The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz - South Beach Sessions - Andrés Cantor
Episode Date: October 2, 2025"Even though I am an Argentinian American, Argentina is my blood, and it transported me, back to Argentina... I felt part of the team winning, I felt I was representing all Argentinians." Andrés ...Cantor has been the voice of the beautiful game to millions for decades. Andrés takes Dan through his prolific career, detailing his journey from a young fan in Argentina to working as a student journalist at USC to bringing his signature "GOOOOL" call to the mainstream and more than 25 years with Telemundo. Together, Andrés walks Dan through his viral emotional moment calling Argentina's 2022 FIFA World Cup win, the undeniable highlight of a storied career. Andrés also speaks about sharing a legacy with his son, Nico, and their history-making experience of calling a game side by side. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Look, you see how happy I am.
Look, you see how happy I am right here.
An gigante. We've got an icon, a legend in here. Andres Cantor, the last name means in Spanish
singer, and he is the voice of song, the booming voice of gold calls, one of the most unique
scoring calls in the history of broadcasting and 25 years with Telemundo. Thank you for making the
time. I've been an admirer of your work. I hugged you when you came in because I feel like
your voice has been a part of my life for a long time. I'm sure you get this a lot.
Thank you, Dan. Likewise. It's a pleasure to
to be here, I do. It's really incredible, really when people recognize me by my voice and not
my appearance. I've been working in television for 40 years, and yet the best compliments I get is
when I'm in a supermarket line and the lady behind me says, wait, aren't you the voice?
How often does that happen? Quite a bit, quite a bit, which is super, super nice.
You never expected any of this, right? Like, what did your professional dreams look like when you
were first thinking about working in sports? I think we have something in common because I went to
USC and wanted to be a professional writer. I started my career as a written journalist. I went through
the four years of the journalism curriculum in USC without taking one television or radio course
because I started writing for a magazine in Argentina,
or actually a publishing company,
they had five very, very popular magazines at the time.
You were going to be a sports writer.
I wanted to be a sports writer.
I was a sports writer for many, many years
until I was called for an audition at the old Univision
without having stepped a day in my life in a TV studio, I had a break.
Your story is remarkable for a number of different reasons.
But can you explain to people as someone who is now more identifiable as the voice of soccer than I think anybody in the world?
I think I can say that fairly.
Your early beginnings at Telemundo, does anybody have any idea of how gritty and small and dirty and cheap all of that had to be
because you were just trying to learn how to do things?
And it probably seemed glamorous to people and wasn't glamorous at all.
It wasn't glamorous. First, my start was a Univision.
Univision. I was 23. So everything that happened in my early professional life was super glamorous
because I had never stepped on a TV studio in my life. So there I was, you know, the lights,
the camera, the counting down, the three to one. It was awesome to me. And then we started traveling
around the world to do games and I said, this, the best life I could have. And actually, it is
40 years detached from that moment. But I have no clue, honestly, of what to do, where to look.
a funny story. If you want to know, I asked my, I will never forget that, and I believe I put
this in writing somewhere. I went to the studio. My very first assignment was to the sports
segment on the national newscast next to Maria Celeste Aradaz, who at the time was, you know,
young and upcoming, but a very good, you know, news anchor. So I said to the director, okay, so what
do I do? Because I've never been in a TV studio or this situation. This Cuban lady, I forget her
name. She tells me very simple. Just read the teleprompter. It's a machine called teleprompter.
Sit in your chair like you have stick up your ass in Spanish. And just read and be yourself.
I said, oh, that's easy.
Okay, so I did this, and hello, good tavern.
And then I sweated it out, and I said, how did I do?
Great.
And then I did the newscast like every other day.
So hold on a second.
So you go from a writing career in that instance to now I want to do something else,
what I wanted to do, my vision, and everything is different now.
Yeah, I go from writing four or five pages.
of literature, you know, because I thought I wrote very well at the time, and, you know, I went to Vegas and cover boxing, and I went to the Oscars and cover the Oscars. And for me, the five pages that they gave me were novels. And I thought I wrote very, very well. I went from that to writing 20 seconds of information. It was the transition, believe me, was very hard. It probably happened to you.
Well, it's God's sense of humor with you that you would love all of the words but be known for one above all, that you would have to be that efficient.
And even there, you wouldn't want to be efficient.
So you lose your breath saying that one word for 30 seconds.
Well, that took a long time to happen.
But yes, definitely it was very funny because obviously if you have to summarize my career with just one word, we know what it is.
But what a legacy, though, right?
Like, I don't know if you're thinking about any of those things now at your age, as you broadcast with your son.
You become the first ever father-son team on English sports television to be doing that particular thing on soccer.
How much do you think about your legacy?
Is it something that you think about at all?
No, never.
Honestly, never.
I mean, I'm 62.
I think I have a few World Cups left.
I'm not going anywhere, either in Spanish or in English or in French, for that matter.
Who knows?
I don't, I mean, we all work because we love what we do.
I mean, at the end of my career, I'll just paraphrase, I always paraphrase athletes.
You know, when you ask the same question of active athletes, they'll say, not really, I'm just looking forward to the next game.
And I actually am to my next broadcast game.
And then, you know, when it's time to retire, I'll probably look back and say, whoa, what does happen now to me is I am, I mean, my viral call of the winning penalty kick in Qatar.
for Argentina, the fact that I am Argentinian, did shake me a little bit because the recognitions
that I've been getting all over the world, actually, because of that two-minute clip with me crying
over Argentina winning the World Cup, it just moves you a little bit because I got stopped
in Australia, in Europe, in Argentina. Anywhere I go, they say, hey, wait a second, you made me
cry. And up to this day, people come up to me either in the supermarket that recognize my voice
or people stop me and say, I cried with you. You made me cry and you made me remember my parents
are not longer alive. We watched the games with you when I was young and there was a family
connection. It's like really, really moving. So if that is considered part of what I did throughout
my broadcast career whenever I retire and that is the legacy.
This is happening now and it's very, very powerful.
Argentina is a champion of the world.
Argentina, champion of the world.
Argentina!
It's champion of the world.
Where did the sky!
He did, he did, Cuthuio,
it did all the Tata,
it did you do Quducus,
What you did you,
Quedators?
That's
a lot of
the
world.
Argentina,
champion
of the
world.
Lecy is
champion
of the
world.
No
could be
to other
way
without
suffering.
Argentina.
The
selection
Argentina
of Leone
Scaloni
is champion
of the
world.
Argentina.
Argentina.
You should know that this was as moving a goal call as there has been
because you were going to get an authentic feeling of you love this as much as you ever have
and you knew that you were seeing a moment that you somehow met with your broadcasting
even though the expectations in that moment had to be really high
but I'm guessing you didn't even feel the expectations because you were just simply moved
and being yourself.
Well, every time then I call an Argentina game,
it's probably the toughest assignment that I have,
because obviously I'm looked at with love and hate
even by the Argentinians.
Because, you know, the Argentinians are watching or listening.
They want me to always say good things
about the Argentinian national team.
So if they can't put three passes together,
and I am very opinionated in my play-by-play,
and I say, come on, guys,
you can't put three passes together,
you know, I'll get criticized and killed by the Argentinian community.
And then on the other side, if I'm talking, I mean, the first 75 minutes of that final
was the best any finalist played in a final of a World Cup.
And I said so.
And I'm pretty got lots of heat from people that were non-Argentians.
Argentinians, you might know, are not the best light in the world.
I don't know why, really.
We're the best.
We're number one.
We're world champions.
But so it's a very, very tough assignment.
So I have to, you know, balance and be extremely careful with every word that comes out of my mouth.
And when you have so many emotions going in the final of a World Cup with your national team,
and I'm on the record that I'm not a hypocrite, I mean, you ask me, who do you want to win, Argentina.
La Procession goes for dentro.
I mean, I try to keep it inside.
the second biggest compliment or the biggest compliment that I got after the final
was from people not from Argentina saying how loud and long I yelled the Mbap goals
because they said that they thought that I would say goal oh Franz scored because they
were scoring on Argentina and that is a big big compliment you pride yourself right on
trying to be honest and I'm not going to I mean sort of objective or a
inspiring to objectivity, right?
But in the moment that Argentina wins the World Cup, your mask falls off.
Yes, and the professionalism too, right?
And it's okay.
I think it's okay because at the end of the day, I mean, the World Cup is a very powerful event.
You have to be, you know, especially in Argentina.
Argentina has an identity with its national team like I think no other country has.
we live and breathe that team
come to work up
we are all fans
and especially I think
there is a different type of connection
with the people that live outside
of Argentina so you know for me
to having called
somebody else champion del Mundo
Brazil champion del Mundo
Italy champion del Mundo and this
champion del Mundo and okay when is Argentina's time
you know I called
the 2014 final in Brazil
we came that close
I've called, you know, all the Argentina games since the 1990 World Cup.
And, hey, I was in Aztega Stadium in 96 as a writer working for Argentina, but I wasn't, you know, with a microphone in my hand.
So, I mean, from then to 2022, I was waiting for that moment.
And that moment happened, and it happened naturally.
I had nothing planned.
I had everybody on their mother asked me.
did you plan this?
What did you have written?
I said, I never write anything that I say
because, you know, soccer is a fast-moving game
and whatever happened happened.
Oh, but you also do the whole thing from your heart.
Yeah, I mean, it came out from my heart.
It came out from my heart at the moment
that that bog went in.
You can see, if you analyze my anguish in my eyes
while I'm looking down on the field,
I'm like all the way up, you know, in the broadcast booth, and I see the ball going in,
and I just went like, it's, you know, it's happening.
And it was just a moment of joy.
My kids don't like it.
My wife, when I said that it was probably the best part of my life because, you know,
my wife comes back, sorry, when we got married, it wasn't?
Yeah, kind of.
And my kids say, hey, wasn't the day that I was born, the best part?
part of the day of your life, yeah, in a different sort.
No, you're lying to them.
You're lying to family.
The best moment of your life was calling that goal and weeping for two minutes
because, and doing your job extraordinarily well in that moment,
showing yourself to the audience, laying yourself bare, and I don't know if it's
forgetting broadcasting principles, but not needing to adhere to them.
Like just feeling, showing everybody how you felt honestly.
But I don't think I, you know, I broke any broadcasting rules, really.
I was, you know, myself.
And I've been doing this for 40 years, and I've been always very true and genuine to my audience.
They can see my face when I'm pissed off about the result or about how bad a team that plays.
I mean, we're all behind the U.S. national team batting wagon here, both men's and women's,
because, you know, we're all Americans, and we live here, and we want them to do well.
And every time I get to call a game that they don't do well, whether it be the men's or the women's,
it shows in my face, and I'm very vocal about it.
I'm just saying that when it comes to broadcasting professionalism, I'm saluting what is a majestic moment that has no criticism.
I'm just not used to seeing my broadcasters sob with their championships.
It's not the most common thing in the world.
It probably is not. That is the way I feel for this game. It's my life. I live, think about football, soccer, 24 hours a day.
Well, take me through your history here. Like, where does your ambition come from and how competitive were you at the start of your career?
I was super, I mean, first and foremost, I was 23. So it was like, I was sitting in the golden chair for many, many years. I started working at the network that
it was the only network that televised soccer in this country on a regular basis.
So I knew I was sitting on the throne and everyone was, you know, watching us,
whether we broadcasted Mexican League, Italian League, whoever we happened to put on air,
it was the only source of getting your 90 minutes of soccer on a weekly basis,
Saturday and Sundays.
So, and I was the only one.
This is great, it sounds absolutely crazy if I tell you that in 1990,
1990, 1994, 98, I've called every single World Cup games game for Univision.
We're talking about 52 and 64 matches.
That is a lot.
Don't ask me how in the heck I did it.
Probably I was, you know, my voice was younger than it is now, but it's unheard of.
So I knew exactly what job I had and where I was sitting.
and I always was very grateful and was it that, you know, I was obviously very aware of my surroundings
because I knew that there were people, you know, wanting my job.
Well, how competitive. You're not giving up the seat for any reason, right?
You're not going to allow someone else to sit in that seat and replace you.
If it were for me, no, of course not.
You know, I didn't call the shots, but obviously the network liked me.
My career exploded after 1994.
So it was kind of, you know, easier to solidify myself as the number one voice of soccer.
But actually, I was the only one until the last World Cup I did for them in 1998.
I called every single...
But how competitive were you?
How unreasonably competitive were you?
Because I don't think successes like this are an accident.
No, of course, no.
I'm super competitive with myself.
I mean, I am...
I mean, it's bad that I talk about...
myself, but I'm a 110% professional and I prepare as much as I can. And when I failed on a given
instance that I think I should have said something different, I can't sleep at night. I mean,
I prepare myself. I'm not talking about stats. I'm not talking about, I'm talking about something
that I've seen on the pitch that could help understand the game better for my audience or that is
relevant to what happened
in that moment. Still you can't sleep
at night? Still you're that unforgiving
of yourself? The other day it happened to
me. I broadcasted the
South Korean National Team and I missed
the
player's name.
There were like four
Kim's, four Leeds, but when
that happens and this happens, every
time I call the South Korean
National Team, I have to
give the first name of that
Lee. Because if I have
10 or six levitards, you know, you're Dan. He's, you know, John. So, and I missed it,
and it took me a while to, I missed the guy. He didn't score, but he had the pass, the assist
to the score. But what so? Like, why wouldn't you be more forgiving of yourself at this point?
Because I can't. No, it's not at this point. I was like this from day one, and I'm still like
this, and it bothers me. I don't know. It's just a competitive, my, you said, how competitive was I?
That's the way that I handle competition within myself.
Well, where does it come from, the ambition?
Probably the, I don't know where it comes from.
It's probably because of, you know, the Argentinian way of playing football and not bringing, I guess.
I always been very, very competitive.
I mean, my friends hate it.
I don't play that often.
My knees don't allow me to play that often now.
But when I was younger, my friends hate it.
I hated to be on my team because I was the most competitive out on the pitch.
I yelled at everyone, I got into fights, even with my teammates.
They hated to be on my team.
This is hard to believe you're a lovable person.
You are just a rabid competitor.
But you know what I was?
When I started working on TV, I said very young,
and we moved to Miami and I started going to the pickup games here
and people started recognizing me,
me, recognizing me, I had somebody tell me, hey, you better take me off because you're
going to get in trouble and you're going to lose your job because somebody's going to punch
you in the face.
But you don't know where it comes from?
You haven't examined your...
No, I mean, it comes from my personality and super competitive in everything that I do.
I don't...
I play to win.
I mean, I'm extremely competitive in business, in life, in broadcasting, in everything that I do.
So take me back to your acclamation to this country.
How much of an outsider were you, 10 years before you're broadcasting?
You're 14 years old or you're thinking about going to USC.
Where are you in your life?
How difficult is the transition to the States?
It was very, very hard.
My parents, my dad, a physician, gastroenterologist, my mom is psychologist.
They move.
I mean, we have similar stories, you know, because your dad came from Cuba.
You know, my parents fled, my grandparents fled, you know, the Nazis from Eastern Europe, Romania, and Poland.
They settled in Argentina.
The military junta was about to take over in Argentina.
My dad was a physician.
Things weren't going very well.
They moved to Sacramento.
I had never seen a horse or a cow in my life.
I came from Buenos Aires.
I was playing soccer every weekend.
I had, I was going to see my beloved team, Boca Juniors, every weekend.
I had all my friends, I had, you know, my family.
I didn't speak a word of English.
It was super, super tough.
I go back, live in Argentina for a year by myself.
I was in heaven, even though everything was very, very problematic.
How old are you?
I was 14.
By yourself, you go back to Argentina for a year?
Yes, because I got stuck actually in Argentina because my parents were,
in the process of getting the green card,
their lawyer said, oh, you're both professionals,
it's going to come out in the summer.
So in the summer, when I finished my last year of school here,
or my first year of school,
the lawyer said, you know, send your son.
If he wants to go, send them,
because when the green card comes out,
you have to go to the U.S. embassy in Argentina anyways.
Well, it did not come out through the summer,
so I had to wait a year or 11 months.
But we're happier there because at least you spoke the language.
That has to be very hard to be a young teenager and not speak any English in Sacramento.
It was not only that, but they asked me, where are you from?
Argentina.
Oh, Rio de Canada.
Oh, my God.
It's going to be tough.
No.
It's Buenos Aires, actually, where I'm from.
So it was really, very tough.
I mean, I had to, you know, learn the hard way.
Then when my family relocated to Los Angeles, you know, they came, picked me up,
grab me by the hair and say, you're not staying, you're coming back with us.
And I did.
And then, you know, I got that climate, I mean, it took me a couple of years in L.A.
to, you know, to start really learning the language.
And I didn't have any visions of where I was going to go to school.
I finished high school in L.A.
And then I went to USC thinking that I wanted to be a professional writer, a sports writer.
and I started writing about sports, like I said, about everything else because...
Do your parents think you're wasting your life and your career by making that choice?
Of course.
Because when I made that choice, my mother had to fight my father tooth and nail over that.
My father didn't forgive me for a long time.
I mean, he came to this country and paid for a private education so I would become an engineer.
And so when I don't want to become an engineer because I want to become a writer, it's an asinine choice.
Did you tell him?
I did, and he didn't like it.
Like, it's not what he wanted.
And it's only, I think I would have ended up doing whatever he wanted me to do.
You know, I don't need to tell you the Latino father.
If it had not been for my mother saying, you cannot allow him to choose something that might lead to unhappiness,
we're watching at the dinner table, you come home every day complaining about your bosses because you're not happy.
And you're hearing your son say, I don't know what I want to do later in life,
but I don't want to be at the dinner table complaining about what I'm doing for a living.
Well, I remember vividly, it happened pretty much the same.
same thing. My dad didn't push me that hard, but he obviously wanted my brother and I to be
doctors just like him. When I had to make the choice of going to USC and choosing my major,
I remember they were in bed already. It was, you know, evening. I knocked on their door.
And I said, I have something to tell you. I'm going to be a journalist. I'm not going into,
you know, medicine. They looked at each other.
And I think one of them said, we support you.
And my dad said, but you're going to die of hunger.
You're going to die of hunger.
And then, you know, my dad, we support you, but you're going to die of hunger.
Those two things don't feel necessarily like support.
Well, I could care less really because I didn't want to be a doctor anyways.
But it's funny because, you know, my dad remembers that day.
and every other time that he sees me, he comes up to me, oh, boy, was I wrong?
Thank God you chose journalism, because now, obviously, let me take you back and take the audience back.
Forty years ago, medicine was one of the best paid professions in this country.
They didn't have to see 40 patients in an hour to make a buck.
They only saw, like, I don't know, whatever it was, you know, 10 patients in a day, and they made a very good living.
So the standard of living was very good.
That is why the comment.
And every time my dad sees me, he remembers why he told me,
and he's lucky that I became a journalist.
Well, what do they have to say about,
have you watched the clip of you calling Argentina winning the World Cup with them?
Like what are the conversations like about that as an achievement for you?
They're obviously very, very proud.
Actually, I have not watched the clip.
I haven't watched too many of my games.
You know, they watch on the other side.
Now they are super proud of myself
because every time they go to a restaurant
and they pay with a credit card,
if there's a Latin owner or a Latin server,
they see Cantor, do you have anything to do with Andres.
I'm his dad.
Oh, no, you're not.
Now you're not.
And he shows pictures and he gets, you know,
That's right. That's right. That's right. Gets to celebrate just how wrong he was about trying to make his son a doctor.
Exactly. Exactly.
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What was it like for you emotionally to broadcast a game with Nico?
It was...
Your son, I should say, to the audience.
It was super weird. Honestly, I mean, it was a very proud moment. A proud family, everyone was watching that game. I was a guest on his network. And it was, you know, they presented me like, we have the legend. Andres Cantor, you know, for the first time calling a game with his son, first father's son on an American broadcast booth in English. It was super moving, super touching. But I needed to be detached from that moment.
because if not, I wasn't going to be able to do my job.
And I told Nico right away, hey, you take it.
I'm here.
I'm a guest.
Forget that I'm your dad.
Just let's pretend that I'm a guest on your network because I'm a guest on your network.
So, you know, pick it up and just, you know, let's do the how it's usually done.
So in that sense, it was, you know, super smooth.
and then, you know, I looked at him and it was weird because, you know, he's so good at what he does
and the way he sees the game and analyzes the game that I had a lot of comfort by doing a game
with somebody that I had never done a game before, but I knew that he knew about the game,
and then I looked over, and, you know, he's an ego, he's my son, and it's like you have to disassociate yourself from the moment
because, you know, Latinos, we are very, you know, maybe...
Repressed is the word you're looking for.
No, no, no, we cry a lot.
Oh, well, wait a minute.
So, no, you went a different way than I thought you were going there
because I thought, okay, so you were trying to keep from crying there.
You're pushing down everything so that you can remain professional.
I'm trying to remain as calm as I could
because I didn't want to mix the fact that this was a moment.
because this moment could happen again
and it will happen again for sure
But a proud moment you're talking about
I think of the Latino man as being
more constipated with his feelings
you're saying no we're criers
No we're criers I mean at least I am
I mean I'm very emotional about everything
I mean I knew what was going on
but I kept it inside because if not
you know I mean the CBS sports
wasn't used to a Latino crying just because he has his son
next to him okay but when you when your team wins
the World Cup. You're allowed to sob for two minutes when you're feeling parental love.
No, that's where I draw the line. I have to be. I think they wanted you there, at least in part,
to mind the emotion of the legendary moment. We did kind of manage the emotions because we gave
a couple, he gave a couple of personal anecdotes. And at the onset, he said, what should I
call you? Pops or, you know, how do we go about this? I mean, we have those moments, which
were super, super nice and, I mean, out of the broadcast guideline book, but, you know, that's
the reason we were there.
And it was super, super emotional.
At the end, I started crying like, you know, like a baby.
Tell me about that.
What was happening at the end?
Well, at the end, we hugged, and I asked him, it's funny because usually I give him
advice, or I gave him at the beginning of his career.
And then at the end, we hugged, and I asked, how did I do?
And he goes, you killed it.
Really?
Yeah.
And then, you know, I went, see, I'm going to cry now.
And then, you know, we went to the green room with all their people.
And then when I got to the hotel, I broke down.
I didn't want to break down in front of him.
Because?
Because it was happy.
I was elated that I had to do this.
It's cold age then, and you're younger than I am, and it's going to happen with you.
I have now suddenly a column in my career called bucket list of things, either career or life, of bucket list of things, even though I consider myself to be very young and active, but I have bucket list things, and that was one of them, and it's going to happen again. I know it's going to happen again somewhere, but, you know, bucket list checked, and it was a lot of fun.
I find it interesting, though, that you would have to go in private to break down and that you wouldn't just share it with him.
He knows because of what I told him when we hugged at the end, what I've told him, which I was more proud of himself than I was of whatever I did.
But you have to understand, like you have here in your company, there were 45 people around that are not used to, you know, hey, what's happening to the legend?
why is he crying? So I kept it to myself and, you know, when I went like this in my room,
started backtracking and thinking of what had happened. And I was, in that moment, I was a very
proud dad. When I was on the booth, I was a very proud professional dad doing the game with my son.
You carry yourself with a great deal of gratitude. You love it every bit as much now as you've
ever loved it. I love it every day. I mean, I'm, uh,
I'm loving it.
I don't know if I love it more now than I loved my professional,
my profession when I started,
but I cherish every moment now.
I savour it differently.
It's, you know, the glamorous part, been there than that.
It's just, you know, my job consists of trying to get people interested in a soccer match.
that perhaps is not as entertaining as it might be.
And I have challenges because, you know, technology obviously has changed the way we have to broadcast
because anything that I say now is scrutinized immediately through social media, and I turn
my phone off just for sanity and mental hygiene until the end of the broadcast, and I'll
answer or I'll realize that perhaps I did something or I said something that wasn't right and then
I fact checked and oh again I can't sleep that night but I am enjoying I'm full of gratitude that I get
to sit in the best seat in the house in the biggest sporting events in history called
Olympics World Cup you know the big matchups in international football World Cup World Cup
qualifying, and they pay me for it, and they pay me very well. What else can you do?
When you mentioned the Olympics, calling the Olympics in 2000 in English, doing it in English,
was that meaningful to you? Where does that rank in terms of career achievements, the specifics
of doing it in English? I believe we would have to fact check this, that I was the first Spanish
language broadcaster to cross over into a major tournament to do English, I think I was.
It was super, super important. Dick Ebersoll wanted me to do the Atlanta 96 Olympics.
I was working at Univision back then. They didn't allow me to. And then it happened that NBC
bought Telemundo and, you know, they allowed me to go call the games. And it was something that I
wanted to prove myself. Like I told you, I'm super competitive. I knew I could do it. I had never
done it. My music for calling the game is in Spanish. I didn't know how I was going to do.
You know how there are different styles in English language, play-by-play broadcasting and
soccer. They're more English from England driven. They're more subdued. I mean, sometimes, you know,
I go make a coffee. The game is zero-zero. I go make an espresso.
So in my kitchen, I come back and it's 1-0 and say, wait, what happened with the volume?
You know, they don't say anything.
I say, how good I not hear when the goal was scored?
So it was something.
It seems impossible to you.
You must, you have to announce the goal as if everyone in the world needs to hear that it was a goal.
Of course.
That's the biggest moment in the game.
I mean, you have to, when there's a touchdown, I mean, I know you make silence, but somebody screams touchdown.
You know, what?
whatever, or the hockey goal or whatever.
But anyways, it was super, super important.
I was very, very lucky to have a great team, you know, with me that helped me through
my nerves.
I usually don't get nervous anymore.
I mean, I guess.
Oh, but second language is tough.
And I think your expertise, you just flowed right over the music.
Mm-hmm.
You are a singer.
You are calling a game and you are there providing accents.
and that language, it's easier to do in your first language, because it's a richer language.
Trying to do it in your second language would leave you very insecure.
Doing it for the Olympics is a lot of pressure to try and do all the prep you need to do
and the lack of confidence you might have of a second language that you can't reach the song.
Believe me, I was not insecure, whatever follows being insecure.
I was petrified.
As I said, I had a very good production team that helped me along the way.
and I'll tell you how insecure I was
or how frightened I was.
I was obviously this was
2013 years into my career.
It's not like the Olympics that I called in Tokyo.
I called a couple of games.
No, but second language.
I know, it's super tough.
I didn't know, and believe me,
thank God there wasn't any social media at the time
because the reaction would have been immediate.
So, first day off, I'm in my hotel in Sydney.
I get a phone call.
Remember hotels used to have telephones.
I get a phone call in my hotel room from Dick Everson's office.
He wants to see me.
And this is halfway through the tournament.
And I said, okay, I'm going there.
Just chop my head.
You know, he's going to...
Dick Ebersol, one of the most legendary production voices
in the history of sports television.
Yes, the, you know, the guy that made Saturday Night Live, SNL,
the guy that worked up with Rune Arledge on Monday Night Football
and he was Mr. Olympics for NBC for many, many years, the executive producer.
He's the one that hires me.
He calls me into his office at the IBC.
He lived inside the IBC.
He had a bathroom and lived inside the IBC during the Olympics
and supervised every minute on air on NBC.
He calls me onto the office and I'm going there thinking,
okay, here's my plane ticket on the way back.
Thank you, but no thank you.
And he says, son, I will never forget.
Son, I want you to know.
You're doing a terrific job.
The reaction back home is great.
And he opens a closet and takes out like a varsity jacket.
He says, I only made 20 of these for very special people.
And you already earned this.
So please take it as a momental.
And of course, if I was insecure up to that day,
because I was, you know, I was very nervous every time I went on air.
From that moment until the final, I was Al Michaels, Vince Coley,
Chick-Hern, all together.
Oh, wow. So you were on fire.
I was on fire.
It gave me, you know, such confidence that was incredibly comforting
that this man, a legend in the broadcast business,
gave me one of 20 varsity jackets that had the end.
NBC Logo, NBC Olympics, and said, you're doing a great job. I said, whoa, really, thank God.
Do you still have it? Do you still have the jacket? I don't know where it went. I cannot for the
life of me think who threw the freaking jacket away. I look every time we find, you know,
we go to the basement, okay, let's look it up. I can't find it. And I regret so much not having
it. Can you explain to the people who may not know where it is that success and greatness
are forever hungry, what would be a great example of how obsessive, compulsive you still are
about preparation because you're not going to do your job lazily?
Well, nowadays, it's totally different than when I started.
So now I have to double up because everything, all the preparation that I have, everyone else
can have, you know, through either AI, through Google, through the club's websites,
before, when I started or throughout my career, this wasn't the case.
You were the reporter on your own information.
Exactly.
And I had to call the teams, call the players, have access to the coaches, to the media
persons, et cetera, et cetera.
Now you've got to find the different things that everyone else can't have to make your
broadcast special.
And it's my expertise on analyzing the game through the lens of the people that I know
if they want to hear what's the average corner kicks that Arsenal takes on a given
Premier League match, they already know that, or at least they can find it.
So it doesn't, I mean, I'll probably say they scored, you know, 38 goals from corner kicks
in the last, you know, two seasons.
That is a good stat, perhaps if there's a corner kick, it happened to me the other day
because I gave that stat and they scored.
I was very, very lucky.
It doesn't happen often.
But, you know, I have to enhance my broadcast in a different way because obviously the information that I have is also readily available for people.
And the way you get scrutinized nowadays is, you know, through social media.
And they have direct contact.
They think that they know you.
You say you gave me a hug because you think they know me well.
People think that because, you know, I'm in their living rooms every weekend, they get to say things to me.
like I know them, you know, for their entire life.
Hey, Andresito, who, Andresito?
What, Andresito?
Do I know you?
And so I have to be very well prepared beyond the stats that are obviously, you know, available.
Can you explain to the people from all of the places that you've ended up in pop culture?
You've been a spokesman on campaigns.
you've done Super Bowl commercials, you've done the late-night circuit.
So it's not just Letterman, but it's also family guy, the Simpsons.
Of all of those things, is there one above all others that you'd put at the very top of looking around and being like, how did I arrive here?
Do you want my better Argentinians of Southwich sessions?
That's not true at all.
That's nice of you to say, but I don't believe you for a moment.
That's why I said you are my Argentinian.
You're just totally false.
That's fraudulent what you're saying right there.
It's not a hundred percent fraudulent.
It's an honor.
I told you it's an honor to meet you and to be here.
Probably the biggest repercussion is The Simpsons,
because it was a cameo with my name and likeness.
There's a character saying, hey, Andres Cantor.
And then it's my voice in the episode.
And, you know, I watched The Simpsons,
but I wasn't like a super, super big fan.
I know what it means, but just as much as people recognize me by the go-call and by the video that made everyone cry,
the other point of recognition is, oh, my, if you made it on the Simpsons, you're big,
and that is like a common denominator of when people talk about the Simpsons.
If you're in the Simpsons, you made it, I guess, I don't know.
You already feel like you've made it, though, right?
because there's something interesting about arriving but also trying to remain hungry
that you have to always feel, if you're competitive, like people are chasing you.
Like somebody wants to take your job.
Obviously nowadays, I mean, before there was only one job.
Now there's many play-by-play jobs around, you know, with many other networks.
But obviously I have the best one because I am the main play-by-play announcer now for Telemundo going into 26 years.
and I get to call the best games.
But obviously, I always, I am very, very appreciative of where I am.
And it's being obviously amazing to be able to be the number one voice of soccer in America
for the last 40 years, 40 years, four decades.
That is, I look back and I know that is going to be part of my legacy for sure.
That I was, you know, I get emotional when people tell.
me, you were the soundtrack of my infancy. You know, I grew up listening to you every weekend.
I love the game because of you. I've been doing this 40 years. That is a long time, and I cherish
every moment that happened, and I'm looking forward to the next, you know, 20 perhaps. And I know
that they're going to be very, very good years ahead of it.
What were the dreams, though, looking like? You must have exceeding them.
You've exceeded your dreams.
Every single one of them.
First and foremost, I never thought I was going to end up doing either radio or TV, and I do both.
I own my own radio company that owns the Spanish language radio rights to the FIFA World Cup.
So I have a big production hat that I wear because I got to put on the production of the World Cups.
And I have a daily show just like you do every day in Spanish.
And I have lots of fun.
My company is 36 years in the main.
make it old. And then, you know, it's it's super nice to be calling the World Cup in 2026 and I'm
looking ahead of, you know, to things that are going to happen down the road. But it's obviously
very, very challenging in today's world. Can you tell me about the entrepreneurial side of
what it is that you do, the production, how many employees you have, why you're doing that?
What's the reason for that? We started my, the founding partner of my company called
Football Department started the company 36 years ago in the Bay Area with a daily show
on Sunday nights just to give out the results of soccer matches.
Then he says one day, let's go after rights because content is king.
He said, you know, what chance do we have?
Well, let's see.
We enter the tender for the FIFA World Cup Rights of 2002 and 6, which were sold together
and won them.
we put a very high bid
I was going to say that's expensive
to win that bid sounds risky
it sounds scary
it was super risky
we're very young
and have good bankers
that lent us
what's the amount of money
can you say is it is it too secret
like how how scary was it
let me ask it a different way
I didn't sleep until we sold
we made the money back
by selling advertising
I can't tell you that
you know the confidence
evidentiality. Understood. I'm not, I didn't mean to be trying. I wanted to place in front of the audience the size of the risk.
A lot of millions of dollars that we didn't have, that, you know, we obviously knew we were going to sell in advertising.
But then we bought this in August of 2019. 11 happens. You know, the world is, you know, paralyzed for a long time.
We had two advertising contracts fall out of our hands. You know, they were ready for signature.
and two big, you know, top-ten companies pulled out.
So it was very, very scary for a long time.
And then it now come 2026, this will be our seventh consecutive.
We are the longest FIFA media MRL, media rights license, in the U.S., regardless of language or medium,
because ESPN lost it to Fox, the Univision lost it to Telemundo, in audio, in radio,
football, the premier remained the longest.
So we invested a lot of money.
This one is the most expensive of all, obviously because it's here, Canada and Mexico,
but obviously most of the games in the U.S., but we're looking forward to it because everyone is excited.
But why do it?
Why not just keep doing what you were doing?
Why the need to expand into something that is so far outside of the realm of what you're great at?
Well, we wanted to, first we started syndicating our show before buying rights.
So we started in that business.
It became very, started to become lucrative.
It was kind of hard to, you know, to, it was hard to get the affiliates on board.
But then when we bought the rights, understanding that content was king, that it was going to be very hard to make a good living of just a show.
And then we pegged it and tied it with FIFA World Cup rights.
That changed the equation.
So now we have a very robust network of 170 stations that carry my show and that carry the World Cup.
And, you know, we wanted to venture into radio.
I love doing radio as well.
And we did.
And, you know, at the same time that I was doing, you know, my television, that's, I always say that I wear all hats because, you know, I am the play-by-play announcer.
I'm the sports personality for the networks.
But then I am, you know, the owner of my company that has all this.
investment behind it. Do you partake in the silliness when I'm sure daily someone comes up to you
and says, do the goal call for me personally? What percentage of time will you actually do that for
somebody? Because they must think you're a jukebox and you must get it daily. Every day and
I stop and I explain to them why I won't do it because if I do it to everyone that asks, I will have
no voice on the weekend to call the games, but I do stop and talk with them and say, hey.
But nobody gets it, though. You will not allow anyone to cheapen it by taking it out in the
wild and selling it. It's a pure thing meant to be around the games where they pay you a great
deal of money for it. No one does, no one gets that for free. I sold bottle openers with my
go-go. You did like this. I went, oh, back in the day when ringtones were a thing, we sold
ringtones with my voice. I did alarm clocks that every hour, I had to turn it off because
it was annoying like hell, but every hour went, go, you knew that was, you know,
have you trademarked it? Do you have it? No, we couldn't trademarked it because the trademark office
said, what's the word, how many O's, how many A's, how many O's, how many O's, like right?
Buffer has, you know, a phrase. That's right, yes, buffer. This is just a word.
You don't even say the phrase because you're well aware if you say the phrase anywhere, he charges
you for it, Michael Buffett.
He's calling me, you know, within five minutes, of course.
I know how it goes.
So, yeah, I mean, I tell everybody, just wait for the weekend.
It's happening on the weekend.
Does any one of your nine Emmys mean more to you than the others?
The 22, obviously, meant a lot.
Everyone means a lot.
I mean, but I really wanted to win the 20,
22 because of the FIFA World Cup.
I thought it was like a, you know, full circle Argentina winning the World Cup and me winning
the Emmy because of my work in the World Cup itself.
And actually, I don't know if you or your audience remembers when Messi came back to
Argentina, he posted a picture of him drinking matte in his bed with a World Cup trophy.
And I did exactly the same photo with my Emmy drinking matte in my bed after I won four or five
months after the final.
Can you explain to people just how far soccer has come in this country from what it is that
you saw at the beginning versus what it is that you see now?
Well, now, at the beginning, there was no professional league.
It started two years after the World Cup in 1994, 1996.
Now we have a very robust league of 30 professional teams.
There was a stat that surprised me.
I did not know.
has contributed 206 players in this last international windows to their national teams.
So we have players that are good, that represent their country playing here in the U.S.
I wish the U.S. men's national team would be doing better because we're less than a year
away.
We have to get everyone excited about this team because the World Cup is here.
And everyone and their mother will know that the world.
Cup is being played in our country come next year.
Whoever doesn't know, they will find out, believe me, and it will be a big deal.
We need the U.S. to do good, to do well next year, to get everyone more excited about
the game if they're not already.
So from when I started way back in 1987, no professional league, just friendly games, no
name recognition on national team players, et cetera.
to today, you know, it has changed tremendously for the good.
Now the teams need to up the ante and play better and make an impact on the field
because, you know, a winning team is always more likable than a losing team.
Forgive me for reading here, but I just wanted to get right all of the campaigns
for global brands that you've had a part in.
The Super Bowl ads?
What were, what do you remember about the stories involving the Super Bowl ads that you did?
Just the idea of you doing Super Bowl ads as a symbol for the American dream on coming to America as an immigrant learning the language and getting into Super Bowl ads is an achievement.
What do you remember about those?
I remember my phone exploding with WhatsApp messages.
I was on a plane during the Super Bowl, and the Super Bowl ad came out, and I knew, you know, what was happening.
So it's obviously to have my name, my face on a Super Bowl commercial,
knowing that I'm being watched by whatever it is, 140 million people.
It's super nice.
And the list of sponsors, luckily throughout the years, it's quite...
I'm going to name them.
I'm going to name some of them.
Budweiser, O'Reilly Auto Parts, AT&T, Pepsi, Geico, Snickers, Gatorade, Dove, Adidas, Nike, Volkswagen,
Chevrolet.
Am I missing anything giant there?
like you couldn't have imagined.
Pepsi, Coke.
Yeah, I said Pepsi.
I didn't say Coke.
I didn't realize Coke.
You did both of them.
I mean, it's amazing that I did.
I did phone company's cars.
I was very, very fortunate.
I did Guyco.
Gaico was a super cool commercial way back in the day.
Yeah, the brands are kind of impressive.
What are the dreams when you were a sports writer at USC?
What was the highest it went?
You were going to be what?
I have this fantasy of going back to Argentina, believe it or not.
I'm becoming the editor of El Grafico Magazine,
which was the equivalent of Sports Illustrated in its heyday.
So I wanted to be the editor of the Argentinian Sports Illustrated of Argentina.
And now you're just as American as you are Argentinian, no?
Or is that fair to say?
It's fair to say, yes.
I lived here more than I lived ever in Argentina.
You know, my life has been made here.
My kids were born here in Miami.
I breathe 305.
So which are you most?
Argentinian, Miami and or American?
If you had to choose one.
Good question.
Well, American in the global arena by a very Myanmarse.
I love the 305.
I publicize the fact, you know, on my socials, every time I'm on the water
or I see something that, you know, we live, or at least I live in the best city in the U.S.
And the other cities hate me for that, but I don't think there's a better city to live than Miami.
And how did you become more of a Miami and then an Angelino?
I had a tough first year when I moved, but then I started liking Miami a lot.
I mean, it has changed dramatically.
it's still, you know, very beautiful.
I loved L.A., but, I mean, L.A. it's a different animal.
It's too big to get, you know, go have a caficito with a friend.
You have to drive an hour.
Now in Miami, you almost have to drive an hour to go.
Yes, now with the traffic, you do have to do it the same.
But your original broadcasting influence was Chick-Hern of the Lakers, correct?
Yes. Well, I listened.
I liked the way he saw.
simulcasted the games. I like basketball. I watch the Lakers on KCal Channel 9. He was the voice
of both radio and TV for the Lakers for many, many years. And he was the closest thing to an
Argentine play-by-play soccer announcer that I could find both on radio or television.
Because of how fast it was. And his phrases and the way he kept people engaged. And, you know,
it was a pleasure listening to him
as much as it was listening
to Vin, to Vin, Scully.
I mean, it was poetry in motion.
You know, it was, you get,
you know, I say that
my style perhaps is eclectic,
even though it's a different language.
I remember how Chick-Hurne used to have,
you know, his catchphrases,
how he changed rhythms
within, you know, the play-by-play,
how he gave the insights about the game,
even though he had a caller man,
color analyst and here the roles are a little bit more defined. He was very opinionated on the game
himself. And then Vince Colley was just in a very slow-paced game, not only he gave you the
insights of what was going on, but it was just poetry and the control of the language that he had
was absolutely amazing. Do you remember the first time that you did your first goal call? Do you
remember roughly how long it was? And did you know immediately?
this is something I'm going to keep
I'm going to have to keep doing this.
I knew I was going to do it that way
because that's the way I grew up listening
to people calling goals,
the broadcasters calling goals.
I remember vividly the first day.
They called me for an addition.
They said that we were going to tape
two games that were going to air on the network.
I mean, they didn't tell me that until I got there.
I was talking about being nervous and frightened
and insecure.
Never had been in a TV studio.
in my life. They put me to do color commentary in the first game. Then we break for lunch.
The guy that ended up hiring me, he says, I can tell that you know a lot about soccer. But
when he says, but I'm about to shake his hand and say, thank you for everything. And, you know,
go home. He says, can you call the second game? And I did. And then, you know, what I call
the goal, I see his reaction. Like, you know, he looked at me.
kind of like in surprise that I was even though you know in Mexico I don't know if way back
then because he was Jorge Berry I love him he passed away recently I always remember
him very fondly because he's a man that gave me my first job and the reason I'm sitting here
talking with you he went like this and then you know I guess he liked it he called me within
the week and offered me a full-time job and then
you knew that it had hit or you because it looks from the reaction that he wasn't sure that it
worked or not um he got caught by surprise i think i because i did yell a lot i don't know how long
it was but it was it was a lengthy goal uh it was actually it was shorter it was more goals
there were shorter goals with goal goal goal goal goal um i didn't know i mean that's the way i
knew and that was the music in my ears of my infancy and the way I grew up listening and watching
games on TV. So I had, you know, no other way of calling the goals. And I did not know that
this was going to catch everyone's attention the way it did first in the World Cup in 1990,
which we broadcasted back then on Univision. Then, of course, it was, I had no clue what was
going to happen in 94.
My career just exploded beyond control in 94.
Have you had a player move you because that particular player told you you have no idea
how much it moved that player to have you call your goal the way you call your goal?
I am hoping to meet Gonzalo Montiel, the guy that scored the winning penalty kick in
2000.
He started following me on Instagram.
He didn't text me.
I did meet the couple of the Argentine national team players.
Actually, the coach moved me.
The coach, I moved the coach.
FIFA invites me in February this, two months after Argentina wins the World Cup,
to be a presenter at the FIFA Best Awards,
and Scaloni was going to win coach of the year, obviously, and he was there.
So I go up to him for a picture, and the minute he sees me,
he says, oh my God, oh my God, the way you make.
made me cry and my family cry.
I only kept your video on my phone when Mike, he was there with his kids.
My kids told me, that's him, that's him when they saw you come in.
And I say, gringo, because they call him gringos, Caloni.
Gringo, what me is so humbled.
I couldn't believe what the guy was saying.
Are you freaking kidding me?
You made the whole country cry.
You, Messi, your team.
No, no, no, no, no.
I want, no, no, I want the picture with you, he said, no, no, come on.
I go, no, I want to get a photo with you.
No, it was like the most bizarre moment.
Well, tell me, take me, take me through, if you would, in your own words,
the articulation of where it is you connected with a country, with a community, with your past,
with your dreams, with your gratitude, because there's no way that you don't break
into tears like that in broadcasting if what you're feeling is not an,
overwhelming sense of gratitude of feeling touched by God because you're allowed to experience
any of that? First and foremost, I would say, was a sense of pride of who I am as an
Argentinian. Even though I am an Argentinian American, as we discussed, this is Argentina's my
blood. And it transported me, you know, back to Argentina. I felt part of them, of them, the team
winning and of all Argentinians. I felt I was representing all Argentinians living in this country
and I know how much, you know, every immigrant suffered. Nobody has had an easy path, you know,
in this country. That was the first thing that, you know, I was super proud that I was able to
call my country with what it means to me, you know, from a soccer standpoint to win the World Cup.
this was the pinnacle of the athlete's career and the broadcasting career of Andres Cantor.
I mean, I've called 12 World Cups.
I saw Argentina as a teenager win the 78 in the stands.
I saw Argentina win as a writer in 86, but, you know, 40 years detached from those moments.
I am who I am in the world of broadcasting in the world, in the U.S., whatever.
And this moment was their moment, but it was my moment.
I've been waiting for this, Dan, for 38 years.
And I felt that Argentine pride in myself.
Were you surprised at all at what came over you?
Were you surprised at the size of it?
I was surprised that I was able to speak.
That I was able to compose myself.
I was crying like a baby.
I was like trying to put words together without sobbing
because I knew people were,
watching the final of the World Cup, which broke all ratings record.
I mean, I have the responsibility that you have at that moment is huge.
And yet here I'm solving, trying to, you know, utter words that have meaning.
Because I put, if you remember, it's, you know, Argentina Campion del Mundo,
champions of the world, but then I start mentioning the past world champions that had died.
there was a song that accompanied the Argentine national team,
Moucho, I mean, it became super, super popular
that mentioned that Maradona was rooting from the sky
for Messi and for Argentina.
So I paraphrase the song, you know,
DeVelho de de Janeiro, but then I added seven more names
of past Argentine world champions that, you know, passed away.
And then I referenced Messi and the coach.
and honestly, as I said, I had nothing planned because not only am I super competitive
with myself, I'm extremely superstitious, extremely superstitious.
So I did not want to have anything prepared in case off because I know I was going to jinxed.
How superstitious are you?
Explain to me the length that your superstitions go.
Minutes 74 of the final of the World Cup.
I'm with Manolo Sol with
Claudio Borgi, former Argentine
winner in 86, Maradona's
teammate. Argentina
was having the game of
their lives. France wasn't touching the ball.
Minutes 74,
I tell Bici Borgi.
Borgi is
what we're seeing real.
And the minute I said that,
I said, why
did I say that?
It haunted me
because you don't do that.
You're going to, you know, I jinx the freaking final within two minutes and Bappe scored two goals.
And it was tied to two.
And then I couldn't get that shit out of my head.
I said, why did I say that?
You want to know how superstitious I was?
Game one, Argentina loses to Saudi Arabia and heard of the upset of the entire history of the World Cup.
Argentina with a 36 match and beaten streak.
I put on a brown suit.
We lose.
That I'll never, you know, wear that thing again.
Second game, I knew exactly what I had, what I wore.
Blue suit, blue shirt, the underwear, the socks on my shoes.
Argentina wins against Mexico to zero.
I keep the same suit
all the way to the final
I have the suit at home
I have my underwear at home
I have the socks at home I have the
framed on the wall you have I have the picture
I should frame it
because that's underwear frame your underwear put it over the television
that is exactly why Messi won the World Cup
because I wore and game day
I went through the same ritual
you know I sat in the same table
at the restaurant in the hotel
the lady I we had to have
the same server and I ate exactly the same thing every time Argentina played.
The last question, the toughest question. The toughest question for last, you said earlier
that your wife and the kids say that that shouldn't have been the happiest moment of your
life. It should have been with them. I give you one and only one that you can do. You only get
to choose one. I'm the asshole here in asking the question. You get to call the Argentinian goal that
wins the World Cup or you get to broadcast the game with Nico, your son. Which one do you choose?
I'll double up
I already called
the World Cup goal
the Argentina winning goal
so if it comes to
2026
no no no I'm saying I give you the only
that you've done these two things
don't try and sneak out of this question
I know I pinned you down here
you only get to choose one
the experience that you had with your son
that made you weep like a baby in the hotel room afterward
or in the experience you had with your country
where you wept in front
of all of all the world oh that's right uh i pinned you down nico you're going to lose yeah
you're going to lose nico you're going to lose he's he's forgiving because he's probably the same way
that's right you'll get more chances to do games with nico you know what then i wanted nico to be an
engineer just like you now wanted you to be an engineer why is he in this profession forget it
Argentina.
I'm honored that you would come in here and spend this time with us.
It's been a pleasure to hear your voice for 40 years.
Thank you.
And I hope you get to listen to me cry again in 2026 with Argentina winning.
You're a big blubbering fool is all you are.
I think Nico might not forgive you, though.
I think he's going to be, he's going to understand.
He's going to understand.
Before we go, I have to say something on record because you, you, you,
viralized a moment of my career. I don't know if you remember this, but you viralized a moment of
my career before social media. After I called the Landon-Donovan goal in South Africa for my
radio company, and within an hour of the match, I guess, you know, somebody had heard it,
and you called me on air on your show and replayed the moment that had happened with the U.S.
making it to the next round with Landon Donovan's goal in an extra time.
I think it's the biggest goal in American history.
It's in the conversation anyway.
It might be.
It might be.
But you took, you know, the time to call me to South Africa, even though I wasn't doing
the games on TV, you were, you, your production were listening to the game in the radio,
and it was super, super nice to be on your show way back then.
Well, I thank you.
With that viral moment.
I love what Spanish radio has been allowed.
to be in South Florida for a long time.
I don't think there's much like it anywhere in the United States.
It is the Wild Wild West Spanish.
As you know, Spanish radio gets away with more than any other radio gets away with.
FCC don't speak our language.
They're not monitoring it because no one speaks the language.
Thank you.
A pleasure of me.
Oh, Jeremy, you, me, Miller Lights, watching sports.
I want to do it right now.
Me too.
MLB postseason?
When do you want to do it?
Dude, football games this weekend.
Baseball's getting going with the playoffs.
It's just nothing like maybe we're at our local establishment.
We get a nice draft Miller Light.
We cheers.
We watch some pig skin.
We watch some hardball and we toast to Miller Light because it's a damn good beer.
I can't wait.
For me, with everything we've got going on, heading into the real, like football season's
really getting going now, which means what a time of year.
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