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October 21, 2009
Oh, Dear: Fatal Attraction Situation at ESPN
An ESPN analyst, Steve Phillips, had an affair with a worker there, Brooke Hundley.
The affair ended and she went psycho on him.
There are a couple of pictures of Hundley that make her look okay, but most of them make her look like, uh, a dude.
Although she did a lot of creepy stuff, the creepiest was trying to Facebook friend one of Phillips' teenaged sons in an effort to pump him for information, and suggest that maybe Mommie and Daddy ought to get a divorce.
"She said that she had overheard my mom telling someone at my brother's baseball game that my dad really likes someone at work and is probably going to move out and that if I need to talk to anyone, she would be willing to listen because her parents went through the same thing," the boy told cops.
"She asked inappropriate questions about my parents, such as: Do they sleep in the same bed? Do you think they will be getting a divorce? Do they fight a lot?" the youth added.
He said the woman even tried flirting with him to get information.
"She told me that she had stopped by the [football] field before to see me [practice] . . . She often awkwardly, flirtatiously complimented me, saying that I was a very sweet and nice guy."
But the son said he grew angry when she referred to his mother as his dad's "baby mama."
"[She] would often make comments of how lucky my mom was to marry a guy with money and not have to work . . . The tone was very jealous," he said.
The boy added that when he didn't immediately respond to the writer, she would start bombarding him with messages.
"Countless times, she asked me for my home phone number and stated that . . . her parents needed to contact my mother immediately," the rattled teen said.