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Michael Phelps Makes Time for 60 Minutes

If he didn't rest before the Beijing Olympic games in order to get himself ready to be a worldwide hero and record-holder, he sure isn't resting these days as he prepares himself to be a Hollywood icon and marketing extraordinaire.

Last night, Michael Phelps was on 60 Minutes talking about everything Olympics with CNN's Anderson Cooper, who even challenged Phelps, who claimed at 205 lbs. to be the heaviest he has ever been, to a swimming race.

The conditions? Cooper would get to dive into the pool and freestyle (that is swim, not rap) and Phelps had to do the whole thing underwater without making a stroke. The winner? Well, it wasn't Anderson Cooper.

Phelps was on 60 Minutes for just over 12 minutes last night, showing his medals to the crew only when they asked to see them, speaking of his mother ("I owe her the world") and of his constant grind post-Beijing (Asked if he worries he's doing too much, Phelps told Cooper, "No, cause I'm having fun. You know, it's like [yawns], excuse me, you know, after I ...).

Maybe the most interesting information revealed was the news that 60 Minutes caught Phelps' agent, Peter Carlisle, showing the human dolphin an offer of $5 million ... that Carlisle rejected.
"Sometimes I get a little frustrated but in the long run I know why he rejected it and why he does stuff like that," Phelps said.

"These types of things were happening so frequently. The number of offers like that that just obviously didn't fit in. It was astounding," Carlisle said.

Carlisle's office receives about 300 calls a day regarding Phelps, but he's only looking for companies that fit Phelps' lifestyle.
Video of the interview is after the jump, fit with one or two goofy Phelps grins. Enjoy.

Manny Being Choosey: You Enter Politics

You decide that you want to help children and better the world in these trying times filled with economic strife, global warming, and too many bowl games. So you decide to serve the public interest and run for office.

You invent a new party and are now a "Mannycan," because mere parties do not define you. And you do some good things. While holding various offices in Southern California, you solve the traffic problem, eliminate smog, and rally Californians on a platform of "In-n-Out Burgers for everyone, not just the rich."

You've taken your success all the way to the Governor's office, where you defeat Arnold Schwarzenegger in one of California's closest elections in history.

You do such a good job as Governor of California that, in August of 2012, you get the call: Sarah Palin is running for President and she wants you, Manny Ramirez, to be her running mate. After thinking about it, you figure: "What better place to help people than as the Vice President of the United States?"

But the media is brutal during the campaign, especially when Anderson Cooper uncovers your secret past playing spies with Jonathan Papelbon.

The Palin/Ramirez ticket is trounced by the Barack Obama re-election bid. You're distraught.

"I just wanted to help people," you think to yourself. "I never meant to cause any harm to no one. You know, I could have made a lot of money playing baseball these last four years."

In the spring of 2013, at the age of 40, you latch on with the Independent League's Long Island Ducks, where you finish your baseball career in the shadows of strip malls.

THE END
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(Not sure how you got here? Start Choose Your Own Adventure: Manny Being Choosey in Free Agency from the beginning.)

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