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Chapter 1: What fishing techniques does Terry Bradshaw share?
the joe rogan experience train by day joe rogan podcast by night all day pull up onto the microphone mr bradshaw they're catching uh rainbow trout oh yeah killed him i've been up this our fourth year can you fly fish Yeah. Oh, yeah. But you're not fly fishing. You come back in July for fly fishing. This is fly fishing, but you've got a fly bobber. It's a fly.
And then you've got that tiny, tiny bug. I mean, you can't even see it, and that's what you catch them on.
So you're using a fly rod, but you have a bobber and a little tiny fly.
The bobber is a... Basically, a big moth or something that holds it up.
Right, right.
Bobber, cork, whatever. Yeah.
Yeah. So it's just a different kind of fly fishing.
What you're doing, because you're in a boat, you know how fast that water's moving. Right. And you just go down through there, and they move it to the... Jets and jetties and stuff.
So you find, like, the pools where they're waiting.
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Chapter 2: What humorous story involves baby Jesus and fishing?
Come on, son. We've got to have a glass of that. Seven years. Do you drink? Yes. You better. I drink this.
You're selling whiskey.
You better.
Yeah, I drink this. Let's have a drink. This is our 12-year that just won all the Golden Awards and Spirits. Oh, nice. Yeah, won all of them.
So age 12 years? 12 years, 13 now. I was talking with Buffalo Trace about that, and they're like- Well, yeah, that's what you drink.
Once you drink this, you'll stop drinking that, unless they're a sponsor. They are a sponsor. Okay, there you go.
And they're nice guys. Okay. And I respect them. That company's been around longer than the country. Longer than America. Long time.
They started in 1773. I mean, when you go back to said whiskey. Yeah. Well, they claim that Elijah Craig was the father of bourbon whiskey. And they do research and then they don't have it back that far where they can actually say because Elijah Craig was a preacher. Oh, really? Yeah. So that frees me up. A preacher who made whiskey. Yeah. Wow. So anyway, that's award-winning 12.
Jim, can we get some ice and glasses?
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Chapter 3: How does Terry Bradshaw describe his experience with cancer?
Time to party.
I'm just going to. This might be the best show you ever have.
All right. I'm excited.
Yeah, you will be after you drink that. Let it sit.
Smells good.
Let it sit.
It smells good. Let it sit. This is the 12-year-old stuff. And what is it called?
Bradshaw bourbon. That's the name.
Can I see?
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Chapter 4: What are the challenges faced by football players regarding injuries?
It worked. It's scary. You don't want your legs up in the air and some doctor coming in there and didn't give it a thought at all. It's kind of the way it was. It was the unspoken word. Bravado. Got it. Yeah? You know that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Football players, they, back in the, can you imagine the 50s and the 60s? Oh my goodness. Jeez Louise. Well, what year did you start playing professionally? 70?
Chapter 5: How did the culture of playing hurt evolve in football?
70 what? 70? 70? 1970. Wow.
Yeah.
I'm 77. Wow. You're what? 50? 58. 58. Almost 59.
Yeah. I'm 77.
Chapter 6: What impact do steroids have on athletes' performance and health?
Yeah. Wow. So I just didn't think anything about it. Well, how'd you get used to all that? I grew up with it. When you grow up with it. It's normal. Normal.
Yeah.
It's all part of it. You play. And as a quarterback, I think back then or anytime, quarterbacks play. Coach has got to know that he can rely on his quarterback to be out there and no matter what. And I even had. One coach say, hey, you always play hurt. You always play hurt. Yeah, I do. Shoot me up. Block it. Shoot me up with stuff. Yeah, let's have it. Stuff, yeah. You don't ask what it is.
You want to hear us? We played Cincinnati one year, and the night before the game, there's a lineup of players going into a room to be shot up. Whoa. Yo. Yeah.
It's just normal. And you don't know what they were shooting them up with? Well, we played, didn't we? I told you. Stuff.
And you didn't think anything of it. Nobody. It was just normal. Normal. Normal. You got to play. Yeah. He's a doctor.
Hey, it's part of the, you know what everybody is. Did they have steroids back then? Yeah, they did. I just didn't know why one player was built like Atlas. Skin tight, muscles bulging. Didn't know, you know. Didn't know anything about it. Howie Long. You never had Howie on the Howies. No, I've never had Howie on the Howies. Howie's amazing. Now, Howie tells this story.
He was a rookie defensive tackler. No, defensive end at this time. He lined up over our tight end, Larry Brown, whose arms were this big around. And he had like a 22-inch waist. Massive legs. Ripped. Every muscle. You could see the muscles in it. It's just... most gorgeous body on a human being you've ever seen. And he put his arm down, you know, getting in position.
And Howie lined up over him, and Howie tells us how he's the best. And Howie goes, you've got to be effing kidding me. He said he'd never seen anything like that. So I'm not saying Larry did steroids or anything like that, but he was something else. But he might have. It might have. I don't know. It might have. Some people were. Yeah, it might have.
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Chapter 7: What insights does Terry Bradshaw share about his experiences with famous personalities?
I think it was Roy. That movie was great. Oh. That turn at the end.
Oh, did it have you fooled?
Oh, I was like, what? I know. At the end of that movie, I'm like, whoa. That's another very smart guy. Edward Norton, I had him in on the podcast. Yeah, very interesting guy.
Yeah, I find actors in general very... Well, they're really good ones. They are Cooper I love. McConaughey, I've done a movie I love. He's great. Great guy, too. Who else? George Foreman.
Also very smart.
Yeah, very smart. George Foreman, we did a show together called Better Late Than Never. Never got to know him in two years. Never got to know him in two years. Really? Never got to know him in two years. How come? He totally didn't associate with any of us. We had lunch. He'd sit over here with his son. Had dinner.
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Chapter 8: How does Terry Bradshaw describe his approach to public speaking?
He'd sit over here with his son. It could be. I would only guess that he's shy. He didn't like the fact that we drank. He didn't like the language that was used because he's a preacher. And I asked him one time, I said, George, how big is your congregation? He said, 120. I said, really? How long have you been doing this? I think he said something, maybe 20 years or something.
I said, because I've been taught as a Baptist and as a preacher, your congregation grows, right? Right, right. Right. Your congregation grows. And I said, so how many? 120. I said, oh, wow, it's small. I said, you're building, you're growing. He said, no, 120 is enough. And I went, 120 is enough? I said, so George... When do you start preparing your sermon?
Do you start on Tuesday like most preachers? No. Oh, you don't? So when do you start preparing for your sermons? Wednesday? No. So when do you start preparing for your sermon? He says, when I stand up to preach, God tells me what to say. Wow. Okay. You're going to argue with George Foreman? I'm not. All right, brother.
Yeah, I'm not arguing.
But, yeah, he was – I wanted to get to know him. He was friendly, but he was just – He was blocked, yeah.
Yeah. Well, he's also another guy that's been famous for a long time. A long time. He's probably figured out how to block people out. And also he went through that dark period when he quit fighting for 10 years. And, you know, the losing to Ali, I mean, that was very hard on him, you know. He knew better.
When he lost at Thrill in Manila, he knew better.
It was Rumble in the Jungle. Oh, okay. Yeah, that was in Zaire. They both rhyme, right? They definitely rhyme. Well, that was Don King, right? Yeah. Oh, wow.
Yeah.
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