The Bill Simmons Podcast - LakerMania, NBA Expansion, WBC Lessons, and MBJ’s Moment With Billy Gil and Wesley Morris
Episode Date: March 20, 2026The Ringer’s Bill Simmons reacts to the Lakers taking down the Heat with Luka’s 60-point game, the NBA expansion, and more (2:15). Then, Billy Gil hops on to recap the World Baseball Classic and t...o give his thoughts on Bam Adebayo’s 83-point game (29:52). Finally, Wesley Morris joins Bill to react to the Oscar results, including Michael B. Jordan beating out Timothée Chalamet for Best Actor and ‘One Battle After Another’ winning Best Picture (01:00:07). Host: Bill Simmons Guests: Billy Gil and Wesley Morris Producers: Chia Hao Tat and Eduardo Ocampo Sam’s Club | Join The Club of Yes And #ULTRACourtside could get you closer to the game! https://michelobultra.com/courtside MICHELOB ULTRA® COURTSIDE ’25 to ’26. No Purchase Necessary. Open to US residents 21 plus. Begins on October 1, 2025 and ends on June 30, 2026 Multiple entry periods. See Official Rules at https://michelobultra.com/courtside for free entry, entry deadlines, prizes, and details. 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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All right. So I'm taping this top part of the podcast. Thursday night, Pacific Time. Just watched a lot of NBA March Madness. March Madness was really fun. We had a North Carolina, terrible loss for them. We had Sienna, trying to do the 116 thing against Duke. Had a couple other good games. We've lost a couple top lottery picks now. We lost Caleb Wilson already, and then North Carolina lost. And then sadly, we lost AJ, who was really good today as well. But NBA.
So initially I was going to do this gimmick,
10 things I'm watching heading into the last basically 12, 13 games of the season.
And the top thing was, are the Lakers for real question mark?
And then the Lakers go into Miami.
They're down in the second quarter.
And it just looks like, oh, man, third game in four nights.
They won these two in Houston.
Looks like their luggage in this game.
This is probably a throwaway game.
They got in late the night before.
And then Luca just goes to another level.
Luca ends up with 60 points.
Luca, let's see, in March, after going 29 and 37, then he goes 40, 31, 38, 34, 36, 43, 39, 37, and then 60 tonight.
And look, his stats have been basically around the same for the last couple years, but it's different when you're watching them.
There's a joy and a swagger that he has back.
I know he has some personal stuff going on and maybe he's channeling it to the basketball.
whatever is happening.
He's locked in.
He looks great.
And there's so much going on
with this Lakers team.
I hate talking about it because
like when I was at ESPN,
they would always be like lead with the Lakers,
lead with the Lakers no matter what's happening.
I thought this Lakers team had no chance to do anything.
It's basically a three-man team
with a bunch of role players,
the guys didn't make sense together.
Just watching Luka, Reeves, and LeBron all together.
It just didn't fit.
And then something has shifted.
And I've watched their last four games intently, including both Houston games and then this Miami game.
The two Houston games are really impressive because they had back-to-backs in Houston.
And normally when that happens, you usually split one of them.
Either you're there or you have to leave and then come back.
And it's just like it's always a disadvantage to the road team.
So the game last night, which was televised, and it just seemed, Schengun was back.
And it just seemed like the class, like, all right, the Lakers already got one.
Houston will win this one. And last five minutes, I felt watching it in real time. It was like
something clicked in my head with the Lakers. We're like, shit. Because I don't like the Lakers,
as you know. You're watching going, shit, last five minutes, they have Luca. This is bad. This is
bad for the other team. So the Lakers have turned in this team as long as they can keep it close
for the first 43 minutes and they have that last five. Now all of a sudden they have,
this incredible offensive player. They have a team that makes a lot more sense around him than it did
even three weeks ago. And you just start to feel like they're going to pull out some of these
games, whereas a team like Houston, who's been bad in crunch time, right? No point guard,
toilet ball offense. Ime Adoka looks like he's in a half coma. And you feel like something bad's
going to happen with them. You feel the opposite as you're watching Lakers. So what changed?
First of all, I think JJ Redick has to get credit for a lot of this because you're in this
conundrum with your team where you have this generational offensive player playing alongside a guy
who wants a new contract, Austin Reeves, who's a really good offensive player who could potentially
be the lead offensive guy on some teams. And then LeBron, one of the greatest players of all time,
not totally willing to accept a super huge role change, which you could feel. There was a little
push and pull. There was always like, all right, now it's my turn. And LeBron doing some of the old
school stuff. Something has flipped. And I don't know what happened with the communication between
the coaches and LeBron. I don't know, LeBron, one of the smartest basketball players we've ever had.
Maybe his supercomputer brain figured it out. He's embraced this different version of himself.
And we've seen this version in the past. There was like a not as, there was a more offensive
version of it in the heat in the middle years, especially that great season when they had the 27 game
winning streak when it seemed like he was going to try to shoot 60% for the whole year.
and he just like didn't have a high usage rate
but whenever they needed them he could make a play
and he was just so additive everywhere
and he was rebounded playing defense
and he's kind of moved toward that version
a little bit more where he doesn't need the ball a lot
he's figuring out how to affect it when he's off the ball
and then they're doing all these little cheap plays
like he'll take off sometimes
in these long passes from 8 in or Luca
if the defense is sleeping and they move up
or he'll be like kind of hanging out
on the side, which you did in the Rockets game.
It was great. Durant fell asleep.
LeBron snuck in and then cut hard to the basket.
Luca gave Malab.
All of a sudden, this team makes sense as you're watching it.
And it makes sense because LeBron's embraced.
I'm the third best guy in this team.
I'm going to have to just figure out how to affect the game.
I don't know what it means big picture.
We talked about this a little on Sunday and a little bit on Tuesday on the pod.
Just like, the Lakers definitely look different, but what's the ceiling?
are they the fourth best team in the West was a valid conversation.
But the more you watch Denver and just something's off with them.
And I don't know whether it's like a mild coaching thing or it's they just haven't been
healthy altogether long enough for what's going on.
But all these games they're losing in the last four minutes.
They're like the opposite of the Lakers.
They've had 10 horrible losses, which really shouldn't happen when we have Joker.
So I don't know.
Like I don't think the Lakers have a chance in hell against San Antonio or OKC.
But at the same time I went to see San Antonio on Monday night.
And there's a young team.
You saw it in the Phoenix game tonight.
Like you can play junk defenses at them, do weird things, let Wemby score try to take out everybody else there.
All this stuff they're going to try to have to figure out in real time.
And Fox is the only major.
guy they have who can,
who's actually been in
real situations offensively, right?
Guys like Castle,
Bessel, like either those guys haven't played in big
games or they're just young.
Dylan Harper, keep going.
And I do feel like
if it was San Antonio Lakers,
which it wouldn't be until round two because the Lakers
are up in the three seed, it would be a
fascinating youth first experience
series, but just
big picture with the Lakers,
I do think it's real.
don't think they're at the level of San Antonio and OKC and maybe even not even Boston with
Tatum back. But that next tier of teams, I think at a playoff series, could they win four or seven?
Could they go four and three against anybody else in the league? Yeah, maybe. Is LeBron
going to stay committed to this? It sure seems like it. He seems re-energized. And then there's,
you know, we talked about this a few weeks ago on the pot about Luca for the point he's at in his
career. Like, why hasn't he had more high MVP finishes? I think he had a third place.
in a fourth place.
Look at it now with 12, 13 games to go.
And the fact that Denver has been arrow pointing sideways
or arrow pointing down for three months.
I mean, they've basically been a 500 team since mid-December.
There's a case now for Luca to be above him
and above Joker in the MVP race.
And I think if I was doing it now,
I would have SGA-1, I would have Wembe 2.
And I think Luca versus Joker is a real argument now.
And it's funny because Joker had this historical run to start the season, the first two months.
He was incredible.
Wembe's had a really, really great two-way run the last couple months.
And Shea has moved into this Jordan Kobe game finisher level, right?
So it's not like all three of them haven't been great candidates.
But what Luca has done offensively and how they built this team around,
they have a chance to win like 54, 55 games, which is.
He's nuts.
Like, Aiton, you don't know what you're getting from him night to day.
Marcus Smart is just going to go two for nine every game, two for seven, three for nine, two for six.
Teams are just going to leave him open down the stretch.
It doesn't matter.
They don't really have a bench, and yet they're going to win 54, 55.
So Luca's doing his job.
And I had him somewhere first, second team kind of on that bubble with a couple other guys.
He's clear first team, though.
I think we know who four of the first team guys are.
Kate can come back and get enough games.
But to answer my own question from the beginning,
I do think this Lakers thing is real.
There's a spirit to them, there's a swagger,
and a competitiveness that you can see when you watch it.
They seem aligned.
Everybody seems to know what their role is
and what they're trying to do.
And I think JJ's done a really good job.
So I'm beyond monitoring it at this point.
I assume this is what we're going to see from them
the rest of the year.
Wembe on the Spurs had a really important game tonight.
And he's, I think they're 20 and two in their last 22.
There's still a very, very stealth case for him for MVP if they can pass OKC.
But they came back from a big deficit.
Phoenix played really well.
It was fun. It's Phoenix has good games against, like they played really well against Boston Monday night too.
They're really well coached.
They're really good at kind of making you do things you don't want to do and attacking you and in unconventional ways.
And today they were just throwing a junk defense at,
San Antonio and seen if they could handle it.
And they couldn't for most of the game.
And then near the end, they come back, make a couple plays.
Phoenix missed two free throws.
Then when they had the ball, last 10 seconds, made the MVP jumper to win the game.
And it was interesting watching the reaction after.
Crowds chaining MVP, they do this thing where they bang the drum.
They made the playoffs for the first time in a couple of years.
So they made a big deal about that.
The crowd's chaining MVP.
They interview them after the game.
His teammates are chaining MVP.
he's like already beloved there.
And I just thought it was kind of a moment for him
where it was like, this is real.
We are a really good team.
We just beat another playoff team at home.
Our guy came through in a real way.
I said on Tuesday, he's the best player I saw in person all year.
I don't know if that means he's the best part in the league.
But his impact on defense play-to-play-play quarter to quarter
is similar to the impact SGA has offensively
and Joker has offensively.
and then you think the stuff he can do offensively,
there's a case.
So just big, big, big picture
where the Celtics have been rejuvenated with Tatum
and just look like they're the best team in the East,
whether they can keep it going.
We'll see it.
OKC, going for back to back,
and we know when they're healthy,
that's going to be the team to beat.
San Antonio, as this precocious,
are they the 90 Bulls or the 91 Bulls?
We'll see.
Denver as the, I don't want to play that team,
but maybe I do, veteran team
with one of the best players of the century.
And then the Lakers
who were in that class with the Knicks and the Cavs
as, and now the Pistons,
because we don't know what's going to up with Cade,
of like, I think that's a contender,
but I want to see more.
And I can't believe the Lakers are in that class.
But I think they are definitely in that second tier.
And I think the spurs are in that first tier with OKC.
And I think Boston's kind of in between that first and second tier.
But what we've seen with Tatum, it's been great.
All right, a couple more things really quick.
The Yonah situation is just super weird.
Probably talk about it more with Zach on Sunday,
but this has been a soap opera basically since the summer.
The trade request, not a trade request.
No, I want to stay.
Do I want to get traded?
No, I want to commit.
And just trying to read the tea leaves of this.
And now it's gotten to the point where they want them to shut it down.
They have a chance to get a top eight.
top nine pick and he wants to come back as soon as he's healthy again.
And they're starting to, there's, it's starting to get a little ugly air.
I'm watching that one.
The 5 through 10 order in the east, Toronto 39 wins.
They're the fifth seed.
Atlanta's won 11th straight.
They're somehow the 8th seed.
Charlotte, who's been a top five team for two and a half months now, at least from
advanced metrics, they're still the 10 seed.
They're two games over 500.
they absolutely killed Orlando tonight on Del Curry night, which was great.
But the 5 through 10, how that shakes out and who you do or don't want to play.
The only team you definitely want to play is Philly because they're not going to be,
they're just not going to be able to put it all together in time.
I don't think in round one.
And I probably want to play Orlando and I probably want to play Miami.
Atlanta, the way they look now, I'm not sure I'd be crazy about seeing them and Charlotte.
I mean, you watch tonight.
like Charlotte will just be up 25 in the beginning of the second quarter of I don't know what
happened so I want to see how that shakes out and also how that shakes out correspondingly with
can the Celtics catch Detroit which I don't think they can Cade sadly got hurt he's got the
collapse young they have a four game lead and I think with the schedule I was I was staring at
and tried to figure out a way the Celtics catch them I don't think they can so Celtics will be the
two seats so they'll play the best playing seed playing team and Detroit will be the one
seed and might end up with like Charlotte with Cade coming back from this major injury.
So just watch that order there.
Tatum trying to get back everything, where he was as a basketball player in real time,
game to game as a Celtics fan has been one of the most compelling things I've seen
in a long time.
There was a game Monday night.
They're playing Phoenix.
And it was a classic Phoenix game, right?
They're up most of the game.
It actually felt a couple times like Phoenix was going to win.
and Jalen was just incredible.
And at some point it was just clear,
like Jalen's going to have to be the outfit tonight.
And Tatum was over on the side,
like he was Sam Hauser.
And everything was running through Jalen
at the top of the key,
one-on-one stuff,
or they're setting picks for him.
And Tatum was an accessory.
And that's the way it should have been,
and it's not a big deal.
I'm not saying, like,
no, it's Brown's team, anything like that.
It was just interesting to see him
settle into that for a game.
And it made me think, like,
I don't know, like in the Golden State game, Tatum was better.
But I don't know if it's fair to even ask him to be the guy who could be the alpha in situations like that.
And the Celtics are to have a guy who's been one of the best alphas in the league this year.
And maybe that's just going to be the setup.
But you can see when one guy's going for it, then the other guy takes over for two minutes.
Like the ceiling of this team, when you combine it with the bench and all the role players and stuff is really, really, really high.
So watching him get it back in real time has been a delight.
I'm so happy to just see him playing basketball again.
OKC at Celtics, March 25th next Wednesday.
That's the game.
Because what we haven't seen yet is somebody just throw the kitchen sink at this guy
and really try to be physical with him and take them out, take them out,
and maybe even throw a little semi-cheap shots.
OKC is your team for all that stuff.
So I wanted to mention that.
The worst four in the lottery.
So there's five teams right now.
Indiana has 15 wins, Washington 15, Brooklyn, 17, Sacramento, 18, Utah, 20.
You really want to be in the top three.
It's 14%.
Plus, if somebody jumps you, you stay in the top four.
It's a four-player draft with a drop-off.
So just how that all shakes out and what kind of tanking we're going to get into as we go down the line,
I think is going to be pretty compelling.
leading us to
the two
big topics
that people have been
going nuts about this week.
One is the
All-MBA MVP
minimum game number
which kicked in
again with Cade
who I think is at 60.
Even though he's played 61,
I think he only counts
for 60.
So he'd have to play
five more games
to be eligible for all-MBA.
I'm a voter.
I think it would be absurd.
It's like
legitimately absurd.
to have this season, finish it,
mark down all the all-MBA teams for posterity,
mark down the MVP voting,
and Cade's just not involved.
It's like he didn't exist in the season.
It's absurd because we're three-fourths of the way through the year.
They're the one seed.
They've completely overachieved for what their talent is.
And he is the number one, number two,
and number three reasons that's happening.
And he's not going to make all-MBA now
because he got a legitimate injury.
I tweeted today,
if Silver just said
we've dropped it from 65 to 62,
I don't think anybody would complain.
Really what they should have done,
it should have been 62 games
or 2,000 plus minutes.
2000 plus minutes is a lot.
Like Maxie, Maxie's at 61 now.
Let's say he doesn't come back with his hurt finger.
Maxi right now is third
in the league in total minutes.
But he didn't play enough to qualify
to make it on a NBA team?
Like, this is just stupid.
We did this wrong.
We overreacted.
I wish I had made a bigger stink out of it.
So you almost have to see it play out with some examples
before you know how stupid it is.
2000 plus minutes, 62 games.
Seems totally fair to me.
And really, like, if you go back and you look at the NBA
and the MVP stuff, the only really egregious one
was the year after COVID when Embed,
I think he missed 21.
Played like 51 games, missed 21.
It was a 72 game season.
And he was playing 30 minutes a game.
And I think he played like 1,500 minutes, something like that.
He finished second MVP.
And I think he was 122 in minutes played.
That's where maybe it gets a little, it's like, all right, maybe that shouldn't be eligible.
Now, it was post-COVID.
It was a weird season.
But 2,000 plus minutes, 62 plus games, one or the other, preferably both, and you should be eligible.
I just don't like this.
We're going to have a snapshot of this season.
and it's not going to capture this season.
We might, Booker is very close to being out.
Kauai is almost definitely going to be out now.
Maxie's going to be out,
and we're going to end up with at least two really goofy third-team NBA players.
We'll see what happens, but I'll be complaining.
Get ready for me to complain about this a few times.
All right, last thing, it's tied together.
Charlotte had Del Curry night tonight,
and it was really cool.
Steph and Seth were there.
family was there. It was great to see the Curry's. He's beloved in Charlotte. He was the first
guy. I think they drafted. He has been announcing games there forever. But just the Curry's
a royalty in Charlotte. And the bigger thing to me, just watching it, that franchise has had a
complete facelift over the last couple years, which we've talked about a couple of times. They drafted
well. They changed owners. They got rid of Michael Jordan. And they hired a really good coach.
They have an identity. They even have lamella ball, like,
really engaged. Like he was great tonight.
So it can be done is my point.
Because as we go to the last thing I wanted to quickly talk about here,
because expansion and all that stuff broke on Monday.
And it broke in a way that made me a little suspicious,
almost like it was being leaked that this is going to be a possibility
because they don't know whether they have the 23 votes yet or not.
They were talking about between $7 or $10 billion per team.
So let's go low just for fun
and we'll say $7.5 billion per team.
That's $15 billion total.
And I've been talking about this for five years.
I have podcasts from 21 and 22
where I was telling you guys
that Seattle and Vegas
we're going to be the expansion teams.
So if it's $7.5 billion per team,
that's $500 million cash
that would go to each of the 30 teams.
They do not have to share it with the players
and that's why they want to do expansion,
or at least some of the teams do,
because it's just pure,
flat-out greed. They didn't make enough money from the media deal, obviously, which is $7.6 million.
Now they have a chance to make another $500 million. And I've had people say to me like, hey,
Simmons, I thought you, you're the one saying how deep the league is. Why wouldn't you want
expansion? Here's why I don't want expansion, because we have nine teams that don't give a
shit right now in a 30-team league. The last thing we need to do is add two more teams that don't
give a shit. They either need to fix you don't give a shit part about the 82 game season,
or they need to relocate two teams and do that as an expansion. I cannot accept,
as somebody who loves basketball, I cannot accept adding to expansion teams and having 11
tanking teams three seasons from now instead of nine. I just don't see how that's a good product.
I don't see how that helps anybody. And the bottom line is there's eight to three
10 guys who truly matter. Those are the teams that have a chance to win the title.
And everybody else is either tread and water, overachieving or tanking. We don't need more of that.
Football has figured it out because football, you have the quarterbacks are really the only
stability for the 7-8 best teams. Other than that, you have the salary cap, which is prohibitive.
You have the schedule and the stuff they can do with the Patriots this year at a fourth-place
schedule. Next year, their schedule is going to be really hard. They can keep tilting
the seesaw against teams. You can't do it in the NBA. So to add two teams, I've just seen,
I'm old enough now to remember when this happened a few times over the course of the league,
and it always screws up. It always leads to halves and have knots in a really crazy way.
And I would accept it if they put in like the right tanking rules, which they're claiming they do.
I want to know what those are first before you do expansion. The other thing is,
couldn't we just relocate a couple teams that aren't doing that well?
I don't want to call teams out, franchises out that are doing terrible in revenue
that are clearly have been struggling with bad ownership in the places they've been in,
like in New Orleans, right?
Like Memphis, Draymond Green called out this week because basically saying they don't even
have like a hotel for the players to stay in.
They've been small market.
They just gutted their team again.
And yet the Charlotte piece of this,
is why you can't say like, well, basketball can't work there.
Because I would have said that about Charlotte three years ago.
So to me, how do you get a team like New Orleans to be confident again and properly owned
and not a place where everyone in the league, whether you're a player, an agent, anybody,
knows that that's one of the worst situations in terms of taking care of the health of players,
injuries, all the injury maintenance, all that stuff, like facilities.
Everybody knows about New Orleans, right?
Memphis is another one that maybe from a revenue standpoint, small market,
they're okay owned, but is a team that should, should, if you're just, if we were just doing this,
let's pick 30 cities that should have an NBA team, Seattle would be picked over both of those
teams.
Like, let's just call it for what it is.
So you really have to make the case for me that those teams can succeed before I'm ready to add other teams.
And here's the other thing with Vegas.
Why is Vegas a good idea?
Vegas already has four professional teams.
Vegas isn't that big of a city.
Vegas, young people don't party and drink and gamble the way they used to.
Every story I read is about how Vegas, from a tourism standpoint, getting a little dicey.
They might have overbuilt it a little bit.
why is this like a surefire bet for expansion? Seattle 100%. I've been saying Seattle should
have a team for 20 years ever since they stole the team away. Vegas, I'm not sure. Like, do we,
A, do we need 32 teams? And B, if we're adding two teams, should Vegas be one of the teams? I still
have real questions about this. And should we just relocate or relocate? I don't know why I'm
emphasizing the re. Should we just relocate the franchise that would immediately triple in value or
double in value the moment it moved to Seattle.
So my question is, why couldn't you at least
explore that side with one of the franchises
before you talked about just adding
to other teams?
I don't get it.
I really want to know more.
So this vote's coming next week.
I'm not convinced they have the 23 votes,
but if they do this, it's a money grab.
And they can say it's like, more jobs for everybody.
Okay, cool.
This is a money grab.
this is going to make the league worse.
I will plant my flag in that
because we are just going to have
more teams doing all the same shit
that we hate now, there's tanking stuff.
So the only way you could do expansion
is if it's tied together
with some real roles to make
these teams actually care about competing
and not being an embarrassment.
Like the freaking Nets the other night,
down 60 to 24 at halftime.
Like the wizards give you up 83 to bam out of bio.
Like nobody wants to see this anymore.
So we don't need two more.
team's doing this. So this is a bigger decision that they have to make. They have to decide
what are the 30 best cities for the NBA? Do we have 30 cities that can handle the NBA at the
highest level? And if we do, maybe we can expand. But now we have to bring in all this
tanking stuff to make it possible to expand from a position of strength and not a money grab.
So that's my take on expansion. We're going to take a break. We're going to come back.
Billy Gale is going to join us to talk about
a world baseball classic and then Wesley Morris
and I can talk movies. That's next.
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All right, the Duke Billy Gill is here.
one of our big WBC fans here at the ringer.
I got into it.
I enjoyed it.
I don't really know the protocol, though,
of rooting for your country versus rooting for players on your favorite team.
And I was battling the whole time because I was rooting for different Red Sox guys to do well
while also rooting for America.
But then I was really happy for Venezuela.
It was about the least patriotic I felt in a while.
So you went to some of these games.
What was it like?
It was incredible.
So I've gone in past years, it's always been great.
I put in, Bill, for a credential request.
So I went there as an official representative of the ringer.
So I was there going on the field, taking pictures of people,
making a presence known so that the baseball community knows we're in the game.
We're here to cover this sport.
The environment is crazy.
It's great, but it's sad because the environment in that stadium is not like that for the next four years.
And it won't be like that at any Marlins games this year, which is disappointing.
But, man, Miami can host a World Baseball Classic.
I have a question for you.
Wait, can you hold that thought?
Can you perform your question to me?
Yeah.
Is it weird to go to a place that has just a certain set, pretty depressing level of energy?
And then all of a sudden, you go there and it's fucking awesome.
And you're like, I'm in the same place where it's basically sucks.
I'm not used to it being that great because since they built the stadium, the Marlins,
have made the playoffs twice, but have not hosted a home playoff game.
Because one was the weird COVID year where they were on the road.
and then they switched it to like three years ago, I think, or two years ago they made it.
But it's that first round is that wildcard round where like the host city hosts all the games.
And it's like best of three so don't travel.
So there's never been a playoff game there.
But because of the roof, it gets really loud and it's a great environment.
But I'm also one that I've become accustomed to smaller crowds.
I've become accustomed to the row in front of me will be empty.
I can kick my feet up.
So it's kind of like when it's too crowded, like it's, that's nice.
but like I'm ready to get back to my comfort.
Like I have plenty of space.
I don't have to wait that long in concessions.
Like I'm good not having a ton of people around me, you know?
Yeah.
So I like the energy, but I got my feel.
We're good with that energy for a little bit, I think.
It felt festive.
What was your question for me?
It was great.
There was live bands going around.
I don't know how it is that like cert-you have to go through security with a clear like bag,
like in every stadium policy, right?
Yeah.
But somehow you can go in with a trombone and you can go in with like a massive drum
and you can take in all of these instruments that seemingly could be dangerous weapons,
but like a purse that's like 16 inches by 16 is a no go.
Like I don't understand that security works.
So here's my question to you.
Am I, it's similar to what you were saying.
Am I a bad American because going into the championship game,
I was actively rooting for my country to lose.
to Venezuela.
So I bet on the Dominican and the
Dominicans in the semifinals against U.S.
Because I've always
enjoyed the baseball players. They've been very good
of the Red Sox. And I didn't really
feel that patriotic about it in general.
In the finals, I was like, I'm going to
root for America in this one.
This would be, I want Roman Anthony
to do well. I was really excited he did
well in the previous game.
But as it went along, and it was
so clear that it meant like a hundred times more to Venezuela. It was hard not to like,
all right, I'm happy for these guys. This is like the greatest sports moment of their lives.
It would have meant, would have meant even like one-tenth as much to America? No.
No, that's why honestly, coming into the game. So I was like walking around, I was asking
people like, oh, you're rooting for. And like, yeah, I want America to win. And last time in the
World Baseball Classic 2023, America also made it to the final. And they lost to Japan.
And there was a classic situation where Shohei Otani is.
pitching against Mike Trout, he strikes him out.
They end up winning the championship,
and it means so much to Japan.
I wanted America to win that one.
This one, America just had like not the best attitude
throughout the tournament,
where you had scoobel coming and going,
and then he kind of started feeling it.
And then in the semi-final game
where they were playing the Dominican Republic,
he drove back from spring training.
He pitched the day before in a meaningless spring training game
for the Tigers, drives back that day
because he wants to be with the team.
And there's like this whole article written
about how he drove through a rainstorm to get there,
which is like, I'm not applauding this.
Like, welcome to Florida.
It rains all the time.
Like, this wasn't a hurricane.
Like, what are we talking about here?
But we wanted to applaud him because all of a sudden it seems like
between the semifinal and the final,
America kind of figured out like,
hey, this is fun.
We should try to want to win this instead of, you know,
saying the wrong thing every possible chance they got,
including Bryce, who like at the end was like,
very gracious.
and he was shaking the hands of Venezuela and all that.
But earlier in the tournament, they asked him about it.
And he's like, I, you know, I'd rather win the Olympics than the World Baseball Classic.
It's like, buddy.
Yeah, just keep that one to yourself.
Just don't say that.
And then there's all the players from all the different countries who are all excited.
And they're saying even Kika Hernandez, who was playing for Puerto Rico, has been the five World Series.
He's won three.
And he's saying winning the World Baseball Classic would be more important, which then caught the ire of Derek Jeter, who on the broadcast,
they say, like, what do you make of all these players
that say they'd rather win the World Baseball Classic
than the World Series?
And he's like, it sounds like players
that have never made the World Series.
It's like, there's plenty who have,
who are saying this.
But also, like, Derek,
you're on the broadcast for the World Baseball Classic.
Like, can we pretend to care just a little bit about this?
Or, like, also, you don't add anything to any of these broadcasts.
Just sit out the World Baseball Classic.
Derek, like, we're not going to miss you.
It's going to be perfectly fine.
So the Americans had kind of, like,
not the greatest attitude throughout it.
You had the situation with Cal Raleigh and Randy Roserana where he didn't want to shake his hand.
And then Josh Naylor, who plays for Canada, decided I want to troll Cal Raleigh and go to try to shake his hand.
And then he also didn't shake his hand.
And the Mariners seemed to be falling apart.
There was no injuries or serious injuries in this World Baseball Classic.
But the Mariners, I don't think, are going to survive the World Baseball Classic, even getting all of their team back healthy because they all seem to hate each other now, even though they'll downplay the situation.
Funny because they had great chemistry last year.
The WBC could have just completely eroded it.
Yeah.
I mean, Randy Rosaranda told Cal Rale to like shove his handshake comment like up his ass,
which is kind of like, this is going to be awkward, I think, when we get back.
And managers are going to have to kind of sort that situation out.
So I didn't think that a team was going to fall apart that wasn't playing in the world baseball
classic, but we have to keep an eye on the Mariners now to see what's going on.
But overall, I thought, great tournament.
Here's another thing.
By the way, Mark DeRosa.
might be the worst manager, I think, in the history of baseball.
Just bring in Miller for the 9-2-2.
What are you doing?
He throws 102.
Nobody's touching him.
Just get an inning at him.
What are we doing?
Did you see they were asking him about it after the game?
So in the press conference after game, they were asking him like, why didn't you bring him in?
And he's like, well, I told, you know, I wanted to respect the Padres.
It's like, respect the Padres.
Did you see what was happening with Venezuela?
Their manager, Omar Lopez, had three different teams call him and say,
hey, you played a semi-final game last night,
do not pitch our pitchers back-to-back nights.
Yeah.
And he said, you know what?
I'm going to pitch four pitchers back-to-back nights,
and you guys can deal with it,
because that's exactly what he did.
Like, four guys that pitched the night before,
the veterans were fine with it.
They did it to Whitlock on the American team
where he pitched three times in five days.
Yeah.
And his last appearance in the finals,
he gave up the winning run.
His miles per hour.
was a little bit down. Big topic with Red Sox fans right now.
Was it? Just ready for Whitlock to be on the deal in June because he pitched three and five days.
So back to back, I don't even know.
Whitlock's a guy on the Red Sox, not to make this two MLB-centric that I have wanted to
work out for your team for the past like five years. He's really good last year.
Yeah, he's really good last year. But he was going to be a starter and then they eventually
moved him and figured him out like in the bullpen. Yeah, it's not as useful to me. I like to
liked it when he was like a fifth starter.
Yeah, no, he's a reliever.
Going back to the team thing,
this was one of my issues rooting for America or being in the mindset of I should root for
America.
This is the country I live in.
First of all, the World Baseball Classic has not been around since like 1892.
Like, this is a relatively new thing.
So it can't be like, we have to root for our teams.
I think you can kind of go where the heart wants, especially in the gambling era.
But I was watching like the Dominicans and the Venezuelans, how they're just reacting to
a double in the third inning
and they're just going
crazy they're so demonstrative
ever been the dugouts flipping out
and our team
was basically like okay guys
we got them
it let's do it I was embarrassed
so forced and even
Bryce Harper when he hit the game
tying home run in the bottom of the eighth
when he's coming around he did like a salute
and he's like pointing at the flag
like I don't know why it felt
like forced and it almost felt like
angry patriotism
But then you see like the Dominicans and the Venezuelans are playing against each other.
They're hugging each other at home plate.
And it's like competitive, but like they're enjoying it where the Americans seemed like like forced.
Well, how about the Brace Homer?
They weren't even like at home plate.
They were kind of over on the side like, all right, we'll go greet them.
Yeah.
It was weird.
The Roman Anthony, Roman Anthony is my guy obviously.
He's Red Sox.
And he has the big go ahead Homer in the game before.
And it wasn't like if it happened for the Dominicans or the Venezuelans, it would have been like a borderline.
just they would have lost their minds for five minutes.
I don't know.
It bummed me out.
The American bad flips felt forced to me too.
Where it's like, well, I see how high the Venezuelans are throwing it.
Let me try to throw it higher.
I think overall, great tournament.
Have you turned on this whatsoever?
Are you in on this?
Interesting.
First of all, way in, enjoyed it way more than I thought.
The ratings were really good.
And I'm not a ratings guy because I don't understand how the ratings just get better
for everything every year. It's like ESPN every month. It's like highest blank ever. And just it feels
like you can finagle it however you want. But anecdotally, people cared about this. People in my life
cared about this. Everybody that likes sports that I know feels like they were at least monitoring it.
And then the last two USA games, I feel, I feel like a lot of people in my life watch that
cared. My dad really cared. He was really upset that Anthony made the last out. He was like, I hope,
I hope that's not going to be bad for him for this season.
I was like, it'll be fine, bad.
Yeah.
He'll be playing in like two weeks in real games.
You know what I really love the most was how you vacillate emotions.
I was mostly rooting for America, but when Judge made an out after Harper tied the game,
and you could be like, all right, Judge, let's go air and finish it off.
Like, part of me was like, I hope you mix it out.
Yeah, I hope it becomes the story.
You want your enemies to fail.
Like, it's so weird.
Because, like, I don't like.
Ronald Lecuna Jr.
Because I'm a Marlon's fan and he's a brave and I find him to be very annoying.
But I felt good for him.
And they're crying on the field the whole time.
You mentioned the Red Sox.
Did you see the stat where the Red Sox outfield?
So they had like us like all of the countries that hit home runs who hit the most
home runs throughout the tournament.
Yeah.
And it's listed like the Dominican Republic hit like 15 home runs or whatever, 12, 11,
whatever it was.
And then they had like the U.S.
I think had like 11 or 12.
And then just Boston Red Sox outfielders.
10 home runs in the world baseball classic.
You guys,
you guys are under is 86 and a half for wins.
And I think the Red Sox are going to be legit good.
Like,
I think they're plus 300 on Fanduil for the division.
That teams like kind of loaded.
Yeah.
And as long as they don't have any pitcher injuries or anything weird like that,
but the Anthony is the big thing.
I mean,
that was why his,
his homer that he hit the go-head homer.
I was really glad he had that moment.
because we're kind of counting on him to have like the Drake May major jump in year two and Abrayo too.
I thought it was a good showing for them.
It's weird to root for the guys on different teams that are your guys and kind of monitoring them.
You end up like it's like a parent with multiple kids on different fields that, you know, some some youth sports.
Tournament, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
One other thing with the world baseball that I really liked.
how it's going to
all the stories now
about how it transfers
to the actual season
becomes like its own cottage industry
for media coverage
because we have fantasy baseball coming
with the season starting
and just how it swings your opinions
either high or low
I think it's kind of entertaining.
I think in 2017
myself and probably everyone else
was watching the World Baseball Classic
when the US won
was like Marcus Stroman might be the greatest pitcher
in the history of Major League Baseball.
I need to draft him in the first round.
Yeah, like, I need to draft him right away.
And then he has like a classic like Stroman situation
where he's like really good one year.
And then he's like not great the year that you draft him in fantasy.
But yeah, people are definitely going to be drafting
and over-drafting certain players
based on World Baseball Classic Performance.
I like...
A break is going to be one of them.
Oh, yeah, for sure.
So you mentioned the ratings.
Almost 11 million people watch.
championship game, which is crazy. I think it was up from like $7 million or something, the previous
championship game. It was the most watched World Baseball Classic game ever. Baseball's writing this high
coming off of the World Series and coming off of the World Baseball Classic. And I'm a little bit
worried that once the regular season starts and everybody goes back to their teams and you lose
the excitement that the World Baseball Classic games had, that people are going to be like, oh,
like, yeah, we're back, we're back to baseball now because you don't have to, you don't have to,
have like the playoff intensity, you don't have the world baseball classic intensity. And now it's like,
okay, this is game number seven of 162. You can't be like playing trumpets and bat flipping and
jumping over, you know, the dugout fence every time someone hits a home run. Now we need to get back
to like, you know, baseball decorum. You know, I see the point. I just think we're so loaded
from a season standpoint with good teams and huge cities with real baseball tradition.
players that care about in both leagues,
young guys coming up,
even like we mentioned Anthony,
but there's a bunch of either rookies
or second year guys that people are like super excited about.
Just watching like what's happening with the baseball cards.
Like you mentioned last time,
the Pittsburgh,
the 19 year old,
the rookie with the shortstop,
whether he,
who knows when he'll come up or will he be like a May 1st guy?
Will he come up at all?
I don't know.
But his card was like exploding during the year.
And it just feels like they have a lot of,
a lot of guys.
I hope they don't do the games with the,
with the rookies where they, like, wait until...
No, they're all doing it. The Red Sox are going to do with the two
pitchers we have. I hate it.
It's one of the worst rules that we have in sports.
The extra arbitration year.
Yeah, it's terrible. It's so dumb.
It's terrible. But like, like, the Dodgers
going for a three-pe is a real thing.
Like, Judge, who's now hitting his mid-30s,
you know, and somehow became embattled coming out of this world baseball
classic. I saw Mad Dogg did a whole thing about it on ESP that I enjoyed.
Like he's,
he's a real figure that people have opinions. My whole thing is like baseball needed to get back
to people in your life just having arguments about different baseball things.
And I felt like we started to lose that a little bit as the sport became more and more
and more random, basically. And now it feels like you talk to people like, are the Dodgers
ruining baseball? And half the people in my life would have like a real opinion on it.
You know, do you think Aaron Judge?
Is it his fault?
People have opinions on this.
What about Roman Anthony?
Could he be the next guy for Boston?
There's like 30 of these now.
Who's the best picture in the American League?
We just have good arguments again.
And I don't, I'd feel blessed, right?
As we head into a massive labor strike.
Well, I mean, that's, this is a thing.
Baseball can't get out of their own way, right?
Because, like, they're writing this momentum,
and they're going to mess this up at the end of the year by having a lockout.
Like 100%, they're going to lock out.
And it's like, why are you guys doing this?
Like, why are we trying to ruin a good thing?
Just kind of agree to something.
Figure it out.
Realize that you can't afford.
I mean, they're not going to miss any time.
Even if they have a lockout,
they'll figure it out so that they don't miss any games.
If they miss games,
it'd be the dumbest thing they could possibly do.
Did you see the revenue thing where it was talking about the percentage that the leagues make?
And they were like 21%, 21%, 20%, and then baseball was like 2.4%.
because so much of the revenue is being driven by a couple of these teams,
so much of the salaries, everything, and clearly something's going to shift.
But on the other hand, as a TV sport, we're all worried about it.
Now that I have all the RSNs, as that all shakes out,
but it seems like from a right standpoint, they're going to be good.
I like the fact that Netflix got involved with the World Baseball Classic,
and these different non-traditional networks are trying to figure out ways to kind of grab a bite
of the Apple from them.
So that's a good thing.
It seems like a lot of people want baseball.
I was a little bit worried last year.
And I'm not one that gets like into the TV, right situation or cares that much.
Like I'll figure out where to watch the games.
But when it was announced that they were going to leave ESPN, I was like, oh, this isn't
good.
Like this is at the end of Sunday night baseball?
Like, what's going to happen here?
And then like because I'm a weird guy and I like grew up watching ESPN, worked at ESPN
a little bit and like know the personalities.
I'm like, what's going to happen to Tim Kirchin?
I'm worried about this.
Where's Kirching going to go?
I don't want to see if I'm at MLB network.
Like I can't, my heart can't take that.
So ESPN's going to have, I think, weekday games now.
But then everyone's going to have games.
There's going to be games on Apple.
There's going to be games on Netflix.
This is what we do now.
Yeah.
It's almost like a game show trying to figure out who has what game.
But I think part of that is good, though, because in theory, each of the networks will be
trying to make their one day a week the most relevant game.
So hopefully then we'll get good presentations and good broadcast from all of the
networks.
And it's not just kind of like mailing it in, hey, here's like a random Wednesday night
baseball game.
But we also have Sunday night and Tuesday night or whatever.
So like we can just throw a fourth team on here and who cares what it actually looks
like.
I'm excited about baseball.
I am too.
We've seen this happen in NBA this year with, you know, like NBC's doing that Sunday
night game, right? With Toriko, they're making it almost like trying to do it. Yeah,
they're trying to give it the NFL Sunday treatment for NBA and it feels like a bigger game.
Like it feels like they care more. They're sending that everybody there is at the game.
Like the studio shows there. Tariko's doing it. They have like the John Tesh stuff and it just
feels bigger, which I think what some of these places will do with baseball. I was just looking at
the World Series stuff on Fandu. The top eight teams for odds right now, Dodgers, Yankees,
Mariners, Mets, Phillies, Red Sox, Blue Jays, Cubs.
And then the ninth one is Atlanta.
These are all, like, big teams that have tradition and, like, big fan bases and really good players, right?
Seattle's probably the one, like, non-giant fan base.
But they have, you know, J-Rod, Cal Rally.
I really like Nailer.
Good pitching staff.
I love Nailer.
Like, it's a fun team.
And even Toronto, which I think is going to be a little different this year because they lost
couple guys. They've had some injuries already, but
they were in the World Series last year.
People know who they are. People know who Guerrero
is. So I think we're in a good
spot, Billy. Baseball might be back.
Who knows? The ringer might have
to figure out some sort of podcast thing.
Wow. I don't know.
I took 11 million people
for the world baseball class. It makes you think like
shit.
There's a market out there. Yeah, maybe people
care again. Maybe they care.
All right. Billy Gill, how you feeling
about, you never gave your opinion on
BAMs 83 on this podcast. So go quick. Okay, so BAMs 83. I was in Sweden when it was going on.
So it was 3 a.m. But my phone starts blowing up because like I'm in group text and they're like,
Bam has 72 points right now. So it's like three or four a.m. and I'm like, I wake up to these and I'm
like, well, I can't go back to sleep. So I'm trying to sign into like my Fanduals Sports Network,
Florida subscription that I have. Of course, because I'm in a different country. It's like the country code.
This doesn't allow it. So I'm doing the old.
old school just following along on my phone.
Oh, the mid-90s.
Yeah, like the 976 lines.
So I'm watching like the ball move like a little graphic up and down the court.
And I'm like, man, they keep fouling.
Like this is kind of crazy.
What's going on here?
I saw that you were kind of a defender of BAM's 83 points.
Oh, I'm a full defender.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Place some defense.
A lot of people weren't like, yeah, stop him.
I'm surprised that that Eric's Bolstra did it because it seems like with their whole
like heat culture stuff, like, oh, this seems like beneath the heat to try to do something like this.
But I loved it. I mean, obviously, I'm biased here because I'm from down here in South Florida.
But I love the fact that they did it. I was thinking that they might do the thing where they take
them out and like, oh, we can't pass Kobe. And they're like, no, see that guy. Like,
we're going to pass Kobe. No, it was cool that that they, and I think it helped that he was such a
liked guy. And that he's so not that kind of player who would like chase stats. And, you know,
everybody was supportive of that.
It seemed like the most fun random game to go to.
It was like real joy in the stands.
He got to like 75.
They're cutting, like, you know, Miami is can kind of come and go as a basketball crowd.
People were like deliriously happy as this was happening.
It was really fun to watch.
Well, the Wizards are a crap team too.
That's the thing.
Like stop him.
Like you guys can play defense.
You can like, why don't you double him?
Why don't you take the ball out of his hand?
Especially in the first quarter.
The heat had like no starters out there except for BAM.
It's like, just take him out.
Let everybody else be.
It was a disgrace.
And this was my big case.
It was like, like the, the wizards.
Like, this is, we have eight teams tanking.
Now we have nine because Milwaukee's trying to tank.
So it's almost one third of the league.
That's a way more of a disgrace to me than Miami being like,
Bim out of bio is a great guy,
is having the night of his life.
Let's see how many points he can get.
I'm never going to be offended by that.
I didn't like that so many, like, players and coaches came out.
and like swaggy P, like former players,
then just like, I don't respect this at all.
It's like, shut up.
Like, no one cares what you think.
Why do you have to ruin this?
Why do you have to ruin a fun thing here?
It is weird, though.
Like, if you look at the all-time list,
then just bam out of bio is number two on the list.
Not that he's not an all-time grade of all-time,
but he's not an all-time great.
You know, I've heard people say that.
And if you go to every sport,
there's fucking weird things in there.
There's people that have had, like, you know,
four-home or, four-homer,
games in baseball.
Like, that guy had four homers.
Yeah.
And in football, same thing.
Where, like, I don't know, who, remember,
Flipper Anderson had the receiver record forever?
That receiver on the Rams, it was like 330 yards receiving or whatever it was.
And it's never who you think is going to have these records.
I think there was some Kobe stuff with it, too.
I think people just love Kobe and they kind of want, they liked how it was
Wilt, then Kobe, and now Bams in the middle of it.
And he's not a score.
But I mean, everybody loves BAM.
And it was the night of his life.
He'd never had 42 points in a game.
So I don't know.
If you like sports, it's weird that you wouldn't like that one to me.
But anyway, all right, Billy Gill, good luck.
Did you do your fantasy baseball draft yet?
My fantasy baseball draft is next Tuesday.
Keepers are in, though.
So that has been locked and we're moving forward now.
We have to turn in keepers tomorrow night.
Me and my buddy Hansch, who's my league of dorks partner,
in my AAL Keeper League.
And I can't even tell you the Google history.
Just searching any sort of info I can find on Joe Boyle of Tampa or Eric Lauer on the Blue Jays
deciding whether we want to keep him for $3.
Do we keep Narvaez at seven?
Just Googling all his spring.
It's pathetic.
It's such a waste of time.
How many keepers do you get to have?
We have 10.
So we have nine keepers.
And now we're battling for who should be the 10th.
and it's just a colossal waste of time.
I love it.
You can keep like half your team?
Well, we have 40-man roster.
40-man roster.
Including minors and reserves, yeah.
That's insane.
I got a million of the thing.
You won't believe it.
And it's one, it's only one league.
It's only a L-L-O-D, yeah.
So you're just full of like random crap players.
This is why we're talking about whether we want to protect Eric Lauer for $3.
Oh, my God.
That is deep.
One of, so we don't do auction.
We do like the rounds still.
So ours is you can keep four, but it's four, you can only do it two times.
So like you can only keep them twice.
Yeah.
And it's four rounds higher than you drafted him the previous year.
Yeah.
So I went in and I spent and Stanton got dropped last year when he was injured.
So he was just out there.
So I picked him up on a flyer, just put him on my I.
L.
And I was like, I'll play him when he comes back.
But also next year I can use him as a 20th round.
pick. So I was like, I'm using this for future situation.
So I had John Carlos Stanton, but then the reports are he can't open a bag of chips,
which seems impossible. And I'm looking at him like, well, he has three home runs or four
home runs already in the spring. So I guess the chip situation has been resolved. He didn't
play in the world baseball classic. I could get him in the 20th round, but also I know he's just
going to injure himself because that's what he does every year. So am I going to waste one of my
keepers on him? I ended up not doing it.
So we'll see what happens at that.
The move is always if the evidence is you're going to really regret this a month from now,
I'm kicking yourself, maybe don't do it.
I'm always stunned by the lack of information in this world we live in now where information is everywhere.
Like Twitter, you can't search for anything on Twitter anymore.
If I want to find out like Joe Boyle, Tampa, give me like the last five days of tweets about him.
Like fucking pizza comes up.
Reddit, not nearly, nobody's starting like a Joe Boyle friend.
Right?
Are you expecting that?
No, I'm not.
So then you're Googling news stories and it's like, oh, Joe Boyle's in that one.
And it's like just this tiny little tidbit paragraph.
It's just not a lot of info.
They don't care about like the diehards.
We need a return to like the true honest to goodness beat writers in baseball that are there in spring.
They leave their family for a month and a half.
They live in like Lakeland, Florida, wherever their team is situated.
And they're like giving us all the information on everyone.
Now it's just like dispatches three times a day, different things about different players.
Yeah, we don't have that anymore.
Now you just go, they're hanging out, making contacts or whatever it is that reporters are doing there.
If they're even attending the games, the managers don't even bother giving you actual honest assessments of what's going on with the players.
It's become a travesty that's going on in journalism these days, Bill.
Well, fortunately, we have websites that can show us the miles per hour compared to last year and stuff like that.
Not that I've ever been to those.
Maybe I have.
Okay.
Are you excited? Are you excited about ABS's debut?
We didn't have it in the world baseball classic.
We didn't talk about that huge controversy at the end of the U.S.
Dominican Republic game where it was clearly a ball.
Game ends like that.
Dominicans are eliminated.
That's going to happen.
It missed by half a foot.
Same thing happened to eating before against Soto.
It was just a bad strike zone.
And American umpire.
So somewhat suspicious there.
I don't know if he's on the take or what's going on.
It was a little weird.
All right, Billy Gill.
you can listen slash watch to Billy on the on the ringer tailgate.
A great show that has continued to go during the offseason as well as you pop on ringer NFL
from time to time and all over the place.
Good to see you.
Thanks for staying up with me.
Hey, thanks for having me.
This segment is brought to you by the all new Audi Q3 made for the yes life.
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When Westcham first took flight in 1996, the vibes were a bit different.
People thought denim on denim was peak fashion, in-line skates were everywhere,
and two out of three women rocked, the Rachel.
While those things stayed in the 90s, one thing that hasn't is that fuzzy feeling you get,
when WestJet welcomes you on board.
Here's to WestJetting since 96.
Travel back in time with us
and actually travel with us
at westjet.com slash 30 years.
All right, so coming up,
it's my old friend, Wesley Morris.
We used to work together at Grant Land.
He has some podcasts called Cannonball
for the New York Times.
And we had about to talk about the Oscars after it happened.
So we're coming in right as we went for too long.
So I cut the first like seven, eight minutes.
And we went right into when we started talking about
one battle after another versus sinners.
So here that is right now.
I mean, it's been a long time.
It's been 30 years of having this man in our lives and wanting the institutions to acknowledge how great he is at his job.
Well, the origins of it could have happened for him and with there will be blood.
And he just went against a buzzsaw with no country for old men.
Right?
So the 2008 Oscars.
And sometimes that happens, right?
Like sinners, I think, in another year could have.
could have won all the major ones that they were up for,
which is basically everything except for best actress.
That's his point about 75,
right?
I mean,
the movie year for 1975 at the 76 Academy Awards.
And, you know,
those five movies,
Barry Lyndon,
Jaws,
Dog Day afternoon,
one flew over the cuckoo's nest,
and,
Nashville.
Nashville.
I mean,
come on.
Like,
four of those movies are going to lose.
And,
you know,
historically, I watched one flew over the cuckoo's nest about a year ago.
Yeah.
And, you know, the least, I mean, the least impressive of the five.
And saying that like one flew over the cuckoo's nest is the least impressive movie,
those five movies is a wild thing to say.
And yet, like, that is the one that is perhaps least discussed, I guess, like, in these last
50 years.
It's the one that's come up the least often, at least in my life.
But Milosh Foreman, he's one of my, I love him.
I mean, every single movie he made pretty much, especially the Hollywood ones are, you know, chef's kiss.
Well, we talk about, this happens in sports, too.
Sometimes, sometimes a category is loaded.
Sometimes you have an MVP and like the NBA, and it's like, holy shit, a lot of guys this year.
But then we also talk about distance, which is something we've been talking about in this podcast forever,
like how we remember it five years from now.
Will we think the right movie won?
Will we think the right director won?
And stuff like that.
This one, because it was one battle versus sinners for months and months,
and then I felt like Marty Supreme was going to nudge some stuff in there,
basically because it came out last.
There's something Sean had talked about,
about just how late the Oscars were this year.
And by the time we actually had it,
it did feel like a lot of times since all of these movies came out, right?
And it probably hurts Chalemay the most.
But I do wonder five years from now what we're going to think should have won.
Because I think there's people really strongly in both camps.
You could feel it in the audience for the Oscars.
It felt like Sinners was by far the most popular movie in the room,
but that doesn't mean anything.
Yeah, every nominee, like, you know, from the craft folks to, you know,
you know, Michael B. Jordan and Ryan Coogler
in the movie itself, you could feel,
I mean, even that production number, right?
When they did, I lied to you as part of the two songs
that got performed during the show,
you could feel the energy in that room for that performance,
and it's not just because you had people,
like there were too many great musicians on stage, right?
Raphael Sadiq and Brittany Howard
and Rian and Giddens and Shabuzi.
I'm not putting him in the great musician class yet,
but like he's good at his job.
You know,
Kerrstone Kingfish Ingram was up there.
Buddy guy didn't even play.
He just stood around.
Right.
It just was,
it was extremely impressive
just to have those people up there
kind of like
contributing five seconds of music
to this, you know,
90 second operation.
But you could feel in the room
that those people were at a,
at a concert, right?
And they were reacting like they were seeing,
you know,
the people,
they were seeing on stage, on stage for free.
So yeah, I don't, I mean, five, ten,
15, 50 years from now.
I will say that one battle after another,
and I don't know if this is,
this feels like it might be true in your life too, Bill,
given the amount of time that I know you've talked
the least about sinners.
And almost certainly one battle after another,
you live in Los Angeles like a, like a town that has such long,
I don't know when to say ambivalent feelings
about Paul Thomas Anderson,
But you know, I mean, like, the question always was, you know,
who's going to make the next one that studio-wise?
And like, are the movies going to make any money?
And so I spent, I spent a year in change,
almost a year now talking about sinners.
I've never had the same conversation twice.
And I don't imagine I'm going to have the same conversation
in five years talking about sinners.
And one battle after another, I don't know, we should talk about this.
I feel like, you know, of all a people,
TVA movies, this is perhaps the most, at least in my life.
This is the most contested one.
And it's the one where the contest for me at least feels like it,
it just really sucks to have these arguments with people.
To pit movies against each other.
Yeah.
Well, to pit those two movies against each other,
but also the camp of people who really feel like one battle after another
is just really doing black women dirty.
And is operating on this continue.
I mean, you and I have talked about this particular...
I thought there was the biggest flaw of the film.
Question before.
Yeah.
But see, I...
My thing about what is going on in this movie is...
I think it's best mode,
and perhaps the best way to understand it,
is like something adjacent to a cartoon,
like a political cartoon, right?
And the thing that I, that I, that I, the thing that excited me so much watching it that
first time, which I'll never, ever forget, I just was so exhilarated and watched it
in IMAX and it looked so good and felt like it weighed 4,000 pounds was the sheer fact
of Tiana Taylor as, as an elemental energy and a physical presence, right?
I felt like he was giving a black woman the treatment
that he gives these white men in his movies.
He was, he invented a character.
And, you know, Pynchon has a lot to do with this.
Thomas Pinchin wrote Violin, the movie, the book that this movie's based on.
He came up with a character who is in the world of this movie a black woman
who has as much weirdness and complicated.
and like wrongness as the white guys do.
Yeah.
And that in the world of Paul Thomas Anderson is a form of that is, that is equality.
But then undergirding that is this, are these, are these questions of like just American
politics, forget like leftist, you know, white supremacist military industrial complex,
but just like what the fundamental grimy roots of this country are all, the soil there.
growing in. And without really having to hit that drum too hard after the first 33 minutes,
you understand what the stakes are. And they don't have to be too specific about what the
politics are. I never got hung up on the fact that these people believe in four things.
And one of them is freedom from fucking fear. Like, yes, amen. I didn't need, I didn't need more
from that because I feel like this is a Chase picture. Yeah. You know, Chase. Chase.
Chase Infinity picture, a chase picture,
between, you know, two white men for a black woman.
And, you know, let's go back to, you know,
that's a 400-year-old American story.
You know?
I mean, I just kind of like the brazenness of it.
I liked its disrespect.
But I'm also, I'm so, I don't know, comfortable with.
And at this point,
here for and really
I've absorbed all the critiques of this movie
in light of the in the light of the way I just laid out
what I think is exciting and exhilarating about it
because there is also, it's attached to this other history
of how black women have been represented in art, culture,
and, you know, American commerce
that were going back to like, you know, 1865 and before.
I thought both more.
You get me a lot to work with there.
When I left the theater,
my biggest flaw with the movie,
which I talked about after,
was I was just,
it was like,
that person was a bad person.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Like, I still don't understand
why they killed the people at the bank.
Yeah.
That was like,
that crossed the line, right?
And then basically dumps her kid,
which is another terrible thing to do.
And then there's this letter at the end
that we're not even sure she wrote
that tries to,
aren't we sure she wrote that?
I know we talked about this before,
but do you have any more clarity on why?
There's a theory that he wrote the letter
so to give the daughter closure, right?
Okay.
But listen, big picture,
I felt the same way you did, like in the theater
where I was like, this is just fucking cool.
I'm just so glad there's a movie like this,
which is the exact same way I felt about sinners.
And I think, I think the,
2026, the big picture when we look back at this on the year,
is just like creative IP from scratch, right?
Yes, yes, yes.
Sinners is literally from scratch.
One battle is adapted from a book,
but either way, like just too wholly original movies.
If you read Vineland, if you read Vineland,
you're like, how did he find this movie?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, but I'm saying,
like at least there was a germ of somebody else's idea.
But just like how creative both those movies were,
I think it's pretty inspiring.
And then you talk about a director
that we've been on this three-decade Odyssey with,
who finally has his moment.
And then Coogler,
who I would say probably has the highest approval rating of anyone in Hollywood right now.
I don't think I've heard one bad thing about him.
Everybody loves him.
And he'll have his moment at some point.
And he'll have his PTA moment.
I don't know when it'll be,
but he'll be on this stage and people lose their minds.
But two great ones.
And now they're kind of linked in some weird way, I think.
Yeah.
I love, I mean, thank you for putting it that way.
because I do feel like these movies are talking to each other in some way.
And I never felt good about them being pitted against each other.
I know that that is the horse race nature of the way we think about the Academy Awards.
But I don't know.
I just really feel like the things, the events that unfold in sinners
have such dimensional,
dimensionalizing
consequences
for what happens in one battle after another.
Yeah.
Right?
I mean, you are,
this is two movies about
black people in America
and the forces
that are trying to almost literally
extinguish and expunge
and absorb
and,
and, you know,
rid white people of
or for white people
to sort of capitalize
off of in the case of sinners.
It's just, I don't know.
I do feel great that these seem like the two movies
that people were most enthusiastic about.
And you could feel just in the terms of the way
the winners broke down.
I don't remember exactly how many sinners wound up with
versus one battle after another,
but they, it feels close to me.
Yeah.
But, you know, then they're, I mean,
Can you talk about Sean Penn for a second?
Well, there's a lot of stuff to work with Sean Penn.
You know, I talked about with PTA doing that,
doing basically the Triple Crown of movie director writing,
which is Woody Allen, Robert Benton, James L. Brooks,
Bong Joon, Ho, and the Coins.
And that's the entire list, basically.
Right?
So you have that.
You have Sean Penn moving into three awesome.
Was that Merrill Streep?
Daniel D. Lewis, Jack Nicholson.
So Katie Hepburn with four.
I call her Katie.
That's how you roll.
Now, Hepburn with four, but yeah, the three Oscar Club is not large.
But you remember I wrote that?
So I did that Oscars piece for ESPN magazine in the late 2000s where I created the scoring system.
Oh, yeah.
Okay.
Basically to try to prove that.
Meryl Streep was by using advanced metrics to prove that Meryl Streep was the greatest
actor or actress of all time.
And the scoring system was best actor, actress wins, seven points, nominations three,
best supporting Oscar wins three, and then supporting nominations won, right?
And what was interesting about it, so Meryl Streep under the scoring system had 65.
And Catherine Hepford, 52.
And Jack Nicholson, 40.
those were the three biggest.
And what was interesting was getting to 20 was hard.
There was like this weird cut off with 20
where it was only Nicholson, Tracy, Olivier,
Daniel DeLois, Brando, Lemon, Denzel,
Dustinero, Hans, Peter O'Toole,
Al Pacino, Leo now with 23,
Gary Cooper, Frederick March, Anthony Hopkins,
and now Sean Penn with 20.
So that's...
Sean Penn's got 20. That's less than 20 actors.
And it's...
And if you're thinking about it's way harder to do this with actors than athletes,
be like, who's the greatest?
Let's rank them.
You can't do it.
It's the errors are different.
But it is a nice little list of kind of actors that mattered over the last 100 plus years, right?
And Sean Penn was right on the cusp, but now he's in there.
Yeah, not one of those.
I mean, it's funny because Sean Penn is probably the least likely to surface in a conversation
that isn't among, you know, like our little circle.
Right. Well, I also think
Of the great actors.
With the other actors, it seems like a lot of people felt like he was one of the guys.
And that was the thing, even in the 80s and 90s before he won an Oscar.
Like, that's one of the best actors we have.
And he's always had that.
But it felt like it went away the last 10 years.
And he just was hitting a pretty weird point of his career.
I mean, he just made weird choices.
He went back to directing these.
I mean, I don't think the movies were inherently strange.
But, I mean, commercially speaking, I mean, he was never really.
really interested in the box office.
He was following his instincts.
And some of those movies were just, you know, that Dakota Johnson.
Well, he had that one where he was an assassin.
Taxi cat movie.
It's just like he, he kind of didn't trust his taste anymore.
At least I didn't.
It was like, there's a new Sean Penn movie.
And I'm like, all right.
I don't know if I trust that it's going to be good.
He does have this side of him that kind of wants it.
Like that's the only way you can, I don't know how else you explain.
I am Sam, right?
A movie that we all,
we all agree it's okay to laugh at
the execution of a thing
that is, you know, also
execrable as
as storytelling and filmmaking.
Well, it led to Simple Jack and Tropic Thunder
was basically its ultimate
destiny. It was such
a ridiculous choice that it had to be
parroted within a decade.
But I mean, it also, it said to me
because all the great
actors have that one performance
where you're like,
it's too much,
you've gone too far,
you want something too desperately,
and sometimes going too far
really does take you
to the Academy Awards
and put you on stage
with an Oscar in your hand.
I'm looking at you,
Mr. Son of a woman, Al Pacino.
But that is also a performance
that comes, like,
what,
10 years after the one
that really breaks him,
which is Scarface.
He does,
he goes from, I think, and Justice for All.
Well, he has the great 70s.
Yeah, it's cruising, Arthur, Arthur.
Arthur, then Scarface.
And then Scarface.
And I think Scarface is the one.
I mean, he, Nicholson and Dunaway all break at the sit,
like they crack at the same time.
Mommy Dearest comes out in 82.
I want to say Scarface is 82?
83, yeah.
83.
82 or 83.
Yeah.
It's 83 Scarface.
and then the shining is, is, is that 80?
Yeah.
Don't forget about De Niro kind of going sideways too during all this.
But you know, Bill, I have a scandalous feeling about that.
I think Raging Bull is, is him cracking.
Yeah.
That's the thing that like, I mean, he wins an Oscar for it, but he's not the same after.
Well, there's also, there's also massive amounts of cocaine going around in Hollywood.
So anytime I look at, anytime I look at late 70s through like about 86, I never know what's going on.
It explains a lot of choices,
a lot of the movies that were being made,
a lot of the ups and downs of actors, who knows?
I just love that though, I mean,
and we're not,
the thing that we're losing is the ability
to sort of have this conversation, right?
Like, we cannot,
I don't know who generationally,
like Michael B. Jordan wins best actor.
Oh, I can't wait to talk about that.
But, like, what are we,
what does the equivalent of talking about a thing
Faye Dunaway, Merrill Streep.
I mean, and Faye Dunaway is just a person who, I think, was just one of the great 70s actors who, like, just shattered.
She went, she went, she didn't go too close to the sun.
She flew into the sun, right, and tried to come out the other side of it.
Tough.
And Mommy Dearest.
And a tough hang by all counts.
Yeah, sure.
I think on the set, I think she was pretty tough to handle.
I mean, and then Mommy Dearest.
broke it and then that was it, it got weird.
When those cameras rolled,
wasn't nobody more willing
to do whatever needed to be done.
I still think Chinatown is one of the,
her performance in Chinatown is the,
I don't know, I've said this to you before.
I feel like I've said this to you before.
What is it?
Maybe,
maybe, I just think that
that is the greatest psychological performance
I think I've ever seen.
I mean, maybe Isabelle Luper and the piano teacher
is close.
but Chinatown
it's just like
she knows from the beginning
of the performance
to what she's acting
but then she has to hold on
all of that
you know she's keeping a secret
from her
the character is keeping a secret
from herself
the actor is keeping
the character's secret
while also keeping a secret from us
Nicholson she has
she so wants to get caught
and like unburden herself
of this that she is willing
to get involved
with a fucking detective, right?
She wants to get caught.
And all of those things are in that performance.
Every single scene,
it is just the way she uses her hands,
the fluttering that her mouth does,
her eyes,
the breath work in the delivery of those lines.
Oh my God.
Her death.
Like, just what she looks like dead.
Oh, my God.
It's just one of the greatest performances
of all time, period.
Who won that year?
Well, she...
Was that Ellen Burstyn?
Yeah, she didn't win that year.
That was Ellen Burstyn.
Yeah, Ellen Burstyn.
Yeah, okay.
I mean, I love that performance.
Yeah, we're probably doing that one over again five years later.
I hope so.
That gets a redo.
But Ellen Burstin is great in that movie, though.
That's the kind of thing you want to see actors.
This Ellen Burstin and that movie to me, I don't know how you feel about this.
That's Salomey and Marty Supreme.
Oh, explain.
What do you mean?
Just like a really unpleasant person trying to live life, right?
Like I don't like that character.
I know where she's coming from.
I know where she's trying to get to.
But she is so abrasive and so hard to, I guess, quote, root for, unquote.
But the actor is delivering the thing that makes the character human.
And the human part is unlikely.
well, this is a desperate, narcissistic woman
whose dreams might not ever come true.
And what you're watching Ellen Bernstein play
is just the anger of those dreams failing,
but also like loving this kid
and letting this man into her life,
but, you know, because this Chris Christopherson,
you better let him in.
But also, what does it mean to have him there?
Anyway, I don't, do you like that performance?
Well, the Oscars loves those kind of characters, right?
Nicholson won with that with as good as it get.
Same thing.
Horrible guy, and now I'm starting to like him by the end of this.
Yeah, but they love those.
I hate that movie.
I know you do.
No, you hate that.
We've discussed in the past.
The greatest thing about the Alice movie is that it led to the CBS sitcom Alice with
Linda Havana and Big Tebeck.
It's one of the weirdest movie versus TV show adaptations we've had.
But 75's a good example because that was when Ark Carney won for Harry and Tonto.
and beat Pacino and Godfather Part 2,
which was one of the great performances
of the last 60 years.
And then,
and then Fay Dono Wait as one for Chinatown either.
But this is what happens.
I do wonder,
it's a really tough one
because I thought Chalamee was great,
Marty Supreme.
It's also a movie I probably don't ever want to see again.
It was a one-timer for me.
Now, what's interesting is,
I've only seen one battle once,
and I'm not positive.
I'll see it again at some point,
but I haven't been racing back to see it,
but I've seen sinners four times.
Interesting.
So I don't know whether rewatchability
affects some of the stuff
with great movies.
Sometimes it doesn't.
Sometimes it does.
But with Marty Supreme,
he's so great in it.
But I, you know,
I thought that movie was,
he just kind of needed to take a shower after.
It was a lot.
I think that's why it didn't,
I think, you know,
something happened with that movie
and its response
and their response to it.
And I think what you're identifying is something like what people felt.
You know, I, you know, we did an episode of Cannonball on the reaction to that movie.
And part of that conversation that I had with Sasha White was just like reading the comments
that got filed on Manola Dargis's review of the movie.
And, you know, she loved it.
And the comments were like, you were out of your mind.
That is the least pleasant time I've had at a movie ever.
I didn't finish it.
I walked out.
He is a reprehensible character.
Why are we cheering this asshole?
And I think that, you know...
It's a little like one battle with what we talked about earlier with that character.
Why am I cheering for this person?
Yeah, but the thing about one battle after another is...
I'm talking about the Tiana Taylor character.
Yeah, yeah.
But perfidia, I mean, perfidia is still the mother of Charlene slash Willa, right?
So the person you're really rooting for.
there is
the daughter, yeah.
Is Charlene.
So I
feel like the thing
about the thing that
makes Marty Supreme
great is also the thing
that makes people hate it.
Well, it's a 1950s
ping pong movie
New York
and, you know,
it's heavily Jewish,
which I'm sure
like affected some people's thoughts of this.
It's a Holocaust movie.
It's like such a Holocaust
flex.
It's,
and there's some
crazy ping pong
CGI stuff.
Like I can see why people are like,
the fuck is going on here.
I also think the way that they sold that movie,
I think people went thinking it was going to be like a cute.
I think the ping pong confused people.
Right.
I think people really thought it was going to be like.
That was like force gun.
Yeah.
Like he's just like doing a tour.
Now it's,
it was yet another movie that was super,
creative and had an insane performance at the center of it that was like, wow, I haven't seen
anything like this in a while. I just, I said this at the time. We did a really long rewatchable
was about sinners. I thought, I thought what MBJ did in that movie, I just couldn't believe
how good he was. And I don't want to say I didn't know he had it in him, but I had kind of reached
the point where I wasn't sure he had it in him. And I thought the subtleties between the two twins,
kind of that 70s macho that he had to have.
I thought the accent worked.
I thought that ending, which I just loved the ending of that movie.
And I thought he was so good in that final scene.
The epilogue or the KKK?
I love the epilogue.
Yeah, I love the epilogue too.
I love the epil.
I just thought he was so good.
And it was a classic, it was like watching when you have like an NBA player who
toils away for 10 years and finally wins the title.
That's how it felt.
watching it.
You know,
it's like,
holy shit.
He put it together.
He did it.
Yeah.
I mean,
I,
I,
that is the metaphor
that I used in some,
so I,
you know,
I watched him with Sean
and Amanda win that,
you know,
SAG award.
Yeah.
And,
you know,
there was that image of him,
like looking at,
like,
looking down at the floor
with his hands on his head.
And I don't,
just that really stuck with me.
And,
you know,
it's like an image that got like,
that was used to stand in for the rest of the acceptance speech
and to sort of be a metaphor for how we all felt about him winning,
was just like, whoa.
Well, even having Landry from Friday Night Lights in the front row
and him doing this, like, MBJ has been an important part of pop culture
for this entire century.
Like, you go to how important he was the first season of The Wire.
He's in Friday Night Lights, which was this beloved show that people felt like
this whole generation people felt like they saved it
was going to get canceled.
They saved it and then he became a big part of the Renaissance.
And then, you know, Fruitvale, which is a really,
I actually watched Fruit Fail this week.
Oh, did you?
And I forgot how good it was.
I hadn't seen it a while.
It's not a movie you're going to watch 20 times
because it's just so, it's hard.
It's so hard to watch.
So then with Fruit Fail goes right to Creed,
resuscitates the Rocky franchise.
right. And that was one of those things
where it's like, oh, I'm rooting for these guys
with the Fruitvale guys. I hope, I can't
wait, had them on the podcast. Can't wait
to see what's next for these guys.
And it's like, oh shit, they're doing
Creed. Like, what's going on?
Did you think that was weird at the time?
I was worried about it. Yeah.
It's like the same way I feel about the Miami Vice
remake and Heat 2 now.
Or it's like,
obviously I hope this works, but are we sure
guys?
I mean, the Miami Vice remake.
Like, by the way.
And he's going to be in that, by the way.
But it's just like he just has found a way to permeate culture over and over again.
But I never, I thought that shit might have sailed on the Oscar for him.
It felt like he was moving into like kind of where Jamie Fox ended up in the 2010's like action movies, maybe a couple of dramas, maybe some fun cameos.
But could he carry a movie and be a best actor?
I didn't know.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I don't know.
What year is that, I mean, I don't want to get hung up on Jamie.
Fox, but like the soloist,
whatever year of the solo,
I guess the soloist is in the 2010s.
It was in that great,
he had a great 2000,
he had a great 2000s, right?
Yeah.
That includes,
I think, one of the best performances
of the 21st century,
which is like him and the soloist.
That's a,
and Downey is great in that movie too.
And it's, you know,
Joe Wright at his,
at his peak Joe Rightness.
Like Joe, right.
I don't know.
That movie is very moving.
If you've never seen the solo,
it's got two slam dunk performances in it,
and it's got such good imaginative filmmaking
from Joe Wright.
And, you know, it came and went.
It's one of those movies.
It wasn't trying to win any Oscars.
It came out in April or March or something.
Well, you know the thing with MBJ?
So the way he had,
and he'd been doing press for this movie
for a fucking year, right?
Just sitting there and seat.
But he did a really good job of,
just kind of played it close to the vest.
You don't really really,
didn't have any damaging quotes or some weird anecdote or something.
He's just not going to sink any campaign,
but go on.
He was just,
just,
he was just getting first downs.
Just moving the chains.
And Salome,
and I don't think this was really 100% fair to him,
but it felt like he's been promoting shit for a year and a half.
And he's just been omnipresent.
He's involved with one of the Kardashians,
which the people have a,
feeling about that. The movie was polarizing. Then he had a couple dopey interview moments.
And at some point, he hit that really rare, fuck that guy potential, which happens sometimes
where people kind of go, fuck that guy. But nobody's like that with MBJ. So I do think that
hope. It's the opposite. It's the opposite. Actually, I think his humbleness really, I mean, or at least
the perception of his being humble.
He's really like that, though.
Yeah, I actually think he's genuinely like that.
Whenever he came on your show, when, was it, was it before Creed?
He came on 2013, he came on, he came to my house in 2015.
So it wasn't even Creed.
No, he came the second.
I had him three times in like six years.
When was the first time?
2013, he came to the Grandin Studios.
Okay.
And by the way, I coached him with the Celebrity All-Star game, too, and he would
was like, we're basically trying to get him the ball.
Kevin Hart just was ball hockey.
Shocker.
But he, the couple interesting things with him just growing up, he was Wallace forever.
Like for a decade, he was Wallace.
But he also had the Michael Jordan thing.
It's like Michael Jordan, Michael B Jordan.
So you're not as good as mine.
And that Michael Jordan thing really hung over him the first 10 years of his career.
Because just because of his name, I don't feel like he shed it until Fruitville.
I think when the fruit fail thing
was just incredibly important for him
in a whole bunch of different ways
and it's a really important movie
you know and you think like
that movie happens
what seven years before George Floyd
to that whatever
but it was it was
but it comes out at the same time
basically as Trayvon Martin
right right and it just
so it's it's a pivotal
movie for a lot of reasons
but it was pivotal for him
because it was like
oh shit
Wallace, Vince from Bright and Eight Lights.
The guy from parenthood.
Like, you know, just didn't know.
Parenthood.
I forgot about that.
But he broke through all of it.
And now he's minted.
You know, I had a whole little, I really believe this.
I don't know if I should be ashamed to myself for like having this feeling.
But I feel like that B is doing a lot now.
And I never think about Michael Jordan.
I never think of 23.
Ever, ever, ever.
I don't think about him at all.
I think about that B as being like an action verb.
You know, like,
like that is like a verb.
Yeah.
Like Michael B. Jordan.
Yeah.
Like it's just something.
It's a sentence to me.
Right.
And I just, he's such a fun, even, you know, like,
I would not have voted for him for best actor.
I just wouldn't have because I'm really not,
I'm so much less about.
my feelings when it comes to these things.
I would have gone Wagner, Mora, Timothy Shalame,
although I would have probably gone back and forth between
Shalame and Wagner Mora in the secret agent.
But those would have been my top two options.
And I, you know, I know that DiCaprio, you know,
I woke up like this.
I feel like he kind of can do these things in his sleep of, you know,
but he did a version of the same thing in Killers of the Flower Moon
and it was terrible, right?
He was not good in that movie.
And he's got such control over the material here in one battle after.
I also think he's better directed in one battle after another,
which is a wild thing to say about Martin Scorsese directing DiCaprio,
because, you know, that relationship.
Right.
But I just think that the comedy of this movie is what he could lean into.
And there's so that the comedy in one battle after another is so elastic
that it just gives all the things.
that DiCaprio is good at
someplace to go.
I think that that stretch
from when he gets to
Sergio San Carlos
Benicio de Toro's
karate studio
to the moment
that he gets caught
with the taser
falling off the roof.
And the way he performs
that being tased
is up there
with the with the
Kweilud
crawl
from the house to the Lamborghini
in Wolf of Wall Street.
That's just such a good,
the physical comedy dimension
of how he plays
Pat slash Bob in one battle after another.
I'm not going to say it's underrated,
but it's a huge part of what makes that performance
really good.
Anyway, I would have gone
Wagner,
Timothy Chalameh,
probably DeCaprio,
and then Michael B. Jordan.
Because I'm not crazy about Blue Moon.
I hate to say it.
I do not.
loved that movie. And I feel like Ethan Hawkins
kind of like trapped in
the gimmick in the shrinking, in
this short man gimmick. Yeah.
I just didn't feel the tragedy
of that story or even like the sadness
of it. I had Salome
and BJ basically
like 55, 45, 45
and I'm not even sure which way.
On your ballot?
I think I would have voted
for Salome ultimately.
But I would have agonized over it
for three weeks because I just thought
it almost have to, and this isn't fair to do this,
what's a harder performance,
and both of them were so hard.
Hard, yeah, those are hard performances.
First of all, playing twins that are different,
but not too different,
but definitely different,
where you could tell them apart
and what some of the choices Jordan made with that,
I thought that stood out.
But,
Salome, that's just an insane movie.
I don't know how many actors
could have even made that movie work.
And that, so I think I probably would have landed on Shalamee.
I would have loved to see somebody try with Michael B.
Jordan. Jordan might have a Marty Mouser in him somewhere.
Maybe.
I would love to see him.
I would love to, like, but that's a really, I mean, Michael Jordan, Michael B. Jordan is 39.
Timothy Salomey's 30.
Well, did you see he's had three Oscar nominations already before 30?
It's like about as rare as it gets?
I do wonder if Shalemae just goes to New Zealand to film a movie.
Let's say he's filming Dune 3 in frigging Dubai, wherever.
And he's just gone the entire promotion season.
And I know they needed him to promote this stuff.
And that was a big part of the movie itself is that they had to blow this out
and do all these like outside the box things to get people to go see a 1950s pink
pop movie.
And it worked, right?
Yeah.
I do wonder if he's just gone like Leo.
style where he's just out. Can you do that and still be with a Jenner Kardashian though? Is that possible?
Maybe not. I don't think that's how that works. Maybe he's wearing Chromeheart suits at next games.
Like this is just so. I don't. But what, what's happened here now is now he's moved into the,
you have to escape the fuck this guy area. And you evolve out of it. And then people are like,
oh, I like this is the Ben Affleck Argo scenario. Well, okay, this is where I like, this is, this is why I came here.
Yeah.
Listen, let's just talk about what his life looks like if nothing changes personally, right?
Because on the one hand, this guy is in a really shitty position.
He is doing, he is the only person at his level of actorly faith.
Doing the thing that we complain, we like plebeians complain, nobody does anymore.
Nobody gives, nobody's just like telling the publicist to go in the other room while I do an interview.
Nobody's like just hanging around for some internet content for somebody who needs it.
Nobody's promoting stuff the right way.
It's like that we talk about tennis players and golfers this way.
Why these guys aren't interesting.
They need to be marching and then he was actually interesting and people are like, fuck this guy.
Yeah, I just feel like, do you want Taylor Fritz to be your movie star?
Or do you want this Timothy Shalome?
Taylor Fritz, by the way, for people who aren't playing attention as a very sleepy tennis player
who's good at his job,
but is also something
you bounce a basketball
a lot of it.
What about everybody
on the woman's side
right now?
Sabalanka,
I mean,
I mean,
you mean,
tennis-wise or acting-wise?
Tennis-wise?
I mean,
Sabalanka is fun.
I mean,
she says some crazy shit
and she doesn't apologize.
Well,
sometimes she'll apologize for it,
but she speaks her mind.
I don't know.
I've never had a
Sabalanka conversation
with anybody at dinner.
Hey,
what do you think of Sabalanka?
It's never happened.
All right, fair.
But I'm just saying,
if y'all want to talk about a really fiery tennis player
who's great at her job,
Arena Sabalanka is there for you.
Have I told you by the way,
before I'm going to interrupt you and then keep going.
Oh, no. Go on.
That would be my number one draft pick for a pro sports thing
would be heard her come back right now.
Oh, man.
It would be so compelling.
I'd be so into it.
Bill.
What would be more fun?
Just come back.
Just come back to us.
Are we doing this to ourselves?
Just come back.
We can not do this.
Just come back.
You know she could do it.
What would be more fun?
It would, like, if Tom Brady came back, it would be like, this is terrible.
Please don't do this.
If Serena came back, I'd be like, what time is she playing?
But first of all, what an insult to the rest of the field?
I'm sorry, I'm just going to say that.
Yeah.
Whether it turns out to be true, you could be right, right?
Like, she does get to the quarter semis and finals of events that she entered.
greatest tennis part of all time.
Yes, sure.
But you know what she's not out there doing every day that Elena Rabakana is doing every day?
Just hitting four hands for five hours.
She's just playing tennis every day.
I know.
That's what would be so compelling.
Anyway, I interrupted the do.
I just, I don't, I don't, I can't, like, it's hard enough watching Venus losing the
first round five times.
So you're still.
So you're pro Salome, because he's interesting and I, I completely agree.
But I also think he was, I think he was in the,
limelight for too long. And I'm not the first person to make that point. Sometimes you can burn
people out on your persona. I also don't love the Wigger thing that he was on for, you know,
getting Marty Supreme rolled out, right? Like, he was doing that thing that makes everybody, you know,
anybody who's attuned to like, you know, our minstrel past, he was very comfortable sort of
fucking with that. And it wasn't in a knowing way. I mean, I
guess it was knowing, but it wasn't, he was leaning into and not questioning or challenging this
thing. He was daring us to notice and comment on it. And that didn't feel great. But at the same
time, again, like, he is doing, he is the kind of star that we say we want to have. And, you know,
I think it is polarizing in a lot of ways. But, you know, my coffee girl, Chloe, you know, one of
the coffee shops that go to in New York City.
You know, Chloe, nothing is going to break her from her
Timothy Gallagina.
I like that you name-trap Chloe, like we knew who this was.
Chloe, I mean, Chloe, I mean, Chloe a culture coffee.
I mean, if y'all know, you know.
I mean, the culture on 38th and 6th.
Like, she, there's nothing, she is worried about this relationship with,
with, you know, him going into the Kenner-Cardashian family.
How can he not be?
Like, imagine this was my son?
Like, yeah, so he's dating.
one of the Kardashians.
You'd be like, what's he doing?
Why?
I mean, but I think that that is part of,
I mean, we know the story that it just doesn't,
it doesn't always end well for the people who go in there.
Oh, really?
Is that what you've been hearing?
Listen, I think this is ultimately,
from a career-wise,
from a career standpoint,
this is great for him.
Big picture, 20 years from now, we will look back and we'll think like, this is awesome.
You needed to get punched in the chin a couple times.
It happens in sports.
This happens in movies all the time.
We've seen the grades.
Sometimes it's good to get a black eye and have a broken tooth.
And then back from it.
I really love the way he entered the Dolby Auditorium.
I don't know if you caught any of the red carpet stuff, but I don't, I did not see him stop and talk to anybody.
He was walking to his assassination, basically.
Like, he knew it was going to be one of the worst nights of his life.
He was going into a roast.
He certainly had, I'm going to get roasted energy.
And he looked like Kevin Richardson from the backstreet boys.
Yeah.
You know, but he had some real, like, I'm going to get wrickled.
I'm going in there.
He was strolling real hard.
He'll be fine.
He's a great actor.
And good things will happen to him.
Yeah.
I told you, I thought Jesse Buckley had the best performance male or female of this century and you made a noise.
You didn't really like that take.
I didn't.
I mean.
You weren't in the hand that.
You just don't have an emotional guy.
Have you met me?
Stop.
I think that I think the problem that I had with that performance is I just didn't understand why the movie existed.
And I sort of felt like it was an acting exercise in search of a reason.
to be. I liked it.
And then and then
the end comes
and like many other people, although I know a lot
of people who got emotional
at the end and were furious that it made them emotional.
But the end
really works. And you know,
I think that it's got to be said
Bill. Like that is
maybe the greatest birth
scene.
Like the, I mean, I know Vanessa
also has a really tough one.
You feel like it's actually happening.
Yeah, that is a really, I don't know how you, there are some things I don't know how you act.
And giving birth is just one of those things where I'm just like, wow.
Well, there's also been some really bad versions of it too, which, you know.
Sure, sure.
But I mean, they usually don't take place in a forest.
Ham that for an hour or 20 minutes.
Start taking place in a forest.
For an hour and 20 minutes, you're like, what the fuck with this movie?
Yes.
What the hell?
And then all the sudden, but all the sudden, but this is, I think you have to, the last 20 to 25 minutes are so good.
You just don't even remember the first hour 20.
It's like, it turns into like, you're like, is this the greatest movie I've ever seen?
And you just, you just forgive the rest of it.
Bill, so you're saying, you're saying what I'm saying.
Yeah, yeah.
You're just also loving the movie because you expunged the first hour or 20 minutes.
So I thought the ending, the whole last stretch.
was so good. I didn't care that I was mad at the first part. Once she leaves to go to the
theater, I'm like, okay. When she said to the theater, it was great. Best Oscars in Memorial
ever. It took them forever to figure out how to do this. What do you think took him so long?
I don't know. I just think, I think it took them forever to understand this is one of the only
parts of the show where everybody's like, I didn't realize he died. I didn't realize she died. Oh, I love
that person.
You could almost put this as an actual TV show and I think it would get ratings.
Okay.
So you're a genius at that sort of thing.
I don't know what you're talking to me for right now when you could be writing a pitch.
It's just like, here's our in-bemmatorium for the year.
Death show.
But the Rob Reiner thing, the only thing they fucked up, and I was so happy they did that.
And obviously one of the worst Hollywood stories we've had, they did a great job.
Billy Crystal was awesome.
didn't break.
I thought he was gunning and he didn't do it.
Never broke because he's a pro.
They show all these people from the movies.
Yeah. Yeah.
And it's like four seconds.
Like you bet we, I just, I was like,
can we sit with this for five minutes?
Like we have,
Bethany Zaniga next to John Cusack.
I was just about to say it. I was been waiting for
to see Daphneesaniga at the Academy Award.
What are we doing? I want to see all these people
one at a time.
I was,
I just couldn't.
they, like, quickly skipped over it.
And, like, Meg Ryan was out there.
I don't, I'm not even sure all the people that were out there.
I don't even know either.
Was Michael Douglas out there or didn't even know?
I don't know.
I don't know.
It's a great question.
I mean, there's, was Danny DeVito?
I don't know.
Oh, wait.
Did they do it?
Did, uh, maybe?
No, they didn't.
He has no reason to be there.
They skipped over.
No, no filmography.
I think I thought I saw Fred Savage.
I'm like, what's Fred Savage out there?
Oh, interesting.
Was like Patinkin?
I don't know.
But.
I don't know.
But I thought that was great.
I thought they did it.
I loved that.
So they go through half of the memoriam,
and then Rachel McAdams comes out and does like a whole Diane Keaton thing.
I'm like, great choice.
Good job.
Way to talk about some of the best females.
They go through that.
Then the end with Streisand, which on the one hand was like,
almost like watching like, you know, one of our parents, like try to speak.
It was like, oh, God, I hope this goes well.
And obviously she doesn't have the voice anymore.
But it was weirdly talking.
touching. Because she meant it.
Yeah. Because she meant it.
I would have Jane Fonda out there with her. I actually, I thought
Jane Fonda and hers should have been together for that.
Did you see Jane Fonda, what she said?
Well, she was
joking, but it was one of those. I'm not
totally joking. Yeah, I don't know.
She was like, I read it in Spanish.
So my Spanish is not good
enough to pick up on the nuances of
sarcasm, but it just seemed like she was
saying, I read it in
El Pais. So I'm not sure.
I mean, the sarcasm might have been lost on me, but...
No, Fonda had to be out there.
Yeah, I think she should have.
I wonder what happened.
I wonder how they asked, who they asked,
and when they asked them to do it.
We know what happened.
Streisand, it's like, I'm only doing it if it's me.
Oh, interesting.
I'm not sharing the stage with anyone.
It's got to be all me.
Yeah, I just kind of loved how, like,
she just, like, woke up and was,
at the at the theater ready to do this you know what else i love it it tied in one of my other
favorite things when somebody who's old um who had an awesome incredible career still carries
themselves like they were just as famous as they were 50 years ago yes and i mean that as a compliment
not an insult it's i just no my mom always has this theory my mom's had this theory forever that
somebody who is beautiful at like age 18 carries themselves like that for the rest of their
life, no matter what they look like when they're 60.
And it's the same thing with famous people.
If you hit a level of fame that you're just that way your whole life.
Like, I'm sure Faye Dunaway before she died when I think she's dead.
No, don't put that out there.
Is Faye Dunaway alive?
Yes, she is.
I'm sure Faye Dunaway right now.
Do you met her would keep me carrying herself like one of the biggest stars in the world.
I just think you almost like have to buy into it to be that famous.
Yes. You're purchasing it. You don't lose it.
This is like, you know, I mean, I like to talk to people about this.
And if I had a different show that I was doing where I was just having people on and
talk about how old they feel, you know, Max Lindski had a great show called 70 over 70.
And it was just like people of note over the age of 70 talking about what it's like to be the age they are.
And I am like one of the things that comes up on that show is like how old do you feel you are?
And I think a lot about like what is the age that you are going to feel when you're 85 years old?
Mine is 32.
I have felt 32 since I was 27.
And what's yours, Bill?
How do I feel right now?
No, I mean, how do you, what's your spiritual age?
Like what do you?
Forty-four.
How old do you?
feel as a person.
44 because I can't play basketball anymore.
Okay.
I mean, I probably could.
I would just get hurt.
That's a great answer.
Like, but when you think of yourself, you think of yourself as a 44-year-old.
Yeah, because I'm still, I'm still locked in.
Yeah.
I mean, I think that Barbara Streisand, I wonder what she would say her age is.
Like, I wonder what she would say she, is she like the 19-year-old girl who got discovered
singing at the Bon Swoix in the village?
You know, I mean, she was younger than 19, I think.
Like, what age?
I think that, you know, Jane Fonda is also one of these people.
How old does Jane Fonda think she is?
Oh, I guarantee she still probably feels like she's a hot 42-year-old.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think that she probably is still doing workouts, to work out videos.
And I think that, like, for movies, I just think it's really important.
Like Denzel, I think Denzel still thinks he's 25.
Oh, you could see that in the Spike movie.
Yeah.
That was a performance that he's probably 10 years to all to do.
And he's like, fuck it.
Is there chasing him in?
I mean, and it really, it can sometimes go bad, right?
It can sometimes ruin movies.
But, I mean, a lot of the time it brings out something really interesting and special.
I think that's the thing that I love watching about Denzel now is that even when the movie is bad or like he is even bad,
the movie. He's committed to whatever it is he has decided to do in front of those cameras.
And it is youthful. Yeah. And like the youthfulness of it is really powerful.
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Just use the ones that come in the bag.
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You know, we have a, it's CR month on the rewaters.
I'm sorry you weren't part of it.
Thank the Lord.
These movies, I just finished to live and die in L.A.
A movie, I will tell y'all,
y'all are going to kill me.
I've never watched it.
So I watched, you know,
I mean, one of the great things about the show is
I'll just listen to episode.
I mean, I've seen it.
Not even have a movie.
Yeah.
I mean, well, now I, that's,
this is one of the ones where like I watched it.
Couldn't believe I've never seen it.
Forgot freaking had directed it.
Listen to you guys talk about it and was like,
I cannot wait to smoke this movie.
Well, so next week, we have, we did The Nice Guys.
And one of the things I brought up was Ryan Gosling's, not to step on the rewatchables,
but Ryan Gosley's 2016, he has the Nice Guys in La La Land.
And I was saying how one of the awards I would love to have in the Oscars is just the MVP for the movie year.
Like how we do in sports.
And it could be a movie.
It could be a director.
It could be a writer.
be anybody, but like, who is the most impactful? And it would kind of be shaded toward if you did
at least two movies that were consequential in different ways for some reason, or somebody that just
own the year. So I think for this year, if we did the MVP, I think it would be PTA because of what he
does, the three awards he wins for that movie, which as we discussed,
Not a long list for that.
Also gets Sean Penn
an Oscar.
Another great Leo movie.
Chase Infinity.
He basically...
The money.
The money that it makes and
will continue to make.
And then some of the stuff it did for some of the actors in the movie.
And then the Benicio del Toro gets nominated, Tiana Taylor.
The impact of it on all these different careers plus how it did.
I think he's probably the MVP.
But I wanted to talk.
out. Yeah, I think, ooh, I like that. I feel like, I think it's hard to argue in that, you know,
I don't know when the, I don't know when in like the NBA, for instance, when this, I mean,
it always seems in the NFL that it's just statistics that determine it. It's not like feelings.
Yeah, NBA, it's weird because NBA is regular season. So I was, I always thought there should be an
award, like a playoffs MVP. But movies are easy because it's just like 2025, who, it's big.
Basically, who owned the year?
Well, but what I'm saying is, what I'm actually asking is in your evaluation of Paul
Tom, I mean, you did not introduce this, so I'm assuming it's inadmissible.
Yeah.
But the idea that it's taken-
Do the Oscars have to tie into it somehow?
No, it's the opposite.
Does there have to be, is there a history that you can take into consideration when making
your choice, right?
Like, do you think about the fact that it's taken PTA this long to get the MVP?
I think part of its narrative.
Has he even been one of the three finalists for an MVP?
Do you know what I mean?
Like he's never even been to this dance before in the way that he's been there.
Yeah.
So if you did 07, that gets really hard because you could say that Daniel DeLewis,
that's one of the great performances of all time.
Yes.
Or you could say, yo, the Coen brothers, this is, their whole career was leading up to this.
and they've completely resuscitated Josh Burlin.
And what they did to Javier Bardem and create one of the great villains of all time.
And they, Cormac McCarthy and Tommy Lee Jones, it's like this exclamation point in his career.
They're probably the MVP's of that year.
And by the way, this is completely stupid.
I'm fully aware.
I'm sure there's movie nerds like, this is the worst thing ever ever shoot me.
Don't do this.
But it's a fun idea.
Like, kind of who owned the year.
It's kind of an interesting idea.
Right.
I mean, like, there was the year, San Diego.
Bullock was definitely the MVP.
I think it was the next year, wasn't it?
No, maybe it was like...
For Blindside?
2009.
Yeah, I mean, she had Blindside and the proposal.
Yes, of course.
I mean, I can be a better black mother than this man's black mother.
Never really considered all this stuff that movie made me consider before.
But I mean, you know, the proposal and the blindside and the way that like it completely
kind of changed our...
understanding of what it was that Sandra Bullock could be in late,
like sort of mid-late career.
It's a great point.
I love,
not only did you embrace my idea,
but you came up with an awesome MVP season,
the Sandra Bullock to do the rom-com,
win the Oscar.
She's also caught in the blindside.
Like,
it's kind of like Milfall of Fame.
It's no denying.
She really, like, graduated into this, like,
different level of whatever and this SaaS.
And nobody knew she had it in her.
No, that's the thing, right?
Because the thing that makes, like, her year, for instance, really interesting is that you just didn't think of her in all the ways that you were sort of being allowed to think of her, which is as, well, I think the sass without having to sort of suffer for it.
The sexy sass.
Right.
So we had Inglorious Bastards that year, and we had Avatar.
with the Hurt Locker.
Catherine Bigelow won picture and director.
Yeah, Cameron.
That's a big one.
And she beat her ex-husband, which was a fun one.
So she would have gotten, she would have definitely been a finalist.
She would have been a finalist.
Yeah.
But I mean, I think that that's Sandra Bullocks.
That's not.
See, this is a fun exercise, the MVP.
Yeah.
So I think PTA was the MVP, but I'm willing to accept other nomination.
I mean, the other candidates,
include Coogler.
Cougler 100%.
Who would have been like if it's just...
I mean, you could argue with the Coogler,
you could argue the case,
part of his case would be
the movie reverting back to him 25 years later.
Oh, yeah, that's a good one.
Which is that, he's not the first one that came up with that,
but also like what that movie meant to Warner Brothers too.
Right.
What it meant to Michael B. Jordan.
Yeah, it's a good battle.
By the way,
We mentioned this every time we talk about the Oscars,
standing back to when we're at Grantland together.
And even we did an Oscars preview.
I think was that on ABC or ESPN?
I don't,
right before I got suspended.
I think it ran on both.
That was right before you guys suspended.
It was right before I left.
When we did that whole Oscars preview that year,
and there was a reason I brought this up,
because we were,
we had all these, like, fake goofy awards for it.
Yes.
That were super fun.
They did add the best.
casting this year, which I enjoyed.
And it made me wonder, are we going to start?
Because I still feel like best young star should be an Oscar.
And I know they've talked about this on the big picture, too, like under a certain age.
I don't know if Chase's Infinity, she might be one of those who's a little older than people
realize.
I don't know, like, what's on what your cutoff is.
Is it 16 is your cutoff?
No, that's, that's.
You went older?
And I'd probably go under 18.
Under, oh, under 18, that's fine.
Chase the Penny was older than that.
Obviously.
But you could have the breakthrough star Oscar, like somebody, but I guess that would be,
it could get complicated.
Like Noah Zup, I think it's Noah Zup, the kid from Hamnet, he's probably your winner.
Would you have pet Oscars or no?
Oh, come on, Bill.
No.
Can you imagine like Hooch getting robbed and Turner and Hooch, some other animal won?
Sorry, Hooch.
I don't know what to tell you.
Huch, you did too much campaigning.
All the animals now were CGI anyway.
Like, I don't even know what the real animal is.
You'd have to prove that you used an actual living animal,
which then creates all these moral and ethical concerns
in your use of the animal.
I don't think is worth it.
So does Chalemay win an Oscar in the next five years?
Oh.
I mean, it's funny because I was going to ask you
how many more Michael B. Jordan,
how many more nominations Michael B. Jordan has?
Oh, I think.
couple more. I mean, he's in that stage now.
And the Oscars, they do make you earn it a little bit.
You had to have been around.
I mean, Bradley Cooper, think about the people that do not have Academy Awards after like
X number of events.
But what would Bradley Cooper have won for?
I'm not saying he was robbed. I'm just saying,
Wedding Crashers.
Oh, come on. Although he was, that's like, there is a sneaky support.
There is a sneaky supporting.
Oh, there you go. That's, so should there be an.
Oscar for comedy and should there be an
Oscar for horror? Should they
just add those? And would you turn the TV
off when they were awarding them? I would not.
I personally would not. If we are
talking about going down this really bad
idea route, no, because
you know, it's true. There were no
comedies, there were no Best Picture nominees
that were like pure comedies this year
for the most part. I mean, really at all.
I mean, K-pop Demon Hunters is the funniest
movie I saw last year and
not nominated for
any of the top awards.
Original screenplay.
What is wrong with y'all?
But I think that one of the interesting things to think about is I thought I don't want a genre category that leave the like bring back the MTV movie awards for that.
But what I do think would be interesting, Bill, is removing the genders from the acting categories.
Oh, wow.
I think we got to call these people's bluff.
See, I don't know the industry's bluff.
You're losing too much history with that, though.
I think that's the only issue.
I think you're creating new history.
We're creating new history.
Yeah, that's a brainbreaker for me.
I just think we got to try it.
We got to try it.
Because at least that we will know something about this organization.
Because it's not like it's the Oscars.
It's not like people, I mean, I'm sure there will be industry people who would hear a statement like this and be like, have you really thought this through.
But I'm just saying like it's not like the Oscars doing it costs work.
So who would have won if it was just one?
actor Oscar.
I think Jesse Buckley would have won.
Jesse Buckley would have won.
I remember what I was going to say
when I brought up that Grantland thing.
Because if you notice,
I pivoted beautifully,
but I had actually,
I thought you remember.
No,
we've been talking about this
ever since we've been talking about
the Oscars,
not knowing the votes.
And this is a William Goldman thing.
He would talk about it all the time.
Least the numbers.
It would have been amazing
if Chalemay lost by like five votes.
Oh, man.
Can you imagine?
I think sinners probably lost by five months.
By the time we got to the weekend, everyone thought Senors was going to win.
Yeah, I mean, I'm telling you if they had another week, I think, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know.
We could have found, we could find out that Frankenstein came in second.
Well, there were too many awards, there were too many awards shows in general.
I said this to Sean last week.
You mean leading up to the Oscars?
Yeah, too many awards and the Oscars, it was too late.
It shouldn't be like right before March Madness.
That's fucking crazy.
Oh, oh.
Put this in February.
Let's get the year done and move on.
Well, I can tell you what does happen if you do that, Michael B. Jordan is not a best actor winner.
I think people turned against Marty Supreme.
We kind of talked about it.
And I also think it took people a second to really understand, including me, honestly, what it was that Michael B. Jordan was doing for that movie.
Because the movie is so good that it doesn't even need.
him to be as good as it turns out he is, right?
Like, we, me and Van talked about this movie.
We made it an instant rewatch.
You made it an instant rewatchables.
And I, you invited me in Van to come talk about it.
I, what do we say?
Who won the movie?
There were only two options.
Who won the movie?
We said Coogler because.
We said Cooghler.
But partly because of the crazy deal he did.
And just how insane it is that he created this movie from scratch and got people to go see
if you actually like do the one sentence of this is a vampire movie set in the 1930s like it's like
it's like the degree of difficulty was like a 9.95 but the marty supreme degree of difficulty was also high
i was just about to say it did not need michael b jordan go out here and act a fool to try to get people
to come see the movie right right the way marty supreme needed timothy salome to do some interesting
stuff to try to lord put some butts in some well next year's next year's oscars is going to be
a lot different because the Odyssey
is just going to win 27 Oscars.
No other movies should even come out.
It's just going to be the Odyssey
across the board, winning everything.
I'm sighing and moaning and groaning
right now.
You'll be the first guy in the theater for that.
You'll know how I feel about
Christopher Nolan.
I'm just like, I'm not even opposed.
I'm just, I don't know.
We got to go.
I kept you too long.
I know.
I'd love for you to come back on
because there's TV stuff
we got to talk about at some point.
Okay, are you watching DTL?
Yeah, I saw.
DTF, sorry.
I saw of them.
It's a fucking weird one.
I don't like what, I don't like it.
I don't like it.
We should talk about love story because I'm, are you watching that?
Are you kidding?
Am I watching that?
Okay.
This is my wife's Super Bowl.
I was going to say.
She's watching three times each episode, watches it, goes to her mom's
Second watch, then third watch over the weekend.
Oh, my God.
This is like, Carrie.
She's been waiting her whole life for the show.
We got to have, okay, then I want to talk to Carrie because, I mean, what a wild show.
And a wild show to have, I don't know what, we can talk about it later, but like, it's a wild show to have now that the country and the world are falling apart.
That we, I don't know, I don't know what this Middle East situation is going to mean for us.
It's definitely not good.
Yeah, I would say not promising.
Not good.
But here we all are strung out on a show about two, one very famous white person and his girlfriend
and how much she does not want to get sucked into the vacuum of the thing that could probably kill her, right?
Fame, paparazzi, the whole thing plus this family that had a bunch of deaths.
Yeah, it just feels like this, I mean, in a completely accidental backhanded way,
even more than, you know,
heated rivalry solving other problems.
This show is really about
like this mess that we are in
and I don't even think it knows it.
Except it comes from Ryan Murphy's
fun house. I guarantee you it doesn't know it.
It might not know.
Between this and heated robbery,
I think this has been my wife's
favorite TV year.
It's only mid-March.
The combo of those two already,
if we can keep this pace the rest of the way,
I got to be honest,
banged out all three episodes
of the Madison with my queen
Michelle Pfeiffer. Yeah.
Yeah. It's a good one.
Okay. You told me to watch it.
I will watch it. Well, you love Michelle Pfeffer
as much as I do. It just
looks like a catalog. No, it's
you'll like it. Listen, we have
to support Michelle Pfeiffer and Guilif Paltrow
for the rest of their careers. Those are our two.
Yes. I mean, as you know, I mean,
I'll do anything for a dope. I would love
to bring you on after the last JFK
love stories. So, so
mark it in your calendar now.
Good to see you, Wesley Morris.
Don't forget about Cannonball.
That's his podcast.
I've been on it.
I haven't been invited since.
I've only been on once.
I'm always available.
I was ready to go.
Fret not.
All right.
Good to see you.
All right.
Nice to see you.
Thank you.
Bye.
All right.
That's it for the podcast.
Thanks to Billy and Wesley.
Thanks to Gahau and Eduardo as well.
Don't forget, two rewatchables went up this week to live and die in LA and a special mailbag.
And the next episode of the rewatchables is going to be.
the nice guys.
Yeah, that's going to be up on Monday night.
I'm going to be back on Sunday after Celtics Timberwolves.
We're going to be live on Netflix, me and Zach Lowe,
so it should be around 7.30 Pacific time when we were going live.
So enjoy the weekend.
Enjoy all the basketball.
I will see you on Sunday night.
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