Share & Cool & Tell with David Dennis Jr. and Mina Kimes
Further content:
• Toward a Unified Theory of Uncool (Ock Sportello)
https://www.neverhungover.club/p/toward-a-unified-theory-of-uncool
• Subscribe to the Mina Kimes YouTube Channel
https://www.youtube.com/@minakimes
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Listen and follow along
Transcript
I'm Pablo Torre, and this episode of Pablo Torre Finds Out is brought to you by Remy Martin 1738, Accord Royale.
Exceptionally smooth cognac for all your game day festivities.
Please drink responsibly because today we're going to find out what this sound is.
Are any of us cool?
Do you think if people did the exercise we're about to do, anybody they would say any
of us are actually cool?
Right after this ad.
We're listening
to DraftKings Network.
If you're looking to add something special to your next celebration, try Remy Martin 1738 Accord Royale.
This smooth, flavorful cognac is crafted from the finest grapes and aged to perfection, giving you rich notes of oak and caramel.
with every sip.
Whether you're celebrating a big win or simply enjoying some cocktails with family and friends, Remy Martin 1738 is the perfect spirit to elevate any occasion.
So go ahead, treat yourself to a little luxury, and try Remy Martin 1738 Accord Royale.
Learn more at remymartin.com.
Remy Martin Cognac, Veeen Champain, a 14 alcoholic volume, 400 by Remy Control, USA, Incorporated, New York, New York, 1738, Centaur Design.
Please drink responsibly.
This is a
nice around the Horn off-ramp that I get to hang out with you guys.
I'm finding myself
missing companions.
Wednesdays is usually when I do Around the Horn.
I was thinking about that, actually.
As someone who didn't attend the Around the Horn conference, there have been a lot of tributes, I should say, to a show that we owe a lot to.
I don't think I went to an Around the Horn conference call in a decade.
So as long as we can skip that part, I am down to refashion what we missed into this.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I don't know when I stopped attending the conference call, but I definitely,
Pablo was like the bad example to me.
I was like, why am I doing this?
Pablo's not doing it.
I'm also on West Coast Time.
This is, by the way, this is how David realizes, oh, shit, I could have not done the conference call.
The whole time.
Oh, I knew the whole time, but, you know, hey, I was like, you know, being the good steward.
I'm just the, look, as we will get get into, I'm just the cool guy.
I'm Bart Simpson, you know, just skateboarding, spray painting stuff.
Are any of us cool?
Do you think if people did the exercise we're about to do, anybody, they would say any
of us are actually cool?
Well, we did last gather to do an entire episode about the X-Men animated series reboost.
This is cool.
So I think it's cool.
Dead get cooler than that, guys.
I think that there are some people out there who think that the three of us are cool.
I think there are more people who would laugh at those people.
Have you ever been cool?
Was there ever a point in your life where you felt like you were cool?
Or when did you peak in coolness?
Probably like
third grade.
Third grade.
Yeah.
Wow.
Mina, what do you, you picking college?
It's definitely college for me.
100%.
But a lot of that is because how cool you are is a product of your surroundings.
Right.
And so going to college for me, my cool factor on a relative basis skyrocketed from high school to Yale.
David's nodding like he had a similar experience.
Absolutely.
David's going to.
I went to school with a bunch of dorky white kids at the small liberal school.
I was the coolest.
Yeah.
I went like the pendulum swang so drastically from high school to college.
I didn't know know what to do with myself.
This is also where I need to remind people, Mina, that David Dennis Jr.
is a former beer pong partner of his classmate at Davidson, Steph Curry.
So he is both observer.
He wasn't cool when I was there either.
So that wasn't cool until like the last two weeks of my time at Davidson.
But
David Dennis Jr.
was the original Splash Brother.
This is
an important fact.
This is real.
This is not an exaggeration.
Also, I am now banning officially Nick Wright.
I just want to say, f you, Nick Wright.
You're off the show.
We can get into that a separate time.
Based on cool, you're banning him because he's not cool.
Well, Mina, also because he did this to you today.
Do you have any other media beefs going on right now at present?
For the eighth straight year,
First Things First
was not nominated for best studio show weekly at the sports Emmys.
When I saw the list of nominations, I don't remember all of them, but one of them was NFL Live hosted by one of my media rivals, Mina Kimes.
And when I saw they won, I was very happy because I think that they do a really good job and I think Mina's excellent.
Obviously, I don't think she's as good as me at anything, but I do think she is excellent and I was happy she won.
Is this why he's trying to grow his hair like Mina's or is that
a difference?
Nick Wright has been trying to do this whole rivalry thing with me now for four or five years.
And honestly, it's like,
I don't know.
What's a good comp?
It's giving a Kobe stopper, Ruben Patterson, an era of Kobe stopper.
Oh, wow.
That's what I'm getting from it.
I saw a tweet when Brock Purdy signed his contract where they were like, Brock Purdy joins like a right, like rivals Josh Allen.
Maybe that's
Brock Purdy's great.
Mick's great.
But like, come on, let's get real here.
Yeah.
Both Mr.
Irrelevant, I dare say.
His show is really good.
All right, fine.
Let's start the actual show.
So, the thing I wanted to start with, guys, is in fact a case study in Cool.
And it started on Substack, which is not the coolest place for things to start, but there's an anonymous author who goes by the handle of Ox Sportello, which is, I believe, a reference to Inherent Vice, already setting sort of like the highbrow kind of illusions
here.
We know we're harkening back.
What, David?
We asked David to read this.
David, your initial review of the piece was in brief?
I don't know like half the references that he made in the article.
So
I had to look up what is
what's the vape thing that everybody.
The internet.
Yeah, the Zen internet.
I know what that was.
I didn't read the cut article that was referenced in there.
It was like a subsection of the internet that I'm not familiar with at all.
You know,
white people have culture too, David.
Thank you, Mina.
That's sort of where I was.
It was a very much like this is cultures matter.
All cultures matter.
But the thing that got this going viral around the NBA internet, at the very least, was one statement in particular that I think is consensus.
And it was articulated thusly: quote, for as long as I can remember, the NBA has served as a cultural North Star.
These NBA playoffs portend a crisis of cool.
And he goes on to analyze Jalen Brunson and Tyrese Halliburton and Shea Gildris Alexander, categorizing them as uncool, which I would like us to discuss.
Anthony Edwards sort of sticks out as, quote, the exception proving the rule of cool, that actually he is somebody who is so alone in his coolness that the others who are variously,
I would say, try-hard meme lords who seem to be imitative of previous imitations, even.
There is a bunch of that.
And so I just want to start, Mina, by actually articulating
what do we mean by cool?
How do we even define this?
Because yes, it is one, I believe,
white blogger's opinion that the categories flow as such.
But I do think there's something he's getting at here that's worth talking about.
So cool is a perfect debate subject because no one can actually define it.
Cool is truly in the eye of the beholder.
However, when he says something like, Tyrese Halbert and Jalen Brunson are not cool, Anthony Edwards is cool, I imagine we all nodded as we read that because it immediately reads as correct.
So
starting from that point, it's not just about play.
I think we can all agree upon that.
There's a certain vibe, what the kids call aura.
I would argue this piece gets at something that is both true and does actually
help us arrive at a definition of cool.
When he talked about how a lot of these guys, and he mentioned Halliburton and of course Tatum, are
their sense of what is cool is just kind of memeing other things, right?
It's derivative.
I think cool is original.
I think part of the reason why
Anthony Edwards feels cool is because he does not seem to be emulating anyone either, you know, in his sense of self, the way he speaks, what he, in fact, he thinks he's better than everybody, which doesn't, that in itself, you don't have to be an super egotistical or whatever.
He was almost too cool for basketball.
I mean, he was a quarterback, right?
He played football.
He was like, football is actually the thing that I'm like great at for a while.
He was too cool for Barack Hussein Obama.
He looked at Obama and said, stand down, son, like he was a 12-year-old child.
Yo, Kay.
LeBron.
Come on, this man.
Are y'all talking to this young man?
Because he just keeps on.
right now.
He just said he's the truth and all that and the truth, the whole truth or nothing but the truth.
You asked him, you tell him the whole context of the situation, though.
You asked him what he think about this young man, and he said, I'm okay.
I said, I'm the truth.
He's the tricker.
That's what happened.
So funny.
So funny.
But I think that if I had to isolate one variable, it is authenticity and originality.
Would you guys agree with that?
Yes.
Yes.
I would add one wrinkle, David, which is also, and I resemble this at times, and I am trying to be self-aware about this at times, try-hardness.
Like somebody who really wants to be cool, effort, transparency of effort feels like another anti-cool
sort of aspect here.
Yeah, what would you add to that?
I think, yeah, I think that's important.
The try-hardness is also important, but also I think that like, I'm not sure that these dudes are any less cool than the people who came before them.
I think that we're just not sort of distilling, um,
like there's not a way to distill their personalities in the way that we had.
Like, immediately when I'm thinking about coolness in the NBA, I'm thinking of like slam covers.
And, like, we're sort of missing this packaging of how players are supposed to be kind of cooler than they may or may not have been, right?
Like, there are these, a lot of these dudes are like AAU guys who just played basketball for all, you know, for a lot of time, which is different than like some of the guys from the 90s who
also just went to school and like hung out with friends and like created their own culture and came from different regions and different regionality with different cultures.
And these guys just play basketball all the time.
And I think there's this belief that if we just see them on social media, we get to know the real them, which I didn't really get to know the real versions of a lot of these dudes.
What I saw was these cool packaged nike ads or reebok ads or slam covers and this way that cool was like disseminated to us like think about somebody like reggie miller who you got the choke and he was like this kind of like kind of annoying dude but like he had this quote unquote aura and then he gets like unfettered mic time for three hours on tv as a color commentator and everybody's like shut up reggie miller we hate you you know what i'm saying like that's you know reggie miller's great and all that stuff but like that's kind of what what it became and because like he had this like barrier and this packaging that created cool in a way that a lot of these athletes do not have right now.
We just get their social media personalities and they're mic'd up, and we like see Jalen Brown being like, we're not wizards, we're Harry Potter.
Y'all think I'll be playing with the energy.
They the magic, but they know who really got the magic over here.
Oh, I like that.
No Harry Potter.
You know, like, we get a lot of that, what we didn't get before.
There's also one thing, Mina, I think, which is that we are, look, the NBA as this like cultural barometer of cool as the piece sort of leads with.
Part of that is as these things become increasingly corporate, as these things are like, you know, lineages that are increasingly formalized, as David was alluding to, we also get further away from what might be the fundamental tenet of cool that we haven't mentioned yet, which is I think that you have to be kind of anti-authority.
You kind of have to be subversive.
So like to me, the coolest figure when it comes to the modern NBA that we have been sort of circling implicitly without naming him is Alan Iverson.
So that brings up the question.
So I have a question for both of you, for all of us to ask, which is sort of a central part of this piece.
Like what, when you guys think of coolest athletes that you've ever experienced, who comes to mind?
I love this question.
Iverson's definitely up there in basketball.
This, by football example, and I think this cuts to Pablo's theory, I think Marshawn Lynch is probably the cool.
He might be the coolest
human of his generation, but definitely the coolest football player.
Just everything about him, from style of play to the anti-authority aspect to the way he spoke and carried himself to like the lore around him.
I would contend that Ken Griffey Jr.
is on the Mount Rushmore of cool athletes in any sport of any generation
and was
you hit that apex because he
was actually one of the best of all time and
had
this glow about him where
you just saw him and you wanted to be him.
Granted, we were the target generation for that.
But there was just something about him, the way he played, the joy with which he played, the way he swung his bat, the way he wore his hat, the way he moved forward.
The way he played for the Seattle Mariners for Mina Times growing up.
Okay, I actually asked Cortez for a clip.
I want you to watch this and tell me that any athlete has ever looked cooler than Ken Griffey Jr.
looks in this clip.
Here's the pitch.
There's a try.
Hey, I'm sorry, but if you ever need to define aura, just play that 0.5 second clip.
Just the dolly shot pushing in on Ken Griffey Jr.
winking and breaking, shattering the fourth wall with a wink is, yeah.
No athlete has ever looked cooler than that right there.
This reminds me, this article and this whole idea reminds me kind of like when I was coming up up in the hip-hop blogs and I was reading like the New Yorker and there were like older dudes writing about like telling me what was cool and like what like Lil Wayne rhymed like Nigerian hair with whatever and like you should like him and it's like well, you know, and so I think what fundamentally as humans, you're going to always think is cool are people who are older than you who grew up like,
who you grew up admiring and who you grew up wanting to be like.
And I think for us as near 40 year olds, I don't think we can really determine what's cool.
Or like none of these athletes are going to be cool.
Like no 20, I don't think that any 24 year old is cool.
There's not going to be a 24 or 25 year old that I will ever think is cool ever again.
Like my dad is never, my dad is never like, Michael Jordan is cool.
He's like, Elgin Baylor was the coolest basketball player ever because that's who he wanted to be.
I think there's young football players who are cool, actually, David, but to your earlier point, some of that is limited exposure, right?
Like we don't really see them as much.
They are naturally kept at a little bit of a distance from us, the helmet.
They're not as present as basketball players.
They don't talk as much.
So I think that helps their cause.
But I do want to do a thing in a second here where we are going to draft the coolest athletes across.
at least the three major sports in the present day.
So we're going to put this to the test.
I'm going to see that in your brains.
We don't have to do it just yet, but we will answer and test David's theory about whether we are just afflicted with clinical old headitis and cannot possibly actually consider a young person cool.
I also want to add a wrinkle as we assess the criteria here for the committee of our audience to judge us
because
on field play, right?
So are we saying that that is that is clearly not separate and apart.
It is involved in the calculation, right?
The reason why on-field play matters and as we do this like cool thing, or try to figure out who the coolest guys are, is there's nothing cooler for a professional athlete than being unbelievable at your sport and then backing it up with how you present yourself.
And I think when we talk about the top guys, Griffey, Iverson, Lynch, they hit that.
It's a very elusive, very elusive bar.
Yeah, but so just the greatness, though, right?
Like, what does that get you?
So Michael Jordan, I think, is a very reasonable answer, a very popular, might be the number one answer when people think of the the coolest basketball player of all time because he,
both as a marketing vehicle, was unprecedented for the obvious Nike, et cetera, reasons and every other sponsor thing, right?
For our generation.
Also, because when it came to be the most pressurized moments, he had the greatest legend and arguably the greatest performance.
So there's that.
But then we get to, for instance, like to discern a bit of
the lineage when it comes to Kobe.
I'm like, I think there are lots of people who think that Kobe is cool, but I see an imitation of michael jordan and i'm like okay i'm gonna dock points for that i think kobe is was
as great as he was a legendary tryhard by the time that he became the guy who was branding all of his mamba stuff which is to say that i think the answers to the draft as we go around in a in some sort of order david there's a i know it when i see it definition as opposed to like some strict criteria for better and for worse.
Can I dump out a hot take real quick?
Please.
I'm not sure Michael Michael Jordan was that cool.
Like, I'm sorry.
Like,
when you watch the last dance and you, like, this dude is like talking to this baseball bat and he's like jamming to Anita Baker before the playoffs, like, this dude is not that.
Like, I remember way, way back, he did an interview, and this sticks out to me so much.
Like, he did some sort of interview, and they were like, what is your favorite artist?
I mean, this ages poorly, but you know, for other reasons, but he was like Robert Kelly.
And I was like, who calls him Robert Kelly?
Like, who did, like, I don't know.
Like, there's just so many things about Michael Jordan that I'm just like, it was all ads, all this stuff.
Like, is Michael Jordan actually really cool?
And by, by, you know, extension of that, is Kobe Bryant even less cool because he wanted to be like Michael Jordan, who was not.
Where's Haley Tatum is doing the
third round of beaming?
I think you hit on just like the more we see of someone, the less.
Then it's just, there's an absolutely an inverse relationship between exposure and coolness.
And no amount of, no matter how cool you are, the more we see of you, the less less cool you're going to be.
If you're looking to add something special to your next celebration, try Remy Martin 1738 Accord Royale.
This smooth, flavorful cognac is crafted from the finest grapes and aged to perfection, giving you rich notes of oak and caramel with every sip.
Whether you're celebrating a big win or simply enjoying some cocktails with family and friends, Remy Martin 1738 is the perfect spirit to elevate any occasion.
So go ahead, treat yourself to a little luxury, and try Remy Martin 1738 Accord Royale.
Learn more at remymartin.com.
Remy Martin Cognac, Veeen Champain, a 14 alcoholic volume 40 by Reny Control, USA Incorporated, New York, York, 1738, Centaur Design.
Please drink responsibly.
Should we get this draft going?
So current players, right?
Current athletes, you have to be active.
I think we should do coolest player per sport for the three biggest sports.
So we each pick one.
So we're each going to draft our pick for who we think the coolest is.
And if someone has drafted them, we cannot take them.
And we will show our results at the end because I love, I love
a draft chart results.
So
I'm going to say this one.
And
this is a player who I've gotten a lot of grief from their fan base because I consistently have him behind two other quarterbacks in football votes and whatnot.
But I think Joe Burrow is incredibly cool.
He has
the nickname.
Oh, yeah, right.
But he plays cool.
He has these like credible big moments.
He's ice cold.
And the way he presents on and off the field is legitimately cool.
I really believe that.
Counterpoint.
Counterpoint.
I don't think Joe Burrow saying stuff
is cool.
I don't think Joe Burrow says cool stuff.
I think he does cool stuff on the field.
I think he says cool stuff.
Does he?
Yeah.
He knows all the words to get the gap
from his time at LSU.
So I think that's pretty cool.
The championship picture is one of the coolest pictures ever taken of him smoking a cigar.
But I would say, like, he, the way he talks when he's interviewed, he's not very, he limits his exposure, which is what cool guys do.
When he speaks, like, he puts pressure on his organization to do stuff he's pretty plain spoken i yeah i like i think lamar jackson is the coolest football player to watch but i don't think he has enough of a persona for me
so lamar gets okay so i'll go next a second um lamar has the anti-authority thing going
The fact that he doesn't have a conventional agent for better and for worse.
I don't know if that's cool in the classic sense, but it's sort of like a f you to the way that like football and business tends to operate.
So the case for Lamar is strong, but I think I'm going to go Jalen Hurts.
Oh, terrible choice, David.
David.
Horrible choice.
David.
Tell me where I'm wrong.
Tell me where I'm wrong.
Okay, you go being a go.
Go for it.
Go for it.
I don't know.
Can I use the word unk, first of all?
I need a ruling ruling from
my compatriot here.
Jalen Hurts,
I think, is an amazing person, and
I'm a huge fan of his in a million different ways, but he is not cool.
Like, he dresses and acts like a 45-year-old man.
He's not, he's, he's lean, he leans in to 90s fine.
Like, that is his whole personality.
Like, he is, he is living single era, fine man.
So far, I'm not.
I'm waiting for the problem.
I remain waiting for the problem that again i have you heard him in interviews he speaks in cliches he speaks in like football talk he has no he is the ultimate it's funny because he just did something that you could say it was anti-authority so he that's what i'm thinking about yeah but for the most part the man when he was in college i believe said he related to nick saban
okay that's ungovernable i think that's pretty i think the only i didn't have that in my oppo research file the thing that helps Jalen Hurts is that now he stands next to Saquon Barkley for the rest of the season.
And by virtue of that, he is going to be the coolest dude because he is anti-Saquon Barkley.
And I think that that's going to elevate him way further than he would have been otherwise.
The thing that'll get Jalen Hurts that the test is, and I don't know how this has not happened yet, how has he not gone through the Jennifer Hudson tunnel yet?
Because he has good management who will not
reveal that to the world.
That's going to make a break.
When he goes through that tunnel, we'll see what kind of thing.
Many football players have gone through that tunnel, right?
No, I don't think we have one.
He's going to go through that tunnel.
Oh, my God.
Hold on.
There's a reference that I'm going to pull out and give you a little bit of a tune.
Have you guys thought about what you would do
if you had to go through this tunnel?
First off, that is a show that I only know, of course, because of the tunnel.
I don't know what else happens on the Jeff Rodson show.
I assume good stuff happens.
I just know it as the tunnel.
I did see recently Randall Park go through the tunnel.
If you recall him, Asian dude, and he proceeded to like do a mixture of, well, we'll show this in post, a mixture of like sort of like popping and locking where I was like, I would aspire to do that and not be nearly as good.
Asian dudes who can dance constantly go viral for crushing the tunnel.
This is my algorithm.
Like the dude from the white lotus, a guy talked about crushed it in the tunnel.
Here's the thing about the Jennifer Hudson tunnel that is fascinating is that they managed to know the algorithms because I don't think I've seen a single white person go through the tunnel.
And then when I talk talk to white folks about the Jennifer Hudson tunnel, they just like reference white people who went through it.
And I'm like, I don't know if this is the tunnel.
I'm getting Asians and like the hot guy from Lion King.
Right, I don't know.
That's it.
I did see Usher go through it on skateboarding.
And I was like, fear all comments section.
Okay, sorry.
Steve, what's your pick?
Yeah, what's your, what do you guys say here?
My pick here,
Lamar Jackson.
Okay, just like,
I was thankful that you guys had picked Lamar Jackson.
I I love Lamar Jackson just because I think there's also this like unfiltered interview that like this part of it.
And also, he has an unfair advantage.
His name is Lamar Jackson.
Like, it's like, come on.
His style of play gets him like 95% of the way there because he is clearly the coolest.
The NBA, David, we're going to snake draft it.
Go the other way.
Are we doing NBA or we're doing basketball?
Because
here's my, because here's the thing that, that, that, I, that I also got out of this article that we started this whole thing from.
This seems to be a male-centric problem because there are like 15 or 20 cool ass WNBA players that
I'm obsessed with at all times.
And so if I had to pick all of basketball, my number one pick would be AJ Wilson because she's like the coolest person in basketball, I think, right now.
She's like an incredible interview.
She won the championship and talked about all the tequila shots she was going to drink.
You have to take four shots.
Children take shots of ginger ale, but you got to take four shots before you pull up to the parade and drink responsibly.
She has the new shoe out, which helps.
She has the like really cool internet soft launch, hard launch, bam out of bio thing going on.
She's the best player in the world by a large margin.
And I just don't think that this article really applies to women, really.
Like there are so many cool ass women athletes and there's a larger pick thing to discuss, I think, about like women and how they, you know, drive the culture and like make stuff cool in a way that guys kind of are not doing, which goes to the Zen and the manosphere and all that stuff.
But like there are so many cool ass WNBA players that are so much cooler than NBA players and Asia would be my number one pick in basketball by far.
They've also been cool for a while, I think is the other thing, right?
Like this isn't like, oh, wow, all of a sudden we have these like cool new generation.
Obviously, the Way is exploding in popularity, but Diana Terrazi is one of the coolest humans to walk this show.
She does, by the way, an awesome at a microphone.
Does not give a fuck.
He's incredible.
But meets the parameters I established earlier.
And the greatest of all time.
Goat player.
Yeah, one of the GOAT players backed it up.
Great on the mic.
Very,
she might be on my round freshmore.
Of course.
Great at social media.
All these WNBA players are great at social media.
Like the more we know them, the more we get to like them.
So Steph, not even a consideration for you.
Like you're like, no, not even, no.
Like, because Steph is the ultimate example to me of playing style getting you on the list.
Not number one, but just like on the list.
And I think he is absolutely one of the coolest players.
He has a cool celebration.
He's like probably the most like
old school.
I'm going to text or call somebody when he's doing something dope.
Even though he's a Nepo baby.
Even though he is.
Even though he's a Nepo baby.
But like Steph has always had this, like, I think the arc of coolness has shifted more towards him.
Authenticity, again, is kind of the driving force.
Yeah, I think that's that's fair.
Influence
so influential, yeah, a friend's house who has two small boys and they're both into basketball, like six and four.
And I asked them which player would you want to play with and like play like, and both said Steph.
And it's like, wow, we're still on, it's still going, you know, they're not saying Lamello or Ja.
But, um, well, that brings me to my pick because my pick is John Morant with an asterisk.
Yeah.
I think that's look, the unsaid thing in this.
It's right there for him.
So sad.
It was, everyone was ready.
I had a friend who worked on
part of the Nike campaign that they were doing for Ja as all of this stuff was unfolding.
And they had to blow it up and make it less cool because they had to make it so that actually John Morant was more palatable to an audience that expected him to be a massive f up who loved playing with guns.
Like there is a line beyond which you go too far.
And as much as the anti-authority thing is, is part of it, like he, at a certain point, you gotta know when to just stop.
And that's where it became untenable.
I think John Morant is fine, guys.
Like, I just think that like, if he played better, it'd be fine.
Like, you know, like if he came back and was and was healthy and they had like deep playoff runs.
Yeah.
Like, I'm just, like, I I just don't think you're going to get a whole bunch of people who are just going to get too upset about people liking guns in this country.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, this dude is, you know, like, I think that's a good idea.
People have forgotten and forgiven way worse in all these sports.
Exactly.
And, like, we're not going to fingerwag at a dude and his love of guns and the bad.
And, you know, there's a lot more.
It's more complicated and complex than that.
It's more like, can you stay on the court?
Is my question.
Right.
Yeah.
I think if he came back from this thing and the Grizzlies, or if the Grizzlies are playing now, for instance, right and he's playing in the conference finals i think he's fine and like whatever you lose your nike campaign whatever i think he's still in a point where he's one of the coolest dudes ever the problem is you're still doing this like anti-authority celebration when you're not like that good or good enough to warrant it right now it also that's probably the big problem i do think the anti-authority aspect of him it feels
he doesn't feel as
cool i mean for obvious reasons but also it just doesn't feel if it feels a little bit and this cuts to the original premise of this piece is a little bit cosplay in a way that i think is something we sniff out with a lot of people this whether they're cosplaying you know gestures or kobe imitators or being anti-authority there is a sense of like is this really you like what you doing bud my pick is i think to it certainly corroborates the thesis of no younger players is an older guy.
I'm going to go Dame.
I think Dame is one of the coolest athletes alive.
Obviously, he isn't the end.
What do you think of?
I think of the hardest NBA photo, one of them of all time, which is the game winner OKC looking at the camera.
I mean,
I know I said earlier that no one has better looked ever cooler than Griffey, but like I was going to say, Mina has a clear thing for who she thinks is cool.
It's looking into a camera.
If you do something cool and look straight into a camera, you're probably cool.
But David, that photo.
I mean, come on.
It's
also another great celebration.
Yeah, another great celebration.
And the very, very rare accomplishment of being an athlete who raps and people still respect you.
Like, that's one thing that
usually docks off a ton of points if you're trying to rap.
But he got Lil Wayne on his album.
I am also realizing a lot of my picks are really handsome, guys.
Also, does make you cool.
Cooler.
I mean, I picked AJ Wilson, so I get it.
Samsies.
I mean, Jalen Hurts, guys, is clearly a beautiful person.
He is.
Objectively beautiful person.
Okay.
So baseball.
Are we ready to move on to baseball?
Are any other takes we want to get off?
One side, actually, one side brief post script take about the NBA.
Because David, you were hinting at this before and Mina as well.
As much as the current generation of NBA players might be starving for cool in the way that bloggers and others will approve of.
If you go through, like, is LeBron cool?
LeBron's like an iPhone.
Like,
he's too, no, he's like too much of a monolith.
It's like Taylor Swift, you know, like it's too, it's too big to do.
He's a literal corporation who is also trying very hard at all times.
But if you just go through the list of like Kawhi Leonard, LeBron James, James Harden, Anthony Davis, Kevin Durant, Paul George, I'm going through just like all NBA caliber guys.
It's not like we have been dealing with a bumper crop of the previous generation where it's like, man, those guys check all the boxes.
I mean, we can get in the second apron and players moving around and stuff like that, but I think a lot of the players that we all thought were the coolest were not necessarily the best players in the game, right?
Yeah, Rashid Wallace.
Like, yeah, there's the Rashid Wallace.
There's like, you know, like J.R.
Ryder and the Between the Legs dunk, or like, you know, Airy Payton, who was all, you know, this all NBA, but was never like the best player in the world.
He was just a cool ass player.
You know, Baron Davis, Steve Francis, like those type of dudes were always really cool.
And we loved them.
We collected their basketball cards.
We like did all this stuff that, you know, we loved about them.
The Clippers, the like Quentin Q Rich Clippers and all that, Darius Miles and them, like those are people that we love that were not necessarily the best in the world.
And I think that like it's kind of shortens our list and like the potential who we're going to pick if we're only looking at all NBA players.
That's never always been the case about who we think is great.
And it's also good to note that like we did have a draft and neither one of us really picked an NBA player.
Like we kind of picked like an old, like a dame who's not going to play and AJ Wilson who's not in the league and Ja, who's like...
The guys
argument checks out.
Yeah, it does.
Our picks kind of illustrate it for him.
Baseball's very top-heavy.
I mean, I think the question.
Do I get to pick first?
Nina goes first, and there is a question that I'm wondering if she will ask out loud as she makes her first pick.
Well, there's two guys, I think, who are clearly the two coolest guys in baseball.
That's how I feel.
So I'm deciding between the two of them.
I'm taking Mookie here.
He's just so cool.
He is a joy.
He's an amazing player.
He's a joy to watch.
He seems like a legitimately awesome dude, but he's funny.
And he, to me,
is the closest thing in spirit to Griffe in this generation.
He's also really good at bowling, and I want to unpack whether that makes him cool or not, because he is like a professional caliber bowler.
He's bowled up per 300.
Another wildly attractive person.
He knows to keep that hat on, you know?
He's playing the right score.
That's true.
I am taking only Hottis.
I wanted to say, speaking of Hottis, Julio Rodriguez, but I can't.
The homer allegations would be too strong.
Are we saying definitively, because Mina brought us to the to the team in question
like shohei otani not cool
i think he's cool i think he's cool i think shohei he would he was my pick show to shohe was my pick don't want to skip over you pablo he's my pick i think just virtue of being
i think that sometimes it's virtue of just being good as hell and the dopest at your sport like goes a long way and he and we also have a barrier we don't get to we don't know that much about him this mysterious this mysterious dude who just goes out
and gambling addiction.
You know,
these are ongoing mysteries.
Yes.
He also, even when he is not playing, just watching him like move in the world, a lot of this is carried by just his, how physically imposing he is.
He is enormous.
He has like star power and he's incredibly handsome.
And watching other baseball players react to him also makes him cool because it is like Otani is like when Beyonce walks in the room.
Yeah.
Right, right, right, right.
People are are in awe of the sound that the ball makes off his bat.
People are in awe of his physical stature.
People are in awe that he can do any of this.
He also is, I think, to the earlier point, like so private that it creates this aura of its own.
Being private is cool.
I think we're learning that too.
Like being less online on some level actually does in this era.
Yeah, it creates the intrigue that I think rates as cool.
I think I got to go with, I'm looking up his age right now to invalidate David's theory about how we can't really respect young people as we continue to draft some young people.
I'm going Ellie De La Cruz.
Great player.
He's not like, again, household name necessarily, but he should be if you like baseball in any vague way.
He stole a zillion bases.
I think it was 25 and 65 was the first shortstop to ever do it.
And that dude playing in the Cincinnati region, I'm like, yeah, I think that's, that feels like conventional.
Like, that's just an all-time athlete doing cool stuff.
And I select him.
Aaron Judge, not cool?
I want to see.
What's the difference between an Aaron Judge and a
yeah?
I think, I think there's kind of a, there's almost like a parallel to like sneaker sales to me, where like the guys who are too large
aren't as cool.
Like no one's really, I mean, the big man, Aaron, Aaron Judge is too large, I think, to be cool.
Jazz Chisholm, though, on the Yankees, is cool and has like, you know, speed and flair and all that stuff.
Yeah, being, okay, this actually connects to Steph and Dame and being small and being really, really good elite at a sport is a real fast track to being cool because there's like an underdog aspect to it that
instantly makes you cool.
And just the style of play, just like crossing people over lends itself to more like acrobatics.
Like the people I mentioned, Baron Davis, Steve Francis, those guys, like we grew up loving those dudes, like point guards.
Point guards are just going to lend themselves to being cool nine times out of 10.
Is Jokic cool?
Is Nicole Jokic who,
oh, Mina's shaking your head?
No, immediately.
He doesn't care.
He's not effortful in the way that we expect athletes to care, but he's also clearly,
yeah, I think he's one of the most skilled players in NBA history.
Why isn't he cool?
Big man?
Is it the big man thing?
I think part of it's the big man thing.
Part of it, I think, is that I don't think people,
you know, as superficial as it sounds, I don't think people aspire to look like him.
You know, I think there's like
this feeling of, yeah, he shows up to work and he just kind of doesn't care and he leaves and goes, does his horses and everything.
I think there's something to that.
I actually think if he were a little bit worse at basketball, he'd be more popular.
I just think like it's almost like too good.
It's like,
you know, like, it just.
What a great take.
Because I think like, like, when I think about like Shaq, right?
Like Shaq, one of the things about Shaq that was so relatable to me, especially, is that this dude was dominant, but you always felt like he could be a little better if he just didn't want to break dance and rap and DJ as much, but like he kind of wanted to break dance and rap and DJ a little bit more.
So it'd be like, it'd be like if Jokic were a little bit worse, it'd be like this dude cares so much about horses.
He's like, you know, he's a genie in a movie.
Right.
Right.
Yeah, if Jokic were a little bit worse, he'd be more popular.
He's just too good to be popular.
So I want to recap what we've done here today.
In the NFL, the three coolest players as appointed by the three of us, number one, Mina Cimes took Joe Burrow.
Number two, I took Jalen Hurts with, and in parentheses, I want next to it, with Kangol.
Kangol is essential.
And number three, David Dennis Jr.
took Lamar Jackson.
What did we do for the NBA?
Who remembers what we did?
Oh, David, right.
It was David Dennis Jr., number one, AJ Wilson.
Me, number two, John Morant asterisk.
Number three.
My picks are great so far.
Number three, Mina Kimes, Dame Lillard, looking into the camera like Jim Halpert or Randall Park.
And then
baseball, number one, Mina took Mookie Bets.
Number two, I took Ellie De La Cruz.
And number three, David Dennis Jr.
took Shohiotani.
Shoho Tani, yeah.
Damn, how did
David out Asian us?
David ended up with Lamar Jackson, AJ Wilson, and Shohei Otani.
He kind of bodied this draft.
I wound up with a Kangol and potentially future gun charges,
which is suboptimal, I guess.
Yeah, I want the graphics to have each of the names by who we picked, and so that it could be in graphic immortality that I spoke to you guys in this draft.
At the end of every episode of Baba Dori Finds Out, we go around and say what we found out today after having a, I would say, a pretty in-depth discussion of cool.
Mina, what did you find out?
I found out that I didn't have time to get in a mention of my podcast with David Dennis Jr., but I'm going to talk about it right here, y'all.
If you're still listening, David and I have been doing this Love is Blind Pod now for a few couple years.
We've done three seasons now, David.
Is that right?
Yeah.
And it's a YouTube show and it became a podcast.
And we enjoyed doing it so much that we are expanding into a ongoing general TV and entertainment show, which you can watch on youtube.com slash at MinaCimes or you can subscribe to the new name of the show is Viewer Discretion with Mina Kimes and David Dennis Jr.
Thank you.
I like that.
The first show we will be recapping is the upcoming season of Love Island, but we are going to be doing non-reality shows, non-romantic shows as well.
However, Love Island really last season was one of the greatest seasons of reality television ever made.
For those who don't know, Odell Beckham Jr.'s brother, Juan.
What?
So yeah, absolutely cool, dude.
What's the cool thing?
Yeah, this is actually extremely cool.
Cordell Beckham, who's now kind of more
than OBJ in certain circles.
But anyways, go check it out.
Viewer discretion.
You can just look up my name.
You can look up David's name and give us a subscribe rate interview.
What I found out, David, is that Mina also showed up to today's episode of Pablo Tori Finds Out with multiple clips.
And so there is a clip from, I believe, one of the reality shows in question that Cortez could not be more excited about.
And I have no idea what this is.
So I'm about to find out right now.
Do you ever get told you look like a celebrity?
Yeah,
I do.
I do too.
All the time on the plane, I get one person, and it's just because I have dark hair and blue eyes.
Oh,
but I don't see it, so don't get excited.
Say it.
What's he writing down in that notebook?
MG, I don't even know if it's MGK's wife or his girlfriend.
Oh no, Megan Fox.
You're just saying you look like Megan Fox.
It's just because I have light eyes and dark hair.
That's the only reason.
There's nothing else.
At least I'm assuming so.
I mean.
Listen.
Listen, buddy.
What did you say?
So I guess I should,
it has been whispered into my ear because I didn't realize this until
Rob whispered it.
They can't see each other at that point.
Yeah.
Because there is a wall, the whole thing.
They're getting proposed to Megan Fox.
Yeah.
And so I am told now, reliably, we have the reveal when they can't see.
Oh, God.
Oh, no.
Oh, no.
Sort of like hit on looks, but not for you.
She definitely lied to me on some how she looked.
Chelsea told me she looked like Megan Fox.
She's so sweaty.
But,
you know, at the end of the day, it doesn't really matter.
I'm very attracted to her.
I can work with that.
What an emotional roller coaster.
My guy is so sweaty.
It's the cruelest edit I've ever seen in a reality show.
You also didn't get to see when they made, there's a moment where he, as a Jim Helper, looked to the camera right after meeting her when they hug.
That is one of the most themed moments in Love is Blind history.
David and I have probably spent no less than three hours breaking down the bacon box moment.
If you're into that sort of thing, if you like listening to two people who treat these shows like the game tape that it deserves to be treated like, check out our podcast.
Thank you both for helping me find out more than I bargained for.
You're welcome, Pablo.
Staring into the camera and wink.
Pablo Torre Finds Out is produced by Walter Averoma, Ryan Cortez, Sam Dawig, Juan Galindo, Patrick Kim, Neely Lohman, Rob McRae, Rachel Miller-Howard, Carl Scott, Matt Sullivan, Claire Taylor, Chris Tuminello, and Juliet Warren.
Our studio engineering by RG Systems, our sound design by NGW Post, our theme song, as always, is by John Bravo.
We will talk to you next time.