something so much and it is different. the bottom line is these guys love men. they love men and they love to hear tears. to hear their voices. they get together with the guys. but it is television. you don t seen see her half the time. you just live with each other. maybe that s the problem. you don t have to see them, right? to tell you the truth that s the case with a lot of the sportscasters. you hear them and they are fantastic. and then when they cut to the booth, oh wow. it is a bit jarring. just imagine if i had legions of fans who watched me for years and years and then was replaced by a different host. and then imagine the hostility that would be out there. i can only imagine. how do look sharp at the homecoming
women, not girls who are fantastic forgiving the money to charity. let s face it. they go to asu. there are worse photographs they could be taking. everyone who is gonna get it will get it. and to ben s point, isn t this a tacit admission by the sportscasters that this is a boring sport. if you did this during a football or hockey game fans would flip out. they have to cut back when the knicks if the knicks play basketball again show them and not the game. i like the slow pace of a baseball game. i have been watching this show called scream queens about a sorority house full of maniacs and i trust do not trust sorority girls and do not make them angry. they will murder you with a lawn poe better. lawn mower.
are you not entertained? i don t think they were entertained. i detect a little sexism with the sportscasters pointing the camera at them and calling them girls? they are focused on them. obviously baseball is boring enough they will put the camera on these girls. i want thought that the brunette was looking at her phone, but not taking selfies. shy was doing what she she was doing what she should be doing and that s eating a lot of ice cream. the girls were offered free tickets to a game. they turned them down. they said you can give the tickets to a domestic violence charity. see a lot of the sorority vtz philanthropy and it is a charity they dedicate a lot of time to. it was very good of them to say that. if i were in the sorority i wok like what are you doing? what are you doing? i want to get more press? i want to be on tv.
as you look at broadcasting today i know this is what yoyou study on media buzz sunday anybody that can come close to say that s a frank gifford style? he seems to be cut in a mold of his own. he was something of an institution. i mean, there are other sportscasters or former football players or baseball players, basketball players, that have a big following, a certain personality. but i was reading in one of the obits that frank gifford broadcast 588 consecutive nfl games for abc. he was always showing up. he did other things, wide world of sports. what made him an even greater celebrity later in his life was his wife, kathie lee, talked about the family all of the time. i think a lot of americans, whether sports fans or not, alive in 1956 when he won the championship for the giants or not, fell like frank gifford was part of their lives. howard kurts. appreciate you taking a couple of moments awe were getting
getting to the end of the road, you know. frank had a great life. he brought a lot of joy to a lot of people. he was an exceptional individual on and off the field. he was a real credit to the game of football. he was kind of a guy that came in the 60s when the nfl needed that you know, that guy and he was in new york. he was that guy. he was like the pinup guy of the national football league. he was a good-looking guy, but he was a great, talented football player. we got the best of him. in 63, we beat him in the championship game. frank gifford was a special man. he was really great for the game. i know you played against him. but also some of your best moments were as sportscasters together. i recall he once said something like he thought you were going to eat his clipboard. well, frank frank i m a