erin andrews video peep
Erin Andrews' peep video has been hot on the Internet for days, but now the Erin Andrews video peep has hit the mainstream. ESPN obviously didn't want to report on the video, but other major news outlets aren't so shy now. Now the Erin Andrews
Erin Andrews Video Peep Airs on Mainstream Media
video peep, and its pictures, have reached actual news organizations like the New York Post, FOX , and CBS. As such, Erin Andrews' video peep, and the evidence of it, isn't just limited to Internet porn sites anymore.
The first controversy came when the New York Post turned Erin Andrews' peep video into front page news - and even reprinted some of the peephole pictures. Of course, they put a black box over Andrews' private parts, but still reprinted the images from the video peep nonetheless.
Erin Andrews tried to remove the peep video of her changing in a hotel room, and threatened legal action against those that filmed it - as soon as they find the culprit. The New York Post reported in their story that Andrews and her attorney would pursue charges against those that filmed her, and those that "published the material."
That would have to include the New York Post, since they put the Erin Andrews peep video pictures on their newspaper for all to see. Although the naughty bits were blurred, the Post may have done Internet searchers a favor.
Those Post readers in New York now no longer have to risk getting a computer virus by searching for Erin Andrews video peep pictures, or by searching for the video itself. They can just go to yesterday's New York Post to get their fill. However, since the picture isn't completely nude, they may keep searching and risk a computer virus anyway.
If that wasn't enough, they could have also watched FOX and Friends and The Early Show yesterday morning. Those news outlets actually aired some of the video peep, as well as posted some of the pictures, while discussing the story yesterday.
Perhaps it's not so surprising that FOX and Friends would play such a video, but CBS is more surprising - as their version of the story was even covered by a "science and technology correspondent."
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