The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz - South Beach Sessions - Chris Fowler
Episode Date: August 9, 2024With more than a quarter of a century calling the biggest games and events in sports - from ABC's Saturday Night Football, unforgettable Wimbledon and French Open matches, to the College Football Cham...pionship Game on ESPN - Chris Fowler exudes excellence… and he’s bringing that special sauce to South Beach Sessions. Chris joins Dan to talk about the immense pressures we place on ourselves, the drive that can cause us to hold self-resentment, and the life-changing experience from discovering tapes his late father recorded as he was dying of cancer They also discuss his profound love of nature, including Chris’ journeys to the mountains of Nepal, and the lessons he learned from sherpas while he was there. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to South Beach Sessions. I'm excited about this one because Chris Fowler, I believe, has been hiding in plain sight
in the shadows for a long time.
You know his voice, you know his face, you know his work because his work is great, but
you may not know a great deal about him.
I believe him to be one of
the greatest success stories in the history of ESPN because you went and I don't know
who you'd nominate for this class, but you went from doing a high school show. I remember
watching you. We're about the same age. I was a little younger and I remember watching
as a sports network blossom. Hey hey who's that guy covering high school
sports for ESPN and what is this entire network about covering sports all the
time? So thank you for doing this. I appreciate your time and I very much
appreciate your work because you've been doing it as a professional pillar for a
long time. That's very kind. I've admired you for a long time. I'm glad we had a
happenstance meeting outside of the men's room of a Miami hotspot restaurant
so we can reconnect and organize this.
I'm looking forward to it.
I would like to get to know you better personally because as I told you before, I've run into
you in the occasional gym in a college town at an important college football game over
the years, but I don't know your past.
I don't know how it is you became as meticulous as you are.
I don't know what your journey has been.
So take us through sort of the beginnings of how it is that you grew up, how it is
you gravitated to sports, how it is that you decided to make what looks like a
dream living, because from where I'm standing, it feels like you figured some
things out about life balance, about how to do work meticulously. It's hard but
also to choose exactly the life you have around your work. Well thank you. I
appreciate that. I will accept that. It's a lot of trial and error. I'm 61 so
you've been around a long time, made a lot of mistakes, learned from it hopefully
and listened to a lot of smart people. That's obviously the key is surrounding
yourself with people you can learn from
and grow with.
And you do learn lessons when you're in that situation.
So I like to think I got a few things figured out, but a long way to go.
I mean, infinite seeking is my motto.
You never stop learning and hopefully improving and growing until your last day.
So that's an ongoing process.
Not to get too deep right away, but my grandmother was a sports fan. and that's where it comes from. I am living the dream since 10 years old
I wanted to do this for a living
What is this? What is the definition of this documenting live sports events and conveying the excitement that I felt as a listener in?
The early 70s late 60s in Chicago when my grandmother was a Cubs fan would sit in the backyard of
her apartment building in a folding chair on a transistor radio listening to every Cubs game and
Scoring him in a scorebook for those. Oh, that's a know what that is old school
Very old school and she had a book for every season and every game of the season was in that book and these were
for every season and every game of the season was in that book.
And these were.
Good, but just good enough to break your heart. Cubs teams, the 69 season, I'm old enough to remember their collapse
when the Mets caught them and the Miracle Mets won the World Series.
I still hate the Mets for that, but I just found that listening to Cubs
games with her, listening to Blackhawks games on the radio and on television
was just like enthralling.
And if you want to break it down to why I love doing this,
is because I like to see people express joy.
And for me, it was the sound through the radio
of Chicago Stadium going insane
when the Blackhawks scored a goal.
And the Oregon playing
and going to Wrigley Field and seeing the collective joy when the Cubs would succeed.
I mean obviously there was a lot of disappointment too but it was just a bunch of people coming
together and being happy at the same time for the same reason. I thought what could be cooler than
that if you could help be the voice to convey what was going on and deliver that to people.
And so there were a lot of different detours and steps along the way we can get into including
Scholastic Sports America and even College Game Day before getting to call championship
events in my two favorite sports, which are college football and tennis, at ESPN.
So one employer for 38 years doesn't happen unless you navigate that well
and get lucky with the rights that that company acquires and learn how to say no because it's
very easy to get off course in life and in any career, but particularly I think in media. So,
you know, since 10 years old I wanted to do it. Did everything I could, extracurricular stuff
throughout high school and college.
I did PA announcing for high school hockey games
in Colorado Springs.
My brother was a player in high school,
got to announce him scoring goals.
That was like an early thrill within the arena,
not on any kind of media, but I went to Colorado.
But shared joy.
Yeah, it was amazing.
It was just amazing to be in the, I still go as a fan all the time to all kinds
of different sporting events.
For the energy?
Yeah, for the energy.
I mean, just to be a part of it.
I think we do our best on TV to capture it.
Some sports, you could argue, are better on TV, but the live experience for me, there's
just no substitute.
I think of you as so even, though.
It's interesting to hear you say that it's the joy that lures you like, of course
You summon it during the big calls, but what I think of you is just maximum professional even
So to hear you say that the magnet for you is just being a joy associate
Yeah, I think that's what first got me into it
I know that you're gonna have people that are pissed off and and
Inconsolable on the other end of the spectrum as often as you're gonna have joyful people
But I think what drew me to it was was focusing on how
Important sports were to people and how much happiness it brought them and it's been cool
Over the years to hear all kinds of comments from our customers that how much a show like College Game Day
meant to them because it's the first time they sat with their dad or their
brothers and watched sports and that's how they came to have a passion for
college football or or someone grew up because I've done tennis for 20 some
years now grew up listening to us call Federer or Serena matches and that drew
them to the sport.
I can't tell you how neat that is,
because that was me.
I was on the other end of it as a little kid,
getting acquainted with sports
through the voices that brought it to me.
Looking at you at 61, though,
and obviously everyone tells you
that you look great, healthy, radiant, and balanced.
I'll drink this margarita to that.
But I don't think of you as a museum,
but you now are that.
You've covered enough of this history
that when you go and do Wimbledon
or when you're doing these big games,
you have a library at your disposal of experiences.
Yeah, and it's fun.
I don't think of it that way, but you're right.
I mean, I just talked about Nadal.
He was hanging it up, and Rafa's been
the most admired athlete for me
that I've ever covered.
I probably had the most admiration and affection for him.
And the great thing about tennis is
you see these long career arcs
when it's an all-time great like that.
19 years ago, I watched him win
his first Roland Garros title
from right behind his uncle Tony and his family in the stands
because we didn't have the rights to broadcast the finals so I just went and sat with Brad
Gilbert in the stands. That was 19 years ago. He was 19 at the time. He's now 38 so half of his life
he's been winning the French Open and I was there to see the first one and and quite a few others
since then and then just watched on TV and tried to put into words how he felt about that.
So yeah, I guess when you've been around long enough, you are blessed to be able to see
the entire career arc as you can of many athletes you covered in various sports.
And there's a richness to that.
I don't get that in college football.
Your career arc is about two years, two and a half years, right?
But in tennis I've had the chance and other sports I've covered too, to be able to see the growth of an athlete as a person
and a player.
And it's, I don't take that for granted.
Why isn't Nadal your favorite ever?
What he has brought to every performance he's
given on the court, the grit, the competitive spirit,
the fight, the competitive spirit, the fight,
willingness to suffer, to dig deep within himself, to do whatever it takes, the
humility, he's grounded, he's a family guy, he practices the way you're supposed
to practice, he has done a lot to grow the sport by the way he's acted off the
court, just all of those things and that's not me, everybody that's him would say that all of his peers they were paying nice tributes to him
when he lost the other day in Paris and that's the last time he's going to play that tournament and
I heard everybody from Cocoa Golf to Sasha Zverev the guy who beat him in that match
talk about what he has meant to them and that's really a lot more important than what he's meant
to me is what he's meant to the sport and
millions and millions of other people are
You someone when you talk about I associate you with like because of the work
I imagine you to be very willful and meticulous when you talk about the suffering of Nadal and
The craft of what it is that you do and what goes into it. The product I get
on television is a very polished one from you, but I imagine just watching your
career art that you're probably obsessively and insanely meticulous. That
you must be sort of unreasonably meticulous just from watching how... I'm
telling you since watching you covering high school, I'm like, that dude knows how to do television.
He's sort of, he's perfected the sculpting
of how people learn the doing of this.
Again, that's very kind.
There's no perfecting,
because you don't choose, chase perfection.
I don't think it's possible.
You just chase constant improvement.
No, I think you have to love the grind.
It's no different than being an athlete.
It's no different than doing anything for a living.
If you like the process of preparation,
improving the groundwork that leads to the broadcasts,
if that isn't torture to you,
then you're ahead of the game.
I don't think people understand the preparation though.
I don't think people, like can you-
They're not supposed to, it doesn't matter.
They don't have to understand it.
It just matters what it sounds like on Saturdays.
But I'd like them to.
I'd like them to understand,
when you get out there and do a broadcast,
any kind of broadcast,
and you're on national television for three hours,
learning everything you've learned over 38 years,
tell me about your process up to that
and how forgiving you are with yourself
after you've performed
less than wherever I'm imagining an unreasonable standard is.
Oh last question, not very forgiving. I mean I'm getting better at that because as I said,
you know, perfectionism is not a path to happiness. You can't be a very happy
person if you hold yourself to a standard of perfection. I had a great conversation
with John McEnroe about this. He was miserable because he was
raised to be a perfectionist once he realized you're gonna make mistakes. You
got to move on and process it. So I've made plenty of mistakes and thousands of
them and you know used to get really pissed off and pick up something off the
desk and throw it somewhere, hopefully not at somebody, when I would get
frustrated. But you overcome that. You realize that you're not
going to be perfect. You just have to meet your own high standard and make sure that
your standards for yourself are higher than anybody else's for you. And I think that's
what I tell young people. You've got to care more about your level or performance than
anybody else does. If you do, you're going to do what it takes to be prepared. So yeah,
a lot goes into a football broadcast. A lot goes into a tennis match, even though there's only two players on the court. But,
you know, the preparation for college football, I say this, having done NFL games as well and other
sports, it's the hardest to do just the sheer size of the roster. And the fact that the rosters
change every hour these days in the sport. I mean, it's harder to get your head wrapped around all the names,
all the numbers, all the stats, all the history. And you have to learn how to be efficient
with your time because you can't grind yourself to the bone and still be fresh and sharp.
Sometimes you've got to figure out, hey, all that matters is really what you sound like
Saturday night.
For years it was Saturday morning for me.
But you can have a great week of preparation, not sleep enough, not be sharp, and suck.
And no one cares what you did on Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday.
So it's getting yourself in the right position to perform.
It's a performance what we do here.
So you have to figure out what makes it work for you.
Preparation is confidence.
I say that if you're prepared, you know,
you can handle the situation,
but it's also important to know when to back off.
I don't anymore like stay up till three in the morning,
studying my chart, just in case the backup left tackle
goes in the game.
And I want to have a story about his grandmother. Okay.
There you have the diminishing returns, right?
You have to know when to throttle back.
There's just too much to learn in college football.
Tennis, okay.
I should know everything about Djokovic
and his opponent in a big match.
I mean, there's just no excuse for not knowing that.
But college football,
you might see a team once or twice a year.
You do what you can, you watch as much tape as as you can but at some point you got to pull off
And I'll go to the gym or go for a walk or meditate so that when the light comes on
You're gonna be in the right frame of mind
I'm going to pin you down though on for a Saturday night performance for the people who might think it's easy Chris Fowler shows
Up and he's just gonna do Saturday night night and he's gonna leave three hours later. Explain to them what that week is like
now that you've arrived at a place that you could work smart and not just work
hard, that you can be efficient about it. I'm guessing the workload is still
pretty unreasonable. Yeah, I mean we're doing more and more. I mean what Herbstreet
does a couple games a week and a pregame show. He's a lunatic. Yeah, he is.
He's a lunatic working that.
I don't know how he does it.
It keeps his energy up somehow.
I believe in doing less and trying to make sure
that I can do the best I can at each thing.
But still, there's not really a bunch of time off in the week.
College football, you're looking at that team's recent game on Sunday, Monday, you're beginning to spin it ahead, you get your chart, you start to fill your chart in.
You have conference calls with coaches and players, you have in-person meetings, you look at a lot of tape, you need to look at at least two or three complete games of a team, especially later in the season.
You got to pick and choose.
You can look at chunks of games, but looking at tape for play- at tape for playback play is important too even though it's mostly an analyst
realm you have to be familiar with what they've done so that you don't just
parachute in and act like you know this game is a singular event and isn't part
of a season that'd be foolish. So time is spent doing that there's so much
information out there now it was very different I'm old enough to say that I started doing Game Day
almost in the pre-internet era.
The internet was just getting up and running.
There were very few websites
that had comfortable information on it.
And so you could sound really smart
if you told people in a national platform
what was going on in Eugene, Oregon,
because you're able to read the Oregon Register Guard
online, which no one knew how to do.
Actually, I had some ways to get at these out-of-town sports
sections. Like this is so primitive. When that wasn't easy to do. Right. Now you
had secret access to newspapers and other things. I had a website called E-Cola.com.
You could link to all these local sports sections
and read what the beat writers are writing.
Now, of course, that is baseline.
That is the beginning,
not the sum total of your preparation.
But the audience is so much better educated.
And these big college games,
there's so much on ESPN and other places
that you've heard 10 hours of content on that game
at the time we get in the booth.
So you better come up with something different or fresh.
And that's where sort of, you know, you explore other ways to get information
that's proprietary or not out there for easy access all week long.
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Grandma and shared joy is where it starts. How supportive was the family? What was
the upbringing around you deciding to choose sports as a livelihood because it seems unwise?
They were supportive but clueless basically. My parents were not sports fans. They were in the
arts but dad was a theater director, a professional theater director and professor of theater arts. My mom was a
choreographer. They were very much in the arts world in the 70s. They had
interesting parties at the house, interesting characters who dropped by.
None of it centered around sports. They might watch a little bit of the Olympics.
That was it. My grandmother was the one that got me into it, and I kind of just
took it from there. But they were supportive. I lost my dad when he was 16,
and he had a vague idea of what I wanted to do.
I was just beginning to sort of think about college
at that point.
So he's never been able to see any of the success.
My mom did see it.
She was able to witness sort of like
the emergence of game day.
And she was proud,
although being an Irish woman was very stoic.
I mean, I wasn't showered with positive reinforcement
or love or accolades the way somebody might have been
from a different family background,
but there was that understanding
that she was proud of what I was doing.
And I've always been pretty good, Dan,
at not needing a lot of external input.
I mean, I don't say that it's unimportant to me
what people think because they're our customers. I will't say that it's unimportant to me what people think because they're our
customers. I will just say that feedback from them, be it really positive and kind or really
negative, duly noted, but it's not going to rock my world. It's not going to make me feel
too differently about what I do. I think you go about your business and like I said, you
meet your own standard and you try to do right by the people you work with because I love the
collaborative part of this and you're surrounded hopefully by people that also
hold themselves to really high standard and you take great pride in the
production and so you're you're less concerned by what other people say or
don't say and I you know I was fine with the level of support that I got that it
wasn't like my mom was watching every show
and jumping on the phone and telling our old friends.
It was good.
It seems like you've arrived though
with something that sounds like real confidence
and that it would be hard to arrive at it
if you lose your dad at 16 and your mom is stoic.
You stoic.
Stoic is the good word. I mean, I don't know.
I think you, I certainly didn't have a lot of confidence
as a younger person.
Wasn't a great athlete.
Moved around, we changed schools a lot.
I was the new kid a lot.
You don't swagger into the school thinking,
hey, I'm him, I'm gonna run this show.
You're just trying to get along and not get knocked around
and you kind of try to blend in when you're the new kid
all the time to not, at least I did.
And so, you know.
Same, by the way.
Same fringes of sports, admiring the athletes,
but just wanting to be close to what it is
that they were close to, but not good enough
to be as good as they were. Yeah, I play, but thankfully none of my career has to do anything to what it is that they were close to, but not good enough to be as good as they were.
Yeah, I play, but thankfully none of my career
has to do anything to do how I played tennis
or football or anything.
So, you know, I liked it, but I recognized pretty early
I wasn't especially gifted, and it wasn't gonna be
a pathway for me to gain confidence or build an identity.
You know, that wasn't gonna be a part of my self-identity
was an athlete or a popular person.
So I don't know, I think you gain confidence over time
slowly if you're in my position or your position maybe.
I don't know how you felt,
but I mean I had no game with girls in high school.
That wasn't a part of it.
I didn't go off to college thinking
I was gonna conquer the world.
I just went off to work hard
and really take no handouts and make my way and sponge up every piece of useful knowledge I could and
be around the Colorado Buffaloes program even though they were horrendous in
football at the time and just sort of pay my dues and loved it.
But yeah I think it took me a long time to to have whatever confidence
I think I had belief in myself, but it certainly wasn't displayed out really too often
It feels like we had similar paths, right?
I went to an all-boys school and I was doing all that same stuff
Just trying to fit and didn't didn't move around a lot
But had a father who was difficult to please or didn't show pleasure and a very supportive
mother, also warm, which was helpful to believe in something that was hard to believe in because
I wasn't even doing it the way you were doing it.
I'm telling Cuban exiles who have come to this country to get me a private education
and an engineering scholarship, hey, I want to write about sports.
I want to see if I can make money writing.
It's not even television and some of the vanities.
And so my father was mortified, right?
Because he had made so many sacrifices
so that I could get and become an engineer like him,
because it would have been a safer path,
but I would have been unhappy.
Like, this thing that I chose fed me
because of the same things you're talking about.
The first time I go to the Orange Bowl with my dad, the electricity of the places, it's
like it would have been what Disney World is to kids of that age.
The Orange Bowl was to me because I'm being jostled around and I'm like, why is that
noise being made?
Why does it feel like this?
Why does everybody feel so good?
And it was more joyous than my household. It was my house didn't have a lot of joy in it. My
mom, my father's not a joyful person and my mother tried, but I wouldn't say that there
was a giant joy in my house.
It was work and commitment. Those were the important things.
The only way you got to freedom in this country was to work, and working couldn't be joyful.
So satisfaction more than joy.
I get that.
I've never focused, though, on the impact of what was lacking.
My dad got diagnosed with lung cancer when I was 14.
So if anybody's out there, I'm sure too many people have known what that's like to have
cancer in your family.
The diagnosis is a huge benchmark.
I lost him when I was 16,
but I was 14 when he was diagnosed.
And so that changed our family's life forever.
One conversation after school at the family dining table,
when that news was delivered,
it was kept from us for a long time
because parents kept stuff from kids.
Cancer wasn't discussed as openly back then and not with kids certainly. And when it was finally time to
tell us what was going on, it was scary as shit. And we knew in that moment that our life as a
family was not going to be the same. And you're very, you're just, you're unsure, you're scared.
Pretty soon he was in another state getting treatment at a hospital in Colorado.
We were back in Pennsylvania
because he was at the faculty at Penn State
when he got diagnosed.
And we were apart for months
and this was, you know, pre everything, man.
There was no FaceTime, there was no cell phones.
You maybe got a phone call once a week from him.
Here's how chemotherapy is going, how's school going?
I mean, it's primitive communication, right?
So it was all very scary. And then we- chemotherapies going? How's school going? I mean it's primitive communication, right? So
it was all very scary. And those are such formative years for you. They were, but again,
what do you do? You try, I was the oldest of two kids. My younger brother was struggling maybe even more than I was because he was two and a half years younger. My mom was obviously
really struggling. So you try to be there for both of them
and not be a problem for anyone.
You learn to be very self-sufficient.
And I've never focused on, geez, that really sucked
that I didn't have a relationship with my dad
beyond 16 as an adult.
I'm envious of that to some degree
because I think it's a rich experience.
He never saw any of my success.
I wasn't showered with hugs and kisses from my mom,
but that's okay.
I don't focus on what was lacking.
I focus on what I needed to do to navigate through that.
And as I said, be really self-sufficient.
Go to school and be very determined.
I'm not gonna take a dime from my mom or anybody else, like zero.
So little scholarship here and there, a bunch of jobs.
You know, people tend to see you now and they would think that you were born that way, right?
You were born on third base or that you don't know what adversity is,
that you don't know what trauma is and heartbreak is.
And I get a little emotional even talking about stuff like that
because you've all got shit we've dealt with.
Every single person you see walking around,
that's what you learn.
You might see a dream life or a guy,
the guy is so lucky and I am,
but that doesn't mean you haven't been through plenty of things
to help shape who you are.
And I'm very aware that everybody I see has stuff,
heavy stuff, hard stuff, difficult chapters in their life and stuff
they have to overcome.
And so I don't take for granted where I am.
And I don't assume that others have it easy,
even though it appears from the outside
that they might be really lucky.
What are the parts that make you emotional?
That's a good question.
I think just,
there's no point in sort of regretting what you don't have. I think that's what I've come through.
You don't get better or stronger when you focus on what you didn't have.
You take pride from the fact that what you made it through.
People had it a lot harder than me, okay?
I mean, everybody out there can relate to tough experiences
and many, many people came through a lot more than I did.
But I just think that, you know,
it's powerful stuff to think about how a parent,
both parents really suffered.
Both parents really suffered from poor health.
My mom had Alzheimer's.
It's a different kind of heartbreaking
to lose someone slowly who is physically fine
but mentally erodes and becomes an echo of themselves.
And Alzheimer's is awful in that way.
So that was opposite from my dad who was sharp mentally and still writing and creating,
but whose body was being ravaged by cancer
at a time when they didn't really have treatments
nearly as sophisticated as they do now.
So, both of those things, I think,
if I think about them make me emotional,
and if I allow them to,
it's just not a part of my daily life,
but it is definitely a part of who I am.
If they allow, if I allow them to, it seems like you're very tough and don't want...
It seems like I'm asking you the question, so you're not volunteering how
tough your life was, and you don't have to account for how tough everyone else's
life is to know that cancer, as you're talking about it, I saw with not
primitive treatment what that did to my brother
over the last year and I wasn't in my formative years
I'm in my 50s and it wasn't my father and so watching all of that you've now mentioned twice
Volunteered twice my father didn't get to see my success. Yes
Clearly that's something that stayed with you.
Yeah, I think so.
I'll tell you something.
I won't tell the long version of this,
because people might wander away.
But I discovered a shoebox full of cassette tapes
my dad recorded when he was a cancer patient.
He had planned to do a memoir, because at that point,
people had not written a lot of books
about what cancer was like.
Again, this was middle 70s and that stuff was kind of swept away. It wasn't talked about.
He wanted to do a book as he was recording his daily activities during treatment and some of it
was very mundane and how who he had lunch with and what he felt but some of it was deeper lessons
he was just learning and these tapes sat in a box in my mom's basement
for a long time, got discovered when she passed away,
we were going through her stuff,
and I have since listened to most of them.
I'm gonna do something with it.
So there's a project there,
because even though he never finished the tapes,
there's a lot of interesting stuff on there,
and half the story, at least half the story
is me listening to him record these at an age when he was a lot younger than I am now.
He didn't make it to 50.
He died at, I think he was 47.
So I was already a lot older than that when I listened to these tapes.
And so it's an out of body experience.
I promise you to listen to recordings of your dad's voice
that you hadn't heard for 40 years, 45 years,
to now hear these tapes.
And this is what he sounded like.
He's very theatrical and being from that world,
doesn't speak like I speak,
is very different than I am in a lot of ways.
And to process, this is his voice as he is suffering, what his daily life is like, and
then coming to these epiphanies that every day is precious and a simple lunch with friends
is priceless.
I'm sure you had conversations with your brother.
You realize when you know your time is not limitless that these things are precious.
And he was recording it.
And my reaction was
basically like no shit. I mean he figured that out when he was a patient but that was so long ago and
at such a younger age. I've known that for a long time maybe since I'm 16. There were guaranteed nothing. You know when you have cancer in your family it was three brothers of him not just him
that cancer took.
You don't assume you're going to live to 90.
You don't assume you've got plenty of time to do all these things because I'll live forever.
The mortality is in there.
And so I think I've approached life like don't put stuff off.
Time is precious. And hearing him figure that out after he got cancer
on tape 45 years later was quite an experience.
I'll do something with it at some point because,
you know, it's very interesting.
No one I've talked to has had that similar experience
about hearing tapes from a dead parent.
No, it's a dead parent about dying, but you say, it seems like, forgive this if I've got
it wrong, but there's a certain lack of self-awareness in you saying no shit to those observations
about mortality when it was forced upon you between the ages of 14 and 16, and so you
lose your childhood there.
You lose your father, and of course it's no shit.
Time is short.
I just learned the lesson.
If he'd lost his father at 16,
he might've learned it before cancer.
He smoked like a chimney, my mom smoked too.
I mean, it was lung cancer that took him.
So yeah, he should have known,
but it just like when someone says,
hey, there's power in something simple,
just having a conversation on the phone with a friend
and sharing this and that,
and just taking a walk in nature.
There's power in that.
I've known that for a long time
because I've known that we're not guaranteed things.
So to hear him arrive at that conclusion in his mid-40s
when cancer was staring at him
was just an interesting experience, that's all.
When you say you've known it, though,
you know it because your dad died.
I can't imagine that not being a thing that shapes you,
like instantaneously, losing teenage years to,
to the realization that life is short.
Yeah, I don't wanna feel like I walked around every day
fearing a short life or fearing cancer.
No, it's appreciating small moments. It's finding real happiness.
I choose not to be morbid. I take care of myself. My penchant for obsessing about health and wellness,
I'm sure comes from that. It doesn't take a genius psychiatrist to figure that out.
I try to take as good a care of myself as I possibly can, but now,
you realize that the small things matter a lot
when you have them taken away.
It leads us to why you would seek out joy
and why you would find it on a wilderness hike,
because you're just enjoying the precious moment
of being connected to.
Being healthy.
I'm alive and grateful.
I celebrate every day that I'm healthy,
that I can get up and move.
And so I have a hard time being sedentary and inactive.
It drives me crazy to sit for long periods of time
and not do something
because I just take great joy in activity
and health and moving around.
Where does that come from?
Do you think it's in here somewhere?
Like when you think of restlessness and activity,
you've mentioned that your parents were performers,
you don't strike me as somebody
who's naturally inclined to perform.
I was scared to death to step on stage.
I had a lot of opportunities to be in theater
as a little kid.
You know, you jump out there in some Shakespearean thing,
my lord, my lord, here cometh.
I was scared shitless of that.
I associated live performance with tension
because as a production was getting ready to be launched,
my dad would be nervous about it,
and he had hit a temper, and he was wound up.
And so that's what theater meant to me was tension.
So I took acting classes.
It was definitely not for me.
And I was scared to death to give reports in class.
Or reports were, I mean, I didn't like public speaking
at all when I first got to ESPN.
You figure out you better get over that,
because they're going to pay you money.
It's stupid to be scared as standing in front of a group
talking to people.
But none of that was natural.
But no, the appreciation for nature
did come from my parents.
We took a lot of hikes, and they're both from Colorado.
We spent time out there.
I still do every summer.
Feel really connected to them and myself
when I'm out in the mountains.
That's kind of my happy place.
So that's always been there, even pre-cancer.
I mean, just the wonders of nature in all its many forms. I mean I
like living here in Miami because I love seeing the trees and I love swimming in
the ocean and the color of Biscayne Bay is something I just cherish every
time I drive across the causeway. I just love nature in all its forms and so
being healthy enough to get out inside and enjoy it is like something I'm
grateful for every day.
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YMX benefits vary by card terms apply you mentioned your father's temper and you mentioned your own when you're frustrated with a mistake
You've made and you throw big separate though. I know nowhere near him. I promise you know
No, I don't have a big temper though. I know nowhere near him. I promise you. No, no, I don't know what his temper is.
I just want more details on the mistake that gets the thing thrown.
I want to know, even though you've outgrown it, I want to know when you say you're unforgiving
with yourself, because I do imagine, again, I'm making assumptions.
I don't know you this way, but I assume that you're very tough and that you're very tough
on yourself.
And so when you're throwing the phone
or whatever it is you're throwing,
what is the nature of the mistake
that makes you ravage yourself unreasonably,
even though you don't do that that much anymore?
Well, at least you added that last part.
I don't ravage myself very much anymore,
but I have been far, far angrier at myself
than I have at any other person, not even close. And especially these days, I really been far, far angrier at myself than I have at any other person, not even close.
And especially these days, I really don't,
I've never raised my voice or yelled at anybody
at ESPN in all those years, except for one person,
somebody that I actually really love,
and that's Dick Vitale, but that's another,
that's a TV story that I've told at his event.
But yeah, I lost my mind, but he drove me to it.
No, but I don't, temper is not really a part of my game,
especially to other people.
I will, I actually, people who think,
all they see is intensity and hard work,
that's what they thought about Game Day,
for this guy doesn't take a lot of joy.
I've had people, really smart, sensitive people,
tuned in people who know me well, like Tom Rinaldi,
take me aside and say, you know,
I know you enjoy this show,
but can you show the joy more?
I said, yeah, sure I can.
I mean, believe me, I'm very grateful to do this job,
but it is such hard work that that comes first, right?
Meeting your standard and the responsibility
of that particular role in a show like that.
You know, you are the point guard, the quarterback,
whatever, people take their cue from you,
for better or worse.
So you wanna convey commitment, hard work,
attention to detail, high standard.
And I've been really, really grateful
that people have expressed that to me,
that they've seen that.
Now, it took me longer to realize,
you should also show you're having a great time,
that this is fun, that you're lucky to be here in this spot, that you're taking great joy in this,
because they take their cue from that too. So that was a longer time coming, but I will still
get pissed off at myself. If I miss an exit over here and I'm just not paying attention, I'll scream
nasty words at myself in the car
for five seconds and I'll calm down
and go about my rerouting myself.
But I can't, you know.
What does your wife have to say about these parts of you
that she accepts and understands and loves,
but may not love?
Jennifer understands.
I mean, I think that I don't have a temper,
so I don't, and I never, I don't.
No, I'm talking about being hard on yourself.
When a woman loves you or when a person loves you,
I know my wife helps me a great deal here,
because if I could fix one thing about myself,
or improve one thing about myself,
I would be more gentle with myself.
And having someone love you in a way that's understanding
and accepting, and can talk me in on stuff
when I'm being unreasonable with myself. That's
why I was asking you how she looks. She's very very hard on herself too
though. She has very high standards. She's meticulous, detail-oriented. When she does
a job does it right. So she, we agree on that part of the thing and she doesn't
let me off too easy if I don't do a good job with something because that's the
way she is. But no, but she understands. I mean, she's not the voice, though, that says, hey, you're too tough on yourself.
Relax. Throttle back a little bit.
I mean, that's not I don't ask her to do that.
And that's not the role that she plays.
She's she understands that I can I can sort through this myself
and that I'm not going to beat myself up for a game
that I continue to that I consider to be below my standard.
You leave the stadium sometimes and you know
you didn't bring all that preparation that you did
properly to bear. Or you just screwed up in the moment. Or you let your
concentration dip in the third quarter. Or you didn't have the words
when it was needed, some big moment. But you know I don't,
again that is a carry over very long.
I want a couple tequilas and I get over it.
All right, we'll keep giving you tequila
and we'll keep trying to milk you
for more and more information about how it is
you're as good as you are at the things
that you are good at.
When you mention preparation,
I'm going to try and pin you down here.
At your most crazy extreme meticulous
Preparation is how many hours a week? Maybe not now
But whenever it was that you were most unreasonable about hungry and getting to a place that
Had achievement in it and wasn't necessarily reasonable or balanced
How many hours a week does it take you to prepare for what you're doing on Saturday night?
What time are you going to bed at on the most unreasonable preparation weeks? Not very
late anymore maybe one o'clock I'm pretty nocturnal. I'm not talking about now I'm
talking about whatever represents your well your greatest extremes on
preparation when you were fighting for your dreams. When I did college game day
and also did Thursday night football,
it was super challenging.
I probably worked, I don't know, 70, 80 hours because it was required.
You know, I did a game on Thursdays.
It was great fun.
It was never the hugest game of the week.
But I took it super seriously.
I hadn't done that much football play by play until that.
So it was myself and Jesse Palmer, Doug Flutie, Craig
James, Aaron Andrews.
That was sort of our group in some kind of rotation.
And I did that game.
And then commercially, flew to game day site on Friday morning
and cranked really hard to do a show that just kept growing
from 90 minutes to two hours to three hours.
It just got harder and harder.
And the level of detail that I wanted to bring to the show
to an increasingly educated viewership
was stressful as hell.
Outdoors.
Oh, so stressful.
I mean, yeah, the execution of the show is another,
we can talk about that, but getting ready for the show,
there was no downtime.
It was nothing but that for 15 straight weeks.
Again, I loved it, but it didn't leave much time
to try to be a good husband.
We were trying to be parents at that point.
I wasn't present for every chapter of that.
It was difficult and super challenging.
I don't really, I'm not a reflective person.
I don't think back on that much, but that was a tough time.
And again, you do what you think you need to do
to meet your own standard and not disappoint yourself.
And it was a lot of work.
When I stopped doing the Thursday game
and just did game day, I could breathe a little bit.
I still stay up really late.
I still don't wanna miss anything.
And that continues today. I just think you can work, as you said, work smarter and know how to
prepare yourself for the broadcast and not get caught up. The preparation is not the thing. It
just sets the table. It's essential, but the job is the performance, right?
So like I said before, you can suck on Saturday.
It doesn't matter to anybody, including me,
how well you did Monday through Friday preparing.
Geez, I had that down.
I didn't say it well, or I forgot this in the moment,
or I got this guy's pronunciation wrong.
Okay, that's what you're judged by.
Practice, it doesn't matter how you shoot and shoot around. It matters what you do.
You're judged on Saturday night for three hours. It's, you figure out, okay, how do I get
the best out of myself for that, that three, four, I wish it was three hours,
it's more like four hours. Is there any particular reason that you're not
a reflective person?
I've never been asked that question.
Because I, number one, believe in the present moment a lot
more.
I don't believe in the future.
Stressing about that, I don't believe
in trying to rewrite the past.
I think what's done is done.
All those kind of cycle babble cliches that people say
that I happen to believe in to a large degree.
But that, you know, I do think that,
we can go deep if you want to.
I do believe that control is an illusion.
We think we have control over things
we actually have no control over.
We have no control over the past.
I don't believe you have that much control over the future except you can put yourself in
position to succeed with the moment.
Play probabilities, play or try to play probabilities but it's not control.
So what you're doing now to get ready for that moment, you know, where preparation meets
opportunity, that's luck, I believe that. So it's what you're doing right now to get
ready for what might happen
But you're not stressing about what's gonna happen in the future because we don't control that so I think I've just learned that
one way to take stress out of life and to be a happier person is to not
Spend too much time looking back or looking forward what a wisdom though like I read a book I could totally wrote about the power of now and he writes about
fear regret is an entire book Eckhart Tolle wrote about the power of now and he writes about fear, regret
is the past and fear is whatever it is you think you can control in the future.
We suffer much more in our imagination than we do in reality.
Eckhart Tolle writes about a lot of that.
I've read a lot of books like his and all his books.
What we imagine could happen, far worse than what's usually going to happen. I mean, nine times out of ten, we're imagining stuff worse than we'll actually confront us.
What a great thing for you to have learned.
How did you arrive at the path of looking for these kinds of nuggets of wisdom?
Those are self-help books that you're reading about how to get to something happier, and
you seem to have, you're living it, it seems.
Yeah, you know, I don't know.
I guess intuitively I've come to some of the same conclusions
that these other people have.
When I read books, I mean, there are light bulb moments.
I mean, I can't say that I read Eckhart Tolle
and none of that stuff, I hadn't thought of that before.
I mean, it makes sense.
But when it reinforces
something you already thought, and I read the Stoics, I read Marcus Aurelius, I read
a lot of, because there were a lot of smart people back then. And I think a lot of it
resonates now, it's timeless. So, you know, just being focused on the present moment is not original and it's not exclusive to one author.
I think it's sort of, you know,
Eastern thinking interests me.
I've spent time in Nepal and the Himalayas
getting to know Sherpas and talking to them
and seeing kind of what makes them tick
and what makes them joyful
and what they prioritize and what they don't.
I mean, it's, all of life is prioritizing, right?
And prioritizing begins with subtraction.
You start subtracting things that are really unimportant
to you, that are wasteful.
You know, and then you're left with fewer things
to worry about and you can choose from among those things
about what to prioritize.
And that to me is just life.
If you stress about, hey, I've got so much on my platter and so little time to do it,
which I used to do all the time, including preparing for games, look how much energy
you're wasting on the stress of that.
In reality, you come to the conclusion that you have plenty of time to do the things you
really need to do, as long as you can differentiate the stuff that you don't of time to do the things you really need to do.
As long as you can differentiate the stuff that you don't really need to do.
And then once you figure out what's important to you, what's going to help
you and help others and make you happy and get you where you want to go, then
somehow prioritize that. And usually for me there's no room for for sitting and
complaining about the past. I like to do it. I like to reflect on, hey, memory lane,
I sat with Corso the other day in Orlando,
we start telling old stories and laughing.
When I do that, I realize, oh, there's great joy in that too
and I should take more time to do that,
but it's never gonna be more important to me
than the present moment, you know?
Understood.
Why are you talking to Sherpas? Are you on a quest for curiosities? Like how are,
I know you like to travel, but what are you, what are you doing there? Like you're,
you're trying to learn. Are you just inherently curious?
No, I go there because the mountains are there, but the people of Nepal in that region,
who are basically they're Tibetan. They've come down from across the Himalayas from Tibet into Nepal.
Then the Sherpas who populate that part of that country
are of Tibetan descent typically.
No, they're just fascinating, very, very, very tough people
who know how to keep things simple
and know where to find joy and know it's important, I think.
And as well as the amazing scenery,
which if mountains speak to you
and mountains to me are the most
profound expression of nature, and we talked about how much I love nature, then the Himalayas
are where you go.
And you test yourself mentally, physically, you go over high passes and climb mountains.
I've never climbed Everest or anything of that 8,000 meter range, but I've climbed smaller
mountains there and I've certainly spent a lot of time at altitude and and and taking great joy in that just went last
Last year with my brother 25 years after we had gone the first time
and was
Extremely proud of being able to do that at age 60 and be physically better than I was at 35
but no along with that you you
Find stillness and just take a lot of lessons from from kind of what you see, what you experience and there's a lot of wisdom.
Most people are incredibly tough. I mean
old stories about walking four hours to school every day. They walked four hours
to school every day. The guy that the Sherpa that took us around, who's
climbed Everest 20 times, was telling us stories.
Now that's not the thrust of his wisdom, but it shows you
that people have been formed by
serious hardship and the resolve and resilience that it takes to overcome that and the fact that
people sit there in a small village and they watch foreigners walk past their house every day,
loaded down with super expensive camera
equipment and climbing equipment and and they've spent 65 70 thousand dollars to
climb Everest okay for for a month of their life and that is an amount of
money that is unfathomable to anyone who lives there right so they've seen that
their whole lives and have have I'm not climbing inside the head of
every Sherpa I've ever come across, but in general, they're not envious, they're not
jealous, they're not angry, they don't feel cheated, they don't feel deprived.
They're very happy with what they have and how they live their life and what's important
to them and not important to them.
And that's family and health and being surrounded
by these mountains.
Are you someone who's perpetually testing himself?
Do you like to test yourself in a lot of areas,
whether it be the weight room or beyond
where you're pushing yourself through
what might be some limits or trying to?
Yeah, I think so.
A lot of different forms.
I mean, I don't give myself that pep talk every morning
by any stretch.
But I think part of what I consider
to be a happy life, a fulfilling life,
is one where you continue to challenge yourself
and get outside of your comfort zone and improve and grow.
And if you cease doing that, then something really precious is lost.
And I really can't imagine life without that, without in some way continuing to
try to improve and grow. And you can't do those things unless you're pushing
yourself, unless you're getting out of your comfort zone. Again, that's cycle
babble, but it really is true. I mean, you have to be comfortable getting out of
your comfort zone and pushing yourself and risking failure. It's why I don't think I don't have any
fear of losing. I don't really have any fear of failing. I want to do everything
I try to do well. But if you sit around and you know, ask anybody you talk to,
you know better than me, talk to these athletes, if you're gonna fear losing
all the time, you're never gonna take a shot. You're never gonna take a risk.
You go nowhere. If you fear losing and failing, you wouldn't even launch a career of being an athlete in sports because the odds
are so long, right? So you got to suspend that and not be afraid of failing and
looking bad and falling short and then you can kind of just kind of free it up
to keep trying to do different things. It's a broad question I'm gonna ask you
but what has your wife taught you about love
and where has your wife helped you grow
through some of these things that we're talking about?
I mean, that's a long conversation.
I mean, I think when you run into your life partner,
you learn a lot about love.
You learn your capacity for it,
you learn how to receive it, and you learn that it's the most important thing. So we met at the least romantic occasion
you could possibly think of, the ESPN Christmas party at a catering hall in Southern Connecticut.
My wife Jennifer was on Body Shaping, which was your show that was very, very important
to ESPN's family and stations early on.
It was really important.
ESPN 2 had nothing.
In fact, ESPN didn't have a whole lot.
Before ESPN 2 was even launched, there was not Sports Center and Get Up and First Take
and these shows didn't exist.
The show was an exercise show in Hawaii.
Was it Hawaii?
Different places, yeah.
Jamaica, Hawaii.
Beautiful people exercising outdoors.
So she did that for a long time, was very good at it.
Among other jobs, she worked as a home shopping host.
She was on Channel 2 in New York at CBS
and did a lot of acting and other things too.
But she was in ESPN because of body shaping.
And so that's what brought her to the Company Christmas Party.
And we were supposed to get fixed up at a Super Bowl party
by some mutual friends the year before.
But nobody told me it was a fix up.. They just told me come to Connecticut on your off
day to go to a Super Bowl party and I was living in New York. I was like, I'm good.
I'm up there during the week. I'm just gonna watch the game on my couch. And
after the fact they said we had somebody we wanted you to meet.
You didn't tell me that. So we go around from January all the way till the next
December and she walks up to me
at the company Christmas party, introduced herself,
and I knew she was, and we just hit it off,
and it's quite weird, but our first date was the ESPYs
in Radio City, which again, it sounds so sad.
It sounds so unromantic and sad.
You really think that?
Well, but 25 years later, I'm asking you a question
about how she helped you grow
and what she taught you about love.
She taught me everything about love.
I mean, I think you meet your life partner
and I'm not a parent,
but so people say you learn another capacity for love.
If you have kids born that you learn things about yourself
and about love that you never knew before
I'll accept that but not having experienced that my my
growth in that area and knowledge of love comes from from Jennifer and I falling in love and and
And getting married and spending 25 years together almost 25 years together. So
Yeah, she's been instrumental to me in so many different ways I can't
even I can't even express it fully but but yeah you when somebody is your best
friend and your your life partner they know you better than anybody else and
for better or worse. So well I like where my wife knows me better than I know me
it's not even that they know you better than anybody else like there are good
many things that my wife is showing me
that I had not before seen about me before.
Does that make you uncomfortable?
I mean, I would say uncomfortable only in the places
that you're speaking about when you say it's psychobabble
to say that you have to go toward your discomforts
to learn something new, to grow, to...
Yeah, true. It makes you uncomfortable.
You understand that it's still...
She means well. It's for your own benefit.
Oh, but it's not even, but the thing is, this is, hot, it's funny to say because she's the
only one that figured these particular combination keys out.
I have to see it for myself.
It's not because I'm going to be nagged into changing.
Like I did all of that my whole life before marrying her.
That's not what's happening. It's that I love this person so much.
I want to be what this person thinks I am.
And so when I see things in my behavior that are
patterns from that, I just saw in my house and I
didn't know that that's not necessarily how it has
to be, or I'm just not paying attention because
I'm just not thinking attention because I'm just not
thinking about the things that have to be conscious in a loving relationship where you
have to be unselfish about things.
No, I'm deeply grateful that she shows me these things.
It doesn't mean that I enjoy seeing them, but then I can get to work on them.
I'm never going to work on them if it's just forever blind spots.
Getting married later, see I was 36 I think when Jen and I got together and she
was 32, 31, 32.
So you've lived quite a bit of life and you've experienced things and you're not coming up
together as kids.
And so there are challenges because I think if not fully formed, you're largely formed
by that stage in life.
Yes.
Well, but I thought I was.
That's the thing. I would say that I would have argued before meeting her I
would have argued I'm formed men are formed by 50 there's not I mean we can
we can talk about wisdoms and things that you can learn and always want to be
growing but that clay can get resistant and and hardened and so I if not for her I think I might have ended
up in something that would have been unwilling to change so readily because
I'm doing it in the name of making sure I take care of somebody who deserves it.
You should tutor me on how to be ready and willing to change that in fundamental
ways. I do find that hard. I do think I am who I am. I think that obviously you need to respect
the wisdom of your life partner
and understand what she's telling you
and be willing to adjust.
But I do think that those are hard things
and they're hard for her to accept from me too
because you can sort of nudge,
as much as you love someone
and they love you, you can nudge them in a direction,
but it's hard to find them and change.
But this is not, but what I'm saying to you though,
is it's not even nudging.
What I have learned in this small space is,
her love tends to be such a pure thing,
unlike anything that I've known before,
teaching me about love, that
if I'm landing wrong with her because she's not inclined to have these frictions with
me, I'm probably doing something wrong.
That's what I learned, right?
And that's a hard thing to learn.
Like if you're stubborn, if you're Cuban machismo, if you're grew up thinking
you know certain things and that you know them with conviction, it's never her telling me anything.
It's me noticing how something lands and being like that doesn't feel right. Like that I'm doing
something there that I shouldn't be doing it. And then I start tracing what it is that is in in my past with my parents and what I saw in my house and I'm like oh well that's that's
what I learned. I think that's wise I think a lot of women listening to this
would say yes they would stand up and cheer what you just said because that's
a hard thing for us to do as men I think I admit that in myself too. And you don't
see the value in it though? I do see the value in it, I do see the value of course.
But because you seem like somebody,
you've accrued wisdoms and to go with the Popeye,
I am what I am, when you're still trying to grow
at every turn, seems unnecessarily stubborn.
I said I am what I am, I just think that you figured out,
when your partner, as much as you love them,
does think differently than you
and sees certain things that are fundamental to her
and to you differently, you can bang heads on it
because you're just not going to find common ground.
And so we have different ways of thinking
about certain things and approaching life
in ways that I have learned limitless things from her
and what she's experienced that I have learned limitless things from her
and what she's experienced and how she's developed as a person, she's come through a whole lot
to about stuff, you know?
So, but it doesn't mean that we're going to find
common ground. No, no, that makes sense.
Yes, on fundamental disagreement,
you're gonna have fundamental disagreements.
You don't hang around for 25 years,
look, this would be one of those agree to disagree things.
I am not gonna see it this way.
We do not see social media the same way.
She does not understand why I ever wanna pick up this phone
and talk to people on Instagram.
Just will not get it.
And I say, well, you don't have to get it.
It's okay.
That's not a pillar of who I am.
It's a part of me.
I like to, my dad was a professor.
I like to help share stuff with people.
I don't go on there and say, you must,
or even you should, very often.
I just say, hey, I made mistakes,
here's what I figured out for me,
here's an idea to consider this,
and that's the way it's presented.
But, you know, how do I get off talking to strangers
and telling them anything about anything? That's...
We have to disagree on that one.
Right, right. Well, but yeah, no, and I understand that also keeps you from being present.
Social media does, keeps one from being present. But also we need it for our work,
and you just mentioned a little
while ago, the idea that you need to keep up. My guess is that you have to be competitive
and hungry, no matter where it is that you've arrived in life with success and you feel
the need to, to keep up with where everyone is because we're on social media. I don't
know about that. I need it for information.
For what I do, the reason I said it,
I was putting my sensibilities on you.
I don't want to be in the phone.
I'd prefer to get out of the phone.
But there are certain things because of the daily necessities
of what I do.
Yeah, as an information getting tool,
we don't open actual papers anymore. But I think she means, you know, why share with strangers
anything on that platform?
Why it's not your job to do that?
I do sports videos.
I talk about sports sometimes on there.
Most of the time, I don't.
I'm sharing whatever else is important to me.
You know, when you're not a parent,
but you think you've learned a thing or two,
I don't go up to strangers on the street
who are college age and go,
listen, if we'd had kids that have been your age,
so you're gonna have to listen.
I don't do that.
But when I'm asked for help,
I get pleasure in trying to help someone
understand something that maybe I can assist with, you know.
You have life wisdoms accrued. You're allowed to share them.
Before we get out of here, I wanted to ask you about both your experience with a college football video game that everyone is excited about,
and whether you think that you've given EA Sports College Football the ability now with what it is that you did for them
for many, many hours to replace you with AI.
Of course they'll replace me with AI.
In the future, in the future,
have you realized that you've just given them
the entirety of your career as soon as they figure out?
It's a multi-year contract, I'll say that.
They can't do it after the first year.
When the contract runs out,
they can let machines do all of it.
I think that that's a whole other conversation.
You could do a podcast only on the looming dangers of AI.
First of all, the video game was great fun for me.
It's an important part of the college football landscape
because people approach the sport very often
through the video game.
It hasn't existed for 10 years. ESPN blocked me from being involved in the first version of that game
because I was a staff employee, they could do that at that point,
and they were supposedly going to develop their own video game in competition with EA,
so they didn't want me to be involved in it.
It really bothered me because it's a part of the pop culture of the sport
and now that it's back and it's been gone for 10 years and it's
like mind-blowingly advanced, the players are involved,
NIL has opened the door for you to pick your team with names on back of the
jerseys and the level of technology in the game
is staggering.
Way too hard for me to play it.
I have a PS1 which doesn't work on that game anymore.
We have to have a PS5 I think to play it.
Just being involved and putting your voice in the game is flattering because it's just
another outlet for what you do.
When somebody is playing a video game
and they throw a 75 yard touchdown pass
and they're playing Ohio State versus Michigan,
they want the voice narrating that
to be as excited as they are.
And so that was the challenge.
They wanted your voice.
For years they wanted your voice.
Well, thanks.
I mean, they wanted some voice.
It hasn't even been around for 10 years.
So I think people are psyched that it's back.
And I think it's going to explode when it goes on sale
in July for that reason.
I've just gotten a lot of really positive feedback
about the fact that the game's even returning.
When people actually get a look at it,
we were up in Orlando about a week ago,
and people were shown for the first time
just how amazing the game was.
Bloggers and insiders and I think it was embargoed until really recently but now I can talk about it.
It's pretty mind-blowing what's out there and so yeah I wanted to do that really really well
and 115 hours spread out over more than two years as they developed the game and wasn't like an
intense amount of time in any given week or month, but over a couple years,
we got everything that could possibly happen
in a game recorded, including stuff
that would never happen in a real game,
but happens in video games where apparently
people punt on second down sometimes
because they lose their mind, but we're ready for that too.
But no, I just, they played back a simulation
of the play that I described.
Ohio State scores 75 yard pass,
first play in the big house against Michigan.
And played back what the computer had stitched together
as my call, because you don't do a complete call.
You do everything involved in a long play.
He's rolling right, looking deep, has a man,
caught, in the clear,
touchdown Ohio State. That's like six different little pieces of information
you've recorded at different times that the algorithm somehow knows how to stitch
together based on what the controller does. It's crazy technology, right? But
when you do that, it didn't quite sound right to me because this is pretty granular, but anybody who watches sports who's seen Chris Berman like lose his mind on
You know
NFL highlights at the end of a day on Sunday, all right
You have no idea what that's actually like in person you've seen it
But the intensity level in the studio
is, I'm holding my hand, a foot over my head
to get to where it is eye level, okay?
Because the process of putting it on the screen,
filters everything, it's the same thing.
You know, you know how to do it.
Well, in a video game, I found it was the same thing.
I had to go crazy in a little padded room
in my office town here in Miami Beach.
Inauthentic, faking emotion.
Faking it, trying to put yourself in a booth
and imagine that situation.
And then bringing a level of intensity
that's very natural in the moment, but very unnatural.
And then trying to do that, by the way,
again and again and again, because we were calling
these high-energy, crazy touchdown plays
probably half a season's worth, we were calling these high energy, crazy touchdown plays,
probably half a season's worth would be squeezed
into like one three hour or four hour voiceover session.
So you're losing your voice, you're losing your mind.
It's very unnatural experience.
You know, we finally figured out how to do this
and let's not quite do that.
Let's have some regular three yard games
and then we'll mix a touchdown call or two in there.
But there was one day when I went into the room
and led the said touchdown Air Force,
which is the first letter, first school in the alphabet,
down to Wyoming, and just went down there.
And it was just, it was a couple of breaks,
but you don't do that in real life.
And so I wanted, when it was actually put together
by the computer, I wanted it to sound like a real game, but it took a while to get there and I had to kind of change
My energy to make it work
I wonder if you thought about your mother the
Choreographer or in the father the theater coach because that sounds more like acting than anything that you've done in your career
Yes, it is. Although if you can put yourself there,
you're just kind of imagining.
It's not, you're not creating from, you know,
something you do have it done before.
You're just trying to fake it and say,
I'm in a booth and I'm imagining this play in front of me.
How did that sound like?
I listened back to some calls from real games
to kind of get in that place.
You're describing acting, Fowler.
You're describing, you're describing acting. Fowler. You're describing acting.
Yeah, but it's your own words.
So I'm not trying to be quote like Shakespeare
or I'm not standing out there and say,
here's the latest like, Ibsen.
Let's see.
I mean, it's shit that I have said before
and I would say just done in a different environment.
That's all.
Appreciate your work, appreciate your time,
and appreciate that after all of these years
that we're able to get together and do this
because the audience should know,
in the history of sports journalism and ESPN,
there have not been a lot of stories like yours you basically went from
Intern to top of the game there over 40 years like your first assignments at ESPN
Were on the lowest rung of 11 years old man. I thought they were gonna hire me for sports center
They didn't know we got the high school show. That's right. You were covering high school kids, but you did it with a great enthusiasm
And I still remember that as sort of aspirational watching you do that was like,
oh, that's interesting. In fact, my first,
my first job in television was doing a show like that.
The Miami Herald High School sports show right near here.
Did someone tell you don't do that? Because the last thing I'll leave you with it,
what I tell anybody is listen to your gut and your inner voice.
And you only do that by cutting out the static. Well-meaning
people will give you terrible advice along the way and one of those pieces of
advice was don't go to ESPN. Startup cable company was seven years old at the
time. I got there in 86 and you should not do that. It's a magazine show, not
live, high school sports. You should go read scores.
These are real places that I have job offers.
Wichita, New Hampshire, Cincinnati as a weekend guy.
I was lucky, I was decent coming out of college.
I was in Denver, I'd worked out of college,
I'd worked in a top 20 market producing
and then doing reports in sports, not anchoring, but I had been on the air in Denver.
DSPN hires me to do this high school show and it felt right.
And had I listened to everybody else, I would have had a different career.
Had I listened to everybody else when I got to ESPN, they would have rerouted me to some
place very quickly away from that show, but not to college football.
So, you know, about three decisions that I made early on,
um, game day was one of those, were instrumental.
So anybody listening to this, whatever you do, um,
find a way to know yourself well,
because it starts there, trust yourself,
and all the best choices I've made.
I've made a lot of bad decisions on stocks
and real estate and all that,
but I've made no bad decisions in my career.
Every single time when it's been A or B or C,
I've felt good about that.
And stay at ESPN, leave ESPN,
could have done that a few times.
Obviously didn't, wanted to, thought about it, didn't,
was the right thing to do was it, didn't was the right
thing to do was stay, don't run away from something, run to something. So all of
those things only come from the fact that whether whether it's being
self-sufficient early on, I learned to know myself well and trust myself and
make decisions based on what felt right and what felt fun. Not money, eyeballs on you, ratings,
none of that ever factored in, it still doesn't.
It's what is gonna feel fun and fulfilling
and what feels right to you.
You wouldn't have met your wife either
at the horribly sad Christmas party.
Very, very different career in life, yes.
What is the most tempted that you were?
Which is the most difficult to find?
When I was pissed off about how things were going up
at the company, when I felt unappreciated, underpaid.
Yeah, I mean, we all have.
You don't work at one place for 38 years
without having chapters, as you know well, right?
Everybody has who's worked there.
Every single person, right?
At any job, not just on air, has felt that.
And probably every other company out there too. So, you
know, you just learn to check your ego, check your temper, and make a sound decision, as
tough as it is, to swallow it. It's the right thing to do.
You toughed it out to have what looks like from here, I don't know if there's other stuff that you wanted to do aspirationally or ambition-wise,
but it seems to me like you have at ESPN
the exact job you want to have at ESPN.
I do, but I'm saying that is good fortune,
but it's also preparation, it's also knowing yourself well
and making good choices,
because I could have taken six different detours
in that path that would
have landed me in a different place and it wouldn't be calling the championship game
in college football or the finals of the women's women's league of the US Open.
It would be someplace completely different.
It might have been also good and fulfilling but not what I'm doing now.
And what I am doing now are my two favorite sports championship events. And it's not sheer luck.
It's just being ready for that and knowing yourself well
and knowing who to listen to and who not to listen to.
And most listen to yourself.
It is good to see you.
And I'm glad that we did this.
Thank you for spending the time.
Yeah, I wish that we had had somebody around here
bring us more so that I could have loosened him up
and gotten all.
I've just this drink. Do you realize if we had three of these, We had somebody around here bring us more so that I could have loosened him up and gotten all-
I nursed this drink all-
I could have just-
Do you realize if we had three of these, he would have been ripping every executive at
ESPN with me lobbing him lobs.
I came prepared for that too, man.
I came prepared for that.
No.
No gotcha here.
This is not the setting for gotcha.
Thank you, Chris.
Cheers, Dan.
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