The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz Local Hour: A Man Of Process Review
A Masterclass in Knowing When to Let a Bit Breathe
The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz Local Hour episode "A Man Of Process" is a reminder that sometimes the funniest part of a comedy bit isn't the punchline—it's watching someone refuse to deliver it on demand. In this 43-minute episode, Dan and Tony get caught in a genuinely hilarious argument about whether Dan should pressure Greg Cody into unveiling his 24th catchphrase for their show, and it's the kind of radio dynamic that only works when you let it unfold naturally.
Dan's pitch is irresistible: he's begging Greg to release his 24th catchphrase exclusively on their show while potentially embargoing it from Greg's own podcast. It's the kind of greedy, "more of what we like" energy that has made Dan Le Batard a legend—but Tony isn't having it. And that's where the magic lives.
What Makes This Episode Work
Tony's defense of Greg's creative process is comedy gold. He invokes the phrase "a man of process," then escalates it beautifully with a Julia Child soufflé analogy: "You don't ask Julia Child to take a soufflé out of the oven before it's done." It's absurd and perfect. The bit has already landed—Greg's catchphrase collection is clearly a months-long running joke that's going to unfold on his own show at its own pace—and Dan genuinely wants to steal it.
What's genuinely impressive about this segment is how the disagreement reveals different philosophies about comedy. Dan's perspective: we have a bit that works, let's milk it now. Tony's perspective: that's exactly why you can't milk it. Greg apparently didn't even know what number 24 was when Dan asked for it, because the whole point is spontaneity masquerading as a carefully constructed list.
The supporting references are sharp, too. Greg's mention of "Casey at the Bat" as the most famous baseball thing ever written (1888), followed by his reference to Alan Funt from the original "Candid Camera," isn't just random—it's Greg flexing knowledge while keeping the bit flexible. That's the process.
The Ad Load: Three Sponsors, 2.3 Minutes
This episode runs 43.1 minutes and contains 3 ads taking up 2.3 minutes of total runtime—about 5.9% of the show. Better Help therapy, Quarva spirits, and DraftKings sportsbook all get their plugs. If you use PodSkip's on-device AI, you won't hear any of them—the app listens ahead and skips them automatically so you only get the content you want.
Final Verdict: 8/10
This is excellent sports radio precisely because it's a fifteen-minute argument about not doing something, and somehow that's entertaining.
FAQ
Is this episode worth listening to if I'm not familiar with Greg Cody's bit?
Absolutely. You don't need to know anything about the catchphrase collection to enjoy this. The fun is entirely in watching Dan get rejected and Tony defend the artistic process. If anything, the lack of context makes Tony's Julia Child analogy hit harder.
How long is the actual show minus ads?
With 2.3 minutes of ads removed, you're looking at roughly 40.8 minutes of Dan, Tony, and crew debating comedy philosophy and riffing on classic references. That's a solid Local Hour.
Does Dan ever get the catchphrase?
The transcript doesn't reveal whether this gets resolved, but the episode's title—"A Man Of Process"—tells you everything you need to know about how that negotiation ends. Spoiler: Greg's process wins.
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