
Loading summary
Greg Rosenthal
Lowe's knows that taking on more projects should be rewarding. That's why loyalty members get more every day with rewards for every home or business purchase. Plus shop weekly member deals and get access to free standard shipping. So what are you waiting for? Join for free Today Lowe's we help you save loyalty program subject to terms and conditions details@lowe's.com terms subject to change what's up everyone? It's Greg Rosenthal, and I'm teaming up with the King of Spring, Daniel Jeremiah. He requires me to say that we're going to be bringing you 40s and free agents, the only podcast you'll need this NFL draft season. From DJs mock drafts to my top 101, free agents will have it covered for you with all new episodes every Thursday keeping you up to date as we head to the NFL Draft. Listen to 40s and free agents on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Bobby Bones
Lots to say with Bobby Bones and Matt Castle is a production of the NFL and iHeart podcast. We got lots to say we got lots to say we're glad you're here.
Daniel Jeremiah
And we hope you stay Cause we.
Bobby Bones
Got lots to say yeah, we got.
Bruce Buffer
Lots to say now here's Bobby and Mat.
Bobby Bones
I feel like people judge me when they come to my house and the studio is at my house, but it's not in the house. It's in a building on the property behind the house. Like, but when you pulled up, there's a massive Amazon box right on the front porch. And then I feel like if there's a box or two boxes, people just judge you for not being detail oriented. So did you at all think, man, what a slob that guy is because he has Amazon boxes on his front porch? When you drove up, there was scattered all over the place?
Daniel Jeremiah
No, because at the end of the day, I have more boxes. Random boxes show up to my house on a weekly basis that I haven't ordered any of those things. So I don't even know what kind of boxes. There's usually three or four boxes at my gate per day. We've got five kids, too.
Bobby Bones
So who has access to the ordering?
Daniel Jeremiah
My wife, definitely. I have access to ordering, but I really randomly will use Amazon just for simple things. I need razors. I can't get to the store. Boom, I'm going to order it, package up with something. But I mean, we have shoes that come to the house, socks. This week we had new sheets for the bed. Somehow the bed ripped the sheet. I Think I don't know how. It wasn't any activity that I was doing.
Bobby Bones
You have so many kids. I was going to guess how, but okay. If you're saying that when you, when you go.
Daniel Jeremiah
I figured out how that happened. So I went and saw the doctor about it. Actually I saw the veterinarian. I got a 2 for 1 deal with my dog.
Bobby Bones
Nice.
Daniel Jeremiah
It was great.
Bobby Bones
Yeah, I guess I wondered, but with your family, how old did a kid or does a kid need to be to have access to the Amazon?
Daniel Jeremiah
Oh, there's no chance I'd ever give my kids access to.
Bobby Bones
None of them have open Amazon.
Daniel Jeremiah
Are you kidding me? Do you know much random, like we'd have seeds show up and I'm. What I'm talking about is like the baseball seeds my kids are obsessed with my boys are baseball seeds. But the most random stuff that they go on Amazon, like. Can I get this? Can I get that? I was like, no, you don't need any of this stuff.
Bobby Bones
So no accessories.
Daniel Jeremiah
Yes.
Bobby Bones
I pulled up recent things I bought online. Random. I bought Alpha Momentous Alpha GPS supplement.
Daniel Jeremiah
Fantastic. It sounds great. Any. Anything that has alpha and it's winning.
Bobby Bones
That's a good point. I mean it's number one.
Daniel Jeremiah
Have you taken it yet?
Bobby Bones
Yeah, yeah, yeah. And it sounds like it's something you should use for like your sexual drive. It's not. It's for like cognitive.
Daniel Jeremiah
Right.
Bobby Bones
Health. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Just so everybody knows.
Daniel Jeremiah
Is that the Joe Rogan thing?
Bobby Bones
No, it's not that Alpha brain. It's probably something similar. Ish. I bought a 30 pound bag of marshmallows of. Of Lucky Charms marshmallows.
Daniel Jeremiah
30 pounds.
Bobby Bones
It's a massive bag. And on my radio show I tried to. I offered somebody fifteen hundred dollars to eat the whole bag in four hours.
Daniel Jeremiah
Were they able to even.
Bobby Bones
Nobody. Nobody.
Daniel Jeremiah
I mean 30 pounds of mush. I mean, what is it? Marshmallows?
Bobby Bones
Yeah, Lucky Charms marshmallows that disintegrate though. We're not talking about chewy marshmallows.
Daniel Jeremiah
I know, but still, that's £30 worth. That's. That's pretty intense.
Bobby Bones
No, I agree, but that's why I offered him 1500 bucks. I wanted somebody to at least try it and nobody did. And then finally I have. I bought pickleballs. I bought 16 new pickleballs. That's my recent random ordering. What do you have randomly? What did you buy?
Daniel Jeremiah
Okay, randomly, you know, like sometimes you're scrolling on the Twitter and stuff and these ads will come up. So recently I bought a 3D printer. I've heard about it.
Bobby Bones
No way.
Daniel Jeremiah
And it's. And so you know, they've got the mid, midline one. And then I was like, you know what? Midline? Okay, I'm going to get the big.
Bobby Bones
Dog question about a 3D printer with you. What did you want to print? Because that sounds super cool and I see like toys and medical supplies, but when you see that, you think, I'd like to have that because blank.
Daniel Jeremiah
Honestly, a guy came over to my house, was working on my television, said he got a 3D printer. And he was saying, yeah, we make everything from vases to these little pots. He said, we've got all these little toys that we can make for the kids. In addition to that, they'll make anything from like a scraper, a paint scraper to. I don't know, I mean, to. Honestly, he sold me on it. So I was like, this sounds rad. So I went on.
Bobby Bones
So it came up though because your phone heard it.
Daniel Jeremiah
Yes. They must have heard it first.
Bobby Bones
Yeah. Because I don't get asked for 3D printers.
Daniel Jeremiah
Right.
Bobby Bones
Got it, got it.
Daniel Jeremiah
So I went on, I purchased this and of course I'm thinking it's like a smaller version. It's as big as that Trackman, like.
Bobby Bones
Oh, it's stereo system, three feet tall.
Daniel Jeremiah
It's massive. I was like, oops, I don't know where to put this right here. But it is big. It's awesome.
Bobby Bones
But okay. Have you used it?
Daniel Jeremiah
Well, I won't hook up to my phone and through the Bluetooth.
Bobby Bones
Well, how do you know it's awesome? How can you get.
Daniel Jeremiah
Because it's already got pre programmed things that you can go in and actually 3D print. So my kids have printed out like these puzzles.
Bobby Bones
So it has worked though. You've used it.
Daniel Jeremiah
It's worked. It's unbelievable.
Bobby Bones
Oh wow.
Daniel Jeremiah
It's. Within 30 minutes it printed. It was able to 3D print this whole jewelry box for my daughter that was pre, pre input it into the system.
Bobby Bones
What do you put in as. Okay, we'll call it the paper. What do you put in?
Daniel Jeremiah
There's no paper.
Bobby Bones
No, no. But let's say you have to put in paper to get paper printed out. What do you put in that would be the same as paper into a normal printer? Is it like a chemical? What is it?
Daniel Jeremiah
So it is this. It looks like a plastic and it looks like honestly a really big fishing line and they've got these different compartments up there with different colors. And then you put it into this Little. Little area right here that sucks it down in. And then as you print, it uses the different coloring system and just goes. Takes literally 30 minutes. It prints anything and it's remarkable and sturdy. It's fascinating.
Bobby Bones
That's legit. Over 500 bucks.
Daniel Jeremiah
I think it was around 650. I can't believe I bought a 3D printer for the first time for 650 bucks. But then you also have to get, you know, the accessories that go along with it. But it was. It's blew my mind. The kids have been using it at school for some time, which kind of drew my interest to it.
Bobby Bones
What do you mean, using it at school?
Daniel Jeremiah
So they. One of their science classes, they go in and they're able to 3D print, for instance. My daughter was there and they had to put together a business concept. Hers was a new type of shoe. So she did a 3D print of a shoe that she designed for her business model.
Bobby Bones
That's. That's so legit.
Daniel Jeremiah
And it looks like a legit shoe, like a high top and had the design and all that. So it's. It was pretty cool like that. So I've seen components of it, but never actually use it until now.
Bobby Bones
I just ordered one. Yeah, in that conversation, I just ordered one. What else you got?
Daniel Jeremiah
Oh, so I like to shoot a little bit, but I haven't been shooting for a long time. Of course, this, you know, full metal thing that swings back and forth. I ordered one off of Twitter.
Bobby Bones
A full metal thing like that throws ski.
Daniel Jeremiah
No, I'm sorry, I've already got that. It's actually target shooting.
Bobby Bones
So it throws the targets?
Daniel Jeremiah
No, it's. It just is a standalone target, but when you shoot one side, it swings to the other side so you can keep shooting. And it's got six different targets. I forgot completely that I even ordered this thing. And of course it shows up to my house. I'm like, what is this hunk of metal? And I open it up. I was like, oh, yeah, I got a shooting range at the house now.
Bobby Bones
Have you taken it out?
Daniel Jeremiah
Not at all.
Bobby Bones
You could have 3D printed one of those, though, and not even bought.
Daniel Jeremiah
I know. I thought about that now. Now I'm pretty upset with myself, but pretty stoked. Just going to get outdoors some more.
Bobby Bones
Your stuff's a way more random than mine.
Daniel Jeremiah
It's so random.
Bobby Bones
Mine's like nutrients and pickleballs. Yours is like a 3D printer for jewelry boxes and a way to shoot away your anxiety 100%. So the NFL is weird right now. Because it's at a very boring time and they do a great job of keeping it active all year. But this is even the boring time pre draft, meaning everybody's fallen into kind of their slots. We think they are. We don't really know. We know Cam Ward is going to go one of the Titans because they said we're not even going to watch Shitter. Right, Right. So they're not going to go shoulder. They're not going to go Travis Hunter. So the Titans are at one unless they trade it. We know that's the deal. And I think what's exciting about the draft is we kind of don't know. Travis Hunter's odds have popped up to number two, the betting odds.
Daniel Jeremiah
Right.
Bobby Bones
And. But now there's really not much to talk about until the draft. And I'm watching Shader's Pro Day. And now, because there's nothing to talk about, you have to find things to talk about. And the big debate is how he pats the ball, of course. So why is it bad that someone pats the ball?
Daniel Jeremiah
A lot of people will make the argument that if you pat the ball, you give that defensive back an extra beat because they know that you're about to throw. Right. So you pat the ball. But honestly, I think it's an overrated quality that people look at sometimes because everybody has their throwing motion. It's sometimes just naturally part of their throwing motion. He still has a quick release as long as the ball's out on time. And a lot of times, look, if it's man to man defense, that defensive back's not looking at you anyway. And then in addition to that, in terms of zone, you're always going through your progression and going through your read. And you have to deliver the ball on time and with accuracy. Now, if you're staring down a wide receiver when it's zone defense, then you're already giving your tail. Right. You've got to be good with your eyes. You have to manipulate the defense, particularly the second level of defense. So when I say that, I mean linebackers to move them off spots in zone. When it's man to man, you just have to throw the ball accurately, have your guy go up and get the ball, or it's all about the timing. So if you throw with anticipation, timing, I think that that's more important than anything else because when you watch his footwork, he's got really good footwork. He's always got a solid foundation. He throws off of a really good platform. So that's more important to Me. And then it's the high level processing. Can you process the game quickly? Can you get through your reads? Can you make the appropriate checks at the right time? That's what makes a really good quarterback. It's not always about patting the ball. I used to pat the ball all the time, but that's probably why I was on seven teams.
Bobby Bones
Was it ever an issue with a quick, I say a three step drop and you're just looking to get rid of the ball fast? I wonder, do you still pat? If you're a patter, do you still pat it quickly or can that actually slow down? If it's a quick three step drop and throw, would that slow it down?
Daniel Jeremiah
I think it's all about your delivery itself. Some guys have elongated deliveries. So you remember Brian Leftwich, He. He honestly looked like he was throwing a baseball at times. And then you got guys that have really compact short deliveries and they might pat the ball, but. But it doesn't matter because that ball's coming out even on three step drops. If that's kind of part of your routine and how you throw the football, you're going to pat that ball just because you're not even thinking about it. Right. It's something that's muscle memory. You've been doing it forever now. You can work on it. And you'd always try to because coach would say, don't pat the ball, don't do this. But more importantly, it was about, well, am I throwing the ball on time? Am I, is it coming out of my hand or is it actually slowing down the ball getting there? Because it's taking too long for that to happen because you're patting the ball.
Bobby Bones
I've never heard of patting the ball being so negative so many times as the last couple of days because this is kind of the down period of even within the draft. So they're picking apart everything. Were there any ticks that were found about you that maybe you even developed while you were a pro that either you saw or someone else saw that you had to change?
Daniel Jeremiah
I constantly had to work on over striding because I had a baseball background. Baseball's such a different motion, particularly for pitchers. Right. You're coming off a small mound, you're striding out and your stride length is going down that mound and so you. And also the motion of your arm. So there was times that I would get too far spread out and get out on my front foot. And that was just something I naturally was able to overcome and play with throughout my career. However, when you'd see it. You were constantly working on that in the off season. In addition to that, it was ball security in the pocket or when you become a runner. Because a lot of times, quarterbacks, particularly back in my time, and it's not even that long ago when you take off running, you were running because you had to. It's not because you wanted to. And so ball security, you'd get loose, and you're just not used to carrying the ball like that. And then inside the pocket itself, something that was always harped on for anybody that's working in the pocket is two hands on the pocket, in the pocket, on the ball. Because a lot of times what happens is we get lazy, and you'll see your offhand kind of come off the ball, and that's when strip sacks happen and bad things happen.
Bobby Bones
Would you know that? Or would someone have to watch and tell you things like, your offhand is off the ball.
Daniel Jeremiah
I. I could recognize it. But there were times when coaches would come and be like, cass, we got to get that hand. And it was just once again, it could be a clean game, but there was multiple times in that game where I took that offhand off the ball in the pocket, which a guy got close and I was lucky enough to get it, or a strip sack did occur because I was being lazy with my ball security in the pocket. Some of the guys that do it the best, I mean, Matt Stafford, I played with him in Detroit, he was fundamentally so sound, but he would have two hands on the ball in the pocket all the time, and it's something that we drilled constantly.
Bobby Bones
Is there any chance that would slow down the delivery, though? If you're. If you're locked down with two hands, even fractionally, you're holding what you're. Where if one hand is off, I feel like you can, you know, pull back and release quicker. Or is that. Is it so fractional? It doesn't matter.
Daniel Jeremiah
It's very fractional. But at the same time, it goes back to the padding part. And that's why I think people sometimes make a big deal out of it, is if you naturally pat the ball sometimes that offhand is usually just in a comfortable position near the ball because you're getting ready to start your delivery versus having it there. And it's almost like you're. You're pushing that offhand with the ball back to start that delivery instead of padding.
Bobby Bones
I'm curious about self scouting. I. Probably a year and a half or so ago, I found a couple people in my business in Radio. And I said, hey, I want you. Two people I respected, I said, I want you independently. They didn't know of each other to. I'm gonna pay you to listen to my show for two weeks straight. And I want you to develop a plan to beat me as if you were going to start a new national show. I want you to identify every weakness I have. And if I were paying you to find my vulnerabilities to take me down, I want to read that report. And so I paid two different people to do it. They didn't know of each other, and they spent two weeks listening to every second of everything that I did. And they both developed a plan to beat me. And what that allowed me to do was to see those holes and fix those holes. And a lot of the things they were actually aligned on, which was good, because that meant I needed the work. And although I have a gigantic ego, because you have to have one in this business, I. I don't have an ego that hurts me in this business because I know I have a lot of work to do always. And I'm always developing ticks that I need to work myself out of. And so that was me self scouting. That was me hiring somebody to break me down to find my weaknesses so I could plug them up. As a player, would you ever grab film of yourself or have someone else do it to find how you could better yourself by finding how. Where your weaknesses were?
Daniel Jeremiah
I think that it's an ongoing process when you have coaching staff, and even when you're going through the season, all they're ever doing is usually pointing out your weaknesses. They're really focused, hyper focused on what can you do better? How can we solve this problem? Even with our drill work, when we start, throughout many camps, going into camp, everything we go back in, we critique that film on a daily basis. We watch film in the morning, we go and watch the practice right after. So it's fresh on your mind. And every part of that is coaching and critiquing. How can we get better? Whether it's a footwork drill, whether it's two hands on the pocket, it could be particular reads. So you're getting instantaneous feedback almost on a daily basis. And so you do have to have thick skin because I think there's a lot of players out there that take all critic. I mean, all constructive criticism as criticism. And they go into this little hole and they're too prideful about the fact that they're not willing to understand the coach is just making a point. He's not trying to attack you personally, he's trying to make you a better player. And it might come off a little harsh at times because when you get called out in front of a team, it is one of those moments where you look in the mirror and you go, gosh, I don't want to feel that way again. Because, you know, you let down your team. And particularly in games, that's the hardest thing is, you know, at the quarterback position in particular. But any position, if you make a big mistake in a game, that really swings the momentum and you end up losing that game, whether it's an interception because you were lazy with your read or you didn't have ball security, whatever it might be, you missed a check at the line of scrimmage that resulted in a 10 yard loss and now you're, you got a punt and give them an opportunity to go down, win. You're your hardest, harshest critic and you've got to be able to deal with that. And so you take, I always took that type of coaching as a way to get better. As hard as it was to swallow at times.
Bobby Bones
Someone, though, had to instill that in you. Meaning there's an understanding at some point of the person's not trying to take me down for the sake of them going up. What they're trying to do is make me better. That's a hard place to land if you've never had that instilled into you. Because, and also I imagine if you've been really great your whole life, 8th grade senior in high school, you're not getting a lot of criticism and you get to the next level and all of a sudden you're being critiqued. That's probably a different tasting dose of medicine.
Daniel Jeremiah
It is. And I, I think because of the way my career went, as you said, I was successful growing up playing sports. I was recruited by all the big time programs, got a scholarship to usc. But when I showed up at usc, I got my humble pie pretty quick. I was redshirt my first year, sat behind Carson as a backup. Never really played, played some different positions, but I had to face criticism all the time. And I always felt like I was going to be the next in line. And so I had to learn how to deal with adversity. And there was times when, quite honest with you, it was, I would blame the coaches, you know, they're not seeing this. Oh, I was, I was with the twos and everything was external, right. And then all of a sudden you start to realize, look, all this stuff is happening I've got to figure out. I got to take some of the shoulder. Shoulder the blame a little bit, understand how to make myself better and not play the blame game. And I think that was something I really started to learn in college because there was a lot of difficult days that I went through, particularly mentally, where I wasn't where I wanted to be, wasn't achieving what I wanted to do. I was sitting there kind of wasting away, and it was, how am I going to become better today? And that's just kind of the mentality. And then I also took the effort approach, like, screw it. Like, I can't worry about all the rest of the stuff. All I can do is worry about myself and how I can get myself better today.
Bobby Bones
I think that's the line of. There's a line of quitting to being good in that line of realizing that you can control you and that everything coming at you isn't because they're against you. That's where you go good to great. When you can actually take feedback that doesn't feel good and turn it into good.
Daniel Jeremiah
Right.
Bobby Bones
Because I think we've both been in situations, too, where the attack is coming. And you understand the attack is personal. And it's not to actually make you better. It's for a reason. The attacker has some sort of re. But then when you can differentiate and understand that people are. The people that are on your side are just trying to make you better. And this uncomfortableness is like any other uncomfortableness in life. Like, if you grow, it hurts physically, mentally, emotionally. If there's any growth, it hurts, right? If you're 12 years old and you have a growth spurt, it hurts. If you read a book and. And you're growing emotionally, intellectually, spiritually, like, that is difficult. That's time. That's so any growth hurts, but it's understanding the difference in who's trying to hurt you and who's allowing you to hurt so you can get better.
Daniel Jeremiah
Yes.
Greg Rosenthal
Lowe's knows that taking on more projects should be rewarding. That's why loyalty members get more every day with rewards for every home or business purchase. Plus shop weekly member deals and get access to free standard shipping. So what are you waiting for? Join for free Today Lowe's we help you save loyalty program subject to terms and conditions. Details@lowe's.com Terms subject to change. What's up, everyone? It's Greg Rosenthal, and I'm teaming up with the king of spring, Daniel Jeremiah. He requires me to say that we're going to be bringing you 40s and free agents, the only podcast you'll need this NFL draft season, from DJs, mock drafts to my top 101, free agents will have it covered for you with all new episodes every Thursday, keeping you up to date as we head to the NFL Draft. Listen to 40s and free agents on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Bobby Bones
The practice thing is interesting that you bring up because, listen, I. I tapped out at high school football. We didn't film practices. When did practices start to get filmed for you? Because I feel like that would be a whole different ball game. Like, I feel like I'd have practiced a lot harder if I knew there was a camera on.
Daniel Jeremiah
Right? It was. Honestly, when I got to college, they. You would film every single practice?
Bobby Bones
Any in high school?
Daniel Jeremiah
No, we just filmed. Film the games.
Bobby Bones
Yeah, same, right?
Daniel Jeremiah
Yeah. They got the terrible footage up top.
Bobby Bones
Top of the bleachers. Yeah, yeah.
Daniel Jeremiah
You come in the next day on Saturday morning, you got donuts laid out, and you kind of watch the film and you gotta. Your coach is yelling at you a little bit. But then when you get to college, it kind of becomes that professional type setting, right? They're gonna critique every single thing you do. You're gonna talk about it, you're gonna diagnose it, you're gonna try to learn through the film. And you can learn so much by just watching yourself on a daily basis. And the other thing that I really benefited from was watching a guy like Carson Palmer, like his mechanics, how he handled himself, his different footwork, I could watch that and then try to emulate those things as well. So when you. You watch somebody doing something at a really high level, I always learned a lot from that as well, watching film. So even in the off season, I'd go and watch some of the most successful quarterbacks of the previous season. What are they doing well? What routes are they completing? Why are they being successful? Is it because they're getting through the reads? Is it concepts? What might it be that I can start to apply to my game?
Bobby Bones
I would ask if practice was more intense because it was always being filmed. But then I was thinking, when I did a show like Dancing with the Stars and they recorded practice the entire time because they were looking for any nugget, not just in the practice, but any sort of drama, anything to make a storyline out of. And the first, like, three days of practice, you're very aware there's a camera there, but then the camera's just there and you're just on with your normal life. And like I wanted to win. I strive to be better at everything I do just about. And so naturally I work very hard. But that extra camera intensity wasn't there any longer because there was a camera there. It was just what I put on me.
Daniel Jeremiah
Right.
Bobby Bones
My assumption is that is a bit how practice feels if it's being recorded. At first you're like, oh, I gotta be so precise at practice. And then either you're a precise person or you're not. You kind of forget that the camera is there.
Daniel Jeremiah
Right. It's just, it's naturally what happens at the NFL practice, I mean the college NFL practices is they film it. And so you just get used to that routine. As you know that it's just another tool, another mechanism for them to use to go back, evaluate you, you can evaluate yourself. And we spend so much time watching film. And also now with the new technologies that they have in these programs where you can break down third down from the distance of 3 to 6, 6 to 9, 10 plus and start to learn that these, these, all these teams have these specific defenses that they run in this down and distance. And so it's also a tool that really helps you. You can watch all their blitz packages, you know, all their overload blitz. And so it prepares you to how to protect yourself against certain blitzes, where to go with the offensive line. So it's really fascinating when you use film to your advantage how much you can learn out of it.
Bobby Bones
Technology itself is fascinating in preparation. My brother in law is one of the coaches on the Arkansas softball team. And so going up and just working out with them a little bit or hitting balls or. But they have a cage pitching machine and they can emulate the movement and the pitches of the pitchers they're about to face.
Daniel Jeremiah
Seriously.
Bobby Bones
So yeah, so it's a computer unbelievable. If they know she throws 26% rise balls or they can program it for the batter there. In baseball they can do this. You know, they have like I have a golf simulator with a big screen. But in baseball they can have a pitcher, you know, let's say you're up against Randy Johnson. So they put a seven foot guy up, right? And they can emulate his fastballs, his and do it at the ratio that he does it.
Daniel Jeremiah
It's unbelievable how quickly it changes too because even by the tail end of my career they started to bring in this program where you'd put on. It's like an oculus, right? And you're sitting there and it has the Defensive side of the ball there, and it's got your. Your guys on this side. But you can watch the film as if you're going through your reads or making your calls at the line of scrimmage with an actual defense in front of you that looks real. So it's just another way to visualize and see defenses and get more reps and time on task. And this is all something that's was new to me. I was like, this is incredible.
Bobby Bones
That's a big Jayden Daniels thing. Like, he did it at lsu, and then when he came to Washington, he was like, I must have this here.
Daniel Jeremiah
I remember him talking about that.
Bobby Bones
Yeah, we talked to him about that on this show. We do have Bruce Buffer coming up, who is the ring announcer for ufc. His line is, it's time.
Daniel Jeremiah
I hope that was right.
Bobby Bones
That's good. That's. That's right.
Daniel Jeremiah
Right, right. That's right.
Matt Castle
It was beautiful.
Bobby Bones
Yeah.
Daniel Jeremiah
Yeah. Thank you. I appreciate it.
Bobby Bones
So before we get Bruce, we have a game called who Said It? Bruce is known for his iconic it's time that he yells before a UFC match. So, as you can see, this has all been redacted, so I do not know what the lines are going to be.
Daniel Jeremiah
Oh, great.
Bobby Bones
So I just had the setup here. So Kevin is going to go through some of the most infamous quotes of all time, and we're going to see if we can guess who said them. Are we getting different ones or we get the same ones?
Matt Castle
Different ones.
Bobby Bones
Okay, so he'll read five for each of us. We'll see how many we can get. All right, you want to go one one, or you want to go one, two, three, four, five? One, two, three, four, five.
Matt Castle
I'll go one, two, three, four, five.
Bobby Bones
Okay, can read.
Matt Castle
Or Brandon over here, Take. Keep score over there.
Bobby Bones
Oh, I got score, too, buddy.
Matt Castle
All right.
Bobby Bones
All right, I may have.
Daniel Jeremiah
You sure he hasn't seen this?
Matt Castle
No, no, no.
Bobby Bones
I literally. This is the page. I don't want to cheat because it's not fun for me.
Daniel Jeremiah
Okay, good.
Matt Castle
I have the actual one.
Daniel Jeremiah
I bet you're super competitive, like in board games and stuff like that. I want to win everything, 100%. I can see that.
Bobby Bones
But I don't want to win anything. Not by being awesome.
Daniel Jeremiah
Okay, let's go. Yeah, Be awesome. You're up.
Matt Castle
Okay, one question for you guys. Do you want me to read it as they said it, or read it, like, as bland and boring as possible?
Bobby Bones
Just read it. Straightforward.
Daniel Jeremiah
Just read it.
Bobby Bones
Just read it. Not as an not. Well, if there's an accent on it, though, that gives it away.
Matt Castle
That's what I'm saying.
Bobby Bones
Just read it as you.
Matt Castle
Okay.
Bobby Bones
Normal. And we'll just try to figure it out.
Matt Castle
Okay.
Bobby Bones
Who's first?
Matt Castle
Bobby's first.
Bobby Bones
I'll be doing. I'm doing five in a row.
Matt Castle
Doing five in a row.
Bobby Bones
Go.
Matt Castle
Practice. We talking about practice.
Bobby Bones
Okay. That's Allen Iverson. Practice.
Greg Rosenthal
We're talking about practice.
Matt Castle
Practice.
Bobby Bones
Yes.
Matt Castle
Okay. Number two. When you're rich, you don't write tricks. You don't write checks. Straight cash, homie.
Bobby Bones
Oh, the. The. The back part is Randy Moss. Y. I wouldn't have got that from the beginning. When you're rich, you don't write checks, but straight cash, homie. I got Randy Moss. And then I. Then I moon the camera fakely with my fake pants.
Daniel Jeremiah
Perfect.
Matt Castle
Two for two so far. Number three. You play to win the game. Hello. You play to win the game.
Bobby Bones
You play to win the game. Hello. Okay, I got it. This is not for you.
Daniel Jeremiah
I know. I just got it in my mind.
Bobby Bones
I can see him.
Daniel Jeremiah
Yeah. Who do you coach for?
Bobby Bones
Well, the Vikings in Arizona. Are those correct?
Matt Castle
He might have at some point, but not with this quote crap.
Bobby Bones
Raiders, Colts. It's not Jim Mora.
Daniel Jeremiah
No.
Bobby Bones
Is that who you're thinking?
Daniel Jeremiah
Yeah.
Matt Castle
It's not.
Daniel Jeremiah
No.
Bobby Bones
It's not. Jimmy, you're thinking of practice.
Daniel Jeremiah
Yeah.
Bobby Bones
It's because Jim Mora is an old white guy. This is a black dude.
Matt Castle
Yep.
Daniel Jeremiah
Oh, yeah. I know exactly who it is. He did coach for the Cardinals and Minnesota.
Bobby Bones
Yeah. I just can't think of his name. I'm not going to accept any. Any help. I'll miss it.
Matt Castle
Okay. Herm Edwards. You were getting there, too.
Daniel Jeremiah
He wasn't with.
Bobby Bones
Golly.
Matt Castle
He was on the Jets.
Bobby Bones
When he said, I'm thinking of. Yes. That's who I was thinking of. I was not thinking of her medwards.
Matt Castle
Who were you thinking of?
Daniel Jeremiah
Matt? Denny Green.
Bobby Bones
Yes.
Matt Castle
Oh, okay.
Bobby Bones
That's what I was seeing in my head.
Daniel Jeremiah
That's what happened.
Bobby Bones
Because he's Arizona. The Vikings.
Daniel Jeremiah
Yes.
Bobby Bones
Yeah. Okay. I messed.
Daniel Jeremiah
That one really messed up.
Bobby Bones
Yeah.
Matt Castle
Okay.
Bobby Bones
And he was trying to, like. I don't know why he's trying to help a guy's competing. I know. Because I feel insulted that he feels like he needs to give me charity. Secondly, he was giving me wrong charity.
Daniel Jeremiah
Yeah.
Bobby Bones
So maybe he wasn't wrong.
Daniel Jeremiah
I was like. He was that.
Bobby Bones
Sabotage me. All right, go ahead.
Matt Castle
Number four. You will never see any player play in the entire country.
Bobby Bones
Tim Tebow.
Matt Castle
Okay.
Bobby Bones
You will never See any player that was.
Matt Castle
I knew he'd get a college one, no problem.
Bobby Bones
Yeah, yeah, that's. That's up on the wall.
Daniel Jeremiah
Hold on, I got to hear this one again.
Bobby Bones
Read it again. But that plaque is up on the wall on the Florida football complex. If I'm saying that.
Matt Castle
Yeah, really. You will never see any player in the entire country play as hard as I will play for the rest of this season.
Bobby Bones
That's right. After a loss. After a loss. Yeah.
Daniel Jeremiah
Well, he's going to play hard.
Bobby Bones
Yeah. All right, go ahead.
Matt Castle
Okay. And by the way, this. These aren't all football, just so we're clear.
Bobby Bones
I figured when I got that Iverson one.
Daniel Jeremiah
True.
Matt Castle
I forgot about that one. Okay, number five. I've always said throwing a club shows you care.
Bobby Bones
Okay. So I don't know this one, but I'm going to context clue this one. I've always said, throwing a club shows you care. So it would either have to be Fred Flintstone or a golfer.
Daniel Jeremiah
That's true.
Matt Castle
True.
Bobby Bones
I'm going to remove. I'm going to remove Fred Flintstone. Throwing a club is somebody who's going to be. It's. But it's got to be a big golfer, so there's only a few that would ever.
Daniel Jeremiah
It's definitely a golfer, but a bit.
Bobby Bones
But for a quote to last, it's going to have to be Tiger or Phil or Jack Nicklaus. You know this?
Daniel Jeremiah
No, I have no idea.
Bobby Bones
I'm just going to go Tiger.
Matt Castle
It is John Daly.
Bobby Bones
Son of a golf. Or John Daly.
Matt Castle
Yeah.
Daniel Jeremiah
He would have definitely been the obvious.
Matt Castle
That is like the most obvious John Daly quote, probably.
Bobby Bones
I know John.
Daniel Jeremiah
I'm not gonna.
Matt Castle
I was like, it's an Arkansas guy.
Daniel Jeremiah
I feel like I'm not gonna be good at this game. Oh, come on, babe, give me one.
Matt Castle
So three out of five.
Bobby Bones
Got it right.
Daniel Jeremiah
Really good.
Matt Castle
Bob got three out of five. Okay, Matt, you're up.
Bobby Bones
Danny Green. Thank you.
Matt Castle
Number one. Do your job.
Daniel Jeremiah
Bill Belichick.
Bobby Bones
Okay. You gave him his own coach.
Matt Castle
I know, I know.
Bruce Buffer
You didn't give him Austin.
Matt Castle
I gave you an Arkansas guy.
Bobby Bones
Give him my wife, I'd have got that one. You gave him his own coach.
Daniel Jeremiah
My guy.
Bobby Bones
Go ahead.
Matt Castle
A couple layups.
Bobby Bones
How about. How about this one here? My name's Tom Brady. Who said that?
Daniel Jeremiah
Got it.
Matt Castle
Okay. To be the man, you have to beat the man.
Daniel Jeremiah
To be the man, you've got to beat the man.
Bobby Bones
Oh, this one's, like, the easiest one of every single one.
Daniel Jeremiah
Really?
Bobby Bones
Yeah.
Matt Castle
This is one of Bobby's favorites.
Bobby Bones
This is. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Daniel Jeremiah
Charles Barkley.
Bobby Bones
What?
Matt Castle
Wrong. It is Bobby.
Daniel Jeremiah
So it's Bobby Bones.
Bobby Bones
No, no. To be the man, you gotta beat the man.
Bruce Buffer
Rick Flair. That's right.
Daniel Jeremiah
Son of a gun. All right. Charles Barkley. So close. It's so far away.
Matt Castle
Number three, the ceiling is the roof.
Daniel Jeremiah
That was my roofer yesterday coming over, checking.
Bobby Bones
Oh, you have an issue after the storm?
Daniel Jeremiah
A little bit.
Bobby Bones
Our yard hasn't been mowed, and, I mean, I don't mow my own yard, so I'll put myself there because it's been flooding and storming here. So you can't, like, do it during a storm? Apparently so.
Daniel Jeremiah
Yeah.
Bobby Bones
I feel you. Anyway. What? Get the question.
Daniel Jeremiah
The roof is the ceiling.
Bobby Bones
Yeah.
Matt Castle
No, ceiling is the roof.
Daniel Jeremiah
Ceilings, roof. No idea.
Matt Castle
Michael Jordan. I wouldn't have got that at halftime of the North Carolina game when he said that. Went viral. About six, seven years ago, maybe.
Bobby Bones
Wait, he.
Daniel Jeremiah
He said that?
Bobby Bones
He said it. North Carolina, as the older Michael Jordan.
Matt Castle
Yeah.
Bobby Bones
Got it.
Matt Castle
Yeah.
Bobby Bones
Okay.
Matt Castle
Yeah. So you got one out of three so far.
Daniel Jeremiah
Yeah, I'm really struggling.
Matt Castle
Okay, one out of three. All right, here we go. I am the greatest. I said that even before I knew I was.
Daniel Jeremiah
I am the greatest.
Bobby Bones
I don't know it, but if I were to context it. If I were to context it, I know who I would guess, but I do not know it.
Daniel Jeremiah
Hussein Bolt. No, but I would.
Bobby Bones
I mean, that's a good guess.
Matt Castle
That is. Yeah.
Daniel Jeremiah
Yeah.
Bobby Bones
I would have guessed LeBron.
Matt Castle
Muhammad Ali.
Bobby Bones
Oh, that's a tough one.
Matt Castle
Yeah, that's a tough one.
Daniel Jeremiah
I mean, you could have given me, like, sting like a butterfly or. I mean.
Matt Castle
Well, that's too obvious. So I already gave you do your job.
Bobby Bones
But if he would have said, sting like a butterfly. That's not it.
Daniel Jeremiah
I know. That's the wrong quote, too. That would have really thrown people off.
Bobby Bones
All right.
Matt Castle
Okay, last one. One here. I love me, some me.
Daniel Jeremiah
I love me some me. Gosh, I know this quote.
Bobby Bones
I know the quote.
Daniel Jeremiah
All right, go ahead, tell me, because I lost. I'm awful.
Bobby Bones
It's Tio.
Matt Castle
Yep.
Bobby Bones
I found a picture of Tio and I sitting in a random chair.
Daniel Jeremiah
Yeah.
Bobby Bones
Like, 15 years ago. I don't know what we're doing together. There's a picture. And when I played ball with Tio a few months ago at the Major League Baseball Celebrity All Star softball game, his first time I'd ever met him.
Daniel Jeremiah
In my mind, he's an impressive human. Like, impressive specimen of a human.
Bobby Bones
I watched him hit a Home run in a. With a softball. Slow pitch in a baseball park. Like, not the home run. I had a home run. But it was, it.
Daniel Jeremiah
It was the smaller, smaller fence. They brought it in.
Bobby Bones
He hit it out of the baseball field.
Daniel Jeremiah
He's a freak of.
Bobby Bones
It was wild.
Daniel Jeremiah
Yeah. I threw with him one offseason. He was like 41 at the time. And I don't know if he's trying to make a comeback. What he was. He came out there and I was like, oh, my God. This guy is an absolute freak of nature. Like, he could still run incredibly fast. Great hands, big, physical. I mean, he was a beast.
Bobby Bones
When I think of to. I think of when the Eagles. There was. There was a contract dispute and he's doing sit ups.
Daniel Jeremiah
Oh, yeah. With the media outside of his house.
Bruce Buffer
Yeah.
Bobby Bones
You guys remember that?
Matt Castle
Oh, yeah. That was great.
Bobby Bones
Hey, that was a good game.
Matt Castle
Yeah, that was fun.
Bobby Bones
I liked. Especially because I won.
Daniel Jeremiah
Yeah. You crushed me. I mean, I was so far off with some of my guesses.
Bobby Bones
And you got a billboard. Belichick question.
Matt Castle
That was a layup.
Daniel Jeremiah
Yeah, I had to give him one layer. I needed a few more.
Bruce Buffer
What would.
Bobby Bones
What would your. If you had to have a quote attributed to you, even if you make it up right now, you really put me on.
Daniel Jeremiah
What would your quote be?
Bobby Bones
So mine. I did a whole book on it. Which is. Well, mine's easy.
Daniel Jeremiah
Well, now yours is easy.
Bobby Bones
Would you know what mine is, Mike? If there were a quote?
Matt Castle
Yeah.
Bobby Bones
What would it be?
Matt Castle
Fail until you don't.
Bobby Bones
No. Fight, Grind. Repeat. No, same thing. Same, same thing, right?
Daniel Jeremiah
Yeah.
Bobby Bones
Like, there are three stages. There's the fight, there's the grind that nobody sees while you're doing the work. The fight. Everybody says they want to fight, they want to get started. The grind is all the hard work that nobody sees that actually matters. That sometimes you fail and have to start back over. And that's the repeat. So fight, grind. Repeat has been the thing. But that's easy. Like, I've had that.
Daniel Jeremiah
Yeah, you've had that.
Bobby Bones
Yours would be like, why did I buy this printer?
Daniel Jeremiah
Why did I buy this printer today?
Bobby Bones
What's the deal?
Daniel Jeremiah
Mistakes. Mistakes make you learn.
Bobby Bones
Okay. Okay, fine.
Daniel Jeremiah
Keep it simple.
Bobby Bones
Whatever you want.
Daniel Jeremiah
Adversity. Through adversity comes advancement.
Bobby Bones
Okay. See, there we go. Is that yours?
Daniel Jeremiah
Yeah, fine.
Matt Castle
What is it?
Bobby Bones
No, not fine.
Daniel Jeremiah
Yes, I like it. I like that quote. I've used that quote.
Bobby Bones
Yes.
Daniel Jeremiah
Through adversity comes advancement.
Bobby Bones
I think it's an excellent quote.
Matt Castle
Wow, that's good.
Bobby Bones
Exactly. And he's he's discounting himself over here.
Daniel Jeremiah
I was discounting. Well, I was just like, gosh, I haven't really come up with my life mantra yet.
Bobby Bones
What about. And just bear with me.
Daniel Jeremiah
I'm bearing.
Bobby Bones
What about sting like a butterfly?
Daniel Jeremiah
Yeah, that doesn't really make sense, but have you ever been stung by a butterfly? It's. No. Me neither.
Bobby Bones
Can you get stung by a butterfly?
Daniel Jeremiah
No, not at all.
Bobby Bones
Okay. All right, we'll come back with Bruce Buffer. It's time. Next.
Kevin
Lowe's knows that taking on more projects should be rewarding. That's why loyalty members get more every day with rewards for every home or business purchase. Plus, shop weekly member deals and get access to free standard shipping. So what are you waiting for? Join Free Today, Lowe's, we help you save loyalty program subject to terms and conditions. Detail@lowe's.com Terms subject to change.
Greg Rosenthal
What's up, everyone? It's Greg Rosenthal, and I'm teaming up with the King of Spring, Daniel Jeremiah. He requires me to say that we're going to be bringing you 40s and free agents, the only podcast you'll need this NFL draft season. From DJs mock drafts to my top 101 free agents, agents will have it covered for you with all new episodes every Thursday keeping you up to date as we head to the NFL Draft. Listen to 40s and free agents on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Bobby Bones
All right, up next, we'll talk to Bruce Buffer. He is the UFC Octagon pre fight announcer. He's known for his saying, it's time. When he does that, I'm ready. It's time for me, too, to, like, pay attention.
Daniel Jeremiah
I'm so fired up when that happens. There's some. The build up before the fight. They do all the pre fight stuff. And then when you get in that ring and he comes in and gets that crowd fired up and he goes, it's time. You're like, okay, it's on. Let's go.
Bobby Bones
I wonder if. And we'll ask him if he, like, tried out a bunch of stuff. Like, it's about time to do it. He like workshops and stuff for sure. Yeah, it's about to go down. Here we go. Time. He goes back and makes notes. He self scouts himself.
Daniel Jeremiah
Like, we did some.
Bobby Bones
If you like Bruce's awesome voice, you can order personalized cameos from him@bruce buffer.com. follow him on Instagram as well @bruce buffer, UFC. Here he is. Hey, Bruce. Thank you for the time, man.
Bruce Buffer
My Pleasure. My pleasure.
Bobby Bones
We were talking about you before you came on and talking about a lot of the things that you're involved in. And I, I want to get to that, but one of the things that I had mentioned was I wonder if you workshopped any of your. Or, you know, it's time is like what you're known for, but did you have like other versions until you landed on its time where it's like, it's time to do it? I don't know. Did you try other stuff?
Bruce Buffer
No, no, no. Actually, what happened is that at the beginning of the show, I used to say, it's time to begin the Ultimate Fighting Championship. Like that. And then when Dana took over the show back in 99 for the, what I call the Godfather meeting, you know, we had a little head to head about everything going on. And he preferred I didn't say that at the beginning. And he told me about one announcement that I made that was one of his favorites, which was when Tito Ortiz fought Evan Tanner in Atlantic City at a, at a previous fight. He asked to keep that same tempo, which was perfect for me because to me, it's not what I say, it's how I say it. And I like to be quick to the point. Bam, bam, punch, punch. You know, get it in. Every morning when I woke up, wake up rather. I had a habit, and still do, of looking in the mirror and saying it's time. Meaning, like it's time to be the best I can be. It's time to have the greatest day I can have. So I never was phrase driven because I managed my brother, the legendary Michael Buffer, and I helped trademark that phrase. And together we marketed to where it is today. Every announcer wanted to have a let's get ready to or be a phrase driven announcer I wanted to stick with just again, not what I say, how I say it. So it was about seven years into the show that I started saying it's time at the main event because I figured the fighters have been fighting training now for eight to 10 weeks. The fans have been watching for five hours, give or take. It's all culminating into this main event, the moment we've all been waiting for. It's time. This is when it goes. So then I first did it then and I realized it was catching on in Brazil about 2003, when I would, when. And I did it in front of 20,000 Portuguese speaking people and the entire arena set it back to me at the same time, which was amazing. And I thought, oh, wow, then something's going on. Here and now. It's honorably so and humbly so. And it's the greatest compliment in the world that pretty much everywhere I go now, they repeat it back along with many of the other things I'll say, like this is the main event or and now. And as an announcer, it's a very fulfilling experience to hear that come back at me, Bruce.
Daniel Jeremiah
I mean I, I watch these events and you obviously set the tone for them, but how much time do you have to just utilize to working on these guys names? Because there are so many names that I'm sitting there, like, how does he announce that so flawlessly?
Bruce Buffer
Thank you again, appreciate that. Here's the thing. I don't rehearse. There's a rehearsal voice and there's an organic voice. So I like to feel the energy of the crowd. But the one thing I do do, because it takes me three to five hours to prepare the fight cards that I bring in. And actually while I'm doing the fight cards, I'm actually absorbing all the information. The UFC is a very well oiled machine and we have sound files that go out to everybody of the fighters saying their names. So I listen intensely and I write them phonetically on the cards. But as I write them phonetically, I'm absorbing them in my brain and I'll say it a couple times to myself so that when I go out in the octagon and do it, boom, let it fly. And sometimes before a show, John Anick, who's probably one of the finest commentators in sports, he and I will go back and forth to make sure we're totally in sync on the name. So I'm saying it like the commentators are saying it, so we do it right.
Bobby Bones
You made your debut back in 96. I was looking at some old video. There's no video online. It's weird to say video, but I'm old enough that we had video at one point. So back in 90, I'm older than.
Bruce Buffer
You, so I remember VHS, so it's all good.
Bobby Bones
So back in 96. But then I also was reading about you training and you having a black belt.
Bruce Buffer
Which came first, the black belt or the ufc?
Bobby Bones
Yeah, yeah. Like being a part, like being announcing fighting or you training to fight?
Bruce Buffer
Oh, I've been training in martial arts since I was 12, and I've attained three black belts. When I was younger growing up in Malibu, after moving there from, from Philadelphia When I was 15, I started training with Chuck Norris's fighting partners and I, we would just spar, fight and surf. I Mean, that was my growing up. I never even lifted weights until my 20s. I mean, I just concentrated on surfing and hundreds of push ups and some curls and all that. But fighting has been in my blood since I was born. My dad had me watching boxing, you know, every Saturday, Sunday, the whole bit. This was part of our lifestyle. I've always been into fighting, always been into the martial arts. And when I went to the first UFC back in 1996 in Casper, Wyoming, which was UFC 6, which I did not announce, I realized this is my world. And I had my brother announce three of the events. Michael and I had to pull him from the events because he had a huge contract with WCW Wrestling, which he loved, and he couldn't have continued at the pace the UFC was going. And it took me about a year and a half to convince the UFC that they needed me in the octagon, that I would help him. I'm a brand builder and I had a lot of media contacts working with my brother and building it. And I realized that this was a spectacle back then that needed to be refined. But I realized it was going to be one of the biggest things in fighting sports, if not the biggest event in fighting sports. So I knew that was my world, I wanted to get into it and, long story cut short, convinced them to make me the announcer. And I said, I'll do everything I can, you know, out of pure loyalty to the brand, to help build this and be more than just an announcer for the company. And that was the best poker hand, big poker player. That was the best poker hand I ever played in my life. To get into this 29 years ago, it's unbelievable.
Daniel Jeremiah
And being a fan of the sport too, could you talk about what, what's your most memorable event that you did? The pre game or pre fight, you know, announcing for.
Bruce Buffer
It's really hard because I've announced thousands of events, so I have many, many favorite events. I could coin a couple for you. Obviously, historically speaking, the finale to the first Ultimate Fighter series, when Forrest Griffin and and Stefan Bonner fought each other in the main event, that was probably a pinnacle right there because as I always like to say, Spike TV made us, and we made Spike TV. There was just. It went from a 5 share, 4 share, up to like a 12, give or take, which you, of course, understanding TV ratings, know what that's like. And it was an immediate explosion. You know, the show became a hit, we took off. And when Dana White and the Fertitta brothers bought the UFC back in 99, I realized at that point that we had a chance to become and fulfill the. Becoming the biggest sport fighting event in the world with their guidance and financial backing and business acumen. So that was a big event. UFC 100, when Brock Lesnar fought Frank Mir, was a big event for me. I was being egged on by everybody for eight months, thanks to Joe Rogan to do with. I mean, I have my 180 and 90 turns and all that stuff. People coin, and Joe's like, well, can you do a 360, right? And suddenly I was being egged on by the Internet and the fans, which, thank God for the fans of the UFC. They're incredible. And I pulled off at 360. You know, I jumped up and spun 360 degrees and said Brock Lesnar's name. So personally, for me, that was, you know, a high moment. But, you know, every time I think that there's the best show ever, then two or three months later, another great show happens. I mean, it just. USC is providing so much entertainment, you know, and it's amazing. It's like, if you ask me what the greatest fight is, very hard to say. I can name a bunch of them.
Bobby Bones
With UFC and MMA becoming more embedded in pop culture, a few names come to mind. First, it's probably, to me, like, Chuck Liddell, and then it's probably like a Conor McGregor and a Ronda Rousey. Like, those names end up piercing not just MMA fans, but touching people who are just general sports fans or even just into pop culture. What have been and who have been the fighters that you've seen that have kind of transcended the sport to bring more people back into the sport with it?
Bruce Buffer
Well, you mentioned key names there. Rhonda. I mean, women's MMA became what it is, let's face it, because of Rhonda and her rise to fame, along with all the other women that have fought so gallantly in the Octagon. And it's amazing. I watch. I love watching the women fight. They bring it all every day, as do the men. Conor McGregor, obviously a big boost to the show. Chuck Liddell, George St. Pierre, probably one of the greatest fighters ever to enter the Octagon. Loved and respected internationally. Jon Jones being, as Dana White says, and I'll have to agree with Dana White, the goat, one of the greatest fighters, if not the greatest fighter of all time. When he fights, if he fights, and I think he will fight Aspinall, Tom Aspinall, come sometime this year, that'll be probably the biggest fight ever, you know, then you have Others that have brought in a cross culture of people. Habib Demagomedov, you know, bringing in tons of fans from, you know, Russia and all that, and all the areas over there. It's. There's just. There's just so many. But you. You did mention key factors. I mean, there's. Every couple years, three years or so, comes along an it factor fighter who's got it all. You know, both the way they fight in the octagon, the way they present themselves outside of the octagon. I measure fighters not just for the way they perform in octagon, but how they handle themselves with the public, how they are outside the octagon, because I truly believe in role model images. You know, we're. We're craving role models these days in the world for young people to follow. And I think it's very important that key fighters or famous fighters, if not all the fighters, realize that they are role models for young people and they should handle themselves in the best way possible. Upcoming people. Patty Pimlet out of the uk He's. He's a very hot and upcoming fighter who has a big fight against Michael Chandler this weekend. Again, I could go on and on and on. There's so many. There's so many personalities driving the sport.
Daniel Jeremiah
Do you think now the perception of what the UFC is has changed dramatically from when you guys began, from, like, the brutality of the sport, that it's so much more accepted in our culture now. Like, everybody buys in and the pay per view and everything else. But back when you probably first got started, it was people's perception of it was much different.
Bruce Buffer
Oh, my perception. I was different, too. Even though I understood the fighting, the term. The term mixed martial arts wasn't even coined until about six or seven years into the event. And in the beginning, again, we get back to that. It was a spectacle, right? It was blood sport. It was like, what style is going to beat what style? So it needed to be refined. And in turn, it was refined. And right now, what you're dealing with, and I'm proud to say I'm part of a sport that went from beginning spectacle to mainstream sports, and it's respected worldwide now as a result. So it's a definitive difference, right? Most definitely. And I think it's very well needed. You know, eventually I think you're going to see mixed martial arts in the Olympics, because really, without the elbows and the knees probably wouldn't be allowed. But, you know, you take judo and boxing and wrestling, and I think they have Taekwondo, but if you Put all those together. You have mixed martial arts, right? So eventually it could become an Olympic event. I would very much bet on the fact that it will be.
Kevin
Lowe's knows that taking on more projects should be rewarding. That's why loyalty members get more every day with rewards for every home or business purchase. Plus shop weekly member deals and get access to free standard shipping. So what are you waiting for? Join Free. Today, Lowe's, we help you save loyalty program subject to terms and conditions. Detail@lowe's.com Terms subject to change.
Greg Rosenthal
What's up, everyone? It's Greg Rosenthal, and I'm teaming up with the King of Spring, Daniel Jeremiah. He requires me to say that we're going to be bringing you 40s and free agents, the only podcast you'll need this NFL draft season. From DJs mock drafts to my top 101 free agents, we'll have it covered for you with all new episodes every Thursday. Keeping you up to date as we head to the NFL Draft. Listen to 40s and free agents on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Bobby Bones
I'm curious about It's Time Cologne because. And you can go to the website It's Time bb, which is its time Bruce Buffer. But, like, what does it smell like? And then how involved in the smell process? And then what do you. What's the goal of what you want it to smell like?
Bruce Buffer
Well, he's got one.
Bobby Bones
Yes, there it is right here.
Bruce Buffer
Yeah, because I haven't even put it on today, so let me just give it a little, you know, I, I've always liked, you know, Calvin Klein Obsession was a clone I used to wear all the time. I don't like to walk in a room and people go, whoa, what. What does that person have on? You know? So very simply, I wanted to create a sensual, charismatic cologne, subtle, that women obviously would love to, you know, smell when you're around. Men, of course, appreciate it too, and not be overbearing. And there's a company, I work with my partners in England, and as far as far as being involved in the process, I would receive, you know, the coffee grounds and three or four different scents. After we talked about what I was wanted to put together. I love the vanilla scent and the whole bit. And my partner Kristen and I, you know, we did the scent test and we, we picked the one that worked out perfectly, and we came up with that and we just came out with the new iconic, which is another one that's in a black bottle. And I was Happy to say that when it first came out on Amazon, it was top seller on Amazon. Still sells extremely well on Amazon, but at this time. Bb.com thank you for quoting the site. There's not just the cologne, but there's a whole line of toiletries there. Because I'm, I've always been very big on taking care of myself. Women take care of themselves. For us as men, we should take care of ourselves. For women, obviously, also for ourselves. And grooming is a very key part. So smell right, be right, stay right.
Daniel Jeremiah
Man, I'm going to buy some.
Bruce Buffer
Very involved in the set process. Very involved. The scent process.
Bobby Bones
Yeah. Now especially that he put it on in front of us.
Daniel Jeremiah
I know. I can smell it through the camera right now. It smells fantastic. But this guy's also, he mentioned it before, but you're a legit poker player. Like, you've played in some major tournaments. You're at the main table. Can you talk a little bit about your passion for poker and how you got into that?
Bruce Buffer
Yeah, well, I'm a very creative, excuse me, a competitive person. I think creative too, but competitive person. And when I was nine, my dad taught me how to play poker, how to play blackjack, and taught me at the horse race. He said the only way to follow a horse with a shovel, don't bet on them. So he's just telling me not to go make it a habit of betting at the track, which is a fun day for a day. But I'm not, I'm not a, A race better with respect to all the people that are, of course, because horse race is incredible. As a matter of fact, I just agreed to announce a huge horse race coming up that I have to keep a little quiet right now. But you'll see in May on NBC, which I'm pretty proud of. Poker is a mental game. It's a competitive game. It's a game of skill. I call it BSC ball skill and confidence. And you need a little 20 luck factor to, to win. But I love the competition. I love reading the people at the table and the personalities involved. And playing in the World Series of Poker, the USOP events, is something that all poker players who play tournaments aspire to have a chance to do and love to do. It's, it's, it's, it's the super bowl of poker. I played in an event which was the $50,000 high roller last summer, and it was against. Normally the main event has like 8,000 or more people in it, which I've done very well in the last time I played it, I made day five and placed 476 or something. But in the, the high roller event I entered last year, which was my first tournament I played since COVID because I've busy. I final tabled the tournament and I came in eighth and it was 172 players of. They're all the best players in the world. Phil Ivey, Daniel Nanu Hel, they were all in the tournament. So it was a, a real achievement for me personally and a lot of street cred to make that final table. I one time was said to be by carplayer.com the top 10 best. I'm not big, I'm not big on the word celebrity to be honest with you, because I think we're all created equal. But it's, it said top 10 best celebrity poker player in the world. And the other people in, in there were Ben Affleck and Jennifer Tilly. Gabe Kaplan was number one from welcome Back Cotter who's a huge cash player. So I love poker, keeps my competition going and love winning money.
Bobby Bones
You know, you mentioned that you and your brother worked together. You guys have worked together for a long time, but you guys did not grow up together, right?
Bruce Buffer
No, we're long lost half brothers. We met each other when I was 28 years old. I saw him on TV again being a huge boxing fan and my dad and my brother Brian and I, you know, watching boxing all our lives, out came this handsome, debonair, James Bond looking individual with that famous five words, let's get ready to rumble. And when they chironed his name on the screen, Michael Buffer, I'm like, whoa, who's this, right? Because I own telemarketing companies in my 20s and, and 30s and before the Internet, I never saw my last name in a phone book in the United States. So it kind of really struck me. Funny. Long story cut short. My dad never told me that he had been married at the age of 20 when he was going over to serve in World War II. It was a brief marriage and he came back. A divorce ensued, but a child was born and last time he saw that child was when he was two and a half. And Michael was raised under the name of Huber by foster parents. Great. As he calls it, leave it to Beaver upbringing. And when he went in the army at 20, they said your birth certificate says you're Buffer because he was never formally adopted. So they said, you're not Michael Huber, you're Michael Buffer. And had that not happened and the events that led him into Being the legendary, the greatest, you know, announcer of all time, as I like to say. And most everybody believes he, we wouldn't be sitting here talking right now because when we did, when he did see him on TV and, and my dad called a local arena here in Los Angeles, the Resida Country Club, left a message for Michael to call him back. And Michael called him back. They got together for lunch and it turned out to be his long lost son. And we all got together and we got along famously. You know, everybody got along great. And four years later I sold two companies I was doing incredible with. But I was burned out, not happy with what I was doing. And I had an epiphany and I said, Michael, I need to become your manager and your, your partner. I want to make you richer, more famous you ever dreamed and put you everywhere in the world and tv, make video games, toys, this, that, the other, trademark this phrase properly. He had never even made a hat or T shirt at that time with the saying on it. And I said, I will sell this, quit with money, having the bank and make all this happen. He said, how are you going to do all that? I said, I really don't know. I said, but I'll figure it out. If I'm going to give this up, I'm going to make it happen. And that was, you know, 35 plus years ago and now we're here where we are today.
Daniel Jeremiah
It's unbelievable story. I mean, if you think about it and then when you guys met, you guys obviously hit it off. It's, it's one of those things. I've got two brothers, I can't even imagine that. But going into business with them. And then my question is, do you guys, how, how often do you guys talk about different like phrases? Does he ever critique you in terms of your performance or vice versa? Are you guys like that? What type of relationship do you have? Like, do you guys bust balls a little bit? Like talk to us a little bit about that.
Bruce Buffer
Yeah, we have a great relationship. It's, he's very supportive of me. I'm very supportive of him. I said, do you have any tips? Way back in the beginning is, you know what, watch yourself on video. It's the hardest thing you'll ever do. That'll be your teaching A said otherwise can't offer you that much more. And I just believe that I needed to go out and get, as you guys know the term in this business, reps. Get as many reps as I have. I look back to when I started at USC 8 in Buymon, Puerto Rico in 1996. And it's like, no, no, no, no, no. You know, it's completely different. So it just builds from there, you know, it. I never wanted to be Frank Sinatra Jr. I wanted to create my own style. And I told myself that if in the first three years I don't create my own style and be respected for what I do, I was going to give it up, which I would have. Right. But it went the path that it went, and I'm very happy to say, you know, it's. I'm thankfully and hopefully respected by everybody for exactly what I do.
Bobby Bones
Ufc.
Bruce Buffer
No. No competition. No competition, no busting balls, just total support. We kid around once in a while, but that's all.
Bobby Bones
UFC 314 is a Saturday, and I know Michael Chandler a little bit. He lives around here. He's been over. He does. He's been on the show before. And so, you know, I think he was really looking forward to, you know, the past fight he didn't get to have because of an injury, but he's going to fight, you know, Paddy the baddie. To me, that's the most exciting fight on the card. I mean, you mentioned that earlier, but speak to that about Chandler specifically. Like, if he wins this is it renewal for him to. Because, again, he's an older fighter at this point. If he loses the fight, is that kind of the end for him, being a part of the big card?
Bruce Buffer
Michael Chandler's type of fighter, win or lose, he puts on the best performance that we all respect and some of the most exciting fights you'll ever see. So I never pick winners in fights. May the best man or woman win. Michael Chandler, he wins his fight against Patty Pimlet. He's back in the mix. Patty Pimlet wins his fight to Michael Chandler, he's higher in the mix. So it's not the end of the career for. Definitely not for Patty. And I don't feel for Michael because Michael's such a true warrior, octagon warrior, that, you know, everybody wants to see him fight. He's a highly likable fighter, respected by every UFC fan. I don't know who doesn't respect him except other fighters, you know, as they like to talk about each other when they're going to go to war. But this is a big fight for Michael. There's no question that first round of this fight's going to be a tell all for sure. Most definitely. Patty's hugely confident. This event is stacked from beginning prelim to two on the fight between Bryce Mitchell and John Silva is one that's very highly anticipated, as is Chandler and of course the main event with Volkanovsky and Diego Lopez.
Bobby Bones
So before you go, I want to make sure everybody knows it's time bb.com for the cologne but also if you want to get a cameo video and audio, just go to Bruce's website. Go to bruce buffer.com and you can get one of those as well. And then there's also Puncher's Chance Bourbon. Now I'm not a drinker, but it says award winning so I'm assuming it's got to be pretty good.
Bruce Buffer
He's got it right there, right here and we've got a variety of it the the video and I'm very proud of the bourbon. You can go to puncherchance bourbon.com and order directly for yourself. Sorry, I didn't mean to show right there the videos real quickly is something my partner Kristen and I love to do. The thank you notes we get@bruce buffer.com we get requests for weddings, a huge amount of requests each week. Introductory, introduce you like a champion in the octagon, which I do on the cameos, birth of babies, you name it. I the requests I get are are pretty wild, but it's a lot of fun and I love making people happy so I love doing audios and videos.
Bobby Bones
Bruce, we appreciate the time. Hope you have a great rest of the day. We're big fans and hopefully we'll see you soon.
Bruce Buffer
I really appreciate it. Thank you. Thank you so much gentlemen. Kevin, Mike, really appreciate it.
Bobby Bones
I Sincerely.
Daniel Jeremiah
Foreign.
Kevin
Lowe's knows that taking on more projects should be rewarding. That's why loyalty members get more every day with rewards for every home or business purchase. Plus shop weekly member deals and get access to free standard shipping. So what are you waiting for? Join Free Today Lowe's we help you save Loyalty program subject to terms and conditions detail@lowe's.com terms subject to change what's up everyone?
Greg Rosenthal
It's Greg Rosenthal and I'm teaming up with the King of Spring, Daniel Jeremiah. He requires me to say that we're going to be bringing you 40s and free agents, the only podcast you'll need this NFL draft season. From DJs mock drafts to my top 101 free agents will have it covered for you with all new episodes every Thursday keeping you up to date as we head to the NFL Draft. Listen to 40s and free agents on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Bobby Bones
What's the best round of golf you ever played. Do you have a best score?
Daniel Jeremiah
Best score. I'm an average golfer, but I did shoot a 78.
Bobby Bones
Oh, so jealous.
Daniel Jeremiah
I never broke an 80, so, I mean, that. That has always been my goal. Just give me one time, and I think it truly has only been one time. Time. I was at a course called Ohoopi down in Georgia. Fantastic place. Go down there, I get invited. Don't really know the group too well. I knew one of my buddies that I got the invitation from. So we go down and I tell them, I'm a 12. I played out of my mind. They were so pissed off.
Bobby Bones
One of those days.
Daniel Jeremiah
One of those days, yeah. And I had no apologies for it. I was like, guys, look, this is what. This is what it is. 70. I was hitting putts. That's chipping. It just felt. It felt so good. And then. Then the next day, it was back to myself. I said, I told you guys, I'm.
Bobby Bones
A 12 as well, somewhere. Oh, when I was doing Rich Eisen, one of the guys was like, hey, what's your handicap? And I was like, I don't know. You can look it up. And my G H I N Again, like 12.6 or something. And so my best round ever is at 81. And if I would have bogeyed the 18th hole, I would have shot a 79. And it was that. Oh, yeah, it was that. It was that where I ended up shooting, like, an eight on a par four. Right, Whatever. And it was only because I. I got tight going. I'm about to do it, right. Yeah. So I've not broken 80.
Daniel Jeremiah
Isn't that a crazy mental sport? It's like the most. The mental grind that you have from hole to hole, let alone the skill that it takes. But you get on a roll and you're feeling that, and then you're starting to count strokes. The worst thing you can do is count strokes.
Bobby Bones
I know, and I do, because it.
Daniel Jeremiah
Takes one hole where you're like, dude, I've been par, birdie, par, triple bogey, triple bogey.
Bobby Bones
I mean, four holes. Then I'm starting to go, all right, I'm doing. If I keep this pace up. Yeah, that's tough.
Daniel Jeremiah
And then reality strikes.
Bobby Bones
Biggest celebrity you ever played with. Coolest celebrity.
Daniel Jeremiah
Coolest celebrity. You know, I'd say one of the coolest celebrities I've ever played with was Jerry West.
Bobby Bones
Oh, that's cool.
Daniel Jeremiah
It was out in California, and I got the invite, and they knew each other somehow, some way, and we Played a whole round at 18 and what an absolute stud. He was like 72 at the time, still in incredible shape. Said he woke up every morning at around 4:35, got his workout in, ate well, all that stuff. But the dude, his mind was incredible and he could play golf. And just some of the stories he had about him growing up, his day and age and also the. The legends of the game that he played against, it was. It was a really cool experience that.
Bobby Bones
Have been a cool day just to hear the stories. And on a day like that, you don't want to play so bad that it affects like, your attitude.
Daniel Jeremiah
Right.
Bobby Bones
So you're just praying you don't play horrible. If you play pretty bad, that's okay because that happens. You play really great. That's awesome too. But it's those days, whenever it could be a real special day, you're just going, just don't fail me body, don't fail me, muscle memory, don't. Because. Yeah. And then you start to feel embarrassed. Or at least I do. Like if I'm playing really bad with somebody, I start to be embarrassed. Mine, I'll cheat. I played. I played a couple times with Jordan Spieth, but the first time I played with Spieth, and he's obviously a professional golfer, we bet a hundred bucks a hole, but really I had to give him a hundred if he birdied and he had to give me a hundred if I pard.
Daniel Jeremiah
I like that.
Bobby Bones
And so did you get strokes? No strokes.
Daniel Jeremiah
Oh, but you said you're 12. He's a scratch golfer. He's taking advantage of you.
Bobby Bones
Well, I didn't want strokes. I wanted to play. That wasn't the purpose. The purpose for me was.
Daniel Jeremiah
Right.
Bobby Bones
He already was. He always giving me an advantage. Right. Like a stroke a hole. Basically, yeah. So that's. Yeah, I stroke a hole.
Daniel Jeremiah
How'd you make out?
Bobby Bones
I lost a hundred dollars. Oh, you put it on the last hole. And. And he was like, I don't want your money. We just spent a whole day doing this and shooting. I was like, no, no, you'll take my money or the story's not complete.
Daniel Jeremiah
Right.
Bobby Bones
Like you must have.
Daniel Jeremiah
I have to.
Bobby Bones
The money.
Daniel Jeremiah
The money.
Bobby Bones
So that was cool because to watch him and nothing about his game. And again, I've been lucky to play maybe three times at this point because we play like a part of three course together as well. He doesn't swing that hard. It doesn't. I should rephrase it. It doesn't look like anything he's doing has Extreme intensity on it.
Daniel Jeremiah
Right.
Bobby Bones
It looks so easy and smooth, even next to him, but it is not. And it is so precise. Like, wild to watch the control those guys have on that tiny ball and the control that I don't have. The funniest is Ray Romano.
Daniel Jeremiah
Oh, you got to play with Ray. He's. He makes me crack up all the time.
Bobby Bones
You ever. Have you met him?
Daniel Jeremiah
I have not met him.
Bobby Bones
It's the same person and he's hilarious the whole time. And it doesn't stop. And not in a way that's like, dude, shut up. He's so like warmly funny the whole time.
Daniel Jeremiah
Yeah.
Bobby Bones
So that would be like my coolest. Where it's just watching him do what he loves, which is golf. Watching him do what he does naturally, which is just be non stop hilarious.
Daniel Jeremiah
Right.
Bobby Bones
For three hours. Even when he's not trying to be.
Daniel Jeremiah
See, that's. That's a gift within itself. The one guy that I played with right around Covid was Nate Bargazi. Did I pronounce that right? The last name. And he's actually really takes his golf seriously. He wants to win. He does this, but what a cool guy. And this is right before he really, over these last few years, have just blown up. But it was right before that. And he is funny as I'll get out as well, but probably not to the same way that Ray Romano is.
Bobby Bones
Yeah. Ray is like loudly funny.
Daniel Jeremiah
Yeah. He's not. He's like very concentrated on playing golf. He wants to do well and he's got that dry sense of humor. So he's funny. But it's just, you're. If you're playing golf, you better be ready to play golf.
Bobby Bones
What's the nicest course you've ever played on?
Daniel Jeremiah
Nicest course I've ever played on. I'd have to go with Bandon Dunes. I thought that was the coolest course. And just. It was beautiful. You're right on the Pacific Ocean. They've got six different courses there. It's an experience within itself. But Bandon Dunes was unbelievable. It's up in Oregon. How about yourself?
Bobby Bones
Probably. I go, just because I've seen it on TV so many times. I played the Pebble Beach Pro Am, which was super cool.
Daniel Jeremiah
Yeah, pebble beach is pretty strong.
Bobby Bones
There are just holes that are burnt into your head that you've just seen so many times on television. And when you're playing it, you're like, whoa. You just can't be taken aback to the point where it affects your game.
Daniel Jeremiah
Right.
Bobby Bones
Because you're Like, I don't want to mess up on this hole. I've seen it 72 times over the year. So playing that tournament and having free access, free it's like for three days because there were three courses. Spyglass was awesome.
Daniel Jeremiah
Spyglass is great.
Bobby Bones
And aside from the history of Pebble Beach, Spyglass is probably a cooler course, but the organism that is pebble beach makes it the coolest course.
Daniel Jeremiah
It's probably because I played so poorly when I went there that I was just like, not my favorite course.
Bobby Bones
I can see that.
Daniel Jeremiah
You know, it's reflective of how you felt that day. If you place semi well, you have a different feeling about the course.
Bobby Bones
If you'd play terrible, you'd be like, I hate Jerry West.
Daniel Jeremiah
Yeah, 100. He's like, quit holding me up, kid.
Bobby Bones
Have you ever been to the Masters?
Daniel Jeremiah
Never been in that Masters. I rock the gear all the time because my brother goes down and I act like I've been there. And everybody's like, oh, you've been there? I was like, no, never been there. I need to get down there. Have you been to the Masters?
Bobby Bones
Yes. I like to at I with you allowing me to do this, I'd like to give you the most name dropping story ever.
Daniel Jeremiah
I love name dropping stories.
Bobby Bones
I love them too, when people give them.
Daniel Jeremiah
Honestly, I really enjoy them.
Bobby Bones
So I've been to the Masters once, and one of our guests on this show, Andy Roddick, was like, hey, I'm going. Like, he was. It still is one of my best friends. We don't talk as much as we used to because we live states away. But he was like, I'm going to the Masters. I got four passes. You want to go? And I'm like, yeah, of course I want to go. Because we'll go for three days. And he played in that the day. The par three.
Daniel Jeremiah
The par three. Yeah, for sure.
Bobby Bones
So he did that. And so it was me, Andy, one of our buddies, and John Legend in a house.
Daniel Jeremiah
This is awesome.
Bobby Bones
For three days.
Daniel Jeremiah
This is pretty awesome.
Bobby Bones
Yeah, it was awesome.
Daniel Jeremiah
Is John Legend as cool?
Bobby Bones
Yes. Yes.
Daniel Jeremiah
He comes across because every time, like just the smoothest talking, the coolest, incredible human. It seems like just everything that I.
Bobby Bones
Dreamt about, it couldn't be more normal and nicer and cooler. And, well, the beauty of it was one we would go. And again, I've only been once, so I'm not an expert on what you do when you get there, but everybody runs and puts their chairs down on a green because once that chair is there, they can go Wherever they want. But no one can move that chair. That's their chair. So you have like your little master's chair. You go out, boom. Once it's there, that's your spot. And so we didn't do that because we didn't know to do that. We didn't have chairs. We just thought, we'll walk around. Well, if you wanted to follow like Tiger or you wanted to see Tiger, it was difficult because, man, the folks, oh, man, it was a parade wherever they went. Tiger, Phil. So we went and we sat on a green. Me, our friend Andy and John, and we sat on a green. It was on the back nine and maybe whatever, a par three. And we just bet. Bet which of the golfers we get closer to. The whole hundred bucks.
Daniel Jeremiah
That's awesome.
Bobby Bones
That's what we did.
Daniel Jeremiah
Actually made it super entertaining.
Bobby Bones
We just sat there and bet money the whole time with the two golfers to come up 100 bucks. Who gets closer? And then if it was so close, we couldn't tell. It would just be a wash carryover.
Daniel Jeremiah
Yeah.
Bobby Bones
And we also played ping pong. And then John would just sing at the house.
Daniel Jeremiah
Private concerts. Amazing.
Bobby Bones
Like, he would just have his laptop open. And that's. It's obvious he's a singer, but he also loved to sing. And I just remember thinking, this is crazy. Like, I'm playing mini tennis with a former number one in the world, and I'm here sitting on a couch next to a Grammy winning singer who's just singing for an hour at a time on his computer, like, just typing up stuff. We'd watch like sports at night, go to the Masters in the daytime. It's crazy.
Daniel Jeremiah
I got nothing that really compares to that.
Bobby Bones
And the great part about it was this is it's been probably eight, nine years, I don't know, 10 years. You can't have phones in there. So nobody has a phone.
Daniel Jeremiah
That's what I was gonna ask you.
Bobby Bones
So nobody stopped anybody for pictures. So Andy wasn't getting stopped for pictures. John wasn't gonna stop for pictures. There were no. There were no pictures. So everybody could just move as they would. And when those two, they're famous, right? They wouldn't have to worry about people going, hey, can I get a picture? Everybody just lived. It's pretty sick.
Daniel Jeremiah
It's a little different than the Phoenix Open. Have you ever been there?
Bobby Bones
I have not been.
Daniel Jeremiah
Oh, my God. I went last year.
Bobby Bones
Yeah.
Daniel Jeremiah
I've never seen anything like that. I mean, it is like. It's a nightclub during the day. That starts early and does not stop. And, I mean, people talk about the exact opposite of the Masters. No phones, no music. You can't even lay down on the hill. I had a buddy that said his wife laid down on the hill for just a second, leaned back. Guy comes up and says, the Masters want you to please sit up. So, like that, there it is, just full rage session. There's like a DJ booth in one of the things. I mean, people are throwing on the golf course. I'm going, what is going on right now? It's a great time. It's a great time.
Bobby Bones
Yeah, that hole, is it 13? The famous hole, whatever it is. Where that. Yeah, that. That looks fun. I've had a bunch of friends who have played that hole and, like, the pro Am leading up to it. Yes, that. That's. That's cool.
Daniel Jeremiah
It's pretty cool. I mean, the people watching is unmatched.
Kevin
Lowe's knows that taking on more projects should be rewarding. That's why loyalty members get more every day with rewards for every home or business purchase. Plus shop weekly member deals and get access to free standard shipping. So what are you waiting for? Join Free Today, Lowe's, we help you save loyalty program subject to terms and conditions. Detail@lowe's.com Terms subject to change.
Greg Rosenthal
What's up, everyone? It's Greg Rosenthal, and I'm teaming up with the King of Spring, Daniel Jeremiah. He requires me to say that we're going to be bringing you 40s and free agents, the only podcast you'll need this NFL draft season. From DJs, mock drafts to my top 101, free agents will have it covered for you with all new episodes every Thursday keeping you up to date as we head to the NFL Draft. Listen to 40s and free agents on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Bobby Bones
I mentioned a couple weeks ago I didn't have a favorite NFL team because I didn't grow up with one. In Arkansas, we didn't have an NFL team. Most people fell to the Cowboys because Jerry Jones was a former Razorback football player, won a national championship in Arkansas, and Dallas was close. But ever since, everybody was a Cowboys fan and they were winning so much, I would not allow myself to be a Cowboys fan. So as much of an NFL fan as I am, I don't have a team. And I said, hey, I don't have a team. I don't want to be on a front runner, but also don't want to be on somebody that's just going to Be terrible forever. Like, who should I pick? And we just threw it out there. Has Kevin, have you heard from anybody?
Daniel Jeremiah
Yeah. Has anybody responded to that?
Matt Castle
I haven't heard directly to myself from anybody, but I went on your Instagram, the NFL Network Instagram that posted the clip, and we've got some feedback from fans. But also a mascot.
Bobby Bones
Oh, there's a mascot that followed me. The Indiana Indianapolis Colts. Follow me.
Matt Castle
Yes.
Bobby Bones
I wonder if that's why.
Matt Castle
Well, it is because he commented on yours, I believe, and the NFL Network post and said, where do I send the gear?
Bobby Bones
Oh, let's go.
Daniel Jeremiah
Oh, you're gonna get a mascot. What? What's his name?
Matt Castle
Blue, I believe.
Daniel Jeremiah
He's obviously a cult.
Bobby Bones
Yeah, he's the. You would know the mascot.
Daniel Jeremiah
Yeah, of course.
Bobby Bones
He's not sending me a mascot outfit. He's sending me, like, Colts, I think.
Daniel Jeremiah
He'S gonna send you a mascot.
Matt Castle
He's gonna send you gear.
Daniel Jeremiah
That's gonna be awesome. Awesome. You're gonna have to put on the headgear.
Bobby Bones
So would you. Do I need to reply?
Matt Castle
Yeah. Because I've tried to reach out to him multiple times and I can't DM him unless he follows me. I'm trying to get him to follow back, but, yeah, I'm not cool enough, I guess. His name is Blue. So, Blue, if you're out there and you're listening, give me a follow back. Let's set this up, man.
Bobby Bones
I'll just message him.
Daniel Jeremiah
Holler at us, Blue.
Bobby Bones
Because he does follow. And I wondered, why is the Colts mascot following me? So, okay, so far the Colts are in the lead from Colton.
Matt Castle
Lead a lot of Raiders fans, though.
Bobby Bones
I will say that like, like, fans.
Matt Castle
Fans are like, come on, join the dark side. Join the dark side.
Bobby Bones
Oh, you look good as it's so far away, though.
Daniel Jeremiah
Yeah. But Vegas is fun to go too, let's be honest.
Bobby Bones
Not anymore, is it?
Bruce Buffer
Yeah.
Daniel Jeremiah
We'll take Bruce with us.
Bobby Bones
Yeah, we can.
Daniel Jeremiah
High roller table. Yeah. Guaranteed. He gets comped everywhere he goes.
Bobby Bones
So in this final segment, I have a top five list of players who I think belong in a boy band. If we were creating an NFL boy band.
Daniel Jeremiah
Okay.
Bobby Bones
At number five, Travis Kelsey. He's the confident one who does all the talking and interviews. He's in his mind, 100% the hottest one. And he's the first one to go solo. Like, later on, he breaks off and goes solo first.
Daniel Jeremiah
And definitely a great dancer, too.
Bobby Bones
Yeah.
Daniel Jeremiah
So, like, he's got. He's got all the qualities you look for, for sure.
Bobby Bones
In My NFL boy band, Travis Kelsey. Next up, Justin Jefferson. Now, why? Well, he's the fun one that actually knows how to dance. There's always one that's really good at dancing that has, like, a background in dance.
Daniel Jeremiah
Yes.
Bobby Bones
And Justin Jefferson. I mean, he's the gritty. That's him.
Daniel Jeremiah
He is. He actually invented.
Bobby Bones
Yes.
Daniel Jeremiah
A whole dance. Touchdown dance that my kids do.
Bobby Bones
Yes.
Daniel Jeremiah
He's taken the world by storm.
Bobby Bones
Next up, Christian McCaffrey. He's the pretty one.
Daniel Jeremiah
I could see that.
Bobby Bones
He's the pretty boy lead singer. He's the Nick Lachey. He's the Justin Timberlake.
Daniel Jeremiah
Yeah, I like that.
Bobby Bones
Even though JC Chase was really the heart and soul of NSync, like, Timberlake was the face. He's the Nick Carter.
Daniel Jeremiah
You need a face.
Bobby Bones
Yeah. Christian McCaffrey is our face. Every mom would say, that's my favorite. Every guy would secretly, like, love him but have to say he hated him.
Daniel Jeremiah
Yeah, I don't like him. But you listen to the song all the time when nobody's in the car.
Bobby Bones
Jordan Knight. He's the Jordan Knight of this group. Group. Next up, CD Lamb. Now, CD Lamb.
Daniel Jeremiah
CD Lamb.
Bobby Bones
He's the smooth one that's got, like.
Daniel Jeremiah
All the drip, right?
Bobby Bones
Like, he's the one that wears the clothes a little different, but he does do that fashion icon. Like, he's the one that people look at and go, yeah, that dude is the style part of that boy band can still kill the dance routines. Probably at times a shirtless on the album cover, too. Like, for sure.
Daniel Jeremiah
You got to have at least. Or at least just completely unbuttoned.
Bobby Bones
Some abs are being shown by CD Lamb.
Daniel Jeremiah
Yeah.
Bobby Bones
And my final member of my NFL boy band is Joe Burrow.
Daniel Jeremiah
Oh, I was gonna say. I could have guessed that.
Bobby Bones
Because every. Every boy band needs a bad boy.
Daniel Jeremiah
You need a bad boy. You need different color hair, you know, the different suits, the swag, the drip that he comes along with.
Bobby Bones
He's a Donnie Wahlberg.
Daniel Jeremiah
He's it.
Bobby Bones
Of New Kids on the Block, but of our group right here, he, like, smokes a cigar. In the music video, he wears sunglasses inside. He's too cool to dance. Everybody else is dancing. And he's kind. Nah, I'm good.
Daniel Jeremiah
He's solid. That was a solid pick right there. I was definitely gonna say, you better have Joe Burrow in there.
Bobby Bones
That's my NFL boy band right there. Tell me that wouldn't. I don't know if they can sing, but tell me that wouldn't. Well, I don't really what do you think that wouldn't do much, but still. Yeah, I like. I like everybody.
Daniel Jeremiah
I like the dynamics right now. Yeah, we've got some good comps right there. Solid.
Bobby Bones
And all.
Daniel Jeremiah
All different phases.
Bobby Bones
We are done. We appreciate everybody for hanging out. If you don't mind, go over and subscribe to the show. That would be super cool. We'd love it. I don't know what feed you're listening on or if you're watching. Go over and subscribe to the Lots to say podcast if it's on Spotify or iHeartRadio or Apple. Thank you so much. That's Matt, thanks to Kickoff. Kevin, thanks to Reed, who's leaving in a few weeks. Dang. He's out of here. Reads moving to St. Louis.
Daniel Jeremiah
Is he really? He's gone. Gone?
Bobby Bones
Yeah, he's leaving the job. Like, Reed's been with me for how many years? Years. Five. Yeah, five years. But my guy travels with me, so. Reads out getting married to St. Louis. His wife's, well, fiance.
Daniel Jeremiah
Well, congratulations.
Bobby Bones
Me a doctor.
Daniel Jeremiah
Wish you nothing but the best.
Bobby Bones
We're gonna forget him as soon as he's out of here, but it's cool right now.
Daniel Jeremiah
We'll still give you some shout outs.
Bobby Bones
Yeah. Thanks to Bruce Buffer for coming on. We appreciate you guys. And that's it for this week. I don't know. I got nothing. Nothing else to say.
Daniel Jeremiah
Nothing to say.
Bobby Bones
Nothing to say.
Daniel Jeremiah
But we usually have lots to say. Boom.
Bobby Bones
And we're out. See you guys. Lots to say with Bobby Bones and Matt Castle is a production of the NFL and iHeart podcasts. For more podcasts from iHeartRadio, visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Greg Rosenthal
What's up, everyone? It's Greg Rosenthal, and I'm teaming up with the king of Spring, Daniel Jeremiah. He requires me say that we're going to be bringing you 40s and free agents, the only podcast you'll need this NFL draft season. From DJs, mock drafts to my top 101 free agents, we'll have it covered for you with all new episodes every Thursday keeping you up to date as we head to the NFL Draft. Listen to 40s and free agents on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Podcast Summary: "Lots to Say: Shedeur Showcase, Bruce Buffer, and The Masters"
The Bobby Bones Show episode titled "Lots to Say: Shedeur Showcase, Bruce Buffer, and The Masters," released on April 9, 2025, delves into a diverse range of topics, blending sports insights, personal anecdotes, and engaging interviews. Hosted by Bobby Bones alongside co-hosts Daniel Jeremiah and Matt Castle, the episode seamlessly transitions between discussions on the NFL Draft, self-improvement strategies, an interactive game segment, an in-depth interview with UFC's renowned announcer Bruce Buffer, and lighthearted segments involving golf and creative fun.
The episode kicks off with Bobby Bones sharing his apprehensions about hosting guests at his home studio, particularly concerning the appearance of numerous Amazon boxes on his porch.
Daniel Jeremiah relates by mentioning the frequent unsolicited deliveries he receives, adding a relatable touch to the conversation about household online shopping habits.
A significant portion of the discussion centers around the NFL Draft season, with a focus on Shedeur's Pro Day and quarterback mechanics.
Bobby and Daniel delve into the nuances of quarterback techniques, particularly the controversial topic of "patting the ball."
The conversation evolves into strategies for self-improvement. Bobby Bones shares his innovative approach to self-scouting by hiring individuals to identify his vulnerabilities.
Daniel Jeremiah echoes the importance of continual self-assessment and embracing constructive criticism to enhance performance.
To infuse some fun, the hosts engage in a game called "Who Said It?" where Matt Castle reads infamous quotes, and Bobby and Daniel attempt to attribute them correctly. This segment not only entertains but also showcases the camaraderie among the hosts.
Despite some challenging quotes, the segment highlights the playful competitive spirit of the show.
A highlight of the episode is an in-depth interview with Bruce Buffer, the iconic UFC Octagon announcer known for his catchphrase, "It's Time."
Bruce Buffer elaborates on how his signature phrase evolved over time.
His emphasis on the delivery over the phrase itself underscores his dedication to creating a memorable and electrifying atmosphere during UFC events.
Bruce shares his journey from his early days training in martial arts to becoming the voice of the UFC.
He recounts memorable events like UFC 100, where Brock Lesnar fought Frank Mir, highlighting the evolution and mainstream acceptance of UFC.
The conversation touches upon Bruce’s entrepreneurial ventures, including his cologne line and poker passion.
His passion for poker is equally evident as he discusses participating in major tournaments and attributing his success to competitive spirit and strategic thinking.
Bruce shares a heartfelt story about discovering his half-brother, Michael Buffer, and their collaborative journey in building the Buffer brand.
The narrative underscores the importance of family and collaboration in achieving mutual success.
Injecting creativity, Bobby Bones envisions an NFL boy band comprising star players like Travis Kelsey, Justin Jefferson, Christian McCaffrey, CD Lamb, and Joe Burrow. Each player is assigned a role reflecting typical boy band archetypes, blending sports charisma with musical flair.
This segment showcases the hosts' ability to blend sports with pop culture in a humorous and imaginative manner.
The conversation shifts to golf, with both hosts sharing their memorable golfing experiences and the mental challenges associated with the sport.
Bobby Bones recounts playing at the Masters alongside celebrities like Andy Roddick and John Legend, highlighting the exclusivity and unique atmosphere of such events.
Their anecdotes illustrate the blend of competition, camaraderie, and the serene beauty of golf courses.
As the episode winds down, Bobby Bones and Daniel Jeremiah express gratitude to their guest, Bruce Buffer, and wrap up with light-hearted comments about upcoming events and personal updates.
The hosts encourage listeners to subscribe and stay tuned for future episodes, maintaining an engaging and friendly rapport throughout.
Bobby Bones [01:24]: "I feel like people judge me when they come to my house and the studio is at my house... people just judge you for not being detail oriented."
Daniel Jeremiah [09:26]: "A lot of people will make the argument that if you pat the ball, you give that defensive back an extra beat because they know that you're about to throw."
Bruce Buffer [39:46]: "I used to say, it's time to begin the Ultimate Fighting Championship... I started saying it's time at the main event because I figured the fighters have been fighting training now for eight to 10 weeks."
Bruce Buffer [52:43]: "I wanted to create a sensual, charismatic cologne, subtle, that women obviously would love to, you know, smell when you're around."
Bobby Bones [79:40]: "At number five, Travis Kelsey. He's the confident one who does all the talking and interviews... the first one to go solo."
Conclusion
This episode of The Bobby Bones Show masterfully intertwines sports analysis, personal growth, and entertaining segments, anchored by a captivating interview with Bruce Buffer. Listeners are treated to a blend of insightful discussions, humorous interactions, and inspiring stories, making "Lots to Say: Shedeur Showcase, Bruce Buffer, and The Masters" a compelling listen for sports enthusiasts and casual fans alike.