Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
All right, this is the Doug Gottli show. Years in
the Bonus with Doug Gottli.
Speaker 2 (00:12):
What what's up? I had kind of an epiphany last week.
Ye you love this epiphany Jay stew that I had. Okay, Uh,
for my entire lifetime. I don't know my entire lifetime,
but since I was probably fourteen years old, you know,
(00:36):
I've always been in the rap and hip hop and
being a basketball player, you travel to different parts of
the country, you hear different kinds of rap, and there
was always, of course, my college years was prime East
Coast versus West Coast. And then you know, everybody got
shot and killed, right that that that we thought mattered.
Speaker 3 (00:54):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (00:54):
And I had a friend of mine turned to me
today and say, hey, did he in jail? Right? A
lot of people think jay Z's implicated. West Coast wins.
West Coast wins. I mean, Stoop Dogg is like everybody's
favorite DJ whatever that shows up at parties and you know,
(01:14):
gets paid reportedly five hundred thousand dollars a day to
show up at the Olympics. You know, ice Cube of
course owns the Big Three, and then he's you know,
he's become like a mainstream movie star right after being
nw A. Meanwhile, look what's happened to New York guys?
(01:36):
Are you okay with that? Jase two? Are you okay
with settling East Coast versus West Coast? With the Diddy
in jail and the Diddy parties that that that's the
ultimate win for West Coast rap. West Coast rap wins.
Speaker 4 (01:48):
I think you're right. I will have one. I'm going
to throw you one wrinkle just to be the devil's advocate.
Where does Nas fit into all this? That's that's the one,
the one thing that I need an answer on.
Speaker 2 (02:02):
Where does he fit into?
Speaker 3 (02:03):
What?
Speaker 4 (02:04):
I mean? Nas was I think considered well, he's the
New York greatest in New York and he's been untouched,
So he's the one guy I think that still keeps
the East Coast gives them a little bit of credibility.
But yeah, the p Diddy thing, it does.
Speaker 2 (02:19):
It gives them credibility, It gives them a it's it
gives them a seat at the table, spot at the table.
But it does I do not think it gets them
anywhere near West Coast rap uh. In my opinion, especially
considering the biggest of biggs, Nas is the guy who
he's the rappers rapper right correct, Like rappers think nas
(02:43):
is awesome. But he hasn't had the mainstream success that
the Tupox or the Biggies of the Snoops or the
Diddies had, So they're there in lies kind of the
rub rub in it, rub in it. He lives to
the radio show. Huh.
Speaker 1 (02:59):
I just I threw.
Speaker 2 (03:01):
I wanted to throw that one out to you because
I just thought it really fit the pod. Did not
fit the radio show fit pod. Here's the other thing
I'd love branding. So I'm doing some stuff with Liquid Death,
and I cannot tell you how many people have texted
me and like they let you do that with you
when you're working at a university. Do you know the
product liquid Death?
Speaker 4 (03:22):
No? I know the product about what's the story behind it?
Speaker 2 (03:26):
Do you know what the product actually is? What is
liquid Death? Yeah? I couldn't hear you when you're talking
before I can hear.
Speaker 4 (03:31):
You now, odd, Okay, I'm familiar with the product. I
just don't know the story behind it.
Speaker 2 (03:40):
There's no story behind it. It's just water. I mean
they actually they have iced tea now as well, which
is really good. But The point is like I've had
friends like, how are you drinking that at work? I
was like, it's water right there. The slogan is murder
your thirst, but you put liquid death on it and
(04:01):
people are like, and you put it like a tall
boy there, and all of a sudden people think your
tall boy can must be Budweiser or something that interesting.
Like it's It's fascinating how on what branding does. Like obviously,
branding has made it cool and the kids love it,
but it's also like people legit think it's booze because
everything else that's in a can is booze. Now, anything
(04:23):
you've ever liked over the past fifteen years, they found
a way to add alcohol to it, like lemonade Seltzer.
This is a great rebirth of seltzer though, too, because
when I was a kid, no one went and had
Brussels sprouts. Ever, he wouldn't serve at a restaurant. Smelled
like a fart, and Seltzer was for old people or
(04:43):
spelled for old Jewish people. Right, they had some flavored Seltzer's.
It was called doctor Brown's. Doctor Brown's was like a
Jewish to a Jewish person. East Coast drink Brooklyn, New
York is really good, but not alcoholic. Now they add
the flavor and the alcoholic and it's taken out.
Speaker 4 (05:00):
It's the biggest scam, Doug.
Speaker 5 (05:02):
It's the biggest scam in the history of of h
of spirits. And uh, yeah, I don't know. It's all
you have to do is you just need seltzer water.
It's a scam because it's cheap to make. All you
need is seltzer water, some kind of flavoring and just alcohol.
Speaker 4 (05:19):
Is it also cheap? Like, is it also inexpensive? It's
inexpensive to make. It's not. You don't have to distill it,
you don't have to brew it. But I mean, it
definitely is a gen Z thing. I went to my
girlfriend's cousins backyard party and the ratio in the cooler
of seltzer to beer was like ten to one. There
was a six pack of medello and the rest was
(05:40):
just this other stuff we're referring to.
Speaker 2 (05:42):
And I'm just is it a I don't understand why
you think it's a Is it.
Speaker 4 (05:45):
A financial consideration for gen Z because you know they're
the financially responsible generation.
Speaker 1 (05:53):
I think I think it's I think it's healthier.
Speaker 2 (05:58):
No, guys like it too, they just don't like It's
like it's like the new zema. It's like the new zema, right,
Like guys secretly like it, but you're like, yeah, I don't.
I don't drink two Truly's and you're like, do you
want one? It's really hot, I could use one. It's
like that. You know, beer makes you fat. It's like
the it's the Dike, it's the die coke of And
(06:19):
you know, you can have someone with vodka as well.
You can get all different sorts of flavors with it.
But liquid death is not that's it's just water.
Speaker 1 (06:26):
Be sure to catch live editions of The Doug Gottlieb
Show weekdays at three pm Eastern noon Pacific on Fox
Sports Radio and the iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 2 (06:37):
Let's Kip the Fox Says and now.
Speaker 1 (06:41):
Say every Day This Time.
Speaker 2 (06:42):
With Doug outlet show in the Bonus Podcast, and play
for your portion of a previous show on Fox Sports
Radio Fox Sports One. We call it what does the
Fox Say? This is Dan Patrick talking about Pete Rose.
Speaker 3 (06:52):
I know that there's this outpouring of sympathy and sentiment
for Pete Rose to be in the Hall of Fame.
Nothing has changed from yesterday today to a week ago.
With Pete Rose. It's just sentiment here to get him
in the Hall of Fame. And what I like to
see Pete in the Hall of Fame, it's a museum.
(07:13):
If you want to tell the story of baseball, then
do it that way, because I know that there'll be
a lot of people old schools say, well, he's stayed
the game, embarrassed the game. He never really apologized until
he was writing a book. I mean, there's so many
angles to this. He is his own worst nightmare, his
own worst enemy. What made him great is what kept
(07:33):
him out of the Hall of Fame. He could just
never say sorry, what can I do to give back
to baseball? And now it would be hypocritical if you
put him into the Hall of Fame now, because why
are you putting him in now? Nothing's changed unless you're
saying we punished him. Now for his family's sake or
(07:56):
Baseball's sake, we're going to put him in the Hall
of Fame.
Speaker 2 (08:02):
Yeah, I like, I think the only way you could
put him in is if you said he it was
a lifetime ban, it was lifetime suffer now we can
put him in. But I'm as I told you in
the open of the show, as I told you with
your annoying I just if you actually paid attention there's
(08:23):
you wouldn't put him in the Hall of Fame. You
just wouldn't. Nothing changed the sympathy over the guy dying,
Like there was no sympathy for him yesterday. What's the
difference he died? Okay, Look, people didn't like me because
when George Steinbrenner died, I point out what a horrible
human being. He was like, well it's too soon, Like, well,
is it a bad guy dies? He died. Life is
(08:44):
one hundred, the mortality rate is one.
Speaker 3 (08:49):
That is.
Speaker 2 (08:50):
It doesn't mean that you want to speak ill of
the dead at their funeral. But if we're going to
contextualize it, let's be honest with it. This is Briddy
quin LeVar Arrington talking about Aaron Rodgers.
Speaker 6 (09:03):
Even as good as Aaron is, he's a generational talent man,
and he still probably is not going to be able
to overcome this whatever the hell is happening with the Jets.
Speaker 1 (09:13):
It's like, I hope I'm wrong.
Speaker 6 (09:15):
You know, well, Aaron, I really do. He's a good,
good guy, but I just I feel like, man, this
organization just can't figure it out.
Speaker 7 (09:24):
And Aaron realizes this, like just listening to his sound,
he realizes now what he's really in, what he's in like,
he's in it, the epicenter of what it is that
has been the reason why the New York Jets do
not have a level of success. He's in it. And
so now he's got to go into for what it's worth.
(09:46):
He's got to go into sell preservation. Man, because what
you do not want, if you're Aaron Rodgers, because you've
solidified yourself as as an all time great, what you do
not want is for people to start saying, well, you know,
Matt Lafleur, I mean he's having success post posts Aaron Rodgers.
He seems to have his new quarterback in love. You
(10:10):
don't want them to go back and say, well, you know, McCarthy,
you know it was coaching, It was coaching, it was this,
It was that. You just don't want to have anybody
put question marks or asterisks beside your name in terms
of what it is that you've accomplished.
Speaker 2 (10:30):
I just think it's a bad marriage. And this is
a little bit like honestly, We talked about this in
the radio show Some It's a little bit. I said
this with Tom Brady, Like Bruce Arians and Tom Brady
that couldn't have. Couldn't They couldn't coexist for more than
a year. Tom Brady is hard driving. I mean like, look,
he's in the Belichick school, like hard driving, stay whatever
you want to, come prepared, get there early. Bruce Arians
(10:52):
like five, let's go have a drink. Those those two
things don't marry together.
Speaker 4 (10:56):
Well.
Speaker 2 (10:56):
It builds up resentment and frustration. You know, it's just
like a marriage, right, opposites a tract like they do,
but it's hard to stay together when you're opposite the
same thing here for Aaron Rodgers, like Aaron Rodgers is
a even if he wasn't there in the offseason, he
doesn't give a give a damn. He expects you to
raise yourself up to the level and it's not And
(11:17):
he doesn't think Sala is particularly good at his job.
And I'm sure he sees through it, and the organization
has acquiesced to it's his guy's offensive coordinator. He can
pick guys on the team. And when you do that,
this is what looks like. This is what entitlement. Looks
like he's earned some of that entitlement. It's just not
a good fit. Just not a good fit. This is
Colin Coward talking.
Speaker 8 (11:37):
About the Lions, and it feels like too often when
I watched Detroit and they were so bad for so long.
I understand this is tough. They're finally winning, and they're
kind of giddy. The fans are giddy. The media is
giddy in Detroit, like we're winning. Okay, that's great. Now
you're consistently winning. Now it's the pivot. You've come a
(11:59):
long way. You're like the fit family member that finally
got their act together. Everybody's happy for them, but you
still wouldn't trust them taking your kids to Disneyland. That's
what the Lions have become. Hey, congratulations, you're not vaping anymore.
But I would appreciate it if every time you come
over you don't go into a thirty minute lecture on crypto.
We all are rooting for Detroit, we all like Detroit,
(12:21):
we all think it's great, but I wouldn't trust them.
I can't trust them. They're not taking my kids to Disneyland.
I just don't trust them. And that's where I am
and they're in this raw, raw stage. And while they're
fun and goff is this and I mean, they're hard
not to like. And maybe we'll know the truth about
Detroit pretty soon because if you look at their schedule,
they got an early buy. So Detroit goes into the
by and then their schedule is pretty brutal at Dallas,
(12:44):
at Minnesota, at Green Bay, at Houston. Jacksonville may have
their act together by then, so maybe that's it. But
run the clock out? How are you getting a safety?
What are you doing? It may not matter against an
injury depleted Seahawk team at Hall on Monday night, it's
gonna matter against San Francisco if you're on the road.
Speaker 2 (13:04):
I agree with I agree with him from this standpoint.
Their style with Ben Johnson's offense Cordiner is a lot
like the Chiefs in that they'll throw in trick plays
and election use him right. They'll play fast and loose,
but when when it comes to winning games, you got
to get serious. And that the safety was a joke.
(13:24):
The one thing I will tell you that goes counter
to what Colin is saying. And you know he he
didn't think Alabama would ever be back when they hired
Nick Saban. You know he never thinks Notre Dame would
ever be back, and I think Notre Dame is. They
have been there, and they are getting closer and closer
and closer. If you, if you have the right guys
(13:47):
and build it the right way, you can win anywhere.
That's my takeaway from Detroit. Do they do some stupid shit, Yeah,
but they do a lot of really good shit. And
they even though they couldn't stop anybody, they've made Jared
Goff looking like he's an unbelievablequarterback. Jo Gov's good, but
that weaponry and all the good drafting and the line
makes him look incredible. That's what the Fox said.
Speaker 1 (14:10):
I'd say, be sure to catch live editions of The
Doug Gottlieb Show weekdays at three pm Eastern noon Pacific
on Fox Sports Radio and the iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 2 (14:22):
Let's find out who What's annoying? Jason Stewart.
Speaker 1 (14:27):
And now it's your annoying.
Speaker 4 (14:35):
We talked about it on the radio show. Pete Rose
passed away and almost immediately began the online debate about
his Hall of Fame candidacy or lock thereof. I want
to tell you just one thing that annoys me about it.
I know there's a massive Pandora's box of topics here,
(14:56):
but Stephen A. Was on first take today and this
is his.
Speaker 9 (15:01):
Murderers had been left let off quicker that Pete Rose has.
Speaker 1 (15:05):
And Baseball want to sit up there with.
Speaker 9 (15:07):
His high and mighty hypocritical selves and literally denigrate this man.
In twenty sixteen, he got a stink, I'm sorry. In
nineteen ninety nine he got a standing ovation. Remember that
doggie in a larger of the World series, Remember that
they gave him a stranded ovation. The American public said,
bum ball at we want this man here. We know
(15:28):
what he did for the game. We know he hurt himself.
We know that wasn't a good look, but it shouldn't
erased twenty three years and they did it anyway.
Speaker 1 (15:36):
Pox on all that damn houses. They better not make
any mistakes. They better not make any mistakes.
Speaker 9 (15:41):
Don't forgive me, y'all, don't forget anybody anybody in baseball.
Speaker 2 (15:45):
We'll canna forget me and yell, I'm just kidding yellow
because I haven't done any research on fucking anything. That's
what he does. Let's first start with stephen A. Smith
murderers have been allowed to shut the fuck up. Okay,
shut the fuck up. Every locker room you go into
(16:07):
in Major League Baseball has rules to say you can't
bet on baseball. And if steven A actually did his
what didn't seem as a journalist once upon time? Or
he claims to still be a journalist, right then, right,
that's what we said. If he did journalism like I
worked with a journalists. And by the way, the only
reason Chuck Wilson hasn't joined us today, Chuck Wilson is
the foremost authority in sports radio on Pete Rose, Okay,
(16:32):
because he's actually read the Dowd Report, which that would
be beneath steven A Smith to actually do his job.
And in the Doubt Report, it shows that Pete Rose
was unequivocally betting on baseball, gambling on baseball. And people go, well,
he's when he was the manager and he only bet
on games that the Reds for the Reds to win. Okay,
he was a player manager, so he played a part
(16:55):
in it. Additionally, if you're only going to bet on
the Reds to win and you don't bet on the
Reds on other days, what are you telling the people
who take your bets that you owe money to let
me spell it out, because apparently you're fucking stupid to
actually know it means. It gives you the ability to, Hey,
(17:20):
you're down one hundred grand, you throw a game on
a Wednesday, you bet in the game on the Thursday.
And by the way, even if you're not throwing the game,
loading up on individual games to win, not caring about
others because you have money on it, okay, completely strikes
at the credibility of putting on a real sport, a
(17:42):
real sport event. Not only that he's never come clean
about when he started betting on baseball. There is no
recorded interview ever of him admitting to betting on baseball
when he was a player manager he got caught and
doing it as a manager, never said he did it
while he was still player. When asked about when he
(18:03):
did it, he said, I don't remember. You don't remember
the first time you vitolated the cardinal sin of professional sports,
especially in Major League Baseball. I mean again, shut the
fuck up. Secondly, and here's a big thing. And steven A,
just because he does not actually do the job that
he claims to do, he is not a journalist. If
(18:24):
he was a journalist, you know what he would say.
He would say, I understand. But the truth is, his
accomplishments are recognized, are recognized, are recognized in Cooperstown. They
are his bat's there, the ball's there, the accomplishments are there.
He isn't individually honored as a Hall of Famer. It's
(18:46):
a lifetime ban. His lifetime is now over. I'm guessing
maybe he gets honor or in and that's how it works.
That's what lifetime ban means. What's the fucking purpose of
having rules if you're not going to follow through with
them anybody. It's not just that he didn't gamble once
(19:07):
and got caught, like sorry, I was wrong. For years
he did this, then he got caught. There's lots of
other parts to Pete Rose, which is not really the
most honorable dude in the world. He was a great
baseball player. It was a different time. He's a great
baseball player. But there's lots of things to Pete Rose
are like, eh, yeah, And then he would do shitty
(19:32):
things like I'm gonna sign autographs and give out picks
right across the street from Cooperstown where they're duckty people
in the Hall of Fame, which is just a fuck
you to baseball. So they said, you know what, fuck
you too. But here's the big thing. Okay, Remember these
are the same people that will say Barry Bonds belongs
in the Hall of Fame when what he did violated
(19:53):
the sanctity of the game. Barry Bonds fucked it up
for one hundred years because his numbers are so obscene.
Probably best player in baseball, but the best player in
baseball was super charged by steroids. So he puts up
these records which are just remarkable. Yeah, but that's like
getting it. Well, I got I got straight a's. Will
you cheated on all the tests?
Speaker 1 (20:12):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (20:12):
I get straight a's. Do we honor people who graduated
under false pretenses?
Speaker 3 (20:17):
No?
Speaker 2 (20:18):
Do we give out if you use and I would
say that steroids weren't maybe the weren't, maybe the answers.
But if you had the questions before the test was
actually asked, and then you got straight a's and people
found out about it, would we call you the valedictorian. No,
of course not. So why are we doing the baseball players?
(20:43):
Why are you doing baseball players? Why is cheating? Okay, again.
And I understand this is kind of where we go
in society, and I'm not some like pear clutch or whatever,
but this is the same fucking thing as Trump. The
dude made up the fact that Obama was in board
in the country. The dude complete continues to make up
the fact that he lost in the election. There's lots
(21:04):
of things that he just made up out of thin air.
And yet people were supporters like, it's it's us, it's
the world out against him. They say the same thing
about Barry Bonds. No, Barry Bonds used steroids and went
from being arguably the greatest play, arguably the greatest player
ever to you give steroids to a guy who's an
all time elite and he becomes a superhero. It's like
(21:26):
watching an X Men play baseball. It's not fucking fair.
P Rose did nothing of the kind when he's baseball player.
But you're not allowed to bet on the sport when
you're playing the sport or you're managing the sport. So
and and and again. After he was caught multiple times,
he has never he never came clean, He never admitted fault.
(21:49):
He never said when he first started doing it or
how he started doing or why he started doing nothing,
none of this. And if you want to compare it
to the court system, here's what happens. When you deny, deny, deny, deny.
You go through the trial, and then you're found guilty.
They punish you to the furthest extent of the law.
The only way in which you get out of it,
and the reason people plead out of it is it's
(22:11):
a plea deal. Yes, I did it right in many
places in this country. You can't, you know, they can't.
They can't punish you to They can't sentence you to death.
If you admit to murdering somebody, right, it's lifetime sentence.
He never admitted to it, He never came cling to
(22:32):
it ever. So I know, stephen A is just one
of many. I mean, obviously I saw you that you
responded to what was Clay Travis's tweet that it was
indefensible that Major League Baseball kept him out of the
Hall of Fame, and you said it was pretty defensible.
Speaker 7 (22:49):
Yet it is.
Speaker 2 (22:50):
But again, Clay has now become he went from voting
for Obama to becoming mister Trumper. Okay, you go all maga,
you go, Hey, I know there's rules. I know, there's
stuff you're not allowed to do that should be eliminate
you from consideration, but why not Foget. Yeah, the rest
of society actually has rules. And in Major League Baseball
people say like, look, he's all time great. Can't bet
(23:11):
on baseball, that's the rule, and never came clean about it.
Who else is annoying?
Speaker 4 (23:16):
You know what's annoying is where I currently live in
southern California. It's a record high one and nine. Still,
somebody forgot to tell the weather that it's October first?
Speaker 2 (23:30):
Is it October already?
Speaker 4 (23:32):
It's amazing how time flies, but it's already October and
it's one hundred and nine degrees in Santa Crita, California.
Someone forgot to tell Santa Clarita that it's the fall
and it's real.
Speaker 2 (23:46):
To Santa Clarita. Summa is not walking through that door.
Sure I did there.
Speaker 4 (23:53):
I love I love living there, but come on, Doug.
Speaker 2 (23:55):
Larry Bird's not walking through that door.
Speaker 4 (23:57):
I hate heat. I hate the sun, which means I
probably should live in Seattle. But do we really does
it need to be one hundred and nine degrees on
October first?
Speaker 2 (24:06):
I will listen I'm just going to tell you this, okay,
And I know this will change, Okay, But I have
been here for this is my fifth month that i've
been here. Fifth and last night I thought fall broke
a couple of weeks ago. Not really, It's been seventy
high seventies and eighties today, it's like seventy. Last night
a big front went through and it dropped about, you know,
(24:27):
about ten degrees whatever. And so it's low seventies, high
sixties for the next like two weeks, sunny and cool
and crisp midnight. Yes. So here's the point is, I
think we've had a better summer and early fall than
southern California. We will not have a better winner, but
five months in we're up. We're up here in the Bay.
(24:49):
But okay, to put on list anything else.
Speaker 4 (24:53):
I feel the need to remind people that Tyreek Hill
chose the Chiefs, I'm sorry, chose to leave the Chiefs. Yeah. So,
as we watched him pissing and moaning last night on
the sidelines, as we watched him have fewer receiving yards
after three quarters than Jared Goff had in his game,
that was a stat that we made the rounds as
(25:13):
we see First Take this morning read their show with
does Tyreek Hill regret leaving the Chiefs. The media is
starting to come around to the content in this podcast.
I want to play this for you because people forget this.
People forget this. He sat down with Shannon Sharp after
he decided to force his way out of Kansas City,
(25:35):
and he said, this is the reason why he left.
Speaker 10 (25:38):
It got like that, probably like me and last season,
you feel me love. I'm the type of guy like
I love playing ball and I love, you know, being
by the team because football is the teams for right.
And it would be some games where like I get
two targets, I get three targets, and we'll go into
meetings and my coach would be like, hey, we got
(26:00):
to get you involved, We got to get you involved,
and I'm.
Speaker 4 (26:02):
Like, no, y'all need to get me involved yesterday.
Speaker 10 (26:04):
Don't tell me about it today exactly, like like you
know how to feeling. So I'm calling my agent every
week after they say some some crazy stuff like that,
like bro, I gotta get out of it.
Speaker 4 (26:13):
So as you watch him piss and moan about this,
I'm just wanting somebody in the media to say, well,
what is better having no stats and getting no targets
on a dog shit Dolphins team where the quarterback might retire,
or getting no targets on a team that wins the
Super Bowl every year.
Speaker 2 (26:33):
This is a pretty easy one. This is a pretty
easy one. I honestly think. Look, Drew Rosenhaus is excellent
at his job. You only hire Drew Rosenhouse if your
goal is to get money and don't give a shit
about anything else. And Drew has accomplished that. But he foster,
he feeds into. It's just like when he like Tyreek
(26:54):
Hill's acting the sideline, Tyreek kills act here, like all
of these factor into this is who Tyreek Hill is.
And you know he was like a victim to some
people a couple of weeks ago with the car thing, Like, no,
he's an idiot who's really good at football, that's fun.
The idiot who everybody like. He's generally like an idiot
that you don't get mad at, you don't like. He's
(27:15):
a likable dude. He's not a bad guy, but he's
an idiot. And he you know, he's sitting there. He
tried to defend himself, like, hey, guess what fuco They
won two Super Bowls without you. And you know what
happens if you're a wide receiver, you're the best player
on a team that you win two Super Bowls, three
Super Bowls on you go to the Hall of Fame.
You know what happens when you go to a team
you chase the check. You don't go to the Hall
(27:37):
of Fame.
Speaker 4 (27:39):
It's so funny you bring that up. About just a
couple of weeks ago, he was the victim. The Social
injustice movement moved off of Tyreek Hill pretty quick. I
guess they didn't want him to be there their front
man the face of social injustice, which is a smart move.
I'm glad we moved off of that one. So Tyreek
Hill is permanently annoying the heat in Santa Karta and
(28:04):
steven A's take on the Pete Rose debate.
Speaker 2 (28:07):
Tyreek Hill I think, I think because it's more fresh,
the p ros everybody's all these people to make the
argument stupid. But let's just go Tyreek Hill. Good.
Speaker 1 (28:23):
Why are we doing this? Because we can?
Speaker 4 (28:30):
Hey, Doug Andrew Wiley, I know a lot of listeners
are saying, who, Yes, he's the Commander's offensive tackle. Andrew
Wiley and you're asking why are we playing sound? And
it goes something like this, I guess he really likes
being on this commander's team.
Speaker 1 (28:46):
This feels great.
Speaker 4 (28:47):
You know.
Speaker 1 (28:48):
I don't want to compare this and that, but this is, uh,
this is the most.
Speaker 4 (28:52):
Fun I've ever had, you know.
Speaker 1 (28:54):
On this team. So we're just having it.
Speaker 2 (28:56):
Well, yeah, I love it. I'm not sure why he's
having so much fun, but I love it. Maybe he
likes the bass and the music. Why can I play
it for you because we're having a fucking blast because
we can't. That's it for the end The Modus Podcast.
Check on the radio show every day three to five
Eastern twelve two Pacific, Fox Sports Tradio. iHeartRadio app. I'm
(29:17):
Doug Godlig