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October 30, 2024 • 28 mins

Doug riffs on the Yankees. Doug reacts to Brady Quinn's take on Anthony Richardson. Doug chooses among deserving candidates Jason Stewart deems as most annoying today. Plus, Davon Godchaux makes today's edition of "Because We Can".

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
What welcome he It's Doug Gottlieb Show here on Fox
Sports Radio, the iHeartRadio app. Of course, thanks so much
for downloading the In the bonus, this is the live
podcast we do every single day, and yeah, we use
the podcast to talk about some other snizzle that sometimes
we can't get to on the radio show. By the way,
if you download this podcast, you know the radio show follows.

(00:25):
There are other things than what we've talked about, right,
there are other things, And I do want to kind
of flush out what possibly happened last night in New
York with the Yankees winning eleven to four. It wasn't
that the Yankees won. I mean, the game was kind
of a shit show in many ways, right, the fan involvement,
the right field line, the errors by the Dodgers, the

(00:48):
blowing up of the bullpen late. But again, you just wonder,
You just wonder. So much of sports is about belief,
is about belief, and you know, Aaron Judge gets it,
finally gets a hit last night, does he now believe?
Go through their lineup and you know, Stanton still not hitting,

(01:12):
but did obviously get on base, and there wasn't any
sort of breakout sort of star other than Vulpe, you know,
and you know Wells was good too. The pitching was solid,
It was fine. I guess just the big question is
is their belief there? Meanwhile, what Freddy Freeman is doing
is ridiculous, Like it's crazy to have a home run

(01:37):
in all four World Series games. I do wonder, like
I would love a baseball guy like what's harder three
home runs in a game Reggie Jackson or four in
four straight games or six and six straight World Series
games going back to his days with the Braves, Like
I don't know, but that shit is crazy. But the
question becomes, at what point do the Yankees truly believe?

Speaker 2 (02:00):
You know, and.

Speaker 1 (02:03):
You know, it's not like the Dodgers have been incredible
atop their lineup show, Hey did get a hit last night,
but what is it twenty five straight at bats without
a home run? Now, maybe you think, okay, that means
it's coming. Maybe because of the shoulder, it's never coming.
I'm not not totally sure. He did looked a little
overwhelmed at times last night. I just I wonder.

Speaker 2 (02:22):
It's like it's.

Speaker 1 (02:23):
Very easy for a Dodger fan to pooh pooh it,
to brush it aside and go like, yeah, it's just
one game, don't worry, you know. I mean it was
five to four heading into the heading into the bottom
of six inning and sort of kind of got away
in the in the obviously in the bottom of the
eighth inning. And I do know that baseball generally, momentum

(02:44):
doesn't just flip, doesn't just change. And this was one
which it was a bullpen day. If you're gonna drop
one now becomes a gentleman's sweep. And the truth is,
like everybody wins the more games that are that are played, right,
the Yankees win more money that's made, you know, Like
our partner at Fox Sports Radio is the local affiliate

(03:06):
here in Los Angeles, Right, one more game is more
ad money, you know. And honestly six and I know
Jay stew has been big on like let's do it
in six that way, it's on Fernando of Venezuela's the
late Fernanda Venezuela's birthday, like all that stuff sounds super cool.

Speaker 2 (03:21):
But belief is the number one thing you need in sports.

Speaker 1 (03:26):
If if somebody doesn't believe they can get ultimately to
where they want to get to, it's never gonna happen
and you do one at least I don't know.

Speaker 2 (03:35):
I wonder.

Speaker 1 (03:37):
I wonder out loud. I wonder out loud if if
the Yankees now believe, I would say, you got to
see if an Aaron Judge hits a home run, everything changes.
So to that point, it still hasn't happened. You know,
he still fools us where you know he'll hit he'll

(03:59):
hit a breaking ball and it'll be up in the
air and you're like, well, you know, obviously when you're
watching on TV, if you're not like a baseball guy,
like as you guys know, like I've watched games with
the Holidays and with some of their friends and some
of their baseball people, and like the same ones that
look that fool us as fans to them doesn't fool them.

Speaker 2 (04:17):
They know when a guy got around on one, I
would I.

Speaker 1 (04:22):
Would guess that until Aaron Judge gets around on one
and and laps the bases, there isn't the full faith
and belief that you know, if Aaron Judge isn't hitting
the ball out of the yard, or isn't getting close
to hitting the ball out of the yard, well then
we have no chance, Like that's our that's our superhero.
But because the Dodgers were so sloppy that that's really

(04:45):
my fear. That was just sloppy. It was still a
winnable game, and I thought sloppiness was was a big
I know there's only one error, but just wasn't a
cleanly played game. And then you add into the fact
that you know, the pitching wasn't what it should have been.

Speaker 2 (05:06):
It just it just wasn't.

Speaker 1 (05:07):
I mean, Honeywell came in and just took up absolute beating.
But that's one where you threw him out to the
wolves and you just let him out there, and we're
sitting there watching the game, going like, are you gonna
get him? Like nah, I think they're just gonna fry
him and reset their bullpen, which is what they did.
So again, it makes all the sense in the world.
I just wonder if there's more belief with the Yankees, Hey,

(05:29):
we can win this game, like should have won Game one,
did win Game four. We're not that far off. We've
done this.

Speaker 2 (05:36):
We won a game.

Speaker 1 (05:36):
Now, we should have won a second game without Aaron
Judge hitting, He's gonna come around, blah blah blah.

Speaker 2 (05:40):
I just wonder if.

Speaker 3 (05:41):
That changes 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 (05:53):
Let's get to the.

Speaker 3 (05:54):
Fox says, and now.

Speaker 2 (05:57):
The time on the Doug Gottlieb Show.

Speaker 1 (06:01):
In the Bonus podcast, we played for you a previous
a previous show, a portion of a previous show. Here's
Dan Patrick and he's talking about the Yankees fans. You
try to pry the ball away from Mookie Betts.

Speaker 4 (06:12):
Now, we've seen interaction before, We've seen fans go on
the field.

Speaker 5 (06:17):
That one.

Speaker 4 (06:17):
I didn't understand. It's not like you were trying to
take away a home run ball or you were going to,
you know, prevent somebody from a you know, catching a
double off the whatever it was. It was a foul ball,
and you're trying to pry it out of Mookie Betts's
glove and then the other guy is accomplice, will grab
his hand. And from what I'm told, they got kicked

(06:40):
out last night. So they drove in from Connecticut and
then you get there and then you get kicked out
in the first inning. There's one more game left at
Yankee Stadium. You just say, and you can't come back
for Game five either, because they were getting a hero's
welcome as they're being escorted out. You had grown men
who who were you know, they were hugging them. I'm like,

(07:03):
what did they do?

Speaker 3 (07:05):
Just act like idiots?

Speaker 2 (07:07):
Yeah? I thought they were.

Speaker 1 (07:08):
I mean, like, look every bit of the the Connecticut Yankees.
Those guys were douchebags. And this is honestly the problem.
It's like most would I'd like to think most fans
are great fans, but there's always a douchebag, and you
just have to have two.

Speaker 2 (07:24):
Douchebags there, you know. I just it's the only thing
I can tell you.

Speaker 1 (07:29):
I mean, obviously, the Dodger fan who reached down in
Game one helped the Dodgers. Help the Dodger. I don't
think it was a home run anyway, but it helped
the Dodgers. I mean, you're not helping the Yankees here,
You're just being a dick, that's what you're doing. So,
I mean, have some balls. There's plenty of Yankee fans.
Those guys can't come back. Facial recognition software can be really,

(07:53):
really useful. Here's Colin Cowhert talking about the Dodgers.

Speaker 6 (07:56):
The Dodgers punted last night. It's called strategy. You'll see
even great tennis players in a Grand Slam event to
conserve energy, get down in a game or a set
and just punt it for the next set. You get
down five to one, punt it. That's all the Dodgers did.
That's why what Dave Roberts is doing is very shrewd.

(08:17):
He's not just managing the Dodgers, he's managing resources. They
don't have any pitchers, and the ones they do are
really good. I mean Walker Buehler, if that's the new
Walker Buehler, this series is over. I mean Yamamoto, Flerty.
We know those guys are good. We know the top
believers are good. That's the Podres Mats.

Speaker 3 (08:36):
And the Yankees.

Speaker 6 (08:37):
But the last night was with strategy. It's like chess.
The Yankees got a pawn last night. They didn't get
a queen. That's all that happened. I mean, do you
really think the bottom seven eight to nine hitters in
your lineup in New York are now gonna get red hot.
It's great that Austin Wells crushed. He's still only hitting

(08:57):
a buck thirty in the series, Aaron Judge hit the
best relievers for the Dodgers are better than the best
relievers for the Yankees, and the best hitters for the
Dodgers are better than the best hitters for the Yankees.
The Yankees got seven runs out of their seven eight
and nine hitters. You got a pawn. It's strategy, it's
conserving energy.

Speaker 1 (09:19):
Yeah, look, I obviously once you got to the eighth
inning and you know, he starts getting lit up, like
what are you gonna do? My issue and we talked
about it in the open is what happens if it
creates momentum positivibes for the Yankees, you know, because when
you're kind of the drudgery of marching, you know, like

(09:41):
a sports version of the Batam Death March, right when
you're like, oh, we're gonna lose the series, but all
it takes this one win and if it breeds hope,
if it breeds belief, and if you can put two together,
now of a sudden, the pressure does shift to the Dodgers,
like you don't want to be the first team in
the World Series to be at three games none and
either forced a game seven or losing seven.

Speaker 2 (10:04):
But as of now, yeah, we'll go with the strategy play.

Speaker 1 (10:07):
Here's Brady Quinn talking about the colt's decision with Anthony
Richardson tapping out of a play during Sunday's loss to
the Texans.

Speaker 7 (10:15):
If you go throughout his entire college career, which three
years at Florida and including last year, all right in
the NFL, he's got approximately over i mean, not quite
five hundred passing attempts, so since twenty twenty. Okay, this
young man oozes with ability and potential, but he has

(10:38):
not played a lot of football, and so his best
football is ahead of him. But the quarterback is such
a developmental position that requires experience, and he only had
one year starting at Florida. He has now been thrust
it in and played obviously as a rookie, but got hurt.
And so I think the concern about him coming into

(10:59):
the league was always going to be how would he develop?
How would he continue to translate his skill and ability
into playing the quarterback position at the NFL level. Now
going to the year two, not only am I concerned
about his development as a quarterback playing from the pocket.
You know, there's been all sorts of reports, whether it's
from you know, joint practices as you just touched on Jonas,
but even further than that, struggling in seven on sevens,

(11:22):
which is an offensive drill where you really shouldn't have
any completions or balls on the ground unless there's a miscommunication,
something gets tipps something like that. I mean, it's it's
an offensive drill, So that's that's a problem.

Speaker 1 (11:39):
Look, I just don't think Anthony Rigardon's an NFL quarterback.
I just think that's what it is. He's an unbelievable
competitor and a crazy, crazy athlete who you're going to
have to teach to be a quarterback. But he's not
a quarterback yet. That's really kind of what we're circling
around on. And the question becomes can you develop him?
And can you develop him without playing him? Because right
now you're trying to play to win, and you'll play

(12:00):
gives you a better chance to win. That's what the
Fox said.

Speaker 8 (12:04):
Say.

Speaker 3 (12:06):
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 (12:17):
Let's find out who are what is annoying Jason Stewart.

Speaker 3 (12:22):
And now it's your annoying.

Speaker 8 (12:30):
Jase.

Speaker 2 (12:31):
Do what's annoying you, Bud?

Speaker 5 (12:33):
So all off season we've been doing this thing with
Jerry Jones. Were on in February, he used the term
all in. So then it got his fan base all
ratcheted up, like, oh man, we're not gonna spare any
expense this offseason. We're going to get all the free agents,
make all the trades. No, you know, cost is not

(12:54):
a concern. That's what all in means, maybe not to
Jerry Jones, when in fact, I guess his goal was
to save money to secure his own players and leave
some for another time, which is the opposite of all in.
So again, on his morning show this week on the

(13:16):
Radio Hit, he was asked about this term all in.
And you would think that after being browbeaten for eight
to nine months about this term, you'd think that he
would finally be like, you know what, I misused that term.
I said that I use the wrong phraseology. I should
not have said that what we've done is not all in.

(13:38):
I apologize to the fans. I obviously misled them. They're
obviously still pissed off at that word. I'm sorry, but Instead,
he offered up this to like triple and quadruple down
on all in.

Speaker 8 (13:53):
I basically was well aware of our commitment to Lamb
and well aware of our commitment to Dak. They were
really the principal reason you saw that all in things
so much. I wanted to make that commitment with that.
I've always looked at the dollars we spend in football

(14:14):
and on the roster, I've always looked at them as scholarships.
When you give a lot of scholarships any one player
in terms of your cap, in terms of the dollars,
then that's much less you got to give to another player.

Speaker 5 (14:32):
So that's yet another explanation of what he meant by
all in.

Speaker 2 (14:38):
Yeah, I don't know.

Speaker 1 (14:39):
I mean, I'm going to disagree with you with the
you know, paying your own players is going all in.
There is a limit to what you can spend. Going
out in the free agent market doesn't really help you.
I mean, the reality of it is everybody in the
NFL says free agency hit rate is like thirty three percent.
Where's you're better off keeping the guys? You know where
they fucked up was, you know, they had a very

(14:59):
good defense coordinator and instead of hiring somebody from that
family who could run a similar system, albeit a guy
not as accomplished as what they had.

Speaker 2 (15:08):
You hired a really.

Speaker 1 (15:09):
Really strong personality, a well regarded defensive coordinator, but somebody
who's completely different personality and completely different style. He screwed
it up, and then you've had injuries as well. So
this is one of those where it's he can explain
it away, but the reality is they made about higher
and they made some med decisions in personnel, and then
they had some injuries, and now they suck.

Speaker 5 (15:28):
Yep, And don't tell your famtin base you're all in
when you're obviously not.

Speaker 9 (15:34):
So.

Speaker 5 (15:34):
John Hayman is my least favorite baseball writer. He's in
the pockets of Scott Boris and all the agents. So
over the weekend he caused a stir with Dodger fans
because he said that the Dodgers are going to be
in play for Jan Soto this offseason, and of course

(15:57):
Dodder fans just started going crazy and creatings and putting
Dodger uniforms on Sodo and saying we'll dominate the next
ten years and blah blah blah. There is precedent for this.
Agents leveraging Dodgers through these insiders that are just sick
of fantish slaves to the agents. Do not believe a

(16:22):
second of that report. It makes zero financial sense. It
would be inconsistent with everything that Andrew Friedman has ever
done here. He's going to find a way to spend
the five hundred million dollars that Soto's gonna get or
whatever he gets on many other things on this roster,
and otherwise it's never going to happen. So the day

(16:44):
that Juan Soto signs with the Mets or Yankees or
Red Sox, I'm going to hit up the people that
I know within the organization and I'm going to say,
what was the level of interest that the Dodgers had
in Sodo. I'm guessing it will be near zero. And
John Hayman should be ashamed of himself for being used

(17:04):
like a slut when it comes to this stuff. Seven
years ago, Bryce Harper needed a last second leverage for
the Phillies. I think he wanted an extra year and
another thirty million bucks from the Phillies. So at the
last second of negotiations, Scott Boris has Hayman and his
sick of fantish ring of losers tell the Los Angeles

(17:28):
market that the Dodgers are late players and the Bryce
Harper signing it wasn't true, and Harper got his next
or last year with the Phillies. So it's annoying that
these agents. It's actually annoying that the reporters do the
bidding of the agents like this.

Speaker 2 (17:48):
Uh yeah, I mean I I look at this stuff, and.

Speaker 1 (17:56):
Look I when you look back to my issue with
the former agent of Freddie Freeman and some of the
reaction from other reporters in baseball, it was like kind
of the same thing, which is they're beholding through the
agents to get the information, and so even when you

(18:19):
have information that may be negative towards an agent, they
come to the defense of the agents because if they
don't do their bidding, they won't get their information.

Speaker 2 (18:30):
So, yeah, Hayman's the worst. That's fine.

Speaker 5 (18:33):
It seems it seems worse in baseball. I'm not sure
what that is. So the third thing is another baseball item.
The Dodgers are up three games to one in the
World Series. They're gonna win the series, and last game
was last night was obviously a punt knight. Whenever you
see a knack and honeywell in a Dodger game in

(18:53):
the postseason, that means it's Dave Roberts telling you he
doesn't need to win or want to win, so he's
reach set the pitching staff for tonight and we'll see
what happens. But Gavin Lucks, just because your manager is
punting doesn't mean you need to start playing like a
little wiger like Gavin Lucks. I don't know. A couple
of nights ago got horrible jumps on balls. He scored

(19:19):
on one, was tagged out on the other. Last night,
he gets a uh, he gets a throw from the outfield.
A Yankee is trying to take a double turn to
single into a double. Lax puts the tag down and
then just keeps it there so that the guy's helmet
and everything could could jar the ball loose. You slap

(19:42):
the tag down. That's the fundamental there. You grab the ball,
you slap the tag down, and get the ball the
fuck away from the player so that he can't kick
the ball away from your glove.

Speaker 1 (19:52):
I thought I thought their fundamentals were fucking Gavin Lux
was so bad on two different plays. So bad is
that what that that's your annoyed by his Gavin Lux
he was the one who threw home to the wrong
side of the wrong side as well, right.

Speaker 5 (20:05):
An infield in he got a ground ball perfectly hit
to him for a play to the plate, and he
didn't use any of the footwork fundamentals you're supposed to use. No,
he threw off his heels like they're some people just
aren't cut out for this, Like this is really high level,
high leverage stuff. Gavin Lucks obviously has flaws, and he's

(20:29):
really starting to piss me off. I don't care that
they lost last night. I thought this game was gonna
go six games anyways. I don't mind if it comes
back that way. But Gavin looks maybe we should consider
not playing him.

Speaker 2 (20:39):
Uh, I'm okay with that. I'm fine.

Speaker 1 (20:43):
That was Those are two shitty plays. Those are two
plays that get you beat. And my thought is my
one thought watching this, and I knew you were going
to say what the punt game was. That's fine. But
once you start like compiling errors and making bad plays
and it starts getting sloppy, it can become contagious.

Speaker 2 (20:59):
It really can.

Speaker 8 (21:00):
No.

Speaker 5 (21:00):
I think that's the that's the huge risk with the
punt games. This is the third time this postseason that
Dave Roberts has punted. Looking back, I think it's gonna
it's probably when they win it all, it's gonna look
like genius managing. The one huge risk is that you
basically gave a Yankee team that was completely defeated at

(21:21):
the plate. You gave them hope, and you gave them momentum.
Aaron Judge actually got a hit or two, like, so,
do you take the risk of giving the other team
confidence in this game? That could mean all the difference
in the world. It's a risk. I don't know if
I love it, but it's pretty obvious that's that's what
he's doing.

Speaker 2 (21:39):
Yeah, anybody else you're annoyed.

Speaker 5 (21:41):
By, No, just John Hayman and Gavin Wucks and Jerry
Jones with.

Speaker 2 (21:45):
All in, you're still annoyed with Jerry Jones and all In. Huh,
that's really got you.

Speaker 1 (21:50):
That's that's really really it's that's how you fired up
for the six months that he said it, six months
ago he said or whenever he said it. That's a
hard one. So many people I'm annoyed by, Uh, you
know what, what's what's the name of the comedian Tony.
Is it that that dropped the that did the the

(22:12):
Puerto Rican garbage line to Tony White.

Speaker 5 (22:14):
The insult comic that does roasts, Yes, Tony Hitchcliff.

Speaker 1 (22:20):
Yeah, here's my thing, though, I understand that he's a
he's I don't know who fucking booked him. You're a
fucking idiot. And then for Tony, like, somebody has to
have the realization, the understanding, the understanding that like, it's
not just that it's the Trump side, or that it's
that you run the risk of alienating for example, Puerto

(22:42):
Rican voters and Puerto Ricans now live in New York
where you are, but also in some of these swing states,
specifically Pennsylvania and the Philadelphiaya. It's not just that, it's
that the running narrative of the Trump campaign is they
might not be racist, but they welcome in racism.

Speaker 2 (23:00):
That is that fair?

Speaker 5 (23:02):
No, it's it's the old I think it's the old
thing that you use with Raider fans, right, not all
Raider fans are in prison, but everybody in prison is
a Raider fan.

Speaker 2 (23:14):
So I do the gang thing.

Speaker 1 (23:16):
Not every Raider fans a gangster, but every gangster is
a Raider fan. But you could do prison as well.
That that would work. I think that would work as well.
And the point is, and it's the not every Trump
voter is a racist, many are not, most are probably not.
But there's not a racist in the world, or especially
a xenophobe who is not a who is not a
Trump supporter. So like to not have the wherewithal and

(23:41):
the understanding of how that's going to land, you are
either fucking stupid, Like, honestly, he's a fucking idiot, he's
a you can be a brilliant comic and a fucking idiot,
a fucking idiot, you know, I mean it just it's

(24:02):
mind blowing, mind blowing. So that one is like I
can't even begin Yes, whoever decided, Oh can you want
to do it?

Speaker 8 (24:13):
Sure? Oh?

Speaker 2 (24:14):
The one that does racist insult jokes. Sweet hey, guys,
you know, like, I'm not a racist, You're not racist.
I get it, but this might not land.

Speaker 1 (24:26):
Well we should probably say something to Tony, Right, make
fun of individual people, don't make fun of racist of people.

Speaker 2 (24:32):
That's a better way to do it, right, they do
that like a roast.

Speaker 1 (24:35):
Okay, good, you know, And whether he went unchecked or
didn't unchecked, and then for the Tony dude like again
to not have the wherewithal an understanding that like, it's
you're at a rally that people likened to an old
Nazi rally in the nineteen thirties, and you're gonna bust
out your best racial humor. Yeah, that's Bolts strategy, Cotton

(25:01):
Bold strategy. And then my favorite part, or maybe my
least favorite part, is the lack of apology tour, which
is like, no, you're taking the wrong way, like not, nope, nope,
I listen again. This is like it's very much like sports, right,

(25:22):
Like we can make fun of teams in our league,
but teams outside of the league, you can't make fun
of it. You can't make fun of the SEC if
you're not on the SEC. Brethren, can't make fun of
the Big Ten unless you probably a Big Ten Brethren.
And yeah, that one is. That one's pretty pretty profound.
That said, the fact that I have to continue to
hear from Jerry Jones and make excuses, I'm not bothered

(25:45):
by the all In thing because my view of all
In is very different than yours. I think he is
sort of he's more all in on Mike McCarthy, give
him a shot, whatever, but they butchered this thing ten
times sideways. And oh yeah, by the way, they actually
did go all in on Dak Prescott, which no one
understands that you're.

Speaker 8 (26:05):
We do.

Speaker 5 (26:09):
Because we can. There is a there's a narrative this week.
I guess there was a defensive lineman who recently played
Aaron Rodgers and made this comment about Aaron Rodgers. But
the story has legs because Aaron Rodgers not only acknowledged

(26:30):
this comment about him, but he said that he's found
a fountain of youth, which is cayenne pepper and water,
and now he's going to be fast enough for what
was it Davin Gadshaw who made this comment about Aaron
after the game Sunday.

Speaker 9 (26:47):
Yeah, I think he's struggling right now. You know, just
a Hall of Fame quarterback like that. Just you hate
to see him go out that way. But you know,
always gonna take away against him, you know, Bill on
your resume. But yeah, he definitely don't look the same.
You just don't like he kept moving back then I
can run him down to catch him. He don't you know,
he don't look mobile at all.

Speaker 1 (27:07):
I mean, you know when you when you have a
big old dude saying he doesn't look mobile at all,
and we all see.

Speaker 2 (27:11):
It's it's a little bit sad.

Speaker 1 (27:13):
It really is because Aaron Rodgers checked every box in
his prime arm strength, intelligence, accuracy, the ability to throw
from from different arm angles, and athleticism. And now you
take out the athleticism and he's kind of just a guy.

Speaker 5 (27:29):
Yeah, Sammy, cayenne pepper and water fountain of youth. Why
don't we just like mace Aaron Rodgers in the face, Like,
why don't we just fire some mace at him that
that should do the trick? Or I don't know, that's
just ridiculous.

Speaker 2 (27:41):
You've never had cayenn pepper. So cayenn pepper is supposedly.

Speaker 5 (27:44):
But it's not gonna bring his game back. No, he's
just ridiculous.

Speaker 2 (27:47):
I mean literally believes anything.

Speaker 5 (27:48):
He's fasting on cayen pepper and water, like it's not gonna.

Speaker 2 (27:51):
He brings He believes anything he reads on the internet.

Speaker 5 (27:53):
Why don't we just deliver it like an enema too, Like,
I mean.

Speaker 1 (27:55):
Well the cayenne pepper. Now what I have around cayen
pepper is if you eat sushi. Often there's a good
chance you have some sort of parasites and the cayene
pepper eliminates the parasites.

Speaker 5 (28:04):
I do too, she often it's all you have. Parasites
are now a part of me.

Speaker 1 (28:07):
Yeah, well I'll have you have cayen pepper. I can
play it for you because we can. All Right, that's
it from the end the Modus Podcast. Check out the
radio show every day three to five Eastern twelve too Pacific,
Fox Sports Radio, iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 2 (28:19):
I'm Doug Gottlieb.
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Doug Gottlieb

Doug Gottlieb

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