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Dominique Foxworth
Palo.
Pablo Torre
I'm Pablo Torre. And this episode of Pablo Torre Finds out is brought to you by Remy Martin. 1738 Accord Royale. Exceptionally smooth cognac for all your game day festivities. Please drink responsibly because today we're going to find out what this sound is.
David Sampson
Can I get an amen Right after this ad?
Owen Wilson
I found a kid who swings a.
Pablo Torre
Golf club like a dream. I'd like to try to qualify him.
David Sampson
For the US Amateurs coming to Apple TV plus.
Dominique Foxworth
What's your name?
Pablo Torre
I'm not into older guys, but I'm.
David Sampson
Flatter a new comedy series.
Unknown
Stick.
Dominique Foxworth
I don't want to go on this trip.
David Sampson
Your mouth's saying one thing, but those eyes are saying something else. From the home of Ted Lasso, you see your shot at redemption. This is your mulligan, Owen Wilson. This game takes and it takes. The game's finally giving me something back. Stick. You know Arnold Palmer iced tea, lemonade. Mix it. I'm missing a nap for this.
Unknown
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Pablo Torre
I am very excited to do this. Please allow a moment of sincerity. We have not done this enough. Dominique David at a table together.
Dominique Foxworth
I refuse to allow a moment of sincerity. Instead would like to continue mocking you for chasing around Jordan Hudson and somehow claiming that you deserve a Peabody.
David Sampson
I. I didn't tell you this. I was sitting with Pablo, right? As a People magazine article came out with his mug on it, on the thumbnail of it, and what I saw and I said this to you at the time. So we're here amongst almost sort of friends and you could tell this warm aura of invincibility flow over him like some sort of mucus when he was on people.com and the irony is he walks around the studio talking about Murrow and talking about serious journalism.
Dominique Foxworth
Peabodys.
David Sampson
Peabodys, Right. So I'm wondering whether Pablo and I meant this. This. I didn't ask you before, are you going to put that as part of now, your elevator speech about ptfo? Because you mentioned obviously all the awards.
Pablo Torre
You'Re asking are we folding it into our awards budget somehow got smaller since we won the awards.
David Sampson
I don't mean very curious things that.
Pablo Torre
Are going to do that.
Dominique Foxworth
Like when you advertise in the show, are you going to say, like, I won this, I won that, and I was on people.
Pablo Torre
I was on. Yeah.
Dominique Foxworth
I have a question for you, though. Is your. Do you believe. No, this is. This is a kind question. Do you believe that your ego is any bigger in your desire for these type of. This type of recognition is any bigger than anyone else's? Or you think you're right in the middle, but you're more honest about it?
Pablo Torre
Right. Let's rank our egos. Can we do that? Can we power rank?
David Sampson
It's going to be a tie for first in this room. There is no shortage of ego in this room. No, it just manifests itself in different ways.
Pablo Torre
Yeah. For instance, you walked into the office today and you had a paper bag full of some stuff, and you had your sneakers on. Your multicolored sneakers on. And you had. What else did you. What else do you have?
David Sampson
Well, it was a sandwich and some chips and a ginger ale. Because we did all this for Dominique, and. And so I drove two and a half for this show, and now I'm driving back two and a half just to do this. Because this was your only window. This is what I was told for this lie. This better be Pablo.
Dominique Foxworth
Sorry. It was completely true.
Pablo Torre
Credibility paramount to me and my episodes.
Dominique Foxworth
Completely true.
Pablo Torre
Please fact check yourself, Dominique.
Dominique Foxworth
Completely true.
Pablo Torre
We made.
Dominique Foxworth
We.
Pablo Torre
We.
Dominique Foxworth
You.
Pablo Torre
We together said, david, we want to do this in person. There's going to be a moment of sincerity even, and it's just going to require you to be here in person. And David drove two and a half.
David Sampson
Well, I asked for all sorts of other windows of opportunities to do it, and Dominique was a no on every one of them.
Pablo Torre
Dominique came from D.C. it's okay if.
David Sampson
You guys manipulated me. It's fine. I got in the car, you guys.
Dominique Foxworth
No one has been manipulated. It is all honesty and truth between us.
Pablo Torre
We're ruining the moment of sincerity.
David Sampson
It passed for me.
Dominique Foxworth
It's gone.
David Sampson
I mean, there is no sincerity gone. I've been thinking a lot about you. I haven't seen you in a while. It's good to see you.
Dominique Foxworth
You too. When are friends, like, when are male friends sincere? How often does that happen? Like, I don't. I'm not. I've gotten better with it as an adult, but most of the time I just. I just roast my friends, and they know that means That I love them.
Pablo Torre
Right, right, right. Should we each say one sincere, nice thing about each other?
David Sampson
No, I don't think that's interesting.
Pablo Torre
Okay, great.
David Sampson
Oh, God.
Dominique Foxworth
Who.
David Sampson
I wasn't ready. It's 1, 2, 3. Brett, about raising. We just.
Pablo Torre
Don't guilt us into you for picking up.
David Sampson
No, it really is. Brett. We're announcing today our new charitable endeavor, because after all these years, they still haven't cured Parkinson's. And I. It's unbelievable.
Pablo Torre
David.
David Sampson
They haven't. So we have to keep doing these athletic events.
Pablo Torre
Dominique, do you see what happens when we get us in a room together?
Dominique Foxworth
What is the highest. The highest level of science? You made it to.
David Sampson
10Th grade. So that's true. I don't know why you're laughing. Do you have a cure for Parkinson's?
Dominique Foxworth
I don't, but I recognize that it's probably hard, and I'm not out here like, man, these mother better hurry up. I've been waiting all day.
David Sampson
Like.
Dominique Foxworth
Like you ordered a sandwich from a deli.
David Sampson
Michael J. Fox, when he started his foundation, said that he expects to be out of business within a decade, so didn't quite happen that way. And Michael F. You know what?
Pablo Torre
You know what? If I may have yet a third moment of sincerity? Because now we had that one, and that's, like, obviously sincere. The third moment.
Dominique Foxworth
Like, it's a goddamn chopped cheese. Like, you know, I've been waiting for 10 years.
David Sampson
I am not waiting anymore, Pat. Anyway, it's been quite telling since we were all last together in Miami that Pablo has just shot himself out of a cannon. And it's all due to the ring camera. And I was.
Pablo Torre
It's not just that. I did three episodes a week.
David Sampson
I would like to ask, though, on the shirt issue, because this was important to me, and we had an. What's the shirt creative issue.
Dominique Foxworth
I agree. I think I know where you're going, and I agree with you.
David Sampson
You. You agree that the shirt should have been off? Yeah, 100%. Now, if you had everybody behind body, would you have had shirt off?
Pablo Torre
So I had.
David Sampson
Because he also is very soft.
Pablo Torre
Okay.
Dominique Foxworth
A little squishy.
Pablo Torre
Listen, I have been doing Parkinson's races in which I complain about Parkinson scientists, but I am somebody who. No, I still. I'm still up in my fighting weight.
David Sampson
It's just redistributed.
Pablo Torre
It is disturbing when I realized that fighting weight is light heavyweight. Our boxers. Have boxers always been this small?
Dominique Foxworth
Yes. Yes.
Pablo Torre
It's crazy. It is crazy what a heavyweight boxer weighs. To answer your question, if I had Dominique's breasts. Yeah, I would have. I would have.
David Sampson
He claimed it was a journalism decision.
Pablo Torre
I don't want to be the look. I. I need.
David Sampson
I think it was a chance.
Pablo Torre
I need to preserve some element of credibility. And I think that was, again, as we say on Dominique's show, we have to thread the coward's needle. And I believe that my threading of the coward's needle was. I'm gonna do this, but I just can't be so much of the story actually, by.
David Sampson
Okay, that is so ridiculous.
Pablo Torre
I regret the moments of sincerity.
David Sampson
Can you pull up a photo of Lenny Kravitz at 61? It just got released. He looks amazing now. Lenny Kravitz looks unbelievable.
Pablo Torre
So. Okay, so we should talk about what we doing.
David Sampson
It's got. It's not normal. He has a full six pack.
Dominique Foxworth
Nice.
David Sampson
At 61.
Dominique Foxworth
Natural.
David Sampson
Are you looking at the same thing that I recently saw last week or something?
Pablo Torre
Men's Health.
Dominique Foxworth
Lenny's ripped now.
David Sampson
Is that. Is that natural?
Dominique Foxworth
Probably not.
David Sampson
You can't.
Dominique Foxworth
I mean, I feel like it's a lot of that in Hollywood. They don't. There's. There's no P man in Hollywood who's covered around testing you.
Pablo Torre
Like, there's no P man at Avengers headquarters.
David Sampson
Ye actors say they did. Will Smith talked about it.
Dominique Foxworth
They go up and down. Yeah. For movies.
Pablo Torre
I wanted to do an episode about this actually for a long time. Like, why are all these actors ripped now? So if you watch, like, certainly you watched White Lotus, they're just like, everybody's jacked. I'm like, your character does not require you to be obsessively working out. You're not a former NFL player trying to reclaim former glory. Why are you exercising?
David Sampson
The irony, of course, is that you can add abs in post. I mean, if there's a budget for post production, which some shows have and some don't, but you can add stuff. And so you don't actually need to look that way in real life. So I don't know why there is all of a sudden.
Dominique Foxworth
I would imagine that they aren't adding stuff for people whose character doesn't need it. Right. Like, so to Pablo's point, the White Lotus guys, they probably just.
David Sampson
Well, one is Schwarzenegger. I assume that he's season before, there.
Pablo Torre
Was a dude who was like the founder of a tech company, and he was like, you know, this part Asian dude, and he was like, clearly not required to be jacked. And that guy was again, a guy whose shirt I would take off if I was Him.
David Sampson
I'm embarrassed of my body.
Dominique Foxworth
Why?
David Sampson
Because it's not a good body. I don't have a good body.
Dominique Foxworth
I mean, it's. Fortunately, you're. I mean, nobody cares.
David Sampson
Well, I do. But again, yeah, I do.
Pablo Torre
Well, I think I. I would say that on the power rankings of people who are older than they look, Lane Krabbit's ESPN announcer, Mark Jones. Oh, ageless, Ageless. Mark Jones was, at last check, in his 60s.
Dominique Foxworth
Also has more pop culture references than me.
Pablo Torre
63.
Dominique Foxworth
He's much.
Pablo Torre
He's much Internet fluid.
Dominique Foxworth
Yeah, he's much closer to. To the meme game than your boy.
Pablo Torre
And David Sampson's on that list.
David Sampson
I'm doing well from the neck up. I have slight concerns about.
Dominique Foxworth
You know, what I think is interesting is like the changing to this point, it feels like the ideas around, like, plastic surgery, which is. It's only reasonable that over time, as it has been around. Because it feels like when we were young, it felt relatively new. Like the idea of getting enhancements and whatever. It was like, it was a big deal if someone had breast implants. It was like, oh, my gosh, look at breast implants. And like, it's been around long enough now that I've. I feel like we're getting to a point where the type of person that is going to get things like the idea that men get height surgeries and. And that's like an extreme version of it. But, like, I know people who've gotten their hair transplant and it's like they go to Turkey. Yeah. No, I mean, you only go to Turkey.
David Sampson
Turkey is the place.
Dominique Foxworth
You only go to Turkey to get it cheap, though, right?
David Sampson
You can get it quality.
Dominique Foxworth
Oh, it's better quality.
David Sampson
Best quality is turkey for hair and for veneers, actually.
Dominique Foxworth
Nice.
Pablo Torre
Why is that?
David Sampson
I listen, I assume they stayed at a Holiday Inn Express, but whatever the reason is that people save their money to go to Turkey to get it and then they come back with plugs. I don't get the whole thing.
Dominique Foxworth
Why not? I mean, if you. I don't understand how you don't get it.
Pablo Torre
Like, you've never contemplated getting your legs broken and then extended and then healed over so that you could be three inches.
David Sampson
So I was short. And I will tell you exactly what I did.
Pablo Torre
You're doing that as a past tense.
David Sampson
I am short. Thank you. Appreciate that, Dominique. Thank you for your Flemmy filled laugh of disdain.
Dominique Foxworth
It's not disdain.
David Sampson
It's more contempt.
Dominique Foxworth
It's a good joke. I'm being a good teammate.
David Sampson
I hung from a bar.
Dominique Foxworth
Michael Jordan did that.
David Sampson
And I would spend more time than I wish to acknowledge. So there's a bar in my doorway in the apartment where I grew up. I grew up in a room in a bedroom. And it's like a expandable stick that is supposed to be used for pull ups, pull ups and push ups. But I didn't do it for that. I did it. I put it high so there was no way to just so at. My fingers would fit right above it and that's it. And I would hang and I mean, like hours.
Pablo Torre
Oh, my God.
David Sampson
Weirdly. And because the adverb was unnecessary, I had been told that it actually works.
Dominique Foxworth
I remember. Come Fly With Me. I assume that you guys are familiar with this tape by Michael Jordan where nobody in his family is close to six six. And he said that he saw an episode of the Brady Bunch. As you can tell, I watched Come Fly With Me far too many times. That episode of the Brady Bunch where someone did this. And he said that he did it. He doesn't suggest that that's the reason why he's tall, but he said that when he was young, he wanted to be tall, and he tried it.
Pablo Torre
So when you hang from the bar, the idea is that the gravity extends your spine. That's the whole thing.
David Sampson
It's nothing. So what it did is I would get. My arms would be sore, right? So but I would do it because what I thought, because I had been told by coaches, like in middle school and in elementary school, that after the sore is where the improvement comes. So I always felt like I had to get to the arms hurting, and then I had to hang on even longer because that's when the growth would happen. I also slept always on my stomach with my toes over the bottom of the bed. And so I wasn't near the top of the mattress, but I would go to the bottom of the mattress because I had read as a kid. So it may have been written by Dr. Seuss that if you sleep on your front with your legs extended, toes over the bed, that while you're sleeping, your legs grow too.
Pablo Torre
Man, we could have made so much money off of a young David Sampson.
David Sampson
These aren't costly fixes, but we could.
Pablo Torre
Have sold you some of those things that you should have. Like those dunk shoes. Remember those dunk shoes?
Dominique Foxworth
Oh, yeah, I remember those. My parents wouldn't buy me the dunk shoes, but I did buy a parachute to get faster when I was young.
Pablo Torre
Of course you did.
Dominique Foxworth
It was great.
David Sampson
Did you run with it behind you.
Dominique Foxworth
Yeah, of course.
David Sampson
That's funny.
Pablo Torre
Was it. Hold on. Was it a parachute for the purpose of NFL prospect training, or was it a generic parachute that you were like, I think this is going to do the job?
Dominique Foxworth
Well, I think I saw somebody using a parachute on tv and so I was like, yeah, I think this is going to do the job. And I mean, the funny thing is I had this conversation. I did another podcast recently and I was talking about how it wasn't until I was like in my mid-20s that I realized that I believe that hard work was like, much more important to my success than like, the genetic makeup. And I was like, I would look around at other people like, you're just not working hard enough.
Pablo Torre
It's like, get your nurture up, son.
Dominique Foxworth
Yeah, but I mean, I think that there are incremental gains, obviously, but fundamentally I was like, born like just now.
Pablo Torre
You're team nature.
David Sampson
Sounds like it.
Dominique Foxworth
I mean, there is some nurture aspect, but what I can't. What you can't do is work your way into being an athlete. Like, you can make yourself a better athlete.
Pablo Torre
Oh, David. David's. David's frowning thoughtfully.
David Sampson
So I believe that the increment, you have to have natural ability, but I think the differentiating factor is the hard work you put in, which I. Which would count for purposes of this conversation as nurture.
Dominique Foxworth
Right? No, I don't disagree with you, but I'm saying that if you are born from a couple of non athlete parents, no matter how hard you work ain't gonna change.
Pablo Torre
What if I hung on a bar for a really long time?
Dominique Foxworth
I find hilarious that David kind of turned his nose up at people getting hair transplants when clearly, if there's a.
David Sampson
Big difference between plastic surgery transplants and hanging from a bar, that's all natural. I didn't take Test Stop, by the way. I didn't take any of the stuff. The growth hormone.
Pablo Torre
Leo Messi got some hgh and kids.
David Sampson
Do it all the time.
Pablo Torre
Grew, I guess, minimally, but enough.
Dominique Foxworth
They do all the time. That's a new thing.
David Sampson
Yes, it is. A really huge thing.
Dominique Foxworth
Even without, like, any sort of like, ailment that will require. They're just getting on. Ach.
David Sampson
The fight that we had with our son because we had.
Dominique Foxworth
We.
David Sampson
I'm short still, and my wife at the time was short. Well, not average for a woman. But he was worried because his older sisters were short. So he was panicked and he wanted to go on the Juice. And he had friends on the Juice who had other small Jewish parents.
Pablo Torre
With what intent? Just like, general walking around.
David Sampson
No. What's that?
Dominique Foxworth
Yeah, yeah, yeah. It wasn't. It wasn't to be an athlete. It was. Yeah.
David Sampson
To grow.
Dominique Foxworth
Yeah.
David Sampson
And. And you go to. You go to doctors who they chart you and they say, hey, you're gonna end up being around 5 dad's hike. And he wanted to be 5, 10. And so he wanted to go on the juice. We said no. And by the way, for the YouTube audience, other similar parents said yes, which made us look even worse because.
Dominique Foxworth
But he. He appreciates you now.
David Sampson
Hard to tell.
Dominique Foxworth
Yeah.
Pablo Torre
Did you speak to him in the language?
Dominique Foxworth
We got to get some of those kids to get sick, man. We need those kids to start passing out. We got.
Pablo Torre
Oh, yeah. Get some therapeutic use exemptions.
Dominique Foxworth
We got to get them kids to start passing out. So you can say, see, See, I'm.
David Sampson
Not wishing his best friends ill, but.
Pablo Torre
I will lose consciousness for a second.
David Sampson
So we watched it on sleepovers. These kids would come over to the house for sleepovers with stuff that had to be refrigerated and they had to shoot themselves during sleepovers. This is the real deal.
Dominique Foxworth
And they were still terrible at basketball.
David Sampson
Oh, this was not. Yes. This was not done to be good at basketball.
Dominique Foxworth
I know, but I'm just saying, you couldn't get some residual hooping skills or something? Get a little bit of.
David Sampson
Their parents were Jewish bankers, so that's why we could. I thought you just said that you can't. I. I thought we just went over the.
Dominique Foxworth
No, no, no, no. I. My point is, like, in the higher levels, like, you're not going to work your way from being a average athlete to being a pro level athlete, but you're a high school kid shooting some testosterone in your. In your butt. Like, I feel like you should be able to whoop some high school ass.
David Sampson
It's hgh, actually.
Dominique Foxworth
Oh, hgh. Which is.
Pablo Torre
Which is safer, allegedly.
David Sampson
I. I would view all of it. We were. A note. All of it.
Dominique Foxworth
Did you.
Pablo Torre
When you told parenting, good job. When you parented, did you speak because you come from the world of baseball as we're president of the Marlins, a team that I presume, by the way, at some point in the course of your oversight, encountered cases where it was like, I think this guy's doing something.
David Sampson
I think, oh, we knew our guys were doing it. Yeah. No, I. I came from the land of being short. And I said to my son, I'm short and I'm great. Like, it's. You're gonna be fine. You have to own it and learn it and learn to deal with things. Stand on your tippy toes during photos. There's just things you can do to try to maximize your 65 inches. But he wanted, he didn't want that. The irony, of course, is he ended up being five eight or five nine, five.
Pablo Torre
He was here.
David Sampson
So he's, he's doing fine. Yeah. I don't know if you've met him. It's Caleb.
Dominique Foxworth
He's great. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
David Sampson
But it's, it's just a funny thing what parents do. When I was growing up and I was not on the growth chart, when I'd go to the doctor was very stressful with Dr. Malashak, where they would chart where you are before each school year. And I was always, you know, 10 percentile. And you're hoping for the growth spurt because the doctor says you're gonna have a growth spurt. It's gonna be because my father wasn't short and it never came. And so those were always such anxiety producing appointments.
Pablo Torre
I'm just getting a sense of David's origin story when it comes to his deep distrust of doctors and scientists.
David Sampson
It's gonna happen. Screw you.
Pablo Torre
Gotta get a cure. It's happening.
David Sampson
It really is such a scam, isn't it? All these diseases.
Dominique Foxworth
I mean, maybe it is, I don't know, but I assume it's not.
Pablo Torre
This is not the kind of live to tape episode I wanted to have. We are questioning the profession of my parents, incidentally, who did do something to me as a kid where they put a lock on the power cord of the television.
David Sampson
So you couldn't watch tv.
Pablo Torre
So I couldn't watch tv.
Dominique Foxworth
Nice.
Pablo Torre
I was born in the darkness. Raised in it. Molded by it.
David Sampson
My parents undid the cable at apartments. Cable comes in through one outlet.
Pablo Torre
Yeah.
David Sampson
And so when they'd be out, all the TVs wouldn't work and there were no computers, no anything. And so I would spend just to screw them. I would spend the entire time searching the apartment, looking for any way to watch tv. And I found in one of their closets behind the French francs and Swiss francs, which I didn't steal because I was far more interested in a little hurricane ready battery, 4 inch black and white TV. And so I would take that out of the closet and I'd watch it while they were out just to screw them because they wouldn't let me watch tv.
Pablo Torre
What were you watching back at that time?
David Sampson
Well, there were three channels. I mean, anything, it didn't matter to me.
Pablo Torre
I Watched Howdy Doody.
David Sampson
It was victory.
Dominique Foxworth
There's so many. Almost every sentence you utter just has so many avenues to go.
Pablo Torre
I like the European currency person.
Dominique Foxworth
Yeah, he said I did steal it. Was you gonna do with it?
David Sampson
David Go to the bank and exchange it. What?
Dominique Foxworth
So I guess the adventures of Lil.
Pablo Torre
David Sampson like it's Muppet babies. By the way, just going to the bank with some Swiss francs, French francs.
David Sampson
Before the euro is French francs. I would say, excuse me, can I exchange.
Pablo Torre
His voice is exactly the same. Little David Sampson is exactly the same voice.
David Sampson
I don't know what you did as children.
Pablo Torre
He's marginally smaller.
Dominique Foxworth
I watched tv. I wasn't abused like you guys.
Pablo Torre
Watch.
Dominique Foxworth
TV and got girls, man.
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David Sampson
I.
Dominique Foxworth
Think about that a lot when I'm like raising my kids about like what am I overreacting to? And is it appropriate to overreact to it? Because like the not watching TV thing, I don't imagine that either of you would unplug the TVs when your kids were home.
Pablo Torre
We monitor screen time but we are not trying to put locks on.
Dominique Foxworth
And so I think that's probably like AI probably falls in that category now where it's like I'm vigilant about my kids in school. I mean not using it right.
David Sampson
So you know, not using AI they.
Dominique Foxworth
Really don't have much interest in playing with it. It's like just interest in using it to help them with their schoolwork. And it's like you can't do that. But like obvious or. It seems obvious to me that by the time they are in the workforce it's going to be something that it'll be better to be good at than not. Which is like.
David Sampson
So then why don't you allow them.
Dominique Foxworth
Right. I know. That's what I'm saying because. Because I believe that there are skills that you need to develop like writing and like reading and summarizing things yourself. Like those things are skills that I think you need to develop. Maybe they won't need to develop them. It's like how. I'm not sure how important typing is going to be going forward.
David Sampson
It's not even taught anymore.
Dominique Foxworth
Right? Yeah.
David Sampson
Curses is not taught anymore.
Pablo Torre
Well, penmanship, let alone typing.
Dominique Foxworth
Right.
Pablo Torre
Remember? I mean, God.
Dominique Foxworth
Right.
Pablo Torre
Kids today will never know the pain of trying to write a cursive Z.
David Sampson
People don't recognize what that is.
Pablo Torre
I don't show that you recognize it.
Dominique Foxworth
You can't predict it. And I think that like you guys would both. It seems like you attribute some of your academic success to the fact that your parents forced you to avoid tv. Right?
Pablo Torre
Yeah.
David Sampson
Yeah.
Pablo Torre
By the way, the. The typing thing is interesting because one of my superpowers is fast typing. And that is now increasingly obsolete because.
Dominique Foxworth
So you became an intellect in part because you weren't allowed to watch tv. And David learned. Learned the scheme and scam. They were like we're gonna take the cords. And he was like I'm look around and try to sneak and steal some stuff.
David Sampson
I was always doing the workaround.
Pablo Torre
David was burgling his own home.
David Sampson
It's. You happen to be 100 accurate. And I'm not the only kid who goes through his parents stuff looking for things. Oh yeah.
Dominique Foxworth
It's Christmas time every year. Christmas time.
David Sampson
But I not interested in some of the things. Like little maquettes. Didn't. Little sculptures like a little Henry Moore maquette. Like a little sculpture this big that you could just whatever.
Pablo Torre
So raised by international spies literally is what I'm getting so far.
David Sampson
What I was interested in Macketz was the little teeth.
Pablo Torre
Just a Walther PP7 with a silencer.
Dominique Foxworth
Does sound like weapons.
Pablo Torre
Some RCP90. I'm just giving you golden eye weapons now.
David Sampson
You shouldn't need to find out what a maquette is. It's a pretty well known word.
Dominique Foxworth
No, it's not. I've never heard maquette.
David Sampson
I've never heard the word.
Pablo Torre
Hold on, let me just go.
Dominique Foxworth
It sounds like a knickknack to me.
David Sampson
No, a knick.
Pablo Torre
A little bit. Patty.
David Sampson
Whack I mean it's an. It's a year's worth of salary for the three of us is what them nicknames.
Pablo Torre
A matte is a small three dimensional model or preliminary sketch of a larger piece of art, such as a sculpture or building. Wow. Yeah. Yeah. So it's basically what you making it up? No, no, no, no.
Dominique Foxworth
We didn't think you're making it up. I just never heard of a maquette. What this is though, sound like McDonald's meal?
Pablo Torre
It is. It's kind of like. Yeah. Like a Happy Meal version of a rich guy's favorite thing.
David Sampson
They can be. They're very valuable hamburger. Right. They're. They're. They're very interesting pieces of. Of art and pieces of sculpture. They're wonderful to live with. But my point was different is that I always knew at a young age what how to maximize my time to get exactly what I wanted. And what I wanted was to not give them the last word in me having to do my homework all night or phone time was a big thing.
Dominique Foxworth
Yeah.
David Sampson
Where it wasn't. I didn't have a cell phone, obviously. So I'd be on the phone trying to be popular with a girl or a guy, and then all of a sudden your mom gets on the phone and that. Because she would set a time. Right. And I, My. She didn't. I don't know how she knew when the six minutes was up, but somehow, I don't know, she was counting down. So six minutes per call.
Dominique Foxworth
What were, what was she afraid of?
Pablo Torre
6 minutes.
Dominique Foxworth
She was just like, we can't have David having friends.
Pablo Torre
Minute seven.
David Sampson
I never, I was never allowed to have sleepovers.
Dominique Foxworth
But I guess I understand. While I may not agree wholeheartedly with the TV idea, I understand why they'd be like, all right, you can't watch TV unlimited. Like that makes sense. I don't understand why you can't talk to friends or they just.
David Sampson
Homework to do. Oh, okay.
Dominique Foxworth
So it wasn't about. If you had finished your homework, she would let you talk.
David Sampson
There's always. I never. I never was able to. Because then there's a book report or a book to read or an extra thing to do.
Pablo Torre
You went to a very fancy school.
Dominique Foxworth
Do you ever think about the cost? Because like, it feels like both you guys see these experiences as being beneficial, but nothing comes without a price. Do you think that there was a cost to being raised in that way, like a negative?
David Sampson
Do you. I mean, I. I find myself to. I have friends now, you know, one or two or a Half. And so, no, I. I think that the benefit of the disciplined life I had is it made me disciplined.
Pablo Torre
I would say that I probably be less enamored of weed as an adult if I was not sort of like, told to, you know, be at the other end of the spectrum when it came to just, like.
Dominique Foxworth
I generally think that this is not just true of this conversation about the things that impact us, but just overall, I think that we often want to make a domino style cause and effect to the things that happen in our lives because we like to tell stories and movies and TV shows and all that stuff is like, we to be able to tell that story. But oftentimes I think the results of things that we think are because of one thing are not at all because of that. So, like, get back to the point of saying that, like, I thought that my hard work made me an athlete until I realized that, like, yeah, my hard work made me an NFL player, but, like, I was always going to be a better athlete than most people. I'm guessing that, David, your disposition is probably that of someone who is more prone to discipline. Because we could have these situations. I remember with my. My wife, with our kids, like, I was pretty strict about, early on about, like, what they were eating and how much sugar was around. And she was like, well, what's just going to happen is then they're going to get out into the world and then they'll be free to eat a whole bunch of sugar. And I just like, well, actually, I don't think we know how any of this will impact them. Like, this could lead to someone who's, like, incredibly disciplined because they had a disciplined upbringing. Or we could tell the other story where it's like, oh, I was so disciplined with that. Then you get out of the house. What that crack talking about, Let me, let me, let me, let me holler.
David Sampson
A couple of rocks.
Dominique Foxworth
Let me. I don't know. I just think that we. We want to be able to explain things.
Pablo Torre
I like that Life movie, though. What that crack talking about.
David Sampson
I was allowed candy from October 31st to Thanksgiving Day. Was it during the year? Because you'd go Thanksgiving, then you'd have to pour the bag out, then it would be gone through by your parents. They'd take out everything that was not wrapped, obviously, because it has razor blades in it. So I was told. I don't know if anyone else heard that story.
Dominique Foxworth
Never actually saw it, never actually had a friend who got that razor blade candy.
David Sampson
It's a lot of effort to put razor blades in an apple, but I'm fine, whatever it is. And then one a night. And so anything over, let's say Thanksgiving's November 24th. You get 25 pieces of candy the 31st, and then through November 24th, and then the rest gets thrown away, so.
Dominique Foxworth
And now you obviously are, from what I understand, a candy addict. So why do you think that. That candy discipline resulted in you becoming an addict and the. The no phone discipline resulted in you becoming a nerd?
David Sampson
I'm not a nerd.
Dominique Foxworth
I mean, I don't know how you would call it.
David Sampson
I'm not a nerd. I'm a lot of things.
Pablo Torre
Let's, let's, let's. Let's live in this definition for a second. What do you.
Dominique Foxworth
Or discipline. I'm sorry? You said disciplined, right?
Pablo Torre
Yeah. Okay.
David Sampson
Wait, you're not. Those aren't synonyms?
Dominique Foxworth
No, they aren't synonyms. I was thinking about Pablo.
Pablo Torre
Okay.
David Sampson
I don't find him nerdy either.
Pablo Torre
Thanks.
David Sampson
Do you think you're nerdy?
Pablo Torre
Well, so that's why I wanted to live in for a second.
Dominique Foxworth
Relative, baby.
Pablo Torre
Okay, compared to what? NFL bound. 36. 36. Dominique. Screen name growing up. Yeah. Classified self. Classified as Josh.
David Sampson
That's so awesome. Give me some that. And you made it happen. I love that.
Dominique Foxworth
It was my screen name. It was my Black Planet page name.
Pablo Torre
We're still looking for that. We're still looking for the archive of Dominique's Black Planet profile.
David Sampson
Did you wear 36?
Dominique Foxworth
My first year. So I graduated from high school early and went to Maryland early. And so the spring I had 36. And then training camp came and I got six. But yeah, that was my. So it was when I. Yeah, I had 36.
David Sampson
See, I love that. That may be the coolest story you've ever told me about yourself.
Dominique Foxworth
Ooh, I got some stories, boy. Turn these mics off, doggy. We used to go to Vegas. Oh.
Pablo Torre
Woo. How many franks were involved?
Dominique Foxworth
Man, you can't. You can't imagine what I could do with a macinette.
David Sampson
Not a Mac. Oh, God.
Dominique Foxworth
What's it called?
David Sampson
Mackette.
Dominique Foxworth
Oh, yeah. It's a maquette to you. It's a macinette to me, boy.
Pablo Torre
David, did you have a screen name?
David Sampson
No. How would you. With what screen?
Dominique Foxworth
Aim. It was a.
Pablo Torre
Well, Instant Messenger. America Online. Did you ever have to come up with a code name for yourself?
David Sampson
I stayed in hotels when I was president of the team under Jay Trotter.
Dominique Foxworth
Nice.
David Sampson
That was my name.
Dominique Foxworth
Jay Trotter.
Pablo Torre
Why?
David Sampson
That's the lead character in Let it ride Jay Trotter played by Richard Dreyfuss.
Dominique Foxworth
I don't think I've ever seen that.
Pablo Torre
And so I was image that I look up from the movie be in black and white.
Dominique Foxworth
Jay Trotter.
David Sampson
No, it's Let it ride from like 1991. It's a great movie.
Dominique Foxworth
89 Tallest J. Trotter.
David Sampson
Richard Dreyfuss is not a tall guy in real life. But you know the players. I don't. Did you use a pseudonym?
Dominique Foxworth
No.
David Sampson
At team hotels. But you guys are always in for one night.
Dominique Foxworth
Yeah, I mean we didn't have the same situation as you guys. It was like the hotel was pretty much.
Pablo Torre
No one was trying to poison your food.
David Sampson
No, I mean it's not about that. It's about the phone calls.
Dominique Foxworth
I don't think that. So like the. The team would have the hotel. So I'm not sure that any of our names were on. Not the whole hotel all the time, but sometimes. But I'm not sure that any of our names were on specific rooms. And there'd be security. So no one was let into the hotel out because like you, you mentioned it wasn't like you guys who were on a road trip. We come in, land at like 4 o' clock the day before, play a football game and don't return to the hotel. So like we spend the night one night there and fly out. So it's not the same.
David Sampson
So it's a homogilla when you check into a hotel with the baseball team because it's a lot of rooms, much like football, but you're there for a longer period of time and you don't have the whole hotel. So there are people around. But pre cell phone, the way you'd reach players is through their hotel phone. Literally the like hey, connect me to room. You know, 1269. So you had to have a manifest of where everyone was. So we'd get two manifests. One with the names that were with the pseudonyms and then one with the key meaning who.
Dominique Foxworth
Yeah.
David Sampson
What?
Pablo Torre
The decoder.
David Sampson
The decoder. So then the traveling secretary, the manager or the GM would know how to reach everybody.
Dominique Foxworth
Our hotels were always, I would imagine, much more boring than baseball or any other sport hotel because we were in and out, we had curfews. It was. Ran a very tight ship. And I imagine that you guys don't do like I know basketball players, I don't know very many baseball players. But like you're there for so long that they live their own lives. So I imagine you guys have Much better stories than that. Like the most, most fun stories we had is somebody just didn't show up to the game or skip curfew or something like that. It wasn't anything that interesting.
David Sampson
Never you?
Dominique Foxworth
Nah, I didn't start drinking until I was 35.
Pablo Torre
Did you know that about him?
David Sampson
We're funny. I didn't start drinking until I was 31.
Pablo Torre
We're a bunch of nerds. I got bad news, guys. We're nerds.
David Sampson
Wait, do you not drink now?
Pablo Torre
I drink so much less now, but I socially and happily enjoy it.
David Sampson
The thing about hotels I find with players is that they are. They get very comfortable because they know they're going to be there three nights, four nights, whatever. So they, they move into the room. And it used to be when, when I was younger, players used to share a room and that was a huge collective bargain issue when they wanted their own rooms because it doubled the cost. But you had grown ass men who were sharing.
Pablo Torre
Yeah, high school debate tournament style, baby.
David Sampson
And these are professional athletes. I assume the NFL was like that too in the 70s and 80s.
Dominique Foxworth
Oh, probably. Yeah. I'm sure the NFL is notoriously cheap. They probably were like that in the 70s and 80s. It wasn't training camp. My rookie year, training camp. I shared a room on the, on the preseason games. But excuse me, after that we were all by ourselves. I imagine college, we share rooms.
David Sampson
Even the top schools like Alabama road.
Pablo Torre
Roommates was a thing.
Dominique Foxworth
I don't know, I can't speak for them, but. And it may have changed now, but when I was in college we shared rooms which that led to more interesting stories.
Pablo Torre
I remember we did an episode with Nate Tice, who was Russell Wilson's road roommate at Wisconsin. Which is to say that, yeah, this is a proud tradition that even, you know.
Dominique Foxworth
Yeah, maybe things have changed now that it seems to be even more and more money in college sports. But yeah, that was. And you're a college kid, your decision making is a little bit inhibited. Not that when you get to NFL all of a sudden it gets better, but like, yeah, me and my roommate definitely had friends over sometimes, which was not a smart idea.
David Sampson
What's the tennis movie that we just watched And I'm totally blanking. Zendaya. I'm so.
Dominique Foxworth
Challengers.
David Sampson
Challengers.
Dominique Foxworth
I haven't seen it.
Pablo Torre
That's good.
David Sampson
There's a fantastic threesome. Oh yeah, I heard about that with the two.
Dominique Foxworth
I heard people complain that it was like not.
Pablo Torre
They didn't actually pay it off.
Dominique Foxworth
Yeah. That it wasn't as Exciting as they had like sold it to be.
David Sampson
Oh, I like the payoff. Was her payoff.
Dominique Foxworth
You liked it?
Pablo Torre
David is running way too much.
Dominique Foxworth
I feel really uncomfortable.
David Sampson
Yeah, you shouldn't. It's a great scene.
Dominique Foxworth
No, no, no. I'm uncomfortable with how excited you are because I haven't seen the scene. So I don't know how to react. I don't know if I should be.
David Sampson
Agreeing with you or you didn't like the payoff.
Pablo Torre
You're Zendaya in the usual of this. Yeah. You're sitting in between to people who are ever closer.
Dominique Foxworth
I am obviously.
David Sampson
Who are trying to be close to you. And you can do spoiler alerts for that movie. It's she. They're trying to do a threesome.
Pablo Torre
Right.
David Sampson
And they all want to be with her and she wants them.
Pablo Torre
Is it trying to do a threesome? Is that the right.
David Sampson
Have them trying to have a threesome? I say, well, you do do them. And. And the payoff for her was that they got all dressed up and ready to go and then she said, goodnight, boys, and left the room. That's a pretty powerful payoff.
Pablo Torre
That is a figurative payoff.
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Pablo Torre
Foreign. Let's rank our worst decisions. David, you go first.
Dominique Foxworth
Oh, gosh.
David Sampson
My worst decision was going public with the fact that one of the things we used to tell our players was to pleasure themselves before checking into their road hotel because we thought, I thought that it would make them get in trouble less. And it's.
Pablo Torre
And so Dominique and I did an episode about post not clarity.
David Sampson
Yes, you did.
Pablo Torre
And this is the same philosophy.
David Sampson
It was. It was the same philosophy and it was a. It should have been kept in house.
Pablo Torre
Yeah. I feel like, hey guys, can you, can you just jack off real quick? Feels like an HR thing.
David Sampson
Right. So I, I would have done it differently. I don't disagree with why I did what I did and I don't disagree with the results. I think we only had like three or four arrests in 18 years. Not terrible. So.
Dominique Foxworth
Oh, you stand by the science.
David Sampson
Exactly. About 30 divorces, three or four arrests, a few restraining orders. You know, just a Tuesday.
Pablo Torre
Three or four arrests. Think if they hadn't jacked off, it.
David Sampson
Would have been even more. I agree, man.
Pablo Torre
So the players were like, okay.
Dominique Foxworth
I mean, I don't think that they were influenced by it. You think?
David Sampson
No.
Pablo Torre
When you went public with this, where did this go public?
David Sampson
So I was giving a, either a speech.
Dominique Foxworth
I was ymca.
David Sampson
I was doing something where the audience just wasn't a Boys and girls necessarily ready for this conversation. Oh, and I regret doing that.
Pablo Torre
Yeah.
Dominique Foxworth
Nice.
David Sampson
I don't.
Dominique Foxworth
Pretty. I mean, that's mild as far as worst decisions are concerned.
David Sampson
Well, Marlin, I mean, speech personally. Oh, no, Master.
Dominique Foxworth
Okay.
David Sampson
You're asking me if I've made bad personal decisions.
Dominique Foxworth
Oh, no, no, no.
David Sampson
I, I, as I sit here, divorced, I mean. What? What do you mean?
Dominique Foxworth
That was a great decision.
David Sampson
Which to get divorced and to get married. I, I, I stand by every decision I've made. They're just not all great. Yeah, but I wouldn't redo any of them. I don't like people who say, if I had to do it again, I'd do it differently.
Dominique Foxworth
Oh, really?
Pablo Torre
Why not?
David Sampson
Because I don't like that you should think of that before you do it in the first time.
Dominique Foxworth
I don't like people who say, I have no regrets because this is where. This is where I was supposed to be. Like, when someone asks you that question, that's the whole point is like, I don't know.
David Sampson
What are you. I have no regrets. What are your regrets?
Pablo Torre
You have zero regrets.
David Sampson
I have. I have myriad mistakes and zero regrets.
Dominique Foxworth
So you are fine with telling the YMCA audience that you wanted your players?
David Sampson
It's not ideal, I grant you. You know, I don't. I don't love the fact that I went into an all black church trying to get votes for the stadium. And I stood up there and I said, can I get an amen? I don't love that I did that, but I did.
Pablo Torre
I didn't know that you did that.
David Sampson
Oh, I gave a whole sermon.
Pablo Torre
Your mistake is in now telling us that you did that. You should regret telling us that I gave a sermon. What the does that.
David Sampson
I gave a sermon to a major black church in Miami because I needed their support for public money for the ballpark.
Dominique Foxworth
So hold on.
David Sampson
I was the only white guy in there.
Dominique Foxworth
Jewish.
David Sampson
I am Jewish. I am white.
Dominique Foxworth
The white is.
Pablo Torre
How did you. Okay, so I want. Because we know, Dominique, that David regrets nothing in terms of his process, even though the outcome may not be what he desired. What was your. How did you dress? What was your approach?
David Sampson
So how I dressed is. I went to visit a black tailor.
Pablo Torre
I said we weren't gonna cut anything.
David Sampson
Oh, no, hold on. No, I'm telling you what I did. And I had a suit made for me by Andre Dawson's tailor. So I looked like Andre Dawson, and it was awesome. If you know the Hawk, he's the most impeccable dresser you'll ever meet.
Pablo Torre
Probably at Lebatard's wedding. As a pure side note, was he really? Yeah.
David Sampson
Andre Dawson, he is just a wonderful dresser. He was the coolest guy. I don't think you'll see it on Google, but. But just very, very good dressing.
Pablo Torre
Oh, yeah, we see. We see. And so how many buttons did your suit have?
David Sampson
It's the only suit I ever had. It had six buttons. Oh, what year was that? This was 2008. 2008. And so we needed the vote. So I had a.
Pablo Torre
You're a king of comedy.
Dominique Foxworth
But is. It's not colorful.
David Sampson
I can't even. I had a consigliere who was Cuban, and we had a plan of all the different people we had to get votes from. So we went to the Cubans. We went to the 100. I had to go get one. Recently made a gaia vada, so I had to wear that to the Cube.
Pablo Torre
Say that one more time.
David Sampson
I think it's gaia vada. I don't really know how it is.
Pablo Torre
But I appreciate you increasing the flexibility of your armpits while you were.
David Sampson
You guys are funny. But I did give a. I did give the sermon and I did. I. I felt like I had the room enough.
Pablo Torre
What does a sermon?
David Sampson
It was about all the things that this 65 inch white Jewish guy could do for them by having a ballpark built with their money. This is what I will deliver for you.
Pablo Torre
You are a prosperity gospel panderer.
David Sampson
I was. What's the. This would have been great if I had had it right in my head. The guy, the.
Pablo Torre
The.
David Sampson
The Music man. And it starts with T, which stands for trouble. Music City. What's the main character? Oh, my God.
Dominique Foxworth
No idea.
David Sampson
I'm. You really don't know? You don't know either somehow, Wolverine.
Dominique Foxworth
I don't know.
Pablo Torre
So the, The, The. The thing. The thing. You know, David Sampson's a method black preacher when he doesn't know the remem. The name of the Music man character. What is Harold Hill?
David Sampson
Harold Hill. You never heard that name? Anyway, so, so that's. I went in and I am trying to explain to this large audience about what public funding means. And I'm standing in my suit and in my pointed shoes. You got pointy shoes, Long pointy shoes that were like size 10.
Dominique Foxworth
Please tell me the suit was like, like black or blue or like a normal dark.
David Sampson
I think it was tan.
Dominique Foxworth
Maybe.
David Sampson
I think it was tan.
Dominique Foxworth
Okay, that's straight.
Pablo Torre
That's good. That's good.
Dominique Foxworth
I didn't.
Pablo Torre
It was six button Obama.
Dominique Foxworth
We should have got me the pointy shoes.
David Sampson
It was something. So it was going great. And I had. I. I had eyes with my.
Pablo Torre
It was going great.
David Sampson
It was.
Pablo Torre
So they were giving you amens.
David Sampson
I. I did not. No, I just had. I had the view that I had their attention. I had the view that they were looking at me as though I was right, one of them. And so I built up to this crescendo. And I look over at the bishop. His name was Bishop Curry. Bishop Curry was his name in Miami. And I look at the Bishop. Then I look out at the audience. I look back at the Cuban consigliere, and I look at the crowd. I say, can I get an amen? And then I walked out and it was awesome. Side note, we got all the black commissioner votes.
Dominique Foxworth
Did they? Oh, so they did say. They said amen.
David Sampson
Oh, we got the amen. We got the votes. We got it all. Wow.
Dominique Foxworth
I was gonna ask you, have you ever been pandered to?
David Sampson
Probably.
Dominique Foxworth
You don't know. Like, I feel like when I'm being pandered to, I recognize it and I dislike it.
Pablo Torre
When you're pandered to. Does it look like this photo of Bishop Michael Curry? We're going to put this on the YouTube channel. But this, this is him.
David Sampson
It was. It's Victor Curry.
Pablo Torre
Sorry, Victor Curry.
David Sampson
Victor.
Pablo Torre
Not Bishop Curry.
David Sampson
It's Bishop. Victor Curry.
Pablo Torre
Oh. Victor Curry is the author of A Charge to keep. I have Fulfilling your life's Purpose, which feels like a book that all of us might have read in our most vulnerable moments. Hanging from a bar for hours at a time.
David Sampson
You guys, I'm happy to be with you guys again. You make me think of things I hadn't thought of in a very, very long time.
Pablo Torre
How long have we known David and we only now get.
Dominique Foxworth
Whenever we're together? I think David thinks that this is an example of me, like, pandering to him, but it's not. Whenever we're together, David's always the star. 100% of the three of us, people would guess, I would assume that the least interesting and least entertain of us would be the former club president, not the people who are on TV for a living or played professional sports. But always it is. It is always. David is somehow the star of the show.
David Sampson
I think we're now coming in tied for second because Pablo is now at a different level. He has left us in the dust.
Dominique Foxworth
You talking about old Peabody over here?
Pablo Torre
Dominique was trying to.
David Sampson
I don't think he would even talk to us going forward.
Pablo Torre
He was, he was trying to. I, I, I was also about to see David as Ara Zendaya.
Dominique Foxworth
Yeah.
Pablo Torre
And instead swung back around, setting it up. We're going to Photoshop that. We're going to have our graphics squad.
Dominique Foxworth
No, thank you.
Pablo Torre
Photoshop that.
Dominique Foxworth
No, thank you.
Pablo Torre
It's going to be really.
David Sampson
It's going to be funny, actually.
Dominique Foxworth
Sounds like a waste of Graphic Squad money.
David Sampson
Hey, listen, welcome to Metal Arc.
Pablo Torre
Oh, such a clutch pickup, Dave.
Owen Wilson
I was worried we'd bring back the same team. I meant those blackout motorized shades. Lines.com made it crazy affordable to replace our old blinds.
Pablo Torre
Hard to install.
Owen Wilson
No, it's easy. I installed these and then got some for my mom, too. She talked to a design consultant for free and scheduled a professional Measure and install hall of Fame, son. They're the number one online retailer of custom window coverings in the world.
Pablo Torre
Blind stock is the Goat.
Owen Wilson
The Goat.
David Sampson
Save up to 50% with minimum purchase at blinds.com rules and restrictions may apply.
Pablo Torre
At the end of every episode of Pablo Doria Finds out, even one that is entirely live to tape. I don't think we're making a single edit to this because I want people to understand what it's like for us to sit at a table together because it is this. What do we find out today, gentlemen?
Dominique Foxworth
The snack draw around here is depressing. Boy, I found that out.
Pablo Torre
That baby episode we just did. You just mad that we didn't have the good snacks?
Dominique Foxworth
It takes a lot of energy to be this entertaining.
David Sampson
I found out that Dominique believes that in order to be a professional athlete, you have to have some sort of nature versus nurture. And I am still thinking about the parents of big leaguers who we had, whose parents were not athletic at all and they were big leaguers, or the people who, like Steffi Graph and Andre Agassi, who have kids who may or may not be professional athletes. Michael Jordan's kids, they tried. They didn't make it.
Dominique Foxworth
My old friend, I think, I mean, you need to go do some DNA tests on these people who somehow became athletes without a shred of athleticism in there. They might find out something that they don't want to know. Like, go ahead, go ahead and look at the NFL draft. Go ahead and look at the NBA draft. Them last names get more and more familiar. I think that there was a time when it was different.
Pablo Torre
No. And now it's crazy.
Dominique Foxworth
It's. It's absurd, you know, like, and even if you're not, even if it's not someone else who plays, like your mom was a college athlete, like, it just. It just doesn't happen anymore. Where it's just like, my dad was a plumber. And I think part of it is that women's athletics has grown to the point. I think a lot of times the athletic gene could come from your mother. You wouldn't recognize that because there was a time when there was not, like, adequate women's sports. And so you'd be like, hey, this kid came out of nowhere. He's an athlete. His dad ain't, but he can ball.
Pablo Torre
Like, eh.
Dominique Foxworth
His mom probably was a tremendous athlete but didn't have the opportunity. So I'm guessing that these big leaguers that you talk about, maybe. Maybe something a little different happening over there.
Pablo Torre
The most prolific university when it comes to generating NBA draft picks is in fact the university of former professional basketball players assembled together as one group. It's crazy how many. How many Nepo athletes there are. We're all kind of Yao Ming being produced by the Chinese government, Allegedly.
David Sampson
Yeah.
Pablo Torre
Y. What I found out today is that David Samson has probably rummaged around the drawers in this office and found all sorts of things that are of value to various Europeans.
David Sampson
Wait.
Dominique Foxworth
He hasn't found that much. Because I tell you one thing. Drawers. It's a shambles. Couple bags of nuts and an empty beef jerky container. What are we doing? It's depressing. It's sad.
Pablo Torre
There's a. There's a. A maquette of jerky. There's a smaller jerky that stands in for the full size.
David Sampson
Jerky times, man.
Dominique Foxworth
Yeah, it is sometimes. Man. Jerky. Man. That just reminds me of David Sampson's YMCA story.
Pablo Torre
This has been Pablo Torre Finds Out a Meadowlark Media production. And I'll talk to you next time.
Podcast Summary: Pablo Torre Finds Out - Episode: Share & Tell & Age with Domonique Foxworth and David Samson
Release Date: June 3, 2025
Hosts/Guests:
In this engaging episode of Pablo Torre Finds Out, host Pablo Torre sits down with former NFL player Domonique Foxworth and former MLB executive David Samson. The trio delves into a variety of topics ranging from personal upbringing and discipline to the intricate balance between nature and nurture in achieving athletic success. The conversation is laced with humor, candid admissions, and insightful reflections, providing listeners with a deep dive into the lives and philosophies of their esteemed guests.
Dominique Foxworth and David Samson share their childhood experiences, highlighting the strict discipline instilled by their parents. David recounts how his parents controlled his screen time, leading him to clandestinely watch television despite restrictions.
David Samson (21:00): "I was born in the darkness. Raised in it. Molded by it."
Domonique Foxworth (28:44): "I find it hilarious that David kind of turned his nose up at people getting hair transplants when clearly, if there's a..."
The discussion emphasizes how these early restrictions fostered discipline but also led to unique coping mechanisms and personal growth.
A significant portion of the conversation revolves around the debate of nature vs. nurture in producing successful athletes. Both guests acknowledge the importance of hard work but question the extent to which natural ability plays a role.
Domonique Foxworth (51:02): "You need to go do some DNA tests on these people who somehow became athletes without a shred of athleticism in there."
David Samson (16:00): "I believe that the increment, you have to have natural ability, but I think the differentiating factor is the hard work you put in."
They explore examples of athletes whose parents were not athletes, pondering whether inherent ability or relentless effort is the key driver of their success.
The trio discusses the evolving standards of physical appearance in sports and entertainment, touching on topics like athletes' physiques, plastic surgery, and the authenticity of on-screen appearances.
Dominique Foxworth (10:56): "I don't find him nerdy either."
David Samson (09:28): "The irony, of course, is that you can add abs in post. I mean, if there's a budget for post production..."
They critique the often unrealistic physical standards imposed on athletes and entertainers, questioning the need for artificial enhancements and the impact on individuals' self-perception.
David Samson shares his experiences as a father, particularly focusing on his approach to his son's height and the consequences of enforcing strict rules.
David Samson (17:25): "So he wanted to go on the juice. We said no."
Domonique Foxworth (52:03): "You need to go do some DNA tests on these people who somehow became athletes without a shred of athleticism in there."
The conversation delves into how parenting decisions, such as restricting screen time or controlling diet, shape children's character and future behavior, balancing discipline with personal freedom.
A candid segment where David Samson reflects on some of his professional decisions, including a controversial policy regarding athlete behavior.
David Samson (40:28): "My worst decision was going public with the fact that one of the things we used to tell our players was to pleasure themselves before checking into their road hotel because we thought, I thought that it would make them get in trouble less."
Domonique Foxworth (42:07): "Pretty. I mean, that's mild as far as worst decisions are concerned."
Samson discusses the repercussions of these decisions, including legal and personal fallout, providing a sobering look at the complexities of leadership and policy-making in professional sports.
Throughout the episode, the hosts and guests share humorous stories and personal anecdotes, fostering a lighthearted and relatable atmosphere.
David Samson (13:01): "We could have made so much money off of a young David Samson."
Dominique Foxworth (26:27): "What's it called? Mackette."
These moments of levity balance the more serious discussions, highlighting the camaraderie and mutual respect among the trio.
The episode wraps up with reflections on the various topics discussed, emphasizing the importance of understanding both personal discipline and inherent abilities in shaping successful careers. The guests leave listeners with thoughtful insights into the intricate balance between upbringing, personal choices, and natural talent.
David Samson (40:28): "My worst decision was going public with the fact that one of the things we used to tell our players was to pleasure themselves before checking into their road hotel because we thought, I thought that it would make them get in trouble less."
Dominique Foxworth (51:02): "You need to go do some DNA tests on these people who somehow became athletes without a shred of athleticism in there."
Pablo Torre (25:02): "Remember? I mean, God. Kids today will never know the pain of trying to write a cursive Z."
David Samson (09:28): "The irony, of course, is that you can add abs in post. I mean, if there's a budget for post production..."
Dominique Foxworth (28:44): "I find it hilarious that David kind of turned his nose up at people getting hair transplants when clearly, if there's a..."
This episode of Pablo Torre Finds Out offers a rich and multifaceted exploration of personal development, professional challenges, and the ongoing debate of nature versus nurture in athletic success. Through honest dialogue and shared experiences, listeners gain a deeper understanding of the complexities faced by those in the high-stakes world of sports and entertainment.
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