Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Hey, thanks for listening to the Cadino and Rich Podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:04):
Be sure to catch us live every weekday from five
to seven Eastern to the four Pacific on Fox Sports Radio.
Speaker 3 (00:10):
Find your local station for Covino.
Speaker 4 (00:11):
Rich at Foxsports Radio dot com, or stream us live
every day on the iHeartRadio app by searching FSR.
Speaker 1 (00:19):
I'm going to give some words of wisdom, and I
know Kavino director are always positive here on Fox Sports Radio.
That's why you hear the great applause when the guys
come in every hour. You hear the crowd. I feel
like there was louder ones when they're actually here. Is
there or is it? Because yeah, there it is. Yes.
They also have eighteen producers on their show, so there's
(00:39):
more people that's always clapping back here. Yes, I know
they always try to be positive. But when you come
at us in what we're talking about, Okay, if you
say you don't want us talking about Kendrick Lamar anymore,
I'm gonna talk about Kendrick Lamar more and more and more.
(01:00):
Don't give me this. It's a slow news day. It's
a not slow news day. Guess there are no slow
news days. There are no slow sports days. In sports
talk radio every single day of your life. You can
talk about sports every single day. And I know that
this may seem like a music conversation, but it happened
in our world of sports, so I still think that
(01:21):
it's there.
Speaker 5 (01:22):
Yeah, And you're like you said, it is the gift
that keeps on giving.
Speaker 1 (01:26):
And a week later on social media, if you are
on social media, it is still prevalent. And if Moncey
and I are here talking about how Auburn is the
number one ranked team in college basketball for the sixth
straight week, and you don't care about college basketball, guess what,
you may turn the channel because you're not interested in it.
If you like Moncey and me, or you like Cavino
(01:47):
and Rich and those guys are truly one of the
best at them. They could talk about a phone book,
not just reading names about the phone book, but just
talk about the yellow pages and they'd make it interesting
for twenty minutes. They're a chemist, is up there with
the best of them. And that's why you listen. Don't
turn away just because of the topic. We're here to
talk and entertain. And if you tell me that get
(02:09):
off this topic, then you can get off my radio.
Speaker 6 (02:12):
We're getting it right now.
Speaker 1 (02:14):
Sorry. I hate it when people say slow, slow news
day and sports. I hate it when radio hosts say
that not much to talk about, bull crap. There's tons
to talk about. There's always tons to talk about. And
you know what, when you get out of your job,
and if you worked on President's Day right now and
you're in the Central time zone IOA, Sam and I
both agree, the best time zone that there is, and
(02:36):
you're coming home from work after working this holiday, you
just want to have some fun. You want to listen
to people having some fun. And I think if you
know and Rich do it the best. And that's all
that we try to do here. So that's that's my
bit of a rant. And yeah, I may be mad
that Margaret and Danielle may not be back on Real
Housewives in New Jersey. I don't know. It just happened
within the last hour.
Speaker 6 (02:55):
I don't know if it's a real report or not.
Speaker 1 (02:58):
And there may be no more food. Like I'm just
it may have really just got me riled up a
little bit, but I just I had to get it
off my chest.
Speaker 5 (03:07):
You know, Dan, right now, if we had a cocktail,
I would cheerose you because it dropped the mic.
Speaker 6 (03:11):
Man that was well said, yes, no.
Speaker 1 (03:14):
You know that wrong Preller Forever tweets in says he disagrees.
He doesn't tell us to stop talking about it. Yeah,
you know, don't give me this. Don't give this. I
cannot stand that. We're here to have a good time.
We hope you enjoy us.
Speaker 5 (03:27):
We're having a grand time, and we are broadcasting live
from the tyreg dot com studios.
Speaker 1 (03:32):
Tyreg dot Time, Andy Cohen, Well you get.
Speaker 5 (03:36):
There an unmatched selection, fast reshipping, free road hazard protection,
and over ten thousand recommended installers.
Speaker 6 (03:42):
Tyrek dot com, the way tired buying should be. Dan,
You're not wrong. Keep going, man going.
Speaker 1 (03:48):
I would, I would.
Speaker 6 (03:50):
I don't even know what tweet you're talking about.
Speaker 1 (03:52):
We have a tribute, we have a tribute to Mike Tyson.
Speaker 4 (03:54):
Well, you going on that round made me think of
one memorable SoundBite from back in the day from Mike Tys.
Remember this, do you.
Speaker 1 (04:01):
Have a problem turn off your station?
Speaker 5 (04:04):
Yep?
Speaker 4 (04:04):
One of the all time exchanges.
Speaker 1 (04:06):
Do you remember that? Dan?
Speaker 4 (04:07):
No, Oh my gosh, so he was on live TV. Okay,
because Covino loves to do a Tyson, this is very
appropriate for this time slot. And he was on live
TV with a local station and the guy said, uh,
talk about your rage, Michael, and uh, and Mike's like,
what do you mean rage? And then uh and then
he got a little heated and then he said an
f bom on live TV. And the guy's like, what
(04:29):
do you need to talk that way, Michael? And he
said this, do you have a problem turn off your station?
Speaker 6 (04:38):
Mike Tyson.
Speaker 5 (04:39):
Every time he talks, it just makes me laugh. Is
the sound of Mike Tyson makes me laugh?
Speaker 1 (04:43):
I'm sorry. Oh, I've never heard that before, never heard
I don't even know what the clip looks like. Oh,
I gotta send you a clip. Yeah, you do find
it listeners. It's great, all right.
Speaker 6 (04:54):
Moving on, moving on, moving on.
Speaker 1 (04:58):
And the guy he tweeted, and he knows who I'm
talking about because he just told me I suck. He
literally just tweeted and he told me I suck. But
it's okay. I'm totally fine with it. It's the straw that
broke the camel's back. This and on the heels of
Real Housewives of New Jersey possibly shaking up their cast.
Speaker 6 (05:14):
This person doesn't even have a profile.
Speaker 1 (05:16):
Pig I get it and it's not it's not a
fact of feeding into trolls. It's just it just is. Oh,
I can't stand that I got it off my chest.
Speaker 6 (05:25):
Yeah, I feel better.
Speaker 1 (05:26):
I feel great, actually really good right now? Good, great
job job. We are in for Covino and Rich here
on Fox Sports Radio. Lots of women's soups today, including
number one Notre Dame, the new number one going up
against number eleven Duke in some Action. We talked yesterday
a little bit on how the women's game needs to
(05:47):
find their pocket of Sunday in being the marquee window,
and that was the case, and now they're taking advantage
of President's Day with the NBA going.
Speaker 5 (05:55):
On and on Sam's favorite network, like what a day
for Sam.
Speaker 1 (05:59):
Yes, that's the Maryland Michigan game yesterday on the NBC
network and on Saturday night a weekend long celebration of
Saturday Night Live and what I find so great about it?
And Isaac just we did the Doug Gottlieb Show earlier,
(06:20):
just talked about it as his favorite thing from the weekend.
On watching the special last night. They had the musical
special on Saturday and it was long. Trust me, it
was long. Sam is catching up to it on his
recorded dvr. I saw parts of both the musical edition
and of the fifty year tribute last night that they
(06:41):
did and like anything, and I think Sam, you put
it best. It was hit and miss on some of
the stuff. Isaac the same thing. Some stuff hits, some
stuff misses. But I don't know a person that was
just like I never watched it, never watched like, at
some point in your life, whether it be an high school,
whether it be in college, Saturday Night Live entered your life.
(07:04):
And I think that's what the fifty Years was trying
to encapsulate. And it took them like three hours and
forty five minutes to do it. Good job to get
fifty years into that much. But I thought of how
they did it, in the names and everybody involved. It
was a It was a very good broadcast both Saturday
Night with the music and then Sunday night with the
overall show.
Speaker 5 (07:21):
Yeah, I did not watch anything yet and I do
intend to watch it. I didn't know it was two
different specials, and I keep seeing clips and I actually
have not hit the clip with volumes.
Speaker 6 (07:32):
Because I don't I don't want to see it on
a small screen.
Speaker 5 (07:35):
I want to see it on TV, but I am
very like they got me to want to watch it,
you know what I mean.
Speaker 6 (07:40):
I didn't know what was happening.
Speaker 1 (07:41):
I completely forgot.
Speaker 6 (07:43):
I loved SNL growing up.
Speaker 5 (07:45):
I don't watch it as often now, but sometimes if
I am at home going through the channels on a
Saturday night and it's on, I'm like, oh, let me
sit through this skit, you know, and if it's good,
I'll sit through the next two skits.
Speaker 6 (07:56):
But sometimes it's not.
Speaker 1 (07:57):
I think I think there's generational ownership of Saturday Night Live,
where you own your generation. I look back at some
of the skits, like I'll tell you when Rob Schneider
would do is making copies like that, Like that was
that was me in early nineties, junior high, middle school,
(08:18):
of what it would be going into high school looking.
Speaker 7 (08:21):
At everyno the Dann Sama Raman walking to the printer
making cuppies Bunniest.
Speaker 1 (08:29):
You wanted that skit like you waited, you you tuned in,
you wanted that skit. Now I'm forty eight years old,
would probably not what I would want in the first
segment or two of Saturday Night Live. But back then
there was something about it. There was something that that
hit with it, and it was in my generation. So
now like it's partial ownership, there are cast members of
(08:53):
Saturday Night Live that are part of your generation and
a part of your group, and that's that was a
part of it. And that's what I find so interesting
about it is whether Manzy, you're younger than me, Jason
and I are about the same age, Isaac's a little
bit younger, Sam and Monzy somewhat in the same ballpark,
but we've got it probably about twenty years of range
(09:13):
within this group year and we would all probably have
different things or different stuff from Saturday Night Live that
we took And I think that's what's so unique about it, which,
by the way, is not unlike sports in saying, guess
what eighties NFL was the best? I know people would
say nineties NFL. You may say two thousands NBA was,
you know, twenty ten NBA. Like everybody has their generational grasp,
(09:35):
and I think that's also the case with Saturday Night Live.
Speaker 5 (09:38):
You know, it's really crazy to think about fifty years,
Like if I really think of who came out of
Saturday Night Live, we've probably probably forgotten some of the
stars that came out of that show.
Speaker 1 (09:50):
When you watch the specially, you're like, Billy Crystal was
on the Cabs eighties.
Speaker 5 (09:54):
That's what the little vis happen, right, Like the little
videos they've seen. I'm like, oh my gosh, I forgot
that that's where they started, that, that's.
Speaker 6 (10:01):
Where it all came from fifty years. That is impressive.
Speaker 7 (10:05):
I didn't even know John mulaney was a writer on
the show until Yes, So I just thought he was
a stand up comedian.
Speaker 1 (10:10):
Really, you didn't know.
Speaker 7 (10:11):
I didn't know he was a writer on the show
until I saw that part of the tribute last night.
Speaker 1 (10:15):
Wow, I thought that was his whole deal, right, I just.
Speaker 7 (10:20):
I just started seeing stand up of him and I'm like, oh,
this guy's funny. And but I really didn't know he
was a writer. Tina Fey did Weekend up Date, and
she was a little bit more in sketches and stuff.
Speaker 1 (10:29):
I don't remember him being in. He wasn't in any sketches,
was he when he was a writer?
Speaker 8 (10:32):
No?
Speaker 5 (10:32):
I don't think. Yeah, I don't think he was. You're
you're right, But there's so many writers.
Speaker 1 (10:37):
Who was looking at the scrolling credits and being like oh,
John Mullaney.
Speaker 7 (10:40):
I'll remember that name. Like once he became more prominent,
then I was like, oh yeah, okay, but.
Speaker 1 (10:43):
Then I didn't know.
Speaker 6 (10:44):
I didn't know that credits.
Speaker 7 (10:45):
Well, you know they go so fast at the end
of the show, right, you know, everyone's doing their hugging
and stuff.
Speaker 1 (10:50):
So yeah, there's there's when you mentioned Chris Rock. For me,
it's Rock, it's far It's Rob Schneider. That is that's
like my lineup.
Speaker 7 (11:06):
And really Chris Rock is on because he was only there.
He even said he's like I barely got in any sketches,
you know, he said his time there is more.
Speaker 1 (11:14):
Than I think that maybe you would. Let I mean
he maybe maybe wasn't Farley, but I think that there was. Yeah,
there was, there was some absolute Chris Rock. But there's
like that's that's the group of like that would be
my lineup. I was telling that. I was telling Jason.
They did this great Memoriam and I don't think I'm
ruining anything by saying this, but of stuff that maybe
(11:36):
they shouldn't do anymore and stuff that wouldn't be appropriate.
And they they did the Schmids gay commercial with Adam
Sandler and Chris Farley and it is it is. It
is so hilarious and it the the thing though that
unfortunately happened with that because this kind of ties into
what they did Saturday Night. They don't have the music
(11:56):
rights to Van Halen anymore on the skit, and so Isaac,
I don't know if you remember the but that commercial
I know Jason Stewart does. It was so hilarious and
so funny that now you go to YouTube like it's
lost forever because now the song isn't used. But like
that's that's the sort of stuff that you go back
to and you're just it's the funniest thing thirty years
(12:19):
ago and it's still the funniest thing today.
Speaker 7 (12:22):
It was it beautiful girls, was this song right? That's
just how it sounded like what you were I don't
remember the exact sounds. On top of the world, the
top of the world, Okay, okay, that's what it was.
Then you just go back play that song on your
phone and pair it out there, you'd be like the
full Schwitz Gay experience.
Speaker 1 (12:36):
It's so great when you see the decrepit pool, you
know exactly what's going on, Just like so many of
the other skits, but that that you remember the Chippendales,
Chiales and the Chippendales was so like gosh, like that
that just you talk about laughter and laughter and laughter.
And then you hear like years later about Farley and
the stuff that he went through, and even Patrick Swayze
(12:57):
and dealing with some of that stuff. You have a
new appreciation from, but you also remember at the time
of just how funny that was and how great those
actors were. I just thought it was I thought it
was great.
Speaker 9 (13:08):
And that's a sign of truly classic comedy that it
ages well because a lot of stuff they do is
totally topical. But you know, knock on wood fifty years
from now, if they still have you know the world,
if they still have YouTube. You said the Chris Farley
Chippendale sketch, Will Ferrell as Alex Trebek hosted a Celebrity
(13:30):
Jeopardy with Darryl Hammond as Sean Connery and with.
Speaker 1 (13:35):
McDonald Norm McDonald as Burt Reynolds.
Speaker 9 (13:38):
Those are classic and timeless, and even from a sports perspective,
you cannot beat the Peyton Manning United Way sketch because
that was the very first thing that kind of launched
Peyton Manning as a personality, for him to have that
caricature of him as like a rogue for the first
(14:01):
time because his his reputation there was totally as a straight,
kind of boring, you know, football quarterback and nothing more.
That Peyton Manning SNL hosting and United Way sketch I
think was the launching point of him being the personality
that he is today.
Speaker 1 (14:17):
I don't think you're wrong. And the funny thing is
is you you used a phrase there where I just
looked at him as he was being such football guy
that it didn't matter if they were eight year old kids,
that you should know the route that you're running and
like that it's it's but it's but it's your point. Yeah,
I think that it did. I think it completely launched everything.
Speaker 4 (14:36):
I saw something on social media and I don't intend
on watching it. I think I'm gonna I'm going to
consume the fiftieth anniversary like I've consumed SNL for like
the past fifteen years, and that's on Twitter, just like snippet. Yeah, yeah,
if somebody else tell me what was good. But like
I did see something and I think they redid the
David Spades sketch where he's greeting he's a Steward or Stuart.
(15:00):
Bye bye bye, bye bye bye, one of my favorites.
I totally forgot. I totally forgot that I did that.
So I need to go back and watch those. Those
are so cool where you had the customers complaining and
he would just be like bye bye, right. It was incredible.
Speaker 6 (15:14):
I think that I forget. What Isaac said really made
me think of like Sena.
Speaker 5 (15:19):
Has brought a lot of people to hosts who you
didn't think would be funny, Like it shows us different
sides to singers, athletes, and I don't know if any
show has ever been able to do that, Like you know,
everyone hosts the show.
Speaker 6 (15:34):
Everyone who's anybody will host the show, and I.
Speaker 5 (15:37):
See skits and I'm like, I didn't think you could
actually be funny and be an actor, and that's a
side that I don't I don't know if any other
show has been successful.
Speaker 1 (15:44):
It's probably why there have been so few athletes that
haven't been asked back, But Barkley's been asked back four times, yes,
And I think that that's that's a reason why. And
when we grew up watching Charles Barkley, you wouldn't think
that this would be the Charles Barkley that there is
to the Bayton Manning point, completely different situations, but yeah,
he was he And like if you want to call
(16:05):
the rock in athlete, they still call it the wrestler,
still show an actor like portion of it, but like
true athlete, only Charles Barkley is the only one who's
hosted multiple times.
Speaker 9 (16:14):
And you know, that's a great point because on the
flip side, in a counterintuitive way, nothing cements you as
having made it in the public consciousness, as being a
notable person, as being parodied on Saturday Night Live when
they would parody LeVar Ball. That's a sign that you've
made it. I mean, they said, you know you've made
(16:36):
it as a person. If sixty Minutes does a profile
on you, you've made it as a crook. If sixty
Minutes shows up to expose you, you've made it as
a famous person. If you're big enough that you get
parodied by Saturday Night Live.
Speaker 4 (16:48):
A notorious person, Yeah, yeah, you're always for the greatest reasons.
But that's true.
Speaker 1 (16:53):
Ray Romano Sports Center, he did his own like that.
Those are iconic stuff you want to hear from you
eight seven seven nine on on Fox eight seven seven
nine nine six six three six nine.
Speaker 8 (17:05):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (17:06):
The SNL parts that stand out there are there are
so many sports I mean doub bears, I mean who
could That's when that started, right, Yeah, yes, I can.
Speaker 4 (17:18):
Be more sick of that phrase.
Speaker 1 (17:20):
And it all started the super fans, right, and it happened.
It happened in the nineties, like during the Bulls Run, like.
Speaker 4 (17:28):
Goodman was it was the guest I want to say,
the first guest that they incorporated that with was Goodman
and then two other.
Speaker 1 (17:34):
Guys and George Went Fame. Yeah, George Went was the
one for sure, I know, and far least one.
Speaker 9 (17:43):
Yes, And they're all having heart attacks during the second
because they.
Speaker 1 (17:46):
Eat stuff like their predictions. Like you knew the joke
was coming, and you still like it was still funny. Yes, yeah,
eight seven seven nine on Fox. It's eight seven seven
nine six six three six nine hit Mancy up at
Manzy Belogna. You can find me at dan Byer on Fox.
The music stuff was great as well, and mentioning that
talking about on how they just launched so many careers
(18:09):
and or they knew who was about to launch and
that allowed a stepping stone or a virtual launch of
a lot of careers in the music stage, because they
would put performers up there that we're about to become big,
but then SNL put them over that hump.
Speaker 6 (18:27):
Absolutely.
Speaker 3 (18:28):
Fox Sports Radio has the best sports talk lineup in
the nation. Catch all of our shows at Foxsports Radio
dot com and within the iHeartRadio app. Search FSR to
listen live. Michael, Jay.
Speaker 2 (18:44):
Nan Meyer, Monttebanos, Kevin Nealon, Isaac Low and Grind, Cherryo, Terry,
Jason Stewart, Dana car I was Sam featuring Cooviy.
Speaker 1 (19:04):
You know what, Rich Jean, Roddy, Danny g.
Speaker 9 (19:09):
Mike who runs this plus you never heard of him?
Speaker 1 (19:13):
Yeah, just just to be clear, this is Coveno and
Rich Mike does not run this place at all. He
does have the editing department. He does not have any
power to do anything or say anything. Welcome in. It
is a President's day. She's Mancy Belania's half the people
we named are here. It's just gonna be up to
you to decide who they are. Moncey is here, I'm here,
Dan Bayer and you can decipher the rest on our SNL.
Speaker 6 (19:36):
That's pretty good. That was good, not planned, well executed.
Speaker 7 (19:40):
That was a little tribute to the late great Don Pardo,
who was He's been gone to I think about eleven years,
but he was the legendary introductory voice for an all
voiceover for SNL for like its first thirty five years.
Speaker 1 (19:53):
I want to say, so thirty years, good job. I
was Sam Don Pardo, He was great. SNL celebrates fifty.
So many ties to the sports world and so much
more that we loved. Susan's in Florida. Susan, when we
say I said L fifty, what comes into your mind?
Speaker 9 (20:12):
I think of one of the episodes or was Kandiceburg
and dan Ackroyd when he said it was okay to
give someone for children a bag of broken glass?
Speaker 8 (20:21):
Do you remember that one?
Speaker 1 (20:23):
No, it's the Halloween costume.
Speaker 7 (20:25):
Man I was deferred to. I always say that one. Yep,
that's going way back to one of the first few
seasons it is.
Speaker 10 (20:32):
Yeah, definitely appreciated, Susan.
Speaker 6 (20:34):
Wait what it explained, because that sounds hilarious.
Speaker 1 (20:38):
Well, still kids got broken glass? Yeah.
Speaker 7 (20:41):
So dan Ackroy's playing this like sleazy salesman or something,
and he's like he just puts a bunch of broken
glass in a bag and he tries to sell it
either as a costume or as just like a toy,
and you know it's just ludicrous from the get go.
So I think I something about that. Did you just
type in dan Akrod bag of glass?
Speaker 1 (21:00):
You'll get it? Oscar tweets in much respect to the
wrestling trash talk skit between the Rock and Bobby moynihan.
Bobby moynihan has been in some very popular skits. I
don't think he gets as much. He's funny, yeah, underratedly funny, yeah,
completely underrated.
Speaker 4 (21:15):
Susan's example reminded me of a real old one. Do
you guys remember the land shark bit where a guy
was trying to like show up and burglarize a place
and he would knock on the door and the woman
would be like, who is it, and he'd be like,
land shark. He was hoping that she would fall for that.
(21:37):
There was a land shark knocking on her door and
open and then he could he could burglari it.
Speaker 1 (21:41):
See the great thing about Saturday Night Live. I don't
know if you guys experienced this with your significant others.
My wife hasn't watched a full episode in probably six years,
it may even be ten years. However, every Saturday night
at ten thirty, she goes, SNL's coming on in an hour,
or if it's eleven fifteen, turn it on Channel four SNL.
(22:02):
Like we don't watch it regularly, I will. I will say,
She goes, hey, can you record so and so is
hosting SNL? And then it just sits on my DV.
Sits there, cause just sits, but it's so ingrained in
her mind and a part of her life. Yep. Now
life takes over and she never gets to it. You
two's performing. Guess what it sits on the DVR. I
(22:24):
gotta go seven pages down and there's a Saturday Night
Live from November of twenty twenty three that is still unwatched,
probably because you two performed, and I don't have the
heart to delete it. There are some times where I've
done this where I've just if she's been sitting down,
I will just put it on because I am I
am DVR OCD. Like if it gets to a certain point,
(22:48):
I have to start clearing it out, but she's that way.
Speaker 6 (22:50):
It won't just delete it for you.
Speaker 1 (22:52):
Well, I want everything to be saved. Anything I record
like I will be the ultimate delete you want to
be yes, and so that's why I but it's it's
there for years and years.
Speaker 6 (23:03):
I mean I've done that as well.
Speaker 5 (23:04):
When I see somebody is hosting that I like, I'm like,
well record it and then watch it later, and then
sometimes I get to it and sometimes the DVR deletes it.
Speaker 1 (23:11):
For me. You get tied in those because when your
person or like your if it's a musician or an
actor or an athlete, and the episode isn't it as good,
it almost feels like your team lost. Yes, yes, right, like,
oh geez, they didn't put him in a great spot
that didn't work out. Please do well, Please do well.
(23:32):
Please be funny.
Speaker 7 (23:33):
Yes, and it doesn't happen hard to be funny and
especially today, Yes.
Speaker 5 (23:38):
It's hard to be funny.
Speaker 4 (23:39):
I saw some reference to your girl, Taylor Swift. So
she went on SNL and did like a hate song,
like a six minute hate song about Jake Chillenhall. Does
that sound familiar?
Speaker 5 (23:50):
I saw something as well, but I think this was
on the musical night I saw. I haven't seen it,
but that's what I saw as well, that she did
something Sabrina Carpenter did something that we're all kind of
making fun of someone else's song.
Speaker 4 (24:04):
But I think Taylor does this ring about all. She
had like a six minute on SNL when she was
the uh, the musical host.
Speaker 6 (24:12):
Well, she has a song.
Speaker 5 (24:14):
She has a song that all of the swifties have
connected to Jake Jillenhall.
Speaker 6 (24:19):
She did, and that's probably what. Yes, so that is true. Yes,
it's all to it.
Speaker 1 (24:23):
She performed it on Saturday Night Live?
Speaker 6 (24:25):
Is that what it is?
Speaker 1 (24:26):
Stick it to him, stick it to him? Yes, Andy's
in Oregon. Welcome to Camino and rich Andy.
Speaker 11 (24:31):
How are you good about you guys?
Speaker 9 (24:34):
Good Dandy?
Speaker 1 (24:36):
What's asking now on your mind?
Speaker 8 (24:38):
I always think of Robert Downey Junior as suitcase Boy.
I don't know if you guys saw that because he
was on the very long but oh they brought up
they brought Randy quid to bring him out in suitcase
and his head sticking out.
Speaker 1 (24:52):
Do you remember that? Iowa Sam gives a thumbs up
to that? To that? Yeah, sorry, he gave Andy the
look you're talking about suitcase boy? Yes, yes, it's all
it was. He's exit stage right, Sorry about that, Andy,
Oh there there is MANSI brought it up, sure enough,
(25:13):
there it is. Yep, it's a big I didn't even
realize he was on it as well. To Sam's point,
there's guys that were on the show, people that were
on the show that you had no idea that they
were even even stuff like they would do. I mentioned
like the commercials like oops, I crap my pants, like hilarious,
(25:33):
bad idea jeans one that probably shouldn't air today, wouldn't
air today, but absolutely hilarious. The Deep Thoughts by Jack Handy,
like even even if it's just the thirty second like
it continues to this day. My sister still loves the
Deep Thoughts by Jack Handy.
Speaker 7 (25:53):
We actually our family bought the entire book of Deep Thoughts.
Really yeah, I remember pages. I think it's like fifty pages.
To me, they did it like fifty times on the show.
Speaker 1 (26:05):
I was gonna say, because I it was like three
hundred pages, it would have been a lot of deep thoughts.
And I didn't realize that actually happened. And you only
have what thirty episodes of season.
Speaker 7 (26:12):
So when it blew my mind watching the first half
of the special last night, was they said that the
show has had eight hundred and some hosts over the
fifty years, which is just and I'm sure many of
them were duplicates, but that.
Speaker 1 (26:23):
Is just crazy. That is just crazy. John is in Virginia.
We're talking Saturday Night Life. John, welcome in to give
me no one. Rich How are you, I'm the good guys.
How y'all doing great? Great Saturday Love memories? You got
in Italy on us?
Speaker 10 (26:38):
Oh? Absolutely, I got. I'm one of the old school folks.
I like the original cast. But there was an episode
that had a John Belushi doing Samurai Hotel and it
was guest starred by Richard Pryor, and John Belushi told
Richard Pryor your mama son, and it just went from
hell from there.
Speaker 1 (26:57):
Yes, historic, John appreciate it. Nature Boy is sent in
land Shark to me to see via a gift from
Saturday Night Live. Paul is in North Carolina. Paul, welcome
to Comuno and rich Oh, gentlemen.
Speaker 11 (27:11):
Speaking of Don Pardo. At the end of the show,
when the cast would gather on stage and there'd be
music playing, Don Powr used to say the funniest stuff.
I remember when Ralph Nader was hosting, he said, I
don't care what Ralph Nader says on my way home,
I'm going to consume my hot dog.
Speaker 1 (27:28):
So funny, magnificent. Congratulations, just staying to the end, because
not many people do, right, And that's one o'clock Eastern time.
Paul's in Paul's in North Carolina. It's a late night.
Speaker 4 (27:39):
But that was on the Jay Moore's favorite bit lines
about Saturday Night Live. He's like, he kind of like
Chris Rock. He was on the show, but he wasn't
really on the show for that long, and he would
always say that he was the reoccurring character of the
guy that's waved goodbye at the end of the episode.
Speaker 1 (27:57):
It's been a great show tonight, Hate Thank you very much.
Kudos to the NHL for figuring out how to wait
to make their All Star weekend work. The NFL has
tried their darnedness, the NBA has tried their darnedess to
do so, and you just get results like you got
last night. Maybe they've fallen into something with the four
(28:17):
Nations face off. Do you think it would work in
the NBA?
Speaker 5 (28:20):
No, no, because they still wouldn't play defense or care
good point. Yeah, I don't know what the solution is
aside from Just take.
Speaker 9 (28:30):
A Break, mina contribute to potential ideas for the police.
They do know to discuss number one, just to try it.
What they did in Major League Baseball. It ultimately didn't work.
But the winning conference gets home court advantage in the
NBA finals, and the other the US against the World,
meaning US All Stars against a consortium of international players.
Speaker 5 (28:52):
I don't think that the US versus the World would
add competition, even though I like the idea of it.
Speaker 6 (28:58):
The other one they would not allow that. They would
not be okay.
Speaker 5 (29:02):
If the All Star Game had that much value to
it where it gave you home court advantage for the finals.
Speaker 1 (29:07):
Well they would not approve that. I never thought it
worked in Major League Baseball, and I just don't think
especially how Major League Baseball worked out, And I don't
know if you'd do it in the NBA. In Major
League baseball, because you had to have a player on
every team be represented. That means that you had bad
teams represented. And in the end, in the ninth inning, sorry,
(29:28):
some of those guys that are playing are on bad teams,
and so you would have a pitcher whose team is
twenty six games out of first place facing a hitter
whose team's in the last place in eighteen games back
deciding on who would get home field on two teams
that aren't even in it. Yeah, and that was you know,
to me, that was that wasn't right, That wasn't fair
at least reward a team that won the most games.
(29:51):
It may not be equal and fair for who everybody played,
but that would be much better than to have two
guys who are going head to head. Someone hits a
home run off of a relief pitcher who really shouldn't
even have been an All Star anyway.
Speaker 5 (30:04):
You're not wrong, but I do like the I like
the intensity of it, like the idea behind it. I
wish it was better because you're not wrong on how
you just described baseball, and you don't want it to
come down to that moment. But I wish there was
something where it would make it matter.
Speaker 1 (30:24):
It's personal pride, person you touched on it three and
a half hours ago. It's people wanting to care. Yeah,
and if the players aren't going to care, they're not
going to play. If the players do care, it's going
to be a better product, just like anything else. Yep,
she's Watzi Belanio. So I'm Dan Byer. That's Isaac Glowing Crown.
Jason Stewart's here. Isaac Glowin kran is here. Thanks for
that trip down memory lane with SMR past fifty years.
(30:46):
Great great stuff coming up next, we're going to wrap
up the show. There is some news show in the
NFL as well, and it really could be interesting for
one player who's about to be paid. We'll talk about
it next here on Fox Sports Radio.
Speaker 3 (31:00):
Sports Radio has the best sports talk lineup in the nation.
Catch all of our shows at foxsports Radio dot com
and within the iHeartRadio app. Search FSR to listen live.
Speaker 1 (31:13):
Cavino and Rich here on Fox Sports Radio. I hope
you survived your first Sunday without football. Happened yesterday. Maybe
that's why there's a three day weekend. She's wontsos. I'm
Dan Byer in for the guys who are in for
Dan Patrick earlier today on Fox Sports Radio. Guys will
be back in tomorrow. You and I will be back
in for the guys tomorrow.
Speaker 6 (31:33):
We are going to be back in. Very exciting. Thank you.
Speaker 1 (31:37):
I mentioned first weekend without football. Thank you very much
to you as well. With the sign that you're holding
up two bits of news coming from the National Football
League as we look ahead to next season, one of
which comes from the Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles, where
Aj Brown, who was the topic a conversation with the
(31:58):
guys last week, has apparently no desire to be getting
back to the playing field. You pointed this out when
we're together on the Sunday Show on Fox Sports Sunday,
Carrie Rhodes hanging out with us as well. When a
reporter wrote I'm ready for training camp to start at
(32:18):
six o'clock yesterday morning, Elliott shore Parks, who covers the
Eagles for WIP in Philadelphia, j Brown responded with Lebron
Lebron's in the news today, Lebron the what did you say?
Like Winson, like WTF, what the heck are you using? Yeah,
(32:39):
And it got me so worked up yesterday because Aj
Brown always does that. And right when I'm about to
get him give him a pass and say, okay. I
saw how much he was loved by his teammates when
they won, even when he had a fit that Jalen
Hurts didn't hit him on a fly route in the
Super Bowl and he catches a touchdown a short time later.
I just think that AJ Brown's history has shown that
(33:01):
he could be a problem.
Speaker 6 (33:02):
And that's exactly.
Speaker 5 (33:03):
It's the history, because if somebody else would have said that,
it wouldn't have this type of effect. But it's just like, really, dude,
you didn't have to we didn't have to repost and
reply to this.
Speaker 1 (33:13):
Correct.
Speaker 6 (33:13):
You could just scroll down and be like, this guy's crazy,
I'm not ready to go.
Speaker 1 (33:17):
Back, And it would have been it would have been
funnier if he didn't go to Instagram three days prior
and right, I'm already over the Super Bowl win. Now
I'm all about and I'm paraphrasing right, perfecting my craft
and dominating in that's.
Speaker 6 (33:36):
What matters to me. Yes, yes, and the journey matters
to me. This is not as satisfying.
Speaker 5 (33:40):
It's you're right, because had he reposted that with Jimmy
Butler's image of him at the bubble where he's like
leaning over the rail, just exhausted, yes, that would have
been better, right, because it's like, bro, I am tired.
We just ended the season, but instead it went with
a different route where it's again, it's because of the
history and you're just like AJ Brown just just scroll by,
(34:03):
you don't have to just scroll on by.
Speaker 1 (34:04):
Can't help himself.
Speaker 6 (34:06):
Cannot help himself if he's still reading that book.
Speaker 1 (34:10):
Again, the whole book thing, the inner excellence, inter excellence.
Let's let's bring that out. No bookmark in it whatsoever.
Just do you think he folds the corner? Do you
think he just remembers the page?
Speaker 6 (34:24):
No?
Speaker 5 (34:25):
No, he just opens it up to a random page
every time, every single time in the.
Speaker 1 (34:29):
Does to grab some inter excellence.
Speaker 5 (34:31):
Sure reads that one page and hopefully you're not reading
it again the next time you open it randomly.
Speaker 1 (34:36):
I just I wanted to be I was starting to
I was starting to warm up to the idea. I
have nothing personal against ag Brow whatsoever. He's a great
football player. I just think that he complains a little
more than other receivers do. And what he does complain,
it's always at the most inopportune times, and that's my issue.
And I don't think that he's proved me wrong. We
(34:57):
even had Adam Kaplan, who is our NFL insider on
Fox Sports Radio and host the Inside the Birds podcast,
so he's tied in with the Eagles. So everybody loves
aj Brown. Everybody does. I don't know if Jalen Hurts
loves him when he's kind of being thrown under the
bus or when there were maybe issues throughout the season.
A super Bowl cures all of that. But right when
(35:17):
I was about to say, like many others feel that
the Eagles could be set up for a good repeat
just because of everything that they've got in place, the
young defense, like it's there for them to maybe do
it again next year, I don't know how much AJ
Brown's gonna want to be involved in that. That's what's
crazy for me. So even it would have been funny
except blank, and the blank is what he stated earlier
(35:39):
this week, and the other blank is basically what has
gone on his entire career in being disgruntled at the
most inopportune times even when they're winning. Like I would
see him. I would see him after a game that
they would lose, and then I'll lose a lot of games,
but you'd have seven catches, one undred and twenty three
yards and a score and he's living it up with
the quarterbacks.
Speaker 6 (35:59):
He got his Yes, it's crazy.
Speaker 5 (36:04):
It's just a I guess, some mentality we don't really
see as often, like it's you care about winning typically, yes,
you don't care necessarily in this type of team sport,
your own personal accolade and.
Speaker 6 (36:15):
Then a loss.
Speaker 4 (36:16):
I'll tell you what. We see that guy in real
life good and it's called good game, good guy, or
a good round.
Speaker 1 (36:22):
Good guy.
Speaker 4 (36:22):
You know the gun the golf course is having a
good round. He's the best guy to be Yes and poker,
good hand, good guy that on good hand.
Speaker 1 (36:31):
I'm a good guy. Yes, I that is me on
the golf course. So I feel so sorry for my
buddy who has to play with me. And I know
there's just and I've known him for thirty years, but
there's awkward silence on the cart when I shank one
out of bounds or I put one in the water,
or I hit one, and I know what's going on.
(36:53):
I cannot turn it off. I cannot just swallow my pride.
And I try. I try to fake it. I try
to be cool, I try to make a joke, but
there is this tension in the air and it's all
because of me. So to that point, that is who
I am.
Speaker 4 (37:10):
You are a brown of the golf club.
Speaker 1 (37:13):
Maybe that's why we just don't see the eye eye
to eye, because we're the same person and your quiz
with Brie. You asked super Bowl ring or MVP, and
I said, give me the MVP.
Speaker 6 (37:23):
Yes you did, Yes you did.
Speaker 1 (37:26):
But I think that's understandable. I think quarterbacks are only
judged by Super Bowls. We don't judge other receivers and
running backs. Really, I even said yesterday on the show,
I feel that other positions are more judged. Are you
like that in any sports? Are you like, don't talk
to me?
Speaker 5 (37:42):
Oh yeah, no, I'm terrible. Like on my Tuesday volleyball league,
if we lose, don't talk to me. It means nothing.
It means nothing, and I like, take it to the
car with me. It takes me like an hour to
get over a loss, Like I hate it. So I
don't care if I played well, if we didn't win,
I'm in.
Speaker 6 (37:58):
A bad mood.
Speaker 1 (37:59):
And it's it's you have a team sports sport, right,
Golf individual, poker.
Speaker 5 (38:03):
Individual right, So it's different, but like, yeah, I can't
stand losing.
Speaker 6 (38:06):
I cannot stand poker poker.
Speaker 1 (38:08):
By the way, I give more slack than my bad
attitude on the golf course because you're losing money, like
like there would be a reason to be angry, like,
oh geez, now I can't pay for X and Y
because it's in the pot of the guy across from me.
I get that more. There's no excuses for me, and
there's no excuses for aj Brown.
Speaker 5 (38:26):
There's no excuses for me to be mad on a Tuesday.
Speaker 1 (38:29):
Unless they call you Maizie or Mansie Mansy, that's Monzie.
I'm Dan. We're in for Kivino and rich agand tomorrow.
Talk to you then bye.