35 Burst results for "Seth"

The Dan Bongino Show
Yuri Bezmenov Explains How Marxists Targeted the Education System
"Democrats have been working for 30 years through colleges and K through 12 as well to indoctrinate a young group of woke soldiers to go out there and take over corporate America You're seeing the results of that happening right now It was all deliberate It was all of them It's all it was all a plot Was it a coordinated effort by people who spoke to each other now They didn't have to They just had to read the same destruction manual If Jim and I put the same table together and followed the same Ikea instruction manual or wherever you bought the damn thing from does that mean Jim and I coordinated No we just had to read the book And the book's been out there forever It's been Marxist communist ideology They want to hear it straight from the horse's mouth This is a Marxist themselves This is Yuri besmanoff He was a KGB agent He defected to the United States We played cuts of him many times Audio cuts and video on my podcast Here's him explaining exactly how marxists and communists have planned this forever that marched through the education system Take a listen Education This track them from learning something which is constructive pragmatic efficient instead of mathematics physics foreign languages chemistry teach them history of urban warfare natural food home economy your sexuality anything As long as it takes you away there you go From an actual Marxist mouth himself you don't need to hear from me Just listen to them They've been plotting this for 30 plus years arguably longer much longer Seth wrote a great book over at Fox about this whole thing

AP News Radio
Hurricanes top Devils 5-1 in Game 1 of 2nd round
"Frederik Andersen needed to make just 17 stops in the hurricanes took game one of their second round series by topping the devil's 5 one Anderson has back to back wins for Carolina since returning from an injury, allowing one goal in each contest. Goals by Brady Shea, Brett Pesci, Jasper Koch and Yemen, Seth Jarvis, and yes, empty netter accounted for the cane scoring. Nathan Bastian scored for the Devils and a curious Schmidt stopped 8 of 11 shots before being pulled early in the second period. Game two is Friday at Raleigh. I'm Dave ferry.

AP News Radio
Hurricanes roll to 5-2 win, take 3-1 series lead over Isles
"Hurricanes have grabbed the three games to one lead in this opening round series with a 5 to two win over the islanders. Carolina took advantage of sloppy island the play when Seth Jarvis scored the first of his two goals on a 5 on three power play. Is huge on the fireplace. To be able to capitalize on that was huge for us. I mean, 5 on three you have to score. You don't get many of those so you have to take advantage of them. And then yeah, we're finding ways. And it's nice, nice to get rewarded. Sebastian aho added the goal to assist anti ranto 27 saves for the win, game 5, Tuesday night in Carolina. Mike mancuso, union Dale, New York

The Doug Collins Podcast
From NFL Sidelines to Podcasting: A Chat With Michele Tafoya
"To follow you as with me today. I had the privilege of being on her podcast. She's now part of the Salem faculty as well, so to speak, that Seth gorka talks about she has her own podcast. And it is just a great time to have you, Michelle. With us, welcome to the Collins podcast. Thank you for having me and thank you for coming on my podcast as well. Someone said they just adored your southern drawl. Got to draw just to go in. You know, look, I'm not chuck Kelly, so at least at least he was authentic, you know? We get it going. All right, I mean, a lot of people have watched you through the years. You've been one of the, you were at the top of your profession. I mean, in sideline reporting, reporting and sports reporting, it was just a name. And now you've hit the ground running with a podcast, you know, talking about current events. If you would, just sort of catch us up. I mean, because a lot of people, I've talked to, they said, I'm a told them I was going to have you on the podcast where I was on yours. They said, wait, and she's still doing football. Talk a little bit about where we're at right now. You know, it was funny. I was checking out of the grocery store the other day. And the woman checking my groceries said to me, my husband was a huge fan of yours. He passed away, and I said, that's so nice, and she said, are you still doing football? And I said, no, I retired, and she said, that's just not right. That is not right what happened to you. And I said, what happened to me? And she said, yes, this is just wrong. And I said, well, hey, hey, hang on a minute. I chose this. And this had been in the works for several years. So I like to clear up that misconception. I think because of an appearance on the view where I said maybe some things that some people thought were controversial, people thought I got pushed out at Sunday Night football. It is just not the truth. I've been planning on this departure for several years and the story of how it ended, why it kept getting pushed until this year is too long to tell, Doug, but that's where I am. And the reason I want to leave was because I wanted to use my voice for something that I really care about. And it's not to say that I don't care about sports, it gave me a great career.

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Judicial Watch's Chris Farrell Reacts to the Alleged Leaker's Arrest
"Farrell, thanks for coming in. Great to be with you, Seth. Thank you. All right, so initial reaction we've got the breaking news at the top of the show, this individual who has been arrested with the S.W.A.T. teams with ballistic helmets. I mean, antifa never got this kind of treatment. He is a Massachusetts air national guardsman in his early 20s, a Jack takes Ira is allegedly the leaker of hundreds accordingly that now we know hundreds of classified documents to his gamers Discord chat room what a bloody joke. But I'm sorry. Take it away. Take it away. Yeah, this is a controlled leak by The White House or elements within The White House. I want to be I'm not going to try to pin the tail on the donkey exactly. But it is a controlled leak of classified information, you don't have an Air National Guard junior airman 21 years old with direct access to CIA operations center summary memos. It just doesn't happen.

AP News Radio
Nelson Cruz 2nd-oldest Padre to homer in 10-2 rout of Braves
"Nelson Cruz drilled a three on Homer and knocked in 6, leading the Padres through the third straight over the braves tend to. As nice to see the whole line, I'm just doing two dimensional and score runs, makes it fun. Starter Seth, we'll go held the braves to one run on 6 hits and picking up his second win. He helped the Padres win the weekend series three one after they dropped the opener in a walk off. Assam Kim and Trent Grisham also homered and Manny Machado had three hits to help fuel the Padres ten run 13 hit attack. Jim Hart, Atlanta.

ToddCast Podcast with Todd Starnes
Caller Unhappy With Dr. Sebastian Gorka's Criticism of Ron DeSantis
"I was hoping to take a minute, maybe 90 seconds and address the top of my Friday, I think. All the people that are just outright attacking Ron DeSantis the past couple of days. And I saw an interview last night. Our newsmax, where the whole interview Brian understand us. And then they brought in a couple of people to respond to runs interview and one of the people with sub gorka. And I'm just on fire after sub gorka said that Seth was all wrapped up about Santa's being silenced for two whole days. After the Trump announcement that he was going to be arrested and then he was mad about sub was mad about Ron DeSantis using the term hush money for a porn star. And he was upset because others were thinking about that's what the case is about. Hush money to a porn stock. But what really got to me was when this was a quote, Ron DeSantis looked into a camera. Point this thing, everyone said, you are a former jag rang, meaning judge efficacy general. Rule of law should matter to you. And I thought I was just, I just went back. For the past year, I'd just like to remind everybody that in April of 2022, Ron DeSantis signed a bill banning CRT from Florida schools from kindergarten to 12th grade. In August of 2022, he formed the election crimes in security office, which has been very successful, but he's looking in the voter fraud. Also in August of 22, Ron DeSantis fired that Soros prosecutor Andrew Warren for not doing his job. I want how many people remember that in September of 2022. We

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Kash Patel Shares the Story Behind the J6 Prisoner Song
"45th president of the United States with the January 6 prison choir, a song that was released without much fanfare, but which has shot up through the charts. Why was it released and how did it get released? Let's talk to a man who's at the center of getting justice for all patriots. He's a fighter extraordinaire. I could spend the next hour rattling off his positions at the DoJ on Capitol Hill in The Pentagon and working for the Trump administration. Let's just say he's a good friend of all patriots. Cash Patel. Welcome back to Mercer first one on one. Seth, thanks so much for having me back on the show and opening with the song. It's a great start. Now, I saw you at cpac, of course, we had a lot of fun at cpac recently and you said something big is going to happen. I can't tell you can't tell you, but something big is going to happen. I think we know what that big thing is right now. Will you tell us about the story behind the song and why it was released and president Trump's involvement? Yeah, absolutely. So fortunately, I was able to be a part of this. We thought, hey, we need to raise not just awareness for the Jan 6 movement, not just to show that there's a two tier system of justice that DoJ and FBI are doing. But to make people effectuate change. So we thought, and real America's voice in Ed Henry were great partner with great pyramid records. And we put together this song. Hang on. Hang on, hang on hang on. Ed Henry did something serious in his life? Ed Henry? And fun old clowny head Henry did something serious. God bless that Henry. Yeah, I gotta give it to him on this one. A great partner. And most people don't know this, but the prisoners sing the national anthem every single night at 6 p.m..

The Trish Regan Show
Seth Dillon of the Babylon Bee Joins Trish to Talk Censorship
"I couldn't think of a more perfect guest to have on this program than my friend Seth Dillon the CEO of baby on be a company that has seen its share of shadow banning and full out banning. Seth, welcome to the program. Thanks for having me on. So I love your website. You know that. I've told you that many, many times before. I need that sort of levity, right? Given everything that's going on. But you guys went through a two double L and back over the last couple of years, like many of us did, but what was unusual about your situation? And I'd like you to speak to it a little bit. I also want to talk a little bit about the business of conservative media with you because you are such a entrepreneur on that front. You've had to deal with this censorship in a way that is pretty extraordinary, even when it comes to humor. What's up and like? Well, I mean, we faced a number of challenges with our humor. One of the things, which is kind of a funny one that doesn't really fit in with the censorship, but it has been a challenge nonetheless, is that half the time we make these jokes, they end up coming true. And so you have the situation where they're fulfilled prophecies instead of punch lines. We have a spreadsheet where we're tracking them now. We have like 90 plus jokes that have come true, which is just kind of a crazy sign of the times. I don't know if that's funny or disconcerting. I guess you can look at it either way. Just concerning, for sure. You guys. You guys are futurists in a way. Yeah, but you know, it started out for us, the censorship really started, we experienced it in 2018 initially, you know, Facebook was facing a lot of pressure to crack down on misinformation. Basically, the idea was Zuckerberg was responsible for Trump getting elected because he let conservatives talk too much. You know, God forbid, conservatives have a platform. You might end up with a Republican getting elected. So, you know, they were trying to crack down on the spread of misinformation. They started fact checking things. They started working with partners like snopes. And next thing you know, we ended up getting our jokes fact checked. We had the first one that was a really big deal was the CNN purchases industrial sized washing machine to spin the news before publication. That was a joke of ours, which is just silly. And it's like the image there is just this big washing machine with a CNN logo across the front of it. Snopes rates at falls, Facebook threatens to kick us off the platform if we keep spreading fake news. So, you know, we've been ever since then when that started, we were dealing with this issue of our jokes continually getting fact checked, getting flagged for incitement to violence, getting flagged for hateful conduct.

The Trish Regan Show
The FTC Is Demanding New Information From Twitter
"We go. The Federal Trade Commission is demanding all this information. From Twitter all under the guise that it wants to protect consumers privacy. Yeah, right. Okay. We're going to get into that. Plus, guess who's here today? The CEO of badly on B the company that found itself remember at the center of our free speech controversy still does, but this was an account that actually got blocked by Twitter and Elon Musk. What did he do first day on the job? He turned it back on. He said, comedy's back will Seth dill in the CEO of the company. He's here. I mean, I'm sorry. When you can not joke about the left, when you can not have a sense of humor about anything, then what on earth really is our world coming to. Anyway, this is serious business. The feds are taking direct aim at Elon Musk and Twitter. I guarantee you they want to shut the whole operation down and it's because of this little thing called Twitter gate. You know, all those files that happen to have the emails between the feds, the FBI and Twitter, executives, we're learning more and more, and more information about how our federal government aligned itself with Twitter management all in an attempt to shut down speech and prevent conservatives from being heard. It happened over and over again. Elon Musk, you just heard him, he said it, but let's listen again. I mean, should we totally Frank? Almost every conspiracy theory that people had about Twitter turned out to be true. Yeah, this is making some people very, very nervous. Because it seems like some of those conspiracy theories, as Elon Musk said, they have come to fruition,

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Senator J.D. Vance Gives Us the Latest Out of Ohio
"Vance senator Vance, welcome back to Merck first. Thank you, Seth, how are you? Good, good, good, good. I wanted to play the clip we've been playing a view drawing that little stick through the crick and then seeing all those pollutants well up. Can you tell us what the latest is from east Palestine and how our Ohio, ohioans doing without the meaningful assistance from this administration. Yeah, well, a couple of big updates. So first of all, they still have not fully cleaned up the contaminated site. So you think about what's causing those chemicals in the water. It's the leaching from the soil, the soil is still contaminated, and they haven't cleaned it up. This is the second thing, of course, the Biden administration continues to largely be MIA, especially the Department of Transportation. The EPA has spent a little bit more time in east palestin. I've actually been happy about that, but everybody else seems to be ignoring these guys. Why is the president not going? If president Trump can take the time, why does Biden not go? Well, by the way, president Trump coming, I think, actually really forced the Biden administration to do more than they were doing at the time. So any action we've seen from them, we've seen in the last week since that visit from president Trump. Look, I think Biden thinks these people aren't his voters. He doesn't care about them. It's really that simple. I think the Democrats see American politics in a friend versus enemy kind of way. They didn't vote for him, so he's not going to pay him any attention. It's disgusting, but that's the way that he sees it.

AP News Radio
Raanta blanks Senators as Hurricanes win 5th straight
"The hurricane stayed hot with a four zero win over the senators. Anti Ronda led the canes to their 5th straight win in 12th and 13 games, stopping 32 shots in his third shout out of the season. When we got back from the bye week, I think the first game wasn't what we wanted and after that we've been kind of just trying to stick with our game and it's been working with Brent burns, Seth Jarvis, Martin HS and Brady Shay did the scoring for Carolina, while Andres veteran and Sebastian aho, each collected to assist. The hurricanes lead the metropolitan division by 5 points over the Devils. I'm Dave fairy.

AP News Radio
Svechnikov ends drought with 2 goals, Hurricanes beat Blues
"Andre svechnikov scored a pair of first period goals to lead the Carolina hurricanes to a four one win over the St. Louis blues, trailing two nothing in the second, Justin faulk was scored for St. Louis to put the blues on the board, but back to back goals by Sebastiano and Seth Jarvis with put Carolina up four to one. Frederick Anderson made 35 saves for Carolina. Dennis Cox, Raleigh, North Carolina.

AP News Radio
Jarvis' hat trick carries Hurricanes past Canadiens 6-2
"The Carolina hurricane scored for an inch or goals in the third period to earn a 6 two win over the visiting Montreal Canadiens. Seth Jarvis led the way for Carolina with his first career, hat trick, including a pair of goals in the third period. Added three assists for Carolina while teammate Sebastian aho had a goal and an assist. Dennis Cox, Raleigh, North Carolina.

AP News Radio
Aho scores again, Hurricanes beat Bruins 4-1
"The bruins have their first three game losing streak of the season following a four one setback against the hurricanes. Sebastian aho tallied for the fourth straight game, opening the scoring in the first period. We played tonight. There's a reason why they're on top of the standings. They play, they play a good game. So yeah, needed to bring our best tonight. Paul stastny, double Carolina's lead with a power play goal in the second. Seth Jarvis and Jordan stall added third period goals, with stahl's empty netter securing the cane's 5th straight win. Frederick Anderson turned back 24 shots and blanked the bruins until Pavel zacha made it three one with 1638 remaining. I'm Dave ferry.

Ledger
Ledgers Global Head of Policy Seth Hertlein Joins Blockchain Associations Board of Directors
"2 p.m. Monday, January 23rd, 2023. Ledger's global head of policy Seth hurt line joins blockchain association's board of directors. We are pleased to announce that Seth hurt line ledger's global head of policy has been elected to the blockchain association's two zero two three two zero two four board of directors. The blockchain association is a leading nonprofit organization whose mission is to advance the future of crypto in the United States, promote blockchain technologies and shape pro innovation policies to ensure the success.

AP News Radio
James Harden, Tyrese Maxey lead 76ers past Nets, 137-133
"The 76ers erupted for 75 points in the first half before holding off the nets one 37 one 33. 5 sixers scored at least 18 points, led by tyrese maxi with 27 off the bench. Joel embiid delivered 26 points and ten rebounds, while James Harden added 23 points. Ned's guard, Seth curry led all scores with 32 points off the bench. Kyrie Irving provided 30 points and ten assists while Nick claxton had 25 points and 11 boards. Philadelphia has won 6 in a row to move into second place in the east. Brooklyn is two games behind Philly as the number four team in the conference. I'm Dave ferry.

AP News Radio
Giddey, Gilgeous-Alexander lead Thunder over Nets 112-102
"The thunder had three players score at least 22 points in a one 12 one O two downing of the nets. Josh Gideon Shay Gil just Alexander each finished with 28 points and Lou dort had 22 as Oklahoma improved to 21 and 23 with its third straight win. The nets led by 5 before the thunder opened the fourth quarter on a 15 6 run. Giddy scored 9 points during the spurt. We're making improvements. Obviously such a long way to go. But we're heading in the right direction. The morale around the group is really high right now, we're feeling good. Seth curry had a team high 23 points in the net second straight loss. I'm Dave ferry

The Blockchain Show
"seth" Discussed on The Blockchain Show
"And so it's not abnormal to see these very large swings as assets and asset classes are either more nascent or going through the adjustment cycle that we've just mentioned related to rates and user adoption. And crypto is going through that too. This is part of the maturation process. To not expect that would be, I think, short sighted and recognizing the ups and downs. To want to take advantage of that, I think, is really important. And to make sure that, as you mentioned earlier, investing for the long term doesn't have to be by a little bit today and then wake up in ten years and hope that it's higher. It can be a more active thing of buy a little bit today by a little bit tomorrow by all of what the next day, keeping it small and its proportion, but making sure that each day each week each month a little bit of averaging in goes a long way to making sure you have the right cost basis so you can generate really great returns for the long term. And I think that that's what we're seeing in the crypto market. Some portion of it will be in my humble opinion be an opportunity. So whether that be Bitcoin or others. And some portion of them will be highly speculative and may not make it to the other side. No different than what we saw with certain puppets of the housing market. There are certain pockets with the tech market from 20 years ago. And that's also normal too, right? That cleansing process is very helpful to the survivors. It creates wider votes. It creates more sticky capital over the long term in terms of how investors think. And so this is a conditional period that I think will set ourselves up for a great opportunity over the long term. So it's a moment in time for where we're at. Yeah. Very well said, really appreciate you coming on Seth. And taking the time to explain this and giving us a really good overall perspective, I think sometimes that's needed. You got a really good grasp on the wider wider space. I think a lot of this is interconnected. It's all related. So I just want to thank you again for coming on. If you'd like to leave us with anything any final thoughts, definitely maybe tell people how they can get involved. That would be great. Yeah, no, I appreciate anything. I enjoyed this. For us, our customers, you mentioned before, you use our app through your phone and so forth. That's how the vast majority of people use acorns interface with it. Our goal at the end of the day is to help people invest in long-term, keep them diversified, make sure they're educated on what they're involved in, and to realize that in every market environment, it's all about having a plan. And if you're disciplined to that plan and you can be thoughtful in terms of how to take advantage of opportunities, that goes a long way to creating really great returns for people in the long term. And I think in this moment of time, we're in a choppy market, maybe it's a downtrending market.

Courtside with Seth Greenberg
"seth" Discussed on Courtside with Seth Greenberg
"Now and donors and sponsors and all of them getting involved in the process. So that's a longer conversation, but I just want to add that to let you know what my mindset was with all of that. But one more thing. So finds before when you're talking about players that don't have a degree. There are countless players out there and a ton of sports that have degrees that aren't doing them any good. Correct. That's part of the issue too. And Jay, that's why I say meaningful. Meaningful. Okay, okay. I mean, that's what we're saying exactly the same thing. And that's on the school too. In part, it's on the player. But the school knows what's going to help that player in the future. And so I'm sensitive to the fact that some players are getting into schools that they might not have gotten into otherwise and having that degree in any way, shape or form is more helpful than not. I get that. But at the same time, you know, not every player is fitting in every school. And that was responsible for who they recruit. And hey, if you're recruiting a guy that doesn't prioritize education, stop recruiting. Right. If you prioritize it. And we're seeing a lot of look, I agree with the except of a kid gets a degree. A big part of the university's responsibility is kind of time so what you were talking about is to expose him to enough alumni that basically mentor them. And being that bridge is a big theme of this year's Instagram tournament and build a bridge to open up doors. That they can walk through to have an opportunity to have a life after athletics and having a degree is just, again, part of that process, but it really, in the end, who helps you get your first job. It's relationships. And if you're graduate and you're you go to Notre-Dame duke, fairly Dickinson or whatever, if we created an opportunity to have mentorship programs within a university so that you could connect people and then that mentor would be with that athlete throughout his career and would invest in his future, that's the biggest thing that we can do to help. No matter what they major in, if you have someone that's like, my son, my son, law. I was a sociological major. I think at Virginia tech. He's in construction now, but he had someone invest in him. And teach him, his second command, a large construction company. And doing great. But he had some investment in him and mentoring him and hold his hand and bring him along and that's what we really need to be honest with it more than anything. More than NIL, we need to create mentorship programs within athletic departments. So that someone when they do leave has someone to hold their hand and build that bridge for them to cross into the next stage of their life, whether it's they play professionally for a couple of years and then come back, that's the biggest thing that we need moving forward on college campuses, no matter where the kid goes, no matter what level of education he has and, you know, because getting into college is hard now. It's really hard. No matter who you are, it's really hard. But if we're getting guys into school, we've got to find ways to help them be successful after college. Well, you know what I just heard there is this is the birth and the creation of the Seth Greenberg mentorship academy. I think we have a business that has a need out there. And we filmed on Seth Greenberg. Jay belson..

Courtside with Seth Greenberg
"seth" Discussed on Courtside with Seth Greenberg
"They say they're doing it, but I don't think they are. And I used an example of Ben Simmons the other day on a different show. I was on sort of the idea that, you know, people said, well, Ben Simmons didn't go to class. And I don't know whether they did or not. I wasn't policing that. But let's say for arguments, say, he didn't. Well, whose fault is that? Number one, it's Simmons fault. He should go to class. Yes. And he should put the effort in and all that stuff. Every student should. But if he's not doing it, why is he playing? What's the priority? What priority? What message are you sending to not only that player to every other athlete at your university? You're saying, we don't care about that. We care about what you do on the field of play on the court. And players get those messages and everybody gets them. I got it too from LSU on that. I don't mean to pick on LSU and I don't mean to pick on Ben Simmons. I'm just using that as a high profile example. So that's more what I was saying. And I agree with you that, you know, look, when players transferred when I played in the 80s, nobody transferred for academics back then either. They transferred, they're just weren't as many because they didn't have the portal back then. If they had the portal, we would have left at the same rate they're leaving now because guys were just as unhappy. It's not that they wanted to, we were tougher and we wanted to fight through adversity. We didn't have the choice. And I tell coaches all the time when they say, well, this kid doesn't want to go through adversity. These kids today don't want to go through adversity. One of the things I ask is, so when you recruited him, you led with adversity, right? You said, when you get here, it's going to be adversity. You're going to have a ton of adversity. You're probably not going to play. I think a lot of guys say, look, it's not easy. College basketball looks slightly easier. It's not easy. You can have to earn what you get. I think a lot of guys do that. I got to be honest with it. I think a lot sure you're going to create an environment and a picture of the program. I think the problem is, today, that might not be bought, but I think a lot of guys say, college basketball is hard. I mean, I think a good portion of guys saying, this crappy, you know, it's hard. And this shit is hard. And it's going to take time as an adjustment. And you know, but we think that you have what it takes to be successful, and you're going to have to grind through it. But look, I said all the time. It looks easy on TV. That is hard in real life. It's hard. But they're not saying, hey, look, when you come here, likelihood is you're not going to play. You're not going to play your freshman year. Like, some of them do it with the lower rank recruits, like I remember Jay Wright talking about when he was recruiting Colin Gillespie talking to him about red shirting. And Gillespie looked at him like, go ahead, talk about all you want. I'm not red shirting, and I'm not going to, I'm not going to sit. I'm going to work my way in the lineup. That might be a different way. But if you're telling your top recruits, when you get here, chances are you're not going to play. You're probably not going to get that guy. And they're talking to guys about NBA now and all these things and that's great. But I just don't see today's player as being, they have options available to leave. And when they, when they do realize, hey, I'm not happy here. I don't like it here for whatever reason. It gets characterized differently sometimes by the coach that's getting left than it does by the player leaving. I mean, it sounds awfully different when you talk when you talk to the two parties. And these players are a lot smarter than they get credit for. And their families are a lot smarter. Are there dumb ones? Are there decisions we differ with? Absolutely. But most of the time, when I hear why a player transferred, I kind of nod my head and say, okay, I get that. I get it. I mean, and I'm not saying anywhere stupid, by the way. This is a percentage. No, it's these little things. We'll get into it on another podcast. I'll stop the console Martin about it a long time ago. And we're talking about even ways to encourage kids to have a cover letter and a resume and coming up with ways where we could have a 100% placement rate for jobs for our student athletes and that kind of thing, especially in.

Courtside with Seth Greenberg
"seth" Discussed on Courtside with Seth Greenberg
"They're behind. And it's alarming because top ten, 15, 20% of players in the country will be able to benefit from an IL and yet the others won't. And then what do those guys left with if they're not after four years or 5 years leaving with a meaningful degree in education? I think we have to address that piece too. I know you can't make anybody go to class, but we can at least put a system in place that encourages them to so that when they leave, they're able to go out in the marketplace and compete. Yeah, but part of it is, what's the alternative? So the way I look at it is the education of every student is up to the school that they're at. And, you know, if you want your players to take challenging classes and to put education first, then encourage them to do that or show them the door. Like there's nothing wrong with that. But there's a push pull between being really good, having a really good team. And then the education piece. I think coaches are great educators in a lot of ways. They teach valuable lessons. My coaches were the best teachers I ever had. But my education was up to me and up to my school. And if I didn't perform at a level, they felt acceptable. I didn't have a uniform. And that was the way it was at my school. And so some of these things, it's kind of like when and I know this is a little bit tangential, but when coaches talk about the transfer portal and they say, hey, there are other coaches recruiting off of my roster. And you say, okay, well, what does that say? Does that say there are ethics problems in the coaching profession? That's what it sounds like to me. So rather than, you know, so how do we address those ethical problems in the coaching profession? We restrict the players. That doesn't seem fair to me. And look, I think there are problems with the portal, but I don't think there are problems with players being allowed to transfer. And we've talked about this a number of times. We won't rehash it all. But to me, these problems are systemic. And it's because of inaction for all these years on the part of the NCAA to address these issues. And that's why it seems like we've had drastic change when the truth is we've had drastic change on the revenue side on the way the business works. And I don't know if we've talked about this on this podcast, but I'll just mention it really quickly. I'm doing the same thing you guys are. I'm talking to a lot of people, like I normally do. And there was an administrator recently that was talking about congressional involvement that we need to have rationality brought into the process as to how much is paid to a player. And when I, because, you know, maybe a collective or a booster or something will act irrationally and pay way too much money to a player or players to have their team and football or basketball be really good. And you know, at first, when I heard that, I was like, yeah, that makes sense. And I understood the understood the concept. But I really started thinking about the rationality. And I thought, well, how rational is it that we're running a multi-billion dollar entertainment industry off college campuses. That doesn't seem very rational to me, given the high minded rhetoric that the system uses about education first, and this is what it's all about and things like that. And to me, it's completely rational to pay a player what you think that player is worth in the marketplace. If we want to talk about rationality, what's not rational is running this gigantic entertainment industry off of, you know, off of the campuses of institutions of higher learning. And until we address that first as to whether we should do things this way, to me, what the players are making is further down the line of issues that need to be need to be addressed in a rational fashion if that makes sense. One thing you said earlier, Jade, I was education. It's his responsibility to be university. Is the vehicle, but a player, I used to say every single parent at home goes away. I'll graduate every single kid who wants to get graduate, which means graduate every single kid who will go to class, be on time, do their assignments, attend study hall, the accountable for what is responsible in that class and those classes, like everyone else that's sitting in that class. The university is the vehicle, the player Agassi has to be the person that makes the commitment. Now, the static around that player is everything but academics, it's no different parenting. Your kids will have the values and the priorities that you give them most times. If the priority in a way is legally money money, I'm going to monetize my kids and education doesn't come into conversation. What's happened is too many times, education is always part of the process and beginning of the recruiting process. So it was. No one ever leaves a school because education. People are able to score for playing time, leave us all roll, shots, and now, and I owe money. It's never education, but education has been put, unfortunately, on the back burner, and that we've got to find a way to bring it back to a focal point. And I was fine. I mean, look, NIL right now is a market value. These collectors are no more than just finding a way to legally buy players. That's fine. That's what it is. That's fine. And I have no problem with it. But we've got to find a way. And look, the NCAA is giving you an opportunity to incentivize education because they have those bonuses that $5000 some schools have that if you're a good academic standards or make whatever certain GPA, you actually get a $5000 stipend. But we've got to find a way to incent incentivize education because we don't we're going to have a generation of guys that hope to be pros, but aren't not everyone's a pro, not everyone's going to get the league. It's the most exclusive club in the world. Europe's money is drying out unless you are really good and you have to earn your money in Europe and my brother's been there for 20 years. He's not taking some kid coming out of college because he can't win in Europe with those guys. He needs a tough mature, so we've got to find a way to bring education back into the conversation somehow some ways is my belief and maybe I'm too pollyanna about it, but we've got to find a way to do it. You're not polyamory at all, but what I would say about what maybe I didn't state it artfully. I'm not saying that education isn't up to the player. A player's success on the court is up to the player too. What I'm saying is if any school wants to prioritize education over everything else, there's nothing stopping them from doing that. And if a player is not going to class, don't give me a new form. If a player is not taking the courses that you think are challenging enough for that player and prioritizing education, don't give them a uniform. But we're not seeing that happen. And your point about incentivizing education like, you know, now that schools can give money for academic performance, that that door is open now. And if you say, okay, if you have a certain GPA, you'll get $5000 or whatever the number is. Well, what's the incentive there? It's to take easier classes so you can hit that number. And is that, you know, and that really has been an incentive for eligibility standards, too. Is let's make sure we keep our players eligible. So the easier path is more encouraged by some of these schools and honestly, some of the coaches, whether it's in football basketball or other sports, make sure they take classes that fit into your practice schedule. When they may have to miss class once a week, excuse me, miss practice once a week for a lab or something like that. There's a pressure on a player not to do certain things like that. So that was my point about an individual school prioritizing education the way it wants to. And so, you know, I think what we're seeing in some of these examples, we're talking about a school's not doing that..

Courtside with Seth Greenberg
"seth" Discussed on Courtside with Seth Greenberg
"I'd love for our research guys to check this out. Have we ever had a conference lose 6 coaches in one year? Wow. I mean, I mean, think about that. A major conference, half of their league is going to be led by new coaches. Right? I mean, almost definitely. I mean, I don't know. I was trying to go back. I mean, shoot, I mean, the big 12s got ten schools. That would have been 60% early. You know, I mean, so what does that mean? And the state of college basketball, and I guess to tie into that, it's not going back, but what is going to be? What is our game going to going to look like three years from now? Will water find its level in terms of the transfer portal? NIL and everything else because right now it is an absolute free for all across the board. And are we going to see more 6 guys get whacked in one year? And I don't know. I can't even imagine 6 coaches in one league getting let go in the same year. And the amount of money that goes, those guys probably get paid by us. It's probably an astronomical as well, because as Jay would always say, there's not enough money. But I mean, like, Jake, Jay, you've been doing this a long time, and you'll find you are out of it while you're in me. Can you remember a year where the ACC or the big pen had 6 jobs open? I can't. No. And I don't know. I don't know whether that's a tipping point or whatever you'd call it a canary in the coal mine or whatever. I think we need more time to see what happens. I'm not as worried about the transfer portal and player movement is so different that it is concerning. But what seems to be concerning more than anything is, like, I don't have a problem with, you know, it's more difficult to follow the game and all this stuff. And now we're waiting to see which players are going to go into the NBA draft, which will come back. So we don't have the certainty we used to about, you know, when the buzzer went off at the final four in the last game, you know, ten, 15 years ago, we pretty much knew who was going to be the best teams the next year. We don't know now. We have to wait. And I don't know whether that's good or bad for overall for the product. And but I'm not as worried about player movement. Now, if I were coaching and you have a chance to lose your roster, it means you've got to, you know, you can retool faster. It's not like in the old days where if you had a couple of guys go pro, you may be screwed the next year. You can replace them right away now. And if you're taking a new job, you don't have a coach doesn't have the same amount of time to be able to say, well, we're going to build this thing the right way. We're going to get two or three classes in a row and build to the future and all that stuff. Now you can, with the portal, you can be competitive right away. You may not be great right away, but you know, you saw it in Texas, Texas tech, all these other places. You can be really good. You can be really good right away. And so that method of thinking is gone. And I don't know that it's going to come back until there's, but Seth the NIL piece, that's really new too. And it's been difficult for a lot of people to wrap their heads around. But we're headed toward, it seems to me, we're headed toward absent congressional involvement in all this, where there's a federal law that governs all this, you know, we're probably looking at a point in the near future where we have schools signing players to contracts. And that's actually, it may not be palatable to some because of the way they view it. But that's actually going to make things easier, better and more stable. And it'll help with player retention. Just be interesting to see how it works. So they signed a contract and they'll be taxed on that revenue, right? Yeah, I mean, they went out and got a job. They'd be taxed on it. Their taxed on. And I owe money. There's a thought in the future that if things keep going toward player compensation, they could be taxed on the scholarship benefit. But I'm not worried about players paying tax. I mean, the entire world pays tax. So I think, and look, there's a part of this that I think dovetails really nicely and blends with education. I mean, you know, we used to say when a player left college that they're going to have to learn how things go in the real world. Now they're going to get that in college with the support of their universities to be able to help educate them on how to handle it. And they'll have a lot of resources available to them to do that. It'll put a little more administrative work on the part of the schools to manage all of it and help the players manage that schools don't have to manage it. But most of it, for me, is more opportunity than a negative. You mentioned academics though, but in fact, we talked about this in our last game day show before championship game. Academics have we're talking about the illegally players..

Courtside with Seth Greenberg
"seth" Discussed on Courtside with Seth Greenberg
"The criticism that it took during the non conference season then leading into the regular season to have availed themselves the way that they did in the NCAA tournament. They think I've been feeling really good about itself as a conference. So you think that's those three teams. That's not the conference. Those three teams of album themselves have had great runs. Correct. I mean, that's not the conference didn't take care of. Look, no agree. Absolutely agree. It's going to be fine. It's going to put 5 6 17 in the future. But they didn't perform, but those three teams. Those three teams, yes. Well, really, they were really freaking good. Great. And they all developed, Jake? For me in a season full of good stories, maybe the most compelling story was Houston. You know, some early in the year when they dismantled Virginia and they were, I thought rolling toward an opportunity to win the whole thing. And to be that good. And then they lose Marcus sasser and trevon mark for the season. And truthfully, I thought they were done. You know, could they win the American? Yeah, maybe. But I figured they were done, that there was no way that they would find themselves in the elite 8 with a chance to get to a final four again after doing it last year. And they retooled and sort of changed some of the things that they did. Guys stepped in to bigger roles and did more. And they found themselves in the elite 8 and the only team, the only team they couldn't bully was Villanova. And they wound up getting clipped and, you know, what was a brutal game? What was a 50, 44, 94 points for those two teams is kind of hard to imagine. But I thought what Kelvin Sampson and his team did was really compelling and to me it was a great story of toughness and being resilient and not accepting a fate that other people thought was inevitable. And that impressed me as much as anything I saw this year. I agree. I'll tell you what, I'm in like when they lost sasser and then those trip Mark. Which one went down first. You're looking and going, I've seen Josh Carlton play. We've seen Shan, we've seen those guys, can they be the guy that, you know, look, they didn't have quad one win and their non conference schedule. And they're during the course of the season. How good are they? Well, they were really good. And they were good and consistent in how they played and what they did. They were great at what they did. And Calvin probably probably as good as any in terms of game planning and putting guys in position to play best Friends, figuring out who they are and how they win, but more importantly, game planning against an opponent. Like he never let the other team's best player beat him. That was not happening. Even in the game they lost. They didn't get beat by Congress. You know, you know, it was a rock fight. March Madness is here. Who will take home this year's NCAA championship trophy? I must say, working for ESPN is what it's cracked up to be. Each day is unique, exciting, and rewarding. It is time to start doing what you love. Sports journalists anticipate a play before it happens. They foresee opportunities and know when to act on them. Even understanding how to talk to players is an acquired skill. Saint bonaventure university will give you the confidence you need..

Courtside with Seth Greenberg
"seth" Discussed on Courtside with Seth Greenberg
"I thought I'd be wrong. I thought they'd actually beat Miami. But for them not with the talent that they have with the style that they play, the best shot blocker in all of college basketball to not get to a sweet 16. I thought was a miss mark by Albert. You know, I look at both of them. I was like, the Big Ten, do they have enough dynamic guards that could just carry you through a tournament? Because I think you need dynamic, you know, I used to turn four gamers, but guys that can just when it comes to time and the incidentally it's going to be, as you move along, you play in possession games. You're going to play against a lot of different styles. You need some guys that are just going to go and make plays. Obviously, Jay navy was one of those guys over there. That's not their style of play. If you look at the style of play in the Big Ten, do they have that guy that could go and just flat make a play? And that's my concern just to even moving forward for them for the Big Ten. Are those guys go in there and awkward finds we said all season long? Their guards, their guards, their guards, a guard, selfishness of their guards. My shot selection decision making, why isn't tabari getting the ball with more often? And that stuff eventually is going to bite you this. I mean, it's just going to bite you in the ass. I mean, so let's face the most disappointing thing to turn. It was Kentucky. Yeah. I mean, I mean, let's call it the way it is. I mean, Kentucky was a team. I thought, was going to make a deep breath. I thought that, yeah, they had weaknesses. Now, tell them Grady wasn't playing well at the end of season. It was making shots. People figured out a little bit how to play savior in terms of gapping them and helping them lame. But if you look, they Kentucky, you looked at the year that Oscar had and Jacob topping improvement and key on Brooks getting more consistent. I'm not none of us. I think of a scenario where obviously they were going to lose the St. Peters. And it happens. And it happens. We've seen Lehigh beat people. We've seen buck now beat people. We've seen Hampton beat people in the incident. But it was unfathomable to all of us to see them lose to St. Peters, who had a look, they also beat Purdue. They also beat Murray state, who was having a great year. So I mean, kudos to them, but I mean, in terms of disappointing, you can't, it's undeniable. That the big blue nation was absolutely stuck. So storylines, what's your favorite storyline fonts really? My favorite storyline is how.

Courtside with Seth Greenberg
"seth" Discussed on Courtside with Seth Greenberg
"Talked about is outside of Jayden ivy, who's the next guy that's dynamic off the dribble that could create offense for himself or his teammates. And they just didn't have that as talented as both of those teams are. They did have two weaknesses that could be exploited by the other teams. All right, most disappointing team. I go, it's a whole big tent. Wow. No, honestly, I mean, you know, I was looking at some numbers and I can't remember right now whether it was 18 or 19 that they've had in the term for the last two years. And of those, whether it's 18 or 19 of the teams they've had in the tournament, only three of them advance to the second weekend in the last two years. Wow. And look, the SEC didn't have a good year this year in the tournament. They only advanced Arkansas to the elite 8. That was their only team remaining in the second weekend. That was disappointing for that league, given how well they had played through the course of the year and a couple of teams were banged up and auburn one plane while at the end their guards weren't playing well, but I don't know how you process that for the Big Ten. Do you say, well, you know, it's just one of those things, but when you have two data points rather than one year, you start to go, is this a trend? And 22 years now it's only two, yeah. That's a great point. No, no, but also 22 years since they won a championship. Right, right. But there are a bunch of leagues. There are several leagues that are looking at that. PAC 12 and all that stuff. It's been a while for a number of leagues, but I think the Big Ten, I thought at the beginning of the year, I think on one of our podcasts, say, man, the Big Ten has got to step it up this year and make up for it. And I'm not sure that the league really did, honestly. Yeah. For me, it's individual team it would have been all burned as a team who and Jay, you just mentioned them.

Courtside with Seth Greenberg
"seth" Discussed on Courtside with Seth Greenberg
"Is a great word, fonts, by the way. That is one of your favorite words. Formidable. I have to find a way to use for metabolic at some point. Someone's going to say my golf swing is formidable. I would say it's forgettable. Like both of those are big pics. I mean, Gonzaga, I concerned back in sag even carrying over from a year ago is when people got up and underneath them. I took them out of flow. You know, they just didn't function the same way, not that they weren't good, not they were good through the course of the season. They didn't have a great non conference and Purdue who you put on the couch funds. Because they didn't guard and they are another team that when people push them out, to me, and maybe this sounds crazy, the team with the most pros. I do have the most pros. Duke's going to have four first round drive choices. Now, there's a fine line. They get to the final four. Obviously they struggle down the stretch. I thought their last game pressure had nothing to do with it. I mean, I think of Wendell Moore shots. I think of Trevor keel shots. What are you talk about a team that had a dominant post player had a dominant forward, Jeremy roach has moved to the point guard. I thought it was a great decision in terms of helping them get easier baskets, experience with Williams experience with roach experience with more, just in terms of talent, they didn't always play that way, even though they're an analytics were really good. Just in terms of counter, I mean, it was hard to say there was another team even close to as talented as duke. Would you guys agree with that? Yeah, but I think what it sounds like we're saying is we're picking the teams that should have been the best. Purdue, I thought was the best team in the first couple months of the season. And then I didn't think so in the last two months. And I would say a similar thing about duke, like early in the season, you kept thinking they were going to stay on that upward trajectory and they didn't and toward the end. In the tournament, the first two weekends, they were the best team. And it didn't play that way. It didn't play quite that way against North Carolina and give the heels credit for that. And I guess in the Gonzaga pick, it was more about, you know, how they played all year rather than because I think we could pick any of these teams to say to give in time they could beat the other. They could have been the best team all that. But it sounds like what we're saying with Purdue and duke is they should have been best. And it didn't turn out to be that kind of year where we had a team that could separate. And I don't really, I'm not sure I know the reason why, honestly. That's why at the beginning of the tournament, remember when we did a podcast on selection Sunday, we were all saying, God, when was the last time we said I don't know this much, you know? It's crazy. Yeah. How much of that you guys think is the fact that many, if not all of those teams had a glaring weakness and JU pointed this.

Courtside with Seth Greenberg
"seth" Discussed on Courtside with Seth Greenberg
"With Jay bilas lafa Ellis and Seth Greenberg. Welcome to bald man on campus. This is basically the reverse fade rewind of the season, kind of looking back at some of the storylines teams and things we would want to talk about. I'm joined by Jay billis who's traveled cross country just to be on the podcast today, giving up an immeasurable amount of time and sleep deprived, which obviously cranky J billis is better than actually well rested J Bill. So we're in for a treat. And then Lafayette wells, who has got a very, very busy schedule today. He does not want to end up on a couch. So we're going to keep this short and sweet. So we're going to look at a bunch of things. First of all, we know Kansas obviously tremendous tremendous sense of their season and a very worthy champion. Let me ask you guys best team in college basketball this past year, not named Kansas. For me it was Gonzaga and I know it ended in the sweet 16 against Arkansas and that's the lasting memory we'll have is the end, but I'm not sure there was a better team start to finish than Gonzaga and they weren't as good as they were last year, but that doesn't mean they weren't the best team this year and as we all know the best team doesn't always win in the NCAA tournament and it was a fine line, there wasn't a big gap between among some of the top teams. They could all beat one another in a given game, but over the course of a season, I don't think anybody can claim that they played consistently at a higher level than Gonzaga did. Yeah, for me, and I would agree with you with Gonzaga. The team that had, I felt the best balance that didn't when it was Purdue. We talked about all along how they have the two deep at every position and St..

Courtside with Seth Greenberg
"seth" Discussed on Courtside with Seth Greenberg
"A microscope on him said, I know he's really good at transition at finishing and making decisions, but there's a couple times this year where they've gone against these zone and I've watched his own reads and he's so much more patient and making the right reads even against zone. I feel like that was a great pickup by them and you know how much I loved Barry's days. He might be my favorite player in all of college basketball, shoots it, defends, rebounds it, and this is a long athletic LSU team that I think is going to be challenged in my bow over because all birds pressure they get up and they can do kind of the same thing and of course jabar Smith, that dude in my mind, not quite a unicorn, but I think that dude should be a consideration for the number one pick and draft last year next year with the way that he shoots the basketball rebounds it and being a team player. LSU has to score off its defense right now to win at the highest level. And they're doing that. Their defense is spectacular. And it's not just how hard they play. It's the personnel that they can put out on the floor that make it really difficult for opponents to get open shots and score and get second shots and the like. The only thing I would say about LSU that you say, well, what about them as a contender for the whole thing? Is do they shoot it well enough? They shoot in the low 30s from three. And that, you know, they can survive that way and beat really good teams. But can they can they win the whole thing with that or challenge for the whole thing? I think they're going to have to shoot a little bit better. But what if that team had Adam Miller too from transferring from Illinois got hurt, it's hard to imagine how much better they would be. But you do wonder a little bit about their ability to score efficiently when they get put in half court games against teams that do a pretty good job of taking care of the ball. Seth forgive me. I'm gonna lay out because I looked at our ratings from last week when I wasn't here and they were through the roof. So I think it's better for our show. If I just laid out for the rest of my life, negatively, I ratings, man. The only reason that, you know, you had a very important situation. I mean, you had a wedding to go to. You just forgot to tell us that you forgot.

Courtside with Seth Greenberg
"seth" Discussed on Courtside with Seth Greenberg
"The start of the games and we'll get into the feast week real quickly. And the Virginia used to game, but Illinois. Tough, tough loss, they did not play well. That's probably an understatement. Great win for marquette. Andres Cabello just seemed to me like at a sort, whether it's, you know, you're losing your security Brian. I don't know if it was Kofi coburn or I would assume, but it seemed like he was trying to do too much. Just quick question for you guys. Concerned about Illinois or, you know what, Mark can't do what they had to do to win. Yeah, I'm concerned to the extent that I think Andre Cabello is feeling a lot of pressure. I mean, I don't just Sue me, not only was their best perimeter defender, but when it was time for them to get a bucket or to make a play, he had the basketball in his hands and stuff, when you're the secondary guy, you can kind of play a ton of free and fast because Batman in that case, I don't see what was there to kind of cover up your mistakes if you will. But now playing without Kofi coburn to your point Seth, he was just trying to do just playing too fast and trying to do way too much. And I think when Kofi coburn gets back out there on the floor, I think that'll settle him down a little bit more because Kofi will be taken up a lot more room, obviously in the painted area, and it allowed him to play within himself. I watched on an Andre cabrillo that was putting the weight of the world on his shoulders and trying to do everything. And he just doesn't play as efficiently that way. That game pissed me off. The reason it pissed me off was because of and you don't want to piss off J billis. You do not. But Kofi coburn's absence was just wrong. And, you know, right now, the NCAA is going through a constitutional rewrite and the constitutional fentanyl so they don't unduly punish athletes anymore. And yet they continue to do it. They just did it with the UMass tennis program. They're doing it where they did it with Oklahoma state basketball and they did it to Kofi coburn. What did he do? He gave money to charity from some of his memorabilia. When he thought, and he thought he was going pro. And he decided to come back, which we should all celebrate and welcome that a young man. Our young person is coming back to further their education. And play in a multi-billion dollar business and make us a bunch of money. And what do they do? They suspend them for multiple games, which benefits no one. And look, we could draw some parallels and say, well, you know, but yet the serious things happen, there are no suspensions, but while the constitutional issues going on, we're continuing to do this. And all I could think of is this is needless and wrong and what lesson is being learned. Like Kofi coburn will never donate to charity again. I never do that again. It just really pisses me off. Yeah. All right, we don't want to piss you off, so now I'm gonna pitch it. What was your take on Michigan? Obviously, I thought that first of all, I really like seat and hall's team. I think they're older, start 5 seniors. They have a physicality about them a sense of purpose. I thought they talked to Kevin war today a little bit defensively. They're really good. I think they're going to catch up offensively. Michael Smith was a pretty good player. And gave him a little bit more direction, concerns about Michigan. Obviously hunter Dickinson, they had like 32 38 points in the paint, but I didn't think the ball moved the way it had a year ago. They've got really good players today is going to be a good player obviously Caleb Houston struggled shooting the ball yesterday. How good is seat hall? How good do you think Michigan is and is this just a game two good teams played in someone's got to lose? I think seat and hall is way better than they're getting credit for. Not that you're doing this, but this has become about Michigan, more so. And I guess that happens when your top 5 top ten team and lose. But that's the value. We say we want these big time games to start the season and then the team loses and everybody snaps their cap over it. And again, not that we're doing that. But I think Michigan just shot it poorly. But you know, at the same time, they had two free throws to tie the game and send it to overtime. So if you take it to, you know, essentially a week ago when UCLA and Villanova played that barn burner if Justin Moore makes that shot over jaylen Clark at the end of the game, we're talking about how tough and great Villanova is and maybe UCLA is not as good as we thought. When the truth is, they're both kick ass good. And they're both they're both final four contenders. You know, so, you know, maybe if those two free throws go down, which is not a stretch, Michigan wins that thing in overtime, and we're talking about a great they are. You know, look, the three of us know and a lot of our listeners know that these games are important barometers for where you're going to be. They're not the be all and end all. And maybe we can see a ceiling that some team has or maybe a flaw or two that they can work on. But you know, I can't remember the last time we got to the lead 8 and said, hey, remember that game in November? That could be a problem. You know, thankfully, this isn't football. Games have no favor that became a problem for me, Mark..

Courtside with Seth Greenberg
"seth" Discussed on Courtside with Seth Greenberg
"Old school, let's go. When was the last time you saw one of those? Remember all the pay phone banks used to see at the airport. You'll see any of that stuff anymore. And when I first got a coach, I'd have a big bag of change so that if I had to make a phone call we were on the road, you know, like you pull off one of those stops. Just I keep on slugging because clubby didn't have a home going for it. It keeps slugging in quarters. 65 cents for the next three minutes. My favorite thing, my favorite thing about that Seth back when I was working with the Nike skills academies is the very first one we had up in Beaverton. And Craig elo and I were doing a shooting drill. And so Kevin Durant, Kevin Love, Derrick Rose, all these guys are in high school and they're at this camp. And so elo tells the guys. All right, when you pull up for the shot in this drill, we want you to hit the same spot you left the floor. And I want you to shoot it like you're shooting out of a phone booth. And so the guys start going into the drill and elo looks at me, elo says to me, why are they looking at me like that? They looked at me like I was speaking a different language and I go, they don't know what a phone booth is. So we had that we asked him after the drill. We said, do you guys know what a phone booth is? And they're like, no. What is that? And we had to explain it to him. We're like, don't you, you don't know who's Superman is like, where does Superman change his clothes now? There are no phone booths anywhere. But I felt really old when none of the players. Like Kevin Durant had no idea what a phone booth was. How about collect calls? Can you make elect calls anymore? I do it. I do it when I get arrested. Yeah..

Courtside with Seth Greenberg
"seth" Discussed on Courtside with Seth Greenberg
"Bald men on campus. With Jay billis, Ellis and Seth Greenberg. I'm Seth Greenberg, and as you know, courtside had a pretty good rumble. We got a new podcast coming up. It's gonna be really good. Bald man on campus with my cohorts. Jay billis and the great lafont so Ellis. Now think about this now. You're talking about three guys that look at the game of basketball for different prisons. Obviously, I coached for 33 years. The fox or Wallace, by the way, he was not a good player. He was a great player to it, the NBA player, and he is going into the Ring of Honor at Notre-Dame, one of the great arms you can get as a basketball player, Notre-Dame. Terrific background from a player's perspective. Ring of Honor for the great Alfonso and by the way, Jay billis is Jersey is hanging in Cameron indoor stadium. Not in the rafters and coach case bathroom, but you know, it's still hanging. Jay Phillips will look at the game, obviously for both their player and coach at a perspective that global perspective he has on the game. It's going to be a great conversation to have great guests great banter. It's going to be free spirited. And this is going to be great called basketball season. Think about this. Coach case final year. Yes, it's going to be a story each and every day. That's just the way it is. Kentucky, are they back? The impact of the transfer portal. How impactful will these transfers be? And then new coach is a new place, whether it's Chris feared, whether it's you for Davis taking over at North Carolina. Where it's Mike Woodson going back to Indiana. Shocker smart's gonna do a great job at Mark Ken. You've got Tommy Lloyd at Arizona. The season is around the corner and we're going to bring you inside college basketball. Bald man on campus, follicle challenge, but brilliant, no less. To learn more, listen to my guy, Jay billis, and Lafayette Ellis. I'm Jay billis of ESPN. I've been on college game day since it started. I've been on bald men on campus on the ACC network since it started. And from the inception of bald men on campus, the podcast, I'm gonna be here from the birth of this great podcast until it's untimely death, not sure when that's gonna be. It could be soon. And I will find some wellness. I'm gonna be Jay and Seth's bald head brethren and I can't wait to get started on our podcast. The energy that we have the chemistry that we have. The forwards of bringing that in a podcast version with some of the latest college basketball information and Jay, I'm excited about two bigs in the country this year that freshman duke has one Gonzaga has one. You know, I'm all about the big shape. Well, thank God you are that somebody will talk about the big guys because this is a guard dominated business. It seems like all the guards go into coaching and they go into media. We might be the only big guys that are working today, but with bald man on campus, the podcast, lafonta, what we're gonna have is the three of us bald guys have well over a hundred years of college basketball experience. 80 years with Seth Greenberg and then you and I have ten, ten years each of us to a hundred. And one of the things I'm looking forward to most is that bald man on campus will take you inside the huddle, will take you inside the locker room so far inside you'll get the stench of Seth Greenberg's old gym bag from fairly Dickens. And we'll have the best coaches on our podcast, the best players, and we'll discuss things far and wide, not only in the game on the court, but off the core issues of the day and we'll also get into the things we've eaten on college game day road trips that we shouldn't have eaten. The things that Seth feels most guilty about on a Monday. And we will make sure that we wash our hands in the process. Yeah, I am looking forward to not only a great season, but I think we're going to have two great teams to start the year. That doesn't mean they're going to be the best teams at the end, but Gonzaga and UCLA have played that epic game and the NCAA tournament last year. I think you're going to be the two best teams to start the year. UCLA has everybody back and then some and good saga is loaded again. I don't know how Mark few does it, but Gonzaga and UCLA, this is going to be a West Coast bias year. We're going to be talking about the West Coast and the Pacific time zone from the jump. And I look at your Alma mater just getting missed that much on this is 1995. I talked about earlier some pigs and some freshmen that are coming in. How about Powell and Cheryl, 16 two 40, knocking down from being played with this back to the basket can actually change speed change direction, a really good passer, him on the front line with Mark Williams who had a breakout gear toward the end of the season last year could be one of the best front courts in the country. Yeah, the most compelling front court since Jay billis and Mark alley played together in the mid 80s, so that's going to be a great year to do. But it's going to be a great year on bald men on campus, the podcast. Don't miss it. I don't know where you go to get it. But wherever you go, go..

Late Night with Seth Meyers Podcast
"seth" Discussed on Late Night with Seth Meyers Podcast
"It's that simple. So <Speech_Male> i said <Speech_Male> what is this biofilm. <Speech_Male> He goes well. When you're <Speech_Male> when you're in <Speech_Male> utero is <Speech_Male> going you're completely <Speech_Male> germ-free. <Speech_Male> You're germ-free environment. <Speech_Male> But the moment <Speech_Male> you're born <Speech_Male> bacteria is introduced <Speech_Male> your system. That's how <Speech_Male> you build your immune system <Speech_Male> and that bacteria <Speech_Male> is part of your <Speech_Male> biofilm. You carry <Speech_Male> it forever and stuff <Speech_Male> as how does it. What <Speech_Male> happens when you <Speech_Male> come out to shoot <Speech_Male> like you hit the air and <Speech_Male> you breed them for the first <Speech_Male> time and he goes. Oh no <Speech_Male> no the bacteria <Speech_Male> you pick up <Speech_Male> you pick up in <Speech_Male> the mother's birth <Speech_Male> canal and <Speech_Male> so i was like wait a second. <Speech_Male> You're telling me. I'm at <Speech_Male> the periodontics. <Speech_Male> I gotta get teeth ripped out <Speech_Male> because my mother <Speech_Male> is still in my <Speech_Male> mouth using. Oh <Speech_Male> yeah you've been fighting <Speech_Male> that sushi. You're born <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Male> and i said <Speech_Male> what did this hyper immune <Speech_Male> system. It couldn't do anything <Speech_Male> for me. Said <Speech_Male> like wolverine <Speech_Male> and he goes. Well <Speech_Male> wait a second. Do <Speech_Male> you have ads. <Speech_Male> And i lifted up my shirt <Speech_Male> and i said i don't <Speech_Male> have i don't have <Speech_Male> one let alone <Speech_Male> thorough so i said <Speech_Male> no. And <Speech_Male> he said why he <Speech_Male> goes. Well i think a wolverine. <Speech_Male> I think adds. He's <Speech_Male> going but you don't have that so <Speech_Male> you're definitely not wolverine <Speech_Male> and he went in <Speech_Male> and took the teeth out <Speech_Male> and stuff like that. <Speech_Male> Ps the story <Speech_Male> though. Before i had <Speech_Male> the procedure <Speech_Male> he says this <Speech_Male> man he goes listen. <Speech_Male> It's going to be five hours <Speech_Male> and we put you under <Speech_Male> as i can't wait <Speech_Male> and he goes the problem <Speech_Male> is that's <Speech_Male> a long time <Speech_Male> so you might have to <Speech_Male> go to the bathroom and i was like <Speech_Male> i'll go before the operation <Speech_Male> because well <Silence> you could do that <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> or we have something <Speech_Male> you could use. <Speech_Male> And i'm thinking <Speech_Male> like are they gonna. Catheter <Speech_Male> is me for this. Like <Speech_Male> is there a tube or something like <Speech_Male> that as what are you <Speech_Male> talking about. And he <Speech_Male> goes. Listen you know. <Speech_Male> We start our lives <Speech_Male> wearing these. Sometimes <Speech_Male> we end our lives <Speech_Male> wearing these. <Speech_Male> And i was like. Oh you offer <Speech_Male> me an adult <Speech_Male> diaper to get my teeth <Speech_Male> work down. <Speech_Male> No shame whatsoever. <Speech_Male> They just let it flow <Speech_Male> aside. I i can <Speech_Male> hold it. And seth <Speech_Male> like a big <SpeakerChange> boy. <Speech_Male> I held it. <Speech_Male> I <Speech_Male> on behalf of everyone <Speech_Male> here. <Speech_Male> We're <SpeakerChange> so proud <Speech_Telephony_Male> of you. <Speech_Telephony_Male> <Speech_Male> Thank scott <Speech_Music_Male> is scholars. Proud <Speech_Music_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Telephony_Male> <Speech_Male> skyline so scouse <Speech_Male> fully tuned <Speech_Male> out at this part of the show. <Speech_Male> But <Speech_Male> i want to say we <Speech_Male> are. We've run out of time. <Speech_Telephony_Male> You've done a wonderful <Speech_Telephony_Male> job plugging periodontics <Speech_Male> story. And <Speech_Male> but i want to say <Speech_Male> a few things that i do want <Speech_Male> you to come back soon because <Speech_Male> masters <Speech_Male> of the universe. You've <Speech_Male> done a great job adapting. <Speech_Male> You have a new book. <Speech_Male> That i think everybody <Speech_Male> should read. I'd like to <Speech_Male> talk about these likely <Speech_Male> to come back. I'm really <Speech_Male> happy doing clerks <Speech_Male> three. It's always <Speech_Male> such a pleasure. And i still <Speech_Male> have your weed and <Silence> one day we're going <SpeakerChange> to smoke it. <Speech_Male> Okay <Speech_Male> that means the world <Speech_Male> then then. It's still there. I <Speech_Male> watched every episode <Speech_Male> to see if <Speech_Male> it's in the cup the way <Speech_Male> howard shore watches <Speech_Male> every episode of <Speech_Male> could make sure they're still <Speech_Male> using steam music. <Speech_Male> So <SpeakerChange> i've been watching <Speech_Male> thank you.

Late Night with Seth Meyers Podcast
"seth" Discussed on Late Night with Seth Meyers Podcast
"Everybody goes much. Bye-bye jason. I was looking at a clerks renaissance fair. It really is to a larger. Hold the micro. Chris i just wanted to show you this feature okay like this is me as silent bob. Watch out easy like this movie magic right here. Yeah here we go just like that. Wow kevin it's kevin guys is here. I know you couldn't recognize me before. But this is. I appreciate you doing this. Man via zoom and whatnot. Because our something happened to me a few months ago. And i instantly called my agent said. Please book me on seth meyers. Because i i watched the show all the time and in my head and heart. We're like good friends. Yeah and i know we're not but like i. Nothing happens to me. Unless i share it with you so something happened to me at the payroll. Don's it's call the majors. Can you book me on myers. And it was like months ago months ago but i was like i'll wait and then it happened but we're making clerks three which i've been trying to make for seven years. So the logic was cancel. Out on myers but i was like what are you mad like. It doesn't work. there's nothing happens those marcel. Even though trying to make this movie seven years. I said everything goes on hold so i could do this interview. Man i say damn near the story because a lot of people wanna come on and they wanna plug a project but the fact that you're here to plug the fact that you went to the periodontics means the world to me. Well i before. I even say that. Can i tell you a quick story about the wife. So i'm on the fan. And so i watched lobby baby by myself late at night spoken weed and it was amazing and it was so good that i was like. I think my wife will get into this because quite like you as a comedian. You prop up your wife. You're not one of those. I can't believe a marriage. You're like i can't believe she married me right so i said she's going to love this special so i sit down with my wife and watch special and she absolutely loves it but this is her review. This is what she says. At one point she goes oh. His wife is so lucky. He's funny and cute and at that point. I'm like what so what. I'm just a funny. And she's like well sometimes. He's funny all the time and at that point even though i consider you my buddy i threw shade right away man because i was like look the myers. Don't have it all. Have you ever seen their dog out their dog..

Akimbo: A Podcast from Seth Godin
"seth" Discussed on Akimbo: A Podcast from Seth Godin
"So a rabbi. A priest an alderman walk into the bar and the bartender says what is this. Some kind of a joke. Hey it seth and this is akimbo. We'll be back in a second to talk about the rule of three and the irreversible binomial. But first here's a message from our sponsor get better clients there in three. Words is the strategy of any freelancer. Who wants to do better work. Get better clients. You can't work more hours but you can work for people who appreciate the work you want to do. They will push you harder. You will do better work. they will talk about you. You will get paid more. You'll be more proud of what you produce how to get better clients. I've been thinking about this for a long time and we have built a workshop just for you if you work for yourself. I really think you need to check it out. It's not a bunch of videos. It's a workshop. You will work with other freelancers working your way forward to figure out how to do this. Work that matters. I hope you'll take a minute to check it out. Visit akimbo dot com slash. Go for all the upcoming workshops. Go make a ruckus. Even if you didn't know the name of the rule of three you've certainly encountered it. The three stooges the three pigs the three musketeers..