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May 1, 2025 39 mins

Falcons DC Jeff Ulbrich publicly apologizes for his son prank calling Shedeur Sanders, but is public backlash too strong? The Cowboys are frustrated with Trevon Diggs’ rehab and much more!

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, thanks for listening to the Two Pros and a
Cup of Joe podcast with Brady Quinn, Jonas Knox, and myself,
LeVar Arrington. Make sure you catch us live weekdays six
to nine am Eastern or three am to six am
Pacific on Fox Sports Radio. You can find your local
station for the Two Pros and a Cup of Joe

(00:20):
show over at Fox Sports Radio dot com, or stream
us live every day on the iHeartRadio app by searching
fs R. Get this.

Speaker 2 (00:33):
You're listening to Fox Sports Radio.

Speaker 3 (00:39):
Two Pros and a Cup of Joe, Fox Sports Radio,
LaVar Arrington, Jonas Knox with the air. Would we be
able to do a side by side of this song
next to Beautiful Disaster by three eleven?

Speaker 2 (00:53):
Just to hear the similarities?

Speaker 1 (00:55):
You know, I feel like you got like you're you
might be a tab bit on the spectrum ride. I mean, bro,
you get caught up on, you get locked in on
something like like let that live, bro, let let's let
the song breathe. We don't have to keep going to
three eleven every single time the song comes on because

(01:15):
we haven't done that. Yeah, be a little unique, be
a little original with what you got going on. Why
hey every day, Hey, hey your urgent.

Speaker 2 (01:26):
Well, that's not the song, that's it. It's a beautiful
disaster whatever. Bro, why don't you let me scratch that?

Speaker 1 (01:33):
Please? Is this it right here? Is it the distinct difference?
You have to listen in the background.

Speaker 2 (01:49):
Now, play the mambo the other one.

Speaker 3 (01:51):
Play the other girls do, side by side whatever they're
disrespecting an intro.

Speaker 2 (01:57):
I don't have to pull that up.

Speaker 1 (01:59):
Oh yeah, yeah, right right, us know all right? All
I know is the in the background. That's what changes
the genre to being specific to d C music. It's
that and those who know, they know that's all I'm saying. Like,

(02:24):
it's not the guitars, it's not the drums, it's it's
none of that. It's the it's the you hear it
in the background. That's that's it's go go. That's why
it's called go Go. It's a unique sound. All right.

(02:45):
We're trying to play on both at the same time.
They don't sound like.

Speaker 2 (02:49):
DJ Ray Ray is going to a confirm what I've been.

Speaker 1 (02:51):
Speculatd They don't sound alike at all.

Speaker 2 (02:54):
Let's go all right, I'm telling you man, that's three eleven.

Speaker 1 (03:03):
Are they playing at the same time right now, because
you can't you can't hear the it's not the same thing.

Speaker 2 (03:15):
It's not far off. Man, I'm telling.

Speaker 1 (03:16):
You you got to listen to the background.

Speaker 2 (03:20):
I'm telling you, I guarantee you.

Speaker 1 (03:23):
Trying to give you, guys why it's called go go music.
It's not reggae, it's go go it's because of the
bongos and and and stuff like that that are in
the background and they play that. I don't I forget
what it's. I guess it's like they are kind of
like drums, but you stand up and you play them
like it's congos and drums, and it's the percussion like

(03:49):
it's it's it's percussions, but it's it's like it's it's
just a it's a background. It's a background sound that
establishes the the line, like the lifeline of what the
music represents look and that's very, very critical and crucial
to the genre of go go music.

Speaker 3 (04:09):
Listen, That's all I mean. But both are good. I'm
just saying it would not surprise me. It would not
surprise me if Mambo Hammers was actually started as a
cover band.

Speaker 1 (04:19):
Three you can catch me while man, sit right Okay,
all right, so we we are off and running here
our two of the program here on Two Pros and
a Cup of Joe on Fox Sports Radio.

Speaker 2 (04:35):
Uh, and it just continues on.

Speaker 3 (04:37):
We are now five days I believe five days since
Shador Sanders was drafted by the Cleveland Browns, and we
have a couple of other dates.

Speaker 1 (04:46):
This is your new deal. This, this is like your
a This is your new Aaron Rodgers. Listen man, he's
been replaced by Shador.

Speaker 2 (04:52):
Listen man.

Speaker 1 (04:53):
These stories I've talked about a rod since Shador Sanders,
these stories continue to come out.

Speaker 2 (04:59):
It's you got to play the hits.

Speaker 3 (05:01):
And there just continues to be tails and branches to
the Shadoor Sanders conversation in the draft and the very latest.
First off, congratulations to Shador. He does have the top
selling rookie jersey. Now we mentioned he was third on
the list behind Travis Hunter, and I believe cam Ward

(05:22):
shad Or Sanders is now number one top rookie jersey sales.

Speaker 1 (05:26):
So I wonder why that is. I have I have thoughts,
but hey, let's keep going.

Speaker 2 (05:34):
So there's that.

Speaker 3 (05:34):
There's also this Jeff Ulbrick, the defensive coordinator from the
Atlanta Falcons whose son was the one who prank called Shador,
which by the way, Drew Rosenhaus did confirmed. Adam Schefter
Abdul Carter got prank called as well too, but they
knew it was BS because he was just gonna go
in the top three anyway, so it didn't matter like whatever.

(05:55):
But this was Jeff Ulbrick, the Falcons defensive coordinator, sing
the situation yesterday.

Speaker 4 (06:02):
First of all, I'd like to publicly apologize to Shader
and the Sanders family for what occurred. Second of all,
I want to publicly apologize to mister Blank, Terry Foutino,
Rean Morris, the entire Falcons organization. My actions, my actions
of not protecting confidential data were inexcusable. My son's actions

(06:23):
were absolutely inexcusable, and for that we are both deeply sorry.
The NFL has taken action and I fully respect the punishment.
We take full responsibility my son and myself, and we
will not be appealing to fine in any way.

Speaker 3 (06:40):
So that was Jeff Olbrick, the dad of Jacks Olbrick,
who was the one who prank called Shador Sanders.

Speaker 1 (06:46):
What kind of kit do you have? Man? Kind of kid?
What kind of kid like you know, like, who, what
type of what type of person are you raising? In
that crib man.

Speaker 2 (06:58):
You didn't pull any pranks in your kid I did
some awful.

Speaker 1 (07:01):
I've done some pretty immature things. How old is this dude?

Speaker 2 (07:05):
Twenty one?

Speaker 1 (07:07):
Okay, I've done some pretty pretty petty things in my
day that would bring reproach on my family name when
I was in middle school, even maybe had a moment
or two in high school. At twenty one, you're no
longer able to be looked at as a kid or
as a child. That's you're you're making an adult decision

(07:29):
for one. That's more than old enough to say that
you are making adult decisions for one. For two, How
how entitled and how much of a snotty nosed little
bitch brat are you to be sitting there at twenty
one years old crank calling people on draft day and

(07:50):
even if you were, even if you were being on
that time, because social media has made it okay to
be more a moron in public, and you get praised
and you get followers, and you get influenced by being
a moron and doing things that morons would do. So
I'm not even gonna go too far down the lane

(08:11):
of saying that you know, this kid is is bitch
made because of doing doing things that would make him
go viral. The reason why I think he's bitch made
is because you endangered your your father's, and and your
family's ability to be able to make a living. You

(08:34):
put that like you you say, uh, you yeah, that's
a lot of money. Uh, but you say, you say,
you know it's it's you know, it's it's kind of
it's inexcusable to do it. What if they had let
him go. What if they said, because because you did
this and you allowed sensitive information to get released to

(09:00):
get out of our building, we gotta let you go.
What if they let him go? What if for some
strange reason, Ulbrick isn't able to catch on again with
another team because you don't protect your information. I mean,
people could get fired for less. Think about it. This

(09:21):
is the type of stuff that sunk of what's his name? Uh,
what's the coach's name? Gruden? Like, it's no different if
you really think about what could happen, right, It's no,
there's no difference. This was released and obviously, uh, a
court or you know, a gathering of information. You released
the emails. But what I'm saying is is if that

(09:43):
young man could get a hold of sensitive information to
call prospects on draft day, that is only information that
the that the organizations have, then what else does he
have access to? Is what I'm saying. What else does
he have access to?

Speaker 3 (09:58):
Because apparently there was his dad left the iPad unlocked
that had all the information that was sent over by
the NFL. The NFL sends over contact numbers for forty
or so prospects before the draft, just to everybody. And
and now because of that, it cost his dad one
hundred thousand dollars. And I was actually thinking this as

(10:19):
well too. I feel bad for Jeff Olbrick from this standpoint.
This is a guy who just went through a clown
show in New York and it's got you know, he's
got his fingerprints on it. Not that he was at fault,
but that's sort of what he's known as. And evening
Jeff olbrig it's like, oh, he was the interim coach

(10:40):
who took over for the disaster that was the Jets
and Rogers and all that stuff. Linebacker, that's how And
I know him as a Hawaii ring him as a line.
I know he is a Hawaii Hawaii Rainbow Warrior. That's
what I know him ass. But he gets to Atlanta,
he's probably thinking to himself, all right, man, let.

Speaker 2 (10:54):
Me just type action like, let me just let me just.

Speaker 3 (10:58):
Go coach the defense and let's just get back to football.
I don't want to deal with any of this crap.
I just went through it for an entire season with
the Jets, and who knows how much longer it lasted,
and then this happens like we're not even at the season,
the preseason training camp, and he's got to deal with
all this blowback. So I actually I feel bad for

(11:20):
Jeff Ulbrick from that standpoint.

Speaker 1 (11:22):
I don't. I don't. I don't.

Speaker 2 (11:24):
Eight sometimes look kids too, you.

Speaker 1 (11:27):
Have two different He's not a kid.

Speaker 2 (11:29):
Okay, but here's letbe not a kid.

Speaker 3 (11:31):
Let me just let me just speak as somebody who
pulled pranks when they were younger. And I talked about
this one on the earlier this week. My buddy and
I got ripped one night and started prank. We were
probably I think we were like twenty one, maybe twenty two,
and we started prank calling QBC he had one phone,
I had the other so that we could get so

(11:53):
that we could get the prices to jump up on
the screen. And then they caught onto us and they
told us to go f ourselves. All right, so let
me throw another one at you. You tell me how bitch
made this?

Speaker 1 (12:02):
Is all right? I mean you are you already?

Speaker 4 (12:04):
No?

Speaker 1 (12:04):
I thank you so good?

Speaker 3 (12:06):
Yeah, but tell me tell me where I'm at on
the bitch made scale when it comes to this prank.

Speaker 1 (12:10):
All right.

Speaker 2 (12:12):
We waited, my buddies and I waited.

Speaker 3 (12:14):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (12:15):
We played at Thousand Oaks High School.

Speaker 1 (12:18):
I don't even need to hear.

Speaker 2 (12:19):
No.

Speaker 1 (12:20):
Yeah, hey, don't be throwing up the Rolling Sixties. You
threw up the role. They'll they'll be throwing up no
roll in sixties. Brother, cool? Well, good, go ahead, good?

Speaker 2 (12:30):
So we uh we played.

Speaker 1 (12:32):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (12:33):
So we played at Thousand Oaks High School. So that
was our Our high school football team was Thousand Oakshi.
Our our trival was Westlake all right, so Westlake hoives
our trival in Ventura County. And we waited for people
to leave a movie theater. We were on top of
a parking structure. We all had water balloons. We waited
for people to leave a late showing in a movie theater,

(12:55):
and we annihilated them from the top deck with water balloons.
And to make it work, we shouted out Westlake football
as we did it.

Speaker 2 (13:03):
How bitch made is that?

Speaker 1 (13:06):
I mean, that's fun, That's that's high school stuff. I
remember I told you the story about when we went
to the I was in middle school, maybe middle school,
and we went to an orchestra at the what was
it the Benadum Center, I want to say the Ben
Benadum Center downtown. Anyway, I had a stink bomb and

(13:28):
there was all kinds of different school and we were sitting.

Speaker 2 (13:31):
Now it wasn't that like the plastic capsule You throw.

Speaker 1 (13:34):
In that and it breaks right.

Speaker 2 (13:35):
Those things are so bad.

Speaker 1 (13:38):
It's the worst smell ever broad step on it.

Speaker 2 (13:43):
It's on your shoe for the next hour.

Speaker 1 (13:45):
So we're sitting up in the balcony. We're sitting in
the balcony and I don't know what school it was.
I want to say it was like Alleghany or somebody.
It's a school we didn't like. And we was like, bro,
you got that stink bomb. I was like, yeah, I
got it. He was like, bro, let's let's roll it over.
Let's roll it over the leg because we could see
over the edge so nobody would see it hit. The

(14:06):
only thing we were risking was if it hit somebody
on the head or something like that, then we were caught,
you know what I mean. But it didn't. It hit like.
It hit like right in the uh. We was aiming
for the walkway and that joint hitting the walkway and
we saw it break. We was like, oh, so we
had to try to work to control ourselves because we
ain't want to be given away. But the orchestra is

(14:28):
going it's playing Da da dah, and you start seeing
all these kids just going nuts. And then the smell
came up to the balcony, so the the they're performing
and you just see a commotion going on. Below us
and above us were in middle school, so you're talking

(14:51):
what like like twelve thirteen year olds, right, everybody's like, oh,
I'm like e Like, while the orchestra's playing, they're so rank.
It's not like raw eggs, it really does. It's like
nasty raw eggs. Anyway, The point of the matter is,

(15:15):
I mean, I mean, you're in high school and you
did high school things. Now the twenty one year old. Deal,
you're immature. You're immature, and you're not fully developed. You're
not ready for the real world, as I would say,
And why that is, I don't know. That would be
my criticism of y'all calling QVC kind of funny. Y'all

(15:36):
might be, you know, in a different place in your life,
smoking a cigarette here or looking across the room, he's
ripping a bong or whatever. Man, I don't know, but
it's kind of it's it's just immature. I wouldn't say, like,
it's like egregious. It's just you're being immature. And that
happens at twenty twenty One's no different here. The only

(15:57):
difference here is that you grab sensitive information from your
dad's from his iPad, which is work related. That's where
bitch may comes in because you have you have now
put your your dad and like and don't don't be

(16:17):
like be clear here, he is now super expendable, super expendable.
Anything that he does can and will be held against him.
He can mess around and lose his job midway through
the season, after the season, be like, we're letting you go,
and and and part of the reason is in his
file is that he really he was. He was got

(16:38):
for sensitive.

Speaker 3 (16:39):
Information two words with cause, with cause, which screws him.

Speaker 2 (16:44):
If he's looking with.

Speaker 1 (16:45):
Cause, it's there, it's now there. So to me for
for his son at twenty one not to have that
type of awareness that you're compromising your dad. I would
assume he's still married. I don't know with you know
what they got going on, but I would assume he's
still married. So you've compromised your family by doing what

(17:07):
you did? Is a prank? Is a prank? Call worth
you compromising your family? And the sad thing about it,
the saddest thing about the whole thing is the kid
only repented when he got caught. So how many times
has he done something that could have led to the
demise of him, his dad, his family that he didn't

(17:32):
have to apologize for, Because that's something like, that's something
he was so comfortable and confident doing it. You could
tell like this is just something he like, he's like
a little degenerate kid. And sorry if Jeff, if you
if you hear this and somebody plays it for you, sorry,
I'm a girl man, just like you are. I put
my pants on one leg out of time, just like

(17:52):
you do. I gotta raise my kids the same way
you gotta get up and you gotta raise your kids.
And that's something that that would be something that just
is not even a part of our family fabric. We're
not even who's wasting time doing dumbs like that. And
if my kids ever felt the urge or the need

(18:14):
to satisfy an itch of degeneratism by by compromising my
wife or myself with sensitive information that we would have,
that's that's it's just not even that's not even an option, Jonas,
it's not even an option, my son, and I mean,

(18:34):
it is what it is like, that's your household. I'll
tell you what. Twenty one years old, twenty one years old,
you do some stuff like that in the Arrington house.
You know what that gets you, Jonas? A one way ticket.
You're twenty one. You've you've sacrificed me being your parent.
You sacrifice me being your parent. I no longer can

(18:55):
have you in my home, so you gotta go. I
don't have trust for you, so you can't be around
me or my things, So you gotta go. At twenty one,
have a good life. You know. I love you. I'm
still your dad, But you gotta go.

Speaker 2 (19:09):
So there's a couple of things.

Speaker 3 (19:10):
A solution to this is pretty easy, Like just give
these kids burner phones that only team executives have, not
their personal contact information, and you pick up that phone
and you can dial straight to them. Use like a
bullpen phone where you pick up the phone, it rings
to the bullpen in Major League Baseball, Like, use one
of those. Like that feels like a solution.

Speaker 1 (19:30):
The bottom line is is still if the kid is
that type of kid and he gains access to the phone,
he might use the phone. I mean, that's not a
solution to a kid that is a degenerate, Like, it's
not a solution.

Speaker 3 (19:44):
I also think we're speaking as older people. When you're
twenty one, man, you're not thinking like like I wasn't thinking. Look,
I'm just telling you when I wasn't thinking about the repercussions.
And then I remember driving about two three years ago
and I was going down this dark road to get
to my house and some kids popped up from behind

(20:04):
a sign and annihilated my windshield with like four or
five eggs. And I was so pissed, and I thought
to myself, you know what I was owed that I
was owed that for water bombing the people leaving the
movie theater, the flaming bag of dog crap on the doorstep,
the one where you put the trash can you tilted
against the front door and you fill it up with

(20:24):
water from the hose out front, and then you ding
dong ditch him and when they opened the front door,
the water pours into the front house. I was owed
all that stuff, all that stuff that happened to me
based on pranks that I pulled when I was a kid.
So okay, you know, lesson learned.

Speaker 1 (20:38):
If if some way, somehow what you did landed you
in the court of law, you know what that judge
was saying to you, what would he say is that
that doesn't matter. She broke the law.

Speaker 2 (20:49):
Shoo program, you broke the law.

Speaker 1 (20:53):
You don't. You don't get to say, oh I didn't know,
just like oh well, oh well, there's going to be
a consequence. And there was a consequence, and there was
a repercussion for his child's actions. But ultimately speaking, that's
a consequence and a repercussion for you. For you and

(21:14):
not protecting the sensitive information that that was released or
was used in this scenario, it's a super make like Jonas,
I know you're you're like minimizing it to Jesse being
like him being young. That is a serious, serious, serious
thing what he did.

Speaker 2 (21:34):
Yeah, I agree, but I also.

Speaker 1 (21:35):
Very serious in nature thing of what that young man did.

Speaker 3 (21:39):
But I also think that any prank that I pulled
when I was a kid, that wasn't a reflection of
my parents. My parents were great people. That was just
me being an a hole at the time.

Speaker 1 (21:48):
Like and I. And that's the point, the point. But
what you don't and then we could get into the
semantics or the details of that. It is a reflection
of your parents, that is the point. That's exactly the point.
What you do is a reflection of how you were
raised or not raised. It's a direct correlation. So those

(22:09):
are the things that you have to think about before
you do dumb ass. That's the point of being raised.
It's like, oh, I became a killer, this, that and
the other. Well, my parents were never a killer. Dah
da dad, this that and the other. That should not
reflect on your parents, but it does.

Speaker 2 (22:22):
Hey, you leave Ted Bundy out of this. Okay, no,
he didn't do well.

Speaker 1 (22:25):
Hey, it is what it is, man, it is what
it is. I mean that it's when you chose to
have that child, that you chose to have a responsibility
over how that child is reared and how they're raised,
and you have to own there's ownership over. Just like
if a kid goes, you know, and becomes an amazing

(22:47):
doctor or or they have a great career of doing
something in the professional world, it's because of the foundational
components that were put in the place when they were
growing up. Doesn't mean that the kid and make mistakes
or do crazy things or anything like that along the way,
because that's a part of growing up. But what I'm
saying is this dude is twenty one years old, twenty one,

(23:11):
you know what he should be doing looking for a job.
He should be handling his business in the workforce or
in school, doing what he's doing in school. And he
should be so busy with finals because it is finals
time in school. He should be so busy with the
things that he's doing to be good in life that

(23:32):
the times are doing something like this would not be
That would not be on his list of things to do.

Speaker 3 (23:39):
I just think people I need That's just how I see,
and people need to be more accountable, like for me,
for example, if my son does.

Speaker 2 (23:44):
Something wrong, I blame my wife. Like that's because you go.
You gotta be still a parent. Action.

Speaker 1 (23:49):
Yeah, well it's still a parent. I blame a lot
of things all my kids on my wife. Anything bad
they do, I say that's her. Anything great they do,
I say it's me. That's just natural. Chapel Pie, Dutch
Apple Pi Baby.

Speaker 3 (24:04):
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Speaker 2 (24:23):
All Right, it's coming up next here.

Speaker 3 (24:25):
Somebody just brutally honest, brutally honest about one of their
best players on their team that's in the NFL, and
that's also yours.

Speaker 5 (24:35):
Next here on FSR, 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 3 (24:51):
Two Pros and a cup of Joe. Fox Sports Radio,
LeVar Arrington, Jonas Knox with you here. Coming up in
about fifteen minutes from now, we are going to hand
out an award on this show that'll be yours here
on FSR.

Speaker 1 (25:02):
How many people out there listening to us. It's like,
I hope LaVar Arrington's kids do something. I hope they
do something that he has to answer for. But you're
gonna be waiting a long ass time I tell you that,
so you might wanted it to happen even more after
what I just said. I mean, I think it's but
I'm just telling you that's crazy.

Speaker 3 (25:23):
It's unfortunate for you to attack Jack Soulbrick like that.
You know, kid made a mistake, man. I think it's disrespectful.

Speaker 1 (25:32):
And that's how life works. Man, life works. You make
costly mistakes. You got to know what the cost is
going to be. That's just how it works. I mean
I might sound kind of hardcore or whatever, but just
saying man like that's at twenty one years old. I
could see if kids still in high school or something
to that effect. You at home twenty one years old

(25:53):
and that's what you're doing with your spare time is
breaking into your your dad's work work items to do
something like that. That kid was the biggest story outside
of Shador Sanders coming out of the draft. Man, Like,
it's one two jacks. You got to be one dumb

(26:14):
ass or one ridiculously super uberly intelligent dude saying that
you know what, I'm going to do something and I'm
going to go viral, and just like the Toua girl,
you're going to get ten minutes of fame and you're
going to be able to leverage that ten minutes of fame.

Speaker 2 (26:34):
Ah, she did was give out advice.

Speaker 1 (26:42):
Hey bruh, but that's on. That's like, this is probably
even on a higher level than that. Like she she
was just being herself and accidentally went viral for being
like a whatever you want to call it what she
was being in that moment. This dude deliberately execute it

(27:05):
crank calls using sensitive information. I mean, if you, as
a parent out there are upset with me what I
had to say, I don't care.

Speaker 2 (27:15):
Listen, I really I really don't care. I think it's
like she's a saliva guru.

Speaker 3 (27:21):
She handed out some advice that people wanted to uh.

Speaker 2 (27:26):
Him, She's not.

Speaker 1 (27:30):
That DNA from somebody, I mean maybe, so.

Speaker 3 (27:33):
She tried to hand out some advice apparently, and you know,
who knows how many people by the way I did.
I did just think of another prank that I was
in the room for, but I did not actually execute.
I had no part in it. I was in a
room when oh my god, this is unbelievable. When a guy,
a guy I got there, they had this device on

(27:55):
a computer where you could call somebody. This is back
there when there's phone books, since you go through the
book and you would call people to get their number.
And he ended up calling somebody that was right down
the street. But he put an effect on his phone
to sound like he was underground, and he called this
person's house and he told them that he was with
the water department and there was a major leak underground

(28:16):
and he needed to find out whether or not the
flow of water was working in each household in order
to get it fixed or else it was going to
be a real problem. And he walked this guy through
sticking his hand down the toilet into the toilet to
see He's all, hey, can you feel my hand. I'm
right underneath your house and the guy's literally got his
hand in the toilet and he's reaching for his hand.

Speaker 6 (28:39):
I couldn't breathe and finally think I had to hang
up because he was laughing so hard. This poor bastard
had his hand in a toilet, sifting through trying to
reach out for somebody else's hand. One of the most
amazing things I've ever seen how bitch made?

Speaker 2 (28:55):
Is that? Is that bitch made? Is that worse than okay, well.

Speaker 1 (29:01):
I mean some people just that. Did you see the
dude that goes around He goes around to different places
and he gives them IQ tests and he makes them
read a sentence and they read the sentence and he's like, okay,
do you remember the sentence? They're like yes. They're like okay,
now stretch touch your toes. Let's see how flexible you are.

(29:24):
Why you recite the sentence and it's like something like
the money will come or something like that, something to
that effect the money something anyway, And when you say
it in reverse, he gets you to say it in reverse.
Say it in reverse, say it in reverse, and it's
very graphic what it says in reverse. And once they

(29:45):
catch on to the fact that he's recording them to
say this in reverse, they just turn and walk away,
like they just turn and walk away. So I get it.
I get that people again and pranking and doing things
like what you just said, like it happens. There are
there are kids and young people, even adults. There was

(30:07):
a TV show where these group of friends that all
they did was prank each other, like that's it, Like
that's what they did. There's there's levels to pranking. You
do things to prank and I and again I blame
social media because these kids are thinking that if I
do something, the most outrageous thing that I can do,
if I do it and I pull it off, I'm

(30:28):
going to become famous. Like I get like, I blame
social media for that. But the bottom line is is
that doesn't even absolve you of culpability like and and
for what it's worth. The sad thing about this, because
my whole thing is if you want to take that
chance and you get caught up and you get in trouble,
then that's a life lesson you have to learn, right,

(30:51):
But when you do it and it impacts other people,
like if that man had got suspended from his job
and was on leave leave of absence based upon this
taking place? Then how do you handle that because now
your actions have impacted your entire family. Like I just
I think the serious and nature of it is is

(31:11):
that you don't you don't play around with things like that.
You just don't like I get it. Pranks, Okay, people
do them all the time. People do things, they make
mistakes they need to apologize for. I get it. But
in this case, in this case, in particular, I just
don't see that. I feel like that that's a tremendous
miss And if the message to these young people out

(31:32):
here is ah, it's okay, you make mistakes, bounce back
and be better from it. If that's all that is,
then so be it, I guess. But you got to
understand that that sometimes it's high stakes being able to
make it in this world. It's hard being able to
land a job. He probably makes I don't know, who knows.
He's probably close to a million dollars, maybe half half

(31:54):
a million dollars, maybe four hundred three hundred some grand
that he makes all the brick he might be in
the millions.

Speaker 2 (32:01):
I'll bet he's in the millions, Okay, Lee, How much
does he make.

Speaker 1 (32:05):
Yeah, okay according to the front of So what if
that man loses his job and can't possibly in some
way somehow does not get back to that that ability.
You know, how many people are able to generate one
point six million dollars in their professional career. Think about that.

Speaker 3 (32:22):
I mean, maybe a son could start like a prank
call business if that's the case, Like really, I.

Speaker 1 (32:26):
Mean that is I mean, his brank would have have
costed them a million plus.

Speaker 3 (32:31):
The uh Saliva Guru Hawk Tuoy or whatever her name
is no relation to Greg Twoey, Colin Coward's producer. She
I believe I had a coin that she was selling,
some sort of a bitcoin or something like that that
ended up being fraudulent and she got accused of a
bunch of wrong stuff like that. But well, you know,
it's a while.

Speaker 1 (32:52):
I'm just saying, yeah, I'm not going to apologize on
my stance, and you shouldn't. I'm not not And to
that gut I put his hand down the toilet mode
trying to make sure everything was good. Like you know,
I'm sorry that that person had you doing that, because
all you were doing was being a responsible homeowner and
somebody took advantage of it.

Speaker 3 (33:13):
Imagine thinking, if you reached down a toilet, somebody's hand
was going to be on the other side. What kind
of horses, asked, I think somebody's underneath the house with
a hand reaching up to you like.

Speaker 1 (33:29):
That hard were you? How long were you? How long
were you with your hand in there? And how how
hard were you trying to get? Like how far was
you pushing your hand through that hole? It's because I
can't get my I wouldn't be able to get my
hand through that hole.

Speaker 3 (33:42):
It was one of the most unbelievable things I've ever seen,
Like it's ridiculous.

Speaker 2 (33:47):
I was laughing so hard.

Speaker 3 (33:49):
It was right up there with that old woman who
had the COVID mask on that was sitting next to
Lee on the flight back from the island, when Lee
was snoring, poor poor ladies, trying to say for life,
you're breathing all on me.

Speaker 2 (34:04):
It's Lee slumped over next door day You're breathing all
over me. And I look over, he's got his arms crossed.

Speaker 1 (34:17):
Do you understand why that makes it so fun? Because
it sounds like Joe, So in my mind every time
you do it, I could see Joe or sup perturbed
by God sitting there and it's like.

Speaker 3 (34:26):
I got news for you after that playing she's with
Joe right now, I got oh dang, yeah, there's no way.
There is no way she walked out of there alive.
Based on what Lee had been drinking all week, she
was already worried about her health. Instead, she got conned
into sitting next to Lee.

Speaker 2 (34:45):
Oh my god, Well, hey, uh is what it is?

Speaker 3 (34:50):
By the way, you could stream this show and all
of our Fox Sports Radio shows live twenty four to
seven in the new and improved iHeartRadio app. Just search
Fox Sports Radio in the appter stream is Live. One
of the newest features in the app that you can
select Fox Sports Radios one of your presets, just like
the preset on a radio dial.

Speaker 2 (35:04):
So be sure to preset Fox Sports.

Speaker 3 (35:05):
Radio and the iHeartRadio app, and we'll always pop up
at the top of your screen.

Speaker 2 (35:09):
All right, so you have read it all over me?
I would have. I wish you guys could have been
there to see it. Unbelievable.

Speaker 1 (35:18):
I would have been dying.

Speaker 5 (35:20):
Bruh.

Speaker 3 (35:20):
I was drooling. I was laughing so hard, that's so funny.
I didn't know what was going on I turnover and
she's like trying to nudge him with.

Speaker 2 (35:27):
All her might.

Speaker 1 (35:28):
That's so funny.

Speaker 2 (35:29):
He's like ninety years old. He's like ninety years old,
big boy.

Speaker 3 (35:34):
She was eighty pounds and LEAs slumped over next door sloord.
Oh my god, smell alcohol. Yeah all right, it's coming
up next here. We are going to hand out this
award and it does have something to do with some
brutal honesty in the NFL.

Speaker 2 (35:51):
That'll be yours here at FSR.

Speaker 5 (35:53):
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 3 (36:04):
Two Pros and a Cup of Joe, Fox Sports Radio,
LeVar Arrington, Jonas Knox with you here.

Speaker 2 (36:09):
Coming off top of XT hour.

Speaker 3 (36:10):
A little over ten minutes from now, we are going
to get into, uh, what the future could look like
for one of the all time greats. We'll have that
for you again here on FSR. It is time though,
for our Express Pros pro of the Week. Express employment
professionals can provide contract workers to flux up for peak
seasons without having to raise your core workforce, headcount, manager

(36:31):
workforce differently, visit expresspros dot com today, that's expresspros dot Com,
and our Express prospro of the Week goes to Trayvon
Diggs and why because he's now all of a sudden
in the news as he recovers from another injury plagued season.
This from Jerry Jones, the owner of the Dallas Cowboys,

(36:54):
courtesy of Calvin Watkins of the Dallas Morning News. Jerry
Jones and talking about trev Diggs, quote, he's working hard.
That's very important because if he will be very good
and diligent as to his rehab process, then he'll get
back quicker and will arrive when he does get back
sounder than if then he has not worked as hard,

(37:15):
he's more subject to injury. He's learned that one time.
My point is, I have a lot of hope that
his actual rehab and experience from the time before is
really helping him out, and I think it has.

Speaker 2 (37:26):
And why is that noteworthy?

Speaker 3 (37:28):
Because apparently Jerry Jones and the Cowboys were not happy
with how Diggs approached his rehab the last time he
left the Cowboys facility. At one point they were a
little bit confused as to why that happened, but they
didn't think much of it. And then when he came back,
the thought there in Dallas is part of the reason
why he didn't come back to full health and perform

(37:48):
at a high level and played a shortened season again
is because he didn't take his rehab very seriously. So
it's always nice when your owner calls you out like
that to the Dallas Morning News in the off season
as you try to come back.

Speaker 1 (38:02):
I mean, you'd be paying all this cash out. You
be sitting there like I need to get an r
O I with my my my investment, you know, see
some entitlements. When when you're paying out that much cash
to somebody, you got that cat making the most money
out of anybody in the league, you better you better
slang that dang ball be come on out here and
slang it.

Speaker 3 (38:23):
I mean, maybe maybe you didn't have to include the Well,
hopefully he learned from the last time in the in
the sound bite to Calvin Watkins, maybe maybe that wasn't,
you know, necessary. He could probably have those conversations behind
closed doors. I just pictured Jerry Jones dropping that line
and then kind of winking to Calvin while he did it,
and that old uh, that old Southern charm of his

(38:44):
and just to try and just try and let him
know like, yeah, yeah, we weren't weren't all that thrilled
with how Trayvon handled everything.

Speaker 1 (38:50):
I mean, I met Trayvon. I'm talking about Dak Prescott's
I'm sitting here looking at this story that you sent
me on AB talking about Julio Joe. So I got
a little distress acted my apologies. I thought you was
talking about Dak Prescott, not Tree.

Speaker 3 (39:05):
Oh no, this was the Express pros pro of the week,
not the of the day.

Speaker 1 (39:09):
Yeah, you tell me what A B said.

Speaker 2 (39:16):
H him and Julio Jones at beef.

Speaker 1 (39:22):
Oh no, I think I think I think a B
is just out for self at this. But I don't
think I think anybody could get it.
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