The Bobby Bones Show - BOBBYCAST - GMA Host Michael Strahan on Splitting a Bottle with Julia Roberts & Going to Space
Episode Date: April 2, 2026Michael Strahan sits down with Bobby to talk about why the daily grind of live television ended up being tougher than life in the NFL, and how he made the transition from football star to morning TV h...ost. He shares what it took to switch mindsets, why TV was harder than it looked from the outside, and how shows like Live and Good Morning America challenged him in totally different ways. Michael also talks about knowing when it was time to leave football, building a career beyond the game, and the lessons that helped him handle pressure in both worlds. Plus, he opens up about what it was like going to space, getting the call from Jeff Bezos, and the perspective shift that came with seeing just how small we all are from above. Collection by Michael Strahan is now available in 100 Belk stores and online. Visit Belk.com Watch The BobbyCast on Netflix! Follow on Instagram: @TheBobbyCast Follow on TikTok: @TheBobbyCast 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 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 grave.
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Hey, Niall.
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She asked me if I want to have a
glass of rosé. I said, absolutely
because who turns down Julia Roberts
in a glass of rosé. And we ended up finishing
off a bottle of rosé. And it
was fantastic. Every
year, I sent her a case of
Jose. I don't know if she drinks it or not, but, you know, I send it to her.
We have a living legend on the Bobbycast today, Super Bowl champion with the New York Giants.
He's a Hall of Famer. He's co-anchor of Good Morning America.
I'm going to talk to Michael Strayhan from setting the single-season sack record.
He flew in space with Blue Origin, which we'll talk about.
Like, he's all over the place. He also has a collection.
And it's called The Collection by Michael Strayan. It suits. It's in 100,000.
Belk stores and it's online.
And I love this guy.
I've been able to work with them a couple times,
be on Good Morning America and he was so nice.
We talk about that.
And we talk football and TV and business and space and everything in between.
If you don't know him, well, you're about to love him.
Here he is.
My conversation with Michael Strahan.
Michael Strahan, what's up, man?
What's up, man?
I'm so hungry.
I'm going to eat Starburst.
You eat Starburst?
I'm surprised that you, for two reasons, would eat Starburst.
Burst.
I haven't had them in years, and that's why they're probably harder than a rock.
They all kind of harder than a rock right now, but when desperate times go off for
Starbursts.
Is it that desperate?
You got to eat old Starburst?
I'm not desperate right now, but...
Not bad.
Let me just say, it's been a few minutes.
I don't even know if you remember me, but I have a couple Michael Strayhan's stories.
Once I was in New York or something else, and I got a call going, hey, when you go up to
GMA and talked to Michael Strayhan about Old Town Road. And I was like, yeah, sure. So I literally
threw on some jeans and a B-plus shirt and went up and talking about Old Town Road whenever
Lodontz X was blowing up. And that was kind of fun because you're just the easiest guy to be around.
And then obviously when I, you know, I went dancing with the stars, that was kind of odd.
That was a fun one too. But I always tell people, like, you're a big dude, but you're a very warm guy.
You feel like you've always been that way towards people?
Yeah. Yeah. I appreciate that.
I appreciate that.
And I remember meeting you every time.
So, yeah, I've always felt like people are important.
I was always, growing up as a kid was kind of had those job that you weren't the seen person in when you're cutting the grass or you're moving furniture and people just don't see you.
You're kind of just there.
So for me, it's always about being warm and making people feel seen.
So, and I like people.
So, yeah, I always, I feel like I'm that guy.
except for the football field.
Outside of that, I'm actually pretty nice.
Was that a switch?
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
You got to have a switch.
You have to be able.
It's weird.
When I was a kid,
kid being like 21 in the first year in the league,
you have to,
you think for years,
like, I got to be mad at that guy.
I got to be mad.
He said something about my mama.
Like, you're creating all these scenarios in your head.
But as I got older,
It was, hey, we can have this conversation right now.
And I say, hold on, Bobby.
Put my helmet on, run out there, look at the guy, smile at him, beat him up a little bit, come back, put the helmet down and continue the conversation.
It was more about learning how to control your aggression, how to control your focus.
And it took me some years to do it.
But it made the game easier, made it more relaxed, made it more fun, less stressful.
So, yeah, I definitely felt like you have to have a switch.
If you don't, you'll burn yourself out quickly.
I think it's been pretty amazing to watch the new professional identity you've created.
But I do, and I work for the NFL, and I work with Matt Castle, who was a quarterback.
And we talked a lot about athletes who, when they leave, they kind of have to figure out who they are because all they've ever done is be that.
Was that, you know, mentally for you?
Was that a struggle?
Absolutely.
I knew I had a job with Fox when I retired.
I mean, that was done.
I already had a deal that signed and put in a drawer.
and the first year of that deal went by
and I still went back to the Giants.
It wasn't about having a job.
It was about having a, you know, being comfortable.
And my first year at Fox first three weeks,
I was thinking I should have gone back to play football.
This TV stuff is not for me.
It's hard.
It's a lot harder than it looks.
And but once I got it down, I love it.
But yeah, football was just,
it's something we've done our whole lives.
And how do you transition our lives?
of that. And you walk into a room and you feel like that's all everybody sees, the football
player. They don't see the human being. They don't see someone who has other interests,
someone who is more rounded than what they expect an athlete to be. So yeah, that was a big
adjustment for me, even though I knew I had a job. It still was tough. Did you feel like when
you would go into a room that you would try to prove you were more of what you actually were,
but try to be more of that so people would take you as that instead of just an athlete?
I think at some point probably probably but I remember I was talking to a movie guy, movie producer
and I remember saying to him, yeah, you know, I feel like I go into these things because I thought
I wanted to be an act tour at that point. So I'm like, yeah, I go to these auditions and I feel like
I walk in and they just go here, the football player. And he said, people will see you as you see
yourself. And he said that and it kind of like, okay.
I got to take myself out of just that football player mentality.
And once I did that,
a lot of different things start to happen.
I think people did see me in a different light.
I think being just taking advantage of opportunities.
And by that, I mean getting over the fear of failure,
the fear of being in front of a group of people
and something not working out,
just saying yes to something just for the experience of it
and see where that led.
and I look back now and I'm so grateful that I kind of got over the fear of the failure,
the fear of feeling like you're going to look stupid if you do something.
And just get rid of all that stuff, drop your ego at the door and go to work.
And that's what I did.
And it's worked out.
How early did you start doing live with Kelly and Michael from after you retired?
I think my fourth year out of football.
Yeah, I think my fourth year out.
Did you feel like you were ready for that?
Or do you feel like that was training camp for what you're doing now?
Oh, no, I was ready for that.
Because coming from Fox, got four other guys that have to listen to and pay attention to.
That was tough.
Live was probably the easiest show I've ever done, to be honest with you.
Because it was more personality-driven.
It was more, you know, celebrity-driven, more fun.
and upbeat.
So that was just kind of natural to me.
And I enjoyed it.
I loved it.
It was really a lot of fun.
And GMA is a little bit of that, but you have the news and you have other
components.
So it required for you to have a different range and much more, a much more rounded range
than live.
But I felt like I was ready for live.
GMA and football were the two that when I first started, I was a little overwhelmed.
Live felt natural.
It was just a good fit.
Did you feel like playing football you would get more scrutiny like film or once you started doing GMA when they were, were you getting scrutiny from, you know, producers or executives?
No, it's weird.
Producers and executives in a lot of ways, you need people around you outside of that who are going to tell you the truth.
And not that they don't tell you the truth, but I think a lot of them are so afraid to upset what they call the talent.
So they will go around and try to hopefully get around
that gets to you around the bend,
not directly to your face.
But coming from football,
I'm used to it like a coach cursing you out,
screaming at you,
talking about everything about you,
you just got to take it,
or you just got to toughen up.
And I'm being on the field and having guys do that
or being in and having the media do that to you
after you have a bad game or bad season.
So I was pretty tough from the football,
aspect of it. I think that
the other criticism that
you get, I think I
judge myself a lot harder
than anybody in the newspaper is going to judge
me. So I
just learned when I play football
and I remember telling one of the reporters this
after he had kind of pissed me off.
I said, well, you know what?
I learned
I'm not going to let
take the, I'm not going to let the opinion of someone
upset me who the last time they put on a football
uniform is when their mom took them trick-or-treat.
and it's very easy for me to criticize what you do.
I can't do what you do.
But I know one thing I could do what those guys were doing.
They couldn't do what I was doing at the time.
So I just always look at it and think no one is, more people want to see succeed, but most people, you know, sometimes they don't.
But then if they don't and you have a comeback, they like that too.
And being in New York, you have that thick skin.
So I developed it here, man, and it's worked great for me.
It's weird. You bring up a great point.
Like our culture is funny because they love to build you up.
They don't always love to see you stay up there because then they love to knock you down.
And then they love to see you build yourself back up again after they've built you up and knocked you down.
It's almost like they want to yo-yo you.
Yes, that's exactly what it is.
Yeah. I will tell you, if you could build yourself back up after getting knocked down,
then you almost feel like nothing can take you down again, you know,
unless you do something to sabotage yourself.
But I enjoy that.
I enjoy being challenged.
I enjoy people doubting.
I think that's what motivates me to be honest with you,
to keep on doing all these things that no one expected this football guy to do.
So I take it as motivation.
I take it as fuel.
I don't feel like I have anything to prove anymore to anybody.
And now I do things that I love to do.
and I enjoy doing and just trying to prove to myself that I can accomplish and be good at something.
What time do you wake up in the morning?
5 a.m.
Oh, that ain't so bad.
Not so bad.
You know, like George wakes up at 3, 3.30, and Robin's like 4, 4.30, and they're like, oh, we meditate.
I'm like, well, I do too.
It's called sleep.
Why?
Why?
So I wake up at 5, and it's a great job, man.
I love it. I actually enjoy going in. I think moving our studio, the only downtown has brought a
different kind of vibe and filling to it and has reinvigorated everybody there. So it's a lot of fun.
Do you have any moments with Good Morning America? And I'll just compare it out. For a week,
I went and I hosted the Today Show. I hope that's not a bad word. But I went on. No, not at all. I
loved them over there. I hosted the Today Show. And Queen Elizabeth died one of the days that I was doing it.
And so it just threw everything off, meaning it was like, okay, we had all this plan.
but now we're going straight coverage.
It's Queen Elizabeth.
Have any of those big world events happened to you where you've had to go, all right, time to just tighten up and we've got to change?
Oh, yeah, absolutely.
Every day.
I mean, we got a situation going on in Iran right now.
So it's like you're in the middle of something and something happens and it's breaking news and you've got to break in.
The show gets thrown in flux.
And when you first start, oh, man, you don't know what's going on.
Your mind just spinning because you've never experienced it.
But now you kind of get used to it.
It's not that it's easy, but you're able to calm yourself down and process everything to get through it.
And that's what's kind of fun about is the unpredictability of it.
Because if every day is just the same, after a while, you can go in there and be a robot and do the job.
I'm like, okay, you guys can just AI me.
And I'll stay home or you can still get this job done.
But yeah, you've got to be able to just move and flex and be flexible with everything.
sometimes one of the worst is when I'm like we're talking all of a sudden your remote messes up and then
at camera you're like we got a problem we're right back the panic is real but it's fun man that's the
interesting part about my job is that I get to talk to interesting people like yourself get to meet
a ton of people um get to cover world events some of my highlights I went to to when they coordinated
at King Charles.
I did the coordination for ABC.
I let the coverage.
So I'm throwing all the raw experts,
and I have to be an expert on the subject myself
to go to places like Easter Island
and cover the Maillai statues
and the ecosystem there.
So it's like all these interesting places
I get to go around the world
to cover different things and topics and people
and animals and everything.
It's fantastic.
The documentary you did about your daughter's fight against cancer,
and I believe that's even in the title
of it. That's professional, but it's extremely personal. And this is a professional question, but I'm
assuming in final cuts, when you get the decision of what's going to be shown, like you're having to
balance. This is your daughter's journey. And yet it's also being made as a documentary.
To me, what seemed like to allow people to see they're not alone and like to also to show,
you know, what had happened, but that a lot of folks are, like, how did you balance that?
Well, that's all unheard. I'll be honest with you. My daughter, the
amazing because I when we got the diagnosis and she was going through what she was going through
she couldn't find anybody her age to to communicate with to share to be comfortable with so that's
why she wanted to reach out and like post all these blogs and do our blogs and do all these things
and when they came to when we thought about doing the doc I'll be honest with you Bobby I've never seen
it. Oh, still, like, still. Because you lived it or it's too hard to watch? I lived it and it's too
hard to watch. And being there every day and send it every day, that is one, the one project where I
said, okay, if you want to do this, got told her, you don't have to do this. She wanted to do
this because she wanted to help other people. So I was a one project. I said, handed it to the team and said,
here you go. This is my baby. Take care.
hear my baby, but I can't, I can't be involved on a daily and look at this. But she's in remission.
She's, you know, checkups are great. She's back in college. But yeah, it's a very hard, that was a very
hard time because I have to go to work every day and put on a brave, happy face. But yet I know when I go
home, I'm dealing with a daughter who I have to take to get radiation treatments or I got to go
to give her, you should take her to do her chemo treatment. So it was,
it was tough, you know, rushing to the hospital at night if you get the fever and then, you know,
showing up in the morning and acting and being in a way in which, okay, that, I can't let my
personal side interact with my, my, um, professional side. But her putting it out there really did
help me in a sense that I didn't feel like, I felt like I could express what was going on
with the people that were close to me and not feel like I had to hold something back.
And because she didn't want the world to know. She wanted the world to know because she felt,
It was a good way to help other people in the world.
How did you compartmentalize that?
You know, it's kind of like football, a switch.
Be honest, with you, it's like a switch.
And it's a gift and a curse because I can have something serious
and I can block it out and do it.
I can do in a moment and I can go right back to it.
And I can block it out and go do other things.
It's a gift and a curse, but in this case, it was a gift.
And, yeah, it was just compartmentalizing.
I think playing sports.
playing football and having to develop that skill helped in this case.
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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.
The murder of a child is 12-year-old.
She's as bad as it gets.
I would think so.
Evil, wake up.
I'm the one that saw the murder take place by Creveit 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.
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with exclusive content.
Subscribe to Love 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,
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I was not prepared for postpartum anxiety.
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All right, listen up.
The Jonas Brothers here.
Our podcast is called, Hey Jonas.
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.
Drop what you're doing and listen to Hey Jonas on the Iheart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your podcasts.
And we're back on the Bobbycast.
I know you spent time going up in Germany.
I'd never been until recently, and I stopped in Munich, and I got a hot dog, and I really put a lot of pressure on that hot dog being good.
Just because...
You got a brothel?
Yes.
And so at high hopes, high, and I got, and it met every expectation that I could have ever had.
Really?
Yes, and I talk about it.
If anybody's like, you ever been to Germany?
I'm like, not only have I been to Germany.
Let me tell you about this hot dog at a street fair.
It was a bride. It was definitely a bride.
So what ages were you there?
We moved to Germany when I was nine.
And then I came back to the States for half of my senior year to play football
and lived with my uncle in Houston for five months.
Got one football scholarship to Texas Southern, got back on the plane in December for Christmas.
and flew back to Germany and graduated high school there.
So I was there from 9 until 17, 18 years old.
My parents stayed until I was 27.
I was in the NFL for six, seven years before my parents moved back.
So I would still go back.
I'd go see my family, obviously.
I felt when I first came back here for high school for that half of my senior year,
I felt more German and European than I felt American.
That was home.
And yeah, it was definitely.
a culture shock
to come back to the States.
Did you only play American football then
for one year?
I played one year in high school, yeah.
That was it. I had no idea what I was doing, man.
I was just like running around,
getting the guy with the ball,
just whoever. I had no idea.
I knew no technique.
I watched the game on TV.
You know, you just tackle the guy with the ball.
If I could do that, I got one scholarship.
And then from there, I figured it out.
And I learned, you know, I've really learned a lot about how to do it.
I watch TV, man.
I would watch NFL games on Sunday.
Even when I was in college, I'd watch NFL games on Sunday.
And I'm just watching a guy and what he's doing and how he's successful at different things.
And I remember reading in those something, and these magazines that needs to have the players, their size, their weight, all these things.
And I remember going, I need to be 6.5, 250.
I need to be 6.5.250.
And my brothers aren't big guys, really.
And I ended up being like 6'5.
At times of my career a little bit over 250 of the big bones.
But by the end of the day, I ended up being what I always imagined I needed to be
in order to be successful in the NFL.
It's crazy.
Is there a person both in sports and in your, we'll call it your second life in media,
who believed in you and you look at that person and go, man, if it wasn't for that person,
I don't know if I'd be here.
I think it's two people at different phases in my life.
Number one is my dad.
My dad, major Gene Willie Strahan Sr.
passed away a few years ago, but incredibly great, great father and a great man.
And my dad, growing up, would always say when, not if.
So he said, when you do this, when you do that, when you go back to the day with your uncle and get the scholarship, when you make it to the pros, when, I mean, everything.
was when, never if. So in my mind, I believed anything was possible. I never had any doubt.
So my dad was that growing up. And then once football was over, my business partner, Constance,
Swartz. It was like Constance kind of picked up the baton. And I'll never forget the first time
I did live, I was a guest host. I was nervous as all could be. I do it. We get backstage and she
looks at me and she goes, this is what you're going to do. This is what you're going to do. This is.
is your next job. This is your next job. This type of business is what you're going to do.
And from there to everything that I do now on the business side to the television side,
it's all because Constance has taken over the role that my dad had all those years growing up.
And yeah, between the two of them, they have really taken care of me.
This may be a really corny question, but what was it like in space?
Oh, amazing.
when I tell you, people ask me that.
And I could sit here and take our whole time together to describe it to you.
But in essence, the whole thing was 12 minutes, up and down, 12 minutes.
But because you're so hyper aware of every sound, every feeling, everything, it feels like it was ours.
When you're sitting in that capsule and you're watching that screen and it's telling you the countdown clock,
and then they added more time to our countdown clock,
which makes you go, huh, why did they do that?
Something wrong?
And they're coming on there.
Like, no, nothing's wrong or okay.
And you're watching that countdown clock.
And once you get to two and a half minutes,
then it goes on the computer.
You're locked in.
So until then, you've got two things.
You can say, one, time out,
which means they'll come on and try to say,
okay, Bobby, you can do this.
You got it.
Or I don't want to fly today.
Then they'll just come take you off.
and I'm looking at the countdown clock and I'm like,
ooh, is anybody on here going to say they don't want to party to break?
And if they do, will I go with them?
And once you get past that threshold where you realize you're locked in
and you have no other option but to do it,
it is such a calming peace over your body.
You're not even scared.
It's a peace.
And once we took off and the thing is moving up,
everybody just screamed, yeah, like,
unprompted screen because it was like all this, this joy and presser relieved.
And you're, you're flying, man.
I mean, you look up that just screen.
It's like, oh, we're 40,000 square feet.
I mean, 40,000 feet in the air and we have, we're going 300 miles per hour.
You're like, okay, cars that do 300 and 40,000.
I've been in a plane.
Next thing you know, you look up, you're like 200,000 feet in the air doing 2,000
miles per hour.
And you were in the light looking at the darkness.
Now you're in the dark looking.
back at the light. And the first time you realize that they released the main rocket and you go
like that and you go, oh my gosh, my arms are floating. Then once you release your seat belts,
you put them, you take them off, you push yourself with the pressure of holding up a cell phone
with two fingers. That's it. Don't ever use your leg. You'll break your neck. Don't blow like the
cartoon. You're not going to move anywhere. Don't do that. You're not going anywhere. It doesn't work that way.
but you push off of that seat and you're just floating.
You're doing spinning.
You're looking out the window and it looks like, you know,
when you leave your phone, your TV on an iPhone and, I mean,
Apple and the circular screen and just looking back at the planet,
it makes you realize how insignificant we are to the grand scheme of everything here.
And it gives you a different sense of what your life is, your family,
like you start you you you get you become peaceful with the fact of death when you're getting ready to take off because you realize this could go awry but then you know i don't want to leave my family i don't want them leave me um and and you realize how much love that there is that you have inside of you uh and but how it's significant in the grand scheme of the world you are at the same time it's just the most unique feeling i've ever ever felt man and you didn't think at all to yell i don't want to do it
you ran, you were locked in?
Absolutely.
I thought I didn't want to do it.
When I got the call to do it, I had out of the, I went to the first launch that Bezos did,
Jeff and his brother, Mark, and I went for GMA, and I'm like, okay, you know,
I can watch these guys go up in a spaceship.
I'm not a space guy.
I watched it, and I said, this is the coolest thing.
When the rocket came back and landed on the pad by itself, they're gone.
You can't see that.
I'm thinking I'll just see them up there and they'll come down.
like a roller coaster that's really hot.
No, they were gone.
Then they come down.
I talked to them.
It was the most unbridled joy I've ever seen out of human being to my life,
everybody who did it.
And I said, this is the coolest thing I've ever seen.
When that rocket land, I think this is like Iron Man cool.
A few weeks later, I get invited to dinner with them and another couple.
And I got there late because I was doing Thursday night football at that point for Fox.
And I'm eating my cold left, the cold leftovers.
that they left me.
And I said, you know, that rocket thing,
I would say I would never do that.
But I would do that.
That was one of the coolest things that I've ever seen.
A few days later, I'm playing golf and I get a call.
And it's Jeff.
And he goes, I think you know what this is about.
I'm like, yeah.
And I was so excited.
I'm in, man.
I'm in.
A week before, I was like, maybe I got COVID.
Maybe.
Dude, I was scared to death.
I was like, what did I sign up for?
Because in the interim, you got to get your paperwork in order.
You know, I'm like, this could be the last week.
I see my family and friends could be it.
But it ended up being magnificent.
And by the time you get on that ship, they've explained everything to you.
You sat with the engineers who built the rocket.
You sat with other astronauts who've gone to space.
They do an incredible job of educating you.
So when you get on the ship, you feel confident.
You're ready to go.
My family cried.
I don't know if they were crying because they wanted me back or they didn't,
but they said they cried.
And I had the best time, the best time.
I want to ask about the coach Vic experience.
As a kid growing up, love Michael Vick of Virginia Tech.
Like he was that dude.
I remember the commercials, the Mike Vick experience commercial on the roller coaster,
you know, so the rise of Mike Vick, and then, you know, when he went to prison and he's back out.
So I've just kind of seen Mike Vick, the roller coaster of Mike Vick.
And I wonder now, because I don't know him, and he's coaching.
now. Like, what did you take away from Mike, Vic, as an adult and as a coach and as a leader of
men? Well, one thing I will say about Mike, is I've known Mike a long time. And I have so much
respect for him because he realized what got him in trouble back in the day and the way that he
was living his life back in the day. That was the wrong way to live his life. And here's a guy
who grew up in a certain way, doing certain things that seemed normal for the community that he
came from, but they weren't and they weren't right. So he paid his debt. He went to prison,
came out of prison, got back on the football field, but also had a lot of, you know,
he owed a lot of money to a lot of people. But he didn't file bankruptcy and rip everybody off.
He paid people back. So I look at Mike and I think Mike has a lot of honor.
I think as the coach, I don't know if there's any other player. I would listen. I would be
amazed. But I look at Mike and I look at Dion.
I mean, these guys are some of the goats of what they did.
And they both are the guys who were signature.
Like, they're so incredible at the time.
They're one of the few football players at the top with their own shoes,
with their own apparel line through Nike.
Like, we didn't get that as football player.
That's how exceptional these two were.
And I love Mike as the coach because I think he's had some life experiences
that other kids, these kids need to hear.
These kids need to experience.
Someone who's been on top, who's been on the bottom,
who's making their way back.
And I think as the coach,
it is so much probably more
than he thought it was going to be.
It's a lot to bite off.
It's a lot of work.
There's a lot of time away from your family.
The other reason I got in the TV
because I wouldn't want to be a coach.
So I think that Mike is a great example of resilience.
I think he's a great example
paying your debt to society
and getting back on your feet.
And hopefully he can turn Norfolk State back around
because last year was a rough year,
but I think he's also learning along with these kids
as the coach
and I think they're learning from him
as men.
Do you think you could have played another year?
Yeah, absolutely.
Why didn't you?
I walked off to field, Bobby.
I didn't lent.
Okay, why?
We won a Super Bowl, man.
15 years, I did everything I wanted to do.
There was nothing left to do.
What was, I'd won an award.
I'd done all the individual stuff.
And after so many years of that,
you kind of go, this is not really fulfilling.
The only thing I hadn't done was won a Super Bowl.
So once that happened, I was like, why am I sticking around for the money to blow my knees out?
And the next thing I got something that's going to mess me up for the rest of my life for a few bucks.
And I kind of felt confident enough that I could make something happen outside of the game of football.
And thankfully, I've been able to do that.
But yeah, I could have played another year.
Physically, I felt great.
There are days I wake up now and I feel like I can give them another year.
Did you have good financial literacy?
Yeah, and not because, not because it was because I had a chance encounter with the guy who ended up being like one of my, he's one of my best friends and my brother who has looked out for me over the years.
And it's like a 10 year age, no, it's, well, hold on.
Yeah, it's like 12 year age difference.
we met on a golf trip when neither of us played golf.
We ended up being like sweetmates.
And we just really hit it off in 1994.
And he got into an accident in the city and called and his wife called me,
who was nine months pregnant at the time in her mid-40s,
which was back then a very risky pregnancy.
And I went to the hospital and saw him and made sure that she had nothing to worry about
and took care of him.
makes it i got all the doctors i made that happen and his promise to me was you took care of my
wife and my unborn son who is now mid-20s and works big hedge fund i can't teach you um i want to do
something for you said i can't teach you football and i'm like yeah because juggling from the accident
when you got hit rod rollerblade or you can't take a head um so it was pretty bad how he looked so uh he
I want to teach you about money.
I don't want to invest your money.
I don't want to control your money.
I don't want any say over your money.
I just want you to bring me every deal that anyone brings to you.
And all the things that you've done before you've met me and I want to make sure we
go through it.
I want to teach you how to look at money.
I want to teach you how to value money.
I want to teach you how to understand it.
What questions to ask when people want it.
Like everything.
And that would be life lesson of the best financial literacy that anybody can have.
It's someone who's in that business in the finance world who takes you under their wing for nothing.
Never charged me one penny.
And has been that guy for me for over 30 years.
So I got very lucky, very fortunate in relationships.
The Bobbycast, we'll be right back.
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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.
eyes, they turned black. It scared the hell out of me.
That was your first murder case? Yes, sir.
Fair to say this was the biggest case of your career?
Yes, sir. Ramp 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 sentenced to the maximum.
I said I'm not guilty. I'll take it to the grave.
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 Lobba 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.
All right, listen up.
The Jonas Brothers here.
Our podcast is called, Hey Jonas.
We figure 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, Nile.
It was 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 IHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen
to your podcasts.
This is the Bobbycast.
I'm going to ask you a question
that I've asked a few people recently.
I don't have any kids yet.
My wife's about to have our first kid.
So,
thank you very much.
Vegas could be,
like,
give me some advice.
Well, when the baby's born, you come home, they don't give you a manual at the hospital.
But don't panic.
I think that, first of all, you'll know what you're doing without even knowing what you're doing, and you'll figure it out.
And kids aren't as delicate as you think they are.
They're rough.
I mean, we were all kids and ran and fell and hit our head on coffee tables and everything else.
And look at us.
We're functioning somewhat.
So I would say, you're going to love.
your kid more than you ever thought you can love anything, including yourself. Because I tell my kids
all the time, because I'm that annoying dad who's sending them, you know, stuff off Instagram,
watch out for this. When you're in an Uber do this. And they're like, oh, dad, you're going to
take self-defense. Oh, dad. I'm like, you don't understand when you're not with me,
my heart lives outside of my body. You're my heart now. So wherever you go and whatever you do,
is me.
And that's the thing about having kids.
It makes you realize that your life is a lot bigger than whatever you do for a living
and,
and, you know,
whatever car you drive and how many people you know,
it doesn't matter.
Kids are the crim-a-crim or what life is about if you have them.
And you'll be fine.
Don't be nervous.
And you'll crush it.
And whatever they,
most, for the most part,
whatever they learn in life,
I think its fathers were always told that
you know, and if you've got a baby, what are we supposed to really do?
And I read a book years ago that said,
the first three years of your kids' life are the most important of the father.
Because we always get this, this idea that, oh, I'm my breastfeeding.
I'm not doing this.
I'm not doing that.
But being there, your rhythm of your heart, the smell, like everything.
And your kids could get as attached to you as they can to anybody.
And I'm telling you, man, it's going to be magical.
I can't wait until you talk to you in a few months or a year.
and you're like, Michael, this is the most amazing thing ever, and I'm having a second one.
All right, I got three final questions for you.
I love when people do, like, lines of clothes because there's a lot of, like, themselves in it.
And I know that you have at belk stores, you have, is it suits?
Like, what do you have?
And how much of it is, like, your style?
It's all of it's my style.
Everything.
So we have suits.
We have belts.
We have all the men accessories.
So everything that you need to get suited and booted is what we got.
And it's all my style.
I don't wear everything you see.
Every time you see me in a suit, it's my suit.
See me in a shirt.
It's my shirt.
I don't go out and buy something else and wear it and try to say, oh, yeah, this is mine.
Everything.
Because I believe if I'm going to put my name on, it's got to be me.
And but I am kind of a, I'm not a boozy guy, if that's a word.
Like, I'm not this fancy horse.
tooty-toity guy because my suits are affordable, but they're nice.
And there's a lot of thought that goes into them.
And I would touch every fabric.
Oh, I like this pocket.
I like that lapel, like obsessing over it because I didn't want someone,
if something's a success and you're getting credit for it and you were really,
really invested, you can feel good about it.
If it were a success and I had nothing to do with it and they're giving a lot of credit
to me, I would feel bad. Just like if it's the failure and I didn't put anything into it,
that I'm mad at myself because maybe I could have made a success by investing. But if it's a
failure and I put everything into it, I could live with that. At least I try. So everything is
me. Everything. So I love the business. It's organic to me and it's organic to my life and
being a football player. We had to dress up. I love getting on the road trips because
you would see some of the most interesting outfits. You'd ever see. I was like, Camille.
suit that change colors with every freaking way you walk to suits that look like
Skittles bags with yellow, green, and purple and everything else.
So, yeah, there's an interesting life.
Okay, two questions left.
This one's probably going to be tough.
But I got, if you could go one, two, three, like, who have you been able to interview
that you were starstruck by when you sat down with them?
Julia Roberts.
Julia Roberts.
How'd that go?
It was first time. Fantastic. I interviewed her at the Beverly Wilson Hotel, the anniversary of pretty woman, and I interviewed her in the suite where they shot the movie. And when we finished the interview, she asked me if I want to have a glass of rosé. So I said, absolutely, because who turns down Julia Roberts in a glass of rosé. And we ended up finishing off a bottle of rosé. And it was fantastic. And her birthday is the same as my twins. So, you know, every year, I say,
sent her a case of rosé.
I don't know if she drinks it or not, but, you know, I send it to her.
But yeah, Julia Roberts was one man.
It's so weird because I've interviewed people multiple times now, so I'm not really as nervous.
Oh, I had Nicole Kidman yesterday and Jamie Lee Curtis.
Nicole Kidman is so nice.
She lives here.
Yeah.
And I know.
She's local, and I know her, and I knew her and Keith when they were together.
I knew them both really well.
She's so nice.
Like she shouldn't be that nice.
You know what?
She's so nice.
And Jamie Lee and her, of course, complimented each other.
And I love the way in which they met and they're working on this project together.
And so I, Jamie Lee said how nice she was.
And you could just see it.
She's a gentle soul, man.
She kind of intimidated me because I love her work.
Like I love everything she does.
I think she just is fantastic.
And the last one, who would be number three?
You.
Stop.
Where we go.
Stop it.
Like, what about an athlete?
When I interviewed Derek Jeter, I thought that was pretty cool.
Or it's usually anybody from when I was a kid that I looked up to because when I meet them, I'm like, this is crazy because I still have that inside of me.
Even if I know everything's like real and, you know, people are people.
But like when I meet somebody from when I was a kid, I still have those feelings.
I mean, you know what?
The guy that my, they're really good.
Like, Jeter's my buddy.
I mean, I won't get me started on that knucklehead, but I love him.
The one guy who I love to is a good friend and everything else, but you see him and you're still like, whoa.
And I remember the first time I interviewed him with first year he got into NASCAR.
And I was like, Michael Jordan.
I mean, MJ is still MJ.
And so that was like the one guy.
And as a kid, I started trying to walk a little bow-legged and stuff like that.
and wish I'd grown to 6-6 and about 2-15.
So I could have played basketball,
but that didn't quite work out.
So I had to go to football.
But MJ, MJ is like one of those athletes that I look at.
I'm like, okay, this is, this is Michael Jordan.
This is the guy who I still get a bunch of highlights on Instagram for my buddies.
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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 terrible.
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 woman that saw the murder take place by Crevent and DePippo.
Anthony DePippo showed no signs of remorse,
appearing unfazed after being
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 Love 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 IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
All right, listen up.
The Jonas Brothers here.
Our podcast is called, Hey Jonas.
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.
Drop what you're doing and listen to Hey Jonas on the Iheart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your podcasts.
And we're back on the Bobbycast.
Final question for you.
You've done many things, and you've been successful.
at many things. Like, what's the key? What's the key to people doing things and making it?
Really having enjoyed and having through the anthem for it. Just don't show up at mail in,
mail it in, be interested. I think that's the thing. A lot of people do things because,
and we've all done things like, oh, I'm going to make a lot of money. But you just don't jump into
something and make a lot of money. You've got to build up to those things. But the only way you're going to build up to
if you have an interest and to stay in it.
And I've always been interested in things that I've done.
I think I try to do things that really make me want to do them.
And that just has seen to be the magic on top of just being nice to people.
I think that is like the greatest thing for me is just people, being nice to people,
understanding people, having a feeling for people, like I said earlier,
making people feel seen.
because if you treat people in that way, people want to be around you.
We never, have you ever seen somebody walks in a room?
And you're like, oh, man.
Well, somebody walks in the room, you're like, hey.
And I think that's just from the vibe and energy that you give off.
So for me, I've just tried to give off the vibe of, you know, I'm easy.
I don't want anything from anybody.
I don't need anything from anybody.
I just want to truly be friends with people.
I think there's so much more fun in that than always having an angle.
So, yeah, show up, be authentic, be interested, and do the best you can at it.
Life ain't that complicated.
I'm going to check out the suits.
If those are the ones you're wearing on TV, I'm going to check out the suits then.
That's it.
You let me know.
I'll see you something, man.
I got you.
All right.
Somebody get your sizes.
We'll sip you some suits.
All right, all right.
You have for Dan, man.
I appreciate that.
Like I said, I'm not just saying it because, you know, we're on Netflix now or whatever.
It's like you were always so kind to me, even if you didn't know you were.
Like you naturally were that guy that you're talking about right now.
Like that's who you were to me.
And that is always the impression when people ask about someone like you or even someone like Dion who I know.
Like it's like people make you feel a certain way when you're around them.
And you were that guy.
So I really appreciate you being so nice to me.
No, you're kidding me.
You were great, man.
And we're talking about it today.
Dance with the Stars, by the way.
Congratulations.
Again.
every athlete that I've talked to who's done it.
And Emmys Smith won the first year.
He came to New York and I took him to dinner.
And literally, we couldn't walk in a restaurant like women getting up from each table we passed.
And he'd have to dance with each one of them to get just to the table.
Can we just eat hungry?
Every athlete I talked to said, man, that is the freaking hardest thing we've ever done.
I said, that's why I'll never be on a show.
I don't want to work that hard before.
To see you go on and not without the dancing background or anything.
That's what I loved about it, man.
And it's how tough I know it is because I've been around.
Everybody's been on that show.
And for you to go out there and crush it like that.
It was fun to see, man.
So congrats again, champion.
I appreciate that.
I'll end on this.
You brought up Emmett.
This is my favorite Emmett Smith story.
I didn't know Emmett at the time.
It's the finale.
And you know, and you've judged dancing with the stars, right?
You've like you've been up there.
I'm the guest judge, yeah.
Yeah, so on the finale, everybody's super tight because you're just trying to do your best.
Everybody's trying to win.
You're doing multiple dances.
I'm in the back, and I've got one more dance to do.
I did not know what I was doing.
The whole season, like, every week, I was just piecing it together.
And I run into Emmett in the back.
There's like the craft services, the catering thing.
And he sees me.
I'm a little bit outside my mind, and he also knows what it's like to be in that spot because he won the show.
And he said, he came up to me, and he said, how you feel.
feeling. And I was a little too just wired for the show to go, holy crap, this is Emmett Smith.
And so I was just talking to Emmett, a champion of dancing with the stars. I said, I'm doing
pretty good. And he said, he said, look at me in the eyes. And so I like focused up for a second.
He put his hand on my shoulder. And he said, look, you have worked every bit as hard, if not more
than any single person to be here. You have one more dance to do. That dance is already done.
You haven't done it yet, but it's already done because of all the work that you've put in.
just go out there and exist, you're going to win this show.
And then I went out, and I'll never forget that.
And after I won, the first person to hop up on stage with me was Emmett to take a picture.
Like, he gave me to go get one for the Gipper's speech right before I won.
I love it.
Hey, I kind of got some chills over here.
Me too.
Tell him back, me too.
Me too.
Mike, thank you so much for the time and continued successes and hopefully our paths will cross again soon.
I hope so, man.
Anything for you, Bobby.
I love it. I appreciate you, man, and continue success and everything you do.
And it's an honor and pleasure to do this with you. So thank you, man.
I'm going to get a couple of those suits. Even if I got to buy them, I'm going to get them.
And I'm going to wear them because I believe you. All right.
We got you. All right. Thank you, my husband. See you later.
Thanks for listening to a Bobbycast production.
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 Kotby.
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.
Evil, wake up.
I'm the one.
and saw the murder take place by Crevec 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 in the Bone Valley Feed on the Iheart radio app.
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
All right, listen up.
The Jonas Brothers here.
Our podcast is called, Hey Jonas.
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.
Drop what you're doing and listen to Hey Jonas on the Iheart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your podcasts.
Last night, a blown call changed a game.
This morning, the internet lost its mind.
and nobody's telling you exactly what happened.
That's where SportsSlice comes in.
I'm Timbo, and every episode we're cutting through the noise,
breaking down the biggest moments in sports
and giving you the real story behind the headline.
And we're going straight to the source, the athletes themselves,
their locker room stories, their reactions in the moment,
and the stuff nobody gets to hear.
Listen to SportsSlic on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcast.
And for more, follow Timbo Sliced Life 12
in the TikTok podcast network on TikTok.
This is an I-Heart podcast.
Guaranteed human.
