Nightcap - Nightcap - Hour 3: Rough Draft, Sterling Sharpe, Humble Baddies
Episode Date: February 8, 2025Live from the Mahalia Jackson theater in New Orleans, head of SB LIX, Shannon Sharpe and Chad “Ochocinco” Johnson bring out fan favorite segments, Sex or Next and Rough Draft, NFL House Ca...ll edition. Later, Unc and Ocho are joined by HOF inductee Sterling Sharpe, rapper Juvenile and the newest addition to Shay Shay Media, the Humble Baddies.03:53 - Roughdraft07:40 - Sterling Sharpe joins28:00 - Juvenile joins37:41 - The Humble Baddies joins46:12 - Q and Ayyy(Timestamps may vary based on advertisements.) #Volume #ClubSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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You're listening to an iHeart Podcast.
I'm Michael Kassin, founder and CEO of 3C Ventures and your guide on good company.
The podcast where I sit down with the boldest innovators shaping what's next.
In this episode, I'm joined by Anjali Sood, CEO of Tubi.
We dive into the competitive world of streaming.
What others dismiss as niche, we embrace as core.
There are so many stories out there. And if you can find a way to curate and help the right person discover the right content, the term that we always hear from our audience is that they feel seen.
Listen to Good Company on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
In the fall of 1986,
Ronald Reagan found himself at the center of a massive scandal that looked like it might bring down his presidency.
It became known as the Iran-Contra affair.
The things that happened were so bizarre and insane,
I can't begin to tell you.
Please do.
To hear the whole story, listen to Fiasco, Iran Contra on the iHeartRadio app, Apple
Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
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All right, check this out, Ocho.
Now it's time for your favorite segment, Rough Draft.
Best NFL house calls brought to you by Homes.com.
From its sleek, ad-free designs, comprehensive agent directory,
and most in-depth neighborhood content of any shopping site,
Homes.com is the right home shopping should be.
So tonight's Rough Draft, we're going to talk about the best house calls
of the season, presented by
homes.com.
I'm going to go
I'm going to take Saquon's Barkley
in the snow, in the
divisional.
That's one for me.
Mmm. Mmm. Mmm. in the divisional. That's one for me.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
Maybe you need to call Michelle and ask her.
Trushe?
Who'd you pick?
I picked Saquon.
It ain't up there?
Okay.
Are we going?
Okay.
Actually, no.
The first one was Bill's first quarter, first and ten on the Ravens. Lamar Jackson on the center.
Takes the snap, hands the ball up to Derrick Henry,
who goes 87 yards for the touchdown to start the NFL season.
Is that up there?
Damn, graphics.
All right, graphics.
Y'all know I don't want to get upset.
Somebody say calm down, Shannon.
Don't trick yourself out of this position
If oh
There are no graphics what day how they gonna see up under there? All right, go ahead Oh Joe
You first you next
Lamar Jackson
Say go on make up your mind. I picked Lamar Jackson. I got Lamar. I just said. I just said, Saquon, make up your mind.
I picked Lamar.
You got yours up there.
Isaiah Likely.
Winnie Jukes, not one, but two defenders for a 49-yard touchdown.
Okay.
Mimes, week five, Broncos, Raiders, second quarter, first and goal. Gardner Minshew takes the snap, rolls to his left,
throws the ball, picked by defensive player
of the year, Patrick Sertan.
99 yards to the house.
Reservation for six, please.
Aw, man.
All right.
Week six, Chiefs 49ers
in the fourth quarter, fourth
and goal. Pat Mahomes on the quarterback draw, takes
the ball to the middle and hits the truck stick on Malik
Mustafa for the one-yard TD.
Okay. Week eight, Calvin Austin
III electrifies the field.
The Steelers' speedster takes
the putt. 73 yards to the house.
Weaving through the Jazz defense.
Draw, drop, and touchdown. Calvin Austin.
No.
Absolutely not. Go ahead.
Week eight. Commanders Bears fourth quarter with time expiring.
Jayden Daniels scrambles and throws Hail Mary pass at 52 yards,
deflected and caught by Noah Brown for the win.
All right, you lost.
You lost just off that.
NFC Divisional round.
This one, fourth quarter, Eagles on 22.
Saquon Barkley takes the handoff.
Out of the shotgun, breaks free, runs left.
78 yards for the touchdown.
When did that happen?
What the hell you mean?
You didn't watch that game against the Rams?
No, I didn't see that game.
I didn't see that game.
Don't worry about it.
Hold on.
Week 13.
Seahawks-Jets second quarter.
Third and eight on the Seahawks' 10.
Devens attack.
Leonard Williams picks off Aaron Ay off Aaron. You know what?
I don't even know how to say his last name.
How you say it?
Shannon, look at your brother.
Where?
Right there.
Hey!
What they do, Hall of Famer?
What they do, Hall of Famer? Would they do Hall of Famer?
Where'd Jordan go?
Man, y'all clap it up, man.
We're starting to show up, man.
Man.
Man. Boss man, what'd he do, baby? That's right. Oh man.
Boss man, what do you do, baby? I'm free.
Good to see you.
Have a great day.
Yes, sir.
Thank you, pal.
No, thank you.
No, no, no, get back to work, yes.
My knee's bad. No, my back to work. Yes, my knees are bad.
No, my knees are bad.
Thank you very much.
It's been a long day and even longer trying to get here from over there.
But thank you for staying.
Hopefully we can get you out of here shortly because I got to get up early in the morning again.
But a tremendous day.
It's an honor and a pleasure
to follow that guy for
a change.
being the first brothers
inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
What's that? Don't you cry up here.
Don't do that.
I want to know, you have to tell me, tell the people out here,
understanding and knowing all you've been through,
where y'all come from,
what it took to make it to the NFL,
the struggles having to leave the game early? What this night means to you?
It's kind of interesting, Oach, because I never wanted to be in the Hall of Fame. I never expected to be in the hall of fame this is not something i asked for this is not something i
wished for this is not something i prayed for because when i left the game the only thing
anybody ever talked about is what i didn't do now i'm okay with that i am i'm okay with what i i put
on film i'm okay with that but so i never had any expectations. This is not like Christmas
to where, you know, you want a skateboard or you want a bike or you want them pair of Jordans.
This isn't like that. So for me today is kind of interestingly surreal because I didn't want this. This is not something I wished on myself,
but being there and seeing my friends
that are in the Hall of Fame
that were more excited than seem like I am right now,
but they were genuinely happy.
My good friend, Terrell Owens,
I hope I'm not doing anything wrong by putting Terrell's business in
the street, but T.O. Crockett. T.O. and I go way, way, way back to before he even got in the league,
and he was so happy for me that he and I had about a about a good 45 second moment to where we just kind of we kind of
got wrapped up in each other and the history and the time and all that so it's it's been a really
good day Oach uh but let me tell you I I haven't gotten there yet it's gonna it's gonna take a
little more time to get there yeah congratulations thank you you. And I know it's been a long time
since you've seen that guy speechless over there. Yeah. You know, your little brother loves you,
man. Yes, he does. When he talks about you, he talks about the man that the only man that he's
ever hoped to be to measure up to because he knows he couldn't do it and anybody that
knows you and anybody
that knows him knows how he feels about you
me personally you know how much love I've always had
for you
let's get some tissue now
we need some tissue up here
for those of you
who might be too young
to remember
we religiously talk about Jerry Rice being the
greatest receiver in NFL history. Those who know football before T.O., before Randy Moss,
we would all mention him because he was that sensational of a wide receiver. He was big time.
And so to then watch you transition into the business
before your brother did,
you did a hell of a job talking the game of football,
teaching the game of football,
working with cats in the industry
and showing us the way as well
and had that pedigree.
There's so many people that followed
that played in the NFL and
now doing television you were doing it before most and you were doing exceptionally well and so
for me to see you have this day thank you thank you is well deserved and I'm just happy for you
it's long overdue thank you but it's here congratulations congratulations Congratulations. Congratulations.
I think the thing is why I get so emotional when people ask why.
I say because I had GPS to get to where I'm going because I had to follow him.
You see, he did what he did with no navigational system.
He had no MapQuest.
He had no Google.
He had no instructional manual.
I had all of that because I got to walk in his footsteps.
A lot of what I learned, almost everything that I learned, I learned from him. My grandfather was very, very hard on my brother. And I didn't understand why until my grandmother said barney why are you so hard on
spanky that's what they call we call it he said mary everything that little one is going to learn
he's going to learn it from him it's his job because we're not going to be around mary alone
it's his job to teach him how to be a man.
It's his job to teach him right from wrong.
He's going to follow everything that he does
because that's what he sees all the time.
For my brother
to do what he's done
with no guidance,
with no instruction manual to get to where he got to get me to
where I got. You guys have heard me say, the only man I've ever wanted to be was him.
He was my hero.
He was my role model.
He taught me to shoot a basketball.
He taught me to throw a football.
He taught me how to catch.
He taught me how to tie my shoes. I'm not the man that's sitting before you today. I watched everything that he did. I
hung on everything that he said. And then you heard me tell the story that he's only three
years older than I, but he's more like my father. My sister's eight than I but he's more like my father my sister's eight years
older she's more like my mother because everything that they did was what a mother and a father would
do for a child I'm not here I'm not the man that I am I'm not the person that I am I'm not the
friend that I am I'm not the father that I am without seeing how he did things.
He's we're brothers.
We're a lot alike,
but we're very different because I've always had to fight.
Everything came so easy to him.
I was so small. They call me Peewee and I just,
I could never understood.
I never understood why I couldn't beat him in certain things.
He was always prouder for things that I did as opposed to what he accomplished.
He was much more happy when I got drafted than he did.
He wouldn't first pick in the seventh round.
I mean, first, the seventh pick in the first round. I went seventh round 192.
He was so excited.
He would just call and say, I mean, he just, man,
y'all don't know what this moment means.
Not just to our family.
My mom is going to be extremely excited.
I'm extremely excited.
Our high school coach who coached my mom, who also coached he and I.
God heard prayers I didn't even know he was missing it too.
There'll be a time that you and I'll have a conversation.
We'll talk, mapping everything out,
guests that you want to bring,
and the party and the entertainment that you want.
Bro,
I've said it before,
I would give every diet.
Take myself out of the hall.
Just for you to be in.
I measure my life in summers.
I don't say years.
I figure I pretty got life in summers. I don't say years. I don't say how big I pretty got.
Hopefully pretty healthy.
I got 20 summers left.
I'm good now.
I'm good.
Love you.
There's only two men, guys,
I've ever told that I love.
My son.
My brother.
It was so hard to keep this a secret steven a when i got the call and i had to get him to come to my home and they wanted to go do it in glenville i said bro i
haven't been to glenville in 13 years he to know something up if I tell him to come down there.
So I can lure him to the house.
Still, he hadn't seen me in my home in six years.
So if I call and I tell him to meet me somewhere, he's going to think something's wrong.
Like, what's up, bro?
He's like, what's up?
I said, man, just come to the house.
He's like, I'm in town.
He's like, you all right?
I said, yeah, bro, I'm good.
I'm good. I just, you know, I'm in town and He's like, you all right? I said, yeah, bro, I'm good. I'm good.
I just, you know, I'm in town, and you know, you close by.
And he had surgery on his eye.
He had a detached retina.
He had a bubble placed in his eye.
He almost lost the vision in his eye about three months ago.
And said he had some blurred vision in his eye.
And he went to the doctor, and the doctor said, we got to perform surgery. They couldn't perform surgery that afternoon because he had some blurred vision and desire. He went to the doctor, and the doctor said,
we got to perform surgery.
They couldn't perform surgery that afternoon because he had already eaten,
so they got him in the next morning.
So that's what we've been dealing with.
Had a lot on my plate dealing with that
because I worry.
I'm the warrior of the family.
I think that's my responsibility now.
But, bro, I'm so happy.
I'm so proud of you.
I'm getting there. i'm getting there i'm i'm i'm getting there it's
look it's hard to explain because you don't want to put your emotions on someone else
but you you know and i think that the easiest way to explain it is we've all experienced, I think Christmas, you have a list
and you're hoping that you could get two, three, or four of those things.
I never wished for this. I never wanted this. And I said it tonight out loud for the first time.
And the reporter was like,
what do you mean you never? I'm like, man, you don't understand. I only wanted to do one thing.
And that was play. Made for This Mountain is a podcast that exists to empower listeners to rise
above their struggles, break free from the chains of trauma and silence the negative voices that
have kept them small. Through raw conversations,
real stories, and actionable guidance, you can learn to face the mountain that is in front of you.
You will never be able to change or grow through the thing that you refuse to identify. The thing that you refuse to say, hey, this is my mountain. This is the struggle. This is the thing that's in
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impossible for you to be the most authentic you. It's impossible for you to love you fully if all
you're doing is living to please people. Your mountain is that. It's impossible for you to love you fully if all you're doing is living
to please people. Your mountain is that. Listen to Made for This Mountain on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm Michael Kassin, founder and CEO of 3C Ventures
and your guide on good company. The podcast where I sit down with the boldest innovators shaping
what's next. In this episode, I'm joined by Anjali Sood, CEO of Tubi,
for a conversation that's anything but ordinary.
We dive into the competitive world of streaming,
how she's turning so-called niche into mainstream gold,
connecting audiences with stories that truly make them feel seen.
What others dismiss as niche, we embrace as core.
It's this idea that there's so
many stories out there. And if you can find a way to curate and help the right person discover the
right content, the term that we always hear from our audience is that they feel seen. Get a front
row seat to where media, marketing, technology, entertainment, and sports collide, and hear how leaders like Anjali are carving out space
and shaking things up a bit in the most crowded of markets.
Listen to Good Company on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. In the fall of 1986, Ronald Reagan found himself at the center of a massive scandal
that looked like it might bring down his presidency.
Did you make a mistake in sending arms to Tehran, sir?
No.
It became known as the Iran-Contra affair.
And I'm not taking any more questions in just a second.
I'm going to ask...
I'm Leon Nafok, co-creator of Slow Burn.
In my podcast, Fiasco, Iran-Contra,
you'll hear all the unbelievable details of a scandal
that captivated the nation nearly 40 years ago,
but which few of us still remember today.
The things that happened were so bizarre and insane, I can't begin to tell you.
Please do.
To hear the whole story, listen to Fiasco, Iran Contra on the iHeartRadio app, Apple
Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Guided by his own words, this series explores Ali's life and legacy through never-before-heard audio recordings and discussions with those who knew him best.
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It created a North Star for me of how I want to be in the world, you know.
As a child, as a young person, he gave credence to my audacity.
There's no debate that this is the greatest global sports figure of all I've found.
Listen to Ali and Me, now on Audible. I didn't want to be an all pro or pro bowler or all that. I just wanted to play.
And I got to do that for seven years and I'm good. And then the hall of fame comes around
and they're like, okay, you've been out five years.
You know, Sterling Sharp is on the list of 25.
You know, it would be he would be a shoe in if he played longer.
But they never talked about what I did.
And I was like, if it wasn't enough, wasn't enough.
I'm OK with that. I slept real good before I found out I was going to the Hall of Fame.
And I slept good after finding out.
But I really didn't have any aspirations on wanting this.
It is a tremendous honor.
I know exactly what that means.
I went through it with him. And that was the greatest athletic achievement of my entire life was
going on that journey with him through the hall of fame. Me going in will not exceed when he went
in. It won't do it. It's not going to come close. That was probably the happiest I'd ever been
because I knew where he came from going to Savannah state, a college. He said he wasn't
going to go. That's one of the times that I told
him what he was going to do. So I knew how hard he fought. And I mean, there's not a lot of
opportunities for us in sports to where I know what Stephen A's journey was like to get here,
or I know what Chad's journey was like to get here.
I know what his journey was like.
And all my prayers were for him.
I'll embarrass him about one story.
I paid all his bills.
He was in the NFL.
I paid all his bills until my daughter was born
because that was that was mine because I wanted him to always
have better than what I had he had a Mercedes before I did he couldn't afford one but he was
driving one and then he wanted to go to a beach party and he drove my new one and wrecked it.
I junkyard it.
Yeah, that's what he said.
I junkyard your carb, dog.
Wait, what?
So you have to understand that we are brothers, are we're one side of the same coin.
We'll say different things differently and we'll do different things differently.
But we think alike. And God is truly, you know, I will tell you this story, are you going to do like everybody else and thank God because you think God wanted you to be a Hall of Famer?
If there is a God.
And I said this. stood up and said, if you would have played longer,
there is no question in my mind
that we would be the first brothers
in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
That was in 2011.
Since he said that,
I have not had one catch,
I have not had one catch, I have not gained one yard, and I have not scored one touchdown.
And we are the first brothers in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
So you tell me if there is a God and I should give him some glory.
And so, you know, for me, that, that is what I'm, I'm,
I'm probably most proud of is everybody used to say, you know,
Shannon, stop trying to be like him. You can't be like him. Shannon, stop trying to do what he does. Shannon,
you can't do what he does. Stop trying to be like him. You can't be like him, Shannon. Stop trying to do what he does, Shannon. You can't do what he does, Shannon. Stop trying to imitate him, Shannon. Be your own man, Shannon.
I am so happy to say he didn't follow me around. I followed him. class of 2025 pro football hall of famer sterling sharp Sterling Sharp.
And now it's time for our next guest, presented by Homes.com.
Let's give it up for New Orleans' own Juvenile. Juvenile.
I'll see you. Let's grab one.
Let's grab one.
Homes.com is a better way to shop for home buying juvie 400 degrees is a classic that
helped define southern route tell me where you came when you come up with these songs because
they're timeless you come on now and everybody hit the dance floor 20 plus years later after you
came out with this when you hear those and you hear people talk about it
i know when they see you in the airport and they see you on the street they talk about 400 degrees
yeah oh man um it's just crazy man you know i get some i get some ill stories sometime when i bump
into people you know and one of the main things I get from some of the people, they say, man, you raised me.
Like, man, I don't know your mama, man.
Yeah, bro.
You got me through some hard times, you know.
And, you know, I tell them all the time when I see them, I say, hey, man, I'm glad I could be of service to you, man.
But 400 Degrees, just like it is in New Orleans for a lot of people, they say, man, it was an inspiration for me to do something in life.
So glad to be there for them.
Listen, Cash Money, bro.
Oh, Cash Money Records, bro, was a powerhouse in the 90s and 2000s, bro.
Yeah.
We grew up on that.
Shit, you raised me, you know, when I think about it.
I'm just being honest.
Man, what is it
like being a part of such a revolutionary label, bro?
It's crazy, man. You know, we was in the studio making them songs. You know, we didn't
see ourselves being, I know I didn't, I didn't see ourselves being, you know, around this
long, 20 plus years. And man, it's one of them situations where you see a little bros
popping off. You know, you had your, you had your shine and then you see Wayne pop off, you see BG pop off.
And it's like, damn, man, we really, we really, you know, we really made it.
You know, and now the city's still showing love, man.
Yes.
Yeah.
When you were in the studio, did you know at the time what you guys were doing?
Did you think it was like, man, these are classic.
These are going to stand the test of time.
And probably, did you ever think, and that's a two-part question.
Obviously, when you have that and everybody can stand their own,
did you think you guys like, damn, we probably ain't going to be together much longer
because each guy can stand on his own. And yeah, we're doing this together, we probably ain't going to be together much longer? Because each guy can stand on his own.
And yeah, we're doing this together, but this ain't going to last much longer.
When we got together, man, you know, Cash Money did an overhaul.
They had a lot of artists on the label.
And then, you know, when I got there, the first thing they told me is it's going to be you.
You know, it's you, Turk, BG, and Wayne.
So when we start hitting them studios
And we start making them songs
We had no idea of
You know
What the people
What the reaction would be
You know
But when we started doing them tours
And that money started coming in
You know
Yeah
You know what I'm saying
The cast went to Rough Rider Tour
And stuff like that
Yeah, that's
I started seeing a few things.
Then I started saying, well, man, I hope everybody getting paid right.
I started worrying about my money too.
Right.
I got you on.
Go ahead.
Who were your biggest inspirations when you were coming up?
And who inspires you now?
So when you was coming up, before you started
popping off, who inspired
you, especially from your own culture?
Good question, man. I listen to
everybody. I was one of them cats that liked to listen
to hip-hop, period. But my main
influence was Ice Cube.
Ice Cube. Ice Cube
was that guy from the, you know, when
N.W.A. came out,
Gangsta Gangsta, and everybody from for me. You know, when NWA came out, Gangsta Gangsta,
and everybody from the city could tell you,
when Gangsta Gangsta came out,
that changed the way everything in New Orleans,
everything, homie, I mean.
And Ice Cube was always that dude for me.
Who inspires you right now that's in the game?
Somebody that you look at and be like, you know what,
that he the one, he one of them.
Man, I got a few of them right now.
It's this guy sitting next to you, man.
I'm inspired by him, the transition.
You know, I'm in the transition of my life
where I'm getting ready to do a podcast.
You know, I
see how y'all, I see how you're picking up all these
awards. And
I'm inspired by that, man.
And my other inspiration is E-40.
You know, the way that he took
the rap game
and started branding himself
I see you with your
LaPorte
I got my yak
I got
everybody down here knows
I'm branding myself
all the time
I got juvie juice
I got chips
I got papers
you know what I'm saying
I got a few things
and
my inspiration right now
probably wouldn't be
somebody that's in the rap game
right now it's cats that somebody that's in the rap game right now.
It's cats that was around back in my day.
Being an entrepreneur.
Let me ask you this.
Weezy was the youngest.
Did you know that he was going to grow up to do what he's become?
We did, bro.
You listen to Bling Bling, you hear Birdman sing.
In the year 2000, we ain't going to tear the game up.
That's how we felt.
We always knew, you know, Wayne Mom, you know, Wayne Mom wasn't letting them curse.
So we had to water it down.
We had to, like, he used to come in there with some songs.
And, like, I said, bro, you can't say that, bro.
The kids are like, bro, you can't say that.
So we knew then some of the stuff he was saying then, like, damn, bro, when we take the cuffs off,
God damn, he going, yeah.
I mean, when he came up with Bling Bling.
Say that again?
Bling Bling.
Yeah.
Did y'all know that was going to be an anthem
because everybody started talking,
hey, bro, you need that bling.
Wayne was making so many sound effects.
You know, that was his trick too.
You know, I come in the studio talking stupid
Like look I'm about to
Man I don't care what you got
I'm about to mess over you
Wayne come back with sound effects
So Wayne was always the one
That killed me on the song man
But yeah man
I didn't know bling bling
Was going to be something
Especially not a word in the dictionary Right Wayne was always creative bro Beyond I can't know bling bling was going to be something, especially not a word in the dictionary.
Wayne was always creative, bro, beyond.
I can't explain it, bro.
I can't explain it.
In the beginning, dude used to have me laughing.
The fact that he was so young and he was like an adult in a kid body.
Some of the things he knew, I'm like, bro, how the hell you knew that?
Amazing, bro. Real smart, too. Real smart, too. I'm like, bro, how the hell you knew that? Amazing, bro.
Real smart, too.
Real smart, too.
Real book smart, too.
Yeah.
If there was an artist right now
that you could collaborate outside of me.
You can spit like that, though.
Oh, yeah, I can rap.
Yeah, I can spit like that, yeah.
You got rhymes, though.
You want to hear it?
No? Well, forget y'all anyway if there
was an artist you can collab with today who would it be right off top off the top somebody that's
active right now it's it's glorilla for a whole bunch of reasons that's a good one yeah that's a
good one for a whole bunch of reasons too yeah i, I Just feel like gorilla fit that whole hot girl thing that I've been talking about and we was talking about years ago
Yeah, not from the projects. Yeah, she just feel like somebody's from the hood like they glow really
Yeah, oh, yeah glow glow. Oh man
She that one yeah
Julie you bring your tiny desk. That was a huge success, especially when you slow motion.
Hey, when you hit that slow motion.
Yeah.
Like when they called you to do Tiny Desk, did you have in your mind like,
okay, I'm going to do this, I'm going to do this.
But to do it the way you did it, I think that's what people like.
How a rapper going to go on Tiny Desk?
Because there's normally people with R&B and slow songs and things like that.
You brought in a rap and sung it in such a way, people are like, well, damn, he might have should have made it like this.
Yeah.
I didn't do it by myself, though.
And shout out to my guy, Sean Bone Short and John Baptiste.
They man it fresh.
They really helped me out.
They really backed me up.
I needed that New Orleans
flavor with me.
They all came
in a 400 degrees band, man.
They cut up too, man.
But it was one of them things
where I didn't even know
what Tiny Desk was,
you know, truthfully.
And I made a statement,
pissed everybody off.
They started going at me
on social media.
I said, look,
if I get 10,000 retweets,
I'll go to, you know,
I'll come up there
and perform on Tiny Desk
not knowing
not knowing
I had to pay for flights
and all that
right
like damn
y'all ain't got no budget up there
so yeah
we had to pay for
I had to pay for everything
but it was all love man
because the fans love it
they did
they did
they did an unbelievable job
ladies and gentlemen
give it up for Louisiana's own
New Orleans' own
Juvie
what up Ladies and gentlemen, give it up for Louisiana's own, New Orleans' own Juvie. Morning.
Hey, that's the fantastic.
Yeah, that's the one, man.
Appreciate you, too, man.
I want to get you some of my liquor, too.
Bet.
All right, bro.
Juvie.
I'm so glad.
Y'all good?
And now, welcome to the stage, Shea Shea Media. Juvie. I'm so glad.
Y'all good?
And now welcome to the stage,
Shea Shea Media's newest signees,
Humble Baddies.
Give them a sip.
Give them a sip right now.
They're going to sip.
We'll be going tonight.
What's up?
What's up?
What's up?
What's up?
What's up?
Hello.
Hey, Bill Chiefs.
Hey, baby. Hey, baby.
You got it. You got it. speechless all right i'm gonna just ask anyway i want to know and i don't know how did humble baddies come about how did it start well we used to have a podcast called I Am Woman.
And a lot of people were asking, when y'all going to get back together?
So I was talking to Ashley and Alexis.
And I was like, y'all, we should do a podcast.
And they was like, OK, OK.
And one day I just woke up.
We were coming from LA.
And we were in the airport.
And I was like, let's. We were coming from L.A. And we were in the airport.
And I was like, let's think of some names, Ashley.
So we were thinking of names.
And I was like, what do you think about Humble Betty's? She was like, I like it.
Blake didn't like it.
Blake was like, I don't like that name.
I was like, it's going to grow on you.
We got Humble Betty's.
And we just started we went to a pot a podcast room started filming stuff
and here we are today is there anything that you ladies won't talk about or is everything
agreeing like every topic we talk about everything okay i'll be talking about everything
let me ask you guys what is is this your
honest portrayal to what we see on wax to riches on netflix is this the honest portrayal of you
three i think it's part of us okay it's definitely a truth no i'm saying because we got to be real
like what you saw i stand on business what i said is what i said okay um but it's not the whole story and that's why we
have our platform humble baddies so that you guys can really get to know who we really are
our real thoughts we can have real conversations we can engage with y'all and you really see like
where we come from you get the background you can't get the whole story in the two minute scenes
we film for hours so you're not seeing like the full story.
But that's why you gotta tap in and get
the back story on Humble Baddies.
So what we see on Humble Baddies
this is who you guys really are.
Correct. With Wax
and Riches, reality
TV have became scripted
reality. Right. So when you
have people who
new cast mates they have a story right and i know
we got a lot of feedback negative feedback saying oh why you expose this person their story needed
to be told so of course when you're dealing with producers and everything it's scripted reality
it's unfortunate but so you really don't want 25 of my nightcap i really
what don't want 25 of my nightclub revenue so our our scene was playing chad and i'll be
we be capping a lot y'all so the how much did my lawyer say she 500 000 a year
that was it was it was a battle of the lawyers with that scene.
I think it's layers to everybody.
And we are public figures and we show up as ourselves.
But at the same time, we have depth.
We have families.
We have businesses.
And we hope for a season two so you can see that.
We are talented women and we have a voice.
So we are just here to sprinkle a little bit of our essence on that.
And our main thing with WAGs, we want to show that, you know, most people think we want to change the narrative of what a WAG is.
A lot of people don't know that the women and girlfriends of athletes really have businesses.
And a lot of people think that they ride their husband or their boyfriend's coattail.
And that's not true.
Like, it's not highlighted a lot that these women have businesses.
And that's what we wanted to show.
Absolutely.
What are some advice you'd give to women that's trying to start a business?
I feel like you have to go for what
you're passionate for because if your heart isn't in it, then you're already, you know, losing. So
just make sure that whatever it is, you know, you got to stick your mind to it and be passionate
about it. Give it your all, you know, get up and do it. Don't just, you know, say you're going to
do something, get up and do something. Every, every effort means something. I say surround yourself with people who are doing better than
you. I say also surround yourself with people who can, you can learn from. I feel that if you are
in a room with someone who is on a trajectory, you can tap in with them. So whether it's mentorship,
whether it's asking questions, I love to be in a room with someone that is doing beyond.
Because I'm like, you know what?
I'm in this room with them.
So you know what?
I can be there, too.
And I listen to them.
And I take heed to what they're saying.
And I bring it to fruition.
And it happens.
So I think it's really about who you set yourself with, who you ask questions to, and who your mentors are.
What are your goals and aspirations for Humble Baddies 2025?
We all set goals before we go out and try to achieve something.
So what are your goals for Humble Baddies throughout the entirety of this year?
Well, we signed under the best.
So we want to go on tour.
Y'all want to go on tour? We signed under the best. We want to go on tour. Y'all want to go on tour?
We started
under the best podcast. Yes, we did.
Media company.
But we plan to be up
there with Nightcap. Okay.
And we need all y'all to subscribe to Humble
Baddies. Yes. Thank you so much.
We're giving away $2,500
to a small business owner
in the month of February.
So if you are a small business and you're looking to take it to the next level or you want to start your business, we have guidelines.
Follow Humble Baddies, subscribe, and you may be a winner.
I like it.
Give it up, ladies and gentlemen.
Humble Baddies.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you for having us.
Ty. You what? Ty. Ty you for having us. It's hot.
It's hot.
It's hot.
You're safe.
Thank you all.
Made for This Mountain is a podcast that exists to empower listeners to rise above their struggles,
break free from the chains of trauma, and silence the negative voices that have kept them small.
Through raw conversations, real stories, and actionable guidance,
you can learn to face the mountain that is in front of you.
You will never be able to change or grow through the thing that you refuse to identify.
The thing that you refuse to say, hey, this is my mountain.
This is the struggle.
This is the thing that's in front of me. You can't make that mountain move without actually diving into that. May is Mental Health Awareness Month, a time to conquer the things
that once felt impossible and step boldly into the best version of yourself to awaken the
unstoppable strength that's inside of us all. So tune into the podcast, focus on your emotional
well-being and climb your personal mountain.
Because it's impossible for you to be the most authentic you.
It's impossible for you to love you fully if all you're doing is living to please people.
Your mountain is that.
Listen to Made for This Mountain on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Michael Kassin, founder and CEO of 3C Ventures and your guide on Good Company,
the podcast where I sit down with the boldest innovators shaping what's next. In this episode,
I'm joined by Anjali Sood, CEO of Tubi, for a conversation that's anything but ordinary.
We dive into the competitive world of streaming, how she's turning so-called niche into mainstream
gold, connecting audiences with stories that truly make them feel seen.
What others dismiss as niche, we embrace as core.
It's this idea that there are so many stories out there.
And if you can find a way to curate and help the right person discover the right content, the term that we always hear from our audience is that they feel seen.
Get a front row seat to where media, marketing, technology, entertainment, and sports collide.
And hear how leaders like Anjali are carving out space and shaking things up a bit in the
most crowded of markets.
Listen to Good Company on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts.
In the fall of 1986, Ronald Reagan found himself at the center of a massive scandal
that looked like it might bring down his presidency.
Did you make a mistake in sending arms to Tehran, sir?
No. No one was let go. It arms to Tehran, sir? No.
It became known as the Iran-Contra affair.
And I'm not taking any more questions in just a second.
I'm going to ask Attorney General...
I'm Leon Nafok, co-creator of Slow Burn.
In my podcast, Fiasco, Iran-Contra,
you'll hear all the unbelievable details of a scandal that captivated the nation nearly 40 years ago, but which few of us still remember today.
The things that happened were so bizarre and insane, I can't begin to tell you.
Please do. To hear the whole story, listen to Fiasco, Iran Contra on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Float like a butterfly, sting like a bee, your hands can't hit what your eyes can't see.
Muhammad Ali was never afraid to express himself loudly and boldly and stays true to form in Ali and Me,
an eight-part Audible original.
Guided by his own words,
this series explores Ali's life and legacy through never-before-heard audio recordings
and discussions with those who knew him best.
Muhammad had this real sense
of his own personal values and principles,
things he believed in, his own sense of conviction,
those convictions never wavered.
Hosted by Muhammad's wife, Lani Ali,
and his close friend, award-winning broadcaster, John Ramsey,
Ali and Me goes beyond the boxing ring
to delve deeply into Ali's extraordinary life
through conversations with Billy Crystal, Mike Tyson,
Rosie Perez,
Common,
Will Smith,
and Bob Costas.
It created a North star for me of how I want to be in the world.
You know,
as a child,
as a young person,
he gave credence to my audacity.
There's no debate that this is the greatest global sports figure of our
lifetime.
Listen to Ali and Me, now on Audible.
All right, ladies and gentlemen, here is time for our last segment of the day.
It's time for Q&A.
Q&A.
Yep.
Q& A. Q and A? Yep. Q and A?
Q and A?
What happened?
I'm waiting.
They got to come to the mic.
Oh.
Hey, we are.
Hey, can y'all hear me?
Yeah.
We are going tonight because I want to go.
Can I go with one of y'all?
I'm going to bed.
I got to work tomorrow.
My name's Kyle.
My name's Kyle Williams.
Oh, I got two questions.
Yes. Did Ocho pay you your
$5,200 yet? You know what? I'm glad
you brought it up.
He ain't about to make that money.
He ain't about to make James Harrison.
I forgot about that.
I forgot about that. Why you snitch one of them chains. I forgot about that.
Why are you snitching, man?
I'm glad you brought that up.
I forgot about that.
Let me get one of them bracelets until you pay.
Hey, that chain look mighty nice, man.
Yeah, but I ain't 85, so give me one of them bracelets.
It say 85 on it.
I'm going to pay you.
I'm going to pay you, though.
I'm going to pay you.
I'm going to pay you.
Hey, thank you for reminding me because I forgot.
Honestly, I'm not lying.
I forgot about the money.
Oh, my second question.
If your grandmother and grandfather was alive right now,
what do you think they would tell you and Sterling right now?
Oh, my goodness.
Ooh.
My grandfather probably would say, Mary, I told you those boys were going to be something.
And my grandmother would probably just be shaking her head.
Congratulations to y'all, man.
Thank you, bro.
Appreciate you.
What up, Mark?
What's up, bro?
All right, I got a question for both of y'all playing the league.
With the situation that happened tonight with Josh Allen winning,
do you think the NFL should release the awards at the end of the season
to prevent. I feel like they used the playoffs for an extra push to swing awards.
So I feel like since Allen keep losing to Mahomes,
there was a way to give him something since he lost to Mahomes.
Because that's the only person he can't beat, Demond Burrow.
Anybody else he played beat.
So moving forward, since both of y'all played,
would y'all rather see the NFL use just the regular season
and give the award out at the end of the regular season?
It is.
The votes are in.
The last game happens on a Sunday.
The votes have to be in Monday at noon.
So the playoffs don't have any impact on the NBA.
Not at all.
They play games, but that one.
It's only the regular season.
Now maybe what they start doing
is that the 50 men and women that vote
they'll probably make those votes public.
Yeah, that'll work
better.
Hi,
Uncle Ocho, my name's Ivy.
I am a
Louisiana native. I wanted to ask
for 90 seconds on how to turn around the New Orleans Saints organization.
Oh, wait.
Whoa.
I got it.
I got it.
90 seconds?
You don't even need 90 seconds for that.
You don't need 90 seconds for that.
You need a quarterback.
And look at the commandos the command has got a quarterback
the right quarterback and turn your franchise around in less than a year if the saints get a
quarterback man y'all gonna be straight yeah now archie y'all a couple years away from arch
but i think you get a quarterback you got to settle on the coach. It seems like Kellen Moore is going to be your coach. It seems like he's the only one that really wanted this job
because you're so much over the cap. You're going to have to release some quality players.
You're going to have to do a really good job of drafting, but it all starts with the quarterback.
Without that guy, you really, it's hard to win in the National Football League.
What about Spence?
Spencer Rattler?
Okay, man.
Thank you.
Go ahead, man.
I just want to say hi, Shannon Ocho.
Thank you.
I'm from Macon, Georgia.
Okay.
I go to LSU.
I also work for the football team as well.
Yeah.
A-doubles, of course, 7-8.
I just want to say just thank you guys for being such an inspiration.
I didn't have a question, but I just wanted to tell you all thank you all.
It's my dream to work in football,
and I believe that I've been able to do that because watching you all and growing up seeing you, Ocho,
I know I'm too young to see you in your prime,
but I did watch your highlights,
so I guess I could count.
I just want to just tell you guys thank you
and just how much y'all mean to everyone and to me
as far as just like seeing just two guys
just from Florida, from Georgia,
just go out and do great things.
Thank you.
I appreciate that. Appreciate you. I appreciate that.
Appreciate that.
Hey, Shannon.
Yes.
Thank you for killing my chiefs over the years.
I appreciate that.
I had a question for one for each of you.
Was Derek Thomas really the real deal?
I love the man.
I loved him.
And I just want to know from your perspective,
was he as awesome as he looked on TV?
And Ocho,
I loved you. You were
awesome. I didn't care for some
of your press conferences when you played the Chiefs.
You were like, oh, I'm going to beat them that year if they
were undefeated. Then you guys kicked their ass.
You went? Okay. Yeah, you kicked their ass.
But anyways, TJ
Huchmanzada, I drafted him a lot
in fantasy. Was he really as awesome as a teammate?
Was he an awesome stud receiver as I thought he was?
Yeah, he was really good.
Obviously, T.J. and I played together at Oregon State, and just so happened,
God put us together with Cincinnati, and so that continuity continued.
That chemistry, he's one of the best at his position.
Yeah, I thought he was a stud.
DT was better than what you saw on television.
The best pure pass rusher
that I faced in my 14 years.
Appreciate you, bro.
What's up, bro? What's up, Bojo?
So I want to ask, what is you guys'
biggest accomplishment individually
outside of football?
Oh, that's a good one. Oh, that's a good one.
Oh, that's a good one.
Oh, my goodness.
Damn, that's a good one.
I mean, I want to – look, I think for me,
my biggest accomplishment is being able to provide for my family.
Because that's what it's all about.
I mean, yes, I love...
Thank you.
I love the fact that what I've been able to build with Shea Shea Media,
Nightcap, Ocho and I, Club Shea Shea, now Humble Baddies, Bubble Dub, 520.
But what is that?
What is all that?
Unless you really have something, someone to share it with.
So for that, for to be able to, I think that's my biggest accomplishment.
I've accomplished so much.
But to be able to provide for my family and to know that everything is going to be okay.
They know everything is going to be okay because that's my responsibility to make sure everything is okay.
I think that's my greatest accomplishment.
I think mine would also have to be that.
I was going to say being a father is my greatest accomplishment, but I still have work to do in that area.
I think we always continue to prove year in, year out.
You're never perfect in that area, but being a provider and everyone understanding, all 211 of my kids,
that you'll never have nothing to worry about, you know,
including those I had kids from, including the missus back there.
You'll never have to worry another day in your life.
So that'll probably be my biggest accomplishment good first i don't really have a question but
i have cortez kennedy's daughter here with me um where is she richis
sign up for me courtney court what they do twin okay? Okay. So, she wanted me to come up with them.
So, yeah, so every time, I watch all y'all shows, right?
Like, every single one, except for the recap ones,
because I haven't even watched it.
But I tell her every time you tell a story about Taz.
So, I wanted to know, because she wanted me to ask
if you could share a story with everybody.
Taz and I came out together.
He, every time, it doesn't matter. You could could go a month you can go a year you can go
five years but when you saw tiz he always asked man how your brother doing how your mom doing how
your grandma doing he was he was his size and you know 300 pounds but he was he was a great great
teammate we made a lot of pro bowls together like I said, we came out in the 90 class.
We're both in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
But your dad was an unbelievable man.
I consider him a great friend because he was always so positive.
I don't think I've ever seen him down.
The only time I've seen him mad when I was on some of his teammates,
he's like, come on, Sharp, let that go.
Nah, I ain't letting nothing go, Tiz.
But he was so great, and thank you for coming, Court.
I really appreciate that.
Thank you so much.
There you go.
What up, Ojo?
What's up?
Hey, Ojo, I got a question.
I want to ask you what you on.
You saw my big cousin, Jerz?
He got an Ojo Cinco on.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, I got you, twin.
Go ahead. We're out running on. Oh, yeah. Yeah, I got you, twin.
Go ahead.
We're out, out, out, out, out now.
Yeah.
Used to be.
He ain't at no more, bro.
Why you hating?
My bad.
I'm sorry.
Go ahead, bro.
So, Oak and Ocho, I got two questions.
Go ahead, bro.
My first question is serious.
So, as a young black man in America, what's your advice?
Like, how do I go through life? I'm pretty good off, but, America, what's your advice? Like, I don't go through life.
I'm pretty good off, but what's your advice?
Well, you can't change anything about your complexion, so you're going to be black.
But I tell you what you can do.
Yes, sir.
Bro, at this point in time, nobody really cares, bro.
You're going to have to work.
You're going to have to grind.
We can't use that as an to grind we can't we can't use
that as an excuse not my bro it's time look i got into this business you do great work
people are gonna want to associate with you yeah it ain't got nothing to do it ain't got nothing
to do because i'm black i ain't nobody i ain't no i ain't no handout i ain't no charity case
we work hard and that's the one thing i always, you know, I convey to Ocho.
It's like, look, in order for us to get to where we want to get, we've got to work harder.
And that's okay.
I ain't got no problem with that.
Because think about how hard it was for us to get to.
He's from Liberty City.
I'm from rural South Georgia.
And we ascended all the way to the tops of our profession.
Yes, sir.
If we did it one time, we can do it again.
Facts.
Facts.
Life is a game. Oacts. Life is a game.
Ocho.
Life is a game.
The better you learn to play it, the better off you'll be.
I got to break that down.
I like that.
I like that.
I like that.
But Ocho, Ocho, look, look, look.
Read this for me, Ocho.
I can't read it.
It's too far.
The shade's on.
It's not too far.
Man, nigga,
you making me get up and shit, man.
Nah, I did that.
What you talking about, man? I said that.
What? Yeah, yeah.
It's nice to meet you, baby. You good? Okay.
I'm sorry, guys. We got to go.
We got to get to the back. We got to do the VIP meet and greet. I am so sorry, yeah. You're good. It's nice to meet you, baby. You good? Okay. All right. I'm sorry, guys. We got to go. We got to get to the back.
We got to do the VIP meet and greet.
I am so sorry, guys.
We got to get going because we got to cut off time.
They're about to cut the lights off.
Guys, hold on.
Thank you guys so much for coming out and joining us on our first stop in New Orleans.
We greatly appreciate it.
The Volume. Get it.
I'm Michael Kassin, founder and CEO of 3C Ventures and your guide on good company. The podcast where I sit down with the boldest innovators shaping what's next.
In this episode, I'm joined by Anjali Sood, CEO of Tubi.
We dive into the competitive world of streaming.
What others dismiss as niche, we embrace as core.
There are so many stories out
there. And if you can find a way to curate and help the right person discover the right content,
the term that we always hear from our audience is that they feel seen. Listen to Good Company
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
In the fall of 1986,
Ronald Reagan found himself at the center of a massive scandal that looked like it might bring down his presidency.
It became known as the Iran-Contra affair.
The things that happened were so bizarre and insane,
I can't begin to tell you.
Please do.
To hear the whole story, listen to Fiasco, Iran Contra on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
You're listening to an iHeart Podcast.