Couldn't you just imagine the phone call from the Province?
Pratt: "No, no, no, that's not what I said. What I'm saying is this: ..."
Jenn Burke should be all over this

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Take the piss (out of someone) vb. British -- to mock, deride, poke fun (at). This vulgarism has been in widespread use since the late 1940s. The original idea evoked by the expression was that of deflating someone, recalling the description of a self-important blusterer as 'all piss and wind.'