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Broncos fan finds massive YouTube show success with a mix of the profane, the inane and unabashed homerism

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Broncos fan finds massive YouTube show success with a mix of the profane, the inane and unabashed homerism


Brandon Perna might be the only Broncos fan grateful for the Russell Wilson era of Denver football. 

Not for the quality of play — the Broncos notched 11 wins to 19 losses with Wilson as starting quarterback — or even because Wilson’s departure set the stage for a 2024 playoff berth and a 9-2 record this season, so far, for Perna’s hometown team.

No, Wilson in the orange and blue made Perna miserable. And man, was that good for clicks.

That misery helped Perna, 41, turn his own fandom into a flourishing YouTube channel. It’s one that’s lowbrow but thoughtful, and that takes fans seriously but treats sports fandom as what it’s supposed to be — fun.

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“I don’t care if they’re … taking a 20-minute bathroom break at work to watch power rankings — like, (heck) yeah,” Perna said, reflecting on his audience in a recent interview in his home studio in Aurora. “Or they’re putting it on before they go to bed. Whatever it is, it makes me excited to do the next one. And hopefully I didn’t betray anybody by saying ‘Your team sucks’ the week before.”

Profane, inane and unapologetically pro-Broncos — “Go (expletive) yourselves, Kansas City” might be his “quoth the Raven” refrain — Perna has been running the “That’s Good Sports” show on YouTube for more than a decade. In that time, he’s grown regular viewership to reach the hundreds of thousands, and recently he crested 820,000 subscribers for the four or more videos he posts every week.

His self-described “bad football news presented in the form of even worse comedy” has grown into T-shirts, coffee custom-crafted for fans frustrated with awful penalties and an online community that spans the globe. His weekly “curse wheel,” which randomly targets teams for misfortune, had posted a playoff-level 9-2 record of successful curses through mid-November.

He’s navigated shifting YouTube algorithms, capricious sports gods and a saturated online market to turn his channel into a thriving operation.

It has grown from a one-man show to include co-writer Will Keys and editors Johnny Barker and Connor Sherrill, folks Perna credits with keeping the commentary sharp and production regular. He shouts out to other sports YouTubers like Tom Grossi and traditional sportscasters like Vic Lombardi for helping him find his footing.

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Having the team in place ahead of the Wilson season had the channel ready to capitalize on the sudden influx of viewers. But getting to that point took years of toiling, as well as treating the burgeoning channel as a job — even when it didn’t have the paycheck associated with it.

Brandon Perna’s Denver Broncos memorabilia inside the “That’s Good Sports” studio on Friday, Nov. 14, 2025 at his home in Aurora. (Photo by Daniel Brenner/Special to The Denver Post)

‘Bigger and bigger goals’

Perna started working in the YouTube world as a video editor in the late 2000s, and he started running his channel casually in the early 2010s. He had left the increasingly corporate world of big-time YouTube production to focus on freelancing.

A quick, janky video, as he put it, changed things.

Peyton Manning, then the Broncos’ quarterback, threw seven touchdowns against the Baltimore Ravens in 2013 — a feat that hadn’t been accomplished in more than 40 years at that point. And that video’s success showed him there was an audience for his brand of irreverent analysis.

Over the following years, Perna was able to dedicate more time to the channel and lean on his wife, Jess Filipas, as the primary breadwinner. Some months and years tested his conviction — whether it was a bad Broncos season, the channel not hitting the way he knew it could, or personal travails, she said.

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But his convictions — his authenticity about the views he brought — never wavered, Filipas said.

The relentless publishing schedule started to pay literal dividends in the late 2010s, to the point that Filipas was able to step back from her full-time job. Then they welcomed a newborn girl to the world in 2020.

The channel weathered the pandemic, as more folks chose to spend time indoors, leading to more sponsorships and contractual obligations. More production led to deeper connections with the audience — and between the cross-country team behind each episode.

“Things have gotten more complicated, but he’s had bigger and bigger goals,” Filipas said of her husband. “But he’s always known there’s more out there than him in the basement doing these videos alone.”

Keys, a lifelong Broncos fan who’s based in Sacramento, looped in with Perna in 2018. He started as a fan of the channel and clicked with Perna as a co-writer. The two cover each other’s blind spots and have similar enough senses of humor that they can fine-tune the antics that draw in viewers, Keys said.

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Perna can read a phone book into his camera and get laughs, Keys said, and the visual humor of editors Barker and Sherrill completes the package.

They strive to show respect for the audience and to have breadth of coverage, Keys and Perna said. They don’t ignore games and don’t hate on teams or players. Even the epithets for the Kansas City Chiefs are built on divisional rivalry and that team’s long track record of success, not sneering dismissiveness.

In addition to news and game-driven publishing, Perna’s team also produces deep-dive pieces to help explain how the NFL arrived where it is today, whether that’s meant looking at past dynasties or broadcasting deep analysis of draft classes.

“People come back because I think they learn something,” Keys said “… We try to put a lot of thought into getting a good script, coming back to it multiple times, adding nuggets of information that no one else has.”

Perna will spend 75 hours a week working in the basement, writing and producing videos, Filipas said.

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But he also pops up to play with their daughter — moments the whole family treasures, even if Filipas jokes about scheduling weekend outings so they’re not “listening to this madman scream about football” through the vents of their home during his Broncos livestreams.

Curse wheels and the joys of sports

Perna said he “did things the wrong way, probably stubbornly, for too long,” before finding success. He had expanded his coverage to the entire NFL, which helped draw in more eyeballs, and established a rhythm and a voice that kept them coming back.

But it was the Broncos’ two seasons with Wilson, the savior-turned-millstone of a floundering franchise, that truly helped the channel find its stride in 2022 and 2023, Perna said. Viewership exploded as people flocked to Perna’s weekly heartbreak.

One particularly ghastly outing, in which the Broncos lost to the Indianapolis Colts 12-9 on a Thursday night in 2022, also stands out to Perna. His publishing schedule keeps him from going to many games in person; that slog of a game was a rare exception.

Perna took his frustrations to his channel with an episode titled “The Worst Game Ever,” which went on to become another recurring theme.

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The YouTube audience, it turned out, “enjoyed watching me be miserable,” Perna jokes now. But the show tapped into the highs and lows that most every sports fan experiences.

“If (Denver is) winning, you’re just going to have Broncos fans (watching) — and they’re excited with you,” Perna said. “When they’re losing, literally any fan of any team could come in and be like, ‘Look at this idiot suffering because his team let him down.’ ”

Those other fans make up some of the bread and butter of the channel’s audience. Perna looks to respect their time with real analysis tucked between the same lowbrow gags that won their attention in the first place. (“I’ve really got to find a way to spread out these poop awards,” Perna said on a recent episode, flashing an impish grin. “It makes me look immature.”)

Other gimmicks have taken on a life of their own.

Most NFL coverage features some kind of power rankings, where analysts try to list the best teams. Perna sees it as a tropey exercise in a sport where anything can happen any week.

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So he’s added his own twist: a plastic, “Wheel of Fortune”-style spinning wheel — only with curses instead of prizes tied to the wedges. A spin of the wheel will doom the highlighted team. How that doom arrives, however, is part of the mystery.

Teams losing, poor outings from key players or even injuries get blamed on the wheel. For instance, Broncos star player Pat Surtain II, one of Perna’s favorite players, got hurt the week the wheel landed on Denver, even as the team won.

“Don’t let Pat find out!” Perna said. “That’s one we want back.”

Fans rewatch the episode to tally the wheel’s latest victims, Perna said, giving extra life to the channel and the community that’s grown around it.

“Russell Wilson and the curse wheel,” Perna laughs, crediting them for his success. “Those are the two things.” 

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Brandon Perna poses inside the "That's Good Sports" studio on Friday, Nov. 14, 2025 at his home in Aurora. Perna has crested 800,000 followers with his NFL show, and its centerpiece curse wheel. (Photo by Daniel Brenner/Special to The Denver Post)
Brandon Perna poses inside the “That’s Good Sports” studio on Friday, Nov. 14, 2025 at his home in Aurora. (Photo by Daniel Brenner/Special to The Denver Post)

Now that Perna has trialed-and-errored his way into what makes the channel work — and settled into 15-hour days to keep up with the football and posting schedules — he doesn’t want to lose focus on that community of supporters.

“The support is overwhelming and humbling, and I try to never take that for granted,” Perna said. “Because they keep you relevant in the space.”

He also gets to see how his formula as an overly dire, overly enthusiastic and consistently irreverent voice plays in an era long-missed by Broncos fans: a season of must-watch Denver football.

The wins this year have been ugly, improbable and exhilarating. Or, in a word, captivating — even for an audience outside of Broncos Country. The wins have also been piling up at a much faster clip than at any time since Perna made his show his primary professional focus. 

I’m ready for the Broncos to have some actual post-season success. Because I feel like once I’ve learned how to do this correctly, the Broncos haven’t been in the post-season,” Perna said.

“Last year, they got there. They didn’t win, of course, but we were just happy they were there. I hadn’t had the Broncos in the playoffs when I feel like I’ve done this (show) the right way. So much of (the Broncos’ success) predated that. So I’m enthusiastic that they’re winning.”

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Nuggets 2026 NBA mock draft tracker 2.0: What national experts predict Denver will do

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Nuggets 2026 NBA mock draft tracker 2.0: What national experts predict Denver will do


The NBA Draft kicks off Tuesday night at the Barclays Center in New York.

The Nuggets, who own the 26th overall pick, are looking to improve a team that was eliminated in the first round of the playoffs for the first time since the 2021-22 season.

Here’s a look at who national draftniks are thinking will land in Denver.

The Athletic | Zach Harper | Updated June 23

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Italy’s Alessandro Pajola defends against Spain’s Sergio De Larrea , right, during the Eurobasket, European Basketball Championship Group C match between Spain and Italy at Spyros Kyprianou Arena, in Limassol, Cyprus, Tuesday, Sept. 2, 2025. (AP Photo/Chara Savvidou)

Sergio de Larrea, guard, 6-6, Valencia

“It’s hard to say whether the Nuggets will have the roster flexibility to use this pick or if they kick it down the road by trading it. This team needs offensive creation outside of what Nikola Jokić does. Jamal Murray is more of a scorer than a creator, and they’ve been missing that guard off the bench to run some offense through. With de Larrea in the mix, they’ll have good size at the guard position and someone who can orchestrate more.” See the full mock draft.

Sports Illustrated | Kevin Sweeney | Updated June 23

Isaiah Evans #3 of the Duke Blue Devils shoots the ball against Rubén Prey #17 of the St. John's Red Storm during the first half in the Sweet Sixteen of the 2026 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament at Capital One Arena on March 27, 2026 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Emilee Chinn/Getty Images)
Isaiah Evans #3 of the Duke Blue Devils shoots the ball against Rubén Prey #17 of the St. John’s Red Storm during the first half in the Sweet Sixteen of the 2026 NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament at Capital One Arena on March 27, 2026 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Emilee Chinn/Getty Images)

Isaiah Evans, F, Duke

“Evans is a polarizing prospect after two years at Duke. At his best, he’s one of the most dynamic shooters in this draft, capable of getting his shot off with next-to-no separation and regularly going on streaks of multiple threes in short spurts. His overall impact on the game can be muted at times though, especially when threes aren’t falling. He’s a below-average athlete and mediocre defensively.” See the full mock draft.

Other picks:

  • Second round, 49th overall pick: Aaron Nkrumah, G, Tennessee State

The Sporting News | Stephen Noh | Updated June 23

Isaiah Evans, F, Duke

“Denver has built a great offense without relying much on 3-pointers. What if they could take an even bigger step on that end of the floor?

“Evans could provide that extra oomph. He’s a good shooter who should be able to drill wide open looks while playing off Nikola Jokic. He has the size to defend capably. And he’s a decent athlete who can attack closeouts well.” See the full mock draft.

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CBS Sports | Adam Finkelstein | Updated June 22

Ebuka Okorie #1 of the Stanford Cardinal reacts after he made a three-point basket against the Stanford Cardinal at Stanford Maples Pavilion on Jan. 14, 2026 in Palo Alto, California. (Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images)
Ebuka Okorie #1 of the Stanford Cardinal reacts after he made a three-point basket against the Stanford Cardinal at Stanford Maples Pavilion on Jan. 14, 2026 in Palo Alto, California. (Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images)

Ebuka Okorie, G, Stanford

“The Pistons, Grizzlies, and Wolves have done the most work on Okorie, but Denver has a real need for a paint touch point guard, especially as Nikola Jokic begins to age and they are forced to explore other ways of creating offense. Ejiofor has reportedly been to Denver as well. Veesaar would fit their system; Reed would be another potential backup five if he were available, and Isaiah Evans and Meleek Thomas could provide floor spacing.” See the full mock draft.

Yahoo Sports | Kevin O’Connor | Updated June 22

Ebuka Okorie, G, Stanford

“The Nuggets need some variety to their half-court offense aside from having Nikola Jokić initiate everything. Well, here’s a guy who could help. Okorie is the best driving guard in the class, a 6-1 jitterbug who manipulates defenders with a tight handle, sudden changes of speed, and an advanced feel for the game. He’s not an above-the-rim athlete, though, and not long ago he was a kid from New Hampshire who ranked outside the top 100 and committed to Harvard. Then Stanford found him, he flipped his commitment, and he proceeded to lead the ACC in scoring with eight 30-point games and a habit for hitting clutch shots. NBA teams will have to decide whether what carved up the ACC will survive against bigger, longer defenders.” See the full mock draft.

Other picks: 

  • Second round, 49th overall pick: Tobe Awaka, F, Arizona

CBS Sports | Gary Parrish | Updated June 23

Koa Peat #10 of the Arizona Wildcats looks on against the Michigan Wolverines in the Final Four of the 2026 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament at Lucas Oil Stadium on April 04, 2026 in Indianapolis, Indiana. (Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images)
Koa Peat #10 of the Arizona Wildcats looks on against the Michigan Wolverines in the Final Four of the 2026 NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament at Lucas Oil Stadium on April 04, 2026 in Indianapolis, Indiana. (Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images)

Koa Peat, F, Arizona

“Peat impacts winning in a variety of ways and was among the reasons Arizona won the Big 12’s regular-season championship before advancing to the Final Four. Good size. Good body. Intriguing prospect. The issue is that he’s a 6-7 wing who doesn’t really shoot, evidence being that Peat only took 20 3-pointers in 36 games with the Wildcats. That’s not ideal for the modern-NBA and why Peat’s draft-range seems vast.” See the full mock draft.

SB Nation | Ricky O’Donnell | Updated June 23

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Koa Peat, F, Arizona

No writeup available. See the full mock draft.

ESPN | Jeremy Woo | Updated June 23

Labaron Philon #0 of the Alabama Crimson Tide dribbles against Trey McKenney #1 of the Michigan Wolverines in the Sweet 16 of the 2026 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament at the United Center on March 27, 2026 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images)
Labaron Philon #0 of the Alabama Crimson Tide dribbles against Trey McKenney #1 of the Michigan Wolverines in the Sweet 16 of the 2026 NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament at the United Center on March 27, 2026 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images)

Labaron Philon Jr., G, Alabama

“This would be quite a fall for Philon, who has interest in the late lottery from the Bucks if they opt for a guard at No. 13. But it seems likely that one of the point guards falls toward the back of the first round with the way the board has shaped up — particularly in this scenario, where the Pistons don’t take one.

“Philon’s range has seemed particularly wide of late, and teams have speculated that he could slip, with his recent workout for the Timberwolves (who have since traded out of the first round) raising some eyebrows.” See the full mock draft.

Other picks: 

  • Second round, 49th overall pick: Jaden Bradley, G, Arizona

Bleacher Report | Jonathan Wasserman | Updated June 22

Tarris Reed Jr. #5 of the UConn Huskies shoots the ball over Aday Mara #15 of the Michigan Wolverines during the first half of a game in the National Championship of the 2026 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament at Lucas Oil Stadium on April 06, 2026 in Indianapolis, Indiana. (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images)
Tarris Reed Jr. #5 of the UConn Huskies shoots the ball over Aday Mara #15 of the Michigan Wolverines during the first half of a game in the National Championship of the 2026 NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament at Lucas Oil Stadium on April 06, 2026 in Indianapolis, Indiana. (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images)

Tarris Reed Jr., C, UConn

“Tarris Reed Jr. has been receiving strong reviews from workouts after putting together a rare statistical season, posting a 9.0 block percentage, 13.0 offensive rebounding percentage and 15.0 assist percentage.

“His combination of strength, paint touch, passing and rim protection should put him in first-round conversations for teams that want bigs.” See the full mock draft.

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Other picks:

  • Second round, 49th overall pick: Dillon Mitchell, F, St. John’s

USA Today | Bryan Kalbrosky | Updated June 23

Meleek Thomas #1 of the Arkansas Razorbacks dribbles the ball against the Arizona Wildcats during the first half in the Sweet Sixteen of the 2026 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament at SAP Center on March 26, 2026 in San Jose, California. (Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images)
Meleek Thomas #1 of the Arkansas Razorbacks dribbles the ball against the Arizona Wildcats during the first half in the Sweet 16 of the 2026 NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament at SAP Center on March 26, 2026 in San Jose, California. (Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images)

Meleek Thomas, G, Arkansas



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When falling housing prices are good news — and when they’re not

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When falling housing prices are good news — and when they’re not


Home prices are falling in Denver and other areas around the nation.

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A few weeks ago, we asked our readers for ideas and questions for future Planet Money newsletters and podcasts. We got a bunch of great submissions, including an intriguing one from Karl Baumgartner.

Baumgartner is a 29-year-old internal medicine resident in Denver, where home prices and rents have been falling. Depending on which data you look at, the Denver metro area is experiencing one of the steepest — if not the steepest — housing price declines in the nation. Home prices have fallen more than 2% year over year, according to the S&P Cotality Case-Shiller Home Price Index, and even more if you adjust for inflation. Rents have fallen even more dramatically.

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“As a renter myself, I am ecstatic about the falling prices,” Baumgartner writes. In fact, he just moved “to a bigger apartment with nicer amenities that I previously couldn’t afford, but now can because rent has fallen.” One of his friends, meanwhile, recently renegotiated her lease for about $500 less per month by showing her landlord that comparable apartments in her area were now going for much less.

“With almost all of my friends being in a similar position at the beginning of our careers with plenty of debt, we are all very excited about the decrease,” Baumgartner says.

So, yeah, falling rents are obviously a win for Denver renters. But Baumgartner is wondering about the broader economic picture.

“We know that negative inflation is bad for the economy in general, and we try to shoot for 2% annual inflation in general. What about negative inflation in the housing market specifically? Are there any downsides to falling prices, or is this just a sign of the market working as it should, with supply finally catching up to demand?”

It’s a great question because economics doesn’t seem to provide a simple answer on whether falling housing prices are good or bad for the economy.

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Denver transfers $3 million from its contingency fund to pay out settlements

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Denver transfers  million from its contingency fund to pay out settlements


Denver will use $3 million of its contingency fund money to help pay out settlements this year under an ordinance the City Council approved Monday.

The council makes a similar transfer every year, but the amount varies depending on the settlements reached, said Laura Swartz, the spokesperson for the city’s finance department.

“It is difficult to budget for settlements in advance because the amounts and timing can be unpredictable based on each case’s own scheduling, negotiations and court decisions,” Swartz said.

Every year, the city sets aside $2 million for settlements in the budget. Officials request a transfer from the contingency fund for anything needed above that amount. The 2026 transfer brings the amount that will be used to pay out settlements this year to $5 million so far.

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This year’s allotment will leave the city with $30.5 million remaining in its contingency fund. The contingency fund is separate in the annual budget from the city’s reserves, which officials have been working to replenish from a recent low point.

The city has been ordered to pay millions of dollars in settlements in recent years related to the Denver Police Department’s actions during the George Floyd protests.

Earlier this month, the council approved about $2.87 million in payments for 13 people who alleged that local police violated their constitutional rights during the 2020 protests.

In April, a federal appeals court ruled that the city must also pay $14 million to another group of protesters, upholding a jury verdict. The city hasn’t yet said how it will pay out that amount.



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