Overview of Postgame Show: The Capper Of The Week (feat. JuJu Gotti)
This episode of the Postgame Show (hosts Dan Le Batard and Stugotz) features guest JuJu Gotti. The conversation mixes Super Bowl reactions, light cultural commentary (including a funny Beyoncé misidentification moment), a new recurring “Capper of the Week” bit calling out bad officiating, relationship “free game” about social media behavior, and several audience polls. The episode opens with a Venmo sponsor read and closes with poll results and a listener call-to-action for Valentine's advice.
Hosts, Guest & Sponsors
- Hosts: Dan Le Batard, Stugotz
- Guest: JuJu Gotti
- Sponsor: Venmo (promo about paying with Venmo during playoff season)
- Call-in / listener feature: Dan invited questions for his dad (Greg Cote) to give Valentine’s Day love advice — listeners were asked to call 305-486-4689 (submit early).
Main segments & topics
- Beyoncé misidentification: Dan recounts accidentally misidentifying someone standing next to Jay‑Z as Beyoncé; the hosts and JuJu roast him for the mistake.
- Black History Month references and humorous banter (including a Malcolm X joke and general celebratory shout-outs).
- Bill Belichick / Jordan Hudson t‑shirt controversy: JuJu’s take — “when somebody shows you who they are, believe them the first time,” advising listeners to stop giving repeated attention to Belichick’s goofy behavior.
- “Capper of the Week” debut: Dan names a referee (who confidently rules a ball out of bounds) the week’s biggest “capper” — calling out officials who act certain when the call is not obvious.
- Relationship/social-media insight from JuJu: free advice about partners who suddenly stop liking your posts — a likely sign they’re hiding the relationship from others.
- Production praise: brief mention that the Super Bowl video team handled pressured moments well.
- Miscellaneous cultural references: Delonte West, the movie “Weapons,” Teddy Bear Ted TV show, Lady Gaga appearance at the game.
Notable quotes & insights
- JuJu on judging behavior: “When somebody shows you who they are, believe them the first time.”
- On social-media signals: “When your partner go from liking every single one of your posts to never liking nothing... that person been talking about you behind your back.”
- Dan on officials: “The biggest capper in all of football is the referee who trots his ass down there acting like he saw where the point went out of bounds.”
Poll results (audience votes — key percentages)
- Is it always funny when people fall off something? — 90% Yes
- Did anyone want another season of the “Teddy Bear Ted” TV show? — 77% No
- Was Lady Gaga at the Super Bowl? — 72% Yes (audience reaction of surprise)
- More famous: Jay‑Z or Beyoncé? — 88% said Beyoncé
- Who should have won Super Bowl MVP? Options presented included “Kenny Walker, the GM, the defense, or the kickers” — 35% said one of the kickers
- Redemption story / Kurt Warner reference: 57% favored Kurt Warner (noted as a redemption narrative)
- Is the day after the Super Bowl the most toxic day for your toilet? — 86% Yes
Highlights / Takeaways
- Tone: Mix of sports talk, humor, cultural commentary, and relationship advice — casual and conversational.
- New segment: “Capper of the Week” targets officials (and other overconfident actors) for comedic callouts.
- JuJu provides memorable, practical social-media relationship advice that resonated with hosts.
- The episode leaned heavily on audience interaction (polling) and short-form banter rather than deep analysis.
Listener actions
- If you want Valentine’s Day love advice from Dan’s dad (Greg Cote), call 305-486-4689 and submit questions early in the week.
- Expect “Capper of the Week” to be a recurring bit — bring candidate suggestions (refs, commentators, or anyone acting overly confident without basis).
Quick production notes
- Sponsor mention (Venmo) at the top of the episode.
- Hosts praised Super Bowl production crew for handling high-pressure moments well.
If you want a one‑line summary: Dan and Stugotz riff with JuJu Gotti on Super Bowl fallout, debut a comedic “Capper of the Week” roast of overconfident refs, drop social‑media relationship advice, and run several audience polls that leaned humorous and reactive.
