Seven years, several million dollars, a two-year prison sentence, and countless acts of charity later, we found this weekend that protesters still feel very strongly about Michael Vick's presence in their city and state.
At what point is a person's debt to society considered Paid In Full...
Nephew Tommy will be in Shreveport Saturday, July 12 at the Strand Theater in Michael Vick's Comedy Explosion. Listen to Hot 107.3 Jamz for your chance to win tickets!
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Post by Michael Vick's Comedy Explosion.
We all know the story about Michael Vick and how he landed in jail for a while. What we just found out is that he now owns a dog again. Is it too soon?
Michael Vick appeared on Piers Morgan last night, expressed that he wants to get a puppy for his kids. The Philadelphia Eagles quarterback was banned from owning any dog for at least three years, as terms of his sentencing for the dog fighting charges.
Players with legal troubles and quarterbacks head a list of the NFL’s most disliked players. The list, based on the findings of a public survey of NFL player perception conducted by Nielsen and E-Poll Market Research, indicates that players with legal issues, contract disputes or suspect character are viewed unfavorably by NFL fans...
A lengthy piece in the upcoming issue of GQ highlights Michael Vick’s mindset past and present and the aftermath of the dogfighting scandal that sent him to prison for two years. How’d he handle the sentencing and subsequent backlash?
“For a while, it was all ‘Scold Mike Vick, scold Mike Vick, just talk bad about him, like he’s not a person,’” he said. “It’s almost as if everyone wanted to hate
Michael Vick is lending his support to a congressional bill that will penalize those who attend animal fights.
The Animal Fighting Spectator Prohibition Act would make attending an animal fight a misdemeanor punishable up to a year in prison. Under the act, bringing a child to an animal fight could cost an offender up to three years in jail.