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tv   Red Eye  FOX News  March 26, 2010 3:00am-4:00am EDT

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join me tomorrow. from new york, good night america! captioned by closed captioning services, inc.
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>> all right. this is the show. we fought so we could have exhibits like this in our schools. i think these are -- they use
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toy gun, but they this toy administrators at the school. stupid. >> is it true that somehow these kids were happy that mr. kent was shot i. i think they would have been happy if it had been mr. smith. or but i think the up side is that they all got out of math class and that was more traumatic. >> you are always glass half full. you are a little ray of sunshine. >> for you, it's almost empty. >> you know how i like my vodka. >> bill, is that your contribution to this conversation? >> my contribution is this -- is this any less traumatizing than dodge ball? >> yes, it is! mr. smith is bleeding. >> you are the bull-ee i'm the one that they aimed for. i still wake up screaming. >> they took it away.
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behind second base. >> from a mocked up bow to a mocking ton t. bow, according to a league source, he wants to get drafted high. the heaven-bound heisman winner asked fellow players about to take the i.q. test to bow their heads in prayer before the exam. and with that from, the back of the class, someone said -- >> shut the [bleep] up. >> someone said just that. that was followed by a room of gridiron giggles from god-fearing tim. i am not saying that tebow ended up crying like a baby, but i am saying that this baby cried like a baby as he did his whining baby dog. watch. [dog whining] >> welcome to the show.
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impossible to keep on track. adorable and yet annoying. you were in jacksonville. you know florida. testimony me about tim tebow telling the other rough, tough football players to bow their heads. >> i was there when mark brunell there was. a lot of religious guys have been there. and the most powerful players on the team. there were people -- i did on a story on this there were people who were alienated, they were religious and outspoken and some of the other players felt alienated. >> well, yeah. >> you know, you can see it -- but saying "chute the [bleep] up," that's just unacceptable and immature. >> what do you think? bow their heads before they eat? i have to read the bible before i crack a beer? >> i did have to do that here in the company cafeteria. i believe in don't ask/don't tell for religion. leave it at the door. >> i am trying to say, bow your
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head, maybe the one who prays most does best and makes more money. >> why didn't you forceitous pray before the show today? you want us to bow our heads. >> jill, tell me, what do you think about that? tim tebow is a super star. he tells to you bow your head, bow your head. >> i think the guys cursing him out is going too far. this is not congress, this is a locker room, show in respect. >> does this remind you of anything? you mean a very difficult childhood? yes. but here's the thing, i feel bad for him. you can tell he was probably shaking and looking at the floors and everybody was laughing, but with every religious athlete, you have to be careful about wearing it on your sleeve. wasn't tiger woods a devout buddhist? he went back to it. but i mean, there are so few athlete who is practice what they preach. i can think of one -- a.c. green
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from beginning to his wedding day, he preached waiting until marriage, keeping his virginity. i maintain the only reason he was a virgin when he got married was because of the jerry curl. that was terrible. >> look there. >> that's natural oil, connie. >> you can buy it online. have you to realize, it is not going to happen. you can't promo products you don't have and web sites you don't have. >> easy if it's greasy, log on. >> from prayers to players. dudes will be dudes and according to some lady who says things -- i think i adopted greg's style. this doctor who is a special cnn correspondent says the biggest difference between the male and the female brain is that the men have, quote, a sexual pursuit area two and-a-half times larger
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than the one in the women's brain and it starts in their teen, guys produce a ton of testosterone n. bill's case, buckets. as she put its, all the testosterone drives the men into a man trance. the glazed-eye look a man get when is he sees breasts. >> why are you looking at me? >> just gazing. you can't blame me, i was born this way. >> you have had boyfriends that stared at other girls and do you think now, i shouldn't have beened mad? >> that's justification. i look at other guys, but i don't leer at them when i am with my boyfriend -- or husband -- or husbands. [chuckles] >> it's disrespectful and silly. this is not an innate thing. jill, you're married. there are attractive men out there. do you stare at other men?
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>> she's not married by the way. >> my problem is this: whenever an attractive woman walks by, i'm checking out the outfit and the shoes and i am like, hey, honey, look at her, isn't she pretty? >> hey, hey >> the girls are leering. my guy gets very lucky because i point out the pretty girl before he notices her. >> psyche 101. >> i am studying the sheen on her dress. but does this i. begin with charlie sheen. [laughter] >> is he still in rehab? this is incredible. >> what do you think? do you feel better that genetically you have no choice? >> at least i know why i'm horny. this is scientific gobbledy-gook to explain it. >> unfortunately, tech support knows. it's on file. >> bill, have you noticed this, being the man you are, you are trying to snap yourself out of
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it, but you can't help but stare -- >> every time -- from now on, whenever i get busted, i am handing them a printout of this article. it's my get out of jail free card. kind of off topic, doesn't the man trance sound like a tech club in chelsea? >> a little bit. the man trap. i feel like it right now. >> and you are staring at them. >> next topic, it has to be something -- you want to go to the tease? >> yeah. >> all right. coming up next, we will have the "b" block and then call it a show. this is the longest "a" black ever. will all the single ladies, all the single lady, all the single ladies, all the single ladies put their hands up?
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>> well, feeling the cold shoulder. more and more women are staying single longer. but a new survey finds that they are feeling the stigma of being spinsters. i am not looking at you. >> you are looking at me. >> thank you. >> which apparently doesn't mean they twirl around a lot. researchers talked to 32 women over 30 who have never been married and found out that they all feel like they are having to justify or explain their singleness. they also feel a bunch of other junk, including reminders they are on a different life path than most women when others ask about their single status and insecurity when family members make jokes or rude comments. you are single, juliette. >> god, i can't wait.
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>> are you feeling pressure? do you understand this story? >> brian, you know that i -- i have a -- i have a marital history. difeel pressure. >> you did? >> yeah. but now this study shows from the university of missouri, by the way, it shows that women over 35 start to feel less pressure, they start to feel more content. i think that they start accepting that they are still single. >> how do you feel? >> i feel -- i feel pressured. i went to a breakfast this morning and a guy who always waits on me said, there are all of these women with their strollers and they look younger and he says, when are you going to have one of these and i was like, when i get married and fall in love and have a husband -- >> the pressure from the bagel guy in the morning. >> i found the whole exchange offensive because i was sitting right next to her. >> when he finally proposes. >> safe to say, we went dutch. >> you told me you were married for a while. you noticed this spinster thing
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among single friends. what age did you get married at? >> uhhh -- well, if do i my lying math, i got married at 18. 22 now. it's exciting. and i had a lot of pressure when i was 17. but actually -- before i was married, i did have this feeling, there is nothing worse than the wedding when they toss the bouquet and they are like, get out there. everybody's staring and you are expected to fight for the flowers. it's horrible. that's just one example. >> have you nowhere to comment. >> i have nowhere in this network. [laughter] >> thank you. good night. great while it lasted. >> i haven't heard the word spinster since the truman administration and i wasn't alive then. spinster? who did this survey? >> we prefer old maid. >> i am going to give you a hypothetical. you see a woman and you look at her, she's 35, 37 years old.
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she's very attractive. and she tells you, i am not married. what do you think? >> i think it's a girl who could teach me something. move in for the kill! >> you are thinking tutor. >> oh, yeah. very much. very much. >> i know where you live. >> thank you for breakfast. [laughter] >> what was the question? >> it's not important. i want to enjoy that comment a little bit. >> juliette. >> you know, it's unbelievable because you are a social commentator. i have heard that. >> you make conclusions about women on the marital status. do you think, if i was single, i would have a shot at that? >> don't married men think that all the time in when i was single, women had to have two things, a pulse and know half the alphabet. and not even the vowels.
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>> what's going on, yuleiet with you in terms of -- when people ask you stuff like that, i know how you felt inside? but how did you project outside? >> i slapped him. >> see, i find pleasure in pain. that does it. >> we will have to mess with the seating chart because this is -- >> take note, america. >> i don't know how to control that. >> do you have a comment on the show? i know these people do. email right now. and to leave a voicemail on greg's direct line. this is really -- >> your line or greg's line... >> what's the price for minute? the half-time report to come. >> the half-time report is sponsored by my brother the role model. mom and dad said he was a bad influence. but to me, he likes to push himself to the limit.
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thanks, my brother the role model. ed
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i didn't pay a penny out of pocket for my power chair. with help from the scooter store, medicare and my insurance covered it all. call the scooter store for free information today. >> welcome back. let's find out if we have done anything wrong so far. i owe to one man only. how are you holding up? >> it's exhausting. >> is it? >> yet exhilarating, later in life, i will be happy i decided to do this. it's a marathon, it's a
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telethon. >> looking back, it won't seem that bad. >> gito work in an hour. [laughter] >> bill, since he's not here, greg asked me to pass on a message -- quote, you were wrong in everything you said and embarrassed your family more than they even thought possible. the water in your glass is from my armpit. >> you know, in a weird way, i feel oddly relieved right now. >> i am not sure why. >> secretary gates asked for changes in the don't ask/don't tell. interesting general james c. conway told the senate armed services committee last month that gays should not be allowed to serve and don't ask/don't tell -- >> is this "red eye"? i didn't know you had all of these facts, but it's true and it's a great point. a lot of people are not happy that we're asking and telling. >> okay. >> yes. >> agree to agree, you two? >> let me do my job.
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>> i'm sorry. i have to watch this more. my fault. >> allen, you asked what's going on with pandas in the military, giving your political leanings, you are a fasten red pandas, right? >> why do you hate america? >> i don't hate america. i just hatred pandas, actually, all pandas. screw pandas. i said it. >> jill, you asked what goes in the fact-finding inquiries to determine if someone's gay and if they check netflix? >> love actually does not count against you. >> but j-lo movies. >> absolutely. big red flag. >> and enough. love actually, want a red flag. >> that's okay. >> monster in love was not without its charms. just throwing that out there. >> juliette, you said it's absolutely the right time for this fight to get rid of don't ask/don't tell n. a recent survey of iraq/afghanistan war
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vets, a percentage said it was okay with them. >> right. i brought that up. >> a mock shooting in schools scares the crap out of students. didn't we do a story where a british school locked up five-year-old kids in the classroom, after pretending their teacher got shot. >> i have a horrible drug problem. >> all right. this is great. earliener another school, a group of 11-year-old students burst into tear when is their teacher told them they could end up in an orphanage, in order to give them insight of the jewish children in the holocaust? >> wow. >> that's extreme teaching right there. >> really is. england, man. right? >> could i ask a question? >> sure. >> just a second -- i didn't think you were going to say yes. i gave you feedback off my feedback and you toldny let me do your job. let you do your job. everyone else gave you feedback off your feedback and you accepted it. why the separate rules? >> because you're the host.
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you are held to a different standard. >> okay, fine. i didn't know. >> he called you brian. >> oh! >> i called him brian last time. okay? >> okay. >> brian. tebow, if you don't want to join in a prayer, politely decline, no point to tell somebody to shut the "f" up. >> seriously. >> the don't ask/don't tell policy with religion. >> what are you? >> i'm a fan. >> you are a fan? i was going to ask you what religion you are, but now i can't ask you? >> don't worry. i'll ask him. >> it's none of your business. nobody knows i'm jewish. never comes up on the show. >> you couldn't be jewish and named levey. men have a sexual pursuit area two and-a-half times larger than women's. that's inaccurate, it's 2,000 1/2 times. >> men tend to inflate their size. >> exactly.
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>> juliette, you said you look at other guys, but you don't leer in front of them in front of your boyfriend, husband or husbands. 2,000 1/2 timeless you are comparing apples to oranges, babe. >> andy, i've had it. i'm done. >> you are over. >> why are you picking on me? >> i guess i'm going home tonight. >> why do you say that? >> jill, you said when an attractive girl walks by, you are checking out her outfit or shoes, whatever, same for bill. >> i am surprised you didn't jump on that before. >> all right. single women over 30 still feel spinster stigma. >> juliette, don't do that what-what thing? >> that's my charm. it's my thing. >> is that right? >> you turned on me. >> we never liked you. >> yeah, i don't really think i am different than i am usually. >> i know where you live, too. >> jill, you said that at least the students -- >> where were you the first half
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hour -- >> got out of math class. but won't hurt their future lying math skills? >> their future lying math skills? >> yeah. >> the lying math skills you use to calculate -- >> oh! like i'm 18 years old because -- >> yeah. >> well, yeah. i had to stop and pretend to calculate and then people know i'm lying. right, i should have paid more attention because then it would be easier to lie about my age. don't tell me what year i was born because i can't, it won't make sense. 1988. >> i think that's good. >> brian, bring it home. >> i will see you shortly to recap and make sure you jot down everything do i wrong, if i do make a mistake. we start again. let me welcome our guests. juliette, plays channel anchor, she can do anything we ask. jill dobson, fox news and president of entertainment of fox news. >> yes. >> that's how i look at you. if tiger woods is in trouble, if
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something's going on with charlie sheen, i pick up the dobson line. and the role of allen combs and the fox news network, radio network. how many affiliates do you have? >> i am not on, it's a dixie cup and a string. >> what is on with you? >> we never got along. >> beat up on your ego. over 100. >> that's correct. >> it's unbelievable. let me do it -- okay? he's head of the school and he makes the rules. he puts the prince in principal. we move o. i speak of bob samp son, principal of a school in washington state. on wednesday, the assess-going educator cancelled classes because it was too damn nice outside. he called it sun-day. sampson says the school hadn't used any snow days and he wanted to let the students into it unseasonaly warm weather -- i
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think it was 63. but he is a cool dude who does cool things for cool people because he's super cool. sampson surveyed parents and a majority thought that sun-day was a great idea. you know what is a bad idea? this junk. who let the clowns out? who, who, who, who? who let the clowns out? >> i can't let you do this. >> juliette, you saw what the principal did. you heard his reasoning. how do you feel about it? what about the kids and the parents? >> who cares about them -- is he single? just kidding. >> i didn't know you liked jean shorts. >> okay. desperate, yes. glad you brought that up. you are into style. >> education, it has to be sunny every day. i want that kid to learn. >> they never have breaks in bellingham, washington, it's always rainy and foggy. >> as a parent, you say, i want that kid to learn is code for: i don't want them in the house.
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let's be honest. >> why is this about me? really tshould be about you. >> thank you. my illegitimate kids. >> i didn't know there was an update. congratulations, i missed a week. there is a terrible trend with kids getting the easy way out. the count re's going soft, the russians are not taking off because it's sunny. >> i don't care about this. >> wow. >> okay. >> spoken like a true kid hater. >> this is a private school. they did cowhatever the hell they want. it is not your taxpayer dollars, what are you belly-aching about? >> jill, i wonder if you care about this? >> i grew mop michigan -- i don't know if you have heard of that. >> no. >> very proud. >> congratulations on the state economy. >> thank you. we are struggling right now. i grew up in michigan, and my school principal was from the upper peninsula of michigan, 10 hours north, meaning he never let us off because he was from a
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snowville, usa. we never got a snow day. we never got a sun-day. i am glad they got the day off. >> dobson is chairman of entertainment at the biggest network in the world -- >> and she's from michigan. >> entertainment correspond correspondentry. >> that's the way you answer a question. >> coming up next, what will the president of the u.s.-- the ultimate fighting have to say it me? here's hope heying says it, rather than show.
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>> his head's shaven and the next guest we have is a super star, the president of the ufc, the ultimate fighting championship t. promises to be
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better than the other 110 combined. the pressure's on you. dana white, the president of the ufc. welcome back to fox news. this is like a second home. [laughter] >> dana, for one thing, 111. as you know, i did the first five. i got the call that the gracies would be involved and they were these brazilian jujitzu experts, you could be 500 or 150 pounds and you could fight. you straightened this out. >> we came in and we basically -- you know, the way that worked, they put together a bunch of television guys says let's answer, which fighting style is the best? could a boxer beat a wrestler? that's how it started and it evolved because the answer ended up being, you have to be a complete fighter. that's the real answer. and that's how mixed martial arts were born. >> wrestlers were quite good.
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in the first match i was the ringside reporter, or the second match. and the karate guy could punch a sumo guy in the face. so we are siting there and after sizing up the sumo guy, who charges ahead, he got a kick in the face with the guy and with he released his teeth. he released his teeth -- i thought, i don't know how long this is going to last. it lasted a while. tell everyone how successful they are in the pay per view universe. >> we came in and bought it from those guys and you know, they used to run from regulation. they didn't want to be regulated. phillip ranallo toward regulation. we said, this is a real sport with real athletes and we want to be overseen, so the government oversees our -- our sport. and there is this man people that was our take, we bought the
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company, 9 years ago for $2 million. >> how much is it worth now? >> you know, there are -- it's worth whatever anybody's willing to pay for it. >> more than $2 million. >> over a billion dollars. >> yeah, it is so hot with the boxing beats wrestling and 111 will be huge. >> tell him you're single. go ahead. >> you have 150 -- >> waiting for. >> it you have 150 employees and 30 live events a year. >> last time i saw you -- >>. >> we have 250 employees on two cantinents. >> you had a reality fight on spike. and the fighters, as tough as they are, they're the nicest guys. you find that out, the toughest guys are the nicest guys. >> we have the reality show. last season, we were pulling 6 million viewers from spike. >> bill o'reilly is jealous of that. have you dvds and pag zenes and events in 20 languages and more importantly, have you a
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wife and three kids. >> right. >> do you want your boys to fight? >> no. obviously, i wouldn't like them to fight. but if they did, you won't control what they do once they get older. if they dwhat am i going to do? they are training. they are 7 and 8 and they started in boxing and they are doing mui tai. >> they are okay on the playground. >> my dad runs ultimate fight ago hands off. i am playing first base and pitching. here's the thing that i find most intriguing. you know i love your sport. what i find is that you -- no one said, you didn't see hire me, i need a break. you give these people insurance. you grew this business. you had -- how rare is that? you know, you are worried about the country because we don't seem to have that gene anymore? >> i don't know. i don't think this country doesn't have that gene this. collapse that just happened,
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things were fine four years ago. everybody was in business, everybody was making a lot of money. hopefully, things are going to turn around now. but -- the thing with me -- this is what i say about -- i think everybody should do. one thing, we are programmed when we are kids. my mom hammered me and said, you better go to school or you will be a loser. i didn't go to college. i barely got out of high school. i have been lucky because i knew exactly what i wantedded to do. i think so many people are programmed -- i have to go to college. you have all of these kids in college, what's your major? kids are like, i'm taking political science but i am probably going to switch. they near school, but they don't know why. they don't know what to do. i have been fortunate that i knew what i wanted to do and i went for it. >> you did. and you did. and you got a focus. people have to take responsibility for their lives. 22 years old, good news, mom, kistay on your insurance until i'm 26. do we have a chance to see the
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fights and intrieb that? is that possible? >> okay. let's at take a look here. dane alet'sville and dana will react. there is a guy winning. right there. >> -- another guy winning. >> that's punching. there's the guy who has won. >> you will see some -- you will someone on the ground -- the only thing -- a lot of things people don't understand is the ground game and how hard it is. and how tough you have to be -- >> how long -- how long are the rounds? >> five-minute rounds. three five-minute rounds or five for a title. >> have you seen neither fighting hitting the ground. do they ever do it standing up? >> yeah. some guys stand and some fights go to the ground and neither guy gets hit. the reason this is so popular and so big, first of all, it's the most exciting live sporting event you will ever see. they are oohing and ahhing because have you never been.
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but the energy and i know when you see it on television, you know, it looks like, he's on top of that guy and hitting him in the facing. listen, we grew up in the john wayne generation, you know, you don't hit a man when he's done. you hit him and you stand him back up. so we are freaked out, but it's a lot savor. in the 20-year history, there has never been a death or a serious injury. >> wow! i wish i could say the same for fox news. >> you are a super star and an inspiration, ufc 111, this saturday at 10:00. and they have never been and they would like to go for free. >> yeah! >> we'll be back. more "red eye."
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>> welcome back. think again. don't think again. take it away, jared brooks from eastern illinois university. >> in local sport, we have tony romo on the phone. let's go trait stohim. tony, can you hear me out there? [loud buzz]. >> we are waiting for a hookup right now. >> all right, we are getting to toneo romo interview.
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tony, can you hear me? [loud buzz]. >> all right. it looks -- tony, can you hear me? i think i heard you a second ago. all right. looks like we are having technical difficulties, we are going to come to back. now we are going to back to tony. you can hear me now? [loud buzz] >> hopefully we can get him coming up real soon here. again, it appears we are having technical difficulties with this. [mumbling]. >> i am barely picking up a little bit of wais going on. we will see if we get that and maybe we can get it after the break. all right. so -- [mumbling]. >> tony, you can hear me now? >> kihear you. >> first of all, after the draft is over, you didn't get picked, were you a little disappointed in that.
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>> i couldn't hear you. but sounds like an interesting question. >> all right. that's -- that's what we have heard here. let me try this now. tell me what happened after the draft was over. take me through the events and then if you can run me through that? [loud buzz]. >> it was a tough moment. we have all had them. jared did great. i am sure he will be very successful. anyone want to share broadcasting moments you would like to forget? >> this one. >> thank you. >> juliette? >> tonight. right now. >> come on! is there something that happened. >> jill? >> i am the worst reporter every day, he kept his composure. good job. >> they left him hanging. all they had to say was, we don't have tony romo. they left the mike up. >> i blame jessica simpson. >> yeah. >> it's the curse of jessica simpson because she won't talk to him and he won't talk on
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ankers. >> thank you very much. >> good job. >> straight ahead, we are closing things out with the postgame wrapup report. half-time didn't go well. see how andy i i thinks the game went.
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>> check your watch. it's time to go to tvsee andy leavy. what do you have? >> juliette, now that greg's not here, is there anything you want to say? >> he's not very tall. people ask me what does he look like? he's not tall and he's not jewish. >> hhmmm. >> gossip. >> are both of those things important to you? >> not at all. are they important to you. >> just checking. >> it's not about me. it's about you. >> it always is. >> hey, jill, what's the chimney sweep? >> oh, know, you were on
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strategy room with me today, and you got to see that i do a great impression of british people. all right, then -- [in british accent]. >> my fans call it -- i don't know why. this is my worst moment in broadcasting. >> can did you that one more time? >> all right... [laughter] >> oh, chim-chim-chu-roo. >> you are adorable. >> allen, did you have a question for me? >> why did you stop following me on twitter? >> because you think the word tea bagger is really, really funny and i think it it's really stupid. >> i am glad we are on a show to do stupid jokes. >> you know it's offensive to people and you keep using it. >> they started using that word. >> back to

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