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Posted

Hi Joe, two things:

 

1. Who is the "Ted" you mention in the Jericho interview?

 

2. How would you rank the podcasts overall?

 

1. Oops, that's in regard to Ted Irvine, who was on last week's show. I used a template for the column and didn't erase that part from last week.

 

2. It's hard to rank, because a lot of them are dependent on the guest that week. Cornette's usually pretty good, but he had an awesome guest in Jim MItchell that made it the best of the week. Jericho is probably #1 right now, because he has access to both the current WWE roster and a lot of guys like Hogan. I still enjoy Colt a lot too. Austin used to easily be the best, but I guess due to his busy schedule he doesn't have a lot of guests, and is just as apt to talk to Ted Fowler or take calls. JR has great guests but he just hammers the same points over and over again. Piper and Goldberg are the most skippable.

Posted

Court already has TWO regular podcasts to discuss current events, and theres nothing about his time on the writing team you havent heard a thousand other places, so this was a waste.

While I'd imagine its a rareity among those who read the column, don't assume that someone that listens to Austin shows listens to other wrestling themed shows, especially the ones Court hosts.

Posted

You should cycle out Goldberg and cycle in the Terry Garvin one

Granted, since Terry is a friend, I'd love to see it, but truthfully, I'd skip the Goldberg ones. I hate to even see you waste your time

With it.

Posted

1. We would have all forgiven you for not listening to Cornette this week.

2. Drop Goldberg and pick up Garvin.

3. I hope you have enough buzz that Jericho sees your comments and gets all passive aggressive at you. That'd be funny.

Posted

Regal on Jericho's show was awesome. I love that my take on what a "great worker" is what Regal says a "great worker" is. And that Regal is so awesome about taking all responsibility for every bad thing that he went through, as well as him saying that it's all show business, and that he always treated wrestling as show business is so great.

Oh, and his story about how he knew how to work a crowd based on if he saw more families and kids walking to the ring or lots of young dudes and how Eddie could do it based on just listening at the curtain is my favorite thing I've heard in forever.

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