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October 31, 2025 67 mins

Kenny Chesney stops by the studio for The Friday Morning Conversation and shares stories from his new book, Heart Life Music. He tells the stories behind songs like ‘You and Tequila’, his first private flight, opening for George & Tammy and the time he got to play college football. Eddie says the Halloween decorations in his neighborhood are getting too scary. We talked about how more people were arrested in the Louvre heist and another heist that went down in a home where they got away with 3 million dollars’ worth of jewelry. We also talked about the words you can say that will boost your career. Bobby shared the dilemma he had after tipping someone $100 dollars recently at a restaurant.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Bobby Bone Show.

Speaker 2 (00:02):
Okay, to all you part tours out there, we appreciate you.
By the way, if you're new to the podcast, this
is just a pure podcast part of the show. Honestly,
it's my favorite part of the show. So we're gonna
have our interview with Kenny Chesney. Always love talking to Kenny.
It's like thirty minutes long or so. And then on
the other side of this, we'll come back and be
here for you guys and do more of the show.

Speaker 3 (00:22):
But here we go.

Speaker 2 (00:23):
It's our interview with Kenny Chesney's a Bobby.

Speaker 1 (00:26):
Bones Show interview.

Speaker 2 (00:27):
In case you didn't know, we have Kenny Chesney in
studio right now. You can pre order his book Heart
Life Music. It is out November fourth. Here he is
Kenny Chesney on.

Speaker 1 (00:38):
The Bobby Bones Show.

Speaker 4 (00:39):
Now, Kenny Chesney.

Speaker 5 (00:40):
Canny, good to see you, buddy, good to see you.
Thanks for having me again.

Speaker 2 (00:43):
I regret not coming to the Sphere shows. I'm gonna
tell you why. Two reasons. Multiple One because you were
kind enough to just reach out and be like you
should come to the show, and I.

Speaker 1 (00:54):
Was like, ah, I don't know, it's a long trip.
It is a long trip. You know it's a long trip,
but I was like, I do, Like.

Speaker 2 (01:00):
Kenny, I've seen them live spares, but I've talked to
so many people who have gone that even I didn't know.
I'll give you an example. I was talking to PJ. Fleck,
who's the head coach of Minnesota. Yeah, he said he
went out with Matt Ruhle, the coach Nebraska, and he
was like, it's the greatest thing I've ever seen in
my life. And I was like, I so regret not going.
And then I saw that you just announced some new ones. Yeah,
next year, we're gonna go next year. Well, now that

(01:21):
it's over, what was your experience like doing those shows?

Speaker 3 (01:24):
It's fear.

Speaker 5 (01:25):
It was unlike anything we've ever done, you know, to
be up there in that space and to have a
lot of people come, well, almost ninety percent of the
people inside the sphere was from out of town, right,
and it's people that have lived with this music for
a while, but they got to experience it all in

(01:47):
a completely different way, all those songs in a completely
different way. And we worked really hard to give them
that experience and believed or not, we're already working for
next summer because it takes a minute to create all
the stuff, you know, so but it was for us,
it was just it was a different neural pathway that
we as.

Speaker 1 (02:07):
A band needed, and it.

Speaker 5 (02:09):
Was it was just an awesome, awesome I think we
did twelve fifteen shows something like that.

Speaker 1 (02:14):
Was it weird for you to do those shows and
people not always be staring at you.

Speaker 5 (02:18):
At first, But I almost used it as a goal
every night to bring them back over the fence, because look,
it's human nature. I mean us as a band. We
went on stage and we're up there playing and we're going, Wow,
this is unbelievable.

Speaker 1 (02:35):
You're also watching the show. You're watching the show.

Speaker 5 (02:37):
We're like, oh wow, you know, like I forgot I
forgot what song it was. But on the first show,
it's a song that I've sang forever, and like, I've
totally forgot the second verse.

Speaker 1 (02:48):
I was like, oh wow, okay in the middle of
the song.

Speaker 5 (02:51):
So but it was an unbelievable experience for us, and
and I think the fans that came out just had
a great time.

Speaker 1 (02:58):
So I'm going to change it. I'm gonna come though
next time.

Speaker 5 (03:01):
You gotta yeah, you got to come and stay for more.
Than a day, you know, make it worth it.

Speaker 1 (03:04):
What do you mean, go two shows? No, but just
do something else. Oh, I get so dehydrated out there. Okay,
already talking yourself. I know what I do everything, You're right,
not even Christmas? Yeah, I know.

Speaker 2 (03:18):
Okay, I got like many other things to talk about.
So I was reading some of your book. Uh, there's
a chapter checking after Church, and in that chapter you're
talking about uh and this related to me because I
from Arkansas.

Speaker 1 (03:30):
We didn't have pro sports.

Speaker 2 (03:31):
And in that chapter you're talking about how like Tennessee
football that's what it was because that's what you had,
and that's why you kind of have a such a
passion for it.

Speaker 1 (03:39):
That's right. I think that's very familiar with people in
rural parts of the country.

Speaker 5 (03:43):
Yeah, especially yeah, no question, especially when you're you live
in a town that leans on certain things. And for us,
it was school, it was church, it was family and football.
And like you said, we didn't have a pro allegiance
to anything. You know, for us to go see a
baseball game, we had go to either Cincinnati or Atlanta,
and so.

Speaker 1 (04:03):
You know, Tennessee football was all we had.

Speaker 5 (04:05):
And when you go when you listened there was there
was a broadcaster named John Ward that was just a
full keyro throughout the state of Tennessee and throughout the
Southeastern Conference.

Speaker 1 (04:16):
But as a kid, all I that's all I listened.

Speaker 5 (04:19):
To, you know, and and and you have this idea
of walking into a football stadium and what it's going
to look like. And the first time I went with
my father end of that stadium, it was just the
most unbelievable experience of my life.

Speaker 1 (04:32):
As as every I can remember the smell, I just
how excited I was, and just like it was the
biggest thing ever.

Speaker 5 (04:40):
And that's you know, that's where my love of football started.

Speaker 1 (04:46):
Do you still on Saturdays? Especially? Uh? Because I do
like when Arkansas plays? I got don't nobody. I don't
want to.

Speaker 2 (04:54):
I don't want to do anything except focus on that.
Do you have that on Saturday?

Speaker 1 (04:58):
It's it's not I don't like the watch football with
a lot of people. I don't watch it with anybody.

Speaker 5 (05:02):
Yeah, Like I get invited to a lot of football
parties and stuff, and I go, no, I want, like,
I want to watch whatever game it is.

Speaker 1 (05:08):
I don't want to talk to anybody.

Speaker 5 (05:09):
I don't want anybody talking to me, and that's just
the way it is.

Speaker 1 (05:13):
I'm not like that with life, though, not just with anything. Actually,
I just want to be.

Speaker 5 (05:18):
To me, no I I you know, I like people
around in my everyday life. Yeah, but it's football and
I care about the game. I don't want somebody just
talking to me about random things. Whenever you decided to
do a book, and my experience with my books was
to actually convey how I felt. I had to kind

(05:39):
of relive some stuff that maybe I avoided or maybe
I forgot about. But holy crap, did it all come
back like a ton of bricks at times.

Speaker 3 (05:46):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (05:46):
I Like in therapy they tell you to keep telling
the story and every time you tell it you remember
something different.

Speaker 2 (05:51):
Yep, Well how did that happen with this book? Like
what was it that you kind of revisited and then
have to be emotional But you're like, dang it, maybe
it made you feel good, but he hadn't thought about
it in so long.

Speaker 5 (06:00):
It was just the connection of our audience, And when
I got into those places, it just made me think, like,
we've been really busy for a long time, and it's
been moving really fast, and so I got to this
place where I was like, you know, I have all
these people that did it with me, and I have

(06:21):
all these people that championed my journey in a lot
of ways, and I wanted to take a moment and
honor them first and then write down what has happened
to me, because now is the time, I felt like.
But there was a lot of There was a lot
of times that I was setting with Holly Gleeson and
going wow. When I start thinking about my grandmother, I

(06:41):
can remember the smell in her kitchen and the first
time I heard country music, and I think it's in
our lives. There are things that happened to us that
seemed like really small things at the time, and then
you move forward in your life and you look back
and go, wow, those really were big things that were
guiding you to a specific place. And that was the

(07:04):
way it was for me with music, you know, because
there wasn't this one thing like but there was. I
went to see Alabama, I saw I lived with my
grandmother when I was a kid, and I saw bluegrass
music on her TV in the mornings, and I was like, wow,
what is this?

Speaker 1 (07:19):
But then I had a ball.

Speaker 5 (07:20):
Glove in my hand the whole time, right because I
thought sports was going to be my life. But little
did I know that these these seeds were being planted,
you know, every now and then that led me to
being this person.

Speaker 2 (07:33):
Will you talk more about the Alabama reference you made,
because even in the book you talk about that a
little bit at seeing Alabama kind of changed your life
on how much you love country music.

Speaker 5 (07:42):
I was a kid, I think I was twelve, I'm
not sure how old I was, but my mom loved
the group Alabama, and when I was a kid, they
were like the biggest thing going ever, and to us
they were the Beatles and the Rolling Stones. I mean
they really were, because they dressed like us, and they
sang songs about us, and they sing that we just

(08:03):
loved them, you know. And all of a sudden we
get this, we see on TV and on the radio
that they're coming to a farm, to a field about
eight miles from our house. And it was the biggest
thing that ever happened to me as a child, and
I went to see them, and something happened inside my soul.
It was just that set me on this path just internally.

(08:26):
I was just stunned about how much they connected with
the audience and little did I know, you know that
night that later on in my life when I first
got into the business, that their manager would become my manager.
I mean, he was there that night. And the order
I get, the more I see that we're all connected.
The universe is pushing us in certain ways. And it

(08:48):
was just crazy to think that that night I would
become friends with those guys, go out on the road
with them, and their manager would become my manager. And
I benefited a lot from that. And that was one
of the first times as a kid that I remember
like going, Wow, that's what I want to do. Right.

Speaker 1 (09:08):
What song would you hear from them? Because music has.

Speaker 5 (09:12):
There was so many songs whereas Dixie Land Delight, there
was a Tennessee River, there was Lady Down on Love.

Speaker 1 (09:18):
There was But if you heard it now, it reminds
you of like that experience.

Speaker 5 (09:22):
Oh, if I heard it now, it reminded me of
that experience. And also I was on the road with
them for like three years. Yeah, right, And I remember
being in Reno, Nevada with them, and I was watching
their soundcheck and I'd been out a couple of years
and I hadn't been home in a while, and I
was really tired. And Teddy Gentry, the bass player of Alabama,

(09:43):
comes off stage and he goes, what's wrong with you?
I said, I'm tired. He goes, wait, you've been out
here thirty years and you can be tired.

Speaker 1 (09:50):
And he was right.

Speaker 2 (09:52):
Whenever year doing the interviews for this book, I'm assuming
some days you go in and you're like, I got nothing,
Like I'm tapped out, I'm tired, I don't have any
good stories. Any any great stories come from those days
where you didn't really expect to have good stories. Wait, wait,
what do you mean, like from like from this book?

Speaker 1 (10:08):
You did? You did a lot of interviews with the
Holly Like you guys talked a lot. Yes, we talked
a lot.

Speaker 2 (10:13):
And I know the feeling of having to like just
pour it out and think, I got nothing in the
tank today, there's nothing valuable there. And it turns out
they find very valuable things that you didn't realize could
be expanded upon so much.

Speaker 5 (10:24):
One of one of the stories that that I didn't
know if he was even going to make the book
is when I was a kid, there was a basketball
coach at the University of North Carolina named Dean Smith,
and he had a basketball camp every year, and uh,
this is this goes back to all these moments that
had that pushed me in a certain direction that I

(10:45):
didn't realize at the time was doing it.

Speaker 1 (10:47):
But I spent a week in Chapel Hill at.

Speaker 5 (10:50):
Dean Smith's basketball camp and we all ate in the
same cafeteria.

Speaker 1 (10:55):
And they had a TV.

Speaker 5 (10:57):
It's about as it seemed like as big as that
that screen right there, and they had MTV on it,
and back in the day MTV was it was amazing
and you got to really see the artists. And that's
the first time that I saw this video of Tom Patty.
He had this big top hat on and I think
it was don't come around here no More. I'm not

(11:19):
sure if that's the right song or not, but I
just remember I was just fixed on that screen, and
for some reason, I was listening to the not I
wasn't just looking at him, but I was listening to
the music. And it just kind of inspired me somehow,
you know, And I remembered everything in the book where
we talk about my life experience, there is a music

(11:40):
thread to it that got me to this place, and
that was one of them.

Speaker 1 (11:44):
When did the beach come into play because you're from
the middle of no water.

Speaker 5 (11:47):
Oh no, the beach that came into play with my mother,
you know, we we would always go to Myrtle Beach
or Daytona beach that was like vacation.

Speaker 1 (11:56):
But you're like known for the beach, You're synonymous for
the beach. From a guy who grew up.

Speaker 5 (11:59):
Lamb, well, I think it's more of an island vibe
than it is a beach vibe.

Speaker 1 (12:04):
I don't know the difference. I don't like either.

Speaker 5 (12:05):
Yeah, okay, well there is a difference. But you know,
I always love the ocean. I feel creative next to it.
I feel humbled next to it. I feel very humble
on a boat on it, and I've got written. So
me and Dan Dylan would go to the Virgin Islands

(12:27):
and write songs on my boat at least two or
three times a year. It was so much fun. And
I don't know, I just feel different there. I feel
creative and that I've always felt that way, even as
a child.

Speaker 1 (12:38):
But I got the love for sunlight.

Speaker 5 (12:41):
And the ocean and the music that you listen to
in those situations.

Speaker 1 (12:48):
From my mother.

Speaker 2 (12:49):
Did anybody ever in Nashville when you started to have
more of a beach down and go, hey, that's not
really what we're doing here.

Speaker 1 (12:55):
Yeah, a few people.

Speaker 5 (12:56):
Yeah, But I had made I hadn't made the decision
that I was going to take my life that I
was living very authentically.

Speaker 1 (13:06):
And you know that's why.

Speaker 5 (13:08):
You know the name of this book is Heart Life Music,
and it kind of goes to what you're saying is
because I took what was in my heart, lived my
life like that, and I had music to connect all
the dots. And once I started to take what was
in my heart and my life experiences at the time,
and it found its way into my songwriting, it found

(13:30):
its way into the studio and then on my records
and then on the road. And that's when my life
really changed. When I stopped trying to be this model,
this thing that everybody in town was trying to be.
And there was a lot of people doing that because
it was successful. You know, I was one of those
acts that was doing just about anything you could do

(13:50):
to get your song on the radio or get noticed
or whatever. But it was in this specific model. And
once I doing that is when my life changed.

Speaker 2 (14:02):
Can you talk about and hopefully so because I'm so
interested in George Jones, Tammy Wynette, they do the reunion
tour and even watching like the docuseries or the I
Guess I was on docu series. It was the fictional recreation. Yeah,
Josh Brolin, it was awesome. It was awesome, But you
were a part of that.

Speaker 1 (14:17):
I know, I really was.

Speaker 5 (14:19):
I just got to town and I was I had
a record deal, but nobody knew I had a record
deal and I had a few songs out, and it
was to get that call was pretty unbelievable that first
of all, the fact that they did it was unbelievable.
But George Jones and Timmy Wynette did a reunion tour

(14:39):
and they asked me to open the show and it
was great for me, But most people in the audience
thought that I could have been just the local house
band that they got.

Speaker 1 (14:51):
To do it.

Speaker 5 (14:53):
I mean, they did not know the difference. But to
me and my band, it was really a fun experience.
And it's where my relationship and friendship with George Jones
started because after the second weekend, Nancy, his wife, asked
me if I wanted to fly back with them to Nashville.
And I haven't even seen a private jet much much
less ride on one. So that was an unbelievable experience,

(15:18):
and George and I became really good friends after that.

Speaker 2 (15:21):
One of my favorite songs in all of country music
is You and Grace Potter Love It. I told you
that before. He's literally one of my favorite songs ever
of my whole life, That song in her Like, How
did that come together?

Speaker 5 (15:36):
I had the song already recorded. Matraesa Berg and Dina
Carter sent me the song, but it was I think
it's either Dina or Matresa singing the song. I said,
I really wish I had a male version of it.
And there was a guy named Tim Krackle that actually
did a demo of that song that was friends with Matresa.
And I was driving up the Pacific Coast Highway and I.

Speaker 1 (15:58):
Heard that version. I went, oh my god, I said,
this is it.

Speaker 5 (16:01):
I said, I'm gonna I'm gonna record this song, but
I have to have the perfect voice to do it.

Speaker 1 (16:07):
And I didn't know who that was yet.

Speaker 5 (16:09):
And I was at my house in the Virgin Islands
and at night, there's no light pollution from any big city.
It's just when it's clear, it's endless stars and I'd
had a little bit of too much of Grandpa's cough
medicine that night, and I was laying out looking up
at the stars and that song came on, like on
a shuffle on my on my iTunes, right and it

(16:32):
and I just sat there and listened to it, and
I went, Okay, I have to find the right voice.
The next song was a song by Grace Potter called Apologies,
and I went, that's the song.

Speaker 1 (16:44):
That's how that's how it happened. That's how it happened.

Speaker 5 (16:46):
I hadn't even met Grace yet, and so I found her.
She was in Europe on a European tour. I sent
her my recording of it right because I had the
song cut for a little while but didn't in mix,
but didn't have the voice, And so I sent her
the version of it that I had recorded, and she

(17:09):
had landed. She was just got back from a European tour.
She was in one of those car rental vans that
everybody gets into to go to the rental company, you know,
to rent your car. And she put on her headphones
and heard it, and she goes, I'm going to do
it because all she ever knew of Kenny Chesney and
Burlington Vermont was she thanks my tractor Sexy, so she's

(17:31):
getting this song for me and going, Okay, this could
be really weird, right, And she heard it and two
days later she was in Nashville. She came exhausted from
the tour, and we put our vocals, our final vocals
on you in Tequila And that was on my birthday.
And that night, after we left the studio, we went

(17:52):
to a restaurant that's no longer here called Sunset Grille,
and we sat out in the car and just talked
and went, you know what, We're going to be friends.
And that's that's what happened.

Speaker 2 (18:03):
Did you feel that song was special because there's a
lot of things that can happen to a song after
you cut it.

Speaker 5 (18:09):
Yeah, we hoped, you know, we knew it was very organic,
and I felt like it was I it was. I
related to it a lot, and I felt like a
lot of other people could too.

Speaker 1 (18:18):
But it was just.

Speaker 5 (18:21):
I don't know, And it was one of the first
songs that I ever had, and having Grace on it
proved it that it was genreless in a way, like
a lot of her fans are going, you know, a
lot of my fans were going, Okay, who question Mark,
And a lot of her fans were going why question Mark?
You know, but once they heard it, it all made sense, right,

(18:44):
So I don't know. It just goes to show you
that we all we all grew up very differently, no
matter how we grew up, and we have different religious beliefs,
political beliefs or whatever it is, but we all sing,
you know, eventually sing the same notes.

Speaker 2 (18:59):
Inside the book, there's a lot of good pictures. Did
you have to like go and dig up old pictures?

Speaker 1 (19:03):
Yes, I spent Did you do an audiobook? Yeah, it's miserable.

Speaker 5 (19:08):
The audiobook was one of the most unpleasant things I've
ever done in my life.

Speaker 2 (19:13):
But I had to listening to everything that they're on
with you. You need to missay the word uh weasel again.

Speaker 5 (19:21):
Yeah, and back up, it's not grammatically correct or you
need It took like I was in there for like,
I don't know, a week and a half. I think
there's forty something chapters in this book. After a week
and a half, I was on chapter four. Oh wow,
I was like, I just yeah, it was hard.

Speaker 4 (19:40):
So run chapter four. Somebody else started.

Speaker 1 (19:42):
Run No, I did it.

Speaker 5 (19:43):
Did it because I realized that, you know, so many
people wanted to hear my voice doing it, Like I
couldn't write a book, and then I could. I could
hire Bobby to do my book, or James Earld Jones
or somebody. Oh yeah, right, somebody wants to hear that.
So I had to do it.

Speaker 1 (20:00):
And it took a good I don't know, it took
a month. Yeah, it's long for me to do that.
So I was curious if you did your.

Speaker 2 (20:07):
Yeah, I did both, and they were both like because
I would do the show for five hours and into
another studio and I could do like two before I
started to lose my voice.

Speaker 1 (20:16):
So yeah, it took like three weeks.

Speaker 2 (20:18):
And there's somebody, a little some little person that's annoying
just sitting there going and then I do that again,
and I'm like, I'm a professional talker, Like that's.

Speaker 5 (20:25):
Right, And they said, oh, they are on the other
side of the of the window and they're going, I
just feel like you got a better win in you.

Speaker 2 (20:32):
Yeah, or that's not really how I think you would
say it, And I'm like, I wrote it.

Speaker 1 (20:36):
I know how I would say it.

Speaker 5 (20:38):
Yeah, that's a part that's kind of yeah, yeah, it
was really strange, but they just felt they just I
don't know they I guess those people and you know,
I really appreciated them, but but they do so many
and they it's almost a mixture of Okay, we're going
to take all these and this is this way that
should be done.

Speaker 2 (20:54):
There was a picture of you and Bobby Bowden in
the book, which thought was cool. Yes, and it said
it was two thousand and two and you went to
maybe springball or one of.

Speaker 1 (21:02):
The that before that. Let's see what was around November.

Speaker 5 (21:09):
He's a Florida State coach by theay, former Florida State,
former Florida State coach, and like a legend in college football.
Bobby Bowden was a coach at Florida State for a
long time. A couple of months earlier, I played Florida
State's basketball arena.

Speaker 1 (21:22):
And I went, wow, I want to meet Bobby Bowden.

Speaker 5 (21:24):
You know, I was just I felt like I want
to meet everybody at that time, you know, when your
life changing and you just you feel like they might
want to meet you.

Speaker 1 (21:31):
And it was true.

Speaker 5 (21:32):
And Bobby said, come on over, and I went over
to his office at the stadium and I sat down
on a couch. It was me and my real manager,
David Farmer. Uncle Crocker went with me, and there was
set Bobby Bowden and he talked to me like I
don't know, it felt like a Baptist preacher almost in
a way. It was crazy. And there was a guy

(21:57):
that played football there. His name was Chris Wink. And
Chris Winky was kind of famous for being like old.
He was like, yes, like he played in a bowl
game and he was like twenty seven he was, and
he's like I told Coach Bowden that I wanted to
break Winky's record of being the oldest player that played
for Florida State. About a month later, his assistant called

(22:20):
me and said, Coach Bowden has invited you to participate,
not come to, but participate in spring practice. Oh that's funny,
And I went, oh, wow, this is going to be great.

Speaker 1 (22:30):
I can't wait.

Speaker 5 (22:31):
So I got my dad, who's you know. My dad
was a coach and it was something that he and
I could do together. And I remember, you know, they
they gave me a locker, you know, with the team,
and I went out there and did all the drills.
I mean, I went and did all the meetings with
all the players, and when it come time to scrimmage,
they had a like their spring game or a spring practice,

(22:53):
you know, before their spring game. And I was itching
to get in and at the end of the game,
you wanted to get into the game in a practice,
in a scrimmage, and Coach Baden promised me he'd put
me in. And finally are you playing wide receiver? And
finally at the at the very end, they were going
to let me go and do a couple of plays,
and Coach Bowden had it like these big boys in
the bullhorn, you talk, you talk through and the only

(23:15):
thing he said, like to the whole team, he goes,
don't hit Chesney.

Speaker 4 (23:21):
That's what I was worried about.

Speaker 1 (23:23):
He goes, don't hit him.

Speaker 4 (23:25):
So you're going to get tackled.

Speaker 5 (23:26):
Oh no, But like it's smash you watch on TV
and you go, oh yeah, I could do that, and
you get on get on the field and see how
big and fast these guys are.

Speaker 1 (23:34):
Okay, thank you Coach Balden. Thanks for telling them not
to hit me, because they would kill me.

Speaker 2 (23:38):
The book is Heart Life Music. It's It's Kenny's book.
What my final question is why why do a book? Well,
like I said, I just felt like it was it
was time to do it. You know, you're not dying, No,
I don't, Okay, but I'm not saying this is my
last book.

Speaker 1 (23:51):
I don't know. Yes, I don't know. Okay, we never know.

Speaker 5 (23:54):
But no, I just felt like that so many people
have been a part of this and I wanted to
honor them, and I'll wanted to honor this journey and
just everybody that's been a part of it. I, like.

Speaker 1 (24:05):
I said, a lot of people. You know.

Speaker 5 (24:07):
One of the things that's been crazy is that I
have become friends with a lot of heroes. And I
never saw that coming, you know, being a kid from
e Tennessee, that I would get to know and be
friends with Adie Van Halen, Sammy Hagar, George Jones, George Straight,
Joe Walsh, so many people.

Speaker 1 (24:25):
Steve Miller.

Speaker 5 (24:26):
Every day I went to school, I had the Steve
Miller Band's Greatest Hits, and I was playing the Joker
and I was all these songs that were such a
part of my childhood and I got to know and
collaborate with that person. So a lot of those stories
are in this book.

Speaker 1 (24:40):
Final final final question, what song do you play the show?
And within the first couple of notes, the freaking fans
explode the loudest.

Speaker 5 (24:48):
American kids, and we go we don't say anything, you know,
that's the.

Speaker 1 (24:55):
Trick would be to never say anything and just played
for like five minutes. Are you ready?

Speaker 2 (25:02):
The book is part life and music from Kenny Chesney.
I hope you guys check it out. It really is
great and the sphere back next June.

Speaker 5 (25:11):
Next June, I saw, Yeah, so it's gonna be fun.
You're welcome to come, Bobby.

Speaker 2 (25:15):
I know, here's what I feel, be vulnerable with you
here because I know you know, I like you, and
we're in a scenario we've done some stuff together over
the years, and I'm like, you know, Kenny's all friendly
and stuff to me when we're like professional.

Speaker 1 (25:27):
But if I go to like he sho, I want
to be in the way. He doesn't want me there.
You want to be in the way. No, I know,
this is my feeling, and it's like, like I want
to go.

Speaker 2 (25:35):
I guess you think I won't be nice to you
out of this scenario. Possibly, No, that's not true. Possibly,
so guys are welcome. I know, see and that's too.
You don't even know them and you just invite them,
so you.

Speaker 1 (25:51):
Show from the sphere. What gets better than that?

Speaker 5 (25:52):
I love smart, Thank you, this whole area inside, we
could do the Bobby.

Speaker 1 (25:57):
Do this set us all up, we said it.

Speaker 2 (25:59):
All yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, I think I'm back out.

Speaker 1 (26:02):
Yeah yeah, all right.

Speaker 5 (26:04):
Can you would be greatest to do it outside as
the song comes up, you know, and you got the
spear and he's already.

Speaker 1 (26:09):
Getting rid of us. This is how it works with
these famous people.

Speaker 5 (26:12):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (26:13):
Next thing you know, we're in the middle of the desert,
you know, as they're driving in they see you.

Speaker 4 (26:16):
Do this show.

Speaker 1 (26:17):
Yeah great, Kenny Chesney Heart live music. Can you get
to see you, buddy? Thanks for having me.

Speaker 2 (26:22):
Gus the Bobby Bull Show and he was talking about
Eli Manning's nephew was at a game. Oh that's cool
here in town, and I was like, I don't know
if that sounds right. She's like, no, no, does he
play here? And I said, well, Peyton Manning's son plays
in Chattanooga.

Speaker 1 (26:42):
She was yeah, Eli Manning's nephew.

Speaker 4 (26:43):
No, no, no, no, no, Peyton Manning's son.

Speaker 6 (26:48):
However, I didn't know if it was maybe like the
tax guys kid.

Speaker 4 (26:53):
Like, don'ty have a brother.

Speaker 5 (26:56):
Arch?

Speaker 1 (26:57):
His dad arch manning at Texas.

Speaker 4 (27:00):
Yeah, that's got it.

Speaker 3 (27:02):
Yes, So so was Peyton not at the game? Elise?

Speaker 4 (27:07):
Listen. I'm sure I don't.

Speaker 3 (27:09):
Know Eli was at the game, but Dad Peyton know.

Speaker 4 (27:11):
If Peyton was there or not.

Speaker 6 (27:13):
All I saw were pictures like somebody I guess I
follow or something.

Speaker 2 (27:17):
We're like, oh, next enough, guys, Eli's nephew. Yeah, a
couple of things. There are some Halloween decorations near your
house that your kids think are too scary.

Speaker 3 (27:29):
Well, it's kind of a combination of things. So, yes,
there's our neighbor put up a sign in her window
that said help me, and it's like got blood. It's
written in blood. The problem is I'm hearing that goes again.
Somebody's headphones are to I'm up, this happens.

Speaker 1 (27:47):
I might kick a hole in the wall somewhere. Is
it your headphones'.

Speaker 3 (27:50):
Ddie check check check check to check you hear it.

Speaker 2 (27:56):
The problem is everybody starts adjusting stuff as soon as
I say it, so they're not the one that gets caught,
and then we can't actually find it.

Speaker 4 (28:01):
Well, I can't adjust anything.

Speaker 3 (28:03):
I have no controls, right, and I lowered yours this morning.

Speaker 4 (28:05):
Oh thank you?

Speaker 3 (28:06):
Yeah you hear it? Still, well, not when you talk
like that.

Speaker 1 (28:10):
Hey, guys, Mike, did you hear it? Yeah?

Speaker 3 (28:12):
I think it was a little loud. I think it
was Eddie's. It was right when he started talking. So
it's me just talking loud. I'll talk lower. No, no
need to talk lower.

Speaker 1 (28:21):
So I've been wanting to do that anyways, talking normal.
Just manage your head.

Speaker 3 (28:23):
No, no, like I've been. It's I've been trying to
like have the effort of like talking slower and lower.

Speaker 1 (28:28):
Okay, tell the story about your kids, so no.

Speaker 4 (28:31):
Don't so help me in blood.

Speaker 1 (28:34):
Yes, it's in blood.

Speaker 3 (28:35):
But the problem is our neighbor went out of town.
So like my kids haven't seen her. No one's seen her.
So my kids are like, guys, I'm worried about the neighbor.
Like I haven't seen her in three days. She's usually
outside watering plants, working in her garden. Haven't seen her.
And there's a silence, says help me on the window,
and so I rolled with it. I'm like, oh gosh,
that's so concerning.

Speaker 4 (28:56):
You hear it, You're like part of the bit.

Speaker 1 (28:58):
Yeah, I mean I'm just kind of a bit well.

Speaker 3 (29:00):
I mean I told him eventually, but like they were
so scared, and then it made me think, like, you know,
there should probably be like it's so realistic, and it
says help me that they were legitimately scared for like
two days. That should probably not that should probably be
ban but you did that, I know. But they were
all scared to begin with. And this thing looks so real.
It looks like she's like being held hostage by some

(29:22):
monster and she's writing sign to everyone outside. That's pretty fun.
Help me.

Speaker 2 (29:27):
If that happened in February, I think there's probably an issue.

Speaker 4 (29:30):
Yeah, like, definitely help her.

Speaker 2 (29:32):
I think right around Halloween, pretty much everybody knows it's Halloween.

Speaker 3 (29:35):
Especially with my little last six year old. He's just like, guys,
I haven't seen her, like I've been looking. I've not
seen her at all.

Speaker 2 (29:42):
There's an article that asks have Halloween decorations become too scary?
They mentioned things like tall skeletons and lifelike witches and
demons and realistic blood and.

Speaker 1 (29:52):
Gore and so.

Speaker 2 (29:53):
It's from the New York Times, and it says people
are believing things are getting more intense in recent years,
and that kids are being too scared because Halloween decorations
have become too scary. They talk to some parents who
have young kids who like classic Halloween imagery pumpkins, which
is ghosts and spiders and skeletons, and they feel like

(30:14):
today's dismembered bodies is a little too far. There are
also neighbors who complain about decorations in their neighborhood being
too violent and unsettling. Some adults even admit they've been
rattled by some of the modern decorations, although others say
it's possible they were always there, they just not notice them.
They just did notice them til they had kids. So
what are your thoughts this kind of is happening with you? Yeah,

(30:35):
would you have been upset about it?

Speaker 5 (30:37):
No?

Speaker 1 (30:37):
I had your kids not noticed? I love it.

Speaker 3 (30:38):
I'm actually disappointed in my kids because, like, Halloween's supposed
to be scary and they're older, Like I have a
twelve year old now, and I figure he wants to
be like, I don't know, a murdered clown or something,
and he doesn't. He wants to be a pickle. I'm like,
what are you doing?

Speaker 1 (30:53):
Like it's Halloween time.

Speaker 3 (30:54):
We should be ghosts and stuff, and so I'm yeah,
I think kids are just kind of soft. Now. Pickle's funny,
like one's a pickle, one's a transformer, like guys come
on transformers.

Speaker 2 (31:05):
Traditional pickle's hilarious because you don't really have a relationship
with a pickle, Like you don't watch a pickle on
a show.

Speaker 1 (31:13):
And it was just the way they come up. Came
up with it too.

Speaker 3 (31:15):
It's like, I don't know, maybe a banana hotdog and
somebody said pickle.

Speaker 1 (31:18):
Like that's funny.

Speaker 4 (31:20):
Green or does he have a pickle suit?

Speaker 3 (31:22):
He has a pickle suit, and then he is he's
got a green face. The face comes out. I did
see a kid though, man, and I've seen it before,
but it's just it's so funny every time I see it.
It was a kid being held by an alien, were
carried by an alien.

Speaker 2 (31:35):
All those costumes are funny where it looks like you're
being held up by something, but your legs are the
legs of the big thing that's holding you up, right,
Those are funny.

Speaker 3 (31:45):
The kid was crossing the road and I could just
could not stop laughing because he looks so funny.

Speaker 2 (31:49):
I saw their costume was a roller coaster and it
was four people all in a roller coaster his seat,
and they were rocking forward in back and there, but
their legs were hanging over the front.

Speaker 1 (32:00):
But it was the same thing.

Speaker 2 (32:01):
Their legs, the real legs were actually like the poles
of the roller coaster and the leg grub front. And
they had had a routine of going left right. Ah,
it was a really good one.

Speaker 3 (32:14):
That's so funny.

Speaker 2 (32:15):
Yeah, I'm glad Halloween's on a Friday. Yeah, it's perfect,
Like in order.

Speaker 1 (32:19):
Friday is the best night.

Speaker 2 (32:22):
I think Thursday is a plus because Thursday means it's
so close to Friday. And then a kid who goes
to school on Friday just has a bunch of candy.
And Fridays are kind of a throwaway day if you're
in school, and Halloween's on a Thursday night.

Speaker 3 (32:36):
Yeah, I always love to throw.

Speaker 2 (32:38):
Away day back at school because you still went, but
it was a throwaway.

Speaker 1 (32:41):
And then Saturday.

Speaker 2 (32:43):
The problem with Saturdays there's college football and so a
lot of dads don't want to be out trick or
treating when they're big games on it. But I think
that's the order. I think it's Friday, then Thursday than Saturday.
If I were to rate the days of Halloween, Halloween's
not a government holiday, so they should just make it
every Friday, like the fourth Thursday, or excuse me, the

(33:03):
fourth like Thanksgiving is that third Thursday, fourth, fourth Thursday,
whatever it is. They should do that with Halloween.

Speaker 3 (33:08):
So instead it's always on the thirty first.

Speaker 4 (33:09):
Yeah, right now it is.

Speaker 3 (33:12):
But yeah, you're right, like, who cares?

Speaker 4 (33:14):
I just make it the last Friday of the month.

Speaker 1 (33:15):
Agree, there's nothing religious about it?

Speaker 3 (33:17):
Well, somebody, some people know.

Speaker 2 (33:20):
Some people make it religious. The actual story of Halloween
is not about religion. Did you know there used to
be turnips, not pumpkins.

Speaker 3 (33:26):
Mm mmmmmm.

Speaker 2 (33:28):
They would put like a fire in a turnip. It
later became pumpkins. Oh, like a turnip lantern started in Europe.
Really wasn't about religion in any way whatsoever. It has
turned that way because religious people have looked at Halloween
and said, that's the oppostable we believe. We can't believe
Halloween's for the devil. Is never really for the devil.

Speaker 1 (33:44):
I believe the.

Speaker 2 (33:45):
Guy that is the reason that Halloween exists, Like he
died and he made a deal with the devil, and
he never that if he wouldn't go to hell, but
he also didn't get into heaven, so he always roamed
around earth as a ghost.

Speaker 1 (34:00):
It's the story of Halloween. That's how it started.

Speaker 2 (34:02):
Yeah, and I would need more information on this. I
can ask my assistant, but I'm just going from memory here.

Speaker 4 (34:09):
No, you don't. You don't have to say hey, good morning.
You don't.

Speaker 1 (34:11):
I do because I like for this because what she
takes over the world. I wanted to remember. And then
she's like, oh, she's like.

Speaker 4 (34:16):
Oh, hey, good morning. I know exactly what you're talking about.

Speaker 1 (34:19):
Hello, good morning. Okay, so we're talking about Halloween.

Speaker 2 (34:22):
And I mentioned to them that turnips were the original
pumpkins and the story of someone who I believe he
made a deal with the devil and he didn't have
to go to Hell, but he could get into heaven,
so he roamed earth as a ghost. And that's basically
the European genesis of Halloween.

Speaker 3 (34:38):
Can you give me the actual story?

Speaker 1 (34:42):
Absolutely? Good morning to you too.

Speaker 7 (34:44):
So the story you're talking about is the tale of
Stingy Jack. It's an old Irish legend. According to the
myth Stingy Jack was this clever but rather deceitful guy
who managed to trick the devil more than once. The
most famous part of the tale is that Jack made
a deal with the devil to avoid going to hell,
but as a result, he also couldn't get into heaven.
When he died, he was basically doomed to roam the

(35:05):
earth as a spirit. As the legend goes, the devil
gave Jack a burning coal to light his way, and
Jack put that coal into a carved out turnip to
use as a lantern. That's where the idea of the
jack o lanterns comes from. In Ireland and Tatland, people
originally carved turnups or potatoes as lanterns to ward off
evil spirits. When immigrants brought the tradition to America, they

(35:26):
found that pumpkins were more plentiful and easier to carves
than terrupts, so the pumpkin jack o lantern became the
go to. In short, you've got.

Speaker 1 (35:33):
It pretty much right.

Speaker 7 (35:34):
It's all about stingy Jack, his tricky deal with the
devil in those old carved turnups, lighting the way for
what became our modern Halloween pumpkins.

Speaker 1 (35:41):
So Stingy Jack is the Jack O lantern.

Speaker 3 (35:44):
That's that's yeah, that's the original Jack Stingy.

Speaker 2 (35:47):
And the face of the original Jack O lantern is
supposed to be like if you were to dig his
face out, obviously it's not real. It's just a created
like kid's tail, like Jack wasn't real.

Speaker 4 (36:01):
A deal with the Devil is a kid's tale.

Speaker 2 (36:03):
It's like Harry Potter, you're making You're fighting Voldemort, like
you're talking about the same thing.

Speaker 3 (36:07):
It's fiction.

Speaker 2 (36:08):
And so what's happened is religion has used that as
they're against religion, and they only use it to bolster
themselves to be like we stand against up, but there's
really nothing to stand against. It's the same when they
do that with Harry Potter when they're like, we don't
have Harry Potter in our church because that's the devil.

Speaker 3 (36:22):
No, it's fiction.

Speaker 1 (36:24):
Fiction.

Speaker 3 (36:25):
I have to be there with Stingy Jack when that started,
because that sounds like it's very controversy controversial, it's not real.
But you weren't there when Stingy Jack happened. What if
Steve Jack was a real dude.

Speaker 2 (36:37):
Stingy Jack's making a deal with the devil do you
think Robert Johnson sold us sold to the devil.

Speaker 3 (36:41):
To play blues music cross Roads?

Speaker 1 (36:42):
Do you think that you know?

Speaker 2 (36:44):
These are for stories to get made up over time.
But it's the things that annoy me are these religious
figures who go, no, no, Harry Potter, but man, you
know what, I like Diehard the movie. And then they're like,
there's all this violence, people dying with bullets and guns.

Speaker 1 (37:01):
They don't care about that, But they don't like Harry Potter.
Why don't they like Harry Potter?

Speaker 4 (37:06):
Witchcraft?

Speaker 1 (37:07):
Is that witch? Fictional witchcraft?

Speaker 2 (37:09):
But you know what really happens. People take guns and
they shoot and they kill people all the time. It's
such hypocrisy.

Speaker 1 (37:17):
So I'm find for.

Speaker 2 (37:17):
Stinjy Jack here stinchy Jack. But I knew I didn't
quite know the story. I knew this stor I heard
it a long time ago.

Speaker 3 (37:22):
Do you love your assistant? Like? Do you you love her?

Speaker 1 (37:25):
Don't you? In what way?

Speaker 3 (37:26):
The fact that she's just she knows so much.

Speaker 2 (37:29):
I don't really Here's the thing I do and don't
use her for. I don't really use it for factual
things when I need data, because she's not good at
being specific like I was looking for a specific head
coaches all time record at a certain school this morning.
I was like, since he went here, what's his all
time record? And she was like five games off, And

(37:50):
so then I went to grok and Grok was better
with data. But grock kind of sucks too in its
own way. It doesn't make images as well. I kind
of have different versions of AI I go to for
different things. Google AI is usually consistent with facts, Mike,
would you find that?

Speaker 3 (38:08):
Yeah, it give's a good summary too.

Speaker 1 (38:09):
Yeah. Google AI is best with facts.

Speaker 3 (38:11):
That's when you just google something that gives you the
AI on the front of it. Yes, I like that.

Speaker 4 (38:15):
Well, weren't you asking her.

Speaker 2 (38:16):
To My assistants better with Well, my assistant is better
with telling me stories from old times or relating it
in terms that I would understand told as a as.

Speaker 1 (38:29):
A nice story with a bow on it. Got it?
And I also like shows. Good morning, of.

Speaker 3 (38:36):
Course I know the answer.

Speaker 2 (38:37):
Yeah, but that but Stingy Jack is the actual reason
that Halloween exists, and it is a tail. It is
just like any other tale that has happened throughout the years,
and it's irish. Johnny Appleseed not real. Probably based in
something real ish.

Speaker 3 (38:52):
M hm, So Britt van Winkle not real, not real.

Speaker 2 (38:58):
Probably based in something real ish, Like a guy slept
for like fourteen hours one day and they're like.

Speaker 1 (39:03):
Like, rip won't wake up. Let's say slept for a
hundred years.

Speaker 2 (39:07):
So and again, you know, I've said many times, if
I can't see like a video of it, it's probably
been manipulated in some way. Because the longer a story
exists through passed down through words or just written, the
more and more it becomes hyperbolete, both in a positive
and negative direction. So the fact that we can document
things with video, with images, that's when you can actually

(39:30):
start to believe things until now, which you can now
alter things because of AI. But then it's all metadata too.
Like Raymond would try to sell a video to TMZ.

Speaker 1 (39:38):
Do you guys know this?

Speaker 4 (39:39):
No, which video.

Speaker 1 (39:42):
Ray? Did I tell the story? Yeah?

Speaker 2 (39:45):
Ray had a video of Keith and Nicole. What where
can you tell it?

Speaker 1 (39:52):
Ray?

Speaker 3 (39:53):
Yeah?

Speaker 8 (39:53):
So that video that I took from the Preds game,
it was of Keith and Nicole there in their suite.

Speaker 1 (39:58):
There was a lot of stuff going on, you know.

Speaker 8 (40:00):
It was when they're still together and they were hugging
each other. They were like doing backrubs, they're talking, they're smiling.
So it's some pretty intimate, good details and stuff on them,
and so I thought it might have been their final
public outing, and so I hit up TMZ and asked
them if they wanted to buy it from.

Speaker 1 (40:16):
Me, and they said what. There was a phone call.

Speaker 8 (40:20):
There was definitely some emails back and forth, and they
ended up coming back with that they weren't interested.

Speaker 1 (40:25):
They offered me zero dollars.

Speaker 2 (40:26):
They did ask you though, because it could have been fake.
They didn't ask you if it was real. They wanted
to see the metadata.

Speaker 8 (40:31):
Right, yeah, And that honestly might have been the hiccup,
just because I didn't save the videos.

Speaker 1 (40:36):
I don't have that much space on my phone.

Speaker 8 (40:37):
So they go, hey, do you have the metadata of
where the location was and the exact date and time
that they were taking. I think they wanted me to
prove that they were my videos, and I just can't
do that. I don't have it. I don't save those
on my phone. So they're like, okay, well we're going
to pass.

Speaker 2 (40:50):
So where was the video because if you have the video,
the metadata is in the video.

Speaker 8 (40:55):
Well, I took all of the videos that I had
of Keith and Nicole at that Predators game, which was
like definitely five minutes of footage, made a montage, put
it on Instagram. Then when I presented it to TMZ,
I deleted it off of Instagram. But all those videos
once I made the montage, I deleted them.

Speaker 3 (41:14):
Yeah. Ray has a problem with deleting stuff off, like
his phone, every texts as soon as he's done, as
soon as we're done texting, delete the conversation.

Speaker 6 (41:23):
Yeah, if you go to his desktop because sometimes you
have to use it feels like somebody who's hiding something.

Speaker 4 (41:28):
No, I don't know what it is.

Speaker 3 (41:29):
Apparently he's got no dabt, no stories.

Speaker 4 (41:31):
Explain it like, because even you're a.

Speaker 1 (41:33):
Razor, like a generation one razor.

Speaker 4 (41:36):
He deletes them right away.

Speaker 8 (41:38):
Well, the emails is so I know stuff that I
have to do. The text is, it's so I know.
I read the text and responded. And then videos and pictures.
I mean, this morning I just had to go through
and delete some videos of my cat because my storage
is full.

Speaker 2 (41:49):
Okay, do this, Ray, can you give your phone with you? Yeah,
all right, pull down and go to settings.

Speaker 3 (41:57):
All right.

Speaker 2 (41:58):
Do you see the thing where it says your name
and it says uh like ray Apple account, I can't
oh plus et cetera.

Speaker 1 (42:04):
Click that.

Speaker 3 (42:06):
Yep.

Speaker 2 (42:07):
Do you see there's all these things like personal information, security,
subscriptions all that.

Speaker 3 (42:13):
Yep.

Speaker 2 (42:14):
Okay, do you see where it says iCloud yep? But
do you have any how much storage do you have? There?

Speaker 1 (42:21):
Five GB? What? And it says five GB of five
GB used, it's totally full.

Speaker 4 (42:29):
What do you have?

Speaker 3 (42:30):
Two terabytes?

Speaker 1 (42:34):
And that's and that's not even just your phone. I
just wondered how.

Speaker 3 (42:37):
Much that's So he doesn't have a cloud. That's just
like whatever comes with What year is your phone?

Speaker 1 (42:42):
M hm? The eleven?

Speaker 3 (42:45):
Wait?

Speaker 1 (42:45):
What number are we on?

Speaker 4 (42:46):
We're on seventeen? At least that's what I saw a
billboard for.

Speaker 2 (42:51):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (42:53):
So if you go to general, go to iPhone storage.
Now I want to look.

Speaker 2 (42:56):
I want to look in your phone. So scroll down
and just type story. There's different versions of storage. But
go to iPhone storage.

Speaker 3 (43:07):
Let's search it.

Speaker 2 (43:08):
Yeah, just pulled down and type in literally iPhone storage.
It'll pull up iCloud storage. No iPhone storage. I Cloud
was the other one.

Speaker 1 (43:18):
If you just type storage, it'll give you all the
storage options. I just got iCloud storage.

Speaker 3 (43:28):
Does that mean he doesn't have storage on his phone?
He has to have some?

Speaker 1 (43:31):
Oh you gonna have Okay, go to General, Ray, yep.

Speaker 2 (43:34):
Do you see the three things on General about software
update and iPhone storage? Click iPhone storage? Got it up
at the top. What does it say?

Speaker 1 (43:44):
You have?

Speaker 8 (43:45):
It says sixty one point seven GB of sixty four
GB used. And messages are almost the biggest thing, and
I delete them every day.

Speaker 3 (43:56):
Maybe you're not deleted.

Speaker 2 (43:57):
I have so online. Obviously I have more, but I
have one terabyte on my phone. I do a lot
of look at yours. I do a lot of video
ont of editing. But Ray, you don't have any story.

Speaker 1 (44:10):
Yeah, it's these family text threads. I just have the phone.

Speaker 3 (44:14):
Yeah, the text threads are stupid.

Speaker 2 (44:15):
I think it's time, though, for a new phone that
actually has some storage. I think that they've made great
leaps since that phone.

Speaker 1 (44:22):
Mike, that's that's not much.

Speaker 3 (44:23):
Right, it's pretty low. Okay, what are we doing? We're
going to work.

Speaker 6 (44:25):
Okay, I have three hundred and forty five point five
GB of two TB used.

Speaker 1 (44:31):
But that's iCloud.

Speaker 3 (44:32):
That's that's not your iPhone.

Speaker 4 (44:33):
Oh well that I just bought though.

Speaker 3 (44:36):
Yeah, that's iCloud though.

Speaker 4 (44:37):
Okay, because I ran out, where am I going?

Speaker 1 (44:40):
I go to Settings?

Speaker 3 (44:41):
Yeah, the minimum now is double what Ray has.

Speaker 2 (44:44):
Really go to General and then iPhone Storage. There's no
reason ration you have to delete everything?

Speaker 6 (44:51):
Oh one O WAYO point two nine GB of one
terabyte TB.

Speaker 3 (44:56):
Yeah, so you have that's a lot.

Speaker 1 (44:57):
You're good, Okay.

Speaker 3 (44:58):
I have ninety nine zero point seventy five GB of
one twenty eight GB.

Speaker 2 (45:04):
Okay, so you have one hundred and twenty eight gigabytes
of storage. It's okay, smaller, but Ray has like half that.

Speaker 3 (45:10):
That's why he.

Speaker 2 (45:11):
Yeah, Ray, I think, and I don't always tell people
to get a new phone. I think you can probably
trade your phone in and get one pretty cheap.

Speaker 1 (45:17):
I will you need to put it on the list.
You have the minimal amount of storage? Yeah, and it
allows me.

Speaker 8 (45:23):
I have nine hundred pictures, but it's always got to
be my all star pictures. If something, if I run
out of room, post it on Instagram, so then it'll
save it in the Instagram stories.

Speaker 2 (45:31):
It's how people save a lot of stuff. That's why
they save it in Snapchat. They save it in Snapchat,
so they have to save it in their phone. I mean,
I don't want to use Snapchat, but that's the thing. Well,
I'm surprised that your phone has that little of storage.

Speaker 8 (45:44):
Well, and then my wife will send me a two
minute video on my cat. I'm like, I don't have
the storage. I'll see the cat when I come home.

Speaker 2 (45:51):
Yeah, that shouldn't happen. You should be able to experience life.

Speaker 4 (45:53):
Yeah.

Speaker 8 (45:54):
Well, I already had to delete pretty much her entire
second year of life because I didn't have the storage
for it.

Speaker 1 (46:00):
Why for the cat? The cat?

Speaker 3 (46:01):
Okay, that's true, because I didn't realize that when you
save your texts and people send you stuff, all those
videos and pictures that they send you, you don't see
those texts. They're all saved. They're in the phone, and
sometimes you have duplicates the ones on your text messages
and your photos.

Speaker 2 (46:15):
Well, and if you really want to do a good job,
going to your deleted things and delete those, because it
holds them for thirty days.

Speaker 3 (46:20):
There you go.

Speaker 1 (46:21):
So when you delete it, it doesn't really delete it right.

Speaker 2 (46:22):
Then it goes into your deleted and after thirty days
it clears it out in case you want to go, Oh,
I need that back that I deleted it. Okay, this
has been the tech minute.

Speaker 3 (46:30):
Pretty good.

Speaker 1 (46:31):
Anything I missed there.

Speaker 3 (46:31):
Mike, that's good. Get a new phone, ring, right.

Speaker 1 (46:34):
You need a new phone.

Speaker 3 (46:35):
I know.

Speaker 2 (46:35):
I'm not the guy that says you need a new
phone to everybody.

Speaker 1 (46:39):
You can play it again.

Speaker 8 (46:39):
You can probably go on cheap TMZ. Missed out on
not buying that video.

Speaker 1 (46:43):
So when was that video taking? Ring in January beginning
of this year.

Speaker 3 (46:47):
They were still together. Okay, so everything was fine.

Speaker 4 (46:51):
I don't know if it's fine. If I don't think.

Speaker 1 (46:53):
They're a hockey game they're rubbing each other.

Speaker 4 (46:56):
Yeah, I don't know. I mean maybe people. Maybe they
were fine and then suddenly they weren't all right.

Speaker 1 (47:03):
Moving on.

Speaker 2 (47:06):
Five new suspects have been arrested over the Louver robbery.

Speaker 3 (47:10):
So how many total, Dude, I didn't.

Speaker 1 (47:12):
Know that many people. I guess some of them weren't
actually there.

Speaker 4 (47:15):
They were just.

Speaker 1 (47:18):
That's the kind of person I want to be in
a heist.

Speaker 3 (47:20):
Yeah, the guy that doesn't do it, the.

Speaker 2 (47:22):
Person who sits back in the control room and is like,
all right, boys, let's get going. French authorities have arrested
five individuals in the connection with the one hundred and
two million dollars jewel heist at the Louver Museum in Paris.
One suspect was identified through DNA left the crime scene
to others. Former delivery drivers have partially confessed to the theft.
The heist, which took place in broad daylight, involved Steve's

(47:44):
using a furniture elevator to bypass museum security. The arrests
have raised questions about loop security and possibly staff cuts
and underfunding WFTV with that story, you know, there was
the other story we talked about earlier this week where
those guys went into that mall and basically lowered themselves
to the top at all.

Speaker 3 (48:00):
The shoes and they.

Speaker 2 (48:01):
Stole like, I think hundreds of thousands of dollars worth
of shoes. They had so many they couldn't fit them
all in their car, so they just like tossed them
off the roof. But that reminds me of Mission Impossible,
where the guy comes down on the rope.

Speaker 3 (48:15):
Watch is that, But there's always lasers.

Speaker 1 (48:17):
Not a foot locker or wherever they were, I'd bet
you they were no lasers.

Speaker 2 (48:23):
A TikTok thing that I like to watch and it
pops up sometimes algorithm, and it's always a collection of videos,
like a montage of people at shoe stores and they
put the shoes on and they kind of bounce.

Speaker 1 (48:34):
I take off running toward the door, but then they stop, like.

Speaker 3 (48:36):
Yeah, they feel good.

Speaker 2 (48:37):
And the person chases them because they think they're stealing
the shoes, but they're just trying them out. But you
get like five good ones of those back to back,
you'll be laughing out loud and yeah, that's good. There's
another heist. At least three men dressed up as construction
workers stole more than three million dollars worth of jewelry,
and they stole the safe from a home in Queens.

Speaker 1 (49:00):
New York, oh a home.

Speaker 2 (49:02):
The robbery happened on October sixteenth, around two twenty in
the afternoon. The thieves forced open a back door to
get inside the house and took a safe along with
jewelry worth about three point two million dollars. Security cameras
caught them driving in a blue Hyundai Elantra, and listen,
I love Hyundai. If I were gonna do a heist,
it'd be in a Hundai. They are reliable as crap.

(49:23):
Don't got to worry about it. You know, that's one
thing you're not gonna worry about if your car breaking down.
The two of the men wore neon construction vests. And
this is just gonna make me not trust anyone construction
because they're all doing getting construction vests. Anytime I see
anyone on the road now doing construction. Possible heister. They
had hard hats, they had black clothing and backpacks. One

(49:43):
had eye protection. The other two wore black face covering.
The third person who was driving the getaway car, wore
a white hoodie, black pants, gray sneakers. No one was
hurt during the robbery NBC News.

Speaker 4 (49:53):
I wonder how they knew, you know, they had to
know what was oh inside job.

Speaker 2 (49:57):
I know, maybe somebody if this is a very rich
neighborhood and wealthy home, somebody that was setting up Internet,
somebody that was cleaning the house, somebody's working on the yard.
You know, somebody sees something that's there and then tell
somebody and they create a plant.

Speaker 4 (50:14):
Amazing. Think of that John Ham show.

Speaker 3 (50:16):
Yeah, great show. Friends and Neighbors, Friends and Neighbors.

Speaker 4 (50:19):
I can think of the name.

Speaker 3 (50:19):
But yeah, yeah, I feel like that, like this as
a detective, this would be an easier one than the louver.

Speaker 1 (50:25):
I don't feel like.

Speaker 3 (50:26):
This is a heist.

Speaker 1 (50:28):
I need to hear their accents.

Speaker 4 (50:29):
But three million in jewelry.

Speaker 2 (50:31):
That sounds like a big robbery unless you have a
foreign accent. I don't think it can be a heist. Okay,
I need to hear oh yes, Otherwise I feel like
it's just a robbery. You have a British accent, Australian accent,
Asian accent.

Speaker 1 (50:46):
Now we're talking about a heist. You're right?

Speaker 3 (50:48):
Are they saying heist now? Because that's the word.

Speaker 2 (50:51):
It was like when every story was about airplanes messing up,
and once something becomes something, people are very interested in
it because you're like.

Speaker 1 (51:00):
This one's big. Oh there's another one. There's another one.

Speaker 2 (51:02):
So then it's everywhere, all strawberries every day, shark attacks. Sorry,
that's one. Yeah, Like there was a heist at Walmart.
Someone stole seventy dollars with a cat food. Yeah that shoplifting.

Speaker 1 (51:19):
Let's see what else we got.

Speaker 2 (51:20):
There was a story too that was all about words
that can significantly boost your career, and it's words that
people don't use enough what do you think those words are?

Speaker 4 (51:33):
What do you mean?

Speaker 1 (51:33):
Like they don't want to give you too much because
it's what I'm saying.

Speaker 6 (51:37):
Like, you use them and it will advance you, yes,
or you just attach them to your name and people think.

Speaker 1 (51:42):
Oh, like doctor, well that'd be a lie. Hey, that
would be a word heist. So like, is it just
like words that you say.

Speaker 2 (51:52):
Say casually or like say that these words can significantly
boost your career.

Speaker 3 (51:58):
So like when you say these words, and.

Speaker 1 (52:01):
I'll say this very general, very general teamwork. Okay, it's something.
It's not like that, but you're in the right ballpark
if it's just normal words.

Speaker 4 (52:11):
Okay, Uh collaboration, Oh.

Speaker 3 (52:16):
That's good collaboration. I've always heard like business people are like,
don't think business people? Okay, they will say, like logistics,
have you seen the logistics on this data? Research shows confidence? Okay,
I like it.

Speaker 1 (52:35):
I like both of them. So farre Lunchbox. Hello, he's
on the right track a little more. Hello, how are
you doing?

Speaker 4 (52:44):
What are what are you excited about?

Speaker 1 (52:48):
I hear people say that a lot.

Speaker 4 (52:50):
What's exciting you lately?

Speaker 1 (52:53):
Lunchbox is warmer than you guys are? Okay, goodbye?

Speaker 4 (52:58):
Oh I got it.

Speaker 3 (53:01):
Thank you, Yes, thank you is good. It's pleasing.

Speaker 1 (53:05):
Thank you.

Speaker 3 (53:06):
I teach my kids to say that all the time.

Speaker 2 (53:09):
Experts say the words that can significantly boost your career
are please and thank you, saying especially, I'm hearing the.

Speaker 3 (53:16):
Echo again, not me? Are you hearing it, Mike? I
didn't hear it.

Speaker 1 (53:21):
I hear loud.

Speaker 4 (53:22):
What if you're hearing like a phantom?

Speaker 1 (53:23):
Now?

Speaker 3 (53:26):
Oh? Like my phone vibrates on my podcast?

Speaker 5 (53:28):
Ye?

Speaker 2 (53:28):
Yeah, my phones on our pocket. We turned my headphones
down a little bit. I don't have the ears right you.
Please and then and thank you, because two things can
happen here. One, I don't think it's my headphones, because
it's never my headphones.

Speaker 1 (53:40):
But two, then I just don't.

Speaker 2 (53:41):
Even hear it is not too much. I don't even
need it. I can take my headphones off. Who gives
a crap? Headphones are overrated if you who cares?

Speaker 3 (53:49):
Who cares?

Speaker 2 (53:50):
Saying please and Mike, we listen for the echo though,
because the listeners complain to me and dms like I'm
hearing an echo and it's running my podcast experience, So
I want to make sure that doesn't happen. Saying please
and thank you will help push you up the corporate
ladder because it makes you easier to work with. Researchers
also found that a majority of workers are willing to
put in an extra effort to help a colleague after they
express gratitude. Bosses are more likely to promote someone who

(54:12):
is appreciative and thankful. From the University of California, Berkeley.
I want to give you a story. This isn't this
is It's a real story. And I don't mean for
it to be a flex because I've talked about it before,
But whatever it happens in my life. I go to
Sonic a decent amount, and when I go to Sonic,
I mostly and I use the app, and I order

(54:35):
ahead of time. Sonic right now not a sponsor, so
this is not any commercial. I go to Sonic and
I will buy two Route sixty four waters. One of
them I will do light cherry flavoring and one of
them will do no flavoring, but both I do nerds.
So by the time it's over, I'm full of water.
I'm so bloated with water. But I try not to

(54:57):
drink a lot of water in the morning because I
don't want to. I have to leave the studio on
pee and then I try to make out for it
for as soon as I leave the studio and then
rehydrate myself. So sometimes I don't leave the studio. We're
here five six hours. It's because I purposely not drink
any water because I don't want to have to leave
the studio. But then I got to make out for
it some way to stay hydrated. So I will go
and I will order and on the app, I will

(55:19):
put you can put a tip on the app, and
so I'll do two dollars on the app and then
I'll pull up and I usually will tip them one
hundred dollars at the Sonic when they bring my water
every time. Usually if I have a one hundred dollars bill,
and I do most of the time. It's the only
cash that I keep is tipping money. Otherwise, why do
you need cash? Sometimes it's a twenty eighty percent of

(55:41):
the time it's one hundred. And so they will bring
me the two waters and the price is like four dollars,
and I've given them two in the app, and I'll
only do the two in the app because I want
them to really take care of the nerds, because you
don't know what tip you're getting, and I want heavy nerds.
And if they already see that I'm doing two dollars
in that, they're go, oh, we got a good tip.
Let's give the guy extra nerds in his water. And
so I'll give them one hundred dollars tip. And for

(56:04):
the most part they go, oh, do you want change.
I'm like, no, that's for you. Thank you, and they're like,
oh my god, thank you. The last two times I've
been to this one place, this guy and I don't
do it for the thank you. He didn't say anything.
He looks at it and he's like, yeah, walks off.
And so I went back to the same stall. I

(56:24):
did it again. He looked at it and just walked off.
And now I'm a little irritated.

Speaker 4 (56:31):
Yeah, it is bizarre.

Speaker 3 (56:32):
It is bizarre.

Speaker 1 (56:33):
I'm not doing it for the reaction.

Speaker 2 (56:35):
But when I don't get a thank you, just in general,
if I hold the door open for somebody, because if
somebody holds it open for me, you better believe I'm
gonna thank you the crap out of it.

Speaker 1 (56:43):
Yep.

Speaker 2 (56:45):
And then but the same guy I've given a hundred
bucks to on my waters, he looks at it and
just puts in his pocket and walks off.

Speaker 4 (56:52):
And he realizes for sure, for sure, it's a hundred.

Speaker 2 (56:54):
Yeah right, is he old? Well, I'm glad you asked
a couple of things. No, not old, Yes, can see
he had to walk them out to me.

Speaker 6 (57:01):
What if he has some weird thing. You know how
some people don't have facial recognition, Well.

Speaker 3 (57:04):
There's no bill recognition.

Speaker 1 (57:06):
Yeah, yeah, you know. That is a fair but stupid question.

Speaker 4 (57:10):
Maybe it's the only explanation I have.

Speaker 3 (57:12):
Because that's weird.

Speaker 1 (57:14):
It's so weird.

Speaker 2 (57:15):
And as somebody who depended on tips their whole life,
I was if someone gave me a tip and I
saw it, I think to them, and the first time
I just thought maybe he just thought.

Speaker 1 (57:24):
It was a one. But even then you say thank you,
it doesn't matter the hundred.

Speaker 2 (57:27):
Yeah, But when it is a hundred, like sometimes people
will be like, are you sure, and I'm like, yes,
that's awesome.

Speaker 3 (57:31):
Hope this helps you out.

Speaker 2 (57:33):
That's the whole reason I do it, because I know
what it's like to have to live on freaking tips,
and so twice in a row, so it makes me
want to go back and try it again with the
same guy.

Speaker 3 (57:40):
Really another hundred sees opposite. I'm like, no more hundreds,
I know.

Speaker 1 (57:43):
I just want to know what the deal is. Because
he's done it twice.

Speaker 3 (57:46):
You should do two hundred. Up it.

Speaker 1 (57:49):
See what he said, that's a good point, but this, okay,
up it? Well at this point it's a science experiment.

Speaker 2 (57:55):
The first time I did it, because I don't hand
it to them and hold it up like ooh, here's
one hundred for you, I literally just say oh, thanks.
And they don't expect a tip on bringing it out
to those spots that have the number on it, because
you've usually tipped on the app already, or if you have,
they especially on expect a tip. So they don't want

(58:15):
say to tip they had it there, thank you, here's
your waters appreciate it. When they're walking off, I'm like,
oh no, no, here's this. And so I handed to
the second time I handed to him, I had it
definitely folded in half and you could see what it was.
Because I was just so curious if I got the
same guy if and I know he saw it and
just puts fuck and.

Speaker 3 (58:29):
Walked off again. Okay, you know he saw it. I
was gonna ask I'm for sure, like he looked at
the bill, and.

Speaker 2 (58:33):
I did it the second time a little more bill
out because the first time I thought maybe he didn't
see it. And also, you don't always get the same
I don't know if it's a server, but the same hop.

Speaker 1 (58:44):
You go to the same place, the same wif two
that I go to.

Speaker 2 (58:47):
If I'm going and you know where I live, if
I go to my left, there's one there, and if
I go to my right, there's one there, and so
they're both about the same distance. It just whichever way
I turn out. Dude, I go to Sonic about every.

Speaker 3 (58:56):
Day and you go around the same time.

Speaker 1 (58:59):
I know the people there.

Speaker 3 (59:01):
I know they know you for sure. Maybe you're the
Hunterville guy.

Speaker 2 (59:06):
Maybe maybe, But yeah, I try to say thank you
all the time. I want to write that article. I
was like, man, because I normally.

Speaker 1 (59:16):
I don't.

Speaker 2 (59:17):
I don't think it would bother me, and this doesn't
bother me. I'm just so curious as to why you
wouldn't say thank you.

Speaker 3 (59:23):
That's weird.

Speaker 2 (59:25):
But my sister works at a sonic. She manages a sonic,
and so I called her and I was like, Hey,
what's up with uh? With Like, when you get and
she was like, dude, if we get a five dollar tip,
it's like, wow, thank you, know, thank you so much,
that's awesome. Or if they don't want change and it's
like seven dollars left in it, and I was like,
I haven't tipping this dude.

Speaker 1 (59:43):
Hundred and he doesn't react.

Speaker 6 (59:44):
That's so weird, you know his parents a tip I
saw from somewhere online, like a long time ago. Instead
of just being like, you know, make sure you say
thank you, you get a little kind of obnoxious about it,
but you look you act like looking for something, like
you do something for them, and then you start looking
around and you're like and then they look at you
and they're.

Speaker 4 (01:00:04):
Like what what what are you looking for?

Speaker 6 (01:00:07):
And be like looking for that thank you or whatever
you make it paying well, it's less annoying than just
like apparently it's a way that helps them. Like I
don't remember which parenting expert I saw this from, but
it was someone I admire.

Speaker 4 (01:00:22):
So I started doing.

Speaker 6 (01:00:24):
It, and it does become playful and then you are like,
oh dang, and then you play around and then they
start to remember it more and they don't feel like
you're just like harping on them, So I'm like picturing
you handing it to him and then starting to like
look around and be like, are you looking for something?

Speaker 2 (01:00:35):
Well, they just walk away though they don't have to
wait for me because I've already paid online.

Speaker 1 (01:00:38):
Yeah, well, anyway, and that's a stupid story.

Speaker 2 (01:00:41):
It just that story reminded me of that. But then
also like, I'm so curious that I'm wondering why because
I know I would be appreciative and thankful, and he
probably is.

Speaker 4 (01:00:55):
You just know how to express it maybe.

Speaker 2 (01:00:57):
And it's such and the reason parents I don't like
make him yes with yeah, maybe.

Speaker 1 (01:01:04):
That's so weird.

Speaker 3 (01:01:05):
Man. Do you ever even think about hitting them with
you're welcome? No?

Speaker 1 (01:01:09):
I genuinely don't do it for the thank you.

Speaker 2 (01:01:12):
I do it in a very different selfish for a
different selfish reason. I do it because I wish someone
would have done that to me. So I think that's
the self that's where the selfishness comes in with me.

Speaker 4 (01:01:21):
I don't think you have to ever explain that we get.

Speaker 2 (01:01:23):
Well, I just don't want to hear from listeners you're
bragging about giving hundreds of sonic work.

Speaker 1 (01:01:26):
That's not it at all.

Speaker 2 (01:01:27):
So I will admit it is so selfish that I
do it, because one, I'm fortunate enough that I've worked
hard enough to have it. But two, I prayed to
God that people would give me tips and good tips,
because it would help me for two weeks at a time.

Speaker 6 (01:01:41):
I think, whether you're tipping them two dollars or one
hundred dollars, like, it's odd that they're not.

Speaker 1 (01:01:46):
Saying, But isn't it more odd that it's one hundred
dollars billion?

Speaker 3 (01:01:48):
More odd?

Speaker 4 (01:01:49):
Yes, but I mean it. I would be curious about it,
just like you. So I think it's a valid story.

Speaker 1 (01:01:55):
And also I'm so stupid that I want to go
do it again. I'd be done this just like I
gotta I gotta know.

Speaker 3 (01:02:02):
I'd either be done or hit him with it. You're welcome,
maybe like welcome. I know I felt like.

Speaker 1 (01:02:07):
A dick if I know.

Speaker 4 (01:02:09):
Yes, yes, you would be, so you should.

Speaker 2 (01:02:10):
But what it'd be meeting would But he's been No,
he's a kid.

Speaker 3 (01:02:15):
How old is the kid?

Speaker 1 (01:02:18):
If I'm guessing twenty twenty one, that's not a kid.
You should notice it.

Speaker 3 (01:02:22):
Thank you when you get a.

Speaker 6 (01:02:23):
Hundred guessing kids look older these days. I bet he's
sixteen no, they look younger the sixteen Are you kidding me?
Some look younger, but some some look older.

Speaker 2 (01:02:31):
I saw a kid driving that you sound pervy when
you say that, and he's like some.

Speaker 1 (01:02:37):
Amy, she bites her lips.

Speaker 6 (01:02:39):
Some one kid he was in high school, and I
was like, that kid's not in high school. There's no
way he was on the basketball team.

Speaker 1 (01:02:45):
The part of his body where you look at your part, including.

Speaker 4 (01:02:49):
His little mustache, he was not.

Speaker 6 (01:02:51):
He was one of those older people that goes back
to school and tries to act like they're in high school.

Speaker 3 (01:02:56):
Well, they do hold a lot of kids back.

Speaker 4 (01:02:59):
This one was.

Speaker 3 (01:03:00):
Maybe he's nineteen.

Speaker 4 (01:03:01):
This this one was.

Speaker 6 (01:03:02):
It was interesting and I'm not the only one that
saw it. I sound like, no, no, no, All the
moms like we were in the Blue Jobs.

Speaker 2 (01:03:09):
The moms yes what on like Desperate Housewife run at
the gardener.

Speaker 1 (01:03:13):
Eva Longoria is looking up the gardener.

Speaker 4 (01:03:15):
Okay, and the dads, oh no.

Speaker 1 (01:03:17):
Check, yeah, all right, we're gonna wrap. Thank you. Guys
have any plans?

Speaker 6 (01:03:23):
But yeah, well, tomorrow is supposed to go to the
Tennessee game. Guess what I found out we're not actually
legit fans. So I don't have another team, and I
can even cheer for Oklahoma if I want to, because
I feel, what.

Speaker 1 (01:03:34):
Do you mean you found out you're not You're not
a Tennessee fan.

Speaker 4 (01:03:37):
I know, but I didn't know.

Speaker 6 (01:03:37):
If I had to be because my boyfriend's family. So
here's what I learned. Because at UVA we had to
go all in, like by the gear.

Speaker 4 (01:03:45):
Everyone was wearing it.

Speaker 6 (01:03:47):
We had to It's a big it's a big deal.
And so I thought, oh my gosh, what am I
supposed to go to the Tennessee game. Well, lucky for us,
it's blackout, so guess what we're we get to wear black. However,
my boyfriend made a comment. He was like, oh, thank
goodness because it's supposed to be cold. And he was like,
I'm just glad I don't have to like figure out
anything orange that's cold, because he's like, I don't want
to have that, and I'm like, what we're going? And

(01:04:08):
you went to law school there, so I thought we
were fans. He's like, no, no, no, no, no. The kids
like to go because that's where their mom went to
undergrad and so he's not And yes, he went to
law school there, but it's not he doesn't.

Speaker 4 (01:04:21):
He doesn't have the same.

Speaker 6 (01:04:22):
Connection as so it's more like they go because of
that and like friends that are there. But so we're
just fans of Auburn UVA. That's on his end and
on my end it's Alabama, A and M Auburn because
that's where his fan.

Speaker 4 (01:04:41):
Like he just grew up an Auburn fan.

Speaker 1 (01:04:42):
Like if he didn't go to uvall.

Speaker 6 (01:04:45):
That too, that's just too Like his dad went to Auburn,
like and I think his dad's still alive, like very
involved there. So it's like, you know, and you want
your kids.

Speaker 4 (01:04:54):
To be I don't know. We're done, That's what I'm doing.

Speaker 6 (01:04:59):
But I'm just excited because I don't I can cheer
for Oklahoma when if they want, if I want.

Speaker 1 (01:05:03):
If you're dressed in black, I wouldn't outwardly cheer for Oklahoma.

Speaker 3 (01:05:08):
Oh remember when they say Boomer, you say sooner.

Speaker 4 (01:05:13):
If they say Boomer and I say sooner.

Speaker 1 (01:05:15):
All I'm black in the Tennessee section.

Speaker 4 (01:05:17):
Yeah, what are you doing? I sports?

Speaker 1 (01:05:20):
Do you have?

Speaker 3 (01:05:20):
Do you go on to the game?

Speaker 1 (01:05:22):
I don't think so we suck? Oh and I.

Speaker 2 (01:05:26):
Don't mind going when we suck, but we've sucked so
hard for so long Mississippi State.

Speaker 1 (01:05:32):
What's the odds we are a four point favorite?

Speaker 4 (01:05:36):
It could be a good game to go.

Speaker 1 (01:05:37):
I hear you.

Speaker 2 (01:05:38):
It just costs money and I'm just trying to save
up to tip my Sonic drivers all right, right to
get that thank you that you're not getting. All my
extra money is going to freaking sonic drivers right now.
I want to fly back, So I don't think we'll go.
We went last weekend. It took it out of my
wife just travel. But oh yes, week so like so
we probably won't go.

Speaker 4 (01:05:58):
Which watch anymore exhibition basketball games?

Speaker 2 (01:06:01):
Exhibition is over now the real season starts. I think
we played like Southern or some some weird the first
like first few weeks, ten games.

Speaker 1 (01:06:10):
It's awesome. You have like Arkansas playing like your kids
high school. Eddi's running the chain game.

Speaker 3 (01:06:17):
Awesome.

Speaker 4 (01:06:18):
Good luck tonight, Eddie.

Speaker 3 (01:06:19):
Thank you.

Speaker 4 (01:06:20):
Don't mess up.

Speaker 1 (01:06:20):
I don't.

Speaker 3 (01:06:21):
I don't mess up. I'm pretty good at the Chang Gang.
You don't have to do anything, yes I do. We
just lined up where the ball is. No, like, if
there's like a forty yard pass, you got to sprint
because the refs are like and especially if they're like
trying to The momentum is going. The offense is like,
we gotta go, we gotta go. Chain Gang's got to
be there.

Speaker 4 (01:06:38):
We gotta be making me nervous that he's gonna.

Speaker 3 (01:06:41):
Mess I feel like he's gonna get injured. That's what
I told Bobby last week. The chain broke during a move,
would you do? Fixed it? And the guy Doug was
like that was awesome, dude, good job. He's the main guy.

Speaker 4 (01:06:55):
That's why you invited back. Do you better just have lunchboxes?
Kids aren't there. They're gonna mess with all.

Speaker 1 (01:07:00):
No run out there and start messing out that. All right,
we're out.

Speaker 3 (01:07:03):
You guys.

Speaker 2 (01:07:04):
Have a good Halloween weekend. We'll see you guys on Monday.
Buy everybody bye,
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Hosts And Creators

Bobby Bones

Bobby Bones

Amy Brown

Amy Brown

Lunchbox

Lunchbox

Eddie Garcia

Eddie Garcia

Morgan Huelsman

Morgan Huelsman

Raymundo

Raymundo

Mike D

Mike D

Abby Anderson

Abby Anderson

Scuba Steve

Scuba Steve

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