The Bobby Bones Show - 25W: NFL Draft Trivia Game + The Reason Eddie Wants Jerry Jones Gone + Someone Got Arrested for Getting Greedy with a Hairdryer
Episode Date: April 27, 2026Bobby puts the guys through an NFL Draft trivia game to see who really knows their history, and things get competitive fast. Eddie explains why he is officially ready for Jerry Jones to be gone from t...he Cowboys, which turns into a bigger conversation about Dallas, the draft and why his kids may be watching the next generation of ownership when they're older. Plus, the guys react to a wild story about someone getting arrested after getting a little too greedy with a hairdryer. Follow the Show: @25WhistlesSports Follow the Crew: @MrBobbyBones @ProducerEddie @KickoffKevin @MikeDeestro @BrandonRayMusic See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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There was no anything inside those eyes.
They turned black.
It scared the hell out of me.
Evil, wake up.
I'm the one that saw the murder take place by Krivac and Divor.
Tipo.
Anthony DePippo showed no signs of remorse, appearing unfazed after being sentenced to the maximum.
I said, I'm not guilty.
I'll take it to the grief.
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The Jonas Brothers here.
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We're here since everyone has a podcast, we want it to as well.
And we've had some incredible guests so far.
And now our good friend Nile Horn is joining the show.
How's it going, boys?
Hey, Niall.
It's the same thing with Slow Hands.
Slow Hands is not about anything else, really, is it?
You know, or taste so good can't be about food.
You do the same, Nick, with some of the stuff that you've done.
You too, Joe.
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Talking Force!
All right, let's go.
Who's got a whistle?
Oh, dang it.
Oh, Mike's that got it in his bag.
He hit you with a dang it
He's going deep in his bag
All right, we can start the show
What's up everybody
Mike, I was thinking about you
I saw the guy run the sub two hour marathon
It's crazy
I don't know how crazy that is
So how crazy is it
I can run a half in the amount
That he did the pool
That's wild
Yeah, but for you I think that's wild
For me I don't think I get it yet
I know I was reading a story
About a guy in 2013
Who said he thought
He would never see someone break
two hours in his lifetime. And he was a running writer. And so it only took 13 years for that to happen.
So if it's a sub two hour marathon, what four minutes and 33 seconds per mile. That is insane.
For 26 miles. Yeah. Wow. I think the fastest I've ever run one mile is maybe like 650.
And so a marathon average is what? Four hours? I don't know about an average. I think it's a different
for everybody. Yeah. Not really. What'd you run yours in? The fastest I've done it is three hours.
in 23 minutes.
Okay.
So, yeah, everybody's freaking out.
I think the other guy beat,
did he beat two hours as well,
but the other guy just beat him?
Yeah.
Did two people beat two hours?
Yeah.
The one that, no way, at the same time?
Yeah.
That's tough.
So it converts to,
if you're running,
I can think about running a 400,
me running a hard 400
back in high school,
and I'm going to be off of my time a little bit.
I felt it was like,
120 or something, minute 20.
Hard as I could.
I could be off about that.
But this is running it at a minute, eight seconds,
a lap the entire 26 miles.
400 is one lap around the track?
Yeah.
Yeah. That's amazing.
I think I'm supposed to respect it more.
And I do because everybody else respects it and is freaking out.
I just don't have the knowledge of running.
But a four-minute mile for 26 miles is crazy.
Where's he from?
I mean, he's from another country, right?
He's not American.
I think maybe Nigeria.
Okay.
Mike can find that.
But I had that to lead.
I just didn't.
It's from Kenya.
Okay.
So Africa.
There's some fast Kenyans.
I think running's their sport.
Is it?
That's one's going to ask.
Like, is that just what they do?
Like, out of the womb?
We're going to start running.
I think running there's sport.
You can do it anywhere.
So that happened.
We can talk NFL draft a little bit.
Where did you watch the Cowboys call to Caleb Downs?
I did.
Pretty cool.
I did.
I did.
Really cool.
I love all the calls.
I think the calls are so cool.
and especially just how different the players answer the phone.
You know, like some of them are like, wow, coach is amazing.
Thank you.
Like Caleb was so excited to get that call.
Some other ones are like, so how Jerry.
It'd be pretty cool to be drafted by the Cowboys.
Even if you're not a Cowboys fan,
like that's an organization you want to play for because it's prime time.
Yeah.
It's old but still cool new.
Like the Packers are old and it's cool because it's old,
but it's not cool because it's also that they're like new.
and I want to say relevant because they've won before.
But people don't, hmm, how would I phrase this?
The Cowboys are still today cool as much as they were old cool.
Yeah, yeah.
The logo, cheerleaders, the stadium.
The whole brand.
Yeah, there's like new elements of that that's cool.
Where the Packers is like, it's only cool because they've been around forever.
And what's cool is when Jerry talks to these players, he tells them like,
you're going to have a star in your helmet.
Like that's his kind of like stamp right there like congratulations.
Welcome to the Cowboys.
You're going to have a star in your helmet.
Do you feel like you wish that Jerry wasn't in that position?
Let me tell you something.
For the first time, I have felt like the ownership is a problem.
Like I've always been the defender of like, no, man, they're a family business, you know.
Like they're the owners.
Let them decide what's best for the team.
They want to win too.
Like they don't want to lose.
That's always been my stance.
I don't know, after seeing the draft and seen that war room where it is 90% family members.
It is.
Like 90% family members and a few coaches.
I don't know how a coach can go into that organization and feel like they have any power to make a decision on that team.
But I think that affects who they hire as a coach.
Now they hire coaches that don't demand that power.
And I don't think that's a winning recipe.
It hasn't been.
You know what I mean?
I mean, look, it's Schottenheimer now.
Yeah, Schottenheimer.
I keep thinking.
Brian.
Yeah, I think of his dad.
Yeah, Marty.
Yeah.
So it's Schotenheimer now.
Look at Jason Garrett.
Like, you just go back to the coaches.
They're mostly, and I say this is respect to as possible.
I know what you're saying.
Like, yes, man.
Yeah.
A little tail between their legs.
Because that, I don't know how a coach can go in there and be like, all right, family members all around me.
You're going to do what I say.
Like Mike McCarthy goes in, right?
He'd been fired.
He comes in.
He knows what he's doing, knows what he's talking about.
He's Pittsburgh just hired him.
But he's not really a guy that you're coming in that's got the bravado and the ego that, like,
I'm that dude.
They don't hire I'm that dude.
They haven't hired I'm that dude since Jimmy Johnson.
Jimmy Johnson.
Barry Switzer.
Yeah, Switzer after Jimmy Johnson.
Parcells, maybe?
Yeah, I guess Parcells maybe tried, but he didn't last.
Maybe that's why he didn't last.
But also, they weren't winning.
No, that's when he brought Drew Bletzer to the Cowboys.
Dude, you know what though?
And I'm talking about like, because I made this comment
We were watching it with all my kids were there.
They got excited.
They wore jerseys.
Like it was really cool.
Like a good family event for like a Cowboys family to watch the draft.
But then I was like, see that little guy right there?
Like there's the grandson, right?
He's like, I don't know how old is he now.
He looks like he's still like 19.
He may be older than that.
But I'm like, what's crazy about this scenario is that that kid right there is going to be your owner.
Like when you're my age.
Game of Thrones.
When you're my age, that's going to be the owner of the Dallas Cowboys.
Unless they sell.
I can see them selling at some point.
Yeah, I mean, it can only stay a family business for so long,
not according to the family,
but just with the history of sports teams owned by families.
There have been a couple that have kept it, like, I guess the Bears,
they're broke.
I don't know if you cared about the Cowboys and if you thought it was now time for a change.
I thought they finally had a good draft.
And then Eddie's like, let's change them out.
No, no, no, I'm not saying that.
I thought it was a great draft.
I thought the draft was great.
It's just for the first time I felt like, wow, this is crazy.
Like, I don't know how we're going to hire a coach that can, like,
you won't be a leader on this team.
Yeah.
I don't think any coach will take that job.
I think the leader thing is unfair,
but I think you won't have a coach that takes that job
that wants to make the decisions, full decisions about that job,
like a general manager, John Harbaugh type.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And John Harbaugh is not even the GM,
but he's really the dude making the decisions.
But we've heard stories too where it's not only front office decisions.
It's like play calling decisions, like all kinds of decisions where they step into it.
Well, that would be me if I owned a team.
I'd for sure be calling plays.
Right.
I'd have a headset on for sure.
Anyway.
I don't know, guys.
I think we should go for it here.
Pavia was not drafted at all, which isn't a surprise to me that he wasn't drafted.
It was a surprise to me that he did not get picked up as a free agent.
So he was not even a free agent.
he's going to go to the Ravens rookie mini camp, which, heck, I got invited to that.
Did you?
Good, man.
You and Pavia.
Running routes for him.
People were debating, is it because he wasn't good enough?
Is it because of his attitude, all the things that come along with him?
NFL teams don't want to have a backup quarterback be any sort of headline.
When you're the backup quarterback, you just need to have nobody care about you and be there in case the quarterback goes down.
So wherever Pavia goes, backup quarterback and headlines.
Is he good enough?
He's good enough to probably get drafted.
But I say probably after he lost the Heisman
and he was at the bar with that F Indiana sign,
like that's not somebody
that you're going to stretch yourself
to bring in with any sort of draft.
So I'm surprised he didn't get picked up as a free agent.
I'm not surprised he didn't get drafted.
but he's just going to go to camp.
It's like a walk on over here, the Lipscomb.
Yeah.
Did you expect for him to get drafted?
No.
Yeah, I didn't either.
If anything, I thought late seventh round,
what I was really shocked by is that Nussmeyer went so, so, so late
because he was ESPN's ranking because he was a third quarterback overall.
And so obviously Mendoza went,
then Ty Simpson went.
Then Beck.
Then Beck went.
And I'm thinking, well, Nussmire's got.
got to be drafted. And then these random dudes started falling out. And I kept thinking the Saints
were going to draft in round six or seven because his dad's office of coordinator there. They didn't
pick them. And so then I started just digging into why. And it's a couple things, depending on who
you believe, because he was a quarterback at LSU. And had he come out a year ago, he'd have probably
been a top five pick. Two things that I read, neither could be true, both could be true. One, he had
an injury all year. Now that doesn't keep you from getting drafted, but it possibly keeps you
from getting drafted in the first four or five rounds. He'd have an injury all year, but everyone
was acting like his interviews were terrible. Like he was Mr. No-it-all in all the interviews and not
in a good way. And so I think the combination of him being hurt and his interviews going so poorly,
from what I read, again, I know nobody involved in his process.
that that's why he didn't get picked.
Kevin,
did you hear anything about him?
No, I didn't.
I was really surprised because he was the last quarterback.
And to your point,
last year was a totally different story going into the season.
And you would think in the interviews,
that would be a strength of his
because he's a coach's son,
he knows ball,
but maybe he took it in a very self-interested way,
I guess,
and rubbed it off the wrong way.
I went to the Chief's seventh round.
Yeah.
As the last quarterback picked?
He was the last quarterback picked, yeah.
Trey Lance's little brother got
picked. Really? As a wide receiver from, I believe, North Dakota State. That's cool.
There were a couple of those guys. Like Rutgers quarterback went before him. I just kept
pulling up the quarterbacks during the draft because I watched all the, obviously night
one, and I watched a little bit of the second and third round. And then I don't watch much.
I just kept, you know, watching the app to see, because I was just curious as to when Nussmeyer
would go and then tailing our quarterback, Tailing Green. Yeah, he went to the Browns. Yeah.
That sucks. He's actually a pretty good.
quarterback. We had a bad team. Pretty good quarterback. He's 6-6. He had like the second
fastest quarterback 40 ever, not just this year, but like set all these records.
Crazy good athlete. Actually a pretty good quarterback. You don't want to go to Cleveland.
I'd rather go to rookie camp with the Ravens.
Well, especially with Dylan Gabriel there and Sanders. There's already, it's already a cram-
funny how you lead with Gabriel. Yeah, you're right though. But yeah,
with there, Shitter and Dylan and Deshawn Watson's going to be back this year.
Oh, God.
Which I never thought he'd see the field again, but he may.
That room, yeah.
Dude, crazy.
You know who I feel bad for?
Fernando Mendoza.
Like, now I see clips now of him getting interviewed by like the Hispanic media in Vegas.
You know, saying like, so Mendoza, like, in Spanish, will you tell us what you're excited
about to be a raider?
He's like, and he's like me where like, I understand Spanish, but speaking is tough.
And watch him and try to speak Spanish, man, I feel bad for the.
guy. Oh, he tries to speak it back? Yes, and it's
tough. It's, you know, it's like, if
you were raised the way I was where my parents spoke
Spanish, but I spoke English, like, that's hard. And then the
media trying to get him to be like, all right, Mendoza,
like, talk to us in Spanish. He's like,
that's hard for me, guys.
Did you guys see the story? There was a, we were
talking about these
prediction sites, and
this is from the independent,
and this is a polymarket
app
situation, because the one we
talked about recently was the guy in the military who bet on them taking the president of Venezuela.
Yes. And he bet like 30,000 made 400,000. They arrested them. And not because he bet it, because
they have no problem with you having inside information. It's because he had signed an NDA with the military.
Like, you can't reveal any of this. And by him doing that, it shifted the odds. So that happens.
And so they have this, it's basically a weather prediction on polymarket.
That's hard. That's like bet on the NBA, man. That's not.
You would think.
However, temperature readings at Charles de Gaul Airport in Paris
spiked twice this month at the same times as bets with large winnings were placed on
Polymarket.
Someone won $34,000 and then to discover the temperature sensors at the airport were tampered
with.
Okay, guys.
What I read that's not this story was that he was taking a hairdryer to it.
And warming it up?
Yeah.
That's crazy.
Wow.
So he would bet it that it hit a certain degree.
and then he would take,
I assume it's a heat,
it sounds like something to do.
For sure.
His wife's hair dryer, though.
He would take the hairdryer
and heat up the sensor
so it would hit that.
If you don't get caught,
that's pretty smart,
but if you're doing it twice,
I don't know if it was once or twice.
Oh yeah, twice,
you can't do it twice.
And then does the weather take
the temperature from just one area?
Like,
I think there's a,
official for
records.
And probably they're using the same thing.
The airport has the official
like snowfall,
wind chill, temperature,
there's one designated place.
And it's usually the airports.
You just can't do it twice.
You get away with it once.
You do it, you shut up.
You collect your money.
You find another way to scam people.
You can't do it twice.
That's where getting selfish
to get you bit in the butt.
Pride is like love.
You feel it in your heart.
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In the moment, it felt like it was going on forever.
I didn't think I was going to live.
I was terrified.
There was no
anything inside those eyes.
They turned black.
It scared the hell out of me.
That was your first murder case?
Yes, sir.
Fear to say this was the biggest case of your career?
Yes, sir.
Rape a murder for a child.
Just as bad as it gets.
I would think so.
People, wake up.
I'm the one that saw the murder
take place by Crevette and DePippo.
Anthony DePippo showed no signs of remorse, appearing unfazed after being sentenced to the maximum.
I said, I'm not guilty. I'll take it to the grief.
Listen to the devil's quarry on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
And to hear the Devil's Quarry ad free with exclusive content, subscribe to Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts.
Hey, I'm Hoda Kotby, host of the podcast, Joy 101 with Hoda Kotby.
We're going to have meaningful conversations with the world's most fascinating people.
Like when actress Olivia Munn shared how she overcame fierce health challenges.
I've gone through breast cancer and then helped my mother through breast cancer.
And that was more difficult.
There's a lot of people who understand postpartner depression.
I was not prepared for postpartum anxiety.
Listen to Joy 101 with Hoda Kotby on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I love the sounds.
The buzzing from the stadium.
the chanting from the fans, the announcers calling the place,
soccer, football, it's home.
Why do I watch the World Cup?
That's like asking me, why do I breed?
I inherited that fandom from my mom.
I like watching it with my dad.
It's a connecting force.
From Futuro Studios, I'm Fernanda and Chavari,
and this is American Football,
a show about soccer culture in the U.S. and its underdog roots.
We go beyond the game to the people and the stories that make it great.
A soccer game is a festival.
It's not just a game.
It's your culture.
I took an elbow to my head which cracked my skull.
It is an American game.
The Brazilians don't like hearing that, though.
Are they the only ones that don't like that?
Nobody likes that.
As we get ready for the Men's World Cup this summer,
listen to American Football as part of the My Coutura podcast network,
available on the IHeart Radio app.
Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Do you do basketball tournament this weekend?
I did and here you go. More drama.
I don't know. This is beginning to be a weekly thing, guys.
This time there was two kids on the court and this was seven-year-olds.
So they were the little guys, kindergarten first graders.
And there were these two kids fighting over a jump ball and they wouldn't let go after the whistle.
Like a ref is blowing the whistle.
So then they start pulling hair and, you know, like jerseys.
Even after the whistle's been blown.
After the whistle was been blown.
And so the refs go in there and try to break it up.
And it's where mama bear comes out.
Two mama bears come screaming out going,
no, you let go of my son.
And the other mom comes on,
no, you don't talk to my son like that.
And they start fighting the court, dude.
They're like being separated by the refs.
The coaches have to jump in.
I felt really bad.
There was this, he looked like a volunteer,
maybe 17 years old, scorekeeper.
he had to jump in and he had to address the crowd and be like,
I'd like to ask everyone to please just settle down.
This is just a basketball game.
I'm like, where is the adult?
This guy's 17 years old trying to like calm the whole place down.
And it was just, dude, it's crazy.
And it was the first time I felt like it was so heated that I felt like a gun could have come out.
If someone was carrying, they would have pulled.
Correct.
It was that heated because once those moms,
got mad, then other parents started backing up their mom from both sides. And then you got dads,
you got everyone involved at that point. And dude, it's, it's crazy. And my kids are just like looking
around being like, what's happening? Like, what's happening here? It's every weekend. There is some
kind of drama fight at these basketball tournaments. Where was the incompetence? What,
where did it's, whose fault is it? The parents. Okay. But, but.
The two moms.
But should they have not, I agree that it gets to that point,
but should they have not, the referee not have stopped the kids fighting situation way earlier?
The thing is they're seven, right?
So they're thinking like, okay, this is cute.
Like, they're just fighting over the ball.
So they blow the whistle and they try to separate them.
But once, like, it turned into hair, like grabbing hair, that's when the moms lost it.
But, like, I feel like our coach could handle that.
Like, I don't need to jump off the bench, the bleachers.
Even if it was your kid.
I feel like the coach could be like, hey, Eddie Jr., like, don't do that.
Stop.
Come on.
Like, get away.
Parents don't need to be jumping out of the stands to fight each other.
I agree with that.
It feels like, though, tension is always at a high with those parents watching their kids,
that they've got to do a better job at training the referees and the coaches to shut that crap down.
Like, if kids start fighting, it's the coach's job to get out there and stop everyone and then stop the parents.
Yeah.
Because you can't assume people are going to be rational.
parents are going to be very irrational.
Right.
Well, it even turned into like even once that was settled,
like 10 minutes later, these two kids were just trying to box each other out.
Parents started yelling again.
Get your hands off them.
Probably because it had already happened, though, where there was a fight.
Right.
Tensions were high.
Here's what happened, though.
So that was Saturday.
On Sunday, we saw on the schedule that we were going to play that same team,
and we're like, we're not going.
The whole team?
Just my son.
We didn't go.
Because you wanted to go home?
No, because I, dude, it's scary.
Like, it's scary.
What about the teammates of your son who then don't have one of their players?
I don't know, dude.
I just felt at that point, I'm going to make a decision for my family's safety to not go to those things.
Because, dude, I'm talking like 20 people were involved in this fight.
Like, that could end really bad.
And it's just basketball.
So at that point, I'm thinking, like, forget winning this stupid turn.
or even like going to this dumb game.
They're seven years old.
What's your kid say about that?
He didn't care.
He's seven.
He's like, okay, cool.
Do I go to my baseball game?
Yeah, you can go to your baseball game.
I don't have a kid that old.
I feel like you're letting down the teammates of the kid.
I thought about that.
I did, but I mean, I never felt like we were in danger before until that time.
But what about the games after that?
Like, they're crazy parents for every team.
Yeah.
Because you watch two teams of crazy parents.
That doesn't mean they're the only two teams are crazy parents.
Yeah.
Are you sure you just didn't want to go home?
No, no, no, I promise.
This was my wife and I deciding, too.
Like, should we really go, like, to this?
Kevin, your thoughts.
Yeah.
I mean, I get it because obviously we're not there to see it,
but if it happens every single week and if your kid doesn't really care,
but I'm with Bobby in the sense of like,
if you just didn't show up, say if you were coach and Eddie
and you're like, well, where the heck is, you know,
so-and-so's kid?
Do you tell the coach at all, Eddie, or do you just not show up?
I just feel like...
No, answer his question.
If I was what?
Did you tell your kids coach you weren't coming?
Or did you just not show up?
No, we told them we weren't going.
No, we told them we weren't going.
We told them we gave them heads up.
You're acting like the team that you were playing
was the one bad team that everybody should be afraid of.
No, and it's not that.
Is that there's beef between those two players now
and their parents.
Those same parents are going to be together in that same gym.
Wait, so that was your kid's game where they happened?
Yeah.
It was my son's teammate.
Oh, dude, I don't sit there and watch games.
But also, okay, I didn't know if it was at the same time.
But, okay.
Did you guys get that when he told the story originally?
No, I thought he was just watching the game.
I thought you were just there and that happened.
No, it was my son's teammate.
Also, don't you think if it happens once?
So it's like if somebody hijacks a plane.
I feel pretty good about getting on the next plane because ain't nobody hijacking the next plane.
They're going to be cops there this time?
Yes, that they're going to crack down on some crap.
Security is going to be extra high.
Yeah.
Not just that little 17-year-old guy, settle down, please.
Was there a fight?
No, no.
Listen, as a parent, you made the decision that was best for you.
I don't know.
I feel like if the team didn't have one of its best players and they lost because their dad got scared
and there really was no threat, I felt like I'd be irritated as a coach.
Don't act like just I was the only one scared.
How many other kids didn't go to the game?
Three other ones.
Oh.
So do they even have a team?
They had enough.
They have five.
There's like, there's a total nine players.
One was out of town.
Three decided not to go.
I'm sure you're right.
I'm sure you're right.
I just feel like you got through it.
It's not going to happen again.
I don't know.
Are you teaching your kid if things get a little weird run?
Yeah.
When there's a fight, don't stand in the middle of it.
That's true.
Get out.
Okay.
You're the parent.
Man, I just, now I'm like.
What did you do on Sunday when you got back?
Did you play golf?
No, we didn't play golf.
Did you do anything fun?
No, I watched NASCAR.
Watch NASCAR, golf.
Is that a guy win?
No.
He didn't win.
He didn't win.
Tyler Reddick did not win.
He won like his fifth race and five races.
He won the pole again, so he started first.
But as soon as the race started, it was Talladega.
As soon as the race started, dude, he went from first to like 21st.
He just, something happened to his car where he just went back, back, back, back, back, and he never finished.
I tell you what happened.
They probably, like, screwed it up.
This guy can't win another one.
Like they purposefully, it's like the guy with the heater at the airport.
Dude, you can't do two in a row.
You can't win five in a row or they know something's up.
But see, for a while, Denny Hamlin, who's awesome on Michael Jordan's team was in the lead, too.
And I'm like, oh my gosh.
If Denny Hamlin wins this now,
something definitely is fishy, but he didn't win.
Did anybody watch the Hulk Hogan documentary?
Yes.
It's good.
Yeah, it was good.
Yeah, so it's four episodes only.
They're pretty long.
If you're a wrestling fan, you'll like it.
They definitely glazed Hulk a bit,
meaning they didn't talk about
some of the really weird Hulk stuff.
But I guess it really wasn't about that.
It was kind of about his impact on wrestling, right?
Yeah, I guess because he's dead.
They're like, maybe we don't fully
just take him down in this documentary?
A little respect for the dead.
Well, it was his last time to ever be interviewed.
Who produced this one?
Do you know?
Who, do you guys know?
Netflix, isn't it?
It's on Netflix.
I don't know if it was a Netflix.
Yeah, I don't recognize the company.
Yeah.
It was really good.
But just like knowing the stuff that I know about Hulk,
like there was a lot that wasn't in there.
Like, not a great dude.
Like him and Jesse Ventura got into a huge fight.
It's not in the documentary
because Jesse Ventura wanted
basically wanted insurance for the wrestlers
and so he was getting all of him
to unionize and Holkwin told Vince McMahon
and there's like a lot of that
but I think aside from that
to just enjoy it because the wrestling is great
Hulk Hogan is the most
important wrestler ever I believe
now my favorite
I'll also say I don't know he was so famous
though like they're only like he's probably
one of the most 10 most famous people
ever
I didn't realize that yeah yeah because you could just go and show a picture
of him to really anybody
They don't have to know wrestling.
Like, he crossed over that hard.
Maybe not kids.
Maybe not 14-year-olds now, but even then, probably.
But I don't know there was anybody more famous in the 80s.
He was like a superhero.
He was like a Batman or a Superman.
They were doing obviously wrestling, but he had cartoons and movies.
It was massive.
And he was the good guy in wrestling, right?
Until he started wearing black?
Until NW.
And they talked about that.
So it was mostly about his wrestling.
It did talk about how he was.
hell you hooked up with one of his daughter's friends yeah oh man like they did a little bit of that in there
brook brook i saw where she was pissed because they really didn't do much about her in the documentary
yeah really just once they got to the reality show yeah and then him kind of not being around when he
was there were kids because he was gone all the time wrestling so what were your main takeaways
with the documentary i think he couldn't separate Hulk Hogan from terry where he got so
famous as Hulk Hogan that in the early days he was able to go home and be himself and then later
you kind of see the shift whenever his fame starts to dwindle a little bit he can't wrestle as well as
he could have and he's just chasing that fame again i think he forgot who he was as a person it was just
holk Hogan all the time and that was kind of his downfall for me what i took away from it was how hurt
he always was the multiple back surgeries the multiple neck surgeries he was on a cane
walking at the end of this.
And he's like, I can't even get up sometimes.
So even as an old man, he obviously was hurt,
but it just feels and sounds like he was hurt
for the last 20 years.
Because of the leg drop.
Yeah, that's right.
That was a move? Well, that's his end move, right?
And every time he would hit,
his back, and he's like, I should have done the sleeper hold or something
where I wasn't constantly, like, falling as hard as I could on my butt.
I guess I also didn't realize how he was, they called him a one-trick pony,
where his wrestling style wasn't that technical,
and he really just had the same moves over and over again,
so people just kind of got tired of it.
Like, we've seen this.
Especially when he shook his head, like, no, he's talking up.
And then once he got old and hurt,
he would just go in the ring and bleed.
He couldn't move around.
They really took a crap on Ultimate Warrior.
Jim Hellwig, I think is his name?
They made him look like the worst wrestler ever.
Worstressor, worst dude.
Yeah, he wasn't well-liked anyway.
He was the one with all the fluorescent.
I loved Ultimate Warrior, yeah.
He was probably my favorite
W.W.E. wrestler
back in that era.
So I liked Warrior more than I did Hulk.
Because Hulk was just,
everybody loved Hulk, so I didn't like Hulk.
Everybody loved the Cowboys.
I liked the Cowboys. I like the Bulls of Michael Jordan.
I don't like the Bulls of Michael Jordan.
I get it.
We could just do this.
I never wanted to be a part of any sort of bandwagon.
I did really like the Ultimate Warrior.
And, yeah, it was not a good, good look for him.
Yeah, they were like,
you were supposed to be the next guy, but he couldn't really
handle it.
Couldn't wrestle.
didn't really have
nobody liked him
he couldn't lead a match
yeah man he was ripped though
and then it got into the steroids a little bit
a Hulk steroids
he was huge
yeah
just generally he was huge
you have to think he's 68 6 9
he's he's that tall
yeah wow
I know and against
wrestlers
he just seemed like a normal
wrestler
like strong but he was so much bigger
than everybody too
unless it was like the seven footers
but yeah he was 6-8-6-9
he'd have been a tweener
a 3-4 in the NBA
yeah that's crazy
and I guess that's like I mean
yeah Hulk I never really put the name
like the Incredible Hulk was a huge big animal
you know like a big dude
and I guess that's why do you call him that
I just thought I was like Hulk Hogan H-H
cool well at first he was
well he had a few names but he then became
the Incredible Hulk Hogan
oh I didn't know that okay
and he wasn't
Italian he was Italian
and Hogan is not Italian and he was like,
I don't know, I'm not even Italian, he was like, whatever.
What's his name?
Terry, what?
Balea.
Yeah, I think he's Irish, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Or one of the McMans, I think his dad gave it to him.
Yeah, it's good though.
It's really good.
I think, my wife, I think, liked it a little bit.
She didn't want to watch it, but she's feeding the baby.
And so I just had it on.
And I think she kind of got into it a little bit.
That's cool.
Yeah.
It's four episodes.
It's worth watching if you're just a mid,
or slightly above casual.
Would you agree with that?
Yeah. Did you get sad at all towards the end?
Yep, it was sad.
Of, like, him, like, still going for that one last pop at the very end.
He was kind of just chasing anywhere he could get that same reaction again.
It was sad for a couple reasons.
He still felt like he was Hulk Hogan.
He had started to align himself super political, so people started to hate him.
Oh, yeah.
And not for on purpose, orchestrated.
Because when he flipped NWO, he wanted to be the bad guy.
But, like, it showed him.
him on the Netflix's first show come out
and people just booed him
so hard and he wasn't trying to be booed it wasn't
like he was a bad guy so
did the part where
Dylan and his dad he gives Dylan
and his dad the $500 does that make the documentary?
It didn't make it.
It did not make it, yeah.
Kevin wasn't there for that.
Kevin, you missed that?
Are you talking about Dylan like
our Dylan? Yeah. It wasn't on this show
but Dylan who
works for me was
saying that him and his dad were down in
maybe Clearwater, Florida.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And Hulk Hogan has like a little store there.
It's like a museum slash gift shop.
And there's a statue outside of
Hulk Hogan.
They were taking a picture beside of it.
And this big black truck pulls up
and is like, hey, brother.
And it was Hulk Hogan and this black truck.
What?
Seriously, dude.
And so Dylan is that are like,
holy crap, it's Hulk Hogan.
And he goes, go buy something.
And Hulk Hogan gives him 500 bucks
to go inside and buy stuff.
No way.
Yeah.
That's awesome.
Drove off, but gave him freaking $500.
That's amazing. That's pretty sweet.
Hey Kevin, I saw your Red Sox fired everybody.
Dude, yeah, I'm back to where I was last year with this team and this organization.
They fired all the coaches. Alex Corr has gone and like five other coaches.
But the real problem is our GM and our owner that we've getting a lot of flack the last five, six, seven years.
And that's where I'm at too, same as everybody else, where I'm like, and we need to sell this team.
I've never understood people who hate.
You say sell the team? You want to sell the team?
Yeah. I want John Henry to sell the team.
I've never understood people that like hate their owners for other than like maybe a Donald Sterling and some other people.
But just for what they do to the franchise, I'm like, all right, you guys are overreacting.
And now I'm finally there where I'm like, we need to sell this team because the last seven years, ever since we won it in 2018, it's just been downhill.
And it just keeps even worse and worse and worse.
Trading moogie bets, not resigning guys, trading away guys.
They don't want to win.
John Henry just wants to make more money.
and it's pretty obvious.
As a Red Sox fan,
you want to win more than anything.
And it's not like,
no offense to the A's,
but we're not the A's.
Like, we can spend money,
they got money,
so spend it,
and it got to be competitive every year.
The poor A's just got astray.
I know.
Well, that's why they're gone.
Yeah.
That's why they're in Sacramento right now,
and they're going to be in Vegas.
I just watched a documentary.
I'm getting all these shows mixed up,
that's what it was.
The Expos one,
where they were talking about owners
that buy,
teams to make money not to win and there are a lot of those like it's literally just about making money
and to have a team but never to win like they're there you would think if you own a team you'd
want to win like your goal is to risk it for the biscuit that there is a significant amount of owners
that is not at all their mindset it's just to have the team to make money to be able to brag that
you own a team and that's it as long as you're making money you're all good and refresh my memory
in the movie major league what was
their motive to tank
to do what?
To sell the team.
To sell the team
because the lady
What was the lady?
Oh, she was the ex-wife of the
Or she was the owner.
Yeah, but I think she got
handed down the team.
It's been a while.
I just know they were peeling the patches.
Every win they'd pill the patch off.
She was where she was naked.
The cardboard cut out.
Speaking of wrestling,
Rick Flair says he slept with 20,000 women.
Oh, my.
He's rounding.
You don't know that number.
Rounding from what?
I mean, it's pretty close.
From 1990.
He probably rounded from like 17,000.
Rick Flair's once again
taking the opportunity to do an interview
to boast about a sexual prowess
while speaking with Ariel Hawani.
Flair was asked about Wilt Chamberlain's
infamous 10,000 number.
Flair claimed to have betted double that number
in this interview. He says he blew by
Chamberlain by the time he was 39.
He went on
40. He went on to add
They weren't all tens, and there were some heavyweights along the way.
He said that.
Yeah, and he didn't remember all their names, and he doesn't want them to remember mine.
Flair is currently 77 years old.
So if we do the math, let's say Flair lost his virginity at 15.
That would give us 62 years to work with.
That figures out at over 322 women a year over that span.
Wow.
If you take Flares, I don't know, I mean.
But that's 300.
How many days in a, how many days in the years?
I mean, that's almost every day.
Yeah, but that's why I'm saying it could be done.
Every day.
That's tiring.
If you take, yeah, there's more than one woman at a time.
Yes, a lot of that.
Oh, I forgot to count that, yeah.
If you take Flair's boast that he passed 10,000 by the age of 39, that would be over one woman a day for 24 years.
But again, if he's doing two or three.
Again, do I think he's hit 20,000?
No, but I'm sure he was going a while.
Mm-hmm.
That thing.
Is he married?
He was?
Okay.
Yeah, because you can't say that once you're married, right?
Can't even make a comment like that.
Unless your wife knows and she's cool with that.
Probably divorced.
Yeah, you got separated in 2024.
Yeah.
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In the moment, it felt like it was going on forever.
I didn't think I was going to live.
I was terrified.
Right.
There was no anything inside those eyes.
They turned black.
It scared the hell out of me.
That was your first murder case?
Yes, sir.
Fear to say this was the biggest case of your career?
Yes, sir.
Rape a murder for a child.
Just as bad as it gets.
I would think so.
Evil, wake up.
I'm the one that saw the murder take place by Crevette and DePippo.
Anthony DePippo showed no signs of remorse, appearing unfazed after being seen.
phased after being sentenced to the maximum.
I said, I'm not guilty. I'll take it to the grief.
Listen to the devil's quarry on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
And to hear the Devil's Quarry ad free with exclusive content, subscribe to Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts.
Hey, I'm Hoda Kotby, host of the podcast, Joy 101 with Hoda Kotby.
Together, we're going to have meaningful conversations with the world's most fascinating
people. Like when actress Olivia Munn shared how she overcame fierce health challenges.
I've gone through breast cancer and then helped my mother through breast cancer,
and that was more difficult. There's a lot of people who understand postpartner depression.
I was not prepared for postpartum anxiety. Listen to Joy 101 with Hoda Kotby on the Iheart
radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I love the sounds, the buzzing from the stadium, the chanting from the fans, the announcers calling
the place soccer.
Football at home.
Why do I watch the World Cup?
That's like asking me, why do I breed?
I inherited that fandom from my mom.
I like watching it with my dad.
It's a connecting force.
From Futuro Studios, I'm Fernanda Chavari,
and this is American Football,
a show about soccer culture in the U.S. and its underdog roots.
We go beyond the game to the people and the stories that make it great.
A soccer game is a festival.
It's not just a game.
It's your culture.
I took an elbow to my head, which cracked my skull.
It is an American game.
The Brazilians don't like hearing that, though.
Are they the only ones that don't like that?
Nobody likes that.
As we get ready for the Men's World Cup this summer,
listen to American Football as part of the MyCultura podcast network,
available on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
You guys want to play a little game?
Yes.
Yeah.
All right, NFL draft trivia game.
I'll give you the details.
First one to buzz in with your name gets a point.
Name the NFL player based on their draft details.
Okay.
Player one.
The year is 2000.
Position quarterback.
Round six.
Team, New England Patriots.
Kevin.
Kevin.
Yeah, Tom Brady.
Tom Brady, correct.
Good job.
College, Michigan.
We'll give that one to you.
Oh, thanks, dude.
he's your guy
I give it
do you mean one fairly
pretty much pretty much
player two
year 1998
round one
position
quarterback
college
Tennessee
Eddie
oh that was
you guys know who that was
what is that noise
oh the music
oh is that it is
I thought it was like an alarm going on
on somebody's phone
It was so low.
I thought it was an alarm going on.
Did I win that?
Eddie.
Okay, Peyton Manning.
Correct.
All right.
Player three.
I thought someone's phone was like alarm going off.
And I was just going to ignore it.
Player three.
The year was 2011.
Position quarterback.
Round one.
Team Carolina Panthers.
Kevin.
Kevin.
Kevin.
Kevin.
Kevin.
Kevin.
Kevin.
Kevin.
Kevin.
Player four.
Position.
wide receiver.
Round one.
Year 2007.
Team Detroit Lions.
Eddie.
Calvin Johnson.
Correct.
College, Georgia Tech.
Wow, dude.
Good, dude.
Player five.
Position.
Defensive tackle.
Team.
St. Louis Rams.
Kevin.
Kevin.
Aaron Donald.
Correct.
That's, yeah.
Good one, dude.
College, Pittsburgh.
Round one, 2014.
Dang, ding, ding.
Yeah, you're right there too, Eddie.
Did you give me that one?
Yeah.
You get that one, Kevin.
You keep a score over there, Mike.
Yeah, Kevin is 3.80 has 2.
Position, quarterback.
Round 3.
Year 2012.
Team Seahawks.
Kevin.
Kevin.
Russell Wilson.
Correct.
Dang.
College, Wisconsin.
Dang, dang, dang.
Kevin's taking the lead.
By two.
College.
Mississippi State.
Eddie.
Eddie.
Jack Prescott.
Correct.
He was ready for that one.
I'm back, baby.
2016, round four.
Nice.
Eddie down one?
Eddie, you need this one to tie
to go to sudden death.
Year 2020.
College.
LSU.
Kevin.
Kevin.
Joe Burrow.
You got it.
Correct.
Dang.
Good job, Kevin.
You want a couple of these.
other ones? He got drafted in COVID? That's crazy.
Yeah, yeah.
You know who else got drafted in COVID? I don't, I'm not sure about the Joe Burrow thing
if that was COVID or not, but Trey Lance.
That's why they're like, ah, we didn't know.
Really?
They didn't know what.
That he wasn't that good.
That's terrible. It was COVID, guys.
Yeah, like they couldn't smell.
They couldn't get him there. They couldn't work out with them all.
Like they couldn't spend much time with them. Yeah.
That makes sense.
Yeah.
You didn't play in front of a crowd.
Not as many games. No crap. Yeah.
We were watching UFC sidetrack just kind of, and they were playing in the apex.
They were fighting the apex or whatever.
What's that?
It's just a building in Vegas.
Like UFC, they work out there and there's just a ring in a big building.
And so that all started when COVID was, so they wouldn't stop fights.
They all fought in the apex instead of going to a big arena or whatever.
And my kids are like, where is this place?
I'm like, yeah, all because of COVID.
But they still do it every, I don't know, every couple weeks.
Kevin's the winner, but we'll roll the couple of these out.
Eddie, you can play too.
College, Ole Miss.
Eddie.
Eddie.
Eli Manning.
Correct.
Dang.
That's what I thought.
Year 2004, New York Giants quarterback.
College.
Oklahoma.
Year 2018.
Kevin.
Kevin.
Baker.
Correct.
Good one.
Position.
Quarterback.
Round one.
Year 2017.
College.
Texas.
Eddie.
That's Patrick Mahomes.
Texas Tech.
That's correct.
All right, one more.
Year 2005.
Okay.
Position.
Quarterback.
College.
California.
Kevin.
Aaron Rogers.
Correct.
Good one.
Good one.
All right.
Good job, Kevin.
Hey, you too, man.
Put up a good fight there, Eddie.
Thank you.
That's right.
Kevin, anything going on with you?
No.
Well, actually,
disappointing news this weekend, guys.
I'm not going golfing this week anymore.
What?
You made a tea time like four weeks ago.
Yeah, I know.
And luckily they already found somebody to replace me,
but I had a setback with the shoulder.
I started just because I haven't played yet or had a full swing.
And I just finished PT last week.
And I'm like, okay, I could probably play.
And I went to go to swing last week and didn't ever get a full swing,
but I had a little setback.
And I'm just, you know, I've done a lot of rehab for the last five months.
And I'm not trying to have any major setback.
So I'm just going to step aside and say this is probably the smart decision here.
Respect that.
Yeah.
Have you played it all?
Yeah.
Yeah, I played this weekend with my kids.
I thought you didn't because of basketball.
Saturday.
We went Saturday morning.
Where?
Harpeth.
Oh, your tournament was in town?
Yeah, yeah, I was right down the road from my house, luckily.
Got it.
So I took both of my kids, and I was like, and I just said it kind of out of a win because I know they'll never beat me.
I was like, whoever beats me gets $100.
And they're like, what?
Really?
I'm like, yeah, if any of you two beat me, you get $100.
straight cash.
And of course, I beat them by like 20 strokes.
But one day they're going to win.
And I feel like I'm just going to do this every single time we play golf.
You know, like, hey, here's your chance.
$100 or you can beat me today.
Until I did that's one of those water cheats like he did against me.
What you're talking about?
That wasn't a cheat, dude.
I just didn't know if you saw it.
Heard screaming.
Water.
I haven't played at all.
We've got to play this.
I know.
I've not touched a club since July of last year.
Let's go today.
I can't.
You don't have your simulator anymore, huh?
No, gave it away.
Give it away to charity.
Dang, I suck.
Gave it to charity, Kevin.
I really suck.
Two golfers right here, and he gave it away to some kids.
The only thing that I could do is I could play like 9 at like 6 p.m.
Today?
Something like that.
Get a little twilight.
I don't even...
Hey, let me check if there's no practice.
Well, my club's closed on Mondays.
But we could go somewhere.
I don't know.
You know the one I took the kids to?
After 4.30, it's first come, first serve.
We can walk it.
No carts, because carts are...
Where'd you go?
Harpeth.
Right over here.
Yeah, right down the road.
There are no carts?
After like 4.30, they shut the carts down.
So it's just us and a bunch of high school kids.
What if you want to? Let's go.
See if you don't have practice.
Let me make sure that kids don't have practice,
and if we're open tonight, I'll go.
I mean, I need to go.
I haven't touched a ball.
But there's no range if you go at 430.
Is there?
No, and the range is closed.
anyway.
Like, how am I even gonna like...
Play around, dude.
Let's just play around
with hitting no balls.
Yeah, just see how it goes.
It's gonna go terrible.
What, when's the last time you walked?
Other than, like, Pebble,
that was your caddy.
I carried your back.
I got invited back to Pebble for something.
You did?
I don't know if I can go,
but in September, yeah.
Not for the tournament,
but for some...
It's a different tournament, yeah.
Oh, we gotta go.
We should go.
I'll talk to your wife.
There's no Wii involved.
It's already a wee.
Yeah.
Hey, I'm your caddy.
What are you talking about?
When you play these things,
I'm your caddy, dude.
I was hit up last week and there's like,
maybe it's like a senior's event or something.
And there's also a thing where they bring it a bunch of kids
and like, hey, we come talk to these kids and we'll pay for your golf
and travel and everything at Pebble.
Are they like troubled kids or something?
I don't think they're happy kids.
I don't know, dude.
Usually I don't get brought in for rich happy kids.
It's all like a bunch of like troublemakers.
Let me see what it says here.
Yeah, usually it's never like good kids that mind their parents and have plenty of money.
Right, right.
It's the champions event.
That's senior, right?
Yeah, well, I don't know.
It's alongside our event, the Champions Tour event,
called the Pure Insurance Championship of Pevel.
We bring 78 kids from First Tea all over the world.
Oh, first T.
That's the one you made me giving the driver to the kid.
That's the one.
Maybe we'll see that kid again.
Yeah.
All right, everybody good?
Yeah, man.
Some kid, adult kid shows up with Eddie's driver.
Hey, you're the one that game of the driver.
10 years ago.
He's hitting at $3.50.
He's playing on the Champions Tour.
That's how long ago it was.
All right, thank you guys.
We will see you later on this week.
All right, have a great day.
And Mike Blow the Whistle.
All right, bye, everybody.
Theme song written by Bobby Bones.
That's me.
And performed by Brandon Ray.
Follow Brandon on social at Brandon Ray Music.
You can follow the show on Instagram at Bobby Bones Sports.
Thanks to our crew.
Co-host at Producer Eddy.
Segment producer at Kickoff.
Kevin, an executive producer at Mike DeStro, but most importantly, thank you for listening.
I'm Bobby Bones. We'll talk to you next time here on 25 whistles.
It's that time to put on your jersey and wave your flag, whoever you root for.
Why do I watch the walk up? That's like asking me, why do I breed?
And it's beautiful. The guys are young and cute and fit.
It's not just a game. It's your culture.
I like watching it with my dad.
connecting force.
From Futuro Studios, I'm Fernanda Chavari, and this is American Football, a show about
soccer culture in the U.S. and its underdog roots.
Listen to American Football on the I-Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts.
Joy is essential, and it's also elusive, but now there's a new and exciting way to start
your journey toward a more joyful existence, Joy 101.
It's a new podcast hosted by me, Hoda Kotter,
If you're craving inspiration to maximize your joy,
tune into these candid, uplifting, and moving on-air chats.
Open your free IHeart Radio app.
Search Joy 101 and listen now.
Joy 101 with Hoda Kotby is presented by CVS.
There was no anything inside those eyes.
They turned black.
It scared the hell out of me.
People wake up.
I'm the one that saw the murder take place by Krivac
and Yves.
Anthony DePippo.
Anthony DePippo showed no signs of remorse, appearing unfazed after being sentenced to the maximum.
I said, I'm not guilty.
I'll take it to the grief.
Listen to the devil's quarry in the Bone Valley Feed on the IHeart Radio app.
Apple Podcasts, wherever you get your podcasts.
All right, listen up.
The Jonas Brothers here.
Our podcast is called, Hey Jonas.
We've here, since everyone has a podcast, we want it to as well.
And we've had some incredible guests so far.
And now our good friend Nile Horn is joining the show.
How's it going, boys?
Hey, Niall.
It's the same thing with Slow Hands.
Slow Hands is not about anything else, really, is it?
You know, or taste so good can't be about food.
You do the same, Nick, with some of the stuff that you've done.
You too, Joe.
Drop what you're doing and listen to Hey Jonas on the Iheart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your podcasts.
This is an IHeart podcast.
Guaranteed Human.
