The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz - Hour 2: Found Your Niche But What About The Keish
Episode Date: August 27, 2025TikTok journalist Carlos Eduardo Espina joins to talk ICE raids and how social media has become the main news source for an entire population. Also, The guys debate how we’re letting Lee Corso age w...ith grace on TV, and whether Big Noon Kickoff should pay homage to College Gameday. Plus, the Suey category for the Best of the Worst Musical Performances of the year! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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We will get back to the silly stuff in a few minutes, but I did want the listeners of this show
to get at least a little bit of information because we're so fractured about how it is.
We consume things these days.
everyone has their own form of media and in and among Hispanic communities the way that folks are
getting their news these days more than ever is TikTok it's not telemundo it's a lot of Hispanics in
this country are getting it through TikTok and if you don't know what's happening in this country
immigrants exiles Latinos are scared I think and so Carlos Eduardo Espina is a TikTok
journalist I'm going to call it thank you for joining us Carlos if you want to
information on what it is that we're going to be talking about. You can follow him across all
social media platforms and at Carlos underscore Eduardo Espina. So thank you for joining us and just
tell us how it is you're getting your news to people because you're a bit of a new kind of
journalist. Yeah, no, well, thank you for having me. I mean, this is something that started five years
ago during the pandemic. It almost started as, you know, just an accident. I was bored at home,
started making videos about citizenship classes, and it just blew up during that big boom that there was on social media in early 2020.
And since then, I've been making 10, up to 15 or 20 videos a day, just, you know, constant news and opinions on everything that's going on.
And how do I stay informed?
I'm always reading, you know, different news sites.
I'm always on different platforms.
A lot of also community journalism, people will just send me videos of what's going on on the ground, and I'll react to it, respond to it.
So just a bunch of different ways of getting information out there.
Now with social media, everything is so fast-paced.
You always have to be on the lookout for what's next, what's happening,
and put it out in front of the audience as soon as possible.
So tell us what's the information you're getting on the ground
that is real, that is factual, about ice raids in this country
that I think most rational human beings watching these ice raids can know
that this isn't what America is supposed to look like.
Yeah, so very early on, you know, during when Trump just assumed officer,
there was a lot of people who were hopeful.
They were like, hey, you know, this is, they're only going to go after the worst of the worst
criminals and, you know, the people who have committed horrible crimes, which I think
everyone agrees with, right?
No one wants people who have committed horrible crimes in the country.
But then the video started coming out of, hey, you know, I was at this gas station and
they just picked up a bunch of guys who were looking out for work outside of the, or,
you know, outside of Home Depot or all these other places.
And a lot of these videos have only come to light because there's just someone, you know,
at the right place, at the right time, or maybe at the wrong place at the wrong time.
just pulling out their phone and recording it, putting it on social media,
sending it to bigger accounts like myself so we can amplify it.
And you really do see a lot of the unfiltered.
I mean, some of the videos I can't even show on my platforms just because they're so strong
that, you know, with censorship and with community guidelines and all that.
But I think that community journalism just very on the ground is really what has moved,
you know, a lot of people's mind.
But what can't you show?
What do you feel people are not hearing or understanding about what's going on with these
raids if they're only consuming traditional news? Yeah, I think a lot of times it's very sanitized
what ends up like on actual news, for example, if you have an instance of an agent beating up someone
or, you know, using language that's not appropriate for social media. You know, you can't really
show that so you have to censor, you have to kind of explain around it. But there are other platforms,
for example, I found, so I started on TikTok, but I found that YouTube is also, you know, a lot more,
basically you can post a lot more without censorship. So over the past few months, I've grown a lot on
YouTube as well. But it's really just trying to get that raw video out there. And then people can form
their own opinions. They can see with their own eyes, what's going on. And like you said, I think
most people come to the same conclusion that while immigration enforcement is necessary, the way
it's being done right now is just completely out of hand and not okay. Can you talk about the impact
of the fear and the chaos going on in these communities caused by these raids? Yeah. So I think
You know, what many people didn't expect, especially Latinos who voted for Donald Trump, is they didn't realize, you know, or maybe they did.
They just didn't think it would impact them, that the Latino community is just so, you know, lean so much on each other that, you know, we have our own restaurants, her own places to go party, our own, you know, everything, our own businesses.
And so when the ice trade really started picking up, a lot of Latino businesses took a huge hit because people weren't going out as much, they're not eating out, they're not, you know, basically doing the day-to-day stuff that they usually did.
And so a lot of business owners are now, you know, debating whether to shut down.
Some people have already had to shut down.
And a lot of times it's people, you know, who supported Donald Trump because they thought the economy would get better under him.
But the economy, at least within the Latino community, is not getting much better.
And many of these small businesses particularly are being hit very, very hard.
Can you explain what someone's rights are, immigrant, bystander, anyone's rights, if they're caught up in an ice rate?
Well, so that's the thing is, right?
you know, a lot of preparation for all this that was going to happen is, hey, you know, we have
these rights that must be respected, you know, you have the right to ask for an attorney,
ask for a warrant, you know, you can record stuff. But we've seen, and I think this was really
caught the attention of many people, agents who maybe are poorly trained or just don't care,
who are just violating people's rights, you know, blatantly. And it's being caught on camera and you
have organizations like the ACLU. I mean, when you see those instances of people's windows
being smashed, you know, you would tell someone, hey, you know, you have the right to
in there until they show you a warrant, you can call your attorney, but that's not really being
followed. So I think right now it's very, we're an uncharted territory almost. I mean, we've
seen people be arrested for recording law enforcement, which once again is not illegal. You can,
if I see Border Patrol, you know, doing a raid somewhere I'm at, I can pull out my phone and
record, but even that's being, you know, attack. So it's very hard to tell people what, you know,
what's permissible now because we have what the Constitution says, what the law says, and then
what's actually going on. And unfortunately, they're two different things.
Carlos, do you ever look back, because obviously you're doing a very important work?
Do you ever look back to 2020 when you were bored on TikTok before you do your first video
and you're sitting there and you're like, I could do a dance, I could cook, or I could talk about immigration?
And then you decided, you know what, this is the route I'm going to go?
You ever look back and think, what if I did cooking or dancing or anything like that?
Yeah, so that's exactly the reason why I didn't go on TikTok until that laid on because it was already, you know,
I started blowing up. Yeah, in 2019, but I remember my friends would send me TikTok videos.
I'm like, this is like the dumbest app ever. I thought it was like, you know, for like, it was when Charlie Demilia was blowing up and all.
And I was like, I don't really care about this. But when the pandemic came, so before the pandemic, I used to volunteer every weekend teaching citizenship classes in person. You know, I would be like 10, 15 people show up to my classes.
But then we couldn't get together in person anymore. So that's kind of where the idea came.
I was like, hey, maybe I should start doing stuff on social media.
I started on Facebook, but people were like, hey, you should try TikTok.
And I was like super anti-Tick-Tac.
I was like, you know what?
I'm going to cave.
I'm going to do one video on TikTok, and my first video just blew up.
And I was like, wow, this is actually a very powerful platform.
And I realize, you know, that on social media, it's not so much the platform.
It's, you know, if there's content out there that you don't like, you can create your own
content and there'll be people that like it as well.
So that's how I found my niche.
And it went very well.
Chris Cody says that's what pays the bill.
He's like, I was anti-Tik-Tac.
Now he's like, let's go TikTok.
It's probably a niche, but what if you would have gone Kish?
You know what I mean?
No, I mean, it's just, it was really interesting the growth because, you know, TikTok was just so revolutionary in that sense where a lot of people like myself, we were very, like, against it.
But we realized, you know, the issue is not the platform itself.
It's just that when it was so new, the content that was on there just wasn't that diverse.
And now you have, like, all times you have attorneys are on.
TikTok. You have, you know, journalists on TikTok. I mean, there's all kinds of content and it's
such a great platform now. But what if you were like the immigration rights dancer, you know,
and you were doing dancing videos while giving the information? People have proposed. I mean,
they've told me like, hey, you know, you should have opened up, you know, some other platforms as
well. And I don't give into that. But yeah, I mean, it's interesting. People, there's like,
I don't know if you've seen there's an attorney. He's like, he shows up with like all this jewelry and all
these rings and, you know, he's got his own style. So I think that's the cool thing about,
like, TikTok. It's a lot of, a lot of people who weren't content creators, who never
try to be content creators, become one and then just kind of find their own, I guess, area
on the platform. But how does this work? The news cycle doesn't stop. Raids are continuing
around the clock. You are taking a break in the middle of this because I imagine that, yes,
it's business, but you're also doing work, I don't know, to protect Hispanics.
Yeah. So it's like a 20, it's almost like, you know, social media is really interesting where it's not like a traditional job or you like you have a set schedule. It's mostly like in between things. You know, I'll be a different event or meetings, but I'll be checking my phone constantly or even be out with my family. And I'm like, you know, hey, I need to check my phone real quick in case something happened. And there's been many occasions where I'm like, let's say, for example, you know, at a dinner, I'm like, hey, I have to step outside real quick to make a video. So it's not like I have a set schedule. It's most like, you know, sometimes things just happen. I mean, one very big example of this.
was i was on the way to miami for the cop america final last year and right as i was about aboard
my flight that's when they uh did the assassination attempt on donald trump and i was like wait i can't
miss it so i had to cancel my flight rebook it and i was like inside the airport making all these videos
i made like you know you know minute to minute coverage on what was going on but i guess that's
just part of the job it's it is what it is uh he is the adam shefter of how do you pass the u.s citizenship test
It is a strange way to go viral.
It's not the way that most people do it.
I do wonder, though, where do you believe most of the misinformation confusion about what's going on is coming from?
Because I don't think most reasonable people, if I present them with some of your videos of like, look, do you think your landscaper friend should be treated like this?
I think most Americans would be appalled.
Yeah. So I think, you know, one thing I've learned over the years is most people who are, you know, in support of what it's going on right now are not bad people. I think they just grew up in different environments and get different sources of information that maybe they haven't been exposed to what's really going on. And I mean that in the sense of, you know, I grew up in College Station, Texas. It's pretty conservative. I have a lot of friends who voted for Donald Trump. And over the past few months, like, we'll be playing soccer or whatever. They'll come up to me, but hey, you know, like, I didn't really know like this is the extent.
of what was going on you know i thought like they were they genuinely thought they were going to go after
like the worst of the worst criminals you know what's being shown on fox news what donald trump
is saying in his speeches and when you start to realize like hey you know it's actually like my friends
my co-workers people i know and that's why i think the work that i do and many others are doing
is just so important because i think this country is fundamentally made up of very good people
who a lot of times just don't have you know the full information and there are people who genuinely
think you know these raids are targeting the worst of the worst which in some cases is true but in the
majority is not that's one aspect then the other aspect too is like social media has gotten completely
out of hand and i say that as a content creator i mean you said in the beginning like you know most people
especially latinos are getting their information on social media i guess that's good for me but i think
as a society it's not very good and the reason why is there's just so much misinformation and
that with artificial intelligence it's gotten completely out of hand i mean people use my image for
example they'll make like this wild video of oh good news you know if you pay this guy a 500
he'll get you a work permit in an hour and everyone's like wow wow carlos is saying it so it must be true
and i'm like that that's not me it's artificial intelligence but especially when you have older people
who maybe didn't grow up in that environment they can't tell and it just there's so many layers to you know
the misinformation disinformation just fake news artificial intelligence all that i think it is very
dangerous to have a society that relies solely on social media further information and i say that
as someone who has in many ways benefited from this from this landscape but
Therein lies the problem. You say that a lack of information is the biggest issue here,
but you're not even getting true information from the administration themselves. It's been
reported that up to 71% of the arrests that ICE have made are people with zero criminal
background. And when pressed on this, the administration says that's not the case. So how do people
actually get access to information when we're in a post-truth world? Yeah, well, that's the
question I struggle with the most because you know on social media there's just so much
information that you can be very selective and you know for example my algorithm is very you know
slanted into one way I'm sure other people are slanted in other ways and I guess the question becomes
is how can we you know step away from social media as much as possible and actually have
genuine face-to-face conversations and I think that's where the real difference is made
because what social media has created is almost these echo chambers where you know people are
being fed the same stuff over and over again. And if you're fed 100 videos of Donald Trump saying,
oh, we've only gotten all criminals and there's no hardworking good people in the raids,
well, then you start to believe that. And so I think, you know, how do you break that structure?
It just takes, you know, meeting people where they're at, trying to as best as possible.
And a lot of times face-to-face interactions, the only way you can really break through,
because otherwise it just becomes an impossible task.
Carlos, thank you for being on with that. Go ahead. I'm sorry?
No, no, I say I know that's a very like gloomy answer, like very dystopian answer, but I am really worried for the future, not of just of our country, society in general, you know, with everything going on on social media, technology, AI and all that. So we'll see how things end up.
You're worried, you're worried. Yeah, I am. Yeah, look at you. You're on the middle of a sports show and look at what we're talking about. Why would you be worried about that?
No, that's what sports are for, right? I mean, I love to place, I play soccer every weekend, every day, all.
almost to distract myself from what's going on, at least from an hour or two.
So keep up the good work.
That's always important.
You too.
Thank you for being on with us.
You can follow him across all social media platforms at Carlos underscore Eduardo underscore Espina.
Thank you, sir.
Thank you.
Take care.
Have a good day.
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Don Lebertard.
Chris Cody does an impression.
Just be careful.
Dangerous game.
This is a dangerous game.
I don't want to play this game.
No, he was saying, man, I could do such a great Kendra.
No, I don't want to play this game.
He's like, man, I can talk to us like him.
This is who we're going to.
we're going to trust with this. I mean, you do it. Let's let
Amin do it, I think. Stugats. I think you
could do it, Chris, because you did a great Charles Barclay.
You're one for one there. Did no one
just hear the segment we just
did with Amin? We cannot be taking...
A mean's judgment is not the best. Counsel from the local
drunk on whether or not
you should do the impersonation
of a black man stumbling over his
words. Like, you don't see the bad judgment
in that. There was.
Moza Moody. Moody, Moody, Moses.
No, don't do you need that.
It sounds worse.
Be careful, man.
We gotta, like, we cannot do this.
It's too close to the line.
This is where the line is.
Something legitimately funny can't be funny
because we're scared.
Our ginger's going to do something racist by accident.
Carry the hell on, Dan.
Rachel.
Dan, the line is where we feel alive, though.
This is the Dan Levitar show with the Stucats.
I am seeing all over my televisions in here,
Lee Corso.
Are we going to actually do this correctly this week?
We're going to have a giant game one football weekend.
Haven't we?
Like, yeah, we did it.
We got here.
How do they screw it up?
They kick him in the ass on the way out?
No, I'm just saying that Lee Corso being a big story, the big story,
we're going to allow someone to age with grace as we ran one president out of office for getting old
and the other one dies in front of us, hiding his ankles from us and is also senile.
We're going to let Lee Corso on television get.
a old gracefully
and send him off correctly. Did you just make a
prediction?
I'd be in a suey's next year. I don't know. Let's
ask a mean.
Got to be worried about the whole, let me not
say it. Never mind.
On with your show.
Why'd you make it about that?
That felt gratuitous.
This is about Lee Corso.
You got multiple 80-year-olds wandering around
out there. We're questioning the mental
health of 80-year-old. People are comfortable
mocking the old. Dick Vital has been a
polarizing figure for the...
We're celebrating Lee.
You keep doing that.
We did that.
Like, ten years ago, people were having their go at Lee, and he had to admit, I think,
I think over the last few years it's actually been a beautiful thing.
People understand what they're seeing on television.
Everybody knows that Lee Corso has been battling through stuff.
Everyone sees the beauty in that friendship that is on that set.
Well, and they haven't forced it, right?
Because he hasn't been on every single week for a long time.
He'll do, like, a couple sets.
No, he's there most weeks, but he'll do like a segment or two.
They've been sunsetsing him over the course of a few years on that show.
Has it had its hiccups because he's had his challenges?
Yes, I think the internet, which is generally a cruel place, has been kind of understanding when it comes to this one,
to the point that we're going to have this beautiful moment.
He's probably going to have some struggles in that broadcast because he's had struggles
in almost every broadcast over the last few years.
I think people will be understanding, appreciative, grateful, and loving.
It's just nice to see, is all I'm saying.
I wonder how they're going to do it because normally, you know, they end the show with him making the pick, right?
Which they will.
Yeah, they will.
I think that that'll be the last second.
They're going to go about it as if everything is normal.
I don't know.
Herbie is going to be a puddle of emotion.
They'll bring Fowler out at some point, old friends.
Gooseys.
It's going to be incredible.
You can't put on the Longhorn helmet, though, in front of the Ohio.
They're going to boo him?
That'd be great.
One last rib on the way out.
he gets booed. Because everyone, he did
Brutus first, right? So everyone is just assuming
he's going to go Ohio State. I love that.
I would zag. I'm with it. I'm with you.
Zach? I would zag.
Stugat. Zicking? All right. I thought you said
you were with Zag. I got confused for a moment
there. Yeah, we all did. Everyone's expecting
something. I would zag. I mean, I was called Stugats
earlier.
Steve Martin, also a prop
comment. Huh.
You guys,
Betty White's situation is not going to happen.
We're three days away. We're good.
I hope so
Wow, Jesus
That's a prediction
I'm saying it's not
I'm putting it out there
because you guys are all throwing out there
and I'm saying that's not going to happen
No, I don't think anybody's true
That's all I'm saying
Like Dan was only saying
That's beautiful what we're doing
That's all I'm saying
I concurred
That's probably not gonna happen
Yeah I hope not
I'm not going down this glip bath
Nope
But I don't think it changes a program
I don't know
It's going to be
It's going to be a celebration of his life
And the only thing I'd be missing
Well I'm not doing that
The celebration of his life.
That's what I'm saying.
It shouldn't be done.
It shouldn't happen.
They would get more viewers.
I don't think so.
Let's not do that.
No, we're not.
How are the ratings going to be?
Are you guys actually interested in this?
Because many people object to all the ratings talk out here.
But I'm interested in what the competition between these two shows becomes.
I don't give a flying rat's ass about the competition between the two shows.
I will see social clips of Big Noon.
I don't care about the ratings.
I hope it does a great number just because that's great for that show.
and Lee Corsoe.
I only care about saying goodbye
to one of television's
greatest morning heroes.
What if,
what if Lee Zax and next week two
he's on Big Noon?
Wow!
Put on the whole time.
Then he goes a Big Noon.
His contract actually just expired
and he just goes a big noon.
Big heel turn.
The real question is,
did they offer it?
Obviously he'd say no,
but did Fox reach out of like,
hey, week two, you're with us.
It would be cool.
That would be a move.
You remember when Ravishing Rick Rood showed up on Nitro and Raw in the same week?
The same night!
That was crazy.
Crazy!
Corso has the type of swagger about him that he could just walk on to that Fox set and get a tribute to the wrong set.
And get a tribute from him.
They're both in Columbus.
They're wrong set.
No, no, no, not wanders.
Like with intention, all right?
With intention, he just goes over to Fox.
And he's like, a lot of you guys, Rinaldi, Felica, you all used to be here.
You know what?
You know what Rinaldi needs to do?
What Rinaldi needs to do for Big Noon is Big Noon needs to also pay tribute to Lee Corsoe.
Because there is no Big Noon without College Game Day.
We all know this.
They should send people over at 9.4, at whatever it is, 1145.
Hey, you come back next week, but you go pay respect to Lee Corso.
Everybody, Rob Sohn, like, it should be simulcast.
The final headgear should be simulcast.
We will be silent for the next 12 minutes.
then they all sit there.
That's what Portnoy is going to go do.
The respect though.
You're right.
They should.
They should do that.
We will now be silent and then they all just sit there and silent.
And Urban Meyer just stares straight ahead with a guy in a bong in a mirror smoking something as he talks or doesn't talk.
Dirty urban.
I still revisit that video where he's telling him the dude to get out of the way on the boat.
What's going on there?
It's a great.
The Urban Meyer catastrophe.
The Urban Meyer catastrophe in the pros.
The guy in the mirror seems to be having a great time.
But wait a minute.
For everyone to know how that was going to fail,
and then for that to fail, like, you know,
with pictures in a barred in Ohio State,
with a guy in a mirror spoke in a bong on a yacht
while he does an interview.
It's just like what you have to be as a head coach,
and what we knew about him in front of the press conference backdrop
was Urban Meyer is a certain way,
He gets success.
He's kind of like the dictator-ruler of this program.
He had health issues.
He had to step down because it's just a health issue.
And he didn't.
Dude loved a party.
I'm sure he'll stop on Saturday to honor Lee Corso.
It will now be silent for 12 minutes.
They should say, look, we're going to make our predictions here.
We understand we're trying to build something here at Big Noon.
But head on over to ESPN.
It's a great idea.
I would be more likely to tune back in next week to Fox if they did that.
I would say classy from you, Fox.
I would give them a standing ovation in my living room.
Now, I'm not watching the show regardless, but if I saw that clip, I'd be like, okay.
Good on you.
Good on you guys.
That's what I'd say.
And the way that you guys watch television these days, as we go into one of these dirty weekends to get ready for football.
Stop doing that.
It's not a dirty weekend.
It's an awesome weekend.
First weekend since 1945, we've had this.
It's all up.
There's such an uptick and.
vibes right now. This is beautiful.
This is not dirt. You misinterpreted
what my dirty meant. When I said one of
these dirty weekends, I meant
the people who listen to this
show will spend a weekend on
their couch watching non-stop
football. Not taking a sour
and not showering.
So smelly. We're headed into
Red Zone Sundays and this
is the warm up. The warm up
is three games
with top 10 teams and
also Lee Corso
kicking it off, leading you to Arch Manning, and that game, and when I asked the question
as everyone gets all excited about college football, the network that has the game is not
the one with Lee Corso, correct?
So coming out of, so you have to change channels in order to find Lee Corso's moment
and before a game.
To find the game, I'd say.
They'll probably be on Corsos.
Yeah.
Wouldn't you assume the automatic moves Saturday morning is the asking you guys.
So the changing of a channel is not really something we do now in modern age
where we go to a television at an appointed time.
I think we can handle it.
I think we can handle it too.
But what I'm asking you is the game usually dictates whether you get the numbers before the game.
That's usually how that works.
I've been conditioned because Fox with their Big Ten package always prioritizes that noon window.
Much of the frustration of the Big Ten fan base, I think more often than not over the last few years,
I see the headgear, and I switch to the next channel.
Or I go to whichever game I'm betting on, which for me is the biggest game of the weekend.
You get the YouTube TV, you get the four box.
I think also, like, the big game is never on ESPN after college game day.
So you're just kind of used to that routine on Saturdays.
You're never like, okay, now I'm going to stick to ESPN, and it's true.
Minnesota, and it's like, this is not the big game.
Yeah, it's always Saturday night.
Yeah.
You're right.
And are we at a point now, given what network and cable television is
or the way that people watch this,
that you're not excluding the poor
when you say you've got multiple devices.
You're watching.
You're addicted to action,
and so if you've got a television,
you've also got your device working
in a way that allows you to watch both things
at the same time if you want to.
We're born for this.
We've been conditioning for this weekend.
You know, in 1945,
the last time they had this top 10 matchups
to start a season.
I'm sure they were flummoxed.
I mean, there's enough games on regular television starting in the afternoon
that you don't need to get crazy with the subscription services.
There's still enough games.
I don't know.
I think YouTube TV has till 5 o'clock today to settle a dispute with Fox.
I'll just say, isn't there something going on as well with the ABC affiliate down here too?
ABC is Channel 18.
So if you want to watch, yeah, because it's now owned by the Sunbean television locally.
This is inside.
That owns Channel 7, the Fox affiliate down here.
One affiliate owns two of the networks.
Just tell me where to go to watch my games.
Channel 18, just have, you'll find it.
Just say sports in your remote.
Put it on the poll.
Mike, come change my channel.
It's very easy.
And then it'll be like, the Premier League, it's a disaster.
Brighton and Hove Albion?
Oh.
Bite me in Cove?
What?
No, Chelsea FC.
No, not Chelsea Handler.
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The conjuring last rites.
On September 5th.
I come down here with you in your house.
Hooray!
Hooray!
Hooray!
Hooray!
The Conjuring Last Rites.
Only in theater, September 5th.
Don Lebatard!
We were talking to and about Freddie Gibbs,
and then Greg Cody made an appearance,
Chris Cody made an appearance,
and we were talking about the possibility of Freddie Gibbs
having actually having the rap album of the year
at which point Chris Cody who is too young for this
and doesn't know like athletes from the 90s
Chris Cody
you okay says is that one of
is that Barry Gibbs
is he uh and so then the
the BJ BGs start playing
Stugats well said
A little bit of a struggle
a little bit rusty here
This is the Dan Levatar show
with the Stucats.
Chris Cody,
what do we have here
for the final
sui performance
of the day?
We have a new category,
I'd say.
It's a musical performance
category, and I would say
the last half dozen years,
best musical has just been
dominated by the Yetis,
the streeters,
the Jemys,
doing these high-produced,
well-produced songs.
And I want to show
some love to the other people,
the people that call in
the Boos Mobile songs,
the Rafe LaFriends,
the Doliacs,
the bad song.
Taylor singing terribly.
The bad song?
So we're doing,
we're having a new category this year. It's called
Worst of the Best
Musical Performances.
And now
the Suey nominees for Worst
of the Best Musical Performance.
The best of different listeners singing about Rafe LaFrance
and Michael Doliac.
Don't try to take
Rayflefrin to the hole
because you will not
No, it's gold.
You know who that is.
That is rape with friends.
Who the F.RU?
Jeremy Tashay's
Unfinished Tony Reilly song.
Tony's new YouTube
tour.
It's great.
When positivity rains,
things are fresh in their life.
Tony Realli is full of life.
Now he comes to you.
Might have a guest or two.
Tony Realli's
Fresh forever, Tony freshness.
Fresh forever with Tony fresh and full of life.
Listener from boldest take singing about Alexander Madison.
Alexander Madison.
My name is Alexander Madison.
David Sampson, all I need.
All I need is just a little more time to be sure how I feel.
Is it just in my mind?
More listeners singing about Rafe LaFrance and Michael Dolliac.
He's in the paint, in the paint, Doliac, Doleac, Doleac, Doleac.
I would do anything for love, but I won't Doleac.
Oh, no, said I won't Doleach.
Listener, serenades Sergei Bobrovsky.
Bobba Brodsky,
Bobba, Bobba Brodsky,
Bobba, Bob, Bobbara
Brofsky.
Stop that shot.
Listener sings about Tuatunga Voloa.
And I'm here to remind you
on the checkdown pass that you threw to me.
You've got gray hair.
He's left-handed with the eye black cross.
Then you wear from me, to it, to it, to a, to it, don't know.
Taylor Vipolis, Belichick is coming to town.
He sees you when you're practicing.
He knows your favorite plays.
Your script won't work on the first drive
because he's got it all on tape.
Oh, you better watch out.
He's getting his guys.
You better find out that balls, PSI.
Belichick is coming.
Coming to town.
Even more listeners singing about Rafe LaFrance and Michael Doliac.
Rayfla France played several places.
Started out at Kansas, ended up with the Blazers.
He was just okay, but they let everyone in.
So Hall of Fame or one day.
Oh, he blocked shots back in people's faces, and he knocked down threes.
On a regular basis when Rape La Prince played in all those places.
Doliac, he's six feet from the rim, and I'm thinking, maybe six feet is close enough.
Taylor Vipolus, Fire Mac Brown.
yeah i'd fire mac brown watching this team is my personal hell yeah i'd fire mac brown
i'm not sure that deserved to be a category oh man all the boost mobile calls got to do something
with those no we don't we don't we could have just never don't we can't we
could have just never thought of them again.
One of the options was upholding a standard.
I thought that was on the table.
Worst of the best, guys.
Billy came in here and harumped something today
that made me feel like he soon is going to be an abuelo.
He came in here and he said 50 home runs used to mean something.
Oh, that is true.
I mean, it wasn't a talk.
It's just sometimes it's just a.
comment. It wasn't for talking on air
about. Just 50 home runs used to...
Did it not? Used to mean something?
50 home runs? It did.
Cal Raleigh has 50 home runs.
It happened two days ago.
No one here was talking about it.
Used to mean something.
So did baseball. I used to sit down and be like, oh, 50 home runs.
You know what they're doing right now? This Seattle, San Diego, you know what that is, right?
You know what it is? It's the Vetter Cup.
Oh.
It's a Freddie Veteran Pearl Jam.
They're playing the Vetter Cup. That's right.
And Cal Ralee, he won the Better Man MVP.
award the other day.
This is Pearl Jam dorking out.
He's doing. People are so tired of that.
It's the only part of Zazlo.
They don't like.
I'll take things that were relevant in 1995.
Well, Mariners and Padres are doing it.
Vetter Cup.
To Billy's point, Amin said earlier in the show that Cal Raleigh is on pace to break
judges' A.L. Home Run record.
And we're just like, eh.
Do you think they're going to break into programming for that?
Because I have my doubts.
They're not going to do it.
They did it for a Yankee, but they're not doing it for a big dumper.
No, I don't think so.
And poor Maris' kid is.
I'll be there. I'll be there. Like, uh, Roger Jr.? Not your time anymore, buddy.
So 61 doesn't mean anything anymore?
I didn't mean anything since 1998. Then we tried to pretend to make it a thing.
Like, this is the AL homerun record. It's like, no one gives an AL about that.
ESPN.
ESPN.
Straight up. If you eat into Memphis, Cincinnati for a cow-rolley-ed bat, I'm going to kill you.
I'm going to, ESPN, I'm going to kill you.
I'm going to kill you.
A riot would have sufficed.
I'm going to kill you.
I don't even, what?
I'm going to kill you, ESPN.
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