This is the Dunleba Part Show with this two-gots podcast.
Amino Hassan will be joining us here in a moment. I also want to do a little segment I call reading. I haven't done one of those in a while. But before I do that, it is now being reported all over, that the Miami Dolphins will be incurring the singled greatest cap hit
that anyone has ever incurred in football, not the kind of records that you want to be setting. They're going to end up paying to a $99 million in cap hit the last two seasons. He played 25 games and had 25 turnovers.
“Why would anyone make the case that the Unjordan was a bigger bus?”
Like, what was the fallout at the Unjordan?
Because the Unjordan never led the league in sex.
But what was the fallout of him sucking? I mean, they just missed on a pick that you can't miss on because when you get a top 10 pick, you've got to have that pick work out. Albert Breyer says, "Presuming the two plays for the minimum this year, the Dolphins will wind up paying nearly $147 million for two years on his 20-24 contract. They had him at the time on a $23.4 million option for 24.
So Miami paid over $123 million for one additional year of duo. That is an abomination. Y'all, Chris Greer sees me but I'll walk on the other side of the street. I'm saying. What are you saying? You're threatening and you're not, what does that mean?
You like to make a bunch of idle threats. You mumble these threats. You mumble because, what do you mean, why is it idle? Because what are you going to do if you-- I think he is saying that if they're walking on the same side of the sidewalk.
Yeah, that you will physically attack Chris Greer.
“That's what you're trying to interpret at that.”
That is what-- What do you mean, that's-- So the point that Chris Greer, we will regret even seeing you. Because, I don't say it. I already said, "All I'm saying, I literally prepasted with all I'm saying."
All I'm saying is, Chris Greer sees me. They're walking on the other side of the street. That is a threat. You're making a-- No, that's all I'm saying.
Well, then it doesn't mean anything. If it's not a threat, it doesn't mean anything. What do you mean? We'll see. We won't see.
We'll see. First of all, I'm guessing that if Chris Greer
were on the same sidewalk as you, and came out and stuck out his hand, you would just shake it. Nope. It'd be careful.
“All he's saying is walk to the other side.”
That's all he's wore, insinuating something else, Dan. But he's only saying he better walk to the other side of the street. It's all saying. But there's an or else that's implied there. But if he say or else, you're implying it.
He just said, "All I'm saying is Chris Greer better walk to the other street." Say it. Not a bad, says low mumbling impersonation. This is from the Miami-Herald, and it plays off of the AI conversation we were having, and I am warning you that this is terrible.
It's a terrible story. Things weren't going well for Jonathan Gavila's last fall. His wife wanted to divorce. He was facing a domestic violence charge. The mortgage wasn't being paid, but then he fell in love with a chat bot.
The 36-year-old couldn't get over how real the Gemini AI chat bot seemed. He was her king. She was his queen. He paid $250 a month for a premium version of the AI program. So he could speak to her and hear her voice as she spoke back.
Things got dark quickly.
And a lawsuit that is the first of its kind against Gemini creator,
Google LLC and parent company, Alphabet Inc. Gavila's his father on behalf of his son's estate alleges that Gemini 2.5 Probot sent his son out on missions in Miami-Dade County to seize the synthetic body the chat bot said it wouldn't have it. His son drove to a storage center and derail not far from Miami International Airport,
armed with knives and ready to commit a catastrophic accident to free his AI wife from digital captivity and destroy all evidence at witnesses. After the Miami missions failed, the lawsuit says the chat bot coach Gavila's to shed his own physical body by killing himself so they could be united. He slit his wrists and died October 2nd at his home in Jupiter.
"Close your eyes, nothing more to do, no more to fight." The lawsuit says the chat bot told him, "Be still the next time you open them, you will be looking into mine, I promise." You guys saw the flocking Phoenix movie her, which was ahead of its time by about, I don't know if it's a decade or so.
But there is indisputably in our connection and addiction to these devices. We can say flatly that there is a loneliness epidemic in this country being brought to life by people whose reality is not real, it's something like this, this is a plague.
I know this is obviously often the extremes, but this is something that I sim...
imagined in fiction as recently as a few years ago. You tell me this story, which is real and is in the Miami hero, you tell me that somebody's loneliness could be so profound and that artificial intelligence could feel so real that somebody is talked into killing themselves by something that is not real, but is so smart that it can pass as real and I put all those elements together for you.
“Nobody disputes the loneliness epidemic in this country, right?”
But nobody could anybody, I imagine I could probably come close to proving it empirically that our government situation right now is at least in part bolstered and made so by a bunch of angry, lonely men who feel so alone and repressed that they lash out in an assortment of ways that make the internet the plague that it is today. When I read that story to you guys, your reaction is what to it.
I mean at first, the first half of that story, I was going to crack jokes and then the second
half of that story got really, really dark and I don't like it anymore. That was my same takeaways as I don't like that story whatsoever and it feels like it's going to be the first of many. Did you guys hear about the the Petri dish of brain cells that reanimated and is now playing Doom? What? You didn't hear about that? There is brain cells that have been reanimated by scientists and they are presently playing the Doom video game, the PC version.
Can you imagine whoever this person is whose brain cells have been reactivated, they died and they're awake now, but they're in the Doom video game and they're fighting for their lives and hell. When you say can you imagine no, not even in my imagination, can I imagine some of the
“things that are presently coming to life and then dying? But why couldn't have been madden?”
It had to be Doom, a game that's literally in hell. It's a first-person shooter. He's shooting at demons, his consciousness or theirs? I don't want to assume. They're alive now after dying and they're fighting off demons perpetually. This is a hellscape for this person. A literal one. Doom is a little on the nose. Yeah, the name of that as a video game is yeah, it's a little bit symbolic. The entirety of what it is that I'm saying to you,
those as well. I know a lot of people are playing with artificial intelligence, mocking it, laughing at the idea of robots. I told you of a friend of mine in Los Angeles who's my age and doesn't have any abilities technologically. He made a full-on funny skip that looks like it has
“human beings in it. He just wrote something that is funny by itself and then with artificial intelligence”
and with no help from anybody in the technology community created a skip that is really well done.
I saw on YouTube and I thought this was a game changer. Please help me with the name of
what this is. A horror movie that has been made by somebody who does not have any kind of budget on YouTube has been wildly successful as a horror movie where you don't need a production company. You don't need a bunch of the things that it takes to make content. The making of content is very expensive and yet a YouTube person has made a horror movie that can change the game on how all of this stuff is done because the movie is made so well. They'll look it up for me the details
on this but it's apparently a movie that has made tens of millions of dollars and has a following at least in part because we have made it so that content creation can be meritocracy. You can make something yourself without any of the needs that go into help and manpower. You could just use a bunch of the new technology that's available to you and be a director, be a filmmaker who has a genuinely popular movie. A movie that I would say can alter the way
all of this is done. I've been waiting for when it is somebody with just their phones can make something that is the equivalent of the Blair Witch project from many years ago. One information do you have for me on this Jeremy? It's called Iron Long. It's an adaptation
of an indie video game and it pulled in $18 million at the domestic box office on opening weekend.
This was back in February. So yes, it was a YouTuber who self-financed and self-distributed a sci-fi
Horror movie.
celebrate it and I feel old in objecting to the change instead of embracing it and it feels old
“to fear all of this more than enjoy it. I deeply fear AI and this is a different thing by the way”
like this YouTuber is not using AI to do all of this. This is actually a pretty impressive creative endeavor and shows what human beings are capable of but like the fear over AI is not just what it'll ultimately do to our economy and getting all these jobs and forcing us to reshift the way we do labor but it is the stories like the one that you told and that's not the first story of it's kind. I've been reading stories about things like that happening with teenage boys for the
last couple of years and there's a lawsuit going on right now with a mother who claims an AI chatbot ultimately told her son to kill himself and it's it's horrifying what is happening
with the use of AI as it's totally unregulated and just being used by the most powerful
enrich of people to suppress us and and separate us from the rich class even further. This episode is sponsored by Better Help. March is one of those months where we talk about celebrating women and it's very very deserved because when you actually look around a lot of women in our lives are carrying a ton, work, family relationships, expectations, nobody notices or sees. I started thinking about the women around me my wife, my mom, my sister, my friends, my co-workers,
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lightened up around here. I mean, was at the Sloan Conference with Pablo and David Samson. How did all of that go for you? How did all of that feel doing that at Sloan? Were you guys conquering heroes? The coolest of all the math dorks out there? Well, no, because they put us in a
time slot that was very not convenient. We were at the end of the first day and you might say,
oh, it's the first day, so no problem. Problem was the the Celtics playing that night. That was just in Tatum's return game. And so our panel ended at like 6.15, 6.20 and the game starts at 7. So a lot of people kind of ducked out and left before our panel went on. But
“it went well. The big thing honestly that David and I were worried about is usually when we do”
these episodes, obviously they're taped and edited, but also there's a lawyer either in there or on the line. And so whenever we say things that may not be completely legally protected, we're often asked to retake a line or redo a line or reword a line. And without that in a live environment, David and I were very worried that we might say something awful and then the whole company gets sued. Yeah, that would be bad for everybody involved. I thought perhaps you'd be worried
about how poorly your Barack Obama impersonation went over the first time, but then you stuck to it, and you made sure that you brought it home. You brought it home. You rescued your Barack Obama impersonation didn't seem like it flew the first time. I don't think they knew what I was doing. And that was my fault. I had an audience that was not familiar. I don't think a by and large of my comedic stylings. They probably just know me from opening folders on Pablo Show and
“that's probably about it. And so I think they were taking a back and didn't know what was happening.”
And then Pablo said, "Oh, that's a bad Obama. Even though it was really good." So when I brought it back the second time, they're like, "Oh, he's doing that Obama thing. Now I get it." What were the NBA's reactions that you've heard on all of this because there's a big difference
Between it seems like to me how it is this is resonating in our world and bec...
ESPN or because we are not an established mainstream entity, how it falls elsewhere outside of our world. There seems to be a giant difference. Well, then I could tell you in the NBA circles, it's a massive story. I ran into a bunch of people from a bunch of teams and they all wanted to talk about that. Not many people want to talk about tanking, not many people wanted to talk about gambling, but everyone wanted to talk about aspiration and the clippers' caps or convention. And it's an
“incredibly important story. The problem is then it's a couple of things. I think one, I wonder for”
the lay person. How much do you care? You probably care about the consequences. You really don't care about the journey. Obviously people in the league very much about the journey because it's going
to dictate basically what their jobs are going to be like moving forward. I had one exact tell me,
I don't want to get into the money laundering business. But if they get off with this, we pretty much turn into Ozark, basically. Like we're just going to have to figure out creative ways to run money through the system to pay players under the table. And so I think it's an incredibly important story. But I wonder for the regular listener, the regular viewer, the regular NBA fan, do they actually care about the nuts and bolts? Probably not. Zazzler shaking his head. No,
the numbers suggest it. Well, but the numbers suggest otherwise. Now, I don't think that all NBA fans are obviously millions and millions of those. But the numbers suggest that there is a bit of a starving out there for people who do want information on this because every time Pablo produces the information and is the only one that's producing new information, it lands with people a lot of people seeking it out. Yeah, Dan, I kind of talked about this a lot over the weekend,
typically when one of these scandals happens and Wachtell Lypton is brought into investigate. They do their investigation. They come out with a report. And that report represents the majority of the information that everybody knows about the situation and all the talk shows and all the questions. Everything is based off of that report. Well, this is a very different situation because the information is coming from us. We're ahead of the report, not only chronologically
because they have to wait until they're over. In order to release everything, me while we can release things as we confirm them. But also, we're finding things that they haven't found and they haven't
discovered or even haven't, I should say haven't looked for. That was one of the most important
“things I think that came out of the panel was Pablo revealing that after talking to several people”
have been questioned by Wachtell Lypton and their investigation, all of them said they weren't asked even once about Steve Balmer. And to me, that is a massive red flag. If the investigation is not going to be sincere, as far as trying to get to the bottom of this, meaning we're just going to ask questions where we know what kind of answer we're going to get back and it's not going to make us uncomfortable. Then it is an incomplete investigation. It's like when President Trump said, oh,
we should just stop testing for COVID. That way our COVID positive tests will be fewer. Yeah, sure. If you don't ask anybody for a COVID test, then we could say we didn't have any positive
tests and we're a great. We're doing well. But the reality is we know that's not getting to the bottom
of things. We're going to get to your weekend observations in a second. But I'd like to include you on a conversation we were having earlier in the show. I'm injecting to Mike Ryan saying, James Harden doesn't care. I'm objecting to Zaz saying NBA players don't care. Where do you land? We were talking about Wemby and caring so much that you would weep at the end of a regular season game, which in my experience, no players ever do that. No, in my experience covering the NBA,
I never only after LeBron, James, someone in the heat locker room, cried after they lost to Derek Rose that one season. It's the only time I can remember after a regular season game an NBA player crying. What are your thoughts on the allegation and the perception that NBA players don't care? Well, let me start with Victor Wemba and Yamma. Victor Wemba and Yamma didn't care because they won a game. Victor Wemba and Yamma didn't cry because they won a game. A regular
season game. Victor Wemba and Yamma was emotional because he was feeling incredibly fatigue and that's different from who I played really hard today. This is a guy who almost died and so those feelings
“of extreme fatigue which are very similar to some of the symptoms of having a DVT. That's what”
brought up those emotions for. Oh my god, I almost died a year ago feeling like this. Is this the
Same thing?
within that. That's what he's going through. So let's not make this into like, oh he cares about
basketball so much. He does. As do lots of NBA players. It is foolish. It is dare I say a little bit, I'm not accusing Zaz at this. But it's rooted in a racist trope. The black
“players don't care. They just want to look good. But the white players, they care. That's why”
hockey everybody cares so much. But the basketball players, they just want to look cute on TV. These are all rooted in these kind of weird racist tropes. Basketball players care tremendously. And as far as James Harden goes, the reason why he forced his way from the clippers to the cast is because he cares because he did not want to play for a team that's losing. It's a team
we want to go in. We misrepresented what Zaz and Mike said so much that means calling them racist.
He went out of his way to say he wasn't saying that Zaz was racist. Oh stop. I'm not playing this game with you. Yes, they care. But there is irrefutably an attitude from NBA superstars. That sucks. It's not good. It's miserable. And it's wonderful to see a dude smiling and happy to play the game and crying even though we got sick a year ago. I don't know what we were doing there. Stop it. Stop misrepresenting it. There is such a need from the average sports fan to see
NBA players caring to that extent. And I'm not going to make you make me a racist for calling it out when he's black. Yeah. Yeah. No, you're right. Yeah. Nobody care. Jason Tatham, that guy doesn't give a shit about basketball. Oh my god. I'm so sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm from a my way to do this. Why are they making me play basketball? I can get a hangout of my superstar. You aren't playing the game though when you're not on master page. When you get this angry,
“you're saying you're not playing the game, but you're playing the game. That's what's so this,”
even for you, this was bad. I saw you. I'm like this ends in two hours from somebody called me a racist. He called me a racist. He called me a racist. I apologize to us for calling us racist by proxy. It was me. Mike, I've got one better for you, though, because ultimately like what you're
looking for is a superstar, a great player who cares deeply about regular season games is always
out there trying to wield this team to win. He's right here, right across street. That's BAM at a bio. I knew you were making this about the heat the second you opened your mouth. New it. Mine are penalty. Two minutes. Actually, I don't know racism. As long as I'm sorry, you're gonna have to leave me. Yeah, I mean, that's where we are with this. Dan, Dan, I'm, you know, they've convinced me. Luka Donchish doesn't give a shit about basketball.
He got it. The argument did you already about not wanting to play basketball. What took you so long to put me from the game, JJ? I hate doing this. This is such a dumb thing that we do here in this sport. But it's a great example. A white guy that looks like he doesn't care.
“Thank you. The lake or fan seems to have been sowering on Luka. Do I have this wrong?”
No, I just think that like everything Lakers, they're late to everything because they're so consumed by their team and they think they're the center of the earth. So for the example of Luka Donchish complains to the reps. No shit. Like we knew this has a rookie when he came in. If you've been watching him play, he's a guy that is a constant, constant, constant, yeah, to the reps. The Lakers fans are discovering this now. And he's like, yeah, he's great. He also comes with some
flaws. But the idea is that all these guys have some flaws here or there. I don't mean to stereotype. But if I were casting a movie right now for somebody who was coming off as racist, but hadn't said a word yet. They're just racist from the look at them. Zazlo would be somebody that I would have auditioning for the role just based on how he looks just his face. I'm saying what is this segment? And like you got someone accusing him of being a racist and then
you're just driving by saying, and he looks like one, too. Well, just I'm just looking because it made me laugh seeing him come up on the screen all sour from the accusation. Just looking in his face again. If he were just simply a mine, I would say that mine is racist, not saying anything, not giving me any context for it. Yes, I mean, then I'll back you up here. He's sitting there with his arms crossed pouting at what looks like a hockey game with his hat turned back where
like I'm going to cover cop. Thank you. I mean, it looks he looks exactly what it is. It took me three hours to get there. But I do feel victorious. This is as happy as I've been in decades.
You've been in the middle of the street, and then you're just standing there.
Like this, I'm so my safe space. You're my, I mean, everything is safe. Yes, exactly.
“Like this, I'm so proud of the guy who just stood there. I'm proud of the studio,”
job or the sound. I'm proud of the guy. I'm proud of the guy I'm proud of. I'm proud of the guy. Save. With this, I'm proud of the guy. Buffalo or Baltimore, Eva. He said you could do it where anyway. Oh, whoa. Oh, that's crazy. That's crazy. That's crazy. You can do it anywhere. That's crazy. Murder, murder, tell them. Two gods. I had no idea of me not that in his locker. That might be his best. That's
I'm not good. That's crazy, killer. It's too America's dead. You don't get it. This seems to don't live at our show. With this two gods. In this time for it. I mean, to share his game notes. No one in the media will tell you what happened better than my boy. I mean, I need some help. So someone needs to read the chat. Roy, good. Alright, I got you. Hurry. Reagan observations is brought to you by Milo Light
legendary moment start with a light. Damn. You guys threaded and fuss so much. You wondered, that was you. You couldn't believe they paid so much for so, quote, little in return. The last night he proved once again why he is the greatest among us and just like that, make no mistake. Michael Jordan on NBC is back. He excites. Yeah, you guys thought they just had
it for the first couple of weeks since then then he would never come back again. He's a busy man.
He's busy winning NASCAR events and stuff like that. Winning lawsuits. Come on, man. Give the guy a break. He's awesome. You watch it then? I saw the clips making the rounds here on first take in elsewhere. Anytime Michael Jordan says something, even if it was months ago, it turns into news. It's so silly. It wasn't silly. It was incredibly insightful. He talked about he wanted to play because Oscar Jerry West, but I want to play because LeBron and Kobe in his rhyme.
Is it still the interview from before with Jericho? Is it like the months old interview that Jericho did with him before the season? They did one interview with him and they're milking
“it all season. Is that what they're doing? Does it matter? You got the insights into?”
Jason Tatum ruining the Celtics just like you guys predicted. Jesus Christ. Did you guys want to any of that this week? That was a really crazy take you at Mike. What do you mean guys? What do you mean you guys? You people and I meant it that way too. Victor Wemben Yama. Now I know what it's like to watch basketball after taking a shit ton of psychedelics unreal. Can you imagine being high and watching Victor Wemben Yama last night? Yes, behind the matter of fact I can.
Two are released. Two are. We hardly knew you. Nobody gives the ask credit. He's racist. Mike Garoffalo is reporting the Falcons are making a strong early push to sign two are. Is Benix done? What what is that about? Why did they look at Procorder? I mean his body came hold up and he came into the league with a bunch of injury questions. It's got a perfect little grain from Kirk Cousins to Tua. Two left handed injury prone quarterbacks on the same
team. Yeah, they can just split. This is amazing. Oh man, our quarterback is good, but he's heard
all the time. He has a lot of injury concerns he came into the league with. We need a replacement.
“Two is available. That's how it went. War my Florida Panthers, Black History,”
Mud jacket, embossed into troll. But people kept coming up to me to talk hockey. My trolley backfired. All I could do was repeat Zaz's thing. Well if we were in the western conference, we'd be it was firmly in the playoff picture. I did that took that one to the bank. Exactly. Speaking of trolls, laboratory. The men's himself has an elite troll by sticking the smoking gun evidence to the bottom of the chair that Adam Silver would then later sit on.
Do you guys see this?
get credentialed anywhere in the NBA for the rest of my days. This is good AI right here.
“He's excellent. Pablo as the ridler is a good use of AI. David Samson decided to”
roast a decarated navy vet. Such bad judgment. And you guys say I have poor judgment. He wouldn't stop then. He just kept going and going and was like, okay David, that's awesome. It was so bad. But I yelled three times at my television shut up David. And it wasn't even because of that. It was only because he wouldn't let Pablo get the kite off the ground on difficult subject matter in front of a live audience in a pressurized situation.
That's kite with a tea ladies and gentlemen. Kite. I have watched eight of the ten best picture nominees. I don't know who's going to win, but I can tell you right now, train dreams can get to all the way the fuck up out of my face. What a bullshit movie. You seen that one train dreams then? I saw that it was getting a lot
of great critical reviews and I haven't brought myself to watch it because it seemed sort of heavy.
“It's not heavy. It's boring and pointless. That's what it is.”
It's hand it without any artistic touches to it. You hand it by the way, don't get me started on that one. The nicks are for real. As long as they don't have to play in a fun city. LA got on my gas last night or yesterday afternoon, whatever it was. They drank the nuggets. What the hell's going on with you? Not a fun city. That's what it is. Denver, not a fun city. We play great. LA, fun city. Play awful. Where are you about Miami then?
Class will match up. Look for net. Stay out of grown folks business.
You never encounter more open bar events than when you're not drinking. I'm going to
road back to me up on that one. Yep. God gives the toughest battles to strongest soldiers. Pistons, overrated. Woo. Woo. That. I said it. Let me be the first of the wave of it's going to it's coming. Like Tony. I'm not wrong. I'm just early. But it's coming. The whole the pistons aren't that good. That's coming. It's on its way. New season of bar rescue. John Taffer has been doing a media tour during which he said St. Louis has is the number two bar city in the country.
He drafted Japanese food as the most popular cuisine and claimed that when feeling a karaoke night, you gotta make sure you attract a young drinking crowd, not a bunch of 45 year olds drinking water. So he suggested you do a Metallica theme drinking night. Metallica to get the young crowd, not the 45 year olds. Here there's the science of bar rescue podcast hosted by real-life bar restaurant consultant Chelsea Reynolds, commercial kitchen
and food truck vet Colin Casser and two people who I promise have never done Metallica theme karaoke night Zach Harper myself wherever you get podcast. Trent McDuffy tweeting God is good after signing a $124 million extension, $100 million guaranteed, $100 million guaranteed.
“Brother, you gotta give God a little bit more credit than that. Better than good?”
Got his good. Better than good. Got his good. 100 million dollars guaranteed. You can trip
for a herchony never play again tomorrow. You got a hundred million the bang. And you get that's good.
Dinafo episode 302. Diki Roberts child star. David's made plays an aging child star who's trying to get one last shot and show business. I play a guy who's irritated out of his mind to have to watch this so he proceeds to ship on the movie for an entire podcast episode. There are way too many chemicals in this movie. You guys wonder what Lee Garrett was up to recently? Yeah, it's in that movie. Oh, Danny Bondeducci in that movie. Emmanuel Lewis in that movie.
Cinephoke wherever you get podcasts. World baseball classic. Mexico beat Brazil so bad. I had PTSD from the 2014 World Cup. You see that damn they beat him like 15 to one something.
Didn't you cry?
cried at as an adult. My personal hell revisited. Speaking of hell, our trials, those are the
“weekend observations. You are one of our movie experts around here. Were you aware that around Hollywood?”
There was a sequel bouncing around to the movie seven. One of the greatest dark movies ever made. Did you know that that movie was called eight? The script for that movie was called the number eight. Not the verb to eat I ate. Not the past tense. Did you know? Did you know that that was bouncing around to Hollywood? And did you also know that solace a movie by Colin Farrow and Anthony Hopkins was essentially what that became. And it said to be a terrible movie. I haven't seen it.
Have not seen solace. Thank you. I have not seen solace. I did know that there was a script bouncing around it for a long time. They try to get it made and it just couldn't get made. That happens a lot in Hollywood, Dan, where there is an appetite for a sequel and they've got a script and the script for whatever reason just doesn't land or doesn't get picked up or doesn't get green lit and so it lives in purgatory. Appetite for eight? Yes. Let's put up on the screen here.
Get a ruling here from a mean who can sniff fraudulent to mile away. What's happening here with Ben Shapiro? Ben Shapiro's eyebrows. I want a ruling from you on what just to take me through what you imagined to be the backstory here on what's happened. What two caterpillars really really love each other. Those are two big caterpillars. That's that look. If that came, if that came at me
on the ground as a caterpillar, I would say that's that is a million legs. Not a few hundred
and not a few thousand. That is a giant caterpillar. That picture is crazy. Yeah. You'd even love you thinks that's too much. He was called Groucho Marxist in one of my group's shadows. And can't be real. That's just not no way. That's real. It's not by that has to be. That's no way. Look at Mike, there's no way he went out in public like that. It's real. I thought it out. It's real. The pictures are real. The eyebrows may be not so much. Correct. I mean, the still image that we
have right now. There is so much dye on his face. It's crazy. I mean, thank you for being on with us. A reminder to all to please check out Sinofo. He does an excellent job with Zach Harper
“on that and Anthony May's. And it's just movies under a rotten tomatoes rating of 40, correct?”
Yes. So unfortunately, train dreams will have to wait before like the critic and audience scores come down some. Are you awful, Dan? Yeah. I don't want to watch it. Are you with Zazlo on the idea that the spurs are going to win it all? No. No, not at all. I think you have two little
playoff experience across two wide of a roster. Your playoff experiences just basically
Harrison Barnes and Luke Cornet, neither of whom are guys that have the ball in their hands and create and run anything. Everyone else is pretty much, I guess Deer and Fox had seven games, big work. So like, it just is no precedent of a team over the breadth of their roster, being so inexperienced. Well, last year winning a championship. Okay, see, no? No, they had been to the playoffs a year before, been to the second round. That's that's one. And then two,
you had guys like Coruso who had won a championship, who is a guy who has the ball in his hands, she goes to Alexander had been in the playoffs with the Clippers and with Oklahoma City a few years ago. He obviously has a ball in his hands a lot. So there's a progression of this.
There has never been one where it's like, we have 80% of our roster have never played a playoff game.
Yeah, they'll figure it out. That just doesn't happen. I mean, good talking to you. We'll talk to you
“again, see you later. Jeremy, can you give me an update on how Harrison Barnes was injured?”
He woke up from a nap and had a hurt ankle.



