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Miguel Cortez, Small Business Owner
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Quayle watches Murphy Brown but who would watch Qu Quayle/Bono in '96.
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Richard Hosking, Paranormal Investigator
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The electronic images become the real data of our experience in the culture of Real Virtuality, and the real Dan Quayle can pick a fight with the fictional Murphy Brown.
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Sam Hayden, Gothic Nightclub Owner
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But it occurred to me that it wasn't really between Dan Quayle and Murphy Brown, there were actually people there who were creating Murphy Brown, right?
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Chrissie Tanner, Homemaker and Mom
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Summary: Murphy Brown is a middle-aged reporter for the FYI News Network, where she must juggle her demanding career and her obligations as a single mother.
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David Rosenberg, Dermatologist
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In a speech a decade ago, then Vice President Dan Quayle criticized Murphy Brown, the lead character of a CBS sitcom of the same name, for choosing to bear and raise a child without a father in the home.
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Bob Greenberg, Congressional Candidate
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But when former Vice President Dan Quayle criticized single parenting in his infamous "Murphy Brown" speech, no one introduced legislation prohibiting issuance of birth certificates to single mothers.
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Abu Kashir, Gas Station Attendant
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The Senator making surprisingly astute observations about MURPHY BROWN and the famous Quayle incident.
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Keith Tennant, Factory Worker
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Brown opened the scoring with 4:00 remaining in the first half as she scored off an assist from sophomore midfielder Kitt Murphy (Richmond, Va.
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Shane Kelly, Bar Tender
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To close my review I would like to come back to Dan Quayle and Murphy Brown, and to what I see as the biggest failing of the books discussed here.
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Sasha Prevette, Kindergarten student
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Johnson was taking his time to do a great job I think he basically became a part of our family like the painter Eldon on Murphy Browns T.
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Jack Crawford, WWII Veteran
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Cast members of the "Murphy Brown" show did the media blitz, publicly laughing at Quayle for even suggesting that what people saw a fictitious TV character do would somehow influence them.
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Craig Leveaux, Blogger
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When Dan Quayle chastised the sitcom Murphy Brown for flouting traditional family values by having its lead give birth out of wedlock, he had a point: television had moved beyond the Nelsons to the new world of the Simpsons.
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