Reynolds told Collider: "Well, I mean, I've never really considered ourselves as owners necessarily. It’s more like stewards of the club, but I'll say that when we win it's gotta feel 20% better than anything I've ever felt in my life, and then when we lose, which god forbid, it doesn't happen that often, thank god, but it's a pretty bottomless pit of despair for a little while. Hard to dig yourself out of. I don't know. What's your experience?"
McElhenney replied: "It actually is a good teaching moment for my 13 and 12-year-old because daddy has to go through a moment of being by himself, counting, meditating so that I can be the best version of myself for the rest of the weekend. So, it's a good thing for me to actually have to go through and practice what I'm preaching about fighting through adversity, and sometimes adversity is just being depressed or feeling bad about your team."
Reynolds then chimed in: "When he's feeling that kind of rage if the club happens to lose — again, thankfully rare — he takes it out on my kids, which is sort of an unexpected twist to this fairy tale."