The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz - The Big Suey: Women Can Think AND Read
Episode Date: March 25, 2024Greg Cote has a strong take: the Steelers are going to be very good. The crew chats about the Russell Wilson and Justin Fields led Steelers QB room. Then, a congratulations to a friend for deleting Tw...itter, Greg Cote commits journalistic crimes, and Billy is furious about toy commercials being marketed toward children. The conversation continues as Dan, Greg and the Shipping Container try to determine the best of the children's toys. Plus, Connor McGregor's press tour for Road House leaves an...interesting...impression. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to the Big Sui presented by DraftKings.
Why are you listening to this show? The podcast that seems very similar to the other Dan LeBattard podcast
I'm sorry. I'm not gonna apologize for that. In fact, the only difference seems to be this imaging
I have been tempted in restaurants just walking past tables to grab somebody's fries
That if they're just there that hasn't happened to you guys
I've done it and now here's the marching band in a way
that face and the habitual liar
the computer audio crash so i will get that up and running we will get that up
and running i'm not going to go into a back room moves myers around will get
that up and running and we will play that connor mcgregor sound for you in a
moment but greg cody for some reason felt the need during this break to say
to me the steelers are are gonna be really good.
Yeah.
And I think everyone is really falling in love
with them having two quarterbacks who aren't Kenny Peckett,
who they've seen had success before.
And I just keep thinking
that they were available cheap for a reason.
Like it doesn't mean that the rest of the league
can't be wrong on some of this,
but I mean, the last of the league can't be wrong on some of this but I mean the
last version of Russell Wilson that you saw was a very constipated offense but I
think most people have the opinion that you have which is those quarterbacks are
going to be better how do you screw that up and I present to you Arthur Smith
that's fair I'm not gonna defend that club but Pittsburgh Russell Wilson I thought was okay last year. Two years ago he was awful.
Last year I thought it was a little bit of a comeback year for him. And Justin Fields, I think is a great contrast.
I think the two of them, I can almost envision a two quarterback system that might actually work where you play both guys,
where both guys might commonly get 10, 15 passes a game because you're going to play them
depending on series and score and opponent.
I think they're going to get a lot out of both guys this season.
I think it's an interesting mix.
And the other thing is Russell Wilson came cheap only because he was willing to because of all the money still being paid by Denver.
And Justin Fields reportedly had four other teams interested in him,
but he was lobbying hard behind the scenes to get to pittsburgh but he was
had cheap i understand he had other opportunities he was had cheap
only because the other opportunities weren't a lot better
for chicago like if somebody was offering a second round pick he would
not be in pittsburgh yet but
but my guess is that the all other things being close to equal they sent him where it is that he
wanted to go and if I told you right now I don't know the answer to the question
I'm asking but if I told you that Russell Wilson wasn't being paid by the
Broncos was just a total free agent what do you think he's getting where you
think he's getting a lot of money you believe that after what he's done the
last couple of seasons that that's a big contract that he's getting I think he's I could be
wrong I think he's getting a second tier Geno Smith type contract he's not 50
he's not 40 million a year but I think he's a guy who's getting a 30 million
but Sean you correct me if I'm wrong because I understand that some shine
came off the bloom when the Dolphins
were scoring 70 off them. But Sean Payton is supposed to know quarterbacks, correct?
And they're paying him a ton of money to know quarterbacks, and they made a giant
investment in order for him to know quarterbacks. And he got there and
promptly ran him out of town. Like, very quickly the reports were coming out
where you're hearing sources say Sean Payton keeps telling Russell Wilson, hey stop with the
politics stuff and the kissing of babies and concentrate on playing quarterback.
He didn't like him from the beginning and when I give a quarterback a lot of
money and then I give a coach a lot of money to be a quarterback trainer and
that coach comes in and immediately runs off the quarterback in a way that makes
us all gasp because we can't believe how quickly denver realized its mistake
you're telling me that you know more about russia wilson and his prospects
then shon payton notes or you feel better about his prospects than shon
payton does because if he could do what you think you can do in pittsburgh my
guess is that shon payton would have had him doing it in Denver. When I say I like the combination of those two it's
because in in Russell Wilson you have a guy who's not chronologically over the
hill yet he should have a few more prime seasons and I think he might and he's
got the the proverbial chip on a shoulder yet still to prove that he ain't done yet
and Justin Fields is the opposite he's the guy who the one team gave up on maybe prematurely but probably only
because they had the top pick and a very good guy to get so they're they're
discarding Justin feels who I think is better than than being discarded at his
age with his remaining potential I think as a mix I think it's a good
combination if I'm reading between the lines here what my dad's saying it at his age with his remaining potential. I think as a mix, I think it's a good combination.
If I'm reading between the lines here what my dad's saying,
it sounds like you're saying that the Steelers quarterback
room is the hungriest room in the league.
Yeah, it could be.
It could very well be because you have two guys
who both think they should start.
Because most quarterbacks are fed well.
Most quarterbacks, you don't look at them and,
man, this guy really needs to prove something,
or this guy, most quarterbacks are paid the most.
You're looking at a room right here
where these guys both have to work.
I'm half kidding with the hungry analogy,
but I do think that both of these guys
have a lot to prove.
Right, they do.
And motivation matters, right?
They do still both have a lot to prove
for very different reasons
at different points in their career.
I think the mix is gonna be great great, the motivation is going to be great. I haven't
investigated the rest of the team. They always have a decent running game. They always have
a decent defense. They could use a wide receiver in the draft, but I just think they're a team
on the rise and I think the quarterback room is one of the most interesting in the league. I am profoundly sad right now
Because what just happened to our show we're headed to
20 years
Doing this and for I'm gonna say 19 and a half of those years a lot to prove
Motivation hunger and team on the rise
Thrown together. Yeah would have made me vomit all over your face
But you see what he's saying here.
Who's the least hungry quarterback room?
A lot to prove, motivation, hunger, team on the rise.
You also said Sean Payton knows quarterbacks
and his extent of knowing quarterbacks
is he had Drew Brees and then he didn't and he retired.
And then he came back.
Like you won one Super Bowl with Drew Brees,
one of the greater quarterbacks in NFL history.
I understand that viewpoint.
I would also say to you that the reason that he was hired
at that amount of money and no one had an objection
to him being hired as a free agent for that amount of money
is because everyone listening to this says
that guy is good at making quarterbacks better.
I think you could argue he did in Denver.
Russell Wilson did have a better year by the standard
that he had set there earlier.
And it was because schematically, you
could see Sean Payton's influence.
Now, whether that is Russell Wilson's inability
to want to push the ball further downfield
like he did earlier in his career,
or whether that was coached out of him, I don't know if we'll ever get a sincere answer especially when you
consider Russell Wilson as a part of this data but you like the fit in
Pittsburgh in that they've never had much and if it comes to hiding a
quarterback not unlike Sean Payton did in Denver why not hide that quarterback
Russell Wilson seems to be a perfectly fine quarterback to hide the problem
with what you guys are saying is I believe that all of the analysis of this
stems from the place I'm about to state.
Because if I gave these two quarterbacks, Russell Wilson and Justin Field, to most of
the teams in the league, I think it would be a lukewarm enthusiasm for that situation.
But this isn't about the quarterbacks they signed.
This is about the quarterbacks who were in that room that all of us know couldn't
play. All of us saw enough of all three of them to say,
those guys aren't good enough.
So clearly anybody would be better whose name I've heard.
Really unprofessional stuff surrounding Kenny Pickett.
That's my opinion surrounding the not wanting to dress out,
not wanting, receiving the news that they were bringing
Russell Wilson in poorly, just like, who are you?
What have you accomplished in the pros?
It's weird that he would prefer to go to back up
Jalen Hertz in Philadelphia than to back up Russell Wilson,
but it would suggest that he's fed up with everything there.
Like that's a, to me, that's harder to get on the field
when you've got a young Jalen Hurts
who just signed for giant money.
Has anyone told him who the hell do you think you are?
Right.
Have they tried that?
Because who the hell does Kenny Pickett think he is?
Well you say this and I would say a star in Pittsburgh
because of what he did in college.
That's who he thinks he is.
He thinks he's an exceptional.
No, I don't doubt that he thinks he's someone.
And he's wrong.
But has someone grabbed him by the shoulders and told him, you ain't shit yet?
Really? Just like that?
Well, it's just because in the pros he's not.
No.
I don't understand. This could very well be like he's playing his pro games in the same building that he was an exceptional
collegiate athlete, but who the hell do you think you are?
Yeah, Kenny Pickett you can imagine as a career backup.
You can imagine that he's already peaked
and he's gonna hang around.
But good career backups are good teammate guys.
Yeah, that's true.
He doesn't appear to be that right now.
Whereas with Justin Fields, he's maybe a backup right now,
but he's not, Justin Fields has talent.
He's like a Jalen Hurts Jr. in my opinion.
They're also incentivized for him to not see the field
because it's a conditional draft pick
and if he gets more than half the snaps,
I believe it turns into a fourth,
which is still pretty good.
Like if Justin Fields is getting half your snaps
and you're hanging around the way
that Mike Tomlin usually does,
I really can't spot much of a difference
between Russell Wilson and Justin Fields
from a production standpoint.
Can we please address what it is that you're asking there?
Because I do think it's a great question.
Who's the hungriest quarterback?
No, that's a terrible question.
Oh.
Who the hell do you think you are?
It's just a great question to ask somebody.
Who the hell do you think you are?
I am.
That's right.
I think Kenny Pickett would,
what would you do if you come up all indignant, right?
Cause it's a great question to ask somebody you're filled with
Gall right it's a great question who the hell do you think you are what if Kenny Pickett look at you said Gardner Minshew
I think I'm the garden I think I'm Gardner Minshew
That would be some self-awareness there that I'm begging to see
No, I think he flips his hair and he says I'm Kenny Pickett
The guy that changed the rules in the ACC.
Kenny Bleeping Pickett, who I changed the rules in the ACC
because I fake slid during a bowl game.
Terrible rule.
This is the most inconsistently called rule.
Just go back to, all right, Kenny Pickett,
you got one on us.
Only one person had got one on us.
Who the hell do you think you are?
It feels good.
Put it on the pole please
gear Guillermo I put you in charge of the polls again does it feel good to say
to somebody who the hell do you think you are yeah hell do you think you are
I feel like that's a rhetorical question like you say that almost as a pejorative
and you really don't expect an answer. You're just making
a claim. That right there from bowling is magical and is I'm him before I'm him and
better done. That's Pete Weber. Greg Cody started writing bowling at the Miami Herald.
Isn't that how you started at the Miami Herald? Writing bowling? I remember Pete Weber's father, Dick Weber, back in the glory days of bowling when Earl...
Big Dick Weber.
Yeah, where Earl Anthony and Pete... What was his Roth's name? The Roth guy.
You're asking us?
Really?
What a great bowler back in the 70s.
Earl Anthony and them boys.
I know Don Carter.
Don Carter was at Donner. Don and Paula Carter. Paula Sperber Carter.
I knew all those people, man.
That was my first job at the Herald
writing a Broward bowling column.
A weird time that must have been.
Electric beat.
It really was.
I was like 17 years old.
I used to sneak in names of my friends
among the bowling agate.
What?
Yeah.
I love that.
Who do you think you are?
I'm not sure.
Nobody wrote about Dade?
No, yeah, Dick Evans did.
Oh, OK.
Harold Legend, Dick Evans.
So many bigs around bowling back then.
Younger brother of Luther Evans, the Harold horse riding
horse rider.
I was going to ask.
In the 50s.
I thought it sounded familiar.
Those are the days, man.
Yeah, Edwin Pope, get Edwin on the phone.
I don't think those were the days.
I don't think those were the days.
They were.
They were days, no doubt.
But the days?
The newspaper was King back then.
And Luther Evans was covering the King of Sports.
Miami Herald, he just admitted a journalistic crime
that'll get you fired making up names in the papers.
At 17, I did do that a couple of times.
Howdy folks, it's Mike Ryan. It's springtime and while every time is a good
time for Miller Lite, springtime is among the best. I was sitting out in my
backyard watching some flowers bloom and some beautiful birds swimming from Royal
Fishtail Palm to Royal Fishtail Palm and I had a Miller Lite in my
hand and I said, yeah, this is the good life. Over the years a lot has changed. One thing
that hasn't, the great taste of Miller Lite. It was the original light beer and to this
day is still the very best one. Miller Lite has more of the taste that you want and less
of the stuff that you don't. Oh, Miller Lite, you are always there for me.
I thank the heavens for you every time I'm sitting on my back patio and I take a sip.
Tastes like Miller time. To get Miller Lite delivered right to your door,
visit MillerLite.com slash Dan, where you can find it pretty much anywhere that sells beer.
Celebrate responsibly Miller Brewing Company, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. 96 calories per 12 ounces.
Don Lebatard!
I miss crank windows.
Too many unnecessary conveniences now, cruise control.
Please, I've got cruise control built in.
It's called my right foot.
It controls how fast the car goes.
No button or steering wheel lever needed.
Power steering. There's another one. Why do I want to give my power to the car?
The power that I once had.
The car is a ton of metal.
I'm a damn college graduate.
Stu Gatz.
Bluetooth, HD radio, satellite.
I'll take AM please with Wolfman Jack
talking through the static
and I'll crank the windows down so everybody can hear.
I'm Greg Cody and that's how it was back in my day.
This is the Don Lebatar Show with the StuGuardz.
I saw a friend of mine this weekend and he gave me a piece of information.
When he gave me the information, I slapped him hard on the shoulder and I'm like, good for you the way that you would
if someone told you that they were announcing
that they're pregnant.
Like I was really happy for my friend
and he saw happiness on my face
as I slapped him on the shoulder.
And what he had said to me was, I deleted my Twitter.
And I was genuinely happy for him because for a few minutes he will get out of this
general poisonous addiction that is filled with a lot of funny, honest to God, it's like
going to the comedy club and having the room filled with like a poisonous smoke.
You're going to the comedy club because you're there for the jokes and you just see it getting darker and darker and darker and something I've talked about quite a bit. I believe it's the
globe's most untreated addiction. The fact that we're all kind of cool with if you're sitting there
in you know on a sidewalk and you start
counting the number of people who are walking past you looking into their
phones you realize that we are an addicted people like it that it is
something that has infected the entirety of the human race and is also great fun
that is difficult to quit it's entirely that. A couple of weeks ago in this
studio I come up from my car I discover I left my iPhone in my car. I couldn't be
without it. Like the first opportunity I'm flying back to my car to get my
cell phone just to have it with me. It's turned off, it's face down, but I have to
have it with me. It's like a security blanket. It's crazy. Put it on the poll please at LeBataar's show. Do you have withdrawal if you've lost your phone for a few hours?
Because I think a lot of people would say what you're saying that we've gotten so used to. One of the things about the addiction
that's so interesting is that the need for stimuli
makes it so that when you are without it
for it because it's changed everything it's changed our attention spans it's
changed our need for action our need to have multiple things stimulating us in a
way that separate us from the present and an old-fashioned way of living but
I'm guessing that everyone I'm talking to understands the feeling I'm talking
about that if you've lost your phone you sort of like
all what do i now do with the spare spaces that i don't want to start
thinking about some of the stuff how do i distract myself
by just headed toward heading toward someplace where
uh... where i know there will be something
that gives me a feeling and i may come from it thinking it's a good feeling
But very often it ends up being a shit feeling and in no way in there
Am I examining? Oh, I think I might be addicted to this thing in a way
That's not terribly healthy
you just gave me an idea that I think we should do as a show and have no phone week and
Just see how we deteriorate as the week goes on.
Obviously, I don't know.
Or how much better the show is.
I don't know if how, the show might be bad
and that could be funny to see too.
Well, it could be better or it could be worse
because a lot of people get their ideas
on what they're gonna discuss next
by seeing anything breaking on social media.
So like I'm not allowed to speak to my family
for a show bit. That's what I mean.
We would all have to be trusted, yeah,
just to see what would happen to us if after like four days since all of us had our phone. I
just think it'd be interesting to see where we all were mentally. And my
addiction I discover is not nearly that of some other people. My wonderful wife
is truly addicted to her phone. Dad, you're not addicted at all by the way.
When you were talking about your addiction,
because dad, you, I'll try to call you,
and you're like, oh, it wasn't by my phone.
You're one of the few people in my life
that sometimes I can't get a hold of you,
because you're just like, oh, my phone was in the kitchen.
So I think if you, and you're sitting here
saying how you're addicted to it,
I think you're better than most artists.
Oh, but I should tell you that I have done
some reading about demographics and some things that are just
simply happening.
The iPad, the addiction spreads.
I have to have some sort of device on me at all times.
I need to read, give me the bigger one.
That's right, my eyes aren't working as well.
Give me the one that I can hold in my hand
so that it feels somewhat like a book,
like the old days when people read like men.
And women.
But what'd you learn?
You were going somewhere.
Women can read too, Dan.
I know, I did that because.
Because it was the olden days.
Because it was the olden days,
back when women didn't have the same qualities.
And Craig was writing about bowling.
Exactly.
And Broward.
I do wanna get back to that,
but however bad you think, if you're listening to this
you think
you are and you think the younger generation is
the amount of content being consumed by teens
and early twenty
dwarfs
how other people are consuming content and has changed television, obviously,
in ways that are overt, so overt that I will tell you
that this weekend I experienced something
that I almost only and exclusively
experienced through sports.
I'm watching Peacock and I'm tolerating
a minute of commercials.
And I'm thinking to myself, as it's happening,
when's the last time that something that wasn't sports is something that I was viewing
You know peacock premium with commercial shocker hard. I know I
Valerie said to me as it was happening. She's like it's five dollars extra a month. I'm like no
Like no no I'm not I'm not given no do you know how much that is a day? I do the math on that it's
No, I'm not, I'm not giving, no. Do you know how much that is a day?
I have to do the math on that.
It's, it.
60 cents. Never call me cheap again.
I think it's six cents, something like that, right?
Never call me cheap again, by the way.
No, this is principle.
This isn't about cheap.
This is not about it.
What's the principle when you're complaining
about the commercials?
I'm noticing something about myself that I did not know.
It was a moment of self-awareness
because I'm being stopped by commercials and has been so long that
i've watched anything with commercials because usually when i'm watching like
multiple sports things i don't have to focus that one of the games
is in a commercial
and last night i'm assuming most of you are like uh... we are around here where
the heat game was a relief because it was 40 point
Difference and so you could go watch some other things
I noticed commercials when I was watching like live
Nickelodeon or like live Disney Channel with my daughter man
They should not be allowed to have commercials for children. It is
Ridiculous like these kids want want everything that they see on television.
They're trying to skip, like the TV people
can't skip on the TV.
Well yeah, no, yes, they go and try to hit the thing
that says skip, like if it's YouTube and it says skip
on the bottom corner, they will go and try to hit it.
But like, the fact that companies can market products
to children in children's programming
should be investigated.
This is insane.
I must have been horrible as a child,
seeing all these commercials for all these toys
that I wanted and there wasn't an option
to not see commercials.
Now when I see commercials,
because kids are not ever seeing commercials,
like I want it, I want it, I want it, I want it,
I want that, I want that,
and it's because these ads are marketing to children.
Yeah, we were desensitized by the commercials.
We knew that every time Creepy Crawlers came on,
that all right, it's either Mighty Maxx or Creepy Crawlers.
You gotta pick one.
Now they just want it all.
Creepy Crawlers, by the way, easy baked oven for boys.
Yep.
Or, you know, people who liked insects.
Put it on the pole, Juju.
Should it be illegal to market commercials
targeting impressionable children?
And you realize that when you buy the thing, oh wait, there isn't an electrical storm
that's going overhead when I play Crossfire. That only exists in the commercial.
You'll get caught up in the Crossfire!
See, it used to be simple back in my day. The commercial was for a slinky.
You'd see a slinky walking down a stair.
Everyone knows the slinky. A slinky. All you need is a slinky, you'd see a slinky walking down a stair. Everyone knows all you needed.
A slinky.
All you needed.
A slinky.
A slinky.
That's right.
I need to circle back around for a second to point out to both the audience and the Miami
Herald that Greg Cody in an earlier segment admitted to a journalistic crime that-
Crime may be a strong word.
Misrepresentation.
Trying to get them retroactively fired.
I mean, I think the statute of limitations
is up given that this was before words had been invented.
Yeah, that's correct.
He was 17.
The original manuscript.
My editors are all dead by now.
Might have overseen that full pause.
He said during the break, he told me
that Jake Gyllenhaal's father or grandfather worked as an executive editor at the Miami Herald.
Really?
Anders Gyllenhaal, Uncle Anders.
So if Greg is to be tried now,
since the crime happened when he was 17,
would he go to juvie?
That would be me in a juvenile cell would be funny.
I was surprised, Billy,
that you didn't have any follow-up questions.
There's a Will Ferrell movie there.
That's true.
On Greg Cody admitting to putting his friends, and he would do it discreetly.
He wouldn't give them any winning scores. He would just tuck them in the agate type.
You don't want to send up a red flag.
Adam Sandler just got 70 million dollars to make this movie for Netflix.
You know how the script goes. The old person goes in, there's mean kids
that are bossing this person around,
they can't meet friends, there's the outcast group
of friends, then take in this old man
who went to juvie for committing a crime
when he was 14 or something.
He then ends up learning so much about himself
and becoming a better man for it.
And Teach is also the bully kids
that there needs to be more understanding.
It's not without romance.
Well, let's, no, this one, without romance, please.
Well, there's a teacher.
But power dynamics are fine when it's the woman
that's in charge, I guess.
So he's in juvie and somebody's asking him,
what are you in for?
And he's saying, I gave Paul Radke a 220 in bowling.
Right.
I made it up.
I made it up. I made it up.
And you're admitting to making something up.
You're admitting that...
A couple of times I did it.
I'm not overemphasizing.
It's a joke.
This is the same as the Carissa Thompson thing.
Just running with, like, didn't get the quotes he needed, so just kind of filling in the
blank.
No, I don't do that.
But I did a couple of times sneak in the name of a couple of friends into bowling agate. Agate for those who don't know is the very very small, fine, small type that nobody ever reads.
Unless you're, it's like every year with the Miami Marathon we run page after page of all
the people who entered the marathon. Nobody gives a shit unless you're running in the
race. You're not reading any of that. It's those people. But it's those people. But you just sold 100 papers.
That's right.
That's exactly what happened.
For people that wanted to see their name in print.
I mean, I miss the days when you ran because you were competing
or you wanted to be healthy.
These people that enter these marathons now,
they want a medal, they want their name in the paper.
How about just do it for the right reasons?
Raise the money, have the money go to whatever thing.
You get your stupid shiny medal.
You need your name in the paper now, too.
What are they doing?
Taking up the whole street the entire day,
kind of bothering an entire city wherever it is,
ruining traffic patterns for all,
like enough's enough already,
run on a treadmill now that we're at it.
Billy has it right on, man.
Thank you. Spot on.
Bullseye.
Greg, we make fun of your age around here
and I just got done saying that you worked at the harold before the invention of words but i'd like that
there is a good to us like exaggeration
but i do think that we shouldn't just skip past the fact
that when we were talking about commercial
you went to slinky and slinky is like one of the original toys like it's what
the first
because i think that i was saying that was a really very td commercial One of the original toys. It's one of the first. Think about how, so yeah.
I can't believe there were TV commercials.
There was a rock.
There was a rock.
There was a rock.
There was a stick and there was a slinky.
It's like one of the original toys.
Ch-ch-ch-chia.
The Chia Pet, that's right.
That's not a toy.
It's Chia Pet.
No, but it was marketed.
It's not a toy.
Chia Pet is not a toy!
Don Lebertard.
Are you back on the caffeine?
Are you back on the Red Bull?
Yes.
Something's wrong.
See, um, we are.
Something's wrong.
I mean, it's unbelievable how manic he is and he sort of just, he keeps, he keeps, you
know, chewing on his bottom teeth in a way that's scaring me a little bit.
Stugats. I've been up since 5 30 a.m.
producing content and in terms of being able to be on
my body needs a little boost and that's why I turn to cocaine. This is the Don LeVatar show with the Stugats.
Overrated toy, even for its time. We can talk about the slinky because the guy that invented it, thank you for your service,
but you didn't invent anything.
You saw a spring go downstairs and you said, that's a toy.
Let me just change the metal consistency and this will keep moving.
Didn't invent anything.
Again, thank you for your service.
You were a naval officer, but you didn't invent anything.
You saw an accident happen and you capitalized on it.
Enough is enough.
And the aluminum one's very dangerous.
You could slice yourself open.
See, I like the aluminum ones.
Once they turned plastic, they lost me.
I mean, very dangerous, the aluminum core.
You want the metal ones.
That's how you teach kids lessons.
It's the most satisfying sound.
A good toy should have a certain amount of danger in it to teach a kid a lesson. Like a choking hazard? Yeah. What? Precisely. A good,
a safe amount of danger. Like those wax army figurines. You got a minesweeper stuck in your,
you know, your throat teaching a lesson. That'll earn you. Yeah, exactly right. The way that Billy
described it was quaint. The way, once you make it a choking hazard, now I have the visions of all of your children,
all of you, all four of you have little girls,
and I have now visions of all four of them choking.
A choking hazard is aggressive.
That's crazy behavior.
That's crazy behavior.
At least twice.
You shouldn't be thinking about our children dying.
She's playing marbles and everything.
Reaching in there, pull a thing out.
Choking hazard, like that's...
Yeah, no, you have to be mindful at all times.
Pretty terrible.
Gotta teach kids young not to choke.
Yeah, I'm constantly...
Chris Paul never learned.
Parenting is just like running through doomsday scenarios.
What is the absolute worst thing that can happen here
because it'll likely happen occasionally,
and it has, you know?
The all-time classic choking hazard for me is the marble
Because it looks like candy it looks like a little round thing that you would chew
And it's just dangerous on the face of it. You know you don't know he's gonna swallow a slinky balloons are also very dangerous
Yeah
Whatever happened to the marble we don't play marbles or Jacks anymore
No, people are still playing for all the marbles,
but you never literally see a marble anymore.
Never literally.
And imagine if the prize for a sports team was marbles.
Oh, wow.
It'd be incredible.
They'd be like, what is this?
Give me money.
Maybe we haven't seen them because of, you know,
the Patriots dynasty.
Well, someone could have won all the marbles,
and that may be why there are no more.
If you're given all of something, even if they're marbles, that's pretty cool. Yeah. I'll won all the marbles and that may be why there are no more. If you're given all of something, even if they're marbles,
that's pretty cool.
Yeah.
I'll take all the marbles.
I wouldn't know.
Now I have all the marbles.
Where are these moles of wax?
If I won all the crickets in the world,
I wouldn't be happy.
How do you play marbles?
What is the actual game of marbles?
Someone with jacks where you like.
You try to grab as many of those pins as possible.
No, that's jacks.
That's the bouncing ball and then you get the,
with marbles, I think you fling a marble
like with your thumb or whatever.
I think you have them in a circle
and I think you have to hit the marbles out of the circle.
Oh.
Closest to an object.
What?
No, that's horseshoes.
Or hand grenades.
Exactly right, close only counts in horseshoes
and hand grenades.
Or bossy.
I played Candy Land this weekend
for the first time in years.
Old school.
Overrated.
It had a glow up that I don't think
was necessarily a glow up.
They changed it now instead of like,
I remember Candyland having like a spinner or something
that you had to like flick to kind of figure out
where you had to go.
Now you just flip over a card and it does,
you move one red square, move two red squares,
one green.
I don't remember, I think that the cards
is an advancement. Flimsy game, flimsy game. Easy to understand car and green. I don't remember. I think that the cards is an advance
I'm game flimsy game easy to understand not really a thinking person's game. Oh, well. It's intended for children
It's also always been cards. I'm a big life guy
Right now yeah, Monopoly is still the king and it was too long and you know it too long
Well, that's it's an endurance test with Monopoly. Yeah, You start off with four people, and you end up with two people.
It's four hours later, and you're like, sell me Park Place
for crying out loud.
Exactly right.
It gets to be a ridiculous face-off.
Nobody wins.
The game takes forever.
So many arguments.
Takes mortgages.
But the bankers drunk.
In the defense of Monopoly players,
that's how endurance tests were meant to be played.
You have your endurance test, you keep it amongst the people who are participating in that.
Not like these damn runners who need their medals and their names in the papers.
I never see the name in the paper of someone who played Monopoly yesterday.
And I'd argue finishing a game of Monopoly more impressive than running a marathon.
I think more people finish marathons and finish games of Monopoly annually.
Yep.
Put it on the poll please, Juju at LeBittard Show.
Annually do more people finish marathons
than games of Monopoly.
Also put on the poll bigger choking hazard,
marbles or JJ Barea.
I want to know from all of you,
when you think of thinking man's game
and not thinking man's game, when you think of the top end of what think of thinking man's game and not thinking man's game when you think of the top end of
What is a thinking man's game? Yes word association first pick off the board and
Because I'm I was talking I was thinking more in terms of trivial pursuit
Jeopardy I was thinking how many action you see where the villain is playing trivial pursuit and Scrabble
I understand that it's a movie contrivance
as the Thinking Man's game,
and you may have already-
When Ronaldo and Messi are getting together
for a once-in-a-lifetime photo shoot,
they're not playing Parcheesi.
You ever see the video of the best chess player in the world?
He shows up super late to tournaments.
You get a certain amount of time,
and he wastes 80% of his time because he he's so good it's like a mind game he plays
with people where like the opponent sitting there just like yeah it's a
little look at me this asshole just win the game quick they say you're wasting a
lot of people's time when when you're caught dead in your tracks in the game
of life well not the board game of life in the normal game of life, well not the board game of life, in the normal game of life, they say checkmate, you know?
They don't say like, you landed on park plays.
King me.
If you were listening to this and you heard a sound.
Look at me, Louie.
It's because I accidentally just hit the first note of that
and it was like, it pinballed through the room,
it careened and you might have heard it
and then questioned yourself, but you heard it correctly.
Is marbles, marbles is one of the least thinking men's game,
right, and women think too, I know.
And people think too.
On their phones and iPads.
Yes, we've covered that.
I'd say it's chess by a mile,
everybody's playing for a second.
Uno's up there. I don't know if it's close.
No, but how about on the low end? How about not, it just doesn't require, I'd say it's chess by a mile. Everybody's playing for a second. Uno's up there. I don't know if it's close.
No, but how about on the low end?
How about not, it just doesn't require,
because Billy said Candyland, not exactly.
Yeah, checkers, checkers.
Red like green light, I suppose.
Checkers, there's strategy with checkers.
Freeze dance.
Uno.
Uno?
Uno, you got it.
Uno is not.
Uno, you need strategy.
If you don't know Uno without strategy, you're...
Uno requires strategy.
As card games though, it does, like Rummy 500 doesn't require a whole lot of thinking I am she's just got such a good publicist
Connect four is pretty challenging
I would love to see a big baddie in a movie playing connect for Tic-tac-toe
Don't start them if you start in the middle with Tic-tac-toe. You're a rookie. Yeah
they just put up here a
Some video of Candyland which suggests to me that
video is now working which means I can go back to this Jake Gyllenhaal interview
with it was not just Jake but it was also Conor McGregor they are selling
Roadhouse and you guys tell me here if you think that Conor McGregor is sober
here. No.
What did Jake bring to the table from the realism
when it came to the fight game?
Jake's a consummate professional, 75 movies made.
You know, I'm blessed to have entered into the movie
alongside him.
He was patient with me.
He gave me guidance and I just took it.
You know, we had a good rapport on set.
He has 75 movies made, I have 75 bar fights made,
and that's it, we had a good...
Sometimes I had to remind him.
I landed one punch, and he hit me with the door.
Other than that, it was absolutely perfect.
Amazing stunt team, Garrett Warden and Steve Brown, and they were phenomenal with us.
They gave us free reign.
And we've done a good job.
Is that hard for you, Connor, at all?
Because you've been in so many real fights to realize, yeah, I'm trying to make this
look real, but I am acting.
For me, what was hard was it was time consuming.
18 hours on set, very little rest.
It was strange to me, but you know, the fight scenes,
I was happy to give my input and my all.
And Jake, as I said, is a consummate professional.
We've done a good job.
This is one of the great talkers in the history of sports.
He wouldn't stop moving his shoulders throughout the entirety of what it is that he was saying there.
I generally just worry for him when you read about the recklessness,
and I don't know whether that is recklessness, whether that is taking a lot of punches,
but I will tell you again, after Muhammad Ali, this is one of the great talkers in the history of sports.
He's plenty excellent as a fighter, but he's more excellent as a talker. He sold his fights.
I understand what he did to BJ Penn and how it is that he arrived, but he entered, he brought,
he taught all of the Mosvidals and Covingtons and all of these people in that sport who have now gotten big paydays
because of their mouth. He taught them how to bluster. He was better at it than anyone.
And when I see that video, I get worried for him. I get scared for him.
Yeah, I think the accent helps its window dressing to what he says, but I agree with you. He's you know, he's a good quote
He didn't seem right there. But again, you don't know whether that's you know, the the whiskey he sells or whether that's
Years of see I'm just telling you that this person is very good at selling stuff
He's been excellent at selling stuff and that was a catastrophe
Like I felt bad for Jake Gyllenhaal sitting next to him having to hear for the second time. He's been excellent at selling stuff and that was a catastrophe. I felt bad for Jake Gyllenhaal sitting next to him
having to hear for the second time.
He's been in 75 movies.
In that movie, one of the interesting things to watch
is how they tried to hide that Conor McGregor's tiny.
They did it a number of different ways.
Open stances for, did you mean Aldo?
How Conor McGregor really shot into
Sordom over BJ Penn. I thought the movie was
fun. It was exactly what I wanted to see
out of that type of movie and I thought Conor McGregor was really good
in playing Conor McGregor. That video is sad.
The video that we just showed because his face is clearly
super red and it's not because he laid out in the in the Sun his tongue is heavy his eyes look kind of
odd you pointed out the tics that he has that that was a dude who's got a
reputation and leans into his reputation being hard-partying he doesn't hide that
fact that looks like a dude that was having himself a good time. Well, slow is what he seems.
Yeah, yeah.
He's slouched.
He's slouched.
He looks like that dude is at the end of a bender right there.
That's what the appearances are.
And he's had several public appearances
where he doesn't look like that.
So I do think that that is cause for some concern there.
Chris Cody, I think the first sighting of Connor McGregor,
and they went out of their way introducing Connor McGregor because this is the turn.
He will do some fighting, some more fighting, but his best days are behind him even though
he can still get a paycheck. So this will be part of the transition into whatever his
life is. Roadhouse made a point of saying, this is introducing Conor McGregor as an actor.
He doesn't appear in the movie until about an hour in.
Nothing much happens in the movie until an hour in,
but when he does appear, he appears nude,
and then gratuitously bends over.
Just letting you know.
Wow, now I'm intrigued.
That was his morning. It's fun, it's fun.
He's really funny in it.
It's the best acting he did in the entire movie.
Yeah, I thought it was fun. I don't know what's really funny in it. It's the best acting he did in the entire movie. Yeah, I
Thought it was fun. I don't know what you were looking for out of that movie, but I got everything that I wanted
Jake Gyllenhaal makes good choices. That's what I'm looking for. There are certain actors and actresses They're like ten of them that I like their choices. This was not a good choice
No, it was ever watch Prince of Persia. I'm not saying he makes all good choices
Did you ever watch Prince of Persia? I'm not saying he makes all good choices.
Howdy folks, it's Mike Ryan.
It's springtime.
And while every time is a good time for Miller Lite,
springtime is among the best.
I was sitting out in my backyard watching some flowers bloom
and some beautiful birds swimming from royal fishtail palm
to royal fishtail palm.
And I had a Miller Lite in my hand and I said,
yeah,
this is the good life.
Over the years a lot has changed.
One thing that hasn't, the great taste of Miller Lite.
It was the original light beer and to this day is still the very best one.
Miller Lite has more of the taste that you want and less of the stuff that you don't.
Oh, Miller Lite, you were always there for me.
I thank the heavens for you every time I'm sitting on my back patio and I take a sip.
Ah, tastes like Miller time.
To get Miller Lite delivered right to your door, visit MillerLite.com slash Dan, where
you can find it pretty much anywhere that sells beer.
Celebrate responsibly Miller Brewing Company, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 96 calories per 12 ounces.