Pablo Torre Finds Out - The Truth About Magic Johnson's Tweets, and More of the Internet's Most Important Mysteries

Episode Date: November 28, 2023

Who runs Magic's extraordinarily earnest Twitter account? Is Wu-Tang really that good at chess? Just how racist is the Oklahoma Sooner mascot? Is Victor Wembanyama the end of human evolution? Also: co...tton balls, buttholes, and trolls. You asked, we investigated — with a little help from Rob Lowe, Method Man, Masta Killa, and Killers of the Flower Moon author David Grann.Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/zAJhIrX1vBs Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
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. Here's my pitch on Irvin's tweet post meeting the aliens. Okay. Met with the aliens, period. They are not what I expected, exclamation mark. Right after this ad. You're listening to Giraff Kings Network.
Starting point is 00:00:41 Every so often on this show, we turn into a detective agency. In what way? We have a number, 5138-85, Pablo. People call that number with their mysteries they want us to solve. And we solve the fuck out of those mysteries. I know, I know. Shout out to these people for the mailbag. I appreciate all the calls.
Starting point is 00:00:57 It's not a mailbag. It's a detective agency. Again, we're not doing this stupid mailbag thing that every show does. I believe that what we're going to do here with this voicemail will prove that we're not just any show. If we can play that first non-mailbag voicemail. Hey, Pablo. I saw your name in the headline of a New York Post article. It says Larsa Pippin and Marcus Jordan trash, quote, miserable, end quote, Pablo Torre over podcast interview. So now that you officially have a feud with the Pippins and the Jordans, I need to hear your response. Please and thanks. Bye. I'm going to have to wear this because we taped an episode of our podcast in which we interviewed Marcus Jordan and Larsa Pippen about their love. Yeah, watch that one so you don't have to listen to their god awful podcast.
Starting point is 00:01:56 Well, now we got to listen to their god-awful podcast as an excerpt because they, of course, actually said the things that that caller was alleging. You know, we did a podcast a week ago. We did Pablo Torres' podcast. And I think... They talked a lot of shit. They talked a lot of shit, you know? And I'm, you know, I wasn't too familiar with the format of his show.
Starting point is 00:02:17 Maybe that's on us, not doing our research or whatever. But, yeah, I feel like the first half segment of the show was talking crazy. And so, you know, it's just funny because then when we did our interview, they didn't really keep that same energy. You know, I felt like, you know, obviously they were, they had listened to the podcast, they were familiar with it. But our interview was very fluffy. It was very one-sided. And I feel like their commentary that aired before I interview was, you know, was pretty biased. It was a hit piece, by the way.
Starting point is 00:02:49 It was a little bit of a hit piece. And now, actually, having watched it back, I wish that that producer, you know, there was some off, I can't remember the dude's name. I just wish he was there because I feel like our interview would have taken a different tone and we would have been able to clap back a little bit. You know what I'm saying? It's funny because I feel like the people that have so much to say are so miserable in their real lives. If we took five seconds to research them, which I would never even do because you're not worth our time. Right. You'd really realize these people are a bunch of losers. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:03:17 It was a hit piece. A hit piece. What a great line. Didn't remember that you, Ryan Cortez. They know my name. I know. That that. That. Come on. I am just bummed that I, I thought we had bonded with them. That's how you left the interview that you thought you guys were friends? I was like, I, I was like, we, I might be at this wedding.
Starting point is 00:03:40 Like, I was hoping for a follow-up episode where we're at the wedding, listening to Michael Jordan give the best man's toast. Clap back, Pablo. Speaking of miserable assholes, what's next? Hey, Pablo. So I ate some really. yummy Thai food last night, but it was so spicy. And this morning, I had the spicy of my life. And I just like, don't feel good. It's like walking home from work. It just felt gross all day.
Starting point is 00:04:11 And it had me thinking about David Sanson. And I'm just wondering if you could find out if you have any strategies for like mitigating the impact of a spicy shit and also find out if his butthole is okay. Thanks. Thank you. I just want to say that I love that we are a safe space for listeners of all genders. What a great call. To confess how miserable their asshole actually is. I also have had the same question about how that's gone for him.
Starting point is 00:04:39 So we had David Samson on for an episode about how he lost smell and taste due to COVID and how he... Truly, because we did the hot ones like hot sauce challenge, and he tasted hot sauces that were draped his wings in hot sauces that were like a zillion scovet. units or whatever it is, and was totally unaffected, allegedly. Well, I text him now, and in the present tense, he reports this, quote, when it comes to hoop burn, easier imagination, my days are spent not with prevention, but treatment. I thought I was in the clear after the hot sauce challenge with Sean Evans, host of hot ones. 72 hours later, things went horribly wrong.
Starting point is 00:05:19 So I have two letters for you, A and D, I believe that's like an ointment that you put on, like, baby butts. And he says, unfortunately, my loss of taste and smell did not come with a concomitant loss of anal nerves, but the juice is worth the squeeze. So to translate it, quote, my asshole is on fire. Well, so here's the thing.
Starting point is 00:05:38 I am not surprised because I believe David Sampson to be somewhat of a liar, and I will tell you why. Juan Galendo, one of our great video editors, was telling me that he noticed out of the corner of his eye that after all of this took place in our studio that David Sampson retreated to the back where you could get milk and water and so forth. And David was alone,
Starting point is 00:05:56 and Juan just saw him and was like noticing how David looked like he was in so much pain. And he was like trying to hide it and he was sweating. So you are accusing David Sampson of fabricating the entire premise of this episode, which is that actually he feels everything. He's just doing this for attention. Oh, you put me in a tough spot because that is quite the leap. That David Sampson is Larsa Pippen. They both could.
Starting point is 00:06:22 use like, you know, some help. Next, voicemail. What's up, Pablo? This is Jack calling from Venice, California. I have a college mascot question for you. I know there's a long, sort of history of indigenous mascots. Some are like the flagrant examples, like the Chief Wahoo and the Washington football team I won't name.
Starting point is 00:06:45 But we'd love your explanation on what the hell in Oklahoma sooner is. It's given real killer of the flower moon energy to me, but we love your. take, let me know if I'm on the right track with it being particularly bad, or maybe it's harmless. So he's asking us to tell him whether or not this is a problematic mascot and where this mascot even comes from. Something we need to know about all mascots. It's honestly helpful for me to know this. I did not know this. We reached out to David Grant, author of Killers of the Flower Moon. I read that. One of the great nonfiction writers on the planet. Yeah, from the New York.
Starting point is 00:07:19 Who wrote the book, yes, of the New Yorker, who wrote the book that got turned into the score, Daisy movie, and he gave us this. It turns out that the term dates back to the land runs of the late 19th century in what was then Indian territory and is now part of the state of Oklahoma. The U.S. government had a long policy of trying to drive Native Americans off their lands and open up these prairies and territories to white settlers. And so it had arranged to have these races. They were these mad dashes for lands where at the sound of a gun, settlers,
Starting point is 00:07:52 would gather, and at that sound, they would race down, and if they got to a parcel of land first and put in their stake, they would lay claim to it. During the land run of 1893, thousands, tens of thousands of settlers gathered waiting for the start of the gun. And the term sooner came from those who tried to sneak across the line early.
Starting point is 00:08:15 So I didn't know any of that. The idea that, okay, it's not that the nickname itself is, like, problematic, but the people it described, apparently are these people who were these settlers that were treating like Native American land like it was a Walmart on Black Friday. Also, it's pretty amazing that like this amazing author from the New Yorker and all these books
Starting point is 00:08:35 is like wasting his time answering our questions. I do love that. It's amazing. I love that David Gran answered our mascot question. Yes, thank you. But speaking of people desperately trying to be first, what's next?
Starting point is 00:08:49 Yo, Pablo, Billy from Brooklyn. I saw on Twitter, X that woes blocked you? What the hell could you have done to deserve that? Why is it about what I must have done? You probably did something. Let's be real. I want to be clear about this whole entire thing.
Starting point is 00:09:06 I'm not here to be as messy as the top of the show indicates, actually. I'm not realizing how much I am apparently this controversial character. How'd you discover you were blocked? So the morning of the hard in trade, I get all these texts, and I'm like, what the fuck happened? And I go, of course, to the NBA's biggest newsbreaker, and I find out that the man who broke the heart in trade had blocked me. Shams blocked you?
Starting point is 00:09:30 Oh, God. Send me up for that. Wow, so Woj blocked me, which is strange because I am, of course, his former full-time colleague, now part-time colleague at ESPN. And so I don't know what I did. I was surprised to learn. And my only theory is that because I work for Metal Lark, and I work with you
Starting point is 00:09:51 that the Miami Heat propagandists have put a stain on my good name. You might be right in terms of me being to blame for this because I have my own story with Woge in the past on Twitter as I do with a lot of people. So I had been following Wojj for many years, as most people do. And I noticed one day I got a notification that said, Adrian Wojornowski followed you back.
Starting point is 00:10:11 And I said, oh, I made it. Yes, he used to follow me as well. I was like proud and showing people. Yoge Wodge follows me now. And like two days later, I noticed Wojohn followed me. and that shit pissed me off so you unfollowed you had the nerve to go to my pro you were that busy you're the busiest
Starting point is 00:10:24 man in newsbreaking and you hate my profile so much that you had to unfollow me so he blocked you yeah he unfollowed me at least I'm not blocked so he really doesn't like our show I got breaking news for you you undoubtedly just got blocked I love our collars
Starting point is 00:10:55 man they're the best they're the best they leave voicemails that sometimes just sync perfectly with the shit that I'm already like wanting to investigate. We can't say it enough. 51385, Pablo. That's right. Call us, and we may play your voicemail like we are right now. Hey, Pablo. This is Butterfly Jones gone from beautiful Key West Florida, a long-time listener, first-time caller. And I was hoping you could find out who writes the beautiful, the incredible tweets by Magic Johnson. They are so amazingly earnest,
Starting point is 00:11:26 but they read like GPP negative 3.5 combined with the enthusiasm of my great Antepaddy. They are spectacular, and I want to know who is behind them. Thank you, blah, blah. There's nobody in the Twitter sphere who I'd want to know more who's behind that account than Magic Johnson, number one for me. It's an active mystery. And so, of course, we had to get to Magic Johnson, which is, it turns out, kind of difficult. But you remember you've met him before, right? I mean, I was there for that.
Starting point is 00:11:54 I've interviewed him at Sports Illustrated a couple of times, actually. I know you're a journalist. Thank you for reminding that. I know back in the day you did journalism. I reported stories quoting him. Back when you and I did high noon on ESPN at the Seaport office at ESPN, there was a day, if you remember, I believe it was 2019. I don't think it's that helpful to relive this. No, it is, it is, dude.
Starting point is 00:12:12 Magic Johnson came to the office, and it was embarrassing what you did. Y'all are here, too? Yeah. Okay. So you had to move both of you because you were in North Carolina, I was in North Carolina, in Miami. Yeah. So congrats now. Well, try to be like you, man.
Starting point is 00:12:29 You're the best TV star in this building today. TV star. A businessman now. Just busy. You have the suit of a business, man. Well, you know, I got to run my business. Matter of fact, I'm running into a meeting after this. Absolutely, man. God bless you.
Starting point is 00:12:41 Yes, take care. I am cringing so hard that I'm, like, becoming smaller. So some background, I'm filming that, obviously. And the reason that it's clipped off in that manner sort of abruptly is I was furiously trying to get my phone out because you're sprinting to hop over a couch to go say hello to Magic Johnson. The video picks up with the first words of you saying to him after having climbed a couch to dapp him,
Starting point is 00:13:06 we can see eye to eye. As if you're like marveling at the... Yes, dude, you stopped on a couch. Of course you can see that. I stood on a couch like fucking Tom Cruise being interviewed by Oprah. Are you embarrassed? Of course.
Starting point is 00:13:17 I mean, the visuals on this are great, admittedly. Like, there's a... The dapp I delivered. Was it worth it? You got the clout of like, hey, I dapped him up. Yeah, but it was... It's not worth it. There's like a leg kick.
Starting point is 00:13:30 I, like, sort of like, wound up. because I cared about the DAP so much that I kicked my leg out like a pitcher. So what's sad now, even sadder now to me, is that despite that clear connection that me and Magic made from atop that couch, when I reached out to Magic Johnson's people,
Starting point is 00:13:48 because of course he's a businessman with many people, to go to the front door on this topic, we were told the following, okay? Quote, thank you for reaching out. Unfortunately, Mr. Johnson, respectfully declines to participate, he is elected not to discuss
Starting point is 00:14:06 the behind-the-scenes of his social strategy. End quote. That was from the vice president of Magic Johnson Enterprises, Alexia Grievous Henderson. But I was energized, and so what I did was I reached out
Starting point is 00:14:21 to a different Hollywood power broker, an actor in this case, that I know has also been obsessed with this now official mystery, by the way, Okay. What do they have to hide? And so, yeah, I called up Rob Lowe. And so Rob Lowe, what was the first memory you have of meeting Magic Johnson?
Starting point is 00:14:46 You know, we met because we were both basically the same age from the Midwest. He's from Michigan. I'm from Ohio. We're in Los Angeles. We're young. We're having success. And we're on each other's radar. And so that was obviously the initial commonality.
Starting point is 00:15:03 But then over the years, you know, I got to know him as a man. And it was really through amount of time spent in and around the Lakers and the Laker organization, traveling on the road, on the team plane. You know, Riley, you know, at one point banned me from staying in the same hotel because... Wait, why? Why were you banned by Pat Riley? Well, because it was the 80s and I was single. And you're a bad influence, Roblo. That's why you were bad.
Starting point is 00:15:38 I was a very bad influence on the Lakers. Meanwhile, but Lakers love me. Riley, not so much. And it was during the format where it was like 2, 3, 2. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So you'd be in Detroit forever. Three games in Detroit. You're like, there's not a lot to do
Starting point is 00:15:59 up by the Pontiac Silver Dome. So, you know, you can do the math. And Riley was not a fan of that. No, no, understandably. Magic Johnson, by the way, was just named one of the four current or former athletes to ever become a billionaire, right? So it's him, LeBron, Michael Jordan, Tiger Woods.
Starting point is 00:16:17 That was this week. But inside of that larger context is this ongoing fascination that many people have around his Twitter account. Yes. And I think you know this. You've been on part of my time. talking to them about it.
Starting point is 00:16:35 But you're like the foremost source. You have advanced the ball more than any other human being on the question of like, what is up with Magic Johnson's Twitter account? And you take pride in this, I imagine at this point. You're laughing at asking this. Yeah, I mean, listen, I have it on very good authority. Yes.
Starting point is 00:16:54 That he dictates it. He has somebody who, you know, whatever occurs to him. and with the emphasis on whatever occurs to him, it's the best. I mean, that's what Twitter was made for him. Made. Exactly. But I'll ask magic next time I see him. I'm going to say, the world wants to know.
Starting point is 00:17:16 Yes. Are you seated in a big smoking chair? Are you doing it in a walk and talk? Is there a fleet? Because you're a billionaire now. So I'm assuming it's a fleet of people, not just one person, who's instantly, you know, putting it in on their phone. And if it's on their phone, how does that get on your Twitter?
Starting point is 00:17:38 Like, the world needs to know. Yes, I imagine like a nuclear football level of chain of custody here. My favorite is always like, we've got to do better when the Lakers are getting blown out. You know what I mean? You're like, I love that. His catchphrases are stuff like, quote, tonight we learned the world champion Denver Nuggets are going to be very tough to beat in the NBA playoffs, period.
Starting point is 00:18:01 Quote, we're all disappointed that our Dodgers didn't hit or pitch well. That's why we lost the series to the Diamondbacks. Exclamation point, which is, and the exclamation points, Rob, are notable. Because for him, on the Magic Johnson emotional curve, that thing is Martin Luther nailing the 95 Theses to the door. when I was on the West Wing, Aaron Sorkin will not use an exclamation point, ever. Oh, wow.
Starting point is 00:18:31 It could literally, he could, in the script it could say, President Bartland is shot. No, exclamation point. No, he does not believe in them. His theory with exclamation points is that it's the, it's the hackiest, sweatiest thing that you can do to make the something sound exciting that probably,
Starting point is 00:18:53 I happen to disagree with it. I think an exclamation point, there's absolutely a place to, they're overused for sure, but I don't go the other way where it's like you don't use them. I mean, to me, that's a bridge too far. On the scale of writing sensibility,
Starting point is 00:19:10 on one end is Magic Johnson. On the other end is Aaron's sort of. And you're not going to confuse their Twitter accounts. You're just not going to. Yes. By the way, are they preloaded? Right. Listen, listen, there's a world.
Starting point is 00:19:23 where what was preloaded wasn't, give me the quote about why the Dodgers lost, you give it to me again. We're all disappointed that our Dodgers didn't hit or pitch well. That's why we lost the series to the Diamondbacks, exclamation point. Okay, so that's preloaded. Also preloaded is,
Starting point is 00:19:40 how about that Dodger pitching and hitting? And that is why we swept the Diamondbacks. So you have, the potential world in which Magic Johnson is a man for all seasons and outcomes. He is ready with a Magic Johnsonism no matter the event and its result. Of course he is. It's why he's a billionaire. Of course he's ready for every eventuality.
Starting point is 00:20:09 It's like abstract art. It really is. It's where you go, I'm pretty sure my kindergartner could have painted that. And yet your kindergartner didn't paint it. No. No, no. Jackson Pollock painted this. Jackson Pollock painted it. He's no kindergartner. And you know what else is a little bit in there?
Starting point is 00:20:30 And this is, we have a mutual friend, Alan Yang, who wrote on the show that I did Parks and Recreation. And one of my favorite characters on Parks and Recreation has a little bit of Irvin's Twitter in him, and that is purred happily. Yes. Oh, my God. Dude, I had never fucking connected this, but 100 million percent. 100 percent. Madge's Twitter account has a little bit of Purd Happily in it. For a female perspective on this scandal, we turn to a woman. Leslie No. I'm about to ask you a question right now, and that question is this. The lewd photo, just how big a deal is it?
Starting point is 00:21:06 Well, frankly, Perth, it's not that big a deal, if you know what I mean. I don't know what you mean, but it had the cadence of a joke. I'm Irvin Johnson, and I love to play basketball. It's hard work, but it's a lot of fun. It's a lot of things. But when the ball goes through that net, the team gets two points. Is there a person who is better at being rich than Magic Johnson? Oh.
Starting point is 00:21:33 And I see Elon Musk as, of course, fantastically accomplished, wildly wealthy, real life, Tony Stark, all of that stuff. Yeah, yeah. On top of the culture war shit. But the point being, I watch him on Twitter and I'm like, oh, that's a man whose brain has been eaten by the internet. It seems like he is doing Twitter, the product he bought for $44 billion incorrectly. And then, in contrast, again, on this scale of extremes, I see Magic Johnson. And I'm like, that guy seems happy. He is happy. For sure. One of the things I love so much about Irvin slash magic is their outlook on life. And it's not a pose. It's not an image. It really is.
Starting point is 00:22:21 you know who he is and that sort of like guileless um enthusiastic straightforward no bullshit um and i don't want to say childlike because that is a connection that it's somehow unsophisticated or not smart and i'm not saying that but there is a purity though a pure yeah it's a purity about it and uh you know you read lebron James's thing and you get, he's always trying to be Nelson Mandela. Right. And, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, magic slash Irving is just being himself. This is maybe the thing about his Twitter account is that it's so authentically his voice that you wonder, like, is it, is it just a performance because it's so consistent?
Starting point is 00:23:15 And then you're like, well, why am I, why am I being cynical about this? It's a gift. Just accept the gift. Just accept the gift. It's one of the few... By the way, it might be the only joy left on Twitter. Absolutely. Rob, absolutely.
Starting point is 00:23:34 The only joy I have left is Magic Johnson on July 17th of this summer, posting on Twitter, quote, Positano Italy is so beautiful and they grow the biggest lemons I've ever seen in my life, exclamation point. It just puts a smile on your face. We're both grinning in a very sincere way because without even showing you the tweet,
Starting point is 00:23:59 you know that Magic Johnson in both hands is double fisting giant Italian lemons. Giant. And they're so big. Giant lemons. There's the question of like when the aliens come, who do we want to nominate as our like gladiator on behalf of Earth? People are always like, it's clearly LeBron James. And I'm like, if we want to... Who? Who's nominating him?
Starting point is 00:24:23 Who? Wait, what? The greatest physical specimen that Earth has to offer in competition. Because we assume this is the thing, Rob. But people assume that we're going to want to go to war with the aliens. And meanwhile, what you and I are on the same wavelength about, I think, is that if we want to, like, diplomatically figure some stuff out, I want Irvin, Magic Johnson with two giant lemons. approaching. Here's my pitch on Irvin's tweet post meeting the aliens.
Starting point is 00:24:58 Okay? Met with the aliens, period. They are not what I expected, exclamation mark. That's it. You've nailed it. Isn't that it? I can't improve on that. And there would be a photo
Starting point is 00:25:19 of Magic Johnson, grinning ear to ear, hand over his shoulder with a fucking alien. With a gray. The gray can barely be in the photo because the gray is like two and a half feet tall. You should do it,
Starting point is 00:25:33 I'm sure you must do a parlor game, parlor trick game where you have three quotes. And two of them are fake Magic Johnson and one of them's real. You have to do that, I'm sure. Absolutely. We're going to find some Purr'd Happily best ofs. And we're going to, I mean, that could be the game.
Starting point is 00:25:51 Honestly. Perth, happily or Magic Johnson. I mean, that's a part game. Oh, that's really good. Okay, let's do this. Let's get Shur Yang, you and me on the pod like this and play it. Done. I'm in.
Starting point is 00:26:10 Rob Lowe, on that note, all I have to say to you is, in the words of Magic Johnson, thank you, exclamation point. Thanks, man. That was fun. I knew the name Rob Lowe going into the video. But like, I didn't know who he was. I didn't know who he was. I'm young.
Starting point is 00:26:26 What do you want me to do? Please tell me you appreciated what just happened there. I got lost watching it because there was a moment where I said, oh, I know who that is. I recognized him. The West Wing, Parks and Rec. The Outsiders, great movie. No.
Starting point is 00:26:38 Austin Powers, bro. The iPatch, I remember him. Young number two. I just want our new friend of the show, Rob Lo, to know that I understand his uvra, even though Ryan Cortez. By the way, you also, like, discovered rock and roll as a concept shot over the pandemic.
Starting point is 00:26:57 Nirvana, bro. So this is all, this is a love language, Cortez. But I did also want to be fair to any skeptics out there who wanted, like, the actual answer to the question
Starting point is 00:27:11 our great listener left, right? Because we know now that it's Magic Johnson dictating the tweets. We know it's his voice incontrovertibly. But in terms of the person who is physically right,
Starting point is 00:27:23 them who is writing this account, there was even more digging that I had to do. Okay, what did you find out? So they wanted to keep all this a secret, obviously, the social media strategy. But I did all of these, I truly investigated this. I did all of these interviews on background. I got to somebody who was in the room, actually, while it was happening. Magic Johnson, with this mystery person posting to the account. And what I was told, okay, the person who physically posts for Magic Johnson was none other than Alexia Grievous Henderson.
Starting point is 00:28:03 Herself, that's the name from the email, right? That is the person who emailed us saying that they elect not to discuss the social media strategy is the person behind the social media strategy. I'm proud of you, man. Like, that's actual journalism. You did it again. good reporting by you. We got to the bottom of just, yeah, the greatest rich person's Twitter account.
Starting point is 00:28:26 Should she get raised, you think? You know, if she wants to maybe help put me in touch with magic so I can dab him up on like sea level, maybe we can, yeah, work out a recommendation, a public endorsement from Pablo Torre finds out. Cortez, it's obvious to everybody that we are the smart show at Metal Arc Media. Dude, I mean, there was a time we had.
Starting point is 00:29:01 Look, who's in the chair. Okay, guy. I mean, I didn't want to say it, but now I'll say it. There was a time we had Action Branson on it. He was talking about shitting into a warm toilet, how it emptied out his whole bowel system. As well as Deezus telling us that the poop in a crack house reminded him of creme brule. Okay, the smartest show in Metal art. A little crust on the top.
Starting point is 00:29:22 You're right. But I do want to get to an objectively smart voicemail about an objectively smart topic, if we could. Pablo, got a good idea for you. We need to find out. who of the Wu-Tang clan is the best chess player. I've read a number of articles over the years that they played chess together when they were recording the 36 chambers. Riza and Jiza seemed to be the most open about their chess playing experiences.
Starting point is 00:29:49 Jizza said he played 78 hours straight against Master Kielers. So who's the best? You need to find out who of the Wutang is the best chess player. Now, I've heard of a lot of those people, obviously. Shout out to Nirvana. You know, I discovered rock music. My musical knowledge is not the best. I like how the through line of this episode is Ryan Cortez finds out what music is.
Starting point is 00:30:10 It's amazing, by the way. So I just wanted to know who all is in the Wu-Tang Clan. Okay, so this is a hard question for even like the most Wutangologists to answer. Because, again, I just want to re-wrack this for everybody, right? There are lots of people in the Wooten clan. They're, according to several actual music critics, one of the greatest, just groups ever, let alone rap, based in Staten Island, and they fucking love chess.
Starting point is 00:30:34 And if I have any credibility with the Uutan clan, it's because they get the vibe of, you know, people who maybe like, yeah, like to do some nerdy things sometimes. And so they have songs about chess, they play chess, and there are lots of possible answers here to answer your question as to who the best chess player might be because there is Method Man, there's old dirty bastard,
Starting point is 00:30:53 there is Rayquan, there is Ghostface, there is Mastakila, there's Capadana, U-God, Inspector Deck, Riza, Jizza, there are lots of candidates. Inspector Deck, that's a good name. It's a great name. Interesting. And so, what we did was we reached out to our reporting intern to get to the bottom of this story, Dan Lebitard. I've heard of him.
Starting point is 00:31:13 To get a comment from Method Man himself. Hey, Dan, what's up? Shit. It never ends, right? You see my hat? Yeah. Kings of New York right now, you know? I'm just thinking, what if Anne Rogers never got hurt?
Starting point is 00:31:34 And this was mostly just Method Man giving us Jets takes. Is that Stugats or Method? I know. He's wearing a Jets hat. He's like lying down on like a floor somewhere. But he did follow up, thankfully, with a text message where he put three names, three names on the metal stand of Best Chess Player in the Bhutan Clan. He mentioned Mastakila.
Starting point is 00:31:54 He mentioned Ghostface. And he mentioned Jizzah. And that also obviously was not enough for my journalistic tastes. And so we called up the first name that he mentioned. So this is an honor for me. I need to tell you that. I'm a fan and also a journalist with a question. Do I call you Killa?
Starting point is 00:32:19 What should I, Pablo Torre, say to you as a way of addressing you? What do you prefer? Call me Jamal, man. That's easier. Nice to kill us. Man's the kill is what I do. Jamel, I got some intel, and I should say that our source is your colleague Method Man, who power ranked the three greatest chess players in the Wu-Tang Clan.
Starting point is 00:32:46 And the medal stand in no particular order is you, ghost face, and jizzah. Does that sound right? What's your scouting report? Well, if he said I was number one, that's correct. He didn't provide an order, but I'm open to your order. This is why I'm calling you up. I'll be honest and say, you know, the number one slot could go between me, and Rizzo at any given time.
Starting point is 00:33:17 What's crazy about this to me is that there's actually like plausible cases for so many of you guys. Like, I don't know if you know this, but I just saw an article. out of like Arizona, recently where like Capadonna was like working some sort of like chess tournament for kids. Like he showed up there. And I was like... Am I breaking news to you about this?
Starting point is 00:33:40 That's definitely news to me. You know, I think we all play chess in our own ways, you know, because, you know, it's definitely, I would say, affiliated with life. You know what I mean? It teaches you so many lessons. That's what drew me to the game in itself. Just the patience, the patience that you learn.
Starting point is 00:34:01 And how often did you guys play against each other? I'm asking you to rank. Every day. Every day. Every day. Me and Diza played 72 games one day. I'm sorry. 72 consecutive in one day. 72. We started like that morning and we ended late at night. I mean, we took breaks and we ate it and we, you know, listen to music or whatever, but the whole day, we just played chess all day.
Starting point is 00:34:35 I mean, we had so many days like that. But that particular day, we played like 72 straight. We counted it, 72. Yeah, we love it, man. What was the win-loss record for you, Mastakila, playing Gizzi? 72 games consecutively in one day. Oh, man, I can't remember
Starting point is 00:34:56 the win-loss, but more likely I was on top, you know. What's your, what's your, um, scattering report, right? So I want a self-scouting report of mass to killa by mass dekilla on how he plays chess versus the other members of, of the Wu-Tang clan. How, what distinguishes your game? I'm just a little natural with it, you know. Some, some of my brothers, you know, they study books, which you should. I mean, knowledge is infinite.
Starting point is 00:35:24 So you can never stop learning. There's always room for improvement. There's always room to learn. You know, some of my brothers, they study different chess masters. I'm just a natural. I absorb and adapt to my opponent, you know. And I like to just stay free like that. I don't like to box myself into any, you know, certain openings or, you know,
Starting point is 00:35:50 I'd just like to be free with it. I'm hearing you say between the lines that you're unpredictable. some of your nerd friends in the Wooten clan are more predictable. That's what I got from your scouting report was done. I think we're all nerds. I get the sense, reading between the lines here again, that you like the psychological warfare of an in-person chess game. Yeah, I love it, man.
Starting point is 00:36:14 Like I said, you know, nothing like moving to pieces. You know, nothing like hitting the clock, you know, right here. Nothing like a little smack talk right there in your face. face. You know, it's nothing like that. It's not like the thrill of that, you know. Muhammad Ali won a lot of his fights before he even entered the ring, you know. Mike Tyson had you intimidated before you even entered the ring, you know?
Starting point is 00:36:41 So I kind of took a little bit of their strategies and, you know, if I can say people before you get no 64 squares and half the battle is won. Have there been great rap songs? lyrics about chess, whether, I don't know if you've written them, I don't know if you've performed them, what's the best example of that? I'm sure that
Starting point is 00:37:04 a lot of artists have made some references to chess, you know, because I know more than just the Wuchang Clan plays chess. I know that. I think Jay-Z plays. Over my years I've seen, rooks get took it by the night,
Starting point is 00:37:21 losing clan for trying to defend the queen. Check me. Before moves. Wait a minute now, though. I'm realizing, okay, so I know Jay-Z plays chess too. So if I'm telling you, Master Killa in person versus Jay-Z at the chess board. Oh, Jay's going down. Jay's going down.
Starting point is 00:37:39 Jay's going down. It's either you give a lesson or you learn one. You know, there's no losses in chess. But that day, I'll be giving a lesson. The patience of choice. is the jewels of life. Think before you speak or move. And I think with that,
Starting point is 00:38:07 you will be so much better off in life, in general, in so many situations, probably all situations. Master Killa, the best chess player officially in the Wu-Tang Clan. And I would say the king of all rappers, when it comes to chess. Thank you for joining Pablo Torre finds out. I appreciate you.
Starting point is 00:38:31 Thank you for having me, brother. Bro, the vibe of that guy, pretty incredible when you, like, juxtapose what his name is, Mastakilla. It doesn't really seem like the type of guy that's going to murder you. He's a great... Well, he's a great hang,
Starting point is 00:38:45 and it is, to your point, a bit ironic that Mastakila preaches patience and prudence more than a guy named Parakeet Cortez. that feels a bit of a switch. What do you think I do on Twitter that's different? I know that you preach the opposite. I do want to get out of this topic, though,
Starting point is 00:39:06 as we anoint Mastikilla as, of course, the gold medalist in the Pablo Torre finds out chess tournament among all rappers. By reminding you, Cortez, what Mastakilla does actually rap about on the way out of this segment? I'd like to know. Homicides illegal and death is a penalty
Starting point is 00:39:24 weren't justifies the homicide. When he dies in his own Eiquity It's the master of the mantis rapture Coming out of you All right So Mastakilla's vibe Did inspire me some
Starting point is 00:39:38 He wanted me to own my nerddom And so let's get even nerdyer At the end here Which is a dangerous thing, of course But what's next? Hey, Pablo
Starting point is 00:39:51 What I'd like you to find out Is where does Human Evolution stop? Are we just going to get a new Victor Weminyama every 15 years where they break all the, you know, anatomical molds? Or is there some sort of leveling out that will eventually have to happen before what's your phrase? Bag of meat and bones, we all just fall apart and nothing works anymore.
Starting point is 00:40:24 Love the show. Hope you use it. So thank you for loving the show. but the word is meat sack. So we called up for this story. My smartest science friend, Cortez, you know him, David Epstein. The best sports science rate in America. The man who wrote a bestseller, a bestselling book, Range, and also the sports gene.
Starting point is 00:40:44 Those were his two bestsellers. What's funny about this one is that he pointed out that the answer to this listener's question is actually less about the genes of the next great athletic specimen than also. access to sports itself. Okay. I think we probably overestimate the portion of the global population that has real access to any reasonable opportunity to do sports. Like, Pablo, I think I mentioned to you
Starting point is 00:41:15 that at the recent World Championships in track and field, a guy from Botswana won a medal in 100 meters, that was the first African man to win a medal in the 100 meters in the world championships. Wow. The first. I would have taken the over. Right. Whereas many people of recent African ancestry
Starting point is 00:41:31 have won many, many medals in the 100 meters. Yes, of course. And I think that just goes to show that, like, most people in the world don't have real access to this kind of stuff, to training, you know. We overestimate the idea that the people who could compete are already competing. Yeah, so I think there's tons of, you know, hidden or undeveloped talent out there. Like, more people, as sports get more competitive,
Starting point is 00:41:52 more people are selected out either because of their genes or because of their opportunities and training environment and stuff like that. So I think there's a lot of the world still, you know, still a lot of talent to explore. A lot of the increase in height over generations has been nutrition and decreased childhood infection, things that's stunt height. But some of it has also been, you know, a sort of mating. Taller people having kids with taller people.
Starting point is 00:42:18 And if you look at this research, even people who have higher VO2 max, which is their ability to, you know, move oxygen through their body to get it to their muscles, it's a predictor of endurance, tend to have kids with other people who have higher V-O-2 max, right? So there may be a lot of this so-called
Starting point is 00:42:35 assort of mating, which is people procreating based on characteristics that are similar, whether they think about them or not, that I certainly think could have an impact. I still think, though, that there's a lot of ground left to be had
Starting point is 00:42:47 and more, again, so-called freaks and just, like, giving access and opportunity to a lot of the world that doesn't have it. Right. So, in other words, Victor Wembenyamas, which is to say guys who are increasingly extreme, tall, long, thin in ways that would be truly like as if, I don't know, Bob Coosie were to encounter an alien. More guys like that, you can see arriving, but simply because they're already out there. And now they might have a more comfortable fit on an NBA team.
Starting point is 00:43:22 You know, and maybe pro-N-B-A and W-NBA players having kids, like, you know, two people are seven feet tall. Yeah. Have a kid, it's still unlikely that that kid is going to be seven feet tall because that's so extreme. But it's way more likely than just a random chance that they're going to be seven feet tall. So I do think that, you know, athletes having kids could have some impact. I got a very clear message from you, which is that Victor Mambayama better have a lot of sex. I mean, look, if there were a thing, if they were like, you were treating it like a horse, right?
Starting point is 00:43:57 Like certain people's breeding rights would go for a lot of money. Oh, man, dude, his semen would be so expensive. What you just said, ridiculous though it is, is humbling to me as someone under six feet compared to Victor Wiminiama? Like my semenyama, because I didn't want to say it. Is it not going to be worth as much as Victor Wiminiama? Because that seems unfair. I have a great Twitter account.
Starting point is 00:44:19 Cortez, what you found out today is that your sense. semen is mid. No. That's just one man's opinion. I mean, it's science's opinion. I mean, I'm not saying that mine is like, you know, premium grade, ejaculate either.
Starting point is 00:44:36 Hold on. My boat is definitely taller than your boat. I mean, it's marginally taller. I mean, relative to Victor Mbonyama, fair. But, but, but, speaking of, of climax, um, David also did point out something interesting, which is that,
Starting point is 00:44:52 We've probably climaxed as a species in terms of height. Like Victor Wenyama, you know, seven foot four and rising, architecturally,
Starting point is 00:45:02 athletically, we're probably not going to do taller than him, not much taller, even though there have been like exceptions. It feels like as much as we can push it.
Starting point is 00:45:09 Unless he's standing on a couch, you mean? I'm just saying, I mean, that's a way to improve. Unless he's standing on a couch or, you know, trying to fuck a WMBA All-Star.
Starting point is 00:45:18 Okay. Which I'm also in favor of, by the way. There's in that case only one way to find out. For the gene. Exactly. What's next?
Starting point is 00:45:26 Pablo, you need to find out where a cottonball man is now. What happened with him? You have to find out where he is now. Find out, Pablo. So this is an appropriately desperate plea because we did this episode, one of my favorite episodes. I love all our episodes, like they're my kids. But this one, our interview with Mori Povich, was special.
Starting point is 00:45:47 And it was special because we watched Mori with Mori. and Cortez, my favorite clip from that whole thing was the clip of one of the phobia episodes that Moripovich would do. And these were iconic. And this one in specific, and this is a genre where people who are terrified as shit confront that shit in studio in person.
Starting point is 00:46:07 And this woman Emily had a very clear phobia, which was cotton balls. You know what I'm going to ask you. You know why we're here. Did you do your job? Did you find this guy? I am pleased to tell America that we've located Cotton Ball Man. We got them.
Starting point is 00:46:27 I have done things with Cotton that nobody's done. And that's Dawn, you know, an entire suit made of cotton. No, you've got to confront your phobia now. This is the famous Mari Show, Cotton Ball Man. My name is Jimmy Shearman. and I've worked for the Mori show for over 20 years. I was a driver. I was a travel assistant.
Starting point is 00:47:00 I was an audience coordinator. Then eventually I became a field producer. The thought process when approaching a role like Cotton Man, you have to keep in mind that Cotton Man is evil. He's a demonic beast. He's there to kind of terrorize. So in approaching that role, you know, back in the day, I used to do a lot of side acting for the show where I would be, you know, a jealous spouse murdering his wife or whatever. I think I took some of that intensity from those roles and applied it to the beast that is Cotton Man.
Starting point is 00:47:46 And I remember getting the outfit. it. And it was basically like oven mitts with cotton balls glued all over them. And I think it was like a box cut with holes cut for the eyes and just cotton balls glued all over it. You're backstage. Okay, get out there. And you're just, you know, Frankenstein coming to, you know, coming to wreak havoc on this poor person, this poor unsuspectable. This poor unsuspective. person and, you know, basically reveal their biggest fear. Cottonball man. I followed her partially, and I think someone stopped me, possibly,
Starting point is 00:48:34 because, you know, there came a time where it was like, okay, the joke is too, like, we don't want to get too mean. Bring her back here. Emily, come here. There's nobody up here. And if the person's really freaking out, like, let's just cut it. So I think security might have stopped me or something like that. I don't think wearing the suit.
Starting point is 00:48:56 made me afraid of cotton. I still wear cotton. I wear cotton shirts and cotton underwear and just like everybody else. Yeah, I don't think that it increased my fear of cotton or anything. I don't have a fear of cotton. I don't like the way it feels sometimes. Being the cotton man, I think I know cotton. Wait, so wait, can we just replay him saying what his name is for the record again, just real quick? My name is Jimmy Shearman. Jimmy Shearman, Cortez. That's ironic. I mean, it's more than ironic.
Starting point is 00:49:36 There's a better word for it, actually. Go ahead, right? It's aptronymic. An aptronym. It's a name that's amusingly appropriate for the occupation of the person that has said name. How did you know that? That's amazing. James.
Starting point is 00:49:49 Jimmy Shearman is Shearman is cottonball, man. I mean, I'm just glad that he gave a middle finger to God when he took this position. 513-85 Pablo. Please call. Send Ryan Cortez more musical suggestions.
Starting point is 00:50:08 We can find out, I don't know who the fucking Beethoven is. Shout out to rage against the machine. God. None of this is a joke. Rock music is amazing. I'm just saying, it's so good. Don't say. This has been Pablo Torre finds out.
Starting point is 00:50:29 A Metal Arc Media production.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.