Pablo Torre Finds Out - The Butthole Story (Or: A Thoughtful Conversation with Sue Bird and Ezra Edelman)

Episode Date: December 17, 2024

This year has seen a boom in the worlds of women's sports and documentary films (and podcasting). So we invited the best point guard in the history of women's basketball (Sue Bird) and the best docume...ntarian in the country (O.J.: Made in America's Ezra Edelman) for an in-person summit to discuss all of it. Plus: one-word answers from multi-hyphenates, wanting control, the good-faith mind games of talking to refs, the bad-faith ickiness of extracting controversy, the Billie Jean King of it all... and why the hard's not as hard, when you're doing the thing you were meant to be doing — even when it's hard. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to Pablo Torre finds out. I am Pablo Torre. And today we're going to find out what this sound is. This is all your a-hles right now. Right after this ad. You're listening to Draft King's Network. Wait, what else is on your actual writer? My actual writer has, granted, this list was made probably like five. It's still true, but it probably was made like five to ten years ago. Plantain chips. beef jerky
Starting point is 00:00:40 Twicks and Pellegrino So to summarize again You are not high No I'm not You just love all the things that I would love While high Wait
Starting point is 00:00:53 Yeah I guess so But tell me what things you would demand a rider for I love seaweed I like seaweed But why would you To what events and places That you're invited to Would you need a ride?
Starting point is 00:01:05 Like a commercial shoot You have your trailer a lot of like, you know, you got an hour. That's a very down-to-earth rider, I got to say. You should be more of a diva. Have you considered that? Like, what is it? Like, no eye contact.
Starting point is 00:01:19 Like, no eye contact. Green M&M's only eye contact. And I want this to smell like, you know, lavender. I could do starbursts, only red. By the way, can you tell him to stop airing your commercial? The Carmx one. Yes. Why?
Starting point is 00:01:34 I love it. There's the new iteration when Asia got. I've noticed that there was an update. Third MVP. When you became MVP once, was that fine? No. You did it thrice. How often in the world have you actually used the word thrice?
Starting point is 00:01:51 Have you ever? Now like 10 times a day, every time they roll back. I'm guessing it's less than thrice. I've been in commercials before. Maybe they didn't run this much, but I've been in commercials before. You could have seen me while I was playing. you probably weren't paying attention. I saw you.
Starting point is 00:02:09 The world wasn't paying attention. Naked? You did see me naked. Although blocking certain areas. That's right. Body issue. In the swim suit issue. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:02:17 No, ESPN body issue. But you're in the swimsuit issue too. Yeah, but that was like a, no, that was, God, what year is it? It's funny that you don't necessarily remember when you were in the SI swimsuit issue. I think 2020. But wasn't that post-retirement? No, right before. It might have been 20
Starting point is 00:02:37 It might have been 20 I guess I can look this up Do you know what I remember about the swimsuit Shoot? Please not Did you have a rider for that? No, he didn't Of course I remember things about the shoot
Starting point is 00:02:51 What I remember is Brianna Stewart was also there and she leans over to me At one point she's like Yo I think something happened with BG and Russia And I was like, oh really? Like what? She goes yeah I don't know I don't know the details but I don't think it's good.
Starting point is 00:03:07 And I was like, oh, because it's kind of like shrug, what could it be? Like, what could be that bad? Right. And then fast forward, 48 hours, maybe a week. Because, you know, it was held. I think it was held for a while, like the actual news. Yeah, right. This was like State Department level embargo.
Starting point is 00:03:22 Yeah. So then, so that's how, that's like technically how I found out, but I didn't know the gist. And she was like, yeah, I think it's bad. What an absurd setting to learn about that? We were in St. Thomas. The opposite. All right. So if you're wondering how it is that I'm sitting with Ezra Edelman,
Starting point is 00:03:58 who's arguably the best documentarian in America, and Sue Bird, who is inarguably the best point guard in the history of women's basketball, you should know that I sometimes wonder that very same thing in real life. But what I knew going into today, which I hoped would be a little bit of a year in review here, was that Ezra, who won the Oscar for OJ Made in America
Starting point is 00:04:20 and has since become the journalistic conscience of my podcast, was going to ask questions. Lots of questions. And that's partly because Ezra does this professionally, and also partly because he hates answering them personally. And I also knew that Sue, who launched her own pod this year with Megan Rapino, her partner, called A Touchmore, would be undaunted by whatever it is that Ezra decided to throw our way.
Starting point is 00:04:51 Now that you're retired for over a year, Over a year? Right? Two years. Over two years. Okay. Yeah. Like, I might be conflating this from getting to know you over the past year.
Starting point is 00:05:02 But in some ways, I mean, I've always known you. You're Sue Bird. You're Hall of Fame, basketball player. You guys are friends. I should establish that. We are friends. Yeah, we're all friends. We're all friends.
Starting point is 00:05:13 But I would venture to say that you have penetrated the world in our culture in a way, in the last two years post-retirement than in a way that you hadn't as a basketball player. Not only are you in commercials, not only are you doing shoots and you're ahead of companies and you're, you know, basketball player emeritus, you show up everywhere.
Starting point is 00:05:37 You actually are a grinder who does a podcast every week. Yeah. I'm in the podcast world. So how do you think you're doing? I don't know. No, for real. I think we're doing all right. We're hanging in there.
Starting point is 00:05:47 No, it's getting better. It's getting easier, better from our standpoint. What's your standard of success as now this. Because before you had a pretty clear one. Yeah. This is a very different business, if I may lay down on the therapy couch on this side of the room. Good question. I'm still figuring that out. I don't know what Megan did recently. It was an interview or maybe something I read. I can't remember. It might have been a podcast we were on.
Starting point is 00:06:15 And she talked about her sister, her twin sister asking her after retirement, do you have some new measure of success? like how do you judge and the answer is I don't know like I don't really have is it money is it like what is it is it retweets yeah is it retweets
Starting point is 00:06:32 is it comments you know on the YouTube I don't know I don't really know what it is yet I think we're both trying to figure that out but what I was getting at was we are I don't it does not feel like a grind
Starting point is 00:06:44 so that's success it is getting easier in terms of like the preparation and how and getting like a flow and an understanding So, which obviously speaks to the grind part of it. So it doesn't feel as hard as it did early on. I think we're getting a little bit more of a flow together,
Starting point is 00:07:01 learning how to do it with two people is different than probably, I'm sure you can speak to this than just by yourself. Yeah. So yeah, so it's getting easier for us. And I think right now that feels like the level. That's the measure of success. That it doesn't feel like a grind. Because something weekly could feel that way.
Starting point is 00:07:16 You guys have an amazing rapport, which is a good thing. By the way, that's the head start. is that you guys are authentically enjoying each other's company. You have natural real chemistry, and people want to hang out with you guys. So much of the battle is we're at a cafeteria, and I'm over here with my weird friends, and Megan and Sue are over there,
Starting point is 00:07:37 and I want them to sit with me, so other people want to sit with us. Totally. And you're just like, do I want to spend time with this person? And that is, you guys are over-indexing on likability, I would say, in that regard. You have nothing to worry about. Cool. Me and Ezra have a different proposition.
Starting point is 00:07:55 Hold on a second. We're going to turn this down a problem. Okay, great. You're 15 months into this, right? You celebrated your year anniversary one in September. Yeah. All right, how are you doing? How do you think you've done in this?
Starting point is 00:08:07 In terms of where you started, how you conceived this. People didn't come to this episode for this. Oh, I did. I'm curious. Unfortunately, I know Ezra did. What's funny is that I have found myself at parties or gatherings or whatever or kindergarten admissions events which i go to these days and people ask me who don't know sports or me um what do you do and i always have to figure out like my elevator pitch for my show which was designed
Starting point is 00:08:36 to be hard to summarize wait hold a second before you keep going what do you do one word i talk talk you don't say journalist let me let me retract that journalist okay so you You say journalist over podcaster. Well, because I go on television and I... You also have multiple... Oh, so you do? Okay, so fine. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:09:05 I've got some 10 calls. I got some W-9s. As a former writer, how does that make you feel? It makes me feel like the more I say that I'm a journalist, which I say a lot on this show, the more I'm compensating for my insecurities about mostly talking. Sorry, so fair enough. I can't wait until we ask you this, by the way. I'm not talking about this.
Starting point is 00:09:25 So, like, I was going to... to send me a legal letter if I ask him questions. So I digress. So anyway, I interrupted. Go back to what you're saying. So you're in the old of you're talking to people. As the ghost of Christmas future, it will never feel cool to say I podcast. You'll notice I did not say podcast when presented with the choice of a single word that is low on the draft board. And it's even weirder for me to have to say, I host a show called Pablo Torre finds out, that's me
Starting point is 00:09:56 because inherent in the premise of me having to say the name of the show that you don't know is that you probably don't give a shit about me, which is an insecurity that I need to get over because I believe
Starting point is 00:10:07 that people should be interested in the show that they don't know even if I am the host and they don't really give a shit about me. The point being that I end up talking about how I use my curiosity to solve mysteries.
Starting point is 00:10:20 I use journalism to answer questions. that I'm authentically engaged by. Considering... And then I hear booed. Considering from once this came and, like, you have a podcast, you're thinking about the theme of the podcast, how best to sort of use this opportunity that you had.
Starting point is 00:10:38 Like, in all seriousness, because I do think this has been a rousing, if not raging success. You are very good at your job. But this idea of, like, Pablo Torre finds out, has this sort of fulfilled your vision for what you hope that? this would be. So I think a lot of my insecurity around answering the question in an efficient way is
Starting point is 00:10:57 because I actually love it so much and I am deeply proud of it. And being given a blank piece of paper on which I've written this, in which I can do this and be like, that was work today. I looked forward to doing this today. I've created a show where every episode we do, I actually am super interested in. I look forward to it. And so I'm working all the time and it's very tiring and all of that. But the answer of like standard of success, do you, again, not to sound like now a coaching cliche, do I love the process? And I do. And I'm proud of it.
Starting point is 00:11:31 And I zoom out to like larger things about how in sports podcasting and podcasting in general, there are not a lot of shows that do what we try to do. I was actually going to ask how if you view yourself as a sports podcast. We are a technically sports podcast. Sports ends up being the thing I love. and I'm still interested in, and so we do a lot of it. Yeah. But we don't feel bounded by that.
Starting point is 00:11:54 As both of you maybe have experienced in terms of what I want to ask you guys about. Do you ever feel any less sure-footed when you're doing podcasts that are not based in the world of sports? No. No. Because, as I think you guys know, like, I pride myself on mostly... I pride myself on using sports to talk about other things. And also, like, I really love talking to people who don't actually... care about sports.
Starting point is 00:12:21 And I think you have some of that too. You don't go to your show because I want to... And you do this. You break down sports and games and stuff, but mostly you're there because you want to hang out with that person. For me, my whole thing is I'm going to make something that people who don't give about sports, as you might conventionally understand them. Something that you might still love.
Starting point is 00:12:44 And that's maybe like also born of an insecurity. You know, like I'm not, I'm not all of them. Like, what do I bring to the table? I mostly bring to the table the possibility that there's a good story or angle or curiosity or a person I've persuaded to entrust me with their own insecurities that I'm then going to invite you to hang out with. So based on what this podcast is called, Pablo Tori finds out, based on sort of your grandiose vision for what you hope to do with certain episodes. Yeah. Does what's happening right now, like, qualify as a complete failure? You're just sitting talking to your friends. Like, what are you doing? This isn't a real podcast. For someone who, like, didn't want to come in the booth. For someone who hates podcasting, has a lot of questions about
Starting point is 00:13:34 podcasting. You're really taken over here. Or is it just so we don't ask him questions? It's definitely. Absolutely. It's classic. It's called filibustering. Filibustering with Ezra Edelman. By the way, speaking of which. Ezra filibusters. What's your current one-word title? professionally. Oh, God. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:13:52 I don't know. Icon. Living. Yeah, I don't have one. Entrepreneur. Wow, okay. Is that a good one? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:14:03 I mean, that's... Global citizen. Yeah, it doesn't really fit, but... To actually answer your question before you get to your point, I still start with, like, either retired or former athlete. Or depending on the room, retired WNBA player. Do you aspire to get to a point where that is not what you say anymore? Not really.
Starting point is 00:14:19 Or think. why? I'm not saying you should. I'm not, no judgment. No, I don't think so. Okay. I haven't given it much. I haven't given it deep thought, but no.
Starting point is 00:14:27 I mean, look, you're an incredibly curious person, the fact that you, like, sort of taken to retirement, like, with gusto, and you try different things. You're, like, sort of between, again, you are an entrepreneur, and you are a podcaster, and you are a, I don't know, cultural ambassador for your sport, and you are a team owner, and you are all these things. Reporting for Dudes.
Starting point is 00:14:47 It's like, it's like, how many jobs do you got? I'd see you got a lot of jobs. So all I'm saying is like there's a level to which you could be like, oh, it would be amazing that in five years without thinking about, of course you're always going to be a Hall of Fame athlete, but you're like, oh, I'm this. And you can believe it, think it. I would just think that might be an amazing thing to be able to,
Starting point is 00:15:06 I mean, it's never going to happen with me. What is your one word answer, Ezra? Documentary filmmaker. That's two words, but. Who doesn't make many documentaries? Yeah, exactly. Yeah, waiting for the rest of the business card. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:15:26 But you guys are both in, by the way, documentaries, women's sports. These are boom times. I don't know. Actually, that's not true. Is that not true anymore? No. For documentaries? For documentaries.
Starting point is 00:15:37 Okay. For women's sports, yes. Because you know why? Everybody watches women's sports. That's right. I've seen that. I've seen you guys wear that, actually. I do want to get to the idea that women's basketball.
Starting point is 00:16:03 basketball specifically, is now cool in a capitalistically verified way. It is not a guilt trip. It is not a thing I want you to enjoy because I like it. There's just real money in this. And that must be profoundly fun on some level for you to enjoy now. Yeah, it is. I think there's a thousand positive things to say about it. Really everything we're already talking about. The businesses that are going to grow, the sport itself, all the things. The only negative for me personally is like, it would have been much easier to capitalize on all this as a player.
Starting point is 00:16:41 I could tell you that. I was going to ask how much of that is like, really, we have to wait until now, so I'm done for this to really? It is what it is. It's not, what are you going to do? You can't change it. It's like classic. You just have to move on, let go.
Starting point is 00:16:52 But I do, I do have moments where even though the podcast doesn't feel like a grind, it's still not playing basketball. It's still not going to play the game. even though having companies or doing speaking engagements or commercials don't feel like grinds every now and then they do. It's still not playing basketball. So yeah, it would have been wonderful to be able to capitalize on all this as a player. Just because that's what I was born to do.
Starting point is 00:17:15 That's why I don't think I want to let go of it. And also you could have enjoyed the sort of at the height of, you know, what's the right word? The boom of player salaries, that would have been nice. I mean, it's nice, by the way, to do what I do. And like now, weirdly, I never thought, you know, and like, oh, do okay financially doing something that I didn't... Right.
Starting point is 00:17:34 No one thinks traditionally is like, oh, documentary filmmaking. Me too. Same. Yes. All of this. What if for some reason you could no longer make documentaries, I don't even know what the reason would be? It is totally not comparable. And there was a boom. I know it's not. I'm trying to make it. Oh. And there was a boom. And now whatever you made on your last film,
Starting point is 00:17:50 people are on a regular, on average, are making 10 times that. You wouldn't be like, oh, dang, I was born in the wrong year. Yeah. That's what I'm... That's all I'm saying. That's fair. Yeah. That's fair.
Starting point is 00:17:59 It's not, but it's like you can't go. back, there had to have been all of us before in order to get to this point. So there's something, you know, the Billy Jean King of it all. So there's that. But yeah, would I love to play basketball and get compensated? Absolutely. So when I'm being a total, like, obnoxious child being like, I completely understand. That's, that's a given. You're right. But you're also doing okay. Oh, I'm not complaining. It just would have been, it would have been a lot easier because the hard's not as hard when you're doing the thing you were meant to be doing, even when it's hard. That's fair.
Starting point is 00:18:29 So the thing about documentary, that's what, no, I, I concur and also appreciate, appreciate what you have now, too. Appreciate your commercial that runs endlessly. No, the thing about documentaries being cool now is that they're certainly cooler than when I was growing up. The idea that people want to make documentaries, even if the economy in this current phase of filmmaking has shifted from the boom time, which was before, it's different now. I agree. And how do you feel about that? Lots of people want to do the thing that you are as fastidious about in terms of craft and effort and standards. Great question. In the way that Sue is not just, you know, welcoming anybody into calling themselves basketball players at that level.
Starting point is 00:19:16 I think it's great that documentary filmmaking as an art is something that is popular. I do think the idea that younger people could inspire to be nonfiction storytellers is great. I do think in terms of how you're characterizing the popularity of documentary filmmaking, you might be conflating what it is that makes it popular with what I would sort of term real documentary filmmaking. So I would... I'd like you to unconflate it. Yes, please. Can you deconflate it?
Starting point is 00:19:45 I could. Walk right into that one. But like, look, yes, I think it's great. Do I think that there would have ever been a time in my life that I could have imagined growing up in making a living as a documentary? documentary filmmaker? No, just like, I'm guessing, could you have imagined that as a young child that you could have been a professional podcaster? Well, you know, so say podcasting didn't exist. Or even just guy who talks about sports at a level with people who actually did this professionally is ridiculous in retrospect. But I mean, the bigger answer to your question, or to me, what I more think about is
Starting point is 00:20:16 the type of documentaries that are sort of more popular and more prevalent are increasingly things that are shown by streamers that are sometimes about famous people. artists, singers, whomever, and that are sort of like bordering a little bit on branded content because they're done in sort of connection with the subjects themselves who often are producers. And the sort of idea of documentary filmmaking as journalism is being sort of pushed by the wayside a little bit. And so it's not like there aren't tons of films that qualify in terms of what documentary filmmaking is I desire to make them and see them. it's just that those aren't the ones that are typically compensated in the same way.
Starting point is 00:20:58 So if you're saying, oh, look at this boom in documentaries. I'm like, yes. But right now I feel like, to me, culturally, there seems to be less of an emphasis on art. You know, sort of in how sort of even like, you know, politically in terms of like what we focus on, what we finance, what we appreciate, all these different things. And I think that sort of has seeped into the art of filmmaking too. in terms of like what gets made, what we value, because it's still a commercial exercise. We are, you know, after all, a capitalist society.
Starting point is 00:21:31 And when it comes to narrative filmmaking, it comes to documentary filmmaking, I see the same issues. And that's what is more of a concern for me. So I do think there is an ability to make money as a nonfiction filmmaker, maybe more than not ever before, because I do think the boom was a few years ago.
Starting point is 00:21:47 And hopefully something, the cycle will sort of get back to a point where you can make really good things for, But like what I've seen is the stuff that is valued are the things that I happen to devalue slightly in terms of the content. So I should say that all of us have been adjacent to participated in judged on a jury or merely just as a consumer. Films that you would consider not the type of doc that you yourself want to make. But this sounds super pretentious. I don't mean to say that because first of all, like every documentary is hard to make.
Starting point is 00:22:22 Every sort of documentary has value. And I really am trying to be like vague specifically. I'm trying to unvague you. I know, but like it doesn't. But the reason I'm saying that is because I, the whole wind up to what I was trying to do was to say, and I have enjoyed personally many of those films. What we are, I think circling though, for me at least, is a curiosity around, do you think we should call them something else?
Starting point is 00:22:47 Because I think it's cool to enjoy both yes and, right? It's cool. I have enjoyed many of those same films that you would not want to make. Do you think they should be called something else? To add to that, is it just when the subject is involved? Is that like the hard line? Yeah, what's the threshold? Well, I do think that's a line that I don't think is...
Starting point is 00:23:09 Right, but is that the only one in your mind when you're thinking of, I forget the exact word you use, but... No, I mean, first of all, I do think there happens to be a glut of documentaries that are now being done in participation with the subject. If a subject has any creative control, I have a problem. Now, I want to clarify, how would you characterize yourself as a hardliner relative to other people in this field? I can't speak for other people. I can just speak for the fact that a lot of these things get made by people.
Starting point is 00:23:39 Right. That's my answer to that question. So some people clearly are, look, by the way, I should also say, based on what we're saying, we all have to make a living. And also, everyone doesn't have a background as a journalist. And so if you come to something as more of an artistic filmmaker or as something, whatever you're trying to do, or you just love the person, oh my God, I love you so much, Sue, I want to make a film about you. Oh, you don't like this. Sure, we can just take that out. Because it's like the world needs to enjoy Sue Bird for 90 minutes.
Starting point is 00:24:09 It's like, okay, I can't do that. That is not what I want to watch. We're going to clip Ezra saying that, and circulate that. And a documentary about you. But I do think there is plenty of people who take on assignments project. and films, whether, by the way, even for the chick, that are, like, totally valid. I'm starting to regret doing it. Came in hot.
Starting point is 00:24:31 How the table has turned. Part of the reason why, though, I wanted to hang out with both of you at this table is because we have enjoyed you two, to a degree that has made me jealous, what I consider the greatest seat in all of entertainment, which is a court-side seat at a basketball game. And watching basketball games with Sue Courtside is it's so fun for so many reasons. One of which is that Sue must behave like the Queen of England. I was literally about to say that. It's like washing with the Queen.
Starting point is 00:25:05 The camera comes over and she's just like... Only at the Liberty Games when they're not playing the Storm. But I feel like there is, you are acutely aware. Okay, so Sue is also a part owner of the Seattle Storm, the franchise that she... Wait, hold a second. When you're sitting Courtside at a Storm game and... Seattle? Are you like up yelling and like yelling at the refs? No, that would never be me regardless.
Starting point is 00:25:27 Maybe in a playoff game. I also am just like so, I'm just so immune to the regular season. It's like, it's really hard to. You're indifferent to the regular season. No, I'm just like, it's a game. Not impressed by the regular season. Yeah. Playoffs though? Like it was, I'll say this, game five, really all the playoff games I went to this year in New York,
Starting point is 00:25:48 game five especially. It was very difficult to stay in my season. And I don't even mean that from like an excitement cheering for one team or another. Both teams had big plays at different moments. Both teams had, you know, big calls, go for them, against them. It was hard not to like do anything. What did you think of the quality of basketball in Game 5? Looking back now, I don't, that's not really the right question.
Starting point is 00:26:11 Looking back now when you look at the schedule, they were tired. They were tired. And so, was that thing, did you know that when you were watching it? I didn't. Because the game was criticized broadly, we should say, for being messy and not the best advertisement for this sport that now people were crazy. Oh, I actually put a lot of that on the refs. So that I was up close and personal.
Starting point is 00:26:32 Obviously, we know I've been to a lot of WMBA games. I basically have that same seat to all the games I've been to prior. It's remarkable for 20 years. Remarkable throne you have. That was the, like, loosest I've ever seen at WMBA game. And W&BA games are very physical. And that was like another level where the offball actions that were happening, some of the banging, some of the holding,
Starting point is 00:26:53 the referees were letting that go. And you guys know at any sport, when a referee lets something go early in the game, it just builds and builds and builds. It gets worse and worse and worse. So I think you had two very tired teams, just naturally, from the excitement, from the emotion of playoffs,
Starting point is 00:27:08 from the travel, and then they basically played every other day. I think there was like two games that had two days in between or something like that. So I think it was just exhaustion combined with both teams beating the crap out of each other because the referees allowed for that. And that led to a very sloppy, messy game. It led to, I think, all the missed shots.
Starting point is 00:27:27 I mean, I don't remember what the percentages were, but they weren't great. It was a grind-out game, for sure. It was a EuroLeague game. I actually said this on our own pod. That is what the EuroLeague is like. Physical, slow whistle. Grind.
Starting point is 00:27:39 Can I slight digression about referees? And, like, so you were the captain of the storm for their... Yeah, I mean, we do captains. I mean, I know it's not like that. It's a good one word to answer. What are you? It's like that serious. the captain. Yeah, yeah, the captain. What's the best way? And I know every referee is a person, human being. You have relationships, I'm sure, with all of them. But what was your mode of conveying frustration, if not contempt, for a call or how a game was being reft in terms of not only knowing that you're trying to get a point across, but you're trying to actually be effective?
Starting point is 00:28:15 So I don't think there is a way to talk to a, there's no magic. way to talk to a ref that you're going to get them to see something or change how they call something immediately. That just like, I don't know that that exists. I don't know that anyone can sit in here and if they're being truthful, be like, oh yeah, I know when I go up to ref X, if I say it like this, they're going to respond to that. It's just not going to happen that way. It's just not. Or they might not, like, they might not call something purposely just so it doesn't happen in that way. And I'm not even saying that to be shady. It's all like a mind game. But what I can't say, say over the course of my career, and I really wish Diana
Starting point is 00:28:52 we're here right now because she'd be laughing. I'd also draft her over, Ezra, just for the record. Next time she's in New York. I do think there's something to being consistent. But it doesn't mean I never got loud and in rough spaces. I definitely have. It doesn't mean that there weren't times where even if the call was against our team and I saw that it was a good call, I didn't just go like,
Starting point is 00:29:14 it sucked for us, but it probably was the right call. So there was like a, I think I was consistent, and I think what that brought was like a little bit of good faith and trust. And so if I did have a really big reaction to something, I think referees understood that I wasn't doing that just to be like demonstrative and because I was pissed. But that's like the course of years and time. Was there ever any dynamic that happened during the course of a game
Starting point is 00:29:41 where it wasn't left, basically it wasn't left on such good terms to a point where you had to have a conversation before the next time that person refereed a game. to clear the air. No. No. Never. You disgusted and even almost...
Starting point is 00:29:55 Where I had to... Like, where I had to go to the ref and a... Like a... You guys got into it a little bit. You were pissed off and or they made a call and you were stewing to a point where it's like, you had to go the next time you saw I'm like, look, like before a game, just be like, hey, can we talk this out? Like... No.
Starting point is 00:30:08 Never. In fact, I've... The opposite. I've had referees come up to me before games numerous times, numerous, like a handful in the course of 20 years, so... Where they were like, hey, remember that. that call that X, Y, and Z happened, I went and watched it. By the way, I'm talking like the next time I saw that ref.
Starting point is 00:30:26 So they could have reffed me on a Monday. I might not see them for three weeks. The next time I saw them, then be like, oh, actually that call, I went and watched it. I see what you're saying. Or and or you were right. I've had that happen. And you say, I told you so? No.
Starting point is 00:30:40 Like, thank you. Obviously, it sucks. I'm like, oh, well, you can't go back. Thanks. And do you then have increased regard for that person for having that? Yes, absolutely. Yeah, the refs and players, it's relationship. especially in the WMBA, very small league.
Starting point is 00:30:52 So that's not that many refs. We all know their names. It was so funny sitting next to you for one of those playoff games. Because you were basically giving me like the pop-up video. Like, there's that ref, there's that player. They have this history together. She does. It was a remarkable just like knowledge of all of these.
Starting point is 00:31:10 Oh, there's some refs I know not to go up to. You're not going to get an answer. So. You're going to get a lot of defense. The small. Don't waste your breath. The small town that is the WNBA, part of what also, the second thing that I was amused by,
Starting point is 00:31:26 sitting courtside next to you, was how unempathetic you are towards bad basketball or even to the messes that we saw in the playoffs. So I'm just like, can you tell, can you, can you, can you, can you tell the butthole story? Yeah, I can. When I am watching basketball, I will sometimes text Sue a photo of what is not literally a butthole, but does demand that you tell the story so that I stop looking like even more of a perv
Starting point is 00:32:11 than I have already established myself to be. So in college, Coach Ariama is known for his humor, his wit, and he can be, yeah, he can be really cutthroat. A bit of an Ezra. Yeah, a bit of an Ezra. Leave me out of this, man. I think he might be funner. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:32:34 Yeah, that's saying a lot. Okay, so we're playing, I want to say it was Tennessee. I'm like pretty sure. We're playing Tennessee, not going well in the first half. Like, just not going well. Like super tentative, kind of nervous, probably, whatever. We go into halftime. I don't even remember what the score was.
Starting point is 00:32:51 We go into halftime. He comes into the locker room and he just looks around. And the man is prolific at like, storytelling in general, and in these moments of, like, building up. He's just, and he knows when to just, like, drop the bomb on us. So anyways, he comes in and he just looks around, you know, makes eye contact, and he goes, do you know what this is? Do you know what this is?
Starting point is 00:33:20 This is all your buttholes right now. He's f***les, though. This is all your a bit. And we were all, because, and by the way, when he goes, do you know what this is? All of us are like, oh, what is that? Right. Doing the three fingers of clenched. Clenched. Index and playing okay? Yeah, like what is... Okay, but just real. You know that? Zoom in on that? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:33:39 Because this is all your assholes right now. And we're like, fuck. And then he goes on to tell us, yeah, just how tight we were playing. This is all your f***les right now. So I told, I shared that with pop-lo. And it's just a thing that I not only will photograph my own fingers doing that all the time. But also Oh, I have a question for you What is the most That your asshole has been like interviewing somebody?
Starting point is 00:34:08 Who has made you feel the tightest? When has my been the tightest? I'm trying to think of what that scenario would be. So that's why I'm gonna like it. For you? Yeah. Oh, okay, easy.
Starting point is 00:34:19 Give me yours. I'm gonna think about. Larry Bird. So, like, you were just nervous because you were in the presence of Larry Bird. Well, like it was like, he didn't like. No, but it was like all things,
Starting point is 00:34:28 which is like I was making a documentary about him and magic. He had no interest in this. It was like he was basically the last person to get to interview. He was like, oh, he's got to wait. We have to go to the end, wait to the end of the season. He's like this mythical figure of like, I think there was a point where like I showed up. He was like, you can come and like go to French Lake and go like talk to someone. He's like, you can talk to my brother.
Starting point is 00:34:52 I might have even literally been in his presence in an elevator like three months before and I was like too afraid to say anything. It was just like he's just, so he comes in and you've been around him. I forgot we're talking about your uncle. And he's ginormous. Yeah. And he already, by the way, someone, this was happening. This must have been 2009 I was interviewing him.
Starting point is 00:35:14 And he doesn't talk about himself. He's really never really talked. And so the whole thing is like you have one guy over there who won't shut the up. And then another guy, it's like that's part of the story. And he just sits down and the whole, it was like it actually was. informative in some ways of how to do interviews because I had a fun item out of time with him. And he sits down and he just is like... Get to it.
Starting point is 00:35:36 And it's like, okay. And I remember just like even before I'm being like, I got to remember every single thing. I can't like to... And it was, he's so intimidating because he's not going to sit there and smile and make you feel comfortable. And it was so that was the easily. And he was just like a lot of things. He's like, I don't know. I don't care.
Starting point is 00:35:57 I don't want to answer that. I was like, cool. But in the end... Ambition right there. It worked out. I don't know. That was a very... And he did talk more than I thought.
Starting point is 00:36:06 It did work out. No, he did talk more than I thought. So why did he... Why did he open up while you were very... Very clashed. Why did he... I can't speak to why he opened up, but I could tell you that, like, anything, this would go for you doing a podcast, you doing a podcast.
Starting point is 00:36:21 It's like, I was prepared. I was very respectful. The thing... I knew, you know what I mean? Like, I was not there to, like, I was not there to, like, I was there to do a job. And I also think he is a responsible individual, so he agreed to do something.
Starting point is 00:36:33 He was not going to do any more than what he agreed to, though. That was very clear. He's like, I said I would do this, so I'm going to do this. You know, I speak to, I have the, I've been mistaken for somebody who should be speaking to journalism classes. And so I'm asked sometimes, like, how do I get better interviews? And all I have is what Ezra just articulated, which is demonstrate that you really put time
Starting point is 00:36:57 into your preparation for this thing. That's true. Demonstrate that you care. It tends to be the skeleton key that unlocks so many people. And Ezra, by the way, is the most extreme version of that for those who are unfamiliar with his work.
Starting point is 00:37:12 That is, you overindex on having that credibility, I would say. I think it's the most respect, or the respectful thing to do. Still, in front of whom has your butthole been most clinched? So the answer to this is embarrassing, because I thought I was too cool, and it was not even a deep dive sit-down interview. But I talked to LeBron for a magazine piece,
Starting point is 00:37:36 one-on-one after a practice, and what LeBron did was render me like the anonymous journalist character in a movie scene about LeBron doing an interview because this is not an exaggeration. He literally throws the basketball off the wall, off the wall of the practice facility, maybe like 40 feet in the air, it carams off, bounces back, bounces.
Starting point is 00:38:03 He takes it, Tomahawk dunks it to finish practice, and then walks over to me. And I would need to, the jaws of life couldn't have opened up my butthole at that moment. How'd the interview go? It was fine. Can we bring this back to WMBA for a second? Sure. Because we, you know, it's been a lot, you know, one of the storylines, as you like to say, of the season. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:38:31 Was of Caitlin Clark and Angel Reese and sort of the special treatment that Caitlin perceived rough treatment that she got from players. The targeting. The targeting. Okay. Anyway, this is all liable to say that when you were a player, what's the most offensive question you got? Honestly, the only thing I can pull right now is somebody was doing, I don't even remember who it was. doing just like a basic, it wasn't even a thing on me. It might have been on our team, might have been on the playoff run.
Starting point is 00:38:59 I know it was during the playoffs. And he just continued to get facts wrong. Were you silently judging or did you actually say something? I was passive aggressive at the end and I got my little dig in. And that was it. It is true that like the idea that unlike Pablo and I, you have been the subject. Yeah. Thousands of times.
Starting point is 00:39:21 And so that's a whole different. lens through which you, and so that must inform how you're talking to people because you know how you like to be talked to. A little bit, yeah. Yeah, absolutely. I think it's in the back of my head for sure. I like it when it's more conversational. I think most people do.
Starting point is 00:39:37 Of course. Yeah. But even that premise, right, like, I think that part of what Ezra does as a questioner is do both somehow, where there is the sense of this. guy could conduct an inquisition, but somehow, shockingly, he has disarmed and charmed me into just talking him about the things that I don't actually want to talk about. Yes. And I actually would struggle with that. What do you mean? Every now and then I have this thought of like, oh, what if I had an athlete and there was some sort of controversial thing that I would love for them to share on my show.
Starting point is 00:40:21 But like that feels icky to try to get that out of them. I struggle with that. I don't have that feeling at all. Yeah, I know. I would assume both neither of you. But I think as an athlete or somebody who got interviewed a lot, I don't want to be that person. But it feels like you're. But this is the medium.
Starting point is 00:40:39 You're exploiting a friendship or a relationship maybe. I don't like that thought. But this is the medium. I know. But that doesn't mean I have to be that. No, what I'm saying. But this is the idea of like if you're doing a podcast, why does one have a podcast? You have a podcast to talk to people.
Starting point is 00:40:53 I have like... But why do you have to get the controversial thing out? Why is that goal? No, you don't. I think Ezra and I have different sort of maybe thresholds on that. I imagine that Sue and the two of us, Ezra, probably have a bigger gap in terms of like the ickiness of feeling like, I didn't want you to do that. The whole point, in fact, is that we have sort of worked to earn a trust that you then implicitly
Starting point is 00:41:20 Yes. Don't complain about when we decide to tell a story that isn't the one that you want to tell. Well, when people talk to you, they also probably go into an understanding. They might get asked. If I'm going into an interview,
Starting point is 00:41:33 I understand with certain people, I understand like, I'm likely going to get asked X. I'm trying to think of an example. I'm just going to use this random one, but I think it's best. Let's say, I don't know how familiar you are. Diana's name's top of mind since I just brought it up. She had a fight with a teammate two years ago.
Starting point is 00:41:50 go, Skylar Diggins. On the bench, everybody saw it, whatever. 32 with under three to play here in the quarter and a little extra testiness on the Mercury bench between Skylar Diggins Smith and Diana Tarasi. Oh, to be a fly on Turner's shoulder to hear that conversation. Well, Dickens Smith, she's got two points. Let's say D. was set to come on my podcast and she's sitting there. I would feel icky being like, so what happened? Whereas I feel like a lot of people are like, Dee, recently this happened.
Starting point is 00:42:24 Can you talk us through it? Or whatever you would say. That moment feels like, eh, even though I'm curious. There is such immense power in what the journalist chooses to include and leave out. Omission is a wildly impactful thing.
Starting point is 00:42:45 Because it is not merely I'm going to twist your words. It's, I am deciding what is relevant. So when we were at the Olympics, we did a live show, and we had Don Staly on, we had Carl Lewis on, and then Mia Hamm came on. And it was in the conversation with Mia. I wasn't even involved, so this is more of a Megan thing. Megan just knew what question to ask, and it wasn't because of preparation. It wasn't because she knew the answer.
Starting point is 00:43:27 she just like stumbled onto it as the conversation happened. And eventually, I don't remember the exact question, but eventually they got to a moment where Mia shared that Emma Hayes, who's the current national team coach, actually brought back that 1999 World Cup winning team to like be with the current players, right? Bridging a gap, bringing it. I mean, the fact that coaches don't do this all the time,
Starting point is 00:43:50 actually, where the previous coaches hadn't done that actually shocked me. And for Mia, in that moment, as she's answering, she gets emotional. It wasn't like a boo-who cry session, but you could see. Eyes start to well up. She's getting like emotional at the fact that other coaches hadn't done it. She felt a little, these are my words, maybe a little disconnected from it all. And now Emma was bringing that all back together and how meaningful that was for Mia. And that's something that we didn't, like I said, prepare for, think about, just stumbled upon it. But really, only Megan probably could have gotten that.
Starting point is 00:44:21 So how did you react to, I assume that's the first time someone teared up on your podcast? Yes. How did you react when you're seeing someone feel that emotional in a genuine experience? I loved it. I thought because it was real, it was, I could like feel what she was saying through my own experience. So I mean, I wasn't feeling the emotion build by any means, but I could definitely in that moment connect to what she was saying. I think when you retire and time goes on, you do just naturally feel disconnected from it. I think you answer in a way that reveals the disconnect. because you're feeling the feelings as if you are the person,
Starting point is 00:45:01 I would be feeling the feelings of somebody who just got a great interview. Has anyone teared up sitting, doing this show with you? Yeah. How did you react when they tear it up? With the craven enthusiasm of someone who's like, that's going to be a good clip. See, you know what you just did that, right? You answered that sarcastically and disingenuously when in fact, that's kind of true.
Starting point is 00:45:23 Well, Ezra, I believe it's time to end this interview. But that is, by the way, but that is the tension in me. Constantly trying to make a show to answer the elevator pitch question. That is not every other show while needing to compete with shows that are, in fact, thinking clip first. Like if you listen to or watch the show we make, this is not a show that's engineered to produce viral clips. If it happens, it happens so incidentally that it makes me truly like, thankful that it happened and also recognize the metric upside of this thing. But I'm not going for that. So my enjoyment and my sarcasm is, yeah, both true and a lie. I want it, but I don't aim for it.
Starting point is 00:46:13 What was your level of anxiety when you're thinking, so when you did the Aspian Daily, right? I assume you're Pablo Torre, you're a journalist, you're doing this every day. And so you are not as Pablo prominent in that dynamic. Is that correct? My name wasn't in the show. Okay. And so like what is your, the idea that you have a show that your name is in and you're willing to talk about yourself and make fun of yourself? And like, what's the balance between your comfort in terms of focusing on your own psychology
Starting point is 00:46:43 and focusing on your own profile when at the same time you're a journalist talking to other people? So you're both personality and Star Review. your own show, but you're clearly are trying to tell other people's stories. Yeah, I do feel like I am constantly testing the tolerance of people. Like right now, as you're asking me the question, I'm like, I think it's probably time to be done. Like, I don't think people want to know that much more about my psychology. My radar and my compass is in finding you guys exploiting your introspection. And for me, like, I am always going to bet on my ability to discern what is interesting about someone else. I am far less confident in what people actually might agree with me about when it comes to my own.
Starting point is 00:47:36 What about butter you? Butter me. What is that? Oh, I hate you. Look at this. Sue Bird, Sue Bird, actual PTFO listener. You just told him. Ezra Edelman.
Starting point is 00:47:48 Just exploiter exploiter of friendships. Wow. It is a more recent episode, though. It is. What's the... Well, anyway, go ahead. Sorry, answer the question.
Starting point is 00:48:00 Now can be cut out. Because butter me looked confident. Butter me. Butter me... Butter me... Butter me... We had a sculpture of me made out of butter.
Starting point is 00:48:12 That we presented to Jerry Saltz, Pulitzer Prize winning art critic. In an episode, he was tough. He was great. He was a tough critic. He was a tough critic. I missed this one. I'm sorry.
Starting point is 00:48:23 You would appreciate it actually because of his. You would. You would actually love it. Okay, but he sent me, I mean, he sometimes sends me a podcast that he's proud of and wants me to listen to. So the last one he sent me was his conversation with Connie Chung. Yeah. Which I enjoyed. Can I tell the clips of that one.
Starting point is 00:48:40 Which I did. And I appreciate that because I am, again, thirsting for all sorts of engagement. I did see the clips. Metric and otherwise. The point with the buttermey thing being that I think it churned out great. This has been Pablo Torre finds out a Metal Arc Media production. And I'll talk to you next time.

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