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Eddie McGee / Latest Videos
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Eddie Mcgee on guiding light
eddie winner of BB1...Big brother
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Eddie Mcgee on law and order
winner of bb1...Big brother
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Big Brother 1 USA Premiere
From the first episode of the United States edition of Big Brother 1. This is from back when the game played with the public voting system, which ended up being a complete ratings disaster.
Please note that any comment on any of Big Brother's international variants, especially the version from the United Kingdom, will be ignored or deleted. This is only to stop people from fighting through the video comments, which is really lame. Also, I personally don't understand why people feel the need to attack the US version of Big Brother. If you don't like the video, suck it up and go watch BBUK.
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THE SIGNAL & FOUR EYED MONSTERS Gen Art Film Festival (Day3)
://DAVIDJR.COM...davidjr davidjr.com gen art film festival 2007 four eyed monsters eddie mcgee angel the signal aj bowen jacob gentry
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Illinois 3-0 in Big Ten for first time since 1990
ATTENDANCE: 57,078 Last weekend's upset of a Top 25 team wasn't enough to get Illinois ranked. Maybe this one will be.
Rashard Mendenhall and Juice Williams carried the surprising Illini to a 31-26 win over No. 5 Wisconsin on Saturday, ending the Badgers' 14-game winning streak. A week ago, Illinois beat then No. 21 Penn State 27-20, the school's first win over a ranked opponent since 2001.
Mendenhall ran for 160 yards and two touchdowns, and Williams added another 92 yards rushing as Illinois improved to 5-1 overall. The Illini are off to a 3-0 start in the Big Ten for the first time since 1990, when they won a share of the conference title.
None of it is a surprise to Illinois coach Ron Zook, who challenged Mendenhall before the season to lead the potent offense.
"I said, 'Rashard, if you have the kind of year we think you're capable of having, and if you do the things the coaches are trying to get you to do, we have a chance to be pretty special,' " Zook said.
Zook's resurrection of Illinois has mirrored his own. He was run out of Florida after three winning seasons, only to surface in Champaign in 2005. After winning only four of his first 23 games, and just one in the conference, he has Illinois talking Big Ten title.
"With a team like us," Mendenhall said, "we haven't had too much success like this. ... [Now] we know we can play with anybody."
The Badgers (5-1, 2-1) hadn't lost since Sept. 16, 2006, at Michigan. It was also only the second loss in 19 games for coach Bret Bielema, who said the Illini played up to Wisconsin's ranking.
"I think it has to do with we're ranked No. 5 in the country and everybody wants to talk about why we shouldn't be," he said.
Whether that ranking was justified is another thing. The Badgers struggled to wins over UNLV, Iowa and Michigan State and were three-point underdogs against Illinois.
It looked like Illinois was the better team most of the way. Mendenhall, the Big Ten's third-leading rusher at better than 122 yards a game, had 100 by halftime, and his two touchdowns carried Illinois to a 17-6 lead.
"That guy's got muscles," Wisconsin cornerback Jack Ikegwuonu said. "He's just a hard runner."
The Illini didn't pound the ball inside until late, relying instead on a no-huddle spread offense and the option.
"We take pride in our running," Mendenhall said. "With our scheme and the playmakers we have out there, it's hard for the defense to focus on just one person."
Although Williams passed and ran Illinois to the lead, it was the sophomore quarterback's relief, Eddie McGee, who essentially sealed the win.
For the second week in a row, Zook sent McGee in during the second half. Against Penn State, the redshirt freshman ripped off a 53-yard run to secure the win. This time, he scored on a 5-yard keeper that put the Illini up 31-19 with 5 1/2 minutes to go.
Zook said Williams hyperextended a knee but probably could have played again.
Wisconsin quarterback Tyler Donovan threw two interceptions in Illinois territory, the first to safety Kevin Mitchell and the second to cornerback Vontae Davis. The 6-foot Davis out-jumped the 6-foot-4 Travis Beckum at the Illini 29 with just over 10 minutes left.
Wisconsin grabbed the momentum and quieted a sold-out Memorial Stadium when running back P.J. Hill leaned into the end zone from 1 yard out to cap a 78-yard drive that got them within 24-19 in the fourth quarter.
After McGee's touchdown made it 31-19, Donovan hit tight end Garrett Graham for a 12-yard touchdown with 1:31 left.
However, the Badgers couldn't pounce on the onside kick, and Illinois ran out the clock.
Donovan completed 27 of 49 passes for 392 yards with two touchdowns, but didn't speak with reporters after the game. Bielema said his senior quarterback would take the loss -- and the interceptions -- hard.
"It's going to hurt him," Bielema said. "He's got to be a guy who takes the good with the bad."
Hill entered the game as the Big Ten's top running back, averaging 133.4 yards a game. Bielema said Hill injured his groin during the game, and the Illini held him to 83 yards on 21 carries and a touchdown.
He managed only 30 yards rushing in the first half, and the effect was obvious on the Badgers' offense. Wisconsin didn't score until less than three minutes were left in the half on a 38-yard field goal by Taylor Mehlhaff.
Williams was far more effective on the ground than through the air. He completed 12 of 19 passes for 121 yards and a touchdown, a pitch to Mendenhall that was ruled a forward pass.
The Badgers contained freshman sensation Arrelious Benn, who scored twice against Penn State. The Illinois receiver caught five passes for only 51 yards.
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Brown, Henne step up for Hart-less Michigan
ATTENDANCE: 57,078 With Mike Hart walking the sideline in a warmup jacket, Michigan (No. 25 BCS, No. 24 AP) needed some substitute stars.
The Wolverines found just what they needed in backup tailback Carlos Brown and a gritty performance by a banged-up Chad Henne.
Brown rushed for 113 yards and Henne played through a hand injury to throw two touchdown passes in the Wolverines' 27-17 win over Illinois on Saturday night.
Receiver Mario Manningham also caught nine balls for 109 yards and two touchdowns, including the tiebreaking score.
"The only word to describe Henne is courageous," Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said. "He did something anybody on this team will never forget."
Hart, the nation's leading rusher with 152 yards a game, watched from the sideline after hurting an ankle last weekend in a win over Purdue. Michigan (6-2, 4-0) was still able to extend its winning streak to six games.
After starting the season with humbling losses to Appalachian State and Oregon at home, Michigan is tied with No. 1 Ohio State for the Big Ten lead.
The Illini have lost two in a row and are still looking for the win they need to become bowl eligible for first time since 2001.
"We had opportunities to win the game," Illinois coach Ron Zook said. "We let it slip away from us."
The Illini (5-3, 3-2) were flagged 10 times for 107 yards and kept two Michigan scoring drives alive with penalties.
Also return man Kyle Hudson fumbled away a fourth-quarter punt with the score tied 17-17 that set up Michigan's go-ahead score.
After signaling for a fair catch, Hudson dropped the ball at his own 13. Michigan senior Sean Griffith fell on it.
"I guess he just misjudged it," Zook said. "That was really the straw that broke the camel's back."
The turnover set up the Manningham's second touchdown, which came on a gadget play.
Wide receiver Adrian Arrington ran right on a reverse before tossing to Manningham open in the Illini end zone.
"I was thinking I was going to run it the whole time but then I saw Mario and I knew I had to throw it to him," Arrington said.
Illini sophomore Vontae Davis took the opening kickoff back 67 yards, setting up a quick 26-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Juice Williams to Jacob Willis.
A short punt and interference penalty by Illinois led to the Wolverines' first points, a 25-yard K.C. Lopata field goal that made the score 7-3.
Michigan took its first lead on a drive that, if not for another costly mistake, would have ended deep in Wolverine territory.
After back-to-back sacks of Henne, the Wolverines were forced to punt from their own 13. But Illinois' Joe Morgan ran into punter Zoltan Mesko, giving Michigan a first down on the penalty.
Ten plays later, Henne hit Arrington for a diving 8-yard touchdown and a 17-14 lead.
Henne hurt his hand on a first-quarter sack, and left the game twice. But he finished the game, completing 18 of 26 passes for 201 yards with an interception. Backup Ryan Mallett was 2-for-6 for 16 yards and an interception.
Carr declined to discuss the nature of Henne's injury, but said he let the quarterback decide whether he could keep playing.
"At the half, we were just hoping he would be able to return at some point," Carr said. "He played with a lot of discomfort."
The Illini sacked Henne and Mallett a combined four times.
But aside from a 90-yard touchdown drive in the second quarter, which put Illinois up 14-3, the Illini struggled to move the ball.
Carr said his team struggles in practice against the no-huddle, spread offense that Illinois runs, but handled it well during the game.
"Other than that [drive], our defense I thought adjusted to the speed of the game," Carr said.
Rashard Mendenhall, who came in averaging 119.9 yards, was held to a 85 yards on 18 carries.
Williams was 8-for-14 for 70 yards with an interception and one touchdown. For the fourth straight week, Zook gave backup Eddie McGee some time, looking for a change of pace. McGee was 6-for-12 for 46 yards.
"We just have to work from here," Willis said. "The game's over. We just have to forget about it."
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