Shaquille O’Neal was blowing up the defensive game plan of his opposing teams on his play day.
Now he’s blowing the toilet.
Analyzing the compelling Nuggets-Clippers game 2 matchups in TNT’s “Inside the NBA” together with the rest of the crew O’Neal hastily made an upset exit.
The fear of his eyes and the idiosyncraticity of his walking meant one thing: cord brown. Bathroom emergency.
O’Neill jumped out of his chair and crossed the set without considering the show.
“Go ahead and keep talking,” O’Neill urged the rest of the crew as he drove off.
Also, while the sudden exit questioned whether the Big Man was OK, Ernie Johnson, Kenny Smith and Charles Barkley couldn’t contain their laughter.
Smith had no problems airing the almost-directed perpetrator.
“It’s the olive oil you’re drinking,” Smith said. “Listen, he can’t hold it. After 40 years old [years old]I can’t keep it anymore. ”
Smith revealed that O’Neill was drinking olive oil to “clean his gut.”
“He read it somewhere [it’s good for your gut] Drinking a shot of olive oil, Berkley added. “I have to do that for two weeks.”
“He’s going to miss a lot of airtime then,” Johnson replied jokingly.
Smith replied, “It’s cleaning his gut fine.”
The hilarious moment culminated with a full-scale replay with O’Neill tightening the bolts off the set. He accused Berkley of talking too much before the upcoming commercial break he plans to relieve his gut.
“Chuck, stop talking, finish your points so we can go to break,” he said as he returned from the bathroom.
“I’m sitting here and ‘Come close hell and hurry’, sorry, America. ”
Hysterical moments like these enraged so many people when it became clear that TNT would not renew “inside the NBA” for another year.
But fortunately for these fans, the show will return after this season. Only new homes from ABC and ESPN.
The popular crew handled another recent snuff when Charles Barkley asked if former NBAER Billy Ray Bates was alive, but O’Neill only misrepresented that he was dead.
Johnson had to apologise for their mistakes Monday.





