The Bill Simmons Podcast - The Jets, 'Rebel Ridge,' a Great 'Sopranos' Doc, and Deion’s Rocky Year Two With Sean Fennessey and Van Lathan
Episode Date: September 11, 2024The Ringer's Bill Simmons is joined by Sean Fennessey to discuss the Jets' loss to the 49ers on 'MNF' (1:47). Then Bill, Sean, and Van Lathan discuss the highly anticipated Netflix film 'Rebel Ridge,'... the upcoming film 'SNL' film, 'Saturday Night' (23:40), and HBO's new 'Sopranos' documentary, 'Wise Guy' (45:06). Finally, Bill and Van discuss some football topics, including Deion Sanders and Colorado, CFB parity, Tyreek Hill, the Super Bowl halftime show, and more (1:18:15). Host: Bill Simmons Guests: Sean Fennessey and Van Lathan Producer: Kyle Crichton The Ringer is committed to responsible gaming. Please visit www.rg-help.com to learn more about the resources and helplines available. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Coming up, we're going to be talking about the Jets and Dion and the Super Bowl halftime show and Tyreek and a whole bunch of pop culture stuff next.
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First, our friends from Pearl Jam.
All right.
On Sunday, I texted Sean Fantasy and I said, win or lose on Monday night, you have to come on and talk about the Jets.
Normally, we just do Rewatchables pods together. And I feel like every time you come on this pod,
you're either tortured or super excited about the Jets or the Knicks.
So now it's Tuesday and the Jets game couldn't have gone worse.
And I'm sorry.
Thanks for having me back.
I think last time I was here,
I was screaming about Joel Embiid and today I'll be screaming about Robert Sala. So thanks for
having me. Oh, let's go. So Robert Sala, I looked this up. He's now 18 and 34 career.
There's 201 coaches who have coached 50 plus games and he's 183rd in winning percentage. Now he's in the bottom 20 cool all time. And it's,
it's an amazing list, Sean, that like Hugh Jackson is on that list. Nepo baby, David Shula is on that
list. Joe Bugle, Mike Nolan, the guy who used to wear a suit on the sidelines for the Niners. He's
on that list. The one and only Romeo Cornell. He's he's on there as well. And now Big Shot Bob Sala.
Are you out?
It's hard to say. They just got their
asses kicked by what may be the first or second
best team in the NFL, right? So like, I can
take a deep breath and recognize that they played
a road game on Monday Night Football
against an absolute juggernaut
and maybe the best coach in the NFL.
But, man,
they looked not prepared, and their
defense got their asses handed to them.
He was completely outcoached,
made zero adjustments,
and obviously I've been waiting a long
time to root for a quarterback like
Aaron Rodgers, and that was okay.
That was pretty good, that experience, but
the defense, which is, I think Troy
Aikman used the phrase vaunted defense
like nine times last night.
Yeah.
They looked mediocre at best.
Well, you said this, because you were texting our inner circle chat,
and you were like, I don't understand this Jets love at all.
Our defensive line is going to be terrible.
Why don't people notice that we lost Huff?
We added Redick, who doesn't play, people are going to be able to run
the ball. You basically laid out every single thing that happened in the game. So, you know,
it's a tricky situation because the whole defense is designed around not blitzing and having a
strong pass rush and having lockdown secondary. So for the last two plus years of the Salah scheme,
it's worked really well because they've had Bryce Huff, who is an undrafted free agent,
who they developed into an incredible pressure guy. They've had John Franklin Myers, an incredible
run stuffing defensive end. And Quinton Williams has emerged as one of the best defensive tackles
in the league. They also had Quinton Jefferson last year, who put a ton of pressure on the
quarterback. They lost Quinton Jefferson. They lost John Franklin Myers
because they couldn't,
because they traded
for Hassan Redick
so they couldn't keep him
on the cap.
And they lost Bryce Huff
to the Eagles
who very smartly
then traded Hassan Redick
who was asking for a lot of money
to the Jets.
Redick didn't play last night
and they're otherwise down
three of their
six best defensive linemen.
Of course they got
their asses handed to them
by a running back
that no one had ever heard of until six
hours ago.
Salah didn't make a single adjustment in the game
and they were playing a bunch of nobodies on the defensive
line too. Undrafted free agents,
guys you've never heard of who
couldn't keep up last night.
It was...
For somebody who follows the team very closely, it was clear
that the defense was going to take a step back.
The hope was that the offense would take a step up.
Yeah. It just wasn't enough of a
step up, I guess. I mean, eight consecutive scoring
drives, apparently that's a record
for the San Francisco 49ers. Have you ever seen anything
like that? No. It was horrible.
I thought
they were trying to start the game, we're going
to run the ball down San Francisco's throat
and keep our defense off the field, seemed
to be the plan, but they couldn't really run the ball. But they's throat and keep our defense off the field seemed to be the plan,
but they couldn't really run the ball. But they had that one drive where,
and we were texting about it,
it was like, oh, that's what we thought
we were going to get with the Jets.
Rodgers making quick decisions at the line,
Wilson was open, and it just seemed like the right mix.
And then it just went away and we never saw it again.
I thought, so Rodgers looked better than Cousins.
Cousins was a statue in that Pittsburgh game.
He just couldn't move around.
Rodgers could move around a little,
but it wasn't the same mobility that he used to have.
Now, he's also 40, and he's coming off a big injury,
but I thought there were moments
when he just seemed like he wanted to get rid of the ball
versus actually trying to zoom out and create time,
which he used to be great at. ball versus actually trying to zoom out and create time,
which he used to be great at.
I think the one interception that he had is pretty uncharacteristic for him
where he was trying to force it into Garrett Wilson.
And you could see it was because
he was a little jittery in the pocket.
He really didn't want to get hit.
But his arm is still money.
I mean, he was making incredible throws.
That free play touchdown to Alan Lazard
and also that throw on the sideline
to Alan Lazard. Those are insane. I mean, I've never, I've literally never rooted for a quarterback
who could make a throw like that in my entire life. So watching that stuff was really fun.
But you know, this is an offense that is coached by the immortal Nat Hackett,
who the run, run past King running on first down on like nine of the 10 drives that they had in
this game. What the fuck is he doing? That was bizarre. The run-run pass king, is that his nickname?
I mean, it is to me and all Jets fans this morning.
If that guy was calling the plays
and it seemed like he was,
that was just a masterclass
in playing into San Francisco's hands
because they had a really stout run defense
and Brees Hall, who's explosive,
was just getting jammed at the line nonstop.
I think he averaged like 2.8 yards a carry.
This is one of the most explosive players in the NFL.
So that was really disappointing to watch.
And you spent a lot of money on the offensive line too.
It was interesting when they brought in the backup
and they were talking about how he was 20 years old
and I was thinking he was like
three and a half years older than my son.
That is true.
Braylon Allen, he's a beast.
Yeah, talking shit to the like grown men on the Niners.
I thought that was amazing.
Kevin Wilds pointed this out,
and I didn't think it was true,
and I looked it up, and he was right.
Rodgers has been thrown for 300 yards
since week 13 of the 2021 season,
which was December 19th, 2021.
Do you want to guess what the number one movie was that week?
I'm going to put all your interests together.
December 19th, 2021.
So there were some December 17th releases too.
There were Wednesday, Friday releases that week.
Oh God.
That's just late in COVID times.
It was right when they were like,
hey, come back to the theaters.
And meanwhile, there was a new strain of COVID coming out.
Well, I'll give you three.
Okay.
Spider-Man No Way Home.
Okay, yeah, that makes sense.
West Side Story.
Mm-hmm.
And House of Gucci.
House of Gucci was the one that really hit home to me
because it felt like that movie came out nine years ago.
Yeah, I think that one was a November release.
I will say Spider-Man No Way Home
is the number one movie at the box office. Back then. Yeah, I think that one was a November release. I will say Spider-Man No Way Home is the
number one movie at the
box office.
Back then.
Yeah, that weekend.
But I'm just saying,
to put that in perspective,
those were the three
movies that came out
during Rogers' last
300-yard game.
Was he an absolute
kook by then?
I guess he was, right?
He was immunized and
all that bullshit.
Yeah, what's it like to
root for somebody who
could be described as
an absolute kook and
thanks for asking um i you know throughout the entirety of him not playing it hasn't been pleasant
but when he was throwing the ball i was into it man i was like whatever what ayahuasca you know
vaccines i'm not thinking about that what i'm thinking about is darts down the sideline i that
that was just thrilling you know i'm not a huge fan of a lot of the stuff that he's done
in the public eye, but
for a 40-year-old guy, even if
he still hasn't thrown for 300 yards in over
three years, it's clear that
he's not over. He's not
done. He's not cooked. I mean, the Niners are good.
And he was able to score on them a couple
of times. And he made Alan
Lazard look like an NFL player, which is something that Zach
Wilson was never able to do so I'm not like completely
out on Aaron Rodgers I don't
know how you could be after
that game I do think they also
have kind of a cupcake schedule
coming up so the world in which
they're doing very well I still
think this is an in a deeply
flawed team though and I'll be
honest you know what I really
started getting nervous is when
you started gassing them up like
six weeks ago.
And I was like, oh no.
Why is Bill on them?
This is not good.
I think that was the right instinct, especially after watching Miami,
who got completely outplayed for almost that entire Jacksonville game
and then would have been down 24-7.
ETN fumbles and then the game just flips.
And then Buffalo is like barely holding on against Arizona.
You know, it just feels like whoever can get to 10 wins in the AFC makes it.
The Jets next three, they're at Tennessee.
Tennessee's terrible.
Home for the Pats and home for Denver.
And I feel like if you come out of that 0-3 after that Pats game
or 1-3 after the Denver game,
there's some solid possibilities
at that point.
I was wondering about that too,
if he would be canned.
It's a tricky one because
I think the Pats are going to be
a little better than people think.
The Jets are also playing
three games in 11 days.
I have no idea why the NFL just,
they have a 40-year-old quarterback
and they schedule them
to play three games in 11 days.
They also have a lot of
nationally televised games
on the schedule this year.
And if they're not good,
again,
that's going to seem very strange.
Yeah, that Pats game is a Thursday.
So they go at Tennessee
and then home for Pats
like four days later.
Yeah, that's really not ideal.
The...
I don't know.
I mean, this is a...
This is...
That looked like a 9-8 win team last night.
You know? It just looked like a mediocre team. And if they are a mediocre
team, my prediction was that they all
get fired at the end of the season and Rodgers
retires.
Does that seem right to you? What do you think based on
what you saw?
I'm not ready to go there yet. He had that
one throw to Lazard
down the sidelines that made me realize
oh, there's nobody quite like
this guy in the league, right?
Just a couple, he pulls a couple throws
out that I don't think anybody else in the league can make.
And it feels like he can still
do that. It feels like he can still
go to the line and be like,
they're doing this, so we should do this.
I mean, this is what happens
in week one and week two. The Niners
just might be, their defense might be just awesome this year. And maybe we were not going to realize
that for three more weeks. I think the Pats game is a little dangerous. And that's the one I'm
trying to figure out, especially the Pats are home for Seattle this week. Trying to figure out how
real that Bengals win was. I read everything. I watched the game again. The defense looked like 2001, hats on the
ball, everyone flying around, defense. And they had a pass rush, which I had no idea they were
going to have a pass rush this year, especially with Judon and Barmore out, but they do.
And then they were really able to run the ball on the right side, which I don't think...
Ramondre was, I think, one of the best running backs in week one, if not the best one.
So the way they ran the ball against Cincy,
I think they could do against the Jets.
I agree with you.
And I think they could pressure Rodgers.
So it's a little bit of a scarier game than maybe I was counting on.
I thought the Pats were going to be
reprehensibly bad, and they're not.
I thought that there was one crazy moment,
like a real sliding doors moment in the Pats game
where Burrow threw the touchdown. I think it was
in the second quarter that got called back
and then he threw another pass over the middle to the tight end
that got punched out at like the six yard line
and fumbled. And I
thought if they went in and scored there
the Bengals might have been rolling down a hill.
And that didn't happen
but I was watching the Pats closely because I was
like I need the Pats to not be good
for once in my life
and I was like
oh fuck they're good
this is not
this is really not ideal
and that was when
I started texting you
and I was like
okay so the Dolphins
looked bad
and they pulled the game out
the Bills completely
turned their act around
in the second half
and looked dominant
in the second half
of the game
and the Pats
are going to be tough
and they played hard
for Mayo
and even though
the Jets have
ostensibly an easier
schedule
man every team picking them to
go like 12 and five or 13 and four, that just doesn't feel right. It doesn't taste right somehow
based on what they've done. Also, you know, Joe Douglas, who did pick Garrett Wilson, who did pick
Sauce Gardner, who did find Jermaine Johnson at the end of the first round of a draft, you know,
he also picked Zach Wilson second overall. He also waited too long to add a veteran quarterback to the team.
He also has now taken two consecutive first-round picks
that I don't think are going to contribute to this team really all that much this year.
And Will McDonald last year and Olu Fashinu on the offensive line this year.
You know, it's like you used to say about Belichick.
It's like you keep taking guys in the first and second round that don't contribute.
That's going to catch up with you.
Like those guys are not really playing that much.
So it's a team that doesn't have as much depth as you want.
The thing I didn't like out of all the stuff they did,
because the Giants did a version of this too,
where they paid draft compensation to get somebody
who played the exact same position as the guy they just could have kept
or just signed.
The Giants could have just signed a free agent.
Instead, they paid a pick to trade for Brian Burns.
And then Jets just could have kept Huff
and maybe even just also kept Franklin Myers.
And instead, they paid a draft pick to go get Redick.
I don't understand the logic of that.
I would never want to give up a second round pick
if I could have the second round pick plus Huff.
I think if you are a cynical Jets fan
looking at the strategy, they felt like they built Huff. I think if you are a cynical Jets fan looking at the strategy,
they felt like they built Huff out of nothing
and they thought they could do it again with other
guys. And so they didn't want to overpay
for a guy who doesn't play against the run,
who's a positional switch
player, who only basically
rushes the quarterback.
And so they were like, we can find another Huff. We can find
another Huff. And then they lost Huff.
And then they're like, shit, we got to get another edge player.
They kind of freaked out.
It was a little bit late in the game.
Howie Roseman, you know, just treating Joe Douglas.
That's another red flag.
Yeah, if the Eagles want your guy, that's probably a red flag.
I totally agree.
Because they have pretty good taste in players.
I totally agree.
And Roseman, you know, Joe Douglas used to work for Howie Roseman.
So that whole thing just smelled funny to me from the beginning.
And all my Eagles friends, of course,
have been taunting me about it all summer.
So I feel shitty about that.
That being said, I don't know.
Given the schedule, given Rodgers,
given Hall and Wilson,
there are definitely going to be games
where they're going to win 30 to 10.
And I have just not seen a lot of games
like that in my life.
Actually, there was an amazing stat that I read,
which is that they had games
in which they scored three offensive touchdowns
just twice last year.
And they actually scored three offensive touchdowns last night.
So it's going to be a better offense for sure.
Even Tyrod Taylor,
he looked pretty slick last night in garbage time.
I enjoyed that.
I also enjoyed it.
I've always liked him.
I've always been rooting for him
ever since he was almost murdered
by the Chargers team doctor.
I'm also not out on this Jets season. I think one of the things is they're built to have a lead. ever since he was almost murdered by the Chargers team doctor.
I'm also not out on this Jets season.
I think one of the things is they're built to have a lead.
They're one of those teams
where it's like,
once we have a lead,
we can run the ball,
we can do play action,
and then on defense,
we can just, you know,
rush and blitz
and do all the Sal stuff.
So yesterday was the worst case scenario.
Also, once the Niners realized
they could run the ball,
that's the most terrifying team in the league
when it's like,
oh, you're letting us run for six yards of carry
and now you have to start moving guys up
to try to stop the run.
Great.
This is what we're good at.
So it might have just been a perfect storm.
We've seen week one overreactions.
I'm not out of them yet.
Wilson and Hall are amazing.
You have two awesome weapons.
They are.
One of my big takeaways from the game,
and this is something we've talked about a lot
over the last two years,
there was no Jets pass rush whatsoever last night,
but Brock Purdy was kind of slinging it.
Yeah, he was.
He looked good.
They even dropped a couple plays.
Well, you know, the famous stat of the Jets
haven't made the playoffs since 2010.
Right?
So that's like winter 2010.
I realized we first met and exchanged emails in 2011.
And we've worked together since 2012.
Maybe I'm the problem.
Time to quit.
Should I put in my notice this morning?
Maybe we just should have a more distant relationship.
Larry David quit the Jets.
Did he though?
I think he kind of did. But if they go 12-5 this year, is he back in?
I don't know.
You know, he's my dad's age.
When you hit your mid-70s, you just start going, fuck it.
So he's claiming he quit, but I also think he watched the game yesterday.
So I don't know.
We'll get a TBD.
Maybe he'll come on the pod.
It's a bummer that the Jets didn't win
because I was so excited to take your high
from the Jets game
and then spin it against you with the Knicks
and Julius Randle just ready
to single-handedly sabotage the Knicks season.
I was ready to do that.
We can do that in a month, though.
That's not going to happen.
What do you mean?
Well, you know, he was upset his jersey wasn't in the window.
Playmaking firepower.
That's what we need in the playoffs.
And that's what Julius Randle provides for this team.
It's going to be fine.
I'm not worried.
Who are the two unhappy guys that aren't going to be playing in crunch time every next game?
Have they figured that out yet?
And will they have special seats?
I don't know where Devo fits in.
I don't know where Dante DiVincenzo
fits in the lineup, honestly.
He's got to be so bummed out.
Yeah, he's turned into
a 20-minute-a-game guy.
I'm sure he'll be psyched.
He was bombed.
He bombed like 11 threes
in a playoff game.
Remember that?
And he's going to get
eight minutes a game
given this roster.
I don't know.
Whatever.
They got Mikael Bridges.
That was awesome.
Come on.
They're good.
You can't make me feel bad
about the Knicks.
They're good.
Josh Hart, all of a sudden,
now just a 20-minute-a-game guy.
How's
his ego going to handle that?
Josh Hart had an incredible
Simmons-esque tweet yesterday, Bill.
It was, none of my parlays hit.
Football is so back.
Josh Hart did that?
Yeah.
NBA odds right now,
by the way,
we have
your Knicks
have the fourth best odds
on FanDuel.
9-1.
Mm-hmm.
Eastern Conference,
your Knicks
tied for the second best odds
plus 440.
This is
the highest they've been since the late 90s.
Are they ahead of the Bucs?
Yeah.
So let me try to guess.
Is it Celtics, Nuggets, Sixers?
Celtics, Sixers, Knicks for the East.
Yeah.
What about in the West?
Well, for the championship, Celtics, Thunder,
right after the Celtics, then Sixers, Knicks together.
Yeah, people are in on the Thunder this year.
We're really going to miss Isaiah Hartenstein.
He was awesome.
I like that guy.
He seems super fired up to be part of the Thunder with Caruso, too.
Thunder is going to be really good.
I think they're live for the Wednesday and all that stuff.
All right, so you're not giving up on the Jets.
You're super optimistic about the Knicks.
And then Mets, are they playoffs?
What's happening with the Mets? I was wondering
if you were going to ask me. I mean, honestly, they might be the most
exciting and resilient Mets team of my
adult life. This has been a crazy season.
They're like 55-29
since May 30th or something.
They've been on an insane run.
They're in a really, really tight
playoff race right now.
And it's the same goddamn problem
where when the Knicks get good,
of course, the Sixers and Celtics
are really good.
When the Jets get good,
of course, the Bills and the Dolphins
are really good.
And in the Mets case,
the Phillies are a juggernaut
and the Braves will not go away.
The Braves are missing their ace pitcher,
Spencer Strider, out for the year.
They're missing their reigning MVP, Ronald Acuna.
They're having a huge down year from Matt Olsen.
They're missing their star third baseman, Austin Riley.
And they're keeping up with the Mets, which is killing me.
But you know what?
I always bitch about not having a super-duper starter root for and not having these great legendary players.
Over the course of the last four years,
Francisco Lindor turned into it.
He just turned into it.
Wow.
He's like a legitimate MVP candidate.
The entire fan base has flipped on him.
He had a really bad first year
where he was doing the thumbs-down thing
and the fans were turning against him.
But man, he's just been freaking nails
for three years in a row
and this year has been his best season.
Just a joy to watch.
Just an old school,
plays 162 games a year shortstop.
He's a wizard defensively.
He sits for every goddamn interview
after every game and says like, we got to be better.
I got to be better. He's clutch.
Just a really cool to root for somebody like that.
I've been on baseball this whole year.
So good son analogy.
You're holding the Phillies and the Braves
and you only have the strength
to pull one of them back on the cliff and drop the other one. Who do you drop? Well, I should drop the Phillies and the Braves and you only have the strength to pull one of them back on the cliff
and drop the other one.
Who do you drop?
Well, I should drop the Phillies.
Who would you want to see dropping
into the abyss of the rocky ocean?
I should drop the Phillies
because they're in first place.
But honestly, I hope the entire Braves organization
mistakenly gets on Titanic 2.0
and just sinks into the bottom of the ocean soon.
I just can't deal with the Braves.
I'm sick of it.
The Braves have been haunting me for 25 years.
So I don't want to see them anymore.
That's our Mets, Jets, Knicks update from Sean Fantasy.
We're going to take a break and come back.
Van Lathan and Sean and I are going to talk about the Sopranos documentary next.
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You know me, I can't go a day without sports.
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All right. Sean fantasy still Monday. It's on Prime.
All right, Sean Fantasy still here.
Van Lathan is joining us.
We're going to talk a little pop culture, the three of us.
Sean, you did your podcast on Rebel Ridge, on the big picture.
I did.
This week, which I watched. I woke up on Saturday morning, and my wife was like,
I'm going to sleep late.
I'm like, great, you should sleep late.
I just watched all of Rebel Ridge. It was great. It played all the hits. I thought it
struggled in the middle. It's probably about 15 minutes too long, which I feel like I'm saying
about every movie, but I really enjoyed it. And I thought the lead actor was great. Van,
what did you think of Rebel Rich? It wasn't what I expected. I expected it to be
a display of this man's physical force
and him beating the hell out of people
who have wronged him.
The movie had layers
I didn't expect it to have.
And just really a fantastic performance.
Like, I watched the movie
and I thought,
there's my black Batman.
I'm serious. I was like, that guy, there's my black Batman. I'm serious.
I was like,
that guy,
like there's like,
there's my black Batman.
Like it,
the movie actually ended up being like a,
a really great script,
a little long,
but I was really pleasantly surprised.
And I had heard the gas on it was so crazy that I didn't think he could
possibly live up to it,
but he did.
Sean,
what's his,
what's it,
where,
where did he come from?
What's his background?
And did you know he had that performance in him?
Definitely not.
It's a really amazing A Star Is Born kind of situation for him.
But he's done some work.
He was in Barry Jenkins' The Underground Railroad, the Amazon series.
He played the rapper in the M. Night Shyamalan movie Old.
That rapper's name was Midsize Sedan.
Oh, Midsized Sedan.
That's okay.
He's done a few things here and there.
You know, the crazy story about that movie
where it originally started its production with
John Boyega, you know, from the Star Wars
movies in that role. And he
left the movie under somewhat mysterious
circumstances. And
he was replaced by Pierre, who's a British actor
who most people haven't seen before. And Pierre, who's a British actor who most people haven't
seen before. And man, he's a badass. I mean, he is just the Batman call is really fascinating.
Chris had something similar because of the way that his character doesn't try to injure anybody.
You know, he's not trying to murder anybody while he's doling out justice. He's got this very sort
of like disarming quality physically, but he holds the screen. You know, sometimes you see a guy who doesn't, who's very still on camera and just looks into the camera and you're like, that guy's got this very disarming quality physically, but he holds the screen. Sometimes you see a guy who's very still on camera
and just looks into the camera and you're like,
that guy's got it.
And Aaron Pierre is the actor's name.
He's got it.
Yeah, I felt I'd never really had a movie experience with him.
I had to Wikipedia him about halfway through the movie
and of course he's a fucking British man.
We just can't win.
We can't win. We can't win.
We're the American actors.
Kalika went, Kalika looked
and Kalika literally went
oh he's British.
And I was like what?
He's like oh my god he's British.
But you know what's funny?
Like when you go back and you watch
First Blood it's obviously a movie that
you know it's going to be compared to
because it ripped off
the same premise is that one of your reasons
it's inspired by
but when you
go back and you look at
the subsequent Rambo movies
John Rambo movies after First Blood
Rambo is the most compelling when he's fucking
shit up when he's shooting
arrows or setting stuff on fire or beating people up or whatever.
But in First Blood, it's not that way.
Like, he's most compelling when he's just going like, yo, why are you doing this?
Like, what's with you guys?
Like, the most compelling part of it is like this guy being in a different situation where these people are like trying to take advantage of him and him just like
pushing back against them and that tension is the most and that's kind of the same thing with rebel
ridge rebel ridge is not at its most compelling when he's getting busy that those aren't the best
parts of the movie those are that's fine but it's most compelling when he's this close to don johnson
and they're talking and they're testing each other. And the psychological part of the movie
is the stuff that makes it work,
which is hard to do in a movie
that's kind of based around this ex-Marine
beating people up, you know?
Yeah, well, that's what the first 20 minutes
of First Blood,
which we did on the rewatch was way back when,
but it's so brilliantly constructed.
And Sean, you did,
what was the theme of the big picture?
It was garbage revenge?
Yeah, just like all revenge movies where somebody has been openly wronged.
And this movie has a perfect openly wronged civil asset forfeiture.
First 10 minutes of the movie.
And you're like, God damn it.
What's these cops?
What the fuck, man?
Yeah.
So I, I would have called that.
I like openly wronged.
I, the other version of that is the, oh man, just leave him alone.
Cause that's first blood, right? So just leave him alone. He wanted to see his buddy. He just wants to get some eggs. man, just leave him alone. That's first blood, right? So just leave him alone.
He wanted to see his buddy. He just wants to
get some eggs. Can you just leave him alone?
And it's like, ah, they won't leave him alone. Oh, they're
really not leaving him alone. Oh boy, here
we go. But I think
what shot, I deliberately didn't read
anything about this movie.
I just assumed it was going to
be the, oh, he's going to get, here we go.
He's just going to beat the shit and kill people.
And let's go, let's put, let's get a body count going.
And it zagged really hard on that.
And it seemed really, like Van said,
really interested in the cat and mouse dynamic with him
and my guy, Don Johnson.
40 year anniversary of Miami Vice season one,
one of my favorite TV seasons of all time.
He creates Sonny Crockett, who becomes the model, the first kind of semi antihero.
He's not quite an antihero, but there's some DNA in there that goes.
And the only thing better than Don Johnson is evil Don Johnson, who we've seen a couple
times.
Evil Don Johnson.
And I've always felt like I don't know why Don Johnson didn't have a better movie
career. He's really good in 10 cup. He's really good in the hotspot. He's, he's been, been
consistently when you see him, you're like, Oh, Don Johnson. I like Don Johnson. And I don't,
I like when he taps into his evil, Sean, good villain. He, you know, he was a hero on that TV
series, but he's been but his best work is by far
when he plays a bad guy in movies.
I mean, he is an awesome bad guy,
or at least a sleazebag.
Well, wait a second.
It might be if I say he was a hero
with a dark side.
That's true.
A drinking problem.
He went against the grain.
He was like that one of the first,
are you going to play by our rules?
Or not.
That kind of created that.
It seems like Sonny Crockett was one mentor away
from being a drug dealer himself, right?
Yeah, he thought about it.
Yeah.
He had the boat.
He had an alligator.
He was like, you know, if things go sideways,
I could also go the other way.
What were you going to say, Sean?
There's an amazing scene in this movie
outside of the hospital
where it becomes clear that what they did was wrong.
And they're trying to sort of make amends
to put the tiger back in the cage.
And Don Johnson in that scene,
when he's explaining what he's willing to do
for the Aaron Pierre character,
and the Aaron Pierre character trying to hold it in
and not just strangle Don Johnson,
high-class stuff.
Like, I personally wanted to reach through the screen
and smack Don Johnson in the face.
Like, that's how you know you're a good villain.
Yeah, it's weird because they released this movie
the same weekend as The Perfect Couple
or The Perfect Couple, whatever it's called,
with Nicole Kidman and Liev Schreiber,
which don't think I didn't watch all six episodes of that too.
It was a really big Netflix weekend.
And The Perfect Couple was just like this new genre of TV
we've now created based on season one of Big Little Lies
where it's like rich people, a murder.
Oh, a famous actress.
Wait, there's a zag.
Who was the one who got murdered?
Oh, it's this person.
Oh, these people did it.
No, they didn't.
Oh, there's a big event.
And it's just, we're just AI-ing that now.
Like if people are afraid of AI,
watch Perfect Couple
because that's AI.
But then all of a sudden
decided it was a black comedy
in the end.
And my wife and I,
we watched all six episodes
and we're like,
what the fuck just happened?
Why did this show exist?
I still kind of
was mildly entertained by it.
But then Rebel Ridge
was, I thought,
really good in a movie
I would have paid to see in a movie.
Van, you would have paid to see that
in the movies, right?
Yeah, it would have been hard
to get me to go see it, though.
Yeah, that's the issue.
Because it didn't have a star
or you didn't like the theme?
Because it didn't have a star.
The movie looks kind of like paint by numbers
if you just look at the trailer.
It looks like the
you fucked with the wrong person movie,
which is what these movies come down to. And so the, even to make me watch it, like Chris wouldn't stop. Chris was,
Chris wouldn't let it go. Chris, like I've never seen Chris Ryan this excited over something.
This is like, if the, the, the Sixers won the championship, he was really like, man,
have you seen it the next day? Man, did you get a chance to watch it?
He's like, man, did you get a chance to see Rebel Ridge?
Like, he was really, and he
almost never- You didn't know Chris
during Den of Thieves, because it was like that
on fucking steroids and HGH
when Den of Thieves came out.
And his recommendations are always so good
for stuff that's van-coded that he knows
I'm going to like, so I had to check it out. But it would have been
hard for me to get, because I did not
hourly recognize Aaron Pierre.
And it would just have been tough
to get me to go to the theater to see the movie.
I might have seen it after word of mouth, but Netflix
was probably easier sell for a lot of people.
Would you put CR over me
with text recommendations of
pop culture content? I'd have
to think about it, but like CR...
God, this really hurts. But he goes
into the deep cuts though. See, he gives some things
that, like he goes, man,
Lioness, gotta see it.
And then I watch Lioness, and Lioness is
fantastic. You have never seen Lioness.
We're talking about the whole Taylor Sheridan
DNA connection here between
I know, but that's not fair. CR is just blind
season tickets for the Taylor Sheridan
universe. It's very true. Whatever that oil show is, it doesn't matter if it's good or not. CR is just blind season tickets for the Taylor Sheridan universe. It's very true.
Whatever that oil show is,
it doesn't matter if it's good or not.
CR is going to watch that one.
He's so fired up for Landman.
Are you guys up on Landman?
This is the next Taylor Sheridan show
that's coming out.
I don't know what the details of it are.
There's another Taylor Sheridan show
that's not the oil show?
Or is that the same show?
What's the show with Billy Bob Thornton
and Jon Hamm?
That's Landman.
Oh, so that's the oil show.
Yeah, yeah.
I like to pronounce it like Grantland, Landman.
Jon Hamm's evil billionaire oil guy
and Billy Bob Thornton's trying to keep it real
in the fields.
And Demi Moore's involved.
That's Landman.
I'll watch every episode just for the record.
Taylor is a fantastic storyteller he really is
um especially like the first season of yellowstone but how how many times can he go back to the well
with the super rich people are still discovering event i just talked to my dad this weekend we
we had our annual pre-jets conversation and we were like how you feeling how you feeling and
then he just spent the rest of the time, him and my stepmom telling
me that they knocked out 1883.
They knocked out 1923.
They're on the third season of Yellowstone and
they're thriving. They're trying to watch the Dutton saga
chronologically in order. Wow. Almost
like Godfather starting in the
1910s. Exactly. Oh, I
like that. And they were loving it.
Creative. Yeah.
He's figured it out. I think they're I it. Yeah, he's figured it out.
I think they're,
I don't understand how he's so prolific.
It doesn't make a lot of sense.
And it does feel like he's the guy from Limitless.
Like he found some sort of pill
that allows him to just write
every episode of five TV shows at the same time.
There's no other explanation.
Do you know what's funny about that?
Mentioning that,
I kind of feel that way in the opposite about about don johnson i wonder how bad don johnson wanted it
i don't know because and i'm not saying that he's like lazy or nothing i'm just saying that like
don johnson every time you see don johnson on screen you go you know i could have used more
don johnson like you you think about roles that don johnson could have played you know, I could have used more Don Johnson. Like, you think about roles that Don Johnson could have played,
you know, and to me, my favorite scene in Rebel Ridge
was when the Wi-Fi is out in the thing
and they're trying to figure out what the acronym means for him.
And, like, they're trying to figure out that he's a badass
and he's outside talking.
That is such a well-played scene.
And Don Johnson has this thing where he
does it in the scene where you can't think of another actor who would have done it like that.
And it's like right there. But I don't know if he wanted to, in that era of hyper-competitive
Hollywood star, it doesn't seem like he was out there trying to be everywhere at one time.
It seemed like he was very selective and he picked and choose a little bit.
I got to say, that's one of the best modern versions,
uses of the internet in a movie I've ever seen, where in that moment you're talking about,
when they see MCMAP,
or it's the Marine Corps Martial Arts Program,
and the female cop is looking at the Wikipedia,
and she's like,
uh-oh,
I think his picture's on the Wikipedia.
I was like,
wow,
we are in.
This guy is the man.
I followed Don Johnson on Instagram.
Seems like he's got a great life.
He lives somewhere warm and sunny.
He's unlike wife number four.
They have a kid who played high school basketball.
He does walk and talks.
Really?
Yeah.
He just seems he'll post pictures of him having coffee.
He lives somewhere warm in California.
And it just seems like he has a great life. I mean, when you're Sonny Crockett for five years, what else is next? You were the
greatest TV cop I think of all time. I have him number one still, Sonny Crockett. He's above us.
Bill, I got to confess something to you. You never watched Miami Vice?
No, I have. I've seen it. I'm not as into it as you, but I understand it's important to you. But
no, four months ago, you were like, you need to start doing walk and talks when you get out of
movies. You need to do the movie bites, instant reaction.
I wanted to do that.
Yeah, what's that pizza?
The Dave Portnoy pizza show.
The one bite, one take.
Sean, do one take.
He just comes in 50 seconds, just hot on a movie.
I was kidding, by the way.
When you said it to me, I was so mad.
I was like, you would degrade me
and make me an animal on social media.
And then honestly, the last few times I've seen a
movie I was like Bill was really onto something I should be doing
walk and talks outside the movie theater
Sean you should do it with the
people
yeah right outside
the theater with the
building behind you and you just
grab a viewer and it's like alright it's time for
one take Sean Fennessey
hey guys Cinema Sean here outside the marquee
at the Grove. I'm here with the people. We just
saw Beetlejuice, Beetlejuice. Guys, what'd you think?
I would
watch every episode.
What was the title I had though? It wasn't
one take. It was
something like that. I can't remember. It was good.
I was really mad when you said it. I was like, you must think
I'm such a schmuck, but you were right as usual.
Well, I just, you see how many movies a week?
20?
No, not that. A lot. I see a lot of movies a week.
10, 12?
Sean's a man.
The fact that you were trying to get this motherfucker
to walk around
No, I wasn't. I was joking.
But I knew it.
I planted the seed. I knew it would buck him.
It did annoy me. When does it end bill sean sean what 2024 movie are you the most excited for van and i to see
maybe even together we were just talking about saturday night and i i do really want you both
to see that i'm very interested you know bill you're a you are a shaman a guru of saturday
night live history so i don't
too much if i could remove one thing from my brain that probably like if it like if your brain's an
iphone and it gets filled up and you can't you don't want to buy any more hard drive stuff for
your brain i would remove a lot of my saturday night live knowledge there's nothing to do with
it i have nobody to talk to about it just this just to set your expectations they do put a lot
of stuff that all doesn't happen in that first night into the movie.
There's a bunch of SNL history,
but I thought it was a pretty cool movie.
I mean, you know, I haven't seen Gladiator 2,
but I'm ready for Gladiator 2 to take over.
I've talked to two people who've seen it
and they were like, get fucking ready.
Really?
Oh.
Really?
Interesting.
Yes.
One person I really trust, too.
I would have bet that that would have been a letdown in some kind of way i mean maybe i'm hyping it up too much for people now but i heard
i was told get ready okay wow how old's ridley scott now 84 oh my god i think he's older than
biden wow yeah older than biden should he run on the Democratic ticket you think Ridley
Was not born in the US
Unfortunately
Gladiator 2
What about that Selena Gomez movie
I saw that Emilia Perez
I saw it at Telluride
It was interesting it's a movie that is about
The Desaparcidos
In Mexico and is also a musical
And is also a trans coming of age story and is also a musical and is also a trans coming-of-age story
and is also a movie about a lawyer.
So it's a whole lot of movie, guys.
Damn.
Complicated movie.
She's getting some best actress buzz,
I noticed.
I don't think that's going to happen.
Zoe Saldana, though,
she of Lioness,
is in that movie, too.
And she's dope.
She's really good.
Hey, Van,
was Rebel Ridge the movie you always
wanted michael b jordan to make uh it's funny it i thought about what i thought about was so
you know john boyega leaves the film like he basically just like checked out of his hotel
and just like walked away right that's what they what they said. They cast Aaron Pierre in two weeks.
Like within two weeks, he was on the film.
And you can tell, right?
Because that might be another reason
why some of the action scenes
aren't like super well choreographed
and he's not doing like high level martial arts
and all of that stuff
because he's really a ground and pound type of guy.
Normally it takes a little while
to train you up to do all of that.
But I was thinking,
if you lose John Boyega, what made them go right to Aaron Pierre?
Like what made them say, OK, we know we got this guy. What made them go right to him?
I was thinking about other guys that could have been in that role.
And if that's the kind of role that like if if Mike or another actor of that ilk like kills that role,
it really does a lot for their profile.
I mean, that's a star-making term for him, if you ask me.
I'm now interested in him.
He carried a whole movie kinetically and really showed a lot of dimensions.
So I don't know why some of the actors,
some of the Black actors stateside,
they don't really trust him with roles like that.
The thing I've been saying about
the Rebel Ridge in particular is that it's a
Steven Seagal movie with a New Yorker subscription.
It's a movie that
is really, really smart,
but is basically just, there's
an indestructible force that is
barreling through this town.
And that's not really it.
There are a few actors who pursued those.
Speaking of Netflix, Chris Hemsworth has the Extraction movies.
They're somewhat similar.
You know, like, there's sort of like, there's a man on a mission.
He's been wronged somehow, and he's got to get to the end of the game.
But there are hard parts to do.
You know, like, it's not easy to carry a story like that and make it seem credible.
The fact that we bought into Steven Seagal for like 10 years doing that, it's kind of amazing.
Oh, I'm still buying.
Shooter with Mark Wahlberg's like that.
The Marine with John Cena might've watched that a couple of times.
Underrated movie to me,
man.
Yeah.
Shooter is pretty ridiculous.
I mean,
you know,
but it,
that,
that's a fun,
fun movie.
All right.
But don't,
don't be smirks to God.
Oh,
Hey,
anybody seen Richie?
Yeah. How dare you anybody know
why richie did bobby lupo sagal was elite ask that why he's beating people up i'm like sagal
was the man sean was like ruiz with brock purdy on sagal meanwhile sagal was elite all sagal did
was win games he just went 13 and 4 every year for like seven years he He's made 1.7 good movies, in my opinion.
Hold on.
Let's take a quick break.
And then I want to talk about the Sopranos doc.
Now it's time for a special part of today's episode sponsored by NFL Sunday Ticket on
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So I asked Van to watch The Sopranos.
Two-part
documentary that's on HBO. It's about David
Chase. It's called Wiseguy. I love The Sopranos.
It's my
one of my three favorite TV shows.
I'm not ready to make a list, but
it's in whatever. What are the other two? It's The Wire
and what? No? Is it
The Wire? white shadow is still
up there for me just because it was my first favorite one sopranos wire curb larry sanders
there's a bunch but say it's on it's on the short list and i thought i knew everything about the
show and then alex gave me this documentary about it and starts out slow for like 20-25 minutes and
then once we start into the making of the show and the
auditions, all of a sudden it becomes like the most entertaining doc. And I was just really into
it. So I'm probably on the highest end. I think Sean's lower and Van, where are you?
Um, I thought it was fantastic. I think that I was able to like, uh, take a little bit of the early stuff a little bit more because you had warned
me because if I'd have thought in any way that I was going to sit down and no
disrespect to the man and watch like an hour and a half on David Chase,
I would have been like,
live it.
Right.
Yeah.
But it's so imperative that the documentary does that because I was actually
unaware of what a biography,
the Sopranos was for him.
And it was,
you needed that context.
But the minute that you see,
I don't know.
I just don't care.
I love the show so much.
The minute that you see 10 different guys reading for Chris and you see
actors that you recognize other other Italian-American stereotypical actors,
like every mob dude that had been in a movie
that you had seen past, present, or future
trying to read for each one of these parts,
and you can see Michael Imperioli there
and why he nails it,
and you can see the moment in David Chase's head
that he goes, that's Chris.
The entire thing was like a narcotic.
Well, how about they do Livia, Tony's mom.
They show a bunch of people doing for Tony's part.
Who clearly didn't understand the character, right?
Like Nancy Marchand clearly understood what they were going for.
And you just see how the show could have gone wrong.
And it almost gives you a little anxiety too.
Like,
they could have made
one wrong decision
it seems like
and the Sopranos
wouldn't have been the Sopranos.
It's like,
the show gets you high.
That,
so,
that like 25 minute sequence
alone,
Sean,
was why I would recommend
this doc for
literally anybody
who likes this show.
I thought when they were
showing the auditions,
we've seen that stuff.
Some of those auditions for movies we like
and TV shows are on YouTube.
I've never seen it cut that way
where it's like you're just watching all these people
and then the person, it's like,
oh, he's going to get Michael Imperioli.
He's going to get it.
But the way they cut it,
it's like, oh, this is why he got it.
I understand.
There's pieces of Christopher,
just him in that room.
I thought that was so fascinating. Have you ever seen anything pull that off quite like that? 90 minutes and it's cut together pretty tightly and not everybody sits for it and they just had
an incredible treasure trove i think in part because the show as the doc like really really
smartly positions is this is the show that changed tv like it's something that you hear people say
but you don't realize until you hear chris albrecht talking about where hbo was at the time
until you hear david chase talking about how he feels completely unshackled from writing this show the way that he had to write all these network TV shows that he was writing
beforehand. Yeah. So you get to see that like in the casting, they get to make different choices.
Like the Nancy Marchand stuff is so cool because she has this consciousness of her persona as an
actress where she's always playing this buttoned up woman. You know, she's always playing this
kind of prim and proper woman and she's been being
asked to cut loose
and be basically the
villain of this show
and be this kind of
like woman who never
gets out of her
nightgown, who's kind
of raging against her
son.
Nagging Italian.
Yeah, yeah.
So, I mean, all that
stuff is great.
I personally, my
favorite stuff, though,
was the stuff that you
guys were a little bit
bumped on at the
beginning, the chase
stuff, because it's just really unusual
to watch somebody who has been so therapized.
Like, he's been in so much therapy
basically be forced,
almost against his will,
to recite his therapy
to a camera and Alex Gibney.
Like, I didn't think that the convention
of being in the chair necessarily
was perfect between him and Gibney,
but the stuff that he had to say about how he put his life into
that show.
And then also in the making of the show, how he forced his psychology onto his writing
staff and onto his actors.
And this sense that this unease between him and Gandolfini, this unease between him and
Robin Green, this unease between people not really knowing where he stood, like him basically
being Tony, the way that he led, the knowing where he stood. Him basically being Tony,
the way that he led, the way that
he was brilliant, the way that he was flawed,
this mirror of his greatest creation
and the way that he worked,
I thought was so cool to see.
Some of the stuff I knew,
I thought you put that well, by the way.
Some of the stuff I knew, like HBO
trusting Chase's vision
and ultimately hitting this point
where they're like,
fuck it.
Make the show you want to make.
We got to trust this person,
which has been a hallmark of HBO's strategy
really ever since,
where they're just like,
here's one guy.
There's no consensus.
There's not six people giving notes.
We're just going to trust this person's vision.
We believe in it.
I thought that part was cool.
I thought the episode five,
which I knew a lot about already
when they go to college
and Tony's going to kill somebody
and witness protection
and how horrified HBO was by that.
And they had the two executives,
Chris Albrecht and Carolyn Strauss.
Basically like, you can't do this.
Nobody was ever going to like this person again. You can't have them commit a murder. And he's like, no, you can't do this. Nobody is ever going to like this person again.
You can't have them commit a murder.
And he's like, no, you don't understand.
He has to commit a murder.
This show's about a mob.
He's got to do this.
He's a bad guy.
And then they find this uneasy alliance of,
all right, well, the bad guy has to,
the guy that he's killing has to maybe
do something to make him a little more menacing
and then it's okay.
But Carolyn Strauss said, when you hit that kind of impasse with a show creator,
you kind of just have to go with it, which I thought was a really cool point. Cause I think a lot of networks would have fucked that part up and be like, no, no, he's not killing somebody.
If he doesn't kill that person, that episode, the rest of the show can't happen the same way. Um,
and then the other, the other thing Van was
Chase at some point could have
probably ended the show quicker and made
movies
and I thought the part two of the doc
was about he kind of
realized this was his
this was it this was
this was the thing he was kind of put
on earth to do and the seed of the end
and this was going to be his legacy.
And he just said, fuck it.
I love this universe.
I don't want to leave it.
And he kept going.
But I couldn't believe that he had never thought
about putting an end on it
until Chris Albrecht, the executive, was like,
hey, have you thought about how this is going to wrap up?
Was he just going to keep going and going?
I don't know.
Those are my biggest revelations. What'd you take from it, Van? Well, number one, I just thought it was
interesting when you put his career in context of like when The Sopranos comes out, right?
Because you know, like that conceit where the cop walks into his captain's office and he goes, hey, I can go get this guy,
but you got to let me do it my way. And then they turn him loose and then he goes and he conquers.
That doesn't really happen in real life, right? In real life, you got to work with a lot of
different people. But this guy was this guy telling his story his way and he was able to
clear everybody out.
And he was not a powerful television figure before that.
He was kind of a guy that was on his last chance before he went and did something else.
And he was able to tell his story in exactly his way, and it became this huge, huge deal.
And he seemed kind of prickly to work with, too, which made it even harder.
Totally.
It did not seem like some of that stuff bro i some of the
stuff where they showed them on set and he's talking to the actors it did not seem like they
were having very much fun when they were talking to david chase yeah it didn't seem like that but
everything about the show that i didn't know because i started watching the sopranos when
i'm 19 and it seemed like automatically everything was perfect when you saw saw James Gandolfini as Tony Soprano,
you go, oh, okay, I've seen that guy a bunch of times.
It's time for that guy to get his shot.
You know what I mean?
Like that guy's in True Romance,
that guy's in Get Shorty.
Oh, it makes sense that somebody gave him something
where he's the guy now.
The Mexican.
Right, right.
Where all of this stuff had to happen
for all of it to kind of work out
in this really serendipitous way.
It's just it's not an accident. Like it's it's timing, but it's also a lot of hard work and a lot goes into it.
And the show could have very easily been bad. I think the weight of the show.
And how that became evident to the cast after a while, everyone thought they were just doing another mob thing.
Everyone thought that they were doing some sort of,
they were buttoning up the great era of mob content that's really over now, right?
Yeah.
Like almost an homage or one last gasp of it.
But then the weight of the show became evident to them
as they read more scripts,
as they got deeper into their character, as they understood just how genius and brilliant the execution of the show was and what that meant to all of the actors and how that changed their lives.
It's like very inspiring.
The best documentaries to me are the ones that make me go, hey, I want to be like that guy, or hey, I never want to be like that guy.
Right?
That inspires some type of emotion out of you.
And it really deepened my appreciation
for The Sopranos.
And, you know,
I do a rewatch per year,
and now I'm going to get started early.
Normally I start over the holidays,
but I'm going to do it now.
Yeah, that's how I felt as well.
It deepened my appreciation for a show
that I already really, really, really loved.
There was stuff that I learned so many things that I didn't know, like little subtle stuff,
like the cast reading the scripts worried that this was the episode where they were going to
get knocked out of the show and how they tried to lobby for him to basically not kill big pussy
because they liked the guy. I get him a season two. And, um,
even stuff like Chase,
that little,
little tidbit about how HBO called it 6A and 6B
instead of a seven season
because they would have had to give everybody raises.
It's like,
shit,
man,
he's still pissed about this
18,
19 years later.
Um,
the Gandolfini stuff I thought was incredible.
And I've always been fascinated by him.
I read all the major Soprano books and pieces
and it just seemed like it got really complicated
the second half of the show with him
as he was just putting too much of himself
into the character
and putting too much of the character into himself.
And I thought what Van said earlier
about how Chase was,
or Sean, you said it,
Chase was putting pieces of,
he's basically like a little bit the mayor of Tony,
but then Gandolfini was also the mayor of Tony.
So you have three different people
that are all kind of the same crazy,
volatile, up and down, fucked up person.
And they're all steering the ship that has 250 people.
I didn't know a lot of that stuff.
Did you know that stuff, Sean?
Not nearly as much.
I think I always understood that there was this uneasy alliance,
this tension between Gandolfini and Chase's creation
and Chase's point of view on the character.
One, the image of him giving the eulogy
at the funeral
is devastating.
Like that moment
is so painful.
Just incredible stuff.
It's so sad.
And there's one other
really interesting
Gandolfini moment
which is that,
you know,
that moment when he,
it's revealed that he has been
holding out in contract negotiations
but when he comes back
and he finally comes to a deal
he gives each of the cast members
$30,000.
But then they ask Edie Falco on camera and she's like, I didn't know that.
Which means she didn't get $30,000 from James Gandolfini.
Where I was like, hmm.
Like Gandolfini was a complicated guy, you know?
And he seemed to have complicated relationships.
That's obviously one of the, not just like one of the signature TV performances, but like one of the signature character creations.
Like you can put that with, you know,
uh,
actors on stage,
great cinematic performances.
Like Tony Soprano resonates so deeply in the consciousness of culture,
but he and chase as open as chase is about so much in his life.
You still don't totally get to the bottom of what it was between them.
He doesn't totally put to words what their
union was, where their
dissenting moments were.
How tormented it was.
I felt like Chase was
holding back in the interview, didn't you?
There was some stuff he wanted to say that he was like,
that guy's dead now. I'm not going to say this.
Yeah, he
seemed really conflicted about it. The eulogy
had never been shown
nobody
it's not on YouTube nobody had seen it
and it's so raw and so emotional
and you could see like
you know I also I'd forgotten
that they made the movie together in 2012
so it was this guy
that he had this crazy complicated relationship
with and yet he still couldn't quit him and he decides
to make a movie and it's like you know I needed my movie
James Gandolfini the guy that had this crazy thing
he's so good in that movie and i love that movie i have to say i've always loved we were working
together when the movie came out bill i remember i wrote about the movie for grantland because i
was like no one cares about this and i think this is such an interesting film not fade away it's
called and it's still like basically ignored even though it's him doing the other half of his
interests it's him doing 1960s american rock and roll culture plus like european filmmaking styles though that though
that stuff is all in the sopranos but it's all layered underneath mob stuff that that band was
just describing this kind of end of an era stuff i for me movie dork that i am i love that he was
always filtering that stuff into The Sopranos.
The Sopranos is a weird show.
It's a really unusually structured and told show.
You know, Lorraine Bracco's interview
was really good too.
I didn't, maybe I knew this and forgot
that they wanted her for Carmelo
and she wanted to zag
because she felt like she had already played that character
and wanted to be Melfi.
But she tells that whole story about the rape episode
and how she stopped reading it.
And she's like, why would you do this?
Why would you do this to my character?
And he's like, just keep reading, keep reading.
And that choice and that final word
and everything the way that was constructed,
I thought that her fork in the road moment
is like, that's probably a top three Sopranos episode,
but it's also easily
the most difficult one to watch.
I didn't even like
when they were showing the
clips from it
in the documentary.
The other one that I thought was,
it just shows how crazy Chase was,
was he would get these people together.
He would throw out
their first five best ideas
because he felt like
the sixth idea was like,
what is that formula? Take their first five best ideas because he felt like the sixth idea was like, what is that formula?
Take your first five ideas.
They're going to suck from six on.
That's one will go.
They would write on a whiteboard all night.
He would get up, add to it, and then wake up three hours later and just wipe off the
whiteboard.
It just sounded like, Ben, we've talked about this sometimes when now in the 2020s, everybody's rightly so trying to be a lot more functional in a work environment and, you know, have a lot less stress and a lot less discord.
And yet you see this show and it's like this show was a fucking maniac show to work on.
And it led to true greatness.
Right.
And then you think, like, was that one of the reasons it was truly great? I mean, we're probably going to get watered down art because we're, I mean, just the reality of it.
You know, we're going to elevate citizenry and citizenship and people, but we're going to get watered down art because there's a certain madness that goes along with it and there was one part in the first part of
the documentary where you can track the show literally physically with the change in james
gandolfini right he like becomes this brute when the when the show first starts he's dashing almost
like to the to the degree that he could be but as the show moves on his fingers get
fatter he gets balder he becomes tony soprano the volume of his breathing goes up throughout
yes i always know that yeah it's almost like the shining with jack torrance like by the end of it
he's just in a fucking bathrobe on a show of himself just strangling people right
yeah and like there's a clip from inside the actor's studio where uh lipton's talking to him
and he starts to answer the question and the crowd starts to laugh they think he's doing tony soprano
but he's not he's just talking like there's a point where and that's another source of the friction that's a
point where he completely rests the character away from what it was before and it starts to
become more in line with like who and what he is and i really feel like that happened to everybody
else as much i feel like for for everyone else uh around it they were sort of in his orbit and they were circling around the weight of what he was doing.
But like he got it got a lot darker that I can't even remember the episode.
I can't point to the episode where Tony becomes a complete total asshole where he completely breaks bad because I keep reaching for Tony Soprano throughout the entire
season. I'm looking for the shred of goodness in him no matter what. I know what he's been through.
I know he has mental health issues. I know he had a fucked up relationship with his father,
with his mother, his sisters out there. So no matter how bad he gets, I keep searching for the good in him,
like to the very end. Like I believe like Tony is outwardly racist. You guys know how I am about
this. And it's one of the funniest scenes in the history of the show. The guy is standing there
looking at Tony and Tony is being- Oh, Meadows' boyfriend.
Meadows' boyfriend, right? He's being outwardly racist towards him.
And I kind of give him a pass.
I understand him a little bit.
I mean, I don't.
I'm like, Tony's a racist,
but I'm kind of like,
it's Tony Soprano.
Because there are other situations
where you see him getting along with...
It's complicated.
He's complicated
and more than any other character
i buy into his complication and bro we don't do complicated well anymore yeah we do either you're
a good we you're a good person or you're a bad person you're you're trash or you're cool you're
canceled or you're active the complicated characters we don't do them anymore and the
complicated people we don't really do them well anymore.
They show us the Gloria Trillo stuff too
in the documentary.
And that part of that show
is as far to the edge, I think,
as I've gone with Tony.
Where, you know, he's so violent
and so hateful towards her.
But also the show is sort of like,
this woman is also crazy.
This woman is also unwell.
And so the show is kind of... Yeah, they're just crazy. This woman is also unwell. And so the show is kind of...
Yeah, they're just bad for each other.
Yeah, and they're so destructive.
But he keeps finding himself in all these destructive situations.
So it is him really who is the cause.
He's kind of seeking it out.
Yeah, exactly.
So he's searching for his mother.
But you get it, though.
It's like they've done enough of the groundwork for you to...
It's like a reverse Luke arc
like Luke comes from being a guy
I don't know anything by the time Jedi
comes around Luke can do
everything Tony actually starts
out kind of benevolent
and ends up Darth Vader
but you understand
but he was always Darth Vader
I think is part of the point of the show
it kind of rope-a-dopes us with the first few episodes. It was always
in there. But see, it was always in there, but
I'm not sure if he was always Darth Vader.
I think he had to make a choice
as more was hoist upon him. Because think about it.
Tremendous loss.
You know, Jackie dies.
There's all of this.
There's a power struggle.
He had to kind of do... Well, his family tried to put a hit on him.
I think that was probably the freaking bad moment, right?
Right.
And so I think he has to...
I think he gets...
He has almost a second adolescence, I'd say,
during the show as he grows from mafia kid,
capo to boss.
And by the time he becomes Thanos,
he doesn't feel like there's anyone
who can touch him or hurt him.
You know, the reason I was always,
like I'll always defend Tony,
not that they need my defense,
but every decision he made on that show,
and I think this was one of the things that comes across in documentary that Chase was passionate about and Gandolfini
was passionate about. The decision was always authentic to Tony, the character and what he
would do. And I remember like even sex in the city, which is a show with way lower stakes
had that season when, uh, when Carrie Bradshaw starts having an affair with Mr. Big when he's married and gets caught and Mr.
Big's wife falls and breaks her tooth.
And it was just,
you just kind of never looked at her the same.
Cause it was like,
I listened at you.
I thought you were Bill.
I don't know.
I thought you were,
well,
I thought you were a different character than this.
Carrie Bradshaw.
I believe in you.
Wait, wait, wait. You like the Manolo block? Bill, What's that to you, Bill? I believed in you. Wait, what?
You like the Manolo Blahnik?
Bill, you're on.
I want to get Glee here.
What was that?
I'm like, listen to you.
Okay.
I didn't realize.
Here's the thing.
From an authenticity standpoint,
Manolo Blahnik, Bill, that's good.
I thought they did it because
it was a good arc for the season
and not because it was authentic to that character.
I didn't think she would do that.
And I think with Tony, the entire time in The Sopranos,
all the decisions that he made, I was like,
yeah, he would do that.
Yeah, I get that.
And Breaking Bad was the same way.
You understood the methodology behind their decisions.
And if you can nail that all the way through a series, that's, I think, the
hardest thing to do. That's why Breaking
Bad did it. Mad Men, when Mad Men started
to get a little rocky there in the last part of the
show, it was because we were like,
I don't understand what Don Draper's
doing here. He's kind of all over the map.
He's doing this, now he's doing this. And I
always felt like that Tony was authentic.
Can we talk about the season finale stuff?
I mean, the last episode?
Can I say one thing that still gets me about Tony, though?
Just one thing.
Yeah, go ahead.
Killing Chris.
I guess I get it.
But I was still aghast.
And every time I watch it, I still
am like, that was a hell
of a decision right there.
I don't know if
I sometimes totally buy
that he would have made just the
snap decision to kill Chris like that.
I don't think it was a snap decision, though.
I think it was building
up to that for 20 episodes.
He was like, this guy's a bad apple.
He's going to continue to haunt my life.
And I have a chance to just eradicate this now.
I think it's consistent.
Because eventually it's going to be me or him.
Yeah, it's consistent with what happens in mob culture as well.
I don't think that that's such a leap.
I think the other thing too is Chase was always very direct,
even in interviews at the time, that he was like,
Tony Soprano is evil he kills people
for money like you do not lose
sight of the fact that even though
you love him and even though Gandolfini is a
you know such a compelling and in many
ways lovable character
he's evil this is this is the
this is the absolute darkest
layer of society that we are portraying in
this movie it doesn't mean you can't have empathy for the experiences
that he's had as a person, but don't
lose sight of the fact that he will kill his own family
to protect himself.
So, you know, I never really
bumped on any of that stuff in the show when I was watching
it because I was like,
he's a figure
of Satan, really, in a lot of ways.
Well, the one line he wouldn't cross was
he is at one moment, I think the show's
called Night Cat,
when they had that great argument with Carmella.
And he puts his hand up like he's going to hit her
and then he ends up just punching the wall
over and over again,
which they show in the documentary.
It's like the one line he won't cross,
he even hits AJ.
I guess he would never hit Meadow,
but that's, you know,
but he'll basically,
he's going to,
on the bingo card of bad TV people, he's going to do all of the bad things, but that seemed you know but he'll he'll basically he's gonna on the bingo card of bad
tv people he's gonna do all the bad things but that seemed to be the one line they would never
cross on the show the season finale um which came out 17 years ago and now i really like
and it really made me mad when it happened i thought they did a nice job of uh
framing some of the decisions some of the did a nice job of framing some of the decisions,
some of the behind-the-scenes stuff,
some of the cinematography they did.
But I forget what the second director,
I thought he made the key point when he was basically saying,
this is art.
You want people to keep talking about art after it's over.
Every TV show just ends and 20 minutes later, you move on to
something else. And David didn't want to do that. And I was like, holy shit, what a great way to put
it. Because we're still talking about it 17 years later. I got in an argument with Sal about it six
months ago. Because Sal's still mad 17 years later. But has that moved up the rankings for you, Sean?
That last episode? i liked it at the
time even if i didn't totally understand what he was doing um i find it is the documentary does a
really good job i think of effectively like recreating those final seven or eight minutes
of that episode which are so compelling and the way that it's cut and you're sort of like always
looking around the corner of the frame to try to figure out what's going to happen next in the way it lingers on the guy who goes into the bathroom
you know the way that the door is always opening into the diner the tension in that in that framing
is just a great filmmaking right so set aside the fact that we don't actually quote unquote find out
what happens to tony or his family it's so so so well done and then i think the way you framed
it bill is exactly
right, which is like, it's still interesting to pick apart and to think about and to try to better
understand. And I think that the show is so emblematic of the shift in television to a kind
of ambiguity and a moral gray that we weren't ready to accept something that didn't say either
this guy died or the show got canceled and we'll
never know what's going to happen to them this was something effectively totally new and the show was
often compared to great novels and that was like the ending of a great novel that there was a kind
of like um interpretive quality to it that holds up to this day so i i really really like it i'm
very pro the madman finale personally i did it did it with Greenwald on Stick to Landing. I still think that's right up there in the conversation, to your point. But the last couple of scenes, that I deserved a payoff.
That after making me, you know, Meadows trying to park a car and all of this stuff is happening.
I'm like, my God, my heart is racing.
Like something's going on.
Then it just goes off.
I'm like, oh man, you're fucking with me.
And that's something that the show would never do.
The show didn't used to do that.
It didn't use to fuck with you in that way and also i think that the dna of the show being so grounded in you know mob culture and depictions
of that you always get a resolution when you're watching something in the mafia somebody goes to
jail somebody gets killed uh somebody or somebody rats out everybody else and goes into witness
somebody rats out everyone else sofia coppola's character is mercifully killed.
And so you always get it.
But here you didn't get that.
You didn't get an out.
You didn't get a morality lesson.
Like in funny games when he goes,
hey, the minute that the guy picks up the,
the remote and rewinds the TV that you guys should have cut the movie off
because you know that there's no way that these people can survive now.
And you're just watching to see how they die.
And I'm like,
don't indict me.
You made the move.
Like,
you know what I mean?
And so with the Sopranos,
you're looking for some kind of resolution. That's going to make you either feel better about the world that you just devoted six years to or eight years to or worse about it. And you don't get it. You get what you get in life, which is. There it is. like everyone dies and nothing is clear like that's and right like you yeah like it's you
you get that i mean just it's how it happens and and they don't bail you out um and so you
you have to make a decision for yourself why the sopranos was so good to you like why you
why tony uh resonated so much with you why you wanted to see the villain win why you care so
much about his family.
They don't give it to you.
They don't give you the big bad wolf.
Like they don't give it to you.
And like at first as a younger man,
I needed it.
Now I really appreciate that they didn't do it
because that's not the way the world works.
I've also rewatched this show.
I think I've done three or four rewatches at this point
that I really appreciate now how many things they threw into that final episode that were either callbacks to stuff from earlier or full circle stuff.
And they did a good job in the documentary pointing out like he says in season one, he has the toast to the family when the power's out at Artie's restaurant.
And he says like,
hey, it's about,
it's the little things.
These are the good moments right here.
And then in the last episode,
AJ brings that up.
He's like, didn't you say once
it's all about the little moments,
the good moments?
Those are, that's what,
and Tony's like,
oh, did I say that?
I don't even remember.
And you realize like,
oh, this guy's been full of shit the whole time.
That was great.
Had you put that together before?
I hadn't put that together.
I did the fourth rewatch, I finally realized.
But it's, I mean, to expect somebody to get that
in the final episode in 2007
when the show's been on for eight years,
like, nobody's going to get that.
Yeah, it's really cool.
But I thought that was pretty neat.
And the other thing I never noticed,
but he pointed it out,
was how Tony kept entering his own POV
and how they filmed it that way
where he kept going in
and how the stuff that Chase had seen over the years
that kind of shaped that.
I thought that was pretty cool.
It was nerdy filmmaking.
But anyway, I thought it was worth watching. It was nerdy filmmaking. Anyway, I thought it was worth
watching. I wish they had interviewed more
people. I wish it had been three parts,
not two, but for the Sopranos.
Dan, I'm feeling another rewatch
coming on. I haven't
done it since summer of 2022.
I don't do a full
rewatch in some capacity
every year. Sometimes I don't do a full rewatch, but in some capacity every year. Sometimes I don't do like a full rewatch,
but I get to a point to where there's really,
the reason why I rewatch it all the time and The Wire too,
is because there's so much content that it makes me actually less selective.
You pick up new stuff, yeah.
Yeah.
Oh, new content that's, yeah.
No, no, no, no.
So what I'm saying is there's so much content.
When I put on HBO Max
right
I get paralyzed
by all the choices
and I go
I'm just gonna watch
The Wire season 3
like
you know
my wife put it
she said this before
it's not a new point
but when we were
watching the documentary
last night
because I made her
watch it with me
and she was like
you know
really miss these people
we haven't done a rewatch in a couple years like I feel like all these people are my friends and she was like, you know, really miss these people. We haven't done a rewatch in a couple
of years. Like, I feel like all these people are my friends. And she said that there's certain TV
shows like that, where you're like, I'm getting together with my friends again. Christopher's
back in my life. And, uh, I thought it was a good way to put it. And I thought that was one of the
reasons the sex in the city crushed on Netflix. Cause people are like, oh yeah, I miss these four.
Let's I'll run these back.
I think that's a hard place for a TV show to get to.
What's weird is The Sopranos,
one of the most violent show about an evil character.
You wouldn't think those were friends.
Same thing for The Wire.
It's like, this is a world you wouldn't think you'd be like,
oh, these are all my friends. But that's kind of how I feel about The Wire too.
Anyway, all right, Sean, we're letting you go.
You have stuff to do. Van, you're sticking around. We've got one more segment.
Thanks, Bill. Go Mets.
Thanks, Sean.
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All right, since we have Van on the pod, we got to rip through a couple topics. Dionne, visit bhp.com slash better future.
All right, since we have Van on the pod,
we got to rip through a couple topics.
Deion, Colorado, go.
Getting as bad as it could possibly get right now.
You predicted this this summer.
Yeah, it just didn't seem like a lot of the issues that were present on the team from last year
had actually been fixed.
And you're looking at the same stuff.
You're looking at offensive line problems.
You're looking at defensive line problems.
You're looking at the inability to cover.
The team is, of course, very top heavy.
I'm not saying anything that anybody hasn't said.
And even some of the guys that broke out in the first game of the season,
like Jimmy Horn, did not do really that much against Nebraska.
It seems like in a situation with him,
he really shows out against lesser competition,
against competition where guys can cover,
and maybe the scheme is better.
He has some problems.
But more so to the point now,
when you look at Colorado,
I'm starting to see stuff
that maybe I didn't see as much last season,
like on the field.
Like Travis Hunter in that game against Nebraska,
where they were thoroughly dominated,
seemed like he was fed up.
Like he wasn't actually believing.
Because one thing I will say
is for all the struggles that they had last year,
you saw some cracks and stuff like that
in terms of the coaching staff and stuff.
But the team seemed like they had a great bond between them.
It seemed like they were a great bond between them. It seemed like they were
okay with one another.
There was always some
different dust-ups and you heard stuff coming up,
but it wasn't until the summer that you got
all this
information about just how fractured the
locker room could be or might be.
So now you have to wonder what's going to happen
with the Colorado experiment. And you have to
wonder where it's going.
Why do people care so much?
Because it's interesting.
If you had to condense it down in one sentence, why do people care about this team that's basically a below 500 college football team?
Because we love Deion Sanders.
There are a couple of people in every sporting generation that rise to the level
of mythic figure. And Deion Sanders is one of those people. Deion Sanders is a guy that like,
you know, locked down one half of the whole field, becomes a huge pop culture star.
Primetime. He's great at baseball. He's great at football. He's a generational athlete,
but he's not just a generational athlete. He's a generational talker. He's a generational
cultural figure. He's a generational style figure. He just means something to someone.
And then to see Deion Sanders' maturation when he's finished with his playing career
and he becomes a leader and a man of God and a family man and a father,
you just believe that Deion will win at whatever Deion
decides to do. And he will win. Deion Sanders will win. What will happen is this. Colorado,
Travis Hunter will get drafted high. Shadu will get drafted high. Deion Sanders will walk away
with Colorado, from Colorado, tens of millions of dollars richer than what he was
when he got there. And his son will go to the NFL and his adoptive son will go to the NFL.
Deion Sanders will win. The question is whether or not Colorado will win, whether or not they
will be markedly better off after Deion Sanders leaves. Besides the financial, I'm talking about
on the football field, and I don't think that they will be. I liked it last year. We talked about it a year
ago because I just hate the college sports infrastructure. I was so excited. Somebody
was coming in and was just like, fuck this and just blowing it up and zagging in the hardest
possible way. And I was like, I hope this works. And now a year later, it feels like we're headed toward
what you just laid out. It's going to get a couple of kids drafted. He's going to leave.
I don't know what's next for him. What's next for him?
I mean, it depends. If he wanted to continue to be a college coach,
remember he had great success at Jackson State for what they were doing at Jackson State, right?
He won the SWAT twice. So it's not like he hasn't ever been successful as a college coach. If he wants to
continue to be a college coach and broken record, everybody's saying this, it would take the
demonstration of building a program that maintains a competitive and structural consistency that people can believe in.
Deion Sanders and Matt Rule came in at the same time.
He beat Matt Rule last year.
He beat Matt Rule last year because Matt Rule is the coach of Nebraska.
He beat Matt Rule last year because Nebraska turned the ball over a lot.
Also, there was a little fool's gold in there.
But now when you look at the team, one team was essentially 28 points better.
The game was 28-10, but it wasn't that close.
One team was way better in the trenches at doing the little things, made less mistakes,
the entire nine.
So it seems that one way is winning over the other way.
So Deion Sanders would have to prove that he could really do this at this level.
And he just hasn't proven that yet.
He's proven that he can be noticed, that he can be disruptive, that he can garner headlines, that he can win in spots or have success in spots.
But he has yet to prove that he can win consistently at that level.
And it's just a fact.
Yeah, you're basically running your own little mini corporation.
Yeah. I mean, a little harder than where he was at the first job.
There are all kinds of guys, right? Like for example, Marcus Freeman right now at, at,
at Notre Dame, great young coach, great young coach. Notre Dame ends up losing a weird game every single year that they shouldn't lose.
They just lost Northern Illinois.
They lose tomorrow.
So they lose to a three and nine Stanford team.
And you wonder, what is it about this guy's process?
Brian Kelly at my school, at LSU, my beloved LSU Tigers.
We come out stagnant and flat at the beginning of the season every
single year we lose big games when the lights are on us and you wonder not that Brian Kelly can't be
a successful coach he's one of the most successful coaches of his of uh of his generation but what is
it about these guys's process and preparation to where they lose in situations like this, or they can't get over the hump in
situations like this. And Deion Sanders doesn't have nearly the accolades or the winning percentage
of those other two guys. But if we're asking those questions about those guys, we're certainly
going to ask those questions about him. Well, a year ago you came on and we were talking about
if this Colorado thing keeps going the way it's going, what's next for Dion? What would be, I think you did a top five programs you'd want him to take over.
Now it feels like the ceiling of that has lowered.
Right.
You'd have to be,
you'd have to be moronical.
You have to be a moron to it.
What it looked like at the time was this,
what it looked like at the time was that Dion Sanders was,
had the ability to catch lightning in the bottle and make everybody want to come to where he was and participate in this.
And that he was going to attract the best athletes.
He had Travis Hunter.
He was able to get Travis Hunter to not go to do that was going to turn a situation to where he didn't have as many resources as some of these other programs and make Colorado automatically competitive, which it looked like.
Right. TCU, Nebraska, it looked like he could do more with less.
Now it's starting to look like that he can do less with more because the school has been financially successful, right?
They're getting all eyes on them every single time.
The lights are on Colorado.
The attention is there, but the team can't function.
So it doesn't look like resources are an indicator of how good of a coach or how good
of a job he's going to do.
So if he ended up at Florida State or if
he ended up at a Notre Dame or any of the places where these coaches are, quote unquote, on the
hot seat, which I don't think Norvell or Freeman is actually on the hot seat, but if he ended up
at any of those places, it doesn't look like he has the institutional consistency to run them well.
I'm not saying that that's true. It's year two for Dion. But I'm saying the team, it's not just that the team is losing.
It's how they lose.
They lose at the fundamentals of football.
You lose at the things you have to do right.
Yeah.
So it's really right now, outside of an opening game loss,
the loss that they had to Nebraska, I mean, Bill, that's as bad as it can go.
And for all the people out there, because there's a part of this, that they had to Nebraska, I mean, Bill, that's as bad as it can go.
And if you're,
and for all the people out there that,
because there's a part of this that,
you know, you shouldn't say this because there's a cultural loyalty to Dion.
I love Dion.
I love what he's been able to do.
Love him as all of that.
But like, if you're looking at the results on the field,
he hasn't proven that he's a great coach at this level.
It's just a fact.
And it might be a level below.
We'll see.
What's your biggest college football story right now?
Thing you care about the most?
Not LSU.
Besides LSU, a couple of things.
Number one, I care about the relative lack of strength
that we're seeing in the SEC.
The parity of college football is really interesting. we've had a couple of years now where
i think things are changing a little bit and you know the so like top 25 parody or like top seven
parody no i mean when you look at the game now i think nil and the transfer portal have leveled
the playing field to a degree to where i don't see the monsters just beating people's heads in.
Last week, something of an anomaly, but you saw Northern Illinois beat Notre Dame. You saw
Boise State in Autzen. Autzen, one of the toughest venues to play in all of sports. You see Oregon
need a late field goal to beat them, right? You see Cal
beat Auburn.
Normally when you match up an Auburn team
with a team from up
there, you know, Cal kids, they're
too busy protesting to care about football.
So normally when you match
them up, you see them get just dominant. It's just
not the same anymore. And
I think it's interesting to see where college
football is going with the transfer portal, with NIL, and with a lot of the athletes that are coming out of the South decided that they're going different places.
You might see a change in the guard in terms of the power structure of the entire thing.
Well, I'm sure it's much harder to have continuity these days.
And then also a coach like what's happening in Boston College right now.
Everyone in Boston's all excited because Bill O'Brien came in, turned it around.
And it just feels like overnight you could have a contender.
All right, next topic.
Tyreek Hill, how big of a story is this going to get over the course of the week?
We're taping this on a Tuesday morning Pacific time.
I don't think it's going to be that big of a deal.
Okay. I think that,
uh,
just to be honest with you,
I think that we've made our decision about this,
about this issue.
Uh,
so I'm,
what happened to Tyreek Hill is a shame and you can look at the video and you
can see the cops overreacting to what happened.
To say the least.
To say the least.
Right.
You can see that happening.
Right.
I think that there was a legitimate time in NFL sports culture where there was an opportunity to leverage the power of the American athlete in order to really address some of the issues that they face as being
black men in society.
And I think we punted on it.
I think that with Colin Kaepernick and just the entire, so interesting that that happened
around the same time that the Super Bowl stuff was getting involved.
I think that around that entire time, you guys can say, people can say whatever they want
about Colin Kaepernick
and what they think about him as a man
or what they would have done or whatever.
The important thing was
that the conversation was being had
about who these guys are
and what these guys are
when they're not in jerseys.
The conversation was being had
and it was important
a conversation to have.
And to be honest with you,
when the NFL made the deal that they made with Roc Nation,
people turned the page on it.
That was a singular thing
that happened. People turned the page on it.
People said, okay, well,
now Roc Nation is involved
with the NFL. There's no way that Jay-Z and Roc
Nation would do anything
that would be involved in anything
that is less than nutritious for black people or for this cause.
So, you know, however way, whatever way you have to say, Kaepernick wants to still be in the league.
So it must be OK. Jay-Z is here now with Roc Nation. So it must be OK.
So Tyreek Hill saying now I saw him on CNN saying that, you know, I want to make a change. I want to do this. I want to
figure out a way. We didn't done everything that we can do. We've protested. We've done all of this
stuff and none of it has worked. Well, we haven't seen any of it through because we've chosen as a
society, in my opinion, our entertainment over our humanity and dignity. We chose football. And it's when I
say we, I'm talking about Van Lathan Jr., the average person. We chose football. We chose
entertainment. We chose tradition. We chose the game that our fathers and mothers gave us
over dignity and over humanity and over what it would mean to envision a society
where Tyreek Hill would not have been treated like that.
And this is for everyone.
I've seen videos of,
when we talk about policing culture,
we often racialize it
and make it about the way Black Americans
are treated by the police.
But when we're talking about policing
and getting to the center of what we expect
from people who are supposed to serve and protect, the poor white boy from Denham Springs, I'm talking about all types of different people who run up'll stop here. But what I'll say is, we'll forget about this. Tyreek Hill will catch touchdowns. We'll move on. We've already made our decision. And our decision was that we loved football more than we loved a fight for dignity or humanity. It felt like there was a similar thing from late 2010s all the way to maybe 2014
Ray Rice range, when it felt like every year the NFL had some sort of issue or controversy
that made all of us go, kind of sucks to root for this league, right? And I ended up getting
in trouble at ESPN with one of the things, but the concussions,
especially, it felt like it was going to be such a big part about how we talked about football
going forward. And were we signing up to watch these people get basically get their brain mush?
They had to figure this out. They figured it out to some degree. It's still a really violent game.
Right. And at some point I think all of us had to look in the mirror who love football and it's like,
am I signing up for this or am I not signing up for this? Right. I know, I know they
made it safer. I know they put some effort into it. It's still not that safe. I went through it
when my son was playing football there for a couple of years. It's like, am I complicit that
I like this? And it feels like in 2024 post COVID people are like, you know what? I love
football. I miss football. And there's this other stuff that comes with it. And that's just what's
going to happen. Couldn't be more right. And by the way, we can sit here and talk about football.
We make the decision every single day. You made the decision when you pick up your iPhone,
you made the decision when you go out, when you eat food.
You make the decision every single day. You make the decision. You choose a little bit over what's convenient and what you like and what makes you feel good. You're not here for that long.
You'll be dead way longer than you will be alive. And you make the decision every single day.
The only thing that I ask from people or I ask for myself is just to understand
that that decision was made, to understand that Tyreek Hill was pulled over and treated that way
by the police. And you care about that because he's going to go out and catch touchdowns for
the Dolphins, right? But there are going to be other people that look all kinds of different
ways, but particularly Black people that is going to be in that same situation. And you won't even have the opportunity to care until it's on video in front of your face. And
then you have to decide what kind of America that you want to live in. So, you know, it's like,
it's nothing to like, when I saw it, I'm like, oh, well, you know, that's obviously a problem
that still exists. It's obviously something that's still going to happen. Even in the NFL,
structurally, the NFL is a racist league. Structurally, it is. And the only reason why I say that, I'm not talking about Colin Kaepernick and how he was blackballing,
how his career was taken away. The NFL had a different set of parameters that it used to judge
black players cognitively when it came down.
These guys were awarded money.
Like, structurally, that is a racist conceit.
Well, they had to create a rule to have people interview coaching candidates that weren't white.
Right.
And so at the same time, once again, like we talked about before, it's complicated.
So much of the workforce is black. It's enriched so many
young black men. So many people are indifferent. It's not an easy answer. It takes nuance to have
the conversation, but more than that, it takes bravery. And I think we lost our bravery when
the kneeling and the movement there dissipated. We chickened out, but we got our
football back. And once again, I'm not letting myself off the hook here, not in any way, shape,
or form. I can't understand why, but during the pandemic, when I saw bubble basketball
and I saw sports, even with no people in the crowd, it made me feel like the world was going to be okay. It literally
did. It made me feel like, oh my
God, okay, how could the world end if they
play basketball in Orlando?
I have basketball games to watch.
You know what I'm saying? And it just completely,
by the time I realized that the moment
had passed, I had pulled my
Saints gear back out.
Any thoughts on the Super Bowl
halftime show before we go
oh my god man the the the thoughts that i thought was congratulations to kendrick
well boy boy boy we know how to spend some mess we relitigated lil wayne's whole career
we relitigated kendrick's career it was kendrick against wayne it was actually it wasn't kendrick
against wayne those guys are fine we know that but it was like rock nation against young money
all of this that goes back to one video that started this entire culture of rap beef
from like 20 years ago this whole thing is it has to do that. It's just so funny to me, man.
They pick Kendrick and it's like, of course they pick Kendrick.
Other than Taylor Swift, he's
the single hottest musical star we have right now.
He's having a moment.
It totally makes sense that he would play there.
I went there in, I think, 2013.
Beyonce played.
I was there when the Pats won their first Super Bowl
in 2001. U2 played.
For the most part,
they just pick an artist that makes sense for the city. I guess when it was in LA and they did the whole homage to
LA hip hop, I think that maybe made people think that was a new model going forward.
But to me, having Kendrick played the Super Bowl made total sense. But what do I know?
Let me ask you a question. I'm going to make you the head of the NFL right now.
Yeah.
Would you allow Kendrick Lamar
to play Not Like Us
in its entirety
or the more controversial parts
of the song at the Super Bowl
where he's calling Drake
the P word
and all of that stuff?
Is that a Super Bowl
appropriate song? He's got to do it in
some way. Would you come and say, okay, you can't call him this. You can't say this because there's
going to be a lot of Americans. A lot of people know about this, but there's going to be a lot
of Americans watching the Superbowl, like knee deep in some nachos going, Drake likes young girls.
What is this? I didn't hear about it. You know what I'm saying?
I think what happens,
because if you follow the Super Bowl halftime show,
it's usually a montage, right?
He's going to play like nine songs.
So he'll play like 90 to 120 seconds,
and not like us.
But then it'll move into some other thing.
So I think it'll organically solve itself.
I think if he put the Drake parts
into the halftime show, that's about as aggressive
of an act as you could do with the halftime show. And by the way, is Roger Goodell really going to
have an opinion on this? Have you seen the people around him? He's going to... Yeah, we better talk
to Kendrick about Not Like Us. I'm pretty sure he doesn't probably know the inner workings of
what's going on in that feud.
What's crazy to me though is that it felt like this feud
which dominated 2024,
it felt like it was on its last legs.
And now we're going,
it's not even mid-September yet
and we're just gonna be talking about
Super Bowl halftime now coming up.
And this is gonna get probably more buzz
for a Super Bowl halftime show
than anything I can remember. Normally for a couple years, nobody even wanted to play the Super Bowl halftime show because they didn't pay you anything. It was more expensive for the artists for themselves to do it than what they got paid. And now it feels like it's back in the biggest possible way. I don't ever remember discourse like this about the halftime act it's funny drake said something drake said
uh he made a vague reference to like round two as if he was gonna kick it back off again this
is a couple of years ago and everybody was like ah come on man let it go we don't need a round
two you lost pretty decisively and he did lose pretty decisively guys it's okay he lost people
lose jordan missed shots your favorite people he lost it decisive over swag not like us maybe the
biggest diss record in the history of hip-hop definitely top five um anyway and so after he
says that kendrick lamar ends up doing the fucking Super Bowl.
It's one thing to have your diss track ringing off in the clubs.
It's one thing to have your diss track as people's ringtones back in the day.
But to do the diss record at the Super Bowl in front of the entire world. The biggest audience you could possibly have.
Nuts.
Flawless victory is over.
Pack it up.
Everybody come back in 2025 with your best albums
and let's see what happens.
You can hear Van Lathan on the Higher Learning Podcast
with our friend Rachel Lindsay.
You can hear him on the Ringerverse as well.
And you can hear him every once in a while
on the Rewatchables.
We're due for another one at some point soon.
Good to see you, Van.
All right, brother.
Good to see you too.
All right, that's it for the podcast. Thanks to Sean Fantasy and Ben Lathan. Thanks to Steve Cerruti and Kyle Creighton for
producing as well. Don't forget, you can watch clips from this episode on the Bill Simmons
YouTube channel, and I will see you on this feed on Thursday. I don't have feelings with them.
On the wayside, on the wayside, I never said I don't have to give up or visit mdgamblinghelp.org in Maryland.
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