Sunday, March 23, 2008

Here are 12 of the finest double-entendres

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Janaka <jdiasabey@yahoo.com>
Date: Sun, Mar 23, 2008 at 2:36 PM
Subject: Here are 12 of the finest
To: Janaka Abeyagunawardena <janaka.abey@gmail.com>


Here are 12 of the finest (unintentional) double-entendres ever aired
on British TV and radio (1) Pat Glenn,
weightlifting commentator
"And this is Gregoriava from Bulgaria. I saw
her snatch this morning and it was amazing!"
(2) New Zealand Rugby Commentator
"Andrew Mehrtens loves it when Daryl Gibson comes inside of him."

(3) Ted Walsh - Horse Racing Commentator :
"This is really a lovely horse. I once rode her mother."

(4) Harry Carpenter at the Oxford-Cambridge boat race 1977
"Ah, isn't that nice. The wife of the Cambridge President is
kissing the cox of the Oxford crew."
(5) US PGA Commentator -
"One of the reasons Arnie [Arnold> > Palmer] is playing so
well is that,
before each tee shot, his wife takes out his balls and kisses
them ..... Oh my god!! what have I just said??"
(6) Carenza Lewis about finding food in the Middle Ages on 'Time
Team Live' said:
"You'd eat beaver if you could get it."

(7) A female news anchor who, the day after it was supposed to
have snowed and didn't, turned to the weatherman and asked,
"So Bob, where's that eight inches you promised me last
night?" Not only did HE have to leave the set, but half the crew did
too, because they were laughing so hard!

(8) Steve Ryder covering the US Masters:
"Ballesteros felt much better today after a 69 yesterday."

(9) Clair Frisby talking about a jumbo hot dog on Look North said:
"There's nothing like a big hot sausage inside you on
a cold night like this."
(10) Mike Hallett discussing missed snooker shots on Sky Sports
"Stephen Hendry jumps on Steve Davis's misses every
chance he gets."
(11) Michael Buerk on watching Phillipa Forrester cuddle up to a
male astronomer for warmth during BBC1's UK eclipse coverage remarked:
"They seem cold out there, they're rubbing each other and
he's only come in his shorts."
(12) Ken Brown commentating on golfer Nick Faldo and his caddie
Fanny Sunneson lining-up shots at the Scottish Open:
"Some weeks Nick likes to use Fanny, other weeks he
prefers to do it by himself."