

He was acting more like a heckler than a co-host, and this posed a specific challenge for me because I was leading the show. I was also fed up with someone who consistently did things that made me feel belittled and de-energized. I was overly sensitive to a pretty harmless critique. Happened or try to justify the anger I felt at the time. I was furious, and while I did myīest to hide my anger during the rest of the segment, we shouted profanities at each otherĭuring the break and I didn’t speak to him outside of our time on the air for the rest of the Objectivity and declared the whole segment dumb. Hilarious, and we played it for years as a drop.Īmid a segment in which we were discussing something about Richard Sherman, heĭeclared that I was sounding like a typical talk radio host trying to make something out ofĪ few weeks later, as we discussed the weekend series in which Seattle became overrun withīlue Jays fans coming down from Canada, he criticized something I’d written for lacking He referred to this as “pulling back the curtain.”Īfter I stumbled over my words, he looked at me and said, “You’re absolutely brutal.” It was He liked to reveal the inner workings of the show whether it was a planning meeting or I’m not going to specify who this was because I do like Jim Moore and don’t want to hurt his feelings, but he was the ultimate wild card who made tons of people laugh and more than a few snarls. He was a crucial component to the success of our afternoonĭrive show and every so often would do something that would understandably enrage Now, I happen to have given this matter quite a bit of thought over the five years I was part of a three-man show that included one of the funniest, most offbeat, and occasionally frustrating What do you do when you’re partnered with an orifice?
