The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz - PTFO - Share & Tell with John Skipper and David Samson (or: Rich Guys OnlyFans)
Episode Date: October 27, 2023Is the NBA's TV bubble about to burst? Is how we consume sports about to change forever? Hear from the man who reshaped the business itself. Plus: Who’s to blame for our misinformation minefield? An...d what the hell happened to retirement? The jamokes from The Sporting Class explain. PTFO-approved reading: House of Strauss: I'm Not Sure How the NBA Triples Its Rights Fees in a TV Recession https://www.houseofstrauss.com/p/im-not-sure-how-the-nba-triples-its Vanity Fair: Inside the New York Times Debate Over Its Gaza Hospital Bombing Coverage https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2023/10/new-york-times-gaza-hospital-story The Washington Post: Older Americans Are Dominating Like Never Before, but What Comes Next? https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2023/10/24/older-americans-working-longer-aging-impact/ Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/GsSzvwXkpLE Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Pablo Torre finds out I am Pablo Torre and today we're gonna find out what this sound is
No, it just feels wrong. It's like oh, I'm getting my I'm getting my news from the 7-Eleven
That's right. Where's your that's where everybody goes to get beer David? I'm always a little good my news there
Right after the sad
You're listening to Giraffe King's Network. So this office I want to bring people into the world of
public tour I find out now merging with the sporting class for one special performance
this week. This office that John Skipper built has a fridge stocked with two things mostly. One of those things is cold brew. I have that in my glass here.
The other thing is a CBD infused drink that John guzzles all of the time.
It's for mind and body function and
right at the top of my list of things I won't is mind and body function. Not necessarily in that order.
Oddly enough, it has no effect. As anything with CBD I've ever ingested or rubbed or put on my body, I've never felt
any effect from CBD.
The pertinent substance is THC, not CBD.
Correct.
I've already found out more than I need to know.
The drinks name, by the way, I enjoy them.
The drinks name is Vibes with a Y.
And so there's just a beautiful juxtaposition
with John Skipper drinking Vibes with a Y.
As I bring in John Skipper and David Samson,
my usual co-host on the sporting class, the preeminent.
So I wanted to describe it in a way
that I haven't described it before.
Because on one level, yes, it's the pre-immunates sports business show that exists in America.
Facts.
On another level, on another level, it's sort of like rich guy only fans.
I wasn't aware that we had anything.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I was aware of that, but I do keep my shoes on.
No, we want to see the feet,
actually we'd not your feet, literally your feet are disgusting and if terrible.
No, my feet are actually very well-quaffed.
We'll show the picture on YouTube channel and draft kings network
despite all of the things that'll do to our audience.
But the point is we get access behind the scenes
to what it's actually like to be a rich guy
who has worked at the highest levels of sports.
And your points of view, to me,
it makes what we do together one of my favorite things
to do in life.
And it's because you guys open kimonos
and we get real intimate,
whether or not they're CBD oil rubbed all over those
those specific creations. I'd like to just stipulate that I'm rich with a Y not an A or Y C H and
I'm actually going to change my name to SKY PPO. I would like to stipulate that working with John
is a true pleasure because I've gotten to know him in a way that I didn't expect to when I worked with him in baseball when he was at ESPN and I didn't enjoy being
around him or seeing him because I just felt taken advantage of it all times and then
getting to know him as someone in business fascinates me, especially now you bring up
the drink and you're giving free advertising and publicity.
I want to point out what I'm drinking, which is water without a label,
because we don't have a water sponsor.
So I'm not going to give one ounce of anything
to anybody without pain.
And it's quite disappointing to be partners
with someone who willy-nilly will give out free advertising.
Well, you know you are the truestist of ever-n-a.
You're a pure capitalist.
It makes it easy to know me, doesn't it?
I'm a capitalist socialist.
With a why?
Yes. I know, I know.
This is what it's like to hang out with John and David in this office.
And I want to explain who these men are for people who aren't familiar with their legends
because David Samson, former president of the, of the, then Florida, Marlins, now Miami, Marlins, but
a guy more than that, John, I think you've noticed this.
A guy whose brain is unlike, I think any other brain that I know, and I know a lot of weird
brains.
How would you describe David's weird, weird brain?
Um, I don't think his brain is weird or peculiar at all. I think his
brain is wired to be a capitalist. He actually, and I mean that as a compliment,
Mr. Samson understands about making money. But I'm, you know, I'm giving away
dollars on the street going. Here's the thing about my brain versus John's brain.
And I've thought about this for quite a long time as I was thinking, do I want to get
under the kimono with someone like John, easy to do with Dan because of the relationship
that I had with Dan, not so easy to do with John.
And I was thinking what will Metal Arc be successful?
And it didn't occur to me that there was anything other than
a successful end to Metal Arc.
Whatever the exit strategy is, whenever that happens,
because while John plays the party, he's just an actor,
playing the part of the socialist, the communist,
John is as about money as I am, except he just likes to act.
And what nothing personal is, I don't act. This is me. This is how I think. This is what I think,
but you never know with John. Well, this is where we come to our first topic today,
because David sees the world through all of these calculations. He sees it as truly like probabilistic,
financially rigorous calculations, Calculi.
And John happens to be the guy who happened to just run
the most, I think we've called it numerous times
on the sporting class, the best business
in the history of media as the president of ESPN.
And so when I'm reading in the Wall Street Journal, this article that's headlined how
the NBA plans to remake TV deals and net billions of dollars for its stars, I'm reminded
that I now work for the guy again who signed those billion dollar deals in the first place.
This is the map that he drew.
And then I read Ethan Strauss' story on his sub-stack,
which is a commentary on that journal piece
about how, quote, I'm not sure how the NBA triples
its rights fees in a TV recession,
and he is far more skeptical and cynical
and doubting of the idea that the cable television model
is doing anything but cratering,
and the tech money that's supposed to come in
is anything but a luxury,
given the rich checks that John Skipper
liked to write once upon a time.
And so John,
this is literally your account or was once upon a time.
What do you make of the idea that MBA season is upon us
and it may never be the same,
given the price of what people like to pay
for such a sport. The premise of the idea that because of the decline of pay TV, the money's not
going to be there for the MBA, the money's going to be there for the MBA. And this does get to the
difference in brains in some ways we were talking about. David, and again, I say this with admiration, is a guy who does his homework, he does his
research, he calculates, he analyzes things, I have a much simpler, instinctual style to
some extent.
I just believe the NBA rights are worth one dollar more than what anyone else will pay
for them.
That's what they're worth.
So, I never did a whole lot of calculating to sort of go, what should we pay? I went into the
negotiation believing I needed to win and that I needed to get those rights to maintain ESPN's
status as the worldwide leader in sports. So you're saying that your board had no care about ROI. They just said, let's
think what John with his vibes is drinking and what he believes the value is and we're
good with that. No, I don't think the parameters, no, my entrepreneurs, just you're feeling
of a dollar more. It's not quite that casual. I would like to talk about who spent I would like to talk about that. I would like to talk about that.
I would like to talk about that.
I would like to talk about that.
I would like to talk about that.
I would like to talk about that.
I would like to talk about that.
I would like to talk about that.
I would like to talk about that.
I would like to talk about that.
I would like to talk about that.
I would like to talk about that.
I would like to talk about that.
I would like to talk about that.
I would like to talk about that.
I would like to talk about that.
I would like to talk about that.
I would like to talk about that.
I would like to talk about that.
I would like to talk about that.
I would like to talk about that.
I would like to talk about that. I would like to talk about that. I would like to talk about that. I would like to talk about that. I would like to talk about that. It's like buying a house, it's like buying a painting,
it's like buying any kind of work of art.
I mean, what's the inherent value of a Rothko?
There's no inherent value other than what
somebody else will pay for it.
I hear you, but I'm sorry to go deeper,
but there are comps for a reason.
So there's a market for Rothko.
So when you go to the auction house and there's a piece
of art for sale, you are aware when they have an estimate, the estimate doesn't just fall out of
John Skipper's brain. There's a reason for an estimate. For a house, there's a value, there's an
appraisal. Things are appraised according to the value, not according. There is ego premium
with the value of a sports team. Right. And there could be ego premium with the value of certain works of art.
Let's say a van go.
Yes.
But if you're looking at a Rothko,
great example, there's a market for him.
Like there's a market for a house,
like there's a market for the NBA.
And we're seeing already the possibility of Turner saying,
hey, we're being priced out of this market.
Which happens.
Well, so John, remind everybody. You remind us what you paid for the NBA deal.
What was the deal that you signed that's now up for expiration?
The NBA deal was nine years for ESPN.
I think it was an average annual of about $1.36 billion.
Turners is 1.24.
And remember, this is important for later, average annual.
Most people don't actually understand
that that doesn't mean that every year you're paying 1.36 billion.
It means that you're one of a nine year deal,
you're paying, I'm making these numbers up,
but they're directionally right, 1.2.
And by the end of this deal,
they're probably paying 1.5.
So to start with the idea that whatever it goes up from is 1.36, but they're already
paying 1.5.
So they're going to end up paying an average annual of two and a half.
That's PR.
I mean, what you're saying.
And because you do it with player contracts, you do it with employee contracts.
If you give someone a raise during the course of an employment deal, whether you're a player
or a media superstar like Pablo.
You are taking, you could take his average annual value,
except what he's gonna do as a talent
and the NBA is the talent here.
He's gonna look at what his last salary was
for the last year of the deal,
and he's gonna want an increase from that number.
So if you went to Pablo as an example and said,
we're gonna give you a 10% increase from your AAV
after a three year deal, he would say, Pablo as an example and said, we're going to give you a 10% increase from your AAV after
a three year deal.
He would say, no, no, the way I calculated is I won 10% for my last year.
That's good to go shading by David.
But I'm going to do this now.
I'm going to get my contract done now as well in this conversation.
That would be cool.
Though I will tell you in any negotiation I ever had, I never heard about anything except
we paid one and a half average annual last time.
We want to take you up and double that.
Well, so John, this is, this is the...
That's what I heard from baseball.
I heard from baseball.
Gee, you're paying average annual, I think we're paying 350.
Because we used to manufacture what the payouts were to owners.
And so what owners would look at is how much money did we get this year from the broadcast
deal distributed versus how much money we can get next year distributed.
And when the commissioner manipulates the distributions,
it makes it easy to convince owners,
hey, you're getting more money,
you're getting X percent more.
But okay, so a lot of kimono opening now,
which I love, but the update here for the public
is that seemingly in this journal piece,
ESPN and TNT are unwilling to pay the prices
that they paid that that they got
from gone.
What?
Why do they?
Are they reporting that they have said they're unwilling to pay?
I haven't heard anything.
So other than other than I've only heard one thing, which is there was a moment where
David Zaslov said, gee, we're not going to pay an inappropriate price.
Well, you say we don't want to lose money.
So the price that they're saying, per the Wall Street Journal, if they're unwilling to
pay is $2.6 billion a year on MBA rights.
This is ESPN and TNT as the legal seeking deals now with Amazon and Apple and tech companies.
Well, with that, that is fairly poor reporting and just, just misleading.
These guys would jump if you set up an obstacle course
100 yards away and the executives and the board and everybody said you could pay only $2.6 billion
to renew your rights, they would be flying to do that. So why there is a suggestion that they're
not willing to pay the amount they're paying now. First of all, they're already paying more now than 2.6 billion.
And nobody, pardon?
Combined.
Yeah, combined.
They're paying more than that already.
So why is the Wall Street Journal suggesting that they somehow have sources suggesting
they're not willing to pay what they're paying now?
You know what?
You know why, Leaks, happen.
It's in the best interest of the bidder to say to the person who has the asset, hey, we're
not going to be able to meet your number.
Nobody pays any attention to that.
Everybody knows that's what's going on.
And trust me, the NBA is not even thinking about $2.6 billion from Turner and ESPN.
They're thinking about quite a bit more money.
And they don't care with the Wall Street Journal reports that they are willing to pay, because they have more bidders that's all it matters.
And I go back, David, when I, your time at Rothko, I'm talking about walking into the auction
house and going, I'm going to buy this Rothko.
I am going to buy the mark, the mark to market is $60 million, but I'm there holding up a paddle.
And when somebody else bids 61, I'm going 62.
That's all I'm saying.
That was my attitude, and that was my intention in those deals was to win.
And because we needed that content, Turner and Yisfin need this content.
This is a really, really hard problem.
So the context broadly here, though, as we imagine John Skipper, you know, in uncut gems bidding,
raising the paddle up on the piece of art that he loves, is that there is now this larger concern
that the pockets of the bidders, when it comes to cable television, David, are not as deep anymore,
or at least now we see inside of the pockets
in ways that we hadn't before.
This has been the biggest news of the past week or two
for me has been finally ESPN, Disney, ABC, whatever you want to call it.
Just let's say ESPN and forgetting corporate ownership.
They had to release not hat.
Let me, let me use the better verb.
They did for reasons that we can tell you,
which is they're selling.
Disney is selling ESPN, they want to,
they want to, they need to raise cash.
There is a lagging stock price,
and they need to pay down debt.
So they want to sell ESPN.
So they released the financials.
That John would never release.
He would never tell the truth to leagues.
He would never tell the truth to owners commissioners anybody it would be nothing
but a lie and now the vibes are getting worse now it's all in the public so what the
leagues are doing whether it's adam silver your buddy which on a side note the way you're
carrying his water makes me laugh adam silver is bending over backwards he's rubbing stuff
all over every joint,
fixing the All Star game,
doing stuff with load management.
What do you think he's doing that
because he wants a better product?
He's doing it because he wants the networks
to be able to have something to attach to
to offer the money that he wants.
Do you know, are you even willing to agree with that?
Or not?
No, no, no, no, disagree with that.
But if everyone's willing to pay what he wants,
why is he changing things to get more?
His objective is to get more.
So he is going to put things in front of people
to get them to pay more money.
Nobody, I don't recall ever being a big negotiation
with a big league where they didn't bring some new toys
to the table to try to push the prices up, right?
More playoff teams.
But Adam's looking for a triple.
I didn't actually know, again,
we're all assuming that this reporting
actually has first party sources.
I don't think Adam has actually ever said,
I'm gonna get three times.
I don't think either ESPN or TNT has ever said
we can't afford to buy this.
But what was he told you?
If he did tell me anything, he doesn't,
because we both understand as friends
that he's not gonna put me in a position
of either lying or revealing things
that he doesn't want revealed
and I wouldn't put him in that position.
But what about the ratings here, right?
They're toys on the table
and there's also a larger context of the NBA ratings
not being seemingly in the linear television fashion.
Of course, the NBA can claim that we are over-indexing
on social and digital video.
But the actual business of people watching games,
how does this inform this negotiation?
Look, you can go around and around the stuff all you want.
The fact of the matter is these are existential rights for ESPN.
They have to have the NBA.
And it's pretty close to existential TNT.
I don't know if they have to have the NBA, but I think they do.
Again, there's a lot of stuff here that we're assuming is being correctly reported.
They probably do have sources,
but including what you just said, Dave,
you said that ESPN is for sale.
That's not what they've said.
They have said what we're looking for
is a minority partner to come in
and give us some money to pay down the day.
That's what we all say.
Who can also help us?
What if, that's everyone starts with,
hey, we just would like to bring an elevator partner.
Oh, crikeys, we can't get anyone to give us 10x on an elevator partnership. All right,
we'll give you a path to control. That's the second step.
That sometimes happens. I agree with you, but I don't know. And I did live within that
place for 27 years. I don't know that I believe that the board and Bob won't to sell ESPN as a whole.
They may be forced to because I'm not sure there is a minority partner.
They also said they won't a minority partner who would help them either grow their content
or their distribution.
And again, I'm not quite sure what that does.
You then, by the way, I do have to defend myself.
I've never had a say in whether ESPN's numbers were released or not.
That was a board and a CEO.
When I'd ask you or anyone would ask you
to tell us the truth about your financial model,
you go with your all your partners right now
and say, open your kimono, tell me how you're doing,
how are you monetizing nothing personal,
you're happy to do it now because you're on the other side.
Absolutely.
When we did it to you, you clammed up.
Well, first of all, I couldn't do it.
I worked for the Walt Disney Company.
What advantage would I get in telling you
how much money we made?
Ha ha ha.
You've now reached the point where David
no longer believes any of his arguments.
No, I mean, I get why he did it.
No, of course you would do the same thing.
Of course I would.
But can I give a larger, but I would admit it.
Well, well, but you are right about what you are right about is the Walt Disney company
did not want to release the Espian numbers.
One, they did not want the leaks to see those numbers because they would have asked for
more money and they did not want the distributors to see how much money the Espian was making.
So they aggregated the media earnings.
They also, it's a big point when he said. I also actually believe they did not want the rest
of the company to know how much of the value
of the company was ESPN.
And Wall Street tried for years,
well, characterize that.
Do the calculations of what,
they try to back into it.
That's what analysts do and they got it wrong.
But for people who have the info,
for people who don't know, John,
how big of the pie ESPN is, so to speak, how big of the pie is it?
ESPN was bigger during, during the teen, the teens to the high to the sub market. The
high to the sub market. ESPN was a bigger, more profitable company than the studio and
the parks put together, Which is staggering, right?
I mean, unsurprising to you guys
who've been swimming in these waters,
all of this is water to you, you're not surprised.
But from the outside, it connects to the concern now
about here are these tech companies
that have more money than God, right?
Their pocket depth is not the concern.
The concern though is that I presume they're seeing again
to just reference opening night ratings
that just happened, right?
Last year, and again, this is just one metric,
but last year, 2.984 million people watch Sixer Celtics,
3.55 watch Lakers Warriors. That was last year.
This year, 2.8 for Lakers, not gets 2.7 for Suns Warriors.
So a decline of some degree.
And so the question is, and this is Ethan's skepticism in the piece,
is why would a tech company that thinks more like David Samson, right?
Looking for every margin, not wanting to overpay by even a dollar, right?
I want to mark this to market why they would replicate the large s of the John Skipper
regime.
So I think you'll agree here when you were calculating, which you're saying you never
calculated, but someone was calculating worth, I'm not sure that ratings actually factored anywhere into the
calculation. It's sexy. There are press releases about where we are. It feels bad when you're down.
It feels great when you're up and you could do it based on a percentage increase, which
100% increase from one is two and that's still crappy because Marlon's we would do that all the time.
Hey, our TV ratings were up 69%. Oh my god, they're the worst in baseball.
Love a press release, David Z worst in baseball love a press release
They love a press release. So do you agree?
You didn't do that you didn't care about ratings for a radio we didn't get paid for ratings other than advertising
Right, and if you look at the numbers just released by Walt Disney company
They had just north of ten billion dollars in distribution fees
those don't change a cent based upon ratings.
They're going to get paid next year,
10 point something billion dollars,
if nobody watches.
My predecessor, who negotiated for rights
before I got there, would frequently walk in
with a whole bunch of data about ratings
and where the leagues were and how many fans had showed up and
Would try to convince the other party that the
Offer they were going to make was more than generous because that's what the numbers show they deserved
Did you care about that advice ball? It's the same thing. It works both ways
Nobody cared. You never talk anybody into
Believing that you have the right position. That's one thing I never believed.
I'm never gonna talk the guy across the table from me into,
I'm actually right, you know,
you really should get to pay you $5,
not the seven you won't.
I wouldn't ever do that.
I wouldn't ever do that.
The way I negotiate is I try to make everything
the other party's idea, and I try to get them to want what I want and have it be that they actually want it when in fact
They don't know what they want so I love doing that and it's a great exercise to do. Yeah
It's the first thing I always ask in any it writes me was tell me what matters to you. What can I do for you?
Then I'm gonna give them most of what matters to them anyway. They're going to say, oh, we won't games on the most of what matter to you. Yeah. So I would walk in and say,
what do you want? What matters to you? I need to understand your priority. So I can address them.
The first meeting we never threw out numbers. The first meeting was about finding out what they wanted.
And then reason, yeah, recapitulating them. By the way, last meeting you said this matter to you.
Here's in mile for you. Here's everything. It of, recapitulating to them. By the way, last meeting you said this matter to you. Here's, and my offer to you, here's everything.
And of course, just gets down to money.
As it does with an auction for a Rothko,
it gets down to a paddle and money,
which is why I say, and I think I come off
maybe as more flippin' and casual about it.
I was very disciplined about it.
I just never deluded myself that I was going to talk
someone else into believing that what I wanted to pay was what they were gonna take
Or that they should take my money rather than somebody else's more money. That doesn't happen.
Happened one time the Little League World Series
We got the rights when somebody else was prepared to be had more money because they thought it belonged on ESPN
Which I appreciated wasn't a lot of money though.
And you're a FIFA dream come true
FIFA dream come true. The FIFA dream come true.
I was gonna say, and Cinemax was never the same as a network
to losing out on those rights.
[♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪
All right, so the spirit of share and tell, I should
continually brand what we're doing here
is that we each bring in a story that we love or obsessed with this week.
That was a sports business obsession that clearly we continue to have, but I want to expand
it so you guys can spread your wings a little bit.
So David, what is rattling around your weird brain?
I've had a hard time this past couple of weeks as many of us have,
especially being Jewish.
It's been difficult dealing with my kids,
being dealing with people with whom I work.
The rise of antisemitism, the fact that I'm quite concerned
with where things are in Israel and Gaza.
And I'm trying to figure out how to come to grips with how I'm getting
my information. And I'm struggling because I work with Coco's, the producer of nothing
personal. And he spends half his day telling me that what I'm reading is wrong when I submit
something to him, Hey, is this really, is this, I've gotten screwed so many times.
You're falling for the aggregator is in the fake accounts.
Every day. And because I get my news on Twitter, on X, and there was an article, there was the bombing,
which this is a serious topic, the bombing in Gaza, the hospital bombing, where the
thought was, it was the IDF, and it turns out that it was a faulty bomb that was by Hamas.
And the New York Times got itself involved in this.
And they got involved because they reported something
that turned out not to be true.
And I was sensitive to it, not just as a American Jew.
I'm sensitive to it as a consumer of news,
as a consumer of sports.
Sports is easy for me to consume.
There's a winner and a loser.
I don't worry about a box score being incorrect because it's binary. The news is not binary as much as people want to
believe it and as much as there's conservatives and liberals. I am far more a centrist where I view
that there is, that you can look at an issue for many different angles. And I'm trying to
teach myself and educate myself using the news. And what's bothering me greatly And I'm trying to teach myself and educate myself
using the news.
And what's bothering me greatly is I'm losing my sources.
And I don't mean sources as an investigative reporter.
I mean sources who are teaching me
and telling me what's happening
because bad information in is bad information out.
Well, so just to clarify though,
what you have been vexed by is the New York Times
now pervity Fair investigation. They acquired Slack messages internally from the Times. With
the Times messed up was the basic reporting of the truth. What really happened here under
time pressure in the fog of war, of course, but there was at the very least, Preventity
Fair, like extensive back and forth, John, about like we should do this, no, let's do this.
There was a squad of people who were deliberating
as a newsroom does on how we're going to report this thing.
Well, I'll need to clarify that,
I don't think anybody thinks Hamas fired the bomb.
It was suggested that the Palestinian authority,
which was a different terrorist group,
may have fired the bomb.
The US government has investigated and said,
they believe definitively that Israel did not send the bomb,
though they cannot definitively say who did fire the bomb.
And by the way, fire the bomb.
It looks as though it was some sort of
misfire right that there what because it went up and went down yeah went up and went down
within Gaza yes it didn't come from somewhere else the Hamas government was the one that said
this is the idea that was the source that they were relying correct and that of course is a bad
source of information but to this, nobody knows exactly what happened.
It clearly was a misfire within Gaza.
But I don't think anybody knows.
And the US, I think it's a CIA, but I'm not sure.
Because my news sources maybe, maybe it's a skew too.
But some, the US government investigated, says they support Israel's claim that they did
not fire that bomb.
I think that's generally accepted.
I don't think people know who did or what happened exactly.
It's not, I do blame the times for they should not have used Hamas as a source.
That's a bad idea.
However, it is a logical first thought that, oh my gosh, Israel is bombing Gaza now.
A bomb went off in a hospital
everybody knew that homos was hiding in hospitals and schools and so it wasn't that
surprising but it was surprising the times fell for homos pointing the finger quickly
to try to turn public opinion against that's the scary thing so what's scary to me is that
i'm not just talking about what's going on in Gaza. I'm talking about what's going on in Maine.
I'm talking about what's going on in New York City
and I have been jarred.
I've been rocked to my foundation.
You are part of the problem, of course.
You're getting your news from Twitter.
Why?
So how are you getting your news from Twitter?
And that's the conversation, David.
Like so much of, to me, I've been thinking about this a lot
as I wrestle with the same things,
how much was to follow this mass shooting, this bombing, all of this stuff.
On this place where also I know her Elon Musk's directives almost, it's just harder to find
truth.
And it's the place where we do silly, unserious things.
And at the same time, we're at that same trough, we're where we're eating.
You know, like we why that was kind of my point of I get your news from Twitter.
But I do the same.
I want to be clear Twitter as this is the portal
into which I have gotten news for a decade.
Now 15 years I've been on this stupid platform.
So Twitter I want to point out and I don't know
that you're on because when I when I tag you,
you ignore me and maybe that's just me.
Twitter does not
Report news
Twitter is the platform
But I go to the New York Times website on Twitter
It is it's the New York Times by line or the New York Times to David is
Effectively and to me often is a Twitter account. I still get the paper delivered
However, I'm a I'm a dinosaur in that way, but yes, in your phone, no, no, I actually get the hard copy.
No, no, no, but I mean, you're reading in practice
on your phone as we all are.
Everybody.
And so it's that, John, that Marshall McCluein quote,
right, I like the medium is the message.
The medium of Twitter, slash X, slash whatever the fuck it is.
It's an embodiment of how we are getting shorter, faster, more
attention, click baity and in effect, dumber.
Well, everybody, miss, I'm more miss led.
I'm not sure it's dumber.
I would say it's more miss led.
I, I think that's right.
But we're all making the sake of assuming because of a lifetime of practice
that things that are put in front of us are true.
Because for a long time, there weren't really mechanisms to effectively spread false information.
You could lie to somebody, I said, you could write an op-ed piece to somebody.
Now you can lie all the time, say whatever you want to say, and there's no
consequence. And that's because these social media platforms have arisen, and they had
hidden behind, I forget what it was called, they act in which they say, I'm not responsible
for, I'm not a publisher. You can hold a paper accountable, right? You can hold a physical
newspaper accountable for printing lies. Section 230. You can't.
You can not hold Twitter accountable.
We spend all of our time trying to convince them,
you should have standards, you should have fact checking.
But of course, there is a large constituency that doesn't want that
because they want to use these platforms to send misinformation
and you should not be getting your newsletter.
But I use Twitter. You would differently,
which is even a newspaper like The New York Times,
they have an editorial section that is opinion.
It states it, this is not reporting the news,
this is reporting the opinion of the author.
And now they are being combined in a way that makes it,
so I can't tell the difference.
Well, the flattening of all of it onto the same platform,
essentially, it's just harder to tell
opinion from reporting, truth from fact.
And I want to point out that we started this conversation,
David, what's been rattling around New York Brain
is the New York Times's error.
So, in deference to the internet,
which I'm sure as a side of this argument,
is yelling, the New York Times just fucked up
and you're blaming Twitter?
So I wanna get to that part, right?
I just blame Twitter, nor should you.
It is the New York Times.
I'm not gonna ever blame.
So this is where I'm in the minority
for where I stand politically.
I'm not blaming Elon Musk.
I'm not blaming Twitter for my issues
and figuring out what's real and what's not real.
I'm blaming myself and I'm blaming the fact
that I rely on the New York Times as an example
as a source of information,
and I expect them to go through this practice of vetting.
But, John, I just wanna point out to you
because you're not on Twitter.
I'm not on Twitter, so I'm not exercising you personally.
I am exercising the platform because I
don't find any value to it.
But the New York Times, I want to
be careful here because David, I
just want to make sure you're not
throwing out the baby with the
bathwater, right? The idea that the
New York Times that any journalistic
institution, John has messed up. They
mess up all of the time. The
problem with being a media
organization premised on delivering
truth is that when you mess up,
it is very easy for someone to point out,
you lied and you are a liar,
and you're no different from the people who lie
like the aggregators and everything else.
There's a big mistake between a mental
error and a physical error in sports, right?
What, I didn't mean to say right, that's a terrible verbal tick.
I do it all the time.
Read 2-1, there's a big difference
between a mental error and a physical error. Right do it all the time. Read 2-1. There's a big difference between a mental
error and a physical error.
Right.
Wait, you're describing the New York Times.
There's corrections all the time.
Those are just things that happen where you have a year wrong.
There's a problem.
What we learned in the Vanity Fair article is process.
That's not correction.
That's process.
Oh, but we want process.
John, as a guy who funded a journalistic enterprise at
ESPN, I, I, the result is bad. And the process in this case specifically was also bad, but
the process writ large of standards, newsroom fact checking, editing, reporting, that's
the only way forward to me is we need to save that. Yes, we do.
And the problem is you have a large constituency right now, which actually doesn't want to
tell the truth.
We just, we have a new speaker of the house who doesn't believe Joe Biden won in 2020.
Doesn't believe that there's climate change.
It doesn't believe burning fossil fuels causes any damage.
You're missing the biggest one that he doesn't believe in.
Women's bodies are their own.
I want to go back and actually defend the New York Times
with Tony Bitt.
They made a mistake, but it's generally a credible news source.
I believe that 95% of what I read in the New York Times
is accurately reported.
You're right, David.
They have a lot of stuff that they say.
This is an opinion. I'm Gell Collins,
and here's what I think about the new speaker,
that's opinion, but most of what they report,
I believe they've reported pretty accurately,
and that they care, and that they want to tell the liberals.
That's a liberal slant.
It's no question that they have a predisposed point of view,
they do, everybody does.
The sort of notion that it's possible in journalism
to be completely and utterly objective and only tell the truth. This is your goal.
But this is your goal. But this speaks to, and it's driving towards a goal with the transparency
of how that goal is being achieved, which is to say, with the disclosure of bias, whenever possible, with the disclosure
of how your process works, right?
Like to me, the big catch 22 for media organizations is that their sales pitch is so grand.
It's, we deliver the truth.
And that itself is a false advertisement. It's really, we do our best as an organization
full of fallible, biased people to deliver the closest thing
to the truth in the fog of war and confusion
on incredibly complicated subjects.
Not as catchy as democracy dies in darkness,
admittedly.
But it's kind of what we need. Not kind of, it's outright what we need.
We have it.
We just don't, people don't accept it.
There are organizations which are trying.
I believe, I believe NBC News is trying to report just the way you just said it.
There are credible sources and there are non credible sources. And smart people can pick and choose among them
and find places where they believe they're getting
better reporting.
It's reporting.
It's not even, it is news to a certain extent,
but it's also just reporting.
Except when Brian Williams makes it up.
So, but this is where the false advertisement is a problem.
When you can point to, when anybody can point to examples of you lying,
when your premise is complicated monologue about delivering truth,
then you become a liar.
And you need, it's almost like being,
it's like a closer who can't blow a safe.
It's like a goalkeeper who can't allow a goal.
Like the standard a news organization
is held to because of its own standards is always higher than the person they're directly
competing with, which now in sports, for instance, can be literally ball sack sports, which
fools David all of the time, apparently.
Pilots can't crash a plane. You don't get one strike. You don't get a blown save. You
don't get one strike. You don't get a blown save. You don't get a goal.
But what if that plane is the thing we need to carry us
to our next location?
That's the same plane.
It is, and we still don't accept anything other than perfection.
The thing about the truth is that there's nothing to agree on.
It's just true.
But give us a body, David, that has existed
where there is consensus around.
You gotta go have the week. There's certain things that we all accept, true. But give us a body, David, that has existed where there is consensus around. You got
to go have the week. There's certain things that we all accept, no matter where we stand,
that are just true. And we don't question them, but it's eroded over time. We're now the
line, the bar of what we were willing to agree as true is bottoming out. It's 12.47 pm Eastern right now.
What time is it in Tokyo?
Uh, 147 am?
What day?
Uh, it is the next day.
Tomorrow.
Yeah.
I think the plate has crashed.
Ha ha.
Ha ha.
Ha ha.
Ha ha.
Ha ha.
Ha ha.
Ha ha.
Ha ha. Ha ha. Ha ha. Ha ha. Ha ha. All right, so I promised a lighter subject.
And so, John, what have you brought us to bring lightness and mirth?
Well, as an elderly American, patriotic American, I have seen in the Washington Post a story
that says, as older Americans push for tyr age, what's next for younger workers? And this this this purports to explain that our
country is now looking out of COVID for mature older leaders. And it sites, you know, Mitch
McConnell and Nancy Pelosi and et cetera, et cetera,
and the federal Mitch McConnell.
Biden, Trump, undermining the argument itself.
Terrible.
But this to be as a whole, much to do about nothing.
Really?
Yeah, it's, look, at the turn of the 20th century,
the median age for a human being was 40 years old.
That's how long people live. That was lifespan. It's 80 years when you start the 21st century,
the average life expectancy is about 80. It's about doubled. It's not doubled because science and
technology have helped us figure out how to live longer. It's because science and technology medicine
have helped to solve some of the
things that killed us early, right? And the Bible says you're going to live to be three
scored 10. You've already cited that or maybe that was Abraham Lincoln, but maybe it's
him quoting the Bible. But it's mostly about people just living longer and living longer,
healthier lives, and deciding that it's more fun to keep working
than it is to quit. Now, this is a luxury that lots of working-class people don't have,
right? You're working construction, you're not deciding to push off your retirement age
after operating a jackhammer for 30 years. But you're doing something fun, like we're doing
here right now. You just keep doing it. I'm 67. I don't think about retiring.
It's a little personal for me as well.
My dad retired at 55, and he was never happy
or not working then he was working.
And so I learned so many negatives.
So what was that?
He was never happy or not working.
He said he was higher at 55.
Yeah, he regretted retiring at 55.
Well, we look at Hollywood now, by the way,
in terms of people with the luxury of choosing,
do I continue to work, quote unquote, work.
Robert De Niro is 80, right?
Harrison Ford is 81, he's Indiana Jones still.
There is his research group,
the national research group in the Washington Post story,
which pointed out, man, the average age of the actors
in the top 20 actors that people say they want to see in
a theater, the average age is 58.2.
And are they all male?
I'm only three women made the top one.
Helen Aaron.
Julia Roberts 55 Sandra Bullock 59, Angelina Jolie 48.
So of course, also a male bias when it comes to this specific category.
A time.
By the way, I did count in this article.
There are 27 mentions of older men and two mentions of older women.
So yeah, this may just be about older guys,
like me, not wanting to give up power and status.
I didn't take it as people are loving working
and they wanna keep working.
There's a whole group of people who are forced to keep working.
So I agree with that, but this is about
Martin Scorsese, Harrison Ford.
It's about the gerontocracy. It's about the gerontocracy.
It's about the gerontocracy.
Yes, what I was telling you how I took the art.
No, of course.
I'm thinking about people working older for a different reason.
You probably read it on Twitter and,
and consequently it was, it was just,
behind a pay-well, I didn't read it at all.
You read it aggregated by Joseph Glennan.
You just went some jimoke thought with all it was.
I don't know that word, but I just think I shouldn't say it.
It's a word that a 67 year old man loves.
It's a great word.
It's a great word.
Jumoke.
Just means a knucklehead.
A Jumoke.
Okay.
But the gerontocracy, right?
The idea.
And I remember, I was on, this is, this is a real look at me, Louis moment, but I was on
MSNBC the day after Diane Feinstein died, right?
Working at age 90 something.
And I felt rude pointing out that it feels insane that anybody would be working at age 90,
let alone the people in charge of our country.
And so the, the gerontocracy, right?
How do we feel about it as, as just the trend line? I get the actuarial tables have changed for humanity, for the species.
But in terms of like who we are turning to for the leadership, I guess literally little leadership here.
That's a little worrisome.
Though you could argue we're not turning to them. They're refusing to go away.
Yes. Wait a minute. They're elected. Hold on. Are they elected? I must have it wrong.
They must not be elected. Some of them are elected.
But as you know, when reelected in safe seats,
which is what most of them are now,
is a foregone conclusion if you're in the right party.
And that's what happened with the fact that our political
leadership is this old, I'll actually separate.
I don't care that our action here is a role.
It doesn't matter.
I agree.
Because it doesn't really have any consequences.
But it does matter that the people running our country
are too old.
And while I am the oldest person here, easily,
I do think there should be mandatory retirement age
for justices and for-
That was the personality of the new. And and for the present it is.
And even for the presidency, right?
And while what about CEOs?
While we are getting to choose them,
we're gonna be choosing between an 80,
one year old and a 78 year old.
Only if we make that our choice, their primaries.
Well, you and I, but to be fair,
while we can pretend that there may be democracy in action,
and somebody, a bunch of people might go to the polls
and vote for Nikki Haley instead of Trump,
or vote for Pete Buttigieg instead of Joe Biden,
they're not going to.
The only time in age of Metal Arc.
None.
My intention here is to stay in front of everybody's career,
I do be a blocker for everyone else's career aspirations
for at least 20 more years.
You're a dream come trail.
So this is the cackling of a guy.
I notice this in the middle of the show.
You're taking a photo of that mid show.
Because I couldn't believe it.
It says skipper slash mid-guest.
That's right.
Like he has his own name.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's mid-guests, mediocre guests,
and then the greatest guest.
I'm not at least blocking other people
from moving up in their career.
I'm staking a claim to this chair right here.
I'm guest one.
You're Skipper or mid-yes.
No, you're not mid-yes.
Okay.
Okay.
Well, this is how we end the show is we say what we found out today.
And David Samson has found out that the labels next to our chairs remind him shockingly
of the hierarchy of this company in which he feels
incredibly devalued. But what did you actually find out today, David?
Wait, are we gonna edit that? Because that is actually what I found out.
I thought that was the whole point of what I found out. Because I sure sh** didn't find that
I think about him. So what I found out is the retirement and the hierarchy and the ego is
Definitely making me examine my future. Mm-hmm. Oh, I'm definitely in your way career was
John, what did you find out today on public?
Sorry, what I found out today is that David Sepson,
a very, very bright man,
is busy getting his news from Twitter.
Yeah.
It just feels the most sharp.
No, it just feels wrong.
It's like, oh, I'm getting my news from the 7-Eleven.
That's right.
So that's where everybody goes to get beer.
David.
I'm always going to get my news there.
So, sh**, everybody's going to that Twitter
and they're putting in what they think.
I'm glad I can get some news out of this.
That must make me a p-moke.
Is it p-moke?
Jumoke.
It's a jumoke.
Is that the definition when you get your news from 7-11?
7-11.
Hey, buddy.
Can I get a pack of cigarettes and gonna get a scratch off?
And tell me, what's happening with the speaker?
John Skipper's Jamoke Southern Voice
is an unbelievable thing that I cannot.
Hey buddy, how about that Mark Jackson?
I cannot believe we waited this long to get to that,
to get to John's Jamoke Voice.
What I found out is that deep inside this kimono
next to these two older rich men.
We're skinny man, it's not a very deep kimono.
No, that was gonna say, there's a lot of them.
What kind of depth do you got to kimono?
You know, it's a pretty surface-planet deal.
Not even 250 combined.
Together though, there is a lot of room for love.
No question.
Oh, I'm not quite.
Is that what you learned today?
Yeah, I was trying to make a heartwarming thing
and David is vibrating up all of his vibes.
This has been Pablo Torrey finds out,
a show that has way more producers
than David Samson's
show.
And they are Michael Antonucci, Ryan Cortez, Sam Daywig, Juan Galindo, Patrick Kim,
Neely Lomon, Rachel Miller Howard, Ethan Shryer, Carl Scott, Matt Sullivan, Chris Tuminello,
Studio Engineering by RG Systems, post-production by NGW Post, and our theme song, of course,
by John Bravo.
We will talk to all of the same thing.
I'm going to do a little bit of the same thing.
I'm going to do a little bit of the same thing.
I'm going to do a little bit of the same thing. you.