Accurate or not, I'd punch Doc Rocket in the gut if I ever met him. His antics are the embodiment of a pee-pee game. I'd buy him a beer afterwards but it is what it is.
to me the first sounds like he is quoting a player saying he is tired of Broussards BS, and "leaks aren't n media" says dont listen to the espn guys listen to what is being "printed"...
Broussard called D12 " notorious indecisiveness" like 6 hours ago, went on to say its down to Dallas and Houston. Doc Roc said dallas is just a smokescreen. I think D12 has made a firm commitment to houston and is telling his people to tell Broussard and sometime today or in the next few days, it will be leaked d12 has made a verbal agreement with US.
Can't make a verbal commitment when they haven't even talked to each other yet. Unless you mean orally committing to Chandler. But I'm sure everyone orally commits to Chandler within seconds of meeting him.
Probably. R Guys R 1 2 4 OK. Like.. Our guys are 1 to 4, OK. So maybe Asik gets traded or he becomes a PF?
That is why he will buy him a beer after he punches him. You keep punching him until he actually says something that is coherent, and then you buy him a beer (or two) for his troubles.
haven't read the thread, just the last 2 pages but "Bobby in the shower" refers to the TV show Dallas when Bobby Ewing was dead, but then they brought him back anyway by opening the next season by just showing Bobby in the shower and his death was just a Dream somebody had. make of it what you will but I think it means that for Dallas it was all just a dream So what’s the deal with Bobby Ewing in the shower? It was a storytelling gaffe of epic proportions–one of the most epic storytelling fails in popular culture, in my opinion. Here’s what happened. Bobby Ewing was played by actor Patrick Duffy, who later went on to fame in the 90s sitcom Step by Step. Though he was a crucial part of the show, he decided to leave after the 1984-85 season, hoping to pursue other opportunities. The scriptwriters killed him off in particularly dramatic fashion, having him run down with a car while saving his wife Pam (played by Victoria Principal, who you see in the clip above). Things evidently didn’t go as well for Mr. Duffy as he hoped. Sometime during the next run of the show he decided to return. But his character death was already an accomplished fact. So, they decided to bring him back–by having it turn out that the entirety of the 1985-86 season was a dream in Pam’s head! Yes, you read that right. They used “it was all a dream.” The entire season. All 31 episodes. That meant for the 1986-87 season, they had to go back and pick up where they left off, or try to anyway. Granted, this was 80s television
Nah, part of the fun is figuring out the message, along with the board blowing up with everyone else decoding it. Stay true Doc!!
OKC 12th pick, good call, would have to be a euro stash yes? wish Doc would explain what his clues meant after the event has passed