Mick Unplugged - The Evolution of Esports with Industry Leader Jordan Rambis
Episode Date: March 3, 2025Jordan Rambis, a visionary leader and innovator in the esports and entertainment landscapes. Jordan is renowned for his strategic thinking and unparalleled expertise in merging the worlds of gaming, t...echnology, and immersive storytelling. His journey from an avid gamer to a key player in shaping the future of these industries showcases his passion for innovation and his dedication to driving progress. With a focus on leveraging AI and technology for solving real-world challenges, Jordan continues to make significant impacts across various sectors, all while staying grounded in his mission to make his family proud and embrace his inner superhero. This episode dives into the dynamic life and work of Jordan Rambis, exploring his role in propelling esports to the forefront of global entertainment and his ventures in the film and entertainment industry, including his latest production, Running Point. Join Mick Hunt as he and Jordan discuss the economics of esports, the transformative power of storytelling, and the innovative technologies shaping our future. Whether it's about pioneering interactive experiences or creating scalable solutions that tackle everyday problems, this conversation is packed with insights and anecdotes that highlight the intersection of passion, technology, and creativity. Prepare for an inspiring dialogue that challenges perceptions and invites listeners to explore the limitless possibilities that lie at the crossroad of gaming and real life. Takeaways: The importance of empowering others in problem-solving. Esports has transformed into a lucrative industry. Gamers can earn significant income through streaming and sponsorships. Sound Bites: "Building an AI-informed future for communities." "We need a complete rethinking of insurance for natural disasters." Connect and Discover:LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/Jordan-rambis Instagram: www.Instagram.com/jordanrambis/ FOLLOW ME ON: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mickunplugged/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mickunplugged/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@mickunplugged Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mickhunt/Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/mick-unplugged/Website: https://www.mickhuntofficial.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Discussion (0)
What would you say is Jordan Rambis's because?
I'd probably say two things.
I'm extremely grateful for all the hard work
that my parents continue to do to make my life better.
So definitely doing things to make my family proud
and my parents proud is always a big motivator to me.
And then the other aspect is.
How did you take esports and really put it
on the grand stage that it deserved and also just
kept it moving and kept it viable? I think I was just in the right place at the right time
with the right knowledge and passion. I was again just a die-hard gamer and...
The income that some of these gamers make it... You know some of the salaries for
esports depends on the game. Some will be or there's other games that you'll be the top player that some of these gamers make it. You know, some of the salaries for e-sports
depends on the game.
Some will be, or there's other games
that you'll be the top player that game and your salary.
Welcome to Mick Unplugged,
where we ignite potential and fuel purpose.
Get ready for raw insights, bold moves
and game-changing conversations.
Buckle up, Here's Mick.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to another exciting episode of Mick Unplugged.
And today, we're joined by a visionary leader at the forefront of esports and entertainment
industries. He's a strategic thinker with a passion for shaping the future,
and he's raising the bar for what's possible in immersive experiences.
Please join me in welcoming the innovative, the forward thinking, the dynamic, the producer of the year in my book, Mr. Jordan
Rambis. Jordan, how you doing today, brother? Thank you so much. I'm doing great. Lovely to be here
and I might need to just go around and walk around with you because you are the perfect hype man.
That was the best intro I've ever had. Thank you so much.
No, I definitely know that you've had better than that, man.
I definitely know you've had better than that.
So Jordan, man, I know that you are a guy that has so much going on.
You're always doing things, looking to.
I'm going to say innovate.
Like, that's my that's my word of the day, to be innovative and not
sit still. Where did that come from, man?
Probably, I've always been a stubborn person, to be honest. I was a stubborn little kid.
I was on a, you know, just the kid that could never sit down in class. And if someone told
them, no, you can't do something, I'd figure out a way to do it. And I think kind of growing up and utilizing that as an adult is I'll look towards an industry,
I'll see some sort of issue within the industry, some sort of problem to be fixed, but I also
know my limitations.
So what I'll do is I'll find, I'll figure out like, okay, hey, here's the problem.
Here's maybe a solution for it.
Who's going to be the right people that I can put in place and empower and take a minority position and really let them do
what they do best. So that's kind of what I've done because that is actually how I
was brought into my first big project. I was brought in to Axiomatic Gaming, which
is a investment fund. We received investment from Disney, Groupon, owners of Groupon AOL,
Michael Jordan, Tony Robbins, Dick Clark Productions. And I was paired up with this
extremely intelligent gentleman, Bruce Stein, who was the former CEO or COO of Mattel and had
worked in a lot of fun capacity before that. And I was just the gaming industry guy.
I knew my lane.
I'm just going to give him the information that I know best.
And he was gonna be kind of the puppet master
kind of making, okay, well, this is how we should do this
then because you told us.
So I've been working to be in that position
where I can be the person that brings everyone together.
They feed the info to, and then I push out to everyone what we should do next.
So for example, if any of the listeners
maybe want kind of advice on ways to go about
with what I'm doing now,
almost everything I'm thinking now is very AI driven
in terms of what's a need within the community. How can we
identify people or how can that system be brought into an AI capacity to be
more efficient? So one of them is actually just become a lot more relevant
fortunately for the company but unfortunately for the fires that
occurred but it's a AI system we built up called Plan Check Solver.
You can go it's actually up right now, planchecksolver.com. And what it just does is it cross references
your building designs with local city ordinances. So the hope is with all the fires that have
occurred in LA, we're taking these lead times from six months to six years or five years,
whatever it's going to
be taking to get these business plans approved or building plans approved down to, you know,
the hope would be just, you know, instantaneous feedback on, hey, everything's up to code. You can,
you know, start on the next step. You know what's crazy about that, Jordan? I started my career,
my life and still am on a consulting standpoint
in the insurance space. So now imagine what's going on with the fires in LA, what's happened
with the fires in LA. Imagine from an insurance perspective now, from a rating perspective.
And I know I have a ton of insurance folks that are listeners and viewers. I might need to connect
you with some players, Jordan, if you haven't already, because my insurance, my risk management cap comes on there all of a sudden. And now we could almost
get individualized ratings on buildings instead of having blanket ratings based on where you're
physically located, but now you're aggregated against others. This could open the door for
individualized rating. No, definitely. I think there needs to be a complete rethinking of insurance for natural disasters, especially
when it comes to one that some of the government's actions can increase or decrease the risk
itself.
So I think it would be nice to see a program similar to what Cal Fire in theory is, but a way
where when an insurance company is not offering fire protection or flood or something that there
should be a little bit more government aid on that side, that there's offerings by the government
that can help subsidize those costs in terms
of reducing the risk.
So like, let's just say, for example, fire, you know, you have your home fire protection
through your insurance company of something that, you know, you have a barbecue or something
that happened that, you know, was more of your fault, quote unquote.
And then something that, again, if you look at the fires in LA, what's a fire protection service where we can analyze where the risk factors are and actually incentivize property
and homeowners to implement pieces that actually will reduce their premiums being paid to insurance.
So example, here comes, we do an analysis using all these different factors of your
home.
Okay, well now we're gonna monitor this home via satellite.
You can do all the AI stuff for privacy,
so it's never any human interaction on it
where they don't see like you could blur out people
and all that, but it could track is there shrubbery
growing within five feet of the home?
Hey, do you have this, you have a pool,
if you buy
this water pump system and the sprinkler guard will reduce your premiums by this much a month.
And only through tech can that be something that's scalable. But you can then have the state
backing an insurance program that is using this tech and AI systems to be okay, hey, instead of trying to look at this problem, just on
the grander scale, we can get down to the smaller nitty gritty details of is this house
being doing what it needs to do to be protected?
Is this house doing what it's doing to be productive?
And I think again, just looking at those issues and using tech and AI as a problem as a way
to solve those problems.
I think it's just, you know, whatever one should be looking at.
Yeah.
Yeah.
If you know any insurance people that, that want to get that done, I think it'd
be great too, cause I'm just hearing these horror stories that's one after
another, I feel so bad for these people.
Totally agree.
So, so Keith, Frank, Chris, Darren, Daniel, Ryan, I'm setting you all up with a call with Jordan
because I think all of you, maybe me and Jordan can definitely give some insight there.
So, Jordan, this can definitely happen.
But I don't want to bore people with insurance, right?
Because we know insurance is not sexy till you need it.
And then when you need it, it's still not sexy because it's crazy by that point.
But you talked about AI and you talked about, again, going back to your just sense of innovation,
right?
At Mick Unplugged, we talk about your because, that reason that kind of makes you do the
things that you do, that big purpose that you have in life.
What would you say is Jordan Rambis's because?
I'd probably say two things.
I'm extremely grateful for all the hard work
that my parents continue to do to make my life better.
So definitely doing things to make my family proud
and my parents proud is always a big motivator to me.
And then the other aspect is probably like,
I have like this kind of like
inner superhero wannabe child. I grew up, I actually had a speech, a pretty bad speech impediment.
I was deaf for two, three years. I had to get a couple surgeries when I was like three to five.
And it gave me this kind of more awkward speech impediment. So I was kind of like that nerdy kid
in class. I'd go home and play video games. And the other thing I would do is I had a red wagon that I would call my
wed wagon back then. And it was full of comic books. And I'd, I take that down the street
and I would just read comic books all day long. So I got obsessed with this kind of
superhero mentality. So it's one of these things where I just, you know, always strive
to see if like, Hey, what's this? What's something I can do that could help the
world? And I think there's also ways to do that that can be cross beneficial. So
one of my friends from college, after college got diagnosed with malignant
melanoma, he's fine now, but we were trying to give out sunscreen and stuff and realized that
wasn't scalable.
So my first tech slash hardware company I started was something called Bright Guard
that I started with one of my college friends, Ryan Warren.
And it was automated sunscreen dispensers, just like you would have hand sanitizer dispensers
at places and we
would sell the ad and you'd be able to sell the ad for more than what you would sell the
sunscreen for.
So it allowed us to give out free sunscreen while making a potentially profitable business,
which we eventually get to.
So I think something like that too where, you know, again, with the PlanCheck solver,
something where you can innovate and actually help
people make the world a better place. But at the same time,
have a successful business, it'll allow you to help more
people, right? If we were just giving out sunscreen, we might
be able to kind of save a few lives here and there, whatever,
but by what we did in getting hundreds of 1000s of gallons of
sunscreen out there
to people who didn't have it on at the time, Bayer, who was our supplier, said we statistically
saved hundreds of thousands of lives, which is kind of a cool thing that again allows
it to scale more because it is a business for profit.
Yeah, that's amazing, man.
One of the things I want to give you credit for, I know you get a lot of credit for it,
but you don't really talk about as much as
I'm going to say you should.
So these are the words of Mick and Mick only.
You were in my mind, one of the key people
that were responsible for the explosion
of the e-sports industry and the e-sports trend
and bringing it to the forefront
and really making it a thing, right?
Because there's been, let's just be honest, you're out in LA and Hollywood.
There's hundreds of ideas that never really take ground, right?
There's a lot of money that gets wasted and lost and ideas.
How did you take esports and really put it on the grand stage that it deserved
and also just kept it moving and kept it viable.
Well, I appreciate that.
There's obviously a lot more people
who had a lot more of an impact on it than me,
but I think I was just in the right place at the right time
with the right knowledge and passion.
I was, again, just a diehard gamer
and had been meeting with Riot Games
and I've always wanted to get into video game
development and just saw this path where I was lucky enough to have a sports background
and knowledge about the sports industry while also being a diehard gamer and understanding
a little bit of business. So I kind of saw that opportunity within eSports
and with the right network was able to get
my friends within gaming and my investor friends
and my sports friends and their connections
and just to get everyone together saying,
hey, eSports is becoming a thing.
We could be on the forefront of kind of trying to make it go down the right
path and be on that upswing.
And yeah, I mean, it was just right as I jumped into it, you know, I think we just had a very
notable group around us crossing all these different industries, that it was definitely some of those names
made esports kind of go to the next level.
Whereas again, getting it taken seriously.
Now I still think there's a lot of innovation that needs to happen with esports and I think
there's also a lot of misconstruing of what esports is.
But I think people viewing gaming content for a multitude of misconstruing of what esports is but I think people viewing gaming
content for a multitude of reasons entertainment education on the games
there's there's a lot of different aspects to what esport or you know
watching someone play on Twitch can be but it's it's always funny because you
get these people that don't get that like why would they why would you want
to watch someone play video games? Like that's that's
not something that naysayers or it's like, some of the game
development stuff is like, oh, you're building a game that
allows your users to build games. Why would gamers want to
do that? They're lazy. They don't want someone else to
build, you know, the game for them. They just want someone to
build the game for them. And I think one thing other two going
back to your question earlier, it's just like, you're always going
to have a lot of people saying no, even even if you're in the
right, and it's very obvious and 99% people saying yes, there
will always be that one person saying no. So it just kind of
depends on who you talk to at what time and get that no or
whatever. But just if if that's something of a passion for you,
and you feel like this is a need that
needs to get solved, there's not a single project or single investment I ever made or
a single idea I ever had that there weren't no's to almost every time.
Actually, every time.
Pretty much, right?
Pretty much.
And what's crazy is, obviously I've known about gaming and e-sports and all that,
but it wasn't until COVID that I realized how much money people were actually making.
And I was sitting there like, oh, I thought fun and games was fun and games.
I didn't realize that there are 13, 14, 15-year-olds making money like that.
And then also when adults making crazy money,
like for the casual listener to understanding e-sports,
talk about the income that some of these gamers make
and why this has become very important.
So there's two kind of aspects to talk about.
Again, there's the e-sport athlete that's being paid as a competitive gamer, which a
lot of them, they'll sometimes be the same person, the person making the most of that.
But a lot of times what, you know, being the best player, it's, hey, you're a really good
player.
Maybe if there's a team, you're good at being a team, but you're just really good at that
game.
And, you know, some of the salaries for e-sports depends on the game. And, you know, some of the salaries for esports depends on the game, some will be,
you know, you'll be the top player of that game and only making tens of thousands or there's other
games, you'll be the top player that game. And your salary as a from the competitive team could
be in the millions. So it really just kind of depends. But then if you add the aspect where
they're a good streamer, that's where you get the biggest checks. And there was whenever you kind of depends. But then if you add the aspect where they're a good streamer, that's where you get the
biggest checks.
And there was whenever you kind of see in the news, oh, this eSport guy or this streamer
gamer was paid this.
It's typically because they might be good at the game, but then their personality and
how they engage and how they create their audience, they know kind of all the right
pieces at all the right times, but they had one just on his streaming deal alone was $80 million over two years. And there's a
lot of people on that.
Ladies and gentlemen, that's real money. That is real money that Jordan is talking about
right there.
Yeah. And you get a direct connection too with your audience. So you can sell your sponsorships
on top of that. You can build out products and really get this immediate
response from your fans
About you know who you are and what you're doing. So you see all these guys that again like
Kai I think it's pronounced Kai Sanat, right? Yeah, and and all these other people that now they're just they're making more money than the
celebrities that they bring on
other people that now they're just, they're making more money than the celebrities that they bring on.
Yeah.
Which is crazy, which is crazy.
And here's a confession, nobody's ever heard this before.
So and physically, I was really good at Madden, right?
Like Madden was my game and that really was the only game I ever played.
And then, you know, when it got to where you could play other people online, right?
Because I always just played individuals or family members
or friends and Jordan, I used to bust heads.
Yeah.
Like we used to have rules like, okay.
Your little sister had no chance.
She,
When my kids were seven, nine and 12,
but there was this one time Jordan, I was like, all right,
I'm going to go play online.
I'm going to do this play against somebody I don't know.
And again, I bust heads.
Jordan, I got crushed.
Out of the gate crushed.
And then you can communicate with the person on the other end.
And it was a 12-year-old.
And I was like, how is this 12-year-old who doesn't even watch football that can be...
Because I'm playing football logically
like a football player would play, right? Like, gonna run the ball, do some little screens and
they're up there like, no, Mr. Hunt. And first when they call me Mr. Hunt, I knew life was over for me
and I could never play Madden again. Like, there's a way to play the game, the game. Like, you're a
footballer trying to play it like it's a football game. Like, no, you got to understand it's a game.
And there's ways to like beat the game. I'm like, yeah, but I don like it's a football game. Like, no, you got to understand it's a game and there's ways to like beat the game.
I'm like, yeah, but I don't want to play that way.
Like, I know you can maneuver your tackle over here and put them at receiver
and put your receiver.
Like, I know all that, but they're like, no, that's that's how you're supposed to play the game.
And I was like, oh, I'm done.
And I haven't played Madden in like five years since I got beat by 12.
Yeah. And the 12 year old will smack talk you better, too. You'll just be like, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, smack talk you better too. You'll just be like, oh, oh, dang.
Oh my God.
Yeah.
You said, you got my mama?
Right.
No, it's cool.
I mean, it is the great thing.
It's actually, I'm too old.
I'm aged out.
I used to be decently competitive at a few titles where you're going to be master ranking
or diamond or whatever
it may be across multiple titles from like multiple different genres. But now I get in there and it's
yeah, like you said, like I'll have my like 10 year old to 12 year old nephew is now kicking my
ass at Fortnite. I'm just like, it used to be my thing. All right, we're playing zero build now,
you don't get a build, we got to we got to go and we're just be shooters But it the thing that they were describing to you is I think one of the things that gets under
valued for gamers is most of these games a lot of these games are about problem solving and I kind of look at them as
almost like
You know digital kind of more fun to play chess in that capacity. Because again, their gaming
is a massive genre. But for the most part, you're trying to understand the mechanics
of a game and problem solve on how to have like the best outcome for it. Right. And there's
some that are just straight puzzle games, you know, like a like a lower Crofts Tomb Raider
type game. And then there's other ones where again, like, like they were saying, Hey, if
you run this play, you have like a better chance of getting it because this is how the game works.
And I think a lot of gamers actually should do that more than they probably do. They probably just play the game and not trying to identify like where the mechanics of the game that I could like be better at.
you can train your brain certain ways to like be more analytical and using that where you're like okay hey I'm gonna look at gaming is more problem-solving
than just entertainment. Yeah totally agree. So the evolution of Jordan
Rambis right so again crazy cool in the eSports entertainment arena now you're
also a producer man like you don't quit, right?
Like, every time I think I've got Jordan figured out,
there's a new aspect to the game, no pun intended,
that you're doing.
So I wanna talk about Running Point
specifically in a moment,
but like what got you into the film
and the entertainment aspect that way,
aside from, you know, living over there,
but what got you there?
I mean, it kind of began when I was,
I had left the restaurant industry.
I worked my way up from like a bartender to a GM
and then kind of wanted to get out of the restaurant industry
and I became an account executive for a software company
that was kind of more explained to me
that I was gonna be like more like marketing,
but it was like cold call marketing type thing,
which wasn't my cup of tea.
So then I had an opportunity to be a production assistant
on a TV show and just kind of fell in love
with that process of a bunch of people
just kind of sitting in the room being like,
hey, wouldn't this be funny
or wouldn't this be entertaining?
It was with Craig Kilburn, who's a legend to say the least,
but he took me under his wing
and there was actually one joke that I pitched him which like normally production assistants wouldn't
pitch a joke and I was just like, hey, what do you think about this? And he's like, I
like it, let's do it and put it on that kind of gave me that bug. So I spent hundreds of
hours trying to develop reality TV shows and putting together sizzles and you know, trying
to get a show sold, never could.
Failed for three, four years as I was being a production assistant on other shows.
And then connected with one of my friends, we want to do a horror film and kind of sitting
down thinking about what we could do is like, oh, what if we go after an existing like iconic
horror property and use that to leverage to help
get a film done. So we went to the Winchester house in Santa Clara, San Jose, San Jose.
And because there's a lot of lore around it and pitch them and had to actually put on
their haunted house as a way to convince them to give us the rights to do the film. So we
actually like managed and produced their haunted house
during Halloween for a couple years
before they were willing to give us the rights
to go try to do the film for it,
which we got Hell and Mirror in four.
I didn't have too many hands
on the two horror projects I produced.
I helped in certain ways that made it happen,
but the jump to the TV and the scripted
doing the
Lakers documentary and helping package that and be a part of that was amazing. And then
this, the What is Now Running Point was something that I always joked around with my mom about
how much fun it would be. And Jeannie Buss, my mom, had been trying to do a similar show
for a long time.
It was pitched more on a drama side and looked at everything from more of a drama angle.
And just being around my mom and Jeannie, like the one power that they have to kind
of keep going and deal with a lot of the struggles that they have, the headaches that they have,
is they laugh.
They laugh a lot.
They crack jokes. They try
to keep the spirits light. And some of the stuff that they have to deal with is so ridiculous.
You can't do anything but laugh at it. So repositioned it as a comedy. Finally convinced
them to like, let me take it out and brought it to a longtime friend, Andrew Thomas, who
we were first maybe going to talk to some other
people. But then he goes, no, like, you got to talk to Mindy Kaling and Howard Klein,
who did the office because I was pitching it as like as the office but the Lakers.
Yeah.
So then Andrew made those intros and it was off to running from there. It was a lot of
fun. The development process was really cool. Going back and talking about the old stories because we just had
finished the documentary. So it's like, oh, even here's what, you know, other things that
happened that we didn't put in the documentary that could be funny to do. Because now we
can do it. It's a fictitious comedy. So, you know, it's, you can change things around and
have more fun with it. Rather when it's a documentary and you have to like kind of stay in your lane
Yeah, too many permissions and documentaries right like if this is fictitious comedy
Like you get to be a little creative because it's branded that way, right? Exactly. Yeah
so it's it's been really fun and there is a lot of laughs during that process and
Again, that's it's back to your question earlier of what drives you. It's like I
love the humor, I love making people laugh, love making people entertained and also it's like if my
mom and I are able to crack up for hours, you know talking about all the stories and funny situations
that's you know, it's about what drives you know happiness in your life. Yeah, no, I agree man, I
agree. Huge fan of it.
You know, obviously I saw the trailer a few weeks ago and then I was like, oh, this is
dynamic.
Like this is going to be game changing.
So huge fan and I'm going to do my part in promoting it as well too.
Like freaking love it.
Yeah.
Put it on every house, every TV on repeat, whatever, whatever you need to do.
I'd love to get a season two out of this.
It was such a fun season one.
So let's do it. Now do I get to be a part of season two? Maybe we can get a little
cameo in there somewhere. I'm a diehard Laker man. I'm a diehard Laker which leads me to my next
question or proposal. I think there needs to be growing up Rambus as a series somewhere, bro, because I know, I know there's funny stories. I know that there are moments of
heartbreak, like, growing up Rambus is something that people
want just throwing that out there for you.
That's very funny. No, there's actually, there was a couple very
big reality TV production groups that back in the day wanted to
do like a Rambus and bus type thing and you know, some just a Rambus type thing but I have no desire to be famous whatsoever.
You know, as much as as little as I can be to still do the things that I want to do.
Fame is, you know, it's not something I want to be a part of but you know, it is cool to
kind of picture what that story would be.
That sounds like a fun idea.
That show would be a fun show.
We're going to make it happen.
I promise you.
So Jordan, man, I know you're a busy guy.
Thank you for gracing us with some time.
But before I get you out of here, two questions I've always wanted to ask Jordan.
Favorite Laker of all time?
Well, I mean, I love my dad, so I'm going to have to say him.
Mark Madsen was one of the nicest guys.
Mad dog.
We both volunteered for the Red Cross back in the day.
He's just a character and one of the nicest guys.
I always light up a room.
But if you're saying everything, it has to be Kobe.
I mean, that's, you know,
knew him when he kind of first came to the team and I'd be over there. Back in the day,
you could like have your family over at the practices over in the corner. So I'd be off
just kind of like playing and he was always just came over with just a nice big smile.
And it's a terrible loss to say the least, but he's inspired so many and I think it's, I
don't think there's any one in the league that could say that he inspired this mentality
of greatness in so many people that I know have changed their lives because of that.
So I'd have to say, you know, after my dad, hands down,
it would be Kobe, truly, truly an inspiration.
My favorite Laker of all time is Kobe for sure.
Your dad's number three, so Kobe, Magic, currently.
He's number two.
Magic. Magic.
So Magic's the reason I love the Lakers.
So I'm a Boston sports guy,
although I live and I'm from South Carolina, but here's the deal. My uncle played for the Patriots.
So I grew up, I was born a Patriot fan.
But the first basketball game he took me to was Lakers-Celtics.
And I fell in love with Magic Johnson.
And so I became a Laker.
So I'm the only person that loves the Patriots, the Red Sox, the Bruins.
But the Lakers are my basketball team. I hate the Celtics. I hate the Celtics.
Yeah, I mean, that makes at least the back in the day the
new the new ownership is a lot nicer. But Celtics is a never
understood that that mentality of the 80s Celtics fans, but
they're diehards. That's for sure. But it's fun. I mean, I
mean, that's what you know, you need that in sports.
That's the one thing I never got about the football
and the penalties and stuff for like celebrating
and all that, cause that's like, to me, like, that's like,
that's how you build stuff.
You build rivalries, you build entertainment,
you want to see them celebrate.
You want to see the emotion.
Yeah, you're telling people to go hurt each other,
but then don't, don't, don't celebrate it or don't have the emotion after
you.
It'd be like producing a TV show or movie and be like, okay,
just say the lines. Don't show emotion.
How boring is that?
Yeah, so I love it. I love to see that kind of just that, that,
you know, the heart come out of the game in whichever capacity.
Cool.
Second question I've always wanted to ask Jordan Rambis, your least favorite Celtic.
I won't say his name because I don't like bashing people, but I think we all know it's
Kevin McKell.
We need to have the highlight rolling right now.
We need to have the tackle rolling.
Make sure everybody's seeing this play.
Yeah, obviously I don't know him from any experience,
but if I had to say anyone, yeah, but there's-
He could be your least favorite,
but most respected at the same time, right?
I don't know about that.
It's not a bad thing to have a least favorite of something.
I would have gone up and kicked him on the shin
after when I saw the videos if I knew.
No, but most liked would probably be Gordon Hayward.
He was actually was big in esports as
well and really one of those ambassadors of a traditional sports player who loves gaming.
And a very nice guy as well. So-
I don't have a favorite Celtic, Jordan.
Yeah, not even one. You just-
No, like I'm a young Superhero. I don't have a favorite Duke player either.
Which is tough for me right now with Laker
basketball, knowing who their coaches and my my hatred of Duke basketball. It's tough.
Well, I'll stick up for him. I will say JJ is a nice guy and very intelligent guy. So
if you say so, yeah, if you're gonna if you're gonna have one, he wouldn't be a bad one to have.
I can't do it. Jordan, man, I know you're busy. So I he wouldn't be a bad one to have. Mm-hmm. I can't do it. I can't do it.
Jordan, man, I know you're busy, so I appreciate your time.
Last thing, where can people follow and find you?
I mean, again, I try not to, but I guess on Instagram, if anyone wants to reach out on
Instagram, just, you know, jordanrambis, at jordanrambis.
But I appreciate the time.
Thank you so much.
And looking forward to more conversations in the future.
You got it brother.
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