LeBron Rumors, All-Star Weekend, & #NeverADoubt - podcast episode cover

LeBron Rumors, All-Star Weekend, & #NeverADoubt

Feb 20, 202448 minEp. 221
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Episode description

On today’s episode, Nick recaps being at the Chiefs parade, breaks down LeBron trade rumors, and decides how to fix All-Star Weekend with 'Nick Makes it Wright.' Then, Nick gives his NBA preview. Later, Nick reacts to your #NeverADoubt tweets. Lastly, Nick and Damonza answer your questions. 


0:00 KC PARADE REACTION

22:54 NICK FIXES THE NBA ALL-STAR GAME

30:46 LEBRON RUMORS

40:37 STEPH VS SABRINA

43:15 NEVER A DOUBT UPDATE

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Transcript

Speaker 1

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Speaker 2

Welcome in episode two seventeen, What's right with Nick Wright? Apologies on the front end for my voice. So here's the deal. This happens every year that the Chiefs have

a parade. I for the better part of three hours, shake hands and take pictures with you know, a thousand people maybe, and then I get on an airplane, I come back to New York, and I'm a little sick, and so I typically would maybe not be doing the show today, but this is our first show since the Prey, and I want to talk about it, and so we

talked about it some on the TV show. I then did a bit of a Kansas City media tour on Friday when we didn't have the TV show, and we're in the A bloc here, not going to really talk sports. We're going to talk about my experience there in some ways to move forward and the ways to move forward.

I'm going to steal from Jason Kandor, who was in the US military for very long time, ran for US Senate in Missouri, lost a very close election, then was running for mayor against my friend Quentin Lucas and dropped out of the mayoral race as he had to deal

with some PTSD from his time in the military. And he went on my buddy Laslow's radio show and podcast and presented a way forward on the scourge of gun violence in America that does not involve passing new laws, but instead involves repealing one.

Speaker 3

Law we already have.

Speaker 2

And I think it's a really sharp and smart way to address it. And so we'll do that. But Demanse's here with us. Demanse's in la and Demonse, you feel free to jump in at any point, and we are. I'm gonna give a little anecdote from this weekend, and then I'm gonna go back to the parade and then we're gonna bounce around a bit. So this weekend I took Deanna, our youngest, to off Broadway show called The Play That Goes Wrong, and it's actually really well done.

It's won a bunch of awards, and the concept behind it is it's supposed to be a regular play, but everything imaginable goes wrong, and that's intentional. I'm not gonna explain the play to you, but it's funny and it's

well done. And in the midst of it, about forty percent halfway through the play, thereabouts off screen or off stage, I should say, a murder takes place and there are three loud gunshots that you hear and I knew, I mean, the play that they're doing is called like the Murder at Whatever Place man or maversham manor or something, and

you knew something like this was coming. And those three gunshots wrung out and I flinched in like a very defined way, and I was like, oh, that's the kind of, for lack of a better term, shrapnel from what had happened Wednesday, Like the me that was somewhere in my brain the last time I had heard something like that was when we were scurrying off the stage at the parade and we heard a very distinct gunshot and the fox secure folks, who I can you know, I will

continue to say what a brilliant job they did, said get down somewhere in my brain that like really impacted and affected me. And so when I heard it again, even though, like you know, I'm in a Broadway show and that's part of the show, I wasn't really expecting it, and my heart raced and I flinched, and it was weird. And I'm a near forty year old man who didn't see any of the actual shooting and didn't see any of the actual victims, and it had an impact on me.

And so I have spent a lot of the time since the parade talking about us failing our kids and the young people who have had, you know, preparing for these events and knowing what to do in all of that just be part of how they grow up. And I apologize that I'm kind of taking a circuitous path here, but I promise I'll layd the plane that we we have a couple different types of reactions to these types

of incidents. If it's like the one in Kansas City where it appears to be gang violence that spills out into what I would call the general population outside of where we as a society have accepted that gang violence will take place. The reaction is throw the book at them, police the streets, keep the criminals in jail, all that stuff.

Speaker 3

And when it is.

Speaker 2

The type of shooting that is very unique to America.

Speaker 3

The lone.

Speaker 2

Wall usually seventeen to twenty eight year old loner guy who loses his mind or has been radicalized by the Internet, or you know, any of the above, we go to mental health. We say we need to do more on

that front. And the mental health thing really really irritates me, because, while yes, I wish we had vastly more mental health resources, it is I find it wildly and offensively disingenuous to claim to care about mental health and want to prioritize that and not recognize the mental health damage we're doing to a generation of kids. If I, as a near forty year old man, was it a play five days later and heard a couple obviously cinematic gunshots, and my

heart raised and I flinched. What about the thousands of kids at that parade? What about them and what does that do to their mental health? What does that do to their ability to be happy, healthy, well adjusted kids.

And the answer is we it's now been a problem in America for long enough and enough people have been a party to some type of mass shooting incident that tragically, we might have the data to actually do a proper sample sized study to see the mental health damage that active shooter drills and that being on the periphery much less in the mix of a mass shooting incident what

it does to people. But claiming to care about mental health and then sticking your fingers in your ear and failing to recognize the damage this uniquely American epidemic has to do with mental health or has impacts people's mental health, I find offensive, and so I will admit I have very extreme feelings. And this is where people will get mad, and that's fine. People are allowed to disagree. I have very very extreme feelings on guns in this country. I

do not believe it to be a constitutional right. I do not believe that the way in my lifetime the Second Amendment has been understood and interpreted by the courts is correct. Flatly, I think it is. I think the fact that we have totally disregarded the fact that the first four words of the Second Amendment is a well regulated militia. It is not well regulated, and it is not a militia. The fact that we have just thrown

that out, I think is a crime. Okay, so I will admit, though I am on the extremes there, I think it is a logical fallacy. I think that if we are really talking about if you believe the reason you have a right to an ar is because you must protect yourself against a tyrannical government, well then shouldn't you then also have the rights to any weapons you can afford fully automatic machine guns, uh, drones, smart bombs, that's what the government's working with, the government comes for you.

They've got they've got suitcase nukes, guys. And so if we're going to take it to its furthest logical conclusion, and it is no, it is our inalienable rights to be able to be able to take on the first infantry if they come for us, Well then we then you know, nukes at trade shows to go along with tanks if you can afford it, right, And I don't think many people actually believe we have those rights. So I think the Second Amendment is consistently misinterpreted. But I've

lost that argument. The courts have lost that decided. I've lost that argument. The politicians, even the politicians I support, have decided they don't want to have that argument. And the guns and the gun lobby and the gun owners have won that argument. So how do we move forward?

And this is where I give Jason Candor and Laslow credit for starting this conversation, which is, instead of adding a law, repealing a law, because there was a law that was passed nearly twenty years ago, the PLCAA, the Protection of Lawful in Arms Act, And what that law did was make it illegal to sue gun manufacturers. It made it you, you do not have the rights in America now to sue a gun manufacturer unless the gun malfunctions.

And what that law has, in my opinion, and again Jason Kandor wrote an article about this, did podcasts about it, and people should check it out. It has allowed the gun manufacturers to operate in an area somewhat outside of capitalism where they do not have to put in the protections or safeguards that every other industry does, because they don't have to be worried about being held to account in a multi billion dollar civil lawsuit. Now, removing this

law would not guarantee anything. You wouldn't guarantee you would win your lawsuit. Wouldn't guarantee any of those things. But what it would do is guarantee that you would have a chance to find out, Okay, are they marketing these guns to children through the discovery process of a lawsuit. Do they have smart gun technology that they easily could be implemented that they're choosing not to because it would cost an extra twelve bucks a gun and they've decided

not worth it. And so to use an analogous situation demonse, you're not old enough to remember this, But when I was around eighteen years old, anybody, and I'm very, very very fortunate that I didn't get hooked on this. Anybody who wanted oxy could get it. It was handed out like candy in at clubs parties. Yes, anybody that wanted oxy could get it. It was that ubiquitous. And the reason, and it's the cause of the opioid epidemic, or a big.

Speaker 3

Cause of it.

Speaker 2

The reason that changed was because the opioid makers got sued into oblivion. They lost billions and billions of dollars in lawsuits, and because of that they ran you related themselves. And because my dream of a proper interpretation of the Second Amendment, that ship seems to have sailed. We are just we are just gonna pretend that there is nothing you can do when you just need to look to any other country in the world to see, well, there's

obvious things you can do. And my dream of a gun buy back program and it not being legal for individual citizens to possess these types of weapons, that's gone. But without this law, would these gun companies start to operate in their own financial best interests and create their own gun registry and to enforce their own background checks, And Candor speculated they might create their own insurance companies

about having to purchase your own gun insurance. They might because the fear of being sued into oblivion because you knowingly and wantonly marketed these guns to kids, to people who you knew were mentally unstable, sold them to people with a history of domestic violence, all those things. If they just had to worry about being held to account,

how much would that change things? How much would that change how they operate because what we know is that this will simply keep happening and we will simply continue on the path of everyone at this point having either been on the receiving end or the I guess giving end of a wellness check. And it's a tragic state of affairs. And I'm gonna tell one anecdote that I did not tell on the TV show, but I'm gonna

tell it now, and then we're gonna move on. When I talk about what this is doing to our kids, and I demands I apologize on the front end, I don't know how this is going to impact or affect you. So, yeah, maybe should have told you this beforehand. So the Wednesday, So the parade happens Wednesday, and and just just put me on camera, please. The parade happens Wednesday. And again we were fine, right, we were fine. We literally had security with us. We we were fine.

Speaker 3

That I am.

Speaker 2

Of the eight hundred thousand people there, there were hundreds of thousands, I would say, in more danger than I was. Okay, So this is not a woe is me.

Speaker 3

This is just.

Speaker 2

Despite that, this is the impact it has on our on our people, especially our young people. So Deanna was saying with my mom. And you know, I sent the text before they had even seen the news. Demante didn't even know yet. Diora didn't even.

Speaker 3

Know yet that it had happened.

Speaker 2

And I sent the text, were fine because I did not want you guys to see the news and not be able to, you know, not know what was going on. But your mom's phone hadn't been working great at the parade. And then when we got back to the hotel, your mom laid down taken nap and I called my mom and face timed her, and your little sister, who's ten years old, said, I was. I was outside of the hotel, I was walking around. I paced when I'm on the phone, and your little sister said, hey, can I talk to

mommy And I said, na, she's taking a nap. She said no, let me talk to mommy. And I said, she's taking a nap. It's been a tough day, you know.

Speaker 3

Sorry.

Speaker 2

She was like okay, and I was like, if she wakes up before you know, you go to bed, we'll call. And that was that. And then the next day, Deanna and I went to dinner and she told me that when we got off the phone, she was worried that I was lying to her that her mom had been shot, and I want to tell her and that while is irrational from an adult's perspective, I get it. It is for whatever. And again we were on the furthest periphery,

but for kids, this is now something she carries. And if we are just okay that that is going to be the world in which we live, then I don't even want to say so be it, because I'm not. But don't you fucking dare ever tell me again you care about mental health or you care about you know, the youth of America. Because we are opting into living like this and acting as if there is no possible solution when every other developed country in the world has

figured it out. Is not acceptable. All right, talk a little sports, come back with her? All right, welcome back in What's Try to Think Right, Episode two seventeen. So the major story from this weekend obviously was one of the worst All Star Games ever played. Uh And I I think that this is mostly the media's fault, And by that I mean people respond to incentives. We have changed NBA coverage in a way to where true we reward truly nothing nothing, pardon me other than postseason performance

and success. There is nothing about the journey that we find cool that we talk about it being worthwhile, and so players have responded accordingly. Players initially responded with load management, and teams were obviously a big piece of that, which was, well, why would I care about playing seventy eight games if that's going to make me ten percent less fresh for the postseason when all that you guys are going to

talk about my legacy? Where I rank, how good I am is based on how I do in the postseason. And so of course, a you know, a casualty of that is going to be the All Star Game. Once upon a time, NBA media rewarded guys who kicked ass in All Star Games. It was part of their legacy. It wasn't a huge part, but it was part of it. How you looked in the closing minutes of these All Star Games. It no longer is. It's now totally irrelevant.

It's now not If I were to say out loud on TV, hey, guys, Lebron has more All Star Game points than anyone in history by a mile, I would be laughed at. People would say, are you kidding me? How many rings does he have. If somebody said, hey, part of dame now his resume is he won an All Star Game MVP, people would say that's the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard. The guys never even won a game in the conference finals.

Speaker 3

So.

Speaker 2

I if they If you actually want to fix the All Star Game, Demanse, I think the answer is pretty simple. The winning conference gets home court advantage in the finals. It's what Baseball did with their All Star Game. You can say that's unfair, but I don't know how unfair it is, because here's the thing. The East and the West play unbalanced schedules as is, so having a fifty eight win Eastern Conference team have home court advantage over a fifty six win Western Conference team in a year.

If the West is the deeper, tougher conference, that wasn't quote fair unquote to begin with. And folks can say, well, still, some guys won't care. Well, then those guys will don't play. The coaches will care because anyone who's coaching an All Star Game, he's coaching an All Star Game because his team has the best record at the breaker, one of the best records at the break. He thinks he has

a real chance of playing in the final. Coaching in the finals exactly so, and you would be able to find even if it's twelve guys and a few of them don't care, those guys wouldn't play. The coach could then just pick the guys who are locked in. Now, if you don't want to do that, then I'm here to tell you there is no obvious fix the international versus the North America that could work for a year.

My idea from yesterday of because right now, the winning players demonse get one hundred grand, the losing players get twenty five thousand. I think having that one hundred and twenty five thousand being duffel bags in cash along the baseline, and the losing players have to present it to the winning players after they get all the money could again briefly temporarily impact competitiveness, but overall, guys respond to incentives, and what we reward in NBA coverage is postseason success

and only postseason success. So as long as that is how the league is discussed, everything else is going to take a back seat to that. So those are my fixes. Go ahead, pal.

Speaker 3

So another focus on the weekend is the buddy Buddy stuff. Luca and yo kids seem to be having soap opera thing going on. The NBA in general seems to be a little bit too focused on the story these days and not the basketball. What do you think about that?

Speaker 2

Well, that's again, yeah, I mean that's again. I would argue a symptom of how the league is covered the league. I think that, And I can check the data on this. I think NBA television shows or my show when we talk NBA, the highest ratings are during the playoffs, and I think the second highest ratings are during free agency, not during the regular season. The drama and the free agency and the player movement has become yeah, exactly right,

has become far more. I don't know if it's interesting or if it's just what we discussed, or maybe it is what the fans want.

Speaker 3

I don't know.

Speaker 2

That has become the second biggest part of an NBA's year is not the regular season. It is the off season. It's the playoffs one and the off season two.

Speaker 3

All right, Next, you think Luca and Jokic whatever team up.

Speaker 2

Well, I mean, Jokic said I love Denver, so Luca would have to come to me. I don't think so. I think Luca would be more likely to go to a more international city. I want a coastal place. But I do think that it is more than on the board that Luca doesn't spend his whole career in Dallas again,

because listen, the folks will come for Luca too. Let the MAVs go out in round one this year, and I don't care if he averages thirty four to nine and nine, folks are gonna be at his doorstep saying, where's the wins, where's the finals appearances, where's the champ I was not in.

Speaker 3

My head for something completely different, but yeah, fair enough on.

Speaker 2

Too, Okay, go ahead.

Speaker 3

Yeah. Another huge story of the weekend was Lebron. Supposedly he could have ended up playing in Golden State with Steph, but he's claiming that he didn't know about it. I think he might have known about it, But the story here here is him not knowing about it, is if he were, if he would have gone. I'm sorry, I'm a little choked up.

Speaker 2

But you're right.

Speaker 3

Lebron obviously says that he wants to end his career with the Lakers. You're the Lebron whisperer. What do you think.

Speaker 2

Listen. I think he does want to end his career with the Lakers. I don't want him to. I think he does want to. I don't trust the Lakers front office or ownership at all at all. I think the Lakers ownership is bad, and I don't think Rob Polink has done a good job. And they when they do, when they make good moves that you know, the front office making these hard calls, and when they make the Russell Westbrook trade, it's what do you want us to do?

Lebron made us do it. I mean, this team has tried for three years to acquire Buddy Heald, couldn't find a way to do it. Daryl got him for cork Mas and three second round picks. So I don't think the Lakers are very well run. Lebron going to Golden State can't happen. He can't go to Steph's team. They would have to find a neutral site, if you will, they would have to find a third party team. And the Warriors are never trading Steph, so that's not gonna happen.

Let me hold on, I have apologize Dean.

Speaker 3

Go to Golden State because it's Steph's team, and it's like.

Speaker 2

Go to the deli and get me another one of these waters. Thank you, baby. Yeah, I'm just saying, yeah, go ahead, I'm on still on the air, go ahead. Uh sorry, I need another water because I'm a little on the weather. So I'm sending Deanna go get it for me. Deanna is here today because she didn't have school. But uh, I just think it would look bad. I think, first of all, I think Lebron doesn't want to ever be traded, and so that's why the Golden State trade

never got off the ground. I think if he wants to leave, he wants to do it on his own volition. But he is not gonna go join Steph's team. You can say, oh, he did it with d Wade, very different. D Wade, Yes, he had won the title, but he had won a title five years before Lebron got there, and that he had just missed the playoffs. And as great as d Wade was, nobody ever actually thought d Wade was better than Lebron.

Speaker 3

People have been Ron against Curry. I feel like throughout his career, exactly.

Speaker 2

Right, exactly right. And so even though Lebron and Steph are buddies now and I think them playing together I'd love the old man team Lebron, Stephen Durant, those three guys you know somewhere all playing together. I think it'd be super fun. The three of the oldest players in the league. Uh, that's still the standard bearers of the league. But Lebron can't go to Golden State, in my opinion, can't do it. So where would I listen? I think

he's going to stay with the Lakers. His son is at USC, Bryce is his whole family's there.

Speaker 3

The tactics to get Golden State to try and get to draft Bronny.

Speaker 2

No, I see, here's the thing. I do not think this was a Lebron spurred thing. I think it was a Draymon spur thing. I think Draymond wanted it and Draymond pitched it.

Speaker 3

Didn't he go on and say something to oh, wait, no, no, no, no, I'm sorry.

Speaker 2

I think that's a no Draymond did. Draymond did go out and say like I had came across my desk and I told him we can't trade Kaminga.

Speaker 3

It was weird.

Speaker 2

I don't I don't fully buy what Draymond said, but set that aside. I think it was Draymond Uh was the impetus here, and Draymond and Lebron obviously have the same agent. Now here's what I'll tell you this off season. There are four places that I would love to see

Lebron go. They're all in the Eastern Conference, and they all make sense, and they are all better run than the Lakers, and they all could win a title with Lebron at this level in my opinion, the first one, go ahead, and you go go, demonse if you want to guess, because you don't know who I'm going to.

Speaker 3

Say, I figured you'd have the Knicks on there.

Speaker 2

Uh, maybe stop, hold on, hold on, So let's go no, no, no, because I want you to go one by one. The Knicks are on there. Now. Lebron understandably does not like James Dolan and has said he wouldn't play for him. Rich his agent has an old kind of I don't know if beef's the right word, but a history with Leon Rose and Worldwide West, who are running the Knicks. So that part of it makes it a little would make it a little awkward. But yes, the Knicks if

Lebron came there this offseason. Because here's the thing. Lebron has the ability to do this offseason. If he wants to go somewhere and play for very little money, go to an already built team that doesn't have to carve out cap space. I don't know that he wants to do that. Lebron is notoriously cheap and wants to own a team one day, so he needs so he needs

the money, Thank you, Deanna. It needs the money sounds weird, but I mean if he wants to be a primary owner of something that's gonna cost billions of dollars, leaving forty to fifty million on the table, doesn't sound like he wants to do it. But yes, the Knicks with Jalen there could win the title. I believe with this level Lebron, who's the next team you you were gonna.

Speaker 3

Say, I said Cleveland, that's correct, but copy.

Speaker 2

Cleveland's the next team. They don't have a small forward, they trust, they have two guards, they have big men, they don't know how to win. It would be an awesome third and final act for Lebron.

Speaker 3

I love that idea.

Speaker 2

I don't think he's gonna do it, but that team would be good enough to win the East again with Lebron at this level, Mitchell, Garland, Mobley Allen. That team, yes, all right? Can you guess the last two?

Speaker 3

The Heat?

Speaker 2

The Heater? Absolutely the next team. I love the ownership, front office and coach playoff Jimmy, Lebron, Bam, He's been there, his family loved it there that you know they might go to the finals again. This year they haven't been able to quite get over the hump, the heat and then the last last year. Right, do you have a fourth? Do you know who the fourth one is?

Speaker 3

Fourth and final? I'm either gonna go. I feel like it's this. I mean, you said take little money, so maybe the Sixers, but I feel like it might be that.

Speaker 2

That's right, it's the Sixers.

Speaker 3

It's the Sixers.

Speaker 2

No, the Sixers. Yes, because while the Sixers are the only team that I listed of the Knicks Cavs, Heat, the Sixers are the one team that has a player that is clearly better than Lebron Jalen Brunson. I don't think it's better than Lebron. I it's close. I don't think he's better. Donovan's not better than Lebron. Jimmy's not better than Lebron. Even year twenty one old ass Lebron.

Speaker 3

I think if a little bit bigger, you'd think that maybe he was better than Lebron.

Speaker 2

Yes, well, if you were a little bit bigger, he'd be better. He's an excellent player. But in the NBA, there's real you know what I mean, Like, there's real limit. There's a reason in all of NBA history the only guys under six to six to be the best players on a champion are Isaiah Thomas and Steph Curry and Brunson's way under si you know what I mean, It's really hard, really really hard. And so but the reason why I think Philly would work for Bron is because

while Embiid's better, that team has never won. That team forget winning a title, forget being in the finals, has never been in the conference finals. They've been the Philadelphia seventy six ers have been in the conference finals or further once since Doctor J was there, the one iverson team. Embiid's never been passed round two. So Lebron's showing up and that, yes, that would work. I don't think it's realistic, but that's where I would like him to go. I do not think he is going to go any of

those places. I think He's probably gonna stay in LA, which you know is a Lebron guy I don't love, but I think it's what he wants. All right, let's go to Steph first, Sabrina.

Speaker 3

All Right, So All Star Weekend was a joke except for the three point contest between Steph and Sabrina. I think it was a really huge moment for sports and basketball in general. What was the story for you here? So the competition, the commentary around it, or anything else poke out to you.

Speaker 2

Yeah, what poked out to me is I think women's basketball is having a real moment right now, and it thrills me. I think Sabrina going toe to toe with Steph at the exact same time that Caitlin Clark is showing the world that women's basketball can get big time ratings, big big time ratings. Like she's awesome, man, she is awesome. And to circle back to what I was saying was wrong, demands with the All Star Game, Jay Williams, and I'm

gonna try and take a shot at Jay. He refused to call her great Caitlyn Clark, and his answer was she's never won a title, and this is what I'm saying, We've done to basketball. Caitlyn Clark is by any metric, one of the greatest female college basketball players ever, one of the greatest college basketball players ever. But because they you know, they lost in the nat they lost the national final last year instead of winning the national final,

you can't call her a great. Now. If the conversation was is she the greatest female college player ever, that's a different discussion. Then if you want to say you have to at least win one title to be the greatest player ever at your thing, So forget a title. Of course, to not even be willing to call her a great is crazy. And so I loved what Sabrina did. And my suggestion for All Star Weekend next year is Steph Versus Sabrina Part two and Caitlin versus Dame in

a super long range like logo for these competition. I think that would be all I think. I think Caitlin versus Dame on like essentially the four point competition and Steph first Sabrina in that. So, yeah, I loved you. I thought it was great. And I like how the NBA guys are embracing the women's hoopers because they're awesome. All Right, We've got to never a Doubt update, and I'm gonna continue to take some cough drops quick break

right back, What's right? All right? Welcome back in What's right with Nick?

Speaker 3

Right? All right?

Speaker 2

So we've got some never a Doubt updates for for you. So let's roll through some of them. Father and son. Look at that from Seth Warland. I mean that a baby with the never a Doubt tattoo and Jeff Willett with both kids with the never a Doubt tattoos. I love it though, and the never a Doubt tattoos are incredibly well produced, and the way they were able to kind of mimic the exact UH font that I have

on my arm is unbelievable. All right, let's keep rolling through them, uh, because I didn't need to not talk for the next few hours for TV.

Speaker 3

UH.

Speaker 2

Scotty might know out in San Diego, San Diego, those folks Summer Campbell Collins UH has a great one with also with a category two take sign. I wonder if they were out at the parade. That's great, and I think we've got a we've got something to play you by. That's awesome. That is really great. Those folks, I think back on the show for the second time. All right, let's get through a few more before I've got to go. Ryan Hodges and Tommy Spears with their tattoos watching the

Super Bowl. Mark Hernandez he's got one along with the Lebron James action figure. Dallas says the tattoo didn't arrive in time, so he just wrote a NAD on his arm. Maybe not the greatest idea, but I understand. And then, of course Mahomes is never a doubt, which was super dope. All right, Uh, demand's a great job today. I'm gonna answer one listener question real quick. Matt Gronkey says, Nick is Harrison Bucker a lot Hall of Famer? No no, no, no, no no. I love Bucker, but Kickers are making the

Hall of Fame incredibly, incredible difficult. He is building a resume, but right now, the only the only Lock Hall of famers involved in the Chiefs Dynasty or Mahomes, Kelsey Hill and Chris Jones. Those are the Andy Obviously there are no other Lock Hall of Famers. Bucker is building the postseason resume, but he's gonna have to do it far longer. He is unbelievable, and I got to spend some nice time with him at the parade. All right, programming update,

we are off. Go ahead, Demansey, nothing, I was fed Tony and yeah, there's the producers always setting you up to fail. We are off Thursday and then all of next week off TV and podcast next week, so we will be back two weeks from today for the next episode of What's Right Again. I apologize for my voice, but I wanted to be on the air with you guys today. Thank you for watching, Thank you for listening.

Great job, Demanse, and we will see you guys two weeks from today for What's Right, see you on TV at three o'clock Eastern, hopefully with a better voice. What's Right? Hey, it's Nick right. Thank you so much for watching. Please do us a favor click subscribe. It helps my ego and Demanse's got a financial bonus writing on a number of YouTube subscribers, so help him out. And also click

the bell. I don't know what the bell does, but they tell me to tell you to click the bell and your audio listeners, people that have commutes, drives, whatever it is, subscribe to the podcast as well. Wherever you get the podcast, same show. Just you know, just in your ears instead of through your eyes. All that check it out appreciate you.

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