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January 22, 2025 56 mins

Today on 2 Pros and a Cup of Joe, the Jets zero in on Lions DC Aaron Glenn as their new head coach but what does that mean for Aaron Rodgers? Critics think extended seasons are exhausting fans but are they missing the point? The Old P, Petros Papadakis joins the guys in celebration of LiAngelo Ball’s rap career. They put their final thoughts on Ohio State beating Notre Dame in the National Championship and much more!

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
It's the best of two pros and a couple with
Lamar rings. Rating Win and Jonas Knox on radio.

Speaker 2 (00:13):
How the hell we feeling here on a Wednesday morning?

Speaker 3 (00:15):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (00:17):
Oh wow? That You hate it when one of your
teammates gives you false enthusiasm?

Speaker 3 (00:22):
What do you mean false?

Speaker 4 (00:24):
What do you mean it was false?

Speaker 3 (00:25):
Was that false?

Speaker 4 (00:26):
You're tired? Oh?

Speaker 3 (00:28):
I'm not tired. I'm ready to roll.

Speaker 4 (00:30):
You sound you actually sound like you're ready to roll.

Speaker 3 (00:33):
I am.

Speaker 4 (00:34):
I believe you're tired on the inside. I mean, we
got I thought about sleeping. I thought about oversleeping today,
did you Yeah? I did. I thought about it.

Speaker 2 (00:45):
Can you plan that or does it just happen?

Speaker 4 (00:46):
I just just you know, Lee? Yeah, you know, Lee
would be the authority on on this question. You you
make a valid point there, Lee. Can you schedule oversleeping
or does it or does it just happen?

Speaker 5 (01:02):
You know?

Speaker 2 (01:02):
Sometimes you decide like I'm gonna catch a few extra
Diz's right now and push push the envelope.

Speaker 4 (01:09):
So I guess that's technically scheduling over sleeping.

Speaker 3 (01:13):
Well, scheduled over sleeping, scheduled over sleeping.

Speaker 4 (01:17):
There you go, that's what the sleep button's for I
do know this though, Aaron. I mean that was profound, man.
It was like sometimes I hear that alarm and well,
I just have already planned to hit the sleep button
and give more zas.

Speaker 2 (01:34):
All right, do you think Aaron Glenn is a hitting
of confusion? You think Aaron Glenn is hitting the snooze
button on on the offer the Jets have on the table,
reportedly a lucrative offer.

Speaker 4 (01:45):
He did leave New.

Speaker 2 (01:47):
York or New Jersey where wherever the hell they do
those things. Uh, he did leave there and go back
to Detroit. But another report said they have told other
candidates that they're targeting Aaron Glenn. He he's their leading candidate.
He's the guy that they feel like they want to
have the job. He's just mulling it over now that
he goes back to Detroit. It would be great for

(02:13):
all of us if Aaron Glenn decided just to walk
away and say now I'm just going to go back
to Detroit, to go to New Orleans and continue on
with my search. But he would make a lot of sense.
He played there. We talked about it a little bit yesterday.
The question just becomes, what do you do at quarterback.
What's the plan because one a team in your division
is on the brink could go into a super Bowl potentially,

(02:35):
and they got the quarterback position figured out. So it
just feels like the same problem is going to be
there a Lah, what's happening in Vegas with the Raiders.

Speaker 6 (02:43):
I mean, is it a problem or you have Rogers?
It's just whether or not you want that to be
your guy next year?

Speaker 2 (02:49):
Do you think he would want to take that on.

Speaker 4 (02:54):
First year there?

Speaker 2 (02:56):
Like, because if you do look at it, it's not
the worst option in the world world from a playing standpoint,
it's just all the stuff that comes along with it.
And I just I wonder if him taking over the
organization and taking over the helm would want to deal
with that right off the jump there.

Speaker 4 (03:12):
I think you have to have the conversation with what
does that even mean? By the way, deal with what
you know, the other thing that comes with him. Yeah,
I think you got to have a conversation just based
upon the feelings that have been, you know, issued to
the media, whether from him himself, Aaron Rodgers, or from
reports that you've heard. So I think that it starts

(03:33):
with ownership. He's got to have a conversation if he's
being hired or he has to discuss his plan, And
if Aaron Rodgers is in that plan, I think he
you know, I think he has to get a firm
hold of what what the decision makers think first before
he makes any any more decisions than I would. I
would say I wouldn't feel comfortable making a decision like that,

(03:55):
at least pre pre pre hiring, unless I had the
opportunities speak with him directly and speak with his teammates
to get an idea of what we're dealing with. Is
this a guy who has the air and the hearts
of the guys in the locker room or is he

(04:16):
a problem? Is he a cancer? Is he one of
those guys that you know, when you ask guys about him,
they're like, yeah, we were better off without him. I
don't think you just as a new coach. I don't
think you just discard Aaron Rodgers. I mean, we could
talk about all of the chicanery that's connected to all
the things that have taken place since he's gone to

(04:37):
New York. But I don't think you just discard him
in any scenario. I think you got to weigh it
out before you move on from the situation. So if
I'm the head coach, I'm weighing out and I'm measuring
what it is. Even though I know I still got
to get another quarterback. You still know you have to
get another quarterback. You gotta do that. That's first and four.

(05:00):
Most you do know you have to get another one
just based off of his age. But I wouldn't just again,
I just wouldn't move on from Aaron Rodgers if I
were taking over the job and he was still.

Speaker 6 (05:11):
Well, how much of that do you think would he?
Johnson or his sons for that matter, I have in
the back of their mind. So when they're interviewing him,
it's like, well, what's your plan? How do you see
our team? You know, how would you envision this year
one going? And maybe he's already given then answer. Maybe
that's one of the reasons why they like Glenn. It's
not just his defensive mind, acumen, or the fact that

(05:33):
he played there and all the other superlatives that he brings.
Maybe there's an little bit of like he's already given
him that answer, like, hey, you've got a problem, right.
I would think most interviews, if you go into it,
you're looking at it from the outside and they're gonna
ask you like, well, how do you view us, Like,
what's your vision for us?

Speaker 3 (05:51):
And my response would be, what appears you have a problem?

Speaker 6 (05:55):
You think you, you know, have a quarterback issue or
something to sit them, I don't think you have an issue.
Here's what I think you do or here's what I
would do if I an eron and then go from there.
And so I think he's probably given them that vision
or that answer of what he wants to do along
with I believe it's Lance Newmark, and so they want
to make the general managers that accurate.

Speaker 3 (06:15):
Yeah, yeah, it's the name I saw a thing.

Speaker 6 (06:16):
So I'm sure since those guys being hired together, they're
a lockstep and they're they're providing a solution for whatever
perceived problem the Jets feel like they have outside of losing. Right,
it's one thing as a coach to come and give
it a vision. Off, Hey, here's how we're gonna win. Okay,
you've heard a thousand of those, But how are you
going to fix the locker room dynamic? How are you

(06:37):
going to fix you know, if there's a perceived issue
with ownership, like I hope he was honestly just say, hey, look,
this is what it was like when I played. This
is what it was like in a place I just
came from in Detroit. This is what I want to build.
And if i'm your guy, you have to give me
the free range or the autonomy to build that sort
of culture with the team.

Speaker 3 (06:58):
But it might take you stepping back.

Speaker 6 (07:01):
It's taking you stepping out of this not flying your
helicopter in over the practice facility, landing, then waltzon out
of the practice field. Might be just kind of able
to stay out of sight, out of mind. There's all
sorts of things that who knows what was said, but
I assume Aaron Glenn Lance Newpark maybe both have given

(07:25):
them some sort of vision or plan for what this
team looks like with Rogers, because I can't imagine you
take this job and go, yeah, I'd rather have a
question market quarterback. That just doesn't make any sense to me.
I think it's a great point too. It's an excellent.

Speaker 4 (07:44):
Assertion of just the familiarity, right, you don't know what
you don't know. So if you're a coach and you're
coming into the situation and you're interviewing and you are
answering these questions, You're answering them in the dark. I
don't know this man's personality, his proclivities, don't I don't
know his habits. There's just certain things that I'm not

(08:05):
going to know if I've never been around you or
your organization. But Aaron Glenn has been here, he has
been on the inside. He has lived it as a player,
and he's lifted as a player with a team that
had a lot of leadership. You know, they had Mo
Collins on that team, that had Marvin Jones on that team.
I mean they had you know, some real John Abraham
was on that team. They had some real goons on

(08:27):
that team. Man Curtis Martin I believe was on the
team back then. Like the I think when you look
at the wisdom and just the veteran feel of what
Aaron Glenn brings to the table, I think it definitely
serves a purpose to have the ability, as we mentioned

(08:47):
with Dion going to possibly Dallas in a scenario like that,
I think it has a ton of value that there's
a familiarity between the owner and the and the potential
coach that was a former player. Because you can politely
or gently say, hey, Woody, you know, just just a

(09:08):
tack bit of you know, just perspective there. You know,
the helicopter, you know, it's like, you know, like just
gently put like you know, can you you know, can
we do it off off hours?

Speaker 2 (09:23):
Can you land it over.

Speaker 4 (09:24):
By the gym? You know? Can you land it when
we're not around? You know? Yeah?

Speaker 3 (09:28):
Or keep it in private? You know, the helicopter in private?

Speaker 4 (09:30):
Yeah? Yeah, you know. I mean, and and sometimes it
just takes you being familiar with the lady.

Speaker 3 (09:38):
Friend, you know.

Speaker 5 (09:40):
I mean what I mean he is a Johnson, you know,
That's what I'm saying. I mean, you know what his
Johnson helicopter around in public or that baby oil. Well,
I'm not saying that. I'm just saying I'm not saying it.
It's in private.

Speaker 3 (09:56):
Damn you keep that helicopter in private.

Speaker 4 (10:02):
I mean it's uh, hey, you take things better. I
think people take things better when they get it from
people that they have a familiarity with, because familiarity in
a lot of cases, if it's fun familiarity, then it's
the closest thing to trust, even though you got to
assume guys like that aren't trusted.

Speaker 2 (10:23):
I'm just worried about Rex Ryan. You know, he really
campaigned for the gig, like really, I mean he got
an interview.

Speaker 4 (10:30):
Because he works out the Four Letter Network. Yeah, but
it just you know, if they catch that spirit, you know,
they'd be wanting to coach.

Speaker 2 (10:36):
Jeez, it's a real shame.

Speaker 4 (10:38):
Maybe you should go be the decordinator at Penn State.

Speaker 2 (10:41):
Do you think, jeez, do you think that uh do
you think Rex got a second interview or no? Or
do you think he was got a one and done?

Speaker 4 (10:52):
I mean, don't you guys think that that was like honestly,
like almost like a chara to say he got it
the first time, almost like almost kind of like a joke.
I mean, I don't know how it could be taken
seriously to hire him at this point. It's just I
feel like it's been too long and and just kind

(11:15):
of you know, maybe the storylines that surround him, I
don't I don't see how they would, you know, the
way things ended in New York, how they take it seriously,
I don't know. I mean, the wheels fell off the
first time, they fell all the way off. Yeah, they
did have success, granted, but that's been quite a while.

(11:35):
When's the last time he's he's coached. When's the last
time he's you know, had success as an.

Speaker 3 (11:41):
Let me see this in his defense, I do feel.

Speaker 4 (11:43):
Like I'm not trying to exack them.

Speaker 3 (11:45):
I'm just you know, no, no, I understand.

Speaker 6 (11:48):
But I was there in thirteen for half that season,
and one of the things that I felt immediately walking
in the building and sitting in team meetings and hadn't
talking with some people in the front office, and then
seeing how he coached, Like I liked him a lot
as a coach.

Speaker 3 (12:03):
He was very, very likable.

Speaker 6 (12:05):
Uh players, style of coach aggressive. I like the demeanor
which she handled things, you know, let guys be pros,
but still had a structure around everything. But you could
tell there's a disconnect there just was in how they
were building the team, how he was coaching the team,
what he wanted. And I mean they had some talent,
and there was definitely some some guys and players that

(12:27):
you were like, all right, like they have some studs
and there they're given some of it, you know, what
he wants, but they just they weren't winning enough at
that point.

Speaker 3 (12:35):
And I don't know that they were on the same page.

Speaker 6 (12:37):
I'm sure the front office and him, but should be frustrating,
and unfortunately, I think there's been a lot of that.

Speaker 3 (12:43):
You know, there's been on different pages.

Speaker 6 (12:45):
So I would have been really curious to see what
a second stint would have looked like. I think it
would be awesome for us because he just you know,
he provides so many comments and you know, different potential
for talking points for us. But I'm also excited for
Aaron Glenn. I'm curious to see what this looks like
as a head coach, a player. He's familiar and all that,

(13:08):
and for a Jets team that again has talent, like
this team has underperformed. That's the best way of putting it.
And it's a loaded roster. If you're a coach, you
can maximize that. More power to you, man.

Speaker 2 (13:20):
So more optimism that a Roger would be back next year.

Speaker 4 (13:24):
I like it.

Speaker 2 (13:24):
And you know, let me tell you something. As the
star of his Netflix documentary The Enigma, I mean, you know,
I'm a fan of it. So if he could get
back and that, it's good for you, right, great, come on,
keeps us in the news a little bit longer.

Speaker 4 (13:37):
It keeps you in the news.

Speaker 3 (13:38):
Yeah, keeps us. I don't know what us has.

Speaker 4 (13:40):
To do with it.

Speaker 2 (13:41):
I'm a we not me guy personally.

Speaker 4 (13:46):
You're kind of a we we guy, little we guy, Wills, Wills, Wills.

Speaker 6 (13:56):
Here's my thing is like I just you know, and
and Lee can attest to this. You don't want to
be helicoptering around in public?

Speaker 4 (14:02):
You know. No, yeah, not a good idea at all. No,
people get the wrong impression.

Speaker 2 (14:09):
What's helicoptering?

Speaker 3 (14:13):
You know the things with the blades they're all spinning
around like that.

Speaker 4 (14:17):
Well, yeah, helicopter in private.

Speaker 3 (14:21):
I figured you did, Bud.

Speaker 4 (14:23):
Oh that's fair. Oh whoa, that is fair.

Speaker 1 (14:26):
Be sure to catch live editions of Two Pros and
a Cup of Joe with Brady Quinn, LeVar Errington, and
Jonas Knox weekdays at six am Eastern three am Pacific
on Fox Sports Radio and the iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 2 (14:40):
All right, so what's your issue with football this late
in the year, Brady?

Speaker 4 (14:45):
All right, Like you.

Speaker 5 (14:46):
Think, uh, it's not my issue. You gotta stop projecting.
But I did notice on social media people being like,
oh man, no one's gonna watch this college football game.
The NFL seasons long. I'll bet college football seasons. So
like these people complain about it.

Speaker 6 (15:04):
And I'm sitting here all right, granted on very little sleep,
so there's probably some delirious thoughts, but I'm going, Okay,
isn't this a good thing? Like football longer? You know,
football for a more period of time, Like, isn't that
what you want?

Speaker 4 (15:22):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (15:22):
Am I the only one that's crazy about this?

Speaker 6 (15:24):
Like, No, you're prolonging the sport that we all have
grown to love and watch.

Speaker 3 (15:29):
Why not just enjoy it?

Speaker 4 (15:32):
You know?

Speaker 3 (15:32):
Why not? Who cares if it's eighteen.

Speaker 6 (15:34):
Games in the NFL at some point here soon, or
if it takes sixteen games to win a national championship?

Speaker 3 (15:39):
Can we enjoy that?

Speaker 4 (15:41):
I'm with you. Yeah, I just think people again, I
just think people that do this are people that that's
what they do. You got to look for something that
can play, and it just depends on the region of
and a part of the country that you're in as well.
Some places are more into that than others. And it's
just a cultural thing, honestly speaking. And that was not

(16:03):
race baiting either, by the way, that was just me
talking about general areas. Certain people will walk by you
and they say, you know, what, hello, how you doing?
You know, the person to say back, Hey, how you doing.
How you have a good day? Certain places in the
world you say that, they tell you f off. You
know what I mean, like mind drafting, business or whatever

(16:25):
it may be. There's just some people that have very
very negative outlooks on themselves and on life, and it
comes through in like the dumbest little things, like it's
a football game. People are going to watch it. Whether
you think people are going to watch it or not.
People are going to be interested in a college football

(16:46):
championship game.

Speaker 2 (16:47):
They are, which we haven't got the rating yet, have
we I don't think so. It's the air of complaints,
you know, And I blame Yelp. Yelp gave people the
ability to dictate somebody else's success based on their isolated experience.
And because of that, the losers and the geeks and
the twrps and the pip squeaks and the nerds at

(17:11):
Yelp have controlled the narrative for many businesses and many
successful companies out there based on one thing. And so
now people can't just enjoy the football games, or can't
just enjoy the fact that, oh, look at that it's
a national championship game involving two of the biggest brands,
not only in college football but in sports. Can't have that.

(17:35):
We've got to complain about when the game is on.
I don't get it. I really don't understand.

Speaker 4 (17:41):
When it's on, what channel it's on.

Speaker 2 (17:46):
Is anybody aware that we are a couple of weeks shots?
Is anybody aware the fact that we are a couple
of weeks shy of having to break down NBA gossip
and storylines Like I'm telling like we are on the

(18:06):
brink of that, and.

Speaker 4 (18:07):
People want to get caught off season. I'm off too.
I'm taking off too. I'm out of here. I'm out.
I'm out.

Speaker 3 (18:15):
I thought you were going to handle our NBA cover choice.

Speaker 4 (18:17):
Come on, bar hell no, because I'm a black man, Yeah,
think I'm I just automatically know best.

Speaker 6 (18:24):
First off, every time I started talking about every time
I started talking about the NBA last year, you were like,
hold up, Johnson, you know what you're talking about Aeric Johnson.

Speaker 4 (18:34):
I did not. I didn't, you did.

Speaker 6 (18:36):
I was like, you know, I actually think they're doing
really good shooting three corners, passing the ball around.

Speaker 3 (18:41):
And you're like, hold on, Johnson, stop talking about the sport.

Speaker 4 (18:45):
All right, Well, since you guys are at it. Let's
go ahead and do this. Let's talk a little bit
about some NBA basketball going on right now. You got
Lebron James. He went oh for twenty five the other evening,
and you know what that was all right, because you
gotta keep shooting the ball, you know what I mean,
You got to keep doing what you're doing. Brownie James
came in off the bench.

Speaker 3 (19:02):
He did in.

Speaker 4 (19:02):
He just truck him, struck him with a positive one point.

Speaker 3 (19:06):
He didn't do anything.

Speaker 4 (19:09):
On his way to out doing Stephen Ay in his career,
but maybe will not outdo Stephen and his walk up
to the arena. And that'll conclude our coverage. Oh, that'll
conclude our coverage. Though the court park the national basketball
I can't get it off. Okay, well here, let's continue
on right now. Kawhi Leonard finally came back and scored

(19:32):
about fifty nine negative points in the game. It was
considered to be an overwhelming experience for him and his fans.
Where it's Kawhi Leonards man.

Speaker 2 (19:46):
By the way, he did come back. He's looked pretty good,
he's looked in shape, and now he's going to miss
another game.

Speaker 3 (19:51):
Oh you see what I'm talking about, Levari. He's trying
to steal your shine.

Speaker 4 (19:54):
There you go. I'm just saying we had a Kawhi
Leonard spotting and and he disappeared.

Speaker 2 (20:01):
More of the story is stop bitching and enjoy the football.

Speaker 4 (20:05):
You got what we got. I mean, we got UFL
USFL right coming up.

Speaker 5 (20:12):
Well, the problem is people feel like, well, you know,
the ratings aren't going to be as good, and it's like, well,
I mean okay, I mean again, I talked about some
of those issues, you know, putting it on ESPN, and
and ESPN is solely having it, Like there is an
element of as much as there's people who probably like
Kirkirk Street, there's probably people who don't or are tired
of listening to some of the different ways they talk

(20:35):
about the game or present the game of football. It's
one of the reasons why the NFL has multiple partners
and multiple teams that get to call those games and
broadcast those games.

Speaker 6 (20:45):
So that plays a little bit of a factor, I guess.
But it's more about the calendar. I think people look
at it and say, like when should the season start?
When should it end? If you're going to expand the Playoff.
I guess it's even if you had teams, you could
still stay within this model. But you know, you got
to give these kids rest, and you got to get
these kids time to do exams and all the stuff

(21:05):
that comes along with it. I mean, God forbid, something
happens like what happens at the Sugar Bowl, and then
you already had one team that was on a day
less of rest that ends up being two, and it's like,
how do you go about handling that sort of thing?
So I think if there's any change that need to
be made to college football to help the back end

(21:26):
of the playoff, to me, it's the regular season. It's
making these teams play more conference games they should all
play died, making them figure out a non conference schedule
where they're not playing cupcakes, especially not late in this season.
And then you go from there, and then you start
worrying about the timing of other things around the calendar.
But you know, I thought the season was awesome. I

(21:48):
think this was one of the best seasons they've had
in college football. That's not just because Notre Dame made
it to the National championship. I thought being at the
playoff games was incredible. And I don't know if the
ratings are gonna come with it or not because of
the schedule when they put those games on.

Speaker 3 (22:04):
But I think it will only continue to grow.

Speaker 4 (22:07):
I loved it. I went to every home game this year,
went to every playoff game. I loved it from watching
it in person and being a part of it again
to that degree in that capacity, and what goes along
with it, what surrounds it, you know, just all of
the people who put in a ton of work to

(22:28):
try to support these these programs. But I also love
it when I'm watching it at home. I really do.
I enjoyed this college season because I just believe the
way it was structured heading into this playoff made it
made the season more relevant to me. It really did,

(22:50):
because with the lesser teams that you take the quicker
you lose interest in yep, that team. I mean, maybe
they may play a team that is up for one
of those couple teams are going to make it, and
they may spoil you know, the team's season. But for
the most part, having it where teams still have the
opportunity to possibly make it into the tournament, I think

(23:14):
added an element of intrigue that was definitely. For me,
it was definitely missing and the interest level was much
higher for much longer this season than I can honestly
say any any like. I've had this intrigue, this level
of intrigue for certain teams, and then you watch to

(23:37):
see if that team is going to live up to
the expectation. But I've not had it for an entire
season four groups like for the conference like this was
like the first time I was looking out a conference like, dang,
how many are they going to get in? Or oh
they're you know, they're going to knock each other off,

(23:58):
or whatever may be. The intrigue of the Notre Dame
deal an independent that goes down to an unranked, unknown team,
and yet they climbed back into it. In years past,
that would have been impossible for that to happen. Think
about that. The best teams and my estimation, the one

(24:21):
thing that happened in this year's playoff is the playoff
the nature played out. It played out, the two best
teams playing the best football ended up playing one another,
and the best team won the College Football Championship. Like
it is crazy.

Speaker 6 (24:39):
I think a year ago those two teams wouldn't have
even made the playoff. Yeah, I mean Ohio State finished
fourth at.

Speaker 4 (24:44):
The Big Ten. Yes and crazy yes, And again I don't.
I don't think that that dictates if you're the best
team in the country or not based upon something that
you have that go wrong. A pro team could be
the best team in the league and lose a game

(25:05):
to a team that you know. You look at and
say how they lose that game? You know? So to me,
why doesn't that exist a little bit more in college? Okay,
you let a game get away from you that you
shouldn't have let get away. I get. It shouldn't mean that,
Oh nope, you're not the best team. You didn't go undefeated. Like,
let's get away from this whole undefeated thing. The best

(25:27):
teams don't always go undefeated.

Speaker 2 (25:30):
And now if they do, it's more impressive.

Speaker 4 (25:33):
And now if they do, it's more impressive.

Speaker 2 (25:34):
Because you've got the gauntlet to go through you get
to get to the national.

Speaker 4 (25:38):
And still got you still got to get through it.

Speaker 2 (25:41):
Like the discussion after Notre Dame lost to Northern Illinois
was what's their path to get there?

Speaker 4 (25:47):
And they find and they found one and just when
I said it after it happened, just when just keep
winning and you're gonna be fine. Just keep winning, and
that's what they did.

Speaker 2 (25:57):
Sort of, Notre Dame more than Brady Well, I mean
he was down.

Speaker 4 (26:00):
I think it was a little down. I mean he
just felt like, you know, maybe the strength of schedule
was working against them. But all they had to do
was just keep winning. And and look at what happened.

Speaker 3 (26:09):
I was there and and.

Speaker 4 (26:12):
Look but just look at the way it plays out.
Like so you're going to tell me that you would
have saw you would have foresaw a team that only
lost the Ohio State and Oregon losing to a team
that lost the Northern Illinois.

Speaker 2 (26:27):
You could you probably could argue Notre Dame in Ohio
State suffered of any teams in college football. Two of
the most demoralizing losses this year, the one to Michigan.

Speaker 4 (26:39):
They lost to the clock. Management was bad. And then
and then you let these boys come up in wound it.
You let Michigan walk up in your house and win.

Speaker 3 (26:54):
What did they do to them?

Speaker 2 (26:55):
Oh?

Speaker 4 (26:56):
Bro, they burned them. And then speaking of burner for
an emergency, you know, like the fires that recently have
swept through Los Angeles, you'll want rapid radios. Yeah, I
said Burner, but we're talking emergencies emergency broadcast again, got it?

Speaker 5 (27:16):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (27:16):
Thanks? Thanks, Hey, listen, you'll want Rapid Radios because that
instant push talk walkie talkie. It's on a national LTE
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with family and emergencies. Go to rapid Radios dot com
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(27:39):
Oh yeah, I do.

Speaker 3 (27:40):
Want to put the bed. One thing.

Speaker 6 (27:42):
I don't know why we need to have this conversation.
It's probably born by Ohio State fans, but this is
the most difficult path greatest run.

Speaker 3 (27:50):
It's like, no, it's not.

Speaker 5 (27:51):
If you look at the entirety of the season, this
season does not compare to l s us. I'm sorry.
They're twenty nineteen National championship. They beat seven top ten
teams that year, they beat four top five. It's never
been done before. And by the way they blew out teams.

Speaker 6 (28:13):
I don't know that they ever trailed in the fourth
quarter of any game ever that season fifteen to zero.
Never trailed in the fourth quarter, and I think the
only time in which they trailed it might have been
like the Clemson game they which was one of the
Was it a playoff game they played them?

Speaker 4 (28:30):
It had have been.

Speaker 6 (28:32):
I mean, that was the most dominant national championship run
that I've ever seen. And Burrow had the single greatest
season in college football history. So I know how State
fans are really excited about what they just accomplished. You
lost a Michigan at some point, you lost on the road. Orian,

(28:54):
you can't consider this one of the greatest runs if
you include the entire season, you just can't. LSU swept
the table with everything, the accolades, the SEC Championship, the
National they did everything. So please stop the narrative of Okay,
I get it. You beat Tennessee, by the way, not

(29:16):
playing their best football by that point in time of
the season. You beat Orging, that's great, it's a good win.
Beat Texas, Okay, beat Notre Dame like that's it was
a great four game stretch. It is not even close
to the greatest season or national championship run in the
history of college football.

Speaker 3 (29:32):
It's just not.

Speaker 5 (29:33):
I think that you can't say it if you lost
two games during the season, you just can't.

Speaker 4 (29:36):
I think that's how they start getting measured though, based
off of what they do in the playoff. The playoff
is going to start defining. Yeah.

Speaker 6 (29:44):
But let's say a team goes undefeated next year and
they wouldn't they go sixteen to zero.

Speaker 4 (29:48):
Yeah, I think they're still going to be I think
they're going to be judged off of what they do
in that playoff, like and what that road looks like.
Like they definitely I get.

Speaker 6 (29:59):
That, by the way, forgot to get there, okay, and
they had a difficult well, they probably.

Speaker 4 (30:05):
The most difficult of any team probably and in the draws,
they probably had the worst, the toughest schedule of games.
That's what I would say. I mean, and I think
that that's where it's gonna go. It's gonna go to
you being judged based off of what you do in
the playoffs. I think getting into the playoff is going

(30:25):
to be looked at more so like how the pros
are looked at anymore, like, oh, you had a good
regular season, but what did you do in the playoff? Yeah.

Speaker 6 (30:34):
But the problem is that's part of the conversation the
National Championship run, Like you can't qualify for the playoff
if you don't win enough in the regular season. True,
but so again, I think, but if you qualify and
you make it into the playoff, and you have a
run in that playoff and you gotta beat some hard
ass teams, I'm just saying, I don't know that people

(30:55):
will judge that team based off of what they did
in the regular season. They're going to judge based off
of what they were able to accomplish once.

Speaker 3 (31:02):
They might get it, I get it. I just don't
think there's a comparison.

Speaker 6 (31:06):
I don't think you can compare that LSU team what
they did, how they won, how dominant they were the
entirety of the season, how well Joe Burrow played, I mean,
Jamar Chance, I mean that whole team was incredible, and
what they did throughout the year, all the big games
they played throughout the year, Like if you really want
to be honest, like, okay, they went fifteen to zero.

(31:27):
We can make the case that they didn't play that well.
They played tough games in the playoff, there's only two
and they dominated by the way, But you can make
the case their playoffs started during the season. When you're
playing seven top ten teams in one season.

Speaker 4 (31:41):
I mean, there's no debating that. Honestly, Other than to
say that maybe the strength of schedule lends to you
being able to make it into the playoff, and then
it's like, Okay, what did they do once they made
it into the playoffs? I mean, I just that's I
just think that I in my mind, the first thing
I think about is what with those teams? Like what
would a Florida State, a ninety nine Florida state done

(32:01):
in this playoff? What would a Michael vick let Virginia
Tech team or Vince Young or you know, Reggie Bush
and those guys, what would they have done in this
six you know, this twelve team playoff? Like I would
love Like in my mind, those are like the things
I think about, what would that look like if they

(32:22):
were if we had a twelve team playoff? Like you
had a bracket Like I think a lot of things.
I think about a lot of things. Yeah, yeah, man,
some good, some some really good, and then some like
that are like just really really like inappropriate. Nonetheless, I
manage I managed to get through them. Sure, Yeah, there

(32:44):
you go. That discipline, Yeah it is.

Speaker 1 (32:47):
Be sure to catch live editions of Two Pros and
a Cup of Joe with Brady Quinn LeVar Errington and
Jonas Knox weekdays at six am Eastern, three am Pacific.

Speaker 2 (32:57):
All right, speaking of the Ball family, somebody who knows
the Ball family very well, he has covered them extensively
doing this song works on local ratio. This song list
stinks too. He is the great Petros Papadaegas, the co
host of the Petros and Money Show, which you can
hear on the Blowtorch and five seventy l a Sports

(33:20):
Fox college football analyst and our good buddy on X
at the Old p Pee. What's happening?

Speaker 3 (33:26):
Good morning Hell and the waterflow.

Speaker 4 (33:31):
Stinks. I'm gonna tell you something that's it s.

Speaker 5 (33:35):
You guys don't know about that hardcore rap game and
Chino Hills fool. Let's go Huskies, Let's go, Let's go Petros.

Speaker 3 (33:43):
I need you becoming strong with that.

Speaker 4 (33:45):
That song would have been in style twenty five years ago.
About style now, no way.

Speaker 5 (33:51):
I don't know why the number one song is a
jellet paid off.

Speaker 4 (33:56):
It's a joke. Is one of them?

Speaker 2 (33:59):
Is?

Speaker 3 (33:59):
He is stabed?

Speaker 5 (34:00):
List his his uh, he got his street card punched
when he stole those sunglasses and China coach.

Speaker 3 (34:09):
I must say what I want to.

Speaker 4 (34:18):
I'm gonna put WHOA.

Speaker 5 (34:21):
I'm gonna get internationally arrested in Trump. I'm gonna have
to save me.

Speaker 4 (34:27):
I can't hoop.

Speaker 5 (34:28):
Oh standing another basket cherry picking form brothers.

Speaker 7 (34:34):
WHOA my favorite intro music man?

Speaker 5 (34:41):
Why not my favorite Jello Ball? It's better than Lady
Saw and Steven Seagal.

Speaker 4 (34:46):
I don't know. I think they're the best.

Speaker 5 (34:50):
Jello Ball line was very undercover years ago that we
covered on the radio a couple of years ago.

Speaker 4 (34:57):
He had a baby.

Speaker 3 (34:59):
Well, so you know, his girlfriend had a baby, a
bastard child.

Speaker 5 (35:03):
And he said, technically that's that is the term. You know,
I mean, Scarface had it wrong. If I die, then
my child will be a bastard. Well if if you're
not married, he's already a bastard. Scarface, Hey you have
to die. Ah, but he had a kid. Jello Ball

(35:25):
had a baby. Different, scar.

Speaker 4 (35:28):
Yeah, what's the matter with you?

Speaker 5 (35:32):
They asked Jello Ball about having a baby and how
his brothers felt about it, because you know, his brothers
at that time were much more famous than him. This
is before the big rap song Tweaker, And he said,
uh my, my brothers are excited to be an uncle
to my seed. So he's always been a warn smith.
You know, I say what I want too.

Speaker 4 (35:58):
They excited to be the uncles my seat.

Speaker 3 (36:03):
I see that's a direct quote shallow Ball.

Speaker 7 (36:09):
Oh it's so dumb. It's catchy though, but it's so
it's such a it's it's a idiot. So it's so dumb.

Speaker 2 (36:27):
It might be the best thing that family has done.
I swear to God.

Speaker 3 (36:32):
Well, you know, I don't know. Mellow Ball is making
more money than him, but he spends so much.

Speaker 5 (36:38):
Every time he wears an outfit, he has to buy
a matching Lamborghini's gonna that is gonna drain your banking
account quick?

Speaker 3 (36:47):
Hey, P do you P?

Speaker 2 (36:48):
Do you buy the speculation that Big Baller brand shoes.

Speaker 4 (36:53):
Blew up the other one Monzo's leg fell off because
of it? You buy that?

Speaker 3 (36:59):
Sure?

Speaker 5 (37:02):
I mean if I have to buy the fact that
Magic Johnson drafted Lonzo over de Aaron Fox and Jason
Tatum because they served him strawberry waffles and Chino Hills.
I mean literally, that was like, he's like this family,
I went to breakfast, we eat strawberry waffles.

Speaker 4 (37:17):
I had to pick up that sounds amazing, though I'm
gonna start this strawberry waffles.

Speaker 3 (37:25):
In the house.

Speaker 4 (37:26):
Oh my gosh, Oh my gosh.

Speaker 3 (37:32):
I like, I don't want to get off the subject.
I want to try to find the way chiny shoes.

Speaker 4 (37:36):
Let my leg, Oh my gosh, draft these shoes wear
my leg fall off? Oh put it back on.

Speaker 3 (37:47):
Give me another contract because my brother's getting richer. Whatever
happened to the oldest ball and his girlfriend? Were they
were they married? Did they have a kid together?

Speaker 4 (38:00):
Is Latina? Yes? I believe she was thea Tina, the
one that has the parents that owned the strip joint,
that that does the That's not the oldest one, that's
that's Jello forever. It was kind of.

Speaker 3 (38:19):
The relationship.

Speaker 4 (38:20):
No, don.

Speaker 2 (38:24):
What about me back man, I'm.

Speaker 5 (38:28):
Still so shocked that the white guy from Camp by
Me Love got to be in the gang in Colors Kenneth?

Speaker 2 (38:36):
Is that the redheaded guy?

Speaker 4 (38:37):
Yeah, he's like all hard.

Speaker 2 (38:39):
Wasn't he the weirder on the Burbs too?

Speaker 5 (38:41):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (38:41):
Why don't you get to be I'm gonna say what
I say.

Speaker 3 (38:44):
I'm so sorry stop we candidate.

Speaker 5 (38:57):
It took us, we edited that, we never found the Gleenson.
We literally it took us like an hour to edit
ten seconds.

Speaker 2 (39:04):
Yeah, what was Kate's doing that old time?

Speaker 5 (39:06):
It was like.

Speaker 4 (39:09):
Beele at Petroos. Seriously, what what did you think about
the grand finale of the college football season?

Speaker 3 (39:23):
You know, I guess we all kind of I mean
I did.

Speaker 5 (39:25):
I had faith or hope that Notre Dame would hang
around and punch him in ahead a little bit, and
they did to a certain degree. But Ohio State was
the more talented team, and Ohio State kind of reminded
me of like a jittery racehorse, right, or that one
really good athlete when you're twelve who lays down on

(39:46):
the field like he's dead, you know, and then pops
up like Rod did Well, you know, like you know
somebody who's a little high strung. And you could tell
because of the way the Michigan game went for them
the last four years. But they were the more talented team,
and they took it to Notre Dame and it probably
sort of just came to fruition in that way. I

(40:07):
thought after the first drive that Notre Dame's quarterback was
going to be metavacked out in a stretcher.

Speaker 3 (40:13):
Looked like he was like just absolutely spent and barfing
on the.

Speaker 4 (40:18):
Sideline and it's what he does. Baby. I loved him.

Speaker 3 (40:21):
I mean, I absolutely I loved that first drive.

Speaker 5 (40:23):
It was inspiring, but you known sustainable though, No, it
didn't seem so after when Ohio State got took the
ball and Chip Kelly started to exploit the perimeter and
create vertical run lanes all over the field, you start
of got the feeling that it was going to be
that kind of night. The interesting thing I think is
now all this talk about how Notre Dame was in

(40:44):
the locker room, and there's all kinds of arguments about
some of the places off.

Speaker 3 (40:48):
He was just Dan Wolken. He was a douche like.

Speaker 6 (40:52):
He was the only one that said it. If you
listen to any interview anyone else, no one else had that.
And then he walks it back by going, what was
sue characteristic? It's like, stop, save your woke stuff somewhere else,
Like just stop, I'm saying, but it's a.

Speaker 3 (41:10):
Bigger conversation for me.

Speaker 5 (41:11):
But I understand Wolkean is not the most well loved
member of the media, and some other people kind of
admitted that guys weren't talking and stuff in a much
more greg air or gracious way.

Speaker 4 (41:24):
Trying to be understanding of the situation.

Speaker 5 (41:26):
But it is interesting, and I'm not really I don't
spend a lot of time in locker rooms after the game.
I mean, we call the game when we leave, and
I remember being in the locker room after the game
as a player and doing it when I work the
se sideline and different things like that. But the one
thing that is interesting is these guys get paid now,
you know, and we're in this really interesting sort of

(41:50):
gray area between these guys get paid and these guys
are quote unquote student athletes or college kids or they're
just kids. But but they're all getting paid. So I
don't know the media treats it. I may be a
little bit different than they used to when players won't talk,
but that part of it. I mean, I wanted Lou
Holtz to come down and do something, but he looked

(42:11):
like he was pretty comfortable up in the booth with
the blanket on his lap. But I wanted to come
down and maybe stare down Ryan Dan halftime. That might
have changed things.

Speaker 4 (42:19):
Interesting.

Speaker 6 (42:20):
What about Herb Street after the game, did you have
any issues because that became more Yeah, a talking point
with all.

Speaker 5 (42:26):
The emotions involved. Seems like he's been going through a lot.
But I mean, if you're going through a lot, why
do you call six games a week? Right? I mean
I can't tell. I mean, he's a mobile as far
as what our business goes. But I think Kirk Kirk
Street became popular or became the leading voice in our sport,
college football, because he was so happy, A good looking guy,

(42:52):
happy to be there, having a great time, very positive.

Speaker 4 (42:57):
Everybody liked him.

Speaker 5 (42:59):
Seems to really know how to deliver the information in
an exciting way and in a way that was really palpable, right,
Because being an announcer is a very subjective thing. Some
people's favorite guy is Tony Romo, and some people can't
stand when he opens his mouth, you know. I mean
it's a very subjective thing to say. If an announcer

(43:22):
is good.

Speaker 3 (43:23):
Well, what do you think about Tony Romo Petros?

Speaker 5 (43:25):
I think he's pretty I mean, I think he's all right.
I mean he's excited. Sometimes, yeah, sometimes he doesn't say anything.
I think he set the bar pretty high in the
first few games he called by knowing the offensive coordinator
and at the same time, I mean, if you're a
football analyst, it's not that hard to kind of feel
like you get in the red zone circle, the tight
end you're probably going to be a genius football analyst,

(43:48):
and the predictability stuff got a little old clad tight
end a lot. Yeah, well it's it's it's a great
idea from you, all right. I learned it from watching you.
I just I sometimes sometimes when when Romo does so

(44:09):
much predicting and then Jim Nann says, well, it's third
and two, what do you think they're gonna do, Tony Jim,
It's like, Okay, well.

Speaker 4 (44:19):
He's fine, everybody's fine.

Speaker 5 (44:21):
The thing about Herbstreet, though, it is like he got
popular because he was having a good time, and now
he's arguing with people. He's fighting total fan bases. He
seems to be, I mean, he seems to be a
total shill for the SEC and for whatever the interest
of the company are. And then he's crying because he

(44:44):
loved the Ohio State team so much in postgame and
needed a tissue.

Speaker 3 (44:48):
Yeah, that's gonna turn off a lot of people. I mean,
I'm sorry.

Speaker 5 (44:52):
You just if you call a game, you can't be
crying about the result afterward because you're so happy for
somebody that's that's my I mean, the guy's built up
a lot of equity. He lives on a private jet
with a dog, doing pro and college football. He's very
much involved in the football world in a way that
others are not because he's so embedded and he's doing

(45:14):
it all the time. But I think that he's begun
to swallow his own bait, and he seems a little bit. Yeah,
he seems just he seems a little bit And people
say this about me in a much lower level, right,
but he seems like a caricature of what made him
popular in the first place.

Speaker 4 (45:33):
It just doesn't seem like he's doing that. Well, what
would your response be to people who say that's what
you are?

Speaker 5 (45:39):
Well, I would say that that's I don't call if
I'm calling a game, if somebody were to say that
about me, I mean, if I'm calling a game, I
don't really care who the network's affiliated with or not.

Speaker 3 (45:49):
I just call it straight up.

Speaker 5 (45:51):
I mean, I've been doing it so long that the
affiliations of the network have changed, and I'm not high
enough on the food chain to really worry about every
sentence that I say being scrutinized.

Speaker 2 (46:01):
I think you're better in Kirk khurb Street. I'll say
it right now.

Speaker 5 (46:04):
Well, thanks, appreciate you got it. I certainly don't have
an agenda built it. And I guess that's what that's
what it kind of feels like.

Speaker 4 (46:11):
I guess yeah.

Speaker 6 (46:12):
I find you more entertaining too, And I think you
say stuff like to your point, like, I don't know
that Kirk makes any comments that are probably critical when
it is deserving.

Speaker 5 (46:21):
Well, he's made so many friends, right, I mean, you know,
when you're friends with everybody in the in the college
football world, you want to protect your friends.

Speaker 4 (46:29):
And I ain't got no friends.

Speaker 3 (46:32):
Jeff, you guys, I mean you must say what I
want to know.

Speaker 8 (46:37):
Well, you have the lizard too, the lizard, Yeah, come on,
got petros? We got petrols on the show?

Speaker 4 (46:50):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (46:53):
Uh, did you have any There was some we were
talking about this a little bit earlier that people were
bitching and moaning about the fact that you had the
National Championship Game the day after the divisional playoffs in
the NFL, and it was just more complaints because that's
what people like to do. You got any issue with
the timeline and the timing of when the game took place.

Speaker 5 (47:12):
Well, I think a lot of people were watching inauguration
stuff too, right, whether they were excited or outraged.

Speaker 3 (47:19):
When you Levart told me he wasn't. LeVar said he
was not watching. I mean it got cut a cake
with a saber.

Speaker 4 (47:24):
I watched it. He's doing a YMC hold it a sword.
I must say.

Speaker 5 (47:34):
You know, yeah, I think that there'll be some tweaks,
you know about when and how sweakers?

Speaker 4 (47:39):
Yeah, much like okay, we can't what do you mean? Whoa?
We got.

Speaker 3 (47:48):
No in the NFL, the NFL was.

Speaker 5 (47:53):
Playing when they were doing the first round, so they
flipped it to T n T and but used their
own uh game production. But T and T got to
do the studio, which was just a bunch of like
Brady knows that you throw a studio show together after
everybody's been working for three and a half months and
tell them to do the championship that was with Victor

(48:13):
Cruz out there doing the salsa.

Speaker 4 (48:16):
That was a little, uh, that was awkward.

Speaker 3 (48:18):
I think there's a lot of things that can change.

Speaker 5 (48:20):
And you know, ending it at the Rose Bowl on
January first, which a lot of people have brought up,
including the Great Joe klatt.

Speaker 4 (48:25):
I don't. I don't. I don't see it. How does
that work?

Speaker 3 (48:29):
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (48:29):
How does that work?

Speaker 3 (48:30):
You have too many weeks and games.

Speaker 4 (48:32):
Yeah, the bye win.

Speaker 3 (48:33):
In the football schedule. The bye week certainly didn't help anybody.

Speaker 5 (48:36):
And I mean, when you think about it, bye weeks
in pro football and pro sports, which you guys played.
The one thing that really impresses me, because I'm such
an emotional wreck, is the way these guys emotionally deal
with the road and the way that they can just
go play football and the crowd doesn't affect him in
the same way because they've been doing it a long time.

(48:58):
And in college that's one of the things about the sport,
other than the hash marks being wider, is the fact
that kids freak out and it makes for exciting plays,
it makes for mistakes, it makes for it makes for
the chaos of college football, and you don't get that
much in the NFL. But what happens in the NFL,

(49:19):
just like college is a week off is not exactly
a great thing. I mean, it's a huge debate in
pro sports rest versus rust, So you know it's going
to affect the college kids even more with finals and
all the different things. If they are even doing that,
some schools are probably not, but all the things that
go into it, I think make it really hard to

(49:41):
perform or be the same team you were in the
postseason than you were in the regular season. So I mean,
when you look at all the way that all the
bye teams performed, some of them didn't even wake up
to the third quarter, maybe there needs to be a
tweak there, But I'm too stupid to figure out what
they should do. Having it up against the NFL and
all that different stuff was a little bit problematic.

Speaker 6 (50:04):
Well, and like Thursday night Friday night games, it's like,
come on, man, like they need to work with the
NFL and say we'll take Saturdays all right. The Saturday
ratings weren't good for the NFL either, So I just
don't understand why you can't save that for college football.
What the NFL owns some of the other days. But
I want to ask you, just because it's all said
and done now, and I know, coming off what you

(50:25):
just said, like what do you think I mean overall?
Were you like, Yeah, I think this is great, It's
gonna work, it's gonna keep growing the sport at this
point because it is a one year sample size.

Speaker 5 (50:35):
Yeah, I mean I liked it, But then again, I
mean I like U and LV games, right, So I
mean I'm totally invested in the breakfast.

Speaker 4 (50:42):
Like Mike Leech used to say, the.

Speaker 5 (50:45):
Chicken has invested, but the park is completely invested, you know,
in the breakfast of college football.

Speaker 4 (50:52):
So I'm I mean, I like all the weird nuances.

Speaker 5 (50:56):
I like seeing Washington State acting like they have a
chance at the college football Playoff while they're playing games
at New Mexico in November. So that kind of thing
I thought was good for the regular season. The implications
for a lot more games made it more interesting for
some people.

Speaker 3 (51:13):
For me, I mean, I have to show up anyway,
but that was cool, and it was cool to.

Speaker 5 (51:18):
See more teams involved in the excitement of the home
games in the first round. I mean, there was a
lot of good with it and a lot of bad,
but I think overall, I think it's a good thing
that needs to keep going forward. I wish it wasn't
a shadow controlled by ESPN, but that's that's how it is.

Speaker 2 (51:35):
He is the old pon X. Petros Papadek is the
co host of the Petros and Money Show, which you
can hear on the blowtorch A five to seventy LA sports.

Speaker 3 (51:44):
I mean, doesn't Brady have enough kids now that he
can start working like a band?

Speaker 4 (51:48):
Dang?

Speaker 5 (51:50):
Yeah you know what I'm saying that the Quinn fav
I never thought about that. Yeah, he made you like
an Irish like a folk shanty. Yeah, well, you know,
like something like that.

Speaker 3 (52:04):
Either my wife rykers sing or have any musical talent.
So that's our ball is out there saying like Berry White.

Speaker 4 (52:12):
Right, I mean, I don't know this song is Oh
my gosh, yeah, I don't know.

Speaker 6 (52:22):
I mean, Petros can give me a studio next time
I come out to l A and we'll lay down
some bars.

Speaker 4 (52:31):
Do is throw tomato tone on theres a. You're good? Yeah,
pretty easy. Yeah, you could do it.

Speaker 5 (52:36):
Hell yeah, we can have a rap group. Yeah, I'll
do the Jamaican stuff. We could just call ourselves. Get
him to the Greek you know. Yeah, but I do
a Jamaican accent, that's right.

Speaker 4 (52:46):
It's got to be done in a Jamaican accent, of course.
And we need a Chinese Jamaican guy because those are
the best. That is funny when you hear it.

Speaker 3 (52:54):
Oh God, there's a lot of Chinese people.

Speaker 4 (52:57):
Yes.

Speaker 5 (52:57):
In fact, the first, yeah, the first guy to record
Bob Marley and the Whalers is a Chinese guy.

Speaker 4 (53:03):
And he sounds like a Jamaica Hey, why coming record now?

Speaker 5 (53:09):
They the biggest record company in Jamaica, moved to Jamaica,
Queens and in New York and they're run by a
Chinese family, I believe, the Hong family. And like, if
you hired like a great reggae singer like Jip Shann
or somebody to come and talk to you guys, it's

(53:30):
probable that a seventy year old Chinese woman would bring
him to the radio station VP Records, which used to
be Randy's Records, Randy Chin.

Speaker 4 (53:39):
Maybe it's the Chins.

Speaker 5 (53:41):
They are still the biggest label of Jamaican music in America,
in the world, and it's completely Chinese run. A lot
of Chinese people in Jamaica. And guess what they own
liquor stores.

Speaker 4 (53:53):
Believe it or not. Hu is hilarious. But yeah, I've
seen Asian people know when I'm there, and it's it's
kind of interesting hearing them speak petcha.

Speaker 5 (54:05):
They chot bob oh. Yeah, a lot of a lot
of Japanese in Peru and Brazil to I gotta go
back to Jamaic and see this. When I was there,
I did not see any of this, So I need.
I need to figure this. Go and ask him where
the local chiny Man is. That's what they call him, sorry,
the local Watch a famous yellow Man song, mister Chin,

(54:34):
I was long shonglong die. No really, baby, I don't know.
You should turn it instead of yellow Ball. You should
listen to mister Chin by the Yellow Man.

Speaker 4 (54:45):
Can you bring us back to that, please, mister Chin? Yeah,
I want, I want, I don't. That doesn't sound like
a profanity song, so no, it's not.

Speaker 3 (54:56):
There.

Speaker 1 (54:56):
It is.

Speaker 4 (54:57):
Oh there, you got pulled it up.

Speaker 3 (54:58):
He's talking about mister in now.

Speaker 4 (55:02):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (55:03):
Three eleven stole that.

Speaker 2 (55:05):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (55:05):
Three eleven is a white band from New York.

Speaker 4 (55:09):
Your energy? Whoa are you for sanity rioting? I'm missuching.

Speaker 5 (55:16):
It's about mister Chin in his store and then that
he and then he takes mister Chin's daughter around the back.

Speaker 4 (55:22):
Cats make songs about anything, won't they.

Speaker 6 (55:26):
Mist I feel like this is starting to seem like
this is starting to seem like country, because country makes
songs about everything.

Speaker 4 (55:34):
Is that similar? Of course? Yeah?

Speaker 3 (55:36):
Okay to Regar, Okay, I mean.

Speaker 2 (55:40):
Listen, I'm a fan of Tweaker.

Speaker 4 (55:42):
I know that, all right. It's number one song in America?
Is it really number one? I'm sorry to bring something
that is horrible. I'm just saying, and it will never
be it will never be anything but horrible. And that's
all I'm gonna say.

Speaker 2 (55:56):
Yeah, Oh my god, you call him Piangelo ball, Well,
P

Speaker 4 (56:02):
Let him know. P.
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