A preview of the 2010 Superbowl advertising, including Tebow, Cindy Crawford, Doritos, Bud Light, Tom Landry, and much more. Plus, highlights from the 2009 Superbowl ads.
If you like football and you like lingerie, Mitch Mortaza is here to answer your prayers with the Lingerie Football League. Babes in tight, silky semi-uniforms kick ass on the field, but there may be trouble in paradise for the LFL founder.
What if ultimate frisbee went pro? Well, take a favorite childhood activity at the park, then combine premature balding with immature frivolity, mix it all together, and you get the Professional Disc Golf Association. Matt Straq reports.http://www.ThatSportsShow.com
Like most dads we know, Damir Docik (father of Jelena Docik) likes to keep bombs in his garage, and Todd Marinovich isn't the first parent to drive a child to ruin for his own emotional needs. Matt Straq looks at the family values behind some of the most interesting sports figures.
How desperate can people be? From Sarah Palin to John Hughes, we're calling in all our favors just to win you over. In this series of pleas, Matt Straq sells out so the bosses can get their panel selected for SXSW. VOTE HERE: http://panelpicker.sxsw.com/ideas/view/4299
From Little League to the geriatric leagues, everyone seems to be seeking some kind of performance enhancement. Matt Straq looks at the issue that unites elderly runners and MLB pitchers with Samuel Jackson and Pam Anderson's cleavage.
No matter whether you are Tiger Woods or John Daly, when your game is down it's time to stop trying and simply be the ball. From Chevy Chase to Y.E. Yang, half a million people were likely thinking this as Woods blew his lead at Hazelton.
The best two-sport athletes in history, Bo Jackson and Shaun White, go head-to-head in this very special episode of That Sports Show. Sit back for skateboarding, snowboarding, baseball, football, even a cameo from Bo Diddley, as Matt Straq breaks it down and declares a winner.
Last week ESPN banned unauthorized employee tweeting, facebooking, and whatever else the kids are doing these days, allegedly to protect the good name of Disney Inc. So, do the fans lose out now that the "Worldwide Leader" has a company-wide muzzle?
Today on TSS, Matt Straq makes the case that NCAA athletes should get paid just like everyone else. There are lots of sticky hands in the college sports cookie jar, so why can't the players get their fair share?