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September 20, 2025 27 mins

Dan and the Danettes remember Robert Redford after his passing. Dan dissects the NFL’s statement on Tom Brady sitting in the Raiders’ coaching booth and he still has questions. Dan thinks Miami Dolphins HC Mike McDaniel and QB Tua Tagovailoa should both be on the hot seat after losing their third straight game to open the season. And Dan reacts to future Hall of Fame Dodgers P Clayton Kershaw announcing that he will retire after this season.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
You are listening to the Dan Patrick Show on Fox
Sports Radio.

Speaker 2 (00:04):
Earlier this morning, got word that Robert Redford had passed
away at the age of eighty nine. Quite a life
and leading man. He was in a lot of movies.
He was also a director on some big movies as well,
and Butch Cassidy and The Sundance Kid, The Sting. I mean,
there's a variety of movies that Redford was in, but

(00:25):
also became a famous director and really a remarkable, remarkable career,
very very big on conservation throughout his life. Sundance Film
Festival that was started by him as well. Don't think
I ever met him. I don't think we ever had
him on either, but I know later in his life

(00:49):
he talked about how he was the leading man, you
were the good looking guy, and he was trying to
get out of that, and you know, it sounds weird
to be I don't want to be a leading man,
but I think he wanted to get out of the
pretty boy. But I don't as much as you want
to try, he wasn't able to get out of that.
Poor guy can't get out of this damn good looking

(01:12):
leading man.

Speaker 3 (01:13):
Yes, PAULI imagine having that as your main problem life
being too good looking. Yeah, because there was a point
where he was the one seed for good looking guys
in America. Yeah, I mean a long run.

Speaker 2 (01:22):
And then you put him with Paul Newman and they
were in a couple of movies. Butch Cassidy and certainly
The Sting. I love the Sting. It's still great, all
the President's Men. He also directed Ordinary People River runs
through it as well. At eighty nine years of age,
pretty good, Pretty good. He went to play baseball at

(01:47):
Colorado and his mom died. I think she was around
forty when he was going to go play baseball, started drinking,
got kicked out of school, lost his scholar ship, and
then he kind of had to start figuring out what
he was going to do for his career and ended
up taking theater lessons in New York City.

Speaker 4 (02:10):
And I love that.

Speaker 2 (02:12):
He bought a piece of property, two acres of land
for five hundred dollars build a cabin in Utah in
nineteen sixty one, and that's where he kind of started
his love affair with that state. But Butch Cassidy and
The Sundance Kid and The Sting, and Radford said that
he really owed Paul Newman because he helped him get

(02:36):
the role in Butch Cassidy and Sundance Kid and The
Sting Too in nineteen seventy three, won the Academy Award
for Best Picture. He was also in the Way We Were,
Barbara Streissan, The Great Gatsby and Dustin Hoffman and All
the President's Men, which was about Watergate.

Speaker 3 (02:56):
Yes, Paulin and the great sports movie. The Natural came
out in nineteen eighty four, and it was a very
controversial decision at the time.

Speaker 5 (03:03):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (03:04):
He played both himself as the older Roy Haws, but
he played himself at eighteen years old in the movie,
which is very and Glenn Close did it as well.
They're twice that age, more than twice that age. So
the earlier scenes of the movie.

Speaker 4 (03:17):
How old was he when he filmed The Natural?

Speaker 3 (03:19):
Yeah, uh, forty he died. He would have been about
forty five years old when he filmed The Natural, and
he's playing himself as a senior in high school.

Speaker 4 (03:27):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (03:29):
I wasn't big on that movie, but I understand why people.
Robert Duval to me was great in that movie as
the sports writer, the columnist.

Speaker 4 (03:38):
But Glenn Close, all right, But.

Speaker 2 (03:44):
Who was the the cocoon demanded Wilford Brimley. Wilford Brimley
for Quakerus.

Speaker 4 (03:52):
He was like thirty one, he was.

Speaker 2 (03:54):
He looked the same. He always looked old always. But
Robert Redford that at the age of eighty nine. I'll
sign him for that right now, yes, time.

Speaker 6 (04:05):
Why do you think guys in their forties looked like
there was seventy back then? Like Carol O'Connor, archie By
you can name if.

Speaker 2 (04:10):
You go back to older Robert Redford didn't look seventy
when he was forty.

Speaker 6 (04:13):
But almost everyone else was like forty going on seventy
three for somebody.

Speaker 4 (04:17):
Paul Newman didn't look seventy at forty.

Speaker 3 (04:19):
In the seventies. It was before like gym's and workouts, yeah,
and feeling good about yourself.

Speaker 4 (04:24):
Yeah. We didn't care what we looked like. Back then.

Speaker 3 (04:26):
You grew old like a man.

Speaker 4 (04:27):
We were a man. We're a man's man.

Speaker 5 (04:31):
Yes, marvit maybe it might be generational, But first, Robert
Redend Redford movie I think of is indecent proposal. Oh,
Woody Harrelson.

Speaker 2 (04:42):
Yeah, he didn't look good and I mean he didn't
come across well in that movie.

Speaker 5 (04:45):
But he was an older davineer, handsome guy.

Speaker 4 (04:49):
Creepy to you.

Speaker 2 (04:51):
Yeah, and then he's saying, yeah, I'll give you a
million dollars if I can sleep with your wife.

Speaker 4 (04:55):
Woody Harrelson, When.

Speaker 3 (04:56):
You're a billionaire and you're creepy, you're eccentric. It's a
different word. That's a great movie, though.

Speaker 2 (05:02):
To me, more it felt bad for Woody Harrelson. Woodrow
should hell on better. You don't loan out your why
they wanted the money, they needed the money. You don't
loan out to me more. That's a lesson that should
have met in the name of the movie.

Speaker 4 (05:16):
Yeah, it was prime to me more. Yeah, alrighty.

Speaker 3 (05:21):
When Robert Redford is the second hottest person in the movie,
you know it's good.

Speaker 1 (05:27):
Be sure to catch the live edition of The Dan
Patrick Show weekdays at nine am Eastern six am Pacific
on Fox Sports Radio and the iHeartRadio w.

Speaker 7 (05:36):
App Hey, it's me Rock Parker. Check out my weekly
MLB podcast, Inside the Parker for twenty two minutes of
piping hot baseball talk, featuring the biggest names of newsmakers
in the sport. Whether you believe in analytics or the
I cast. We've got all the bases covered. New episodes

(05:56):
dropped every Thursday. So do your sofa favor and listen
to Inside the Parker with Rob Parker on the iHeartRadio
app or wherever you get your podcast.

Speaker 2 (06:07):
Spend a little bit of time, maybe too much time
yesterday talking about the conflict of interest or the appearance
of a conflict of interest with Tom Brady in the booth,
in the coaches booth and having a headset on helping
with the offense with Chip Kelly during the Raiders' loss
to the Chargers. So I said to Todd, would you

(06:28):
reach out to the NFL and ask about broadcasters being
in the coaching booth not owner because Tom is a
minority owner. And Todd sent this to the NFL. Are
broadcasters allowed in coaching booths? Is there any statement from
the league on Tom being in the Raiders booth? Thank
you very much, Todd, and we heard back from the

(06:50):
NFL there are no policies that prohibit an owner from
sitting in the coaches booth. Then once again we ask
about a broadcaster, not a coach or not an owner,
and nothing that prohibits him from wearing a headset during
the game, Brady was sitting in the booth in his
capacity as a limited partner. All personnel sitting in the

(07:11):
booth must abide by policies that prohibit the use of
electronic devices other than the league issued equipment, such as
Microsoft's surface tablet for the sideline viewing system. Also, Tom
continues to be prohibited from going into a team facility
for practices or production meetings. He may attend production meetings remotely,

(07:34):
but may not attend in person at the team facility
or hotel. He can conduct an interview off site with
a player, like he did last year a couple of times,
including for the Super Bowl. Of course, as with any
production meeting with broadcast teams, it's up to the club,
coach or players to determine what they will say in
those sessions. Once again, we ask about a broadcaster sitting

(07:57):
in the coaching booth, about an owner there. Tom is
a minority owner, He's allowed to be in the coaching booth?
Is a broadcaster allowed to be there? That was what
we wanted to know, still want to know. But Todd
reaching out to the NFL, and you know, if I'm

(08:18):
the Bears and Tom comes in, or we're doing an interview.
I mean, I'm instructing. If I'm Ben Jonson, I'm instructing
my entire staff. Let's be very limited. Let's be polite,
be professional, be gracious, but let's not share much. And
it's going to hurt the broadcast. But if I'm the
Bears and you're in desperate need of a win, the

(08:41):
last thing I'm doing is sharing. I'm not currying favor here.
I want to make sure that we're going to win
a game. I don't want to tell you anything. I
don't want to tell you anything that you're going to
be able to tell the Raiders, Which why wouldn't Tom
do that? Is there a separation at church and state
where Tom's going to go? Hey, Chip Kelly, I can't
tell you because I you know, in my other job,

(09:03):
I was told this.

Speaker 4 (09:05):
I can't tell you about.

Speaker 2 (09:06):
You know, what the defense is going to do, or
what they like to do, or who's banged up on
the other side line of scrimmage. Like there's once again
it's the perceived conflict of interest here. But the NFL
is just trying to kick this down the can down
the road. Now, Hey, once we get to Thursday, and
then it's not going to be a big deal. Well
it's going to be a big deal when the Raiders

(09:28):
play the Bears. Then it becomes a big deal again.
But the NFL survives all of this and they don't
have to answer anything. You know, if I'm Commissioner Goodell,
all he has to say is, Hey, the owners don't
have a problem with this. I don't have a problem
with this. It's you guys in the media, Okay, And

(09:48):
maybe that's the case, maybe fans don't care, but it's
a conflict of interest that Tom is in the and
if you're if you're going to help the Raiders, let's
not be blat about it, because that's how this happened.
If Tom was there but he wasn't in the coaching booth,
I don't know if we would be you know, have

(10:08):
a problem with it, be like, all right, we get it.
I still don't like it because I want him to
be If you're going to do the game as a fan,
I want you to do the game, do it correctly,
be able to talk to the people. You know, what
did Ben Johnson tell you? What did he tell you
about Caleb Williams, whatever it might be. Why does he
hold onto the ball so long? Why did you think

(10:29):
Caleb got sacked sixty eight times? Let I don't know,
these are questions. Am I going to answer those? How forthcoming?
Are you going to be? But we thought we would
at least ask the NFL, just so we had them
on record. But they didn't say anything about a broadcaster.
They said the owner can be there.

Speaker 3 (10:47):
Yeah, Paul, I would really like to hear Fox's reaction
to this. The people who run Fox. My expensive broadcaster
is on Monday night football with a headset on, and
he's good. They're doing cutaways on my competing network.

Speaker 2 (10:58):
Well, we did try to reach out to the head
of Fox Sports, Eric Shanks. We didn't hear back, but
you know, once again, Todd's not afraid of reaching out
to anybody just so we can get an answer.

Speaker 4 (11:09):
So I'd be curious. Well, and.

Speaker 2 (11:15):
If I'm the Bears, I'm like, Tom, Sorry, can't do it.
I'm can't do it.

Speaker 1 (11:21):
Fox Sports Radio has the best sports talk lineup in
the nation. Catch all of our shows at Foxsports Radio
dot com and within the iHeartRadio app search FSR to
listen live.

Speaker 2 (11:33):
Well, it was a moral victory. If you there's no
column when you see one or loss or time. There's
not one for moral victory or a quality loss, because
the Dolphins could have won that game. They went toe
to toe and they gave you that glimpse of this
is who they really should be. And you're tied at

(11:54):
twenty one. You have the roughing the punter, and then
that changed the game right there. You know you're an
eyelash away from getting a finger on that punt, and
then all of a sudden, the game probably changes changes
in Miami's position, but you don't block the punt, you
roughed the punter, and then all of a sudden, the

(12:17):
Buffalo Bill's tack on ten more end up winning. Barry Jackson,
a great columnist with the Miami Herald, had some questions
about the Miami Dolphins after the loss. Now I've said it,
I wouldn't have given to that contract extension because he
hasn't earned it, hadn't earned it. Plus you look at
his record and then you look at his health, and

(12:39):
I never would have given him a one hundred and
sixty seven million dollar contract after the twenty twenty three season.
In that season, he went one in six against good
teams and they couldn't score more than twenty two points.
The Dolphins gave him a four year, two hundred twelve
million dollar contract in twenty twenty four. They didn't have
to because they controlled him through twenty twenty six fifth

(13:03):
year option. Then they could have used the franchise tag
on him a couple of times. So this isn't revisionist
history on my part. I just couldn't trust him to
stay healthy, and I didn't think he was playing great football.
You know, for an offensive might a head coach and
Mike McDaniel and you have Tyreek Hill, Jalen Waddle, Tua.
They're supposed to lead with their offense. They're supposed to

(13:24):
be a team scoring at least thirty points a game.
But even last night, twenty two to thirty four, one
sixty one to two touchdowns, had the interception passer rating
eighty one. But the Dolphins are two to ten in
his last twelve starts against good teams. But if you
look at the point total, that's the thing that stood
out for me. Granted they could have won that game.

(13:46):
You get seventeen against Philadelphia, twenty against Buffalo, fourteen against
Kansas City, twenty two against Dallas, nineteen against Baltimore seventeen
against Buffalo, seven versus Kansas City, twenty seven versus the Bills,
twenty three versus the ram seventeen versus Green Bay, twelve
versus Houston, and then twenty one last night against Buffalo.

(14:07):
So one game where Tua was the quarterback, they went
over twenty three points against a good opponent. It's not
good enough. Won't get it done. And it's not just
on him, but that's where you start him and the
head coach Mike McDaniel, and Tua should be on the
hot seat. Can't fire the quarterback, but you can fire
the coach. But they gave you an idea of they

(14:29):
can play, they can be competitive. But Tua got hit once,
so it wasn't like man Buffalo's defense. Buffalo's defense isn't great,
at least not right now. And I thought Buffalo played
an okay game, but you got to at some point,
you got to win these games. If you stole that game,

(14:51):
and then you win the standalone game Monday night against
the Jets, Okay, now we called off the dogs. The
heat dies down a little bit. You're two and two,
but now you got to win the game against the Jets.
And that'll be standalone game on a Monday night, and
all your problems come forward. Everything is on display. You know,

(15:13):
sometimes that's great when you go, hey, we're gonna showcase
our talent. This is like, oh boy, I hope they
spend a little more time on the Jets than they
do us. But here is the Dolphins head coach Mike McDaniel.
After the loss.

Speaker 8 (15:26):
Our expectation was to come in here and win the game.
And we knew we had to not turn the ball over,
and we knew we had to, you know, try to
get at least plus or at least even with them
in the in the takeaway department, and we had to
play good football and make some plays. And you know,

(15:47):
we had a turnover in a critical situation, we had
a critical penalty against on a punt. Those types of
things can that's how these types of games are decided.
So it feels like a loss, and it feels like
we have a lot of motivation to get.

Speaker 5 (16:07):
Back to work.

Speaker 2 (16:08):
It feels like when Mike is at the microphone, it's
like the press secretary for the White House, like I'm
gonna translate. I'm going to tell you some things. It's
not the president. Who's going to be speaking, it's the
press secretary. But it's just didn't sound inspiring. And I
think we go back to that first loss to the

(16:29):
Colts that set the tone and then you have a
player's only meeting. When you have a player's only meeting
after one week, that's doom and gloom. There's no excuse
like this the first game of the season. I'm always
amazed when a coach says, hey, we weren't ready to play.
How's that possible? You had seven months to get ready

(16:50):
to play a game. We weren't ready.

Speaker 9 (16:54):
Huh.

Speaker 2 (16:56):
It wasn't like, hey, you have this game and you
got a game in four days. It was seven months
to get ready and two of it was just you know,
it's just kind of a to a performance there, and
it's not all on him. But man, we give the
quarterbacks too much credit and too much blame.

Speaker 4 (17:15):
And that's the case right here.

Speaker 5 (17:17):
Yes, Martin, football is the one sport where I will
not take we weren't ready to play as an excuse.
You had seven days every single week, you have seven
days to prepare for the next team. What do you mean, NBA, MLB, NHL?
You play every day basically, you had seven days. What
do you mean you're not ready?

Speaker 2 (17:36):
Well, they weren't ready for the opening week against the
Colts either.

Speaker 5 (17:39):
Seven days, seven months. Either way, they weren't ready.

Speaker 2 (17:42):
So the Bills hold off the Dolphins thirty one twenty one.
They're now three and oh the Dolphins are zero and three.
Is it just me or does every Bills tight end
sound like he has the same name they got They
got some Dawson and Dalton and Paul. There's three tight
ends there, and it feels like they're on the WB.

(18:02):
They're on a show.

Speaker 5 (18:03):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (18:04):
Their quarterback room, as people like to say, is Dalton Kincaid,
Dawson Knox, and Jackson Hawes, Hoddle.

Speaker 5 (18:12):
On it for all lost to the over coming next
on the WB.

Speaker 4 (18:18):
Oh, yeah, well.

Speaker 5 (18:19):
Dawson break it up with Johnny coming up next.

Speaker 2 (18:23):
I kept thinking, I'm trying to I'm getting confused. Is
it Dalton Knox? Is it Dawson Knox? Is it Dalton?
It does sound like the starting rotation for Mississippi State's baseball.

Speaker 4 (18:35):
Yes, yeah, we got Dawson out there and then we're
gonna bringing Dalton out there.

Speaker 9 (18:40):
Carter Hendrix about the bend.

Speaker 2 (18:43):
They sounded like fake names to be like okay, and
and they love their tight ends there in Buffalo. All right, Seaton,
what's Oh, it's a meat Friday. Here is the menu.
Beef and charizo, chili, heno, cheddar, corn bread, bacon, corn bread.

Speaker 4 (19:05):
Oh has it better than we do? No ethan chariso chili.

Speaker 3 (19:12):
Yes, I am a huge Chresa supporter from way back.

Speaker 4 (19:15):
That's good.

Speaker 3 (19:16):
My concern though, is the guy behind me having Chriso
and then a drive home.

Speaker 4 (19:20):
Yeah, yeah, it's about an hour drive. You are a
grown up, so I'll let you handle accordingly.

Speaker 9 (19:25):
I don't through the whole fill up the plate like
a big pictures now.

Speaker 4 (19:28):
Bowl of chili's plate.

Speaker 2 (19:29):
Yeah, why don't you just hold your cheriso there?

Speaker 9 (19:33):
Pace myself.

Speaker 4 (19:33):
Yeah. Yeah, long drive home, but it's a Friday.

Speaker 9 (19:37):
That's right. I'll stop at a mobile or a Snoca.

Speaker 4 (19:39):
What do do you know? The codes? The bathroom codes
on got to do?

Speaker 6 (19:44):
One of them has the key with like a brick
attacked through it. This other guy, he sends me into
some back room.

Speaker 2 (19:49):
Do you even buy gasoline when you go into these
gas stations?

Speaker 9 (19:52):
Rarely? I'm more like I get a big of chips
and like a coke.

Speaker 4 (19:57):
They're like, oh, here comes that guy again.

Speaker 9 (19:59):
Great the shop till tomorrow.

Speaker 5 (20:02):
We're closed.

Speaker 4 (20:03):
Do they do police tape outside? Do not cross?

Speaker 9 (20:08):
It's embarrassing when they stop putting the tape around you
while you're strolling here.

Speaker 2 (20:11):
All right, So we'll run down the football matchups NFL
and college over the weekend. Our good buddy, Clayton Kershaw
to retire after the playoffs. We'll talk about that. He's
pitched really well this year. And I love that you
can come to that decision. That's a really hard decision,
especially when you're playing well. So many athletes go, I

(20:32):
can't go like Travis Kelcey, I can't go out this way.
You can't, but you might go out in a worse
way the following season. But Clayton Kershaw has pitched well.
They've needed him to pitch well. And when you start
to look at these pitchers like true pitchers, you got
Surezer Verlander, Kershaw, and pretty much after that, the ACE

(20:56):
is done with Major League Baseball. And I wonder how
we're going to look at numbers for pitchers for the
Hall of Fame, because it used to be if you
got to two hundred and two fifty. Okay, maybe a
little more than that. Now it's going to be one fifty.
I mean, Jacob de gram is kind of a dinosaur

(21:20):
in there as well. But for the most part, the
starting pitcher and how we view them is going to
change dramatically because you won't have I mean, Verlanders pitch
pretty well second half of the season. I think he
wants to pitch again. I think he wants to get
three hundred. I don't know where he is. He's pretty close.
And then Scherzer is in there. He wants to continue
to pitch. But Clayton Kershaw wonderful season and first ballot

(21:45):
Hall of Famer.

Speaker 4 (21:47):
He was a great, great pitcher.

Speaker 2 (21:49):
We hope to have him on before the end of
the regular season or the postseason.

Speaker 4 (21:54):
All right, Seaton, you've got a poll question for me.

Speaker 8 (21:56):
Not only do I have a poll question for you,
but I was lucky enough to get three Todd at
two thirty am last night.

Speaker 5 (22:02):
I don't know if Todd I know they are very important.

Speaker 4 (22:04):
These are the things that are on Todd's mind if
he wants.

Speaker 9 (22:06):
To share this, sep It was very restless.

Speaker 2 (22:08):
And then I got a recap email after that saying
here I put all three just in one email now
for convenience.

Speaker 4 (22:13):
Okay, very thoughtful.

Speaker 2 (22:14):
I will warn the audience Fritzy got a little loose
yesterday on the twelve to fifteen podcast. It's the wrap
up with the back room guys, and it feels like
that's a spillover and it's Friday. Fritzy on full display.
All right, Todd, would you like to give us the
three pole questions that you came up with at two
in the morning.

Speaker 6 (22:33):
The first one you've already touched on or we've already
touched on was last? Not a moral victory for the
Dolphins in Buffalo? The choice is being absolutely they stood
toe to toe with a much better opponent. That's keeping
it positive. Absolutely not, they still lost by double digits.
Third choice, there are no moral victories, only losses, especially
at the h to three mark of your season.

Speaker 2 (22:52):
I think it depends on what the expectation level was
or is for the team. The Dolphins are supposed to
be a playoff too. On the cusp of being a
playoff team, I don't think you can have moral victories
if you're a team that's supposed to be a playoff contender.
I think the Browns can have a moral victory, or
Carolina can have a moral victory. A couple of these teams,

(23:14):
but not many, because I think the NFL is built
in a way that everybody should be kind of hovering
around seven, eight or nine wins, and the Dolphins should
be that kind of team. I don't think it's a
moral victory. I think this is who they're supposed to be.
It's not like they played out of their minds where
we go, Wow, that was a big surprise. It wasn't

(23:35):
a surprise to me because they're built for offense, and
they stayed in the game and when it came to
crunch time two is you know qbr if you follow
that is terrible in the you know, the last five
minutes of a game, in a one score game, he
has a terrible QBR. I mean, that's where these games
are won and lost. That's the difference between my quarterback

(23:57):
and your quarterback. How many times did we do that
with Brady? How much times left two minutes? What's he need?
He needs touchdown? Damn, you guys are gonna lose Mahomes Montana.
I mean way run down the list of great quarterbacks
of all time now two is not in that category.
But I expect Josh Allen to do that. I expect

(24:18):
Lamar Jackson to do that. I don't expect two a
tongue of Iiloa to do it. If I do, I'm surprised.
But he does have weapons. He's got two of the
fastest guys in the NFL. He's got the fastest guy
in the NFL. Oh yeah, I just two yard passes here,
That's all I need to do. It's two yards and

(24:40):
you take it thirty. We both get credit for a
thirty yard touchdown pass, but I don't. That's not a
moral victory, all right, What else do you have?

Speaker 9 (24:49):
The second one?

Speaker 6 (24:50):
Is the best NFL Week three matchup is? And this
is just an aphabetical order or not because I'm a
Bronco fan. Broncos Chargers, Rams, Eagles, Lions Ravens, Monday Night
Football or other. Could there be something other than those
three as the best game of Week three?

Speaker 2 (25:04):
Well, I would say the rematch with the Rams and
the Eagles, But I mean even the Bengals Vikings with
the backup quarterbacks is kind of interesting to me. Broncos
Chargers is big, and Lions Ravens but I would say
Rams and the Eagles because I thought the Rams were
a better team in the second half of that game.
I know you got to play a full game, but

(25:25):
I thought the Rams were going to win that playoff game.

Speaker 4 (25:28):
All right, what else?

Speaker 9 (25:29):
And the last one a little off the board. I
think the other day we were talking about Haley.

Speaker 6 (25:32):
Joel Osmond was on the air off the air that
and we've said many times that he should have won
the Academy Award over Michael Kane. So if you had
the sixth sense, if you had that ability, I guess
it's maybe a discipline. It's a horrible thing in that
movie to have that. Which group of dead people would
you be happy to have the sixth He looked very
upset when he was telling Bruce Willis that he's got
this thing. I don't think it was affliction, whatever you

(25:52):
want to call it. Nobody wants to see dead people
pop it around. It's kind of scary. But if you
had the sixth sense, which group of dead people would
you most want to see floating around around you? Actors, actresses, athletes,
family slash pets, musicians, presidents, supermodels, super miles in their prime,
not when they're eighty and they passed away of natural causes.

Speaker 4 (26:13):
So this is what you're doing it too. In the morning,
between two.

Speaker 6 (26:16):
Fifteen and two forty five in the morning, I was
tossing to him, like and just a few of these
poll questions.

Speaker 9 (26:20):
The first two were fairly obvious. The third one was
a little odd to be thinking about it.

Speaker 2 (26:23):
No, it's very odd. But there's only one right answer,
and that's your family, you would think.

Speaker 9 (26:27):
But I don't know if it's going to completely run
away with I'm very curious to say.

Speaker 2 (26:30):
The last time you said, man, I'm thinking of that
supermodel who was eighty years like, I'm not thinking of
Bridget Bardeux or rack how Welsh or any of these
women who passed away.

Speaker 9 (26:41):
One of my uncles I liked.

Speaker 6 (26:42):
But if there was between the uncle Joe, he was
a little weird sometimes at the satyr at the passover table,
I might have to go with one of the super
miles that passed away. It's not everyone, but I'm curious.
It's not going to be one hundred percent. And obviously
you feel like compelled. You got to pick family and pets.

Speaker 4 (26:56):
I got to put a hard cap on you today.
I think there has to be. It's a valid question.

Speaker 9 (27:00):
Do you guys think it's one hundred percent of the
vote's gonna go to your family?

Speaker 2 (27:02):
Okay, if I said you could revisit with your father,
oh forget.

Speaker 1 (27:06):
Of course.

Speaker 9 (27:09):
It's the right answer.

Speaker 6 (27:10):
But not everyone is like, oh, I wish I could
go see my grandma and my dad again.

Speaker 9 (27:14):
Some are like, screw that.

Speaker 6 (27:15):
I want to see the famous athletes to hang out with,
a walk around or just see them floating by.

Speaker 9 (27:19):
It could happen.

Speaker 3 (27:20):
Yeah, I was thinking I'd go with Charles Groden over
my dad. That's what I was thinking.

Speaker 5 (27:24):
About, yes Mar Sorry everyone for two was on a
twelve fifteen podcast. I put a disclaimer up because he
was like this yesterday, and we could have put a
hard cap on it like you guys did, like.

Speaker 6 (27:39):
Aunt Michelle, Johnny Uniis and Grandma's kind of smelled and
I didn't let her go to dinner.

Speaker 4 (27:46):
Okay, all right,
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