The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz - Postgame Show: Cooper Flagg and the Flaming Pitchfork
Episode Date: October 31, 2023Cooper Flagg committed to Duke, and the visuals of him holding a flaming pitchfork are...something. Plus, a discussion on the movie theater experience thanks to Five Nights at Freddy's. Learn more abo...ut your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You're listening to Giraffe King's Network.
Stugots, it was not that long ago that Zion Williamson was Duke's third biggest recruit
in a recruiting class. This was when Coach K went from being all the things Duke was to playing the same game
Everybody else was with one and done. And since then Duke hasn't mattered the way that Duke used to matter
Even though Coach K had that farewell tour. It hasn't quite felt like that until perhaps right now when you have a recruit that is a great white hope with a wonderful name Cooper flag with two G's is very athletic. He is someone who's exciting people because he is long. I mean, he's not
Chet Homegren or Wemben Yamano. But he is those people other than those people. But he
is someone whose athleticism jumps off your screen. And what it is is athleticism. Guys,
got crazy good game too. And he looks a little bit even at the age 15 in the World Cup
He looked more
Filled out than some of the NBA comparisons you just made right now
I wasn't that familiar because it's typically following 15 year olds playing basketball as in my forte
But NBA players were were posting on social media about him
I think LeBron posted about him.
And what this kid did at the World Cup,
it jumped off the screen that this guy
is going to be a great, not a good, a great pro.
Now for the class of 2024, he's easily the number one recruit.
And he just committed with one of the more terrifying photos
I've ever seen for a lot of reasons.
First off, PTSD, white boy that can ball going to Duke, that's just naturally scary to me
as an ACC supporter.
He was going to Yukon, right?
Also, scary.
Yes.
But the photo shoot in North Carolina, if a white guy is coming at me with a pitchfork that's
on fire, I start running the other way.
And when you couple that with this dude,
who is built out more than most teenagers
at that position, trust me, he is terrifying.
And I hate that he's going to Duke.
It is such a perfect signing for Duke.
By the way, Rutgers has recruited very well at the time.
They have the number two and number three recruits
overall in that class, so keep an eye out for them.
But there are rumors that Miami recruits a little bit.
Thaia is going to jump to number two overall.
So you get to see those two guys do in battle in the ACC provided that the ACC is still
a thing next year.
You have to.
You have to watch his highlights on YouTube.
It's one of those things that gets shared in group chats.
He is an absolute baller, and it sucks that he's going to Duke,
but also I'm happy.
Why is he holding a flaming pitchfork?
Well, they're the Duke Blue Devils.
Duke Blue Devils.
The pitchfork historically is a weapon of the demon.
And a Blue Devil would like a blue pitchfork
that is on fire to torture you and that's what
Cooper Flag is going to be doing both with his game and quite literally a pitchfork
that is on fire.
Just don't do that in the South.
Just don't do that anywhere.
And we don't want him burning a flag either, right?
No, well, you did that and there's two Gs.
I know.
That's important.
It is his name. And he does look a little stronger than your average freshman coming into college.
He does look.
He does.
And he's got to fill out a little bit more.
Look, some of these guys that are a little bit on the lanky side that are that have those
dimensions.
They don't have this perimeter game, especially at that age.
But he's got handles.
I'm telling you, he's going to be a superstar in the NBA, which is going to
excite a lot of people, a lot of, all right, I'll just say white people.
Right.
And if you're a fan of the international, if you're a fan of the international game,
I know Dan's big on evolution of the sport.
And there's probably a bingo game out there from our listeners when they mentioned the evolution of the sport
But this is something really cool to see because for the longest time guys like Wembee Luca
Joker they're allowed to excel in places like Europe because they play positionless
They look at you they see your skill set and what are you good at and it doesn't matter if you're seven foot
If you can initiate offense if if you've got handles,
if you've got full court vision,
you'll play you like Yokech.
But here in the States, we're still kind of more married
to even though that's changing, little by little.
So kind of married to how tall are you?
All right, we'll put you on the inside.
Cooper flag and others that came before him
are signaling a sea change that the US is gearing up to be more
like Europe. Cooper Flag is a dynamite talent. Let's talk about a different evolution and
entertainment to got your movie theater experience is going to need to change for the movie theater not
to go extinct. One of the ways that you could keep it alive beyond Tom Cruise is
everything that Taylor Swift is doing with her popularity, but another way that
you can do it. And I don't think I saw this one coming. Five nights at Freddy's
the idea of turning video games, popular video games into movies. This one is very poorly rated, but that doesn't
matter because it's making money and it is not a good movie. I don't think even the
purchased rotten tomato critics are making it something that's above a 25. But young people
are attracted to this movie. It is not just young.
I mean, you can assume young people.
The nostalgic people.
It made $80 million at the box office.
Do you know how hard that is to do in this day and age?
And it's inflation.
That's like six tickets.
But especially when, and this may surprise you,
if I told you a movie made $80 million at the box office,
especially with Taylor Swift's movie out there
and Scorsese having a recent picture, you'd be impressed.
If I told you that it's not exclusive to theaters,
you can watch this movie from your home right now on Peacock.
It got released on a streaming service the same day. And that didn't stop people
that are familiar with the intellectual property to go out and spend money in a time that's
not great in our country to spend money on this movie specifically. And I fear that the
wrong lessons we talked about it a little bit with Mike Scherner and Los Angeles. I fear
that the wrong lessons were taken from Barbie in that surely this was a huge hit.
The move is let's buy up all the Mattel intellectual property and that's a secret to success.
Not great star power, not a great script, not great filmmakers that really transformed
that intellectual property into something special.
Hollywood's going to take the wrong lessons from that.
We see something like the last of us that goes out to much critical acclaim, huge hit on
Max.
And now, Five Nights at Freddy's, which is also, like the Last of Us, derivative of a video
game property.
And the move in Hollywood right now is carbon copy.
Let's do Last of Us.
Let's tell these stories.
They're more thought out because video games take very long to finish a story arc
Let's do mini series with these things limited run series
But now you're seeing with a movie that's going out on a streaming service on the very same day
There's a lot of money attached to these properties
And I guess I'm of a certain age and all I really play are sports games
I wasn't really aware that five nights at Freddy's
was a video game, totally missed it.
I learned through its success that it was a video game.
If you're doing that with video games that aren't part of the pop culture, lexicon, imagine
what you can do with major properties like red dead redemption and grand theft auto if
you were ever to turn that into something. You're looking at something that could potentially be the biggest box office smash of that year.
It's a crazy pivot in the industry.
One of the things that has happened,
I saw Christopher Nolan was complaining
about this the other day, saying that the cinematic experience
is something that should be about the story, not the screen.
And Martin Scorsese says the opposite.
He wants to make something that is a film,
even if films aren't as long as the one
that he's making with killers of the flower moon,
where that's nearly four hours to God's.
And I ask you this question sincerely.
Scorsese artist, he's a genius.
I, you know, he's one of the
first filmmakers that anybody would mention on greatest filmmakers in the history of film.
But I do wonder why someone like that wouldn't want his movie to evolve into something that
could be even more than three and a half hours. Could be four or five or six hours
if he were determined.
Dan, I'm not going to a theater for four hours.
You want me to go for five, six or seven?
I'm not going to have the band.
No, no, no.
What I am saying is limiting yourself
to only showing something in theaters
when clearly your audience has outgrown that.
The reluctance to evolve to where your audience is because you're
preciously protecting this thing that isn't any different to most people watching it
at home through a convenience.
I know you're saying to most people, I'm not even pushing back on that, but I damn it,
it is different.
It is special.
Maybe I'm too much of a romantic,
but there is something different about going to the movies
and experiencing something communally,
especially when it's a big epic picture
with a great filmmaker attached.
And I know that you cherry-picked Christopher Nolan
and it seemed as though with those quotes,
they were lined up in opposition,
but Christopher Nolan's been a champion
for seeing things at the silver screen. He released Tenet and now, up in opposition, but Christopher Nolan's been a champion for seeing things at the sober screen.
He released Tenet in now,
what in retrospect still seemed like kind of the middle
of the pandemic,
and I went at that time in my mask
to go see it the way that the visionary wanted me to see it.
I love going to the movies.
I love going on the movies by myself sometimes.
And the fact that the movies are catering
to your experiences
as times age, you get a recliner, you get drinks,
you get a meal, it's not a wonderful experience.
But they're not communal at this point.
That's usually like six people in the entire theater.
Allow yourself to spread out.
I mean, one guy's sleeping because he had too much alcohol.
I'm with Mike, but it's just that you don't,
you gotta be going like opening weekend to a popular movie to get that communal experience.
Most of the time, it's seven people in the theater.
I'm the, some of my favorite movie experiences
aren't necessarily sitting down,
watching them at my home with my loved ones.
It's seeing a crowd gasp at a theater.
It's seeing a crowd cheer.
It's seeing people emote,
and that's not something that watching something
at home affords you, and by the way, there is a whole industry that is really important to pop culture
to this country, to the economy, that we kind of have a shared responsibility and help
and keep alive. I am legitimately surprised because it's almost something that I didn't even
notice happening to me, Stugatz, but, and no one could have explained it to me eight years ago,
that I would absolutely want something that is eight installments
and don't want anymore when I'm at home, anything that's two hours.
And I can't even explain it as I'm talking to you, because it doesn't make sense to me
that I want something that I can come in and out of
that I don't have to invest the three and a half hours in.
At one time, I don't want the obligation of it.
I would absolutely, the weird thing about it
is I'm sitting here telling you that I would binge watch
killers of the flower moon if it was four episodes.
But if you ask me this.
45 minute episode.
If you ask me to sit down and watch,
I don't know how it happened.
It was a real, I'm confused by it.
I saw something on IG Reels that kind of reminded me
of like the binging experience.
And it's a guy going to a Mexican restaurant,
he sits down and he orders chips and salsa,
and the waiter puts down a big cup of salsa and 20 tortillas.
And the guy's like, why would I eat 20 tortillas?
Give me the tortilla chips,
and the guy just cuts up the 20 tortillas,
puts them in a fryer, and gives them to him like that.
He's like, that's more like it.
I would never eat 20 tortillas.
When that's what you're eating every time you order
a a bountiful platter of chips and salsa.
If I gave the choice to everyone listening to this
and said, you can watch this Scorsese movie
in four parts at home,
or you can watch an epic Scorsese movie from a
maestro toward the end of his career in a theater. What are most
people choosing? What's the majority of people at this point?
It's always been one that he's had trouble with.
I'm at home, Dan, to answer your question. Give me the series
at home. Where are you on this, Lucy? I like going go when it is empty. So I don't want the community aspect. I want to sit by myself and with the whole road,
nobody around me.
I would probably pick watching it at home though.
Yeah, give me an 1140 amp showing any day of it.
Perfect.
You know what I miss with all these digital projectors
and iMac screens?
I miss the sound of a projector starting up.
Do.
And I'm going to be able to see the whole thing
and I'm going to be able to see the whole thing and I'm going to be able to these digital projectors and IMAX screens?
I miss the sound of a projector starting up.
Dude, and the lights dimming.
The lights dimming.
The lights dimming.
The lights dimming.
The lights dimming.
The lights dimming.
The lights dimming.
The lights dimming.
The lights dimming.
The lights dimming.
The lights dimming.
The lights dimming.
The lights dimming.
The lights dimming.
The lights dimming.
The lights dimming.
The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. The lights dimming. I'm not. I mean, I saw it. It was Los Angeles, which is obviously Tinseltown, but there were plenty of
Everyone knows about Los Angeles, and it was a Jason 2 opening weekend, but I was in a sold-out theater for killers of the flower mood
on a Monday. There it is.
You can do that. That does make it a lot better. You can do it off of your phone.
You play that first and then you start the movie
and then all of a sudden a bunch of alligators
having sex with each other.
It gets candy and in here.
Why is it Tinseltown?
I don't, well, Tinsel is something that makes
something shiny, right?
I'd like, like, holiday.
I call it the city of angels.
I think Tinsel, I think of it as just sort
of a silver confetti type of thing.
Yeah, which is what I don't know.
I don't know.
Tintseltown.
Just because it's sparkly.
Yes.
You got it.
You are longing for 300 people in the theater and I think that most people listening to this
would prefer for people in the theater.
I think that it startles you when someone has a reaction.
When there's a big group, you're like, oh, these noises are normal.
It like startles you.
It's like, I don't even see the person
where that noise come from.
It all depends on the type of movie, right?
If I'm seeing a 10-pole summer blockbuster,
I want to experience it with a large group of people
because there is, yeah, comedies like that.
Sky movies get, I saw get out in a big theater
and it's one of the more memorable experiences that I had.
If I'm watching, was it a big empty theater?
That would be terrifying for a scary movie.
No, Mike, you're yearning for a day
that simply does not exist anymore.
I'm with you.
The community.
You don't nature of going to a movie is great.
You go see Karate Kid, you walk out,
and everyone's trying the crane kick.
I miss those days as well.
But you're not doing anything about it,
because you value the convenience
of being able to watch it at your home
But do it get so stone before these movies
I mean I guess I you know what I fold I have a losing argument
You guys I'm sure you see the appeal but not enough to actually do it
But it's a shame and it's something that I'm gonna miss for future generations. I just don't understand
for future generations. I just don't understand where Sacy's need to hang on
to this with just stubborn,
he's not gonna be compromised.
He came up through it.
He came up through it.
He was inspired by going to the cinema
for the vast majority of his career.
He got people to go to the cinema and experience
the movies romantically the same way that he did.
I mean, there is nobody on this planet more passionate about movies and
more and square-scanely I don't know what the longest movie ever made is but it is not normal and he doesn't have a lot of other
examples of the four hour movie
I'm gonna get you.