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February 6, 2026 52 mins

Bobby may have found the most genius Valentine's Day plans this year. He wants to know if what he has planned counts as a celebration for the holiday. Raymundo had a friend ask him the secret to Bobby's success. We all went around the room to try and pinpoint what Bobby has that makes him the way he is. In Easy Trivia, Morgan got a BIG win last week. Can she carry that momentum into this week to stop Eddie from another championship.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Transmitting Lisa, Welcome to Friday Show.

Speaker 2 (00:13):
We got a big one Morning Studio.

Speaker 3 (00:15):
Morning Easy Trivia. The category is named the month Eddie.
What month does Thanksgiving take place? November? That is correct?
This game is so easy.

Speaker 2 (00:27):
Amy? What month is my birthday?

Speaker 4 (00:29):
April?

Speaker 2 (00:30):
Correct?

Speaker 3 (00:32):
Lunchbox, what month does Halloween take place? October?

Speaker 5 (00:35):
Correct?

Speaker 2 (00:36):
What month does Valentine's Day take place? Morgan?

Speaker 6 (00:39):
February correct?

Speaker 2 (00:40):
So it's easy trivia.

Speaker 3 (00:41):
If you miss a question, you'll be eliminated and hear
this sound you've been You played a five. Eddie's wearing
the tr because he's the champ. Eddie has four wins.
Amy and Morgan have three wins. Lunchbox has one. You
guys ready to play?

Speaker 5 (00:56):
Ready?

Speaker 3 (00:57):
The category is acronyms Easy Trivia, Yeah, Eddie. What does
GPA stand.

Speaker 5 (01:02):
For Grade point average?

Speaker 2 (01:05):
Correct? Amy? In sports? What does m VP stand for
Most valuable?

Speaker 4 (01:12):
Leah?

Speaker 3 (01:12):
Correct? Lunchbox in medicine? What does e R stand for
Emergency room? Correct?

Speaker 2 (01:20):
Morgan and texting? What does l o L stand for
laugh out loud? Correct?

Speaker 3 (01:25):
Everybody's still in the category is the answer starts with oh?

Speaker 2 (01:30):
As in the letter.

Speaker 3 (01:31):
Oh, Eddie, what animal's famous for? Playing dead? When threatened,
Oh Possum, Apossum? Correct? Amy?

Speaker 2 (01:45):
What boy band was I a member of?

Speaker 4 (01:49):
Oh Town?

Speaker 3 (01:50):
Oh Town is correct? Lunchbox? What pop singer is known
for songs like good for You and Driver's License?

Speaker 7 (02:05):
I know her first name?

Speaker 2 (02:08):
Hmmm, I don't know for not.

Speaker 7 (02:10):
I'll just go with it. I'll just go with it.
Olivia Rodrigo correct.

Speaker 8 (02:14):
Acting Morgan Rodriguez or Rodrigo.

Speaker 7 (02:19):
I didn't know.

Speaker 3 (02:20):
What former football star was famously involved in a nineteen
nineties trial?

Speaker 9 (02:27):
Is O? J.

Speaker 2 (02:27):
Simpson?

Speaker 4 (02:29):
Footballer?

Speaker 2 (02:31):
All that felt weird and also I can't answer a question.

Speaker 6 (02:35):
I know that was more of a rhetorical question in
my head. That's the only one that I know that
was involved in a famous trial.

Speaker 3 (02:40):
Was a former football star was famously involved in a
nineteen nineties trial?

Speaker 2 (02:44):
It has to be O. J.

Speaker 4 (02:44):
Simpson?

Speaker 3 (02:45):
Say your answer, Yeah, that's correct. The category is two
thousand's Eddie. Jennifer Lopez wore her iconic Versace dress at
the Grammys in two thousand.

Speaker 2 (02:56):
What color was it?

Speaker 5 (02:59):
Oh?

Speaker 10 (03:00):
Shoot, immediately when you said that, I saw like her
wearing a pink dress.

Speaker 5 (03:09):
But I feel like it was green. Something's telling me
it was green.

Speaker 3 (03:15):
Jennifer Lopez's famous dress it's the Grammys in two thousand.

Speaker 7 (03:17):
What color was it?

Speaker 5 (03:18):
I'm gonna go to green?

Speaker 3 (03:20):
Oh?

Speaker 5 (03:20):
Was it pink?

Speaker 2 (03:21):
It's green? Oh?

Speaker 5 (03:22):
Thank you?

Speaker 7 (03:23):
He was acting.

Speaker 5 (03:24):
I wasn't.

Speaker 2 (03:25):
Amy.

Speaker 3 (03:25):
What was Paris Hilton's catchphrase from the reality show The
Simple Life in two thousand and three?

Speaker 4 (03:33):
Okay, I feel like there were may have been a
few things, but Paris for sure would be like, that's hot.

Speaker 2 (03:39):
That's hot.

Speaker 4 (03:41):
That's hot.

Speaker 3 (03:42):
Soay, your answer, yeah, that's hot is correct? Lunchbox, What
career took a nose dive when this singer had a
two thousand and four lip sync flub on Saturday Night Live?

Speaker 7 (03:54):
Oh that's Ashley Simpson?

Speaker 2 (03:55):
Correct Morgan.

Speaker 3 (03:58):
In the category of the two thousands, Britney Spears and
Justin Timberlake famously dated during the early two thousands. What
did they wear to the two thousand and one VMA's
that made headlines and is still used as a meme.

Speaker 6 (04:10):
They're both in denim outfits?

Speaker 2 (04:13):
Correct denim? Yeah, the category.

Speaker 3 (04:17):
Is Disney Eddie in The Lion King, What does Hakuna
Matata mean?

Speaker 5 (04:24):
It means no worries?

Speaker 2 (04:26):
Correct Amy.

Speaker 3 (04:29):
Who is Maui's voice in Moana, and it's also playing
him in the upcoming live action Movieing those names, don't
see Mowanna, who is Maui's voice actor in mo Wana
and is also playing him in the upcoming live action movie, Don't.

Speaker 2 (04:55):
Huff them puff.

Speaker 4 (04:56):
I'm thinking I only have one person in my head,
so might as we'll just say it go.

Speaker 2 (05:00):
I think it's gonna go ahead.

Speaker 4 (05:02):
If I'm saying this correctly, it's like Jason Momoa or
something like that.

Speaker 3 (05:07):
Is your answer, is it's racist and correct?

Speaker 5 (05:14):
I don't think guys.

Speaker 10 (05:16):
Rock the Rock the Rock, Okay, I never we're pronouncing
it right though.

Speaker 2 (05:21):
Once she said pronouncing it, I knew she was not
going to Dwayne Johnson. Dang it. Amy has been eliminated.

Speaker 3 (05:30):
Eddie just fist pumped.

Speaker 4 (05:33):
Shoot, am I is that racist? No?

Speaker 2 (05:35):
I'm totally kidding. Feeling a little look taking your cancel lation.

Speaker 4 (05:45):
Later, just like I mean, I never would have said it, but.

Speaker 2 (05:49):
No, I'm just the island. That's just funny, you know,
all right? Next up? What poisonous fruit lunchbox? That's snow white?

Speaker 7 (05:56):
Eat an apple?

Speaker 3 (05:58):
Correct Morgan in the category of Disney, who plays the
Genie in the twenty nineteen live action adaptation of Aladdin.

Speaker 4 (06:09):
Say those numbers one?

Speaker 3 (06:10):
Who plays the genie in the twenty nineteen live action
adaptation of Aladdin Will Smith?

Speaker 2 (06:16):
Correct? Wow?

Speaker 3 (06:18):
Three people remain good Eddie? The category is the largest
What is the largest continent on Earth?

Speaker 5 (06:32):
The largest continent would be okay, Alan is Asia?

Speaker 3 (06:37):
Right?

Speaker 5 (06:37):
Asia is all that? Yeah? Asia?

Speaker 2 (06:40):
Wow? Correct? I did not think you would get that.
Who I thought you'd go Africa?

Speaker 5 (06:45):
I mean, Africa's a big Next up, lunchbox.

Speaker 2 (06:49):
What's the largest planet in our solar system?

Speaker 7 (06:52):
I'm going give me Mars? Why not? No idea?

Speaker 2 (06:58):
Wow?

Speaker 3 (07:01):
No?

Speaker 2 (07:01):
Do you guys know it?

Speaker 1 (07:03):
You bid?

Speaker 4 (07:06):
Because it's Oh I remember how I remember that?

Speaker 5 (07:09):
What?

Speaker 10 (07:11):
No?

Speaker 11 (07:11):
I just know is she backed away?

Speaker 2 (07:15):
Hey that's racist. No, but I do go. It's giant Jupiter.

Speaker 5 (07:23):
So it's like huge.

Speaker 2 (07:24):
But that's how I do that.

Speaker 5 (07:28):
And then whatever whatever helps?

Speaker 2 (07:30):
Good for you? Who's left Morgan?

Speaker 5 (07:32):
Just you and Eddie was great, greatest scenario ever.

Speaker 2 (07:36):
What's the largest bird in the world? Morgan?

Speaker 6 (07:41):
M hm the largest bird in the world?

Speaker 3 (07:45):
No pressure if you miss it. Eddie not only wins,
he is the returning champion. He'll come back again. Yeah,
the largest bird. And I thought I think it's an Ostrich.
But then there's like the technicality of like they don't fly?

Speaker 2 (07:58):
Is that.

Speaker 7 (08:00):
Your answer?

Speaker 12 (08:03):
Is there another big bird? There's a big bird, big
yellow bird. That's not a real bird.

Speaker 2 (08:07):
Three seconds an Ostrich? Correct?

Speaker 10 (08:11):
I thought she was gonna go big bird.

Speaker 3 (08:17):
Okay, the smallest is the category. Two people remain Eddie.
What's the smallest country in the world by land area?

Speaker 13 (08:25):
What the smallest country in the world? Uh, I don't know.
Do you guys know this?

Speaker 10 (08:40):
Don't you know?

Speaker 5 (08:42):
Did you?

Speaker 2 (08:43):
Did you know it? I know the smallest country in
the world. Five seconds and give me Fiji and correct?

Speaker 5 (08:58):
What is it?

Speaker 4 (08:59):
Vatican?

Speaker 3 (09:00):
Corc oh forgot that was the country Morgan for the wine.

Speaker 2 (09:04):
If you get this, well you win. We call this
a comeback. Excluding Pluto.

Speaker 3 (09:11):
What's the smallest planet in our solar system? Excluding Pluto?
So Pluto is not because there's an argument of Pluto
is a planet. What's the smallest planet in our solar system?
For the win and to keep it going and to
be one point away. I think you've ever won a championship.

Speaker 5 (09:32):
I know this is give us like lunchbox did.

Speaker 7 (09:37):
I didn't give up out of the room.

Speaker 4 (09:40):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (09:41):
He didn't even get a bu It just gets in
this car and goes home.

Speaker 8 (09:48):
There was no way I was going to figure it
out by sitting here, so I just took a guess,
get his car keys out.

Speaker 7 (09:53):
He doesn't even wait.

Speaker 5 (09:57):
They get lunch, He gets home and calls the answer in.

Speaker 2 (10:03):
He does to be give us the answer. He goes,
all right, here's my goodness on the physic mars.

Speaker 5 (10:14):
Meanwhile, Morgan is just thinking.

Speaker 13 (10:16):
I really am.

Speaker 6 (10:16):
I appreciate you're sitting there.

Speaker 2 (10:19):
It's great.

Speaker 6 (10:20):
Can you repeat the question?

Speaker 2 (10:21):
What's the smallest planet in the Solar System?

Speaker 7 (10:23):
Not Pluto.

Speaker 12 (10:26):
Saturn, It's not Jupiter, it's not is it your anus?

Speaker 2 (10:35):
I need an answer, Mercury. That answer is.

Speaker 14 (10:41):
Correct, Anonymous.

Speaker 7 (10:54):
The question to be.

Speaker 2 (11:02):
Hello, Bobby Bones.

Speaker 3 (11:03):
Have an issue with a few of my friends who
are always late, not five minutes late, twenty thirty, sometimes
forty five minutes late.

Speaker 2 (11:09):
At first, I've brushed it off. Life happens.

Speaker 3 (11:11):
But after years of this, it's starting to feel less
accidental and more on purpose. I'm always the one sitting
at the restaurant alone, guarding the table, or standing awkwardly
at the bar pretending I'm just early. Do you stop
inviting people who are chronically late to things you're doing?
Is this a lower your expectation situation? Or do you
set boundaries and cut them out of your life? Signed

(11:32):
always on time? It's very much a lower your expectations.
And then don't just invite some places when they have
to be on time.

Speaker 4 (11:38):
Hey, you don't have to cut them out.

Speaker 3 (11:40):
They can be in things where it doesn't matter what
time they arrive, but they're not coming to things where
they have to be on time.

Speaker 4 (11:47):
And also, have you had a conversation, Oh, I'm.

Speaker 3 (11:49):
Sure people that are late they know what they're doing,
they just don't care enough to change it. If you're
chronically late, you know what you're doing all the time,
you don't have respect for the other people. So I
have friends that are chronically late. There are certain things
we invite them to. Certain things we don't. If they're
just coming over to the house, then we know they're
probably gonna be twenty thirty forty minutes late, and that's

(12:11):
an understanding. But if it's something where you have to
be somewhere on time, they just don't get invited.

Speaker 2 (12:14):
It's on them.

Speaker 3 (12:14):
They're gonna lose out. But you can't continue to be
disappointed by the things they continue to do. They've given
you every signal on how they're going to live their life.
You can say to them, man, when you guys are
late and makes it really hard on me. And if
they don't change, then you have to change. I don't
think you have to kill them or anything, but there
are certain expectations you have to have with people that

(12:35):
have given you reasons to have those expectations. And yeah,
they don't respect your time. They probably grow up in
a culture though we're being on time wasn't a thing.

Speaker 5 (12:43):
Boom, no, not boom, that's it. And so how we
grew up.

Speaker 10 (12:46):
I remember growing up in the culture where like, man,
if you you were gonna be somewhere like not if
the party starts a nine o'clock right you get there.

Speaker 2 (12:53):
The party is different because there are multiple people there.

Speaker 10 (12:55):
Okay, fine, dinner, dinner, meet us the restaurant's seven. No
problem will be that seven thirty seven to forty five.

Speaker 2 (13:00):
That's so disrespectful. That's so disrespectful. And never did we
see it as disrespectful.

Speaker 5 (13:05):
It was just kind of how it goes.

Speaker 4 (13:06):
So it was everybody showed up.

Speaker 10 (13:08):
That late, Yeah, sometimes people were early, sometimes people were later.

Speaker 2 (13:11):
Yeah, you don't live on an island. It's not island time.

Speaker 4 (13:15):
You know.

Speaker 5 (13:16):
You used to tell me the wrong time.

Speaker 2 (13:19):
Yeah, I would do with a lot of people.

Speaker 3 (13:20):
And then I just understood, I'm not having the people
around anymore. If it's something where we have to be
on time and they're not on time, they just will
not be invited to come because it's not worth it.

Speaker 2 (13:29):
So they've given you a reason to feel that way.
Act accordingly. Hey, cut out in your life. I'm mad. Now,
that's so disrespectful of people.

Speaker 4 (13:35):
It seems a little extreme.

Speaker 3 (13:37):
Yeah, you have to just figure out what friends can do.
What that's the advice that I would give you. Now,
if it's a work situation, you don't. They don't work
there anymore. That's also that. But that's that's friends. So
that's what I'll say, thank you. Close it up. I've
got when Valentine's they figured out and I'm pretty happy
about it.

Speaker 2 (13:55):
So we talk about it.

Speaker 3 (13:56):
And not every couple celebrates Valentine's Day the same and
it's because it's on weekend night.

Speaker 2 (14:01):
I think it's on Saturday night. Celebrated mine on the twelfth.

Speaker 3 (14:05):
This year.

Speaker 4 (14:07):
Why are you doing it a little different?

Speaker 3 (14:08):
Well, Mark, I'm asking Eddie, do you know about our
valentine se plans?

Speaker 5 (14:12):
I don't.

Speaker 3 (14:12):
So we were going to dinner, me and my wife,
Eddie his wife. Last week. It got canceled and so
we rescheduled it to the twelfth. And my wife said
that counts as Valentine's dinner. She said that, yep, whoa yours.

Speaker 10 (14:28):
I haven't asked, but maybe i'll ask her. Hey, we're
having this dinner with Bobby and Caitlint.

Speaker 4 (14:33):
We're going to a nice place, but the twelfth fountains
on the fourteenth.

Speaker 10 (14:37):
So yeah, And the fact that your wife said that
that counts.

Speaker 5 (14:42):
I mean she said it.

Speaker 2 (14:44):
So he's bought.

Speaker 4 (14:45):
Oh sweet, Bobby's going to pay for Eddie.

Speaker 3 (14:47):
Yoh god.

Speaker 2 (14:49):
It wasn't part of the deal.

Speaker 4 (14:50):
It's not you know, you're probably going to the dinner,
are you?

Speaker 5 (14:54):
I often do. Yeah, I know, but I often offer.

Speaker 10 (14:57):
I get my wallet out and like, oh, okay, no,
thank Bobby appreciate that.

Speaker 7 (15:00):
It's a good point.

Speaker 3 (15:02):
Maybe I shouldn't pay for his dinner then, because it
is Valentine's Day.

Speaker 10 (15:05):
True, Okay, if you don't pay, then it's definitely.

Speaker 2 (15:09):
Our Valentine's Day two. But do you want me to pay?

Speaker 3 (15:13):
What? Could you still count it as your Valentine's dinner
if I paid?

Speaker 2 (15:16):
Amy, let me ask him.

Speaker 4 (15:17):
Well, I mean, I guess he could be he needs
to do something else for his wife.

Speaker 10 (15:20):
Why why if Bobby's already doing that with his wife
and we're at the same dinner.

Speaker 4 (15:24):
Today now we're talking about Bobby picks up the bill. Okay,
then use that money to give your wife something else
because you already, like return the Christmas present you've bought her,
and now here we are Valentine's Day and you need
to get her something.

Speaker 5 (15:36):
I forgot about the Christmas present. You're right, man, that's
a good dude. That's awesome that your wife did that.

Speaker 3 (15:42):
Though I'm almost positive she said you can count it,
or maybe she don't blame her.

Speaker 2 (15:47):
Maybe she said are you going to count it? Either way?

Speaker 3 (15:50):
I heard count Oh, either way, I didn't even factor
it in and they changed the day to dinner difference.
I don't know, man, I think that connection can be drawn.
And you know, she's pregnant, so she didn't feel good
a lot of times.

Speaker 4 (16:02):
Yeah, that's what I mean, Like she's gonna get dressed
and put forth the effort of like getting ready and
going out. Then yeah, I would be like, yeah, let's
do this. Don't don't do another dinner two nights later.
You know that's a lot.

Speaker 5 (16:15):
I love the idea. I love the idea.

Speaker 10 (16:17):
And if you pay even better, dude, maybe maybe I
get her roses afterwards.

Speaker 5 (16:21):
And that kind of counts.

Speaker 7 (16:22):
Do you want Bobby to buy those two?

Speaker 4 (16:24):
No?

Speaker 5 (16:24):
No, no, I got I got that.

Speaker 7 (16:27):
I got that.

Speaker 3 (16:27):
COT probably need to recheck, but I think the twelfth
counts is not time dinner.

Speaker 4 (16:30):
Yeah, I mean, I guess that makes sense. You're still
going to do something else though, but no, it's a
little something. Gift giving is your love language.

Speaker 2 (16:41):
You can't tell me what I'm doing what my language is.

Speaker 4 (16:45):
I'm not.

Speaker 2 (16:46):
But anyway, I thought we got it. I thought we
kind of. That's pretty good, man, got a little bonus,
you know what I mean, really good.

Speaker 7 (16:53):
It's time for the good news.

Speaker 2 (16:55):
Bobby.

Speaker 3 (16:59):
I don't know if he listened to the show, but
want to shout out Kenneth Harrell and Saint Louis that
bad weather, like a lot of the country did, and
his roads were bad in his neighborhood and they weren't
doing much about it.

Speaker 2 (17:09):
So he just went and rented a skid steer and
did it himself. Oh that's cool.

Speaker 3 (17:13):
Paid five hundred bucks and rented the thing, which is
it's a small construction vehicle.

Speaker 2 (17:17):
It's like a bulldozer, just a small one.

Speaker 3 (17:20):
And so he just paid for it and started clearing
the streets like they're not coming here, so I guess
I'll go do it.

Speaker 2 (17:28):
Paid his own money.

Speaker 3 (17:28):
A local restaurant owner saw him doing it and was like, hey,
would you come and help out with some of the
spaces there. So he did, and it just turned into
a big thing like they should go fund me for
like a thousand dollars max it out of a thousand
go fund me like a thousand bucks around.

Speaker 2 (17:42):
He paid five hundred for that, and the work.

Speaker 3 (17:44):
That he did put a big shout out because he
wasn't looking for money and he used his own money
to Kenneth Harrell and Saint Louis who made everybody's life
a little easier in Saint Louis.

Speaker 2 (17:52):
That's what it's all about. That was telling me something
good fun.

Speaker 3 (17:59):
I'll go first, despite the myths your hair and fingernails
don't keep growing after you die, because people have often
said your hair keeps growing. In that case, you'd open up,
you know, whatever you're buried in and it just be
all hair.

Speaker 2 (18:15):
It looks like.

Speaker 3 (18:17):
Eighties hair band good. Yeah, so it grows for a second,
but it doesn't grow forever. You know what grows as
you get older though, Your nose?

Speaker 2 (18:23):
Your nose. What old people have huge noses.

Speaker 3 (18:26):
It'd be an honor to have a long nose because
that means a long time.

Speaker 2 (18:29):
Yeah, noses and ears is all right, amy you're up.

Speaker 4 (18:34):
Music lights up nearly all parts of the brain, including
the hippocampus and the amygdala. The area is tied to
memory and emotion. So if you're looking to reward your brain,
stir up feelings, trigger memories, maybe just help you feel good,
not necessarily sad, listen to music.

Speaker 3 (18:53):
As part of David Hasselhoff's divorce settlement with Pamela Bach
back in two thousand and eight, one of the things
he fought for was to catch phrase don't hassle the Hoff.
He won it never heard that ye have used that more,
haven't either? Speaking of years about music? You know he's
an artist, right, David Hassehoff. I didn't know that massive
in Germany. Oh, I think that was not a.

Speaker 2 (19:15):
Joke waiting for I know he's massive in Germany.

Speaker 6 (19:18):
I think that party did.

Speaker 4 (19:19):
Unfortunately for David Hasselhoff, all I know he has other
things going on in his life. Was he still love?

Speaker 7 (19:25):
Yeah? You still around?

Speaker 4 (19:26):
Okay, that'd be one I'd be unsure about if you
ever asked me. But all I think about him is
when he was drunk eating that hamburger and his daughter
recorded him and it was so sad.

Speaker 2 (19:35):
He's seventy three years old. What was wrong with him?
Eden Hamburger? Was he saying he was wasted? Yeah?

Speaker 4 (19:41):
It just was a really sad moment and his daughter
was recording it.

Speaker 2 (19:44):
It went super viral. Yeah, do you want a David
Hasselhoff fun fact?

Speaker 4 (19:49):
Did you already have that?

Speaker 7 (19:50):
Well?

Speaker 3 (19:50):
You mentioned that about Germany, and so I have some
stuff about him in German. So he's way more famous
in Germany. In the late eighties, his song Looking for
Freedom hit number one in Germany and became the unofficial
anthem of the fall of the Berlin Wall.

Speaker 7 (20:00):
Dang wow.

Speaker 3 (20:02):
So we see like a lifeguard running down the beach
or driving an eighties car They see him as like
a real rock hero.

Speaker 5 (20:08):
That's crazy.

Speaker 2 (20:08):
It's crazy, lunchbox.

Speaker 8 (20:10):
Back in nineteen ninety nine, during Toy Story two, they
were almost done with the movie and someone at Pixar
ran the wrong command deleted ninety percent of the movie fired.

Speaker 4 (20:23):
Can't you undo that?

Speaker 3 (20:25):
Oh?

Speaker 8 (20:25):
Luckily they had backups, but the backups failed, and they're like,
what are we gonna do? Well, there was a woman
on maternity leave that had a copy at her house. Oh,
and that's how the movie Toy Story two was saved.

Speaker 3 (20:37):
She had it on her personal computer at home and
she was on maternity leave.

Speaker 5 (20:41):
That's amazing.

Speaker 2 (20:44):
That's a good one, Eddie.

Speaker 10 (20:45):
Okay, So, speaking of animals animal Crackers, there are nineteen
different animal shapes in the Animal Crackers Zoo, which is
crazy because I feel like every time I eat him,
I just have elephants and like the same ones. But
there are giraffes, there's a camel. I've never seen any
of these.

Speaker 5 (21:00):
A bear.

Speaker 2 (21:01):
I don't think i've seen an animal cracker in a
long time.

Speaker 3 (21:03):
Though.

Speaker 5 (21:03):
We have like buckets.

Speaker 3 (21:05):
I like good, I like them not too sweet, they're perfect,
and so they're how many it said nineteen total. Huh,
you know the original animal crackers were meant to be
eaten while standing them up. What do you mean, well,
the original animal crackers were meant to be eaten while
standing them up, not just snacked on. When Nibisco introduced
Barnum's Animals in nineteen oh two, the box even looked

(21:26):
like a circustr. I remember that, Yeah, I do remember that,
And that the kids were encouraged to play with the
animals before eating them.

Speaker 2 (21:31):
So they were toys first. Let's use them as toys.

Speaker 3 (21:34):
And then eat like play, I got you, so play
with them first, then eat them.

Speaker 5 (21:38):
But that sounds just gross.

Speaker 2 (21:40):
Yeah, like play a whole day and have them after all, right, Morgan.

Speaker 12 (21:45):
Bald eagles take five years to grow in that iconic look,
So they aren't born with a bright white head or
yellow beaks. They're actually when they're juvenile, they're dark and
really intense, and then they kind of they're called immatures
and they look really patchy and then find only after
they hit that five year mark is when they get
the crisp whitehead and yellow beak, yellow eyes, that whole look.

Speaker 3 (22:06):
You know, the sound, well, make a sound of a
ball eagle amy goo. Yeah, not real. Hollywood puts those in.
Eagles actually make lighter, weaker seagullie type sounds. But the
thing we hear ah, that's all Hollywood movies.

Speaker 5 (22:20):
And you hear it bounce off the mountains.

Speaker 6 (22:22):
Yea, yeah, because they're a sea eagle.

Speaker 4 (22:25):
I didn't know that. I thought they were just like
a regular bird.

Speaker 2 (22:28):
Huh.

Speaker 6 (22:29):
Eagle is known as the sea eagle.

Speaker 2 (22:32):
Seagull mm hmm.

Speaker 3 (22:41):
There's an episode of My Strange Addiction about this woman
that would eat her toenails all time.

Speaker 7 (22:46):
Yeah, toenails.

Speaker 3 (22:47):
So he's upset because he eats his toenails. Let me
play you this clip from the TV show My Strange Addiction.

Speaker 2 (22:53):
My name is Janet.

Speaker 11 (22:54):
I live on hedges built West Virginia, and I'm addicted
to eating toenails. I eat my nose every when I see,
you know, any nails growing in, I just go straight
forward and just like biting on them, showing them.

Speaker 2 (23:07):
This toenail is so sulty right now, it tastes so good.

Speaker 11 (23:10):
I have been eating toenails for about twenty six years now.
I started eating toenails when I was about eight or
nine years old. When I do bite my toenails. I
bite them till there's no one nails to bite enough
to eat them.

Speaker 3 (23:24):
Listen, I bite off my fingernails sometimes. So I'm not
acting like I'm better than this, but I don't look
forward to it because I just can't get enough.

Speaker 2 (23:31):
I bite them. Because I'm watching narketsall basketball game, I'm like,
oh boy, oh we don't lose.

Speaker 3 (23:35):
But Lunchbox upset because he's been talking on the show
that he eats his toenails. But also you make a
whole ceremony of it.

Speaker 8 (23:41):
Yeah, I'll be sitting there watching TV and I will
sit there and pick them off. I don't use clippers.
I use my fingers and I rip them and then
I line them up across my thigh and I just
go down and I.

Speaker 7 (23:53):
Just kind of eat them in my mouth.

Speaker 8 (23:54):
Sometimes I just put them in and treat my teeth,
you know what I mean, Like play around with them
in the mouth for a little bit, and then I
start shooting any what.

Speaker 10 (24:01):
Are you doing?

Speaker 4 (24:02):
I just feel I'm like, I'm go. I know I've
heard this for years, but something is just extra gross
about it right now, and I want to boll no.

Speaker 8 (24:09):
But I saw this and I'm like another shot at
being on TV and it doesn't come to me like, how.

Speaker 4 (24:16):
Did did you submit yourself? Because she probably did.

Speaker 7 (24:19):
I understand.

Speaker 8 (24:20):
I didn't know they were looking for someone that eats
their toenails. And maybe she has a leg up on
me because I watched the clip and she was at
the gym and she could go sit on the bench
and she was able to take her foot to her mouth.

Speaker 7 (24:32):
And just bite it off. I couldn't do that.

Speaker 3 (24:35):
She probably stretches though. To be able to do that,
she worked at I mean she's.

Speaker 6 (24:38):
Been doing it consistently since she was eight.

Speaker 2 (24:40):
Then you look forward to eating your tonels.

Speaker 8 (24:43):
I mean it's a good snack, Like if I'm just
watching TV, it's not a snack?

Speaker 7 (24:48):
Well what is it?

Speaker 3 (24:49):
Then?

Speaker 4 (24:51):
Disgusting?

Speaker 7 (24:53):
So why is it not considered a snack?

Speaker 2 (24:55):
You eat things and to be there's no sustenance food.

Speaker 7 (25:00):
You don't think that's protein, I don't.

Speaker 2 (25:02):
I mean it's.

Speaker 4 (25:04):
Hair whatever, our hair, curutine whatever, what's our hair made of?
Because that's what our nails are made of. It's creating,
not creatine keratin.

Speaker 10 (25:13):
Maybe well, then you actually eat at lunchbox like you
ingest it?

Speaker 8 (25:17):
Yes, Eddie, I chew it and then I swallow it.

Speaker 3 (25:21):
Yeah, toenails are primarily composed of keratin. They also contain
trace amounts of minerals like calcium, iron, zinc, vitamin.

Speaker 2 (25:31):
He's doing daily vitamins.

Speaker 15 (25:33):
But yes, it's another chance out the window. So congrats
to her. But I was so upset. O congrats to her.
Uh yeah, anyway, I just wanted I want him to
share that with you guys. I felt like it's a
good morning for you guys to hear that.

Speaker 4 (25:45):
What I just want to say that it is not
advised to eat toenails because even though yes, they're made
of keratin or however you say it, they're not. It's
not really it's indigestible caratin, they say, and can carry
harmful bacteria, fungi and dirt from your shoes. Then it's
directly on your mouth, which would cause an infection, which
could explain how he gets these diseases and thereat.

Speaker 2 (26:07):
Infection in your mouth. Maybe they call it a destructive.

Speaker 10 (26:10):
Habit, and maybe it's infected your gut, dude, and now
your gut hurts.

Speaker 2 (26:14):
What if all of his problems are because he eats
his tonails.

Speaker 8 (26:17):
Oral Thrush said he had that that was his dynamic college.

Speaker 3 (26:25):
That's what was oral thrush. Yeah, you got it from
eating your tone. Yes, we've diagnosed it, Amy, good job, Yeah,
no problem. Two things happened here. One we were all
sticked out, and two we diagnosed lunchboxes illness.

Speaker 15 (26:38):
It's time for the good news.

Speaker 4 (26:44):
Shout out to America's Vet dogs, because they just gave
us Army veteran Mark Patton a service dog and he
was deployed to Iraq Kuwait. He suffered multiple traumatic brain injuries,
loss of mobility, he has PTSD depression, anxiety, and he
waited nearly a year to get matched with the service

(27:05):
dog Shane, and it's going to completely change his life.

Speaker 7 (27:08):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (27:08):
And the reason that that's such a big story is
they cost so much. They're like twenty grand a dog.

Speaker 4 (27:13):
This particular dog, they say they spend more than fifty
thousand dollars to breed, raise, and train each dog to
work with these type of vets.

Speaker 2 (27:21):
So, yeah, I'm he totally minimized my story.

Speaker 4 (27:25):
No.

Speaker 3 (27:25):
No, we had bought like three or four from military
folks from this show and so and then I'd also
done some work with Purina and we'd got vets dogs
and so hey, maybe inflation. Oh yeah, maybe it was
twenty grand five years ago announced.

Speaker 4 (27:38):
No, I think we did got the dogs. I know
we did get the dogs, like Obama maybe like it
was over five years ago. So yeah, maybe a little inflation,
maybe depending on because he has the list of things
they have going on that the dog can tend to.

Speaker 2 (27:54):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (27:54):
No, it's crazy the amount of money these dogs are.
And I'm sure dogs that have to be trained for
different needs more. But that's a great story. Big shout
out to that organization because they really need these dogs
and they deserve to have these dogs.

Speaker 2 (28:08):
And that's a great one. That's what it's all about.
That was telling me something good.

Speaker 4 (28:13):
Wake up, Wake up in the morn.

Speaker 14 (28:18):
And it's on the radio, and the dogs gets on time.

Speaker 2 (28:24):
Already in his lunchbox. More game too, Steve red and.

Speaker 7 (28:27):
It's trying to put you through the fog.

Speaker 2 (28:30):
He's running this week's next bit. The Bobby's on the box,
so you know what this the Bobby balls morning, Corny,
let's go mourning, Corny.

Speaker 4 (28:48):
What kind of dough does a gamer use?

Speaker 2 (28:51):
Kind of dough? D o U? G? H okay does
a gamer use?

Speaker 4 (28:56):
Yeah? Nintendo?

Speaker 14 (29:00):
Uh, that was the Morning, Corny Bobby bone Showy Up
to day.

Speaker 8 (29:09):
This story comes us from Indianapolis, Indiana. A forty nine
year old man was staying with his brother and it's
cold outside and the gas lines are kind of frozen.
He's like, no worry, guys, I got a blow torch.
I'll get in there and I'll fall him out.

Speaker 2 (29:23):
The gas lines with fire. Make sure I'm hearing this right, Yeah,
got it.

Speaker 8 (29:27):
So he crawled down in the crawl space, got the
blow torch, and you know what happened next.

Speaker 2 (29:33):
I would suspect nothing good.

Speaker 7 (29:35):
No, the house caught on fire.

Speaker 2 (29:36):
Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 8 (29:38):
And so the brother, the dog and him, they all
got out with the house.

Speaker 2 (29:42):
And nobody died.

Speaker 10 (29:43):
No one died.

Speaker 3 (29:44):
And this isn't one of those where you're changing it
because we can't have depth in the bonehead.

Speaker 2 (29:47):
But sometimes you'll lie no, no, there's no line.

Speaker 10 (29:49):
Yes, so he can do it.

Speaker 2 (29:50):
Yeah, so people die.

Speaker 3 (29:51):
He'll just be like, and everybody live. But I look
back at the story and somebody died.

Speaker 8 (29:56):
Or I'll just say, ah, you know, condition unknown, Okay, no, no,
but they all escaped, but the house suffered a lot
of damage.

Speaker 3 (30:03):
Yeah, yeah, I got Eddie I blow torch for Christmas,
but I know better than that.

Speaker 7 (30:08):
Did you use it on your fawcet?

Speaker 3 (30:10):
No?

Speaker 10 (30:10):
I use it on the driveway. Yeah it worked, huh,
I kind of sort of. Oh like he fired the
driveway and the ice. It's pretty cool, but I freak
me out. I know better not to do that in
a gas line. I'm not a bonehead.

Speaker 2 (30:24):
There you go, you're not all right.

Speaker 8 (30:26):
I'm lunchbox at your bonehead.

Speaker 7 (30:27):
Story of the day.

Speaker 3 (30:30):
So if we go back to Christmas, this guy got
a scratch off and he hit for one hundred thousand bucks.

Speaker 2 (30:34):
The story just came out.

Speaker 3 (30:36):
So they do scratch off tickets as gifts, and he
got his, and you just got one hundred thousand bucks.
That's nice, that's crazy. Just scratching wine would be so fun.
I invested so much money, except it's not an investment,
it's you have to be That's crazy to me that
you scratch off it. I just wouldn't believe it even

(30:57):
if I were in like Arkansas. Let me say this
for and fit and I get a scratch off, I
had one hundred thousand bucks. I'm looking around the room,
see where all you suckers are to see if somehow
you gave me a fake one.

Speaker 10 (31:05):
Who did this?

Speaker 2 (31:07):
Yes, so there's that one.

Speaker 3 (31:08):
And the second one is this guy goes in for
a gallbladder surgery and left with the vaseectomy. Oh oh,
George thought he was going under the knife for gallbladder surgery,
but later learned he'd been treated for a complimentary visseectomy
instead complimentary breakfast. Oh oh yeah, it's like super a.

(31:29):
They got the complimentary Wait.

Speaker 4 (31:31):
So did gallbladder get removed to.

Speaker 3 (31:33):
The original surgery was postponed to day due to circumstances
outside of his control. The small detail ended depth, causing
confusion that made its way to the surgical orders and
now it's malpractice and so it's a scandal. So yeah,
because he was delayed to day, stuff got mixed up. Okay,
he was able to get the correct surgery, while doctors
pointed fingers as to who was to blame for the
air of the viseectomy from oddity central.

Speaker 10 (31:55):
And you can reverse the viseectomy, I guess if you
really want to do that.

Speaker 2 (31:58):
Yeah, but then't I mean it's not one hundred percent
though it's not. And then it's like, now you've had
two surgeries on your junk. Everyone Scuba like blew his out.

Speaker 7 (32:08):
Oh yeah, because he went home and.

Speaker 2 (32:09):
Like did it right away with your wife.

Speaker 10 (32:12):
They told him not to have a seconomy.

Speaker 2 (32:14):
I need action a caveman.

Speaker 10 (32:17):
Well was a u fork moment.

Speaker 16 (32:19):
My wife would want me to do this, and we
just looked each other in the eyes and there we were.

Speaker 2 (32:24):
You're a caveman, you fo it and then you hurt yourself, right.

Speaker 16 (32:27):
Yeah, I was hurt for like almost two weeks because
you weren't supposed to do it right afterwards.

Speaker 2 (32:30):
Just to wait, of course, yeah, let it heal.

Speaker 10 (32:32):
But I did not worth it.

Speaker 3 (32:34):
It's like having sarger on your elbow and get an
arm muscling match as soon as you get home.

Speaker 10 (32:37):
Is work.

Speaker 2 (32:38):
You can't do that crap? Would you? Would you change
now in retrospect?

Speaker 3 (32:42):
No?

Speaker 16 (32:42):
Because it I mean, knowing how it's going to feel afterwards,
I think the feeling of the first one supersedes the
second one.

Speaker 7 (32:50):
I don't know.

Speaker 10 (32:50):
I don't know what he's Yeah, what do you mean?

Speaker 16 (32:52):
I can't say too much because I mean it's a
little graphic. It was worth it, though, it was worth it, Yes,
for a week of pain. Yeah, because because she.

Speaker 3 (32:59):
Was now I don't like his eyes.

Speaker 10 (33:05):
I'm still understanding.

Speaker 2 (33:06):
No, dude, it's good. I think it's one of those
better not to understand. Yeah, I can tell you later.
So some people came to your house and I we're
going to fix your trees in your yard away.

Speaker 4 (33:15):
They were knocking on all the doors in my neighborhood
for tree clean up and pick up. And they were
from Florida. Yeah, and they said they came up straight
away to help out. And I was like, oh, well,
that's really awesome for work.

Speaker 3 (33:28):
Yeah, like we used to when our roof houses, we
would go to states that had tornadoes or bad like
hailstorms because there were so many people that needed it.
Everybody locally could not get to everybody that needed it,
so you knew there was plenty of work.

Speaker 2 (33:41):
So yeah, we.

Speaker 7 (33:41):
Would do that.

Speaker 4 (33:42):
Okay, if there's one of your work. I instantly thought
of like, oh, I mean I ended up hiring a
local company, like a guy that does stuff in my house. Anyway,
they were able to still do the tree stuff, which
not a lot of yard companies can. They're not equipped.
But I was like, oh, dang, are y'all taking jobs
from the people here. But there's so much that it's
hard to keep up. So it was yeah, I guess

(34:04):
they just go where the work is.

Speaker 3 (34:05):
Yeah, if you want it to be done in a
timely fashion. Whenever it's a complete disaster like it is here,
everybody local is not going to be able to do
it timely because I'm sure like the guys that were
doing our trees, they probably get asked by twenty five people,
but we work with them a lot, so they probably
put us on the front of the list. But if
you're in person eight nine through twenty five, you want
it done now. And also they're working.

Speaker 2 (34:27):
I mean, it's people. They're not scamming your like, no, yeah,
I don't mean, I don't think they are.

Speaker 7 (34:31):
That's what I thought when they knocked on my door.
Now he's after it. I was like, scammer.

Speaker 3 (34:35):
No, not they could be, but that's not generally the case.
It's people coming in town because they know there was
damage and that's what they do at home, and there
may not be a lot of work right now.

Speaker 2 (34:44):
Right because we would do that all the time.

Speaker 3 (34:45):
If there'd be storms, like we'd go into Tennessee or
Missouri especially and or North Texas and go, hey, we'd
see where the damage was, or if even on a
more local level, we drive to different lakes if there
was storms like seawalf find seawall damage, because if we do,
we drop up in a boat flat bottom sees destroyed
sea walls and go knock on the doors like, hey,
do you know you got a seawall ishoe? We you know,

(35:07):
put a bit in that kind of thing.

Speaker 4 (35:08):
Mm hmm. But I got bids. So I got a
couple of bids because I really had no idea and
ended up going with the guy that I work with.
I trust him a but then b he was half.
My other bid was double, and I was like, well,
I guess I don't know how to even know, because
I've never had anything like this happen in my yard.

Speaker 2 (35:29):
Yeah, it's a mess.

Speaker 4 (35:31):
So it's just like I was surprised how drastic the
quote was.

Speaker 2 (35:34):
Was he like gonna give me massage or something happen?

Speaker 4 (35:37):
No, I mean I feel like he just could.

Speaker 3 (35:39):
He has a lot of work, and so he's if
what the work he's gonna take, if he's in such demand,
maybe it's just going to cost more to get him.

Speaker 4 (35:45):
Yeah. I just was like, oh, it's quite the difference.

Speaker 2 (35:49):
Eddie says his son wants to be just like him.

Speaker 10 (35:50):
Now, dude's crazy. He told my wife he said, I
want to be just like dad, strong and fit.

Speaker 11 (35:57):
Eh.

Speaker 10 (35:59):
I was like, he's what he's like? Yeah, he said
I want to be just like Dad, strong and fit.
So that's awesome to me that my son sees me
in that way good, strong and fit, because I'm definitely
not strong and fit.

Speaker 3 (36:12):
Okay, you're saying that because those two laughed hard when
you said that.

Speaker 2 (36:15):
They left a little too well.

Speaker 4 (36:16):
I think it is like my kids will come and
sometimes like rub my arm whatever. They'll be like, mom,
your arms are so soft, like what they mean in squishy.
They say the word soft and squishy, And I'm like, uh,
go away. That's rude, I know, but they're not meaning
it is rude. They kind of feel. But I'm like, ugh,
I need to go lift heavy or something. But your

(36:36):
kids see you as not soft and squishy.

Speaker 10 (36:38):
And then every day I kind of say like, man,
I really want to go to the gym today. I
never really go, but I say it, so maybe in
their mind, like oh maybe when we were at school,
Dad went to the gym, you know, so in their mind,
I'm very hard and help.

Speaker 4 (36:54):
Bobby go rub his Go see me feel soft and squishy.

Speaker 2 (36:57):
He doesn't.

Speaker 10 (36:57):
I'm not soft and squishy. My stomach is a little
soft and squish. You want to feel my arm?

Speaker 2 (37:03):
I mean you can bring it open. I felt your
arm before.

Speaker 4 (37:05):
Feel it. No, don't flex. It has to just be casual.

Speaker 7 (37:09):
He's just watching TV right now.

Speaker 10 (37:10):
I mean that's how I watched TV.

Speaker 2 (37:12):
It's been bigger, but it's okay. Well, we used to.

Speaker 3 (37:16):
We used to work out really consistent. I haven't worked
on in three months because of my bankle surgery, so
it used to be harder.

Speaker 10 (37:22):
I think the fast got me a little bit. You know,
I man, didn't eat for twenty days, ate.

Speaker 4 (37:26):
Some of your muscles.

Speaker 2 (37:27):
You want to feel me without working out for three months?

Speaker 10 (37:29):
Absolutely?

Speaker 4 (37:30):
Okay, that's hard?

Speaker 1 (37:35):
Hard?

Speaker 4 (37:35):
Has it been bigger?

Speaker 5 (37:37):
Fast?

Speaker 2 (37:37):
I don't take the fast and twenty days did that
to you?

Speaker 15 (37:41):
Oh?

Speaker 4 (37:41):
No, muscle.

Speaker 10 (37:46):
Protein intake wasn't there.

Speaker 2 (37:47):
He was eating beans. Stop.

Speaker 3 (37:49):
You didn't go on a fast for three weeks and
lose all your muscle? You're not gandhy Okay, uh huh.

Speaker 4 (37:55):
All right, okay, so coolie.

Speaker 10 (37:57):
I thought that was cool.

Speaker 2 (37:59):
That should make you feel good.

Speaker 10 (38:00):
It makes mean like literally Amy, they said strong and fit.

Speaker 4 (38:07):
Okay, yeah, I guess they did.

Speaker 3 (38:09):
Ray.

Speaker 2 (38:09):
One of your friends was talking about me.

Speaker 10 (38:11):
Yeah.

Speaker 9 (38:12):
She was just asking, she goes, not necessarily, how you've
become successful? She just said, what does he do that
makes him so successful?

Speaker 2 (38:21):
What did you answer?

Speaker 3 (38:23):
What?

Speaker 9 (38:23):
The easiest way for me to answer it was I
just said, he compartmentalizes. He wouldn't while he's at the
Bobby Bone show. He's not going to be worrying about
stuff at home. Oh my, I need to work on
my pickleball court. He would never do that while he's
at work. So whatever he's faced with, he's working on
in that moment.

Speaker 2 (38:41):
How did this come up in conversation? She was just wondering.

Speaker 9 (38:43):
She's like, you're next to him every day, How is
he literally that successful?

Speaker 2 (38:47):
What does he do? And I said, he compartmentalizes.

Speaker 4 (38:50):
Okay, you do compartmentalize, but working next to you every day,
I have a different thing, but I don't. I wanted
to safe space. I wanted to.

Speaker 3 (39:01):
Like it's there's no such thing in a safe space
in this room. You know that, So I think that
this make I think we.

Speaker 2 (39:08):
Space, we promise you're safe.

Speaker 4 (39:10):
I think you might agree. But something I've noticed over
the years, because I mean twenty years of different watching
you take on different things. So starting off with you
just watching you do radio. But then even in Austin,
you became a rapper. Okay, so that was one of
the first times I saw this. It was like it
didn't matter. You just you were a rapper. You didn't

(39:32):
like second guess it. You just went and did it,
and you made it like nothing anybody said was going
to stop you. It was like part of your this
has always been your part of identity. This is what
you do. We come to Nashville. Now you're in country music.
You just do it. You start a band. I have
a band, of course, I have a band. I'm a musician.
I'm a band, I make music, I write music. I'm
a writer. I'm a comedian and now I go do

(39:53):
comedy shows. But it's like all the evolution of all
the things when I've watched you pursue them. You pursue
them as if that's what you've always been and it
doesn't matter. Like cause my brain, second guess is stuff
that I want to go do. I'm like, oh, I'm
an idiot, Like I'm not. Why would I go do that.
That's not who I am. You know, your brain doesn't
do that, at least I don't think. My what I've
taken in watching you over the years is there's no

(40:14):
way your brain does that. Your brain does not have
that option. It just like it's straight ahead, like you know, duh,
I'm a comedian, Duh. I go on a comedy tour,
obviously what I do. And then you go and you
sell out, and you do and you keep doing it,
and then you go to the next thing like, oh,
of course, I'm a mentor on American Idol, you know,

(40:34):
like it's just am I close?

Speaker 17 (40:37):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (40:37):
No, I think sure, that's your perspective of your opinion,
so you're not wrong. I think there are two things
that successful people, the ones that I know that they
have in common. Number one is the ability to keep going.
That's the hardest because it's all that didn't work out
at first, and sometimes it's always that didn't work out.
And number two is an irrational confidence in yourself.

Speaker 4 (40:58):
I think that's the where I'm.

Speaker 3 (41:00):
Yeah, and I have a wildly irrational confidence in myself
that I can do anything I.

Speaker 4 (41:04):
Want, Like I'm going to write a New York Times
bestsell i' gonna write a book. I'm author.

Speaker 3 (41:07):
There's no reason I should have to write a book.
But I was like, if other people can do this,
why can't I do it? Like I have an irrational
confidence in every single thing that I do. But if
I did, and I wouldn't be able to do things
that are irrationally that are abnormal.

Speaker 4 (41:22):
I could have summed it up in irrational confidence. I
didn't know exactly what it was called, but that's just
what I've witnessed over the years. And I'm like, he
just goes for it. Yeah, no, and not that there
haven't been failures, but it doesn't Matt, like you just are.

Speaker 3 (41:36):
Yes, I'm irrationally confident that I can do anything. I
think if I ran for president, I would be president.

Speaker 4 (41:40):
But then you also have this side of you that's like, uh,
but well nobody's gonna read it.

Speaker 3 (41:44):
Oh for sure, that is a big imposter syndrome that
always lives within myself always.

Speaker 4 (41:51):
But the irrational confidence trumps it for sure.

Speaker 2 (41:55):
Yep.

Speaker 3 (41:55):
I believe I can do anything in the whole world.
If I had to quit this job today and I
had to go be an investment banker, be normal. I
could be a head coach of a college football team
in two years.

Speaker 2 (42:03):
I have no doubt.

Speaker 4 (42:04):
Yeah, it's almost like it feels delusional for sure. Then
and then you're like and then you do it, and
you're like, okay, delusion, You're.

Speaker 10 (42:11):
Already shocked when you do it. Like when it happens.

Speaker 3 (42:15):
There are times where I'm like, well, after I'm done,
like after I get away from it, I'll look back
and like writing books, I don't know how to write books.

Speaker 2 (42:26):
I don't know how to write books. And I was
just like, I'm gonna write a book.

Speaker 3 (42:29):
And so I wrote a book and it did really well,
and i was second book it did really well. And
now that I'm far away and I'm not writing books,
I'm like, dude, why do I think I could just
write books and just fly to New York and like
go into these places and be like, can I try
to convince you guys to buy my book?

Speaker 2 (42:45):
And a lot of people said no. Everybody said no
at first.

Speaker 4 (42:48):
Well, and that's the thing with the irrational delusion or
the or the irrational confidence and some of the delusion,
you still are extremely proactive. It's not your I'm just like, oh,
this is just going to happen, and you will it
like it's you chase it, you go for it, but.

Speaker 2 (43:03):
You also do the work. I put the work in
to get it done.

Speaker 4 (43:05):
And you act as if it's happening, which is believe the.

Speaker 2 (43:09):
World is bendable.

Speaker 3 (43:10):
I believe you can do anything you want physically if
there aren't physical limitations on it, I believe you can
do it. I don't think I can just dunk tomorrow
or ever unless but there is a way for me
to dunk. And this is how I look at life.
I can't dunk. I'll never be able to dunk in
the way that most people will consider dunking. I can
get trampline and dunk. I can't dance. I'm never gonna
be as good a dancer or some of those people.

(43:30):
But can I go and want to dance?

Speaker 2 (43:31):
So sure, I'll do it. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (43:35):
I told Sharna second week of that show, we're gonna
win this thing, and I have no idea how because
I suck, but we will win this show.

Speaker 2 (43:42):
And You're like, you're out of your freaking mind. And
so yeah.

Speaker 3 (43:46):
The two things is you don't stop and irrational confidence.
If you have those together, I think you can do
whatever you want, but I do.

Speaker 2 (43:54):
I have a wildly irrational confidence.

Speaker 3 (43:56):
But I've also done so many things that I probably
shouldn't have been able to do that Now I really
believe if I could do anything, so that would be
or compartmentalized as I would say.

Speaker 2 (44:06):
It was just different in a way.

Speaker 3 (44:08):
Like if you don't believe you can do big things,
nobody else will either. And if you haven't done big things,
why would you believe you can do big things because
you have no record to show you can do big things.
So you have to be irrational about stuff, even delusional.

Speaker 2 (44:18):
But yeah, that's what i'd say. That's good. I agree
with you on all that. You said a rational delusion.
That was like two words. That was a little hard.

Speaker 4 (44:25):
I went irrational confidence. I combined the two. I meant
a rational confidence. But yeah, I'm glad you received what
I was saying and you agree.

Speaker 2 (44:33):
It's funny you bring up the rapping. I was voted
what second best rapper in Austin, Texas.

Speaker 4 (44:37):
Well, that was the first time I saw it in
action because I was.

Speaker 10 (44:41):
Like, Bobby going to become a rapper?

Speaker 4 (44:42):
Yeah, I was like, what the And then he has
a name and he's like outperforming shows and he's winning
awards and I'm like the But that's where I saw
He's like, oh this guy just you know, it was
early on in our relationship where I was like, Okay,
I think I'm seeing how he is and then what
But I didn't fully understand until I got here, and
then also when I was doing work myself, because you

(45:04):
can adopt that thinking for yourself, like if you're someone
that doesn't come naturally to me, but I in certain
things have adopted it, like I just have to act
as if this is who I am until I become it.
Whereas Bobby was at whatever age, I'm not sure it
was wired into him.

Speaker 3 (45:21):
Or I have that to get out of where I was,
Like anybody graduate high school, college, so why would I
think I could do that?

Speaker 2 (45:28):
Very well?

Speaker 4 (45:28):
Could have been at that moment, whatever age that happened
to you early in childhood, whereas mine, I wasn't exposed
to that thinking till an adult. And it's not naturally
wired in me, but Bobby's.

Speaker 2 (45:38):
Just mine was shoved in.

Speaker 4 (45:40):
Me, wired and ready to go.

Speaker 2 (45:47):
Do you have any answer to that? What would you
have said before?

Speaker 10 (45:49):
I mean I was going to say psycho in the
in the way of how you like work is just
I mean, you're just gonna work, man, You're gonna work, work,
work until it's done. And what's really impressive too, is that,
like how you learn about something. If you're gonna do something,
you kind of learn how it all works. I don't
know how you do it if you read books or
what or ask people, but you always have this knowledge

(46:11):
of like, all right, I'm gonna go into this world.
I need to know how it works. And you figure
that out, or I would be like, oh, I don't
know how that is, Like I don't know how that works.
I guess I'll ask someone, But you figure it out.
And to me, the work ethic is really what I've
just seen, like in a psycho way. Do you just work?

Speaker 2 (46:27):
Why do you psycho so much? That's twice because I
would and he emphasized psycho. Yeah, because it is kind
of I would say dedicated.

Speaker 10 (46:35):
It's unhealthy at times. Yeah, for sure, you know the
way you work so much and how you prioritize work
over other things. But that's how you got a lot
of your stuff.

Speaker 3 (46:47):
Work, work, work, compartmentalize it done feels a little meaner
than Amy's.

Speaker 4 (46:52):
And what did you say? What you go, Eddie? Well
you didn't finish your sentence, Eddie. What do you think
before Amy?

Speaker 2 (46:57):
No, I finished it.

Speaker 4 (46:58):
I finished it in my head for Amy hijacked the
whole time.

Speaker 2 (47:01):
Oh no, before Amy accurately ribed.

Speaker 4 (47:10):
Yes, yes, I'm well aware of what my mind does,
so I have to always This is another thing that
I got from Berne Brown. Let's assume the best. That
was me not assuming the best, but in general, let's
just assume.

Speaker 10 (47:25):
The best, Bobby, You don't assume the best.

Speaker 4 (47:29):
In what other people are. Like.

Speaker 3 (47:31):
I automatically positive this year though, in case you forgot
my word of the year, Well it's oh yeah, I'm
still but I'm still remembering it like I'm just more
positive about it.

Speaker 4 (47:41):
So you're you're digging in.

Speaker 2 (47:43):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (47:43):
I am not always more positive, but I challenge the
negativity a lot of times.

Speaker 2 (47:48):
It doesn't always.

Speaker 3 (47:52):
Manifest itself in complete positivity, but I do when it
does happen, I do go, Man, do I really want
to be negative about because it's gonna be the same
result regardless, so I'll be positive. It's not like I
do want to be negative. I've just seen it happen
too many times, but sometimes I'm like, you know what, let's.

Speaker 2 (48:04):
Go work out.

Speaker 4 (48:06):
That's good.

Speaker 2 (48:06):
Yeah, I love that. Look at us all growing.

Speaker 4 (48:08):
It's just like the world has been the bull. Your
brain is muldable.

Speaker 3 (48:11):
Oh that again, that's pretty much that's just neuroscience.

Speaker 2 (48:19):
Okay, Ray, Yeah, good stuff. I'll ever listen to this.
Thanks Bud answered.

Speaker 1 (48:26):
Eddie. What's up?

Speaker 5 (48:26):
Guys?

Speaker 10 (48:27):
I keep getting dms, like I'm talking about like twenty
dms of people telling me about their kidney stories that
they want either they need a kidney or they know
someone that needs a kidney, and if I'm willing to help, dude,
I don't know what to do, Like do you ever
respond to them?

Speaker 4 (48:41):
No?

Speaker 10 (48:42):
But I'm thinking maybe maybe I'm the guy that reposts
those dms and be like, is there anyone out there
can help?

Speaker 4 (48:50):
Maybe?

Speaker 3 (48:51):
So this was all rooted and Eddie's saying it'd be
awesome to donate a kidney a long time ago, a
long time ago.

Speaker 2 (48:56):
But then he's like, I want to do it. I
want to do it. I want to do it.

Speaker 3 (48:58):
They were like, great, get tested, go do it, and
he's like, nah, I don't really want to. So then
it became a bit where Eddie would always say wanted
to do it, but never do it. Call her for
calling in. But now you're that guy. God may have
put this on you.

Speaker 10 (49:11):
Okay, great, I love it, But what do I do, Like,
I don't have twenty kidneys? So even if I did
want to donate a kidney, like I got twenty dms
in my inbox.

Speaker 4 (49:20):
Well, so yeah, reposting them or putting them out there,
that can't hurt. You're contributing to the efforts of finding
a match.

Speaker 10 (49:26):
Like one one kidney.

Speaker 4 (49:28):
He's not going to do that. Let's just take out
of the.

Speaker 10 (49:31):
Currently not right now. Currently that makes us come back
to it right now, it's just not the timeless.

Speaker 4 (49:37):
This is the year of him being serious. He's not
going to do it, then you need to be You've
now put yourself in this category of like, you know,
a catalyst, like the voice of helping people find kidneys.

Speaker 10 (49:49):
So it could be that is it a hip of
violation though to be spreading somebody else's you.

Speaker 4 (49:56):
Okay, if they can find a kidney, like I think
they're gonna.

Speaker 3 (50:00):
Can you imagine how popular you would become? You're still
gave me the kidney guy, and you are matching people.

Speaker 10 (50:05):
I love it.

Speaker 4 (50:06):
I know, I mean, I mean, it was like, any.

Speaker 10 (50:10):
I'm not a hero, Like, it's not about me.

Speaker 2 (50:11):
You've done nothing convinced I should not a hero because
you're not right.

Speaker 10 (50:15):
But it's not about me. Even if I do the
kidney guy thing right where I just repost all these kidney.

Speaker 4 (50:20):
Things, you're like a matchmaker.

Speaker 10 (50:21):
Yeah, but it's not me, you know, I'm just I'm
just a hero. I'm not a hero. It wouldn't be me.

Speaker 3 (50:27):
We do have this voicemail too, because Eddie said he
think about donating part of his liver.

Speaker 2 (50:31):
Here you go play number two.

Speaker 17 (50:33):
Eddie donating a liver. I actually donated my liver about
seven months ago. They took seventy percent of it and
it's already fully reregrown. Recovery was about eight weeks, so
it was a little rough at first, but now I'm
completely back to normal. So I just wanted to give
my two stents about that. Hope everybody has a great day.

(50:55):
Thank you.

Speaker 2 (50:55):
That's legit that you could do.

Speaker 3 (50:57):
You could just be the organ donating guy, do some
of your liver, yeah, and then deliver and kidney guy
seventy percent and.

Speaker 2 (51:06):
It's already grown back.

Speaker 5 (51:08):
Yeah, that's amazing, insane.

Speaker 10 (51:11):
But also, how do you just live on thirty percent?

Speaker 2 (51:13):
Well, don't ask me that.

Speaker 4 (51:14):
I don't know the answer, but you're not like it.
If it's growing that fast, you're it's turning over?

Speaker 2 (51:19):
WHOA is that something you'll no.

Speaker 10 (51:22):
No, no stop, I'm just I'm going to do this
my year, being serious possibil Seriously, I think that's really cool,
and I mean I would definitely think about it.

Speaker 2 (51:32):
Oh my god.

Speaker 4 (51:33):
I mean, the liver seems doable.

Speaker 10 (51:35):
Totally doable. The kidney you got too, and you give
one away, you're left with one.

Speaker 4 (51:39):
Except for I'm wonder if there are rare circumstances in which, like,
your liver's supposed to go back and then it just
like doesn't.

Speaker 2 (51:45):
What do I say that to him?

Speaker 10 (51:48):
Forget I'm out.

Speaker 3 (51:49):
Then the liver is the only visceral organ that regenerates.

Speaker 4 (51:53):
It's the only one unless there's a malfunction.

Speaker 2 (51:56):
That's probably with anything.

Speaker 3 (51:57):
Okay, I think you should actually consider, do you that
you could change lives by doing this? All this may
have happened for this reason? Yeah, yeah, so that he
can be share of information matcher and he needs to
donate something though, so he's not a hypocrite like you
don't see. You know, the greatest color football color analysts,
most of them have played, and he needs to play.

Speaker 2 (52:19):
He's getting the.

Speaker 10 (52:19):
Game and at least play in the game a little bit.

Speaker 2 (52:21):
Yeah, yeah, think about that, all right.

Speaker 4 (52:23):
I mean, but I wonder your liver has to be in.

Speaker 10 (52:25):
Top tip top.

Speaker 2 (52:26):
I don't think it does.

Speaker 10 (52:27):
I think it has to be a pretty good shape
my college years.

Speaker 3 (52:31):
All right, look, we're done, everybody. Thank you for listening
to the show. All right, by everybody. Bobby Bone The
Bobby Bones Show theme song, written, produced and saying by
read Yarberry. You can find his instagram at red Yarberry,
Scuba Steve Executive producer, Raymond No Head of Production. I'm

(52:51):
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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