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January 17, 2025 77 mins

Dan + Shay stop by as the Friday Morning Conversation. We talk to them about a time they were each wrong in their career, their unusual coffee order and they sing public domain songs such as Hush Little Baby and Mary Had a Little Lamb. In Fun Fact Friday, a popular book that only has 50 words, a song that was named after a deodorant, and a country that was late for the olympics because they read the calendar wrong! Plus, we start a new season of Easy Trivia!

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
TRANSMITTI welcome to Friday Show Morning Studio, Morning Dan and
Jay coming up, and just a little bit that'd be
super cool.

Speaker 2 (00:18):
Glad everybody's here. The best state to raise a family now.

Speaker 3 (00:21):
They have a lot of indicators here, friendliness, annual family
income on average of the entire state, housing affordability, healthcare quality,
crime rates, school quality statewide. The best state number one, Massachusetts,
So shout out Massachusetts.

Speaker 2 (00:39):
You guys are doing great. A little too cold.

Speaker 3 (00:41):
I'm gonna go ahead and give my kid's a little
worse education for a little warmer.

Speaker 2 (00:45):
But that's okay. Great job Massachusetts at number two.

Speaker 3 (00:49):
Minnesota cold, North Dakota, cold, Nebraska, cold, New Hampshire, cold,
New York at six cold Illinois seasonal. But I used
to go to Games I regularly in April. Cold wisconsint cold.
Maybe it's because they have to be inside.

Speaker 2 (01:04):
Yeah, they can't get in trouble. Uh Maine at nine,
Connecticut at ten.

Speaker 3 (01:07):
So shout out to all the cold states for having
the best state to raise a family. That's good, and
now you want the worst.

Speaker 4 (01:15):
Oh, let's see where it's hot.

Speaker 3 (01:19):
These are all warmer states. There's not a single cold
state on this list.

Speaker 2 (01:22):
Alabama on there. Yeah, it's warm. It's hot in Alabama.

Speaker 3 (01:26):
So I'm gonna go one is the absolute worst, Okay,
so I'm gonna go ten to one. Ten Arizona real hot, Okay,
you stopped the hot and cold thing.

Speaker 2 (01:36):
I was just like a little bed.

Speaker 5 (01:37):
I was doing the top.

Speaker 2 (01:38):
Yeah yeah, but we don't do that for everyone.

Speaker 3 (01:40):
South Carolina at nine, Louisiana at eight, Arkansas at seven, Hey, look,
it's a win for You're.

Speaker 6 (01:46):
Gonna be one were the way you were setting it up.

Speaker 3 (01:49):
Usually us in Mississippi battle for the last by in
every single category, and it sucks we don't have the
leadership to get us out of there.

Speaker 2 (01:55):
But at seven, hey, look, it took us up six spots.

Speaker 3 (01:58):
Alabama six, call him a five, Nevada four, West Virginia three,
Mississippi two. And the number one worst state to raise
the family is New Mexico, which.

Speaker 2 (02:09):
Oh, yeah, breaking bad.

Speaker 4 (02:11):
What's reference in New Mexico? Yeah, Albuquerque?

Speaker 2 (02:16):
Yeah, I mean yeah, no, we don't know, but no,
it's not real, it's not.

Speaker 3 (02:18):
That's so everybody in Massachusetts you win this day, and
everybody in New Mexico there'll be better days ahead. Well,
maybe a better century later. It's a tough one coming up.
George Burr's our buddy is going to debut a brand
new song, and it's a great song. We'll get to
that in just one second, but let's start with this. Now.

(02:40):
He's in our Hundai green room already. Wow, it's early, Okay,
George Burr's coming in a second on the Bobby Bones Show.

Speaker 4 (02:46):
Now, George Burge Georgia have.

Speaker 2 (02:49):
This new song. Won't be long.

Speaker 3 (02:50):
It's so awesome, Like it was one of those moments
where I listen to it and I was like, oh, yeah,
this is what George is supposed to do, like for
his whole life.

Speaker 2 (02:56):
Like it.

Speaker 3 (02:56):
That song is that good and dare I say, I
don't think better is the world? But it's elevated from
the hitsy fat so far.

Speaker 7 (03:04):
I think it's the most excited I've ever been about
new music. And I think that's because it pulls the
curtain back a little bit more, lets me tell a
little bit more of my story and kind of just
grow as an artist.

Speaker 2 (03:15):
I had kind of been praying for this song.

Speaker 8 (03:16):
Man.

Speaker 7 (03:17):
There's a lot of pressure that comes with trying to
follow up success in this industry. Be just because songs
that are real and mean something to you are are
hard to find. And so I've been writing and writing,
and I had not had the song that I felt
like was my guaranteed next single yet, And I was
talking to care of my wife, and she was basically like,
when you wrote mind on You, you knew it was
the one, and when you wrote cowboy songs, you knew
it was the one. And until you have that complete certainty,

(03:40):
you don't have it yet. And that same week, my
dad and mom came to visit in town, and I
was watching my dad playing in the backyard with my
two little guys that I'm now raising, and I'm just
watching the man that raised me teaching the kids that
I'm trying to raise, and all of a sudden, I
just have like all these flashbacks of like life and
how magical the path has been to get here, even
though there's been some hard times to it, and how

(04:02):
lucky we are if we saw down a little bit
just to be here with each other. And this song
ended up falling out that afternoon, and within twenty four
hours we had declared it my next single. And I
think it gives a little bit of a peek behind
the curtain to who I am, and every little picture
in this song is a real story that I have lived,
And I think that's the first time. I've always had

(04:22):
songs inspired by life, but I think this is the
first song where like every single line is completely true
and a real story, and I think that's awesome.

Speaker 9 (04:30):
Yeah, it's the Anonymous sin by.

Speaker 2 (04:36):
Anonymous sin Bar. There's a question to be well, man,
I love Bobby Bones.

Speaker 3 (04:48):
A few months ago, I discovered that my husband has
been ordering fast food late at night after me and
the kids go to bed. We typically eat pretty healthy,
but we will have a cheat day or days over
the weekend. He's currently the most overweight he's ever been.
He wants to lose weight, but obviously his eating habits
are going to prevent that from happening. He also learned
about a year ago he has a heart condition, and
thankfully it's under control, but I'm worried that his weight

(05:10):
will cause him to have more serious heart problems earlier
in life. How can I bring that up? I know
about it late, not ordering. How can I bring it
up without him knowing that I know? Or should I
tell him? And will he be offended? Signed?

Speaker 2 (05:26):
Sincerely, wife, of a closet eater, Amy, what would you do?

Speaker 10 (05:31):
Yeah, I mean, I don't know if he's gonna be offended,
but I think there will be some potential shame that
he has around that. So he may feel embarrassed if
he's doing it and he's having to sneak it. He
may be addicted in a way to something I know
that I've in my eating disorder past.

Speaker 4 (05:49):
There were times where I.

Speaker 10 (05:50):
Would sneak food and eat food and do it discreetly
and binge on certain things, and I had a lot
of shame around that.

Speaker 4 (05:57):
So it's really delicate.

Speaker 10 (05:59):
But I think if he's your and you love him,
like it's okay to bring it up and ask how
he's doing and want to know, hey from him, how
can I best support you?

Speaker 4 (06:07):
Because I love you and I want you to live
a long time.

Speaker 3 (06:09):
Here's what I think's happening. He doesn't like the healthy food,
so he's just trying to eat food that he likes later.
I mean, that's it to me, like he just wants it.
He's been told We've probably all been told certain things
about our health and you should really pay attention. And
we all feel a bit invincible because we really don't
think we're ever going to die, although we all know
we're gonna die. And if you've been anything very healthy
and he's ordering food, I think probably he just doesn't

(06:30):
really like food that much, and so he's ordering something
he likes, which is junk food.

Speaker 2 (06:34):
You can tell him, hey, I saw you're ordering a
bunch of stuff like bro.

Speaker 4 (06:38):
You don't think he's gonna be embarrassed.

Speaker 2 (06:39):
No, I think that he got caught made.

Speaker 4 (06:41):
I guess guys are just different.

Speaker 3 (06:43):
No, I'd be like, ah, crap. Mostly I would to
be like, oh crap, I got caught. I want to be embarrased.
I want to be embarrassed about it. I would just
be like, hey, look, all I can do is tell
you that the doctor said X, Y and Z, and
if you keep doing this, this is what's going to happen.

Speaker 2 (06:57):
And so that sucks. So you're gonna keep ordering it.

Speaker 3 (07:00):
I don't think it's fine, but I'm not your parent,
and so where can we meet in the middle on this?
Otherwise he's going to keep doing it and you're getting
it up in the same spot. So he's not gonna
be embarrassed, only that he got caught. They don't cover
his tracks better you get caught you.

Speaker 2 (07:16):
I don't.

Speaker 3 (07:16):
I think he's addicted to not liking the healthy food
at dinner time. Do you guys feel that way about dudes?

Speaker 2 (07:23):
No? No, I'm very open about food.

Speaker 10 (07:26):
That's probably why I think I'm a different perspective because
I snuck food before.

Speaker 3 (07:30):
I'll sneak food, but it's only because I don't want
my wife to eat the rest of it.

Speaker 2 (07:33):
It's never because I'm embarrassed of it.

Speaker 3 (07:35):
If it's like I got something and I know that
she would probably eat the rest of it, I'll sneak
it and then hide it somewhere in the fridge, but
only because I'm selfish and want to eat the other
part of it too. So call him on it and
just go look, I'm not your parent, because the last
thing a guy wants is somebody like a wife to
act like they're your parents to work. It'll make him
eat ten times that. So you can't be Now, you

(07:56):
can be like you're gonna do what you want to do.
I don't agree with it, but is there somewhere we
can meet the middle of this. That's about the only
way you can have that adult conversation with them.

Speaker 4 (08:04):
That hard stuffs. No joke though, he's got to look.

Speaker 2 (08:06):
Out for that. Okay, now you're nagging me with that tone.
All right. Here's Clay who left us this voicemail.

Speaker 11 (08:16):
Had a pretty good onorn and corny for Amy. I
used to live his stones throw from a family who
all died of mysterious head injuries. Anyway, hope you're having
a good day.

Speaker 2 (08:26):
Talk to you soon. Stones funny, I'm gonna play it again.
Let me like that. Gave me a good chuckle. It's dark, okay, right,
just hit the whole thing again.

Speaker 11 (08:38):
Had a pretty good onorn and corny for Amy. I
has to live his stones throw from a family who
all died of mysterious head injuries. Anyway, I hope you're
having a good day.

Speaker 3 (08:47):
Talk to you soon.

Speaker 2 (08:48):
Lived the stones throw away which they were getting hit
by stone stones.

Speaker 4 (08:53):
Yeah, interesting, pretty good.

Speaker 2 (08:55):
Here's Tommy in Las Vegas bitting lunchbox.

Speaker 12 (08:57):
Get a red card last week, and he's playing.

Speaker 2 (08:59):
The game Games. And since Eddie won the easy.

Speaker 5 (09:03):
Trivia, who's he going to eliminate from the next round?

Speaker 3 (09:06):
Great question, Eddie will eliminate someone coming up a little
later on in the show, and we decided we're gonna
use lunchboxes red card in that same game. We have
another one of those games, okay, and so he got
red carded, but it'll be from that version of the game.

Speaker 2 (09:20):
Guys, I love listeners, just keeping us straight. God, we
forget everything, Yes, Tommy, thank you very much. Amy's pile
of stories.

Speaker 10 (09:29):
The FDA is now proposing that nutrition and bo be
placed on the front of packaged foods now, not everything
that you would see on the back, but three main
things would be on the front. Saturated fat, sodium, and
added sugars boom, right in front.

Speaker 4 (09:43):
Of your face.

Speaker 3 (09:43):
I get it, And theory it sounds great. We need
to be talked to, like where the dumbest humans ever.
We just need like a little scale. One bar means terrible,
or do sad faces to happy faces? Okay, like how
bad again? When you go saturated sugar mongolian ballaga, I'm like,
I don't know what that is, looks like it tastes
good though.

Speaker 2 (10:04):
It's like the spicy meter, right, it's like you hot mine.

Speaker 3 (10:07):
You need to do that, And somebody's got to be
the judge of how healthy. But you have to define
what healthy is. But we have to be talked to
like we're the dumbest, because we are when it comes to.

Speaker 10 (10:16):
This, I think you're onto something. I never thought of
it that way, But it's pretty genius. It should be
like maybe like a cancer meter, like you're okay and
then it's cancer cancer case.

Speaker 3 (10:26):
Yeah, it's Yeah, it's genius because it's so dumb and
we need to be talked to because we have one
hundred things going around going on in our lives, and
also we don't even know what this stuff means.

Speaker 4 (10:36):
Yeah, I know.

Speaker 10 (10:37):
Like this week one of the big stories too, is
about how the red dye number three whatever is now
illegal and I'm like, well, wait, what is that?

Speaker 4 (10:44):
And it's in so many things and.

Speaker 10 (10:46):
They have We're gonna have it in our food until
like I don't.

Speaker 4 (10:49):
Know, twenty twenty seven.

Speaker 2 (10:50):
Or something, but it got yeah, I guess for more years.

Speaker 13 (10:52):
Bro.

Speaker 10 (10:53):
Yes, maybe, but like back in the nineties it was
made illegal for women's makeup, and I'm like, why did
we take it out of make up back in the nineties,
but we're just now taking it out of our food.

Speaker 3 (11:03):
Yeah, thirty five years ago was bar from cosmetics because
of the potential cancers.

Speaker 2 (11:07):
Don't worry everybody. It was still in.

Speaker 4 (11:10):
We put it in candy and kids.

Speaker 3 (11:12):
Like us, and mostly it's candy, those marri Chao cherries.

Speaker 2 (11:15):
Or whatever this is. I don't ever eat those.

Speaker 3 (11:18):
Yeah yeah, Maraschino at Maraschino cherries. But it's in random
things ruined skittles like Skittles had.

Speaker 2 (11:24):
Whatever that chemical was that they had to pull out
of the Skittles.

Speaker 4 (11:27):
Yep, Well California at least did did we nationwide?

Speaker 2 (11:29):
I don't know, I just know somebody did, and they're like, well,
why didn't we already pull this up? What else?

Speaker 9 (11:35):
So?

Speaker 10 (11:35):
A new Gallup poll asked Americans which professions they trust
the most and which they trust the least, at least
or most.

Speaker 3 (11:42):
First, I'm going to go most would be we have
to trust doctors or they wouldn't exist.

Speaker 4 (11:48):
Yeah, we do, but they're at the bottom.

Speaker 2 (11:50):
Of the top five. But they're at the bottom of
the top, so they're in the top. They're in the top.

Speaker 3 (11:55):
Okay, So I'm going to go and I would say
like pastors or priests, but there's too many of them
touching kids.

Speaker 4 (12:00):
They're not even on.

Speaker 2 (12:00):
I know, I know, what do you have? A number one?

Speaker 3 (12:03):
And I'm the most trusted nurses, oh for sure. Yeah,
because they feel like they care. Doctors, not that they
don't care. We feel like they're running everywhere.

Speaker 2 (12:11):
Yep. And next, next, next, like, okay, go ahead.

Speaker 3 (12:14):
Number two teachers, Yeah, we have to trust them or
it doesn't exist.

Speaker 4 (12:19):
Okay, Next military officers.

Speaker 2 (12:21):
Go ahead, Do we need those? Yep?

Speaker 10 (12:22):
And then in a number four is pharmacists, and following
pharmacists is doctors medical doctors.

Speaker 4 (12:26):
To be specific, it's Bobby, you're a doctor.

Speaker 2 (12:28):
I'm a doctor, I'm a I'm a doctorate of letters.

Speaker 14 (12:30):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (12:30):
But guys, if you want to know any letter in
any number, you're the dude.

Speaker 2 (12:34):
Yeah. I can see any letter and name it. So
that's amazing, man. Yeah, trust that I know what I'm
talking about. All right, Amy, what's well, what's the worst?

Speaker 10 (12:41):
Okay. So when it comes to who we trust the least, lawyers, lobbyists, Congress.

Speaker 2 (12:45):
It's put politicians for sure.

Speaker 4 (12:46):
And TV reporters.

Speaker 3 (12:48):
Oh, lawyers has always been an unfair thing because of television.
We don't even only know lawyers, Like I never know
a single lawyer growing up, but I would just see
on TV. Don't tusk a lawyer.

Speaker 4 (13:00):
When you need a lawyer?

Speaker 3 (13:01):
Yeah, got it, which it was always just this like
Hollywood thing of like lawyers are shadies.

Speaker 2 (13:06):
He just grow going I think lawyers are. But really,
I've never been screwed up about lawyer.

Speaker 3 (13:11):
I've been in like negotiations against them or somebody else
has one. But that was always when we were told
to be weary of But then you're never really around
them unless you're like rich, so the whole time you're like,
i'd be cool if I even metal lawyer.

Speaker 5 (13:23):
Yeah.

Speaker 10 (13:23):
Well, on the top of the list is a lobbyist.
I don't know a lobbyist, do y'all?

Speaker 2 (13:26):
No, but they're mostly just.

Speaker 4 (13:28):
Shading in DC for that right number three.

Speaker 3 (13:31):
They are for titanium dioxide, which is the ingredient found
in candy Skittles. When the bill was introduced, Skittle somehow
became the poster shop for the band. But the final
version of the law only affects four food chemicals and
doesn't include titanium dioxide. I don't think you should eat
anything with titanium. I don't listen. I'm not doctor of foods,
but if it has titanium, I think you should get
the frownie face on that one.

Speaker 2 (13:52):
Yeah, I do like skittles, though.

Speaker 4 (13:56):
What else in Country News.

Speaker 10 (13:58):
Tickets for the million dollars show on sale today, So
I just want to shout that out because obviously it
supports Saint Jude and it's such a fun night and Bobby,
you can cherl the details because it's literally your show.

Speaker 3 (14:09):
Well, for those who don't know, Eddie and I, we're
in a band called the Raging Idiots, and I think
this is like the eighth or ninth year we paused
because of COVID.

Speaker 4 (14:15):
It's the eighth.

Speaker 2 (14:16):
It is the eighth year we've done it.

Speaker 4 (14:17):
I have it here on my news lost.

Speaker 2 (14:19):
Yeah, COVID was lost year. We really wish we had
that one back.

Speaker 3 (14:23):
And so yeah, tickets are on sale today at ten
am at Bobby Bones dot com for that. And we
play in our band, but then artists show up with us.
Miranda Lambert is gonna play with us, Bailey Zimmerman, I'm
reuniting my old band Otown the boy Band, a ton
of artists come by.

Speaker 2 (14:38):
We don't keep any of the money. It's for charity.

Speaker 3 (14:40):
That's happening. And then also in Austin the iHeart Country Festival.
Our tickets for that on sale today too, not yet
they're not. Thank god, I want to go up against that.

Speaker 4 (14:49):
There was a pre sale situation tickets all right.

Speaker 3 (14:52):
I was nervous. I was like, I want to go
up against it. That's a massive Okay, then.

Speaker 4 (14:56):
Yeah, that one's in Austin.

Speaker 10 (14:57):
The million Dollar Shows in Nashville at the Ryman March fourth,
and tickets go on sale today at ten am Central
Bobbybones dot com.

Speaker 4 (15:04):
Thank you, I'm Amy. That's my pile.

Speaker 2 (15:06):
That was Amy's pile of stories.

Speaker 15 (15:09):
It's time for the good news, Amy.

Speaker 10 (15:15):
So there's this guy, Trevor Phillips, and he found a
dumpster full of flowers three years ago in Nashville, and
he had no idea this would turn into an entire
mission of spreading joy. His neighbors suggested, hey, you should
save the flowers, deliver them to a senior living facility.

Speaker 4 (15:32):
So he did just that.

Speaker 10 (15:34):
This inspired Trevor to create Flower the People. It's a
volunteer driven initiative dedicated to repurposing discarded flowers. So they
take the discarded flowers, turn them into beautiful bouquets, and
they deliver them to nursing homes all over. There's florists
that volunteer normal people that volunteer, businesses that volunteer, everyone
donates different things in times, and the senior citizens they

(15:58):
get love too.

Speaker 3 (15:59):
So I want to say, first of all, I love it.
Good for this dude finding something people are throwing away.
One person's trash is another person's treasure. I would recommend
changing the name, though, Flower to the People, Flower the people,
Flower to the people.

Speaker 2 (16:10):
I think flowers people's like flower the people, Flower to
the people.

Speaker 3 (16:14):
It's like power to the people. That's the that's the rhyme,
flower to the people. I put a two in there,
and it'd be so much cooler. One little word, yeah,
flower to the people. That I remember that.

Speaker 4 (16:23):
Flower the people sounds flower the people.

Speaker 2 (16:25):
Yeah, like shower the people. That's not saying shower the people. No,
not really. If you have power to the people, that's
I've heard that about this, Flower to the people.

Speaker 4 (16:35):
Flowers to the people.

Speaker 2 (16:36):
No, it's not powers to the people.

Speaker 4 (16:38):
Because power is it's power.

Speaker 2 (16:40):
Oh my god. Anyway, flower to the people. It is
a great story.

Speaker 4 (16:46):
Flower the people.

Speaker 2 (16:47):
That's what it's all about. That tell me something good.

Speaker 3 (16:55):
I'll start back in nineteen oh eight, the Olympics happened
in London and the entire Russian team showed up to
the Olympics twelve days late. Why well, this was the
time when the calendars had been changed and the rest
of the world had switched to the Gregorian calendar, which
we use now, but they were still on the Julian calendar,
which I don't know what that is.

Speaker 2 (17:15):
But they still it's like daylight saving time, shown up
late to church. Oh wow, they showed up late to
the Olympics by twelve days. How shock they were. It's
not like he got on Twitter and see what was happening.
They're like, all right, guys, we're here. What the dude?

Speaker 3 (17:27):
Javelin's over? I thought that was pretty funny, fun fact
Friday Emmy.

Speaker 10 (17:32):
So doctor Seuss's editor didn't think that he could write
a book in fifty words or less. So Green Eggs
and Ham was only written because of a bet, and
it's fifty words on the dot.

Speaker 2 (17:43):
I had no idea was so a few words. I
love a good bet too.

Speaker 3 (17:46):
Wher what DraftKings had that as the odds that he
could do that a lot of money be pretty tough.

Speaker 2 (17:50):
Yeah, lunchbox sagging sucks for women. Sagging sucks for men.
So women, Doctor seuss.

Speaker 6 (17:58):
If you'd watgging to slow down of your breasts, quit
sleeping on your stomach that causes your breast to sag faster.

Speaker 3 (18:07):
Okay, graggy, I guess sagging sucks for women. Sagging sucks
for men, Sagging sucks always, sagging sucks. Then sagging sucks
in a boat, Sagging sucks in a coat. Of all
the things that sag. When your boobs sag, it sucks
the most fifty.

Speaker 2 (18:22):
Wyards or less. I just did want on sagging od yeah, yeah, okay.

Speaker 3 (18:26):
Nineteen of the most common last names in Mexico, ooh
Garcia and.

Speaker 4 (18:31):
With s or z oh Sanchez.

Speaker 2 (18:34):
Okay, nineteen of the twenty s and z is.

Speaker 3 (18:38):
The only outlier is Garcia, no way, which is the
second most popular last name. Basically, you're the Jones of Mexico,
because I would believe Smith is first in Jones the
second if I were guessing common American names.

Speaker 2 (18:53):
But they all into ESA's or z except for Garcia,
which is.

Speaker 12 (18:57):
Like down in my hometown, where like they were must
have been ten thousand Garciasn't that crazy? Like so many
related not related wow, you know, yeah, well, maybe lunchbox
already went sag forgot doctor Susagnus.

Speaker 2 (19:14):
I did a whole bit after that, so I forgot
he even went Morgan.

Speaker 16 (19:17):
Okay, so this kind of goes off the first one
you were sharing, Bobby. January is named after Janus, the
Roman god of Janus.

Speaker 4 (19:23):
Yes, Janus janis. No, it looks like what you think.

Speaker 2 (19:28):
But at the front, thank god they changed that name.

Speaker 16 (19:30):
Go ahead, the Roman god of doors, gates, and transitions.
But in the ancient Roman calendar, January was not always
the first month of the year. January first became the
official start of the new year in forty five BC
when Julius Caesar introduced the Julian calendar.

Speaker 12 (19:46):
Oh, Julian calendar, Julius Jay Caesar.

Speaker 2 (19:49):
Well, then I'm going to do one off yours.

Speaker 3 (19:51):
We all currently have hemorrhoids, Well she did, Janus. We
middle a joke. Everybody has hemorrhoids. They're just not inflamed.
They're naturally occurring cushions of vain in the anal canal.
But they're only noticeable when they're a problem and they
become inflamed or swollen to the factors like straining during
bowot movements, having a baby running. I got mine from training,

(20:13):
just one. But it was a bad one.

Speaker 2 (20:15):
But you apparently already had it. Yeah, you just inflamed it.
That's a good point too.

Speaker 3 (20:19):
Well, then I got one bigger than the other, the
like twins, who WANs white, taller than the other one?

Speaker 2 (20:23):
Jealous?

Speaker 4 (20:23):
What is Janus?

Speaker 2 (20:25):
Sounds like? Yeah, then she heard. Yeah, we're just kind
of rolling off each other.

Speaker 10 (20:30):
I thot hemorrhoid was maybe named after a Greek gods
hemmy something hem.

Speaker 2 (20:40):
I'm just gonna let you swim on this one. You're
not going to save you from drowning, Eddie. Did you
go yet? No, I'm not gone yet, and I'm not
gonna do follow you guys.

Speaker 12 (20:47):
Okay, So you know the song smells like teen Spirit
Nirvana ravana, right, So teen Spirit is the name of
a women's deodorant. I didn't know that, and so this
whole song started because the girl that Kurt covein.

Speaker 2 (20:59):
Was did you not know that? Where have you been?

Speaker 4 (21:02):
Yes?

Speaker 2 (21:02):
Yeah, you get finished. I'm sorry, but what I had
no clue?

Speaker 12 (21:05):
So what I saw this, I'm like, oh my gosh,
fun fact Friday, go ahead. So apparently Kurt Cobaine's girlfriend
at the time spray painted in his room. Kurt smells
like teen Spirit, and that's kind of where he's like,
that's funny.

Speaker 2 (21:16):
I'm gonna put that in this song.

Speaker 3 (21:18):
That's a cool story, the origin story of the song.
But the fact that you didn't know as teen Spirit
was an ideodorant, sir, I didn't even know what that
song meant. Really smells like teen Spirit? Okay, cool, by
the way, I just looked it up, Morgan. What was
that calendar? What was January called?

Speaker 16 (21:32):
So it was named after Janus, the Roman god.

Speaker 2 (21:36):
Your noose is how it's pronounced.

Speaker 16 (21:37):
Okay, I never would I would have never gotten her Janus.

Speaker 3 (21:41):
I wouldn't have never got into the hemorrhoids. Actually, I
said Janus. The sixth commandment literally translates from Hebrew as
thou shall not murder, not, thou shall not kill.

Speaker 2 (21:54):
Now do you know why?

Speaker 4 (21:55):
Because?

Speaker 10 (21:56):
Okay, because you may be able to kill someone in
self defense, but murder is cold blooded.

Speaker 3 (22:03):
I was so smart. That is exactly it. So again
the translation goes to thou shalt not murder. Not what
we're often told and readers, thou shall not killed because
lots of war self defense. And he already knew that
one and I knew yours. Nobody knew Janus, not a

(22:24):
single person. This woman was scammed at eight hundred fifty
thousand dollars thinking she was talking with Brad Pitt. Did
you see the story? Having so she thinks she's talking
with Brad Pitt. He's sending her pictures he's in the hospital.
Their AI generated images that scammer was using a breadth,
but they don't even look real. It looks like they

(22:45):
copy and pasted Brad Pitt's head on a body and
a It's crazy.

Speaker 2 (22:50):
And by the way, eight hundred and fifty thousand dollars
and that money right, and who has that money? That's
that rich?

Speaker 3 (22:56):
Like make decisions if you if you're going to be
certain by amount of rich, you gotta pass a couple
tests have access to.

Speaker 2 (23:03):
That kind of money.

Speaker 10 (23:03):
And if you have that kind of money, I just
feel like there's checks and balances right, like someone would notice, like, hey,
you're giving an awful lot of your money.

Speaker 3 (23:10):
To d unless they have so much money that it's
not even noticed. But I'm telling you, the pictures that
the scammer would send a Brad Pitt in the hospital
are hilarious, hilarious. They're taken from like movies. The head
doesn't quite fit the body.

Speaker 2 (23:24):
Yeah, google it. This is from Entertainment Weekly.

Speaker 3 (23:28):
Brad Pitt fans are being warned about scammers after a
French woman lost eight hundred and fifty thousand dollars and
her marriage after falling prey to AI images and fake
messages impersonating the actor and in the AI images because
I think her name is Ann, brad Pit holds up
a card with his face on and I love you,
but the head and the body are not the same size.

(23:50):
Like once I did an AI generation of myself as
a doctor holding a baby because I wanted to see
what the pictures would do. I did like nine different
versions and I had like nine on one. It just
couldn't nail it. And this is kind of what that is.
And the scammer was using it. She was just forking
over money.

Speaker 2 (24:07):
Quote.

Speaker 3 (24:07):
It's awful that scammers take advantage of fans strong connection
with celebrities, but this is an important reminder to not
respond to unsolicited online outreach, especially from actors who have
no social media presence. The scammer's told Anne that Pitt
needs funds to cover his kidney treatments, which he could
not pay for himself due to his divorce proceedings freezing
his bank accounts. So in the greatest lives, there are truths.

(24:30):
So he was going through the divorce like eight years
with Angelina Jolie. To convince Anne that the real pit
was behind the account, the scammer sent doctored and AI
generated images of the actor in a hospital bed to
verify his identity.

Speaker 2 (24:45):
I'm telling you one.

Speaker 3 (24:47):
Of the heads I swear to he was in black
and white, like everything else in color, but the heads
in black and white from like a movie.

Speaker 2 (24:54):
What are you laughing?

Speaker 10 (24:55):
I'm laughing at one of the pictures where he's supposed
to be on a ventilator. It seems like because he's
in ICU and he's got all this stuff, but like
a headshot, the the hose that's normally go into the
mouth area is like into proud shit. It's because the
photo like and it's like a headshot. It's like a

(25:16):
glamour shot in the hospital and he looks perfectly healthy.

Speaker 3 (25:19):
Like the face, Yes, do you see the black and
white head one that everything else is in color, but
his face is in black and white.

Speaker 4 (25:24):
I mean, I'm going through.

Speaker 3 (25:25):
Them all I feel bad for her because she obviously
did not have that capacity mentally to challenge these thoughts
within herself.

Speaker 2 (25:34):
I mean, she even bored to her husband. She divorced
her husband, Brad Pitt.

Speaker 3 (25:37):
Though.

Speaker 4 (25:38):
I mean, well, and she looks really pretty normal.

Speaker 2 (25:42):
She's not old.

Speaker 6 (25:43):
You got a picture of her.

Speaker 4 (25:43):
I don't know what's normal.

Speaker 2 (25:45):
She looks yeah, you're right.

Speaker 3 (25:47):
It's like when you see a teacher and you're like, well,
I can't leave this teacher hooked up in the eleventh grader and
you're like, wow, she's kind of pretty. That's we I
didn't expect that.

Speaker 2 (25:55):
It's that pretty.

Speaker 3 (25:56):
Like if you were to see her normally out, you'd
be like, so, but because she did the weird stuff,
you're like, for weird people.

Speaker 2 (26:03):
Nine, Wow, she's a weird person. Nine. And she's not old.
She doesn't look old. She looks like she's like forty, Okay,
she's fifty three. She looks good for three.

Speaker 4 (26:14):
Black and white one, but they made the whole image
black and white.

Speaker 2 (26:16):
I'm seeing with the beds and color and his faces
in black.

Speaker 4 (26:19):
Oh, oh my gosh.

Speaker 2 (26:20):
So eight hundred and fifty thousand dollars. It's terrible. What sucks.

Speaker 3 (26:24):
Is like they asked Brad Pitt's people to comment, what
do you say? And obviously I think someone's like, are
you going to give her the money back? We can't
do that because then because people have faked me to
people and people have given them money. And one time
I told School, I was like, I'm just going to
give this woman the month she gave a fake me
like two thousand dollars, and I'm like, I'm just going
to give her two thousand dollars on my money because I

(26:45):
felt terrible for her. And School was like, don't do
that one. If that's a precedent in the two, you
may be getting scammed by somebody saying they were getting scammed.

Speaker 14 (26:52):
In good point, she's fifty three. The real irony would
be if Brad Pit falls in love with her. Now
after all this, that's it. I'm rooting for the up,
I'm rooting for love here. Wild story, huh wild, It's time.

Speaker 2 (27:05):
For the good news.

Speaker 3 (27:10):
Victor was a firefighter for thirty three years and he's
a lot older now so he cannot actually fight the fires,
but he does have a therapy dog named Jack, and
what he's doing is taking Jack to like all the
shelters or wherever people are displaced, even to where the
firefighters are and just letting his therapy dog be a
therapy dog for them that so they need it. Man,

(27:35):
imagine being a firefighter over there now or and they're
coming in from all over the country too, Yeah, they
have to or from all over California as well.

Speaker 4 (27:43):
And Mexico, and they're coming in from all over.

Speaker 2 (27:48):
So it's just one again.

Speaker 3 (27:50):
It's a minor thing, but everybody's finding their way to help.

Speaker 2 (27:54):
And I thought it was a great story.

Speaker 3 (27:55):
Saw on a good morning America, and so a big
shout out to Victor la Vega and it's there be
dog Jack and that is what it's all about.

Speaker 2 (28:03):
That was telling me something good.

Speaker 3 (28:06):
Twelve years old kid in Michigan drove one hundred miles
stolen suv. I'm thinking to me, at twelve, I could
have probably pulled that off on smaller roads because at
sixteen or fifteen or whenever I took driver's z with
Coach Castleberry, I petrified to get on the interstate. So
I don't think I got on the interstate, but I
had to learn how to drive a little bit because

(28:27):
Arkansas Keith would be like, okay, we got to I'm
going this way, try to get in front of the
deer dog because we would hunt using dogs. When you
hunt using dogs, you're listening to the dog's bark as
they're like running a deer and you're trying to get
ahead of it. So i'd have to go and like
pick him up. That's a twelve or thirteen. But I
don't think I could have gone a hundred miles because
I need to interstate. Yeah, this kid was tracking his
progress south, either from his iPhone or that app that

(28:50):
Amy has Life.

Speaker 2 (28:51):
Three sixty deputies stop the.

Speaker 3 (28:53):
Preteen in Grant Township is about one hundred miles, no passengers.

Speaker 2 (28:58):
They did confiscate it.

Speaker 3 (29:00):
Twelve gauge pump action shotgun with several rounds of ammunition
and a small amount of weed.

Speaker 2 (29:04):
At twelve, he just.

Speaker 3 (29:06):
Lives a different life than I did. Crazy, that's from
m Live. I didn't say he had any plans to
use the shotgun, but.

Speaker 2 (29:15):
He had it. But he had it.

Speaker 3 (29:18):
Yeah, I feel bad for the environment he had to
grow up in that all of that happened. So but twelve,
I just imagine me I'd got to the highway and
quit and been like, ah, I'm done, I'm out there.

Speaker 2 (29:30):
Help somebody help me out of here.

Speaker 3 (29:32):
Now time for the morning corny, the Mourning corny.

Speaker 10 (29:39):
What's the least spoken language in the world. What sign language?

Speaker 5 (29:49):
That was?

Speaker 2 (29:50):
The mourning corny. That's pretty funny. Do you get it? No,
of course I can.

Speaker 3 (29:54):
I never don't get a guy. For the record, I
never don't get it. Well, I almost never don't get it.

Speaker 2 (30:00):
The Bobby Bones Show, now, Dan and Shae.

Speaker 3 (30:02):
Guys walked in with the Starbucks lea shade? Did Shaye?
What's your Starbucks drink? It's just black coffee, No way,
cowboy coffee.

Speaker 13 (30:09):
I'm not, you know, trying to be too manly to
be like, you know, I don't enjoy a latte. I
mean it tastes really good, but I've been eating no
sugar for like the last thirty days.

Speaker 5 (30:17):
So I'm on that black the Cowboy coffee game.

Speaker 3 (30:19):
I'm gonna say that. And and really for me, it's
just a cup of whipped cream, and I'll be like,
no black coffee, that's it is not your vibe. So
my actual vibe because I have a drink over here
as well as I drink like a tea at chai tea,
but I don't.

Speaker 5 (30:31):
I hate coffee.

Speaker 3 (30:32):
But I always say to my wife, let me get
my coffee, and she's like, it's not coffee, don't be annoying.

Speaker 2 (30:36):
But I always say, it's a coffee. What is yours?

Speaker 3 (30:39):
Dan?

Speaker 5 (30:39):
I feel like that's the American version of what that is.

Speaker 2 (30:41):
Though.

Speaker 17 (30:41):
It's like, let's let's meet up for coffee, even if
you're just having an Cottter toast. You know what I'm saying,
Like when you're in Europe, I'm a Cotto toast as
a jam. Wow, I'm a black coffee guy.

Speaker 5 (30:50):
You're a black coffee too.

Speaker 17 (30:51):
Yeah, I'm like religious about the pour over and the
whole deal, and it's a.

Speaker 10 (30:54):
Whole How long does it take you to make your
morning coffee?

Speaker 5 (30:57):
This is bad Amy.

Speaker 17 (30:58):
I actually calculated this because I make one for myself
and I make one for Abby, and it's probably like
thirty to forty minutes all all in because it's a
slow drip. You know, I got to clean out the
V sixty thing.

Speaker 4 (31:08):
Yeah, and a year.

Speaker 17 (31:10):
It's several weeks of my time, which is probably not
a great situation, you know what I mean?

Speaker 5 (31:14):
You calculate it per.

Speaker 10 (31:15):
Day theraceutic I'm sure who knew they.

Speaker 2 (31:18):
Were something metal?

Speaker 15 (31:19):
Like?

Speaker 2 (31:19):
They both come in they're singing.

Speaker 5 (31:21):
Big houses like black coffee.

Speaker 2 (31:23):
We like a black coffee in a fist.

Speaker 5 (31:25):
Fight every morning from my turtleneck.

Speaker 13 (31:27):
Here, Bobby, by the way, your coffee is way different
than mine, Like I had one of Dan's coffee is
one time, and it's legitimately the strongest coffee I've ever had.

Speaker 17 (31:36):
My I was up for like three weeks. I mean,
this is strong. I'm aniacal about it.

Speaker 3 (31:40):
Though.

Speaker 17 (31:40):
It's like you get twenty grams of coffee sixteen to
one ratio water to coffee beans.

Speaker 5 (31:44):
You're rolling, you know what I mean. And measurement, Yeah,
I'm measured in. Here's well.

Speaker 17 (31:49):
My scale though, is running out of batteries quicker than
it used to because Abby has gotten into sour dough.

Speaker 3 (31:54):
Oh, my wife to the same thing. So did she
make the thing? Does she create the living organism?

Speaker 5 (31:58):
She probably got it from store.

Speaker 2 (32:00):
Yeah, that's what it is.

Speaker 17 (32:00):
Yeah, it's called Mother, I think yes, No, Yeah, I'm honestly,
I'm sure he dropped it off for Caitlin or vice versa.
I'm not sure where where it came from, but it's
apparently been living for like twenty five years.

Speaker 3 (32:11):
That's that's it's wild. The starter of Kaitlyn God, the
first one was like eighty years old. It's like, Amy,
you have to learn something to this because we don't
talking about no.

Speaker 5 (32:19):
Well, that's how it can be really old, right.

Speaker 18 (32:21):
Yeah.

Speaker 10 (32:21):
A lot of friends started like you need your starter,
and yes, you'll either get it from a friend or
you can order it eighty years old. It's multiplies. So yes,
that particular starter, if you go back to the origin
or the root of it, is from when it was.

Speaker 2 (32:34):
Bad for sourdough bread.

Speaker 5 (32:35):
First, are you on the sowardough train?

Speaker 13 (32:37):
No?

Speaker 4 (32:37):
I want to be.

Speaker 10 (32:38):
Yeah, gets a free Yeah, I know, but I just
have to kind of like make the move.

Speaker 13 (32:44):
I thought my friend was messing with me when they
told me like that his wife had gotten into making
sourdough and that they had had something from their grandparents,
and it was like ninety years old, and I was like,
I can't be ninety years old. But now, you know,
you learn something new every day.

Speaker 2 (32:57):
That's terrifying. By year old.

Speaker 3 (32:58):
On eBay, you can buy a hundred years starter for
like twelve bucks.

Speaker 4 (33:01):
Is it authentic?

Speaker 2 (33:02):
H I don't know.

Speaker 3 (33:04):
They send it.

Speaker 5 (33:05):
There's no way to prove it.

Speaker 3 (33:06):
It's like for someone says a random fact like, yeah,
there's actually four billion different kinds of beatles.

Speaker 5 (33:11):
I can't check that. How am I supposed to know?
That's not I feel like you're lying to me. I
feel like it creates a lot of work. Though. She's
always doing something with you, you know what I mean. It's amazing.
I love it. The discard you make the crackers.

Speaker 2 (33:22):
It's a whole an hour doing coffee every morning. You're
not gonna hate on how long it tas her.

Speaker 5 (33:26):
That's true.

Speaker 10 (33:26):
Yeah, she's using the discard to make crackers or cookies
or whatever.

Speaker 5 (33:29):
That's being resourceful hundred percent.

Speaker 2 (33:32):
Okay, Dan and Cherry here they do music. Everybody they
call they music.

Speaker 5 (33:35):
Yeah, that's not.

Speaker 3 (33:35):
While we're here today, I would like to talk to
you about sour though. So first let's we're gonna play
bigger houses. About to be number one? Congratulations again, Next
one up. It almost feels like the Alabama football program.
Next one up, next one up, now the five star program.
You know, historical or Georgia or whomever. Give me the

(33:57):
story of bigger houses, Like, tell me some of the
person all about it. And then we'll play and come back.

Speaker 17 (34:01):
Well pre Sourdough obsession. I love my wife, I love
you Abby, she's probably listening to right now. The sour
Dough is amazing, by the way. Okay, so this song
came about. We had kind of finished up this album.
You know, we were super proud of it. We were
writ and we were trying to figure out what the
title of the album was. Always say this, this is
how Speechless came about. At the eleventh hour, you think
you're done, you turn it in, It's like, well, we
still don't have a title. So we kept, you know,

(34:23):
we kept writing songs. We went into write that day
and our buddy Andy Albert. I got to give a
shout out to Andy Albert. We've probably shouted him out
on the show a million times. I moved to Nashville
with Andy in twenty ten. We were struggling, camping out
behind Little Caesars, eating the pizza out of the dumpsterard
and wing the things, sneaking into the Continental Breakfast at
the Hampton in on West End.

Speaker 5 (34:40):
Got all the stories. But he's just a great songwriter, a.

Speaker 17 (34:43):
Great friend who's in my wedding, And we were writing
that day and he had just bought a new house. Right,
he's had a little bit of success, had a few
number ones on country radio, and we've been struggling at
it for ten years. Right, And he was like, man,
I got this idea. And when Andy says he has
an idea, he's honestly, I think he's the best songwriter
in this town. And everybody's going to realize that really,
really soon. But when he has an idea, it's like,

(35:04):
you listen, you know it's gonna be good.

Speaker 5 (35:06):
He's like, I.

Speaker 17 (35:06):
Hope this isn't weird. But Abby was over the house.
You know, him and his wife had just bought this
new house.

Speaker 5 (35:11):
It just had a new kid.

Speaker 17 (35:13):
And he should have been so proud of this house.
It's amazing, Like he freaking paid for a house from
writing country music songs like what we dreamed about since
we moved to this town. And you know, you know
how it is when somebody comes over your house, you
make an apologies, Oh, we're going to wallpaper this bathroom,
or we're gonna rip this tile out, or you know,
we're going to change the sink, and Abby stopped them
and was like, guys, like you don't need to apologize

(35:35):
for any of this stuff. This is amazing. You should
be so proud of this house. You guys have worked
so hard to get to this point in your life.

Speaker 5 (35:41):
Just enjoy it.

Speaker 17 (35:42):
I know we all get caught up and going on
redfin or Zillo and talking about bigger houses and what's next.
And Andy stopped right there and he wrote bigger houses
in his phone, and I got to get emotional talking
about it. Man, it's a special song to us. And
he came into that session that day and he kind
of had the whole thing done. He said, I got
this line, apologize if it's weird, but it came from

(36:03):
Abby and he said, the thing about the thing about
happiness I've found is that don't live in bigger houses.

Speaker 5 (36:07):
And at that.

Speaker 17 (36:08):
Point song was done. That that hook right there says it.
All the rest was just paint by numbers, filling into blanks.
And man, that's such a special song to us. You know,
it's an honestly an unconventional song to take to country radio.
Thank you guys for playing it, Thanks to all the
stations that did. There's no drums in it. I don't
know when the last time a song without drums got
to this point on.

Speaker 3 (36:26):
I never noticed that the song a ton I never
noticed there were no drums, which meant I never noticed
it was lacking something.

Speaker 17 (36:31):
That's a good sign. And honestly, you you identified this song.
I sent you the album early, and this was one
of your favorites. You hit me back on this Save
Me the Trouble, and there was maybe one other one,
but this is one of your favorites.

Speaker 5 (36:40):
I have the text to prove it.

Speaker 17 (36:41):
So there are a couple I hated, same with everybody else,
but no, honestly, it's like for a song like this
that means so much to us, that has meant a
lot to our fans, to get to this point on
the chart, to have an opportunity to go number one,
is a testament to just the power of a great song.
And that's it reminds us why we got into this business,
why we write country music, why we love country music.

(37:03):
And honestly, I remember the day we decided to make
it a single. We were sitting in la we were
filming the voice, and we were talking about, you know,
after Saving Me the Trouble went number one, what's.

Speaker 5 (37:11):
Gonna be the next single? What do we doing?

Speaker 17 (37:12):
Do we go up tempo to We's summertime and somebody
like called into a radio station. There was a video
of it, and it was a lady just talking. She
was like almost in tears talking, you know, about her
grandson and he heard that song and you know, it
was just this emotional story and I was like, man,
it's crazy how much people are connecting with this song.
I was like, it would be crazy if that could

(37:32):
be a single, and she's like, why can't it be
a single? And we were hanging we maybe had a
few drinks, so something up on that patio and I
think I've filmed you saying it, just like this song,
Like let's take a chance on it, you know what
I mean? At this point in our career, got another
to lose, Like, let's go with a song that means
a lot to us. If it's meaning a lot to
our fans, when the power of country radio gets behind it,
it's gonna be a whole different thing. And man, to

(37:54):
see it at this point on the chart means a
lot to us, to our families, to Andy, to our relationship,
to our friends, and I don't know, man, just a
special song that will you know, always hold a special
place in our Hearts.

Speaker 5 (38:07):
On the Bobby Bones Show.

Speaker 3 (38:08):
Now, you guys have been doing it for a long time,
even though you're still very young. How do you not
do the same thing again when you've had success doing
it already? Because I feel like the easy thing would be,
let's just do what we did last time. It was awesome,
Like because again, you could keep doing the exact same
thing over and over and over and have massive success
until you don't. But you guys haven't done that, Like,

(38:30):
how do you how do you avoid that?

Speaker 13 (38:32):
I think a lot of times a solo act, it's
harder for you to you know, to veer off and
maybe try something new. Not to say that that's true
for all solo acts, but I feel like for Dan
and I it's it's a lot easier for us to
really collaborate, you know, in those moments where we're writing
the album and things, we're able to push each other
to try and you know, kind of different, not definitely,

(38:52):
you know, we want to do the same kind of music.
We will always want to be Dan and Shay. You
can't go off and just you know, abandon what got
you there in the first place. But I think that,
you know, just like going with bigger houses. As a single,
you know, one of us can be like, hey, why not,
let's just do this, Let's do what we want to
do and make sure that we're making the art that
we want to make. And I don't know, it just
it's kind of been that way throughout our career, of

(39:13):
just pushing each other of hey, let's just do what
we want to do.

Speaker 5 (39:17):
You know what, we know our fans are going to love.

Speaker 13 (39:18):
And obviously throughout the years, I think that you learn things,
you know, you try things that you you know, you
push the boundaries a little bit. Sometimes it's like, all right,
let's reel it back. You know, we don't go that way,
Let's go in this direction. Let's go in this direction.
And I think that you know, once you have your identity,
we know who you know we are, and we know
who Dan and Shay that you know the brand that

(39:39):
we've built. And I think it's important to push the
boundaries while also still, you know, not abandoning what got
you there in the first place, which is you know,
that first album for us, there was a lot of
our you know, super fans that were still you know,
some of their favorite songs are on that very first
album and you know appropriately, you know where it all
began for us, and I don't know. I think it's

(40:00):
it's important to push those those boundaries but also not abandoned,
you know what got you there to begin with. And
that can be a tight rope that is hard to walk,
but it's a lot easier when there's two of us
to be like, hey, let's let's push this or let's
kind of roll this back. And I don't know, that's
that's part of the fun, is kind of pushing the
boundaries a little bit. You know, I think it's uh,
we're able to do that and have the confidence to

(40:21):
do that since there's there's two of us kind of
being our own cheerleaders.

Speaker 3 (40:25):
Let's play this game. What's something that maybe you were like,
I don't know, but the other one and I would
like an answer from both of you. The other one
was like, I believe in it, and you're like, all right, fine,
I don't know that I do, but let's go in
it and being a success.

Speaker 2 (40:37):
So what did you go?

Speaker 3 (40:39):
Don't because you told the story of bigger houses where
she was like, why can't it be I'm not gonna
let that be an answer. But one you're an advocate
and the other one's not, and the one who was
not was wrong because it was successful.

Speaker 17 (40:50):
I wouldn't say I wasn't an advocate, but I after Tequila, right,
biggest song of our career, trying to figure out what
we go with next, and we had a song on
that record called Keeping Score that was streaming like crazy.
Kelly Clarkson was on it, you know, one of the
most famous, most incredible vocalists of all time. Like the
biggest get we could get as a feature. Getting to
hear her sing a duet with Shae was unbelievable. That

(41:11):
was kind of my vote for the next single. I
was like it, could you know, go number one at
country you cross over to hot a C do the
thing like, you know, because Tequila was crossing over at
that time, and Shae was like, you know, Speechless, I
think is the one, Like I think it's amazing. I
love singing it. That was always this thing. If if
he loves singing it, that's always a good sign. He
loved singing. Tequila loved singing bigger houses, and he loved
singing Speechless.

Speaker 5 (41:31):
And I love the song.

Speaker 17 (41:32):
I thought, you know, it could be a hit, but
I was like, ah, you know, we got this Kelly
Clarkson thing on here. How are we going to leave
this on the table? There was this shows in Rapid City,
Iowa or no, I think it was Rapid City, Iowa.
It was during our album release week. It was a
crazy show. Brett Eldridge was on the show. I was
wearing a crazy pink and green floral shirt. I remember
it like it was yesterday. We went on stage. The

(41:53):
song had been out for like three days, and we
played speechless and somebody was on the side of the
stage filming with their phone and the crowd sang it
like crazy. When that chorus hit. I looked over at
Shay I was like, it's a single, that's it. But
he was super passionate about that song, and uh, he
was right.

Speaker 3 (42:08):
Good, that's a good story. Yeah, Like that's the kind
of stuff we have him here for. That's a good one.
All right, that's a good story.

Speaker 2 (42:14):
Share you do one?

Speaker 3 (42:15):
Okay, Well there's a song called Tequila though, Oh man,
I don't know. I mean, there's like, how is Dan
so right? And maybe you weren't, because again, keep four
was an awesome song. I loved it too, and that
would have been a hit, but I think you made
the right decision. Speechless is what you guys will be known.

Speaker 17 (42:29):
For all timer. I think it's in our top three
in our catalog. It's it's a special song. It's it's
it's not time stamped by a moment in time. That
song could have came out in the seventies. That song
could come out today, and I feel like it would
still sound fresh.

Speaker 3 (42:40):
So you you tell me when were you not right?

Speaker 2 (42:43):
Oh?

Speaker 5 (42:44):
Man, I've never been wrong. I mean it's crazy, all right, Yeah,
you guys were coming up.

Speaker 13 (42:50):
No, I mean, uh, you know, there's been some situations
like like Speechless was like you know, I usually I
try to sit back and you know, take the collective
of the if we have such a you know, a
great team, and Dan and I are usually on the
same page about everything.

Speaker 5 (43:03):
I mean, even you know, Speechless.

Speaker 13 (43:05):
He was not against the song ever, but there's been
moments where I've been like, this has got to be
the single, that we've got to do this. I felt
that way about Tequila, as did Dan. But I felt
that way about Tequila as well. And I remember there
was a lot of people not to throw like our
label and everybody under the bus.

Speaker 5 (43:20):
But it was like that with Tequila.

Speaker 13 (43:22):
You know, we had pushed a song called road Tripping
that was that was definitely it was definitely hits.

Speaker 5 (43:27):
So it don't look.

Speaker 13 (43:29):
Showing that tattoo, but that it was like that Dan
and I were very much. I was like, because Dan
had written the song, and from the very first time
I heard that demo, I was like, we're going in
there and we're recording the song, which one is Tequila.
And I remember being in London and our you know
a lot of people you know around around the label
were like that we can't you know, we just you know,

(43:50):
had this song. It wasn't necessarily a failure like our
our fans loved road Tripping, but it was like it
was gonna take a long time to push the song
to number one, and we were kind of getting into
it was winter time, you know, and we had the
Christmas break coming up, and I was just like, we
we've got to push this song, like this song is
this is it? Like I felt as strongly about the
Tequila as I did speechless.

Speaker 5 (44:10):
Those songs were like.

Speaker 3 (44:11):
You're talking again, You've turned this into how shell right?

Speaker 5 (44:13):
You know. One of the segments called is it not.

Speaker 3 (44:16):
No, you're supposed to be wrong in your part.

Speaker 5 (44:18):
I'm trying to think of something.

Speaker 10 (44:19):
That does make me curious why they didn't Why were
they wrong? Like why why were they not on board? Well,
but I wondered if they gave you that reason of like, yeah,
because it's winter, and like tequila, I have no idea.

Speaker 17 (44:35):
No, maybe it's too much inside baseball, but yeah, that
factors into it.

Speaker 5 (44:38):
The seasonal thing. Is it winter?

Speaker 13 (44:40):
Is it? You know?

Speaker 17 (44:40):
And at radio you always want to have tempo, like
tempo I feel like always gives you the best shot.
But if you look at it historically, sometimes the ballads
are the biggest risk, but they have the biggest reward,
Like in our career from the ground up, speechless Tequila,
those are all, you know what people would say ballads.
I don't know, we could come out with one hundred
and twenty b pm song. There's going to be somebody
out there still says it's about Ah, we can't get

(45:00):
to it this week. Oh you know, we've got too
many ballads. I'm like, this song is punk rock song?

Speaker 3 (45:06):
Well, everybody's shay perfect Listen. You should have asked Dan
because I can't. I'm trying to think of it. I
usually listen to Dan.

Speaker 13 (45:14):
Here's the reason I haven't been, you know, wrong with
singles because I trust him implicitly, and you know, most
of the singles it's we're like right there, and so
I really should say, Dan and I have never been wrong,
you know what I mean, except.

Speaker 5 (45:31):
On the Bobby Bones Show.

Speaker 3 (45:32):
Now, when we do our podcast, we can't put any
music in the podcast because now if you put something
on demand in a podcast, it's illegal. It makes total sense.
But we can't put even a clip of a song
in a podcast now unless it is a public domain song.
So public domain would be songs are like one hundred
years old and.

Speaker 5 (45:50):
Without further ado, this is happy birthday.

Speaker 3 (45:52):
That's exactly it, right, So I have a few because
we have a really large podcast audience, like millions, millions
listen to every episode. Thank you for lying, but thank
you very much. Where I do I watch you in
your window. So here's the thing, cooking sour dough. I
will give you, Shay if I give you a public
domain song for our podcast listeners. Radio is gonna hear
this too, would you mind? I don't know if you're

(46:14):
loose or not.

Speaker 2 (46:16):
Thank you very much.

Speaker 3 (46:16):
I'll give a little something, would you How about a
little hush, little baby? Public domain can be saying for free? Yes,
would you mind giving us fifteen twenty second hushle baby. Oh,
he's standing Bobby here.

Speaker 13 (46:27):
I've been waving my whole life for this. I actually
I was practicing this this morning.

Speaker 17 (46:30):
He's gonna perform it to me as well, which you
know effect I'm trying to make sure I know the
words this.

Speaker 5 (46:36):
I might screw this up.

Speaker 8 (46:37):
I don't know why, little baby, don't say your word.
Daddy's gonna buy you a mocking bird. And if that
mocking birt dancing, that's all right because Danny Say is
here to do.

Speaker 2 (46:53):
It for you, baby like that.

Speaker 5 (46:56):
Thank you.

Speaker 3 (46:57):
Hold on, guys, we gotta ingo b I N G O,
as done by Shape public domain. Okay, this is b
I G O B and.

Speaker 5 (47:11):
G O B I G O.

Speaker 4 (47:15):
Big else.

Speaker 2 (47:19):
Hame o.

Speaker 4 (47:21):
All right, that's your that's your next single.

Speaker 3 (47:24):
So it is actually, you know, our last freebie, a
song we can do for free.

Speaker 2 (47:30):
Mary had a Little lamb, as done by Dana Sha.

Speaker 13 (47:33):
Right, Okay, I feel like this is kind of the
rendition of like Our Silent Night, you know, what I mean.

Speaker 17 (47:37):
Honestly though, Mary had a little lamb. Like it's not
too far off from Dan and Shay's sound. You know,
throwing back is like the Savage Guard half country to
the O G.

Speaker 2 (47:44):
I haven't said that in fifteen years.

Speaker 3 (47:45):
Give me a break, a break, pretty good Savage Guard,
and give me a break.

Speaker 5 (47:50):
Come on, all right, let's see here he started too high.

Speaker 9 (47:58):
Imagine say, are Mary had dang?

Speaker 5 (48:04):
This is harder than I thought it was gonna be.

Speaker 9 (48:07):
Mary had a lit su lamb.

Speaker 5 (48:13):
What's the rest of the words.

Speaker 2 (48:16):
Mary had?

Speaker 5 (48:17):
Oh that's I was doing the wrong I was doing
the wrong melody.

Speaker 2 (48:19):
What were you doing?

Speaker 5 (48:19):
I don't know.

Speaker 9 (48:22):
Mary had a little lamb? Lit su lamb lit everybody?
Mary had a little lamb.

Speaker 15 (48:33):
It's what code was, wide as now everybody Now Mary
had a lits damn Bobby horrible little Mary had a
lit su lamb?

Speaker 5 (48:47):
Who something? Who snow? That's the podcast listeners, Thanks so much.

Speaker 2 (49:00):
I wonder what you were doing at first.

Speaker 5 (49:02):
I don't know, but it was It's sounded familiar, didn't it.

Speaker 15 (49:04):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (49:05):
Like I was like, is he didn't roll your boat?
I didn't know what it was, but it was something
you were in a pocket. I'll tell you this. It
was another public domain that hasn't been written yet. You know,
check back in thinking. You know, Dan, I've been having
a discussion about this. For our next album is going
to be all public domain songs, actually free. There's not
enough of them Christmas. And you guys are smart because
you do originals, but also you can record the classics

(49:26):
or free.

Speaker 5 (49:27):
It's unbelievable.

Speaker 2 (49:28):
Yeah, it's great, and make the money.

Speaker 10 (49:29):
Are you doing? Twinkle Drink a Little Star?

Speaker 5 (49:31):
That's what it was, Amy Twinkle two. Now we're sinking yeah,
neon star written by Ernest It's sick.

Speaker 2 (49:43):
How does twinkle to go though?

Speaker 13 (49:45):
Twinkled twink Let me let me sing it for you, Bobby, Twinkle.

Speaker 5 (49:49):
Twinkle little stock got it?

Speaker 8 (49:52):
How wonder watch you?

Speaker 3 (49:55):
Uh?

Speaker 5 (49:58):
Science is it?

Speaker 10 (50:02):
It's Twinkle Twinkle a Little Star?

Speaker 5 (50:04):
Public doming it is sure is bang boo.

Speaker 3 (50:07):
They kicked the door in right now and arrest Dan
and shit you must pay.

Speaker 2 (50:11):
What do you guys do? Are you going on the road?
What's up we're doing? You're doing any shows this year?
What's what's it?

Speaker 5 (50:17):
We're in the studio making new music.

Speaker 3 (50:19):
So okay, so right now, No, we're not doing shows.

Speaker 17 (50:22):
Chilling on shows for a minute. We played a lot
of shows last year. We did arenas, amphitheaters, did the
whole thing. We're in the studio, man, we're I always
say this, but I feel like we owe it to radio,
we owe to our fans to really focus and make
the best album that we can.

Speaker 5 (50:36):
So, yeah, what's mean in that studio?

Speaker 15 (50:38):
My house?

Speaker 2 (50:39):
Literally? Like, what does it mean?

Speaker 3 (50:41):
You go right like you're recording the stuff you've already written,
your demoing.

Speaker 17 (50:45):
That's a good question because I feel like usually when
you say you're in the studio, it's like we're going
to Ocean Way. We've got three days book We've got triples,
we've got the session players booked. We're kind of just
writing right now. Figured out what the next thing is
gonna be in the studio, like properly in the studio soon,
not fakely, not fake's got a baby on the way too,
now got that you.

Speaker 13 (51:04):
Got another baby. I've been trying to figure out, Well,
I was there. I was singing some public domain songs
in my bedrooms.

Speaker 5 (51:10):
How it always goes. That's how it started, you know,
I'll watch it was a big public domain. Yeah, yeah,
it's a big public domain.

Speaker 2 (51:16):
Fam on tour public Domain The Rock.

Speaker 5 (51:19):
Rocks.

Speaker 3 (51:21):
Guys, congratulations again. It's really cool to just watch the
sustained success as it does and as your sound does.
It's never the same, but you still remain Dan and
Shay like there's a consistency about it. But it's like
you guys are always growing. Even in this record there
was much more. It felt like instrumentation that you could
actually identify. I felt like that, So I'm looking forward

(51:44):
to seeing what's next. We love you guys. You guys
can follow at Dan and Shay. We'll play bigger houses
a hundred times and you don't need our help, but
you know why not.

Speaker 5 (51:53):
Sour Dough is in the mail.

Speaker 2 (51:54):
Thanks, thank you very much. They are.

Speaker 15 (52:00):
Wake Up the Mall and.

Speaker 18 (52:04):
It's on the radio and the Dodgers Ready lunchbox More
Game two Schoople. Steve bred have trying to put you through.
Buck He's running this week's next bit. The Bobby is
on the box, so you know what this.

Speaker 3 (52:25):
Is, the Bobby Ball Easy Trivia. Next, Eddie, you get
to eliminate somebody. Don't forget Oh right, you dominate it
now games next segment, but eliminate whoever you want right, you.

Speaker 5 (52:36):
Want me to do it now?

Speaker 3 (52:37):
So Morgan's back incau So that means you can eliminate Lunchbox,
Amy or Abby?

Speaker 2 (52:46):
Do you want do you want to you want to
manut it to think? Or yeah? I think I have
to go with my biggest competitor.

Speaker 3 (52:52):
Makes it so boring, You guys don't know who it is.

Speaker 2 (52:56):
It is. Amy's the only other person that wins. I
won one. I'm a crown or two. Now, you guys
are the lowest two.

Speaker 12 (53:02):
And Abby is available to get kicked out too. Sure,
I'm gonna kick Abby out because she has been working
on it and she's done a little better.

Speaker 3 (53:10):
You're lying now, show okay, so we will come back.
Easy Trivia the easiest trivia game ever. Next the category
and Easy Trivia is first grade Knowledge, Eddie or the champion?

Speaker 2 (53:24):
First? What animal is known for having a long trunk? Elephant? Correct? Amy?

Speaker 3 (53:30):
Two plus two equals four? Easy Lunchbox? What's the name
of the shape with three sides?

Speaker 2 (53:37):
Triangle? Correct? Morgan? What do bees make honey? Correct?

Speaker 3 (53:43):
That's the easiest one. Nobody ever goes home in the
first category. When you do miss one, you hear this
sound Eddie.

Speaker 2 (53:51):
Has the tr again. He has nine total championships.

Speaker 12 (53:53):
I'm the Tom Brady Easy Trivia.

Speaker 3 (53:55):
After You're better than that. He's got seven. You're right
after ten. We have to retire the game some elements.

Speaker 2 (54:00):
Oh no, no, to do that.

Speaker 3 (54:02):
The category is Disney Eddie. What type of animal is
Bambi bambys a deer? Correct Amy. What's the name of
Simba's father in the Lion King?

Speaker 10 (54:15):
This is going to be the good one, Simba move
Fossa correct lunchbox.

Speaker 3 (54:21):
What's the name of the fairy and Peter Pan Tinkerbell?
Correct Morgan. What's the name of the animal in Dumbo?

Speaker 2 (54:29):
The name of the animals?

Speaker 5 (54:30):
Kind of animal? Yeah?

Speaker 2 (54:31):
Thank you, thank you, thank you.

Speaker 3 (54:33):
The category is the nineties Eddie, which NBA star retired
in nineteen ninety three to play minor league baseball, then
return to basketball in nineteen ninety five.

Speaker 2 (54:42):
That is Michael Jordan Correct Ammy.

Speaker 3 (54:45):
What was the name of the coffee shop in the
TV show Friends Central, Correct lunchbox. What animated Disney movie
released in nineteen ninety four featured the song Circle of Life, Circle.

Speaker 2 (55:03):
Five seconds?

Speaker 3 (55:03):
Lion King?

Speaker 2 (55:04):
Correct Morgan?

Speaker 3 (55:06):
What iconic sitcom About Nothing Premier to nineteen eighty nine
and ran through the nineties About Nothing? What iconic sitcom
about Nothing? Premier in nineteen eighty nine and ran through
the nineties.

Speaker 16 (55:20):
What kind of information on his show?

Speaker 5 (55:23):
Is that?

Speaker 16 (55:24):
It was just like something known that it's about nothing.

Speaker 4 (55:27):
The only thing I can think of is Seinfeld?

Speaker 2 (55:29):
Is that your answer?

Speaker 9 (55:33):
Shoot?

Speaker 2 (55:33):
Is there another need an answer?

Speaker 5 (55:34):
Three?

Speaker 4 (55:35):
S Seinfeld?

Speaker 2 (55:35):
I guess correct? I show about nothing?

Speaker 4 (55:39):
Is that what it's known for?

Speaker 3 (55:40):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (55:40):
Okay, Yeah, you're a little young, see that. Yeah, I'd
never heard that before. US History Eddie? Who wrote the
Declaration of Independence? Who wrote it? The guy that signed it?
Thomas Jefferson? Correct? Amy?

Speaker 3 (55:59):
Which war was five between the North and the South
regions of the United States Civil War?

Speaker 2 (56:03):
Correct? Lunchbox?

Speaker 3 (56:05):
Who did the United States declare independence from Britain?

Speaker 2 (56:11):
I'll accept it, great Britain, Oh, Morgan? Who was the name?

Speaker 3 (56:17):
What was the name of the ship that carried the
pilgrims to America in sixteen twenty the Mayflower?

Speaker 2 (56:21):
Correct?

Speaker 3 (56:21):
Good job, you get less time, questions get a little harder.
News of the twenty tens Eddie. Which royal couple got
married in twenty eleven in a globally televised ceremony. Which
royal couple got married in twenty eleven in a globally
televised ceremony.

Speaker 2 (56:38):
Yeah that is Kate and answer Kate and Charles.

Speaker 3 (56:46):
In correct, Amy, do you know Yeah, William Prince William and
Kate Middleton?

Speaker 2 (56:52):
Who cares about those people? Well, you did in this
trivia round and you didn't get it right. God Amy.

Speaker 3 (56:57):
What song sparked a viral dance craze by the artist
ci in twenty twelve.

Speaker 2 (57:03):
Gangham style is correct.

Speaker 3 (57:06):
Lunchbox, who was the first ever host of the Oscars
to take a selfie that became one of the most
retweeted images of all time.

Speaker 6 (57:14):
Ellen Degenerous Correct Morgan.

Speaker 3 (57:17):
What viral challenge involved people pouring water on themselves to
raise awareness for als.

Speaker 4 (57:22):
The ice bucket challenge?

Speaker 2 (57:24):
Correct? Three remain Eddie, I'm sorry. That's fine. I'm not
that sorry. You just missed it. That sucks. It's easy trivia.

Speaker 3 (57:35):
Only three people left, Amy, Lunchbox and Morgan. The category
Amy is healthy Foods. What fruit is known as a
good source of potassium bana Correct Lunchbox. What fruit is
known as a powerhouse of anti oxidants.

Speaker 2 (57:53):
Ossie I berry you think you're thinking of. That is incorrect.
It's a bone, Morgan.

Speaker 3 (58:04):
What's the name of the green tea powder that is
used in lattes and smoothies? MAA correct? Two remain Amy v. Morgan,
sixth grade math.

Speaker 2 (58:16):
Amy.

Speaker 3 (58:16):
What's an angle that's less than ninety degrees? What's an
angle that is less than ninety degrees?

Speaker 2 (58:27):
A cute? Correct? Morgan. What do you call the perimeter
of a circle?

Speaker 3 (58:35):
M M?

Speaker 2 (58:37):
What do you call the perimeter of a circle's circumference? Correct?
They're so smart?

Speaker 3 (58:42):
Great job. The categories technology. Two people remain Amy. What
does wi FI stand for?

Speaker 4 (58:50):
What?

Speaker 10 (58:52):
Don't I don't know that? I know this actually wireless?
Does it?

Speaker 2 (59:02):
What does wi fi.

Speaker 10 (59:03):
Stand wireless frequency? Wi Fi wireless frequency?

Speaker 4 (59:11):
I don't know?

Speaker 3 (59:12):
That is incorrect? It is wireless fidelity. Morgan, over to you.
If you get this right, you win. You get yourself
here in the city.

Speaker 2 (59:21):
And good luck.

Speaker 4 (59:22):
Wireless.

Speaker 3 (59:23):
What do you call the files that let websites remember
you your log in, shopping carts and more.

Speaker 4 (59:32):
There's data and there's cookies.

Speaker 3 (59:34):
What do you call the files that let websites remember
you your log in, shopping carts and more.

Speaker 2 (59:39):
You're on the clock. There's a dumber.

Speaker 16 (59:41):
It has to be cook guy, there's cookies because they're
the files.

Speaker 4 (59:45):
Don't cookies.

Speaker 3 (59:47):
I think she having to see your guys, your answer
is cookies. The answer is cookies. One of the bigger
stories for today is that Biden has announced you will
not enforce to TikTok ban. So big news late last
night this morning. So President Joe Biden won force a band.

(01:00:07):
This is from AP News on the social media app
TikTok that is set to take effect a day before
he leaves office on Monday, leaving its fate to the president.

Speaker 2 (01:00:18):
Like Donald Trump.

Speaker 3 (01:00:19):
Congress last year in a law signed by Biden required
that TikTok's China based parent company, Byte Dance, Divesta Company,
and Trump also called to ban the app at one
point too. So everybody was in on it, and now
Trump wants to keep it. I even saw like the
head of TikTok's gonna be at the inauguration with Trump.

Speaker 12 (01:00:38):
Is a Chinese guy.

Speaker 3 (01:00:39):
Yeah, dude, yeah, I never really thought it was a
threat that it would be gone, but I don't know everything.
It's just it would be politically a very bad move
for anybody to get rid of what we love now.
Politically bad move doesn't mean it's wrong, right, because there
have been a lot of politically bad moves that we're
thankful for and some that happened and we wish didn't.

Speaker 2 (01:01:02):
But we're good for now.

Speaker 3 (01:01:04):
Man.

Speaker 2 (01:01:04):
I love my TikTok.

Speaker 13 (01:01:06):
Hmm.

Speaker 3 (01:01:06):
All my guys, all my Chinese spies that talk to
me now they got to hopefully they reach out and
they're like, hey, we're.

Speaker 2 (01:01:10):
Gonna extend this for a little bit. Yeah good. Yeah,
So we talked about it.

Speaker 3 (01:01:16):
The TikTok ceo, according to Forbes, will portally attend Trump's
inauguration as the band looms is.

Speaker 2 (01:01:20):
It's not going anywhere. All those people that got on
that new one though.

Speaker 3 (01:01:23):
That's crazy red dot, what's called mm hmm, red zone,
red card, that note, red note.

Speaker 12 (01:01:29):
So we danced all around it.

Speaker 3 (01:01:32):
Uh yeah. It's gonna take away my excuse though, for
being on TikTok all night, because I'll just be on
the bed flipping and she'd be like, are you gonna
go to bed? I'm like, I gotta get it all
you can. It's like it's like somebody dying and you're
going to spend all the time with them. My cam
before they go.

Speaker 2 (01:01:45):
Away, because you know how much time they have.

Speaker 3 (01:01:46):
Well, it's like I don't have a lot of time.
I need to like do the things I love doing.
I did read too that Kevin O'Leary, mister Wonderful from
Shark Tank. You know, he's trying to buy it, and
that's been out for a couple of days. This morning
they acted like it was that was really close. I
know mister Beasts said he's trying to be a part
of buying it. So how much would that be? Twenty billion?

Speaker 12 (01:02:05):
I think for TikTok and mister Wonderful would have to
have partners and stuff, right.

Speaker 3 (01:02:11):
I think he's worth fifty billion. Again, I'm just saying words.
At this point, all everything I need to say that
I say needs to be fact checked.

Speaker 2 (01:02:18):
Dang, that's crazy.

Speaker 3 (01:02:19):
But from things that I've read, Kevin O'Leary's net worth
and I'm getting these things are so wrong though, because
there's no way he's only worth four hundred million dollars.

Speaker 12 (01:02:29):
Own net worth.

Speaker 3 (01:02:30):
Yeah I heard on one of these news stations he
was worth billions. But who cares. He's going to get
the money to do it, okay, or he's trying to,
but they have to also allow it as well. Because
Elon Musk wanted to buy it. Dude, he could buy
it with the money in his wallet.

Speaker 4 (01:02:48):
That's crazy.

Speaker 3 (01:02:49):
Bezos could buy it. Warren Buffett could easily buy it.
But yeah, what's the what's the price? Say TikTok's worth No,
it's wait worth way more than that. But it could
go as much as fifty billion, I think possibly. Kevin

(01:03:10):
O'Leary said he had a twenty billion there is, but
but without that, yeah, here it is.

Speaker 2 (01:03:15):
Oh, thank god, I'm right on something.

Speaker 3 (01:03:18):
Consortium of business people, including billionaire Frank McCourt and O'Leary
ventures Kevin O'Leary, have previously said they'd be willing to
pay up to twenty billion for TikTok, and not only that,
Kevin O'Leary, mister wonderful saying we'll buy it without the
algorithm because by Dance China, they're not selling the algorithm
if they sell everything else they're not. There is no

(01:03:38):
chance it will die before they give up the agorathm.

Speaker 4 (01:03:40):
But it comes with it.

Speaker 2 (01:03:41):
They just no, it doesn't.

Speaker 10 (01:03:42):
Oh it's but they just don't. I thought it comes
with it.

Speaker 3 (01:03:45):
But they don't tell you how to like buying a
KFC and like you get to make the chicken.

Speaker 2 (01:03:49):
But you don't get to know the rest of chicken in
the buget exactly.

Speaker 4 (01:03:52):
I don't think so, because but then well isn't that
going to change?

Speaker 2 (01:03:57):
Sure it could change, but would we even really know
notice it? Yeah, because if you're replicated.

Speaker 3 (01:04:02):
There must be something sold replicated close enough people would
do it and it would be the same algorithm on
another app.

Speaker 10 (01:04:07):
Wow, y'all are going to be on it, and you're
gonna be like, well.

Speaker 4 (01:04:10):
Here's what is in feeding you what I want?

Speaker 3 (01:04:12):
Instagram reel sucks. Here's why Instagram reel sucks. And you're like, well,
why aren't people just going on Instagram reels? If I'm like,
I want to go watch again, I watched nineties wrestling
on my TikTok on Instagram reels. If I go over
and I watch a nineties wrestling clip, I'm gonna get
flip nineties wrestling, nineties wrestling, nineties wrestling, nineties wrestling, nineties
wrestling ad nineties. Now, if I'm on TikTok and I

(01:04:32):
watch a nineties wrestling clip, I'm gonna get nineties wrestling
I've seen from It's always sunny in Philadelphia that makes
me laugh. I'm going to get something from the Chicago
Cubs recently. I'm gonna get Razor. Oh another nineties wrestling
clip speech about something happening in the Middle East from
a professor that makes me learn, Oh, it's not the
clip by ninety So it's all that, like they know
how to instagram reels is like, you watch that, here's

(01:04:54):
eleven more in a row.

Speaker 12 (01:04:56):
Could it be because in the rules here in America,
like the law of privacy laws where you can't they
can't like really look into everything that you are into,
you know how that's so protected like privacy laws and
software or whatever protected.

Speaker 2 (01:05:10):
Well, people get busted all the time.

Speaker 12 (01:05:12):
They're like, did you like there's a lawsuit they Facebook
didn't do this for these five years.

Speaker 3 (01:05:18):
Cambridge like Cambridge Analytica type stuff like series listening to you.

Speaker 2 (01:05:21):
Like that kind of stuff.

Speaker 4 (01:05:22):
My phone's going off.

Speaker 12 (01:05:23):
Sorry, But in TikTok there are no rules, right because
it's China, and like they can just well.

Speaker 3 (01:05:28):
Well, we're not in China. They're nobody's following the rules
on that they have all rules.

Speaker 2 (01:05:35):
I just feel like we can.

Speaker 3 (01:05:36):
They'll they'll take the loss. They'll if they get caught,
they'll take the loss because they're worth so much. Like
Apple does have to pay something some crazy number to
like everybody and in the end everybody gets like a nickel.

Speaker 2 (01:05:49):
Yeah I saw that.

Speaker 3 (01:05:50):
So people don't evenet involved in the lawsuits. But yeah,
there are like theoretically laws about information, but you don't
think you're saying a word, and not just the ads
that we get on everything. But there's something about TikTok
that by putting that on your phone, it's more sensitive
than anything else and probably not in a way that's great.
But to me, it's not even about the information that

(01:06:11):
you're giving up and I'm not fearful of like the
digital they have. My information mostly gives me ads to
stuff I want to buy.

Speaker 12 (01:06:20):
They know exactly what you want.

Speaker 3 (01:06:21):
Yeah, and I'm not up to I'm not up to something.
But it's the ability to take content and either create
division within a group that is your adversary because we're
adversaries with China division.

Speaker 5 (01:06:40):
Or dumber.

Speaker 2 (01:06:43):
Yeah, definitely feel dumber, like after.

Speaker 3 (01:06:47):
Dumbed down the culture, Like imagine twenty years of this
and Americans reading has gone down thirty percent, and we
already are not scoring well, like our test scores are
not as good. So but that's like a long term
play and that's what we're doing country v Country long
term plays, like let's just make them dumber so we

(01:07:07):
can dominate them in two decades. So that's a part
of it. There's and I'm sure there are elements of
it that have no idea.

Speaker 2 (01:07:13):
But don't we.

Speaker 10 (01:07:14):
Fight back and ask for just like the educational stuff.

Speaker 12 (01:07:18):
Yeah, like what you got its stem video, it's on there,
you can watch it.

Speaker 5 (01:07:21):
It's all you know what.

Speaker 3 (01:07:22):
That's like, let's fight back and I'll just read books.

Speaker 2 (01:07:25):
Yeah, well study you won't though you have.

Speaker 4 (01:07:27):
The as an art. I get it.

Speaker 10 (01:07:29):
We don't want our government to controls that way, But
like why don't they like counter it and try to
make teachers.

Speaker 3 (01:07:35):
So it's a it's a it's a societal problem, Like
we don't value our teachers to pay them a wage
that makes the best and brightest out of college, or
at least a lot of them go, I want to
go be a third grade teacher, and they are very
bright third grade teachers. But it's not that everybody finishes it.

Speaker 2 (01:07:56):
People go on.

Speaker 3 (01:07:56):
I want to be a freaking CEEO. I want to
make money. And if your goal is to make money,
you don't go be a teacher. If your goal is
like to change the world, hopefully you do that. But
it's why nonprofits could should and do pay a ton
of money to great CEOs, and they should. Otherwise you're

(01:08:16):
gonna have nobody that wants you have nobody with any
sort of competitive bone, or somebody that wants to be
successful with making money building inside of a corporation, go
and run run nonprofits. It's always weird to being people

(01:08:37):
to get mad that they pay somebody running a wonderfully
run nonprofit a ton of money. It blows my mind
that people get mad because it takes five seconds to
figure it out. If you pay somebody nothing to run
a nonprofit, because you're like, it's a nonprofit, pay you
pay them nothing. And let's say they do seven hundred
dollars over the year, but you pay them nothing, that's
plus seven hundred dollars.

Speaker 2 (01:08:55):
Good job.

Speaker 3 (01:08:56):
Let's say you pay somebody five million to run a
nonprofit and it makes thirty one million dollars, Well, you're
plus twenty six million dollars now. So you can either
pay somebody nothing and not have outrage on the internet
and you're plus seven hundred bucks and that nonprofit doesn't
get to do near as much good work. Or you
can go and post somebody from a Coca Cola an

(01:09:17):
Apple and pay them five million dollars and be I
can't believe you're paying somebody five million dollars run a
nonprofit supposed to be a nonprofit. Do you actually care
about what the organization does? Because if you get one
of the biggest, best, brightest minds, the money that you
pay them is going to be nothing compared to what
they make and their.

Speaker 12 (01:09:36):
Value, yeah, and how they grow the organization.

Speaker 3 (01:09:39):
It's like athletes or actors that's celebrated in our society,
great ones and you're like, how does an athlete make
fifteen million dollars? It doesn't really matter what profession you're in.
If you make your company more money than they're paying you,
that's a win for the company. So it doesn't matter
if you're worth two hundred million dollar. If you can

(01:10:01):
generate that revenue, then there's going to be a bidding
war for your service. Is at about one hundred and
forty million one hundred and sixty million, maybe even over
two hundred if they think you'll grow in value over
the next few years. But TikTok is all good, stay
on it, enjoy life. Can't roop for China in the Olympics.

(01:10:24):
So I'll be honest with you, No, I never know whatsoever.
I'm not going to be on that. So that's what's up.
That's that's the news of this morning.

Speaker 2 (01:10:32):
That it shouldn't. I was gonna say that matters. It
matters to me.

Speaker 12 (01:10:35):
Oh yeah, man, I love TikTok too, man, Like I
love that people get to be funny and I get
to see how funny.

Speaker 3 (01:10:43):
It's the funniest social media ever, like like and there's
corners of everything.

Speaker 2 (01:10:47):
So I will I bought dude wipes off up the other.

Speaker 12 (01:10:49):
Day dude wipes like wipe wipes.

Speaker 10 (01:10:51):
Then you already have those. Just made it easy. TikTok
shop makes it easy.

Speaker 2 (01:10:55):
TikTok I it.

Speaker 3 (01:10:56):
I had something a long time ago, but but I
about like a year's supply for like fifteen bucks, just
wipes a year's of fly.

Speaker 5 (01:11:01):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:11:02):
They come to a.

Speaker 3 (01:11:03):
Huge box and they got the kids, Like I can't
believe I got these fifteen bucks. It's in my algorithm,
I'm sure. But about like a bunch of dude wipes
off there and they came to the house. Yeah, but
they're like dude wipe, but they're like already kind of
wet and the pack. Yeah, it's like toilet paper. Oh okay,
wet for your butt.

Speaker 12 (01:11:18):
No, that's perfect, it's great.

Speaker 2 (01:11:19):
It's like a wet white. But they just put a
dude on it, so dudes will go like that for me, right,
it's just a white. Yeah, I got it. Anyway, that's
the news. Thank you, Bobby Bones show.

Speaker 6 (01:11:29):
Sorry up today, this story comes up from Highland Park, Michigan.
A man walked into a Dollar General and went to
the hot pockets, said I'll take some of those, start
shoving them in his pockets and his coat, and the
employee goes, hey, you can't steal those, and he goes,
I got a gun. I'll blow your head off if
you say anything.

Speaker 5 (01:11:47):
And he left.

Speaker 2 (01:11:48):
We got a lot for a hot pocket.

Speaker 3 (01:11:49):
Yeah, you know, maybe if anything, it's like I have
a club or a base or even a knife, because
you want to go gun.

Speaker 2 (01:11:57):
That's that's a whole different level.

Speaker 5 (01:11:59):
He called police.

Speaker 6 (01:11:59):
He was like, hey, I think The guy works at
a store a couple of doors down in the shopping center,
and they went in the break room. Guy was eating
hot pocket.

Speaker 5 (01:12:07):
Of course.

Speaker 3 (01:12:09):
You really shouldn't say anything, but I just wouldn't.

Speaker 10 (01:12:11):
Go gun yeah, or blow your head off. What if
it's like, you know, I'm gonna shoot your pinky toe?

Speaker 3 (01:12:16):
Or he can do like the Mob does and be
like maybe I will maybe I won't do something bad
to do you if you stop me?

Speaker 2 (01:12:21):
Oh it just for choice?

Speaker 15 (01:12:23):
Is yours?

Speaker 2 (01:12:23):
Chat?

Speaker 13 (01:12:24):
Well?

Speaker 3 (01:12:24):
No, keep it away. It's like Mob, We're not really
doing anything.

Speaker 2 (01:12:28):
Okay, Okay, I'm lunchbox.

Speaker 6 (01:12:30):
That's your bonehead story of the day.

Speaker 3 (01:12:36):
Our listeners know us pretty well. They listen to a
lot of the show. They know things will like Amy
found I guess somebody found it for you.

Speaker 4 (01:12:42):
Yeah.

Speaker 10 (01:12:42):
Carla for example, she's a listener. She pitched a little
segment idea for us. And it has to do with
Pablo Escobar's private jet. So you can now stay in
it like as in like an airbnb, you can spend
the night with you and your friends. It's a it's
a seven twenty seven the original leather seats.

Speaker 4 (01:13:01):
Are there a gold toilet?

Speaker 2 (01:13:04):
Like where is it in Mexico, you.

Speaker 4 (01:13:06):
And three of your associates.

Speaker 3 (01:13:07):
Or South, yeah, Central America.

Speaker 4 (01:13:09):
For whatever reason, it's grounded in the UK.

Speaker 10 (01:13:11):
Maybe Pablo flewid over there and it got stuck, couldn't
bring it back, so.

Speaker 3 (01:13:15):
I sold it at some point too. It'd be Pablo's
old plane.

Speaker 13 (01:13:18):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:13:19):
But also it's like we are glamorizing really bad guilty
of it.

Speaker 4 (01:13:23):
Two, it's horrible. I I mean, I'm.

Speaker 3 (01:13:25):
Not shaming anybody, because I will watch a documentary and
we'll talk about it here. It's crazy with time, how
we glamorize really awful people who did really awful things.

Speaker 5 (01:13:35):
Awful.

Speaker 10 (01:13:36):
Yeah, No, I don't like him at all as a person.

Speaker 2 (01:13:39):
But you're obsessed with cartel.

Speaker 10 (01:13:41):
I am intrigued when there's documentaries or shows. I watched
them all.

Speaker 3 (01:13:47):
Yes, and again not shaming, because we all have this version.
It feels fictional as why because either it's separated through
so much time or it's not at all how we think.
So it's like a zoo an nomal the situation.

Speaker 4 (01:14:01):
Yes, it's just fascinating.

Speaker 2 (01:14:03):
I actually think that do that live that hurt?

Speaker 3 (01:14:05):
Like?

Speaker 2 (01:14:06):
That's it's crazy.

Speaker 3 (01:14:08):
So would you stay in Pablo Escobar's airplane because there's
a it looks like a massive tour bus.

Speaker 5 (01:14:13):
It looks awesome.

Speaker 6 (01:14:14):
It doesn't have wings anymore, just so you know.

Speaker 4 (01:14:16):
It's a wingless seven twenty seven.

Speaker 3 (01:14:17):
Forgot that part, but it doesn't matter because you're not
can do anything with wings anyway.

Speaker 10 (01:14:21):
Taken off, he had a gold toilet.

Speaker 2 (01:14:24):
They had a lot of money.

Speaker 3 (01:14:25):
Remember that there was so much money that the rats
every month would eat millions of dollars because there was
just so much.

Speaker 12 (01:14:33):
There was one time when he was on the run
and it was really cold, he just burned money to
stay warm.

Speaker 2 (01:14:38):
There's money.

Speaker 3 (01:14:40):
Fields all through Central America where they would bury it,
and like farmers now still find it, so it is
not all found at this point.

Speaker 2 (01:14:50):
Would you say, then when you.

Speaker 10 (01:14:51):
Think about like the blood on that money.

Speaker 2 (01:14:53):
God take the money, or no, I don't want.

Speaker 10 (01:14:55):
Anything to do with that money, and no I'm not
going to stay there.

Speaker 3 (01:14:57):
Due to the legal nature, Escobar couldn't deposit money his banks,
so they would just have to buy warehouses to store
the cash.

Speaker 10 (01:15:05):
Yeah, I mean, I like the idea of Carla, but yes,
to Bobby's point, if it just feels icky to I
don't know who's making money off of it if it's
going to you know, maybe like a drug organization to.

Speaker 6 (01:15:17):
Help get It's businessman Johnny Palmer, he bought the plane.

Speaker 3 (01:15:21):
Pablo Escobar would spend twenty five hundred bucks per month
back then, which is probably like twenty thousand now per
month on rubber bands just to wrap around the cash.

Speaker 2 (01:15:32):
So we're spending twenty.

Speaker 3 (01:15:33):
Five hundred bucks a month just on rubber bands. Had
to buy that many rubber bands that that's crazy. The
question is if you were there, would you stay in it?

Speaker 11 (01:15:40):
Yes?

Speaker 15 (01:15:40):
Or no?

Speaker 10 (01:15:40):
Amy, No, I'd be too scared, like something was gonna happens.

Speaker 3 (01:15:45):
That's probably the safest place in the world. Yes, what
you think Someone's going to murder you on Pablo Escobar's plane?

Speaker 2 (01:15:50):
I bet that's the safest.

Speaker 10 (01:15:51):
Place he's on his plane anymore.

Speaker 5 (01:15:54):
No, lunchbox, Yeah, that'd be so cool.

Speaker 10 (01:15:58):
What what would be cool about it?

Speaker 6 (01:16:00):
I mean, that's Pablo Escobar. Yes, I mean it's weird.
He was a drug kingpin.

Speaker 3 (01:16:04):
But what would be No, literally would be cool about
it to you?

Speaker 5 (01:16:06):
Yeah, it's a private jet.

Speaker 2 (01:16:08):
It's not anymore.

Speaker 6 (01:16:09):
It used to be okay, and I mean it traveled
all over the world and it held so much money
in Pablo Escobar, who was a freaking bad dude, I
mean bad.

Speaker 2 (01:16:19):
I'm not really hearing why it's cool yet. That's what.

Speaker 4 (01:16:22):
That's why I can't say it's cool.

Speaker 10 (01:16:23):
It's all I'm fascinating and I want to watch it,
but I don't want to be I don't want to
be a part of anything that he was in. Like
if I feel like I was in there, the energy
in there, I was just.

Speaker 3 (01:16:32):
Like, ugh, I think I would just rather be comfortable
in a hotel when I go look at it. Probably, yeah,
but I don't think I want to stay the night
just for comfort reasons.

Speaker 2 (01:16:39):
But yeah, you can stand in that Airbnb.

Speaker 4 (01:16:42):
Not crazy.

Speaker 2 (01:16:43):
Yeah, it's pretty wild, so cool.

Speaker 3 (01:16:45):
Johnny Palmer, businessman said the jet was built in nineteen
sixty eight for Japan Airlines, and in nineteen eighty one
it was converted from Pablo Escobar into the private jet.

Speaker 2 (01:16:55):
Wow, I mean it's legit. Don't get me real.

Speaker 3 (01:16:57):
That's your jet with a bed and it's awesome. I
get freaked out thinking about flying over the ocean, and
like the sixties or the fifties, I don't like doing
it now, like getting in an airplane and flying over
the ocean.

Speaker 2 (01:17:08):
Then that's crazy. I didn't even know what they were doing.
Well now I trust me. They they don't think they
don't doing now I think pilot's getting there. They like,
what's happened? How do we do this every time?

Speaker 11 (01:17:18):
All right?

Speaker 2 (01:17:18):
That's it up on the podcast today.

Speaker 16 (01:17:20):
Morgan, Dan and Shay we're on with us, and you're
gonna hear a song on the podcast.

Speaker 3 (01:17:24):
Yes, they were able to sing public domain songs and
you can hear it on the podcast.

Speaker 15 (01:17:27):
All right.

Speaker 2 (01:17:28):
What else?

Speaker 16 (01:17:28):
We had a new season of Easy Trivia and a
listener's husband is secretly ordering.

Speaker 2 (01:17:33):
The Bobby Bones Show.

Speaker 3 (01:17:34):
Theme song written, produced and sang by read Yarberry. You
can find his instagram at read Yarberry, Scuba Steve executive producer, Raymondo,
head of Production. I'm Bobby Bones. My instagram is mister
Bobby Bones. Thank you for listening to the podcast.
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

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