Dan Le Batard is one of the biggest personalities at ESPN, but heās also one of the best voices in entertainment. Find out why in the latest Deeper Cut.
If youāre looking for a new voice in entertainment to listen to this year, make it Dan Le Batard.
Yes, Le Batard is a sports personality for ESPN. But his work is as much entertainment as sports, not to mention cultural and social commentary, and brilliant three-ring circus.
Le Batard has quietly built himself a small empire since joining ESPN in 1998. Heās been hosting radio show The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz since 2004 with co-host Jon āStugotzā Weiner, with a TV simulcast since 2015.
In 2011, he added an afternoon TV series, Dan Le Batard is Highly Questionable (now shortened to Highly Questionable). Heās easily the most entertaining guest host on Pardon The Interruption.
And last month, he announced the launch of a new Le Batard and Friends podcast network, which officially premiered Tuesday, Jan. 8 with Le Batardās long-form interview series South Beach Sessions. The end of 2018 even brought about his own merchandise store.
Actually, quietly is probably the wrong word. Dan Le Batard has never done anything quietly. That is what makes him not just a sports personality, but an entertainment one, too.
To paraphrase a line from ESPNās sister network ABC, The Dan Le Batard Show is about sports like Charlieās Angels is about law enforcement. You donāt have to know much about sports to enjoy the show. Le Batard and his colleagues have eschewed the dry, tired sports-talk concept; they donāt rattle off endless statistics or sound like hollow talking heads. Thereās a lot of noise, but itās almost always joyful.
When they discuss sports topics, they find an entertaining way to do it. When Derek Jeter had his contentious interview with Bryant Gumbel, rather than just talk about Jeterās outburst, the show had producers Billy Gil and Chris Cote re-enact it.
Theyāre not here to reiterate what happened and debate the minutiae of it; theyāre here to discuss it from a genuine, real-fan perspective, where theyāre able to laugh and rant and remind audiences why people care so much about sports in the first place. They put the fun back in sports while also gently ribbing it, not unlike a family sitting around the Thanksgiving dinner table.
But much of what they do has little, if anything, to do with sports. One of the showās recurring bits is bringing on Zoo Miamiās Ron Magill to talk wildlife. Greg Cote from the Miami Herald, Chrisās dad, is in studio every Tuesday with a āBack in My Dayā segment where he opines about things like gift wrapping.
Theyāll routinely skewer other media personalities, especially those elsewhere on ESPN. Tuesday was a highlight, as Will Cain called in to jokingly discuss his rivalry with the show and wanting to have his own podcast network; Dan joked that theyād start a āLe Batard and Enemiesā project.
The TV simulcast billed Cain as āStephen A. Smith Adversary,ā a reference to Cainās butting heads with Stephen A. Smith on First Take. Speaking of First Take, another gag involves Le Batardās team pausing their own show to give a ālive lookā into the other ESPN program just to see what Smith is up to now.
Thereās no one they make fun of more than themselves, though. Thereās a āpenalty boxā that Dan will send peopleāeven himselfāto if he feels theyāve killed the show. A long list of fines can be handed out for any number of reasons, and thereās a year-end faux awards show that once spent more than seven minutes deciding which was the best Dan Le Batard mistake.
All of this is fun and games, with a fantastic cast of characters including the show producers, and other ESPN personalities, and the occasional celebrity (Kenny G played the halftime show of their college football megacast via phone, and the late Bob Einstein had some amazing commentary). Itās everything thatās great about the entertainment world, without any of the pomp or hyperbole.
But while he makes everyoneās lives more interesting, Dan Le Batard is also capable of being quite serious when the need calls for it. And heās also authored some of the most important takes on a few issues over the years.
The other, under-appreciated strength of Dan Le Batard is what happens when the laughter stops. Le Batardās career took off when he investigated the University of Miami football team, and he is still writing for the Miami Herald. Heās a true journalist, and heās also incredibly committed to the city of Miami and to his Cuban-American culture.
When Major League Baseball began to normalize relations with Cuban baseball players a few weeks ago, Le Batard devoted a segment of the radio show to discussing how it was more of a problem than anything else. Heās both written and spoken about his familyās history; his parents are Cuban exiles.
His father, Gonzalo Le Batard, is his co-host on Highly Questionable and has become a fan favorite as the prankster āPapi,ā but heās also an engineer who risked everything, along with his wife, to get his family to the United States. Le Batardās producing team on the radio show is nicknamed āthe shipping container of frightened refugees.ā
Itās not just cultural issues that heās passionate about. Everyone knows Dan Le Batard for his pointed interview with MLB commissioner Rob Manfred after the Marlins were sold. He was not afraid to be emotional on-air when former ESPN president John Skipper, who had played a huge part in his career, resigned.
And it was less than three years ago that Le Batard and Weiner were incredibly honest on the air about nearly ending their radio show. Thatās some of the most raw, genuine, emotional radio that youāll ever hear.
Thereās every reason for entertainment fans to listen to Dan Le Batard, whether itās on radio, on TV or preferably both. His shows are the anti-sports shows, that focus on the story behind that latest headline rather than just repeating it. And thatās what the best of entertainment is at its coreāgreat storytelling.
Le Batard and his team know how to tell a great story, and they do several times a day. Whether itās digging into the next odd story, sending Art Briles to hell repeatedly, or tackling some tough subject head-on, they are natural entertainers. Thatās why they succeed.
They show TV fans that you can make a successful TV show out of the bond between a son and his father, and remind us of the importance of family. They prove that hard work and sacrifice is still worth something. They remind audiences that there are many things that need to be taken seriously, but yourself isnāt one of them. And perhaps most importantly, while theyāre having fun, they make sure everyone else is having fun, too.
Do yourself a favor and join Dan Le Batardās marching band to nowhere. Itās an entertainment experience like no other, and itās the purest form of fun youāll ever find on television or radio. Just watch the clip below and youāll understand why we all need a little Le Batard in our lives.
The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz airs weekdays at 10 a.m. ET on ESPN Radio and ESPN2; Highly Questionable airs weekdays at 4:30 p.m. ET on ESPN.
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