Pablo Torre Finds Out - Share & Tell with George Santos, Mina 'The Meanie' Kimes, Danny Downer, and Pablo
Episode Date: December 8, 2023Why are we allowing the most flagrant liar in American politics to shamelessly Cameo-wash himself with direct-to-consumer content? Is it so unreasonable that Shohei Ohtani isn't handling his free agen...cy like the American sports media wants him to? And about that sports media: Are the olds — and words — about to get left behind? (Plus: farts in a jar and the ballad of the teacup Maltese.)PTFO-approved reading:Shohei Ohtani's Secretive Free Agency Is a Missed Opportunity for Him and MLB (Buster Olney)How Gen Z Is Killing Sports Media as We Know It (Alex Reimer)Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/puOmElQS7R8 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
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Welcome to Pablo Torre finds out.
I am Pablo Torre, and today we're going to find out what this sound is.
Hey, Noah, what's happening?
Former NBA basketball referee, Tim Dongey here to wish you congratulations for getting that Chode certificate.
Right after this ad.
You're listening to Giraff Kings Network.
I feel like I come across as like a transparent person, but Dan, you know that I'm not at all.
Thank you.
This is, Dan, we should promote this.
as like the big tease of this episode.
Mina Kimes finally reveals
how much she is not telling you.
Well, I'm, yeah.
Pablo Torre finds out.
Are you going to find out?
You know stuff.
Oh, I know.
Because you know me.
I mean, the, look,
I'm not calling for anybody to get hacked.
I'm just saying on the list of people
who should be,
you are literally doing what Trump did
in that one debate
where he was like,
China should hack.
Was it Biden or something?
You remember Russia?
He was calling for...
I just want all those hackers to stand down and stand by or whatever the fuck it was.
I'm not the one with the search history that I don't want to go to America.
Yeah, we should stop talking now, actually.
Who would have the worst and so clearly you of this trio?
You are, but you are so well concealed.
I've realized that to protect my mental health and,
do my job in a way that makes me happy. I have to be very deliberate about how much I share
and what I share, both in terms of information and also in presentation, which is kind of
what you're talking about, Dan, on different platforms, on social media, on podcast, on television,
you're getting very different approaches from me. I hate it for her, though, Pablo.
I hate it for her because the best her, the best her is the goofiest, free
that doesn't have to think about that at all when televised.
Doesn't have to think about,
doesn't have to give a consideration to the presentation.
It's just being herself.
What Mina is saying is that if you don't,
if you don't like her on her around the horn,
then you don't deserve her on a zip line yelling at Dan Lebitard,
giving football takes.
I want to say thank you to both of you guys.
It's the holiday season.
Mina has a child.
Dan, I feel like one of his kids now working at Metal Arc Media.
And I thought that I would usher in the first topic of today's show by giving both of you this special gift.
Hi, Dan and Mina.
So Pabble tells me congratulations are in order.
Mina, congrats on the newborn son.
I love babies and I hope that you guys cherish this little new one.
and, you know, just have a blast and be great parents.
And whoa, Dan, congrats on founding Metal Arc Media,
which means that this expensive-ass cameo is work expense.
Well, I guess you all achieved your dream, so go Seahawks.
I saw that on John Oliver,
I hadn't seen the story before that he was holding a baby,
and someone asked him, is that your baby?
And the response was the most sinister of responses,
which is not yet, it's not my baby.
That man is such a threat to democracy
as a general symbol
that they will soon be stealing our babies
while we're laughing at.
Isn't it cute what a liar he is?
Let's give him some more money.
That's right.
Is it easier to laugh at him now that he's not in Congress, though,
and that he's not actually like a present threat to democracy?
Or is it,
is there a word like there's sports washing, eco washing.
There should be like a cameo washing.
Cameo washing him when we laugh at him and say dance, dance, monkey dance,
you know, which is basically what cameo is.
But it is, Pablo, it's offensive.
This man has a broken cameo.
He's one of the most popular ever because everybody wants to treat him as a joke,
but he's ultimately cashed in on all the lives.
I paid him, you paid him $400 for that.
This is exactly the story that I wanted to talk about, is how I'm supposed to feel about how much I love the fact that, yes, we paid George Santos for...
We don't love that fact.
One of us loves that fact.
One other of us does not love that fact.
I don't want to be funding that man.
And I don't want to be funding a minute.
That price.
Get us a discount at least.
Make the price a joke.
Make that the funny joke.
So I want to point out a couple of facts about the video that.
we just played. Number one for people who are not watching on YouTube or the Draft
King's Network. He's just sitting in his car, like knocking this out. I requested this.
He got back to me in an hour. So he's just churning through this. Not trying. Just it's an
ATM, of course, to buy more Botox. He is Stugats at the highest elevated form of politics.
Well, the second fact is that in his Stugatsian way of just being very familiar, he assumed
that you guys are the parents of Mina's child. I don't know if you clobotze.
that. He was congratulating Dan on Mina's son. So there is just that fact of the matter.
You know. Well, and and metal, I mean, it can be argued that Metal Arc was birthed somewhere
around the three of us. The idea of Metal Arc right here, the birth of it is somewhere around
just empower creatives to be themselves and they'll figure it out. And he's better than all of us
at Cameo. None of us will make as much money as he does at Cameo.
What I'm about to say is probably going to make this mood in this Zoom profoundly uncomfortable.
But just seeing Pablo in between me and Dan, I do feel like if we had a son, it might look like Pablo.
Like if you did one of those face mash apps.
Now it's really uncomfortable.
Yes, she's absolutely right about that.
In fact, you need to do that face mash app so that people can see it will be Pablo.
You would be, yes, it's uncomfortable, but she's not wrong.
It's just my face.
You're saying we've got to get this special software.
You're just, it's just my face.
No, no, it's not just your, no, it's not just your face.
I'm going to not make eye contact.
No.
Herz, no, Pablo, hers is, her face.
This is why it's not just your face.
Hers is thin and radiant.
Mine is red and bloated.
When you combine them, we get your very full face.
I'm also Asian.
Self-consciously full.
Dan is Latino.
There's a little, that is what Pablo looks like.
Pablo Torre is a Spanish name.
It's a Spanish name.
Three very ethnically confusing people hanging out together, wondering what we all look like if we crossbred is a nightmare of the party that George Santos does represent, incidentally.
Bring it back.
And I do want to bring it back to George Santos, which is somehow more comfortable than the previous conversation we were just having for me personally.
because I was thinking, Nina, to your point, like, he's just, he makes me laugh.
And is it okay?
And he's a congressman from New York State.
And so I believe there are people, real people whose lives were made worse materially by the fact that he was the most flagrant liar in the history of American politics by certain standards.
And yet his salary as a congressman, which is generously speaking, let's say six figures, he's made more than six.
figures in three days, just doing this. And so what I'm left with is the idea of I would 100
million percent watch a George Santos reality show. I would do that. I challenge you to say that
you wouldn't. I will also point out that he, the reason I would watch it is because he used our
American political system in a way that totally degrades it, but is legitimately something that
makes me laugh out loud.
And is he, he's Trumpian in that way, where I'm just like tipping my cap and also consuming
the content and also, uh, on some level, aspirationally mourning democracy, but mostly enjoying it
for now.
I mean, there are aspects of this that feel novel and then there are aspects of this that
are very much not new.
In fact, um, we had a vice president candidate who parlayed her run.
into a reality show.
Sarah Palin.
Like that happened.
So like the idea of, you know,
that politicians are entering this space
and,
and maybe I'm not talking about her intentions,
but like what happens next is fame, it's lurid,
it's reality TV, whatever, that's not new.
The direct-to-consumer nature of Santos,
what he's doing, that is new.
This is something we talked about,
actually when we talked about OnlyFans,
there's some like kind of parallel.
else here, which is, you know, will people pay for this? Do they want this? That feels new. And then, of course,
you know, he is extreme. I mean, he literally is, I think the first person expelled from Congress in
quite some time. The nature of what he's doing feels very new in the sense of like he is a specific
type of celebrity that has overtaken the American entertainment sector. So naturally, one of those
celebrities would make it to the highest, you know, halls of the land or whatever, which is that
he is famous for wanting to be famous, basically.
Yes.
Can you guys help me with part of this?
Because I don't want to be a scold.
Nobody wants this.
It's much easier to laugh than the fear for the fall of democracy.
But when Mina says those things are not new, she's absolutely right.
and obviously capitalism is not new.
But what feels new to me that he's an avatar for is just keep leaning into the shameless.
You can topple the rules.
You can topple the integrity of the offices.
You can topple and gerrymander district lines.
You can accrue real power if your superpower is just,
I can absorb any form of shameless and then monetize it.
Like, I'd prefer to laugh at that.
It's more comfortable to just be like,
isn't this funny, but like symbolically, it's not funny given where the country is, given where the world is.
Well, also textually, it's not funny on the level of I'm looking at the justice.gov website and reminding myself.
So what did George Santos do allegedly? And it's like, oh, he was charged with conspiracy, wire, fraud, false statements, falsification of records, aggravated identity theft, and credit card fraud.
I'm like, okay, that's bad. Counterpoint, there is this video of him, uh, proto cameo.
sort of style, where he roots on the Mets.
Hey guys, today's opening day as a good old Mets fan.
I know you guys aren't going to be playing until April 6th back home, but in good old fashion,
let's go Mets.
He's not entirely in on why he's funny, right?
And so it's this line of he is a clown and he is also beclowning us.
But mostly the entertainment value to me is he does.
totally get why I'm laughing. And the more that he is going to become self-aware, the less
funny it is. But for the time being, I'm like, thirsty, like, avatar for the utter desperation
for attention in the attention economy, it's farcical and funny to me. And I'm trying to train
myself to realize it probably has peaked. Like this might be, probably is like sell stock in
George Santos right now is kind of where I'm leaning at this point, Nina. Yeah, it feels temporary
in a way. And that's, I think, part of the reason why I'm maybe not as horrified or nervous about
him. But again, you know, you can point to other political figures who I probably would have said
the same thing about and I was wrong. But, um, but, um,
You know, this feels like a 15 minutes situation for the reason you said, too, I think, because of the very specific nature of why it's so funny.
It feels like it can't last.
But Mina, if I may, I did, I mean, and Pablo debuted his show with this particular shame of mine.
I was laughing at all of these same things about Trump and also pointing out.
And this one's important to me, also pointing out, hey, he's not a half.
actually funny. He's only unintentionally funny. Like, he's not a comedian, but his base thinks
he's funny. And so what it then becomes is me, liberal elite, laughing at Trump as he takes
the country from me, because I'm laughing at him and how dumb he is, because he's not actually
clever enough to be funny. But his constituency is like, no, he makes you look like a fool. He's
funnier than you are. He is funny. Wait, Mina is, is grinning devilishly, and I don't know why.
Some of his nicknames are kind of funny. I did, I just,
I just don't agnate this.
Now we release the texts.
Fair enough.
Fair enough.
Fair enough.
Go look at the.
There's a giant Wikipedia page for just the nicknames.
And there's a lot of deep cuts and ones that haven't made it to the mainstream.
Sloppy Steve for Steve Bannon is objectively pretty accurate.
Or, oh, God.
There's some real bangers on it.
No, you can find.
They are actually not sure if I want to co-sign.
the ones I find most hilarious. Meatball Ron was good.
But he tried out to sanctimonious first and it fell flat and then it, he stuck with it.
Yeah. Meatball Ron is funny. Yeah. Yeah. I want to point out though,
um, wacky omorosa. I'm like, yeah, I can't really dispute that. I would, I should point out that.
Spent a lot of time on that one, did he? Wacky Amorosa. Did he? Workshop that around the White House
for a little while.
None of them are like particularly clever also like.
But no,
he connects there.
Guys,
I'm,
I'm serious about this part of it.
You understand why the liberal elites who aren't running around with guns are laughing
at this stuff while it's connecting with others and those others are feeling laughed at by not
just people who are making them feel intellectually inferior,
but also look like us.
and they've got a leader who's telling them
these people are dangerous.
These people who are laughing at you.
They're the rapists.
They're the people from other countries
who want to take your country.
And to them it's not a joke.
To them it's not like,
no, let me go grab my gun.
This guy's got my back.
Danny Downer.
That's a good one.
That's a good one.
That's a good one.
Danny Darkness, yes.
Damn.
Yeah.
I'm trying to think of one for me.
Now hold on.
Dan, let's workshop this.
We can't, we can't,
We can't let her win this game be 1-0.
She always wins, though.
I know.
I know.
I would we go, what would we go?
Maladjusted Mina.
Maljusted Mina.
Like just, maladjusted Mina.
That's how, if I was trying to harm her, if I was trying to cut her with something.
Messy, messy, messy, messy,
describes what her texts are actually like, but not actually like her as an organized person.
Hold on.
That's how you're going to segue to the private life.
Oh, oh, oh, oh, wait, wait, wait, wait, oh.
Meena, Mina, the Meany.
Meena.
Oh, you're, oh, oh, my God.
Pablo, do you know how much money we would make if we got on cameo,
Mina's real feelings about some people in the industry?
I believe that if Mina were to do that, she could at least charge as much as Brian Cox.
Hi, I'm Brian Cox.
I play Logan Roy, and if you want me, I will tell you to fuck off in a very uncertain manner.
So Brian Cox, $689, Dan.
That's the market rate for one of the great stage actors, Thespian.
Thespians of all time.
You know who's not winning is Cameo, by the way, because there's a great, sorry,
Sopna Monshuari, a friend of mine did a great article for The Times about the rise and fall.
During the pandemic, they were valued at like a billion dollars and had 400 employees.
Now they have, they had to fire like the best majority of their staff.
And it's because they couldn't get A-listers to do it.
Oh, hold on.
Counterpoint.
I believe that disgraced former NBA referee Tim Donagie is an A-lister.
Hey, Noah.
What's happening?
Former NBA basketball referee, Tim Donagie here to wish you congratulations for getting
that Chode certificate, I know it's been a big thing for you to do, and you got it done, my
friend. So congratulations. And I know Vegas bumped up the odds of you getting laid up to plus
4,000. All the best. And hopefully your buddy Alex will help you get that taken care of.
Oh, my God. That was a Chode certificate.
Chode, I got it, yes, the Chode certificate.
We got that out. I hope Metal Lark wasn't paying for any of the other videos that you
showed there. Tim Donagie luckily is only $40. So, you know, a real bargain.
That's, that's why you don't want to be on Cameo because you're basically a lot, like,
you're revealing how popular you are. Your own value is horrifying to me.
Mina, the meaning would kill a Cameo. Like, if she was just offering, not just her reading what
you want, but her giving you embargoed secret thoughts on how she really feels about
certain people.
That would kill.
You're making me sound like such a
hater.
I am not that much of a
hater.
No, I didn't say that.
That's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's.
Mendacious Mena is what Trump would call me if we were debating.
Yes, that's right.
There's miserable Mena again.
Like, I would be like, well, actually, here's a bunch of facts.
So, to the ladies and gentlemen, miserable Mena, am I right?
And the crowd would go wild and you would see me melt like just into a,
puddle on stage.
All right, Mina, what did you bring us today to spite the premise of your misery?
Okay.
Well, this is a story about someone who I do not foresee granting cameos anytime soon or
interviews, and that is Shohei Otani.
So a little backdrop, we are right now in Shohei Otani's The Bachelor era because it is
his free agency.
He is meeting with teams.
They are courting him to offer him hundreds of millions of dollars.
But he and his camp would not like you to know which teams he is meeting with, how those meetings are going,
really any details about him, which seems to have irked some in the sports media on first take, notably.
Both Stephen A. Smith and Chris Rousseau complained about this.
The fact that we're even discussing this is a complete joke.
This Otani scenario, sweepstakes.
You know, do you know when the MVP?
He wouldn't even tell you what his dog's name was.
What is the big secret?
Geez, he's a free agent.
He's talked to six teams.
Giants.
He was in the needin with the Blue Jays.
Obviously Roberts does that.
I mean, the Cubs are in the mix.
The Angels.
What is this?
The Atomic bomb?
Our colleague, Buster Olney,
my colleague, sort of Pablo's colleague.
Buster Olney wrote a column about how it was bad for...
It's my colleague, too.
I don't have to be at ESPN to be a colleague.
He can be my colleague, too.
I don't know.
I don't know why I felt the need to clarify that.
I mean, all you did there was box me out.
I work at ESPN.
Pablo, you still work at ESPN.
Buster works at ESPN and Dan doesn't.
That was that.
That's what you did.
He's our colleague.
Danny Downer strikes again.
Buster only, our colleague.
Go ahead.
I'm sorry.
Danny Downer.
Every time we say it, can you find producers do a
sound effect whenever we say Danny Downer?
Let's see, hold on a second.
I'm sure.
Yeah.
Wow.
People are angry.
People are not angry, but the point that Buster made, and I think this is what I find interesting because I do think it's a point that you can see both sides up is that it would be better for baseball if Otani was a more public figure.
He mentions in his column that Otani accepted the MVP award.
He saw this with his dog when they asked to.
him for the name of the dog. His camp said, we're not ready to reveal the name of the dog.
And then I went back and read some coverage of Otani and his approach to the media in
Los Angeles or Anaheim. And he is unusually reticent. He doesn't, he limits his availability.
The angels protected him, I think, which is something he liked about playing there.
So, you know, I don't think Otani personally owes anyone anything. So I want to be clear.
my interest in this is not coming from a place of indignation.
I think that's kind of ridiculous.
But I do think you can have a discussion over whether it's bad for baseball,
that its brightest shining star is not a public person.
Because, you know, like that's not an unreasonable stance to take, I think.
The part that's most interesting to me is I'm always fascinated by the cultural differences in all sports,
but especially this sport,
where I've seen Latin players come in
and struggle with some of this stuff,
but the Latin player gets imprisoned by,
don't be too flamboyant,
don't get misunderstood in your second language.
Don't be too loud.
This one was interesting to me because,
and I'd like you guys to speak to this part of it,
it's not merely that culturally,
there are some privacy differences
between how we cover media stuff
in both countries in Japan,
and here. But more interesting to me is whatever level of privacy he wants for his personal life,
in matters of business and how public business deals are in America and Japan, like the sacred
contract of business where Otani is from, like we have no respect for it here. And so you're
asking something of him. He is more likely, man, Hideki Matsui came over here and was comfortable
with his porn collection.
To me, this is something that is more dangerous in public.
Business in public is something that I can't speak to the cultural differences.
I just saw it with Ichero.
He would not say anything publicly about anything because he was afraid of offending a sponsor
because business matters are to be respected.
I imagine that in Japan, where he's an enormous star as well, he has been stealing for,
and stealing in the sense of S-T-E-E-L, like hardening himself against
the pressures from the outside that demand to know more, you know?
And I don't know if this is just like an Asian athlete thing,
but I will bring another Asian athlete into the conversation,
which is that Jeremy Lynn, who has his own fandom, of course, abroad,
specifically in China, he announced at the beginning of this year, okay,
that he had been married for two years and no one knew this.
He released an Instagram post.
I considered myself friends with him.
I no longer do after realizing that via Instagram.
But the point is, when you have a fandom,
when you have an army of people who are demanding access,
and it's scary, I get why Shoyotani is looking at the cost benefit
and just saying, look, what you guys get off on, I don't.
I have a different sort of a kink.
Privacy to me is something that I enjoy in a way
that must be unrelatable in a world where for us,
literally, our economy is attention.
And he's saying, I don't need any of that money because the stuff I'm getting is not affected by any of the things that will make your lives and your businesses, boom, I'm good.
I think different people, certainly different athletes, are more private than others for very different reasons.
Like, Dan, I hear what you're saying about sort of the likelihood that there are like cultural factors with regards to putting your business out there or, you know, business in general.
But it seems very clear to me that Otani, it's not just about business.
This dude doesn't want anything about himself out there.
The dog is the funny story, right?
Because it's such an innocuous, charming thing.
That dog, by the way, is like the cutest dog I've ever seen.
You should look at the picture.
It looks very expensive.
But Mina, is it him that's protecting the privacy of himself or the dog there?
Or is the economy of his people all around him not wanting, I don't know whose choice that is because he's worth so much money.
And the business of him is so strong.
Is he the one asking for that protection or is it just naturally gathering around him?
It's impossible to know, obviously.
But he doesn't come across when he is interviewed as somebody who's like dying to reveal things about himself in a way that would make me think,
oh, his camp is all, you know, they're crazy.
We can make fun of them.
Like the fact that his camp didn't want to reveal that detail that they're being so cloak and dagger about this,
it is funny.
It is okay to say, hey, this is a.
little bit ridiculous. Of course he's meeting with the Dodgers. We don't have to like turn
it into, oh my God, David Roberts, what a gaff that he revealed. They had a meeting with him.
No, they had a meeting with him. That is funny. But as far as why in particular, he is private,
you know, and I was saying like there's like different reasons for that. I suspect,
because this is something I have noticed in general with public figures who are private,
Marshaun Lynch is one who really comes to mind.
It is the Kauai Leonard.
Sometimes it can just be your personality.
I feel like that's kind of the case with Leonard and into some degree,
Marchand, based on conversations I've had with people who know him.
But also, I think there's a fear of misinterpretation.
I know for me, personally, that's why I am a private person.
We are talking about this at the beginning is I'm always afraid if I say something,
it might be taken out of context.
It could be used against me.
And naturally, I do think that fear of misinterpretation,
is probably exacerbated by cultural differences in his case.
But, you know, I think for certain athletes, that fear will lead them to do business and treat the media a certain way.
And fear might be the wrong word, wariness, perhaps appropriately.
And I wouldn't be surprised if that's the case here.
But I think there is, and there is, by the way, a bit of a Venn diagram overlap, right, Dan, in terms of like the use of a translator and why you do it.
Some people do it to protect themselves.
Other people do it to evade media responsibilities.
So certainly Latin players have enjoyed some of those strategies as well.
But I'll point out that at a certain point, when you become so conspicuously private, you dare people to want to find out stuff.
Right?
Like that's strategically, this is where I caution against the strategy.
You can say, you can say, you can caution against it.
whoever his role model is here, like Ichiro kept his business, his business.
And Ichero came before Otani and may not have been quite what Otani is, but it was similarly
big in both countries.
And he controlled the narrative.
He did tighten the grip such that we never got to know Ichero.
We don't know anything about now.
It was a different age.
It's not the internet age.
And it's not now where you're daring people.
But what you just said is interesting, Pablo.
Latin players, I remember with El Ducay Hernandez, he had a transatlese.
He had a translator but didn't need one.
He was observing a lot, but it was a big controversy in New York.
Why won't he just learn the language?
Learn the language.
And Cashman and the Yankees wanted him to speak.
They didn't want him to be using a translator, and it was a thing.
But you're absolutely right when you say they're afraid of sounding dumb in their second language.
They're afraid of being misunderstood, but it's not just the words, Mina, here.
What you're saying is any bit of information can be misunderstood.
Even the name of a dog can be lost somehow by a fearful camp in whatever it is, the bridge that we don't cross across the transition, you know, across this language barrier.
It's a barrier, but it's not limited to language.
I think to drill down on the dog thing because I think it is really interesting.
Like, why?
Why would you not release that in an accurate detail?
I would suspect that, like, like, if the dog's name got out, this is so ridiculous.
Pablo. Palletori finds out.
You've got to figure it. Make that your mission.
I'm on it. You think I'm joking. I'm on it.
I don't think it would. The reason why this camp probably would not want that to get out is not because the dog's name is like Hitler or something.
That would be bad. I would also not want to reveal this for the record.
Yes. That would make sense. Yes. That would be bad for everybody involved.
It would be bad for baseball. We would not disclose that either way.
It would be a signifier probably to the athlete that the, his representatives are talking to people.
So he might, you look at that and say, well, yeah, right.
Like, yes.
Yes.
It is like when I was, when I was young and I had a diary, I didn't have a lock, but I would put like a single hair on top of it to see.
And then if my brother had broken into my room to read the diary, the single hair on the diary is the dog's name.
Manipulative.
Mena.
Misery.
The movie,
Misery, Mina.
What a move, Dan.
Mina is talking about
laying a trap
in the forest
of her own house,
hoping that someone
falls into it,
daring someone
to go for the thing
that she is,
for the bait
that she has laid.
As the daughter,
sister of an older
brother,
uh,
it's something
I don't think
you guys would understand.
Oh.
You just unlocked a
court.
childhood memory that I had suppressed, which is I was on a soccer team growing up where the coach had a German shepherd named Adolf.
Yeah, see, I would not have disclosed that if I was that coach either.
The first time we heard it, I remember all of the parents and the kids just being like, wait.
What?
You got, if the only way to even begin to have a dog named that is to have it be like,
like, what's one of, one of those ones that can't like get on a curb, like needs to be lifted to be put on a curve.
Oh, a miniature Maltese.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
A teacup Maltese.
I think he said it was a family name at one point.
We don't believe that.
Adolf is one of those names where if you look at name popularity, obviously it falls off of, it's like a win probability chart for a team that loses it.
like it just completely falls off, obviously, for good reason.
That's, what a metaphor.
I'm going to tell you a funny story.
I want to tell you both a funny story about a teacup Maltese.
One of my greatest fears with a former girlfriend was her going out of town.
And like Christopher and the Soprano's, me sitting on the teacup Maltese and killing the T-Cup Maltese.
So I had a great, no, I'm not kidding you when I tell you, I had a great fear that I was going to kill that animal.
And so one time I was walking this tiny, tiny animal.
animal and around a corner comes a big dog and grabs it by the head, grabs Bella by the head,
and throws her up in the air. And I did a six-year-old girl's horror movie scream while the dog
was in the air because my greatest fear had been realized in that moment. That animal's head was
in a bigger animal's mouth and I was as scared as I've ever been. Did you catch it?
Well, no, I was just too busy screaming. I was too horrified and screaming.
me, I didn't catch it, got thrown up in the air and fell on the ground and was not killed,
but could have been killed on my watch.
I heard an amazing rumor, because I actually have been, like, asking around about Otani's dog name.
The rumor I've heard, okay, is that Otani's dog's name, the reason they're not saying it is
because the dog's name is the name of one of the teams he is considering.
Stop.
Dodger?
The dog's got to be named Dodger.
That's a good reason.
It is a good reason.
It's a good reason not to give the dog's name.
You don't understand, by the way, what it's like being a sister.
People are always like, oh, I mean, how do you deal with all the hate online and the abuse?
And I'm like, my brother used to put his farts in a jar and leave them in my room.
Does that work?
Yeah, does that scientifically work?
No, it doesn't work.
It's the stupidest thing ever.
but I just use that as an example of the like being a younger sister to an older brother is like living in saw.
Just horror traps at every turn.
I would like to disagree, but I'll point out that me and Dan simultaneously were like, wait a minute, could we do that?
Is that, is that physics?
Does that work?
I mean, I'm going to try now.
I'm going to, we're going to find out.
There was an article on awful announcing.
The headline was how Gen Z is killing sports media as we know it.
And Dan Shaughnessy of the Boston Globe reacted by saying,
it's been over for a while now.
I miss when there were real smart people who were sports fans.
And it became old guy yelling at clouds.
And then the internet turned on Shaughnessy and said,
get out of here, journalist guy.
We're taking over now and made him feel like an, you know,
an old man with a mop for a head.
And so this is where we are with how some of this stuff is covered.
Young people get to be the reason that things are popular.
But what I wanted to read from this article that felt to me like, this is time passing me by what I'm about to read to you as an old-timey journalist more like Dan Shaughnessy than whatever it is that's happening at the parts of the food chain that scare old media with young people.
For the last two decades, beleaguered sports media execs and veterans have bemoaned about how millennials consume sports content.
We read blogs and not game stories.
We get our highlights on social media and don't watch TV.
We listen to sports podcasts and turn off sports talk radio.
But in due time, the challenge of capturing millennials will seem like the good old days.
We may not pour over the box score in the next day's paper, but that's because we've already seen it.
We enjoy sports just like our parents.
The difference is we consume content differently.
Today, the challenges are much more existential and problematic.
What if young people don't like sports at all?
And then it goes through at length how we're different generationally.
I don't really have a question for you guys.
I'm just placing in front of you the idea,
you guys are younger than me and you've been making fun of me about being old for a while.
And so here you occupy the space best equipped to do the translation or be the bridge
between what I am or what Dan Shaughnessy is and what young people crave from their sports coverage.
I was simply leaving space for our producers to insert the downer
sound, because I assume that was obviously what there is.
I appreciate.
You say downer sound, look at here.
Maybe America's next great sports section will be found in some form on Twitch or IGN.
Don't just say goodbye to long form writing.
Say goodbye to the written word altogether.
So, I'm curious how you think about this as somebody who also is still getting away with plausibly being young, while also inside.
feeling very, very old in ways that make me honestly, psychologically more lebitard than
whatever imaginary person is our collective phobia in this industry. But I do caution against
seeing young people as so categorically different as species. And therefore, it reminds me of
the story we did on Share and Tell many moons ago. I even forget, due to my own age,
who exactly I was talking to about this.
But it was the idea that, oh, young people can get scammed online at a rate actually
greater than the old people.
And we sort of imbue young people with this power because they are young that sort of papers
over all of their stupidities.
And I think there's a difference between us not understanding the direction things
are going.
And I confess, I wish I knew more about the direction things are going.
but Mina I also want to point out that like
to make them into the boogeyman
is to also I think
give them a compliment that they have not yet earned
which is admittedly the oldest thing I could possibly say.
Yeah well I was you know I think Dan very artfully
tried to avoid demonizing young people
when you were talking about sort of the changing nature
of both sports and sports media in terms of consumption
you're just saying you know you're not sure you understand it
in terms of like how do people
these days, how does the next generation
watch sports when
they're looking for commentary? What is the nature
of the commentary? What are the platforms
they're going to for that commentary? All of these
things are like radically changing in a way
that I share Dan's
I wouldn't say
confusion is the wrong
word, but I feel like there's a lack of
clarity right now around the
entire space
that
makes it hard for us to project
When people ask me the question, like, where do you see yourself in 10 years or even five years?
I always say, I don't know because the places people are going to right now to hear sports commentary, which is what I do for a living, are changing so quickly.
And the way you make that commentary is also changing.
It's very hard for me to look out and say, this is what we're all going to be doing.
I don't think we thought the three of us would be in this format.
Exactly.
Exactly.
Exactly.
You know, but as to like what the next generation actually wants out of sports,
I don't think that it's fundamentally changed that much, to be honest.
I think they still want the same moments and narratives and takes and discussion and deeper analysis.
But how they want that delivered is something that I'm not sure.
like we're all trying to figure out.
And when you, Dan, when you, when you read that column about how, you know,
with Shasi saying it's not the written word,
I don't know if that's true necessarily.
I don't think it's accurate to say young, you know,
like the zoomers only consume news via like 10 seconds sound bite.
That feels like old man yelling at the cloud and it feels inaccurate to me.
But let me read some of these numbers to you and you tell me what you take from this,
Pablo, like what is accurate and what is inaccurate? The numbers are dire. According to a new study,
only 58% of Gen Ziers say they enjoy live sport. That figure aligns with other data about our beloved
zoomers. Only 23% of Gen Ziers say they're passionate sports fans compared to 42% of millennials,
33% of Gen Xers, 31% of baby boomers. More concerning, 27% of Gen Zers said they dislike sports
altogether compared with just 7% of millennials, 5% of Gen Xers, and 6% of baby boomers.
There are myriad possible explanation.
Youth sports participation is way down.
Kids are now addicted to video games in virtual worlds.
TikTok is melting everybody's brain.
But the fact is young people aren't digging traditional sports these days.
The idea of sitting down at a predetermined time to watch a three-hour game seems so outdated.
That's different.
So I concur.
that this is something in the sea suites of all of these sports,
they are very aware of and they are very afraid of.
But I would draw a straighter line towards just the general fragmentation of everything,
as opposed to a specific allergy towards the product that we loved
and got taught by our parents or whoever it is indoctrinated us into the cult of sports.
Mina, right?
Like, that feels, if you were to sub out, I don't have the numbers on this, of course, but sub in movies, television shows, anything.
The internet broke up and siloed everything in a way that prevents the authority of institutions, for most of which in media was sports, let alone journalistic institutions in media itself.
It just sort of shattered all of it and scattered it across the floor.
Yeah, it's the death of monoculture, is like what you're talking about.
sports, you know, have inhabited that space in a way that, like, there used to be, like,
certain movies and television shows. And as everything is fragmented, they're suffering from
the same thing, which is not that the younger generation, it's, there's not, I don't think
there's anything inherent to the products necessarily that is turning them off, although, you know,
maybe there's some polling that shows, you know, like the lack of youth participation and then
concerns about like broader
silent issues, health,
things like that might matter.
But I really think more is they just have more
stuff to do and things to look at.
And so naturally,
when you have, you know,
a generation of people who are
interested in like a ton of different things and have a ton of
different things at their fingertips, they're going to
consume the big things a little bit less.
And that doesn't feel like it's changing
anytime soon.
So there might be a world in,
in the not so distant future,
where sports are still incredibly popular.
Taylor Swift is still like something of an incredibly popular.
They're still like, you know, big movie franchises that do Barbie, whatever.
But the dominance isn't as assumed as it was in the past.
And so what we're left with, I think,
if we're looking to our crystal ball collectively,
we're left looking at this.
Hey, Danielle, this is Stugat on cameo.
This was sent by your husband to be here, maybe now, your husband, Phil.
He said, we're getting married this weekend,
and he wanted to surprise you, his future wife, with a cameo.
Can you tell the way getting married to me?
Well, listen, let me tell you, anything, anyone who knows Phil, and I've known forever,
and no one knows Phil better than I know Phil, okay,
knows that he is going to be the best husband, father, okay,
the best friend that you'll ever have in the world.
a faithful, honest, never going to cheat on you,
never going to do a bad thing to you to work hard,
support his family.
I mean, I'm telling you,
I know Phil.
And there are a few people who know Phil,
but I don't know Phil.
He is so tired of playing that character after 20 years
that he is giving the bare minimum effort on,
all right, I'll give you your public lies,
but I'm just going to move my hands around
and look totally bored while I do it.
Dude, give me 70 years.
me $79.
He is sitting in a chair.
He turned on a light, but you can only see like half of his face.
Not trying.
Not trying.
It's just held his hand out.
Here, he is, have you ever seen in Key West when a monkey jumps off of someone's shoulder
and runs and grabs a dollar and then runs back?
He's not even running.
He's getting someone to turn the cameo on for him and he's just laying there.
And that's the lazy circus monkey at the.
the very end of his act.
We started the show with the Santo story talking about sort of how like these ridiculous
characters have suddenly achieved power in various spheres.
What would be the equivalent for Stugats in sports?
Would it be like if they made him, like if he had actual power, would that be the closest
thing in our world?
Oh my God.
If he had, well, he's got, he's got a lot of power.
He's got a lot, but that's how he uses it.
The power to sound drunker.
as he continues to speak over the course of one minute is a power that you two can,
can sample for $150 is what that costs.
I'm starting $150.
He's done $250 of them.
For that.
Wow.
And complaining that he's not making enough money.
Yeah.
The commissioner of the NCAA, John Weiner.
At the end of today's episode of Pablo Torre finds out, it's time to say what we all found out.
Who wants to go first?
I found out on Pablo Tori found, finds out where the root is I am a founder.
I'm a founder of a company.
I found out that my company funded a professional liar that isn't Stugats and paid him $400.
And I'm offended by that on behalf of the company and the country.
that Pablo Torre had that expense allowed by whoever is in charge of the money around.
Immediately expensed.
I found out that Pablo Torre, who loves double entendres and innuendo, draws the line at me pointing out that he looks like the child of me and Dan.
That was the first time I've ever seen you look uncomfortable.
His discomfort was wonderful.
I don't know what happened there.
And they're going to be able to have so much fun with the computer images of that.
It's going to look like that.
I do want to see what our face is mashed together.
It looks like now, Dan.
That's my discomfort.
What I found out is that I live in fear of the people who Photoshop images for Pablo
Torre finds out.
Yes.
And speaking of the people who work for me slash torture me on a regular basis,
Pablo Torre finds out is produced by Michael Antonucci, Ryan Cortez, Sam Daywig, Juan Galindo,
Patrick Kim, Glele Lohman, Rachel Miller Howard, Ethan Schreier, Carl Scott, Matt Sullivan,
Chris Tuminello, and Julia Warren.
Studio Engineering by RG Systems, post-production by NGW Post,
theme song by John Bravo.
Thank you to the big lead for calling us the best sports podcast of 2023,
even though we've existed for like three months.
We'll talk to you soon.
