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Dan LeBatard
Okay. You ever get that moment where your dog looks at you like you're the adult in the house? Don't be nasty. Think I've got it all together. Meanwhile, I'm frantically googling, can dogs eat watermelon? Because of course, one just licked a slice and I'm out of food and flea meds. Thank goodness for Chewy. I go on the site. Bam. Everything's there. Food, meds, toys, even stuff for birds and reptiles, which I don't have. But I still looked. Now I'm on autoship because obviously it shows up on time every time I don't have to remember a thing. And yes, fleas and ticks are still a thing. And Chewy's got the good vet recommended stuff. Plus, their customer service is 24. 7. Chewy has everything you need to keep your pet happy and healthy. And right now you can save $20 on your first order and get free shipping by going to chewy.comDan that's chewy.comDan to save $20 on your first order with free shipping. Chewy.comDan minimum purchase required. New customers only. Terms and conditions apply. See site for complete details. Now's a good time to remember where tequila's story truly began. In 1795, Cuervo invented tequila. Cuervo. What are you doing here?
Stugotz
Cuervo. Anytime someone says Cuervo, I show up.
Dan LeBatard
Well, I do know that to be true. But even during ad reads like Cuervo, I think he could lay out, especially.
Stugotz
For one of our great partners. Sweet, delicious Cuervo.
Dan LeBatard
Since then, Cuervo has stayed true to its roots. The same family, the same land, the same passion.
Stugotz
Cuervo. So enjoy the tequila that started it all.
Dan LeBatard
Cuervo. Cuervo. The tequila that invented tequila. Proximo. Cuervo.com, please drink responsibly.
Stugotz
Cuervo.
Dan LeBatard
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Stugotz
Welcome to the Big Suey, presented by DraftKings. Why are you listening to this show? The podcast that seems very similar to.
Dan LeBatard
The other Dan Lebatard podcast? I'm sorry.
Stugotz
I'm not going to apologize for that. In fact, the only difference seems to be this imaging. I have been tempted in restaurants just walking past tables to grab somebody's fries that if they're just there. That hasn't happened to you guys.
Dan LeBatard
I've done it. And now here's the marching man to.
Stugotz
Nowhere Fat Face and the Habitual Liar.
Dan LeBatard
This episode is presented by DraftKings.
Stugotz
DraftKings.
Dan LeBatard
The Crown is yours.
Stugotz
Pablo Torre is going to join us here in a little bit and I've got Bill Belichick. I'm going to put news in quote marks, but I'm going to ask you guys and Pablo some opinions on this because I do think it is news that for the first time that I've seen, Belichick is going out of his way. Way to say something counter to Bob Kraft this. The last few years of whatever their breakup was has Belichick being real quiet about how he feels about Kraft, while Kraft clearly makes a 10 part Apple documentary that makes it look like Belichick was to blame for everything that went wrong in New England. And Belichick has been quiet about that, but he's not anymore. He has done something that is for him, I think newsmaking. But the thing that I just read that I wanted to get to has a shocking fact in it that I really didn't know until I just read this story about LeBron James. The story about LeBron that reports that he hasn't had buyout or trade discussions with the Lakers and he expects to be with the team. And one of the sentences in that story says the following. And I really was caught off guard legitimately by the end of this. The Lakers have received no indication from James or his representatives that he would request a trade or asked to be bowed out of the final year of his contract, which will be his eighth season with the Lakers. The longest consecutive stretch spent with one organization in his career. I can't believe that. Like I'm reading and I'm like, is that true? Oh, it is true. Oh, my God. He's been there eight years. I read that sentence and I had to do a double take. I'm like, that cannot be right. That he's been with the Lakers more than he's been with Cleveland consecutively. No, I know, but I'm saying that I think I think of the start of his career as being longer than the time of what? I think of his time with the Cavs at the start of his career trying to get to the finals as something that took longer than the time. I think of him as a five year player with the Lakers. I Don't know if it's the pandemic that screwed me up, but I do not think of him as that. For the Lakers, eight years is to have that be the longest tenure of his career. You could win some trivia games. I think if you start asking people that question.
Dan LeBatard
How about twice as long as he was with the Heat? Yeah, like, that's another one, right? Half the championships. That's true.
Stugotz
Man, that is some quick homer math that Jeremy did there. The two of them just speaking the same language. Like the two of them connecting eyes, finishing each other's sentences.
Dan LeBatard
Yeah, but then it gets dicey because then you can say, well, it's, you know, a bubble title. Right. So then do you take that championship away? Because then you also take away a finals appearance from the Heat. So what do you do in that instance? As I don't do anything. The Heat didn't win it. What do I care? I'm just saying, I mean. Well, hold on a second. You think I talked to people about the finals that he lost? Well, I mean, yes. That's what we're holding up for Pat Riley Finals appearance being the greatest night in sports history. It was.
Stugotz
Okay. I'm glad we've resolved that. Pablo. Tori finds out.
Dan LeBatard
This guy doesn't know anything. His kids are running away from him. Good card. I may not let him. That's not how running away works, buddy. Doesn't seem like you're exactly a disciplinarian here. You may not let him. The kid already went and bought a flight and bought tickets to an event in another state behind your back. You think he gives a shit what you say? No, he doesn't respect you. Out of here. How's he gonna get a hotel or a car? Is he traveling with another adult? Do you have a fake id? Real tight ship you're on over there in the Zaslo Manor. Apparently you can Mansion. Apparently you can skate around Airbnb. Like if you put the card down. Apparently Airbnb is easier than.
Stugotz
I don't know the difference between a manor and a mansion.
Dan LeBatard
I don't know.
Stugotz
Put it on the pole. Zazzle's delusion at Lebatard show. Do you know the differences between a manor and a mansion? Let's bring in someone highfalutin that we keep around here in order to answer the highfalutin questions. Pablo Torrey. Pablo Torrey finds out he's trying to go from the podcast world of manor to mansion with all the stories that he's doing. What is the difference between the two.
Dan LeBatard
Things do, you know, I think manners like Beauty and the Beast, you know, it's like the Beast lives mansion. I think manor is ahead of mansion. I think it's above mansion. I think mansion is. You know, there are lots of mansions. Beverly Hills. You know that beast lived in a castle. This is crazy talk. Yeah. No, a manor. A manor is like an estate. I feel like. I think a manor entails more than merely the structure. It means that maybe you got like grounds to go pheasant hunting. Mansions. The best place you could ever live. Everybody. No, please. Everybody who's well read like me and Pablo know that a manor is ideal. Yeah. Bunch of illiterates around here.
Stugotz
On the poll at Le Batard show, what's better, mansion or manor? I think manor. Manor also has a royal connotation. Does it?
Dan LeBatard
And haunting. Absolutely. Also. Yes. You guys seen Saltburn?
Stugotz
Yes, we've talked about Saltburn.
Dan LeBatard
Seen that. That tub is a manners tub, not a mansions tub. That is a manners tub. Mansion is going to win that poll though. Hell yeah, it is.
Stugotz
You want to bring up with Pablo Torre what it is that you were saying about how it is that he teased his latest episode of Pablo Torre finds out in a way that didn't make you think that he had done anything other than uncovered some guy named Moose on the Internet.
Dan LeBatard
You know, I thought maybe it was a short. I saw like a five minute clip. I was like, if this is it. But no, apparently there's a lot of. A lot of layers of this onion to peel back. So Pablo, I will be checking it out later.
Stugotz
I don't believe you. You've said that twice. You keep saying that every time he comes on. None of you are listening to Pablo's podcast. It's obvious in your every comment.
Dan LeBatard
I appreciate Chris very cowardly walking back though what he's already established earlier on the show. My sources close to this show have informed me of what Chris has said. Manner. I think that. I think we nailed it. Personally, I can't really tell. It's very small text in this tiny zoom. A large country house with lands, the principal land of a landed estate.
Stugotz
So he's trying to promote you from a mansion to a manor.
Dan LeBatard
I do nothing but try to set this guy up for success, but you can't help him get out of his own way. A mansion is generally a large, luxurious house, often modern, and its primary focus is on size and opulence. I don't know what opulence means, but that sounds like a really good thing to have a mansions for the Poor. The poor's rich. Yes, yes, yes. Lands. You want lands. You want gentry, you want landed gentry, you want people killing your fields. Opulence. Mansions are new money. Manors are old money. If you can't go pheasant hunting on your land, what do you want it for? Yep. If you can't accidentally be cursed by a witch on your property somewhere turning into a beast. Not interested. What are we talking about? She was a trespasser.
Stugotz
Angel, do me the favor, please, of putting together a T shirt. Le Batard aft of Zaslow, as he presently looked, shouting, I want opulence. Pablo Torre finds out is the name of the podcast.
Dan LeBatard
And as I was saying earlier, we're talking about me. Look, Chris is obviously wrong, but whatever. I don't need to belabor that point. The point here simply is that you know who else wanted opulence? The characters in this episode. And there is no clip that can summarize the layers of this. I've been hardened by the way that people describe my own show to me, and you guys do it the most insultingly. But other things I've heard are along the true crime kind of style of podcasting, which is weird because what we're doing is like, actual, again, not whatever. I'll be the guy who says we do journalism because we do journalism. So how about in a way that unfurls like a true crime story? That's why you got to listen to the whole thing.
Stugotz
It's thorough storytelling that you're trying to give a click Generation 30 seconds so that they come listen to you. But tell them why they should be interested in this story. For people who don't want to do deep dives, they don't want an hour of Malik Beasley. Tell them why this story's interesting.
Dan LeBatard
So if you're a heat homer, like all you guys are number one, we reported first, and it turns out, not exclusively, that Terry Rozier, not cleared by the FBI investigation into legalized sports gambling throughout the NBA that had not been out there. Tom Haberstrough helped us nail that down just for you guys in South Florida. Number two, turns out that there is a mystery that has befuddled the entirety of the NBA, which is how was it that a guy on Twitter months before, in January, months before Malik Beasley got named in this FBI probe in the Eastern District of New York's federal investigation? How is it that this guy predicted it? How did that happen? Nobody else knew it. How is it, furthermore, that that guy turns out to be a character that you may have interacted with on Twitter. If you're an NBA Twitter addict like me and Amin Elhassan and Tom Habershow are the three people on this episode. And it gets to John Porter, it gets to Larsa Pippin, it gets to Carmelo Anthony, it gets to that Dante DiVincenzo. 3. It gets to a notebook that has the word trap and two exclamation points on it that has rules for smoking weed inside Malik Beasley's house. It gets to something called the Parade of Homes in the Twin Cities, actually, where there is a parade, a tour to go and see the biggest, most opulent homes in the Twin Cities area that resulted in Malik Beasley pointing a rifle at a car full of people that helped uncover all of the story for us in legal documents. So all this is very germane to everything you're saying. And that's not even getting to the fact that, by the way, I think we did an investigation that's more exhaustive than the literal FBI did.
Stugotz
It is a good investigation. I will call Pablo and a thing that he did dirty. Because there was like 2.2seconds in the episode where I'm seeing a text exchange in which I'm see iPhone and I see the. I'm assuming Pablo's iPhone. The source is just calling Malik Beasley a dumbass. And I'm like, that's not journalism. That's just an iPhone. That's just an iPhone and a text that Pablo got from somebody. I believe his sources and I believe he's credible. And I believe that Malik Beasley is indeed a dumbass. But that's cheap.
Dan LeBatard
Well, this is the thing. This is why we attract via clip. And then we keep you with the honey of not all of us. Well, listen, the point is, when somebody texts me who knows really well the teammates, current and former Malik Beasley. You're right, Dan. I shouldn't take that. And so at face value. And so what I did was I spent an hour getting to the bottom of it. It's kind of like the beginning. And we wouldn't publish that, of course, if it wasn't validated and justified. Reported out in future minutes of that podcast. But Chris Cody just needs to know that I think this is a story about a lot of guys like Chris Cody that the NBA has no understanding of. And not only the NBA, but the government, the federal government tasked with investigating all of this. They don't understand how the sausage gets made when it comes to the world of legalized sports betting either. And it's a remarkable thing to See that? Wait a minute. Maybe the people we got to understand to understand a very complicated story on its face is actually a lot of people that. That we've been tweeting with. It's been there the whole time. Don LeBatard Pablo leads all of podcasting in reading while smiling. If you listen to ESPN Daily, he sounds like he's having the time of his life. Stugats coming up next. I'm going to tell you, the Savannah Bananas are changing. How do you know I'm bananas? How do you know I'm smiling? That's how I found my vocal range. Sometimes I just say, savannah Bananas. This is the Dan Levatar show with the stugats.
Stugotz
Let me explain to the folks who want the details that are there. Go to Pablo Torrey, finds out, and you can get everything. It's more on Malik Beasley than you're getting anywhere else because the details are great. The. The moose character who revealed this now regrets revealing this. Correct. Regrets putting that. Putting you guys on the case so that you can now find out who that was. And now this is a person who's telling people anonymous, or thought he was telling people anonymously. I know things because he knew things, but now these are not things you want known by these people who are now, you know you're in crime. You're. You're in the business of crime.
Dan LeBatard
Well, listen, I always keep thinking, Dan, of that quote from the Big Short where they're investigating the guys at the ground level of the mortgage crisis, and one of the characters turns to the other and he asks him, why are they confessing? And the guy goes, they're not confessing. They're bragging. That is so much of the story. It's the story of meme coins and trying to raise money via private discords for something called National Coin association with the NBA logo is like the parody thing for the coin. Yes, it is. My favorite thing, by the way, my favorite thing in this episode, of the many things I love about this is that we had Tom Haverstrough knock on the front door, like, call up the guy, ask him, will you do an interview with Pablo Torre? Finds out, and the guy is like, yeah, I think I've heard of that joke before. And they have a conversation in which he realizes at the point that Dan is describing, I have made an enormous mistake. And you see it, you hear it, it's just rare. Again, that's the true crime aspect of it. But journalism in real time, you hear someone regret opening the can of worms that will Result in. Yes. Potentially actual legal consequences. Real things in life. And it starts so stupid. My favorite things start so stupid. And they get serious and smart, but also funny the whole way through. But also darkly funny the whole way through. There is no better case study in that than this episode, I think.
Stugotz
So give me the top item to get people over there before I get to other subjects, including Bill Belichick. If I say the best dark funny thing that you have in there, it is blank.
Dan LeBatard
Oh, my God. It's Tom Haberstrough trying to bro out with this guy immediately. Tom Haberstrough says, how are you doing on this fine Tuesday. Like, he's trying to relate immediately. If you don't Tom at all, it's just like, I love that. I just love that.
Stugotz
Okay, that's super inside and awkward. And it's dark funny to you because it's Haberstro trying to do investigative work. And he's going to be clumsy at it because.
Dan LeBatard
But, but, but the best part is that he gets the goods. This awkward guy sidling up to you at the bar who's like, basically, literally, in this case, recording the call, having disclosed that is trying to bro out with this dude. And it's so awkward, but you get everything. You click on the episode to hear everything is my point.
Stugotz
So funny, but not dark funny. The funniest thing in the episode is blank.
Dan LeBatard
Oh, my God. That. We had a producer watch Madea's family reunion five times to search for Malik Beasley, and that detail pays off in a way that can only be described as relevant to the federal government. So there's that.
Stugotz
That's a good dismount.
Dan LeBatard
Five times. All right, I'm in on this.
Stugotz
And, well, but this is. This is consistent to what I would just tell people again and again that if you're watching the phenomenon of what's happening with podcasts and where it is that intimate storytellers get in your head in a way that connects with. Because people still like to discern what's good and separate it from all the antiseptic shit that everyone else is making. What Pablo is making does deeper dives on things regularly than anyone in sports journalism is doing. And in this particular case, if I say the most interesting detail from this story, that's going to end up being something that has consequences that we'll look back on years from now and say, ah, that's what the gambling stuff did to sports back then while we were clucking about Pete Rose. Like, that was the real stuff that was happening.
Dan LeBatard
Yeah, it's that amid these incentives, these new incentives in which all these ways exist for people to have interests that diverge from their employers, players versus NBA teams. It turns out that we stumbled upon real evidence that the John Tay Porter scandal was underestimated by the federal government. That in their own reporting, in the FBI's Research and Investigation, we think they undershot it. We think it went deeper and earlier. And we have the way that this connects to Malik Beasley, to Terry Rozier, but really it's the fact that even the government, I think, has some level of this wrong. I think they don't understand the scope of it. I don't think they're as fluent as Tom Haberstro, Amin Alhassan and me. And NBA Twitter addicts. Then frankly, the ship, a container. When it comes to knowing, when it comes to crypto, gambling and basketball, these are three things that are so intertwined. And the government isn't Internet NBA Twitter brained enough to get it yet. But I think we have here at Meadowlark Media a bunch of people, actually that might be. You ever think to myself, you know what? I, Pablo Tori, have found out enough, or I found out a little bit too much about this. Like, I like my kneecaps, I have a family. Maybe I should find out a little less about this situation. And by the way, that frankly, ahead of the shipping container, a little bit of an undercut, but, you know, you worried someone's going to kill you. That's really all fair points, kind of. I mean, if I am disappeared, the unfortunate reality is that there are no multiple suspects. And by the way, it's just tomorrow's episode. Thursday's episode is not us taking the foot off the gas. Like there is something else that's going to be a thing, I think. And yeah, please tell the world my story if you never hear from me again. That would be my request.
Stugotz
All right, this is a bit dramatic.
Dan LeBatard
Seems not worth it, to be perfectly honest with you.
Stugotz
I disagree.
Dan LeBatard
I mean, I mean, you're willing to risk Pablo's life.
Stugotz
I'd go a step further. He will not have succeeded at Meadowlark until he gets the Epstein files, so.
Dan LeBatard
Oh, I thought until worse than death. Hey, that was an episode. That bird watching episode, man, is still waiting. I'm still the counter. The counter is still being monitored. I'm ready. I just need more people to watch Birdwatch.
Stugotz
Please tell the world my story is what it's going to say on Pablo's actual tombstone.
Dan LeBatard
And then, and then the world is going to say I will get to it.
Stugotz
How long is it going to take? Are there three Schwarber bombs in it? I don't have time for this.
Dan LeBatard
World's going to say, oh, you know, that teaser clip should have been a little more concise.
Stugotz
I wish you'd done it quicker. Bill Belichick. I want to, I want to know how much you guys were interested because I don't know if you went and looked it up or you know what I'm talking about. Do you guys have any interest in Bill Belichick responding to Robert Kraft, yes or no? Yes.
Dan LeBatard
I mean, I'm involved. Sure. Jordan, you know my answer.
Stugotz
So again, I will offer the context of Belichick ate a 10 part docu series that Kraft okayed and had editorial oversee on that buried Belichick. I don't know how many people saw it, but it blamed Belichick for just about everything that was wrong there. And Belichick ate that without saying anything.
Dan LeBatard
You don't believe Belichick actually watched it though, right? Man, I bet he did.
Stugotz
Why wouldn't you watch something like that? It's a 10 part docu series and they warn you, hey, Kraft did it. Like, you don't think that there's a human being in there that would just have normal ego that would want to know how they're chronicling 10, 10 episodes of his dynasty for 20 years.
Dan LeBatard
Look, what we've seen and Pablo's uncovered a lot of it, obviously from Belichick over the last eight, 10 months does go counter to the guy that we thought he was as head coach of the Patriots. And that guy wouldn't have been sitting down for 10 hours to watch something that other people are saying about him. But, but again, like his behavior has run counter to what we have known all these years. I think if it was a doc made by like the media, I'm with you, but this is like craft.
Stugotz
No, but crafty. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. It was made by Apple tv. But, but without saying no. What? What? Let me, let me look. It's a 10 part docu series that everyone in New England sees as Bob Kraft taking a hatchet to all things Bill Belichick. And Belichick has never said word one about Kraft that would give you any indication that they have problems. Not a word. So Bob Kraft evidently said, and this is the quote that evidently got to Belichick. Quote, I gave up a number one draft pick for a coach that only won a little over 40% of his games to get him out this The Dudes on Dudes podcast with Gronk and Edelman.
Dan LeBatard
Is that a fake podcast name or real, baby?
Stugotz
Man, that is so real. And I would have guessed fake. Quote. I don't know if there are any jets fans here. I think Bill Belichick to come to the Patriots in 1999 was a big risk and I got hammered in the Boston area, but he was with us for 24 years. So Belichick responds in a statement to ESPN. Why would he respond to this? Like why would this be the thing? Big risk. I took a big risk. Like you don't object to a 10 part docu series publicly that changes the entire history. But now he says that he took a big risk on you. And here is where you send a statement to espn, quote, as I told Robert, multiple times through the year. That's a statement. Okay, that's. Wait a minute, Pablo, you're an expert here. Is this Bill doing or is this Jordan who's doing this?
Dan LeBatard
Well, continue the quote and I'll tell you by the end.
Stugotz
All right. As I told multiple, as I told Robert multiple times through the years, I took a big risk. I took a big risk by taking the New England Patriots head coaching job. I already had an opportunity to be the head coach of the New York jets, but the ownership situation was unstable. I have been warned by multiple previous Patriots coaches as well as other members of our other NFL obligate organizations in the media that the New England job was going to come with many internal obstacles. I made it clear that we would have to change the way the team was managed to regain the previously attained success. What do you make of that, Pablo?
Dan LeBatard
That smells like air Jordan. Listen, the whole thing with Jordan and what she does is that she represents Bill Belichick's personal interests, right? Not unc. That's allegedly the case. This is the definition of personal interest. That is the definition of like, I've been keeping receipts on you and I've been ready. The thing that I don't know if I have said clearly enough, but you guys conversations back and forth here reminds me, is that the 10 part Belichick documentary thing, which is real, by the way. Don Van Natta at ESPN did incredible reporting showing how this was actually Belichick in the behind the scenes production capacity. Like basically having the IP to this. It was almost definitionally Bill Belichick's project, but sorry, Robert Kraft's project. Excuse me, Robert Kraft's project. Bill Belichick was blindsided by that. So this was a Robert Kraft project that Belichick did not know about. What Belichick did, though, is that he sat for it. So Belichick's in the document that Robert Kraft has the intellectual property rights to, per Don Van nanows reporting. Which is all to say that when Bill Belichick is embracing Jordan Hudson as his media protector, as his shield against bad prisoners, part of the reason he's doing it is because he got burned by Bob Kraft. Like, this is all connected. So that was part of the origin story of why did Belichick turn on even his own publishing company? Why did he turn on his media partners? Why did he become so distrustful? It's because a very paranoid person, and we know Belichick can be paranoid when he was with Kraft, became even more paranoid because of Kraft on the way out. And that quote is now a public glimpse into the way that Bill Belichick has been feeling with Jordan Hudson for quite a while now. You know, guys, it feels pretty good when you accomplish something you've dreamt of. For a long time. I've been feeling really, really lucky to not just make it to 30, but to be doing all of the things I ever wanted to do, including working here on the Dan LeBatard show with Stu Yachts. And when you think about it, the origins of this show were once just a dream. For them. That dream turned into the show and business that you're listening to today. And starting your own business is a dream that lots of us share, but too many of us just let it remain a dream. Don't hold yourself back thinking, what if I don't have the skills? Or what if I can't do it alone? Those what ifs turn into why nots. With Shopify by your side, Shopify powers millions of businesses worldwide, including 10% of all U.S. e commerce. Whether you're Mattel or you're just getting started, Shopify's got your back. Not a web designer, not a problem. Shopify has beautiful ready to go templates. Need help with the details? Their AI tools can enhance product images, write descriptions, and even generate discount codes. Worried about finding customers? Shopify makes marketing easy with email and social media tools. And if I ever get stuck, Shopify's award winning 24. 7 support is always there. Turn your big business idea into With Shopify on your side, sign up for your $1 per month trial and start selling today at shopify.com batard go to shopify.com batard shopify.com batard hey everybody, it's Mike down here in South Florida. As the audience well knows we've been celebrating a proper championship and we've been enjoying every minute of it. And by my side throughout that entire championship celebration has been Miller Light. Yeah, I wanted to make my championship time a Miller time because much like most of the fun memories I've had as an adult, Miller Lite has been right there by my side, supplementing every experience. And now that I'm about to travel during the summer, you can rest assured I'm gonna be having plenty of Miller Lite along the way, because that's what summer's all about. And since 1975, Miller Lite has been right there in all those memories. For you listening right now. Well, it's the 50th anniversary of Miller Lite. That's 50 years of great taste, great friends, great moments. Miller Lite great taste. 96 calories. Go to millerlight.com dan to find delivery options near you. Or you can pick up some Miller Lite pretty much anywhere they sell beer. Cheers to 50 years of Miller time. Celebrate responsibly. Miller Brewing Co. Milwaukee, Wisconsin 96 calories.
Stugotz
And 3.2 carbs per 12 ounces.
Dan LeBatard
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Stugotz
Everybody get 30, 30.
Dan LeBatard
Better get 30.
Stugotz
Better to get 20, 20, 20. Everybody get 20, 20.
Dan LeBatard
Everybody get 15, 15, 15, 15.
Stugotz
Just 15 bucks a month. Sold.
Dan LeBatard
Give it a try@mintmobile.com Switch upfront payment of 45 dollars for three month plan equivalent to 15 dollars per month required new customer offer for first three months only. Speed slow after 35 gigabytes of network spicy taxes and fees extra. See mintmobile.com Don LeBatard Pablo leads all of podcasting in Reading while smiling. If you listen to ESPN Daily, he sounds like he's having the time of his life. Stugats coming up next. I'm gonna tell you the Savannah Bananas are changing. How do you know Savannah Bananas? How do you know I'm smiling? That's how I found my vocal range. Sometimes I just say Savannah Bananas. Savannah Bananas. Yeah. This is the Dan Levatar show with the Stugats.
Stugotz
Let me explain to the folks who want the details that are there. Go to Pablo Torre finds out and you can get everything. It's more on Malik Beasley than you're getting anywhere else because the details are great. The moose character who revealed this now regrets revealing this. Correct. Regrets putting putting you guys on the case so that you can now find out who that was. And now this is a person who's telling people anonymous or thought he was telling people anonymously. I know things because he knew things. But now these are not things you want known by these people who are now you Know, you're in crime. You're. You're in the business of crime.
Dan LeBatard
Well, listen, I always keep thinking, Dan, of that quote from the Big Short where they're investigating the guys at the ground level of the mortgage crisis, and one of the characters turns to the other and he asks him, why are they confessing? And the guy goes, they're not confessing. They're bragging. That is so much of the story. It's the story of meme coins and trying to raise money via private, private discords for something called National Coin association with the NBA logo. Is like the parody thing. Coin. Yes, it is. It is. My favorite thing, by the way. My favorite thing in this episode, of the many things I love about this, is that we had Tom Haverstro knock on the front door, like, call up the guy, ask him, will you do an interview with Pablo Torre? Finds out, and the guy is like, yeah, I think I've heard of that show before. And they have a conversation in which he realizes at the point that Dan is describing, I have made an enormous mistake. And you see it, you hear it, it's just rare. Again, that's the true crime aspect of it. But journalism in real time, you hear someone regret opening the can of worms that will result in, yes, potentially actual legal consequences. Real things in life. And it starts so stupid. My favorite things start so stupid. And they get serious and smart, but also funny the whole way through. But also darkly funny the whole way through. There is no better case study in that than this episode, I think.
Stugotz
So give me the top item to get people over there before I get to other subjects, including Bill Belichick. If I say the best dark, funny thing that you have in there, it is blank.
Dan LeBatard
Oh, my God, it's Tom Haberstrow trying to bro out with this guy immediately. Tom Haberstrough says, how are you doing on this fine Tuesday? Like, he's trying to relate immediately. If you know Tom at all, it's just like, I love that. I just love that.
Stugotz
Okay, that's inside and awkward, and it's dark. Funny to you because it's Haberstrough trying to do investigative work. And he's going to be clumsy at it because.
Dan LeBatard
But the best part is that he gets the goods. This awkward guy sidling up to you at the bar who's like, basically, I mean, literally, in this case, recording the call, having disclosed that is trying to bro out with this dude. And it's so awkward, but you get everything. You click on the episode to hear everything is my Point.
Stugotz
So funny, but not dark funny. The funniest thing in the episode is blank.
Dan LeBatard
Oh, my God. That we had a producer watch Madea's family reunion five times to search for Malik Beasley. And that detail pays off in a way that can only be described as relevant to the federal government. So there's that.
Stugotz
That's a good dismount.
Dan LeBatard
Five times. All right, I'm in on this.
Stugotz
And, well, but this is. This is consistent to what I would just tell people again and again that if you're watching phenomenon of what's happening with podcasts and where it is that intimate storytellers get in your head in a way that connects with things because people still like to discern what's good and separate it from all the antiseptic shit that everyone else is making. What Pablo is making does deeper dives on things regularly than anyone in sports journalism is doing. And in this particular case, if I say the most interesting detail from this story, that's going to end up being something that has consequences that we'll look back on years from now and say, ah, that's what the gambling stuff did to sports back then while we were clocking about Pete Rose. Like that was the real stuff that was happening.
Dan LeBatard
Yeah, it's that amid these incentives, these new incentives in which all these ways exist for people to have interests that diverge from their employers, players versus NBA teams, it turns out that we stumbled upon real evidence that the John Tay Porter scandal was underestimated by the federal government. That in their own reporting, in the FBI's Research and Investigation, we think they undershot it. We think it went deeper and earlier. And we have the way that this connects to Malik Beasley, to Terry Rozier. But really it's the fact that even the government, I think, has some level of this wrong, wrong. I think they don't understand the scope of it. I don't think they're as fluent as Tom Haberstro, Amin Alhassan and me. And NBA Twitter addicts. Then, frankly, the shipping container. When it comes to knowing, when it comes to crypto, gambling and basketball, these are three things that are so intertwined. And the government isn't Internet NBA Twitter brained enough to get it yet, but I think we have here at Meadowlark Media a bunch of people actually that might be it. You ever think to myself, you know what? I, Pablo Tori, have found out enough, or I found out a little bit too much about this. Like, I like my kneecaps, I have a family. Maybe I should find out a little Less about this situation. And by the way, that frankly, ahead of the shipping container, a little bit of an undercut, but, you know, you worried someone's going to kill you? That's really the question. All fair points, kind of. I mean, if I am disappeared, the unfortunate reality is that there are no multiple suspects. And by the way, hey, it's just tomorrow's episode, Thursday's episode is not us taking the foot off the gas. Like there is something else that's going to be a thing, I think. And yeah, please tell the world my story if you never hear from me again. That would be my request.
Stugotz
This is a bit dramatic.
Dan LeBatard
Seems not worth it, to be perfectly honest with you.
Stugotz
I disagree.
Dan LeBatard
I mean, I mean, you're willing to risk Pablo's life.
Stugotz
I'd go a step further. He will not have succeeded at Meadowlark until he gets the Epstein files, so.
Dan LeBatard
Oh, I thought until worse than death. Hey, that bird watching episode, that bird watching episode, man, is still waiting. I'm still the counter. The counter is still being monitored. I'm ready. I just need more people to watch bird watching.
Stugotz
Please tell the world my story is what it's going to say on Pablo's actual tombstone.
Dan LeBatard
And then, and then the world is going to say, we'll get to it.
Stugotz
How long is it going to take? Are there three Schwarber bombs in and I don't have time for this.
Dan LeBatard
The world's going to say. You know that teaser clip show been a little more concise.
Stugotz
I wish he'd done it quicker. Bill Belichick. I want to, I want to know how much you guys were interested because I don't know if you went and looked it up or you know what I'm talking about. Do you guys have any interest in Bill Belichick responding to Robert Kraft? Yes or no? Yes.
Dan LeBatard
I mean, sure, Jordan, you know my answer.
Stugotz
So again, I will offer the Context of Belichick 8, a 10 part docu series that Kraft okayed and had editorial oversea on that buried Belichick. I don't know how many people saw it, but it blamed Belichick for just about everything that was wrong there. And Belichick ate that without saying anything.
Dan LeBatard
You don't believe Belichick actually watched it though, right? Man, I bet he did.
Stugotz
Why wouldn't you watch something like that? It's a 10 part docu series and they warn you, hey, Kraft did it. It like you don't think that there's a human being in there that would just have normal ego that would want to Know how they're chronicling 10, 10 episodes of his dynasty for 20 years?
Dan LeBatard
Look, what we've seen, and Pablo's uncovered a lot of it, obviously from Belichick over the last, you know, eight, 10 months. Does go counter to the guy that we thought he was as head coach, the Patriots. And that guy wouldn't have been sitting down for 10 hours to watch something that other people are saying about him. But, but again, like, his behavior has run counter to what we have known all these years. I think if it was a doc made by, like, the media. I'm with you, but this is like craft.
Stugotz
No, but. No, no, no, no, no, no. It was made by Apple tv, but without. He's in it, like, no. What? What? Let me, let me look. It's a 10 part docu series that everyone in New England sees as Bob Kraft taking a hatchet to all things Bill Belichick. And Belichick has never said word one about Kraft that would give you any indication that they have problems. Not a word. So Bob Kraft evidently said, and this is the quote that evidently got to Belichick. Quote, I gave up a number one draft pick for a coach that only won a little over 40% of his games to get him out. This is the Dudes on Dudes podcast with Gronk and Edelman.
Dan LeBatard
Is that a fake podcast name or real, baby?
Stugotz
Man, that is so real. And I would have guessed fake. Quote. I don't know if there are any jets fans here year. I think Bill Belichick to come to the Patriots in 1999 was a big risk and I got hammered in the Boston area, but he was with us for 24 years. So Belichick responds in a statement to ESPN. Why would he respond to this? Like, why would this be the thing? Big risk. I took a big risk. Like, you don't object to a 10 part docu series publicly. That changes the entire history. But now he says that he took a big risk on you. And here is where you send a statement to espn. Quote, As I told Robert multiple times through the year, that's a statement. Okay, that's. Wait a minute, Pablo, you're an expert here. Is this Bill doing or is this Jordan who's doing this?
Dan LeBatard
Well, continue the quote and I'll tell you by the end.
Stugotz
All right. As I told multiple. As I told Robert multiple times through the years, I took a big risk. I took a big risk by taking the New England Patriots head coaching job. I already had an opportunity to be the head coach of the New York Jets. But the ownership situation was unstable. I have been warned by multiple previous Patriots coaches as well as other members of our other NFL obligate organizations in the media that the New England job was going to come with many internal obstacles. I made it clear that we would have to change the way the team was managed to regain the previously attained success. What do you make of that, Pablo?
Dan LeBatard
That smells like Air Jordan. Listen, listen. The whole thing with Jordan and what she does is that she represents Bill Belichick's personal interests, right? Not unc. That's allegedly the case. This is the definition of personal interest. That is the definition of like, I've been keeping receipts on you and I've been ready. The thing that I don't know if I have said clearly enough, but you guys conversations back and forth here reminds me is that the 10 part Belichick documentary thing, which is real by the way. Don Van Natta at ESPN did incredible reporting showing how this was actually Belichick in the behind the scenes production capacity. Like basically having the IP to this. It was almost definitionally Bill Belichick's project. But sorry, Robert Kraft's project. Excuse me, Robert Kraft's project. Bill Belichick was blindsided by the that. So this was a Robert Kraft project that Belichick did not know about. What Belichick did though is that he sat for it. So Belichick's in the document that Robert Kraft has the intellectual property rights to, per Don Van nanows reporting. Which is all to say that when Bill Belichick is embracing Jordan Hudson as his media protector as his shield against bad pr, part of the reason he's doing it is because he got burned by Bob Kraft. Like this is all connected. So that was part of the origin story of why did Belichick turn on even his own publishing company? Why did he turn on his media partners? Why did he become so distrustful? It's because a very paranoid person, and we know Belichick can be paranoid when he was with Kraft became even more paranoid because of Kraft on the way out. And that quote is now a public glimpse into the way that Bill Belichick has been feeling with Jordan Hudson for quite a While now.
Stugotz
Don LeBatard sub 500 seasons.
Dan LeBatard
It's been lonely now the best players on our side been losing and losing for much too long. But now we're back with New York Pride Stugats. Jaylen, you've got us on our feet. Jaylen Land. We're going to win the East J Land without Randall. We're still doing Fine. This is the Dan Levatar show with the stuff.
Stugotz
Can we talk for a second, though, about the thought behind this? Like, think about what we're talking about here. It's a slow time in sports. You just made your way out of the news cycle, even though this cretin is chasing you from Airbnb to Airbnb, looking into your bedroom and peering in the oh, me.
Dan LeBatard
You're me. I was like, who's the creed winning.
Stugotz
This award winning Cretan here has kept you in the news.
Dan LeBatard
And it's also on my tombstone. Award winning Cretan.
Stugotz
And. And everyone is telling Belichick, just, just go away for a while. Just make all of this go away for a while for him to send a statement to espn, man, like this, like, what? Now you're gonna. Now you're gonna do it.
Dan LeBatard
That is the Jordan Hudson difference. It really is. Like again, Belichick wins when he says nothing. He loses when he says stuff. Why is he saying stuff? I have reported exhaustively, I think, one thesis as to why that is. But you're totally right. It's an own goal that makes him look smaller than he needs to be because frankly, the whole thing is like Bob Kraft trying to also weirdly praise Bill Belichick in the first place. Right? It was like, if anything, yes, it was a backhand accomplishment, but it was a compliment. Like he's proud of hiring Belichick. It was a risk. And of course, through Jordan Hudson and Bill Belichick's collective lens, that is now a slight that must be reckoned with because we will not be criticized anymore. The days of old Bill are done. This is a new era. And so here we are.
Stugotz
Can we just talk about this for a second? No matter who you are, I give you the success that Bill Belichick has had for the last last quarter century. A success with someone else as your boss that you're reporting to you quietly eat a 10 part documentary that puts the blame for any failures of winning one championship every three years while you were the coach squarely at your feet again and again and again. Would you all not want to make comment on that? Would you all not want to rebut that? That in your own way? Wouldn't that be the most human thing in the world? The idea that the umbrage was taken to. I took a big risk on Bill Belichick, who I will remind people was the jets coach, but he resigned on a napkin. He was a big risk. He was, because look at his personality. He was a problem. You Couldn't make him the face and voice of a team in New York because he wasn't going to sell shit for you. Like he was a big risk for a big risk to be the insult and not a 10 part documentary. Makes no sense to me.
Dan LeBatard
Me. Well, that's where it's kind of like one of those, you guys go to like carnivals and stuff where there's that, that game where it's like a bunch of coins that pile up and they pile up and they pile up. And the whole thing is that at some point you drop a coin that becomes the thing that pushes all of them. Always get sucked into that game.
Stugotz
I love that game. It's one of my favorites.
Dan LeBatard
I'm gonna get so many coins. Yeah. Jordan Hudson is basically now that game for Bill Belichick where the slides drop in and at a rate we've never seen before, it's jackpot. It's like, yes, this is the time, we gotta speak. Now is the time. Now the noises are going off right? Like now we gotta deal with this. So it's Dan. It's not merely one thing in a vacuum. It's the accumulation of everything. As reminded by the person who I continue to report feeds a PR strategy that is so opposite to what Bill Belichick's discipline used to be.
Stugotz
I've got a legitimate question for all of you based on what Pablo just said there, because it is one of my favorite things to see or find in an old timey arcade. And I will say it's been my experience with gambling all my life. I see a bunch of coins there, I put mine in, thinking I will get more coins, and then I leave with no coins.
Dan LeBatard
There's a 20 there almost dangling over the edge.
Stugotz
The machine has all my coins. But I've been complaining lately to you guys that nobody takes cash anymore. I told you the other day that I had a win woman say to me, holding up a nickel, what's this worth? And so a coin. A coin is. Are these coin machine games still? They can't be something that's being made if, if, if the penny costs more than a nickel to make. And Trump's talking about eliminating the penny.
Dan LeBatard
I haven't seen that game like the one you're talking about now has been moved. It's like headphones now. Like you can win headphones in this. Even worse. All of these games in like Vegas are just like all electronic digital. So you can't even like really necessarily know if it's just computer code telling you you won or lost versus, like.
Stugotz
So let me.
Dan LeBatard
I like the one with the light. The light going around in a circle, and you got to stop it at the right time. Good at that one, too. Yeah.
Stugotz
Can you guys pretend that we're talking to an audience that has no earthly idea the game that we're talking about with the coins for a moment? Because I'm guessing that perhaps a generation does not know this game.
Dan LeBatard
We don't want them as listeners if they don't know that game.
Stugotz
Yeah, yeah, Okay. I do. So don't you use the Wii the way you'd like to in France? Leave me out of it. No, you. That's fine. But don't speak with me.
Dan LeBatard
We man or folk don't want them here.
Stugotz
Okay. Pablo, how you know what I want, though, from you is to describe that game.
Dan LeBatard
Me?
Stugotz
Yes. Thank you.
Dan LeBatard
It's a game where there's a light that goes around. You have to hit a button, and then if it stops right in front of where the button is, you win all the tickets in the world.
Stugotz
Okay.
Dan LeBatard
And if you get. Just outside of it, you get, like, four tickets. Yeah. We've got a penalty. Five minutes. Major asshole.
Stugotz
Not helpful.
Dan LeBatard
That's a different game in any way.
Stugotz
The.
Dan LeBatard
The.
Stugotz
How would you explain the game to people, Zaslow? Because it is one of my favorites, but I want the audio audience to have a new experience with this game.
Dan LeBatard
There is. There's a mach. Okay, so there's like a flat surface with all the coins or. Or the chips. And you put your coin in and it lands in an area which is open. And there's like a mechanism that kind of pushes back and forth the coins. And if your coin lands in the right place, it'll be a domino effect where your coin will then push the coins all the way up front. And they all come out to you.
Stugotz
They don't, though. You lose them all. And it's all optical illusion. And. And. And the. The coins are pushed by what they said, like a bulldozer type of thing.
Dan LeBatard
It's like a platform that pushes in and out, in and out, over and over again. And. Yeah, it's kind of. Look, it's a cousin. It's a more mechanical version of like, trying to throw a ring on the top of, like, a milk jug or whatever. Like that game. This game has trapdoors, by the way. I watched a video on how it works. So, like, if you see them sometimes they have, like, a lip that goes out on the side, and those lips have things on them, too, and you're like, wow, look at this. This is extra stuff that looks like it's dangling and confronting ball. And then underneath that there's slots. So when it pushes it forward, they're actually falling off the side into a box underneath it where they're just catching all of your quarters. So you're not actually. It looks like it's going to come down because there's all these extra quarters, but they're falling off the sides where you can't see it, where it's being covered by something. Wasn't he supposed to leave?
Stugotz
The rules don't work on Wild.
Dan LeBatard
You guys can talk about things you don't know about.
Stugotz
You don't have to know. On Wild Willie Wednesday.
Dan LeBatard
The rules don't apply in the manner. In the manner. There is no penalty box. We need more time. Trap doors.
Stugotz
We can all agree the rules don't apply to you.
Dan LeBatard
Dungeons. That's right. And studies and trap doors. You want a trap door? Come to our manor. Oh, I love a trap. You pull a book out, all of a sudden there's a new room. Popping false walls left and right. There's a candelabra. Opulence. What? People tilling your fields. Opulence. Tilling.
Stugotz
You guys want to see if you want to get the timing right on that.
Dan LeBatard
Opulence. The sound is in it.
Stugotz
Let's see if you can get the time right.
Dan LeBatard
Opulence.
Stugotz
Is there a reason, Pablo, that your promotion for the. The podcast episode that you have dropping tomorrow is a flimsy, flimsy sort of saying, and we've got a thing that might happen tomorrow. Like the way that you promoted that was.
Dan LeBatard
That wasn't the best. And, well, it's because I don't want to signal because, look, I'm doing stories other people are doing. I don't want people to know that I'm doing the thing that'll come out tomorrow before it comes out. I want to preserve my competitive advantage to beat other people to what I think is a punch. So, you know, I want to avoid trap doors that I've set for myself. So I'm going to be strategically boring on purpose this time.
Stugotz
You think other people are trying to get to your bird watching story like that? There are competitive journalists trying to elbow you out of the way on your stories about bird watching.
Dan LeBatard
Well, that one there should be. That was a giant L for the rest of the journalism world. Competitive bird watching. A guy saw 10,000 birds, then another guy saw 10,000 birds. Did both of them really see 10,000 birds? That's a Lot of birds. I like the one. I like the one where you smoke all the athletes weed. That was a good one.
Stugotz
Pablo Torrey finds out is the name of the podcast. It's doing the work no one else is doing. Thank you, Pablo. We look forward to the thing thing coming out tomorrow. Whatever it is that that is. You're being boring on purpose and promoting it. That seems not the best way to do things in 2025. You keep trying to do it on merit though. We'll see if it gets you anywhere.
Dan LeBatard
I would never say this to him publicly, but I think I'm going to check the Malik Beasley one out.
Stugotz
No way.
Dan LeBatard
Yeah.
Stugotz
What?
Dan LeBatard
Is he still here?
Stugotz
What? Pablo, he sold it. He. Wait a minute. He correctly sold something.
Dan LeBatard
I've been fooled by Tony before.
Stugotz
There's no way. But Tony.
Dan LeBatard
I have like an hour. Tony, are you Pablo. He should have won. He should have won six man of the year last year. Said he was gonna watch Jacob Misarowski last night. Oh, he came on so late. May hit this elevator, got the baby.
Stugotz
He came in in the eighth inning and Tony.
Dan LeBatard
Oh, I forgot. There's also. There's also an amazing shot at Miami Heat legend Duncan Robinson by the guy who was at the center of this moose. It just comes out of nowhere. It's great. I forgot about that part. A lot of Miami Heat stuff in this.
Stugotz
For. For as many people who love what you're doing, do you find a whole lot of people with short attention sp time when we can, you know, empirically say that the young male is trending in a direction away from your long form journalism? Do you find a lot of objections to you going and doing this work that is highfalutin?
Dan LeBatard
I feel like the market opportunity is so vastly tilted in favor of short attention span. Stuff on the phrase, look, you want dudes, I got dudes on dudes too. I got dudes. Dudes on dudes on dudes. How many goodbyes?
Stugotz
Tell the world my story. Get a Magic Johnstone self important cretin. Get him out of here. Pablo. Tori finds out is the name of the podcast. How many times are we going to say goodbye to him?
Dan LeBatard
Award winning Cretan Dan.
Stugotz
Yeah, that too. Please tell the world my story.
Dan LeBatard
Seriously though, subscribe. Enough. Got to be careful in New York, Dan. I said New York is mellow. That's what I'm saying.
Stugotz
He. He came after Melo. Why did.
Dan LeBatard
Don't do that.
Stugotz
Why did Melo take astray?
Dan LeBatard
Do not walk indictment. I promise you. Don't walk indictment. I'm just reporting. I'm just. How is he still here? Right? I have to defend my. My. I guess my legal standing. My. My freedom as a citizen. You guys are now besmirching me with various bits of slander.
Stugotz
Billy accused you. Billy? Billy accused you of trying to ruin Carmelo Anthony. Anthony.
Dan LeBatard
No. I just pointed out that he dapped up courtside a co conspirator allegedly of Dante. Okay, that sounds pretty bad. That sounds pretty bad. I'm gonna go now. I'm gonna go. I'm gonna leave.
Stugotz
It's a dap. That doesn't count for anything.
Dan LeBatard
He's mellow. Everybody daps them up.
Stugotz
It's not an incriminatory.
Dan LeBatard
Your honor. I just love dapping strangers up.
Stugotz
Did you just kill a cockroach? What?
Dan LeBatard
I don't know what did you just spilled water. Everybody spilled water. A little water. So much electrical. Wires.
Stugotz
Please tell the world my story. Pablo says as if shouting from the bottom of a well.
Dan LeBatard
You guys ever notice how there's just a fee for everything now? You buy a concert ticket, there's a fee. You rent a place for the weekend cleaning fee. Just breathing near an event. How about a processing fee? It's wild. That's why I'm glad I found two. Chime. You can go to chime.com dan and skip all that nonsense. Chime has got fee free banking. No monthly fees, no overdraft fees, no minimum balance fees. Just clean, simple banking that actually helps you keep your money. And when you're trying to save or build something for yourself, fees can really set you back. Chime makes it easier to get ahead, not harder. Open your account account in 2 minutes@chime.com dan that's chime.com dan Chime feels like progress. Chime is a financial technology company, not a bank. Banking services and debit card provided by the Bancor Bank NA or Stride Bank NA members. FDIC Spot me Eligibility requirements and overdraft limits apply. Timing depends on submission of payment file. Fees apply at out of network ATMs. Bank ranking and number of ATMs according to US News and World Report 2023 time checking account required.
Podcast Information:
In this compelling episode of The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz, hosts Dan Le Batard and Stugotz engage in an in-depth discussion featuring guest Pablo Torre. The episode, titled "The Big Suey: Please Tell The World My Story," delves into significant topics related to sports, pop culture, and investigative journalism, providing listeners with a rich and insightful narrative.
The episode kicks off with a heated discussion about the long-standing relationship between New England Patriots' head coach Bill Belichick and team owner Robert Kraft. A recently released 10-part documentary commissioned by Kraft has stirred controversy by portraying Belichick in a less-than-flattering light—a move that hasn't come without repercussions.
Dan Le Batard (22:00): "We're talking about this 10-part docu-series that Kraft okayed, which basically blames Belichick for everything that went wrong there."
This revelation marks a significant shift, as Belichick traditionally maintained a low public profile regarding internal team matters. The hosts explore the implications of this documentary on the Patriots' legacy and the personal dynamics between Belichick and Kraft.
Another highlight of the episode is the surprising revelation regarding LeBron James. Contrary to popular belief, LeBron is entering his eighth consecutive season with the Los Angeles Lakers, marking the longest unbroken stint with a single franchise in his career.
Stugotz (05:02): "He’s been with the Lakers more than he's been elsewhere. Eight years is his longest tenure. Did I believe that? Not at first!"
This segment examines how this extended loyalty impacts both LeBron's legacy and the Lakers' dynamics, contrasting it with his earlier career movements and public expectations.
A significant portion of the episode is dedicated to the investigation surrounding NBA player Malik Beasley. Hosts discuss the intricacies of the federal investigation into legalized sports gambling within the NBA, highlighting how Beasley became a focal point much earlier than publicly acknowledged.
Dan Le Batard (10:48): "We've unveiled a mystery that baffled the entire NBA—how did someone on Twitter predict Malik Beasley's involvement in this investigation before it became public?"
The conversation delves into the evidence uncovered, including dubious Twitter interactions and connections with other NBA figures, painting a complex picture of the gambling landscape in professional basketball.
Guest Pablo Torre brings his expertise to the table, elaborating on his podcast "Pablo Torre Finds Out." Torre discusses his methodical approach to uncovering stories that mainstream sports journalism may overlook, emphasizing the importance of thorough investigative work.
Stugotz (08:05): "Pablo's podcast uncovers stories like Malik Beasley's that others haven't touched, which is critical for a comprehensive understanding of these issues."
The hosts commend Torre for his dedication and the depth of his investigations, suggesting that his work sets a new standard in sports journalism.
Dan and Stugotz advocate for the value of long-form journalism, contrasting it with the current trend of bite-sized content catering to shorter attention spans. They argue that in-depth storytelling is essential for truly understanding complex issues within the sports world.
Stugotz (16:43): "In a world where everyone has a short attention span, our deep-dive journalism stands out by offering thorough storytelling that matters."
This discussion underscores the show's commitment to providing listeners with comprehensive analyses rather than superficial coverage.
Interwoven with serious discussions, Dan and Stugotz engage in their trademark humorous banter, making the episode not only informative but also entertaining. From debating the nuances between a manor and a mansion to playful critiques of promotional strategies, their chemistry adds a lively dimension to the episode.
Dan Le Batard (17:07): "We had a producer watch 'Madea's Family Reunion' five times to search for Malik Beasley—and it paid off in ways relevant to the federal government."
Their lighthearted interactions provide a balanced listening experience, ensuring that complex topics remain accessible and engaging.
Dan Le Batard (22:00): "We're talking about this 10-part docu-series that Kraft okayed, which basically blames Belichick for everything that went wrong there."
Stugotz (05:02): "He’s been with the Lakers more than he's been elsewhere. Eight years is his longest tenure. Did I believe that? Not at first!"
Dan Le Batard (10:48): "We've unveiled a mystery that baffled the entire NBA—how did someone on Twitter predict Malik Beasley's involvement in this investigation before it became public?"
"The Big Suey: Please Tell The World My Story" episode stands out as a testament to the show's dedication to uncovering the deeper narratives within the sports world. By featuring guest Pablo Torre and tackling subjects like the Belichick-Kraft documentary, LeBron James' tenure, and the Malik Beasley investigation, Dan and Stugotz provide listeners with a rich, multifaceted perspective that goes beyond surface-level reporting. Their blend of serious investigation with engaging banter ensures that the episode is both informative and entertaining, making it a must-listen for fans seeking comprehensive sports journalism.