Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
It's the best of two pros and a couple of
Joe with Lamar Areas, Brady Quinn and Jonas Knocks on
Fox Sports Radio. It was the big news. Uh. Moments
after we went off the area yesterday. Uh, we all
of a sudden got a brand new teammate here at
Fox Sports, Tom Brady the Goat, agreeing to be the
(00:26):
lead analyst for Fox's NFL coverage. Yeah, once his career
is overweight. Now there's been some there's been a back
and forth about what does it goat make by the way,
does it yeah, goating a sheep or same thing? No,
(00:47):
goats are nasty little things, eat anything. Yeah, how that
comes out the other one? Yeah, I said, how do
they eat everything? But yet it's just like, I mean,
I don't know, they're trying to figure that they're also creepy,
kind of a demonic looking animal, and and the way
they use their horns to try and make you know.
(01:07):
But but it is kind of when they come at
you pretty easy to control. You just grab the horns
and then you're just a little buck. You though. Now, dude,
we I told you I took the kids to a
little pettings that had one getting frisky with me. I
literally had to grab it by the horns and like
push the thing away. It started, like, you know, like
it was gonna charge at me, you know, you know,
(01:27):
hitting the ground and all that. That was one thing.
I don't think you needed to take the pitchfork to it.
I didn't do that. I didn't do that, but I
grabbed it by the horns. I looked in the eyes.
I said, look, buddy, I got little girls here, and
I don't care how you know, excited you are to
be here that we're here, but we're not doing this anymore.
I would have grabbed them and looked at him and said,
I will eat you, you know, curry. We'll curry you
(01:51):
right on up, and I'll tell you what you will
taste delicious, my friends, So you might want to tread lightly.
You're walking up on the wrong one. This, uh, this
goat for for Fox Sports. This Tom Brady. Now, there's
been some the report that came at. Andrew Marshawn of
(02:11):
The New York Post report at first that it was
a ten year, three D seventy five million dollar deal,
which is just astronomical. But like then there was some
other pushback that maybe it wasn't the you know, an
accurate number, although he's doubled out and said that he
stands by his sourcing on that. Whatever the case, maybe
Tom Brady is going to be the lead analyst for Fox.
(02:33):
He's also going to serve as a company ambassador who's
going to help with sponsorships and promotional activities once his
career is over with. So Tom Brady, if you're wondering
what his plans were after his career is over, apparently
he's going to enter into the broadcasting world. He'll be
that lead analyst for Fox. And what I think is
an absolute home run. Higher if if it seemed a
(02:54):
little odd that Fox is pretty quiet after the Troy
Aikman Joe Buck departures, and they me, they've been working
on this for a little while here. So Tom Brady
is now with us here at Fox Sports once his
career is over with. How about that? Yeah, a couple
of narratives about this whole scenario UM and they're like, well,
around the time that Aikman started talking to other UM networks,
(03:16):
whether it be Amazon or Disney, whoever else you want
to talk to talk about. They're like, oh, that that's
when the discussion started with Tom Brady. Let me be
very clear about this. Every network knocks on that door
every single year when there's a need, meaning, hey, Peyton,
you're sure you don't want to come on and do
this full time with us. Now Disney has finally been
(03:39):
able to come to an agreement with Peyton Manning. That is,
but it's very different than what this is, at least
reported to be for Tom Brady. With Peyton Manning, it's
an agreement with his company, Omaha Productions, And we don't
really get those figures on what it looks like. I'll
put it this way. I was told by a source
(04:02):
it is. It is in the nine figures, and depending
on how much it costs him to produce certain content
and all that, he might be making and pocketing more
than what tom Brady is supposedly making in this deal.
So it's a very different structure of what's happening. Tom
Brady is basically saying, like, I don't wanna have to
worry about putting together the production and a team in
(04:23):
a business to do all this. I just want you
to pay me a really really high dollar amount. But
let's let's talk about that dollar amount real quick. So
what a thirty seven and a half million it comes
out to per year, which the crazy part is it's
more than every single year he's played in the NFL,
including this year, with the exception of where he got
I think thirty nine million. So think about that the
(04:45):
next ten years, he will make more than every single
year of his twenty two year career besides one, which
is incredible to think about. But if you really look
at the spend what Fox spends on the NFL per year,
I believe the ballparks or figure that I saw as
one point one three million or a billion dollars thirty
(05:08):
seven and a half isn't that much for your number
one analysts for your quarterback. That's three percent of what
you're already spending on the rights to the NFL. And
so when you really look at it, you're like, is
that too much? And I think there's people who argue
and complain like, well, I'm gonna tune into the game anyway.
But you know, LaVar and I talked yesterday about like
(05:29):
some of those games you're watched on mute, and maybe
it's because you like that you don't want to listen
to analysts. I'll tell you this much Lavarre. You're gonna
listen to that Tom Brady proadcast on mute, the first one.
I'm gonna listen to it, The Peyton Manning Show, like
you listen to it because you want to hear what
they have to say. So for all the people out
there who are like, oh, it doesn't matter, it's the matchup,
(05:50):
I'm gonna be I'm gonna gamble in the fantasy whatever.
It doesn't matter who's calling it, it does in this case.
And that's why he's gonna warrant this much and the
ambassador and everything else that comes along with it, where
I'm sure Fox will utilize him, like I'm sure we'll
get a piece of him on Big Nude Kickoff for
Ohio State Michigan. You better believe when we're at Harbor,
Tom Brady is probably gonna be there, or he might,
(06:11):
you know, show up for a segment or two. So
all those things I think are out there. I just
think it's interesting that people think this is over payment,
and when you're actually looking at maybe the marketplace of analysts,
you go, yeah, it's a lot more than others are making.
But we also don't really know what Payton man Manning
is pocketing. When it's all said and done, I think
that figure is pretty competitive, if you're asking me, I
(06:33):
think it's pretty competitive when it's all said done, what
Payton's putting in his pocket after all his Omaha productions
and the Monday night football on esp ESPN two packages
all said and done, I mean you if you think
about there, there's first of all, people have to understand
there's a formula that that these companies use and giving
(06:54):
out shelling out the contract that they're going to shell out,
they're not going to not even for Tom Brady, They're
not going to break their formula. I mean, that's just
that's the business practice of it. Whatever it is that
they're offering him, the percentage of what that is going
to generate is going to be an astronomical profit for
(07:17):
them as well. And then not to mention, not to
mention name one advertising company agency, name name one company
that would not want to bid on being a part
of whatever it is that's connected to Tom Brady with
Fox like name one. And that's the thing about it, right,
(07:41):
if you're bringing that to the table, you're you're you're
you're a golden goose. You're you're like, Tom Brady is
not a goat, He's he's a goose, and he's laying
gold in the eggs. And that's the reality of it here,
is that to monetize him that way is ultimately telling
(08:03):
you the market has spoken, they've done, you know, how
much they've probably invested in seeing what that would would
cost or what that would generate. To have him and
his brand connected to what they're doing, it becomes the
number one show, the number one broadcast period immediately. It's
already that right now, and he's and he's still playing.
(08:23):
So I mean, it's a no brainer. It's a no
brainer to to follow that that pattern. But it's also
something that I mean, he earned it, you know, he's
he's earned the right to command that type of attention,
those type of dollars, and that type of opportunity. So
(08:44):
for all the people out there that that feel like
that's too much, I mean, you clearly don't understand how
how important or how how much weight being considered one
of the greatest athletes of all time, what that represents,
especially in the football arena, that it's one of the arenas,
(09:06):
it's one of the categories where the best of the
best and the most famous of the best of the
best are rewarded with the spoils of everything connected to
the accomplishment that took place within that game. I will say,
even at my level, even at my tear of accomplishment,
(09:30):
that s is crazy. It's crazy the amount of opportunities
that you receive because of what you were able to
accomplish as an active player. And he's the best of
us all, so I don't find it to be surprising.
Congratulations to him, um, and I certainly will. I'm a
fan of Tom Brady. I've always may I've never made
(09:51):
a secret. Um, I've always been a fan of him.
I I used to whip his ass in college. He
got the last last laugh of it. But what the
idea of it is. I think he's a fine dude.
He's He's actually a super entertaining dude. I've spent a
lot of time around him in personal environments. A cool
dude to hang around, down the earth dude. And and
(10:14):
I think we got a chance to see it when
they won the super Bowl in Tampa. But as as
a TV analyst, I think people will get an opportunity
to really figure out that Tom Brady actually is a
pretty freaking entertaining dude, just like we found out about Peyton.
You know, Peyton Manning is is a funny dude, like
on on the Sneak. His personality is that quirky, like
(10:38):
corny type of deal. But it's funny, it's funny like
it entertains me. So, I mean, you're talking about like
we said, he's he's he's the best of the best,
and I thought that was a great win for Fox
and tend then to announce it. Now, so now you've
put a lot of attention on Fox. You're you're basically
(10:59):
putting it out there that everybody needs to be on
call and on notice that we got him. So so
whatever it is that y'all going pony up, y'all better
start saving y'all coins right now. If y'all went in
and one in on this. And it's also there's been
this discussion now, well just because it's Tom Brady doesn't
mean he's gonna be good at it. Okay, Well, I've
(11:20):
been hereing for four years of Tony Romo is good
and I completely disagree, and I've disagreed since day one.
So it's to each his own. Everybody's got their own,
their own flavor when it comes to this stuff. I
I love Troy Aikman and Joe Buck. I thought they've
been one of the top broadcasting teams in the sport
or in sports period for a long time. And yeah,
(11:41):
you're you're intrigued to see what they're gonna do at ESPN,
But I sort of know what they are. This works
and it's gonna work for in my mind for two reasons.
Number one, because of the intrigue factor that Brady pointed out.
I want to I want to watch, I want to
see it, and and and it's not gonna be one
of these Well I gave him a first half. I
gave him one game and then I'm out. No, I
want to see how this develops because I think everybody
(12:02):
acknowledges and you guys who know this better than me,
because you've called games, you're better from your first game
to your second game. You probably grow light years just
in that regard when it comes to broadcasting. But also
it's Tom Brady. I don't see him failing at a lot.
I don't see him putting his name on something or
committing to something just just because it's a money grab.
(12:22):
He doesn't need the money. I think he's gonna put
his put the effort in. I think he's gonna be uh.
He's going to try and figure out how to get
better at this whole thing. And if it's a ten
year deal, he's probably gonna improve light years from year
from game one to game two, year one to year two, etcetera, etcetera.
I just don't I don't see how this fails, either
from a business standpoint or just from his broadcasting standpoint.
(12:44):
I think he's I think he's gonna be fantastic. I
think he's gonna be fantastic. Whatever you want it. I was.
I was yelled in my ear a moment ago, so
somebody screamed in my ears. I apologize. Yeah, no, no, no, believable.
Was just end up being a failure is basically what
he was. He did. He did admit that the tuck
(13:05):
rule could have been a fumble. I mean, can you
please at least acknowledge the fact that, you know, whatever
hatred you've had towards Tom Brady, he's trying to come
clean and and he admitted to you guys that it
might have been a fumble. Screw that guy, Okay, it
is co worker. I appreciate your candid honesty. Could be
like Joe Montana, there you go, that's what he's been
(13:28):
wanting to say. Hey, hey, hey, heyway, I'd take offense
to that. Joe's a Notre Dame guy now, and he's
a Pittsburgh guy. So I'm on this one. So we're
going out on this one. I don't think we gave
Joe enough time. We're gon we're gonna sandwich you berto,
What did what did Montana get? Eleven games? You get
like eleven games? Is a broadcaster and then he was
(13:49):
out the door. He was before his time to his style.
Like to think about it, if Romo, if Romo would
have started back then, he might have been looked at
the same. You know, Montana should have just predicted plays
for the first year and then uh not prepped here
two and just played golf all week, because I think
that probably would know that his popularity of just doing
(14:11):
what the basics of what you do when you watch
football would turn and to him being a broadcast phenomenon.
I don't know that it's that anymore. Though it wasn't
this season, Yeah it wasn't. And there was a push
behind the first, people are turning hard right and I
almost feel like people were listening to it like the
(14:34):
control move, like yeah, Tony Romo just said it's going
to be a fly and a hitch and and yeah, yeah,
change that all right? Thanks? Oh man, it was a
run dummy. Be sure to catch live editions of Two
Pros and a Cup of Joe with Brady Quinn, LaVar
Arrington and Jonas Knocks week days at six am Eastern,
(14:55):
three am Pacific on Fox Sports Radio and the I
Heart Radio. This is the moment. Brady quinns looks forward
to it, this entire show. He loves the little sprinkling
of the schedule release all week long. Huge fan of this,
huge fans and Brady Quinn, Uh, this is just for you.
(15:18):
This is a big, big story. Here is the NFL.
The full schedule release will be coming out tomorrow evening.
But we did have another piece that was dropped. We
have a drumroll please live studio band here for Brady Quinn,
just for his listening pleasure. Here, Brady Quinn, good news
for you cowboys at Packers Week ten, Sunday, November Packers
(15:43):
Week ten, what is that? Afternoon? Week ten, November no,
excuse me, awesome, big time man question Mike, Mike, Mike McCarthy,
McCarthy fact, Can I give the bigger question here? Yeah?
(16:04):
Which team is more likely to not hold relevance by
the time Cowboy in Alice? Yeah? Although the division hunt
because they might be further along in the division, right,
because that's a bad division and those and those divisions
(16:24):
tend to be backloaded. So I don't I don't even
know my way. Aaron Rodgers is happy. Yeah, that's true.
I don't know, man. You know, this could be the
year that it falls off the rails for for your boy,
a rod I mean, you realize what's going to happen.
What the entire week leading up to that, assuming Rogers
is healthy, is going to be. Hey, what's it gonna
(16:47):
be like when Rogers and McCarthy Are they going to
shake hands when they see each other? Like, what's what's
this interaction going to be? Like Mike McCarthy's back in
Green Bay like that. That's where we're going to take
that entire discussion all week long. Get ready for it here,
I mean, because I know Brady, you love the six
month preview of a Week ten matchup in the NFL,
big fan of it. Huge. Look, I'm all for the
(17:11):
NFL creating this three x you know, day seven news
cycle where they're like never, they're never in the back
of your mind, they're always like on you know, the front,
the funnel lobe or or whatever. I get all that.
It's just sometimes you need a break, like it's okay,
(17:33):
Like it's okay NFL to take like a couple of
months off or a few months off and try to
let some other sports shine. Because here's what you will
find out. When you give people a dose of the
other professional sports leagues out there, it only makes them
miss you more. The more you hang around, the more
(17:54):
you keep, you know, trying to make everything so dramatic
and sensationalize it, you kind of get burned out and
fatiguague by it. And so that's where I just wish
whoever isn't whether it's Roger Goodell or whoever else is
behind the initiative to make it a three sixty five
year thing. It's like, no, you gotta take a little
little time away just to make people get much more
(18:15):
excited for it. You know, when you're constantly talking about it,
it's hard to really get overly excited about it. So
I think this is one of the areas and where
you know, again I understand the business model on the
marketing aspect behind it. They really should think about those
starting to comp some things down. What's their month off June, June, July,
I mean June. You still got mini camps, um and
(18:36):
and O t A is going into that. So technically
there could be injury news. There could be you know,
you've got the franchise tag for those guys we've gotten tagged.
There's the deadline to come to a long term agreement. Um,
so there's you know, there's still some action. I mean, hell,
Jimmy garoppoloill probably get dealt at that point in time.
July though, that's when they start to report to training camps,
right at the end of July. But you've got like
(18:57):
those three weeks off, four weeks off between your your
mini camp and then when you report. But yeah, I
mean nowadays they're sort of report earlier and earlier, So um,
it really is an eleven weapon sport, That's what I'm saying.
It's like, eventually you need to realize that people need
a break. It's okay, like people take a vacation to
(19:18):
get away from everything for a little bit. It's okay
to do that NFL. You don't have to make a
week ten matchups seem like it's the most dramatic thing
in the world. In May, six months away from it's
like I I mean, I tease, I teased it last hour,
thinking all right, we're gonna get you know, maybe they'll
release the the opening of the season, maybe the who
(19:39):
are the Rams playing Week one? And that's what they
dropped week ten? Who the hell is thinking about Week ten?
Like nobody's thinking about Week ten Packers Cowboys at that point.
We don't even know where these teams are going to
be at It just the idea that that was what
they wanted to give out, all right, So what were
the discussions? Like, all right, right here on Wednesday before
we do the full schedule release, we've got to give
(19:59):
him something. How we in a wet their beak? Ah,
that is a wet we it's a wet beak. It's ten, yeah,
but it's a it's an interesting matchup. I mean, it's
six months away. Yeah, but you know that Dallas Dak
Prescott is going to square off with Aaron Rodgers. There
you go. Sometimes it's not the first, like they haven't
(20:20):
done that before, but but maybe this might be the
year and Mike McCarthy Aaron Rodger, you know, yeah, but
I'm just saying, you know, if if you're if you
pay attention to Greg Jennings, Greg jen Linton said that
about year three, Uh, Mike McCarthy is is on par
on pace to be lights out with the results that
(20:41):
he gets as a head coach. That's what Greg Jennings said.
That's all he said. So that's why I am so
interested in what's going to happen in week ten when
Dallas visits Green Bay on Fox. By the way, time
on fought. Just just for those aufter you who are
(21:03):
wondering what Mike McCarthy did, and you're three with the
Green Bay Packers they went six and ten. Yeah, but
what happened? What happened the next year? The next year
they would have eleven and five, but they lost in
what happened? Hold on, hold on, we've been five years
later they went a Super Bowl. Baby, there you go, alright, five,
so five years since, but he said three the third
(21:26):
year was when the change started to take Brandy, you're
misrepresenting McCarthy. It would have been seven and Ted had
the extra game, you know, so because it was they
limited sixteen games schedule, that's why it was only six
and ten. That's right. So dare you what are you eating?
Can I guess one? For the first three years? Can
(21:47):
I guess berto apples with cinnamon. That's your go too,
That's correct. That's a good little snack. He makes it
look so good when he's eating back there, and I
always be wondering what it is, and then it's something
that lets me down, like apples down. I don't know,
(22:08):
Like it looked like they were noodles for a second,
Like in my mind I created noodles like pasta. I mean,
I don't know if he's doing like a top ramen
at five ten as you're talking to those, aren't that
wouldn't look like a top Ramen noodle. That would look
like more of like a um, what's it? Pin ay?
I want to say, piney pasta. I don't know anyway.
(22:30):
That's bratty easy Italian. Yeah, but he's German as well,
I know he is. It's prattys to hijack the entire globe.
Can't you like leave some of it for the rest
of us. He's also American. Yeah, I'm just telling you
what stots out to twenty three and me shouts out,
I'll be doing a read for them pretty soon. Here
(22:52):
are you a promo? A right? Really we got them.
It was like the call of it was like impeccable timing.
There you go. That worked out? Well? Yeah, nice plug.
You're like like shack, he got the like, yeah, I
went to Penn State. Yeah. You know a lot of
these people creating business, they went to school up people
(23:15):
out there who are like going to Bosley's who need
like a lot of plugs. Do we have Bosley's as
as your hair hit replace? Hair replacement? You know, I
gotta put them plugs up in there. My boy, Darryl Gardner, boy,
he was using them joints. That's my dude. Was Hey,
I got a question for you want this for a while,
(23:37):
you know lebron And like the stuff that he puts
on there, because there's times it looks like he's got
a full head of hair, and then at other times
it's like he doesn't have much up there. It's called Beijing.
What it's called Beijing? Like you got Beijing, Beijing, Like
the city in China. It's like that's the name of it,
(23:58):
like the beef what is it? What is express menus?
You got to look it up. You got to look
look it up. Yeah, it's like it's like, uh an idiot.
It's like it's like, uh, hair die. But now it's
(24:20):
turned into a thing where guys, it's now come on.
What is read it read off? Read it off? What
is it? Nothing? I got nothing. So it's like it's
like the new thing where you you paint, you paint
(24:42):
in um over the boldness that is showing up and
it's like more of like um artistic expression. So so
wherever that here is missing, you use Beijing. You you
diet and and and you create like what is seemingly
um filler for you know, you basically are dyeing your skin.
(25:04):
Does it come off? Yeah, it wears off if it
stayed on. But here, but here's my thing, right, So
I'm up on Beijing, like and and a lot of
barbers use Beijing to like make their lineups. Are you
saying Beijing, Beijing? Beijing? So you're saying Beijing, yeah, like
(25:25):
the city, Yeah, yeah, Beijing here like sand it's b
I G E N Beijing, Beijing, Bernos, guy, it did
have come up? Did you get it? Yeah? B I
g E N so say it. It's it's like Beijing, right,
(25:47):
what is it? Tell me what it is? I don't
know read it? I mean a lie had a tough dick. Yeah,
look first a cognity girl. Now you don't want to
talk about Beijing. It root it Lee? What what's the
description of Beijing? Is it as simple as like it's
just yeah, it's like it's not it's not as it's
(26:08):
not saying it's permanent powder hair color Wow, and you're
able to like color in like you know, graze or
you can cover it morphed. I'm what I'm trying to
tell y'all is it has morphed into covering bold spots. Why,
by the way, on the note of the chia pet,
(26:30):
why couldn't we figure out the technology for hair. If
we can figure out how to make a darn chia
pet grow, you know you can't talk to those people. Hey,
but you know another thing that they're doing these days.
They're taking fake hair and and connecting it to like
this whole like almost like what you do when you
put a wig on and you glue it to the
(26:50):
head and then you cut it as if it's that
person's hair. And and they have like a full head
of hair off of like a wig, a wig weave
in type of deal, and the barber cuts it like
it's your hair. Sounds painful? Can I can I tell
you a story about it? Sounds weird to glue the
(27:11):
hair onto the head, But yeah, do too. Okay, this
is my one you enjoyed. No, no, it's the true story.
Halloween one year? Was it all the way down your back?
Let me finish Halloween. Halloween one year somebody Halloween went
ye oh my god, but you guys do that. I
(27:33):
wanted to. I want I wanted to go dressed as
the Ultimate Warrior for Halloween, all right, So um I
told my mom. I was like, yeah, that's the costume
I wanted to do. So we did what we did
back in the day. We went to a thrift store.
She found a wig that looked like an alternate Warrior.
(27:54):
But she's like, I'll clean it up, I'll cut it
because she made all the costumes by hand because it
was a lot more affordable, and she ended up cutting
it so short that with the face paint and the
wig I walk trigger treating. We walked to a door,
neighbor's house right around the corner. I know exactly what
(28:16):
houses was, and this old guy answers the door. The
first thing he says to me is what are you
supposed to be a woman? And I turned around and
I looked. I looked at my mom and she was
like sorry. And that's how Jannis was born. Like she
didn't even feel bad. She was like, listen to the
(28:38):
best I could. It was, you know, it's a it
was a two dollar wig at a thrift shop. I
tried to modify it. Guys like, are you supposed to
be a woman? I'm like eight years old, cross dressing
and who knew though, how how ahead of my time?
I was right there stepped Ohio, just sure do miss
(29:00):
it man? Funny by the way, that that'll wrap up
our coverage of week ten's matchup between the Cowboys and
Packers here seen on Fox just released a short time ago.
All right it is and Beijing and for Lebron's refertive,
like Beijing beef it's not even spelled the same. There's
(29:21):
some very notable celebrities that have rocked the Beijing to
cover their bald spots. Be sure to catch live editions
of Two Pros and a Cup of Joe with Brady Quinn,
LaVar Errington and Jonas Knocks week days at six am
Eastern three am Pacific. Hey, this is Jason McIntyre. Join
me every weekday morning on my podcast, Straight Fired with
(29:44):
Jason McIntyre. This isn't your typical sports pod pushing the
same tired narratives down your throat every day. Straight Fire
gives you honest opinions on all the biggest sports headlines,
accurate stats to help you win big at the sports book,
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and listen to Straight Fire with Jason McIntyre on the
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(30:07):
your podcasts. Let's turn it over to the great Petros Popacas,
the co host of the Petros and Money Show on
the Blowtorch AM five seventy l a Sports Fox college
football analysts, Pee, what's happening? Good morning, Good morning, Hello
yet he Pops. Were you a fan of Big Trouble
in Little China the movie? Yes, yeah, sure, everybody likes
(30:31):
that guy Kurt Russell did. But did you like the movie. Yeah, uh,
Kim Cattrall, the knife and the forehead move. Yeah, you
liked it. I liked the like cat guys with the
lightning float around and the one guy was real strong
and all that stuff. Yeah it's a classic. Yeah, I
(30:51):
thought my radio partner really really likes it. Lo Pan
actually got a star on the Walk of Fame. That's
why I was bringing it up. Yeah, I believe low
Pan is also the same guy. I gosh, I don't
want to get this wrong. Uh, let me look, he's
been in quite a few movies. We'll see the guy
in Uh was he the guy in Chinatown? Lee? What
(31:17):
was his name? Lead? Laughs? Got his name here? Please
say this? Yeah he said something else. Yeah, he's been
in a lot of movies. I thought his first name
was really filmography. Let's go to the seventies. Yes, no, Chinatown? Yes, okay, yes,
so he's in Chinatown. The Roman Polansky movie often cited
(31:38):
as the best noir film in the world. Hey, pops,
they didn't say his nickname was was really his middle name? Right?
That was his middle name? Sorry, patros Pops, I'm sorry,
I'm having I'm having a bull bit here. I'm sorry.
I really like the movies he's been in here especially.
(31:59):
He was also in the to Jake's which is the
failure sequel to Big Trouble A Little China. I didn't
know that. I don't. I've never seen that movie. By
the way, Kurt Russell raised in Thousand Oaks, California. How
about that? Thousands have you said? Have you hung out
with him before? Nah? But I've heard he's a cool dude.
Isn't he married to Goldie Haunt? Yeah, they're not married,
(32:19):
they're not they're life part a partnership. Yeah, like the
end of Four Weddings in the Funeral. Let's do all
the movies. Yeah, overboard about that one. I like that one. Yeah, yeah,
movie right, Dean Dean Prophet, come on, yeah, alright, great
name yet I love it? Alright, Um, rom com Petro's
(32:44):
speaking of relationships and partnerships. I mean, what's this Jordan
Adderson visiting the Texas Longhorns. I thought he was signed,
sealed and delivered uh to uh to the USC Trojans.
What's going on there? I mean, come on, I don't know.
It really feels like he's right in the wealth. He
wants to go visit all the offensive geniuses. Oh, he's
(33:07):
got to seeing Star Kisi. Maybe he's gonna go see
Lane Kiffin, another office of genius. Has he been to
USC Petro's Has he already visited the idea? I haven't
been to USC and forever. I think you have to
wear a mask, like what kind of masks? Not a
COVID mask, but like no, a COVID not like an
(33:28):
eye wide shut mask. I wouldn't be surprised. I have
to say. I do have to go there for camp though,
I mean you, I just don't want to see like
all the other people that are riding D's. But I'll
be over there. I gotta be there for And what
do you mean and what you know? Everybody on the
(33:50):
uscin I mean all the all the people that are
suddenly big USCS party. But I might have to do it.
M hmm. Let me let me ask you this. I mean,
it's it's this is clearly a a look at college
(34:12):
free agency. I said earlier in the show. I got
Defensive Player of the Year as a sophomore in the
Big Ten. I I won the Beric and the Buckets
my junior year. Why wouldn't I entertain if if I'm
in the n I L Era. Why would I not
entertain a market that and and I love my school.
(34:34):
I'm just doing this for the sake of hypothetical conversation,
which is now we're seeing what addison being a reality?
Why wouldn't I self self do or representation see free agency? Wise?
What market can monetize me the most for my final
year of college? Why wouldn't I? If it's legal legally speaking,
(34:58):
I can't see any research why anybody wouldn't When we're
talking about a volatile sport where your career and your
life and the trajectory of what your life and your
family's life was going to be can change within a
matter of a split second. I think that if the
money is available, and there's life changing riches available right
(35:20):
now for you and your family before you have to
go through this draft process, just to do what you
already have proven that you can do quite well, which
is play college football, I I it's very hard to
argue with that. Obviously, we're in some kind of weird
no man's land where we haven't really figured out what
(35:43):
the rules should be or not. But I hate to
do this, but I'd like to remind everybody when it
comes to the whole an I L thing and these
players getting paid and money that's available to players, we're
still not solving any of the problems with college football. Yes,
some guys that are outliers that were probably already gonna
make money in the NFL are going to make money
(36:05):
a little bit early, and that's good. I don't have
a problem with that. But it's still not the schools
that are making billions of dollars hands over fist with
their football program that are held accountable to pay the
players that are taking care of them and are in
this relationship with the schools they have this uh well,
(36:29):
I guess it wouldn't be a symbiotic relationship, but it's
certainly uh necessary to have each other for a certain
amount of time between the players and the schools, and
the schools should be accountable to that. The schools should
have to pay some of what they make for all
the players, not just the guys that are winning the
Bednarik their junior you know. And it's a real that's
(36:53):
the problem. And we all are sitting here and celebrating
this thing that we basically don't even uh we ignore
the elephant in the room, which is the schools are
still getting away with free labor for college football and
they're making billions of you know, it's it's obvious. No
(37:18):
one talks about it, and it's it's one thing to have,
you know, the school accountable that's already got billions of
dollars in an endowment for the players, and it's a
whole other thing to have the Coca Cola or some
donor that owns a grain factory paying millions of dollars
for your players because he likes to be around football.
(37:38):
It's stupid. Yeah, no, there's there's no doubt about it.
I think, um the no, no no, I don't know if
you call it irony or not. But the fact that
in the n I L space right now that that oh, well,
these payments can't be paid for play who of course
the n c A would state that right. Of course,
(37:59):
the institutions would want to uphold that because they don't
want to cut away from all the money that they're
making off of the product that's on the field for
this free labor. So that leads me to and I
think it's probably a simple answer. You know, it's been
proposed that there will be a two tier system there
will be one in which you know, these these teams
end up licensing the branding and name, image and likeness
(38:23):
of the school's football team, essentially to create what does
it pay for play model. I would assume you'd be
all for that. Yeah, I mean, i'd be Like. The
thing I was for for years was the idea to
give guys ten twenty thousand dollars upon every twelve units completed,
and once they're done and they graduate, you have two
(38:45):
hundred thousand dollars, as opposed to the crazy and frightening
feeling of no longer being under the umbrella of the
school you played at, whether it's Notre Dame, Penn State,
or USC for all of us respectively, or or Jonas
Kyle Lutheran. Yeah, but the point is, like when you're
(39:07):
done playing college football, you feel spit out, like you
feel done, like when you even if you're going into
the draft, even if you have great potential for the
next level, it is a real divorce. You can't really
do anything for them anymore. Most of us don't get
to go back and introduced the new coach in a
press Cotton So I mean, I mean, I was asked
(39:34):
I don't know why I just made a comment. I
was very proud of you. I was very proud of you,
and I said that on the show. As I've told you,
I sat in that room and I just go, I'm
not gonna say anything. You don't have to defend yourself.
Brady was a great moment. Thank you. My point is
a two dollar cushion for not just the guys that
(39:57):
were really successful, but for all the guys that were
on scholarship for you when they're finished, as opposed to
going directly to Enterprise, rent a car and driving the
car that's covered in the brown paper bag, uh to
somebody's house because we pick you up, you know, instead
of doing that, they have a little bit of money
(40:17):
to start their lives out with and help their family
and a college degree. That was always something I thought
was feasible. But now when your quarterbacks got a two
million dollar deal, it doesn't really feel as feasible anymore, doesn't.
I'm sorry, Jonah Well, I was just gonna say, I
feel like you're kind of taking a shot at Brady
for going back to introduce the new head coach when
(40:40):
you were the MC for the USC basketball team for years.
I mean, why was the p A guy. Yeah, like
you know, you really hyped him up. Got everybody going
like I just I wonder like what happened there? Like
why did did you just get tired of it? And
just so I was, I was, well, I didn't have
to be fair. I didn't have a lot of time,
so I didn't show up. Maybe they shouldn't. Where were
(41:03):
you going with your original statement? I was fired via text.
That's text. That's right for the p A guy. You
gotta gotta show up, that's part of it, right. Well,
I had other opportunities on those nights to make more
money for the disparity. Was was just saying it was
(41:29):
a glaring despair. Yeah, And I was told that it
didn't matter how many I would do, that I would
always be able to do it. And they lied, they did.
It was a fabric line liars that they are. Was
it anything to do with you being critical of the program? Yeah? Okay,
was Sam Clancy there? Man with Sam Clancy, Yeah, slam Clancy,
(41:55):
Scalabrini and Brandon Grandville, bighead, Brandon grand Jeff Trepan yea, uh,
David bluthin Fall. I can name all the old USC players.
When I was there all right, The USC did a
great disservice firing Tim Floyd, and there was no wrongdoing
found with Tim Floyd and anything he did in the
(42:17):
recruitment of O. J. Mayo. He was cleared by the
n C Double A and there was no show cause,
but he was still fired by Mike Garrett and he
was probably the best USC basketball coach of the last
twenty years. Enfield, they don't it's a little bit of
a lie, you know. They don't really schedule anybody, and
then they'd get blown out of the tournament. They did
pretty good a couple of years ago, but Enfield is
(42:39):
not as he's not as solid as as Floyd was.
Just as far as coaching goes, it's always the O
J at USC. I'm glad you've brought up him doing
it the right way and all that stuff, and and
that's really J. Mayo. That's that's really funny that you
would do that. I mean, I thought that was kind
of class listen and distasteful. But I mean, I'm just
(43:00):
saying what it was funny though, No what Jonas, I'm
just saying. I was trying to transition into a real question.
But the the whole O j thing kind of you
know O you know, look, yeah, there there is an imprint.
Yeah there, You're right, there are fingerprints too. But hey, listen, listen, listen.
(43:24):
This is my last question. All right, and this is
a serious one because you were kind of talking about
he did it the right way and the way he
brought Mayo in. Um, well, no, I'm not saying you
did it the right way. He was clear, okay, found yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah yeah. How do they how do they go from
(43:47):
here with with these rules? Like you see that the
committees are coming together, They're they're trying to basically create
this whole we're buckling down or we're going to tighten
up the reins on things. I mean, that's got to be,
you know, for show like Well, No, I think part
of what Brady said is true. I think, uh, they're
(44:09):
gonna find different ways to pay the players through the
school or through the TV deals. You think. So you
think that's going to happen. Yeah, it's already happening. I
think because I think and I think you see it
with the college football Playoff is a really big uh
indicator because it's not an n C double A property.
So with the college football Playoff. It's it's awarding a
(44:33):
championship in college football outside of the jurisdiction of the
n C Double A. It's not an n C Double
A trop that. Yeah, so, I mean the College Football
Playoff is basically just a created committee by ESPN, which
is another problem. And that's why the SEC gets two
teams everything like that. That's a whole other conversation. But
(44:53):
the point is the college football Playoffs existence is making
the n C Double A very nervous. That's why they
don't really sanction people anymore. Nobody gets the death penalty,
nobody really gets suspended. Everybody gets to transfer wherever they want.
The n I L thing has happened. This is all
because the n C Double A is losing their grip
on their most lucrative product. So what's gonna happen is, Uh,
(45:17):
everybody's going to form their own college football kind of entity,
all these different things that the writers have been talking
about for years. It will be continued seismic change, and
they will figure out a way to pay scholarship players
and we'll still make our money calling the games that
God get him on Twitter at the old p Petros.
(45:39):
Uh time flies It goes by way too fat for
you guys. Straight back to bed and strap my sleep
mask on. We will We will do it again next week.
I always appreciated we are state, be in and wake
(46:01):
up the echo. Yeah it is yeah, pet Papa and acres,
cost of the Petros and money. Shawn A in five
seventy l a Sports also a Fox College Football analyst.
Always a fun spind it. I want some spend dip man.
I'm in the move for spind dip, spin dip, yeah,
(46:21):
spinach dip and artist. Yeah. You said you worked in
in restaurants. I mean you should know what spind dipping.
We include art at choke. We don't. We're not bias
against artis. I like artichoke in there too, But nobody
says artichoke dip. I mean you know where I come from.
We do spin. Yeah, you never heard of that. No,
that's the first. That's the first from spend it interesting.
(46:44):
Maybe it's cultural. Wow. Fox Sports Radio has the best
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