Just doesn't care. Still goes to Brewers games. Still sits in that Row 1, Seat 5 seat. And now, thanks to a Milwaukee Journal Sentinel fluff feature , commentors are destroying her on a variety of subjects.
Of course we weren't glued to the MLB. The big news: shirtless guy was tweaking his nipple. Yes, we'd love to show you the video, but MLB goons have that lock on our YouTube account so you get screencaps of nip tweaker. All we heard for like 18 hours from Milwaukee Brewers fan was that our Front Row Ashley marketing campaign was "lame" and a "complete failure" wouldn't be on TV in Wisconsin. Blah, blah, blah. And then we went out and put Ashley in the infamous seat usually occupied by Front Row Amy.
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About MUZU is a trendy magazine for trending topics. That's her right above the dot-com in the Brewers ad to the left of the umpire.
She says she loves the Brewers and swears she never set out to be noticed. Men being what we are, it just happened. Sports radio started talking about this striking brunet last season, and then sports website Deadspin wrote about her. Front Row Amy was born. Now she has a Facebook page with that name that has more than 12, fans, and another 8, followers chat with her on Twitter BrewerGirl Last month, a guy dressed like Amy with a black wig, stuffed-in breasts and cleavage lines painted on his chest sat in her seat at one of the games she skipped.
That spawned his own Front Row Andy page on Facebook. It's surprising, to me at least, to learn this sudden celebrity is a wife and mother of three - a son, 12, and daughters, 9 and 7 - and that she drives to and from each game from her home in Oshkosh, where she works with her husband of 18 years, Russ, in a property management business.
Amy never cared about baseball until she discovered the Brewers during the season. She found that going to games made her feel like she was part of something big, and she learned that she enjoyed it most when she went alone. I could sit here and keep score and not have to talk to anybody. I could get absorbed in the game," she said. My interview with Amy at her primo seat before Monday's game was interrupted repeatedly by guys wanting their picture taken with her.
Dressed in Daisy Duke shorts and an off-the-shoulders white top, she happily posed with each one, including half a dozen members of the state champion Sun Prairie Cardinals high school baseball team. They were honored near home plate before the game, and then they headed right for Amy. Never mind that she's old enough to be their mother.
In TV land, the camera in center field that shows each pitch softens her 43 years and bathes Amy in deep-tan hotness that obviously works even on teenage boys, not to mention middle-age guys I know who can't stop talking about her. They are attracted to the looks thing," Amy said when I asked if she's flirting with us via mass media.
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