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November 13, 2021 118 mins

Morgan and Eddie spent time diving into all the things happening in their lives right now. They shared some recent movie recommendations + Eddie shares what his life has been likely lately post adopting their two kids. Then, Eddie sings the National Anthem!! The two of them have a fun time walking up and down memory lane about life, love and the pursuit of happiness. (Once you listen to the podcast, you’ll get this joke).

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
It's the Best Bits of the Week with Morgan number two.
What is up y'all? Happy weekend? We are getting so
close to Thanksgiving. I am Morgan. If this is your
first time listening, this is the best Bits of the week.
And what I do is break down all of the
segments that happened on the Bobby Bones Show this week,
but I rank them as the top seven. So of

(00:23):
course there's a lot more to happen, but these are
the best ones. But my personal favorite part of this
is that I get to bring somebody on and we
just talk about life, love, the pursuit of happiness. I
don't know, We're talking about everything. And this weekend I'm
bringing on Eddie with me and we always have some
good deep conversations when I bring Eddie on. Isn't that right?
Are we going to talk about love and the pursuit

(00:44):
of happiness and all that stuff? Because I'm excited now.
That quote was just in my head Eddie, like I
was like trying to reach for something and that's what
I found. So yes, maybe we might talk about love. Okay,
if you will like to talk about love, we can.
I mean, how far do you want to talk about love?
I don't know, Morgan, We're just gonna get into it.
We'll find out coming in at number seven. Lunchbox was

(01:08):
on paternity leave for like several weeks, and when he
finally came back, we got to quiz him on Harry Potter.
So honestly, I mean, great segment on its own, but
really what I want to do here is talk with
Eddie about the things he's been watching, maybe some recommendations,
maybe things we shouldn't be watching. I don't know, Eddie,
got anything that you've been watching. I can proudly say

(01:28):
that I am like two episodes away of finishing ted Lasso.
So that's huge for me because I've I mean, we've
talked about on the show how like I like to
binge and all that, but I really can't because and
it's not that like I don't have the time. I
don't want to come on like Lunchbox and be like
I don't have time, like I nap all the time,
but I do have time to watch TV. I just

(01:50):
can't watch the shows that I want to watch because
I have kids everywhere. Like ted Lasso. I literally tried
to watch it with my thirteen year old. I said,
all right, you know what, it's a feel good show.
Let's give it a shot. And within five minutes of
the movie of the show, I mean, there's a curse word,
like like five minutes in and I'm like, oh my gosh,
and it's I don't even know if I can do this,
So we ended up not watching a point. He hasn't

(02:10):
heard cuss words, I mean come out of you or
at school or something. He's never heard him come out
of me. Maybe, like maybe if like I forget he's
home and I say something, But no, I try really
hard not to curse around him. Now. Has he heard
it around his friends? Probably? Yeah, Like sure, I'm sure
they say it amongst each other. But I don't want
Dad to be saying it, or I don't want to

(02:31):
be watching a movie with him and be like, hey,
this is cool, like the way they're talking, totally cool.
You can do this now. If he does it with
around his friends, I'm not worried about that, Okay. Now, Also,
you call it curse words, I call it cuss words.
I mean I could think I say cuss two no,
like cussing. I think you're right, though, I think it
is curse words and cursing. But I've always called it

(02:54):
cussing and cuss words because of my regional dialect. Just
another thing that I say wrong Italian. Yes, gosh, I
hate this podcast sometimes because I just get totally roasted
as how how bad I speak? No, I think that's
that's so you, and I think people love that about you. Okay,
So no cuss words around the kid. See, you couldn't

(03:14):
watch ted Lasso, but you're close to finishing I'm close
to finishing ted Lasso. Now. I came on the show
Wow back and I talked about a show called, um
is it how? What's it called Ordinary Joe? Yes, the
three Jo's three three different Joe storylines. Yes, we did
we talk about that that last podcast that we did. No, well,
we did. We did talk about it on the show.

(03:36):
At this point, I'm not sure if we talked about it.
I don't even know where certain things. But yeah, if
you still like it, recommend it. Okay, Okay, So well
here's the thing. So I saw the first episode and
I came on the show and said, like, oh, I
love it. It's so good. The concept is great because
it really is cool. There's a guy named Joe and
he's looking at three paths of his life, like into

(03:56):
his future. He's graduating college, and he says, do I
go this way? Do I go that way? Or do
I go that way? And like basically the storyline follows
all three ways and with a way they kind of
turn out and then you as a viewer, you're kind
of like you like, you know, you get to pick
which one you like better or whatever, but you experience
the three paths that he ended up taking his life. Now,

(04:18):
I am about six episodes in. It's one of those
it's an NBC show, so it comes out weekly. Of course,
no benging, no beinging, So I waited, I didn't watch it.
I kind of just let all the episodes happen. And
now I think there are maybe seven or eight out
and I started binging six of them. And I still
love it, like I really do love it. Now my

(04:39):
wife has lost interest completely. She says it's cheesy, she
says it's stupid. But I do catch her like folding
clothes while I'm watching it and listening and watching, and
she'll ask me a questions like what did he just say?
Now exactly because you love this well, I will say
that I think everybody you know whether they admit it
or not, has to have a feel good one or

(05:00):
two feel good shows in their life. Yeah, Like it's
what do you call that? Like a guilty pleasure? Yes? Yeah?
I mean but feel good is like a category of
movies and TV. Right, But like a lot of people
watch thriller in crime and these very like intense things.
So I think everybody has to, as much as they
don't want to admit it, have to find those kind

(05:21):
of cheesy, feel good things to kind of counterbalance watching
dark stuff. I think that's my favorite. Like I gravitate
towards feel good. Yeah. I love feel good movies. I
love feel good shows. Now do I get stuck watching
like true crime documentary and love it? Yes, Like I
do fall into that sometimes. But if I get to

(05:43):
choose I love feel good stories, I'm with you. I
think I just think there's so much darkness in life
right now that my easy way to escape is listening
and watching feel good things. Right, So what are you watching? Well?
I did watch the Love Hard movie. When Amy suggested,
I was like, yes, I couldn't reerated enough. It was
really cute on Netflix. Is that a like a Christmas movie?

(06:04):
Christmas Catfish movie. Yeah, it's cute. It's definitely a cute
little dady movie with Nina. I think her name is
like Nina debrav or something. I'm probably pronounced. This is
where the elder millennial gap just comes in. Well, you're
not helping either because I probably mispronounce her name. So
that was good. I watched Logan, which was one of
the Wolverine movies that's older. Somebody told me I needed
to watch. It was really good, very violent, though very

(06:27):
violent not my style, but decent in the Marvel spectrum
of things. So that's been out for a while but
on Disney Plus it's been out for a while, but
it's on Hulu. My boyfriend convinced me to watch it
because he knows how much I love all the superhero stuff,
and Wolverine fits into that Marvel category because it's technically
in the universe, but they've never like cross pads and

(06:49):
the actual superhero sign. So I'm he's a comic book nerd,
so I'm getting all kinds of backstory and things that
I have to watch. Your boyfriend is, oh, yes, he's yeah,
but you're also like a lover of Marvel too, Like
without even knowing him, you were all into Marvel, Oh, yes,
I like recently. I mean I was a huge fan
of Batman forever. Who wasn't a fan of like the

(07:12):
Dark Night series? Yeah, so good. I don't feel like
you had to be a superhero fan to love those movies, right,
Those are like regular ordinary movies that anyone watch, yes,
and not arm pretty dark no. No. But I mean
like common movies like, hey, what are they showing at
the movie theater? Oh? The Dark Night? Oh cool, let's
watch it. Yes. So so I liked those, but newly

(07:32):
accommodated towards Marvel DC and watching any and everything superhero.
So then, of course I started dating my boyfriend, and
he's a huge common book nerd, and I like love
that we both have this nerdiness in like this realm
of superheroes, except he is so much more specific about it.
He knows all the details. He's very intelligent, and like,
if I even misspeak on one of them, he's like,

(07:53):
that's not what it is, and I'm like, okay, I tried.
So though I'm still in my whole super beer super
hero hero see right now he's listening and being like,
oh my gosh, Morgan. She can't even say superhero. I know,
it's really tough to say where it's like, get very excited.
But one I wanted to talk to you about because
it's the newest Tom Hanks movie and you're a huge

(08:14):
Tom Hanks fan. Yes, it's Finch on Apple TV Plus.
Now I don't I've only seen the previews or whatever
the commercials on TV. I've saw it on Apple Plus.
I haven't gotten to it yet, but I do want
to watch it. It seems like he is like a
scientist or something or maybe an inventor, and he invents
like and I'm telling you, I don't. I don't know

(08:35):
anything about this movie other than what I've seen on TV.
And he I think he invents like a robot or something. Okay,
So I've watched half of it so far, all right,
and I'm actually and this is kind of weird because
I've only watched half of it. It moves slow, which
is why I'm only too half. If a movie moves slow,
I tend to like stop and then I'll find a
way to watch it later. Great, that's not a good sign.

(08:55):
Not a good sign. But it has made me laugh
a few times loud and it's really cute. The robot
that you see in the trailer is so cute. Question
is is he alone like almost like castaway? I don't
entirely know yet, And I don't even want to give
that away because I don't know. I haven't because they
don't really explain what's happening until like it starts to

(09:17):
happen in the middle. That's why it's so slow, and
you're kind of like for forty five minutes, you're kind
of lost interesting, but you're intrigued because it's Tom Hanks. Yeah,
but see either here's my problem, Morgan, Like, so again,
I'm a huge Tom Hanks fan, Like I love all
his movies. I've seen ninety percent of his movies, like
ninety percent out of this whole catalog, Like there are

(09:38):
a lot of movies. But I feel like, and he's
such a great actor and he's so good that sometimes
you forget it's Tom Hanks, right, Yes, but I feel
like if he keeps making movies, we're no longer gonna
believe the character anymore. Because he's been these like huge
characters with big trademarks like Forrest Gump, he's been Captain Phillips,

(09:59):
he's been like Captain Sully, like you know, and I
think the more he makes movies, the more we're gonna
be like, this is just Tom Hanks. Now, it's just
Tom Hanks the actor in all these different scenarios, do
you know what I mean? Well, yeah, but isn't that
the goal of an actor and actress to get to
a point in their career that you will literally watch
the movie because they're in it? Yes, right, Like that's

(10:21):
definitely the Tom Hanks effect. Yes, And that's your peak.
Like if somebody's a huge I don't know, Ryan Reynolds fan,
they're gonna watch Deadpool even though they don't like Deadpool
or they don't like superheroes because they love Ryan Reynolds.
And I think that's a peak of it. Until like
Tom Hanks has been at his peak for years. Yeah,
I mean because this movie and I love like cute

(10:41):
little robot things, and just like the trailer intrigued me.
I was like, oh when Tom Hanks, and it has
to be decent. And I do think for the most
part that does happen. There's only a few times when
a really big like movie star flops as far as
a movie goes. Yeah, yeah, I think like if you

(11:01):
if I name one, it would probably be like Joaquin
Phoenix is one for me. Yeah, where when I watch
him act, he makes me feel nervous because it's Joaquin Phoenix,
and I forget all about the character he's playing. I'm
always just like, oh, he makes me feel so anxious
just watching him. Why why is that with him? I
don't know. I don't know a role he's played before. No,

(11:23):
just just him, Like have you ever seen him do interviews?
He's just an awkward person. He's very awkward and fidgety
and all that, and I feel like in every movie
he plays, he is that person. So I forget he's
really playing the Joker. So did you watch The Joker
and you you enjoyed it or did you not like it?
I did enjoy the movie, but right now, if I
think about The Joker, I feel like it's Joaquin Phoenix,

(11:43):
not the real Joker. Fair And when Harvey Harvey didn't,
when um what's his name played in the Dark Knight,
you didn't. You were just thinking about the Joker. Oh
are you talking Heath Ledger? Yes, no, yeah, you weren't
looking at him like this is Heath Ledger you're like,
this is a joker. No, because he's Ledgers, this like Australia.
Well he was an Australian surfer dude, like you know,

(12:05):
uh freaking underwear model. But you forget all about that
when he's the joker, You're like, wow, this is not
Heath Ledger. That's what to me is like a good actor.
That's what a good actor does. Forgets. He makes you
forget that he's really that character or she's that character. Okay,
so are you are you stating in a controversial opinion
right now that Waking Phoenix does not forget that he

(12:26):
is walking Phoenix. Maybe it could be my problem, it
could be my issue. Like I'm the same way, feel
the same way about Amy Adams. Right, you just took
it out of my mouth. I was gonna say Amy
Adams is the same I watched that movie and I'm like,
I don't care who you're playing to me, I'm watching
Amy Adams play a character. Yeah I had I remember
you making that statement about her, and I like her.
I mean, I've never liked, not enjoyed her stuff. But

(12:48):
it's funny to me that you have this reoccurring thing
with movie stars. Yeah, because it's still about two of them.
But now I fear that Tom Hanks is going to
be that. I'm like, stop making movies because I want
to remember you as the amazing actor that you are, Eddie.
I feel like if you start problem, I feel like
this is a problem. Maybe you could be right, you
could be right. We need to lurk inward and find

(13:09):
out why you are um putting this on these actress
and actresses that you don't like. I don't know. But
then you see, like Julia Roberts, like, Okay, she has
completely stopped making movies for the most part. Yeah, and
I like that. I'm just like, I think she'll she'll
be back eventually, maybe hopefully. But to me, it's like

(13:30):
Julia Roberts was awesome and she's so good, and to
me she's still a great actor. But I like that
she's taken a break because she's not still doing it
and confusing me as a as an actor. I don't know,
I mean, you know what, I'm even confusing myself. So
maybe you want them to retire when they hit their
peak or come back as an older person. That way
we forget, like Forrest Gump was in his thirties or forties,

(13:52):
would Eddie. He needs to stop acting. He needs to
stop it right now. Like that's a good one. I mean,
you know, he's still trying to play a bad guy
like in these these recent movies he's a bad dude
with a gun, like a drug trafficker. And I'm like,
you're not fooling anyone, Clint, Like you're not. You're old.
You can't beat when he punches a guy in a movie.

(14:13):
You're like, this is not believable. You need to stop
doing this now. I do want to know too, because
just because you're dining at quiz anymore. On Harry Potter,
did you end up continuing the series? Are you watching
it with your kids? Not yet. I found out afterwards
that my kids are actually the six year old and
the eight year old are actually scared of the movies.
Like I thought we were all enjoying them because we

(14:36):
watched Chamber of Secrets together because we would make it
as part of our Friday night movies or whatever. Yeah,
and then I found out later that they couldn't sleep
that night and that they were scared, And I didn't
realize that it isn't Harry Potter's not scary to me obviously,
but to them it kind of scared him a little bit.
Oh no, I yea, but I could totally understand. It's

(14:57):
a little creepy. If you're you know, a six year
older an eight year old, you're just like, oh, what
is this, like these magic spells and these goblins or whatever. Well,
and I mean it is a version of violence. It's
not not violent. It's just magical violent. Yeah. So my
thirteen year old and I will we will probably keep
watching continue to watch Harry Potter, but we stopped for

(15:19):
a little bit because I wanted to be a whole
family thing. I figured, like every Friday for the next
two months, we can do Harry Potter. But they're like, no,
we don't want to do that. I feel like, if
you give them both two more years, I think they
might be there. Yeah, it just may be a little
too young still. And your kids are so sweet that
if I see violence and they're like, we don't want violence.

(15:41):
I mean, they were good sports. They watched the whole thing.
I'm like, that was good dad. And then the next
day they're like they go to bed and they're like,
we can't sleep. Oh my gosh. Okay, well you guys,
can can hear right now? Lunchbox, he did his Harry
Potter trivia and you find out if he got him
all right or if he has to watch another movie
number seven. So a couple of months ago, we all

(16:02):
had to watch the Harry Potter movie. The first one.
I watched it. I passed the test. Eddie watched it.
He did not pass the test correct. Lunchbox did not
pass the test correct. So they had to watch the
second one. So Lunchbox is not taking this test yet,
so we're gonna take it now, ready, Lunchbox, Yeah, let's
go into the chamber of secrets. Did you watch it? Yeah?
It's second year of school. Man, you did watch it?

(16:24):
Oh my gosh. Let me tell you. My wife likes that,
like I think she watched it before and she was like, yeah,
this will be boding. I can watch it. I love this.
We can watch it together. Let me tell you that's terrible.
So Eddie did watch it and passed the second Yeah,
so here you go. This is your quiz. Okay, what
color is the flying car? Uh? It's blue? That's correct. Wow,

(16:47):
we all expected it to be wrong. Scooby had the
wrong button. Nice, you did watch it. Yeah, I did.
I tell you I watched it with the wife likes
this nerdy stuff. Did you watch the whole thing starts
to finish? I mean I was probably in an out,
but I mean did you watch it in one setting? No? No, no, no, no,
didn't have time to. I mean it's like two hours.

(17:08):
I mean it's a long movie. They're very so are there,
like DoD they go through all through high school and everything?
Like do they do twenty years of school? Morgan? How
many are there? Eight are the prequels, But how many
Harry Potters are there? Yeah? There's eight? Yeah? Okay. Second question?
What kind of creature is Dobby? Dobby is the guy

(17:33):
that little it lives in a house. Um, elf, he's
an elf. He's an elf, that's what you call him.
He's a he's a house elf. You have to get
just one more ride it out of the next three. Okay,
how you got this? Why hasn't Harry heard from his
friends all summer? Why hadn't they heard from them? Why

(17:58):
hasn't Harry heard from his friends all summer? Oh? This
is Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets. That's that
last guy. What's his name? The guy on the question above, Dobby,
Dobby stole the mail, right or something like that. He
kept the mail, he did something with his mail. He
didn't get the mail. He didn't get because his friends

(18:18):
would send him letters, but they he never got him.
And I think it was Dobby that like threw him
away or kept him or whatever he did with him.
The answer is Dobby intercepted his mail. Let's go the
other ones. What is the Slytherin house symbol? Oh, that's
the one with the the snake on it. Correct? Who

(18:43):
says this quote? Fear of a name only increases fear
of the thing itself, fear of name itself. Fear of
a name only increases fear of the thing itself. That
supposed to be a trick has to be Dobby again, Hermione,
But you got out of five? I mean, Harry Potter,

(19:05):
I didn't like it. You're not going to keep going? No, Okay,
that is such an investment and it's just not for me.
What would you give the first two movies? Would you
rate them all together? C minus it's not my not
my type of thing? Morgan? Does that offend you? Yeah?
I mean, Harry, I just rewatched them and I just
remembered how good they were. I watched watched them so

(19:26):
fast too, Yeah, every single one. Well, you are done
with a segment. You passed the test. We didn't think
you would pass the test, honestly, but congratulations at Yes,
hate references it now and all this Joe, he loves it.
It's the best bits of the week with Morgan number two.
It was a whole debate on the show this week
because Amy thought she saw a sign, and everybody debated

(19:49):
whether signs even exists or if they believe in them. Now,
first of all, Eddie, I want to know if you
believe in signs. Absolutely yes. I mean I've even the
smallest of sure. I mean, I think it's our job
as humans to look for these signs like theyre. I
think that they're everywhere. We just don't see them because

(20:10):
we just, you know, we don't think that there's signs.
We think that we make all the decisions on our own.
But I think they're out there absolutely well. I love that.
I mean, I feel like the universe has a way
of telling us when we need to know things, and
it's typically right at the best moment. Signs. I think
Bobby kind of talked about this on the show a
little bit about signs and your gut feeling kind of correlate.

(20:30):
I do feel like that's true. Yeah, somewhere along the line.
I don't know how it all works, but I agree
with that. So we won't get into this too much
because we talked about pretty heavily as made on the show.
But I do want some like life updates with you.
It's not life signs, but I want to know what's
been happening in your life. Oh my gosh, well with us,
I mean, things are just like I feel like. So

(20:52):
we we've adopted our two kids. We were fostering for
three years, right, and we've finally adopted them. They are
part of our family, and you know that there's a
sense of security coming from especially our six year old.
He is completely different. I know before the adoption, when
we were still fostering him, he had this feeling of like, ah,
where am I going to do my life? Like? Am

(21:13):
I going to stay here? Am I going to go
somewhere else? And he never talked about it. He's pretty private,
but he just had this kind of like feeling around him.
That's that just said, I don't really know what my
future holds really and after the adoption, it was just
body the body language was like, oh, I am comfortable here,
this is my home. You are my family. And so

(21:34):
there is a huge, huge difference of aura in our
house because it's a final thing. You know, these are
our adopted kids. We're all one big, happy family. But
comes with that is complete chaos, Like our house is
complete chaos. So do you feel like your two adopted
kids now are settled in Yeah, yeah, absolutely, coming to

(22:00):
their own very much, showing you like you know, when
you're in a relationship for the verse, like a few
few years you're like, hey, oh, show y'all have my
good sides, right, and like it starts to get really
serious and it's like here's all, here's all my sides. Yeah,
and I think that got bad. But that comes with
like you know, taking your shoes off, like ah, all right,
this is my home. I'm gonna make this my home,
like now you're gonna get all of me. And we

(22:20):
love it. We love it. But I will tell you
one thing that just happened. Um it was huge, Like
we had a full on UFC fight in the back
seat with our eight year old and our six year old,
and they are best buds, best buds. They they they
they they're one year apart as far as school grades.
So they go to the school, go to school with

(22:40):
each other, and they hang out and they see each
other at school, but after they're done with school, they're
together until it's time to go to bed, like best
of friends, right, But they're also brothers and they fight
like crazy. So but they've never punched each other. Well,
I don't know what it was, and I wasn't in
the car. My wife was driving, but she said that
there was some kind of argument in the back seat

(23:02):
where one was like humming and the other one said
stopped like three times, like you're annoying me, stop humming,
and the other one would not stop, and he finally
like touched his cheek like, oh, you're being cute, like
touch your cheek. And then and then the six year
old like clocked my eight year old, and she looked
in the rear view and was like, what is happening?
And then the eight year old unbuckles his car seat

(23:23):
and jumps over and they're fool on fighting in the
back seat. My wife had to pull over and break
it up, and she called me She's like, you would
never understand what happened. There was a fool on ufcat
fight in the back seat of our car. So I
mean that's what I mean. Like you, when you're friends
with someone, you don't really fight like that, when your
brothers with someone, When your brothers you fight. When your sisters,

(23:45):
you fight because you're so comfortable with each other. This
is where we are in our stage. The two of
the six year old and the eight year old are
so comfortable with each other that they're fighting well. And
I do think it has to do with the age similarity,
because correct me if I'm wrong. Have your eight year
old and your thirteen year old ever had like an
altercation physically? Nope, not like that. So my sister and

(24:07):
I are are the same amount of part I mean
she's two year basically a year and a half than me.
We would get in physical altercations all the time, you mean,
like wrestling, hair pulling, hair scratching. I got for so
many years and still to this day, my sister gives
me a hard time because I have my nails grow

(24:29):
so long very quickly, and I would always have long
nails unintentionally, they just grow very quickly. And I would
scrape her and she's like you as you caught your nails.
It was a fight, and we still to this day
have that disagreement. I'm like, I'm not scratching you anymore.
That hasn't happened for like twelve years. But I'm telling you,
it is something about that age, the closeness because you're

(24:49):
experiencing so much of your life together. Like my sister
and I went to the same high school. We you know,
we were close enough that we had similar people that
ran in different groups. Like, we just had so many similarities,
so there wasn't a lot of time apart. And because
of that, things always boiled over the edge, and we

(25:10):
would always have these blowout fights until we were I
would say, until I had like kind of gotten in
middle school. We would have those blowout fights. Wow that long.
I mean, yeah, Like, you just have so many things
happening that you're so close together and you love them
so much, but you know that you love them so
much and they're going to keep loving you that you
can fight them. Right. It's like the one person in

(25:31):
your life that you can fight that won't run away
from you. That's what I'm saying. You fight a friend,
you end up not talking to them for the rest
of your life. You're like, we had it fallen out
well and two boys, I mean we'd never punched each other.
You may have to deal with punching more than we do. Well, yeah,
I mean yeah, my dad would have to pull us
off of each other. And it was a it was
a whole thing. And that happened for several years. So like,

(25:52):
what would you guys fight about? Oh, Eddie, I couldn't
even tell you to this day what they are like,
that's how stupid they were. I'm sure some point along
the line that was because I stole one of her outfits,
or you know, I was being annoying and I was
touching her face, right, kidding you something so similar, man,
that face touching, it'll get it'll make someone really mad.

(26:13):
It's the one person that also knows how to get
under your skin in every way. Right when they're around
you all the time, they know exactly what makes you mad,
and so if you're making them mad or annoying them,
they're going to do it right back. Yeah, we would
lock each other out of bathroom. I mean, I'm telling
you stuff you would see in movies. And I think
it has so much to do with that age gap
that like anybody within that one and a half two

(26:34):
year realm is going to deal with this altercation. Yeah,
it's it's definitely a weird thing, because you're right, we
never had that. We never experienced that with our thirteen
year old and our eight year old. They were just
they don't have that kind of relationship obviously because one's
way bigger he would kill the other one. But but
you know, my wife and I after it happened, we're like,
how do we discipline them? What do we do? And
during that conversation we have this this same conversation of like,

(26:56):
this is a good thing because they feel like brothers.
You know, you can't do this with someone that you
know that you may not see ever again or whatever.
Like these are brothers, They're they're in this together for life,
and this is what happens. Me and my brother we
did this all the time. How far apart were you
and your brother? My family's weird we had it was
my brother and then my brother and I are six

(27:17):
years apart. And then we have a little sister and
she's eight years younger than me, so we are really
spread out, but you would get in my physical altercations, yes, yes,
but my only way of getting to him was by
using a weapon, because he was way bigger than me,
faster than a weapon. So like pens, like I would.
I would grab a pen and I would like wait

(27:39):
till he wasn't paying attention, and I would just throw
it like as hard as I could. One of them
one time stuck right in his hand and it was
like an arrow. It like hit and stayed stuck and
I was like, oh crap, and I booked it. I
ran like I ran out of the front door into
the neighborhood, went to like through five houses while he
chased me. It was a big deal. Oh my gosh.

(28:00):
So maybe the runs in your blood. Well, I think boys,
I think when you have conversations with boys like that
have brothers. I mean, fighting was a part of it,
like just and you, I mean talking beatings. And our
rule growing up was like you can't hit the face.
And that's our rule here too at the house, Like
you want to punch each other, punch each other in
the body, no face shots. That's got to keep the

(28:22):
faces pretty okay. You can't ruin your face like you
can do kidney shots whatever you want, no face shots.
But m yeah, so it was it was a really weird. Um,
it's a weird experience for my wife. But I think
ultimately we were really like excited that it was kind
of like a thing where like, Wow, he feels so

(28:42):
comfortable that they can fight with each other like that,
and there's gonna be much more of this happening. We
know it. Did you guys end up disciplining the Oh totally. Yeah.
They lost electronics for like a month. Oh oh yeah,
they can't. There's no TV, there's no PlayStation, there's nothing
till like Christmas. Why do I have a feeling this
is to start more fights, because then they're really going
to be hanging out with each other because they don't

(29:03):
have anything to do. But they hang out with each
other anyway. Morgan, I'm telling you they are inseparable, like
they do everything together and that's why they fight so much.
Did you like ask them like, hey, why did this happen?
But yeah, they have an answer. No, they don't know.
It's it's like you and your sister. I don't know,
like kids, Well are they hey, are they old enough
that there are girls involved? No? No, no, no no, no,

(29:25):
they're still at the age that six and eight is
still the age of like, oh girls, okay, hey, everything's
getting younger nowadays. So I don't know at this point
of like at that point, maybe they have a girlfriend,
and maybe one of them was flirting. No, because I
asked him all the time. I was like, who's your girlfriend.
They're like, stop dead, it's not cool. I don't have
a girlfriend. But then the thirteen year old, that's a
different story. They're like, oh, oh my gosh, I picked

(29:47):
him up from school. He's gonna kill me for saying this,
But I picked him up from school the other day
and they were these three girls like and they're like hey,
and they wait. Then I'm like who are they? And
he goes, just some girls dead, no big deal, And
he kept looking at him from the corner of his eye.
I'm like, no, who are those girls? Like nobody? Dad,
Just keep driving, all right, just keep driving. Well, I mean,
he is so close to getting like his permit at

(30:10):
this point, Eddie, Like he's a year or two years
from that, I know, But he doesn't want to drive.
Isn't that cool? Like he literally doesn't want to drive.
He's like I think I'm ready for that, dad, really, yeah,
no desire. He's terrified. I think he will once his
friends start driving and he realizes like with a driver's
license comes freedom. But right now he's terrified. Like I

(30:30):
told him, I'm like, hey, you want to drive the car, Like,
I'll let you. We can go to a parking lot
or whatever. He's like, no, no no, no way, no way,
I'm not ready for that, no chance. Does it feel
weird to kind of look at him and just realize
how much he's grown up? Yeah? So fast? Yeah, And
it's weird because the older he gets, the more he
kind of looks and does things like me, like, it's
so weird. It's so weird, And like he'll just be

(30:52):
sitting in a certain way and my wife would be like,
look at him. It's like it's just like you, And
I'm like, that's crazy. It's like looking like you spawned
off a little mini me. But he didn't really think
it was going to grow up to be a miniu. Huh,
Like you knew it was a miniu back in the day,
you just didn't know it was going to be like
an adult, you know. And you know what's even crazier,
our our baby two year old that we adopted. I

(31:13):
mean he looks like he can totally be our kid.
I mean he looks like both me and my wife mixed.
It's like people he does. People look at him. Yeah,
you can talk about this, like people look at him
and say this is crazy, Like he could totally be
you all's kid. Yeah. No, I had to. I had
to do a double take when I saw him again.
For we had like a little adoption party after they

(31:36):
got adopted, and you guys celebrated it, and all the
kids were running around in their jerseys, so I knew
he was one of the kids, but I had the
last time I had seen him, he was a baby
being help And so I saw him and I was like,
what did something change? I swear that is Eddie's child,
Like it looks so much like you guys. Yeah, that

(31:57):
it threw me. But then the other one, which is
so funny too, because three sisters, or I have three
older sisters, two or my half sisters, and one of
them we really don't have a lot of similarities at all,
but one of them we do. So there's three of
us that kind of look alike, two of us that
really look like three of us that kind of look alike,

(32:17):
and then one that doesn't look like any of us.
And it's so funny, but she loves it that that
sister that doesn't look like any of us loves it
she stands out on her own. Yeah, she has her
own look. Yeah, so you'll have one that kind of
looks like them and one that guy stands out on
his own. Yeah. It's pretty cool the way that all
works out. And you're just like smiling. I know nobody

(32:38):
can like see you while we're talking because this is
just a podcast, but you're like all smiles talking about kids,
even though the chaos has officially arrived. Well, I think
I think it's like I was at church till the
day and there was a whole sermon about how you know,
you live life and you think about you know, you
think that you're doing something for a certain reason, but

(33:00):
and God has a completely different other reason for you
why you did whatever. And it brings me to the adoption.
Like I started thinking, well, the reason we moved to
Nashville was for the radio show, you know, the reason
we moved to Nashville was for this, and this is
what we do. But at the end of the day.
I'm like, I would have never met our kids that

(33:20):
we adopted if we would have never lived in Nashville.
We may have adopted someone from Texas, but we would
have never met these two kids. So you just never know,
you know, like you never know why you do things.
And so I smile really big because this is just
a big part of my life that I never knew
was going to happen. And I still kind of look
at and say, this is crazy that we're actually doing this.
But I love it. Oh that was so sweet. I mean,

(33:43):
church out, you're having you in a deep I know,
I know we're talking about signs. I'm telling you. I mean,
that's a sign if I've ever heard one. I love that.
I love that story. I mean it was always going
to be a sweet, emotional story because of the whole
adoption and foster and everything. But just on top of that,
you know too, you when you are one hundred percent
like this is what was supposed to happen, that feels

(34:03):
really good. It's like it is a sign from the
universe to say you're doing something right. Totally. There is
another story you mentioned and I want to hear about
it is that you lost your keys for like two hours. Yes,
speaking of chaos. So yeah, we So we do like
a family like a football We do family football game
where even my wife plays and the baby plays and

(34:24):
we all go to a field and we just played football.
And so I'd gotten there before. I'd gotten there the
first with two of my boys, and my wife got
there later, like thirty minutes late with the baby. And
so when the baby came, I got down. I was like,
there's the baby. And he came and he ran and
he greeted me, and he knocked me over. And I
guess when he knocked me over, my keys fell out

(34:45):
of my jacket pocket. I didn't realize this at the time.
And this is already like five o'clock. Now it's getting
dark at what six or something. So we played football,
we hung out and we're like, all right, time to go,
and I get put my hands in my pockets. I'm like,
I don't have my keys. My keys are not here.
So I go to my car. They're not in there,
and I'm thinking, oh crap. Like there's a huge field

(35:08):
and the grass isn't short, and I'm thinking, how are
we going to find these keys? So I'm like, all right, boys,
I have this one cell phone with a cell phone light,
and we're gonna walk around this whole field. And we
walked Morgan for an hour. People were walking with their
dogs and they try to like they notice, like, oh,
are you looking for something? Like, yeah, my car keys.
So we almost had like a team of like ten

(35:28):
people looking for my car keys. And then after like
after looking for about like forty five minutes, my wife says, oh,
my gosh, I remember the baby putting something in his
pocket and he was hanging out by that tree over there,
and I go, oh, my gosh, I do remember him.
He was acting sneaky. He had something in his pocket

(35:49):
because he's so he's so like the guy who's got
his hands in pocket, liked do nothing to see here
and move along. He totally knew he was doing something wrong,
and so he walked towards that tree. And then I
go to the baby and I ask him, I'm like, uh, baby,
like where where where are the car keys? And he
can talk, it's just broken. It's it's broken talk, like

(36:11):
who knows what he's talking about. So he goes, oh,
car keys football and he points to the field. I'm like, right,
but where He's like, oh, over there football, and I'm
like great, Like, so I go towards that tree. I
look and Morgan, it's fall over here. So they are
just leaves covered like the under under trees. It's a
blanket of leaves. And I'm like, how am I going
to find these? So I kick leaves around fifteen minutes

(36:32):
later I found the damn keys. Oh my god. Basically,
what you baby wanted to do was have a whole
game behind and seek after playing some football. Oh yeah, totally.
So yeah, that was a lot of fun. O. Life
is exciting, but there's also a lot of chaos. I mean,
there is nothing boring about my life, Morgan, nothing boring.

(36:54):
And how is Coachella your dog doing? With all the craziness.
I'll tell you one thing. I'm upset. I'm upset with
her and I'm still upsetting. This happened a couple of
days ago. Can you she's still here? Right? She is
still here? No? No No, no, she's here, but oh no, no,
no, no no, she's no. She's great. I love her. She's great,

(37:14):
Like she's she's so chill. We probably see her for
about two hours a day because she's like a teenage
girl and she goes upstairs and he chills, and then
she comes down, hangs out with us for about ten minutes,
and goes upstairs again. And then that's kind of her day.
She doesn't like hang out with us all day. She
gives us like two hours of her day to hang out.
But when we eat, of course, she's down there in

(37:35):
two seconds because she's waiting for scraps um. I had
picked up Sonic and I had my cheeseburger right there
on the table and my ocean water drink and my
onion rings, and I went to go get something in
the kitchen and the boys go, Dad, Cootella grabbed your
burger And she had my entire burger in her mouth.

(37:57):
And she's looking at me like, oh, do you want
to know what I did? Oh my gosh, what did
you do? I took the burger out of her mouth
and I ate it. No, Yeah, I did, Yeah, I did.
I was so mad. I'm like that's I was so hungry.
I was so hungry. I was like, that's my burger,
give that back. And I ripped it out of her
mouth and I ate it. The boys are like that,
that's disgusting. I did. Oh my gosh, I'm cringing right now.

(38:21):
I mean, like, I love my dog, she kisses me,
I would never eat after her. I had to look.
I look, if you know me, I have no problem
dropping something on the floor and eating it, like, no
problem at all. I did have second thoughts about eating
the burger that I ripped out of my dog's mouth,
but I still ate it. That is full on dad's status.
If I have ever heard one, Well, I'm a dad.

(38:43):
What do you want from me? No, that's like, that's
like no shame at that point, you know, when you
just see and experienced so much, it's like, I don't
care what it is. I wish you would have seen it.
I was so mad and I grabbed that burger, ripped
it out of her mouth, like give me my burger,
and I ate it. How much did she eat? Did
she just like bite I don't know, or did she
actually have some She didn't eat any of it, she
just had in her mouth. Oh and the buns have

(39:06):
the you know, her teeth marks in it? Still like,
oh my god, yeah is good? Who for whoever's listening
to this, I want to know if you've ever eaten
after your pet? I would love to know, because I
bet there's some funny stories out there about similar situations
to Eddie. Not for me. I would never do that.
But Eddie, more power to you for eating your dang burger.

(39:27):
But Morgan, you you're the one that like makes like
your dog food, Like you don't you like make chicken
for her? Oh? Yeah, she has. She has her own
special meal. She gets turkey with sweet potatoes, carrots and
green beans. That dog eats better than I do. Did
you ever want to make her a vegetarian like you
or a vegan? I mean, listen, I would love to

(39:49):
because I hate cooking me. It grosses me out. You
do it for the dog, and I do. I do
it for her. I ground that turkey up and I'm like,
this is so gross every time of but I still
do it. And yeah, so I would love for her
to be but I don't you know, that's not what's
best for her. This is the diet that's what's best
for her. So I take one for the team. But like, literally,

(40:10):
she's eating all the meat that I am not eating.
So like I was, you know, helping save the planet,
my dog is not. So what do you do? Like
you make an actual turkey, or do you buy it
already cooked? Oh gosh, no, I don't make an actual turkey.
So I'm like, I'm like, let me get this straight.
So you buy a turkey from the store, you put
it in the oven like it's Thanksgiving, and you make
her turkey. It's Thanksgiving every five days in my house. No,

(40:32):
I get, I get ground turkey. I get. It's three
pounds of ground turkey every time. So I cook it all.
I'm smash it all up, crumble it, whatever you call that.
I don't know. Yeah, yeah, yeah, I know what you're saying.
You mix it all up, and then I cook the
bag of sweet potato's, bag of carrots, and a bag
of green beans all frozen, put them in a crock
pot for four hours, and then I mix them all

(40:52):
together when it's ready. I mean, you're a mom, Like
you're basically a mom. I know. It's a whole thing.
And my boyfriend is actually watching my dog by himself
for the first time, and so she has all these supplements.
She is she has to happen her food because she's
getting old. No, it's just it's like to because normal
dog food has certain supplements in it that does help

(41:14):
them right, right, So, like as much as there's bad,
there's good, and so I have to supplement the good
things that come from that to make sure she's still
getting that with with human food. And so I can
say a cusword on a podcast. I mean I think
I think I did earlier. So he literally working as
a curse word. Um, he looks at me, goes. So

(41:35):
I had to put all the shit in her food, right, No,
I prepared a bag for each meal so he didn't
have to do it. Eddie sweet. I felt so bad
because it is it's a lot of work, and it's
you know, she's my dog and it's a lot of work.
So when somebody watches her, I always put it. I
put it at label backs. It's like Monday breakfast, Monday lunch,

(41:56):
Monday dinner, whatever, and it's all like done. So all
I have to do is put it in a bowl
and give it to her. Yeah, so that that's happening
for the first time, but it was definitely a funny
process to experience. That's awesome. That's what's happening in my
way right now. That's a little different than mine. Vis
I mean, you know, it looks, it sounds like you're
getting ready to be a mom mom. I mean, you know, Eddie,

(42:18):
I still don't know. I still don't know if I
want to have kids or not. I have not I
can literally lean either way. Yeah, truly, I love it.
I love Remy and I love having a dog, and
I love having somebody to depend on me. And it'd
be cool to have like one that talks back to me. Yeah,
but I don't know. Like I love the idea too
of a foster adoption. That's not against anything for me.

(42:40):
I mean that's in the realm too, So I don't know. Well,
tell you what. You can walk around and look for
a sign and there may be one out there for you.
There may be one sin right down in oh oh
yeah or yes, oh man, yeah, not know. You guys
can listen to Amy right now. This is the sign

(43:03):
she experienced in the wild Number six. What happened to you? Well,
I was walking along kind of in a stripmall area,
running an errand, and I was thinking about something. I've
been thinking about it for a while, but really hardcore.
In this moment it was in my brain. I needed
to make a decision. Is it like deep life stuff? Yes,
Like I'm not going to share what it is that
I'm thinking about. But I walk. As I walk, there's

(43:26):
this guy putting up one of those signs with those
little letters like spelling things out. It's really cute, and
he drops a bunch of the letters, and right in
front of me is an in and a know what.
So you're thinking of, let me just cret a scenario.
Should you quit this job and take a new career.
That's not it, but it's something difficult decision there you go, yes,

(43:47):
very deep thing. And then all of a sudden, an
in and a note are right there in front of
my feet. And so you're thinking, is this God sending
me a sign through letters that this guy's dropped in
front of me? Yes? Or no? Right, I don't know.
But what are the odds? That's pretty crazy? Right do
you believe? Don't know? Don't know. That's why I'm telling

(44:08):
you about it. Okay, if you're asking me, no chance,
no chance, no chance? Now I want to believe the
two random letters that fell from the Okay, but you
you do this thing. You tell that one. Now she's
going to use it against me. Go ahead. That we
all tell sometimes where there's like the flood and the
guy dies and he gets to heaven. He's like, when
you saved me, I was bringing da da da, And
he's like, well, I sent a rowboat, I sent somebody else,

(44:32):
I sent a helicopter. I mean, this could be one
of those things. Well, I rolled two letters right in
front of you and you didn't listen. Could that be it?
Is it affecting your thought process that those letters fell? Yes,
decision making is very difficult for me at the moment,
and so I don't know. I guess I'm just looking
for anything, but I don't want to just grab onto anything.

(44:53):
That's why I thought I would share with you all
this crazy. I mean, what are the odds scenario that
happened to me? If you guys were making a life
decision and two letters fell from this guy and they
said no or yes? Would you believe that that was
a message from God? Are you all blind? This is
a clear message from God saying no, amy whatever you think.
It's like, hello, I'm telling you and oh this is

(45:16):
the answer. Yes? Right? No? Really I think no, You're
not going to prove each other right or wrong. But
I'm telling you how it would react. I totally believe
in signs. Dude, this is a huge sign. Amy. Now
I'm more confused than let's just pull the room then this,
We'll just do a whole pall here. Does this mean something?
Yes or no? Lunchbox, it doesn't mean anything. It means
you're losing your mind. You're going crazy. It's better to

(45:38):
flip a coin than to have some random letters on
a ground or fall. Yeah, a coin is more sing
Any letters could have rolled in front of me S
and Q exactly, but it wasn't. It was in and
a null. Here's day. So it may have come been
on like it's on that neither did they fall in

(45:59):
front of you? No? But what if I had been
walking the other way? You weren't though, That's the point.
Is a sign from above? I think? So I'm morgan, Okay,
two Ray, there's not necessarily no. It could have been
a Z. It could have just been numbers or you know,
numbers letters. Who knows what it was? Two? Well, she's

(46:20):
saying she saw no. Would you take that as a
sign from above? No, because it didn't fall perfectly as No,
there's no way. It was like mixed up, And she's like,
what does that? I mean? No, it was a in
and a note there in front of me. Yes, it was.
It lined up perfectly like it's on the board like
it's supposed to be. No. No, but it was in
and all your vote no, Ray, it's a joke. I
think if you're looking for a sign, you will find it.

(46:41):
If you don't believe in signs, you will not find
the sign. I think our minds want to take us places.
We follow that. I think you're looking for a sign.
You saw one because you were looking? Yeah, well that
was actually I was just walking along and the letters
fell in front of me. The sign found her bones,
it did. So what are you gonna do? No? No,
I don't know, because I'm I'm on a journey. I

(47:04):
don't know. Maybe I'll look for more signs. I'll give
you both said, what if the room said no, it's
not a sign. Mostly Mike d you can vote on
this too. That's everybody here. I think it's a sign.
Then I guess I think it. I guess it's a sign.
I might pull a few more people in my life.
Can I take this to my therapist? I'll be like

(47:24):
what everybody on my show voted about it? No, not yet. Oh,
Caitlyn will agree it's a sign. Oh, for sure, for sure,
she will for sure. I just think, like right now,
I could look around the room and find signs for
any question. Well, go ahead, find one. Should I walk
out of this room and out of this show right now?
I see I see it? Yes. Okay, okay, we're making

(47:49):
light of No, we're not making light. I'm just saying.
I'm just saying that if you were really looking for something,
you could find something. I was though because she was
thinking about it. Of course I was thinking about it,
and just give me a sign. No, I was thinking
about the decision. I wasn't. I wasn't looking for a sign.
It just happened. I know there are people in their

(48:10):
cars right now screaming that they have had similar thing.
I'm sure. I think most most people think, hey, I
just got a sign and I should do it. I
am not that person. I think that we are. We're
easily manipulating our own minds. What about my birds? You
think birds are your parents? Well, it passed away. Could
be signs from my parents, and I'm then making a
joke about that. But you think that your mom is

(48:32):
a she's a cardinal, which I get is. People always
want to tell me, well, you know, cardinals are red
ones or males, and I'm like, yes, I know, we don't.
Your mom's a dude bird now, yes, and then my dad.
But I have never had a blue jay in my backyard,
and I track birds obviously became my hobby about a
year ago. I know what birds have been in my backyard,
and a blue jay never showed up to my feeder

(48:52):
until after my dad died. I'm going to tell you
what a sign is. A sign is going with your gut. Okay,
you know what going with your gut is. It's not
actually your gut. It's the part of your that processes
really difficult decisions really quickly. Right, you told us, And
so I'm gonna say, go with your gut. That's your sign.
Your sign is okay, one, two, three, This is what
I should do. That's your brain telling you what to

(49:12):
do based on all of the data that it has had.
Is taken in and spit back out. Okay, all right,
I'm big brain guy, me too. Well, I don't know
you like like those signs. I'm both, can't hear me? Both? Yeah? Yeah? Yeah? Yeah? Okay,
let us know what you Decide Hill. It's the best
Bits of the Week with Morgan. Number two. The guys

(49:35):
of Low Cash always brings so much energy and they
came in on the show this week to talk about
their new EP, Woods and Water. They also talked about
a name that they almost called themselves. Plus they have
a collaboration coming with none other than the Beach Boys,
so they performed one of those songs that inspired that collaboration.
I mean just so much and so much fun stuff

(49:56):
here with Low Cash. They're great dudes. Listen right now.
Here is their interview and their performance of I Love
This Life and Beach Boys number five. The Friday Morning
Conversation with b Low Cash. What's up, Low Cash? Hey, brother,
you guys good. We are good. We are good. It's
interesting to see you guys together right now. It's it's

(50:16):
got to be weird to be a duo and you
spend your whole life growing up together and you you
you're grinding on the road and then you decide we're
gonna live in two different states. Now. Yeah, it's been different,
but great. Yeah it hasn't been Yeah, because I see
him more than my wife. So because you still meet
and go on the road and stay on the road
together the whole time. Yeah, we're together all the time,
and I think the break was much needed. It's kind

(50:36):
of yah thinking well, I mean for me, especially with
three kids. My wife's from Florida, so we needed some help.
And my kid, my two little ones. My girls are
crazy and you mean help like other family down Yes, yes,
move my mom down too. So it's been great your
mom Chris moved down to Florida as well. Yes, yeah,
you took the whole family. I have to still got
some up in Baltimore, but not you know, not too

(50:57):
many left of the Baltimore Hillbillies they went down. There's
what's been happening with you guys lately, Like, what's what's
Low Cash up to. We just released a new EP
we're fired up about. It's called Woods and Water. I'm
a little bit more woods and Chris's water. And it's
always been that way. We almost called ourselves woods and
Water back in the day. It was a close call
between Low Cash and Woods and Water. But we picked
Low Cash obviously, and we kept Woods and Water in

(51:18):
our back pocket and said maybe it's an album name someday,
and so here it is. We got it. Chris, are
you on the water a lot? Now? Yeah? All you wakeboard?
I'm going I'm trying to learn to wakeboard. But I
mean in Florida, like, I like the ocean the golf
part of it, So you wakeboard there, you gotta worry
about sharks and stuff. So but I mean, I love
to fish a lot. I'm out there fishing all the time.
I just never I grew up in Arkansas, so we

(51:40):
didn't have We had lake because I lived near a lake.
But I've never been a beach guy because I never
really spent a whole lot of time on the beach.
Saying where It's like, what am I going to do?
Sit out here all day and cook? That's what I
feel like I'm doing. Cook on the beach. I get
kind of board, Yeah, just like falling to sleep and
then join it. I'm like, anybody want to go play
pop utters? Yeah, I'm fall asleep in my bedroom with
air conditioner on a TV instead out here to get it. Son,

(52:01):
That's exactly what he's like. He's I'm attacking Chris for
no reason. Crazy low Cash is here. They have a
new EP out today called Woods and Water, And in
a minute we're gonna play some Beach Boys the song
beach Boys. Okay, But what I'd like to do before
we get to the newest song, I'd like to go

(52:22):
back in history and play the first number one for
you guys. Yeah, would you mind going back in time
and playing a little bit of I Love This Life?
Was that a number one? Or if it gets to
number that was the number two? That's right now? That
one of the charts. But it's the biggest song of
our career, and so it just goes to show it
doesn't have to go number one to change your life.
Which chart like Bangladesh something? All right, let's go back

(52:47):
to the first big hit, Prolo Cash. Here is I
Love this Life. Let go. I'm love my boots broke in.
I love my camel hat. Don't mind a little pain
on my jeans. I road like that. I love to

(53:09):
drive my truck crossing railroad tracks. If you hit them
too quick, they'll hit you right back. I love friska
Field with the first frost stone, how it shines. I
go when the sun turns on. I love the sound
of them wheels, my baby singing a long when the

(53:30):
Bobby Bone Show comes on. Let's go. I love a
small town world. I love a country and I love
a fighting man. Love this life, selling on the road,
rolling through my mind. Man, I love man, I love man.
I love this life. Whoa whoa man? I love this life.

(54:00):
Whoa whoa Man? I love this lie low Cash and Studio.
Is that the song that people sing the loud us
back to you guys? Definitely? Oh yeah? Where do you
put in the set list? Last? Always? I guess you
have to. Yeah, if you make that mistake and they
peek too early, yes, and then they're still playing for it.

(54:24):
They's waiting for that song. So I think my favorite
song from you guys. You know, we look at the
past body of work like whenever I know somebody came
out like that song to me was like the jam
and that was our first number one, and that's what
I meant, first number one. Yeah, yeah, So what do
you guys start the set with? What's the first song
you play? You just started this a song called Don't
Get Better Than That, and um, it was kind of

(54:46):
like I love this life thing, but we the label
kind of folded while that came out, so and never
the old label. And so then we moved over to
our home you know BMG Wheelhouse and so now we
just redesigned our show and one big country song has
become the opener. Now, so you guys had a song
out when your record label collapsed. Yeah, that's a that's

(55:08):
a weird call to get Yeah it was. It was
pretty awkward. Hey, we like you, but we don't exist anymore. Yes,
it was actually somebody from this office that called us
and they were like, uh, did you hear the news
that your record label closed? And we were like, girl,
lunch right now. We had no idea, and so you
guys tipped us off. It was great. All right, boys,
you have five new songs out today. We do. That's exciting.

(55:29):
It is we fired us and so you have this
song called Beach Boys. The whole project is woods and Water.
But then I hear Beach Boys and I think of
the band the Beach Boys, right, Like, I'm assuming there's
a correlation between all of it. There is. I mean
it started that way too, because when we decided to
write the song, I was like, guys, we should write
a song that's a country song but has the Beach

(55:49):
Boys stylistic harmonies in it, like like the Ouius and stuff.
You don't just have fun with that, and so Jared Mullins,
one of the co writers, says, we should just call
it Beach Boys, and we're like, nas too on the nose,
we can't do that, and he was like, no, let's
take the country to the Beach Boys. And we're like, now,
when you say it like that, that's kind of cool.
So we wrote the song and then the Beach Boys

(56:09):
heard it. They loved it. Um that you know. Mike
Love and Brian Wilson became co writers on the song
with us automatically because of the influence of the song.
And then we just went down to Tuscaloosa, Alabama and
recorded with Mike Love and the Beach Boys. So we
have a version that's yeah, that we've got So it's
it's exciting, that's pretty cool. Yeah, let's and I'm being

(56:30):
told before I say, let's hear it? Do you guys
haven't performed this full song yet until right now? Correct?
Especially is it? Don't don't be nervous. So we're good.
Lot Cash is in studio. This is a new song
called Beach Boys. Let's do it. I get around, around,
get around, I get around. Yeah, let's leave the John

(56:56):
dear here, tike the CJ. Let's roll this back roding
to a freeway, gonna drive until the map turns blue
where they say we talk a little funny. Let's take
the country to the beach boys. Treat that red dirty
for saying. Show them how we Tennessee boys bench you

(57:18):
jomp bull buzz on the cantar rain and get a
little bit of red off a red neck. Drop a
lime in the bottom of a long and by the
boat the flutes and get ship bread with some local hunted.
Let's take the country. I get around, round around, I
get around. We'll drink them down down, drink them down.

(57:39):
We'll drink them down. You get around around, get around,
you get around. We'll drink them down down, drink them down.
We go. I get around, round, get around, I get around.
We'll drink them down down, drink them down. We'll drink
them down. You get around around, get around, you get around.
We'll drink them down down, drink them down. Give me
the beach boys low cash. I think, what's your focus

(58:05):
on the that's impressive. I mean the whole time you're
hitting the justl That's how it talks. Right in my
left ear. The whole time. We should hear that solo.
Ye go here, look at that solo there. Yeah, that's
why you're hearing in the background the whole time. Nice job,

(58:26):
there's a lot to that song. Yeah, I'm tired. Yeah,
Low Cash is here. They have five new songs out
today and you guys check it out. It's Woods and
Water out now. I'm gonna play a clip of sipping
sunsets here rather then you get to sip in the

(58:50):
and then here is the next track, small Town for Life.
I'm stop on the back walk, guys. Good job, congratulations
on the new music, and I'll spend out about a
week now. Thanks for having us in and playing some

(59:13):
snippets of it. I mean, that's all I want to do. Well,
had to bring the beach boys in with us. Imagine
at low Cash. You guys follow him. Check out the
new music, Woods and Water. It's the best bits of
the week with Morgan number two coming in hot at
number four, and I say coming in hot because Lunchbox

(59:33):
maybe going to jail. I mean, something went down on
the show this week. He brought it in that he
you know, doesn't necessarily want to spend money the right way,
and he may be getting an insurance fraud situation. Who
knows with Lunchbox, but he broke it all down and
we kind of helped him decide what he should do next.
So listen up number four. Okay, so Lunchbox, what's happening.

(59:54):
So we had a big storm months ago and there
was a lot of hail and you know, hit the house,
and all my name started getting new roofs because they
had hailed damage. And I was like, hey, maybe I
got hail damage. So I finally call a roofing company
and they said, yeah, you got hailed damage. I called insurance.
They come out and they agree. So they write me
a check for thousands of dollars. Okay, so but somebody

(01:00:16):
came out, Yeah, and they looked at it. Food, different
people came a roofing guy, and then my insurance guy,
they adjuster or whatever he's called, yeah, and they're like, yeah,
you definitely need a new roof. I see all the
hail damage. Won't write you a check for this much.
So they mailed me a check for thousands of dollars.
And now I'm just like, well, why don't we have
to get a new roof. We already got the check
do you need a new roof? According to them, I do,

(01:00:37):
but I've been living in it for months and it
hadn't There's been nothing wrong with it since the storm.
So let's talk about the fraud element of it. Why
does your wife think that if you don't spin it
on the roof, you could go to jail. She thinks
that's fraud, like insurance fraud. Yeah, that's what she goes,
you know, that's insurance fraud. And I said no. I said, oh,
do we need a new roof? And they said yes,
and they wrote me a check. I didn't say I
was gonna get a new roof. I said, do we

(01:00:59):
need a new roof? And they wrote me a check.
So I'm like, why wouldn't we just keep these Why
wouldn't we just use this thousands of dollars for something fun?
What do you have in mind? A vacation? I mean,
I think what it's going to bite you in the
butt is when you try to resell your house. If
you do ever move that, they're gonna go, hey, you
need to fix this roof and it's going to cost you,

(01:01:19):
wait for it, thousands of dollars. Yeah, So at some
point you're gonna have to pay this thousands of dollars.
So basically you're stealing from Peter to pay Paul, but
then you gotta pay Peter back at some point. Yeah,
because they obviously found damage. They're not going to just
assess your house and send you money if they don't
think there's a valid reason that your roof needs fixing.

(01:01:39):
But in my argument, I told my wife, like, Bobby
got scholarship money for college and he went and bought
a PlayStation, So he's true. I took up my one
loan that I took. I took out a one thousand
dollars loan and I bought a PlayStation and clothes. Okay,
so maybe you didn't come then I paid it back,
butch committed from you. No, you can take the money, yes,

(01:02:00):
but that's Bobby's. The responsible thing to do would be
fix your roof, because clearly there's something wrong and you'll
end up paying for this later. If insurance came out,
if an adjuster came out, if the roof guy came
out and said you have damage, you are entitled to
that check. Because it's like if your car was in
a wreck, if you can still drive your car around,
you don't have to fix it as long as it's

(01:02:20):
still drivable. Insurance gives you the money to fix it.
Ye ah, man, Okay, good, so I'm off the hook.
So it's free cash. But at some point you're gonna
have to pay for that roof, right, But eventually, maybe,
you know, because prices are really what is it called high?
Like what inflated? Okay, so maybe if I wait like
a year, and then it'll go down and shingles will

(01:02:41):
be cheaper and I'll get a better price and I'll
make It's like an investment. It's like playing the stock market.
But isn't an investment if you spend on a vacation, Yeah,
I mean mental well being. Okay, if that's how you
feel about it, great, But you're not just getting off
scott free. Eventually, at some point you're gonna have to
pay because you're gonna have to get that roof fixed. Now,
you could call the roof and be like, hey, like,

(01:03:03):
I only have this much to spend on a roof,
How how can you fix this? What's the most you
can do? You can peel off a little bit for yourself,
a little bit for the roof. Yeah, find the lowest price.
Remember you get what you pay for. Yeah, okay, well,
well to that point, a lunch box could fix the
roof himself. When I'm Bobby, you used to roof houses,

(01:03:30):
you could help him. No, I do not. He's busy.
I did. I didn't forgot about that. I don't do
that anymore. And I don't like heights. You're not committing fraud. Okay,
do whatever you want with the money, but just know
at some point you're going to have to pay that back.
Now his wife is irritated because she probably knew it
wasn't going to send me to jail. She just wanted
him to be scared so he wouldn't do this. Had
you lied about something I love you, insurance money, that

(01:03:52):
would be fraud. I thought about lying the first time,
like when the tornado came through. I wanted to get
up there and ripped shingles off and so, but then
I didn't. You would not do that. I thought about it, okay,
but you where were you on the percentage of doing it? Uh?
I was almost I mean, I was like, but that's fraud.

(01:04:12):
That would have been fraud. Someone would have had recorded
you and then sent it in and then you get
in trouble they didn't even make the news, like he's
always wanted. That's true. It's the best bits of the
week with Morgan. Number two, there was a news story
that Bobby brought to the show and it made us
discuss torture songs. Okay, so some security guards were torturing

(01:04:34):
inmates with baby Shark, which is arguably as a dad
I bet Eddie one of the worst songs. Yeah, totally.
I mean I hear that song all the time. So
they tortured him with that, and which made Bobby then
list five of his top torture songs, like if he
were going to torture somebody, these were one of the
five he would choose. And it made me think, Eddie,
what are just some of the worst songs out there?

(01:04:57):
I mean, one really one that comes to mine for
sure is what does the Fox say? Do you remember
that dumb song? What does the fox say? No? No, no,
no no no no no no no no, no, Like
what was that? Like? That to me is like get
that out of here. That was just trash to me.
Oh so bad. I mean, that's definitely up there. I

(01:05:18):
think I'm not gonna list like the five that he did,
because they are like he really knailed. He didnature songs.
So we're not going to include those just because we'll
end up hearing them with Bobby. But I'm going to
tell you some of the ones. This is the list
coming from some musical site. I'm so don't trust. Okay,
this isn't your list. But the top the number one

(01:05:41):
of the fifty worst songs ever is Starship. But we
Built this City? Do you know that song? No? Is
it we built the City by Starship? Oh? Yes, I
bet you. It's backwards, Yes, I think it's yes, it's
like we build this city. I don't know that. I
don't know if that song annoys me or not. Well,
you'll know the number two for sure. Okay, what is

(01:06:02):
a breaky heart? Oh don't then I don't know. Then
nawn I mean yes, but my heart am I aky
breaky heart? Yes, but it's still a jam though. But
you know what, Let's be real. Any song played on
repeat over and over and over is probably torture. Yeah,
a lot like the Friday song Friday Friday, Gotta get

(01:06:26):
down on Friday. I love that song. I don't hate it.
A lot of people hated that song, but I do
not hate it. And I'm with you. That's one, okay,
So I don't I don't know this one. These are
some you may know. I'm not okay familiar why because
they're older. I knew it, sang it Morgan, Well, this
one is from nineteen eighty six. Shots always everybody have

(01:06:50):
fun tonight, Wang chunk, everybody have fun tonight. Then then
then I think, so, I think, so, I don't know.
That doesn't sound too annoying now, I mean it's it's
like eighties. It's typical eighties with that like you know, oh,
there we go night. I do not know the song.

(01:07:12):
I feel like this is a good song. Now. Can
you dig it over and over and over? I mean, yeah,
you're like, yeah, let's go. I think. So. Listen. The
only songs that I cannot listen to over and over
all the ones, And it happens sometimes with rap songs.
They're black and yellow, black and yellow black. I'm literally

(01:07:33):
listening to it on repeat in the song Yeah, I know,
black and yellow, black and yellow? Who is that? Oh
it is? You're right, You're right, am I right? Yeah?
You scuba are right what I'm talking about. I don't
know why I thought it was Kodak black, but m yeah,
that's that's definitely one of the top for me. I
do not like songs that repeat words over and over again.

(01:07:56):
Another one on here is Limp Biscuit Rolling Roll, Roll,
Roll and roll and roll and roll. And what are
they doing repeating the word over and over? Oh yeah,
don't they have like a screamo part in that song too?
Probably it's Limp Biscuits. So I think all of their
songs had like some kind of a pretty solid impression.
Baby really good. And then at number five is Vanilla

(01:08:19):
Ice Ice Ice Baby. Oh damn, though, come on, Morgan,
you don't even know. So, like in what was I
sixth grade, we had this thing in McCallen. This is
where I grew up in McAllen, And I don't know
if this was everywhere. Did you ever have competitions dance
competitions where like it was almost like a fight and
everyone's like ooh, and they'd all get in a big

(01:08:40):
circle and in the middle of the circle are two
people like battling. I mean, I've seen that happen at
like weddings and stuff, but this was like a legit
dance battle. This was a legit dance battle, and it
was too Ice ice Baby mc hammer like at that time,
Sir mix a lot. Those were the songs that were like, man,
you're gonna comp and we would call it comping, and

(01:09:01):
like I was terrified. I was terrified being at home,
like being like, oh, man, I hope nobody wants to
camp me tomorrow, so I gotta be prepared. So I
would learn dances in my room just in case, like
somebody challenged me when I went to school the next day,
you had to be ready to be camped. Oh my gosh,
So did you ever get camped? No? I never got camped. Nobody,
nobody wanted to call me. Hey. But like you know,

(01:09:23):
since you knew the dance though, like when it was
time for like some junior high dances, you'd go out
a little bit and do some like mc hammer, you
would do some vanilla ice like ice ice baby stuff
us for us. What I'm talking about? He want you
want to camp anyone? Now? You can't handle this? I
don't know. Oh I can handle let's go. Hey, I've

(01:09:47):
seen your TikTok videos. I'm good. You're gonna you'd beat me.
You don't, hey, you don't want to comp this? Nah,
you're good. I know you're good. I'll call lunchbox though anytime. Yeah,
his moves, there's something else. Oh my gosh, So those
are the those are the worst songs ever apparently. Yeah, okay,

(01:10:07):
one of these doesn't even make sense to me. Literally,
this just shows you humans have a natural tendency to
just want to hate things. One of the songs on
this list is don't Worry Be Happy. No, that's such
a good song, like who you're hating in it because
it literally says, don't worry be happy. Here is a
little song that I wrote. Yes you're hating it because

(01:10:29):
it's a happy song. Happy songs are good. This is
a jam. Oh do you remember another? This is like
a list of fifty I'm not gonna go through all
the clay Aken Invisible. I loved clay acn sing it. Gosh,
I don't think. I don't think I can remember, but
I remember him on American Idol I do too. He
was like really young looking, like did you look like
a little little kid? Yeah, And he had like blonde,

(01:10:51):
kind of spiked hair, yeah, And I remember he was
so good. Him and the other guy, gosh, what was
that the other the older guy oh, Ruben, Yeah, Ruben stuttered, right,
was that the same season? I don't know. All of
American idol is like a blurback then, Like Kelly Clarkson,
Ruben stuttered, Um, who's the old guy? Taylor Hicks, Clay Aiken,

(01:11:13):
All that's all blurred in. I don't know what years
or seasons those are. This is it? Yep? Oh my gosh,

(01:11:34):
this is pretty good. I used to rock out to
this song, and this is just brought that core memories.
This is on the list. Yeah, this is of the
fifty worst songs ever. A bunch of haters. Listen. This
list is coming from Canada, so you can't trust those peoples. Okay,
that's funny. I don't see any Canadian. Maybe they are

(01:11:56):
I don't know what artists or Canadian or I mean,
I feel like Clay Acon might be Canadian. I don't
know if I've heard that somewhere. I could. I could
totally be making that up. Let's see, we're gonna or
we'll look it up. Clay Aiken, where is he from?
Oh oh no, it says American singer. Oh yeah, yeah,
not Canadian. My bad. Also, he does not have oh yeah,

(01:12:16):
I know he did have Blonde Spike here from Oh totally,
I remember that. Oh my gosh, yeah wild that was
I walked down Memory Lane. That Another walk down Memory
Lane is Billy Gilman one. I had all of his CDs.
What are he saying? There was that music video you
were there? No, you were you were starting to sing

(01:12:37):
it one gift, No one. Yeah, I don't remember it.
I remember the music video where he's in a school
bush one hard, one hard. No. No, I don't know.
I don't remember there, like we're there there go thank you. Yeah,

(01:13:17):
I had, I had all of the albums he put
out when he was younger. That one might be torture
for me. Maybe it's not on this list. It just
like activated because of Clay Aiken. Yeah, yeah, i'd ever
tell you that when like, um, but I think I
don't remember what my son was doing. But it was
like he it was some kind of lesson. It was

(01:13:39):
my thirteen year old and it's like I think it
was like last year. He was twelve, and it was
some kind of lesson where I was telling him, like, look,
you've got to make a change, And so I made
him listen to Man in the Mirror by Michael Jackson
over and over until he like, Man, Now that I
think about it, this might be a form of torture.
Like I stuck him in the bathroom. I said, listen
to this song. Made him listen to Michael Jackson Man

(01:14:00):
in the Mirrors because it's about making a change, and
it all starts with a man in the mirror. And
so I wanted him to listen to these lyrics, look
at himself in the mirror and be like, he's right,
I need to change and it all starts with me. Yeah.
And now that I'm thinking about it, listen to this
whole bit that we just did. Oh my gosh, I
was torturing my thirteen year old Eddie. You tortured your child.

(01:14:24):
But how many times did he listened to that song?
I don't know, for about thirty minutes, but I mean,
now he loves that song, killing it with all the

(01:14:44):
best scuba shout out. Dang, dang, Eddie, you just full
on confronted that that's tormous that you did for your childhood. Yeah,
I guess. I guess I'm part of music torture. I guess.
I think, Well, how are we in this segment? Is
that you to go home? And tell your son you're sorry. No,
I really do. No. I'm telling I'm gonna go home
and be like, hey, what's your favorite song man in

(01:15:05):
the mirror? Right, He's like, no, no, never again, Dad.
So he did learn his lesson from doing that. Well,
I don't know if he just came out and told
me what I wanted to hear, but he came out
and said, Dad, you're right, Like I totally, I mean,
that song is right on. I'm gonna make a change.
You should totally follow that up and find out if
if he was really being honest with you or what,
because if not, you need to apologize. Okay, I'll do

(01:15:28):
that just for you. I feel so bad for him
right now. I'm just like picture of myself stuck in
a bathroom listening to that song on repeat. Hey, look,
when you're a parent, you start you try to come
up with all kinds of unique styles to parent, because
some things work and some things don't. Unique style meaning
torture maybe, Oh my goodness. Okay, Well he's gonna go
apologize to his son. Now we're going to get to

(01:15:50):
Bobby's top five torture songs. Here they are number three,
So I've listed my top five torture songs on a
loop on come on at number five, Maka ran up hours, hours, three,
four in a row anywhere, It's just a room with
nothing but makar Raina playing at number four. In this song,

(01:16:13):
I just remember I would leave the skating rink and
I was like eleven and I could never get it
out of my head. And it's the chicken ed hands
over and over again. So if I were going to
torture you guys, this's the top five songs I would
play a number three Aqua Barbie Girl, Let's Go Pontie,

(01:16:41):
number two of my torture song list, Sigh Gangham, stole Star,
who Whoo? Who cut them? And number one, Any guesses
the most annoying, most torturous song? Exactly? Hey, look man,

(01:17:10):
the first thirty minutes of all these songs, I think
we can have a good time with it. Maybe six
to nine minutes not good. I think Baby Jog is
still the worst because that song never leaves once it starts.
It just sits in there forever. Do you think these
guys don't want any money, these prisoners, yes, no idea, Yes,
that shouldn't be happening. It's the Best Bits of the

(01:17:31):
Week with Morgan Number two. Kind of a controversial segment
on the show this week, particularly with one show member
Abby sang the national anthem. She totally rocked it. She
killed it. All the adjectives I can use to say
she did good. Somebody on the show didn't like it.
Now that's the bit we're gonna get to. But to
start here, Eddie, have you ever sang the national anthem?

(01:17:53):
I mean, you're half of the Raging Idiots. You write
songs all the time, you are an artist, So have
you ever sang the national anthem before? I was asked
one time to sing the national anthem at a Nashville Sounds,
which is a Triple A baseball team here. They were
having a game and they're like, would you like to
come out and sing the national anthem? And I said, yeah,

(01:18:13):
I've never sung the national anthem, so I took I
took them up on their offer. I went, and I
think it went great, Like I think it's It might
be on YouTube still, I don't know somebody recorded it.
Were you there? You were there the national anthem? I'm
trying to remember. Was that before the celebrity softball game
and no it was just a regular baseball game, any

(01:18:36):
time that you threw out a pitch. Maybe I don't remember.
We all went as a show. Even Bobby went down
there with me. I think Amy might have been there.
This might have been before I was part of the show. Gosh,
maybe Okay. So I mean I was nervous because of course,
anytime you sing the national anthem, it's like, don't screw
this up. This is the biggest song, like, you don't

(01:18:57):
mess this up. Everyone's listening. And I think I nailed it,
and I think the key to the national anthem And
I told Abby this too before she's saying it. I'm like,
you have to sing in the right key because you
think you've got it at the very beginning. You start with,
oh say, can you see right? And it sounds cool.
But what you don't realize is that when you get

(01:19:19):
to and the rockets Radler, it's way too high, Like
that part is really high. So you have to start low.
And so I told Abby before this whole bit, I
was like, look, it's all about where you start, So
practice it five hundred times. Start it low and get
ready for the high part. And she did, and she
nailed it. She was awesome. So that piece of advice.

(01:19:43):
You're kind of like a little expert, so you are
your voice pipes warmed up enough to give us a
little bit always Morgan, do you want me to sing
it now? I do? I want it a little taste
about anything of the national anthem? Gosh, not no lyrics.
Let me see how I can do it. Okay, I
gotta take my hat off too. You know what I'm
gonna preface this. There was no preparing, there was no
anything that was just winging it. So I'm giving you

(01:20:06):
all the grace here to Eddie. Okay, let me take
a breath. Oh say, can you see by the dawnserly light,
what's so proudly we hailed by the twilights, last gleaming

(01:20:30):
whose broad stripe send bright stars through the pairroous fights?
Or the lamb parts we watched were so gaedly streaming
and the rockets rackling, the bombs burstinging. It gave proof

(01:21:00):
through the nine that our flag was still there. Oh
say it us that star spangled bander way, or the

(01:21:20):
Land of the Free and the Home of the Bread.
Thank you, like not even any nervousness, like you just
like rouped that out of nothing. I did mess up

(01:21:42):
a lyric, though, Did you hear that it's like the
ramparts a little giggle? I didn't know where you're giggling.
I thought, I really didn't. I was just like, he's giggling. Man.
You expect all those lyrics to just come naturally, you know,
because you've sung it how many times? Hundreds of times?
But I you know it happens. Gosh, Eddie. That was all.
So thank you, Morgan, so good man. I have so

(01:22:03):
many talented people on the show, it's insane, Honestly, I
really did. Like after I sang that national anthem, I'm like, oh,
I wonder if like any other teams out there would
want me to do it. And I would totally go
to any other any baseball team anywhere in the country
and like go sing national anthems like I love singing it.
I'm not nervous to sing it. You know, it is

(01:22:24):
the hardest song to sing, but I don't know. I
love singing it and I guess it just comes out naturally.
Who knows it so does? Like you really didn't sound
nervous at all. You were like, let me just pull
out my favorite song out of my back pocket and
sing it real quick. I love it, Ella too, I
love it. Okay, now you're turning Morgan Morgan hey or
we we have embarrassed me one time on the show,

(01:22:47):
and you are the reason for that embarrassment forever walking
down that train again. Well, you know better than to
say anything off air because whatever happens off air can
always be brought to honor and you do. You can't
let your guard down for one minute off air. That
was like we were chilling back home. Does everybody hanging out?
And I was like, yeah, Like my parents were talking

(01:23:08):
to Eddie and he's just like he's getting all my
deep dark secrets. And the next thing I know, we
get back on Monday and all my deep dark secrets
are out. I think your mom told me in lunchbox.
I think we were having dinner or we're having lunch
or something. Your mom told me in lunchbox. And we
looked at lunchbox and I looked at each other said,
oh man, this is gonna be good. Oh yeah. That
was arguably one of me my top five embarrassing moments

(01:23:30):
of my lifetime, just sing on air, because like I'm
already nervous on this show. Sometimes you know, sometimes you
just get like nerves when you're talking. You're talking to
a lot of people, and you're you want to say
the right things or whatever. And so when I was
out in the so for anybody who hasn't heard it,
I had to sing karaoke on air to prove there
was a reason why I wanted to be a singer

(01:23:52):
when I grew up. One day when again, there's a
reason I'm not a singer. One day and so I
was literally crying in the hallway before I came out.
I'm gonna mess up. It's gonna be terrible. I'm so
bad at singing, Like there's a reason I don't sing anymore.
But now I'm now I've kind of come into my
own and now I just owned it because I know
I'm a bad singer when I like, when I say
karaoke the Oulderman, it terrible, absolutely terrible. Yeah, but you

(01:24:14):
had fun with that, Oh yeah, when you when you
get to a place of owning that you're bad at something, yes,
but it is depressing. When I was a younger kid
and I thought I was actually really good, oh man,
you know, and you're like, oh, I'm gonna be so
good i'mna be star one day. Yeah, and then like
you realize you're not one day. Oh we're so sad
now oh no, no, we're going we're going on a

(01:24:37):
high note because you just totally killed that national and
I'm not kidding, and we have I mean, I went
to the Red Sox game when I went up to Boston,
and we have a really cool connection up there. I
am sure you could go sing, Oh my god, can
you imagine singing for the freaking Red Sox at Fenway.
I mean that that's like that's bucket list have a
connection there, Eddie. I'm absolutely like sure, at the very

(01:24:58):
least you can get in touch with the right person. Okay,
let's know, if they'll say yes, let's him make this happen,
that would be amazing. Yeah. I mean I feel like
this is a bucket list item and you're so good
at it. Thank you. Regardless of like the your celebrity
status as Lunchbox my celebrities, that is, you're really good
like and that's not anything that's surprising because you're an artist,

(01:25:20):
but it was cool to just see you whip that
out of your back box. You're like, it was no
big deal. Thank you. Thank you know, that's really cool.
Thank you. That means a lot. I love it. I
know everybody's gonna love it. Feeling very patriotic after Abby
saying this week after Veteran's Day and then Saturday, we're
starting them off right with another national anthem. That's all right,
So I'm just gonna leave it at that, and we're

(01:25:40):
gonna go into now getting to hear another national anthem
by Abby singing it, just you know, ignore the banter
afterwards that will make you sad. The Lunchbox number two, Hey,
let's go, Abby, let's go, Abby, You're about to nail this. Yes,
this is our phone screener Abby, who has been asked

(01:26:01):
to seeing the national anthem in front of almost twenty
thousand people at a big marathon here in town for
Saint Jude. Yes, whoa And you mentioned it to us
and we were all like, yes, let's go. But Lunchbox
wasn't like that. He doesn't think you should know. He
was not. I'm not even gonna look at him. Why
don't you think she should do it? Because she's not
good enough. Listen, guys, you need people in your life

(01:26:22):
that are honest with you. You guys are like their
parents that tell their kids, oh, yeah, you can do it,
and then they go and they can't really do it
because they're awful at something. You got. You got to
see your kids down sometimes and be like, look, that's
just not for you, sort of like my parents did
that with college, like it's not for you, and you
went to call here. I know they tried to get
me not to go to college. Hey, sink through that noise.
I ain't going to it's not talent like contests. They

(01:26:45):
asked me to sing it, right, but like as someone
that can sing the national anthem, yeah, then you're gonna run. Yes.
And you're also it's a Saint Jude. You're like a
fun fundraising goal, so got it. That's why they asked me.
Are you nervous right now? Good? Can you tell us?
Because the nerves are gonna be setting again game day

(01:27:06):
two U And so if she nails this, we will
give you an honest recommendation if you should do this. Okay, yes, Ray,
would you mind pulling the music down? Oh? Man, here
she is. This is our phone screener. Abby, Come on,
Abbey singing the national anthem? Abby? Are you ready? I'm ready?
Go ahead? Oh say, can you see mother dawnser? What's

(01:27:31):
so proud at the twilights? Last gleaming? Who's brought striped
sund bright stars? Do the pairs fine? Or the ramparts
we watched We're so gallantly streaming the wrong cancer rug.

(01:27:59):
The momb's bursting in a gay proof through the night.
Then a blag was stoo there? Oh say does that
star spangled banner or the limb of the brae and

(01:28:26):
the of the brave? Come on? So why didn't you
do that? That was good? Maybe was laughing during that performance.
We were, I mean a little shaky and like Gabby
even said it, so thank you Gabby because she was like,
when you get nervous, it kind of like tenses up

(01:28:47):
your vocal cords and kind of restricts you. And it's
I hate that feeling, so like if you just relax,
so I need to just like relax. But other than
the shakiness, I feel like it went pretty well. I
didn't look at lunchbox the part where I was most
worried where and the rockets regular? You nailed Okay, good,
you nailed it. There's no reason you should think twice

(01:29:08):
about doing the national anthem. The answer is easy. Yes,
was it pitchy at all? It's the very beginning. It's
the very beginning, just because you were trying to find
your place, you know when you did oh see, you know,
I give it an A minus. Okay, okay, but I
think it was excellent. Thank you should be proud to
go do it. That's awesome. Amy, Yeah, you're doing it.

(01:29:31):
I love it. Yeah, it's not even a it's not
even if now it's it's you're gonna go do it
and crush it. Eddie. Yeah, you're doing it for sure.
But Abby, Um, you have to enjoy yourself. You have
to have fun out there. Once you have fun, you're
not going to be shaky. You're not gonna be nervous.
Just enjoy the moment and you won't even think about
being nervous, and you're gonna kill it. You did so
good at it. Also, people aren't gonna be reviewing you

(01:29:51):
while you're out there. They're all ready to run the race,
and they're gonna be right, you know, showing respect to
our country. And that's what I'm hoping. Yes, no, that's
what will happen. Right. You've heard the national anthem a
bunch of times don't really go a little little pitchy
on that note, and if you do, you forget about
it five seconds later. You know, yeah, it's excellent lunchbox.
Go ahead. Look, Abby, you asked if you were pitchy.
There was numerous times in that song you were pitchy, like,

(01:30:12):
you know, right in the middle they got real shaky
and kind of nasally, and I was like, oh, man, like,
I don't know how you can tone that down, but
I thought in the middle you crushed it. Thank you.
This is the guy that can't even clap on beat,
like what right? But and so you're not gonna go
see me clap at the beginning of the marathon on beat,
like I'm not gonna clap a song. No, but you're
supposed to nail something that makes no sense. He's not

(01:30:33):
gonna go Abby, you're doing it, okay. Yeah. I hope
they've heard that, because they're gonna be so pumped that
you're doing it once they heard that, all the words
like you're good, oh, yes, words in here, yeah, yeah,
good job, thank you. Two three thumbs us, six thumbs up.
The one sad face. It's the best bits of the

(01:30:56):
week with Morgan. Number two are viably one of our
favorite guests in the last few months, Doctor Laurie. She
came on, Well, here's the deal. Bobby acquired Ray Mundo's
Beanie Babies collection and a few barbies, and you know,
the beanie babies are a hot item lately, right, everybody
thinks they're worth so much money because so many people

(01:31:17):
have them laying around, And so doctor Laurie came on
and she appraised him. Turns out he does have some
special little guys in there, this little beanie baby collection,
and that's what we found out during this whole segment.
But I think what's the funniest part is I was
watching on social media after and all these people are like,
I need to go dig out my storage units and

(01:31:38):
find all my beanie babies and find out my old
toys because they're probably worth a lot of money. And
I feel like that's true because I had made this
comment on my Instagram, like for a caption, because I
was doing disposable cameras with some friends and I was like,
everything old is new again, and that's what always happens. Yeah,
did I give you an old camera? You did? Have

(01:31:59):
you have you used that old camera? No, I've been
trying to find somewhere that I can get the film
and stuff. I haven't dedicated a lot of effort to
finding film because it's such a cool piece that it
also works as really cool deck or in my house.
Yeah no, it totally. It's so old looking, you know,
like it's a thirty five millimeter like legit film camera.
And yeah, you're right like me growing up. I can

(01:32:21):
take that to like the grocery store one hour photo
done now. I think Walgreens maybe does it, but like
they have to ship it out. They don't do it
there and it takes weeks or whatever. But Morgan, like,
you're such an artist, you know and creative, like you
need to take pictures with that thing. You're going to
fall in love with it as soon as you get
those pictures back, I know, and I need, well, listen,

(01:32:42):
I need to do it. I also have a really
expensive camera that I have not touched in years. You know,
you get busy with life or whatever. I need to Like,
I see it every time I pass it. I'm like,
I need to go find film for this so I
can take some pictures because I do want to. It'll
happen one of these days and there's definitely like a
sense of surprise. That element of surprise too when you

(01:33:02):
take the pictures and you're like, all right, okay, we're
gonna take a week to get these back. Then you
finally get them back, you're like, let's see how it
all turned out. You don't know that. You don't know
that experience because everything you know that you use is
like automatic. It's all digital. It's like snap, look at it,
don't like it, delete it, take it again. Like the
idea of taking something trusting that you took it right

(01:33:24):
is like crazy, Like that's just how we grew up.
When I forgot how cool because again, disposable cameras were
around for a little bit when I was younger, so
I knew enough about them how to use them. But
so my one of my girlfriends won like this little
bar giveaway thing, and part of it was to go
to this pop up bar. You got some food and drinks,

(01:33:44):
and you got disposable camera to take pictures for the
night and then they would develop them digitally for you. Yeah,
and so we were taking pictures of everything and I'm snapped.
The funniest thing happened because we thought we were young, right,
like we're in our late twenties, like feeling young. We
give a camera to somebody else to take a picture
of us four girls, and this poor girl had no

(01:34:05):
idea what she was touching. She couldn't like wind it
and she was like is there a flash? What? And
she was like do I look through the hole? I'm like,
oh my gosh, this is like that was a moment
that I felt very old. Yeah, now you know what
it's like to be well in that moment, I at
least knew. I was like, Okay, well I'm getting older.
But I posted all like we got all the pictures

(01:34:26):
back because they are able to like develop them digitally now.
And it was the coolest thing that we've done in
so long because we put our phones down and we're
hanging out and we're just taking pictures with this camera
that we don't ever know what the photos are going
to look like until they get developed. Yeah. That was cool.
I mean, that's that's how we lived our lives. And
I love that. And again I say that because everything

(01:34:46):
old is new again. Everything comes back unless it was
like massively hated, which has happened like with gauchos. If
you remember girls wearing gauchos. Those did not come back.
For what are those? Are those pants? Their pants are
like capris and then they are wide so they like
flow but their capri Yes, yes, okay, I know what
you're talking about. Right, they're like yoga fans and they're

(01:35:07):
like spread at the I know exactly what you're talking about.
There are some things that don't come back, but if
it was really cool once upon a time, like nineties
country and whatever, it will come back and it will
be awesome again totally. And that's why I like to
save things, like you know, that's probably why beanie beanie
babies people still have those, because you always do think

(01:35:28):
like this will eventually be worth something. Everything you have
now eventually will be worth something. Man, I've kept so
I don't know how much I still have because what
my wife and I did about ten years ago was
we made these memory boxes and it was a way
to consolidate all our mess because I kept everything. Hold on,

(01:35:48):
are you telling me you're a hoarder kind of I
would say rat pack? No, no, no pa, no, no pat,
no pack rats that's what it is. Not a rat pack. No,
I'm a pack rat. Like I like to keep things
I don't like to like, you know, keep soda cans
and things like that, like or trash. I don't do that.
But if there's something like a cool Hawaiian shirt that

(01:36:11):
I wore in high school, like I still have it,
I'm like, I don't want to get rid of this
because these will come back like eventually. And it was
like a nineteen sixties Hawaiian shirt, which was cool when
I was a kid. Now like if my son ever
wants to wear it, I'm like, dude, this is vintage,
like original Beach Boys Hawaiian shirt, you know. So like
I've always thought that way. So when doctor Laurie came in,

(01:36:31):
I was like, in Heaven, what do you think you
have in your position in your what you call pat?
I don't know. I don't know if I have anything
worth And like I have baseball cards still, I know
my mom, Yes, my mom said that she still has
some of my baseball cards, basketball cards, football cards. That's cool,

(01:36:54):
Like I want to definitely bring those out of storage
and like see what kind of condition they're in. And
then but you do Morgan is buy like a book
that has all the value of these things. And I
think it'd be cool to just go through it with
my with my kids and be like, all right, here
we go, Like I have an O. J. Simpson card somewhere.
Oh my, oh, you know that is worth something, I
would think because he's what, he's out now or whatever.

(01:37:16):
Yeah he's been. I think he's out. Yeah, who knows.
Who knows. But like you know, there's definitely there's definitely
a kind of value for things to have a pop
culture correlation O. J. Simpson whatever like that for sure
brings value to cards. But I don't know. I think
someday I'm definitely gonna get it from my mom and

(01:37:37):
then go through it with my kids. To me, I
think that's probably the most valuable thing I still have,
is like sports cards, What do you have? Well, I mean,
my mom is a lot like you. My sister and
I call them hoarders, No hoarders, Like I think hoarding's
like a real like it is. Our houses is incredibly
clean and you wouldn't know it until you walk into

(01:37:58):
the storage room and there is a masses of things
that we had grown up as a kid. She I mean,
we have schoolwork, artwork that we had that she keeps
and it's all organized in different bins and artwork that
you guys did in school. Yes, where were children? Wow,
there's I mean we have easily five to ten bins
full of beanie babies. Those are there, We got them.

(01:38:21):
I'm pretty sure we collected every single Wait, so are
you so when doctor Laurie came in, were you like,
I'm going to go through my beanie babies? No, because
here's the thing. My mom is never going to get
rid of anything. So like, even they could be worth
thousands of dollars, and my mom was like, no, that
sentimental value. So she will pinpoint a moment when we
got that beanie baby and be like this memory is
attached to this beanie baby, and interesting, yeah, sell it.

(01:38:43):
So for her, it's all the memories and we love
them because like we we as much as we give
them a hard time, we love it because we can
go home and it's like you're you're walking down memory
lane and you're remembering a lot of things that you've
forgot you were young, and so it is it's that
cool factor. But like something could be down there worth
millions of dollars and we would never sell it. Yeah,

(01:39:04):
that's interesting, that's interesting, and that's kind of the process
that my wife and I went through too with all
our stuff. We're like, what are we gonna do with
all this stuff? So we created like these this memory
box thing where it's really only like two or three
boxes where we're like, these are the must keep items.
And this was like a journal that like when my
wife and I were dating, we wrote down in like
places we want to visit around the world and so

(01:39:27):
like love that. Yeah, so like we kept that. They
were like old things when I was my first band
or whatever, and it was like my first like microphone.
It's all beat up and like chipped and everything that's
in there. Things like that that I want to remember
that aren't worth anything. But my wife made me get
rid of a lot of stuff because if it were
up to me, i'd be just like your mom. I
would keep everything well. And hey, I will tell you too.

(01:39:49):
The kids are gonna like it one day, because you know,
growing up, not only do I get to go back
and like relive moments, but like she keeps so many
clothes items like iconic ones, that there'll be times I
go back I'm like, hey, do have this from like
this era, And she'll be like, oh, let me just
check really quick, and I'll have it for whether it's
a costume or something I want to wear. She has it.
It's like when I like all my prom dresses I've had,

(01:40:12):
she kept them all. That's just her personality, like there's
memories attached to them. So so does she still have
her wedding dress? I believe so, yeah, is this something
that you would like to like where when you get
married or do you want to get a new one?
You know, I don't know. I mean I remember seeing
pictures of their wedding, but I don't think I can
even picture her dress right now if I tried, Like,

(01:40:35):
I don't think I didn't even know what it looks like.
But if I looked at it again and she she
would allow me to use it in some way, because
the thing that people do with like wedding dresses is
they kind of redo them and use those that fabric
and pieces. But I don't think my Woe will let
me do that. I think she want to keep it
in She's like, no, no, I want to keep it
the way it was. Yeah, and she does so like

(01:40:55):
in all the in our different rooms that used to
be like my sisters and eyes before we moved out,
and these different closets you'll find different memories along with
the storage room. I love that it's like a facade.
You walk in the house like, oh, it's so clean.
You open a closet, it's like, oh, everything. And when
I tell you she kept every prom dress, which again
I use them for a TikTok, so like it works out.

(01:41:17):
Oh that's where you get your your your wardrobe from
from TikTok. When I did, like the prom dress one, Yeah,
she saved all my prom dress. Okay, you're like roasting
me for saving him. I'm like, listen, I couldn't get
rid of these and if my mama would let me,
like this is not her thing, so and again I
say that all to give her such a hard time,

(01:41:38):
but like it's been a really cool part of my
adult life to be able to walk past all those
memories and like they're still there. So is there any
chance that if you know, through all the stuff that
doctor Laurie said, like the most expensive beanie babies, if
you go home and you find that Beani baby, Like,
any chance if you can you convince your mom to
sell it, Like if you're like mom, I am this

(01:42:00):
one's worth five thousand dollars. Maybe mostly only because we
have like four bidden for so many beanie babies. Oh,
there's so many eddy And we also have all of
our Happy Meal toys somewhere in one of those bins,
Like why those are the crappiest toys ever. And there
was one thing, one thing that I wanted because my

(01:42:21):
sister has over the years, she's really good at getting
it out. She's got them to do garage shows, so
she's gotten some of it out. It's just like the
really hot items that they've kept. And there was one
thing that I was looking for that, of course, I
think got sold somewhere along the line. Was I had
a collection of Polly Pockets. Did you ever know or

(01:42:42):
know of polly Pockets? Sounds familiar. So they're these little,
like pocket size little dolls and they're like rubber and
they'd have all these different outfits like an updated version
of Barbie basically. And I had a collection like I had,
I had buy every kind and it could go across
this whole studio table, right, And I looked for because

(01:43:05):
I wanted to pass it down to my niece. And
I was like, I think she'll love these because they
started making them again recently, so at least it didn't
matter in that aspect, but they got sold, and I
was so mad. It was a one them. I think
my sister did when she was going through because it
was in like I had it nice and neat in
a little like organized tub thing, and I think she

(01:43:26):
sold the tub not realizing all of my pollypockets are
in there. Oh so it was a cartoon. I'm googling it.
It was a cartoon. So these are like little figurines
from the cartoon. And then they got turned and they
were like these little rubber dolls that you could like
put these rubber outfits back on and off and you'd
play unlike you'd play with barbies. Did you ever have
the polypocket pocket World? Oh? Yeah, all of them, the

(01:43:50):
polypocket pop in party pad. Yes. If there was one
toy I remember from my childhood or two, it would
be it would be a furbie and polypockets. I remember
those for sure. And we definitely have a lot of
perfews too. I'm telling you, all the memories are down
there somewhere. So so one day maybe we'll get her
to sell them, but I don't I don't think so

(01:44:10):
so so funny. I did not know that about your mom.
I love it, and again I give her such a
hard time, but she she kept all those memories for
us and she hopes that we can pass them down
to like our kids one day, and she does like
she's she slowly started passing on like all my stuffed
animals that I had that I used to sing too. Um,

(01:44:31):
that was your audience. You were singing too, stuffed animals,
that was your were There are photo evidence of me
doing that. They're getting passed down to my niece and nephew,
so that that is the cool aspect of it. So
I think you should keep things. As my opinion of
that has changed as I have gotten older. I used
to think get rid of everything, and I still do.
I get rid of boxes and a lot of stuff.

(01:44:51):
I think there's a apple and the happy middle ground there. Yes,
and it sounds like you found it. You found the
perfect middle ground. Now you just need to go chase
down your baseball cards. I know money, I know mom
still has those, and but then again, you know, like
do you want to make money or hand those off
to my kids? And like, hey, hang on to these,
then maybe you give them to your kids. It is cool.
I think if you have one item specifically that you
can keep passing down, it's a part of a family.

(01:45:14):
I think that's really cool. But you just know that
one day, whether it's one hundred and fifty years from now,
somebody's gonna sell it. It's gonna go away at some point.
That's right, there's gonna be one person that wasn't in
the middle. Let's get rid of it. I don't care
it wasn't mine anyway, Like, let me make a thousand
dollars here, but at least the last like one hundred
hundred fifty years, you know, right, Oh man, So right now,

(01:45:34):
you guys, you guys can listen back to Bobby getting
his beanie babies appraised, and you know you'll probably end
up checking your beanie baby collection after this. I'm just
telling you, it's pretty fun. Number one on the Bobby
Bones Show. Now Doctor Laurie's showtime. So here's what happened.
A couple of weeks ago, someone on the show noticed

(01:45:56):
two of our guys out selling beanie babies on the
street trying to make a couple bucks. To me, was
offensive because I pay them well. Doctor Laurie I don't
know why they're trying to sell beanie baby from the
back of a car. And so I tell Ray, our producer,
what do you have, and he has a ton of
beani babies. I'll give you one hundred bucks for the
whole package, the whole two trash bags of them. Me
thinking I'm just going to give them away as gifts

(01:46:16):
to listeners because I don't think I'm in the beanie
baby game to make any money. So many though that,
I thought, is there a chance that any of them
are worth anything? So just know that all in I
paid one hundred dollars for all these beanie babies, and
so I have pulled some of the ones that we
think could have a value. And up first, should I

(01:46:37):
hold it up? Yeah? Okay, it up first. You aren't
doing Bobby. You aren't doing what everybody in America does does.
I can't even tell you. So many people will say
that to me. They'll say, I just pulled the ones
that I think might be valuable based on my research,
which is all over the place on the internet. If
you tried to do this research, so I'm an idiot.
You're saying, no, God, no, no, no, no, okay, So
This is a lot of people are doing what you're doing,

(01:47:00):
says Cubby. And these are the original from nineteen ninety three.
This is Cubby. It's a brown bear that lays on
its belly. What can you talk about this one? All right,
let's talk a little bit about Cubby. On his hang tag,
which is the heart shaped tag. That tag should not increased.
There should be no odor, there should be no stains.
That tag should in fact say the original Beanie Baby,
and make sure there are not two eyes and the

(01:47:20):
word original on the front of that tag where it
says tie Beanie Baby original. Oh, it does say original
Beanie Baby original O R one. What do you mean
two eyes? Well? O R I G. Sometimes they have
an error and they have two eyes. But do they
do that on purpose? I think a lot of them are.
Actually some of them were purposeful. Some of them were

(01:47:43):
knocked someone that's just manufacturing errors and such. There are
two eyes, but they're not together like original is just
spelled with a two eyes. So there's no error. Right,
So it says original Beanie Baby. It's there's no odor,
maybe me a little bit, but there's no odor on
Cubby to bear, okay, And on the tush tag, which
is the tag that's attached the bottom. It should say

(01:48:04):
handmaid in it should say Cubby, and then underneath Cuby
it should say handmaid in China. Underneath that it should
say nineteen ninety three. Let's see up nineteen ninety three. One.
Underneath that it should say polyester fiber and PBC pellets.
Polyester fiber and PVC pellets. Oh my gosh, here you go. Okay,
so that's a good one. That is one of the

(01:48:24):
original nine, and there's a lot of them out the
original but the original nine that we're first introduced in
nineteen ninety three are more valuable than many of the others.
After the original nine, the next bunch that you want
to look for are bears. General bears. I don't care
what it is, but it looks like a bear. That's
what you want. So Cubby here his birthdate on the
hangtagka first top. Heag yeah, yeah, it is eleven, nineteen

(01:48:49):
ninety four. It's eleven fourteen ninety three. Okay, So that's
unusual because usually you have a ninety with the ninety
three with a ninety three piece. So value on this
one's going to be about two hundred dollars. Wait, how

(01:49:11):
much did you buy all these Beatie babies from rayfrol
Oh my goodness, Ray, are you like I just had
a palputation. I mean that's just one so far. You're
gonna be a millionaire. Oh my goodness, Ray, what are
your thoughts? I'm one beatie baby and baby, and I'm
already winning. I'm excited. This is awesome Radio. I don't

(01:49:33):
own them anymore. They're yours, dude. He's a nice guy.
Raise a nice guy. Okay, all right, Doctor Laurie, let's
do Oh my, I cannot I blew out my ears streaming.
Don't bet they're all gonna be that okay, so easy,
all right, right, let's do I feel like anything that
looks like a bear. Let's do Patty, anything that looks

(01:49:53):
like a bear. Who's like, get the bear? Patty. The
platypus is one of the original nine. There's an original
on the I spelled as its should. Okay, are there
any other errors? For example, on the back of the
hang tag is the word surface, It'll say surface wash?
Does that have an R in the word surface? On
the hang tag, which is the heart shaped tag? Come on, Bobby,

(01:50:15):
learn the tag. No, I'm looking to all kind of tags.
So I'm looking and it says data birth one six
ninety three. Um, where what does it say? Surface? Usually
on the back of that tag it will say surface
It might say surface wash. The back of the tag,
though there is a it's kind of been torn. Oh no,
is the tag torn? Yeah? No? Wow, wow, Bobby, that's

(01:50:38):
not good. Okay, no, no orders, no stains. Right, it
does say surface wash, but the back of the tag
is torn. Okay, all right, that's okay. So let's see
on the tush tag. On the tush tag, does it
say polyester fiber and PVC pellets? And is the is
patty the platypuss made in China, polyester fiber and PC pellets,

(01:50:59):
and it is made in come On, made in China.
Oh okay, it says handmade in China. Then it says,
oh Brook Illinois to two things down. That's right, that
should say that. That's correct. So value on that one's
going to be about two hundred dollars. Okay, So so

(01:51:24):
far you're at four hundred and fifty dollars three fifty.
This is classic Bobby Bobby written all over. Let's do
it a couple more. Let's do a couple more. Okay,
doctor Laura, you see if we can show in front
of me Eddie, can we show her at my table here? Yes,
doctor Laura, will you which of these would you like
me to grab you? I'm just like the is the

(01:51:45):
Princess bear there? Yes? It is? Is she there? Let's
talk about her a little bit. Let me give you
a little bit of insight of what folks should do right,
so you know, because you may have some you may
have others. This is the princess. I call her the
Princess Bear. She's the princess and she's a memorial fund raiser.
You do a lot of a lot of things for
a lot of charities. You know, you're a good guy.

(01:52:06):
And this was a fundraising situation for the memorial fund
for Princess Diana after her death. She died on August
thirty first of nineteen ninety seven. So this bear comes
out and then there's a poem on the hang tag.
There's no date or birth on the han tag, and
then on the tush tag. Princess should have certain characteristics
that you're looking for. First of all, before we get

(01:52:28):
to tags, I'm sorry, Bobby, before we get to tags.
I know you're becoming a tag expert pretty fast. But
first of all, I want you to look at the
bear and see where that the rose has a little stem.
It should go almost right to her belly button. That
stem of that rose, that rose right in there. Yeah,
that rose stems should be actually the stem should be
green and not white. Is your stem green? Yes, I'm colorblind,

(01:52:51):
but it looks as that's green. Yes, oh my gosh. Okay. So,
and then the other thing about it is those eyes.
The two eyes are looking straight at you, like if
you if you were to puld it up to me,
or those eyes even some of the bad bat eyes
are not even I would say they're even. I mean,
what do you think of those eyes even? Yes? Yes,
oh man, you want look here? Let's let her look

(01:53:12):
at it. Yeah yeah, yeah, okay, So it looks that
looks good, all right? And then different color noses also
come into it, but that's in different bears, not on
this bear. So a couple of things. You don't have
the cape, you don't have the crown. You only have
a ribbon. She once had a cape and a crown too,
And there should be a poem on the hang tab,
the ribbon should be purple. There is there is, okay,

(01:53:36):
and then only a poem no dates. And then on
the tush tag it should say Princess Handmaid in China,
Princess Handmaid in China nineteen ninety seven, Polyester fiber and
pe pellets, Polyester fiber and pef hell, oh my gosh,
nineteen ninety seven, nineteen ninety seven. Yeah, that's all that.
Yell it already. Value on that one today, now don't scream.

(01:54:00):
Let me finish my sentence before you all scream. Oh.
Value on that one today is one hundred and seventy
five dollars. However, next year is the twenty fifth anniversary
of Princess Diana's death. I would not sell that thing
this year. I would wait until early August next year,
and I'd ride the press wave so you can make
the most money off that piece next year during the

(01:54:22):
twenty fifth anniversary. Okay, now you can yell, hold on,
speculate for me. What do you think I can get
for it next August? Okay, I think you can get
five dollars. Let's go. I mean, is race still live
in there? Raymundo. As we finished talking with doctor Laura which,
by the way, follow her on Instagram at doctor Laurie V.

(01:54:46):
Visit her website doctor Laurie v dot com. Raymundo jest
and the ones that she has I've profited. What's gonna
look like all in about a thousand bucks? Like, how
do you feel? Well? I guess I've just thought of
the way to explain it to my wife and my
wife's mother and just say, hey, I mean I helped
you guys sell your vehicle. I helped sell the Barbie dolls.
I failed at the Beanie Babies, but I made us

(01:55:07):
a hundred Who's to say people are going to pay
you for that? Maybe they will, maybe they won't until
you sell them. There's I've still made the hundred dollars
you haven't. Well, Now, Ray makes a very good point.
I gotta make this point because it is what the
market will bear. And these are my values are based
on actual sales records where pieces have sold. So if
they it's not oh it's a list price. So this

(01:55:29):
is what people are paying now. People can list them
at thousands of dollars and never have them sell it
that this is what pieces people have so bought them for.
That's what my values are based on actual sales records,
and don't forget that, you know. On Doctor Lorie Live,
on my YouTube channel, people can show me their objects live,
just like you did, and A'll of course appraise those objects.
I don't care what it is, beanie, babies or anything else.

(01:55:50):
I'm happy to do that too. Okay, there's just hey,
thank you for your time. This has been so much
fun and hopefully, I mean, I think we should hop
over there every year so and just get her on
the air. She's a great guest and look up crap. Yeah,
so fun. I'll be happy to do it with anything
you want. Nice to see you, Nice to meet all
of you. Thanks to Scuba Steve for working with my team.
All right, bye, Doctor Laurie. So yeah, it's the best

(01:56:13):
bits of the week with Morgan number two. All right,
that's it for us. We always have so much fun
when Eddie comes on here. We talk for so many hours.
It's like our catchup therapy sessions all kind of combined
into one. And Morgan, I feel like we can talk
for hours, you and I like we probably just did,
but like I don't know, I just feel like we
can just keep going on and on about it. Yes,

(01:56:34):
you and I just love you and I love connecting
to people, and so that's why we can connect very easily.
Like you, Me, Scuba, Steve, we all have that kind
of personality where it's very like just wants to connect
with people. Yeah, I love that, and Lunchbox hasn't. Sometimes
sure until he's tired, than he's like yelling and then yeah,
there's a lot, but yeah, it was so much fun
just catching up and hearing about your life and what

(01:56:55):
things are life now. So thanks for hanging out with
me for a little bit, a little bit of extra
work from you and Scuba. Shout out to you guys
for hanging out with me. Um. Let the people know
where they can catch you. More of Sore Losers Yes,
producer Eddie and all my socials that's this at producer
Eddie and then Sore Losers Podcast that's me Ray and Lunchbox.
We do a sports podcast. Hey, we we love doing

(01:57:18):
it and I think the people that listen love listening
to it. And we're planning a little something, a little
trip to Vegas. We're maybe thinking about doing a Sore
Losers Vegas getaway. We're we're inviting all our listeners. That's
in the plans. We don't know exactly what it is,
but we're gearing somewhere around January for that. So that's
really cool too, that we're talking about. That's so fun.
I'm so excited for you. You have to come, Morgan.

(01:57:39):
I'm going to come crash the Sore Losers Vegas party.
You're not crashing, you're joining it. You're having fun with us. No,
I love it. I think the Sore Losers have a
really awesome Dare I say cult following. I think that's
what we do. Yes, a mixture of sports fans, regular
people and truckers and all sorts of a variety of
people that live out in the world. I love it

(01:58:00):
kind of people right there. Yes, I love it. And
you guys can follow the show at Bobby Bones Show
and all social media. Hit up Bobby Bones dot com
for a lot of fun videos that Eddie and I
both were really hard to make sure they're up for
y'all to watch everything back um, and then you can
follow me on all the things at web girl. Morgan.
I am so just so happy right now. My cup

(01:58:20):
is filled that I got to hang out Addie for
a little bit. Thanks for hanging out with me. All right,
let's go look for signs. Let's let's go look for
Let's go look for sign I just couldn't even say
it a lot, even though I believe in them. All Right, bye, y'all,
I love you, Bobby. Boney Bone Show
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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

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