Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
What did you do yesterday?
Speaker 2 (00:04):
Mm?
Speaker 3 (00:06):
Why does it so hard to remember what we do?
Speaker 4 (00:08):
Because a long.
Speaker 5 (00:11):
Stevenson had practice, we're prepping for state. I have to
remind him over and over he cannot run today. He
wants to so badly. He wants to run all the time.
There's no practice and he cannot run. So, oh, ordered
his fat heads are not going to come in, So
yesterday ordered foam fingers.
Speaker 1 (00:29):
Wait, so you have the fat heads coming in, so
you'll have big heads of his, but you can't use
them during the race.
Speaker 5 (00:34):
Yeah, because they're delayed. They were supposed to be here
by now. So that's something I dealt with yesterday, was
trying to track down the fat heads and it looks
like they're not going to make it in time unless
they miraculously arrived today and then we'll have them for
in the morning. But just in case, we ordered foam
fingers and palm pomps, so like, you know those big.
Speaker 4 (00:53):
Fingers, you know, the big.
Speaker 5 (00:56):
Fingers might have first events that say like ever so, uh, yeah,
I worked on that.
Speaker 3 (01:03):
Just I don't know, I can't remember anything else.
Speaker 1 (01:06):
You watched Cubs win yesterday? Oh, it was a good one. Yeah,
so they won the Series two one.
Speaker 3 (01:11):
So you got your Cubs hat on?
Speaker 1 (01:12):
Well, I've born they had like three times in the
past two weeks. Oh yeah, so not really that reason.
But yeah it is a blue I think it most
because it's blue. Yeah it matches my blue sweater.
Speaker 3 (01:23):
But yeah, okay, so dumb question.
Speaker 1 (01:25):
Yeah, yeah, because that's what you say to a poser
fan like you're wearing. It's like we were on your hat.
Because now I've worn it like ten.
Speaker 3 (01:34):
Times, I know that you're a real fan.
Speaker 1 (01:35):
I just take an offense to be called as I.
Speaker 3 (01:38):
Didn't call you that. That's your own filter.
Speaker 1 (01:40):
Yeah, for sure. I live my life through my own filter.
Speaker 5 (01:42):
Okay, that's not what I meant. I just meant your
you woke up and you're happy the Cubs won.
Speaker 1 (01:48):
Oh I feel like that's postery two to put on
something after that.
Speaker 3 (01:50):
After a yeah okay, well yeah, okay.
Speaker 4 (01:53):
That's my own filter doing that though.
Speaker 3 (01:54):
Well, so anyway, you watch the Cubs win.
Speaker 1 (01:56):
Eddie wanted that cowboy hat because the play pretty good
last week, and now I wear.
Speaker 4 (01:59):
It all the time.
Speaker 3 (02:00):
Yeah, I got I got Eddie that hat.
Speaker 4 (02:02):
Actually it's a new one. The other one's dirty.
Speaker 3 (02:05):
Oh you liked it so much, you got to.
Speaker 4 (02:06):
Know that's what I was.
Speaker 3 (02:07):
That's a compliment.
Speaker 4 (02:09):
I usually wear the other one more, but this is
like the presentable one.
Speaker 1 (02:12):
Yeah, my filter would have been like, dang it did
anymore the one I.
Speaker 4 (02:16):
Got you You didn't want to clean.
Speaker 5 (02:17):
That one happened, Eddie, Like, hey, everybody listening, let me
show you a healthy filter. Eddie, that's awesome that you
liked the head I got you so much that you
wear it it's dirty, and that you got yourself another one.
Speaker 1 (02:27):
Oh, let me show you unhealthy.
Speaker 4 (02:28):
Show me let me see what I like better.
Speaker 1 (02:30):
Okay, you can't even more the hat I got you
can't even clean it, Like, try to clean it a
couple of times before you get a new one.
Speaker 4 (02:35):
I don't like the way that one made me feel
like Amy's filter better.
Speaker 1 (02:43):
So yeah, I bet a bunch of money on it too,
And I bet a thousand bucks on the game. But
I bet well, I bet five hundred on each. I
bet five hundred because the Cubs were plus one and
a half. What does that mean?
Speaker 5 (02:56):
Oh my gosh, it means that whatever the score is,
if you add a point and a half, they'll still
and they make them win even though they're losing.
Speaker 3 (03:06):
The point and a half could take them over and
they win.
Speaker 1 (03:08):
Yeah, they lose one thet it's good.
Speaker 4 (03:11):
You got it.
Speaker 1 (03:12):
Final score add the point, the plus or the minus.
So I bet the cuff plus one and a half
because they were the underdog, and I didn't need it
in the end because they won straight up. But I
also bet the over and the over? Was it seven
and a half? And what do you think it over is?
Speaker 4 (03:31):
You got this?
Speaker 3 (03:31):
You cant plus one minus one the over?
Speaker 1 (03:33):
What's the over? I said it's seven and the over
with seven and a half.
Speaker 3 (03:37):
Does this have to do with score?
Speaker 1 (03:40):
You'll get this, you're smart?
Speaker 3 (03:41):
Thanks? The over is.
Speaker 5 (03:47):
M Well, now, I'm just thinking it can't be the
same as the plus and the minus.
Speaker 3 (03:52):
So if they.
Speaker 5 (03:56):
Win over that by that many points exactly?
Speaker 1 (04:01):
No, So that's a pretty good guess. The like an
over under is the number of runs or points you
have to bet if it goes higher or lower than
the total number of points, like the total between both teams. Okay,
so I bet the over on seven and a half.
They didn't hit the over, so basically I broke even
what did they end at?
Speaker 4 (04:20):
Six?
Speaker 1 (04:21):
Five?
Speaker 4 (04:21):
Maybe?
Speaker 1 (04:23):
Maybe four? It was maybe three one or three two.
I don't know.
Speaker 5 (04:27):
I would have never gotten that, by the way.
Speaker 1 (04:29):
But may go up.
Speaker 4 (04:30):
I bet you would have.
Speaker 5 (04:31):
Na maybe I would have maybe gotten there. But then
now I feel like an idiot if my filter is
because Bobby, I feel like you'll get this, You're smart.
Speaker 1 (04:40):
And then I'm like, well see, and here I am going.
My filter's going, hey give her some positivity.
Speaker 4 (04:45):
Yes, yeah, it didn't work.
Speaker 1 (04:47):
And then I'm like, hello, that's what I did. And
then I worked. I worked out for two hours yesterday,
two hours not because I'm a monster or like any
fitter than I've ever been, because I'm not.
Speaker 4 (04:58):
But the game was on, You're taking a lot of breaks.
Speaker 1 (05:01):
I was just like, I do this thing on an app,
and so I did that, and then I there was
no Cardio in it. So there was like a forty
five minute workout, and then I walked for forty five
minutes as the game was on in the gym, and
then I went and got in the sauna. We have
a sauna, so I got in it as the game
was up. I was just trying to like stay like
active while the game was on. So yeah, if I
(05:22):
look super muscular, today. That's why extra muscular and I'm not.
Speaker 3 (05:25):
I'm in detox.
Speaker 1 (05:26):
I'm in below mid baseline shape. For me, I have
no reason to be in shape other than like general health,
so I just stint in pretty good shape. But if
I have a reason too, I'll definitely do things, like
if I've got to be on camera or I'm training
for something. So I'm not any stronger or in better shape.
But when I saw a line or Richie to the night,
he kept hitting me in the arms, going there's so
(05:46):
much buffer than last time, And in my mind, I'm going,
am I fatter? He's like you didn't used to beat
and he's like slapping me on the arms. Backstage, He's
like what have you been doing? Like how are you
getting so buff? And in my head, my filter is
like I must be way fatter because I'm not more
buff by any means.
Speaker 4 (06:04):
You don't use the word buff if you mean fat.
Speaker 1 (06:06):
Like ever, yeah, you would say like thick, but it
can or bigger, but it can be misconstrued. Like I
could just see somebody it was put on some weight
and be like, dude, you bit like jah, I don't know.
My filter screwed me.
Speaker 3 (06:18):
There, take your.
Speaker 5 (06:18):
Own thing to Tim McGraw recently, where you were like, dude,
you look.
Speaker 3 (06:22):
Would you say no?
Speaker 1 (06:23):
I said, you look extra jack.
Speaker 5 (06:24):
Extra jacked. I know, but he's doing less cardio, he said.
Speaker 1 (06:29):
So I'm doing less everything.
Speaker 3 (06:32):
I don't know. I was just trying to help you.
Speaker 1 (06:33):
I'm doing us everything. So yeah, I did that, And
then we watched the first episode of Slower Horses last night.
It's like season four or five, my wife and I did.
I also, she was feeling pretty good, like she didn't
have a bad illness day sickness day yesterday, and so
I slept in there with her because if she's feeling bad,
I'll just go sleep upstairs because she's gonna be up,
(06:55):
and then she's gonna feel guilty that she's up and
not get up as much even though she feels bad,
because she knows I have to wake up with them.
And it is just a pattern that we both don't
want to get into. So I slept in my own
bed last night. I've been traveling a bunch this week,
and my sleep score was ninety three. WHOA that is
that's good. I never hit the nineties. That's yeah, that's
a I'm talking about. If I hit the seventies. I'm like,
(07:18):
good score, I with my sleep score, kind of like
you in high school. Uh, c's were good.
Speaker 4 (07:25):
Yeah, d's got ds.
Speaker 1 (07:27):
Oh most of mine are d's, though most of my
nights are d's. Like when I showed Amy mind the
other day. It was in the sixties or maybe even
the fifties, and I was like, look at this, it's
how bad I Sleepang, So do.
Speaker 4 (07:37):
You think it's because you were so tired swept.
Speaker 1 (07:39):
Better or in my bed? I was in my own bed,
in your own bed.
Speaker 4 (07:42):
Yes, we've talked a lot about this own bed thing
when you're married. And this is the best you've slept.
Speaker 1 (07:48):
Well, it's one night because I've had a terrible week
asleep because I've been traveling so much.
Speaker 3 (07:51):
Do you think you good? Because the Cub's one?
Speaker 4 (07:54):
Oh that too, No more ridiculous.
Speaker 3 (07:56):
I've always been a Cubs fun dang.
Speaker 4 (07:58):
Yeah. But they won, so that's special.
Speaker 3 (08:00):
I thought that they win.
Speaker 4 (08:01):
But this is the playoffs.
Speaker 1 (08:03):
They haven't won a playoff series. It's like twenty seventeen
or something when they won the World Series. Now they
won the series and sixteen.
Speaker 6 (08:09):
Myne okay.
Speaker 5 (08:11):
Speaking of a's, b's and c's when we move off this.
I have something to say. I just don't want to
forget it.
Speaker 1 (08:16):
A BS and seas you can have it, okay.
Speaker 5 (08:18):
So you know you said like Eddie and school he
made sees something I did yesterday, speaking of I watched
this whole YouTube video about grades these days with kids
and how expectations are just lower and like an A
now is like.
Speaker 4 (08:35):
A bet, you know, are you serious?
Speaker 7 (08:38):
Yes?
Speaker 3 (08:39):
They said every five years, you go back.
Speaker 5 (08:45):
Every like twenty fifteen, twenty twenty twenty.
Speaker 3 (08:48):
Five, like every five years or so.
Speaker 5 (08:50):
It's like we keep declining and we're the only country
that this is happening in and we spend more on
education than any other place.
Speaker 3 (08:57):
And so I was like, well, this is going to
be a problem.
Speaker 4 (09:00):
Because lower in the standard.
Speaker 5 (09:02):
Yeah, the top one percent of people though, they stay
the same, like if you're a one percent type learner,
like you're like they're saying your top one percent of
middle school, high school, like you're already IVY League, like
you're going to go there, that you're just that type
of learner and you're very motivated.
Speaker 3 (09:17):
But everybody else they're like, yeah, is these days your kids?
Speaker 5 (09:22):
You're if your kids in high school and they're making
an a. They're probably making an a for like junior
high stuff, even though they're now in high school.
Speaker 1 (09:30):
What I heard you say is we spend more money
on education.
Speaker 4 (09:31):
Than anybody else.
Speaker 3 (09:32):
Yeah, that's what I said.
Speaker 1 (09:33):
I don't know if that's true or not true correct,
but I can't imagine that's true.
Speaker 5 (09:38):
I trust these guys I was listening to. They sounded
like they definitely knew what they were talking about, and
it was more so like don't lose hope, but you
know that like sometimes Eddie. This also made me think
of us, especially as adopted parents, like we adopted kids,
that maybe their education was a little bit off. And
that's why my boyfriend even sent me this YouTube video
was because of some stuff we're going through with schooling
with both of my kids, and they didn't get some
(10:01):
of the fundamentals that other kids got. So he's like,
watch this because maybe we just need to go back
to like even though my son's in eighth grade, Like
let's go back to like forget some of his eighth
grade homework, Like just forget it.
Speaker 3 (10:15):
We need to go back to first grade. Who cares?
Like at home, he'll be learning.
Speaker 5 (10:20):
First grade stuff. So that's what we're working on with
his tutor. But that's what these guys were saying, like, Hey,
it may be hard for your kid to hear, but
as a parent, it's going to serve them much better
if they go back and get some of those fundamentals.
Because it all it's like building blocks. It all stacks
on top of each other. But sometimes we're like, ah,
well they'll figure that out later. They don't need to
(10:41):
know that from second grade. Well, yes they do, because
there's value in in mastery, Like if until you've mastered
that second grade thing, don't move on.
Speaker 1 (10:52):
So we don't spend per population more than other countries. Oh,
we spend more per student, but we don't spend more
per pop, which is why we're dumber. The US does
not have the highest per resident spending once you include children, adults,
non students, even when adults were children. Differences in cost structure,
which is salaries, andra structure, regulatory costs, and other factors
(11:15):
are higher. It costs more for buildings here, oh, to
build for schools, So all that also goes into what
we're spending. I just and then private funding versus public funding.
Rich kids are getting much more spent on them, which
also counts on the average A doubt what poor kids
are getting as well, which isn't the same, which is
also whier education systems kind of sucky.
Speaker 5 (11:36):
Well, they were specifically also talking about private schools as well,
and that the expectations there are even lower, so some kids,
some families, he use an example of, like, you might
be spending thirty forty thousand dollars a year for kids
to go to this school, and you're not getting the
same education that they used to get for that thirty
forty thousand.
Speaker 1 (11:54):
I typed in, how can we be spending more? And
a lot of our educational spending comes to freaking buy buildings.
Speaker 4 (12:00):
I guess real estate too, to have schools.
Speaker 1 (12:02):
More than actually paying teachers and paying for tools, Oh
to make kids smart, And that makes sense. Yeah, higher
spending does not necessarily guarantee better educational outcomes, and the
per capita metric you choose, which can be pur student
per resident share of GDP at cedric, can affect the comparison.
Speaker 5 (12:18):
So, I know, I was paraphrasing and lumping that. I'm
sure they broke it down more, but kind of based
on what you're I know they said those things. I
guess I just don't know the complete breakdown of what
they were comparing that to when it comes to other countries.
Speaker 1 (12:32):
Where other countries may not invest in real estate or
a massive building, they may actually put it into the
tools given to kids to learn and giving higher teachers
higher salaries, which actually does affect the total outcome of
learning more so than just having a school. Yeah, and
having land to put a school on and spending all
the money on it and focusing on it more than
actually getting the kids smarter.
Speaker 4 (12:54):
I mean, our schools here have a lot of land.
You know, you think about the playground or like even
the place where you just go and play football, Like
we have huge fields. Our schools are built on like
huge plots of lands.
Speaker 1 (13:04):
All the football stadiums and high schools and Texas are
counted and they're.
Speaker 5 (13:10):
They're like, oh, well, they did talk about how sometimes
parents like like they always understand a sports and analogy,
like they might really struggle with their kid going back
to like the fundamentals. But they're like, what's the first
thing you do in sports if a kid's not performing well?
Speaker 3 (13:24):
You go back to the basics?
Speaker 5 (13:25):
Becham cut them, no, no, But like maybe you need
to go back to the basics.
Speaker 1 (13:32):
On top of that, no more learning for you.
Speaker 5 (13:34):
Well anyway, I don't know. That's another little thing I did.
Speaker 1 (13:37):
Yesterday, RAYMONDO. Your sister saw me as an extra on Nashville.
Speaker 7 (13:41):
Yeah, she's binging it and she goes back and starts
watching it. And so you were a reporter asking questions
and then I told her where to see me in
a scene. So she saw me as an extra, you
as like one of the reporters DJ Local, you know,
and so she was like curious, She goes, how much
did you guys get paid for all that?
Speaker 1 (14:00):
I don't I was. I had three different roles on
that show, which is crazy because I was a reporter
who asked questions in my first little entrance into the
world of Nashville the TV show, and I asked a
couple of questions, so I had lines, and then I
went back and I was something else, and then I
had real lines as myself. I played when the show
(14:21):
was ending, I was playing me talking with like Connie Britton,
Erina James, Yeah, like with the lines, and that was weird.
Speaker 5 (14:30):
So she's binging it, probably because that's something that just
got added to Netflix too.
Speaker 1 (14:33):
Oh really, I'm about to be famous.
Speaker 4 (14:35):
Wow all over again.
Speaker 1 (14:36):
My extra, my middle and my my scene.
Speaker 4 (14:39):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (14:40):
That was weird because they would go like, hey, I
know this, you did this last time, but now we
feel like we should use you in a more prominent role.
Speaker 4 (14:48):
I was like, okay, Yeah, that was bizarre.
Speaker 1 (14:50):
I don't know. Eight hundred bucks, probably at first because
I wasn't an extra because I had lines.
Speaker 3 (14:56):
Oh well, now that it's on Netflix, do you get
another check?
Speaker 4 (14:58):
Oh? Oh oh good question? And maybe mailbox money?
Speaker 1 (15:02):
Maybe? I know the last time I did it was
in the thousands.
Speaker 3 (15:06):
Whenever the last time you got a mailbox check?
Speaker 1 (15:07):
No? The last role I did on Nashville, Oh it
was in the.
Speaker 4 (15:11):
Thousands, and the last role was the one you played yourself.
Speaker 1 (15:13):
Yes, And they would talk about me when I wasn't even.
Speaker 4 (15:16):
On the show. Would They'd be like, I was on
the Bobby Bone Show.
Speaker 1 (15:18):
Somebody was on the Bobybone Show and she really killed it.
I'd be like, wait, what I get paid for that?
Speaker 4 (15:23):
He's my name? Yeah?
Speaker 1 (15:24):
Yeah, so I don't know. But I were all in
probably like five thousand dollars for all three appearances. Ray
what about you?
Speaker 7 (15:31):
I was a lot less than that. I told her
just because I was an extra. But I think I
was there from let's say eleven AM to about seven
pm and they gave me sixty bucks. Dang, dang, because
there's a lot of hurry up and wait when that
TV camera's rolling, you just sit there and do nothing.
Speaker 1 (15:49):
What were you doing to get that job? Did you
just see it online?
Speaker 4 (15:54):
Yeah?
Speaker 7 (15:54):
I believe they went to you. That's how you you
know that you would got it through your people. But me,
I think I just there was something online. It was
part of this come be an extra, and I did that,
and there was some scene at the Bluebird, and there
was another scene that I was actually at the same
location as you. But yeah, yours was obviously through your people,
But you were at the Bluebird for yeah, because I
(16:14):
saw yeah, because that's the scene I was with. Scarlett
was performing there.
Speaker 1 (16:18):
That's pretty cool. It's weird when they do that tour.
They're like Nashville back together playing all the songs. Nobody
knows the songs from Nashville. Like, it's a cool thing
to like if you watch the show, they're all together.
But I want them to do covers while they're up there.
Speaker 4 (16:30):
I think they do. They just because I saw him
at CMA Fest. They put they got back together at cmafest.
Did they play covers or do they play That's what
I feel like. They did a cover maybe like Johnny
Cash or something, or maybe that was just Charles Eston
and then he brought out the crew to sing one
original something like that.
Speaker 1 (16:43):
Yeah, I don't think I want many originals if I'm
going to watch the cast, because those songs really didn't last. Yeah,
because they weren't meant to last. They were just meant
for a moment on the show. And I have a
friend who wrote a bunch of songs for that show
and produced. That was kind of his entrance into Nashville,
was producing a lot of those songs. But that's funny,
it's on net play. I wondered why I was feeling
so famous lately. You had a feeling people must be
(17:04):
seeing my extras. I was an extra. I guess I
wasn't an extra. I was a prefer to walk on. Basically,
if we're doing sports analogy, Lunchbox wants to know why
Eddie thinks he's so funny? What happened with Eddie?
Speaker 2 (17:14):
Oh, Eddie thinks he's a comedian. Yesterday, there was this
food in the kitchen and everybody's lined up to get food.
So I line up and I get food, and Eddie's like,
yells out in front of the whole building lunchbox, why
are you getting food? I've already seen you eat this morning.
And I'm like, everybody is eating, what's the big deal.
(17:35):
And he goes, I've seen you already eat three things.
And everybody's like, I ate earlier too, but I'm getting some.
It was just so awkward, like one said that and
no one laughed. It was just like and Eddie repeated
himself like twice to make sure everybody heard him, and
no one loud. And I was like, dang, Eddie, you
really think you're funny, but no one cared about your
dumb joke.
Speaker 1 (17:53):
I feel like this is the battle the exaggerators here
big time, because you also were probably well, okay, you
tell your signs.
Speaker 4 (18:00):
Uh no. I mean he he was fighting people to
get a bagel, and I'm like, dude, you've already eaten,
like we've been here for ten hours. Ye like so
so yeah, I walked up to the table and I'm like,
because he was like fighting people for a knife, like,
give me the knife.
Speaker 3 (18:12):
I got fighting people for the knife. I'm telling this exaggerated.
Speaker 4 (18:15):
No, no, no, no exaggeration. People were trying to get
cream cheese. He was like, no, let me get that
first real quick. I gotta go, I gotta get back
the studio and I go, dude, whoa, whoa, relax man,
I've already seen you eat breakfast, like let other people eat,
That's all I said. You're so funny Eddie.
Speaker 2 (18:30):
So he thought he was. He thought he was hilarious.
And everybody's like and one guy was like, I already
ate too, but I'm getting some.
Speaker 6 (18:36):
You said.
Speaker 1 (18:36):
Everybody was now one guy yeah, yeah, literally, these are
the great embellishers, both of them, and did laugh, though
lunchbox people did laugh.
Speaker 2 (18:43):
No one laughed. And literally there was one girl. She
got a bagel and then I was cutting a bagel
in half. There was no fight over any knife. And
then I put the honey walnut cream cheese on there
and I went about my way. But when Bobby was
getting food, Eddie says nothing.
Speaker 4 (18:59):
He didn't see Bobby get food.
Speaker 7 (19:00):
Oh, he's all.
Speaker 2 (19:01):
Quiet, and like, oh, let me be quiet.
Speaker 7 (19:02):
And then once Bobby walks away.
Speaker 4 (19:03):
Once why are you eating?
Speaker 1 (19:06):
I got? I got four pieces of melons, But he
didn't call you out quickly when nobody was there, because
I wanted to get out.
Speaker 4 (19:11):
Of the way. Did you fight anyone for a melon?
Speaker 8 (19:13):
No?
Speaker 4 (19:13):
I got.
Speaker 1 (19:13):
I jumped in before anybody was there, and I got
four quick pieces of melon and got out because I
already had breakfast.
Speaker 4 (19:19):
Exactly what was fun was like? And then he tried
to get back at me because I was like filling
up my Coffee's like, what are you doing any getting
more coffee? You already had coffee this morning.
Speaker 1 (19:28):
I'm like, okay, yesterday there was a surprise like breakfast
and little selibratory moment for somebody who works in our
building who's going into the Radio Hall of Fame as
an executive. And she kind of runs our syndication company.
I guess she does. She's one of the people that
runs our syndication company. And Scooba See came over and said, hey,
everybody's meeting over in this area because she's about to
(19:50):
come over and they're get a surpriser. We didn't know
anything about it. We didn't know ahead of time it
was happening. So I'm like, when exactly and he's like
sometime between like nine thirty and ten, and so I'm like, okay,
well let us know. He goes, you guys can probably
walk over there now. So we walk over there, and
as soon as we get settled, she comes around the
corner and they surprise her and I'm the first one
there and she looks at me like I did it.
Speaker 4 (20:08):
She looked at me like she's like, Bobby, oh my god.
Speaker 1 (20:11):
And I just there like, yeah, this is for you.
And it was for her, and I'm super happy for her,
and I voted for her.
Speaker 4 (20:20):
She did say thank you. Your spot was perfect because
you were the first person she saw. I had nothing
to do with it. I just actually walked into it.
Speaker 1 (20:27):
I'm glad I could be there.
Speaker 4 (20:28):
Yeah, she thought like I was one of the main people.
Speaker 1 (20:30):
And then she referenced me and talking about uh like
contracts getting done, and she's like, you know, Bob, because
I just stumbled into it. I'm happy for her. I
didn't really like her, but I had nothing to do
with it. I got way too much credit. I'll say it.
I did nothing. I didn't plan it. I didn't know
what was happening until five minutes before. I was just standing.
I wasn't even standing in that place on purpose for
(20:51):
mro walking in the hallway, that's just the first place
you stand, and so yeah, that's that's me going. I
had nothing to do with it. That was funny and
I got a little credit for that one.
Speaker 4 (21:01):
Eddie has a theory on GPS maps. Oh yeah, I
think they're messing with us. I think they're actually making
traffic worse. I don't know why they would want to
make traffic worse, but what I'm seeing, Like the other day,
I was trying to get somewhere, and there's if you
leave my neighborhood to get on the main interstate, there's
like four or five ways you can actually do it.
You can go through the main way, there's another main way,
(21:21):
and then there's like three neighborhood ways. So I always
go the same way because the GPS tells me to
go the same way. Then one day the GPS is like, no,
go this way, and I'm like, well, that's.
Speaker 1 (21:33):
Weird because there's traffic in the other place, probably right
maybe right.
Speaker 4 (21:36):
So I was like, nah, I don't believe it. There's
no way there's traffic there right now. So I went
my original way guess what not one car It was
saying on the GPS that my original way was traffic,
do not go that way. I'd take it anyway it
lied to me.
Speaker 1 (21:49):
Is there a chance there may be an accident that
was just cleared?
Speaker 4 (21:52):
Dude? There were no cars, like it was like a
ghost town, free wheeling all the way down that road.
So I'm thinking, like, do the g GPS just say, like,
you know what, today, let's make this road congested that
way we can change the route and make sense.
Speaker 1 (22:07):
Well why before when you have a theory, you should
theorize why.
Speaker 4 (22:13):
I feel like they create the traffics so that they
can send people away that there's no traffic eventually and
look like they're saving the world.
Speaker 1 (22:22):
So you're saying they're moving people just to show people
that they are keeping constant awareness.
Speaker 4 (22:29):
They can control us.
Speaker 1 (22:31):
Well that's drastic.
Speaker 4 (22:32):
They're all like controlling you. But they do.
Speaker 1 (22:34):
But they're not making you do that.
Speaker 4 (22:35):
Because I have seen too, like when the GPS says
like go this way, and you start seeing cars cut
in lines just to follow the route of the GPS,
to say like, oh, they obviously have the same GPS
I do, and so we're all going this certain way,
and they're creating a jam in that area, and then
they probably say, why would they do that so that
they can control us?
Speaker 1 (22:54):
That they can they're not controlling you.
Speaker 4 (22:56):
And then they can say, like you know what, do
not go on whatever Bobby Road, take Eddie Road instead.
They're influencing you and they look like geniuses because they
congested Bobby Road. So now they're like, oh wow, look
these guys are so smart. They send me on Eddie
Road because Bobby but Bobby Road is congested. Well they
did that, they did that on purpose.
Speaker 1 (23:14):
Yeah, I don't think there's any basis to that.
Speaker 4 (23:17):
Do you guys not feel that? Sometimes?
Speaker 1 (23:18):
No, I think there's probably an accident or something there
that someone didn't push. Is the accident gone? Because you
have that option where it's like is this car or
the car that's pulled over? Is it still there? And
you but yes or no?
Speaker 4 (23:28):
Oh yeah? Do you do that? Not?
Speaker 1 (23:29):
Never?
Speaker 4 (23:30):
Not? Never? I don't do that.
Speaker 1 (23:30):
I don't review stuff. I appreciate when people do that.
I need people to do that, yet do I NA?
Speaker 4 (23:38):
How is the police thing legal? Like to say that
there's a police car there, Like I feel like that
should be outlawed like the old fuzzbus.
Speaker 1 (23:47):
You're not supposed to tell people that there is a
police officer that is either monitoring for speed or whatever
they're doing, because they could be actually looking for a criminal.
That's why.
Speaker 4 (23:59):
So if they allow it, I mean, the app lets
you report a police officer.
Speaker 1 (24:03):
But I think now that's been that has been challenged
at Supreme Court as free speech.
Speaker 4 (24:09):
Oh, like you can freely say there's a cop there.
Speaker 1 (24:13):
Yeah, it's complicated if they say speed trap ahead or
something like that.
Speaker 4 (24:18):
Speed trap is the word they use in the app. Oh,
mine's a little picture of a cop cop ahead in
two miles and then they ask you is he still there?
You know what's crazy too, though, like GPS's if it
said just go down this bridge and the bridges and finish,
we'd all do it, and we'd all.
Speaker 1 (24:35):
Probably just fall on some people and by friend Michael
and why oh but both of them while they drove
into a pond because the GPS said so, I don't
think I would.
Speaker 4 (24:48):
I mean, that would be the biggest hack ever, Like
if a hacker wants to get rid of someone.
Speaker 1 (24:51):
And what the problem is an incomplete bridge. That's why
I said an Incoplete Bridge have a bunch of signs
going up to it, so they have to do both
hack and physically get out and move all the signs. True,
because there would be barriers to keep cars from doing
that if there wasn't a complete bridge there, which wouldn't
be a wide open bridge.
Speaker 5 (25:05):
And then also bank that they're just like not paying
attention at all whatsoever.
Speaker 1 (25:10):
There were no signs that the GPS was saying it.
If it was just free willing I drive off the bridge.
Yea too, But I think goodbye, good bye my friends,
And you're like, what happened? Yeah, yeah, I would for sure.
But I guess my pushback on that is if there
is an in complete bridge, it's hard to even get
up to the bridge because they have so many barriers
(25:31):
put out so cars can't follow, like an old GPS.
Speaker 4 (25:34):
That hasn't been updated. Yeah, yeah, I think.
Speaker 1 (25:36):
It's terrible theory about like it.
Speaker 4 (25:37):
Thanks for bringing it up, man, I thought about it
for like an hour yesterday.
Speaker 1 (25:40):
Are you challenging yourself to have broader questions? Yes, thoughts?
Yes see, that's what I hear. I like that.
Speaker 4 (25:47):
You know what I did the other day that we
talked about, I don't know. Like two or three weeks ago,
we were talking about looking up more. You know, I
don't know why I said. I said something like I
don't look up ever, so I started looking up more,
like I want to see the sky more, and what.
Speaker 1 (26:01):
If I see like a UFO, like that new thing
coming to Earth We've been talking about forever. I'm telling you,
whatever it is, we ain't used to having it. I
saw a guy last night talking about it who was
like a astrophysicist. He was like and he was talking
about the chemical makeup of it. He's like, I don't
know what this is.
Speaker 4 (26:16):
Oh the one that was caught on that image or whatever?
Speaker 1 (26:18):
Can you find it? I'd be done that, Mike, would
you mind looking that up? And then I watched more
yesterday on twenty five, Whistles were talking about how my
algorithm is all well, a lot of it is like
magician secrets revealed.
Speaker 4 (26:31):
Okay, sounds cool.
Speaker 1 (26:33):
You're not interested in.
Speaker 3 (26:34):
The magician secrets being revealed?
Speaker 1 (26:36):
Yeah, they're tricks like David Copperfield, David Blaine, how did
they do it? Very famous and they will break them down,
and it's a guy in a mass.
Speaker 4 (26:43):
Going, yeah, you think this is real, But here's how.
Speaker 1 (26:47):
And then they show you the breakdown of how they
do these illusions. And so if you watch one, you're
gonna get nine, and I watch all nine, so then
I get twenty seven. That's how it works. And so
we were going through a David copperfield trip where he
like an illusion where he flew over the Green Canyon
and nobody could figure it out for years.
Speaker 3 (27:05):
So how do you do it?
Speaker 1 (27:07):
Because they zoom out so you can see him, But
what they didn't show was the extra extra, extra long
cables from a helicopter. Oh and they had just attached
it to his shirt and you don't see it because
the color matches the rock behind it.
Speaker 4 (27:24):
Oh wow.
Speaker 1 (27:25):
And they do zoom back in this eighty special and
show you there's nothing he's not but they zoom just
a perfect amount to keep this extremely high helicopter with
an extremely long wire.
Speaker 3 (27:37):
It still seems dangerous though.
Speaker 4 (27:39):
Yeah, probably yeah, yeah, Mike, what do you see.
Speaker 6 (27:43):
Not seeing any update? It's that one that avoided the
hell Fire missile.
Speaker 4 (27:46):
Right, that's it?
Speaker 1 (27:46):
No, No, no, no, that's not it. No, that's a UFO
that's like an alien space crash, the one that's coming
down that was hiding behind the sun, hiding behind the moon,
that keeps approaching Earth.
Speaker 4 (27:55):
Oh, I don't know what that is. We've never talked
about it.
Speaker 1 (27:58):
Yes, we have, we have. I think you just hear me.
Wah wah wah wah wah. Just Charlie Brown's whenever I
talk about this stuff, I don't remember that one neither. Yeah, well,
keep thinking of keep thinking on stuff.
Speaker 4 (28:11):
Yeah, and I'm gonna look up more.
Speaker 1 (28:12):
Yeah, look up, but don't look up too much because
your eyes will burn.
Speaker 3 (28:15):
You don't have to look right into the sun. Just
look into the trees.
Speaker 4 (28:18):
Look up, look at the clouds. The way the clouds moves,
They're just amazing the way they move.
Speaker 1 (28:22):
Abby saw kicks Brooks at Walmart.
Speaker 4 (28:25):
No, no way from Brooks and Dune. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (28:27):
True?
Speaker 4 (28:27):
If is he getting through a false Abby?
Speaker 2 (28:29):
True?
Speaker 4 (28:30):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (28:30):
How crazy?
Speaker 1 (28:31):
Oh my god, it was so cool. Yeah, so tell
a story.
Speaker 4 (28:35):
Yeah.
Speaker 8 (28:35):
Well, I walked in and I heard his voice because
I was really close to him, and he has like
that distinct like accent, you know, And he was with
his wife and they were just shopping around.
Speaker 1 (28:44):
And then I just, you know, moved on.
Speaker 8 (28:47):
But then I was checking out and he was at
the next the cashier next to me with his wife,
and he was just chatting it up with the cashier forever,
like he's just the nicest guy.
Speaker 1 (28:56):
He's a very nice guy. Yeah, very talkative guy. But yeah,
kicks Brooks from Brooks and Dyne at freaking Walmart.
Speaker 4 (29:01):
That's amazing.
Speaker 1 (29:02):
Do you want another one? Yes, Raymond. Who'd you see
at the mall?
Speaker 7 (29:06):
Yeah, so mine's a two for the first person. I
was sitting there. I was at Zara, and then below
is the Nordstroms and there was a whole group of people.
It's mainly i'd say high schoolers probably, and then kind
of maybe middle schoolers because there was some moms around.
It was freaking post Malone at the mall and not
wearing sunglasses. He had his cowboy hat on Dallas Cowboys jersey,
(29:27):
just hanging out outside of Nordstroms taking pictures.
Speaker 4 (29:30):
You have the Dallas Cowboys jersey.
Speaker 1 (29:32):
Funny.
Speaker 7 (29:33):
Yeah, it might have been right after the game, or
it was the same day as the game. And then
I'm driving, I go to Chick fil A in the
same area. I'm in the drive through, pulls up SUV
Country Singer. It's freaking Jordan Davis within ten minutes, I
see two famous people in Nashville.
Speaker 1 (29:50):
Baby, So we got Kicksbrooks at Walmart, Post Malone at
the mall and Jordan Davis at Chick fil A, And
people like are the country stars around Nashville? Well, that's
actually where they are at normal places. If you come
to town and you go to like one of these
bars that's named after an artist, there's gonna be nobody
famous there.
Speaker 7 (30:09):
Well except for last night.
Speaker 4 (30:12):
What was last night?
Speaker 1 (30:13):
Jelly Roll was at jelly Roll Okay, why was he?
Speaker 7 (30:18):
He was performing, he was on stage.
Speaker 2 (30:20):
It was him.
Speaker 7 (30:21):
It was the guy that's the right hand man for
one of the Paul brothers on the podcast, and then
Nick Sayersana, he's like a streamer guy. But they were
all in town and Jelly was performing on stage at
his own bar.
Speaker 1 (30:32):
That's interesting. I guess if there's a performance occasionally that
will happen sometimes the artist un announced performance. Yeah, if
they do, they have like an obligation to go a
few times because they don't actually own the bars, they
lease their name. It's like a steakhouse. Rarely are the
steakhouses actually owned by the people you pay, Like, if
I was gonna do Eddie Bar and grill. I would
(30:53):
give you two hundred thousand dollars a year and I
get to have your likeness and you're going to agree
to come three times a year. Deal, Like that's most
lee what it is. You don't actually buy the bar.
So when this is a company that does.
Speaker 4 (31:03):
When this Morgan Wallen bodycam video came out and he
calls Eric Church to get him off, yeh yeah, So
what's the point of calling Eric Church? Like he's not
the owner, right Eric Church?
Speaker 1 (31:15):
May I don't know. I would say most of those
bars are owned by the same company downtown, so there
could be like one offer so that I'm not familiar
with where the artist does own the bar. But those buildings,
like there's a building where the John bon Jovi jab
jays is are selling it right now. The building one
hundred and thirty million dollars.
Speaker 4 (31:31):
Dang, I mean it's so old.
Speaker 1 (31:33):
So it's like what artist is going to jump in
and buy a building because now you're in the real
estate business and then you got to put somebody in
the building and it's just your bar. So yeah, most
of the bars are owned by a company and they
leased the names of the artist. I don't know what
did you what did you guys to not just why
he called Eric Church. Oh yeah, I don't know, click
up because.
Speaker 4 (31:53):
Eric's on the phone. Eric Church talk to him.
Speaker 1 (31:55):
And Eric was like, hey, can you at least do
this in an area like, not in the public because
doing it on Broadway.
Speaker 4 (32:00):
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1 (32:03):
It was funny watching the cops go in that back
room and watch the surveillance footage.
Speaker 4 (32:06):
Oh that was awesome. Yeah, because I guess they have
to have proof before they take him away, and they did,
and they did, and then him on the in the
back of the cop with the car guy like trat man.
Speaker 5 (32:15):
It did turn that out because Thomas Read's a great guy.
He would never get arrested.
Speaker 4 (32:19):
That's accurate.
Speaker 1 (32:21):
Ray Mundo found a song in our system and I
remember the song and I'll say this, this is back
ten years ago, and I have not always been someone
who doesn't curse. I stopped cursing because I didn't want
to think in cursing. I don't want to write jokes
cursing in my head. I don't want to use it
as a crutch. I actually like cursing. It's fun. It's
(32:41):
funny as long as you don't overdo it. I'm not
anti cursing, I just don't do it. I haven't said
a curse word in probably seven or eight years.
Speaker 4 (32:47):
Amazing, No, no, no, it's it's it's it's amazing because like,
if I try to do that, I would drop a
can on my foot and be.
Speaker 1 (32:55):
Like, ah, you wouldn't though it'd be a discipline you
could get. And also it's like a discipline test for me.
I need those occasionally. But I did this song called
mother f and Brentwood when we first moved here. I
remember this one and we took the the voice changer
that made my voice a little deeper, and Ray said
he found it. I don't know where this song has been.
Is it bleeped?
Speaker 7 (33:14):
Yeah, it's bleeped.
Speaker 4 (33:15):
Do you want?
Speaker 7 (33:15):
I have two versions? You want the M and F
bleeped or just the F, just the F? Perfect.
Speaker 1 (33:21):
Let me hear a little bit of that. I haven't
heard the song and forever go ahead? Yo, Yeah, Captain
Caucasian here I turn it deeper.
Speaker 7 (33:34):
Yo, yo, Yo, what to talk about?
Speaker 4 (33:37):
Brent Will?
Speaker 7 (33:37):
Where you are? I'm from Marbo, Brent Will?
Speaker 4 (33:40):
What a hodie?
Speaker 3 (33:41):
Stay real, I'm from Mao and brent Will, where you
may just get killed.
Speaker 1 (33:46):
I'm from Marble, from brent Will, where my salmon stays grilled.
Speaker 7 (33:49):
I'm from Marbo brent Will, keep my pell like greeno chilled.
Speaker 1 (33:54):
Oh, just a hook? We have any of the we
have any of the verse.
Speaker 7 (33:58):
There was never a verse. It was just that. I
bet you think you would rap live, you would do
it live.
Speaker 1 (34:04):
No, we had a whole We had a whole version
of it.
Speaker 4 (34:06):
No, No, I know, but I think the reason he has
this clip is because you would use that to go live,
to do it live.
Speaker 1 (34:11):
I would never perform this song live and a millionaires.
Not one time did I ever do it live?
Speaker 7 (34:15):
Oh?
Speaker 4 (34:15):
Maybe?
Speaker 1 (34:16):
Where would I do that song live? I would never
get on stage and curse? Yeah, but I had a
whole Uh, it's.
Speaker 4 (34:21):
Got from Brentwood, where the home you stay real.
Speaker 7 (34:24):
I'm from Mother Brentwood, where you may just get killed.
Speaker 1 (34:28):
I'm from Mother Brentwood, Where are my sam bestays grilled?
I'm from Mother brent Wood, keep my pella greno chill.
And I remember it was all It was a joke
song because Brentwood was like so posh and it was
like Dolly lives down the street, what are you say?
And I'm come and can I get It's.
Speaker 3 (34:44):
Just all it's a killed part because.
Speaker 1 (34:46):
Your neighbor like, no, it was just to be funny,
because you can't get killed in Brentwood, because it's so
posh you can't. Yeah.
Speaker 4 (34:53):
I think there was a line too, like there's a girl.
I see it's Carrie Mother.
Speaker 1 (34:58):
Yeah, Carrie Mother, very under and Underwood looking at me.
I'm from Mother Bretwood.
Speaker 4 (35:05):
I remember that line. I remember when we wrote it,
were just like that's a good line right.
Speaker 3 (35:10):
There where my salmon stage grew.
Speaker 4 (35:12):
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1 (35:14):
Can you look a little deeper, ra and see if
that you can find the whole song anywhere? Yeah, I
know it's on a SoundCloud somewhere, which is where I
parked it a long time and then never found it.
Speaker 4 (35:23):
That's a that's a hits.
Speaker 3 (35:25):
You know what I was looking for the other day.
Did you see Jane Goodall died.
Speaker 1 (35:29):
The Monkey Woman?
Speaker 4 (35:30):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (35:30):
Yeah, so monkey that's what I know are from.
Speaker 3 (35:33):
The chimp chimpanzees. Yes.
Speaker 5 (35:35):
So in elementary school I had to do this project
where I was I guess I chose to be Jane
Goodall and I lived out on my front porch. I
turned my front porch into like a tent and I
had a pillow and I slept out there. I was
with my chimps, and I filmed this whole thing like
on VHS and I know it somewhere because it was
my school project and I was like a method acting
(35:59):
like I was like I made myself Jane like, and
I think my parents were like over it, and I
was like, I'm sleeping out here.
Speaker 3 (36:05):
I have to sleep with my chimpanzees, and.
Speaker 5 (36:08):
I'm trying to find it on my v I have
like all the stacks of VHS tapes that I got
for my mom's attic after she passed away, and I'm
trying to find me as Jane Goodall. And I'm like,
dang to that I didn't know exactly where this was
because I've been very timely, like rip Jane.
Speaker 1 (36:21):
Well, I'm looking for m F. Brentwood.
Speaker 4 (36:24):
Can't find it.
Speaker 3 (36:26):
While you're looking. Oh keep talking about Jane Goodall.
Speaker 5 (36:30):
But just made me think of like how like now
kids just have to like you know, film themselves on
their phone and make something real quick. Like we had
to set up a tripod and camera and a VHS tape.
Speaker 3 (36:40):
We had to film ourselves.
Speaker 1 (36:42):
Do you have no idea the Raging Idiots do Sam
Hunt as Mickey and Goofy get out?
Speaker 4 (36:49):
Huh what song is it? You know? I don't know.
Speaker 1 (36:54):
I don't have the soundcloed app. Dang it its I
can download the app.
Speaker 4 (36:58):
Man, there's that's crazy. I don't remember that at all. Dude.
Speaker 1 (37:01):
It's like a whole different life when we moved here. Yes,
that to me, I was just I was mentally ill
the first three years.
Speaker 3 (37:08):
Why do you say that.
Speaker 1 (37:09):
I thought it was I didn't come up.
Speaker 4 (37:10):
He was in the zone.
Speaker 1 (37:10):
I didn't come up for air.
Speaker 4 (37:11):
He was in the zone.
Speaker 1 (37:12):
You guys are living lives, and I was like, oh
my god, we're getting found every single day.
Speaker 5 (37:16):
Well oh yeah, I mean there was that fear, but yeah,
we were like, well we followed making videos.
Speaker 3 (37:23):
I don't know about you, but I'm feeling thirty two.
Speaker 5 (37:27):
Thirty two, we all went over to Bobby's and my
sister was there and we made a thirty two video
for my thirty second birthday.
Speaker 3 (37:35):
So that was, oh my gosh, that was twelve years ago.
Speaker 4 (37:38):
And that was a hit. And then you came out
and you're like, let's do two and I was so mad.
I'm like, Amy, we're not going. But we did it.
Speaker 5 (37:44):
We were over at Bobby's was like a port a
training port, but not a porter potty but a potty
yeah potty, a potty trainer.
Speaker 4 (37:55):
And you had Bobby and a diaper.
Speaker 3 (37:57):
And we were like, I don't know about you, but
I feel too.
Speaker 6 (38:00):
I can play it premiere. What raging idiots?
Speaker 4 (38:04):
Sam?
Speaker 1 (38:04):
Yeah, I can't get the app.
Speaker 4 (38:06):
So we're trying to take yourself. Let's make it a go.
Speaker 1 (38:09):
You're ready, wait, play this on the podcast.
Speaker 4 (38:13):
I mean, it's not really Sam Hunt, but it's parody.
It's not the parody, it's the music.
Speaker 1 (38:20):
You want to do it live? I don't know if
we can, so we better not. We don't want the
whole podcast to get shut down. Okay, dang, I have
to listen to that though. But but mother e F
and Brentwood we owned.
Speaker 4 (38:32):
Carry Underwood looking at me, Okay, oh that's original music, man, Yeah,
Eddie made the beat. Yeah sick, yeah, alright, turn me down.
Speaker 1 (38:51):
All right, let's take a break and we will come back.
So let's go around the room. First, they released because
they had to make a public the finances of Keith
Urban and Nicole Kidman and inside of those finances, and
I can read this from E Nicle. Kidman's divorce filings
(39:13):
were shedding light on her finances with Keith Urban. One
day after it was confirmed that the couple had split
after nineteen years of marriage, Nicole's lawyers prepared a child
support worksheet that was submitted as part of the custody agreement,
listing both in Nicole and Keith's monthly and come at
one hundred thousand dollars each per docs obtained by E News.
And then I saw a lot of comments like one
(39:34):
hundred thousand dollars a month, that's all they made. There's
an agreement by them to just share that amount. And
there are also so many because they make way more
than that.
Speaker 4 (39:43):
I was gonna say, I will take one hundred dollars
a month.
Speaker 1 (39:45):
But also, oh, they make way more than that. You
would take that, but they make that that significantly more
than that. One, what are the odds it's the same
exact amount from both people. Two, they don't make a
per week or per month's salary. They have jobs where
they're just popping around doing different jobs. They don't get salaries.
She may get a splash of money for this movie
or this project. Keith gets probably signs a deal with
(40:08):
a concert promoter, gets money that comes in from publishing.
Speaker 4 (40:12):
Random.
Speaker 1 (40:13):
All their money is random. There is no one hundred
thousand dollars that they can determine is the set amount
of money every month, because there is not a set
amount of money every month. Now, another thing that they
can do is they're businesses that get all the money
can actually pay them. That happens a lot. So let's
say Keith Thurbin has an LLC, what'll just call it
Keith ourbinink. He may have it set to where that
(40:34):
thing's getting paid, but he's getting one hundred thousand dollars
put into his account a month. So the odds of
them getting making the same amount of money, first of all,
every month at one hundred thousand dollars each one in
a million. And that's just not true. They make different
amounts of money, they do different kind of jobs, and
also there's not a set amount they make. So they
have with their lawyers somewhat camouflage their money because it
(41:00):
agreed upon mutually that's what they would share. You got
to go through this a bit.
Speaker 3 (41:03):
Right discovery yeah, but I can call.
Speaker 1 (41:06):
It their discovery was where you agree that discovery only
goes so far.
Speaker 3 (41:11):
Yeah, I guess you can.
Speaker 5 (41:13):
I don't need to manipulate it like that, but yeah,
I suppose you could, especially if you're like two super
famous people.
Speaker 4 (41:21):
Why is this public knowledge? Like why do why does
the finances have to be public knowledge? Divorce that's public,
It's just you can just look at it filed. Yeah, right,
It's just funny that people are so interested in that. Yeah,
are you kidding? Where we stop at a wreck? Nah?
I just look for a second, but.
Speaker 1 (41:37):
I mean again, that's a second you're looking, right, this
is this is that help to help? And also we
care about what people make. We care about the houses
of famous people. We care about when they get divorced,
we care about when they cheat, we care about anything.
That's all. We see it as entertainment because we don't
see it as real people.
Speaker 4 (41:52):
Right, But there are real people and it's got to
be tough for their whole life to be exposed like that.
Speaker 1 (41:58):
It's a trade off. But yeah, I agree, Yeah.
Speaker 3 (42:00):
Yeah, Eddie.
Speaker 5 (42:02):
Because why divorce records are generally public, Well, the freedom
of information and open courts, transparency and government accountability. I mean,
if you end up going to trial, that's when it
gets real dirty because everything's out.
Speaker 1 (42:18):
Nicole and twenty twenty four took in thirty one million dollars,
So that's cool. That's no, no, No, that's way more
than one hundred thousand dollars a month.
Speaker 4 (42:26):
It's a lot.
Speaker 1 (42:27):
Yeah, So the odds of them both making the same amount,
the odds of it coming in the same every month.
Even if they did make the same amount, people were
shocked that that's all they made. But that's not all
they make. And there are different ways that you can,
again manipulate this, and they're probably did I don't know,
did you see the keithso like certain amount of money
(42:48):
for ever year he didn't use cocaine? No, because he
had a rehab thing. Yeah, I mean he talked those
money by who Nicole, so every time he didn't use
every year. The story this morning was and I don't know,
I spent no time on it. It's also weird because
I know him.
Speaker 4 (43:03):
I know it's weird.
Speaker 1 (43:04):
And it's also why I haven't been talking about it
a whole lot, because it just feels it feels gross
because it's a real person to me, but the story
was there was a deal in there, and Mike, would
you mind looking this up?
Speaker 6 (43:16):
He has a drug clause six hundred thousand a year,
so he's.
Speaker 1 (43:19):
Owed like eleven million dollars because he hasn't used cocaine
and since that issue back in maybe twenty seventeen or.
Speaker 4 (43:24):
Something, and this is a real agreement, Like went to
a lawyer and would you.
Speaker 1 (43:28):
Mind reading that?
Speaker 9 (43:28):
Mike, Yeah, says he's earned six hundred thousand dollars for
every year, so it's at a whopping eleven million dollars.
Speaker 6 (43:35):
Wait, what since you went to rehab in two thousands.
Speaker 4 (43:38):
I'm telling my.
Speaker 3 (43:38):
Wife that, how do you.
Speaker 1 (43:41):
Well, everything can be put in a prenuptial agreement or
even a post nuptial agreement. You can put weight in
it if she gains this much weight, Uh, that's so crazy,
or if he gains this But people get married for
I know. It's just hard to erotected from different things.
Speaker 5 (43:57):
Like are you It just seems like if you already
like he already has money, so like why is he
how does getting paid for not doing it? It's like
if you want, if he wants to do it, he's
going to do it. Is the six hundred a year
really keeping him from doing it?
Speaker 3 (44:10):
Is it?
Speaker 5 (44:11):
Like, I don't know. That just seems so like something
you would do with your kids, Like, hey, you get
a reward if you Yeah, if you don't. But he's
he's high functioning, like he takes care of himself.
Speaker 1 (44:21):
It's mostly lawyers too, and it's let's say they I
don't know what kind of agreement they had, but let's
say that a pernacial agreement, which I'm sure they did
because they were both millionaires when they got married. Let's
say that happened and he had gone through this, and
maybe he gets less in the agreement if he doesn't
stay clean and in order to meet that because because
(44:44):
him not staying clean, if he weren't, would affect the
marriage and the would be a divorce, and it would
cost her money if she's making more than him. Like
it's all math in the end. But let's say he
did stay clean, which didn't affect the marriage in that way,
which was why they So therefore we're going to pay
him positive instead of the next negative that would be
getting divorced because of it and her having to pay
him out. More so legal, and it was very legal line.
(45:08):
Richie talked about that in the show I did with him.
He was like, my first wife, we got married because well,
we wanted to get married, he said. But then he
went to his pastor. And I don't want to kill
the whole story because it'll be on the Bobby Cast
probably come out next week. He was like, went to
the pastor and was like, hey, can you like help
me because I'm, you know, just got a divorce. I
don't know what to do it. And the pastor was like,
(45:28):
no one's ever gotten divorced at this church. And He's like, dang.
And so he said, I got married with one pastor,
and I have to get divorced with seventeen lawyers, and
then to get married again, we have to put all
these clauses. And it's not just like he goes and
I get it, because now you got to protect it
because there's more to protect. Man. It's like, if you
have a hut, you don't need seventeen armed people protecting it,
(45:51):
but if you have a massive castle, you have to
protect it. So it was interesting he talks about that.
Speaker 4 (45:58):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (46:00):
Also don't know how much of this Keith and Nicole
stuff is true. I know the big rumor happening now
is because they keep playing Keith singing The Fighter with
Maggie Baugh, who is playing guitar for him a little bit.
And Keith is known to sing songs like that with
his he brings people on stage. I'm sure there's video
of him singing with Natalie Stovall, who's doing most of
(46:20):
that tour with him in that way, and they're like
a song he wrote for NICOLEI singing with another woman
and we think he's cheating with her. And that's a
song where he just brings a girl on with him
to sing because there's a female park As Carrie sings
that in the original, and Keith had lived stuff all
the time. Now, I don't know that it's true or
not true because I have not asked.
Speaker 4 (46:40):
I mean I even saw an article where they were
asking her dad. Yeah, he's like, what all I know
is that she played for him, like they're professional. I
don't know anything else. But the headline was, you know,
musician's father speaks out about her relationship with Keith Urban like, okay,
headline to get you every time.
Speaker 1 (47:00):
I don't know that it's true or not true. I
don't know. I don't want to know, right, Yeah, because
if you knew, that'd be a lot for you. Sometimes
I know stuff I don't know.
Speaker 4 (47:11):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (47:14):
I have a feeling, but I don't know. No Brandon,
do you know. No, he looks scared of him because
a lot of times Brandon knows because Brandon has written
so many songs with so many people, and like, has
all these relationships.
Speaker 4 (47:31):
Well, this is what the bottom of that of that
article said too, And it's just like, Oh, everyone Nashville knows,
and I'm like, what are you talking?
Speaker 1 (47:37):
This one not true. I knew that they weren't together.
Speaker 4 (47:41):
Like the word around Nashville is like, that's what this
article said at the bottom of like the one where
they were talking to.
Speaker 1 (47:45):
Her dad like I don't know, and yeah, I don't know.
I don't know that I knew they weren't together. One
of my best friends lives next door to them, to
Keith and Nicole, and they would see Nicole walking around
the neighborhood a bunch and not recently that'd be crazy,
but she would just go for walks and she would
(48:05):
cover up headed toe. That's how they would know it
was her. Wow, because her skin is so porcelain and white,
and I'm sure she burns easy.
Speaker 4 (48:11):
Oh okay, thinking.
Speaker 1 (48:13):
Oh yeah, like no, I think, oh no, they go
to the mall. I've seen to call it the freaking mall,
walking around crazy.
Speaker 5 (48:18):
I've seen her hiking in public. You know it's her,
but she's very covered up because she doesn't want her
skin to see the sun.
Speaker 4 (48:24):
Yeow.
Speaker 1 (48:25):
Yeah, I've run into the call at the mall tough. Yes,
you have to yeah them together.
Speaker 3 (48:31):
And I mean where they live is so private she
doesn't need to cover up.
Speaker 1 (48:35):
Yeah, it's like, yeah, it's a gayor neighborhood.
Speaker 4 (48:38):
Yeah, I saw Jack White outside his house.
Speaker 1 (48:41):
I believe that that's somebody who's also very white. It's
very I've never seen Jack White in person. Yeah, I
just saw one of the yard. We've asked him to
play the Million Dollar Show a couple of times. There's
always a reason he can't. Either he's gone or maybe
he just doesn't want to. I don't know. We never
press anybody when they say no. It's always a scheduling conflict.
That's just the universal thing to say, and it could
(49:02):
be the scheduling conflict.
Speaker 4 (49:04):
But yeah, Jack White's awesome. That would be cool. I
bet like it's gotta be cool for him to like
just turn the TV on and then there's watching some
game and they're all, oh yeah, like every game you
watch their cham Nation Army is that. But you watch
a soccer game in Europe and they're like that's amazing. Yeah,
(49:26):
that's good.
Speaker 1 (49:27):
Okay, round the room, that's mine. That that one hundred
thousand dollars a month story is accurate. The story is accurate,
but people are blown away that that's all the money
they make. And I'm telling you that's not the case.
That hasn't agreed upon. This is what we're gonna submit
based on. They could be flubbing the system through they
only get paid out of their own companies a salary
(49:48):
of one hundred thousand a month. That works too, Okay, what.
Speaker 5 (49:51):
Do you Okay, So do you'all ever use the word lollygagging?
Speaker 1 (49:56):
Yes, a little bit sports wise, like our head coach
used to be like some and you know, get get
out of the huddle, that kind of stuff.
Speaker 5 (50:02):
Okay, Well, I just I was yesterday years old when
I learned it's lolly gagging, because for my entire life,
I've said lolly gaggling.
Speaker 1 (50:10):
Oh oh, I never heard of lollygaggling any means roast you.
Speaker 5 (50:14):
Mean, well, I've been saying it, and I'm like, stop lollygaggling.
Speaker 1 (50:18):
I no chance would say that here. No, we'd catch that, No,
we'd catch it.
Speaker 5 (50:22):
Okay, Well, so it came up the other day and
then so I don't know if my son said something
and it got into my head and I'm like, oh, yeah,
I'm using that word. And then, uh, yesterday my boyfriend's
son was taking a lot of time on something and
I said, stop lollly gaggling around and they all looked
at me and they were like, it's lolly gagging, and
(50:42):
I didn't believe them, and so I just looked it
up and looked up like the origin and everything. And
I was going to teach all in case because see,
Eddie's from Texas, Lunchbucks from Texas. Sometimes we say things differently,
and I didn't know of down there with lolly gaggling,
or maybe in Arkansas lolly gaggling.
Speaker 3 (50:56):
But I'm the only one.
Speaker 1 (50:57):
You're the only one, and Arkansas stuff, I guess, yeah.
Speaker 5 (51:00):
That's another one that yeah, I thought, So anyway, that's
just my I thought I would share with y'all as
a lesson. If you're saying lolly gaggling, it's completely wrong
and it's lolly gagging and it's from the mid nineteenth century.
Speaker 4 (51:13):
Yeah, could you be a lalla gagger?
Speaker 3 (51:16):
Yeah, you're a lalligagger.
Speaker 4 (51:18):
Like I tell my son what you're a lalla gagger?
Speaker 1 (51:21):
I do say that, yes, and that's tense.
Speaker 4 (51:22):
Yeah, And every time I said him like, that doesn't
sound right, but that's right.
Speaker 5 (51:25):
I look lowell is to drop a rest idly lull
l o l l lull like I would say to
your son, you're a lalla gaggler. Like now, so that's
your lesson for the day essentially, Hey.
Speaker 1 (51:38):
You're a gagger?
Speaker 4 (51:39):
Ohent that different?
Speaker 3 (51:42):
No no, no, no, no, but that's our word of
the day.
Speaker 1 (51:44):
In syncs, Lance, Joey, JC, and Chris are exploring an
arena tour. So that's in sync. Wanting to go back
out but no Justin And so the question is, and
this is according to TMZ, the four have been discussing
in arena tour after Justin Timberlake declined to participate in
earlier offers from Live Nation. In a ag can they
sell arenas without Justin Timberlake.
Speaker 3 (52:06):
For nostalgia.
Speaker 1 (52:08):
It's only nostalgia. What's maybe what's an arena number? Thirty thousand, ten,
ten to twelve? I think and be bigger. But the
only reason people are going to go is nostalgia.
Speaker 5 (52:17):
Right, So, but I'm thinking of the age group of
the nostalt people are probably like in their forties. They're
looking for something to do, be fun, to get your
girlfriends together and go back.
Speaker 3 (52:27):
You can yeah, yeah, they can do it.
Speaker 1 (52:31):
I'm gonna go. No, because tickets are too expensive.
Speaker 3 (52:33):
Oh how much are they charging?
Speaker 1 (52:35):
No, they're just generally tickets.
Speaker 3 (52:37):
Are too generally. Okay, I was about to say, I
was thinking.
Speaker 1 (52:41):
Justin sings so many leads on those songs Justin and
JC that a lot of those songs aren't even being
sang by the same person Dan.
Speaker 4 (52:49):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (52:50):
So my point to this is Justin Timberlake, stop, you're
not so cool to not tour then sync.
Speaker 4 (52:55):
But he's not even really singing, right because the Lime is.
Speaker 5 (53:00):
Yeah yeah, he was just having the crowd sing.
Speaker 4 (53:03):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (53:04):
No, But I'm saying, well, he shows lollygaggon.
Speaker 1 (53:08):
He's trying to say I didn't know people, and I'm
not saying he's doing this so I'd like to say
that first and foremost, I am never going to illness watch.
I don't know what you have going on. You could
be you could have the worst lime disease ever or
no lime disease.
Speaker 4 (53:23):
Oh, I got you.
Speaker 1 (53:24):
I didn't realize so many people were using lime disease
as an excuse to get out of stuff. I'm not
saying he is, but that where he's like he was
getting crushed online for not singing it out of shows,
and then out comes the excuse of lime disease. An
excuse can be a real reason too, Like I wasn't
able to run a four or five forty because I
had a broken leg. That's my excuse. That's real. Yeah,
(53:44):
So he said he had lime disease, and then all
the story started to be look at all these other
people who have lime disease. They're using it to get
out of stuff, because you were, like, it's so different
for everybody that you can just say it. Don't know
that he's doing that.
Speaker 4 (53:58):
That's a bad one, man. Lime disease is a bad one.
That just make it, does you know? I don't. You
can make up a broken leg, you can't prove it.
Just wear a cast now you can prove a broken leg.
I would say, it's the opposite of what you're saying.
But the lime disease like that's really like hurts people,
like yes, but so so faking it that's one way
ticket to to hell.
Speaker 1 (54:16):
You think making a broken leg, that's you don't go
to hell for broken leg.
Speaker 4 (54:21):
Now you see people with neck braces, like.
Speaker 5 (54:23):
Have you seen the people with lime disease that get
put the bees.
Speaker 3 (54:26):
In the rack and get stung?
Speaker 1 (54:28):
Is for therapy or the reason I would say about
the lime disease, it's so it affects everybody so differently.
Some people can have lime disease and be moderately or
a little affected. In some it runs their whole life. Yes,
and they can't quite figure out how to even diagnose
the symptoms because the symptoms change. And so because it
is such a very there's such a variation of how
(54:50):
people are affected by it, it's easier to claim.
Speaker 4 (54:52):
You have it.
Speaker 5 (54:54):
Yeah, this was a lot of autoimmune stuff for even
long COVID.
Speaker 4 (54:57):
Sure, yeah, you know. And is it all from a
or is there other ways to get lime?
Speaker 1 (55:02):
It's a great question that I don't have extensive lime
disease knowledge I have one family member this had it
and one friend this had it, and they were so different.
One friend that had it wasn't even affected, like occasionally
sometimes he would get like a coal or some mine
like nothing, and the other one debilitating.
Speaker 3 (55:19):
Either of them do the bee therapy?
Speaker 1 (55:20):
No, tell me about that.
Speaker 5 (55:22):
Well, I've just seen videos of people where they have
bees sting their back, like along their vertebrae, like it's
almost like a line, and they I don't know, they
have a partner or a friend or spouse whatever, and
they take the bee and put the stinger in the
back and stings them and then I don't know how
many they have to do it once. But the venom
is that what comes out of a bee. It's supposed
(55:43):
to be healing.
Speaker 1 (55:46):
Lime disease is a bacterial infection transmitted to humans through
the bite of infected black leg deer ticks. So it
doesn't say multiple. I thought there'd be other ways to
get it. So all these people got bit by ticks.
The bacteria that cause lime disease, which is I'm not
gonna try it, are spread by black legged ticks. Wow,
(56:07):
I would have sure thought there would have been more ways
to get lime disease. Wow, because it's a lot of
people getting it. I don't think they're in the woods.
Speaker 4 (56:15):
Yeah. I wonder if like if a tick bites an
animal and then the animal bites you. I don't think so.
I don't think the bacteria transfers like that.
Speaker 5 (56:23):
Apparently BBT be venom therapy is a controversial.
Speaker 4 (56:28):
It is I and I was going to tell you
why I have a problem with it. I have a
problem with it because of what the beef therapy.
Speaker 1 (56:33):
Go ahead, BVT BBT, because yeah, it sounds very controversial.
I thought it was like nutty. I thought that was
just known that was a nutty thing to do. I
never thought like, oh, this is universal now.
Speaker 4 (56:42):
That this is a problem because bees only have one
sting in them and they die.
Speaker 1 (56:46):
Yeah, so you're worried about killing the beople.
Speaker 4 (56:47):
I mean that is so rude to take the bees
life just because you want to cure your eddie.
Speaker 5 (56:52):
We do things like that all the time when things
were superior.
Speaker 1 (56:55):
To But we shouldn't be superior. That's a rude word
to you.
Speaker 4 (56:58):
We already eat their honey, actually superior.
Speaker 3 (57:00):
Well, Eddie, do you eat meat to survive?
Speaker 4 (57:04):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (57:05):
You think you're superioor do you kill a cow just
and it's not even to save your life, because there's
alternative that's to live, but you don't have to eat
meat to live.
Speaker 1 (57:14):
Some would say, yeah, I would disagree with that. You
can get lime disease without it says remember because I
looked up can you get lime disease without a tick bite?
And it says yes, you can get lime disease without
remembering a tick bite. Because the ticks that transmit the
disease are very small, it can easily be missed. So
it really didn't answer the question. I asked, huh.
Speaker 4 (57:36):
I think the first thing you said is I mean,
but the only way you can get it anyway.
Speaker 1 (57:39):
A lot of people predicted, No, not predicted. A lot
of people speculated that he was just lazy at the
shows and use it as an excuse. I don't know
if that's the case. I don't I would bet it's
not the case if I were betting. But there was
a wholess of celebrities that all of a sudden had
lime disease. Do you have the list?
Speaker 4 (57:59):
Oh?
Speaker 9 (57:59):
No, I was saying, you can't get it without a
tick bite. Yeah, it has to be on your body.
For at least twenty four hours to transmit the bacteria
the tick.
Speaker 1 (58:06):
It's like a bomb in a movie. And if you
pull it before the bomb goes off.
Speaker 5 (58:09):
Yeah, you can't get it to person in person contact mosquitoes,
fleas flies, you can't food, water, you cannot pet to person.
Speaker 3 (58:15):
You cannot unless you have a pet tick.
Speaker 4 (58:17):
So it's accurate. Every time I've heard someone say they
have limes de's, I'm always just like, dang, they were
in the woods like.
Speaker 1 (58:22):
Celebs with lime disease. I looked it up. Justin bieber Avelvin,
Shania Twain, Amy Schumer, Ben Still or Belahadide I like Baldwin,
Kelly Osbourne, Kelly Flanning and Debbie Gibson. Justin Timberlake, Yolanda Hadid,
Fletcher Riley, Daryl Hall, Ramona saying Chris Kostoff for something,
he's dead. It's a lot of celebrities. Are they all camping?
Speaker 6 (58:40):
Okay?
Speaker 3 (58:40):
Why right?
Speaker 4 (58:41):
Are they all going on hikes? Like?
Speaker 1 (58:42):
Where are they hi from? Marketsall? We had ticks everywhere
and I can't understand anybody where I'm from getting lime disease.
Speaker 4 (58:48):
But if you play golf, dude, you go looking for
your ball. You can get a tick.
Speaker 3 (58:52):
Oh, here we go, Bobby. I have an answer.
Speaker 1 (58:54):
Maybe probably so wrong about all this, but I'm not
committed to being right.
Speaker 3 (58:57):
On this, but I do have an answer.
Speaker 1 (59:00):
I just don't believe anything anybody says. Go ahead, okay.
Speaker 5 (59:03):
The reason why celebrities may appear to have higher lime
disease is because increased awareness. They often have access to
healthcare professionals and may be more aware of the symptoms
and risks, and they get actually diagnosed, whereas other people
might be walking around with it and they don't have
the resources to diagnose it because it is so difficult.
Speaker 1 (59:22):
I understand that that's how people know more about it,
but you don't get it just A lime disease is
different because you have to get it from an animal.
Speaker 3 (59:28):
I understand.
Speaker 5 (59:29):
I'm saying more people probably have it than we realize
in gen.
Speaker 1 (59:32):
Pottles, but I'm not talking about gen pop. I'm talking
about celebrities. That was the opertaty in the list of
celebrities and they still or an avri lavine have lime disease.
Speaker 3 (59:40):
It says here too.
Speaker 5 (59:41):
It could be lifestyle factors because celebrities may spend more
time out out course, now.
Speaker 4 (59:45):
We're talking celebrities spend more time outdoors.
Speaker 3 (59:47):
Celebrities often travel to different parts of the world.
Speaker 1 (59:50):
Like the difference in something like lime disease, which is
given to you by a tick biting you, and autism
what you're born with. I think that is the answer
for autism. Why are there more people they are autistic?
Because we understand more about it now, we understand the
spectrum is now even opened up. More doctors know more
about it, they can diagnose the healthcare So that's why
(01:00:12):
there's more people with autism than there is. Line disease.
Line disease you get at sixteen years old, at thirty
one years old. You don't get autism at thirty one
years old, although I think of adult we do a
little bit, a little bit of bit. It's just a
test I took to told me that. So I think
that's the answer for something like autism. And they're like,
with so many people have autism? No, no, no, we understand
(01:00:32):
more about it. We've actually opened up the spectrum a
lot more. There's way more education going into it. There
are kids that twenty years ago would never have been
diagnosed autism. They just would have been weird. But now
that there's a greater understanding, that's why the numbers are bigger.
Speaker 4 (01:00:50):
And title duh causing it?
Speaker 1 (01:00:53):
Yeah, all of it. Maybe I took talent on a
whole bunch, maybe like age sixteen. Uh. The line disease
thing is a little fishy to me. Not that people
have it or don't have it, but all of a
sudden celebrities get it and they use it as an
excuse to get out of stuff.
Speaker 4 (01:01:08):
They travel a lot.
Speaker 3 (01:01:11):
Yeah, there's lots of reasons why it could be here.
I don't know what's true what's not true?
Speaker 4 (01:01:15):
Hey, but you know you know what. Nothing's true until
it is, that's it.
Speaker 1 (01:01:19):
Don't believe anything. So if I'm being honest, we're AI
right now. We're not even real. We figured out a
way to go in, push a button and just do
this so work.
Speaker 3 (01:01:28):
Like we would know more?
Speaker 4 (01:01:29):
So where are we?
Speaker 3 (01:01:30):
We would know more if we were AI.
Speaker 1 (01:01:31):
We know so much that we can't reveal all that
we know because people would know that we are AI.
So we have to still be dumb a bit like we.
Speaker 5 (01:01:38):
Oh so we just RAI is programmed to be like,
hold on, let me google that, yes, slowly gaggling yes.
Speaker 4 (01:01:45):
I've been saying that, all right, that is exactly right, yeah, Eddie, Yeah,
so bad news for people that still have AOL dial
up service. After thirty years, they finally said no more.
They said that there were only two hundred thousand, around
two hundred thousand users in the world that still use
(01:02:06):
AOL dial up.
Speaker 1 (01:02:07):
I saw they went bankrupt. Well, belly up, they said
in the article.
Speaker 4 (01:02:11):
Yeah, they said that the service, like you can still
have your AOL account, so lunchbots, I don't know if
you still have your ale account, like that's still good,
Like none of that will change. But if you have
the AOL dial up service where you connect the motive
who has dial up though, even if it's not, that's
what I'm saying, they said it was. I'm so surprised
that two hundred thousand, two hundred thousand people and they're
just out of luck because they shut it down. It's
(01:02:33):
over that, dude.
Speaker 1 (01:02:35):
That is a good run.
Speaker 4 (01:02:36):
That changed the world.
Speaker 1 (01:02:37):
AOL as a messenger was a game changer.
Speaker 4 (01:02:39):
For now that I think in semester might still be around.
Speaker 1 (01:02:41):
Oh I'm sure, but that was a game changer in
general with being able to talk to people. That was
the first messaging service I ever had. My name was
radio Bobby.
Speaker 4 (01:02:50):
It was awesome.
Speaker 1 (01:02:51):
You dialed up Scotty dialed up some. But oddly my
name is radio Bobby before I was ever on the radio.
That's crazy, that's foreshadowing well what I was gonna do.
That's crazy that you knew you were gonna do. Like,
what if, like you didn't do that? What have you
just changed treen names?
Speaker 4 (01:03:08):
Well? Yeah, good point. Yeah, Radiobby wouldn't be such a.
Speaker 1 (01:03:11):
Big I mean, I wasn't like I was like, it's
crazy though it didn't work out, but yeah, that's that
sounded dumb.
Speaker 3 (01:03:17):
Change the handle.
Speaker 4 (01:03:19):
But dude, remember those the CDs and they would give
them out and you'd be like, cool, I have two
hundred three hours of dial up service.
Speaker 1 (01:03:26):
I think I'm more surprised that two hundred thousand people
still have dial up than I am. Two dred thousan
people still had AOL.
Speaker 3 (01:03:31):
Did you say it in the whole world?
Speaker 4 (01:03:33):
Yeah, the customers period all over the world that had
dial up does AOL?
Speaker 1 (01:03:38):
They still provide services out of America.
Speaker 4 (01:03:40):
Well maybe it's America Online, right, So maybe I don't
know that's why, but you can say that. But you
can say that though, because like if the Chiefs win
the Super Bowl, they are the world champions even though
they played just Americans.
Speaker 1 (01:03:52):
No, no, I know, but AOL probably was international. But
in my head, I think of America Online, so it's
only America.
Speaker 3 (01:03:58):
Maybe it was that what AOL stands.
Speaker 4 (01:03:59):
For Erica Online.
Speaker 3 (01:04:01):
I never knew that. No, I just get in my A.
I said to say that.
Speaker 1 (01:04:06):
We blame everything we say that. I'd like to say,
I think I've said a bunch of stupid stuff this hour. Yes,
and I'm just like speculating a bunch of crap. That's
my AI doing that.
Speaker 4 (01:04:14):
But see that's stupid. Why would my A I want
to be dyslexic and have this calculations.
Speaker 1 (01:04:19):
To show you have flaws and an AI shouldn't have flaws.
Speaker 4 (01:04:23):
You're one of the people the AI is acting like,
I'm I'm flaw. I have flaws even though it's perfect.
Speaker 1 (01:04:30):
Yes, it's so purple at being real. It's presenting flaws.
Speaker 4 (01:04:33):
That's like you're dumb your AI. That goes m let
me think she already knows.
Speaker 3 (01:04:39):
No, that's she's stalling.
Speaker 4 (01:04:41):
She's not stalling, it's immediate.
Speaker 3 (01:04:44):
Oh well, then it's so annoying.
Speaker 1 (01:04:46):
Speech patterns they have learned.
Speaker 4 (01:04:49):
She says, uh like.
Speaker 5 (01:04:53):
Oh, well, that's an interesting question, lunchbox.
Speaker 2 (01:04:57):
This one's gonna hurt. There was a woman who was
breastfeeding her son right before bedtime and she gets done.
She looks down and she's bleeding. The sun had accidentally
bit her nipple. It was hanging by a thread.
Speaker 4 (01:05:10):
She rushed to the er.
Speaker 3 (01:05:11):
How old is kid?
Speaker 4 (01:05:13):
And how many teeth full teeth does the kid have?
Speaker 2 (01:05:17):
It doesn't say, It doesn't give a teeth count.
Speaker 4 (01:05:20):
But how old was a kid?
Speaker 7 (01:05:23):
She said?
Speaker 2 (01:05:24):
She thought she was gonna get stitches, but nope, They
just put a bandage on it and said, don't worry,
it'll go back.
Speaker 1 (01:05:28):
Do you have an ideot how old the kid was?
Speaker 2 (01:05:31):
Uh no, it doesn't say.
Speaker 3 (01:05:33):
AI was like act like good morning now.
Speaker 2 (01:05:37):
But it has a picture of me.
Speaker 7 (01:05:38):
He looks young.
Speaker 3 (01:05:39):
He looks young, fifteen months he was.
Speaker 1 (01:05:42):
You found it, You found his story, and then you
found the answer.
Speaker 5 (01:05:44):
That's part of the AI, that's part of our things.
So mom's fifteen month old son bites her nipple off
a breastmeting.
Speaker 4 (01:05:52):
Just this whole thing.
Speaker 9 (01:05:53):
Fat Amy found it, found the story and it's literally
the headline.
Speaker 2 (01:05:59):
It's not in the headline. It says mom goes there
after her son been off half her nipple y breastfeeding.
It doesn't say on the headline, thank you people?
Speaker 6 (01:06:06):
Do I call mom's fifteen month old time?
Speaker 4 (01:06:08):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (01:06:09):
Sorry, sorry, I'm on the New York Post, so my
my headline does not have.
Speaker 4 (01:06:12):
It fifteen months? Hold on, let me do that. A
year and a year?
Speaker 3 (01:06:16):
Three months?
Speaker 1 (01:06:17):
Did you go a year and shady? You need to
turn your AI setting to be a little smarter? Is
it just a little like frequents.
Speaker 3 (01:06:24):
That just a little you need to be that rele?
Speaker 4 (01:06:30):
Good morning?
Speaker 1 (01:06:32):
All right, what do you what do you have going
on this weekend?
Speaker 3 (01:06:35):
State?
Speaker 1 (01:06:36):
Baby?
Speaker 3 (01:06:36):
Let's go, we're going to State.
Speaker 5 (01:06:38):
I'm telling y'all, I've not been a sports mom, whereas
the kid's been really great at something. So it's totally
I totally get it.
Speaker 4 (01:06:45):
Now, do you know what you're doing? Though? Like like
whenever you're like, hey, don't run because the day before no,
I don't say.
Speaker 5 (01:06:52):
You never know the coach, No, the coach says it,
and then also like it, yeah, his dad saying stuff,
my boyfriend who ran track in college, like very like
he's and is very dialed in like his kids athletics.
Like he's getting tips from other people, not just me,
and I'm following.
Speaker 3 (01:07:06):
I just reiterate.
Speaker 5 (01:07:07):
I reiterate what I hear from the other people, and
I try to just encourage and I want to work
on the mental I'm just pumping them up, like I'm
so excited.
Speaker 3 (01:07:17):
It's nine am tomorrow Clarksville.
Speaker 1 (01:07:21):
That's fun. It's exciting.
Speaker 6 (01:07:22):
It is.
Speaker 4 (01:07:24):
Yeah. Games, we have basketball games all day. It's like
the start of the fall season. I guess we have
basketball games all day Saturday because all three of my
boys are playing. Is it?
Speaker 1 (01:07:34):
Listen? Just I know you love your kids.
Speaker 4 (01:07:38):
I love them.
Speaker 1 (01:07:38):
You can't get enough? Are you annoyed? Sometimes you can't
watch college football?
Speaker 4 (01:07:43):
Well, have it on their phone. Technology has helped a
lot with that all the dads, So yeah, we all
kind of have our phones up. So me and a
couple of other dads have like lined up, like are
you get the Alabama game? I'll get this game, and
you get Old Miss game, and we put them all
next to each other.
Speaker 1 (01:07:58):
But are you a little annoyed you can't like dedicate
yourself off to a single game.
Speaker 4 (01:08:01):
Yes, yeah, but I can watch the night games, Like
we're usually home by like six o'clock, everything's over, so
I can watch all the night games. But yeah, man,
and then Sundays now, like they're like, oh, we got
practice on Sundays at noon, Like the Cowboys play at noon.
We're gonna have to figure something out. Usually my wife
takes takes the kids to practice. Really yeah, because you
want to watch the Cowboys, which they're playing at noon,
(01:08:21):
and then I mean the whole day revolves around the Cowboys.
Like if they play at noon, we got to go
to church at eight in the morning.
Speaker 1 (01:08:26):
Oh, you manipulate your schedule based on that. I never
saw a modification of Cowboys.
Speaker 4 (01:08:30):
If the Cowboys play at at three, we can go
to late church, it's no big deal. But if they
play at noon, we got to be out of church
by ten o'clock because I got to be home.
Speaker 1 (01:08:37):
We gotta gotta warm up.
Speaker 4 (01:08:38):
Yes, you gotta get my work done. I gotta get
food going.
Speaker 1 (01:08:41):
All that lunch walk were done.
Speaker 2 (01:08:44):
My kids got soccer games tomorrow. That's all I know about.
Speaker 5 (01:08:49):
See, this is what you have to look forward to,
games running soccer, basketball.
Speaker 1 (01:08:56):
I'll be one hundred Who cares you're.
Speaker 3 (01:08:58):
Not going to be a hundred.
Speaker 4 (01:08:59):
I've seen some of those days.
Speaker 3 (01:09:00):
You're gonna be like fifty five.
Speaker 1 (01:09:05):
Arkansas is not playing this weekend to buy? They have
a yes, not really a bye bye would be in
a tournament, but a bye week, right, bye week.
Speaker 3 (01:09:15):
That's what they called it when Notre Dame.
Speaker 1 (01:09:17):
Was idle idol. They are idle. Yeah officially, yeah, sure
they have a bye week, but by mostly is like
a free a free entrance into the next round if
it's a bye, like a tournament by.
Speaker 4 (01:09:31):
Yeah yeah yeah, like like the Brewers would be on
a bye.
Speaker 1 (01:09:34):
They gotta buy, they got to buy. They have, but
they play Saturday. Well the Cubs play Saturday tomorrow. Uh,
and Arkansas doesn't play. And I really gotta figure out
if'm gonna be able to get Chicago go to go to
a game the Cubs game.
Speaker 3 (01:09:50):
Mhm, obviously.
Speaker 5 (01:09:53):
I mean that post.
Speaker 4 (01:09:56):
Season's tough though, right, Like to get tickets for yes,
I mean like good tickets, yes, like where you got
a little insider, yes, connection, yes, but you.
Speaker 1 (01:10:08):
Can get any ticket million dollar man style.
Speaker 3 (01:10:12):
What does that mean?
Speaker 1 (01:10:13):
Everybody's got a price, that's what the million dollar man
you say, Ted Tobiassi. Everybody's got a price. You can
buy any ticket on a secondhand, second secondary site, stub
hub whatever for any price. But also I have pretty
good connections there that I think I could get it.
Speaker 4 (01:10:31):
I could do. Okay. Have you ever sung the seventh
inning stretch?
Speaker 1 (01:10:35):
No?
Speaker 4 (01:10:35):
I have not. That's a goal.
Speaker 1 (01:10:37):
Well. We went to the game last time and I
was like, hey, we're going up, Me and Eddie and
George Burge was just US three and Morgan. That's right,
Morgan won. I said we're going up, and a friend said,
are you singing? I said no. For some reason, they
they didn't ask, didn't ask me to say. And I
(01:10:57):
was a little perplexed because we'd always been trying to
find like the right time for me to go up
and do that kind of stuff. I've thrown the first
pitch out before, and it was like, that's weird to say. Yeah,
and then we get there and it's it's ladies' night,
oh and all it was all women doing everything.
Speaker 4 (01:11:11):
Yeah, it made sense.
Speaker 1 (01:11:11):
It was thrown out the first pitch, it was singing
seventh any stretch, were like, oh, yeah, I'm smarts. Even
let me in nationalism.
Speaker 5 (01:11:17):
It was all.
Speaker 1 (01:11:18):
The whole thing was lady's night. Uh yeah, so Arkansas's
not playing. Oh, we're having a like a like a
game night ish thing at the house tonight as long
as my wife feels good and people coming over for that.
I don't know what we're gonna play, but that's what's up.
Anything else.
Speaker 4 (01:11:36):
Everybody feel good?
Speaker 1 (01:11:37):
Great man A right, you guys, have a good weekend.
We'll see you guys on Monday. By everybody,