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cover of episode The NBA’s Danger Cycle, Plus Usyk Is Invincible, ‘Landman’ Can’t Lose, and Chalamet Will Win the Oscar With Chris Mannix and Chris Ryan

The NBA’s Danger Cycle, Plus Usyk Is Invincible, ‘Landman’ Can’t Lose, and Chalamet Will Win the Oscar With Chris Mannix and Chris Ryan

2024/12/18
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The Bill Simmons Podcast

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Bill Simmons: NBA联盟经常被认为处于危险之中,但这只是联盟发展中的一个反复出现的主题。联盟历史上曾多次面临危机,如今的担忧并非前所未有。他回顾了NBA历史上多个时期面临的挑战,例如早期联盟的混乱、70年代的扩张失败、80年代的毒品问题和种族问题、90年代末期乔丹退役后的低迷以及2000年代初期的规则调整等。他认为,NBA联盟需要一个新的“独角兽时刻”来扭转局面,重燃人们的兴趣。NBA的收视率下降,但这并不一定意味着人们对篮球的兴趣下降了,联盟需要找到新的吸引点,例如培养新的年轻球星,并改变比赛的观赏性。 Chris Mannix: 关于Jimmy Butler的交易传闻是目前NBA联盟中最热门的话题。他分析了迈阿密热火队可能交易Butler的原因,以及其他球队可能成为潜在买家的可能性,例如休斯顿火箭队。他认为,休斯顿火箭队应该考虑交易得到Jimmy Butler,以提升球队的实力,并补充球队在关键时刻的得分能力。

Deep Dive

Key Insights

Why are people concerned about the NBA's future despite its success globally?

People are concerned about the NBA's future in America due to several issues: the league is perceived as too reliant on foreign stars, there's a lack of recognizable American superstars under 30, the game has become too homogenous with excessive three-point shooting, and some feel the league is too politically active, which has driven away certain fans. Despite this, the league is financially strong globally and has a rich history of bouncing back from similar concerns.

Why is the Miami Heat considering trading Jimmy Butler?

The Miami Heat are considering trading Jimmy Butler because he doesn't fit the team's timeline. Most of their key players, including Bam Adebayo, are under 27, and Butler is 35. Miami is also exploring options to reboot and potentially maximize their roster in the short term, while Butler's contract and future with the team are uncertain.

Why does Bill Simmons think Usyk will dominate the upcoming fight against Fury?

Bill Simmons thinks Usyk will dominate the fight against Fury because Usyk is a generational great with superior boxing skills and discipline. Usyk's pressure style and ability to shrink the ring and land precise punches have been key in his past victories. In contrast, Fury's mental and physical state are questionable, especially given his recent issues and the fact that he has never faced a loss before.

Why is the February 2025 boxing super card significant?

The February 2025 boxing super card is significant because it features multiple high-quality fights that would typically headline their own cards. This deep and stacked card showcases the positive impact of the Saudis' investment in boxing, providing a rare opportunity for fans to see the best fighters in the world on a single night. However, there are concerns about the pacing and exposure of fighters, especially those in earlier bouts.

Why is Timothée Chalamet a strong contender for the Oscar for Best Actor in 'A Complete Unknown'?

Timothée Chalamet is a strong Oscar contender for his role in 'A Complete Unknown' because his performance as Bob Dylan is surprisingly convincing and powerful, especially in terms of his singing. Chalamet's promotional efforts and his ability to captivate audiences in this challenging role have generated significant buzz and momentum, making it likely that he will receive a nomination and potentially win the award.

Why is 'Landman' considered one of the best new shows of the decade?

‘Landman’ is considered one of the best new shows of the decade because it successfully blends elements of prestige TV with entertainment and humor. The show features a compelling father-son story, well-developed characters, and a unique setting in the Texas oil industry. It also offers a mix of drama, romance, and comedy, making it appealing to a wide audience and highly engaging to watch.

Chapters
Bill Simmons discusses the recurring theme of the NBA being "in danger", going back eight decades to show that this is a league that's always been on the line. He highlights five "unicorn moments" in NBA history where unexpected events propelled the league to new heights, interspersed with periods of uncertainty and near collapse. The discussion touches on various factors such as player aging, changing game styles, and cultural shifts.
  • Recurring theme of NBA being "in danger" throughout its history
  • Five "unicorn moments" that saved the NBA
  • American vs. global popularity of the NBA
  • The need for a new "unicorn moment" to revitalize the league

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
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Coming up, talking NBA Cup and the state of the NBA, boxing, land man, Timothy Chalamet. This is a great podcast. That's all next. This episode is brought to you by Uber Reserve. You know, it's a game changer for travel. Booking my ride in advance to the airport with Uber Reserve. Uber Reserve makes it easy to plan my whole trip. I just did this.

Booking rides up to 90 days in advance to help squeeze the most out of traveling, especially if you're doing odd hours, rush hours, like early in the morning. You got to do it. Plus with Uber Reserve, you'll get an assigned driver, you get upfront pricing, and you get extra wait time included. So go ahead, plan like a pro. Reserve your Uber ride up to 90 days in advance. See app for details. This episode is brought to you by Michelob Ultra. It's tip-off time for NBA Cup.

So I hope you're all ready and stocked up on Michelob Ultra. Notice how I called it NBA Cup and not the NBA Cup? Trying to get that going. We'll see how it goes. I really love how they're getting fans closer to all the action with Michelob Ultra Courtside. It has exclusive content and prizes like Courtside Seats, the trip to the Paris Global Game, or to All-Star Weekend and much more. Learn how you can get closer to the action.

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and void where prohibited. We're also brought to you by the Ringer Podcast Network, where I put up a new rewatchables last night. Chris Ryan and I did The Gambler, a movie that came out 10 years ago with Mark Wahlberg. One of our favorite gambling movies, a really kind of deep, fun movie to talk about and make fun of and also appreciate. So you can watch that on the Ringer Movies YouTube channel.

as well. Next week on the rewatchables, I think from next week is the first week we're going to be video pod on Spotify for the rewatchables. So you can watch it on our YouTube channel, ringer movies, but more importantly, you could watch it on Spotify as you're listening to it. You can just see our beautiful faces. So stay tuned for that on this podcast.

I'm going to start at the top with some thoughts about the NBA Cup, the final game, and also the state of the NBA because it's been a big topic lately. And I have some big picture thoughts about that. Chris Mannix joined us to talk about just the Jimmy Butler trade buzz in Vegas and some other NBA topics. And then really, I had him on to talk about boxing because we have a big card this weekend. My guy Usyk is fighting Fury, the rematch. So we're going to talk about that and some of the big heavyweight fights coming up.

And then last but not least, CR, Chris Ryan. We did a couple things in studio yesterday that I taped for this podcast. One is about Landman, which is my favorite TV show of the decade, just hands down. Succession really started last decade. So I can say my favorite new show of this decade. And then we talked about Timothee Chalamet and the Bob Dylan movie and Chalamet's

chances to win an Oscar? What should he do next? And more importantly, why hasn't he come on my fucking podcast yet? So we're gonna hit all that. First, our friends from Pearl Jam.

All right, I am taping this after the NBA Cup Final in Vegas. The Milwaukee Bucks, they destroyed the Oklahoma City Thunder, who could not hit a shot. It happens. They looked young.

They looked a little nervous. They looked like a team of young guys from Oklahoma City who had just spent the last five days in Las Vegas. They looked like a team that didn't realize they were at the adult table where Giannis was sitting, who proceeded to unleash holy hell on them, which he's been doing basically for over a month now. I think the last 16 games, he's something like 34, 15, and 7. He doesn't shoot threes anymore.

which I think, you know, not like he was jacking up 10 a game, but he was always shooting three. He, you know, would always kind of test it out. But now he's just like, I'm going to be early 2000 Shaq crossed with Spider-Man. And I think he's, as I'm recording this, he's plus 600 for MVP on FanDuel. And, you know, he's closed the gap with him and Jokic, as great as Jokic has been. Milwaukee seems like a real contender. OKC still seems like a contender. This is the league now. If you don't make threes,

you know, you're probably not going to win if you're shooting 35 to 53 as a game. If they're not going in, you don't have a chance, which ties into a bigger theme with what's going on with basketball right now. The last couple of weeks have been peak people asking me what's going on with the NBA. And, you know, part of it is the ratings.

because everyone loves to talk about ratings, even though the NBA just signed a $76 billion deal and the ratings don't ultimately really matter. It's an American thing more than a worldwide thing because the league's doing well globally. But when you look at big picture, what's going on with the league, you know, LeBron and Curry, they're old. They're making desperate changes. They just changed the all-star game again. They just did the NBA Cup in Vegas. Too many foreign stars. That's another thing you keep hearing.

The schedule is too long. Been saying that for 20 years. We can't find any under 30 American superstars to carry the torch from LeBron and Curry. That's a valid thing. Too many threes, too much sameness in the game. Can't really counter that. Too woke. The league's too woke. It's driven off a lot of possible fans. I'm not touching that one.

It's an American problem and it's not a worldwide problem because again, worldwide, internationally, the league is doing really well, but it's an American problem. And yet the franchise values are the highest it's ever been. They just got the highest meteorite steal they've ever gotten. They have, I would say 35 to 40 completely recognizable stars, whereas football might have 10. So it's not like this is a disaster, but this is what we do with the NBA.

We love to panic. We love to talk about how things are bad. And it's a little like what SNL is like, where everybody's like, SNL's dead, SNL's done. And then guess what? SNL's gonna have its 50th year. This is an American problem, and this is eight decades of a recurring theme that I would call the NBA is in danger, that we're now living through again in December 2024.

I want to go backwards. I want to go through eight decades of NBA history to show that for the most part, this is a league that's kind of always a little bit in danger. Like football dating back to the John Unitas beating the Giants in the late 50s, the greatest game ever played to that point. Football has always been solid.

50, 60, 70s, Super Bowl, the merger. It's just been going and going. The only time I ever remember people even wondering what the future of football was going to be like, and I was one of the ones wondering, was the early 2010s with concussions, Goodell. We had to add a bunch of stuff with Gates after it. It seemed like they had to change the way that football was being played because it was too violent.

And there was a moment there where it was like, where's football? Are you going to let your sons play football? Are we going to be watching this in 20 years? And guess what? COVID happened and everybody was like, you know what? I love football. And now football feels like it's the biggest it's ever been. If you're talking about basketball,

It's always been on the line of being in danger. So you go back to the 40s and 50s, the first 15 years of the league. The league, by the time we got to 1954, the league was in complete chaos. The pace was too slow. There was no shot clock. People were just fouling each other, trying to dribble out the clock. George Mikan was dominating everything and the league kind of sucked. And then they came up with a shot clock. That fixed some of it.

it was still really violent it was a lot like hockey back then um there wasn't nearly enough scoring they had a big betting scandal that would that was a big thing there were barely any black players kind of a problem all the best black players were playing for the harlem globe trotters other places because they wouldn't let them in the league and when you think back to where the nba was even in the mid 50s when russell showed up it was regional everything was in the east coast

Or like the Pennsylvania area, the fringes of the Midwest. There were no West Coast teams. And the NFL was bigger. College football and college basketball were bigger. Baseball was bigger. Boxing, horse racing. Name a sport. It was probably dead even with hockey. Get to the 60s. Russell's in there. We start finally getting some black stars. We get Elgin Baylor. We get Oscar. We get Will Chamberlain. And the 60s becomes...

You know, Wilt versus Russell, Celtics dominance. It's still not going awesome. We still don't have like a definitive. The league is fine.

moment. And at the same time, this is one of the most tumultuous decades in American history. There's a whole civil rights battle happening. There's assassinations all over the place. And, you know, a league that's becoming a mostly black league had a pretty strange fit among all of that, especially as Russell is becoming one of the dominant athletes we've ever had and a huge spokesman along with Ali and Jim Brown and some others.

So the league is gaining steam from an impact standpoint, but it still hasn't hit the popular piece yet.

And then we have our first unicorn situation. There's five unicorn situations total. And I want you to remember this because we're going to tie it back in at the end. So this first unicorn situation, the 1969 finals, which turned out to be Russell's last NBA finals. He's going for his 11th title. They're underdogs against the Lakers. We finally have a California team. We have Jerry West and Will Chamberlain and Elgin Baylor. And the Lakers are favored to win game seven in LA. Russell beats them. And it turns out to be like the first great modern

NBA finals game that we had the next year, the Knicks, everyone in New York is like so delighted. The Knicks are finally good at basketball. Like the Celtics are gone. They have a chance to win the title. 1970 finals. Willis gets hurt, comes back game seven, becomes one of the most famous games in NBA history. Also will kind of chokes. Uh, so we have that Kareem enters the league that same year. And then in 1971, he wins the title. He's the most Ballyhoo Ballyhoo college player. Um,

um, to that point to somebody that's considered to be a successor to Russell and Wilt. So he's in the league. And then the next year, 71, 72, the Lakers went 33 straight. Jerry West finally wins the title. So you have this four year unicorn run, all these crazy events, and it propels the league up a level. And all of a sudden now the NBA is looking really good. Well,

We have to go back to the danger zone again. From 1973 to 1976, they overexpand. They make the classic mistake of they just add too many teams. The ABA has formed and is stealing a lot of the young players. So all of a sudden, the quality of the play is starting to go down. The quality of officiating is starting to go down.

ABC loses the NBA to CBS because CBS kind of double crosses Rune Arledge, who's the most important sports executive probably of all time. And Rune Arledge is pissed and decides to counter Bergeron and the living shit out of the NBA. College football, college basketball, wide world of sports, the superstars competition. And he just makes it his life's mission to set the NBA backwards. There's a salary boom that

That happens where all of a sudden you have some guys that aren't doing that well who are making a lot of money and everyone's really aware of it. Sidney Wicks, Pete Maravich, Spencer Haywood. So there's animosity toward basketball players for the first time. The Knicks and Lakers are done at that point by the time we get to the mid-70s.

And they have the future of the league, or so we would have thought on paper, Dr. J, Julius Irving, he's in the ABA. He's not even on television. So the NBA not only is getting older with some of their older stars, like, you know, Havlicek, Jerry West, all the guys from the previous generation, Oscar. But Doc, the guy who's supposed to come in and carry the league with Kareem, is in the wrong league and not on TV. And I'm a young kid in Boston. I would have loved watching Dr. J.

Not on TV. So again, we're in danger. And then what happens? 19, we have a second unicorn situation. The 1976 finals, Havlicek and Callens on Boston, two of the most famous guys in the league. They're playing Phoenix, triple overtime game. I was lucky enough to be at the game with my dad. I was six years old. I might've slept through the fourth quarter in the first two overtimes. But it turns out to be the greatest game in the history of the league. Celtics win the title. The NBA is back.

The ABA merges into the NBA that summer. All of a sudden we have Dr. J, David Thompson, George Girvin, George McGinnis, all the Moses Malone, all these guys are now in the NBA and the NBA is 22 teams and stacked. And it's awesome. And that leads to Kareem jumping to cream's already in LA. Walton's on the blazers. The blazers take off that year. Uh, and it's a late run second half of the year into the playoffs. They beat the beat Kareem.

They end up beating Dr. J and Philly in the finals. Bill Walton, turns out maybe he's the next Bill Russell. Everybody's in love with the guy. He's got the beard. He takes the jersey off after they win. So this is unicorn number two situation. 76 finals, 77 finals. Basketball seems like it's in the best shape that it's been in maybe ever.

What happens? We go back to the danger zone, the late seventies into the early eighties. Walton gets hurt the next year, never really recovers. And I, it would be like when Binyama won the title this year and then just got hurt and we didn't see him for six years. The cocaine era happens and the cocaine that's hitting all the sports that's hitting Hollywood, that's hitting the comedy circles. Cocaine starts to wipe out

Pretty much everybody starting in 1978, and it does some real damage to the NBA and cut short some careers, changes the course of some careers, some young stars that they're counting on go sideways. So you have that. You have the Kermit Washington punch.

in late 1977, that 77, 78 season where he punches Rudy Tomjanovich, a white guy, and all this ugly stuff surfaces up. All the casual racism that people felt toward, you know, a mostly black league being catered and sold to mostly white fans, that all pops up. And this crazy two-year run of, you can go back and read some of the old Sports Illustrated things about the league's too black.

that it's never gonna work. And it just, it fucking goes crazy in a bad, bad, bad way. In a way that even as a little kid, I was kind of noticing the way they were talking about it. It was not great. We had the dumb owner apex back then. This is when basically anybody could buy an NBA team and you just had these dumb owners. Like the Celtics for a year had John White Brown. He was terrible.

Just dumb owners making dumb trades, not trying to build anything. So the teams that are just in constant chaos, you have the dumb commissioner apex to Larry O'Brien, who's awful. David Stern comes in and looks a hundred times better compared to him. A few years later, you have CBS fucking up.

the playoffs either do tape delaying the primetime games or making the NBA schedule weekend playoff games so that you're playing game three and game four of a series back-to-back days. So they could care less about the health of the players. They really didn't want to show the NBA because it wasn't doing that well. So you had that

You had college hoops, the NFL, baseball, NHL, boxing, college football, and horse racing are all more popular than the NBA by the end of the seventies. Cause they have the Washington Seattle finals twice around, which is a great basketball finals, but not exactly a marquee finals. And all of it is eventually captured in breaks of the game by David Halberstam, the best sports book of all time that comes out, I think in 82, but the NBA, like they're like the Lakers play the Sixers, I think in 82 and 83, uh,

And some of those games weren't even on live television. They weren't on until 1130 on the East Coast. That's how bad it was for the NBA. So I'm going to say a little more dangerous than right now. Leading to our third unicorn situation, the 1984 finals. We had Bird and Magic in the league for a while. They don't play against each other in the finals, even though they have this great rivalry dating back to 79 when college basketball was way bigger than the NBA. Bird and Magic play each other during the same year CBS is like, you know what?

We're showing all of these finals games live now. We're going to show them in prime time. We're going to really try to get behind the league and they get bird of magic. They get a seven game series. They get one of the great series in the history of the league that happens. They have Michael Jordan on the Olympic team that summer coming into the league on the Chicago bulls, the third biggest market they have. MJ happens.

And then we're off. We get David Stern. We get Cable. We have USA and ESPN by that point. So as a little kid on the East Coast, all of a sudden I'm able, I couldn't see George Gervin and David Thompson or whoever in the 70s unless I went to the Boston Garden to see them. Now in the 80s, I can just pop on Cable. I can see Dominique Wilkins. I can see Isaiah Thomas. I can see Adrian Danley. Whoever I want, I can see. I can see Magic Johnson on the other coast. So that's happening. They're figuring out how to brand stuff better and

Once MJ really gets going with the bulls, the NBA takes off. We get the NBA fantastic commercials and we have this incredible unicorn 15 year run bird versus magic Jordan, six titles. We have the Riley Knicks and Hakeem and Barkley and Isaiah's Pistons, the Blazers, Sean Kemp and GP Stockton and Malone. I didn't really like watching them that much, but I'm going to throw them in anyway. Uh,

On and on and on it went. And it was the watershed time to ever be a basketball fan. It was the most talent concentrated into one area. Everyone's playing super hard. The league was the most fun, I would say, in the late 80s, early 90s.

And it just keeps, Jordan retires. They're fine because the Knicks make it that year. Jordan comes back. It becomes the biggest story really of anything other than maybe the decision with LeBron. Jordan wins three straight titles in a row in the Bulls, including the 72-win Bulls. And the NBA just goes, it's just arrow pointing up. All of it's captured in the last dance. Well, what happens? We hit the danger zone again. MJ retires. Right after he retires,

lockout, no basketball for six, seven months. People are pissed because these guys are making so much money. The young guys are able to switch teams three, four years. Everyone starts getting mad. All the ugly, casual racism stuff starts like percolating a little bit again. It's like as hip hop culture infected the NBA, Stern puts in a dress code. Wasn't great. Not great times. Well, what happens? We don't have an MJ successor. Grant Hill,

KG, Tim Duncan, C-Web, Iverson, Shaq. We're an MJ successors. And then 2000, Kobe and Shaq. So we have Shaq and Kobe together. We kind of know something's happening with Kobe. And in the 2000 season, that's unicorn number four, Shaq and Kobe.

Shaq fouls out of game four of the finals. Kobe comes in, puts on the Superman cape, wins the game. They end up winning the title. This is after they escaped against Portland the previous round. And now we have this crazy Kobe and Shaq run. That was like real drama, real theater. They were great. The 2001 Laker team is probably one of the two best teams of the century.

As of that's happening, a phenom named LeBron James is in high school. He's going to be in the 2003 draft with Carmelo and some others. And the league looks great from 2000 to 2003. That is our unicorn number four moment. Shaq and Kobe ending up on the same team in Los Angeles, California on the Lakers. Couldn't have worked out better. Well, we immediately hit the danger zone again in 2003. We have the Kobe incident and the trial. Not great.

We have the 2003 and 2004 finals, which were rock fights and ESPN Classic and NBA TV Hardware Classics, I think are banned from showing any of those games. Defense got too good. The game got too physical. We had Kobe and Shaq falling apart. The game slowed down. The pace slowed down to the point that after the 2004 season, they had to add all these rule changes and these other legal defense stuff just to try to quicken stuff up again.

And you had a league that was built around Tim Duncan. I think he's one of the seven best players of all time. Didn't really resonate with people like he should have. Dirk Nowitzki, German. KG, mostly stuck on bad teams except for 0-4. C-Web, Dwayne Wade, Angry Kobe, Young LeBron on crappy Cavs teams.

It was grim. And if you remember, like when I was writing for Page Two, back when my fingers worked, I used to have a joke about how I was one of the last 20 NBA fans. The joke was that the NBA kind of sucks now, but I still love it. And this was a gimmick that I would do because we were in real danger with the league. Culminating in the 06 finals where we had the referee controversy with Dallas and Miami. And we've all agreed not to talk about the 2006 finals. Then the 2007 finals were the East

was like in such bad shape. LeBron ends up making the finals. He's a heroic performance by him with just an awful Cavs team that I think would be a 14 seed if we had them in the season now. So things are grim. Things are bad. There's a lot of what's wrong. You can go back and search for my column archives, multiple what's wrong with the NBA column. What happens?

Well, unicorn number five situation happens 2008 to 2018. In short order, we get the probably illegal Pau Gasol trade where the Lakers just steal Pau Gasol and nobody even else knows he's available. Thanks again to Chris Wallace for creating the second mini Kobe dynasty. Gasol and the Lakers. Now the Lakers are a contender. KG's already been traded to Boston. Now Boston's contender. All of a sudden we have Celtics Lakers in 2008

And we're off, baby. We're back. We have, uh, we, Kobe, Kobe loses in 08, but wins the next two finals. Celtics are in there in 2010 against them. After 2010, LeBron, who can't get it done with Cleveland, the decision, probably the single biggest off the court NBA moment that we've had other than MJ retiring the decision. He changes teams. People lose their fucking minds. Goes to Miami.

All of a sudden we have Miami LeBron. We have aging, but still fun Kobe on a contender Lakers. Aging, but still fun Celtics. A bunch of great young players coming up like KD and Russ on the Thunder. It's just going and going and going. And then what happens? Curry and the Warriors show up.

Curry reinvents basketball. He's hitting threes from all over the place with Klay Thompson. They have their little run. This goes all the way through 2019. 2019 finals is the tipping point. Durant gets hurt. Klay gets hurt. That Warriors dynasty ends. Durant, we lose a year of his prime. We lose a whole year of Curry's prime with the Warriors. Really, two years. But that was our last unicorn stretch, 2008 to 2019. And then what happens?

We're in danger again, starting in 2020. The bubble. The bubble ends this really fun NBA season we're having where LeBron and the Lakers, Kawhi and the Clippers, Giannis is on his way up, Jokic is on his way up, Embiid's on his way up, Tatum and Brown are on Boston, and it just feels like, and then boom, the bubble, weird.

The player movement becomes out of control. It just feels like every year guys are switching teams. It starts to feel a little more like NBA 2K. Load management becomes a bigger story. The schedule's too long. We all hate it. They won't do anything about it. The three-point stuff just gets worse and worse and worse. Now we have the Celtics shooting over 53s. So there's a sameness to a lot of the games that I think...

A lot of people are down on. I would encourage people to go back and watch some of the terrible post-ups in the 80s and 90s and see if you still don't like threes. But there's definitely a Curry effect with how the game is being played.

The foreign stars are now all the best under 30 guys. And this is a league that dating back to Hakeem, who is just one of the best players I've ever seen in my life, but he wasn't from here and he never resonated like an American guy. Now we have Yoka, Jinyan, Esa-Nuka and Embiid and Wemby and maybe even SGA if he can bounce back and from, from a terrible NBA cup.

and become a real guy this year, maybe take OKC to the finals. Those are six guys that aren't from here. And we're talking about when is the next star? This is a league that's so beholden to the LeBron, Curry, Durant era

and seems so afraid to pass the torch to the under 30 guys. You can see it with the TV schedule. OKC is on TV this year less than the Lakers, less than the Warriors because they keep feeding us LeBron and Curry. You watch ESPN, all the content they're doing on First Take and on the NBA Today, it's always Lakers, Lakers, Lakers. They're playing the hits.

And it's coming at the expense of trying to build up these, these new stars, which we even saw in the Olympics. I love the Olympics. I thought, I thought LeBron and Curry and Durant watching those guys like fend off Serbia and France, like that was amazing stuff, but it did come at the expense of the next generation of guys who kind of needed a moment like that, you know? And I think this league is, if there, if there's a criticism that I think is valid, it's, it's

pushing these guys that have kind of already had their moment that were already great and trying to extract more great moments from them when there's probably not a lot of greatness left versus rolling the dice with some of the new guys, which is, you know, I see why they do it. But at the same time, like they gotta be pushing the younger guys more. And at the same time, like you have somebody like Edwards who, uh,

is such a unique and original guy. And then he shows up for this season, he's shooting 12 threes a game and he's starting to look like everybody else I'm watching. So there's a sameness to the new guys. And then you have somebody like Jokic who is really bird and magic trapped in a Serbian seven foot doughy body. But he's not from here. And for whatever reason, he doesn't cook with fans. I don't think the way he should. So my point, big picture,

is that we've had five unicorn moments and now we're due for a sixth. And this league has been around for eight decades. And every time a unicorn moment, we're not even in the middle of one or we don't have one coming, everybody thinks the NBA is in trouble. They're in danger. It's over. This is just the DNA of the league. And here's what's going to happen. There's going to be some new player that comes in, some new team, some new event. It's going to shift this

And all of a sudden we'll be like, oh, you know, it's like when we did the Vince McMahon documentary, Triple H had this great quote about when he was talking about when Stone Cold and Vince and that whole era. And he was like, I felt it's like an earthquake. It's like, did I feel that? Did something move? And you just kind of know from a narrative standpoint, something has moved.

And that's what the NBA needs right now. I don't know what that's going to be, but I'm going to bet on the 80 year history of the league and the fact that internationally, it's fine. This is an American problem. People are losing interest in America because they can, you know, watch fourth quarters of games in the NBA app. They can follow it like what Derek Thompson said on my podcast. You can follow the league without really watching it. So the ratings are down, but I'm not sure the interest is down what they're missing.

ironically, is what women's college basketball with the WNBA had, where Caitlyn became somebody that people just wanted to watch. They just wanted to watch her games. They didn't care who she was playing. They didn't care what the stakes were. They wanted to watch her. And that's why I think you could really make the case. She's more valuable than anyone the NBA has because she's the only must-watch basketball player right now other than the old guys in the NBA. So they have to figure out

What is their unicorn moment? But my prediction is that it's the NBA. It's been 80 years. It's looked bleak before. They always bounce back. This is the league we have chosen. We're going to take a break and we are going to come back with Chris Maddox.

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It's nice to see all the different family traditions people do this time of year. You know what's become one of my new favorite traditions? My daughter comes home from college. We haven't seen her in LA where I live since the beginning of August. So when she comes home,

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All right. Chris Mannix is here. You can read him on Sports Illustrated. You can listen to his excellent boxing pod. He's got a basketball pod too. He's in Vegas. We're taping this before the NBA Cup tonight. So we're going to avoid that. You really came on to talk boxing. I'm going to save that. I'm going to put that over. Just quickly, some basketball stuff because you've been in Vegas for a couple of days. What's the big buzz? What are all the kids talking about?

Well, the NBA really wants you to care about the NBA Cup. That's for sure. We'll see how much that sticks. But really, when you talk to people with different teams, the buzz nowadays is Jimmy Butler. And what exactly is going to happen down there in Miami? It's pretty clear at this point that

There'll be a few teams that express some level of interest in Jimmy Butler. And now I think the question is what kind of motivation does

does Miami have to do a deal here? Like Miami's playing some pretty good basketball. Jimmy just went for 35 the other night and we know the heat when they, they just believe when they get to the playoffs, they can beat anybody and they've got a decent track record of, well, in 2022, they did, right? Yeah. It's not happening this year. Yeah. Probably not. No, I agree with you. And,

If you look at their roster, Jimmy doesn't fit the timeline. Everybody, including Bam Adebayo, is 27 and younger. So you figure the Heat would have to get motivated to do a deal. The question is when, who's going to be on the table, what kind of offers are there. That's really kind of the most interesting thing, I think, in the league right now. So I watched the fourth quarter in OT of the game last night against Detroit that they ended up losing in OT.

He was incredible in that game. I think he had like a 35, 19 and 12, something like that. But it looked like playoff Jimmy was really trying hard. That team has a weird identity issue with with Hero, who's been excellent. And it seems like over and over again at the end of games, it's just these Hero 27 footers or Butler. Bam's not involved really at all.

And, uh, it's just, it's just a weird team to watch. It's not a team that's going to win four straight playoff rounds, but it seems like to me, we've seen this go a couple of different ways with the guy who maybe doesn't want to be there anymore. He's got, you know, he's going to be a free agent at the end of the year. Maybe he's not, he's not happy. The team didn't give him an extension. He seems like he's moved toward the, I'm actually mad. I didn't get the extension and now I'm leaving after the year. I'm going to show everybody how awesome I am.

And to me, I said this on the pod the other day, Houston's the team. You watch Houston. Were you there for the NBA Cup semifinals? I was not at that game, no. But I do think, Bill, Houston, they doth protest too much about how they're going to keep this team together. Every time you see a quote from Raphael Stone or some reporting coming out of Houston, it's, we want to keep this team together and...

and see what it has. And I get that. I understand wanting to see how a young team fits over 82 games, how a young team plays in the postseason and kind of using that as a data point to build off of. But if you have a chance to supercharge your roster with a defensive-minded veteran that would fit in pretty well, I think, in Ime Udoka's system and his culture, I think you've got to at least take a swing.

Well, and the other big part is an end of the game guy, which they don't have. They, you really feel it. Like they have no chance in an OKC playoff series. They're just not going to be able to get shots. They want OKC just strangled them. You know, it's like we're talking boxing later. It was like watching the boxer who just doesn't let the other guy breathe. And the guy just is trapped in the corner against the ropes. Just just trying to hang on. That's how I felt watching them offensively. Shangoon's probably the safest bet. I don't trust any of their perimeter guys.

And they don't have that one guy who's like, all right, one point game, three minutes left, like kind of take us home. They go to Fred VanVleet. I don't trust Jalen Green at all. Like he gone down the line, but I like a lot of their players and I do think they have an identity. And what's interesting is he fits in with the identity so perfectly. So I was saying a couple of days ago about Butler with Rozier.

And then Van Vliet's expiring's in there and you load it with, uh, you know, guys to make that they have a bunch of expirings to make it work. And then they have picks. And for Miami, it's just a reboot. They get cap space this summer. Nobody has cap space this summer. It's one of the crazy things. Yeah. And one other team, right? It's like Washington or say there's, I think there's only two teams with 30 million and up Miami could rig this. So all of a sudden they could have the most cap space and be, to me, it's a reboot destination. Yeah.

And all of a sudden, next year, they're a different team and a little more dangerous. And we've seen them do this multiple times in the last 20 years, right? It seems bleak, then all of a sudden, they're back. So I'm working under the assumption they're trading them. You don't think they would possibly think that they could beat the Celtics and the Cavaliers and OKC? I just can't believe they would think that.

I think they could, they probably think they could be competitive with Cleveland because there are things you can exploit against the Cavs in a seven game series. They can't believe they're on Boston's level. They're not. And that's really the bar, right? Like, yeah, they could look as of right now, today, they could extend Jimmy Butler. They,

They can give him two years, buck 13. Like you, you've got to think till June 30th to do that. If you really want it to, they don't want to, you know, he's 35 years old and no matter how he's playing right now, like the idea of attacking two more years onto to that option year, it doesn't make any sense to them. And I get that. Like how many teams over the last 12 months, uh,

have hand out extensions they wish they didn't. Right? Like Denver and Jamal Murray. The Sixers and Joel Embiid even. Like, you don't... Even? That's the number one extension to me. I was trying to be nice. I was trying to be nice. Like Embiid at least has like an MVP track record. Murray had never even been an all-star. He was coming off that absolute crap of an Olympic run. Those guys are just examples of...

guys you give extensions to way too early. Miami, they're on a different path here. Jimmy's not going to be on it. I think my question would be, Bill, is if like... The draft capital move is probably the right way to go. The expiring contract is probably the right way to go. Reboot. Use that cap flexibility. But...

can you get interested in Michael Porter Jr. if that's a deal with Denver? I saw you had that last week. As a Jokic guy, I loved it and I was trying to talk myself into it, but that can't be the centerpiece. I mean, you don't think that, do you? Is Porter Jr.

Is Porter the centerpiece of a Butler trade? I mean, he's such a good offensive player. And I just think in that Miami system, you could unlock even more in him. But now I don't have cap space next year. I do that. You don't. I'm committed to those three guys. You're throwing out your cap flexibility stuff. You're going two more years at big number for Michael Porter Jr. After this year. Yeah. Yeah, after this year. Right. It's a tough call. I love his offensive play.

Everything he can do offensively, I love. And he's kind of shaken off the injury bug from the last couple of years. I just wondered, he kind of fits the timeline too. What is he like, 25, 26 years old? All of a sudden, you're adding MPJ in with all these young guys, throw Jaime Jaquez into that mix. I guess, can you get something better than Porter Jr. in free agency? It would be kind of my question over the next couple.

couple of summers. I don't know the answer to that. You know who would root for that trade is the Celtics because they'd be like, oh wait, you're going to have Porter and Hero and the same team in crunch time? This is great. It's like an all you can eat for who we're going to attack. I'm with you in the sense that I do like Porter as an asset

A little more than I think other people, the contract, the back issues, like there's, there's real things to be scared about. Like the defense, the fact that he's been replaced during games and crunch time for Russell Westbrook for defensive purposes. Like there's red flags.

I love that he's played with Jokic for this long because that's like getting your fucking masters for how to play basketball. Right. There does seem like there's more there offensively. But to me, that's a guy I like. I'm looking at a team like Brooklyn or some of the other like Eastern Conference also rants. And if you're looking at Porter thinking like, you know what?

This is a guy who might be a 25 point game, point of game score on a different team. You know, right now he's in the corner a lot, or he's like just trying to play. Jokic and Murray are running everything.

So what might that look like on a crappier team? What could that look like on like the Pistons with what we watched, you know, with Tim Hardaway and Beasley are doing it in that and Tobias Harris are doing that kind of shooting forward spot. What if you put Porter in there? So, yeah, listen, I would love to see Denver somehow improve this.

I just don't know. I don't think Porter is enough to get somebody like Butler. And then Golden State feels like they shot their wad with the Melton thing. Now they can't put the salaries together. Yeah. Well, you can still, I guess, rules-wise, put Schroeder into a deal. And I don't know who's going to want Schroeder on the expiring. And they've got some... The problem with Denver is they have no draft capital, right? Like, you'd have to throw, like, Zeke Nagy into that and hope somebody...

But man, you watch them and I've watched a lot of them the last couple weeks. Like they need something. Like they need somebody with an edge. They need somebody to bring some energy to that team. I know Murray's had a good couple of games like 48 over the last two, but you know, he looks awful. His shooting numbers are all down. Jokic, I mean, I

I don't want to dump on the guy because he's having a ridiculous offensive season, but defensively, he's terrible. And that's a big reason why they've sunk as far as they have defensively. So they just need an infusion of something if they're going to maximize these last, not last, but these few years of Jokic playing at an MVP level. And I don't know if Butler's the guy because all of a sudden you can't shoot at multiple positions, but his edge and the way he plays, I think that would be...

something that Denver needs. He's certainly the most fun for the playoff run. I can't believe you said Jokic's defense was terrible. That really hurt my feelings as a number one Jokic lover. It's conditionally terrible because he's got great hands. He's jumping passing lanes. He gets steals. He's very active. He's good at breaking two-on-ones. There's things he does well, but then you watch a game like the Kings last night where they're just...

Getting basically whatever they want. And, you know, his lack of rim protection becomes more of a problem. Well, this is this is the problem among the problems. And I was talking to to an assistant coach that that went up against him in the last couple of weeks. And, you know, part of it is Michael Malone is just running him out there for like 38 minutes a game. Yeah, because he has to.

If you're carrying that heavy an offensive burden, it's going to cost you something on the other end, no matter who you are. And I think it's costing him there. The other thing I keep hearing, and I haven't been around him personally enough to see it, but people keep saying he's heavy, right? Like he's not in the kind of shape you've seen him in in years past. And all those things have...

you know, caused him to go from being a guy that people saw trending towards like an average to good defender. Like he's never going to be elite, but an average to good defender to now he's kind of taken a step back into that, that below average defensive range. And look, it doesn't really matter for their purposes because he is so dynamic offensively, but he's,

Look at their defensive problems, and some of them are solved with Aaron Gordon back in the mix, but Jokic, Murray getting killed on the point of attack, some of the guys off the bench not delivering. They're not a good defensive team for all those reasons. Well, and I think the too many minutes thing is a big problem, too. Is there any other Butler team? Because you threw out Denver the other day. Golden State and Houston were the two I was focusing on in the content I did. Is there...

Is there anybody else we're not thinking of? Because it doesn't seem like there is. I get amused by how many times I keep hearing Phoenix thrown in this discussion like it makes any sense for anybody to do a deal like that. Like, Phoenix would have to trade Bradley Beal. Miami would have to want Bradley Beal. I don't know why Miami... And he would have to waive a no trade clause and he's not Bradley Beal anymore. Like, he's... If it was three years ago, Bradley Beal, I guess we could talk about it, but not the guy now. It doesn't seem like he can play for three straight weeks.

I see a lot of just going down through Hoopsite, but it's like Phoenix interested in Jimmy Butler. Dallas. Dallas too. That's another one. That's not going to happen. I could see Golden State taking a swing. Golden State and Denver are the two teams that probably aren't all that concerned about Jimmy Butler next year. It's all about this year. You want to maximize a window. And if Golden State can get him for some combination of Andrew Wiggins and Brandon Pajemski, then you'd probably jump at that.

if you're the Warriors and if Denver can get him, you know, just for Michael Porter Jr. and some filler, you'd probably jump at that if you're, if you're the Nuggets, at least you should, because you're, you're, you're not looking at two, three years down the line. You're looking at now to win something. I thought I was going to add Thursday. I had the Cam Johnson, Dennis Schroeder, golden state. I did a whole thing about it. And I really thought that was going to be how it played out. And then they got Schroeder two days later and they didn't get Cam Johnson. And then the reporting people were saying they didn't want to put Kaminga on the table.

in a Cam Johnson trade. I was really surprised by that because the contract that Cam Johnson's on versus what Kaminga is probably going to get for agency next year, 30 million, I'm guessing Johnson's like at 22. I'd just rather have Cam Johnson. I think he's a better asset. And I thought if they, and that's why I don't feel like that's dead yet, because I think the more you stare at that, the more you think, ah, Cam Johnson at 22 is...

just a good asset. That's like, if I was doing like top 30 best contracts in the league for non-rookie contract guys, Kim Johnson's in like the top 12 making 22 a year. So I don't think that's dead yet.

Do you think they're holding on to Kaminga, though, to see if there's something better out there than Cam Johnson? Yeah. I think they're holding on. The problem, though, you mentioned Schroeder before. I don't know if they can trade him in a trade where he's with other players because the trade deadline's early this year. It's like February 6th. So I think the trade they did for Schroeder, it's not in that two-month window where then you can repackage the guy for multiple guys. I think it is, though. Did they change the rule for that? No.

I'm not smart enough to remember all the new rules there, but I do think... Maybe they changed it. From what I heard coming out of this was that they can package Schroeder

as for another deal. So it's basically, it's the same contract as DeAnthony Mouth. The second round capital they swapped means nothing. Well, that's great then. So then they could do Kaminga, Wiggins, Schroeder, and they'd have to find a fourth guy somewhere like Podzemski, who I think they overvalued over the summer. I think it was one of the lessons of the summer.

That was like they were making him basically an untouchable and he's just been really bad this year. Not totally his fault he's playing out of position, but he has been good.

He's in low 30s from three-point range. He's really cratered in that sense. Schroeder's interesting. I mean, if he gets traded again, what, the big nine teams in eight years? Why do you think it didn't work for him in Boston? Because this version of Schroeder now I really like, but in Boston, it just didn't work. Yeah, it's probably more to do with style of play. I don't really remember all the... I don't think there were any issues in the locker room. He had some of those early in his career, but I think he's moved past them. Yeah, it seemed like they liked him.

Yeah, and getting moved from Brooklyn is more about like, hey, we want a guy that can't play more than we want a guy that can. So I don't know, but offensively, I think he's going to help the Warriors to bring it full circle in the short term. I think having another ball handler is good. Having another scorer is good. A guy that can make shots in clutch situations. Obviously, Kerr likes him. I think he's going to help, but I don't think he's untouchable over these next couple of months either. I really like him too because competitive...

a good defensive player, like just feisty. So the feistiness now you have him and you have Draymond and, uh, Kamiga gets a little feisty. Sometimes Curry talks shit. Like there's a little more of an identity with the team. The only other Butler I was looking at and trying to figure out any way was the Cavs. Just,

Does that even make sense? Do they have the contracts? I just couldn't figure it out. And I'm not confident that they would do anything major anyway because they have great chemistry right now, and I don't think you'd want to fuck with that. The Cavs, to me, they're a great regular season team. They're built to win a whole bunch of regular season games because they'll play 11 guys, and that's awesome in the regular season. But that's not really consequential enough

in the playoffs. I love Mitchell and Garland right now, but smallish guards in the postseason can get exploited. We've seen it happen even in Cleveland before. So, you know, any deal with Butler and Cleveland would have to, I assume, involve Garland. Do you want Garland if you're Miami? Does that make any sense? You brought up defensive issues with Hero and Porter. It's the same kind of situation if you bring Garland into that mix. I don't know. If I'm...

I don't think that's the move if I'm Cleveland, but I don't know that I'd make Cleveland a threat to Boston yet either, despite the fact they played really well against them in those two games. Let me ask you, if salaries, if you could throw out salaries when you made trades, do you think the Celtics would trade Peyton Pritchard straight up for Giannis? I mean, yes, but the fact that we're even asking that question. How about Peyton Pritchard for Jimmy Butler?

I don't know, man. This is an unbelievable season that he's having. I mean, this is beyond six man of the year. Like his per 36 stats now are nuts. Incredible. Shooting stats are nuts. He's in the running for one of the best six man seasons anyone's had since like John Havlicek for the Celtics. I can't believe what I'm watching.

the short answer to Pritchard for Butler is I think Boston would say no because Butler doesn't shoot threes. If you play for the Celtics, you have to shoot at least eight threes a game to, or be able to, to do. I mean, he's been awesome and what a contract he's on too. Like, you'd have to, you couldn't do a Butler deal because Butler's making like, what, 46 million and Peyton's making eight. So,

So you can't even, you can barely put him in any trade. I would say if you're doing best contracts in the league, he's got to be in like the top three. He might even be number one. He's six million of the year. It's 7 million bucks and also gives them the luxury of like, oh, Derek White's a little banged up tonight. We'll just play Pritchard. He'll score 29 in the starting spots. It's really great. I mean, the ceiling of this regular season Celtics team when everybody's back, I do feel like they have like a 16, 18 game winning streak in there somewhere before the season ends.

Can you think of a player... I can't think of a player that's had the kind of three-year stretch of Peyton Pritchard where it's like he's not playing, Joe Mazzulla doesn't like him, he wants to be traded, and all of a sudden he's getting opportunity, and now he's in the sixth man of the year. I'm sure guys have had this kind of rollercoaster ride, but...

I haven't seen one like Peyton Pritchard to get to this level. You said a couple of years ago, this was where we would be talking about Peyton Pritchard, where would you trade him for Giannis or Jimmy Butler? Well, those were jokes. I know, I know. But I don't think Butler's a joke. I wouldn't trade him for Jimmy Butler. I mean, it's going to come off crazy, but Peyton Pritchard fits what this team is doing. Peyton Pritchard can come off the bench and knock down six threes, two of them at the buzzer. He's just the perfect fit for what they want to do.

Yeah. If you're talking 7 million for Peyton Pritchard or 48 for Jimmy Butler, I think for the way this Celtics team's constructed, it is,

It's, it really feels like you see this happen sometimes in basketball and in football and baseball and boxing. It seems like the game slowed down for him a little bit. He'll have these moments where all of a sudden he's doing old man post-up plays on shorter guards. He's around the rim. He's like, Oh, I'm going to do old man, pick up basketball and just like shoot a jump hook over this guy. It's been really impressive to watch speaking of boxing, um, big fight this weekend.

My guy who I bet on every time he fights, I just parlay him with football teams. Usyk is the rematch against Fury. Usyk's never lost. Everybody's been looking forward to this fight. Is this to you? Will he finally get the credit he deserves as a main draw fight? Or what does Tyson Fury have left fight?

I think it's more of a what does Tyson Fury have left fight. I do think that for a broader audience, Usyk is getting some of the credit that he deserved back at Cruiserweight when he became the first ever undisputed champion in the four belt era, comes to heavyweight, beats AJ, your guy, twice. My guy. My guy who no matter where I bet, I lose. Yeah.

Four against. I'm like, oh, for my last six. I get a text from you every time Anthony Joshua fights. And it's usually like, I can't believe I bet on that guy. Or I can't believe I didn't bet on him or whatever. Yeah, every time. Yeah. I think as much as he is getting some of the exposure that...

that he deserves. And I had like a two-hour conversation with him last month for a story that's coming out on Friday. He's really a remarkable guy with a remarkable backstory. This is more about Tyson Fury and what does Tyson Fury have left in the tank? I mean, he has overcome a ton of stuff over the last 10 years, whether it's outside the ring issues, weight issues, depression issues, depression,

coming back from tough fights, you know, a whole bunch of different things. He's never had to come off a loss before. And I talked to Tyson for a while last week. I've watched a lot of clips of him over the last couple of weeks. And I do wonder kind of what is his mindset coming into this fight? Like how much does he have left as a fighter?

at 36 years old, which is chronologically younger than Ogs and Usyk, but he's been through physically and perhaps mentally so much more. I mean, I saw an interview Tyson did this week

where he said that he hasn't talked to his wife, Paris, in three months. Like, didn't really elaborate on that, but said he hadn't talked to his wife in three months. And I'm watching the interview. I'm like, what? Like, this is a big family. They were on that Netflix series. Like, they are intertwined, those two. Hasn't talked to her in three months. Now, maybe it's because, hey, I'm...

Just totally locked in. I don't know if I buy that, but I'm wondering what Fury has left here. Because if you're not 100%, if you don't have your A game, Usyk's going to beat you. I think Usyk is a generational great. You know, I think he's one of those rare guys that...

that only come along once every 20, 25 years, that are so skilled, so strong, doesn't matter what weight class you put him in, he's going to dominate. Big guys, small guys, he's going to beat you with his discipline and with his game plan. If you don't have everything going for you the right way, you're going to get beaten. And that I'm not so sure about with Tyson Fury.

Well, the interesting thing about the first fight is the scorecards had it closer than I think I had it in my head when I was watching him. Fury almost got knocked out. It seemed like it was a wrap and he really got the shit kicked out of him. I think it was the ninth round and then kind of right. He definitely won the 12th round, the 11th round. I remember two of the judges gave it to him.

One judge didn't, which was super suspicious, but I don't know. It was a split decision, but it really wasn't like, I don't think anybody watching that fight thought, oh, I wonder who won. Fury's face looked worse. Everything looked worse. I just think who's like reminds me so much of Pereira in the UFC where it's just watch him. And you're like, I don't know what the answer is to try to beat this guy. At least in UFC, you could try to take the guy down and get him on the ground.

I, with Usyk, I almost feel like it's gotta be somebody like Bacoli just overpowering him and using like a huge size, you know, I'd bring Bacoli up. I just, a huge size disadvantage. Cause he is like a blown up cruiserweight and maybe that's how to beat him. I just don't see Fury doing it.

You got to, first of all, at some point you should sit down with Bacoli because he's an incredibly engaging guy. I know you love him. He's interesting. Usyk would beat Bacoli 12 zip, by the way. Usyk would not make the same mistakes Jared Anderson made and stay within range of that right hand. He would just be zipping around. He'd be zipping around them using feints inside, outside. How dare you disparage Bacoli?

There's a lot of guys I want to see Bacoli fight. He's a really funny guy. And fun to watch. Nobody wants to fight Bacoli. He couldn't even get on the February 22nd card. They had to push him to the next card, but he was supposed to... I mean, it seemed like Dubois was going to be the natural whatever. He didn't want to fight him. Dubois does not want to fight. Dubois does not want to fight Mara Bacoli. Not with... Dubois is sitting out there going like, all right...

right, there's maybe a rematch with AJ, which is worth eight figures. There's maybe a unification fight with the winner of Fury and Usyk that can be worth eight figures. I am not getting in the ring with Martin Bacoli and risking getting my head taken off when I've already had some issues with knockouts in the past. You're not doing that. So look, Usyk, what I love about Usyk is that he kind of gives away the game plan before every fight. Like,

Like when he makes these jokes where he's like, don't be afraid, Tyson. I'm not going to leave you alone. That is him telling you that he's going to be applying pressure all night. And pressure comes in different ways. Like it doesn't have to be this overwhelming. I'm going to put you in a headlock.

and every round type of pressure that we've seen from some brawlers. It can just be staying in your face and making you keep your hands up at all times and making you stay on your toes at all times. That's exhausting. Like Tyson Fury, I thought, won the first half of that fight with Usyk. 4-2, could have been 3-3. Um...

But the pressure Usyk put on was overwhelming. And in the ninth round, it got up to him. When Usyk landed that first straight left hand, you know, that was the fight right there. So he's going to do the exact same thing again. And again, it goes back to Fury. If he's not as sharp as he's been at his very best, I think he's going to have a lot of problems in this fight. Usyk has a lot of pieces of things that I've loved from guys in the past, right?

Like he, as the fight goes on, it just seems like he shrinks the ring and, and figures out the exact distance, how to hit the guy with the little tiny punches that don't seem like a big deal. And then they kind of add up, but there's like pieces of Hopkins in there. There's pieces of Cesar Chavez in there. Like they're just those guys that just,

there's one fight, the first four rounds, and then the fight starts to shift and you can kind of feel it. And I don't really know what the answer is to beating him, but I just know I'm going to be betting on him every time he fights. He's 37. I don't know how many more of these he has left, but I mean, he, if you look back at his, he's 22 and oh,

He beat Joshua twice, beat Dubois, beat Fury already, could be beating him again. He was dominant as a cruiserweight. Go back to the 2012 gold medal in that whole era. Like he was beating all those guys. And I don't like if he wins this, like what's next? Because you could fight Dubois and Parker fighting February 22nd. So Zhang and Cabell. So maybe it's one of those two. I don't know who's the next fight.

it's, it's not going to be AJ who wants nothing to do with, with who's sick. And AJ, to me, like they, they keep talking about like, if Fury loses, you can make the AJ fight. Like we didn't just see AJ get clobbered over five rounds today. Dubois, like, I'm just going to forget about that. That happened. Remember the three in a row, AJ one and not, not that one. Uh,

So it's not going to be AJ. You beat Fury again. It's not going to be Fury. Dubois would certainly do it. But like, yeah, I mean, I think Usyk, if there was enough money on the table, would certainly fight Danny Dubois again, become undisputed champion once again. There could be like events out there for him. Like everybody in boxing has been trying to find a way to do a fight with Jay Lee Jong on Mainland China.

Like the amount of times I've heard about Zhang going back to the bird's nest in Beijing in front of 100,000 people, you know, for a while it was Anthony Joshua. Well, hey, it could be Alexander Usyk that

that fights him there if Zhang can get a win in his next fight. So maybe it's something like that, but he will have quite literally have cleaned out the heavyweight division if he beats Tyson Fury for the second time. There'll be guys he hasn't beaten, but beating those two top guys twice, that will be an accomplishment. And you asked me, like, how do you beat Usyk? To me, there's only one way to do it, and that's to just apply unrelenting pressure to him because Usyk

There have been times where Usyk has been in trouble. Like at Cruiserweight, he had a split decision win over Maris Bredis, who's a physical guy at Cruiserweight. The times that AJ had success against him was when he was the one putting pressure. He was the one letting his right hand go. I think it was like the 9th or 10th round of that second fight where he had Usyk in real trouble. Even early on, Fury landed some good shots on Usyk, just didn't follow up.

and chase him down. Go back even further. Derek Chisora, of all people. Derek Chisora might have given Usyk his toughest fight at heavyweight because through six rounds, he was just lumbering after him in that fight. So if you are willing to just go all in and commit on a pressure style, you can have success against Usyk. But if you try to box him, you're going to lose every single time because he is a better boxer than everyone at cruiserweight and everyone at heavyweight.

Which is one of the things that made Fury special was at his size, he was like kind of a sneaky good boxer, but not compared to this kid. I'm glad you brought up Chisora. I think he's lost to everybody in the division at this point, right? He's still going. Not over yet. So is there a Cruiserweight that could move up? Not. I mean, look,

So Gilberto Ramirez is now a unified champion. And Gilberto is someone that people in the U.S. know a little bit about. Former champ at 168, title contender at 175, lost to B-Bowl back in 2022 over in Abu Dhabi. He's a name in that division. And he's...

You know, Usyk's fought in the U.S. in the past. That would probably be a pretty big fight if Ramirez wins one or two more fights. The other guy in that division is Jaya Pattaya, who's super athletic, good power at that weight class. Still trying to build a name, I think, that's big enough to get someone like Usyk that's interested. So those are conceivable, possible fights, but I would make Usyk a big favorite against both those guys. You know, Usyk too, Bill...

The last fight, I forget what his exact weight was, but you could tell that in what was, I think, his fifth fight at heavyweight, he had grown into the weight class. Before, he was just going up in weight, and he was like 212, 213, 218. He was solid in the last fight. He is a full-fledged heavyweight right now. And if he takes on a cruiserweight like Ramirez or Apataya coming up,

they're going to have problems with his size. So yeah, there are some decent names there, but nobody that I would make a threat at this point to Usyk. Yeah, I remember that happened with Holyfield. It took him a couple to feel like he was a heavyweight and then it happened. Well, on Fandle right now, he's minus 166, Usyk, which I just think is nuts. I don't understand...

at this point in his career from everything we've seen, how he's not minus 250 against everyone else in that division, just blind. There's not one person that he shouldn't be minus 250 against. So I worry, Bill, but I worry about some of the, like the scorecards were too close last time. Um, you know, he needed that knockdown to pull out a decision. Right. Um,

you know, there's a lot of money in a trilogy. That's a reality, right? Like if Fury wins this whole pile of money, I don't, I don't want to do it, but I've seen enough in boxing to wonder, um, you know, what could happen in a circumstance like this. I think it gets very fishy. It gets very fishy. And I think more importantly, there's, there's some bad judges in boxing, like really bad judges and judging boxing is hard. I have to do it on an unofficial capacity, you know, every week at the zone. But, um, it did,

Some strange things happen on scorecards in boxing. And I hope we don't get that in this fight. I hope the right man comes out the winner. Yeah, probably the maddest people get at you is either something you wrote about LeBron or they didn't like how you scored round four in the third to last fight on the zone thing. Right. People just go nuts about the scoring. I had to go nuts watching it. I get so mad.

Really? But it's always on a micro level, right? It's like, I can't believe you scored the fourth round for such and such. Right. Well, let me go back and rewatch that and I'll rescore it. But it's hard, especially some of these rounds where there's not a ton of action. And I think Usyk Fury, some of those rounds were hard to score, especially in the first half of the fight when there wasn't the kind of obvious action that you saw in

in the second half. But I mean, I just hope there's no controversy to this one. If Fury wins, great. Let's have a trilogy. I think it'll be awesome. But if Husek wins, you know, hope he wins clean. Well, the other thing, when you're sitting close, you might miss like the biggest punch of the round because the ref blocked you or, you know, it's not an exact science. Before we go, we got to talk about the supercard on February 26th, or February 22nd.

I don't know if there's been a card like this. Like the third, fourth best fight on this card would be the best fight on a Saturday night. We've talked in the past about how the Saudis and all this overseas money, and they're just like, we want everybody good to fight each other, and that's what we want. This seems like the full culmination of that. This is one of the best boxing cards of all time.

When you saw it all laid out, were you shocked? Like they didn't even have room for Bacoli. They were like, now we're moving you over, moving your fight later. This is one of the, we have super middleweight, lightweight, welterweight, better BF against B-ball, Dubois against Parker, Zhang's fighting Khabib. Like it's a fucking crazy card. It's the deepest card that I've ever seen. You go to the

You go back to the 1990s and Don King put on some unbelievable pay-per-view cards where they were four fights deep, championship level, high level stuff. We've never had a card that on paper goes seven fights deep with all headliners night after night. And this is...

This is an example of the positive impact of the Saudis' entry into boxing. What we're going to see in the main event on Saturday is an example. I mean, having...

Two fights between Fury and Usyk in one year is remarkable. Even more remarkable is the headliner of the February 22nd card. I mean, we had to wait six years. Six years, both Beterbiev and Bivol were world champions. And they didn't fight each other because there's no money in it. Because neither one of them has a real fan base. Saudis come along, they make a fight in October, and less than six months later, we're getting the rematch. Like, that is... There's a huge net positive there.

for the Saudis being involved in boxing for boxing. I would say this, though. I don't know how necessary it is

to have seven fights like this on a card because it's great if you want to watch all seven. If you are a true purist, if you're a diehard, yeah, you sit down at 11 o'clock in the morning on the West Coast and you're watching, you know, Zhang fight or you're watching Virgil Ortiz fight. It's great. Like, I would... I will spend my entire day, if I'm not there, watching that particular card. But...

especially in the U.S., not a lot of people are probably going to do that. And I do think there's something to the idea of spreading this stuff out, right? Like having two or three great fights on a card and then a month, month and a half from that, then having the other two or three great fights, like having sort of a schedule start to build up. Recurring during a month. Yeah. But don't you feel like this is UFC though? Like UFC has changed the thinking on this because there'll be some UFC cards that you could watch for five straight hours and they kind of want that.

Yeah, but UFC is able to do that month after month, right? I don't know what the boxing schedule is after February 22nd. There are some fights I'm looking forward to, but nothing with the kind of depth that we're going to see on the 22nd. Even Shakur Stevenson-Floyd Schofield is a fun fight that would headline in Newark or in New York. Virgil and Madrimov, good fight in Texas. I think it's... Look, I'm...

excited to watch every single one of these fights. I wouldn't argue, though, with the idea of like, hey, let's push a few of them a month from now and maybe a couple others. Yes, just divvy it up. Give these guys a chance for a little more exposure. It's great that they're getting the money. All these guys are getting paid. In a sport like this, you deserve it. But I just worry about the exposure of a guy that's going to be fighting at noon Pacific in the U.S. That's the only thing I would quibble with. Counter. Counter.

This is like Thanksgiving. It's like, should we have sweet potatoes and mashed potatoes and stuffing and like, fuck it. Let's just, let's just go for it. To me, this is like a once in a decade kind of card. I don't know if they'll be able to replicate this many fights in a row. I've never seen anything like this where you literally can't miss the first of seven fights. And the best thing is Stevenson, who I think is my least favorite good guy to watch. And now he's buried on this card with six other fights. So I don't have to

you know, be like, ah, do I get it? I don't really like watching this guy. And now it's like, he's just one of the many, but somehow they left out my guy, Bacoli.

So do I have to get Bacoli on a podcast, try to pump him up? What do I need to do? I think you should. I think he'd fly to Los Angeles to do it. I mean, he's got this incredible story where he's from Africa, but he's kind of Scottish now, and he's got this great personality that comes with it, and he's been so avoided for so many years. Just to put a button on the card, it's a great problem to have, right? I'm excited about it.

I want to see it. You're working, right? Are you working it? I believe so. We haven't figured that out yet. But yeah, I was at the last better be a B-ball fight. Yeah. It's a great problem to have. Seven hours of high-level boxing is going to be awesome for the boxing fans out there. Ultimately, that's what it comes down to. I wonder, this card's so good, I wonder if you almost need two play-by-play guys. I don't know.

I don't, is it too much to ask one play? It's almost like you have to go WWF or they have the two different play by play guys for the five hour card. That's like, that's, I don't even know if Gus Johnson would be able to go for seven straight hours with boxing. We did that whole, um, Riyadh season card in LA, which I think was like six fights. Like that was a lot of, cause that was, you know, that was a pretty deep one. You had

David Morrell fighting low on that card. You had a pretty good slobber knocker of a fight with Jarrell Miller and Andy Ruiz low on that card. These are long days, but if you are a true purist and someone that just wants to sit down on your couch and is willing to invest seven hours, it'll be one of the better days you'll have.

February 22nd, February turning into a surprisingly good sports month. It used to be like the dead month, but now all of these different places have figured out like the trade. They moved the trade deadline up somehow against the Superbowl and then a whole bunch of stuff happening. Uh, Chris Mannix, great to see you have fun at the NBA cup tonight. I hope all's well with you. You got it, man. Thanks. This episode is brought to you by PayPal sports fans. I know going to the big games can get expensive. So let's talk strategy. Let's talk how PayPal has changed the playbook.

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and may be used everywhere, MasterCard is accepted. This episode is brought to you by NFL Sunday Ticket on YouTube TV. There's a lot to be thankful for this season. For one, I'm thankful you can get NFL Sunday Ticket on YouTube TV right now for only $209. That's exactly what you need as we head right into the playoffs. You can invite your friends over. Maybe you have a multi-view. You could have four different games, one for you,

One each for the three other friends you invite. You can change the games around. As soon as a game, the outcome becomes pretty certain. Dump that game, but in another one. I've become the multi-view master. The moment...

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is about timothy chalamet in the bob dylan movie tried not to have any spoilers in this so uh we're gonna play that and then after that we're gonna move right to land man

My favorite new show of the 2020. So me and Chris Ryan right now. All right. I'm here with Chris Ryan. It is less than 10 days until the Bob Dylan movie comes out with Chalamet. A complete unknown. You've seen it. I have. I saw it over the weekend on the Producers Guild app. Must be nice. Low expectations. I don't want to step on your pod, Vashon, because I know you have a big pod coming out at Christmas. The thing that jumped out to me was how good Chalamet was.

Yeah. And I intentionally tried not to read anything. I wasn't that excited about the movie because I've never loved Bob Dylan just because my entire life, everyone's just talked about what kind of a moody dick he is. He's kind of a perfect example of English teacher guy, English student. Right. A lot of reading, a lot of philosophizing. I liked the music, respected it. My parents really liked him. He means a lot to my mom. But we kind of know him, the older version of Bob Dylan. Sure. Where he's just like kind of mutters and does... Anyway. Anyway.

Chalamet was great. Yes. As you know, I love when people sing in movies. Val Kilmer in The Doors is one of those. I always thought it never got enough credit. Cooper in A Star is Born does a good singing. He does a really good job. And I don't understand why he's not a prohibitive best actor. I don't think enough people have seen the movie yet. I think when he is actually... First of all, he's already doing the Lord's work on the promo tour, which we're going to talk about. Yeah. But once people see this movie...

I think that he might slingshot ahead of Rafe Fiennes and Adrian Brody. So what are the cases for Rafe Fiennes and Adrian Brody? So Rafe is probably a, he deserves it. Body of work. Conclave's really good. Body of work? Like a Joel Embiid type of case two years ago? He's never won. Okay. Okay.

I'm wearing a thunder hat. I don't even acknowledge that. Yeah, body of work for Ralph Fiennes and I think for Adrian Brody it would be like this is it. This is the performance of a lifetime even though he's already won which I think will probably count against him. Already won. That's a strike. Chalamet, this is great for the Oscars. He'll definitely get nominated and it will feel like a younger hit for Oscars but

I gotta be honest, I wasn't positive he had a performance like this in him. I didn't see a musical side of Chalamet. It's the first movie that I feel like, this and Dune, but definitely Dune 2, where it kind of gets like...

Tim's a Tim he's a man now like he's like actually a convincing guy in his late 20s now remember when this happened to Leo yeah was like the catch me if you can era where I was like oh Leo's an adult now yeah he had done the beach and a couple of other things to try and move into like out of heartthrob and into adult and you know I remember this happened to you when we went to the ringer yeah you shed like your Grantland teen idol that was that was my blood diving he went right up

But yeah, no. So, so now this, this opens up, he has this, I think he's going to win the Oscar. Yeah. Um, I'd be surprised if he didn't, I think he'll get a lot of momentum cause it's so surprising how good he is in this. Yes. Um, in a movie that probably shouldn't work in a movie, I'm not even positive. I don't want to step on your take cause you have the whole pot, but I'm not positive. I love the movie that much, but I love the performances and I thought he was great. I thought, uh,

What's the Top Gun lady's name? Monica Barbaro. Monica Barbaro. Yeah, she was great. She plays Joan Baez. Norton. Yeah, Norton is Pete Seeger. I think it's a movie that'll probably be like, a lot of people are like, I love the performances. I love the music. I don't know if there's like a huge story there. But that's been a lot of musical biographies in general. Like Walk the Line was the same thing. People were like, I love Phoenix. I loved Reese. The movie was solid. That one had a little bit more inherent tragedy built into it, but

I think that this one is just going to really blow people away because if you see the trailer and if you just look at Timothee Chalamet in his day-to-day life, you probably wouldn't guess that he could pull this off. It has something in common with The Star is Born when we heard word about this and then there was the initial clips and you think, oh no. No, brother. Oh boy, here we go. We've seen people make

go this way and make the mistake. But anyway, you mentioned the press tour with Chalamet. So Chalamet's using the opportunity that he might have here where he's odds-on or he's going to be an odds-on Oscar favorite if not the prohibitive favorite. And he seems to be taking most of that time

to make it clear how much you love sports. Yeah. I love it. Now there's a very, you know, not famous, but infamous clip of him on Kimmel from like eight years ago or whatever it was, where he talks about how much he loves you. Right? Yeah. He's done Theo Vaughn. He's done Game Day. He's done all the late night shades. He was great on Game Day. When are we getting Timmy on the bill pod? I put the request in. Okay.

I've wanted to have Mon for years. I know he's a big Knicks fan. He seems like a genuine sports fan. He seems like a nut. And we put the stuff out. I don't know how his team decides. So this is the Chalamet, the challenge. Yeah, Chalamet, come on the pod. Let's find out once and for all how much sports you know. I saw you on college game day. It was convincing. But I also know he's an actor. Yeah.

And he could memorize, what, four or five pages of script of dialogue in one day? He couldn't have remembered like six picks that his buddy gave him? And I want to like really dive in with the Chalamet sports experience. The flip side is that like there are photos of him like autograph hounding Amari Stoudemire.

Let's talk about it. Let's find out this side of you, the sports side. It's not coming out in a Theo Vaughn podcast. What do you think you would do to him? Would you just put him on Guess the Lines blind? I want to go full 80 minutes. Let's have the deep dive mix combo that you've never really had on a podcast. Travis Hunter, how does he translate to the NFL? Yeah, let's talk real college hoops. Do you gamble? Where do you gamble? What sites do you use? Are you a friend of FanDuel?

How'd you do last week on NFL picks? Like, how deep does this go? Do you play fantasy football? What if he's not coming on your pod because he has lost most of the money he's made following million dollar picks? No, I'm doing well this year. I just had a bad last week because of your team, the Eagles. Yeah, come on. Let's really see it once and for all. Do you have takes on the Super Bowl? Lions defense is banged up. What do you think, Chalamet?

Let's go. Why is NBA ratings down? NBA ratings down. Why? What are your reasons? LeBron and Curry and Durant stay too long? What's your take? There are threes. Are we getting too much of a homogenous product with threes? Yeah, this is what the people want, Chalamet. Come on the pod. We don't want you talking about how you've just been building your whole acting career towards playing Bob Dylan. We want to know whether or not you think Jalen Hurts can win a Super Bowl. And I want to pitch him, which I've done in the past, that did with Michael B. Jordan to much success.

A couple roles that I think he should play now if he wins the Best Actor. What's next? Heist movie. Really well done rom-com. And then what would be the third one? Just stuff for us. So I pitched... Heist movie? Is he bad? It's a sports movie. It's a sports movie. Coach? For Greenwald, I pitched him Timothy Chalamet as a iconoclastic offensive coordinator, like the Ben Johnson story.

Oh. Like a guy who's coming up through Texas high school football. Isn't Mike McDaniel more fun? Yeah. He just kind of unravels because he was his quarterback. He only runs so many slants. If we find out that Mike McDaniel got involved in some crazy Scarface Coke thing.

thing in Miami. Mike McDaniel crossed with Pain and Gain. Yes. Starring Chalamet as the offensive coordinator of the Dolphins who's falling behind with gamblers. It's like we love these plays you're calling but our wide receivers keep getting killed out there. Another one's down. So sports movie, heist movie. Yeah. Does he need to be in a There's Something Wrong with the House movie? Oh, like a horror? Yeah. Yeah.

I think that this movie, when you see him in Dylan, he's got a little hair on his chest. And I think he needs to be back in the mix for Heat 2 conversations. I don't know what part, but I'm just saying he could be in the conversations. And then I think, I think you're right. A horror movie would be incredible. Or like if we're, I'm having fun with this, but if we're, if he's going to do the Leo playbook, just...

checkmark best director one after the other you work with all the greats that's what Leo did is there anything from has he done Fincher yet he hasn't he hasn't done Fincher yet no it's Villeneuve it's it's James Mangold for Complete Unknown yeah I don't know I mean Timothy Timothee Chalamet the New Jersey drone story oh that would be great it's like a guy just a guy in Jersey Chalamet just the trailers and it could be like Spielberg like Close Encounters or War of the Worlds yeah

That sounds great. Yeah, Close Encounters of the Drone kind. If he wants to cash in, though, you've come up with some spy franchise. Oh, like a Bourne kind of thing? Yeah. You come up with your own, or Mission Impossible. You come up with your own version of that. But maybe you mix it with sports. Oh, sports spy. Maybe he's like... So he's like Connor Stallions. Yeah.

He's Rich Paul crossed with a spy. It's like, clutch as a front for all the espionage work he's doing. That was just like the young Scott Boris story. That's true. Maybe he plays Scott Boris. That could be a sports movie. Sure. That would be a great transformation. It'd be like when Leo played J. Edgar. Well, out of all these ideas, the best idea is Mike McDaniel crossed with Pain and Gain.

Because we get Miami. Yeah. There's drugs. You could, you could, you could embed him in the Miami football scene. You could be, you could make it be like, it could be like Teddy Bridgewater is hanging out and stuff like that. It would be awesome. Well,

Well, whatever the case, shall we? Come on the podcast. Let's let's do this once and for all. Let's talk about future roles. Let's talk sports. Let's talk Amar Stoudemire. Let's talk Carmelo. Does he have thoughts on the Carmelo Maropod? Like, I want to know all this stuff. Just come on the pod. Come open a six pack with Bill. Come on. You're going to win best actor. Come on the pod. This episode is brought to you by State Farm. State Farm helps you score an affordable price when you choose to bundle home and auto insurance with the personal price plan.

Bundling home and auto? That's a pro move. Just another way you can save on your insurance needs. Talk to a State Farm agent today to learn how you can bundle and save with the personal price plan. Like a good neighbor, State Farm is there. Prices are based on rating plans that vary by state. Coverage options are selected by the customer. Availability, amount of discounts and savings, and eligibility vary by state.

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All right, we're taping this after the sixth episode of Landman ran. So there's spoilers in this. CR is making my all-time TV rankings. All-time, like anything ever broadcast on television or streaming. I think Landman's like third. This is the greatest show of this decade. I can't believe how much I love it. It's the first show in a while that

When we're getting toward there's five minutes left, seven minutes left, I'm like, oh, man, there's only seven minutes left. You can't leave Cooper like that. Please, no. I can't wait a week. This sixth episode was the best episode of the season. It was incredible. It's everything we want from a dumb TV show like this. I don't know how good it is, but I know that I haven't had more fun talking about a TV show this year. Like, literally, like, every conversation I have about Landman seems to go 20 minutes, and it's just like we're hysterically laughing, but also deeply, deeply involved in the plot. Yeah.

this is Taylor Sheridan's... I didn't know that he was ever going to have a home run again after Yellowstone. I thought he would have shows that niche people, like People Love Lioness, People Liked It, Mayor of Kingstown, Tulsa King, whatever, the Yellowstone spinoffs. This feels like it could be the biggest show he made. Billy Bob's no Kevin Costner in terms of the matinee idol department, but in terms of...

The amount of people watching it and the amount of times where you're just like, there's something in here for everyone. Like, you can be into this because it's like Friday Night Lights. You can be into this because it's like Sicario. You can be into this because it's like Dallas.

I don't know, man. I love this show. Think of the three things you just mentioned. And it's like a hybrid of all of those things. One of the things, because we were talking to Fantasy about it. He'd only watched the first three and he's in like movies right now. And I feel like he hasn't paid 100% attention. Because if he did, he would understand. But I do feel like the second three episodes, the show really fell into place. It was almost like shared and needed a...

get a feel for the actors that he had. And once he realized, like, I just got to let Billy Bob and Ali Larder cook in every scene possible. This is the most I've liked Billy Bob literally in 20 plus years. The first two episodes, Ali Larder mostly just appears on FaceTime. Right. It was like she hadn't finished her previous job yet. Yeah. They were like, well, can you FaceTime in? It would be like basically being like, we're going to have Sangoon just like

only check in from the locker room. He's not going to play at all. It's an incredible performance by her, but you're right. After the first two episodes, I think the show teaches you how to watch it, which is essentially there are going to be three or four scenes where Billy Bob absolutely monologues and cooks. And the only time that doesn't happen is when Ham calls him

To yell at him. Right. And then there's all this domestic drama between Billy Bob's character, Tommy, and her character, his ex-wife, now current wife. And it's just amazing. The funny thing is, did you notice that, like...

no one's giving Taylor Sheridan notes. This is Andy's big thing. Greenwald's big thing. There are scenes where you're like, how much longer is this scene going to go? Like the dinner scene from episode four, I think, where she makes the wild boar bolognese. Yeah. And then he's like, are you on your period? And like, there's just, and you're like, how fucking long is this happening for? And it feels like you're just like in some sort of experimental drama. Well, all right. So let's unwind this. So Billy Bob, uh,

This is basically the same theme as what he struck away with with Coster and Yellowstone. Yeah. A really good, likable, charismatic actor who hadn't been really great in a role in a while and then Sheridan just unlocks it. He just wrote it for him. It's in his voice. This is all of the things I love about Billy Bob Thornton. And even like there's a little of the Friday Night Lights coach in here. A little bit of the NASA guy from Armageddon. Right. Yeah. Just...

And this guy's been around forever. And when he's in the right role, he's perfect. But in this, he's like super perfect. Then Allie Larder, who I think all of us who had the Varsity Blues run. Then she had the Heroes run. And I think everybody likes her, but I hadn't seen her in anything. And this is, I was saying to you earlier, like there's that story about Starship Troopers. Yeah. That Casper Van Diem.

He thought he was in a serious drama, like a Spielberg movie, and everybody else knew what it actually was. It was a Broadway movie, yeah. And I don't know what Allie Larder thinks the show is, but whatever she's doing, I love it. But the show seems to be bending towards her now. Like, in the beginning, I was like, this is insane. Like, she's in a bikini on FaceTime, crying every scene. And now it seems like she is an integral part of the drama and is, like, in every scene, even when guys are getting absolutely murdered by falling pipes. Right, she's...

Dion Waiters multiplied by 700. And her and Billy Bob are great together. What's weird is that Demi Moore is in this show. Yeah. And if you would watch the trailer or if it was just the call sheet, you'd be like, yeah, Demi Moore is going to have a much bigger part in this show than Allie Larder. Allie Larder's part is a hundred times bigger than... Demi Moore has had eight lines and they filmed her from like 30 yards away in every scene. Yeah. And I don't know why she's in the show other than maybe they...

needed the extra name. So those two. And then the actor who plays Billy Bob's son in this... Oh, Jacob Laughlin. Yeah, so he was in this movie. He's just really good. Yeah, he was in a movie a while back. This Jeff Nichols movie called Mud. That's really, really good when he was a kid actor. And I haven't really seen him recently. And he's awesome. Yeah.

Yeah. Like he is kind of like the Matt Saracen character. That's a good comparison. The prodigal kind of son who wants to be an oil man but doesn't want to do it on his dad's back. And he's just really soulful, really good. It could be really bad. This show would not work if he wasn't doing a good job. And he's...

He's wiry and I don't know how tall he is, but yet still believable when he stands up for himself. And I was attached to him within two episodes. He starts hanging out. First of all, we didn't mention Michael Pena, who's in the credits in the first episode. Yes.

And my shit detector's going off the whole time. I'm like, this is weird. Well, he does a real live forever McBain speech in the middle of that first episode. Oh, yeah. But they basically did the same thing they did with Kyle Chandler. On K-Stone. Yeah. And Dave Annabelle on Yellowstone. Yeah. So he dies. And then that sets off like his widow...

All of a sudden, and you just know, it's like, oh man, this is going to go up. His friends, the dead guy's friends didn't like, they don't like where they, and you just kind of know. But I still love it. One of the best parts about this show, which is so refreshing, is that it's not a

overall mystery or overall plot that you have to keep track of all these different moving pieces. It's a great point. You're just like, there's a problem every week. It's like dead body in the oil well that we got to figure out. We got another clue. Yeah. It's just every week, it's like West Wing or like Grey's Anatomy or like any big, really successful drama. They just give you a problem that Billy Bob has to solve by the end of the episode. Or not. Or he's like, we're fucked and Jon Hamm's going to get mad at me. And I feel like he has complete handle on who his character is.

what, what like his baggage is as a human being, who he has to answer to that he can get mean. That's why episode six was so big. Cause it was like, I know there, there's a dark side with this guy and we haven't really seen it a hundred percent in the show. And then in episode six, you see it. And the whole show's leading up to him confronting these guys who beat up his son. And the moment he locks in,

You're just like, honestly, it's like watching like a Michael Mann movie or something. It's awesome. It was so good. One other thing I wanted to mention is that I think I've realized that I'm a secret huge fan of shows where people have to travel a huge distance to have a very simple conversation. This was a big thing for Ozark where it was like, I need to see you. And they'd have to drive all the way around the lake to the resort or all the way back. Your car scenes? This scene, this show is basically like,

They need to have a conversation. You have to get on a private plane and fly from the Permian Basin to Dallas to get yelled at for five minutes. And I was just like, if we had that at the Ringer, if the Ringer was based in West Texas and you were like, I'm going to need to talk to you. And I'm like, I got to go. How fast can you get from Fort Worth to Houston? The private plane leaves Permian. I fly to Dallas and you're like,

I didn't much care for that Celtics team yesterday. Let's talk about it. It is like we said about Tatum. Well, I know you're emotional, but don't ever yell at me. I'm your boss. This show checks so many boxes that just work for a TV show. Like, what is this world? This weird oil world. I don't really know this. Oh, now you're bringing me into it. Now I kind of feel like, what's it like for the crews that work

you know, on these oil rigs or like they're dread like, oh, this is like this whole little community with these little mini houses. Uh, then it's like the ham part. What's it like if you own this thing? Yeah. Who's, who do you deal with?

The ham part's interesting because I don't feel like that's fully baked yet. And I'm not sure how much time Ham had to film the show. Yeah, but I think that he does a really good job explaining things for people who might be looking at this more from the business perspective. Like the two speeches he's given, well, the one... You're talking about Ham. Yeah, Ham. The one where he's like, this business is like constant crisis situation.

punctuated by extraordinary success. I'm like, that sounds like an incredible idea for a show. And two, like when he's just like, I'm the bad guy. Like everybody hates, I've accepted the fact that the oil industry is the villain. So all my job is to do is keep oil between this number and this number. Well, and then the lawyer. Oh yeah. Who was getting a little flirty with Billy Bob and then Allie Larder's character squashed it. But she's just an assassin. Yeah. And so in episode six, she goes to see the widow.

And they're like, here's the check. And then they're doing a little back and forth. And the widow smartly asked, well, wait a second, what do you guys get out of this? And she's like, just lays it out as cold as possible. Then the daughter is the other one. There's five or six really good characters that I want to know more about that I'm willing to go on a couple of journeys with. But the most important thing to me, this is the best show Jon Hamm's ever done. Yeah.

You know, people say Mad Men. It's going to get aggregated. No, no. Yeah. That's going on Hoopsite. People say Mad Men. I say watch Landman for a couple episodes. No, I'm psyched for him that I can't even tell. Maybe he only had five shooting days in a month.

Billy Bob seems to be the only one who was fully committed for the six episodes. And Billy Bob's got to memorize like five pages of a monologue. Right. It's an incredible feat athletically. I do agree. Ham seems to be always getting off a plane

getting off on his mobile phone and then hanging it up. Yeah, they're like, John, can you film from two to five? Yeah. We just need to get off a plane and you're yelling at somebody. Ham was on Eisen and he was asking about how it was to shoot this and he was like, great. I put on a suit, I got off a plane, I talk. And Demi Moore was like, I loved it. Yeah. Two day shoot. I think that this show does really remind me that it's okay for TV to be a lot of fun.

Like we have had a nice long stretch of prestige television that's very serious, very like this is about important issues. There are important issues in Landman, but you can take them as seriously as you want. There is like at least three things in this each episode where you're like, what did I just watch? Well, and the thing was Sheridan and he figured out he laid the groundwork for with the first couple years of Yellowstone. He's made a bunch of shows, obviously. Yeah.

But to me, this is his apex. This is just like, he's taken all the lessons he's done on all these different shows. And he's like, how can I make the most entertaining show possible about the oral world in Texas and just let some actors cook. But the father-son story is like definitely really affecting. Like I really, really like it. Yeah. And the ex-wife stuff, you know, that's not going to last. How that's going to go back. But there's so many good touches. Like she goes back to get divorced, right? In episode six. Yeah. Are you going to say the line?

Go ahead. There's been a couple of lines that are like eyebrows. Oh, yeah. They'll push in almost an R. Yeah. Yeah. So she says, I may have to suck Victor's dick to get my Bentley. And he's like, well, bring your toothbrush. Yes. And she goes, there's a whole party in the back, but they...

The other thing is I like the houses. Like it's just these weird, crazy mansions you would never see in any other walk of life. They've done a good job with that. For Sheridan though, I just feel like he's figured it out once and for all. I think this is going to be the biggest show he's ever had. And I know Yellowstone was the biggest show of the last 10 years. I honestly wouldn't be surprised.

I wouldn't be surprised. I mean, I think that Yellowstone was like a phenomenon where there wasn't really anything like that. There was no Western on TV at that moment, I don't think. This is a little bit more familiar to people, but I think as...

it keeps going. They're probably only going to be, it's so popular, I wouldn't be surprised if some like huge star does a guest star next year. That's, I was going to bring that up. Andy Garcia is supposed to be on this season, you know, like it's going to be getting bigger and bigger. That's the next iteration of this is some big ass stars coming in because that's somewhat what happened with Yellowstone. But I think Yellowstone,

Was a big show that we're all like, wait, is that a big show? And we kind of, people are kind of stealth watching it. No, people are actually watching Yellowstone. Yeah, right. Yeah. And then COVID, it felt like everybody caught up and then all of a sudden that became the biggest TV show. But, you know, it definitely went a little sideways once the Costner thing got weird. You know what's crazy about this show too is how fast they made a couple of the sets become like instantly recognizable and kind of iconic. Like the cafe that they all hang out at, the bar, where it's like everyone's drinking all day long because they have like crazy shifts. Yeah.

And then, like you said, the McMansion and the Country Club. You're kind of like, I already know this world. Like this is it usually takes a show like years to be like, oh, and you know this place and you know that place. And it's like, no, they instantly kind of hit all of that stuff. Yeah. So this is like there's the prestige TV stuff that we talk about that we have the podcast named after it. And there's a certain like just elite script. Yeah. White Lotus kind of thing. And then there's like the Yellowstone side of stuff.

There's this middle ground between those two worlds that's the hardest thing to straddle both lines. And I feel like this is one of the only shows that has done that. Yeah. You know, where it's like this show is not far away from being a real prestige show, but it doesn't want to be. Yeah, it wants to be funny and crazy and have music. It also wants to be fun and entertaining and goofy. Yeah. So where does it go?

Where does it go? Where from here? Yeah. The rest of the season. I think that they'll probably keep playing out like the adversarial relationship between Monty and Tommy. But I think that the cool thing about this series is that it'll probably like Yellowstone where there's like a big bad every season. And so there will be like a big plot for each season, but all the parts will stay the same. One of the big lessons I've learned that if my son ever watches this is maybe don't get involved with the widow as a kid. Just, just,

Just point blank. What are the lessons? Who has the friends that are threatening you with guns the moment you like spend... You're just raking... Instantly goes a motor along. You're raking your front yard. There's multiple... Maybe like, fine. There's lots of fish in the sea, buddy. Yeah. No, I like... I think all the actors in this are really good too. That's the other thing. Like, she's good. The actress who plays the widow. All across the land. And the daughter is just going for it. She's the...

sister of a woman who was on The Bachelorette. Oh, is that true? And yes, is 28. I mean, she's 28 years old. She's playing like an 18 year old. It is an extraordinary bit that she's just like, I'm nude in this house while like the lawyer guy is like, I can't look at you. Yeah. So what's the competition all time for a show like this? All time? I'm saying like that middle ground between prestige and like just going for it.

I'm trying to think of other shows that were like this because like White Lotus was way more on the prestige side, you know, was goofy. Yeah, Succession is way more prestige. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's just, this is the hardest, hardest one to thread. I think it's more, it would be something that like David E. Kelly did. It would be like Big Little Lies, maybe. Yeah.

That's good. Like that kind of like, this is very pop. It's got big people in it. People will just like looking at the furniture. But this show's literally for everybody. I know. There's not one person in my life who wouldn't like Landman. And if they didn't like Landman, I'd have to reevaluate my relationship with them. Or you would at least be like, you would like a part of this. You'll like the oil stuff. You'll like the Cooper stuff. You'll like the love affair between Allie Larder and Billy Bob Thornton. There's something in here that you will like. I couldn't get my dad to watch it.

And cause he's like, ah, Yellowstone. I got sports. I got a lot. I'm like, dad, if you don't fucking watch land, man, I'm going to like fly to Boston and I'm going to just tie you up in front of the sofa and make you watch it. So he checked it out. So he started watching. Of course he's on my paramount cause he doesn't know how to, how to pay for any streamer. And so he's like, yeah, I watched the first two. It's good. And then he watched the third one. He's like, third one was good. And then the fourth one is like texting me. Did you see land, man? So I went to watch the one last night after I did my pod on Sunday night.

It had already been watched. I had to like start it over. My dad was just like, right. Yeah. So I was like, oh, he's all in. My mom's like that with Lioness. She was like, have you heard about this Lioness show? And I'm like, yeah, I have. Right. And then all of a sudden it was like, all my episodes were done. So do you think Taylor Sheridan took like the limitless pill? There's no other explanation for how he's ever produced this. So he has now written at least 40 hours of television this year. I don't understand how he does it. I don't get it.

Nobody, is there other people? Does he have like five people under him? I don't know, but this is like, we haven't seen a run like this in Sorkin, where Sorkin wrote every episode of West Wing. Can you imagine? And this show, honestly, it kind of reminds me of West Wing a little bit.

It's a lot of people like walking and talking and solving problems in entertaining ways. That's a good comparison. Yeah. And West Wing was close to the prestige side too, but it was just a really well done, well acted, fun show. But there would be like three good plots per episode of West Wing. Yeah. There would be like an overarching thing where it's like the president's sick or whatever. But like for the most part, it would be like Josh is going to solve something. Sam's going to do something. And like CJ is going to do something. And then you get a big speech from the president. Yeah.

I just picture Sheridan in the writer's room and he's like, man. There is no writer's room. Yeah, he's just by himself with a dog and he's just like, man, I haven't had anyone blow up or had some terrible thing happen in an episode and a half. Yeah. I'm just going to have this guy step on a bunch of pipes and then fall under and get crushed by them. I'll tell you what is unprecedented. It's unprecedented for someone to have the biggest show on TV end while possibly one of the biggest shows on TV is beginning and you're responsible for both of them. I can't think of another time that's happened.

Unbelievable. That you were writing both of them. It'd be funny if we had like the first take type of infrastructure for TV showrunners. And it was just like, it's Sheridan the goat that's coming up next. I thought you were going to be like first take, but for like actual land man. Oh, that'd be amazing. Should Cooper have kept it in his pants? Coming up. That would be great. Yeah. Just an entire first take about the different. Wind power. Does it use more energy than we think? What's Allie Larder's character's name?

Oh, I can't even remember. I just refer to her as Allie Larder. She doesn't need a name. I think her name is Allie Larder on the show. Angela. Angela. Yeah. Because Allie Larder's Instagram. She's like, Angela's back. Episode four. What a win for her. I'm so happy for her. I'm happy for Billy Bob. I'm happy for everyone on the show. I'm happy for us. Yeah. So it's 10 episodes? I think so. Yeah. The odds of Mallory loving the show are 100%. She loves. She texted me on Saturday saying six hours to lay a man. I'm like,

Lamar Jackson's on. I think this is the most ringery show that's come out since probably White Lotus. So when was that? 2021? Yeah. Yeah. This is a beloved piece of art. Watch Landman. It's really good. All right. That's it for the podcast. Thanks to Chris Mannix. Thanks to Chris Ryan. Thanks to Kyle Creighton and Steve Cerruti. As always, thanks to Jack Sanders for helping out last night with Craig Horlbeck as we taped some stuff with CR. And I will be back on Thursday.

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