All Episodes

June 4, 2021 82 mins

The band ‘3 Doors Down’ stop by to perform some of their biggest hits including “Kryptonite” and “Be Like That”. Bobby talks to them about their career and going back out on a huge tour! Lunchbox brings some audio of him acting out a scene from his acting class. We determine whether or not he has improved his acting skills. Bobby reads a listener’s email who has a question on how to tell her boyfriend that she wants a very specific type of engagement ring!

Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
Good transmitting it's having a friend, thanks for hanging out.
More in studio, ad Chris Lane over the house and
he's up on My Bobby Cast today. Do you know
Chris Lane? Yes? You know him from what I know

(00:22):
him from? Uh, well, events we've done. I feel like,
oh yeah, um, yes, I do I know play you're
going to know about his name? Yes, he proposed to
his wife, saying the singing the songs, you really don't
don't know. I don't care to say you don't know.
I'm the point. I can sing it. If I hit

(00:42):
one word, no, that's not okay. So if I Eddie,
can you sing what's your name? What's your day? What's
your birthday? That's I don't know about you. That's not
the one I'm talking about. Can your name another one?
That's about it? I think painkiller or something. So he goes,
I got a fix, and then he has the song

(01:06):
that he wrote for Laura and his wife called Big
Big Plans. I got some big big so he came
over to the house. He was good enough to get
drafted playing baseball. He played at UNC Charlotte, which is
crazy like a good school, and he had torn his
acl like multiple times. He's a twin brother who thought
he was gonna get drafted, health he didn't get drafted.
It was weird, the whole situation. But his brother plays

(01:28):
drums for him now and they're twins exactly the same. Yeah,
but I was talking to him. He opened up for
Garth Brooks once because Garthro tough these big shows and
invited an artist out and I asked him about that,
asked him, but, hey, what was it like opening for Garth?
He said, I heard you're a card guy, give me
your best trick. And I thought to myself, well, I
don't know who you heard that from, but I'm not
a card guy. I don't know how to do anything.

(01:49):
He was like, well, good, because I am. He put
out a deck of cards and did this card trick
that I feel like I had seen people do before.
But he was really good at it. And when he
left the room, I was just, you know, smiling ear
to ear, thinking this was the coolest thing that ever
happened to me. Garth Brooks comes in and as a
card trick before I showed Wait, I didn't know with

(02:10):
card trick guy. Wow, he said. He walked back in
that room and he looked and there was a table
when he walked into his dressing room and Gartha put
a bunch of merch from Garth and signed all of it.
And then he came in. I was like, hey, so
your card. Guy's like, no, I gos who I am?
Gartha does oh? I put your card any card. And
then he talked about how Keith Urban was one of
his biggest influences and he met him at a radio
of it once and this is Chris, you know, telling Keith.

(02:32):
They'd made eye contact, and then Keith came over. I
made eye contact right when I first got I just
I think I just put out fixed and he's across
the room. He made eye contact, and he walked out
of his way to walk over there and say hello
to me. And I was incredibly nervous, and I'm telling
him the store and I'm like, man, you're my hero,
Like you know, you're my biggest inspiration, all this kind

(02:53):
of stuff. And he gave me a hug and he
was like buddy, patting me on the back. He's like, buddy,
you need to get out more. So you guys check
it Out's great. We did about an hour. It's it's
Chris Lane. He talks about all kinds of stuff. He's
about to have babies. His wife Lauren. I didn't know
she won the Bachelor, and so he actually met her
like four years earlier, and they took a picture together

(03:16):
and it was her and her fiance Beniggins, Yeah and
him walk together. And then he talks about the Strow
how they got together. Crazy story. Good guy, You guys
check out the Bobby Cash wants. The show is over today.
Don't download it now. Heck, it's not even downloadable till
this show is over. That's a lie. But yeah, check
it out. Hope everybody's having a good Friday. Just appreciate

(03:36):
you hanging out with us. It is Mike d wedding weekend,
so at this point tomorrow we're gonna be waking up.
It's still not at Mike's wedding, but it'll be happening
tomorrow night. Oh was right. Let's open a mailbage something.
They write, Hello, Bobby Bones, I've been with my friend

(04:00):
for three years now. Marriage has been talked about, but
neither one of us are in a hurry. My question
I need advice on is when how do I tell
him what kind of ring I want? I've wanted a
particular cut diamond that is not the most common an
emerald cut, not Jim, since I was just a young girl.
Anything he gives me, it'll be amazing because it's coming

(04:22):
from him. But since I have an idea of what
I want, shouldn't I tell him to help him out?
I also can't guarantee there wouldn't be a small tinge
of disappointment if it's not that style. What should I
do and how should I go about it without making
him feel rushed or pressured? The show is great. I
listen to the podcast every day. Thank you, signed C.

(04:43):
Get a few experts here on this. We just went
through this myself as well. Maybe I'll let you go
first on this one. How would you tell him without
telling him? Okay, so I don't know if you have
a sister or a best friend or someone that he
also knows that can kind of have this conversation for you,
and if he's even thinking about it. Hopefully he's reaching
out to those people anyways to see if they know anything.

(05:05):
But make sure that they know. Make sure all your
people know what you want, because somehow it's going to
come up when he's ready or to that point, or
make sure that they let him know, especially if this
is something you wanted since you were a kid, and
an emerald cut is very unique and specific, it might
not even be on his radar. Maybe I was not
going to go to anybody, really, I mean I wasn't.

(05:28):
You weren't, no, because I thought I wanted it to
be a total surprise. Okay, so that's why I wasn't
going to go to anyone cheap. You have to organically
bring up rings without it being about proposals. For example,
you find an Instagram where someone got proposed engaged and

(05:51):
you're just looking at it or a show or something
and you're like, oh, that's really sweet. I want to
kind of ring that how much? And then you look
at it go oh, that is not for me. Here's
the kind of If I don't want emerald, those are
the best looking one. You gotta start planting those seeds
to not pressure him to do it, but also make
sure he knows it. Because if someone wants to fully
surprise and they don't trust that your sister or your
aunt or you know, your your cousin Jimmy isn't gonna

(06:13):
like you got it, I would say plant the seeds
that way because everybody's always getting married and proposed to
on shows or Instagram be like, could you see do
you see Shanda's ring? Now, I didn't see Seanna's ring.
Oh it was a gym cut. Makes me want to vomit.
I like emerald cuts. Like for me, I've always dreamed
of having an emerald cut that I would say, that's

(06:35):
how you would do it, Raymundo, any advice, You just
got the whole thing. Yeah, definitely going together. Why is
it all a big surprise? Well, because you may want
it to be a surprise. Yeah. These girls, now they're
very specific and very particular about the ring they want.
Don't even guess or leave it to a sister, brother, aunt, mother.
Just go in with him, have mimosas. It's actually a
day event. That's pretty fun and there's really no pressure.

(06:55):
I would have hated going in and not being able
to surprise her. I would have hated it. I mean
I went in, but then I did it like seven
months later. I probably surprised her. You just wait, anew
was coming and at seven points seven months later, Ray,
she was irritated at you. If you date for a
couple of months, I would hope she's starting to think
about a ring. Everybody knows in a way of months.
I mean, you date for a couple of months, if

(07:16):
you're serious about each other, I would hope that's the
next big thing that you guys are thinking about. Nobody
should be totally surprised, like, oh my gosh, I cannot
believe you did this. Well, and it's been three years.
I know. I still wouldn't want a surprise or I
surprise Kaylin like crazy. She had no idea. It was
the best part about it. She was in shock. If
I find out five years later she knew. I'm being
ticked off. But I would say, just start planning it,

(07:40):
planting it unless you don't want it to be surprised,
and you can be like, hey, whenever ready, I'm ready
to go to the store with You can just start
saying it like Ray is saying. But I think the
surprise is the way to go. All right, we forgot
about that, every buddy, yea, yeah, I mean I feel
like we gave her options. Yeah, but I think my
options probably the best of course. Yeah, yeah, yeah, all right,
close out the mailbag. We got your team. That was

(08:02):
about the clothed Morgan. If they want to email us
what do they do? Mailbag at Bobby Bones dot com.
Time for another round of the hardest trivia game and
all the land. It's called Never Gonna Get It. And
we played this game yesterday with A Laura and she
did not win. The question yesterday was the average one

(08:23):
of these costs four times as much as it did
twenty five years ago, but it's half the size. The
answer was, guess computer, you guess wedding. Now, Laura, you've
been able to live through your failure yesterday. How are
you feeling about yourself? Oh? Well, I cried myself to
sleep last night, but I'm feeling so much betterday. We
love that. We love that. Now, if you remember correctly,

(08:44):
A Laura works in real estate in Texas. Now, Laura,
give us another fun fact about you. What celebrity the
people say you look most like? Um I used to
get Amanda Binds all the time, and then she kind
of went off a rocker, but you know, she went
talk on a little bit, so I'll take it. Amanda Binds.
It is okay. We have a Laura, which, by the way,
Laura's a very interesting name. What's the what's the root
of that it's actually an interesting story. So my dad

(09:05):
named me after one of his old ex girlfriends in
high school. But my parents are still married and I'm thirty,
so I think we're doing all right. Let me get
this straight. Your dad named you after an ex girlfriend
and then Mary, and then told your mom that before
he married had you. My mom's super cool. He just
loved the name, obviously, I get it. But ain't no
way love the name. Okay, Well I like the name too.

(09:26):
So you're saying if Caitlin wanted to name your baby
after and if Kaylin wanted to name our baby Ryan Gosling,
I'll be irritated. I'm kidding, hiding, I'm just kidding. I'm
just kidding. He just wanted to to be like he
has Ryan Gosling's ex. No, I don't want that. I
have to live up to that, then I would hate that. Actually, Okay,
we're gonna play, never gonna get it. Here is the

(09:47):
really tough question, and now for grabs a one hundred
dollars cash gift card courtesy of Hyundai. Here we go.
One in four women say this would be an immediate
deal breaker when it comes to accepting a second date
with a guy. What is it? One in four women

(10:09):
say this would be an immediate deal breaker when it
comes to accepting a second date with a guy. What
is it? There? You go one hundred bucks off for grabs, Laura,
if you can get this with your own answer, you
want one hundred dollars? Well do you think that is? Laura?
Oh my gosh, Well my immediate thought goes straight to

(10:30):
something financial. Let's see. I'm thinking's something like treating a
server badly or something like that. Pretty good. Okay, that
is her answer, treating a server badly or being disrespectful
to server. That is not right. But she's still in
the mix here because the whole panel Amy Lunchbox producer

(10:51):
Eddie Morgan number two, who runs all of our digital Raymundo,
sits in the glass room and does the audio. You
can choose for many of them to represent you. Now,
who feels like they have this? One me Eddie, And
I've never said that I'm confident about it. Good Okay, Laura,
you've heard who thinks they have it? I mean, it
could be so many things. It could. One and four

(11:13):
women say this would be an immediate deal breaker when
it comes to accepting a second date with a guy.
What's that deal breaker? Laura, who are you gonna have
represent you? Well? Again? I love my girl Amy, but
Morgan does go on more dates than anyone else, so
I might have to go to Morgan again. Okay, Now
Morgan did not have confidence, but Morgan does have the nearest. Yeah. Um,

(11:38):
so let's go to Eddie, who has had high confidence? Eddie,
what is your answer? Big time? So I usually I
go with something that's very like, oh, this is common whatever. No,
I'm gonna go a little unique on this one. I'm
gonna pick wrinkled shirt. Okay, he picked a wrinkled shirt, lunchbox.
You throw your hands in the air. You said that
was stupid. You love it? That was a terrible no,
no, no no, you love it. One of four women say

(12:00):
this is an immedia deal breaker when it comes to
accepting a second date. What do you have? Talking with
food in your mouth? Bad table manners? How are you
doing well? Girls turned off immediately? That's gross. Can't handle that. Okay,
those two had high confidence, and I'll tell you one
of you is wrong. Oh the other one's wrong too.

(12:20):
I changed it mid thing. It would just scratch out
nine other things you want another one. He didn't pay
for the meal? Okay, Amy, what do you have? Nipple ring? Well,
there we go, she's wrong. Got a winner. I mean,
I think that's more than one one out of four?
Um nipple ring? Okay, Raymundo, what do you have? He

(12:41):
didn't text the same night as the first date? Excuse me?
Nipple ring and texting both are wrong. So it all
comes down to Morrigan. Who she picked. Morgan, you let
her down the first time, I know, and I don't
want to let her down twice because that just makes
me not feel good. I means you will cost her
over two days, two d no pressure. One and four

(13:03):
women say this would be an immedia deal breaker when
it comes to accepting a second day with a guy.
What is it, Morgan? I have two things? What are
they both talking about themselves too much? And not paying
for the first date? Not paying for the first date
is very traditional and I don't feel like it's as
common now for that to be a deal breaker. But
I do feel like it's a traditional thing that one

(13:26):
in four women could be upset if they don't pay
for the first dake. Okay is that your answer? Yeah?
Not paying for the first date here's what I'm gonna
do it. Laura. You can choose if she gets it
right or wrong, and if you're right about that? So
I think obvious, Like kids, how do we know Morgan

(13:49):
didn't get it right? I don't think she did. I
think that lady Laura's on her name. She just cast
herself one hundred bucks. You think that Morgan choose right? Yeah,
because that was my other answer, and I decided that
it was too obvious. That's why it's right, all right, Morgan.
Number two, you're right. Women light tradition. They like it
to be paid for and wine to nine if they
show up a dinner and he's like, you pay for
half or you gotta pay for this? And you know women, right, Laura,

(14:12):
you have your choice here. I'm letting you change your
answer up. Do you want to stay with that Morgan
gets it right or go with Morgan gets it wrong?
Oh I'm gonna stay wrong. That's okay, I don't. I
don't want to let you down. The answer is yes.
Come on, come on, number two, you're right. One and
four women say it would be an immediate deal breaker

(14:33):
when it comes to accepting a second day with a
guy if he has a messy car. No one got
it right, but Laura does win the all right, lunch
Rucks would be out on a date, lunchboxes. He's lost everything,
he doubled up many times. He's done. Laura. Congratulations. We

(14:54):
wanted to get you that win. We gave you a
few opportunities to get it. We're very happy you got
tomorrow Terbucks right there, Laura. I hope you have a
great weekend. Thank you so much, and don't forget watch
Breaking Bobby on Sunday night at ten nine Eastern on
net GIA. It's not even part of the reader. I
just throw that into games, all right, Laura, hold on
the phone, Bobby. The latest from Nashville in Tullywood Morgan

(15:18):
number two, thirty second Skinny. Lots of new music out today.
Tyler Farr released a new song called cover Girl, Heyer,
Shouldn't Never, Coverer, make Up, Pat Don't Healing so damn Tired,
Seleely his hands on Hey cover cover on Girl, he

(15:50):
Man to co Black. Dirk Bitley released a new version
of his song black, make my World give me lack
a hard not just keep doing that thing you do.
Rush me with my world goal Jimmy Allen released a

(16:17):
collaboration with Noah Schnacknee called Don't You Want to Know?
The Rules Don't Right? And Brett Young's new album is
out today. Weekends look a little different these days. I'm

(16:39):
Morgan number two. That's your skinny. It's time for the
good news lunchbox. Something good. Bill Yardley has parkins and
disease which keeps him from doing a lot of things
around the house. And it was his birthday recently and
his wife got him a flag kit so he could
put up a flag American flag in the front yard.

(17:00):
The only problem is Parkinson. He needed a power tool.
So he goes in the next door app and says, hey,
I need to borrow a power drool and someone says,
you know what we know, He asked Parkinson, so why
he was at the doctor. They came over and mounted
the flag for him and put it up on the poll.
That is awesome, and he said, it's just nice to
know that is this day in time, that there's still
people that love the Tennessee tradition of volunteering and putting

(17:22):
out the American flag. Dude, that's awesome. That's what it's
all about, right there. That was. Tell me something good, Lunchbox.
You're still paying for acting classes. Yeah, still doing my acting,
still doing the virtual online things. We haven't got together
in person yet, and I feel like I'm coming into
my own when you get together in person, will that
be in town or they live in Hollywood? No, No,

(17:44):
it should be in town. Yeah, I mean I found
it online, so I mean I assumed they're in town.
How much do you pay for this? It was I
think it was like six hundred bucks for three months
or four months something like that. Wow. And so your
goal at the end of this class is too blank.
Hopefully my acting skills have improved enough that I move

(18:04):
up a level in their their classes, and maybe it
gets me some roles, you know, maybe small time roles
on TV commercials, and then I work my way up
to the big screen the movies, you know, like the movies. Yeah,
we got it. No, we weren't figuring out what big
screen meant. It's like, wow, good for you. Yeah. So
Lunchbox started taking these classes during the pandemic and he's
continuing with the course. But if you move up, do

(18:26):
you have to pay again for the second course? Yeah? Yeah,
well yeah, you have to pay. I mean, it's not there,
not just gonna give to you for free because you're
a good actor. Well you paid better. Way if you
don't pass, do you pay again to retake the course?
I think I have to go. I have to start
in the beginner level again. Dang, which is sad. So
what do we have here? This is a clip of
what show How I met your mother? And and you
are who I am? Well, I'm Ted Mosby is an

(18:47):
older guy, So I'm really Bob Saget. I'm the voice guy. Oh,
you're the guy who comes on. It's like, so you
know kids back when he's talking to his kids. Yes,
he's talking to his kids, and so you're Ted Mosby,
but it's Bob Saget and so Amy, why did you snicker?
Because I just I can't wait to hear her like
I don't know, I just know how what we listened
to last time. I would like to hear the Bob

(19:07):
Sage clip first. Yeah, here we go. I found out
years later that your mom was at that party. I
just didn't meet her. And it's a good thing I
didn't because if I had met her, I don't think
she would have liked me. Heck, I don't think I
liked me, but that's okay. Tomorrow had a rock okay,
and you're doing that. That's what I do. Get ready, guy,

(19:27):
here we go Lunchbox doing the voice of Bob Saget.
I found out years later that your mom was at
that party. I just didn't meet her, and it's a
good thing that I didn't, because if I had met her,
I don't think she would have liked me. Heck, I
don't think I liked me, but that's okay. Tomorrow had arrived.
Huh Hey, how good was that? Sounded pretty good? Yeah?

(19:49):
See Amy snicker before and then she's like, that, are okay?
Sounded like story time like for the kids, that's what
it is. Sounded a little reedy. Yeah, it's pretty good.
It wasn't horrible. That line is serious. That line's kind
of touch. Play Lunchbox again. I found out years later
that your mom was at that party. I just didn't
meet her, and it's a good thing that I didn't,

(20:10):
because if I had met her, I don't think she
would have liked me. Heck, I don't think I liked me,
but that's okay. Tomorrow had arrived pretty good. I think
there's a probably a little texture, a little feel in that,
but I feel think it's pretty good. Yeah, I get
better hearing it back, like I should have been more emotional. Yeah,
now that I hear at the second time, I'm like, man,
I didn't hit the emotion part enough. Still pretty good.

(20:32):
We have another clip. This is a clip two ray?
What's this clip? We know? Its second clip? I mean
it's just it's from the episode No More. Okay, have
you never seen How I Make Your Mothers? Not just
one scene? Here we go. So Lillian Marshall decided to
make the best of a bad situation. And that's also
how the sport of apartment roller louge was invented. You see,

(20:53):
I didn't know it yet, but my luck was about
to change. Its pretty good. Yeah that's better than the
first one. Narrating Yeah, yeah, someone, it just sounds like
he's reading though, you know what I mean. Yeah, I
am going to choose to acknowledge that you are improving.
I would like to say that too. And he's not

(21:15):
like yelling it, because sometimes when he reads something or
he does everything, he yells right there, Yeah he's doing
you know, even a commercial. I feel like he's just
sometimes Yeah, I feel as though he's like getting into character.
I would like to acknowledge the growth that I have
seen from you. It feels good. That feels good. Would

(21:36):
you like to acknowledge I would like to be real
with you and say you have a lot of work
to do. I'm just being your friend and saying you
work a little harder. You're getting there, but a little
harder getting there. I like that you're getting there. Yeah.
And he starts with believing in yourself and a wise
band one said don't stop believing. Yeah, actually said like this.
They said, don't stop believe you can get on the

(21:57):
big screen. Yeah. Man, I'll use that for inspiration, don't
all right? Good job though, you're Amy's pile of stories.
So I got the Jaco and hits according to Taste
of Country in at number five down to the Honky Tom.

(22:20):
It's a good song. It's not a top five. Who
I forgot about that one? It's a jam it is.
It's a really good song. It's fun, but it's not
top five like made for you. I'm gonna tell you
my list ter made for you. You know what I
really like because I go anywhere West Virginia. Baby, So
let's see, don't tell me your list ship, and then
there's um, there's I have it's hard to sing another

(22:42):
song on night that's not on your list? Well, I
think it's probably like five or something, five or four.
But then alone with You, Alone with You, that's a jam. Two? Okay, Amy,
what's it? Number four I was Jack you were Dying. Yeah,
it's a good song for him. It's number one for him,

(23:04):
but not something that I turn on. I'm like, I
need to listen to some Jaco and I don't go
to this first. Yeah, I agree, Okay, number this list
is already kind of garbage. There he is, beeching. Did
a ray make this list? This is like a ray
Jaco and list. I guess. I just like the meaningful,
heartfelt stuff more. Number two Barefoot Blue g Knife, Yeah,

(23:28):
which I would have put at the back side of
this just because of the popularity. Yeah. And and number
one Days of Gold. Dude, Okay, this person's never listened
to Jake Going. They just went and randomly picked five songs.
Do you have a Loan with You? On that list?

(23:49):
So they took twenty one songs and ranked them, and
Alone with You came in at number seventeen. Whoever made
this list? Fire them? I don't know who. They should
not be able to write any more articles about Jaco
on You're now off the Jaco and beat. Okay, where
do they put any anywhere with you? Nineteen? What they

(24:10):
put made for you? Number thirteen? Okay, yeah, they they
do opposite day. They write this on opposite day. Okay,
what else you got? Well? Researchers in Singapore think that
the human body might have the ability to live to
one hundred and fifty years old. Scientists have developed this
iPhone app that accurately estimates biological aging, and it discovered

(24:30):
that life expectancy actually has the capacity to be almost
double the current norm. So kind of crazy. What's gonna
stink is they're gonna figure this out after we die?
Oh yeah, properly. Like I'm gonna die in the next
I think. I'm like, oh, we got it, eureka, we
figured it out. That's what's going to happen. Have you
thought any more about freezing yourself? No? I think about

(24:52):
dying every day, but I don't. Butamiliar it's you have
to freeze yourself before you die, before your brain dies.
That's what I And so you have to make that
decision while you're alive. I'm gonna go and freeze myself
where I am now and hopefully i'll wake up, but
not after you die and get frozen, because your brain
activity is dead. But if you're on life support and
they say like it's not looking good and they're basically

(25:14):
they're aways, your body could be declaring comfortable dying. I'm
uncomfortable with this. You don't want to just pop yourself
in the freezer. I'm uncomfortable with this conversation. I don't know,
I don't I don't. Have you already thought about dying today? Yo? Yeah,
so before this conversation, Yeah, I think about like I
look back at a year ago and I just last
night I took Ller out last Day's dark and I

(25:35):
was like, man, this is probably the fiftieth time I'm
taking Ler out, and every single time has been like
just a normal day. But like back forty nine days ago,
I don't have in three hundred more of these, I'll
be I'll look back and go like, man, it's just
like days flat go by but with nothing, and eventually
days are gonna stop going by, and I'm like, why
I should be having more fun. I should be experiencing

(25:56):
more life. Yeah, none of this crap matters. Like the
older I get, the more I feel that way. It's
little stuff like taking all out and I'm like, I've
been so many times, but every time I do it,
I think, oh, I got plenty of time left, but
I have less and less time every even do it? Yea,
but yes, that's good. Then I think that's healthy. Good
every day it made me feel better about and that
I was deep. What else, well, well, anybody in this
room admit to googling themselves regularly. I don't bones. I

(26:18):
don't google myself. I don't need to. I get enough
hate anyway. What if, like, you do a cool article
and you're like, oh, let me see that's out. No,
this is what happened to me, though recently an Amy
asked if I wanted her to bring it up on
the Earth of the Day, and I didn't. But I
did all these interviews for Breaking Bobby Bones. It was
one after the other. I probably did three hundred interviews
in three days. I was exhausted, and I didn't know
who I was talking to at points, And so I

(26:40):
do this thing and I've really not been talking about
running for office lately, because like, I'm okay right now,
I don't feel if I get to call in, that
means I feel like it's all gone to s and
I feel like I have to go do it. It's
other than I want to do, but it's something I
will do if I feel like I'm needed. And so
I haven't been feeling that needed lately. And there this
article is like, hey, do you run for office? I
was like, well, I've been thinking about it much. I

(27:02):
said that, I said, I do feel like someone like
me needs to run, because, like I come from struggle.
Most politicians are the kids of politicians who haven't had
it easy growing up, or they grew up rich and
that's why they're able to run. And I said, we
don't need kids of rich people running. We don't need
kids of other politicians running who had an easy rowing up,
because they don't represent people that have gone to the struggle.
So the reason I think I would be good in

(27:23):
a way is that I've gone through it, Like I
know what it's like to speak for people who have
had to struggle. And so the Fox News picks up
the article and runs it, and the headline they put
out as Bobby Bones knows exactly who he is, and
I was like, well, that's a weird headline. So then
people start retweeting, going, hey, good to know this guy
knows exactly. So then I started to get blasted for
the headline, and then I dumbly look into the comments

(27:44):
and it was just brutal. And I didn't even know
us for Fox News. They just asked me the question
and I answered honestly. But that was the situation where
I did not why do we talk about this? Well,
because I was going to talk about how um you know,
googling year, Well that happened. I googled me because I
was wonder where all the hate was coming from, and
I found that article. Okay, well, google in your own
name isn't a bad idea, because you should know what

(28:05):
other people can find out about you, especially if you're
looking for a job. But that's kind of where it is.
Other people are just wait into themselves and one and
eleven Americans google themselves every day. Wow, that's a lot
of people. Yeah, mostly I google myself when the hate
is coming from a place I can't find. That's what
it is. Remember you asked me, You're like, hey, I
have the story I know, and I was like, nope,
go and talk about it. Yeah, all right, that's why

(28:29):
nobody good runs for political office because anytime you do,
people just attack and you're like, why would any want
with worth the day I want to go run for office? Yeah,
and put themselves and put themselves through that. So if I,
and I said in the article, if I never have
to run for office, great I win because I feel
like we're okay, yeah, all right, enough, all right, I'm Amy.
That's my pile. That was Amy's pile of stories. It's

(28:53):
time for the good news. So this veteran, Michael Parks
wakes up every day at three am to catch a
bus to work, and he's been in this transitional housing
that helps out veterans and he's working this job again
wake him at three am to take the bus. But

(29:14):
then someone was like, goalie, he really wants to transition
out of his house, get his own place. If he
could work more, that would be helpful. Anonymous donor gave
him a car, so now he saves a bunch of
time having to commute, which can help him take on
extra shifts during that time and make more money. So
he's going to be able to get his own place
soon too. And again the donor is anonymous. But hate

(29:34):
that the whole car. I mean, I just don't nothing.
I don't get it. I don't get it. Here's a
good story. That's a veteran gets a great story. Great story.
And for this guy, time is money and now he
doesn't have to commute as much and he can. Maybe
the person doesn't want the attention, yep. Maybe they want
to do something to go without, like they don't want
to be in the stuff good Why do you do

(29:56):
good stuff? Well, this guy so that this guy could
get I would get more work and then buy a house. Right.
But you gotta understand, if this guy put his name
out there, people be like, oh my gosh, you did
such a good deed, we'll give you stuff. And then
you get it. Like what is it called the question again?
Why you do? Why do people do good stuff? Asked me?
Why do you do good stuff? I was thinking about

(30:17):
that as you ask that, why do it? I think
I think we all have reasons we do things for
other people. I think because so much was done for
me as a kid, because of people giving me food
or making sure I got to church, or making sure
I had football cleats we couldn't afford. I think I
feel like I owe it more than I think that's

(30:37):
generally why I do it. Why I think I owe
it because people help me. Why do you do good stuff?
I feel like I have been blessed in my life
and I want to be able to pass that on
to other people. And I feel like there is a
certain part that you just feel it feels good to
take care of other people, to help your neighbor, whatever

(30:57):
that looks like, if it's like your literal neighbor or
or someone in another country, like, there is just something
about if you have the means showing up for other people.
I mean, you don't have to help piss someone monetarily
by any means. So lunchbox to you, why do you
do good stuff? So people will be like, oh man,
I dude is into something good and they'll they'll they'll
recognize me for it, Like you want the accolades that

(31:17):
come with doing something good. Sea, We all have different reasons.
As long as something gets done good, who cares? Right?
You know I want that pad on the back. I
guess this is what you get now, we know we
get it. Yeah, we get it. We get it. Okay, Amy,
that's a good story. Yeah, thank you. That's what it's
all about. That was tell me something good. Got this
voicemail from Tyler in Utah Orange Studio. Hey, just listen

(31:41):
to podcasting yesterday. I just want to point out Amy's
good minutes but four minutes and thirty periods. Thank you.
It was four minutes and you must have just kept going.
We must have encouraged you to keep going exactly, So
that's on you. Yeah. I go over to the b
team Facebook page and they just fight for Amy's burden.
They want more. They want more, really, but they like

(32:02):
it when we like make fun of it. But they
still want to hear a little bit of it I hear.
Is a voicemail from Mary. I'm probably one of your
oldest stalkers. I watch anything that you're on, and I
love Caitlin. The show was great and you don't have
to worry about your shows want to be a success.
I love y'all. The word stalker does hit a little weird.
Other than that, appreciate that. And then she started to

(32:22):
saying I watch you, and then she finally said social
media guy on this show. Yeah. By the way, new
episodes break about You on Sunday Night, ten nine Central
on nat GEO. I will be a stunt person. I'll
be lit on fire. It's a whole thing. Here is
Bob Ett from California. Good morning studio. I was gonna
tell you as tell me something, a good story. My
husband lives a little theater. A kid couldn't pay for

(32:43):
the pizza his card when it weren't. My husband stepped up.
I'm in a favorite pizza for you, young man. Guys said,
thank you, walks away, just into the BMW and drives away.
Waw Anyway, he did a good seat anyway, Hi, that's okay.
I forgot his car. Yeah, it's still nice and good. Nothing. Hey,

(33:04):
thank you call us anytime. Eight seven, seven seventy seven, Bobby,
It is now time for the morning Corny, Morning Corny.
Why did the little bird get in trouble at school?
Why did the little bird get in trouble at school?
He was caught tweeting on a test, like cheating. That's
a that's a tough one, tweeting because a twitter. Now,

(33:26):
no I get cheating to right. Tweeting on a test, Yeah,
that's a tough one. But another one okay, it has
nothing to do with birds. But if you don't get
this right, this is one of those ones where I
just need you to roll with it. Hit it. Morning Corny.
A cop pulled me over and said papers, okay, and

(33:46):
I said, scissors and draw off. That's funny. That was
the Morning Corny. But he'd say paper paper rock. No,
he'd say paper, not papers, your papers, like, yeah, I
don't know, it's good funny. We struggle today, all right.
I have another one just kidding on the phone. Is

(34:09):
Jerry in Kansas City. Jerry, what's happening? And I'm heard
the segment with Lunchbox about no about everybody about he's
being a ten. Nobody's a ten. I said that as well. No,
I don't think on the scale of one to ten,
how we give people a number where I'd put myself
at a honestly, like a six point seven. I think
I'm right there. I'm not quite good looking. I'm riding

(34:32):
that slightly above average looking category. And I think that's
just because I keep myself in good shape. I got
a pretty generic everything. Lunchbox says he is a ten.
I didn't think perfect was able to be accomplished, but
you do feel that way. Yeah, I mean you say
perfect can't be accomplished. If you watch diving and swimming,
they get tens all the time gymnastics, so there are
not all the time, very rarely, but okay, so there

(34:54):
it is able to be done. And if you put
me in a machine and they were like, oh, perfect,
this is what perfection would look like if they tried
to make it. Will you think about that, Jerry? No,
what would you give a lunchbox? If you're giving him
a number one through ten? If have you ever seen
him before. I've seen him and I've heard him, and
I rate him about a five. That's good, Jerry, because
I'm not I'm not looking for you to rate me

(35:15):
a ten. I'm looking for the ladies to rate me
a ten. That's what matters. But you're married. You shouldn't
have to worry about anybody else. Well, I mean, yes,
I'm married, but the women still think I'm a No,
you're married, you're off the market, yes, but people still
rate me. I mean there's a lot of people that
are married, but you still rate him. That's what happens. Bobby.
How do you guys stay in that studio with Suziko.

(35:37):
That's brutal. Um. We kind of laugh with it a
lot of times, occasionally at it, but we just I
don't know. He's been here for how long? Sinking and Jerry. People,
it's an honor to be around me. People like being
around me because it's like, dang, I get to be
a round a ten. I get to be a round

(35:57):
a star. So you would be in you would awe
struck if you were in the studio. Also, no, I'd
rather be near amy your body, that's your cup of tea.
That's fine. If you want to be around people are
kind of boring and you know, not so much fun.
That's cool. Go there, Jerry. I appreciate that call. I
think you if you are saying what a lot of

(36:19):
people at times feel. Um. I don't think Lunchbox is
a ten. Think it's a fine looking guy. Definitely don't
think he's a ten, but he thinks he is. He
still claims that when he goes to the mall or
he goes to the grocery store, women try to hit
on him absolutely because they just can't resist him. So
I can't resist they see me, They're like, dang, I
gotta get to talking to that guy. All right, Jerry,
thank you for calling. I hope you have a great day.
I don't see too. What are you gonna say? What

(36:40):
are you say before he's hanging out? I don't see it.
I don't fit it. Okay, I don't see it, all right, buddy, See,
like the Friday morning conversation with I'm a big fan
of these guys. You guys good, Yes, are good, because
I'm good. You have so many number one songs and
we're gonna get to some music in a second. But Brad,
when's the last time you guys actually for people in

(37:00):
a room. It has been quite a while since we
played for some people in a room like this, and uh,
it's it's it's always been a little bit different to
do it, but uh, it's actually it's really cool to
be sitting here doing it because it's fresh and it's
been so long since we've done that. It's I'm kind
of looking forward to it. But I was, I was
honestly nervous this morning when I got up to come in.
Why would you get You and I know each other

(37:20):
at this point too, so it's not like we're meeting
for the first time, But why would you bean. Is
it because you haven't sang in a while. It's because
we haven't sang in a year. And it's probably the
biggest radio show in the country. No pressure, listen. I'm
just such a big fan and so um, you know,
you guys all coming in together. This means the world.
So thank you guys for waking up early and singing,

(37:41):
because I know it's a it's a famous rock band.
You don't want to wake up early in the morning,
and you know it's early in the morning, so I
appreciate that. So where do we start? Um, you guys,
the record has been out now what twenty years? Twenty years?
And I did see that you guys were gonna play
you know, the Better Life all the way through from
track one to track How many tracks are on that record?
I think eleven, I believe so. But track one is kryptonite.

(38:04):
And do you start off with the big song? I
think we're going to dang. The crowd's gonna be like,
all right, we're ready to get warmed at whoa. This
isn't the big one. It's gonna be you know, it's
it's a little bit different, but we've done it every year.
We you know, we have a Better Life foundation and
every year we play a show for that, and we
actually tried this out of doing the record and we're
done away from the song, right, and so we just

(38:24):
started that record, which you know, it has Here Without You,
which is another one of our big songs. And it's
like at best that put that song on like the
fourth fifth on the set. But it was just so
cool and it was kind of inspired by several years
ago we went out on tour with Aerosmith and they
and it wasn't like a like a an anniversary for
the record or anything, but they came out and they
played their hits and all, but they played the entire

(38:45):
record of Toys in the attic and it was so
awesome and it was just it's just we've done it
for the Better Life that year and it was just
so fun to do that. It would be fun to
do this year. I think let me hear a clup,
Raymond up Here Without You? I big was this song
for you guys, Here Without You? Because I heard it.
I heard it and played it on the radio. It

(39:06):
felt like every five minutes. It was a monster. That
was a big song. And then it was a really
important song for us too, because you know, after the
success of the Better Life record, which was I mean,
by the grace of God, it had it had four
hits on it, which was really a blessing too, because
you know, if it if we would have only had Kryptonite,
that would have been it, you know, obviously, but if
it's really hard to kind of follow up a song

(39:28):
like that and then to follow up a record, and
so here without you and when I'm going off the
off the second record really were important for kind of
like launching us and kind of for lack of a
better way of putting just cruise control in a way.
You know, whenever I think two or three years ago,
we do a big charity show, Eddie and I do
the Raging Idiots million dollars show, and I was like,
dang you, it would be awesome. Brow would co out

(39:48):
and seeing Kryptonite, we'd play it. And then I was
nervous when you showed out because I was like, oh, well,
because we're doing like the background vocals, we're playing the guitar,
and we come out and it was we played at
the Rhyman and it was really one of the highlights
of what we've able to do. So so that's where
we met the first time. I think it is it is, man.
I had fun that night too. I was nervous too.
And then he wrote a check and then he's like,
and then I want to give you ten thousand dollars

(40:09):
and I spent I bought a new jacket. It's awesome gas. Yeah, yeah, Um,
what'd you guys mind? Because we're gonna talk and play music. Both.
Do you feel like you're warm enough? You guys vocals? Warm?
You're good? I think so pretty good. Can we hear
a little verse and chorus of Kryptonite? Like we go
to the show. It's the first song the crowd. We're
all there, we're all naked. Here's three doors down and Kryptonite.

(40:41):
Lots of walk around the world. Two. We's my trouble, man,
I love my money, Lion somewhere in the sands of time.
Now watch World foot to the Dark Side of the Man.
I feel there's nothing I can do. Boy, I watched

(41:11):
World the Suit the Dark Side of the Moon. After all,
I knew it had to be something doing. I really
don't mind what happens now. And then a song as
you be a fan at being if I go crazy

(41:32):
and then you used to call me super Man. If
I'm living well, hold in my hand by my side
of my Superman Christ Night. Come on man, that's great.

(41:55):
That's awesome. Man. How does that feel to sing again
when people watching clapping? It feels good. Yeah. I feel
brothers too, We like to clap. Sitting here trying not
to swit. How did that that song? If if I'm
familiar here, like that song kind of became a hit
locally first and kind of spread that way? It did?
It did? Man? Um it Our local radio station down
in Biloxi, Mississippi played the song for us and um

(42:18):
after just after playing locally and like like I said,
and begging them to play the song and going on
the radio station and playing on the local on the
local show that they had once a month there, and
it just really kind of happened to us like a story,
you know. And I and we were naive when it
was all happening, and we didn't realize that that's not
how it really happened, you know. So it really kind
of happened to us like it happens on TV, you know.

(42:39):
And by the grace of God, it all came together, men,
and it was it just makes a really good story,
more so than than how it actually comes together sometimes
and and uh, dude, we're just really thankful to be
I have all been a part of it. The tourist
announce you guys can get tickets at three Doors down
dot com. I mean you're everywhere. I was gonna read
some cities, but you have like one hundred and fifty

(42:59):
million cities here everywhere. You're going back on the road.
Is that exciting to go do band full band shows?
I cannot wait, man, I cannot wait a long time. Brad,
How's how did the band stay together? How's this still happening?
You know? Man? We just uh, our fans. Our fans
have been so good to us, and they have encouraged
us a long way. God's been good to us. He's

(43:19):
kept us, kept us going. And uh, you know, we've
been through a lot over the years. But you just,
I mean, you know it really is it's it's it's
the fans, man. You hear how much of music means
to people and little encouraging notes on whether it's Instagram
or Facebook or something somebody you walk by in the
store every day. Man, I don't think people realize how

(43:40):
much it means to you, and how much those little
pats on the back just keep you moving forward. Do
people come up to you now and be like, hey,
you're the guy from I do. I'm not sure if
it's Creed or Three Doors Down or lit they ever
do that. They can't even get three days graced all
the time? Three yeah, three days grace. They're they're a
little harder. Yeah, but yeah, dang, you get the Kryptonite

(44:04):
comes out, it's a massive hit. It's it's played at
rock radio, it's played at pop radio, it's everywhere. At
what point do you start to feel like, wow, like
we're being played everywhere and I can actually feel it
as as you're living your normal life. When I think
that we've seen how I think I've seen how far.
It was our first trip to Europe and our first show,

(44:27):
our first real show in Europe was a little club
in Finland, and uh and we've not even been to
Finland that many times, but it was our first show
over there. And Matt and I were walking up to
the door of this club and four or five hundred
venue and it was at three o'clock in the daytime,
and it's snowy and kind of Ford. It was like
snowy or dribbling rain or something. Anyway, it's pretty inhospitable weather.
And it was three or four little girl standing in
front of the club wanting an autograph, and we just

(44:48):
walked down there in the middle of the day to
kind of check the place out, and just like we
were in Finland and then and they didn't hardly speak English,
and I was like they were waiting on us in
Finland in the show. You know, it was just three
or four well three or four hundred, but it was
just showed you just how far that, like your music
has reached all the way over here and to a
place that you never even thought you'd come. Did they

(45:08):
ever try to like flash you guys up and put
you in fancy jackets and like, guys, we need more
of a like a like a we need to flashy
sparkling for a second for a second. They did, and
they just realized that that just did not it just
that that shirt in that voice just don't look right together.
They yeah, they well they sent it to like media

(45:29):
class to teach us to how to even kind of
do an interview. And I don't think I've paid attention
in that class any more than I did any other class.
But uh it, I mean it helped, and I mean
they tried to make us or tried to help us
not talk quite so I mean like this, you know.
And I did the same thing when I got into
doing like radio television. They were like, hey, you're from Arkansas.

(45:51):
Your accents too thick. And so I went to a
speech pathologist and tried to learn. And at this point
I've kind of re embraced what I stopped doing for
a while, but it was the same thing. And they
were like, you can't go work in a lot of
places if you sound like a hillbilly. I know, I know, man,
It's it really was like that. And um it was
I don't know what would they tell you in these classes,

(46:11):
Like they would go all right, Brad, mister door's down,
come on in, um say, because for me it was
gez because instead of going, you know, fishing, I would
be like, we're going fishing and they would go, well, you,
first of all, you have to ad gees all your
words because you're eliminating somehow. And eyes for me because
eyes how I've been now trained to say it. But
as eyes, yes, you know. It was like I got hitting,

(46:33):
get hit in the eye, you know, instead if I
got hit in the eye, and they were like, well,
if you say a people, people aren't gonna like you
because you're gonna sound like you're from Arkansas. And so
I imagine they probably do that same stuff to you
they did, and you know, but you know, it was
so cool about it was as you get out and
uh and you meet people in like the real world
out on out on tour, is everybody like just it's

(46:54):
a Southern accident. Is like disarming to people or something.
It's like they don't they don't take you. It ain't
look at you like your stupid or anything. It's like
they look at you kind of like, oh, he gotta
be you gotta be decent, you know it. So it
kind of like it is a little bit disarming to people.
So I kind of embraced it also, and I'm like, well,
I mean, people wa get you know, three Doors Down

(47:16):
they're in studio now they're going back out on tour.
You guys can get tickets at three Doors down dot com.
It says seven seventeen I mean a thumbs janyway for
March April, May, June, July seventeenth is the first show back,
and you guys will be in Huber Heights, Ohio, Corbe, Kentucky,
New Orleans, Orange Beach, Alabama, Pelham, Alabama. So a lot
of our listeners now I gotta get to see you guys,
you know on tour. Whenever you had Kryptonite and it hits,

(47:39):
do you have that feeling like, oh man, we have
to have a second song so we don't end up
like Chumbawamba, like like a one hit Wonder was that
was that a fear in the group? Absolutely? Absolutely, and
I mean it was. We were so thankful that Loser
done good, and not only had it done good, but
that it done good at rock radio because at the time,
you know, you did you want to be a rock band,
but uh, you know, it was such a big hit

(48:00):
it not just rock, but at top forty and if
you went over to the top forty two much did
the rock wouldn't play anymore. So we needed to definitely
keep our roots and rock and Loser became a hit
at rock and it was a It was number one
at rock radio for months. I was like five months
or something, it was. It was for a long time. Man,
I loved er, that's that opening of a loser. Just
it's strong, thank you that would you guys, would you

(48:22):
guys play that acoustically? Do you guys do a loser? Okay?
Three doors down? Or here? This was the number one
at rock for a long time. Here is loser and

(48:43):
breathe in right away and nothing seems to fill this place.
I need this every time, so take your lasket off
my case. Someday I hope behind love that post to
me lands and this won't fall away and the sooner

(49:07):
follow away getting to ser a pushing me on full
life settledge because I'm a loser and sooner lady, you
know I'm eating. You're getting too, sir. You're holding around

(49:27):
penalty and the fall because I'm a loser. I'm a loser.
Come on, man, that's all hell up? Okay, three doors
downs here when you come, we're gonna come back in
a second. I'm gonna ask for when I'm gone, So
just no, have you look at tars tune it's ready

(49:50):
because I'm gonna ask for that in a second. We're
gonna come back with three Doors Down. I'll say it again.
Go to three doors down dot com. The Better Life
twentieth anniversary. They have so many dates on this tour.
You got as you can as you can hear. They
still have it, Brad still has it. Sometimes artists come
in they're like, I'm gonna go back and play the record.
I'm like, well, sing from me. They're like oh, We're like, oh, no,

(50:10):
you got it. You guys got it. That's awesome. The
Friday Morning conversation with Three Doors Down, super Pump. These
guys are in the studio. We're gonna play a couple
of songs coming up in a second. Hey, Brad, you
know we did this thing where I think we celebrated
the record and you know, us three we went and
we talked for a while and talked about the history
at Three Doors Down, and then all of a sudden,

(50:31):
a copy of the Better Life on vinyl showed up
in my house. You sneak into my house and leave
it there, because I have no idea how it got
in my house. Blame it on JP okay, somehow that record.
It had a whole long note on it, and I
was like, I didn't let anyone in the door, and
then somehow in the house. But I gotta imagine it's
crazy you're still in the grocery store and you hear
one of your songs, like, that's gotta be a weird thing, right,
it really is. Thank you're shopping for fish sticks and

(50:54):
all of a sudden you here. I'm here without you, baby,
It was like two weeks ago, really, And and I
can hear it. I can hear just like a little
note of it. I'll know it's at And now I
told Jen this, I stopped, Did you go? And she
just rolls her eyes and bats off. What kind of
singing training did you have as a kid when you
started the band? Um? I didn't. I grew I was

(51:14):
the youngest of seven kids, and I grew up an
Assembly of God church, and and you know, and some
of the God they sing a lot, and I never
sing up in front of the church. Friends. Just grew up.
It was never out of place in my house to
be loud, you know, because I mean my family is
a pretty loud bunch, and none of them would argue that. UM,
And so it was never I was never bashful or anything.
So I just kind of grew up singing and UM

(51:36):
and loved eighties hair metal and all eighties bands, and
then I love like nineties country, and me and my
friends we would ride around the neighborhood and have a
little miles the Sundowner truck that my daddy gave me
when I was like thirteen. I just couldn't leave the neighborhood.
So we'd ride that truck around and and we would
just sing and sing and zing and zing. And I
guess that's where I learned how to sing. What anyone
tell you, hey, Brad, you're pretty good, like you should

(51:57):
try to sing? How did you start to get the
affirmation to know, yeah, I should try to do this? Well,
we didn't have a singer in the van. It was
just three of us, just jam and I mean we
didn't even have a there was nobody really even thought
about two singer. I was, well, I try it, and
I didn't. I mean I was not confident at all.
And and I taught our bass player. His girlfriend and

(52:20):
one of her friends would be sitting there sometimes listen
to us sayment, well, bat do you sound good? And
I think them telling me that gave me more encouragement
to finally like stop looking at the wall while I
was singing and kind of turn around and be like,
all right, I can do it, you know, and and
all my friends would I've never had any friends that
like picked on me about it. All my friends and
even like a little southern, small hometown, they were all

(52:41):
really encouraging about it. And that helped me more than anything.
How'd you have those friends? That's the opposite beat me up?
Told me I was a loser the whole time. That's
why three Doors Down it's they're here. Tell me about
the name. What how did three Doors Down the name
come about? It was it really doesn't meaning thing signific again,
it was just we were kind of searching for a

(53:02):
name and we had a gig coming up like that
nine or either. The night after this little trip, we
took down to Go Shores, and being from South Mississippi,
we just the little town you go through going down
there is just pull a little fruit stands and some
in the same buildings, and one of the fruit stands
had moved a couple of parcels down in the same building.
They had put up some tackle letters it said business moves,

(53:24):
I mean doors down and some of them had even
kind of fallen off. And at the time there was
three of us and we just kind of mailed it together.
And used it the next night at the party and
just figure, well, it's it's semented now he can't change it.
Did anyone ever have conspiracy theories about what the like
crazy theories like three Doors Downs actually the sign of
the Beast? And I've heard some doozies. Really, I would

(53:44):
imagine because it's so like I never knew what it meant.
And you're like, well, I bet it means something like
deep or something like they're up to something. I'm sure
you heard people all kinds of weird theories about the name. Huh. Absolutely,
And I mean I can't really name them, like one
off top of my head, but people have asked me.
It's like, well, it has to be like it means
like such and such where somebody somebody left three doors
down and you murdered them. Yeah, as I heard, three

(54:07):
Doors Down are here right now. They have their guitars.
They were so gracious to come in and play some songs. Okay,
so I've got two requests. Well you do when I'm gone.
This is my first request to absolutely tell me what
tell me about this song? Like when you when you
think about back in the day, when you know it's
written and you started recording it, like what comes to
mind When I'm Going is actually the only song that
we've ever written on tour. We've never We've always before

(54:30):
Incense always had the big dream getting out on tour
and man, we're just gonna really hustle this time. We're
gonna play shows at night time, we're getting get on
the bus and right during the day, and it absolutely
never happens. And we wrote when I'm Going on on
the stage one day at soundcheck, and and they had
had they had been playing the music around for a
little bit, and I guess, uh, we don't always write
lyrics and melody or music at the same time. And

(54:53):
sometimes they've written this completely different ideas that wind up
together and um, and that's kind of how those that
idea was. And we were on stage at sound chick
one day and put it together, and I remember somebody
standing there thinking that saying that, man, it's a good song.
And it also once we got it, it gave us
some confidence. It was it was really cool to have

(55:15):
that song and play it a little bit on the
Better Life tour, even though it was on the way
from the Sun record, because we knew we had one
in our pocket. That was a good song going into
that recording process, and I think it took a lot
of the anxiety out of that recording process, which allowed
us to kind of open up and write the songs
that we did for that second record. Hey all right,
here we go, here us three Doors Down with when
I'm gone. There's another world inside of me that he

(55:52):
may never see them. There is secrets in this life
that I can't Hi and somewhere in this darkness stairs
and lying that I can't find him. Well, maybe it's
too far on way. Maybe I'm just flyhind, Maybe I'm

(56:19):
just blind. Hubie when I'm here, Ramie when I'm wrong,
Phomie random scared, and love me when I'm gone. Everything
I am and everything in me won't to be the
one you wanted me to be. I'll never let you down,

(56:40):
even if I could, I give up everything gif only
for your good to Whoomie when I'm here, Romie when
I'm wrong, you can whom random scared. You won't always
be there to love me when I'm going home, Love
me when I'm going home on Three Doors Down. Good Chris,

(57:10):
whenever we talk about these songs, I mean, you wrote
a lot of these songs too, almost all of them.
I mean, here you are the quiet guy playing the guitar,
No One, I'm making mailbox moneys, you know, writing these
songs of Brad. I mean, it's gotta feel pretty good
for these things to last so long, right, it really does. Um.
I was talking to my wife the other day, but
I was like, you know, with COVID and everything's sitting
home for two years, like we're living off what we
did twenty years ago. It's just really a blessing. Really.

(57:33):
Is the checks still actually come in the mail or
now they're just going right to the email. Are you
guys still making money though? Are they like streams? Are
you still you still getting a little bit here and there, man,
especially especially off like songs like Here Without You and stuff.
And I mean that song a couple of years ago,
and you know, like that song came out in two

(57:55):
thousand and three years whatever, two thousand and four or
five or something under three three. But like in two
thousand and nine or whatever, Universal took all their music
off YouTube and put it all back, so kryptonite and
Here Without You essentially got put back on the same day,
and um, from that date, like eleven years ago for
a seventeen year old song. That song it's got like

(58:17):
six hundred and forty million views on YouTube and it
still gets like a million views a week? Is it?
Do people keep putting it in movies and stuff too?
And when I say the grocery store, like that's where
you want to be, it's kind of everywhere. At that point,
I gotta assume, like, and it's weird. Could you start
it off as a rock band? And now like I'll
flip on the high AC station. It's like another light
one from three Doors Down And you're like, day, how

(58:37):
stuff is transition, But that's where that's how you're getting
paid still, absolutely like a rom com will put three
Doors Down in I'm here with that Chube babe, and
you're like, all right, well I never expected that love
scene for the stuff. But that's gotta be cool too, right,
It really is, man, it really is, you know. And
And whereas last year, you know, we weren't able to
go out and play shows, people were at home streaming

(58:57):
some music, you know, and and and that really, you know,
is the transition of the music industry has happened. And
where there's really not record sales anymore. Artists are you know,
that's where the artists bite is off streaming music and
in different ways, and and uh, I don't I don't
know if if kids and people realize what a blessing
they were too artists last year being at home streaming

(59:17):
all that music. I want to ask before we play
one more song here, because let me say this again,
twenty year anniversary, have the better life playing the whole thing.
I'm not wrong here, you're playing it from top to bottom,
top to bottom, and I want to get into be
like that, which I believe you two wrote together, just
you two, you're in a room, you write this song.
This is you know, one of the middle tracks here.
When you're right, be like that because I am I wrong?

(59:39):
Was it on the American Pie soundtrack too? Yeah? I
remember that thing coming in the song is also over there,
and I'm like, this is it crazy? And it was
in the movie and so that song became again such
a hit. Do you ever go? Can you believe us
who just sat there and wrote that song? Man? I
think that it was that quick. I think that all

(59:59):
the time I have felt guilty before about like man,
it's like I know people try like so and I mean,
we're not overly talented, dude, But I mean, I mean
when I say that God's blessed us with some songs
he really like has because, like I said, wonder why,
I like, why didn't somebody else write some of those songs,

(01:00:20):
you know, because they just it weren't that they were
like great, They just meant they connected with people. And
I guess to just do it in the simplicity of it. Um.
But you know, and I sit on stage and saying
be like that of many a night, thinking that I'm
singing what this song I'm I'm living what this song
is about. I'm like, I'm actually get to live a
song that I that I that I wrote about. You know,

(01:00:42):
here is be like that from three doors down. He

(01:01:06):
spends his nice in California watching the stars on the
big screen, and then he lies awakened. He wonders, it's
why can't that be me? Because then his life he's

(01:01:28):
fiddling with all these good intentions. He's left a lot
of things even rather nine men channel right now, and
just before he says good night, he hes uh with
a little smile at me, and he says, if I
could be like that, I would give anything and just

(01:01:53):
to live one day, hay in those shoes. If I
could be like that, what I knew what I d
three doors down there here killing that. That's awesome, guys,
this has been so much fun for me. Bred I

(01:02:14):
saw a picture of you with Scott's stat from Creed. Yeah,
and was it here in town? It was? I didn't
know he lived here. He does, man, he lives out
in out in Franklin. I've tried to get him on
the show. He won't even respond. He won't come on
the show. Come on, is he not? Did he not
like me? Man? You know what, that's the first time
I've talked to Scott in a long time. Is that right?
That Creed was the first band to ever take us

(01:02:36):
out on tour and we per se if night, you
know a couple of times over the years, like people
like air Smith and Seasy Tod we've gone and played
several shows with, but we've never opened for a band,
and Creed was the only band that we've ever opened for.
They were the first band to take us out on tour.
And uh, you know that was back in like in
the day, and um it, me and Scott just somehow
we got to talking on Instagram and uh, I said, man,

(01:02:58):
And he said, I'll think over in Franklin. I'll like, Man,
I'll live in murphies Bro And I said, hit me up.
His son was playing ball down the road from my house.
And went down there and talk to him and and
then my wife and I went out and eat with
him and his wife the other night Man and it
was it's it's good to see Scott Man. He's doing
great and he's a he's a great dude. Man put
a good word in for me because I like the guy.

(01:03:18):
And I was like, I want to I want to
talk with them, hang out on let me hear stories
and so and I was like, I saw a picture
with Brad with them. That's my end. Because we have
a mount rushmore of guests we've tried to book on
the show. It's a weird it's a weird list, but
it's Scott Staff, Hohole, Cooking, Vanessa, Carlton, and post Malone
and we don't we can't get those four and so
you can help us actually take one of the names

(01:03:39):
off the mount Absolutely listen. They didn't come in here
for their own health. They came in here because they
have a new tour. It is the Better Life twentieth
anniversary toward Three Doors Down. They are all over there.
If you have a city, they're probably in it. I'm
looking at it. Here go to three Doors Down dot
com or you can go to the three Doors on
Instagram page. All the dates are listed there. Man, guys,
you just so great. So first of all, if I

(01:03:59):
was one and a hat, I tip it to you
because you still have it. I'm such a big fan
and for me this has been a thrill. So thank you, guys.
Thank you for and that is it. And you guys
go to the show, because are you guys coming here? Yep, Okay,
if I'm in town, I'm going to the show. And
by going to the show, I mean I'm singing all
the songs on stage with a microphone. Bring you all
right there they are three Doors Down. Everybody. Thank you, guys,

(01:04:20):
thank you. It's time for the good news. Matt Jenkins
had been agnoying the bump on the back of his
head for a few years. He says he first noticed
it when he hit his head after fainting, and it
grew from the size of a marble to a tennis ball.
Think about that. A bump. It continues to grow. It's

(01:04:41):
a tennis ball size, but eventually he listened to it.
Earlier dating who was a nurse, Melanie Miller felt the
bump and said, hey, you need to get a m r.
I and find out what that is. The next day
he did, and doctors told him he had been ignoring
a brain tumor but started to come through his skull.
The tumor was benign. He was out of the hospital
four days later with a new lease on life. That
romance his girlfriend didn't work out, but he credits her

(01:05:01):
to being his saving grace. Here's a clip of him
talking about her. She's my saving grace. She really was
the person in my life that helps me acknowledge and
realize this pore. It was too late. It's tough to
break up with her when she does. I mean, that's
the situation you kind of ower a couple. But good
for her in the fact that she was a nurse. Yeah,
and it's like, hey, sometimes I'll say this about me.

(01:05:22):
You just gotta get kicked in the butt and go
to the doctor, Like I need to go to the
dentist right now, And Kaitlin's like kicking me in the butt,
like go to the dentist. I don't like going to
the dentist. It hurts. I'll be honest with you. I
don't like it. Don't make me feel good in my
mouth and so, but I have a backtooth that I
grind my teeth so bad when I sleep that I
know this has just been grinded to it where it's

(01:05:42):
starting to like have tiny splits in it. Yeah, that's
why you need to wear a mouth guard. I don't
need a lecture here. Okay, we'll talk to your dentnis
about it. Then you go, hey, thank you for telling
me that you're right? All right. That's a good story though,
of her looking out for him. That's what it's all about.
That was tell me something good. Let's got a Brandon
who is listening in Ohio right now. Hey Brandon, what's happening? Hey,

(01:06:07):
good morning, studio. How are you all feeling. We're feeling
pretty good. How are you feeling? I'm feeling good. H
I'm feeling good. That's pretty close. It wasn't exactly, but
we have we applaud that effort. Yeah. Yeah. What I
would normally do is go, hey, Amy, how do you feel?
I feel good? Oh? I feel so good. But that's

(01:06:27):
pretty good, Brandon. All right, what do you want to say? Brandon?
Hey man, I just wanted to tell you, Bobby that
you know, I'm proud of you and you're an inspiration
to people, and that you shouldn't worry about so much
the negativity that people may give to you on the
Internet or wherever. You know. I've always outcomes from sort

(01:06:50):
of the same situation I grew. I grew up rough,
and it seems like every time I got punched in
the mouth, I was able to get right back up.
So I think it's just a I think it's just
an inspiration. I appreciate it, and I thank you so
much for what you do. Well, it's very kind of

(01:07:12):
your Brandon. Where are you live in Ohio and Canton
for football Hall of Fame's right? Look at that? Yeah,
I know where he is. I mean convincing him have
a little dinner. What do you think you're have for
dinner tonight, Brandon? I'm not sure. I'm hoping steak and taters. Wait,
how are you gonna is? Somebody's gonna cook that for you?
You go home and cook that. Hey, my wife takes

(01:07:34):
good care of me. Dang, get some steak and taters.
That's what I said. Thanks usually work out pretty good
for me. All right, Well, I appreciate that called Brandon. One,
that's very kind of you. And two you're my kind
of guy. I appreciate that. Have a great weekend, Bud, Hey,
you too. All right, there he is Brandon. Hey. More kids,

(01:07:56):
and this makes sense, and we've mentioned this briefly before,
but more kids are being named Karen than ever before.
You gotta think if you name your kid, your baby Karen.
At this point, it's just because your grandmother, a great grandmother,
was named Karen. You're passing it down. I don't see
many people choosing Karen, Like, Okay, we gotta think of
a name that really fits well. Karen right now, I

(01:08:16):
don't That's not a name people are choosing because of
the negative connotation with the word. Right. It would also
stink to be named Karen as a thirty year old
right now? Yeah. It would also stink to be named
Alexis as a fifteen year old. Oh yeah, because sometimes
you just can't help when your name something and then
something comes in behind you and takes over. I know

(01:08:37):
a couple people that have kids named Alexis, and they
were named before Alexa. Sorry, I guess it'd be Alexa.
Even Alexis, though, is going to close set off everything
in the house. Yeah. Karen from Karen fear Child and
Little mcdama was on my podcast talking about it. I
don't even think of her dad. No. She said that
there was an instance with her son where she was
almost he was like embarrassed that his mom's name was Karen.

(01:08:59):
She was talking about that stinks, But I don't. I
guess when I say her name, I don't think of
that as the same Karen because he's not a Karen.
I know. When she said it, I was like, whoa
I've been I've been sitting here with you for thirty
minutes and never cross my mind like you have to
deal with that. But she's someone that, yeah, has had
to deal with. The Karen backlash was in Saint Louis
yesterday for The Day Left the radio show. Flew Up

(01:09:22):
and I have for the last three years worked with
Peuring the Dog Chow on their service Dog Slute campaign.
And what I do is I go up and I
work with vets and we're shooting a documentary right now
and I'm helping produce a little bit too. That's all
about showing how these service dogs are basically medicine for
vets who come back with PTSD and how in you know,
they'll pass different laws to have different medicine covered, but

(01:09:44):
they don't pass for service dogs and these vets needs
are The problem is there twenty thousand dollars each, right,
because these dogs, they go through training, they have to
go there's a lot. It's right, It's a substantial amount
of money. And so if it's not for people like
either dog chow er us on the show or people
you know donating, these our vets don't get this dog

(01:10:07):
that helps them with their life. And so that's what
I was doing yesterday and met some listeners. We're just
walking down the road. We had some time to kill
before we went to the airport. Let's be like, uh,
what are you doing here? Yeah? That was it. They
would be like uh. They would like point for a
second and be confused, like are you Mostly it's Kaitlin.
Now that wraps back around to me because they're like,

(01:10:27):
oh you that that you are him because she's with you.
That confirmation. Yes, we were on the flight yesterday flying
up there and I'm sitting on the inside on the
window seat and Kaitlyn's in the middle seat, and then
were they were like, you know, twenty people in the
entire flight to the southwest flight up to Saint Louis
and the flight of ten that comes and sits down
next to Kaitlin while I'm asleep and goes, hey, how's

(01:10:49):
it going, And she's half a sleep. She's like huh
did she thinks something wrong? At first, She's like, what's up?
She goes, oh, we just recognize you guys, And he
wanted to come and say hi, And Kaitlyn's still knew
to this war old and She's like, Hi, what's happening?
Like what do I choose? Some do I do? And
I was like, just do what you normally do it,
just be nice. But I heard it happening, so I
just still think to sleep classically, Yeah, I'm just having

(01:11:14):
a nat right then you missed the whole thing. But
we were in Saint Louis and start harder. I can't
wait to share the kind of the story about the
service dogs. It's just my thirty year I'm telling you,
you know, one of the things too people And I'm
not even focused on it right now. But if I,
you know, was in any sort of office, I would
make this a priority to make sure that our vets
get the resources they need because they don't get them

(01:11:35):
right now. They go over and they serve us and
they do what they do, so we can do what
we do. And a lot of times they come back
and they get deadly squat or at least very little.
And so I was able to work with a guy
named Andy who was thirty one, who had who had
worked in Haiti after the earthquake, went over with the military,
and another guy who was in the Middle East and
as a marine. And it's just great. It's just great.
And we like to do as much as we can

(01:11:56):
on this show for it for a military too. So
what we're gonna do next week is all we have
a hero every single year that's been through something traumatic
and we basically build him a house. And so do
you have the information of their about him? Yeah, Army
Sergeant Majetic he was serving over in the Middle East
when he hit an ied and then gunfire took out

(01:12:19):
I mean he lost arm, fingers, part of his intestines,
his nose, his ears, severe burns, all kinds of things
and he served for twenty years. Wow, and then that happened.
So we're trying to, yeah, build a home for him
and his wife through building homes for heroes. But we're
able to do it through our patriotic Pimp and Joy line,

(01:12:41):
which every year we do this for a veteran and
we put out something new that's red, white and blue
that you can wear proudly come fourth of July, and
that's why we do it and this time of year,
and we don't keep a single red penny, no nothing
from Pimp and Joy. So next Wednesday, do you have
a time yet? Yes, it's seven you tell me, Yeah,
I'll tell you. I mean I had a talk at
what time do you want to put him on? I

(01:13:02):
was like, can you tell me? It'll be next Wednesday,
So be ready. It's eight thirty seven thirty Central. Okay,
eight thirty seven thirty Central. We will put this line up,
Bobby Bonest. It is limited, but all the money that
we make from this goes to building our hero a home,
one that's specially built for him. Yeah, because he's obviously
his whole life changed after this incident. I think he's

(01:13:23):
had eighty surgeries to date to like help just get
him put back together as best as possible. And he's
very deserving, amazing veteran that did a lot for our country.
Had I think joined the army in nineteen eighty eight,
so served for a really long time and something I
wasn't even born in we can do. But just yeah,

(01:13:44):
be ready on Wednesday because it is a cool thing.
And then when you come fourth July, when you put
on your patriotic Pimp and Joy, you can feel proud
and know that the item you're wearing literally helped build
a veteran a house. It's it's great stuff too. If
you if you've been with the show a long time,
you know that. But boom next Wednesday at eight thirty
seven thirty Central, we will put this line up. Yeah,

(01:14:04):
and then just for you said, for people that have
been here a long time, they may know. But if
you happen to be a new listener, joining us, Pimp
and Joy is just about spreading joy to others mainly
and then also choosing joy for yourself. It started with
my mom's cancer battle, but we have so many listeners
that have gone through adversity or cancer and they've worn
their Pimp and Joy to treatments and it just gives
them a little extra strength because they know that they're

(01:14:27):
not alone. Yeah, all our Canadian listeners, you rock too. Yeah,
you can learn. That's right. That's not red and blue.
We wrap more arms around you too. Yeah, let's go
baby belly to belly huh. And white Yeah yeah, there's
a race of blue. Yeah, it's fine. And we had
a like a several years ago, we did a red,

(01:14:47):
white and blue Pimp and Joy hat that's custom made
and we sold out and we're bringing that back this
year or so. That's exciting, that's right. Yeah, yeah, all right,
So next Wednesday that'll happen. And just so you guys know,
we're gonna do a segment next week. We got a couple. One.
We're gonna eat the cicadas, a chocolate covered cicada. Yeah,
Monday or Tuesday. We feel like they'll be in before Monday,

(01:15:09):
but if not, it'll be Tuesday. So I'm teasing for Monday, Like,
listen up seven thirty the govern Cicadas. So we're trying
to get us from Monday. Another thing we're gonna do
is the Hobby Challenge, where each of us take a
hobby that we like, something that's fun for us. We
put it in a hat, we draw it another hobby.

(01:15:30):
We got to give it three three shots. That's right,
because Amy's doing birds all day, air day, and so
here we are like okay, but she's like, if you
just try it, you'll like it. Whoever draws me, I
will give you a feeder and some bird seed and
then and a bird caller. Are you going to go?
So that we'll do the hobby challenge next week too?
So pretty good, feel like we get some good shows

(01:15:52):
next week. The cicadas, though, I did read a story
that said, if you're allergic to seafood or shellfish, don't
eat a cicada. What it's a shelffish because it's the same,
it has whatever the property. Morgan, did you back out
of this? Yeah? I did. Well. It just I've never
had any kind of meat, and insect is still like meat.
So the FDA issue to warning for people with a

(01:16:13):
shellfish allergy don't eat cicadas. Turns out, the agency warns
that noisy insects share a family relation to shrimp and lobsters.
That's a noisy insects. So but where you're out anyway, Yes,
moral reasons, moral reasons. I've also never had seafoods, so
I think I have a natural allergy to that too.
So first time anyone's pulled out of a bit on
the show for moral reasons? Oh wow, is right? Right?

(01:16:34):
I think? Right? No, I don't think anyone else ever
pulled out for moral reasons. M let's talk to Alexa
and Indiana. We're just talking about people named Alexa and
how they were named this before Alexa came out, and
their life has to be like what, Alexa, how are
you good? How are you doing pretty good? What's it
like being named Alexa? Okay, so my name's actually Alexis.

(01:16:56):
Oh so it's similar. Cool. So that was the whole
point of me calling in is when I tell people
my name, they think it's Alexa, so then they'll call
me Alexa. Um. And whenever I'm around one of the
Alexa systems, every time someone says my name, that'll like
pick up on it. Even Mabby, our phone screener, thought

(01:17:20):
her name was Alexa and put it in as Alexa. Yeah, okay,
well there you have it. Alexis. Thank you for your call.
I appreciate that. Yeah, all right, there you go. Hey,
let me ask you guys a question. How hard are
you gonna go at Mike Dy's wedding? Hard? Hard? I'm
serious hard hard. Yeah. Man, I've been in the stage
of my life because a celebration needs to be celebrated, right,

(01:17:43):
Like we don't celebrate the things enough, Like birthdays are like, oh,
that's my fortieth birthday, blah blah blah. This is a
big deal for Mike D. So if he's gonna go hard,
his family's gonna go hard, and we're gonna be there.
I'm going hard with him. Mike d gets married tomorrow night,
so we're all flying to Texas, and I just wonder, how,
like Morgan, how hard are you gonna go at Mike
Key's wedding. Well, I've already agreed to take tequila shots

(01:18:03):
with his family, so I'm I'm going down. Is this
gonna be sloppy or is this it's not gonna be reckless? Right? No,
I'm never sloppy when I'm drunk. You only you. Most
of the time, people don't know when I'm really drunk.
I'm the only one that knows it really good at
holding it in a Yeah, I'm gonna repeat myself from
four years ago and I went to lunchboxes wedding in Austin.

(01:18:24):
I mean, everything just seems right. Why not go hard
again in Austin, Texas? Okay? And to recap that, Ray
missed the ceremony and showed up to the reception totally.
I think his fiance or a wife now is feeding him. Yeah,
a baby girlfriend at the time was feeding you food. Hey,
my wife will be ready to do it again this year.

(01:18:44):
Let's go. Are you guys all staying near the venue? Yes?
I am No, I'm staying in Austin. You're gonna drive well? Yeah? Um,
Hillary is our d D for the wedding and then
we plan to come back and potentially go out in
Austin after the wedding. Maybe. Are you gonna go hard bones?
I don't know. No, No, I don't. I don't go hard.

(01:19:07):
I don't. I don't drink. I might dance. Oh that's
going hard me. That would be going hard. Cake. No
lots of cake, I don't think so. I'm on. I'm
on operation no cake. You know what I had last night?
It was pretty good. I had some chickpeas and honey
roasted chickpeas. Chocolate covered no honey roasted cheese. It's operation

(01:19:29):
feel good now, I just liven't weight look good? Feel good? Right, amy? Yeah,
if you look good, you feel good. If you feel good,
you play good. If you play good, day, pay goody good,
something like that. I'm not trying to get paid. Sorry.
This story comes with us from Martinez, California. Some teenagers

(01:19:50):
caused the two alarm fire when they were playing with
flaming tennis balls. They found some old tennis balls. They
were lighting them on fire and hitting them back and forth.
Sounds kind of fun. I'm not above that me either,
And I laugh because, yeah, it's dumb, but at one
time I would have been this dumb. And it does
sound like it have been fun to watch what happened
if somebody overhid it. Yeah, they overhid it, went into

(01:20:11):
some vegetation. Oh no, caught one house on fire, a
few cars, and nine thousand people without power. Yeah, don't
do it. Kids. Well, here's the thing. I still am
not better than that. I think if I were in
a tennis court like in it contained within and it
was nighttime, Oh that would be cool at night and

(01:20:32):
it was all dark around, no, like like lightup golf.
I've seen people do that on the internet. Blow golf, yeah,
or laser tag all those fun things. Yeah, how old
were the kids? They were teenagers. They were arrested, no
charges and released to their parents. They should have they
should do with a lot of community service. They should
have to. I mean it's tough. That sounds fun. All right,

(01:20:54):
I'm lunchboxed at your bone head store of the day.
All right, let's go flashback Friday. A year is two
thousand and four. Here we go Flashback Friday. The biggest
country song is Tim McGraw live Like You Were Dying
Knock two thousand and four. Okay, yeah, yeah, I know

(01:21:18):
I've said that in like twenty seconds. The biggest pop
song is Usher Confessions Part two and the biggest thing
of pomp culture. The first episode of Jeopardy featuring Ken
Jennings aired again. This is two thousand and four. He
won thirty seven thousand dollars that night. Then he won
seventy three more shows in a row and more than

(01:21:40):
two point five million dollars. I feel like the person
that beat Ken Jennings isn't popular enough. I don't know
who that is. We should know exactly, No one knows
who is. No one knows who that is, Like who
was finally able to take down Ken Jennings. That's probably
a trivia question somewhere. All right, that's what's up. We're
headed to Mike D's wedding. He will be married tomorrow.
Here's the thing. It's gonna rain. It is You saw

(01:22:02):
the forecast, it's been gonna rain. Well they were, Yeah,
they have a contingency plan. Yeah, but you never want
to see that, like like the ironic song. Yeah, it's
like rain. But is that irony or just bad bad luck?
I don't know if that's irony. That's a good point.
But maybe it's good luck. You know, people say that
about their wedding, but they only say that because it

(01:22:23):
sucks and they need something to say. They're trying to
be positive about it. It does change it and say
it's good luck. It is going to what do you mean, Well,
I don't know. We can just change it and say
rain on your wedding day is good luck. Well that's
what they do. Say, Oh I thought it was bad luck. No,
they always say it's good luck. And I say, people
just say that because it sucks. There's nothing else to say.
Oh I missed that. I thought Eddie said bad luck. Yeah, okay, anyway,
we're gonna go. We're scrambled. We will see you Monday,

(01:22:44):
Bobby Bones Show. You guys have a good weekend show.
Advertise With Us

Hosts And Creators

Bobby Bones

Bobby Bones

Amy Brown

Amy Brown

Lunchbox

Lunchbox

Eddie Garcia

Eddie Garcia

Morgan Huelsman

Morgan Huelsman

Raymundo

Raymundo

Mike D

Mike D

Abby Anderson

Abby Anderson

Scuba Steve

Scuba Steve

Popular Podcasts

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

Ding dong! Join your culture consultants, Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang, on an unforgettable journey into the beating heart of CULTURE. Alongside sizzling special guests, they GET INTO the hottest pop-culture moments of the day and the formative cultural experiences that turned them into Culturistas. Produced by the Big Money Players Network and iHeartRadio.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.