Spoof of Brady Quinn EAS Commercial

Winner

Adarqui!!!

Now stop reading the dictionary and get working on that Manning spoof script. I want a draft by Monday

[quote]Razorslim wrote:
Winner

Adarqui!!!

Now stop reading the dictionary and get working on that Manning spoof script. I want a draft by Monday

[/quote]

You mean that “light and gentle” Manning script. Duh.

No

This one needs to be hard hitting and cutting edge. More of a satire than a spoof

haha…

razorslim, i need some funding for that one… msg me on youtube i accept paypal donations.

;d

[quote]Razorslim wrote:
No

This one needs to be hard hitting and cutting edge. More of a satire than a spoof[/quote]

Sorta like Brokeback Mountain?

beebuddy we will fly you and a friend down for that one…

;0

[quote]adarqui wrote:
beebuddy we will fly you and a friend down for that one…

;0[/quote]

Well when he said “hard hitting”…

[quote]Razorslim wrote:
I actually think Brady Quinn is going to make a good NFL quarterback.[/quote]

Puhleeeze!

Brady Quinn has “BUST” written all over him - with a capital suck.

[quote]adarqui wrote:
spoof (spf)n.

  1. Nonsense; tomfoolery.
  2. A hoax.
  3. A gentle satirical imitation; a light parody.tr.v. spoofed, spoof·ing, spoofs
  4. To deceive.
  5. To do a spoof of; satirize gently.
    [After Spoof, name of a game invented by Arthur Roberts (1852-1933), British comedian.]
    Word History: We are indebted to a British comedian for the word spoof. Sometime in the 19th century Arthur Roberts (1852-1933) invented a game called Spoof, which involved trickery and nonsense. The first recorded reference to the game in 1884 refers to its revival. It was not long before the word spoof took on the general sense “nonsense, trickery,” first recorded in 1889. The verb spoof is first recorded in 1889 as well, in the sense “to deceive.” These senses are now less widely used than the noun sense “a light parody or satirical imitation,” first recorded in 1958, and the verb sense “to satirize gently,” first recorded in 1927.

the keywords there are “light or gentle” beebuddy …

i win.[/quote]

you win? you made a terrible video, there are tons of those on youtube, how does that make you a winner?

By the way, from the definition YOU posted: “satirical” “satirize gently” “British comedian” “These senses are now less widely used than the noun sense “a light parody or satirical imitation,” first recorded in 1958, and the verb sense “to satirize gently,” first recorded in 1927.”

LIGHTWEIGHT!

you fail at reading comprehension?

[quote]adarqui wrote:

you win? you made a terrible video, there are tons of those on youtube, how does that make you a winner?

LIGHTWEIGHT!

By the way, from the definition YOU posted: “satirical” “satirize gently” “British comedian” “These senses are now less widely used than the noun sense “a light parody or satirical imitation,” first recorded in 1958, and the verb sense “to satirize gently,” first recorded in 1927.”

you fail at reading comprehension?[/quote]

No you did, you moron, you fail at life. The “more WIDELY USED” as in common usage, as in … oh forget it, you’re a moron.

This is actually starting to intrigue me - if you didnt mean it to be funny, what did you mean for it to be? Was this some kind of avant garde work of art? A metaphysical protest of the war? What?

Can’t believe you tools are arguing about the definiton of a word. It is obvious that adarqui is not spoofing the Brady Quinn commercial but is actually spoofing the word “spoof”

[quote]rainjack wrote:
Razorslim wrote:
I actually think Brady Quinn is going to make a good NFL quarterback.

Puhleeeze!

Brady Quinn has “BUST” written all over him - with a capital suck. [/quote]

You may be right. But with 32 NFL teams, after you get past the top 10 or so QBs, there aint much to work with. The NFL has a huge QB talent problem. Why do you think the likes of Testeverde keep getting calls? Brady just seems athletic enough to perform well on any one of the 22+ teams that need a QB.

i think you have some spoof in your eye, here’s some tissues. my use of “spoof” clearly falls within the definition. i’m surprised you know how to turn on the interwebs.

razorslim, i don’t know or care how well he does in the nfl, but he is damn athletic for a QB… i don’t know why i’m even talking about him, i just found his EAS commercial funny. you are right about the qb talen pool though, so quinn will get his shot soon enough.

Dates: 03/04/07 03/22/07
Height: 6036
Weight: 232
40 Yrd Dash: 4.73
20 Yrd Dash: 2.75
10 Yrd Dash: 1.62
225 Lb. Bench Reps: 24
Vertical Jump: 36
Broad Jump: 9’7"
20 Yrd Shuttle: 4.22
3-Cone Drill: 6.79

hah

Stop arguing that the word “spoof” doesn’t imply humor. You are starting to look like a non-native English speaker.

the humor is light… or so to say… just a dash of humor… sprinkle just a tad bit of humor on that video… a gentle application of pink polo shirts, head bands, “LIGHTWEIGHT!”, “NOW I’M DONE.”, and suck my balls.

ok im bored with my thread, was amusing while it lasted… i think im done posting.

:wink:

Dang dude…sweet gym.

I like the David Blaine spoofs better.