The Bill Simmons Podcast - Curry Survives, Trae Melts Down + Ant’s Crazy Shooting with Kirk Goldsberry, plus WWE President Nick Khan Stops by
Episode Date: April 16, 2025The Ringer’s Bill Simmons is joined by Kirk Goldsberry to react to the Grizzlies-Warriors, Hawks-Magic Play-In games before discussing shooting stats and NBA awards (2:10) Then, Bill chats with WWE ...president Nick Khan about the future of wrestling and more (56:59). Host: Bill Simmons Guests: Kirk Goldsberry and Nick Khan Producers: Chia Hao Tat, Jessie Lopez, and Steve Ceruti Get anything delivered on Uber Eats. www.ubereats.com 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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Taping this a little after 10 o'clock.
Just watch Goldstate hold off Memphis in the playing game.
It was a fascinating one.
Kurt Goldsberry.
I love the playing game.
Eight, nine is great.
Super fun.
We got a blowout.
We get a fun game.
We get some trade young trade rumors coming out of the first game and then the second game.
Memphis, a team that I was not a huge fan of, who I think is now 12 and 18 in their last 30,
put up a spirited fight.
There's a couple moments of this game where I was wondering if Golden State was actually going to blow this
and be in this bizarre scenario of losing to San Antonio,
losing it over time in the last day of the season,
then blowing this Memphis game at home.
And now all of a sudden fighting for their lives just to play OKC who just
won 68 games, but instead they escaped.
Now they play Houston.
What was your big takeaway watching this game?
Oh, it shouldn't have been that close.
It was a frustrating game for both teams, honestly.
And Steph Curry, I mean, two giant threes.
I think he's bookended his season before the season,
that masterpiece in Paris, and now to wrap up
the regular season and secure the playoff spot
for his team, two just classic Curry threes.
Uh, when they needed him most, it was an incredible moment.
Um, but a real frustrating end too.
I mean, Draymond fouling out there, uh, Jimmy Butler throwing the ball away.
This team, oh, they should have put them away earlier in my opinion, but they got
there, they got it done.
Now they have this fascinating season, uh, series coming up with,
with the Houston Rockets bill.
It's one of those weird subplots of this entire Warriors run dating
back to 2013,
abject sloppiness at the worst possible moments in crunch time.
And they somehow won four titles and go down as the most, you know,
one of the most memorable teams of this century. And yet at the end of games,
they're up three and I'm watching it just expecting
something stupid is going to happen.
Curry's going to dribble the ball off his foot.
Somebody's going to lob a pass across court.
That's going to get picked a dumb foul.
Like it's for a team that fancies itself on high IQ stuff.
And they do have, you know, an unbelievable basketball IQ.
They sure do dumb sloppy things at the worst possible times.
It's really, really, really odd.
I don't get it.
Yeah, they're always among the league leaders in turnovers.
Yeah.
And they've been loose with the ball this whole era.
Yeah, that's a good way to put it, loose with the ball.
Little loose.
Little loose with the ball.
But yeah, the Draymond foul was like,
dude, the time is on your side at that point in
the night.
And they just give them the free throws.
The refs didn't help either.
I'm not going to say it helped either team.
Like the Phantom foul on Edie and Pods had a great block I thought was clean.
But this is the result I think we all thought was going to happen tonight.
I think the Warriors securing the seventh seed and a little Houston matchup
well, let me big picture on Golden State a team that I was really bullish on and
This will be this is now prisoner of the moment bill. This is my time of year
this is when I really shine overreacting over and over again and try not to react but
I Think Golden State's lineup stuff is a little alarming for a team that I thought
really had a chance to win two, three straight rounds.
Kaminga is now just out.
Not only is he out, but you look at the box score today, Curry led the team in rebounds.
That doesn't see my deal.
They got killed on the boards.
Edie's size, I thought, what did Edie finish with?
17 rebounds. Edie's size really bothered them in this game. And it still feels like a team that's kind of
grasping for stuff. And if Jimmy wasn't awesome in that first half,
I think this game could have slipped away from them. But the big question for me, I was on Zach's pod on Monday.
I didn't even realize that Kaminga got benched in that last game.
I thought he was hurt because why wouldn't they play him?
They need somebody like him.
This game was just a Kaminga game.
This was an athletic physical.
They needed his rebounding.
They needed size and they still buried him.
So I guess he's just out.
I don't get it.
Yeah, it's remarkable.
I know I was listening to you and Zach too.
It's great to have Zach in the network,
but it was noticeable tonight.
I mean, Golden State's old.
You have Draymond who's old,
who had just sort of banged up his neck the other day.
Right, old guy injury.
When you have like neck injuries, it's an old guy thing.
Steph has a bandage on his hand, his shooting hand.
And Jimmy, I obviously was limping around after that Clipper game.
This is an old team.
So it's another reason why I expected to see Kaminga again tonight.
Just because of the depth.
He's a young player.
He's another body.
But again, Bill, like you said, no Jonathan
Kaminga. Early in the game, the bench actually saved them early. Memphis came out hot and Post
and Gary Payton both I thought sort of gave them a fresh burst energy. But yeah, what does Kaminga
have to do to get some run out there? Yeah, I guess you could say Butler played 39 minutes
Kaminga have to do to get some run out there?
Yeah, I guess you could say Butler played 39 minutes and maybe they just don't want to play Butler with, with Curry and Kaminga.
And I think the lineups were the plus minus stuff with those three together
were pretty bad for most of the season.
And maybe they just made a decision if we're going to play Draymond, he played
30 today, but he's a foul trouble on Butler 38 that That's just not a lot of room left for comingo.
But then you look at the rest of it, like healed, played 12,
Peyton played 19, Looney played nine post played 21.
It was pretty good.
I just, for this specific game, I, if I'm Memphis, I'm like, Hey, that's great.
Please don't play comingo because he's somebody that could carry some offense.
I mean, when you, you have 75 points for two guys and you know,
Peyton is your third leading scorer who just had wide open shots the entire game.
Um, not great.
I don't, you know, on the one hand, first round is great for Golden
State because of the breaks between the games, right?
It's the same thing for the Lakers.
The older teams first round is where you want to be, where you might play Saturday,
Tuesday, Friday, Sunday.
You just have all the stuff.
But on the other hand, it just feels like some of the teams in the West are still going
up and whereas the Warriors have kind of leveled off and now are completely dependent on having
big games from Stefan and or Jimmy.
And, uh, they're going to this Houston series where they're going to be able to throw just a shitload of dudes at Curry.
And we already saw it with Ahmed Thompson, uh, two Sundays ago, um,
and try to wear him down.
They also have a bunch of wings to throw at Butler, which brings back the
cominga thing, but it feels like cominga is now in the attic with the Christmas ornaments and we're just not going to see him again.
Yeah.
And I think he's going to be an interesting figure to watch in another way too, because Houston is one of the better rebounding teams.
In the league too.
And, and, you know, when Draymond's you're big and you're not getting a lot of rebounds with with post out there and I just you just start to wonder
Are they gonna have to put coming in just to match the athleticism and the physicality of this Houston team?
Yeah, I wouldn't Houston be able to do the same thing that Memphis just did with Edie and Jackson when they put their double big Lineup, I would think that would be a nightmare for the Warriors. The other thing that's interesting with that matchup
I believe is you know Dylan Brooks and Fred Van Fleet, nobody stops Steph Curry, but those two guys
have both done a great job defending Stefan, relatively speaking for the last
five to seven years, Van Fleet in the 2019 finals and Dylan Brooks for years
on this Grizzlies group.
Not to mention, as you
said, Ahmed Thompson, I think Stefan had one of the worst games I've ever seen
him have on April 6th, one of 10, three total points, the only three points he
got Bill were on a 34 foot three bomb.
Uh, he never got anything going.
Um, Eme Adoka was essentially calling my cry baby to his face.
It was just a nightmare game.
Right.
Uh, and so I'm, I'm really fascinated by this matchup on a lot of fronts.
And the question for me is can this aging set of great players, Hall of
Famers match the energy and the physicality of Emea doka's fleet of young
bloods who are just dying for this
moment.
Well, and it's, this is Houston Golden State, just a classic old school NBA playoff matchup.
The young guys against the older guys, right?
It's like Golden State's washed up, but they're older and their guys have a lot of playoff
years, a lot of playoff memories, but it's, you know, this is the 87 Celtics against the
Pistons. This is the 91 87 Celtics against the Pistons.
This is the 91 Bulls against the 91 Pistons.
Like we've just, we've seen this over and over again over the years, the OO Lakers against
the OO Blazers.
Um, and in this case, you know, I thought Houston would be favored in the series because they're the two seed.
They have home court in game seven.
They just kicked their butt a couple of 10 days ago.
What do you think the odds are on Fandual because they came out?
I know you've dabbled on the gambling side a little bit.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I would say-
You've been corrupted by Amy Howe a tiny bit to look at the odds.
Yeah.
We, we, we, I think FanDuel is going to have
the Warriors as slight favorites.
Am I right?
Well, you're right that they're favorites.
It's not slight.
They're minus 200.
Dang.
I think that's too much Bill Simmons.
I think that's gonna move.
And we did, Russel and I did the live Clippers Nuggets line
on Sunday and it was way higher than now.
It's like, I think the Clippers are favored now, but before the nuggets were like minus 160.
That rocket line is going to drop because all the dudes that they can throw at Curry,
home court, youth, the fact that Curry's banged up.
Yeah.
The fact that Jimmy hasn't played like this kind of level
of basketball over and over again in a couple years,
where you're just like, hey Jimmy, we need you now
for 39, 40 minutes a night.
And the lack of like that third scorer.
I don't know who I'm picking yet.
I'm gonna wait till Thursday, I really wanna analyze it,
but to me this series is an absolute toss up. And I think the double big lineup and all the
people that could throw a curry are real advantages for Houston.
I assumed it was going to be this matchup all day and I'm with you. I don't know who I'm going to
pick. I'm tempted to pick Houston because I'm sick of everybody just telling me Golden State's going
to walk away with the series like it's going to be easy. And I know that's not going to happen.
I know that's not going to happen.
Um, and, and I don't think those odds are correct, but yeah, I also could see a
world where Golden State goes down there steals game one or game two and is feeling
really good about their chances back in the Bay.
Um, I, I don't know.
I just think those odds are a little wrongly priced.
I think that Emea doka is going to have these guys ready, um, to, to do.
You know, what they do best, which is incredible defense, incredible
defense, physicality, and rebounding.
So punishing post-up stuff.
Maybe a couple, maybe, maybe somebody starts making a couple threes from the
corner that you wouldn't totally expect.
Yeah.
That the ceiling of their team is pretty high.
I just don't know if they can hit it.
They held Golden state built to 90 points.
And then one of their, what did they play five times this year?
Cause the end season tournament, uh, and one of those games, Golden State only scored 90 points.
Um, you know, that's a pretty remarkable stat.
I think Golden State needs to score a hundred to win.
I think they're like one in 10 when they don't score a hundred or something like that.
So if, if, if Houston's defense is able to clamp down on this Golden State offense,
the Rockets have a chance, uh, a good chance to win the series.
It feels like we've had a lot of Warriors Rockets over the years.
And it also feels like Steven Adams has played the Warriors in a few playoff series over
the years.
Dylan Brooks said, like there's weird history between these two teams and some of the players,
which makes no sense because Houston's such a young playoff team.
But if I was a Houston fan, I would look at tonight's game and be like,
that's our blueprint.
Big size on the boards.
Try to play up and down and as chaotic as possible.
Try to get them into where they were is going to sloppy an offense.
Use your athleticism.
Try to wear these dudes down and hope at least one or two of your guys
can get a little heat checking.
You know, because if you catch the Rockets on the wrong day
when it just looks like a rock fight for them
for the last seven minutes, you're like,
what's going on with this team?
They're in a little bit of the same position
as Golden State with, they're not positive
who their best five is to close the game.
It kind of depends on the situation. That always makes me nervous when I get to the playoffs. I
kind of like to know who's my five, right? That's like the best thing about the Celtics and some of
the best teams is the Cavs. Okay, see, they kind of know who their five is. But the other best thing
that Golden State has going for them,
how much would the league want a Golden State Lakers series in round two?
I'm guessing. I wouldn't want to be Minnesota or Houston from a, hey, like I'm just going into those
series and be like, guys, we're probably not getting a ton of calls over the next two weeks.
So just how are we going to handle this?
Are we going to be cool with this?
Cause that's probably how it's going. getting a ton of calls over the next two weeks. So just, how are we gonna handle this? Are we gonna be cool with this?
Cause that's probably how it's going.
It crossed my mind many times today.
And the great thing about that too, for the league,
is like it guarantees that either LeBron or Steph
is in the Western Conference Finals too, right?
So if they get to round two,
you know either one of those glamor franchises
and superstars is gonna be be in the Western Conference finals.
So yeah, that crossed my mind too.
Well, how about if the Lakers beat Minnesota and it's Houston, Gold State and the other side.
That's also a complete no lose for the NBA because Houston Lakers would be an awesome series that has the same kind of bad blood all over the place, including Ime, who got kicked out of a game for calling LeBron a bitch, which was
amazing.
Brooks, who, you know, has tried to make his decades mission to be LeBron's rival to very
little success.
And then Steven Adams, who's always willing to bang into somebody, but that's just such
a weird matchup.
The Rockets going double big and the Lakers don't have bigs. The Lakers don't have real bigs. Rui, LeBron have sort of masqueraded.
They have bulks.
Yeah. Yeah. It's interesting. Bigs in this Western Conference
playoffs are a big piece of the puzzle. I think, you know, the, the Hartenstein acquisition changes Oklahoma City's
ability to play big, uh, this time around, obviously Joker, uh, is in there.
But, you know, I think the Western Conference, there's three incredible
series and let's probably expect that one eight series to not be that great.
Yeah. I think that's, that might be an NBA TV exclusive.
Do they still have the NBA TV series? They do, right? The OKC versus whoever.
Yeah, that might be squandered. OKC Dallas. I think you just shove that over on NBA TV or.
Maybe it's maybe it's Memphis. Tooby.
OKC Memphis, by the way, should be Vancouver, Seattle. Think about that.
That would have been pretty crazy.
That would happen.
OKC Memphis would be a fun series.
Cause the thing about Memphis, I don't think they have any title aspirations
whatsoever, but they are fun to watch.
Oh, for sure.
The high scoring games.
The other team is always going to have two guys in the thirties.
Yeah.
I hope, I hope our man, John Moran is back and ready to go on Friday.
I think he turned his ankle pretty bad.
I have a really bad memory.
Or the Ewing theory might have to convene. Who knows?
Well, they did seem, they played well. Bane had a great game.
Bane almost helped. He almost stole this game.
He was making it seem like every shot and the ones he missed were like these
torturous misses that would go in and out.
He looked great.
But yeah, Memphis played pretty well, I thought.
And I think.
Okay.
See, isn't, isn't going to have a problem there, but, um, if John Moran gets to play
okay, see, I think that would be, that would be really entertaining actually.
I can't say it was the greatest Jaren Jackson performance.
And I really agonized, I ended up leaving him off third team
OMBA, making way for a couple other guys.
And it was, I just saw too many of those where it's like, he's good, he's solid.
But you're also forgetting he's out there for large chunks of time.
He's not, he's impactful, but not totally.
And I don't know.
That was a game where I feel, especially with like Golden State as small as they
were going, I felt like he could have kind of dominated that game.
And it just, I think the situation is what it is.
Yeah.
He, he, he settles for threes too much.
Well over half of his shots again today against that smaller team we're behind the three point line.
You know, when, when he was sort of running that offense last year in the absences of
Bain and Moran, he was doing a lot more driving and a lot more playmaking that didn't exist
tonight.
It didn't exist tonight.
Uh, and I'd like to see him be a little more aggressive against some of these matchups
because he's so talented. He's got these like both, he can finish with both hands near the rim.
But yeah, I still think they're going to, they're going to win against the winner of,
I'll pick them to win against the winner of the Sacramento Dallas matchup.
What are your thoughts on that one?
I think it needs a sponsor.
Is there a dysfunctional product that could be the sponsor?
Dallas and Sacramento, two of our most dysfunctional franchises.
Whatever that product is.
Maybe it's probably some sort of pharmaceutical product.
Or maybe it's like a CBD thing because you have to kind of get a little buzz on as
you watch the dysfunction.
But yeah, I have no idea that you could tell me Dallas is just ready for the
season and I would believe it.
Sacramento is always a roller coaster ride and both of them had really,
really, really abnormally strange seasons.
Like the Sacramento, the firing Mike Brown, going to Christie, that just giving up on Fox
a year early for reasons that remain unclear, bringing back the Levine to Rosen combo. And
I don't know, it feels like two teams that I think are going to look a little bit different
next season, whatever happens. Yeah, I have no idea what to make of either team. I think I'm
season, whatever happens.
Yeah. I have no idea what to make of either team.
I think I'm, I'm pretty sure that Sacramento's got enough to win this game.
Uh, it would seem like it, right?
Yeah.
I said on Zach's spot, I wonder if it's a one, two, three Cancun situation for
Dallas, like we just got booed for two months, like let's get ready to call it
a vacation, but I don't, I don't trust Sacramento either.
Are we still lighting the beam in Sacramento or did we decide of going 500 for six months?
Maybe it's not beam worthy anymore.
Oh, they're lighting that thing.
Oh, they're still lighting it?
Okay.
Yeah, they'll light it up, I think, tomorrow night.
I think they'll light that thing up
and then hop on a flight to...
Let's take a break.
I wanna bring in Saruti, Orlando Magic fan,
to discuss the bizarre Atlanta and Orlando game we watched today.
It's a quick break right now.
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All right, Sarudy is joining us.
The ringer's Iron Man.
Just had a child, but loves the NBA playoffs and so wired from Cole Anthony Knight that he had to join us.
But was that a better Orlando win or a more fun Atlanta loss for you?
Yeah, it was all good. I was just feeding the kid and I was just like, you know,
I might as well just stay up and hop in this Zoom record. I'm wired. I gotta be honest with you.
I don't know that I'm happier about winning the game or that I just don't have to watch Trey Young play basketball against my team anymore. That was, it was disgusting. Like
it was, and maybe I'm super sensitive to it because they played the Hawks a couple of
times here down the stretch. But it's like, he's yelling at the ref for calls that he's
getting during the game. And it just feels like as a guy who just likes to watch,
enjoys basketball, because there's a lot of people being like,
what's his future this summer?
He would undoubtedly make the Magic better.
And I just can't, I could never talk myself into it.
So I'm happy about the win, but I'm mostly just happy
that I don't have to watch that anymore.
Wow, Skullsbury, if I heard that correctly,
that was Saruti saying that win was a double win
because Trey Young was so annoying in that game.
Orlando might not trade for him this summer,
so we won twice.
That's how I interpreted that.
Dude, I've never seen a player taunt a ref.
With the ball, he was gonna pass it to him,
then he spun it back to himself,
like a big brother to a little brother,
and that's when he got tossed.
That was great.
It's a tough one.
Well, it's one of those things that'll go into the off season now and it'll be a
narrative and I think he was going to be in trade rumors anyway, for a bunch of
different reasons.
And, you know, the, I remember Paul Pierce at this point with the Celtics when the
mid two thousands things weren't going great.
And then he had that thing with the Indiana where he, he showed up for the press conference with this headband edge and it was like, Oh man, is he trying to get
traded? What's going on here?
They ended up keeping them, but we've seen different players hit this specific
point and it does feel like fork in the road now for Trey.
He was 2018 draft.
It's the seven years.
You know, I, I don't know what you get for them.
You, you start is like, is jaw.
Is it like a jaw type of level for a trade?
Is it a level below is Lamelo too high?
Is it, do you try to do your version of that?
The Jean-Tay Murray, like some picks and an asset,
just get out of it. What would you do, Kirk?
Jalen sucks. What do you think, Sorroudi? Jalen sucks.
Oh God, no way. He's hanging up.
I mean, I'm not, I'm not going to go like Dallas Mavericks fan level on that, but I would stop watching the team if they traded Jalen sucks for Trey Young.
I that's, I mean, no way. I mean,
That is Dallas Mavericks level just for the record.
It's, it's, you can't trade a guy who and I know you're just where this is, it's like
hypothetical, but like a guy who's like kind of the heart and soul of like the
energy of the team for a guy who I just don't know what trade is.
Like I, you know, obviously had the conference final a couple of years ago.
And I think he's really talented.
He led the league in assist this year, obviously.
Maybe there's a situation that works for him, but I can't, it's just like a
basketball fan be like, yeah, I can't night in night out route for that.
I just can't.
I it's, it's, it was, it was uncomfortable to watch.
I mean, he's, that's why it was so great.
Cause the Anthony black a couple of times who had a great game, by the way,
Anthony black, Cole Anthony and Wendell Carter carried Paulo in France.
I mean, more of France a little bit.
I mean, Paulo was good early and then, you know, got the cut above his eye.
So who knows?
But those guys were awesome.
But it was great to see like the action of, of Anthony Black
kind of got Trey tossed from the game.
And I don't know, man.
Like I, I'd rather root for dudes that just like kind of,
I hate to be the old man,
but play the game the right way.
But like, that's just, I, I, I don't want to watch, I don't want to watch foul baiting.
I don't want to watch.
I don't want to watch somebody yelling at the ref the entire game.
And, uh, you know, that sh I guess that the magic would, which they need another
elite guard, they need somebody, they need to get the ball out of Paulo and
Fron's hands all the time.
They leave those guys on islands to like at the end of shot clocks and they just
do them a disservice coaching thing.
No, I don't know.
I don't even know if that's a roster thing.
Like it would be nice if the offense evolved
even a tiny bit.
I'd love Cole Anthony who was, you know,
basically carrying them at parts of the game.
Like why does he come in with two minutes left
in the third quarter if you go up this massive run
and now the Hawks are back in the game.
Questions I have after the game, but you know,
he ended up doing it anyway.
But yeah, like I just, I just, I can't,
I can't deal with Trey.
Kirk, all right, you can't, I can't deal with Trey. Kurt.
All right. You're in the front office.
Everybody gets together and you have the Trey Young conversation and the problem
with the Trey Young conversation, the stats are there and the conference finals
thing is the thing that screws it up because you can't say good stats, bad
team guy because he made the conference finals and you probably have to go back and really look through, well,
how'd they make the conference finals?
What happened?
And then you have to really analyze that goofy sixer series, which was, you know,
the end of Ben Simmons, his career was a shortened season.
And how do you, how do you judge, was this just a fluke or are we not giving him enough credit because he was one of the four teams left in a playoffs?
I don't know what the answer is.
Yeah, I think he deserves a lot of credit for that run.
I mean, what we saw him do in the Knicks series and like getting, becoming that villain and becoming a guy who's capable of winning those big games. There was a little bit tonight where I thought he was going to get it going in that third quarter, Saruti, where they
opened it up and finally got your team running up and down the court. And he was at the forefront
of that. And then, yeah, like it's not ethical hoops. Like he, the, when the bonus light comes
on, he totally changes into the worst, most annoying player with all due respect to Chris Ball
somehow is taking it to another level.
When the bonus light comes on, Trey Young shines even brighter.
But there is some value there.
There is a team that would take a chance on him.
Maybe it's somebody like Portland or Sacramento.
I don't know.
I don't like the player.
I think what the Hawks have that makes it really interesting is they have this
incredible defense waiting to be there with these wings with Risha Shea, Jaylin
Johnson, obviously Dyson Daniels, a Kong Wu.
They have this like fleet of young athletes that are ready to shine.
I don't feel like Trey fits into that.
Uh, so I'm among the other, I just, I believe that he will be, uh,
mentioned in a lot of trades, uh, this summer.
Yeah.
And I just wonder who the team is.
So Seridio Anthony black and a contract and no, just then just you're hanging up.
Yeah.
I'm not even taking that phone call there before the Luca thing wasn't, there
were some talk about maybe the Lakers sniffing around Lake kind of LeBron thing.
Can't betray what was happening.
Yeah, I never believed that.
I mean, Sacramento can never be ruled out.
With their last 12 years track record,
you can't rule them out.
And the San Antonio would be the wild card for me.
I know.
For people who aren't watching this on video,
Kirk just made a face and leaned backwards in disgust.
I think that's the problem, dude.
When you talk about it with Sarutti's team,
it's like there's this visceral reaction.
When you talk about it with my team, there's this visceral reaction.
It's not exactly like, oh.
It might get to a point where if you feel like you can get him for 50 cents on the dollar,
his contract's not that much longer.
I don't know.
Yeah.
Isn't that kind of what happened, though, a couple years ago
where, like, it was Russell Westbrook, and it was like,
well, you know, would a bad team just take a flyer on him
just to kind of be interesting?
But there aren't that many teams.
I mean, Sacramento's probably the one.
But there aren't that many teams that are just like, hey,
we're so bad that we just need to be interesting,
so let's just take a flyer on Trey Young.
It feels like you talked about a bill, like there's just a lot of talent in the
league. A lot of these teams are headed in the right direction.
Even like, you know, the wizards and the hornets, like, why would they,
why would they do that? Um, there aren't, there isn't just that team.
It's like, Hey, let's just do this because we have nothing else going on.
And, uh, there really hasn't been teams like that for a few years now.
It feels like.
Yeah. Plus with the apron, everything's harder, like moving contracts, you know, everything.
Suri, did you want to make the case for Orlando in round one against the Celtics?
I was texting our good, with our good buddy, Kevin Clark.
And I, the thing I said was they, I don't think they have any shot in the series, but
I weirdly think that they could win two games.
Like I feel pretty good about that.
And that's, I think it could be a six game series and it'll be tough for the
Celtics, but I just don't think, I don't know how the magic score with them.
I mean, I, I don't know how.
If they go to the defense.
Yeah.
You bet your best chance is almost on the road in Boston where the Celtics just
seem to fall asleep every home game for whatever reason, they'll probably steal
a game one or two and then, you know, who who knows like people might start losing their minds and say some irresponsible
stuff, but they, you know, I, I can't imagine.
Everyone's locked into the magic all year long, but the offensive laws that they
go through, it's, it's like uncomfortable to watch at times. You're just like,
how is this? I think Zach mentioned to, I think forget it was you or whoever,
but it's just like,
can we just get some sort of offensive coach in there to figure some things out?
Why does, why does everyone that comes to Orlando, like KCP,
what was he, one of seven, I think from three,
I mean, Paul and Franz were 0 for seven or eight combined.
It's just like, why is everybody gonna go there
just immediately?
And it's not even like, like some of them are open shots,
they're just missing open shots.
And I, you know, as much as I like to think,
like I think that, well, they're two and one
against the Celtics this year.
I think they, a couple of those Tatum wasn't around.
Listen, it's a couple of years of Orlando having good games against Celtics.
Like my dad, of course, who's always sky's falling in his tech sometimes as we get to
our playoff time, he really wanted Atlanta to win because he's like, Orlando makes me
nervous. Sorry.
We've had trouble against them over and over.
Now this is with Suggs. Suggs was always a big piece of that is the difference.
Atlanta is a great, like, you know, when Alabama plays like an FCS team in the
first week, that's a perfect like first round opponent.
Like you just, you know, you get, you get warmed up a little bit.
You don't really get beat up.
Like the problem with the Magic is you're going to get beat up for five games or
so, five or six games, and it might kind of hurt you later on in the playoffs.
That's, that's certainly a team that isn't gonna be awesome
bruise-wise in round two and round three,
but I just can't see the magic without Suggs,
the scoring situation, I can't see it happening.
Plus it seems like the Celts are happy.
Kirk, Celtics sweep plus 126 on Fandl,
four to one is plus 168, and Cerruti's two game prediction that would net you plus 610.
Celtics four to two. Wow. That's, that's a pretty good price. A lot can happen in these games.
People forget how few sweeps there are sometimes. I think that the case for the magic winning one
is like what they did to the Hawks three point shooters tonight. They had four made threes, Bill.
That's like only out of the 1200 NBA games we watched all year long, only, um,
I think 13 times that a team, either team make, uh, four or fewer threes.
So Orlando has been the best three point defense in the NBA all year.
Um, they've suppressed attempts and makes at a very high level.
Um, that said, I think, you know, the Hawks are not the Celtics.
The Celtics and Missoula have a way of going from good to great
against every defense, um, and it's terrifying, but that the case is
they will sort of force Boston into,
you know, and you watched them all year.
If Boston has a below average three point shooting night, if they hit 26%
of their threes, they're beatable.
Um, and I think if Orlando can get some better scoring, if they have Cole
Anthony playing like this or Wendell Carter Jr.
playing like he played tonight, uh, they could steal one game.
I think this is a five game series.
Um, but I wouldn't surprise if it were four or six, I would say
it's a five game series in my head.
It's also a, like an interesting big brother, little brother dynamic
with the Jason Tatum, Paulo thing.
Both you guys, they're friendly.
I think Paulo was asked about it after the game and you know, he said
like the ultimate, you know, compliment or whatever, be just playing well against him.
You know, it's the guy who I think a lot of magic fans like
hope Apollo that his career steers towards the Jason Tatum.
Like he's never going to be that defensively, but at least
just kind of like the, you know, the caliber of player, the,
you know, MVP first team on BAs like that thing.
Uh, it's an interesting storyline to watch.
I just, I just watched Apollo too many times.
I just go, God, like I, I understand the criticism about the, the, um, like the
shooting and the shot selection at times, but they just leave them hanging out the
dry.
So he's asked to do so freaking much all the time.
And like, that's why when Cole comes in and gives them like a secondary
ball handler creator, like Cole was pretty inconsistent.
He was awesome tonight.
If they just had a guy that can can I don't know who that is necessarily
I wanted to be Malik monk in the offseason who could like ease the low
We kept looking at keep asking me ask me. I don't know who knows. Let's see how this series goes and how depressing is
I think I mean guy he's available. Yeah
I
That's it's just a dynamic to watch those two Duke guys going at it
Who what's your Tatum plan for this series?
I would just throw, I mean, Isaac and just hopefully you could just bother the
heck out of them.
Um, Isaac's been, he hasn't been as consistent this year as he was last,
although he played a lot of games.
So I guess he stayed healthy, so credit to him, but I would do that.
Um, maybe a little bit of Franz.
Uh, I mean, they're, they're certainly big.
They've got the size to...
You saw it tonight.
The Hawks are a different team, obviously, than the Celtics.
But man, it's hard to get good shots against them.
Kirk said it. They're the best defensive three-point shooting team.
They're the worst three-point shooting team on offense,
but they also defend and don't let teams make threes.
So they're kind of old school in that way.
So that's the path.
Can they just get the Celtics to not shoot
well and play good three point defense and hopefully they can get some shot
variance on offense for for 21 from three.
Iconic.
It's a box score right out of the early 2010s.
Um, all right.
So Rudy, I guess we're natural rivals for, uh, for the next two weeks.
I look forward to it.
All right.
Thanks for popping on.
Later.
Uh, Kirk, you did a. I look forward to it. All right, thanks for popping on. Later.
Kirk, you did a shooting column on the ringer.com.
Yeah.
A great website.
And you gave out the Shooting Excellence Awards,
including the Wardell Award
for Best Shooter of the Year, Steph Curry,
which is the number one award and the most important.
That's like your best picture, basically. Is anyone ever going to win this award other than
Steph Curry? How did you frame this in your mind mentally? Is, could somebody win it when he's
still playing? Could somebody come and take it? And if somebody did take it, who would that be?
Yeah, it's like the batting title and the Ted Williams era, right? Like this is just feels
like this is going to go to him. But you know, in the piece I looked at some,
some potential young players coming along
and there's some surprising names that, you know,
there's the Devin Bookers of the world that you think of,
but dude, I'll give you a name that is really relevant
for the playoffs who is suddenly an incredible jump shooter
and that's Anthony Edwards,
who is combining volume and efficiency and age.
I would throw that in there at a ridiculous level.
And some people are in the season sort of lamented that the fact that this
hyper athletic, you know, highlight machine was taken so many threes, but he's good
at it.
Uh, and so he comes to mind as somebody who liked it or not could be the best
shooter in the NBA in four or five years.
If he continues this trajectory, I mean, I don't know if you saw the stats, but
like very few players in NBA history have had more than 300 threes in a season.
Um, and, and now he's on that list.
Uh, and he creates a lot of them and specifically with a step back bill,
which is a very difficult shot that only players like Luca and Stefan and Harden
have really been able to do reliably.
Well, he's actually hitting at that at a rate that's better than all those guys.
Uh, and that really caught my eye this year.
So Anthony Edwards could take the torch in a weird way.
I would not said that last year, but doing the research for the piece, I was like,
it's undeniable that this guy is ahead of schedule as a jump shooter.
I looked at his stuff long and hard because I was debating.
I gave him a test drive for that last first team on NBA spot.
I gave him a test drive for fifth spot MVP.
Um, so I was looking at all the stats.
First of all, he won the three point title this year for three pointers made,
which Curry has owned. If Curry's healthy, he just says,
he just wins that every year as long as he plays 68 games,
you know, 65, whatever. Edwards hit 320, Malik Beasley at 319,
Curry at 311 and nobody else had over 266.
But I don't think people realize how many threes he takes and makes.
Like people like us realize it, but I don't think if you ask the average person on the street,
who made more threes this year?
Steph Curry or Anthony Edwards?
I don't think anyone would say Anthony Edwards.
So you have that, but he also took, took, uh, he made 415 free throws, which was six.
He took 496 free throws, which was fifth.
So he's moved into that kind of late 2010s, James Harden, Harden was the
Alzheimer for this, but threes and free throws, a little bit of that.
But then he's also doing all this other stuff,
including the defense, um, and the athleticism.
And I just, I was really, really happy with, uh, where we landed in this
aunt journey and now we have this Laker series where we're going to find out.
Can he, can he go up a little bit of a level here?
Yeah.
And that's, it's, it's a perfect stage for him to check in
and see where he's at.
Because there's a chance that the Wolves
will win this series and he's gonna be
just the star of the show on some of the biggest stages
in the first round of these playoffs.
And when he came out of Georgia
and was the number one pick,
I didn't think
that he would be the best shooter in sort of his cohort of early twenties players.
I didn't think that was going to happen.
I always thought I was going to be an athlete.
But he's great.
And then the other name you mentioned that I don't think people quite realize how great
of a shooting season we just had was Malik Beasley.
And if you look at just the catch and shoot stats, it's better than any
clay Thompson season, except for one.
Like Malik Beasley, it's not an exaggeration to say when you look at the
volume of threes he's taking and the percentage he's making, it's like
having clay Thompson out there.
In fact, it's like a better version of clay Thompson for
most of clay Thompson out there. In fact, it's like a better version of Clay Thompson for most of Clay Thompson's
career.
Uh, and I think that helps explain what's happened in Detroit.
Um, the sort of.
He can do it at the end of games too.
Yeah.
And he doesn't even start, which is why he's a six man of the year candidate.
Um, but he finishes a lot of games and he gives Cade Cunningham a, just a great
spacing weapon, um, but it's also just a, you know,
Malik's been a great catch and shoot guy
in the league for a while.
Yeah.
He had one down year in the Lakers.
But this is not, this is, he's taken it to another level.
So he's another one that sort of popped in this awards
and gave him the best catch and shoot guy.
Cause I don't think people realize,
and we'll see that in a big series too
with the New York Knicks.
Yeah.
To Bill is is can he continue
this under the bright lights?
I couldn't believe that he wasn't the favorite for sixth man of the year.
I voted for him.
I voted for him over Pritchard.
I watched, I obviously watched the Celtics the most.
I thought Pritchard had an excellent, excellent season off the bench, but Beasley, you know,
the Celtics could survive whether Pritchard was good or not. He could go one for eight for three points and it just wouldn't matter.
The Pistons couldn't survive Beasley having a bad game against a good team.
Like they actually really, really needed him.
He was probably, you know, Durin is their second most important player, I think,
because of all the rim protection rebounding, the alley-oop stuff that he gives them.
And Beasley's probably, it's probably two A during and two B Beasley.
Um, but with the shot and I've talked about it before, but the shocking thing
was how they would run offense for him in big spots at the end of the games.
Like they, they really would come out of timeouts and be like, we're running
this play and you're going to like the same way you would treat Klay Thompson.
So to me, it was a close, I clay Thompson. So to me it was close.
I thought I didn't think it was close.
I thought he was clearly six man of the year.
Yeah.
Anybody doubts go to basketball reference and look at clay and then look at Malik.
Um, there've been only nine instances of a player hitting more than 39% of their
threes while also hitting more than 300 threes in a single year.
Curry's done it six times. Clay's done it one time.
And then this year, Bill, Anthony Edwards
and Malik Beasley both did that.
So I think that was a stat that was like, oh my God, yeah.
There's more threes than ever.
Nobody wants to hear me complain about that anymore.
I get it.
But we're seeing the emergence of more
of these great
shooting campaigns. And this year was book Beasley and Edwards.
Yeah. He, you know, one of the things that screws up the six man stuff when you
look at it is some guys will have these games as starters and their stats will
jump way up when they're the starter. And then when they're the reserve, the
stats are different. You can look at all this stuff with the splits easily.
It didn't really matter.
He was just as impactful.
No matter how many minutes he got when he brought them off the bench,
he started 18 games, stats were like four points better, but it wasn't dramatic.
Um, and he was, he didn't have what a Pritchard had that one game where he
had like 45 against Portland, right?
That's the thing.
Naz read had a couple of those where he started and had big games.
Beasley was, you know, he averaged 16 points a game.
And I don't think he played. Did he play?
I'm looking at it now. Sorry.
Twenty seven point eight minutes.
I don't know. Shot forty one point six from three.
Took nine a game like that.
These are crazy numbers for a six man. It's one of the better six-man seasons we've had so any other shooting
seasons stand out for you? Well relevant to this weekend I'm gonna say Tyler
Harrow has had a breakout year but he's he's mastered the floater which is
really interesting and kills kills a lot of drop coverage and he's just the best at that.
The floater sort of replaced the pull up jumper for young guards, you know,
Chris Paul's generation would always pull up at the elbow off two feet.
Uh, Tyler Harrow and, and, and John Moran's generation is definitely like
running towards the basket, throwing up the floater, um, the stats back that up.
And this year, nobody has been better
than that than Tyler Harrow.
And, you know, I think in the Butler absence, if you look at the Miami
heats numbers over the last 15, 16 games, their numbers jump off the page.
And I think whoever wins that game in Chicago has a really good chance, Bill,
of taking the eighth seed in the East, um, from Atlanta.
And I think Tyler Harrow and the Heat.
I forgot we're not done with Atlanta yet.
We have them again.
We, we were saying goodbye to them for the year, but now we're
going to have them again.
And both Chicago and Miami are playing above that 9-10 level right now.
And so I think whoever wins that game is going to have a lot of momentum going into Atlanta.
And I could see that being Miami.
And I could see Miami going into Cleveland and stealing a game.
Um, and I could see Miami going into Cleveland to steal in a game.
So I noticed, by the way, I noticed the same thing with Miami. Cause that line it's, I think it's like Chicago by one.
I loved, I loved Orlando tonight and I also like Golden State, but they were
favored by like six, seven, my son, not amazing.
But like, I think, I think the two favorites are going to win.
Tomorrow's a harder match of games.
And I really liked the Chicago thing.
I think they're fun to I really like the Chicago thing.
I think they're fun to watch.
But the same thing, you made the key point with Miami.
The numbers are pretty good for them.
Just his last 15 and BAM, I think, finally looked like BAM.
It had a couple of real kick-ass games.
But in general, you know, a couple of times they played teams that were trying to tank, stuff like that.
But I just would be surprised if they lost tomorrow.
I'll say that.
Yeah, me too.
I think I'll go a step further.
You have Spoh, you have these guys that have gone very far in the playoffs still on that
roster versus a Chicago group that you can't say that about.
So I feel like I am picking Miami.
You know, I, I like Chicago again.
I think they're playing better than, than, than the nine spot right now.
Giddies hurt and playing, which that part makes me nervous where he's like
questionable, but he's going to play it.
I don't like that.
Yeah.
And then, yeah, so I, I love that, but yeah, I was here.
Oh, what else in the piece is interesting?
Uh,
by the way, the other one I, I, I refused to make a pick, but if you actually
forced me to make a pick, I'd probably take Sacramento.
Yeah.
I don't feel great about it though.
The last thing from the shooting piece that I think you'll enjoy is the best
shooting big man in the NBA this year.
Yeah.
You'll remember a couple of years ago, Carl Towns claimed to be the best big
man shooter of all time.
Uh, which that wasn't true.
What, what happened?
It's so, did we debunk that
to those of us who watch basketball before 2000, there were other good
shooting big men before town.
So I didn't realize, Oh, Dirk Nowitzki.
I forgot.
Oh yeah, that's right.
The MVP who won a title.
Yeah.
But Nicole Jokic among his many feats is literally the most efficient jump shooter in the NBA among all the people that took 400 jump shots this season, which I forget 98 players.
So of the 98 players that took at least 400 jumpers, nobody's more efficient than Nikola Jokic.
But he also, that doesn't include that he was like 42% from three?
That includes the three.
Oh, that includes the three.
It includes all jump shots.
And I think that is an astounding fact.
I know you and Ryan are debating the MVP votes, but I didn't know that going into that, but
just how great-
I'm not debating anymore because we had to mail it in today.
Oh.
Yeah.
And you ended up with Nicola, right?
I'm going to save it for Thursday's pod.
Okay.
But you bet you, I mean, some of the stats with him, like that shooting stat you just mentioned,
there's like nine different things you could say about his season from either using counting
stats or advanced stats that are just dumbfounding.
I mean, nobody had, I'm pretty sure nobody had been in the top five in points, assists
and rebounds per game in the same season.
And he's in the top three, but he was also second in steals.
And then he also shot 42% from three.
And then he was also like, it was like a 19 point difference when he was on or
off the court offensively for them.
Um, it's just like, you start going through this stuff and it was like, he
did eight things that just don't happen.
Yeah.
Ever.
That's, I think the last one you said for me, I really think the MVP vote comes down
to how you look at the word value and valuable in this context.
And for me as a stats guy, those on-off differentials with, with, with the Joker are so extreme
that it proves to me that way I think of value.
And again, I think this is a year where we have really unique two
candidates, both are deserving.
Two, by the way, yeah.
A plus candidates.
This is not a, I have to talk myself into an MVP player.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But, but, but I always come back to, and I think you alluded to this
with the two through 12 thing, but yeah, like when Nicola is sitting down for the Denver Nuggets, they're
immediately a lottery team.
They're immediately a lottery team until he takes off the towel and stands up and
goes to the scorers table and comes back into the game and then they're a playoff
team again.
It's, it's that trash.
Did you vote for the ringer 100?
I can't remember.
Uh, no, I didn't do it.
It's too tense for you.
Well, I sent't do it. I didn't do it. Two, two tens for you. Well, I sent my last list and, um, it's interesting.
So a hundred players.
I obviously took it seriously and really tried to rank everyone correctly and put time into
it.
Okay.
See had seven of the top 96 for me.
They had number two, 17, 18, 62, 65, 79, and 96.
Because I put Kason Wallace in my top 100 because I think he's unbelievable.
Um, Denver had one, 41, 60, and 78.
And I had, I didn't, Jamal's not even the top 40 for me at this point,
just cause he's been so erratic this year, you know, and it, and it, even when he starts
playing well, then he gets some dumb injury again.
And that, you know, the league is so deep.
You start comparing him to like somebody like Desmond Bain tonight, you know,
who's had a really good season and showed up when it really mattered.
Um, but anyway, the point is, uh, I thought that was interesting.
This, this one jumped out at me too.
I had seven Houston guys, my top hundred 31, 43, 72, 73, 81, 83, and 95.
It's not nothing.
And then you look at golden state six, 28, 40, and we're done.
It's three guys, you know, so that's not everything, but it is kind of instructive
when you start looking at talent
in a big picture of guys,
teams compared to other teams.
And one team has seven top 100 guys,
the other team has three.
Now, granted, one of them is number six.
And it's one of the themes for me this season too, Bill,
is like, if you look at the top four teams, top two on both sides, there's, there's something in common is they're all pretty
young.
I think the Boston Celtics have a couple older guys in Orford.
Yeah.
The holiday.
Drew.
Yeah.
But like when you look at the absolute core of the Cavs, the Celtics, um, but also obviously
in the West, the Rockets and the Thunder.
It's a young man's game, dude.
It's a young man's game.
And in these playoff series,
like where I can see myself talking myself
into the Rockets beating the Warriors is like,
dude, there's just these young bucks
who have a lot more energy, who are a lot more resilient.
Like when Jod turned his ankle, and like for an older player, that's probably the game.
Right.
You can't come back from that.
It's like a week.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You're, you're coming off on the wheelchair.
Yeah.
Those are the moments.
Uh, and I think there is a case for depth being more important than ever right now in the NBA.
And I think the Rockets have that and the, and the Warriors don't.
Um, but yeah, I think that's an interesting way to look at these playoff matchups too is who has the
most depth and what you just said about the Rockets is another reason I'm going to talk myself into
taking them I bet. Yeah, I mean they're bringing in Tari Asen for 17, 18 minutes a game and it's
just like you're unleashing him for those minutes and it's like oh let's a game and it's just like, it's like you're unleashing him for those minutes.
And it's like, Oh, let's put him and Thompson together.
Watch this.
Um, yeah, I don't know what I'm going to do.
I hate any series taking the team that doesn't have the best player.
The Warriors clearly have the best player.
And then when you saw how Jimmy could flip the switch tonight with all the time off between
the games, but the Warriors, the fact that Steve doesn't seem to really trust what his
roster is makes me nervous.
Cause I felt like he had a handle on it three weeks ago.
It really did.
I felt that Laker game when they beat the Lakers a couple of weeks ago.
I was like, Oh, this team knows who it is.
They knew who their guys are.
Now we're heading into the playoffs and I'm not sure they know.
So I guess we'll find out
we'll find out man yeah so I kept you up too late we're gonna go unless you got any University of
Texas updates for us no I mean it was great to see the Longhorn Corey Joseph back on the television
screen tonight I haven't seen Corey Joseph in a while there's a there's our update there's seen Corey Joseph back on the television screens and I haven't seen Corey Joseph in a while.
There's our update.
There's a Corey Joseph update.
There's a Corey Joseph.
Yeah.
But yeah, Bill, thanks.
And I can't wait for these playoffs to start, buddy.
All right.
Great to see you.
Your beard's looking as good as ever.
Nice little salt and pepper.
Really nice.
Thank you, brother.
Good to see you.
Thanks for staying up with us.
All right.
My friend, Nick Conn, is here.
He is the president of WWE.
They have WrestleMania coming up.
Do you want to hear my WrestleMania 40 years ago story?
Please.
I didn't have a lot going on.
No girlfriends to be seen.
And the fact that they had a WrestleMania pay-per-view with Hulk Hogan and Mr.
T was in the running for biggest thing that happened to me in 1995, maybe not
related to the Celtics or Boston team.
Uh, couldn't wait.
Felt like there was a real moment where wrestling fans were kind of shoved to the side.
We were kind of at the kids' table.
We weren't doing the booger eaters,
we weren't taking it seriously.
And then also MTV and Hogan,
and it's like, no, no, no, now it's our time.
The wrestling fans matter,
but you were also a wrestling fan, so you remember it.
By the way, WrestleMania One was so big. You watch it, I assume, on closed circuit?
We somehow had cable in Connecticut, because I was going to high school in Connecticut.
Amazing.
We somehow were able to order it on cable and watch it that way.
But I don't think everyone had that option. Some people had to go to weird closed circuit places.
Yeah, I was closed circuit LA sports arena, because at that time we were living in Los Angeles as kids.
So what was what was the crowd the most fired up for at the LA sports arena?
You know, look, the Hogan Mr. T, which snooker in the corner against Orndorf Piper and Bob Orton in the corner was huge. But that Andre the giant moment, there's something about that. I think it was $15,000 body slam challenge or body slam match with John Studd.
That felt big also.
Yeah, the closed circuit era is so hard
to explain to young people.
I saw Duran Leonard won.
I saw Hearns Leonard, the Boston Garden closed circuit.
So that was what, November, 1981, something like that?
Yes.
Saw that in the garden and just about everybody
was rooting for her and so I was outraged.
But by the way, think about it, like we would pay tickets
to go watch TV in an arena.
Yeah, and like a really crappy screen and it wasn't even,
it wasn't like it is now.
Like if you did like a watch party now.
It's great, it's great now,
but it was a blurry screen back then.
Do you guys do that?
You have watch parties now?
Yeah.
We have a lot of international watch parties with Netflix for the upcoming
WrestleMania.
We did deal with Cosm, if you know Cosm.
Of course I don't.
Right.
Cosm is a, it's sort of like a sphere like Warren Lounge.
Okay.
It's in a few select cities, including Los Angeles, Atlanta,
WrestleMania will be there.
It's already sold out, but it's a great viewing experience.
So we do them and we do them domestically as well.
Well, I want to talk about WrestleMania in a second, but since, since the last
time you came on, we actually finished a Mr.
McMahon documentary for Netflix.
It was a multi-year Odyssey.
I still can't believe it.
It ran, uh, Six episodes, six hours.
A big history of WWE. Vince was prominently involved. You guys were... Vince was gone at that point, but
the whole situation was pretty weird. And I think pulling it off was one of the craziest
achievements I've ever been involved with. I still can't believe it actually aired.
It felt like it was dead seven times.
A lot, a lot.
But by the way, it's a testament to you.
It's a testament to Netflix, you know, to get that done.
Obviously, in getting it done, the latter part, which you just referenced,
was quite bumpy, you know, for everybody.
But it got done and it seemed to get, you know, quite high viewership numbers on Netflix.
So what was the response like internally and like, you're in charge of WW you're
doing this giant documentary that's, you know, it's warts and all of a pretty
controversial guy who's involved in a big legal proceeding and, and there, did
you get people going like, why are you doing this?
Why hasn't this been killed?
Well, look, episodes one through five, it was all fine.
And then, you know, episode six obviously had a lot of, you know,
tawdry allegations in there. So, you know, the most important thing at the company
was, hey, this is not for us to spike it. That's not what the deal was. And the deal
that was struck with Netflix was prior to me joining WWE on a full time basis.
So it was sort of trying to help everyone stay calm who was watching it and hey, we'll
get through this thing and get to the other side of it, which hopefully, you know, now
we are.
What was the kind of, what kind of feedback did you get from people on it?
It went everywhere from, Hey, it was phenomenally done like you did with Andre, the giant documentary
on HBO sports to, Oh my God, you know, this thing, uh, you know,
it's not true, it's not factual, you know, this and that there were people who
loved it, uh, as an objective, whole objectively told profile of a person.
Yeah.
People who are close to the subject who didn't like it, which, you know, I
understand that I would think you understand.
Yeah. It was, uh, it certainly ran the camera know, I understand and I would think you understand. Yeah.
It was, uh, it certainly ran the game of emotions.
I was really proud of how it was done.
I thought, and I thought it was the hardest thing I've ever been
involved with just to, just to make, especially when the story kept changing.
My compliments to you.
There were a lot of bumps in there.
There were a lot of, you know, it was not easy and you stayed steady.
You got through it as did Netflix and you know, here we are.
Yeah.
You know, these things are documents.
I feel the same way about the Celtics thing we're doing right now, where it's
like, you know, you, you hope that 20 years from now people watch it, it'll be
some sort of snapshot of what happened, but.
Were you happy with the way the Celtics one turned out?
I really was actually.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, that's, that's different because these big ass documentaries spread over a bunch of years, like they,
they, there's a certain level of expectations that come with them now.
And you kind of have to exceed those people just assume they're going to be
infomercial or so they're not going to be good and they're prone.
They're prone to not want to watch it over what you almost have to convince them.
No, no, this is a good one.
You should watch this.
So I'm proud of it though. Look, for whatever it's worth, I too thought it over white. You almost have to convince them. No, no, this is a good one. You should watch this. So I'm proud of it though. Look, I, for whatever it's worth, I too thought it was
phenomenal. I put it up there and HBO sports, you know, as you know, you're one of the co-creators
of 30 for 30, but HBO sports was the sports documentary home for everything prior to 30 for
30. That bird verse magic, you know, documentary that Ezra did 10, 15 years ago, whatever that was.
15.
I thought that was the best basketball documentary I had seen.
It's excellent.
I put this one up there with that, and I also loved Once Brothers.
I'm not suggesting...
Oh, thank you. Yeah.
We did that one.
I know you did.
Yeah, that was a fun one.
Loved it. I thought it was a deep emotional story, but the Celtics one, it was not told simply
through the lens of a fan.
Yeah.
Which I think, I don't want to say it was difficult for you.
I wouldn't know that, but I know you're a huge Celtics fan, sort of be able to tell
the story objectively.
You know, Watson Hall was impressive to me.
Yeah, we wanted to do like just have an interview, a hundred people tell the story of the city
as it intersected with the team.
And you know, I think I've been trying to do these
and we felt that same way when we did the Vince one.
You don't just want to tell the story.
You want to also be levitating above it,
trying to actually say something.
I think that's when it gets hard.
And like in wrestling, there's been so many
documentaries at this point,
just about everybody's been done
and they've been kind of varying degrees of quality.
And the ones that seem to resonate the most, there's like two different audiences for it.
There's like the diehard wrestling fans who like dark side of the ring and all the nitty
gritty stuff and they're just going to eat those up and those are basically for them
only.
And then the question with the wrestling stuff is how do you get our wives to watch?
How do you get our wives to watch? How do you get like our kids to watch?
How do you get a much bigger audience for it than just the people that were going
to watch it anyway?
Totally.
Look, it's sort of the same thing we try to do weekly with WWE.
You're going to have the hardcore fans who watch, you know, no matter what, and
they'll either love it, hate it, or they're somewhere in between.
And then you try to broaden the audience as I think or at least I hope that we
Have over the last number of years to get people like your son back into it. He's out again
We had talked about this. Well, I thought he's coming to WrestleMania
He is but he's you know all the stages
He's in the state the stage now where the next stage will be like age what 24 when all of a sudden you come back hard
I'm not in the I'm too cool for this now. Yeah, we're gonna have to you might have to pile drive them The next stage will be like age, what 24 when all of a sudden you come back hard.
I'm going to have to have a private conversation with him.
Yeah. We're going to have to, you might have to pile drive him.
We'll have to have a private conversation with you and me on the side with him at
WrestleMania.
He's excited to go, but it's not, he's not on it like he used to be.
He's above it now.
Yeah.
I got it.
He's too cool for it now.
I understand.
But he, but the thing is he's not too cool.
That's the thing.
No one's too cool for wrestling.
It's the cycle of being a wrestling fan. So now he's here and then eventually he'll be back here.
I know I've mentioned it before, but WrestleMania, I think it was 2016 in Dallas.
So your son would have been nine years.
Yeah, my son was nine. That was the wheelhouse for him.
You were sending me videos from your hotel room of him doing Ben, your son doing all the wrestling moves on your guy's hotel bed.
Now my son who you know, Sonny is nine.
So I get to experience that firsthand and seeing him, my son do all the
things Ben was doing nine years ago.
Well, and then Sonny also, when we saw him, he deceived us on what the, um,
what the WrestleMania was going to be.
So you've already trained him to, to swerve people, trust little kids with information.
We thought we were getting inside info for how WrestleMania was going to play out.
And what he told us wasn't true.
I really respected it.
Well, by the way, there's a precursor to that conversation.
He said to me, Hey, if Bill Simmons asked me what's going to happen in Royal Rumble,
do we trust him?
Do we tell him? I said, we trust them, but we don't tell them. And he said, okay, then I'm going to happen in Royal Rumble. Do we trust him? Do we tell him?
I said, we trust him, but we don't tell him.
And he said, okay, then I'm going to tell him seen us taking the whole thing.
And I said, okay, great.
He never said any of that, but I'm just kidding.
I wouldn't believe that, but that's what happened.
He told us scene was winning Royal Rumble.
And we were like, wow, Nick Khan's kid.
He's got to get that kid in line.
He, he, he told us the wrong thing or he told us the right thing.
And then it turned out to be the wrong thing.
Listen, someone in this room and to the listeners, there's only two of us in this
room told me years ago, Hey, keep in mind, everybody tells somebody.
So, you know, the Jacobi trust triangle, the Jacobi trust triangle.
So we had to keep it tight.
That's was not winning the world rumble.
So that was the biggest decision you guys have made with a character in the company.
I don't even know since when this was somebody that you protected for 20 years.
You never turned him over.
He was always a good guy, even as the crowd, he's polarizing and his 50 50, but
that was the cool thing, but he always tried to stand for something. He was a role model. It helped.
The thing I always heard was the merchandise made it so much easier to just sell a
bunch of stuff.
Cause there was always this next generation of kids coming and then you finally
turned them right near the end out of nowhere.
So here's what I thought was interesting about that whole process. Number one,
John Cena's merchandise still off the charts.
Top of show at every event or almost every event.
The sort of collective decision to make that heel turn.
Yeah.
Triple H, Cena, Dwayne Johnson, Cody, everyone immediately on board with the whole thing.
So-
Had they pushed Cena to do that before or no?
Not since I had been at WWE and not since Triple H had been,
you know, in charge of creative.
So I don't know, you know, 10, 15 years ago, you know, perhaps,
but certainly not in the last five years.
Cause when they did it at WCW with Hogan, that was kind of a form of desperation.
Like he was really Peter, Hocomania had petered out with WWE and then was
petering out with WCW again and they flipped it at the perfect time and just.
Well, by the way, that is, as you know, one of the greatest heel
turns in the history of wrestling.
But as you just articulated, sort of had to be done.
Yeah.
Cena on his, you know, final run with us.
You've even, you even saw the fans prior to the heel turn, the ones who were saying,
Sina sucks and we love Sina.
There was no more Sina sucks.
It was 98% overwhelmingly positive reaction to John Sina for at least the
last couple of years.
So to do it when again, triple H and Sina and everyone else decided to do it,
I thought was phenomenally and phenomenally effective and really smart.
Yeah.
Cause we went to the show in LA the day before the fires, which seems like it was seven years
ago and had this, uh, you guys had your first Netflix show.
Cena, there was a popularity with him that I, I, it felt like a little nostalgia tinged
with we kind of know this is the end.
And it was probably the most tied into him that I felt like I had seen a crowd
in a long time where people were like, we love this guy.
We know we can see the finish line now.
And it was one of, that was the two legacies from that night were that, and
then Hogan just got booed out of the arena, which I can't imagine you guys
ever thought would happen, right?
Yeah, look, it was also rock showed up that night. Hogan just got booed out of the arena, which I can't imagine you guys ever thought would happen, right? Yeah.
Look, it was also rock showed up that night, Travis Scott with J Uso.
If you remember him coming through the crowd, you know, doing sort of
the Yip thing, you know, with Jay, I thought there were a number of
moments that resonated, but yes, Cena sort of announcing it had been
announced, but sort of physically announcing like, Hey, this is it.
This year is going to be it.
And you're not going to see me again in the WWE wrestling ring.
You'll see him across our stuff, you know, well past the end of this year.
But to turn, if that was January 6th, elimination chamber was March 1st.
And that's when the big heel turn was over the course of seven weeks,
you know, massive, massive turn.
We always talk about with wrestling.
It's like the NBA where you have like draft classes or eras or generations
and the talent kind of ebbs and flows.
And I can't tell.
I think that the company right now seems like it's as successful as it's ever been.
Right.
And it seems like wrestling, at least for you guys, the WWE version of it is
the most successful it's ever been.
at least for you guys, the WWE version of it is the most successful it's ever been.
I don't know how much of that is how you've handled the behind the scenes the last five years, you and Triple H and some others, or is it just a talent boom? Obviously it's both,
but what's the seesaw? Like being smart behind the scenes versus like, if you had this much talent,
it's probably going to happen anyway, Right. Like what's the seesaw?
I think, look, to me, it always comes down to the talent and the creative.
That's what drives WWE.
So if you think about it, Roman Ryan's went through, you know, some illness
and came out on the other side of that positively.
CM Punk had left the company as you know, 10 plus years ago, and it
seemed like he would never return.
He returns.
Dwayne Johnson hadn't wrestled.
He showed up at the SmackDown premiere on Fox, if it was 2019, 2019 at what was the
Staples Center, but he hadn't done anything long-term with us in a long time.
Cody Rhodes had left to go elsewhere and Seth Rollins
sort of elevated himself on his own, just a handful of rear Ripley, you know, pops.
Liv Morgan comes along.
So there's something definitely special going on with the talent right now.
But if you look at-
And Roman's crew, I think was another one.
Were you, that was one of the best crews.
That's another 50, 60 years of wrestling crews.
I mean, you know, like the four people, the five people, and it's like, Oh,
these guys might turn on each other.
Oh no, they're fine.
No, they might turn it.
Like that's the legacy of wrestling.
It's the bloodline to your point.
It goes up there with DX.
Yeah.
It goes up there with the four horsemen.
Right.
It goes up there with any of those great factions that you said, Oh my God, this is special.
And you know, it's not going to last forever, but as long as it did last, it
was phenomenal, phenomenal.
NWO before they started letting everyone in.
It became like the Soho house.
It's like, wait, is there anything special about being in this place?
Full Soho house.
Everybody's getting in.
It's like, Oh, there's Virgil.
Scott Norton, Vincent, not Virgil and WCW.
But yes.
Yeah, that was pretty rough.
A lot of, a lot of numbers.
They kind of lost the narrative fast.
Yeah, no, it seems like this is the best run, but you still needed the main guy.
And it felt like the big thing this decade was just getting Cody Rhodes and get it,
first of all, stealing him from your competition, but then also seeing that you could build him as like the face of the company, which I
got to be honest, I didn't see.
I thought he could be like one of the guys.
I didn't realize he could be the center of everything, which I think he is.
I think what's really amazing about Cody's story to me is he saw
it before anyone else saw it.
Yeah.
And to ask to be led out of his WWE agreement, I guess it would be, you
know, eight or nine years ago.
It's a classic bet on yourself moment.
Classic bet on yourself.
And by the way, to your credit, you leave ESPN.
You don't have to bring me into it.
I'm just saying it's a bet on yourself moment.
These things, when people bet on themselves and it works out and as you
know, it doesn't work out for a lot of people, there's a lot of people who
asked out at WWE and you sort of never heard from them again, a lot of people
who left ESPN, you may never have heard from them again.
Yeah.
You went, you built something, you monetized it, and now we're doing the
podcast from your home, you know, eyeball test here, 24 bedrooms, this house.
So that's a nice accomplishment.
And for Cody, back to Cody, you know, he leaves, he doesn't like the start us thing.
He thinks he can do much more than that.
He leaves, he hits the Indy circuit.
Like, so whatever he was making at WWE at that time, he left that guaranteed money
to go on a night by night basis.
He took a full bet on himself.
He went, he started part of another, you know, league.
And then you sort of saw him fade out over there.
And it's something that we talked about at WWE.
It was like, well, this is interesting.
It used to be, hey, this is about the wrestlers.
This is about empowering the wrestlers.
This is Cody's, one of the co-founders.
And then that narrative shifted.
And that's when we decided, when we knew contractually,
we could make the call to
make the call and say, Hey, why don't we get together and have a conversation?
The deal was done in minutes and boom, he returned WrestleMania 2022 at
AT&T stadium just three years ago.
Right.
And a year later was in the main event of WrestleMania 2023 at SoFi.
To his credit, he's never really talked about what happened with those guys.
Yeah.
He doesn't, he doesn't talk a lot of shit in a negative way, which is
something I admire about him.
He moved on and he's in a better spot.
It, it felt like it probably got a little credit grabby over there.
That was just knowing nothing just from reading and, um, following,
following the breadcrumbs and reading stuff like Meltzer's Newsletter
and weird shit like that where you're just like,
ah, it seems like there's a lot of people
in this kitchen right now claiming
that they cooked the pot roast.
You know this shrill.
I saw you do it at Grantlin.
I saw you do it when you replicated Grantlin at the Ringer.
Everyone knows who the founder is.
You don't sit there saying, I this, I that,, me, me, me, my, the people who do that. I've never really seen them succeed.
Yeah.
I feel like the actual leaders, they're the ones they'll take credit when
something's a disaster, which you should as the leader of a company.
When something is success, give credit to everybody else.
It doesn't matter.
Compliments are currency.
Another Dave Jacoby.
Jacoby, the CEO of the company.
Yeah.
And I think that's the biggest thing. I think that's the biggest thing. I think that's the biggest thing. which you should as the leader of a company when something in success, give credit to everybody else. It doesn't matter.
Compliments are currency. Another Dave Jacoby. James Babydoll Nixon too.
That's one of his mantras.
Babydoll, one of the all time great characters in the modern history of the
media business.
Nice compliment. Nice currency. We're at the masters. It's just a slew of, uh,
it's like watching the Anchorman fight with all the anchors,
except nobody's fighting. Everybody's trying to get along,
but it's all these different people with competing agendas
being like, hey, what's going on?
Everyone's friends all of a sudden.
Do you miss that?
Do you miss being an agent?
Does Baby Doll smoke at the Masters?
It's like a chimney.
That's amazing.
Yeah, he was on fire.
Do you miss being an agent though?
Listen, I loved being an agent when I was an agent,
but when I decided to stop doing that five years ago, that was the end of that for me.
I have had the good fortune of sort of being a friend of court to a number of former clients
if they need advice or want advice or just friends who may want advice from time to time.
I'm always happy.
Or you'll just hire former clients.
Just put them.
Put them on camera.
Put them in.
Or like CM Punk, who for some reason you were always kind of involved in.
That was one of those where I was like, Nick's nuts.
Like this guy's, this guy's a cancer.
Like you can't let this guy and it's been, seems like it's been great.
By the way, it was so obvious to me that he wasn't a cancer.
I had, in having been an agent assume I had dealt with some personalities
that were not the easiest, you know, from time to time.
I can't believe that.
I had always found it to be a gentleman.
I always found him to be honest, responsive.
And I felt if he was that way, you know, outside of the company, if given an
opportunity to come back to the company, he would be that way.
And he said that he would be, and he's been a gem to work with.
I think, cause I certainly feel this way about myself back in the earlier days.
Like I think when people have trouble.
Dealing with somebody who's not good or doing a bad job or has no vid.
Like, and I, for some reason, back in the day, I would take that really personally,
it would make me upset, I would try to fix it,
I would get all wrapped up in it.
And I think as you get older, you're like,
you know what, most people are terrible.
And once you kind of realize that,
it's like I just gotta navigate around it, it'll be fine.
Once you realize that, it's a different way of living.
And for whatever reason,
it took me until my mid-40s to realize it.
I think there's a constant through line in a bill.
I think for the supremely talented people, punk yourself.
Oh, thanks for putting us together.
Yeah.
Two of the greats.
Two of the greats.
Thanks.
Two of the greats, right?
Your, yourself, Triple H, the biggest challenge is to deal with mid-level
management or, or lousy mid-level management.
Yeah.
Correct, right?
You had, I think, referred to at one point
as like the khaki brigade.
The blue shirt and khaki police.
The blue shirt and khaki.
Correct.
Those were more the mid-level.
Coming in to sit in on a meeting
and have some bad ideas and screw everything up.
Right.
And then tell us to lead with the Lakers.
You were young and creative and had ideas
and many of them were great ideas.
And when you come up against no different than, than Phil, I see, uh, CM
punk and you come up against sort of bad mid level management, they can stifle
creativity and stifle ideas.
And when you're young and you know, you've got a little bit of chip on your
shoulder, which I think most people who end up successful do, it can be stifling.
It caused a lot of anger.
Yeah.
If you take, if you take incompetence personally, it's probably not a great way
to be it's by the way, the thing about it, when you said chapter in the book,
I'll never write when you say most people aren't great applies to every profession.
Yeah.
We, you know, servers in restaurants, executives at networks or buyers.
It's the same thing. Like, like club coaches and youth sports. So servers in restaurants, executives at networks or buyers,
it's the same thing. Like club coaches and youth sports.
Same thing.
That's why when you find somebody
that's actually really good, you treasure it.
No question.
It's like, wow, this teacher my daughter has is amazing.
I'm so happy this person exists.
It applies to everything.
I'm with you.
No, it is true.
Yeah, so it's been, I think S punk probably get a little, a little older.
Maybe put some stuff in perspective, tried a couple of things, had a couple of
failures to all of those cliches apply.
When you said you finally, like my words, calm down on it in your forties.
Yeah.
I'm sure Phil, I'm sure triple H as you got older, you have children, you get
married, you realize sort of the don't sweat the small stuff thing that maybe
you may have sweated years ago.
And it seemed once Phil and Triple H reconnected in my brain, it was going to be magic.
And boom, he reappeared or he, you know, surprised everyone at Survivor
Series Chicago a year and a half or so ago.
And it's been magic since.
And one of the other big things you did was splitting up WrestleMania,
which I'd like to credit you at least partially with that one.
I don't know. You might deserve all the credit, but that was one of those things.
That was an idea that was sitting there for years.
The event was so long, you just, you almost needed like an IV.
You're in your seat for eight hours. My son would never move. He was in that stage.
You're like, I'm not going to the bathroom,
I'm not going anywhere, and it was just these
terminally long shows and the audience would die
over the course of the show.
If the number one sport in the United States,
as you know, is the National Football League,
and they effort to have three hour games
and a three and a half hour Super Bowl,
and yeah, of course, there can be overtime
and longer games and all this stuff,
then why shouldn't we effort to do the same?
So, you know, seven hours, eight hours of wrestling of WW and one night is a lot.
Well, especially the crowd is doing it.
They're, they're on a roller coaster during the thing.
They're excited.
They're, they're intense.
Like, you know, do you have breaks?
You just, it's really anything longer than four hours, I think is really hard, right?
But it's really hard.
This is also our first one, at least in the last five years.
That's not on final four weekend.
So that was another thing you were, this is why I get mad with the NBA.
You actually looked at the schedule and try it.
We're trying to figure out weekends.
That would be advantages for you guys.
Totally.
Even look, we've done the American only holiday weekends.
If you think about it, fourth of July,
there's such a lack of sports on the people and it's with no disrespect
intended. We'll actually watch the Nathan hot dog eating contest.
But why wouldn't we do a WWE event on that weekend? So we do.
And labor day weekend, even though there's early college football,
why wouldn't we have a big, if people are like,
oh, well you can't get butts in seats, well sure you can
internationally, it's obviously not a holiday there.
And now that everyone can watch on their phone,
it doesn't really matter what day it is as long as it's not
a cluttered sports calendar.
I think you saw college football get into a little bit
of a mess with their playoff system going right around the NFL games, coming out at compelling NFL weekends.
Hopefully they reconfigure that, but it's something we put a
lot of time and effort into.
The good news.
It's the only mistake college football made.
They've nailed everything else.
It's been perfect with having these giant, ridiculous conferences and
teams that are 3000 miles apart.
When kids are supposed to be in school, flying cross country.
It's tough, right?
When it's fragmented, any of these sports, the NBA is not fragmented.
There's a leak.
The NFL, WWE, we're not UFC, not fragmented.
There's a leak.
It's what even on the boxing side cause such destruction for different, you know,
sanctioning bodies, interim champion,
who's actually the champ, all these different weight classes.
It's all chaos until there's sort of sent a central, you know, holding account or central
boss, if you will.
It's going to be tough to get any of that in line.
It's one thing I love about UFC.
It's the best, dude.
It's so much easier to follow for casual fans like me. I just want to watch the pay per views. I watch every pay per view. I love about UFC, it's so much easier to follow for casual fans like me.
I just want to watch the pay-per-views.
I watch every pay-per-view.
I love UFC.
I'm not going to watch 52 weeks a year.
I'll listen to Ariel's podcast sometimes.
I'll read some stuff occasionally, but for the most part, I'll fully admit, I'm a little
better than a casual fan, but I'm a casual fan.
And it's so much easier to follow when there's not 95 fucking belts.
By the way, look at what Dana and the Fratitas created.
If you ask them, they'll tell you, we took everything we liked about
boxing and incorporated that and all of the other nonsense that we hated.
We made sure to get rid of that.
Yeah.
Even if you haven't watched for a moment and you order a pay-per-view and you're
like, oh, the number one contenders fighting the champion.
Yeah.
That makes sense.
Yeah.
Number three is fighting number eight.
And I know what the featherweight division is.
Cool.
Totally.
Yeah.
Totally.
They nailed it.
And you know, that's to their credit.
I was so baseball did this almost out of necessity where they were like, we have
a major problem, we have to fix this.
And there's other leagues.
Football is just a monolith at this point.
They can do whatever they want.
They're gonna go to 18 weeks, you know,
whenever they want, it's gonna work.
And basketball is the one that it feels like
is gonna have to start to get a little more innovative
with the schedule and everything.
You always look at stuff like, why not?
Why can't we do this?
Like, all right, I get that we did it that way, but why wouldn't we do it this way?
Um, I don't understand why people that run big things like that.
Don't all just think that there's such a fear of, oh, well, that's
the way we've always done it.
We can't, we can't move from that.
That's what the fans are used to.
I don't feel that way at all.
Do you?
At all.
Like what, one of the dilemmas in baseball,
which was sort of fixed with the pitch, uh, the pitch clock, the pitch count clock.
You know, you didn't know in Los Angeles, you went to a Dodger game.
Oh my God.
Was it going to be a three hour affair? Was it going to be a seven hour affair?
Like, would you ever have taken your son to a Dodger game with the old rules?
Your nine year old son is like, it makes me home at one 30 in the morning.
Brutal. How do you go to a nighttime game on a weekday that starts at seven o'clock?
Yeah.
Why would you even do that?
It tastes so hard to get in and out of there.
By the way, my first year as an agent, which was in 2006, somehow I
met the baseball hall of fame.
I don't think we've ever talked about this story before.
And that's, you know, Cooperstown.
And I went there and they said, you know, we're not making a lot of money.
What do we need to do to fix this thing?
I said, shut down this whole Cooper's town operation, move it to Vegas.
Never heard from them again, never heard from them again.
But to me it was like, that was what they should have considered if they
wanted it to be a year round engagement.
But again, that's the way they had always done it.
And that's the way they wanted to keep it.
That's a tough one,
because on the one hand,
every baseball fan makes the pilgrimage to Cooperstown once.
But you don't do it 10 times.
Fine.
Yeah.
By the way, travel it, do something with it.
Yeah.
But don't do what you're currently doing.
Now, it feels, you're right,
there should be a big version of it.
But you guys, the WWE Hall of Fame was an idea
that's sitting there forever and that hasn't happened yet.
But it's happening this Friday.
Stand by the way.
See you disrespect.
What do you mean?
Triple H is being in the, oh, the brick and mortar hall of fame.
You're saying I want the actual, I can walk into it.
I can go around.
There's videos.
There's, I mean, maybe you could be the ones that finally did the pantheon idea
that I've always wanted to do with the levels.
Listen, if you're like your five level hall of fame and you get to the top level
and it's just like Hogan, San Martino, like all the great greats.
Who's your Mount Rushmore for wrestling?
Should we wait until my dog starts barking?
Whatever we can bring him in.
Whatever you want to do.
Hogan has to be in it.
San Martino.
John Cena, Rick Flair.
Yeah, I get that.
Cena is probably the shaky spot.
I think Hogan, Hogan and Flair have to be in it.
No Austin for you.
It's a, it's a pretty brief apex.
Yeah, shorter run. Talking five years, it's a pretty brief apex. Yeah. It was a shorter run.
Yes. In five years, you know, I think rock potentially, but rock is another one
where the actual apex wasn't long enough.
Like if you're going to hall of Famer, the career has to be part of it.
Like, like flair and Hogan, how long they lasted was amazing.
And even San Martino wasn't as long as those guys.
Who do you, who do you think it is?
Flair Hogan for sure.
Yeah.
And then as you just sort of articulate in a different way, the final two are tough.
Cena deserves some sort of recognition.
They were talking about a 20 year run.
Yeah.
What Roman's done the last couple of years.
Thinking of it.
Yeah.
I mean, he's definitely in the conversation now.
Tremendous.
And then you think back, you know, San Martino was just before me, but you would read in
Pro Wrestling Illustrator, oh, he held the championship for this period of time.
And superstar Billy Graham, you know, came along in this and that.
But definitely Flair and Hogan.
I would put Austin somewhere around there just because of the impact he had.
I think if I'm remembering correctly, he retired at like 39 with injury and,
you know, all of those things rocked left early to go pursue a different career
and was doing movies like the tooth fairy and it was in the get shorty
sequel, you know, paid played like a buckler.
His extra five years when he was just kicking ass, like basically Hogan's late
eighties, I think the two, the two ass, like basically Hogan's late eighties.
I think the two biggest apexes were Hogan and Stone Cold.
Oh my God.
I'm not just saying that as like a WWE homer.
WCW never had anything like that.
And by the way, and Rock obviously went on
to monumental success once he left.
No, but Stone Cold, his feud with Hogan,
I mean with Vince, when that Stone Cold, his feud with Hogan, I mean, with Vince, when that really hit,
it's like there's been, there's nothing like that.
It rejuvenated the entire company.
Can't miss TV.
And you think about it, you had Austin, Hogan,
Rock, Triple H, DX, Mick Foley, and oh yeah,
you had Undertaker Kane and all those other guys as well.
Just an amazing, amazing bench that all hit at once.
Well, the other thing with, with Hogan and Stone Cold, it's the only two times
they shifted the actual popular culture.
Right.
Hogan definitely in the eighties and he's part of this whole patriotism boom
that's like sliced alone and Schwarzenegger and like we're Russians are the bad
guys and we were like big USA,
like he was right in the middle of that. And then Stone Cold, right?
As we tried to cover this in the Vince doc a little bit, um,
right as something was shifting in America and people were just getting edgier
in general. And he just felt like he was one of the people, him and DX felt like
they were at the forefront of something. NWL was like that too,
but he was at the top of it,
of like, it's okay to be the anti-hero.
When you think about like him as an anti-hero,
which hadn't really happened in wrestling before.
I mean, there are pieces of it in different guys,
but nobody had been like, I'm gonna just own this.
And I would have been a heel 10 years ago,
but now everyone's rooting for me.
Then it moves into the Tony Soprano.
I was just gonna say that. That's kind of what TV became in the 2000s.
He was like the first one.
The precursor.
So when everyone says, well, Tony Soprano was the first anti-hero, you know,
that you're rooted for now, correct.
It was stone cold.
It shows you WWE was ahead of the game.
And sometimes, you know, Paul Leveque and I will sort of, you know,
semi joke like life is WWE, WWE
is life.
It's our product is great when it's reflective of the times, which you just articulated through
Hogan and the Reagan era with Arnold and sly and all that.
And then in the Clinton era with the proliferation of cable news and information and what was
going on in the White House at the time and the Jerry Springer show.
And this then people, there was more of a populist movement where people who hadn't
had a voice before were starting to have a voice.
And I think to your point, DX and Stone Cold both reflected that.
Do you feel like, like you could argue now there would be a moment to tap into that,
but where the UFC is seems to be the one that's tapping into this, this side of the universe, right?
You could see all the people that were at UFC the other night and it's, it's been this
side that was one of the reasons Trump won the election again.
But this, this whole movement basically against the far left, but wrestling has avoided it
this time around.
Right. basically against the far left, but wrestling has avoided it this time around. Right? Yeah, wrestling's avoided, but it was interesting
because two weeks after, two weeks, give or take,
after the Netflix Raw, Into a Dome premiere,
you and I were both at the UFC fight at the Into a Dome.
In the heart of LA, you and me there,
and it's as many, you know, LA is probably as left
as it gets at this moment in time.
Yeah. The place was sold out. And remember the main event, you know, fell apart, you know, a is probably as left as it gets at this moment in time. Yeah. Place was sold out.
And remember the main event, you know, fell apart, you know, a couple of days
beforehand, boom, Dana and the UFC move quickly.
They put in, you know, another opponent.
No one asked for a refund packed house.
Yeah.
Huge crowd, huge gate.
I think their product appeals to everybody.
Just like the WW product appeals to everybody.
It just happens to be that the CEO of UFC is a close friend of the president.
So UFC definitely has an attitude of we don't judge.
We don't judge over here in UFC.
Come in.
If you like, if you like watching people in the octagon, welcome aboard.
But by the way, that's, that's how Los Angeles used to be.
Right.
It used to be if you've been married 10 times, don't worry about it.
Move here.
Yeah. Like Jerry bus. We don't, we don't, we don't judge the Lakers owner does been married 10 times, don't worry about it, move here.
Yeah, like Jerry Bus.
We don't judge.
The Lakers owner does his own stuff.
We don't care.
Correct.
Who was the producer on Karate Kid, Weintraub?
Who had two wives or something like that?
Well, we had Simpson and Bruckheimer.
There's a million of...
Yeah, but I think this guy in particular, there was an HBO documentary on him.
He had two wives at once. Not like, hey, get divorced and this. By the way, it was an HBO documentary on him. He had like two wives at once. Wow.
Not like, hey, get divorced and this.
And by the way, it was like, hey, that's your life.
Right.
I don't.
And I still feel that way.
I still I have nothing to do with that.
You have nothing to do with me.
Live your life.
Yeah.
And somehow L.A. shifted a little bit outside of that.
I think UFC stayed consistent.
If you like our product, we want you.
And that seems to be a good winning hand.
So TKO right now has UFC and WWE.
And PBR and IMG. PBR is professional bull riding.
IMG and on location.
I'm just talking from a combat standpoint, but you don't have the boxing piece yet.
But then, I mean, the last time you were on the pod, we talked about this
and this is your favorite sport.
And it feels like just me know nothing from afar.
It feels like there's a boxing opportunity slash momentum for something, for
somebody to corral at least a big piece of it.
And you talked about it last time.
Are you any closer?
Well, I think, I think you caught the announcement, you know, Dana, myself, our partners,
Turkey, I'll shake to create a new boxing promotional company a couple of months ago.
I did.
Yes.
But nothing's happened with it yet.
You could announce whatever, but you still need, like to me, it's like, okay,
they're going to do this.
That means they're going to acquire something, but you haven't
acquired the something yet.
No, nothing, nothing to be acquired.
We're going to grow it organically, but I'd look for if we're, you know, mid
April now, I'd look for a big announcement on that the next four to six weeks as
to what our first card's going to be and who's going to be on that card.
This is all going to be one-off stuff.
Not like something that potentially has a chance to be UFC WWE.
No, we want it to be UFC and WWE like, but you'll see an announcement with more to come.
I don't mean to intentionally be cryptic on the whole thing.
It could be as cryptic as you want.
But we have a plan.
Now it's for us.
Because I saw the first thing and I'm like, all right, they're just kind of planning a
flag when nothing is actually happening.
But now you're saying something's going to happen.
That's that, that's the thought.
That's the hope we'll see.
What are the opportunities in boxing right now?
I think, look as other than cohesion.
Yeah, exactly.
It's been proven, you know, with the UFC people like to see a good fight.
They just have to know as with the UFC, who the fighters are.
It's same with WWE.
If you get invested in the fighters in UFC, which they've done a phenomenal
job of doing UFC as if you get invested in the wrestlers and WWE, more likely
you tune in more likely to show up.
It's the same thing in boxing.
If you know, Matt Max Kellerman, who you and I both known for a long time, he
used to say, if you pull up to a four way stop sign on one corner, a guy's putting a golf ball, the other guy's throwing a football, the other
guy's shooting a basketball and the other two guys are fighting, what are you going
to watch?
You're going to watch the two guys fighting.
He said, but the problem with boxing is you pull up to that same corner and it's
Tiger Woods in his prime putting the golf ball and it's Jordan in his prime
shooting the basketball and it's Mahomes throwing the football and it's two guys
you've never heard of fighting, then it's a different choice.
That's the issue with boxing.
It's a series of one-off events where as soon as the fight ends, it's Dana
White says it often, uh, it's a going out of business sale.
Let's charge you the most we can for one night.
Let's give you the least in return.
No good undercard fights, no reason to sit in your seat
other than 10 minutes prior to the main event.
And hey, if the main event's bad, then if you feel that we stole your money
at home on pay-per-view, no big deal.
That's on you.
If you do it the opposite way of all of that, then you have a chance of
actually building a product that has some sort of viability.
The Saudis, I think have, have shown a little bit of the blueprint because the cards are better.
And the card they had in, what was it, February was awesome.
Even though they had, you know, one fight fallout last minute, they had to fly out of shape.
Boccoli, my guy, cross country, no sleep.
Listen, Boccoli got paid, he took one hit and his trainer's like, we're done.
And, you know, we escaped.
Now here's the good thing about what Turkey is doing there.
He's bringing Bacoli back.
Yeah.
Right.
That's what you should do.
If you step in on a fight on short notice and you lose the fight, give the guy another chance.
You don't have to be 30 and 0 for it to matter.
Right.
Well, that's what we grew up with.
Of course.
Everyone fought everybody.
You and I didn't know Marvin Hagler as the WBA middleweight champion.
We knew him as the middleweight champion.
Yeah.
And he fought Hearns and he fought Duran and he fought Leonard and he fought some
of them again and the best fought the best.
It's the same with Ali Foreman Frazier.
I think it's somebody like Ken Norton.
Like he fought everybody.
Everybody.
Yeah.
And by the way, he fought Ali three times.
Think, think about that.
By the way, he also fought, um, it was Foreman Lyle and then Foreman Norton.
Or was it Cooney Norton where Cooney destroyed Norton?
That was the end of Norton.
That was the end of Norton.
Yeah.
That was, uh, like 1980 range.
And those are all heavyweights, obviously not the Hagler group, but the other
group we're talking about, like just have the best fight, the best.
It's that simple.
It's what the Saudis have done.
It's what the UFC and Dana White have done.
If it can be replicated in boxing, Hey, you have a winning hand.
That sounds pretty enticing.
How has Netflix changed your business?
Well, the whole scope of it.
Number one, their default is yes.
On anything that you ask for.
It's, yeah, sure.
We'll get on it right away.
I always say this about the executives I like the most.
I don't have any of their office numbers.
You call them sell to sell.
It's sort of like with you.
I call you, hey, I'll call you right back or give me an hour.
You pick up and we have the conversation.
Do you even have an office number?
No. Yeah, same.
I don't have one.
So they're phenomenal.
It's also their power, their brand.
And I know this is going to sound really naive.
I didn't realize globally that it's the same interface
that it is at home.
So sometimes if you travel internationally,
you're like, where do I find the NBA game?
And you're looking and you can't find it.
It's the same avatar that you have at home and your kids avatar and your
wife's avatar and you click into it and it shows you, Hey, here's where you
paused and watching all the other things.
It's the same exact interface.
So I like the user accessibility.
We certainly love 300 million plus subscribers.
That says households by the way.
So assume that's 700 million plus people.
And you've seen our international ratings go through the roof in a number of
different countries, because again, easily accessible.
Were you surprised that you, it seems like every week you're trending as like
the number one TV show for 36 hours.
I'm always pleasantly surprised by that.
I was surprised by that.
Here's why I said, I feel like in anything in your business and our
business, like the clock resets at midnight for a reason, you know, no
matter how good or how bad the day was, the day's over and you have to go and
replicate it again and try to build something even bigger the next week or
the next show, it's the same for you in what you do.
Same for us.
So, you know, we're proud of that, but every week we're sort of anxious to make sure that it stays that way.
Yeah. I think talking to the Netflix people,
I think the pleasant surprise for them was people watching it,
like the people in Europe waking up.
Sometimes it's coming on their sleep,
but waking up and watching them getting these pockets of viewership from when
either people woke up or pockets of viewership from people they didn't expect would get up early to watch it or stay up
late and just watching how the different parts of the world interacted with it.
Um, I know that there's some, some areas that they were probably hoping.
Maybe you had a star that you could develop that would be
exciting for that specific area.
Yeah, look, it's part of our recruiting for the last year or so.
It's, you know, you can't just pipe out American content globally and
internationally.
So, you know, if you look at Axiom, who's on the NXT roster, he's a Spaniard born
in Spain when he showed up at our show in Barcelona, unexpectedly two, three, four weeks ago, whatever it was, crowd went crazy.
People like their own and that's good.
Even if you look at the collaboration we're doing with TNA and Joe Hendry,
he shows up at our Glasgow show.
People love that.
Obviously drew McIntyre main roster for us on the Glasgow show.
People love that.
So it's the, the, the unique aspect about WWE is for our talent.
It's as much about marketability as it is ability.
If you can, if you're marketable and you have charisma and you have the it factor,
we can sort of help with the rest.
And then yes, every so often you'll get someone who has both John Cena, Roman Reigns.
Well, there's a line you don't want to cross, which has been crossed a couple of times, where it's like,
we really want to get this part of the world going and watch this.
And then if the person doesn't have the chops, it gets a little dicey.
Yeah, look, the height of what can work, and this is the obvious one,
when you had Bret Hart and Owen rest in peace and the faction with British
Bulldog and all of that.
And you would see even like the Montreal screw job, if you will.
Like that was in Canada.
It's unbelievable.
That that happened.
Unbelievable where Bret was and is a hero.
And at that time, even if he was sort of perceived as the heel in the United States, you know,
Hey, I looked down on what wrestling has become, which was all part of his character, you know, at that exact
moment in that exact city, just phenomenal, phenomenal content.
So if you were going to create stars from scratch and you could pick any part of the
world, I would assume India and Brazil would be two big ones.
Throw Mexico in there.
And Mexico.
Yeah.
Those would be your three.
For sure.
So anyone listening from those countries, get your shit together.
Hit Bill on Instagram or Twitter, whatever it is, since I'm not on any of those
platforms and send your audition.
Very smart.
And he'll really start smart.
Stay off social media.
Not great.
Better.
What are any other big predictions for the year for WWE?
So our deal with Peacock is coming up in 11 months.
They've been phenomenal partners. for the year for WWE? So our deal with Peacock is coming up in 11 months.
They've been phenomenal partners. Again, WWE, as you know, was on our, what were called pay-per-views,
became premium live events.
They were on WWE network until 2020 when we did the deal with Peacock.
And they have a bunch at your library.
A bunch.
They've outperformed our expectations.
We'd like to think we've outperformed our expectations. We'd like to think we've outperformed their expectations and now we'll sit down
together and see if there's business to be done moving forward.
Is it better to even have stuff on a streamer like that versus like, wait, how do
you, your YouTube, you guys were one of the first people to blow out a YouTube
presence and now you have what 15 years of YouTube videos at this
point, one of the biggest channels anyone has.
Like is it just sometimes the way YouTube has grown and skyrocketed?
Does it just make more sense to double down on that?
Well, look, we love YouTube.
We have 110 million subscribers.
Oh my God.
10th most subscribed to YouTube channel.
That's not sports channel.
Yeah.
That's channel.
So you have, you know, ahead of it, you know, Coco Mellon, Mr. Beast,
some Indian music channels, but nothing sports oriented.
So we're number 10 there, which is phenomenal.
We're also on CW, which is a broadcast network.
We're also on USA Basic Cable in the United States.
We're on Netflix streaming globally.
We're on Peacock streaming domestically.
We want our product to be available to everyone everywhere, depending
on how they like to receive it.
Isn't that funny how different that is when, like when they launched
a network, what was that?
10 years ago?
It was in 2014.
Yeah.
11 years ago.
I think that was when I did the pod with Triple H right around there.
Um, and it was, it was the right move at the right time to do that.
And it was like, we're going to go on demand.
We'll own our rights.
People will pay for this.
We'll be able to build.
We'll make more from it this way.
Now the mindset is completely different.
We want as many people to see our stuff as humanly possible.
And we want to be tied to platforms where anyone can see our stuff.
To totally look at it.
First of all, in 2014, when WWE went to WWE network, which just so we're
clear, obviously I had nothing to do with, and that was, you know,
a brilliant, brilliant decision.
The biggest scam that I've ever seen in television was the fee that in
demand dish and direct would take for pay-per-view.
So just to plug you in anywhere from 30 to 60% of a WWE event, of a boxing
event, of UFC at that time, and then WDB got out of that business and UFC got
out of that business and took it exclusively to Disney.
All to Omegah.
Maybe the biggest VIG ever.
Now Apple probably leads the way with VIGS.
Would they get 30% on apps.
30% on apps.
But these guys were big person.
These guys were taking a vigorous 50 to 60%.
Yeah, it was not.
And in demand was all the cable companies together.
It was like a legal, you know, consortium that would just come down on you.
And if you said, no, I don't want to do it at that fee.
Great.
What were you going to do?
You then you wouldn't be able to show what you wanted.
Totally.
So streaming also fixed that and it got you out of the volatility of, well, what
pay-per-view numbers are we going to do this weekend?
What are we going to do this weekend?
What are we going to do this weekend?
So you knew with consistent subscribership, you could actually plan for publicly traded
company on what financials would be coming in.
I want to talk about the TV business in one second, but, um,
do you feel like you have a rival? Cause like two years ago could make the
case last year seemed like, no,
now it just seems like you guys are all powerful again.
And AW is not a rival in the same way. Their kind of moment,
just I have no dog in the race. I don't really care, but it's just from a,
from afar, it seems like their moment came
and gone and they're like just firmly number two now.
Well, look, we're, we're always the underdog at WWE.
We always feel that people underestimate us, that we're looked down upon and we like it
that way.
Like bet against us.
We prefer that and allow us to show you what we can do.
Short our stock. Go ahead.
I don't know about that. You can literally do it. Go ahead. Bet against us.
Bet against us. If you look at the stock price now, it's far in excess of what it was when we
all started together five years ago. And we're quite proud of that. And at the same time,
we got to keep re you know, re earning our
keep on a daily basis here.
So we feel like it's a good moment, but we still feel like there's a lot of room
for growth in terms of the other wrestling promotional company, uh, they
have a lot of talented wrestlers.
Uh, and we're happy about that.
When contractually, you know, they're available to be, you know, talked to and
have conversations with assume a number of them will come over
and nothing but respect for the father who-
Oh, that was way too nice.
Finances it and owns the Jaguars and all those other things.
That was very pleasant.
Look at you.
That's it.
You're so magnanimous.
I'm 50 now, so different than when we were much younger.
Yes.
Well, your biggest issue is sometimes you don't want
too much talent because you only have so many spots
to put people and you end up just kind of wasting people.
Look, that's something we won't do.
Yeah.
We won't sign.
I think that happened in the past though.
Maybe before you.
Perhaps, but we won't sign and bench people.
You know, we sign people who we want to use.
I'm not saying bench people, but you sign somebody
and then within a couple weeks, you know,
they're barely being used because you have too many people.
No, I was saying if another entity signs and benches people now, like that's
some, not something we would do.
Oh, cause that is a thing that happens.
That's, that's what I've been told from time to time.
Not us.
Not awesome.
Um, from a TV standpoint, you're one of the world's most astute media
watchers and we always end up talking about ESPN when we do this stuff.
But since the last time we talked, Netflix is in sports in a huge way.
As, as you personally know, Amazon's in, we had this whole basketball deal,
shake out, and it feels like everything is moving toward streaming stuff.
And the networks are kind of holding on for dear life and
overpaying to keep, uh, keep up the fight.
Most notably ESPN, which who I think has had a really rocky couple of years.
Um, and for what they paid with basketball, especially there's probably
going to be some repercussions with that and other parts, and it seems like
they've moved behind like big talent contracts, a couple of big right fees and then try to cut costs elsewhere.
Almost like a movie where you're like,
we want to get our four guys for the poster and we'll get a really good director.
But maybe we can save money over here.
What do you see the future of the networks that you used to work with?
I think, look, you know, Netflix was saying years ago,
we're not going to get in sports.
We're not going to get in live.
Uh, and I think anyone who was following it, who had a reasonable point of view,
knew that was just a temporary position.
And obviously Netflix knew that they went in with the unscripted shows, the
after shows live, they went in with the Chris Rock comedy special, you know, live.
And I think they saw the power of it so much so that when Gabe
Spitzer got hired to run sports, I don't know that they had any
sports rights and all of a sudden they wake up with the
Mike Tyson fight and WWE and NFL games and their own hot dog
eating contest and Hey, more and more is coming.
And that's my understanding.
So immediately overnight, they become an impact player.
I thought they did a phenomenal job with even with the halftime
show for the two NFL games.
They go all in.
Uh, it's one of their superpowers.
And Amazon does the same.
Totally.
And you saw Amazon again, this sort of a tease Amazon went into tennis
in the UK and parts of Europe early.
Yeah.
Let's see if we can do it.
Let's see what it looks like.
And then boom, Hey, we're going all in with the NFL and then boom, the big NBA deal.
So you're seeing, you know, the power of live, you know, the power of sports.
You know, you're at the top of the heap in the media business in terms of
your knowledge about all of that.
What about what happens when more folks get into it?
You saw YouTube with their Sunday ticket, you know, deal.
So I think for the traditional buyers, they need to have run smart businesses.
At the same time, they have to be competitive and they can't expect that,
Hey, you know, years of doing it one way.
They, well, this is how we've always done it.
As you said earlier, you know, here today, so we've always done it.
Why would we do it any differently?
If the universe has changed, you better change with it.
If not, you're going to be left behind.
So we'll see who gets left behind.
Well, they missed on UFC for a while and then belatedly got into it and that's been okay.
Although those rights are coming up, right?
Well, think about it.
HBO Sports years ago.
That's the biggest miss.
Yeah.
Ari Emanuel set up a meeting for Dana White and the UFC with HBO sports when
HBO boxing was still booming.
And for whatever reason, I think it was ultimately the UFC's decision not to go
there, UFC, it was HBO wanted to produce the events, Dana wanted to make sure he
controlled his own production.
The deal didn't make.
And you've seen what the UFC has gone on to do.
HBO sports doesn't exist anymore.
So at one point, as you know, they had Wimbledon years ago and I think other
tennis tournaments, then the Kings of boxing, hard knocks, documentaries.
They had a foothold of something.
Correct.
And then I think they sort of got comfortable.
And by the way, if you ask the folks at the NFL, some of the folks at the NFL
right now, what's your biggest concern?
They'll quietly tell you to make sure that we never think like Major
League Baseball thought in the seventies, which is, Hey, we're the number one sport.
Right.
So lucky us.
It's sort of, what do we keep needing?
What do we have to do to make sure that we stay number one?
And like you said, Hey, there's an 18th game coming and Hey, let's take the
combine out of Indianapolis and Hey, in Philly for the first time, six, seven, eight years
ago, whatever it was, let's take the draft on the road and let's monetize that.
Everything they do is constantly evolving that product.
I think it's the same thing with the UFC and their business model.
I hope that WW is perceived in the same light.
Sometimes if we get it wrong, with Triple H and I talk or Lee
fitting or Chris Ligental, other senior executives at WWE, it'll
start with, Hey, I think we fucked this thing up.
It'll be one of us saying that.
Yeah.
And then, okay, how do we fix it moving forward?
And the most important thing is to identify the problem and realize
you have a problem if you're trying to avoid it, or you're trying to
say it's someone else's problem.
By the way, much like the last presidential election,
and you and I are not overtly political,
but what I saw was one person saying,
I'm gonna take care of you, I'm gonna look out for you,
and another party saying, don't vote for this guy.
Right, and with no message at all.
I've just never seen that work.
Yeah.
I don't believe.
Vote for us, because you can't vote for him.
Absurd.
Like how, how do you make that decision?
You and running the ringer, when you bring talent over here, it's let me tell you what we can do together.
It's the same thing at WWE.
It's not, don't go with the other guys that maybe it works on one or two deals,
but it doesn't work long-term.
You got to figure out that problem is and change the messaging.
What is the ESPN five years from now?
Look, I think it's still continues to exist in a meaningful way.
Uh, the sub loss has obviously hit them hard, but I think they've actually
made some good moves with a lower subscription audience.
So as you said, they fixed their NFL talent issue.
They fixed their NFL relationship.
At least that's my perception.
I think I would agree with that.
Yeah.
And look, they went in on retaining their NBA rights, the finals being quite
meaningful to them, they don't have their first Superbowl, if I might
have the facts.
A lot of college football.
A lot of college football, right?
They went all in on the SEC.
They went all in on the playoff and the championship.
They went all in on certain talent as you just articulated.
And hey, it's sort of reflective of the US economy, if you will.
Relatively speaking, the middle class there got squeezed.
The people making a lot of money made more money.
And hey, if you want to make entry level money, there'll be a spot for you.
Again, relatively speaking, reflective of the U S economy.
It's a weird one.
Cause I think that thing that's changed from maybe 15 years ago was the sense of
like, we also want to do great stuff.
Like there was a bar for we at least a a couple times a year want to be looked at
as, as a place that did an awesome thing or like, you know, inspired somebody in
some way or did some piece of content that, um, could really impact people.
And I don't know if they still feel that way.
Look, I think as soon as budget shrinks, those tend to be the first things to go.
Yeah. Well, I think they've just kind ofinks, those tend to be the first things to go. Yeah.
Well, I think they've just kind of, we're, we're showing games, we got games
and highlights and that's kind of what we are for the most part.
And, you know, they'll still do some other stuff, but maybe, maybe when to
have ambition like that, when you have a company in the size of that, I think,
um, maybe it's too hard to juggle everything.
Yeah.
It could be that, or it could simply be,
you know, hey, we had a hundred million subs at one point.
What is it now, 54 or 55?
Isn't that crazy?
It's crazy.
But as soon as the bundle went away
and people actually had a choice
in terms of what they could subscribe to,
I don't think it's a reflection on ESPN.
I think it was bundled in and people sort of had to have it.
And when they didn't have to have it, the people who still wanted it, kept it.
So if you're dealing with smaller numbers, those then tend to be the things that go first.
If you have, you know, a surplus year, you got to be careful because next year may not be as good.
For this WrestleMania coming up, coming off of the success of WrestleMania Philly 2024,
we have WWE world, a partnership with Fanatics.
Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday, Monday, all day event,
the two night WrestleMania, which we talked about already.
We have SmackDown on Friday, we have Raw on Monday,
we have the Hall of Fame standalone show Friday night after SmackDown.
We have The Undertaker, one dead man show, is sort of one man show, if you will.
Jesus.
Right.
After, um,
WrestleMania Saturday.
And then we have Tony Hinchcliffe roast of WrestleMania after WrestleMania Sunday.
And then by the way, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday, Monday, we also have
an after party with our partners, medium rare at the fountain blue.
You'll see WWE stars there.
You'll see other celebrities there.
It's all day, all night.
That's coming off of the success.
We think all of these will be successful.
All indicators are, they're going to be hopefully phenomenally successful.
And then next year we got to go build something bigger.
That's just the way it is.
So you think for ESPN it's the grind of, you know, where Amazon and Netflix can just parachute
in and out of stuff that they want.
ESPN has a 365 day responsibility,
still at this point, to have stuff.
And I think they have way more competitors
than they used to.
I remember when FS1 got theirs, you know, in 2013,
and it was like, here comes FS1.
And ESPN's attitude was like, how dare you?
We're going to, and I felt the same way.
I was like, we're going to crush these guys.
Come get us.
Now there's, you know, seven, eight different people with real money coming at you.
And it's, it's really hard to stay on top.
Look, I remember the FS1 thing.
ESPN was so dominant.
Well, you remember the FS1 thing because you made a lot of money.
Just parlaying the two networks. Those are the clients. For a lot of people. FS1 thing because you made a lot of money. Just parlaying the two networks.
Those were the clients.
For a lot of people.
Those were the clients who made a lot of money.
You remember that as the heyday.
Those were the clients who made a lot of money.
Nick Khan, the greatest year in Nick Khan's life.
So, you're like at a school auction getting the two drunk parents.
They're here 20K for the trip to Mexico.
22.
Listen, I was just right place, right time.
What can I say?
But ESPN was so dominant that it was, okay, we're going to keep our 11 o'clock
sports center and we're going to bring back Keith Olbermann to put them on ESPN
too, to make sure just in case you're thinking, I don't want to watch sports
center, we have something else to offer for you.
And oh yeah, we got grand land programming and what was the name of your, your
unsanctioned NBA show, the great basketball show basketball show.
We did 10.
Right.
So it was like even unsanctioned, we're going to have, you know, high end content
here and again, that I would say the first 50, 34 thirties, if you will, like
amazing, shockingly, like just the quality off the charts and if you will, like amazing, shockingly,
like just the quality off the charts. And then over time, like there are only so many.
We had some stinkers, to be fair.
Early on?
I mean, I'm so happy everyone remembers them all finally.
Maybe the occult one wasn't as good as.
No, I wasn't gonna name names.
I'm just saying.
I thought you winked at me and said, let's name names.
It's like anything else.
As the years pass, people remember the best 10 or 12
and think the whole series is a good one.
How about when you have to spike the Marion Jones one?
No one talks about that.
Oh, there you go.
Yeah, I don't know.
Well, so the WB, all that stuff, any predictions?
Any predictions for anything?
What do you mean the WB? I don't know, you always have the Warner Brothers. Oh, the WB, that stuff. Any predictions? Any predictions for anything? What do you mean the WB?
I don't know. You always have the Warner Brothers.
Oh, Warner Brothers discovered.
They're trying to work around the fringes now with, they didn't get NBA, but now they're...
I can't tell. There was a big piece about them this week.
Yes, I read it. I read it.
Which is a weird, it was one of those, I have a lot of information going in all these different
directions and the reader is just going to have to figure out what to make of this. But the basic
premise was Warner Brothers stuck between these two worlds, this world that used to exist and this
world that's about to happen. Kind of feeling like that maybe is a strategy. I thought that was pretty
interesting. I don't know if I agreed with it. I think like any company, you know, maybe they made a couple of mistakes,
you know, here and there.
Um, but I think they now see that.
And if they can figure out, okay, what's the programming to build, bring in post
NBA that it's tough, right?
When there's so many mouths to feed TNT, TBS, max HBO, Oh, true TV.
Oh, this, so that like, it TV, oh, this, oh, that.
Like, it's a lot.
And those are still generating revenue,
so you'd think to yourself.
Which one is Dr. Pimple Popper on?
I can't remember.
Dr. Pimple Popper, I don't remember which one that was.
It's one of those.
Yeah, but I still have DirecTV,
so I see it on the grid, you know.
You still have DirecTV?
Yeah.
Who do you call when something goes wrong?
It's brutal.
Do they even have people working?
Listen, it's brutal. I tried to order the Terrence Crawford, Who do you call when something goes wrong? Do they even have people working?
Listen, it's brutal.
I tried to order the Terrence Crawford, Errol Spence boxing match off of DirecTV.
They said I was at my pay-per-view limit.
I called someone, spoke to someone overseas.
I said, what are you talking about pay-per-view limit?
How is there a limit? I just want to spend money on your service.
Am I up to date on my bill? Yes.
Then how is there a limit?
And what am I ordering on pay-per-view that
would put me past that limit?
There's no UFC on DirecTV pay-per-view.
There's no WWE.
It's a mess, but I still have it.
That's YouTube TV and Apple TV.
I can't wait to explain DirecTV to my great grandkids 50 years from now.
Yeah.
So they used to come in, they would put a dish on top of our house.
They would give us a receiver. If you canceled Direct TV,
you would have to mail the receiver back or it would cost you $500.
You couldn't, nobody would answer if there was an issue. I can't wait to.
Bill, how about this part of it?
It's a documentary.
So we connected on me coming on your podcast.
What if you said to me, show up somewhere between 8 a.m. and noon,
and hopefully I'll be there,
which is what the cable companies and DirecTV said.
They'd give you this window. 8 at noon? How about like 8 to 3?
And at 11.59, you'd call and be like, hey, my guy hasn't shown up yet.
Like, what's going on? Oh, we're so sorry.
We have to reschedule for 10 days from now.
You wouldn't allow your doctor to do that.
You wouldn't allow your accountant to do that.
Can I just put you on hold for one second, sir?
Please don't, no!
Please, no.
Don't put me on hold.
How about when they'd hang up on you after a while?
And then you're just starting the process over again.
Start the process over.
One of the happiest days of my life was moving
to streamer stuff full time and not having DirecTV.
Yeah, by the way, again, like the in-demand,
dish direct, VIG that we were talking about. Football, too much hubris, too much arrogance with their product.
Because they have football. They thought they could do anything they wanted.
Correct. Instead of, by the way, as you know, it was a big brag in like 2000,
2001. If you had direct TV, you were like, yeah, you were the guy.
It was like one of the first things I ever splurged on.
Correct. Yeah. I don't have cable. I got satellite.
I can get all the football games and then I get all the basketball games.
Yes. And they took full advantage of the consumer, as did the cable companies,
the traditional cable companies. We'll be there between eight and noon.
We'll be there between noon and five. Like it was a joke. The whole thing was a joke.
And then, hey, someone came along with a better product and, you know, ate part of their lunch.
Who buys, who becomes the next, uh, Iger successor who takes over.
Who's your money on?
I would say 60% chance insider, 40% chance outsider.
So I'm a little more interesting because they have the fork.
It's really three candidates coming from inside.
Matt Bellamy wrote a really good piece for puck.
Our guy, Matt, I read it about, uh, also very rich like you now, Matt.
Oh, he's loaded.
It's crazy.
He's, he's on TV shows now.
He's doing great.
Yeah.
He's a scripted actor now.
Yeah, he's on the studio, but he had a whole piece about, could
Disney go after Sarandos, which a, I was really jealous of great idea.
I don't know how I, I just so mad that I didn't come up with that.
B, really interesting idea.
Like if you're going to do an outsider, why not do like a maverick outsider?
And one of the things I was wondering was like, would I ever even want that?
Would you want your successor to be somebody who would actually be a little more cutting edge, maybe than you are.
And maybe somebody that could reinvent some things and modernize your
company in some different ways.
I don't know.
I thought that was fascinating.
And then if you're Sarandos, would you want to do that?
Are you already in the Disney of now?
Do you even need to leave Netflix?
Think about his career arc.
You remember when they split, what was it Netflix and Quickster? Yeah, Quickstar almost ended his career. Almost ended his career arc. You remember when they split, what was it, Netflix and Quickster?
Yeah, Quickster almost ended his career.
Almost ended his career.
But then quickly they realized, like we were talking about,
no, we've made a mistake here.
We better change this and we better shut that down
and we better hyper-focus on the fact that people aren't going to be
really renting DVDs for that much longer.
And they nailed it.
And then early on, okay, let's put on the, uh, Kevin Spacey show and orange is a new black.
Let's cater towards, you know, the critics, if you will.
Sarandos came out and said, we need to be HBO before HBO becomes us, which he corrected six, nine
months ago in the New York times Q and a recent, what I should have said was we need to become HBO, CBS, the BBC, and all of these other things before they all become us. And to his credit
and Netflix's credit, they did do that. There's something for everybody there, globally, not just
domestically. So when you turn it on, you're like another Menendez Brothers documentary, like, yeah,
people watch it. They also realize, like, I've always thought a lot of people lie about their
taste in things, that even if it's anonymous polling, people lie.
I think to me that the first sign I saw, you remember like in the late
nineties, early two thousands, the radio ratings were done off writing it down
in a notebook, what you listen to.
So you'd see classical music on FM radio, smart talk on FM radio.
And as soon as the rating metric shifted to the PPM, the portable people meters,
and they could actually tell what people were listening to,
no one was listening to classical music.
No one was listening to smart talk.
But when you're put on the spot of like,
hey Bill, do you like smart talk?
What are you supposed to say?
No, I like dumb talk. Right. Oh yeah, of like, Hey Bill, do you like smart talk? What are you supposed to say? No, I like dumb talk.
Right.
Oh yeah.
Of course I like smart.
Do you like classical music?
Yeah.
I love classical music.
Netflix realizes like people like all kinds of programming.
I think Bravo realized it years ago also with the housewives.
Yeah.
A couple of ones got it.
By the way, think about Jersey shorts first season.
Yeah.
Like people not in LA LA, you could always say what you're watching.
There's no such thing to me as a guilty pleasure.
If you like something like it, but in other parts of the country where that
kind of program was looked down upon, people be like, Oh yeah, I watched
Jersey Shore, I just don't admit it.
In LA you admit it.
It was great TV.
Listen, algorithms don't lie.
They don't lie.
Yeah.
Algorithms are a window into your soul.
It's like, do you like true crime documentaries where somebody got algorithms don't lie. They don't lie. The algorithms are a window into your soul.
It's like, do you like true crime documentaries
where somebody got kidnapped
and they couldn't find the killer for three episodes?
I do.
By the way, think about-
You're gonna love this Gabby Petito doc.
Totally.
She's a vlogger and she's disappeared
and her boyfriend might have done it.
Great, I'm in.
I'm in.
How about Netflix did another OJ documentary?
Yeah, they're just running them back.
I'm ready for Bundy again.
They haven't done Bundy for five years.
They gotta come back with Ted Bundy.
Is Bundy is a sicko?
By the way, how about the Dahmer scripted series?
Yeah, we're back.
Tough to watch on an airplane.
They brought back Manson.
Tough to watch Dahmer on an airplane.
Dahmer's a tough one.
The hooking up with the mannequin thing.
I don't know, I think I'm good with Dahmer for a while.
Manson, I was like, I gave it a, you know, I like Manson stuff.
Yeah.
Um, but it was one of those.
It was like, all right, I don't know if how much I learned from that, but yeah,
though they're rerunning the hits now.
Did you like the once upon a time in Hollywood Manson storyline?
I love that movie.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Love.
Yeah.
I feel like people like didn't love it the way I thought they should have.
You know what happened?
I was just talking with Fennessey and Chris about this.
COVID happened.
It came out.
It had its whole run through 2019.
We were at Sundance.
We did a live rewatchables of that movie.
Maybe beginning of February.
Yeah.
And then it was about to have this whole run with the Oscars and, and, um, all
the way through and it just would have moved it and then COVID happened and
COVID messed everything up.
That really did.
Like convert just people didn't have the same conversations about anything.
So I always felt like that was weird because it's, it has been five plus
years since that movie came out.
Phenomenal.
Now they're making a sequel. I just read that the other day. it's, it has been five plus years since that movie came out. Phenomenal.
Now they're making a sequel.
I just read that the other day.
That's pretty new, right?
Fincher's going to direct Tarantino written movie.
When was the last time he wrote a movie that he didn't direct?
True Romance or something after that?
There's probably something since then, but yeah, it's pretty rare.
I just watched True Romance with our 13 year old daughter for the first time.
Oh Jesus.
We skipped a couple of your early scenes.
That's when you have to really know the movie and fast forward.
The early Gary Oldman stuff, you got to skip a little bit, but after that,
even the Christopher Walken, Dennis Hopper scene, you can watch it.
Yeah.
With your kids, it's no problem.
Bathroom Bra with Tony Soprano and Patricia Arquette is pretty brutal.
Pretty brutal.
It's a great movie though.
Amazing.
Amazing casting.
All right.
Thing you're most excited about for WrestleMania this weekend, if you had to
pick one thing, what's going to happen in Sina Cody, where does that go?
You think that's the number one?
I haven't watched wrestling all year, but this is the one thing
I should care about storyline.
I think it's very close with Roman punk and Seth because with Roman punk and Seth as an argument
It's been made as to why each person should win and you know, do you see Roman getting pinned when he got pinned last year?
Yeah by Cody, you know, how's that gonna turn out Romans still at his peak?
He's not on the back nine not even close to it from our point of view. How old is he now?
What happens at Roman? I think it's 36.
Oh my God.
36, 37.
Oh wow.
He's got, yeah, he's got at least five peak physical years left.
No question.
He takes phenomenal care of himself.
It's sort of like the Floyd Mayweather thing.
Floyd never got fat, never drank, you know, always kept himself ready to go,
which I always respected Roman Cody, these guys who keep themselves in that top sort of physical
shape, eating almonds.
Amazing.
But the baseball people, and I'm not a huge baseball guy would tell me,
Hey, the stats show you past the age of 39.
That's the furthest you can go as a prime athlete before the drop.
And then you see Tom Brady and what he did and the time he put into
maintaining, you know, where he was. Maybe LeBron, we'll see with him, but it's these guys are, there's such
aberrations you can't even.
By the way, we got lucky with this golden state loss the other day.
So WWE WrestleMania does not go up against Lakers golden state this Saturday.
Right.
You have Lakers Minnesota instead.
Yeah.
I'm going to, I'm coming Saturday.
I'm going to be at the triple threat.
Yeah.
I'm glad you're going to be there. It's going to be.
Who wins the NBA finals this year? I sure hope the Celtics. Okay. So he's going to be really good.
There's artists, nobody believes in us building with them. The Clippers are excellent. Cleveland's
really good. There's like five teams that could take it this year. It's unusual. Is Celtics,
Lakers still the best, the highest rated?
The wet dream of all time for the league.
I was looking at the matchup.
Although, Knicks Lakers would be bigger. It's not going to happen this year,
but I think if you had New York, LA, the Knicks not having one since 73,
and then generations of Knicks fans, that's probably bigger.
Lakers make it to the championship?
No.
Who makes it from the West? No
Okay, see maybe the coppers. I'm not I'm not gonna rule out the Lakers but
Clippers are in there Lakers
Okay sees a heavy favorite how about coppers with the hot hand late
Unbelievable amazing. I can't I can't I know all the Cooper fans are just nervous that the rugs can get pulled out with Kawhi again, but they've been, they've been awesome.
And then, you know, you can't count out Denver just cause they have Yoccage,
but I can't see them winning three rounds in a row.
But it says they're in a spot a little bit like you guys where they just have
a shitload of talent right now.
You said these matchups where you're like, cool Quippers Denver.
This is like, you know, four of the top 25 guys in the league are in this series.
Who's the best player in the league right now?
You know basketball obviously far better.
Yocuja.
Can't be stopped.
Yocuja's the best.
And not afraid of anybody.
SGA, Giannis, Tatum, Luca.
Tatum's sick.
Luca's sick.
Ronson.
All right.
Well, I'll see you in Vegas this weekend.
Thanks for coming over and doing the live.
Thanks for having me on.
Good to see you. I love this mansion. This is at least 45, in Vegas this weekend. Thanks for coming over and doing the ride. Thanks for having me on. Good to see you.
I love this mansion. This is at least 45,000 square feet minimum.
That's my take. Thank you for having me. Always good seeing you.
Appreciate it.
All right. That's it. Thanks to Nikon. Thanks to Kurt Goldsberry.
Thanks to Gahau and Jesse as well. Thanks to Saruti.
And we will be back on Thursday. I have a fully fledged action packed podcast for you.
So I'll see you on Thursday.
Must be 21 plus and president select States for Kansas and affiliation with Kansas Star
Casino or 18 plus in President DC.
Gambling prom, call 1-800-GAMBLER or visit rg-help.com.
Call 1-887-897777 or visit ccpg.org slash chat in Connecticut or visit mdgamblinghelp.org
in Maryland.
Hope is here, visit gamblinghelplinema.org
or call 800-327-5050 for 24-7 support in Massachusetts
or call 1-877-8-HOPE-NY or text HOPENY in New York.