Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Boom. If you thought four hours a day, minutes a
week was enough, I think again. He's the last remnants
of the old Republic, a sole fashion of fairness. He
treats crackheads in the ghetto cutter the same as the
rich pill poppers in the penthouse the clearing House of
Hot takes break free for something special. The Fifth Hour
(00:23):
with Ben Mallar starts right now. That it does. We
are in the air everywhere, spanning the globe, kind of
the podcast globe. As it's the weekend. You hear this open,
you know that we are here eight days a week
the podcast The Fifth Hour, which began one day a week,
(00:44):
and as a glutton for punishment, we have shifted to Friday, Saturday,
and Sunday at the radio show five days a week,
this the other three. So they've added an extra day
of the week because four hours on the overnight are
not enough. And as you know, because you found the podcast,
you're available on the I Heart podcast network. This is
(01:04):
a interview podcast, so we're not gonna have a lot
of b s. But I am joined by for better
or worse, David Gascon, who is over there loud and proud,
and I'm happy that you mentioned the interview session of
this podcast, because Lo and Behold in the month of June.
The highest and most downloaded podcasts so far this month
(01:27):
is the one I did with Ashley Evan Smith from
the UFC. Just I did not download that podcast, so
I did not need your support that highest downloaded podcast
in June June. Just it's early in June. We are
you talking about you? We're not even midway through the
month of June. And it's a great start. It's like
a great start, secretary at just getting out of the
(01:48):
gates quickly and then pulling away down the stretch. Well,
to be fair to the to the woman, the UFC
person that you interviewed, there, I you you're more like,
there's only a few. I'm not a big UFC person.
You are. I'm not, so I don't know a lot
of the people. I know the big names. I watched
the Connor McGregor and that level. Uh, but I didn't
(02:10):
really know who this person was. So you did it.
And if you want to interview more UFC people that
I've never heard of, you are more than welcome to
do that. You can hijack the fifth hour and get
all Schnacker and talk to your favorite UFC people and uh,
and just knock yourself though. It's not like we're talking
strictly m m A or boxing or anything like that.
It's like what we do you and I or any
(02:32):
guests we have on Letty Dike Drill was a great example.
We went off the beaten path with them. It wasn't
all baseball chatter. It's the same thing with these fighters,
like they got need to defend it. You're very defensive.
No need to defend you just want to make sure
I clarify it because the mob that is the Mallard
militia might get a little sensitive. No never, never sensitive
(02:54):
before we get into our I don't know, guest friend
friend hanging with us. I want to promote all these
social media channels if you haven't followed me yet on
Twitter at Ben mallor Instagram, Ben Maller on Fox and
the Facebook page Ben Maller Show. And also if you
want to personalized video on cameo. I just did another
(03:15):
one of those the other day there. Uh. And I
keep saying I'm gonna send out links on social media
and I never do because I always forget on the
weekends I got stuff going on, but it's just type
my name in Ben Mallory on cameo. And as you
pointed out, yes, I am cheaper than the other people
at Fox Sports Radio. I'm a value compared to Clay
Travis and Rob Parker, which you're on there. So I'm
(03:36):
I'm a deal on that. And you're also all over
the place guestcon. People can find you or Twitter at
David J. Gascon, Instagram at Dave Gascon, but not on
not on Facebook, and not on cameo. Yeah, not not
on those things. A question for you because you did cameo.
So so buy a chance of someone requests a message
(03:58):
from you, like let's say they were quest the message
from you on on Friday. Do you do you wait
three or four days and then tape record it to
be played like the next Friday. No, dummy, I'm just
I don't. I'm just double checking. You know. Some people
like to record things for days and I hear you.
(04:20):
I know where you're going with that. Uh no, I
do it live. We'll do it live. But but no, yeah,
I usually I try to get back within a few hours.
I mean, unless there's too many of them, and then
it takes maybe a day or something like that. But
there's I've never had that problem really, so I'm just
gaming that I would have that problem. But then maybe
when I put it out there it'll I guess maybe
(04:41):
when I go on furlough when we have to take
time off because because of the pandemic, maybe then people
will I'll just I'll do nothing but cameos that entire week.
If if that we eventually get to that. I know
Eddie is gonna be out next week on on the furlough,
and I have not decided I might just keep working
for free, but I probably will take some time off
here some point. You should work for free. I mean,
(05:04):
Lord knows I need someone to be on my side,
you know. I mean, well, if you've seen my early
checks in radio, I often have worked for free in
the broadcasting business. But anyway, what was your starting rate
when you first started in radio? Oh my god, I
got paid on a per game basis when I worked
at the mighty six ninety and it was it was
(05:26):
not much. It was like, I think it was like
forty or fifty bucks a game, which seems like a lot.
But to cover a baseball game, you get out there
at like two o'clock and you leave at midnight. So
the per hour for fifty dollars of work and you're
there ten hours, that's generally not a good payout, you
know what I'm saying. Yeah, I see. When I first
(05:47):
started in radio at I Heart San Diego was ten
dollars an hour part time and you were capped at
twenty nine hours. But then when I became the game
day host of the Chargers, you had to work the
morning show that led in the pregame show, then you
cover the game and then the post game twelve. It
was a nightmare. It was. It was audio salt mines
(06:10):
what it was. But you build up some thick skin,
I guess you build up some thick skins. So anyway,
speaking of thick skin, uh, somebody that has the thickest
skin around that I know A beloved figure in local
Boston radio dominated the airwaves, and and that matters. Like Boston,
one of the things I love about Boston is that
(06:32):
the sports radio format is the most important format of radio.
It's not music, it's not talk radio or anything else.
Eat is sports talk. And over the last twenty plus years,
traditionally the sports talk station W e I, where I
briefly worked did some filing stuff for you at night.
(06:54):
Was the number one station in Boston, and the Sports
Hub came along, and then it went back and forth
between the Sports Hub and EI, who was the number
one station, But for much of that time Jerry Callaghan
had the morning show, the Dennis and Callahan Show, then
the Kirk and Callaghan Show, and they killed it. They
were number one morning drive, which if you work in radio, man,
is that really huge? And Jerry said, I've known Jerry
(07:17):
for several years and going back probably over a decade
now when I first met him, and Jerry uh was
a writer at the Boston Herald. He was a very
successful writer at Sports Illustrated before he got into talk
radio at w e I. And it all went away
about a year ago. And the reason it went away,
(07:38):
Jerry was ahead of his time. Here. It is the
story that those of us that work in radio behind
the scenes talk about the nightmare scenario. Jerry Callaghan, number
one radio guy in Boston, dominated station, made a ton
of money, everyone loved the show, big audience, canceled because
(08:00):
of a protester. But it's a little different than what's
going on right now right now there's cyber mobs running
around canceling people, which some some like, I don't uh.
And Jerry Callahan again, all that success, all the resume,
the domination, and one person ruined all of that, took
(08:20):
all of that off the board because they didn't like
what Jerry had said on a radio show. So let's
welcome in here. He's got his podcast now, the Callahan Podcast,
Radio Legend. Jerry Callahan and Jerry, why don't we start
with that? Can you walk me through what happened in
that nightmare scenario about a year ago? Do you really
(08:42):
want to hear it? Step by step? Then? Um, going
through a pic. I have to tell you, brother, because
it was my life. But it was strange. It was
a few years ago now, I guess four years ago now.
We did a segment on a five year old kid
who was transition a transgender five year ottle kids and
(09:02):
you know, naturally we said, that's pretty weird. That's a
uh that that is crazy. Literally we said, said the parents,
you know, we're bad parents for doing it. There was
there was a story in the Boston Globe and they
were obviously, uh, you know, glorifying it. And I'm wonderful
it is, and we said it's nut. And some transgender
(09:23):
activist a guy whose kid was tender and older older kid.
Kid was like in his twenties, but the father was
a very active room guy in and he just went nuts,
just started emailing our advertisers, I mean all of them,
national ads, local ads. He would email all of them
(09:45):
every day. I mean, I'm not kidding, said thirty thirty
five emails every day calling us everything homophole book and
they getting everything else. And he would take our show
every day and they pick it apart and they take
out little segments and take it anything that bothered him.
And he didn't make a new email. And he wouldn't
believe if I showed it to you things that just bizarre,
(10:06):
saying that that's racist or sexist. If we said anything
about like my problem, I said, chicks, you know, instead
of girls as a chicks, And he let an email
saying he wanted to be a supported he's kind of thicker,
and it just it was nothing. At first we laughed
about it, but he just bore down some national advertisers.
(10:26):
Local people are good, but nationally they don't want to
get involved in anything, so they would you know, say
we're we're going, we'll we'll you go somewhere else. So
we lost national accounts. We met with the guy. He
he was just duplicit as he was, you know, he
was insane. He was like obsessed with us. And he
(10:48):
would say, you know we we volunteered to go to
sensivity training. We had to meet go through transgender sensitivity training.
We did everything, we did a p s A, We
did anything he asked, and he just up coming. He
would not let up. One day, you know, they'd say
the left, even though the radings were great. And they
(11:08):
finally said they get rid of Kirk, my partner, kirkman Ahan,
and he didn't go away. And then four or five
months later they called me in the said Witler choice,
we've lost eight million bucks. You know, he just won't
leave us alone. And they made a deal with the guy,
Stacey made a deal he would go away if they
get rid of me. And what do they do, They
(11:28):
take Cowards's kind of like today these days, these guys
taking a knee, these mayors like Garcetti and these police
chiefs taking a knee for the mom. But that's what
last year. Took a knee for the ball. Be sure
to catch live editions of The Ben Maller Show week
days at two a m. Eastern eleven pm Pacific on
Fox Sports Radio and the I Heart Radio app. Yeah
(11:50):
and Jered, I mean, I love you man, You've been
great over the years. But everyone in radio, what happened
to you? Guys like it's like a horror story and
you would just you laid it out perfectly. But you
were ahead of your time in many ways. But it
wasn't the mob. It wasn't a mob that got did.
It was like one guy, but you you were canceled
by a protester. We were canceled by one activist. But
(12:12):
he also got help from Boston Globe, which is incredible.
People don't think anything of us to do in the business,
and what they did. They had an editor her name
was Shirley Leon. An editor just hated the station and
she'd write occasionally write columns and one how awful we were.
She worked with the guy. She literally got a list
of our advertisers and called them with him, an editor
(12:34):
of the Globe, and said, are you aware of this
sexist comment they made as a homophobic comic they made
on a on a daily basis, so and so the
Globe was completing. The Globe is not really a newspaper anymore.
It's just kind of an arm of the you know,
the Democrat Party, and they're just I mean, it's Sean
Henry's a little plaything and and no one reads it
(12:56):
or subscribed to it, but they do it carry out
their little bit debt as when they want to. When
me came after us, so the Globe end was one activist,
then Bob said, one guy just got on his computer
every day and attacked. And you're right, we were kind
of We talked about that now, Kirkmanhan and I talked
about that this week. How we couldn't some office we
wouldn't take us off of you talking about Antiefer and
(13:20):
Black Lives Matter and whatever. The mayors, the governors, you know,
we'd be would be getting some in some kind of
trouble daily the Red Sox now the Red Sox for
a big story because they they cowered to uh, Tory Hunter.
I don't know if you saw this, but this week
Tory Hunter made up some silly story about how fans,
a group of fans were chanting the N word and
(13:41):
all the other fans were laughing in the stands, and
it's it's ridiculous on its face. Nobody actually believed the story.
But the Red Sox put out a statement and said,
oh yeah, Tories experiences. They didn't actually say they believe them,
but they said they support Tory Hunter and and you
know they coward the way they always do. And there
is no way our station would have let me or
(14:04):
Kirk on the air this week. They would have, you know,
they would have pulled the put for sure, because that's
your right. Then. That's why I feel like we were
ahead of the time. This was almost a year ago
from me, and now it's happening less than line. I mean,
you see it that the guy in Sacramento who said
all lives matter dot dot dot, every single one that
Grant Napier to play by play guy and he got
(14:26):
fired saying oh lives matter. Be sure to catch live
editions of The Ben Maller Show week days at two
a m. Eastern eleven p m. Pacific. Yeah, yea, Jerry.
I mean, it's like you and and we're always like
walking on eggshells and I and I don't I'm not
nearly as as polarizing you guys. Did a great show,
and we do it a little different on the overnight.
But like your people are looking to trap you. It's
(14:49):
like they're trying to trap you. And if you don't
have the same thought that they have, your your racist
or your evil and they just they tag you with
these things and it's it's a wild time. What's happening
right now? It's wild and it is frightening. Man, it
is scary. It's and you know what it used to be,
even it was a better a year ago and ten
(15:09):
years ago, fifteen years ago. I mean, you listen to
some of the stuff Stern did on FM or I must,
even the characters, they mean, they just had much more freedom.
I know guys in radio, as you of course do,
but I know the guys friends of mine are still
there and they feel like they're both are numbered because
they're gonna step in it one of these days and
(15:30):
some activists or some group is going to come down
on them. Everybody's playing scared. It's you can hear it
in the voices of a lot of these guys. They're
playing scared. They're afraid of a topic like this. You know,
they wish they could talk about you know who should
who should lead off, you know, for the rests. Instead,
they're forced to talk about black lives matter and in
(15:53):
our gutless governor in Massachusetts, and they set down the lockdown,
and I mean it gets very intense, and these guys
are getting very nervous because they know it is a
it is a scary time. They're just waiting for the
next had to get locked up. Be sure to catch
live editions of The Ben Maller Show weekdays at two
(16:14):
am Eastern eleven p m Pacific. Jerry, I got a
question for you, because you know Ben obviously working at
w E I. I actually went to school in Boston.
I went to Northeastern for grad school back in the day,
and I love the city. I know you're from there,
but I absolutely love Boston. I have family and friends
that I grew up there. Um, with all this going on,
(16:35):
and with your long history of working in radio, working
in media, when this started happening, and even when it
got to I guess the boiling point for everybody involved,
did you ever think, person like, there's gonna be some
retribution for these guys, for for the attack and for
the way that they went after you and pretty much
chopped you by the knees with your career. It didn't initially, No,
(16:59):
basically we're asked about it so that you know that nuts.
I met with the girl, right and I said, he's
what I said, and you know what, I said, this
is crazy, a five year old child transitioning and I
had a picture of the kid was born a boy
in the transitioning to a girl. And I said that's crazy,
and he goes, yeah, I would admit that's kind of crazy.
(17:19):
I go, you just didn't need it what I said.
And the guy said, you didn't like the way you
said it, and it just snowball from it. He just
became obsessed and he said, I'm not going to stop
until I get these guys fired. And we got wetting him.
We got to know is his story. He was, That's
all he did, you know, suit his neighbors. He super
(17:40):
prown or started a petition to get this you know,
selective and removed. It was so he was wealthy and
he was said was retired and he just was sit
home on his computer and try to william people's lives.
And initially I'm thinking, you know what, ratings were great.
The revenuet was great. I've been there twenty years and
you know, we had no boot prop and and I'm
(18:02):
starting to think now that you know, I should have
seen it come in. I mean, it's there was no
sign that. As I say this all the time and
talk radio sports rading, you need one thing above all others.
You need a boss with some balls because you're gonna
get especially in this day and age, the calls. It
used to be you get letters and calls. Now you
get emails and texts, and you get the Twitter mob.
(18:24):
And if the boss has some balls, he could tell
him a screw. You could say, you know, he's my
guy because his opinions, and I got his back. I
had that for much of the twenty years. I did
not have it for the last couple I had a
boss who was it was scared of the mob and
scared of losing his job and did not want to
(18:45):
fight for us. It wasn't a fighter and just rolled
over and said, okay, we'll move on. Now. The station.
I don't know if you know this event, but they
just had the worst monthly rating in thirty years since
I think ninety one and ninety two. It's a disaster,
and obviously, um you know, there's all kinds of the
(19:06):
red sex have just fallen off the map. They're just
irrelevant now and that hurts. But the numbers, strings of
the revenue are in the toilet, but they're not, you know,
getting any grief from many activists. So I guess that's
what they wanted. That was the choice they made. Yeah,
it's it's uh yeah, I saw that the numbers went down.
We are my overnight show. I went to the Sports
(19:28):
Hub and so, I mean, they're they're the beneficiary right
of all all that's happening over there. But I don't
like EI. The're mad aton and the way the example
people like like me and others. So they kind of came.
They brought on them. And the numbers are just I mean,
they love something you can wipe off the bottom of
your shoot right, just they're just awful, ugly, ugly numbers.
(19:49):
Did you hear the Big band? Did you tell your
story of when your EI experience? Uh, well, well yeah
I told a little bit. I didn't give him all
the details, but it was Dave correct, that correct, j
Jerry full disclosure. I don't think you left the company
because of what you said. I think it's because the
(20:11):
bad luck that Ben brings along. So we're against the station.
All the just goes to batty now like things just
go down the waystside. We we were looking for a
third guy. It was Kirkland and I were looking at
the third guy, and we have talls. So the only
guys in the guys in and then some from around
the couple at Shawn Salisbury flying one day had a
bunch of locals. And then because I was like him
(20:33):
on overnight and his attitudes, she make a good cities
of wise as it was like the fall that he
roots for people to lose. You don't work for people
who when you were for guys to lose. That's a
good way to look at it. So Ben comes in,
you can it comes at the station said like a
big suitcase. He looked like John Candy and plane strength
and automobiles dragons and obviously I think it came down
(20:56):
at four bills at that point, right, we'll do it.
Um it becomes in the deal, change everything. We moved
the mics so big sits down and we're just talking
on man. We said, so I think we had a
break down, and you know where the company puts you
typical our company that put him at the cheapest hotel
right down the street. I think it's a day's in,
(21:17):
but it was calosed convenient, so we tell them that's
where the terist state amount eleven. There was a couple
of the hijacker state there and he got Ben. You're like,
We're like, you could have been in his room, and
Ben's like, on his wife, don's the terrorist statement room.
(21:41):
But it was fifteen years later that Ben was a
little uncomfortable staying in the same way with the terrorist
from nine eleven. Fox Sports Radio has the best sports
talk lineup in the nation. Catch all of our shows
at Fox Sports Radio dot com and within the I
Heart Radio app Sir s Are to Listen Live. Yeah, well,
(22:03):
Jerry to be it was a horrible hotel. Uh. It
was like I I would not like, I would not
put my worst enemy in that hotel. And they hadn't
cleaned it. It was like the reason and you told
me the story, and I thought you were b asking me.
That's not true. And then I looked it up and
and it was in the I think the Harvard newspaper.
They because it's right near Harvard, that hotel, and they
(22:23):
said that's that's yeah, that's where the guys stayed in there,
and they stayed on the same floor I was on.
So I don't know what room they were in, but
they were on the same you know, I was on
the same floor. So I was like when and then
when I walked down the hall to the elevator, I'm like,
this is the same walk these assholes made when they
were they were coming down. It was. It was crazy.
I had I had a good time, and you guys
were great, You're very kind of me, and uh, I
(22:45):
had fun there, and it sucks that the way it ended.
And as you said, the station's gone on the toilets
since you guys left, and and that new morning show
is not exactly taken off unfortunately. It feels like the
industry getting scared and powering and playing it safe, and
(23:07):
everybody's you know, walking on egg shows because it wasn't
the freedom that we used to have. And you can
have and you could tell them people, you've got to
have the freedom do the talk show, any kind of
talk show. You can't be afraid of stepping on a
on a mind every time on the air. And that's
what lot of guys earn it, and Jerry walk me through.
(23:31):
I know you got a longerer writer at the Herald
and you you worked at Sports Illustrative, Like, at what
point and you mentioned this, at what point did the
media companies indoor censorship? Because it certainly feels like we're
heading that direction where if you don't agree, they want
to silence you. And and it wasn't like that for
a long time, but at some point within the last
(23:52):
I don't know how many years has happened. Why is
it happening? Well, A couple of things I think is
the uh Twitter, the social media has made it so
much easier to round up a mob and go after
a guy, or go after the station. Like I said,
I keep playing some of the stuff that we did.
We once set a strip. We don't do the sports
(24:12):
mostly the John Dennis and I had a stripper come in.
She was performing and she she lit herself on fire
in the studio and we were in then laughing. And
I'll remember because the Midday Wholesdale he complained, Uh, we
did it, and we're like, we don't look at its
radio which sound I mean, but we did crazy stuff
(24:34):
like that, and uh, no one thought anything of it.
Now If you did that, you get a thousand or
more tweets or texts or emails. It was just harder
to complain when you had to write a letter. It's
much easier to round up a mob, as we could
see around the country right now. You can get on
Twitter and round up a mob, a virtual mob, but a
(24:56):
a matter of minutes. I also think in our case,
he just that sucks. They were not happy with the
morning shows. They were made their feelings clear when we
were when we criticized him, and I'm not trying about
criticizing him unfairly, even just whatever, making fun of a
dealing with hungry for something, and they would call management,
(25:17):
and management would immediately apologize and make us call us.
And then the team was the one getting money from
the station, and yet the team was the one calling
all the shots. It never made me sense to me,
But the teams became, you know, at least in my world,
the team became much more powerful and in control of
(25:37):
the station. Which is that. I mean, if people know
that you're in the tank for a team, they don't
respect your opinion about the team anymore. So I think
that's a problem too. Jerry, you gotta go back real
quick on this, so correct me if I'm wrong. But
you said that you brought a stripper on and she
let herself on fire. Yeah, so you have you have
(26:00):
a stripper that comes on, let lights herself on fire,
performs Ben has males come on a show, they drink
their own piss and then light themselves on fire. Maybe
I should be Emboston not Los Angeles. Those days are over.
It was funny because they she burnt a little hole
in the studio wall and stay there forever she did
(26:21):
to her nest. And then she did one of my
sidekicks my co hosts. Sheep like burnt his cut chair.
He had jeans on, so she just had you know,
lighter fluid. She lit over the up and it was
pretty wild and we laughed and had a good time.
And maybe someone wrote a letter, but it wasn't a
big deal. Now you probably get the thousand tweets and
(26:43):
tis that day somebody really wanted to round up the moss.
It could come after you, which is why stuff like
that just isn't done anymore, even if it's you know, entertaining.
Even if I said for all the listeners it was
some you know, so you hunder um woman fully closed
pretending to do that. Right, could then just some some
(27:06):
that pretending to be in his radio There was no camera,
So why could it be offensive? How does that offensive here? Yeah,
it was different rules that that was years ago. You know,
maybe Becauseterne set the prone and other people did it.
(27:26):
It didn't really make a deal out of it. But
now there's no way in health they would never allow it.
If you did it, you know, there's been would be
someone you know, protesting the next day and they'd want
your ass on the platter. And they did get it,
they would get it. Yeah, Jerry, the thing about the
Twitter mob, I feel like it's the matrix. It's not
(27:47):
it's not realized. There was a study done he probably
saw it a few days ago that said that the
top ten of people on Twitter are responsible for eight
percent of the content that is created in the United States.
So you're talking about ten and and you look at
the overall numbers about the US population, how many people
are actually on Twitter, how many active users? You're talking
(28:09):
about a handful of people that are dictating to major companies,
major advertisers, and to to get rid of people, how
how is that allot are we going to have an
awakening here at some point, Jerry, where people realize that
this is complete bullshit. We can say that on the podcast. Yeah,
you know, I mean, what's the man? I mean, I
(28:30):
think the podcast today we were going down the list was,
you know, cow Patrol is is getting canceled, and Pops
the sub cons after twenty seven years is getting canceled.
The reason and the reason for it is they want
they don't like positive portrayals of cops. And I still
imagine that whatever fifty years ago is we're having to change.
(28:52):
Hollywood is making these changes because they're being pressured not
to police officers in a positive way. You'd say, that's insane,
that's so happened. I could. I mean, I got it's
like the guy in psycholto that maybe in siots are
saying all lives model, what what does this rust? Or
(29:13):
the guy in the New York Times, so helfu a qualititor.
That's science because you want a headline of building is
batter because of historic buildings are being evangelized, and they
said buildings matter, you get fired, you get science. So
it is scary time. I'm glad I'm not twenty three
trying to get into the business because I mean, you
(29:34):
would just you just have so many rules to follow
just to survive. I don't know, I always I wonder
that too. Ben likes the pendulum gonna swing back the
other way. It sure doesn't seem that way. It sure
seems like the uh, you know, the barbarians are inside
the gate now and they are going away when you
(29:54):
see just the way they I mean, we where I am.
The politicians are the worst. I mean that they just
bounded the whims of every morning. They're all into the
defunding the cops. Now they're own, you know, Black Black
Lives Matter. On the day that they took over the
Seattle City Hall and by the way, six blocks of
Seattle um, the wrestler John Cena gave him a million
(30:19):
dollars and we talked about that on the podcast my
podcast today, like, can you explain this to me the guy, Obviously,
John Cena feels like it's good publicity or whatever giving
a million dollars to play Black Lives Matter. But if
you turned on the news, John, you would see the
occupied city Hall. They're participating in a lot of these
riots and they're a big part of this occupation of
(30:43):
six blocks of Seattle. I mean, are you not supporting
little lawlessness? I mean they are all kinds of co
operations that are giving a half a million or a
million or more uh to Black Lives Matter. And I'm like,
first of all, there's lots of good causes and not seen.
It is a very terrible time. What are you picking
this for because you've been shamed into it or because
(31:05):
they've prosecute Because if you don't, they're gonna say, what
are you a racist? I mean, they don't need your money.
They're you know, they're not right now, They're they're not
doing very constructive things at the moment. You can find
op chanities to to help out. Yeah, yeah. And and
the police thing to defund the police, which has been
(31:26):
spreading around here and people just knocking the police. Listen,
I I support the police, and I know you do too, Jerry.
And and it's like if you say that, they're like,
while you're racist, you can't say you support the police.
How do we get to again? How do we get
I'm just wrapping my head around all of this because
like I know, there's bad cops and the and they
obviously need to be taken care of. But that doesn't
(31:48):
mean you get if you have one bad apple, you
don't throw out all the apples. And they want to
throw out all the apples. Jerry and the and the
bad apple that caused all this is going to prison
for the rest of his life, life of pure hell.
I mean, he got arrested, he's gonna get I think
he's gonna get evicted. But I'm older. I think I'm
older than you, guys. I remember a time when you
(32:10):
were supposed to respect and admire police, and people were
actually like cheering for them in public and buying them coffee,
and there were TV commercials about what heroes they were.
I don't know if you guys remember it was like
three weeks ago. Remember that three four three four weeks ago,
the middle of the pandemic, you know, or something like
seven thousand in New York. Cops got the virus because
(32:32):
they were on the front lines fighting and there were
cops everywhere doing good work, and we were supposed to
stand and cheer when we saw them. And because you
know whatever, a handful of activists decided one day that
all I mean a new finger is the thing they
stake paid is a c A p all cops are bastards,
(32:52):
and it's like everywhere and these and these riots and
news occupied and I'm saying, wait a sect three weeks
ago all cops were he those Yeah, it's it's it's
crazy and you know, not the reference a book because
we you know, we're sports radio guys, but you're a writer.
The Orwellian thought police from the book N is like
(33:13):
and I read that years ago, you know, and I
was like, whatever, but it's really true. They the Grand
Napier thing is the greatest example saying all lives matter,
which most reasonable people with common sense will say, Okay,
I get that, but the thought police, the activists are like, no,
you can't say that. We have banned that phrase, and
so like, who are the people? I guess the question
(33:34):
is who are the people that decide what's allowed and
what's not allowed? And how how have they came so
much traction in the last couple of years wild because
because there's nothing the people fear more than being labeled racist,
and they don't they don't buckle to uh, you know,
black lives matter, or to the people that are carrying
(33:55):
the water the media that they see. Media sends his
work because it gets there all on board. I mean,
if you don't do everything they demand. That includes not
saying all of them, not only the guys say it. Man.
He said it, not in a way of like throwing
it in the guy's face and like we're shooting Black
(34:16):
lives matter. He kind of saying the anciliatory way. He said,
always matter, do every single one, like I care about everybody.
And the freaking guy is out of work now because
of it. And there's and you know what's what makes
it worse is there's very little outrage. I mean there
are people who saying, yeah, good. I mean they're very
very little outrage when there's something so insane because they're
(34:39):
afraid to be in the next you know, no one
wants to be next. Yeah. Well, and Jerry. Also, the
thing about Grant Napier is that not only did he
get fired for that, but then they said he was
like a racist, that guy thirty years as an NBA
play by play guy just because he had strong opinions.
And DeMarcus Cousins didn't like what he said about him
on the radio. And Chris Webber, which is, you know, Jerry,
(35:00):
you've done the job great. You have to be critical
of athletes that to do the job right, at least
the way I was raised doing the radio. You've got
to be critical. It's not you're not doing your job.
And because he was critical of grand Napier, he became
a racist. You can't even criticize or a grant aper
criticizing the Marcus Cousins. Rather. I mean so, I guess
the lesson is, if you're gonna be a play by
(35:21):
play guy and a talk you can't be a talk
shows at least an opinion that talk shows. Right, you're
gonnaken trouble for that. No, you can't know there's you know,
everyone's gonna be my cream bird. That's the goal. I
guess for some people, everyone's just gonna be you know,
everyone was gonna sound the same and just escape their
laying and be as careful as possible. It's very very discouraging. Um.
(35:43):
But maybe maybe right, maybe it's swing the other way.
It doesn't feel that way right now. It feels like
the the inmates are in full controls. I'm asylum right now,
but I don't know. We'll see a time. Jerry, what
are you doing now? Anyway? I'm obviously the uh, everything
is still flammable in terms of sports and politics and whatnot.
(36:05):
But what are you doing professionally now that you are?
I do a podcast daily called the Jerry Callahan Podcast,
which is me the same guy. Wasn't I get to swear, however,
and I get to say what I want. I don't
get cold in the boss's office. And it's it's doing
very well, doing a health not better than my old station. Um.
(36:26):
And you can find it in all the usual places
we were, you know, we we the slogan or whatever
the on the on the locals, it's uh, Jerry Callahan Podcast, Politics,
sports and revenge, and we have done a lot of
all three lately. As you know, there's not that much sports.
(36:46):
Although I gotta say the Drewbries thing is insane. That's
another example of the country. I mean, the meat whatever
gone the same. And the guy said what he said,
which is it started to answer to a question about
kneeling for the anthem, just talking to love and his
kind countree, and he's I believe he's apologized twenty seven times.
Now is life suppologize as his kids are apologizing and
(37:07):
neighbors are apologizing for what? I don't know, but I
think if they could do it the Drew Brees. I
think they know this. Everyone knows this. They could do
it to anybody, and so they exceed They succeeded in
kind of preemptively shutting everybody up on this topic. And
I'm telling you my prediction I've made this week is
on Week one, when the NFL puts up rod to
(37:29):
Goodell will be there and he will take a knee.
Goodell himself will take a knee. That's how far we've come.
Every all these guys will, you know, Brady probably will.
It's gonna be just a whole new world out there.
And it's not that they believe in the cause, because
we don't even know what the cause is. Colin Kaepernick
is smart enough to not open his mouth. He never
(37:50):
says anything because I don't know that he could articulate it.
But everyone will be on board. It's going to be
very dangerous to, you know, stance the anthem or tell
everyone how much you love your country or how much
you respect the military. Those are going to be dangerous
words very soon, whether person or professionally. You mentioned you're
(38:12):
a couple of years older than us. Have you ever
experienced anything like this since you've been born, no God,
no nothing, nothing even not even close. And I liked
to be on the adding, you know, big stories like
I felt, you know, like it was what we're there for,
you know, we did, you know we're there for. Not
(38:34):
eleven of planes went in the building while I was
on the air, and we talked about it immediately and
every day for weeks and weeks. And we were on
the air after the mathon bombings, and while they were
searching for the Zigny apps, which was right in our neighborhood,
and we were we had the Watertown cops in the
studio right after the shootout. So I mean, I like
(38:54):
that kind of those kind of stories, the big stories.
I don't know how you can't. It's certainly more interesting
than you know, the next day's starting pitching matchup or whatever.
But nothing like this, truly nothing. I mean, it's incredible.
The you know, we destroyed the economy voluntarily in this
country over the last three months. We had these lockdowns
(39:14):
where you couldn't go out in public without being called selfish,
you couldn't go to the park, you were called selfish.
And then immediately instantly because of one bad cup, who
did one awful, evil thing we have, you know, two
hundred thousand people in the streets in Los Angeles, and
everyone's said, is that wonderful? Just a bizarre time, And
(39:36):
I'm glad I at least have an out where the
podcast to talk about it, because man don't want to
talk about Well, what about your your personal relationships? Because
we talked so much. Ben and I talked about just
the way that social media is and colleagues and whatnot.
But we all have friends and family that are either
right eas or lefties or somewhere in between. Have you
(39:59):
severed ties with people that are in your personal circle
just because they've been so outlandished one way or the
other that like, in this kind of an environment, it's
there's no point in having those people around anymore. I
I don't severtise with them, but they sometimes advertise with men.
I can handle it, you know. I I say this
all the time, like I get liberal friends of hate
(40:20):
Trump and and I don't debate them, just like Ow
the Data co host or car and I don't take
it personally, but they do. You know, I have family,
so I avoid it with certain people, but I don't mind.
And how gladly talk about this. Whatever the issues here
today with with the riots or the pandemic or whatever.
(40:43):
I don't understand that most people, especially here. I see
that being raised in Boston and go to school here,
and I mean, I've always been outnumbered. There's always been
more crazy liberals and you know, people like me. So
I'm used to it. And I've worked in journalism so
used to being outnumbered. I don't mind. I like to Jerry.
(41:03):
I want to ask one more question before I turn
it back over to Bed. This is a personal question. Um,
if I put you in the garden in a game
seven and you needed one guy, would you rather have
Jonathan Quick or took a risk? I need to be honest.
I bet Larry Bird come on question. I thought you'd
(41:26):
ask me like Jordan a bird and answered. I was
gonna answer before you finished question. Would there we almost
every os career and it was just never seeming like
it was a treat every night. It just so tough
and so cuch. But I don't know. I'll take the
local kid because there you go, Jerry. I want to
(41:47):
go back to the Red Sox thing with the statement
they issued about the racism and all that, and uh,
you know, I've been to Boston a few times over
the years and and I've never seen that. I know,
obviously the history of Boston going way back. You guys
when you had the Morning show you had talked a
lot about and it was the Adam Jones thing a
at Fenway a few years ago, Like like, what is
(42:10):
what is the real stories? Like it seems like people
just repeat that is Boston racist, like the media portrays it?
Is it as bad as it worse? I mean, where,
what's the real story? I know the old history too.
It used to be racist. General manager the cold Jack Roberts,
and I want to take her ups and try it
(42:31):
out and take that leaping on one off the field.
They didn't get a tower? Are so to take a
shower on all the stories going over today on my podcast? Um?
You know what I denied the history they had in
the Cobs, which is some kind of berry and Johns
Patrick who was there for decades, who was raping young Rob.
(42:55):
I brought kids went to Haven training and he would
play them in ever with them. And this went on
for years and I found a big cat and busted
and died. And I think that it still owners looked
the other way when this was going on. Sometimes will
solve the history. That doesn't make what Tory Hutter or
Adam John said true. I mean if you look at
(43:16):
it and says that's what happened this week. Then and
they had to do the interview in Boston had said
whatever his clients in the field, the a group of
five kids chanted the N word, and he actually did
it on the radio cha to the N word, and
a whole group of adults have said clapped and laughed
along with them. Now that is on its face, that
(43:38):
is impossible to believe. That it is not by facts.
That's impossible to believe. Nobody reporting, nobody said anything. He
didn't say anything. This was like pen pen trap, wasn't
he didn't see anything. If the pap told nobody, he
just decided now to make this story up. And everybody
knows it's you know, it's it's bols that can happen. Okay,
(43:58):
I'm not saying things like that. Hasn't have to put
the past. But this example and he game is just
made up. The world socks of course, and the planters
that they are put out a statement saying what toys
experience was, It's real. It happens, And I said, they
believe that. They just said thinks acts happened, and they
said that that's seven complaint for last year racial stars
in the stands. Now there are three three million fans
(44:21):
over with anyone games said that. I don't know, is
that a lot of that? A little? How many of
the Yankees have We don't know how many thes the Dodgers,
who knows, But they said it happens because they like
everyone else. Now, they put out a picture of the
new general manager at his desk in his office, and
they put a picture on the wall behind it to
say black lick does matter, and another picture of Luther
(44:45):
came next to it. That's how much. That's how much
these guys paying it. They have that list are haped
to call stories h to a liar. They don't believe
the story either, but they don't want to say it
because it will make them look racist. If so, that's
the situation, you know, the again the mob wins again
(45:05):
the mob. He isn't control of things. The mob has
to put the red sox in Kimmid David. And that's
how they operate. They don't have any black people in
the front office and all black, a black manager in
a hollow lot of black people. But god, they think
black lives matter. So give him a pun on the head.
There you go. And and Jerry one one final point.
(45:25):
You gotta tell the story. You went to the White
House a few years ago and uh it was with
the Patriots. And what was that? Like, I trump yelled
your name. I remember I heard you guys played the audio.
He could like kind of barely hear it, but he
he like acknowledging that was pretty cool. What was what
was that? Like? They were up they were up in
the balcony or whatever that's called up in the balcony.
He gave a bunch of players in the class a tour,
(45:48):
chumped it after a ceremony. You take them, you know,
doing the thing. And so we're outside looking up and
they come out on the balcony. Bob crafts that's Jerry
Calley had done it. He's a big supporter yours. And
he said thanks Jerry, and he yells my name. I said, Spross,
you know, and audio and there's another game made Jerry
(46:09):
the front of us, he claimed to the sampan wasn't
even was like somewhere else. But uh so I got
a shout out from the President at that time, which
was pretty cool. That was the day and Hernandez on
himself killed himself. That day. We went on the air,
book the news, and then what happened went to the
White House. It was a big day. Wow, that is
(46:30):
a big day. Jerry. Thanks for doing this again. The
Callahan podcast right's available where we get podcasts, you can
or the little phonow me on Twitter to just that
tolling the g but it's called Jerry Callahan Podcast Sir
awesome downloaded, subscribe to it, give Jerry a good review
and continues sex success. Jerry, thanks for coming on. I
(46:51):
appreciate it. Thanks Jerry. Sure, Thank guys. Thanks thanks for
having me.