Four nine two four, Happy Tuesday, more metroplex and world. And unlike a lot of broadcasters that I saw on TV yesterday when I took in a lot of the local news, we have not wade out of as adjectives. We're here to talk about it with words. We can do that. We're not going to be speechless from what we saw yesterday in the skies. Once
in a lifetime event, friends, and it was great. Even Tim who called in yesterday, let's saying he was non plussed by it, even tweeted me and said, pretty plussed, bro, pretty Plus, I'm Kevin Turner. It's Dandy. Bayliss's wrong, got Danny today? We had Danny, Dude. We had Dandy, which I knew this J J. Jackson, I missed so much work. Yes, an interview with a big, important, notable person. You're not just some slappy eight am eight ten. Are
you saying that we normally interview slappy like Tim? No? No, no, we don't. Well, it's just like one for us to have someone on. It's very respectable. Yeah. I think a lot of people just think we're a bunch of deal weeds. We just get stand up comics that no one's ever heard of Dusty Sleigh Tomorrow San Antonio man was a slappy No. I don't think so, no, no, and no one thinks for dill Weeds we're cool as heck. I think so too. I think so. I look at us, I sort of got I saw a well Don
van Nada Junior, Jesus Don van Nada Junior. Only that's all you can do. You don't want to get Dan Vaughan Nada because that's a different guy. It's Don van Nada. He's writing the Jerry Jones book. He's calling it at eight ten. Oh, so many questions how to even do that story? And maybe he's not doing the whole thing. We'll find out. It's called the Star. That's the name of the book. J Jones Star.
He was. He's such a good writer. Yeah. And as far as people that do this kind of thing, that guy, dude does so much legwork and research. It's incredible. Had him on before in the past, and dude, he's great. He is so good and so smart and yeah, I know what you're talking about. He's and he likes to have a good time too, Like he's not just button down and super serious.
Really, Yeah, he's cool. He's a cool, cool interview. He's the one who wrote the big Johnny Walker blue piece on Jerry from well, he usually is the guy behind like kind of the expose. The big stuff was one that kind of broke the news about the uh, the Dalrymple video stuff, secret recordings of cheerleaders and whatnot. And then I just saw a
pig. I don't know, I don't know how recent. It's hard to tell when you look at Jerry, but of them sitting on the bus and talking, you know, it's just I don't know if it's credit to Jerry or what I mean. This is a could could be someone who you consider your arch nemesis. You know, you're the writer keeps long forming the trouble I get into. Yet you're gonna write my biography. I think it's that
I'm gonna sit down with you for dozens of hours if need be. I think it's almost like the the the relationship that police have with criminals, because it's kind of in the game. As long as you don't touch civilians, then you're okay. And Jerry knows that his behavior and the stuff that he's
doing has a chance to get to become public knowledge. And if the purporter does a better job at exposing that stuff than Jerry does it covering up, covering it up, then Jerry's just kind of like just kind of tips his hat, all right, you got me. That's amazing. I bet that's that's how they how Jerry views it. I bet it is man like I just surely respect for you, respect the game. Yeah. Well, also, I think the first step to not having any any enemies is not caring
at all what people say or think about you. I mean, that's Jerry's not getting pulled off sides by anything. I ever. I remember why I worked at the at the fan one time, maybe twice he did freak out and call in, and that only happened. Like if you say something that's really about them not trying, which is so false. They do try. They just make a lot of dumb decisions sometimes, but they do try,
maybe to a fault. They try sometimes when it would be time to maybe pull back and rebuild or whatever, although I don't believe in rebuilding the NFL. So but that's like the one thing or a joke about his age. He did not like that, Like I'm here, you say it to my face. Well, yeah, you're eighty one hotlines ringing. Oh crap. But uh, dude, he does not care, and he doesn't I'm I
I've always have billions of millions of dollars. That's some a little bit of thought, that whole thing about when you get older you don't care about what people think. I think we all care about what people think, and I think Jerry cares about what people think. It's when you get older you learn how to manage your reaction to what people think. You are able to handle criticism better. Does that make sense? You don't react to the criticism with
defensiveness or whatever. But I mean, look, we all say that. It's like I just don't care anymore. I don't really care. I do. I think we all really care what people think. But the thing is is, how do you react when what they think is negative? Nobody's talking about us though, Yeah, and people have been talking about Jerry for thirty forty years whatever. It is a lot since since the Cowboy purchase and his
bubble a lot before that. And he's a billionaire. You know that does give you some fuel too, Yeah, exactly, like I've already won. Do I care what these pleabs are saying, they're talking about me. Oh that's good. More about if we always say that, like, is he okay with everyone? As long as they're talking, doesn't matter if it's good or bad. So's things has been completely just false about him. He doesn't care and he probably has cut off lines if it's about the Cowboys versus about
him personally. But when we all talk about him and his family personally, yeah, because a lot of it's out there, including Upskirt Picks, Well that's not his family kind of is. But how many owners? Does everyone in this town know that all their kids' names? I mean, maybe it's common. I don't know, but I guess they don't necessarily show up on TV in the draft room, you know, or have high level positions with
the team. I understand that. But their life is the perfect combination of succession in the Righteous Gym Stones, Yeah, mesh it all together and playmaker if you want. Yeah, it is. Every time I watched Ryge' Jimstones, now is it funny? But I'm just like, oh my god, I'm tying everything back to that family the same way with succession. You enjoying it, but it's like I'm still thinking about the Cowboys while I'm watching it.
It might be part of the reason I enjoyed both the show so much, because it must be fun though, Like, if you're a how old was it when he bought the team? Forty? He was eighty nine when he bought the team? Yeah, in his forties, Yeah, something about thirty six or yeah, probably about my lifetime ago, thirty six, I see, so mine say he's eighty one now, right, so he was
eighty nine, he was forty six. Jeez. Weird as we get older, you know, Like I don't know, like when the Rams hired Sean McVay, I remember like he was thirty six or something, thirty something so young it just didn't make sense. And forty six an insanely young, you know, but it feels like it now, you know, when he's younger than us. I was just cuban only about the mouse. I'm cuban sixty something now and he bought him in ninety nine, twenty five years ago.
So yeah, he was forty one, forty forty one probably man, maybe not even let's see man. Yeah, we're my glasses. Yeah, that's a bad glasses on this morning. Uh oh no, if your eyes are hurting. I'll tell you at seven thirty if you need to go to the doctor or not. Yeah. Uh, it's this article. Mark Evan went broke, nearly went broke a twenty seven, became a millionaire five years later. Blah blah blah. I don't know. Well. He put ROI Radio
on the Internet. I thought that meant return on investment. Not anymore, that's what everyone else thought it meant. He sold micro solutions to comp Serve for six million in nineteen ninety he was thirty two, and then broadcast dot Com and the Big Dog by Yahoo for five point seven billion. Streaming. He puts streaming on the internet, like we He didn't get enough credit for that. And it was freaking Norm Show, right, I have been norm
Show was the first thing that he streamed on. Yeah, because the match games were on five seventy or whatever. Yeah. And that handful of people that got in on the ground floor with that company. Yeah. He had a buddy that a guy that I'd kind of met through a really had a
few really good friends of mine. He was this other dude, and we'd see each other all the time, out and out, out and about, and I kept asking him one time, It's like, so, what you know, you're always hanging out and staying up late and seeing bands and stuff. What kind of job do you have that that enables you to kind of live this lifestyle? And he was, you know, a little demure about it, I guess, but uh I finally got him to tell me. He goes, well, I was Uh. I worked for Broadcast dot Com.
And when Mark sold the company a few years back, you know, he we all got paid. We got paid with stock options and cash and whatnot. And I go, what does that mean? He goes, I don't have to work ever? Like he made millions? Really, yes, damn. And he was just some you know, really smart tech dude that like going and seeing bands and was friends with a lot of musicians and stuff.
But yeah, he was just this real quiet guy that always saw out and about He's like, yeah, I'll never have to work again if I don't want to try, Buddy Jason Farrontello, his part was yesterday. Sorry I missed that birthday, j Jason, same thing, Ground four of Yeah, Broadcast dot Com. Yeah, got a big path, and I think to work, but I think there's the lowest level. I don't I have no idea what Jason made. Yeah. I mean Demeris worked there too,
you know. Yeah, And I don't know. I've I've had whiskey with Damaris and tried to try to get it out of it, try to get a number out. No. Look, I didn't try that hard. I'm you know, I realized that's but I feel like, on some level, if that happens, you kind of do want to tell people, right,
It's like friends. Yeah, I was thinking about that last night because, you know, we especially in the last couple of weeks when I've downloaded the lotto app and have been playing that, he started having those you know, how am I going to do it? How would I do it? Yeah? And I saw this video. It was one of those you know podcast the Financial Dudes that streams the show on YouTube every day. What a novel
idea? And uh And some guy called in and he had he was telling him that he won twenty two million dollars playing the lottery, and he said, the only people that know and he's married with kids. He goes, my brother knows, and my wife knows, my kids don't know, and none of my friends know. And the guy's like, okay, the financial. Dude's like, okay, I don't have a problem with that. He goes, are you still working? He said, yep, I still work.
He goes, have you upgraded your your you know, possessions lifestyle? He said, not at all. He goes, we had just paid off the house that we live in. I love this house. I don't want to move. He goes, did you did you go out? You bought a new car? Right? He goes, no, we we paid cash for two Toyotas and we love them, and that we don't see any need to get any different cars. And yeah, just the my most smartest, reliable dude. That's probably the complete opposite of what I would do. But
I don't know. I might, I might be cool with it. But the fact that he didn't. He's he has no plans of telling his kids until they are like in their thirties, because he got I don't want them growing up just what do you call him? He goes, I don't want them to be waiters waiting around on me to die. Yeah. Yeah, Or they just kind of like never never commit to anything or follow their dreams
or passions because they know they've got this, this this mattress. They can fall on a golden full of money, and I think that's so admirable. And I think that's it. Now. The kids might be pissed later, like Dad, what are new dollars? But maybe when they're old enough to understand, they'll realize what why he is doing what he's doing. But I
think that's a brilliant approach, that is. And I wonder if we would tell each other, like if you won the damn power ball, the one that happened on Saturday, and your cash out was, you know, after taxes six seven hundred million dollars, how would you conduct your life? Would you tell me? And Kevo, Yeah, oh, I think about that
a lot. I always thought my plan would be, well, I don't know, and this is probably the opposite of sort of what you're saying in the private, but it would be I would start a documentary like the second I found out. I would just with my phone. I would film myself
as much of my initial reaction as I could get. And then I think it'd be fun to go to my brother's house, you know, and knock on the door, you know, and tell him and get his initial you know, go to the handful of people my mom, I guess are the people that I was gonna tell yues for the sake of the documentary. I would probably tell you guys too, thereby violating exactly what you're saying. But I don't know that I would want to do or if I'm smart enough to
do what that guy did. The documentary is your plan, man, whatever you want goes, so thank you. You want to include this. Well, the financial advisor guy, you know kind of asked him, aside from the things that I mentioned, what's your motivation for this? And he said, you know, he was, well, when I won the money, he goes, Obviously, I hired an attorney and got some money people to help me understand what's the best way to do this, handle the financial aspect
of it. But he said he started doing research on people that had won lotteries in the past and said that, you know, the overriding theme was that these people that won large sums of money like this basically went through it within ten years and were flat broke. Yeah, you see it happen in the NFL all the time, or maybe you used to more than you do now. But he said that, he goes, I didn't want to fall in you know, I didn't want to succumb to some of those pitfalls.
But well, you said he won twenty two million. Twenty two million, but that's that's pocketed. Yes, that is the you know, it was probably like a fifty million dollar thing then after whatever taxes and whatnot. But he took the lump sum and he ended up pocketing twenty two million, which is a ton of I wonder where like the tipping point is, Like, that's I mean, that is a ton of money. I think more than enough for the rest of your life. I could blow through that in a
month. But that's what like when you applied to the NFL or an athlete. Yeah, and if your career earning is I don't I don't even know what the what the career earning is right now if you have four six year careers like solid make pension whatever, but you're I mean ten million more, I guess you know it depends. But that's yeah, and yes, to
us, that feels like infinite money. But man, if you try to keep up with your super max guys on your team at all and put on the show for a few years, I can see that not lasting ten years and nothing else coming and no plans for anything else to come in. Yeah, something's probab maybe some careless gambling. I think if you have your situation squared away, you know, you've got a house that you like, you like the neighborhood you live in. What's wrong with my car? Nothing.
That's where these guys screw up is they upgrade things that are not essential, are not even really that important. Yeah, but you're a you're a that is a mature adult saying that. And on some I guess I am too. But if you're twenty two twenty three, you start going and then it goes Plus you have all your friends that you now have given dumb jobs too. And yeah, and plus it's fun as hell to take all your friends to Vegas, you know, or to Beza or whatever, of course,
and yeah, I would probably do that too. Man, you torture a lot faster, you think even ten million dollars. Well, that's the thing he said. That was another common thread, and the people that had won large sums of money was the knocks on the door, you know, the family, the phone calls, the sad stories, you know, the I need Oh yeah, well let's gotta lee. Mortgage is coming up and a wife just lost her job and they tell you a real uncle, Bill's got
diabetes and then yeah, and it's like, that is sad. I do love this person. They're not lying to me. Yep, but that ain't your responsibility off just a little bit. Well, here's a funny thing, feeding the cats, isn't it. I mean, if I gave someone five hundred dollars, that's five hundred dollars they did not have yesterday. So there
feeding the stray cat. You know, dynamic there, that's true. One thing that this guy said that won the money that I thought was fascinating is he's got a great cover because his wife's father had passed away right around the time that they won the money, and he left his entire inheritance to her. Now, granted, it wasn't like a million dollars enough to if they
smoke screen enough. When he bought his mom a new roof out of pocket because of what some insurance problem that she had, She's like, where are you getting all this money from? Well, you know, we got the inheritance from Sheila's dad. He's like, oh, and the financial advisors like, you've already spent that money. A like five times, haven't you? And he goes, oh, yeah, for sure, but it's you know, they nobody knows how much we got and they know it wasn't because it
was a visible lifestyle that her dad lived. You can kind of gauge what somebody's worth and how much money they got that they can use as a cover. But he's like, really sensible, dude, And I wish that I could find the link, because man, if you anybody that comes into money that hasn't grown up with it or had it in a long time, it's a it's a really good watch. Imagine if that like just take that power
ball whatever you pocket three hundred million dollars. There is I guess the scenario where you wouldn't have to tell one soul, right, and you wouldn't have to tell your spouse. Yeah, I suppose if it's another account. Well, if you got divorced, you probably would very separate account. That might be why you don't tell her. Caribbean Island, says Zurich, Switzerland. Honey, you're always going to the Cayman. Yeah, why do you like the Caymans? I love Scuba? Well, if you tell her what it
what if she's like she's like, not that impressed by you. But now that you have this money, what if she's a real conniving bitch, you wouldn't want her, you know, the day after what you want her to know? If you won, you and your husband was a real conniving bit, you wouldn't want him to know. Is it better if I fraend it that way? That sounds to me like throwing good money after bad is then you're killed in a murder for hire plot. That's actually very possible too.
Yeah, people, yeah, that has to be the billionaire lottery murder for higher story. Right, Oh my god, a real one has to be probably easily found. I don't want my name out there because and then what all wins to dollars? You're like, hell, just the idiot, common criminal that thinks if you've got a lot of money, then you just have stacks of cash lying around your house and bunk key on the head, and you can find out where anybody lives just if you know their name. But
everyone's personality is different. I mean, I personally think I could be fine playing golf on an island, but I wonder if we didn't have this, I think I would be fine and just quit, never do it again. But boy, I don't know. You go a year of not doing whatever this is that we do, you might miss it. You might miss not having a voice to comment on something which is over you is. And I don't really look at the job that way. But take it away from you
and see if you thought about the job that way. Oh yeah, any people might miss that. I've never No, I don't know. Maybe you've met you making music living a I mean, because we do live semi public lives, not really at all, but sort of. I don't think I've ever met anybody, maybe outside of norm that loves this job, in this business more than you, Kevin. I think that you would be miserable if you have the business well, okay, the art of it then, or
the whatever you want to call it it. I think you would be miserable if you couldn't do this in some capacity on a semi regular basis. Start a podcast. There it is solved. You're right nowadays you can do other things to scratch the itch enough, but it is one of the rare jobs that you even if you have a billion dollars in the bank, it's a
niche that you can't really quantify losing in your life. You know, like the ability to do this, and it's just not the ability to do it well, but just the fact that you get to do it is very unique and cool. And even a billionaire does you know, if you don't have it, it's an odd thing to be like, all right, well,
what the hell? Like that was really something that was fun. I also wonder that, Okay, approaching this job, if you knew that you had five hundred million dollars in the bank, part of part of the allure of doing this, I think is the fact that, you know, maybe us more so than others, feel like the string could get cut at any time.
Yeah, And I wonder if there's some some element of juice oh yeah to that, to that dynamic that makes it more like if you had what I'm saying is, if you had half a billion dollars in the bank, what's the risk you got a big net under you no matter what you do. Yeah, yeah, I think that's kind of make what makes life worth being engaged in. But we all can get toasted. Yeah in a week if five hundred million dollars. I absolutely am not pulling audio from Fox four
at NBC five and their eclipse coverage. Yes, last night it's not happening. I'm good because I wouldn't have to do it. But now they're come up with something and I did nine o'clock. Good. Get ready, Yeah, I'm ready for that. If you are a powerball winner, are you someone who does have twenty plus million in your accounts, especially if you've never told anyone, you know, if you keep it very secret, one let us know what that's like. We won't put your name out there. We
won't put your name there. We'll set up some golf your club, of course, and we just want to learn about your lifestyle and what you do, maybe become friends. You'll become good. We don't want anything out of this. I don't want any even the opportunity fellowship, friendship. Where are your contemporaries? Although it is customary if you invite Mikey and Kevin to your club that you provide them with, you know, a set of custom club Yeah, new club driver, a nice thing? Maybe three does? Three?
Does titleists? You need a driver? I don't even need a driver. I didn't bring clothes, sir. Yeah, I need the belt and shoe and a new shoe to take you to the grand opening, Travis Matthews, North Park. I O, Smithew, you haven't even seen these clothes with the black card. Here you go. I am opening up a new position for a multimillionaire in my life, and I'd like to welcome anyone listening
who fits that category to apply within what an altruistic maneuver. You got a Mike Michael Sarroy at iHeartMedia dot com and he'll get to that email eventually. I have enough poor friends, all right? You want to you need balance. I want balance in my life, exactly right, and I need to offset on my idiot poor friends with someone very wealthy. And I have that position. I like that filled asapp two and four or personal email. He's
authorized. So, Tim, if you're listening, imagine a billionaire best friend who actually liked you and would and knows that you're not I mean, you know, knows that you're not out to get them or whatever, but knows you also appreciate. Yeah. Masters, When do we leave five o'clock today? Okay? On the private jet? Just a friend. I want to go to the Masters. Eight years, so much has happened. It's Master's week. Keo, dude, tomorrow Oh, I got you a good primer
at Tuesday. That's not even a master's primer Tuesday. It's something that happened in the live tournament this weekend. Very funny. Play that for you at seven. Well man, all right, good talk. Let's all continue Sexton today up, all right, Tuesday. Tuesdays are the worst day of the week. Oh it's it sucks, but but we're gonna ramp it up for you today. And we're gonna begin with the most important thing in the world.
And you can't imagine it is about the event that happened yesterday that's next to ninety seven won the freak
