Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
When with with after with our show, you're gone ruing
it you except we're simple to be pursuing it.
Speaker 2 (00:19):
To hold out Shaw shaking through the sewer. Kid, Now,
what're chilling at the Eagle? Yeah, we doing it through
your clocking on the dot. Got a habit for my house?
Or done status? How it started?
Speaker 1 (00:30):
Kidting Crattic shows that enough multiplied like a rabbit.
Speaker 3 (00:34):
Two in so out, creak it up, beat the habit.
Speaker 4 (00:38):
I wan to hang out with a friend.
Speaker 5 (00:42):
Rocket on the radio.
Speaker 3 (00:44):
My hon boy skinning his hand talking on the radio.
It's time to do.
Speaker 1 (00:52):
The sponsorin.
Speaker 3 (00:55):
All the here we go, OKT just.
Speaker 4 (00:58):
Steing up and.
Speaker 6 (01:03):
Ah, yes, it is the ben In Skin show on
ninety seven point one The Eagle. He has been Rogers.
That's kt fun tweets. That is Christina, a little baby
corn bread k Ray Ray Ray, I'm skin Wade. And
it is a big day here at ninety seven point
one the Eagle. It is a sad day here at
ninety seven point one The Eagle. No doubt you have
(01:24):
heard the news. A legend has passed. Ozzy Osbourne passed
away this morning at the age of seventy six. This
is according to an announcement from his family. He is
just two weeks removed from playing his final concert. We
had talked about that a couple of weeks ago. That
(01:44):
was in the UK, and pretty much almost who's who
from the world of heavy metal and hard rock all
went out there to be a part of that because
it's it's been out there. Ozzie's been dealing with Parkinson's disease.
It was diagnosed in twenty nineteen, and so you know,
obviously he's a not only a huge figure in the
world of music, but also a figure in the world
(02:06):
of pop culture. And everything changed for Ozzy when they
had that was that show called Meet the Osbourne That
was like the.
Speaker 7 (02:14):
First reality show I remember watching too. Yeah, you know,
it's huge.
Speaker 3 (02:19):
It was huge.
Speaker 6 (02:20):
Ozzy Osbourne obviously started as the lead singer of Black Sabbath.
He had a hardcore hardcore drug problem and ended up
leaving the band, and Sharon Osbourne, who people got to
know because of Meet the Osbourne's, was his manager and
she sort of cleaned him up and dusted him off
(02:42):
and got him back out there and he teamed up
with the legendary guitarist Randy Rhoades, who passed away and
started his solo career as Ozzy Osbourne and had a
whole secondary solo career that was just as big, if
not bigger, than what he did with Black Sabbath. But
it is pretty shocking that just two weeks ago he
(03:03):
was on a stage performing and then as of today
he is no longer with us.
Speaker 7 (03:08):
Yeah, that was called back to the beginning, by the way,
and they're releasing a movie I believe next year, So
that'll be sad.
Speaker 4 (03:16):
Now.
Speaker 7 (03:16):
When we see footage of him, it feels like he
just kind of like was waiting for that, you know,
and then he did that and he knew it was
his final performance. He was proud of it, as he
should be, and it's kind of like that was, you know,
his last turra.
Speaker 3 (03:30):
Yeah, we talked about that. I thought he sounded great.
Speaker 7 (03:33):
It's really sad, though, man. And he's writing a memoir too,
I believe. I don't know if that's done. It's just
really the Prince of darkness. Yeah, freaking gone.
Speaker 8 (03:42):
Yeah, And this was so was nine months ago as
like I was October he got put into the Rock
and Roll Hall of Fame as solo artist too, and
I remember going, yeah, he didn't look great because he's
he's Ozzy at this point and he's been you know,
Parkinson's right, so he's shaking and Jack Black's speech on
him is just incredible. May I'll find that for later
(04:04):
in the week because it's so good and uh yeah,
it's a bomber man.
Speaker 3 (04:08):
You get the news like this.
Speaker 8 (04:09):
Yesterday we warned Malcolm Jamal Warner died the Cosby Show.
We had a situation a couple of months ago where
they all came in threes. So I'm uh, I need
to find out who that was because my memory is
kind of going on me.
Speaker 3 (04:20):
But that was sly Stone, and it was Brian Wilson,
and it was some other music cords. It was there.
Speaker 6 (04:28):
Yeah yeah, So I mean around here obviously the premiere
rock station in the history of Dallas Fort Worth The Eagle.
Speaker 3 (04:36):
Uh, no doubt.
Speaker 6 (04:37):
We'll be celebrating Ozzy Osbourne all week long, as we
you know, learned of his passing this morning. But you know, Christina,
you brought up an interesting thing about uh, you know,
having that moment and then.
Speaker 3 (04:51):
Kind of letting go.
Speaker 9 (04:52):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (04:52):
Uh, I you know, I had a really good friend
of mine. We talked about him that passed away recently
from Parkinson's. He was really my dad's friend, but he
really got me into music and when he first got
the party.
Speaker 3 (05:02):
This was a guy that always.
Speaker 6 (05:04):
Involved himself and stuff like if you guys have ever
seen the commercial for the play sixty on NFL, which
was a whole campaign they did for decades to get
kids to go outside and play for sixty minutes every day.
Speaker 3 (05:16):
I remember that. Yeah, he started that. That's cool.
Speaker 6 (05:19):
And he was always doing things, always writing songs, doing
different stuff. He's a real interesting guy. But when he
got the Parkinson's diagnosis, he would create these projects to
keep himself engaged, right, to keep himself going, keep his
mind off of Parkinson's, and still go achieve things. And
I think, you know, if you have those sort of
(05:40):
things you're trying to do, and that did, I mean
we talked about it was positioned as the last hurrah,
so to speak.
Speaker 3 (05:47):
He probably did.
Speaker 6 (05:49):
Have that moment of letting go and not necessarily fighting
anymore because it is such a horrible thing to have
to deal with.
Speaker 3 (05:56):
Yeah, went out on his terms. Yeah, I went out
on his terms.
Speaker 6 (05:59):
But he is a legend for so many reasons, and
obviously we will be talking about him all day long.
We'll get into some more Ozzy Osbourne stuff later in
the show, for sure at five point fifteen. But another
thing we're going to be doing this week, Ben, we
are the official station of Dallas Cowboys Camp, even though
we're not in camp.
Speaker 3 (06:19):
Yeah, we're not there. We're not an aux snard, but
we're the only Cowboys Camp show with the courage to
broadcast on a rock station without being there in person.
I think that speaks volumes. It says who we are.
Speaker 6 (06:32):
And as such, you know, Jerry Jones and Steven Jones
and your guy shot e KT. They hit the podium
yesterday and they did their camp introduction press conference as
they always do, and there's one particular thing that had
a big news element to it, and that is the
way that Jerry talked about the Micah Parsons contract situation.
(06:53):
Did you guys see JJ Watt talked about it on
Instagram or Twitter and MIKEA. Parsons like JJ Watts tweet
where he was taking shots at Jerry.
Speaker 3 (07:04):
Yeah, And I can't tell. It's like Jerry just likes
stirring the drink and being in the drama or it's
just so rich that he does whatever he wants, but
there's no way this is productive, and maybe it all
goes away. You know, he and Mike are taking a
little shots at each other. Maybe they get the deal
done and it's just window dressing, but it doesn't feel productive.
Speaker 6 (07:23):
Yeah, I mean, that's the Jerry Jones way, right. But
as we do cover all of this, keep in mind
that we have that audio for you, the Mike Parson
stuff we'll get into in the five o'clock hour after
we talk about Ozzy Osbourne, and then coming up and
around the sports we have some other stuff, including clearly
when Jerry was on land Man he had really impressive
(07:44):
thoughts of John Hamm. We'll play you some of that
audio so you can understand all of that. But it's
time to get going. A sad day around the Eagle
as Ozzy Osbourne has passed away at the age of
seventy six.
Speaker 3 (07:55):
We will be talking about it.
Speaker 6 (07:57):
All day, but coming up next on things in his tracking,
I will give you the sights and sounds of the
tour of the University of North Texas.
Speaker 3 (08:06):
That's next.
Speaker 9 (08:09):
News.
Speaker 3 (08:09):
Hot Gods ever.
Speaker 5 (08:13):
Come.
Speaker 3 (08:14):
Stay on top in the boots, shove.
Speaker 8 (08:22):
All I told you guys, was I've got a wild
story about how George Clotey might have broke up Tenacious
Tea Temporarily I left out some very crucial details. So
I'm going to play you, guys, thirty seconds from an interview.
The guy who's the reporter conduct conducting the interview and podcast.
Speaker 3 (08:41):
His name is Andrew Callahan.
Speaker 8 (08:43):
His subject is the son of Joe Biden Hunter Biden,
who we've last talked about. He got pardoned, but he
was you remember at the strip club he would put
the Fleet Foxes on on his lap while he was
getting a lap dance. He would have that on his
like on his leg. Very strange, and Fleet Foxes are
(09:03):
just not stripper songs.
Speaker 3 (09:05):
So wait, he was disrespecting the strip club DJ by
playing his own laft dance song.
Speaker 8 (09:09):
Yeah, well, I think he probably a guy who was
in a private room. I would imagine, you don't know,
I assuming he's a man of a little bit of money.
I don't know, are you now a lot of money?
Are you familiar with the Fleet fox has been? Yeah, okay,
it is not not at all. I couldn't really get
over that fact. That was very funny to me. So
we just know this guy has done a lot of drugs.
(09:30):
He's a little unhinged. So he's doing the interview and
this thing went on for like three hours. But the
first question before we get to the tenatious deep heart,
is he's mad that George Clooney turned on Joe Biden
Because when Joe Biden fumbled the debate, George Clooney took
out an op ed the New York Times. It was like,
we gotta find someone else. Yeah, the Democrats gott to
find someone else.
Speaker 6 (09:51):
That was sort of the catalyst too, to really get
that thing turned around on Biden.
Speaker 3 (09:55):
Hunter Biden hates George Clooney with a passion.
Speaker 5 (09:59):
Did he want dropout?
Speaker 10 (10:00):
No, George Clooney's you know, came out with his maybe
it was a little before that with his op ed.
Speaker 5 (10:06):
And what is George Clooney always saying?
Speaker 10 (10:08):
He said that the President needed to be introduced to
him at a fundraiser. But the guy on his shoulder,
who's usually a military officer, has a one job to
say the name of the person that's walking up. That's
he makes up the story about how the president had
to be introduced to him.
Speaker 11 (10:26):
Oh, like he didn't recognize George Clooney exactly because of
like dementias and I don't know that's that's the implication, right.
Speaker 5 (10:33):
Yeah, like he's forgetting things.
Speaker 3 (10:35):
Okay. Now, if you'll have seen how much of VP,
A little bit of Veep, a little bit Buster Bluth
from Arrested Development plays this role for Elaine from seinfeldt
As it's every time at whatever event they're at. Just
that Senator Johnson, he was just quietly because they don't
they can't remember this amount of people. It's too just
(10:56):
too much to do. By the way, so who's the
guy interviewing Biden on this? Because this is Callahan's name.
This is everywhere right now, yeah, and it's number one
news story. My favorite thing is he explains the difference
in cocaine regular cocaine and crack and the clips push
a t from the clips repurposed it and said, go on, okay,
(11:17):
So here is Callahan asking about this? Is this is
the Tenacious d event because today's D timporarily broke up
right after Trump got shot because Kyle Gass on stage
in Australia was like, maybe you don't miss next time.
The crowd laughed.
Speaker 11 (11:31):
My only really famous Hollywood friend is actor Jack Black,
you know from School of Rock, and so Tenase's Need
did a concert in Sydney, Australia. You know, this is
a day after they tried to assassinate Trump and Butler
Pa and I guess Jack Black's guitarist or whatever jumps
up on stage and he's yells up into the effective. Hey,
next time you aim, you try to shoot Trump, aim
a little bit closer next time. George Clooney is blowing
(11:55):
his phone up, being like, if you don't kick your
band member out of the band, and like publicly denounced
this guy. Like I don't know what the consequences were,
but it was kind of like you're out, out of
what we don't know, and so his hand was basically
forced to be like, oh, sorry, my band member has
serious mental health problems.
Speaker 5 (12:11):
We're breaking up the band for now.
Speaker 11 (12:12):
The tours canceled, and so, I mean, it is cool
to see Hollywood actors voice more progressive opinions, but.
Speaker 10 (12:20):
Him, Kim Kim, and everybody around him, I don't have
to be nice.
Speaker 4 (12:26):
Number one.
Speaker 10 (12:26):
I agree with Quentin Tarantino. George Clooney is not an actor,
He's a brand. And by the way, then God bless him.
You know what, he supposedly treats his friends really well,
you know what I mean, buys them things, and he's
got a really great place in Lake Como. You what
do you have to do with anything?
Speaker 3 (12:42):
Why do I have to listen to you?
Speaker 10 (12:43):
What right do you have to step on a man
who's given fifty two years of his in life to
the services of this country and decide that you, George Clooney,
are going to take out basically a full page ad
in the New York Times to undermine the president.
Speaker 3 (12:56):
Okay, so you can see how mad he is at
George Clooney, but him. Yeah, but it was obvious. Yeah,
the whole world was like, dude, why are y'all trutting
this weekend at Bernie's dead guy out there?
Speaker 12 (13:09):
You know what?
Speaker 6 (13:09):
The big problem with saying who cares what you think?
Actor is And it's like, okay, but why do we
care what you think? Whoever you are right now saying
what you're saying.
Speaker 3 (13:20):
Yeah, Like people put, you know, credence in whoever they respect,
and so it's like, I mean, it's hard to muster
up a lot of respect for Hunter Biden. His track
record is not offset bad.
Speaker 6 (13:34):
So I'm just sitting there listening to Hunter Biden trash
George Clooney going all right, and you have credibility because
why But also.
Speaker 8 (13:42):
George Clooney, I don't like him texting Jack Black though. Yeah,
I'm like you probably stay out of that. Yeah, such
tenacious need to do their thing and whatever happens. And
he makes it sound like Clooney thought he was in
charge of like who makes it and who doesn't? Probably
say was telling him this will be bad for you.
Speaker 3 (13:56):
Yeah, he was not for me. I'm not threatening you
what I'm gonna do you because I run Hollywood.
Speaker 6 (14:01):
And I also think Clooney is so involved in democratic politics,
so you're saying, hey, this is bad for democratic politics
to share on assassinations, Like what are you really accomplishing
right now? Nobody wants their enemies murdered?
Speaker 3 (14:15):
Stop?
Speaker 1 (14:15):
All right?
Speaker 3 (14:16):
We will get into Cowboys camp stuff at four o'clock
because we are the official unofficial number one show of
Dallas Cowboys training Camp. And that's not there in Oxnard,
but coming up at just over three minutes, we'll talk
TV news celebrities rally around Stephen Colbert. That's next.
Speaker 6 (14:31):
We've been and Skin Show ninety seven point one. The
Eagle Ozzy Osbourne has passed away at the age of
seventy six. We'll be talking about it old day. We'll
do a big segment about it coming up at five
point fifteen.
Speaker 3 (14:42):
Do not miss that.
Speaker 6 (14:44):
We also have Volbeat and Helstorm tickets we're going to
be given away. They're going to be at the Toyota
Music Factory Pavilion on Monday.
Speaker 3 (14:50):
Be listening.
Speaker 6 (14:51):
Have your iHeart Apprettium. We'll give you a chance to
win those sometime during the show, But right now it's
time for this.
Speaker 3 (15:07):
I don't usually watch Colbert.
Speaker 8 (15:09):
I kind of record all the stuff in case something happens,
I can just go back and find it and rip
it off the TV for the show.
Speaker 3 (15:14):
But last night it was one of those weird times.
Speaker 8 (15:17):
I just kind of looked up and I was like, oh,
it's ten thirty, Okay, yeah, that's I'll just see what
colberts you got to say about the news that he
got last week that his show is going to be
canceled next May. I just wanted to see how he'd
handle it. I had no idea of what was going
to happen. What's his monologue going to be like, maybe
we'll have a good joke or something. We'll see what happens.
Speaker 3 (15:34):
So here is the first joke that he did when
he came out, I'm gonna go ahead and say it.
Speaker 5 (15:39):
Cancel.
Speaker 3 (15:40):
Culture has gone too far.
Speaker 13 (15:43):
You may have heard the news last week. We learned
that the Late Show will be ending in May, and
I want to.
Speaker 3 (15:54):
Thank you.
Speaker 13 (15:55):
It sunk in that they're killing off our show, but
they made one mistake.
Speaker 5 (16:00):
They left me alive.
Speaker 8 (16:05):
I want to play into the camera having fun, very good.
And then here's his second joke that I wanted to
play for your games.
Speaker 13 (16:12):
Our network, CBS, who I want to reiterate, have always
been great partners, put out a statement saying a very
you know, very nice things about me and about the show,
and thank you to them for that. They clarified that
the cancelation was purely a financial decision. But how could
it purely be a financial decision if the Late Show
is number one in ratings? A lot of folks, a
(16:36):
lot of folks are asking that question. Over the weekend,
somebody at CBS followed up their gracious press release with
a gracious anonymous leak saying they pulled the plug on
our show because of losses pegged between forty million and
fifty million dollars a year.
Speaker 3 (16:51):
Forty millions a big number.
Speaker 13 (16:52):
I could see us losing twenty four million dollars, But
where would Paramount have possibly spent the other sixteen million?
Oh yeah, Still that's that's still a lot of money.
I mean, where where does the Late Show rank? Jim
what other companies lost that kind of money last year?
Speaker 5 (17:07):
Bed Lop? Sir, damn it.
Speaker 13 (17:10):
I told them we should stop offering the audience unlimited shrimp.
Speaker 8 (17:14):
Stands over to the audience and all the audience is
eating red lops, everyone in the audience. And then he
brought out weird Al and the guy from Hamilton and
did start doing a song and going around the audience,
and the they basically making front of the cold Play
cam bit and John Stewart and John Oliver were there.
Seth Myers and Jimmy Fallon were there. Adam Sandler was
(17:35):
randomly there. So I call these late night guys are
there like solidarity and kemllon takes Summers off.
Speaker 3 (17:41):
That's interesting because Sandler was on Jimmy Fallon last night.
Speaker 8 (17:44):
Okay, I mean they're in the same Mike, Yeah, right,
they're the same they might be in the same building.
Speaker 3 (17:48):
Yeah, okay, that's interesting. So it's like not that far
away at least, so it's easy to do, you know.
I thought that was kind of kind of cool.
Speaker 1 (17:56):
Though.
Speaker 8 (17:56):
They get back and then apparently Fallon said something too.
I made a little bit of a joke, which is
kind of like, say it's bad. John Stewart went on
a heavy rant on his show. He works for the
same company as Colbert. He's probably I don't know that
they'll just cancel the.
Speaker 3 (18:12):
Daily Show, but he could get slept on the wrist
if he keeps it up, because he went hard last
night apparently. But all those all those shows are in
danger and they're in jeopardy and they just have to
rediscover themselves. And they got it. They got to figure
out a way to do it more efficiently. It's number
one and it's losing forty million dollars a year. What
does that tell you? That tells you that just getting
the ratings doesn't work? Well? What are the ratings for?
(18:34):
The ratings are for selling advertising? So what does that
tell you that advertisers are not buying that? Yeah?
Speaker 6 (18:41):
And I would also, I mean, it'd be interesting to
me to see what the real numbers are. I don't
think those are the real numbers because how long has
he been on the air?
Speaker 3 (18:49):
Ten years? Ten years?
Speaker 6 (18:50):
So they're just gonna keep losing forty million a year
and do nothing to adjust the budget and then suddenly
just pull the plug because oh my god. Look, I
mean this this was done so they could all the
company companies do stuff like that all the time, and
it just so happens that this is a high profile
thing because of the lawsuit, because of what sixty Minutes did.
Speaker 3 (19:09):
I'm real curious to sixty minutes make money for the network.
Speaker 6 (19:13):
I mean you can, like, Okay, if it's losing forty million,
I bet the show budget is extremely high. Well why
not cut the budget in half?
Speaker 3 (19:22):
That's what I thought. And you know, I used to
sell that, and it's like you're talking about late Fringe
and that's not a high profile thing to like those
ads are like one hundred and fifty bucks for thirty seconds.
Like I've sold late night talk show ads for one
hundred and fifty dollars, two hundred dollars for a thirty
second ad and Dallas fort Worth, right, And I've also
sold you know, CSI Miami thirty second spot for eighteen
(19:45):
grand for thirty seconds, right prime. And so it's like,
if you're spending a ton of money on late fringe,
you're not it's good. That's a hard thing to do,
so just figure out a more efficient way to do it. Yeah,
but this was this was It's hard to leave that
this isn't related to Cell company, especially when Trump put
out a big post that's like celebrating it and he
(20:07):
said Kimmel's next, and Colbert was like, no, no, no, Kimmel,
you don't get to be the martyr. I'm the guy.
These things happen.
Speaker 6 (20:15):
I mean, most lawsuits are business or politically or and
or both motivated. My brother in law was involved in
the Time Warner merger lawsuit with the Department of Justice
that was politically motivated.
Speaker 3 (20:29):
These things happen all the time in our world.
Speaker 8 (20:31):
I am excited, and I know we've got to hustle here,
but just he's got ten months to play with this
thing and see what happens. And it reminds me of
Conan going out. Conan knew he was going out, and
he was doing all he could to ramp up the
NBC budget, and there were so many live animals randomly
showing up on the show.
Speaker 3 (20:47):
So that's your bit. He'll go out with a bang.
But so yeah, there we go. All right, there you
have it. There's your TV news. Coming up next, the
official unofficial show of Dallas Cowboys training camp on officially
gets it underway next as we review the things that Shoddy,
Jerry and Stephen had to say yesterday. That's coming your
way next. Man is around the sports KTD coun queens
(21:12):
as all the sports.
Speaker 8 (21:14):
Yes, Yes, the Cowboys anal state of the team addressed
annual State of the Team address yesterday, Jerry Jones, Stephen Jones,
Brian Schottenheimer, and then Tad the PR guy, and then
the media members I wanted to play and the five
o'clock hour we'll get to all the stuff that involves
Micah and Micah's contract stuff, because a big theme of
(21:37):
yesterday was that Micah went on the Undertaker podcast last week, Yes,
the wrestler of the Undertaker and kind of did a
little business there. And then the Cowboys are kind of
negotiating through the media as well. We'll get to that later.
I wanted to pull just the first question because you'll
get a little bit of the Stephen Jones iconic laugh.
Speaker 3 (21:56):
Here a brawl outside. Wait I clicked on something else.
There we go.
Speaker 12 (21:59):
We golers one of the most intelligent guys in the NFL.
And if he's thinking that way, I'll go right along
with him.
Speaker 3 (22:07):
But that's all I need is just a little bit
off Mike Steven because they it's like, you know, Tyler
Smith made comments like the goals win super Bowl, that's
all it is. And of course first takes like a
big story and spent twenty minutes on it, like, no,
it's nothing. It's literally a fart in the wind, It's
all it was. So they said, do you have a
Super Bowl roster Jerry.
Speaker 12 (22:26):
And Spiler's one of the most intelligent guys in the NFL, and.
Speaker 4 (22:35):
I love it.
Speaker 3 (22:36):
I love Steven laughing.
Speaker 8 (22:38):
So they find Trayvon Diggs because Trayvon Diggs did not
his off season workout program was in Florida, kind of
did his own thing.
Speaker 12 (22:48):
We expect a player paid like trevoron On to be
here all the time. We expect him to be leading.
Speaker 4 (22:55):
It's important to have the right body language and every
respect when you are one of those rare, financially paid
and gifted players. You've got to have some leadership about you.
Speaker 5 (23:08):
But the de escalation is contraction spelled out.
Speaker 9 (23:11):
So he understood when he decided he was going to
train in South Florida, he understood what would be that
what the consequences would be.
Speaker 3 (23:21):
That's that said. It towards a divorce. And dude, I
don't have a problem with what the Cowboys are saying.
If you can't pay everybody a ton of money, and
if you're going to pay a guy, you expect that
he'll be around, Like if he's not, that's fine. I mean,
it's a deteriorating relationship. Look what happened with Luca and
the Mavericks. If you can't get on the same page
with the training staff and you're not all moving in
(23:41):
the same direction and two sides don't trust each other
and the organization's paying you a ton of money, that
has a chance to go really south fast. Yeah, and
you know it's it's just weird because football is a
sport with a hundred percent injury rate. Yeah, they could
get out of him after this year and be fine
and only have like five million dead money. It's they
(24:04):
use no dead money. But dude, they they they lost
Jordan Lewis. Dude, Digs is hurt, and then they drafted
a guy that's hurt, so their their cornerback position is
in trouble.
Speaker 6 (24:18):
Yeah, they really need that rookie to be healthy for
the first time in a decade. Yeah, but man, I know,
I know he's awesome, but man, if you look at
that injury rate, wow, they let's be really here.
Speaker 8 (24:31):
I mean, like, I think a lot of people writing
it off, I think it sounds like Treyvon knew he's
gonna get fined, didn't care because he was getting fined
less than a million dollars.
Speaker 3 (24:38):
Yeah, okay, so deal.
Speaker 6 (24:40):
I also think Trayvon probably knows he's not going to
be a Cowboy any long, Right.
Speaker 3 (24:44):
I agree, And so he's like, this is it. They
get him back. But I think there's you cannot count
on that guy being productive here there that is a
dysfunctional relationship. Yeah, you can't find a guy five hundred
grand and think it's just going to be rosie.
Speaker 1 (24:59):
Now.
Speaker 3 (24:59):
He may, you know, and he may think, I don't
even need any good film this year. Everyone knows what
I can do. I'll go get paid next year away
from the Cowboys. Or maybe he thinks, all right, I
need to come actually show something. His body language does suck. Dude,
He's very he would be great if you needed a
free safety that didn't tackle. Okay, so you know, just
a guide's gambling. You know, let's get one more before
(25:21):
we slide into the second part of this shanty shotty time.
Speaker 8 (25:25):
You know, Gary used to have so many mottos, you know,
fighting for our life and finish the fight and six
inches and all that stuff. McCarthy had Mojo moments. Shanty
Do we have a motto twenty twenty five?
Speaker 14 (25:36):
No, I mean the Modol's gonna always be compete every day.
I mean, that's what we're all about. I've been other
places where there's a theme of the year. I don't
believe in that. I believe in that you should have
a central theme of your program, and that's compete every day.
And again, that's not just on the practice field. That's
in the meeting rooms. It's time away, being smart things
like that.
Speaker 3 (25:54):
And all right, so no motto for the twenty twenty
five Cowboys. I do like competing during time. Does he
not understand marketing though? I mean, cow was your marketing
arm you gotta have a motto, my dude, those are
always so corny, and I don't have a problem with that.
It's actually refreshing glad to hear that.
Speaker 8 (26:13):
I think everyone else though in the organizations, like we
make some t shirts, though, you come up with the motto, dude,
let's keep this going.
Speaker 3 (26:20):
You got more, right, oh plenty? All right?
Speaker 6 (26:22):
More Cowboys audio from the official show of Cowboys Camp
to Ben and Skin Show next right here on The Eagle,
Ben and Skin Show ninety seven point one The Eagle. Obviously,
the biggest story of the day around here on your
Home of Rock is that Ozzy Osbourne has passed away.
Speaker 3 (26:37):
We've been talking about it.
Speaker 6 (26:38):
We're going to talk about it at five point fifteen
during the weekday update. Uh so be listening all day long.
We have some tickets to give away. But we talked
about this a little bit off the top. We'll get
back into it at five point fifteen. Ozzy Osbourne has
passed away at the age of seventy six. We'll get
back into that later, but right now, it's time for
more Cowboys audio.
Speaker 3 (26:57):
What you got there, Katie, Okay, Yeah, just keeping it
moving a little bit because we talked about shoddy a
little bit Brian Schottenheimer and the question I want you
to know, this whole answer is like eight minutes long,
and I trimmed it up for radio purposes. The question
from Tim Callishaw went a little like this, Jerry, I
loved you on land Man, and that started some Landman
stuff that we'll get to in a second. But then
(27:19):
it was like, are you embarrassed that you didn't get
to an NFC championship game again? And the Washington football
team the Commanders did, and are you embarrassed about it?
And then it spun off into talking about Brian Schottenheimer.
Speaker 12 (27:32):
We didn't do well at quarterback last year because Dak
got hurt in my mind, just to show you how
simple it's his for me, and we didn't block him
up very good either past protect or open the holes.
One thing that I'm so optimistic about is the guy
sitting right over there, because the minute the season was over,
we wanted him to have the most influence on the offense.
(27:55):
When I first was thinking about him, I really didn't
think about him being the head coach.
Speaker 3 (28:00):
That's oh my god. We didn't think he should be
the head coach, but we did know we wanted him
to have the offense, which means we were all kind
of right when we were guessing this.
Speaker 8 (28:09):
They wanted McCarthy to be the coach. They just McCarthy
did not want to be the coach. He couldn't call
the plays.
Speaker 3 (28:14):
They wanted McCarthy to be the head coach, but just
be a walk around head coach and then let Shoty
run the offense. So I wonder what that argument was
during the season or whatever. I wonder if there was
friction there, although it was a lost season without Dak cam.
Speaker 8 (28:28):
Now MacCarthy's like, what do you want me to do?
You know so, but they were also like three and
five at the time he got hurt.
Speaker 12 (28:33):
I did think about though about him really being involved
in helping us be a better offensive football team. This
is going to be exciting to see of what a
man that's spent thirty years grew up in this game,
never had a chance to head coach. I'm excited about that,
and I'm proud that he's getting this opportunity.
Speaker 4 (28:51):
He deserves it. In my mind, man, that makes me
go here this year. That makes me feel good.
Speaker 8 (28:59):
I think Shoddy seems like a really nice guy, but
he has had an opportunity to be a head coach.
It's by doing better at your other stops in your NFL.
Speaker 3 (29:11):
Yeah, if he was, if he had been kicking ass,
somebody would have said, oh my god, we have to
have that guy be our coach. He's super nice guy.
But that doesn't mean. Look, he was just the guy
who was closest to the empty office where their head
coach used to sit. Yep, he Jerry just said, we
weren't even thinking about him as a head coach.
Speaker 6 (29:28):
Yeah, the head coach of the Cowboys shouldn't be a
cute story. I mean for him to be, man, I'm
excited about this cool story that that shouldn't be the case.
But that's really it just goes to show you just
that's the way the Cowboys are running. And you know,
I maybe I'm giving too much credence to Steven. I
do think that if Jerry wasn't around, Steven would do
(29:49):
things way differently. No, yeah, let me say I'll say
significantly differently. I think there would be a different approach.
But I still think that there's things that you have
to do to acquiesce to Jerry and things that he believes.
For an overall scope that doesn't have to do with
just what happens on the football field.
Speaker 3 (30:09):
And really, if you look at it through that lens,
it's been wildly successful. So who's going to tell him
anything different? Right the way Jerry runs it, it's the
most valuable brand in sports. Yes, and that's bigger than
Super Bowls. That is bigger, not to the fans, not
to the gensas to the Joneses, to the bottom line,
to what they're building their grandkids, their legacy, et cetera.
Here's some standard getting older stuff.
Speaker 12 (30:30):
I've got to live more in today than I've ever
had to because at old times running out.
Speaker 4 (30:35):
And that's just the fact, that's just what it is.
So I'm living for now.
Speaker 12 (30:39):
We could be anywhere we want to be, but our
assets in right here because we want to be, because
we want to be and be a part of it. Now.
Speaker 4 (30:45):
That's enough for me, and I have paid the price.
Speaker 12 (30:49):
Personally, I don't have any problem justifying when somebody says, well,
do it differently, why don't you just watch it on TV.
Speaker 5 (30:56):
I don't have to.
Speaker 4 (30:56):
I've paid too high price in my mind for doing
what I'm doing.
Speaker 3 (31:00):
He's not wrong.
Speaker 6 (31:02):
Rich people can do it, I know, but rich people
can do what they want. That's the world we live in.
Rich people do what they want, and that's what he's
telling you. I've paid the price. I'm a rich person.
I want to be here running this toy, and you
guys are at mercy. I always think about like people
that want him to fire himself and everything. Think of
your own fantasy football team. Would you just let some
consultant come run your fantasy football team for you? Would
(31:25):
you get as much joy out of it?
Speaker 5 (31:26):
No?
Speaker 3 (31:27):
No, this is his fantasy football team. It's just he's
so rich. It's real life and I and I also think,
you know, no one's ever going to do it. It
would just for me.
Speaker 6 (31:37):
It doesn't bother me so much because I'm accustomed to
corporate sports. But for me, I just I roll my
eyes when they say we're we know that we're just
stewards of this franchise, and I'm just like, man, shut up.
You're a rich guy. You did incredibly well. You're wealthy
or powerful. You're doing what you want with it. That's fine.
Speaker 3 (31:55):
So I appreciate that.
Speaker 5 (31:58):
It was good.
Speaker 4 (31:58):
Well, they didn't give me an enough time on it.
Speaker 12 (32:02):
My best scene was when I was talking to what's
his name Land up here in the bed, John.
Speaker 3 (32:08):
What's his name? John ham Okay, he can't remember his
kischen his name either.
Speaker 12 (32:14):
When I was talking to what's his name Land up
here in the bed, I said, the good news is
that they say you're gonna live, and so don't make
me have to come up here and visit with my
rubber glove and get you out of that bed. Now
they took that out, and I thought he was the
best scene in the whole thing.
Speaker 3 (32:32):
I thought it was his middle finger. Oh really, Oh
my god.
Speaker 8 (32:40):
Not only does not know John Hamm's name, he doesn't
know one of his best players and the guys in
current contract negotiations with we'll get that at five o'clock.
Speaker 3 (32:49):
There you have it. Oh we'll also get into the
passing of Ozzy Osbourne. We'll do that today at five
point fifteen. Don't miss that. But coming up next in
the Food News, the most iconic Texas food bracket is back. Obviously,
sad day in the world of rock, Ozzy Osbourne has
passed away. We'll get into that coming up at five
point fifteen, a deeper dive into that, So stay tuned
for that. But right now it's time for this.
Speaker 5 (33:17):
It's time.
Speaker 3 (33:21):
Yesterday we discussed this.
Speaker 8 (33:25):
Axios the publication surveyed a bunch of readers out of Austin, Dallas, Houston,
and San Antonio to conduct this most iconic food bracket.
I put a post up at ninety seven one The
Eagle on Instagram and TikTok it's at the Eagle Dallas
on Twitter.
Speaker 3 (33:40):
You can see that if you'd like. We voted on it.
Speaker 8 (33:43):
But then they actually have tallied the votes and we've
moved on to a round two. With a score of
seventy six percent, smoked brisket took down Chicken fried steak
to move in around two.
Speaker 4 (33:54):
Wow.
Speaker 8 (33:55):
They will now take on fahitas, who, with the score
of sixty one scent took down Texas Chili. So smoked
brisket versus fajitas, what a classic battle.
Speaker 3 (34:09):
I'm gonna go with brisket. Had some brisket today from
Tender Smokehouse Insulina. It's it's magical. You had good brisket.
I'm gonna go with brisket. Everyone, what about brisket fijedas?
Speaker 5 (34:23):
Wait?
Speaker 3 (34:23):
That thing, oh should a thing? It would be it
should be a thing. I'm going brisket too.
Speaker 6 (34:29):
Wouldn't that kind of be Barbericolah kind of Yeah, Well
we're uh, we're good there, brisket moving on you get there, Yeah,
I'll go with brisket. Uh, no offense to featers, but
you're out of here. It's you know, as you get
closer to the end, it gets tougher. I mean, yeah, matchups, Yeah,
what are you gonna do?
Speaker 3 (34:47):
The confusing one? Yesterday?
Speaker 8 (34:49):
Golf shrimp at fifty nine percent beats King Ranch cast Roles,
and I mean.
Speaker 3 (34:53):
That's what a weird matchup. I don't I've never heard
anyone say, wait, are these shrimp from the golf? Are
these golf shrimp?
Speaker 12 (35:01):
Like?
Speaker 3 (35:01):
No one ever says that they're trying to make They're
trying to make that more Texas than it is. Yeah,
for sure, But I'm telling you I am. And then
King Castrole. What I think that's that? I think that's
a classic eight nine matchup?
Speaker 8 (35:13):
Is that for your Austin Houston and San Antonio readers.
I'm wondering the King Ranch Castle.
Speaker 6 (35:18):
I've heard of King Ranch Castrole. I know I've had it.
I remember that it had little stuff on top of it.
Speaker 3 (35:23):
But I couldn't remember exactly what it was. Queso seventy
four percent defeats Freedo pie as it should, leaving us
golf shrimp versus caeso. Do we even have to ask no, no,
but dipping the shrimp caso gosh I had a girl, yes,
especially if it was fried gold shrimp'd The weird breakfast
(35:48):
tacos took down migas really eighty percent to twenty not
even close. Tomali's dunked on barbacoa sixty five percent, bringing
a breakfast tacos versus to Molly's. Interesting.
Speaker 8 (36:04):
Now I'm a complicated figure here because breakfast tacos for
me can't have egg in them. They just force egg
in it, like everyone likes egg just as much as
they like bacon, sausage and potato.
Speaker 3 (36:14):
It's very confusing to me. Sounds like you're eating a
taco you like a double potato, just like you like
wearing denim underwearing denim jeans.
Speaker 8 (36:21):
No baked potato, sausagecheesetto potato, baked potato sprowns, and potato tots. Yeah, well,
I would prefer my potatoes to be used as the
softener more than the eggs.
Speaker 3 (36:32):
Soften because.
Speaker 8 (36:34):
I like eggs. Okay, Well, I'm pretty egg neutral. Honestly,
you got to be in the mood for eggs.
Speaker 3 (36:39):
I get that. Oh you're agnostic. I'm pretty agnostic, and
I'll allow it. Thank you God. You know you don't
do this often. But that's one where I'm a little
bit I wish would have thought of that one.
Speaker 5 (36:52):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (36:53):
By the way, breakfast taco is over to Molly's. Really yep,
I'll say that too, as long as there's do you
want to you want to dispute that.
Speaker 7 (37:01):
Kreg, I'm going to Mally's because a good Tomali to
me is way better than a breakfast taco.
Speaker 3 (37:06):
But I would agree with that, but I would also
contend that of all Tomali's, only twenty percent of them
are good Tomali's. Okay, I get good Tomala's on the rag.
Speaker 8 (37:17):
Uh fifty five percent win for Cobbler over Texas sheet
Cake incredible.
Speaker 3 (37:24):
I mean, I've never heard of Texas sheet Cake.
Speaker 8 (37:27):
And what was seen as the highlight of round one,
the closest battle that went down to the wire, but
a buzzer beater for the supernut pecan pie fifty over Calachi's.
Speaker 3 (37:37):
Wow. Map to a cobbler pecan pie round two matchup.
That's incredible. I suspect pecan pile win. But I'm a
cobbler guy. So he's voting cobbler. I'm voting copple. I'm
a cobbler guy and a pecan pie guy. Oh what
you would you do? A guy? Would you do a
double bite? Absolutely? This is like Christina's a gold shrimp
(37:58):
keeso thing right, gold shrimp who says Gulf shrimp, would
you do? Would you be willing to do a pa Cobbler? Yeah,
for sure. That was my nickname, the Cobbler. I don't
remember that pet con pie for me? Yeah, con pie
for me as well to one and he had a
half vote, so two and a half for.
Speaker 8 (38:21):
Bible advance on our brackeat. So they have the final
four tomorrow. It's kind of up to us if we
want to keep it going or not. I'll see yes,
it feels like a layup of contents. Let not finish
the job tomorrow, Thank you axious.
Speaker 3 (38:34):
All right? Coming up next to the Today Game, followed
by the most Important Job Skills right Now, followed by
the passing of a rock icon, Ozzy Smith. Ozzie Smith.
Ozzy Osbourne is no longer with us, so, uh, we'll
get into that. Ozzie passes at five point fifteen, don't
miss that is So things are weird since COVID. The
(39:05):
job market's evolving. You got people working at home, You've
got AI stepping into the world and automation and all that.
You have companies trying to save money and a lot
of stuff going on.
Speaker 8 (39:16):
There was a new research that came out and there
was about a thousand people responded on this thing, and
this is what are the most important job skills to
have in twenty twenty five. Right now, if you're hitting
the job market, maybe you're looking to get a new job,
what's the most important thing you can have?
Speaker 3 (39:36):
And I have your top ten answers. The ability to
easily bend over because I think so much physical labor
is going to be a part of what's valuable.
Speaker 7 (39:49):
What robots are for.
Speaker 3 (39:51):
Well, I don't know. I don't know that they've mastered
that yet. I think about this a lot because I'm like,
I have kids, you know, that are nineteen seventeen to fourteen.
I'm like, what is the workforce going to be like
for them moving forward? How important is a college degree,
do they? I think people who know how to code
can do some stuff. Ah, And I'm like, okay, don't.
(40:12):
Shouldn't everybody just be focused on AI, like how to
work in the AI feel at this point, probably, which
is terrifying. We were having a conversation the other day
with some people at a restaurant and they were talking
about that exact conversation we had where it was like,
don't go to the restaurant at nine o'clock. And I
was talking to a restaurant and they're like, you can
come in until there's ten minutes left, because that's the
way businesses think. And I was like, Yeah, the people
(40:36):
in the restaurant that are complaining about working longer, they're
gonna come in for a real rude awakening when there's
no jobs left.
Speaker 1 (40:42):
Yeah.
Speaker 8 (40:43):
Like your first guess was the ability to bend over. Yep,
I'm gonna go ahead and give that to you at
number two. Resilience, flexibility, and agility.
Speaker 3 (40:51):
Let's go. I told you, I told you I'm assuming flexibility,
like a flexible schedule. Maybe I don't. I don't really
understand being able to put your ankles behind your ears.
The number one thing that's needed right now in the
job force, and I do fear for people who are
looking for jobs analytical thinking. They need people who can
(41:13):
think analytically. So data. The social media world has taught
us the opposite of that. Don't analyze anything, just react
quickly and emotionally. Number three leadership and social influence. That's
having a following right already, there you go. Okay. Number
four is creative thinking. So creative thinking is not completely
(41:34):
out yet, it's going away, and that's something that AI
will learn pretty quickly, I would think so probably. Oh
number five, these are tough. These are two things I
look for in interns. Back when we had interns, motivation
and self awareness. Oh yeah, we had that one intern
(41:55):
that would just try to get on the air and
like insert himself into conversations TCU guys. Yeah, the TCU guy, Yeah,
the big TCU guy. I guarantee you he is not
working in our field. I mean I guarantee he was
like in the room with us, but if a conversation
was happening, he would put himself on the mic to
answer questions, Yeah, hey what happened? He he uh said.
(42:16):
That was probably about eight years ago, nine years ago.
As his family or whoever was paying fifty five to
sixty thousand dollars a year for that education. I don't
think he's in our field. I like to talk sports
self awareness. You just gotta have it, you just gotta know,
you know. I struggle with that six technological literacy. It's
(42:40):
a problem for me. Me too, Dog, you're better at
it than I am. Core does this go into I
mean it's brutal and uh yeah, I and I mess
around with a lot of it, just enough to realize
even more that I don't know any how it works.
It's overwhelming for sure. Yeah, uh oh, we can all
practice this number seven though.
Speaker 8 (43:00):
They're looking for someone who has empathy and active listening skills,
all right, AI does not have that.
Speaker 7 (43:07):
No, maybe active listening, but not empathy. No, they are
always listening.
Speaker 3 (43:12):
Yeah, they're always listening. Yeah they've been listening. Yeah, but empathy.
They don't have a heart. Groc was modeled after Elon Musk.
There's no way it has empathy. Okay. I don't understand
how curiosity and lifelong learning is going to help you
in a job right.
Speaker 7 (43:27):
Now because you keep yeah, you keep learning and getting
better at your job and stop making so many mistakes.
Speaker 3 (43:34):
Stay curious, never stop learning. I need you to mop
the floors of the lows.
Speaker 6 (43:39):
I'm learning that KT is not employable right now, not me,
Oh dog, I need your intellectual curiosity to be sharpened
mine so curious?
Speaker 3 (43:50):
Did you not hear what he said seconds ago? What
are you talking about? Need to go check your own tape?
Speaker 8 (43:57):
Huh oh, I'm not active listening. Yeah, talent management number
nine that girls of seven?
Speaker 3 (44:10):
What does that mean? Like talent management been able to
rank the hotness, being able to get people in line? Yeah,
you know, buy in.
Speaker 8 (44:20):
This guy said something to someone else that got back
to me. How do you handle it? A lot of that,
A lot of you know, Yeah, disgusting. We should move
on and talk about the important story in the world.
Speaker 3 (44:33):
Yeah, we got sad news today, the passing of an
absolute icon. Ozzy Osbourne has passed away at the age
of seventy six. Yeah, and battling Parkinson's And this is
just like three weeks after his final concert. How incredible
is that that he went out on his terms and
ended doing a show.
Speaker 6 (44:54):
Really this was I mean, look, anytime someone famous passes it,
it's shocking, you know. But when we I did not
go and watch the footage from that concert. You saw
some of it, didn't you, Christine, some of it. But
we played the audio and I remember sitting here going, god,
Ozzie sounds great. Yeah, you know, now he was sitting
the entire time in his Prince of Darkness throne, which
(45:18):
you know, I mean, with him and the legend and
the legacy and all that, it made sense and we
knew that he was struggling, which is why you know
they did this concert. But that's what was shocking for
me by looking down and see it is like, man,
he's just a couple of weeks removed from giving a
really good performance, an important performance, and all of his
fans being able to connect with that and love that.
(45:40):
That's what I think really kind of blew us away
about it.
Speaker 7 (45:43):
Yeah, and he had been practicing and actually like working
out up to that concert too, so that might have
taken a big toll on him as well.
Speaker 3 (45:50):
It's quick, do you want to hear it?
Speaker 8 (45:51):
Real quick?
Speaker 3 (45:52):
Yeah, just kind of what he sounded like here, this
should happen. Now. That doesn't sound like a man who's
going to be passing away.
Speaker 1 (46:10):
Now, you know.
Speaker 3 (46:25):
That, boy, they got that guitar me, so they have.
Speaker 6 (46:34):
He has certainly one of the most maybe I don't
want to say the most, but that is about as
uniquely identifiable as a voice as you can have.
Speaker 3 (46:43):
Like, nobody sounds like Ozzy.
Speaker 6 (46:46):
He sounds in his own I mean, I can't even
think of another singer that sounds close to that. He's
got his own unique tambour that's unlike really anything else,
and he is so identifiable. Obviously, we've been playing Black
Sabbath and Izie music all day long on the Eagle,
and I would imagine that'll be one of our main
(47:06):
themes all week long as well.
Speaker 3 (47:07):
I was just thinking, like the number of tributes and
statements and whatever that's gonna happen the next two or
three days gonna be overwhelming. Oh yeah, we mentioned the
last segment.
Speaker 8 (47:17):
Even someone is Modernist post Malone, who did a song
with him which was a huge hit five years ago,
and then with everyone else who's been with him forever.
Speaker 6 (47:25):
You know, I really don't think we can overstate the
importance of that reality show. Yeah, in terms of like
there's no way that a post Malone wants to do
something with Ozzie without that reality show because It bridged
him to an entirely new audience and really made a
reason for him to continue to make music.
Speaker 3 (47:47):
That show came out in two thousand and two. Wow,
twenty three years.
Speaker 7 (47:51):
I mean, I want to say that was one of
the first big like family reality shows. We had Real
World and stuff, but this was a whole new thing
that broke round for everything.
Speaker 3 (48:01):
What year was that, two to five? So in two like,
seeing that, I was like, wow, man, he is he's
had a hard life. You know, he's not doing very
well and he can't really speak, yeah, speak very well.
But he kept it going for a lot longer. Yeah,
obviously his mumble bit was was insane, I mean yeah,
and he leaned into the mumble bit.
Speaker 8 (48:23):
And I didn't watch the show, but like, I just
watched the soup that had the recap of all of
the reality shows, and they made fun of that show
so much because Sharon is crazy and then her daughter
Kelly was nuts.
Speaker 3 (48:35):
Yeah, and Jack would not his name Jack. Jack kind
of looked like the lead singer of Harvey Danger. But
so Sharon.
Speaker 6 (48:43):
Also, she's got a really interesting story because Ozzie was
left for dead in the late seventies. She got him
cleaned him up, got him back out on the road
and built and she was obviously a very savvy business lady.
And was she on a Mayormerican idol. She ended up
being on one of those shows, America's Got Talent. I
can't remember which one, but she was a judge on
(49:06):
one of those shows. Because that platform that was the
Osbourne's or whatever that thing was called, it just all
four of them became famous on their own.
Speaker 3 (49:16):
Yeah, And.
Speaker 6 (49:19):
Honestly, like, if you look at it, Ozzy's kind of
the butt of the joke on that show. Yeah, it's like, oh,
look at our dumb heavy metal dad that no one
can understand, you know.
Speaker 3 (49:29):
And but that that was an empire onto its own.
Speaker 6 (49:33):
If you look at Ozzy, he had a huge career
in the late sixties and the early to mid seventies
as the lead singer of Black Sabbath. He had a
huge solo career as a metal icon solo artist in
the eighties, and then he came back ten years later
in the two thousands as a reality TV show. I mean,
he had three completely separate careers that are all legendary
(49:55):
on their own.
Speaker 8 (49:56):
Wow, she had apparently Sharon had made a post about
Malcolm Jamal Warner about three hours before Ozzie died.
Speaker 3 (50:03):
Wow, fucking rip to him. So very weird, very weird.
Rest in peace. Ozzy Osbourne passed away at the age
of seventy six. All right, we wrap up today's show
with a little Dallas Cowboys action. What is the biggest
controversy in Dallas Cowboys land right now? That's coming away
in just about three minutes. Right here on the Eagle.
Speaker 6 (50:21):
All day long, we've been talking about Ozzy Osbourne has
passed away at the age of seventy six.
Speaker 3 (50:26):
We just did last two segments talking about it.
Speaker 6 (50:28):
If you miss anything we do post the podcast, you
can go back and listen, no doubt. All week long
we'll be talking about Ozzie playing some music. Course, you
know you're gonna expect to hear that music right here
on the Eagle.
Speaker 3 (50:39):
But right now it's time for this Cowboy surprise.
Speaker 8 (50:59):
All yesterday, the Cowboys have their State of the Team address.
It's Jerry Jones, It's Steven Jones, It's Brian Schottenheimer. The
big story though, is that Michaeh Parsons wants to get
a new contract. And uh, here's the first question. To Jerry,
will Michael practice before his contract?
Speaker 4 (51:14):
Well, everybody here is under contract.
Speaker 12 (51:16):
When you're up there in that top ten percent, so
to speak, of the league, and that top quarter tile
of your team, leadership is really big, and leadership exhibits
himself when you're negotiating as well.
Speaker 4 (51:28):
I'm appreciative of Michael being here.
Speaker 12 (51:30):
We've got a player that we've a docked him for
not being here during off season workout, as you well know,
and we will find him for that.
Speaker 3 (51:39):
Okay, just kind of mentioning Trevon Diggs. They're homies, right
dark michaeh Yeah, Okay.
Speaker 8 (51:44):
Travon's always on Micah's podcast. Yeah, so Micah is there now.
Micah is under contract for twenty four million dollars this year.
So that's what Jerry's pointed in. He's under contract and
that's the that's the business that Jerry's going to be.
IND's like, what do you mean we don't have to
do anything? What does make this year twenty four million dollars?
Speaker 3 (52:06):
That's good chunk change, good chunk change. And they could
franchise him, right, good franchise it franchise or twice, which
would be what per like the first time. Okay, is
he a linebacker, is he a defensive end? He's a
pass rusher. Okay, he'd get up to probably thirty thirty five.
I mean, I mean they're kind of get a deal done, yeah,
or they would have traded him by now, Like I mean,
obviously they're dysfunctional organization. But if you didn't think he
(52:29):
was worth it, you should have traded him, right, This
is what Jerry wants. He wanted to have this press
conference and talk about it. I saw a good guy,
Kevin Carkey's doing the ring.
Speaker 8 (52:38):
Here's a ESPN now and he had a good, good,
uh good take today and it was if Jerry Jones
was I wanted to have made a deal. How you
win the next three super Bowls but you have no
action in front of the live microphone.
Speaker 3 (52:52):
Jerry would say, no deal. And he's right.
Speaker 8 (52:56):
If you tell Jerry you can't speak to the media,
no press conferences, no radio shows, but you get three
super bowls for how long?
Speaker 3 (53:04):
For three years? Three super bowls? Okay, she would say no,
I think that's accurate. There'urate because he knows the one
constant through all these years, as the valuation of the
Cowboys says skyrocket. It is him talking, so he thinks
that him talking and doing all this is the most
valuable thing they have, right uh ar chain kN Are
(53:25):
you frustrated that the deal's not done with Mikeel.
Speaker 4 (53:27):
Not at all? I have we do, and I don't
mean this.
Speaker 12 (53:31):
I have things undone dangling participles, I bet I have
twenty of them every day, and some pretty serious.
Speaker 4 (53:37):
Here is, you can't have it all done at the
same time. It doesn't work that way.
Speaker 12 (53:41):
I was looking at this documentary and I spent some
time going back in them.
Speaker 4 (53:47):
It Smith negotiations.
Speaker 3 (53:48):
I mean, we're just a shameless plug for Netflix. That
happened about five times yesterday out of nowhere. Even after
he would say I don't spend any time looking back.
He mentioned the documentary that's coming out next But you
know it's crazy. I mean, we all could. We've been
around him so long and listening for so long. We
all know what he's saying. But if you just take
(54:10):
those words and just listen to him out of context,
that sounds like the most unhinged insanity I've ever heard.
Dangling participles. Though he's been playing that hit for a
long time, it's grosser I don't even know what it means.
I've got a bunch of unfinished business dangling. Oh no,
I've got an energy contract over here, I've got oil
business contract over here. You know, Uh, okay, what about
(54:31):
it costing more? Though, like you know TJ. Watt just signed,
so you could have got this done months ago, possibly
and you have saved money.
Speaker 4 (54:38):
He used to comprise that.
Speaker 12 (54:40):
Let's say buick for I remember when they were five
thousand dollars, believe it or not, and today I don't
know what they sailed for, but it's a lot more
than five thousand dollars. I've seen them go dead at
five thousand dollars, and I'm seeing them go dead at
fifty thousand dollars. It's just the times you're in and
just the money here in I'm not trying to be cute.
I'm not at all concerned about a contract that involves
(55:02):
and will affect that in any way. I can't emphasize
that or not, so.
Speaker 3 (55:07):
Abuw it What a weird way to explain inflation.
Speaker 8 (55:11):
Yeah, and not in being wrong on it too, though
you still would have saved money hypothetically. Now he may
look at it as I'm saving sixteen million dollars on
it right now by paying him twenty four million to
god in play.
Speaker 3 (55:21):
So but I don't know.
Speaker 8 (55:24):
Uh So Shoty gets to talking here, and then Jerry
comes in on top of Shoddy at the end, and
the question is more like, so, what happens if Micah
doesn't play in games?
Speaker 14 (55:32):
We're committed to having him take that next step, not
just as a player but as a leader.
Speaker 12 (55:38):
Just because we signed him doesn't mean we're going to
have him. He was hurt six games last year. Seriously,
we've signed I remember signing a player for the highest
paid at the position in the league and he got
knocked out two thirds of the year, Dark Prescott.
Speaker 4 (55:52):
So there's a lot of things you can think about.
Speaker 8 (55:55):
Dacks over there throwing a football through a tire. Wait,
hold it right, as a long time ago. Uh and
Michael has four games last year, not six. So Jerry's
wrong and just talking out his ass.
Speaker 6 (56:07):
Isn't it silly though to talk about signing the context
of injuries and signing players unless it's an always injured player.
Speaker 3 (56:15):
Oh just wait, I mean it's weird. It's football, bro,
It's the NFL. You guys know this. But if he
doesn't get out on the mic and do this. He's
not in the narrative right, and he's inserting what he
thinks is the most valuable piece the whole thing. It's
all yesterday was about.
Speaker 8 (56:28):
Uh Okay, So Michael goes on the Undertaker podcast and
saying that the Joneses have complicated this?
Speaker 3 (56:33):
What about that?
Speaker 4 (56:34):
Of all of the people that I've set down with
as a player, Michael Parson is.
Speaker 3 (56:39):
As great Michael Parson. Michael Michael Parson. Okay, well, hold on?
Has anyone gone out there and claimed that Twitter account?
Speaker 5 (56:50):
Yet?
Speaker 3 (56:50):
That's the power? Who is Michael Parson singer?
Speaker 12 (56:55):
Of all of the people that I've set down with
as a player, Michael part is as savvy and knowledgeable
and understanding of his financial business relative to football as
any player I've ever been around.
Speaker 4 (57:08):
Now, he's smart.
Speaker 3 (57:10):
Jerry's Michael Parsons. So that's it, Michael old on, I
want to see who this is?
Speaker 6 (57:17):
Okay, So if you go right now at Michael Parson
joined August two thousand and nine. He's got three he's
following three and has two followers, and he hasn't tweeted
since twenty ten.
Speaker 3 (57:31):
He's either dead or a Russian bot. Can Michael Parson
have a resurgence on Twitter? Hey, Jerry, have you talked
to Michael's agent yet?
Speaker 12 (57:40):
I've talked with people that have talked to him. Let's
put it like that, Michael, I don't necessarily talk to
these agents. So I don't necessarily talk to attorneys.
Speaker 6 (57:49):
And hell, I don't even talk to my daughter. Hey man, dude,
Charlotte and him communicate all the time.
Speaker 3 (57:55):
I'm mad. The other one.
Speaker 12 (57:56):
I do stuff everywhere, and I don't necessarily talk to
the people that are hired to do certain things. I
talk to the principles ninety percent.
Speaker 3 (58:04):
Of the time. Okay. I do like the phrase, I
do stuff everywhere. You step everywhere. Okay, what's the hold
up here?
Speaker 9 (58:12):
It's not productive to talk about any details about what's
holding what up?
Speaker 3 (58:16):
Okay, great, Steven's like, we're gonna talk about this.
Speaker 5 (58:20):
That's the only thing I would comment on.
Speaker 12 (58:22):
The other thing I would say is, for real, five years,
there's a lot of water under the bridge.
Speaker 3 (58:29):
Okay, Now this is the most insane thing he said. Okay,
because this is this is really crazy.
Speaker 5 (58:33):
That's the only thing I would comment on.
Speaker 12 (58:35):
The Other thing I would say is a contractor four
or five years. There's a lot of water under the bridge.
If you step out there and do something in the
first two or three you can get hit by a car.
And so there's a lot to look at over a
lot of years that could make a big difference.
Speaker 3 (58:51):
I can't give Michael Bares a contract. What if you
gets hit by call Oh my god, yeah, anyone?
Speaker 1 (58:56):
It is.
Speaker 6 (58:57):
It's insane that like the justification that he's hang out
loud where everyone's like liter on he's saying that out loud.
We were gonna give Rico dowdle On a contract, But
what if he gets eaten by a bear? And now
that he now that he's out there on the East
coast during hurricane season.
Speaker 3 (59:12):
Hell, okay, now this question Joseph Hoyt, who just went
to the Dallas Morning News, And Joseph Hoyt is asking,
so you had no problem getting done a deal done
with Trayvon Diggs and Terrence Steele. Why why why do
you have to you did that early? Why can't you
do that with Micah?
Speaker 4 (59:28):
Frankly, Frankly, should we have waited on digs and steal
Oh you brought them up?
Speaker 5 (59:38):
I didn't well, the other thing is the willingness.
Speaker 8 (59:44):
Dart Steel's just over there getting some reps in practicing,
is off the mindset, and he's like, wait.
Speaker 3 (59:48):
Hold on, what did I do?
Speaker 6 (59:50):
Ben knows you can hear the weights in the background
because the weight room tent is right by that tennis court.
I think what he says that you hear Terrence Steele
drop a he found weight on his toe.
Speaker 3 (01:00:01):
I mean he basically said they were willing to do it. Yeah,
and so that's why they did it. And now we
hate those deals and we hate those deals.
Speaker 8 (01:00:09):
JJ Watt, who's now a CBS commentator, said anytime you
can publicly take a dig at your star quarterback and
your star pass rusher simultaneously right before the season begins,
you just gotta take it. Nothing makes guys want to
fight for you more than earing out upset you are
that they got hurt while.
Speaker 3 (01:00:26):
Fighting for you. He's leaving out Treyvon Diggs and that
Terren Steel are like God, Now, Treyon Diggs is a
little bit deserved on his part, Like I don't have
problem with them calling it Treyvon Diggs right now. Yeah,
but Terren still, dude, he did Yeah, you wanted to
be better.
Speaker 6 (01:00:43):
Do you guys think Jerry kind of also partly holds
Treyvon Diggs against Michael Parsons at all. Probably, oh may,
I think it's probably a part of it because he
did say something about leadership, like cut right off, the
quarterback leaders should be start talking about Hey, well Digs
ain't here.
Speaker 3 (01:00:57):
What kind of leader are you? You can't get your
best friend to camp?
Speaker 6 (01:01:00):
Wow Ah, great stuff, KT, It's gonna be another amazing
Cowboys season. We start cussing the Cowboys all right. Thanks
for hanging out with us today, a sad day. We'll
keep bringing you more information as we get it about
the passing of Ozzy Osbourne. We'll be playing his music
in Black Sabbath music all week long. I'll never forget
the time that KT looked Michael Parson dead in his
(01:01:23):
eye and he said.
Speaker 8 (01:01:24):
Thank you for participating in our Texas Iconic Food Bracket.
We'll see you tomorrow with more, and Michael Parson was confused. Christina,
stick around and play some music there, You're going
Speaker 3 (01:01:34):
Yeah, Well, I'm gonna get my sock bag dude that
I had to take a poop