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Host 1
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Host 3
Hey, thanks for listening to the Best of Fabino and Rich podcast. Be sure to catch us live every day from 5 to 7pm Eastern, 2 Pacific on Fox Sports Radio.
Host 2
Find your local station for Cavino and rich@foxsportsradio.com or stream us live every day on the iHeartRadio app by searching FSR. My first question is, are we prisoners of the moment, as Danny G. Likes to say? Hi, Danny G. Or was that what up, Danny G? Danny G's on the phones at 87799 on Fox. He was on the edge of his seat watching this game last night like everybody else. It was set up for the Knicks to win. They were up by 18 in the fourth.
Host 3
I'm not going to lie. At that moment when they were up about 18, I went outside to start trimming my rose bushes and, you know, you know, do the dad thing.
Host 2
Sure you want to admit that.
Host 3
You know, you do the dad thing.
Host 2
Where you realize you're on the radio, right? Yeah.
Host 4
Rich, can you make us sound a little cooler?
Host 2
Yeah. That thing would tell your little nose picking kids to go do that while.
Host 3
Dad finishes the game, making sure there are no weeds sticking out of the cement.
Danny G
I think it's awesome. There's nothing wrong with yard work turning up the flowers. I am right there with you.
Host 3
Let's go. Maybe one quarter, Dan. I mean, sorry that you don't have the curb appeal. My house has no say you did it.
Host 4
After the game was completely over, Rich.
Host 3
Got the herb appeal when they were up 18. I'm like, all right, I could go. I could go take out the recycling and check out the garden.
Host 4
And that's getting worse.
Host 3
And then Danny garden.
Host 2
The garden was rocking until the very end.
Host 3
I was worried about the wrong garden, I guess, because I start getting text messages from Danny and Kavino like, oh, and as soon as I saw oh, I ran back in the house. I'm like, babe, put the game back on.
Host 2
With six minutes left in the fourth quarter, the Knicks were up 111 94. 111 94. And as we already said, they won 138, 135. Halliburton with his hands around his neck. They choked.
Host 3
Know what I just learned, by the way, in the last couple minutes?
Host 2
What?
Host 3
Dan Byers got class. And you two clowns.
Host 2
What are you talking about? We've always known that.
Host 3
Probably live like pigs.
Host 2
You think that's a compliment? We've always known you're the. You're the last guy to realize it. So if I was Dan Byer, I'd.
Host 3
Be insulting Go to Dan Byers house. I bet you. I bet you everything's nicely manicured.
Danny G
I just redid my front lawn. I'll show you pictures during the break.
Host 2
You know what, Dan? I'm not surprised. I always thought you had class. Rich just figured this out.
Host 4
The difference, Rich, is he does it in between the big games, not during the games.
Host 2
So the first question, based on everything we saw Naismith lighting it up, five three pointers, like, what the hell's happening right now? Was that the craziest doink shot of all time or was that just prisoner of the moment reaction? Because when that happened, you were like, no way. And then the crowd got silent, the broadcast got silent. You're like, what is it? Was that a three? Oh, no. Is that a premature celebration? It got real weird and awkward for a minute because I think nobody really understood what happened. Did the shot go off on time? You didn't know how to react? Prisoner of the moment, Was that the wildest shot or doink of all time or do you have another one that comes to mind?
Host 3
I don't think I'm being a prisoner of the moment when I say it absolutely was. And I'll tell you why that was the wildest ending. The series of events that led up to it, like, it looked like he was driving to the basket and then he's like, psych. Oh, I. You know, he saw a defender right there in the box and then he did the little backup and you're like, oh, what is he trying to be a hero? And then when it hit, you're like, what? Not only that, when it boinked up.
Host 2
Is it a boink or a doink? I think a boink is what you're doing this weekend.
Host 4
Yeah, it was a doink.
Host 2
Yeah, Doink like the clown.
Host 4
Because Kawhi had the triple doink.
Host 2
Yes.
Host 4
So this, this is competing with that one.
Host 2
That's the first one that has to come to mind. Right. Because it's a recent legendary moment. And what if it's a bad doink?
Host 3
Are you listing your favorite doinks?
Host 2
Yeah, the clown is last on the list.
Host 3
Dan. Was it the Bears? The double doink?
Danny G
Yes, it was Cody Parkey. Double doink.
Host 3
Good doink. No good. The Chiefs had a good doink last year. Remember in the playoffs? Yeah, they had a couple. They had one against the Raiders. Right too. The Chiefs had a couple of doinks, but the Bears one. You're speaking about the doink? Doink. No good. The Kawhi Doink. Doink Doink. Triple doid.
Host 2
And again, crucial moment, right?
Host 3
Oh, what about one of your favorite.
Host 2
Childhood movies, Pee Wee's Big Adventure. No, which one?
Host 3
Teen Wolf.
Host 2
Oh, my other favorite movie. Yeah, there was a very famous triple doink. It was like two and a half doinks, but it was a triple doink to end the game where Teen Wolf himself makes that legendary foul shot while the guy's just standing there under the basket, which never happens.
Host 3
We all agree, we love Michael J. Fox and everything about him except for the fact that his shooting basketball mechanics.
Host 2
He had a terrible.
Host 3
He's like, you know what a little kid pushes with both hands.
Host 2
Like he had some decent ball handle, but his shot was weak. But that whole situation was weak too, because the guy, the nemesis, keep your.
Host 3
Ball handling to yourself.
Host 2
The nemesis, the bad guy from the bad team was under the basket like.
Host 3
Taunting him, like, that's how you defend the free throw. That's how you line up.
Host 2
Yeah, but that was a triple. That was like a two and a half doink.
Host 4
If you look back, need to look this one up. But Alan Houston on the other side, famously for the Knicks, had a game winning jumper, often referred to as the doink winner. But that was against the heat back in 99.
Host 2
Danny G. Will open it up to everybody. Prisoner of the Moment or not. 87799 on Fox. Hit us up at Covino and Rich at Fox Sports Radio. When you think of the series of events that led up to this and again at the Garden, Eastern Conference finals, big moment. Like we said. Neesmith hit what, six of his six.
Host 4
Of eight in the fourth quarter, six.
Host 2
Of his eight three pointers in the fourth. I think he hit five in a row at one point, ended up with 30 points. Halliburton ended up with 31. His foot was just on the line though, just on the line, but pushed it to overtime. So he said, he said, and I quote him, it was an early celebration, an early celly, meaning he was waiting for the perfect opportunity to bust out the Reggie Miller choking signal and hand gesture. But you know what? It pushed it to overtime and they ended up winning. So all's fair, he got that off and he ripped the hearts out of all Knicks fans and the Knicks team. Did you see Brunson at the end of the game at the press conference sitting there like, like bewildered, like a.
Host 3
Vein was about to pop in his head.
Host 2
Seriously, he was just sitting there emotionless.
Host 3
Like you wonder could he rec.
Host 2
Yeah, it was the weird. And I get it, that was again.
Host 3
That was, I mean, I've said it.
Host 2
A few times in the past few weeks. This was Molaram level. Kalima Kalima and Mo Ram just ripped the heart out of all the Knicks fans and stomped all over it. Game one at home. Look, it's not over by any means. Even Charles Barkley, who has the Pacers winning, says, you know, the Knicks will recover. It's only the first game, but still a game they should have had and has to crush the spirit a little bit. But that doink. Let's focus on that shot.
Host 3
I got more doinks. That was ridiculous. More doinks.
Host 2
Dude, that was the most ridiculous shot ever.
Host 3
2024. OK, not this football season. Last football season. And of course you're going to say I remember because I'm a Niners fan. But do you remember when that big comeback against the Detroit Lions in the NFC Championship game, when the defender ran a little too far, it doinked off of him into the arms of Brandon Iuk for a touchdown.
Host 4
That's right.
Host 3
Doink. What about this one of your favorite doinks off the head of Jose Canseco.
Host 2
That's a famous. I don't know if it's the. But it's a famous D for that.
Host 4
May be the best in baseball history.
Host 2
That is such a great one. You know, there was a recent one. I forget who it was, but there was a recent one off the head. And it wasn't a home run, but it was. Someone got hit right off the head. It was really funny to see.
Host 3
I mean, David Tyree, was it a doink or just against the helmet? Do you call it? That was more like a. Zoinks.
Host 2
That was one.
Host 3
Zoink. Sorry. But that was more like a yoink. Grab your yoink.
Host 2
Yeah, it was like a bit of a yoink. So where do you rank that? Are we prisoners of the moment or were you just as bewildered as. And befuddled and be muffled as Brunson and everybody else watching? Because, Rich, you know how they say art imitates life? If they did this in a movie, you would be like, yeah, right. That would never happen. It hit off the rim and bounced so perfectly up. It felt like it was up there. So it was past the backboard, right? Or am I imagining this now? Past the backboard? It felt like it was so high and you watched it in slow motion. Go right in like zinc. That was insane.
Danny G
It went so high it left the TV screen.
Host 4
Like it did.
Host 3
Yeah, like it felt that it wasn't.
Host 2
Even in the camera shot. I gotta watch it again, Dan, because it was insane to see thank you. That was wild.
Host 4
The way it fell straight down is the way you have to shoot the basketball at an amusement park to win a big stuffed animal.
Host 2
That happens.
Host 3
Yeah. I don't know if, you know, he got a Scooby Doo afterwards.
Host 2
That happens one out of like 10,000 times. A bounce like that, that was insane.
Host 3
I would say even more than 10,000 because that.
Host 2
So even though he said it was a. It was a premature celebration with the choking Reggie Miller thing, I think it was appropriate because of the moment and that bounce. But, yeah, it would have been cooler behind the line.
Host 4
But if they had lost in overtime, if they would, what would you have been saying right now?
Host 2
Yeah, we would have been laughing at him. Yeah, they had to win at that point.
Host 3
You wasted the choke. Say.
Host 2
Yeah, they had a win and they did.
Host 4
Yeah. And then you would have been listing not the greatest doinks of all time, but like the greatest premature celebrations of.
Host 2
All time, dude, Without a doubt, Danny. Yeah, they saved that moment by winning the game for sure. And he admitted, like, you know, he was a little premature. He was waiting for the perfect moment, Thought that was the moment, but his foot was on the line.
Host 3
Would you call the immaculate reception in the NFL a doink because it went off the defender right into the arms?
Host 2
Yeah, I guess it is a doctor.
Host 3
Of a receiver for the Steelers.
Host 2
But I think what comes to mind first is weren't your Raiders.
Host 3
Weren't your raiders on the receiving end of that, Danny?
Host 4
Some of the players and coaches on the field, Rich, claim that it slightly.
Host 3
Doinked off the turf and Franco Harris for the win.
Host 2
We all think Kawhi Leonard, though, I think in recent history with the most famous triple doink, because there was also.
Host 3
A great overhead, by the way, that was a great. Ever see the overhead photograph of Kawhi just sitting there waiting?
Host 2
Yeah, but there's overhead of this, too. Yeah, no, I know what you mean. That iconic moment where they're all sitting.
Host 3
There, everyone's just watching. Like, if it was a movie. Doink, doink, doink.
Host 2
That's insane. Now, does the three. Here's basically the stupid question, I guess when you really want to break it down. That was a triple doink and you had everyone there watching, and that's very Teen Wolf like, and movie like, you're right. Does the triple doink beat out a doink that went straight up and out of the screen like Dan Byers said?
Host 3
I. I think without being a prisoner of the moment, I still think this one.
Host 2
Yeah, it was wild because the Kawhi.
Host 3
Was a decent shot, and he just got the role. Essentially. I started. Look.
Host 2
I started looking around, and I was in a room by myself. Like you. I was doing the. You believe I'm pointing at the tv. Like, are you.
Host 3
Will you believe this?
Host 4
You were talking to your dog.
Host 2
Yeah, I'm talking to the dog. But that's one of those moments that whoever's in the room, you're looking at them like, did you see that?
Host 3
And again, not that the Kawaii shot was perfect, but again, he got the role on, like, a soft triple doink, like, boom, boom.
Host 2
It was amazing. This was one we're gonna see for years to come.
Host 3
This is like, you know, when you're.
Host 2
In the schoolyard and it was like a circus shot.
Host 3
Like, you ever see this kid?
Host 2
Like, the Globetrotter trotters couldn't perfect that shot.
Host 4
But it didn't. It didn't win at the buzzer the way Kawhi's did.
Host 2
Yeah, that's the difference. That puts it over the edge.
Host 3
You ever see that clip of the kid that threw a ball against a schoolyard wall thousands of times because there was a hole in the wall the size of, like, the tennis ball?
Host 2
Yeah.
Host 3
And then finally, after thousands. This is like a.
Host 2
You know, a lot of kids watch, perfect placement.
Host 3
This is like a dude perfect trick shot.
Host 2
You know, that's actually a great challenge. I would love to see guys like, dude perfect, and see how many times it would take them to recreate that.
Host 3
Shot off the back of the rim so that it goes directly up in the air and then in overtime.
Host 2
And by the way, again, when you watched it in real time, it was. It was sort of confusing. Like, I like that dramatic pause. I was wondering, are the broadcasters letting it breathe for the moment just to hear the crowd roar? But the crowd was silent, and I think they were still trying to figure out winner, Was it a winning shot.
Host 4
Or not because of that toe.
Host 2
But that, that, that silence, which was not that long, but in the moment, felt like it was like 30 seconds of silence.
Host 4
You know, I think what else made that shot pretty incredible was the fact that he had to regroup and recover and step back the way he did. And a lot of times when you see an NBA player have to regroup like that, it's almost airball that gets shot. And so to. To see the force that he still got the ball up there and then the ball bounced straight up. That surprised me because the way he looked, I thought, oh, is this going to be an airball?
Host 2
And you know what in any championship moment, playoff moment, you need a little bit of luck. They played big at the end and again, the series of events that led to that moment, that was a big moment. But you can't sleep on what Nismith did, hitting all those threes free throws.
Host 3
That, that really contribute.
Host 2
Yeah, exactly. All those moments. You have to imagine that the Pacers confidence is through the roof.
Danny G
The reason I knew that the ball left the frame was because I slow mowed the final three seconds on my tv, like on the DVR to watch it. And there's a point where Halliburton goes into the lane and then turns around, looks at the clock at the other basket to find out how much time he has, which is now under 2 seconds. So it's like 1.7 seconds. He then realized instead of just turning around at that point, that he has enough time to at least jump and try to get on the other side of the three point line. Then got the shot off with one second. There was a fan on the sideline after the ball hit the rim that is like this. His arms in the air. I know you can't see it on the radio, but I'll describe it. And then they immediately go to the top of his head in disgust as the ball.
Host 3
Surrender. Surrender cobra.
Host 2
Right.
Danny G
Yes.
Host 3
Now in overtime when the Knicks were down by three. Listen, I feel like Brunson and Cat got two looks at a three. It wasn't like, you know, the tightest defense. It was good defense. But don't you feel like Brunson and Carl Anthony Towns both had shots? They were two opportunities.
Danny G
Yes.
Host 3
It wasn't like, man, there was point whatever seconds and they couldn't get a shot off. They had two looks and it just.
Host 2
They had a few looks, but they also played some bad defense the previous possession.
Danny G
1 and had the ball go out of bounds on Brunson's hands after it was deflected by Nem hard. So they're only down one at that point. If they keep possession, maybe they get a better shot.
Host 2
Oh, dude, that game seemed so over to the point where you're right, Rich. You know, I, I really don't blame you for going outside to trim your Rose Garden. Cause it seemed over at the Madison.
Host 4
Square Garden, he's not the only one in the country who tuned out when.
Host 2
It'S like you were not. You're not.
Host 3
It was almost a 20 point game. My kids are eating sloppy Joes for dinner. You know, the wife's getting bath time ready and I'm like, yeah, yeah, baby. I'm gonna go outside for five minutes. Dad needs a breather. So I go outside thinking, I saw the game. I got it.
Host 4
It's one of those games where you had to keep checking it, though, because again, we've talked about this earlier in this NBA season. A 20 point lead in the NBA is not the same that it used to be with all these three points.
Host 2
When I started hitting those threes, I started getting the nervous farts a little bit. I'm like, oh, man.
Host 4
At one point it. It became suddenly 123 to 118. And that's when I focused in again and sat down to watch.
Host 2
I could not believe I got to.
Host 3
Ask this question because this was a trending thing on Twitter and social media today. Are Dallas Cowboys fans thrilled? Are they calling this the redemption? Like the curse of Stephen A. Smith for being so hard on Cowboys fans. So our Cowboys fans loving the moment where you get to see Stephen A. All sad about his Knicks, I'd imagine so. The dude comes in with a cowboy hat every time Dallas loses a big game.
Host 2
So I can guarantee I'm a sad man.
Host 3
There's got to be some Cowboys fans sad, man.
Host 4
If they wind up. If they wind up losing this series, then I think Cowboys fans will probably revel in it.
Host 2
And again, what was the old saying, the thrill of victory and the agony of defeat. Oh, you saw the agony of defeat in that press conference. You saw the nick spirits like, like leave their bodies. And that press conference was Les Miserables. Brunson sitting there. And again, wasted performance. Brunson 43 points. Carl Anthony Town's 35. I think he had, by the way, which one?
Host 3
Clowns told me under 28. I believe his name was Steve Cavino.
Host 2
Did I?
Host 3
Yep.
Host 2
You sure it was me?
Host 3
Yeah, I'm. We could go back to the videotape.
Host 2
Oh, man, don't listen to me, bro.
Host 3
I know.
Host 2
So.
Host 3
But don't worry. You know, you would have won your Draft picks pick six yesterday if you picked anyone in the over. Because 138, 135. Like every one of the ones we talked about. Danny. Over, over, over, over, over.
Host 2
It proved two things. Like Danny G. Said, in these games, in today's world, with threes like that, you can't leave. Stick around. And it proves again that basketball is so magical and so great when they're playing at this level in the playoffs. The reaction of last night's game, Pacers with a huge win. Game one, huge. Again, stomping on the hearts of the Knicks. And I'm saying it was the best doink shot, you're probably thinking since Kawhi, but I think since Teen Wolf. Since the triple doink in the movie Teen Wolf.
Host 3
Rich classic.
Host 2
Yeah, you remember that? 1, 2, 3, 80s music.
Host 3
Kicking the 80s music.
Host 2
And by the way, the random fun fact about the ending of Teen Wolf.
Host 4
Yeah.
Host 2
Not only did Michael J. Fox make the final shot, but this is a fun fact. There's a. Dude, do you know this story?
Host 4
Yeah. You told us that you used to pause your VHS tape on this all the time.
Host 2
That's not true. But there is a fun fact that, you know, it takes place in a high school in the 80s and the kid makes the shot. It's a story of puberty, really. That's really what this movies about. But one of the extras in the gymnasium has his junk out.
Host 3
Yeah, right there. And undoes his fly.
Host 2
Undoes his fly. Has his junk out right there.
Host 4
What's the time stamp, Covino?
Host 3
Oh, Camino has it at 143.
Host 2
Yeah, I have it memorized. But yeah, it's one of those infamous sort of moments.
Host 3
It's. There's two Michael J. Fox random moments like that. The junk shot at the end of Teen Wolf, which is true, by the way. There's a guy in the jump shot or junk shot.
Host 2
Junk shot. He makes a foul shot, but there's a guy with a junk shot in the background.
Host 3
I don't know what was less impressive, the junk shot or his jump shot.
Host 2
Yeah.
Host 3
And then if you watch Back to the Future 3, which many say is the worst one, but still enjoyable.
Host 2
It's good. It's different.
Host 3
You're a big fan of mad dog 10 and.
Host 2
Right? Oh, yeah, dude, mad dog 10.
Host 4
How old was Brett Favre when he was an extra in that movie?
Host 2
Stop. Good one. And that man is Brett Favre.
Host 3
So I was saying, in the end of Back to the Future three, remember when Doc Emmett Brown rolls up on the train like, Marty, I've turned the train into a time machine. There's a little boy, Emmett's son in the future. Like, this is little Emmett.
Host 2
Some little redheaded Weisenheimer.
Host 3
There must have been a signal. They say on the set, like, if one of the kid actors needs to pee, he just, like, points down to his privates. So in the middle of a scene, Michael J. Fox and Doc Emmett Brown having, like, an emotional moment, you see the little kid.
Host 2
Like, if you watch the scene, look it up on. You're like, what's that kid doing?
Host 3
Why is he pointing what is he doing?
Host 2
Two random Michael J. Fox moments. But in the movie Teen Wolf, there is a famous triple doink to win the shot. And again, life imitates art imitates life. You think of Kawhi, but that one last night was. It was a circus shot.
Host 3
You know, we joked about the clown in wrestling. There was a gimmick. I totally forgot this where there were two doinks.
Host 2
Two doink. The clowns.
Host 3
Double doink. I'm going to give you a shot at a free coffee right now.
Host 2
Oh boy.
Host 3
That's our usual wager because Kavino's a cheapskate. Alex P. Keaton, Marty McFly, legendary Michael J. Fox. In fact, I'll buy you coffee for a week if you could tell me what his character's name in Teen Wolf was.
Host 2
I was trying to think about it.
Host 3
I was trying to look it up.
Host 2
What was Francis's name? Chubby or Chunk?
Host 3
Chunky.
Host 2
Chubbs.
Host 3
Chunky.
Host 2
I couldn't think of his name.
Host 3
I don't think anyone knows.
Host 2
I could sing you the Teen Wolf cartoon song if you wanted me to. I can't think of the guy's name. Stiles was the cool guy.
Host 3
Stiles.
Host 2
Stiles.
Host 3
Right. But he was Scott Howard.
Host 2
See, I wouldn't have remembered that.
Host 3
That's a tough one.
Host 2
I wouldn't remember that. But are we prisoners of the moment or was that just insane last night?
Host 3
I think because of how it doinked like off the back of the rim, straight up in the air like as if almost, you know, like. Remember angels in the outfield when the ball was being carried by angels into the players gloves. I feel like that ball went straight up and like. God, that's the thing.
Host 2
I feel like if it happened on any level. Wait, is the Pope. That was ridiculous.
Host 3
Is the Pope a Pacers fan? Do we check this?
Host 4
Yeah, but I feel like his toe kept it from being the greatest doink of all time.
Host 2
Had it closed out the game.
Host 4
Yeah. Had it been a three pointer to win it, then I think it would have been on the top.
Host 2
Fair. Fair point. Danny, let's go.
Host 3
JP In Florida says we are forgetting the best triple doink. What's up jp?
I
Okay, triple doink.
Host 4
I'm going to go a little off.
I
The grid here and I apologize. I'm going to hit a nerve here. But it's in Japan. One of your favorite people. Someone knocked out with a triple doink uppercut, then a left, then a right.
Host 2
Are you talking when James Buster Douglas.
I
I'm sorry.
Host 2
You need to bring that up right now. I was having such a nice day. And not only did it knock out Mike Tyson, he was never the same. He never recovered. And we're all sitting there, mouths wide open, like, holy. What just happened?
Host 3
It was a boom, boom, boom.
Host 2
See, those shots are so powerful. I don't look at them as I.
Host 4
Was going to say. Those don't.
Host 3
Caleb in Idaho. What's up, buddy?
I
Hey, what's up, guys? So I got two playoff stats for you regarding the Knicks. And these are from since 1999 when, when playoff play by play by play tracking started. So teams were 0 and 944 when trailing by 14 with 245 left in the game. And then teams were 0 in 14, 14 by trailing by at least 9 with under a minute left in the game. All right, so a literal all time playoff choke job.
Host 2
You know what, when you think of.
Host 4
Those numbers, Carl's page this morning.
Host 2
And then you think about the chances of that shot going in. Like I said, how many times would it take a dude, perfect, perfect Globetrotter like moment. How many times do you would take to make that shot? That's insane that that happened.
Danny G
Think about if this was the Golden State warriors down 14 with three minutes to go. What does Steve Kerr do? Everybody's pulled because they're old, right? Why have Steph Curry and Jimmy Butler and them run around the floor?
Host 3
What a great point for two, you.
Danny G
Know, for the final two or three minutes. But that's not who the Pacers are. So like, those stats are mind blowing. But how many times do teams just wave the white flag when they're down by 14 with three minutes left or nine points with a minute left. A lot of times teams are just like, we'll pack it in. And the Pacers not only don't back it in, they've done it now three times, once in each of the series they've been in. In these playoffs.
Host 3
I really think we are downplaying Indiana because of. They're not, let's be honest. Indiana, Indiana.
Host 2
We're caught up on the Knicks hype too.
Host 3
Yeah.
Host 2
Talking about all the old school heads. The old heads coming there to support, you know, you're having all this electricity at the Garden. We're from the east coast, so yeah, we're caught up in that excitement. The Pacers, what they did was insane.
Host 3
Let's go to E Dog in New York. I wouldn't be surprised if he's drunk from yesterday.
I
I hate to, I hate to tell you this, but I'm sober for 28 years. And the next Art. Mazel tov, right?
Host 2
Hey, that's something to celebrate. Good for you.
I
Yeah.
Host 2
Yeah, man, Congrats.
I
Okay. I'm attending my group anniversary on Friday. And always welcome to go if you're sober.
Host 2
Happy for you, man.
Host 4
Gotta be sober.
Host 3
Now. I feel way dumb for making a drinking joke. Geez.
I
Also, about these Knicks, listen, they're not done. No, they're gonna come back in game two. They're gonna score a lot of points. And if the Knicks fall back behind, they can always catch up because that's what they did against Boston. And I hope nobody gets hurt on Indiana, but I'm a Reggie Mill fan, too. But I'm glad that the Knicks are going to win game two, three, four, and five. They're going to win in the five.
Host 3
You'Re saying a back end gentleman sweep. You know what?
Host 2
You have to.
Host 4
Richie's just drunk with Nick's enthusiasm.
Host 2
Exactly. Yeah. You have to imagine that when Brunson was sitting there, what is wool cap on his scullion pounding that, you know, in shock, that he's just mentally preparing himself to get mad, get angry, and make sure they win the next game.
Host 3
By the way, what's the chances I make a drunk joke about a guy that's like, I've been sober for 28 years.
Host 2
That's just you. You're insensitive about 97%. Just rich. You're just like, calling foot in his.
Host 3
Mouth Davis, Davis, Chatterbox Davis.
Host 2
That's why he can't control himself.
Host 3
Yeah, that's what happens. And see.
Host 2
And it's going to take us to heal us.
Host 4
It's Mental Health Awareness Month. And on a recent episode of just heal with Dr. J, the incomparable Taraji P. Henson stopped by to discuss how she's discovered peace on her journey. So what I'm hearing you saying is healing is a part of us also reconnecting to our childhood in some sort.
Host 2
You said I look how youthful I look because I never let that little girl inside of me die. I go outside and run outside with the dogs. I still play like a kid. I laugh, you know, I love jokes. I love funny. I love laughing. I laugh at myself. I don't take myself too seriously. That's the stuff that keeps you young and stops you from being so hard to hear.
Host 4
This and more things on the journey of healing, you can listen to just heal with Dr. J from the Black Effect Podcast Network on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts at.
Host 2
And T Connect changes Everything.
Dan Flores
The American west with Dan Flores is the latest show from the Meat Eater Podcast Network. Hosted by me, writer and historian Dan Flores and brought to you by Velvet Buck, this podcast looks at a West available nowhere else. Each episode I'll be diving into some of the lesser known histories of the West. I'll then be joined in conversation with by guests such as Western historian Dr. Randall Williams and best selling author and Meat eater founder Stephen Rinella.
Host 2
I'll correct my kids now and then where they'll say when cave people were here.
Host 3
And I'll say it seems like the.
Host 2
Ice Age people that were here didn't have a real affinity for caves.
Dan Flores
So join me starting Tuesday, May 6th where we'll delve into stories of the west and come to understand how it helps inform the west ways in which we experience the region today.
Host 3
Listen to the American west with Dan Flores on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Host 5
In 2020, a group of young women in a tidy suburb of New York City found themselves in an AI fueled nightmare.
Host 2
Someone was posting photos.
Host 3
It was just me naked. Well, not me, but me with someone.
Host 2
Else'S body parts on my body.
Host 3
Parts that looked exactly like my own.
Host 5
I wanted to throw up. I wanted to scream. It happened in Levittown, New York. But reporting the series took us through the darkest corners of the Internet and to the front lines of a global battle against deepfake pornography. This should be illegal, but what is this? This is a story about a technology that's moving fast than the law and about vigilantes trying to stem the tide. I'm Margie Murphy. And I'm Olivia Carville. This is Levittown, a new podcast from iHeart podcasts Bloomberg and Kaleidoscope. Listen to Levittown on Bloomberg's Big Take podcast. Find it on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Host 1
I know a lot of cops and they get asked all the time, have you ever had to shoot your gun? Sometimes the answer is yes. But there's a company dedicated to a future where the answer will always be no.
Host 3
Across the country, cops call this Taser the Revolution.
Host 1
But not everyone was convinced it was that simple.
Dan Flores
Cops believed everything that Taser told them.
Host 1
From Lava for good and the team that brought you Bone Valley comes a story about what happened when a multi billion dollar company dedicated itself to one visionary mission. This is Absolute Season 1 Taser Incorporated.
Host 4
I get right back there and it's bad.
Host 2
It's really, really, really bad.
Host 1
Listen to new episodes of Absolute Season 1 Taser Incorporated on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. Binge episode episodes 1, 2 and 3 on May 21 and episodes 4, 5 and 6 on June 4. Ad free at Lava for Good plus on Apple Podcasts.
Michael Kasson
I'm Michael Kassin, founder and CEO of 3C Ventures and your guide on Good Company, the podcast where I sit down with the boldest innovators shaping what's next. In this episode I'm joined by Anjali Su, CEO of Tubi, for a conversation that's anything but ordinary. We dive into the competitive world of streaming how she's turning so called niche into mainstream, connecting audiences with stories that truly make them feel seen.
Host 5
What others dismiss as niche we embrace as core. It's this idea that there's so many stories out there and if you can find a way to curate and help the right person discover the right content. The term that we always hear from our audience is that they feel seen.
Michael Kasson
Get a front row seat to where media, marketing, technology, entertainment and sports collide and hear how leaders, creators like Angelique are carving out space and shaking things up a bit in the most crowded of markets. Listen to Good company on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Host 2
We're live from the Fox Sports Radio studio and it's time for the tie rack play of the day. And I'm sure you know which one we're highlighting today. It was a premature chok sign that W up working out in overtime.
Host 3
Two point game, six seconds to go. Halberton driving. He's in the lane. He nearly lost it. He backs up and unloads a three.
Host 2
Oh, that did not happen.
Host 3
It hit the back of the rim, it popped high into the air and it dropped gently through the net. Gently through the net.
Host 2
I mean that was a great description. That's exactly what happened.
Host 3
Gently.
Host 4
And then his stat team told him, hey, it's actually a two.
Host 2
Oh boy.
Host 3
Hey, the Knicks hearts were ripped out on that one. As you know, Halliburton, Indiana got him on courtesy of the Pacers radio network.
Host 2
And it's time. There's a search.
Host 4
Yeah, what we gonna do right here.
Host 3
Is go back.
Host 2
Back into time.
Host 4
Throwing it back for a Thursday Old School 150 hit at 50 after C&.
Host 3
R. Give you the time capsule topic.
Host 4
And we reminisce together.
Host 2
Hey, look at that. We're right on time for once. Yeah boy. When 50 hits on the clock. When 50 hits in life. Old school, man. Old school. When 50 hits. We do it every Thursday. We get you involved at 877-99-CON FOX. And today we discuss arcade games. And as Iowa Sam hinted it. Hinted at it. It's Pac Man 1980. On this day, Pac man became a thing out of Japan. And before Super Mario, everything was Pac Man. Before Sonic, before Sonic, before any of these iconic characters, Pac man was everything. I remember the arcade game like yesterday. But what I remember even more than that, Rich, was when Atari 2600 was the thing, or maybe you had Colecovision or Intellivision. Whatever you had when it was part of the home console and you were able to play Pac man at home. That was. Yeah, that was next level Pac man.
Host 3
I thought Ms. Pac man was almost better.
Host 2
Ms. Pac Man, I think, was more popular, to be honest. It was the Pac man rage of the 80s. Like I said, cartoons, Saturday morning cartoons, lunchboxes, T shirts, clothes. Pac man was everywhere. And what's crazy about it, stuffed animals, right? Everything. If you were at the boardwalk, you're trying to win a Pac man something.
Host 3
Now listen.
Host 2
But you don't see really any signs of Pac man today.
Host 3
Here's the thing. You're a little older than me. And people would know that by looking at you.
Host 2
A little older. A lot cooler though.
Host 3
Yeah, kidding. But I'm more of a kid of the 80s and 90s. So my first gaming console was late 80s.
Host 2
Cause if you don't recognize the popular.
Host 3
Pac Man, I'm more late 80s, early 90s. So to me, for me, my first video game console was Nintendo. I missed Atari. And I, for that reason think that Pac man doesn't get enough credit. I feel like Mario has a billion dollar movie industry now.
Host 2
Sonic the Hedgehog, just the Bandicoot gets more props than Parappa the Rapper gets more props than Pac Man.
Host 3
Pac man wasn't there, Was it Adam Sandler?
Host 2
What was that?
Host 3
That was a good one. Pixels. Yeah.
Host 2
Great movie. It was a great movie.
Host 4
But was that actually Pac man or was that something.
Host 2
No, he was involved.
Host 4
Okay.
Host 2
And there was so many different iterations of Pac man and what he looked like in the game and on the cartoon and things like that. But Pac man was huge. It was iconic.
Host 4
It generated over $2.5 billion in quarters by the 1990s.
Host 2
Yeah.
Host 3
That's amazing.
Host 2
And like I said, it's a lot of coins. You remember playing it on Atari, Remember seeing it for the first time, being blown away. Like you could play this at home.
Host 3
Do you have to bring Those all to a coin star machine? I hope not.
Host 2
So based on the anniversary of Pac man, again, revolutionary game changer pun intended from 1980 on this day. If you can go back in time, Doc, if you can go back in time, Marty McFly style, what's that one game you'd love to go back to experience for the first time? Oh, you could go back to Chuck E. Cheese or showbiz pizza place or that local arcade and experience that game for the first time. What would it be?
Host 3
You know, I think we could include arcades and home console. Home consoles. I think that's fair too. Yeah, I have an answer and I think it's gonna be hard to beat. I'll throw it out there and we'll take your feedback. I think when I was at the baseball card shop, the baseball card shop in my hometown also had a couple arcade games in it. When they said, we're bringing in this new game, NBA Jam, that was your jam. You could personalize the cat. Like there were special codes you could use. Like you're like, wow, that actually looks like Tim Hardaway. Or oh, wow, these that he can't buy a bucket. Like, that game was next level in my mind. So NBA Jam, number one on this guy's list. And we want to Hear from you 87799 on Fox. More Covino and Rich. Friday, June 20th. We are doing our Cavino and Rich FOX sports radio show live from Circa in Las Vegas.
Host 2
Las Vegas stadium swim.
Host 3
Stadium swim. We're having a Cavino enrich pool party on Friday. So, you know, break out your flip flops and bring your sunblock. It's gonna be hot out there, but we're gonna be doing a great.
Host 2
Bust out your skimpiest bikini.
Host 3
No, that too.
Host 2
Sam, get your speedo ready, buddy.
Host 3
I expect a yellow Iowa speedo on you. I maybe almost like a Borat style.
Host 2
Like an old school Dusty Rhodes.
Host 3
Black and yellow, black and yellow with a giant eye on around the, you know, almost like a, like a wrestling single.
Host 2
Some of your favorite FOX Sports radio friends will be there. But listeners, friends, Romans, countrymen, we are inviting you circa June 20th. We're doing a live broadcast and a bonus podcast on Saturday.
Host 3
So here's how it rolls. Friday, doing the show live. Pool party, stadium swimming, the biggest, most luxurious, beautiful pool in Vegas. So Circa, for the pool party Friday night, the Legacy Lounge, which is the top floor of Circa, they're having a fireworks show. We got drinks and food and all.
Host 2
The fun that's kept all the prices low, guys. So it's not going to break the bank. You're invited. The next day we're doing, like I said, a podcast and another dinner for everybody. And I'll tell you what, because I want to get back to the phone calls, we'll go over all the details on over promised on fox Sports Radio's YouTube page, give you all the details, show you what it's all about. Right after this show, an hour from now, episode 93 of Over Promised. But this is your invite. Circa in Vegas. We hope to see you there. June 20th, 21st. 22nd.
Host 3
Let me just remind everyone though, for all the big sports fans, they say that Circa has the nicest sportsbook. And you should see the TV screens and all the games going. Danny D. Danny G. That sportsbook.
Host 4
Oh yeah, I've sat in there for two hours straight.
Host 3
Oh my God. Just, I mean, I mean it's beautiful. And there's a whole area where we are going to have a big dinner on that Saturday night, the 21st. Drinks, food, the whole deal. We'll give everyone more details as we get closer. But Circa, that weekend of the 20th and 21st, I'm telling you, it's gonna be a blast.
Host 2
This is your invite, guys. We hope to see you there. Fox Sports Radio Nation details on our social media pages. All right, we got discounts and all sorts of things going on, but back to the phone calls. Pac Man, I'm telling you, if you didn't live it, please believe me. Huge. I remember just being blown away the first time I saw it. And you know, actually I was such a spoiled kid, but my dad worked in the vending industry. Yeah, I had a Ms. Pac man machine when I was a kid.
Host 3
I bet you did. I did spoil.
Host 2
I was like a Mexican Ricky Schroeder.
Host 3
Do you have a little train in your living room?
Host 2
Yeah, I was like silver spoons, vato style. But anyway, it's one of those games that you do want to go back and relive and remember because we had never seen anything like that before Atari and before these arcade games. Would you have like Pong and a bunch of bs?
Host 4
Do you remember when Pac man had the sit down version of the video game where players sat at the tabletop?
Host 3
Yeah, listen, we had one of those at the I Heart in New York, Danny G. Like 20 years ago. And in between songs we'd all jump out there and play in between.
Host 4
That's, that's really cool. I remember being a really, really small kid and me and my older brother, we would look inside a teen center that was in our city here in Southern California. And wish we could go in there because we saw the teenagers playing Pac man while they were sitting down.
Host 2
All the young 80s bullies and teenagers trying to steal your quarters and jump in on your game. Whether you were at Showbiz pizza place or the arcade or your hobby shack, Rich, buying baseball cards. You said they had video games there. Or the bowling alley was always great for arcade games.
Host 3
What about Noah's Arcade?
Host 2
Yeah, if you can go back to Noah's Arcade, which one would it be?
Host 3
No, Evander, you.
Host 2
I know Danny G. Has a really great answer. I like your answer a lot, Danny G. So I'm trying to think of a different one even better than mine before.
Host 3
If you're just joining us now at the end of last hour, I said for me being more of a kid of the late 80s, early 90s, man, when NBA jam for player, by the way.
Host 4
Four. Four players.
Host 2
All these people, you know, around. There's a lot of pressure as a little 80s kid because all these people are watching you play, right. Waiting for the next game.
Host 4
Yeah, another multiple player arcade game, Rich, where me and my brother and cousin would take turns and we would use pencils, pens, popsicle sticks to hit two buttons at the same time. Track and field.
Host 2
Oh, yeah, absolutely, that.
Host 4
We spent hours on that damn stand up video game and then the one at home. And this, this I probably have the best memories of unwrapping this one punch out. We could not wait to get that out of the package.
Host 2
Honestly, I think you stole my answer, Danny G. And it was a two pronged answer. Because if I was gonna go back to the arcade and I mentioned this to Rich and Spot recently, I remember all the arcade games. I was such an arcade kid and I loved playing all these games. The one that stood out the most to me, even before Dragon's Lair, which was like crazy graphics for the time.
Host 4
Remember that? Yes.
Host 2
Was regular punch out and the sounds that went with it. The arcade sounds of body blow, body blow, body blow, uppercut, uppercut. Great fighting. You're an up and coming boxer. The whole thing of glass Joe and.
Host 3
All these characters before Tyson was incorporated into the Nintendo.
Host 2
Yeah, the arcade version. And then when the Nintendo version came out, that was one of those like, oh man, I gotta.
Host 4
Gotta have it.
Host 2
Yeah, gotta have that.
Host 4
And I tell you, I remember we bothered our mom for months and we weren't the first on our street to have it. So we were jealous of everyone who had it. So when she finally got enough money to get that for us. You know, because she was a single mom at the time, we were beyond excited to take that out of the packaging.
Host 2
And the Nintendo version, Mike Tyson's version, the graphics at the time you thought were the greatest thing ever. So I would love to go back and relive that if I could because I just remember how I was mesmerized by that game. And I showed Rich a home video of me the first time I fought Mike Tyson on the game. I finally got there. My dad recorded it. So what was that moment for you? And we'll go around the room, we'll take your phone calls. What up, Dan Beyer?
Danny G
Tecmo super bowl on the Nintendo was the biggest because the first Tecmo bowl that came out didn't have all the teams. But this one, not only did it have the teams, it had the little pixel graphic of the helmet.
Host 4
Oh, that's right.
Host 3
In the select screen Dem buyer. I know you think you're a Cavino guy, but you know, and I for years have I. When we talk about the love of Tecmo Bowl, I always say, no, no, no. Tecmo super bowl is the far superior Nintendo game.
Danny G
Absolutely. 100.
Host 3
It was so good. So when I think in my mind Tech Mobile, I'm actually thinking Tecmo Super.
Host 2
Yes.
Host 3
And I a lot of times in the past incorrectly said super Tecmo Ball. It's Tecmo Super.
Danny G
Yeah, I did the same thing. But to be able to play a full season, go through the weeks, have a playoff set up, it was, it was great.
Host 3
It's a little kid's dream that loves schedule watching like you and I, you.
Host 2
Know, these are all great answers if you can go back and relive it for the first time. Danny G. Did you give your answer? Because I thought you were going to say something else.
Host 4
Oh, the stand up arcade game. My first memory of ever going to an arcade. I was mesmerized by pole position.
Host 2
I remember being at Photon, which is a laser tag place growing up, and they had a pole position there. And that was like you're almost intimidated to step up and play that game. And it looks so cool and it.
Host 4
Was so fascinating, especially seeing the older kids play it at the time. Yeah, exactly. We didn't know how to drive. We didn't know what we were doing. We didn't know what we were doing with the stick shift. But watching the older kids do it, we wanted to try that too. And I remember leaving that arcade thinking to myself, if I could have a handheld version of that in the car right now with my mom. I would play that game forever.
Host 2
Well, you had Pole Position. You had Rad Racer, too, right, for your Nintendo. But pole position arcade game was definitely one of those games that everyone was just trying to get in line to play.
Host 3
There was not a great arcade where I grew up. So arcade games for me were video. They had a couple arcade games at the baseball card shop, and they always had a few at the bowling alley. And I remember at the bowling alley. I'm going to throw one more out there, and then we'll take your phone calls at the bowling alley.
Host 4
By the way, start with Daniel in Missouri. He worked at a bowling alley that had video games.
Host 3
When. When you're at the bowling. I remember.
Host 2
I remember.
Host 3
Remember the ball washer, and they always had the crappy pizza.
Host 2
I thought you were the ball washer.
Host 3
You want to be my ball washer? So I remember. I'll give you just one phrase, and you'd be like, oh, yeah, finish him.
Host 2
Oh, Mortal Kombat, Immortal combat came out.
Host 3
And you'd be like, facing you next. Everyone put their quarter up because you're like, who's next?
Host 2
That was next level.
Host 3
And you knew that you had to figure out your fatalities.
Host 2
I'll give you a memory you probably forgot, Danny G. You'll remember.
Host 3
Wait, hold on. Was that a sound effect or Iowa Sam.
Host 2
That was Iowa Sam. He's good at that. Yeah, that was pretty good, Sam. It was a good impression. But you would have your quarter up like Rich said. But there would be little. Finish him. Little hood rat rugrat kids that would be going around every machine just trying to see if there was quarters in the slots. Just trying to steal your quarters.
Host 3
I mean, till this day, if you see a payphone, you check, right?
Host 2
Yeah. So, all right, let's go to the phones. If you can go back on the anniversary of Pac Man 1980, go back and relive this experience for the first time, what video game would you choose?
Host 3
45 years ago, Daniel in Missouri. What's up, buddy boy?
I
Hey, what's going on, fellas? I love you guys. How you doing?
Host 2
Thanks, man, so much.
I
All right. Yeah. So my answer has changed about nine times since I was listening to you guys. But I think, like, hanging on, like, the single mom vibe and, like, I was an only child, so, like, gangs were really important to me. You know what I'm saying? So, like, I think for me, John Madden, sports talk football with Joe Montana. I mean, God, that was a game changer for me. Like, you could like you ever talked about techno Super Bowl. You could go in, you could change the rosters. You had all these statistics and everything, man. It just, it. It made life good for me, you.
Host 4
Know what I mean?
Host 2
Yo, playing at home was a big deal. Different level. Yeah, it was a different level. And you were obsessed with it, and it was a fun part of your childhood. Right, Right. But putting your initials up on the arcade. Let's not forget about the bragging, right? That was involved of your initials making the top three top five on the actual arcade game. If I could put a little sac in there for Stephen Anthony Cavino, the Sackman. Those were bragging rights, dude. I was the King of Kong.
Host 3
Wait, you're. You're Stephen A. Stephen.
Host 2
I'm the real Stephen A.
Danny G
There was also nothing like getting your skin of your hand pinched playing Centipede. Oh, my.
Host 3
Talk about the battle scars a little later in our life, Dan. I had a buddy who sliced his whole hand open playing. What is it? What's the golf?
Danny G
Oh, Golden Tea.
Host 3
Golden Tea.
Host 2
Yeah, that's the one.
Host 3
He did like a. All right, let's go. Sliced his.
Host 2
It's a different conversation for another day. But when Rich and I first met and started hanging out, we'd be at local bars in Hoboken, New Jersey, playing like Buck Hunter was Buck Hunter and.
Host 3
Golden Tea were the games they had there.
Host 2
Yeah, yeah. But that was a different era in a different time.
Host 4
That's like when we finally had a gun at home for Duck Hunt.
Host 2
Right, right, right.
Host 4
That was a game changer. It was a game changer.
Host 2
Hey, you want to blow your mind, Danny G. Do you know, fun fact.
Host 4
I've seen this meme.
Host 2
Everybody's had Duck Hunt and has played Duck hunt, but the player 2 control controlled the Ducks.
Host 4
We never knew that.
Host 2
No one knew.
Host 3
No one ever even thought about it.
Host 4
We didn't take the instructions out.
Host 2
He really did. So let's go to the phones and continue. If you could relive these first time moments, what game would you pick?
Host 3
Let's say hi to John and Chico. Johnny, what's up, man? Actually, you know what? John wanted to talk NBA playoffs, but.
Host 4
Maybe let's see if he's got a video game.
Host 3
What's up, buddy?
I
I got a video game. I spent more quarters on Defender in my life. Me and my buddy, my God, we'd go down to the pizza place. I mean, that was our day, you know? And I'll never forget one time we. We couldn't get our quarter out of the darn machine. We hit that thing, you know, you have to clunk it. If it didn't all the way through, well, I hit that thing. The darn door came open. There was more quarters and all loud. We just sat there and played that thing for about eight hours.
Host 3
It's funny if you got. If you got.
Host 2
Came out in 1981, by the way.
Host 3
If you got little kids. My son is 5, so we were recently at an arcade and, you know, he wants to do the race car games. Yeah. You know, remember when you're a little kid how bad you were because you, you would, you would turn so extreme, like, exactly like, like you had no concept of, of like a gentle turn.
Host 2
That's how we felt playing Pulpism. What up, Sam?
Host 3
Well, speaking of race car games, one of my first memories was Cruisin World, where you had both a sit down and a stand up steering wheel. Different versions. I also loved the Simpsons video game in arcades, which was really hard to beat. That was a tough one. I do remember that being tough.
Host 2
Simpsons came out around the time of.
Host 4
Yeah, it was a little.
Host 3
It was in the 90s because I was. I'm younger than you guys.
Host 2
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Do you remember Rampage? Do you remember that game where, like, it was like. Like a Godzilla and a King Kong. They're just smashing the building and. All right, maybe not. So back to the phones.
Host 3
You brought up something I just have to mention.
Host 2
Sure.
Host 3
You and DB we talk about putting your initials on there and like, the joy of that. That's why there was a. There was a baseball game on Nintendo that I thought was revolutionary. No one loved it. I don't hear many people talking about it, but stars, Baseball stars, you were able to create your own players. Like, you can make your little league team and like, this guy's fast. He has more power like you.
Host 2
I did that with Baseball Simulator 1000.
Host 3
Baseball Stars was a game that I thought was underrated.
Host 2
All right, well, since you brought up it up. And my answer was punch out for arcade and Nintendo. I remember clear as day. I feel like I was in like fourth or fifth grade. I feel like maybe in fifth grade I was in grade school. I was hanging out a grade school friend's house and we're in his basement playing.
Host 3
Tickle sticks.
Host 2
We were playing tickle sticks. We were playing Nintendo and everyone's just trying to get in on the game. And I remember he had a cartridge that was shaped like no other cartridge in the collection and put it in and it was a baseball game. And it's still till this day, my favorite game. And I have it in a handheld version and I still play every other night. But I remember seeing the fireworks when you hit a home run. And that game, honestly, is still my favorite. RBI baseball.
Host 3
Yeah, it's a good one.
Host 2
Punch out is my. Is my answer. But RBA baseball might be my favorite game. And I remember seeing it for the first time.
Host 3
Like, I know you'll. I know you disagree.
Host 4
Is it RBI baseball or RBI baseball?
Host 2
No, it's rbi. It's RBI baseball.
Host 3
I was. I was a bigger fan of Bases Loaded, to be honest. I know you weren't.
Host 2
Bases Loaded had better graphics. But the game sucked. So let's go back to the calls.
Host 3
Stephen and Spokane. Spokane.
Host 2
What up, man?
Host 4
Spokane, Spokane.
I
What up, guys?
Host 3
What up, man?
I
Yeah, so someone just said my answer the same sentence, but I'm gonna go with a backup. And it's NFL Blitz. NFL Blitz, great. You just throw the football all the way down the field and score a touchdown.
Host 4
Yeah, Blitz was fun.
Host 2
It was a football game. I play all the time. It was like robots that played. It was an arcade game. I'm just trying to look that up. Thanks for the call, man. Who else do we got?
Host 3
That is our buddy Tripp in Vegas, who talking about Mutant League Football.
Host 2
I'm going to look it up. Sam.
Host 3
Yeah, I have a frame poster of Mutant League Football Football. Trip, who we're going to be hanging out with in Vegas at circa.
Host 2
What's up, Trip?
I
What's up, gentlemen? Yeah, I already got Friday and Saturday night off. Looking forward to seeing y' all. I look forward to hearing y' all in the morning too.
Host 2
Thank you so much for everything, man. We're gonna have a great time.
I
I can't wait to see you guys if I'm not too busy repotting my plants. Anyway, so I got a couple. My boy Danny G took mine, but there's a couple more. So we used to go to Aladdin's Castle. What a great name for an arcade.
Host 3
Yep, I went to Aladdin's Castle.
Host 2
That.
I
Yeah, Play two. I would say karate champ and then funhouse the pinball game.
Host 2
Begin, begin, bite, stop. Judge White Dude. I used to love me some pretty good ones.
Host 3
We got Be the Man Adam in Bakersfield. What's up, Adam and Rich.
I
Hey, how's it going? So I got a few. You mentioned Dragon Slayer. That was classic. 10 year old fight. Spent a lot of quarters on that Zack Thon, which had like the 3D graphics at a 45 degree angle, which was really cool at the time. But I gotta go back to probably 1982. Walking into the dimly lit arcade at the Valley Plaza in Bakersfield, California. Crazy climber. And this is an obscure game with two handles. And you're like a little guy trying to climb up the skyscraper while they're throwing pots at your head. And King Kong's at the top with the wires. You guys remember?
Host 2
I'm looking at it right now. I'm not sure I remember it, but, yeah, it looks cool. Looks like a, you know, classic game. I'm not sure I remember that. But, dude, you hit the nail on the head. I was just talking about home movies that I've been looking through. Everything was so dimly lit in the 80s, man. And before that, I'm sure there was.
Host 4
Some sketch things going on.
Host 2
Every home video is like, yo, did someone have the lights on or what?
Host 3
In contrary, I feel like anything from the 90s is overlit, probably with too many neon lights.
Host 2
Yeah, we're leaning into it because we lived through the dim dark ages.
Host 3
Yeah, we overcompensate. It was like, yeah, it's a little dim in the 80s, all right. Neon everywhere. 90s.
Host 2
We need fluorescent lights now.
Host 3
By the way, the reason we're talking about this. Today marks the 45th anniversary Pac man made its debut in video game four in Japan in Han. Let's go to Dan and Casey. What's up, Dan?
I
Hey, guys. How you doing?
Host 3
We're good, man. Have some good burn ends. What do we like? Jack Stacks. And what was the other place?
I
Arthur Branch is the one, man.
Host 3
Oh, Oklahoma Joe's.
Host 2
Oh, yeah.
Host 3
That's another good one.
I
That's good. They're all good here.
Host 3
Yeah, I love me some burn ends. What's up, man?
I
I used to work at bowling alley. Extra money in the arcade. Back in the day, it was Contra. And I don't want to be, like I was saying, give everything away, but the end of my time there was Double Dragon and Tekken.
Host 3
Double Dragon was a big one.
Host 4
Double Dragon, yeah.
Host 3
Dragon in contrast, every game.
Danny G
By the way, great call.
Host 2
Yeah. He called out Iowa Sam. Yes, yes.
Danny G
Great.
Host 2
And every game he mentioned I loved.
Host 3
I agree.
Host 4
And you know, Iowa Sam dumped it, though. That's a good move.
Host 3
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Host 2
No, I didn't.
Host 3
The Contra code. Do we all still remember that?
Host 2
Yeah. Up, up, down, down. Left, right, left, right. BA select start for two players. Let's go.
Host 3
What was the type. What was the Tyson code? Smart.
Host 2
00737-35963. That's to get to Mike Tyson.
Host 3
And you must have got all the girls I got.
Host 2
So I just.
Host 3
Your brain remember that, you know, there's. There's valuable information that your brain can't hold because it's holding those codes.
Host 2
I'm a special boy, Sam. That's why.
Host 3
Yeah, if he knows that. But the last book he read was where the Wild Things Are.
Host 2
Yeah.
Host 3
All right, Hoff, you're on in Maine. What's up?
Host 2
What up, Hoff? Hey, guys.
I
This is an awesome topic.
Host 3
Thanks, man.
I
So I'm gonna go way back. We actually had an Activision arcade right near where I grew up.
Host 2
Awesome.
I
And Spy Hunter back in the day, Like a line of crocs.
Host 2
Oil slick. Dude. The smoke screens.
Host 4
Yes.
I
Yeah.
Host 2
Sports game was Arch Rivals.
Host 4
You remember?
Host 2
Oh, of course. I love that. That was a. That was a bowling game. Bowling alley game for me. That's where the basketball players. The dude had a mohawk.
Host 4
Right.
Host 2
And you just be knocking people out. Arch Rivals was a good one. I used to love to play that game. And for the record, if you keep in score at home, I was. Sam was right. Mutant. Mutant League Football was when I played a lot at the arcade too. I just forgot the name of it. I have a question. Great call, man. I appreciate it.
Host 3
I. I feel like we got all the good answers. Even though the phones are all lit, they're still lit. Could anyone name their greatest video game disappointment? Like, what game was like, this stinks.
Host 4
Because I remember you just weren't good at it.
Host 3
Danny G. For me, I was a big wrestling fan as a kid. Hulk Hogan, Macho Man, Andre the Giant. They had the first like WWF wrestling game on. Nintendo stunk.
Host 2
There was one called Tag Team Wrestling for Nintendo to stunk. I was a big arcade Matt Mania.
Host 4
Fan at the arcade. I remember everyone, all the kids at school talking about that game. Paper Boy.
Host 2
Yeah.
Host 4
And I'm like, oh, I can't wait to try this. And then I was like, this game stinks. I didn't like it. I took my butt to the Star wars stand up arcade game. Remember that one? You had to drop the missile at the perfect time.
Host 3
What about the.
Host 2
What do you remember all of them.
Danny G
I love Tron.
Host 2
Tron.
Host 4
Oh, good one.
Host 2
Tron looked really cool. I always, like, was intimidated by it. I was like scared of that game.
Host 3
Wasn't there some type of short docu series or documentary about the E.T. video game and how they're all buried somewhere?
Host 2
Yeah. Notoriously known to be the worst Atari game ever. And it sort of like ended the whole phase and they ended up over manufacturing them and they buried them in a, in a. Would you even call it?
Host 3
So you mean in, you know, a million years when, when civilization's gone, some new civilizations, Planet of the Apes digs it up. Yeah. They're going to be like etv.
Host 2
You know, who's kind of forgotten too, though. Like, like I was saying before, Super Mario is everything. I thought Pac man would be.
Host 4
Right.
Host 2
Because Pac man was the, the iconic character. Frogger was pretty big too, back then. Frogger was huge.
Host 3
Yeah.
Host 2
Big, big game.
Host 3
I would say the faces of video games. If you were to talk about generations, like, you know, you could, you could do the faces of quarterbacks in the NFL or, or, you know, NBA stars through the generations.
Host 2
I would say like a Mount Rush.
Host 3
I would say like Pac Man, Super Mario, Sonic. And then it more like first person, like Call of Duty and like those type of things. But as far as.
Host 2
Yeah, who's that fourth? That's a good one.
Danny G
I don't know who the fourth is, but to your point about Frogger, I felt like Frogger was like Pac man was one. And Frogger and Donkey Kong were like the silver and bronze.
Host 2
Yeah.
Danny G
You know, like, of that era.
Host 4
Just.
Danny G
I mean, obviously Super Mario bigger than those two. But I felt like Frogger and Donkey Kong were the runner ups.
Host 2
And that was the first time we were introduced to Mario and Donkey.
Host 3
I was gonna say maybe for lack of someone else, Pac Man, Mario, Sonic, maybe. Unless you can think of something else. Donkey Kong also appeared in the Mario Brothers movie. If you saw that with your kids, fantastic. Like Donkey Kong's part of that Mario world now. So I don't know, it's an interesting one because. Right, it's got to be Pac Man, Mario and Sonic. Those are like the, the faces of, of different brands and everything.
Host 2
And it's going to take us to heal us.
Host 4
It's Mental Health Awareness Month. And on a recent episode of just heal with Dr. J, the incomparable Taraji P. Henson stopped by to discuss how she's discovered peace on her journey. So what I'm hearing you saying is healing is a part of us also reconnecting to our childhood in some sort.
Host 2
You said I look how youthful I look because I never let that little girl inside of me die. Die. I go outside and run outside with the dogs. I still play like a kid. I laugh, you know, I love jokes. I love funny. I love laughing. I laugh at myself. I don't take myself too seriously. That's the stuff that keeps you young and stops you from being so hard.
Host 4
To Hear this and more things on the journey of healing. You can listen to just heal with Dr. J from the Black Effect Podcast Network on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts at.
Host 2
And T Connect changes everything.
Host 5
In 2020, a group of young women in a tidy suburb of New York City found themselves in an AI fueled nightmare.
Host 2
Someone was posting photos.
Host 3
It was just me naked. Well, not me, but me with someone.
Host 2
Else'S body parts on my body. Parts that looked exactly like my own.
Host 5
I wanted to throw up. I wanted to scream. It happened in Levitt, New York. But reporting this series took us through the darkest corners of the Internet and to the front lines of a global battle against deepfake pornography. This should be illegal, but what is this? This is a story about a technology that's moving faster than the law and about vigilantes trying to stem the tide. I'm Margie Murphy. And I'm Olivia Carvel. This is Levittown, a new podcast from iHeart podcasts Bloomberg and Kaleidoscope. Listen to Levittown on Bloomberg's Big Take podcast. Find it on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Dan Flores
The American west with Dan Flores is the latest show from the Meat Eater Podcast Network. Hosted by me, writer and historian Dan Flores and brought to you by Velvet Buck, this podcast looks at a West available nowhere else. Each episode I'll be diving into some of the lesser known histories of the West. I'll then be joined in conversation by guests such as Western historian Dr. Randall Williams and best selling author and Meat Eater founder Stephen Rinella.
Host 2
I'll correct my kids now and then where they'll say when cave people were here.
Host 3
And I'll say, it seems like the.
Host 2
Ice Age people that were here didn't have have a real affinity for caves.
Dan Flores
So join me starting Tuesday, May 6, where we'll delve into stories of the west and come to understand how it helps inform the ways in which we experience the region today.
Host 3
Listen to the American west with Dan Flores on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Host 1
I know a lot of cops and they get asked all the time, have you ever had to shoot your gun? Sometimes the answer is yes. But there's a company dedicated to a future where the answer will always be no.
Host 3
Across the country, cops call this Taser the Revolution.
Host 1
But not everyone was convinced it was that simple.
Dan Flores
Cops believed everything that Taser told them.
Host 1
From Lava for good. And the team that brought you Bone Valley comes a story about what happened when a multi billion dollar company dedicated itself to one visionary mission. This is Absolute Season 1 Taser Incorporated.
Host 4
I get right back there and it's bad.
Host 2
It's really, really, really bad.
Host 1
Listen to new episodes of Absolute Season 1 Taser Incorporated on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. Binge episodes 1, 2 and 3 on May 21 and episodes 4, 5 and 6 on June 4 ad free at Lava for Good plus on Apple Podcasts.
Michael Kasson
I'm Michael Kassin, founder and CEO of 3C Ventures and your guide on Good Company, the podcast where I sit down with the boldest innovators shaping what's next. In this episode I'm joined by Anjali Su, CEO of Tubi, for a conversation that's anything but ordinary. We dive into the competitive world of streaming. How she turning so called niche into mainstream gold. Connecting audiences with stories that truly make them feel seen.
Host 5
What others dismiss as niche, we embrace as core. It's this idea that there's so many stories out there and if you can find a way to curate and help the right person discover the right content. The term that we always hear from our audience is that they feel seen.
Michael Kasson
Get a front row seat to where media, marketing, technology, entertainment and sports collide and hear how leaders like Angelique are carving out space and shaking things up a bit in the most crowded of markets. Listen to Good company on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Host 2
Dan Byer, I'm sure you remember Danny G. You'll probably remember Iowa City. Sam, you were busy playing Earthworm Jim or whatever. You're playing Marvel, Marvel Madness or whatever.
Host 3
You like Earthworm Jim.
Host 2
But when Double dribble, by the way.
Host 3
I was trying to find out he has no partner. It's just Earthworm. I thought it was like someone in Earthworm Jim.
Host 2
Inchworm Rich messed it up. Inchworm Rich. But do you guys remember seeing for the first time the epitome of awesome graphics when Double dribble.
Host 4
Oh yeah, double dribble up in the slow mo.
Host 2
When it went into the slam dunk mode, you were like, that was almost.
Host 3
Almost like the tech mobile future is here. It was almost similar to the Techmo Bowl High 5.
Host 2
But it was even cooler because it was like completely changed. The slam dunk went in and you would miss, you would break the slam dunk. And the graphics at that time, when you see them now, it's laughable. You see them with your Kids like kids. This was what was considered amazing, which.
Host 3
Is I love the graphic of Tom Brady from a couple years ago. I was like, this is how long Tom Brady's been playing. And it was his first, first football video game. And then it was like, you know, Madden 23 or whatever.
Host 2
Double dribble, double dribble. So let's wrap it up with your phone calls. Little crossfire, which means say your name, say what's up, and make it snappy.
Host 3
All right.
Host 2
What's your game?
Host 3
El Paso. Manny, what's up, man?
I
Was Dig Dug. Nintendo Dudes at home was two of them. Batman and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles were used. All four Turtle.
Host 3
That was cool. Ninja Turtles was dope. Chris in Columbus. What's up, man?
I
Hey, not much, man. You had mentioned the robot football game. I believe it was called Cyberball. And you could upgrade your quarterback to where he was really fast, but he would smoke.
Host 2
So I'm looking at up now because I do remember playing a lot of these games and the previous caller that said, oh, yeah, total yes. You know, Know what? Now I'm confused if I played Cyberball or Mutant League Football. They're like the same game. But the call I said dig dug. It made me think of Qbert and how big Cubert was at one point.
Host 4
Yeah.
Host 2
But you know, if I had that one wish Danny G. To go back in time, it wouldn't be my answer. It would still be punch. I'd have to be like an iconic mouth dropping moment of no way.
Host 3
Yeah, Ray In Northern Cali. Hey, Ray.
I
Hey, guys. I just got to shout you out. Rich, you dated the girl from the Brett Favre documentary.
Host 3
I dated a lot of girls, man. Yeah.
Host 2
I mean.
Host 3
I mean.
I
My game was the Simpsons Arcade game. That was his.
Host 3
Yeah. You know, I was saying a lot of people. Yeah.
Host 2
Third person to say that.
Host 3
Yeah. Rob Indiana. What's up?
Host 4
Oops.
Host 2
Oh, by the way, you dated Jamel Hill. That's pretty wild.
I
The milestone. I'm 56. I remember the launch of all video games, but I remember Pong being really the first thing that stood out. And then the Atari 2600 comes out. The Cleco, the Intelligence, and you start getting your Space Invaders, Asteroids, Missile Command. I remember went to a party, a birthday party at a pizza place, and they said there's gonna be games there. So I think a Bozo Buckets, Monopoly. I never heard of a video game. I walk in this back room and I see, you know, a pinball machine and these things I never saw before. This is before Pac Man But Space Invaders was the one that really kind of changed and segued the whole games. You know, we don't think about it much anymore, but when Pac man came out, that was. That was the game changer of all time. Everything started to go with that. But before that, I'd had to put Pong and Space Invaders on that Mount Rushmore, followed by Pac man. And then everything just moved forward.
Host 2
Yeah, Space Invaders was definitely a huge game. Phoenix was very similar to that. My first Atari game, though, jaw dropping, because to me it was like, oh, my God, I could play games at home. I was playing Atari 2600 and Commando Raid I thought was like the most amazing thing I'd ever seen.
Host 3
Well, we are running too late. So I just want to say you're allowed to name the game. And that's it. Name the game and that's it. Robin, Indiana. Go.
I
Let's go. Pitfall.
Host 3
Pitfall. Clint in Vegas.
Host 2
Clint.
I
What about 720, the first skateboard movie?
Host 3
There you go, Matt, L.A. okay, so.
I
Since I got to be quick, what was the original name of Soda Popinski in the stand up arcade? Super Punch Out.
Host 2
Oh, no, man. I only know Soda Popinski. I never got that far in the arcade with his name.
I
That was in the. That was the Cold War.
Host 4
Russians were the enemy.
I
It was vodka Drunkinski.
Host 2
I have.
Host 4
Right. I saw a meme about that. Yeah. Racist.
Host 2
Filling in for Dan Patrick tomorrow. So wake up with us. And real quick, right quick, Mike Piazza stood up for Juan Soto. Rich, any thoughts on that?
Host 3
Juan Soto. Mets leg legend Mike Piazza offers advice to Juan Soto. This is according to Sny. You gotta rely on your teammates to have your back. Piazza says getting booed in the beginning made him better and it's a rite of passage of playing in New York.
Host 2
Well, as of now, Soto's still pounding, but yeah, will he come around? You have to believe he will. He said there's an adjustment period.
Host 3
He said it's a character builder. When Piazza first became a Met, he was booed. People thought, thought he was not enthused to be there. He still wanted to be in Los Angeles with the Dodgers and the sunshine. And people were saying, and people were like, yo, Piazza, boo.
Host 2
Know the difference.
Host 3
And ends up being one of the faces of the franchise of all time. And the same about Keith Hernandez.
Host 2
So it so far winning the way the Mets are winning now.
Host 3
So far, the proof in the pudding was that in the mid-80s, when the Mets started turning things around, Keith reluctantly went to the Mets. And everyone's like, he doesn't want to be be here. He's been part of the franchise for 40 years. Mike Piazza came to the Mets and led them a year later to back to back playoff appearances and a World Series. Clearly there's a pattern. A star comes here and if he struggles, those booze are a rite of passage. I'm Juan Soto is just fine.
Host 2
Okay, so we're not gonna have time to talk about mommy, daddy makeovers and Brittany Mahomes and things like that.
Host 3
It was weird though that Juan Soto looked at seven straight pitches yesterday. Though I will say that I think he's mentally just trying to, to find his mojo or something.
Host 2
And you know, maybe we'll talk about that on Dan Patrick. So we have that extra hour because on Over Promise today, our bonus podcast, we're going to talk about iconic sports photos because today's the anniversary not only of Pac man, of the most iconic sports photo of all time. Now, when I say Muhammad Ali's involved, can you picture the one we're talking about? Of course, because there's a really famous backstory about it and I'll tell you all about about it and we'll pick, I don't know, maybe three or four, maybe five other.
Host 3
Wait a minute.
Host 2
Iconic photos.
Host 3
Story time with Steve Kavino.
Host 2
Story time with Steve.
Host 3
Man, I can't wait.
Host 2
So we'll talk iconic sports photos on Over Promised and we'll get into depth with our party details.
Host 3
Yeah, we are going to be at Circa in Las Vegas. The dates again, Friday 20 June.
Host 2
So if you're thinking about stopping by, check us out on over promise. We'll convince you.
Host 3
And Saturday the 21st of June. So Friday and Saturday, big events, big parties and we want you to be there. Everyone's invited. Can't wait. I can't wait either. So we'll see you then. And we'll see you on Over Promised in about five minutes. Our bonus podcast that streams video and.
Host 2
Audio so you could live chat and all again. FOX Sports Radio's YouTube page. There's 92 previous episodes. 93 debuts in six minutes. And join us manana early in the morning in for Dan Patrick. Perfect.
Host 3
Arriva dare you, baby.
Host 2
See you in the over promised land.
Host 5
In 2020, a group of young women found themselves in an AI fueled nightmare.
Host 2
Someone was posting photos.
Host 3
It was just me naked.
Host 2
Well, not me, but me with someone else's body parts.
Host 5
This is Levittown, a new podcast from iHeart podcasts Bloomberg and Kaleidoscope about the rise of deepfake pornography and the battle to stop it. Listen to Levittown on Bloomberg's Big Take podcast. Find it on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Dan Flores
Why is a soap opera western like Yellowstone so wildly successful? The American west with Dan Flores is the latest show from the Meat Eater Podcast Network. So join me starting Tuesday, May 6, where we'll delve into stories of the west and come to understand how it helps inform the ways in which we experience the region today.
Host 3
Listen to the American west with Dan Flores on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Michael Kasson
I'm Michael Casson, founder and CEO of 3C Ventures and your guide on Good Company, the podcast where I sit down with the boldest innovators shaping what's next. In this episode, I'm joined by Angeli Su, CEO of Tubi. We dive into the competitive world of streaming.
Host 5
What others dismiss as niche, we embrace as core. There's so many stories out there, and if you can find a way to curate and help the right person discover the right content, the term that we always hear from our audience is that they feel seen.
Michael Kasson
Listen to Good company on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Host 4
I'm Clayton English.
Host 2
I'm Greg Lott.
Host 4
And this is season two of the War on Drugs podcast.
Host 3
Last year, a lot of the problems of the drug war. This year, a lot of the biggest.
Host 2
Names in music and sports.
Host 4
This is kind of star studded a little bit, man.
Host 3
We met them at their homes, we met them at the recording studios. Stories matter and it brings a face to it.
Host 4
It makes it real.
Host 3
It really does. It makes it real.
Host 4
Listen to new episodes of the War on Drugs Podcast, Season 2 on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Host 1
I know a lot of cops, they get asked all the time, have you ever had to shoot your gun? Sometimes the answer is yes. But there's a company dedicated to a future where the answer will always be no. This is Absolute Season one, Taser Incorporated.
Host 3
I get right back there and it's bad.
Host 1
Listen to Absolute Season 1, Taser Incorporated on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. You're listening to an iHeart podcast.
Podcast Summary: The Herd with Colin Cowherd
Episode: The Best Of Covino & Rich
Release Date: May 22, 2025
The Herd with Colin Cowherd brings together hosts Covino and Rich for a dynamic and engaging episode titled "The Best Of Covino & Rich." This episode delves deep into recent sports events, memorable game moments, and blends in nostalgic discussions about video games and pop culture.
The heart of the episode revolves around the intense playoff game between the New York Knicks and the Indiana Pacers. Covino and Rich dissect the game's pivotal moments, focusing on a controversial shot that swung the momentum.
Covino [03:27]: "At that moment when they were up about 18, I went outside to start trimming my rose bushes... do the dad thing."
The hosts vividly recount how the Pacers surged from an 18-point deficit, culminating in a game-tying shot that led to overtime. They highlight the strategic plays and the critical performances of key players, emphasizing the game's unpredictability.
A significant portion of the discussion centers on what the hosts term the "doink" shot—a metaphorical reference to unexpected game-clinching moves. They debate whether these moments are mere reactions to in-the-moment excitement or emblematic of deeper strategic prowess.
Rich [06:19]: "Because Kawhi had the triple doink."
Covino and Rich compare recent game moments to iconic sports events and even scenes from popular movies like Teen Wolf. They explore how these "doink" moments become etched in fans' memories, drawing parallels between real-life games and cinematic representations.
Shifting gears, Covino and Rich indulge in a nostalgic trip down memory lane, reminiscing about classic arcade games and their childhood favorites. This segment is rich with personal anecdotes and shared memories, fostering a sense of camaraderie and shared history.
Covino [36:57]: "My first gaming console was late 80s... NBA Jam was next level in my mind."
The hosts discuss a variety of classic games such as Pac-Man, NBA Jam, Double Dribble, and Mortal Kombat, sharing their first experiences and the impact these games had on their upbringing. They invite listeners to reflect on their own gaming histories, creating an interactive and relatable atmosphere.
Interactive segments with callers add depth to the episode, allowing listeners to share their own experiences and opinions. Covino and Rich skillfully weave these interactions into the broader narrative, enhancing the episode's engagement factor.
Caller Danny G [24:56]: "I think without being a prisoner of the moment, I still think this one."
Listeners contribute thoughts on game moments, favorite video games, and even share humorous anecdotes, making the discussion lively and multifaceted.
Towards the latter part of the episode, Covino and Rich announce exciting upcoming events, including live shows and pool parties, inviting listeners to participate and engage further with the community.
Covino [40:50]: "So here's how it rolls... Friday, doing the show live. Pool party, stadium swimming..."
They provide details about event dates, locations, and activities, creating anticipation and encouraging audience participation.
Wrapping up, the hosts reflect on the day's discussions, tying together the excitement of the Knicks vs. Pacers game with the joy of reliving cherished memories from their youth. They emphasize the blend of sports passion and cultural nostalgia that defines their dynamic.
Covino [62:10]: "Who's that fourth? That's a good one."
The episode concludes with a teaser for the next broadcast, ensuring listeners stay tuned for more engaging content.
"The Best Of Covino & Rich" is a testament to the vibrant interplay between sports commentary and cultural nostalgia. Covino and Rich skillfully navigate through exhilarating game analyses and heartfelt reminisces, delivering an episode that's both informative and deeply relatable for listeners.
For those who missed the episode, "The Best Of Covino & Rich" offers an engaging blend of sports insights, nostalgic reflections, and community interaction, making it a must-listen for avid sports fans and pop culture enthusiasts alike.