Wednesday, May 24, 2006
It Doesn't Quite Fit, Does It?
I don't really know how this helps OJ find the real killer, but he must know best.
In a scene from his new candid-camera program "Juiced," O.J. Simpson pulls a prank involving the infamous white Bronco, drawing criticism from the family of a man he was accused of killing.
As part of the pay-per-view show, Simpson pretends to sell the Bronco at a used car lot and boasts to a prospective buyer that he made the vehicle famous, according to a segment aired Thursday on "Inside Edition."
"It was good for me -- it helped me get away," Simpson said, referring to the slow-speed, televised police chase that preceded his 1994 arrest on charges of murdering his ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend, Ronald Goldman.
He's doing a pay-per-view crappy Punk'd knockoff? Oh, the poor, misguided bastard.
I'm glad to see OJ has moved beyond the charade of giving a crap and is now laughing openly at having- what's the term?- "juiced" America.
In a scene from his new candid-camera program "Juiced," O.J. Simpson pulls a prank involving the infamous white Bronco, drawing criticism from the family of a man he was accused of killing.
As part of the pay-per-view show, Simpson pretends to sell the Bronco at a used car lot and boasts to a prospective buyer that he made the vehicle famous, according to a segment aired Thursday on "Inside Edition."
"It was good for me -- it helped me get away," Simpson said, referring to the slow-speed, televised police chase that preceded his 1994 arrest on charges of murdering his ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend, Ronald Goldman.
He's doing a pay-per-view crappy Punk'd knockoff? Oh, the poor, misguided bastard.
I'm glad to see OJ has moved beyond the charade of giving a crap and is now laughing openly at having- what's the term?- "juiced" America.