Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
We'll go to mom may.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
This.
Speaker 3 (00:10):
Guys, Hey, welcome to the show Morning Studio, Big show
coming up. Dance parties. Mitchell Tenpenny will be in. But
don't want to do this. Let's go around the room
and just check on everybody. They don't always do this,
So give me something from your life. Ammy, you can
go first.
Speaker 4 (00:22):
Well, lately I've been researching if you can keep your
organs after a surgery or anybody part that's been removed.
Speaker 3 (00:29):
Oh should we ask why? Well? Yeah, I was.
Speaker 4 (00:32):
My daughter came to me and said, hey, when I
get my tonsils out, am I gonna be able to
keep them? And I was like, why just in a
jar because it'd be cool in my room? And I thought,
I don't think so. So then I research it and
turns out you can if you want to.
Speaker 1 (00:47):
You just have to, I guess, ask for it.
Speaker 4 (00:50):
And it may be state by state or hospital by hospital,
doctor by doctor, but I.
Speaker 3 (00:54):
Hope it's that doctor by doctor where they get to
make that decision. I think should just be a general
rule you get to keep body.
Speaker 1 (00:59):
Parts or not?
Speaker 4 (01:00):
Right, But yeah, people have kept some crazy things like hey,
do you get.
Speaker 3 (01:04):
To own anything in your body?
Speaker 1 (01:05):
Your body?
Speaker 3 (01:06):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:06):
Like, if you're having a tumor removed.
Speaker 3 (01:08):
Great point, I want to keep it.
Speaker 1 (01:10):
You're having your foot.
Speaker 3 (01:10):
Removed, I want to keep Do you want the tumor
your foot removed?
Speaker 4 (01:13):
Some people some people want to keep the tumor to
show people like, look at my tumor.
Speaker 3 (01:18):
We're missing the headline here. Your daughter's having a tonsil
taken out.
Speaker 4 (01:22):
Yeah, she already had an appointment. Apparently they're very they
bother her a lot.
Speaker 3 (01:27):
Normal people send the appointment.
Speaker 1 (01:30):
No, no, no, no her tonsils. But we just have to
find like the right time.
Speaker 3 (01:34):
And so in general, you can keep body parts after
surgery that there are a few restrictions, but high risk
materials if the body parts are radioactive proposing extreme risk
to the public. I guess a kryptonite or something. Yeah,
you're like, yeah, okay, mine is so. Last time doctor
Josie ar Vet came to and did Stanley's evaluation. He
(01:56):
was overweight. He's a bulldog. They're fat, and so he's
been working hard. He lost five pounds a boy and
so I put it up on Instagram. He went from
sixty seven to sixty two pounds. And he doesn't know
any of that means and he actually did nothing, you know,
just feed him less. Who knew.
Speaker 1 (02:10):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (02:10):
My wife like, why are you giving us so much food?
He's getting so fat And I'm like, no, this is
amount of food that he likes. And so she's like,
how do you even know what he likes? Right, I'm
like I can tell, and so I we've limited, but
he's lost five pounds. And then I got the message
early this morning from doctor Jose. I'll read it to
you now because again he's had so many health issues.
He says, good morning, you're probably doing the show. But
Stanley's blood work came in. It looks beautiful. Allus cell
(02:32):
counts are perfect and those organs are functioning normally. He's
healthy and skinny, rare for a bulldog. It's good news. Yeah,
I can't wait to tell him today. Oh yeah, he's
me excited.
Speaker 2 (02:40):
I love it.
Speaker 3 (02:41):
Yes, okay, it's happening in my life, lunchbox. I'm taking
a step towards safety.
Speaker 2 (02:46):
You know. I ride my bike hopefully three times four
times a week to work, and I never really wore
road with lights. And I've had a couple like honk,
you know, because they can't see me. So I bought
a little vest. People honk at you because you're in
the middle of road and they can't see you.
Speaker 3 (02:59):
Yeah. Wow, that's dangerous. And last Christmas I bought him
lights for his bike.
Speaker 2 (03:03):
You I have a little light on my bike, but
like you can't. I mean it's not that bright.
Speaker 3 (03:07):
So now you aren't a vest.
Speaker 2 (03:08):
So it's like a like a neon thing. It's like
for runners. But I'm wearing it on my bike and
so you can. I light up the morning. Scott, that's
cool and that's dangerous. I didn't realize people are almost
hit you on the bike. It's a numbers game.
Speaker 3 (03:20):
It is a numbers game. And I realized that.
Speaker 2 (03:22):
I'm like, all right, you know, a couple of close calls,
and I mean, I put the Eddie's light on my bike.
Speaker 3 (03:25):
He bought a car yet not yet? Why dude, the
bike's working just fine, I hear you. But he's like,
not buy a car for a year? Does still work? No?
Is it dead? Yeah? I was just sitting there in
front of the house. It's just hanging out. So I
was trying to I don't know.
Speaker 5 (03:41):
I was prepping for the show and I was like,
you know what, I had this note to send you guys.
So I looked at it, and I guess on iPhones,
on your notes, if you like backspace like a little
too hard, it deletes the whole thing and you're like,
you can't undo it. And so the note just reads
people are d And I'm like, what could I have
possibly been thinking?
Speaker 3 (03:59):
Hey, when I do that, handwriting can be so bad
on a note, And Mike and I was trying to
figure out what I was trying to say.
Speaker 5 (04:04):
Someone to ask you, guys, what do you think I
was trying to say? People are disgusting? That's not bad dynamite.
I probably wouldn't say that.
Speaker 3 (04:12):
It had to be for like a story we were
doing or something you were thinking in your life. For
people people are dumb people Where people are disgusting, that
doesn't ring a bell. It's not ringing. I hate when
that happens. Let us not be figured out.
Speaker 1 (04:25):
Okay, people are what's the word right now?
Speaker 3 (04:28):
What does that mean? It's that trend from it's actually
it's actually not gonna say anything, but it's actually not
a thing anymore. Is that like that? Like whatever? But
I was just gonna let you have it more. When
you say that's over, I mean it's on the back
end of it. Yeah, saying it, I don't say that.
(04:50):
You know what that means. All Right, we're good, everybody's here,
let's go. There's a question to be Hello. Bobby, my
son is in his thirty year of college. He's getting
(05:11):
credit card offers out the wazoo. He's also getting some
horrible advice. He's been quote reading online about how having
multiple credit cards is good for his credit score in
his future. But really he's just watching it on TikTok.
We're talking at least a dozen that I know of.
I just know that when I was in school, the
freedom of a credit card got me into serious trouble
that took me forever to dig out of. And as
(05:33):
they say, that's how they get you. Where can I
direct him to get better advice on this stuff than
just watching TikTok? Signed dad brains? So let's start with this.
So what is recommended is to have a couple of
credit cards, but not use them, because what that does
it shows you never miss a payment. So you don't
have to make a payment, but you never miss a payment. Now,
(05:54):
to give someone access to credit cards wide open with
an immature brain, they probably end up using the credit card.
So I think TikTok generally is a pretty good place
to go for advice if you're getting it from people
that have the credentials to give you advice. So if
you tell your son don't watch TikTok for advice, he's
gonna watch TikTok for advice. What I would recommend you
(06:17):
do is say, hey, look, I understand and I love
that you're researching this, but what you're gonna need to
do is make sure you're listening to people who have
the credentials to talk about this in a way that
is responsible, not some nineteen year old or twenty three
year old who's just trying to get clicks. And then
also give them a little reality. Interest rates gonna be
proun gonna be terrible. Oh yeah you gotta pay two. Yes,
(06:37):
there is some validity to that because you need credit
open to have good credit. It's not you need to
have a bunch of credit on it. And also you
can even talk about, hey, if you want to do
some stuff, you pay it off every month. Yeah, that
helps because then you don't get I think it opens
up a lane for there to be education on credit cards.
And if you tell him don't do it. He's gonna
do it, and there is some valid it's just enough
(06:59):
truth to make it difficult to deal with. But don't
tell him not to do it. But let him open
up a credit card and monitor it. Also as nineteen
and he's going to buy a bunch of beer. It he's
gonna be a nyman. But yes, Amy, Yeah.
Speaker 4 (07:13):
No, I mean I was always told that when I
first started trying to build my credit to have credit cards.
My dad even helped me open some, but I can't remember, Yeah,
if I was paying it off or like you said,
not spending on it. But I was doing it with
a goal of building my credit. And then once I
graduated college and I was on my own, I start,
like on my own own own. I started, you know,
(07:35):
getting some trouble in some trouble and when I.
Speaker 1 (07:39):
But when I got married, I got.
Speaker 4 (07:40):
A little responsible, paid some stuff off and yeah, been
good ever since.
Speaker 3 (07:44):
This is a good, good time for education. All right,
here's Kelly from Michigan. I'm just outside of Detroit and
I just heard on the radio that mister Christmas is
coming back again this.
Speaker 1 (07:55):
Year, and I couldn't be more excited.
Speaker 4 (07:58):
I know, you're friends with Brett, and can you please
thank him that he's coming.
Speaker 1 (08:02):
Back to Detroit because I'm so excited. Thank you so much.
Speaker 3 (08:06):
Love the show, mister Christmas is Brett Eldridge. It's the
best show. It's the best show. He's a very close
friend of mine, but it's the best Christmas show. I
don't even go to many Chrismas show, so I gus
it's the only one I'd ever care to go to.
We'll just translate ery in orchestra once I was good. Yeah,
but if Brett Eldridge comes to do this Christmas show,
go to the show. And I know tickets went on
seal pretty recently, so yeah, have fun with that. That'll be fun.
Speaker 6 (08:30):
Pile of stories.
Speaker 4 (08:32):
Almost half of us have at least one unused gift
card lying around, and some of us even more than that,
So I bet.
Speaker 3 (08:38):
It's more than hell, or maybe just it's half of
it and actually know where it is. Yeah, because sometimes
I'll use it. Then there'll be like six bucks on it,
but I can't buy anything with six dollars. That's how
they get people. You can put it towards it, but
I don't want anything else.
Speaker 5 (08:51):
I have to pay for I even gave you a
hundred dollars upercard. You don't know where if I stole it. No,
no one stole it. I'm telling you, I don't lose
stuff stole it.
Speaker 3 (08:59):
Do I lose stuff? I know, but there could have
been people in my house. I don't know. I don't
lose stuff. For the last time, and he got me
an uber eats gift card, and I it was, what
do you use all the time Uber eats? I'm not
saying that the bad card, it's not personal enough for
a very close friendship.
Speaker 7 (09:13):
That was.
Speaker 4 (09:15):
Also the encouragement here is if you're doing some Christmas
shopping or started that process, gather all your gift cards.
See if there's some gifts that you could buy for
other people or even treat yourself to a regift them.
Speaker 3 (09:26):
Yeah, with a question mark on it, Like, I don't know
how much is left on this thing, because I think
that's probably a lot of mine. Nine dollars here, four
dollars at Express? Okay, what can I buy an Express
for four dollars? Right? Nothing?
Speaker 4 (09:38):
And then if you have a gift card, you're like,
I just will never shop at this place. There are
websites that will buy unused gift cards for about seventy
percent of their face value, so at least you can
get something instead of it just laying around.
Speaker 1 (09:51):
Yesterday in your news.
Speaker 4 (09:52):
You talked about how warm milk would help you go
to sleep cool Real Simple. You know Mark Stewart's magazine,
they say the opposite.
Speaker 3 (10:00):
Wait, they have a magaic called Real Simple. Yeah. Also
they make magazines.
Speaker 1 (10:03):
Still, well, you can go online, got it? Yeah, you
can at the grocery store checkout. It's there too.
Speaker 4 (10:09):
But cow's milk, they say, a warm cow's.
Speaker 1 (10:12):
Milk is balming.
Speaker 4 (10:14):
So not only does it have the trypto fan, the magnesium,
the vitamins.
Speaker 1 (10:17):
But that warm thing, which tea tea is warm. You
can have milk, yes, it will skip the.
Speaker 4 (10:24):
Milk and maybe do Canon Mill tea because they say
that it is a powerhouse to get you ready for bed.
Speaker 1 (10:31):
You know that show Tulsa King that you like with.
Speaker 3 (10:32):
Selvestrs Paramount Plus it's really good. Yeah.
Speaker 4 (10:35):
Well, jelly Roll, we knew that he was going to
show up somehow in there, and now we know.
Speaker 1 (10:41):
Here's the clip of him on this week's episode.
Speaker 3 (10:43):
It's hard work, but you know you got good benefits.
Speaker 7 (10:45):
Yeah, and we also get a lot of cool stuff
people leave on the floor after a concert.
Speaker 3 (10:50):
I got it speaking up. I got to go in
here and tidy up right quick.
Speaker 4 (10:54):
So he is acting to sell Vester like he's a janitor.
Speaker 3 (10:57):
That's cool. And then he's not.
Speaker 4 (11:00):
But he's like to tell us your slungs like I
don't know who you are. So he's like, yeah, I
clean up around here, that's why joking. Yeah, he's joking,
and he's like, I got to go up on stage
real quick. And then he goes up on stage and
seeings like his songs like I'm not okay, and so let's.
Speaker 1 (11:14):
Just like what you'll trick me whole dang. So Tulsa King,
it's a good show.
Speaker 3 (11:17):
That's cool for a jelly roll to get that. I
saw the picture of them together.
Speaker 1 (11:20):
Cool, I Amy, that's my pile.
Speaker 3 (11:22):
That was Amy's pile of stories.
Speaker 2 (11:25):
It's time for the good news, Bobby.
Speaker 3 (11:27):
Yeah, what a story. Over Labor Day weekend, a couple
of Kentucky had plans to go on a little three
day vacation. They're gonna go to the lake, They're gonna
go on a high do some resting. And they were like,
you know, what, I'd rather just go home and watch
the football games. So like, all right, so they decid
to go home early, and so they stop at a
(11:49):
grocery store on Lois Bill and bought a few scratch
offs and what's up, lunch Rocks, I heard you make
a groaning noise. They got home, turn on the TV
and started watching football. Then they just started scratching the tickets,
one of those fifty thousand dollars. Wow. And had they
not decided to leave their vacation to go watch football,
they would have never even stopped at the store and
got the tickets they want fifty thousand dollars. That's from
(12:11):
upi dot com.
Speaker 2 (12:12):
That could never happen to me, because I'll never leave
a vacation early.
Speaker 3 (12:17):
Like, why would I ever leave a vacation football though,
Because like when you read the story, Bones, I was like, man,
I would totally do that. But they went home to
watch football. I would have made sure my vacation had
a great Wi Fi so I could have watched it
where it was just wild. And they'd leave vacation early.
I mean, I'm not a big vacation guy. Yeah, we
know you're weird. That is weird. Yeah, I just I
could use a vacation every week like today if I
(12:37):
were like, you know what, I have a vacation. Yeah,
I take it comfortable, no problem. All right, there you go.
That's what it's all about.
Speaker 2 (12:43):
That was telling me something good.
Speaker 3 (12:49):
Rainbows are actually full circles. You just can't see the
bottom half because of the ground. Stop.
Speaker 5 (12:55):
I think it would go all the way around. I've
never seen that you can't.
Speaker 3 (13:00):
But what about like because the ground that's fun makes
you think pretty good and fun? Fact Friday, Amy, what
do you have?
Speaker 2 (13:06):
So?
Speaker 4 (13:06):
Al Capone's business card said he was a used furniture dealer.
Speaker 3 (13:12):
And he was a gangster who did a lot of
bad things, killed a lot of people, but didn't go
to jail for that. Nax Frog got them for tax
for money because they couldn't get it for the other stuff.
Speaker 4 (13:20):
So if yeah, you haven't run into him, swamp info,
you would have received a business card so you could
keep in touch.
Speaker 1 (13:25):
Business furniture dealer, lunch box.
Speaker 3 (13:29):
Platypuses don't have teats, so I have a platypus. Fact
two coming up crazy, We're going platypus after platypus. Go ahead,
you do yours first, Yeah, so they don't have teats.
Speaker 2 (13:39):
Okay, So how do the young get milk instead of
sweating when they sweat quote unquote, they just secrete milk
out their skin and it sticks to their body and
then the young coming suck it.
Speaker 3 (13:50):
Ah, that's weird. That is weird, okay. Speaking of platypuses
or PLATYPI not sure. In the early seventeen hundred, it's
for almost one hundred years, people thought the platypus was
a hoax like Bigfoot or Latinus monster. People just thought
it seemed too ridiculous. There was a venomous animal with
a ducks bill and otter's feet in a beaver's tail,
so it was that of legend. Yeah, I still don't
really know what they are. You just told me. It
(14:12):
looks like a small seal but with a beat like
a flat beak. It's a weird thing. Yeah, you never
seen a platypus. Never anybody have.
Speaker 5 (14:21):
So if you took all the gold that we have
mined as humans and get it all together, it would
fill up four size Olympic sized swimming pools.
Speaker 3 (14:29):
Four which I think, like that's not a lot. That's it.
Tell me that again. So if you were to take
every piece of gold that we have mined that exists
right now.
Speaker 5 (14:37):
The history of the world, and you threw it all
in pools, it would fill up four Olympic sized pools.
Speaker 3 (14:43):
That's it's all. That's it.
Speaker 5 (14:45):
But you think about it like we all have gold,
but it's like little chain like what you throw that
in the swimming pool.
Speaker 3 (14:49):
It's like nothing. Yeah, but they have I'm not saying
you're wrong, but I think they have like blocks of
gold and like vaults in places.
Speaker 5 (14:56):
And then you think, like back in eighteen forty nine,
like they were mining a lot of gold, but I
guess not that much.
Speaker 3 (15:01):
If you read it, it's true, that's crazy. But why
didn't what was doubt my forty nine ers?
Speaker 1 (15:06):
Oh okay, now I get it you right now. Actually
was like, you know, think about it back in eighteen.
Speaker 5 (15:13):
Four and I feel like you guys take everybody else's
facts and be like, Wow, that's cool.
Speaker 3 (15:16):
Eddie's well, don't check that one. No. No, I thought, wow,
my mind is blown If that's all. And I knew
eighteen forty nine was a gold rush. I wasn't the
one challenging in that.
Speaker 4 (15:28):
Morgan So humans can smell fresh rainfall better than sharks
can smell blood in the water.
Speaker 3 (15:36):
I mean, I know that smell. How do they measure
what a shark can smell though, if you can't actually
do it that well, because we assume that, like when
you bleed in the water.
Speaker 1 (15:45):
Sharks are going to swarm you, right, yea, I understand it.
Speaker 3 (15:46):
But I mean there's not a single shark that's allowed
themselves to be uple for to this test and get
given feedback.
Speaker 1 (15:50):
I guess they tag them and they do research.
Speaker 3 (15:53):
Maybe they flip their fin when they smell it, like
all right, I hear you. But then you got to
communicate with the show. Okay, it's illegal dow any debris
from the Challenger explosion. If you get caught with some,
you could get up to ten years in prison. Dang.
And then when the breathalyzer was created in nineteen thirty,
it wasn't called the breathalyzer. It had a much warmer,
more fun name, the drunkometer.
Speaker 7 (16:14):
I like that.
Speaker 3 (16:16):
That one doesn't look too fun, like I'm pull you over,
ready to put you on the drunkometer. It should sound
a little more serious tracco meter. In fact, my best
guess is I've never been swaddled as a baby. I
don't think I was ever swaddled. And I'm sitting on
the floor now and there's a blanket on the floor,
big blanket. I'm about to be adult swaddled a big boy,
(16:39):
big boy walk like that. At what age do people
stop being swaddled? Like his kids? Two six, one, one
and a half. Okay, so I would bet I was
never swallowed. And there's adult swaddling, and so we had
this massive blanket. So I'm laying I lay back. Okay,
your next news be right at the crease.
Speaker 4 (17:00):
You should stop swaddling when your baby starts to roll
over between two and four months.
Speaker 3 (17:05):
Oh my god, get up, according to okay, take my
head off out of the bank. Oh that makes sense.
I'm not You don't need to be able to breathe.
Speaker 7 (17:13):
You got it.
Speaker 3 (17:13):
I'm a baby. I'm stupid. Hey, I'm a stupid baby.
Oh no, you're not a stupid baby, you're just but
how can I talk on the microphone? Eddie's now wrapping
my arm. You gotta put your arms. Oh my arms
are kind of crossed.
Speaker 1 (17:28):
Leave one arm out.
Speaker 3 (17:29):
You don't okay, Oh wow.
Speaker 2 (17:31):
She's resulting you're swaddling No, you don't leave an arm
out when you swamp.
Speaker 1 (17:35):
No, he wraps it with the other side.
Speaker 3 (17:37):
Now he'll wrap the guys.
Speaker 7 (17:39):
Let the guy.
Speaker 3 (17:39):
Swaddle you too.
Speaker 1 (17:40):
Okay, everybody saw.
Speaker 3 (17:41):
Why does the baby have to be the parent here?
So I'm on my back, I'm in a brown blanket.
Eddie is now wrapping my feet so far do you
feel I'm really aggressive? That's what you have to be
usually real snugs. You can't move.
Speaker 1 (17:58):
Do you feel nurtured?
Speaker 3 (18:00):
I'm being This is my third layer? Okay? Oh god dang, okay,
he's talking another layer under Oh two man swaddling now
on TikTok. You can see adults being swallowed, but not
like this. This is some love, like this is your swaddole.
So it's not so bad. Just leave you there. Actually,
(18:23):
so maybe he doesn't know whether or not it feels
trapped because it doesn't understand the concept of being trapped.
Speaker 4 (18:28):
You know, it's supposed to mimic the baby being back
inside the womb.
Speaker 3 (18:31):
Got it, got it?
Speaker 5 (18:33):
I haven't been in a woman a long time, so
let me ask you this. So sometimes we swaddle him,
leave him in the clime out of breath. Go ahead,
you leave him in the crib like that because they
can't roll over, So can you roll over?
Speaker 3 (18:47):
Great question, let's see.
Speaker 4 (18:56):
Oh gosh, I think you've gone full blown like method acting.
Speaker 3 (19:01):
Oh God, can you get out of that? Well, well,
you probably could because it's not trapped. The problem is,
is it? Yeah, I don't like this. I thought there
might be some comfort or like I get to relift
some feeling I didn't have as a child.
Speaker 4 (19:16):
Do you think right now it's that you're feeling uncomfortable
and you should power through and get comfortable with the uncomfortable.
Speaker 5 (19:21):
No, there's many people in the room watching me. Well,
and then you're supposed to really be napping, like you're
not supposed to be like awake. Yeah, it'supposed to be dark.
You're supposed to have your music.
Speaker 3 (19:28):
On, like I feel like people are listening to me.
Speaker 4 (19:31):
Many many people who've tried adults swaddling say the experience
helps them feel warm, comforted, and relaxed.
Speaker 3 (19:38):
I feel that one of those heavy blankets has almost
the same job.
Speaker 1 (19:41):
If you created blanket.
Speaker 3 (19:43):
Yeah, put it on your chest. Do that. That costs
like forty bucks, And then you don't feel awkward when
your friends are wrapping you in a blanket. Hey, guys,
we could just leave them there. Yeah, like it's go somewhere. Okay, well,
it's just come back. I've been swaddled. You can see
on our instagram on anything. You can look at the pictures.
I have to get out of this.
Speaker 5 (20:02):
God, well, my legs are pretty Babies probably don't have
the core strength I have though, probably not, you know,
I mean, like.
Speaker 3 (20:09):
You ever see a baby? Come on, you look like
a worm and a coucoo this okay, yeah, okay, we're
gonna take We're gonna come back. You can watch all
this online. And I've been swaddled, so we'll check this
off the list. Next up, diaper, It's time for the
(20:31):
good news.
Speaker 4 (20:36):
So Tammy, why have Oxford, Ohio? Has been getting radiation treatment.
She's sixty five years old and every day she takes
the same route to get there, and she goes by
this house that had a Halloween display, and it would
bring her so much joy because the family would change
what the skeletons were doing outside, like they would be
doing different activities since so I imagine the family out
there at night kind of setting them all up doing
(20:58):
different things. So she look forward to driving by and
she was touched by the creativity. So she wrote the
homeowner's a note saying thank you for bringing me joy.
When I drive by, I'd see the skeletons in the
pool or bowling, and it would just lift her spirits.
So the homeowner, Bill Piles, he saw what she was
going through and he thought, oh my gosh.
Speaker 1 (21:18):
You know, she mentioned it's her final day of radiation
coming up.
Speaker 4 (21:21):
So for her final day when she drives by to
get treatment, the skeletons are there supporting her and cheering
her on and like dressed.
Speaker 3 (21:28):
Up, and it's a sign to go yes, like I
got children.
Speaker 1 (21:32):
It's just like above and beyond so special.
Speaker 3 (21:35):
It's just like all the skeletons are like having a
way to go Tammy party. People are just du that's awesome.
And also the fact that she wrote them a note,
like we even rewind like who even writes a note
or somebody doing something in their yard.
Speaker 4 (21:46):
Well, I think when you have cancer, you just have
a different perspective and outlook. And she's like, oh, wow,
this has brought me joy and I'm going to make
sure to tell them.
Speaker 3 (21:54):
And there's a big like he supply wood that one
of the skeletons is holding it, says tan me a
huge letters like it's got a lot of work into this. Yeah, dang,
that's a good one.
Speaker 1 (22:03):
Really cool.
Speaker 3 (22:03):
That is what it's all about. That was telling me
something good. There's a voicemail from Kathy in Iowa just.
Speaker 5 (22:11):
Wondered where we see the value in investing in.
Speaker 2 (22:15):
This really easy money of a laundromat.
Speaker 1 (22:17):
When he can't even figure out how to take the
free money from a four to one K that's offered
by your company.
Speaker 3 (22:23):
Come on, now, it's lunchbox one. We should buy a laundromat.
And we're like, you've never actually led us to a
single good business decision or we've done something, you don't
ever give us the money back for it. And at
the same time, he does not have a four oh
one K, which our companies offer his entire time working
here twenty years. But she's saying it's free money. It's
free money. It's it's out of your paycheck, so it's
not free money.
Speaker 1 (22:42):
That's all times they match it.
Speaker 3 (22:44):
Yeah, they give you money to go with it. Always
that right now they imagined it. No, not right now,
but sometimes they do it, and you would have moved
I checked, you would have missed out on thousands of
dollars free money though.
Speaker 2 (22:52):
So she's still not free money. They don't even offer
free money. So's she has and they do for me
to do at times? Yes, well when is that time?
Don't ever, you don't lose money at launder Matt, You
actually lose money anyway.
Speaker 3 (23:05):
Would would you like to hear about the laundry mat? No,
we would maybe later, but we would like to have
our money from the palate. That would be nice the
u os. Oh no, yeah, see that's why we don't
get in business. Uh, let's go to Amy with the
Morning Corny. Here we go the Morning Corny.
Speaker 1 (23:21):
Why did the rug need to go to therapy?
Speaker 3 (23:23):
Why the rug need to go to therapy?
Speaker 1 (23:24):
He was always getting walked on?
Speaker 3 (23:30):
That was the morning Corny question. Wouldn't it be better
like walked over? It isn't walked all over? Walked all over?
Speaker 1 (23:38):
Yeah, you get walked on.
Speaker 3 (23:39):
Yeah, you can fight for the joke, but you don't
like it, telling you I don't like going with that
kind of material.
Speaker 6 (23:48):
On the Bobby Bones Show.
Speaker 3 (23:49):
Now he's got a record that came out September twentieth.
He's here. He is an amazing singer Mitchell. Good to
see you, buddy.
Speaker 7 (23:57):
Oh it's good to see you.
Speaker 3 (23:58):
Brother. Hey, since I like you and I feel like
I know you, I'm going to ask you a question
that maybe I wouldn't ask you otherwise.
Speaker 7 (24:03):
Let's go.
Speaker 3 (24:04):
I'm so happy that you were nominated for a CMA award.
Speaker 7 (24:08):
Thank you man now so much. I was ready for it.
Speaker 3 (24:11):
I've known you for a long time. Yeah, you know
your first number one number one back in twenty eighteen.
That's right, you have three number ones. How are you
a new artist? How are you nominated for Best New Like?
What is the criteria for that?
Speaker 7 (24:23):
I've never been nominated for anything CMA.
Speaker 3 (24:25):
Is that the criteria?
Speaker 7 (24:26):
I think? I think so. I think it has to
do with you can be up to three albums and
let it never been nominated something like that. I mean,
you look at Jelly, you look at that shoot. I
remember when you know, there's a few few of us
that have been around quite a while and getting the nomination.
Speaker 3 (24:42):
I'm happy. Yeah, it's awesome. But when I think about you,
I think you've been killing it for a while.
Speaker 7 (24:47):
Well, thank you, brother, I appreciate that. Yeah, I was.
I was surprised too, But I'll uh like any anything,
I'll take it, especially from the peers.
Speaker 3 (24:54):
Were you surprised? Yeah, I was there, like a second
level that you knew you were in it or all
of a sudden it was. It's just like best new artists.
Speaker 7 (25:01):
I had no idea when they were talking about when
it was coming out or announced again. And I woke
up to a couple of texts that said congrats, and
I texted texted my manager. I was like, what are
they congratulating as work? Then I got on Instagram and
uh and saw it and that was, you know, awesome.
You know, in the industry, waking up to those kind
of things are amazing. But yeah, I truly didn't know
what day or anything that was happening, or I.
Speaker 6 (25:23):
Never got anything good on the Bobby Bones Show.
Speaker 3 (25:26):
Now not today, right? Why did you choose that one?
Speaker 7 (25:30):
It's our single?
Speaker 3 (25:31):
Right now? Why did you choose this single?
Speaker 7 (25:33):
I just think it's an important message too. I mean
it's kind of disguised around a breakup song, which I
tend to write a lot of breakup songs, even though
I'm happily married to Megan. But I like songs that,
you know, evoking emotion, and but this song's kind of
got a bigger picture. It's it's about wearing an owning pain.
It's about saying hey and acknowledging it too. It's about saying, hey,
(25:53):
I know that this has happened. I'm I'm gonna get
over it, but not today. Today, I'm gonna acknowledge it,
accept it, and where it and you know I'm doing
it in finger quotes. But as getting a little older
and maturing, I think that's the only way I've been
able to get through some things in life. It's truly
accepting things and then moving forward from it. And so
the not today term comes from that. It's like, hey,
(26:14):
I'm gonna do this, but not today.
Speaker 3 (26:16):
How emotionally mature that sounds, thank you, because it's I'm
acknowledging that I am going to do it, but I'm
also acknowledging that I mean, it will not be today
because I'm not in the healthy place to do that.
Speaker 7 (26:26):
Come on, it's time heels for sure.
Speaker 3 (26:30):
So the album is called The Third, which is I
mean the third it's the first song, but also why'd
you call it the third?
Speaker 7 (26:38):
Because I am the third as well. My name is
James Mitchelltonpenny the third, and I wanted to say thank
you to my dad and granddad for believing to me,
and unfortunately, you know, they're not here anymore. So I
wanted to encompass all that. It being my third record
as well, it just all kind of made sense, but
to say thank you for for believing to me and
letting me do music for as a career. I have
a lot of friends that moved to town that their
parents and families that don't do that. That's really stupid
(27:00):
and just very grateful. My family never did that.
Speaker 6 (27:02):
On the Bobby Bones Show, now.
Speaker 3 (27:08):
You have new music out. But also I do want
to bring up the fact that Brooks and Dune ash
you to be on Reboot Part two with a huge
compliment that mean, here's the question. Was that as awesome
as it seems.
Speaker 7 (27:18):
Even cooler, even more awesomer it was. It was amazing, Man,
what a full circle moment I've so we got me
into country music was Ronnie and Kicks. And to get
to work with Dan huff in them and have the
trust and faith to take one of their songs and
make in mine was a little intimidating at first, but
when I got in there and I was playing night,
so I was like, yeah, whatever y'all want to do,
of course, and Ronnie and kch like, we're not going
(27:39):
to put on the record if you don't do it
the way you do it. And that was so awesome
the confidence that they instilled and just made me feel
made me feel warm and special.
Speaker 3 (27:48):
Man.
Speaker 7 (27:48):
So that was really really cool.
Speaker 3 (27:49):
And you did that Ain't No Eight. Yeah, that's one.
Speaker 7 (27:52):
Of my favorite songs of all time. And I'm surprised
no one's ever done that one with them, so it
just made sense.
Speaker 3 (27:57):
You're right though, that would be kind of intimidating. Yeah,
something they did so well.
Speaker 7 (28:00):
They're like, now you do it. Yeah, I get it
in there with a guitar. Bart and Dan huff Two's
like no, no, no, no, I like that guitar.
Speaker 3 (28:05):
You do your thing.
Speaker 7 (28:06):
And I was like, oh, okay, all right, And yes,
it was a nerve wrecking.
Speaker 3 (28:10):
When you play all these shows all around the country,
you've been doing it for years and they give you
like you know, some places will give you like a
jersey of a local team, college team. How many of
those do you have?
Speaker 7 (28:18):
I have a lot, I have a whole I have
a whole like closet a full of jerseys. Man. I've
been collecting jerseys since I was a kid. But yeah,
over the over the past few years, getting the ones
with the names and stuff. I like it, their memories.
I call myself a collector. Wife calls me a hoarder.
But uh, I like just like you sports cards. You know,
it's it's a problem. Like I love sports and so
jerseys are a big deal to me. And this is
how we do it.
Speaker 3 (28:38):
Without getting injured. Yes, yeah, that's how we stay involved
with that.
Speaker 7 (28:41):
I get the filip part of the team without actually
going out and getting crushed.
Speaker 3 (28:44):
What do you feel like as your favorite piece of memory? Oh? Yeah,
like that you personally have of your career. And then
do you have anything at the house that you have
from somebody else?
Speaker 7 (28:51):
Oh, man, of my career. That's that's wild. I think
for me, it's you know, the Opry sign.
Speaker 3 (28:58):
Uh?
Speaker 7 (28:59):
When can they give you the parking sign? You know,
like for people that don't know when you when you
have your debut at the Opry, they give you a
parking spot and they make a sign that says your
name on it. And I have mine right up next
to my wives now so it's that's a pretty special one.
It's pretty cool to have that with her. And then
I mean, I got a I played Atlanta a couple
of years ago, and I'm a I'm a Braves fan
(29:20):
as a kid because growing up in Nationalist Braves or
Saint Louis, I chose Braves and Chipper Jones is my
favorite player. I did not know he was at the
at the show, and I had his jersey on and
he came up and we called and did all the things.
He signed the back of it Hall of Fame Chipper
je So I put that in a frame and I've
got it up there in that memory and.
Speaker 3 (29:39):
That you didn't know he was at the show. Cool,
We're in the.
Speaker 7 (29:43):
Jersey and that was that was cool. I felt. I
felt like, you know, such a huge fan fangirl on it.
But he was, like he's so nice. He gave me
his number. I appreciate that. Like Chipper Jones, I text
every now and then with him and it's like that's cool.
I don't get it, but I'll take it.
Speaker 3 (29:57):
Did he come up? Did you find out after the show? H?
Speaker 7 (30:00):
Yes, I found out. Well, no, I found out right
before I was going on.
Speaker 3 (30:02):
I don't want to know that. I don't want to know.
Speaker 7 (30:04):
After and then I saw I saw him over in
the corner, and then I didn't meet him. And then
after that I got to meet him and spend some
time and do the thing.
Speaker 3 (30:11):
And I'd have been like, don't don't stare him in
the eyes.
Speaker 7 (30:13):
Yeah, don't over I was. I was looking at the
whole time.
Speaker 3 (30:15):
Does he like this? What does he think about this?
Kobe calais on one of the songs on your new record,
So why Kolby? How'd that come together? Man?
Speaker 7 (30:23):
I've been singing with her in my car since since college,
and uh, I you know, recently the last couple of
years have gotten to know her. We weren't like super close,
We've got to know her. And I did one of
those things. I actually wrote that song with Teddy Swims,
another incredible singer, and but when I got into the
studio to record it, I just kept hearing Kobe's voice
on it, and I did that thing where you text
the artist. I was so nervous.
Speaker 3 (30:44):
Oh so you asked yourself.
Speaker 7 (30:46):
Yeah, I'm so scared, Like I hate asking any favors
of anybody or any you know, know that song is
not for me, but I did, and she responded back
pretty quick and was like, I've been wanting to ask
you for something one time, and I was like, oh
my gosh. So it ended up working out organically and perfect.
And I'm just such a fan of hers, And what's
so cool to get in the studio and like be
mixing something in here her voice come back through the
(31:06):
speakers instead of just like in my car. I was
like I had to stop her a couple times and
be like, hey, I'm listening to Colby Klay right now
in the other room.
Speaker 3 (31:12):
This is pretty cool. You could be like, hey, we
do we count me in?
Speaker 7 (31:15):
Yeah, that joke got overdue a few times.
Speaker 3 (31:19):
I want to play a little bit of that. Here
is Trek seven on the new record. It's called Guests
We'll Never Know. With Colby Kelay, you covered Iris from
Google Dolls.
Speaker 7 (31:26):
Yeah, man, how to do it? It's one of my
all time faves.
Speaker 3 (31:29):
I've heard you play it.
Speaker 7 (31:30):
Yeah, Yeah, it's great.
Speaker 3 (31:31):
It's a like such a fun song anyway, and everybody
kind of knows it.
Speaker 7 (31:36):
Everybody knows it. It's such a nostalgic song and I
don't know, it just makes it's just sets on that
brings out the fields no matter what. So we had
some extra time in the studio that day and I
was like, let's.
Speaker 6 (31:44):
Do our version on the Bobby Bones Show.
Speaker 7 (31:47):
Now.
Speaker 3 (31:49):
Woke up in a dream the tour, so I don't know,
tell me about like what what do you do? You
have a when do you play your hits? Because you
have multiple hits now, like what's the strategy?
Speaker 7 (31:59):
That's that was the hardest part this year is figuring
that out because I'm I'm a big proponent of play
the song as it got you there. I'm not I'm
not gonna name names, but I've gone a couple of
concerts recently where they didn't play there's the songs, and
I'm like telling you that. So we definitely have our
songs in there that that have given us a career,
and but we wounded up throwing a few new ones.
(32:19):
So the hardest part was finding the order where it's
not enough too many new ones in a row, so
we play them throughout the whole thing. We in the
we in the set with like you know, I'll go
in and drunk drunk me at the end of when
do you Drunk Me? Into Iris? And it's just such
as it works great, And that's how we ended up
doing IRIS. Was one day I was on stage and
I finished the chords and drunk me and just kept
(32:40):
playing the chords and IRIS lyrics came to my head
and I just tried it once and everyone sung it,
and I was like, let's do that again tomorrow, and
did that for about two years and I was like,
let's just cut it, so it kind of it kind
of works into that song. But yeah, I mean we
we we try to. We do polls and stuff like
what do you want to hear? And now I have
a I have a part of this set where I
just grabbed my guitar and I asked people, what do
you want to hear? If there's some deep cuts or
(33:00):
other songs that you want to you know that we
might not play anymore. I want to try to give
them some of that.
Speaker 3 (33:05):
He used to do that, Eddie. I would do that
on our comedy tour, but we would it didn't matter.
Everybody would yell everything, so you couldn't prove what they
were saying, so we would just know what we were
gonna play.
Speaker 7 (33:15):
That is, you definitely have some in the back of
your head, but you know everyone has her cell phone
now with the type on it. Yeah, so if I
can see a song that that helps, you can't you
definitely can't hear them they're yelling. That is a good point.
Speaker 3 (33:25):
We'd be like, oh, you want to hear walk five
hundred miles? Yeah, okay, And nobody said it. We'd be like,
when I wake up, I know I'm gonna be We
know that one, and like nobody has ever a requested
in the history of our life, but that's what we
would do.
Speaker 7 (33:35):
That's a good co have done that before.
Speaker 3 (33:37):
God, I'm glad you can.
Speaker 7 (33:38):
I think that's the way to go.
Speaker 3 (33:39):
We're in a good place. Twenty tracks on this thing.
That's a lot of songs. Yeah, it's half of Morgan's
So we're getting what's fun right now? Like, what what's
fulfilling for you right right now? Golf? Right now.
Speaker 7 (33:51):
I've been loving playing golf, getting out doors, but being
home a little bit a little bit more. And this tour,
this tour has been a lot of fun. This is
our headline tour. Time I get to do a headline tour,
it's it's the most fulfilling thing we've been out with
Jordan Davis, which is amazing and we're about to do
Canada with him. I love Jordy, he's one of my
best friends. And and then Luke Colms getting to do
stadiums this here was insane. So I'm not taking an
(34:14):
away from that. But there's nothing like having a crowd.
It's there for years, that's yours. Yeah, man, it's so
much fun and you're just a brand new art he's
a baby art.
Speaker 3 (34:22):
Artist. See even you had to laugh a little bit
because it's awesome.
Speaker 7 (34:26):
Nominated, trust me, six years and I knew it was
a possibility. I laugh and yeah, I know, and I
tell but it's you know again, like I'm not complaining.
Speaker 3 (34:34):
I'll take it.
Speaker 7 (34:35):
But yeah, we've definitely, especially for the people that have
been with us from the beginning, I'm like, thank you.
This is a testament to y'all truly. But uh yeah,
I'm not the newest of new.
Speaker 3 (34:44):
Mitchell again launched his headlining Woke Up in a Dream
tour earlier this month, and so go and go to
his instagram. You can see it all there. All the
dates are up there. Congrats with Brooks and Doune. Congrats
on the new record. Are we still we played? We
still play? Golf the same place.
Speaker 7 (34:59):
Yeah, remember there, Yeah I am, I'm still remember there. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (35:02):
I don't have any friends there. So let's go. And
now now that I have my my shoulder, I tore
my shoulder for a long time out of the play,
so I played one time, but now I'm ready.
Speaker 7 (35:12):
To back.
Speaker 3 (35:13):
Okay, get on the toes, you guys. Go follow Mitchell
and Mitchell tenpenny, he's awesome. Follow him at M the
number ten penny, M the number ten penny and go
check him out on tour and check out the new album,
The Third Mitchell. Good to see buddy.
Speaker 7 (35:28):
Thank you guys, always cheers.
Speaker 3 (35:31):
Wake up, wake up in the mall and it's already
and the dogs there, ready lunchbox, more game cho Steve
Bred haven't trying to put you through fuck, he's ridding
his week's next bit. The Bobby's on the mix, so
(35:52):
you know what this.
Speaker 4 (35:58):
Is the Bobby Ball.
Speaker 3 (35:59):
So easy trivia. The category is holidates Eddie are the champion?
Go first? What date is Valentine's Day? Like the date
date like February and no one goes home? No, no
one goes home for sure on February thirteenth. How did
you not know? The day of Valentine. Well, it's always
(36:20):
on your calendar. I don't even remember that. February thirteenth.
You also thought us every thirty? Yeah? Thank you serious?
Are you just like atention February third? Yeah?
Speaker 1 (36:27):
Okay?
Speaker 3 (36:28):
On February fourteenth? Really? Yeah? Oh, I can't believe you
guys didn't know that. That's hard. Maybe my sister's birthday
is the thirteenth. Maybe nobody goes home first round? Thank goodness? Oh? Okay,
Abby or Morgan? Who's in? Morgan? Oh? Amy's not. Amy's
out of this. Yeah, you got eliminated. Morgan. What date
is Christmas?
Speaker 1 (36:48):
December twenty fifth?
Speaker 3 (36:50):
Abbey? What date is Halloween?
Speaker 1 (36:52):
October thirty first?
Speaker 3 (36:53):
Correct? Lunchbox of the day is New Year's December thirty first, No,
that's New Year's Eve, New Year's of January first. New
Year's is January first, the new year, New Year's Eve.
I've never heard New year I remember New Year's day day?
You said, what day is New Year's New Year's Hey,
(37:14):
what do you know for New Year's Maybe we're not
We're not. Just it doesn't matter, you guys will say
if you miss it. From now on, you hear this
sound you've been Oh boy, I don't know. That's up
there with psalms. Morgan was doing the Bible the very top. Okay,
I don't know, Okay, here we go. Lunchbox has two points.
(37:35):
Eddie has two points, but Eddie is the champion Disney
movie songs. The category let it go as from what
Disney movie Eddie Frozen? Correct Morgan? And which movie would
you hear the song under the Sea Little More Maid?
Correct Abby? In which movie would you find the song
super califragilealistic xpialidocious, super califragilistic xpialidocious Mary Popping correct Why?
(38:02):
And what movie would you find Akuna Matata that's the
Lion King? Correct? The category an easy trivia is inventors
Eddie who invented the telephone? Alexander Graham Bell? Correct Morgan?
Who invented the light bulb?
Speaker 1 (38:27):
Oh boy, the light bulb?
Speaker 3 (38:31):
Who are you? Who invented the light bulb? No?
Speaker 1 (38:35):
I have gram Bell in my head, and I have
Isaac Newton gravity discovered.
Speaker 3 (38:40):
But like the light bulb, Thomas, you've been finished it finished,
Jonathan Taylor. Thomas Thomas, I was there, oh man, Abby?
(39:02):
Who invented the company Apple? I did this last time,
a long time ago.
Speaker 7 (39:09):
His name is.
Speaker 3 (39:12):
Is everybody, okay, what's happening? Oh my gosh, this is
not happening.
Speaker 1 (39:18):
This is absolutely happening.
Speaker 3 (39:20):
And I can see him who invented the company Apple
Brain working and gives yeah five seconds, no, no, no, no,
because I know who it is. You have five seconds anyway,
wear a black shirt.
Speaker 1 (39:34):
His name is I did not.
Speaker 3 (39:37):
This is why I got to live in Steve jobs
or oh, either one you had taken either Steve lunchbox?
Oh boy who invented the airplane first to fly? Look
at his face? The right? Brothers? Okay? Good? Which one
their names? Only two remain? Am I right? We're don
(40:00):
two already? Yeah, we're down at just you two? Wow.
The category of space. What famous comment Eddie appeared in
both nineteen ten and nineteen eighty six Hayley's correct lunchbox?
What is the closest planet to the sun? That's when
always gets us. But it doesn't matter. Just miss as
we can move on.
Speaker 1 (40:21):
Or get it.
Speaker 3 (40:22):
Wait he misses it. He's doing the whole song and dance,
so either he really doesn't know or I don't get
us out.
Speaker 5 (40:28):
I'm very energetic, Okay, What's what's ridiculous though, is he's
writing down my very energetic I don't.
Speaker 3 (40:34):
Looking to help him. The closest planet to the Sun.
So it's the im Mars. Oh my gosh, well wo
and Mercury I had them? Oh yeah, y whoa, this
is why I kicked Amy out. Exactly why I kicked out?
Speaker 7 (40:55):
And why is that?
Speaker 3 (40:56):
Because come on, look at this dude. I just breezed in.
I got two questions right and I won. Well, I
got the first one wrong with you didn't know? I know,
but I didn't count. I don't know. I got to
learn my planets. Man, what planet is most recognized towards rings?
(41:18):
Eddie Saturn asked me. I knew that one. What planet
is known as the red planet? Eddie Mars? What else?
You go? It doesn't matter. I'll save these for next week.
Speaker 2 (41:28):
Wow.
Speaker 3 (41:29):
What on the phone is Courtney? Who lives in Illinois?
Hey Courtney?
Speaker 8 (41:35):
Okay, So Bobby, I actually had a question for you.
So in my class, I'm actually writing about grit and
I started thinking about you and where you came from.
You came from a fall town in Arkansas. Your dad
wasn't around when you were growing up. Your mom like
you were the first family person in your family to
graduate from high school in the NSA college, and it
(41:55):
took you a really long time to get where you
are now. You want to be in Premus the Stars,
but I'd have to be really uncomfortable for you. You
like you've done so much in your life for a
small talent kid and Arkansas, who the awesome was sacked
against them. So I was just curious, Bobby, where do
you think your great came from to get to where
you are now? Even after hearing know all.
Speaker 3 (42:15):
The time, thanks you much? Had us all right? Now
that's pretty well prepared. Do I get to be in
your paper?
Speaker 4 (42:20):
Though?
Speaker 3 (42:20):
I give you an answer like quoted that's exciting. Yeah,
I was hoping, so okay good. I think people have grit.
Mine is based on I have fear based success. I
have fear based grit. Nobody I know that has grit
wanted to have grit because you have to have grit
through struggle, like grit comes through things not being easy.
(42:40):
Anybody I know they can run really fast and only
have fast running grit or really smart. So I don't
consider myself extremely talented, but I do have a passion
for the things that I do. I do have perspective
to understand how hard a lot of the stuff is.
And I do have a lot of perseverance, meaning there's
a lot of failure. A lot of people don't see
(43:01):
a lot of the failure that happens in life. We
just see the good news on Instagram or Facebook. People
only post their good stuff. So I think my grit
comes from the fear of being where I started and
then all the other I think being passionate about it
helps a whole lot too. It's easier to do something
that you love. Like my worst case scenario is doing
(43:22):
something I love and being poor. Well, I already grew
up poor, So worst case scenario is I'm doing something
I love and I'm still poor. That's okay. Best case
scenario is I do something I love and I can
make a living. That's pretty awesome. And also, if you
do something you love, you tend to be better at
it because you love to do it. And if you
get better at it, then the rewards come. The rewards
(43:43):
can be monetary, the rewards can be fulfillment. But I
think my grit comes from just being scared to be back,
you know, living in the trailer park or moving the
apartment complexes. I wish I didn't have to have it.
You don't get it unless you have perspective. But you
don't get pspective unless you've seen some crap. So I'm
proud of my grit, but it's not something that I think.
(44:05):
As a kid, I was like, I want to be
gritty and I want to have to work really hard
to get ahead. Now, I think we all just wanted easy,
but I think that's where mine comes from. I appreciate
you asking that question thinking about me in that article.
I wish I was like, have you to be so
good looking? That will be a great question, you know.
I'd be like, I don't know, I was born with it.
But nobody ever asked that one. We're like, how'd you
get to be so? Like hilarious?
Speaker 1 (44:27):
But there's the story there, Well, yeah, I get be
double life.
Speaker 3 (44:30):
Yep. So I had like a few situations probably, yeah,
but luckily not all. I think I was God gifted
some intelligence, so I don't think I had to like
super work for that. I was always a smart kid.
I was always on like the gift and talented classes,
even in kindergarten, first grade, what's yea that God gave
me that? Good? Pretty cool man? I well accept that. Yes,
(44:52):
I agree. I agree. I'm lucky to have that he
didn't give and I'm lucky to be six to one.
You're not six to one though, Jar's license. So and
do we go by government documents or not? Do we yes?
Or no? Sure we do? That's right. Did I have
on shoes that probably gave me a half inches? Absolutely?
But it says six to one, So I stick with that. Uh, Courtney,
I will send you this clip so you can't have
(45:14):
it and use it in your paper.
Speaker 8 (45:15):
Oh my god, thank you so much, Bobby.
Speaker 3 (45:17):
You're welcome. I appreciate the call, and I appreciate you
thinking about me. Signed six foot one Bobby.
Speaker 6 (45:21):
There we go, Bobby Bone show dory up to day.
Speaker 2 (45:26):
This story comes up from New York City. A man
and a woman entered the subway around twelve thirty am
and the subway train car was closed, no one driving it.
It's like, let's try to open it. They open the doors,
they're walking through it. They get up and they're like,
well the keys are in it. No, fired it up
and they took it for a ride.
Speaker 3 (45:47):
I know you can just take the keys and I
don't know, I don't know that was just you just
turn a key and make it go. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (45:53):
They said it was an empty subway car that had
the keys in it or whatever, and they started it
up and drove it.
Speaker 3 (45:59):
And crashed it like a subway car would need like
somebody sitting in like a main hub, giving somebody permission
to go so they don't crash into each other. Right,
if you're letting like drivers control, that's wild. They I'm
surprised they didn't like do other stuff in there, like
we got a subway car, let's get naked. No, no,
they didn't.
Speaker 2 (46:17):
They had camera video camera of it all. Like they
walked around, looked around, then started up, drove it, crashed,
it fled. The woman was arrested. Man's still at large.
Speaker 3 (46:25):
I won't wonder if the door's opened like an elevator too,
like if you pull hard enough then all of a
sudden it goes you get in.
Speaker 2 (46:30):
I mean, I wonder if it's even hard, like if
it's off, if it's like just oh it opens automat easily.
Speaker 3 (46:34):
All right, that's it, thank you. I'm lunchbox at your
bonehead story of the day You guys in a parking
lot Massachusetts. He's an envelope in the parking lot, goes
up to the envelope, It's like, hello, envelope, what's in you?
Opens it? Twelve thousand dollars cas Wow, just find a
random envelope. So the question is what would you do
drive to the bank. Well, that's what I would do
it twelve thousand dollars. That you know something was going
(46:58):
to be done of significance. It's not just somebody with
random money. Somebody loses twenty bucks that falls out of
their pocket wallet, they were making a transaction. Lost twelve
thousand means they were going to do something and this
fell out or was misplaced. Yeah, like there was an
active goal with this twelve thousand dollars. Different than if
you lose five bucks outside of the road. That wouldn't
(47:20):
change your decision at all. You would still just go,
I'm going to keep it all here. Let me legk
at it this way, I mean legal, look at this
way ahead.
Speaker 2 (47:25):
Is it wrapped with rubber bands or with the little
paper slides from the bank.
Speaker 3 (47:30):
That makes a big difference. Does rubber bands some illegal
going on? Now? What would you do then? If you
just found illegal not even illegal rubber banded money. Take
it to the bank, so you'd still steal it. Yeah, okay,
but what if it had bank slips? Take it to
the bank, but feel a little more guilty, got it?
So you're either way.
Speaker 2 (47:47):
I'm taking twelve thousand and I'm going to my bank
and I'm saying, deposit that in my checking account?
Speaker 3 (47:53):
What do you do with it? Though? Like that's stressful?
So this is what the guy did. So he sees it,
he find is that he goes and turns it back
in somebody else who's been realized that they lost an
envelope full of cash. Who's a regular shopper there when
said I lost this money. It was an envelope. This
is how much it was. And they we're like, oh,
we have right here. Okay, think that's good. It's a
(48:13):
good ending. They got their money back, and she gave
him a reward. What do you think the appropriate award
should be? At least one thousand, at least like eight percent?
Oh wait, no, you know what, what's twenty percent of
twelve thousand, two hundred to that twenty hundred bucks.
Speaker 2 (48:31):
That's twenty four hundred If we're tipping everybody twenty percent.
Speaker 3 (48:34):
Nowadays, that's funny to say tip, but also that's a
bit different if you're in the restaurant tip because but
I'm gonna say it's different than tipping, because you know,
when you go to a restaurant that you should tip.
You may not have the twenty four hundred dollars to
give if your bill, well, guess what, you wouldn't have
twenty You wouldn't have dollars if it was just saying.
There's a difference in going somewhere where a tip is
actually expected as part of the service. You don't even
(48:56):
have to give a reward. But so your initial answer
was thousand bucks, right, yeah, but I want twenty percent.
Now it's fair give him three hundred bucks. I think
that's not bad. You did not. I think he did.
He didn't deserve anything he deserve. I think anything he
gets because he wasn't doing it for the reward, because
if he's doing for the money, he would just kept
(49:17):
the money. And now it's three hundred dollars extra. Now, no,
he could have twelve thousand. We can't look at it
that way, No, he could. You absolutely look at that
bad for the guy. I feel terrible for the guy.
Speaker 2 (49:27):
It's like when I worked at Sam's and the dude
that I was working cards but was found, you know,
like one of those bank bags with three thousand dollars
in it, and it was obviously like a little league.
Speaker 3 (49:38):
They've gone shopping. He was like, man, I'm my little league.
You know they you know, like a baseball league or
a oh they kept the money in the bank bag.
They're like selling cookies or s or they were No,
they came to shop with cash. Why why did they
go to a little league?
Speaker 2 (49:49):
You no idea, because when they came back, you knew
it then it was a little league that they said
if ult came, but you don't know, like the head
of the so he found like three thousand dollars in
this bank bag and he's like, man, I'm gonna keep
it over here and I'm gonna keep it.
Speaker 3 (50:04):
But then someone came back asking for it.
Speaker 2 (50:06):
It's like, hey, I was here shopping for the little
league and where and I left the bank bag in
the cart.
Speaker 3 (50:13):
Any chance you found it and the guy gave it back.
That's good, but he was gonna keep it if they
didn't come back. And I can understand that and the
person probably would have kept it, gave it to the store,
and the store probably goes. If nobody had returned it,
then the store could have kept it. Know, we're done.
I have ever told you guys about the money I
found on the atm Oh, it's so good that we
cause we're gonna go home now. That's oh. I was
gonna say, if it's so good, we'll hold off, but
(50:35):
then tell it now. Sixty bucks. Man, I walked up
to get money out. He was sitting right there in
the tray. That's awesome. That's crazy what you're doing.
Speaker 7 (50:41):
I took it.
Speaker 6 (50:42):
Yeah, yeah, that I'm cool with that.
Speaker 3 (50:45):
I'm cool with that one. They were just sitting there.
Somebody else is going to walk up and take it.
Sixty bucks just forgotten money, unlike the envelope money. Who
that's a good one. How long ago is that? I
was like, I don't know, fifteen years ago. Oh, he
has a lot of time inflation. That probably were like
one hundred buck. Thank you, We will see you Monday, okay,
by everybody. The Bobby Bone Show, The Bobby Bones, The
(51:05):
Bobby Bones Show theme song, written, produced and sang by
Reid Yarberry. You can find his instagram at red Yarberry
Scuba Steve executive producer, Ray Mundo, head of Production. I'm
Bobby Bones. My instagram is mister Bobby Bones. Thank you
for listening to the podcast.