Ah, yes. Episode 28,110 in the never-ending soap opera known as Brett Favre.
I've loved his effort on the field, and gushed about how he's been a difference maker off it.
I've agitatedly tolerated the yearly Tractor Watch, and just felt plain sad when the divorce between himself and the Green Bay Packers happened.
Now, after taking a day to let the events of the last four days happen in the "Benedict Brett" saga happen, I'm not sure how to feel.
Because I, and the grand majority of us on this planet, don't have the beyond-a-shadow-of-a-doubt-or-even-reasonable-doubt facts to give us true pause for feelings.
Some of us choose to take Jay Glazer's FOX Sports report for real.
Some of us choose to take Brett Favre's words in his press conference as gospel truth.
But having worked in the sports media, and having been on the other side of the sports media world as a public relations staffer whose job it is to control what information is being leaked to the public, I've learned to know better:
That we will probably never KNOW the truth of what happened as long as we live on this earth.
For example: Glazer's report says that Favre and then Lions-GM and President Matt Millen chatted for 60 to 90 minutes.
Favre, in his press conference, said it was no more than 25 minutes.
Do you have Brett Favre's cell phone records? The Packers certainly wanted them back in the Minnesota Vikings tampering allegation.
I don't think Jay Glazer has them.
I'm willing to bet that Brett Favre doesn't even have them, as I'm guessing Deanna sent them through the shredder after paying the phone bill.
The cell phone company has them, but my guess is, it's not a government-owned company, so we can't get those phone records available to us as media or the public.
More so, there's no way we could ever get an actual recording of what Favre and Millen said to each other.
Did Favre and Millen discuss hunting and tractors, as he put it in the presser?
Or did they talk in more detail about - as a hypothetical example - Mike McCarthy's tendencies to use key passes on 3rd and short situations in the red zone against a 4-2-5 defense?
And can we trust Brett Favre's word anymore?
At this point, considering the record of Brett Favre, recalling how he text messaged multiple national reporters this summer to tell them the report of him coming back was "b.s."
How do those text messages smell now, since he's playing again - in a Jets uniform, no less?
That's not the only instance of say-one-thing-and-do-another that we've heard out of Brett Favre.
If this was a courtroom, we'd have a hung jury or a case thrown out of court because of a lack of evidence and conflicting testimony.
Folks, we need concrete proof. And that proof - Brett Favre's cell phone bill - is probably buried next to Jimmy Hoffa in the Jersey swamps.
So to waste my time on espousing my feelings of anger at Brett Favre about this incident is no longer worth it.
Because we will probably never get the complete facts.