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Old 11-12-2009, 09:30 AM
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Thumbs up The Race to the Chase

Martin to JJ: “It’s Not Over Yet” 11/10/2009

Johnson's misfortune at Texas allowed fan favorite Mark Martin to cut into the Championship points lead. Martin is within 73 points of the lead heading into Phoenix where Martin won in the Spring (photo courtesy: Chris Graythen, Getty Images Sport)
PrintEmail ShareChase Race 8 began with Jimmie Johnson holding a 184-point lead in the race for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Championship, to be crowned at Homestead-Miami Speedway Nov. 22. But when Johnson crashed on Lap 3 at Texas, Mark Martin seized the opportunity with a fourth-place finish that shaved 111 points off of his second-place deficit.

“In Phoenix we led the most laps and won the last time there,” Martin said in looking to Chase Race 9. “We can go head-to-head with them [Johnson and crew], and there’s no reason to think that we can’t run strong at Homestead[-Miami Speedway].”

“We were just in the wrong place at the wrong time,” said Johnson. “We didn't want this by any means, but we're still in a great position, and we'll go to Phoenix and race."

Amazingly, four drivers—Martin, Jeff Gordon, Kurt Busch and Tony Stewart—sit within 178 points of Johnson and the Nov. 22 Sprint Cup Championship in Miami. The maximum points a driver can make up in one race is 161 points, and Martin got more than two-thirds of that at Texas alone. He’s now got two more shots—Phoenix and Homestead-Miami—at shaking his four-times-a-bridesmaid label.

Next up, the Sprint Cup contenders head to Phoenix for Chase Race 9, where Martin will look to put another dent in Johnson’s goal of an unprecedented fourth consecutive Sprint Cup Series Championship, to be decided at Homestead-Miami Speedway Nov. 22.

Martin won at Phoenix and should have the edge over Johnson in Miami, as he long has been considered the top racer on the circuit at intermediate-length tracks and has a better career average finish at Homestead-Miami Speedway (12.0 to 13.6) than does Johnson.

"He might be the best there's ever been [on intermediates]," said team owner Rick Hendrick.

And this year’s Ford Championship Weekend at Homestead-Miami may be the best value in the history of NASCAR’s series-crowning weekend. Because fans can enjoy this year’s Championship finale on a $55 budget, thanks to FREE parking; an almost-to-good-to-be-true “Bring Your Own” policy; and unlimited re-entry for fans looking to restock their 6x6x12 cooler throughout the day.

DON'T MISS THE NASCAR HAULER PARADE

And on the track, this year’s Nov. 22 Sprint Cup Series Championship in South Florida has a ton to offer:

► 50-year-old fan-favorite Martin trying to capture his elusive first NASCAR Championship after 27 years of racing (and four Championship runner-up finishes)

► Tony Stewart seeking his third Sprint Cup Series Championship while also becoming the first driver/owner to win NASCAR’s biggest prize since Alan Kulwicki in 1992

► Jeff Gordon driving for a fifth Sprint Cup trophy for his mantle, which would put him just two behind all-time Championship leaders Dale Earnhardt Sr. and Richard Petty

► South Florida-resident Juan Pablo Montoya—the first non-American ever to qualify for the Chase “playoffs”—running among the Chase leaders in just his third full-time year in NASCAR

► And Johnson trying to make NASCAR history as the first driver ever to win four Sprint Cup Championships and separate himself from NASCAR legend Cale Yarborough, the only driver to win three straight Sprint Cup titles (1976-78)

Of course, there also will be 38 “other” drivers seeking the checkered flag at THE Championship Track’s 1.5 mile, 18-20 degree variable-banked oval.

And throughout the weekend, the party rages all around the Speedway. NASCAR Sprint Cup Champion Richard Petty will greet fans in an appearance at the Pit Road Box Seats. Legendary Champion Bobby Allison—of NASCAR’s celebrated “Alabama Gang”—will be on hand in the Coke Zero Fan Zone. And Gordon will make an appearance in the Premier Club.

In addition, with 2009 marking the 40th anniversary of man landing on the moon, Apollo 11 astronaut Buzz Aldrin and former Captain Jon A. McBride will be on hand to celebrate America’s space exploration. For tickets to all of these appearances, please visit THEChampionshipTrack.com or call (866) 409-RACE.

The stars of Hollywood also will be well-represented on Ford 400 Sunday with Tony Award-winning actress Anika Noni Rose of Dreamgirls fame singing the national anthem and Mike Rowe, host of Discovery Channel’s Emmy-nominated series Dirty Jobs with Mike Rowe, serving as Grand Marshal.

On Sprint Cup Sunday, fans can enjoy the ultimate on-track experience: the Pre-Race Track Pass (10 a.m. to 2 p.m.), which invites fans to walk the front stretch of one of the most technologically advanced racing facilities in America. Take pictures, participate in interactive displays, enjoy live entertainment and experience the thrill of NASCAR up close and personal. Pre-Race Track Pass’ers also will enjoy an exclusive look at the 2009 Sprint Cup Trophy, to be crowned Nov. 22 at THE Championship Tracksm.

The live-band lineup on the Coca Zero Entertainment Stage will thrill music lovers of all types with Ghost of Gloria (“The Evidence”), a four-piece South Florida modern-rock band that draws its influence from the Foo Fighters, Incubus, Sevendust and Tool. Also taking the stage will be Fast Ryde, a country-music duo whose debut single "That Thang" hit the U.S. Billboard Hot Country Songs chart earlier this year.

Last edited by ModSammy; 11-12-2009 at 07:54 PM.
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Old 11-12-2009, 07:15 PM
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Nov. 11, 2009

It’s a Dirty Job, but Someone has to Do It
Popular television host to be Grand Marshal at Nov. 22 Ford 400 NASCAR Championship race

MIAMI— Some NASCAR drivers have been accused of being dirty when it comes to on-track action. Their 3,400 pound racing chariots chew through tires while charging through dust and debris which makes cleaning the cars a dirty job. Well, the Grand Marshal for the Nov. 22 Ford 400 at Homestead-Miami Speedway knows a thing or two about dirty jobs.

Mike Rowe, creator and executive producer of Discovery Channel’s Emmy®-nominated series Dirty Jobs with Mike Rowe, has been named the Grand Marshal for NASCAR’s Sprint Cup Series Championship at Homestead-Miami Speedway on Nov. 22.

Rowe has spent years traveling the country, as an apprentice on over 200 jobs that most people would go out of their way to avoid. In addition, since 2007, Rowe has served as national spokesman for Ford and Ford F-Series Trucks, specifically.

He is currently helping launch the all new 2011 Ford Super Duty - featuring the all-new Ford-engineered, Ford-tested and Ford-built 6.7-liter Power Stroke V-8 turbo-diesel engine - through a series of online videos that demonstrate how tough the truck is.

"I'm very proud to be the Grand Marshal of the Ford 400 season-ending NASCAR race,” said Rowe, CEO of mikeroweWORKS.com, Creator, Executive Producer and Host of Discovery's Dirty Jobs and Ford Motor Company spokesperson. “I've had a lot of jobs in my life, but have never been a Grand Marshal. Never been a Grand anything, actually. I hope I can live up to the billing and give the drivers and the audience the best rendition of "Gentlemen, start your engines" that they've ever heard. Thank you to Ford and to NASCAR for this opportunity."

Unlike Dirty Jobs, which is entirely unscripted, Rowe will have a clearly defined role at this year’s NASCAR Championship race. As part of his duties, Rowe will give the traditional command of “Drivers, start your engines” to the 43 star racers of the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series before the start of the Ford 400. In fact, the notion of depicting hard work as noble and fun is central to his personal mission.

“Mike Rowe has worked so many jobs, what’s one more?” asked Homestead-Miami Speedway Track President Curtis Gray. “He epitomizes the NASCAR spirit; he combines hard work with a passion for American automobiles, so he is the perfect fit as Grand Marshal. We are lucky to have him, and after the Ford 400 I’m sure we can dig up a dirty job for him.”

It’s motorsports history in 2009 as Homestead-Miami Speedway becomes the first venue ever to host all of North America’s premier motorsports championships: the IndyCar, Grand-Am Rolex Sports Car and Firestone Indy Lights Series during the NextEra Energy Resources SPEEDJAMsm Championships; and NASCAR’s Sprint Cup, Nationwide and Camping World Truck Series during Ford Championship Weekend Nov. 20-22. Great seats for all 2009 Championships are available now by calling (866) 409-RACE or visiting THEChampionshipTrack.com.
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Old 11-12-2009, 08:37 PM
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Old 11-19-2009, 10:12 AM
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Grand Marshal of Ford Championship Weekend: It’s a ‘Dirty Job’

Mike Rowe, of Discovery Channel’s Emmy-nominated “Dirty Jobs,” to deliver most famous words in racing for Sprint Cup Championship at Homestead-Miami

(By Official Release)

MIAMI — Stock cars weighing in at 3400 pounds tearing around a 1.5-mile oval, trading paint and burning rubber, charging through dust and debris. Competing for motorsports’ ultimate prize—the Sprint Cup Championship at Homestead-Miami Speedway —can be a dirty job, so who better to deliver the most famous words in racing at NASCAR’s Nov. 22 Championship finale than Mike Rowe, host of Discovery Channel’s “Dirty Jobs”?

Creator and executive producer of the Emmy®-nominated series, Rowe will provide the Grand Marshal command of “Gentlemen, start your engines!” to the 43 Sprint Cup drivers competing in the Nov. 22 Ford 400, the headline event of NASCAR’s series-crowning Ford Championship Weekend. Having spent years traveling the country as an apprentice on more than 200 jobs that most people would go out of their way to avoid, Rowe is no doubt up to this task.

“I'm very proud to be the Grand Marshal of the Ford 400 Sprint Cup Championship,” said Rowe, CEO of mikeroweWORKS.com. “I've had a lot of jobs in my life but never once have been a Grand Marshal—never been a Grand anything, actually. So I hope I can live up to the billing and give the drivers and the audience the best rendition of ‘Gentlemen, start your engines’ that they've ever heard. Thank you to Ford and Homestead-Miami Speedway for this opportunity.”

“Most people who get this honor don’t get a lot of practice leading up to it,” said Homestead-Miami Speedway President Curtis Gray. “But Mike Rowe has made a career of stepping into unchartered waters, so I’m confident this one is going to go off quite well. But after we crown the 2009 Sprint Cup Champion, I will ask that he stick around to help sweep the grandstands.”

A national spokesman for Ford and Ford F-Series Trucks since 2007, Rowe currently can be seen in a series of online videos demonstrating the toughness of the recently launched 2011 Ford Super Duty, featuring the all-new Ford-engineered, Ford-tested and Ford-built 6.7-liter Power Stroke V- 8 turbo-diesel engine.

It’s motorsports history in 2009 as Homestead-Miami Speedway becomes the first venue ever to host all of North America’s premier motorsports championships: the IndyCar, Grand-Am Rolex Sports Car and Firestone Indy Lights Series during the NextEra Energy Resources SPEEDJAMsm Championships; and NASCAR’s Sprint Cup, Nationwide and Camping World Truck Series during Ford Championship Weekend Nov. 20-22. Great seats for all 2009 Championships are available now by calling (866) 409-RACE or visiting THEChampionshipTrack.com.
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Old 11-20-2009, 01:15 PM
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DOWNSHIFT: Gettin' dirty with Mike Rowe

autoweek.com

Mike Rowe has risen to fame as the host of "Dirty Jobs" on the Discovery Channel, as well as narrating other shows such as "Deadliest Catch," and for the past three years has been a spokesman for Ford. Editor Wes Raynal and interactive editor Dale Jewett talk with Rowe about what he likes to drive, his first car and his dirtiest job.

http://www.autoweek.com/article/2009...UDIO/911209994
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Old 11-20-2009, 04:44 PM
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HOMESTEAD, FL - NOVEMBER 20: TV personality Mike Rowe stands on the grid during qualifying for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Ford 400 at Homestead-Miami Speedway on November 20, 2009 in Homestead, Florida.



http://www.daylife.com/photo/0g5pdHUeTa4KW

Make sure you check out all the photos of Mike!
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Last edited by ModCharlie; 11-20-2009 at 05:11 PM.
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Old 11-21-2009, 04:01 PM
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Default FORD 400 Q&A with Ford Spokesman and Grand Marshal, Mike Rowe of “Dirty Jobs”

Press Release
Post a Comment November 21, 2009 – 5:49 pm



Discovery Channel's "Dirty Jobs" Host, Mike RoweMike Rowe, Ford spokesman and host of the Discovery Channel’s popular show ‘Dirty Jobs’, is serving as the Grand Marshal for Sunday’s Ford 400. He visited the Homestead-Miami infield media center to discuss his role and answer questions.

MIKE ROWE – WHAT ARE YOUR TOP THREE DIRTY JOBS? “Top three or bottom three? There’s no difference anymore. It’s hard to know. You can’t compare chipping out the concrete from the inside of a cement drum on
a concrete truck, to replacing a broken lift pump in a five-story silo and a waste-water treatment plant versus washing windows from a bosun’s chair at 500 feet in Hawaii. They’re all weird. What they have in common is generally people who are willing to do that thing, and not just willing to do it but have a good time. That’s the secret of the show. We sweat and we bleed and we cry, and sometimes we throw up, but we always laugh and, at the end of the day, we always enjoy a frosty beverage, so it’s not all bad.”

HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT BEING GRAND MARSHAL? “I feel grand. I kind of have a dysfunctional relationship with parades as a rule. In fact, in the first season of Dirty Jobs one of the jobs was parade float dismantler and after the Rose Bowl, they bring in these giant floats, and it rained that particular year, so all of those flowers and stuff were rotting on the things, so I went in and spent the day venting my frustrations, tearing floats apart. I vowed I would never go to a parade and wound up being the grand marshal at the smallest parade in the world two years later because so many people wrote me letters saying, ‘Listen, you’ve got parades all wrong. You should give them another chance.’ The shortest parade in the world is the St. Patrick’s Day parade down in Arkansas. It goes one block, but 50,000 people show up. I sat on a toilet and a guy dragged me on a tractor and I waved a plunger. That was my last grand sort of anything, so this is what you call a step up.”

IS THERE ANY DIRTY JOB YOU’VE DONE THAT’S CLOSE TO YOUR VOICE-OVER WORK ON DEADLIEST CATCH? “Danger, risk, those things are a big part of the show because people used to always equate them into the value of the job that gets done. Nowadays, risk gets mitigated a lot more than it used to, so when you see a show like Deadliest Catch or a job like high-rise window washing, it’s hard not to watch it because you’re seeing people who are still actually getting paid to assume risk, so that’s a big part of this whole genre. Deadliest Catch, nothing really comes close to it statistically. The first time I went up there I spent six weeks. I worked on the boats and I hosted the first season of the show and most everybody I knew got hurt in some way, some seriously, and there were six funerals I went to, so it’s hard to even really talk about it in terms of the unusualness of it because in the job, as the job is going on, it’s just a part of the job and those guys don’t think twice about it. Me, I think twice. My job is an apprentice, so everyday for me is the first day on the gig, so I live in a perpetual state of wonderness/hope/fear/regret/gratitude. It’s complicated being me.”

WHAT DO YOU SEE AS THE DIRTIEST JOB IN NASCAR BESIDES OURS (IN THE MEDIA)? “This room is not bad, actually (laughter). There’s metaphorical dirt. There’s literal dirt. I talked with a lot of the mechanics the other day and, obviously, they’re up to their elbows in all kinds of grease. But the fact is this is not a dirty job. There’s just way too much fun going on here for my brain to even make that particular association. I haven’t seen anything necessarily that would make me go, ‘Man, I wish I had my crew here for this.’ Although this morning I did take a test lap in the pace car and hit the big turn at about 140, and there might have been a dirty job in the passenger seat, but, again, a totally different story.”

WHAT PREPARES YOU FOR THOSE DIRTY JOBS? “That’s a great question and the honest answer is nothing. We really wanted the show to live up to the name reality – not the way it’s become associated with so much programming, but to really be an honest show. The more you prepare, in TV anyway, the less honest you can be. The more produced the program becomes, the less authentic it becomes. The more you rehearse, the more you study, the more takes you do, the more scouting – all of those things in a weird way are
counterintuitive to what I think viewers want to see, and certainly to the kind of TV that I would like to make. So the short answer to your question is none. I really want to – to the extent that I’m able – show up with the viewer’s point of view and experience whatever it is for the first time.”

A PARTICULARLY PUNGENT ODOR IS WHEN THE REAR END OF A RACE GETS BURNED UP. HOW DOES THAT COMPARE TO OTHER THINGS YOU’VE SMELLED? “How do I juxtapose a burning rear end with anything else? That’s basically your question? Top 10? You can’t compare it. For instance, there’s a place in Oklahoma City called Skulls Unlimited. I didn’t know what Skulls Unlimited was anymore than I know what the end of a rear end smells like when it’s on fire, but at Skulls Unlimited they take the head of a Bison, in fact they take the whole Bison and they put it into a boil and they keep it their until all the flesh is gone. You can’t compare anything on the planet to that smell. You really, really, honestly can’t and I tried. I went home and I wrote for three hours in my journal and I tried to capture the flavor of scraping and invisible thing off your teeth and then it still gets on your fingers and you can still smell it. I don’t know how to do it, but I also can’t compare it to going into Bracken Cave, which is outside of Austin a few miles – 40 million Mexican Free-tailed bats live in this cave. I went in with a bat biologist and the bats, they’re constantly crapping. They don’t stop, so you walk into three or four feet of guano and when you get to the end of the cave it’s up to your waist, and then you’re sinking in it, and in the guano live flesh-eating domestic beetles and they’re biting you, and the bats are continuing to defecate and urinate and give birth, so little placentas hit you and explode. So when you’re standing in the feces of another species slowly sinking and being eaten alive by domestic beetles while they defile you from both ends, it has an odor. It’s hard to put that in a context with the back end of a burning car, but it’s up there (laughing).”

HAS THERE BEEN ANYTHING TOO DIRTY? ANYTHING YOU SAID NO? “No. There have been some jobs that we passed on because we knew they wouldn’t pass muster with the network. Fundamentally, I want the show to be a celebration. It’s important. I want people who watch the show to understand that these are the jobs that are holding polite society together, and even though an embalmer
or a crime scene clean-up technician is important, it’s tough to go be a smart-aleck when there’s a body in the trunk. It’s just not the
show that I want to do, so I’ve passed on some that are just grim and dark, but I’ve never said no to a job because it made me uncomfortable. My job is to be uncomfortable and to try my best. And really the only honest way to pay a tribute to the people who do these jobs, which is also critical to the show, is to let the view see me try. When I’m in Bracken Cave sinking in that horrible soup of stuff and the bat biologist is with me, it lets the people who are watching realize that the bat biologist is in there everyday, and as bad as it might be for me in that little snapshot of time, this is what he does. So that’s an important thing to point out, to me. The show is not about succeeding, it’s about trying.”

ON YOUR WEBSITE MIKEROWEWORKS.COM YOU SAY IT’S ‘PATERNALISTIC, UNCHARACTERISTICALLY SINCERE AND PEDANTIC.’ TELL US ABOUT IT. “I knew that three or four seasons into the show I wanted to talk about more than exploding toilets and misadventures in animal husbandry and a lot of the things that make the show kind of fun and make it kind of a spectacle, so I suggested to the viewers that it might be fun to build a trade resource center online – a place that actively celebrated carpentry and steam fitting and pipe fitting and plumbing – these kinds of industries that essentially provide all the jobs we’ve been profiling – and I got thousands of links from the people who watch the show. From that, we began to build this modest site, and then people wanted to talk about work and wanted to talk about labor, so we set up some forums. And then people wanted to literally find jobs, so we tried to find some more useful resources that we could combine together, so right now MikeRoweWorks has been around over a year. It started on Labor Day and it’s been the thing that’s grown from the show that I’m most proud of because there’s a big conversation going on now nationally about what a good job is and what a good job looks like and what it means to actually work, so even though Dirty Jobs is maybe the simplist show in the history of TV, it’s got some very big fundamental themes in it, and it’s those themes that MikeRoweWorks is about.”

DO YOU SCOUT OUT THESE JOBS BEFOREHAND OR NOT EAT BEFORE YOU GO OUT THERE? “I try not to show up hungry as a rule on this job, or full, but, no, not really. In the first season when we were trying to find an audience and see if the thing had any
legs at all, I took an active role in making sure that the places we were going, that there was a there there. We’ve never really been
disappointed. All of the ideas for the show come from the viewers. Dirty Jobs is essentially programmed by viewers and hosted by the
people I meet, so it doesn’t do me any good to know any more than I have to, and I really don’t have to know very much. The show is more mission than story.”

YOUR RELATIONSHIP WITH FORD AND THIS WEEKEND IS A PERFECT FIT FOR YOU. “It’s been great. Ford was a perfect fit before MikeRoweWorks. As soon as this show became a thing, we sat down and thought, ‘Who looks at work the same way?’ And just made a
very short list of companies who would be good partners and Ford was at the top, and we began talking a little over three years ago and
quickly realized we were saying a lot of the same things just as a matter of philosophy. I started working with the Truck Division, and
continue to to this day – cars as well, parts and service – it’s an across-the-board relationship and they’ve been wonderful. Not only
have they sponsored and supported the show, but they’re sponsoring and supporting MikeRoweWorks, and for that I’m grateful and glad to be here.”

ANY HINT ON WHAT WE MIGHT HEAR TOMORROW? “It’s gonna be a surprise to me first and foremost. I don’t do a lot of rehearsal, so
I’m not exactly sure, but from what I’ve seen others do, the deliveries seem to vary between a sleepy kind of ho-hum to somebody having a seizure on the ground. Maybe somewhere in-between would be sensible. Maybe not. I’m not sure.”

I IMAGINE CLEAN-UP AFTER THESE JOBS IS PRETTY IMPORTANT TO YOU. TO WHAT EXTENT DO YOU GO THROUGH TO MAKE SURE YOU CAN USE YOUR HANDS TO EAT WITH AND NOT WORRY ABOUT GOING TO THE HOSPITAL? “First of all, thank you. I’m touched by the level of your concern. It’s good to hear that (laughter). Of course it’s important, but it’s also relative and it’s a concept that evolved over the last five years. After that shoot at Bracken Cave, that was very, very early in season one and I had stupidly worn into the cave my favorite pair of khaki’s – super-thick, army-issued khaki’s – and one of my favorite t-shirts. Now they were completely soaked in all the fluids I’ve already mentioned, but I was determined to salvage them, so I rolled them up and I put them into my carry-on and I got to Dallas and I got toward the plane. My bag was going through security and apparently it triggers something. They wipe that wand on it and they had trace elements of gun powder, so, of course, they stop me. Now it’s not gun powder it’s fertilizer, but there’s a link. I don’t know what they’re thinking, but they open up this bag and my khaki’s that had been soaked in all that bat crap and all the other stuff, it kind of exploded. It wasn’t a flame, but the stink on it filled the whole terminal. The FBI came over and the cops came over and everybody was looking at the bag like it was full of bat crap and it was, but I realized then that I could no longer travel the way that I used to and I would either have to embrace the idea of disposable clothes or find a cleaner that could take care of it. There are no cleaners, so I don’t where the same thing twice anymore – ever. I just leave them behind.”

- PCGCampbell for Ford Racing, Press Release

http://www.catchfence.com/2009/sprin...of-dirty-jobs/
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Old 11-21-2009, 04:14 PM
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Ford Racing's Facebook Album
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Old 11-21-2009, 04:22 PM
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Check out Behind the Scenes in the Scrap Yard for more updates and photos!
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Old 11-21-2009, 10:19 PM
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The Miami Herald - Sports
Saturday, 11.21.09

DIRTY WORK?

Mike Rowe has washed windows at 500 feet, replaced a broken lift pump at a water treatment plant and chipped clean the inside of a cement drum on a concrete truck.

So serving as a Grand Marshal for Sunday's Ford 400? Child's play. Rowe is host of the Discovery Channel show Dirty Jobs, but finds nothing filthy about yelling ``Gentlemen, start your engines'' in front of 60,000 or so at Homestead-Miami Speedway.


http://www.miamiherald.com/sports/story/1345914.html

You'll Do Great Mike!
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