The Bill Simmons Podcast - An NBA Six-Pack, Netflix’s WBD Pursuit, NFL Picks, and John Cena Finally Stops By, With Joe House and Matt Belloni
Episode Date: December 5, 2025The Ringer’s Bill Simmons is joined by Joe House to crack open a six-pack of NBA opinions before making their Ringer 107 picks (5:01). Then, Matt Belloni joins to talk about the impending Warner Bro...s. Discovery sale (01:08:26). Finally, John Cena joins the show to discuss his decision to walk away from WWE, getting his first drink with The Undertaker, and much more! (01:42:52) Host: Bill Simmons Guests: Joe House, Matt Belloni, and John Cena Producers: Chia Hao Tat, Eduardo Ocampo, and Kevin Cureghian Get Gameday Deals all season long only on Uber Eats. Order Now. This episode is sponsored by State Farm®. Don’t settle for just any insurance when there’s State Farm. The Ringer is committed to responsible gaming. Please visit www.rg-help.com to learn more about the resources and helplines available. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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The Bill Simmons podcast brought to you by the Ringer Podcast Network.
I have a new rewatchable is coming for you on Monday.
Hopefully we are recording it tomorrow.
There's a special guest.
I don't want to jinx it and tell you what movie it is.
But I will tweet it from the rewatchables account tomorrow after we record.
After I know we've recorded it.
But it's going to be a fun one.
I'm excited about it.
I am recording the intro for a very long podcast.
It's what time is it?
846 Pacific time.
P.T.
I wanted to wait until after.
Lions Cowboys.
Because this Cowboys Renaissance was so much fun.
Who knows?
They'd won today.
They would have had a chance to put some real heat on the Eagles.
Of course they lost.
They couldn't stop the Lions.
The Lions' offense just did whatever it wanted.
Dallas is now 6-6-1.
They're not out of the playoffs.
It's not looking great.
they would have to sweep home Vikings, home chargers at Washington on Christmas at Giants to finish 10, 6, and 1.
I think the ship that has sailed is the NFC East because the Eagles are 8 and 4 at the Chargers this weekend.
House and I are about to do Ringer 107 picks.
We both think the Eagles can beat the Chargers.
They're home for the Raiders, a home and home with Washington and at Buffalo.
So I just feels like Philly's going to get to probably 11 and 6 somehow.
So the ship has sailed for Dallas except for Wildcard.
But they just lost to one of the teams that they would have been competing for the wild cards.
So this might have been it.
It would have been fun.
One of the reasons I want to wait for the intro, because if Dallas did beat Detroit tonight,
and I actually thought they were going to hang, C.D. Lamb got a concussion, you know,
fairly early in the game, which didn't help them.
But it would have been funny if they won this one because there would have been a real,
maybe Jerry Jones was the smart guy all along case.
But that is, that chip has sailed too.
And probably Dallas's playoff hopes have also seen.
sailed for so for big picture i think we have probably know who eight of the seven playoff teams are
if we go ram chicago seattle philly green bay san francisco tampa and detroit that's probably
the list barring a collapse from somebody so somebody's going to get bounced we'll see what happens
it still might be detroit that was a must win for them tonight three and five so we'll see how it goes
they play at the Rams next week,
which will have ramifications all over the place.
Anyway, on the podcast today,
House and I are going to talk some basketball at the top
and then we're going to do Ringer 107 picks.
Matt Bellany comes on next
because we want to talk about this Warner Brothers sale.
And then last but not least, John Cena, finally.
First time I've ever had him on my old pod, on this pod.
First time we've ever had John Cena,
and we go for 100 minutes.
And he came to the studio and I had a great time.
So I got to update the Bellany part really quickly, which I still think holds because we talked about all the possibilities, all the ramifications.
But we recorded it six hours ago.
And Bloomberg, Lucas Shaw, our friend and Michelle F. Davis reported that Warner Brothers has entered exclusive negotiations to sell its film and TV studios and HBOMAG streaming service to Netflix, according to people familiar with the discussion.
So that means over the next few days this could play out.
They could agree on a price.
And then we will see what happens.
Will the government block it?
Will Paramount sue?
Will Paramount, I don't know, can they try a hostile takeover while this is happening?
Who knows?
But this is the biggest, biggest, biggest, biggest media story we've had in the entertainment
world, I think this decade.
If Netflix, who hasn't bought anything, finally buy.
buys Warner Brothers and gets all of their assets.
So Matt and I talked about all the angles.
That's coming up.
So it's House, basketball, football,
Bellany talking about the Warner Brothers sale,
and then John Cena.
This is an absolute megapod.
It's really good.
It's all next.
We're going to take a break.
And then ProJap.
This episode of the Bill Simmons podcast
is presented by State Farm.
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It's like expecting a linebacker on the football field,
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Sure, they both can handle the pressure
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We're kicking things off with a special part of today's episode brought to you by Mikhailobotra as the official beer partner of the NBA.
They know the best moments on or off the court are served cold.
So let's crack open a six-pack as we dig
into the most buzzworthy moments of the season so far
and also a little NBA Cup as well
and we'll talk about the superior play of the day.
So Joe House is here.
We're going to talk football picks a little bit later
but I wanted to keep you on
so I could have somebody to throw off some NBA opinions.
We're going to do six opinions.
You like beer.
I don't know if the beer is going to throw you off.
Look at it.
Looks nice and cold and tasty.
Six beers in there.
I like that beer.
Six things.
I want to start here, and we could make this the superior play of this Mikhailobotra six-pack
that we're doing.
Shea Gilgis Alexander, very boring to talk about.
Won the title last year when the MVP scores 33 points a game.
He's an assassin's facial expression never changes.
Not that fun of a topic, not a lot to say, not a lot of places to go.
House, as we record this on Thursday afternoon Pacific time, Shea is average.
32.8 points a game in 33.6 minutes.
He's almost a point of game.
To put this in perspective,
the per 36 guys in history
who have been over 35 points a game,
do you think Michael Jordan is on this list?
I do.
He is not.
Wow.
Will Chamberlain, 1961, 62, his 50-point season,
37.36.
Yannis this year,
35.78, just got hurt again.
James Harden in 2019, 35.38.
And then Shea playing no fourth quarters, basically.
He's missed 11 already.
I think he's missed half of the season in the fourth quarter at 35.1.2.
He's shooting 55%, 44% from 3, 88% free throws.
He's been 20 a night for almost 100 games.
The record's 126.
That's a record I actually care about.
It's so fucking hard to score 20 a night.
Think about that.
Foul trouble, a night where you're off,
a night where you get hurt in like the third quarter,
they're on pace for a 75 win season.
And right now he's like a slight,
Slate, Slate MVP favorite on Fando.
I think he's plus 155 Yoko, just right after him.
I don't see a scenario where he's not the MVP again
if this team wins like 75 games.
What's the number where it's like he has to be MVP?
Honestly, to me, anything over 70 wins.
So 70 and 12,
there's basically no scenario
if he plays the whole year and he's doing this,
that he's not the MVP.
And he holds this level.
I mean, the hard thing will be,
how do you pay
proper respect to the Joker?
Because the Joker's going to average
a triple double.
And it's an impactful triple double.
I mean, you mentioned Hardin in 2019
should have been the MVP.
Or was that his MVP year?
Which year did Westbrook steal it?
His MVP was 18.
Westbrook stole 17.
17, yeah.
I forget who won 19.
In any event, the...
Case for the Joker.
Who won?
Janice?
Yeah, that makes sense.
Yeah.
The case for the Joker is going to be compelling.
As long as this Denver team gets to like 55 wins, which is north of some injuries already.
Yeah, they'd have to be mid-50s.
I don't know.
Where they're at right now.
I think if we're over 70, I think it has to probably be Shea doing this.
I'll throw one thing with Shea, beyond all the number stuff.
He's hit the point.
So I'm watching the Warriors game the other night.
And it's really fun.
Seth Curry got to play.
It was really excited for our girl, Callie.
And they're hanging tough.
They're throwing haymakers.
And at one point, did you see it?
They're up, they're up like five with like four or five with like five minutes left.
And you're just watching it going, I know how this is going to end.
This is fucking Friday at 13.
Four he's is going to come into the cabin and he's going to start killing people.
And Shay just puts teams away.
And you know he's going to do it.
You know what shots he's going to get.
And now it's like, I've never seen a guard just do this relentlessly night after night
since we've had league pass.
Jordan was doing this.
We didn't have league pass.
You know who else agreed with you?
I was looking to live bet.
I wanted to live bet Oklahoma City.
Oh, when Golden State was like up four, you were just like jumping into it.
The market is like, oh, here is 10 and a half.
Like even though the game was only four points, it was like here, you know, they have to win by 10.
and a half that that's that's because i wanted some okay c i was like godly man can't get any breaks
they're going to win so many games this year and there's a million reasons for it and they're
like a perfectly constructed team and they're young and they're hungry and they even have it seemed
like they have a little edge from them even from last year to like show like not only we're the
champs we're laying the smackdown this year yeah but the shape piece i've personally watched it
swing five games they're like oh they're going to lose today and she's like no we're actually not
I'm going to make every shot right now, and that's going to be it.
So I'm starting the six-pack with him.
We'll go to Janus really quickly.
Talked with Max Callerman on Tuesday.
This is second for the six-pack.
Talk to Max Calherman about favorite Janus destinations.
And my favorite was Atlanta just from a trade package standpoint.
Before I tell you a mystery suitor, do you have a favorite Janus trade destination?
Because this really heated up last 48 hours.
And he did get hurt, but he's going to be back in a couple weeks.
I think Houston would be incredible.
I think that the combination of youth and, you know, the KD, you know, last hurrah kind of vibe here.
So what are you giving up?
I'm not sure.
Are you putting Schengun in that?
Some Tarisen maybe.
It's not getting Janus?
No, no, no.
Like it's a big package.
It's a big package.
It's a big package.
So it's like a Reed Shepherd, Jabari, Smith, Tari.
You're just trying to patch contracts together
until you can get near the honest number.
I'm just hanging up unless shangoon's in it.
Okay.
That's fair enough.
If I'm the bucks, I'm like,
we're not just taking a shitty trade.
Two different people mentioned this to me in the last 24 hours.
I just wanted to mention this team.
And it chills my bones.
The heat of Miami.
Two different scenarios.
One has BAM in it.
which I think if you're doing this, you probably try to keep BAM.
But pretty easily you can do the three brothers, Yannis and his two brothers.
They have to be in the trade.
You got to take both of them.
Okay.
With Bobby Portis, and you get back Hero and Bam, Yakishonis, who needs to leave Miami because
he's a pick and roll guy, and they don't run pick and rolls.
And picks, and that's one.
But I think the more likely one, which is interesting to me, three brothers, hero, where,
who's good, Wiggins and picks.
You think that's superior to Houston?
It's a three for one.
Well, here I'm getting a top 45 guy in the league who can put up 25 a night.
I'm getting a really good young center who I'm shocked by how much he's progressed this year.
I think he's really good.
I'm not positive he's perfect with BAM.
And then I'm just getting a bunch of picks and a tradable contract in Wiggins.
what are those picks
what are the picks
I'm just you
whatever my picks are
here they are
I don't love it
I let me
let me this is
I'm sorry to do this
I'm sorry to do this
do you watch the end
of the Dallas Mavericks
and the Miami heat
Miami was making a push
Dallas was playing
quite quite valiant
um
are your boy Cooper flag
came through in the club
he did foul he foued
on a play that they called a block
that's fine
He's getting some respect already.
But Tyler Hero took a couple shots.
I was like, man, this isn't not the time for that shot.
You know what they'll love it?
It's going to have done better.
Tyler Hero hoisting?
Yeah.
Well, I'll tell you this.
The Yonah stuff is a very hard pause button.
Calf strain, it looked bad when he fell down.
Yeah, I was scared.
They'll be super careful with it.
So now, this goes through January now.
There's going to be more unhappy teams.
but yeah the Miami piece of it
because the buck's bait
the thing that stood out to me
was the was the in the reporting
and a lot of people did some good reporting about it
one of the people said
that if he picks
if he decides he wants to go
and he tells them the team
they'll try to get a deal done
with the team at a respect to it
so if he says New York
he could say that
that's basically towns
in Annanobi there's so much
apron complications
it's a very good trade
Yeah, but I don't know if the Knicks can send both guys in the same track.
I'm still, the apron is the most crazy about time.
Right, right, right.
But he could, he could say Atlanta sounds great, figure it out.
I mean, respectfully to the great cities of Houston and Atlanta, Miami's got a natural advantage.
Miami has an attraction.
The brothers, imagine what the brothers try to persuade him.
Three brothers.
Like, imagine my brothers telling me.
yeah he's like he's like he's like the house brothers there's like the meal ticket and then the two
black sheep and they would be like tim and rich house we're going to use the house name on south
beach you understand this we're opening a bar yeah all right speaking of Dallas you mentioned them
earlier obviously i've been watching we have a lot of mav's futures they started out a little
season from heli and then something has happened the last couple games as ad has started to look
like AD again.
Well, that's one thing.
That's one important thing.
They started to actually play a real point guard.
So Jason Kade can no longer say that he was intentionally trying to tank to get
Nico Harrison fired because Nico Harrison is gone.
So now he's playing a point card.
He was sitting right there.
There's been a lot of AD stuff.
And I know there's different trade possibilities for him.
And I look forward when we launched the Max and Rich podcast next week.
Maybe Rich will talk about some of those scenarios.
Who knows?
Who knows what they're capable of that pod?
I'm not trading Anthony Davis right now.
I'm keeping him.
Flag and Davis together,
I need to see this more.
Okay.
I'm not,
I'm hanging up on all calls.
I just want to watch this for another month
because they had too many big guys.
They were playing flag out of position.
They put,
they did him a real disservice,
which I've talked about multiple times.
But now he's in his right spot where he's like a four.
And now you have Gafford.
coming off the bench as like one more big man.
But basically you have a lot of flag and AD together.
That's like a winnable combo as my four or five.
I think that's really hard to deal with,
really hard to deal with defensively.
It's great for flag.
I'm not fucking with that.
So your point is you're not trading Anthony Davis in any 80 cent on the dollar
because Dallas has to move.
This is what you're arguing here.
Like why would Dallas at this stage?
Why do I have to trade them?
Right.
Yeah, right.
Make me real.
Am I getting young?
honest back? Like, make me a real offer. I'm not
trading him for
you know, Yacca Pertil and Emmanuel
quickly and some picks. Like, fuck off.
I'd rather keep them.
And Flag has been,
I know you've been a little focused
on it. Flag has, Flag and Knapple
have both look like they're 27 years old
in some of these games. That's
absolutely right. The poise is, I mean,
the Edgecom as well.
I treat him like a, like a, he's,
all of them make dumb plays.
Yeah. But I'm just like the poise.
They're ready.
They arrived in the NBA, ready to play.
I don't even want to tell you one of the texts I had about Knappel to a basketball
friends of ours of my comparison for him because I would get laughed off the internet.
No, I've just been really impressed by him.
Should I say it out loud?
I know who you're talking about now.
Have a check?
No, I don't want to do it.
I don't want to put it on him.
I don't want to put it on him.
No, I'm not saying.
I'm denying everything.
Do you beep in that?
There's moments where he looks kind of like a taller Havich.
I got to be honest
he never stops moving
he's fundamentally perfect
he's got great posture
he's just added it
if he can play like three positions
and he just looks a little
little hablachecky to me
and flag I don't know if I've seen flag
before what is flag
I don't even know what is he
let's let it play out a little bit
but what is he what
who is his doppelganger
I don't even know
he's doing stuff
where I'm like I don't know what that is
He has a disability.
You have to take a whole bunch of guys.
And unfortunately, you know, my brain goes immediately like,
what four white guys is he most like?
I have to make a combination.
It's Tom Chambers.
I have some Tom Chambers in there.
And then I see some AK-47 in there.
I'm not doing it.
We're not doing it.
I mean, really, it's more Tatumy than anything.
Some of the stuff he's doing on offense.
Same size, same kind of as Tatum was trying to figure out his one-on-one game.
next thing on the six-pack ironically we're on a fourth beer right now we're on a fourth beer right now ironically
with jason tatum because here's what's changed fourth beer tatum well here's what's changed house
the Celtic season went from and we're one injury away from we're probably going to be pretty
bad so why are we going to bring tatum back screw up a top 10 pick we're not going to head to
the playoffs anyway i felt this way i saw them in person a couple weeks ago and i'm like i don't see
it they've really, really turned into a decent basketball team.
And Jalen has been a top 13, 15 guy in the league.
He's going toe to toe.
They just had this stretch where they played Orlando and the Knicks and Minnesota and
Cleveland and one other really good team.
And they went four and one.
I forget there's a 15 in there.
They're all good.
And they really could have won five of the five.
The one they lost was in Minnesota.
And granted, this is part of the Ant package.
Anches made a couple of fucking crazy shots, which he does.
I'm not like, oh, if he had him, that's what he does.
I get it.
But they kind of had Minnesota in a spot where it felt like they could steal the game.
And Missoula, I think, has done a good job.
They have all these energy guys.
They have an identity.
Their offensive rating is, like, surprisingly, shockingly really good.
Cata's been a revelation as a center.
And it's hit the point now where Tatum has to come back.
if he can play.
Drew Smith has to.
Well, what's he going to do?
So let's say he's cleared and ready to go in January.
He's just not going to play for eight more months.
Drew Smith's already playing with the same injury.
These could be eight, nine months.
From everything I've heard across the board,
he's been relentless and a maniac and passed every checkpoint
and has done everything possible to come back as soon as possible,
100%, not 94%.
And they're understandably being careful.
but at some point it's like if he's ready to play what's playing what are we waiting for we might
be like a five or a six seed so i just i feel more confident than ever with the way that this
team has responded that he's going to be back wow not reporting it i just i watch this team
and i think they're in a good spot you're not saying that after four beers you're saying it like
it's my four beer opinion on the six pack but listen the whole organization like it's it's you know
they're trying not to talk about it they don't want to put
pressure on them. So what makes you nervous about this?
I've been wondering on this stretch of success that they've had about the challenge of this
composition all season long, which is fourth quarter scoring. And I watched it a little
bit against the Knicks. And Jalen's just like, no, it's fine. We need a bucket. I'll go
get us a bucket. And I wonder out loud how sustainable that is in view of the workload.
that he's carrying, like this stretch,
if you look at the minutes, the usage,
the way that he's been efficient
and the impact it has on the roll guys,
he really does rise all the boats.
You know, he's the rising tide.
I don't want him to get hurt.
So I'm knocking on wood with both hands.
But that's not really...
We appreciate that.
Can he do that for long?
That would be part of the reason for Tatum to come back
because it would take a lot of pressure off of that situation.
They've been really good.
about his minutes. He's only been at 33 minutes a game this year. It's averaging 29 a game.
I was so happy because I've absolutely loved this Jalen season. And he actually really did get
better at a couple things, including he has this move now that he did not have before and he would
try to do it and half the time would dribble off his foot. But he goes hard like he's driving
in the basket. And then he does like a hard stop and a really low crossover dribble that because
these teams would always dive down and try to pick his dribble.
He does this hard, low dribble now and then this little fallback 12 footer.
And I swear to God, he makes like 90% of them.
It's like unstoppable.
It's like this DeMarroza mid-range game that he just didn't have last year.
And he's able to shoot threes, go to the basket or get, like, his shot selection's been really smart.
And I was so happy for him on Tuesday in that Knicks game because I think that was a big, that was a big marquee.
Big peacock game.
Nick Celtics and he sucked in the first quarter and all these people I've watched the Celtics
out here. I was like, oh, great. Of all the games that he's going to suck in this one when everyone's
watching. And then he rallied back and he killed the Knicks. He did. They didn't have Oji,
but he like really went after him and brought it to him. So I think he's gone up a level and it's
great for Tatum because when Tatum comes back, he's not going to have to be the Tatum from last year,
right? You're just kind of moving them in and giving them the 27, 28 minutes a game. Anyway,
they're the six seed right now.
The problem with them is Brown, Pritchard White,
Cata, these four guys,
if any of them gets hurt,
this crater's.
They basically need 30 minutes from all of them.
But just the first time,
this five-game stretch,
Detroit, Orlando,
the Knicks and Cleveland,
they beat,
almost beat Minnesota,
where it's like,
this team's, like,
pretty good.
And you had Jason Tatum,
who is the fifth best player
in the league last year,
they're going to be better than pretty good.
It's a shame you couldn't keep
to keep Cornette,
see his game-saving block.
I know.
We love Cornyn't.
Couldn't pay him.
Simons is a little bit of an X-factor
because I don't think Joe trusts him.
Yeah, sure.
But he does have some good one-on-one stuff.
And I think they're falling into him,
maybe being the six-man.
Anyway, fifth one,
the Chris Paul,
with an all-time,
everything ends bad the other times,
otherwise it wouldn't end final season.
I just, house,
I got to ask,
you, has there ever been a six months like this for an NBA team that you can remember?
Starting with Game 7 against Denver when they took the most massive shit possible
in the biggest possible stage, just terrible, immediately, awful for Hardin.
From that moment on, this has been an absolute train wreck.
And I don't remember anything like this.
it's it's only rivaled by another era with this very same organization
which is when the owner turned out to be a virulent racist
yeah like with where his words were taped and and and published
when the team was pretty goddamn good right had a chance to make the finals
that's yeah that's a worse like in the moment thing blowing the lead to houston they've
had worse things, but this stretch, that game seven, the aspiration scandal that we don't even
know what the punishment's going to be yet, but hugely embarrassing for everybody and a big
plague over the season. They signed your guy Bradley Beale, who then immediately got hurt.
They signed Brooke Lopez, who's just washed now. He can't play, unfortunately.
Horrible start. Norm Powell, who they trade because they won't give them an extension,
thriving in Miami. The Lakers are thriving in general.
and look like a contender.
They have all this Chris Paul weirdness.
They don't have their pick.
They're giving their pick to a team
that might win 73 games.
And on top of all of this,
the All-Star game is here
at the Aspiration Dome in February.
I can't think of a worse run than this.
I mean, you didn't even include
the legal jeopardy of Tailu's two best friends.
Oh, I forgot about that.
I think he was at some of those poker games.
He was all right, though.
He was just playing.
Yeah. Yeah, I forgot about that one.
That wasn't great either.
So, yeah, this Clippers thing, I don't say getting better.
They did win last night, which was they beat somebody that.
They beat the Hawks.
You're missing a bunch of years.
Because, yes, 10-second rant, Jalen Johnson was a late scratch.
Like, here's the thing, everybody.
If you're going to bet on the NBA, don't do it early in the day.
There are no good numbers early in the day.
Just wait till the last possible second.
God damn clue who's playing.
I laid two and a half on Atlanta early in the day.
Like, okay, I like the situation, blah, blah,
doing like sensible match-up stuff.
And, you know, five o'clock, Jalen Johnson's out.
Oh, well, good.
Bye-bye money.
I mean, you have to hedge out of it, which I did.
Yeah, you got to wait until the last 10 minutes.
Sixth thing for the six-pack.
I'm kind of excited for the NBA Cup matchups.
Can we rank these from four to one?
Yeah, let's go.
Because I think all these teams are going to try.
And I'm always ready to watch any basketball team
where I have 100% certainty that both sides care.
They're going to compete.
Let's go.
I'll give you the four options.
We have the all Florida battle, Miami versus Orlando.
We have the Knicks going to Toronto.
Suns Stunder.
Dylan Brooks just probably trying to as close to being kicked out as possible
without getting kicked out.
And Lakers, Spurs.
no wemby
what do you got for number one
I think suns thunder is super alive
I just think there is so much
because the general public
hasn't really seen the suns yet
people don't really have their heads around
you're betting on them all year
they're number one against the spread
they're number one in the entire NBA against the spread
so yes I try and make
profitable bets.
I just need this Colin Gillespie thing.
I need...
Amazing.
Conor Gillespie?
Colin Glesby?
I need some sort of explanation for how this happened where this guy has become such an
awesome point guard.
They had him on the team last year.
This is an unbelievable example of addition by subtraction.
You really can't overstate how much it sucked to have, you know, those three guys
who clearly were not on the same page.
Not saying a bad thing about any one of them individually,
but it clearly was, you know,
whatever was going on.
The vibes were so horrible.
Whatever was going on with Coach Bud.
Well, that too.
And your guy Bradley.
Manix texted me that the vibe at the Quippers game
that he went to last weekend
was actually worse than the vibe
from the Sun's games last year,
which I thought was the most damning thing I heard about the Quippers.
I hope I'd, I'm sure he said that on his podcast.
too. But, yeah, better vibes. They really give a shit. And I think there's a real
deal in Brooks' conversation to be had. Every team that he's on really, really, really tries.
It's the one thing you can count on. And over and over again, he's on the team that seems like
it gives more of a shit. It's part of the reason while I'll forever hold Russell Westbrook in
such high esteem. Not a guy that like, you know, style of play-wise is, I've ever been able to
really wrap my head around always like
you know where's the IQ element
especially on defense
hoops IQ I'm talking about
but god damn that guy cares
god damn he tried hard
goddamn he dragged a terrible Washington
team to the playoffs
he gets rebounds
yes he fills up this box square
all right so you have suns thunder first
I have Miami Orlando first
okay I like what's going on
with this Orlando team and there
There's some interesting palo questions.
I'm not going to bring any of them up,
but there's just some questions, some things.
I always get suspicious when somebody loses their best player
and then immediately looks like the team has fallen in a place.
I'm just monitoring.
Miami's been really fun to watch,
and I hate myself for saying that, as I mentioned, every time.
Which is really fun.
They revamped.
They went into the lab in the summer.
They're like, you know what, we're not going to be as last in pace any longer.
I like their style.
What if we're first in pace?
Try that.
Oh, you know, all of a sudden, here we go.
Interesting.
Let's push the ball, spread the floor.
You have the ball attacked the basket.
That's why my guy Yacchishunis hasn't played.
That's not his game.
They should trade him.
Trade him to, free him.
Free Yacchishutus.
I would put Lakers spurs.
I would have Nick's Toronto last.
Yeah, that would go.
So you have Suns Thunder one.
I have Miami Orlando one.
so we'll flip those for one and two
and then Lakers Spurs 3, Knicks, Toronto, 4.
Okay.
I think that's fair.
I just psyched for all of them.
There's a great mix of upstart teams.
Like, who had Toronto, you know,
showing up and showing up in this instance?
And I think on that big stage, it's a good test
because the Knicks are not going to be like,
oh, yeah, let's accommodate Toronto here.
That's going to be fun to watch.
I think they need to add NBA awards
that I can vote for at the end of the year.
because I'm not allowed to bet on any of the awards,
so I'd rather just vote for more awards.
You want more awards.
Scotty Barnes deserves some sort of award.
And I was thinking the category would be,
I never really liked watching you, but now I do.
Something like that.
I've really enjoyed watching Scotty Barnes this year,
and I did not enjoy his game for the years before.
Something clicked in his head.
I like how unselfish he is.
I like his physicality.
I've just really enjoyed everything he's done.
Thumbs up, Scotty Burns.
If we were going to be like, you know,
even more gracious towards Scotty about it,
what was going on was the Toronto organization
with this inexplicable tank concept
that got Masai fired
because he really couldn't explain it to anybody
and they just kind of floundered
and it never really made sense
or translated into impactful draft picks.
And so they went the other direction, and it's a pretty interesting team this year.
It helps them that they have Ingram who can look like discount to rant sometimes and has that,
it was funny to watch him that one game when he hit the game winner, they gave it to him.
And he flipped the ball almost like Rondo style before he started his move because he's like,
here's what I'm going to do.
I'm going left, I'm pulling up, and I'm making.
He made it with like an incredible amount of confidence.
Then the next game they played Charlotte.
and it was the same situation
in Charlotte because they have a good coach
was saying
there's no fucking way
you're doing that move again
so as he started
they just sent two guys to the spot
and double teamed them
but that's taking that load off Barnes
plus he's older
but I've been really impressed by him
anyway that is
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We're going to take a break and talk football.
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All right, before we get to the games that we really like, we got to talk about Fandall now
live in Missouri, and to celebrate, we're turning to the expert who's had more barbecue
than any white man alive, Mr. Joe House, to rank his favorite Missouri dining establishments.
I know you've dabbled a few times.
here. What do you got? Well, I don't think I'm going to rank the establishments. What I'm going to do is
celebrate a very unique aspect of the Kansas City barbecue scene. And the nationwide, everybody
claims they have, Texas has its barbecue. Carolina has its barbecue. But there is only one
place you can go to get burnt ends. This place is Kansas City, Missouri. And there are a number of
phenomenal establishments that have really made their mark with the burnt ends.
Now, if you don't know what I'm talking about, it is the tip of a brisket.
And over time, it's kind of evolved.
Now, a lot of times what folks will do is cube up a piece of the sort of fatty part of the
brisket, and then they re-smoke it.
It's been prepared, then you cube it, then you re-smoke it.
They're magnificent.
They're one-of-a-kind, and there are several essential.
establishments in Missouri, Kansas City, Missouri.
I don't know who lays claim to the OG original.
It might be...
Everyone's a winner.
We don't need to pick a winning establishment.
The point is, go get some Burtt tips in Kansas City.
Burnt ends in Kansas.
You could go to Gates, Arthur Bryant, you want to go to Joe's, Jackstack.
LC is apparently top of the list.
I've tried a bunch.
I haven't tried L.C.
That's got to get on my list.
But burnt ends in Kansas City.
It's actually with Dave Jacoby at MLB All-Star weekend in 2012.
I hope you got burn ends while you were there.
I made the mistake eating too much.
And then we had to do like an interview with somebody.
And I was like in a barbecue coma.
It was great.
That's what I do.
That's all stuff you can do in Missouri.
You can also gamble in Missouri because Fando is now live in Missouri.
And they're celebrating with a ton of great promotions and rewards for everyone.
So sign up today.
Take advantage this weekend.
All right.
Let's talk about our favorite NFL games.
A lot of football has happened since the last time we talked.
We had all those Thursday, Friday games, Sunday game.
Suddenly the Pats are considered to be the best team in the NFL,
which is even as a Pats fan who loves the Pats,
I would say that's probably ridiculous,
but speaks to where we are at the season
where nobody can even figure out a team to make the favorite.
We do not have an OKC in the NBA house.
But what we do have is Picks.
And you and I, once again, started out great last week.
It went sideways.
I want to use this as an opportunity to talk about a bunch of games
with a bunch of playoff implications.
Can we stay away from Seahawks, Falcons?
That's fine.
Numbers too big.
Like the Falcons there.
Like the Falcons a little,
but I'm not betting Kirk Couss.
We're not betting the Falcons anymore.
We're not betting Kurt Cousins against the number one defense.
Definitely not doing that.
No, thank you.
Seahawks by seven, no thanks.
Not doing that.
Bucks, minus eight and a half against the Saints.
I can never tell who's playing for the B.
Way too many points.
The Saints QB is just good enough that I almost wanted to throw Saints
plus eight and a half in there,
but I feel like we've taken them.
before and they couldn't beat Miami last week. They're out.
Rams minus seven and a half
at Arizona.
There's some backdoor
potential. I just, no thanks.
High favorite on the road.
I don't know what to make Arizona. And then
I mean the Rams, the only,
here's the case for the Rams,
three pieces. It's Sean McVeigh
in December. He absolutely
owns Arizona, especially
in Arizona. And
they lost last week.
So that would be the case. They're going to come in
and just beat the crap out of poor Jacoby percent.
All right.
I'll put them in the parlay pile.
The maybes.
It's a really weird Dolphins Jets game that initially I liked the
dolphins, right?
And then it ended up, it's the Dolphins minus 3 is the line right now.
Yeah.
I think it is.
Yep.
But the Jets have been pretty good, the last five games.
To the point then I was like, oh, maybe we should take the Jets.
Then I'm like, well, if I'm changing my mind of the game, probably a stayway.
the special team stuff is crazy in this.
The Jets are first at DVOA in Miami's fourth.
Yeah.
So I guess that's going to decide the game.
I'd rather not find out with our money on it.
It's going to be 40 degrees, though, house.
There's your thing.
There's your thing.
Now, I've said on a couple podcasts this week,
I'm no longer making bets based on what we think the weather's going to do
because it really stuck us really in a sweet place in that Browns game
where we were like, oh, if a party can party throw in the 50 mile out winds
in Cleveland, get out of here
with that. But for sure
it's going to be cold in New York
in the, I'm just going to call it the
Meadowlands on
Sunday. And it's for sure the case
that Tua is going to be the quarterback
the Miami Dolphins playing in the
cold up there in the Meadowlands.
That's true.
Sounds like you're kind of intrigued by this one.
I like
the way the Jets have been playing.
They are conceding. They are conceding
no ground.
They are trying hard.
I've been impressed.
Just put it on the tent.
Just table it for a minute.
That would be my inclination, though.
Browns minus three and a half against the Titans.
Brown's defense at home.
Browns burned us last week.
I thought it was a really stupid game.
So initially I had this down.
Here's why I decided against it.
And I was thinking a lot about
how the Browns completely effed.
us and everyone else
who bet on them last week
and all the stupid shit
they did
and it made me wonder
like is this a secret
tank team
I was on Brown's Reddit
really fun place by the way
enjoyable
tour through the Browns Reddit
and I can't say
they're enthusiastic
about Kevin Stefanski
because one of my takeaways
and some people are like
we don't know if he's trying to tank
but if you were trying to tank
you would do some of the stuff
you did in that game.
And it makes me not want to take them in this Titans game.
So I think it's a stay away.
Is that fair?
Yeah.
And, you know, we have to like look at each other Sunday afternoon and say,
we laid three and a half with Chador.
We laid three and a half points with Chador.
We did that thing.
He was on some show.
I follow him on Twitter and he posts a clip sometimes.
I enjoy the great Cassell clips.
But he had this thing about how he's still at the college speed.
And he hasn't graduated yet to pro speed.
It's a great observation.
it. He's not quite at the
pro speed yet. So good. The problem
with the Browns is you go down
nine plus points with
them and the game's over. Game's over.
They were 10 to 8. I was like, they might
be able to do this. And then it was 17.8.
It's like, I'm done. We're right.
The coach thinks they go for it on
from their own 30th. Do you
know that San Francisco had
five drives start on the
Cleveland side of the 50 yard line? I'm aware.
I watched the whole game and I was losing my
mind. They scored 21 points by
starting on the 35-yard line of Cleveland.
I said to Sal, that was the dumbest thing all year that I saw coach too.
It's a shame because that Brown's defense is so good.
Yeah, we can't pet them.
Can't bet them.
Next maybe for me, the Vikings are favored by one and a half at home against your team house,
Washington.
Coming off a week where Max Brosmer just kept throwing picks like he was handing out
turkeys on Thanksgiving as a professional athlete.
your team look good and it almost makes me
not want to take them this week because they look good last week
and almost beat Denver and I don't know what's going on
which quarterback you're getting but I just
don't want to be involved in this game if that's okay
it's just a stay away for me you okay with that
yeah it looks like Jay Daniels but then he's not healthy
like I don't like that scenario Marriota
in Minnesota makes me nervous every
Minnesota offensive scenario
makes me nervous. I just want to stay away.
It's fine to stay away. I just want to tip
my hat to the Minnesota defense because
that Seattle game
was nerve-wracking.
I had my favorite bet, my best
bet. I gave it out on the Ringer pre-game show
was Seattle minus six and a half
in the first half, just
to cover a little seven-point line
and the dramatic,
possibly one of the greatest
quarterback plays
Brozmer, just a
miracle cover for me in that spot.
But that Minnesota defense had Sam Donald seeing stuff.
Like he had Sam Donald's face.
Don't let anybody convince you otherwise.
And Minnesota's defense was bringing it.
They brought pressure.
I don't want to have anything to do with that for this Washington team.
That's one of the reasons the Seahawks were a stay away for me against the Falcons.
Because I haven't loved how their offense has looked.
We keep seeing Sam Donald's face.
Like three out of the last four weeks.
the ball. They traded for
Shaheed and I basically he seems
like he's a punt returner.
And now it just seems like I don't know
like JSN last week who I had in
one of my leagues
but it was frustrating because it just
seemed like they were like you're not catching the ball
yeah, I couldn't get the ball to him.
All right. Parlay
possibilities.
Rams Cardinals is in there.
Broncos at the
at Vegas I guess but
something scares me about Vegas. Like they
finally figured out just throw the ball to Brock Bowers
all the time. Does work.
It's 50 feet. He manages.
He's incredible. And Denver's just
clearly going to be this team that pulls
wins out of their ass all year.
Ravens Steelers.
Oh, interesting. That's Ravens minus five and a half.
I don't like the Ravens that much.
I'm not afraid of them when the Pat's play them.
I don't think they're that good of a football team.
I mean, there's been a lot written about this
and discussed about this this week about
Rogers in the Steelers offense and how horrible it is and how it's like actually there's historical
precedents being kicked now with how little the lack of explosive plays how he never throws
the ball more than five yards no 20 yard completions it's like over and over again everywhere you go
there's terrible stats about how bad the offense is and then the flip side of it is that these
games are always close i feel like this burned me last year with this mentality of raven stilers
it's always close, but the dogs do cover most of the time.
75% of the time, the underdog covers.
I just feel like the Steelers are shot offensively.
I don't even know what you do if you're them on offense
other than just try to run the ball.
Maybe they're going to be able to do that against the Ravens.
But is the Ravens a parlay team for you, or is this just a stay away?
Because I don't like them either.
Yeah, I'd be inclined to stay away.
The only thing, I bet the under, as soon as the number came out
because of classic AFC North, I think I got it around.
I don't know, 43 and a half, something.
But it might have opened far north of that.
Either way, I don't, it's in the Tick-Tag zone.
Well, here's one that I know you're going to.
Oh, no, it's not Tick-Tac.
It's Vegas-Zone.
Pardon me, pardon me.
Vegas-Zone.
I know I'm going to be able to talk you into the Bengals in a parlay as a dog.
No.
I know you're ready.
No.
No.
No.
Why not?
Because if the bills can run the ball, the way that they did against the Steelers,
and I think they can run the ball
the way they did against the Steelers.
And it's the bills at home.
41% chance of snowhouse.
I kind of don't mind laying the points.
I kind of don't mind laying the points.
That Bengals defense remains not good.
It's better.
I thought they were pretty frisky last year.
Good effort against the Patriots two weeks ago.
That they were frisky against the rent team.
That they were frisky on Thanksgiving.
They're improved, improving.
but go into Buffalo.
This is, you know,
Buffalo understands that it can seed no more ground.
I mean,
I've been using that today.
Well,
so the case for Buffalo,
because I think everybody feels like Buffalo's had a disappointing season,
and it's basically because they don't get explosive plays anymore
because no,
their receivers can do that.
But I think they figured that out.
No separation.
And now they're trying to do last year's chiefs routine
with like run the ball, run the ball, short passes.
That's pretty good.
I always mention this.
I keep track of wins, losses, either or games.
You do.
Buffalo has eight legitimate wins.
I think they have the most wins of anybody of just outright.
I guess the Pats have eight, maybe a couple others have eight.
Nobody is nine.
But I have them eight two and one, and the only either-or game was that Ravens' comeback game in week one.
Other than that, all their wins are legitimate.
And I said this last week, that Texans Thursday night game, which seemed like a bad loss for them,
to play on three days rest.
They're playing a Texan's team that I think you and I both love.
And they almost won the game.
Very well suited that Texans team to turn
Josh Allen into a one-dimensional player,
particularly well-suited, the Houston team.
With all of that said, Joe Burrow,
with the playoffs on the line
and the AFC North in absolute shambles,
I just think he's,
going to move the ball.
Okay.
So maybe there's an overplay for us,
or maybe it's like Bill's money in the over,
something like that.
Okay.
I guess there is snow.
I don't know.
Table it.
All right.
The ones that I like the most.
What's the game you like the most?
The Eagles.
I have that down.
Eagles minus two and aft at the Chargers.
Jalen Carter's out.
And I guess the question is,
does it matter where Philly plays?
Because their fans hate them.
Aren't they better off playing on the road?
Who's going to,
are they going to get cheers or booze?
Because the L.A.
crowd isn't going to be, you know, there's no LA crowd showing up for the, for the, for the,
be the Philly transplants who live here, but they're all going to be so grateful to see their
team in person. They're not going to boo the first time they go three and out. Think about that.
How good would that be grateful? It's like, thanks for coming and see me three thousand miles away.
It's going to be a happy crowd. It's an incredible number when we don't know for sure that
Justin Herbert's going to play. This is, it's like two and a half. If he does play, he's going to have
a broken hand. Right. He can't play on, they can't really go for it on any fourth and
short because he can't be the quarterback.
Tray Lance has to come out and be the quarterback.
Anytime I see Tray and Lance on the field,
that's like, that's a win.
Let's go. All right.
Sign me up.
Plus you have the Eagles,
10 days rest.
Eagles coming off a terrible loss.
They have,
they've sucked since the second half against Dallas.
They've sucked.
So I watched all of that Chargers game last week
because there's only three games.
And I was in a fantasy thing where I had Brock Bowers.
I was going against somebody
so I was like locked in
and I don't know
the Raiders kind of hung around
in that game in a way that was a little disturbing
and you realize like
and Max Crosby was doing stuff
every once in a while
the Raiders just aren't good
they're not well coached
they just don't have enough talent
but they kind of hung around
in that game in a way that I thought
would have been alarming
if I was a Chargers fan plus Herbert
you know these guys
we saw with Rogers last week
you're broken hand you get sacked
you fall in your hand, you're trying to protect the hand, you fumble.
Like, there's so many ways this can go wrong with a fucked up hand.
It just feels like stealing to get the Eagles at anything less than a field goal when I honestly don't,
I'm not positive he's playing.
I'm not sure it makes a ton of sense for them.
Plus, even like he had a terrible throw around in the Red Selling last week.
I don't think he's been lights out.
The guy that scares me in this game is Vidal, especially if Carter's not playing.
wonder if they can run the ball in them.
But the thing with me is, like, should the Chargers be like an 11-win team?
Like, it's the kind of game you should lose.
Philly needs it.
I'm with you.
I like the Eagles, and they should be able to sort this stuff out.
One, there's three that I really like.
Well, two that I really like, one that I kind of like.
I'll give you the kind of like first.
The Bears plus six and a half in Green Bay.
And you were on Green Bay last week.
That was one of the ones we hit.
The fear would be Caleb and Lambo.
To me, this seems like a flash sale line to me.
Like, why isn't this line three and a half or four?
There's still like a little untrustworthiness with the bears,
but I feel like with what they did against Philly
and how they ran the ball and how good their offensive line is,
the old Lombardi phrase, bad offensive lines don't travel.
They have a good offensive line.
And they're an outdoor team,
and this seems like the kind of game they should hang around with,
and it's a lot of points.
It's too many points.
Green Bay has it covered as a,
a favorite by this number this entire
season. Green Bay is great when
they're an underdog or where the line
is tight. Green Bay by this number
like you look it up. They flat
out just don't cover, don't come close
to covering this
number. I think
the Bears, see, what
helps the Bears is it's going to be
freezing effing cold. It's going to be like
single digit cold. Yeah.
And they are going to run. They're going to
just try and run the football.
But to the credit,
The offensive line was a point of emphasis in the offseason.
And then they arrived with a head coach who actually can scheme up an offensive line,
a protection package and some run packages that are synergistic.
So it's not just we got guys, we got guys, and now we have a plan also.
And the way that they ran against Philadelphia,
now I don't expect a repeat of that because by EPA, Green Bay is pretty good.
But they're only like middle of the pack in terms of win rate.
in terms of defensive rush.
But I think that the Bears will try and establish the run,
and that creates at least a little bit of room for Caleb.
Nobody's asking Caleb to go, you know, win the game.
If you are, then you're going to lose the game
because we're still early in his career.
But I think that six and a half is a crazy number to me.
I like that they're going to be able to block.
I also like that the one great thing he has is the scrambling.
his ability to get out of trouble three four and Drake made us too three four times a game he can just
it seems like it's going to be a sack and it isn't and as inaccurate as he is it's still a good quality
I just think they hang around I also felt like we had the Packers in that Thursday game
there was a few moments where they needed a first down where they needed a play and I never knew
where they were going and it would be like whoa wicks made a play and dubs and it's like I didn't
really trust Watson'll have his one play long right but
I didn't really trust them series to series where they were going on like a third and seven, third and eight.
And now Wix is hurt.
He's got the red flag next to him.
I was nervous that whole game against Detroit.
I mean, Detroit, you know, played pretty good.
They're in a lot of trouble.
Different class.
But the other thing.
Too many points for the bears.
Yeah.
I like the Chicago's finally got, it's secondary healthy.
And it's a good secondary.
Like we've been waiting all season.
like everybody that highly touted Chicago secondary.
This is the time that you need them against this Green Bay team.
Yes, too many points.
Are we taking the Bears?
A lot of confidence.
Yeah, I think we should.
Cold weather team built for, built for eight degrees in limbo.
They're fine.
Yeah.
They're fine with it.
Great.
Jags Colts.
I can't believe we're doing that.
Jags Colts.
Jags plus one and a half against the Colts.
You're making a face.
Why are you making a face?
I just don't know what to do with this game.
This game confounds me.
This is going to be one of my picks.
Oh, good.
Okay.
Thank God.
Jags are plus one and a half.
Why does it confound you, by the way?
Because Jacksonville owns the Colts in Jacksonville.
You'll hear the stat a million times.
Rahim has it.
You know, he's been talking about it since Monday.
The Colts haven't won in Jacksonville since 2015, something like.
Remember we were talking about home browns?
Outdoor Colts to me is a thing too.
I thought Dimes looked terrible last week.
He can't move.
Dimes can't move.
That's the handicapped, right?
Bad weather.
Because what they have to do, the Colts is established the run.
They can't have Jacksonville, who surprisingly can put some pressure on the quarterback.
They can't have him teeing up and teeing off on Jones.
He can't move.
Jacksonville's not bad.
They're frustrating because of Lawrence.
Thomas is going to hopefully be back more this week,
but they can run the ball, which I've noticed with them.
Like, they actually can run inside, right down the charter's threat.
Yeah, they can run the ball for real.
At home.
So that's like the pathway for them.
Can they do that to replicate that against the Colts?
You can't have Trevor Lawrence throwing the ball.
Then you hate yourself.
74% chance of rain.
I think that's good for Jackson.
If it's a bad weather, rainy outdoor game,
I just like the Jags.
Okay.
I don't want Daniel Jones who can't move around.
No sauce gardener in this game again.
And I think the Colts for the last month have just been different than those first seven weeks.
There's just no question.
Every stat says it.
Yeah, well, they travel.
They had all of this travel.
They played away games, outdoor games, grass games.
Somewhere in there, Jones got hurt.
And then it was supposed to be come home against Houston, get right.
But they can't get right because my man,
Danny
Indiana Jones
has a broken
fibula apparently.
They're like
it's fine
he can move
around on it
yeah it
sounds great.
I also like
this Jags home
crowd.
I thought they
were good
in the Chiefs game.
Okay.
Yeah,
I think that
crowd can
dial it up
every once in a while.
It's funny
to take the
Jags
and then watch
Trevor Lawrence
and then send
each other texts.
That all by itself
is funny.
So let's do it.
I'm in
endorsing this pick because one thing I was thinking for your Sunday show yeah like I wonder if
there's like a jaggs by 14 and a half kind of like blowout bet because like there's a world where
this game goes horrible for the Colts you know like Jones can't move no but it's just like the
jaggs like they pour it on the weather's shitty and all of a sudden you're like whoa and
jacks they scored again eight to one they're 14 and a half I'm just
mentioned that all right i like the jaggs that's one of the picks and then last one um i knew we
would agree on this one texans chiefs it's in kansas city texans are plus three and a half um it's
going to be 25 degrees it's a night game the chiefs have major offensive line issues including
their left tackle's gone i think taylor's gone too yeah um and they have the best defense in the
league it just feels like a miracle kind of matchup for them depleted offensive line cold weather
it's a cold weather and defense game and i i don't know i i the texans can run the ball i just i
think they're really good and i think they're going to make the playoffs which means they have to
win this game they they cannot lose lose this game and and still have hope of making the playoffs they
have because they probably have to win their division yes the way this goes right yes so
you have this one too texans plus three and a half um i i like the under better i played the under
because these these two teams are both top five unders this season uh i have a parley option for you
okay okay okay now i'm texting texins plus seven and a half under 49 and a half yeah see
i don't want us to parlay teams any longer this is a parley i can endorse like we lost last week
We both love Dallas.
We should have gone 3 and O on Thanksgiving.
We love the situation.
We loved the way it looked.
And yet we took that and put that with the stupid Eagles.
What do we, why did we do that?
That was dumb.
Why do we do that?
Like a team, play the team.
I don't want to make two team combinations anymore with our parlayes.
Because what we have to do is all these adjusted line things.
But if you want to do a Houston,
where, like, it's correlated.
The idea of Houston covering that spread, the three and the total, you know,
you push the total up, so you're going to finish way under the total.
That makes sense to me.
Now you're talking.
That's, I don't know if anybody would say it's positive, expected value, but at least it makes
sense.
Well, we could either do Texans plus seven and a half under 49.5.
or we can do Texans plus four and a half under 57 and a half.
I'd rather do the first one of those two by far, by a long shot.
Seven and a half, four and a half.
Yes, yes, yes.
All right.
Yes. Yes.
So we'll mark that down.
So we have Bears Packers.
We have the Bears, the Texans with the parlay, with the Jags, with the Eagles.
And we need a 15.
This is where we've gotten in trouble all year.
It's always been bad right here, this spot.
We always have the four bets and somehow don't have the fifth one.
We can't lay the points with Cleveland.
You're not, you don't want to go against Joe Burrow in Buffalo.
I don't want to go against Joe Burrow.
I kind of do, but I understand.
I understand your perspective.
I don't want to do that.
You don't want to bet on Gino Smith and the Raiders getting seven and a half.
I mean, the Broncos haven't covered a number that big on the road all season.
I don't want to do that.
Okay.
That's a no.
It's five. Rams, cooking against the Cardinals.
No, back doors open.
You don't like that one?
I don't.
Are we really going to do the game with your game?
Are we going to do the Jets?
Jets plus three against the Dauphins?
The two of cold weather?
Just try to ride that one last time?
Just Tyrod Taylor, the resurgent Aaron Glenn?
I kind of love it.
We have a lot of Jets fans in our lives who hate themselves
and hate their team and hate football.
But there's a glimmer of something there
with this current version of the Jets.
So if you look at the last, since week six,
Jets lose to the Broncos by two,
lose to the Panthers by seven,
those are both two winning teams,
beat the Bengals,
beat the Browns,
lose to the Pats by 13 in a game that was competitive for a half,
beaten up by the Ravens,
and then they beat the Falcons last week.
Dolphins.
They got blown out in week nine by the Ravens,
beat the bills,
beat the commanders with your team
when you're still missing dudes.
In Madrid.
And then barely beat the Saints last week.
And it's like, the dolphins are back, are they?
They're five and seven.
They can run the ball.
A chance has been good.
They can run.
They've reinvented themselves
as a running defense
with some pass rushers.
all right fine
fuck it
we'll see the jets
we get two in 40 degree weather
that'll be fun
see at least like
we'll be texting about Trevor Lawrence
and saying bad things about him
but it will be fun to watch Tua
in that cold weather
because they're saying like
it's in the high 30s
and it's the feel like
will be in the low 30s
and what Tua is going to feel like
is getting the F off the football field
by the way he has not been
good.
It's not like two
is the reason
they're winning.
It's not like
he's been killing it.
All right.
So our Ringer 107,
today's Ringer 107
brought to you by a Fanduel
and we have Bears
plus six and a half
against the Packers.
We both think that line's too high.
Texans
plus seven and a half
parlayed with the under
49 and a half
in Kansas City.
We think the Texans
are a live dog.
We love their defense.
Big, big,
big.
offensive line issues for the chiefs 25 degree weather uh this is a three point game three point
game lower scoring just feels fine jaggs plus one and a half against the colts and danny dimes
is uh semi broken tip fibula eagles minus two and a half against the chargers uh we like when the
eagles are on the road because then they're not home with their fans booing them and yelling swear words
at them and then last but not least uh we can never find a fifth
pick we feel great about. So we're going to have to
default to two in relatively cold weather,
40 degrees maybe. Going
against the Jets, plus three
at home, the red hot Jets and won three
of their last five.
Tyrod Taylor, the number one
special teams, DBOA.
Nick Folk! Give that man a ball. Give him a game
ball. This team, all they do is win
games, sort of.
That is our
Ringer 107
in all lines are subject to
change on Fandil's sportsbook.
All right, that was fun.
We're due for like a four-and-one or a five-and-o.
Maybe it'll be this week, thanks to the Jets.
Before we go, I wanted to give you a Thanksgiving story.
I'm here.
Got to talk about food.
Do you have a good Thanksgiving, by the way?
Amazing.
Thank you.
Yes, incredible.
Got to see family.
Went down to Raleigh, North Carolina.
Speaking of great food scenes.
Crawford brothers, new establishment from the Crawford Empire.
Excellent.
Incredible.
Wagu steak.
Incredible.
Wagyu.
So, I had Thanksgiving, had like nine people over, had a bunch of stuff.
My mom made her baked beans.
Our friend Sissy made her cornbread.
I don't even cornbread, like casserole type thing.
It just was like old school.
I don't know how much butter was in it, but it was in a casserole dish?
Yeah, it was a long casserole dish with cornbread.
It almost tasted like cornbread, but more like mashed potato-y kind of cornbread.
Yes. Oh, I'm imagining it.
Yeah, you would have loved it. Incredible.
My mom's baked beans were out of control and also great for the intestines over the next couple of days.
Thanks to her.
We had the sweet potato casserole.
Awesome.
Had that.
We had all kinds of stuff.
Turkey, obviously, cranberry sauce.
But all these sides.
We had so many sides that my wife never brought out the mashed potatoes.
Oh, my gosh.
And we realized after the dinner that the mashed potatoes,
never came out because there was so much food, the mashed potatoes just got a DMP out of nowhere.
It happens.
They were just in the fridge.
Yeah.
There was cream, spinach.
We had all these things.
We had so much stuff that mashed potatoes never made it.
And my wife was like really upset about it because she's like, how do you not have mashed potatoes
on Thanksgiving?
I can't believe that.
And I was like, A, nobody noticed.
B, we were fine.
But she really felt like that was the one thing you had to have.
we also had two different versions of stuffing.
I forgot to mention that.
I was like, no, people don't notice stuffing, not mashed potatoes.
You know how much I adore your wife.
She didn't miss the mashed potatoes.
Right.
She didn't even know they weren't there.
She feels like they're an elemental part.
And yet she also forgot.
Like that's, you know, that tells the whole story.
Well, that this leads me to my point.
Mashed potatoes.
Overrated?
Nine people eating Thanksgiving dinner,
not even realized that Mesh potatoes.
potatoes weren't out there.
Well, I don't know how crucial mashed potatoes are to a Thanksgiving spread.
I just go ahead and say that because of all the other ways you can, you just described like
six side dishes that are each in their own unique way.
Mind-blowing.
You can have, and by the way, mashed potatoes a couple days after, awesome, incredible.
You can make mashed potatoes with scrambled eggs and they have the effect of making the eggs
as light and fluffy.
If you can get the ratio right,
it's in,
and then you get some of that,
some of the,
the momofuku chili crisp
and put it with the mashed potato egg.
In fact,
I go on dinner time live and ask,
Chef Chang to make you mashed potato,
scrambled eggs and get some of that chili crisp.
I'm telling you,
this is an lemon out of 10.
You're going to love it.
We should,
we should done this as a first take segment.
Mashed potatoes need to step up.
They're getting passed by,
All the other potatoes.
B&P.
Mashed potatoes, that's been good for years.
Yeah, I love mashed potatoes.
So you know what I dated about 8 o'clock that night?
Yes.
I made myself a second whole plate of turkey, but I included the mashed potatoes.
I brought them, brought back my friend, and they were happy to be there.
Yeah.
You can put them on a sandwich that they're very, very, you know, versatile, the mashed potato.
You can put them in a lot of different stuff.
Yeah.
I'm proud of you.
That was my Thanksgiving story.
All right.
We're going to take a break.
Thanks, House.
We're going to come back with Matt Bellany.
and then John Sina.
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All right, I had to bring in our guy Matt Bellany from Puck and from our podcast to town, which I love.
It's great.
And it's been bustling lately because there is a Warner Brothers sale that's been happening in slow motion for months and months and months.
You call it a car crash.
I got to say, Bellany, there's too much football going on.
There's too much basketball.
There's movies.
There's screeners.
I'm just not focused on it.
And I know you're covering this on your pod, but I wanted to bring you on.
And you can you just give me the idiots guide?
What's happening?
It seems like there's three suitors.
We have Paramount really wants it.
Netflix allegedly has the inside whatever, but we'll talk about that.
And then Comcast is kind of looming.
Those are the three suitors, correct?
Those are.
And the process right now is they are getting bids.
And the guy running it, David Zazlov, who runs Warner Brothers Discovery, he is the chair of
the committee that's evaluating.
all of these bids and he keeps asking them to sweeten their bid and paramount has said that we believe
we are the easiest path to getting this deal approved they think they have an in with the trump
people because they just bought paramount they settled the lawsuit between trump and cbs they have
they did a big deal for the ufc they're going to be broadcasting the you know the fight on
the white house lawn and they they are making
a bunch of changes at CBS that Trump likes. They're going to release Rush Hour 4 because Trump
wants them to because the director Brett Ratner is doing a documentary about Melania. So they've done
a lot of things. Larry Ellison is friends with Trump and has donated in the past. They believe
they have the easiest path to get this deal approved and that Netflix has a ton of problems
getting this deal approved by the government because in the world of antitrust law, Netflix is the most
powerful streaming service, and they would be buying HBO Max, which is, you know,
depending on what metric you use, third, fourth, biggest streaming service.
So that potentially has some antitrust problems in this country.
That is what Paramount is pushing.
And then today we get this letter that Paramount sent to David Zazlov at Warner saying
that they believe the process is essentially rigged, and that Zazov is pushing this company
towards Netflix because they are going to treat him better.
They're going to give him a cushy job and that they are the sort of preferred buyer here.
Wow, that's a lot.
And you didn't talk about Comcast.
You didn't talk about Comcast because they're involved too.
Comcast is sort of and also ran here so far.
They are in the mix.
They are seen as potentially the company that needs this the most because they have Peacock.
I mean, that's my thing.
They need it the most.
Yes.
And ultimately, many of the analysts that are watching this say the company that needs this the most will ultimately get it.
I slightly disagree.
I think it's a combination of needing it the most and having the most money, which is what the Ellison's have.
They have unlimited money because Larry is worth something like $2.60 to $80 billion depending on the day.
And they ultimately feel like they need it because they only own Paramount and they want to be a scaled competitive.
editor to Netflix, and you can't do that with just the Paramount Plus subscribers.
You put that together with HBO and the Warner Brothers Library, and you've got a pretty
compelling value proposition there. Comcast with Peacock does feel like they need it, though.
Yeah, that feels like a one plus one equals three for a whole bunch of different reasons,
because I think, and Peacock's doing a little bit better. They have the Shivroy Kidnap Show.
They do. Everyone loves that.
Big hit, apparently.
They got the traders.
Yeah.
They got an NBA now?
Right.
They got some NBA.
I feel like right now everything's been kind of quiet from a disruption standpoint
because everybody's got their little spots in the pecking order.
And we're making less TV shows.
We're making less movies.
We're making less everything.
Everybody's being super careful.
Amazon could have been potentially a big disruptor, but they keep reorging.
The disruptor part that I think would be the most.
most interesting to Paramount got it because then it's like, all right, we are stepping into the
boxing ring now. We have a ton of IP. We have money behind us. We have a football relationship.
We have UFC. We have this huge library of all these movies and TV shows. And we can actually
try to take a couple punches here at Netflix. Well, that's why many people think that Netflix is going
so aggressively after this. It's more of a defensive play. Well, that's going to be my question. Yeah. Is this a
defensive player and offensive play by Netflix,
they don't want, they have pole position
right now. They don't want Paramount to
potentially unseat that.
Absolutely. And by the way, add in a little
bit of a personal element. The head of streaming
at Paramount Plus is Cindy Holland
who got fired by Ted Sarandos
at Netflix. Yes. So they
just stole the Duffer brothers away
from Netflix. They did stranger things and they
wanted to re-sign them and then they went over
to Paramount. So there's like... Was it
a steal? Well,
not for what they offered them. They
offered them movies in theaters to get them to go there. Are the Duffer brothers like directors of
the kinds of movies you want to see in theaters? Maybe we'll see. They haven't ever directed one of
those before. I want to see the advanced metrics of getting the people after their transformative
huge show. Yes. That is the HBO. The last 30 years. Yeah. HBO makes that argument all the time
that, you know, we get the greatest show out of these people. And then if Netflix wants to overpay them to
take them away. God bless. Go there. And, you know, it's like the guys that did Game
of Thrones. They got overpaid by Netflix. And what did they do? They did that
zero body problem. What was that show? Well, they did that one, but they also
did the Garfield show, which was really good. I'm still, I still like those guys. But yeah,
they're probably not going to top Game of Thrones. The show that Tom from,
Tom from Successions. Oh, the one that just, that just air. Oh, right. I have not seen that yet.
I'm still okay with those guys.
It's just like when you're paying people
for past performance.
They paid them Game of Thrones money
to do zero body problem,
which was not successful.
Yeah.
Well, it's interesting because
from a Netflix standpoint,
they've never bought anything, right?
And they've kind of been proud of that.
And there's this whole road,
and I went on your podcast
and talked about this about media mergers
and why do people even do these?
We had a whole conversation about this.
Netflix said this at the Bloomberg conference that you were at.
The co-CEO, Greg Peter, said there is not a good track record of media mergers.
It's a terrible track record.
It is.
It just is.
It's terrible.
And you're also assimilating different cultures.
You're bringing in executives with their ideas.
There's always too many people.
You end up doing a lot of layoffs on a lot of cuts.
And it's going great for Netflix.
So to me, I haven't talked to anybody from there about why are you going?
after this. I'm not even sure how much I believe, but it seems totally defensive to me because
people are worried about Paramount. But as somebody who's a creator who makes stuff, you kind of
almost want Paramount to get it because now you would have like, now you have two people kind of
going at it against each other for content, which would be, I think, great for everybody.
Well, it would merge. It would take the legacy studios from five down to four if you merge
Paramount and Warner Brothers.
Now, they argue that they're going to
increase the number of movies and put
investment into that. But ultimately,
you merge these services,
if you merge the studios,
it's one fewer buyers
in the marketplace.
But if you put Netflix over Warner
Brothers, you could get,
Warner Brothers as a theatrical
studio could entirely go away.
HBO Max could
entirely go away. I mean,
it's that kind of a merger.
where the fundamental playing field of Hollywood would change significantly.
Well, I know you've talked about this,
but if Netflix got Warner Brothers, what happens to HBO?
Two scenarios.
One is it goes away.
They absorb the subscribers.
They transition them.
I mean, that's idiotic.
You can't do that.
Or make it a tile on Netflix,
where you go to Netflix and there's a little box that says,
you love HBO, click, everything you'd ever want to watch on HBO.
That's one scenario.
What Netflix is telling people is that they would operate them separately and that there
would be an HBO Max service.
There would be a Netflix service.
Maybe they have the same back end.
Maybe they don't.
But that the brands and services would remain separate.
I don't know if I believe that.
That's the kind of thing you say if you are trying to win regulatory approval of your
big merger.
But the goal of buying this is not to buy HBO Max necessarily.
The goal is to suck up all of those Warner Brothers franchise movies.
I mean, Netflix would own Batman.
They would own Wonder Woman.
They would own Minecraft.
All of these big franchises would become Netflix movies.
And maybe they put some of them in theaters.
Maybe they don't.
Maybe they do it for a couple of years just so everyone gets off their back.
And Ted Sarandos can be a hero around town for releasing movies.
But then maybe they backslide.
I mean, that's the goal.
Or they take HBO Max and they spin it off and sell it.
There's a scenario where they buy this company or the studio and streaming side of the company at Warner.
And then they take the studio and sell HBO Max to Comcast.
So then they can kind of take what they want and Netflix can take what they want.
That's one scenario.
So that's a library IP play.
They decide they don't need HBO.
They actually sell it off to make some of the money back.
And they're basically getting library and cockpock and paramed.
I mean, paramount.
Yes.
I mean, that is very complicated because obviously, what is the value of HBO?
It's the brand and it's all the subscribers, but it's mostly the content that is on HBO,
which presumably Netflix would want to take for themselves.
It's all those Warner's movies.
It's, you know, the full library of HBO shows.
You could watch The Sopranos anytime you want it on Netflix.
Like, that is kind of the value.
And if they sell HBO Max to another company,
What goes with it?
Some of the library, all of it, you know, rights to the library, it's very complicated.
So we could get our scenario where they sell it to Apple.
And we finally have Apple buying HBO, which should have happened 10 years ago.
Or you have Comcast buying it and just merging HBO and Peacock and calling it HBO because nobody knows what Peacock is.
Exactly.
And the key element there is that HBO Max is global and Peacock is only domestic.
So Comcast would immediately become a global streaming player, and currently they are not.
And Comcast has some other advantages, right?
With the they have the wiring for cable and these things that maybe could help them in some other ways.
Broadband is a declining business, but they also have theme parts.
Not for old people.
Not for old people.
But, you know, Elon wants to make everybody a Starlink customer instead of broadband.
But, you know, the, but remember,
Universal has the theme parks.
So that would be synergistic with the Warner IP if they were to get it.
Now, Warner IP is tied up at six flags.
If you go to your local six flags, there's like a Superman coaster, things like that.
But presumably there would be IP plays that Universal could use in the parks
and ultimately transition all those heroes over the Universal Parks, which is a big
business and growing for them.
Well, the scariest thing you said was that HBO would get absorbed in a Netflix and basically
be a little carousel.
tile. I think that reminds me of like when going back in the early 2000s with wrestling
when WW bought WCW and basically just assimilated the roster and just everything got lost
and it just didn't work. And I, you know, I feel like there's an HBO audience. It's a distinct
brand. And I just think that's really hard to fold into something else. I hope that's not how
this plays out. Yeah, but there is a lot of overlap in those customers. I mean, you, and most people
who have HBO also have Netflix, right?
Yeah, but don't you think the type of content you would expect from HBO that you might
like veers a little bit different than the type that's on Netflix?
Oh, of course.
I mean, HBO is still the best brand in television because it stands for something.
Netflix stands for many different things to many different people and it's dependent on the
algorithm and it's not, it just means television, which is great for Netflix because it's
allowed them to grow to more than 300 million subscribers,
but it doesn't mean what HBO means.
You and I both give a show a chance on HBO because it's HBO,
when we would not give that same show a chance if it was on CBS or if it was on even Netflix.
I give every show a chance.
I am not a show snob.
But perfect example is the pit.
Did you watch the pit?
I didn't watch the pit.
Okay.
But the pit won the Emmy this year for Outstanding.
drama series. The pit is a fairly conventional, extremely well done, fairly conventional
medical doctor show. If that aired on CBS, no way it wins the M. No way it even is nominated
for the top M. But because it aired on HBO Max and had the premature of that brand, people saw
it differently and it not only was nominated, but won the top MEC. Well, I wonder what would
happen with The Beast and Me if it was on HBO instead of Netflix.
Because I think Netflix has had some really good stuff this year.
And, you know, like even adolescence, I thought that Garfield show was excellent.
Like, I think if you took the best 10 things that have been on Netflix, they could go toe
to toe with any other streamers.
It's just they also have a lot of other stuff.
Yeah, look at the volume.
I mean, that's what HBO always says is that they have such a higher hit rate.
And I don't necessarily mean hits that are super popular, but hits that are good.
good and that might last. Yeah, higher batting average. Yeah, higher batting average. And Netflix
has so much content and so much garbage. They also have some good stuff. And then the definition
of good and garbage is different for every person. I would argue HBO has some garbage too.
They do. They do. And when they miss. Especially when they have the discovery documentaries and all that,
all that stuff that they're putting on there. Yes. And when HBO misses, they really miss. Like,
But to me, HBO is more of like a, they're like a closer.
They're like throwing 60 innings.
They're coming in to pitch the ninth.
They have an incredible K walk ratio.
And Netflix is trying to be a 250-inning starter.
I just think that it's apples and oranges.
I don't know how that fits in together.
I do think it's interesting for Comcast, though, because that's the one,
if I had to rank them for how would this shake up the landscape,
Netflix getting in is, I think, the worst-case scenario.
Because then it's just
They become like a monolith
I just don't like that
Streaming wars are over
I mean
Yeah that's
One of the analysts
Wrote exactly that this week
If Netflix gets Warner Brothers
Like it is over
It is like
The ultimate flex
The ultimate one
I mean you made the Ben Affleck
Uh
I said that on the phone to you today
It was Ben Affleck
Except in the Batman part
After he won the Oscar and Argo
And he's just like fuck it
Yeah
I'm invincible
Now I'm just gonna be Batman
I can do anything
I cannot do wrong
It just
But it's also interesting
that Netflix thinks they need it.
If they're real about this,
if they are not just going through the motions
to raise the price,
if they think that they are,
they need this,
then there's something going on at Netflix
that we don't know about
if they think they need this.
Because all signs point to a lot of growth potential,
margins are great.
You know, they have good shows, good content.
Like what's going on there if they feel like
they need the HBO library this badly?
yeah i mean you could look at it the other way and you go you got to keep growing even during times
when you don't think you should keep growing i saw this happen at ESPN in the 2011 1213 range they
thought they were invincible they thought they were going to have this lead forever and within five
years it flipped on them and all of a sudden they were scrambling and the subs were going backwards
and it was all because the decisions they didn't make in 11 and 12 and 13 when they really could have
consolidated. And then they
almost made some misguided ones, right?
Like, I don't think buying Fox
was a good idea by Disney
at all. I don't. Especially
when there's, I think, better stuff coming.
I've been a little more forgiving on that one.
I think that it's a little underrated what they
did get. And we talk about Disney
in a little bit of a different light
since they did buy Fox.
They would have scale problems
and they would perhaps be
in more of a Comcast situation
if they did not have
all of that content from the FX networks.
They wouldn't have Avatar for their theatrical slate.
They wouldn't have the X-Men and all of those Fox Marvel properties that they're
going to exploit for the next decade.
There's a lot of stuff that they got from Fox content-wise.
Now, did they probably overpay and did it load them up with debt that may have
made them unable to do other things that they should have done like by a video game company
or do some of these other things?
Maybe that's a better argument.
but on a pure content play,
they did get a lot of stuff from that.
Or you could have argued they could have invested that money in other places.
They could have spent even more on sports.
Could have bought electronic arts.
They could have bought a number of other things
that would have been potentially additive to their business long term.
Or they could have waited for a Warner Brothers scenario.
Yeah, so the paramount piece of this,
if they did get this,
if they do pull this hostile takeover,
This is where I need you because I just don't understand.
Like, hostile takeovers, it seems like it's something out of a season seven succession episode.
Totally.
How often does this work?
How legal is it?
Is this going to end up in a scenario where just everybody's suing each other for the next five years?
And nothing happens until 2034?
Well, this is the opening shot of potential litigation.
This is a pre-litigation letter that was sent today from Paramount to 1.4.
Warner Discovery saying, look, guys, we're on to you.
We saw that one of your executives was meeting with regulators in Europe.
And there was a German newspaper report saying that they were lobbying for them to try
to block this deal.
If the Ellison's have the inside track in the U.S., Warner Discovery was supposedly going
to Europe to try to head it off there.
And they're like, that's not fair.
If you are in bed with Netflix, I mean, Ted Saranos, the head of Netflix and David
Zazlov at Warner's, they were at U.S.
match together, not, you know, two months ago, they're friends.
If this is being directed to one company over us, we are going to sue you.
And that letter was directed at the independent directors of the company, the people on the board
who are not hands selected by the investors there, they are the ones that are afraid of getting
sued because if they go along with a plan that does not serve the shareholders,
but serves management, then they are liable if they are sued.
Now, I'm not saying that's correct.
You could argue that Netflix just put in the most money.
They're offering the most money here from all the reporting.
And if that's the case, then maybe they're just going to go with the highest bidder.
But if there is something sinister going on, there could be litigation.
And even if Paramount just thinks that there's something going on, there could be litigation
that spurs out of this.
I doubt there's anything sinister going on.
You do.
Yeah, that seems really improbable to me.
Do you know David Zasloff?
Huh?
Do you know David Zazloff?
I know.
He's been a good foil for you over the years.
He loves the spotlight.
He wants to stay at this company so badly.
He loves that he gets to have dinner with Charlize Theron and a bunch of people at his house.
He wants to stay there.
And Netflix from my reporting and others, like they're saying, yeah, you can stay at Warner Brothers.
If he splits this company as he wants to and it turns down Paramount and splits it
and then sells off the studio separately,
he gets to stay in that chair longer.
And there are other incentives involved
that Paramount is referencing,
and I'm writing about in my Puck newsletter,
that suggests he is doing this to keep himself at the company.
Not saying that's true,
but that's the suggestion at least.
And if that's the case,
that may not be in the best interest of the shareholders.
So Netflix, the other piece would be the sports,
that there's some sports stuff that comes with,
Warner Brothers, too, on top of the IP, and Netflix is obviously taking sports way more seriously
and dabbling left and right. Yeah, they have March Madness. They would have some baseball.
They'd have the Savannah bananas that we all love. They do not have NBA. They do not have football.
So the big two are not coming with this deal. But Netflix is already getting some football.
They are. Yeah. So the case if you're Netflix is you're blocking Paramount from being like your
one B competitor like that you're just going to be fighting for the next 15 years who has
endless pockets and now you're spending more with them combined with you're doing awesome right now
that doesn't necessarily mean you shouldn't keep trying to grow I would think those are the two reasons
you would do this yeah or some problem that we don't know about that you know growth is lagging
or they're seeing engagement on their existing content or they feel like there's a cap on how big
they can grow with the current assets they have.
I don't see that one.
I feel like more people have Netflix every year.
I know,
they do.
It keeps going out.
You kind of like have to have Netflix.
If the problems were really significant,
they would have to disclose them to their shareholders.
So it's not like there's some ticking time bomb there that they're just not telling us
about.
But, you know,
they're doing this for a reason.
And if it's not just purely defensive and it is offensive, it may,
there may be some kind of stress point where they say,
okay, we've tried to make movies.
for 10 years now, and we can't get much traction on our movies.
Is that because you need to have IP in your library to make movies that people care about?
They see the numbers on the movies that they license from other studios.
If you go on Netflix most nights, the top movies are from other studios.
It's Shrek, it's minions, it's, you know, the Warner Brothers movies like Superman that they just
license over on Netflix.
And they're seeing that.
And so they have the data.
And they're probably saying like, if we owned all that, it would be so much easier
and so much more of a growth generator for engagement than having to license them out
and get, you know, get rigged over the coals every few years on these licensing deals.
Maybe that's what they're thinking.
Yeah, I don't.
I see your point.
I don't know if I agree with it.
But the one piece that I think like if I was running Netflix would worry me,
They have a movie right now called Train Dreams
That's fucking awesome
It really is
It's really, really good
I really liked it
And it's on Netflix
And I watched it on the PGA
ScreenRap I got
I didn't realize it was on Netflix
But it is on Netflix
And it just feels like that movie
Should be a bigger deal
Because that's like
Everything you'd want an Oscar contender
It's kind of the it's a little like Coda
A couple years ago
I don't know who made it
I have no vested interest in it
I just really liked it.
And it's like that to me, it's like if you're making, yeah, if you're making movies and
Netflix cares about having movies, like, that's an example of that movie should be huge
on Netflix.
And I'm not sure why it isn't.
It's doing okay on Netflix for that kind of movie.
But that's a movie they bought at Sundance and they paid like 20 million.
I believe it was 10 million for that movie at Sundance.
I saw it at Toronto at the film festival, loved it.
I would love for movies like that to get theaters.
But Netflix is not in that business.
so it didn't get a theater.
I think that movie could have done okay
if it had gotten a theatrical release.
It's a really beautiful-looking movie.
That's the other element here
is whether Netflix will shut down Warner Brothers
as a theatrical studio
if they get this deal.
They're saying no.
The problem is with movies now,
movie theaters are back in a real way
and people like going to the movies.
And Netflix is smart.
And if they see like audience drifting a little bit this way,
they're going to want to keep a piece of that
Well, I said maybe. Maybe, maybe not. I mean, Netflix has been pretty consistent over the last 10 years of trying to kneecap movie theaters at every possible opportunity.
Ted has said over and over again, it's not our model. It's not our model. We do not put movies in theaters. We want people to watch movies on Netflix. Now, they make concessions for certain filmmakers. They give them a two-week release for the Knives Out movies. They give Greta Gerwig some IMAX.
Like, that's what they do to get these projects.
But they would prefer that we all watch their movies on Netflix, not in theaters.
And that is very different from the Warner Brothers HBO Max relationship, where they would
very much like us all to go to the theater first.
And then on home video, if we want to watch it there, fine.
So how that shakes out is a key component here.
No, but you can't tell me, like, if Netflix had one battle after another and it was in theaters
for three weeks and then went right to Netflix.
Like, Netflix wouldn't sign up for that.
I think that's where we're going.
Two weeks is there.
Whatever it is.
Yeah.
And it would not, because it's two weeks, it would not get a national release because
the theater chains will not play movies from Netflix if they don't get a proper
theatrical release.
So one battle after another would have been a Netflix movie for most of people who saw.
Yeah, so that, that would have hurt one battle after another.
If I forget one battle after another, what about the next Batman or the one after that?
of these movies, they're advertising themselves as come see this on IMAX.
Yeah.
March, March 3rd.
That's the thing is like Netflix is saying we will honor the theatrical release for
these Warner's movies, maybe now, but maybe not after a couple years.
The best thing for Netflix in the world would be is if there was a brand new A-list actor
playing Batman movie that was only available on Netflix, they would love that because
everybody would watch it and it would become a phenomenon and something people talk about.
The whole knock on Netflix is that it's just a sea of slop and you don't remember what you
actually watch. They can't create franchises out of their content. It's very difficult for them
because these franchises we know as brands, for the most part, are theatrical movie experiences
that we got up off our asses, went to the theater, saw there, and remember. And when there was
marketing everywhere for these movies.
The rewatchables.
How many rewatchables have been Netflix originals?
I don't know.
You know?
Extraction?
Maybe?
Well,
triple frontier.
We've been saving.
Okay.
So you did triple frontier and you did extraction.
No, we haven't done it yet.
Oh, you haven't?
Okay.
We're waiting.
But my point is, I know that you do mostly old movies, but the reason why those
movies...
We don't need to do anything for the last five, six years.
But the reason those movies are rewatchables are because they're going to
movies and you love them, but because you remember them and they were moments in the culture
that lasted in your head. When you said you were doing weird science, I remember the billboards
and marketing for weird science when I was a kid. I remember that experience of going to the theater
and seeing that movie. And that's what Netflix is missing out on. And they have a hard time
of that. So maybe if they buy Warner's, they'll change their model and they'll put movies like that in
theaters. My guess is they want. They had happy
Gilmore, too, and it felt like everybody
and their brother watched that movie in the first three days.
Totally. But you know what? That's a
sequel. That's a sequel to a
theatrical hit. True.
Well, we'll see. Jay Kelly will be
a good limit test for this, right?
Two big stars.
Jay Kelly's a small movie.
I know, but George Clooney and Adam Sandler on the cover
of your Netflix car.
So that's not nothing. Yeah, they didn't
see. You know, they don't look up. Had
Leo and Jennifer Lawrence
similar type situation.
It was an Oscar movie
that had two big stars
that they could put on the tile
and that movie did really well for Netflix.
But then again,
Maestro didn't do great for Netflix
and that had Bradley Cooper.
So they've had star-driven movies.
That was not, that movie,
it was very well done,
but I wouldn't say it was a great hang.
No.
The thing with Netflix is
they're always going to keep moving
and they're not going to stay stationary,
which is how all these big media companies
I think I've gotten into trouble over the years.
If you look back at anybody,
it's always like, we're doing great.
Don't change a thing.
And that's when you have trouble.
Even like Spotify,
like being here the last,
you know,
last five and a half years.
Like they're constantly like,
what's next,
what's next,
what's that?
We weren't even doing video three years ago.
But they were like,
this is coming.
We got to do this.
And I think that's how the
company's thing.
The analogy of,
you know,
thinking you can do no wrong.
The analogy for Spotify there would be,
let's just buy up a bunch of
of podcast studios and pay a bunch of stars to do podcasts because we're freaking Spotify and
we're making so much money we don't know what to do with it and look at that you the ringer
worked and then what else yeah but i to defend that strategy which was great for me in the ringer
obviously yeah they were trying to put the footprint in a in a podcast right and you know at the time
they mistakenly thought it was defensible but it was a mistake thinking that celebrities
would lead to the same way
it would be with TVs or movies
where you get a celebrity
that would drive an audience
and what you eventually realize
is a good podcast drives an audience.
It's the chemistry of the host.
How dare you speak of the royals that way?
But, you know,
and then as everything's shifting to video,
I think some of the things they bought
made a lot more sense
than the 2010s than 2020s.
True.
No, they absolutely put a flag down
in the podcast space.
Yeah, they're spending money.
Yeah, my point is,
they overspent on an area that they were confident enough to go into because of all the
success they had led to the town with Matt Bellany. It did, absolutely. But then my, but,
but, but then the, you know, the Netflix situation right now is are they doing the same? Are they
about to drop 60, 70 billion dollars on a theatrical oriented studio and a streamer that is
overlapping with what they already have? Yeah, it's interesting. I mean, they have so much money. I thought
the fact that it was a mostly cash offer?
Yeah, about 85% cash, we are told.
And then the rest in stock.
I was surprised by that because there's stocks, awesome.
Anyway, so when do you think, does this play out before the end of the year?
How long does it go?
Warner's wants it to, but keep in mind, this isn't the end.
Even if they accept an offer and start negotiating with exclusively with one party,
anyone can come in at any time.
Like, anyone, if there's some super billionaire out there just waiting,
for this all to play out.
And then they accept an offer, start negotiating the deal.
And someone comes in and says, wait a second, I'll give you more money.
That's, I'll give you way more money than they're doing.
They can, they can go with that offer like down the line.
Excuse me?
Neil Mohan, just got, just throwing his hat in the ring out of nowhere with YouTube.
If YouTube did it, I think the government would probably have a word with them.
The merger of the number one and number two streaming services.
probably not going to work.
So Pluto and
Tubi,
Tube is Fox.
Tube is Fox.
Maybe Tube buys Pluto.
But Tube Flubo,
that was a joke on hacks.
Roku.
Oh,
Roku.
Charlie Collier just comes flying in off the top rope.
I haven't looked at their valuation lately,
but I don't think it's quite big enough
to justify this kind of expense.
This is not.
easy. This is not Paramount sold for about $8 billion. This thing is going to sell for between
60 and 70 billion, probably. It's just an entirely different animal and there are only a few
entities or people that can afford to make that kind of investment. Maybe it would be the guy that
bought the Dodgers. The Dodgers. Mark Walter. The Dodgers. Yeah, he's just, he's going nuts.
Yeah, then they could air the games there. I heard he's tiptoeing around some other LA assets right down
too. Oh, really? Are you breaking
some news here? Well, just
keep an eye on. Keep an eye on him. I don't know if he's
done. Not hard to follow the breadcrumbs
on it. All right.
Matt Bellany, we can listen
slash watch you on the town
Monday, Wednesday, Friday.
Your social
clips are out there sometimes.
Sometimes. And listen. I try to get Lucas
a better camera. I know.
The town on video, 26.
It's coming. It's coming.
Is producer Craig going to have like his own like
producer cam? We should. It really should. I would prefer the camera be on him most of the time and
not me. Well, at least you figured out your camera angle finally in the BS podcast. I know. It's not like
up my nose. Yeah. Matt Bellany, great Steve. You too. Thank you. I can't believe this hasn't
happened before. John Sten is here. So we won't be able to say that after this because it's happening.
It's happening. And it'll be like, hey, welcome back. Or you're never invited here again. One of those
to me. Well, I don't know whether you're the 17-time champ or the 14-time champ,
because I've never, once they split the belts, it just became super confusing me.
You won the WWF-W-E title, the lineage title. That was 14 times.
You might be asking the wrong guy.
But then you won the Universal one three times, which I think used to be the old WCWNWA title
that moved over. You might be able to say any stat, and I'd be like, yeah.
Well, I'm going to count the 14 because I count.
them for the, for the Boston titles for the century. Because we won six with the
Pats, four Red Sox, two Celtics, one Bruins, and then you're 14, that's 27.
If the NFL absorbs the AFL, isn't it still a Super Bowl trophy?
So we'll count the other three. That's great.
No, but I don't know. I'm just trying to, I don't know. I don't know.
If the NBA absorbs the ABA, isn't the NBA trophy still the NBA trophy? I think
Yeah, you're right. I think you're right. I think you've, it's 14. I think the three are over there.
We can semantics all day long. I think what's important about championships in our business is it is pretty, it is the business card to show you're at the pinnacle of your profession. So regardless of like the origin story of it or whatever, when we deem this leather and gold, this thing that is manufactured, like, okay, this is it. You know, it's, um,
it's it's not as muddy water as like boxing but it's it is it is the symbol of like hey we're
placing a pretty sizable investment on you well and it's the culmination i mean you especially
like you played football late 90s you do some bodybuilding you were in that there's like uh on
youtube that discovery show where they did about what was that op w or i don't remember ultimate pro wrestling
yeah it was uh here in orange county yeah so you're trying to figure out what was i ever yeah
All that stuff.
My God.
But within five years, you're the champ.
But I was feeling like when somebody wins a champ the championship the first time,
you can kind of see the disbelief in their face, even though, you know, maybe you know it's going to happen.
But just like, holy shit, this actually happened.
And I did it.
And I climbed the mountain and I'm here.
Well, that's an interesting perspective.
If you saw, I just was able to perform one last time in the TD Garden in Boston.
And on that night, I was able to have a match for the Intercontinental Championship,
which I won for the very first time.
And the look on my face is like, what's going on?
So I don't know if that wears off.
That's an interesting perspective because every person I've seen when they win it for the first time
has some sort of like look of surreal appreciation.
but it was the same look I had a few weeks ago
when I won the Intercontinental Championship
for the first time in my 23 years
I've never had a chance to go for it.
Well, it's like think about it,
especially because wrestling's been in everyone's lives
from day one, right?
So, like, I think about my son.
That's what we're trying for.
Well, my son had the championship belt
when he was six, seven, you know,
and doing moves and beating up a pillow
and pinning the pillow and then doing this.
And then you think when you're an adult,
it's actually happening.
But even like when Hogan won, when he beat the Sheik,
everybody is the same look in their face.
Like, I can't believe in.
The crowd's going nuts.
Yeah, it's weird because you do make a good point.
Like, it is part of the curated experience of entertainment,
yet it happens.
I also think there might be,
but I don't think this is our business particular, maybe.
Nothing truly happens until it does.
Right.
There's a lot of stuff that can happen
between even the bell ringing and the bell ringing again that can change outcomes or
whatever.
And these are moments, hopefully anyone who's involved in WWEs, you know, thought about their
entire life.
And when they happen, there probably is a wave of surrealism that comes over, you know?
What were you like, 27?
Man, again.
There's 2005.
How old are you in 2005?
Like 27, 28.
Your late 20s at that point.
Yeah, we'd have to work.
But you'd only been in the business.
for like five years.
Yeah, I don't,
so I don't know how much that matters.
I don't know how much I care about that anymore.
I think...
I'm just saying it happened fast.
You went from, like, trying,
oh, it would be nice if I could get a WWE contract
to be in the channel.
I'm holding the belt.
Yeah, that is a pretty fast...
At a WrestleMania.
Yeah, yeah.
But in all fairness,
in the class I was brought up
and in the time, you know,
life is a whole lot of luck.
And I was very lucky.
going to be brought in at the time than I was brought in.
So many tectonic changes were going on in WWE.
I was in a very gifted class.
Yeah, you were.
There were members of my class that were made champion far before me with just about
or a little less experience.
So it was just a case of good timing.
And I think opportunity is a lot about good timing.
And it's just a matter of what you do with it.
Yeah, it was such a strange era for WWB because it was like,
It's coming off the most scorching hot time in the history of the company, right?
You have this run with the rock and Stone Cold.
And this whole...
He defeats WCW.
Yeah, well, it's the whole mindset of like attitude and racy programming and competition.
And then it's all kind of washed away.
Like it was, we're kind of in the middle of what another boom in wrestling.
No question.
You know, there's multiple avenues of competition.
There's multiple outlets of programming out there.
WWE has so much programming out there.
And to somebody like me who just doesn't have a lot of time to invest to everything,
it's like, man, I don't know how we sustain all this,
but to our consumer they want more.
The more we can give them, the better.
People are actually going to sit down and listen to this
because this hopefully is going to drop some breadcrumbs on December 13th.
Right.
And they want more.
They want to hear more.
If I could sit down with you for five hours,
I have a feeling our consumers would hang in there for it.
It's just we're in another golden age.
You know, I certainly won was when it nationalized
and WWF was put on cable television.
I think that would Hogan on the cover of Sports Illustrated.
I think that was one.
I think the attitude era and the height of WCWF competition
was another one.
Yeah.
And I think here we are in yet another golden age, like a boom.
There was a little mini one when you and punk were feuding.
I remember that was the first year of Grandland
but I felt like
the internet had gotten really good at trying to read
between the lines of what was real
what was not real and it became like this own game
it wasn't as big as the things you mentioned
but something, it's definitely some sort of little mini-era
So like a moment of relevance is different
like that unbelievable night
that film that punk had was amazing
and when it gets picked up by genuine sports outlets
like oh man he really did something great
Yeah.
Well, it was good for you, too.
I think it was good for everyone.
Yeah.
The Montreal screw job is another moment.
It's like, wow, this got picked up by a lot of folks, and it was a moment.
But it was kind of in a lull in the business.
And I mean, like, boom, I mean, like, sustained bull market.
Like, wrestling is on everybody's mind from 1984 to, like, 1988.
and then from like 1997 to 2001.
Yeah.
And now it's been like, I think COVID helped us out a lot.
We were the only program that ran during the pandemic.
Yeah, that's a good point.
To give fans entertainment.
Right.
But it's probably been like 18, 19 to 25.
Like it's grown exponentially, the better TV deals, being able to reach more global audience,
having a crop of new stars and having the old stars kind of fade and transition.
but, like, having the bullpen stacked.
Yeah.
I think is helped.
And the fact that now it's relatively easy to be a performer on TV,
and I'm saying comparatively speaking,
before there was only one Monday Night Raw with two hours of broadcast time on it.
Now there's a bunch of different shows.
TNA just announced another TV deal.
Like, there's a lot of stuff going on.
So there's a way for you as a performer to put your business card out there.
You know, like now has been, it's been a great time to be a wrestling fan,
and it's been a great time to be a wrestling.
Yeah, it's a good point because, like, when you came up, there was way less shows.
WCW got integrated in, and there just wasn't enough time for everybody.
Everybody was pretty miserable for the most part.
So, WWE had birthed Smackdown, so from two hours to four hours.
But we absorbed ECW and WCWC, absorbed like 250 contract talent for four hours of television.
With no real plan.
Because you're just kind of adding, it would be like if the NBA,
It just doubled the amount of players in the league
but had the same amount of teams or something.
Yeah.
So it's, and we went through a name change.
Get the F out.
So we became WWE.
The XFL failed for the first time.
Yeah.
Stone Cold Steve Austin was fired.
The Rock went to Hollywood.
Triple H was hurt.
The Undertaker was hurt.
Like, people don't understand,
especially performers now.
It's very difficult to tell them.
You know, we just did Petco Park
with like 46,000 people in it.
We sold seats that didn't have a ring
you. You had to watch on a monitor, but you would say you were there.
Right.
Man, I remember doing, it was formerly known as the MCI Center in D.C.
where Dave Batista's wife sang the national anthem.
And there were 1,200 people in the building, not 1,200 tickets sold, 500 tickets sold,
1,200 people.
Wow.
In where I'm essentially going to have my last match.
You know, like, it hasn't always been this prosperous.
And it really warms my heart.
to be able to look around the arenas and see the place jam-packed and the people excited,
to see the promotion thriving, to see the talent really do well for themselves in a
performative aspect and certainly like a financial aspect. They're getting paid a whole lot more
than I was. But instead of like shaking my fifth and saying, well, back in the day we only
made this much, I think that's a great way to show like, I just want to leave the place better than
I found it. Yeah. So now we got a bunch of millionaires.
because the company's doing well.
Like, it's leveled up.
It is leveled up in every aspect.
Sports families are bringing us in.
ESPN's welcomed us into our family.
Netflix has welcomed us into their family.
Like, we're out there all the time.
We used to have to struggle to get, like, a good time slot in Germany.
And you have to do all these international TV deals.
But now we're just on Netflix.
So that helps global touring, which can keep demand high in the states.
Like, it does so much, which can keep.
the business hot for longer, which we can pay talent better and create more stars.
It's all really, really, really good.
I'm just happy to be able to see the beginning of this snowball get kicked downhill and
see where it goes.
You also seem like you have like four different generations of fans at this point, right?
You have like people like me, anyone over 50 who were there pre, who remember like pre cable,
who remember, like, when Killer Khan broke Andre the giant's ankle
and when Subisco turned on Bruno, all that stuff.
Sure.
And then you have the kids that kind of came up during that Hogan era,
that they got indoctrinated that.
Then you have the kids.
Attitude era.
Then the kids from Rockstone called that era.
And then basically your era through punk,
and those people are now adults.
They're bringing their kids.
Yeah.
Or they're bringing, or they're going after college and they can afford tickets now.
Yeah.
So it's just, it just feels like it's.
gone and gone out and on.
And I also think that's what's great about the business.
Like, you're right, it does touch a lot of hearts and minds, and everyone has their story.
Everybody remembers, like, their one moment from that era of like, no, but nothing was better
than this.
Right.
Comparatively speaking, I think a lot of people view Saturday Night Live like this.
Saturday Night Live is like, yo, no, this cast was the best, and this skit was the best,
and this moment was the best.
And then someone else would be like, how can you see?
say that when this year was the best and this cast and remember this skit they've done so much
great work and they've had so many rosters of stacked comedians that they do have eras and they
do have like the best of this era and it is it is zeitgeist generational comedy so like if it
if it moves you in a certain way you can watch some of those skits back with somebody who's never
seen him and be like they may not it may not resonate you know what I'm saying just like if you
watch Hogan Sheik was the first match I ever saw that hooked me.
But you show, you know, a young mind who watches the way the business is now,
you show them that match back, it might not resonate with them.
You know what I'm saying?
It's just, it was just, it was what I needed to see at the time.
Well, they always say with SNL that whoever, whenever you were watching the show
when you were 13, that's what you thought your favorite cast was.
And wrestling's probably somewhere between 10 and 13 that those, when you were all in.
I remember watching with my son and I knew it was going to happen because he was like,
this physical kid, like, very, very expressive.
And I was like, he's going to get hooked.
And we took him to the Staples for one of the shows.
That was it.
Man.
And you became his guy immediately.
Well, he doesn't watch enough wrestling.
No, you were like the little kid catnip.
Thank you so much.
I showed you two pictures that you had with my son when he was like six.
I was trying to think, like, how many pictures do you think you've taken with little kids?
So is it over a million?
I don't know.
I think like 22, 23 straight years of you posing with...
I could say as many as I possibly can.
Because if there was anyone that I couldn't or anyone that I refused,
I'd like to think that I had good reason for it.
And I don't expect anybody to understand that.
But like, to this point now, and I'm not saying those pictures are over.
I hope they continue.
Definitely not over.
As a conduit to bring new minds to the business.
But I would like to think from the second I was asked to take the first picture to right now,
I have taken as many as I possibly can.
Well, and you're always nice, too, because I was asking.
Not always nice.
I'm a human being.
No, with the kids, you understood the game.
Yeah.
And the kids are like, during the headlights freezing.
I don't think that's understanding the game.
I think that's understanding the life.
Like, the conduct of some adults, I'm huge on respect.
It's one of my core values I wear it on my hat,
sometimes is extremely self-serving.
And I don't mind that.
We're all out to do our own thing.
Kids are so honest.
They're honest.
And you can see when an adult wants to approach you
and the kid does not.
And you can see when a kid wants to approach you
and doesn't have the courage.
Or if that kid is courageous
and comes up to approach you,
even if it's,
even if their social skills aren't honed,
even if they're disrespectful.
Like I got to give a tip of the cap
to a young person.
person who is confident and self enough to come up and convey like, hey, I'd like to do this.
I'd like a picture.
And there have been some moments where, like, parents are shoving their kids in me where the child
does not want this.
It is a vehicle for the parents.
And sure, the parent may be thinking someday, you'll wish you took the picture, but that's not
someday.
We're now.
Yeah.
And that kid is not want any part of it.
And I'll politely try to get to the kid's height and explain that, like, it's okay
if you don't want to do this, it's fine.
in those situations I want to try to take seconds I don't have.
I have barely a few seconds to speak with adults
who come at any sort of relationship agenda
from a selfish perspective.
That's all.
I was in the best situation.
When my kids were little,
my daughter's two years older than my son,
and we would go backstage to some of the WD stuff,
and she would be the handler trying to get photos for him.
Nobody could say no to her.
It wasn't a parent.
And the wrestlers were always like,
This is great.
Yeah, yeah.
I'll do it.
What's interesting about your career is, I got to ask.
Nobody retires in professional wrestling or boxing.
Nobody but me.
Nobody.
So why are you different?
Why is this actually happening?
Because...
Why should I believe you're not going to be back in three years from now?
You don't have to believe anything you don't want to.
What I've been able to do over 23 years is turn a lot of.
of non-believers around.
Yeah.
And that is by my actions.
I don't expect anyone to believe that, like, hey, I'm retiring.
Oh, no.
The precedent hasn't been said.
The precedent for wrestling retirement is like a wrestling wedding.
Like, something's going to go wrong in the wedding.
No one ever retires.
Good point.
Has there ever been a successful wrestling wedding?
Never, never.
So I understand the skepticism.
And you'll know I'm serious when I never come back.
Why do you think the rock kept coming back?
other than money?
Because he left a bunch of times and became a pretty big movie star and didn't need to come back.
So it's difficult there because you're asking me to think for somebody else.
Yeah.
I know that I want to do it forever.
I can speak from my perspective.
Yeah.
This is something I've heard a lot this past year.
Man, you're going out in your own terms.
That's bullshit.
I want to do it forever.
When you've been there live, like to anyone out there who doesn't understand what WWE is,
or just go live.
Like, um...
Did you just look at the camera?
That was impressive.
Sure, indeed.
I'm just trying to speak to...
I didn't realize you're going to be a performer on me.
But I want to let everybody out there, Nolan.
You know, like, um, when you step in that building live, it's just a different energy.
Yeah.
And I never want to let that go.
But, um, my body hurts.
I'm a step slower.
I promised myself and the fan base, like when I started before I won that first championship.
When I'm a step slower, I'm out.
And yet some people are saying you're having some of your best matches ever this year.
Yeah, but it's all I have left.
That's what people don't understand.
And I want to go out at a level that is still passable and in some twinkles admirable
and not have to rely on luck.
You know, I got one date left.
I have given my heart and soul to this year.
It has taken a lot to just do 35.
dates, where it's before I do 220 in my sleep. Like, it is time to move on. And...
220 in a year? Easy. So the 80s, it was like 3.30. That's the thing. It's trickle down.
Now it's... It's weird. Now, I saw a stat. I think L.A. Knight has had the most
W.W.E. matches this year in 70. Wow. And I see that. And again, it makes me smile.
It's like, now talent can wrestle longer. Well, in the 80s, they're just hopping in cars and just
drive it in the next place and wrestling. When it got national, it was...
different like they would they would do um morning matinee in toronto and then they would do the
garden so like they would there were like three units running it was it was a true live event
juggernaut not that it isn't anymore yeah it's a more so do a ton of events as much as you can
you know and it that's um i think the the concept of of tko is to try to pick your spots
try to make every event you know out of control special as big as you can and and uh look at the globe
instead of just the U.S.
So you said your body's obviously different after an entire century of wrestling.
Yeah, it's a half century.
A quarter century.
What were the worst injuries?
I remember you tore your pack.
Tore my pack, tore both triceps.
Both triceps?
Yeah, yeah.
Broke my neck.
Yeah, that was probably the most dangerous one, right?
The most dangerous one because if not treated, like, most of the case, my tricep tears, that's serious.
but if left to its own devices eventually some of it will grab on somewhere or it'll just like stay torn and i'll
have a dent in my arm same with the peck like maybe it won't attach but i you know i can still move like
75% of my body when a disc ruptures in your neck and it gets um pressed against the all the
energy and the the cords and stuff that tell you to move it can shut that stuff down yeah so that that
was a weird because it was like outpatient i remember getting
fusion and going to
SmackDown. You got the fusion. Yeah, it was
early on. Dr. Maroon did
fusion on me in 2007 or 2008, but I remember going under
on Tuesday morning and then going to Smackdown in Pittsburgh.
Like walking in to say hello to everybody. And it's like, what the
didn't you just get next surgery? But it was
it was like a... Well, plus like the history of
wrestling. Some, that sidelines some of the biggest stars we had.
Like Stone Colds. True. True. But then again, like
I've all, you know, I started playing football at 15.
And so I started late, which is good.
But I was always in the pit, in the trenches, so to speak.
So you have eight years of full contact football.
Yeah.
Could be putting a bar on the back of my neck with heavyweight for an extended period of time.
Plus all the combative action that's involved in the sports entertainment, I think it's just overall wear.
Well, and also as you're, as the 2000s are going along and we move into the 2010s, wrestling is just becoming crazier and crazier with the bumps.
So that's all.
The bar keeps raising.
That's all performative choice.
Yeah.
If you see the stuff that I do, it's not, it's as crazy as I can get.
Yeah.
But it's.
You're not doing the Shane McMahon jumping 25 feet off of a stilcase.
And again, those are performers' choices.
I tend to lean more on, why are we fighting?
What is the story?
What is the reason I want to go in and yell for one guy and boo the other guy?
And I think my hat's off to the athleticism that some of our performers possess.
But, you know, like the average NFL career is only so long because you have to be the best athlete.
Yeah, if you're a tight end, if you're grunk, that's not going to be a 20-year career.
So, again, the more you ask of yourselves, and I'm not saying for people not to try hard,
but there's a lot of different ways to tell stories in wrestling.
Do you worry that, did you worry as this was happening that the, the bar was getting too crazy for what the bumps were?
No, I've, and again, I don't mind performers choosing to take their time to do what they want with it.
Yeah.
I totally respect that.
I've always had a good understanding of what I can do and what I can offer.
Yeah.
And I've only tried to go outside of that maybe once or twice, and that's when I've like, oh my God, I almost killed myself.
Do you remember, what was it?
I try to take a, like I don't flip over well,
and I try to take a suplex where I flipped over.
I didn't practice it.
I just wanted to do the best I could for the person I was with.
It was like, yeah, don't worry about it.
I'll figure it out.
I want to be okay for you.
I almost broke my neck.
It's just stuff that,
thinking that I was smarter than the business.
Right.
You know, and those were mistakes, but I'm okay.
Yeah, you seem like,
out of all the other people who became superstars,
almost like the most self-aware of what you could,
couldn't do, how far you should push your character.
I mean, you didn't become a quote-unquote heel until this year.
I mean, you did it earlier in your career, but...
That's not my choice.
It's not my choice to go out there and play a good guy or a bad guy.
That's above me.
That's a level above me.
Well, it's a little bit your choice.
You were one of the biggest stars in the...
But they had.
You have some say in it, though.
I don't view it as my choice.
I don't want the stress of that.
I've never done this.
Like, I don't, you tell me, am I a good guy or a bad guy?
Tell me who you want me to face.
How long will we be working together?
And that's what I want to get into the sand.
This is the story I'd like to tell.
These are the details I'd like.
Like, I never pick opponents, never curated my stuff.
Hey, we want you to tell.
turn heel or like hey the crowd's booing you guys should turn me heel no it's not that it's not my
sandbox i think uh in in my perspective a pro takes the tools that you're or takes the
subject matter that you've given and tries to make it something special so you trust the people
who are paid to make these decisions that they're going to make the right decision whether i
really that was vince forever the answer that's yes but whether i trust them or not it's it's their choice
make. So they say, be a good guy. Okay, no problem. In my mind, this is what I think a good guy is
and this is how I think a good guy would act. Is this okay? Yeah, sure. Like, that's the difference.
I do see a lot of performers spend their time, invest their time to try to curate their own destiny.
Yeah. And again, not wrong. It's just, the wrestling is a chicken soup business. There's no wrong way to do it.
I just always wanted to know what you need, the outcome you want, the piece in the chessboard
I can play, and can I do it my way?
Like once we get all those things together, can I do it my way?
Is that fine?
Well, there's one other piece that you're really good at.
And it's funny because sports talk is a little like this, too, or being on TV or being in
cruise.
I've talked about this a lot of my podcast.
When you're with somebody every day, when you're with them once in a while, when you're on a show
that has five people on it, you have to sell other people and they sell you.
And it's a quid pro quo, right?
And if other people that you're with are doing well too, that's good for you.
And if they're selling you, that's also good for you.
And a lot of people don't understand that.
Wrestling, I think, is the ultimate example of that because...
Talk more about that.
What do you mean?
Well, to have a good match, both people have to buy in.
You have to sell the person you're with.
They have to sell you.
It can't just be a one-person thing.
It's got to be both of you.
And I think you've been really good over the years that always having good matches.
Like there's not been other people like this, right?
Like Rick Flair was always like famously, always had good matches,
was always good at the other person, always came off well when the rest of Rick Flair.
I think that was the case for you.
So again, it depends on the match, right?
Like, and I've been in all sorts of stories.
Yeah.
When you are told, hey, I'm the good guy.
You're the bad guy.
You have four minutes on television.
And the purpose of our four-minute commercial
is to make John look unstoppable.
So the way you can do the best for me, for you, and for the match
is to bump like a madman and lose.
Yeah.
A flip scenario, this is the famous suplex city match
with Brock Lesner at SummerSlam after he had defeated the Undertaker.
how does one follow breaking the streak?
The most mythical thing in sports entertainment
that a lot of us thought would never end
and this beast breaks it.
Yeah.
I'm up next.
How do we follow that?
I think I went to that match.
It was in L.A.
So you probably did.
I did.
I thought you were going to die.
Exactly.
So how do we make this guy
who won this huge thing
definitely not a fluke.
If I went out there
at a 50-50 performance
with Brock Lesnar,
Brock Lesnar is capable
of making anyone look fantastic
by the time.
But that didn't help.
Brock,
that didn't help the story
and it didn't help all of us.
I can't say that night
was a good time.
Watching you getting annihilated.
And that's another thing.
When you sit there live,
it is a one episode thing,
but it's not.
It's the vibe that gets weird
because people are like,
oh my God.
Is he going to really get hurt here?
What's happening?
doing knowing there's a lot of things here and i love talking about this i could i could talk about
it all day what what is the purpose of the match well it's always audience reaction right no
what is it it depends the purpose of that match was to get brock lessner over strong on our
most cherished strong and believable intellectual property if he can beat the undertaker he's a beast
if he just destroys John Sina, I want you, I want you uncomfortable and looking over to your
shoulder, your friend being like, who the F is going to beat this guy?
And along comes somebody like Roman Raines.
Finally, he can do it.
You know, like, and those moments, you leverage that SummerSlam, that single serving packet
in a microcosm, this is why I said you got a lot of stuff there.
In a microcosm, and this is the first time I'm reflecting on this year, because it's a narrative,
that's going, but we got one left, so who cares?
The match Cody and I had at WrestleMania,
which was awesome.
Some people would say different,
but it was not the end of our story.
It was like the end of Act 1,
knowing that like you got Cody,
you got to turn bad,
eventually this is going to happen,
we need you to peek at SummerSlam.
That's the end.
Performers get in their head just like they get,
you had said like performers,
want to show the best they can, thinking that's best for the match, they also get in their head
that, like, WrestleMania is the end. I got to go out for WrestleMania and tear the house down.
I'm not saying you don't.
I'd take the NFL playoffs for wrestling business.
But if it's the first chapter of your book, it's not. You can't end the book in chapter one.
So we had a very, by design, we had a very methodical match with a very simple end.
And we thought, you know, we thought we would have some parts and players.
Those disappeared.
It didn't matter because it was the end of Act 1.
So we had like Act 2 and then Act 3.
And then if you compare what we did in April to what we did in August, which is...
Yeah, one of the matches was awesome.
Maybe it was the summer.
I got confused.
The Summer Slam was awesome.
Because that was the end of our story.
And that's the ride we're taking fans on.
But it's as difficult to conceptualize as,
you're not coming back.
Like, no, everybody comes back.
You just, you had this match of WrestleMania that left me.
I wanted more.
Yeah, no kidding.
You're going to get it.
Yeah.
Because although we know that like WrestleMania is the end of our season,
when it came to Cody and I, that was just the beginning for us.
And certainly just the beginning for me after them choosing to say,
well, now you're a bad guy.
Okay, I'm a bad guy in February.
I got to the middle of April to figure this out.
What's the best way I can?
do it and what's the best way I can do it, integrate it, and then look at my morality in
August. You know what I'm saying? That's a short time to accomplish all that, but you have to be...
It's like writing a TV season, like if you're doing breaking bad or something.
You've got to commit. Yeah. You've got to get suplex 19 times and lose sometimes.
Yeah. To know what's on the other side. And the Cody thing, what had to do with Cody and I,
me with me and brock i'm getting i'm getting killed for roman i'm i'm hoping like man keep going
hope you get over if it's not you brock's gonna keep on this path and hopefully somebody you know
but like it's i never ask how can i look good when i sit down with an opponent um i love
anecdotes i have the first time i ever worked with a j styles yeah he is the nicest human being
in sports entertainment and I always have some sort of I can find some energy of like you said this
about me an interview once or like man I don't like the way you work or whatever AJ's such a good guy
and I sat down and I'm like man this is this is going to be okay why are we fighting so what do you
mean why are we fighting I want to be the champ that's not good enough take a second to yourself
figure out why we're fighting I went on my bus scoured the web to try to find out anything this guy's
ever said just anything a sentence never speaks bad about anybody yeah so then i came back to him and like
literally after two and a half hours he was finally like okay this is this is a j this is an allen
but maybe a j's thinking that if you were never around i would be where you're at and i'd be so much
better because when in that ring i am better i'm like we got it and we built our story
culminating with the even the match at the Royal Rumble with I, AJ, am a better in-ring performer.
You are charismatic, but hell of lucky.
You put these two in a ring together and I will run circles around you every time.
And that's where audiences are like, your son would be like, hell no, that's my guy.
Anybody that watched TNA would be like, our guy's finally getting a shot.
This dude's awesome.
Wait till he can do his stuff.
and now you're divided
and now you're interested
and that's an issue
that you can run with
but you have to sit and ask
why are we fighting
well you just tapped into
the most important word
in the history wrestling
jealousy
it's something like
80% of the rivals
rivalries right
because it's something
that people understand
yeah
those stories have to come
from a place
redemption
jealousy
anger
why you and not me
whatever it should have been
me is great
stole this for me
they did that with Hogan all through the 80s
it was Paul Andriff was the first one
It was great
And then Macho Man was the best of all
It's an emotion we all have
We all can understand
And I think that's why it's like
I want to be the champion
I never rested that
That's never good enough
There has to be something more
And when you have that
It's great like anytime you have on the mic
If you ever get lost
you know where you are because I'm supposed to feel jealous of you.
Anytime in a match, you know how to act.
If you are jealous or if you finally are cresting that hill
and now you feel confident, how do you act, how do you move?
What do you think the audience will believe?
The answers to these questions aren't perfectly placed,
man, they're easier to come by.
So instead of being like, we'll do stunt after stunt after stunt,
you can build this thing.
you know, just going back to AJ
where he completely, in the beginning of those matches,
outrestled the hell on him.
And I was out of my place.
We told the story of, I'm going to be better than you
and then you are.
And my world is crumbling.
And then finally I start doing a little of my stuff,
which is more like throwing handbones.
Yeah.
But then I start hitting him with like my best stuff.
And he kicks out.
And I'm like, who is this kid?
Why won't he go down?
Yeah.
And maybe he's right, maybe I'm wrong, maybe my world is crumbling.
Like, those are just by saying, like, I think this is why we're fighting.
You can dig into so much.
And I know this.
A lot of performers don't do that because I'll always, in a post-mortem sense, if I watch matches,
I'll watch me like, okay, you did this and this, why were you guys fighting?
What do you mean?
They told, we got, we were on the main event.
We went out there for a match.
Yeah.
Okay, cool.
All right.
And again, I'm not saying that someone who doesn't ask or answer that question cannot be successful.
But if you know the story, think of sports.
Some games a lot of people watch.
Yeah.
And some games they just don't.
There's games on all the time.
Games of everything on all the time.
But if there's a rivalry or if there's meaning, like college sports.
Chiefs Cowboys,
57 million people on Thanksgiving.
Man.
An important game for both teams,
two famous teams,
two good quarterbacks.
And there's a million stories you can tell.
But there's an ego piece to this though,
which it sounds like you were always thinking about
what was good for the business,
the storyline,
how could you think big picture months and years in advance?
And then there were other people who,
especially the stories are more famous
and like the 70s and 80s of like,
I'm at this spot.
how do I keep this?
How do I, how do I?
And this was a big topic after Hogan died about that he, you know,
the big criticism with him, at least in the 80s and 90s,
was that he didn't pay it forward.
And he was always trying to hold on to what he had and not.
So again, I think there's a lot there.
And I always, I always try to look at life of like control,
the control of what can I do, right?
wrestling was a territorial gangster business
and it was cutthroat
so if you did have something going you want to keep it
it has its origins from carnival performing
which is the even more cutthroat
it then gets nationalized
just because it gets nationalized
just because we end segregation
you can't change it takes a long time
to change people's mind right
so just because it gets nationalized
you don't take the gangster out of the guy you know like they're they still have to operate like
that any story i heard about um non-meritocracy and i don't like it i don't like it and there'll be
people to to criticize my career or my actions or whatever they have they have the right to feel
how they want i believe best person best idea wins
and I believe sports entertainment is the perfect meritocracy
because you know the sound of noise
and promoters, whether they like you or they don't.
There are these age-old tales.
So I didn't get the shock because a promoter didn't like me.
Promoter didn't like me.
Everybody hated me.
But they heard the noise.
So they got to give me at least one more chance.
And in that one more chance, you've got to get the noise again.
And if you get the noise again, you get another chance.
And then you get another chance.
And then eventually the promotion, the office, they like you.
Because not only with all these chances, have you got the noise every time.
But in my case, I want to be a reliable employee.
I want to be somebody you can invest in and bet on.
I want to carry myself well as an advocate for the company I love.
My job is to fake fight.
I am doing the thing that I, as a six-year-old with the paper belt, I'm doing it.
I don't want this to go away.
Right.
And they'll come a time when someone does it weigh.
better than me that okay great no problem it's your turn you know like um so again i guess
i i enjoy hearing that because you're not wrong um stamping your territory and and being the
top draw you know you want to see who somebody really is given power you want to see who somebody
really is take it away like i don't i don't blame anybody for trying to keep where they're
at. But I've always operated. The way I'm going to keep where I'm at is put us out there,
put a mic in my hand, put us out there, and let the bell ring. And I'll always get the noise,
and I'll always be as prepared and ready and, like, on my game as anyone you put me in there
with, no matter what. And when it's time for me to go, I'll go. The power thing's funny,
kid. I was just talking to my old agent James Baby Doll Dixon about this, who reps all these TV
people. Talk to me about the nickname.
He was great. Baby doll. Well, he calls everyone baby dolls, so he just became baby doll.
Right on.
But we were talking about somebody who, as they ascended, kind of became more of an untrustworthy asshole that we know.
And I was like, I just didn't see it in the early stages. I didn't realize they were going to be like that.
And he was like, that's the thing. Everybody's got it inside them, but you don't know what's going to happen until they get some power.
When they get power, something shifts.
I don't know, though.
I mean, like...
I just thought it was an interesting take.
I was like, oh, so...
I'll give you another.
Not everybody has it in there, but sometimes if it's in there,
and then all of a sudden you get opportunity and power, it can tilt it.
Well, I mean, I'll give you another take.
You're right.
It's not fastest person wins, right?
It's opinionative, objective.
It's floor gymnastics.
So it's kind of like if you're cool or not.
I don't know how many folks came from where they came from to wrestling,
like being cool.
Right.
So it might be a little imposter syndrome.
It might be a little like lack of self-worth.
A lot of performers, including myself, want to be out there because out there you're,
it feels like home, you're comfortable, you're accepted, but you kind of struggle with who
you really are.
and if people see your flaws or imperfections then maybe it's all gone like it's it's weird like
i i've i've told the w w i'll never be able to to thank them especially the audience for making me
the human being i am today and it's just time under tension i think if my career were shorter
maybe my decisions or my perspective in life would be different but i've had to go through so much
or I've gotten to go through so much.
I've been told you're a good guy.
You own the sandbox, no problem.
I get out there, and the noise is opposite of the good guy.
I've had that for a long time.
So I still have to traverse the obstacle of like,
how would a good guy do this?
And in doing that, man, humiliated, embarrassed, bullied, picked on,
but all part of the act.
Because when you're in the arena, it's part of the act.
business. You know, people have grabbed the microphone and attacked me personally. We blur the lines
a lot. Gosh, fans of my bald spot. They, that's me to get a hair transplant. I'm so glad. I'm so
grateful. But like, you're out there. And it's very fragile. And I've seen so many gifted people
like not make it because it's so very fragile. You need to have like so many things in line.
to have a sustained good career and that a lot of that is like having control your mental health
you know and i think a lot of the and and having a really thick skin i think especially you came
in the 21st century during the internet era as wrestling was completely changing into this different
all the message boards all the cheat yeah everybody had an opinion then social media comes
with twitter and instagram and stuff becomes meaner and meaner and people become faster to jump on
or off somebody.
And you're just navigating this the whole time.
I've also tried to be patient.
I think you can just let things play out.
You don't always have to answer every question.
You can leave people wanting more.
You can wait.
And, like, again, I was getting bullied live before message board.
So I had a really good, I had already been through it, you know.
But I think it's funny.
Like, you come in right around.
when LeBron comes in, right?
LeBron's still playing, you're still wrestling,
stuff that in the 1970s
to think that somebody would still be at the top of their game
in their early 40s of basketball
and their late 40s in wrestling
seemed pretty inconceivable.
And you both had the ups and downs.
He had a bunch of, like his big thing
was the decision when he became basically
a heel in real life for, you know,
six, seven, eight months.
He's getting booed in stadiums.
And just feeling the wrath of the internet
and just how people are.
which you felt too and you just kind of at some point
it almost like it gave LeBron more focus
and more inner strength and it kind of helped him
achieve all the stuff he achieved in the second half of his career
like he wouldn't be denied you know
so in some ways you could say it was like the best thing
that could happen to him but it's weird to say that
well it's weird to say because it is what happened
right in my case
I guess I always
I always try to look for a good explanation right
in our business when you hear negative noise the knee-jerk reaction is to jump on the audience
to turn heel so to speak to be a bad guy but that's that's not what I was told the person
who can make those decisions in the creative body making those choices saying like we're not
doing that well that was Vince and even now like in some cases um let's let's take the
year of retirement. I think a lot of people were wondering what would happen if John Cena turned
heel, if I turned heel. And then what I did, it left a taste in people's mouth that they
didn't like it. And like, they wanted other stuff. I wanted a music change. I wanted a uniform
change. I wanted him to act like this. Well, we've been talking about it for 15 years. Never thought
I was going to happen. I got 11 months to do this, 36 TV appearances. It takes five years
to get a guy over regardless. If you turn them, it's going to take a year or two on television
for a really to sink in, especially if you really want to get into it and then be able to flip
and then get a guy to get a nice, or get a performer to get a nice flip on the other side when
it's time to turn again. I don't have the time to tell the right story. But that's besides
the point, because I'm told we're going with this story. We sure are. I'm going to do the best I can.
And to be able to hear the audience be surprised. And then kind of like, this is not what I wanted.
It's not that you may or may not have wanted me to turn bad. It's that a lot of people started to realize.
Like, when I came out into a dome, it was like, 36 dates, that's it.
It's hard to conceptualize.
The first time I put a counter on after Vegas, and it went down to, like, right down to 24.
It was like, whoa.
And then we started, then the site started to pick up, like, 15 left, 12 left, 10 left.
So you're glad you're structured it that way mentally, it sounds like?
No, no.
All this stuff.
off for this whole year.
Like, this is that's going to play out.
By design, because I knew it had never been done.
So how do I continuously send messaging of like, you're never going to believe it?
You're never going to get it.
I have to reinforce the fact that this is it.
I still don't believe it.
Which is fine, which is great.
And hopefully 10 years from now, we can sit here again.
Like, he really did it.
Are you coming back yet?
2038.
I'm like, oh, man.
Yeah, yeah.
He wasn't lying.
So I've been in a high level of performing for 23 years.
years. I have minimized foolishness in my life. I've been compensated fairly. I have my
health. Also, you have a side gig. You can be the star in movies. I appreciate you saying
that. That's also beyond my control. I don't know when the phone rings next. But in the height
of all that, in doing 220 days a year for, I don't know, 10, 12 years straight, the most important
the thing in my life was WWE, and it's not anymore, and that's okay to say. I'm still obsessed.
I'm so passionate about it. I'm not obsessed. I was obsessed. Yeah. Very passionate about
wrestling on my days off, on my free time without any compensation. I will go anywhere I can
if, you know, my partner and I say, hey, you have an off day. What would you like to do? I'd like to go
watch younger talent perform and critique them. That's what I enjoy doing on my time off. So I'll always be
around it. But man, like, how much more do I want? You know, what it, there's always another
crowd to perform in front of, but like, gosh, maybe if my actions set an example for this
class, hopefully my actions about political behavior over the course of 23 years have set an
example. I can tell you, in my perspective alone, I don't know if this is truth, but from my
perspective, there is a lot less political activity now 2025 than when I started in 2002.
So I can't say it's done, but I can say it's greatly minimized. And if that's because
of me, great. If it's not great, because that's what I wanted in the first place. So maybe as
the first wrestler who actually retires, I set a precedent for young people to be like, man, I want
to strive to give it like two decades and then go out, like go out the biggest way I can.
it's also a different business model for athletes.
Do you keep holding on for one more and then one more and then one more?
Or take a look within yourself and be like, man, I can give you guys the best year I can.
Can we figure out what that is and figure out what the compensation is for that?
We just saw this happen in the NBA.
Chris Paul, who decided to have one last year in the Quippers.
And he hung on too long.
It was 41.
And then they waived them today as we're talking about.
I see it all the time.
It should have ended like that.
But it should have because that's what you want.
Like I do not blame any performer for one to continue to get out there.
It is, it's beautiful, man.
I'm going to miss it so much.
But I've seen it.
Yeah.
And I don't want to be it.
And now with one left, man, if I have to pump myself full of adrenaline to make sure that I give all I got,
I have enough left in the tank for one match.
Well, so I was at the first Netflix raw the night before the fire's here.
You came out.
The two notable things from that was Hogan came out and got really booed.
And almost like some, I think some famous wrestling people would have kind of felt the crowd energy and turned it.
And it was almost like he didn't know what to do.
So that was one notable thing.
And the other one was when you came out and it was clear, it was like this purposeful angle that everybody had put a lot of thought
to it. Nobody tipped me off on it. But as I was watching it, I was with my son. And I was like,
oh, this is smart. They're going to, they, I see what they're doing. They're making this like
the year of Sina. He's going to make one last run at trying to, trying to win the title.
And like, I see what they're doing here. And I think it, I think it went better than anyone
could have expected. The heel piece was the thing. It seems like you have like small regrets
about it. Not at all. No? No. You don't think it. Do you think it went perfect?
Or like, what would you have changed if you did it over again?
What is perfect?
Here's what I do know.
Perfect is never achievable.
I think that's a sucker's chase.
When I look back on it, could I have given any more than I did?
Not a bit.
Yeah.
I over-prepared.
I tried to go to every corner of my emotional well-being.
And the cool thing is, like, when the audience began to turn,
we turned yeah so like they helped it out and that dynamic was a little bit ahead of schedule
for let's say Cody and I but it made for a great showing for the summer so you choose you
make again anecdotes make new day a bunch of heels they're aspirational pastors but they're
bad guys the crowd booed them and then they love them no
Nobody wanted to change him good, but, hey, it's time to change him good.
You know, let's try John like this.
I know we have limited time, but let's do something really big.
Okay, it didn't work.
It didn't mean anything get my all.
You know, I often talk about a main event on WrestleMania I had with the Ms.
a long time ago where the Rock came down to interfere.
Everyone knew Rocky was coming.
The match between Ms. and I was lackluster as far as audience involvement
because they were waiting, obviously, for Dwayne.
Johnson, who wouldn't want to be just looking
towards the entrance. Yeah. Mizz got
knocked out, won the championship of the concussion.
Like, we beat the hell
out of each other. We couldn't give anymore.
But I
didn't, looking back, I didn't understand
all the things, and maybe we should have done something different
because we should just got rock out there
earlier. But that
piece was also, again, it's
WrestleMania, I think we had to blow it off. That piece was
a building block for a year later in Miami.
Because the next day on TV,
we challenged each other.
to the Miami WrestleMania.
So it was like leveraging WrestleMania for another WrestleMania.
I just wasn't used to it.
I didn't get the perspective.
And it worked.
It ended up being one of the most successful events in company history.
So when you say like, oh, man, you seem a little bit like this.
I don't.
It happened.
It was great.
And it helped.
Like, it paid off.
And this whole year, I think, has been special in that regard.
People have bought in.
And I'm so glad because after this, I don't have.
another chance. If they didn't buy in, I
would just go. You know. Faking
injury in July. It's like, no, no.
I would do the rest of my dates.
And then
I could look back and be like, man, I held them on too long.
But in these shows,
like it's now become
you want to be on these shows.
We have tons of people watching. You have sold out
arenas and stadiums.
It's a chance for you to show your business.
Well, you made one mistake.
Please. I'm open to criticism.
Why wasn't the last match
of Boston.
Again, that's way beyond my control.
I'm not a, I don't book the live event calendar.
Well, my guess is that.
If it was up to me, every match would be in Tampa.
But that, my guess is,
like that's, they knew the Boston match.
The mistake is I didn't have 36 matches in Tampa.
I know, but you're like the Boston home team, though.
Trust me, it was great to be able to go back there one last time.
My guess is they thought that could be its own thing and your last match could be
its own thing and they didn't need to combine those two things.
You never know.
I don't know if the garden was available.
possible so you never know like that's a thing of like man it would be perfect if perfect for you like
you don't you don't know the routing you don't know live event in the live event uh hurdles that they
have to go through it was an emotional event it was great the last boss match and and it was like
the last the last then you can get a bunch of last stuff the last smackdown in chicago where i
started yeah um the last time in td the last time in nsg my last raw my last premium live event or
pay-per-view in San Diego and then of course the last match and um in trying to create the
atmosphere for the last match folks in creative were like hey we want to do like this tribute thing
and i i never i never book myself yeah but i called uh triple h and i said i have an idea
uh you'll know how to do this because i don't know how to write television but i think if we do a
tribute show, one of two things are going to happen. It's either going to be too much or too
little, which means it's not going to be good. Why don't we take Saturday night's main event.
Everyone knows as John Cena's last match. The video packages, you want to trickle in there throughout
the night, no problem. Then we go to the match, have the match, that's the night. But beforehand,
on a night, I know people are going to be tuning in. We're going to have a sold out. It's going to be
definitely an item, a ticket you want to have in your hand. And that last, that last, that last
piece of relevant energy
that I can get an audience member to tune into.
Show the future of your business.
Have top-named WWB superstars.
C.M. Punk, Charlotte Flair,
who you put it together how you want.
Have them have non-canon exhibition matches
with the future of the business.
Bring kids up from NXT.
Get them in a building with real noise,
with real energy.
Let them get under the bright lights.
Maybe, just maybe.
Like, I want to be.
be here. You know what I'm saying? And they get to wrestle people with experience and wisdom
and in non-canon, exhibition matches where nothing's on the line. It's just a chance to see,
it's a chance to hear the music of your favorite superstars against someone you have no idea.
And he said, that's a great idea. And they're going to do it. I have no clue what the plan is.
But I know it's, that's how I want to go out. Right.
I want to I want the people who are tuning in for me to be like yeah but you see that other kid
I'm watching next Monday because he's awesome or she's awesome you know like what a better way
to tip the cap and try to try to keep keep the thing going you know what would you tell
2003 John Cena if you could give him going a time machine give him like two tips of
advice. What would it be? There's going to be this thing called Bitcoin that the Winkle
bosses are going to debut in 2012. I'd give them a sports almanac. I'm kidding. I'm kidding.
No, uh, I don't, I don't, it's weird. I've, I get asked that question a lot. I don't, I can't
ask that question a lot. Yeah. Oh man, I feel like a jerk. Do you want to ask another question?
Well, give me one thing you would have told yourself. I don't know if that works. Like,
I don't know, first of all,
to see your generational self
is a weird paradox, and who knows,
but like,
to tip someone off about like,
even if it's like,
hey, man, just keep it up,
it's going to be crazy.
What the fuck does that mean?
Am I going to go crazy?
What's, what's,
I just,
things have happened the way they've happened.
And that's how they needed to happen.
I'm going to use my new John Cena mentality
to just look forward and not think about how I asked you a question
that a lot of people have asked you.
I'm going to try to spin it into a positive
and just ask another question.
Yeah, go for it.
Yeah.
You got one?
I thought that was a really good one.
Who was your biggest mentor when you were coming up?
Like looking back into that 0304 or 5.
Did you have anybody that became like a Mr. Miyagi?
No, Vince, without a doubt.
Interesting.
Let's talk about that because he was on the docket.
As you know, I did the documentary that you were interviewed for.
And we had a whole segment about the ruthless aggression.
Like that was kind of your big moment.
You were like a rational confidence, young guy, John Cena, like, fuck it, I'll do it.
I'm in there.
So how was Vince at that point when he took you under your wing?
Like, would you learn?
How did you help you?
So he was just really kind with his time.
He would explain things.
Here is a person making a lot of, if not.
all the choices.
Yeah.
I am always in search for a good explanation.
And he would always give one.
And in giving the good explanation, you would get a nugget.
And because Vince had such fluency in every avenue of the business,
a lot of performers are worried about the stunts.
I think one of the benefits of doing 220 shows a year is pace,
And if you obsess over the physical aspect of the business, you might get exhausted.
You might burn out.
I love the technical aspects, but then I also became obsessed with the theatrical aspect.
And then I also became obsessed, especially when before I won my first championship on the way to getting relevance and the way of shifting from the obscure Saturday night program to Smackdown,
I became interested in the business
and not my business
like how can I take from this place
to make as much as I can
the business
how do we get more people in the arena
and
the only person it seemed like
that had a good explanation
for a lot of those questions
was Vince
and that allowed it allowed
just a wealth of information
to be dumped on on me
I had full faith and trust in him.
I think he had full faith and trust in me.
He also had a really good track record of,
I think this person can carry us for a little while,
and he was usually right.
He wasn't afraid to try,
which is another thing I learned from him.
Like, do not be afraid to swing big
and do not be afraid to fail.
Be accountable for your friends.
I'm glad you said that.
That's one of the biggest things I've learned in life.
I think people are too afraid to fail.
It sucks.
Failure sucks, man.
Get back up.
I understand.
But it's like, it's not, it's uncomfortable.
Yeah.
And failing is bad.
Taking accountability for failure, that's even a heavier weight.
But gosh, man, I just.
What was your biggest failure?
Like when you look back, like the one where you were like,
blowing the completely disintegrating ruthless aggression.
And it almost got me fired.
so here I am a young whippersnapper
debuting in Chicago because the Undertaker's sick
I get to challenge Kurt Angle
to a match on Smackdown
from a sold-out house
at the formerly known as Rosemont Horizon
the Olympic gold medalist says
what makes you think you can stand out here with anybody else
what do you have that I don't ruthless aggression
I slap him in the face
that's great that's aggressive
yeah and then the match we went on to have
is pretty ruthless
but then like
He won, but would like a roll-up pinfall.
And then the aggressive, ruthless young kid goes like,
man, you only got me about that much.
And then the next thing they did was like a backstage taping with The Undertaker,
where the ruthless, aggressive kid is so starry-eyed that the Undertaker has given him advice.
Like, hey, you did a great job.
Shakes the Undertaker's hand.
That is neither ruthless nor aggressive.
So this is what I mean by like being ready.
for opportunity.
That gimmick, those two words, that personality,
I could either lean into being aggressive and ruthless.
And we all know what those things are.
We all have an idea in our head of what is ruthless and what is aggression.
Or I could do a 180 and be like the most passive aggressive, pass.
I was neither.
You were in no man's land.
I was neither.
And I didn't have the technical ability of my peers.
And they gave me this beautiful moment on a.
silver platter. No one told me it was an attitude. No one told me, but I didn't take
advantage of it. That was my biggest failure. Because a year later, they're like, hey, we're
going to let you go. And I'm like, yeah, yeah, okay, I get it. I got it. Like, I could see the
cheers against Kurt Angle, then a little bit with Chris Jericho, and then I'm turning a heel and
Billy Kidman on Saturday Night Velocity and nobody cares. You know, like, I blew it. I blew it. I
and was lucky enough to get a second chance.
Well, you had, we talked about in the documentary,
though, you're rapping on the bus.
Yeah.
And Stephanie hears it, and then all of a sudden you're, that was it.
But the rock had a very similar kind of,
there are always these moments where it's going one way
and one little small thing happens, and it flips.
Yeah.
And in Rock's case, he was like, man, just,
you're going to put me with these folks, just give me the mic.
Right.
And in my case, I got lucky.
Somebody heard me on the mic.
And I was like, would you be okay doing that on TV?
Let me weigh my options.
You're going to fire me or do this on TV.
Looks like I'm your rapping kid from West Newberry.
You know, like this is just, yeah, sure, great, I'll do it.
But I think the cool thing was I essentially failed fast.
You know, and I was held accountable for my failures.
Kid, obviously this isn't working.
You know, yes, you're correct.
all right you know like that's i get it and it made me like all right i'm going in and um i just
had a conversation with a young town the other day who is trying to find themselves and they
they express like oh man i think i have my why down to this i said okay but what is what does that
mean like i went from wearing boots and tights and carrying my laptop to playing roller coaster
Tycoon to like, you're the rap guy. Fine. I'm the rap guy. I'm going to buy my gear in the hood.
I'm going to get faded up at the barbershop. I'm going to tell everybody I'm throwing this jersey
out tonight. I'm going to wear diamonds and then switch the diamond for a steel chain. I'm going to
wear five-fingered rings. I'm going to wrestle in sneakers. I'm going to wrestle in jorts.
I'm going to wrestle in yellow corduroy and blue sheepskin suits. I'm not going to look like everybody
else. I'm going to make my own music. I'm going to freestyle everyone in the parking lot so they know
it's not rigged and no one's writing my stuff. I'm going to come out with my own album. We're
going to make music videos. I'm going to do concerts. I'm going to work clubs in between
Smackdown and Raw and pay-per-views. Like, it was it. It was me. You went for it?
Wholeheartedly. And three years later, I'm in a theater with Adam Crollo watching you in the
Marine. Yeah. Man, I feel like I still owe you money for that one. No, we enjoyed it.
What was? That's, that's, that's, maybe that's all.
Also, certainly a failure.
I mean, I got run out of the movie business,
so that's a big failure, too.
For some people.
You'll never work in this town again, kid.
I kind of enjoyed those action movies.
What do you think?
You were the one.
Well, what do you think was your career year?
What do you think was your best year?
Because I felt like as a writer,
I have like three years of my head
where I was like, I really had it going that year.
I really feel good about how that year went,
the stuff I did, and I have fond memories of it.
Do you have a year like that?
Gosh, I like this one.
25.
I like this one.
Really?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean...
Well, certainly probably the least taxing physically because you're...
Not true.
36 matches?
Yeah, 36 matches.
Versus 220?
It's weird.
Like, if you talk to a performer who's done that schedule,
you don't have time to do anything else.
It's kind of like being in-season.
But like the preseason is so tough for NFL.
Right.
The helmet feels heavy and like the first few hits hurt.
But then when you get in it,
It's like, yeah, we got into the game.
Don't worry about, we got another game.
We got another game.
You get that callous and your timing gets great.
And it's like you get in a zone.
You get in a flow state.
It's really tough to get in the flow state with like 36.
Sounds like almost like playing golf.
Like you better off playing golf five times a week than one.
Yeah.
And then maybe like once a month.
Right.
Where I'm going to give you five minutes to hit a bucket of balls before you go out there.
Oh, sorry, you have three minutes.
It's day in a bucket of balls before you go.
So give me your second best year?
I don't know, man.
That had to be one year where you look back and you're like,
oh, man, we were humming that year.
So I think the year in Miami that culminated at WrestleMania with the Rock.
I thought that that was a pretty,
and the reason I choose the two things
is because a year-long build in 2011 or whatever it was in WWE is unheard of.
is this possible and it worked a wrestling retirement is unheard of is this possible and skeptics
will be skeptics but with one left december 13th is it i can be like it worked it was everyone
critically happy they're going to weigh in on everything i'll always be criticized you'll
always have your opinion of like i would love to this they they booked it wrong he did this wrong
I know a lot of folks showed up
and I know TKO's doing well
and I know our fan base is still interested
the fact that we were able to do a tournament
to get to the last person
so now the shows I'm not even on
Who's at Gunther and L.A. Knighter left?
Yeah, and the shows that I'm not even on
have gravity and like, oh man, I want to kind of see what goes on.
What a cool idea of like, well, John isn't going to be there
but the presence and the idea of this
and that of course it leans into like my core value of meritocracy.
And same, same thing with on the 13th.
Man, we'll give you a chance.
See what you can do.
Please, I'm begging.
Any young performer that gets out there, steal the show.
I would love them to just talk about you and not me.
That means I have done my job.
You did the performer thing again.
I want to send the message to who was ever on the thing.
That was great.
Gunther has to be in top five this century of guys that I'm sure are a great wrestler,
but the next day you're in the shower just like, fuck.
I mean, those chest slaps...
You took me to a weird place.
I don't know.
Talk about it.
No, you're just like the chest slap.
I just can't imagine the next day.
Those seem like they hurt.
I would say the Lesnar suplexes would be the number one.
The Gunther chest slaps.
I don't know what else is in the Pantheon for you for like the next day.
You're just like, oh, I'm feeling it.
I think for me it's performers who lean on...
like really like beating the hell out of out of you there is a certain magic to what we do
yeah and so you're talking like the hard clothesline slash just um i would i would borderline
into say like like um unsafe striking unsafe maneuvers like where i don't know the the
feeling that the the realism trumps the ability to like what should be first and foremost is
we're going to give the best we can and we're going to walk out of there
And nobody gets hurt.
And there is a certain magic to our business.
And there are certain performers.
Brock is one where his stuff is physical, but he's one of the smoothest.
Like, she's a really great performer.
Randy Orton is another one.
It's like great performer.
And his stuff looks great.
And his timing is beautiful.
Seth Rawlins is another one.
CM Punk is another one.
The list of folks who understand the magic.
Yeah.
And again, I don't fault anyone for their style.
It's their lane to choose.
But I do know, for me, personally speaking, my math would be a whole lot less if every night I beat the tar out of my opponent and I expected them to beat the tar out of me.
You know, you just, you ride down that injury avenue a lot more frequent than you would if you understood the magic of our business.
Nick Con wanted your Mount Rushmore.
So this isn't my question.
Sure, sure. Mount Rushmore is, what is it?
He wanted your four.
He said you would actually give it to us.
No, not presidents.
Jefferson, Washington, and Lincoln.
Give us.
Is that Mount Rushmore?
No.
It is.
You got to give us the four.
Is that Mount Rushmore?
Wrestling Mount Rushmore.
You're saying that's not Mount Rushmore?
We need a wrestling Mount Rushmore from you.
That's mine.
That's what I'm doing.
Come on.
Lincoln wrestled the bear.
You can either give me the four, the four best you ever saw or the four best you ever
wrestled.
Now you've got to do it.
He demanded.
You know, he's thinking.
control of this December 13th show. You got to do right by him. I would like to think that the
relationship I have with Nick Con, he does right by me and I do right by him. That's fair. That's
fair. Yeah. So Rushmore is off? I gave you. I gave you Mount Rushmore. Can you give me... Can you
give me the three... So you don't want to do three best wrestlers you ever wrestled against?
That's a great question. That's basically Rushmore. No, it's not. Okay. You talked about Mount Rushmore. I gave
what is your real question what do you want three best the three best so you three best people you
ever wrestled the three best people I ever wrestled where you were like marveling at how good
they were allans Sean Michaels Seth Rollins Sean Michaels Seth Rollins Sean Michaels Seth Rollins
and it is very tough to narrow down to a third I've had incredible chemistry with people
It's tough.
Well, so let's concentrate on those two.
Because Michael's is usually somebody's answer for this question, right?
So what was it about him that was just different than all these other guys?
He can make this a champion.
He would look at that and be like, okay, need to bump around for that book.
And then I'm going to super kick the book and then beautifully fall on top of it.
But at the same time, he just, his performance, and Seth is of the same vein, his performance is, like, Randy falls into this category.
But then again, there's, like, guys who have had crazy chemistry with AJ Stiles, CM Punk, Kevin Owens, Dwayne, Edge.
Right, now you're just listening, guys.
But, like, I've had this.
It was interesting, though, it's been around for 23 years.
I think those are the two.
Yeah.
Because...
of their like they can just work with anyone anyone and i've been lucky enough that like i was
anyone a few nights you know who was the one that jumped the highest from where they started
where years later you're like wow you really you really did it cody
cody rhodes cody okay explain that one he asked for his release from the company left
But did you feel like he was a good wrestler when he left?
I felt like he had, man, the first time I heard that kid speak was at the Hall of Fame in Chicago
when him and his brother inducted his dad and I'm like front row going, I'm out of a job.
Or Los Angeles it was.
Like wherever he, like this kid is coming for me, I better go back and practice.
And, you know, generational talents of big shoes to fill.
And gosh, he did the best he could with what he had, but he realized it,
You know, start up here, and then you watch the stock go down.
And then essentially the company dissolves of like, I got to go.
And then like, man, what is going on with this guy?
And back he comes.
And he's our guy now.
I don't think there's any arc better than that.
Like to be kicked out or to be out of the club.
And then not only earn your way back in, but earn your way back in
and prove that you can compete and perform every day at,
the top level, not a top level, like the top level.
And it seems like he learned some stuff from you that he talks about.
Like, I think you were an important person for him.
Man, whatever anyone has between their two ears is just a matter of like your application of it.
You know, if that's the case, I'm grateful for the moments I've shared with Cody.
I'm grateful for the moments I still share and will share.
But he's doing it.
And I think that's important, like he's doing it, regardless of where he got it from.
Like I said, I got tons of information from my mentor.
I think that the best way to honor that information and honor that wisdom is to put rubber to road and make something happen.
Undertaker.
Yeah.
Was he that much of a leader behind the scenes?
Yes.
Was he the number one?
The most respected personality.
And, you know, you.
You could even feel that in 03 as you're coming up.
You're like, oh, that guy, don't fuck with him.
Until about, like, recently.
And even still, I think that his name still carries weight.
I don't know because I'm not a new performer.
I know what I know.
Yeah.
But in looking at, like, I'm so grateful to have experienced phases of the business.
Yeah.
And I'm so happy for where it is now.
the locker room essentially doesn't need a spokesperson
because all of our people are professionals.
You know, it's not like pirates or herding cats anymore.
Or like, we don't need an internal police force
because we're all professionals.
But that being said, a lot of the fraternity,
a lot of the bonds,
which led to great programming,
that stuff has dissolved.
So it's weird.
You want to look back and romanticize how things were.
But how things were was like, man,
you better get a $200 advance on tonight's show
because you're not going to get paid.
So that's just how they were.
And I had fun and great times under being welcomed into that fraternal business.
And he was literally, he was very instrumental in that.
I had my first drink with The Undertaker.
What do you mean, like, first drink ever?
Oh, yeah.
It was 26.
That was your first drink?
And he was like, I sat down.
I'm like, hey, he's like, oh.
Like, hey, I don't, uh, boom.
You know what?
I'm going to go for it.
Yeah.
Because I have this wise figure who has, who is very stoic, doesn't say a lot,
welcome me in.
Like, that is, okay, I understand why I don't do this.
But I also understand that I want to do this.
I'm okay.
I'm going to give this a try.
And I'm so glad I did.
Because in that one conversation, I still, I see us at that bar.
Some of the lessons he gave still stick with me.
Yeah.
The two things I vividly remember from that conversation.
Always take care of your crew.
He never let any of the boys pay.
Never say goodbye.
I got so hammered when I was like, man, when is it time to go?
It's like, go whenever you want.
Just don't ever say goodbye.
And I was...
Don't ever say goodbye.
That's such a good advice.
And I was so happy.
The Undertaker's an Irish goodbye guy?
I was I guess so but that was that was a maybe he's Irish that was a tip he bestowed on me it's a good one
I was so out of place I turned to I was like man thanks so much and then so many people that I'd never
talked to I said I said goodbye to everybody yeah but then it just put me right back in the seat
and I stayed there a little bit longer but I really thought it was important to know that like he
was like always take care of your crew take care of your crew Irish goodbye when it's time to
go, it's time to go. So when it's time to go, it's time to go. We've got one left. You know,
it's time to go. So, but I, he's just, he was tremendously respected. And I think because of that,
he was, he certainly had a great relationship with Vince and could act as a conduit.
Any, anyone who can bridge that gap. And that's another thing. It's not, there's no gap anymore.
Yeah. There's no like office and the boys. It's like everybody's in it together. Everyone's
accessible. You can go up to Paul. It's not like Vince wasn't accessible, but Vince also did
everything. So now like Vince's brain is split in a bunch of different places. There's Paul,
there's Nick, there's Chris Legenthal, there's Matt Altman, there's anybody in talent
relations. There's like you can get answers through all these folks. Justin Scalise with live
events, Derek Castleman with merch and Ethan with fanatics. Like I can get a good explanation
without spending or asking the man to spend minutes he don't have. You know,
know, so it's not, it's, it's very little, it's us versus them. It's, it's all we. You know,
it's like, I like it like that. I like it like that, because I was never a big us versus them
guy. Did you ever think the W.W.E could survive and thrive without Vince after seeing, like,
you just mentioned all the things that he did. So of all the things he did, and of all the things
he taught me, one of one piece that was very important is that no one is irrepress, you.
placeable. And that's the truth. The one thing that needs to stand firm is the consumer's
belief in what we do. And Vince has so much knowledge. I think what's happened is
unfortunate because you have this individual with so much depth of field who can still offer
things. And we no longer can pull from that well. But it doesn't mean we don't have able-bodied
folks who can't put on creative programming so yeah i i never wanted uh vince to go because i
love him and i know how much he loves the business but he taught me like we're all going to go
all of us and he taught me that not only through saying through his actions i was there today he fired
stone cold he missed the date got to go his biggest attraction i got to i got to let people know this isn't
okay. So things happen. We got to let people know this isn't okay. It's time for you to go.
Everybody goes, man. Everybody goes. So because of his words, yeah. Yeah. So you're either
going to be wrestling Gunther or L.A. Knight. Or L.A. Knight. Yeah. That's a great topic.
Look at you. Look at you. Look at that. Right there. You say, hey, yeah, you got it. You got it.
I've had you for a long period of
time and now it's my god it's tomorrow i know i know it's been her a while um and then that's going
to be it and you're going to actually retire yes uh and you have little brother coming out which i'm
supposed to promote because dave bernad is my friend and he's one of the producers i don't know
when he wanted to mention that whenever it comes out fun comedy me and eric andre yeah it's coming out
like next year it's something yeah uh you'll you'll see me at w ovance i'm going to be involved
as long as they will have me until i am need to until i need to be replaced
but I will look like this.
So you can be involved as like a personality
slash facilitator.
And I will go up and...
Announce her?
I don't.
Nah, you don't really like announcing.
No, I would love to do it.
I think the announcing crew we have now,
I'm such a big fan of Stu about it.
Wade Barrett.
I think he's carving out an excellent legacy for himself.
I know Michael Cole's getting a little long in the tooth.
He's probably wanting to move on.
I would love to sit at the table.
I think we have, man, I love listening to Big E-Call stuff.
This would be a good angle for you where you're jealous of Michael Cole this whole time.
But I've always been jealous of Michael Cole.
I knew I was better than you this whole time.
Yeah.
Listen to you and out.
Just what I think I'm out.
You reel me back in.
You have to have the time to regularly commit to be an announcer.
Yeah.
Like I know Pat McAfee struggled with that.
He split himself in a bunch of different directions.
And gosh, I don't, I don't blame anybody for going until you can't go.
Right.
but like he didn't he didn't have it in the tank like he can't be you can't be everywhere at once so yeah he's
I actually thought he was doing a good job as the was but like an answer but at some point you can't you can
have just too many jobs and too many places so that was a you were like hey man 36 dates must
have been easy this year I did too many jobs the originally because you're doing a movie as you're
also doing this I was in Budapest going from like flying from Budapest like do all night on set in Budapest
fly to indie, do indie, fly back, land, drop my stuff off, go film.
And like doing that until post-Ressomania, like back and forth to Morocco and Budapest
and all these crazy places that weren't easy commutes.
And it's just, you think you can do it.
He's like, ah, sleep, I'll sleep on the plane or whatever.
You don't.
It doesn't happen.
And then you get upside down and you're like super fatigued.
But like, I threaded the needle just enough.
The plan originally was to do like a full year.
This is just going to show my ignorance of the business.
I wanted to do 220 dates.
Just take a year off of everything, hop on a bus, do a full WWE calendar, and like totally say goodbye.
Thank goodness that the business isn't like that anymore because I would be, if you took a gingerbread man, just broke them, I'd be done.
They only needed me for 36.
Did they, did you ever ask your half-brother Dom Torretto for any advice or no?
know. I ask Vin for advice all the time. You do? Yeah. And he's... You stayed in touch with Vin?
We text back and forth all the time. Really? He's like, he's a really good dude, man. And like,
he's, um, there's another guy who's like, he keeps himself. But if you know him, he's like a really
wise, genuine dude. I love how loyal he is to Paul Walker. Man, I... Like, he's, he keeps the memory
alive in all these different ways and it's, it always seems completely authentic to me. He just like really
love the guy, and he always wants to, like, bring him up in a good way.
I also know he cares about his body of work, and he cares about the people he works
with.
Yeah.
And that's also cool.
You know, um, no, a cool guy.
Shout out to Vin.
I definitely keep in touch with him.
I mean, it's funny, because it's not like you weren't famous, but that franchise is
basically like you're entering the Marvel universe when you're in a fast movie.
And I get to be a Toretto.
Yeah.
I get to be Jacob Toretto when they're like.
I had some notes about whether the, bring it all on.
I don't know.
Their relations.
But I just didn't really seem like you guys had a lot in common genetically.
I got to wear the cross.
And as they would say, it's in the books.
Do you have to do any fake driving preparation?
And you sort of, were they teaching you how to?
I don't know.
Because you're doing, you're, they have car full of cameras, right?
And you got to, it just seems like it's this weird, weirdly hard acting that you wouldn't think would be hard.
So.
Because you got to pretend like things are coming.
this is happening, guys crossing.
Two things about me.
One, I love to drive.
And two, I never, thank goodness, shut off my imagination.
Yeah, yeah.
So, like, doing Bumblebee, working with Bumblebee was a long stick with a tennis ball.
Peacemaker, Eagley was a gray bowling pin.
Fast, a lot of times you're driving in green screen.
Yeah.
I just a trip to imagination land.
Just throw yourself into it.
Yeah.
Did you feel like people didn't know who you were in the fast universe?
I don't expect any.
Like, who is this guy?
That's the thing.
Like, I don't expect anyone to know who I am.
And I don't care.
Because it feels like it's, and I'm a card carrying fast and furious guy.
But it's not, it's like this universe that's over here in a lot of ways.
So is massive and it's global.
So is WWE?
Yeah.
That's what I mean.
It's almost like, I wonder what the overlap was.
So I think, again, like, I can't say how much WWE's prepared me for who I am.
here's a here's a genre where you can go around the world and little kids come up to you and do this
but no one in entertainment knows you so a lot of the opportunities i've had people have no effing clue
who i am and that's okay because i just want to do good i figure it's just like when in wrestling
when nobody knew who i was yeah all right all i got to do is go out there and get the noise
and they'll get another chance just go out there and get the noise and i don't care
that people don't know who I am, that don't know my story.
What I care is at one point, someone was like,
I'm going to bet on you.
And maybe it's to say a few lines or a cameo or whatever.
Dob needs a brother.
Connect the dots, however you want.
We would like to bet on you.
I feel like that brother would have come up in the first eight movies.
Hey, man, I'm glad it came up in the ninth,
and I'm glad it was me.
So in the bottom of the ninth, I made it in.
You know what I'm saying?
Stuck in there.
just try to do the best you can with the opportunities
and don't care like I don't I never care about
who knows me and who doesn't
I don't even know where Vinn ends
and Dom begins at this point
I just picture him like hanging out
like he invites you to his birthday party
and he gives a speech to everybody
and he's like to me familia
and does like one of the
Corona's all around
yeah and just the coronas and does this whole
thing I just feel like he's merged
I bet there are folks out there
that would have that perspective about me
to say, like, I don't know where John Cena
the W.W.E character ends and where, like,
John begins. Right.
Well, you were the first era of the people that didn't
have the gimmick or, like, you actually
just used your name. You want to talk again
about luck. That was not my choice.
Right. And now that's basically almost
everybody. They went from an attitude
era of, like, edgy TV, and for a hot second,
they were like, we want more realism.
I snuck in.
Yeah. Like, in them.
like the Indiana Jones where the thing is like closing and I snuck in like me
Brock Randy Battista Shelton Benjamin under the thing we got it you know and
it's so many people would look at that and be like well you don't own your name I don't
care so many people because of what WW is done has put the IP out there have allowed me
to get so many opportunities so I could be greedy and try to cash in on
like give me every shekel that that is attached to that name because it's my name or I can
be grateful to be like because of that name I did this, this and this, which they have nothing
to do with. And then it vaulted into this, this and this. They have nothing to do it. And every
once in a while, there's a ball cap and t-shirt thing that they absolutely get what they've
earned. You know, but it's weird because it's like, man, you got to use your real name. But some
people come out from the perspective of like, do they own your name? That's weird. It just,
is what it is. I'm so lucky.
I'd like to see you at a couple more
big Boston sports games, I think, would be a good
2006 and beyond for you.
Like, lean into the Boston thing a little more.
We count your titles. You would like to be.
27 titles in the 21st century,
thanks to them. You count them weird.
What do you mean?
You counted them weird.
Well, I counted the WWF ones.
WWF slash E.
Were they all E or were there
a couple Fs in there? I think they're all E.
They're all E? I forget. I never
really, I always think they should.
won that lawsuit.
I get it. The other one was
first, but it always bugged me.
Sometimes it's not worth it.
Yeah, I guess not.
And they move seamlessly to
WWA. What a great way
again to like, no,
we're going in this direction. No one's
going to get it. Yeah.
Until everyone gets it.
Right. And man, I had folks
in like 2014. You still
WWF? Yo, it has been
WWE for like a decade now.
Now no one. Yeah.
Like, no, the F is out.
So, good choice.
You had to get rid of the F and one of your moves, right?
Yes, yes.
When they went PG?
So, again, a great, a good explanation, right?
Brock Lesnar's move was the F5.
Yeah.
I had a similar move where you pick a guy up.
We both pick guys up.
He is a little bit more strong where helicopters.
But yours was the FU.
but it came out of nowhere.
Like, I'm, I'm a middle.
So again, the match is not about me.
I'm a middleman for Brock to beat to go to the Undertaker.
But the more you can make that middle match exciting.
Yeah.
The cooler it is, because it's a good one-off of the fans.
So I didn't, I didn't try to make Brock look bad,
but I was abrasive with my trash talk and was like, you have the F-5,
I have the F-U, and that's where the-
That's a pretty good line.
that's where the name of the move happened.
So I kept using it.
And then as we evolved into PG,
I was told like, hey, we can't use that anymore.
And then switching it to the attitude adjustment has been incredible
because, like, it's so weird that art imitates life.
Like, I'm always trying to change people's perspective or all from a new perspective.
So literally, I'm trying or leaning into the fact that you can,
can adjust your attitude no matter what at any moment.
And that, like, really changes the dynamic of anything.
You know, it's what, if the, if the move was still called the FU, it'd be tough for me to
sit here.
Yeah, seriously.
You know what I'm saying?
It evolved because it had to, but it, rather than swimming upstream, yeah, okay, it's
the AA, it's the attitude adjustment.
All right, December 13th, Saturday night's main event.
Yeah.
We don't know who you're fighting it.
I hope for the sake of your chest, it's L.A. night so you don't have like dark,
Roon Slap Marks.
Ah, that's the last one.
Yeah, it'll be fine.
All right.
And I got two, I got two big old...
Who's favorite in that match?
What's that?
Gunther versus L.A. Knight.
Who's the favorite?
Man.
It's pretty close.
Two guys who've been doing really well,
the last couple of years.
I like the edge
that L.A. Knight has.
Like, he operates on a nothing-to-lose
sort of thing. I think many times
this is...
I think many times he might be his own biggest
hurdle.
But gosh, if there's a dude willing to bet on himself, it's L.A. night, and I admire that.
It would be fitting if you beat somebody with the L.A. in his name in your last match.
It would also be great if it was in Boston.
But none of that shit is in our control.
Yeah.
It sounds like you just would have done Tampa.
36 in Tampa would be glorious.
It feels like you're becoming like a Bucks fan.
I don't even know if you're focused on this Patriot's Renaissance.
This is going to burn this room up.
I don't even watch anymore, man.
Well, you're too busy.
If you're flying back and forth from Budapest and you're wrestling and making movies.
It takes time.
I don't even know what day it is, man.
All right.
John Cena,
congrats on everything.
I'm glad we found out of,
that's how we're ending it.
We're ending it on a downer of like,
I don't even watch sports anymore, man.
We're ending it on.
That's how it goes.
That's the last moment we have.
Well,
I could make you do a freestyle rap.
No,
you can't make me do anything.
You're going to ask me to it.
I'll say, no.
That's a great idea.
That's, yeah, that's no.
I'm happy for you.
that you feel like this last year
was in some ways your favorite year.
Like that's a great way to go out.
How many people get to retire on their terms
where they're actually happy with that played out?
You used it. You said it was my terms.
I would do it in infinity if I could. This is not my
terms. These are my terms. What is your terms?
My terms is do it forever. But you can
control when you stop doing it and you're controlling
it, which is a good thing.
Well, again, I asked if like,
hey, company,
do you think this is a good business idea?
and they agreed so we're able to do it.
What I love most about the year is
I think it will keep on giving moments after it's done.
Yeah.
I think people will begin to continue to reflect
and like, oh, but maybe it was,
this was the story they were trying to tell.
I think it's weird to talk about it
because WW is so at the moment,
like something happens on television and people like,
I hate this.
Like, this is the greatest.
I said, and it is, it has been a year-long story.
Yeah.
And people will digest it once the last one happens on the 13th.
And then I think they'll reflect, especially when they realize that I'm not coming back.
And then, like, you could dive into like, oh, man, what were they really trying to do across a year?
It's never, it's never been done before.
I would not, I could not give an ounce more of effort.
I don't think there's a single thing I would have changed, and I like that it isn't perfect.
I like it.
I like that parts changed.
I like the dates and cities changed.
I like that the last one isn't in Boston, all the stuff that like, it would be perfect if.
No, life isn't perfect.
Like, you just do the best you can with what you got.
And I personally like all that stuff.
I like the patient's angle is good, too, because you're right.
Everybody's like, yes, no, quick, move on to the next thing.
scroll up and down on my reels.
Something as simple as, like, in my last title defense,
having Liv Morgan assist and beat me in the same way that I turned on Cody,
but she did it better than me.
Yeah.
Just being able to like, hey, wait, you're going to get a call back to this moment in February
in November, but just wait for it, wait for it.
And being able to pay it off that late in the game, like, I don't know.
And whether that means anything to anyone else with me,
I just, I like to know that there's not a moment I'm not thinking of.
There's not, we're doing everything we can.
I'm doing everything I can.
So I just, I hope it, if it doesn't, nothing ever stands the test of time,
but I'll be very good on the 13th knowing that like, all right, I gave the best I could this year.
I truly all the wisdom tricks, knowledge, physical ability, strength I have left, effort,
seconds, time,
advice, whatever.
I don't have anything left.
And the 13th is going to be special
in that regard of putting a period
on this. Did Dom Torretto or RSVP
yet or no?
Can't make it. He's got to save the world.
I don't want to
I don't want to tell you what it's about,
but there's cars involved.
He gets selfish that way with the cars.
Duty calls.
John Cena, thank you.
Great to do this. Thank you.
All right. That's it for the podcast.
Thanks to John Sina, thanks to House and Bellany, thanks to Gahou and Eduardo as well.
New rewatchable is coming on Monday.
I'll tell you the movie on Sunday night because we haven't taped yet,
and I want to make sure it actually gets taped.
But in the meantime, you can watch on HBO and HBO Max.
Our first installment of this season of the Music Box series,
it is the Jeff Buckley documentary by Amy Berg.
It's awesome.
It premieres on HBO Thursday.
and then you can find it on HBO Max as well.
So go check it out.
Have a great weekend.
I will see you on Sunday with Cousin Sal live after the Sunday night game.
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