Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Welcome three hours a great sports dot to the Petros
and Money Show on air at AM five seven e
LA Sports with the ability to really go anywhere and
do anything, streaming everywhere with the iHeartRadio app hosted by
Mad Money Smith. Check out the fit and Petros Papadakas.
That's what we like to hear. Here they are on
(00:22):
your home of the LA Dodgers in sync and down
the grain. Petro send Money, Trosen Money, Rosen Money, Rosny, unbelievable.
I don't crack. He's the under pressure puss.
Speaker 2 (00:35):
Puss puss every damn night.
Speaker 1 (00:40):
Man, Wow, man, breakdown.
Speaker 2 (00:43):
Now you won't apologize to him?
Speaker 1 (00:44):
No, no, Nicoler said that cannot play with him. We
cannot make decisions that costs the team. And that's my mom, dude,
My mom's a pamp. Mister e Limited, you.
Speaker 3 (00:58):
Got mister personality here on the phone.
Speaker 2 (01:00):
Avano.
Speaker 1 (01:07):
It's only words unless they are true.
Speaker 4 (01:12):
Ovig, Petros and Money AM five seventy LA Sports Live
Everywhere on the iHeartRadio app. Making our way to six o'clock.
It's UCLA Basketball Tonight taken on Prairie View an m.
They'll tip it off at six thirty so an hour
from now, we'll go to pregame. Remember Tim Kates will
have postgame, so give him a holler. Talk about that
big victory or unbelievable loss to the Panthers.
Speaker 1 (01:34):
No, come on, So it's either a victory that no
one cares about or a loss that will shake the
bowels of the college basketball world.
Speaker 4 (01:42):
It's exactly right, and Tim Kats will be the maestro
to conduct your phone call orchestra tomorrow full three to
seven show. Thursday is the Bjay's appearance, the final petros
In Money appearance of twenty and twenty four. It is
in West Covina. Would love to see you going into
Clippers basketball against the Mavericks out there in Dallas. So
(02:03):
it's Bjy's West Co giving away Clipper tickets, UCLA tickets,
BJ's gift cards and a whole bunch of other prizes
from the PMS prize closet. They do a happy hour
and the brew house specials all of that peak It's
time for.
Speaker 1 (02:14):
The final hour fun fast effect. It's the Yeah three fun.
Speaker 4 (02:19):
Fun fact uh Vietnam Christmas Pee. Vietnamese food is considered
by many to be some of the finest in all
the world.
Speaker 1 (02:29):
Well, somebody sent us a picture from Vietnam the other day.
That makes me feel a little squeamish. But yes, I
understand what you're saying.
Speaker 4 (02:35):
Uh, why what is it about Vietnam cuisine? Well, listen,
you loved Vietnamese egg rolls.
Speaker 1 (02:44):
I do, Matt from the to Uh, I go over
to uh. There's a Vietnamese restaurant around the corner here
a little sister in uh in Redondo Beach that I
go to Little Dot and uh not And not to mention,
the gat is Vietnamese restaurant in all of California. In
San Pedro on Pacific. You guessed that Matt Nom's Red door.
Speaker 4 (03:08):
Oh love Noms red door. Come on, get a knock
on that thing. We have one on Second Street that
I absolutely love visiting. Got into a little bit of
trouble when I tried to have some fun with it.
But Enemese food pee.
Speaker 1 (03:21):
You didn't crawl in there on your belly like an
army man or something.
Speaker 4 (03:25):
Maybe I did, Maybe I did. The Vietnamese believe that
they are three kitchen gods Pao Kwan, who live with
and observe each family chef's actions. They depart at the
end of the lunar year. They report their findings to
(03:45):
not want the Jade Emperor on whether or not meals
were in fact balanced with the five Asian elements spicy, sour, bitter, salty,
and sweet, and whether or not the principle of yin
and yang comprising a meal to provide contrasts and spiciness
and the temperature of the food were in fact adhere to.
So there is a higher bean, there is a greater
(04:09):
calling when it comes to them preparing their food that
the rest of us, when we're slapping together a ham
and cheese sandwich on white, simply do not abide by.
Speaker 1 (04:18):
And perhaps you shouldn't have liked done a somersault into
the restaurant and come up fireing. Uh time for quickts, everybody,
come to ms quick hits. Come make it quick, y'all. Yeah,
maybe I'll see you someday when the fighting stops. The
(04:38):
Lakers are forte eat until.
Speaker 4 (04:39):
I should have worn my agent orange shirt in that was.
Speaker 1 (04:42):
A terrible mess. They're off until Thursday. It's an ounty.
Speaker 4 (04:46):
I'm sorry. I wanted to make sure I get that
the way. I'm sorry.
Speaker 1 (04:49):
Browny James is going to Orlando to participate with the
South Bay Lakers in the G League Winter Showcase this week.
Their first game is Thursday. Lebron is liking what he'sa
from his son in recent games.
Speaker 3 (05:03):
Just keep stacking the days, keep putting in the work.
The work always prevail at the end of the day.
It's just it's just great to see him getting back
into the flow, getting back to his game and getting
back to him just playing free and going on just
playing the game he loves and know how to play.
So I love his aggressiveness. You know, he was aggressive
from the beginning in both games all the way up
(05:24):
into the end. So and did it in short minutes,
you know, on both sides of the floor.
Speaker 1 (05:29):
Kate says it's cut no defense.
Speaker 4 (05:31):
That's what he says. The G League is a showcase,
is what he claimed. He said, It's called a showcase
for a reason, to showcase future talent, only to get
their penis is punched when they arrive. In the NBA penis.
Speaker 1 (05:43):
Punch, the Clippers punched the jazz and the penis last night,
making them unable to blow their jazz horn five thirty
tip Thursday in Dallas on AMPI seventy LA Sports and
Matt they're revamping the All Star Tournament.
Speaker 4 (05:57):
Apparently, Yeah, called desperation is a stinky cologne. The NBA
announced a revamped All Star Tournament instead of the All
Star Game, a four team, three game, one night tournament.
Three teams of eight All Stars apiece. The fourth will
be the winner of the Rising Stars Challenge for first
(06:19):
and second year players. The winning team in all games
is the first to score forty points. The three teams
of All Stars are going to be picked by the
TNT crew. Shackle, have a team, Chuckle, have a team, Keny,
You'll have a team, and each player on the winning
team gets one hundred and twenty five grand second.
Speaker 1 (06:36):
Place fifteen seconds ago and you're hit delivering things. But
I lost, you lost me. I don't care. Yeah, I
don't care.
Speaker 4 (06:45):
You know what, though, I don't know if anything can
compare to the Kenny Smith steven A Smith, Oh freaking
free throw contest. Just do that for All Star weekend again.
Speaker 1 (06:54):
Somebody prophesies that Shack or Charles wouldn't have anything to
do with it, and they'd send punk ask Kenny out
there and look what they do. But plug ass, can
you get out there? The Chargers are eight and six.
They're at home Thursday night against the Bronchitos five point
fifteen on All ninety eight to seven. Matt will be
on the call. The Rams are winners of three in
a row. They're in first place top the NFC West.
(07:14):
They are doing a lot of podcast work, and they're
in New York on Sunday, Big City, taking a nap
to take on the Jets. Uh. I know you're excited
about the Rams and their performance. Matter you give a
little whoop, I did.
Speaker 4 (07:27):
I gave you a whoop, But I immediately wanted to
shift to Major League Baseball and say, come on, Scar,
Scar of Pale, get yourself squared away with it, say
about it. Yeah, now that Cody Bellinger has been traded
to the Yankees, you know you got him. You're not
gonna have him to kick around anymore, although they haven't
had him to kick around for about five years now.
Speaker 1 (07:45):
But eight. No, he's been Chicago's problem and Matt, it
turns out the harder you throw, the worse it is
for your arm, which needs a lot of studying to
figure out.
Speaker 4 (07:57):
Yeah, chasing V low and better, and I'm doing the
air quotes stuff I learned effort.
Speaker 1 (08:03):
In Rookie of the Year with the Gary Busey character
when he was like, I don't know what will happen
if I fire this arm up.
Speaker 4 (08:09):
Ever again, I don't think you need to interview two
hundred people to know that kids who are like twelve
years old and playing baseball year round and are throwing
freaking twelve to six curve balls and chasing eighty five
mile an hour fastballs is not good for their arm,
as their balls still haven't dropped and they still sound
(08:31):
like teenage girls. But the study made broad recommendations potential
rule changes to address the increase in pitching injuries. I
don't know what that's gonna do. Dads and moms want
their kids to play baseball in college and professionally.
Speaker 1 (08:46):
You're the only one out here that has a chance.
You're the only eight year old out here that's going
to the show.
Speaker 2 (08:51):
Kid.
Speaker 4 (08:51):
Come on, what's going on with your two year old
and the belt you have around his torso and his
right arm? Oh they could be a lefty anyway, you
know what I mean. Lofty s make a lot more
than matures, you know. Okay, all right, I see what
you're doing here. Now that guy's gonna get fined by
Major League Baseball if he tries to do that, well,
I hope so the.
Speaker 1 (09:12):
Great Carson Palmer will join us next NFL legend, local legend,
played pro football all over the country and of course
now the head coach at Santa Margarita High. We'll talk
to Carson in the next segment. It's a Petro Some
Money show on AMPI seventy LA Sports.
Speaker 4 (09:32):
Petro Some Money AM five to seventy LA Sports slid
everywhere on the iHeartRadio app Amateur Basketball. Tonight, We're off
at six. It's UCLA, Prairie View, A and M coming up.
So six thirty tip six o'clock pre and remember set
your schedules and it's a flex alert, so pay attention.
Not a three to six or a two to five
or a three to seven show, but two to four
thirty will be the final live remote of Petro Some
(09:54):
Some Money this year, BJ's West Covina Thursday, two to
four thirty pm, giving away Clipper two tickets, UCLA tickets,
BJ's gift cards, a brand new lamp, and all kinds
of things from the PMS prize closet. You do not
want to miss it. It is this Thursday, starting it too.
Speaker 1 (10:09):
Matt joining us right now, a brand new coach in town,
and it's very exciting, a real champion, somebody who we've
talked about for many years. In fact, the other day
in a production room, I said something like about Carson Palmer,
and somebody said, oh, are you going to tell a
story about Carson Palmer who you played with? And I
was a little embarrassed because I guess I do it
(10:31):
a little too much. Carson Palmer, Heisman Trophy winner, great
NFL quarterback, All Pro, multiple Pro Bowls, Retired and now
giving back to the community where he won multiple championships.
He is the head coach at Santa Margarita High School.
Let's go Eagles. Ah, just very very exciting jumping into
(10:54):
that Trinity League to battle it out with the Boscos
and modern day and bring them back to cif supremacy.
Carson Palmer, one of the great teammates, one of the
great people in the city. To see you did, and
of course he's here joining us live from Santa Margarita
High School. Carson Palmer on your Southern California Toyota, Nina
(11:16):
celebrity hotline. Carson, What's cracking welcome to the show.
Speaker 2 (11:18):
How are you, prey Daddy. I am well, and your
intro game is strong, very strong. Thanks for having me.
Speaker 1 (11:27):
I could do better. But the December we get a
little burnt out.
Speaker 2 (11:32):
But not you.
Speaker 1 (11:33):
In this December, you decided you're going to take a job,
which is a hell of an undertaking for anybody, let
alone a guy that knows what it takes to inject
life into any football team at any level. I know
your son Fletcher's there. What went into the decision, well
a lot.
Speaker 2 (11:49):
I mean this is a place where my football journey started.
I came in here as a scrawnee freshman that could
flick the ball, but I had no idea where it
was going, where it needed to go and why. And
so my journey started here then to s see and
and then to play it at the highest level for
a long time. Uh and have the opportunity to come
(12:11):
back and and be it at at this school, this institution,
and it's got such a special place in my heart.
And this opportunity came up, and I just realized there's
no better way to get back and then give your
time and knowledge. I've been so influenced by some tremendous
minds and some tremendous coaches, and I'm just at the
end of the day, I'm just recycling information I got
(12:34):
from from amazing coaches and and team meeting, you know,
points of emphasis to talk about when when you're talking
about the game or the psychology of the game. I've
been so influenced by these minds that I'm just sharing
and regurgitating the information and sharing it with these kids
and such a pivotal point in their lives.
Speaker 1 (12:54):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (12:54):
You mentioned that, Carson and sharing what you learned, and
of course you spent time with with Bob Johnson, He's
been on the show before, legendary coach here in southern California,
and just kind of from him and the other coaches
you had through through high school. How much of it
still applies? Like is the game still the same game?
Or has it changed? Or has coaching changed? Like how
much of that do you think you can apply?
Speaker 2 (13:16):
Well, so much has changed. I mean just the fact
that you can now transfer. I mean when Petros, when
you and I were in high school, if you were
to transfer a high school, you'd sit out an entire year,
which is just it's unfathomable. You can't imagine losing an
entire year when you're healthy to stand there on the
sidelines and watch. And so now with essentially a transfer portal,
(13:37):
just like in college, that's a massive change. You just
need to be ready. You're going to lose guys and
you're going to get guys in, and you're gonna lose
guys and you can get guys in. But at the
end of the day, I'm a firm believer that the
game has it changed. You've got to take care of
the ball. Nothing is more important than the ball. You
can't give it away. And on defense, you've got to
go take it. And when you have it, you got
(13:59):
to run the football. And and so I know everybody assumes,
oh that you know, Carson's taking the job. They're just gonna,
you know, flick it around the field a bunch. We're
gonna throw the ball and we're gonna play. We're gonna
play like the pro offense like I've been used to.
Like I know, we're gonna have some some professional type
concepts and schemes. But at the end of the day,
you want to win, You've got to be able to
(14:20):
run it. You got to be able to run it
in the red zone. There's a thread against the defense
that that they can't just drop eight guys and rush
too or three guys. And so you know, that's the
base fundamentals of football that hasn't changed in my mind.
You've got to be able to run it and you
got to be able to stop the run on defense.
Speaker 1 (14:38):
I want and only Carson Palmer CP joining us right now,
the coach at Santa Margarita High What a beautiful place,
What a great place to be competing in high school
football in southern California, which is a great hotbed for
high school football that produces quarterbacks like Carson Palmer. So
very full circle and a lot of fun. You uh
(15:00):
to live to see. So to speak. Every guy that
gets a coaching job at at any level has got
to have a plan, and a plan really fast. And
the first thing is staffing, right like who you bring
in and and and who you're going to trust with
the kids, because there's too many, like a basketball team
to coach all on your own, like Gene Hackman and Hoosiers.
So how's that coming together? And and how long have
(15:22):
you had it in your mind?
Speaker 2 (15:25):
Well, I just just uh was asked to take the
job on Friday, I think, last week, So I'm literally
I'm not even a weekend. But I'm I'm going to
be really intentional with the staff. Since the news came out,
I've I've received a ton of calls. I've I've reached
out to guys I've always thought would be great coaches
(15:46):
that maybe aren't high school football coaches necessarily, And so
I'm I'm casting a wide net. I'm turning over every stone.
I'm looking to put together intentionally a really solid But
I'm not saying, hey, by January one or by you know,
the beginning of Christmas break, I've got to have a
staff outline. I'm just I'm doing my research right now.
(16:09):
I'm talking to guys. I spent probably four hours on
the phone today in two interviews. So I'm casting a
wide net. I'm trying to find the best staff I
can possibly find and put together a really strong group
of teachers that want to have an impact on kids
and at this point in their developmental stage, in these
high school years, these are so precious and so important,
(16:31):
and so I really am being intentional with this and
look to fill it out, you know, as these kids
come back to school early January. I'm hoping to have
everything finalized and done by then, but I'm out in
the big rush, just just to slap a staff together,
to be able to say we got the staff hired.
Speaker 4 (16:48):
Well, he's far too humble to say it. Cards and
so I will you say, run the ball and stop
the run? I mean running backs? Petros Papadega's linebackers coach
John Papadegas. How about two generations of Papadakis is out
there with you.
Speaker 1 (17:00):
I don't think he let's go, let's go Greek orthodox.
I don't know if we mix with the Although I
don't know, I do know, Carson. Multiple Paul Hackett Paul
Hackett playbooks from our teammates have been sent down to
Orange County from all around the country for you to
check out the old brown shoe and the horse to
(17:20):
hot Bronco and the many things that we grew up running.
But a lot of that stuff hasn't changed in football.
You know, you've played for so long and you kind
of watch the game change while you were playing. What
is the other than the transfer portal, which we kind
of talked about, what's the most shocking thing that has
changed about the game since we played well, I.
Speaker 2 (17:41):
Think everything comes back around. It's it's funny you mentioned
Paul Hackett and a real true old school West Coast
offense that Paul learned from Bill Walsh and the San
Francisco forty nine ers. Heyday. It's funny because you're starting
to see it in the NFL right now. You're starting
to see a return of the pure pre regression pass game.
(18:01):
You know, last probably five or ten years, you saw
a ton of RPOs and you heard a ton of RPOs,
and that's really kind of for a for a handful
of years, replaced the quick game and the three step
drop back game. Well now you're seeing it all over
the place. You're seeing sprinkles of the old school West
Coast offense and that really that pure progression style of play.
(18:22):
And I just think it's funny. You know, it's just
you know, good stuff comes back around, and then somebody
tweaks it and works on this and that. You know,
they win a Super Bowl, they win a national championship,
so a bunch of people copy that. But it's funny
that the concepts and the style where it's a pure
progression where the quarterback drops back and his first hitch
goes to the first target, and then he hitches twice
(18:43):
the second target, and then he hitches the third time
to the third. You're starting to see that come back around.
So I think that's the thing that surprises me is
there's all these tweaks, there's all these wrinkles, there's all
these changes, but the good stuff, that really solid stuff
that made sense back in the day, it finds it
way to come back around sure enough.
Speaker 3 (19:02):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (19:02):
I think about just sort of NFL wise people speculating
that the Raider job might come open, and they're like,
oh man, you really want to get into a division
with with Sean Payton and Harbaugh and Andy Reid and
Mahomes and Herbert and all of that. And then I
kind of think about the job you took and what
you take on when you step into a league that
has modern day that has Bosco kind of these two
(19:22):
buzz saws that you know, and look, some other teams
are starting to make up ground these last few years.
But when you look at the Trinity League, is there
a way to approach this, to attack it, to try
to take on these top two teams that have been
there for seemingly I think it's probably been about a
decade now.
Speaker 2 (19:38):
Incredible programs. I mean Modern Day just beat Day La
Style the other night for a state championship. And you
know Orange Lutherans and their Servites and their Jay Sarah
is a newer school, it doesn't have the history, but
just incredible programs. And I think the thing that jumps
out at you is the support that these programs have
and the pride that the alumni take know and being
(20:01):
dominant like Modern Day has been and Bosco's dominance, and
you just these things do not run themselves. When you
get in the in the private school league and you
don't have the funding from the state and from you know,
all the avenues that they have the funding from. You
you see that this at this level, to run these
(20:21):
type of programs and to be able to compete at
this level, so much goes into it. And the success
that you know, the schools you mentioned have and the
stellar institutions that they all are, I mean, it really
is impressive. And that was one of the things that
was that was most exciting, you know for me about
I had guys that you know, had been reaching out
to me about getting in coaching at the NFL level.
(20:43):
Or college level. And then when you say, you know
you're going to high school, but you know it's in
the Trinity League, people understand it, people respect it. I
think people you know of my playing days, I lived
all over the country and traveled all over the country.
People know about this league outside of southern California, and
they know outside of that, you know, outside the state
of California, this is a well respected, well known league.
(21:06):
It's the best league in all of football. And it's
really exciting to me to be an underdog and really
build this program out and create the infrastructure that this
program needs to give it the staying power it needs
to compete year in year out with those schools. So
that's my biggest overall goal is build the infrastructure, create
(21:28):
a program that has staying power to be able to
compete at some point year in year out with those
other two big schools and also the rest of the
teams in this training league.
Speaker 1 (21:38):
They just gave the Heisman to a non quarterback. I
voted for the running back even though I don't have
a vote, which is amazing, but you you are a
Heisman winner. Of course. Way back in two thousand and two,
the two thousand and two Heisman, And do you flirt
(21:58):
with going back every year or when you go back,
how do you make that decision? And what aware? I
mean you saw that Cam Newton had it stole the show.
Speaker 2 (22:08):
Yeah, I mean pee, you know, I'm a big high
fashion guy with no doubt I would you know work,
I've got like four stylists on retainer.
Speaker 1 (22:16):
That checker. You took the risk of that checkered button
button down at the Heisman that you won. It was
a wild fashion.
Speaker 2 (22:22):
Risk, wild wild way outside the box, very very very well.
But no, I you know, it just depends on I've
got I've got four kids, so it always depends on schedules.
It's tough to get to New York. Obviously was tough
this year because that was, you know, literally within within
hours of taking this job. But it's an incredible weekend.
(22:45):
And I'm not surprised to hear that if you if
you had a vote, you vote for the running back.
I voted for Travis at the end of the day.
I mean, when you say who is the best player
in the country, it's a pretty quick response and answer
that it was Travis. As good as Jenty was and
as amazing as the season. He had the fact that
that kid was able to do that on both sides
(23:07):
of the ball. It's just, you know, from my NFL background,
I can't wait to see once he settles in and
just focuses on cornerback and playing corner I mean, the
sky is the absolute limit for Travis.
Speaker 4 (23:19):
Last one for me, Carson, you know, working with the Chargers,
I remember on so many of the flights back, Philip
Rivers was just so into high school football and it's
all he wanted to talk about, and he would talk
about when he was retiring how excited he was to
coach high school football, like it really was the number
one thing that he would talk about. Is that kind
of how it was for you as well? Is there
(23:41):
something about high school because I would assume others reached
out to you to be a quarterback coach, to be
a coordinator to coaching college kind of Have you always
had your eye on the high school level versus the others?
Speaker 2 (23:53):
No. I actually had a great chance to sit down
and hang out with left in July when I was
kind of of thinking about these next steps and how
it looks and you know, all the challenges that come
with this. So I had an awesome chance to sit
down and really just get into it with him and
understand the challenges and the biggest issues. But it wasn't
(24:15):
something that's always been on my radar. It's not something
that I was chomping at the bit to be done
playing and transition into like it was for Philip. But
you just, you know, you spend a little bit of
time around these kids, and you see how impressionable they are,
and you see just how thirsty for knowledge they are,
and they are absolute sponges any information that can make
(24:37):
them better, any information that can give them an edge.
Just the excitement. It's the purity of high school football,
especially now that college is really pro this level and
this age is what excited me, and just a passion
to learn, a passion to learn the game. I just
wanted to be a part of it. And so it
(24:57):
was not something I've been thinking about for fifteen or
twenty years. It just has kind of been a slow
build for me. And then the opportunity in the situation
opened up and just realized I need I needed to
take this opportunity, to take this chance.
Speaker 1 (25:10):
Well, we have some friends in the Trinity League, but
now we're rooting for the Eagles all the way. Carson
Palmer looking to put another guy on the wall like
River Craycraft and Johnny Stanton and Matt Nichols, great players
of the past, and Carson Palmer a shining example of
what being a great Southern California football player and citizen
(25:34):
can do for you. And by the way, Carson, I
have a Blittannikoff vote because I'm such a good receiver expert.
You know how android I am beyond the hashes out there,
really understand.
Speaker 2 (25:46):
Phenomenal hand, phenomenal hand, oh no doubt.
Speaker 1 (25:49):
And I can come coach running backs for you. But
we but much like myself, we can't run zone at all.
We're way too stilted for that and we can't see it.
So just gonna be a lot of double team power scheme.
Speaker 2 (26:02):
We're heading in the zone direction. And you're too expensive
for my coaching staff, so it wasn't going to work
out unless you were donating your time. But there's always
I got a spot for you if you want to
donate some time, I got a spot for you.
Speaker 1 (26:16):
I'll bring my dad down and just leave him perfect
and on the way down, I'll pick up my liphoe
and a squat rack and we'll have it. We'll have it.
We'll be done.
Speaker 2 (26:29):
We'll lock him in the weight room.
Speaker 1 (26:30):
Well, God bless you, Carson. Congratulations on this endeavor. We
hope it brings great success to you and your family
and UH and all these young people and the school.
So good luck and have a great Christmas. Say our
best everybody.
Speaker 2 (26:43):
That's Trust Money. Thanks for letting me come on and
talk about our program. You guys have a great Christmas
as well.
Speaker 1 (26:49):
Appreciate it.
Speaker 4 (26:49):
Thank you, Carson.
Speaker 1 (26:50):
I think they should change it to the Screaming Eagles. Now.
You know, it's a great call because Carson's so crazy
and why.
Speaker 4 (26:57):
You heard it right there, checkered shirt at the heisman.
Speaker 1 (27:01):
It's crazy.
Speaker 2 (27:03):
You know.
Speaker 1 (27:03):
The great thing about him is how even keel he is.
And you know, some high school football coaches. I don't
know if you notice, Matt.
Speaker 4 (27:12):
I don't know what you're talking about.
Speaker 1 (27:13):
It kind of maybe says so don't have that skill.
All right, we'll be back with your dead and live
guy birth the other day. Very nice to talk to Carson.
Good luck to Santa Margarita. Thanks for listening, everybody. It's
the one and only Petro send Money Show tonight. We
(27:34):
got UCLA, Prairie View A and m HBCU coming to
poly Pavilion, and I know it's going to be backed
to the rafter and Tim Kates will have Bruin talk
right after the game. Here it is the dead Guy
birthday of the day.
Speaker 4 (27:51):
Well this is too good. It's eleven days. That is
all that has separated IRV Robbins from Bert Baskin. But
I feel like Burt got the short shrift. Born in Streeter, Illinois,
parents emigrated from Russia and Poland. Pops owned Baskin's clothing
store for about thirty five years there in Streeter until
(28:12):
he retired Irv's sister in nineteen forty two. You and
my sister, I know you're having a great time out there.
You're making money. But I got this Snowbird ice cream
shop and I am making money and I got to
open up another one, but I don't want to run it.
I think we can really do something here. So he
convinces Burt to sell the clothing store and to open
(28:33):
his own ice cream shop ice cream shop in Pasadena.
So Irv runs Glendale, Burt runs Pasadena. They've got eight
stores between them in nineteen forty eight when they combine
and they discover their thirty first flavor together, Chocolate Mint.
Forty three stores by the end of forty nine, more
(28:55):
than one hundred by nineteen sixty Wow, and five hundred
in nineteen sixty seven when they sold Baskin Robbins to
United Fruit Company Fruit for twelve million dollars. What did
Bert do with all that money?
Speaker 3 (29:11):
Pee?
Speaker 4 (29:13):
He died a month later. Yes, sadly he died out
down that.
Speaker 1 (29:17):
The ocean has turned to yogurt.
Speaker 4 (29:19):
I've lost my spoon, His wife, Shirley, his beautiful children,
though well set for life, and Baskin, of course, changed
the trajectory of ice cream forever. Quarterback crunch, Dakora ice,
come on without that? Who the hells is scream today? Anyway?
Speaker 1 (29:34):
Nobody, nobody, nobody? All right, Matt an accomplished guy for
your live Guy. Ryan Johnson is fifty one, the movie maker.
Born in Maryland but grew up in Denver. Then a
very very important move in his life, moved to San
Clemente at the age of ten, went to San Clemente
(29:56):
High School. Let's go Triton's Sam Darnold having a great
year one last night. He went to USC Film School,
and I don't know if you know, that's kind of
hard to get in there. No, yep, it's Chapman. No,
you're right, he graduated. I was a grip at Chapman.
He graduated in ninety six. It was nineteen seventy seven's
(30:18):
Any Hall by Woody Allen, which inspired him to direct
his debut, which I love, is called Brick with Joe
Gordon Levitt, filmed at San Clemente High, and then he
wrote direct Cooper. Yeah see boom, Yeah, you scoff at
Joe Gordon Levitt, but you like Looper. He wrote and
(30:40):
directed them the eighth installment of Star Wars, The Last Jedi,
which I believe sucks, but doesn't suck as much as
a lot of the other new Star Wars stuff. I
think he knew how much he sucked because he turned
down the next one and he said, yeah, I'll just
do like a separate trilogy and I'll just get away
(31:00):
from you. George Lucas a little bit. So I don't
know when those are coming out, but he did two
mystery movies, Knives Out and The Glass Onion, A fine filmmaker.
Speaking of that, Tim Kates. You'll have him to kick
around tonight once Josh Lewin gets mother f'd hard by
Mick Cronin. Then Tim Kates takes over from Brew and Talk.
Speaker 4 (31:21):
You see a lot, prick your favorite baskin Robin's ice
cream flavor. Let him relive his youth.
Speaker 1 (31:26):
Have a great night, everybody. We'll be back on tomorrow
at three. Thank you to Carson Palmer and David Vasse
podcast the show on the iHeartRadio app Stop the Yard.
I think you should have sent me