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Still my favorite to wear around my Michigan buddies.

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scUM "buddies"?

What?
 
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Off to a great start on BTN for Big Ten Media Days 2017.

I think the press conferences started at Noon ET and the actual schedule if you were streaming/watching on BTN started at 1 p.m. ET (so you missed an hour if you were following according to a schedule to stream/watch).
 
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http://btn.com/2018/01/24/our-dave-revsine-explains-his-absence-from-btn/

Our Dave Revsine explains his absence from BTN
By Dave Revsine

The routine is the same every morning. I wake up, plod into the bathroom, look in the mirror, and try desperately to do something the average person does roughly 29,000 times per day. I try to blink. And every morning for the last 10 days, the result has been exactly the same. No matter how hard I try, I can’t do it.

Actually, that’s only half-accurate. I can blink my right eye fine – pretty well if I do say so myself. I can blink it to the beat of show tunes and rock anthems – even throw in a little Morse Code for good measure. Yeah, the right eye is quite impressive.

But, back to the issue at hand. The left eye. And the left eyebrow. And the left side of my mouth. Can’t move any of it.

After I spent a week battling a cold and a very odd headache, my face went numb on the night of Jan. 12, while I was attending a hockey game with my family. To say it was frightening would be an understatement. My wife and I initially thought I might be having a stroke, though a brief Googling of symptoms eased that fear. We were doing our “Tip-Off Show” the next morning in East Lansing, so, convinced that I wasn’t dying, I dutifully got into my car and began the three-plus hour drive. Right around the halfway point, I glanced at my numb face in the rearview mirror and noticed that my left eye wasn’t blinking. I pulled over, did another quick Internet search and diagnosed myself with a textbook case of Bell’s Palsy, a temporary nerve condition that paralyzes one side of the face.

Somehow, I made it through the show on Saturday. Some outstanding producing kept the camera from focusing on my malady. I drove back to Chicago, saw a doctor who confirmed my diagnosis, and began the process of trying to get better.

The issue, unfortunately, is that process involves sitting around doing nothing. Bell’s Palsy can take weeks to run its course. It can also take months. There’s no real rhyme or reason to which cases resolve the quickest.

Cont'd ...
 
Upvote 0
http://btn.com/2018/01/24/our-dave-revsine-explains-his-absence-from-btn/

Our Dave Revsine explains his absence from BTN
By Dave Revsine

The routine is the same every morning. I wake up, plod into the bathroom, look in the mirror, and try desperately to do something the average person does roughly 29,000 times per day. I try to blink. And every morning for the last 10 days, the result has been exactly the same. No matter how hard I try, I can’t do it.

Actually, that’s only half-accurate. I can blink my right eye fine – pretty well if I do say so myself. I can blink it to the beat of show tunes and rock anthems – even throw in a little Morse Code for good measure. Yeah, the right eye is quite impressive.

But, back to the issue at hand. The left eye. And the left eyebrow. And the left side of my mouth. Can’t move any of it.

After I spent a week battling a cold and a very odd headache, my face went numb on the night of Jan. 12, while I was attending a hockey game with my family. To say it was frightening would be an understatement. My wife and I initially thought I might be having a stroke, though a brief Googling of symptoms eased that fear. We were doing our “Tip-Off Show” the next morning in East Lansing, so, convinced that I wasn’t dying, I dutifully got into my car and began the three-plus hour drive. Right around the halfway point, I glanced at my numb face in the rearview mirror and noticed that my left eye wasn’t blinking. I pulled over, did another quick Internet search and diagnosed myself with a textbook case of Bell’s Palsy, a temporary nerve condition that paralyzes one side of the face.

Somehow, I made it through the show on Saturday. Some outstanding producing kept the camera from focusing on my malady. I drove back to Chicago, saw a doctor who confirmed my diagnosis, and began the process of trying to get better.

The issue, unfortunately, is that process involves sitting around doing nothing. Bell’s Palsy can take weeks to run its course. It can also take months. There’s no real rhyme or reason to which cases resolve the quickest.

Cont'd ...


just read this. hope he gets better soon!
 
Upvote 0
http://btn.com/2018/01/24/our-dave-revsine-explains-his-absence-from-btn/

Our Dave Revsine explains his absence from BTN
By Dave Revsine

The routine is the same every morning. I wake up, plod into the bathroom, look in the mirror, and try desperately to do something the average person does roughly 29,000 times per day. I try to blink. And every morning for the last 10 days, the result has been exactly the same. No matter how hard I try, I can’t do it.

Actually, that’s only half-accurate. I can blink my right eye fine – pretty well if I do say so myself. I can blink it to the beat of show tunes and rock anthems – even throw in a little Morse Code for good measure. Yeah, the right eye is quite impressive.

But, back to the issue at hand. The left eye. And the left eyebrow. And the left side of my mouth. Can’t move any of it.

After I spent a week battling a cold and a very odd headache, my face went numb on the night of Jan. 12, while I was attending a hockey game with my family. To say it was frightening would be an understatement. My wife and I initially thought I might be having a stroke, though a brief Googling of symptoms eased that fear. We were doing our “Tip-Off Show” the next morning in East Lansing, so, convinced that I wasn’t dying, I dutifully got into my car and began the three-plus hour drive. Right around the halfway point, I glanced at my numb face in the rearview mirror and noticed that my left eye wasn’t blinking. I pulled over, did another quick Internet search and diagnosed myself with a textbook case of Bell’s Palsy, a temporary nerve condition that paralyzes one side of the face.

Somehow, I made it through the show on Saturday. Some outstanding producing kept the camera from focusing on my malady. I drove back to Chicago, saw a doctor who confirmed my diagnosis, and began the process of trying to get better.

The issue, unfortunately, is that process involves sitting around doing nothing. Bell’s Palsy can take weeks to run its course. It can also take months. There’s no real rhyme or reason to which cases resolve the quickest.

Cont'd ...

Damn. Hope he recovers soon. Had a couple acquaintances who didn't get full recovery and it was very uncomfortable for them.
 
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