All Episodes

September 15, 2025 • 28 mins

Doug riffs about the college football weekend. Doug reacts to Colin Cowherd's take about Caleb Williams. Doug chooses among deserving candidates Jason Stewart deems as most annoying today. Jalen Hurts makes today's edition of "Because We Can".

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
All right, this is the Doug gottli Show. Heres in
the Bonus with Doug gottlie.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
What Up Doug Gotlieb Show with the Motus, Fuck sports.

Speaker 3 (00:13):
Prittio, iHeartRadio app Welcome, Welcome, Welcome, Welcome in. I don't
hate to say I told you so, but I did
tell you so that Alabama is not terrible a terrible
football team. We still don't know how good Florida State is.
But early in the season, when you don't know who
you are and you haven't practiced together a ton, you

(00:35):
don't play particularly well, you don't freak out. This is
my way of saying, we'll just use Alabama as the
launching point, right, but this is this would be my
way of kind of convincing people, letting them know that, hey,
early season, nobody knows what they have, right zero people

(00:59):
truely know what they have. They just don't. They don't
know what they have. And if you don't know what
you have and you throw them out there in a
football game of a team that can beat you, sometimes
they do even if they're not better than you. That's
just the simple reality of it. But a crazy weekend,
and think about how kicking game is such a big
factor where you have Tennessee loses really because of their kicker,

(01:25):
and Notre Dame loses because they can't get an extra
point down. Right, It's just it's just wild, and it's
a little bit like it's very interesting.

Speaker 2 (01:40):
It's a little bit.

Speaker 3 (01:43):
Like the chain game. And like, wait, how is it
like the chain game? Okay, I'll explain it to you. Okay,
the chain gang in the NFL or in college football.
You're like, really, we have a you know, ten billion
dollar industry or whatever, however many you know, and NFL
is a one hundred billion dollar industry, maybe more than that,
and we're deciding first down, touchdown, all these things based

(02:04):
upon the eyes of an eighty year old guy who's
working on the chain gang for minimum wage.

Speaker 2 (02:10):
Let's be better.

Speaker 3 (02:12):
The same is how you should approach it if you're
a college coach. Right, So much of well you have
to worry about budget wise is how much we spend
on a quarterback, how many spend enough? It's the line,
how do we balance out on getting quality coaches and
our facilities and also.

Speaker 2 (02:27):
Getting better personnel.

Speaker 3 (02:29):
But how much time and thought and money is put
in resources is put into the kicking game? And yet
the kick game wins and loses these games. It's been wild,
but I still think we'll circle around to most of
the teams you thought being good being really good, and
Notre Dame losing two games early to two teams at

(02:50):
the top of their schedule. In terms of talent wise,
I don't think those are eliminators for the college fball playoffs.
That's the other thing that's changed is an early season
loss doesn't kill you. Early season two losses probably does,
but maybe not if you run the table.

Speaker 1 (03:03):
Be sure to catch live editions of The Doug Gottlieb
Show weekdays at three pm Eastern noon Pacific on Fox
Sports Radio in the iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 3 (03:13):
Let get to the Fox Says and now every day
of this time in the Boat's Podcast. Play for your
previous portion of Fox Sports Radio Fox Sports One Show.
Here's Colin Coward talking about Kayleb Williams and Ben Johnson.

Speaker 4 (03:29):
Maybe there's a coach it works with. I don't think
it's Ben Johnson. There are two or three components to
quarterbacking in this league. You don't have to be big,
you don't have to be super mobile. Jared Goff isn't
but there are two or three things you have to
do in this league. You have to be consistently accurate.
You just have to be again, Jared Goff can't run.

(03:49):
He's consistently accurate. Caleb's not. And you have to be
an anticipation thrower. You have to see stuff before it's
wide open, and he doesn't. It all also helps if
you have a composure. I don't think he does. He's
like the news anchor and the teleprompter goes down.

Speaker 2 (04:06):
Oops.

Speaker 4 (04:07):
I just don't think this marriage works. That doesn't mean
people get divorced and they find.

Speaker 5 (04:13):
The love of their life.

Speaker 4 (04:15):
Caleb's really talented and Ben is a structured timing coach.
But together they don't compliment each other. They just don't.
The coach wants this, and this player is capable of
doing this, and it doesn't mesh. But this is a marriage.
They don't compliment each other.

Speaker 3 (04:37):
It's interesting on how the one to eighty Colin has done. Yeah,
I don't know. I mean, if we're if we're fair,
Caleb hasn't been great and it hasn't worked so far.
But it's also Ben Johnson's second game as head coach,
and that's a hard one going against his former team, Like, you.

Speaker 2 (04:55):
Know, that's that's that's not all. That's not easy.

Speaker 3 (05:00):
I'm not willing to go it's not working. It won't
work two games in. But there were signs of this
in the preseason. There were signs of his inaccuracies, and
those signs haven't gone away. And I think that's the
biggest problem, which is it's not accurate enough.

Speaker 2 (05:19):
And that's why.

Speaker 3 (05:19):
You know, you can look at some of the misthrows
from last week that people put on social media and
go like, well, it's one throw here there, Like, yeah,
NFL guys do not miss by that much. NBA guys
don't miss open, wide open shots, and NFL guys don't
miss wide open throws.

Speaker 2 (05:33):
So until the accuracy is.

Speaker 3 (05:34):
Solved, it forever won't work. Here's Dan Byron Kerry Roads
yesterday on Fox Sports Radio talk about the biggest surprises
in the NFL season so far.

Speaker 6 (05:45):
Who's your biggest surprise at the moment, I'll read the
name so you so you know, right and so you
don't have to guess. But you got the Rams, we
got the Bengals, we got the Bills, the forty nine Ers,
the Colts, Cardinals, Eagles, and Packers right now.

Speaker 7 (05:58):
Out of that bunch, I think the Colts definitely, guys.
I think there are some that thought maybe this team
would be looking for a quarterback in the next draft.
Not having faith in Daniel Jones, they turned it over
to Anthony Richardson. Now they had two home games, but
beating Denver today is quite the accomplishment the other one, honestly,
and especially how today played out. The Bengals have that's

(06:20):
most recent history, have been historically slow starters. They weren't
fast out of the gate last week against Cleveland and
still needed a last second touchdown today to be Jacksonville.
But to do it without Joe Burrow. If you would
have told me that, I would have said, no way.
They were two and zero.

Speaker 6 (06:35):
Yeah, that's mine as well.

Speaker 8 (06:35):
Bengals.

Speaker 6 (06:36):
I mean, the Colts is definitely a surprise, obviously, but
the Bengals, they always historically start up slow and then you,
like I said, Burrow goes down and they were down
in this game and found the way to win.

Speaker 2 (06:46):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (06:47):
I think the one. We give a lot of credit
to quarterbacks, and good for Daniel Jones, but I don't
think we can understand how important and impressive Jonathan Taylor's
been for the Colts. You know, it's got four hundred
and thirty six yards rushing and then you know he
can catch it out of the backfield. He only had
two catches yesterday, but I had more catches the week before.

(07:07):
I mean, he just a dynamic two way running back.
Is a great lifeline for a quarterback. Great lifeline for
a quarterback. And I think Shane Steiken, who was kind
of an offensive play calling wizard even go back to
when he was the OC with the Chargers. He's been

(07:28):
able to do more because Anthony Richardson just not accurate enough,
doesn't see the field well enough. Danny Dimes is not
the greatest quarterback on Earth, but he's more experienced, and yeah,
he's got that Jonathan Taylor as a great weapon, as
well as you know Tyler Warren, who they're using a
bunch at tight end, and they like that Alex Pierce

(07:48):
kid as well as a big, tall wide receiver. I
don't I like what the culture doing, but again we
had to temper. It's two home games. Dolphins are a mess.
We still don't have any idea how good the Broncos are.
It's very very early last year. They had a surprising year.
This year people picking them something to go to the
super Bowl, but you know last year they didn't beat anybody.
And I also think schedule plays a factor. Packers have

(08:09):
been the most impressive, beaten two of the best teams
in the NFL from last year, but they also were
both at home and one was on a quick turnaround
for the Commanders who had to go on the road.
So you know, a lot of those teams we mentioned
played two home games or played some of the bad
teams in the league. This is pretty Quinn talking about
Note tre Dame.

Speaker 9 (08:30):
They played two really good top twenty football teams that
they lost by total four points. You know, won by
field goal one the last second play by one. So
it's it's tough sludding there's They are a good football team.
They are to be one of the top teams in
college football. I know see that. I would see people
will say, oh war bo, I mean, okay, they didn't

(08:50):
play the cupcakes like your school did. Okay, you know,
like like Nebraska's really puffing their chest out right now.
It's like, all right, we'll see this week. You actually
played this year, like you actually play an opponent. So
We'll see how that goes. But my general point is
state you know, there's pet states run on that board too,
but they can't even cover half the spreads they get
against SOMETHINGSE teams. We you know, there's no conference to

(09:15):
play for, no conference championship. So the problem is, even
if you went out and you go ten to two,
is the rest of the schedule strong enough? You know,
based on how they've adjusted the strength schedule, do they
get enough points for playing those teams early in the
season close? And if they dominate like they did last
year followed the Northern Illinois loss, they still make it in.

(09:36):
Like I would say this, what we know for sure
is Notre Dame now allows their faith to be held
in everyone else's hands.

Speaker 3 (09:46):
Look, I think Notre Dame is still a good football team.
I mean, you know, you botch a staff on an
extra point and end up losing the A and M
because of it is crazy, crazy turn of events, crazy
turn events. And the one thing that the playoff does
allow you to do is you can drop a couple
of games. I think, if you're going to lose games,

(10:07):
this is the time of losing. But I don't think
they can lose another one and likely still get in.
That's what the Fox said say.

Speaker 1 (10:15):
Be sure to catch live editions of The Doug Gottlieb
Show weekdays at three pm Eastern noon Pacific on Fox
Sports Radio and the iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 2 (10:26):
Let's find out who What's annoying Jason Stewart.

Speaker 5 (10:30):
And now it's your annoying, hey, Doug. With the local game,
I think the national game. The best game yesterday was
Eagles Chiefs and Tom Brady was on the call. And
I have a very deciphering ear when it comes to
Tom Brady. Our guy Jonesy, he's a football coach. He

(10:50):
listens to the podcast every day, and he was unfultun
and he's like, he really got it in for Tom Brady.
And I'm like, I don't really have an in for
him as much as he was anointed this top position
with zero experience, So I guess I would be a
little bit more critical of how he's doing, given there

(11:12):
are more deserving people to have that slot. I don't
think he has the insight to be successful. In other words,
like Magic Johnson, he was amazing at playing the game.
I just don't know if he's going to be great
at articulating insight into the game which that job takes

(11:32):
that I don't think is fixable. This part is fixable.
I grabbed this personally because I heard it in the moment,
and Doug, You've done thousands of games yourself. I'm going
to play this. Play the most consequential play of that
game Eagles and Chiefs. Perhaps the most consequential game of
the entire weekend was when Patrick mahomes through an interception

(11:56):
at the goal line. And I want you to tell
me what's missing in the summation by Tom Brady bos
picked off.

Speaker 1 (12:04):
It's macugall.

Speaker 8 (12:05):
Who's got it?

Speaker 1 (12:06):
And who's run? One man the beef? Alright, he's taking
out Andrew mccuba, the rookie from Texas on the bounce
off of Kelsey, had a huge play for the Eagles. Incredible.

Speaker 10 (12:23):
Patrick makes a great throw on the angle route.

Speaker 1 (12:26):
Travis just a little late in his.

Speaker 10 (12:28):
Head around perfect place to throw the ball if you're
Patrick and mccooba. Johnny on the spot kind of just
falls in his hands.

Speaker 5 (12:39):
Simmons, what's missing from the last part of that.

Speaker 2 (12:43):
Call, Doug, the first name of the player.

Speaker 5 (12:48):
Play played again, play this shorter one.

Speaker 1 (12:52):
Incredible.

Speaker 10 (12:53):
Patrick makes a great throw on the angle route, Travis
just a little late in his head around perfect place
to throw the ball at you're Patrick and mccoopa Johnny
on the spot kind of just falls in his hands.

Speaker 2 (13:09):
Simmons, I don't know what is missing. Help me out.

Speaker 3 (13:14):
I mean the Johnny on the spot is a little
bit of a you know, nineteen twenties reference.

Speaker 2 (13:18):
Whatever.

Speaker 5 (13:19):
He takes us up to the point where he should
have done something, and he didn't. Right, he said how
perfect the throw was from Mahomes, that that's the only
spot that a quarterback can throw it. He just didn't
take the extra step that the number one commentator on
a professional sports broadcast needs to do. And that's criticized

(13:42):
Another big name in the moment, Travis Kelsey's famous I
get it in the moment, though, there has to be
a comment that Kelsey has to make that catch. Yes,
because you said everything other than that, but you did
not say it. Yeah, and I think think that could
be fixed. You get the balls to criticize big name

(14:04):
players in the moment.

Speaker 3 (14:05):
Well there's there's also and look, you're the seven times
super Bowl champion, so you can you can say, like
the best players will drop that falls but make no
mistake about it, Travis Kelsey has to catch that football,
has to catch the football has to has to have
to He is on the field for one thing, to
catch that ball, and he did not. I would agree

(14:28):
with you.

Speaker 2 (14:29):
I would. I would completely agree with you.

Speaker 3 (14:32):
I don't know if that's fixable, because I don't know
if it's just he he is of this mindset of
I don't want to be critical of anybody, but there's
there's a difference between analyzing and critiquing. There there's also
like you can analyze and tell us about is the
is the route at the right depth? Is this because
when I saw it, it looked like it was just

(14:54):
a slight smidge out of his reach, and it felt
like that's the that's age. You know, like five years ago,
that hits him right in the middle of the chest.
Last year it hits him, you know, at the wrist.
This year it's at the edge of his figure tips
and it falls falls away to the other team. I
would agree with you on that. It's a very it's
a very insightful thought that, Hey, at some point you

(15:16):
got to be critical of guy. I don't care if
Travis Kelsey's going to the Hall of Fame. He's got
to catch that football.

Speaker 5 (15:21):
So, speaking of football, Donald Trump, with everything he has
going on right now, everything that his country is dealing
with politically right now, felt the need to shoot this off.
I think it's truth social That's where he that's what
his platform is. He he wrote this morning, the NFL
has to get rid of that ridiculous looking new kickoff rule.

(15:45):
How can they make such a big and sweeping change
so easily and quickly. It's at least as dangerous as
the normal kickoff and looks like hell, the ball is
moving and the players are not the exact opposite of
what football is. Sissy fo ball is bad for America
and it's bad for the NFL. I think that that again.

(16:08):
I think you learn the hard way. I think a
lot of people learn the hard way that optics are
almost everything nowadays. Just because you have thirty seconds to
write a tweet about the NFL doesn't mean that you
should do it. As we are coming off of a
major tragedy that has divided this country more than most

(16:32):
events have in modern years, I just don't see why
you would feel the need to tweet this. And then
I think, oh, okay, there's a key word in this tweet,
sissy football is bad for America. That's playing to his base.
That gets the base route up.

Speaker 2 (16:50):
Right.

Speaker 5 (16:50):
Anyway, anytime you can call somebody a pussy, Trump's gonna
do it and his base eats it up. So I
think that's it. But again Optic's speaking, well, how you
could send those tweets.

Speaker 3 (17:05):
The this This is where people go like is this
this is like a cult and you're like, what do
you mean. It's like, like, okay, because a cult if
it's not a cult, it's just like, hey, I don't know,
this is really what we need to get into instead.
Remember over Charlie Kirk's murder. Okay, so you have suddenly

(17:27):
Republicans have tried to position themselves as like, hey, we're
the thoughtful, we're the respectful. Hey, like we're not the
violent side they are. And then it's the basically what
he's saying is, ah, this is woke. Woke is democratic,
the Dems are pussies. That's what he's saying, right right?

(17:50):
Is that is that fair?

Speaker 5 (17:52):
I have no idea if it has to do with woke.
I just think that anytime he could get a chance
to call call somebody. Yes, yes he will, and how
wrong is he? By the way, it's not a new
rule this is it's.

Speaker 2 (18:02):
Not a new rule.

Speaker 3 (18:04):
It it's just the weirdest thing.

Speaker 2 (18:09):
Again, like.

Speaker 3 (18:11):
I don't I don't even know, I don't even know
anybody who goes like that was the right time to
send that tweet. But there's just no one will hold
him accountable because what he's what he's done is unless
you bow at the altar.

Speaker 2 (18:24):
I mean literally throws you out to the wolves.

Speaker 3 (18:27):
It's just I mean, do you really think there's a
guy in communication going uh.

Speaker 2 (18:31):
Hey, uh pres uh yeah. Can we take that down? No, no,
we won't take that down. It was a great tweet.
By the way, it's really good.

Speaker 3 (18:40):
I know it's not a tweet. I know it's on
that true social but whatever you call it truths, Yeah,
it's it. We are living in the weirdest time.

Speaker 5 (18:49):
But you're right, So coming off the Charlie Kirk thing,
as you just mentioned, so there of everything that has
happened in sports as a kind of a reaction to this,
I meant on Friday, three members of the media at
that point Friday were fired for social media posts that
were disrespectful towards the murder, and there were dozens and

(19:13):
dozens of others over the weekend, but I think maybe
the most I guess the one thing that rose above
all was Dan Lanning's message in his press conference. I
do want to play it all. I want to play
it all because there's a lot here. I'm not saying
I agree with every word of it. I don't even
know if it was a great thing to say, but

(19:34):
Dan Lanning's message two reporters on Saturday afternoon, the US.

Speaker 11 (19:40):
Could learn a lot from our locker room. I think
the people in this world can learn a lot from
our locker room. You walk in down locker room, you
got guys of different races, guys of different backgrounds, different religions,
and you got a team that loves each other. Like
tons of differences, tons of differences where they come from,
what they deal with, and ultimately you got a team
that loves each other.

Speaker 8 (20:00):
I think we're missing some of that in our country.

Speaker 11 (20:02):
You know, you talk about are you recently found out
like Charlie Kirk was an Oregon fan, right, I didn't
know that.

Speaker 8 (20:08):
I hurt for his wife, Erica and their kids like that.
That sort of.

Speaker 11 (20:11):
Evil should never exist in our country, and that's what
it is, is evil like. But I remember having to
explain that to my family, right, I remember sitting down
my kids and explaining what happened. And they're talking about
people talking about it at school, and it's just sad, right,
But it's just as sad, you know, every day it
seems like we deal with some sort of violence that's
going on in our country, whether it's you know, school
kids in Colorado or kids in Minnesota at churches. I mean,

(20:35):
life matters, you know, and I think we've lost sight
of that. But I just wish, I wish the world
could learn a little bit of something from our locker room,
because we got a bunch of people with differences, and
what you got in there is a bunch of people
love there. And there's some people that'll be disappointed about
how much I said about this, right, And there will
be some people that are disappointed that I didn't say enough.

Speaker 8 (20:54):
Right now, I really don't care, right.

Speaker 11 (20:56):
What I do care about is if you disagree with me,
if you hate me, if you don't like me, just
know this, I love you. I absolutely love you, right,
and life matters, And that's no way that Charlie should
have experienced that his family should experience that. There's no
way that that evil should exist in this world, and
we have to continue to identify and point it out
and make sure that it's absolutely evil. There's no reason

(21:18):
in the world that our kids we should be worried
about sending our kids to school. It's our most valuable
commodity in the world. They should be protected. And the
reality is there's just not a.

Speaker 8 (21:27):
Lot of common sense on both sides.

Speaker 11 (21:30):
Like common sense says, oh, it's mental health, right, common
sense that, oh, it's guns, you know what, it's both Like,
let's have some common sense. Our kids should be the
most protected thing in the world, right, they should have
armed guards at every school because there's sick people. There's
sick people in this world, right, And on top of that,
sick people need help, and it should be really hard
for a sick person to have a gun. Should be

(21:51):
really hard, right, And if people can't see that from
both sides, how disappointing is that.

Speaker 8 (21:56):
But I just know, like when you see moments like
that that exist.

Speaker 11 (21:58):
Right now in our country, like I just think about
my kids and I hope I remember I saw that
video is disgusting, And I just told them, like, man,
I hope my kids don't see that video.

Speaker 8 (22:07):
How much does that side.

Speaker 11 (22:09):
I hope Charlie's kids never see that video like disgusting, right,
and we glorify it, we praise it. You know, people
are Internet warriors and those are sick people. And at
some point we need to go look at sports because
what our football team has is it has people on
both sides of the fence, right, And there's fans that

(22:30):
love our team that have a lot of different opinions.
And the truth is, there's a lot of things Charlie
said that I did not not agree with it all.
There's a lot of things he said that I did
agree with. But what's disappointing is I could respect those
differences and somebody else couldn't.

Speaker 8 (22:43):
And they thought that they deserve to be God.

Speaker 11 (22:45):
In that moment, and they didn't, right, And nobody should
have to experience that. So yeah, I got a lot
of disappointment. We had a you know, a Bible star
with our team. We talked about it with our team,
and I think our team feels the same way regardless
of views. I don't think they feel anybody ever deserves
to experience what some people in our country are experience
right now and is super disappointing.

Speaker 5 (23:04):
So there's a lot there, and I think he makes
a lot of sense. I also think that there's I
think I give him a ton of credit for saying it.
I think a lot of coaches kind of bury their
head in the sand this past weekend, and I wonder
how many coaches spoke to their team about this tragedy. Doug,
did you have you spoken to your kids about it?

Speaker 3 (23:27):
Yeah, we spoke last week. I talked him a little
about it.

Speaker 5 (23:30):
Do you believe him when he says that I've spoken
to my team and we're all on the same page.
That's the one thing that I kind of questioned in
this seeing all the reaction over the past five days,
I just can't imagine that a group of what seventy
five eighteen to twenty two year olds, mostly of color,

(23:52):
I don't know if they are quote on the same
page about Charlie Kirk. Do you believe that.

Speaker 3 (23:59):
It's the what are we on the same page about?
We're on the same page about. Hey, you can you
can like him or hate him, but this is not
violence is not acceptable. Yeah, And that we're just gonna
bond together and do it through football.

Speaker 2 (24:13):
Sure.

Speaker 3 (24:13):
I mean it's a really hard one for Dan Lanning.
He's in Eugene, organ Right, He's in Eugene, organ It
is not just a left coast. It's a left coast
more than just in words, right, it's a extremely progressive
state and area. So you know in and you know

(24:36):
in in college football, you have a lot of you
have a lot of support from donors, and a lot
of those donors are to the other side. I would say, look,
he here's why he benefits. Uh, here, here's why he's
able to speak out. They're really good and everybody else
just doesn't want to get fired.

Speaker 2 (24:57):
That's the reality of it.

Speaker 3 (24:59):
They don't they because you know, if you're not perfect
with your words, there's the feeling that you can get fired.

Speaker 2 (25:08):
That's the crazy part about it.

Speaker 3 (25:09):
And again, there are lots of people who have said
lots of things that they deserve to be fired for
because and they also don't really understand what the First
Amendment means. They just don't. But I think there's generally
a good amount of fear for speaking out in any way.
And even if you listen to his wording, like he

(25:31):
definitely straddled both sides of the aisle in terms of
what he's saying. In an effort to I will also
point out that I don't love everybody. I don't I
respect your right to live and your right to speak
your mind, but I'm not going to sit here and
say I love everybody. But I understand what he was
getting at, and I did think the message all things

(25:54):
considered as toxic as every step along the way can be.
I actually think you did a really good job of
saying some smart things, of positioning his itself squarely in
the middle, but being understanding of however you feel, and
also while speaking out and saying like, look, it's a
real thing, like now we care about shootings. You know,

(26:17):
I care about this, and I do understand that on
some level, like it was, it's a major national, international story.
It's not just a podcaster who's thirty one like that's
trying to diminish the impact of the story. And the
fact that it went so viral made it even more impactful.
But we can't lose track of all the other things.

(26:38):
So I thought it was pretty smart, and I thought
the last thirty five seconds or so, we're gold.

Speaker 5 (26:43):
So Trump's tweet or Tom Brady.

Speaker 3 (26:47):
No, Trump's trumps tweetings because because again, like here is
the thing.

Speaker 2 (26:52):
It had nothing to do.

Speaker 3 (26:53):
With national security, with border or with anything else, but
everything he does and left to his devices, divides us.
And if you don't agree with him, you're a pussy.
And like that's just one not becoming the president too.
You're like a year late on a rule that's been
out there, it's been discussed for a while, and then

(27:16):
three it's divisive, it's annoyed.

Speaker 1 (27:24):
Why are we doing this?

Speaker 9 (27:25):
I do.

Speaker 5 (27:28):
Because we can, all right, So this is great. This
is on a live broadcast yesterday. It made it over
the air over the air on a national TV broadcast.
Jalen Hurts on a hot mic. As they were I
think in victory formation, Chiefs were complaining across the other
side of the ball, and Jalen Hurts had a message

(27:50):
for the Chiefs.

Speaker 1 (27:51):
Their advantage again today and now they take a couple
of knees and can work their way toward two. And
Ozero start to the season. You at the Chiefs, We're about.

Speaker 2 (28:00):
To start over two. That's so good. Was his first
ever three game losing streak.

Speaker 5 (28:05):
We won the fucking game.

Speaker 2 (28:06):
We won the fucking game. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (28:08):
Yeah, it was really good and that was yelling hurts.
By the way, why can we say it, Yeah, because
we can't. That's it for the end of the Modus podcast.
You got the radio show three to five Eastern, twelve
two Pacific, Fox Sports Tradio, iHeart Radio app.

Speaker 2 (28:21):
I'm Doug Gottlieb.
Advertise With Us

Host

Doug Gottlieb

Doug Gottlieb

Popular Podcasts

My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark

My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark

My Favorite Murder is a true crime comedy podcast hosted by Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark. Each week, Karen and Georgia share compelling true crimes and hometown stories from friends and listeners. Since MFM launched in January of 2016, Karen and Georgia have shared their lifelong interest in true crime and have covered stories of infamous serial killers like the Night Stalker, mysterious cold cases, captivating cults, incredible survivor stories and important events from history like the Tulsa race massacre of 1921. My Favorite Murder is part of the Exactly Right podcast network that provides a platform for bold, creative voices to bring to life provocative, entertaining and relatable stories for audiences everywhere. The Exactly Right roster of podcasts covers a variety of topics including historic true crime, comedic interviews and news, science, pop culture and more. Podcasts on the network include Buried Bones with Kate Winkler Dawson and Paul Holes, That's Messed Up: An SVU Podcast, This Podcast Will Kill You, Bananas and more.

24/7 News: The Latest

24/7 News: The Latest

The latest news in 4 minutes updated every hour, every day.

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.