Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:07):
This goody.
Speaker 2 (00:12):
Indulge me a bit, everybody. Sometimes I just wanted to
go on a tangent and you don't have.
Speaker 1 (00:17):
To agree, but just be cool, Okay.
Speaker 2 (00:20):
Then if you disagree, you can disagree after. I just
don't even my flow interrupted. You know. I'm like a
rapper in the boots. I'm like jay Z when he's
like hit it and he doesn't even really hear the
beat yet. There's a really cool video of jay Z
hearing the beat to uh, get Dirt on your Shoulder,
and it's he hasn't heard it yet, and like, I
think Timbaland is that producer you may want a fact
(00:42):
check me on all this mic And he's like, oh,
that's it, that's the that's it, that's it, And he
doesn't have anything written down, or maybe it's ninety nine
problems and that's a different one. Regardless, he has nothing
written down. Which one is is it Dirt off your
shoulder with Timbland?
Speaker 1 (00:58):
Yep?
Speaker 2 (00:59):
And he's not freestyling because he doesn't do the whole thing,
but he's doing parts of it, and he's he's like
oh yeah, yeah, yeah yeah, if you huh get dude,
and he's like feeling it right with it and get yeah,
dirt off your shoes and he just goes and it's
like wow, And then he's doing all these other verses too,
(01:21):
and some of it. Dude, it's crazy to watch his mind.
Speaker 1 (01:24):
That's cool.
Speaker 2 (01:25):
Another one was ninety nine Problems, a very similar one,
and that was produced by not Timblin' Rubin, Rick Rubin,
Rick Rubin, same guy that did Beastie Boys, Don't we did?
Johnny Cash Hurt Yeah, did a bunch of massive and
every and same thing. He was like, jay Z comes
(01:46):
down with no paper and has kind of what he
wants to do, and it's like, if you haven't got
it's crazy, crazy the mind of like the greats. My
mind is not great because I wasn't even wanting to
talk about that. I wanted to go on a little tangent,
but nobody interrupted jay Z, So please don't interrupt me.
Speaker 1 (02:03):
Got it.
Speaker 2 (02:06):
In my trash can, which I have here beside my desk.
It's mostly papers that we recycle. Every once in a while,
I'll spit in it, but i'll spit underneath papers because
I don't even like to see my own spit. You
don't like.
Speaker 1 (02:19):
Spit, You're interrupted?
Speaker 2 (02:21):
No, I don't care if you interrupt like that, like effection,
but every once in a while they'll be like, and
sometimes I'll put like a food in there, not a lot,
but if I have food, like I'll take a little
jar if I have fruit and throw it away, And
it's on me. But it's also a little bit on
(02:41):
scuba if we don't get the trash out, because what
happens when there's food in the room fruit flies, blood flies, right, gnats.
We're in the old studio. We have gnats everywhere all
the time.
Speaker 3 (02:52):
I'm yeah, fruit flies.
Speaker 2 (02:54):
So it's my fault. So when there is food in
the trash can, which I try not to have in there,
mostly that's on me because I should take the trash out.
But if I don't, it's kind of on scuba. But
we kind of have a rule and everybody does a
pretty a job of not leaving food out. I'm the one,
so I'd like to say that in the one however, Amy,
(03:18):
but my cookie cake, you please give it back to
our lunchbox. You left a massive piece of cookie. It
was sitting on your desk, Like, why is he giving
it to me? Because it was on your Now you
have to eat it. We have decided you left it
out for twenty four hours.
Speaker 1 (03:33):
This is awesome.
Speaker 2 (03:34):
Now. It was on the radio show today, but we
did it after the show yesterday. I walked in think
it was the first one in the room. It was
still dark in here, and I was like, Amy already
here having cookie cake for breakfast. Did I not see
her car out there?
Speaker 3 (03:45):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (03:45):
They were like, no, she left food out for twenty
four hours.
Speaker 3 (03:48):
I was still here.
Speaker 1 (03:51):
Wait overnight.
Speaker 3 (03:52):
Well no, but I think I planned on coming back
here after I had a podcast interview, So.
Speaker 2 (03:57):
I planned to come back and eat it.
Speaker 3 (03:58):
No, no, no, no, no, I didn't plan to come back and
eat I plan to come back in here. I had
a podcast interview and I had to go because I
had to go to the other studio. And what studio
the one.
Speaker 2 (04:08):
Down the hall.
Speaker 3 (04:09):
Yeah, but I was gonna be I was late.
Speaker 2 (04:11):
I had It's like she had to go to the
studio in Atlanta, right down.
Speaker 3 (04:14):
But I mean I had a we were backing up
into like I was like, oh, shoot, I gotta go.
So then I was like, oh, I'll come back and
tidy up. But then I don't have this door locks after.
Speaker 2 (04:26):
Noon, so I was like well wise man said, if
you're having food problems, I feel bad for you, girl. Okay,
I'm just cake on your table. Eat that cake on
your table. You gotta eat that cake on your table, okay.
Speaker 3 (04:41):
So it has enough sugar in it that I'm sure
it's sitting out, so it's fine overnight.
Speaker 2 (04:46):
It's like a preservative.
Speaker 3 (04:47):
I think, yes, exactly what it is. And so I'm
okay with that.
Speaker 2 (04:52):
But can I don't even care that you eat it?
Speaker 3 (04:56):
I just I will.
Speaker 2 (04:56):
Can I say I don't want you.
Speaker 3 (04:58):
You would make somebody else to, So.
Speaker 2 (05:00):
I literally don't want you to eat it.
Speaker 3 (05:01):
Here's the thing, though, but I don't want to get
I need whatever.
Speaker 2 (05:05):
No, no, no, don't need it. Don't No, it's not even
about that. That wasn't the point. The point was you left
food on the table for four hours.
Speaker 3 (05:10):
That was bad.
Speaker 2 (05:11):
And do you know who I depend on more than
anybody else? Set an example as an adult to the
rest of these people that aren't adults most of the time,
offense Mike not talking about you.
Speaker 3 (05:19):
What I was a child?
Speaker 2 (05:21):
No, no, not, you weren't a child. It was unexpected.
Speaker 1 (05:24):
It's true, Amy, we look up to you.
Speaker 2 (05:26):
They were all so disappointed food. I was like, guys,
give her a break, and they were so disappointed.
Speaker 3 (05:32):
Yes, they were so disappointed. Well, I didn't know that
I wanted. It's so pretty. I didn't want to throw
it away.
Speaker 2 (05:37):
But now you're fibbing for your own just tossed it.
You didn't want to throw it away. It's half eat
and it looks disgusting because it's happy.
Speaker 3 (05:44):
It still looks pretty.
Speaker 1 (05:45):
Amy, don't lie because then you'll just let us down again.
Speaker 2 (05:47):
They are so disappointed and they don't know what to
believe it this.
Speaker 3 (05:50):
I'm shocked that one of them didn't pull up the
voice changer and come up with some whole.
Speaker 2 (05:55):
First person in. And I told long Spot hide it
behind the table so we can do the bit because
they may have and I've ever used the voice change. Amy.
So she left her food. She likes there are hungry
people all over the world that she couldn't donate it.
Speaker 3 (06:11):
Yeah, or she's like she's so tidy and responsible.
Speaker 2 (06:15):
Anyway, everybody, please throw your food away. I hate having
a YouTube example, Amy, that's really sad for me.
Speaker 3 (06:22):
This cake is honestly so good.
Speaker 2 (06:24):
It's the best cookie cake I've ever had.
Speaker 1 (06:27):
Is it still good?
Speaker 3 (06:28):
Well me, I'll let you know.
Speaker 2 (06:30):
Don't eat it. Why you don't have to because it
was just a joke. I don't want you to have
to eat it. I was just playing, okay.
Speaker 3 (06:37):
Oh the outside was a little hard. I'm not gonna
lie because I think just being hot all day, but
the center soft interesting.
Speaker 2 (06:46):
I ordered it again. I pay full price for the cakes.
I'm gonna go broke because I've ordered a couple already.
Speaker 1 (06:53):
No way these are cheap. They're not. Their quality is
so good.
Speaker 2 (06:55):
They're not cheap. But she makes them herself at her house,
and so is that legal?
Speaker 3 (07:00):
Yeah, she probably has a license or permit. You can
get a permit to do it out of your house.
You just have to.
Speaker 2 (07:05):
I don't know if it's legal or not.
Speaker 1 (07:06):
I don't have no questions.
Speaker 2 (07:09):
It's m ads dot eats eat z and it says
cute custom cakes and bakes Nashville, Tennessee. Pricing availability in
menu on order form booking February and V Day special below,
and then you just go look at her cakes if
you want again. I don't even get a one percent discount,
(07:30):
so I don't feel bad. Don't hit me with oh
he's promoting it because it's free. It ain't free, folk,
you're it because it's good. Yes, that's the best cookie
cake I've ever had.
Speaker 1 (07:40):
Did anyone eat the disco ball? There was an edible
There were like four edit edible disco balls on there.
Speaker 2 (07:45):
I did not eat the disco ball. I had a
half piece of cake. We were in the middle. This
ship is run extremely tight. If you guys are out
of the room, I'm recording countdown or some other podcast thing.
So I had a piece of half piece of cake
and I got rid of it because I don't want
to be flies mhor amy. That turns in her all night.
Speaker 3 (08:04):
Maybe she was just okay, look, I have a bite
prepared if I take.
Speaker 2 (08:06):
A bike, don't eat it because I don't want you
to be sick. And isn't interesting enough to bring up again?
It literally is maybe, Well, yeah, y'all.
Speaker 3 (08:16):
One fruit fly shows up, and trust me, I know
what's getting brought up.
Speaker 1 (08:20):
That's true.
Speaker 2 (08:21):
In a vacuum, it will not be brought up again.
Out of a vacuum. A fruit flies show up and
then people pick it for waste of food they heard
on the show. They gets done away, then we'll bring
it up again. N PR causis is not really cookie
cake and it was lying. Then we'll yeah, because they
like to fact check you on stuff.
Speaker 3 (08:38):
I know they do.
Speaker 1 (08:39):
Can you explain the vacuum every time? You say the vacuum.
Speaker 2 (08:42):
By itself without being affected by anything.
Speaker 1 (08:45):
So inside like the vacuum bag.
Speaker 2 (08:47):
Inside a vacuum, it doesn't be a great question. I
think sometimes I say that and I don't think I
understood until it was explained.
Speaker 1 (08:54):
I never understand it.
Speaker 2 (08:55):
So inside of a vacuum, it doesn't mean a vacuum, okay,
but it means without any influence of anything else or
anything that could influence it in the future alone.
Speaker 1 (09:05):
By itself, got it okay? So like isolated.
Speaker 2 (09:10):
Absolutely with no other information that is pre or post.
So we were talking about the Kan City Chiefs and
I was like, in a vacuum, they're not an unlikable team.
They're unlikable because they've won a lot and data da
so people don't like teams that continue to win. But
in a vacuum, you just take this one team, extrapolate
this one year and big word, dear God, I'm just
(09:32):
gonna take a break.
Speaker 1 (09:34):
That was just I don't know what that word means either. Like,
I don't what does that mean?
Speaker 2 (09:39):
You look at what Google? Do them both? Because I
think that's fun, And I also could be using it
in a way that isn't completely accurate. I feel like
I am, but I've used words completely inaccurate before.
Speaker 1 (09:52):
Can you spell that for me?
Speaker 2 (09:54):
I'll just do it for you, struggle.
Speaker 3 (09:57):
You have to find a way to use extrapulate.
Speaker 2 (09:59):
Today to estimate or conclude to like we extrapolate data,
we take it out and use it, separate.
Speaker 1 (10:11):
It, put it in a vacuum.
Speaker 2 (10:13):
No different, you can you can take data and put
it in a vacuum. Ok. Yeah. To extend the application
of a method of conclusion, especially one based on statistics,
to an unknown situation. By assuming that existing trends will continue,
our similar methods will be applicable.
Speaker 1 (10:30):
Do you remember when you learned that word?
Speaker 2 (10:31):
Yes, I do, because we would constantly have to extrapolate ratings.
Oh so you're already in radio when you do that?
Oh for sure, Okay, that's a term they use forever.
Let's just extrapolate.
Speaker 1 (10:43):
May the first time I remember the like execswhere around
and they were like, oh, we're doing a deep dive
on your show, and I'm like that hurts you guys
are on a vacation. Like deep diving. I don't understand
and I never knew understood what deep dive men, but
now I've heard it hundreds of times, like it's a
research going deep into research.
Speaker 2 (11:01):
Yeah, you get a deep dive on anything I do.
Deep dive, Yeah, characters and careers. It's just trying to
learn more than you normally would on the surface surface.
So like James Avery, who played Uncle Phil, a dive
in Uncle Phil would be he was a voice of Shredder,
he was Ninja Turtles the cartoon whoa, he was Uncle
(11:22):
Phil on Fresh Prints. But you deep dive further stage
actor right, very famous stage, and then you you learned
childhood that that's an even deeper dive. So it's just more.
But yeah, those are just words I use, not even
sure if they're all right, but using them. Scrapulate, No, no, extrapolate.
Speaker 1 (11:42):
Extrapulate is it you?
Speaker 3 (11:45):
Later?
Speaker 2 (11:45):
Late what I thought. I was watching our TikTok Boby
Bone show TikTok page, and I was telling Morgan and
Eddie they're doing a great job in those videos because
there's a science to it. You just can't put a
good bit. It's got to like immediately hook you and
you gotta be in and out interesting because I'm swiping
(12:07):
through like crazy. I'll swipe through our stuff too. If
I'm on it, I don't want to see me and so.
But there was one when we were doing the sayings
because Amy's was cold as hale because it's not cold
as hell, and then Eddie goes, I always thought it
was play it by year, and I'm like, what do
you mean? He goes, play it by year, not ear.
I thought that segment was pretty fun until I was
talking and I could absolutely hear somebody thinking it was
(12:31):
play it by year. Now it's weird to go, we're
gonna give it three or sixty five days to play
it by Yeah, but it does sound like play it
by ear, play it by year. That sounds the same.
Speaker 1 (12:40):
Yeah. So it makes more sense to me for all
those years than like, play it by ear your actual ear,
like you're hearing, No, play it by.
Speaker 2 (12:49):
Ear would mean we are going to kind of listen
the situation and make a decision based on what's happening
in that moment.
Speaker 1 (12:56):
Wow, Because my brain says, it just makes more sense
to be like, hey, you know what we'll take the
whole year think about it. Maybe we'll do it.
Speaker 2 (13:02):
Man, that is a slow.
Speaker 3 (13:03):
Decision a long time.
Speaker 2 (13:05):
Hey, Abby, who is Lindsay Who's fortieth birthday? I'm gonna
sign this book for Oh do we know?
Speaker 3 (13:12):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (13:13):
Is it a listener? Yes? Did they send the book
up here?
Speaker 4 (13:15):
Well?
Speaker 2 (13:16):
Is her friend her friends? Yeah?
Speaker 3 (13:18):
Like a surprise, oh for her birthday?
Speaker 2 (13:22):
You know what? Even better than that would be me
saying happy birthday, Lindsay, hope you have an awesome fortieth birthday.
You're gonna get a surprise, which is I'm going to
sign this book and write happy birthday to you. But
I hope you're forty. The birthday is awesome and it Yeah,
but even if it's the one that's getting a surprise,
it'd be pretty cool to hear this from like her
show she if she likes us and we're like, happy birthday, Lindsay.
(13:43):
That's even cooler than getting a surprise book if you
ask me, No, that is legit. So this is sign
and give it back to you.
Speaker 3 (13:49):
Yep.
Speaker 2 (13:49):
When this comes to people, just mail them up here
on like a random package and then we open mail
and it's.
Speaker 1 (13:53):
Just a book.
Speaker 3 (13:54):
Well, I talked to her on the phone, so I
knew it was coming. She was like, would you do that?
I was like, sure, I'll do it and send it
so I.
Speaker 2 (14:00):
Will sign this. Okay, okay, okay. Speaking of Cake, I
announced via Cake Eddie and Ray were leaving. I wrote
this note to myself. But now the listeners are guessing
who is leaving the show since it looks like Eddie
and Ray are locked in and so here are the
odds based on the amount of guesses on social media.
The favorite is Morgan at five to one.
Speaker 3 (14:22):
That sounds weird to say favorite.
Speaker 2 (14:26):
We were betting.
Speaker 3 (14:26):
I get it. I know that's how betting works. It
just sounds a little Yeah.
Speaker 2 (14:30):
The person that would have the most bets would be
Morgan at five to one, so you would bet you'd
make the least amount of money because she'd be the
favorite according to the betters to leave the show.
Speaker 3 (14:41):
Why is that?
Speaker 2 (14:42):
I don't know why people picked you more than anybody else.
Speaker 3 (14:45):
Am I giving off leaving Vibes?
Speaker 2 (14:47):
I don't know. I think about that. Why do you
think it is, Mike? I don't know. I don't either.
Speaker 3 (14:51):
I don't feel like I'm put leaving Vibes.
Speaker 2 (14:53):
I would think. Maybe it's that there's no vibe at
all about you leaving or staying and it just feels
like out of nowhere what happens? So they're going with
the out of nowhere vote? Got it? Okay? What about
like the potential of someone that could leave and be okay, Well,
I'll read you the odds. I don't know why people
have selected them, but Scuba Steve's at ten to one,
so second overall Scuba Steve, and I think that's probably
(15:14):
based on the fact that Scuba has been vocal about
wanting to do more, not that he doesn't do a
lot here, but he wants to do some front facing stuff.
So you know, be the guy chase my dreams, chase
chase his dreams.
Speaker 1 (15:26):
Maybe it's all I want to chase his dreams.
Speaker 2 (15:29):
Let's go Amy's third, fifteen to one, Lunchbox at twenty
to one, kick off Kevin at twenty five to one,
which for him to have any odds at all, I'm
surprised because he's not really on this show a whole lot.
Abby at fifty to one, Mike be at seventy five
to one, and me at one hundred to one. So
I'm the one least likely to leave. But edity your question,
(15:51):
who can leave and be fine? Amy?
Speaker 3 (15:55):
Or sure?
Speaker 2 (15:55):
If I left, it would just be Amy. She'd sit
over here. Oh, Amy would run the show of course,
or I don't know what would happen. I don't know
what happened.
Speaker 1 (16:05):
Mental health hour pull.
Speaker 3 (16:06):
That audio, please, mental health. I talk about more than that.
Speaker 2 (16:12):
He means off here.
Speaker 1 (16:12):
But if you went free range, though, Amy, I think
we go straight mental health.
Speaker 3 (16:16):
No, no, no, no, no, we'd have we'd have fun.
Speaker 1 (16:20):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (16:20):
Probably, I don't know that that's the case. But if
if something were to happen in this room, I know,
whenever my contract is coming up a year and a
half or so ago, I like, I know who they
were thinking about replacing me with, and it wasn't somebody
in the room. But I think they were also just
doing that to kind of be like, oh, we're talking
to somebody whoa So if.
Speaker 1 (16:34):
They replaced you with, like say that this person, would
we have to work for them?
Speaker 2 (16:37):
No, you guys would not work for the show. Okay, Yeah,
Amy would do like National mid Days or something or
nights or something like that. Rest you guys, I don't know,
good luck, good luck, But that would be the answer.
I think Amy's the most prepared a scuba obviously, could
can executive produce anything, run a show because that's on air,
it's sales, it's but people don't really know what he
(16:59):
does because most of it's off the air. Yeah, I
think the answer to Amy, I can also cut grass
too good landscape, that's true, so I can always fall
back on that.
Speaker 1 (17:07):
I bet I'm.
Speaker 2 (17:07):
Better fall back which or not. Sometimes I just want
to do that instead of waking up this early. You
seem like you get a little something.
Speaker 1 (17:14):
Yes, man, I'm sure lunchbox got me sick.
Speaker 2 (17:20):
Way, so that would mean I would be wrong that
he didn't have right Coaches Convention. So either he yelled
too much at Coaches Convention, which he does every time
he goes to Vegas, or he brought in another illness.
Speaker 3 (17:31):
Yeah, which is it, Eddie, because you also accused him
of yelling at coaches correct.
Speaker 1 (17:35):
I mean, I guess initially thought it was all coaches
Convention him yelling. But now that I know that, I'm
starting to sound a little bit like him, I think
he's just getting a sick Now.
Speaker 2 (17:45):
Well, Morgan sits in between you two. Morgan, do you
have anything at all.
Speaker 3 (17:48):
I did not feel good yesterday.
Speaker 5 (17:50):
I never felt bad.
Speaker 1 (17:51):
There was nothing bad.
Speaker 3 (17:52):
It just no, like my head was like you know
when you feel like very.
Speaker 2 (17:57):
You didn't go to the doctor, you're diagnosing yourself.
Speaker 5 (17:59):
I went to the doctor, got a nasal spray and
got a syrup.
Speaker 2 (18:05):
Well he's got a syrup, guys.
Speaker 6 (18:07):
He got a nasal spree and a syrup prescription shrink
nail spray. She said, have you been storing the past
couple nights? And I said, My wife said, I. She
goes there's a lot of drainage down there was sick.
Speaker 3 (18:16):
So gross, that's what that.
Speaker 5 (18:19):
Yeah, yeah, that's what The snuff all over.
Speaker 2 (18:21):
There is sick after lunchbox is sick. If that's tructly,
I was wrong about Coaches Convention, so I would he
ended up bringing a disease again and getting into you guys.
Speaker 5 (18:30):
Infection is not contagious.
Speaker 1 (18:32):
Then well, how do you explain all three of us
at this table getting sick.
Speaker 5 (18:37):
I don't know. You go other places, you know, you.
Speaker 2 (18:39):
Go out in the world, but this is the consistent
place where I'm sitting every day.
Speaker 6 (18:43):
And now you were, I mean, you were at the
Rullers getting ring with a bunch of kids and it
doesn't matter.
Speaker 1 (18:49):
It does matter.
Speaker 2 (18:50):
I will admit I might have been wrong about coaches
Convention because he might have been sick and brought it
to you guys. Thank you. Morgan is not sick.
Speaker 1 (18:56):
This is a thing.
Speaker 3 (18:58):
You don't know what I feel.
Speaker 2 (19:00):
Yea, that would be like her telling you what you feel.
Speaker 5 (19:01):
But I was never sick. I never felt.
Speaker 4 (19:03):
Bad because it manifested a way for you and your
body doesn't mean it didn't do differently for me.
Speaker 2 (19:07):
Even though.
Speaker 3 (19:09):
I don't know.
Speaker 4 (19:10):
I don't feel great, but I don't feel horrible yet anyway.
Speaker 2 (19:14):
Thanks.
Speaker 1 (19:14):
Thanks on Shanks lunchwalk. Hey, you're welcome, man.
Speaker 2 (19:16):
But I told you apparently you're not supposed to cut
another person's cake.
Speaker 3 (19:20):
Well, I feel great, you do?
Speaker 2 (19:22):
Yeah, Well, speaking of people leaving, there was a little drama
with Morgan cutting people's cake, which I don't have. But
she cut my cake. I have a problem with that.
What like what happened?
Speaker 4 (19:30):
So apparently there's people on the internet who feel you're
not supposed to cut somebody else's cake.
Speaker 6 (19:35):
On any level.
Speaker 3 (19:36):
But I thought it'd be rude to make somebody cut
their own cake.
Speaker 2 (19:40):
So why are you not supposed to cut someone's cake.
Speaker 3 (19:42):
Because it's theirs.
Speaker 4 (19:43):
I guess, like it's there you whoever it's for, Like
say it was for Eddie and Ray it was their
decision to cut their cake.
Speaker 1 (19:51):
Apparently, I've never seen that.
Speaker 2 (19:52):
I've never heard this before either.
Speaker 4 (19:53):
I got literally some dude was like, why is she
cutting the cake?
Speaker 3 (19:56):
I'm like, well, first of all, neither one of them
wanted to do it.
Speaker 2 (19:59):
Eddie can't do.
Speaker 1 (20:00):
It and do it.
Speaker 2 (20:00):
I saw eddieut in the hall today struggling with his
tumblr one arm in it because he's got.
Speaker 1 (20:06):
A broken arm.
Speaker 2 (20:07):
It's like one of those twisted like have it down
and screw it in. I looked down him for a minute.
No what I tell you, though, I said, laughed and
walked off.
Speaker 1 (20:15):
I said, let me be. I got to learn how
to do this.
Speaker 2 (20:16):
Yeah I could do it, man, I gotta learn how
to do it.
Speaker 3 (20:21):
It's good for your brain too, to use your non
dominant hand, Yeah, to complete a task.
Speaker 2 (20:27):
So, if your arm is not broken, I think those
are good skills. If like, you have to get back
in the studio on in a timely basis and you're
struggling knocking it over.
Speaker 3 (20:33):
I was just trying to find the positive I can see.
Speaker 2 (20:35):
But I left him because it was like, let me
do it, man, I said, let me be leave me
all right, Timmy, I'll let leave you be a couple. Here.
Someone throw at a two thousand year old statue in Greece.
Police start investigating after an ancient statue was found in
a trash bag near garbage cans in Greece. I feel
like everybody's trash in grease has like thousands of years
and stuff in it because everything's so old there. But yeah,
(20:57):
this thing is worth hundreds of thousands of dollars. The statue
is thirty two inches tall. It depicts someone wearing flowing garments.
It's missing its head and arms. The man took the
statue to authorities. Someone was detained but later released over
the situation. But again they found this very valuable statue
in the trash now that head and arms being missing,
(21:18):
any guesses.
Speaker 1 (21:21):
Isn't there like a famous statue that's already got that missing?
Speaker 2 (21:23):
Yes, there are many. Why do you think? Why do
you think that is?
Speaker 3 (21:29):
Is it representing decapitation?
Speaker 2 (21:34):
It is not representing decapitation?
Speaker 1 (21:36):
Is it?
Speaker 2 (21:36):
Like? None of your guesses are gonna be are gonna
be stupid though.
Speaker 1 (21:39):
Okay, so is it like when you see roadkill and
like the horns are off?
Speaker 2 (21:44):
No? Okay, no, no, no, So your guess was roadkill?
Speaker 1 (21:48):
Yeah, like you can sell an arm or ahead launch box.
Speaker 5 (21:54):
I mean, gosh, maybe it's uh colt.
Speaker 2 (22:01):
Oh shut off all the heads YEA, explain that?
Speaker 6 (22:04):
I mean that's there. Yeah, I mean that's if you
want out of the colt. There's no in and there's
no out.
Speaker 5 (22:09):
So they were in the cult, yes, and they wanted out.
Speaker 1 (22:11):
They were going to reveal.
Speaker 2 (22:13):
So they shot the statues head off, but not the
human head. Hey now I'm just asking. I mean the house,
like how the colt.
Speaker 5 (22:23):
Runs out, like this is what happens to you if
you try to leave.
Speaker 1 (22:26):
No, but the statue had a head in arms right
when they found it. They didn't have arms and head.
Speaker 2 (22:31):
So I've walked through some of those museums and like
Italy France, and if the head is gone or the
arms are gone, a lot of them, some of just
the tips of the nose are gone. So invading armies
or like enemies of wherever you are, would do that
as a sign of disrespect, cut the heads off, the
tips of noses or the arms. Some of the most
(22:52):
famous statues and the world don't have a head, so
it's mostly during war. Instead of demolishing the whole statue,
which they could have done and eliminated the art period,
it's they would just chop the head off.
Speaker 1 (23:09):
They say, like the Sphinx, is that is that it
in Egypt?
Speaker 2 (23:11):
No, that has its head.
Speaker 1 (23:13):
No, it's missing the nose. And they said Napoleon did that.
The Pyramids.
Speaker 2 (23:17):
If you ever reading of the pyramids where they're built,
exactly where they're built, how precise they are. It's more
than just a bunch of humans carrying blocks forever, like
they are in specific places that line up with like
the Earth's axis in such a advanced way.
Speaker 1 (23:33):
You think Aliens.
Speaker 2 (23:34):
Yes, I don't know about that.
Speaker 3 (23:37):
I thought your next sentence would be so or.
Speaker 2 (23:40):
Advanced civilization that was actually or they were more advanced
than we give them credit for.
Speaker 1 (23:44):
And the Egyptians just just took credit for it.
Speaker 2 (23:48):
M Sure. I don't know about CREA, sure because like
but but they said that would be Egyptians. But they
would have been.
Speaker 1 (23:54):
Egyptians who made it, and they were advanced.
Speaker 2 (23:56):
I think they were more advanced than we give them
credit for I think they had technology that we don't
understand they had. I mean, just because we have it
doesn't mean we're the only ones that had it. There
could have been whole parts of the earth that through
natural disaster have been wiped out and they had to
kind of start over. But if you read the peer
about the pyramids, I could probably find you some information,
(24:17):
like exactly where they're located. It is amazing how and
how precise like that the tip are where it points up,
tip is where it points up, the blocks, how they're
put together, The rocks are from like a thousand miles away.
Those they had to travel with those things through really
difficult terrain. The Great Pyramid of Giza is aligned with
(24:41):
the cardinal points of the compass. This thing's massive. The
square base of the pyramid is only three point four
arc minutes off true north, which is about one millimeter
per meter.
Speaker 1 (24:52):
But it's off.
Speaker 2 (24:54):
It's it's well, nothing is going to be perfect, but
you're talking about a milli You can't you can't even
hold your fingers. So that massive being that on, How
does that happen? How do you even understand what true
North is? With the technology that supposedly existed. Then what
(25:15):
even is true north right? You're talking about thousands of
years ago?
Speaker 1 (25:18):
Could they have gotten lucky?
Speaker 2 (25:20):
Uh, that is the luckiest possible situation to be exactly on,
to build that pyramid that big, that base and be
a millimeter from true north. No, can't be lucky. He's
coughing over there. You see coffee him trying to hide
his cough.
Speaker 3 (25:42):
So apparently for precise north south alignment they used the
position of the stars.
Speaker 2 (25:48):
Okay, great, and how they're going to do that thousands
of years ago? When the Earth rotates and moves right,
you have to understand the stars are moving as well
if you're using the stars, because that's what's happening, right,
The stars are ever in the same place two nights
in a row because we're moving, we're spinning, and we're
moving around. So they have to understand the movement of
(26:09):
the stars the movement of the earth. And they knew that.
How do you know that?
Speaker 3 (26:17):
I don't know. So they had a constant reference point
for determining north.
Speaker 2 (26:20):
Okay to be one star to be one millimeter off.
Speaker 1 (26:25):
I think stars move. I didn't know that.
Speaker 2 (26:26):
I know we move. No, I know they moved to
us because we're spinning this way and we're moving around
at the same time. Yeah, but I thought, like, you know,
you know those apps, the constellation apps or whatever, and
you ever see a constellation in a different place, I
couldn't tell you. Oh you ever you ever not see
a constellation one night and then you see a constellation again?
Sure a month later. That's because I do.
Speaker 1 (26:46):
But I think that's like cloudy days or whatever.
Speaker 2 (26:49):
Even then, stars do move a little, but for the
most part we move. We move and spin in two ways.
We're spinning and we are what's the word you can
do it class? No, No, we're not flat.
Speaker 1 (27:04):
Uh oh, we're uh spinning and uh.
Speaker 2 (27:07):
Okay, it's over. I tried to tell you Earth does
water around the sun rotates orbits orbits? Okay? Anyway, Pyramids,
there's no chance that's just luck. I don't think it's
luck a millimeter off that massive. I think it's probably
(27:27):
they were far more advanced than we think they were,
and because we're thousands of years later, we assume we're
just so much smarter than everybody, which I don't think
was the case. Or Aliens.
Speaker 1 (27:38):
I just feel like they dominated the Pyramids right, they're like, yeah,
we did the Pyramids, and then they just stopped because
like they didn't do the Internet, Like shouldn't they have
just kept going?
Speaker 3 (27:47):
It says here they had a sophisticated understanding of astronomy.
Speaker 1 (27:52):
Maybe that's it, that was their strength.
Speaker 2 (27:53):
So yeah, but even to have that, that's such a
vague thing to just say, Okay, tell me more. You
can't because we don't know enough about They won't even
let us me. They won't even let us go on
the pyramids. Really like an investigate, even the greatest Egyptologists.
I watch all this stuff on TikTok from etologists. M
(28:13):
I only know that word from TikTok.
Speaker 1 (28:14):
That's someone that studies Egypt.
Speaker 2 (28:15):
Yeah, in the pyramids, and you know there's so much.
Do you know that there are no bodies in the pyramids,
none of the mummies. I don't believe. Look up. If
there are any dead bodies in those pyramids. I think
it's far less than we thought. Often thought those were
like cemeteries.
Speaker 1 (28:30):
Yeah, tombs.
Speaker 2 (28:31):
Yeah. Did you ever see the footage of when Heraldo
found that King Tut's tomb? And it was so boring
Herald it was like a live thing. In the eighties
on television.
Speaker 3 (28:41):
It says some pyramids have been robbed of the bodies,
and then some burial chambers are now underwater.
Speaker 1 (28:47):
Did you know King Tut was a child, Yes, and
he I think he had like a bad leg or something,
but they could never like, there's no image of him
with a bad leg. But in history they've realized that
he had a bad leg, but they could not do
that in art because they wanted his legacy to make
it look like he was strong.
Speaker 2 (29:05):
Interesting. Yeah, while pyramids were primarily built as tombs for pharaohs,
most of them have been looted. There aren't a lot
of mummies really found inside. Some notable pharaoh mummies have
been discovered, but those of the Old Kingdom period where
the pyramid burial was most common. So I don't know
what that means. I'm probably wrong in some way, but
I thought they were just full of dead bodies. I
thought the pyramids were just like cemeteries for a lot
of the famous people that lived in that time, and
(29:27):
you would just like go to a level and it
was just like a bunch of tombs.
Speaker 3 (29:30):
Whoa King Tut apparently had a clubfoot. A Kleff palette
bone disease, flat foot.
Speaker 2 (29:37):
And he died but he just had that like the
eighteen hundreds.
Speaker 3 (29:39):
He died from complications from a broken leg in malaria.
Speaker 1 (29:42):
Which was tough because being a hunter was such a
big deal then, like if you were the king, like
you had to be the best hunter, you had to
be a warrior, and he wasn't. He's a kid though, right,
he's young. I think he's like a teenager with.
Speaker 2 (29:54):
A with a club foot and a cleft palate.
Speaker 3 (29:56):
No wonder. I mean his other nickname was Egypt's Boyfriend.
I'd go by King Boy.
Speaker 2 (30:03):
Pharaoh is pretty cool, except you it ends up being
like Backstree Boys where they're like sixty and still called
the boys. Aztec Pyramids, I've seen those different pyramids South America, Yep.
We're positioned with careful alignment to astronomical events, often oriented
to capture specific sunrises and sunsets on significant dates and
(30:23):
are placed in relation to prominent landmarks. And again they
have a really advanced system with astronomy as well, Like
you would think nothing would have been advanced in like
they don't have clean water. Yeah, they could figure out
where a sun is, what to build a building.
Speaker 1 (30:38):
I went to one of those pyramids and inside there's
still a stone tablet where they drew like artwork, and
this one specific piece of art was it looked just
like an astronaut with like the bubble helmet and a
tube coming out of the I mean it was crazy.
And that was from back then.
Speaker 2 (30:55):
We have at our house, you know, the Nike statue
and from Italy. It's like the winged Victory. They call
it night. It's missing the head. It's the most famous,
probably headless statue. It's got big wings. So woman got boobs.
Speaker 1 (31:11):
Oh cool.
Speaker 2 (31:11):
I think we have a version of that, but it
doesn't have a head. It's the very famous. It has boobs. Yeah,
I don't look at them, so who knows. I think
it's in Paris. I think it's in the Louver in Paris.
But it is a headless because Nike's a Greek goddess.
But it's in Paris. I think that's where I'm confused.
(31:32):
But this thing is probably if you put on the market,
it would it be a one hundred million, it'd be
a billion dollar purchase.
Speaker 1 (31:38):
How did you get yours?
Speaker 2 (31:39):
It wasn't that we bought the gift shop.
Speaker 3 (31:42):
It's a relic.
Speaker 2 (31:43):
Yeah, we literally, but it's probably how tall is that?
Speaker 1 (31:47):
Three feet? Yeah?
Speaker 2 (31:49):
Probably three feet tall. So we had to mail it
because we couldn't fly it back home.
Speaker 3 (31:53):
But golly, you guys, I don't know. It seems like
they were skilled astronomers, even the Maya people.
Speaker 2 (31:59):
Like Mayans, Mayans.
Speaker 3 (32:01):
Maya looking I'm reading the Mayans.
Speaker 1 (32:04):
I know that from Maya.
Speaker 4 (32:08):
Maya.
Speaker 3 (32:08):
Why they're calling them the Maya people. But yes, the
Mayan pyramids, it says they were skilled astronomers who meticulously
observe the movements of the sun, moon, and planets. Using
this knowledge, they align their pyramids and other structures with
celestial events like solstices, equinoxes, all that stuff that we
(32:29):
don't understand.
Speaker 2 (32:30):
But that's so vague. And what you're saying they had
an advance of all those are just said words to
be able to explain anything in detail of how they knew.
Speaker 3 (32:37):
And they were meticulous about it.
Speaker 2 (32:40):
That doesn't really say much about I know what meticulous means,
but I'm sure they're meticulous about a lot.
Speaker 3 (32:46):
Okay, guys, it's more.
Speaker 2 (32:47):
Greater understanding that I think baffles people.
Speaker 3 (32:51):
Baffles me how we're here today.
Speaker 2 (32:52):
So the Great Pyramid of Giza is aligned almost perfectly
with cardinal North, an air of point zero six seven degrees.
They think if they rebuilt it today, they could not
get it as precise as it was then if they
were to do it again.
Speaker 1 (33:08):
But what else were they doing?
Speaker 2 (33:10):
Each limestock block used to build hunting eating by Yeah,
trying to survive.
Speaker 1 (33:14):
At nighttime, They're just probably like, hmm, let's just look
at the stars for five hours. Us. We're like, we do.
Speaker 2 (33:19):
We got to watch this show at nighttime. I think
it's sun goes down, eyeballs, go to sleep, to wake
up to have the energy to hunt.
Speaker 1 (33:26):
Oh, probably, that's probably. I'm thinking, like you got all
the time in the world to look at the sky
and study it.
Speaker 2 (33:32):
Each limestone block used to build the Great Pyramid weighs
between two and a half to fifteen tons each single block.
Speaker 3 (33:39):
And some of them were from one thousand miles away.
Speaker 2 (33:41):
Yet it's still unclear how they transported and lifted these
massive stones. God the Great Pyramid is the only surviving
Wonder of the original seven Wonders standing it over four thousand,
five hundred years. Originally they were covered in white. They
were white limestone.
Speaker 1 (33:57):
Oh, Wow, and what are they now? Just like brown sand?
Speaker 2 (34:00):
Yes, through time and through some there was some disaster
or too, and they peeled a lot of it off
at some point, but they were polished white limestone, which
reflected sunlight and made it shine like a giant mirror.
Speaker 1 (34:13):
Wow, that's good.
Speaker 2 (34:14):
That'd have been pretty cool.
Speaker 1 (34:15):
That's like kind of like the one in Vegas.
Speaker 2 (34:16):
Okay, the top most piece of the Great Pyramid is missing.
They don't know what happened to it. So you're talking
about something massive that weighed tons gone the Vegas heist. Ever,
they do not, and they do think that it was gold,
but they don't know how they got that. You know,
let's say it's five tons each tons two thousand pounds,
(34:38):
that ten thousand pound piece of gold off of it
and then out of there. They don't even know where
it is, And how do you take that to the
pawn shop?
Speaker 1 (34:45):
Hey, Chuck, but I got in the back.
Speaker 2 (34:48):
How much will you give me for this?
Speaker 3 (34:49):
Okay? I just googled asking for the best documentary to
learn about this stuff, and apparently there's something called Decoding
the Great Pyramid on PBS.
Speaker 1 (34:59):
I don't know it's on Hulu now. I think the
one I saw.
Speaker 3 (35:01):
Okay, so I now I'm curious, So I want to
watch it because I just feel like I need to
have a better understanding.
Speaker 2 (35:07):
Inside the Great Pyramid, the temperature stays consistently sixty eight
degrees fahrenheit, regardless of the desert heat outside.
Speaker 1 (35:12):
That's crazy.
Speaker 2 (35:13):
They understood how to create an environment to hold a
temperature and keep the temperature even with no sort of
no technology.
Speaker 1 (35:21):
They were the first air conditioning people. Dude. They crust
the hvag man like they knew exactly what was up.
Speaker 3 (35:28):
They say, sixty eight is right where you should keep it.
Speaker 2 (35:31):
I messed up the other night because we like our
air cold, and it's been so cold at the house,
and so we'll keep it at like sixty four sixty three.
Oh but I did cool sixty four, which means if
it gets warmer than that, it cools to sixty four.
But it's been like nine degrees outside. I didn't do
heat sixty four, which I should do in the winter.
(35:52):
I did cool sixty four, so if it gets below
sixty four, it's not going to heat it up. So
I was freezing. I woke up as forty nine degrees wo,
it wasn't even the air was blowing.
Speaker 1 (36:00):
But it's not going to trigger the air because.
Speaker 2 (36:02):
It's cool, not hunt, so it's not going to start
heating for any reason. But it was. I looked at
the temperature, and that's what I said.
Speaker 3 (36:09):
I got a note from the electric company saying that
sixty eight heat was what I needed to do.
Speaker 2 (36:15):
Yeah, we should I should have put on sixty four heat,
meaning if it gets below that, it heats it to
sixty four and then stops. But instead it was on
cool and there was no reason to heat because heat
wasn't even in the conversation. The pyramids at Geeza are
aligned with the stars of Orion's belt, possibly reflecting the
Egyptian's deep interest and astronomy in the afterlife. The hidden chambers.
(36:35):
Modern technology like cosmic race scanning has revealed previously unknown
voids and chambers within the Great Pyramid, which they still
do not understand where all the chambers are, why they
were all built, or how they were built at times,
like how people would get to them, because there is
no way to get to them. Contrary to popular belief,
the pyramids were not built by slaves. The Great Pyramid
(36:59):
was the tallest man and made structure. While the pyramids
are often thought up as tombs, no mummies have been
found in the Great Pyramid, leading to theories it may
have a different purpose. So pyramids are crazy. I don't
feel like Egypt would be a fun trip, Like to
get there, be a long trip, be very dehydrated when
I got there, the desert, and then it just looks
like there's chaos there all the time. Let's it looks
(37:21):
chaotic now where I wouldn't feel safe. But then everybody
that's not in America sees how much gun violence we have,
and they feel that way about us because in other
countries just doesn't happen, other developed countries. Where everybody here
is walking around with a gun, that's crazy to people. Yeah, pyramids,
that's fun. I would like to go to. I'd like
(37:43):
to see that because it's like a city there, like
it's city, and right on the edge of the city
are the massive pyramids.
Speaker 1 (37:48):
I know, every picture you look at it makes it
look like it's in the middle of nowhere, But if
you turn the camera around the city's right there.
Speaker 2 (37:53):
There are some things too, until like maybe the seventies,
people could climb it and eat on top of them. Yeah,
like you could just go and hang out look at
the pyramids as a tourist and climb at the top
and have a meal up there, which is crazy because
image people will be getting hurt falling down them.
Speaker 1 (38:09):
TikTok.
Speaker 2 (38:10):
I'm glad it's back because I learn a lot from it.
You just have to understand that not everything said is true.
It's kind of like in life, look at your source.
I learned something politically the other day that maybe it
was Jimmy Carter. It was around that time that there
weren't elections within parties. Each of the parties just selected
their candidate and those two ran, and then America voted,
(38:32):
Oh wow, where now we have primaries, like anybody can go.
I want to run. You have a whole Republican primary
may have twelve people, and then it's slowly you get thee.
You go to Iowa, you go to New Hampshire. We
didn't have that. Those two parties just selected somebody and
America voted between the two, which to me, I wasn't
(38:52):
alive then, so not super familiar of watching the Iowa
primary in sixty eight, but they didn't have that, and
that was a little mind blowing to me. In a bit.
There are theories that a true democracy, whenever anybody could
be president, it became troublesome because we're in a true
(39:17):
in a well, we'll say a republic, a true democracy.
We don't have true democracy because we're not voting on
every issue. We vote on people and then they make
decisions for us. So that's more of a republic than
a democracy. We have very democratic ways of electing people
and even voting for issues, but we don't pick everything
the people. We pick the things.
Speaker 1 (39:35):
They do say to the republic, which it stands right.
Speaker 2 (39:37):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, And they said that when anybody could
start running for office is kind of the downfall of
a republic or democracy because in the day, even though
it felt a little shady, were they of these organizations
picking their person, They would kind of pick somebody that
had acquired enough skills that if they were then the president,
they had an understanding of what the rules were. They
(40:01):
knew bureaucracy, they knew government. But now like I literally
can run for president and if I just caught a
good wind, next thing, you know, oh my god, I'm president.
Anybody could be it. Jimmy Carter might have been the
first president after they decided they weren't just picking from
(40:22):
the parties anymore.
Speaker 1 (40:23):
And who was before that? Ford?
Speaker 2 (40:25):
I believe so, so I thought that was that was fun.
Speaker 1 (40:29):
Dude, you need to be a professor.
Speaker 2 (40:31):
I don't cause I mean, I'm I don't like the
way you talk.
Speaker 1 (40:34):
Sounds like a cool lecture that people wanted to sit in.
Speaker 2 (40:37):
But I only find that interesting. I'm not interested in everything.
Speaker 1 (40:40):
There's got to be a class of like like everything.
Speaker 2 (40:42):
Here's the history of pyramids I kind of know, which
I really don't. Here's what I learned on TikTok about
the presidency, and here is a crash course in all
the actors from Cheers.
Speaker 1 (40:53):
I don't know, man, you seemed like you'd be a
good professor.
Speaker 2 (40:57):
I was watching that show on Netflix with Ted Danson.
You guys watch that not yet inside? Man?
Speaker 3 (41:01):
Yeah, I watched it.
Speaker 2 (41:03):
I think for I feel like they were trying to
chase only murders in the building a bit. It's fun,
it's soft, easy watch thirty minutes old actor that people
like and Ted Danson same over it only murders because
it's Martin Short and Steve Martin and I it's fine.
(41:26):
I think it's good. For what it is. He goes
undercover in an old folks home because he's trying to
find it who stole something an old person. I'm not
I don't want to spoil anything. It's yeah, it's fine.
I think it's a good family watch, Morgan, would.
Speaker 4 (41:37):
You think, Yeah, I feel like it's an easy watch.
It kind of felt like a older version of the Office.
It kind of had that kind of dry sense of humor,
a lot and kind of funny moments. I enjoyed it
more than I thought I would.
Speaker 3 (41:51):
By the end of it.
Speaker 2 (41:52):
I enjoyed it less than I thought I would by
the end of it. Interesting. I still liked it, but
I think I was I was pretty bullish going in
that I was gonna like it and we were gonna,
like just have something like a throwaway thirty minutes to watch.
We're in the middle of watching Night an Agent. Guys,
it's it's corny.
Speaker 3 (42:07):
No wait, are you talking about you? Should you start
season one or you on season two?
Speaker 2 (42:12):
Season one?
Speaker 3 (42:12):
Okay, okay, okay, I.
Speaker 2 (42:14):
Know I still like it. It's written so corny. There's
enough action to keep me in, but I can predict
what's gonna happen, Like eight out of ten times.
Speaker 3 (42:23):
Well, season two just loaded up, I think yesterday, So
that's what I'm gonna be watching this week.
Speaker 2 (42:29):
I'm not officially gonna review it because we're not done.
We're six of ten episodes through YEP. But it's red
and kind of corny. It doesn't mean I don't like it.
We've watched a lot of CIA shows and FBI shows,
and some of them are so real.
Speaker 3 (42:41):
Feeling that this right, maybe because you just went from to, well.
Speaker 2 (42:45):
The Agency is awesome and its final episode is to
it's tonight of the season.
Speaker 3 (42:51):
And that one's on paramount right, Yeah, Okay, I gotta
keep them all straight.
Speaker 2 (42:55):
The Agency is awesome, Like I think Faster Horses is
the best, mostly too, because they're all in like six
episode seasons. I think there are three or four seasons,
and they kind of have the point, get to the point,
here's the conclusion. Next season is ready to go. I
think that's probably the best of all the new shows
that we've watched that are FBI CIA type shows. The
(43:15):
Agency were not finished one more, but it's awesome. You
have to pay attention though, in those type of shows where,
if you like, are on your phone for five minutes,
you're like, wait, what just happened?
Speaker 1 (43:24):
Amy's out?
Speaker 2 (43:26):
Yeah, or three watches?
Speaker 3 (43:28):
No, I mean, I watch it, but I just may
not know everything that happens. I just realized with a
night agent because it came back last night, and my
son likes that show too, So we were trying to
figure out when we were gonna start season two, and
I realized I didn't watch the final episode, season ten,
so I was like, oh, episode ten fun. Sorry episode
ten of the first season, and I was like, oh,
(43:50):
I never finished.
Speaker 2 (43:51):
This where the spoiler was for me, because again we're
only halfway through. Is the picture for season two shows
the girl? Oh you guys don't don't say anything, but
it shows the girl, so that means she never dies.
Speaker 1 (44:04):
Oh yeah, good.
Speaker 2 (44:05):
Cat Like, as soon as I went up, I don't
know enough about it. I don't know what you're talking about,
but that's not good. I see the head picture, the
front picture of season two back, and I'm like, oh, cool,
we're going to start the show and we will start
watching it. And then that girl is a character on
the show and you're like, well, there's no chance she
dies because they just showed her on the picture of season.
Speaker 3 (44:19):
Two unless they're just showing Oh unless it's.
Speaker 1 (44:22):
Just her memory.
Speaker 2 (44:23):
Yeah, oh it could be.
Speaker 3 (44:26):
So yeah, that's good final episode. Oh so what we
did watch though? With my kids? We watched Baywatch instead,
that movie with The Rock and zac Efron.
Speaker 1 (44:35):
Yeah, how's it not corny at all?
Speaker 3 (44:39):
So corny, but we laughed out loud a lot. However,
I didn't realize they were going to show like an
actual penis. They do, and I watched it with my kids.
The Rock on a cadaver. To me, I mean, they're
in a morgue and there's a dead body. But zac
Efron most definitely picks up the penis and has to
(45:02):
inspect under there, and I'm thinking, I know, but I'm
here with my kids and I just was like, well, kids,
there's a penis.
Speaker 2 (45:13):
Chopping wood significantly boost testosterone levels.
Speaker 3 (45:17):
Yes, yes, yes, what.
Speaker 2 (45:18):
Do y'all think chopping wood?
Speaker 3 (45:20):
You'll want to go chop.
Speaker 2 (45:21):
Some wood anything with your large muscles as a man,
like your butt, your quads, anytime you're working those. Yeah,
those are very testosterone building muscles. That's why if you
want to have a natural testosterone. If they asked, they say,
do the heavy that the dead lifts the squats that
type stuff. But yeah, I mean if we chopped wood
(45:45):
on camera, I think Ray would probably look the most natural.
Speaker 1 (45:49):
Because he's a lumberjack.
Speaker 2 (45:51):
Yeah, he's also thicker.
Speaker 1 (45:54):
Ray worked in a mill like chopping wood, So I
mean chood in the mill.
Speaker 2 (46:00):
I don't.
Speaker 3 (46:01):
I don't think he had an.
Speaker 2 (46:01):
Axe and markets Keith working the mill. But it wasn't
chopping a forklift? Right, would you do it at the mill?
We just pushed around piles of sawdust and shop much wood. No,
we shot know wood. The machines do all that, got it. Yeah,
so I think Ray would be And he's also lowered
to the ground, which isn't an advantage. You want to
be actually higher. Well no, not for you though, because
you have to lift it as high it ye say,
(46:21):
you'll look good. I think right would look the best.
Speaker 3 (46:23):
Well, that's the case. He could make a lot of
money because women want to watch men chop wood.
Speaker 2 (46:28):
But women don't want a short man. So it's weird.
Speaker 3 (46:31):
Well, stradio, Sure people live longer than film from really
that makes.
Speaker 2 (46:35):
Sense because somebody that's seven feet tall dies at like
twenty eight. But yeah, they're like guys that are five
foot eight and below live three plus more years than
guys who are taller.
Speaker 3 (46:45):
It's like bigger dogs die sooner than chihuaba's.
Speaker 2 (46:48):
That sucks for me being so tall.
Speaker 3 (46:50):
Well, good, good thing for you. Some of it's a
little bit fudged.
Speaker 2 (46:54):
I got. I got a physical yesterday. Speaking of fudged,
I know this sucks. I got I got a physical yesterday,
and I took some picture of some of my stuff
and it was like I left here and had to
do a three hours to do the full physical, the
full physical from blood to body, fat to ekg. Like
my resting heart rate was like fifty. And he was like, dude,
(47:16):
that's awesome.
Speaker 3 (47:16):
Oh that's good for you.
Speaker 2 (47:18):
He was because you you know your body's not in
an aerobic state and knows it can just chill. It
was like fifty, and I had I should have brought
the pages in.
Speaker 1 (47:28):
But my that's a legit physical though, like it's not
like school.
Speaker 2 (47:32):
My metabolic age. I have it here on my picture
that I took.
Speaker 3 (47:37):
Why didn't we start with this? This is way more
interesting than pyramids.
Speaker 2 (47:41):
Yeah, even come up, who knows who cares? But okay,
let's do a mineral real quick. We'll play this, Okay, back.
My metabolic age is the age of the inside of
my body based on things how we explained to me,
like in five, like how my body just works.
Speaker 3 (48:03):
Yeah, yeah, you have your biological age or your your
chronological age, right, that's what you're born with. Which is
or you do you want to say.
Speaker 2 (48:12):
I don't care of forty four. I don't have no issue,
but we.
Speaker 3 (48:15):
Need to compare. So you're forty four, and then what
is your metabolic.
Speaker 2 (48:19):
Or metabolic age is a measurement that compares your basal
metabolic rate, the number of calori, how your body burns
calories at rest, your organs. It's an indicator of how
young or old you really are as relative to your
actual age. If your metabol your metabolic age is lower
than your actual age age, it suggests you have a
(48:40):
more efficient metabolism and likely better overall health. If it's higher,
it may indicate And then it goes on factors that
impact metabolic age, muscle mass, activity level, diet, health conditions.
I think what ended up getting me a little bit
was lack of sleep, but all of those factor into
that's basically like your over all life score. I'm forty four, Amy,
(49:03):
guess my metabolic age, knowing all my lifestyle habits. Don't
sleep well, but I do eat pretty well. I do exercise.
Speaker 3 (49:13):
Twenty nine.
Speaker 2 (49:16):
Was the because you went too high or too long?
Speaker 1 (49:18):
Not too low.
Speaker 2 (49:19):
Okay, that's not too low.
Speaker 1 (49:20):
Twenty nine.
Speaker 3 (49:21):
I mean the sleep in his twenties.
Speaker 2 (49:23):
I have I I have the image here of it.
I didn't make it. I took a picture of it.
Speaker 3 (49:27):
Listen, you've never had a sip of alcohol.
Speaker 1 (49:29):
Oh gosh, that's correct.
Speaker 3 (49:30):
Okay, yes, hear me out. I have my reasons for this.
You're extremely active. The only thing that I think really
really gets you is the sleep, and so I even
added some for that. If you slept, great, could be
nineteen twenty.
Speaker 2 (49:43):
Five, Eddie, you pushed her, So what did you guess?
Speaker 1 (49:47):
I'm gonna got thirty seven. Oh you're obviously younger, younger
than your real age, but you're not twenty dude, you're
not in your twenties. I'm gonna go thirty.
Speaker 2 (49:54):
There's no reason. Like I'm not fighting you about it,
like you're being wol don't be stupid, you idiot. You're
you're twenty twenty.
Speaker 1 (50:01):
That's ridiculous.
Speaker 3 (50:02):
I don't think it's crazy.
Speaker 2 (50:03):
Lunchbox thirty four, Morgan thirty two. My metabolic age is
you see it from over there? Yeah?
Speaker 3 (50:12):
Shut up, shut up?
Speaker 2 (50:14):
What is eight? No, I'm kidding guys, it's twenty nine?
Speaker 3 (50:17):
Wow? Hello, twenty nine?
Speaker 1 (50:21):
So what does that mean? Like you're gonna live forever?
Speaker 2 (50:23):
No, I'm an I could walk outside and get hit
by a card to morrow, that's true. Yeah, I could
also have develop a disease. I did. I mean, let's
not say that I could, but he could. But anybody's
acting like you're gonna live forever if it happens. No,
but I know, if you were to do odds like
we did with Who's leaving the show, odds are based
on a lot of the decisions regarding health that I
(50:45):
would live longer than otherwise in a vacuum. We're not
in a vacuum. But that's it. I have a twenty
nine twenty nine.
Speaker 1 (50:53):
That's impressive.
Speaker 2 (50:54):
Hey, I was. I was pretty happy with that.
Speaker 3 (50:58):
I don't think I'm getting the respect from these you know,
especially Eddie.
Speaker 2 (51:02):
He pushed you.
Speaker 3 (51:03):
You did, I said, twenty nine years of sh I did?
And then I was spot on.
Speaker 1 (51:08):
That I'm going to be like freaking eighty if I
do that physical. If you did, dude, they would say, like,
you're gonna die next week.
Speaker 2 (51:14):
They'd poke you to see, hello.
Speaker 3 (51:16):
Are you You don't even need to take the time
to do the physical.
Speaker 2 (51:19):
I'll tell you, yeah, eighty amy diagnosed. Tell me your
bones are getting so brittle? Is so sad? Part I know,
Like I said, he's breaking it. We talked, he's breaking everything.
Speaker 3 (51:30):
Oh that's a sign of what osteoporosis?
Speaker 2 (51:35):
My total body fat percentage? What do you think it is?
And I'd have to pull up what the parameters are
because I don't I don't have a guide of what.
Speaker 3 (51:43):
I don't remember this stuff.
Speaker 2 (51:44):
He went over BMI too. He's like, BMI's a load
of crap, it is he was, He said, people that
have a lot of muscle, Like he said, if a
Titans linebacker came in, his BMI would be terrible because
he'd have way more muscle. And it's based on height.
And he goes, that's just a line like there are
a certain population that you can use it with, but
really they don't even use it anymore because it's so
off and some with body fat percentage. But let me
(52:07):
see what let me type this in what is ideal
body fat percentage for forty four year old man one
hundred seventy pounds. Oh, I tell you about the height.
So I go on, and this is so stupid. They
made me take my shoes off, which I didn't want
(52:27):
to do because I always measure tolerant shoes.
Speaker 1 (52:28):
Did you take tall shoes?
Speaker 2 (52:30):
No? But I have a little. I was like, I
was like, what's the difference. I'm not again, I'm not gonna,
you know, get a scholarship or not get a scholarship
based on let me just measure with my shoes.
Speaker 3 (52:42):
You're information because I.
Speaker 2 (52:44):
Know, I know why they're doing it, but I just
want to ask. I just sad, let me do my shoes.
And they said no, no shoes, and so I said, okay,
So I take them off. And they asked me a
question that I wish I would have answered.
Speaker 3 (52:53):
Differently, honestly, how did you answer.
Speaker 2 (52:57):
Different I wish I would have answered differently, because they said,
is this much in your head? And I should have
said yes, because it was smushing my head, that thing
on top, it was kind of pushing down too hard
on my head, and I would I should have said yes,
and then they would have like loosened it a little
bit and gone up. I just needed a half inch
because on my page it had seventy two point five inches. Oh,
(53:18):
you should do the math on that. What is it's
six foot and.
Speaker 3 (53:20):
A half, six one and a half dan.
Speaker 1 (53:25):
And a half.
Speaker 2 (53:27):
It has to be an even number because it's twelve
twelve twelve twelve twelve twelve.
Speaker 3 (53:31):
No, no, I know you're right. I just kept thinking
for some reason, you'd like to say you were six two,
but you.
Speaker 2 (53:35):
Like, oh, no, no, six one, six one. I'm six one.
We know that, and shoes for sure, I'm six and
I think my driver's license says it. And I think
it was smosh in my head. I just wish I
would have said, yes, it was smoshing my head.
Speaker 3 (53:47):
Is it important to you?
Speaker 2 (53:48):
It's not. It's funny.
Speaker 1 (53:50):
Well, it's a little important though.
Speaker 3 (53:52):
It's even important to be six one because you're you're
the only one there in the room, like.
Speaker 2 (53:57):
It's other people there. I just wanted it on my
sheet rented because I was gonna take it home because
Kaitlin's like, you're not six one, you're six six foot
and a half. I've seen it many times in your
and I'm like, but there they always have some excuses
to lie. But I'm liking shoes for sure. I'm six one,
And so they put it on my sheet, and before
I took it out of the room, I sharpeyed it
out so it can never be eased against me. Yeah,
(54:20):
I just should have said, yeah, it's pushing it on
my head too much. And then I peed in the
cup and then I'll still wait for my results from
all the blood stuff I did. I got in a
was it a slip What.
Speaker 3 (54:33):
Do you call those things? A rope a gown?
Speaker 2 (54:35):
Yeah, a gown, a hospital gown. They opened in the front, Yeah,
they opened in the back.
Speaker 3 (54:40):
For the most part, it depends on which way you
slide it on. You can slide it in and then
it ties in the back, or you can put it
over your shoulders and put your arms through and it
ties in the front. There. Whichever way way did they
Which way did they tell you? Normally before the nurse
or whomever leaves the room, they tell you which way
to put it on.
Speaker 2 (54:59):
They they did. They said it opens in the front.
Speaker 3 (55:01):
I just thought, okay, so they're telling you keep it
where it opens in the front.
Speaker 2 (55:06):
The ideal body fat percentage for a forty four year
old man depends on his overall fitness level and health goals.
Here are general guidelines for men by body fat categories.
So essential fat means you just need this percentage to
function is five percent. You have to have that just
to live. For athletes, it's six to thirteen percent. For
(55:26):
fitness it's fourteen to seventeen. This is a forty four
year old man, six foot tall, one hundred and seventy pounds.
And also not everybody's the same even then, even if
you use all those stats, but this is just a
generic average is eighteen to twenty four. Obese to is
twenty five percent or higher. Where do you feel like Matt.
Speaker 3 (55:43):
Probably fall in fitness category.
Speaker 2 (55:46):
Fourteen to seventeen. My c section probably holds me back a.
Speaker 3 (55:49):
Little bit now higher, But the score tissue.
Speaker 2 (55:51):
I know, but it's it's still it's still probably show
up his body fat. Yeah, I mean I was eleven percent.
Speaker 1 (55:57):
WHOA whoa elite athlete?
Speaker 2 (55:59):
No, well, athlete, it's ay elite, just athlete. Yeah, I
didn't say elite. There's no elie, but that was I
was at eleven percent. That's pretty proud of I'm all
sort of yeah, like mentally, I'm in a good place
right now too. But they didn't do any calipers.
Speaker 3 (56:13):
And squeezed your fat.
Speaker 2 (56:15):
I got on a machine and held stuff and there
was a machine around me, and they're just like so,
but I won't get the big results told next week
the blood stuff, but pretty good.
Speaker 3 (56:25):
Not bad. You're twenty nine. You can start saying that
now too.
Speaker 2 (56:30):
And Eddie is eighty. We'll let her eighty for sure
do it. Well, I don't think you're eighty.
Speaker 3 (56:35):
I was googling more about osteoporosis because I know it's
more common in older women. That's actually what I'm trying
to fight right now is for older me. I'm trying
to protect my but I'm doing all kinds of things
for that. But it says your men can also develop
the condition, and I think Eddie you might. I can
start sharing with you some of the things I'm doing
to prevent it.
Speaker 2 (56:52):
I don't think it's fair that you already diagnosed me
as having osteoporosis. Well, we just asked her to do
a blind diagnosis anyway, but.
Speaker 1 (56:58):
She's already diagnosed me as someone like that's broken a
bone twice in two years doing athletic stuff.
Speaker 2 (57:05):
It's not like I like we fell roller skating.
Speaker 1 (57:08):
It wasn't I was flying there, dude, I was flying.
Do you remember that guy?
Speaker 2 (57:13):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (57:13):
No, was it there? I was going that fast.
Speaker 3 (57:16):
How much do you think you drink these days?
Speaker 1 (57:19):
I would say two days out of the week.
Speaker 3 (57:24):
And how many days a week are you working out?
Speaker 1 (57:26):
Three?
Speaker 3 (57:27):
Two days out of the week, how many drinks?
Speaker 2 (57:28):
You don't work out any more than we work out. Like,
go for a walk anything, go for a walk, but
I don't lift. No, well, you don't have to lift.
Speaker 1 (57:38):
I go for a walk. There's like a hill behind
a house. I'll walk up that hill like two or
three times.
Speaker 2 (57:42):
Oh, that that counts.
Speaker 3 (57:43):
That's great. You should add a weighted best. That'll help with.
Speaker 2 (57:49):
Cops. He'll break a hip.
Speaker 1 (57:50):
I'm telling you, dude.
Speaker 2 (57:51):
Do you think they'll call the cops on a Mexican
guy in the vest?
Speaker 1 (57:53):
One hundred percent. I don't look Mexican.
Speaker 2 (57:56):
So you're saying someone will think you're a side bomber driver.
Like pictures, though the picture does Amy who's in it?
He does? Like, dude, that's funny. That's where your mind goes.
Speaker 1 (58:12):
I've seen a white dude. I'm going a white dude
with a beard, and I'm like, I gotta call the comments.
I then saw me.
Speaker 3 (58:19):
I get the car, then wear the weighted vest under
a sweatshirt or something.
Speaker 1 (58:23):
I'm hiding something.
Speaker 2 (58:23):
Then here and Amy, when you walk over and look
at the driver's license because his picture one of the
funniest I've ever seen, I'll tell you.
Speaker 1 (58:31):
At the airport they take five looks at.
Speaker 2 (58:33):
It, look at it on microphone camera. Amy, So don't
look here. We go and go.
Speaker 3 (58:38):
Okay, hold on three two one.
Speaker 2 (58:48):
I don't even know why did that? He looks like
he walks some one of the great pyramids. You do
look like Egyptian or a Middle Eastern.
Speaker 1 (58:55):
Yeah, I'm telling you for sure. People people think I'm
Middle Eastern.
Speaker 3 (59:00):
You look cute, but you don't look You're right. I
would be like, you're not Garzia.
Speaker 1 (59:04):
I remember I was at the store once and somebody
was like, where are you from? And I was like, oh,
I'm from Texas and they're like no, no, no, like where
are you from from?
Speaker 2 (59:09):
But where are you?
Speaker 1 (59:11):
Like, I'm from Texas?
Speaker 2 (59:13):
Liken and raised because he didn't think you're a Mexican.
Speaker 3 (59:15):
They thought it was, and then they say from from me,
You're like, well, Mexico. And then they're like, and then
where where are your friends?
Speaker 1 (59:24):
It's crazy.
Speaker 3 (59:25):
It doesn't like you're it says, I won't say your
full name, but your name on here is very very Mexican.
Speaker 2 (59:32):
Yeah, that's why at the airport they're like, uh huh,
your picture on there is not very very Mexican, though,
you know, it's hilarious. We were at Auburn doing no
good uh too much access. Coach Bruce Pearl had us down.
We're working out with one of the main players. We
were playing basketball and somebody who was there I think
part of the program, I think is married as a
(59:54):
Middle Eastern partner and went up to Eddie because they related.
They're like, oh my gosh, you look just like my husband.
I'm like, oh, he's a Hispanic guy. No, he's from
like Turkey. She went up daddy to kind of relate
to him, you know, being a Middle Eastern in America.
She's like, my husband's saying that. He's like, nah, I'm Mexican, man.
Speaker 1 (01:00:16):
Crazy. I'm telling I get that all the time. I
got Kurdish the other day. I don't even know what
kurdish Ish.
Speaker 2 (01:00:26):
What do you mean, Like, where's the country of curd
Have you ever heard of Kurds? Like the people I've
heard of cheese Curds. There's not there's not a country
of curd So.
Speaker 1 (01:00:37):
What is because that's what she told me, she said,
you look Kurdish.
Speaker 2 (01:00:41):
They're basically mountainous people from the Middle East. Oh wow, yeah,
so ethnic group. No Curtis Lakia though, Okay, I don't
think there is a there is a I mean, look,
there is a Curtis Stand, but it's like roughly defined.
Speaker 1 (01:00:59):
Maybe that's it Curtis Stand. It's not like Iowa, right man,
I've gotten Saudi, I've gotten India. Like from India, I've gotten.
Speaker 2 (01:01:08):
Kurdistan as parts of Iran, Iraq, Syria, and Turkey. So
like I said, it's not like a defined area, but
roughly that mountainous area.
Speaker 1 (01:01:17):
That was the one where I'm like, oh, I don't
know what, I don't know what.
Speaker 2 (01:01:19):
That's always makes me laugh about someone think, sure, it
happens all the time. Something.
Speaker 1 (01:01:25):
It starts with a smile.
Speaker 2 (01:01:26):
First, They're like, oh, like you're you're one of us,
and I'm like, huh, what does that mean?
Speaker 1 (01:01:30):
Find us I'm just getting cheated as in a coke.
What do you mean.
Speaker 2 (01:01:34):
Ten conspiracy theories it turned out to be true. I
feel like we're just in the kind of the mood
and mode for that right now. I love a conspiracy theory.
I think some of them now though, turning into disinformation,
which makes it very difficult to know what's true and
what's not. But I did find this article of ten
conspiracy theories that we're at one point no way could
(01:01:55):
it be, but then turned out And now we look
back and we're like, yeah, makes because we're kind of taught.
Speaker 1 (01:02:01):
It was true.
Speaker 2 (01:02:01):
But you see Trump, So Biden released like I don't
know the number, like thirteen thousand documents when he was
in office about JFK. And then Trump signed last night
he said they're going to release everything. Now we've heard
this before. Who knows what everything means? Because when Biden
released all those documents, thousands of pages of documents, some
of it were still redacted. So when by Trump signing
that yesterday last night, doesn't mean we get more redacted
(01:02:23):
files or do we get the files redacted? And do
we learn who really killed jfkde.
Speaker 1 (01:02:29):
Would you read that whole thing?
Speaker 2 (01:02:30):
Nope. I would wait, or I would ask chat GBT
to summarize it. Yeah, just give me a real lifts
notes version of it. It's like the Justin Baldoni Blake Lively.
I haven't read any of the documents there, but I'll
watch attorneys who have read through the I think it's
ninety pages.
Speaker 3 (01:02:47):
That it's a lot.
Speaker 2 (01:02:49):
The longer it goes, the worst she looks by far.
Speaker 3 (01:02:54):
I feel like it goes back and forth.
Speaker 2 (01:02:55):
It did when so it was him a good guy,
then her good guy, but once he countersued them, and
it's like, look at these texts that she used in
her lawsuit that I'm showing you the rest of the
context to me, if you're like, hey, what really happened?
They probably developed feelings.
Speaker 3 (01:03:09):
For each other. Yes, I was going to say, do
you think that she loved him?
Speaker 2 (01:03:12):
I think I think. Listen again, I'm just gonna I'm
gonna do a lot of speculation.
Speaker 3 (01:03:16):
Thing on that.
Speaker 2 (01:03:17):
I think that that's kind of her mo Is to
fall in love with her actor. That's how her and
Ryan Reynolds got together. They did a movie together, they
did Green Lantern.
Speaker 1 (01:03:25):
I don't know the story. She she was married to
Ryan Reynolds.
Speaker 2 (01:03:28):
She is, she is, So what's this?
Speaker 1 (01:03:30):
What's this?
Speaker 3 (01:03:31):
Justin is in the movie. It ends with us with her.
He was the director and co star and coastr Yeah yeah,
and so you don't know anything about this now zero?
What what is your This hasn't been on TikTok at all.
Speaker 2 (01:03:43):
Yeah, I live in this space. It's okay, it's not
that interesting to me. I feel like, though, really interesting.
I'm not on his side, but she doesn't seem like
that good of a person.
Speaker 3 (01:03:56):
Yeah. I have no idea whose side I'm on. I
just know that I've gone back and forth with like, oh, WHOA,
that's crazy, and then someone else will present something, WHOA,
that's crazy. I know when she was looking like the
good guy, a lot of other things were coming out
from other actresses and people in Hollywood talking about how
they've been mistreated, and then it made you believe her more.
Speaker 2 (01:04:17):
You know, she was with DiCaprio, she was with pin Badgeley,
which was her co star and gossip Girl.
Speaker 3 (01:04:24):
Yep, yeah, oh they were to good. They dated, yeah, briefly, Eddie.
Speaker 2 (01:04:28):
I wouldn't even worry about getting It's like trying to
watch the Sopranos. Starting today.
Speaker 3 (01:04:32):
You know what, but Sopranos is so good.
Speaker 2 (01:04:34):
Entertaining great, but don't waste your time.
Speaker 1 (01:04:36):
She's still married though.
Speaker 2 (01:04:37):
Yes, now he's starting to look like the real douche
Ryan Reynolds.
Speaker 3 (01:04:41):
Well, so the thing I most recently watched was that
maybe Ryan found out about the feelings, and so that's
why he went and confronted her.
Speaker 2 (01:04:48):
Theory or fan theory from docu. Okay, so the lawyers
that i'll watch break down the stuff. They'll go, this
is what was said in her case, this is what
is said in his and hers would be like the
text that they put in the case, and then his
is Okay, here's that text, but here's everything else around it.
That is exactly why. Here's the video from this set
where she says I did this, but let's watch that.
(01:05:10):
Here's the actual video, including five minutes before and five
minutes after, like once they start going full receipt.
Speaker 3 (01:05:16):
I guess this one. I don't know if we called
fan theory, because I don't know that she's a fan
of either person. But she's now a mom. But she
used to be a casting director in Hollywood, and she's like,
trust me, I have casted.
Speaker 2 (01:05:27):
For so much they trust me.
Speaker 3 (01:05:29):
Okay, but maybe I paraphrase okay, okay, okay, because I
felt like I could trust what she's saying now that
she gave me her credentials. And she said that sometimes
people have chemistry, sometimes they don't, and when they really do,
like you can tell the ones that just have it
and they have feelings for each other. And she's like,
I watched that entire movie, and she said she texted
one another casting buddies and was like, you cannot deny
(01:05:52):
the on camera love. You cannot deny it. It is
on and off. And I feel like they have something
going on. And that is now my theory that they
were in life and it caused this whole thing.
Speaker 2 (01:06:01):
My pure speculation would be that too would be there
were feelings and then that's where all this comes from.
Speaker 3 (01:06:07):
That's crazy.
Speaker 2 (01:06:09):
But Eddie, don't worry about it.
Speaker 1 (01:06:10):
Dude, you got it.
Speaker 2 (01:06:10):
You got enough. It's not even that interesting. Had I
not been invested, I wouldn't continue to be invested.
Speaker 3 (01:06:15):
Have you watched it in with us or read the book?
Speaker 2 (01:06:16):
I've not done either.
Speaker 3 (01:06:19):
That should be homework.
Speaker 2 (01:06:20):
I'll pass. I don't even want to know about the story.
Like I'm sad, I know that much.
Speaker 3 (01:06:24):
Okay, Well, I had read the book a long time ago,
and then when it turned into a movie, I was
really excited and I wanted to go see it. So
I did.
Speaker 2 (01:06:31):
And how's a movie take take everything else out of it,
everything that you knew pre mid I liked it.
Speaker 3 (01:06:36):
I liked it. Yeah, I felt I felt like I
was already influenced by some of the stuff though, because
the jury Blake was acting with the promo of the book,
because it is about domestic violence.
Speaker 2 (01:06:49):
Promo of the movie.
Speaker 3 (01:06:50):
The promo of the movie was all like the main
character and like flowers and living this life and girlly
and like this is so great, and then you're like, god,
this is a really heavy story. And then that's that's
what you learn. And some of the legal stuff back
and forth is like she was made to look bad
for promoting it that way, but that was literally how
Justin had said, you need to promote this movie. Colleen
(01:07:10):
Hoover's the author. I like a lot of her books.
I'm actually listening to one of her books right now
on Audible called November ninth. It's pretty good, except for
the main characters are eighteen and it just really throws
me off when they were got young and then there's
like a love scene and I'm like.
Speaker 2 (01:07:23):
Why I never watched that? She on Netflix about the
water which one I don't know Charles Eston's in it?
Oh yeah, out of band I felt too old, like
seeing one they're like in a boat and it's like
a bunch of twenty I am twenty nine though, so
maybe I should feel but I felt like.
Speaker 3 (01:07:38):
I can watch a good teeny bopper and I don't
mind this whole storyline. I think it's great, but I'm
when there's a love scene and they're eighteen, I don't
like it. Kind Of like on Landman, the daughter is seventeen,
and it really is crazy to me how sexualized she
is on the show. It's all I feel awkward. I'm like,
she's seventeen.
Speaker 2 (01:07:56):
We haven't watched Landman so.
Speaker 3 (01:07:57):
And she's not seventeen in real life, but her care
character is. So that feels weird because my daughter's seventeen
and if she was acting this way, I would be
losing my mind.
Speaker 2 (01:08:06):
I mean probably most seventeen year old are actually no,
I don't know because I haven't seen that show.
Speaker 3 (01:08:11):
Yeah, well, once you watch it, you're probably gonna be uncomfortable.
Speaker 2 (01:08:13):
The Girl, the daughter of the Vice President and Night
Agent show. I'm watching it now. She plays a college
student daughter of the vice president. Everybody with me. She's
in her thirties in her life.
Speaker 3 (01:08:24):
Yeah, this girl of seventeen, she's twenty seven.
Speaker 2 (01:08:27):
Old is her character though, twenty one twenty Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:08:31):
I mean that's gotta be so like I get a compliment.
Speaker 2 (01:08:33):
I'm twenty nine. I get it, like I never really
understood and related.
Speaker 3 (01:08:37):
Yeah, I know, right, you should audition for stuff.
Speaker 2 (01:08:41):
My glass has helped me a bit visual age, meaning
any of my wrinkles or lines on my eyes they're
blacked out by my glasses.
Speaker 3 (01:08:49):
Yeah. It's a nice touch.
Speaker 2 (01:08:50):
And I've never really gone on in the sun.
Speaker 1 (01:08:53):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:08:54):
Hell, did you ever do tanning beds?
Speaker 2 (01:08:56):
You did, right, I had a brief membership for and
like two thousand and one.
Speaker 3 (01:09:02):
Yeah, so that's what's really my dermantologist said, that's really
what screwed me over.
Speaker 2 (01:09:06):
Oh, we did mole check yesterday too, which is always
tough for me. That I was in the gown from
ole check and so it's like, let's look at your
back and it's it's Kurdistan, basically that the cards lived there,
back there, Oh mountain mountains. Oh yeah, it's just I've
always had a ton of moles. I've had many cut
off and he's like.
Speaker 3 (01:09:23):
Oh did you buy up see me, He's like, some.
Speaker 2 (01:09:26):
Of these we may have to send off. It wasn't
a oh this one looks bad, but he's like they're
just raised.
Speaker 1 (01:09:33):
And so you think that would be tanning bit.
Speaker 2 (01:09:35):
No, no, no, family, Like my mom had a bunch
of moles. Luckily they're just on my back.
Speaker 3 (01:09:42):
See our family. Mine's family stuff too, but a lot
of it's not visible. It's like stuff you don't like
the train die has to see and then I'm like, okay,
is this really here? But I don't know if y'all
remember before my wedding. At my wedding means my mom
had a lot of makeup on, so you can really tell.
Plus the surgeon did a really good job. But like
six weeks before my wedding, she had her entire face
like cut open down the middle and had to like
(01:10:02):
scrape out all the skin cancer and sewed back, and
she had a huge scar. It ended up healing nicely,
but I remember her debating like oh, your wedding's coming up.
Should I wait? And the doctor's like, we probably shouldn't wait,
So she went ahead and did it. But now my skin,
I'm in my forties and he's sharing with me some
of the things that my mom had that I now have.
And from my mom it was stuff from her childhood
and younger years, and all of my damage is from
(01:10:26):
those my tanning bed days, my laying out by the
pool with baby oil days.
Speaker 2 (01:10:32):
YO didn't know how bad that was.
Speaker 3 (01:10:34):
I no, But now no, I don't even do anything fun.
Speaker 2 (01:10:38):
We did the family history thing yesterday and I don't
know mine, but he's like, all right, let's go. I
know my doctor now at this point pretty well. He's like,
let's go through family history and he's like, uh, well,
we don't really have many places we can go. He
knows both. My grandfather died of cancer, but I didn't
know either one of them.
Speaker 3 (01:10:56):
Do you know what kind of cancer?
Speaker 2 (01:10:57):
No, my grandma, who adopted me and raised me, her
husband died. My grandfather. I didn't know him, but my
mom was only eight when he died, so she didn't
even really know them. He did die of cancer. And
then my biological dad's dad died of cancer.
Speaker 3 (01:11:14):
So do you think that this is worth maybe reaching
out to your biological dad to get information that can
be helpful for you. Nah, Okay, I know that that's hard,
but or.
Speaker 2 (01:11:25):
Like it's it's healthy for me to be stubborn.
Speaker 3 (01:11:30):
I get it. I know it's probably like not at
the top of your list of things to do, but
I think knowing some knowledge in that way is power.
But I mean you are powerful enough.
Speaker 2 (01:11:40):
You've seen my results.
Speaker 3 (01:11:41):
Yeah, you're a twenty nine.
Speaker 2 (01:11:42):
So yeah, like eleven percent body fat. Ten conspiracy theories,
it turned out to be true. We'll go ten to one.
The US government fabricated this was the theory or exaggerated
attack on American ships to justify escalating the Vietnam War.
So the theory was the u US exaggerated the attack
(01:12:03):
on their own ships. The truth was declassified. NSA documents
confirmed that one of the attacks never happened that we
said happened. It was the Gulf of Tonkin incident. So
there was an attack, an attack that we escalated because
of the attack on us, but that attack never happened.
They just said it happened so they could that's the
(01:12:26):
Gulf of Tonkin incident turned out to be true. The
theory Number nine, Bayer sold blood products contaminated with HIV
to foreign markets.
Speaker 3 (01:12:36):
No way the truth.
Speaker 2 (01:12:37):
According to history dot com, this is a real life
site because they do documentaries on the channel, so I
believe it. In the nineteen eighties it was confirmed Bayer
knowingly sold these products, leading to thousands of infections. That
would be something I would want to read further into
to just know, because I'm curious about that. And maybe
it was they just were selling blood products and they
(01:12:58):
didn't realize it was contaminated when they really as some
could be, they were like, well, we're not going back now,
We're just going to sell it all. I don't know,
but that turned out to be true. The next one
is the theory was Project Sunshine. The government harvested dead
bodies for radioactive testing without consent. I didn't see that bad,
(01:13:18):
but it was revealed in the nineteen fifties at the
US and the UK conducted these studies, often using stolen
body parts from dead people. You know, probably not the
most integrity filled action, but yeah, you know what, they're dead,
not like you're selling HIV blood alive people, right man.
Operation paper Club. I've read a lot.
Speaker 1 (01:13:39):
About Operation paper Clip. That doesn't sound too bad.
Speaker 2 (01:13:41):
I've talked about it here. When I say what it is,
you'll remember me talking about it. This one's wild and
it's obviously true. But the theory was the US government
secretly brought Nazi scientists to America after World War Two.
Speaker 3 (01:13:53):
Oh yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:13:54):
Declassified documents confirmed the program, which aim to levered German
expertise for the Cold War. We took the smartest knots
and said we'll change your name, NASA.
Speaker 1 (01:14:06):
Other.
Speaker 2 (01:14:09):
Other areas of expertise that these scientists had that we didn't.
Gave him a new house, gave him a new name,
said yeah, you were Nazis and we should murder you,
but you can bring But we were like bidding against
other countries, other countries, one of them two. So they
did some heinous things. But because they were really smart
and really good, we gave them a new live so
(01:14:30):
they could build our space program, build our That's a
tough one.
Speaker 3 (01:14:33):
Is there a movie on that?
Speaker 2 (01:14:35):
There's probably a few. The Pentagon papers. The theory was
the US government misled the public about the Vietnam War's progress.
The truth was the leak Pentagon papers in nineteen seventy
one exposed systematic deception by multiple administrations, which is basically,
they would tell us we were doing better in the
war than we were. That's a war we didn't win,
(01:14:56):
so would constantly be on television on the news. Well
look at us, we're really dominating. But it turns out
it wasn't true at all. Number five NSA mass surveillance
the theory the US government was conducting widespread surveillance on
its own citizens. The Truth. The leaks in twenty thirteen
revealed the NSA's extensive surveillance programs, confirming widespread concerns about
(01:15:19):
privacy violations. I wish I knew more because those were
I'm sure they found a bunch of stuff, but those words,
when it's just generic words, widespread concerns, Yeah, I got
widespread concerns about a lot of stuff. Number four the
spying on John Lennon. The theory the FBI was tracking
John Lennon due to his anti war activism. The Truth
(01:15:42):
declassified files confirmed the FBI monitored Lenin in his seventies
because they feared his influence on the anti war movement,
so they tracked him. Oh, this next one is crazy too.
I've talked about this, the Manhattan Project, and you guys
price the movies about this.
Speaker 1 (01:15:58):
There's a movie I think called that, but there are also.
Speaker 2 (01:16:01):
Other movies, like wildly successful movies about this. Do you
remember what that is at all? The Manhattan Project, the
US government was secretly developing an atomic bomb during World
War Two. Mike, what's that?
Speaker 1 (01:16:13):
I mean, that's what Oppenheimer?
Speaker 2 (01:16:14):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:16:15):
OHI oh yeah, I fell asleep in that movie.
Speaker 2 (01:16:17):
Oh yeah, you didn't like it. I didn't love love it.
Speaker 3 (01:16:22):
I liked it.
Speaker 2 (01:16:23):
I liked it, but I thought I was gonna love
love it because it was getting every award nomination, And
I think I would have liked it more had I
not been told I was gonna love it. But I
liked it. The massive secret operation involved tens of thousands
of people, led to the creation of the atomic bombs
that dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Do you ever see
the story about when they dropped those bombs? While they
dropped them there, but basically because there were cloud and
(01:16:43):
they couldn't drop them all the places.
Speaker 1 (01:16:44):
Oh dang, No, never heard that story.
Speaker 2 (01:16:50):
Hopefully I'm not making it up. I'll do a little
fact check on that and read it and then wrap
this up. Number two mk ultra the mind control experiments.
The theory was the CIA conducted secret experiments on mind
control using drugs like LSD, hypnosis, and other techniques. Documents
declassified in the nineteen seventies confirmed the existence of mk ultra,
where people that had no idea they were being experimented on.
(01:17:12):
Were I think the unibomber, because he's a Harvard guy,
I think he was part of these type of experiments
without without knowing Krazinsky, Ted Krasinski, who might have just
died in prison, or he's at that crazy prison in Colorado,
that super super what do.
Speaker 1 (01:17:33):
They call it, Maximum Max?
Speaker 2 (01:17:35):
Yeah. And then number one is Watergate, which we know
is real. Oh, by the way, I.
Speaker 3 (01:17:39):
Said that died in twenty twenty three, Yeah, pretty recently,
eighty one.
Speaker 2 (01:17:43):
It's weird what someone goes away they're kind of already dead. Yeah,
Like I thought Charles Manson was dead a long time ago,
is he not? I think he's dead now. Oh got him.
Speaker 1 (01:17:53):
Bob Barker just died, right, just died.
Speaker 2 (01:17:56):
Can you know? I don't know how for sure I'd
be on that bet. And then the theory was the
Nixon administration orchestrated to break in at the Democratic National
Committee headquarters and then attempted to cover it up. The
truth was Investigative journalism and Congression investigators revealed the conspiracy,
leading to Nixon's resignation in nineteen seventy four.
Speaker 3 (01:18:15):
Kazinski was like, actually cute when you was younger.
Speaker 2 (01:18:18):
Uh, yeah, and we're wildly smart. Yeah, But the experiments
they did on him. The cities of Hiroshima Nagasaki were
chosen his targets for atomic bombs in part because of
the weather conditions. Clouds over Kourage, Japan in August nineteenth,
nineteen forty five forced the US to target in Nagasaki instead.
Speaker 1 (01:18:38):
Dang, they couldn't wait.
Speaker 2 (01:18:42):
No, they couldn't wait. But imagine you live in could Courage,
Japan and it happened to be cloudy that day, so
you didn't get an atomic bomb dropped on you.
Speaker 1 (01:18:52):
Yeah, but then you love that other you live in
that other city, and.
Speaker 2 (01:18:55):
You're not living.
Speaker 1 (01:18:55):
You were never the target.
Speaker 2 (01:18:56):
You don't get to imagine because you're done.
Speaker 1 (01:18:58):
You're done. I remember in Oppenheimer they talked about I
believe it was Kyoto, and one of the guys says, no,
my wife likes vacationing there.
Speaker 2 (01:19:04):
Let's not do it there.
Speaker 1 (01:19:05):
Really, Yeah, so they said in the movie.
Speaker 2 (01:19:07):
Weather conditions played a major role in the decision to
bomb Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The weather affected the timing of
the bombings and the damage caused by the second bomb.
Wild all right, good, anything else?
Speaker 3 (01:19:21):
A lot of things here covered a lot of very
random topics.
Speaker 1 (01:19:25):
But it does feel like that's crazy that, Like those
do sound like crazy theories and at the time probably
be like that, come on, stop, that's not true.
Speaker 2 (01:19:32):
All of them.
Speaker 1 (01:19:32):
Yeah, turned out to be true.
Speaker 2 (01:19:34):
Likeltr's wild to me. The Kultra that's the experiments they
were doing on people that had no idea with hallucinogens
like that kind of sucks. Yeah, you're going in, it's
just a filling.
Speaker 1 (01:19:48):
Let's give you acid.
Speaker 2 (01:19:49):
Yeah, it's like, yeah, it's just a cavity. Man, We're
gonna and all of a sudden, you're freaking chasing bunnies
and monster. Yeah, wild man, Wild, there's a bonus one
cointell pro The theory was the FBI infiltrated and sabotaged
civil rights groups and I wore movements and other activist organizations.
(01:20:10):
The truth was Documents obtained in nineteen seventy one confirmed
that Coointal pro targeted figures like Martin Luther King Junior
in groups like the Black Panthers so they would infiltrate
and sabotage them. Imagine you're John Lennon or MLK, and
you know the government is like monitoring everything you do
(01:20:31):
with such sensitivity. That's a weird life to.
Speaker 1 (01:20:35):
Live, stressful.
Speaker 2 (01:20:37):
At one point, I'll be able to share it. At
some point in my life, I'll be able to share it.
When I had cars, I saw my house with lights on,
and I open the window, they drive off. That's a
very scary nine months of my life. I almost wrote
it in my last book, and I thought, I don't
even want to bite the foot of that goblin. But
(01:20:58):
there was a it was a really scary time. Do
you know what I'm talking about?
Speaker 3 (01:21:01):
Trying to think right now.
Speaker 2 (01:21:03):
Well, I for sure was being monitored. But but don't
say it because I've purposely chosen not to talk about it.
Speaker 3 (01:21:11):
Because I'm not going to say it.
Speaker 2 (01:21:12):
I don't wow. Sometimes once you run the whole Marveled Avengers.
Speaker 3 (01:21:15):
That is a fiction story about people I don't know.
I'm not going to like out you in your life
right here.
Speaker 2 (01:21:22):
It's a little different accidental, though I think it's on purpose.
Speaker 3 (01:21:25):
You haven't. I think I'm just a little more free
with fiction, Eddie.
Speaker 2 (01:21:29):
We take the camera off of me. Yeah, I'm not
on a camera right not on camera. Nothing I do
in my note it's going to be seen.
Speaker 1 (01:21:39):
We just see amy.
Speaker 3 (01:21:44):
I sight.
Speaker 2 (01:21:45):
If you can't say you can't see.
Speaker 3 (01:21:46):
It, I can't see it. I see it. It was
longer than you think. Also, I write like I always
saw was Nate mgotta yeh, Nate forgot.
Speaker 2 (01:21:54):
He's been after me for years, and now you're reveal it.
Speaker 1 (01:21:58):
That's what it is.
Speaker 2 (01:21:59):
We walked it over to her and then just bring
it back.
Speaker 3 (01:22:02):
I gotta go get my eyes.
Speaker 2 (01:22:03):
I think he is very funny. Some of you guys don't.
Speaker 1 (01:22:07):
I mean, it's not that I don't think he's funny,
like I do think it's funny. I just see him
play these Yeah, yeah, massive.
Speaker 2 (01:22:13):
Area he's killing. He made like eighty million dollars last year. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:22:16):
I saw that, and I'm like, wow, I didn't think
he was that funny.
Speaker 2 (01:22:18):
I'm such a fan of somebody who can do it
clean without having to be like I'm the clean guy.
Speaker 3 (01:22:23):
Right, And he still interacts with dirty comedians because he's
like calling him clean and dirty like against it.
Speaker 2 (01:22:31):
He just does it, Like I admire that. I think
it's really good.
Speaker 3 (01:22:33):
What's the appropriate road blue comedians? It works there you go?
So he and yeah, he interacts with blue.
Speaker 2 (01:22:39):
You remember that now?
Speaker 1 (01:22:41):
And so what is he? What's clean? Color is clean?
Speaker 2 (01:22:44):
I was asking to remember what I wrote.
Speaker 3 (01:22:45):
It's clean white, no bad words clean.
Speaker 2 (01:22:50):
What'd you say white white?
Speaker 3 (01:22:51):
Well, if dirty's blue, white is clean?
Speaker 2 (01:22:54):
Got it?
Speaker 3 (01:22:54):
I don't know, it's just I don't think there is
a color Eddie back up. I think it's just clean
and then blue.
Speaker 1 (01:23:00):
Okay.
Speaker 2 (01:23:00):
You ever see the Campill sketch where they're talking about
black ice and the ass is like, you know, watch
out for black eyes and one's a reporter of one's
weather man, and like just because it's black, don't mean
they're like trying to go like there's some wide ice
that got me to one.
Speaker 1 (01:23:13):
But it's like it's really hard to see black.
Speaker 2 (01:23:18):
They're like at night, really be aware of the black guyes.
I watched that last night. Actually, yes, it's so funny.
Speaker 1 (01:23:25):
Feel is on my TikTok algorithm.
Speaker 2 (01:23:27):
I just saw the one where he the guy's got
trouble the baseball players got a problem slapping people's butts.
I haven't seen that one.
Speaker 1 (01:23:32):
He went to therapy for it.
Speaker 2 (01:23:35):
So they're like, guys, we can look, we've got to
not slap butts around here because so and so just
got a treatment for that.
Speaker 1 (01:23:41):
I haven't seen.
Speaker 2 (01:23:41):
That's a funny one. The one that I see every
few months because people just post it randomly is someone's
doing a political talk and he's like, and we're going
to stand up for everybody, even the gaze, and it
keeps going to like Jordan Peel, and he's like the
camera like the camera goes to his face sitting in
the crowd and he's watching the speech, and he looks
at the camera right when he says, hey, we're gonna
(01:24:02):
protect everybody's right, so you know, even the gay people.
And he realizes the cameras on him when he talks
about gay people, and he goes like, get the camera
off me. So he comes back to it and the
camera goes back to Jordan Peele, and then Jordan Pel's
like hiding under the chair when the camera comes back
to the third time. It's super funny. There's so funny, different
that like old Chappelle showed sketches ahead of their time,
super funny. Mine heavily now is It's always sunny in Philadelphia.
(01:24:26):
Not stop clips that shows really funny. Okay, that's it,
Thank you guys. Let's do it. You can listen to
the Yellowstone podcast. I think we Yeah, go If you don't,
I'm gonna do eight episodes of this. It's gonna be awesome.
Go search for the Yellowstone Feed. We had an issue
on our feed yesterday, but I had on She was
(01:24:48):
the governor, then senator and the love interest of John Dutton,
big role in the show. She was my guest and
we talked a lot about her career, what it was
like working on Yellowstone. So go search that up on
the Yellowstone we have an episode of today. We have
twenty five whistles, and we have on the former general
(01:25:08):
manager of the Patriots who won three Super Bowls, Scott Peel,
which was super cool. Amy your four things? What do
you have going on? Do you know the four Things?
Speaker 4 (01:25:15):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:25:15):
No, I did. Quotes that'll just help you rethink how
you look at life and things that happened to you
with like little nuggets personal stories from me, and then
I even have I recommend other episodes that you can
listen to from a couple of other podcasts that I
love that kind of tie into the same theme. So
it's kind of a quick episode, but impactful at least
(01:25:37):
for me. Sometimes I'm like, oh, this is a good
therapeutic episode for me.
Speaker 2 (01:25:42):
I need to do quickly. The draft results of the
Best Candy Barks. I don't want to let that go away.
We drafted the Best Candy Bar. We had the first
overall pick. I did.
Speaker 3 (01:25:53):
Amy did yeah, because I went with Reese's and it
was controversial.
Speaker 2 (01:25:56):
You did not win, but I didn't lose.
Speaker 3 (01:25:59):
There's no way lost with Ese's.
Speaker 2 (01:26:02):
The loser had six percent is a very low. So
I can read you everybody's and you tell me who
you think had six percent. Amy had Reese's Cups, Reese's
Take five and Heath Bar.
Speaker 3 (01:26:13):
I mean, maybe I lost, Maybe maybe I did.
Speaker 2 (01:26:18):
Morgan had Kit Kats, Watch Your McCall it's, and Three Musketeers.
Speaker 3 (01:26:21):
Pretty solid.
Speaker 2 (01:26:22):
Lunch Box had Snickers, Milky Way, Hershey's Milk Chocolate Bar.
Speaker 3 (01:26:27):
Not bad.
Speaker 2 (01:26:28):
I had Butterfinger Heyday and emin m's.
Speaker 3 (01:26:32):
That's good.
Speaker 2 (01:26:32):
Ray Mundo had twigs, rollos and feastables.
Speaker 3 (01:26:36):
Okay, lost loses every time.
Speaker 2 (01:26:39):
Yeah, ray had six percent.
Speaker 1 (01:26:43):
Because no one knew feastables.
Speaker 2 (01:26:45):
It's a weird thing. You have to know mister beasts
to know mister feast and he had rolls the number
two and I only took M and MS because Amy
took Rie's cups. I felt like we could break the
rolls a little bit. Yeah, yeah, but I think the
feastables got him. Raymundo feats at six percent. I was
in fourth at sixteen percent, Morgan at seventeen percent, whoa.
(01:27:06):
Amy finished second, and then Lunchbox finished first at thirty
six percent. Snickers was a big, big one which I
couldn't they didn't take I already had carmel two of them.
I didn't want a third one. We were forced me
to eat them. Yeah, that had been the move. Okay,
you picked off the three, eat all of them.
Speaker 4 (01:27:22):
Now.
Speaker 2 (01:27:22):
Raymond is out in nextrapt Eddie's back in, which is
usually the case. They just revolve me.
Speaker 1 (01:27:25):
We just go back and forth.
Speaker 2 (01:27:26):
It sucks so bad. So there's that and then one
other thing. We get a lot of questions about where
to find things and Morgan when this happens, is it
show stuff or is it Nashville stuff? Like what are
what are the questions?
Speaker 4 (01:27:37):
Mostly, Oh, it's just where to find like different types
of content, like the drafts.
Speaker 3 (01:27:41):
It's on.
Speaker 4 (01:27:42):
Everything is always on our website Bobby bones dot com.
Everything is up their content, videos, YouTube page, blogs, the drafts,
like links to shows Bobby's doing.
Speaker 3 (01:27:52):
Everything will always be up there. And then if it's
not there.
Speaker 4 (01:27:56):
That you somehow can't find it there, you can find
it on our social media pages, which all Bobby.
Speaker 2 (01:28:00):
Bone Show, okay, at Bobby Bone Show all the way around.
Subscribe to our YouTube channel if you don't mind, and
that is it. Okay, you guys, have a great weekend.
We'll be back Monday. Check out today's show podcast hopefully
Caine Brown was on, and we will see you guys later.
All right, bye everybody,