Roughneck said:
Dude, you're 17 and have over 1,400 posts on a Message Board of a team you do not even like. Do not even try to play the Life card as you sure as hell don't have one.
Considering I post here as much as I post there (two windows you know...)...
Here is the article I found about this issue, I look for another one.
Owens dances around questions about sex
Playboy asked the Eagles receiver about his former quarterback - and gave him a chance to slam the NFL. "We're almost like slaves, like robots," he said.
BETHLEHEM, Pa. - Terrell Owens gives some fascinating and potentially inflammatory answers to questions posed by Playboy in the September issue of the men's magazine that will hit newsstands Friday.
The most controversial answer from the Eagles' newest receiver was about Jeff Garcia, his former teammate and quarterback with the San Francisco 49ers. Owens was critical of Garcia's ability before and after he left the 49ers, but Playboy's question was not about the quarterback's on-field performance.
The question: Jeff Garcia "has denied media rumors he's gay. What do you think?"
Owens' response: "Like my boy tells me: If it looks like a rat and smells like a rat, by golly, it is a rat."
Exactly what he meant by "my boy" is not clear. Owens is single and does not have any children, according to the Eagles' media guide.
Playboy followed up by asking what would happen if an NFL player came out of the closet and admitted he was gay.
"I probably wouldn't say anything right off the bat," Owens said. "I'd just see what everyone else has to say. I'd probably keep my distance and, hopefully, he would keep his. If it was a guy who was helping us win ball games, hey, I'd have no problem with it. He can do what he wants to do outside of my everyday life."
Owens also complained about the restrictions being placed on the players by the NFL, and he said that the negative perception about him was created by the media in the Bay Area.
"In the NBA, you've got guys who get wristbands with their numbers or initials or whatever on them," Owens said. "We can't do any of that. We can't have any personality, no individuality. We're almost like slaves, like robots."
Owens on the public perception of him: "[It] has been tarnished by what the Bay Area media put out there. Dude, I'm a great guy. I'm a nice guy."
Perhaps his funniest line came when he was asked to compare the touchdown celebrations of Cincinnati's Chad Johnson and New Orleans' Joe Horn last season. Owens said Johnson's sign plea was original, and Horn's cell phone call was a cheap imitation of Owens' famous Sharpie celebration.
"[Johnson] knew what everybody was expecting, and he flipped the script, saying 'Please don't fine me,' " Owens said. "But Joe Horn was basically being a copycat; you can call him Kinko's."