The Dan Patrick Show returned to the air on October 1, 2007; the show was produced by the Content Factory, with national sales and
syndication handled by
Premiere Networks. The program initially began on outlets owned by
Clear Channel, but has since expanded to many more stations across the United States, both live and tape-delayed depending on the market. Eventually, the show was added to national radio when
Fox Sports Radio used it to replace
Out Of Bounds with Craig Shemon & James Washington on January 20, 2009. The show could be heard live on Sirius XM 247, a Fox Sports Radio simulcast. It used to be heard on a delayed basis on
Sirius XM Sports Nation, which broadcast on both XM and Sirius. The show was removed the first week of January 2010, removing it from the Sirius platform entirely. The show is simulcast online at danpatrick.com, and live on the Fox Sports Radio site. The show began simulcasting live on
DirecTV's
Audience Network (formerly The 101 Network) in August 2009. The show's web site was hosted by
Sports Illustrated, for which Patrick still serves as a senior writer. In October 2009, the rights to the show were purchased from The Content Factory by DirecTV's sports division, DirecTV Sports Group, which now produces the show. Premiere continued its role as distributor. As of October 25, 2010, the show began simulcasting on
Fox Sports Net and
Comcast Sports Net. The Comcast and Fox Sports Net broadcasts ended in July and on October 17, 2012, respectively, though DirecTV continued carrying the show on their
Root Sports regional sports networks which formerly affiliated with FSN. After a short delay, the program began airing on
NBC Sports Network on November 5, 2012. The show's airing on NBCSN was subject to preemption by other sporting events, especially the
Tour de France in July. The NBCSN simulcast ended with the show of February 28, 2019, and resumed March 25, 2019 on
AT&T-owned streaming service
B/R Live. After Patrick's and
Rich Eisen's shows were
dropped by Audience as of February 28, 2020, both moved briefly to
YouTube (with Eisen also simulcast on
NBCSN), before Patrick moved again on August 24, 2020, to
Comcast-owned streaming service
Peacock, simulcasting on both services for a week before permanently settling with Peacock. (Eisen would follow that October.) The main studio from which the show is broadcast is in
Milford, Connecticut. Space above a then-
Subway restaurant at River Street and New Haven Avenue in downtown Milford was converted into an elaborate clubhouse-style studio by
DIY Network, as part of their "Man Caves" series hosted by former NFLer
Tony Siragusa and DIY's Jason Cameron. The studio features several monitors, sports memorabilia, a basketball hoop, a pinball machine, a foosball table, a bar with 3 kegs and a golf simulator. The show had previously been produced in the attic of Patrick's home in the transition period from ESPN to Premiere. From September 2012 until the show's relationship with AT&T ended, the Monday show was broadcast from a studio in New York City during the NFL season. Patrick did this so he would not be as inconvenienced following
Football Night in America's late ending on Sunday nights. As of 2015, with the move of all NBC Sports operations to
Stamford including
Football Night, the show mainly originates from Milford. On April 19, 2019, the show moved again to a larger location at 363 Naugatuck Avenue in Milford, which includes a basketball court and full kitchen. Patrick often relates anecdotes of his ESPN career, in both positive and negative lights. He often refers to his former employer as "The Mother Ship" (he also used "ES
Peon" in the show's early years), and expressed disappointment with their practice of preventing their talent from appearing as guests on his show, and frustration when an ESPN employee has agreed to come on the show only to later cancel. In the case of
Erin Andrews appearing on the show, she later sent him a message and Patrick then stated on air that she had been told by ESPN she would no longer be available as a guest to the show. In response, Patrick has used the phrase, "if you're afraid, buy a dog", and on the rare occasion an ESPN employee does appear on the show, will say, "you don't own a dog."
Michael Wilbon, co-host of
Pardon the Interruption, is the only regular guest from ESPN, appearing a handful of times per year.
Mike Golic and
Chris Berman are the only other former colleagues to appear on the show since Patrick's departure from ESPN, appearing on set before the Super Bowls in 2010 and 2013, respectively. (
Scott Van Pelt called in briefly on one occasion.) Whenever college basketball analyst
Jay Bilas appears, it is while he is doing television commentary for
CBS during
March Madness. Other guests who have developed a relationship with Patrick over the years and served alongside Patrick while when both were at ESPN include baseball analyst
Peter Gammons, whom Patrick affectionately refers to as "The Dalai Lama" for his tremendous insight of the game. Patrick will often mockingly speak to ESPN management directly while on air, in large part after discovering thoughts or news he has been able to divulge from guests appearing on his show are later found on ESPN programs or website, without giving credit or mentioning
The Dan Patrick Show as their source. Patrick has stated on his show many times he is less forgiving when his former employer fails to give credit to guests who appear on his show regularly who might be in direct competition with ESPN, such as
''ProFootballTalk.com's Mike Florio, who might be the first to report on a story and later appear on The Dan Patrick Show'' but may be lesser-known than Patrick. He also has remarked on their history of stealing news that is broken on his show, and having their own reporters "confirm" such news rather than directly attributing it to Patrick's show (this has caused him to coin the phrase, "We don't break news, we sprain news"). Despite mocking ESPN, he often speaks fondly of his former co-workers, both those appearing on and off the air. ==The Danettes==