Bradshaw fumes on-air after being cut off by Fox host Charissa Thompson
Terry Bradshaw's on-air moment came during a quarterback panel when Charissa Thompson signaled for a commercial break as Drew Brees named his Mount Rushmore of NFL quarterbacks.

Terry Bradshaw fumed on Fox Sports on Sept. 22, 2025, when Charissa Thompson signaled for a commercial break in the middle of his remarks during a quarterback discussion on a Fox Sports program. The moment occurred as guest panelist Drew Brees was being asked to name his Mount Rushmore of NFL signal-callers and Bradshaw began to weigh in on the top quarterbacks of all time.
During the segment, Brees listed Joe Montana, Tom Brady, and Doug Flutie as members of his elite foursome, then Bradshaw started to offer his own view. Thompson, with an arm around Bradshaw, called for the break, and the camera pivoted away from the on-air talent as the screen faded to black. Moments later, Bradshaw could be heard reacting on air, saying, "I finally get to talk football and you go to break!"
Bradshaw, 77, remains a central figure on Fox Sports and is widely remembered as one of the NFL’s most accomplished players. A four-time Super Bowl champion and a two-time Super Bowl MVP, he was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1989. His broadcasting career began while he was still an active quarterback in 1980, and he has since become a familiar face for Fox Sports viewers who follow football analysis across the network.
The exchange occurred on a program in which Brees’ list of quarterbacks was one of several topics; the segment also touched on Bradshaw’s standing among the all-time greats and the ongoing debates over who should appear on any given quarterback Mount Rushmore. The moment has drawn attention for illustrating the live, unscripted tension that can surface during television broadcasts, where timing and production cues intersect with on-air personalities.
Eric Blum, a US sports reporter, wrote that the moment was captured during the broadcast and highlighted Bradshaw’s visible frustration as the break was called. The account, which originated from a syndicated coverage of the Fox Sports segment, notes Bradshaw’s storied legacy in football and broadcasting, reinforcing how his on-air persona continues to resonate with fans who remember his playing days as a Steelers icon and his post-career role as a broadcaster.
The incident underscores the dynamic nature of live television, where moments of interruption can become talking points long after the cameras stop rolling. For Bradshaw, who has spent decades in the limelight, the exchange is a reminder that even celebrated stars can be momentarily sidelined by production decisions during high-profile broadcasts. Fox Sports did not issue a public statement regarding the moment in the immediate coverage available, and Thompson did not publicly expand on the exchange in the coverage compiled from the program.
In retrospectives of Bradshaw’s career, the emphasis remains on his on-field success and his enduring presence in football media. The discussion around Mount Rushmore quarterbacks, including Montana, Brady, and Flutie, continues to be a focal point for fans debating the sport’s greatest players, and Bradshaw’s occasional on-air intensity is now part of the ongoing dialogue about television presentation and the way live sports analysis is produced.