The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz - The Sporting Class Live from Cannes Lions: Private Equity & Naming Rights; Is Charles Barkley retiring?
Episode Date: June 21, 2024Welcome to The Sporting Class! Meadowlark Media CEO John Skipper and Nothing Personal's David Samson are back with another episode with host of Pablo Torre Finds Out ... Pablo Torre! We are live... from Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity! The boots on the ground from the biggest global advertising meet-up. All colleges are trying to find new ways to bring in money, but Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark has an idea on how his conference can. The Big 12 has decided to sell the name of the conference and is looking to bring in private equity. Florida State wanted private equity for just itself. The Big 12 wants private equity for the whole conference. Let’s also discuss naming rights, what they are, and how/if that money is well spent. What else are we thinking about? Charles Barkley retirement? Paramount Global failed merger? NFL Sunday Ticket lawsuit? Tune in to find out! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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You're listening to Giraffe King's Network.
This is the Don Leventor Show with the Stoogats Podcast.
So the thump that you just heard was David Sampson dropping his unsponsored Gatorade, sorry unsponsored anonymous bottle of something onto the ground David and John. Can you explain where we are right now?
Can you explain for the people only listening what's around us right now?
What is around us is a multitude of sweltering
human beings on the beach in the south of France,
meeting and greeting and hugging and slapping and spitzing
and trying to justify their expense account.
Which is what brings us here today.
So I have wanted people to understand that we are not just a show
that I call Rich Guys Only Fans. We're a show that lives the lifestyle of Rich Guys Only Fans. We're in the south
of France. We're at Con Lines. We're at Sport Beach specifically. We are suspended in a
cube above a stage. And if you watch on YouTube or the DraftKings network or just on YouTube,
I don't know what we're doing with this episode because it came together quite suddenly.
But beneath us
I mean there are there are athletes there are marketing people. This is the largest
Advertising festival John on the planet. Yes. Yes it is. And so so David John is grumpy
I think we need to put that out there right now. Yeah, I am a he's a ten
I'm about a seven great and and we're on the south of France guys. I hear you. There's a 10, I'm about a seven. Great. And, and. We're out in the south of France, guys.
I hear you.
There's a couple things missing right now.
What's missing?
Air conditioning.
Yeah.
Is number one.
Number two, a place to keep liquid is missing.
There's a table in front of us.
I have to call out that Coke is not in my ear.
So there's two things that are necessary
to do a proper sporting class.
One, the bracelet's done.
Yeah. Schlep them all the way to France.
Two, coke in the air.
So now we're basically going, we're flying solo.
No net, we have great people here from Sport Beach.
Yes.
I mean.
We have a whole crew here to support us.
I would just point out,
we can watch the guys blow a shower.
This guy appears to be soaping up
and curing the result of his fitting.
And I would have passed on an episode this week,
but four, there's more going on.
If we were back in studio, in MetalArk Studio,
there just happens to be so much going on
that people are taking a break to go to a conference here,
but the world of sports business has no break. It's absurd what this beach has become so
for people who have not had the pleasure of being at the south of France with two
of their friends who are also their colleagues sometimes their boss other
times their arch nemesis you see that the whole beach has been overtaken by
mostly tech companies it seems like. Metas here, Amazon, Netflix,
and then there's also the sports stuff.
And so I wanna actually use this opportunity,
John and David, John, former president of ESPN,
David Sampson, former president of the Marlins,
what we're doing when it comes to the trajectory of sports
as it fits into the age of tech,
because there is money in sports still.
And I would have assumed that, oh, wait a minute,
tech's here to eat everybody's lunch.
And so what is happening, John,
from a big picture perspective?
Well, tech is here to eat everybody's lunch,
but the best way to eat the traditional media company's
lunch is to buy the sports rights from them because it is
continues to be the most predictable the most viable content in the universe so I
had the great fortune to mostly be in the sports media before they emerged as
the behemoths they are but but sports sports is gonna be more valuable than ever.
I've never thought that the entry of tech companies
would have any effect on sports
other than to make them more valuable.
What interests me is that you were in the business of,
and we've talked about this a bit about long-term deals
versus short-term deals when you're trying to get live rights.
And what I thought would change is that leagues, We talked about this a bit about long term deals versus short term deals when you're trying to get live rights
and what I thought would change is that leagues,
conferences, et cetera, would be more interested
in staying short term because if you look
at what we're looking at here, up and down this beach,
Sport Beach has this amazing setup
and it almost feels like the anchor
of what everyone else is trying to do.
It's the biggest setup.
And so when you've got that sort of asset, I've always liked the idea of being a free
agent as often as possible.
It's betting on yourself, it's maximizing your earnings in many instances, and leagues,
and we're seeing this with conferences now, they're really so worried about cash flow
that they're willing to go longer, and that accrues to the benefit of the networks without We've seen this with conferences now. They're really so worried about cash flow
that they're willing to go longer,
and that accrues to the benefit of the networks,
without a doubt.
Well, I always felt that we were advantaged
by going as long as possible,
and I was always slightly puzzled
that the rights holders would sell us their rights
for a long time, which they did
simply because of the gratification they got from
the large increases.
And people always forget that those are increases that are average annual increases, not year
over year increases.
But oddly enough, the rights holders, I think, not certain that the tech companies were going
to come in, began to want to go longer.
I do know that some of the rights holders are putting in options to get out probably to hedge their bets,
but I would think that your point of view is right with the emergence of the tech companies,
the continuing interest of the traditional media companies, I would go short.
There's something else here I wanted to mention that.
Is it the sweat pooling down onto your microphone?
It's disgusting.
I'm sorry, yes, it is very, very hot in here.
If only I had known.
So what you have to do is just sort of relax.
That's right.
That's right.
So anyway.
Caribbean music play.
Breathe in, look, I just want to point this out the code the zurds
I pronounce it David. How do you guys or is right there? It is so blue and relaxing the code is here, too
That's a region in your armpit. Yes. It's also
I digress. It's okay. Don't touch me, please. It's so moist
I'm gonna see
Pablo if you and I can avoid sweating. I feel great.
Before you think about it.
I feel great.
Can we return to a quick point here, which is,
I wanna bring you back to the moment
when MLB.com was invented and was approved.
It was the first owners meeting I ever went to,
my first day in baseball,
and it was a group of old, rich, white guys
trying to explain this internet company
and they didn't know anything about it.
We just knew that we had pro formas
of what distributions we'd get and we voted for it.
We were like, let's start this company.
Bob Bowman tried to explain what it was,
but the irony of why conferences and owners
are not necessarily
able to maximize their revenue until they've put
their trust in younger people.
Look at the people if you walk around this beach.
We're old.
This is now when it comes to tech and sports.
Sorry to break it to you, John.
I'm sorry, John.
I'm aware.
So it's just a different, it's become a different world
where to maximize value you have to actually embrace
what all these companies here on Sport Beach,
Incon Line are able to do for you.
And it's something that it's hard to comprehend.
And interestingly enough in retrospect,
Bob Bowman was one of the early people to understand
what the value would be, though he mistakenly believed that what it would do
was allow the leagues to control their own rights
and distribute them digitally,
as opposed to continuing to sell them.
So I want to explain-
He wants that.
Pardon?
He wanted that and now the leagues want that now.
So I want to explain though, Bob Bowman,
for me, was always associated with MLB AM, right?
Yes. MLB Advanced Media. Yes. And for people who are not familiar, what were they ahead of with MLB AM, right? MLB Advanced Media. Yes. And for
people who are not familiar, what were they ahead of MLB AM? One, they were ahead
of the technology of distributing games over digital, over the internet.
Right. And they were ahead in sort of understanding that you could sell
subscriptions to consumers. Again, they thought it would lead to a different outcome,
but Bob really did understand what digital media
meant for media rights.
And we were hired.
It actually broke off in a transaction
that you're very well aware of.
MLB.com versus MLBAM versus the digital side.
We ended up running other people's technology,
NHL and other entities.
Disney's, right?
Well Disney became a partner
and it was another screw job by John and his folks.
That's why we're here in France.
We bought BAM because they had built superior technology.
And I do think, and Dave you tell me if I'm wrong,
that the baseball owners understood
that they were never going to forego the big checks
that media companies, now media and technology companies
would pay them in order to build media themselves.
We were cautioned to not do the deal.
Which deal?
Any sort of transaction with Disney.
When we split it up and then sold it off,
and then remember we sold the last part off as well
for another huge chunk of money.
Yes.
And it was advised and it wasn't a big chunk.
After all, you were ready in the black for that
and we were ready, we could have held out for way more.
I think you agree.
But.
For the record, I'm not agreeing publicly.
He's merely tolerating David sitting next to me.
Really nodding at your assertions.
But I believe we played for market fair market value at the time.
And by the way, the CFO of the company was dramatically against the deal of Disney.
Yes.
Would you think today looking back the CFO of Disney would be upset?
I believe that Disney, looking back, thinks that it was a smart acquisition.
Well, this is what my question is, which is, David, so I like to imagine that-
You're making me more grumpy.
I didn't think you were covering this.
Part of what I love, we never know what we're going to do on this show.
Part of what I love that we do, though, is we we end up relitigating the ways in which your paths
have crossed throughout time. And so I like to imagine John of course, president
of ESPN, and David, relatively younger person, executive, with one vote of 30,
but they're in the room meant to foresee, you were meant to sort of tell the
future, you were the young person. And so when you look back at how this all went down, David,
what would you have counseled your younger self?
You could whisper into young David Samson's ear anything.
What would you have said about what the old David Samson
had said?
I tried to say it.
I said it at the time and I said it now.
The owners wanted the money because they believed
they would use it to acquire players
in order to win a World Series.
And you knew that and everybody who does business with rich white people knows it,
because they're old. It's what Scott Boris trades on, that's his currency,
is hey, let's say you're one piece away and I've got your piece.
Was there an actual vote?
Of course.
And did you vote against it?
Jeffrey wouldn't allow it.
What I found out today. I was running for an octogenarian white owner who wanted another World Series. Don't talk about your stepfather.
Former.
Former in that way, David.
I'm telling you, it's the perfect storm.
Owners versus tech companies, owners versus people like John.
Which brings us to where we are today.
It certainly does.
Right?
Around here, there's not a lot of people who are in a position to say no are today. It certainly does. Right around here, there's not a lot of people
who are in a position to say no to this.
They don't come to this.
Right, right.
What they come here for though,
is the opportunity to obviously make deals
of a way that is staggering when you see all of the
C-suite people who are here,
but also to find like what you can monetize
in sports these days, right?
And so when it comes to John, naming rights,
we come here with a docket of stories.
One of the stories we bring back from the United States
is the idea that the Big 12 is looking to monetize
its naming rights.
Brilliant.
This is of a piece of what we were just talking
about which is they believe they're going to get capital they're going to
use that capital to win championships or excel on the field and get more donor
contributions and make money and they're not they're going to take this
money and they're going to use it to overpay coaches and try to compete with the Big Ten
and the SEC.
I just continue to be puzzled by the proposition
that private equity will come into college programs
and that that money will be sensibly used
to build something of value.
I believe that there will be grumpy legislators and grumpy college presidents who will be going,
what do you mean that we have to pay down this debt and we're still going five and seven every year.
There's no cough button. So excuse me. There's two issues here. The private equity issue
and the naming rights issue. Brett, your mark is who we're talking about. To start with,
we can use him as a conduit. The commissioner. The commissioner of the Big 12, which I've
now been calling the Big 16 because there's 16 teams. So I can't stand the fact. But not
all six of them are big. All 16 of them are big But so they're gonna get rid of the big and maybe name it the all-state 12
Right the big all-state conference is on the table. Wait, why would you rename the conference and not?
Correct the number. Why would you continue to call it the all-state 12 since the only reason call it the big 12 is some
Perceived from brand value from history just rename it the Big 12 is some perceived brand value from history,
just rename it the Allstate 16.
So when Yarmark ran for commissioner, he was told that he was going to raise revenue because
that's his thing.
And the Yarmark brothers are famous for this.
They find a way to get blood from a stone.
And this is a brilliant thing that he's doing.
I don't want to sully him in any way, because if you can get a company
to give you 30 to 50 million a year,
that's money that is incremental
that will be distributed to the schools.
Whether they use it for coaches,
whether they use it for NIL, for players,
or for a nicer house, doesn't matter.
He, his job is to distribute more money
to the member schools.
And my skepticism is not relative to his skill
at grabbing money.
Look at the rights deal he did for the Big 12.
I mean, arguably not as competitive,
not as good a conference as the Pac-12,
and he got the deal that had the Pac-12 gotten that deal,
they would not have disappeared.
Still be the Pac-12, not the Pac-2. I don't think they're gonna call it the Pac-12 gotten that deal, they would not have disappeared. It'd still be the Pac-12, not the Pac-2.
I don't think they're gonna call it the Pac-2.
They should just keep calling it the Pac-12.
Washington State, Northern State,
although I think they went to a different conference.
The Mountain West, I believe.
Oh, so there's no more Pac-2?
There may be a Pac-2,
because there still is a contract for media rights
to be paid that I'm not sure has been obviated yet.
The real conference was the friends they made
along the way, David.
Have you learned nothing about sports and business?
The second thing you mentioned was private equity.
And we covered this once on a sporting class
when we believe it was Florida State
who was looking to bring in money
and we had a great conversation about it.
Now your mark's doing the same.
At the conference level. At the conference level doing the same. At the conference level.
At the conference level, it's not at the school level.
So you're talking about a venture capital firm
buying 15 to 20% of a conference
for up to what they're saying is a billion dollars.
So quick math, let's say you got 20% of a billion,
easy math, you're valuing the big 16 the all-state 12
whatever you want to say at five billion dollars the only assets of that
conference this is what I've been racking my brain about while sitting in
traffic and schmitzing what are the assets that generate that valuation the
grant of rights is so let's explain John what a grant of rights is for
people who are not fluent in college football speak. The colleges all grant their rights
to the conference to be sold in aggregate. So the 12 to 16 teams in that insurance company
are put together and sold to an entity.
And the value of the grant of rights
is the amount of money that some tech company
or some traditional media company agrees to pay.
But so it differs from Notre Dame.
I'm trying to draw the distinction for people.
Notre Dame is historically not in a conference
and they sell their media rights one off.
Their football rights. a la carte.
They'll go to ACC.
Well in fact, they sell a grant of all their rights
except the football to the ACC.
And then they separately sell their football games to NBC,
though five of those games are with ACC teams,
so I'm not quite sure how that works.
Can't remember how that works.
The theory is that the grant of rights in the big 16,
that they're more valuable as a group
than they are individually.
So people put their grant of rights in the pot,
and then the conference goes out
and gets a media rights deal.
Then the conference has money that it distributes
to the 16 schools.
But if you've got a venture capital investment where they need to get maybe a preferred return
on their invested capital or they have some sort of there's going to be a agreement that's
been negotiated that it will explain how they get their money back.
It turns out that I can't figure out what the benefit is other than there's
going to be a distribution made from the billion dollars from the venture capital
firm that's going to go to schools outside of the media rights deal that
can be used for paying coaches more and IAL players etc. A mirror of the
baseball dynamic. Right. It is an interesting change from our discussion about Florida State.
Because if you remember that discussion, David, you were asserting, and it's certainly correct
from a business point of view that it would force Florida State to make their athletic
department a profit center.
It becomes even more complicated when you're now talking about 16 teams
and you've got to figure out how to make Texas Tech and Kansas and Oklahoma
State and San Diego State and Central Florida and Tulane as an aggregate
profitable enough for the conference to pay back the private equity firm that invests. Do the individual schools have to be profitable for the conference to pay back the private equity firm
that invests. Do the individual schools have to be profitable
for the conference to be profitable?
I had it as different classes of assets.
The conference setup has never been intended
to create profit.
There is a amount of the money that gets taken off
of the grant of rights or sponsorships that go across the conference that funds the
administrative office, but it's always been a fairly marginal
amount of money. These conference offices aren't big companies.
I mean you go in the SEC and I don't know how many people it is,
but it's not a big company. Is it bigger than this booth?
It is bigger than this booth,
but just about the same number of people.
They do not have Eric Cantona, though,
beneath us speaking poetry to applause.
If you heard that in the background,
that's also happening right now.
But I ask the question about how to monetize all of this,
because we're now getting to the idea of,
is this a good business? Let's start with that just broadly.
I don't think this is a good business but I do never underestimate the
willingness particularly of male executives particularly male executives
of a certain age at marketing companies and
private venture funds to want to be close to sports.
And I do think that's a lot of what sponsorship dollars and naming rights dollars and I think
these investments will be is, oh my gosh, I'll get to sit in the booth, you know, at
the University of Texas and watch them play and I'll get to go in the booth, you know, at the University of Texas and watch them play
and I'll get to go in the locker room.
And that's what these college conferences and college teams are looking at, is compromising
themselves in terms of what they're going to do, how they're going to comport themselves.
And it does, and David said this last time and I agree it forces them to sort of make
these real businesses which is a natural a natural outcome of making the players
employees and they will resist that term right they don't want to call them
employees but I don't know what it is when you pay somebody to do something
it's either work for hire or you're an employee. Do you know any other designation for people who get paid?
Hourly?
But that's either, it's a freelancer,
I mean, that's a hard thing.
Independent contractor.
I don't see how you navigate that path.
Your college credit.
Well, contractor is a work for hire,
it's work for hire or employee.
Let's face it, this is not gonna be the last conference to try to raise money this way.
Florida State won't be the last school.
Everybody's looking for influx of capital.
Everyone's trying to find a way.
And because you're hired to do that.
And so I believe that what we're seeing in many of the stories we cover is just starting. Whether it is the naming rights, the private equity, whether it's things related to gambling.
To me, all the things that we're seeing now, we're starting and it's not going to stop.
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This is the Don Lebatard Show with the Stugats.
Music
Music
Music
One of the interesting things that you guys have established though is the idea that these
deals are made by individuals for whom sports holds allure.
These are the most exclusive events at highly exclusive locations.
I just want to drill down on like when we talk about marketing and deal flow here, how
much of that actually matters because tech promised the rigor of data, but we're not talking about data.
We're talking about a human element in a sense.
And John, this has been obviously how business has been done for decades.
Yes, and I do think that tech companies are a little less smitten by the idea of getting
to comport with athletes and see them.
However, I'll suggest there is a new golf league in which golfers are going to tee off
and hit into a green screen and someone called to ask me my opinion of whether this was a
good investment.
And I said, it's a great investment if you're prepared to pay money to spend time
with Tiger Woods and Rory McElroy.
A tough day for Rory for this weekend.
Tough day, but he's still somebody that-
A profitable day.
Yes, a profitable day.
But people have agreed to pay money
in order to watch people hit into a green screen who are very famous.
Right. Well, people are paying money left and right to watch people do things, to feel close to them.
That's how Twitch was born. That's what YouTube is.
We know at MetalArk Media when we do watch parties, when we do an Oscars watch party or a Stanley Cup watch party,
there's great audiences who are interested
in watching us watch something.
Now, that is counterintuitive to my upbringing
in the world of business where I thought
I had to add value in order to extract value from somebody.
But the value's now changed.
With a watch party, you're not extracting value
other than the value of somebody's time.
But you're actually
getting it you're building subscribers you're getting more time allocation
which you can then go sell you're getting sponsors for that watch party
it's an actual profitable event so something like this con line but let me
pivot that right so what David is talking about I believe is the idea that
there is audience,
pre-existing desire for these events.
That is a cough from David Sampson.
It's okay, we're just in a tiny glass booth.
I'm not contagious, it's allergies.
I don't believe you.
What David is talking about is the idea
that you go to where the audience will be.
So the parallel to the sports marketing executive is
they wanna be there too, but so does an audience. audience will be. So the parallel to the sports marketing executive is they want
to be there too, but so does an audience. The question returns us to naming rights.
So here is a thing, David, that you have sold before with the understanding that
there would be visibility, there would be audience, but it's not a show, it's a
name. So how do naming rights work? It's really such crap.
I mean, I'm sorry to say it.
All the companies that do it,
when you wake a budget, you have a marketing budget,
and marketing people need to spend
their marketing budget or they lose it.
But when you're out selling naming rights,
you are selling a promise that you are getting
the following exposure, and you give them
all sorts of analytics
and the marketing people are pretending they analyze it
and they do their own spreadsheets.
Chase does it when it came to the Garden or the US Open.
Pepsi does it all the time.
They have whole departments in place.
Citibank has entire departments
where they're evaluating these deals
and it's just absolute horse hockey.
The Citi Field deal is a great example
at the new Shea Stadium where the Mets play.
Everyone said, my God, there was a meeting in baseball
when they got 20 million a year.
Everyone was ecstatic, and blessed memory, Ted Lerner,
former owner of the Nationals, quick story,
said, David, look, we're gonna get 20 million
for Nationals Park.
I said, Ted, who did the financing
for Washington's stadium?
I don't know, it was already built.
We got it for free, all public money.
I said, okay, CitiField was built.
There were huge amounts of fees that CitiField collected.
They were hired by the Mets as part of the deal.
They named the facility. They named the facility.
They get a suite.
They get various things that have actual,
ascertainable value.
And then you're left with a piece
that they call naming rights.
Because really, who gives a rat's ass?
When someone says, oh, today's game is at Citi Field.
Oh, I'm gonna switch banking to Citi Field.
I'm moving out of Chase and I'm going to Citi.
It's not measurable, it's all made up,
but it feels good for marketing people to see their name.
It makes them feel as though
they are associated with something
and that's why they spend the money and it's fantastic.
Though, when you did suggest there were fees,
now that could be good business, right?
Which is, gee, we're gonna do banking,
the Mets are gonna do banking. Yeah, could be good business, right? Which is, gee, we're going to do banking, the Mets are going to do banking. Yeah, that's good business. The putting your name on a
stadium. I'm hoping that all these companies get something other than they just that they
do. They do get tickets. I know that and they get to go to games and you can take your clients
and make them feel good about it. Giveaways. But I do think it's very hard to do the mathematics
to make it feel like it actually is good expenditure
of marketing.
Famously, and I can never remember who said it,
but there was a famous ad person who said,
I know that 50% of my money is wasted.
I just don't know which 50%. I think in naming rights, I think it's closer to 75 to 90
I know 75 to 90 is wasted but it still feels good
It's one of the great vaudeville acts of this century is the way we've seen naming rights and you see it up and down this
Beach, there's people they have inflatable. Everything is sponsored. Everything is sponsored.
But again, the logic though is simple.
On the level of name recognition is by definition
the simplest form of what advertising is.
Have you heard of us?
Are we in places where you associate us positively
with things you like?
That's the very basic premise.
What's that worth?
Well, I will say it kind of feels to me like it's worth more to a newer company.
I do not understand how a ubiquitous brand like Allstate finds value in putting their
name on something.
Well now we're getting to something else, the Super Bowl commercials and the prices
of those continue to go up and it really goes back and forth with companies that are startups who want to spend their entire annual marketing budget on a 30
second Super Bowl ad and then people look at it and they're like ooh I don't
know even what that company does but I remember it made a top 10 list of good
Super Bowl commercials. But this brings us to again what tech is and I often say that
we have been promised things and you guys
fight back under the premise that there was never a promise you merely you being
the larger consumer believed a sales pitch that was dishonest from the start
what the premise here of what a super bowl commercial gets you right is the
promise of here is um here is the last remaining monoculture.
Right, no one else, what else are we gathering underneath
when it comes to tents in America?
And so truly, if marketing is gonna matter anywhere,
I would imagine that sports would be the place
because everybody's still across the aisle,
religious, political, musical, still gathers here.
Well it's, and it's also for
traditional 30 60 second advertising
Sports is the only place you can get a large concurrent audience at the same time. That is valuable
That's why ads at the Super Bowl cost so much money, right?
hundred and somewhere near a hundred and
40 million people watch the last Super Bowl. Their clarity is value. However, I will point out I once bought a Super Bowl ad.
I can't actually remember.
I think I bought two when we introduced-
What did you advertise?
ESPN, the phone.
Oh, perfect.
And I must tell you, it was a disaster.
And I am sure that I know that way more than 50%
of that money was wasted.
And I think that was in the day when they cost
only one million dollars.
Which would be a bargain.
I think one million for a 30.
And I think we projected we'd get like 80,000 subscribers.
We thought the phones would light up.
And I think we got about 15 or 20,000 subscribers. I am dying would light up and I think we got about 15 or 20 thousand subscribers
I had to know was this brought to you or did you bring this to somebody else?
I had to say it was my idea despite everything I've said here today
By the way I thought it would make me a maka I thought I would be the man
A maka
God do I love what Goiam's speaking of
It's so good It's making me the Clem Platt I thought I would be the man. A marker. God, do I love what Goiom's speaking of.
It's so good.
It's making me have a clump.
But it did not.
It did not do any such thing.
And we shortly closed ESPN The Phone after that.
Yeah, whatever happened to that, by the way?
Do you have a prototype anywhere?
No, I do not.
In fact, I'm embarrassed that I brought it up.
I should have forgotten about it altogether.
You still run into a few people who remember ESPN. I vividly remember it because in a way,
by the way, this is another recurrent clue line. Very cool phone. Very cool phone. Quote John
Skipper. But we got our ass kicked by the telephone companies who actually knew how to sell telephone plans. What we knew how to do
was broadcast sports and talk about sports and report on sports and we
should never have gotten into the phone business. There's a lesson there David
there is a lesson. No, no, there's a great lesson which is we entered it and exited
it very quickly because we understood that we were not going to succeed.
And there was a rationale, and I'll stop.
Number portability happened, which is when you could actually change your phone number.
And we thought that meant that many people would be more willing to change their phone
plan, but it coincided with the introduction of free phone plans
when Verizon would give you four free phones.
And we were selling a phone for $500.
It's the interesting thing, CNN Plus is an example
of a network that started a big startup cost.
They had a change at the top and they immediately stopped it.
I think that was around for a day or two
I think it costs twice as much as the phone. Yeah for sure
But the idea of like how quickly do you pull the plug on something?
It is as soon as you know, it's not gonna work
But there are very many people who are not willing to admit it
So they and they throw good money after bad is one of the greatest ways that companies go bankrupt
and have to go into the world of financing
to borrow expensive money is because they're willing
to keep going because they're not wanting
to admit they're wrong.
Yeah, look, there is of course a through line here today
also of executives and their incentives.
Personal incentives being confused
with macro company wide
needs really.
Oh my gosh, I wish I could remember that name
of that paramount committee that was there to protect.
Oh yeah, Severance Protection Committee.
Severance Protection Plan.
Right.
That's a good one and a shout out without Coke in the year,
he would have had it for you right now.
I know.
That's a merger that I've been still,
if you ask me, I don't know where we are in the show,
because I don't see a clock, but if you ask me.
I think Frank Lampert walked around downstairs,
that's what I was monitoring, sorry.
To see if we're done?
No, no, no, just knowing that, yeah.
If Matt Coke was here, we could find out
if it's Eric Cantona or Rick.
I think it's probably that one.
And I also believe it's Frank Lampard.
There you go.
I'm playing the role of ugly American today.
No, no, this just means I've been watching European football
longer than you have.
In fact, I've been living longer than you have.
Well, also, John and I, on the walk over here, David,
we walked by the FIFA tent.
Did you kick a ball?
No, but I did notice to see if they spotted one John Skipper, former witness, in the FIFA Federal Corruption Trial walking by.
As we walked by, I saw large sums of money being handed from one person to another.
That is a joke.
But I'm pretty sure...
Are you sure?
Not sure, actually.
I did not actually see it.
The tents are all, there are people enclosed
in non-see-through tents.
They did have those pins though that indicated
that they are, they're powerful in the world.
Should compliment Sport Beach.
Yeah.
And Stagwell in one way to say that
I got to here a couple days ago
and this wasn't nearly ready.
It was a mad dash at the end.
There were a bunch of people doing a bunch of things and now you can actually get food fries and working cameras and lights
They erected a stadium. I very as it were though, of course, I'm not loving that we are suspended
We are very visible again in a cube
Over a stage somehow. I'm confident tonight that there will be people both staggering well and not staggering well.
That is likely.
One of the people who are staggering, it seems towards the exit, is Charles Barkley.
Can we talk about Charles? Because we take that story from across the Atlantic also.
Biggest story of the, bigger story than any story here.
I believe his resigning has the same level of credibility as his running for governor
Of Alabama. He did not resign. I know he did not resign. You're right. He said he was going to retire
He said that after his next deal they have the next year is a whole nother year
His claim is I won't work for another network, which is total horisaki. And his claim is, you know, thank you very much,
but I'm done.
And he was nice enough to name his successor,
which I'm sure would make a media executive super happy.
A couple of possibilities.
We named several possibilities.
And by the way, I actually feel slightly different.
I bet he believes.
Vince Carter.
I think he believes what he's saying.
I think he believes he's going to quit,
but I believe it might become irresistible to continue
because it's very good pay for having a little fun
and not a lot of hours.
Well, Turner's statement certainly would indicate,
Turner, very unusual, I'm not sure that I would've actually
agreed to this if I were to be running Turner.
They agreed to release a statement after Barclay did this.
And the statement was, we love you,
and we are gonna work with him to,
I don't have the exact statement,
but it was something like, hey,
it's not over till it's over,
and we're gonna work with him to figure something out.
I don't know why you would let your company
be put in that position where you're basically
over a barrel for an NBA analyst.
And for Barclay to do it the way he did it I just thought was very
unnecessary immature but great great leverage for himself. Well and as always
with Charles who was a very nice fellow it's entertaining. It does also seem to
indicate and I don't think he has any
insider knowledge, but he seems clearly to believe that that WBD is not going
to assert their matching right. Which may or may not exist. No, I actually believe
it does exist. I have reason to believe it does exist, though, and I said
before I was very skeptical existing
yeah let's I now know from a very good source that it does exist there is a
matching right for a third party who wasn't involved that still seems
peculiar to me I would say I have heard that there is again from a good source
but I do not believe they will exercise that nor do I believe nor do I believe John's reporting David we're updating his entire story no no no I do not believe they will exercise that, nor do I believe, nor do I believe.
John's reporting, David.
Where he's changing his entire story.
No, no, no, I did not change my story.
I've come upon new information
and is, despite your goading me to admit
that I knew or didn't know whether it was matching right,
I apparently did not remember that there was such a thing.
Wait, so you had one too.
You're not saying that Turner got one and Disney did not remember that there was such a thing. Wait, so you had one too? You're not saying that Turner got one and Disney did not?
Again, someone who should know from either Turner or ESPN
has told me that there is indeed a matching right.
For both parties.
Yes.
David, while you've been-
Who knows?
I never read those contracts.
Why would I read those contracts?
We had an outstanding lawyer and legal staff
and I felt no need to read the contract.
Can we let people behind the scenes?
Please, we should.
It's very normal that John would not read
the entire contract start to finish.
Owners don't read stadium deals,
they don't read the TV deals,
they didn't read the formation of MLBam,
but you're given a summary memo
Yes, and that is often what owners will read and what I'm sure you got for the deal
The summary memo would have contained a matching right? That's a germane provision. I might not have read the summary
Look I always believed in doing my job and letting other people do their jobs.
It can't be.
And my job was not to construct a contract.
It was to negotiate the basic terms of a deal.
Do you know how hard people work on those summary memos so that you can have a working
knowledge of what you're signing?
I had a guy who read the summaries.
David was that guy.
I was the guy who started my life writing the summary memos
and ended my life reading the summary memos.
You actually have, I believe, a...
Law degree.
Which is called what, a jurist?
Doctor.
Yeah.
Yeah, JD.
JD?
Yes.
I'm not a doctor doctor.
There's a lot of noise. Yes, Sue Bird
Announce our friend. Sue Bird has been announced. Aren't you interviewing her?
Not today, but she is appearing beneath the cube we're suspended in
She's somewhere there. Yeah, it's actually quite a system. They have here. I believe this studio is booked every single minute
Yes, we are in the day
We are the ones who are most recklessly abusing our editorial freedoms inside of it to be very clear as we do.
But I love that David, this is why I love this show, is that John will say something. John is a reporter now, in doses, which I love.
I've watched him report along the beach while you've been schvitzing but my favorite part about John's journalism is that he's reporting about himself
He's realizing things and David is on the other side of the table throughout his career a
Gast well a gas absent perfect memory
You you have to report on yourself and and also disclose when a major update comes to the story.
This is a major update.
We are transparent in terms of our venue and in terms of our ethos with the show.
I'm interested in these microphones that you have a beach sport and you have a sport beach.
That's right. The more we say sport beach, the better it is, I think.
I think my cube is on backwards.
Oh, no. Beach on top? I'm not really positive how it's supposed to be.
David, as the person who cared about the word and the orientation when he sold naming rights,
when he was making summary memos, and is now in a relationship with a man
for whom that could not have been
close to the level of concern for him is a delight, honestly.
Sean and I go back, go back a ways.
Variety's what makes the world go around.
The idea of the...
Is this for the network too?
I don't know.
You don't know?
No idea.
Are we being kicked out soon?
We got like five minutes.
Oh, cause there's some other things
that we're already mentioning.
What do you want to talk about?
What should we talk about, David?
Are you willing to just talk a little bit
about what's going on with that lawsuit?
Would that bother you?
This is our prep live on the air.
With that lawsuit.
The NFL antitrust lawsuit.
Oh, the Sunday ticket lawsuit.
Because in fact it impacts you and decisions you made and bids you'd be willing to think
about making.
How much it mattered whether or not games can be free for everyone or not?
I'm not sure I understand what that lawsuit is about well enough to comment smartly upon
it.
Let's have David summary.
Summary memo time.
Let me do a little summary and then ask your opinion. I won't read it. Let's have David summary memo time. I'm gonna do a little summary and then ask your opinion.
I won't read it.
You only have to listen.
Think about the concept where you turn on your local
networks and you get to watch your local team.
And it's free, whether it's CBS or NBC or ABC or Fox.
You're watching your team.
But you wanna watch another team.
You don't have the right to just buy.
If you're in New York and are a fan of the Chicago Bears,
you can't just buy the Bears game on that Sunday.
You have to buy something called the Sunday ticket.
Sunday ticket is very expensive, several hundred dollars,
and it gives you the right to watch
every out of market game, not just the Bears.
That's the concept.
There's a lawsuit, and it's been concept there's a lawsuit and it's been
going on for years and it's basically an antitrust suit where what people are
saying is you're made me pay so much money and I all I wanted to do is watch
the Bears okay well I have two questions one doesn't the NFL have an antitrust
exemption so I love where your heads at the NFL does have an antitrust exemption? So I love where your head's at.
The NFL does have an antitrust exemption,
but what's being litigated now is that the exemption
ought not to be covering this specific instance.
But it is certainly possible to combine multiple things
into a package and sell it.
That's not against the law, right?
Last time I checked, I can get French fries
with my hamburger for a single price,
or I might have to pay for them individually.
I'm not quite sure what that violates.
You can go to any place to get fries.
There's nowhere else to go to get a Bears game.
You can go to McDonald's, Burger King, Shake Shack.
There's very many options for fries,
we can argue quality later.
But for a live event, there's no way,
I think you'll agree, that's not a good comp,
fries versus a Bears game.
It's probably not a good comp, but I could go
to a high school game or a college game
or a flag football game. I mean, Chicago Bears is not the only football game I can see and if I mean now
No, well, it's gonna be your position
I don't even understand what the lawsuit is saying and people are thinking the NFL is going to lose this which would be an epic
Loss at this court level. I mean they can appeal it etc
But think about what the NFL is arguing.
The NFL, they found emails saying,
we wanna get the games to as many people as possible.
That's one set of emails.
There's other emails saying, hey,
let's make sure that we do not lower the price
and we do not offer anything a la carte.
You're in, you're in for everything.
So they actually have a smoking gun of a behavior
which drives up prices to, allegedly,
not really allegedly anymore, it's out as evidence,
which drives consumers to pay more,
which is what the government's trying to protect against.
And the NFL could get caught,
they're getting caught right now,
acting in a way that's different than what they were saying,
which is we want our product for everyone.
In fact, they were full of it.
They want people to pay.
Yeah, I'm skeptical that the NFL will lose this,
and I can't tell you why in a legal sense,
but I'm confident they can appeal it to the Supreme Court,
and Samuel Alito will vote to uphold it
and his wife will fly some kind of flag upside down. Like our microphone flag, their American flag
will be upside down. I think it's safe to say. They'll fly the NFL shield upside down.
We are now officially, I believe, out of time. We can get to antitrust. Yeah, we get home
Let's do that for the next one baseball. Let's just do that privately
We'll get in the car and we'll do it. I'm not sure anybody wants to hear it. Well review. Thanks
Oh, well review some french fries
Here love you John along the near quassette. So what an effort John made to come? Oh, and by the way
I think the chaotic nature of this was
perfectly suited to sort of the environment we're in, which is fun and interesting and hot and chaotic. David has dried up.
It's a miracle. Look at this. I regulated. I told you, just relax.
Thank you both. Love doing this with you guys. Thank you.
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