Greg Bobkin
Silver Seagull
- May 22, 2012
- 16,301
"These days..."
The film series "Most Valuable Primate" was about a chimpanzee playing ice hockey and was a play on words based on "Most Valuable Player". The premise of the film was that MVP can stand for either, so it's not surprising that a commentator can get the two mixed up. Everyone mixes up words sometimes. Just ask Ronnie Barker.So she’s a sports commentator using an acronym associated then with valuable players and you think she’s referring to a movie series? You’re wooshing me aren’t you?
In NSC terms it means 'Most Vacuous Poster'Sod the alleged racism, can people please stop referring to MVP as an acronym?!
Are you going to start the nomination process, or just go straight in with a poll?In NSC terms it means 'Most Vacuous Poster'
Rubbish. Have you ever seen me post something dumb?If you commentate enough you're bound to say something dumb eventually.
In NSC terms it means 'Most Vacuous Poster'
@Is it PotG? ....what do I win?Are you going to start the nomination process, or just go straight in with a poll?
Did somebody SCREAM for a police officer?Do we know if the OB are investigating her ?
It’s not remotely odd. She made a simple mistakeHumans are primates, of course. Still an odd thing to say.
Hmm. Well I guess from time to time you come across the odd exceptional individual.Rubbish. Have you ever seen me post something dumb?
Do you think they should be?Do we know if the OB are investigating her ?
No but it is not my call to makeDo you think they should be?
Well it is. You could call them. Or if they don't answer, you could scream.No but it is not my call to make
Not sure she'll make the grade, even in the Danish second tier...Do we know if the OB are investigating her ?
Ok thanks for pointing that out, it seems then she said MVP and then went onto use the word ‘primate’ as well in the same sentence which i get might offend, i thought the way BBC wrote that article the “Most Valuable Primate” was their explanation of the acronym MVP she used and she was apologising for describing the player as the MVPWell the BBC have used quotation marks in the article, if she didn't say it they would be in big trouble:
Guha responded: "Well, he's the MVP, isn't he? [The] most valuable primate, Jasprit Bumrah. He is the one that's going to do all the talking for India, and why so much focus was on him in the build-up to this Test match, and whether he would be fit."