Jimmy Chitwood
Hall of Famer
i turned on the idiot box this afternoon and just by chance happened to catch a segment of ESPN's Outside The Lines.
the segment? the negrophiles at ESPN were indulging in former Oklahoma State quarterback Bobby Reid's self-indulgent pity-party recitation of "the man who done me wrong."
anyway, for those who don't know the story, as one of the biggest recruits in Ok St's history Reid was supposed to be the next Vince Young. however, as a sophomore he eventually got beat out for the starting job by a white quarterback (Zac Robinson). furthermore, he turned out to be a whiny pussy.
but he really became famous when Oklahoma State head coach Mike Gundy went on a furious rant protecting Reid during a press conference. it's all over YouTube for anyone who's not seen it.
why is this important?
Gundy, who's made his career out of recruiting black athletes and doing everything he can to help them play, is being run down AGAIN by the "world's sports leader" as the man who ruined Reid's career. and who is making such a claim, you might ask?
no less than Bobby Reid and his skank mother!
Outside The Lines is re-hashing this pathetic excuse for a human being's sob story, but he's been crying about how he was "mis-treated" for over a year now. Reid can't contemplate that a white athlete was actually better and beat him out of his job. no, it mus' be uh cunspiracee an' sheeuht...
Reid ended up graduating OSU (which is a shocker, in itself), and then transferred to play his final year of eligibility for a black coach at all-black Texas Southern.
somehow Gundy is the bad guy in this tale, according to Reid and his "mamma" and apparently the negro lovers at ESPN agree. yes, this is the same Gundy who goes out of his way to recruit negroes over white kids and would do anything for his favored affletes, including make a fool of himself in front of the national media. whitey is the devil any time some negro doesn't get what he wants when he wants it.
this is just one example i saw today, but it happens daily across the country. and i wanted to get it off my chest.
no matter what white people do for (or give to) blacks, it will never be enough.
the segment? the negrophiles at ESPN were indulging in former Oklahoma State quarterback Bobby Reid's self-indulgent pity-party recitation of "the man who done me wrong."

anyway, for those who don't know the story, as one of the biggest recruits in Ok St's history Reid was supposed to be the next Vince Young. however, as a sophomore he eventually got beat out for the starting job by a white quarterback (Zac Robinson). furthermore, he turned out to be a whiny pussy.
but he really became famous when Oklahoma State head coach Mike Gundy went on a furious rant protecting Reid during a press conference. it's all over YouTube for anyone who's not seen it.
why is this important?
Gundy, who's made his career out of recruiting black athletes and doing everything he can to help them play, is being run down AGAIN by the "world's sports leader" as the man who ruined Reid's career. and who is making such a claim, you might ask?
no less than Bobby Reid and his skank mother!
Outside The Lines is re-hashing this pathetic excuse for a human being's sob story, but he's been crying about how he was "mis-treated" for over a year now. Reid can't contemplate that a white athlete was actually better and beat him out of his job. no, it mus' be uh cunspiracee an' sheeuht...
Reid ended up graduating OSU (which is a shocker, in itself), and then transferred to play his final year of eligibility for a black coach at all-black Texas Southern.
somehow Gundy is the bad guy in this tale, according to Reid and his "mamma" and apparently the negro lovers at ESPN agree. yes, this is the same Gundy who goes out of his way to recruit negroes over white kids and would do anything for his favored affletes, including make a fool of himself in front of the national media. whitey is the devil any time some negro doesn't get what he wants when he wants it.
this is just one example i saw today, but it happens daily across the country. and i wanted to get it off my chest.
no matter what white people do for (or give to) blacks, it will never be enough.