Score Stop Score

Brad Riter

Score Stop Score used to be called Riter Radio and streams live M-F 10am-12pm Eastern time. Host Brad Riter is a long-time radio personality based in Buffalo, NY and rarely knows what he's going to say until he hears what just came out of his mouth. Music, entertainment, and sports are frequent topics with his regular group of "correspondents." Find the latest episodes on Spotify, YouTube, Apple, and wherever finer shows are available.

  1. 3 DAGE SIDEN

    From Basement Mic to WGR: The Rocky Training Montage Paid Off

    Episode 265 is part adrenaline rush, part gratitude tour, and part behind-the-scenes career checkpoint. Brad opens by recapping a whirlwind Friday that already included a morning appearance on WGR before jumping into Riter Radio live — complete with the obligatory “Friday” music bit and a schedule shakeup to bring Scott Wilson on early. The big announcement: there will be no traditional 10–noon Riter Radio for the next two weeks because Brad will be co-hosting 1–3 PM on WGR with Tim Graham while programming shifts settle following the Bills’ departure from the station. What started as a short fill-in opportunity quickly turned into a ten-show run, a mini media blitz, and a flood of texts that made Brad feel like he’d been hired to coach the Bills. Beyond the logistics, the episode becomes a reflection on reps, preparation, and credibility. Brad frames the past 265 episodes as a “Rocky training montage” that has quietly prepared him to step back into a fully staffed radio studio — producer, cameras, real-time chat, no scrambling with tech — and simply talk. He revisits pivotal career moments (covering 9/11 live on local radio, calling Hasek’s greatest save, early Sabres postgame chaos) as proof that this opportunity isn’t random; it’s a return. The show closes with Olympic detours (drones tracking skiers, Norwegian medalist oversharing scandal), NHL chatter, and a sincere thank-you to listeners who’ve ridden along for the ride — with a promise that Episode 266 resumes in two weeks, even if the stage temporarily shifts down the street.

    1 t. 27 min.
  2. 4 DAGE SIDEN

    Riter Radio Takes Two Weeks Off—Because Brad’s Going Back to WGR (1–3pm)

    Brad opens Episode 264 mid–self-roast, annoyed that he let the intro music fully run out and turned a three-second timing hiccup into a full-blown “we’ll never compete with the big boys” production rant—then immediately apologizes to the audience for catching strays. After some chaotic soundboard/slide-whistle fumbling, he gets to the real point: Episode 264 is happening today, Episode 265 is happening tomorrow… and then Writer Radio is going dark for two weeks (no show Monday through Friday next week, and no show the week after). He reassures everyone the archive is deep and mostly evergreen, and hints he may still drop something in podcast form so people aren’t totally left hanging. The reason for the hiatus: Brad is stepping back into actual radio—hosting WGR from 1–3 p.m. for the next two weeks while the station reshuffles its lineup. Week one is a co-hosted run with Tim Graham (The Athletic), and week two Brad anchors from the studio while Tim (and likely Sal Capaccio) contribute from the NFL Combine in Indianapolis. Brad frames it as both surreal and energizing—returning to the building nearly 18½ years after leaving full-time—plus an opportunity to give the station more edge in a post–team-produced-show world. Along the way, he dips into classic Brad-life chaos: juggling texts on-air, parenting logistics, and a mini-meltdown about the grim reality of volunteering (especially running youth sports), before wrapping with excitement, humility about it being a tryout, and confidence that he can thrive with real producers, screeners, and an actual co-host.

    1 t. 34 min.
  3. 5 DAGE SIDEN

    We’ve Bugged Our Own Homes (And Call It “Convenience”)

    Episode 263 opens with Brad spiraling from a flashback to February 2000 — the day the Bills cut Bruce Smith, Thurman Thomas, and Andre Reed — into a broader meditation on what it actually feels like when a football window slams shut. Using that “Black Monday” moment as emotional reference, he questions the obsession with Super Bowl appearances vs. championships, the randomness of legacy, and whether winning a title truly makes everyone—from assistant coaches to PR staff—“better.” That thread somehow detours through Thomas Edison’s birthday (light bulbs, phonographs, motion pictures—“Mount Rushmore of life” stuff), the first American hospital, the phrase “COVID-19” entering the world six years ago, and a ranking of historical events from greatest to worst. Along the way, Brad revisits $1.50 movie nights at the Como Mall, Ricochet starring Denzel Washington, prison sword fights involving Jesse Ventura, and the golden era of Mighty Taco as a full evening of entertainment for under six bucks. The second half pivots into present-day chaos: a 9th-year college football player at Montana, Super Bowl halftime ratings math (and why “everyone watches the Super Bowl” anyway), skepticism about media metrics, and the illusion of choice between competing broadcasts. That skepticism deepens into a full privacy rant after news that the FBI accessed footage from an unsubscribed Nest camera—leading Brad to question whether we’ve voluntarily bugged our own homes in the name of convenience. The episode closes with nostalgia over Buffalo mall closures, reflections on changing media distribution (Spotify uploads, YouTube edits, ratings methodology), and a final push for Brain Vault Episode 3 at The Caz, with Tim Graham confirmed and a mysterious potential special guest teased—possibly, maybe, jokingly… Bad Bunny.

    1 t. 24 min.
  4. 6 DAGE SIDEN

    AI Kidnappers, Curling, and the Death of Journalism

    Episode 262 opens exactly how Brad warned it would: no plan, no rundown, and full Tuesday chaos. What starts as “this is a nothing show” turns into a live-wire mix of ice fishing recaps (including the now-legendary one-minute bass catch), Olympic mixed doubles curling hype (Corey & Korey forever), and a wide-ranging conversation with Ben Turnbull about niche sports, life roles, and why being the “one-eyed king” in the valley of the blind might be the real secret to happiness. Bob Gaughan joins fresh from a dentist appointment to break down the Super Bowl fallout, Drake Maye’s playoff faceplant, Hall of Fame math failures, and the strange new media world where billionaire team owners and platforms increasingly control the message. From there, the show spirals into AI paranoia, deepfake ransom scams, Savannah Guthrie conspiracies, Kid Rock lip-sync drama, and whether we’ve collectively bugged our own homes in the name of convenience. Brad updates listeners on Brain Vault’s one-week reset—lower ticket prices, GA seating, energy tweaks, and a team-driven rebuild before Episode 3—and closes by revisiting Olympic pressure (Mikaela Shiffrin’s struggles), Hall of Fame voting flaws, and the philosophical question of whether Bill Belichick can legally be described as someone’s “boyfriend.” It’s messy, funny, skeptical, and quintessential Riter Radio: no plan, lots of ideas, and somehow it all works.

    1 t. 22 min.
  5. 9. FEB.

    Super Bowl Reset: Reality Returns to the AFC East

    Episode 261 of Riter Radio opens with a deep exhale across Western New York: the season ends with the Seattle Seahawks winning the Super Bowl, and—more importantly—the New England Patriots getting thoroughly exposed on the biggest stage. Brad breaks down why the Patriots’ collapse matters more for perception than punishment, arguing that their rise this season was real but wildly overstated. The Super Bowl performance resets the offseason conversation, validates lingering doubts about their offense and quarterback, and quiets MVP talk that never quite passed the eye test—especially when stacked against years of elite, under-awarded play from Josh Allen. For Bills fans, it’s not joy—it’s relief. From there, the show wanders (intentionally) through exhaustion, Super Bowl commercials, Olympics whiplash, and the modern inability to trust anything at face value. Brad tells a disorienting, sleep-deprived weekend story that perfectly mirrors the media moment, before diving into a thoughtful back-and-forth on AI: where it’s genuinely useful, where it’s dangerous, and why recognizing authentic voice still matters. Scott Wilson joins for a sharp football breakdown, reinforcing just how lopsided the Super Bowl actually was and why good teams don’t rush quarterbacks into coronations. The episode closes with updates on Brain Vault (including a schedule change), reminders that organized chaos is still the brand, and a simple truth: football season is over, the Patriots are back on Earth, and everything feels… manageable again.

    1 t. 52 min.
  6. 6. FEB.

    Ice Fishing, Innovation, and the Wildest Minute in Show History

    Episode 260 of Riter Radio turns into one of the most unpredictable—and memorable—shows in the program’s history. Brad opens by celebrating the evolution of the show across radio, audio-only streaming, and YouTube, before leaning fully into experimentation by attempting a live remote broadcast from Ballston Lake, where a group of longtime friends is ice fishing. What begins as a casual check-in instantly escalates when the crew unexpectedly pulls a massive largemouth bass out of the ice—live on camera—creating a genuine “did that just happen?” moment that Brad calls the most exciting minute the show has ever produced. The successful remote setup, equal parts improvisation and luck, reinforces the show’s identity as willing to try new things—even if they might fail spectacularly. From there, the episode pivots seamlessly between sports, media, and culture. Scott Wilson joins to break down NFL Awards night, Hall of Fame selections, MVP voting logic, and the increasingly awkward nature of pre-scripted sports broadcasts. The conversation stretches into college football finances, recruiting wins for the Buffalo Bulls, and how deeply football culture now intersects with politics. The show closes with sharp observations on the collapsing sports-media landscape, a passionate defense of great writing in the age of AI, Olympic absurdities, and a return to Ballston Lake for one final check-in—underscoring that Episode 260 wasn’t just about content, but about connection, curiosity, and catching lightning (or a fish) in real time.

    1 t. 49 min.
  7. 5. FEB.

    A Bills “Vibe Tweak,” a Super Bowl Call, and a Full Muppet Spiral

    Episode 259 opens with Brad doing what Riter Radio does best: thinking out loud in public. He crowdsources the chat on the show’s visual layout—full-production graphics vs. a cleaner, tighter shot—and walks viewers through real-time experimentation with banners, overlays, backgrounds, and green screens, breaking just about everything along the way. From there, the episode drifts into family life and scheduling chaos: a middle-school band and jazz concert featuring two of his sons, followed immediately by the reality of three basketball practices in three towns, an unexpected baseball conflict, and the moment Brad realizes he has simply overcommitted everyone. The emotional centerpiece of the opening is a hilariously awkward parent moment sparked by a rumor that his sixth grader “has a girlfriend,” which escalates when Brad’s dad accidentally blurts it out in front of the accused child at the school concert. The back half of the show shifts gears with a live call to Jay Skurski, checking in from San Francisco during Super Bowl week to discuss logistics, Bills-adjacent storylines, and Skurski’s evolving perspective on the Joe Brady hire. The conversation frames the move as a “vibe tweak” rather than a teardown—continuity for Josh Allen, players genuinely liking Brady, and big questions about whether he can coach Allen hard when necessary. From there, the episode veers into a long, joyful cultural rabbit hole sparked by a Washington Post essay on the Muppets’ 50th anniversary special. Brad uses the piece—and its very human, unmistakably non-AI writing—as a jumping-off point to talk about creativity, authenticity, his discomfort with AI-generated prose, and a revelation about Brain Vault’s true DNA: not just “Kill Tony,” but The Muppet Show—controlled chaos, music, lights, backstage energy, and fun that doesn’t need to be perfect to work. The episode closes with ticket pushes for Brain Vault, plans to bring Paul Peck on as “senior Muppet correspondent,” and Brad heading off to watch the special himself.

    1 t. 28 min.
  8. 4. FEB.

    Media’s Changing Fast—Bills Radio Rights Prove It

    Brain Vault week two at The Caz went way smoother than the debut — a bunch of the early problems got fixed — but Brad felt the room energy dipped because he didn’t come out and clearly “take control” with the full how-it-works explanation (QR code, phone play-along, where to sign up, what the vault is, etc.). He raves about the venue (and its absurdly nice green room), recaps a rare post-show hang with Tim Graham and Jonah Bronstein, and lays out the mission: keep building, get the crowd closer to the front, crank up the pace, and turn Brain Vault into the raucous, TV-style trivia night it’s supposed to be. The big story of the day was the Bills and WGR ending their 14-year partnership, with One Bills Live moving to streaming on buffalobills.com and the Bills app (still simulcast on MSG). Brad’s take: it’s not automatically a disaster for WGR — it’s a negotiation/business decision in a changing media world — and both sides can come out fine. That led into a longer “media landscape” riff sparked by a Spotify/Netflix/Ringer piece (Bill Simmons strategy, YouTube dominance, attention economy, exclusivity vs distribution), plus quick hits on Sabres playoff positioning, the Pro Bowl, and a Belichick Hall of Fame voting explanation that brought Spygate back into the conversation. Brad closed by sharing some of the Brain Vault trivia categories from the night and shouting out sponsors Buffalo Trim and The Financial Guys.

    1 t. 38 min.

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Score Stop Score used to be called Riter Radio and streams live M-F 10am-12pm Eastern time. Host Brad Riter is a long-time radio personality based in Buffalo, NY and rarely knows what he's going to say until he hears what just came out of his mouth. Music, entertainment, and sports are frequent topics with his regular group of "correspondents." Find the latest episodes on Spotify, YouTube, Apple, and wherever finer shows are available.