Tuesday saw Tony Kornheiser make his long-awaited return to the Pardon The Interruption studio for the first time since before the Coronovairus pandemic. After three years away, Kornheiser joined his longtime co-host Michael Wilbon in-studio in Washington, D.C.
PTI has been a staple of ESPN’s evening programming for over 20 years, with Kornheiser at the forefront. But like everything else in the world, the show has looked a bit different over the past three years; it’s not that it lost its luster, it was just different. Tuesday marked a return to normalcy, which he discussed Wednesday on his The Tony Kornheiser Show.
“I went in and did PTI yesterday; I just thought I’d drop that out there,” Kornheiser said. “I went in. I was excited to go in. I’m excited to see if in three days, I get COVID because that’s my great fear. It was fun to do. I have to say, it was fun to do for those people.”
“And I had a lot of people who know me and have my phone number. I don’t look at social media ever, so I don’t know what people are saying. And it’s OK, whatever you say, you say. It’s fine. But friends of mine — or people I would consider at least acquaintances into friends — were basically unanimously happy that it happened. And I tried to answer each one of those things that I will do this occasionally.”
Kornheiser made it clear that it’s not gonna become something that happens more than occasionally. He said it’s not weekly, nor will it happen 2-or-3 times a week.
“First of all, Mike has to be there,” Kornheiser said of his longtime co-host. “Second of all, I gotta want to do it. And I’m not gonna do it every day. And if somebody thinks I’m gonna do it every day…I’m familiar with the phrase, ‘Give them an inch, and they’ll take a mile.’ I understand that’s going to happen, so I’m saying right now, I’m stressing occasionally, not regularly. Occasionally, I will go in there. If that’s not good enough, we know where the doors are.”
“But it was great fun,” he added. “Glad I did it. I was sort of surprised at the reaction…I had a very good time. So let me say this again: this will perhaps occasionally happen.”
Kornheiser’s return to studio was met with overwhelming positivity, highlighting the enduring appeal of PTI and the dynamic duo at its best. Even if it only happens occasionally, which Kornheiser could not stress more, it’s still a win for viewers everywhere.
About Sam Neumann
Since the beginning of 2023, Sam has been a staff writer for Awful Announcing and The Comeback. A 2021 graduate of Temple University, Sam is a Charlotte native, who currently calls Greenville, South Carolina his home. He also has a love/hate relationship with the New York Mets and Jets.
Recent Posts
Steelers legend Terry Bradshaw says he’s never met Mike Tomlin
"Maybe everybody'll leave you alone and respect you for what you've accomplished in the great city of Pittsburgh."
How will Netflix Warner Bros. deal affect sports documentaries?
This acquisition makes it hard to be optimistic about the future of sports documentaries.
TV and streaming viewing picks for December 8, 2025: How to watch Eagles-Chargers
Week 14 in the NFL ends in Inglewood, CA as the Eagles hope to right their ship against the Los Angeles Chargers. ESPN2 has a Monsters, Inc altcast.
Dave Portnoy apoplectic over Raiders bad beat: ‘Pete Carroll should be in f**king prison’
"That's the worst beat of all time! That is cheating! What the f**k?!?"
Fox’s Brady Quinn calls out ESPN over Notre Dame bowl withdrawal criticism
Quinn was not having the perceived double standard...
Aaron Rodgers hopes Steelers win means media ‘will shut the hell up for a week’ about Mike Tomlin
Rodgers may get his wish, but more complaints are just one loss away...