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Stuck Between IDK IDC and Idgaf Cow Shirt
Stuck Between IDK IDC and Idgaf Cow Shirt
know, you don’t have to live in a mansion. STELTER: But it does take some flak, they say, blank walls looked like hostage videos. And excessively putting your own book behind you is also a drag. But photobombing children and pets are always welcome. BAHREY: We just took the view that everybody’s in the same boat. Everybody’s trying to get their kids on Zoom classes and dealing with rambunctious pets. And for us, it was normalizing and it was fun. STELTER: Over time, big names like Carl Bernstein have improved their home setups, raising the camera and tweaking the audio. TAYLOR: A lot of people have upped their game. And, you know, naturally, we take full credit. [11:55:03] STELTER: Now, I will admit, I did grovel for a 10 out of 10 rating by going to the grocery store and buying a pineapple for my shelf, because Room Rader loves pineapples. Stuck Between IDK IDC and Idgaf Cow Shirt Twitter critics aside, Web cams and iPhones are keeping the T.V. Magic alive. It’s less expensive for networks and less time consuming for guests. Producers say hard-to-get stars are easier to book nowadays, because they just fire up their computer from home. So, this formula will live on long after COVID. TAYLOR: I think we’ll start to see more of a hybrid, more of a mix. But I think — I think the at-home T.V. Is here to stay. BAHREY: I personally love it because it makes me feel like we’re all in this together. I mean, obviously, selfishly, we hope it lasts. (END VIDEOTAPE) STELTER: It’s true. Guests are just a click away, thanks to these devices. Will take my live shot there. And see you next week for more RELIABLE SOURCES. (COMMERCIAL BREAK) ‘Luv Ya Blue,’ Bum And Earl Too: When Houston And The Oilers Were The NFL’s Perfect Match In the late 1970s, Houston was booming, being country was cool and nobody was as country as the Oilers.
Coached by a man named Bum and powered by a running back named Earl, both every bit a one-name Texas icon like Willie or Waylon, the NFL team and the city were simpatico. Bum Phillips grew up working cattle in Orange, Texas, about 120 miles from Houston, before he became a successful high school and college coach, while wearing cowboy boots and a Stetson hat on the sideline (just not in the Astrodome, because his mama taught him never to wear a hat indoors). Earl Campbell grew up in the rose fields of East Texas and had already become a legend as a high school senior in Tyler before winning a Heisman Trophy at the University of Texas. The two had an instant connection. They already had a mutual friend: Willie Nelson. Together, Bum and Earl became the faces of a franchise that finally allowed Houston to escape the enormous shadow of the Dallas Cowboys, coinciding with Houston’s rise as the country’s fastest-growing city and a depiction in “Urban Cowboy” as the center of the country-western universe. With stars such as Campbell, Elvin Bethea, Robert Brazile, Dan Pastorini and later Kenny Stabler, the Oilers were a tight-knit brotherhood who wore big belt buckles and bigger cowboy hats, hung with the locals at the honky-tonk Gilley’s — just like John Travolta — and rode horses at their coach’s ranch. “The football players that we had on our football team kind of meshed with the town,” Phillips told NFL Films a few years before his death in 2013. “That situation hit just right at the right time.”
For Houstonians, that era still lingers as the standard by which all teams are measured. “There was a very big sense of pride that the Oilers were just so Texas,” said Houston rapper Bun B, who grew up idolizing Campbell. “Like from player to coach, it’s all Texas. I mean, we loved the Oilers. There wasn’t any other option, because the only other option is the Cowboys, and that’s not even an option. That’s just like Blue Bell ice cream, you know? There’s Blue Bell ice cream or we’re not eating ice cream.” Stuck Between IDK IDC and Idgaf Cow Shirt Such adulation is a far cry from Houston’s current relationship with its NFL team, which has deteriorated with the departures of Jadeveon Clowney, DeAndre Hopkins and the greatest player inTexansfranchise history, J.J. Watt, while a divorce with Deshaun Watson appears imminent. The ongoing drama is just the latest painful chapter in the story of Houston and pro football, including the Oilers’ relocation after the 1996 season before the Texans made it an NFL town again in 2002. “I’m sorry for those fans,” said Brazile, the Hall of Fame linebacker who played in Houston from 1975 to 1984. “What more can they take? They had the Oilers leave, they had a hurricane that destroyed their city, they had the snowstorm this year. The breaking up of that team, I feel bad for the Texans’ fans, because I know exactly what they’re feeling.” It wasn’t always like this. Four decades ago, the Oilers owned Houston lock, stock and oil barrel. Bum rides into town Upon the franchise’s founding in 1960, the Oilers became an overnight success, claiming the first two American Football League titles. But following a loss to the Dallas Texans in the third AFL title game, they finished above .500 just once until the AFL/NFL merger in 1970, then went 9-45-2 in their first four NFL seasons. The Oilers were most famous for a fan flipping the bird at the Monday Night Football cameras. They squandered draft picks and became a laughingstock as owner Bud Adams, a Houston oilman, burned through coaches and kept a tight grip on his pursestrings.
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