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Brooks Barnhizer podcast interview - The Green Room

Long form podcast that is well done. I only went about 10 minutes in also but will come back to finish. Brooks is quite the personality and talker along with the interviewers. Looks like the interview was in a fraternity house "smoking room" off the main living room.
 
Just completed it. If anything, I really appreciate Brooks even more. While he was very measured in his responses, he also was very authentic and thoughtful. He also seemed genuinely curious about the interviewers, and wanted to inquire more. This was recorded before the season, so he was in the midst of not being able to practice full go - so he definitely was reflective on the fleeting nature of playing basketball. Wherever he lands after Northwestern, he's gonna be in good shape.

Other fun moments:
  • Him describing Nick Martinelli's rizz.
  • Describing Blake Barkley as the one teammate he would not let watch his kids.
  • Him being a good sport about eating the really spicy wings.
 
What's everyone paying for a haircut? I pay $20 in Maryland plus tip. The NU guys said they are paying $30 for a dorm haircut. And I don't think that guy is giving a hot foam finish with razor trim, neck rub and an aftershave splash - or any other happy finish. Flat tops and really scruffy hair $5 extra.
 
I'm officially old, but the way these three guys all talk drove me nuts. They must have said "low key" and "bro" at least 500 times between the three of them.
 
I could not figure out what "low key" was referring to, so I missed a whole lot of the conversation. At one point I thought it was a reference to a character in a computer game. The other word was "rizz" which I could not figure out until macarthur31 spelled it out and I googled it.

Also Brooks occasionally dropped into speech which I believe is more typical for young black men - and the interviewers spoke a little similarly as well - which I assumed was from playing endless hours on the court. That was my initial thought and then he or the interviewers referred to Kai Cenat, a successful Twitch streamer. I hadn't heard of Cenat or Twitch until the day before when Von Jones referred to both on a Harvard forum concerning post election analysis by political types. He said they were examples of what young people were viewing ILO legacy TV. So like pretty much everything else, speech patterns and new word usage in large part come from social media.
 
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I'm officially old, but the way these three guys all talk drove me nuts. They must have said "low key" and "bro" at least 500 times between the three of them.
I spent a few months with a bunch of teens this summer and as far as I can tell, "low key" has no actual meaning outside of the context in which it's used. Often it was just a filler word on the order of "like" and "um", but it could mean almost anything.

And god I feel old typing that.
 
I spent a few months with a bunch of teens this summer and as far as I can tell, "low key" has no actual meaning outside of the context in which it's used. Often it was just a filler word on the order of "like" and "um", but it could mean almost anything.

And god I feel old typing that.
Someone has to spill the T
 
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