The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz - PTFO EXCLUSIVE: Why Everyone Says "Let's Gooooooo!": The Lost History of a Phrase, from Shakespeare to Taylor Swift
Episode Date: October 10, 2023Quarterbacks yell it. Gamers revel in it. Bros text memes and hashtags of it. Even Travis Kelce's girlfriend loves it. How did a simple phrase transform from a Jumbotron clap-along into such a ubiquit...ous exclamation? With apologies to Tom Brady and Lil Jon, correspondent Jeremy Taché searches for the real GOAT of "Let's Go!" Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to Pablo Torre finds out I am Pablo Torre and today we're gonna find out what this sound is
Tom Brady you and I split screen and let's let the nation decide who is the goat of the
Right after this ad
You're listening to Giraffe King's Network.
So, for the past couple of weeks, Cortez, we here inside the PTFO newsroom, have been
grappling with a particular dilemma.
So there's a team of journalists out there and I see them. They are working on something all of them together.
And what it is is they are working on why you've worn the same blue jacket every single time we've taped.
It is a cardigan. It's not a jack. Been over worn. It has high-thread count.
You have not taken it home to wash it once.
It is naturally resistant because of those fibers.
Do you have any other cardigan or sweater type of outfit?
I have many cardigans.
I have a lot of knitwear.
That is not the dilemma.
It's not apparent.
No, if you watch this show.
The dilemma we're here to discuss and how dare you.
How f**king dare you.
It's a nice cardigan, I'm sorry, but you do wear it a lot.
It's all I'm saying.
The dilemma is far more pressing.
This sweater does not smell.
The dilemma is how we're supposed to f**king cover Taylor Swift, right?
The thread bear sweater of American media these days is talking about Taylor Swift because we should just
say it for people who have been, I guess, in a coma for weeks now, Taylor Swift is dating
Travis Kelsey, and it is the most overcovered, oversaturated, it's most overdone story in
all of American culture.
Bro, I apologize.
I was not listening to anything you just said because it just hit me like
you in the cardigan. It's not unlike like a doctor like putting on like a lab coat or whatever it is
they wear and they're like, Oh, now the doctor and they go in and whatever. You put that on when you
walk in here like, I am now a journalist. I'm just trying to make my parents proud of me. They're not.
proud of me. They're not. But I was contemplating, I was contemplating it truly like how are we going to do this differently? How are we going to stitch together our own beautiful, high
thread count quilt that addresses the Taylor Swift story. And so I did notice one thing. 11th play of the drive. My home's lost again.
So there it is.
A touchdown to Kelsey.
This may be the first time in history of the patch of the home is using the most popular player
in the world.
But Taylor swooped in the house.
Travis Kelsey says, oh, baby.
Now, if you are not watching on the draftings King's Network or on YouTube, what you cannot see there
is Travis Kelsey, yes, Kansas City Chiefs, Tide-N,
scoring a touchdown.
What you cannot hear there anywhere
is what Taylor Swift is very obviously saying
on live television in front of all of America
behind the glass of a luxury box
right next to Donna Kelsey, which is let's fucking go.
the glass of a luxury box right next to Donna Kelsey, which is let's fucking go. And this
mostly just went like unremarked upon, except by certain people. Here you have Taylor Swift, probably just met Travis Kelsey's mom for the first time.
They're at the game last week, and she's going, let's let thing go.
Well, but never in front of her. But Travis Kelsey said that everybody in the booth
that she was sitting in, his family,
everybody said that she was so lovely.
Lovely, until I'm sorry.
If I heard that, and my son was dating a girl,
has a mouth like a teamster, that's it.
Oh!
Like a teamster.
Bro, what's wrong with this Fox News guy?
Like, let's fucking go is everywhere.
I've seen it in sports for a year.
I see it everywhere.
I see it myself.
Yes, and that part, what you're saying here,
preventative aside, that's the thing that hit me about this.
Because you're completely right.
Everybody everywhere, all of the time,
all at once seems to be saying,
let's go.
Quarterbacks say it.
College kids say it. I've seen Formula
One drivers say it. NBA players say it. Teachers say it. Gamers say it all the time. What
I wanted to find out is something that I have long been curious about myself. Why? Why
is everyone saying this same phrase? As if this is a meme that they're all forced
to retweet? And it turns out you're not the only one with that question because when we
put out the call for voicemails to our great listeners, it turns out one of them had
a very similar question to that.
Hey Pablo, it's David from DC. I was hoping to get the definitive story about how the phrase, let's go, became the
defacto response to a big play sports game.
Everywhere I look on TV in local sports, that's all that's being said when something happens.
It has just become the go-to phrase for all athletes when they do something happens. It has just become the go to phrase for all athletes
when they do something big.
How did that happen?
Where did it come from?
Thanks, bye.
I genuinely love our listeners.
Right, I do too.
Call 51385 Pablo.
That's a lot more questions.
Please, because that was amazing.
The assignment inbox is open, as I'm calling it.
But all of this really did feel like the universe itself
was calling us to investigate this question, right?
The question of who deserves the most credit
for this phrase.
And the good news is that I knew exactly
which PTFO correspondent that I needed
to go on this assignment.
I'm thinking of the same guy.
Yeah, chair bear.
Oh, God, Fort Bear.
Yeah.
Shhh.
Shhh.
Shhh.
Shhh.
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Shhh.
Shhh.
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Shhh.
Shhh.
Shhh.
Shhh.
Shhh.
Shhh. Shhh. Shhh. Shhh. Jeremy Tajjay, we meet again. How old are you?
I'm 28, Pablo. Just even the voice is already giving me PTSD. So you're 28 years old, you're
very young, you forced me to reckon with my mortality, and you're bringing me back into the time machine because the last time I saw
you Jeremy, or at least the time that I cannot forget, it was April, the Miami Heat were
playing the Milwaukee Bucks in the NBA playoffs, and I was hosting, sitting in Dan's chair, trying to direct the conversation among you,
Miami Heat Propagandists.
And in that conversation, suddenly,
I heard you say this.
Let's go!
In that scenario, I was just trying to add a
rightful punctuation to one of our beloved heat propagandists
in Ryan Parakeet Cortez.
Someone who obviously is beloved here
at Pobletori finds out.
And to me, I felt like he just needed some support.
To me, you felt like Wiley Coyote
over the canyon realizing that,
oh yeah, this is gonna go south real quick.
Let's go!
And we can play one more time, actually, just for,
you know, just thoroughness.
Let's go!
The reason that I was saying it to begin with
is because I was sort of following
what athletes have been saying in moments like that.
Forgive me, what athlete were you channeling there specifically?
I think it would be unfair to name any specific athletes in this scenario.
I don't want to throw them under the bus.
Well, there are lots of suspects, so that's a thing about this story, is that you start
to just peel the first layer back and you're like, this is omnipresent.
Well, there are a ton of options, right? Like you have Nick Foles in the 2018 Super Bowl for
the Philadelphia Eagles.
Let's go! Let's go!
Woo!
Yifla Braun James, who will say it before games.
Let's go!
Yes, I've heard Formula One drivers say it after their races.
Let's go!
Let's go!
Yes! Which means that both pre-game and post-game athletes are using this, right?
It kind of means everything, it's kind of like f*** at this point.
It's a word that gets deployed to mean all sorts of things.
It's a call to action, as well as a celebration of the action you already had successfully
completed.
Yeah, it's Shalom, essentially.
No, it's one of those words where I don't know.
I guess the part with Let's Go that's confusing to me is that I don't really remember it
existing growing up.
And you pointed out, I'm super freaking young.
So it's not like there's been that much time for all of these phrases to evolve.
And for us, elder millennials, Jeremy, we are similarly confused.
All we sort of know now is that the word cloud of American life, right?
In 3,000 point font is let's go. And it's there now, it's hanging over us. And so
this is why I came to you with an assignment, an actual journalistic task for a guy who
is a led into the air.
How did we get here?
Like how does human speech in this way go viral?
Who was the patient zero of this movement?
That's a great question, and yes, I did spend weeks reporting this.
I mean, we spoke to other journalists, we spoke to people within sports, people within entertainment.
I mean, really, it kind of went across the board.
And this goes beyond the standard jumbo-tron calls of like, let's go Yankees.
Or let's go Metz.
And I think that's the part that's kind of crazy.
We were just talking about it, right?
I don't remember it growing up.
And I think that's my first takeaway from going down this rabbit hole.
Wait, wait, wait, wait.
So you went down the rabbit hole and you didn't find anybody there?
I mean, if you're pulling America, the obvious and easy patient zero would be Tom Brady. Are you ready?
Let's go!
Let's go, get the go!
Let's go!
When you see that, you're like, oh right, of course.
Of course, every bro in a quarter zip sort of fleece, they're cosplaying as Tom Brady,
yes.
Well, and that's the part, right?
Tom Brady's supposed to be Mr. Let's Go.
You know, he's been using this sort of elongated version of Let's Go, the one that we're
talking about, the scream, the guttural version of it.
Since at least 2015 at the Patriots victory parade, let's go! a lot of the scripted scripted the scripted scripted the scripted the scripted scripted the scripted
the scripted scripted the scripted
the scripted scripted the scripted
the scripted scripted the scripted
the scripted scripted the scripted
the scripted scripted the scripted
the scripted scripted the scripted
the scripted scripted the scripted
the scripted scripted the scripted
the scripted scripted the scripted
the scripted scripted the scripted the scripted the scripted scripted the scripted the scripted You've got to create a lot of different emotion to heighten your sense of awareness and focus.
Like for me, anger was good.
Anger was good because it was motivating.
The more I could create an enemy, the more I wanted to go and kill those guys.
Now, I knew I was going to kill them physically.
But man, if I could just, what did they say?
You know, and what did they look like?
They disrespect me at all, you know, and did that.
So say something.
Like those are the little, little, little things
that can get me right in the emotional frame of mind
that when I ran out of the field and I said,
let's, can go.
It was really, let's go kick some ass.
That's what we were doing.
That is the sound of people applauding a sociopath.
I mean, that's what that sounds like.
He literally was like, let me figure out what it's like to channel a serial killer.
I'm not gonna do it, but I wanna get it.
That's right.
So who inspired Tom Brady to say this then?
Like in your investigation, is everyone just like
seeding intellectual property rights to that dude?
No, absolutely not.
Like that's not gonna happen.
And we'll get to the guy that really thinks
he may very well be behind it.
But I can tell you that it's not Taylor Swift
as someone who is a resident swifty
around these parts of metal art and media. She does, hey, she does have a song, an unreleased song. Mind you, called Let's Go.
I need to stop you there, not just because I am worried that I don't know enough Taylor Swift's
stuff to actually be a working member of the sports media today. But also because I do want to turn our little sports journalism enterprise here into something of a trademark
office. Because the question we're circling is like who owns this phrase, right? Like,
what's the standard here that we're using to determine who Mr. Let's Go or Mrs. Let's
go would be?
So to me, standard number one was pretty simple. Let's go had to be organic. It couldn't
feel forced, it couldn't feel performative. It's got to come from that deep place inside
of you. That guttural place that this is not something that I have planned. So like listening
back to some of your previous episodes of Pobletory finds out, Russell Wilson started all of
a sudden making his catchphrase, let's go,
because he heard that Taylor Swift
has been saying it, well,
that wouldn't necessarily apply.
Right, right, right.
So Russ saying, by the way,
Russ saying a lot, go hawks in Seattle,
that doesn't apply either,
because again, the letter of the law
there, not exactly the same thing as,
let's go.
Right, because for standard number two,
the letter of the law wasn't enough, right?
We wanna talk about the sort of spirit of the rule
as we continuously discuss how this is sort of
an emotional thing, I think,
the spirit of the law matters here.
And so the phrase, let's go,
it's really been around forever, but it's usage,
it's spirit, That's distinct.
You need like, I don't know, at least seven owes it.
Right, right, right, right.
So again, not like this.
Let's go.
But like even more owes, even more, uh, Hutzpah, I believe.
So what's the lineage here?
Like where does this origin story actually begin?
Even the great all-knowing Wikipedia, uh Wikipedia struggled to get all of the details right here.
For example, Wikipedia claimed that there was a resurgence of a 70 year old chant to
a, let's go, go, go, white socks that led to the 2005 white socks playoff run.
But 2005 absolutely would pre-date all of the internet stuff we're describing right
now.
Yeah, and that's part of why this story is wrong, because we reached out to catcher AJ Przenski,
who was on that team,
a classic, a classic name in Major League Base.
Of course.
And he told us via DM that that song in 2005 was not really as much of a part of the White
Sox World Series run as Don't Stop Believe in by Journey.
When you talk about the real origin story of this phrase, it goes all the way back to
the late 1500s.
It turns out that Shakespeare had a line in a comedy of errors.
Now let's go hand in hand, not one before another.
Yeah, listen to that.
Now it does occur to me that you are a little more Shakespeare than Tom Brady.
Jeremy.
Yeah, more Shakespeare than Tom Brady, I think is how anyone who knew me in high school
also probably would have described to me.
But a writer for Slate who we spoke to Luke Winky, he's also obsessed with this.
He traced that that Shakespeare line drew straight from there all the way to 1942. And that's when there was
a recruitment poster for the US Navy that read, fight. Let's go join the Navy.
Yeah, now we're getting, I think, significantly more macho in the evolution of the phrase.
Yeah, well, the writer said the same thing and he said that the militarization of this
rally cry kind of gave it this communal masculinity in a sense.
And so this phrase, just to recap here, goes from Shakespeare to the US Navy, out to like
locker rooms, to stadiums, to the sidelines, to where.
Jukeboxes across America in the 1960s, Pablo.
Do you remember this clap?
Of course, of course.
I found out where it comes from.
It's 1962's Let's Go, parentheses pony by the routers.
And I was legitimately really excited to find this song because I think as so many
sounds that initially come from songs, no different than Sevenation Army, which has become
an arena staple.
I don't think I realized that that clap and let's go came from musicians, came from a song.
This is something I always just assumed was concocted for stadiums.
And so the idea that this came from one place was really exciting.
Right, well now that I'm thinking about like the musical catalog here, there's that, and
then there's the Ramones. Right, and that was in 1976. And then the cars, the New York Metz had a song. Do it.
[♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪
Now this is the video for Let's Go Metz.
[♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪
This is essentially a hype video for the New York
Metz in the middle of their season in 1986.
A season that was going incredibly well, obviously led to them
winning the world series and halfway through they had this unbelievable idea to create
a music video around a song called Let's Go Mets that had everyone chanting, Let's Go.
So this thing, as someone who grew up, was born in the city in New York City in 1985.
This thing, when I watch it now for the podcast audience, what you're missing on our YouTube
channel is essentially like a giant singing pile of cocaine.
Even watching it behind the scenes video on the VHS that we were able to find here,
which that was a journey in itself.
The energy behind it is crazy
because you have, you know, players juggling baseballs
for the camera, blowing bubbles,
and there's all sorts of extra shots that they had to get.
Oh, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go.
Who the f*** are the people behind this?
Ha ha ha ha. So we spoke to the ad man who commissioned the video as well as the jingle writer who made
the song.
And he also directed the video.
And what they told us was a ton of different information about what was going on behind
the scenes here.
First and foremost, the ad agency that was working with the Metz initially,
they reached out to Billy Joel,
tell John to Stevie Wonder,
and ultimately, they settled for someone
who they had already worked with on previous jingles.
So the ad man gives one direction to the jingle man.
It better be f***ing great.
That's just good coaching. It is good coaching. It is
good coaching. And the jingle guy told us that, and this is a direct quote, what can people
get their head around with six beers in them? And so that's sort of where this simple,
let's go, let's go, let's go starts up. You know, he had no comment. What were they on, Jeremy?
What were the players in the video on?
He had no comment about whether or not the Mets who were notorious party animals were
particularly on anything during the video shoot, but he said that the energy was up.
It did sound like a lot of fun on set.
I mean, there were notes of Ron Darling playing air guitar on a baseball bat.
Keith Hernandez sat the director down and told them that initially the players were really
excited about the song and making the video because they all thought they were going to
be rock stars and make a million dollars a piece for some reason, which they did not.
And what the director told me specifically is, quote, they all wanted to be rock stars.
That was the level of childhood naivete.
So this is what's going on is you have all of these players behind the scenes.
It's amazing.
But this director, I imagine that this director must look upon this work as the greatest
of his entire career that...
Well, he also wrote the jingle for the Miyaw Mix commercial. It could not have been a better thing for him to have done than write the Miyaw Mix commercial.
Like it's perfect.
I am reeling now at the arc that you're tracing here, right?
So we go from William Shakespeare to Miyaw Mix Guy. And now, as I assess the English language Jeremy, and you are
a crypto-cuban, you're quietly a Cuban-American.
Crypto-cuban is great. Crypto, I have to do phrase I'm going to use all the time.
I'm thinking of the Spanish language for that reason, right? And as a person who knows Spanish and marvels at how to do it better, I want to point out
that like, Vamos, Vamos is a thing in Spanish.
Vamos literally means let's go.
And that's been a thing forever.
And Vamos, when I think about what that word means versus what Miel mixed guy had the
meds doing, right?
Like there is an edge, there's an
edge to Vamos, there's that Brady,
the Tom Brady animosity to Vamos.
And so which of the English
speaking artists that you surveyed
here, who came closest to sort of
replicating that specific quality?
Well, for that, I believe there's only one answer.
The modern barred himself.
Yes, how could I ever got it?
I mean, come on, it's gonna play in every single arena.
You're gonna hear it constantly.
We did reach out to Lil Jon multiple times, but a humble guy himself, he refuses to come
on here and take credit for the origins of let's.
Oh.
After the break, we figure out who deserves the throne that Lil Jon somehow abdicated. So I want to be intellectually honest here with you Jeremy, because I think we're dealing
with something that is legitimately tricky.
Because what we're trying to do is solve the mystery of influence, right?
And influence is not the same thing as being first.
William Shakespeare cannot just, in the comments section of human history, say first, and
so the question really is about who is the most influential and maybe even who is best.
It reminds me of like the problem that advertisers and marketers are facing even in the age
of the internet because our brains are so noisy, our brains are so reluctant to assign credit
for things.
And so I feel like that's a complication here that we got to reckon with.
Who deserves credit?
Look Pablo, all of that is fair.
All of your intellectualism is appreciated, but I do think I found the guy who deserves
the most credit.
God, I remember this man.
I want to describe this man Jeremy, for our podcast audience.
What is happening in that video that you just
resurrected for me? Let's go. Is you have a head coach who is approximately eight inches shorter than everybody
else in the room? Yes, at least. Right off the bat, wearing a white shirt and tie.
Okay, a white shirt and tie tucked into his dress pants.
Facing away from everybody in the room. It's kind of an amazing reveal.
Like you don't see them at first.
The team is walking away.
And what's beautiful about it is you only see the team at first, you hear the Let's Go
in the background, but you see the team, and then slowly there's a bit of a pan, and
then a quick sharp zoom right into Masu Driscoll, who's yelling at the top of his lungs.
Pablo, he is my Mr.
Let's Go. This was in the A-SUN title game in 2017.
Of course, of course. Who could forget the 2017 Atlantic Sun title game? I believe
the only Atlantic Sun title game to ever go viral. And I talked to Coach Driscoll this
month. Well, first of all, I want to say thank you for having me on.
It seems like it was so long ago when in reality it was right around the corner.
What is this guy like in actual human conversation?
Well, he says he's been doing this basically forever in sort of a more punchy way, though.
More of a, hey, let's go, come on, let's go, let's go, let's go.
That type of mentality.
I'm a very, hey, let's go, hey, let's go, let's knock it out, let's go, let's knock it
out, let's knock it out, let's knock it out, let's go, let's go.
But then one day in 2015, during a conference semifinal, he let out a sound that I imagine
sounds somewhat like this.
Let's go! AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH he is the king of the Let's Go.
And I think he knows it, right?
He loves when other people do it too,
and he'll be the first to judge,
which I think is great.
He's kept track of when LeBron said Let's Go.
He's kept track of when Bronny James has said Let's Go.
He's kept the receipts.
He judges Pablo.
He judges.
Instead of America's got talent,
I can be sitting up there.
I don't know if you bent the knees enough.
I'm not sure if you're back.
If your vocal cords were extended enough,
I just really don't,
I don't think you hit that note.
The crescendo,
it really didn't crescendo the way it should have.
The technique is what I am most impressed with now.
Yeah, I mean, he has a down-to-n-art form.
I mean, literally, if you look at the video, he's someone who he stands away from his players.
He says he always looks toward the wall as to not scream in anybody's face.
He doesn't want to blow out their eardrums.
Hmm.
Sometimes it has to be a let's go.
And then something doesn't go right, right?
And then you have to kind of regroup.
Let's go.
And then so now you got a different ending.
The breath is huge.
Whether or not you have a vitamin C drop in your mouth is critical.
The way in which you take that breath before the depth of the let's go
and in your body movement because you don't want to die for him too, right? Come back to it
because you want it to be able to breathe back out. This man is a teacher.
He is a master. He is truly incredible at this.
incredible with this. Does he get recognized because of this? Like out in real life. Oh, yeah. I was at Marshall's the other day with my wife returning some. He guys that I know that I know
that voice center where I said, well, it's a good thing. No one ever says, man, I recognize your face. No, it's always like, I know that voice.
Does being recognizable in this way, does that help him in his actual job?
Does it help him recruit young people to play for the University of North Florida?
Yeah, I mean, he said that in the middle of probably a half dozen different recruiting
trips, there's been a, wait, hey, you're that guy from
the meme, right? And he had a recruit that actually ended up, I believe, coming to the
school who drew out a picture of him as the meme, who's a bit of an artist himself.
So he really urged back the vocal cords, all of it, the diaphragm extended.
Yes, the veins just popping out of the neck. He drew it all.
It was amazing.
And look, he says that the team has let's go.
Offs that he'll continue doing the let's go, no matter the team's record, because he wants
to be able to show that this is kind of a fabric of the program.
He's still doing it every game.
And one part that I think is awesome is that the school even has a sort of let's go competition
during player warm-ups to hype up the crowd.
Oh my God.
Warfax come down from the stands with an opportunity to scream.
Let's go.
I mean, it's become marketing for the university at this point.
He does keynote speeches, conferences, it's unbelievable.
It really is.
I just want to say for the record, I unironically want to hire this man to do the keynote speech.
I want to start a conference just to have a keynote speech where he does this.
He wants to be a proper influencer.
I'll tell you that, based off the conversation, he suggested to me and I kind of think he
was only half joking.
He said that his athletic department should get three
tenths of a penny for every new view of the video. He's up to 385,000 and counting on
YouTube alone. That's not including any of the times I sent it in my group chat.
I am now trying to piece this all together because you gave us two standards in the last segment
for deciding who Mr. Let's Go ought to be.
And number one, I believe, was that it needs to be organic and needs to be coming from
deep inside you.
And this man feels like the Marianist trench when it comes to where this is coming from.
So obviously check on standard number one.
Absolutely.
So number two, I think we, how many OZ did you say we needed?
I think it was seven.
You're right, okay, so let's try and count this.
Every time we played, it feels like there are more owes attached, but yes, I think we're
hammering the over on this one.
Yeah, I think if we counted, we'd probably get closer to 700 than to seven.
He smashes the over here.
I think we're a good shape.
So did you tell him Jeremy?
Did you tell him on behalf of Pablo Torora, he finds out that we were deciding
his place in the linguistic history that a coronation was on the line in your interview.
Yes, I did.
I did tell him.
I told him that he topped both Lil Jon and Tom Brady, and in turn, he actually coined
his own new phrase.
Well, first of all, that's a kind honor, and I want to say thank you.
And second of all, I think when something's genuine, I think it certainly separates itself
and it allows it to be whatever it becomes.
And so I'm not a Shakespeare.
I'm not a long fellow.
I'm not any of those of those people. But I would say that I'm
very honored that you would phrase it that way because you know that's pretty good rapper
and that's obviously the goat. So that's for, hey, maybe I can be the goat and then let's
go. Wait. Is he saying that he is the let's goat?
I think he is.
Look, Coach Triscoll is still pretty decidedly pro, Lil Jon in this narrative, but he legitimately
thinks that he can take Tom Burnett.
It wouldn't even be a competition.
I'm serious.
It wouldn even be a competition. And real, I'm serious. It wouldn't be.
I mean, if you want to do this or do this real quick and get them on someday and get
me on and then have a national vote to see, he'd bring Gong Kowski with him.
He can bring you everyone to bring with him and let the best person win. Now he can't use the
explicit if because you know a lot more people are in the
secular population will be vote for him. So Tom Brady, listen,
coach Matthews, risk of University in North Florida,
apparently you and I both have it. Let's go. There's been very,
very popular over the years. We know you're the goat and football. But let's see you and I split screen and let's let the nation decide who is the
goat of the Let's Go! I'm not going to say that.
I'm not going to say that.
I'm not going to say that.
I'm not going to say that.
I'm not going to say that.
I'm not going to say that.
I'm not going to say that.
I'm not going to say that.
I'm not going to say that.
I'm not going to say that.
I'm not going to say that.
I'm not going to say that.
I'm not going to say that. I'm not going to say that. I'm not going to say that. I'm not going to say that. I of energy, you could say. Full of it. What's it this as well?
Which I love.
He's not Shakespeare. I disagree. I fully disagree. He's creating words.
He's creating words, but hold on. I do not even admit something here, Jeremy, because
the reason I went into this episode was because I had a very strong feeling that let's go
was dead and that you specifically, you were the murderer. That you had killed
it in April. And then when I saw Taylor Swift appear on national television in the most
now famous game of the NFL season, I thought I was just watching her, you know, like just run
a steam roller over all, what was already a corpse. And now, after having, you know, my Sarah Bellemburst by Matthew Driscoll, I kind of got to admit
that I want to see the let's go prove that he is, in fact, the greatest of all time. just already sort of concerned for society as to what will happen if UNF ever runs off
a match.
March Madness tournament win.
The levels of energy on that, let's go from Matthew Driscoll, might.
I think people would actually die.
I think power plants could be fueled by it and lives would be lost as a result of it.
But you do raise a good question here.
And so I should ask for journalistic thoroughness here, when Matthew Driscoll gave that iconic
let's go, right?
This is 2017.
The one with a zillion owes that made him the greatest, the let's go.
Did they win that game?
Uh, no. They lost by 16. Yeah. Yeah, that's that's that's perfect.
Jeremy Tasha, thank you for your reporting. Wait, am I allowed to real quick try to redeem myself?
No. With one final better, let's go. Wait, am I allowed to real quick try to redeem myself? No.
With one final better, let's go?
No.
No.
I have a feeling it's okay.
Let's go! Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa Okay. Okay, at the end of this episode, I found out that I need to look inward at my own vocabulary,
because the number one phrase that I absolutely abuse and beat into the ground through sheer repetition, is lol.
You know, lol, lol.
Laughing out loud.
Lol is all over my texts,
and I always say lol ironically, obviously,
because I would never be the type of person
who says it sincerely.
I say it as a parody of someone who would say
it sincerely. I say lol all the time as a joke. But after hearing from the definitely
sincere Matthew Driscoll and Jeremy Tase, I realized something important. If you say any phrase often enough,
it can no longer be considered ironic.
In fact, if you say any phrase often enough,
it just becomes who you are.
Lowell. This has been Pablo Torre finds out a metal-like media production. And I'll talk to you next time.
you