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I turned from spectator into reporter while watching the Pacers-Detroit game the night of Nov. 20, 2004, when Indiana had a shot at an NBA title before a season-killing brawl at the Palace. On a cold, cold night, I took my wife to the scene and gathered information for a fan-reaction story for USA Today due to the national interest.
And I couldn't find the printout of my online-only work from that era, but I did shoot some video of a very bizarre incident -- an incident that will rank among the most bizarre of my career. Brawl-meister Ron Artest, after he'd been suspended, gave an interview to the Today show to explain his side of things.
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He did it at the offices of Indianapolis-based Emmis Communications, where outside fans had gathered. And a radio station at the time had dressed one of its personalities as Piston Ben Wallace and put him in a dunk tank for Artest to try and sink. It's 16 seconds and truly strange.