The Zach Lowe Show - Clippers Controversy Continues With Legal Expert Michael McCann, Hall of Fame Thoughts With Howard Beck, and 'Simpsons' Appreciation With Alan Siegel
Episode Date: September 8, 2025An eclectic Zach Lowe Show begins with law expert Michael McCann, who comes on to discuss all things Clippers (1:42): Steve Ballmer’s defense, Mark Cuban’s opinion, and what might come next. Then,... what up, Beck?! Howard joins the show to talk about two of the newest members of the Hall of Fame, Dwight Howard (35:51) and Carmelo Anthony (52:18). Finally, Zach welcomes in Alan Siegel (1:09:21) to talk about their favorite 'Simpsons' moments and episodes to celebrate Alan’s book, 'Stupid TV, Be More Funny.' Host: Zach Lowe Guests: Michael McCann, Howard Beck, and Alan Siegel Producers: Jesse Aron, Victoria Valencia, and Steve Ceruti Get started today at HubSpot.com/AI Unfold more with the new Galaxy Z Fold7. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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I mentioned last week regarding the Kauai Leonard situation that I am not a lawyer, so I went out
and I found a lawyer and I found the sports lawyer Michael McCann.
He's a legal analyst for Sportico.
He's a professor at University of New Hampshire Law School and a visiting professor at Harvard.
Heard of it.
Michael McCann.
How are you?
I was doing great, Zach.
It's great to see you.
It's been a long time.
We go back a long way to like the original days of the Sloan Nerd Conference,
which is turning 20th this year.
Did you realize this is the 20th Sloan?
No.
I mean, we were there at the beginning, right?
with Daryl Moore. This is when it was small and I can't believe me. The impact that it's had on
the industry is pretty incredible. And to have seen it over that time, 20 years, man, that's a long time.
All right. So, Kauai, we're all familiar with the beats of the story by this point,
starting with Pablo Tori finds out and this no-show endorsement deal that Kauai had with a
scam company called Aspiration that Steve Balmer was an investor in $50 million, which to Steve Balmer is,
you know like a dime to the two of us sadly enough for us um and of course aspiration also was like
a founding three hundred million dollar plus sponsor of the clippers um i i talked about it with kirk
goldsbury on thursday it was kind of my first run at it and uh here's what we knew then and i think
what we know now after being on the phone about this over the weekend and you wrote about it on
over the weekend i think for sportico if anyone wants to see the legal analysis there thing number one
that I feel like I know.
The concern dovetailing into anger from other teams and other corners of the league is not
going to go away.
And I just continue to hear from people who are.
Now, you know, this is a competitive league, right?
So anytime one of the other 29 teams smells blood, they're going to pounce and say,
yeah, got to hammer that team, hammer that team.
But my phone just, it's the text, the calls just keep coming in from people saying, well, this
can't be a coincidence.
They've got to punish them for this and this and that.
people who may not have actually listened to the podcast who certainly haven't gone back and read the CBA in a lot of cases.
But the anger is there.
And I don't know.
Like, I didn't think Steve Ballmer's interview with Ramona Shelburne was like particularly persuasive in any way.
I shouldn't say persuasive.
I don't think it was helpful.
Like I don't quite understand why he did it other than the general idea, which I've heard in some corners of, well, if he's going to be this bold to get out in front of this before the board of governors meets this week in New York and everybody yells at him.
him about this. Well, he wouldn't do that if he thought there was any chance in hell that he or the
team would be found guilty of doing any of this illegal cap circumvention stuff. I guess I thought,
like, it was always going to be perceived as like a home court interview with Ramona because Ramona
is so tied to L.A. And I just didn't think it like moved the needle at all. It was the exact
defense that you expected that I expected, which was just plausible deniability. If there was
something that went on, I didn't know about it. The Clippers didn't know about it. We're good.
will let the league investigate. Did anything in that interview surprise you? No. I mean,
and I think like you said, his tactic was to get ahead of it because if he pauses and doesn't do an
interview, it looks like he's strategizing with his lawyers. And that I think in the public specter
would lead people to infer guilt, right? If it looks like he's being deliberative and cautious
with his wording, that probably undermines the public relations component of it. But as you said,
there was nothing in there that's going to really change the fact pattern. The fact pattern is
there's this suspicious contract and the onus is on the clippers. And I, you know, I think this is
a situation where maybe he had nothing to do with any of this. But that doesn't mean no one at
the clippers did. And I think that's going to be a sort of an interesting feature is that
Balmer is the face of the clippers. But there's all sorts of people that work there as we know.
and to the extent there's any improper actions by people below him,
and maybe he didn't know about it, who knows, that's not going to matter to the NBA.
If there, in fact, was salary cap circumvention,
even if Balmer himself can credibly say he had nothing to do with it,
that doesn't clear the team,
and that doesn't prevent the team from being punished in a way
that involves forfeiture of draft picks and other sanctions.
So, I mean, he certainly is going to make the case that he had nothing to do with it.
He may be right.
and it may not make sense to him that he would be sort of scheming in the manner in which
we've been led to believe, but that doesn't necessarily clear the team.
And I think that's going to be an interesting feature.
We'll get there.
The other thing I said on Friday that I was sure of at that moment, and we'll see over the
weekend the athletic first reported that the league has retained a massive law firm,
Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen, and Katz, which is one of the, the white shoe law firms.
Does anyone wear white shoes anymore?
Is that even a thing?
I've never owned a pair of white shoes that are not sneakers to investigate this.
And people around the league owners, other people I've thought toward the weekend.
This is now going to be a month's long process.
This is not going to be something that's going to be resolved in a week or two.
I assume that's the case they're going to pour over everything.
Because the one thing I said at the end of yesterday's podcast, I said, I find all scenarios at this moment,
I find all scenarios plausible to some degree.
I find the most nefarious scenario potentially plausible.
I find the least nefarious scenario where this is literally Uncle Dennis and a bunch of con artists at a phony company all getting together for a phony deal.
Clippers had nothing to do with it.
I find that plausible.
And I said there's a chance we're going to get to the end of this investigation.
And we're going to end up in this very gray area where there's this trail of just strange.
You could call it circumstantial evidence.
I don't actually know the technical definition of circumstantial evidence, but a strange
series of deals, non-deals, whatever, that ends in this strange contract.
And the only thing strange about it, I think, is the amount of money and the lack of work.
The fact that it's with a Clipper's sponsor is not unusual.
The fact that it has an out clause, if Kauai is not on the Clippers is not super unusual either.
But the amount and the lack of work is unusual.
So we could end up in a gray area where all of that remains.
as shady looking in six months as it is today.
And yet, part two of the gray area is there is nothing uncovered that directly links that
contract to anybody with the clippers.
And that's the scenario I'm most interested in because that is a gray area that's
very tough for the league.
This strange thing happened.
It clearly like has tentacles that reach in different places, but we can't directly link it to
not only Steve Ballmer, but anyone with the clippers.
but it's still something that the rest of the teams are angry about.
It's still an appearance that we don't like and is just not good for us.
What do we do there?
And I said on Friday, you know, there's this one extreme cut type of punishment,
Joe Smith being the classic example,
where you rip away first round picks and you find people and you suspend people.
And then there's nothing on the other end where it's or just like a little slap on the wrist fine
or a second round pick and a slap on the wrist fine.
And there's a big area between those things.
If that's where we end up, I don't know what the answer is for the league.
And if you ask me today, what's the most likely concluding point?
I think it would be that.
But we're going to, we're going to have to wait and see now.
The tricky thing for other teams is that while their instinct may be, this is bad,
the clippers have sort of turn the rules on their head to get and keep Leonard.
The reality is the other teams have to be careful.
because to the extent teams have a duty to police endorsement deals of players,
it presents all sorts of conflicts of interest,
including whether or not teams should even be in that space.
If there's a duty on the part of the Clippers to screen endorsement deals between players
and sponsors, that's not contemplated by the CBA.
There's no NBA rule on that.
It's sort of making up a new policy, which actually could be bad for teams.
And not only that, I could see the players union saying, wait a second, you don't have a right to be policing endorsement deals.
This is a deal between the sponsor and an athlete.
The fact that the sponsor has some sort of business relationship with the owner of the team, that doesn't allow the team oversight or veto power on endorsement deals.
So this gets into a tricky space that I actually, I think the league will be cautious with this.
And honestly, other teams, they may be rooting for punishment.
They better be careful what they root for because they may suddenly get a new policy
that changes how they interact with sponsors.
Let's step back for a second.
You mentioned the degrees of like knowledge that could have been or in theory.
We don't know anything.
We're going to find out everything through the investigation.
Let's just, you cannot posit that enough.
All we know right now is what we know in the investigation.
They're going to get documents.
They're going to get.
Who knows what they're going to get.
But there's like, there's.
like 3.5 different scenarios here, right?
Scenario number one, worst-to-case scenario for the Clippers,
Balmer knew about this, either at its inception or at some point,
either directed it, knew about it, or learned about it,
and didn't do anything about it until he got caught.
That's like worst-case scenario, worst possible punishment.
Scenario number two is there's like a rogue Clippers employee somewhere
who did this without Balmer's knowledge,
without Lawrence Frank's knowledge,
without the basketball operations department knowledge.
You said that's also bad for the team.
They could be punished for that.
I agree, but I do think that's a secondary level of punishment.
That's not nearly as bad as like the top guys knew about it.
And scenario number three, Uncle Dennis and some scammers just did a deal on their own.
Nobody at the Clippers knew anything about it.
And that's the scenario that Mark Cuban drilled down on in his appearance with Pablo Tori
Tore on a follow-up of Pablo Tari finds out because Cuban has been defending Balmer from the beginning.
And I thought if people want to watch that, they should watch that.
I thought that was a really interesting conversation slash argument.
And I thought Mark Cuban asked exactly the right questions in that.
Pablo got a little, it got a little testy because I think Mark was asking the right questions.
Because Mark's drilling down in, do we really think the Clippers knew about this?
Do we really think Balmer knew about this?
And Pablo keeps bringing up while I have seven sources,
within the organization, one of whom agreed to come on the podcast, the original one,
with voice modulation and facial disguise and all of that.
But backed up, according to Pablo, by six other people, anonymous people within aspiration,
that say they were told that this was for cap circumvention purposes, this endorsement
deal with Kauai Leonard.
And when I listened to the first podcast, I had the same questions that Mark Cuban had in the follow-up.
And I think it's very important for people to go watch it and listen to it.
Because his question was simple.
Who are those seven people?
Right.
Who are they?
We don't know who they are.
Number two, how did they know it was cap circumvention?
Well, somebody told them.
Who told them?
Did that person know it was cap circumvention?
Was that person just repeating a bad rumor?
Was that person guessing?
Was that person Uncle Dennis?
I think those are the exact right questions because it sounds powerful and maybe it is
that seven people say the words cap circumvention.
But Mark is drilling down on the exact right questions,
the exact questions the league is going to try to answer.
And I know you watched that.
What did you think of that sort of back and forth?
Because that's, that's, it doesn't really, it matters that these people say the words cap
circumvention, but without knowing how they learned that term, who told them that term,
who told them this was this, what this contract was for?
Like, I don't know quite what to make of that.
And Mark is right to drill down on that.
Yeah.
The NBA is not going to rely on that.
Let's be honest.
I mean, the idea that there are seven anonymous people, as you said, and as Mark said,
the source of that could be the same person who himself or herself is not authoritative,
is not credible. We don't know. Maybe this person has been fired and they're spreading a
rumor to do damage and they spread it around and it's like wildfire. We don't know. And the reality
is, is there any corroborating evidence? Is there a text message? Is there an email? Is there a
social media message? Is there anything? If it's only seven anonymous people, you could find
seven and honest people to say anything. So I don't, that's not, I mean, it's certainly interesting.
And if there's something there, there's something there. But we don't know. I totally agree
with Mark Cuban. And if I'm the MBA, I need more than that. I need, will any of these people
cooperate? Here's the other thing. They're not under any obligation. First of all, if we can identify
who these people are, they're not under any obligation to cooperate with the NBA or the MBA's legal
counsel. And to the extent they want something in return, that creates the problem of they're doing
this on a transactional basis and they're not reliable sources. I just thought to boil it down,
the most interesting debate within a debate that they had was, I'm paraphrased good, but Mark Cuban
asked Pablo Torre a question, but who do you think is the fulcrum of all of this? And Pablo responded,
well, Steve Bomer is the fulcrum. And Mark said, no, no, no, no, you're wrong. Uncle Dennis is
the full room. And I think if it boils down to anything, that's kind of what it boils down to. And
the Uncle Dennis stories are like a legion. You know, he's asking for equity stakes in hockey teams and
planes and mansions and all this. And I'll say this again, like the use of a plane, the occasional
use of a vacation house, a team paying for hotel rooms for agents of people representing their
players during a playoff series. Like all of that is kind of like, okay, like we're going to let
that go. This is something different. But Uncle Dennis has asked for something different many times.
before. Can I read you a clause in the CBA that I found very interesting as a layperson?
You got it. Article 13 of the CBA is the one that talks about circumvention. Section 2 is the one
that talks about what cap circumvention is. And it's basically like you find ways to pay players
more than you're allowed to pay them. This is the clause that I zeroed in on when I looked at this
and others who want the league to really dig in on this
and make sure that there's no grounds for punishing the clippers here
will also dig it on.
And we're going to put it up on YouTube,
I think it's like Section 2, Clause D, blah, blah, blah.
And it reads,
a violation of Section 2A or 2B, the circumvention clauses.
A violation of Section 2A or 2B above
may be proven by direct or circumstantial evidence,
including but not limited to evidence that a player contract or any term or provision thereof
cannot rationally explained in the absence of illegal contact.
Now, Kauai's contracts, I said this on Friday, none of Kauai's contracts with the clippers
were ever suspicious to me.
I didn't care about the four-year thing.
I don't care that he didn't sign for the full max the last time.
He's been injured.
He's been unavailable.
He wanted to be in L.A.
The whole league knew he wanted to be in L.A.
when he left for L.A.
None of his contracts
have ever been suspicious to me.
So scratch that.
Scratch anything related
to the contract being suspicious.
A player,
a violation may be proven
by direct or circumstantial evidence
including but not limited to.
That not limited to to me suggests
it's not limited to,
but I'm a lay person,
that I can look at things
other than the player contract.
Now, I don't know
what the combination of not limited,
to and circumstantial evidence actually means, could you help me understand that? What is that saying
that investigators can look at? Yeah, I think there are a couple things there. One is the role of
circumstantial evidence is evidence that doesn't directly prove an assertion, but one can use it
to reach a conclusion that's consistent with the assertion itself. So the idea is that we think he did
it, this evidence, maybe the endorsement deal, if he didn't perform any services and wasn't
required to, we can rely on that as circumstantial evidence of salary cap circumvention.
But what this does is it really is like a burden shifting mechanism.
It puts the burden on the clippers to say, okay, we have this suspicious thing.
Explain it.
Tell us, make sense of this in a way that doesn't lead us to believe that you circumvented
the salary cap.
So this is kind of like a guilt, you're guilty until you prove your innocent type of mechanism.
That doesn't mean that the Clippers will be found guilty,
but it gives the NBA a lot of latitude,
a lot of discretion in assessing all sorts of things,
including, you know, Pablo's podcast.
I mean, there's all sorts of sources of evidence that could be used
to draw inferences.
But at the same time, it tells the Clippers,
look, there's this suspicious thing.
We don't think Leonard did anything.
You got all this money.
Explain it to us.
Doesn't mean you did anything wrong.
maybe it's Uncle Dennis, but explain it to us.
So it puts the onus on the clippers to provide, for instance, evidence to provide a timeline,
to provide text messages, to provide any sort of written narratives that the team has.
It puts the onus on the clippers to provide maybe testimony, maybe from officials at the team.
It basically creates a workload issue for the clippers that they're going to have to prove themselves,
innocent.
Yeah, that's one of the interesting things about, you know, I read a text message on Friday from a GM
telling me like, you know, what I'm hearing from my peers on the league is, this is enough
that the clippers kind of have to prove to us that nothing nefarious happened here, which is
not how the legal system is really supposed to work.
It's supposed to be the other way around.
So this is like a gray area.
The other clause that I told you I wanted to dig it on is just above that in the circumvention
thing.
And it's a little longer.
We're going to put it on YouTube if you want to read it.
But I'll read it to you and you can tell me what you think of it.
Yeah, get that coffee going.
It shall constitute a violation of circumvention.
for a team or a team affiliate to enter into an agreement or understanding with any sponsor
or business partner or third party under which such sponsor pays or agrees to pay compensation
for basketball services, even if such compensation is ostensibly designated as being
non-basketball services to a player under contract for a team. That, I think, doesn't come
into play yet because that seems to me to be saying a team or a team affiliate has to come has to
sort of direct disagreement with a sponsor to pay money to kawai leon. There's no evidence that that has
happened. Obviously, that's what the league is looking for. Let's go next part of the clause. Such an agreement
with a sponsor may be inferred. That's a legal, that has a legal definition, I assume inferred. I know what
it means in English, but you're going to tell me what it means in legalese. Such an agreement with a
sponsor may be inferred where such compensation from the sponsor is substantially in excess of the
fair market value of any services to be rendered by the player for such sponsor. So in English to me,
that means such an agreement, i.e. an agreement that could run a foul of circumvention rules may be
inferred, implied, assumed is what that means to be in English. If the dude is getting
more money than you should get by any reasonable measure,
that appears to,
that little clause there appears to hang out
and suggest to me like,
it doesn't matter if we can prove that the team
directed it or orchestrated it or even knew about it.
We can still infer something
from just that little piece of evidence.
Am I reading that right or wrong?
Because you could stretch that far if you want,
but maybe inappropriately far, I don't know.
No, I think your read is.
I think a couple things.
What is that the Clippers will say,
we're not the sponsor, right?
The sponsor reaches a deal.
To be clear, no one thinks they are.
And they're not, aspiration is aspiration.
The Clippers are the Clippers.
Kauai's contract is over here.
And that is separate from Kauai's deal with aspiration.
These are separate things.
I still think there has to be some linkage
between the Clippers and aspiration for it to be salary cap circuit.
But it's just a sponsor that decides it wants to pay a player X amount of money to do
nothing,
is what maybe this was. I don't know, but maybe it wasn't. Do we know if Kui Leonard requested
to do any services? Do we know if the company's financial woes made it so that they weren't
interested in having sponsors to work? I mean, there are all sorts of variables that we don't know.
I don't think the sponsor or a third party providing money to an athlete with no connection
to the team whatsoever would be salary caps or a convention because there has to be some linkage
to the team that this is part of some plot.
If it's just pay somebody a gift, I mean, that's a tax issue.
There's all sorts of legal ramifications to that.
But that to me, that strikes me as outside the scope of the team.
Is there any part of the CBA or the Constitution, any other legal or rules-related issue
that we are overlooking here that I haven't mentioned that you've been hearing about
or digging into?
Is there anything that we're like missing?
I mean, there are general conduct provisions both in the CBA and in the league constitution.
I don't think they're at play yet because we have a specific provision that's more relevant here,
the circumvention of the salary cap.
There are obligations on the part, as we know from Steve Balmer's predecessor, Donald Sterling,
there are obligations on the part of owners to meet the business standards of the league,
including in their contractual work.
Again, I feel like it's premature to go there,
but that's another source of law that could apply if they think Balmer did something nefarious.
I explained that. What is that source of law? I didn't understand it. Sure. So Article 13 and 14 of the
League Constitution go into ownership obligations, including not pursuing business agreements that stake a
position that's adverse to the league. And here, if in fact there is some contract between the
clippers and the sponsor to circumvent the cap, one could interpret that language to say,
well, that's a business agreement that's taking a position adverse to the league.
I don't think we're there yet.
I feel like that's a, that's a bit of a, you know, if this is a law school exam, this would be a
student who wrote that, I would say, you know, stick to the more relevant provisions.
All right.
So what happens now?
What can Wachtell this law firm actually get from the clippers?
What are they obligated to get?
What is this process like?
They can get a lot from the Clippers.
The Clippers have an obligation to cooperate, including everyone who works there.
So, including Steve Bomber.
So in terms of demanding emails, texts, narratives, they'll probably demand some sort of timeline
that the team will have to fill out and provide a context as to not only this sponsor,
but all of its sponsors.
Because they want to figure out, is this particular contractual relationship different?
Obviously, Steve Ballmer invests in all sorts of things, I'm going to guess.
And I think as a broader point, the fact that we now have private equity buying into leagues and teams,
this is sort of an interesting twist to it, right?
Because you have all these owners of teams now through private equity that, you know,
they have business relationships that could potentially create complications in terms of player
endorsement deals.
So my guess is that Wachtel will say, look, you've got to provide a timeline.
And you have to meet with us.
you're going to have to meet with us in person
and we're going to ask you all sorts of questions
including about
conversations with Kwai Leonard
as representatives, Uncle Dennis,
everyone, just to ensure
that you're in the clear. And also
were you on notice?
Did you have any, let's say the clippers say we weren't
involved with this, that's one thing.
But if they were given a hint
to say, hey,
you know, this deal is a little weird
that Kui Leonard has.
Did you bother to look into it?
it could turn out that the league says, okay, this is not salary cap circumvention,
but it's some form of negligence that the team didn't do its due diligence.
This goes back to your point of finding them and taking away a second round pick.
This would be consistent with that, that they didn't, you know, they didn't do a good enough job.
To me, that's really interesting because if I were another team, I would say,
let's be careful here because we don't want to be policing our sponsors and what they do with players.
Because that creates this due diligence obligation that we don't currently,
have. Do we have to, we also don't, for privacy matters, we can't review an endorsement deal
between a third party and a player. We don't have the legal capacity to do that. If you want us to do
that, that's one thing. I could see the union pushing back saying, well, wait a second. You don't want
to suppress players' opportunities for signing endorsement deals. It gets into a tricky space that that,
I think could be interesting to look at. I'm going to do something foolish now. Can I do,
I'm going to do something very foolish. I'm going to predict what's going to happen, okay?
And I'm going to do this knowing that it's stupid because we don't know what this investigation
could find anything ranging from nothing to everything.
It could find anything you want to think about finding it could find.
Here's what I would predict.
I'm going to predict it finds no smoking gun, no email, no text, no nothing from anyone
at the clippers, from Balmer on down to the equipment manager saying, do this for this cap
circumvention purposes.
And if that is, in fact, what they don't find or what they find slash don't find,
I'm going to predict that still because of the diligence and just appearance issues
that you're talking about, that they get a slap on the wrist, like a second round pick
and a million dollar fine or something like that.
My next prediction after that, my second most likely scenario would be they find nothing
and there's no punishment at all.
But I think that there'll be, this is just me blindly as a stupid layperson guessing if they find something or if they find something, if they find a smoking gun, forget about it.
If they find just anything that resembles that, there'll be, I think, something bigger than what I'm suggesting in terms of a punishment.
I don't see a Joe Smith scenario.
This would just be my blind, what is it, September 8th beginning of a long investigation prediction.
I bet they don't find a smoking gun because I just don't think anyone would be that dumb.
and I do find the Uncle Dennis theory
like somewhat like pretty plausible
but I still think the league
because of the reaction
because of what the depth of specifics
that Pablo has uncovered
I think that there would be some sort of slap on the rest
what do you think of my prediction?
How stupid am I?
No, I think that's a very reasonable prediction.
I might I might right now
my instinct is sort of on the nothing side
as as I mean again I could be wrong
I just feel like we need to know a lot more
before we even get to any sort of punishment.
And I also think teams might be rooting for something now.
They really should think through what a penalty is for a team not policing a sponsor's work with the player.
I feel like that, to me, that's a problematic area.
And, you know, the league is run by lawyers, right?
This is a league that's run by really sophisticated attorneys who have been at, you know, elite law firms and, you know, the white shoe, right?
They've worn the white shoes.
I think the union will start to weigh in that this gets into an area of, to the extent players' endorsement deals could be constrained by some sort of due diligence requirement.
If I were the union, I would be thinking about that.
This reminds me of the NCAA stuff with NIL and collectives.
You know, the idea that they should be able to sign college athletes should be able to sign deals that pay them.
I mean, it gets into a similar turf, but I think you're right that right now, unless there's some smoking gun, this looks like either nothing or, you know, the second round pick, you were negligent, you should have done more, or you were on notice.
I mean, here's the thing.
Maybe they were on notice that there was something nefarious and they opted not to look into it.
They're going to say, well, we don't have the right to do that.
We can't, we can't like get into conversations between players and their endorsers.
but the league could say this was this was more suspicious there's a weirdness to how
quye leonard joined the clippers his uncle there's been all sorts of like red flags in this
and maybe there's some sort of punishment call for but it would be like you said you know
the second round pick type of sanction not this is not joe smith i mean i think that's really clear this
is not joe smith joe smith was obviously as we know it was involving it was on paper it was on paper it was
like, you know, pay them less to pay him more later. I mean, that was the team as the payer.
This is not that at all. But I do think to your point, just the long history of murmurs,
and not even murmurs, they like murmured out in public in 2019 about Kauai. And just, again,
the depth of how ridiculous this whole thing looks that Pablo has uncovered, this ridiculous scam
company, this ridiculous contract, this strange player who never says anything. I just think the anger
from other teams, despite the concerns you're outlining about like, oh, this could get turned around on us somehow and in a way we don't anticipate.
I just don't think that's going to go away with time. And forget it if something is actually found linking the clipper says. That's a whole different ballgame. We should be clear about that. But I just think the anger is not going to go away. And I guess we'll just have to see sort of what what the investigation finds. Because again, it could find nothing. But I just think, I guess what I'm like, this is,
this could become a huge deal.
It could be something that we look back on and say,
well,
it was interesting,
but it didn't really lead anywhere.
But it's certainly interesting, right?
I mean,
like it's,
and it doesn't,
just the optics of the deal,
the sponsorship deal itself are so bad and strange that it's,
it's something.
And I guess now we just wait,
right?
Yeah,
it's totally weird.
I mean,
why would a sponsor,
if this is all reported correctly,
why would it pay all this money for nothing?
That,
that is not what sponsors do,
right?
You're signing Quai Leonard.
He's a public figure.
He's for your brand.
If you're paying him nothing and the expectation is that it's nothing, that is really problematic.
It doesn't mean the Clippers did anything wrong, but it sure looks like there's something,
it's a rational behavior.
And it makes me think that maybe this is the uncles, we don't know, right?
But there's something odd about that.
Now, maybe the company is going to say we didn't, you know, we were running out of money.
We couldn't ask him to do stuff.
and we were worried about these other problems,
but it certainly is not a scenario that it is interesting.
I'll go to your point.
It's an interesting, odd scenario that warrants attention.
Well, the Clippers have already been indirectly punished
by having to deal with Kauai Leonard's health issues for six years
and winning three playoff series in six years
and watching the Thunder win the championship last year.
But it's going to be.
I have a feeling I will be leaning on your expertise.
Again, thank you for educating me on these circumstances.
substantial evidence provisions in the CBA that are interesting, maybe applicable, maybe not.
All I know is what we don't know today outweighs what we know and we will just have to wait
and see Michael McCann go back to teaching the young minds of America, the next generation of lawyers.
We need them. Thank you, sir.
Thank you, Zach. Appreciate it. Great seeing. Let's do it again.
This episode is brought to you by Samsung. If you're someone who's constantly bouncing between
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All right, shifting gears.
Hall of Fame weekend.
some interesting NBA personalities and legacies inducted into the Hall of Fame along with
the great Sue Bird, Adrian Wojnarowski, Billy Donovan, others. What up, Beck?
What up, Zach? How are you, sir? Welcome back from Croatia. Your vacation photos looked spectacular.
As always, I remain jealous and Croatia remains on my bucket list of vacation destinations.
Eventually I'll get there. Everyone comes. Everyone comes eventually.
You know what I did not see?
You know what I did not see, but I was waiting to see?
Somewhere in that photo roll that you and your wife post.
I did not see the foofy, like, green drink that you claim not to drink.
But there was one that she did send to me once because you had clown me for drinking foofy drinks during a drunk with power pod.
I'm not going to comment on any of this.
I'm not, I'm certainly not going to tell the story of when Charles Barkley made fun of me for like 16 consecutive minutes at a bar in Denver.
using language they can't be repeated here for my drink orders.
So I'm not going to comment on that.
It's my podcast.
You can get the hell out of here.
That's fair.
Two guys were inducted into the hall that I think are always fun to talk about
because of what they were and what they weren't.
And we'll start with Dwight Howard, who got into the Hall of Fame, first ballot, first
attempt.
And I was a voter for the top 75 all-time thing that the NBA did on its 75th anniversary.
Were you?
I was, yes.
Dwight Howard was a no-brainer on my list for top 75.
I was kind of aghast that he didn't make it.
Was he on your ballot or not?
He was not.
You can be aghast at me.
I'm aghast at you.
How did he not make it?
Not the first time.
It's been what, five years or more,
four years, whatever it's been.
It's hard for remember how I was doing all the cutoffs.
I don't, I try not to have any regrets over these things.
The one regret I think I have is that I did not spend more time trying to
determine whether how much deference to give to the original 50 from the 50th anniversary team.
And I think there was a just a, um, a bottleneck of modern day players that were trying to
squeeze on for those last 25 spots if you defer to those 50. I did eliminate one member of
the original 50, which was Lenny Wilkins, um, but I was not comfortable crossing out more of them.
And I, it, it speaks to how difficult the whole task was, Zach. And the thing with Dwight was, he was
in a category for me with some other guys who were like the multiple time defensive player
of the year types who were like mostly defense, not offensively minded players, but who obviously
made a huge imprint on the league as defenders, as defensive anchors, as elite defenders,
all-timers. So like DeKembe and Ben Wallace and Dwight and there was this whole category. I was trying
to figure out, is it like some of them are all of them and how do I distinguish even between them
and you're weighing them against
like all these offensive
freaking dynamos,
it was hard is what I'm saying.
Also,
and we'll get to this,
Dwight has a complicated legacy.
Not saying he doesn't belong in the hall,
not saying he didn't belong
on the 75th anniversary team.
If he didn't make my ballot,
I wouldn't have had a problem with it if he made it.
Just saying both the guys we're going to discuss
have complicated legacies,
which is why they're fun to talk about
because it's not that clear cut in some ways.
Not only did he make my top 75 roster,
I was not an MVP voter back when I was writing for a now defunct Sports Illustrated blog in 2011.
He would have gotten my MVP vote in 2011 over Derek Rose who won it and over LeBron James,
who was sort of the analytical darling choice.
I wrote a column about it then that I would have picked White Howard for MVP in that year.
He was in the middle at that point of five straight first team all NBA appearances at center.
He made eight all NBA teams in all.
He's a three-time defensive player of the year.
And I saw over the weekend, so I'm like, well, you know, that was when the East was cruddy.
The East has always been cruddy.
And B, that was when like the center position was dead.
It was so easy to make all NBA teams.
No, it's not true because I went through here's here are the second team and third team big men.
It's not like there's no Yokic.
There's no M.B.
If he's healthy.
Here are the second and third team, all NBA big men.
And I don't know what the hell we were doing as voters with positions here, as you'll see.
in the five straight years that Dwight Howard was the first team all-N-Ba center.
2008, second team, on the second team, somehow were all three of Tim Duncan, Amari Stademeyer, and Dirk Novitsky.
All three on the second team.
Not all of them are centers.
All three of them are big men.
On the third team, Chris Bosch and Yao.
That's like not bad.
2009.
Second team, Yao, Tim Duncan.
Third team, Pau Gasol, and Shaq.
Shaq's getting old.
I get it.
He's still Shaq.
2010 second team dirk and amari third team tim duncan andrew bogat hit his best year ever when he got before he got injured and pow gasol
paul pretty good NBA champion etc that year 2011 second team amare dirk and pal all on the second team somehow
Third team, Lamarcus Aldridge, Al Horford, Zach Randolph, somehow all on the third team.
2012, second team, Andrew Beinham, Blake Griffin, Kevin Love, all on the second team.
Third team, Tyson Chandler, and Dirk Novitsky.
It's not like the D'Andre Jordan Charity era and all of that.
Like, there's some good players on there.
Two quick things.
One, I'm going to excuse myself from any blame or credit or anything for any of that.
And also because I was, during the years I was at the New York Times from 2004 to 2013,
I was prohibited from voting by Times rules.
So I take no responsibility for any of what you just went through, including the MVP.
Small forward, Zach Randolph, making the 13-all-N-B-A.
Like, how did that happen?
Real quick, when did the league switch to the front court, three-front court instead of with a center?
I can't.
No, I don't think that was ever a thing for all NBA because they just, they went straight
positionless now.
We're straight positionless now the last
couple of years, but back then,
I'm pretty sure it was still two guards, two forwards
and a center. Yeah, that's what I'm saying.
So his center had... It's right.
So Dwight's not... It's not Dwight
versus Amari. I mean, Amari eventually became
a center. It's not Dwight versus
depending on how
how the
league defined people's positions
at that time. Was Duncan eligible at both center
and power forward? Probably, especially later in his career.
Powell was probably eligible at both.
but it left voters with the decision on who to put at the forward spots and who to put it as the quote unquote true center.
So I think there was some ambiguity.
My only point is you're not, no one is going to be able to diminish Dwight Howard's career and first team all NBA run by saying it was a bunch of clowns behind him on second and third team all NBA.
But it was, but we were we were long past.
So the interesting thing with both Carmelho and Dwight, both of whom we'll discuss.
They are part, perceptions of them and arguments about them, and I am participating in that argument to an extent by pushing back on you, is that they were caught between eras in various ways. In Dwight's case, the caught between eras part is that we, he arrives when Shaq is, you know, he's drafted in 2004. Shack has just taken the Lakers along with Kobe to their fourth finals in five years. Shack is still an incredible force. We have gone through this whole era, this really a golden era of centers.
with Shaq and Ewing and Morning and Rick Smiths and, you know, Akima Laijuwon Robinson.
I get all of this. I get it. Yeah, you get it. I want listeners to understand. Dwight comes
along at a time when centers, it was not just this preeminent position and a really important one.
They were offensive hubs. And this then goes to the Shaq clowning Dwight all these years, right?
Shack wanted, and I think a lot of fans wanted and people around the NBA times wanted
Dwight to be more of an offensive force and a hub the way that Shaq and Morning and Robinson and Ewing and Akeem all were,
that he was an elite defender and almost single-handedly made the magic relevant for all that time
is a huge accomplishment on its own. But he did not fit the archetype that we had become used to.
So when people take shots at him or wonder if he could have done more,
I get it. I get why the criticism existed. I'm not saying it was all justified, and I certainly Shaq went over, you know, went overboard and all this. But I get it. If you look at Dwight's, like, just look at the offense, right? Like all, his all time rankings, he's 10th and rebounds all time, 13th and blocks all time. That says enough right there about the impact he made. And obviously took the magic to the finals. He's 53rd all time in scoring, 19,000.
485 points, but still, almost to that 20,000 mark, which is elite in itself.
Five rebounding titles, two block titles.
I was looking at, like, his field goal attempts per game just as a basic, you know, old-school metric.
The most he ever shot was 13.4 field goal attempts per game.
Two years, 10-11 and 1112.
He ranks, but for his career, he's 9.7 field goal attempts a game.
Pretty low for an all-timer.
That ranks 140th, a month.
among all Hall of Famers, tied with Manu Genobley and Slater Martin and just above Tony Kukoch.
If we ranked Dwight by his highest average, the 13.4 that he put up in two different seasons,
he'd still only be 94th in a tier with Chris Mullen and notably Bill Russell.
Bill Russell obviously offset his lack of offensive production with a bazillion rings.
And Dwight has this weird career arc, right? You and I discussed this on your pod once a
years ago, I think. His first two years, because he comes in as a teenager, he's putting on
muscle, learning the NBA game, he's growing, he's acclimating. So two years of acclimating,
eight straight years of just sheer like dominance, especially as a defender, right? All-MBA,
all-defensive. Eight straight, all-star appearances. And this is, this is something that can't be
underestimated, especially when we talk about Carmelo. Sure. Four top five MVP finishes
and one MVP runner-up finish.
Carmelo Anthony had one top-five MVP finish
in his entire career.
Like that, that speaks to,
you are universally considered
one of the three to five best players in the abate.
Now, I'm not going to sit here
and do the defense of Dwight Howard
as offensive fulcrum that everybody does.
It's true Dwight defenders.
It's true Dwight defenders.
And I would consider myself a prime Dwight defender
that, yes, his gravity as a role man,
his screening, his slip screens, his speed, his power as a dunker, yes, it was the centerpiece
of an ultra-modern NBA offense that got the magic to the finals.
He created shots for others without touching the ball.
I get all that.
Yes, Dwight Defenders.
In those prime years, he averaged 20 to 21 and in his best year, 23 points a game.
That's a lot of points.
Yes, Dwight Defenders.
By the end of that, by it is absolute apex in the right matchups, he was starting to develop
if not a sophisticated post game, an effective one.
I went back last night and I watched game six of the 2009 conference finals
against the Cavs when the Magic made the finals.
He had 40 points in that game.
And with Jemir Nelson injured, they threw the ball into him in the post like 25 times.
And Zedruna Zagalskis and Anderson Verrajo and Ben Wallace, God bless him,
had absolutely no shot.
Dwight had 40 points who was spinning around them, hitting jump hooks.
Now, those guys were slower and older.
against the Lakers in the finals of Bynum and Powell and Lamar Odom, too, took some turns defending Dwight.
He only averaged 15 points a game and shot 49% in the finals that the Lakers won in five games.
All this to say, there was a roadmap to Dwight becoming a more effective post player
that maybe got cut off by the fact that starting and towards the end of his magic career,
he starts suffering back injuries after which he's never the same guy again,
including in the disaster, are we having, now this is going to be fun Lakers team,
with Nash and pal that sucked.
And then he leaves after one year when Kobe in the free agency meeting says,
I'm going to teach you how to win Dwight.
So yeah, cool.
I'm going to go to play for the Rockets now.
And then he just changes teams.
All the stories come out about how he farts and he likes candy.
He becomes kind of a punchline.
Those back injuries, much like in a much higher class version in terms of NBA legacy,
much like John Wall's knee injuries, sort of torpedoed whatever chance he had to evolve.
I don't think he was ever going to become like a polished offensive player.
jump shot, the bank shot that he flirted with was like it went in sometimes. It was ugly.
I'm just saying there were times when he was a more sophisticated offense player that people
can be credit for. And the last thing I will say is the East was cruddy. I saw my guy Hollinger
wrote over the weekend that the East was loaded when Dwight made the finals. Dude, the East was not
loaded. Okay. The East had three good teams. Cleveland, Boston, and Orlando in that year. And Boston
lost Kevin Garnett towards the end of the season. And Cleveland, I mean,
what they did around LeBron
was like a crime against humanity
how they constructed that team.
And then there's a 12-win gap
between Orlando and the next team.
So the rest of the East was poop.
But Dwight Howard took a team to the finals
that was starting.
I'm not talking about coming off the bench.
I'm talking about starting.
Rafa Alston,
Haydut-Turkeglu,
Rashard Lewis, and Courtney Lee.
That team made the NBA finals
and beat an ill-constructed,
but still 66-win
Cleveland team to get there.
Like, you can tell me that the center position was down, that the East was, as it always
was down.
The flip side of that is that Dwight took a team that had no business on paper.
And Stan Van Gundy and his coaching, obviously huge help too, to the NBA finals.
And they're like a Derek Fisher barrage away from being two to in that NBA final.
He's never got back there again.
But I'm just saying the center position being down, the East being down, you can flip those
arguments around and be like, look at the team this dude had.
and they made it all the way to the final because he was that good.
Which is why I would never argue against him in the Hall of Fame
and I would never argue against the 75th anniversary team.
He is an all-time great.
And listen, eight years, we talk about, and I say this, the weird career arc, right?
Eight years of dominance followed by eight years of just like bizarreness and farting,
volatility, fucking around, bouncing from team to team.
Teams, bouncing between the team because teams just wanted to part with him.
What's your favorite?
What's your favorite memory of Dwight Howard's season with the Charlotte Hornets?
You have any good memories of that one?
I can't constantly remind myself.
I can't think of, I remember the trade when he went from...
I can't picture it.
Yeah.
I can't picture him in the Charlotte uniform, Zach.
He goes Houston to Atlanta to Charlotte to Washington, to the Lakers, to Philly, and back to the Lakers.
Champion with the Lakers.
Champion with the Lakers.
Averaging 12 minutes a game in the finals.
Valuable minutes.
He played well.
Dwight played well.
Oh. It's that back end that I think makes it hard for people. Again, I'm not justifying anything on behalf of the people who don't want him in the Hall of Fame or who say he shouldn't be. I'm just saying he has a complicated legacy because you follow that eight years of dominance with eight years of just mayhem. And maybe some of that was the back injuries. Some of that is his personality. A lot of it is things that he did, right? Remember when he really wanted to force a trade to the,
the Brooklyn Nets.
He was going to play with Darren Williams.
And then he suddenly opts into his option year midseason,
panics, decides not to be traded.
Then in the offseason, demands to be traded again.
The Nets and Magic can't come up with a trade that suits both.
So they trade him in that 14 deal to the Lakers instead.
And then everything that happens from there, right?
He clashes with Kobe.
He clashes with Dan Tony.
He goes to Houston by his own decision.
Great with Hardin until he wasn't.
Then clashes with Hardin.
Like he had a lot of clashes.
There was lots of clashing going on.
And so when we're assessing the totality of a guy's career,
and if we're going to have the arguments that we have because it's what we do in sports,
it's fair for people to note all that stuff too.
It does not disqualify him from the Hall of Fame to be clear.
These are tier, if you did the Bill Simmons pyramid,
these are mid-p pyramid guys.
And I don't think anybody would argue with that.
The last thing I'll say about Dwight is this.
he never really evolved as a passer out of the post or anyone you could run an offense
through from the elbow.
That's a knock against his offensive versatility for sure.
His rebounding, going back and watching some old Dwight games, his rebounding, I think,
was an underrated part of his defense.
He was not only a monstrous rebounder.
He was not just to go up and get it rebounder.
He would hit people and box them out.
And not only that, he was so big and so strong and his elbow so.
so pointy and dangerous that people would just like not even go in there when he was there.
And his speed, I think, was an underrated part of it as offense.
Like he's just outrunning these big men up and down the court over and over again and
sucking in the defense and getting threes for other people.
So hats off to Dwight.
Great career.
Congrats on the All-Fame.
Carmelo Anthony, 9th all-time, 10th all-time in points in the NBA.
So sort of the anti-Dwight, actually.
They're almost like polar opposite Hall of Fame.
fame kind of players.
All-time great score.
It's actually sort of interesting how quickly he has become an antique kind of player.
So looking back at his career, typically 35-ish percent of his shots were long twos.
And he shot them well.
Like he shot them at a 45 to 48 to 44 percent rate.
That's very good.
So, but like 35 percent of his shots were long twos.
Last year, according to cleaning the glass, one player,
in the entire league shot greater than 24%.
Forget 35%.
Shot more than 24% of their shots from long twos.
Can you guess who it was?
DeMar de Rosen.
DeRosen with a bullet at 39% of his attempts being long twos.
Next most is Joelle M.P.
And 24% and Chris Middleton at 24.5% in limited action, obviously, last year.
I mean, first of all, that shows you why all the old heads love DeRosen so much.
And second of all, like, how?
It had to be him.
How antiquated stylistically Carmelo's game already would be.
Now, but he's indisputably one of the greatest scores of all time.
Unlike Dwight, who's whatever, you put him in points, like way down the list,
zero first team all NBA appearances for Carmelo Anthony.
Four third team appearances, two second team appearances,
one top five finish in MVP voting.
And his legacy, I think, unfairly for quite a long time,
was all the times that the Nuggets and then the NICs lost in the playoffs.
And if you look back and look who they lost to, you are hard pressed to find any series they lost that they, quote, unquote, should have won.
They lost to the eventual NBA champion, unless I'm missing something, four times.
The Spurs in 2005 and 2007, the Lakers in 2009, when they made the conference finals, Carmelo's first breakthrough run,
were twice in that series, game one and game three, the nuggets are down by two in the last 30 seconds.
at the game and Trevor Arisa steals inbound passes to seal the game for the Lakers.
Didn't go great there.
And then with the Knicks lost to the heat in 2012 when I think that's a series where Amari
punched a fire extinguisher container case at the end of it.
And, you know, like they were underdogs in all those series and they lost all those
series.
I think the interesting thing about Carmelo is he was never a great defensive player
and often not a good one.
I think if there's the main knock on him is the playmate,
like Dwight, the playmaking just never came.
Like these six, eight wings now are,
have to be playmakers.
His career averages in the playoffs,
23 points a game,
two and a half assists,
seven rebounds,
he was always a very good rebounder,
41% shooting,
32% on threes,
43.5% on twos.
That's just like not super duper elite playoff performance.
And I just think he never
Like you can sit here and say they never
All these playoff losses were teams that they should have lost to and they did and that's very fair
You just never got the sense that he had he took a team and really elevated it to a level above where it should have been
With the exception of maybe the 54 win nicks in 2012-2013
Who lose to the Pacers in the second night
We don't need to go back and how he got to the Knicks could he have just gone there as a free agent
Instead of making them trade all this stuff
to Denver. But like, I say all this to say, there, he's, they're so different as players,
Dwight and Carmelo. Their legacies are so sort of complicated by the limitations of their
game. And you can nitpick them here or there and God knows I nitpick Mello during his prime.
When that dude was cooking, like, there were few things more exciting in the NBA than
Carmelo just raining long twos and stepbacks and the footwork and all that than,
then, then that. I mean, he was thrilling to watch at his peak.
And if you appreciated that aspect of the game, and it has become now an old school aspect of the game, right?
Like, why was Michael Jordan so awesome?
Well, yeah, early in his career, it's because he could just jump over everybody.
But Michael Jordan had some of the greatest footwork for a guard, a wing of all time.
And there was an artfulness and a grace to Michael's game in the way that he could create space for himself and get shots off.
And Carmelo, like Kobe, like others who came in on the heels of Michael's,
career, like that was the model, right? If you were a dominant wing player who was great with the
ball on your hands and had phenomenal footwork and could just manufacture in the post, in the midpost,
and ISO ball was absolutely, you know, more than acceptable back then. And Carmela was really
fun to watch if you enjoyed that. The thing about Carmela, I mentioned about Dwight
being a victim to an extent of being caught between eras, right?
The era of all the great bigs, especially offensive-minded hubs,
and then he's coming in at a different time.
Carmelo, the eras he's caught between.
In 2003, he's coming into the tail end of isobal, right?
The league has just now changed the rules to try to eliminate two guys standing on one side of the court,
and illegal defense rules allowing the other eight,
or forcing the other eight to stand on the other side.
The league is trying to get more ball movement.
Mike Dantone's sons are about to take off.
So we're at the tail end of isoball, pre-player tracking, pre-procession stats.
We're not even talking in per 100 yet.
We're not talking about efficiency all the time.
That word never even comes up.
We're just talking about field goal percentage.
We have no effective field goal percentage.
True shooting.
We have none of this.
And he overlaps with Kobe, like the classic gunslinger type.
And I just think that Carmelo, over time, starts to look worse and worse under the scrutiny of newer tools, newer understanding, different kind of analysis of the game.
and then there's the other things you already mentioned, right?
He was kind of an indifferent defender.
He could be a ball stopper, which again became more of a problem in this era than it was in a previous era.
And he wasn't a particularly efficient score, and he wasn't a particularly willing passer.
But when he passed, that was always the frustrating thing is when he took the offense
and when he decided, I'm going to be LeBron Light and I'm going to start whipping these passes to the corner and hitting the role,
man, he would have these games with six or seven assists.
You'd be like, man, he sees it.
Like, is it a matter of willingness?
Like, he doesn't see it quite like LeBron or Lucas see it, but he sees something.
So when Mike Dantone and Carmelo were together here in New York, right?
And I'm still a Knicks beat writer at that time.
You know, this was still the peak two of LeBron and Carmelho discussions.
I wrote that story, you know, years ago, 2015, 16, whenever about the kind of a friendship
slash rivalry between them. Carmelo and LeBron, when they first arrived, and then eventually
just the burden was on Carmelo, but they were being viewed in contrast to each other constantly
from the moment that draft happened. And Carmelo suffered in part because he's a big wing like LeBron
and who has the ball in his hands a lot, like LeBron. But he's not built the same way LeBron is in
terms of being a really playmaking, assist-minded, I'm going to orchestrate everything kind of player.
Dan Tony went to Carmelo at one point, because remember, before,
insanity happens. The Dix had no point guards. This was how insanity happens. They had no
all the points guards. Chris Duhon. I can't believe I will not stand for the Chris Duhon and Pablo
Prigioni and old man Jason Kidd or Rayshar, although that's later. Uh, Duhan was the prior season. But yes,
like eventually we get to kid and prigioni. Be in between those things, though, it was Tony
Douglas. Oh my God, Tony Douglas. A creaky Baron Davis, a creaky Mike Bibby. I'm doing this off the top of
my head and I'm probably missing somebody. My brain, you know, there's this whole
of the science about how your brain takes in new information and it has to eject old
information to fit to new information. My brain ejected Tony Douglas like a ref ejecting
Rashid Wallace. Like I completely forgot about Tony Douglas. It's perfectly justifiable.
So, Antonio, in light of all this, and in light of the fact that he and Carmelo have not
quite figured out how to get on the same page philosophically with regard to the offense
yet. Remember, Mike Dantone is all about the ball finds energy, the ball finds energy, and with the
sons it was pinging around and Nash is orchestrating. He wanted Carmello to play more like
LeBron. And it was not an unfair like, oh, be like LeBron. It was more of a, look, we can put the
ball in your hands all the time. You can run high pick and rolls. You can find guys. You're a very
good passer. You will have the ball in your hands as much as you want. And we all know Carmello
wants the ball in his hands a lot. And Carmelo didn't want that model of offense. He wanted to
back guys down. He wanted
to ISO at the elbow. He wanted
to jab step. He wanted to do
what he does. But that was antithetical
to Mike Dantonies make quick decisions
with the ball. The ball finds energy. It should ping
around player movement, ball movement, blah, blah, blah, blah.
And eventually that leads to Mike Dantone
forced out, quit, whatever
you want to say.
But there was a moment there.
And there were moments, by the way. I think Carmel
had like a 10 assist game once. And we went
to... A very good passer out of the post.
Could read the help players out of the post very
well. And I remember we're talking to him after the game and he's like, yeah, maybe I should do that
more often. I mean, he had this moment of reflection where it was kind of a, yeah, I could be more
of a playmaker. I could do more of a, and then he immediately reverted to like, you know, 1.2 assists
per game kind of thing. For his career, he's at 2.7 assists per game, which if you take the
the 52 players who finished with 20,000 points in their career, everybody in the 20,000 point
club, 52 of them, he ranks 39th in assists. And that's between George Gervin and Shaq.
And if you look at him versus like the other Hall of Fame type wings, right?
LeBron's an almost an unfair comparison, but Bird, Drexler, Jordan.
I'm going to put Janice in this category because he's mostly been a small forward.
He handles the ball a lot.
Kobe, Durant, Elgin Baylor, all these guys average way more assists per game than Carmelo.
I don't need to go through all the numbers.
He's in a tier among the elites.
He's in a tier assist-wise with mostly like centers and power forwards.
Power forward where he eventually landed, power forward where he did not want to be.
where he did not want to be, by the way.
Something else he pushed back against
that Dantonia others
had wanted him to do was like you could take advantage
of a lot of guys by playing as a small
ball four.
So yeah, he's another guy who
clear-cut, obvious
Hall of Famer, incredible score,
fun player, great dude, by the way,
great to cover, always accountable,
always available, wins, losses, otherwise.
He was great.
Love covering Carmela for the couple of years that I was
still on the beat with him.
But it's a complicated resume.
And, you know, toward the end,
he was getting booed at the garden.
Wow.
They all turn.
At times.
Once a Nick, always a Nick.
Yes.
I'm glad you mentioned the positional thing
because that's what made him so fun to watch
when he was at his apex is.
He was too big for threes.
He could beat the crap out of him in the post
and he was too fast.
Like, that first step against PowerFords,
it was over.
Like, forget about it.
A couple other mellow things before we go.
another thing he never got in comparison to LeBron was on a stacked team with his peers.
And part of that was the decisions that he made with his contract in the line with LeBron, Bosch and Wade.
Part of that was one of like a top three what if in the entire history of the NBA is what if the Pistons take Carmelo Antony instead of Darko Milichichich.
Like that's like an all time like the whole league is warped by that.
And he was also, and part of the reason why occasional ball stuff.
Toppermello was so puzzling was he's also a top four all-time Team USA player to the point that
Fiba Mello became a thing. It was a completely different player. And I would be remiss not to mention
the Redeem team in 2008 also was inducted into Springfield this weekend. And Carmelo was
among the players who saw the floor in the fourth quarter of the gold medal game against Spain,
which I rewatched. Let me tell you, Howard, I remember that game being tense. Holy fuck was that game
tense. In the fourth quarter, Team USA is up nine going to the fourth quarter. Spain immediate
seven o'er run. It's 91.89 with eight and a half minutes left. There's a famous Kobe three,
a four point play actually against Spain's zone defense that gets the lead up to 108, 99 with 310 left.
And in the telling of that game, that's the shot that sealed the game. Because Kobe, if people want to go,
just watch the fourth quarter. Kobe is the best player on the floor in the whole game. And what way it actually is 27 points in
the game coming off the bench.
But Kobe's the best player in the fourth court.
He's everywhere on D.
He blocked a jumper.
He deflected a lob to pal on a switch.
He's everywhere in the game.
But Spain then goes on a quick 5-0 run.
It's 108-104 with like two minutes left in the game.
And remember, this is the Redeemed team.
This is, we lost it Worlds in 2002, Athens in 2004, Worlds again in 2006.
All the press was Coach K, Jerry Colangelo.
This is the team.
It's a four-point game with two minutes left against.
Ricky Rubio looks like.
a 15-year-old in this game, and then Wade hits a three to ice it.
My only point is only two players played the entire fourth quarter in that game, Kobe
and LeBron.
But Mello was always awesome for Team USA.
The short three really helped him.
But that game was, I mean, and Mark Gasol, like, did not play much in the fourth quarter
of that game.
That was Pau's team more than Mark's team.
And it was just, peak Rudy Fernandez is involved.
Awesome, awesome game.
Like an all-time great game, almost on par, not quite with the Serbia-U-S game
from last Olympics.
It sounds like I need to do a rewatch.
It's so long.
It's awesome.
Yeah.
And Carmelo, it's a funny thing, right?
One of the critiques of him during his career is, you know, he didn't really mesh with Amari in New York.
And he didn't, like, if you look at it, in Carmelo's defense, and he only won three
playoff series his entire career, which is stunning.
Again, if you contrast that with a lot of the other elite players, he's on the charts with
top 10, top 20 scores of all time, all that.
his playoff win total is frightfully low compared to everybody else's.
But he didn't play with a ton of Hall of Famers, right?
He had Chauncey Billups in Denver and briefly in New York.
He had Alan Iverson in a very strange period that I often forget happened in Denver.
He had old, old Jason kid for that 54 win season with the Knicks.
And that's pretty much it for elite players that he was with.
Damn, at the end in Portland.
Like, Mello and Portland was actually kind of fun.
There are some fun Mellow games in Portland.
And yeah, he made contract decisions that kept him from being able to conspire with,
with, you know, Wade and LeBron or whoever else it could have been, Chris Paul.
And he made decisions that kind of boxed himself in.
And it's unfortunate.
And he also was not necessarily one who was going to willingly seed a lot of offense or control to other players,
even if he had those guys with him, except during the Olympics,
which part of why Olympic Mello became a thing was like,
people just love the way he was playing off of Kobe and LeBron and Wade and all these guys
because in that context, like, what else were you going to do?
Right?
Like, this is not a roster where you're like, no, no, no, it's my team, my time.
Like, you're you're kind of forced into that role, but he did it willingly.
He embraced it.
He was awesome with it.
But it was the kind of thing he was going to be willing to do once every four years in the
Olympics.
But he did it to its absolute peak.
He was like the greatest role player of all time if you want to even use that term.
And again, for people who want to nitpick, you know, guys' resumes as they go into the hall,
remember, the Hall of Fame is not the NBA Hall of Fame.
And he'd be in an NBA Hall of Fame, too, if there was one.
But it's a basketball Hall of Fame, and the three Olympic Golds matters a ton,
as does leading Syracuse to a national championship as a freshman.
It's the totality of your career and your contributions to basketball.
And, yeah, Carmelo, indisputable.
My only question, the only thing I'm still wondering, Zach,
will there be a separate wing for his postgame hats?
Maybe.
But I will, I don't even, I mean, he did have some great,
some good wide-brimmed post-game hats, round-brimed and everything.
Great hats.
Yeah, Fiba Mello, like, didn't have the burden of creating the offense.
It was catch, fire, and run like hell.
And those team USA teams still with run like hell.
All right, Howard Beck, real ones, the ringer.com.
Always a pleasure to see you.
Look, man, we're going to be talking about NBA basketball sooner than you think.
It's early September.
Let's go.
Shortest month of the year goes by in a nibblink.
I'll see you soon, bud.
All right, ma'am. Good to see you.
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It's September.
There is no NBA basketball going on.
There is Eurobasket, but there's no NBA basketball.
I have long told people, and I sound now like an old man yelling at a cloud like Gabe Simpson,
that the single greatest creation of American popular culture ever, ever, is the Simpsons from like 1990 to 1997.
I've lost track of the show over the last 15 to 20 years.
But nothing, nothing, not the wire, not the X-Files, not the Godfather, not whatever you want to posit is the best apex of American pop culture was better to me than Peak Simpsons.
So boy was I delighted when the ringer's own Alan Siegel wrote this book about Peak Simpsons.
And so episode one, segment one of my Zach read some books over the summer, a podcast series starts with Stupid TV, Be More,
funny how the golden era of the Simpsons changed television in America forever.
Alan, I have one major critique of this book for you.
Shoot.
Can you write another one that's like 400 pages longer?
Because I want to dive into all of my favorite episodes.
Like I want 50 pages of the writers who you got all of except for Schwartzweiler,
who's like a who's like a, you describe him as a Paul Bunyan figure in American comedy,
John Schwarzwierdor, if I'm saying his name right.
I want more.
I want more, which is a good sign, I think.
I had this problem when I was writing it where I would go on these little tangents where I'd be quoting the show in the book over and over and over and over.
And I like couldn't help myself.
But I realized, you know, I think some of the people reading this know a lot of the quotes already.
So I dialed that back a little bit.
But I wanted to like I have all my favorite little jokes.
And your book sent me down a rabbit hole of like my favorite episodes of all time.
But the best, the best, I mean, how old are you?
42.
So I'm 47.
I'm a little old.
48.
Oh my God.
I just turned 48.
like two weeks ago. I'm a little older than you. So I'm like in high school during peak Simpsons.
And the best way I can describe their effect on me. And you talk about how they were on Sundays and then they were on Thursdays. And that's important because on both Mondays and Wednesdays, we had weight sessions, lifting weight sessions in the morning for water polo and swimming, which I played both in high school. And there were like four of us who were super fans who every Monday morning at six.
30 in the morning or every Friday morning, depending on when the show was on, we would spend the
entire wait session rehashing our favorite jokes from the previous Night Simpsons. And the best way
I can describe it is I didn't even know really what my sense of humor was until I watched those shows.
I learned about absurdist comedy and political references and movie references, 75% of which I didn't
even get now that I've read your book. I learned that I learned that I,
learned about things that tickled my funny bone that I didn't even know tickled my funny bone from
this group of writers who was so much more sophisticated. That's the best compliment I could give.
We would come in the next day and dissect joke for joke. Like, oh, what about that one?
What about that one? That it, like, I learned my sense of humor from The Simpsons.
People ask me all the time, like, what is the greatest influence of the show? And I mean,
you could sort of say, like, look at the adult animation going on right now. There are dozens of
shows that would not exist without The Simpsons. But I think it's sort of like it helped us form a
worldview, which I think is the most influential part of the show. Like you can talk about the comedy,
but, you know, there's a line by one of the writers, George Meyer, that I always steal, which is basically
paraphrase, it's like life is crushing and miserable, but it's worth living. And I think
that that's what the Simpsons taught us in a way. And like that kind of gets lost now that the show is
sort of an American institution and not this dangerous thing anymore.
You get into a lot in the book about the writer's room, which was both gross and inspiring,
about some of the individual, you know, mega figures, Matt Greenig and Sam Simon and James
Brooks and John Schwartzweiler and on and on, different showrunners.
It's all very interesting.
I want to leave that for the readers.
And the George H.W. Bush versus the Simpsons and the Cosby Show versus the Simpsons.
I had forgotten even that Dr. Hibbert is kind of like a Bill Cosby character.
I totally forgotten that.
I want to get into some of the nitty gritty.
And you'd get into the nitty gritty.
In the book, you have a whole section on the monorail.
Obviously, a seismic event in American comedy.
You have a whole section on the Bort license plates.
Now, I don't know if you can see it back there.
You know what?
I'm actually going to go get it.
Okay.
So what's the story behind that?
That's my dort license plates.
Lugens Dort plays for the Oklahoma City Thunder
and I had a running bit saying
the Thunder are just missing this opportunity
all their hipster fans
if they produce Dort license plates
would buy them
and you have a whole chaper about American drivers
who have Bort license plates
from the itchy and scratchy episode
this is signed by Lugent's Dort
and it's a one of one and I own it
does he know the show at all?
I haven't talked to him about it.
I have to talk to him but this was all
this was like a pandemic thing
that they gave me.
By the way, I rewatched that show, that episode with my daughter, when we went to Disney World last year.
And now she wants to do the thing you talk about in the book, which is rewatched The Simpsons with me.
I'm definitely game for that.
Well, it's funny, I went to an oasis concert, you know, as a 42-year-old white male, I went to an oasis concert in L.A. this week.
And we were in this giant parking lot.
And I turned to my friend and I said, I think we're in the itchy lot, which is a reference to itchy and scratchy.
episode, you know, it's like the Disney giant parking lots.
And then another friend didn't hear me and made the same damn reference.
So that's where we are.
What is, I guess one of the jokes that comes to mind to me is like, what do I mean by a joke that
taught me about my own sense of humor?
One of my five to six favorite episodes is Cape Fear, which you write about in the book.
And the famous joke, absurdist joke from Cape Fear is side show.
Bob stepping on the rakes over and over again, which I thought was hysterical at the time for reasons
that I did not understand. Like my brain did not understand why this was funny because it's like
objectively not that funny. It's just the same thing happening nine different times and it makes
no sense. Why are the rakes there? Why is he stepping on them over again? Is he that stupid? Why
doesn't he just walk the other way? The joke more so that I think of when I think of that episode
is when Homer, the Simpsons are being given a new identity and they're the Thompson's and
the the FBI guy or whoever is like, all right, let's rehearse this. I'm going to say hello
Mr. Thompson and you say back Homer, hello. And it's like, hello Mr. Thompson. Homer says
nothing. Hello, Mr. Thompson. Homer, remember, you're Mr. Thompson. Hello, Mr. Thompson.
And then Homer whispers, I think to Marge, I think she's talking to you. It's just such brilliant
writing that it just makes me cackle even today. What's your all-time favorite episode?
Give me some of your best greatest hits.
The one I've been saying, and this changes every week, is Mr. Plow.
Because it sort of has all the stuff that made The Simpsons great that, like, you couldn't do on live action TV.
So imagine, like, you don't have an episode of family ties where the characters are rival Plow drivers.
And in Mr. Plow, you know, you have Linda Ronstat and Adam West as guest stars.
You have references to movies that, like, this is something I've brought up a.
million times and I just can't get enough of it.
They reference a movie called Sorcerer.
It's a William Freedkin movies from 1977 that got totally buried by Star Wars.
And in 1992, when Mr. Plow came out, there was absolutely no reason to have a sorcerer
reference in a Simpsons episode.
But there is a shot for shot parody.
It's when Homer is on the bridge in his truck and there's like the Tangerine Dream sort of fake
score, like the tinkly piano.
And what's crazy is I didn't understand that reference.
until I was like 39 years old.
That's how sort of deep these references were.
I never did until you wrote about it in your book.
I thought it was cliffhanger or something like that.
I didn't know.
So I went back and watched clips of Mr. Plow and two jokes that I had forgotten about
that just delight me to this day.
So Homer is driving drunk back from Moes in a snowstorm.
Maybe a little too casual with the drunk driving on this instance.
She's obviously not a laughing matter.
But he's what the windshield wipers.
it's like full of snow, no snow, full of snow.
And then he crashes a car.
He crashes into a car.
He re-rends a car.
And he gets out of the car, looks at the damage, and drunkling's like, well, I got him
as good as he got me.
And then he realizes that he's crashed into his own car in the driveway of his house
and goes, do!
Which is a word you.
And that one just delights me.
And then as the police or whatever are investigating this crash, they interrogate Homer.
And they're like, so where were you coming from like when you had this accident?
the insurance adjuster.
Where are you coming from when you had this accident?
What is this place Moes?
And then we go into Homer's brain,
which is always the most,
always the most delightful place to go.
And he goes,
he comes up with an answer he thinks is brilliant.
And he says,
it's a pornography store.
I was buying pornography.
And then his brain says,
I wasn't going to think of that.
There's just such great jokes.
Give me another highlight.
So this joke is,
and it's pandering,
but I don't care because I love it so much.
It's when Krusty opens the clown college.
And it's because he's lost money betting on the Washington Generals.
And you see him watching the generals play the Globetrotters.
I reference it one every like 10 episodes.
Yeah.
He's like he's spinning the ball on his finger.
Just take it.
It's like, I didn't get it.
But then it keeps going and he says, someone says him, why did you bet on the generals?
Like, I thought the generals were due.
We're due.
Give me another episode that's in your like top, your pantheon.
So Lisa's substitute is, it's tough because this isn't one that like people quote all the time,
but it's when Dustin Hoffman comes in and he's Lisa's substitute teacher.
And he, again, this just shows like at the time how sort of backwater animation was that like Dustin Hoffman wouldn't even have his real name on, you know, in the credit.
So he just went by Sam Edick, which, you know,
get it. So it, that episode, like, had actual emotion and sort of gravitas to it that other episodes
didn't. And it kind of spooked the writers because they were like, shit, like, we're going to have
to be this emotional forever. But it sort of gave a good example that the show was not just Bart saying
hell and damn all the time. And that, like, really helped it launch it into a whole other
stratosphere. Can I give you a couple of mine that are in my, other than Cape Fear? Other than Cape Fear.
Let me see. Where do I want to start?
Let's just do the monorail right away.
Because it's obviously an all-timer.
The song Conan O'Brien wrote it, has performed it at the Hollywood Bowl,
which is just outrageous that this happened.
And it's an episode, people who are listening to this know the monorail episode.
Can I give you my favorite moment of the monorail episode?
Of course.
More than the song, more than donuts, is there anything they can't do?
More than anything else, my favorite joke in the monorail episode.
is. I believe it's at the end after Homer has saved the town from devastation in a monorail crash.
Or it's at some point.
Leonard Nimoy. Why is Leonard Nimoy in this episode again? He plays himself, but why is he in it?
So they initially wanted George DeKay to come in and he had already played another character
in a different episode. But DeKay was like, no, no, no, I can't do a monorail episode. I have a deal
with the San Francisco Transportation Department.
So he didn't want to trash public transit in any way.
So they got Nimoy and Conan was excited because Spock outranked Sulu in Star Trek.
So that's why Nimoy ended up in the episode.
All right.
So Leonard Neumoy, now I remember, Leonard Nimoy is on the monorail and there's a solar eclipse.
And it's Leonard Nimoy.
He's playing Leonard Nimoy.
And he says to his seat neighbor, a solar eclipse, the cosmic ballet goes on.
And you think for the seat, the random person sitting next to him,
it's the greatest one of my entire life.
Leonard Nimoy is talking about astronomy and the guy just goes, anyone want to switch seats?
It just slays me every time.
That episode has one of my favorite moments, which is like the Marge exasperation with Homer like peak when, you know, Marge is like talking about who's going to save everybody.
And Homer's like, is it Batman?
She's like, no, it's not Batman.
Just like, and that kind of goes back to the Cape Fear episode too where they've been kidnapped.
and Homer is passed out
and you just hear Lisa go,
Dad's been drugged
and Marge goes,
no, he hasn't.
Just like,
all right,
I'm going to give you another one
that I don't think
was in your book even once
and I kept waiting for it
and waiting for it
because it might be my favorite episode
of all time,
although it's a cliche answer
to this question,
the stone cutters,
which is called Homer the Great,
I think.
Is there stuff on the cutting room floor
of the book about that episode
or is that episode
not as sort of pantheon popular
as I think it is?
It's incredible.
I think my present
problem was that there are so many damn good episodes. Like there was a writer that once told me,
I once, you know, for the ringer, I ranked all the best, I think the top 100 episodes. And he sort
was like, if you did like a random number generator for the first 250 episodes, you probably
could not go wrong. Like it probably would seem reasonable. I mean, Patrick Stewart in that
episode is so funny. Like the line that I always remember is like, let's get drunk and play ping pong
and they're like, you know, in the, in the, in the, in the very deep voice. And, and,
Again, there are so many good episodes that it was hard to know sort of what to whittle down,
like what was the most important.
Homer becomes a big wig in the stone cutters, which is like sort of a Mason's secret group
in Springfield with all the Springfield luminaries.
And he's living it up and he's going out to the club every night.
And Marge warns him at one point, like, hey, Homer, you know, like nothing lasts forever.
And he just goes, everything lasts forever.
It's a classic Homer line.
And then at the end, when he's kicked out of the stone cutters or they dissolve, I can't
remember who exactly what happened.
happens. Another just great throwaway joke. Marge is like, you know what, Homer, don't worry about
that club. You're a member of an even more exclusive club than that. And she's referring to her family.
And he just goes, oh, the Black Panthers? Like, as if that would be a reasonable. So those are the
jokes that just make everything. Give me another one of yours. Yeah, well, I was going to say, like,
what the writers love to do was this sort of like weird dichotomy of making Homer incredibly stupid,
but also give him like a brain that he didn't really have.
It's like on one hand, he would forget how to breathe.
And on the other, he would make jokes about Vassar or, you know, Vassar.
He knew what Vassar College was, but he could forget how to breathe.
And I think like, so there's, there's a joke that I repeat all the time.
It's like not an episode people love.
It's when Bleeding Gums Murphy dies.
And so there's a runner throughout the entire episode where like a hot dog vendor is there,
you know, selling Homer hot.
a hot dog and they're at Bleeding Guns, Bleeding Gums Murphy's funeral.
And you just hear the hot dog guy go, hot dog, get your hot dog.
And Homer is like, woohoo.
And Marge is like, do you follow my husband around?
And he just goes, lady, he's putting my kids through college.
And it's like, it is a throwaway joke in some ways.
But the, like things like the delivery, like you don't realize.
Like, it's not just the writing.
It's hysterical.
another one like that that I reference all the time just randomly is here come the pretzels when they had to baseball game which I'd forgotten about I went through a whole montage of on YouTube there's a montage of every time Homer says it's my lifelong dream to do something and then Marge says no Homer it was your life wrong dream to do X and you already did it and one of them is it was your lifelong dream to run on the field during a baseball game and you did it and it cuts to a photo from the newspaper of Homer running on the field to the baseball game he's put it up in his house despite the fact that the headline is
idiot cause Springfield the pennant.
And this is such a great joke.
Go ahead.
I was going to say like Homer's sort of weird.
Weird.
He has no short term memory and his long term memory screwed up.
And it's like he, his memories are like just sometimes just like old TV episodes that he thinks he lived, which is like, again, a weird, weird projection of the writers just how much they watch television.
You do get into that at one point where he talks about how he's excited to go to it.
to his high school reunion to see the old gang,
Ralph Malfe and Potsie.
And March is like,
that's happy days, Homer.
Okay, I'm going to give you a couple more
of just my all-time favorites
and you can take off wherever you want to take off.
Colonel Homer,
where he manages Lurley in the country singer,
Homer loves Mindy when he almost has an affair.
Homer goes to college
when he lives with the nerds in college.
Homer goes to space when he's the NASA guy.
I'll stop there.
Those are, those are, oh, what, Homer bad man when he's accused of sexual harassment.
Those are, those are like in my pantheon personally.
So Colonel Homer has one of my favorite jokes, which is like a peak George Meyer joke.
So George Meyer was this writer.
I assume people know who he is who've listened to this podcast, but he just had this way
of like making these very simple punchlines that like weren't necessarily, like, without
context, they don't like really pop.
But like a great example is like Homer's in this honky talk bar and these two sort of, like,
like rednecks are at each other's throats.
And you hear one and just goes,
hey you, let's fight.
And the other one goes,
them's fighting words.
And it's like this joke that some,
one of the other writers was just saying it's like,
it's like a joke that should have already been written,
but somehow it wasn't.
And that's like a George Meyer joke.
And the,
the Mindy episode is great.
The line that I repeat is just Homer when he's sort of obsessing over here,
over her.
And he just goes,
Mindy has a motorcycle.
And like,
it doesn't really make any sense like on its own.
but it's hysterical.
There's a joke,
and I don't even remember
what episode it's in
that stands out to me.
It's just like,
how did they land on this joke?
I don't know.
The context,
it's just coming to me in my head right now.
Grandpa Simpson has an American flag,
and the flag has only 49 stars on it.
And Homer or someone is like,
hey, I think there's a star missing on your flag, grandpa.
And he just says, like, out of nowhere,
like, no, there isn't,
I'll be dead in the cold, cold ground.
before I recognized Missouri.
And I'm like, how?
Who wrote this?
And I remember watching it and dying of laughter,
not even understanding why that's funny.
Like, why is I,
but just this sheer ridiculous is up,
like, why does he hate Missouri?
It's completely unexplained.
It's this like weird old-timey,
like kind of like weird civil war era attitude.
It's like,
there's the grandpa line where he's like,
telling stories about his military time.
And he's like,
he replaces the word 20 with dickety.
And he's like,
the Kaiser stole our.
word for 20. It just doesn't like where does that come from and like that I think is
you know what made the show great. It's like you sort of expect a certain level of joke and then
it like goes up an entirely different level. Another thing that you get into what you get
into in the book a storyline that has been talked about but you out you broaden it and explain it
more which is always like even I could sense this as a teenager that the show found its stride
when it evolved from being a show about Bart
to being a show about Homer.
And George Myers in the book, he says,
to me, Homer is the greatest comedic character
in the history of the world.
And I completely agree with them.
Homer Simpson is my favorite character
in any show of any kind ever of all time,
at least comedy-wise.
And you get into that,
you get into that sort of transition.
And I completely agree.
And now I forgot what I was going to say.
I'm looking at my Homer.
The trajectory maybe, like how it happened?
No, I mean, but you get into that, but it's just like, that's when it really sort of hit its absurdist high.
And all my favorite episodes are from, from that era.
But I don't know what I was going to say, just Homer and the writer.
But you talk to the writers about this in depth.
Yeah.
And I think like it's sort of like a double-edged sword.
So they realize that they have this character that they can go nuts with.
Like, you know, just a good example to me is like, you know, you can't send Bart to space as an astronaut because he's 10 years old.
But you can send Homer.
And, you know, that episode, Deep Space Homer is an absolute classic.
And at the time, the writers were like, I don't know.
Like, it's not grounded.
It's not real.
And I think, like, by then that they had the room to really sort of send the show in a different
direction, like to make it less realistic.
But I think it wouldn't, that wouldn't have been possible without the first three, four
years being very grounded.
I remember what I was going to say about Homer.
every single time
he imagines an alternate reality
and they show the alternate reality
is an absolute home run
like there's one word
that Germans come take over
the nuclear power plant
and he imagines the land of chocolate
and it's just everything's made of chocolate
and it's Homer dancing like an excited little girl
eating everything that exists
including like animals
and a common theme is
he's eating all the time
so in deep space Homer
they have this beautiful
beautiful sequence set to the same music as 2001 to Space Odyssey, where Homer is floating in
space eating potato chips that have exploded out of the bag. And in Homer Badman, when he's accused
of sexually harassing a babysitter, he imagines living under the sea. And they cut to him
singing a version of Under the Sea from the Little Mermaid, but he's eating all the fish that he comes
with. He's ripping snails out of their shells and eating them. He's eating and he's just eating
all the time. And then cuts back to reality in March says, Homer, that's your solution.
for everything going under the sea.
It's not going to happen.
My favorite sort of Homer, like, cutaway gag is the cartridge family where Homer gets a gun.
And he just goes, what if I rob the Quiky Mart?
And you see him and he's in a chair and he's twirling a gun in his finger and Marges in a bikini and, like, just dancing.
And then, like, it cuts back and he realizes he's left the Quiky Mart already.
And he's just like, don't.
Yeah, it's great.
Speaking of the Quikimart,
Apu is not on the show anymore, right?
Correct, yep.
So that is, that controversy coming to the center of the show
and then Apu not being on the show in Hank's area
sort of saying like I didn't realize that
some could construe my voice as offensive and all of that.
That's long after I was really watching the show.
Going back, like, it was interesting to me
because just as like a formative viewer,
I always thought they kind of did right
by Apu as an immigrant and told his immigration story with love and a heart. And there's an
episode where there is like a right wing mob that wants to change the immigration law to kick him out.
And the town and Homer kind of rallies on his behalf. It's a very, it's, it's one of those issues
that I know is more complex than I'm able to articulate because of my own life experience.
But I, he's an interesting character in that regard. Yeah. They make him very like, again,
maybe this is a flattening it or a cliche, but like he's hard, he's incredibly hardworking.
He's smart.
He's funny.
And he does everything right.
And I do think that that was on purpose.
Like so the portrayal of it and the voice, like, yeah, like you can absolutely take, take issue
with that.
And Hank Azaria is very smart and like talked about it.
He, again, like you said, he evolved on it and realized that he probably wasn't the right
guy to voice to voice him.
But I mean, there's a line.
There's a line in that episode where, again, Apu is trying to become a.
citizen and Homer's like, Apu, you must love this country more than I love a cold beer on a
hot Christmas morning.
And it's like they give Apu a lot.
And I really did like that at the time.
They also, that line also that also has one of my favorite Apu lines where he's trying
to act American in an American accent.
And he says, the Nye Mets are my favorite squadron.
And as a Mets fan, that particularly tickled me.
All right, give me, before we go, give me.
give me one last episode that you want to that you want to hit as like an Alan Siegel just I can't live without this episode highlight.
So I love the Itchy and Scratchy and Poochie show, which is a season eight episode where they,
itching Scratchy adds another character, you know, a dog from hell, which one of the writers sort of said like if your show is is, or rather that Poochie is a great example of like when you need to end your show.
And I think if you watch that episode now, it's sort of, it's a great commentary on like fans and fans thinking that they have ownership of pop culture, sports, whatever.
And it's just a question of like when you make something great, like who owns it?
Like so there's an exchange where, you know, Bart is talking to to comic book guy and comic book guy is complaining about itchy and Bart's like, you know, we don't owe, the show doesn't owe you.
you owe the show and comic book guys response is worst episode ever like people cannot handle
when something that they're obsessed with like have a parissocial relationship with like isn't in
their control anymore and like at the end of that episode like they turn the TV off and it just
goes to fuzz and like to me that is like that would be a great ending of the series well look I mean
you get into the one of the great parts of the book is and again here's the book right here
Who's the book? Stupid TV, be more funny.
Buy this book if you like The Simpsons or even if you don't.
You get into sort of like the formative internet and like the first message groups about like popular shows like The Simpsons and how some of the writers actually dove into those groups and chatted with those people.
And like that was really interesting to go back to like early to mid-90s internet like Wild Wild West.
And like these guys, some of them are reading what the super duper smart fans are saying about the show.
there's something so funny about the fact that in 1992
Simpsons fans were like,
shows going in the toilet.
It's crap.
It's bad.
It's like unimpeachably the greatest season of TV and the history of TV.
And even then, people were whining about it.
So it's like,
I don't know if it's like a rule of the internet or a rule of people congregating.
Like they will get really negative.
And the writers at the time,
like the Simpsons writers,
at some point they had to like rip the modem out of the wall.
Again, I'm dating myself talking about modems, but it, like, they couldn't handle.
They thought that they liked the feedback, but at some point, you just need to let it go.
Okay, this is just tip of the iceberg stuff.
I mean, this book, the stories about the writer's room are incredible.
The stories about Schwartzwelder, who's like this mysterious figure, who's a genius, are incredible.
The first 50 to 75 pages are just about like how unlikely it was that this show would ever hit the air.
and succeed.
The George Bush stuff is really fun.
There's just so many fun subplots in this book.
I just wanted to have fun talking about the show.
I will end by saying this.
Do you have any of these books in your library,
the episode compendiums?
My friend, I went to summer camp,
and when that book came out,
when the first official Simpsons episode guide came out,
we would pass it around and just quote it.
Because again, in like 1997, 1998,
couldn't watch the show.
You couldn't just get shows on demand.
You couldn't get clips on YouTube.
So we were remembering stuff that we didn't know,
unless you taped it off TV,
which very few people did.
I mean,
that book is like,
it's like falling apart on my bookshelf.
So this is The Simpsons,
a complete guide to our favorite family,
and it takes you seasons one to eight.
And like,
here's a page.
It's just like stacked with quotes
and images and plot devices.
And two things, number one, I took it to college, and the same thing happened with my college buddies.
We would just be like leafing through this book, like, oh my God, I forgot about that joke.
There was no YouTube to like, let's look up this joke.
Oh my God, I forgot about that episode.
That was so funny when that guy said that.
All the best jokes are like highlighted in small paragraphs here.
Second of all, when I worked at ESPN and if I ever do TV again, it was in my TV backdrop at home.
And my wife, and my TV backdrop is like serious books and back.
basketball books and a picture of Tim Duncan and a picture of my family and a TV itself that would
show the logo of like NBA today. And then this book in a prominent spot like above the TV.
And my wife would be like, why is that silly thing? Like up there, it doesn't fit in your basketball
backdrop like fans. People are going to think you're being silly. And I'm like, that if you if you
fucking touch that book, that book stays there in a place of primacy forever. The show is like a secret
handshake. If someone sees that book in your background, their eyes will light up. Like, maybe one
out of every 10 people, but it connects people in a way that, like, even some of the best shows ever
don't. And it's not a knock on Mad Men or Sopranos, but I just don't think it quite has that
connectivity that, like, The Simpsons has. Okay, I got, I have to ask you one more question
before I let you go, because now I'm looking at the photos. Favorite random non-core character?
It could be anybody from like Flanders level to someone who appears in five episodes.
Like favorite, just like this thing is always a pleasure.
I mean, sideshow Bob to me is always hysterical because it's like he's such a funny
caricature of like a right wing guy, right wing politician.
But also he's like very erudite and well read and like a musical theater sort of genius
who can sing like all of the HMS Pinafore or whatever.
And he, like, it's just such a nuanced portrayal of a character like that.
And like a lesser show would, you know, wouldn't do it that well.
And like you contrast him with like the most prominent like Democrat on the show.
And it's Mayor Quimby and he's a complete like corrupt corrupt asshole, which is funny
because the show definitely leans to the left.
But, you know, there's no sacred cows.
I'm going to just give you two off the top of my head.
One is a deep cut and one is obvious.
Troy McClure every time.
And you have a wonderful section in the book about Phil Hartman, who was glue on S&L and glue on The Simpsons 2.
Anytime they couldn't figure out a character, you go into Lionel Hutz and everything.
And then deeper, this is partly because it's a recency of memory.
I was watching a clip that had him.
Rainier Wolfcastle, who's the Arnold Schwarzenegger actor in the show, just every time he's on,
including in one of my favorite episodes,
the Springfield Film Festival,
where Mr. Burns gets Seniors Spilbergo
to direct his hagiography.
He has a great,
Rainier is in that one, too.
Those are my,
those are two off the side of my head.
There's a great,
this is for everybody.
There's a great clip on YouTube
of all the McBain clips spliced together
so that it's one movie.
I forgot it was McBain.
And at the end,
it's like, you know,
see McBain next in,
I think the name of the movie
is you have the right to remain dead,
is the,
name with a sequel, which I will always talk about.
Alan Siegel, uh, thank you so much for your time.
We might have to do a sequel to this when nothing's going on in the NBA, but everyone
everyone should buy the book.
Uh, you also, if I recall, wrote the oral history of Nirvana's unplugged.
Uh, was that, was that you too?
Yes, that's a very, very important memory for me.
We have to have some beers together because Nirvana is my favorite band of all time.
And that album was, that was a formative moment for me.
But anyway, everyone bought the book.
And, uh, thank you for your time.
I'll see you soon, buddy.
Thanks for having me, man.
See ya.
All right, that's it for a loaded, eclectic, random Zach Lowe show.
It's Monday.
The Board of Governors meets this week.
I think Kauai Leonard will probably come up.
We will be back on Thursday, most likely,
with another episode talking about whatever comes out of that,
whatever new happens in the NBA,
maybe a restricted free agent actually signs a contract like Cam Thomas did last week.
We will see.
Thank you to Victoria, Jesse and Sir Rudy on production.
Thank you for a lot watching, listening.
However you get your podcast, we'll see you later this week.
week on the Zach Glow show.
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