Episode
September 23, 2025
Chidalu Nwogu

To The Baha Returns: New Season, No Chill

When To The Baha wrapped its first season, the chat was still buzzing days later. Fans kept debating old clips, calling out their favorite moments, and asking when the crew would be back. So for Season 2, the plan was simple: pick up where the arguments left off and turn up the volume.

That meant doubling the output: from two days a week to four. It meant building a new set that looks and feels like the kind of place where NBA arguments are supposed to happen with warm lights, clean lines, and just enough tension in the air. And it meant opening the door for guests this time, bringing even more voices into a space already known for speaking facts.

The energy hasn’t changed, Theo Pinson, Raymond Felton, Charlie Villanueva, Tyler Relph and Hong still talk like the cameras aren’t rolling, but the platform around them has. Season 2 showed right away that To The Baha is more than episodes and uploads, it’s where the basketball arguments live now.

Season 2 Highlights — The Debates That Broke the Chat

Best Duo in NBA History?

“Batman and Batman.”

That’s how the guys described Kobe and Shaq, and there wasn’t even a hint of disagreement. Usually, any conversation involving MJ gets Ray instantly defensive (“Stop it, it’s MJ!”), but this time he just nodded. Shaq was the most dominant big man of his era, Kobe the closest thing to MJ anyone’s seen, and together they were untouchable. The chat went nuclear. (watch here)

‘96 Bulls or ‘17 Warriors?

This one got loud fast.

It started calmly enough then Hong said, “I got the ‘17 Warriors over both teams,” and immediately everyone lost it. “Who’s stopping MJ?” was met with “Who’s stopping KD?” Then came the defensive breakdowns, the shot-making arguments, and someone vividly describing the nightmare of Luke Longley trying to guard a Steph Curry screen.

In the end, the table agreed on one thing: the Warriors’ shooting and ball movement might be the one thing even the ‘96 Bulls couldn’t game-plan for. But everyone agreed if we’re talking toughest matchup, Shaq’s Lakers still cause bigger problems than either team. (watch here)

Who Had the Greater Impact: Allen Iverson or Steph Curry?

“Steph changed the game. AI changed us.”

That’s how this one started, and it stuck. Steph reinvented modern basketball including spacing, pace, the three-point revolution. Kids yell his name when they shoot from half court.

But AI? He changed the culture. He gave an entire generation of Black kids someone who looked like them, sounded like them, moved like them, and could cross you into another dimension while dropping 40. The braids, the tattoos, the swagger and the game to back it all up.

They gave Steph the edge on pure basketball impact, but they agreed on one thing: Iverson was the full package — game and culture. (watch here)

Special Shoutout to our TTB Regulars

We’d be lying if we said the launch didn’t feel like a family reunion. The chat was packed before the intro music even hit, with our usual suspects — Nikari, MT, Burton — clocking in early and ready to give their support. We’re nothing without our community so we appreciate it

And with this new schedule we give more streams, more topics, more chaos , and more moments that make you stop scrolling and lock in. And Season 2 already gave us a few classics.

Same Chaos, New Chapter

That’s the magic of To The Baha: it’s smart, unfiltered, and fun in a way most sports shows aren’t allowed to be. There’s no pretending here. No sanitized debate segments. Just hoopers talking hoops like they would if the cameras weren’t there and letting the chat jump in like they’re on the couch too.

This season, we’ll be keeping the debates rolling, bringing new guests into the mix, and making sure the community that built this show keeps having a front-row seat.

To The Baha is back, it’s bigger than ever, and we’re just getting started.

Catch the show live four days a week, Monday to Thursday, on YouTube