Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, today is the longest day of the year. Summer
officially starts today, and that means it's also the longest
day of the year. The summer solstice takes place tonight
at exactly ten forty two pm Eastern Time, and then
after this weekend the days will start getting a bit
shorter until the winter solstice on December twenty. First, it's
felt long today. It's still mornings. I know what.
Speaker 2 (00:21):
The mornings just felt long. Maybe it's part of the
longest day of the year.
Speaker 1 (00:24):
Are you drunk? No, I'm going with your story, Amy
for you as summer started yet?
Speaker 3 (00:31):
Ah?
Speaker 1 (00:31):
Yeah, as you're decided by kids in school.
Speaker 4 (00:34):
Yes, and they got out like May twentieth or something,
So summer is been going for a month.
Speaker 1 (00:42):
Yeah. I think mine is Memorial Day. That's the official
start of summer in my mind. So it's already been
summer as far as when, because when I declare is
when I start summer in correct, be's rained every freaking day.
It feels more like spring. And Seattle. Thank you, thank you, everybody,
thank you for the feedback.
Speaker 4 (01:00):
Well, I've never been to Seattle during any time.
Speaker 1 (01:02):
Oh, I never been to Seattle. Do you know that song. Nope,
but I really nothing. No, Now that comes to mind
when I say that, Eldy not nothing. Oh I never bitten.
I don't matter. I studies found that recycling should have
a lottery. I studied found more people would recycle if
(01:23):
you made a lottery system. Instead of tens as the bottle,
you gave people a one in ten thousand chance of
winning one thousand dollars. The result was a forty seven
percent bump in recycling rates. Oh that's cool. Like you
give people a chance to win something substantial, but you
don't give them all the little things, and you make
more money. And then a few people make a lot
of money with the chance though there's a chance. That's
how the lottery gets people. They give them a chance
(01:47):
for something.
Speaker 4 (01:47):
You're seeing, there's a chance.
Speaker 1 (01:49):
Yeah. So I used to recycle the crap out of
some cans for money. Yeah, as a kid. I remember
I bought a Connect four game. Recycled all summer, turn
them all in. Thought I was going to get like
a million dollars. You got like I got like four dollars.
And then I bought a Connect four game and that
was my reward for picking up cans all summer, taking
all these trash bags in. Would you crush the cans
(02:10):
to do you have a can?
Speaker 2 (02:11):
Ye?
Speaker 1 (02:11):
Sure? No? Out of my foot the foot, Yeah, there
was no can crusher. There was the body, human body,
put all that work into it and bought a Connect
four game. What kind of crap is that? Amy? Your story?
Speaker 4 (02:23):
Well, I have a list of freebies you can get
if it's your birthday, because my son's birthday is coming up.
It's so crazy that this summer, well, towards the end
of the summer though, he's seen me turning fifteen.
Speaker 1 (02:35):
Yeah, he looks like a young adult. It is wild
him striding out on your treadmill when he was working
out inside because it was raining that that was the
first time that it looked like an adult. Yeah, because
he was like physically striding long to run and his
body just looked long like an adult. And I was like, dang,
(02:57):
like he's getting.
Speaker 4 (02:58):
Yeah, and I'm out of him. He's really excelling at
track and cross country, like I think, and he's still
going to be in junior high but I think by
the time he gets to high school, I'm like, we
could we could have a little track star on our hands.
Speaker 1 (03:11):
Well, so sports is so good at just developing discipline,
even if you're not going to do it outside of
high school, like if you embrace it in high school.
Like there are things that I took from playing high
school football that have nothing to do with football because
I was never athletic enough. I'm not a Scuba Steve
who if a couple of things had gone right, I'd
have been in the NBA. According to Scuba Steve, and
(03:32):
he stands by this, he could have played the NBA.
And I think regardless if everything goes right, Yeah, dude,
do you have a day?
Speaker 5 (03:39):
Were talking about how you could work really hard to
become a dunker, just so I can work really hard
to become an NBA player.
Speaker 1 (03:44):
There's no difference there is. There are guys that can
dunk the crap out of the ball who can't sniff
the NBA. And also that wasn't my full analogy. However,
there was no chance, even if everything would have fallen
exactly right for you or for me, that you could
have played the NBA. I don't know. Do You didn't
know me back then, so I don't know, and it
doesn't matter. And I've seen his son play, his son,
(04:06):
his sounds pretty good, Scuba. How tall are you? I
am six foot one.
Speaker 6 (04:10):
Oh my, were you shooting like two thousand jump shots
a day? Or how many were you taking?
Speaker 3 (04:15):
Like?
Speaker 5 (04:16):
I mean also my backyard as a kid, this is
back when parents are still married. We had a basketball
court in the backyard and I used to play every
single day, no matter what, after school, weekends, everything. So
I don't even count probably thousands of millions of shots.
Speaker 1 (04:29):
I think if you would have stuck to it and
had a lot of conditions fall exactly right, you could
have been a D two bench ballplayer. I said bench
by the way, but that's college ball, dude.
Speaker 5 (04:39):
But sometimes those guys they come through, like the Jeremy
Lynz where the Mac McClung's and they come out of nowhere.
Speaker 1 (04:45):
Yeah, he's in the G League and he just plays,
but he was one. He started D one, but then
he worked his way. He works in the G League,
but then he gone.
Speaker 5 (04:52):
He's with the Magic where he does get called up
every once in a while, but he's in that space.
Speaker 1 (04:55):
You're not MC, but I could have been Mac McClung.
Speaker 4 (04:58):
No, who is Mac mcclong.
Speaker 1 (05:01):
Well, Mac mclung. He ended up a Texas Tech. As
college career, he played three different schools, I think, and
he went to Slam Dot Contest every year. A small
white guy, you can dunk like crazy, he can jump
so high. Yeah, and Scuba is him according to Scuba. Yeah,
well Scuba, why couldn't you? Why Why didn't Did your
dreams fall short? What happened?
Speaker 7 (05:19):
Then?
Speaker 5 (05:19):
My parents got a divorce and it just crumbled me
and I had to become an adult at the age
of nine instead of a kid. And and then you know,
I still tried working at it, but we lost our
house and just fell into a lot of crap. And unfortunately,
my priorities then flipped to help my mom out. And
also my confidence wasn't what it used to be. The yeah,
always living in my head. So I feel like life
(05:41):
short changed me. But it worked out for the better
because other things happen, and now here I am so.
Speaker 1 (05:44):
Oh no, no, the better would have been you'd be an
NBA star than this, for sure, no doubt about it. Yeah, No,
I did not if NBA was one of the options
that wins.
Speaker 4 (05:53):
What if he made it to the NBA but he wasn't.
Still you make millions of dollars even if you're a.
Speaker 1 (05:58):
Bench yesands the best paying, highest skilled.
Speaker 4 (06:05):
Okay, hear me O on this. What if scubahead gone
that direction and then you know, had so much money
and then hurt his ankle and then got hooked on
some drugs and then.
Speaker 1 (06:18):
My car.
Speaker 4 (06:20):
Is this still could be the better path? Like, just
because you have a bunch of money doesn't mean.
Speaker 1 (06:24):
Well, we're assuming scuba could have made the NBA. I'm
removing that assumption. None of us are athletic enough to
have played pro sports. You there is the perfect mix
of you have to be this athletic and have this
amount of drive ambition, want to circumstances, be in the
right place with the right training, or put yourself in
(06:45):
there like it has to be this the Venn diagram,
the two circles are almost on top of each other
because it is so rare. It's rarer to be a
professional athlete than like a Victoria's Secret model. Wow, yeah,
something like that sounds good. It's one of those two.
Or maybe it's rare to be a Victori's Secret but
it's close.
Speaker 2 (07:03):
I think so, because there are less victoria Secret models
than that there are athletes. Professional athletes.
Speaker 4 (07:07):
Yes, it's only one brand and there's a million teams.
Speaker 1 (07:10):
Right, right, but maybe just a suit a model. I
see what you're saying. Yeah, there's no way Scuba would
have made the NBA even if every circumstance was right.
Just like I'm not playing pro baseball, You're not. I'm
gonna be a pro golfer. Probably what happened to you
that you're not playing pro baseball? Even if everything would
have gone right, I did not have the athletic ability
(07:32):
to even with the greatest of work ethic I did
not have the athletic ability to make it to that
pro level. Could I have probably played college had everything
gone right and I was able to put everything into it. Yes,
but life happens, and that it'd have been low college,
not even Division one. Like, let's not play because I
was a good high school player. But there's a difference
in a good high school player and even a medium
(07:54):
Division two player. So no, I did not have that
athletic ability. So no, not an option. You did shine
at that celebrity All Star game. The adult version of
me is much better than the kid version of me.
Oh really, Yeah, I'm much more focused then. I'm focused
on sports. School survival eating Yeah, like scupa survival. But
(08:17):
there's no way he would have been an NBA player.
There's just no way.
Speaker 4 (08:20):
Y'all are probably even think this is so lame, But
you want to know a picture the other day of
I don't know why this is just chopped in my
head about dunking and like that. It's I didn't know
my boyfriend could dunk, and he and it's kind of hot.
Speaker 1 (08:36):
He can still dunk. There's no way he can do
How old is he?
Speaker 4 (08:38):
Okay, fine, he can't still. But I saw a picture
of him dunking in high school. But he dunked. He's
sixth Street. That's like he could dunk, like.
Speaker 1 (08:46):
You're hooking up a Palu McCarney but putting a picture
the Beatles in the sixties over but I mean, none
of us could dunk in high school.
Speaker 4 (08:52):
That was pretty crazy that he could dunk, and I
because I didn't believe him, and he was like, oh,
there's a picture, like yeah, there's proof. And because his
son was talking about dunking in it. Right now, the
way his sun is growing, his son's probably gonna be
taller than him. And he's trying to work on basketball
big time and anyway, I was like, dang, you could
dunk because I didn't because he I guess also with
(09:13):
age because you asked his age. He's fifty two. He's
sort of fifty two. Only did you think he was older?
Speaker 6 (09:20):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (09:20):
Yeah, I thought he was a lot older.
Speaker 4 (09:22):
It's because of his beard. I like his beard, but
he's like, if he were to shave his beard, he's
just way older.
Speaker 1 (09:28):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (09:28):
I don't think he had told us he was fifty
five or fifty six, but I don't know.
Speaker 4 (09:32):
He's fifty two, and he's annoyed because I really like
his beard. But he's like, you do realize this is
aging me by like a many years because his beard
is so gray.
Speaker 1 (09:40):
But if his woman likes it, who cares.
Speaker 4 (09:42):
But I like the beard, but he's like, you know,
if I shave, I'm going to look way younger.
Speaker 1 (09:47):
A minimum NBA salary right now for a rookie minimum
salary is a million one and that's rookie, not even
top draft picked like that. So Scuba could be a
multi millionaire.
Speaker 5 (09:59):
Right when I would have been in the league as
a rookie, I think it was around like four hundred thousand,
five hundred thousand.
Speaker 1 (10:03):
You probably got a three year deal though. Yeah, and
you'd invested that money wisely. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (10:07):
Yeah, and four hundred thousand was worth a lot more
back then.
Speaker 1 (10:11):
Totally. Yeah. You buy a beautiful house in Orlando for
like one hundred thousand, right, flipped, flipped. That house.
Speaker 5 (10:19):
Could have been turned into a reality TV star. Who
knows what could happen.
Speaker 1 (10:23):
It's good, But you really don't think you could have
played in the NBA, right, No.
Speaker 5 (10:26):
I really do think, especially if you talk to me
about yet. I was working towards it. I was in
the Junior NBA. We were one of the teams that
played at the Arena. I was on a great team.
We had, we had a good system going and we
were going to build ourselves up and then just keep
moving forward.
Speaker 6 (10:38):
Do you know why they had the junior NBA team
play at the arena so your parents would buy tickets
to the game.
Speaker 5 (10:43):
No, we have free tickets, and we were and we
were the ones that were the best in out in
the state and played there.
Speaker 1 (10:47):
No, they needed time to fill it halftime.
Speaker 5 (10:50):
Now we played before the game.
Speaker 1 (10:51):
They couldn't give enough. I do think the Arena is
one of the great names.
Speaker 5 (10:56):
Dude, it's the greatest.
Speaker 1 (10:57):
It's the greatest name for an arena in Orlando. The arena.
You're thinking that guy doesn't know how to say arena. No,
not true. It's the arena because of Orlando, or it
was right Scuba, it was not anymore. It was Yeah,
they have.
Speaker 5 (11:08):
The key of the new one, which is like, man,
it's cool. But the arenas where it's.
Speaker 1 (11:11):
At When you saw Amy shooting the three scooba where
we're like, I can beat her right.
Speaker 5 (11:15):
Now, right right then and there, No, I could not
because I was I'm not as far as my cardio
goes as you saw shooting three corners though, oh yeah,
they like stay that, Oh yeah, I could. The double
rims pretty hard though. It was very impressed with Amy
to nail what she did with the scenario. But I think,
what was the scenario?
Speaker 1 (11:32):
Double rim?
Speaker 4 (11:33):
What is double rimming it?
Speaker 5 (11:35):
Yeah, it's much more difficult to shoot on a double
rim than a traditional.
Speaker 4 (11:38):
I was shooting on a difficult rim.
Speaker 1 (11:40):
Guys, why do you do this? So I will say
impressed that wasn't a traditional double rim amy. A double
rim is put in places they don't steal them. For
the most part, it's harder to steal, so they they
don't make it to be harder to shoot it. What's
not like the more skilled players playing double rims. It's
so they wanted the harder y'all never told me I was,
and it's harder to rip off this advantage. That's but no, no, no,
(12:00):
there's no disadvantage. And I still guys, Yes, Amy, impressive,
it was impressive. It was very impressive. It's very impressive.
I would say there were one and a half time
rims full double. It's still it's still awesome, Amy, No,
it was still awesome.
Speaker 4 (12:21):
It was it was sounds like it was even more awesome.
Speaker 6 (12:23):
Yes, but it sounds like Scooba things. He could beat
her time, is what he's saying.
Speaker 1 (12:28):
That's what he Yeah, Oh I don't think. I don't
think you can beat that. I don't think Amy can
beat that time if no, no, no, if you were
to do it again, I don't think you could beat
your time that you did because you were on freaking fire.
It was awesome, like you came out, you missed the
first few, then you just caught like she's on fire. Yeah,
it was awesome, NBA Jam Yes, I.
Speaker 4 (12:49):
Think probably because night before my boyfriend trained me.
Speaker 6 (12:53):
We don't want to hear about that, and we can't
forget too.
Speaker 4 (13:00):
He did help me, he is he can coach.
Speaker 2 (13:03):
Hey, Amy, you were outside too in the element where
win was a factor. Absolutely, humidity, Yeah, he.
Speaker 1 (13:13):
Air pressure, son know of it. Our point is, I
think you were awesome and it was a great day,
and I don't think that you would be able to
go and beat your time. I think that was a
perfect day, just like got a perfect game with the
celebrity softball game. I don't think I can get better
than that.
Speaker 4 (13:26):
Oh you know, I don't think ill and beat my time.
Speaker 1 (13:29):
I think all of the elements were perfect. My body
was feeling healthy, I was feeling good. I freaking had
it in the park home run. I think I might.
Speaker 4 (13:36):
Well, you mean you're talking about when you got MVP.
Speaker 1 (13:38):
Yeah, Eddie was mentioned that earlier and I was like,
I think I wouldn't be able to perform that way again. Interesting.
I think all the elements were perfect for that night,
and I don't also don't think.
Speaker 4 (13:48):
You do it again.
Speaker 1 (13:48):
I think you could do it again. You could, and
I think I don't want this to be about me. No, no, no.
Scuba Steve can't beat Amy's time. It's my point. What
was our time? Do you remember twenty five minutes? I think?
Come on, scoobam, yeah I could do that. Yeah, that
was how many forty? Okay, first of all, everybody, all
the numbers jumped in. Okay, history, this is how history general. Yes,
(14:09):
you made thirty four? No, no, no, there was a
number she had to reach.
Speaker 4 (14:12):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (14:12):
I think it was thirty four.
Speaker 4 (14:13):
Thirty three.
Speaker 6 (14:14):
Well, that's what I'm saying. She made thirty Did.
Speaker 4 (14:16):
I stop or did I?
Speaker 1 (14:17):
Guys, let's just get officials, Mike, Mike, Yes, Mike, Mike
will give us the number in a second, and I
would bet you that Scuba cannot beat that by one
in the same amount of time. I would bet money,
same court.
Speaker 4 (14:29):
Every much money.
Speaker 1 (14:31):
Do you want to bet against me?
Speaker 4 (14:33):
No, I'm curious how much?
Speaker 1 (14:35):
Well, let me see what the number is and see
the time. Michael, look at that. We'll come back to
it in just a second. And Arkansas man has said
that his brother's recent lottery luck led to him winning
three hundred and fifty thousand dollars. His name is t
He told the Arkansas Lottery officials he stopped for gats
at the Walmart super Center and Monticello, inspired by his
(14:56):
brother's recent lottery win and bought his own ticket. I
don't even play at all off, and he said, I
was just thinking, well, if it's his time, might be
my time. He selected the three hundred and fifty thousand
dollars cash payout, which is a twenty dollars scratch off ticket,
because it was his favorite color blue, and he hit
and won three hundred fifty thousand dollars. Wow from UPI
did it say what his brother wants? It doesn't.
Speaker 2 (15:16):
So his brother wins and he's like, oh maybe I
got that luck too? What?
Speaker 1 (15:21):
Yeah that's right?
Speaker 6 (15:22):
Yeah too bad. My whole family is just a bunch
of losers.
Speaker 1 (15:25):
Lunch.
Speaker 2 (15:26):
Have you ever done like that's my favorite color ticket
by it?
Speaker 1 (15:29):
No?
Speaker 6 (15:29):
But I've never had my brother win anything, so I
haven't been able to use this.
Speaker 1 (15:33):
You know, but for other reasons, like you're supposed to
go to church wants and drive away from church and
buy one.
Speaker 6 (15:39):
I've sat outside of a church and tried to feel.
Speaker 1 (15:41):
The woy won't you go in? You have to go in,
learn the lesson, and then go to a gas station. Okay, No,
because that's happened before when people have left church, and
then obviously what you do after church is gamble. So
you go and you gamble because Jesus rewards you for
gambling right after church. Yeah, Mike, it was thirty one
(16:02):
and thirty minutes, so and what does she do it
in twenty five? A little over thirty also, so for
us it was thirty in an hour, and so she
did it in ti many.
Speaker 7 (16:12):
It was like over a little over thirty minutes.
Speaker 1 (16:14):
Okay, so let's say thirty one minutes. Let's say we
gave Scuba Steve thirty one minutes to make thirty one
three pointers, so one a minute basically, not basically for sure,
that's it.
Speaker 8 (16:24):
Yeah, sure, yeah, yeah, I can do that easily, especially
if you guys and I have people catching my rebounds
in the same scenario and everything, same deal.
Speaker 1 (16:35):
Yeah, I could do it.
Speaker 6 (16:36):
I mean the same hoop.
Speaker 1 (16:37):
Oh you think lunchbox. I trust lunchboxes judgment on this man.
Speaker 6 (16:41):
I when we played Scuba trying to shoot a jump
shot was pretty ugly, but that was with people guarding him,
and I.
Speaker 5 (16:48):
Didn't have Amy's boyfriend training me the night before either,
that's true.
Speaker 1 (16:52):
I don't know you had all life to train. You
had thousands of thousands of shots.
Speaker 5 (16:56):
Maybe millions, millions. Yeah, that was early on in my life.
I mean since then, I've probably shot maybe four times.
Speaker 1 (17:01):
What do you think latch box thirty one and thirty one?
Speaker 6 (17:06):
I don't think you can do it.
Speaker 1 (17:07):
I don't either. Scooby be in a bet one hundred bucks.
Speaker 5 (17:10):
On it, y'all put a hundred bucks on it.
Speaker 1 (17:12):
Yeah, okay, I mean that was easy. Well, know what,
knowing at all? Believe no what? So no one's on
my seat. I think he can do it?
Speaker 9 (17:21):
Do it?
Speaker 1 (17:22):
No. Amy's being nice, but Eddie does think you can.
Think you can do it? Scuba. Amy's being supportive and
we like that about her.
Speaker 5 (17:29):
But I don't edif you, if you believe in me,
would you put up half then to fifty to fifty?
Speaker 1 (17:33):
Yes, I'll do fifty bucks.
Speaker 6 (17:35):
See, I don't know, like Scuba, your car just cardio
wise alone, I think you're gonna get more tired than
Amy does shooting threes because Amy is better cardio Right now,
Oh man, this is tough.
Speaker 5 (17:47):
I'm not playing a game though, I'm just I'm getting
I'm taking no.
Speaker 4 (17:50):
I mean, I walk around the neighborhood with a waited
best like that.
Speaker 1 (17:53):
That's something, that is something. What do they call that? Farking?
Speaker 4 (17:57):
No?
Speaker 1 (17:58):
No, not larking, U parking, hoping, rocking. Okay, you see
where to mix it up?
Speaker 6 (18:07):
Yeah, I was thinking, got it sounds.
Speaker 1 (18:10):
Like yes, So I thought that's why I was sparking.
That's why. Family soda business at Connecticut was scammed out
of one hundred thousand dollars and a publisher's clearinghouse scam,
and the co owner dragged his own brother in an interview, saying,
I know Bill is kind of gullible, but to send
a company a check signed is beyond belief. So even
when they're talking about like his brother's still taking like
(18:32):
little jabs, do they still do publishers? Dude? I don't know.
It just reminded me of like the nineties. Yeah. A
Connecticut family run soda business was scammed out of one
hundred thousand dollars after a family member was duped by
a fake publisher's clearinghouse prize scheme. Oh Bill Podman believed
he had won five point five million and followed instructions
to write voided company checks for verification checks that were
(18:53):
then fraudulently altered and then cashed. The scam involved two
checks forty nine thousand each. Though the laws won't make
up the business, it has deeply affected the family and
their trust. These people are evil w f SB. You
know when they get one finally on the line, they
run to their other buddies and like, we got one.
Of course we got one. LaunchBox your story.
Speaker 4 (19:13):
You know, we didn't finished my story, but that's okay.
Speaker 1 (19:17):
I thought it was over.
Speaker 4 (19:19):
I never got to it, but I'll save it for
another time. I was bringing up that it was Stevenson's
birthday and how.
Speaker 1 (19:25):
All the places, the free places, all the yeah, take
it away, Amy oh Man, take it away his birthday.
Speaker 4 (19:32):
So I George Camill, who is Rachel Cruise's co host.
They're part of the Ramsey Group. A while back he
posted this list of the top birthday freebies, and when
I was trying to google birthday freebies, this list came up,
and I was like, oh, awesome, would you do have
to read the fine print and maybe like download the
app or join the club or whatever. There are so
many free things you could get on your birthday. And
(19:53):
I'm kind of pumped to do this with Stevenson, how
many do do we just give an example? The list
is long, but like, Okay, you get a free pretzel
from Antians, Well what are those?
Speaker 1 (20:08):
That's what you're at the mall?
Speaker 4 (20:09):
A free pretzel?
Speaker 1 (20:10):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (20:11):
At Chick fil A, you can get a free dessert.
At Chipotle, which Stevenson love's going there, you can get
a free side of chips and gualk, which I'm like,
that adds up. Sometimes I have to tell my kids
no walk because they just spend too much. They're like, no,
no chips and wualk, Krispy Kreme free Dona. I feel
like those are kind of everywhere. Starbucks, you can get
(20:32):
a free beverage or food item, which I had no
idea Starbucks handed out free things, but you got to
read the fine print, like you may have to download
the Starbucks app or something, but still you're gonna get
a free drink.
Speaker 1 (20:41):
So you can google free stuff for your birthday and
see a lot of the stuff.
Speaker 4 (20:44):
And see a lot of the stuff, and I just
thought it was funny, like for his birthday, he wants
to try to do everything we need to do to
access all this and then go around and get as
many free things as he mostly can, and I'm like.
Speaker 1 (20:55):
You don't have a diarrhea.
Speaker 4 (20:59):
I just thought like that'll be fun for like an
activity for him to do on his birthday.
Speaker 2 (21:03):
You don't feel embarrassed when you say, like, it's my birthday,
Like what do I get for free?
Speaker 1 (21:07):
I don't say that.
Speaker 6 (21:08):
Why would you be embarrassed?
Speaker 4 (21:09):
No, I'm not embarrassed because he's going to do it
and he's fifteen.
Speaker 1 (21:12):
Yeah, yeah, good point. I'm not going to do it,
but because that would be embarrassing.
Speaker 4 (21:17):
Yeah for me a little bit. Like I mean, I'm
turning forty five today, I have my free ice cream.
Speaker 1 (21:23):
Yeah, beverage from Starbucks.
Speaker 6 (21:24):
And the cool thing about being a kid is they
don't there's no way to verify your birthday, so every
day could be your birthday.
Speaker 4 (21:29):
Well, I think that part of the find.
Speaker 1 (21:31):
Always finds a way to like hypothetically rob places out
of money too. Well, did you see that he's not
embarrassed by doing it. It's just fine because I think
but then two, he then hypothetically finds a way for
a kid to steal from every single place to go
every day.
Speaker 4 (21:46):
At Red Robin, you can get an entire free burger. Yeah,
rob free burger.
Speaker 1 (21:50):
That's what I'm saying.
Speaker 6 (21:51):
Done on locations and be like, hey, it's my birthday,
and then tomorrow it's your birthday. And when you're fourteen,
guess what, there's no idea to check, So like, all right,
I guess it's your birthday, free burger, to go to
the one across town. Hey, freeburger the next day.
Speaker 4 (22:02):
Yeah, but I'm not gonna tell. I don't know, and
I haven't read the fine print on all of these,
but I'm not putting that in his head because I
don't need him going around town acting like it's his birthday,
because you know, if Stashier gets wind of this, it's
gonna be her birthday every day. His sister will do
that all the time. But anyway, just you know, take
advantage of that. Could be something fun to do with Stevenson.
This was his idea. And thank you shout out George
(22:24):
Campbell for putting up a list.
Speaker 1 (22:25):
All right, lunchbox, your story.
Speaker 6 (22:27):
We talked about that guy that after graduation went to
Burger King, picked up a shift. He's working in his
like graduation gear, and someone took a video. Two hundred
and thirty one thousand dollars raise for him on a GoFundMe.
He has announced where he is going to college where
Gwinnett Technical College. He'll start in the fall. He's going
(22:49):
to become a mechanic and hopes to open his own
shop one day.
Speaker 1 (22:52):
That's awesome. I wonder if he has enough money to
open up a shop now. I mean, yeah, he didn't
even to go to school two hundred Well, maybe didn't
even learn the skills. Yeah, you need to learn the
skill learn this point.
Speaker 6 (23:02):
At this point, he has two hundred and thirty one
thousand dollars. He could open a shop and just pay
someone and be the owner of the shop.
Speaker 1 (23:08):
Well, at two hundred and thirty one thousand dollars, it's
going to be hard to one if that's the exactly
on my money, he has buy the land, are you
gonna lease it? You're gonna buy it? Yeah, and then
buy the building. And then you got to pay somebody
full time. You gotta pay them a salary or an
hourly wage.
Speaker 2 (23:22):
And the equipment in there is expensive, like the stuff
that lifts the car. All that stuff is really really expensive.
And he needs to make sure he knows how to
do anything. He's hiring anybody to do so, Yeah, as
it kind of a short sighted question. I just wondered
how much money he had. If he had like a
couple million, I could see.
Speaker 1 (23:37):
Him buying a place, letting someone run it while he
went to school to learn it, and then coming out
of it. But that's pretty cool. That's a good story.
Speaker 4 (23:45):
Yeah, money lunch talks for businesses. It goes fast, like
real fast.
Speaker 1 (23:50):
Amy, Amy. He knows he's a businessman exactly making business deals,
trying to get that money, trying to get that money, Amy,
Do you think you'll ever get that money? Question? Man?
Speaker 6 (24:02):
I think about that every day.
Speaker 1 (24:03):
He's still trying that. I don't just trying. Is him
saying it? I don't think he's the One time he
came and he's like, I have an idea, and it
was like, did we talk about the hair Are we
talking about that in the air? Ye?
Speaker 6 (24:18):
The haircut play?
Speaker 1 (24:19):
Yes we did? We talk about that And he wasn't
even like serious where he looked it up. But he's like,
I don't want to do like a haircut place where
kids can get drunk. And I was like, I don't
think that's a good idea.
Speaker 4 (24:27):
No, that wasn't no, no, And to be clear. Want
you once you clarify, I just before you say it.
I laughed at him for this. I remember laughing, and
I feel bad about that, and I should say I
should take back my laugh and you should go for
this amy. Bobby was supportive.
Speaker 1 (24:44):
I was supportive.
Speaker 4 (24:45):
You were supportive, and I laugh.
Speaker 1 (24:46):
You know why you laughed though. It's not because of
the idea, because the idea wasn't terrible. It's that he
just says stuff all the time and never follows through. Wrong.
Speaker 6 (24:55):
No, that's where you're wrong.
Speaker 1 (24:56):
Okay, you do your thing. We'll let you have it
because you do follow through a lot. Go ahead, Yes,
I do follow through a lot.
Speaker 6 (25:01):
So this was a hair cutting place for children, and
where we live there was not a spot for kids.
You had to go to the adult barber shop or
you had to drive across town to get at kid haircut.
And we thought, oh my gosh, this is great. So
we started doing all our research and then we started
interviewing barbers and haircut people were like, listen, I'm gonna
(25:22):
be honest with you. None of us go to barber
school to want to cut kids hair. So the turnover
rate when we talked to people that in other cities
that have kids, they're like, it's so hard to keep
a barber that cuts kid's hair. And we looked at
all the factors, and then my wife got pregnant with
our third child, and so she had to put it
on the back burner because she was having a kid.
Speaker 1 (25:44):
No, no, no, and so we didn't do it.
Speaker 6 (25:47):
And then we're glad we didn't because then you know,
with COVID and everything, it was just been a disaster,
we think. But we also you would have a drink
for the parents, because you're really catering to the parents.
So he was like, offer like a glass of wine
or a beer for mom or dad who are sitting
there while their kid gets a haircut. That was our idea,
(26:07):
and we ended up not doing it because she got
pregnant with our third child.
Speaker 1 (26:12):
I think, and I was very supportive, and I remember
I just was supportive of him actually doing something, trying
something that was a weird uh huh, keep going. I
think it's an listen. I have very limited experience of
understanding liquor licenses. My wife and I own part of
a restaurant, and so we have a very very very
(26:35):
very very basic knowledge of this I think to go,
we'd like a liquor license where we're also catering to
kids is a little tough tougher of an ask if
you have a liquor licen while you're cutting adult hair,
not that tough. To have a liquor license while you
have kids getting your hair cut, I think would be
a bit tougher. Are there any kids? Because I think
you can give away a drink, so it's not a ball,
(26:58):
you're not you're not buying out?
Speaker 6 (27:00):
Are you not buying it?
Speaker 1 (27:00):
We give it to you.
Speaker 2 (27:01):
Is it okay to give away a drink to the
people that brought the kid to that?
Speaker 1 (27:06):
I think that's fine in theory because you're not selling it. Yeah,
but you can offer somebody a drink. That happens in
most places you go to. I don't know the legality
of it, but they do it everywhere you going. Hey,
you go into a freaking store sometimes like Hey, can
I get you some sparkling water or steal water? You
walk through that mall in Las Vegas is what I'm
(27:26):
thinking about. Like you go through all those stores and
you walk in if they think you're gonna buy something,
like can we bring you some water or would you
like some wine? Like if you're really gonna buy something, like,
would you like it? They don't card you. So I
thought the LaunchBox just having an idea was great. But
I think why Amy laughed to defend her a bit,
not the idea that he never follows through.
Speaker 2 (27:48):
I didn't know he was already in the hiring phase.
I thought that kid from you said you were already
interviewing people.
Speaker 1 (27:55):
No.
Speaker 6 (27:56):
No, you interviewed other owners of barbershops and kid places
in other cities, and they were the ones that telling
us that, hey, turnover is so.
Speaker 1 (28:05):
So how did you find those other barbers How did
you reach out to them in other cities? You look
up the owner of what you look up? Now, how
did you do it?
Speaker 6 (28:13):
My wife? Listen, my wife interviewed all these people, She
had meetings with them, all this stuff.
Speaker 1 (28:17):
It feels like Ted Kruz, Tucker Carlson, guys.
Speaker 4 (28:20):
Oh gosh, that's awkward. No, it's no. I think what
I'm hearing is his wife did it.
Speaker 1 (28:27):
Yeah, That's what I'm hearing too.
Speaker 6 (28:29):
Was what she wanted to do. She was laid off
from her job and she had this idea, and we're like, oh,
my gosh, that's great, and we started investing.
Speaker 1 (28:36):
We'd all been like, great idea. So she's she's the
woman trying to make those deals and make that money.
Got it? Okay, got it? Got it? Got it? Make sense?
There we go because she's the one doing all the reach,
which makes sense. Why you can't really explain it.
Speaker 6 (28:48):
No, she sat down with people that own barbershops.
Speaker 1 (28:51):
Did we got get it?
Speaker 2 (28:53):
She's a business woman trying to Heck, if she were
doing it, we'd all invest.
Speaker 4 (28:59):
Oh boy, well, Lunchbuck's real quick. You all revisited?
Speaker 1 (29:04):
Now no, no, no, now we're well.
Speaker 6 (29:07):
I mean with three kids, it's just she's handserful, hands
hands are ful, Like we decided, and we just fed.
Speaker 1 (29:13):
Him an answer. He got to say it, and then
he got got it.
Speaker 6 (29:16):
All the time we thinked about like how glad like
in the end that we ended up not doing it,
just because the amount of time it would have taken
her and us to be like, oh my gosh, Saturdays
we got to be there.
Speaker 1 (29:26):
Oh we got it. It would have been running a business, right, And.
Speaker 6 (29:29):
We decided at that point we were like, we're glad
we didn't. At this stage of life. It would have
been a bad idea.
Speaker 1 (29:34):
Are you about to die?
Speaker 4 (29:35):
Oh no, this stage at the stage of life with
three young.
Speaker 1 (29:38):
But he had two young kids already, so they added
one kid, which completely changed the trajectory. So it changed
your business acumen, Like you don't want to have a
business at all, because.
Speaker 6 (29:47):
Because she was pregnant, and so if the timeline to open,
it would have been about a month of difference when
the baby was being.
Speaker 1 (29:54):
Born, so it would have been a nightmare. Then I'm
gonna hear you, but I'm trying to use your logic
for the kid. Just hire somebody to do it. That's
what you just said. He can open up his own
shop and just hire somebody to do it what you
guys could have done, like the burger king guy.
Speaker 6 (30:07):
Yeah, but I wasn't given an extra two hundred something
thousand dollars.
Speaker 1 (30:10):
But you have, you've been able to work and have
a career. He has and he's a kid in high school. Yeah. Yeah.
My favorite moment, though, I must rewind Amy feeds lunchbox
the line to get him out of trouble with her,
Like she's like lunchbox, lunchbox, and he's like she's like,
hands areful, Hands areful? And then she goes, Okay, well I.
Speaker 4 (30:33):
Could tell that's what he was searching for.
Speaker 6 (30:35):
Yeah, I mean they were searching for.
Speaker 1 (30:39):
My only point. And again I remember being super supportive
of my only point. Is he always say he wants
to get that money, but he never is always an
excuse for why he didn't get that money. And crazy too,
that your wife is a business she is, like, she
had a great idea. We didn't know it was her idea.
Whatever you think. I'm like, how'd you talk to him? Well, well,
well I she did. She set up me. She did, Yes,
(31:00):
she did. We fully believe it. I'm fully understanding and
support my decision and supporting you earlier. I'm supportive of
me and how supportive I was for her. Huh. That's
a good point. That were very confused, So that idea
is done, lunchbox no more.
Speaker 6 (31:15):
Yeah, I think we put that on the Yeah, yeah,
that's kind of we kind of moved on from that.
We were like, ah, that's gonna be a lot, a
lot tougher with three kids and just everything.
Speaker 10 (31:28):
It was, so you're giving up forever on any business
idea at all? No, no, no, no, I mean that
was just right then that at that point in our life.
We decided that was a bad move, like we shouldn't
do it. It's not it's not the right time. I
don't know if what I don't know if we'll revisit
a kid haircutting place, because adult animal. I don't think
(31:50):
we would do haircutting market.
Speaker 4 (31:51):
Well, you may revisit a business business, he.
Speaker 9 (32:00):
Said, in the same exact tone that she said. It's amazing. Yeah,
oh business, dude, that's hilarious. Even he's laughing at that,
even he thinks that's funny.
Speaker 1 (32:14):
No, even you went business. He went business guy, this
is great.
Speaker 4 (32:19):
Visited another time.
Speaker 1 (32:21):
He's Amy's puppet.
Speaker 8 (32:27):
Man.
Speaker 6 (32:28):
Oh man, he said exactly what Barbie said.
Speaker 1 (32:31):
I said it after him, man, I said it after him.
I'm Maddy's puppet. He said it first. I said it
a puppet puppet. Oh man, oh man, Man, what's happening.
That's funny. That makes me laugh out loud. I still
I'm still supportive. Lunchbox great, especially then I know your
wife is running it, dude, Yeah, because she's a businesswoman
(32:53):
making those deals, trying to get that money. So back
to my question, are you ever going to get his
barbecue business? Are you ever hold on? Are you ever
to get that money, hopefully how.
Speaker 6 (33:05):
Business investments, stocks.
Speaker 1 (33:09):
Bonds, amy anything, nothing? Okay, Uh, who has the story?
Speaker 3 (33:17):
Eddie?
Speaker 1 (33:17):
You're up.
Speaker 4 (33:17):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (33:18):
So there's there's a flight from going from San Francisco
to London and everyone's on it. The flight attendants, they're
about to serve the meals and they're like, where is
this other flight attendant?
Speaker 1 (33:29):
We haven't seen them. They're just like, I don't I
haven't seen him in like a few hours.
Speaker 2 (33:33):
And so they go they check. It's one of those
double decker planes. So they're going up and down looking
for this flight plane. Yeah, going overseas, I would scare me.
And they finally find the flight attendant in the bathroom
button naked.
Speaker 1 (33:47):
Lunchbox going lunchbox. Go ahead.
Speaker 6 (33:49):
Hey, Eddie, thanks for paying attention to the show. That's
whead like two weeks ago.
Speaker 1 (33:53):
That's will punishment that Thank you very muchly Man, what
a great story. He's not crazy. They couldn't find the
flight attendant. I thought.
Speaker 4 (34:03):
I remember Bobby being like, that's so not where you
would expect to flight attend.
Speaker 1 (34:09):
We did a whole thing, man, weird. Yeah you just
got you just got on the wheel. No way we
did this story we did? Wow, Morgan?
Speaker 4 (34:21):
Yeah, you ready for my stories?
Speaker 1 (34:23):
No, I'm asking we did this story, Morgan? Everybody remembers
that when he was doing it? Did everybody start to think? Oh, like,
maybe I wasn't there that day? Was I was I
gone that day? You haven't been gone? Sure?
Speaker 6 (34:40):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (34:41):
Yeah?
Speaker 6 (34:43):
What time do I interrupt him?
Speaker 1 (34:45):
I don't know. That's why I went lunchbox and let
lunchbox have the honor. Hey, but dude, female flight attendant?
Would that be crazy? Lunchbox? But wasn't it a male?
It was a male? Dang it. I was hoping it
was a different story. No, dang the story, Mike. What's
the ruling here?
Speaker 4 (35:03):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (35:04):
And what happens we have a punishment? Yeah, there's gonna
be free on there? Right, you'll get a free No, no,
we'll vote. We'll vote.
Speaker 6 (35:11):
And remember when you voted for no free for me?
I vote no free Amy? How many would you like
to vote?
Speaker 1 (35:16):
We did vote? Yeah, we did vote Amy.
Speaker 2 (35:18):
No.
Speaker 1 (35:19):
No, no, let me ask, Mike. Just because you're yelling,
it doesn't mean it's true.
Speaker 7 (35:22):
Do we vote for Amy to have a free No?
Speaker 1 (35:24):
I think we just gave it was on there? Yeah,
that was just Amy you will get a free spot
to free spots you get, you get one for sure,
you can earn a second. Oh how do I earn
a second? I don't know. We'll figure out a game.
I have to come up with a story. Now another one. Yeah,
I'm sorry, dude. Dang well, we all saw you waiting
into that one too, Morgan.
Speaker 3 (35:46):
Okay, so there's this video that's been going viral for
the last couple of days. I'm assuming Bobby you might
have seen it. It's of Ella Lingley at our concert
and yeah, this fan holds up the sign on his
phone like he wrote it on Snapchat and was like,
wink if Riley Green is a dumb day. Yeah, and
(36:07):
she sees it in winks like very visibly on purpose
blink like does the wink, And everybody has all kinds
of speculation now that all the things that we thought
once were definitely true.
Speaker 1 (36:20):
Blink if he's a wink dlink Yeah, and she winked
at the phone, got it, and.
Speaker 4 (36:27):
Then someone was filming and then it pans to him
and you can see what he had on his phone,
which was you know, him saying winkift.
Speaker 1 (36:36):
We figured, yeah, I have to check out.
Speaker 4 (36:41):
Why Bobby knows too much.
Speaker 1 (36:44):
There's certain I can't act like I don't know things.
And also it's not my place in certain places to
talk about things when it's not my right. I don't
like that's That's one of the reasons I don't like
to be and have French not French. I have good
friends that are in the music industry, but I don't
like to be in stuff. I like to know stuff
because then I can't talk about it openly. So how
(37:05):
about that?
Speaker 6 (37:07):
Is it weird that she did wink knowing there's gonna
be so many cameras or is it that her saying
like I don't care?
Speaker 9 (37:13):
Well?
Speaker 3 (37:13):
I think Ella and Meghan have both been playing a
lot on social media of just posting.
Speaker 4 (37:19):
Yes songs and yeah, or Meghan's like, Kim, what did
she post on Twitter the other day or something, or
she said something like can we just make a guy
that's not evil?
Speaker 1 (37:30):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (37:30):
There's like a lot they can.
Speaker 3 (37:31):
They both kind of keep playing, so it's hard to
tell if they're both doing it on purpose or if
there's something actually here or there's playing into all the
speculation because you know.
Speaker 4 (37:41):
It builds it up. Was Riley at the Beach with
another girl.
Speaker 1 (37:44):
I don't think that Megan Maroney thinks that Riley Green's evil,
well she would like for I don't think Megan Roney
thinks Riley Green. I don't think she thinks he's evil.
And I'll just I'm done good.
Speaker 3 (37:58):
And I mean Ella Langley Ridley Green are still performing together.
Speaker 4 (38:02):
They performed together last night. Yeah, the U though, Yeah, yeah,
they're doing I feel like they're doing their job.
Speaker 1 (38:08):
Yeah, they're really obligated. Yeah uh yeah, No, you really
can't just go We're not going to tour together, even
though we've signed all this and sold all the tickets,
because we're no longer doing it. I don't know if
they did it, who knows.
Speaker 2 (38:20):
You think artists feel like safe during a show to
like do things, and maybe like they really they think
that it's not going to go viral.
Speaker 1 (38:27):
I think twenty years ago you could do anything you wanted.
You could eat head off a bat. Thirty forty years ago,
nothing mattered on stage because that was where it was
like a house show. In wrestling, it doesn't really count
because it's not on a television, so you could have
anybody win. But you can't do that anymore because phones
and so the newer artists, I would say, anybody forty
(38:48):
in below who have had to grow up in music
with social media anymore. No, you know, every little thing
that you're doing is documented. And I would say though
it's actually helped live music because now people have to
pay attention to details like facial expressions, like not sucking
at guitar, like being able to sing, not mailing it in,
(39:09):
Like they're all these things now that make shows better.
But like you say, there, everything is under a microscope
because everybody has a phone and anything can go viral
at any time. Okay, cool and Eddie went, you go? Yeah,
you did your stop you you know I went. Michigan
man got fifteen to thirty years after breaking into Eminem's
house for a second time. Lunchbox, where were you? No?
Speaker 6 (39:34):
I wasn't me Listen he gets that long for breaking
in twice, fifteen to thirty years. I mean he must
have a rap sheet, right.
Speaker 1 (39:43):
The guy, Matthew Davis Hughes, thirty two, was sentence fifteen
to thirty years. He was previously found guilty of first
three home invasion, aggravated stalking, and second offense habitual offender
after he broke into Minim's home twice. All that from that,
he's stalking Eminem. You can't stalk anybody. It's just a
higher profile case. We're hearing about it because of Eminem.
The first incident occurred in twenty twenty when he confronted Eminem.
(40:03):
The latest incident August of twenty twenty four. He'll spend
a minimum of eighteen years behind bars. Prosecutor said he'll
have no contact with Marshall Mathers HM live. Fake Venmo
accounts were stealing donations from real charities. Yeah, the emails
that come in from these places that really aren't those
places look really good. If I get an email from
Venmo and I use Venmo, it's like you just paid
(40:25):
eighty three dollars to something. I'm like, did I? But
it looks so good. Like I went and change my
Twitter password the other day because I got an email
that said, hey, your account's been compromised, and I thought, oh,
it got me. But even though it got me, I
didn't get got because I went to my Twitter account
and changed my password through the site, not through clicking
the link. So it tricked me into thinking that my
(40:47):
Twitter account had been or someone was trying to get
into my account. But luckily I didn't click the link.
I went, oh, if this is true, I need to
go and change my account from my account. But I
can easily see where when I'm not as vigilant about
not falling for scams, that I could have clicked it
so easily and been like, well, I'm gonna click this
link to change, and then they have me.
Speaker 2 (41:08):
Yeah, you guys gotten a response from that graduate that
we've donated too.
Speaker 1 (41:13):
Still Nope, great question, Like, I know we talked about
it a few days, but let me go look on
my venmo and again we're not looking for any sort
of thank yous. But it was weird to hear nothing,
because we've just all been scammed or made mistakes. Did
you guys get anything? No? I guess we're just gonna
(41:39):
leave it. Fox is the one guy who didn't.
Speaker 4 (41:41):
And I'm signing with it.
Speaker 1 (41:44):
I mean, my favorite is Eddie. He writes on her page.
Her na is Brionna. He writes congratuations parentheses. I just
made that up. Yeah, I know nothing. I guess. The
other thing I worry about is that she doesn't know
she has it, because Eddie doesn't ever check his correct
which Lunchbox made it appearent very recently, and he doesn't
(42:08):
know he has money in there because he doesn't get
an alert.
Speaker 2 (42:11):
I check it like once a week, but I don't
have notifications. I try not to get notifications on my phone.
I got nothing, no, no, nothing, because like every time,
like my wife has all her notifications on all of them. Yeah,
and so her phone's constantly glowing. I have no notifications
on it. But I know vin Moo because I'm on
it so often. I use it all the time. As
much as you use it, you would think you just
(42:31):
know what's in there, and it's money.
Speaker 1 (42:32):
It is money, I know. Oio man says he lost
twenty seven thousand dollars after a scammer came to his house.
Speaker 2 (42:39):
Which is crazy. You want to hear some stupid Then
they said up the sting? What that was my backup story?
It was should have gone with all, should.
Speaker 1 (42:45):
Have gone with that one. Robert Wise of Ohio was
speaking out after being scammed out of twenty seven thousand dollars.
He says he got a text that looked like a
fraud alert from Apple. Quote Apple pay alert. Your Apple
ID was recently used for two hundred and thirteen dollars.
If this is not you, call this number. He called
the number, spoke to a man. He said, I had
to go in with throw all twenty seven thousand dollars
(43:06):
for my bank account or it was going to be drained.
So man, you're also playing that game of that. Somebody
has twenty seven thousand dollars in their bank account, like
I think I'd be going for like the six hundred dollars.
Right after Wise feil to deposit the funds into a
bitcoin machine, the bad guy Cooper, said he would send
someone to Wise's house to collect the money in person.
(43:27):
After the funds were handed over, Wise called the Sheriff's office.
He was instructed to stay in contact with Cooper so
that he could be caught. Detectives launch a sting operation
and arrested forty two year old Lewai Zang, who showed
up again to collect more money, so he gave him
the money, got scammed, and the idiot who got selfish,
came back to the house to get more and that's
(43:48):
when they arrested him. He's been indeed on theft, Identity
fraud and tele Communications Act data.
Speaker 2 (43:53):
I've never heard of scam scammer's going to like a
lot of electronic scammers, a lot of email scammer all that,
but going to your house like that's I've never heard of.
Speaker 1 (44:04):
That wasn't the original scam at your house though, when
they would drive around sell steaks, and steaks would be
just garbage steaks. That's what they would do a Mountain pine.
But you still got the steak. But they were such
bad quality because they would lie about it.
Speaker 6 (44:14):
Or the magazine and the kid, Oh you know, I'm
raising money for my youth football team. If you just
or this magazine I just got out of jail, then
you never get the magazine.
Speaker 4 (44:22):
I bought all those fruits and veggies for the homeless people.
Speaker 6 (44:25):
That's right.
Speaker 4 (44:25):
That guy came to my door and he had a
binder full of like all the farming stuff I could buy. Yeah,
and he had just gotten out of prison and this
is going to change his life, like this was his
first job.
Speaker 1 (44:35):
And he showed laminated card and that that's proof, that's legit.
Speaker 4 (44:39):
Yeah, And he had just spoken to my neighbor down
the street, Marianne. Yeah, which I don't even know if
I have a name or.
Speaker 1 (44:46):
Name, oh Bold, just pick a name.
Speaker 4 (44:50):
You just pick up like down the street there. He
wasn't like, you know, the White house over there. But
I'm like, oh, okay, Marianne around the corner.
Speaker 1 (44:57):
What name would you pick if you had to, like
fool somebody Like I just talked to so and so, Bob,
no woman, A woman? Mary? I think I picked Mandy. Well,
that's pretty unique. Your neighbor Mandy, Like, yeah, I just
talked to your neighbor Mandy, Like it's I don't think
that's Amanda Mandy. I feel like.
Speaker 2 (45:17):
It's like, oh, Mandy's okay. I've changed my mind because
Mandy's good because it could be a nickname that normally
she doesn't go by.
Speaker 1 (45:22):
Oh, I didn't think about that level. That's cool.
Speaker 4 (45:24):
Yeah, like Miranda or Amanda yep, and she goes by Mandy.
Speaker 1 (45:29):
Yeah, maybe you know Miranda. What's how does Miranda coming?
Speaker 2 (45:32):
Well?
Speaker 4 (45:32):
I was thinking, what could I don't know. Maybe it's Amanda, yeah, Amanda, yeah, yeah,
I never heard of a Miranda.
Speaker 1 (45:41):
That'd be randy names. You know.
Speaker 2 (45:44):
I think I think somebody did that to me the
other day. They were selling pest control and they're like, no,
I just your neighbor. And then it said Chuck. I
think they said Chuck your favorite Chuck, you know, like
just just bought some of this and he loves it.
And I'm like, I don't know what Chuck. I'm pretty
sure I know all my neighbors don't know.
Speaker 1 (46:00):
You really could go the nickname round and be like, yeah,
your neghbor tiny, and you would think you know them,
so you know, well you must really know Sean, there
is a little neighbor because I'm tiny. Yeah. Joel mchel
spent ten thousand dollars on hair transplants. His hair looked great.
I saw the TikTok clip. He's being interviewed and they're
talking about getting the hair transplants and one of the
(46:21):
guys is like, I want to get it done before
it starts to go bad, and Joel mckell's like, well,
you know, I've had it. Yeah. He was a guest
on the We Might Be Drunk podcast, coasted by Mark
Norman and Sam Morl and he revealed that he had
four hair transplants to get his hair back. And I
think he's admitted to having a strip where he's like,
(46:41):
it was very painful where they take a strip out
and put a strip on. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (46:45):
They told me about that one, but they said that
there wouldn't be enough hair back there for the top
of my head and the front.
Speaker 1 (46:51):
I have three final things to talk about. A man
suffers heavy metal poisoning after drinking from a thermis, the
same thermist for decades. Lunch wolves. A man died from
heavy metal poison The culprit in his demise ended up
being a rusty thermist that he'd been drinking in for
over a decade. See.
Speaker 2 (47:06):
I've thought about this with Like, we talked about microplastics,
but what about like metal shavings, Like that doesn't.
Speaker 1 (47:12):
I don't think it's as easy for metal to come
like tiny micro metals to come off of other metal
to then be absorbed into the body, where plastic is
not as dense of a material. Yeah, Like think about
punching a piece of plastic and punching a piece of metal,
which one hurts. More metal, more dense, harder to have
little pieces come off of it.
Speaker 2 (47:32):
I just feel like in the next in the future,
they're going to be like they're finding mitro metals.
Speaker 1 (47:37):
Yeah, micro machines in our body and our body we
all eate micro machines as kids. Uh yeah, he died.
That sucks. The rust got him out of the Central.
I watched the clip of Will Smith rapping in London.
Anybody see this? Nor did you see it his new song? Yeah?
Oh that's terrible. Not only is his new song terrible,
there's like a ton of people around him, like they
(47:57):
set it up and nobody. Nobody's like on it. Everybody's
just like they're not confused, but they're just standing there.
It's like a bunch of MPCs just like hanging out.
I can play somebody.
Speaker 2 (48:09):
MPCs, non player characters, unplayable characters.
Speaker 1 (48:12):
Oh so close.
Speaker 7 (48:13):
Do you think he thinks that song is good?
Speaker 1 (48:15):
I think when you're that famous, people just celebrate you
all the time. They tell you the Emperor has no clothes.
So yes, I do. I think the Emperor has no clothes.
And you're that famous, everybody tells you how everything is
so good? You made this. You want to be relevant
again in the rap world. You're trying to get people
to stop talking about you slapping Chris rock Man and
so he makes the song he used to be celebrated.
(48:37):
I think he won the first ever Rap Grammy. Yeah
with Jazz Yeah, DJ Jazzy Jeff and the fresh Prince.
So if I I know, I'm marked this on my phone,
if I hit the ribbon because now Twitter has changed
a little bit, I didn't like it. Nope. Articles nope,
photos nope, videos nope, highlights nope, rep lies nope, Posts nope.
(49:01):
How do I get back to the ribbon on this
new version because I ribboned it?
Speaker 4 (49:08):
Man?
Speaker 1 (49:09):
Why are they changing the ribbons like a book? I'm
in Yeah, I got it, I'm in beta. I have
the new beta. I got here we go. Here's Will
Smith performing in the middle of the street in London.
Speaker 11 (49:20):
If you girls, I like pretty girl, jump, I like
pretty girl.
Speaker 1 (49:33):
There's there's ten rows deeper people. He's in the middle
of it and nobody's dancing or ANTHI ladies and gentlemen
think you're like sixty switches. Yeah, he's comp probably completely sober.
(49:53):
Right it sound drunk to you? Yeah, he was just
yelling loud. Will Smith, age fifty six. He still looks good.
It's it's very hi. It's very hickory dickory doc though.
Speaker 7 (50:06):
And then he broke his no cursing really curses in
the song.
Speaker 1 (50:10):
The family Guy scene where it's the Will Will Smith rapping.
Do you guys know that. No, I can play it
for you and then we'll talk. Karen read and we'll
be down here. Will Smith, I look pretty girl. How
are you feeling it?
Speaker 2 (50:24):
Give me in my head all day at the demo,
I'm like, okay, I look pretty girls.
Speaker 1 (50:30):
Here we go, Will Smith clean rat from family guy,
I respect women.
Speaker 6 (50:38):
When I'm all that in deep, I take him to
the park on me, but your museum man, I only.
Speaker 1 (50:42):
Try to kiss him if they're red air. Woooo what
what what? Hop out you come? And dad by getting
the job so you can help me for schools supplies. Woo,
wipe your shoes on the map when you're coming the house.
Someone just clean that flow. Wooo, there you go. That's
(51:05):
so good. Amy, could you hear that? Funny? Yes? There
you go? Boom. Any thoughts on Karen reetrial day after,
I watched two jurors speak. I watched her number four
and jur number eleven.
Speaker 4 (51:14):
I haven't what they say.
Speaker 1 (51:17):
Well, the first jour that was on TMZ not the
most articulated guys, and he was the first one to
go and he was just like, we didn't think she
did it. In the second one, she was a little
she actually had more to say about some specifics. She said,
you know, at first I thought she could have been
guilty of manslaughter, but the more that the defense just
showed that there was no way that she hit him,
(51:41):
and she would not say cover up. She did not
implicate anybody else, but she mostly was like, there's just
no way, there's no way she killed him. And so
she was the one talking about the she was standing
in a podium. Yeah, possibly the tow that I don't know.
I watched so much TikTok. I don't know who said what.
I know I watched her number four. I think she
(52:01):
was four or eleven. But she's standing at a podium
and the other guy was on a couch and is
living in with a bad camera hand gole. That one
was weird. Guess TMD was interviewing on a computer. But
she was like, yeah, we just didn't think she did it. So, yeah,
you know who looks real bad is the McKay Shick's terrible,
(52:22):
like because she's the one that searched for like how
lobes can you die the snow like she was the
one that said she went in and told him like
a dead body, like she'd let really really it's coming off.
This is the big loser, thoughts Amy.
Speaker 4 (52:36):
Yeah, I haven't. I was so invested in it, and
it's like, once it came out, I've just sort of
like taken a break. So I haven't really paid much
attention to any of it. I guess the one thing
I do keep thinking about is who did it? What happened.
Speaker 1 (52:49):
I'll be curious because of that to see if they
pursue a civil trial. I mean I wish they should.
Speaker 2 (52:53):
I wish they would because like that's the main goal, right,
let's find out who.
Speaker 1 (53:00):
I don't understand what you're saying. Oh, let's find out who. Okay,
you're not saying civil trial. Well, they would have to
what would they have to do with the with the
DA have to a civil trial? They would sue her
for money, Karen read, But like who who would do
thathing his family? His family? Sure? Yeah, yeah, they would
put it. Oh, this would be like O J suit
is like I got it, And that's not without a
(53:21):
reasonable doubt. That's like majority of majority rules. If your majority,
you lose the case. I hope they don't, because they
look like they are dedicated to just pinning on her
more than finding the real killer.
Speaker 4 (53:37):
Yeah, like, let's find out what in the heck happened.
Speaker 1 (53:40):
And wipe shoes. Oh yeah, and reach Bible. Oh, reach Bible.
Oh so yes, ma'am. Oh, it's a funny sketch. All right,
that's it. We're gonna do Chris Lane interview coming up
in a second. So part three will have Chris Lane
and we'll go through some voicemails. Let's see more, Mike,
(54:03):
what's on your podcast?
Speaker 7 (54:04):
I did the top debut film from directors because I
watched that Paul Rubens documentary and talks about Tim Burton's
first movie being Peevie's a Big Adventure. So I went
through other big famous directors and what their first big
hit was.
Speaker 1 (54:15):
Yeah, check out movie Mike's movie podcast. We'll come back
with part three and Chris Lane in a second