Ryan McGee
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
You go, she doesn't know what she's doing.
She knows exactly what she's doing.
He knows exactly what he's doing.
Well, it's interesting, isn't it?
And now we're talking about money and resources and small towns and all that.
Now the Big Ten's got the big alumni bases and the big cities, and now it's kind of Mason-Dixon line again.
I think there's so much talent.
I think there's a chance to be back.
And isn't it funny how the perception changes when you don't win however many national championships in a row?
I'm good, yeah. I'm petty enough that I hope that all of the professors that I had who said I could never β and the people I interviewed with for jobs who said I could never be on air because of the way I sounded. I'm petty enough to hope that they β Yeah, screw those people.
I'm good, yeah. I'm petty enough that I hope that all of the professors that I had who said I could never β and the people I interviewed with for jobs who said I could never be on air because of the way I sounded. I'm petty enough to hope that they β Yeah, screw those people.
I'm good, yeah. I'm petty enough that I hope that all of the professors that I had who said I could never β and the people I interviewed with for jobs who said I could never be on air because of the way I sounded. I'm petty enough to hope that they β Yeah, screw those people.
No, no. I say it all the time. I went to Connecticut to work at ESPN at the Death Star, basically a year out of college. And the company, ESPN is so much different now than it was 30 years ago. People from all over the country. But back then, it was basically just me and a bunch of guys who'd gone to school at Syracuse and Columbia. And everyone treated me like a foreign exchange student.
No, no. I say it all the time. I went to Connecticut to work at ESPN at the Death Star, basically a year out of college. And the company, ESPN is so much different now than it was 30 years ago. People from all over the country. But back then, it was basically just me and a bunch of guys who'd gone to school at Syracuse and Columbia. And everyone treated me like a foreign exchange student.
No, no. I say it all the time. I went to Connecticut to work at ESPN at the Death Star, basically a year out of college. And the company, ESPN is so much different now than it was 30 years ago. People from all over the country. But back then, it was basically just me and a bunch of guys who'd gone to school at Syracuse and Columbia. And everyone treated me like a foreign exchange student.
They literally would speak loud and slow to me.
They literally would speak loud and slow to me.