All Episodes

July 5, 2021 61 mins

Bobby opens up the mailbag to address an interesting topic...other people punishing your kids. Josh Turner performs his hits in studio and country legend Randy Travis even joins him for a performance! Plus, we all share weird smells that we like!

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

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
What's happening in everybody? How's your weekend? Amy? That was
really good. I mean we just hung out as the
family of the kids. Like our our EMO now is
hiking and movies. But we did we we do play basketball.
Now we're a basketball family. It's officially up and we've
got bat like new basketballs to have air. Wait a
few that we realized had no airs. We're all, well,

(00:32):
this is no fun. Did you have to go through
the HO because when I was at your house, was like,
we gotta put up a basketball goal, but we have
to ask the HO to put something on. I think
we did and we got approved or you just did it? Listen,
that's what I would do, ask for forgiveness. Yeah, no,
we we we must have gotten improved because it's all
so far. No notices on our doorstep, so really that

(00:54):
I mean, we're just you know, gamers, ballers, now ballers,
wait for it. We play horse and nice whatever else
an other game. I can't think of the name, big Eddie.
You I did so. Yeah. My in laws are in town.
So we rented one of those double decker boats, which
are awesome. By the way, explain a double decker boat.

(01:14):
It's a pontoon, you know. So it's got floats on
two big metal tubes or whatever, and it's a flat
platform and then it has a two stories and on
the top you can either jump off, you know, like
kind of like cliff diving a little bit off. Like
I would say, it's probably about two stories, like a
two story building in balcony. That's how far the jump
would be. So all the kids are like, all right,
we're jumping off the top or whatever. But my seven

(01:34):
year old junior, junior, he's the only one not doing it.
So all the kids are like, come on it, isn't
he the adventurous one. Yes, he is the daring one,
and he's just looking. He's like, I don't want to
do it. I don't want to do it. So we're
all kind of come on, come on, do it. And
I said, look, if I jump, will you do it.
He's like, okay, if you jump, I'll do it. I jump.
He still won't do it, So I get up there,

(01:55):
just pushed him offe boat. He was so mad. He
was so mad at me. He was crying when he
came back up and he's like, I hate this. That
was terrible. I hate this boat. I hate this lake.
And I gave him about ten minutes to kind of
stop yelling. I said, all right, time to get back
on the boat. He's like, no, leave me here, I'm

(02:15):
just gonna float away. But eventually ten minutes later he
was like he was over it. I don't know about that.
I don't know about that. But you know how in
life people have big teas and little teas for trauma
like you have. I never heard it referred to as that, yet,
well I heard of it. My therapist likes to call
it like little teas and big teas. So big tea
would be losing my mother dying, big tea. Little tea

(02:38):
is that, Eddie? Just like we need little teas. I
agree we need little teas. But this is gonna be
something to be quite traumatic for a child, that Eddie.
I know. Well, you know what, like the rest of
the day, I was like, are you still mad at
me for pushing you off the boat? And after at
night before he went to bay, He's like, no, I'm
not mad. Okay, you guys call this is a great
thing for people to hit us up with. I'm the

(02:59):
voicemail line, oh great bad parent, good parent. Yeah, Because
he wouldn't do it. He said he would also he lied.
He said, thank you all right, Eddie. I'm not calling
you a bad good parents, bad parent for Eddie throwing
a seven year old kid off the boat. Yeah, life
checking on our numbers. Eight seven, seven seventy seven, Bobby,

(03:19):
good parent, bad parent. It was fun though, eight seven
seven seventy seven, Bobby watchwalks. How's your weekend? Oh, weekend
was great. I mean did yard work and we went
on some walks, played in the pool. The weather was great.
I mean we didn't really can't really do much with
a two year old. They can't do anything. I mean,
I really can't fill him off the boat. You're good,
he's seven. Come on, you guys send us a lot

(03:40):
of emails asking for advice, and sometimes I like to
read him back to the show. Let's open up the
mail bag yet something year, he says, good morning studio
on Bobby Bone Show. My name is Robert. Have a
parenting question. So I remember growing up, my grandparents were
always allowed to punish me just like my own parents would.

(04:03):
That includes getting spanked, which rarely happened, Thank goodness. I
was talking my wife about that. With my wife about
that and wondering if we would ever give our parents
or siblings permission to punish or even spank our kids
if they were watching them for us. I said yes,
I'd see nothing wrong with it. However, she was not
into the idea as letting someone else spank our kids.

(04:24):
Would you let another family member spank your kids within
their own judgment if they were looking after them for you?
Did any of your parents give free reign to any
of your family members to punish or spank you? Thank you, Robert.
I'll go first. I don't have kids. I'll just tell
you my story before. I'm not gonna give my feedback.
You can do that. I was. I had permission for

(04:46):
anybody could hit me like there was a It was
a village, it was raised by a village, my grandmother, neighbor.
Anybody was allowed if I was bad, to spank me.
I don't know that was the best parenting technique, but
all the time, aunts didn't matter. If I would did
something that got me in trouble, it was well. My
grandmother raised me though for years too, But it was

(05:07):
all right. Go get a switch, Go pick one, and
I picked the smallest one and show her. Then she'd
tear me up with it. Um, But I was punished
by in a group setting. But I don't have kids, Ammy,
I'll go to you. What do you think? Well, I
was spanked only by my mom and my dad and
that's it. So and I would say the same for

(05:27):
my family. We've we don't spank our daughter. We've never
had to uh with our son. We have before, and
we're moving away from that a little bit. But I
would only want it to come from me or my husband,
nobody else. No, not your sister, no, and trust her.
I trust her, but that's not her. What about me?
That's sometimes? Yeah, And you know for him, they were

(05:54):
spanked at the orphanage. You know my kids, well, yes,
but only by Papa Pierre. Like the nannies didn't do it.
It came not from women but from a man. So
with my son, it actually is more effective if it's
my husband. And it really has been something that worked

(06:15):
for us because that's how he was already raised innocence.
But with our daughter hasn't been a thing at all,
and now she's thirteen, so we wouldn't do that. But
I just couldn't see anybody else in my family giving them,
even if I trust them or not putting that responsibility
on them. It's a heavy thing and it should. Yeah.

(06:36):
I mostly put all my husband anyway, thinking he's a
weird thing, right. I mean I really never thought about
it till I got way way older, and I was like, hey,
just get hit. Yeah with anything like extension chords. Whither
would grab anything extension chords fly swatter and if I
was real bad, she'd pulled the fly swatting part off
and oh my god, just whoop me with the hangers?

(06:57):
What that that wouldn't necessarily fly to dangers? Probably that
wouldn't fly today or is it flying? And we just
don't know about I'm sure I think part of it
was because I grew up in a really poor area
where nobody really cared about us that much. We were
just being spanked. But that just the whole way. Yeah,
if I came on here right now and I was like, man,
you know my kids were off the last night, I

(07:18):
just took the extension cord like that would be you're right,
and you're right. And also we recognize too that we're
saying this and Jess, but that is the that is
happening to somebody that's that's really sad that happening. And
it wasn't sad when it was happening to me. Feel
sad to me because I was living it. Yeah, what
do you think you'll do when you have kids? Um,
I think they'll be so well trained that they'll never

(07:41):
for sure, for sure your kids are gonna be perfect.
I didn't think about that. Yeah, it would be so
well trained, there'll be no punishment. That's what we need
to train our kid. Yeah, I'm trained and disciplined, so
I'll probably it won't need it. I'll probably just give
him a stern look. They'll understand four kids, what's happening
to you? So I'm like me. You know, only me
or my wife spank our kids. UM, our biological kids.

(08:04):
We can't spank foster kids. We don't do that and
really and we don't even if we do have. I've
only how to do it twice. But if we have
to spank our biological kids, we have to really separate
them all so that way the foster kid doesn't even
know what that's happening. Very it's very weird. So how
do you scold your foster kid? Time out? And again?
Time out can't be in an another room. It's got

(08:26):
to be on the steps where we're we all are,
you know, so just away from where the activity is happening.
Like if we're all in the living room, then you
sit on the steps right there, we can still see
you put your time out and you can't participate. We
call that time in time in you can start are
We learned that from our therapist. If you want to
take that, and then they feel like they're still in
with you, but they can't move. They don't feel abandoned.

(08:48):
It's effective. They definitely do feel like something, something different
is happening and like, Okay, all right, I can't be
part of this this party or whatever, and I'm in trouble.
But uh. And then as far as like my grandparents,
my parents, uh, I would let them. They I don't
think they would my parents. My parents spoiled my kids
and my wife's parents. I don't think there's any thought

(09:08):
of discipline our children. They're just kind of like, oh,
they can do whatever they want. They're not our children.
But I would give them permission if they asked, so Amy, no, Eddie, Yes,
I would say yes. If it's one super close person
that they're staying an extended amount of time with Let's
say if they're staying a week with them, but if
they're I could spank them. Could I your kids if

(09:29):
they were staying with you a lot? Yeah? I would
just hate for my kids if they were to exist.
And then if they were somewhere for a long period
of time and they were used to being spanked as discipline,
and then they were never getting discipline because oh it
doesn't allow. Yeah, well I can already tell you they're
not gonna They'll probably be like, yeah, bring it on.
Let Amy spink me, because that's what my son does

(09:49):
anytime it's either between my husband or me. And it's
been a while, but let's just say in the beginning,
when we had a spank, if I would spank him
in then say, you know, well dad'll be home. Do
you mean me to just wait? He's like no, Can
you just go ahead and do it and get it overwey,
because I'm pretty weak. You guys can call them, leave
us a voicemail, leave it up there eight seven seven

(10:10):
seventy seven, Bobby, I'm gonna go. Yes, it's okay. If
it's somebody you super trust and are super close to.
Eddie says yes. I say no, no. I think it's
all per parent, per kid. Anyway, Yeah, thank you for
that mailback question. I think a lot of people probably
wonder the same thing, are experiencing the same thing, and
I'm glad we got to talk about that, Morgan. If
people want to send us an email, what do they do?

(10:32):
Mailbagat Bobby Bones dot com. All right, close it up,
we got your Now was about the cloth. It's the
good news countdown, counting down the biggest good news stories
across the left. All right, here we go, friends, let's

(10:52):
get going here quick hitters. A school in Fort Worth,
Texas was able to provide school supplies to all its
students this year to save parents money. So one hundred
and seventy families decided to pay it forward, and they
came up with over five thousand dollars and bought supplies
for another school that needed them than that smaller multiple levels.
First of all, how about the school for being able

(11:14):
to figure out how to have enough money to buy
everybody's supplies and then they That is just an amazing story.
Billy and Nellie Jones of Savannah, Georgia, were born just
four days apart. Back in nineteen twenty they were married
and they were both teenagers, and after eighty years as
a couple, they just celebrated their one hundredth birthdays together.
So they're both one hundred years old and they did

(11:37):
it in the house that they built together in nineteen
fifty eight. Wow. But the appreciation on that house, they
probably make a pretty penny off that thing. That's crazy.
That's awesome. Just being one hundred's awesome, much less you're
significant other eighty years is the married couple all that's crazy.
A family left a note on their door thinking their

(11:58):
delivery drivers, along with some snacks for them to take.
This is one driver's reaction that will make you smile
when you hear it. You can't hear him the club,
but he does a hill kick at the end when
he's walking away. This is where Caitlin, who is just
such a giving person, and was like, hey, there are
a lot of delivery drivers coming by too and long days,

(12:19):
and so we set out a big basket and for
uber anyone who was like, hey, take whatever you want, well,
the problem is she filled it up like three times
and she's like, okay, we're out of stuff. But I
had put on my Uber eats app like Postmates app.
Hey there's a basket of free stuff. Just take something
after you drop off the food. And I left it
up even though we'd already taken the basketbag and I've

(12:40):
forgotten people were They were to hit me on the app, going, hey,
I'm out front. I dropped off the stuff. Where's the
free stuff? And I was like, oh no, I forgot
to take that message down. I know, a little disappointing.
After spending nearly seven years in the New Jersey shelter system,
Brooklyn the dog has finally been adopted. Wow, seven years
the Hamilton Township Animal Shelter and Trent celebrated in a

(13:01):
post instead. It took two thousand, five hundred thirty six days,
but this beautiful girl has finally been adopted. That's awesome.
Seven years. Here we go and Will Clawson just got engaged,
so naturally he asked his brother Henry Joe, who has
Down syndrome, if he'd served as his best man on
his wedding. The exchange was filmed to put on Will's Instagram.
This is awesome. Here's a clip. So where are you?

(13:23):
Please say yes to be my best man? We want
to be my best man. And awesome. I love it.
That's awesome that the good news countdown. It's time for

(13:44):
the good news. An auto shop owner named t J.
Crossman is about to give away a car to a
person in need. It's the fourth car that he's given
away every year the last couple of years he's done this.
He's excepting nominations now. He's been motivated to give back
since he survived about with cancer fifteen years ago. And

(14:06):
so what he does is he collects parts old car
and then he kind of rebuilds it and then gives
it to somebody. Amazing, like, over the year he spends
his time doing this. Is that crazy? That's good. That's
what I'm talking about. That was tell me something good.
People's biggest pet peeves with people they live with. Okay,
here are the top five. And then I actually asked

(14:28):
Caitlin what her pet peeves are about me before we
left where I left this morning. Number five having people
over the house without heads up all right. Number four
eating someone else's food. Yeah, that's frustrating. I feel like
I make a lot sometimes and then my husband will
just eat it and I'm like, well, that was supposed
to be for the whole family tomorrow. Number three lounging

(14:50):
was hanging it just like I feel like Eddie's a
lounger at his house. Do you think I just lounge? Yeah,
I do, but it's a lounging. It's cool if it's
it's lounge shine, But if it's not, then it is annoying.
Number two is wasting electricity. That's a pet peeve that
people do. Yeah. Then number one is not stacking your dishes.
And I wonder if that's stacking order, that's doing the dishes.

(15:13):
Like the number one thing is your partner or the
person you live with not doing the dishes, right, bothersome
to you? Yeah, what's your pet? People with your husband?
Coffee grinds everywhere right now, it's a problem. At our
new house. We have this one little part of the
countertop that's dedicated to the coffee. And now he thinks
like that can just be his space where it doesn't matter.

(15:34):
How I want to know every day where how he
thinks those coffee grounds that are all over the counter
and the coffee's like stains, how they go away every day?
That's what I want to know. Yeah, do you think
he just magically disappears. No, every day I clean it up.
What do you think he would be with you? Nothing? Okay?

(15:54):
And I tell you, I don't know. It's not true.
I know that I'm annoying for sure. So we would
need to add ask him though. And I don't have
any with any things. For Caitlin's just perfect as far
as living with makes the bed have no IS's like nothing,
like sometimes she wants to talk and you don't really well,
she wants to talk all the time, right, and I
want to talk. Yeah, I'm just trying to think of

(16:15):
something because there has to be something. Nothing comes to mind.
And I asked her, and I get this is very
early when I woke her up and asked her this.
So I was like, hey, what are your pet peeves
with me? I don't know that they're pet peeves, but
things you do that I just don't understand. That's okay,
go ahead, okay. Um. If something is sealed chips, rice cakes,
whatever it is, if it's sealed with one of those

(16:37):
little plastic toppers or even the wire ones that you
spin and twist, you don't use them again, Like you
open it and then you throw it away. The twist
day thing or it just goes but then I wrap
it and then lean it on the wrap. So it's
just everything is stale all the time, all right. Anything else? Yeah,
you um, sometimes you take your plates or your bowls

(17:00):
to the dish washer to sink. I thoroughly, it's before
the show go ahead. I take it to the sink.
You take it to the sink, and you don't rent them.
I fill it with water. No. In fact, last night
you filled it with water. And I was so taken
them back that I didn't even bring it up because
I was like, don't make a big deal about this.
Don't make a deal about it, because then he might

(17:22):
not do it again if I make a big deal
about it. Okay, and anything else. Yeah, you don't always
put the toilet seat down, that's true. And I feel
bad about that because sometimes you'll come out and be like,
I just fell in, and what do I always say, Oh,
I'm getting better. That brings me to another thing that
you do that kind of drives me in, saying you
bring up things that you do that are normal to

(17:44):
try to get me to give you some sort of props.
You're like, hey, I fed Stanley this morning, and I'm
like I've fed him every day, three times a day
for the past however long. That's the end of this segment.
All right, thanks, sorry, she had nothing. All right, back
to you, which is me in the studio. Oh my gosh,
you're like my son, what I made my bed today? Well,

(18:06):
you're supposed to. I brushed my teeth today. Well no,
you're not getting rewarded for something you were supposed to do.
Everything joke. You're supposed to pay, always braying about I
pay my chilesbore goes. You're supposed to. You can go
to Facebook and put your biggest pet peeve with your

(18:27):
husband or wife. Who have you lived with? Search Bobby
BoNT Show on Facebook. So I'm going to give you
the real first name of a famous country artist. You
just tell me who it is and who we know
them by. For example, Frederick is that dark spent leader
John Party. We did that one before the break? Okay,
are you ready ready? Troyal? Now, whose first name is Troyl?

(18:52):
Is that Garth Brooks's real name or George Strait's real name?
Troy Troyal? Oh my gosh, I did not know either
of them had a different I didn't even know that
was a name Troyal, Troyal. I'm gonna go with Garth.
Real name Troyal, Garth Brooks. Yeah, there you go. Okay,

(19:18):
Patricia is that Reba or is it Tricia Yearwood? Well,
it makes more sense if it's Patricia. But is this
a question? Patricia? Is it Riba or is it Tricia Yearwood?
Tricia Yearwood? The answer Patricia Lynn Yearwood. All right. Kenneth,

(19:42):
whose real name is Kenneth? Is it Eric Church or
Jason Aldean Air Church? I think Kenneth, Kenneth, Kenneth, Kenneth.
I think it's say it like both of them doing
impression of them, but you'll get it. Kenneth, that's Eric Church, Goodden, Kenneth, Um,

(20:02):
it's Eric Church. It's Kenneth, Eric Church. Eileen whose name
is Eileen? Is it faith Hill or Shania Twain? Oh Man, Eileen,
I know this one. I think it's faith Hill. The

(20:26):
answer is Eileen Regina Edwards and that would be Shania
Twain totally different. But faith Hill's name is Audrey faith Perry. Okay,
all right, how about Samuel? Is Samuel Tim mcgrawl Toby Keith,
oh Tim mcgrawl, Tim McGraw is Samuel Timothy mcgrawl Yeah,

(20:46):
and his dad is oh, come on, oh, I just
had it. Yeah, I was gonna say tout. That's Keen
on the tip of my tongue. All right, one more
cold Colden. Is that Chris Stapleton Colden? Chris Stapleton or

(21:07):
is that Cole Swindel Colden? I think it's gotta be
Cole Swindell. Oh, I guess it is your answer. Yeah,
it's cold Rainy swindellin I've never heard of Troyal or Colden.

(21:28):
We need her until today. You're Amy's pile of stories.
So a group of girls, they're gonna get their chance
to make a case in front of a judge as
to why they should be able to play tackle football
in Utah. They of course should be able to play
tackle football. Absolutely if you can make the team, go

(21:49):
and make the team. Now, I don't think that they
should be giving any special liberty. You know, well you're
a girl, so we're gonna make it easier for you know,
But of course they should be able to play. I
know girls when I was younger that could have played.
There were girls we played Sparkman High School. There was
a girl that played defensive end for them. She was
like third string, but she got in and every dude

(22:10):
in our team was scared of death that she Not
that they were scared of her, but they were scared
that she was going to make a play on them
and then it will be on film. So absolutely, if
her girl is strong enough and fast enough, same as
a guy, let her play football. What if a girl
wanted to play in the NFL, great, if she's good enough,
I don't care what sex you are. If she's good enough,

(22:30):
she should be able to play. So do you think
that doesn't work out or that's not applying like in
basketball because there are girl basketball teams and boy basketball teams.
There's no real girls school football teams. Yes, in a way.
I would say that though that if there was a
woman who was a good enough basketball player, she would
play in the NBA. Yeah. Okay, but Miam mostly men

(22:58):
get a lot stronger. Just generally speaking, we're bigger um
and we kind of outsize most women. But not at all. No,
I agree, I hear what you're saying. I'm just genuinely
curious because I mean, with football and these girls having
to put their case out at her, there's no girls
football team at schools, So they should they should have
somewhere to play if they want to play. I advocate

(23:19):
for women having a shot to do anything the guys do. Yeah, okay,
quarter peace, standing up, have had it. Maybe tough for you.
Now they've invented for that. All right, what else you got? So?
Dolly Pardon says that she has never been in a
fight with her husband, Carl Deane. My husband and I
have never fought. We've never bigger batting for us because
I never wanted us to say bad things that we

(23:39):
would have to remember what We'll just kind of walk
off or go do something else and you know, kind
of let that die down. I have to work at anything.
Marriage is a is a business too. Yeah. She said
that she treats her marriage like a business partnership, and
she that's how she handles business. So that's how she
handles her marriage. And I was like, oh, dang, I've
only been married fourteen years and I've lots of whites. Shoot.

(24:04):
So there's a guy who gets paid to go to
people's funerals and settle scores or take care of things
or tell secrets after the loved one or the person
has passed on, so it's like, hey, you go take
after I die. You can go ahead and tell some
people this or he says. People also hire him to
get rid of things like money, drugs, or guns that

(24:26):
they don't want their family or friends to find it.
Wants if I die, you got to take care of
this for me because I don't want people to find it.
He's basically a fix it guy. Yes, and you pay
him as you're dying, like ten thousand dollars right yep,
and then he goes and takes care of whatever crap
you need. And the thing is, here's here's why this
job could be perfect. You could be paid. He dies,
he didn't know if he didn't do it, exactly, you

(24:48):
have ten thousand bucks of pop. Nobody ever knows you
didn't know it. I don't even have to go to
the funeral, just a chill because the person's dead, exactly right.
That was Amy's pile of stories. It's time for the
good news, which lunchbox good. Addison had a birthday coming up.
She was turning eight years old. Her mom comes here

(25:09):
and says, Addison, what do you want for your birthday?
She says, Mom, I don't want presents. I want donations
to the animal shelter. So our mom posted on Facebook
said no presents, only donations, and people came through with
twelve thousand pounds of food. Wow. See sometimes Facebook does
do good things. Most time not, yeah, but occasionally one

(25:30):
of those stories makes you go, that's why facebooks are good,
and that's why the little girls good got all this
present she could have had, but it said all those
animals get to eat. There you go. That's good news
right there. Tell me something good. That was, tell me
something good. Gonna listen to a voicemail here from Belinda
from Albany, Oregon, right outside of Portland. Here you go, Hi, Bobby.

(25:51):
I don't know how long you guys have been on
after your butt. For at least four or five months.
I've been left saying to you the first time I
listened to your guys and heard Amy's positive ativity, you're
just giving kind souls. I love you all. Bye, Thank
you very much. Well, let's take more of those calls.
I'll be honest with you. Load those. Thank you. Thanks
for listening to us in Portland too. We're still really

(26:13):
new up there, so we appreciate that support. In that encouragement.
We love it. All rights over to Amy now and
get the morning Corny, Morning Corny. Why are basketball players
messy eaters? Why are basketball players messy eaters? They're always
say it, it's funny, say it. Come on, they're always

(26:36):
driveling drivel. That was the Morning Corny, one of the
rare times Amy quits a joke right in the middle
of it, and then we have to you're across the
finish line, because I mean, I liked it, and then
when I started to really say it, I thought I
was already anticipating that you're gonna be like, oh, I
was slam. Don't do that. Yeah. I know purposes where

(27:00):
their land, but I don't always think that they're laying
on I like them. If your husband said I just
don't want to wear my wedding ring anymore, would you
care a little bit? I would wonder why? Because why
why have you been wearing it for this many years
and now suddenly it bothers you. It's uncomfortable. Almost one
third of new husbands are choosing not to wear a

(27:20):
wedding ring. In the room here lunchbox, do you wear yours? Nope, Eddie,
you wears of course have it on right now? School
is Steve, do you wear yours? Yeah? Wear it every day.
I feel weird without it. Got it on and listen.
That's about here too. One of three, which is lunchbox.
But why doesn't lunchbox? I want to know this. I've
just never worn jewelry, never owned a watch, never had anything.
So I just it felt weird and so I just
don't wear it. Don't need to. So it's either because

(27:43):
of their job or they find it uncomfortable or bothersome
that's it the job. Well, yeah, the job. I mean,
I don't want the way these to think. No, it's
just uncomfortable. It feels weird to have it on your
hand all the time. According to marriage counselors, if a
husband is ring free from the beginning, there's nothing to
panic about. They just don't like wearing ring, right, I
can do that. However, if he's not ring free, then

(28:04):
all of a sudden wants to be ring free. That
brys something to think about there, like why yeah, and
my husband does take his offer work though, Um, what
if he wanted to wear around his neck? I got
a chain? Huh guys do that? Yeah? Oh? Why? I
think that's actually pretty cool. What why because it's closer
to your heart? No, just because I don't want to

(28:24):
wear a thing in my hand. I have trouble with watches.
I never wear watches because any jewelry around my hands,
I just don't wear anything. Okay, you run that by Caitlin.
What you're wearing it as a necklace. Eventually, whenever y'all
get married one day, Probably not a fight I'd like
to get into. So I'm just trying to, you know,
I avoid that stuff at this point on the Bobby

(28:48):
Bones Show. Now, Josh Turner, what's up man? How's it going?
Is this the first time you've been in the studio
and this studio? Yeah, so since we've knew? How long
has it been had you been here? It's been years? Huh.
We had a number one and then when did you
come in for your buck? I've seen you at remote
something that I know I've seen you. It hadn't been

(29:10):
that long. Well, let me say this, it seems like
I missed you. That's what it feels like. My heart
just feels like it missed every day seems like a year.
Josh Turner is here. I was thinking about you coming
in today and I wondered, when you go through a
drive through, do people ever recognize your voice through the
Just a person like welcome to Starbucks a double shot,
but they're like, are you Josh turn? Does that ever happen? Uh?

(29:31):
Not at the drive through? Um, but yeah, usually when
I go into a restaurant, if I'm by myself, I
just when I opened my mouth, it gives it a voice.
So when did your voice start to go that deep?
What age? I had been singing bass and stuff in
a in a quartet when I was in my teens,

(29:53):
early in high school, but it didn't have the depth
and the texture that it has now because I didn't
really know how to technically use my voice. I didn't
know there was a proper way to use your voice,
and so I injured my voice in nineteen ninety six.
That led to my first trip to Nashville to the
Vanderbilt Voice Clinic, and so I threw all that rehabilitation process.

(30:15):
I had to kind of learn how to sing and
talk all over again. And that was when I kind
of started noticing that my voice was developing into what
you hear now, and so it was really kind of
a blessing in disguise, So it's probably, you know, i'd say,
technically like early early college when it really kind of
took shape. Josh Turner's here. He's gonna play first. I

(30:36):
requested that you play your man, if you're cool with that. Yeah, man,
that is such a jam and it's such an up
beat song, and it makes me want to be somebody's man,
you know, all the things that should make you feel. Yeah,
So if you don't mind, here is Josh Turner here
on the Bobby Bones Show. Baby, locked and over and
turn the lights down low, put some music on. It

(31:00):
solved and slow, Baby, we ain't got no place to go.
I hope you wonder stand. I've been thinking about this,
holy long, never felt a feeling quiet the strong. I
can't believe how much it turns beyond just to be

(31:24):
your man. There you go, Bobby Bones, and now we
talk out of it. Now. That's right, folks, that's Josh
Turner coming to you this morning. That's right. Trappic today,
seventy two degrees feeling good. I jo on the way
to work today. Be sure to wave with somebody. Just
don't touch their hand with your hand, because you know
what happens then nice job Night, Adopt Josh Turners. Here

(31:49):
on this record, Country state of Mind. There's a track
you do a Hank Junior song with Chris Jansen. It's
it's Country state of Mind. The records named after this.
Here's a clip of Josh and Chris Jansen doing Country
state of Mind. You have Chris Jansen, you have Runaway June,

(32:12):
you have Maddie and Tae. Special guest appearance Randy Travis.
I do it with Chris Chris Stofferson, who's making all
these calls for you because you have the most loaded
cell phone I've ever seen. You either get all these
folks on your record. I did all of them, pretty much,
all but Alison Moore, which was kind of a surprise
because I had done alone for Shaking. And then my

(32:33):
producer Kenny Greenberg said, hey, you mind if we if
I bring in Alison Moore to sing on this. I said, absolutely,
go go for it because I was listening to her
when I was in college and I always loved, you know,
her voice, and she actually had a song called Long
Black Train. So I'm not the only one. In a second,
I'm gonna play a couple more tracks from Country State

(32:55):
of Mind. We do something with guests called urban legends.
Stories we read about them online that we don't know
if they're true or not. I have one for you
that I read about you, and I was like, is
that even true about me? So well, we'll see. I'll
run it by you. Josh Turner will come back in
one second Bobby Bones Show. On the Bobby Bones Show. Now,

(33:16):
Josh Turner, Oh, here you go. This is the urban
legend that I read about you. Okay, when you were
a student at Belmont, you went to Johnny Cash's property.
You saw the gate was open. You took it as
a sign, so you went knocked on the door. The
door knob wiggles, the door swings open, and there stands
Johnny Cash. He and I both jumped back, Josh Turner says,
because he didn't expect to see me, and I sure

(33:39):
didn't expect to see him. That's very true. Wow, you
try to walk inside someone's house. I didn't try to
walk into his house, but the gate from that land
knocked on the door, I know. But then he said
he wiggled the knob, and I think Johnny Cash wiggle
the knob or did you? Now you said the door
knob wiggled yeah, which was him, yeah, yeah, yeah, okay.

(33:59):
I thought, sorry he said the door knob, and I
thought he just straight up was like I see this
as a son, I'm a long right end. And I
was like, what, okay, that makes sense nowad that's great?
And then what happens right right? Then? Does he call
the cops or do you guys go and make a
salad or what happens? You know, I was just a young,
dumb college student that had stars in my eyes, and

(34:21):
I just, uh, I was just trying to meet my
hero because I had been reading his autobiography and I
had read about the neurological disorder that he had been
diagnosed with. And I got to think in one day
that if I didn't get to meet Johnny Cash before
he died, that I would be extremely disappointed. And so
I knew I was taking a risk, but I didn't

(34:42):
really know what to expect. And so I get there
and like, like like you said that, the gate was
completely open. I drive in a park, I walk up
through the door. I knocked, nobody answered, So I kind
of walked around the corner of the house and it
was just pitched black dark around the the house, and
I said, m I probably should stay over here in
the light, and so I went back. I knocked again.

(35:05):
There's a stained glass window beside the door, and I
could see through the window, and there's a painting of
June on the wall. So I was like, this has
got to be the place. So I knocked really hard,
and I hear this voice from the depths of the
house saying coming coming, and my heart just started fluttering,
and so like I said that, the door swings open
and there's Johnny Cash, and he and I both kind

(35:28):
of flinched, and once we got over the initial shock,
I just started kind of introducing myself, telling him why
I was there. You know, I was a big fan
of his, has been reading his book and all this
kind of stuff, and just thanked him for the impact
that he had had on me. And he was just
very nice and down to earth and shook my hand.

(35:49):
He laughed, you know, when I told him my heart
was about to beat out of my chest, and he
kind of laughed and said, well, you know, we're all human,
and so, like I said, he's in a few minutes
with me, and then he said, I'm gonna go back
in and rest and I said, I understand. So he
shuts the door and I started walking back to my
truck and I just broke down crying because I could

(36:09):
not believe that it had just happened. And then the
morning that I woke up and found out that he
had passed away, I was so thankful that I had
taken that leap of faith to try to go meeting,
because that was the only opportunity I ever had to
meet him. Wow. What a story. Oh, I mean because
cool and you seem very normal, but also that could

(36:31):
be very scary for an artist. I mean even if
you now, that means someone a big just turn a
fan could see your coming off at your door, which
you're stable and see you know, but if someone was not,
that would be very Somebody asked me earlier, like what
I learned from that, and I said, well, I've learned

(36:52):
that if somebody knocks on my door, don't shoot him
because they might might end up being famous and they
I don't want them hating me talking bad about me.
An interview Josh Turner is here. I canna ask you
one more thing here before we get into another song.
But you have four boys? What about you? Is producing?
All the boys and no girls. A lot of testosterone.

(37:14):
Ye riders in the sky nick nicknamed me the Tornado
of testosterone. So I guess that's it. I don't know.
So are you gonna have a girl? Are you trying
for a girl? You? We did? We tried four times
to play old four times. That's funny, all right, Josh

(37:34):
Turners here, by the way, let me mention again on
the twenty first. But but there's a bunch of tracks
out now. I'm no stranger of the Rain Country State
of Mind with Chris Chanson. That's a Hank Junior song.
I can tell by the way you dance. I've got
it made, by the way that that's a John Anderson song.
And he's actually on the song too. Yeah, uhh. Now
that's probably a little nerve racking because you cover a

(37:55):
song with a buddy, but you cover a song with
the let me play Devi clup of that Raymondo. You're
singing it with the guy Simon, mister Simon all win,
so you can't sing it like John and Yeah, it's
a lot of pressure. Did you guys sing together? Well? Uh,
I had already done my part, but I was in
the studio when he did his part, that's gotta be

(38:16):
so cool, right, yeah, yeah, so all right, all right,
And I just kept listening to how he did his
I was like, is he gonna make me have to
go back in and and sing re sing my part?
You know? But it all worked out and you'd be like, hey, John,
while you're here was swinging. Yeah, oh man, all right, Josh,
you're gonna play Forever and ever amen, which is you

(38:37):
know for me one of the songs growing up in Arkansas,
kissing ninety six Randy Travis. Yeah, why this song? Why
did you pick the song? Uh? It's Randy's signature song
and uh. And I had seen several events around town
where somebody would, you know, go out and sing this
song and they would have Randy come out and sing

(39:00):
you know, the last amen, and um, you know, I
just I was like, man, you know, we need a
recorded version of that, and so um, so I asked
Randy if he would come in and and uh, I
asked him. I said, hey, you know, I've seen you
do this live in a lot of different settings, and um,
but we're in the studio now, so if you want

(39:21):
to sing more than just the last amen, feel free
and he said nope. So so I was like, well,
Randy Travis is literally getting the last word. Well, and
let's Randy's here, which is really cool, so we can
bring him in now. So Randy Travis is here too,
which is awesome. Just so grateful that you guys came
into play some music here. You may think that I'm

(39:49):
talking foolish. You've heard that I'm wild and I'm free.
You may one under how I can promise you now,
this love that I feel for you always will be.

(40:11):
You're not just time that I'm killing. I'm no longer
one of those guys. As sure as I live, this
love that I give, it's gonna be yours until the

(40:31):
day that I die. Oh baby, I'm gonna love you forever,
forever and d ever. Ray mean, as long as old
men sit and talk about the weather, as long as

(40:52):
old wham and sit and talk about old man. If
you wonder how long I'll be faithful, I'll be happy
to too, you bugging I'm gonna love you forever and

(41:13):
diver forever, and diver forever and dever forever and diver. Hey,
maybe nice now was great? Come on? Wow, Josh Turner,

(41:37):
Randy Travis one take wow get it, wow wow wow.
Great job both of you guys, great job. We're just
such big fans of YouTube. Mister Travis just grew up.
When I think of growing up in Central Arkansas as
a kid, it was just absolutely it was mostly Randy
Travis and Garth and that's pretty much it. That's pretty
much all it was. It was Randy Travis and Garth.

(41:58):
And I know what, Damian's a little more or streight
than it was. It was probably more George Straight and
Randy Travis. Yeah, that's why I don't tell too. I can't.
I don't want to. Look I'm getting I don't. We
have so many people in and out of here, but um,
that song just took me. It takes me right back
to my childhood and like my dad and friends and

(42:20):
writing around. And I had no idea you were even
here today, So I guess I was a little shocked
when you came in and then just to see I
don't know, that song just touches a lot of people,
and so it's just cool to hear that today and
then hear you be a part of it. And no,
I'm all emotional. I don't even know why. I'm like,
what is happening? But well, it's it's proof of the

(42:44):
influence in the impact that one person can have on
the world really, because you know, you think about your
memories and how Randy's music affected you, and you know, Randy,
you know, is the reason that that I moved to Ashville,
because he made me realize that it's possible for somebody
that grew up in a small tobacco farming community to

(43:06):
come to Nashville, to come to the big city and
get a record deal, and and uh, you know, so
he inspired me. You know, Randy, we were out. I
was out with some buddies and they had me. They said, hey,
they don't know a lot about country music, and they said, hey,
make like a ten song playlist, and so I had
Digging Out Bones was one of them that I put
on there. Man, you talk about being a killing my grandma.

(43:28):
Digging out Bones Randy was my jam. I sang it
loud as I could the other day. So it's it's
really nice to have you here. That's That's the first
country song I ever sang in front of a crowd.
Is because and I was thirteen years old, had no
idea what a neglige was so I appreciate that I
was making all the old ladies in church kind of blush,

(43:49):
you know. So that's funny, Okay. Josh Turner, Randy, great
to see you. Always always a pleasure. This has been
just a real fun experience for all of us. So
it's a real special day for us. So thank you, guys.
Scooping All right, there is Josh Charda, Randy Travis. Everybody,
it's time for the good news. There's this woman, Kari Woods,

(44:12):
a mom of five. She was at Vacation Bible School
at her church praying for an eight year old girl
named Abby who needed a new kidney. And after she
found out that she was a match, she thought, you
know what, I really feel like the Lord is telling
me to give this little girl my kidney. So she
did and the surgery went well and Abby is now
in good health, jumping rope, playing outside and doing all

(44:36):
of that all because this woman learned about her at
Vacation Bible School to pray for her. Wow, and she
was the answered prayer. Wow. You know I love it. Yeah,
I mean too, that's a good one. That's tell me
something good right there. That was tell me something good.
It's happening, everybody. Thank you so much for hanging out
with us this morning. Here is Andrew from California, More

(44:58):
Studio to get your advice, Bobby, me and my girl
are currently in a long distance relationship, and I know
you and Caitlyn were at that point, but I just
want some advice. We're both be young, we're both trying
to live it up, so advice would be great. Thank
you my advice. And it was the first ever long
distance relationship I'd ever done. We just always had a
plan next. We weren't ever just living separately, going I

(45:20):
wonder when we'll see each other again, even if it
was far away. We had a plan. We were looking
forward to when she would come here or I would
go there. But then again, we got here with Corona
pretty quick because we dated for a few only a
few months, and then she was just kind of trapped here,
which in the end was the greatest thing to ever
happened to me. Right, So my only advice to you,

(45:42):
so I'm like your young guy, is just make sure
that you know whenever you leave, you already have your
next little spot planned because you're looking forward to something always.
Otherwise you kind of just feel like you're floating. Kaitlyn
used to come to town and then she would get
here and then start to get sad already because you'd
have to she knew she'd to leave in a few days,
and I was like, wait, wait a minute, don't get

(46:02):
sad until you're actually leaving. Yeah, I do, like, just
be happy for a second. Yeah, and so and then
I take her to the airport and I would talk
with that and say like, hey, no need to get sad.
You're gonna come back. We already have our next short planned.
Like that's why it worked for us. It's like, don't
get sad. This is enough. You're coming back in three
weeks or two weeks, and then you're gonna get stuck
here and then you're gonna live about a one single

(46:23):
small suitcase for three months. Um. Yeah, that would be
my advice there. Andrew, good luck. It can work. It's tough,
it can work. But there's also got to be a
bit of a plan for how to end the long
distance as well. There's got to be an instant the means,
let's do one more. Here you go. This is a
heather in North Dakota. I just wanted to find out

(46:44):
if you and Caitlin had your own song a couple,
we have a few. I mean, her and I haven't
really talked about this on the level of just picking
a song, but i've I've made a list here. The
first time we kind of went somewhere together, and she
knows every nineties country song, every word to every nineties
country song, and so we were Brooks and Done Neon

(47:06):
Moon had Oh, I know what was happening. Eddie and
I were practicing because we were playing with the Brooks
and Dune and I was learning, making sure I knew
every word of the song, because you feel like you
do until you have to sing it with them, all right,
and you're let go, and then we just kind of
say that song reminds me of her because we just
sang it for an entire weekend. So that's not our song,
but that's one. Also, the du Alippa song Don't Stop

(47:28):
Now reminds me of her when we first met Don't
Come Now, Don't Stop Caring, because I didn't even love
the song, but she liked the song and she went
to the same church as to Alippa, and so I
thought that was cool. Yeah, that is cool, and so
that song was a big one Jesse and the Rippers

(47:48):
forever serious, Yeah, why why this? Because she used to
play it all the time and be like, this is
my song for you. She was kind of kiddy, but
not really. And also, who doesn't let full house and
Jesse's playing this at the wedding Forever the dam But

(48:09):
finally the one that I would say is our song,
not because we've picked it or had this conversation, and
this song because she says that when she knew that
I was the one for her. I took her to
a Matt Carney concert and we were in Oklahoma City
because I surprised her by going to the Oklahoma City
Thunder game and then Matt Carney was playing. He's a

(48:31):
friend of mine, and so after the game, we went
over and watched the back end of his show and
hung out with him afterward. But he played this song
at the very end of it, and she said, when
during this song is when she knew that I was
the one and it's nothing left to lose. So and

(48:54):
then we listened to that song all the time too,
because we know all the words to it, and that
was a real special time for us. And then in
the song too, he talks about moving to Nashville, you know,
and probably in her life too, she's thinking like, oh
my gosh, like I could live in Nashville. Well, that
whole song too is like let's just go for it,
like there's we got nothing to lose, let's just go
get it. So yeah, and it's a jam too where
were you and that since you know where you were

(49:15):
like the game and the concert, if that's when she
had the moment of knowing where were you at that
moment already knew you knew too, Well, yeah, because I
planned the whole trip. I'm not planning a trip like
that for somebody that I'm not berserk over. So yeah,
and she said I haven't seen it, and I'm not
going to ask her for it. That she took notes

(49:35):
on her phone that night on how she felt because
she didn't want to let that kind of go by,
and she wanted to. I guess maybe when she gets
mad emulators she can go check it her little diary.
But I think and I can ask her. I think
that's probably are if we had to sit and vote
on a song, I think that's it. Nothing left to lose.

(49:56):
Matt Carney, But those other ones remind me of her
a lot. Every time I hear on Moon Now it's
like that's I just think about That's cool. Yeah. Do
you have a song not like of your first dance
at your wedding, but like a song that you you
and your husband when you first started being together, it
was like your song. I mean, ours is anything when
we first started dating. He loves Texas country, so and

(50:16):
Pat Green ended up being one of our songs. But
I would say anything Jerry, Jeff, Pat Green, Robert l.
Keane and even some other guys that aren't as known
as those Texas country guys. So you have a whole
format as you now, all the Texas country anything with
the Red nerd and it is our song. No, But

(50:37):
I will say, like even Parker McCollum's song that's out now,
when it comes on the radio, it instantly has that
Texas country feel, and I think of him already with
that song and he loves it. But there's not song
but I can think of right now unless it's Pat Green. Crazy,
But Eddie, you said not that. I think ours kind
of came later. We had our early ones, but I
think fix You Now has become our song because of

(50:58):
just the roller coaster ride that our marriage has been,
ups downs, ups, downs, and we've always just kind of
ended up being there for each other. So when fix
You comes on, we both just get really quiet and say, like, gosh,
I love this song. It's like we did too in
my station. Are you listening to our playlist radio? Because
I don't listen to the alternative stuff too. They never

(51:20):
play things they don't it's always like hateful stuff. Now,
I'm having some work done on the house outside and
I was walking out coming over here today and it
smells like WD forty and I love the smell of
w D forty that in gasoline. I probably shouldn't love
it as much as I do, but I could just
sit there and take it in. Is there a smell
that is a little weirder but you love it? Yeah?

(51:42):
And I just realized how much I missed it or
loved it from back in my tennis days because we
were cleaning out the garage and I found some tennis
ball cans and open them up to put some stuff away,
and when I popped up in the can, I just
that's a good smell, and so brand new tennis ball
smell Eddie, you I'm weird. One is parmesan cheese. People

(52:02):
say it's stinks so bad, but I really like the
way it smells. Do you guys like gas? Oh? Yas? No, No,
you don't. You act like it's a bad thing. It's stinky.
Sometimes skunks smell good to me. I'm not kidding why.
I don't know. Not all skunks, but there are certains.
Maybe I don't know what to eat that day, don't
But there's some skunks that if they if I drive

(52:24):
down the road, I'm like, do you like the smell
of No, I don't see, because that's that smells the
same to me. That's skunk. Oh it does really? Yeah.
Do you like the smell of Mary Jay Mary Jane? Um?
What was it called? Mary Jane? Jane said Jay. I

(52:50):
thought it was like doctor's cousin Mary. Um. Not particularly. No,
I don't know, yeah, me not at all? Yeah, yeah, much.
Why you have a smell you like? Oh? Yeah, I
like smelly socks, Like every time I take my socks off,
I have to smell them. I just I don't know why.
Something about my that smells like a good day. Yeah.

(53:11):
I love new car smells like getting in a fresh car.
That leather smells great. Well more Raimond, know what you got. Yeah,
whenever my chick leaves something the oven too long and
it gets burnt, sets off the fire alarm. I actually
love the smell and I just slowly fan it. You
like burnt food, Yeah, yeah, I really do. I don't
know what it is, but it Yeah, it definitely brings

(53:33):
up my senses a little bit. That's funny. I haven't
heard that before. Are these things cheap or are these
things progal? What do you think the difference is in
your mind? Oh, cheap is like a you're being cheap,
like a cheap skate. You're trying to you're stingy with
your money for no real reason. Nice. I like that.

(53:54):
That's a good definition, Like you're just stingy for the
sake of it, right, And then being fool is you
have to be smart how you spend your money, and
you're you're trying to respect that. Okay, cheaper, frugal, not
taking your turn to buy everyone around to drinks. Cheap,
I would say cheap, Yeah, buying generic food products like

(54:15):
frequently as a kid, we never got the boxes of cereal.
Way to look at the bottom and instead of frost
of flakes, we had flakes of frost. That is frugal,
that's frugal. Yeah, that's not cheap. That's frugal because you
really can gets like generic medicine. They're like, you want
the generic brand, no difference. Yeah, regifting is regifting cheaper, frugal, cheap.

(54:37):
Oh I don't know, because sometimes you have a gift
that maybe isn't for you, but you can give it
to somebody else and they're gonna love it. I'm gonna
go with frugal on regifting, okay, because I never regift
because I'm like, I just want to get rid of this.
But if I have something I'm not gonna use and
it's give it to Eddie, I'll take it too. I'm

(54:57):
gonna go frugal. Okay, Really, is anybody else with me
on this? Y'all all think it's frugal. I think it's frugal.
I don't think people. I don't think people are gonna
disagree with you angrily, but generally speaking, I would think
it's it's frugal, Okay, cheap, Okay, no, it's but it's
your opinion. I'm not ours watering down the soap and
soap dispensers cheap or frugal frugal. Oh that's cheap, so

(55:20):
so gets right. Okay, I'm going cheap on that one.
Like there's some things you just shouldn't Okay, not blasting
the air conditioning right now when it's super hot. It
depends on what you can afford. But let's just say
you can afford it, and you're my husband. You're being cheap.

(55:42):
I was gonna go frugal. Okay, you have a personal story.
It's bringing frugal, but I I don't. I don't need
to be hot when we can have it on, but
I it does. I am thankful for my air because
I know some people do not have it all right,
and that's been cheaper frugal. Thank you. Um, we should
do Corny after dark, okay. For our listeners they're new

(56:03):
to this show. Amy does a segment an hour and
a half or so ago. It's called the Morning Corny.
It's a little corny joke, fun for the kids. Most
that's how it started. Amy loves corny jokes. But now
there's a new hybrid where it's it's a little more adult.
So we say I can say something, well, we'll bleep it.
Ray is sitting there with the bleep button, and if
we have to bleep it, we will. Okay, Ray, are

(56:26):
you ready? And now the morning Corny after Dark. Why
are men's voices louder than women? Why are men's voices
louder than women? Men having antenna? I don't get it.
Is it a whole joke? Or did you in men
having antenna? Oh, you're gonna have to beat this Ray,

(56:51):
She means, they're Oh, my gosh. I didn't get that. No,
I didn't until Amy did her hand in an upward
mode shin, and you started laughing as soon as you
finished it. She's still laughing. My eyes are gonna water.
I'm not gonna I've started modestly, and we do not
have antennas. By the way, I have a little transmister

(57:15):
t mister radio. Yeah, okay, okay, okay, hit it again.
And now the morning, Corny after Dark. What's the best
part about gardening? What's the best part about gardening? She's
laughing so hard you can't even say it. What's the

(57:37):
best part about gardening? Getting down and dirty with your Now,
it's kind of funny, that's kind of cornyn Yeah, okay,
all right, all right, have you with another one? And
now the morning corny after dark? What do you get
when you cross with a potato? Wait? The setups dirty? Ya? Okay,

(58:00):
so I gotta beat this is the first you know,
we'll do the first thing. What do you get when
you cross with the potato? Oh? My god, this is bad.
That's bad. Man. I ain't raised getting time. I'm believing everything.
Story up to day. This story comes up from California.

(58:24):
A twenty five year old man showed up the hospital.
He said, Man, I got attacked by two guys. They
slashed me with a razor blade. They vandalized my car,
they beat me up. Turns out he just got in
a one car collision and he wanted to blame someone else,
so it was his faulty wrecked the car. He wrecked
the car, wanted the cover of it. So he tried
to say that they beat up his car and beat
up him. He was you're drunk. Yeah, when Lunchbox does

(58:48):
the drink emotion with his hand, none of our listeners
can see it, so that whole thing is missed unless
I say, Lunchbox did a drink emotion was his hand.
So he was drinking yeah, they believe alcohol was involved,
so he doesn't want to get a d UI, so
he says he got beat up. So he got beat up,
but he wrecked his car and hurt himself. Got it.
There you go, I'm munchboxed out your bone head story
of the day. They say that you're eventually going to

(59:11):
enjoy the same food as you're significant other. The longer
you're together, the more closely your food is, you'll start
liking it sometimes just because it's around more, and you're like, well,
I'll kind of cave in most people I know. With us,
we do lunch and most dinners together, not always breakfast
because of how early we wake up here. But they

(59:32):
say being around someone will shift your taste. Now, I
read this story and she talked about it on the show.
She's never had a condiment, never had mustard, never had ketchup,
hates it when I eat mustard, and I love mustard.
She won't kiss me until I brush my teeth, and
she has to know I brush my teeth. She won't
touch the bottle. She will make these raps. She's great cooks,
so she'll do all this stuff, make it, make it,

(59:53):
make it. But she won't touch the mustard bottle. She's
so disgusted by it, like, and that will never change.
And I'm like, you didn't just squirt it on there?
We have masks, put a mask on, squirt it on there.
She will not do it though, And she again, she
won't kiss my face if I've eaten mustard and haven't
brush my teeth. That's I mean. And yet it's not
like she had some bad experience where she ate it

(01:00:15):
and it made her sick, Like she's just never even
tried condiments. And her mom's the same way. So crazy.
But I'm like, you ever had a hot French fry
with cold ketchup? Yeah, it's amazing fries. Um. She'll do
a little barbecue sauce. Oh yeah, that's right, barbecue says
there only one anything your husband liked that you didn't
like that now you like. It's probably more so that

(01:00:38):
he now eats the way I like, Well, your your
way is a little weird, well almost vegan. No, I've
started eating well, I guess to that point. I eat
stuff that he grills now and I used to not
really eat meat. So he's affected me that way. But yeah,
he eats a lot more plants. Than he used to
because he did not eat salads or he when he

(01:01:00):
got married, he made one dish and it was he
called it the pasta tuna. Surprise was a surprise palapenos. Oh,
I thought a surprise was it didn't make you sick
or not? No, but it was um, spaghetti noodles, the
cannatuna and maybe mustard and then the jalapenos were the
surprise part. Well, I canna put mustard on a steak

(01:01:23):
like I canny mustard on any meat whatsoever. She's not
gonna do mustard. But okay, we're done. We'll see you tomorrow. Goodbye, everybody,
Advertise With Us

Hosts And Creators

Bobby Bones

Bobby Bones

Amy Brown

Amy Brown

Lunchbox

Lunchbox

Eddie Garcia

Eddie Garcia

Morgan Huelsman

Morgan Huelsman

Raymundo

Raymundo

Mike D

Mike D

Abby Anderson

Abby Anderson

Scuba Steve

Scuba Steve

Popular Podcasts

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

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

Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

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

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

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.