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I was always around it. Hollywood saved me. On this week's episode of Eating While Broke, a podcast presented by the Black Effect Podcast Network, Nick Cannon joins us to discuss his journey from teenage comedian to entertainment mogul. Now I do the super dad content with my kid and everything that people go viral for and making millions of dollars on YouTube I was doing in the 90s. Listen to Eating While Broke from the Black Effect Podcast Network on America's number one podcast network, iHeart. Follow eating while Broke and start listening on the free iHeartRadio app today. In 1978, Roger Caron's first book was published and he was unlike any first time author Canada had ever seen. Roger Caron was 16 when first convicted, has spent 24 of those years in jail, 12 years in solitary. He went from an ex con to a literary darling almost overnight. He was instantly a celebrity, he was an adrenaline junkie and he was the star of the show. Goboy is the gritty true story of how one man fought his way out of some of the darkest places imaginable. I had a knife go in my stomach, puncture my spleen, break my rib. I had my guts all in my hands only to find himself back where he started. Roger's saying is, I've never hurt anybody but myself. And I said, oh, you're so wrong. You're so wrong on that one. Roger from Campside Media and iHeart Podcasts, listen to GoBoy starting on April 9th on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. Hi, I'm Bob Pittman, chairman and CEO of iHeartMedia. I'm excited to introduce a brand new season of my podcast Math and stories from the frontiers of marketing. I'm having conversations with some folks across a wide range of industries to hear how they reach the top of their fields and the lessons they learned along the way that everyone can use. I'll be joined by innovative leaders like chairman and CEO of Elf Beauty Tarang Amin, legendary singer, songwriter and philanthropist Jewel. Being a rock star is very fun, but helping people is way more fun. And Damian Maldonado, CEO of American Financing. I figured out the formula. I just have to work hard, then that's magic. Join me as we uncover innovations in data and analytics, the math and the ever important creative spark, the magic. Listen to math and Magic on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcast. My name is Brendan Patrick Hughes, host of Divine Intervention. This is a story about radical nuns in combat boots and wild haired priests trading blows with J. Edgar Hoover in a hell bent effort to sabotage a war. J. Edgar Hoover was furious. He was out of his mind and he wanted to bring the Catholic left to its knees. Listen to divine intervention on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm Mary Kay McBrayer, host of the podcast the Greatest True Crime Stories Ever Told. This season explores women from the 19th century to now. Women who were murderers and scammers, but also women who were photojournalists, lawyers, writers and more. This podcast tells more than just the brutal, gory details of horrific acts. I delve into the good, the bad, the difficult and all the nuance I can find because these are the stories that we need to know to understand the intersection of society, justice and the fascinating workings of the human psyche. Join me every week as I tell some of the most enthralling true crime stories about women who are not just victims, but heroes or villains or often somewhere in between. Listen to the greatest true crime stories ever told on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. You are listening to the Dan Patrick show on FOX Sports Radio. Final hour on this meet Friday Dan and the Danette Stan Patrick Show. We'll head to Memphis, sort out what's going on with the Grizzlies as they get ready for the postseason. And will they have John Moran for the rest of the regular season? It's a meat Friday. Burgers, buffalo wings and smoked potato salad. Who has it better than we do? Nobody. Stat of the day brought to you by Panini America, the official trading cards of the Dan Patrick Show. We got basketball coming up tonight. It's the women's final four. Texas and South Carolina, Connecticut and ucla. Geno Smith got locked up with the Raiders when this happened. I was told that, hey, boy, they got Gino on the cheap. And I was told he's going to renegotiate his contract. Well, he did and he got paid. And really this to me is, I think it's, it's something to remember when it comes to these quarterbacks this year because a lot of times what happens, we get caught up in 40 yard dash times and mechanics and Wonderlic test scores and hand size. Geno Smith was written off after failed stints with the jets and the Giants, reinvented himself in Seattle. Now he gets a new deal and he's been a Pro bowl quarterback. Sam Darnold, supposed to be the savior of the jets, then discarded in Carolina, buried behind Brock Purdy and Then he becomes a 100 million dollar man in Seattle after lighting it up with the Vikings. So we want instant results, certainly at that position. So with Cam Ward and Jackson Dart and Shador Sanders, keep it in perspective. I know it's hard to do this. Not every quarterback's a bust. It's just sometimes they take a little bit more time. But Pete Carroll's 73. He wants his quarterback to be ready to go. He's familiar with Geno. I think they take Ashton Genty because at first I thought that maybe whoever was going to be coaching the Raiders, they would take Shador Sanders and it felt like that would be a great place for him. And I think Dion even felt that way. Now you have Geno Smith. They're probably not taking a quarterback. You take your running back. Pete Carroll loves to run the football, be a little more conservative with his quarterback and hopefully play good defense. That's the blueprint he wants to win. Now he's 73 years of age. Yeah. Seaton. And yeah, it sounds a little weird I think sometimes to hear like, oh, they extended Geno Smith and you're like, well, why? But you're not really paying him a ton of money. Even with the extension, he's still well out of the top 10 in terms of quarterbacks. I think something like 16th the league. He's coming off of three or four pretty great seasons for him. He's one of the most accurate passers in the league over that stamp that, that time frame. It's a, it's a pretty great deal. But that's why we're going to look for Cam Ward to be great right away. Jackson Dart right away. Shador Sanders right away. And they won't be great right away, not even Cam Ward because he's going to a bad team. Shador Sanders, maybe if you go to the Saints, maybe you're better earlier than Cam Ward is or Jackson Dart if he would go to the Steelers at 21. Just saying. But I think we get caught up in the immediacy of this and there are so many reclamation projects that happen all the time in the NFL, but we just don't have the patience. And teams don't have the patience. They move on. We spent a lot of time, too much time talking about, well, we should have been talking about the game winning shot by John Moran against the Heat, but he had another gun gesture. And this is back to back games that he's done this after being called onto the carpet by the NBA commissioner. And then you have this now what's the commissioner. Do. Do you say anything? Do you do anything? Playoffs right around the corner and you got Memphis fighting for survival there and you just had your coach fired. Demichael Cole covers the Grizzlies for the Memphis Commercial Appeal. Michael, thanks for joining us. John Morant sounds like he's a victim here, that he doesn't care about the criticism. Feels like, you know, maybe he's being targeted here. Help us understand the local feel of John Morant and what he's done the last two games. Yeah, Dan, the number one thing when kind of peeling the curtain back here is this isn't anything new, actually. This is a celebration that John Morant and several of his teammates have done over the course of the season. So when you talk about John Morant feels, you know, John Moran being the victim here, I think that's the feeling internally, especially specifically, you know, with him. You know, this is a celebration. I've seen him, I mean, I could at least go back to the beginning of the year, him doing this celebration. And he does it pretty much after every made three pointer. Now, you know, Jais and Steph Curry, he's not making four or five three pointers a game, but, you know, he's made a decent amount of three pointers. And we've seen this celebration time and time again. I think what stood out in this particular situation going back to that Golden State game, is number one, it's Grizzlies, Golden State. Over the last two, three years, that game has always had increased significance. And then number two, it happened and it caused a technical foul. So in the past we see it, and in this game, you know, the recent game that was on, you know, national TV against the Miami Heat, it's harmless. It's coming after, you know, made three point baskets. And he's doing it towards the Grizzlies bench, he's doing it towards the opposing bench, he's doing it towards the players. He's just doing it in a general direction. And in the case with the Golden State game, it was him and Buddy Hill, you know, gesturing towards one another, which led to the official stepping in and calling the technical foul. So I think that's kind of what's brought this increased attention onto it. But locally, I think that's the main point here is this is something that he's been doing for months. What do you think the commissioner does this time around? I don't think the commissioner does anything until it's something that leads to, you know, a. A greater, you know, type of, I guess altercation or something, if that makes sense. So in this case, let's say, you know, if, if John Morant gestures towards an opposing bench and a guy gets up and walks in his direction, then I feel like that's when, you know, they'll have to step in. But if you, the league. This is not just a celebration John Morant's doing. This isn't just a celebration that the Grizzlies players is doing. It's one that's league wide sort of in a way. And even LeBron James, you know, he did kind of a, a, a little bit of a different version of it yesterday against the warriors, but he made a shot in the corner, the corner three pointer that he made and he turns towards the crowd and, and does kind of a similar celebration. But again, you know, you have to understand, we understand why with John Morant there is increased intention on when he does it. You know, that has happened because of how the last two years have, have kind of played out here. But in this case, I don't think the, the commissioner will really step in and, you know, do anything of significance unless it leads to something greater. Because you really. What we're seeing is there's a May three, he does the celebration and they go back to playing defense. Yeah, but see, what I worry about to Michael is if I'm the commissioner, I want to be proactive. I don't want to be reactive. I don't want to go, hey, until there's an altercation. We've already seen Job and be very immature with an actual gun a couple of times, and he's still doing that. I, as the commissioner, it's just, it's a bad look for the league and a bad look for him. And now it feels like he's embarrassed the commissioner publicly by, you're going to do it again. And he already had a. If the league doesn't have a problem with it, then why did the commissioner talk to John Morant? I think, I think in this case it was more so because inquiring minds wanted to look into the situation. That's what it was in this case. Because if the league had seen an issue with the celebration. That's my point. They would have reached out in January, they would have reached out in February. They reached out in previous national televised games where he's made three pointers and did the same celebration. There would have already been an instance where the league said, j, read the room. Yeah, some other guys may be doing this celebration, but you specifically, you probably shouldn't be doing this. But that hasn't been the case. I think in this, in this situation. Going back to this Golden State game a couple days ago, I think what, what happened was when people saw it, when it led to a technical foul and all of that, inquiring minds reached out to the league. People like reporters reached out to the league. Hey, is there anything of significance going to be done about this situation? The league said we'll look into it. The league looked into it. And I think it was a situation where the league pretty much did their due diligence. I don't think the warning, so to speak, was a big, hey, don't you do this again or we're going to do, we're going to do something. I think it, I think it was more of a read the room type of situation, if that makes sense. So I, I do think with the commissioner, he needs to be proactive with this and, and with some other situations that have been similar with players around the league. But at the same time, he's been sort of reactive all throughout this time with jog going back to May to March of 2023. And I think that's kind of the case here. Most teams don't fire their coach when they're heading into the postseason. So why did the Grizzlies fire their head coach? He wasn't connecting with the players the same way anymore. And Taylor Jenkins has been here six years, so his, his voice players, you know, kind of connected with Taylor Jenkins on a whole nother level. The big thing we talked about at the beginning of the year with Taylor Jenkins, John morant, Jaren Jackson Jr. Desmond Bain, the leaders of the team was. He talked about the need to be, I guess, brutally honest, you know, with those guys critiquing the players, saying, telling John Morant, look, we need you to be better defensively. Desmond Bain, we need you to be better defensively. And they had good, honest conversations and those seem to be received well. Early on in the season, the Grizzlies were doing well, but what we saw Dan take place was when the Grizzlies schedule got tougher, you turn the calendar to January, you go to February. When the schedule got tougher, the Grizzlies start to struggle. And it was like they're not beating the top tier teams to the point. When Taylor Jenkins was fired, The Grizzlies were 11 and 20 against teams with a record above.500. So if you look at the record, you know, in a shell and you say that's a good team, that just, you know, top five seed the west, six seasons with the team. But the bigger picture is, it's pretty simple, actually. To me, the Grizzlies want to win. Their court is in place. They believe in John Morant, Desmond Band and Jaren Jackson Jr. They believe that that trio is enough to. To championship contention. So they have their core in place. The next thing you, you have to realize is the financial situation. Jaws on his second contract. Pretty much a max deal. Desmond Bain is just, you know, a few million dollars below a max deal. Jaren Jackson Jr. Is, is potentially in line to receive a significantly bigger deal this summer if he makes all NBA. So when you factor in all of that, the financial dollars are about to get tight and they need to win really soon. So I think that's a part of it. It's the urgency of the situation. And then you factor in the urgency. It's the reality that, hey, we're not beating top teams. We're 11 and 20 against the best teams. Especially since the all Star break, you haven't beaten a top team in the league all of the. And they lost four out of five, you know, before he was fired. So when you factor in all those things, the writing was kind of on the wall that, hey, this season isn't going anywhere. It's time to make a change. Michael, thank you. I'm sure you got a busy day. We appreciate your time. I appreciate you, Dan. Thank you. That was great, great stuff. To. Michael Cole covers Grizzlies for the Memphis Commercial Appeal. And he brings up great points. And look, do we cherry pick sometimes when we see something and it can be a topic and then we can talk about if he's been doing this. The NBA didn't have a problem with it. Do they have a problem with it because it was on national tv? Do they have a problem that maybe it almost led to an altercation? See that? I don't buy that. When Demichael says, you know, maybe the commissioner is waiting for something to happen now, I'd rather be proactive, preventive than let me wait till something happens. Nehemiah in California. In Nehemiah. Welcome to the program. Thanks for holding. How's it going? Dan Dennett? Great. What do you have? I wanted to chime in on the John Morant gun gestures. Yeah. If we're going to go so far as suspending John Morant for doing the gun gestures, is this going to come down to us changing the name of what we call shooting? Thank you, Nehemiah. So we won't have a shooting Guard. Well, John Moran is a shooting guard at guard. Yes. Yeah, well, we don't have shooting guards and point guards anymore. There's no designation like that. The way it used to be. Will in Virginia Beach. Hi, Will. What's on your mind today? Hey, Dan. Hey. I was just kind of. Well, the guy right before me kind of stole my thunder a little bit. But I was gonna say, these guys are commonly referred to as snipers and assassins and shooters and things like that. And, you know, you see the cutting the throat gesture sometimes or the stomping on the body just here. But, I mean, I don't have a huge problem with it. But you could maybe fix it by changing the vernacular. Maybe calling the basket like a shoot, like a laundry chute. And then you could spell it. C, H, U, T, E, R. They got all these. Or, you know what? Will, thank you for the phone call. How about he just stops doing it? We don't change anything. Just don't do it anymore. That's all. It's really simple, huh? We're gonna. We're gonna change, you know, labeling. You can't take a. He's not a sniper, Anybody. I mean, just stop doing the gesture. That's all. Boy, Sean in Florida. Hi, Sean. By the way, Jaws listed as a point guard, not a shooting guard. Hey, Sean. Oh, man, that's hilarious. Good morning, Dan. And Dan. That's six three, 185. It's a beautiful day here in Destin, Florida. Some of the best beaches in the world. You guys should come visit, especially if you like fishing. I just wanted to say, go, Gators. Gainesville is one of the best college towns that exist also. God, man, I was laughing about that story about the streaming art so much. Anyways, go, Gators, guys. Y'all have a good day. Thank you, Sean. Thank you. To sum up, Sean, Gainesville is a great college campus, and they have nice beaches in Florida. Who knew I had nice beaches in Florida? And Gainesville's a great campus. Yes, Todd. I get the impression he wants Florida to beat Auburn tomorrow night. I think so. Win the whole thing. Yeah. Yeah. Go, Florida. Go, Gators. Yes, Paul, remember a bunch of years ago, we got to go down to Auburn in Alabama, and the football stadium is on the campus, so, like, people park and tailgate on the campus on a Saturday. Very cool place. Yeah. Yeah. That's when Cam had been suspended and came back for that game. Lucas in Indiana. Hi, Lucas. Hey, again. 62205. I've got sort of a philosophical question about baseball. I wasn't a baseball fan until like 5 or 6 years ago and I just arbitrarily was choosing between the Dodgers and the Giants and I ended up picking the Dodgers and I got to watch them immediately win two World Series and set themselves up for like a decade. And don't get me wrong, I'm having a wonderful time, but I almost feel bad about it because I usually root for teams that struggle and don't win things. What do you think? Am I a bandwagoner and should I feel bad about this or should I bask in it because it's really rules and I'm loving watching baseball, but I feel kind of like I'm betraying my down home, working class, tortured fan mentality because I threw a dart at a map and picked the powerhouse. Yeah. You know, know, it sounds like younger kids now where it's really not an allegiance to your hometown. It's you like certain teams for certain reasons. But hey, if, if it means you're following baseball, great. I mean, you might have to apologize a little bit by when somebody says, hey, you're from the Midwest and you're a Dodger fan. Yeah, I just picked them and they won two titles. Yes, Marvin, it's like in 20 years where everybody's going to be a Chiefs fan. Yeah. Or. Or Golden State warriors fan. Those guys have turned those franchises into national powerhouses as far as fan bases. All right, let me take a break. More phone calls coming up. We're back after this Dan Patrick show. Fox Sports Radio has the best sports talk lineup in the nation. Catch all of our shows@foxsportsradio.com and within the iHeartRadio app. Search FSR to listen live. Hey, Steve Covino. And I'm Rich Davis. And together we're Covino and Rich on FOX Sports Radio. You can catch us from 5 to 7pm Eastern, 2 to 4 Pacific, on Fox Sports Radio and of course, the iHeartRadio app. Why should you listen to Covino and Rich? We talk about everything. Life, sports, relationships, what's going on in the world. We have a lot of fun talking about the stories behind the stories in the world of sports and pop culture. Stories that, well, other shows don't seem to have the time to discuss. And the fact that we've been friends for the last 20 years and still work together, I mean, that says something, right? So check us out. We like to get you involved, too. Take your phone calls, chop it up, as they say. I'd say the most interactive show on Fox Sports Radio, maybe the most Interactive show on planet Earth. Be sure to check out Covino and Rich live on Fox Sports radio and the iHeartradio app from 5 to 7pm Eastern, 2 to 4 Pacific. And if you miss any of the live show, just search Covino and Rich wherever you get your podcast. And of course, on social media, that's Covino and Rich. Something unexpected happened after Jeremy Scott confessed to killing Michelle Schofield in Bone Valley season one. I just knew him as a kid. Long, silent voices from his past came forward, and he was just staring at me. And they had secrets of their own to share. Gilbert King. I'm the son of Jeremy Lynn Scott. I was no longer just telling the story. I was part of it. Every time I hear about my dad, it's, oh, he's a killer. He's just straight evil. I was becoming the bridge between a killer and the son he'd never known. If the cops and everything would have done the job properly, my dad would have been in jail. I would have never existed. I never expected to find myself in this place. Now I need to tell you how I got here. At the end of the day, I'm literally a son of a killer. Bone Valley Season 2 Jeremy. Jeremy, I want to tell you something. Listen to new episodes of bone Valley Season 2 starting April 9 on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. And to hear the entire new season ad free with exclusive content starting April 9th. Subscribe to Lava for Good plus on Apple Podcasts. I caught Todd out there with the wings, sneaking at Buffalo. I had a carrot and a wing. Okay, I know we're supposed to wait until. I know, but you've. It felt like you were sneaking out there to grab Buffalo. I asked permission, especially since I saw you there hovering over it, blocking me from getting over there. I was like the security guard. You grabbed it and you go, okay, if I get a wing? I actually took a bite first. Then I asked you, it's okay that I finished this? Yeah. Paulie. Todd eating a carrot should be the lead of this story. Dipped it in the. In the dress. In there? Yeah. He wanted to dip it in again. I go, no, no, double dip. I wouldn't have done that. No double dipping. All right. A couple of phone calls in here. John in Ohio. Hi, John. What's on your mind today? Hi, Dan. First time, long time. 5, 8, 1, 90. Okay. I had a story about Jim Nance. I heard your interview yesterday, and the guy is just a super class act. I was at the 92 Lexington regionals. And there was a little restaurant across the street from Rupp arena. And we had left and got in there to get some beers and Jim and Billy Packer walk in and they go up to the desk and the hostess obviously didn't recognize them and they said, can we get a table? And I didn't hear the conversation. But basically there was a two hour wait and they made no accommodation for him. And he didn't even say I'm Jim Nance. He didn't say anything. Him and Billy Packer just walked out. Okay. I don't know if it's a great story that I don't know. Did Jim go storm out? Yes, Paul. I thought he's gonna say Jim Nance didn't big time and ask for a seat or a private table which would been on brand. There's a restaurant in Dayton, Ohio called the Pine Club. I don't care who you are, you do not get preferential treatment. Presidents of the United States have been in Dayton. They have to wait. Called the Pine Club. That's a little crazy. Hey, Todd, why are they more special than you? The President of the United States though a lot of them are haters. But again, you're not going to make accommodation for the president. So gymnast. And they didn't stay for two hours waiting for a table. It sounds like from that. No, they did not. They decided to move on. They did. It's an incredible story about Jim Nance save a child from choking. You're not going to believe this. That's actually worth it. And he told the story so fast. Come on. What are we doing? All right, Come on. It took a little while to have him land the plane. Andy in Virginia. Hi, Andy. What's on your mind? Hey, Dan, thanks for taking my call. Been a fan for a long time. Well, thanks. I just wanted to get your opinion on the John Morant situation and what you think the difference is between Florida State shooting arrows or the Patriots with their muskets or Tampa Bay shooting cannons. Or is this just more of a exaggerated thing when Shooter McGavin makes a putt. But. But Andy, and thanks for the phone call. This is about John Morant off the court where he's had an actual gun with him and flaunting it. That's where you draw the line. Okay? That's the difference here, Nick and Irvine. And if I'm John Moran, I don't want to remind people of an embarrassing time in my career. Hi, Nick. What's on your mind? Couple things. Number one, Best Sports Week by far. A thousand years from now, what are they going to be talking about? How the Dodgers started their 2025 epic, epic season. To know no one else has ever done it as a defending champ. A thousand years from now, they're not going to be talking about anything. You know, they're going to be looking back. All right, so I solved the tush push. Hopefully I can get to be known as the Nick and Irvine rule. I think it will, I think, Dan, you know, I think if we. With you on board. So here it is. Okay. The way, the way the Eagles run it, the quarterback, his shoulders are low and true football position, he's, he's, he's getting low and the guy from behind is pushing the tush and that's because that's where the leverage is because of the position of the quarterback. Now there are lots of rules in the NFL that says you can't block under the chin when you're rushing the quarterback. You can't hit the quarterback in the head. You can't block in the knees of the, of guys in the offensive line when they're in a certain formation. Okay. So what you do is you eliminate where you can push, which is the tush. And you want to try to push him down by below the tush. Good. You're going to be trying to tackle him. You're going to. When he's loaded with shoulders or low to the ground, you're going to try to push him above the tushy. No, no, you're not going to be able to. So it's going to sound something like this, Dan. All right, well, thank you. That's Nick. That's Nick. It's going to be the Nick and Irvine rule. So thank you. With the, the Tush push, the commissioner is going to get rid of this rule. Somehow, some way he'll get rid of this. The Eagles will still be highly, highly successful with a quarterback sneak. Yes, Todd, Did Nick and Irvin ever get to his actual point? I, I don't know if he was being serious, but he was telling us where you could actually push the quarterback from behind, but not on the tushy. Another quick get to the point story. We got, we got to land the plane. Okay. Come on. Better than that. Kaden in Missouri. Hi, Kaden. What's on your mind? Hey, Dan. First time caller. Suck it, Fritz. You on a Friday? That's not necessary. I started to hype up my Auburn Tigers a little bit. I just don't really see why people think it would be a bad thing. To have them in the championship, they got the best freshman in the country, size Cooper flag, and they got the best player in the country and Joe Knight room. Pretty much all I wanted to say, man, you guys have a good day. All right. Good luck. Yeah, I'm just talking about, you know, as far as a TV audience goes, I couldn't care less who plays for a title. I'm just looking at it. Are people going to watch? Are they going to care if Houston. Houston is not aesthetically pleasing, but that's a great coach and he's done wonders there at Houston. But just looking at this as a fan, are you going to tune in for that? Is that something you're going to go, must see tv? You got to have Duke in there. Then you'll get a big number. If it's Duke in Florida, you'll do a really good number. And Houston's going to give Duke a lot of troubles, I think a lot of problems. I. I believe that. Let me see. Oh, I saw this story and then Paulie saw it as well, and we thought, you know what? We should talk about this. You'd never think that Lamar Jackson and Dale Earnhardt Jr. Would be locked in a battle, a perhaps lawsuit battle, a trademark battle over the number eight. Dale Earnhardt Jr. I believe, wants to trademark the number eight. And then Lamar Jackson or his people lawyers filed something. I don't know if an injunction to prevent this, but there have been a lot of number eights. I don't know how Dale Jr. Can lay claim to the number eight and trade market. Yes. Todd, that sounds kind of ridiculous. It's like, you know, I love. I'm. So I take capital. That is ridiculous. Okay. That's ridiculous. Yeah, I want to. If numerals. So letters of the Alphabet. We could take any letter or number and we can trademark it anytime anyone wants to write a sentence. Todd, we. We know that. We know it's. It's ridiculous. How is that even remotely a thing? I know. We know that. Paul, can you add something to this? I'll try. Not as good as that. Junior used eight on the side of his car for eight full seasons of nascar. Fritz, you'll like that. And so he was before Lamar Jackson using number eight. He's trying to file a bunch of trademarks, and Lamar Jackson is trying to block him because he's doing some promotional things with the number eight. The other hiccup is Troy Aikman has the number eight on a beer, which has been trademark already. So they're. They're making the case. Like, who was there first? A little bit in some of these court cases. But how can you trademark a number? Usage of a number, I guess, like as a brand of eight. Okay, if Junior wants to trademark eight in nascar, great. But not in other sports. What about Ovechkin, the great eight? Steve Young, Kobe? I mean, there's been a lot of Yogi Berra. There's been so many eights. Todd, are you going to add something to this? Yes. John Elway is known as seven. So what we're saying is it would have been financially responsible for him to make billions of dollars off 7. Anytime anyone refers to the numeral 7 forever, they have to pay John Elway a certain amount of money. But that's. That's not what the lawsuit's about. It's about different usages in media and promotions. Not. Not usage like you can't use the word, say, eight and you get sued for it. Not that it's not that extreme. I'm. I shouldn't have brought this up. No, it's actually a good topic. Like, could you settle it this way? Who has more fans with tattoos of their number referring to them? Dale Jr. Or Lamar Jackson? Well, like that. You can definitely settle it that way if you want one side to win over the other. For sure. Yeah. If you want Dale Jr. To win. Yeah, yeah, he's gonna win. I mean, Kobe wore eight. He's a pretty good one. Cal Ripken Jr. Yeah, that's a pretty good one. Dale Jr. A Washington Commanders fan, by the way. Okay, so who's the most. Eight. Eight of all time. If he had to give the number and the rights to it to any athlete of all time, who are we picking? Ripken, Kobe Bryant, Dale Earnhardt, Jr. Lamar Jackson, other. Well, Yogi Berra won more than all of those guys. He played for the Yankees. What did Yogi. How many. How many titles did he win? 14 time all star, 10 time world series champion, two time MVP. Yeah, okay. He's the most decorated. Kobe's the most famous. But then he changed his number 24. But I. I'm. I don't know. I'm kind of surprised that Junior or his people go, we're going to own the number eight or the usage of eight, what would prevent somebody else from using eight in a. Like, you got Troy Aikman already using this. Yes. Right. But if Lamar Jackson wanted to start selling keychains with the number eight on it. Well, Dale Earnhardt Jr. Owns that already, so you. Now, you can't. Well, can we grab A letter. How about dp? Yeah. Or just die. I mean, I'll take that. It's all about the D. Yeah. Yeah. D's. Let's just start grabbing letters. Yeah. Lamar Jackson uses ER. Gonna be 25 letters in the Alphabet. With kids there, we're. Hey, we're not using D anymore. What were you saying, Paulie? LaMar Jackson uses ERA 8. I don't know why ERA looking at that. To sell clothing, duffel bags. Earnhardt uses his trademark stylized number eight to sell clothing, toys, and NASCAR goods. Well, Lamar might be era. It might be the company era, not era. Yes. Todd and Aikman's beer spells out eight. So is there a difference between using the numeral and spelling up the word of a number? Where does that go? And he should have changed his name to Troy. Eight men. I like that, actually. Thank you, Todd. Nailed it. Thank you. Yeah. Yeah. Oh, you're gonna give me a boy. You know, I don't give those out. Oh, sympathetic blue. No, you did. You did pause. But maybe it's because you had a couple of, I don't know, rough, rough suggestions. I tried to give you a little love. Yeah. Then all of a sudden, I got John Elway in this story. I'm like, why? Why is John Elway in this story? Because he's seven. Yeah. And then if Joe Montana number three. Yeah. He was just Joe Cool. That's not anything but Always is seven. So he's got to buy seven. The word and the numeral. You get older. But I stay seven. Yeah, that's a good line. I. Maybe we should just do the A, T, E. And we'll get that part of eight, too. You guys take the number, we'll take the eating. Oh, I like that. Yeah. All right. Daryl in Texas. Hi, Daryl. Hi, Dan. Hi, Daryl from Texas. Six foot, good personality. Hey, you guys had that crazy Bo Jackson stat with Harbaugh. Yeah. This week. Well, I have a. I have a pretty wild one. Jerry Rice has the most receiving yards after the age of 40 was 2509. And Tom Brady comes in second with six. Yeah. Dad of the day. Brought to you by Panini America. That. That's. That's very niche. Niche, as they like to say. Jared in Georgia. Hi, Jared in Georgia. Hey, dp. Hey, bud. Switch switching gears here. Watching the Olympics last year when USA when you had KD, LeBron, and Steph all playing great. Yep. It made me kind of think about how I have a comparison with them for TV guys or sports guys, and I would say that would be you, Jim. Nance and Ernie because of Yalls longevity, how successful y'all have been and y'all, how professional y'all are. I kind of compare you three with those three. What do you think? What's your take on that? Thank you. That would be me agreeing that I'm awesome and that would be kind of awkward. Your thoughts? Yes. I'll let others decide that. Yes. Marvin. And you're Stephen. That situation, that's threesome. Yes, yes, yes, yes. Paulie. Well, I think objectively you could compare you three in the fact that you're measured on air and you're consistent on air for decades and that you're part of your job, you realize, is to make the other talent the star in certain situations. Yes. And I think all three of you guys do that. Yes, yes. But, you know, Bob Costas and Almighty, I mean, there's so many. There's. There's too many. But yeah, thank you. To be included in that group. But yeah, if. If I get to pick who I'm going to be, I. I want to be Steph Curry. Let me take a break. If you're watching on Peacock, you're going to get to watch Fritzi go out and fill his plate full of wings and carrots. Probably less than carrots. Yeah. And you'll be able to hear Todd eat his wings. It's a wonderful, wonderful sound. And the burger, potato salad. Yeah. All right, we'll take a break. We're back after this. Be sure to catch the live edition of the Dan Patrick show, weekdays at 9am Eastern, 6am Pacific on Fox sports Radio and the I heart radio app. Something unexpected happened after Jeremy Scott confessed to killing Michelle Schofield in Bone Valley season one. I just knew him as a kid. Long, silent voices from his past came forward, and he was just staring at me. And they had secrets of their own to share. Gilbert King. I'm the son of Jeremy Lynn Scott. I was no longer just telling the story. I was part of it. Every time I hear about my dad, it's, oh, he's a killer. He's just straight evil. I was becoming the bridge between a killer and the son he'd never known. If the cops and everything would have done their job properly, my dad would have been in jail. I would have never existed. I never expected to find myself in this place. Now I need to tell you how I got here. At the end of the day, I'm literally a son of a killer. Bone Valley Season 2 Jeremy. Jeremy, I want to tell you something. Listen to new episodes of bone Valley Season 2 starting April 9 on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts and to hear the entire new season ad free with exclusive content starting April 9th. Subscribe to Lava for Good plus on Apple Podcasts. Last call for phone calls what we learn what's in store on Monday. We'll write Monday's headline in any sport. Have that for you. Coming up, this day in sports history. PGA Tours Best in San Antonio, the Valero Texas Open and you can see it on Golf Channel NBC. And Peacock. Final results of the poll question. Seaton. Yeah, we got a couple of them up there. We have John Morant needs to be helped or suspended. Right now, 68% have him as suspended. We also have which fan base has no sense of humor about itself? Bills. Cowboys are Patriots. Cowboys running away with that one. 77%. All right, cowboys. Yeah. Are they all in again in the offseason? Like I'm trying to keep track of all the moves the Cowboys have made here in the off season. You have the pro days at Colorado with Shador Sanders and Travis Hunter. They probably have a couple other players as well. But now I think Dion called it something different than a pro day. Marvin, did you see, was there a different label of what the pro day is for Colorado? It was like celebration day or performance day or. But it wasn't pro day. But it was something different for Colorado with Shador and Travis Hunter. Yes, Paulie, Payday. I'm looking. I don't see what he said. Well, Travis Hunter is certainly going to get paid up top. I have it. Okay. Dion called it. Coach prime called it a NFL showcase. Showcase day. Okay. All right, good. I don't know if we're going to solve anything today with Shador Sanders, but he seems to be the topic in this draft. Where's he going? Is he slipping? Jackson dart go in front of him. The Saints take him. The over under is eight and a half of the draft picks and right now, and I'd hate to say over, but you start to look at these teams, if, if the Browns don't take him and the Giants don't take him, then who else is going to take him and the Saints, it feels like now, unless somebody wants to move up and get him and that's obviously a possibility here. But then I just wonder, is he trade up worthy? If he falls in your lap, you might go, man, this is great. We're very lucky here. Like the Raiders with Brock Bowers. Like he was one of the top, top guys coming out but playing tight end, you know, are you going to take him in the top three or four? That's why it's weird when you go, that guy is going to be an all pro. Do you want to take him right now? I'm telling you, he's going to be an all Pro. Nobody is surprised that he's an all Pro. But you could have taken him and you know, it's a sure thing. But they still don't do it like the best player in the draft. You can take him. I don't know. I don't know. Maybe we should take a chance on this quarterback here. All right, Monday headline. Any sport. Todd, I'm going to start with you. You've had a rough show. Maybe nobody's laughing, Todd. I'm the only one laughing. Yeah, I'm going with what's net to like? We're down to two flag and broom off the final four games. Oh, all right, Seaton. Let's see. This is Monday's headline. Monday's headline. How about Croc teas? Florida gives glimpse of finals showdown. That's pretty hot. Dang Croc like a gator. Oh, yeah. Croc teas. Croc tease. Morvan Paige Turner. Paige Becker's leads Yukon. Come on, somebody's talking about that on Monday. I went to Yukon and I was in a magazine. You were just saying. But you weren't on the COVID of the Yukon magazine. I thought we were having fun. That's weird when the writer's like, oh, you got to say something nice about Marvin. I go, okay. He's. He's. He's on time. He. He's. He's. Do you have another question for me, Paulie? Monday headline. Ugh. Makes me want to Duke. Blue Devil's in the final again. Not even anti Duke. All right, all right, I'll take that. The judges will. We will accept that one. We will accept that this day in sports history. You'll like this one, Dan. One of your guys. 1974, Hank Aaron tied Baby's major league record with home run 71 4. 1986, Wayne Gretzky set the NHL record with point number 213. Overrated. It is funny calling someone not overrated over it. On this date. 1983, Jim Dance cried. North Carolina State beat Houston 5452 to win the NCAA championship. 1988, I was at this when Danny Manning and Kansas win over Oklahoma 83.79. Let's see. Anything else? I think that's it. Jason in Florida joins us. Hi, Jason. What's on your mind today. Hey Dan, you mentioned earlier about the the A's plane in the minor league stadium of Sacramento and if they made the playoffs that Major League baseball wouldn't want them to play there. They may have an alternate. They may be able to play in San Francisco possibly for playoffs but more legitimately, what if the Tampa Bay Rays make the playoffs, they're playing in a minor league park and there is no alternative looking for the Rays to play. You're right. I mean this is a mess for Major League Baseball. It is two steps forward, one step back and you know the A's are going to be there for a few years. Tampa Bay, they keep trying to keep them in Tampa and gonna get a new stadium and then you're not getting a stadium and then you have the weather damage and. But there's some other good positive things with major League Baseball. Torpedo bats. Todd, what did you learn today? Trying to trademark a numeral could be challenging in the court of law. Seaton, what did you learn? That's about Mad Dog. Not worried about the torpedo bats. Marvin, what did you learn? We don't know anybody on the 76ers. We do not. Paul, what did you learn? Todd eats carrots. Todd, what did I learn? Only the Dan Patrick show can work in Bill Pullman and his career during the opening minutes of a national sports talk show. Thanks for the phone calls, the emails, the tweets, the all around support. Go to danpatrick.com to listen to the Dan Patrick Takes a Gamble podcast for Fritzi, Seaton, Marv, Paulie, yours truly, have a great weekend. A great lawn is like a great sports team. It takes expertise and a little extra care to stand out. And that's where Trugreen comes in. Here's the best part. It's more affordable than you think. They'll even match any competitor's price. Plus, Trugreen backs it all up with a satisfaction guarantee. Not happy. They will come back between visits to make it right. So don't wait. Head to trugreen.com today and let the pros do the work while you sit back and enjoy the results. Exclusions apply. See trugreen.com for details. I was always around it. Hollywood saved me on this week's episode of Eating While Broke, a podcast presented by the Black Effect Podcast Network. Nick Cannon joins us to discuss his journey from teenage comedian to entertainment mogul. Now I do the super dad, content with my kids and everything that people go viral for and making millions of dollars on YouTube. I was doing it in the 90s listen to eating While Broke from the Black Effect podcast network on America's number one podcast network, iHeart. Follow Eating While Broke and start listening on the free iHeartRadio app today. In 1978, Roger Caron's first book was published and he was unlike any first time author Canada had ever seen. Roger Caron was 16 when first convicted, has spent 24 of those years in jail, 12 years in solitary. He went from an ex con to a literary darling almost overnight. He was instantly a celebrity, he was an adrenaline junkie and he was the star of the show. Go Boy is the gritty true story of how one man fought his way out of some of the darkest places imaginable. I had a knife between my stomach, puncture my spleen, break my rib. I have my guts all in my hands, only to find himself back where he started. Roger's saying is, I've never hurt anybody but myself. And I said, oh, you're so wrong. You're so wrong that one. Rod from Campside Media and iHeart Podcasts, listen to GoBoy starting on April 9th on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcast podcasts I'm Mary Kay McBrayer, host of the podcast the Greatest True Crime Stories Ever Told. This season explores women from the 19th century to now, women who were murderers and scammers, but also women who were photojournalists, lawyers, writers and more. This podcast tells more than just the brutal, gory details of horrific acts. I delve into the good, the bad, the difficult, and all the nuance I can find because these are the stories that we need to know to understand the intersection of society, justice and the fascinating workings of the human psyche. Join me every week as I tell some of the most enthralling true crime stories about women who are not just victims, but heroes or villains, or often somewhere in between. Listen to the greatest true crime stories ever told on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Hi, I'm Bob Pippman, chairman and CEO of iHeartMedia. I'm excited to introduce a brand new season of my podcast Math and Stories from the Frontiers of Marketing. I'm having conversations with some folks across a wide range of industries to hear how they reach the top of their fields and the lessons they learned along the way that everyone can use. I'll be joined by innovative leaders like Chairman and CEO of Elf Beauty Tarang Amin, legendary singer, songwriter and philanthropist Jewel Being a rock star is very fun, but helping people is way more fun. And Damian Maldonado, CEO of American Financing. I figured out the formula. I just have to work hard. Then that's magic. Join me as we uncover innovations in data and analytics, the math and the ever important creative spark, the magic. Listen to math and magic on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
