A Cooper Flaggasm, NBA Trends, Lorne Michaels Stories, and a Celtics Pyramid With J. Kyle Mann and Susan Morrison
Host: Bill Simmons
Guests: J. Kyle Mann and Susan Morrison
Producers: Kyle Crichton and Chia Hao Tat
The Ringer is committed to responsible gaming. Please visit www.rg-help.com to learn more about the resources and helplines available.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Press play and read along
Transcript
Speaker 1
It's the Bill Simmons podcast presented by FanDuel. The NBA season hitting full stride.
Don't foul out on your chance to win with America's number one sports book.
Speaker 1 Bet on fun markets like live quarter player props and partless. Plus, enjoy our new NBA player prop pages, your one-stop shop for player props that include FanDuel's exclusive performance trends.
Speaker 1
Tracking the last five games for top markets. They even do that.
The app is safe, secure, and easy to use. When you win, you'll get paid instantly.
So, download the the app today.
Speaker 1 Bet with FanDuel, official partner of the NBA, the ringer, is committed to responsible gaming. Please visit rg-help.com to learn more about the resources and helplines available.
Speaker 1
Listen to the end of this episode for additional details. Must be 21 plus in President Select State's game problem.
Call 1-800-Gambler or visit rg-help.com.
Speaker 1
The Bill Simmons podcast is presented by FanDuel Sportsbook. We did this big docuseries for Max and HBO that premieres on March 3rd, Monday.
It is about the Boston Celtics.
Speaker 1 It is about eight decades, how they intersect with the NBA and the city of Boston and America and all the great players and rivalries and feuds. And we're all really proud of it.
Speaker 1 So, Monday, March 3rd, it's coming.
Speaker 2 In the meantime, I have a little pyramid for you.
Speaker 1 Celtics Pyramid. I narrowed it to 15 players, and we're going to do it right now.
Speaker 2 Here it is.
Speaker 1 15 players. And the catch is,
Speaker 1
it has to be the Celtics version of them. So this isn't like Kevin Garnett.
I'm not taking Kevin Garnett's whole career. It's just Kevin Garnett on the Celtics.
Anyway, pyramid.
Speaker 1 Top level, one guy, Bill Russell. I have him as the number three all-time guy,
Speaker 1 11 of 13 titles, the most important on and off-court NBA star ever, relevant.
Speaker 1 Greatest winner in the history of sports. Also relevant.
Speaker 2 He's at the top.
Speaker 1
Next to Larry Bird, John Havlichek. I don't need to make the case for Larry Bird.
I have him as the sixth best guy ever. Three straight MVPs, three titles.
But here's a fun Larry Bird fact.
Speaker 1
MVP from 1980 to 1988. Fourth, second, second, second, first, first, first, third, second.
That's over nine years. Larry Bird was amazing.
And he, I think he even would have been better now.
Speaker 1 John Havichek in the running for most underrated NBA superstar of all time. Eight titles, 25,000 points, played 16 years,
Speaker 1
which is like playing 25 years now. I don't know how he did it.
His three-year peak, 27, 9, and 8, his four-year playoff peak, 27, 9, and 6,
Speaker 1 was one of the most clutch players of his era, if not the number two clutch guy behind Jerry West. And the greatest thing about him, all-time Swiss Army knife guy, had this whole career as a six-man.
Speaker 1 He could play guard, he could play forward, whatever your team needed, he could do it. And then eventually he ended up as a forward during the last couple of titles.
Speaker 1 But there's never been a career quite like that where you're just winning when you you come in, you're winning when you leave.
Speaker 1 And then the next level, so Bob Kuzi, if I had to do a Mount Rushmore, he would be the fourth guy for that.
Speaker 1 Six rings, won an MVP, best non-center of the first 15 years of the league, the first fun, entertaining player in the history of the league. That's relevant.
Speaker 1
First, great point guard ever, relevant. 10 first all NBAs, two second all NBAs.
He was just a dominant player. By the time he retired, he was basically the babe ruth of the league when he retired.
Speaker 1
And then he passed the torch to his teammate Russell and Elgin and Wilt and everybody else. But that's the top four.
So the other two on that level that I would put Dave Cowans,
Speaker 1 who was one of the most important players of the 70s, won an MVP, won a couple titles. And, you know, the 70s Celtics or the 70s Knicks, those were the best two teams of that decade.
Speaker 1
And he was the most important player, him or Havicek, at least, for this entire Celtics run. So he's on there.
And then Sam Jones, who's another underrated all-time guy
Speaker 1
who didn't even really get to start because the league was so stacked. They had like eight teams, nine teams.
He was coming off the bench behind Bill Sharman, who was also awesome.
Speaker 1 Didn't get to start till like the last two-thirds of his career, but is one of the great clutch players in the history of the league, even now, and made all kinds of crazy shots.
Speaker 1
We covered some of them in the documentary. So Russell, then Bird and Havichek, then Koozie Commons and Sam Jones, then these next four, pretty easy.
Kevin McHale,
Speaker 1 who is one of the 40 best players of all time. And I think if he doesn't hurt his foot,
Speaker 1 maybe even can climb up into a potential,
Speaker 1 I don't know, in the 20s. I don't think it's out of the realm that he could have been in a KG Barkley area,
Speaker 1 but was never able to recover from all the playoff games they played. But best low post player I've ever seen, him and Akeem.
Speaker 1 Paul Pierce.
Speaker 1 The title changes everything for him, right?
Speaker 1 If the KG trade doesn't happen, who knows what happens with the second part of Paul Pierce's career? Instead, he belatedly develops into this awesome playoff guy, crunch time guy down the stretch.
Speaker 1 He just has this whole second career.
Speaker 1 Also really durable and
Speaker 1
an excellent scorer and went head-to-head against LeBron a lot. And his teams won.
against LeBron at, you know, not a not a super young point of LeBron's career either. So he's in there.
Speaker 1 Jason tatum who i think so right now i have him fourth level and i have him ninth overall uh definitely has a chance to leapfrog a couple of these guys pretty soon i think especially if they won back-to-back titles this year i think he has to go into the top six at that point bill sharman who was the best two guard in the league for the first 15 years of the league warren's mentioning just first team all nba year after year uh good score and also weirdly i think people seem to think he was the toughest guy from that era He was just cold cocked people for the hell.
Speaker 1
I didn't like the way you set that pick of me. I'm just punching you.
So I'm putting him in there.
Speaker 1 And then the final level, the last five, Kevin Garnett, who was only with the Celtics for six years, but
Speaker 1
that 0-8 team. And then the first half of 2009, they make the 2010 finals.
They almost make it again in 12. And a beloved Celtic, too.
Speaker 1
I think the most popular Celtics since my dad has had season tickets now since the 73, 74 season. Bird was the most popular.
And I really think the next two were probably
Speaker 1 Callans and Garnett in some order.
Speaker 1 And I don't know who was ahead of who, but in terms of just beloved by the crowd and the fans, Garnett has to be up there.
Speaker 1 Tommy Heinzen only played for like eight or nine years because this was the smoke and drinking era. I think they were just having cigarettes at their timeouts, but was an awesome, awesome forward.
Speaker 1 And big scorer, rebounder, came through a couple times in the playoffs, outplayed some forwards that were really good, like Bob Pettit, so he's in there. Robert Parrish,
Speaker 1 13 years, I think, with the Celtics, maybe 14, three titles,
Speaker 1
wasn't on that Kareem level as a center, but was on that second level. I think he even had a second team on NBA, so he's on there.
Jojo White,
Speaker 1 another guy, really underrated from the 70s.
Speaker 1 I had him in the pyramid when I did my book in 2009 and had his most famous moment other than winning two titles was the triple overtime game, which is one of the great performances by a non-superstar that we've ever had in the finals.
Speaker 1
I think he played 60 of the 63 minutes. I went to that game.
I barely remember it, but there was the famous image of him just sitting on the court at the end because he was so wiped out.
Speaker 1 But he was just a real, he was just a top 10 NBA player for six, seven years.
Speaker 1 Man, Jalen Brown's my last guy. I think he belongs.
Speaker 1 You win a title. He wins finals MVP.
Speaker 1
The durability with him, the fact that in the 2020s, this team is just relevant year after year because of the Tatum Brown connection. I think he has to be in there.
So toughest cuts for me.
Speaker 1 Paul Silas, Dennis Johnson, Cedric Maxwell, Ray Allen, Don Nelson, Casey Jones, Red Arbeck as the coach.
Speaker 1
That's all I got for you. That's my Celtics Pyramid.
Coming up, going to talk basketball with Kyle Mann, and we are going to talk Lorne Michaels with his biographer. It's all next.
Speaker 1
This episode is brought to you by Chime. A great team avoids dumb penalties.
So get ChIME on your side to help avoid dumb fees.
Speaker 1 With Chime, you can bank fee-free, unlock your paycheck early, and with qualifying direct deposits, you can get 1.5% cash back on eligible everyday purchases while building your credit.
Speaker 1 Start banking smarter today.
Speaker 1
Sign up for QIIME in minutes. Terms and conditions apply.
See chime.com for details. Chime is a financial technology company, not a bank.
Speaker 1 Banking services and the secured QIIME Visa credit card provided by the Bank Corp Bank, NA or Stride Bank, NA members, FDIC. Optional service and product may have fees or charges.
Speaker 1 Details at chime.com slash fees info with a qualifying direct deposit earn 1.5% cash back on eligible secured CHIME Visa credit card purchases.
Speaker 1 On-time payment history may have a positive impact on your credit score.
Speaker 2 Results may vary.
Speaker 1
Learn about credit building and more at chime.com. We're also brought to you by the Ringer Podcast Network.
I put up a new rewatchables on Monday night. We did Crash.
Speaker 1
We are going to do another Oscar winner this coming Monday night. So you can watch that as a video podcast on Spotify.
Check out our Ringer Movies YouTube channel as well.
Speaker 1 That's also where Sean Fantasy will be going live with his big picture crew right after the Oscars on Sunday night on his big picture podcast, which is also available as a video on Spotify, by the way.
Speaker 1 We're also brought to you by FanDuel Sportsbook. 30 on 30 lives on our profit boost token, which we're doing every Friday the rest of the way, I think except for March Madness.
Speaker 1 You can bet on any 30-plus point score you want on Fridays. I tweet out my picks.
Speaker 1 I love this because I love just looking at the matchups, how many teams if you played four games in five nights, any of that stuff, and just try to guess who's going to go off.
Speaker 1
So be sure to claim the PBT, place your 30-on-30 bet for Friday. Just look for 30-on-30 in the FanDuel Sportsbook app.
Don't forget about theringer.com.
Speaker 1
Don't forget about Celtic City premiering Monday night, March 3rd on HBO and Max. And we're going to have it every week for the next nine.
So
Speaker 1
buckle up because it's a really good one. Coming up on this podcast, I'm going to talk to Kyle Mann, our old friend from The Ringer, about Cooper Flag.
It's time. It's late February.
We got to do it.
Speaker 1 And we're going to talk about a bunch of NBA trends and some other stuff as well. And then
Speaker 1
Susan Morrison, who wrote the definitive Lauren Michaels biography that came out last week. I loved it.
I just made her come on. We spent an hour and just talked about Lauren.
Speaker 1 I had a great time. So so that's the podcast first our friends from pro jab
Speaker 1 jkyle man is here from the ringer hasn't been on in a while miss talking hoops with him i was waiting to pull the Cooper flag rip cord with him.
Speaker 1 And then this week, Jim Beheim compared him to Larry Baird. And I was like, all right, let's officially have the combo.
Speaker 2 I've been watching. Did you watch tip the scales? You couldn't do it anymore.
Speaker 1
Yeah, I was going to wait until we got to March Madness, but now I couldn't even make it out of February. He's gotten better every week.
The highlights have been fun.
Speaker 1
The game situations have been fun. It's crazy that he's only 18 years old and is the all-around guy that he's already seems like he's becoming a Duke.
I think people are raising their ceilings of him.
Speaker 1 I hate the word generational. It feels like it's getting thrown around too much.
Speaker 1 I think a better word is just unique. There's just not prospects like this anymore who are as good on both ends and as additive all over the place.
Speaker 1 And I'm trying to debate how excited to get about this because, as you know, these are my type of players.
Speaker 1
I'm just trying to make everyone better. I'm just super competitive.
How can I fit in? Like, these are my favorite guys. So how excited do I get, Kamen?
Speaker 2 Well, first, I was going to add, you're talking about Jim Bayheim.
Speaker 2 Whenever I watch broadcasts that he's on, he always kind of sounds to me like an uncle who just ate Thanksgiving dinner and he's just kind of leaned back and groggy, making groggy comments about the game.
Speaker 2
Like, and he just makes me laugh throughout the games. Uh, I'm glad he's on there, though.
He's good. Um, yeah, well, I mean, you're talking about your preferences and players and things.
Speaker 2 I mean, what you're describing is winning. I mean, who doesn't like to win? I know you like to win, Bill.
Speaker 2 I do. I do too, you know, so, and I think you're talking about the difference between generational and unique.
Speaker 2 I think what sets Cooper apart is, you know, we have seen, I'll say the buzzword toolsy guys.
Speaker 2 We've seen guys who check a lot of boxes and are two-way players, but I think Cooper, who does check those boxes, and we can talk about him more in detail, something that is unique about him is that I think that he has those things that you don't normally see as an in an 18-year-old.
Speaker 2
He's carrying one of the heaviest loads in college basketball. I had it pulled up here.
His usage this year is 30.5%. Whoa.
Yeah.
Speaker 2 And his assist usage is 0.83, but he's also averaging almost 20 points per game. So you're just kind of like, how is that?
Speaker 2 So that just tells you that like he's watering a lot of plants and he's watering his own plants. He's just, he's doing everything for them and still being really efficient at it.
Speaker 2 But the thing that sets him apart, I think, with that wide foundation is that, and I wrote about this on the ringer not long ago in a profile I did on him.
Speaker 2 I've already, I'm getting coopered out because I've talked about him so much pre and mid-college, but he has the potential to evolve, I think, into like a heavy load-carrying superstar at the next level.
Speaker 2 I think some things need to happen for that to, for that to pan out for him, but I think that's what makes him unique.
Speaker 2 Is that, and you're right, I think he could go on to any team and he could be like a like a Scotty Pippen type to a superstar, which I think is the most likely scenario for him.
Speaker 2 But I totally wouldn't rule out him becoming somebody that does, who you just depend on as your hub for everything because he's he's he could evolve in so many different ways.
Speaker 1 Yeah, if you're creating a stretch for
Speaker 1 slash forward guy for the whatever, however we play basketball now, it would probably look something like this, right? Maybe you'd make him an inch taller.
Speaker 1 What is he six, seven and a half without sneakers?
Speaker 2 That's maybe
Speaker 2 six, eight. Yeah,
Speaker 2 okay, maybe he grew.
Speaker 1 Yeah, so maybe you'd add an inch there, but he's got the long arms, but this is everything you want for somebody next to some sort of big man who could have his hands around the rim and do and do all that stuff.
Speaker 1 When you try to compare him to people, Bird is the obvious one that everyone keeps feeling like Beheim did just because it's a white guy who does a lot of stuff.
Speaker 1 There's more Tatum with me than I think maybe, and maybe there's a Duke parallel with them too. But the way the Celtics use Tatum now.
Speaker 1 as a point forward who can defend all these different positions on defense, I feel like that's going to be Flag's destiny.
Speaker 1 The difference is when Tatum came into the league, we knew he had a chance to be like a special player, but there were so many things that still needed to happen with him. He was a scorer.
Speaker 1 He felt a little Durantish,
Speaker 1 but there wasn't any semblance of the passing game that he has now or the defensive level that he's gone up to, or even how much better of a rebounder he is.
Speaker 1 Flag's kind of already doing all those things, and I just don't know what he looks like when he's 25.
Speaker 1 Because I assume he's just going to keep working as three-point shot, and eventually he'll just be like a 40 to 45% three-point shooter. I assume he'll add a couple of low post things.
Speaker 1 I assume he'll get really good at passing out of double teams. But for the most part, to be this close to a finished product at age 18 from a skill standpoint, that's what's so unusual, I think.
Speaker 2 Yeah, it's really, I mean, it's really, really well-rounded. You mentioned, I mean, the bird thing is funny just because Cooper, I think, as you know, grew up with a heavy boss.
Speaker 2 Well, that's the thing.
Speaker 1 Yeah, he got indoctrinated in the 86 Salts highlights from his great mom, one of the great moms of the last 40 years.
Speaker 2 Just showing him highlights. Have you ever heard clips of his mom talk?
Speaker 1 Yeah,
Speaker 1 they would be like driving in the car, watching like a DVD player.
Speaker 1 And she had like old Celtic games because she wanted them to play like that.
Speaker 2 Yeah, yeah, those old, those old portable DVD players.
Speaker 2 Yeah, he, it's funny because
Speaker 2 Yeah, he has this heavy kind of Boston connection, and I'm sure you would rather be good now than be bad and try to get flag. It's probably, it's a worthy trade, but I mean, he
Speaker 2 he, he has, if you want to like compare him to Tatum, I think they have body kind of differences that are, that are really affecting the way that they play.
Speaker 2 Like Tatum came into the league, I think, as more of a guy who leaned towards being like a shot creator. I think he has like a lower center of gravity and he's a little bit more of a wiggly athlete.
Speaker 2 He has like really big, broad shoulders and got downhill a lot and things like that. Cooper, Cooper, I think, is not quite the wiggly ball handler that Tatum was at the same age.
Speaker 2 But I think the thing that is so promising is when you watch him and you watched him at like Mont Verde and you watched him when he was growing up.
Speaker 2 A, he's like, he played as a big guy who would kind of be in the middle of the floor and would make those decisions that you and I have talked about on this show a myriad times where he will get in the middle of the floor, he'll take a quick snapshot of what the spacing is on the floor.
Speaker 2 And he was really, really good at making those kind of short roll, like connective passes or come off a pin down.
Speaker 2 What was really funny is that like Mont Vird used to run this very bird-esque pin down on the block for him.
Speaker 2 And they, and they still are doing it at Duke a little bit because he's lethal in the middle of the floor right now.
Speaker 2 So I think if you look at the way that he's able to read the floor in that sense, and then you see him kind of fledgling and blossoming as a, as a ball handler, like I said, Tatum is ahead of him, but I think Cooper is way ahead of Tatum as a processor of the floor at the same age.
Speaker 1 Could interview you.
Speaker 2 And if you look at the gap between those two things and you see where Tatum is and you see Cooper's brain, his skill set, and you say, okay, well, what's the difference there?
Speaker 2
And this is the argument I made in the piece. The difference, the distance there is just his handle.
I really do believe that's all it is.
Speaker 2 And if you look at the way you're talking about his mom, you talk about his basketball family. If you look at the way he has courted challenges in his career since the time we've followed him,
Speaker 2
Every indication is that this guy is a maniac worker. He went to Duke a year early.
He left Maine a year early after like two years there where he was just dominating.
Speaker 2 Actually, Actually, it might have just been a year.
Speaker 2 And he's just way ahead of schedule by design. And
Speaker 2 he's just an insane worker. So I expect him to bridge that gap and improve his handle.
Speaker 1
That's the number one thing with him. And that's the thing you read from literally everybody who passes through his life in some capacity is maniac competitor.
They say that over and over again.
Speaker 1 And the older I get, the more I feel like, whether it's football, basketball, name a sport.
Speaker 1 That's the number one, if you really want to be truly great, that's the number one quality that everybody seems to have. Just maniac competitor, maniac competitor wants it so bad.
Speaker 1
Oh, he's not that great at this yet. He's just going to keep going and going until he can go up a level.
And I'm with you. Like,
Speaker 1 if you were going to use him as a point forward, I don't think his ball handling is good enough to do that in the NBA right now, but he's 18. But it's one of those things that I could just see him.
Speaker 1
He's like, all right, I got to work on this. I'm going to absolutely be a psycho and work on this constantly.
All right, I got to work on catch and shoot threes.
Speaker 1 I'm going to just shoot 10,000 of these these until i get it i just think that's who he is and and all the best guys ever and not that he has a chance to be that good but all the best guys ever had that so if you're adding that whoever gets him and i'm already worried about the lottery because there's a couple teams where i'm like oh man i just don't want him to go there you know like which ones well i didn't you know like i don't want him to go to like a bad team where we with this NBA infection that we've had for 50, 60 years, where we take these great talented players and and just stick them in bad situations.
Speaker 1 Like what happened with LeBron in Cleveland the first couple of years. He's on the worst possible team and he turned out to, you know, it turned out great for him, but you just lose a couple years.
Speaker 1 The best case scenario is what happened with Bird.
Speaker 1 There's no scenario like that this year in the NBA that that could happen, but Bird goes to the 79, 80 Celtics and they already have like good players.
Speaker 1 They go from 29 wins to 60 plus, but they had really good players in that team and he just elevated all of them.
Speaker 1 So, you know, like, I don't think Portland could get in there, but I think Portland is a team that, you know, if he was on a team like that, that would be really interesting. Philly.
Speaker 2 Yeah.
Speaker 1 You know, if somehow Embiid came back,
Speaker 1 if they were able to stay in the top six, San Antonio would be the dream of all the teams. It's putting him next to Wemby.
Speaker 1
I can't think of a better like sidekick for Wemby, assuming Wemby is going to be all right next year. Yeah.
They have a couple of bites at the Apple.
Speaker 1 But when you start talking about just throwing them on Washington, I don't know how many of the guys on the Wizards are even going to be in that team in three years.
Speaker 1 You know, you really want to build around him in the right way.
Speaker 2 That'd be a crazy collection of like athletes, I would say, over the
Speaker 2 short amount of time.
Speaker 2 Like if they picked up Kulabali and then picked up Saar and then picked up Jerry's out on Tsar, but I think if, yeah, adding flag to that, the only thing I would, the only thing I would say that I think is a little bit of a twist.
Speaker 2 You mentioned LeBron, and I think LeBron is in this category is that some players, when you come into the when they come into the league, I look at them and I think there's a lot there, but the conditions and the context of where where he goes is really, really going to affect how he develops.
Speaker 2 Cooper, I think, is a context. Some guys are like they're just culture setters, you know, Trey Duncan.
Speaker 2 I'm not, you know, this is like hallowed, get struck by lightning type thing I'm going to say here, but you know, Steph, LeBron, those are the types of guys who just have winning habits.
Speaker 2 They demand the most of everybody.
Speaker 2 I, um, I had a funny conversation with, I had a funny conversation with a friend of mine, and he'll know that I'm talking about him when I say this, But he was telling, he's a physician, and he was, but he, and he does surgery.
Speaker 2 And he was telling me whenever in his operating room, he said, he sets the tone to the point, the level of excellence to the point where the stupid people and the lazy people don't want to be in the room with him because they know they're going to be accountable.
Speaker 2 And I just started laughing. And I was just like, that's what great people do is like, you kind of, if you're going to be in the room with them, you know, you have to kind of elevate your game.
Speaker 2 And I think that Cooper is that type of guy, but I think you're right, man. He like, he, he, and I think he's willing to sort of fit into any kind of scenario wherever he goes.
Speaker 2 And the shooting is going to come along. Like, that, that, that's, that's the only other thing I would add, too, is if you go back and people should go watch this.
Speaker 2 We've known Cooper for probably four years in the mainstream. You can go watch his games from when he was a freshman and a sophomore in high school.
Speaker 2 He was shooting like set shot in the driveway three-pointers. The distance that he has come in the three or four years since we've known him is remarkable.
Speaker 2 Like he was just a runaround deer deer block shots guy when he first came on the scene and he's become a full-fledged handler in college in a tough conference.
Speaker 2 Well, the ACC sucks, but tough competition.
Speaker 1 It's interesting because one of the guys that he reminds me of, he has nothing in common with physically really, but it's KG because KG was seven foot one.
Speaker 1 Their bodies are completely different.
Speaker 1 I think KG was probably a better athlete, but the way, the way as a help defender and a rim protector and just how he's moving a second before the play is moving and he always seems to know where shit's going.
Speaker 1
That's the KG quality. I mean, that was one of the things that made him so special.
He doesn't have the same size. He doesn't have the same arm length.
Speaker 1 And he's not as like a scary competitor, but he's fierce like KG was.
Speaker 1 And I think that's another guy who is a good comparison for him where you talk to, like we were doing the Celtic stock, and we had so many stories from these people that played on those 08-09 teams where they were just like, the guy was a lunatic.
Speaker 1 Like we'd have these random scrimmages and, you know, beginning of October, four weeks before the season started. And he's caked in sweat and screaming at everybody.
Speaker 1
And there's just certain guys like that. That's why the fit's going to be so important.
Like New Orleans, that one would worry me because of,
Speaker 1
you know, they've been a tortured franchise for 50 years. It just seems like people go there and bad things happen.
Utah is a weird fit just because of the players they already have.
Speaker 1 Toronto was kind of with the other one I was looking at where they have, you know, some interesting offensive players and a couple of Barnes.
Speaker 1 I don't know what Barnes is still, but they have some talent. And could that be a place where he could go in and he just becomes the centrifugal force?
Speaker 1 How much is what happens over these next month here at the AC tournament and
Speaker 1 March Madness? Does it affect anything with him and how people are going to feel about him?
Speaker 2 I don't think so. I think
Speaker 2 I really don't even know what would happen. He'd have to just totally crap the bed or something.
Speaker 2 he, there are certain prospects that get to the point where it is, it is,
Speaker 2 you're just
Speaker 2 like, you're not having like positive generating, like diminishing returns is the word I'm trying to think of.
Speaker 2
It's watching him at this point is just not, there's not a lot of point to it because I've seen enough. Right.
Yeah, right.
Speaker 1 You've sent in your verdict already. Is he the most sure thing guy you've studied since you started doing this with us?
Speaker 2
I think that he is probably the most. You mentioned KG's active mind.
I wasn't scouting back then. I was a kid, but I mean,
Speaker 2
he probably has the most driven personality. Other than I would say Wimby is the only other person that I can think of.
That when I watch them, I'm just like, there is singular focus in this person.
Speaker 2
And you can tell that they're bright. I just think.
And this can transition into kind of some of the broader things about the league and the way it's going, I think, but he
Speaker 2
just has this curiosity about him that I would not bet against. And I don't want to overstate when we talk about his handle and things like that.
It's not like he's a Yackety Sachs disaster.
Speaker 2 It's just he has a couple different areas where teams are trying to bait him into going, and he's getting smarter and smarter about not taking the bait.
Speaker 2 And there are some ways I pointed them out in the article that he can specifically, I think, set his man up to create kind of driving lanes for himself and create more advantageous situations.
Speaker 2 But you mentioned like which team he goes to. I just don't, I wouldn't worry about that.
Speaker 1 So you say it doesn't matter because you can go so many different directions with him you know right you could be and the team you have five years from now maybe nobody's on that team from right now anyway yeah because wemby was a sure thing except how tall he was and the history of guys over a certain height so even though he was a sure thing and he checked every box he wasn't a sure thing because
Speaker 1
It's just hard when you get that big and we have the history of that. It's just, it's too complicated.
So it's always in the background.
Speaker 1 Every time he would land on a foot, foot, anything, you're always nervous.
Speaker 1 Luca,
Speaker 1 to me, at least for me, was the surest thing just watching what he did that year overseas and how sophisticated his offensive game was. And I thought Anthony Davis was a sure thing.
Speaker 1 I was super, I was incredibly excited for Zion. I thought, you know, holy shit, but there was always that fear factor with Zion because he was so in the air all the time.
Speaker 1
Those guys always make you a little nervous. Anthony Davis was like, this guy's definitely going to be on a really good team at some point in his career.
You see it at Kentucky.
Speaker 1 Now it took longer than we thought, but those are the guys, at least recently, that I think jump out. Am I missing on anyone?
Speaker 2
You're right about Luca. I'm trying to think of, I'm sure there are other ones.
I mean, these are just kind of the high points.
Speaker 1 Well, because you look at somebody like John Moran, you're like, all right, this guy who can't shoot from the outside. He's an electric athlete, but you know, he's in the air.
Speaker 1 He's banging bodies all the time. There's things that make you nervous.
Speaker 2 If I'm taking a guy like this, I want it to be like, I know I'm going to have this guy for 12 to 15 years at the highest possible level and for something for that not to happen would have to be like a legitimate fluke it's not a legitimate fluke if like wembinyama hurts his knee or his foot or anything because we see that with centers but you know i think i the anthony davis to me it seemed like man i i really hard to come up with a scenario where he's not awesome yeah the the luca one you pointed out is is is a good one too and i think that one should be in the group too because and he has some similarities in terms of the way i just i always try to watch guys who seek, who like run away from stagnation in their, in their sort of development towards the NBA, because Luca, every single time, and his, you know, the people around him played it really smartly is that when he was at a certain age, the challenge, they were always ahead of the, of the stagnation.
Speaker 2
They were like, all right, we, we see that he's going to stagnate here. And they just kept moving him up.
And I think what happens in that situation is you just develop.
Speaker 2 The later you delay problem solving in your development, I think the worse off you are because problem solving and decision-making are the most important thing to help you adapt to the speed of the NBA.
Speaker 2 And I just think you see some guys like Chris Paul came into the league and his size always was a stimulant, I think, for him as a problem solver. Whereas if you look at somebody like
Speaker 2 these high school college guards who are big bullies on the playground who get to the NBA and suddenly they can't bully anymore, you just see them be like, for the first time in their career, like, oh, shit, I got to think about this in some way.
Speaker 2
Right. And you see them kind of get bowled back by it.
I just think that Cooper, Cooper is so ahead of it on that front.
Speaker 1
Chris Paul was a short thing to me as a point guard. I was, that was like, there was no way he wasn't going to be really good.
And Durant was another one from that era.
Speaker 1 That if you actually watched that whole season and watched all the, just how easy it was to get whatever shot he wanted and how unusual of a player he was.
Speaker 1 It was like, there was no way this guy is going to be awesome. Where I usually get in trouble are the
Speaker 1
guys who have the athleticism, but it's hard to tell what the motor is or what the competitiveness is or situations like Dwight Howard. It's like, the guy's 18.
He's got Adonis body.
Speaker 2 I have no idea,
Speaker 1 you know, would you bet your life? LeBron was an easy one.
Speaker 2 Yeah.
Speaker 1
You know, in 03, all you have to do was watch him in high school twice and be like, there's nothing like this right now. Six foot eight and a half, like athlete like this.
This is going to be insane.
Speaker 2 It's hard to like, not hold it against guys too, because you'll watch players who are 18 years old, like you said, and you're like, how how competitive is he I don't you start to feel a little wishy-washy about it and I think to myself I'm I'm just thinking well thank goodness no one was judging my career when I was 18 years old because I was just a total shithead and had no clue what I was saying right you could grow out of it but but there are red flags though like Ben Simmons that LSU season and then him just ditching the team with like a few weeks left and it and it was like hmm That didn't go great, you know, like, whereas like if it was somebody like Cooper Flag or if KG had gone to college, like there's just no way they're not finishing the season and being a complete psychopath the entire season.
Speaker 1
So there's stuff you can learn. I, to me, Flag is as sure of a thing as I can remember.
And the, the best thing about him from an NBA standpoint, you can just see what he's going to be.
Speaker 1 Like there's such a clear position that now exists in the way, in the way the league is that I would just assume somebody's going to end up using him a lot like the Celtics use Tatum.
Speaker 1 He's going to have the ball a lot.
Speaker 1 He's going to bounce around depending on what the matchup matchup is. He's going to be a little bit of a Swiss Army knife, the same way Tatum is.
Speaker 1 And can he be a crunch time guy? Maybe. Is he going to be better off as a completely overqualified number two?
Speaker 1 I think he's better than that. But yeah, if that's your worst case scenario for him,
Speaker 1
it's going to be really great. All right, we're taking a break.
We got to talk about a lot of NBA stuff here. This episode is brought to you by Audi.
The all-new fully electric Audi Q6 e-tron.
Speaker 1 A huge leap forward, featuring effortless power, serious acceleration, and the most advanced tech of any Audi ever.
Speaker 1
Experience technology that puts you center stage with a panoramic digital stage, plus an optional screen for front seat passengers. That sounds fun.
Perfect for watching the latest sports documentary.
Speaker 1
Maybe I made it. The Q6 e-tron is not just a new EV.
It's a new way. to experience driving.
Learn more at Audiusa.com. Always pay careful attention to the road.
Do Do not drive while distracted.
Speaker 1 Sometimes in basketball, 30 points can be worth more than 30 points. You can get a 30% profit boost from the ringer with FanDuels 30 on 30 during Friday's NBA slate.
Speaker 1 We are teaming up with America's number one sports book to give you a 30% profit boost.
Speaker 1
You can either pick a player to score more than 30 points or bet on our new exclusive 30 on 30 special markets, like any game. Back yourself out.
Go nuts. I tweet out my picks on Friday.
Speaker 1
I really like these. I like trying to guess.
I do the matchups. I look at how many guys
Speaker 1 have people played four games and five nights all that stuff try to figure out who's just going to go off and then you just get to root for it uh whether you want to ride with my picks or make your own
Speaker 1 look for 30 on 30 in the fandule sportsbook app or head to fandu.com slash bs for your chance to score a bigger payout this friday remember you can find out how much 30 can be worth with fan duels 30 on 30 you must be 21 plus in president suck states or 18 plus in president in dc opt-in required bonus issued as non-withdrawable profit boost tokens, restrictions apply, including any token expiration and max wage or amount.
Speaker 1
C terms at sportsbook.fandre.com. Gambling problem call 1-800-gamble.
Visit rg-help.com. So I asked you any NBA trend stuff that you've noticed this year.
Speaker 1 You're a big style of play comparing stuff to history guy, as am I? Anything you've noticed this year that jumped out? You're like, hmm, well, this is something.
Speaker 2 Yeah, over the, this all ties together to what we were talking about with Cooper, and I think it factors into
Speaker 2
player types and things like that. When you're looking at the way the two teams that I think before the season, your pick for the finals was OKC Boston, right? Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
Speaker 2 And I think if you look at the way, and I think this will tie to Jimmy's fit with Golden State, too, which I know you want to talk about,
Speaker 2 this spatial sense and flow, like we know that in the past, really since video and analytics became really, really ubiquitous and easy to access, I think that the league made a leap forward.
Speaker 2 I don't even think that's speculation. I think the flow of information just iterated really, really fast.
Speaker 2 Things were more, the scouting reports got more and more complicated from game to game and more detailed and things like that. So you've just kind of seen the flow of information take a leap up.
Speaker 2 And I think if you look at the way, I know you're keenly aware of this, but when you just kind of, I noticed this in the finals, whenever the Celtics players, I remember I was like watching, there are a lot of people people on Twitter who are, we have people who are the former NBA people, the people who I think are actually qualified to analyze mid-series adjustments in detail.
Speaker 2 There's not a ton of them, but we have some on Twitter.
Speaker 2 And you were watching the details and you would go down through there and they'd say, okay, there's this, this, this, this, and this rule for this, this, this defensive coverage.
Speaker 2 And I'm just looking at it and you just, your head starts spinning.
Speaker 2 and you just think, how in the world could someone on the court keep all that information in their head to the point where it's like reactionary?
Speaker 2 And I think that that is something that is setting OKC in Boston, aside from just having, being smart transactionally, something that is setting those two programs apart is I think that they are curating people just better than anybody else.
Speaker 2 I think you're getting good basketball players, but if you look at the types of guys and you're like, why is Peyton Pritchard popping? Why is Sam Hauser popping?
Speaker 2 Why is Luke, why are these guys working?
Speaker 2 What is it about Al Horford that's allowing him to, you know,
Speaker 2 why is it that Derek White
Speaker 2 has found a home there?
Speaker 2 I just think that overall, if you look at organizations and how they are like evaluating people, I think that that is a huge advantage in the NBA today, just because of what we were talking about in terms of the speed of the game.
Speaker 1 Yeah, the discipline of we know what types of players we want to put together and we're never deviating from this.
Speaker 2 Right.
Speaker 1
The Celtics had this last year with Brissette. They really like Brissette.
Incredibly popular teammate,
Speaker 1 good athlete.
Speaker 1 You know, whether he's an NBA rotation guy, I don't know.
Speaker 1 But they end of the year and they're like, we're just, we're not playing anybody who can't make a wide open three if the ball goes to him, right? So then they're testing out different guys this year.
Speaker 1
And it's Jordan Walsh gets a cup of coffee. And they started playing my guy, Jaden Springer.
And
Speaker 1 they just came to the decision, like,
Speaker 1
everybody in Florida needs to be able to shoot a three. That's what we're riding with.
So then they end up with Tori Craig.
Speaker 1 And then smart guys who all of them can guard somebody or at least not get completely embarrassed in space.
Speaker 1 None of them need the ball, need to be like ball stoppers because they already have two semi-ball stoppers with Tatum and Brown.
Speaker 2 You could sustain like one or two of those guys, right?
Speaker 1
Yeah, you can have one, two, and even those guys are trying to get better at it. And that's it.
And then OKC, it's pretty clear what they're trying to do. They're just getting fantastic athletes.
Speaker 1 They want the ability to go bigger or smaller depending on who they're playing.
Speaker 1 And they want guys who can fit with Shea because, as great as Shay is, he's another one who is, I don't think he's the easiest guy to play with sometimes.
Speaker 1
He has the ball a lot, especially when he's feeling it. And you got to have guys who aren't going to be like, all right, now it's my turn to shoot.
They don't have any, it's my turn now.
Speaker 1
They don't have any of those guys, right? It's Shea's team. They all know it.
And Chet as such, he's another one who's just so additive.
Speaker 1 Like going back to the Cooper discussion from I think Chet and Cooper have a lot in common.
Speaker 2 Yeah, actually.
Speaker 1
He's just like, he's just there to help and chip in. And he takes nothing off off the table.
And then Jalen Williams is now their wild card.
Speaker 1 And that's the guy, I think, when they get to the playoffs, that's he's going to decide series for them because
Speaker 1 you're not going to take out Shay,
Speaker 1
but you can limit him a little bit. You can make it hard for him.
You can send doubles at him. You can do all the stuff that teams are trying to do to Tatum over the last couple of years.
Speaker 1 And eventually, you're going to need the Jalen Brown guy to step up and make some plays. And you're going to need the side guys.
Speaker 2 That's
Speaker 1 when I watch, especially, I don't know if you saw
Speaker 1 them fall apart against Minnesota in that second game and they'll, and down the stretch in OT, but I still feel like, you know, until you've done there and you have the scars
Speaker 1 and you've lost a couple of those and you have these guys who've just, they've kind of been through a few of those, like I still never going to 100% trust it.
Speaker 1 But then you'll have a situation like the 2015 Warriors where it's like, I don't trust it. And then they're hoisting the trophy.
Speaker 1 you know but but anyway back to your original point i think you're right those two teams and i think Cleveland, I think, deserves credit for understanding who they are.
Speaker 1
And even that Hunter trade, I thought was such a good trade. They needed this specific thing.
They went out and got it. All of their guys compliment each other.
And to me, those are the three.
Speaker 1 Those are the three with Denver as the wild card for the top four.
Speaker 2 Yeah, sometimes you get lucky in a superstar like a Jokic, you just sit him in the middle of your, you know, your planetary diorama and everything falls into place around him.
Speaker 2 And Jokic takes spare parts. And, you know, this, you know, if you handed a professional drummer a really crappy drum kid, he knows how to make it sound good.
Speaker 2
And I feel like that's, that's kind of Jokic. Jokic can repurpose things that maybe one man's trash is another man's treasure.
But I think with these teams, these two teams specifically,
Speaker 2 you know, when you think about the slugging percentage of how many decisions there are within a given NBA game, and you think about the difference, the margins between a small decision, and I think like attacking and vacating space is an enormous thing that can tank whether or not a team is working.
Speaker 2 Like with the Celtics or with OKC, if a guy doesn't have an instinctual kind of feel for, all right, they're loading up on Shea in this situation, X player's head is turned, you know, I'm gonna go here, and that takes an activeness of mind, I think.
Speaker 2 But then the other thing is just how, and vacating space is the other thing, and just getting the fuck out of the way, as we've seen, is you know, knowing when to do that.
Speaker 2 But I think in terms of guys getting better, too, I think it's gotten super detailed down to the point of they know what it takes for a person to like have like a permanence of a concept and they know how to sort of do that whenever they're working guys out.
Speaker 2 And guys who aren't reflective people, you're talking about like knowing who you are, they're just not going to be as apt to grow as fast as other players.
Speaker 2 So I think it's gotten really like psychologically detailed even in that point. And I think you're absolutely right about it does kind of come down to knowing who you are.
Speaker 2
Like it's amazing how many teams across the league don't really know who they are. I made a joke last year about the Bulls.
I was like, the Bulls were like Bruce Willis in the Sixth Sense.
Speaker 2 They were dead and they had no idea. And you'll look at some teams, some teams who just are just sunk cause following these paths that are never going to end up being a masterpiece.
Speaker 2 And I think that's a really key part of it.
Speaker 1 Yeah, Golden State is a good example of knowing who you are because the Brandon Ingram trade was sitting there for them for and they were like nope whatever season they're like this is the kind of guy that doesn't work out for us you know he needs the ball he's a little bit of a ball stopper um him playing without the ball isn't awesome kerr had him and team usa didn't work out great he basically uh didn't even i don't even think he played the last two games but uh they kind of held the fort and then they you know which ties into we want to talk about jimmy Bringing in Jimmy and keeping your fingers crossed that he's going to behave himself, but knowing that there's a hoops IQ element with with him.
Speaker 1 But then now there's this whole low post and space and Steph pulling guys away. And basically, you're able to play four on three a little bit with Jimmy as your low post guy, as weird as that is.
Speaker 1 They've never really had a low post guy like that since,
Speaker 1 I don't know. Durant, if you count him as, but he's kind of like a medium post guy.
Speaker 1 David Lee going way back.
Speaker 2 I guess you're
Speaker 2 a little bogey, maybe.
Speaker 1 There's a tiny bit of bogey, a tiny bit of David West. But Butler, it's been, and we're taping this before they play tonight, but it's been really fun to watch the different spacing they have now.
Speaker 1
And Steph's stats have immediately gotten better. I mean, he's, he's just, it's already had an effect on him.
And the more I love the trade when it happened, we were really bullish on it.
Speaker 1 I bet on the Warriors when I was at the Super Bowl to make the playoffs of Fandel.
Speaker 1 The more I'm staring at it, like I do, there are some Rasheed Wallace 0-4 parallels
Speaker 2 where,
Speaker 1 you know, both of those guys, neither neither of them had actually won a title, but gotten really close. Both of them were just unbelievably talented.
Speaker 1 Both of them wore out their welcome at their own place. And both of them were
Speaker 1
a non-sexy asset because of what had happened, but they were still assets. Yeah.
And then it's like, what if we can take this and move this here into this culture with these people?
Speaker 1 What does this look like? It's very hard to pull those trades off. We've seen a lot of people try to pull off the 2004 Rasheed trade.
Speaker 1 They might have done it.
Speaker 1 This is a team that had no championship ceiling at all, and now they're a team that we have to at least mention.
Speaker 2 Yeah, there's a sweet spot of distressed asset and talent that is, that is act that you could bet on in the right scenario. And
Speaker 2 you also just have to have the culture to sustain something like that. And the Warriors have proven over and over again that they can.
Speaker 2 But I think the big thing, I was looking at some of the stats through, I guess it was seven games.
Speaker 2 I mean, there are seven three-man lineups that Jimmy is a part of that have a plus 20 net rating, and only one of them is like actually negative.
Speaker 2 He's in one lineup that's like negative 0.5 or something. So his impact on it has been immediate.
Speaker 2 And I think you hit it where talking about like Duran and the post, I think the big thing is that Steph has not had like a switch partner for a while.
Speaker 2 Like he hasn't had a guy on the floor where if you switch this, this is going to create an issue because you think about, you know, Wiggins had his little run there where he was doing some things and they've had these, they've had a ceiling.
Speaker 2 They've had scores here and there, like Poole, they could put him in an action for that season and he was, he was making, making lemonade. But I think that he has,
Speaker 2 that is like the starting point. Really, since like Iguadal or Durant, I don't think that they've had a guy that could punish a switch as consistently as Jimmy does.
Speaker 1 Iguadal is a good, good one for that because some of the defense that he brought to the table is some of the stuff Butler's doing for them, too. I'm really intrigued by them.
Speaker 1 And Lakers are another one. I think he's going to fit in easier with Golden State than
Speaker 1
this Lakers situation. I'm, you know, I've already gone on the record.
To me, they're a legitimate contender.
Speaker 1 But it's a pretty dramatic trade for mid-season.
Speaker 1 The history of the league is it's really hard to make a trade like that halfway through the year and then actually have it lead to you making the finals or better.
Speaker 1 There's some examples, but not somebody as talented as Luke is. And, you know, it's, it's just, the league is so much more fun than it was a month ago because Golden State was not fun to watch.
Speaker 1
I hated watching the Lakers. And now you have these two that it just feels like we have enough teams.
I think Memphis is really interesting because,
Speaker 1 you know, Ja,
Speaker 1 Ja will have these games where he's like nine for 25, but he makes the two biggest shots of the game. He's not making threes at all.
Speaker 1 He still plays the same kind of reckless offensive game that always works out for him.
Speaker 1 He hasn't really evolved from that at all, but he's still like they're down six down a point or down one with six seconds left.
Speaker 1
I just feel like he's scoring. He's one of those guys, you know, like in a playoff series, I'm not positive.
I'd want to see them, and I also don't think they could win the title. So I don't know.
Speaker 1 I think the league got really interesting, and I was not interested a month ago. How about you?
Speaker 2 Yeah, well, I was going to say a couple of things.
Speaker 2
The Luca trade, I guess I haven't even got to talk to you about it at all. I was at the Cali Caliperry return game, which I thought was going to be the biggest story that night.
Right.
Speaker 2 And we were sitting there in the post-game presser, and somebody showed me their phone. I was like, what?
Speaker 2 I didn't believe it seriously for the rest of the night. Anyway,
Speaker 2 everybody's beating that one to death. But
Speaker 2 on Jaw,
Speaker 2 he definitely is the separator for them in that sense. I do think that he's suffered a little bit from defensive, like officiating shifting recently.
Speaker 2 And that speaks into what's, I think that's what has made Boston and OKC really effective, too, is the fact that they have that, they just have this chain, this, this circular chain link that really doesn't have any obvious gap in it.
Speaker 2 Because even if you are bigger than them, they're so laterally mobile and strong that they can prevent players from playing as big as they are because they move so well, you know, because you know,
Speaker 2 a lob threat, one of the ways to stop a lob threat is to physically get in front of them. Like, don't let them jump, you know.
Speaker 2 And I think that that's another big thing that has really
Speaker 2 made an impression on me in terms of how to view the league is, A, I think strength is, we had that time where the game spread way out and, you know, offensive players ruled the day.
Speaker 2 And I think being skinny was something you could get away with.
Speaker 2 But I think the more that they've allowed defenses to sort of exist, the more I think players like the Celtics have, like your Drew Holidays, your
Speaker 2 lower sort of secondary body kind of guys, I think are having an impact again.
Speaker 1 It's fun to think of teams even five, 10 years ago and how they would have competed in the league now, the way how deep everything is. Because I do think the league is just better.
Speaker 1
And I think the teams are deeper in a way that that whole model of the mid-late 2000s, I'm not sure. Like the 2050 Warriors would still be awesome.
Yeah.
Speaker 1 But you go to like that 2019 Raptors team that won. And I know Kawhi was awesome, but he wasn't as awesome the last two rounds as I think
Speaker 1
when we think back and we think like, like, oh my God, playoff Kawhi in 2019. It was like, all right, the last two rounds, not quite as good.
They got a really good Van Bweet
Speaker 1
one series. And, you know, they patched it together.
They had some really good competitors. But I look at that team now and it's like, would that team,
Speaker 1 would you pick that team ahead of Boston or Cleveland in a playoff series from what we have this year? I wouldn't. With Gasol and Kawhi and
Speaker 1 Siakam, I think Ananobi missed the playoffs, Van Bweet, Lowry.
Speaker 1 I just, I think that's the third best team in the East. So you go back and you look at some of these, like that Bucs team that won in 21.
Speaker 1 I don't think that team, yeah, I don't think that team could win now.
Speaker 1 I don't think that Phoenix team that made the finals built around Booker and CP3 and DeAndre Ayton and Bridges and Cam Johnson, like that team's not making the finals now. There's no way.
Speaker 1 The league's just better.
Speaker 2 Wasn't the West pretty devastated that year, too? I mean, not to
Speaker 2
be able to do that. Yeah, it all blurs together.
But yeah,
Speaker 2 I'm trying to think back.
Speaker 1 The Murray injury was a big one that year.
Speaker 2 Well, the league, the league sort of ebbed and flowed between the helio thing spiked to the moon, obviously, for a while there.
Speaker 2 And we've talked about this a lot where I think that we've kind of shifted away from that model, I don't think works as well anymore.
Speaker 2 I think, and you see, you've seen the shift with the way Cleveland is playing this year.
Speaker 2 They went from ball, they are a really good example of a team that was maybe probably miscalibrated a little bit in the way that they were so ball screen dominant with Donovan Mitchell.
Speaker 2 And I would look at that team over the past couple of years and just be like, if they would just just play through their big now, Evan Mobley had to get better.
Speaker 2 I think that's a key part of the equation.
Speaker 2 But, you know, allowing those guys to move around him, I think they're a good example of the way the league has shifted lately when you look at the way they've succeeded.
Speaker 1 I think people think I'm doing a bit in trying to reverse Jinx Cleveland when I talk about how good I think they are. I think that team's really good.
Speaker 1 I think it's going to be really hard to win a seven-game series against them, especially when they have a game seven.
Speaker 1 And the biggest thing that's changed, everyone's talked about how Mitchell, when they gave him the contract, and he's just pulled back enough that it's still his team, but other guys get to shine.
Speaker 1 Garland's healthy, but Moby is the big difference because I feel like his three is going in now.
Speaker 1 You know, last year it was like, please shoot that. You're not making that.
Speaker 1
There's no way. It's going to be an ugly line drive.
Now he's shooting with confidence.
Speaker 2 And
Speaker 1 it's a team that has
Speaker 1
four of the best 50 guys in the league. Mitchell's in the top eight.
Mobly's probably in the top 20 to 22 at this point. And then Hunter as a fifth guy is nuts.
Speaker 1 And I got to be honest, like, everyone's already given the six-man award to Payton, to Peyton Pritchard, who's, who's, it's weird. You have to watch him because his stats are better than Ty Jerome.
Speaker 1 And part of the reason they're better is because he's had games where he played in place of White or no Jalen Brown. And they just let him go off and he'll have like 29.
Speaker 1
So maybe that's why he should win. I think Ty Jerome's been the best bench guy in the league, especially in these big games.
He's like swinging games.
Speaker 1 Pritchard will have games against certain teams when he just looks like an undersized guard who can't do anything and teams are attacking him.
Speaker 1 Ty Jerome looks like, it's like, is this guy a $100 million player?
Speaker 2 What is he?
Speaker 1 So I just don't think that sixth man of the year is over yet because I think he's been playing great.
Speaker 2 Has anybody ever won most improved and sixth man of the year in the same year?
Speaker 2 Wow,
Speaker 1 the double dip?
Speaker 2 Would he have a, would he have, how much of an argument would he have for that, do you think?
Speaker 2 Because is it just did he is it did he improve or is it that he got into a context where he's properly seen? Because I think he's improved. He's obviously worked in his game.
Speaker 2 I don't think that's ever happened, has it? I'm trying to think of the double dipping on the major awards.
Speaker 2 We had a rookie of the year MVP before, right? Didn't Wilt did he?
Speaker 1 Cade's the favorite on Fando, and I think that's justified.
Speaker 2 For most improved?
Speaker 1 Yeah, the leap that he made. Now that this is like, usually, most improved is either one of two things.
Speaker 1 It's either I was here and now I'm here, or it's like nobody was even fucking talking about me last year. Now I'm here.
Speaker 1 Cade
Speaker 1
becoming a top 10, top 12 guy in the league, which I think he is. You saw it last, you know, you've seen it during this win streak.
You saw it last night. Like
Speaker 1 that's probably the winner. But yeah, Peyton Pritchard is
Speaker 1
he's plus 170. Oh, Beasley.
I forgot about him. He's three to one.
Speaker 1 And like Ty Jerome, Ty Jerome's 50 to 1 Fando. I'm like, is there a better sub than him? I guess they have Ahmed Thompson as a
Speaker 1 as a as a six-man candidate.
Speaker 1 That's a weird one. I feel like he's a starter, but what do I know? Beasley's been, I guess Beasley's a good choice, too.
Speaker 1 My point is, I don't think Pritchard has that award locked up by any means. Beasley's been amazing for Detroit.
Speaker 1 If he'd played like this on Milwaukee last year, they might have been able to survive until Giannis came back.
Speaker 1 Yeah, the defensive player of the year, Moby, is the favorite for that one, too, which, you know, some of this stuff's going to play out. And then Rookie of the Year,
Speaker 1 which is just grisly.
Speaker 1 Right now, Castle's the favorite, but this is among the worst rookie of the year candidacy classes.
Speaker 2 Are we in Martin Carter Williams territory?
Speaker 2 We might be.
Speaker 1 Well, that was tough because he just had fake stats on a team that stunk.
Speaker 1 But yet, I still like this rookie class. Where do you stand on it? You obviously did a lot of work on it last year for us.
Speaker 1 Are you happy, unhappy, medium, unclear? Where are you?
Speaker 2
I think it's spun forward in the way that we thought it would. It was a class, it was a draft class.
A high school, it always is driven by the high school class because
Speaker 2 if they could draft them, they would, but they want to use the college buffer to get a good, kick the tires and see what happens when they go up and level up in the competition.
Speaker 2
And you saw some shift. You know, I mentioned like Isaiah Collier was a guy who was ranked really high in the class, somebody, you know, out in LA.
That I assume you got to see some.
Speaker 2 And sometimes you see shifts there that happen. Like Reed Shepard obviously ascended in that year and got drafted.
Speaker 2 But overall, we knew that that class lacked like a generational foundational type of superstar. So I'm not super surprised that I expected that to spin forward into summer league, which it did.
Speaker 2 Summer league was just like, yeah, we, you know, there's some guys here that we like.
Speaker 2 But, and so, no, overall, not terribly surprised.
Speaker 1 Are you surprised by Shepard, though? Because you were pretty, you're pretty high on him, at least being like a bench guy right away, right?
Speaker 1 I'm kind of amazed that he's not playing it all for Houston. I don't really know the reasons.
Speaker 2 Yeah, you can make the argument, you'll hear people talk about you know, how much time do they have? Eme, obviously, it's it's a high bar for a rookie to play for Emae.
Speaker 2 Yeah, and to just he wants to he wants to win, and that's his mentality. And you look at them and what their goals are in the short term, Reed just doesn't really fit them right now.
Speaker 2 I think the big thing is he really needs to play. I was surprised they brought him out of the G-League so fast.
Speaker 2 I've heard some people kind of talk about the quality of the G-League right now, which is a riveting conversation. But
Speaker 1 quality being bad?
Speaker 2 Yeah, that is right. That it's down right now.
Speaker 1 It seems like it's the worst it's been.
Speaker 2 Yeah,
Speaker 2 I've been shocked by the shooting. I mean, I didn't expect him to shoot so poorly, but
Speaker 2 I don't know. You would think that if he was doing the things that he does well, that he would get to play because you keep hearing people make that argument about
Speaker 2 that. But Dillingham, too, I thought would come on a little earlier, but I think we've seen some signs that he's going to be okay.
Speaker 1
Some signs the other night. I'm all in.
I haven't sold any of my Dillingham stack.
Speaker 1 I like that he seems like a great teammate and a real competitor, too, which I like.
Speaker 2 Yeah.
Speaker 2 You know what I realized after we had finished the draft work last year? I was like, Nick Van Exel. I kept saying he just.
Speaker 1 Oh, that's a good one.
Speaker 2
I said he was in the Nick Van Exel spiritual lineage, and I was like, that's perfect. He's the guy.
Maybe you don't lean on him heavily because you could fall down and kill yourself, but you know,
Speaker 2
here and there in spurts, he comes in and he's obviously really talented. Him and Ant.
I don't know if he's going to solve Minnesota's problems or anything like that, but I still believe in Rob.
Speaker 1 Who's your favorite non-Cooper flag college guy right now?
Speaker 2 Oh, boy. Let me
Speaker 2 pull up my list here.
Speaker 2 I mean, of the
Speaker 2 C, of the guys at the top.
Speaker 1 I'm fascinated by the other Rutgers guy, and I know he's either going to break hearts.
Speaker 2 Ace?
Speaker 1 I'm fascinated by Ace.
Speaker 1 I don't know what he is. And if I was a GM, I think I'd be afraid to be like, all right, this is my third pick.
Speaker 1 I'm going all in on this guy because there's a chance it just is not going to translate to the NBA in the right way.
Speaker 1
But there's another alternate universe where it's like, this guy seems legitimately unstoppable. Yeah.
And what, what is this going to look like if he just figures out a couple of things?
Speaker 1 His offensive,
Speaker 1 the shot making is just really unusual.
Speaker 2 I
Speaker 1 don't want to compare it to Durant because
Speaker 1 that's like, you know, sainted ground.
Speaker 2 Yeah.
Speaker 1 But there's some stuff he does where I
Speaker 1
just don't. I don't think he'd be fun to play with, at least not yet.
You know, it just seems like the ball's going to him. He's shooting.
He's one of those guys.
Speaker 1 But there's some shot-making stuff with him.
Speaker 2
Yeah. Wow.
The Durant with Durant, the thing that always kills me is with people when they talk about him, the dribble shooting is the thing that set him apart at his size.
Speaker 2 And the difference is
Speaker 2 you just don't see guys that can handle and shoot it like that.
Speaker 2 But then, you know, later down the road, we saw Michael Porter Jr.
Speaker 2 come along, who obviously had a lot of, I think he's more like MPJ personally, because MPJ at the same age was very similar in that he had this gigantic mallet that was very useful in every single situation.
Speaker 2 And for MPJ, it's continued to be useful, but every single situation was a nail for him because he had this thing that he could just rise up over people and hit shots. And Ace has that.
Speaker 2 Now, I have some, my comp that I've made is that I think that I think that Ace is sort of like he could be a Jaden McDaniels type with the MPJ shot making.
Speaker 1 Do you think he could be that good defensively?
Speaker 2
He's a weak side disruptor, and I think that the defense could come a long way. I think that he's still kind of learning the game.
Like, you talk about problem solving in the way we were earlier.
Speaker 2 I think he's on a new frontier, so it's going to be really interesting. I would not lean on him to be a decision maker for me, like going to the basket, things like that.
Speaker 2 There's not much proof that he's going to be somebody that can pass out of a situation where he gets loaded up against, but you're right. His shot making is crazy.
Speaker 1 He's an extension pink slip guy. You take him, and you're either it's going to work out, and you're getting a four-year extension, or you're going to be on NBA TV in a year.
Speaker 1
It is a risk-reward pick, but I am fascinated by him. And his teammate's really good, too.
I mean, his teammate is a way more traditional.
Speaker 1 This is the kind of guy we've seen succeed in the NBA over and over again. I don't have a lot of takes on him.
Speaker 2 On Dylan? Yeah. He fits more what we were talking about before,
Speaker 2
that sturdy lower body type. He's a big guard.
He's a great finisher in the lane. He's really crafty.
Speaker 1 Yeah, he's it's he'll he's going to be a really good NBA player. I don't know if he's going to be an all-NBA guy, but he'll be good.
Speaker 2 Yeah, there's one guy that I would be fascinated for you to watch just because I want to hear your opinion on it because he has a lot of the traits you like. Foreign guy?
Speaker 2 No, well, Jaeger Demon earlier in the year, I texted you. I was like, you got to watch this guy run ball screens.
Speaker 2 He's still fun to watch, but he slipped a little bit because of some of his scoring issues.
Speaker 2 But the other guy that I would say is Derek Queen from Maryland, I think you should watch because because he is a very, very, like, has crazy hand eye coordination for his size.
Speaker 2 He's a really smart, like handsy defender. He can pass the ball, but he has this kind of slow-mo.
Speaker 2 I said
Speaker 2 he has some sort of,
Speaker 2 this is a dangerous one. I hesitate to say this, but he has some kind of deal kind of qualities to him
Speaker 2 where
Speaker 2
he's a little laissez-faire and that every once in a while he'll, he's 6'10. He'll just drive baseline and rifle a left-handed pass through a tight window to somebody on the money.
And
Speaker 2 he's somebody really fascinating that I'm curious to hear your take on when you get to watch him.
Speaker 1 I got to say, I've been impressed by Duke, just the team, the team that they have.
Speaker 1 Like, they have a bunch of guys that I could just see on NBA teams down the stretch, but I admittedly have not watched.
Speaker 1 I mean, one of the wrinkles for me is I've never watched women's college basketball during the regular season before.
Speaker 1 And I've actually watched, I've watched women's college over men's college a couple of times, which has been really surprising to me.
Speaker 1 But so I feel like I'm not as versed on the men as I usually would be at this time of year. But I have watched a bunch of Duke and
Speaker 1
for them to not at least make like the final four, final two, I just feel like something really bad would have have to happen during a game. Like they just go ice cold.
They just seem really complete.
Speaker 2 They have a guy on their team that I think you would like named Cion James, who is built like Drew.
Speaker 2 He's, he's a big, like, and when they moved him into the starting lineup, they played Auburn, who has been sort of the favorite for the year.
Speaker 2
They played Auburn at home and they moved him into the starting lineup and their season just changed. He's, he just, he's, he's a smart player.
He can guard multiple positions.
Speaker 2 So he's somebody that I expect to be pretty instrumental to whether or not they win. LeBaron Filin is another one, too, that I would throw out that I really, really like a lot for Alabama.
Speaker 2 But yeah, I could, I'll wait until you circle around and we can. Yeah, I'm just starting.
Speaker 1 We finally finally have more time to watch stuff. Hey, so I want to talk Celtics a little bit because we got the big documentary, Celtic City, coming on March 3rd, Monday on MAX and on HBO.
Speaker 1
You follow the history of the league. You try to intersect it with the guys we're watching now.
Is there anybody from all the different Celtics eras that you would love to have seen in 2025?
Speaker 2 Oh, man, that's a great question. I mean,
Speaker 1 Bert, you can't count Bird.
Speaker 2 Yeah, I remember when I was making that Indiana travel video last year, I think I was texting you about, I was going back and watching some of the Indiana state footage and I was just thinking Bird absolutely would have translated to today.
Speaker 2
Yeah. No problem, just because of the space.
You went talking about spatial intelligence.
Speaker 2 I mean, over the, over the decades,
Speaker 2 I think Ainge is a pretty fascinating player.
Speaker 2
When he was younger, just seeing the way that he was able to, just obviously a really smart. player.
Dennis Johnson, I'm a big fan of. I think in the era of ball pressure, he would have translated.
Speaker 2 I'm trying to think of this. Do you mean
Speaker 1 how about Mikhail?
Speaker 1 Because I feel like Mikhail is now a unicorn that will never happen again because whatever version of Mikael happens at 25, that guy's just shooting threes all the time.
Speaker 1
Which started to happen to Mikhail near the end of his career. He started stretching them four more.
I just don't know if a low-post guy would ever have that arsenal of moves anymore because
Speaker 1 it would just be banged in your brain to shoot threes and clear space, get out of the way for other people. I don't see it happening again.
Speaker 2 He's somebody that I think would probably, this kind of reminds me of our conversation when we were like creating the all-time fun team.
Speaker 2 He's somebody that I think would have probably been the fulcrum of a
Speaker 2 like big guy-driven offense with movement around him.
Speaker 1 Like a little Shangoon, Shingoon on Houston, a tiny bit.
Speaker 2
Yeah, because if you had the right guards around him, he was such a dominant one-on-one player. He would have been pretty.
Shingoon is an interesting.
Speaker 2 Where would you compare Mikhail and Shingoon as passers, though? I think
Speaker 1 Mikhail became a better passer
Speaker 1
because he played with Bird. There was that osmosis thing.
I think if Mikhail's on another team, he's probably like 1.1 assists a game.
Speaker 1 But I think when you play with somebody who's just always making extra passes, there's no way you don't start doing it. It's one of the great things about basketball.
Speaker 1
Yeah, I guess like you would have Mikhail would have been a center. You would have put shooting all the way around him and just tried to get him on the low post with space.
And
Speaker 1 that would have been a good one.
Speaker 1 The types like the Parrish types,
Speaker 1 you know, those guys now, they're just valued completely differently in the league, you know, because back then you owe every team needed one or you needed a center to guard the other centers.
Speaker 1 And now those guys are like 15 to 20 million dollar players. And then, or you'll see a team like the Lakers who are just like, I guess we're just not going to have a center.
Speaker 1 Or it's somebody like the way the Celtics use Porzingis and Horford as like these stretch fives with size that, you know, ideally you can kind of play them off the ball and then have them come flying in on the paint.
Speaker 1 It's just, there's not a lot of parish types now. Detroit probably plays the closest to what an old, older era team plays like, right?
Speaker 2 Yeah.
Speaker 1 With it, they have size and rebounding and they're tough and nasty.
Speaker 1 They have a couple shooters and then they have one really good offensive player and it's just kind of, it's like a 1991 type of team.
Speaker 2 Yeah. and they've gotten well they we knew this in the past few years was
Speaker 2 for the player type that cade was and where he was in his growth they tweaked some things to help him out it was it was i was i kept calling it the crowded elevator it was yeah cade cade was just like there are just too many people on the elevator can you please get off the other one i was gonna
Speaker 2 in making this documentary Did you feel any kind of burden?
Speaker 2 I'm not trying to interview you here, but did you feel any kind of burden to represent somebody that was maybe not properly represented in the younger younger generation because I think of like a Havlichek, if you look at his stat lines, so balanced throughout.
Speaker 2 Was there anybody that you felt like a burden to be like, We, we really should focus on this guy to bring out, you know, make to shine a light on his like legacy?
Speaker 1 Yeah, we had a few of those. Havicek's definitely one,
Speaker 1 um, who was a incredibly important player to the league in the 70s, especially as one of the legacies to Russell and the Celtics, but also like as the ABA is getting more and more fun, he's one of the few stars they had left.
Speaker 1 Reggie Lewis was a big one.
Speaker 2 Yeah.
Speaker 1
And we hadn't really seen that. You know, we have a lot of Reggie stuff in the last third of the series.
And
Speaker 1 I just think he's one of those that kind of came and went. People remember he died, but they don't remember how good he was and how important he was to the Celtics.
Speaker 1 That was another one. Then there's little, like, there's moments as you go through where you're trying to explain the impact of somebody.
Speaker 1 Koozie, I mean, Koozie is a big part of the first episode how important he was to the league you know that that the league just wasn't entertaining you know they didn't have a shot clock for eight years and it was just a it was just a bunch of you've seen some of the old videos like it's brutal and it's just a lot of big guys and it's a lot of set shots and running hooks and then koozy becomes in and he's easily the most fun player in the league.
Speaker 1 And he's the most fun player in the league probably for the first 15 years of the league until Elgin and
Speaker 1 Jerry West and Oscar kind of get going.
Speaker 1
And the way he ran fast breaks and just some of the old footage. It's like, it's impossible not to enjoy the way those teams played.
It's so different.
Speaker 1
It's the same sport, but it has no correlation to what we're watching now. Everything's about three on two, three on one, two on one, four on two.
Can we get a layup? Can we get a layup?
Speaker 1 Can we get a layup? And that's like the driving force.
Speaker 1 Now you're running the same place and the guys are splitting out to the corners and Koozi be running and he'd be like doing like over-the-head tosses to somebody in the corner.
Speaker 1 It's just completely different. So, yeah, there is some pressure with some of that just to explain, like, hey, here's why this person was special for four minutes.
Speaker 2 Yeah, the context is just so infuriating whenever you hear people talk about like the history of the league.
Speaker 2 Because, if you like, talking about koozy, people just drive me nuts because they'll go back and use the lens of today and watch the way he's dribbling.
Speaker 2
The officiating of dribbling is like one of the things that single-handedly changed the way the game is played. Like, it just blew the walls down.
I had a clip of of you're talking about the carrying.
Speaker 2
Yeah, they used to, it was so strict. Your hand had to be directly on the top of the ball.
And, you know, I made a video with this one time. You just watched over the decades,
Speaker 2 the hand went from the top to kind of on the side to totally on the side to under. Now it's, you know, and I think it's been a good thing.
Speaker 2 I think it promoted self-expression, which is what the league marketed itself on and exploded. But I just think Koozi is one that is funny to watch.
Speaker 2
If you imagine a game where you had to dribble the way that he did, it was pretty creative. Granted, the league wasn't, I don't know, integrated or anything like that back.
It definitely was that.
Speaker 1
So you had the dribbling thing. You had the sneakers, the fact that they're playing and, you know, just these rinky day converses.
And
Speaker 1
then it was really, really physical. You know, you're just, people are just like, Chloe, it was more like hockey.
They called him cagers, you know, the first 15 years of the league. So
Speaker 1 it's a different sport. The other thing with the assists, like they're scoring all these points.
Speaker 1 You only got an assist if it was like the guy is catching the ball and like laying it or the guy is catching it and shooting immediately or they didn't count it.
Speaker 2 So I've heard old guys complain about that.
Speaker 1 Oh my God. I mean, they complain, they must complain about so many different things, but
Speaker 1 like the equipment they had, the money they didn't make, all the statistical rules against them.
Speaker 1 But, but yeah, and then, you know, it's, it's, we try to use the Celtics as a lens to look at the league and the sport and how it changed and how it intersected with America in all these different ways.
Speaker 1 And
Speaker 1 it is, it is hilarious how the footage changes over the years. Even you watch the stuff from the 80s, like that.
Speaker 1 Like we have a big part about the Boston Philly series in 1981, which is like probably my favorite series ever. But that becomes,
Speaker 1
it's just a UFC fight. It's like a 10-man UFC fight.
There's no spacing at all. Every time somebody goes to the basket, they're just getting clobbered.
Speaker 2 And it becomes this kind of hybrid of like rugby basketball and ufc by the fourth quarter and that's like you would just wouldn't you wouldn't really see that we see elements of that sometimes with the big tense games but not like that there's not there's not there will never be another series like that i don't think yeah it's interesting i i was watching some games i think i was trying to watch something for jerry west one time and i was just amazed at the way he and oscar robertson would drew a i was amazed at the pickup point i think that is something that has really evolved now with this the thread of the deep three-point shot.
Speaker 2 Teams just pick up way higher than they did in the past. You'd watch.
Speaker 1 Oh, yeah, you're right.
Speaker 2 You'd watch legitimate stars with the ball like a Jerry West, who today, if Jerry West dribbled up the floor, he would be a threat from, I would say, 28 and in.
Speaker 2 I mean, like, he legitimately would take those shots. And you would watch him dribble literally
Speaker 2
to the elbow. before he gets contact and he'd pull up for that jumper.
And I wonder if some of that is what you're talking about, just the clogged lane so many times that that shot was just available.
Speaker 2 I mean, Oscar Robertson
Speaker 2 did that a lot too, but I think the pickup point is something that has really, really changed over the decades.
Speaker 1 Yeah, that's how the 85 Lakers won the finals. They just stacked it.
Speaker 1 And if you watch some of the footage from that, Danny Angel, DJ, they're not just wide open from three, they're wide open from like 18.
Speaker 1
So the Lakers are so packed. They're just not letting Mikael and Bird beat them.
And they're just like, take those 18 footers all day. And the Celtics kind of didn't know how to respond.
Speaker 1 And when you watch it now, you're just like, why didn't you guys move back? You would have just had wide open threes. You would have made one out of every three.
Speaker 1 The points per possession would have been more. But, you know, nobody, nobody really thought that way.
Speaker 1 There's a lot of good stuff. I think for the basketball junkies, I think they're going to be
Speaker 1 pleasantly surprised. We were able to pack a lot of stuff in this thing.
Speaker 1 You believe in the Pistons yet, by the way? I forgot to ask you about them.
Speaker 2 I think
Speaker 2 they are on the path toward that young teams need to be on, which we've talked about in the past.
Speaker 2 Whenever you have a young team, you have a coach, you have sort of your startup CEO who comes in and is just trying to make everybody feel good. And then you're like, all right, we're going public.
Speaker 2
We need a real CEO and you go get the person. And I think they did that.
So I think we're in the phase of they're going to be entering the playoffs. And then you, it's sort of like Orlando did.
Speaker 2
You enter the playoffs, you get the data read back on that. And you say, this is, because the playoffs define everything.
You always talk about fourth quarters in the playoffs.
Speaker 2
And it's like, those things come back. And this is what we saw.
This is what happened. This is is the map towards what we need to do.
So that's kind of where they are in the process right now for me.
Speaker 2
So we're going to see what kind of the way teams play them. And then that's going to inform the moves that they make.
So they're on the path. Detroit fans, they seem to hate, think I hate Cade.
Speaker 2 I don't really understand that. But yeah, so but they're they're they're on the right track.
Speaker 1 So it's a tough one because, and Marcello never wavered on Cade, but last year did I.
Speaker 2 I don't understand it.
Speaker 1 But I think, you know,
Speaker 1 it's, it, he was was a different guy than he was this year. Yeah.
Speaker 1 And everyone's admitting, really, from the last couple months, anyone who listened to any of our stuff or any of the stuff we were doing, like, it was like something's really good is happening with Cape Cunningham here.
Speaker 1
And it keeps going and going and going. And the veteran shooters they put around them, I think, is a good model for how to build a team.
It's interesting, though. Like, right now they're sixth.
Speaker 1 They have a chance to bump to
Speaker 1
four or five. If I were them, I'd want to be in that sixth spot.
And I'd I'd want to play the Knicks because I think they could give the Knicks a shitload of trouble.
Speaker 1 They're a really tough physical team.
Speaker 1 They're probably, if they're not the best rebounding team in the league, they're in the top three.
Speaker 1
I just would want to see them in a playoff series. And it's probably a year too early.
It's probably like what Orlando is like last year.
Speaker 2 It's like, oh, watch out for these guys.
Speaker 1 And then they shoot 20% in a game seven. But when you can rebound and you have veteran shooting and you have one guy that you can go to in the last five minutes, I just, I'm taking you seriously.
Speaker 1
So I knew they were going to beat the Celtics last night. No, Jalen Brown, third game and fourth night.
It's kind of a bad matchup. Celts are kind of stuck in the second spot.
Speaker 1 Like that felt like a loss, but it's still a really nice win for Detroit. Like they've won eight straight.
Speaker 1 I'm taking them seriously as at least a first-round upset threat. I think you have to think of them that way now.
Speaker 2 Yeah,
Speaker 2 they're in that position where they may not beat the Knicks, but they're in the position to really take a bite out of them
Speaker 2 as they end the next round, which is they're definitely not going to be a pushover.
Speaker 2 And I think you're right about they have these, they had the guys that were athletic, you know, Asar and Jalen Duran. Durin is somebody that I was really high on.
Speaker 2 I couldn't believe the way he got stolen in that draft. He was somebody that very obviously fit the archetype of somebody that could switch, and he's just super athletic.
Speaker 2 So sort of a poor man's bam type of archetype guy.
Speaker 2
And then the shooting. A lot of the times that's the simplest answer.
You got a downhill guy, just add some space around him. It seems like it's not rocket science, but seems Pistons finally did it.
Speaker 2 I mean,
Speaker 1 they're top five net last 15 games. They're plus 7.6.
Speaker 2 That's like,
Speaker 1 if you're in the top five for a 15 to 20 game stretch at this point of the season, I think you have to be taken seriously.
Speaker 2 Anyway, all right, Kyle Man.
Speaker 1 You'll come back at some point when we're in the March Madness throws, but it was good to see you as always.
Speaker 2 Likewise, good to be here.
Speaker 1
This episode is brought to you by Velveeta. Game Day is all about the tailgate spread.
Listen, if you're going to have friends over, you absolutely 100% have to have a lot of things for them to eat.
Speaker 2 Everyone gets hungry.
Speaker 1 They can say they're not going to eat, but guess what?
Speaker 1 If you lay out the right kind of spread and you have some good, cheesy, creamy, melty dip with some good crackers, some chips, they're probably going to eat it.
Speaker 1
So why not do creamy shells and cheese, melty Velveeta blocks and cheesy jarred quesos? I don't know. Why wouldn't you? They're taking down one taste bud at a time.
Do yourself a favor.
Speaker 1
Stock up on Velveeta before kickoff. This episode is brought to you by Prime Video.
Thursday night football is on. It's only on Prime Video.
Speaker 1
This week, the Buffalo Bills and Houston Texans collide in an AFC showdown. We thought these were going to be two guaranteed playoff teams.
Now,
Speaker 1
who knows? This could be a loser-leaves town match. Coverage begins 7 p.m.
Eastern with football's best part, ATNF Tonight, presented by Verizon. Not a Prime member, not a problem.
Speaker 1 Simply sign up for a 30-day free trial it's the bills and texans thursday at 7 p.m.
Speaker 1 eastern only on prime video restrictions apply camazon.com slash amazon prime for details all right susan morrison is here she works for the new yorker she wrote a big biography on lauren michaels that came out last week or this week last week last week and uh how long were you working on it because it felt like this was like almost a decade's worth of work it was just about a decade yeah just about a decade how did you convince him to do it because you got some i mean you spent an entire week behind the scenes in a in an episode joan hill hosted last decade but also it just seemed like you got a lot of lauren time which is pretty unusual i did and i know i recognize how unusual that was and that's i think i mean it's it's it's worked for me uh well basically after the 40th anniversary uh 10 years ago i started thinking about the show and the enormous impact of lauren himself you know nobody has been more responsible for what makes, you know, generations of Americans laugh, what we all think is funny.
Speaker 3 And, you know, it was a huge legacy. And I knew Lorne a little bit because I worked for him briefly in 1984 on the new show, which was his one spectacular public failure,
Speaker 3 his attempt to do SNL in prime time.
Speaker 3
And I was just a kid. I was a munch kid then, you know, but I had a front row seat to this interesting situation.
And I made a lot of friends there, even though I switched to journalism.
Speaker 3
I kept in touch with all those people. So I would see Lauren maybe every eight or 10 years.
And
Speaker 3 we always said hi. And
Speaker 3
so I decided, I knew Lauren wouldn't say yes to having a book written about him. So what I did is I wrote a proposal, sent it around.
I was surprised by the interest it generated.
Speaker 3
There was a big bidding war. I signed a deal with Random House.
I had not promised them. Lauren's involvement.
And then I wrote a note to Lauren and I said, I'd love to come see you in your office.
Speaker 3 So I went to see him and I said, Lauren, I've just signed a deal to write a book about you and the show. I don't need anything from you because, you know, I'm kind of connected in your world.
Speaker 3 But if you would like to talk to me, it'll be a bigger and better and richer book, you know, which your legacy deserves. And, you know, the truth is he looked like he was going to faint.
Speaker 3 He was surprised and he doesn't like to be surprised, as you know, if you've read the book.
Speaker 3
But he was, you know, incredibly polite, as he always is. And we chatted about this and that for a while.
And he said, let me give it some thought.
Speaker 3 And so a few days later, I followed up and we met for a drink at a bar in a hotel. And
Speaker 3 I thought we were going to, you know, be negotiating. That's that it would maybe be like, well, this and that.
Speaker 3 But as often happens with Lauren, people say that sometimes you sit down with Lauren and he starts a conversation. You're like, wait a minute, so I missed the previous conversation.
Speaker 3
Like you'll just kind of leap ahead. And that's what happened.
We sat there.
Speaker 3 He was drinking his belvedere on the rocks and he just started telling stories about his childhood about his parents and i realized oh he's going to do this you know i didn't have a notepad or or a tape recorder so i would run the ladies room and write stuff down so i just forget it and um you know he asked nothing of me there were no terms there was no deal he just
Speaker 3
I think, you know, he liked me. He respected the magazine.
I think he knew there was going to be a book written about him.
Speaker 3 Better it be written by me than, you know, some kind of entertainment business hack who was going to turn something around really fast.
Speaker 3 And so then I just started visiting him in his office, you know, a couple Friday nights a month, and we would have these leisurely talks. And it was very civilized and really fun.
Speaker 3 And, you know, talk to everyone else in his world. And
Speaker 3 the charm, the real charm of it for me was that I didn't have to deal with any publicists. And that can really be the backbreaking part of a project like this.
Speaker 3 I think that, you know, once word went out that Lauren was talking to me, all these people just said, sure, you know, and everyone loves to talk about Lauren.
Speaker 3 So, you know, after we had done that for a year or so, then I realized, okay, if I'm going to write this guy's biography, you know, you want to avoid it being like a death march through the years, you know, 1986 turned to 1987, turned to 1988.
Speaker 3 And I'm a magazine editor, so I wanted some of that up-close in the room material like you have have in a magazine profile so i said you know how about if i just come to the show one week and just stay at your elbow and watch everything
Speaker 3 you know so i can convey to people the the magic and the insanity of how this show comes together every week uh you know i i kind of related to it a little bit because it's not completely unlike the way we put together an issue of the new yorker you know we have a weekly deadline a lot of crazy egomaniacs you know
Speaker 3 so i and he let me and And so I was able to sit there through all these very intense, usually confidential meetings and got to see all the complicated levers that he has to push and the egos that he has to solve.
Speaker 3 And it was, you know, I sometimes said to my editor, this book could be, you know, published by Harvard Business School.
Speaker 3 I mean, it's a funny, interesting book, but it's, it's a real management Bible, too.
Speaker 1 So
Speaker 1 I was shocked that he let you hang by his side for an entire show like that, especially if they're having pretty candid conversations about Joan Hill was the host that week and the psychology of getting a host to either buy into a sketch or sometimes like him not wanting to promote
Speaker 1
mid-90s. Lauren didn't want to promote it, even though Joan Hill had this movie he directed.
And he's like, ah, we don't do directors. We only do actors.
Speaker 1 But all the little tidbits you got from that, I just couldn't believe.
Speaker 1 he allowed you in that inner circle. But do you think part of it was because he knew the book was coming out so much later than that episode that it was okay?
Speaker 1 Like, if he had done it and it had just all run like a week later, I think that would have been weird. But seven years later, it seemed okay because there's a lot of other stuff in there too.
Speaker 1 Like they're having problems with Leslie Jones that week and she's hitting that point where she's probably outgrown the show and everybody's realizing it.
Speaker 1 But you had all the stuff in there that after seven years, it seemed more benevolent than maybe in 2018.
Speaker 3 Well, the first thing I'll say is, certainly Lauren, neither Lauren nor I knew that it was going to take that much longer.
Speaker 2 Oh, interesting. Okay.
Speaker 3 I mean, I, you know,
Speaker 3
the book took this long just because it took this long. You know, I interviewed hundreds of people.
I have a demanding day job. You know, I did some on the weekends.
Speaker 3 But still, I don't think, I don't think Lauren's that strategic. I don't think he's thinking like, oh, this will be some years.
Speaker 3 I think he just felt like he, again, it was a great honor for me that he just trusted me. And I did say to him at the beginning of that week, I said, I know how this goes.
Speaker 3 You know, if somebody blurts something out that's really, you know, controversial or disgraces themselves or some confidential thing happens that you would like to be off the record, let's check in at the end of each day and you can tell me.
Speaker 3 You know, that's the way at the magazine, we would maybe deal with it if we had a journalist visiting a meeting or something.
Speaker 3
But he never did. He never said, oh, you know, when so-and-so blurted out, blah, blah, blah.
Let's let's erase that.
Speaker 2 Oh, never did.
Speaker 3 He never did.
Speaker 3 And, you know, but again, I think it's that, you know, he respected me as a, as a journalist and, and knew that I wasn't going to, you know, I wasn't out to hang anybody or burn the place down. And
Speaker 3 I'll tell you the truth.
Speaker 3 I mean, there were a handful of things, particularly at the Saturday night, the party after the show, where people were wandering around, you know, a little blitzing things that, you know, and I mean, just because I'm a, you know, I'm a good journalist, but I'm also not out to nail anybody.
Speaker 3
And I think I probably protected a couple of people here and there. But the book is really true to what happened and to my experience.
And I, as I said, I felt honored by being trusted that way.
Speaker 1 Well, because if you go back to the 80s, and there was that great book that Hill and Weingrad wrote about the first 10 years of the show, and as they're finishing that up, Woodward comes out with the book about Belushi.
Speaker 1 And they talk about in the Saturn Live book that came out about the 10 years, like there was a chill with those guys because they felt like they were burned by the Belushi book.
Speaker 1 They'd given Woodward all this access and then he just steered the book toward basically the cocaine downfall of Belushi.
Speaker 1
And it seemed like they were, they basically made it seem like Lauren kind of scaled back right at the end. And he hasn't really done anything since.
And I was wondering, like,
Speaker 1 did he feel like, all right, was it, cause you even have a quote in the book about basically he's like, the less talking you do about how well you're doing, the better off you are, which I thought was interesting.
Speaker 1 But then at the same time, he's letting you do this book.
Speaker 3
Yes, it's true that he has always had a policy that there isn't much to be gained by talking to the press. You can be quoted out of context.
You You know, all these things can happen.
Speaker 3 And they did feel burned by Belushi, by, well, I'm sorry, by Wired. A lot of people, including Jim Belushi,
Speaker 3
told me that they felt that they had been misquoted in the Woodward book and that things were taken out of context. You know, I mean, that kind of, that happens a lot in this business.
I,
Speaker 3
you know, I'm not in a position to fact check. Woodward's book, but I, I mean, I was really careful.
You know, I've been working at the New Yorker for 30 years. I was really careful in the research.
Speaker 3 I had a fact checker, check everything. You know,
Speaker 3 I think that there was a level of comfort with how I was going to be doing it. But you're right.
Speaker 3 I think that the only reason that he kind of went against his usual dictum, which is nothing to be gained by talking to the press, is that.
Speaker 3 It was right after the 40th, the 40th anniversary, as you remember.
Speaker 3
It was a beautiful show. It was very emotional.
I think Lorne was a little softened by it. And I think
Speaker 3 he felt it, that they were celebrating the 40th and Phil Hartman was gone and
Speaker 3 Belushi and Gilda and so many people and Tom Davis. And
Speaker 3 I think he thought, God, it's going to be even a smaller group at the 50th. I think he was for the first time really thinking about his legacy.
Speaker 3
And I just happened to kind of... get him at the right time.
And
Speaker 3
I definitely felt that he was reflective in a way that isn't maybe his norm. I mean, you've interviewed him.
You've talked to him.
Speaker 3 He's not naturally that interior person.
Speaker 3 So I think that
Speaker 3 it was just good timing. He also, you know, I'll say he's, I think he's a little bit superstitious, which I love.
Speaker 3 And when we met that first time in his office, you know, I told you he knew me from the 80s, but I told him something he didn't know, which is that when I was 16
Speaker 3 during the first season of the show, I took the Metro North train in from Connecticut and was in the audience for one of the Elliott Gould shows, which was magic.
Speaker 3
And it was one of his favorite shows from that season. And I think there is something that kind of that sparked something in his brain.
It felt right to him.
Speaker 1
Yeah, I felt that same way when he let me do the pod in his office. I think he knew like, I love the show.
And, you know, it meant a lot to me. And I had a lot of history with it.
Speaker 1 What struck me when I interviewed him, first of all, his recall is amazing. Yes.
Speaker 1 I was really surprised by just how specifically he could remember stuff stuff going back to the 70s and 80s, like it happened yesterday.
Speaker 1 But the thing that you mentioned earlier about how this book could be like
Speaker 1 almost like a business class for management, that was
Speaker 1 his sense of
Speaker 1 how to direct people, how to nudge people, the different points of a career you hit.
Speaker 1 knowing what the shelf life is of a relationship with somebody and whether they're going to leave or actually whether they're going to stay under the umbrella and just kind of stay there or they're just going to go and are they going to come back.
Speaker 1 It seems like he's probably put more thought into this than just about anybody because a lot of people have managed successful companies.
Speaker 1 Not a lot of people have managed a successful company that also has to deal with all the things that come with fame and managers and agents and the temptations and, you know, whether you stay loyal to the infrastructure of the show or you leave and you do something else.
Speaker 1 And it just felt like he had put like an extraordinary amount of thought into it. And that was one of the things I loved about your book is like, it's really in there.
Speaker 1 Like you really feel like all these different examples of like, it's time for them to go or they're going to find out the hard way that they shouldn't have left.
Speaker 1 Like he, it just seems like that's like one of the legacies of Lauren, basically.
Speaker 3
Yeah. I mean, one of the things, Chris Rock was a great source, very smart guy.
And he said, think about it, this guy has been hundreds, if not thousands of people's boss.
Speaker 3 And if that doesn't make you an expert on human behavior, you know, what does? I mean, he's, he's, he's almost like a shrink. He's seen so many people go through this weird crucible, right, of change.
Speaker 3 You know, think about like Bill Hayter comes from Oklahoma in his early 20s. His only job had been working, you know, and as an assistant on Iron Chef, right? And so you see these people.
Speaker 3 And then they become famous overnight. You know, Lauren says he's the world's expert on watching people get famous.
Speaker 3 And very often
Speaker 3 he's fully aware there's like an asshole phase. You become a big jerk for a while.
Speaker 1 But it's a thing like if it lasts, if it lasts more than 15 minutes, you just stay an asshole.
Speaker 2 Or he had some quote like that. Yeah.
Speaker 3 So he knows how to shepherd people through this. But in terms of like the management approach, I think that I think it's a lot, it's largely intuitive.
Speaker 3 Like I, you know, I remember Judd Appetow hearing once about how when he was a 25-year-old or 26-year-old, young young showrunner working on Ben Stiller's Fox variety show in the 80s, which is a great show that got canceled right away.
Speaker 3
He was terrified. He didn't know how to manage people.
He was holed up in his office reading, you know, management for dummies, like trying to learn how to do it. Lauren never did anything like that.
Speaker 3 I think he,
Speaker 3
a lot of it is intuitive. He's got great EQ, but also, and this was the fun part about researching the book.
I mean, sometimes I think he's almost like a young character out of Dickens or something.
Speaker 3 Like every stop along the way, every bad job that he had, he nonetheless learned something important from it.
Speaker 3 Like you can see him going through the first 30 years of his life, gathering the little individual skills to becoming a producer and learning.
Speaker 2 Oh, and especially his interactions with stars.
Speaker 1
Yeah. Just like, oh, I learned this from Flip Wilson.
Oh, I learned this from Lily Tom. And he just takes it.
Speaker 3 Exactly. Yeah.
Speaker 3 And the other thing that's unusual about him is that not only is he good at dealing with those kinds of incandescent creative egos or narcissists, but at the same time, he's a guy who has the mellow confidence to be able to deal with the suits.
Speaker 3 You know, a lot of Conan O'Brien said to me, you know, in the Game of Thrones of show business, you know, Lauren will be the last one standing. And if you think about the number of
Speaker 3 administrations of NBC ownership he has outlived,
Speaker 3 Mike Shur,
Speaker 3 the SNL writer is now creating a lot of different shows.
Speaker 3 I quote him
Speaker 3 talking on a podcast once about what it's like to work for GE. GE owned the network for a long time.
Speaker 3 And he quotes the network or pretends to quote a network saying something, something like, gee, how come our laser guided missile department is doing so much better than our fart joke division?
Speaker 3 So you're working for people who are basically making toaster ovens, you know? Right.
Speaker 3 And he knows how to kind of ride it out when those people turn into pests.
Speaker 1 Yeah, you did a good job with there's, cause there's a couple eras with that
Speaker 1 where he just trusts the infrastructure and that there's going to be upheaval above him. And if he could just kind of hold on to the steering wheel.
Speaker 1
And like the thing he says over and over again to people is you just got to stay in the air. You just got to keep it going.
How do I stay on?
Speaker 1 Because all like the most famous stage for this was probably the Don Olmer era in the mid-90s.
Speaker 3 Yes, yes.
Speaker 1 You know, he's trying to get rid of the show and Lauren could have like escalated it turned into nuclear war and maybe it gets bounced but he just kind of it's kind of
Speaker 3 what happened what conan did you know with the tonight show when he made this social movement out of tv which lauren hated yeah that that to me that lauren that was like exactly what you don't do you know what you do do is you just keep your head down and and ride it out and the stay on the air thing again to look at the lessons that he garnered along the way in the in the in the 60s and 70s when he was working in la on variety shows, you know, he was on Laugh-In, but he knew that the cooler show was the Smothers Brothers.
Speaker 3
That's where Steve Martin wrote and Rob Reiner. And he kind of wished he were on the Smothers Brothers.
But then the Smothers Brothers basically allowed themselves to become martyrs.
Speaker 3 They wouldn't let up on
Speaker 3
their Vietnam stuff. You know, they had Pete Seeger on singing waist deep in the big muddy.
And the president called Bill Paley and got them taken off the air. And
Speaker 3 Lauren, I think, always felt like, yeah, they did great material, but they didn't, you know, they didn't get to stay on the air. And if you're not on the air, you're nowhere.
Speaker 1 Yeah, you have a couple of good stories about the shelf life of the moment you have. One of them was the Smothers Brothers, right?
Speaker 1 Where it's like, they were cool and then you fade, you turn into something else.
Speaker 1 It also, you know, he could feel it probably happened in the early 80s when Letterman became the cool show, which you talked about too.
Speaker 1 SNL is all of a sudden a little late and Letterman is now the new person. And I mean, one of the great things about this book, I knew so little about that five-year stretch when he wasn't on SNL
Speaker 1 and just like grabbing all these different ideas and things. And really.
Speaker 1 None of them worked out other than just getting Broadway Video to buy a bunch of IP from the show, which turned out to be really smart financially.
Speaker 1 But all the creative stuff, none of it really worked out.
Speaker 3
Yeah. And you could that, you know, he thought his TV life was over then.
He thought, oh, that I did my TV thing. Now I'm going to have my Mike Nichols moment.
Speaker 3
You know, he always wanted to make a film like The Graduate, and he thought that was his destiny. You know, his grandparents owned a movie theater.
He grew up besotted with the movies. And
Speaker 3 what's interesting is that, you know, he was working on an adaptation of Pride and Prejudice. You know, he was, he had bought the rights to Don DeLillo's.
Speaker 3 oh gosh, you know, the one that Noah Baumbach just made, White Noise. And, you know, these are really highbrow pictures.
Speaker 3
They weren't like Animal House, which is what you might have expected him to do, you know, go in a bit buffo comedy direction. So that didn't work out.
And
Speaker 3 the thing, the only thing he did during those years that brought him pleasure is he
Speaker 3 wrote three amigos with two of his best friends, you know, Steve Martin and Randy Newman.
Speaker 3 And he described that to me as like the one time where he just followed, this is what I always pictured it to be like, you know, like George S.
Speaker 3 Kaufman staying up all night with the Marx brothers, drinking too much coffee and fixing the third act.
Speaker 3
And I think he realized that, you know, he doesn't, he doesn't want to sit alone in a room with a typewriter. He wants to be brainstorming with his friends.
He likes a clubhouse.
Speaker 3 You know, his whole life, he's been looking for a tribe.
Speaker 3 And so that's what made him go back to SNL in 1985.
Speaker 1
But it also, I mean, you laid out part of why he went back to SNL in 1985 is it didn't seem like he totally knew what to do. Oh, yeah.
And this was like the one thing that he knew he was good at.
Speaker 1 And he had tried all these other things and it just never totally fit.
Speaker 3
Oh, he was horribly in debt. He'd lost his own money on the new show.
He had to mortgage his apartment.
Speaker 3 I mean, this, the idea of Lorne, you know, in financial distress was something that he, you know, it almost reminds me of Scarlett O'Hara. You know, I'll never be poor again because.
Speaker 3
When he was 14, his father died suddenly and his whole life changed. And there was financial uncertainty.
It was, it was, his mother was depressed.
Speaker 3 And, you know, he's, he's one of those guys with catastrophic thinking who kind of lived his whole adult life to make sure that never happened to him again.
Speaker 3 So when he was presented with the offer to come back and save SNL after five years away, he first he didn't know what to do. His pride felt a little wounded, like, oh, is that just going backwards?
Speaker 1 And he. Well, we should mention they were probably, the show is probably dying if he doesn't come back.
Speaker 2
Yes, they were going to thank it. They were going to kill it.
He's got that guilt trip part of it.
Speaker 3 So it was save your baby or we're going to kill it. And so he asked for advice from two mentors.
Speaker 3 and he always had a lot of mentors in his life in the same way that he would go on to be everybody else's mentor so the first one he asked was david geffen who was his first agent way back in the day and geffen said you know lauren you should not go back and take that job in new york you know you've done that someone who wants to be you should do that and i love lauren's response to that because it's very honest he said to me he said well you know i always kind of liked being me yeah
Speaker 3 so then the second person he asked, much more sage, an older man, Mo Austin, who was the chairman of Warner Brothers Records.
Speaker 3
Mo was much more clear-eyed. And he said, look, you're great at that job.
You love New York City. There are very few big entertainment jobs in New York City.
It's a perfect fit. You should go back.
Speaker 3
And I think that the penny dropped. And Lauren realized, yeah, I'm good at live television.
And, you know, Jim Downey, one of
Speaker 3 longest-serving head writers on the show, has a great way of summing up what he thinks Lauren's strengths are that make him so good at live TV.
Speaker 3 He said, Lauren's a guy not that great at term papers, really good at tests. You know, in other words, a hard deadline is necessary for him.
Speaker 3 You know, with movies, he could kind of noodle around with rewrites and never actually get to the end of it.
Speaker 2 Yeah, I like that part of that.
Speaker 3 The show goes on because it's 11:30, no matter what.
Speaker 1 Yeah, I liked how you laid that out, that some people, their weakness is they can't stop tinkering with something, you know, and it could be anything, right?
Speaker 1
It could be a magazine feature you're editing. It could be documentary.
It could just somebody that never feels like it's done and they can't make final decisions.
Speaker 1 But when you, when you're on on Saturday, 1130, one of my favorite things about your book was that process of going between dress rehearsal.
Speaker 1 And, and you laid out everything that happened on that Jonah Hill show from dress rehearsal right to when they go live, when Lauren turns into like a different human and he's just like, all right, here's what we're, and it's like the one time all week where he's just, he has to make decisions.
Speaker 3 Now, people have told me, and this, I'm pleased by this, people have told me that when they're reading that section of the book, their heart starts pounding. Right.
Speaker 3 And when you're in that room and think about it, every, it's a tiny, not a big room. This is the ninth floor office.
Speaker 3 Every square inch of the carpet, I mean, people are on there, kneeling on their knees because there isn't even room to sit down Indian style. Everyone's crammed in there.
Speaker 3
It really is like a scene, you know, they're about to go into battle. And you could just, you can feel the tension.
It's thrilling.
Speaker 3 And that's obviously what makes the drives the adrenaline and the, you know, magic in the show that that tension.
Speaker 3 Because many people have critiqued it over the years and said, wait a minute, you know, why don't we just pick the actual seven sketches on Wednesday?
Speaker 3 And then we don't have to have this whole hunger games rigmarole.
Speaker 2 Right.
Speaker 3 But I think Lauren knows that keeping that creative tension and the competition and the, that that is good for creativity.
Speaker 1 Well, one thing that was, and I never really thought about it correctly until I read what you wrote, but like, I never thought of all the factors.
Speaker 1 I would always think like, oh, he'll just pick the seven funniest things. But the stuff he's weighing about like, is this cast member in the cast too much?
Speaker 1 Did the audience respond in the dress rehearsal? Are we going to have the right amount of energy in this part of of the show?
Speaker 1 So he's like, he's on some different plane that it seems like only he can see. That's which makes me wonder how anybody could take that job after, even though he's 80.
Speaker 2 Right.
Speaker 1 But like, how do you come in? And there are all these other factors beyond just what's funny, what's not funny. Now, maybe somebody would just approach it completely differently and be fine.
Speaker 1 But I just hadn't thought about it before.
Speaker 3 Yeah, it's Steve Higgins calls it like five-dimensional chess. He's thinking, do I keep the host happy?
Speaker 3 Do I make sure, like the show I was at, you know, I think one of the reasons that, you you know, one of the sketches got canned is just because it was these huge movie theater seats.
Speaker 3 They were just too damn hard to get in and out of the doors. So like next, you know, and
Speaker 1 it's like
Speaker 1 $20,000 down the drain the moment they say no.
Speaker 3 Have time to get the prosthetic head on, you know,
Speaker 3 and there's so many things that, you know.
Speaker 3 all week i mean and this is this probably is a
Speaker 3 decisive management choice one of the things that's so cool is that all week long, Lorne is soliciting opinions from everybody.
Speaker 3 And not just the writers and the cast, but you know, the costume assistants, the pages. You know, he wants to hear from everybody.
Speaker 3 He likes to think of it as an egalitarian enterprise, that everyone is as necessary as everybody else.
Speaker 3 And I know that sometimes in meetings, even, he has a sheet of paper and he'll jot down every time someone has spoken because he wants to make sure everybody in the room says something.
Speaker 3 And then so he's he's metabolizing all those points of view all week. And then there's a moment after the dress rehearsal when he walks up this little cinder block staircase.
Speaker 3
It's like the least glamorous place in the building up to his office. And I just thought of this now.
It's almost like, do you watch Severance?
Speaker 2 Yeah.
Speaker 3 You know how they go in the elevator and then they go
Speaker 3
and, you know, it's like he goes up the staircase. and he becomes the other guy.
Okay, so then he's in his office and suddenly
Speaker 3 he's not thinking about what everybody else says. It's just him.
Speaker 1 It's just so the whole week is about him peeking for that hour.
Speaker 2 Yeah, and then he goes leading up, making sure he's fresh.
Speaker 3 He comes Superman and then he is the decider and everything that comes out of his mouth, like it's him, it's him, it's him, it's him.
Speaker 3 And so to see that transformation, like it is really, it's really interesting.
Speaker 1 Well, one of the great things about that week you spent with the show was the show that's in dress rehearsal and then gets or the sketch that gets bumped is this Beavis and butthead sketch that they couldn't figure out and then they ended up doing it with ryan gosling last season yeah and it's one of the best shows of the decade and it's like holy that's the same sketch it was dead for five years and came back i know i know and i remember thinking you know louis louis a carry and the amazing makeup and prosthetics guy he worked all week on those heads yeah
Speaker 3 and lauren wasn't completely getting it uh first he said oh i feel like it's just kind of cone heads redux you know and then he also didn't understand why jonah kept being in profile which he thought looked really awkward and then somebody had to say no no in beavis and butthead you always see him in profile but it just wasn't really gelling but yes i mean i i kudos to the writing staff to hang that they hung on to that but they might i mean they must have like 10 of those a year where they're like i can't believe he didn't pick that one let's just like save it and
Speaker 3 circle it back and dress and i'll tell you it was a whole lot better when gosling did it so right right right yeah there's reasons he didn't do it but you know another thing that was fun to learn like i didn't know that the cowbell sketch existed right before walking and that they did it they tried to do it when norm mcdonald hosted and yet you can see like can you imagine anyone but walking doing that now no right well you i mean going through the years
Speaker 1 One thing I appreciated was he was really, really grateful for some cast members that popped up at the right times. And the guy that he really
Speaker 1 effusively praised was Dana Carvey, who I still feel like is the most underrated star of the 50 years.
Speaker 1
He doesn't get mentioned in the Mount Rushmore, but he should. And he was basically, Lauren has these different quotes where he's like, this guy was a machine.
This guy could do everything.
Speaker 1 We wrote, we were able to ride him for the late 80s, basically.
Speaker 1 And it seems like he felt that way about Ackroid.
Speaker 1 He felt that he wasn't there for Eddie Murphy, but Eddie's in there. Will Farrell was like that.
Speaker 1 Was there anybody else that he talked about where it was just clear Lauren was like, this is a Mount Rushmore guy for me?
Speaker 2 Or lady?
Speaker 3 I think Phil Hartman, definitely. I mean, and all of these people you've just mentioned, like they're, they're actors, you know, I mean, they're really in it.
Speaker 2 They can,
Speaker 3 you know, somebody described Ackroyd as the kind of guy who can kind of zip himself into a character and disappear into it.
Speaker 3 You know, very different from like the way Belushi performed, which is he's always a Belushi-esque character, you know.
Speaker 2 Right, he's a force of nature.
Speaker 1 Well, you had that great thing about Ackroyd about how if they needed to do the sketch in three minutes instead of three three and a half, he would talk faster to make them move along.
Speaker 3
That's right. I think that among the women, I think, well, I think Jane.
Kristen Wigg has to be, right? Kristen Wigg, definitely.
Speaker 3 And one of the things that's amazing about Kristen Wigg, and I started, when I started watching, re-watching the shows more carefully, you see that what she does that's different from a lot of comedy performers is her acting, everything she does is so small.
Speaker 3 You know, she does so much with less, like just little movements of her eyes or even like her, if you look at her Denise character with the forehead, like it's, it's so subtle.
Speaker 2 Um, right.
Speaker 1 Hater, Hater said once to me that
Speaker 1 the unbelievable thing about her was every single character she ever did was slightly different. Then there was no like, oh, I'll do this and I'll just have a wig on.
Speaker 1 It was like each thing was slightly different than the other thing. Like she was just re just inventing new people each time, which they were like, how does she do that?
Speaker 3 Yeah, yeah, no, no, I think definitely. I mean, I think Kate McKinnon is a great actor.
Speaker 3 I think Jan Hooks was just incredible. And she also tends to, I mean, of course, she gets shoved under the rug.
Speaker 1
Yeah, I'm with you. I almost, I did my all-time cast and she was the one.
I was that was like one of the toughest cuts for me. Yeah.
Speaker 1
Because I just feel like for four or five years, she was amazing. Could do anything.
I also like the
Speaker 1 people that can sing and perform and do sketches and do characters. Like there's like some sort of total package thing that I think think only a few of them have really pulled off, you know?
Speaker 3 Well, one of the things that I loved, you know, getting, because I hadn't really gotten it until I spent a whole lot of time there, is that the thing is that all of them, at the end of the day, they're just theater kids.
Speaker 3 You know, they're all people who did guys and dolls in high school. You know, even like Lauren,
Speaker 3 there's a bit in the book where Lorraine Newman described how once she was with him in the 70s and she had just had a bad breakup.
Speaker 3 And he and Lorne launched into that song from Westside Story, Forget That Boy.
Speaker 2 Yeah, yeah. Like the idea of, you know, I mean,
Speaker 3 I have two daughters who are theater kids, so I'm very familiar with this type, but all of them, you know, I remember seeing Colin Firth interviewed once about how much he loved doing, you know, the scene in ABBA where he's in the jumpsuit and the and the platform shoes because everybody who's an actor, they just want to do that, you know.
Speaker 3 And
Speaker 3 it was also very interesting to hear Lauren talk about and just to see with all of them how, you know, the audience is always projecting onto SML.
Speaker 3 You know, they want it to be a political show or an anarchist collective or whatever, but it's really show business. It's just show business.
Speaker 3 And that's why often when you see these scenes shot backstage, you'll look down the hall and you'll see a couple of showgirls, a man dressed as Abe Lincoln and a llama. You know, it's like that scene.
Speaker 3 I don't know if you're as much of a Beatles nut as I am, but like in Hard Days Night, there's that scene in the theater where John Lennon's going down the stairs and he runs into a showgirl with a headdress.
Speaker 3 And like, yeah, even the Beatles, it's just showbiz.
Speaker 3 And there's something I kind of love about that.
Speaker 1 We're going to take a break and come back. And I want to talk about Lauren as Confucius.
Speaker 2 Okay.
Speaker 1 This episode is brought to you by Veore, whose lounge collection is a total game changer for fall comfort.
Speaker 1
Take their Ponto performance joggers and coronado hoodie made with Veori's signature dream knit fabric. Super soft, lightweight.
Move with you wherever the day takes you.
Speaker 1 Plus, they're designed to look great, whether you're working out, running errands, or even heading to the office, or like me, power walking around LA.
Speaker 1
Basically, Viore is an investment in your happiness. For our listeners, they're offering 20% off your first purchase at viori.com slash Simmons, V-U-O-R-I dot com slash Simmons.
Exclusions apply.
Speaker 1
Visit the website for full terms and conditions. This episode is brought to you by Whole Foods Market.
At Whole Foods Market, you'll find great everyday prices for this Thanksgiving.
Speaker 1
Check out their 365 brand. No antibiotics ever turkeys start at $149 a pound with Prime with Organic Birds at $299 a pound.
You'll find Thanksgiving essentials like condensed soups. I love those.
Speaker 1 Instant mashed potatoes, like those too. Organic baking spices plus low prices on everything else you need from fresh produce to frozen appetizers.
Speaker 1 Enjoy so many ways to save on your Thanksgiving spread at Whole Foods Market terms apply. All right, Lauren has Confucius, which seems to be a recurring theme with everybody who's been in his orbit.
Speaker 1
He just dropped shit. Like, I just, I took down some couple of things from your book that I screenshotted.
He was talking about Belushi taking Chevy Chase's overnight fame the hardest.
Speaker 1 And he said, there's a certain kind of person who, if they're not famous by 26, they're going to burst into flames,
Speaker 1
which I thought was like, yeah, he's, he's probably seen that too. These people that come on the show and they're like so anxious to have it all happen.
But it seems like
Speaker 1 he seems to feel like, except for the rare exceptions like Carvey, you almost need two years on the show before you can become who you are.
Speaker 1 Like, what, what did you find out when you're researching the book? Like, what's the, what's the arc of a cast member to actually be really good on the show?
Speaker 3 Well, I think that
Speaker 3 I think he really likes and respects the ones who come in there. and survey the scene and figure out, okay, this is how I can be effective here.
Speaker 3 Like plenty of them, and again, they're young, you know, they, there's no orientation, there's no instruction packet. Like, it's sink or swim.
Speaker 3 You know, you have to figure out, okay, who can write for me? Who can I write with? How am I going to get on the air?
Speaker 3 And, and the ones who can sort that out, you know, are, are the, are the ones who are really going to make it. Um,
Speaker 2 yeah.
Speaker 1 Uh, well, then there's someone like Kristen Wink comes in and she's just immediately, you could tell,
Speaker 2 she's going to be
Speaker 3 there are a few shortcuts. Like, and this began with Billy Murray, when, you know, when he started on the show in the second season, he had a good first show, and then he just kind of disappeared.
Speaker 3 People didn't like him, audience didn't like him because they thought he was a Chevy replacement, and he wasn't so cute as Chevy. But, you know, he was playing like second cop parts.
Speaker 3 So Lauren and he devised this idea that Billy would come on the show behind a desk and just address the audience and just say, hey, I'm not cutting it here. I don't know what's the matter, people.
Speaker 3
Don't you like me? And he talked about his dead father and everything. But that did it.
You know, he connected with the audience. They really liked him and he was in.
Speaker 3 And that kind kind of began this tradition of one of the time-honored ways that new cast members kind of get their footing is to go on weekend update
Speaker 3 as themselves and say their name into the camera. I mean, think of Adam Sandler when they did his first Thanksgiving song.
Speaker 3
You know, he was not really thriving so much on the show, but then he came in. He was himself.
He looked like himself. He did his funny little song.
Everybody knew, oh, I know that guy now.
Speaker 3 And the week.
Speaker 3 Eddie Murphy did that too with Raheem Abdul Muhammad that was the first time he did that that was it it he took off so that so that works you know and um the week I was there Melissa Villa Sonor had one on update and that that she broke through so you know there are a lot of different kind of shortcuts some people are just so good at it you know look at Keenan Thompson who's been there forever he just
Speaker 3 you know, I think he recognizes it as a good thing.
Speaker 3 Lauren will often say that, you know, agents, people's agents and managers are the menace because they'll suddenly start getting like movie offers and they'll say, hey, get out of this place.
Speaker 3
You got to leave. You know, it's time to leave.
And Lauren, you know, does a lot of sidebar conversations with these people.
Speaker 3 And what he, what he says, another one of his co-ens is, you know, make them,
Speaker 3 let them build a bridge that's strong enough so they can walk across it and walk away.
Speaker 1 But yeah, that was another Lauren Confucius thing.
Speaker 2 Yeah.
Speaker 3 And there are so many of them. And some of them, what I love is some of them actually, you can't figure out what the hell I mean.
Speaker 3 and writers and casts spend years talking about them and one that a lot of people mention to me is something he would say well you know there's people who build the house and there's people who buy the house and you have to figure out which one you are and everyone is like what the hell what does that mean
Speaker 2 what if i'm both i don't know
Speaker 1 uh yeah you had uh
Speaker 1 the one I mean, this is another one. We talked about Chevy Chase
Speaker 1 when
Speaker 1 he said, the idea that you could feel things for somebody and then you run out of it, I realized so people burn out of relationships. And he said that about,
Speaker 1 he said that about a family member, but he was talking about Chevy Chase. Like sometimes the professional relationship,
Speaker 1
it just is what it is. It's supposed to be four, five, six years, and then it's over.
And that's, it's like real life.
Speaker 3
And you have to walk away. Yeah.
And I think it was, you know, when he started the show and had the original not ready for primetime players, they were just kind of supposed to be in the background.
Speaker 3 Nobody was supposed to become famous. Oh, yeah.
Speaker 3 You know, no one was supposed to become famous. So when suddenly Chevy was famous and he was on the cover of New York magazine, that totally messed up the ecosystem.
Speaker 3 It created, you know, it was a loss of innocence, to use one of Lauren's favorite terms.
Speaker 2 And everyone's
Speaker 1
fame back then, too. It's 30 million people watching the show potentially on a Saturday night.
It's just a different level.
Speaker 3 And so it was very painful for him to see this tribe, this family fractured. And then, but when Chevy did go, painful as it was, again, this was one of these lessons that he had to internalize.
Speaker 3 He realized, okay, this is going to happen again and again and again. And so he sort of inured himself to it.
Speaker 3 But he also realized that, you know, like George Steinbrenner or like any sports team, you have to keep bringing in rookies. You have to seed the team.
Speaker 3 And that's something he learned the hard way, you know, but, but he, he, that's what, that's how he's kept it going for 50 years.
Speaker 3 There are always new people.
Speaker 1 I think that's one of the reasons I connect with the, the whole structure of this show, because it's a lot like sports.
Speaker 2 Yes.
Speaker 1
You have to constantly think about like, all right, this person's taken off. I probably only have them for two more years.
Now I got to develop a bench behind them.
Speaker 1 Another thing that I loved, I should have mentioned this three minutes ago, but his.
Speaker 1 hatred of agents and managers and how how just their agenda doesn't align you know all they're doing is just trying to get whoever the most amount of money possible.
Speaker 1 Yeah, they don't care about career. They don't care about relationships and how he tries to navigate that, but it's like one of the few things he can't hide his contempt for, which is like these.
Speaker 3 Oh, yeah. I mean, he says, I think
Speaker 3 somewhere in the, at least one place, he says in the book, agents are morons, you know. Right.
Speaker 3 And the thing they all hate more than anything is when agents get tickets to the show and they're getting the audience. I mean, people have told me, but, you know, because they're so jaded.
Speaker 3
I mean, you want the real fans. You don't want an agent.
So you'll look up at the balcony and you'll see a bunch of, you know, CAA agents and their dates asleep.
Speaker 2 They're half asleep. Yeah.
Speaker 2 More so.
Speaker 3
But about this Steinbrenner thing. Yeah.
And this,
Speaker 3
I found myself wondering if this had something to do with your affinity for the show. You know, Lauren, he is a sports guy.
I mean, loves the Yankees, goes to the Knicks. He's a big hockey guy.
Speaker 3 And he uses a lot of sports metaphors all the time. You know, he uses a lot of baseball metaphors.
Speaker 3 When Will Farrell was talking to me about Lauren Style, he said, you know, Lauren's like, he's like a baseball manager.
Speaker 3 He knows you got to keep the highs not too high and the lows not too low because it's a long season. And a lot of people, you know, use sports talk to talk about how the show works.
Speaker 3 And the other thing people say is that the closest thing to SNL on television, because it's live, is sports.
Speaker 2 Yeah.
Speaker 1
You know, well, yeah, it's like a live sporting event. Yeah.
Well, you had stuff in there about how a compliment from him is, it's rare.
Speaker 1
So when you get one, it means something. But it is the cast members that succeed the best.
I've talked about this.
Speaker 1
It's like a basketball team where when you play basketball, it's not just about, oh, clear out. I'm going to score.
Like you're trying to make other people better.
Speaker 1
You're trying to connect with people. You're trying to move without the ball and set picks.
And those are the people that always do best on the show.
Speaker 1 Here's another Lauren quote: The trouble with a thankless job is that no one thanks you. Like you could put the shit in like in like fortune cookies.
Speaker 3 i know um wow that's a great marketing idea
Speaker 1 and he talked about uh why he's devoted to the show when it takes every ounce of my strength to get it on and there's nothing but resistance and nobody seems to give a then i want out because you can only give up your life for something greater than you so far it's been worth it now he's 80 and he's still giving up his life for the show but there's other reasons for that right like the moment he's not running s and now
Speaker 1 you're not getting your calls returned in quite the same way Like there's a power that comes with the show that I think he's aware of.
Speaker 3 I think it's so much his whole life and his whole personality.
Speaker 3 I don't think he's going to leave there unless it's on a stretcher, you know, and, and he always says that if you, if you're, if producing's done well, you leave no fingerprints. Yeah.
Speaker 3
And that's true. And that's sort of why he's been behind the curtain all these years.
But at the same time, his fingerprints are on everything. You know, it
Speaker 3 every one of them has absorbed his sort of gospel and his sense of values about the show. And not just about the show, but about how to live their lives.
Speaker 3 You know, in addition to all of his comedy rules and axioms, he teaches them how to live, how to live in New York, how to order in a restaurant. You know,
Speaker 1 he's paying for like new teeth for casper and all kinds of things.
Speaker 3 And the gifts he gives are so like you get the fees. People have told me, oh, he gave me this really great luggage or Simon Pierce glassware.
Speaker 3 And you sort of feel like he's ushering them into the good life. I was with Jim Downey once when he opened this box it was an airmes
Speaker 3 big orange box it was an airmez sweater for his birthday and he was so intimidated by it you know he googled it and saw how expensive it was and he said i have to get a safety deposit box for this right
Speaker 3 where you have to wear it
Speaker 1 he had a story about that you have in the book that i had never heard about when ray charles was on the show
Speaker 1 And he was going to be reunited with all these people that he had done all this great stuff with. And he's like, are you excited to see them?
Speaker 1
And Ray Charles said, most of them owe me money and wasn't excited at all. And he's like, all right, I'm going to tuck that story away too.
Exactly. Down the road,
Speaker 1 you know, these special relationships I allegedly have might not be so special 20 years from now.
Speaker 3
Yeah. I mean, again, that's the sort of keep the highs not too high, the lows not too low.
I mean, he, he, there's a way in which all these people, they are his family members.
Speaker 3 He's recreated the family that, you know, he lost when his father suddenly died when he was a child. But there's also, you know, it's also business.
Speaker 1 I mean, he managed, he, he walks this very fine line right well and also when he went when he stopped doing s and o after the first five years you have a thing about yeah the phone's not quite ringing the same way um there's some conan o'brien stuff in this book that i've believed and felt for a while that you really got into and you know not like in a new york post page six kind of way but it was you know that he was the one person he did the tonight show and he moved to la and he kind of left lauren out of it which has been atypical for everybody who's passed through the universe.
Speaker 1 And
Speaker 1 it seems, it seemed a little chilly. Could you feel that when you were reporting it?
Speaker 3
I did feel that. And I thought there was so much regret surrounding it.
And I mean, I wanted to change.
Speaker 3 I think so. I think it was, I think there was real pain.
Speaker 3 I mean, Conan is always the first to say that if Lauren Michaels hadn't looked at him at one point and said, you, you know, he would never have had this. And think about it.
Speaker 3 But Conan wasn't even a a performer, you know, he was a writer, right? You're going to get a writer like this and give him this huge platform.
Speaker 3 And the thing that's so sort of sweet about it is, you know,
Speaker 3 there's, I think there's a sort of a bit of a road not taken aspect of that for Lauren, because he started out as a comedy writer who maybe wanted to perform. But, you know, and Lauren exalts writers.
Speaker 1 But became a really fun performer on the show in his own weird way, which you covered nicely. He became a character somehow.
Speaker 3 Right. I mean, I think the Lauren character is as big a character as Church Lady.
Speaker 3 So, yeah, he gave the keys to the kingdom to Conan. And I think Conan, you know,
Speaker 3 I think
Speaker 3 it's
Speaker 3 most people in the business feel that Conan and his camp made a tactical error when they did not insist that Lauren be made executive producer of the tonight's show.
Speaker 1 Well, but they also broke the rule where he found out from somebody else, not them, which seems like the one way to really cross Lauren.
Speaker 3
And I know those guys. I know, you know, went to college with Conan and I know Jeff Ross's manager.
And I do think they have some regret about it. They were very young.
They were very caught up in it.
Speaker 3 These big shots at NBC were saying to them, no, no, no, you don't need Lauren Michaels. You don't, you know, you're going to do it in LA.
Speaker 1 You don't need Lauren.
Speaker 2 He's in New York.
Speaker 3 He's activist NBC management at that time who didn't really, you know, they kind of wanted to elbow Lauren off the stage.
Speaker 3 So, but as Jeff told me, and I, and I quote him in the book saying, you know what? we didn't jump in front of the truck for Lauren. So why should Lauren have jumped in front of the truck for us?
Speaker 3 And Lauren would never have admitted, like, you know, having his feelings hurt or that they should have done it differently. But everyone in his camp feels like it was a faux pas.
Speaker 1 Well, and I said this at the time when all that was happening because we were doing podcasts about it.
Speaker 1
I just don't think what happens to Conan happens if Lauren's involved. He was too powerful and he meant too much to NBC.
And if
Speaker 1 like the whole Leno, it just wouldn't have happened. I think, I think Conan's protected disaster.
Speaker 2 Yeah.
Speaker 3 But the thing, the kind of beautiful thing at this point is, you know, Conan is now king of the world, king of podcasts. You know, he's just doing so great.
Speaker 3
I'm so happy that Conan has landed where he has. And he and Lauren are on very, very good terms.
You know, it was great to see Conan at the anniversary show. And I think there's a lot of real,
Speaker 3 real honest, ongoing affection between the two of them.
Speaker 1 A couple other things that I loved when he brought Rob Lowe in for Wayne's World.
Speaker 1 He likes to hire people who've just had a flop because they work twice as hard.
Speaker 2 Like, who else would think like that?
Speaker 3
Absolutely right. It's true.
Who would have thought of that?
Speaker 2 Yeah.
Speaker 3 No, because that was right after the sex tape. You know, Rob Lowe was in disgrace.
Speaker 1 Conan said about Lauren.
Speaker 1
A lot of people, myself, this is to you. A lot of people, myself included, think that Lauren has a secret.
And Lauren has made a career out of letting people think he has a secret.
Speaker 1 I think Lauren's real secret was to communicate to me, you have to figure out this show. He's basically saying,
Speaker 1 I actually don't think Lauren has the secret, but he'll have like a really good thought starter that you can then take and run with it. That's how I interpreted that, right?
Speaker 3 I think so too. But I think also
Speaker 3 it's that Lauren has, unconsciously or not, cultivated this mystery and power that makes everybody want his good opinion, want to do good work for him. You know, it's,
Speaker 3 and, and, and, and that is the secret. It's this, this power that he holds over these people.
Speaker 1 That they just trust his take on, if he's really passionate about one thing, they'll trust him.
Speaker 3 Yeah. I mean, John Hamm told me that there isn't a day that goes by where he doesn't think, what would Lauren do?
Speaker 3 You know, and he curbs the impulse to pick up the phone and call Lauren and ask him, you know, over when it's really important. But a lot of these people live their lives that way.
Speaker 1 You had a lot in the book about the imitation game with Lauren, which has started like, God only knows since the 70s and
Speaker 1 how aware Lauren is of it and how many different iterations they were and all these different, you know, the writers would have their thing and then Bill Hayter would have his thing and it would just go on and carve and all that stuff.
Speaker 1 And Lauren would just seems like he's fine with it, right? Because you make fun of the boss. That's what happens.
Speaker 3 Well, one of the funny things Lauren said about it to me, he goes, he said, yeah, you know, it's the most American thing there is, making fun of the boss.
Speaker 3 And then he said, of course they don't really do it much in canada because nobody's that successful there right
Speaker 3 um but yeah i mean it see that is consistent with another one of his many theorems which is the 12 no the infinite monkey theorem which is how he views uh the essence of comedy writing it's that old joke about you know you put a thousand monkeys in a room with a bunch of typewriters and eventually one of them will write hamlet that there was a 60s comic named stanley myron handleman who changed that joke to say, put the monkeys in the room with the typewriters.
Speaker 3 I went back a couple hours later, and they were just fooling around. And Lauren thinks that there's this incredible wisdom in that, and that that's what you do with comedy writers.
Speaker 3 That's why you have them writing all night long when their defenses are down, when maybe they're drunk, their guard is down.
Speaker 3 70s, you know, fatigue is your friend, he'll say, and because you want them to be at their goofiest.
Speaker 3 You don't want to be too, you know, self-conscious when when you're writing comedy you want to really it's like pure id i guess and and i think he recognizes that all that time they spend making fun of him it's like lubrication for comedy you know it loosens them up and and paul lapel even said it kind of helps you deal with the fear you know the fear of laurene and the fear that you're not going to get on the air it makes you just sort of loosen up and again he's a smart enough manager of people to know that if that works for them fine you know and he also told me, and I wish I had kind of pushed harder on this,
Speaker 3 he said that he does this too, that he's a really good mimic of the people at the show. And he just does it at home.
Speaker 2 But interesting.
Speaker 2 Like just of family members?
Speaker 3 I guess. That's volume two.
Speaker 1 When do you think he realized that he was just going to be on the show and this was it? Like what year?
Speaker 1 It was somewhere between probably late 80s, early 90s, where he just, all right, this is my life. This is what I was doing.
Speaker 3 Well, I think a real turning point came after 9-11 you know because the the whole 90s the mid-90s were a terrible time for him with almost getting fired by don ohmire and uh then the show picked up steam with all the great you know political debate stuff that jim downey wrote and everything and then 9-11
Speaker 3 it was it it was the moment that i think the show emerged as a kind of an important american institution and a new york institution too like simultaneously i mean it brought it back to its fruits This was a, you know, it was the first time in my life that America seemed to like New York, right?
Speaker 3 Yeah. And New York suddenly was kind of like even me.
Speaker 1 I hate New York. And even that, I remember rooting for the Yankees in the playoffs, hoping they'd get one for the city.
Speaker 3 So, you know, the way he conceived of that moment with the firefighters and Mayor Giuliani pre-disgrace, you know,
Speaker 3 and had Paul Simon sing that song. Like he just had this producer's knack for navigating that moment, doing something that was so beautiful and profound and also funny, you know.
Speaker 3 I mean, as he says in the latter part of my book, when he's talking about doing the COVID show,
Speaker 3 and you know, you just always have to, the show has to show up and you have to demonstrate, remind viewers that there's a decency to the show.
Speaker 3 And I think that it was that moment that the show and Lauren himself just kind of were, you know, it was kind of a Hall of Fame moment. They weren't going anywhere.
Speaker 3 He's never really been under threat since then.
Speaker 1 It's interesting because when they missed the moment, which I think you wrote in the book, that after Trump got elected, when the way they started the show, it just didn't work.
Speaker 1
I didn't think it worked in the moment. I think people behind the scenes didn't feel like it worked.
And now I don't think anybody looks back and thinks, oh, what a great moment.
Speaker 3
Oh, I love Kate McKinnon singing that song. But I mean, I thought it was kind of wet.
You know, I thought, I just thought it was just
Speaker 3 some people liked it.
Speaker 3 But again, I thought the reason I thought that was interesting is because it showed how finely calibrated his ability to kind of deal with the sort of millennial sensibilities on his staff are.
Speaker 3
He knew he had to give them something. They wanted to do this.
He didn't like it, but he let them have it.
Speaker 3 And it reminded me, another funny anecdote that I love in the book is I'm walking with him through the theater district.
Speaker 3
We passed the Mean Girls Marquee. That's the show he produced with with Tina Faye.
And he was disappointed because his friend Margaret Trudeau was in town and he got her tickets for that night.
Speaker 3 And he was angry because the lead actress had called in sick that day because her dog had eaten glue and she had to take the dog to the vet. So she wasn't going to be in the show.
Speaker 3 And Lauren just shook his head and he said, if it was Patty Lapone's dog, it would be dead.
Speaker 2 You know,
Speaker 3 the idea that, you know, because he's a real show-based guy, the show must go on. And the fact that his friend Mark Richard Crudeau was going to have to see an understudy,
Speaker 2 I didn't like it.
Speaker 1 A couple other things. You were talking about Ann Beets when she came back for the anniversary show.
Speaker 1 And he's kind of saying like, oh, her career didn't kind of go the way maybe she thought it was going to go. And he said,
Speaker 1
you were like so many others who started the show. Beats, Michael said, didn't understand heat.
They didn't understand that you're hot for about two or three years.
Speaker 1 And if nothing else happens, you go to the back of the line again, which it seems like he was painfully aware of with himself too, right?
Speaker 3
That's just what, yeah, I mean, he learned that after the first five years. And so again, he's just like this guy.
He's got this lesson book that he, and he remembers.
Speaker 3
Think about the rest of us and so many people we know, we repeat our mistakes. Right.
We do the same thing over and over. He doesn't.
He somehow learns from his mistakes.
Speaker 1 What's the most fair criticism you heard from him from? the people you were interviewing that was like a recurring criticism of him about him yeah
Speaker 3 Gee, let me think.
Speaker 3 You know, I think that there are people who just feel that sometimes
Speaker 3 his aloofness
Speaker 3 can actually be cruel and cold.
Speaker 3 You know, there are definitely people who feel that way. There are the same number of people who say, like, oh, you know, when my wife got sick, he called and fixed the insurance.
Speaker 3 And, you know, so it's, it's both.
Speaker 2 Right.
Speaker 1 He paid for funerals. He paid for Michael McDonald with Donahue's funeral, even though, O'Donaghan, even though
Speaker 2 he didn't like him.
Speaker 3 But I do think that that sort of icy management thing, which you, you know, there's the book deals in it. I think mostly that kind of peaked in the 90s.
Speaker 3 You know, you have Bob Odenkirk moaning about how, why the hell is this guy in charge and everything? But at the same time, you know, Odenkirk and Lauren are now good friends. I mean,
Speaker 3 what there's a lot of in Lauren's life, it's, you know, the way people, you know, in 12-step programs and like make amends.
Speaker 3 You know, Lauren gets a lot of letters from people 30 years later saying, I can't believe I was such a jerk when I worked for you.
Speaker 3 Now I know how hard your job is because I've had to, you know, be a director or manage people.
Speaker 1
Well, you're dealing with the ambitious people in their 20s and 30s. I mean, I'm sure I look back at some of the stuff I did like way back when.
I'm like, God damn it, why did I do that?
Speaker 1
And I'm sure they have a lot of those moments, especially a pressure cooker where it's hunger games every week. Everyone's pitted against each other.
He said,
Speaker 1 you have this near the end.
Speaker 1 You can't spend the last half of your life watching the first half of your life, which is how he felt about nostalgia. Is that one of the reasons he's still working at age 80?
Speaker 3
I think that's true. He doesn't, I mean, he, I think these anniversary shows mean a lot to him, but he isn't on a nostalgia trip.
You know, he is really in the moment.
Speaker 3 Uh, he's never like, oh, those were the days it was better than. He's, you know, I think he probably thinks
Speaker 3
that the utility of all the fanfare over the 50th is to get more read get more viewers for the 51st and 52nd season. He's always charging ahead.
He's thinking about the next cast.
Speaker 3
Earlier this season, you know, I was talking to him about how this current cast is really big. It's a big cast again.
It's too big.
Speaker 3 And he said something like, yeah, well, you know, it always takes like two or three years for the kind of new cast to sort of settle.
Speaker 3
And it just struck me that as he's about to settle 50th, he's thinking about, he's thinking ahead. He's thinking about making the cast work.
And I think that's part of the secret of it.
Speaker 3 You know, he doesn't, he doesn't look back.
Speaker 3 And again, why it was all the more special that when I talked to him right after the 40th, he was in the sort of rare sweet spot of thinking about the past and the future and his legacy.
Speaker 3 And I mean, I think there's a lot of warmth in him that
Speaker 3 he's letting come to the surface a little bit more now. And that is kind of lovely.
Speaker 1 Well, the biggest thing that's helped him is that there hasn't been a
Speaker 1 kick-ass threat competitor to come in. I always thought Netflix, I just can't believe Netflix hasn't challenged him yet, but I think it's because Sarandos loves the show so much.
Speaker 2 He just doesn't want to challenge more.
Speaker 3 Yeah, Sarandos is one of those guys who sends him a Father's Day greeting, you know? Yeah, but it'll be interesting to see, right?
Speaker 3 Sarandos is behind this new, you know, Netflix's first foray into late night television with the John Mulaney show company.
Speaker 1 Oh, and comedy, too. They're like at the, you know, they have this whole Netflix as a joke week out here.
Speaker 1 And the one thing that's missing is like an SNL type show, but I just don't think they're doing it until Lauren leaves.
Speaker 3 Yeah, I think, I think that's right. I think at this point, there's so much, so many issues of respect and karma that nobody's going to try to, you know, nudge him off the stage that way.
Speaker 1
Well, congrats on the book. I had you for an hour.
I could have gone longer.
Speaker 3 It was really fun.
Speaker 1 I thought it was so enjoyable because I'm so fascinated by him. But the management and perspective on success and loyalty and all that stuff, I just thought it was really cool.
Speaker 1
I love the way he laid it out. And the behind the scenes stuff with that Joan Hill show was just awesome.
Like as a diehard SNL person, like I just was, I thought it was so interesting.
Speaker 3 Well, and once I got to really know all those personalities, just to see, you know, somebody, Larry, I just did Lawrence O'Donnell's show and he said it's, it was sort of like the office, you know, like a workplace comedy.
Speaker 3 I mean, just seeing like the way he would manipulate Colin Joe's this way and the way he would get Jonah Hill to not to shut up and the way he was just like, it's really interesting to watch.
Speaker 1 Well, congrats. Go get the book.
Speaker 2 Thank you.
Speaker 1
Thank you. Good to see you.
All right. That's it for the podcast.
Thanks to Kyle Mann and Susan Morrison. Thanks to Kyle and Gahau and Saruti.
Speaker 1 As always, don't forget, you can watch this as a video on Spotify.
Speaker 1 You can watch it on YouTube on the Bill Simmons YouTube channel. You can watch all of our rewatchable stuff on the Ringer Movies channel.
Speaker 1 And we have Celtic City get ready Monday night, March 3rd, HBO and Max, episode one, a nine-week journey about the Celtics and basketball and America and Boston and life.
Speaker 1
So that's happening. Enjoy the weekend.
I'll see you with Brasillo on Sunday afternoon. We're going to tape, I think, right after the Denver Celtics game, which should be a barn burner.
Speaker 1 So enjoy the weekend. See you then.
Speaker 1 Must be 21 plus in president select states for Kansas in affiliation with Kansas Star Casino or 18 plus in president DC. Gambling problem, call 100 gambler or visit rg-help.com.
Speaker 1 Call 1-88-789-7777 or visit ccpg.org slash chat in Connecticut or visit mdgamblinghelp.org in Maryland. Hope is here.
Speaker 1 Visit gamblinghelplinema.org or call 800-327-5050 for 24-7 support in Massachusetts or call 1-877-8-HOPENY or text HopeNY in New York.
Speaker 4 The holidays mean more travel, more shopping, more time online, and more personal info in more places that could expose you more to identity theft.
Speaker 4 But LifeLock monitors millions of data points per second. If your identity is stolen, our U.S.-based restoration specialists will fix it guaranteed or your money back.
Speaker 4
Don't face drained accounts, fraudulent loans, or financial losses alone. Get more holiday fun and less holiday worry with LifeLock.
Save up to 40% your first year. Visit lifelock.com/slash podcast.
Speaker 4 Terms Apply.