The Bill Simmons Podcast - Part 1: Jaylen Brown’s Crucial Season, an OpenAI Rebellion, and KC’s WR Shortage With Kevin O’Connor, Derek Thompson, and Austin Gayle
Episode Date: November 21, 2023In Part 1 of a two-part podcast, The Ringer's Bill Simmons is joined by Kevin O'Connor to discuss Jaylen Brown's changing role on the Boston Celtics (2:06), before talking with Derek Thompson about Op...enAI's decision to fire CEO Sam Altman, the fallout, how rapidly AI is developing, predictions for the following weeks, as well as a check-in on Elon Musk during the troughs of his lawsuit with Media Matters, and more (32:44). Finally, Austin Gayle stops by for another segment of NFL Nerd Out, where they run through some surprising advanced statistics on C.J. Stroud, Zach Wilson, the Panthers offense, Chargers HC Brandon Staley, USC QB Caleb Williams, and more (1:27:55). Host: Bill Simmons Guests: Kevin O'Connor, Derek Thompson, and Austin Gayle Producer: Kyle Crichton The Ringer is committed to responsible gaming, please checkout theringer.com/RG to find out more or listen to the end of the episode for additional details. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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First, our friends from Pro Gym. All right. Kevin O'Connor is here from the ringer. You can read him at TheRinger.com. You can listen to him on the Mismatch podcast.
We have a big Celtics-Bucks game coming on Wednesday.
There's a Jalen Brown conversation.
It's kind of brewing.
It's not a bad thing.
There's nobody taking sides.
It's not damaging in any way yet,
but it's just been an interesting subplot
to an 11-3 Celtics season,
especially considering
he signed for a $304 million extension last summer. I got this tweet forwarded me to a bunch
of times today, and it was from somebody whose Twitter name is ryb__311. And he said,
Jalen Brown got it better than anyone. Supermax money. If the team loses,
it's Tatum's fault. Lowest expectations of any all-star. No one even cares when he plays like
shit outside the playoffs. Not expected to playmake, not expected to guard the first,
second, or third option. Multiple people in my life sent me this text, including people who
aren't Boston fans,
because I think people want there to be a Jalen Brown conversation because he got all this money.
It's like, oh, there's going to be a Jalen thing. At the same time, I am on a lot of texts like,
God damn it, what the hell is going on with Jalen Brown? Is it panic time yet? Where are we with
this? Well, RYB underscore 11, spot on, right? I mean, he is like that is a spot on tweet um i mean i think
with jalen brown bill like i think with him the conversation how much is really different right
like the sloppy ball handling that's nothing new we saw him have as many turnovers as he did shots
and a finals game against the warriors we saw him do it again against the heat in game seven last
year when he had eight turnovers eight made shots shots. The four shots aren't anything new. I think what's changed
with the way we're perceiving Jalen Brown is the fact that now with Boston, they have Chris Tapp's
Porzingis. And with Porzingis, he's shooting 11.9 times per game to 17.8 for Jalen. So even though
Jalen is sacrificing a little bit, he was at 19, 20 shots per game the last three seasons. Now you have him who is, let's just be real,
he's inefficient in the half court compared to some of his all-star peers. And now you have him
with Chris Tapps Porzingis, who has a 67% true shooting this year. Jalen Brown is at 54% true
shooting. So he's in this situation where his role is effectively the same
as it's been in recent years, just a little bit fewer shots per game.
When Porzingis, meanwhile, has been amazing,
he looks like he should be the second option
or should at least close the gap with Brown.
So I think that's where not much has changed
other than the other guy on the team
that should be getting more shots
and Chris Epps, Porzingis. Yeah. I mean, you could argue Porzingis should be the second option.
And really Derek Wider drew holiday, destroying whoever the weak defensive guard is on the other
team and putting that guard in a pick and roll and running it with anybody else in the team.
That could be the third option. It's weird to say this because Jalen's in an incredible situation. This is
probably the most talented team in the league. I think them and Denver are the two favorites
right now still. Murray will come back at some point. And Jalen's in an awesome spot for a lot
of the reasons laid out in that tweet, right? It's all, anything he does is additive positive
if he's playing well, doing well, all that stuff.
I just wonder if this is a great situation for him because you could say he's the fifth most valuable guy in this team. Doesn't mean he's the fifth best player, but you saw when White is in, White, they lose to Charlotte on Monday night. White's not in the game. They're one and two without White. They're 10 and one with White, including the one loss was that Philly game. That was pretty close. They lost by three and it came down to the last play. Poor Zingas, the stuff that he's brought to the Celtics
has been honestly way better than I think any of us ever expected. He seems super happy.
He's a really, really, really, really good offensive player. I have no idea
how long he's going to stay healthy. I think every game with Porzingis is a knock on wood.
And it's like at some point he'll probably get hurt for three weeks. I'm just factoring that in.
Tatum, I think has been maybe 2% better than he was last year. And the White Holiday combo are
great. So whatever Jalen brings to the table is, is basically a bonus.
But this is also a guy who's taken 18 shots a game.
Who's taken a few times,
the biggest shot of a game,
whether you wanted to him to or not.
And that's the little tug of war.
I mentioned this two weeks ago after that Minnesota game,
they get a stop,
get the ball 10 seconds left.
Missoula should have called a timeout.
He didn't.
Jalen had the ball at half court. He hadla should have called a timeout. He didn't.
Jalen had the ball at half court.
He had, I think, McDaniels on him.
It might have been Edwards.
It was one of the two.
And it just became clear.
It was like, oh, we're headed toward a hero ball, Jalen three.
And it's like, his odds just aren't good on this.
He's going against an awesome defender,
and I am not confident he's going to make this.
He misses it.
Then it goes to overtime.
The question for me, KOC, is how much does he have to sacrifice?
How much does he think he has to
sacrifice? And does he want
to sacrifice for this team to
ultimately reach its destiny?
That's going to be the question of the season
ultimately. There's going to be a point where
I think Porzingis is going to have to
close the gap in shots per game.
Like you said, Derek White's had some moments.
Drew Holliday's going to take plenty of shots as well.
So I would expect at some point Jalen's 17.8 shots per game comes down.
How much does he want to do that?
I mean, sometimes with some of the shots he takes,
doesn't it feel like he's trying to prove that he deserves the $300 million
instead of just doing what is ultimately best for the for the team like
he had that shot the other night obviously the one that everybody was talking about the three
porzingis is pretty open in the paint didn't pretty open he was wide open wide open i mean
the charlotte announcers are like oh my god he had porzingis i mean like moments like that that's
where like i i'd struggle to say it's because he's trying to prove himself when he's always had moments of tunnel vision and he misses guys.
Jalen Brown has always been somebody who scores and isn't somebody who elevates his teammates.
That's why I think, you know, like, yes, maybe you could ask.
He could, you know, have a bigger star star role on another team.
Is this the best for him?
That's what you said earlier.
In a way, I think it is because this is where he doesn't have that pressure to be the guy because I don't think Jalen Brown is the guy
who elevates all of his teammates. He's not the playmaker. He's not the
guy who's a shot creator. And with this team, the way it's constructed,
there's flaws in terms of them getting to the rim,
getting to the free throw
line. They don't roll the basket.
They're bottom 10 and getting to the
basket. With Jalen,
it's the offense where
everybody shares that creation load.
I don't think it would be good for Jalen if
it were all on him
to do that. Well, you know what that looks like?
It ends up looking like the Chicago Bulls
and a couple of these other teams we have
where it's like, all right,
Zach Levin's your best player.
Where are you going?
Winning is for the best for him.
Like this is what's best for him.
So it's really about,
this is where the Celtics need to figure out,
particularly Jalen Brown,
considering all the talent that's around him now.
What is my place in the team?
And what are the things that I can do
that leads us to winning a championship?
And taking 18 shots per game, there will be nights that he should be taking 18, 19, 20
plus shots per game.
But there's going to be a lot of nights where I think his best role is going to be 10, 11,
12 shots per game and shooting more spot up three pointers.
Because I think with them, like at the beginning of the season, there were sometimes Jalen
would dribble the ball up the floor and back his man down into post-ups inefficient looks that's not his game and i
think with him i would like to see boston again like to me this is all about porzingis here
with the jalen frustration that some celtics fans are feeling right now it's because of the other
option and christaps porzingis porzingis is one of the league's most efficient post scorers going back to last season.
You heard me on Verno with the
podcast earlier this year. The year he had with
the Wizards, nobody's watching the Wizards.
It could be a good stats,
bad team type of situation, but
Porzingis looked like an improved guy
last year with Washington. It's carrying
over this year with Boston where he is just
beating up smaller
guys when they switch on post-ups and
I don't think the Celtics are finding him enough there was a play against the Grizzlies on what
Sunday Saturday whatever night that game was yeah Sunday night and like I think it was John
Conchar got switched on to Porzingis Porzingis has like a foot on him and meanwhile Drew Holiday had
an iso against Jaron Jackson Jr. like why is Drew Holiday taking a contested ISO jumper
against Jaron Jackson Jr. when Porzingis has amazing post-positioning on Conchar?
So I think the Celtics collectively need to figure out
how do we get Porzingis more than just 12 shots per game?
Because he's been that good going back to last season,
and I would like to see his usage tick up over the course of the year.
Yeah, and some of this is we're only a few weeks into last season. And I would like to see his usage tick up over the course of the year. Yeah. And some of this is this, we've only a few weeks into this season,
40% of the starting five is new. These guys are all trying to figure it out. And that's why
this is not a, Oh, the Jalen Brown thing is not working out. This is just like,
this is a discussion. I think anybody who watches the Celtics all the time,
it's the number one thing people are talking about. How is he going to tweak his game
to fit into this embarrassment of riches where, you know, there's moments where if the other
team's guards suck, White and Holiday can just dominate a game or they can dominate a half.
If Tatum's feeling it like he was in Charlotte last night, he kind of have to ride that. I think
the thing, the thing that surprised me with Jalen, cause I really like Jalen. Like, I've actually been defending him
in some of these cases.
The Miami series was indefensible.
He was terrible.
But I think for the most part,
he's got some faults the same way
some other great players does,
but he brings so much else to the table
that you want to forgive some of the stuff
where it's like,
I wish he wouldn't do that.
You know, like if Westbrook's
the number one person of all time like that, Jalen's, you know where it's like, I wish he wouldn't do that. You know, like if Westbrook's the number one person
of all time like that, Jalen's, you know, he's below,
but he's not that far below.
Oh man, oh, he's going to do the thing
where he tries to dribble through five guys.
Don't do that, Jalen.
Come on, you're going to lose the ball.
But I think he plays hard.
I think he's unafraid.
He certainly has the confidence of somebody
who's been in 105 playoff games and some real
wars already and had to guard people like LeBron and Jimmy Butler, people like that.
What's interesting about situations in now is he's in this role that I think Chris Bosh got,
was in with Miami. You know, we've seen it over the years. Doc Rivers talked about on my podcast
last week where it's like, it's actually better for the team
if you double down on the defense,
on the little stuff,
maybe take some,
drop down to 14 shots
and become more of an all-around guy.
That's going to be more impactful.
We have a big enough sample size KOC.
He's not in most of the best lineups
this team has had.
And it's pretty eye-opening. lineups this team has had. And it's,
it's pretty eyeopening. Like Brian Barrett had some stats about when,
uh,
when he's on the court,
he got this from clean the glass.
They're plus 7.4 net.
And when he's off the court,
they're plus 16.4.
It's,
it's not a giant difference,
but it's not nothing either.
when he's just this year, he's shooting 44.8% from the field,
but he's 52.2% on twos, which is 83rd in the league.
At the rim, he's 38 for 68, which is the 28th percentile.
And then the minutes when Tatum isn't out there,
the team's minus, they have a 108 rating.
And Barrett said only three teams were south of that this season.
There's also some usage rate stuff with him.
So 29 players in the league have a 28 usage rate or higher.
Only 29.
We have a 30-team league.
He's got the third lowest assist percentage
behind Wemby and Cam Thomas.
Not sure that's the company you want to be in.
He's 23rd in true shooting out of the 29.
And just for per 36, he's 119th in assists.
So what we're getting is like this guy who really should be the do-it-all glue guy,
kind of what he was in the end of the 2010s,
where it's like, I'll just do everything else.
I'm here to help.
But he doesn't seem to think that that's who he is.
And how that tug of war with him and Missoula and the rest of the lineup and the better options they have,
how he kind of figures out his place to me is the ceiling of this team.
Even more so than Tatum reaching an even higher level, you think Jalen Brown is going to be that
X factor? I do. Because I still think Tatum is probably a year away
from being the guy that he's ultimately going to be.
Because this year, the big difference was he got stronger.
And when you talked about Porzingis punishing smaller people,
Tatum can do that too.
And they have this superpower that they did not have last year
where if you go smaller against them,
they're going to find a matchup and beat you in the paint
and get
a 10-footer, an 8-footer, a 6-footer with either Tatum or Porzingis against a smaller
guy.
Last year, I remember it was Horford was basically the guy they would do that with.
I know the results were mixed.
So they have that.
And they also have Drew has like, I'd kind of forgotten.
He's got this crafty, herky-jerky post-up game he can go to sometimes.
So they have ways, depending on who you're throwing at them,
to punish them.
But then you see last night,
it's like, why weren't they attacking LaMelo
in the fourth quarter and in overtime?
That guy can't guard anybody.
I know he guarded Halliburton on that one play,
but that's just somebody I would want to be attacking
whoever he's on.
But with the Jalen thing,
it's just not the best matchup most of the time.
And I think he might be one of the last ones
to realize that,
is the fear I have with the X-Factor piece.
Is there a point where,
I mean, even if he doesn't realize it,
that he could be forced into that type of role?
I mean, could there be situations
that come this season?
Like, yeah, Boston's been one of the best teams in the league,
but there probably will be a moment
that Mazula doesn't have him on the floor in a big moment
because he's riding one of those great lineups
that you're talking about where it's featuring role players.
And I think with Jalen,
there could come a moment where that happens,
where then it's like Celtics win the game,
it becomes an even bigger conversation,
and we're on this podcast again talking about, where's Jalen's place with Jalen it might
be his choice but it could also be the team saying hey like this is what we need from you we like
this has been your goal in recent years but look at past championship teams like you mentioned Chris
Bosch that dock on like Ray Allen sacrifices Clay Thompson Clay Thompson during the Durant years he
sacrificed a shitload he took
three four less shots a game and ultimately that's what leads to winning what is best for the team
if taking you know 13 14 shots instead of 18 19 20 plus like last season is what leads the team
to winning a championship then then you got to do it and with boston like you got to look around
that locker room and see the amount of talent that's around you whether it's obviously tatum is the best player on the team but kp
drew derrick white other guys that can have like hot shooting nights where maybe just the ball
finds them more often with jalen yeah we we saw him like you said the late 2010s when he was
younger in his career pre-all-star he could lock in more often and do some of that stuff
on defense he became a better spot up shooter.
He was a 40% guy off the catch for two or three straight seasons.
And he hasn't been for,
I think since 2021.
So like if he,
if he can get the catch and shoot three point number back up to 40%,
that gives him more value even when he's not running pick and roll or not
isolating.
So with Jalen,
like he's like,
I think with the Boston,
like we're nitpicking because this is what you do with
championship contenders. You find what is the weak spot, what could hold them back,
what do they need to solve. Well, and a guy who signed a $304 million contract.
We're nitpicking because he has a huge salary cap figure, and that's just a fact.
For sure. And if they fall short this year, he's the guy that they probably move next summer.
I think that's fair. Hey, listen,
the Red Sox sucked. The Patriots have been an absolute abomination.
So the Celtics have,
the Bruins are doing well. But for me personally,
I'm more into this Celtics
season than I normally
would be because the Pats have been so sad.
And we've also been watching Jalen
now since 2016.
And when you're,
when you spend that much time with a player just day in,
day out,
you kind of get to know after a while,
all right,
he's going to do this or this is going to happen.
And one thing with Jalen this year,
if he doesn't get the ball for three,
four minutes,
it's going up and you just know it,
you know,
it's sitting on the couch,
watching the TV being 2,000 miles away
from wherever the game is.
It's like,
he'll get the ball over half court
and it's like,
oh, he's shooting this.
He hasn't had one for a while.
Now Tatum, same thing,
but Tatum's a better offensive player.
It just feels like
there's been some,
which started last year
because he took 21 shots a game last year,
20.6, something like that.
So it was happening last year too, but it made more sense last year because they didn 21 shots a game last year, 20.6, something like that. So it was
happening last year too, but it made more sense last year because they didn't have Porzingis.
They didn't have Drew Holiday. Smart was always going to be the inferior offensive player on the
team. Now Jalen's, in my opinion, the fifth option if I really need a basket against a good team. And that Minnesota game was a really good example.
There's just not good options against,
if they're guarding him with McDaniels or Edwards,
who's invested in actually trying to play defense
with those guys, with Gobert protecting the rim,
Jalen's not necessarily the best matchup for us in that game.
And whether the light bulb goes off with him or not,
I just don't know.
I don't,
he,
he,
he,
when you're 27 as an NBA player,
you kind of are who you are.
It's not a lot of,
not a lot of change,
not a lot of growth at that point.
So this,
this might be who he is.
Do you at all,
do you all at all worry about,
like,
I think these last two games against Memphis and Charlotte,
the inability to get to the basket with any consistency?
I mentioned earlier their bottom 10 and free throw rate, bottom 10 and at-rim shots.
You're talking the whole team.
The whole team, even bottom 10 for that matter in consecutive years now.
When you set a pick and roll, rolling to the basket, it's a team that pops.
Even Porzingis, Porzingis can shoot off the catch, pick and pop and all that, but
I think getting to the rim more
often would be nice to see them experiment with
over the course of the season, forcing
some of those at-rim shots,
instead of driving kick, forcing some of those
rolls to the basket with Porzingis,
try to get some lob opportunities.
He can finish off one or two bounces as well
on his way to the basket.
I'd like to see that, because we know the team is good. We know
they're going to be in the playoffs. I'd just like to see them add that
wrinkle to their offense, just like you're talking about
the post-ups earlier. That's a great addition. It's awesome
to have that with Porzingis and Tatum. I think a little bit
more rim attacking would be something that Joe Mazzola
should look at over the course of the season, too.
Well, they're 11-3.
We mentioned the Philly loss.
Philly outplayed them that game,
but they still had a chance to tie it.
Porzingis missed a three.
That could have sent it to overtime.
They lost to Minnesota in overtime in a game that they had the ball.
The Charlotte loss yesterday was disgusting,
but it was also no Derek White,
and it's Thanksgiving week.
You can't totally overreact.
The thing that has shocked me over everything else
with what you're talking about
or like, did they get to the line enough?
And I just can't believe how good Porzingis is.
And I don't know if it's just because certain guys
on a team with an embarrassment of riches,
it actually makes them better.
Because all he's doing is shooting wide open threes.
And then if somebody puts a small on him, he's either trying to post that person up
or they're trying to throw lobs to him.
And he's super happy.
It doesn't even feel like he's necessarily breaking a sweat in some of these games.
He's just kind of jogging around with this big smile on his face.
And his rim protection, which we knew was kind of the sneaky piece of the Porzingis
package, I think has been pretty good.
But he's also not a huge foul shot guy.
So it's going to be Tatum or it's going to be the guards.
But I guess my fear with this team is it's like in football when you have the team that's
thrown in the first two months of the season, like a Miami.
It's like, oh, this looks great in October when it's 75 degrees.
But can you audible when we get to December, January? Can you start running the
ball? Can you start winning 17, 14
games? I do worry
about with this team a little bit when
things really slow down.
Is it just going to be guys jacking up
threes and not
actually trying to run offense?
What Denver can do
when Murray's back
is the cheat code in the league right now.
Do you feel like Boston has anything like that?
Because I do not.
No, they don't have that two-man game.
That's unstoppable.
There's nothing you can do about Jokic and Murray or even Jokic and MPJ or Jokic and
whoever you plug and play with him.
It doesn't matter.
He's the cheat code in the half court.
And Boston, it still feels like there's going to be stretches where,
and that's why I want to see them do a little bit more, you know,
wrinkles with pick and roll and just see how it looks over the course
and see them roll into the basket.
But that's not a cheat code either.
They just don't have that.
So they're not on the level of Denver, in my opinion.
They're a tick below.
Yeah, and Denver, Murray's been out,
and now Denver's like, oh, somebody beat Denver here.
Whoa, what is it?
Denver's the best team in the league.
And all that's happening now without Murray
is their young guys are getting more experience
that they're going to need more.
But Jokic is, there's nothing like him
until Sangoon replaces him as Jokic 2.0, which is might
be happening faster than, uh, we anticipated. If I had to rank my Celtics, uh, things I'm
worried about the most to me, it's still Porzingis getting nine months at him as number one,
because you just have to look at his game logs and basketball reference and his injury history.
I just think every day that he's out there and healthy and happy and smiling is a huge win for
the Celtics. That would be one. Number two would be, I still feel like there are guys short,
and I wish they had one more guard with size that in certain games against long, big teams like that Minnesota
team, that they had somebody else with some, somebody between 6'4 and 6'6 who is either
a two guard or a three or even a point guard.
Like in Austin, even if it was Austin Rivers, who I've been hoping they've signed for two
months, not just because he's at the ringer.
I thought he had good moments in Minnesota last year.
But one other person
that gives them protection
against bigger teams.
And then the third thing
is this Jalen thing.
And is he going to accept
the Chris Bosh piece of this?
Or is this just who he is
the rest of the season?
On that number two,
how many first round picks
would you trade for Alex Caruso?
How many do they have left?
So they can trade first in 2024 and 2026,
and then they have swaps in 25, 27, and 2030.
He makes about $9 million,
so you could get there with Pritchard
and a couple of the $2 million guys.
So Holiday was worth two plus Rob plus Brogdon?
Yeah, how many are you giving for Caruso? Holiday was worth two plus Rob plus Brogdon. Yeah.
How many are you giving for Caruso?
You going all in with two?
You going to two first for Caruso?
I do think the price for him is two firsts,
and I don't think it's crazy.
But I also think somebody other than the Celtics is going to pay that.
They also don't really have the contracts to add up to trade for him.
I was looking at this the other day.
It's hard.
It's Pritchard at 4 million.
And then you have six guys making about 2 million.
So you thought they just extended Pritchard.
I,
does that make it impossible to trade him?
I,
I believe he's tradable.
Oh,
is he?
I believe so.
I was,
I never understand that role.
Once the guy gets extended,
I just feel like,
uh,
don't you feel like there's other teams that make
more sense for Caruso?
How do the Lakers not have him already?
He is the poison pill provision,
which makes it more complicated.
But he can be traded.
It's just more complex.
The Lakers will be after him. A bunch of teams
should be after Caruso. You're right.
The fear would be Philadelphia.
Because I think Philly's one guy
short right now. And that's somebody who could play crunch. Now, now I know what their crunch
time lineup is, right? It would be Maxie. It'd be Caruso, Tobias, Embiid. And then who's the
fifth? I just want to, one of the wings. Are we going to be talking about an Alex Caruso
bidding war in January and February? Is that what's going to happen here?
How about this? You know what's crazier? He's unquestionably
a better asset than Levine,
who makes four times as much
money as him. I can't
think of three teams that Levine could
go to that...
Let's say Golden State said, fuck it, Clay Thompson's
washed. Here's
Clay Thompson and Kaminga and
a first for Zach Levine. I wouldn't
recommend that. I don't know if
Zach Levine changes their destiny.
You want Caruso in it. You need Caruso
in that deal if you're Golden State, right?
Right. Or if you're the Lakers
and it's like, all right, they might get Zach Levine.
Cool. Well, I have to get Caruso
if that's the trade.
But they can't do anything until mid-December.
It feels like it's going to be a move in the deck chairs
in the Titanic-type trade,
where, like, Portland's in it,
Simons is involved,
and Brogdon's going a different place,
and Levine either goes to Portland or some third team,
maybe he goes to Charlotte,
where it'll just be, like, three bad to mediocre teams
just moving pieces around,. He goes to Toronto.
I don't, from what I've seen of his career,
I just don't, he doesn't seem like somebody
who's a missing piece for a championship contender.
Caruso is.
I've been up and down on Levine
throughout his entire career.
I didn't love him pre-draft.
You know, when he was a terrible defender,
I was way against him.
He became average at one
point he's he's improved offensively i i think with levine that salary number is where i'm like
like levine and that money 40 plus million dollars for multiple years coming up that
that's my drawback with him however the situation that he's been in throws career he's never been
like if you plug him into philly and you have their motion and movement that you
have next to Maxie and is surrounding Joel Embiid,
that becomes interesting.
If you,
if you plug him in with the Lakers and he's running high pick and roll with
Anthony Davis and activating him,
that becomes interesting.
So I think with Levine,
I'm,
I'd have my hesitations trading for him,
but I'd be very,
very intrigued in seeing him next to that star level talent.
Because we just talked about Jalen Brown, how is this the best situation for him?
Well, it's the best situation for him to win and not have to be the guy.
Zach Levine really hasn't had that situation in the prime of his career where he hasn't
had to be the guy.
All of his flaws are on display.
I'd like to see him
in a situation where some of that's covered up and he can focus on his strengths because there's
some skill there as a scorer off the dribble, off the catch that a team could activate and
he could help elevate some other guys like an AD and pick and roll and whatnot.
Right. And Jalen's had real success in playoff games.
Of course.
You know, and Even you think the
Golden State Finals, he was probably the most reliable player they had in that series. I thought
that was the best probably he's played in his career and that wasn't that long ago. So we'll
see. I think this Milwaukee game that's coming up on Wednesday and you look at the team that
Milwaukee has versus the team Boston has and Boston has such advantages at the wings, right? So even if they tilt everything to try to worry about Tatum,
Jalen's going to have the worst guy on the, on the bucks, probably guarding him at all times,
whoever's out there. And it should be a great matchup for it for him. But he also knows that.
And it's like, are we going to beat the bucks if Jalen is if Jalen is 12 for 25? I don't know.
It's a fun basketball conversation situation.
I'm not ready to panic.
I'm not ready to say it's not an issue, but it's definitely something.
And I think as we go over these next few weeks,
it's probably the storyline of the season for the Celtics.
And so I think he determines their ceiling.
You still think it's Tatum? I still think
it's Tatum. Tatum's the best guy on that team.
Of course, Brown is
in the top three for sure and what's
going to determine Boston's ceiling.
All right. KFC, you can hear him on
the mismatch talking
more basketball with our guy Chris Vernon.
Chris Vernon, by the way, if
anyone in Memphis needs a little league coach or a youth soccer coach around April 16th, Chris Vernon's going to have
some time on his hands. He thought he was booked the last two weeks of April, maybe first two weeks
of May, but he's going to be available now for some assistant coaching.
Can we fly him out to LA and have him do some in-person pods and whatnot?
Yeah, let's do it. He's got plenty of time.
Verno was the last person not to be afraid of what was happening with Memphis. We're fine.
We're fine. We don't have old Dharma.
You said to him, we were texting about it like a week ago and you just coldly texted him,
Verno, you're going to be
five and 20 when Jock comes back. And it was like, you just threw like a, like a thing of water in
his face, but you were right. That was the case. All right. KFC. Good to see you. Good to see you
too, Bill. This year, Fando's got something you'll really be thankful for right now. New customers
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But you can find out for sure on part two of the BS podcast.
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All right, I hate to bring Derek Thompson in
when we have a holiday weekend coming up
and we're supposed to be thinking about family time
and fun stuff and just kind of looking forward
and what are we going to buy on Black Friday,
but there's so much shit going on
that is in your wheelhouse.
This OpenAI story that unfolded over the last
five days, I think even for crazy stories, was one of the craziest stories I've ever seen.
And what was interesting for me, I didn't really understand any of it. So I was trying to read,
I'm trying to read smart people's tweets like you, and I'm trying to read all the coverage of it,
just trying to wrap my head around it. I've never really seen a story like this. I guess the only comparison would be
as the internet is coming up in the mid nineties, if there had just been an ideological split
between two factions who were shaping the internet at the time. Because I remember back in the day,
the mid nineties, people were like, the internet's going to ruin everything.
Y2K's coming. The internet's going to shut down society. All of our information is going to be online. This is going to be the worst thing ever. And then the internet, it hasn't been fantastic,
but it's been really good. There's been some things we wish we didn't have, but for the most
part, it's been good. This feels like a crazier version of that. So this is unfolding for you.
You're hosting Plain English for us. You're writing for The Atlantic.
And you're just like getting ready for year end stuff. And then this blows up. What's your first
reaction? Well, my first reaction, which was a lot of people's first reaction, is that I can't
believe this is the second consecutive November where the most famous young guy in startup tech
world who happens to be named Sam suffers some
kind of scandal that is intimately related to both effective altruism and the future of technology.
You had Sam Bankman-Fried and the implosion of FTX and Alameda Research a year ago, exactly.
And now you have Sam Altman, the CEO of OpenAI, being unceremoniously fired. I got to say,
you know, Bill, you're saying that you don't
understand exactly what happened as you feel like an outsider here. I think the insiders
of the story don't understand exactly what happened. It's not entirely clear to me that
people at OpenAI who work directly under Sam Altman understand why he was fired. And the lack of transparency from the board
that just seemed to fire up Google Meet
and fire one of the most famous people in technology
all of a sudden without any kind of detailed explanation
to the company or the general world of what they were doing
is a huge part of the interest around this story.
Like it is not just important
because OpenAI is arguably the most important young
company in artificial intelligence. It's also this huge mystery. What the hell are they doing and why?
Did your mind go to the gutter like mine did immediately? I was like, I must have had an
affair with somebody in the office or he must have harassed somebody or there must have found
some sort of damaging. And it wasn't any of that. All of a sudden, within 24 hours, it's like, oh, this was actually two ideologies
that just were opposed with each other
and that was it.
But then he gets fired, he wants to come back
and now he's going to be at Microsoft
and we could talk about who are going to be
the winners and losers from this down the road.
But just having all this unfold over the weekend,
which is usually the worst time to report anything and it felt like the story was changing every six hours.
I absolutely thought that this was a worst case scenario reason for firing initially. I mean,
the letter itself that explained why OpenAI fired their CEO said he had not been consistently
candid with the board. They didn't give him an opportunity to resign. They clearly all of a sudden fired him.
You think back to other times that tech CEOs have stepped down from companies that they helped
found. Something like Adam Neumann. Adam Neumann ran WeWork as a private checking account. He did
all sorts of malfeasance there, absolutely
lurid conflicts of interest. He wasn't fired. Even after he became a joke and the company's
valuation plummeted, he resigned. So the idea that OpenAI would fire its CEO without any warning,
I immediately went to the idea of clearly something incredibly bad has happened here,
something I can't even fathom. Something truly, truly horrific.
And then an hour goes by and two hours and three hours.
And I start to see some people that I know who also clearly know Sam very well in Silicon
Valley starting to tweet really nice things about Sam Altman.
We're so sorry to see you go.
You're such a star, yada, yada.
And I started
DMing some of these guys. And I'm like, why are you tweeting such nice things about Sam Altman
when it's possible that this guy might have committed some like terrible, terrible crime?
And they answered with a bunch of like very cryptic messages. They said, I know what happened,
but I can't talk about it. I know what happened, but I can't talk about it. So then I went to,
okay, well, it's not the worst case scenario. It's not some kind of like, you know, sexual assault or something like that,
where they clearly had to fire this guy immediately because he had broken some terrible law.
And the drip drips from the company are all about the things that Sam hasn't done. So for example,
the CEO comes out and says, this wasn't about malfeasance. And then the new CEO of the company, Emmett Shearer says this wasn't about AI safety.
So the board fires him for vague reasons.
And then other people start telling the public
all these reasons why they didn't fire him.
But we don't get the answer to the question
of why they actually did fire him.
We can talk a little bit about
what the sort of conventional wisdom is now
of why he actually was let go
and why OpenAI right now is like falling apart at the seams. conventional wisdom is now of why he actually was let go and why OpenAI right now
is like falling apart at the seams.
But it is absolutely fascinating
and sort of unprecedented in my experience
to have someone of this stature
fired for reasons that are not explained
to the public or to the company that he runs.
And we're taping this, it is Tuesday,
like mid, late morning Pacific time.
So the story might even change as we're taping this, it is Tuesday, like mid-late morning Pacific time. So the story might even change as we're talking about this. There were so many fascinating point of building a company like this is to try to do good things,
but also be as profitable as possible.
You can't just be in the,
ah, we don't care if we make any money from this.
We're trying to do good for the rest of the world.
Can you do both at the same time?
I think that's going to be one of the legacies
of this story, right?
It's like, what is the responsibility of a company that clearly has the ability to shape
the next couple generations of how we interact with each other?
Do they have a responsibility to make that good?
And I don't really know the answer to that.
Well, Bill, you're asking such a good question.
It's the right question.
It's how did a company like this end up in a situation where you have a nonprofit owning a for-profit company? And here I think it's worth
doing just like a little bit of history into what OpenAI actually is, because it's not like almost
any other company that exists in technology. Back in 2015, OpenAI was founded as a nonprofit by Sam Altman and Elon Musk and a couple other luminaries in artificial intelligence. And they found it as a nonprofit to be owned and operated entirely inside of the big tech system. We don't want meta and Facebook to exclusively own the most
important technology in history. We have to find some way to build it so that it works the benefit
of all of humanity. The best way to do that, they said, is to make it a nonprofit entity.
Now, here's the problem. It turns out that building technology like chat GPT is incredibly computationally expensive.
And the engineers who are smart enough to build it are also very expensive to hire.
At the same time, you have people like Elon Musk, who used to be associated with open
AI, pulling out of the company.
And so the funding that they used to rely on from the richest guy in the world, they
can no longer rely on.
So what do you do if you're a nonprofit? Well, you let the safety piece too, as the tool is growing, they have to figure out all these
different checks and balances to protect it, which also costs a ton of money.
A ton of money. You have to hire a safety team, the safety team to check the technology and the
engineering team to build it. Exactly right. So you're in 2018, 2019, and OpenAI says,
this is too expensive to run as a nonprofit. We need to open up a for-profit subsidiary of OpenAI that can raise equity and get venture funding and build stuff that can actually turn a profit, that can earn money.
Is there a parallel to this in previous to 2019? Has anyone ever been in a situation like this before? Because it doesn't
seem like it. I can't think of a really good example of a for-profit operating underneath
a nonprofit where the board of the nonprofit can fire the CEO who essentially runs the for-profit
company. And to skip to the end, that's essentially what seems to have happened here.
You have a board of directors, which is, as of Friday,
it's Sam Altman and Greg Brockman,
the chief researcher,
the chief scientist of OpenAI,
Ilya Sutskiver,
and three non-employee board members
who essentially oversee
this for-profit entity.
They fire Sam Altman
for running the for-profit side
of this company too aggressively, right?
They build Chat chat GPT.
They're building these products
that are incredibly successful,
that are making hundreds of millions,
if not billions of dollars.
They're raising tens of billions of dollars
from Microsoft.
They're pushing forward this technology really quickly.
And the answer to the complicated question
of what happened on Friday seems to be,
this is most plausible, it's this.
The nonprofit that felt like it had a mission
to protect this technology from moving too quickly
felt like Sam Altman and the for-profit side of the company
was moving too quickly.
And therefore, they decided to take the measure
of most extreme incaution and fire the guy
even if it might cause the implosion of the company.
That seems to be what happened here.
It's almost like a self-detonation.
That the way, the way I look,
I was like everybody else
just trying to understand the story.
And it felt like an act of self-sabotage.
What was interesting in some of the reporting
was that they made a billion dollars
in revenue this past year,
which is a lot for a relatively new startup.
Like that's not, you know, if you, especially if you think like, all right, we're trying
to sell open AI now, what would the valuation be?
Um, it'd be like 10 times that.
So the company's already worth 10 billion bucks and this was a nonprofit to start.
Um, I guess the, the Sam Altman side of it is probably the most, if you're just thinking
about this, like what are the TV shows and movies about this going to be like? Sam Altman side of it is probably the most, if you're just thinking about this,
like what are the TV shows and movies about this going to be like?
Sam Altman will clearly be the star.
What is he as a character?
Because it seems like unlike some of these other people,
like the WeWork guy and some of the other people that have been in this spot
who just, or the Uber guy, Travis,
where people were like, that guy's kind of a douche.
He was out of Hollywood.
It doesn't seem like Sam was like that at all.
He seemed really well-liked by everybody.
So I don't even know what kind of character he would be in a movie.
What does he stand for?
Does he stand for 60%?
Let's do this because this is good for society.
40%.
Let's also make money.
What's like the pie chart of it?
The best way to understand Sam Altman is that
this is a guy who, before he ran OpenAI, was in charge of Y Combinator, which was the, and is the,
most successful and largest accelerator of young tech startups in Silicon Valley.
It's a guy who's really plugged in. It's a guy who believes in growth, who has incredible
relationships with venture capital,
incredible relationships
with big tech corporations
throughout Silicon Valley
and up into Washington State.
He's incredibly plugged in
and he's really brilliant
at running businesses.
I mean, he took a company
that has 600, 700, 800 people
and built the most successful
generative AI product
in the world, arguably.
I mean, lapped Google and lapped Meta and lapped all these other companies that were
trying to do the same thing.
So he's great at growth.
I think that's the simplest way you can put it.
He's great at growth.
And the problem for OpenAI, the problem for Sam Altman is that, again, like I said in
the story of its founding, which is so important, I think, for understanding the last 100 hours, this is a company that in many ways was designed to eschew growth, right?
They were designed to not be like just another company. this house that was divided against itself, where you had essentially, you know, I was thinking
about like, what's a, what's like, what's a, what's a metaphor to make it like really stick
to people who are sort of outside of the tech community. And I sort of thought of like, okay,
imagine, imagine if you had an owner of a new NFL team, like let's say the new commander ownership
comes in and they say, we have a dual mandate for running the Washington commanders. Number one,
we want to win games. And number two, we want to limit injuries. We think it's really, really bad that a lot of NFL
players get injured and we're really moral and ethical. We want to limit injuries. The first
year of their ownership, let's say the Washington Commanders are having nothing like the season
they're having right now. In fact, they go 10-0. They are 10-0, the most successful team in the NFL
and the head coach is fired. All of a sudden, no warning,
the head coach is fired. And people are like, why is the head coach of the Washington Commanders
who are 10-0 fired? And it turns out that actually the Washington Commanders got to 10-0
because their defense was really, really good. And it was knocking people's heads off and breaking
arms and breaking legs and causing a bunch of concussions. And so the Washington Commander
ownership fired the head coach because even though he was winning, he was also causing a lot of injuries. And if you went back to the founding document of the Washington Commander's ownership, it was all about, yes, winning, but also limiting injuries. And so this is an incredibly strange situation for any sports team to operate under, right? Because you don't have any sports teams that have this weird dual mandate of be really commercially successful, but also operate by this moral standard. But that's what you have with open AI. It's an unbelievably unique and maybe even
nonsensical corporate structure. And I do think that this unique and nonsensical corporate
structure is exactly what people need to look at in explaining why did this happen? Why did one of
the most successful, as you said, Sam Altman, one of the most successful young tech startup guys get unceremoniously dumped from one of the most successful companies
in Silicon Valley?
It's because of this bizarre corporate structure.
All right.
So to continue your commander's analogy.
So the board is basically like, we don't want you to run any pass routes over the middle.
We've done all this AI studies on how offensive players get hurt and it's passes over the
middle.
You're not allowed to do the tush push anymore.
We've studied that.
And then the coach comes in and he's just thrown over the middle and he's doing the
tush push.
He's doing all the things that they were asking him not to do, basically.
And he's doing all these things to win.
That's what I want to emphasize in this analogy.
I'm sorry if the analogy is too convoluted for some people.
No, I liked it.
I'm totally sticking.
But the reason I think the analogy fits here is that what's so confusing to most people
is that open AI is thrillingly successful.
CEOs don't get fired from their companies for being successful.
It doesn't make any sense unless you sort of fill in the fact
that the ownership model is not designed to maximize success here. It's designed to maximize
something else, right? The benefit to humanity, this slowness and the safety with which artificial
intelligence is created. So just as with a scenario where like the Washington commander
ownership doesn't actually want the team to focus on success. It wants the team to focus on limiting injuries, on wide receivers running over the middle. That's essentially what we're seeing here. I called you and I was like, I feel like we have to do something about that. And you ended up coming on my podcast and we ended up doing a long pod because it felt
like, holy shit, this feels like the most significant thing that's happened in a while.
Now, fast forward to Thanksgiving week and it feels three times more significant than
I think we even realized in May.
What's crazy about the story just in general is that this has all happened over the past
year.
And I wonder, I mean, obviously the company existed
before that, but the growth and all the shit
that it was actually going down
felt like it was contained to last November to now.
And I wonder if that's part of what made this story so weird.
This was such accelerated, crazy growth.
Even like something like Uber,
they had years where they're like in some select cities trying to make sure, see if it works. Will people pay for this? How do we,
how do we handle the drivers? Where do we find the drivers? How do we check their backgrounds?
And it just took forever. This was within a year, this became the single most powerful thing that
had happened in the last 30, certainly since the internet, they had a bunch of copycats,
right? So Sam's competitive and he's thinking, we have to keep growing, growing, growing.
Somebody's going to pass us. Somebody's going to take our turf. So maybe it was altruistic in some way on his side, because he's thinking we're the ones that actually have our hearts in the right
place, but the people that are coming might not. And that's why we have to grow. And that's,
so I actually feel like there's a world in which everybody's motives were still aligned.
He probably saw the competitive piece of it a little differently than the board.
Is that like a fair theory? I do think they were fundamentally misaligned,
but I absolutely buy the idea that I think you're hinting at, which is that it's possible
that in the fullness of time, we'll think that board, as shambolic as the process of firing Sam Altman has been,
had the right idea in mind. Artificial intelligence, I don't think, is like most
technologies that came before it. If we indeed do build a kind of machine that is as smart as the smartest person and can train itself, therefore,
to be even smarter. That's an unbelievably powerful technology that I think we should
be incredibly cautious about developing. And maybe the board recognized that and saw something that
you and I and a bunch of other critics of the board simply don't, that they are making the
right decision to slam on the brakes here,
seeing that Sam Altman, while following all of the right ideas in terms of pushing forward this
piece of commerce in a really competitive industry where everybody else is gunning it,
Google is going full throttle and Meta is going full throttle and Amazon's going full throttle
and Apple has its own investments. He's like, we have to accelerate if we're going to compete.
I get that as an idea, but it is possible, yes, that this technology that we're all sort
of going headlong toward inventing could be dangerous.
Now, I should say that I'm trying to give the board some credit here.
I should say the way this has turned out is catastrophically ironic.
Because as I said just a few minutes ago, OpenAI was founded in 2015 because the last thing that
they wanted was for artificial intelligence to be developed within the biggest companies in the
world. What happened 48 hours after Sam Altman was fired? He was reportedly hired by Microsoft, the second biggest company in the world after Apple. And so he and Greg Brockman, the president of the company and a bunch of other smart engineers and maybe also AI safety researchers are going to potentially decamp to Microsoft. And this entire effort to keep artificial intelligence outside of the hands
of the largest tech companies might ironically, in like a Greek tragedy kind of way, end with the
smartest people in AI working directly under Satya Nadella, the CEO of Microsoft. That would be just
an unbelievably ironic conclusion. But isn't that what makes this story so distinctly like American?
That's been every American company ever, right?
What American company didn't eventually get bought up by the bigger gun?
I'd be really interested to know how far Facebook, Amazon, Google,
all the alphabets basically, competing against OpenAI,
how close they are, what the standings look like,
what the total yardage,
what the first down efficiency.
Like, I wonder how far ahead OpenAI is.
And that's one of the things
that I think is so fascinating with this story
is I don't know how big their lead was.
It might've been smaller than we think.
It might be smaller than we think.
And it's also possible that the next big story in AI
is going to be a paradigm change. So you mentioned that this story of ChashiBT And it's also possible that the next big story in AI is going to be a paradigm
change. So you mentioned that this story of ChatGPT, it's so young. ChatGPT, let's see,
what day is it? November 21st. ChatGPT debuted on November 30th, 2022. This technology is 51
weeks old. And it has reshaped the sort of corporate AI struggle. You have every major
tech company, Apple, Microsoft, Meta, Amazon, pouring billions, sometimes tens of billion
dollars into AI right now. It's a huge consumer story. ChatGPT is the fastest growing consumer
product in history. It's being used by millions of people every day and software and engineering
and design and publishing. And it's a big cultural story. Like, I don't know if your kids talk about this,
but high schools and colleges are trying to figure out
how do we weed out Chachamiti cheaters?
Because this is a universal B plus replicator.
You can ask it any question.
It will like give you a B plus answer
as Matt Bellany has been reporting.
I've watched it unfold
because of one kid in college and one in high school.
I've watched it unfold in real time
where even by now,
I think they have a lot of checks and balances
where they can tell if somebody used AI
and there's been warnings and we'll know if you do this
and it's got to be your work.
Like all that shit's happening already.
And that happened within a couple months.
But you asked how close are they to open AI?
And I guess where I wanted to go with my answer is
ChatGPT has been such a successful commercially
and culturally successful product.
It's possible that large language models like ChatGPT
aren't the future of AI at all.
That when it comes to the most powerful AI,
there's going to be a big paradigm shift.
And that there's something that Meta is building
or that Amazon is building
or that Chachapiti is building that's going to surpass what we think of as the frontier of AI.
So just yesterday, for example, there was a report that came out in Nature magazine that found that
they had developed a machine learning AI for sensing pancreatic cancer in patients much better
than the best radiologists in the world. Now, I lost a parent to pancreatic cancer. So to me,
and to the millions of people that have lost people to pancreatic cancer, which is the worst
cancer, the most serious and malignant hard solid cancer in the world,
the ability of AI to detect cancers before they become stage four, that's going to save
way more lives, I think, than chat GPT.
So it's possible, Bill, that the next chapter of this revolution makes chatbots look like
absolute child's play.
Like that is honestly the hope here
that we can find some way to use this technology
to make an inflection point in medicine engineering
and not just in fun images and essays.
Think about the internet in 1996
versus what the internet looks like now.
It's pretty crazy.
We're gonna take a break
and I wanna keep talking about this.
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now. Just search Movember. So you were talking about some of the things that are going to change short term
with OpenAI and just the things that we know.
It feels like it's having a dramatic impact on
science. I even think
the stuff that we saw in the Hollywood, the strikes,
and all of a sudden it became the number one thing
that, you know, every side was kind of worrying about
and trying to figure out.
That changed in real time over the course
of the writer's strike and the actor's strike.
There's some sports stuff that I think
is going to be fascinating with it.
Like all the things I care about,
it's going to have a dramatic impact.
Even like, you know, how do you,
how do you prepare to play for a game?
What, who is, who is more possibly injured versus other people? Are there things we can do to avoid
knee injuries for high school and college basketball players? Like, I feel like there's
going to be a million thousand things to that. Then there's all the dangerous stuff that we
talked about the last time you were on the pod talking about this,
which is the deep faking
and being able to replicate somebody's voice,
being able to call a bank
pretending to be somebody
and be like,
hey, can you take $50,000 out
but it's not your voice?
So we have all those things.
Is it sad that I think about
the big companies getting involved
in this stuff
and it just is scary
because I don't trust them.
I don't trust really any of these giant companies. And I think they've lost our trust in so many
different ways over the last 12 years that this feels like this weekend, I really hope we're not
looking back at it and going, this was the weekend that AI fell apart or AI went and fell in the
wrong hands where it's almost like an action movie
where it's like, ah, the villain's got this now.
That's my big picture overreaching.
Holy shit, I hope that's not how we remember
Thanksgiving weekend, 2023.
But I kind of feel like that's how we're going to remember it.
I think your fear is totally warranted.
I mean, you look at meta and you look at Facebook
and you look at what Facebook has become
in so many parts of the world,
where it's just become a pure amplifier of hatred.
You look at the effect that Instagram,
which, you know, look, incredibly successful product,
brings a lot of people a lot of joy,
but also has been clearly shown to increase anxiety
among teenagers and especially among teenage girls.
These big tech companies have shown over and over
that yes, they make some incredible products.
They run some incredible logistics systems.
I think Amazon's logistics are absolutely extraordinary,
better than maybe any other logistics system in the world.
But at the same time, you have every right to be concerned
about a really important technology being held
by a scarce few and by a scarce, very rich few
who are out of touch
with the needs of
and the concerns of the masses
that their technology
is being deployed on.
And don't care about human welfare.
Yes, and care more
about returning value to shareholders
than they do about human welfare.
You are retracing, Bill,
every single concern
that I think was present at the dinner table when Sam Altman and Elon Musk and Ilya Sutskovor sat down with a bunch of other AI figures in 2015 at a dinner that ended with the creation of a nonprofit called OpenAI, to one, I should say, one of the major bets in artificial intelligence,
to be a nonprofit bet, rather than the many, many big tech bets that were going to be placed
on artificial intelligence throughout Silicon Valley. It's a completely reasonable fear.
And while I'm making fun of the fact that I think that OpenAI was catastrophically misaligned,
that it was like an NFL team where you have ownership that's maximizing, you know, no injuries, while the team just wants to win.
And therefore, you can have a coach who, you know, wins 10 games and gets fired.
I'm comparing it to that, you know, in a way that makes it seem like I'm making fun of OpenAI.
But you could absolutely imagine how 10 years from now, 15 years from now,
we see that AI has retraced the very problems that we've seen in other internet creations like
social media, Instagram, and its effects on anxiety. So your fears are absolutely warranted.
This technology I take really seriously. I know some people don't, and they think that, you know,
it's that my interest in open in AI is a little bit like people's interest in like NFTs from a
few years ago. No, I take this stuff really seriously. I think it really is going to be
the next big wave of technology. And I do think that it is different than just inventing like a slightly faster car.
It's a total paradigm shift that we should be very careful about. And if it's just going to be
like three companies led by like three dudes with like Meta and Microsoft and Alphabet just going at
it, and that's it, that's the race. It's just three people overseeing AI divisions.
Yeah, that's a scarier world, I think, to me,
than a world with a bunch of bets
on developing a technology
that is systemically regulated by a smart government.
Well, we've both heard the same things about
in the rich guy investment circles,
the AI industry has single-handedly rejuvenated
just very similar to like early 2000s internet
and just these little runs we've had
where all the money is going to specific places
and this next startup and we talk to this guy
and he's working this and this lady has this.
And my guess is that there's going to be
a couple of things coming
that will at least come close to
this. I just think the stakes are different. I look at how we've treated social media the last
15 years. And I think you and I have even talked about this before in the pod, but I feel even
more strongly about it now. It's very similar to the cigarette smoking. It just is. You go to the
30s, 40s, 50s, 60s. I was watching Mad Men season one a couple weeks ago
and just how everybody smokes
and how they're selling cigarettes to people
and they know they're bad.
By the 60s, you knew they were bad, but they didn't care.
It's social media now is the same thing.
Social media is bad.
It's bad for people if you use it too much.
Anything's bad for you if you use it too much.
But social media specifically,
it ties into a bunch of different stuff.
Depression, loneliness.
I don't think the COVID era helped.
But I just don't feel like we're worried
about its effects on young people enough,
not to mention all the other shit that comes with it.
But it's not as dangerous as this AI thing
where this is what the
movies have been telling us since the late sixties, right? The machines are going to win. The machines
are going to take over. And you see some of this stuff and you're like, man, the machines might
actually become smarter than us. And then how do we police that? Which is the basic premise of,
of this open AI battle. But so my point is the social media stuff scares me.
This, the ceiling of this
or the basement,
I guess you would say,
is so much scarier.
And that's why the flux,
I think, I think this is
the story of the year right now.
I can't think of a bigger
thing that's happening.
Yeah, people made fun of me
for saying this,
but the last time I was on this show
or maybe two times ago,
I said, I think it might be
the story of the decade.
It is hard for me to think of a developing story that's
happening right now that could potentially touch every single country in the world. And that is
only going to grow because technology, unlike other trends, unlike say politics, technology
doesn't end, right? The chips just gets smaller and faster. The phones just get more developed.
Technology just grows.
And if Chachapiti is able to do all of these things right now,
you have to imagine that five years from now,
it is very likely capable of doing exponentially more.
I would say that on the social media part,
I've sometimes compared social media.
I see the comparison to cigarettes.
I prefer the comparison to alcohol
because alcohol is, it tastes good.
It's a social lubricant.
You can use it in a way that is beneficial and fun.
And that same way, I think there are millions of people
that use Instagram in a way that's just basically fun.
I found a lot of use from X, Twitter, threads,
finding communities of experts that I can just
plug into as they just burp up thoughts to the world. That's been really, really useful for my
job. But as with alcohol, social media, when you use it too much, and especially when young people
use it too much, is a huge detriment. And it is in fact a toxin. It's a poison. And just as overuse
among young people of alcohol or overuse among anyone of alcohol can be a problem, overuse, I think, of social media is in many ways one of the more severe undiagnosed, I think, psychological problems in this country.
What makes AI interestingly similar but different is that I still don't know what the metaphor is.
With social media, I really do feel strongly that it's attention alcohol. With AI, it's hard to think of an analogy for developing a technology that can teach
itself to become smarter than its inventors.
I mean, I suppose you can reach back to Mary Shelley and Frankenstein, and there's certainly
not a lot of hope that comes out of that book when it comes to analogies here. But we don't have a great metaphor or a historical echo of what it's like to develop
a technological species that is smarter than and more capable than its inventors across an array
of subjects, including improving itself. That's a really unbelievably, I think, profound concept. And so while the OpenAI story, it is a movie.
It is lurid.
It is kind of funny and pathetic.
And the board's behavior and lack of transparency has been shambolic.
I do want to make sure that we keep coming back to this idea that I think this technology
could be really profound.
And I want to make sure that we design human systems to develop it in a way
that we get the most
out of this profound invention.
I would put it like this.
It has the capability
and the probability
of prolonging and improving
everybody's life
while also the possibility
of ending it immediately.
Right?
Yeah.
So glass half full,
it's like,
this is going to be amazing. We're going to be able to going to be amazing we're going to be able to
you know we're going to be able to take so-and-so's body here's what's good for you here's what bad
here's what's bad for you we're now spitting out this diet that you should stick to every day
and you're just going to be 20 better at everything you do and there you go we're
going to have basketball players playing till they're 50, although LeBron might do that anyway.
But I said there's going to be all these benefits that are awesome.
And at the same time,
there's going to be this fear
that it's Terminator 2.
Yeah.
What comes to mind right there
is just nuclear technology.
You know,
Oppenheimer is really interesting
in that at the end of that movie,
you know, spoiler alert,
everyone should see it.
You know, he's so afraid that he's invented a technology that's going to create a chain reaction that destroys the world.
Now, you can take that one of two ways.
You can take very seriously his fear that he's invented a technology that really could destroy humanity.
Or you can look at reality and be like, wait, we're 70 years, almost 80 years removed from the invention
of the nuclear bomb.
Figured I had to police it.
And nuclear fission is an incredibly successful form
of clean energy generation.
And in fact, the threat of mutually assured destruction
has coincided with arguably the period of most peace
between major powers in the world
because we can't attack each other without destroying
each other.
So that kind of paradox, that paradox of nuclear technology, I think has a lot of resonance
when it comes to the paradox of artificial intelligence, which, as you said, has the
potential, I think, across a couple of different subjects to make us a little bit better at
Excel, a little bit better at doing research or coming up with podcast ideas, a little
bit better at answering history questions, but maybe in a few years, a little bit better at doing research or coming up with podcast ideas, a little bit better at answering history questions,
but maybe in a few years,
a little bit better at discovering pancreatic cancer,
a little bit better at predicting biomarker health
and allowing us to be healthier
while containing within it the possibility
of creating this really, really big disaster.
I do think that's probably a fitting metaphor.
Or how to improve eyesight,
how to fix a spinal cord injury.
There could be all these benefits from it.
Well, the story's going to keep going.
So you're going to have to come back
to maybe three, four weeks
because I know that this thing's going to change.
There's a couple more things we got to hit really quick.
Twitter, which this is one of those stories
that I've been trying to avoid for the most part
because it's just awful.
It's an awful story.
Everything that's happened.
As you know, I thought that the site was a dumpster fire to begin with.
So in some ways, maybe this is how it should finally end.
But it got super dark in the past week.
And you have all these advertisers pulling out now.
And I know you talked to a bunch of people.
What is the consensus on what's happening
to Elon Musk these days?
Because it's, just knowing nothing,
just watching from afar,
it seems like he's doing like a,
like a Austin Powers, Dr. Evil bit almost.
It almost doesn't seem real.
I don't even really understand the upside for him.
He bought this company that's lost 65% of his value. I think he's tarnished his name irrevocably.
Um, he, I don't even really understand what he's, what he's trying to stand for
or what his goals are. He just seems deranged. And is that not the right takeaway?
I'll answer it like this.
If you asked me my opinion of Elon Musk before he bought Twitter, I would have said, this is a guy whose political views I don't necessarily share, but I consider to be a genius and one
of the most important people in the world.
Tesla, whatever you think about Elon Musk,
accelerated the electric car revolution in America
and in the West, and that is a mitzvah
if you care about climate change.
SpaceX lapsed NASA in terms of its ability
to make reusable rockets, and if you care about
not just getting to Mars, but putting stuff in space like satellites, like Starlink,
that is a huge mitzvah. He's building other things like Neuralink. He's an interesting guy
who is incredibly successful at solving these difficult, naughty hardware challenges in a bunch
of different subjects. My God, what a smart guy, and I'm glad that he's working on these serious problems.
I, by the way, I'm 100% with you.
I felt the same way.
You fast forward to today. My opinion of Elon Musk is that he is a deranged conspiracy theorist whose purchase of Twitter
has allowed his freak flag to fly in plain view of not just the average person, but the
average advertiser.
And it has destroyed his investment in this company and his reputation. I mean, you are looking, when you look at Twitter
or X, at a company that already before his anti-Semitic musings or his anti-Semitic engagement
with people in the last few weeks had already lost 60% of its ad revenue. That was before Apple said
it was pausing or
excuse me, pulling its ads before Disney and Paramount said they were pulling their ads before
the largest tech entertainment company said they were pulling their ads. Revenue was already down
60%. He has run this company catastrophically and he's run it catastrophically, I think,
because he has run it through his personality, which was always an albatross, rather than through his business acumen, which was always, I think, pretty top class.
So that's my brief take on Elon Musk. It's always easy, I think, to lean into the idea that,
well, he's always just been a bad businessman. He just got lucky with SpaceX and Tesla. I don't
believe that's true. I think he's actually- You can't say that. Nobody gets lucky with two things like that. I agree. I don't believe that's true. You can't say that. Nobody gets lucky with two things like that.
I agree. I don't think that's luck. I think that's skill. So I resist this temptation to say
that he's always been somewhat clownish and incompetent, but I also really resist the people
who respected him and are clinging to this vision of him as some kind of hero who transcends
what we expect from business leaders. He's made a clown show of himself in the last few weeks,
and he's getting exactly what he deserves. And I don't really understand it because I think he was
definitely eccentric. And there are some things you could have picked at, but the guy from the
last year doesn't really have a resemblance to the guy from the 2010s, I don't think.
I think they're two different people. So I don't know what happened to him, I guess is my point.
I don't know what the catalyst was or the trigger for him to kind of go sideways. And this isn't, this isn't about politics,
any of that stuff. It's just how you present yourself to the world. It seems like something
has snapped with him. Um, even him trying to, you know, threatening to sue media banners this week
for just reporting stuff like that's was insane. I just, I didn't even understand. I kept like
reading the story. Like, am I missing? Oh, I'm not missing anything.
This is just insane behavior.
Like he actually seems like insane with some of this stuff.
This is a self-described free speech absolutist
who is suing a media company for reporting on his company.
Correctly.
That says it all right there.
Right.
Exactly.
I don't even understand how you can do those two things at the same time.
Well, I think the parsimonious explanation is that he believes in free speech absolutely
up until the point where that free speech directly threatens his business, at which
point his values switch from being a free speech absolutist to being a chief executive.
I think that's probably the simplest explanation here.
And I don't think that's too cynical to say. You know, to your earlier question of what happened, you know,
in my mind, there's only two possible diagnoses here. One is that he's always had these kooky
beliefs, but he didn't own a social media network where he felt totally free to communicate all of
these beliefs that have always been a little bit conspiratorial and wacky
or something has changed, whether that's him, whether it's his wealth, whether it's his response
as so many people I think have been radicalized by the experience of COVID in the last few years
and Donald Trump, whether it's something emerging from that cesspool of news events that he's come
out of it by being just a little bit wackier than he is before.
Maybe something has changed.
Maybe he's always been like this.
I can't diagnose from afar.
But clearly, as a third-party observer like you or me,
clearly it appears like something has changed.
This is not the person who did CNBC interviews
about what he was trying to do with Tesla and SpaceX
or hosted SNL.
This is a different figure.
And look, you cannot be in the advertising business
while spouting anti-Semitic nonsense
and suing people for pointing out
the anti-Semitic nonsense that you spew.
It is an impossible situation.
And I do think that X, Twitter,
is in, if not quite a
death spiral, in a terrible, terrible place. And I would not be surprised if there's more shoes to
drop in that particular story, whether it's the CEO resigning, other resignations from within the
company, other catastrophes hitting the company. I mean, as we've seen throughout tech and throughout
media, sometimes these stories can really snowball. And so I don, as we've seen throughout tech and throughout media,
sometimes these stories can really snowball. And so I don't think we've seen the end of that story
at all. I remember in the 2000s, I wrote about the Tyson zone, which was named after Mike Tyson,
as he got weirder and weirder and hit a point that I would have believed
literally any story about him, you could have sent it to me and I would have been like,
oh, that adds up. And I think Elon is there. The Elon zone in some ways is even crazier than Tyson's
own. Because if somebody, let's say the Atlantic wrote some feature about him, they're like,
one of the things we've learned is that he has 15 monkeys shipped to his house each week,
which he then drinks the blood out of their skulls because it gives him strength and virility.
I'd be like, I believe that.
I honestly don't know what story
I wouldn't believe about him at this point.
He's operating, even Tyson wasn't like this.
Tyson was like, oh my God,
oh, Tyson got in a fight in Vegas.
Like, you'd believe that.
This is different.
This is, like, if you told me
he just got in a space rocket and flew away
and he's like,
I'm going to circle the earth for two years. I'm like, yeah, that adds up. I could see that.
And I think we should say the Elon zone is the Tyson zone, except it matters, right? The guy
is worth $200 billion. It affects millions and billions of people.
Yeah, exactly. This is a guy who's worth $200 billion. He runs a satellite program that delivers internet to Ukraine. He has $4 billion worth of government contracts that send stuff into space. He's an incredibly important because this is not like someone getting a weird tattoo on their face.
This guy has a lot of power and you want people with power to recognize the discipline that they have to use that power with.
Yeah. What if he's like, I've updated our Tesla computers and now it's going to do this.
And you're like, wait, what? What's going to happen?
We're just tweets are going to pop up
on my dashboard. Who knows what he's capable of. Last thing you've done some great podcasting on,
on Israel and Palestine. I mean, I don't know how many episodes you've up to at this point,
but you've tried to be balanced in the middle of just trying to understand for, try to understand
exactly what's happening and try to explain it in the right ways.
It's also an incredibly scary story to just talk about and converse about. How have you been able
to find that balance with the podcast of my responsibility here? And you've written about
it too, obviously. My responsibility here is to inform and explain, but this is the most polarizing story and conflict that we've had probably
since you've had a platform. So how have you balanced it?
It's been really hard. That's the first thing I should say. It's been really hard.
And this is a situation where typically on my show, I love to provide solutions and answers to problems.
I love to be able to look at the open AI saga, for example, and say, I think I know what
this is about.
It's about corporate structure or look at something that's happening in the economy
and say, here's my thesis about why Americans feel the way they do about the economy.
It's been really hard to do that with Israel-Palestine.
And look, it would be completely ridiculous for me to imagine that I can somehow solve a crisis
that has bedeviled this region for 70 years, 80 years.
So it's been very hard to do,
but it's really important for me, I think,
doing a show that is about finding ways
of framing the news, to be honest with listeners
about when I'm struggling to come
up with my own frames and to say, I don't know what the right answer is here. So we're going
to listen to an Israeli historian who takes Israel's side in this conflict. And we're going
to listen to a Palestinian historian who's going to take Palestine's side. And then we're going to
talk to a counterterrorism expert about Israel's military strategy. But then we're going to talk
to a Palestinian peace activist who rejects the very idea that there should be any kind of military intervention in Gaza.
The only solution to the anguish that I feel about this problem is balance. I don't have
the answer here. And so what I can provide in lieu of an answer is answers from across the spectrum.
And all I can say is I hope that people who listen,
and I would encourage people to listen, especially to some of the episodes, like the history episode,
where we go through, we really try to tell the 70, 80 year history. Actually, really,
we go back to the late 19th century, the 150 year history of the Israel-Palestine conflict in about
one hour. I've tried to be as balanced and as fair as possible and to call out unfairness where I see it, wherever I see it.
So it's been hard.
It's been valuable.
But it's, you know, you know, it's it's why I love doing what I love doing, which is getting
into subjects that initially I don't understand and trying to pull some kind of comprehension
out of it.
So from that standpoint, it's been a really rewarding effort. And I hope
that listeners to those shows appreciate it. Well, I appreciate that. They did a great job.
All right. Last thing, because we started talking about opening eye predictions. Let's do first
take style. We'll be Stephen A and Shannon Sharp. But how do the next two weeks play out?
What do you think happens?
Well, you mentioned the Tyson zone.
And this is a story that is very firmly in the Tyson zone.
I mean, I could imagine, very seriously,
I could imagine OpenAI going back to status quo antebellum
where Sam Altman is reinstated as CEO,
everyone stays at OpenAI,
and the only people that leave are the three non-employee board members who led the effort to fire Sam Altman is reinstated as CEO. Everyone stays at OpenAI and the only people that leave
are the three non-employee board members
who led the effort to fire Sam Altman.
So essentially everything is the same
as it was one week ago.
I think that's possible.
I think it's possible that OpenAI doesn't exist
in one month.
Because if what is real now
continues to be real for a few more weeks,
Sam Altman isn't there.
The entire company,
700 of the 800 employees have signed a letter to the board saying, bring back Sam and fire yourself,
or we might quit and go to Microsoft. They might do it. They might all be serious. And Microsoft might just welcome all of them with open arms. It's the easiest acqui-hire ever. They might all
go to Microsoft. OpenAI no longer exists essentially as a company. And Microsoft essentially eats the entire thing.
That's possible.
So, you know, this is my way of getting,
of slithering out of a clear answer.
When you're living in a world
where the company exists exactly as it did a week ago
is an option,
and the company no longer exists in two weeks
is also an option,
it's very, very difficult to have any confidence interval
about what's going to happen.
I'll make this prediction. I'll say nothing in the last few days gives me any confidence
that the board is going to budge from its position. And so what's the status quo? The status
quo is that Sam Altman is in a deal to join Microsoft with Greg Brockman, the former president of OpenAI. Hundreds of people join him
and a new research slash commercial AI entity
that is either within Microsoft
or co-sponsored by Microsoft opens up.
It's basically OpenAI 2
and original OpenAI no longer exists.
I guess that's my prediction.
So what would happen to the original technology?
It was like, couldn't they sue?
You're copying the technology we created in this company.
And then it gets into a whole other thing where it's like, wait, I thought you didn't
care about this stuff.
Now you're suing for profits when you're a nonprofit.
Like, it just feels like this is going to end up in some lawsuits.
This is where my even pretend expertise entirely runs out.
I have no idea how it works.
If you essentially have
all of the members of a company start a new company, but the intellectual property resides
with the nonprofit that formerly paid them their W-2s. I have no idea how that works out.
This is where lawyers will be paid billions and billions of dollars in working on all the details.
But my prediction is yes, that OpenAI as it currently exists,
I suppose I'll guess that it won't exist
in the exact same way two weeks from now.
This would be an unbelievable FanDuel bet
where it could be like,
will OpenAI exist in three weeks, minus 250?
Will Microsoft acquire OpenAI, plus 500?
It does feel like there's so many different options.
There's also the option that
it just kind of limps along
and doesn't.
And Sam takes all these guys
to Microsoft and then
OpenAI is kind of like,
we're still here.
We're still doing stuff,
but they don't have any
of their best people anymore.
And they kind of miss their window,
which we've also seen
happen a bunch of times,
not just in the tech industry,
but, you know, even companies like Funny or Die, sometimes you have your window and then it's gone.
That's absolutely true. The one reason I guess I would guess that they won't have missed their
window is that if all the same talent moves to some new entity and they understand how to build
large language models and they have the
same relationships with companies to store the data and get the data. It seems very plausible
to me that they end up building something that's very much like ChatGPT within this new company.
But you're absolutely right. Sometimes you need lightning in a bottle, and clearly OpenAI was
lightning in a bottle. And we should add to the sort of, you know, menu of possibilities here.
OpenAI stays the same.
OpenAI no longer exists.
You know, something like OpenAI exists, but it loses enough talent or loses enough juice
in some way that we look back on this as the end of a certain chapter for this incredible
company.
And we say, wow, they peaked in late October of 2023.
And then this board decision threw it into chaos that actually led to a worse outcome
for everyone from a commercial standpoint, that none of them essentially achieved their former
glory. You can listen to Plain English with Derek Thompson. You can read them at The Atlantic.
God knows what else he's up to. You had a busy 2023.
A lot of stuff happening.
Great to see you.
Thanks for coming on.
Thanks, Bill.
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We have some awesome games this week.
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just because whoever wins that game
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And we have no idea whether CJ Stroud is ready,
but he might be.
I'm also Steelers-Bengals.
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All right, Austin Gale is here from The Ringer.
We played a little game called Nerd Out a few weeks ago.
We said we would do it again around week 10, week 11.
Well, now we're headed toward week 12, Thanksgiving
in the NFL coming up.
I asked you to come up with, I don't know, six, seven crazy stats from the first 11 weeks of the season or numbers or things that jumped out, caught your attention, made you go, whoa, what the hell is that?
What's your first one?
I'm actually going to go to college football for the first one.
Bill, since we are getting into week 12, I know the paths are eyeing maybe a quarterback,
maybe a wide receiver in the 2024 NFL draft.
Caleb Williams, who everyone sees as this next Trevor Lawrence, this next Andrew Luck
over the last couple of weeks, maybe not playing as well, crying in the stands, creating discourse.
The stat that jumps out to me, fifth longest time to throw in the entire FBS,
holds on to the football. 16 turnover-worthy plays, this is according to PFF, on pressure
dropbacks. That's five more than any other quarterback in the Power Five, and this is
the kicker. So that's holding on to the ball, that's not playing well under pressure. 30%
of the pressures allowed in USU's offense on Caleb Williams' dropbacks have been assigned to
him, according to PFF. What does that mean? Running into pressure, doesn't have the pocket presence,
in clean situations, still creating pressure on his own by bailing out of clean pockets and not
doing it. The other quarterback that was 30% in the last five years, Bryce Young, whose biggest
struggle right now is pocket presence. I really do feel
that Caleb Williams, his Achilles heel right now is how bad he's been under pressure and how much
of that pressure he's creating himself. So it's interesting because he seems like he's just gotten
worse as the season's gone along. Everybody had him either one or two in the draft. And the first
time I saw some mock draft this week, I'm sorry. I can't remember who wrote it, but they, they had Williams at five and I was like, Whoa, but I do wonder,
like, we've seen this happen before with quarterbacks who have the lead in September,
October. And then by the time we get to April, they're not in the top five anymore. I I've been,
I just feel like if the Pat's got the number two pick, I'd want them to take Marvin Harrison,
um, or the, or the left tackle who's supposedly an absolute beast. I don'd want them to take Marvin Harrison or the left tackle, who's supposedly an
absolute beast. I don't want them, this is such a rare opportunity to have a high pick. I don't
want them to take quarterback and have it be a coin flip. And it's not even a coin flip. It's
usually like 40, 60 or 35, 65. You point to CJ Stroud, you go, well, that one worked out, but a lot of times it doesn't.
So man, the Caleb Williams stuff, I think is not to mention, he's been a little erratic
just in general. It just makes me nervous when the spotlight gets bigger. You got an NFL fan
base during these games. So yeah, that's not great. So who do you think should be the newborn
pick or have you not done all the research yet? Right now, I'm still leaning Caleb Williams.
And the reason for that is, as I bring up the stat about him under pressure,
I think he's been under a lot of pressure, not just on the football field,
but pressure from a spotlight standpoint.
And you've seen the tweets about him not doing press conferences and all that stuff.
He's covering his face, crying with his mom in the stands.
Every single move this dude makes is under the spotlight,
which I think has been pressure unto itself. The reason I still back him is the arm talent, you know, bring up Bryce
Young in terms of not having the pocket presence coming out of Alabama. Caleb Williams has
infinitely more arm talent than what Bryce Young is bringing to the NFL. He's obviously a lot bigger.
The other piece that I have here is he's the highest graded quarterback, according to PFF,
when kept clean, when the situation is good, when the offensive line is fine, he's not panicking.
He's not under pressure. He's one of the best quarterbacks, if not the best quarterback in
college football. So I pumped the brakes on him, like sliding past Drake May or sliding
hell into the, you know, the five spot of the 2024 NFL draft. But these are things that we have to
bring up when we're talking about quarterback prospects. I think the reason they're coin flips
and the reason this draft media, I do think it's like hyperbolic is like, we see a quarterback, we say best since Trevor Lawrence, best since Andrew Locke.
And we're not willing to talk about like, okay, but he still needs to work on this and this and
this. I think this stuff will carry into the NFL. He's going to run into clean out of clean pockets.
He's going to create pressure himself. He's going to struggle on these pressure dropbacks in the
NFL. It's about seeing that, knowing what you're getting and creating an offense that you can win
with around him, not just pretending that he's going to be perfect when he enters the league.
Yeah, it would be interesting if you switched Bryce Young and CJ Stroud this year, what would have happened?
Because I don't know if any rookie quarterback would have succeeded with that goofy Carolina team with no weapons.
They don't seem like they can block.
And it just seems like the coachings, every piece of it is kind of, that was one of the few things I got right this year,
was I thought Carolina was going to suck, but they just seem poorly coached and poorly organized.
All right. What's your next nerd out? I mean, you bring up poorly coached and poorly organized
the Carolina Panthers under Matt Rule, which was an abject disaster. I remember Kevin Clark here at
the ringer writing about how we don't need to see this anymore. We do not need to see Matt Rule
coach anymore. That offense averaged negative.51 EPA per drive
and 18.8 points per game.
This offense under Frank Reich is almost double as worse,
negative.99 EPA per drive and only 14.4 points per game.
You can say, well, they didn't have Bryce Young and Danny Dalton, the veteran.
This has been nothing short of a disaster
after what was already a disaster.
What is happening in Carolina is obviously from the top down,
not being able to hire a good head coach
because you bring in Frank Reich,
expecting him to bring this offense forward.
They try and bring in Evero.
They try and do all these things.
They bring in Bryce Young.
It's not panning out.
They try and build an offense that caters to his strengths
and minimizes his weaknesses.
That's still not working.
You, you may be, you know,
people may have predicted that the Carolina Panthers
weren't going to be good this season,
but to be almost double as bad
as what the Matt Rule era Panthers were,
that to me, I mean,
something has to change significantly
at the top in Carolina.
Yeah, it was weird because even,
even though they didn't make the playoffs,
I did feel like they stumbled into something of identity last year right when once they got brought steve wilks and
they were this power running team they were seemed like they were pretty good on defense
they had some injuries especially in that last game uh when they were trying to make the playoffs
but um but at least i kind of knew who they were i don't know what this panthers team is
it's interesting because they're playing the Titans this week and
the Titans are another one where it's like,
oh, you guys might not win again
this year, but now all of a sudden here it is with
Carolina. I think Carolina
is hands down the worst team in the league.
What's crazy about it is
they don't have the incentive to tank
because Chicago has their pick.
So on the fly
they're going to be, I don't think they want to go 1-16.
So I'll be interested to see
what kind of desperation they have,
not just like with how they change stuff on the field,
but also like,
could Frank Reich just get fired after,
you know, if they lose on Sunday?
Could Tepper just be like,
fuck it, this is a bad hire.
Let me try to bring in another voice.
Let's try to see what,
I just don't know where it goes,
but it's not going to go well. And we've already seen, there's reports about how Tepper loved
Bryce Young, but maybe Frank Reich liked CJ Stroud. And then you already have comments on
Frank Reich in the press conference, calling out ownership and who he brought in, all that stuff.
That to me, when you don't have buy-in at head coach and who is supposed to be the leader of
your franchise on the football field in the quarterback, it's hard to create any sense of ownership.
I think it's more likely that Frank Reich is out after his first year because
of the discontent he clearly has with the quarterback they selected at the
top of the draft.
Oh,
I think it's a wrap,
but I mean,
this was what happened to him in Indianapolis.
He could never find the right quarterback.
And I thought he was incredibly overrated as a coach.
I couldn't believe people were like, Oh, now they brought in the steady hand of Frank Reich. It's like, what was
steady about it? Go back and look at all the Indianapolis seasons. I'm sure they'll do something
else. Next one for you. So obviously, baby, there were reports that Frank Reich wanted CJ Stroud.
CJ Stroud has had the electric start to his rookie season. So I went back and I looked at every
quarterback drafted into the NFL since the year 2000.
There's been over 190 quarterbacks
drafted in the NFL since the year 2000.
In their first eight games,
who generated the most EPA on their dropbacks?
Here's the list ahead of Stroud.
Patrick Mahomes, Dak Prescott, Justin Herbert,
Robert Griffin, Phillip Rivers, end of list.
That's better than Andrew Luck.
That's better than Matt Ryan. That's better than Andrew Luck. That's better than Matt Ryan.
That's better than Cam Newton.
That's better than Ben Roethlisberger.
He, right now, is in rarefied air,
and that's coming after a game
where he threw multiple red zone interceptions,
which kills expected points added
as that nerdy metric I always bring up.
What C.J. Stroud is doing is as good,
if not better, than any rookie quarterback
we've seen over the last five years,
and borderline up there in the top five, in the top ten, with any rookie
quarterback that's entered the league this millennium.
Wow. Well,
the eye test backs it up because
he threw that pick on
Sunday, and I was shocked.
He's hit this point already
as a rookie quarterback that when he has a bad
throw, you're like, what the hell, CJ? And it's like,
oh, this kid's 22. He's going to have
10 of these. The whole point of being a rookie quarterback is to make two terrible
throws a game. And then you try to cut those down, but he's just, it's, you know, somebody's
good when you're surprised when they fail. I, I also think like, you know, cause we've heard
this with Mac Jones and Zach Wilson here, like these, Oh, well, who are their weapons? And oh,
they can't block farm. It's like, well, is CJ Stroud's position that great?
Like he's, you know, tanked out was,
what was he, a fifth round pick, a fourth round pick?
Yeah.
Nico Collins, their running game,
Damian Pierce was a disaster for them.
They finally got some life from Singletary.
I wouldn't say they have the greatest offensive line,
but when you watch what happens with CJ,
it makes it harder to make
the excuses for these other younger quarterbacks
that have failed.
The Mac Jones, he just
misses throws every week. And you could say
like, well, their offensive line is bad. Look how much
he has so little time to throw.
But it's like, well, his weapons aren't that great.
I honestly think that's
what impresses me the most about the CJ
Stroud situation because
if he was playing poorly we'd be making Bobby Sloak first year offensive coordinator that
excuse we'd be making oh Nico Collins Tank Dell uh Dalton Schultz this isn't a good receiving
core they've had multiple injuries along the offensive line that's what make this like
like almost double as good than what it is like he's having a insane historic efficient season
to the start of his career
with a supporting cast
that if he was playing poorly,
we'd be blaming.
We'd legitimately be blaming
Bobby Slowik, D'Amico Ryans,
this offensive line,
these receivers,
if he was playing poorly.
Instead, we're like,
you know, these receivers,
someone texted me,
a buddy from college texted me.
He's like, maybe Nico Collins
is actually a number one receiver.
It's like, no, CJ Stroud is insane.
That's what's happened.
He's like legitimately changed
the trajectory of the team like single-handedly. It's like, no! CJ Stroud is insane. That's what's happened. He's legitimately changed the trajectory of the team
single-handedly.
I mean, we watch bad football
all week.
So even that play
at my home side yesterday
when he floated that 30-yarder
and hit the guy in the sidelines.
And it was just the perfect throw.
And both announcers were like,
oh!
It was just such a great throw.
And the quarterback play is so bad week to week that whenever somebody has a throw like that,
it really jumps out. Cause you're like, Oh, I'm not used to seeing somebody thread the needle
like that. Right. And CJ seems to have like four or five of those a game. Anyway, what's your next
one? My next stat I'm staying with number two overall picks. I'm staying with quarterback
play, but it's the opposite.
It's not good quarterback play of CJ Stroud.
It's Zach Wilson.
Because the era is ending and we're bringing in him, Boyle, for the New York Jets,
I had to kind of tie a bow on this for you.
It's rare that you get to see busts at the quarterback position play 30-plus games.
He has gotten the opportunity to play a lot.
It's like Jamarcus Russell, how much games he had in Las Vegas or Oakland when it was. No quarterback using that same
number of quarterbacks drafted since the year 2000 has generated more negative EPA on their
dropbacks than Zach Wilson. That's worse than Jamarcus Russell. That's worse than Bruce
Gretkowski. Some of these quarterbacks, that's worse than Joey Harrington. That is the worst,
literally the worst. 30 games by a
quarterback we've seen to start their career since the year 2000. It was that bad in New York. He was
a bust of busts. He's going to go down as one of the biggest busts in NFL history. People are like,
oh, maybe not because he wasn't the number one overall pick. The number two overall pick,
who after Trevor Lawrence, legitimately never lived up to expectation, won't even be a backup
in this league,
but we got to see 30 games from him and it will go down, I think,
as the worst, if not one of the worst,
quarterback starts to a career we've ever seen.
Wow.
Yeah, it's...
You were talking about disconnect
with ownership and coaches.
You could tell a couple weeks ago with Salah
where he was just like,
I'm not going to talk about this anymore,
that they were making him play Zach Wilson.
But I,
you know,
I think when you stick with a guy for that long,
who's clearly incompetent,
I almost wonder,
are you trying to kill your own season?
Because like,
like they might,
they might not want to be good.
This is a conspiracy theory.
Conspiracy bill is out now.
They might not want to be good. This is a conspiracy theory. Conspiracy Bill is out now. They might not want to be good enough
to have the possibility of Rodgers
coming back in mid-December.
So it's like,
let's just keep playing Zach Wilson.
Let's keep...
Because there were guys
that could have traded for it.
There were guys that could have signed.
Even Flacco,
who hasn't been good for four years,
is still better than Tim Boyle.
Tim Boyle,
there's never been a situation
like this Tim Boyle thing.
You mentioned all the bad Zach Wilson.
Tim Boyle's worse.
There's no indication at any point in his career
that he can be a competent quarterback at any point,
not even in like senior year in college,
his stats weren't good.
And then through the years,
he's had chances over and over again to win backup jobs
or have this or have that happen. And every time he's gotten his over and over again to win backup jobs or have this or
have that happen and every time he's gotten his ass kicked by somebody in the preseason
it's i was reading i was on an airplane last night just reading up on him and i was like is this the
worst quarterback anyone's ever created and now he's starting on friday in the black friday game
all because he's aaron rogers friend like i still don't really understand like how he got into this
position and to join you on the conspiracy theory bill,
I honestly feel that jets ownership looked Sala and Douglas in the face and
said,
Hey,
you drafted him number two overall four plays in the season.
This is your mess.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We're going to see it.
Like you,
like I bet Saul had to beg ownership.
Like,
dude,
can we please bench this guy?
Cause he didn't have answers.
He's pleading the fifth on jets radio on whether or not he benched him or not. Like he legitimately, his hands are tied. He's like, ownership's telling we please bench this guy? Because he didn't have answers. He's pleading the fifth on Jets radio
on whether or not he'd bench him or not.
Like he legitimately, his hands are tied.
He's like, ownership's telling me to play this guy.
I have to play him.
I have to own my mistake.
Douglas and I have to own our mistake.
We have to watch this guy play and lose the locker room.
Like, you know, the group chats of defensive players
in that Jets locker room are firing off
on Zach Wilson every single week.
It was sad to see how bad it went
before they finally made this change.
Yeah, Garrett Wilson at some point was just going to stop
running past routes and just run
two feet and stop and just stare
sadly at the ground. What's your
next one? Brandon Staley, baby.
It's time. Oh, the
defensive guru? The defensive
guru has become truly
a what exactly do
you do here situation. The chargers defense ranks 28th
or worse in the following metrics since brandon brandon staley took over in 2021 points allowed
per game success rate based on epa and yards allowed per play why does that matter in the
three years prior they ranked 12th or better in those same stats the defense has legitimately
gotten worse by multiple degrees since Brandon Staley took over.
And that's after they allowed him to go get JC Jackson.
They allowed him to go get Khalil Mack.
They brought in Sebastian Joseph Day.
They brought in Kyle Vannoy.
They drafted Kenneth Murray.
Like the amount that the GM and ownership has invested in Brandon Staley and given him the opportunity to bring this defense, not just back, but like to maintain its relevancy in what it was the last three years. And that utter failure that has happened in Los Angeles,
honestly, has gotten to the point where
every Brandon Staley mic'd up moment is laughable.
Like him saying, yes, I'm calling the plays.
He's getting mad at me. It's over.
It's been over for Brandon Staley.
It was over probably when they lost that comeback
or that blowout, that win against the Jacksonville Jaguars
in the playoffs.
It's been over since then.
And he's been parading as this defensive guru
and legitimately has brought the Chargers defense
to its knees. He's the
quarterback rejuvenator, but it's not his own
quarterback. It's other quarterbacks.
He's the one who turned around Jordan Love's
career last week. I was doing, because now
we've had enough stats now for a couple weeks
that it's actually, you know,
as I try to match up what I'm doing,
million-dollar picks, I write down different things.
The Chargers being, they're 32nd and first downs allowed.
They're 32nd in pass yards.
They're 28th in yards per play.
And they're playing Baltimore this week.
And it's just like, you just, just fundamentally just look at this game.
Now Bosa's out.
And it's like, how's Baltimore not just going to drive down and have 13 play drive after
13 play drive.
Everyone else in the league is doing this.
Detroit, who had 533 yards against them two weeks ago,
and then last week really struggled against Chicago for three quarters,
almost because a team was playing real defense against them again.
I'm with you.
I can't believe how bad he is.
And I do wonder, who's the splashy hire for them after the year?
Cause Staley's there's no way now, but is this a Belichick team? Um, is this, uh, could this be
like a trade, a second round pick for Mike Vrabel type of team? Like what, what's their move? Cause
they have no identity. They're number two in LA and a team in a city that didn't even really care
if they had a football team to begin with. So they're worse than the Clippers. They're at the rock bottom
of the LA landscape,
but they have this
top six quarterback.
They got to do something.
I legitimately don't think
the Los Angeles slash
the remains of the San Diego fan base
will allow them to go
defensive-minded head coach.
I legitimately don't think
that's possible.
I think it's got to be Ben Johnson,
the Detroit Lions offensive coordinator.
I like what Shane Waldron is doing with Geno Smith in Seattle, even though it hasn't been the year it was. What he does creatively. I think it's got to be Ben Johnson, the Detroit Lions offensive coordinator. I like what Shane Waldron is doing
with Geno Smith in Seattle,
even though it hasn't been the year it was.
Like what he does creatively,
I think would be an injection of life
into this offense that they desperately need.
If they bring in anybody on defense,
it'll be better than where it was.
It can't get much worse.
Like that's why I don't think you go defensive minded.
The number one way that Chargers write the ship
is the defense becomes league average,
20th or better in any of these metrics. And Justin Herbert continues to be Justin Herbert, because I do think that there
are points in the season where you're like, maybe he's a bit overrated after this past week.
And after the last few weeks, seeing how the Chargers defense and now the Chargers pass
catchers with Quentin Johnson with that massive drop, like you can see what they'd be capable of
if the defense could stop a nosebleed and they had receivers that could catch the football yeah fair what's your next one i wanted to finish with a potpourri if you will let's hear it
celebratory matt canada kind of steelers offense oh yeah we forgot to bid him a do matt canada
poor matt it's over it's over it's like the first time i saw some of the you know someone tweet out
the first time they made an in-season coordinator change it's like the first time I saw someone tweet out it's the first time they've made an in-season coordinator change
since like the 40s.
The Steelers are such an awesome organization for that, by the way.
Being a Raiders fan my whole life,
I feel like we change coordinators every week.
So to see that change, you know it's significant.
And I'll start with the running backs
because that's the fantasy football community.
They know Jalen Warren is better than Najee Harris.
How much better?
Jalen Warren leads the league among running backs
with 50 carries and yards per carry at 6.2.
A lot of that's that big run,
but he's had over 100 carries this season.
That difference between Najee Harris
and what he is, 6.2 to 3.9,
a 2.3 yards per carry difference
between Jalen Warren and Najee Harris
is the biggest of any running back tandem
with 50 or more carries each
over the last five years.
Wow.
And yet Najee Harris had three more carries
than Jalen Warren did last week.
That to me, by itself, is what are we doing here?
The other stat I have for you,
there are 30 quarterbacks this year
that have had 200 dropbacks.
Obviously only 30.
We've had a lot of injuries.
There's only one that has generated zero EPA.
Not positive, not negative.
Zero EPA on clean dropbacks this year. That's when everything's fine.
That's when the protection is fine. Clean
dropbacks. Kenny Pickett has averaged 0.0
EPA for a dropback. That
is hard to do, man. That
is so hard to do, and I think it's a
combination of two things. One, Kenny Pickett doesn't have it.
I think we've seen that this year. He doesn't have it. He's not someone
you want to develop. Two, this offense,
even when things are clean, even when
things are fine, cannot,
cannot find a way to score points. I
loved Mike Tomlin's answer. We're like, what do you want to
see change with the offense? He's like, I just want to see points.
I think that this firing
is honestly too late to save anything
with this offense, but it was much overdue.
Well, I
went big on Pittsburgh before the year
and bet on them a bunch of times in the first
10 weeks, and it was always why don't they play Jalen Warren more?
Can they just play Jalen Warren more?
Yeah.
Then last week, bet against them in the Browns game.
And the whole time I'm like, holy shit, I hope they don't realize to give the ball to Jalen Warren more.
Either way, it's whatever side you're on.
It's so clear that he's the best offensive player they have.
I do think Pickett,
I'm like Pickett's last defender. I'm a defender. I do think he throws a nice
30-yard ball down the sidelines. And I don't, like sometimes just maybe play the hits. If your
chef in your sports bar can only make like boneless chicken wings and a burger, maybe that's the
menu. And with him, he's good at scrambling around and buying himself time. And he's good
at throwing that one pass to Pickens. I think Friermuth coming back, I think that's going to
help. I do think there's a world where he gets rejuvenated because their offense,
how many times can you run a bubble screen that
gets tackled behind the line of scrimmage? How many times can you run a screen pass where there's
seven guys where the guy catching the screen passes, you know, it was like just basic shit
where it's like, what was that play? Yeah. We know it's second and eight. You're going to run.
Like they know, they know you're going to run. That's why they have eight guys there.
There was just no imagination, play action stuff, anything. I thought it was dumbfounding. I mean, I feel like it was a lack
of imagination. And that was like anybody who's watched the offense. It's like this offense lacks
creativity. We're seeing other offense players do so much cooler shit with their offenses. And I
think the other thing was confidence. Like you on third and long, it was bubble screen. It was not
pushing the ball downfield. If it was pushing the ball downfield, it was in a vertical route,
isolated to Pickens in a one-on-one situation.
They did not trust him, or Canada specifically,
did not trust Pickett to throw the ball downfield
and read the defense.
I think he's going to get that opportunity now.
And for me, I don't know if it's...
Maybe there is a starting caliber quarterback
in Kenny Pickett that you could develop him into.
I just don't think it's worth it.
With where the league is going and what you can go get,
what you have to go get.
But they're 6-4. They're probably going to win this week.
They're favored this week. They could be
7-4, as bad as Pickett's been.
I don't know. I make this joke all the time,
but I thought Baltimore really
stumbled into something
9-10 years ago with Flacco,
where they're like, Flacco's not that good, but we're just
going to have him chuck it down the field.
Either there'll be a PI or somebody will catch it or it'll be incomplete. Like the only bad version of it is an interception, but then that's basically a punt. And that with
Pittsburgh, like you can be a case, just throw it to Pickens five times a game, 40 yards downfield.
And two of those five passes, something good will happen, which is better than what your offense is.
And then the Jalen Warren piece.
I have a nerd out for you.
Yes.
I have a hot take.
That play that Valdez Gantling dropped
to decide the Monday night game.
I watch football every week for 13 hours a day.
I think 50% of the receivers in the league
who are a top three
receiver for their team would have dropped that pass. Wow. Really? Yeah. Really? I watch people
drop that pass all the time. It's a hard catch. You're running full speed. You're running like a
four, four. You're outdoors. It's raining. You got lights. You're looking up. It's got to be
perfect. You got to catch it. You're worried the's got to be perfect. You got to catch it.
You're worried the guy's going to hit you
as you're catching it.
Nobody in the Pats could have made that catch.
Like I watched the Pats every week.
Nobody in the Pats.
I think Garrett Wilson, he would have made it.
Like you go through the best receivers in the league.
Like both Miami guys would have made it.
But I think there's only like 25 guys in the league
that would have easily made that catch.
There's a couple of people who might have like juggled it and held on.
But I think that catch is harder than people realize.
And we all sit in our couch.
We're like, oh, he should have had it.
Oh, it hit his hands.
Oh, here's the freeze frame picture.
But I'm telling you, man, it's a that's a hard catch.
My gut reaction was like, no way.
I think maybe that number is 60 percent or 70 percent.
But I think the bigger problem is here's the
bigger number zero percent of the chiefs receivers make that catch like like that that's the problem
like the problem you know people want to say it's drops and all that stuff like that i think they
lead the league in drops now the kansas city chiefs do like the problem is is we saw this week one and
they did nothing about it like i i honestly feel that you cannot blame that loss on the receivers
you have to blame that loss on the receivers you have to blame
that loss on whoever's making the roster decisions in kansas city not making a play to go get a guy
like go get a guy or make maybe pay more for odo beckham jr in the offseason pay more for deandre
hopkins in the offseason because this isn't good enough justin watson's not good enough sky more
has not lived up to what we wanted him to be coming out of the second round of western michigan
marcus valdez-gandling is clearly not good enough has the most drops on downfield passes of any receiver in the league. This is not
on them anymore. Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, it's shame on me. The Chiefs failed to
add enough talent either in the offseason or after they found out week one that these receivers are
going to be a problem. And now they're going to make the postseason. They maybe don't have the
first round by, which is a problem. They're going to have to go three games with those receivers,
with the volatility of those drops. I don't know if first round by, which is a problem. They're going to have to go three games with those receivers with the volatility
of those drops. I don't know if they make it through
that gauntlet. I've been
saying this all season. It happened in 2006
Pats. They were able to get to the AFC
championship game and then they couldn't
get the big third down when they needed it.
But it was Rashid Caldwell and Jabari Gaffney
and Daniel Graham.
They just didn't have the guys.
Here's the thing that I think people forget with the Chiefs.
You can only pay so many guys.
Nobody ever makes this point, right?
Mahomes is the most expensive QB in the league.
Travis Kelsey, although they have him on a pretty good contract,
but he's still super expensive.
They just paid Chris Jones.
You go look at their spot track.
Justin Reed's making like 13 million a
year. Joe Tooney's making like, I think 13 or 14. Like at some point, something's got to give.
You can't pay for everything. You can't have a good offensive line. You can't have Chris Jones.
You can't have Kelsey. You can't have Mahomes. Like you're going to have to try to get lucky.
The big mistake is they paid Valdez Gantling 11 million a year,
which seems like that 11 to 15 million range for receivers seems to be like
the death range.
That's where you get like Juju Smith Schuster and you get, you know,
the Pats pay Nelson Aguilar a couple of years ago.
And it's just, you're, you're paying money,
but the guy's not totally reliable.
I think what they tried to do was they were hoping Rishi Rice,
they were hoping Sky Moore,
these guys, these young guys that they were invested in,
they just haven't come through.
I actually like Rice.
I wish they would throw him the ball more,
but I just don't think people understand
it's really hard to pay everybody.
Kelsey's supposed to be their main guy
and he couldn't get open last night.
I think another roster decision
that still pains them
is drafting Clyde Edwards-Hilaire over
Tee Higgins and drafting even just a running back or any of those receivers that were going to be
available to them at the back end of that first round. He's not even a rotational player for the
team. I know he had a couple carries, but Clyde Edwards-Hilaire, when he was drafted, I remember
so many draft analysts are like, he's the missing piece of the offense. That's the only thing they
needed. You lose Tyree Kill, and now Clyde Ward-Tillier barely plays 10 snaps a game. Like you, they
needed to invest in high value positions with every pick they had. And I love what they've
done on the defense. Leo Chanel, Billy Gay, they've added a lot of talent there, but any
offensive player you picked better been a tackle or a receiver because you are going to pay Mahomes
a lot of money. You're going to pay Kelsey a lot of money. And on then you had Tyree kill on the
books. Like to me, drafting a running back then
is going to haunt them in this window for quite a bit.
Well, we'll see.
You can't pay everyone.
And Kelsey, everyone's like, they have no receivers.
They have Travis Kelsey.
He's basically a receiver.
It's not like he's Rob Gronkowski in the mid 2010s.
But I think they were hoping Rice more.
And then they missed on Valdez-Scanley, but I still stand
by my statement. I think
I don't know if half the receivers
don't drop that pass, but
I just think it's a harder.
Saruti, what do you think before we go?
I think you're insane.
You think I'm insane?
I mean, listen, I'm not going to be
like, hey, I was good when I was
18 years old, but man, a high school kid makes that catch. You're just running straight. Okay, I mean, listen, I'm not going to be like, hey, I was good when I was 18 years old. But man, like a high school kid makes that catch.
You're just running straight.
Stop.
Okay.
You said, okay.
You said, you know, he's waiting to get hit.
Man, he catches that and he's in the end zone.
Like it's over.
That's it.
And like, all right, the conditions are the conditions.
But man, they brought this guy in as a free agent.
That's like his one thing is he's a deep threat.
Catch the ball.
I watch people drop that pass every week.
On every TV, somebody's dropping that pass.
I don't know. I honestly felt too like
the ball tracking of that, like
him getting two hands on that was kind of
impressive since it was kind of overhead in the lights.
Yeah, he's flying. I don't know. I felt
like he got a bad rap last night. I felt bad for
him. If he had made the catch, it would
have been amazing. How about that?
Oh my God, what a catch.
The commentators would be like,
that's a handoff. You can't do it better
than that. You can't handle
it. I feel like all the love would have been on Mahomes.
It would have been an expect.
Hey, Mahomes, throw it a little bit better. Maybe throw it
a little closer to him.
That's what I'm asking. Mahomes is like, oh yeah, I could have threw it a little
bit less. He's 100% just
taking the bullet there. There's no way he actually believes that.
That was a perfect throw. No, he doesn't believe that.
Mahomes is a stand-up guy. He's not blaming guys. I like it.
I like Mahomes. Sorry, I think Mahomes is good now.
Listen, Bob Descantling is a
backup receiver, and that would have been an incredible
catch. And I'm sorry, but
I watch football every week, and guys
drop that. Quentin Johnson
last Sunday.
Easy catch, right? These guys always
freaking screw this up. Anyway, alright. Austin Gill, great to These guys always freaking screw this up.
Anyway, Austin Gill, great to see you.
Thanks for coming on.
Absolutely. Thank you.
All right, that's it for part one
of the special holiday extravaganza.
Thanks to Steve Cerruti and Kyle Creighton.
Thanks to Austin and to Derek
and to Kevin O'Connor.
Don't forget for part two coming
late night,
Tuesday night,
we're going to be talking to NBA with Bob Mahoney and we're going to do a
million dollar picks with dangerous Danny Kelly who brought us home
undefeated last week.
So we'll see if we can keep the momentum.
I will see you for part two in a little bit. I don't have
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