Can hearing a rooster crowing make hens go broody? Even if it's on TV?

Mother of Chaos and Rosemary and Thyme,
Thanks for your advice, and everyone for your comments. I'll look for the parrot water cup. I keep a small fan running in the area where the nest boxes are all day, every day in hot weather, to get rid of the smells, and cool it off. When it's cold I just put it on for an hour in the morning. During the day they usually only go in there to lay eggs. They sleep there all night, so that's where the smells are concentrated, even after I've taken the poop out. I ended up bringing her inside the air conditioned house in the big dog crate, with water, until I saw her drink. A couple of hours. She was much better after. But at night she was running scared after looking at the broody jail, so I told her she could sleep on the roost, and she went right up there and got on it. (Who taught them to understand English?). In the morning I found her in the nest box, but she hadn't been there long, because it was clean. She's loose eating right now, so I better go check on her.
 
Well, I think the broody drama is over. Thank you so much for all your help and advice. Every time I go out to look at Buffy (my Buff Orpington) (after 3 days in Broody Jail), she is out in the run walking around, enjoying her freedom. Everyone else had started laying normally again. I do catch her in the nest box in the early morning, but maybe she is just trying to start laying again. Everybody is happy. Last night I got home after dark and found them all roosting outside in the run, but I heard a noise of somebody scuffling around in the coop. My trusty flashlight revealed a nasty MOUSE, coming out of their nesting area, walking down the ramp like she owned the place! As Roseana Roseanadana used to say, "There's always something!"

I screamed so loud that the neighbors asked me if I needed help!
 

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Latest Buffy update: She's laying again! and everything is back to "normal". I decided it was time to do a deep "Annual Coop/Run Cleanup" since there were smells that didn't go away with routine cleaning. I removed ten 3 gallon buckets of loose material (old bedding and dirt, as well as the top six inches of "poo mud" that was caked into a hard surface (that looked dry on top, but wasn't. It doesn't get much air and sun in the under coop area. The ladies were pleased to be left out in "the pasture" (chicken tractor with a wire roof that I move around my back lawn) for three days during this project. It also gave me a chance to inspect for entry points for the uninvited (rodent) guest. I put down Sweet PDZ and let in air out for a few days, while I carried the ladies from pasture directly to bed (without letting them loose in the run.) I found two possible points of entry, which I fixed with hardware cloth and heavy rocks on top. Then I sprayed all the ground surfaces with Eaton's new Coop Odor Eliminator, and after it dried I put down Eaton's hemp bedding in the "deep litter area" filled the rectangular dust bath with new coarse sand (dug up from a yard project), and spread new "potting soil" (which is mostly just partially decomposed bark.) everywhere else. One more thing I did was get rid of all the small rocks which had been under the tree. The chickens throw it all around and it sometimes gets stuck in a crack between the patio and the run entrance and prevents to door from closing. I dug out the debris in the tree well, and put the small rocks there, covered with bigger rocks that I don't think the hens will be able to move.
Here's the result.
 

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Ok, I might have forced my virgin Buff Orpington into going broody.

Is it possible that the sound of a rooster crowing on TV could cause my virgin (as in no sex or any experience with a rooster) to go Broody?

I like to wake up very early before kids and pets can start making demands on me. I make a cup of coffee and and put the TV on very low on my favorite YouTube channels while I take my blood pressure. I did this for two weeks and recorded my results and the doctor said my readings were so good I could stop taking my blood pressure medicine.

It used to be Monty Don's Garden, but lately I have a new favorite, Country Life Vlog, a half hour of nature sounds and very little talk (and when there is it's in Azerbaijani) about a family doing old fashioned things around their farm. It's filled with the sounds of cows mooing, brooks babbling and yes, rooster's crowing. It's very soothing.

Since it's very hot here, this is the time of day when I open my windows and let the fresh air in. Well, about 3 days ago my Buff stopped eating, and I thought she had changed her egg color, because I would pull dark brown or green eggs out from under her. Then I realized there were no Buff colored eggs. She had stopped laying eggs and was sitting on everyone else's. She seems so depressed! I tell her gently that she can't become a mother until she's "been with" a boy...

In the morning when I remove the coop floor for cleaning I push her out and she will eat and and drink a little, and maybe scratch around a little. But then she goes right back to the nest and stays there all day. The one she likes is one of the two favorites. The others seem a little confused and alarmed by what she is doing. She won't even come down for treats like watermelon or cherry tomatoes in ice water. I worry about her in the heat, so I usually put a small bowl of ice water near her. I have to give them ice water around noon every day when the temp is between 90 and 102.

Any advice?
This is an interesting thought...I don't think that's how that works, though :(
 

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