THE ED MYLETT SHOW - A Story of Greatness -w Terrell Owens
Episode Date: September 3, 2019Turn your hardships into fuel! Â My friend, Terrell Owens is one of the greatest Football Players of all time! He's a 6-Time NFL Pro-Bowl player, actor, humanitarian, loving father, fitness expert, m...odel, and motivational speaker. It is my great honor to bring him to the show. In this interview, T.O. shares how he became one of the greatest of all time while overcoming everything that stood in his way. He shares the keys to success and his incredible personal story from growing up in the projects and the influence of his grandmother suffering from Alzheimer's to his incredible work ethic and career as a professional NFL player. Bottom line, this is a truly REMARKABLE conversation and you will see a side of my friend T.O. you have never seen before. I can almost guarantee you, YOU WILL BE INSPIRED, learn key separators of one of the all-time greats and you will be telling other people about this interview! If T.O.'s personal story and what he overcame will be riveting and inspiring for you and everyone you share this with! Â
Transcript
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This is the Edmmerwood Show.
Welcome back to Max Out with Ed Myleth.
Gentlemen of my left does not need an introduction.
This is Terrell, Eldorado Owens.
Not my fool name.
Otherwise known as T.O.
To most of you out there.
And newly elected NFL Hall of Famer T.O.
So congratulations on that.
Appreciate it.
And welcome to the program.
Appreciate it.
Max out.
Max out.
Exactly.
We're going to max out the day here today.
So I'm, there's so much to talk about.
So this guy, you know, if you don't know Google it,
but you're talking about, in my opinion,
my generation, the best wide receiver in football,
and arguably the best player in football during that time,
153 touchdowns, almost 16,000 receiving yards,
probably the most impressive thing,
I don't know if you know this or not,
only put player in the history they don't feel
to score a touchdown against every single team.
Did you know that?
I do know that.
Yeah, but even better than that,
maybe you don't know this,
only player in the history they didn't
have able to score two touchdowns against every single team. Did you know that? I do know that. Yeah, but even better than that, maybe you don't know this. Only player in the history of the NFL to score two touchdowns against every single team. Did you know that?
I think I know. That's the real you knew. So you're talking about, I mean, in the history of football,
one of the all-time greats, and but I don't actually don't think it's the most interesting thing about you.
I think the most interesting thing about you that I've started to learn is how you grew up.
So I want to talk a little bit about that because I don't think coming out of, you went to Tennessee,
Chad and Nuga, that's not necessarily necessarily no offense, but that's not a wide receiver
NFL powerhouse of football, right?
So, and where you grew up and how you grew up, I don't think everybody would have predicted
at eight years old or ten years old or even seventeen years old, necessarily you would turn
out to be the way that you did.
So I want to talk about how you got
there and what you did so how did you grow up like where did you grow up
Alexander city Alabama relatively small town like how small I think 14
15 thousand people small so relatively far I mean small I mean where
everybody knows your name yeah right, right. Like that TV show, cheers. Yeah.
Everybody knows your business.
Right.
They know what's going on.
Right.
But our football team, our school, we were 6A.
I mean, so we were pretty, pretty big in terms of our school size.
In high school.
In high school.
But you didn't play football before high school, though, right?
No, I played in junior high, but I was just kind of just on the team.
That's crazy.
I mean, I was really little skinny, scrawny. When I left high school, I was just kind of just on the team. That's crazy. I mean I was I was really little skinny
scrawny when I left high school I was probably maybe right at six feet or you kept growing six foot
one and maybe 170 75 pounds. Did you not even go back to the foot. Did you start like your freshman year
on varsity in high school? No I didn't I was on JV I was on juniorV. I was on Junior Varsity. You played JV. Right.
Junior Varsity.
Then obviously, once you get past the 10th grade, you have to play on Varsity.
So I played a number sports from baseball, basketball, a ran track, obviously football.
I just played the sport because I was competitive.
Just like to play the game, my junior year, that was when I got really
got an opportunity to play. I was like second to third string, so actually second
string, so the receiver that was going to be playing that particular game on a
Friday night, he and I'm getting sick during the school day. And so I end up
having to start. And so my running back coach Coach Lassiter came up to me and
he goes, yo Ricky sick, he goes, you're going to have to start,
you're going to have to play tonight.
And so he basically gave me some encouragement,
where I sat at my locker.
He literally said, he goes, you're going to do fine.
Don't worry about it, then.
And he went on to say, you know what,
you're going to score a touchdown tonight.
Did you?
And I did.
You did.
So the third leading receiver in the history of the NFL
isn't starting as a junior in high school until this guy.
No, senior, nor senior. You're either. Are you kidding me? No. You didn't starting as a junior in high school until this guy.
No, senior, nor senior, you're either.
Are you kidding me?
No.
You didn't start as a senior in high school?
That's been in it.
So you obviously, wow, like, isn't that a lesson?
All you young athletes have followed me.
Hey, just because it's not where it needs to be right now, it doesn't mean it can't
get there.
And you want to be a nurse that have followed me.
You may not be on the varsity of business yet.
This is one of the all-time greats in the history and you're talking about by that time
most guys would be recruited.
They got eight, nine, ten schools coming after them.
Absolutely.
That's crazy.
So what did you do just like every time you get an opportunity you just took advantage
of it?
Is that what would happen?
I did.
My coach, my head coach at the time Steve Severese, he basically like you during the course
of the school year. We have probably
a 30 to 45 minute period, what they call it, enrichment period where we can either study
the other work on other subjects kind of to help get your grades up things that nature.
I used that time to go down the lift weights. So he basically went around to, again, they sent
something around to all the teachers
that basically said, yeah, if a player wants to go out,
if you guys grant them, let them get a pass
to go down to the weight room or what happens.
So that's literally what I did.
I took that, those moments, those 30, 45 minutes
of enrichment period, talk to the teacher,
went down to the weight room,
and that's where I started to do,
put in extra work,
just to kind of get myself bigger, faster, and stronger.
That always a theme through the whole 15 years of the NFL?
Yes, that was the start of it.
And so my coach, now he's a coach's savoury,
he's over the whole Alabama Athletic Association,
football association.
And so these are some of the things when he left,
and he coached a couple of years at a couple of high schools. That was the message to some of
his students that with me really kind of continuing and beginning to
success that I did early on in my San Francisco days. That was the story that
he told those students that I was a kid. That was a kid that really that really
put in hard work. I wasn't the most athletic. I wasn't the most sought after. I
wasn't the most highly recruited coming wasn't the most sought after,
I wasn't the most highly recruited,
coming out of high school, going to college,
but he always remembered during those enrichment periods,
he could go down that weight room, go down that hall,
he would hear somebody or weights clinking around
in the weight room, he knew exactly who it was,
and it was me.
That's awesome. So you, just so you know so you know even for me because I know a lot
about you, I did not know you didn't start in high school to a senior year. And so then
you didn't get recruited by the Alabama's, the Auburn's, the LSU, either.
Yep, I just got asked this question just a few days ago. Again, Auburn is 45 minutes
for me. Right. University of Alabama, their hour and something away for me.
But again, it wasn't, it's not their fault.
I was a late bloomer.
My body developed late.
My skill set wasn't where it needed to be
to even capture the attention of those schools of that caliber.
So again, when I look back on my whole professional career and even, you know,
scholastically, you know, high school, college, without my desire, coupled with my dedication
and my discipline, those are my 3D's, desired dedication and discipline.
Without those three, I wouldn't be where I am today.
All these people spinning on planet earth right now, you've had one of the most extraordinary
lives in sports of anybody the last 20 years, right?
All kinds of different things have happened.
And so before we get even to college but I want to go back back, I think behind, when I interview
people and my friends that are successful, I go back when they're a little boy, some talking
little to real, little tarot, right?
Make sure I pronounce it correctly, little tarot.
I go back to that little boy.
I wonder what was going on in that dude's life, to give him this edge, this drive, all these
different things that make you up.
Usually, there's like a great person behind him, an extraordinary person, usually a woman
when it's a man.
So for you, when you were this little boy, we go back to six-year-old, eight-year-old,
nine-year-old, what would your life like,
and who was instrumental in it?
Again, growing up in a low income,
type of environment.
Real low income?
Yeah, I mean, I lived in the projects.
So when you think about projects,
I mean, being on welfare, I know what that's like.
Having to stand in line to get blocks of cheese
and bread and stuff like that.
I know what that is. The WIC program, Women, Epping and Children.
I'm familiar with that. Food stamps. I'm familiar with that.
I went through that process. Again, living in the projects,
again, if you've lived in the projects, you know what it's like.
Not the best of situations you got. Roaches crawling around,
turn on the lights, they scurryried around. Dude, I I lived it
Yeah, so again my grandmother like I said my mom I live with my mom a little bit again
We stayed in the projects. She had me at a very young age. Yes, my grandmother helped my mom raise not only
But me with my other siblings. Yeah, so you think about the women or woman behind, you know, that little 6'8, 9'10 year old
tarot.
That's who it was.
It was my grandmother.
What did she do for you?
What was significant about her?
Just the way she raised me.
I mean, she was from the South.
Anybody that knows anything about the 50s, 60s, you know, it was rough, especially for
in African-American.
She picked cotton.
Wow.
Her mom and dad picked cotton.
So it was a generational thing.
So these are some of the things that I've learned.
And even when she was on the phone talking to her friends,
I was ear hustling at that age.
I heard some of the hardships that
not only that she had to go through,
but what she learned through her mom and her dad.
I mean, at one point through her life,
she lost track of her mom.
She had no idea where she was.
And again, when I got into college a few years
into the National Football League, my mom tried
to help find my grandmother's mom.
There was rumors that she was in prison
and all these things, and obviously to no success.
But again, these are some of the things again,
the way that I was raised
I'm a product of my environment and I feel like she raised me the right way. She taught us absolutely
You can add that to my list of these. Yeah, I mean it is in there
But discipline was a big big part of it. I'm growing up in a household like that
I
Was under her roof. I had to buy a bite by her roof. I can almost picture her
So you were when you made it. I'm just curious you made it you've signed you've probably had your rookie deal
But then you finally had a you know you get that good contract right you're the first contract
What was it like for her for you like?
Was she proud of you like was did her life changed is she?
What was it like for you to do something for her? What would that feel like just because you know
Everybody know like you have a breakthrough moment someday like what would that feel like? Just because I don't know. You have a breakthrough moment someday.
What's that feel like?
It changed and she had no idea it was changing
because she would diagnose with dementia.
That's right.
And 96 and that was my rookie year.
And anybody that knows anything about dementia
and the progression and obviously Alzheimer's
in which I'm an advocate for.
Yeah.
Again, I didn't realize until I really did a lot of research
and it became more knowledgeable about the disease,
but she had no idea what was going on with her.
Her health was eventually gonna deteriorate
to where she had no idea she wouldn't recognize her own son,
her own daughters.
So again, the bond and relationship that we had she wouldn't recognize her own sons, her own daughters.
So again, the bond and relationship that we had is so, I'm so thankful and blessed and fortunate
because even throughout my 15 year career,
I was able to, once she got to a point
where she couldn't walk around,
my grandmother was very active.
She didn't drive a car for a period of years,
but she would walk all through town. That's how small a town was. I mean she would walk through town.
She didn't want to ride with anybody. That was her way of just exercising. But
unbeknownst to her, her health was deteriorating. And she had no idea who I
became. I understand you talk about the contracts and I made in one year what she probably made her entire life. I end up paying off her house. She had no
idea. Yeah. But again, these are some of the things that I felt like I owed to
her because of some of the things that she did not only for me but my mom as
well. And so everything that I've done throughout my career she's definitely
been at the backbone. She's been the cornerstone, she's been my inspiration, she's been my motivation,
regardless of the perception that people have of me based on the media portrayal of some of the situations that have gone up through my career.
Speaking of that, one of the things a lot of people don't really even know about with T-O2 is he does a lot of work with Alzheimer's,
he does a lot of work with people that suffer from dementia and things of that sort.
So you're talking about a guy who's put his heart, his time, and his money, where his mouth
is on this stuff too.
So I knew she was a significant presence in your life and I didn't want to do an interview
with you without honoring her.
Oh, absolutely.
So that's why I bring that up.
So anyway, you go away, you play basketball and football in college, right?
I did.
My...
And your college football team wasn't a winning team either
No, it's funny
We played 11 games a year. Yeah, so I told a 44 games my my whole college career
Guess how many games that I won how many you win 13. Oh my gosh. Are you kidding me? 13. That's it
So that tells you where the program was at that point time time. Yeah, yeah. From 92 to 96.
Oh my gosh.
Now where they are.
Right.
Um, my, the athletic director, the chancellor
of the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, me leaving
there kind of putting them on the map, so to speak.
They basically, I, I've helped their program.
Oh my gosh, of course.
To get to where they are right now.
I was so touched and moved three years ago when I went back
for the first homecoming in 19 years.
I had no idea what kind of impact that me going to chat
knew to me, having the level of success that I've had
in the Western Football League, what it meant to my college.
I gotta imagine that every single recruiting conversation they've had
since the day you sign with the Niners and became something,
your name was said.
And again, remember, like I said, I was so oblivious.
From 96 being drafted with the Niners of what I was doing
and what I was going to, and what I became.
I had no idea.
Yeah, I think there's a lot of things,
I think there's things that guys like you do
that are just unconscious.
Like I just think there's a lot of things
that are great about you that you take for granted
because it's you and also some of the results
or impact you can have.
And so.
I'm conscious and unknown.
There are so many great things that I've done
throughout the course of my career
and the media kind of hand pick and nick pick,
you know, people that they want to put at the
forefront and glorify.
I never really was fortunate enough to be one of those guys because of my personality.
I think maybe it rubbed some people the wrong way because of my confidence.
And that often got misconstrued with being a cocky and arrogant.
My grandmother, we just mentioned, she would be appalled if I was arrogant or cocky.
That's not how I was raised.
And so for me to hear all these things
and for the media to portray me in this,
like yeah, I dealt with it internally.
Nobody wants to be frowned upon or looked down on
or be characterized as being arrogant
or just a bad person in general.
So I had to internalize these things again.
I was bullied, I was picked on as a little kid as well.
I had self-esteem issues.
I didn't like being dark skin.
I didn't like being skinny.
So a lot of these things that I experienced
as a young age, it motivated me as I grew up.
It's stacked and stacked.
I tell you what, man, I appreciate all honesty
or not only throughout your career,
but also even now, just saying those things.
Because there's a lot of guys out there
that are watching this, they're insecure,
they're getting bullied.
They're skins too dark, or they're skins too light,
or their eyes are a certain way.
They're getting bullied for, they're too heavy.
Before I knew the correct term
of what being picked on me, now it's bullying you.
It's bullying you.
You have, right?
Yeah, you have this campaign around bullying you.
Yeah.
Again, I have a guy in Montana, William Hinder,
who has a program now to really combat
and really build around guys like myself
to help promote and with bullying you.
I hope all you young guys out there
or parents who have young kids,
I hope you play this part of the segment for them
because he turned that into fuel for himself
eventually, right?
And in terms of you, when you played, listen,
I'm sure you'd acknowledge everyone
makes mistakes in their life.
They say something, they should say.
Yeah, no doubt.
But I gotta tell you, with the media loves you,
I work with a lot of athletes,
and with the media loves you,
they create characters.
People aren't one-dimensional.
You have many dimensions to you.
So once you're a character,
they love to portray you a certain way,
ask you questions that fit that narrative.
And then all of a sudden,
find me an athlete who's not,
find me a professional athlete
who's not incredibly confident.
And I will show you somebody
who is no longer a professional athlete, right?
Like you have to play with immense confidence.
It's not arrogance.
You just answer stuff honestly.
So let's talk about that for the career for a second.
I'm curious, this small town guy,
not a big time school,
now you're in camp with the Niners, you're rookie year.
Okay, Jerry Frickin' Rice is there.
Probably your hero growing up, right?
Gotta be.
I never, like I said, my grandmother's so strict,
I didn't get to do a whole lot.
Didn't watch a lot of TV.
That's crazy.
The only TV shows that I really got to watch
was Willa Fortune. I got to watch the channel 6, 10't watch a lot of TV. That's crazy. The only TV shows that I really got to watch was Willa Fortune.
I got to watch the Channel 6, Channel 12 news.
Really?
I got to watch the Cosby show.
Get out.
Really, for real.
But did you know who Rice was?
No, not until like my junior year in college.
Oh my gosh, that's bananas.
You didn't know who Jerry Rice was
till your junior year in college.
Junior year in college.
I had no idea because I never followed football like that.
I never really was a football fan.
So you go to camp though, I know a little bit
about the history, so Jerry Rice is there.
Then there's a number one pick in front of you,
Stokes at a UCLA, what do you think?
You got drafted the year before, not in 1995.
So they got a number one, they invest a third round
picking you, right?
What was that like?
Did you have to earn a roster spot?
Like were you the first thing,
like I gotta make the spot?
Oh yeah, well absolutely. I, again, not really knowing and being aware of what,
what the draft consists of, what it encompasses.
I mean, I thought, okay, you drafted, you're on the team.
I mean, I didn't know you had to,
I didn't know you had to go through the pros,
you got to make the team.
So, like I said, that was kind of how clueless I was.
That's awesome.
To really me playing beyond the collegial level,
because I never thought that I would play
beyond the collegial level.
Awesome.
We mentioned basketball.
I played three years of basketball.
I mean, the program wanted me not to play my senior year,
understanding that had an opportunity to play
professionally.
Football.
But my love was so great for basketball. I was like, no, I'm not going to forego my senior year, understanding that had an opportunity to play professionally. Okay. Football.
So my love was so great for basketball.
I was like, no, I'm not going to forego my senior year of playing basketball to concentrate
on football when that was never really on my radar.
It's crazy.
But yeah, I was drafted, Ward number 15 in camp.
My coaches, Larry Kertsy at the time, they drafted me on potential based on my physical
attributes and what I could probably add to the game
They thought that I could learn under
Jerry rice JJ Stokes and then I got to be there and saw guys like Nate Singleton on these are veteran receivers
Chris Thomas and a lot of other free agents that were on the team at the time. Yeah, so I'm looking around
I'm like I'm number 15, I don't
get an 80 number, you don't get an 80 number, a legit number until you make the team.
I didn't know that. So 15 was was was my number going all the way through preseason and asked
as, yeah, as this preseason unfolded, you started to see the cuts break down as we get closer
to the season. So I saw guys that I felt in my mind were better than I was.
Really, they were getting cut.
So I mean, it's natural, natural instinct.
OK, if you know that your skill set
is not where theirs are, you're like, OK, well, I'm next.
You're next, yeah.
That's the same.
I was a realist about my abilities
when I was in high school in college.
I knew that there were guys that were better than me.
That's crazy to hear.
I knew that there were guys that were bigger, faster and stronger than me, even in college.
But that's what prompted me to get the key.
Not only did I work out in my spare time when I was in high school those 30, 45 minutes,
I didn't go home during the summer after my first
minute saw more year of school.
So I got the key from the strength and conditioning coach.
I did the same thing.
Got the key to the weight.
There we go.
Did the same thing.
I would go into, that's how I got stronger
because I was in there by myself.
So I had to lift off by myself.
I had to be careful because I was in there by myself.
No spot here.
Nobody spotting me. So that's how I got stronger.
So these are some of the things that I did. Unbeknownst to the world out there in terms of how I
made it. This is so good because you outworked everybody. It's also the things you do when no one's watching.
Like when you play, the one of the things everyone would say, ah, it's physique, it's physique. Right. Now you know where this comes from.
It doesn't happen overnight. That's awesome to hear. I hope everyone's hearing these lessons, business sports, you name it.
And then again, this running theme of
you taking advantage of opportunity, right?
So during that season, rice gets hurt.
That's my second season.
Second season.
Is that when you had your breakthrough
was really the second season?
Yeah, it's kind of sort of, yeah.
I play sparingly.
Yeah.
My rookie year, I played a lot of special teams.
Yes.
But what you got your couple passes there, you know?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I mean, I think I had my, I don't know how many yards I had.
No, I think I had like four touchdowns in my rookie year.
But again, I started counting just familiarized myself
with the playbook, Steve Young, just a culture
of professional football in itself.
And so I go in my second year, again,
going into the off season, I'm preparing myself,
just to be a vital part of value to the team.
And so we go into my second season, first game, we go down to Tampa, Jerry Rice, I think
he runs a reverse or something and warrants that.
I think just beat our defensive end, gotten from behind, and he tears his ACL.
From that point on, I mean, I get thrown into the fire.
Here we go.
And so that's where that preparation, you know, that I,
and just me familiarizing everything that I had done my,
my rookie year leading up to my second year,
I was preparing myself for this moment.
I love it.
And if I wasn't prepared, then I wouldn't have been able to,
to add value to the scene, to the, to the team.
You see, I didn't say been able to add value to the team.
You see I didn't say success because I had no level of success at that point.
I was still trying to add value.
I was trying to add value to the Jerry Rises, to the Steve Young, to the JJ Stokes, to the
organization, to the team itself.
So I hadn't really experienced any success at this point.
I was still trying in that mode of proving myself that I could play at the team itself. Wow. So I had really experienced any success at this point. I was still trying in that in that mode of proving myself that I could play at the professional level. What a great
distinction. So when did the, by the way, I'll tell you one thing, just off the whole thing. I turn
on a football game. It's a playoff that's you guys against Green Bay. The best catch I've seen
in the clutch moment in my entire life is that catch you made in the end zone. That's a lot.
When here was that though. 99. Okay, we're going to feed this in right here. You're going to watch catch I've seen in the clutch moment in my entire life is that catch you made in the end zone.
Well here was that though.
99.
Okay we're going to feed this in right here.
You're going to watch this guy come across the middle and you get obliterated and hold
onto the football right?
Yeah.
That's the kind of stuff about like you added value, added value, out of value and then
it was like oh my god this guy is special.
It's literally like where I call the ball it's like it's equitably going in between two
cars or going to the eye of a hurricane or a tornado?
Because Steve Young, he put that pass
where nobody else could catch it, but me.
How much time was left in the game?
I think at that time when I called by eight seconds left.
It's like eight seconds left in the game, right?
So I think things like that start happening.
So you took advantage of your opportunity.
Then there's these special moments
and you start going, wait a minute,
maybe I got something here, right?
Maybe I'm special.
Why did you have this guy?
Just so you know, this man had 20 catches
in a single football game.
So I'm curious, did you know going into that game,
like whoever the corner was that,
we all might eat this dude up,
or was that just the game kind of fell in your direction?
Well for everybody that don't know about that,
this is Jerry Rice's last home game.
Okay, I didn't know that.
So yeah, this is Jerry Rice's last home game. Okay, I didn't know that. So yeah, this is Jerry Rice's last home game.
We playing the Chicago Bears.
We go into this game with the game plan
and the mindset of we trying to send this guy
off into the sunset, you know,
then we're trying to send him off
and into something like this, right?
So our first 15 plays, scripted or 20 plays,
there, I think it was 15 okay I
guarantee 13 98% of the past plays fit 13 to 14 of the past plays on the plays in
general okay we're for Jerry okay we're trying to send the greatest receiver of
all time out the best way possible got you but not only did we know that
but the world knew that the Chicago Chicago Baratini, that.
The deepest knew that.
So they tried to prevent, and they did a great job
of taking him out of the game.
Taking him away, which opened up space for you.
What did you just mention?
You segue into this by saying,
me taking advantage of opportunities.
So that's what I did.
So Jeff Garcia, the quarterback at the time,
he had to be smart, going through his progression, progressions,ions knowing that okay, I can't imagine what Jeff was like.
We trying to get the greatest receiver of all time, we trying to get him off.
So he has to be smart about the game plan, not to force anything.
So he goes through his progressions and Jerry been the number one receiver.
And you could have said that me and JJ, again, depending on the receiver sets,
on formations, we're two and three in a progression.
So I was just basically running my routes to win,
to be open, to be that secondary receiver.
If Jeff goes through one option,
and Jerry's not there, he goes to two,
and he goes to three.
I was on the receiving end of 20 of those past.
It's interesting. This is like the most telling part of the interview,
just so you know, because the perception of you,
I think sometimes is that,
and it's completely opposite,
I'm gonna bring another example up in a minute,
I think like the ultimate team player on the field.
I just asked you about a record you had for a long time
and you credited Jerry with it.
You literally just said that he created opportunities for me.
Like it really was. That's what a team person, actually most team guys would not even say that. and you credited Jerry with it. You literally just said that he created opportunities for me, right?
Like, that's what a team person,
actually most team guys would not even say that.
So that's incredible.
And I ask you about a record you hold,
you basically give credit to Rice for moving coverage
his way and opening things up for you
and your quarterback by the way too.
I'm curious because now you become the Jerry Rice
the rest of your career.
One of the things that's unique you guys,
when you're at a high level of sports, that you know you see the records he's got
and but you have to understand something every football game this man went into for about
a decade or more the defense on that Monday when they got together was how do we stop 81?
Right you understand the whole the whole structure of the defense is how do we take away their
best weapon. This was their best weapon. What's that like? I'm curious like all week. You
got to be so good. You're going to face their best corner, right? Or
or they're going to slant coverage your way. You're going to get double cover most
of the time, whatever it is. What's it like? No one a whole team is scheming
against you. And how did you end up prevailing week after week after week, beating
coverage like that? What was that? Was it your was it your ability to run the route?
Was it your film study? All of it? Like what was it? It's just my preparation. Understanding what they're going to give me.
Understanding my coaching. Them helping me, they were helping me perfect. The
craft will be coming to receiver. Coming out of Chattanooga I had no idea of
really I wasn't faced with the level of competition
that I was gonna be facing in the pro.
So I had to work on these things,
you know, day in and day out after practice.
I was working with my hands, working with my feet.
My physical part that was a given,
I mean, I could run through a guy all day, all day.
But I knew in order for me to progress
and get to the level of Jerry Rice,
then I had to add some tools to my toolbox.
I probably had a toolbox, but I probably had maybe two or three tools in there.
You know what I mean?
So I was lacking.
So I had to add some tools to my repertoire into my box in order to really perform at
the level that I knew that I could once I started to grasp what I could do on the football
field.
So the separator was that extra preparation,
those extra tools again.
You have average, you have good,
and you have great football players.
Yeah.
And you see that there's only the margin of,
with good and great is very, very slim.
Yeah.
And what separates those guys,
when you think about, in football,
you think about the Jerry,
you think about the Tom Brady's, your Steve Young,
obviously, you know, Hall of Fame caliber, talent guys, and basketball, you think
about the Colby, you think about the Michael George, you think about the
LeBron's, and what they're doing later on in their careers is because they
realize that there's something that separates them from good to good, to
great. Coming out of high school, I wasn't that great
coming out of high school, but these guys,
when you think about Kobe's, the Kevin Garnet,
the LeBronz, they're projected to be great.
But it'll be a big disappointment and failure
if they don't exceed a little bit
to those expectations.
But you think about what Kobe did.
He took the blueprint of what Michael Jordan did.
You think about what LeBron has done.
Not only you can't just pinpoint and characterize him
with one particular, right?
He possesses so many abilities from all these great players
that are paid away from him.
He realizes that and he took advantage of the opportunities.
So he takes the time to play 15 seasons.
And now you feel like you look at this guy play,
he can play 15 more because he's invested in himself
He believes in himself
Yeah, and that's what I had to do too. I knew that I wasn't
Good at that at one point. I was average. Mm-hmm. I started from average
Wow, and I worked my way to good and then once I saw him like okay, I'm a pretty decent athlete
Yeah, what can I do to take me to the next level? I utilize the resources around me
from my personal trainer to my coaches.
I listen, when I would be on the football field
and I would see Steve Young talking to Brent Jones
or he would be talking to the quarterback coach,
Matt Kavanaugh, or when Bill Washington may walk on the field
or he's talking to Jerry Rice,
these are conversations that they had.
I was in ear shot distance.
I would be paying attention.
So there was something that he and Steve, Steve and Jerry are trying to get on the same page with.
I knew that he's talking to him, but I'm being taught at the same time. So I'm taking all this into
into account and into consideration because I may be in that situation one day and ultimately I was
because I had some big shoes to feel.
Wow.
I was a, I honestly, I was afraid to be average.
I was afraid to be good.
I wanted to be great.
I wanted to be better than good.
And so that's what enabled me to do the things
that I did on the football field.
When I saw smaller guys, you know, squirt through defenses,
how quick they were, how agile they were,
I knew as a big body in order for me to get to that level,
I had to work on these things.
Wow.
This is awesome.
Like, maybe some of my favorite three or four minutes
in the history of doing this, because this is like inside
the inside of the inside of a hall of favor of anything.
Same is true for any of you guys in business.
You get to that level where you're good,
you want to get to that level where you're being great.
It's fighting for these little extra things,
those extra mentors, extra conversations, extra preparation,
extra tool in your toolbox to communicate or close or product or whatever the heck it
is, it's awesome.
Curious, this is a football question.
Toughest corner you had to go up against in your career.
A NIS Williams.
A NIS Williams from the Cardinals.
Was he the Cardinals?
Yeah.
First, he was with the St. Louis Rams.
Yeah, Rams and then cards, right?
Because we played I was in the NISC West, so we played them twice a year from my first three and four years.
And so he was a big corner.
Okay. I was a big receiver.
Um, so again, I'm sure he did film study.
Yeah. Just like I had to do film study.
And guys that did film study to try to minimize you.
Like you said, they gave me how do you stop this guy?
Yes.
You know, I was just a young book 81.
How do you stop?
How do you stop this young? Yeah. I was just a young book 81. How do you stop?
How do you stop this young kid?
They stop this young kid.
So him being a veteran, I'm sure he studied film on what I did good, what I did decent,
what I did poorly.
And he probably tried to minimize those things, eliminate those things.
What I did great, a good at that time.
And so it was tough getting a bump in run because it went to a small school.
I wasn't faced with a lot of that.
So everybody probably want to get physical
with you at the line of screens,
but very few guys had the capacity to do it
because you were so strong, right?
And Williams could.
Right, and the thing is, especially for him,
he was just my size,
so he could, there was some room for error for him
to make up, but if it's a smaller guy,
if they mess around and they slip,
I use my physicality or my quickness to get by,
they know it's a wrap.
They know it's a wrap.
So they didn't come up and press me as much.
But he was the guy that forced me, I'm like,
man, I gotta get better.
Cause I can't only just get by with getting,
having some success against these other corners.
Yeah. They're going to be other big corners in the lead. They're going to look at
him. It's like, okay, he stopped T.O. So let me see how he did it. Wow. So I had to
prepare myself for any in every situation. I love hearing this. The other thing
about you is a player then we'll move off this. But I want to say one thing is I
think people underestimate how tough you were. First off, the best of
ability is availability. You're available all the time.
You just, you were durable like LeBron.
It's one of the great things about LeBron, Jane.
Nutrition.
Nutrition.
And Brady had the one year with his knee, but this dude plays football, right?
Like he's available.
It's how you rack up these numbers, right?
And help your football team bring value.
You were tough though.
And so I'm a Patriot fan.
So I just want to talk about this one situation.
You know what I'm going to say, right?
Super Bowl 39. Super Bowl 39. So this man gets to the
Super Bowl and the truth is a few weeks prior to that he basically breaks his
leg and has a screw in your leg. Is that not your food? Yeah, two screws. In my
ankle I try a lot of the ligaments in my ankle. Okay. On the diagnosis once I
got my MRI the following day.
A lot of legum is torn.
I didn't know my leg was broken till I got an X-ray
because they MRIed my whole leg
because I went to sleep that night and my leg was really,
it was aching so bad, not my ankle, I got iceded.
But I was throbbing throughout the course of the night
up by my knee.
So I told the radiologist something like,
yeah, it's like my leg was aching throughout the course of the night. Alright cool. We'll just we'll just
extra the whole leg or whatever and see what's going on. This is one of the most
under reported stories seriously. I think in the history of the NFL, right? This
man played in the Super Bowl. No one thought he was going to play. They weren't
sure the game planned for it, but no one thought he was going to play. This man
played with a recently broken leg in the Super Bowl. This is something that no one
talks about. There's even a slight limp when you would watch him warm up,
and then he flat, early in the game.
I'm watching the game, I go, oh God,
Owens is gonna kill us.
The only reason, I'm not being negative about anybody.
I want you to talk about playing with that injury,
playing through some pain,
because you had to be in some pain or some discomfort,
or you weren't at your best.
But I'll be honest with you, I watched that Super Bowl.
If they'd have continued to get you that football
in that game, there'd have been a different result in that football game. I remember
that last couple of drives you had were taken forever. I'm like, thank God it's taken
further, not getting the ball to T.O. They literally, if they just kept feeding you the
football, they could not cover you. You were like a man on a mission in that football. I'm
not saying that because you're sitting here either. It's a standout moment for me in sports.
I coach a lot of athletes. I know that you weren't at your best and you you came in the again. The greatest opportunity of
your career was this super bowl to shine and you shine and if they
won the football game, it would have been a legendary story people would tell
forever because you played so hurt. So just talk about that game a little bit
and that injury and playing with it. Your thoughts about it. Number one, my
faith in God. I mentioned my grandmother. We didn't touch on her earlier but I
see the Christian lady.
Raised me in the church.
Again, she always told me about Philippians 413.
And that scripture is I can do all things
through Christ and strengthens me.
I'm a favorite scripture.
So number one, I wanted to exercise my faith in God.
It was bigger than the Super Bowl.
I wanted to show people that if you believe in yourself,
you believe in God.
If you believe in some higher being,
and in my case, I believe in God,
that all things are possible.
When doctors excluded me, they said that there was no way.
They said there was no way I would be playing in a Super Bowl
in six and a half, seven weeks.
At three weeks, they said, there's no way he'd be walking around.
But I wanted to find the
us so everything that that the Super Bowl encompasses when you think about
the magnitude you think about that the end result of trying to hold that
Lombardi Trophy up that never really dawned on me as I prepared I knew what I
was preparing for but I in order to achieve that, I had to get on the field to perform.
I had to be able to play in order for any of that to happen.
So I just wanted to, you know, my training staff, Rick Berkhoater, they were behind me 100%.
Those guys saw my preparation from the time that I got traded from San Francisco to Philly.
They understood how hard I worked.
They had already heard about it, but then they got to see it firsthand.
I prepared myself before every practice to try to eliminate injuries for the long haul.
It's like going on a vacation.
You've got a car, you've got to go across country.
You've got to make sure the nuts and bolts, the cars, the tires, the balance and rotating.
You got to make sure everything in a hood is ready for this road trip.
So that's how I prepared for the season.
So going into the Super Bowl, I prepared my rehab process from mid-December to February.
I prepared myself like it was the first time that I was preparing for anything.
Wow.
Wow. like it was the first time that I was preparing for anything. Wow, wow, wow.
And so with that help of the training staff,
I was able to do some remarkable things on that football.
Was it a game time thing, or did you know you were gonna play that day?
Leading up to game day.
Yeah.
My first time practicing was Wednesday.
One day's and two days are pretty light days.
So you were out seven weeks, first practice back
is the Wednesday before the Super Bowl.
Wednesday before the Super Bowl. Wednesday before the Super Bowl.
Going into it, Wednesday it was unseasonally cold and rainy during this time of the year in Jacksonville.
So that was my first practice.
So up until this point I'm running around, I'm rehabbing, going through ladders, I'm doing everything, no problem.
This particular day on Wednesday it's raining, it's drizzling rain, it's
cold, it's about 40 degrees. I started to run around and my leg started to ache.
Oh my gosh. So that good doubt in the head coach's mind that I would be ready by Friday.
And it was, it was scary for me and, and Rick, the trainer at the time because he hadn't
seen me limper, do anything up into this point. And I'm talking, I'm doing the time, because he hadn't seen me limp or do anything up into this point.
And I'm doing ladders, I'm doing drills to assimilate like game type atmosphere.
So now I'm practicing for the first time and I start limping.
And I'm like, oh my gosh, what's going on?
I told Rick after the practice, I said, Rick, don't worry about it.
I said, trust me, I know you believe in me.
I said, just tell Andy, I will be ready by Sunday.
And on Fridays, when they assess injured guys,
and they have to clear them for the games.
So they had this meeting on Friday after I practiced,
and Andy Reed still had doubt.
Thursday was obviously better than Wednesday,
but he still had doubt.
So I told him, I said, Rick, I will be ready.
I said, just believe me.
He believed me.
That's one thing I will say about Rick.
He's now with the Kansas City Chiefs
still right there with Andy Reed.
We talked today, like I never departed.
Well, but he knew I was gonna be ready.
So he had to convince Andy.
Andy, he's gonna be ready.
And I think if Andy could do it all over again,
he would give me more opportunities
on that Super Bowl 39 Sunday
because I think he took the reins off a little bit.
But the opportunities that were given to me,
that day I had nine passes to come my way.
I took advantage of the nine passes.
How much you catch?
Nine for 122.
You had nine targets, nine catches. Nine, yep. Now for 122 yards, and I'm gonna tell you, I watched the game, he won had 9 targets, 9 catches.
Now for 122 yards, and I'm going to tell you, I watched the game.
He won't say this, I will.
The dominant player on the field today, and Tommy's a friend of mine, right?
And he won that Super Bowl.
The dominant player on the field that day was T.O.
He was the dominant player, and it scared me as a page of him.
Like, if they keep getting this man in the football, because it was one of those days
you're like, you've seen games like that, you've had games like that, you're like,
this athlete is dominating these guys in this coverage. No matter what they moved your way, I like you could, you've seen games like that, you've had games like that, you're like, this athlete is dominating these guys
in this coverage, no matter what they moved your way.
I think you could have had 25 catches
that day if they'd have targeted you 25 times.
I'm not saying that because you're sitting here,
I'm glad they didn't know offense
because it helped them win another Super Bowl.
Yeah, I honestly believe like if I had one or two more catches,
that increases our chances of winning that game
and we end up losing by three points,
but there's no consolation prize for second place.
It's one of the all-time gutty performances.
People talk about way back in the day, Jack Youngbud played with a broken leg.
Everybody knows that story.
It's one of the all-time gutty performance, the history of professional sports and a
Super Bowl was T.O. on that.
Just unreal career.
We'll talk about the Hall of Famine, man.
I got a question for you.
Obviously, throughout your career, not everything was rosy, right?
So on the field, real rosy.
Not always off-field.
By the way, off the field, I don't want to point one of the thing about T.O.2.
Barely drinks, does no drugs, never a distraction off the football field.
But there was some media stuff, how they painted you, how you reacted, etc.
What do you regret?
You went back, you said, hey, I'd change this
if I could.
If I'm being honest, if I look back on my career
on the field, I can't believe you change anything,
but off the field, media related, all that kind of stuff,
what would you say?
I wouldn't, I regret is a strong word.
I don't, I don't regret anything.
I mean, could I have gone and could I,
I wish I could go back and change some things.
If I had to change anything, it would be my communication with management.
It would be my communication with coaches.
It would be my communication with players.
But again, I attribute the lack of communication with my upbringing.
Yes.
Because I said, I wasn't, it was socially awkward for me to be involved outside of functions where I had to
be included because again, I wasn't allowed to do any of that with my grandmother. So I was a
product of my environment, my upbringing. As I grew up and now looking back on it, again,
I understand that my poor communication on every scale,
it hindered me not only in my professional life,
but my personal life as well.
When you think about dating, you know,
being in a relationship,
what is one of the key things to solving a lot of things
is communication.
So again, I see where the lack of a father
being in the household, how that hindered me a lot.
When you have parents,
or you have kids with both parents in the household,
you tend to see that those are kids that are more successful.
When you have kids that are in single,
especially in urban homes,
they seem to face a lot more adversity.
They're more challenged in a number of ways.
And so I'm no different and so as you said I
don't stand here and I've never said that I was perfect by any means it was a
growth and maturation process that I've had to go through that a lot of people
have to go had to go through and it's unfortunate that people see me in a
different light based on what they've heard through media what they've read
obviously is a part of the media.
But at the end of the day, I always refer,
and I just hold on those words of my grandmother,
always be true to who you are.
No matter what the situation, people
are going to talk good and bad about you.
Because if you allow that to manifest and get
under your skin, you're not going to progress as a human being.
So I've always felt that way, always
played with a chip
on my shoulders, even in every situation,
when it was something, again, with management or coaches
or a player, I didn't allow that to deter what I had to do
in the football field.
That's for sure.
Because I knew that if I did that, I wasn't playing
for the right reason.
And we weren't gonna benefit,
understanding my level of playing
what I brought to the table.
My goal was obviously to win a championship.
And in order to do that,
I had to be efficient on the football field.
And if I let outside things and outside noise
affect me to where it affected my play,
then where's my value?
Yeah, I appreciate that.
That's the honest answer. and I do see that too.
The other thing too is that I watched,
all I know is I watch the guy contribute on the field
and I watch and everyone that I know that knows you.
So that actually knows you or is interacted with you.
Every single person tells me the same thing.
He's such a good guy, so warm, even your spirit.
He has no, you're good, warm dude.
Even I watch how you treat my guys with the cameras. Every little thing like
that because some guys don't do that. The camera comes on as you know, oh, hi, you know,
and they're like a whole different character. Who you see sitting here is who he is right
when this camera clicks off. And I love that about you, brother. Like I admire you. I admire
what you've become and where you come from. And it's all culminated. It's kind of the
final couple pieces here. It's culminated now you're on the ultimate team.
Yeah, right?
You're on the, you're in Hall of Fame.
So if you go back, I'm just curious.
I wanna know how you feel about that.
You go back to this little boy, T.O.
no father in the house, small town, food stamps,
projects, mom's 17 when she has you.
This is amazing, man.
Grandma kind of raises you with mom,
but grandma's the main influence.
Not a great high school player until you advance.
Got your opportunities.
Go to a relatively unknown college.
Third round draft pick.
When you get to the team,
Jerry Rice is on the flipping team,
and there's a guy they draft the year before
who's a first rounder,
so that's not ideal either.
And then, and I'm just curious,
this journey's taken you from Dallas to Philly to you were
in Cincinnati, Buffalo.
Did I miss anywhere?
Is that it?
Yeah.
San Francisco Philly, Dallas, Buffalo, Cincinnati.
See, I kind of know my stuff.
So you have this journey from this little boy TO to this man now, and now you're about
to get inducted into the, I mean, your great, great grandchildren
are gonna come visit this bus of you in the Hall of Fame.
I mean, you go down in history now, right?
Like, that's amazing.
Very few people have ever walked the earth
end up in this group.
What's that feel like for you?
I'm curious.
Are you proud of you?
Do you see it as a big deal?
Like, I'm curious.
I can't just have the sun again,
because again, like I said,
I felt like my career was incomplete. You see it as a big deal, like I'm cute. I, again, it just hasn't sunk in because again, like I said,
I, I felt like my career was incomplete.
This, me getting to the Hall of Fame,
that doesn't really, it doesn't complete my career for me.
It doesn't validate it because I know I could have done more.
Yes.
Understanding the politics of the game,
being that I was so outspoken.
What you think, and you see now what we are as a country, as a society,
and you think about the millennials.
Everything that I did back then,
it was frowned upon.
You think about the platform,
the social media platforms,
where these kids, and everybody has a voice,
to be heard.
I was doing those same things.
It was frowned upon, but now it's being embraced.
I feel like I was ahead of my time in terms of how people viewed me, in terms of the platform
and the voice that I had.
I know that I'm not a bad person.
We just talked about it.
Could I have done some things differently, of course?
But when you talk about character, I'm always going to defend my character.
We're talking about the Hall of Fame and what that means.
The reason I've been so vocal about that is because I'm going to defend my character. We're talking about the Hall of Fame and what that means. The reason I've been so vocal about that is because I'm
going to defend my character.
My reputation is what it is.
You can ask anybody about that.
It's going to be good.
It's going to be bad.
But in terms of my character, that's
what I'm going to defend, because my grandmother,
she instilled in me, who I am, and who people get a chance
to see on an everyday, not on an everyday basis.
But when you fin 15, 20 minutes to an hour, you get to see the essence of who Terriol is.
On that football field, it's like I'm a marble character, I'm a superhero.
I put on that uniform and I turn into somebody else.
You think about Peter Parker, goes to Spider-Man.
David Van Er, an incredible Clark Kent, and the Superman, Diana to Wonder Woman.
That's how I separate the two.
So being in the Hall of Fame, I understand it's an honor.
It's great.
It's a great accomplishment.
I'm hoping my kids can one day sit and watch
and really just hear the words that are coming
on my mouth
and understand who their father is. What I've had to go through, what I've had to
overcome. It wasn't the worst of things, but everybody always has their path to
success, their journey. That's why I wanted you on the show because I think it's
one of the most extraordinary stories. I think it's a story of like
achievement, of overcome adversity, of hope, of honesty, of hard work, of toughness, of resiliency,
of performance, of taking advantage of opportunities,
when they put up multiple ones, like,
done start as junior dude gets sick,
ends up becoming the NFL Hall of Fame.
I mean, like, I think this journey, this story's like,
I think it's as magnificent, like,
I want people to see it.
And action speak louder than words,
your actions are scream. Look at the actions, there's a sheet here of your records. I started to think I was to see it. And action speak louder than words. Your actions are scream.
Look at the actions.
There's a sheet here of your records.
I started to think I was gonna do it.
This is this, we'd be have a whole day,
I'm interviewing you on just this stuff right here,
right, it's bananas.
So I'm real, I wanna say congratulations to you.
For that.
And also, how you treat people,
precedes you.
And I wanna thank you for being a humble guy,
a giving guy, a generous guy.
You could be humble, giving generous,
and still be strong and confident.
And I think people misunderstand that,
and you embody it.
Before we go though,
couple of things I want to make sure they can do.
First off, how do they find you on social media?
Number one, because I want them to interact with you,
because this man's going in the hall of fame.
You're about to watch him go on the next journey
of his life, which is going to be extraordinary.
All the philanthropic stuff you do,
so how do they find you on social first of all?
At Teralon's and obviously Facebook you find me Facebook at Teralon's.com.
I have two Facebook pages, I have a fan page, my personal page, my personal page has a photo of me with some shades on it.
My fan page has my logo, my T.O logo. Okay.
And so just to know that you're on the right page,
those are mine.
And yeah, like I said, I'm very social media.
You are.
Active, Twitter, Instagram, Snapchat, all of that.
And the reason I want you to have that tolerance.
Yeah, at Terrell, I want you guys to interact with them
on there too, is I've told T.O.
Listen, he's starting to do a whole lot more of it too.
T.O. would be an incredible speaker.
Those of you that run companies to bring into your company and have them interview to
have them speak because the story itself is just extraordinary, right?
And like, we're talking beforehand, just so you know, people that walk the walk are unique.
He could go play right now, right?
Oh, yeah.
And he may still, he may be the first person we talked about.
He never know.
He's in the Hall of Fame, who's still playing football, if someone needs receiver.
Tell him right now, yet three days ago,
you ran the 40, what year are you in?
I ran a four five.
I ran a four five, four five now.
And Larry, I came off of playing that day,
had a couple of meetings.
And then my buddy challenged me, Matthew Hatchet,
he played with the Vikings,
played with the Jets back in the day,
we're good friends, he coaches at
Polly High School. And he's about, we're about the same age, I think he's a year younger than me.
And we're always talking about who's in better shape and we got to talk.
And he goes, what can you run to 40?
I said, dude, I can at least run to 4.4.4.5.
Yeah.
He goes, there's no way.
Right.
He goes, see, there's no way.
I said, dude, just, and I haven't done anything.
I haven't run to the 40 in like four years. I said, dude, just, and I haven't done anything. I haven't run in the 40 in like four years.
I said, dude, I can at least run a 45.
I said, I'm gonna challenge myself to run under a 45.
I said, 45 is easy.
That's a given.
So he coaches, he trains up some kids.
He was at Culver City High School.
I happened to be in the area.
Again, like I said, I had just got off the plane,
did a couple of things.
Crazy.
And he's like, oh, I'm over to high school, come over and run this 40.
So I always prepared myself.
So I had some shoes in the trunk.
Always prepared.
Always prepared.
And yeah, I ran it a few times in my best time.
Both guys clapped at that time.
Two guys clapped it.
Four or five.
Four or five.
That's awesome.
By the way, UGMs that are out there watching this,
just so you know, ran a four or five right off the damn plane. So just imagine that somebody's chasing me.
And that's why I had 153 tests. I was out there running scared.
I literally, it's so funny. We talk about the 222 pound football guy.
That's running around with a lot of confidence, a lot of physical ability.
But in my mind, dude, I always still envision envision I felt like I was that little kid in junior high high school
That's a hundred and hundred and seventy eighty pounds. Wow getting picked on
Running around that field will grow me you think I'm about to let Ray Lewis hit me
You think about the last Steve at water hit me. I'm out there running scared. That's how I had a hundred fifty-three test.
That's so awesome.
Four five with nobody chasing you.
And then the last thing, I just,
because he's also in the business world too.
The guys who were filming this, they're like,
I've seen this super cool backpack
that I wanted to get, right?
This whole new innovative thing.
And he happens to be involved in the company
they were talking about.
So just tell them real quick,
how do you pronounce it and how do they find it?
First of all, I'm in a lot of things.
In technology, I'm in the home decor, I'm in the fashion.
You know, try to look good.
You know, that's part of looking, you know, staying lean.
But again, when you think about fashion,
there are so many elements to fashion,
but you think about backpacks.
It's not backpacks, I'm not just for school now.
You know what I mean?
You can look cool, you can look stylish.
Again, this is a high end type of backpack.
It's a Zooks bag, go to Zooks bag.com.
That's X, double o X bag, B-A-G dot com.
And you will see the style of bag that we're talking about.
And it's just not just a backpacks.
Just to put stuff in, you can put your laptop in, other items,
but the cool thing about this bag,
it has two detachable speakers.
That's the technology aspect of the bag as well,
that you can play music, Bluetooth, very stylish.
I mean, like it's like a lifestyle bag,
as much as it is, right?
It looks good, but also it's a lifestyle bag.
And I just tell you, my camera guys,
we're talking about that, you end up here, and they're like, hey, he's like, that's my company. So it's awesome. So I'm, right? It looks good, but also it's a lifestyle bag. And I just tell you, my camera guys, we're talking about that. You end up here and they're like,
hey, he's like, that's my company. So it's awesome. So I'm, I got this a great
season of your life and I'm proud of you and I'm excited for you and I'm
grateful for today very much. Thank you so much to you. I enjoyed it so much.
And so as I always tell all of you, first off, make sure you run on my two-minute
drill. It's not the two-minute drill he ran. Two-minute drill is that when I make a
post on Instagram in the first two minutes,
anybody makes a comment with a hashtag maxout to it. You get into drawing that data when my gear,
my books, all kinds of stuff from me. So make sure you're making comments. And when you see this
interview here today, you're watching an iTunes, giving a review, if you're on YouTube,
some report, platform like that. Make sure that you make a comment, give it a like or something like that. Hope you and Jay enjoy today's program everybody and max out. God bless you.
you