The Buffalo Bills have plenty of interesting content this year for their reporters. Whether it’s the positive impact their numerous offseason acquisitions will have, the elite status of quarterback Josh Allen, or the team’s realistic shot at winning its first Super Bowl in history, the amount of content is endless.
John Wawrow from Bills AP thought there was something more that needed his attention Monday. He was more worried about the fact that songs by female artists aren’t on the soundtrack that frequently accompanies team practices.
No, I’m not making that up.
Curious.
I just realized that it was the #BillsPractice music soundtracks rarely feature a woman act, if at all.— John Wawrow (@john_wawrow) August 22, 2022
This is something that I can assure you, no Bills reporter, nor any other human on the scene, even normal, would have cared.
Athletes can use soundtracks to boost their energy levels, mental focus and mood. Male and female athletes usually listen to music by the same artist (a bold concept I know). The fact that the Bills don’t often have female artists blaring on their speakers during practice should not be surprising, but rather expected.
Surprisingly, a lot of people on Twitter — a place where the average IQ of users is often not very high – called out Warwow’s nonsensical and irrelevant observation in some pretty witty and hilarious ways.
Whoa that’s a good point. I just discovered that Bills never had a woman player throughout their history. So nuts.
— eeessahhh (@issapunk) August 22, 2022
John, john is right. I really want to see josh Allen throwing bombs as flo milli blasts in the background.
— kelbin (@pissboymcgee) August 22, 2022
Is it possible to feel okay?
— Stephen L. Miller (@redsteeze) August 22, 2022
If you are trying to become a wakeful virtue-signaler, others will be using your illogical words against you. The idea that the Bills don’t include enough people because they choose their music choice is as absurd as it gets.