I dunno, as much as the younger guys are in vogue across the league, older coaches have been the main ones actually racking up chips this last decade
. The average age for SB winning coaches during that time has been over 60.
They just don't want old coaches, or any coach really, being judge jury and executioner like he was for a long time.
Nobody's ever called him a bad/poor coach, it's his GM role and personnel related decision making that undermined his coaching these last few years. I'm an ardent believer that if he goes into a new situation where he mainly has to focus on the X's and O's without being the one stocking the cupboard, he'll be successful again.
Also doing podcasts and reaching younger audiences can't hurt to help chip away at his curmudgeon/grumpy old coach public image
The more personable he is and personality that he shows on air, the less that sort of stuff is gonna stick to him the way that it has.
He's already gonna do the traditional media gig with ESPN and Peyton, would be really cool if he did the 'new media' content circuits at the same time during the week too. I think he'd kill it doing both.