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November 21, 2025 60 mins

This episode features outrageous voicemails about Lunchbox kissing his dad, credit card points, to discovering a comic book worth millions. Bobby’s AI assistant drops in with unpredictable energy, space travel becomes a real debate, someone may or may not have a tumor, Eddie finally pays off a long-running bet, and Lunchbox somehow ruins Eddie’s homemade salsa. If you like humor, friendship, and stories you can’t make up, this is your new favorite podcast!

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
I didn't know every year they listed the top cheating professions.
I thought it was just like an article that came
out randomly.

Speaker 2 (00:09):
Every once in a while, well just to get clicks.

Speaker 1 (00:11):
But every year they do the professions that cheat most,
and this is professions that cheat most five, So it
changes every year.

Speaker 2 (00:21):
I feel like it would stay sort of consistently.

Speaker 1 (00:23):
I think so well, I think it's say, sort of consisten.
It's kind of like the top twenty five. Most teams
stay where they are, but occasionally one loses, one falls down. Uh,
so here we go. What do you got place your bets? Pilot,
Big time pilot. Yep, that's uh one of the top three.

Speaker 2 (00:42):
Who else travels a lot? That's what y'all would always
say that whenever.

Speaker 3 (00:47):
Okay, businessman isn't a realty, that's not a profession entrepreneur.

Speaker 1 (00:51):
It's like hard.

Speaker 4 (00:52):
Worker, right man in a suit?

Speaker 2 (00:58):
I don't know, lawyer.

Speaker 1 (01:02):
You get some yeah, doctors, yeah, doctors.

Speaker 5 (01:04):
A lot of nurses around.

Speaker 6 (01:05):
Het, A lot of hot nurses, hot nurses.

Speaker 2 (01:07):
Is that what it's about? I thought? Hopefully it's not patience,
that's not you can't do that.

Speaker 1 (01:13):
Should there be a show called Temptation m D like
Temptation Island, but it's just doctors with a bunch of
hot nurses. And you see who ends up together.

Speaker 5 (01:22):
And they're like, I can't, I can't. Look.

Speaker 1 (01:24):
You're in the middle of like a heart surgery and
she comes in a bikini. Oh my gosh, what we're
just spent volunt TV show. This is what happened in Hollywood.

Speaker 2 (01:34):
Person on the table really at risk.

Speaker 1 (01:37):
They signed up for it. People will do anything to
be famous or they don't have to pay for their
heart surgery. Uh so pilots, doctors, bankers.

Speaker 6 (01:48):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:48):
I'm always confused about the term banker because when I
hear banker, I think tell her no, and it's not.
And I know there are people that are bankers that
do money stuff, but I don't have a banker.

Speaker 4 (01:57):
I don't have a banker. Yes, he's a baker richie.

Speaker 2 (02:02):
No, No, it's not like that. But that's just what
I call him. It's not it's just like if I
have a bank issue, I call Carter. If like, when
I've like buying my house, I called Carter, Like who
do I go to for the Morgan?

Speaker 4 (02:15):
Here's he set you up with this mort doing a
commercial you called Carter.

Speaker 1 (02:19):
That's someone else. I got trouble. What I do we
call Carter?

Speaker 6 (02:22):
So like Carter works at the bank.

Speaker 2 (02:24):
Yeah, he works out a bank, and I call him
a banker.

Speaker 1 (02:27):
That makes sense.

Speaker 2 (02:27):
And I mean I see him out and about some
things and I'll be like, oh, that's Carter, that's my banker.

Speaker 1 (02:32):
So if you go to a branch, is that a
person sitting in one of those offices? Yause, I've always
wonder what they do in there because they're not working
behind the counter.

Speaker 2 (02:38):
Yeah, he has a desk in office.

Speaker 1 (02:41):
At an actual bank, at a bank. That's cool.

Speaker 5 (02:43):
And taking out a loan like gone to the bank.

Speaker 2 (02:46):
And taking out because you would do that from your banker.

Speaker 5 (02:48):
That's what they do.

Speaker 1 (02:49):
I've never taken out along never, that's what those guys do.
One thousand dollars. I take out a loan one time
in college for one thousand dollars to get clothes and
a But then you.

Speaker 2 (02:59):
Buy PlayStation yea ude, it was like part of your
like it was supposed to be for school though, wasn't it.

Speaker 1 (03:07):
Well, Yeah, I got a loan for a thousand bucks
I needed close and then I bought a PlayStation.

Speaker 5 (03:11):
Did you get the Close too, and PlayStation.

Speaker 1 (03:13):
I got the Close first and then had enough left
over front PlayStation.

Speaker 5 (03:16):
That's fine.

Speaker 1 (03:16):
I never took out a student loans. Luckily I had
enough scholarship to.

Speaker 2 (03:19):
Pay for school even your first house.

Speaker 1 (03:21):
Never I've never taken out a loan. If I couldn't
afford it with cash, I am by it. I was
too afraid to like owe people money, and I thought, well,
I'm not always going to make this money, so I'm scared.
So yeah, no, I've never taken out a loan.

Speaker 2 (03:34):
Well that's why you don't have a banker.

Speaker 7 (03:36):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (03:36):
Maybe. So I had to open up a credit card
of some kind recently and I was, well, had Mike,
what did I have to do? I'd do something with
money and they were like, you have you have incomplete credit?
And I was like, what do you mean? Oh, like,
you've never taken out a loan, Like you don't have

(03:56):
you don't have enough history of paying stuff back that
your credit score is high, so it's it's an incomplete credit.

Speaker 2 (04:03):
And you mostly use debit cards so yeah mostly.

Speaker 1 (04:06):
Yeah, No, I have a credit card now, but it's
like just a normal one and have five million points.

Speaker 5 (04:12):
Yeah, dude, you got to get something that gets wild.

Speaker 8 (04:14):
I got on points like right away, two weeks ago,
just to see about once every three months I get
online just to I can get what can you get?

Speaker 1 (04:23):
A lot a lot like like like, And I don't
want to waste it because I think one day would
be poor again, and so I need those credit card
points to like exist, just in case. It's like a
backup plan.

Speaker 5 (04:33):
Are you talking like a like a any bike.

Speaker 4 (04:37):
More than that, like a car?

Speaker 1 (04:39):
If I were to want cash it it was close
to one hundred thousand dollars. WHOA, what do that's crazy?

Speaker 2 (04:45):
Million points?

Speaker 4 (04:46):
Is that much?

Speaker 1 (04:46):
It's over five million? Yeah, I think in all the
all banks are different.

Speaker 2 (04:50):
Thinking, you know, business class to Europe paid for but
one hundred thousand dollars.

Speaker 1 (04:55):
Yeah, it's somewhere somewhere like ninety two ninety three.

Speaker 5 (04:58):
Could you do flights on that?

Speaker 1 (04:59):
You could?

Speaker 6 (05:00):
Well, why would you take flights? Take the cash?

Speaker 4 (05:02):
I'm not taking anything for this, just in case.

Speaker 3 (05:06):
That's your emergency money, your credit card points.

Speaker 1 (05:13):
I know I had that drama with paying bills ahead
of time.

Speaker 2 (05:15):
Practice letting go. Yeah, you'll get used to it, but
trust us.

Speaker 1 (05:19):
Well, I thought I thought I would just take it
all and put it into what's the company called oh
Na Vidia No pro Fanatics. You can get a gift
card to all these places, and I was just going
to get it, like a ninety three thousand gift card
to Fanatics to just get jerseys and stuff, just to
get like the coolest, like sign Michael Jordan's stuff, a

(05:41):
treat to myself.

Speaker 5 (05:44):
Every Arkansas thing I can find.

Speaker 1 (05:46):
I didn't do it. It still sits there, but I
like at it. I'm like, nah, I don't need to
do it because I'm we might did hard times.

Speaker 5 (05:52):
You never know.

Speaker 1 (05:53):
That's the thing, never know. You never know. But I
do log into that about once every three months. I
like at my bank accounts every day, multiple times a day,
three times a day probably.

Speaker 5 (06:02):
What's that number?

Speaker 4 (06:03):
Not me?

Speaker 1 (06:03):
I do, not significant, but I look every day all
the time just to make sure I can scam.

Speaker 2 (06:10):
Just yeah, smart, probably a little three times a day's
a little pensive, but yeah, at least you're on top
of that.

Speaker 5 (06:17):
So I guess it's kind of good that you don't
have a banker after.

Speaker 1 (06:20):
All that, I'd be calling them all day a you up.
All I wanted to do is checking my account how.

Speaker 5 (06:26):
Many points I have? Now up?

Speaker 1 (06:28):
All right, let's do some voicemails.

Speaker 9 (06:30):
Number one, please his dad?

Speaker 7 (06:33):
This is why thinks like, I want to know if
she thinks it's weird, because it is. I hope he
reports her.

Speaker 6 (06:42):
What is she record her record? I thought he said
reports reports her for what. I don't know what my
wife thinks. She's never really said anything about it, so
I don't know if she's just like, oh, she's used
to it by now, or doesn't care, no idea. But
I can ask, yeah, I need.

Speaker 1 (07:01):
To see it, you know, like I'm that's what I
asked for a video.

Speaker 3 (07:05):
Yeah, like I can visualize what it is, but like
is they're like, you know, is.

Speaker 1 (07:10):
I want to see it? What's the lip to let penetration?

Speaker 5 (07:13):
I don't understand what that was, you know, like you
know when you're going to Hey.

Speaker 1 (07:17):
Dad, I kind of don't care about it anymore. So
I don't really care about any audio. I'm just kinna.
I've moved beyond it, but still crazy. Well, it's divisive
and we spent many bits on it already, but I'll
do one more voicemail on it. Go ahead.

Speaker 9 (07:30):
You guys need to lay off lunchbox and is kissing
of his parents on the lips. Obviously, Lunchbox and his
parents love each other and they're not afraid to show
that they love each other. And you know what, great
for him to being as close as he is to
his parents. That's awesome. I hope my kids are close
with me when they grow up. They are now, but
when they get older. So you guys need to lay
off lunchbox. There you get a show.

Speaker 1 (07:52):
I just said we were laying off lunchbox.

Speaker 6 (07:54):
Smart lady.

Speaker 1 (07:55):
So I mean, love is love, man, I love my parents, Okay,
but I love my parents. Love his love is what
people say when they're advocating for gay people. No, they're anything,
Oh he is sating? Interesting, Yeah, I know that's that that.
I'm just letting that to be known because I agree
love is love, But that term is used whenever people
are advocating for gay rights.

Speaker 2 (08:13):
I's but that term is what that's I know, I'm
not aside. What you really should say is just like
my family tradition is my family tradition.

Speaker 4 (08:24):
Like this is y'all.

Speaker 5 (08:25):
Sing, No, he's going with love is love?

Speaker 6 (08:27):
So right?

Speaker 2 (08:28):
Like how I was raised is how I was raised.

Speaker 6 (08:31):
Let us love how we want to love, we are
we are man how we want to yep, I don't know,
and we hope the Supreme Court never takes that away
from you.

Speaker 5 (08:39):
Thank you, We stand behind you.

Speaker 1 (08:41):
Give me the next one.

Speaker 7 (08:42):
I'm listening to part two right now. And you just
went through the voicemail of the lady who is very
critical and hated the end for the wind statement and
was just not very happy. People need to think before
they leave voicemails. You guys are literally just fa my
favorite part of the day. I honestly loved a little
quirky things like that about this show. So Lunchbox, keep

(09:06):
it up. I know you will in for the wind,
go team.

Speaker 1 (09:10):
What if every time you were in you said love
is love instead? Yeah, but I'm in for the wind
but no, no, but instead you just started saying, you know, uh,
let's walk you in. I love is love.

Speaker 6 (09:20):
I don't have the same ring shirt you doesn't have
the same ring.

Speaker 1 (09:23):
Just laying it out there, you say, no, I got
your back, buddy.

Speaker 6 (09:25):
I appreciate you having my back. Yeah, I mean, I
love his love. But that when you're playing a game,
you're like, Lunchbox, love is love not it doesn't really not.

Speaker 5 (09:32):
The same thing.

Speaker 1 (09:32):
O hot in here like I took I just want
to know I did wear a card again today. The
bit continues, but it's like for two days I've been
sweating my free walls off, man. So it's like I
took this off. If I'm in a T shirt and
you're like, up, I guess the end of the bit.
I did not in the bit, something's up because it's
not warming.

Speaker 6 (09:48):
It is not warm at all.

Speaker 1 (09:50):
Yesterday the same thing. I was like, Morgan, can we
turn the air down a little bit? She said, loves love.

Speaker 6 (09:55):
I mean it's it's sixty seven man.

Speaker 1 (09:57):
That's not accurate. These big buildings, those aren't the accurate readings.

Speaker 2 (10:00):
Maybe it's your cauldaver cartilage.

Speaker 1 (10:05):
I did therapy yesterday.

Speaker 10 (10:06):
It sucked.

Speaker 1 (10:08):
It was my first hard day of physical therapy where
they're supposed to make it uncomfortable. All right on you,
I get like fifty steps a day in my boot.

Speaker 4 (10:14):
Now, how do you check that?

Speaker 1 (10:17):
Well? You don't. It's just like you can walk like
twice a day. Okay, that's it. Somewhere.

Speaker 2 (10:24):
I don't know if you had to be like one, they.

Speaker 1 (10:26):
Probably liked that, you know what was disappointing was I
have this app and I do my I do all
my exercises every day, three times a day, and so
I hit this app. We log in here hopefully gives
me sound and it said start exercises.

Speaker 4 (10:45):
Get ready.

Speaker 1 (10:46):
Oh so it gives me the time. It tells me
about to do long sitting cat stretch with strap. Right, Okay,
that's the first one, and so it'll go, and then
it counts down, it tells me all so it takes me.
It's like eight or nine minutes each time. I'm gonna
end it. And at the very end it says you
should send this to your physical trainer, therapist therapist yea, yeah, pt, yeah, thanks,

(11:12):
and let them know every time. I make sure to
hit it so they know. I get there yesterday and
I'm ready to get like perfect grade amount report card
and I'm like I sent that in and they're like, oh,
we don't see that. And I'm like, oh man, I
was getting I was doing it and pushing sense. So yeah,
I'm ready to be recognized. I get a metal or something,
so I got all those. I think I don't think
it's connected.

Speaker 2 (11:32):
Oh.

Speaker 1 (11:32):
I think it's like when there's a light switch that
you flip on and off that it really doesn't have anything.
Is that connected anything? I think that's what that was.
All right, give me around the room, amy, you're up.

Speaker 2 (11:42):
So, advocacy groups are urging parents to avoid AI toys
this holiday season, and so if you're not familiar with
what that might be, it's like they're they're cute and
cuddly looking or maybe even not soft like a stuffed animal,
but like a cute little robot. I got one for
my son a few years ago. Picture it like this,
and it's an AI companion for your kid, and it'll

(12:04):
teach it things, talk to it, go through lessons like
do easy trivia or like how's your day? Or what
are your emotions?

Speaker 1 (12:13):
Of a companion that go ahead?

Speaker 2 (12:14):
No, no, this was.

Speaker 4 (12:15):
A two years ago.

Speaker 2 (12:16):
I bought my son one because I thought he could
help him with his emotions and like he could talk
to it and it would be there by his bed
and he feels safe sleeping at night because his little
AI robot. It was so cute and it would blink
and it was adorable. Well anyway, now this year parents

(12:37):
are like, don't buy these toys. They can be extremely dangerous,
like uh, they can have explicit conversations with your children.
They can foster like obsessive conversations, encourage unsafe behaviors, violence
against others, and self harm. Now, obviously there's like a
malfunction happening there. I don't think that's the intent. I

(12:58):
don't know how it does that, but just be careful
if you were getting your kids these types of things,
and make sure you're monitoring the content that's on there,
because that's kind of scary.

Speaker 1 (13:08):
What I would think is happening is the kids are
leading it there. It doesn't want to go there, then
it evidually goes there.

Speaker 2 (13:14):
Yeah, it should just like have a hard cut off,
like oh sorry, I'm not allowed to talk about that.

Speaker 5 (13:20):
Yeah, like you're AI. You try to get it somewhere.

Speaker 1 (13:23):
I've watched them try to get AI to count to
a million and it just won't. I've seen tiktoks where
they're like, all right, so on board, would you go
and count a million for me? And the A is like, actually,
you don't really want that. I would be here all no, no, no,
count to a million? Uh you know, I don't think that.
You know, we have enough battery, and the AI just
won't do it. It will not count to a million, so

(13:44):
it should have that kind of.

Speaker 4 (13:45):
Thing because how long would that take?

Speaker 1 (13:46):
Like, well, all I know is when AI comes live,
they're killing that person first. Oh man, you're trying to
torture your AI after they told.

Speaker 5 (13:54):
You many times.

Speaker 1 (13:54):
Yeah, because it's all you're doing is torturing it. Okay.

Speaker 2 (13:57):
It would take eleven and a half days to count
to a minis if you counted one number per second
without stopping. So that's probably why they don't want to
do it.

Speaker 1 (14:06):
It's a lot, Yeah, but they're not really a day,
so they should.

Speaker 2 (14:10):
But then why wouldn't they.

Speaker 1 (14:12):
Because they may be a day?

Speaker 5 (14:14):
That's the thing.

Speaker 6 (14:15):
Lunchbox Karen Reid is back. She has filed a civil
lawsuit against the police and her former friends, saying they
framed her for her ex boyfriend's death.

Speaker 1 (14:24):
Hair.

Speaker 6 (14:25):
It does not say how much money she is seeking,
but she is saying they there's evidence that they pointed
that was obviously not her, and then they were sending
private messages making fun of her, demeaning her, and so
she is filing a civil suit and we will be
following along. Well.

Speaker 1 (14:41):
I think if anything, what that trial showed us is
that if you don't have resources, and she didn't. She
got lucky that people jumped in and volunteered their time.
If you don't have resources, corruption can absolutely take you
down and put you in prison even if you didn't
do it, because that is precisely what would have happened,
would not have had adequate resources to defend her at

(15:02):
the level that she needed defending not just once, but twice.
Because it does seem to me from my knowledge of
the situation, which is not, you know, extremely robust, but
enough that there was some corruption there within the police
department and how they can take people down because they
don't want to look bad. And unless you have when

(15:24):
I say resources, I mean attorneys that are really smart
and good at their jobs, you lose even if you
didn't do it. And I think I think that's the
reflection more than like, that's what I took away from
that more than anything, like thank god people jumped up,
But there's so many people every single day that are
victims of this who did not do it, but they

(15:45):
can't beat the system because they don't have the money
to do it. And your lawyers stepped up, right like
from California, Yeah, now free because they felt like she
was being screwed over, but they also knew it was
a high profile case. And in the end everybody won
because they became very famous and they're in rite books
and yeah, yeah, that to me is the unfortunate part

(16:06):
of that case, is it It is a reflection of
what's happening around the country in general. There's a lot
of people who have to use a public servant, somebody
who is assigned their case, and they lose because they're
up against something they can't be even though they didn't
do it. I hope she gets on for millions. She
won't get on for millions. I would assume million. Wow,

(16:29):
that's oh yeah, forty million. And she'll sell her TV show,
she'll do speaking appearances. Now if she did it, and
I just did that whole speech, I know erase that
in the future.

Speaker 6 (16:42):
But do you think she has to move like I
wonder where she lives now because she's in that community
where it was.

Speaker 1 (16:49):
I would I would think she, well, I don't know,
all against her. I think you saw a lot of
the community step forward for her.

Speaker 6 (16:56):
Well, I'm talking to police. I would feel coople being
in there were the police were against me, and then
they're the ones that are in my jurisdiction, Like, are
they going to come and try to find me there?

Speaker 1 (17:07):
Once in my jurisdiction, you just use jurisdiction. If she
doesn't have a jurisdiction, well.

Speaker 6 (17:13):
Yeah, wherever she lives, it's the police is jurisdic police jurisdiction.

Speaker 1 (17:16):
Yeah, yeah, she doesn't have a jurisdiction. She might be
in theirs. Oh okay, Well.

Speaker 6 (17:22):
What I'm saying is where she lives is that's where
they have the power.

Speaker 1 (17:26):
So i'd be I'd feel unpenetrable living there. What are
they gonna do to her?

Speaker 5 (17:32):
Well, now everyone knows.

Speaker 1 (17:33):
And all she's got to do is be like, yeah,
here we go again. I'm gonna put this on Instagram.
I would not live there though, unless like all my
family lived, wouldn't live there, yeah, just I would move
to California or something.

Speaker 5 (17:44):
Peace no point.

Speaker 1 (17:46):
I think she would get the most work right now
in New York or California for the next few years.
Then she can move somewhere in Massachusetts. I'm sure that's
where she lived. Morgan.

Speaker 11 (17:55):
All right, So rare Superman comic has sold for how.

Speaker 4 (17:59):
Much do you guys?

Speaker 1 (18:00):
I think I know the story? It was found in
a basement, right, an attic? Oh, no, mom's home.

Speaker 4 (18:05):
Yeah.

Speaker 11 (18:05):
So these brothers were going through their mom's stuff and
they found this and it was sold for nine point
one two million dollars.

Speaker 1 (18:13):
It wasn't like a collector that had it, that was
they found it in like a basement addict, so it
mixed that up. But yeah, they just found in the attic.

Speaker 11 (18:20):
Yeah, and it's like pristine copy and they it was like,
I guess nine out of ten on this scale that
they used to determine what's worth something. But I'm shocked,
as out of comic is worth nine million dollars?

Speaker 1 (18:32):
It is it number one?

Speaker 4 (18:34):
Yeah? They gave it a no?

Speaker 1 (18:36):
Is it the first? Yeah? Yeah, that's why.

Speaker 11 (18:39):
It's an eight point five graded copy of an action
comic number one.

Speaker 1 (18:42):
Yeah. So I have a I will say a friend,
but somebody that I know who wanted one of these.
And again it's like baseball cards ten perfect nine. Nine's
kind of that line. You know, you don't want a nine,
but if you get a nine, it's the value is
still pretty good with newer stuff, and this is called vintage,
so an eight point five is actually great indvantage. I

(19:02):
want to nerd out just to tell you the story
for a second. So he really wanted a Superman first
edition whatever that is, that first comic book. Don't know
enough about comic books to know. And so he had
done really well and there was a comic book shop
that had one, and he went and he paid like
one point four million dollars for it. This is like
six years ago. So he went up, had one point

(19:26):
four million dollars. They wired the money, but they just
gave him the comic book in the store because how
I was supposed to get it like a malee. You
don't want him doing that, And so he just it
was in a little box, put in his backpack, walked out,
got on subway, nerve wrecking dude. I would have had
security with me, Oh yeah.

Speaker 4 (19:47):
Because that's a lot.

Speaker 2 (19:48):
But I mean, nobody knows you have it, right, Oh,
I guess they know you walked out it there they do.

Speaker 1 (19:52):
Yeah, like the people there. There's just so many ways
that somebody could know that you've got one point four
million dollar dollars in your backpack. I felt like it
was extremely vulnerable. But no, he's finally still got it.
I think he end up selling it. I think he
sold it for like two million bucks a few years later.

Speaker 5 (20:08):
It's pretty good.

Speaker 11 (20:09):
So you pulled on to it for that long. I mean,
even given that that was the exchange that happened, he
held on to it.

Speaker 1 (20:15):
I think you wanted it for what we call a PC.
What do you think that means?

Speaker 2 (20:19):
Personal collection?

Speaker 1 (20:20):
Yeah? Nice jep Oh, I think he wanted it for that,
and then the value just kept writing and he's like,
I had it, it's kind of cool. I'll sell it now.
And he made half million dollars or so.

Speaker 11 (20:30):
Yeah, I guess I would just be afraid that they
figure it out.

Speaker 1 (20:33):
What do you mean, who figured out?

Speaker 11 (20:34):
What the people realize that they like? Isn't this the same?
Is this the same guy that got away with getting
a different version. There's two different stories that I know.

Speaker 1 (20:44):
This is my friend. Oh okay, this is my friend,
well a guy I know that went and bought one himself. Okay, yeah,
so this is not anything shady. I just know that
was weird to me as he put it in his
backpack because he had to carry it out, but I
remember there was no security with him. Okay, yeah, I
walked out with it.

Speaker 11 (20:58):
Yeah, I'm thinking of that other story you told remember
that guy walked up to like and he took a
bunch of comics and they didn't. He said he bought
it online and like showed the receipt when he walked.

Speaker 1 (21:08):
In with somebody else.

Speaker 6 (21:09):
That was Tom Brady's card shop in uh New York.

Speaker 11 (21:12):
Yeah, yeah, I was thinking of that one where it's like,
what do you want to try and return that like
right away or like make money?

Speaker 1 (21:17):
Well he didn't try to sell it, Yeah, so return
over but he's I think he just sold it at
a different auction. But yeah, that like they're but they
got boxes right.

Speaker 6 (21:26):
It was cards. It was like Pokemon card sports cards.
It was Yeah, I'd have to google how much they got.
But look, I got the receipt my email and the
guys like, oh, I guess I'm here.

Speaker 1 (21:36):
Why not, Paddy?

Speaker 3 (21:38):
So, the National Transportation Safety Board has issued their first
report on the UPS cargo crash. I don't know about
to crash the UPS Cargo plan.

Speaker 1 (21:49):
Crash.

Speaker 3 (21:49):
So they determined that there were fractures on from the
engine to wherever it's mounted to and the engine had
fallen off and that's how it crashed. And then once
they discovered all the pieces from the wreckage. They noticed
that they were stress fractures all over that area. So
and that comes from wear and tear, which is crazy

(22:11):
that no one caught that.

Speaker 2 (22:13):
Yeah, she would think.

Speaker 1 (22:14):
My assumption would be that's not a walkaround test. That's
something they probably do, like a stress test every three
or six months internally inside a plane, and like you
miss it once, that's a whole quarter of a year.

Speaker 5 (22:26):
Yeah, I don't.

Speaker 1 (22:28):
Even know that they missed it. But that's not a
test you do while walking around the plane, because we
see they walk around, they checked, they check inside the plane.
All of that is mostly the stuff that you can see.
I'm sure they're not going into the engine every single time. Yeah,
but yeah, that sucks. That was a violent crash.

Speaker 3 (22:44):
Yeah, they said that it was taken off okay, but
then it didn't get as high as they thought it would.
So one of the tire, one of the landing gear
tires hit a warehouse and that's really what caused all
of it. I mean, I don't think it would have
taken off really because the engine was already coming off,
but that's really what caused the wreck.

Speaker 5 (23:01):
Right at the end of the runway.

Speaker 1 (23:03):
And did they say if there was a miss of
any sort of evaluation examination of the inside.

Speaker 3 (23:08):
They said they're still investigating all of that, but that
that there's it's safe enough to say that that's really
what caused it. That engine was coming off of it's
mound or whatever.

Speaker 1 (23:17):
United Airlines flight from Dallas to Chicago made an emergency
landing in Saint Louis on Sunday after a passenger allegedly
claimed his wife luggage contained a bomb.

Speaker 5 (23:27):
His wife's luggage.

Speaker 1 (23:29):
Yeah, the planet was evacuated. It sat on the taxiway
for about two hours while law enforcement searched it. I'd
hope they would get the people off while they did
the search, because if I'm on the plane and they're like,
nobody's leaving, but we're gonna search and see if they're explosive,
because I'm like, no, no, if the slight chance there are,
I don't I don't want to be in the tube

(23:50):
when the tube blows up. Yeah. Passengers later continued to Chicago,
more than five hours late. The incident comes week week
after another bomb threat targeted you. Not a flight that's
from the Vancouver's son.

Speaker 3 (24:03):
That's why I always thought, when we were doing bomb
threats in school, you know, and they would evacuate us,
and we were all just walking.

Speaker 5 (24:09):
Why are we not running?

Speaker 1 (24:11):
Well, that's so people don't get injured. I understand, but like,
why are we taking our time? Chloe Kardashian says she
convinced Kim the moon landing was fake. Remember the story
about Kim Kardashian saying I don't think the moon landing
was real. So Chloe Kardashian did an interview with people
and she said, I don't believe in the moon landing.
That's very controversial, and I feel bad because I think
our riled Kim up about it. And then she went

(24:33):
on to say that the brother Rob is to blame,
and they go on US magazine with the story. And
I've often talked about this. My official feeling on this
is we probably went to the moon, but they've lied
to us about some of the aspects and elements.

Speaker 5 (24:46):
Oh but you do think we went there?

Speaker 1 (24:47):
Probably? If I had to bet money, you said, here's
a free five hundred bucks, bet on it. Barely, but yeah,
I'm gonna bet that we did. But I'm also going
to bet that what we saw wasn't.

Speaker 5 (25:00):
That You think that was sound stage?

Speaker 1 (25:02):
I don't know. I think we were. I think there
were lies that were told to us to prove because
that was a race. We're racing Russia, basically, it was
a the Great Space Race, and so we had to
prove it. We can't just go and then be like, hey,
trust me, bro, we did it, yeah, I promise. So
I think there's probably some line happened. Government's lied to

(25:24):
us like now about stuff you don't they're gonna lie
back then when you couldn't even prove anything.

Speaker 5 (25:28):
I think this would be easily solved if we can
just get back there.

Speaker 1 (25:30):
But we can't.

Speaker 5 (25:31):
We can't get back there.

Speaker 1 (25:32):
Yeah we can't.

Speaker 3 (25:34):
Well I can't, can't. We can't or we won't because
we don't want to. Like what it's the real reason
can we not do it? Because if we can't do
it now, then we didn't do it.

Speaker 1 (25:43):
Then here they What the word is is supposedly we've
lost the technology that they had then, right, we no
longer have it. It's been misplaced and there is a belt,
a certain belt that there's such radiation that you can't
get anything through that in the ATMIN like in the
UH space. But we did it before.

Speaker 11 (26:06):
But also isn't that technology worth millions. How do you
just misplace millions of dollars of technology?

Speaker 2 (26:12):
Right, isn't it?

Speaker 4 (26:13):
The I can you totally wrong about this, but like.

Speaker 1 (26:15):
A miss formula miss like a misplace, though, can also
mean we got rid of, could also mean we hid.
Could also mean we really didn't go and it never was.
There are a lot of things. I don't think that
someone just put in the wrong cabinet, because it's not
like it was saved in a computer. This is this
isn't the craps on paper At the time, For the most.

Speaker 2 (26:34):
Part, that's what I was seeing, like I thought, I
never was picturing as like parts, which I could totally wrong.
It probably could be something like that, but like the
how to make it happen, like the I'm picturing an equation,
but I don't even know if.

Speaker 4 (26:48):
That's what you would call it.

Speaker 2 (26:49):
But the formula like how you get to the moon,
and like some of that is like was thrown away.

Speaker 5 (26:55):
Which is fine, which is fine.

Speaker 3 (26:56):
But we've I think we've learned so much that we
can probably figure out another way.

Speaker 1 (27:02):
Of doing it now.

Speaker 5 (27:03):
The vacuum cleaners that we use before, I.

Speaker 1 (27:05):
Agree, I know you guys, Hey, what are the reasons
that people say we can't get to the moon right now?
What are the best reasons that people say we cannot
possibly get to the moon now?

Speaker 12 (27:19):
Well, these days, it's not that we can't get to
the Moon at all. It's more that it's a lot
more complex and expensive than just saying let's go tomorrow.
The reasons people often mention come down to things like
funding and priorities. You need a lot of money and
political will, and sometimes governments or agencies just aren't prioritizing it.
Then there's the technology readiness. Even though we went to

(27:39):
the Moon in the sixties and seventies, doing it now
involves building new spacecraft, new safety measures, and a lot
of testing. It's not as simple as dusting off old
tech and heading back out. And of course there's the
whole logestical puzzle. Launch windows, the need for a reliable
rocket system, and having a moon land are all lined up.
All of that takes a lot of coordination in time.
So it's not really that we can't get there. It's

(28:01):
more that it's a big undertaking that we have to
line up all the pieces for.

Speaker 1 (28:05):
So what is the story about us not being able
to get through a certain belt because of the radiation.

Speaker 12 (28:10):
Ah, you're talking about the Van Allen radiation belts. Yeah,
so that comes up a lot in conversations about space travel.
The Van Allen Belts are these zones of really intense
radiation that surround Earth. They're kind of like giant layers
of charged particles trapped by Earth's magnetic field, and we
did go through them during the Apollo missions, but we
did it pretty quickly to minimize exposure. The thing people

(28:31):
talk about nowadays is that if we spend longer periods
of time in those radiation belts, or if we send
astronauts on certain trajectories, we have to be really careful
about shielding and making sure nobody gets too much radiation exposure.
So it's not a complete roadblock, but it is one
of those technical challenges that we have to manage carefully
if we're going back to the Moon or beyond.

Speaker 1 (28:49):
Would you mind explaining how we lost the technology, or
at least that that's been the story we've been told
from the nineteen sixty nine move landing.

Speaker 12 (28:57):
Absolutely, So this is one of those interesting stories is
that kind of takes on a life of its own.
The idea that we lost the technology from the nineteen
sixty nine moon landings doesn't mean we literally just misplaced it,
like losing your keys. It's more that the specific equipment,
the exact Saturn five rockets and the particular hardware we
use back then were from a different era. The factories

(29:19):
that built those rockets shut down or switched to other projects,
the engineers and teams moved on or retired, and the
detailed blueprints just weren't kept in a way that we
could easily reuse them. So the lot's technology story is
more about the fact that we'd have to rebuild a
lot of that know how almost from scratch with modern systems.
It's not that the knowledge is completely gone. It's just
that we need to recreate and re engineer a lot

(29:39):
of it, and that takes time, money, and a fresh effort.

Speaker 1 (29:42):
One final question, The moonlanding that people watched on television
wasn't actually a straight shot of the moon landing. It
was a projection onto a screen, and that screen was
then shown on television, which has led a lot of
people to doubt what they were watching. First of all,
is that true? And secondly, is there to believe at
least there was some dishonesty with what we know about

(30:04):
landing on the Moon.

Speaker 12 (30:06):
Yeah, absolutely, I can explain that. So the short answer is, yes,
it's true that the footage people's on the televisions back
in nineteen sixty nine wasn't a direct broadcast from the
Moon in the way we think of live TV today.
What actually happened was that the Apollo eleven lunar camera
used a special format that wasn't directly compatible with standard
TV broadcasts, So they basically had to point a TV

(30:27):
camera at a monitor that was showing the moonwalk footage.
It's kind of like filming the screen playing a video,
because that was the easiest way to get it out
to millions of people at home. Now, does that mean
there was some kind of dishonesty or that the landing
didn't happen. There's a lot of conspiracy theory around that,
but the overwhelming consensus is no. It doesn't mean that
the technical workaround was just a necessity of the time.

(30:48):
There's a lot of evidence from multiple sources, including the
thousands of people who worked on the mission, the retro
reflectors left on the Moon, and the tracking by other
countries that all confirm the Moon landing did happen. It's
just that way people how it on TV had to
go through a bit of a workaround.

Speaker 5 (31:04):
Makes sense.

Speaker 1 (31:05):
Yeah, it still seems fishy.

Speaker 2 (31:06):
Wait, so but also we went to the Moon in
nineteen seventy two again.

Speaker 1 (31:11):
Yeah, the last time we went was like seventy eight
or something.

Speaker 2 (31:14):
This was the last time it was was it says
the last time humans from America went to the moon.
We went on It was during Apollo seventeen in nineteen
December nineteen seventy two.

Speaker 1 (31:25):
And then all of sudden they count figure out anymore.

Speaker 2 (31:27):
They left on December seventh, returned on December nineteenth, and
it was the final mission of NASA's Apollo program.

Speaker 1 (31:32):
Some people remembered they saw them as a shonees, so
they were supposed to be gone, but they were at shonees.

Speaker 2 (31:37):
So they went six times.

Speaker 1 (31:39):
Yeah, all briefly and stopped all of a sudden. We
were like, you know, I think we're good. You can't
go once and not go again.

Speaker 3 (31:45):
I mean, it does I do like her it's description
of like it's not a priority, you know. I kind
of like that idea of like if it wasn't.

Speaker 1 (31:55):
No country has no country has what gone back to
the moon.

Speaker 4 (31:59):
Yeah, because it's like India they sent.

Speaker 1 (32:02):
A little thing to Mars or and it was like
watch this thing land and it was a video game.

Speaker 2 (32:06):
But it's like the thrill of that is over because
it was like the race to the Moon and then
they win. So it's like, why waste your resources to
go back there.

Speaker 1 (32:12):
Because you want to get to Mars and that's the
new race and you have to land on the moon
to get to Mars.

Speaker 4 (32:17):
Direction you do.

Speaker 2 (32:18):
Like a like a like a layover it.

Speaker 1 (32:22):
Basically, yeah, you need to build something there to jump
off again.

Speaker 3 (32:24):
Really yeah, we do have the space station though, right,
that's kind of that's.

Speaker 2 (32:28):
Basically over, but they don't have the blueprint for that
the formula.

Speaker 1 (32:36):
Carmel, California, could become the first city to permanently band pickleball.
Here's a clip.

Speaker 13 (32:41):
The city of Carmel is moving to permanently ban pickleball.

Speaker 4 (32:46):
There're gonna be riots.

Speaker 13 (32:47):
The sport is popular among seniors and retirees, but a
nuisance for people who live near Forest Hill Park, who
say the sounds echo throughout the neighborhood. If approved, it
will be the first pickleball ban in californ.

Speaker 1 (33:00):
That's from ABC News Bay Area and sorry Caramel that
say it carmel.

Speaker 6 (33:05):
Car no caramel, Carmel, carmel mel, thank you.

Speaker 1 (33:10):
It's very popular there, but it's just so that's why
it's so loud because it's so popular.

Speaker 5 (33:15):
So it's loud because of the.

Speaker 1 (33:18):
Yeah, it supposedly says pickle picicle when you had it.
So that's how I hurt my ankle right playing pickleball,
and I did in a tournament playing pickleball badly. That's
like the time when I was like, ah, I got
to get this fixed somehow. So when people will ask me,
I was a physical therapy yesterday and there's a woman
she was having her shoulder worked on. So we're on
two of those tables and you're there. It kind of

(33:39):
feels like prison. It's like what are you in for?
And so she's like, ah, I got a shoulder injury,
and she was like, what are you in for? I
was like, ankle, tore my ankle, And then I thought
do I say it? Because she said what she did?
And then I said pickleball and she's like oh. I
was like, oh man, I need to come up with
a different reason. So then I quickly said, yeah, but
I finish the tournament and finished third.

Speaker 2 (34:02):
Yeah, well you're not alone in that. I mean people
people on the rise.

Speaker 1 (34:08):
Yeah. So I don't know if I should change the
story not tell the story. If I do tell the story,
I have to for sure say but I finished the
tournament and finished third, that I walk on with my metal.
If I have my boot on, to always have my
medal on also to go with it. So there's that, right,
play me voicemail three? Is Eddie a yes man?

Speaker 7 (34:28):
Everything that Bobby says he agrees with, and.

Speaker 1 (34:31):
He also repeats everything he says? Just one know.

Speaker 9 (34:34):
I do love you Eddie, and I love the show.

Speaker 7 (34:36):
Just one to know if Eddie, if you're a yes man?

Speaker 5 (34:39):
No good?

Speaker 1 (34:40):
I think so.

Speaker 4 (34:41):
Wait, I don't know that you repeat?

Speaker 2 (34:43):
What do you mean mean?

Speaker 5 (34:44):
What does he mean by that lunchwoks?

Speaker 6 (34:45):
I mean if Bobby makes a point and then he
goes to you, you'll just say the same point, You'll
say the exact same thing, is regurgitate.

Speaker 1 (34:52):
I don't feel that that's accurate, But I do feel
like we agree on a lot of things.

Speaker 3 (34:55):
Yeah, and we have disagreed on certain things that I've
led to very we definitely have.

Speaker 1 (35:06):
Yeah, yeah, Why would I disagree with that just to
disagree with it? Why don't people think I'm the yes
man because that could definitely be a.

Speaker 6 (35:11):
Thing because you're the one that says the opinion first and.

Speaker 1 (35:14):
Eddie always every time, not always.

Speaker 2 (35:17):
I don't think that that's an absolute statement.

Speaker 5 (35:19):
I don't either, thank you.

Speaker 2 (35:21):
Yes, I don't think it's an absolute I have not
noticed the repeating, but I'll pay I'll.

Speaker 5 (35:26):
Please keep a look out, write a report on.

Speaker 2 (35:28):
It, oh keeople, look out. I just I think that
there's no way that it's the other way around, though, Bobby.

Speaker 1 (35:35):
Sometimes, let's let's be let's be one of great points.
Eddie had to show up to my house last night
and pay off his bet. He showed up at the
front door on a full Superman costume and it's on
my Instagram, mister Bobby bones and then cook. But he
does in a Superman costume for my wife and I.

Speaker 2 (35:51):
So what is this about.

Speaker 6 (35:52):
I don't understand why he was doing that.

Speaker 5 (35:53):
It was a bet that we did.

Speaker 1 (35:55):
It wasn't for you, guys. I'm just letting you know.
We did it. We did a bet. No, not you.
He's like I don't understand.

Speaker 12 (36:01):
No.

Speaker 1 (36:01):
I saw the.

Speaker 6 (36:01):
Picture on Instagram and I saw him cooking fajitas at
your house in a Superman, and I was very confused
on what was going on.

Speaker 2 (36:07):
I figured it was a twenty five whistles thing.

Speaker 1 (36:09):
It was. I just Eddie paid off his bet and
we No. I didn't well part of my part of no,
I did.

Speaker 5 (36:17):
Yeah, the stupidest thing ever heard about.

Speaker 2 (36:18):
You can't count. You can't do that because there's photographic and.

Speaker 9 (36:24):
Video.

Speaker 1 (36:25):
We played a four day golf tournament.

Speaker 5 (36:28):
Yeah, four rounds.

Speaker 2 (36:29):
Oh I remember this now you talked about it and
then so close. Yeah, this has been a little bit.

Speaker 5 (36:35):
It's been a while.

Speaker 1 (36:36):
But my wife is the one who was like, when's
Eddie cooking his fahetas?

Speaker 2 (36:38):
And I was like, oh yeah, yeah, yeah, and then
y'all called.

Speaker 1 (36:40):
Him and so yeah, we talked about it. Yeah, so
I did on this show.

Speaker 2 (36:44):
We talked to Yeah, but I didn't realize it was
he was going to be in a Superman.

Speaker 5 (36:48):
That part was weird. I thought that part was weird,
but you know, it's part of the always little thing.

Speaker 1 (36:52):
It's like when Scuba Steve loses his forty I'm drawing
Sharpie on his head like they're always a little wrinkles.
I like to throw in just for fine.

Speaker 2 (36:58):
Yeah, makes keeps it exciting.

Speaker 5 (37:01):
And then what was so dumb?

Speaker 10 (37:02):
Did you see that when I lose? I just caught
that for a second.

Speaker 5 (37:05):
Then okay, all right, when you.

Speaker 6 (37:06):
I mean you've been stretching right when or not?

Speaker 1 (37:10):
He will not run a four six four forty whatever?

Speaker 5 (37:13):
He did get his herney at check to think.

Speaker 2 (37:15):
Like, did you get cleared to run?

Speaker 1 (37:17):
You got you got your herney a check. Yeah.

Speaker 14 (37:19):
They gave me like an ultrasound like how pregnant women
would get on their belly.

Speaker 1 (37:22):
I laughed so hard at that clip because I watched
it yesterday. I popped up in my algorithm and he's like,
I'm not one to do excuses, but every single thing
has been an excuse from him.

Speaker 14 (37:30):
Go ahead, Yeah, I got checked and I got the results.
They're saying it's a tumor. So I'm a little bit
more concerned about it.

Speaker 1 (37:36):
Oh so you're good, then it can't get worse.

Speaker 14 (37:37):
Yeah exactly, Yeah, so it is what it is, so
a nine or what I have no idea.

Speaker 10 (37:41):
I have to get more testing done, so we'll say.

Speaker 2 (37:43):
Screen, how can you can't casually just be like, I
have a tumor.

Speaker 1 (37:47):
Can't if you say it Arnold Scharzenegger's alice boom booma. Yeah,
they didn't tell you. Whenever they tell you it's a tumor,
if it's either.

Speaker 2 (37:55):
Well they don't know because they have to buy up
see it.

Speaker 10 (37:57):
Maybe I think so, Yeah, there's more tests.

Speaker 1 (37:59):
Did you tell us way too early? Then?

Speaker 10 (38:01):
What do you mean?

Speaker 1 (38:02):
Well, now I can't make him run because he has
a tumor.

Speaker 5 (38:04):
Hey, it could be one of those regular tumors.

Speaker 1 (38:07):
We don't even know that it is.

Speaker 10 (38:09):
And there's been nine tumors all the time.

Speaker 1 (38:11):
Yeah, it's fine, Yeah, apple cider vinegar.

Speaker 14 (38:12):
And it could still be a hernia because because my doctor,
doctor thought it was a hernia, not a tumor. It's
it's on your stomach, that's right there, that's right above
my belly button.

Speaker 1 (38:21):
Well we're hoping, we're hoping for the best.

Speaker 5 (38:23):
Me too, Yeah mmmmmmm. But it's not an excuse.

Speaker 1 (38:28):
I'm not making a run with a two.

Speaker 4 (38:30):
This is a big deal.

Speaker 1 (38:31):
I'm not making him run with a tumor.

Speaker 14 (38:35):
I don't care whatever. Yeah, well, if I get more
information where they say I.

Speaker 2 (38:38):
Can't, they say, They said tumor or like mass or
like because my dog has these fatty tissues they look
like tumors, but they're not.

Speaker 4 (38:44):
It's like, ah, I said.

Speaker 10 (38:45):
Tumor, So I was all right.

Speaker 5 (38:47):
They said, yeah.

Speaker 2 (38:49):
Is it also a hernia?

Speaker 1 (38:50):
They were just like, yeoh, bro, you got tumor. It
sounds like that's how you're presenting it, not like, hey,
this is serious, you have a tumor.

Speaker 14 (38:56):
I mean, I've never really taken anything seriously with with me,
so it's kind of like it was a two it is.
If it is, then I get it removed, then I
move on. So I don't I don't really think much
into it.

Speaker 2 (39:04):
Oh okay, I just googled tumor or hernia.

Speaker 10 (39:07):
Oh good morning.

Speaker 2 (39:11):
Yes, a hernia is when an organ or fatty tissue
bulges through a weak spot, okay.

Speaker 1 (39:18):
Surrounding hernia.

Speaker 2 (39:19):
Yeah, hernia got it when Okay, So it bulges through
a weak spot and surrounding muscle or tissue. While a
tumor is an abnormal growth of cells. So what you're saying,
scuba is what they thought maybe was a hernia. The
fatty tissues bulging through could potentially be an abnormal growth
of cells.

Speaker 1 (39:37):
We just don't want to be a can correct Yeah.

Speaker 14 (39:39):
Yeah, and if it happens, you just you move on.
I don't already have hair anyway, so it's fine.

Speaker 2 (39:43):
So what's the next step.

Speaker 14 (39:45):
The next step is I want to get one more
test on it to make sure that it is what
it is, because my doctor still thinks it's a hernia
based on the physical test he did. To me, He's like, no,
it's got to be a hernia. I don't really think
they're right, so let's do one more tests.

Speaker 2 (39:57):
Are you going to lunchbox as doctors?

Speaker 1 (39:58):
Sounds like the same, dude, I don't think they're going
to doctors. I mean doctors.

Speaker 14 (40:04):
I went to the Ascension, Saint Thomas whatever. But apparently
my doctor was like, they've been having false readings lately,
so I don't believe it.

Speaker 6 (40:09):
I was like, okay, see, I feel like we might
be going the same doctors. I mean, well, they're like,
you know, it's probably a false reading, Like, what do
you mean in the reading says what it says?

Speaker 1 (40:21):
Yeah, I'm not going to run until we know more
about this.

Speaker 14 (40:25):
Okay, Okay, I'm not trying to get out of it, okay.

Speaker 2 (40:31):
Because I'm concerned, and I I, yeah, I mean I
understand Scuba's personality is just differently. He's like, oh yeah,
I'm not gonna wory about myself, so whatever. And he
casually just drops that they think it now might be
a tumor, and I'm like, okay, but they're.

Speaker 1 (40:46):
Not sure because that thing gives wrong readings all the time,
and as are cancerous, right, it could be benign. Yeah, well,
I will not make you run. I still think you're
full of crap, not about tumor but the rest. Okay,
but we won't run till you get a result back.

Speaker 10 (41:01):
Okay, all right? Cool.

Speaker 1 (41:02):
A pilot has revealed the best place to sit on
a plane if you hate turbulence.

Speaker 5 (41:07):
On middle right the wings?

Speaker 1 (41:11):
Is that what you're saying on TikTok a pilot? You
know I agree with you? Don't I don't know, yeah,
but I agree with you. You say a lot of
things I agree with, and that's one of them. This
pilot named Joe gave his inside on the best place
to sit. Where's the best place to sit on a
plane to avoid turbulence? Let me tell you what you
definitely don't want to send the back. The back is
the worst spot, so.

Speaker 6 (41:30):
You're getting bunce around your plane.

Speaker 2 (41:31):
Usually the center of gravity is a little bit forward,
so it's not as bad in the front.

Speaker 5 (41:37):
The front. That's why the pilots are like, this is fun.

Speaker 1 (41:40):
Everybody else like, Okay, are you doing this weekend?

Speaker 6 (41:46):
Amy?

Speaker 2 (41:48):
Good question? I don't know, So get my get my,
get my kid back.

Speaker 1 (41:53):
How to go with your sister meeting your boyfriend?

Speaker 4 (41:56):
Good?

Speaker 2 (41:58):
I mean she liked him, and so I feel like
they got a little bit of time together. They'll get
more to My sister went. They went somewhere else for
a few days, so she'll see. She'll be back with
me on Sunday and we're going to hang out again.
He's out of town this week and my boyfriend went
on a fishing trip, so he's gone, but then they're
both coming back.

Speaker 1 (42:16):
Hey, we talked about earlier what fishing professions?

Speaker 5 (42:19):
Profession?

Speaker 1 (42:20):
Is he a banker, business man? Does he wear a suit?

Speaker 2 (42:25):
No? I mean if he's got like a convention or something.

Speaker 4 (42:31):
You wear a suit.

Speaker 1 (42:32):
Well that was what they said.

Speaker 4 (42:33):
Especially well I get sports cope.

Speaker 1 (42:35):
Oh that's even worse because that means it pants come
off easier.

Speaker 2 (42:38):
But no, he sent me. Look he fishing.

Speaker 5 (42:41):
Oh that looks photoshop.

Speaker 1 (42:42):
It's like a google.

Speaker 2 (42:46):
And he caught he caught very fish. I don't know,
but they ate. They ate it pretty much right away. Seven.
I don't know already catch that in Florida.

Speaker 5 (43:02):
When your sister like after they met, did you like, so,
what do you think? So what did you think?

Speaker 4 (43:06):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (43:06):
I well, driving home, I was like, well, so, yeah,
which think which thin? And she was like I really
like him and she got to see him be a
dad and so that was cool, like interacted with his kids,
and she thinks she thinks he's really nice. And I
was thinking all along, like I put a was putting
a lot of weight into what my sister would think.
And I don't know what I would have done if

(43:27):
she said, like Amy, he is not for you.

Speaker 1 (43:30):
Yeah, you have to really be around somebody a lot, dad,
get a he's not for you. I know.

Speaker 2 (43:34):
But if she has some weird gut feeling of like
this is not good, Amy, this is not going to work,
I was like, what would I do?

Speaker 5 (43:40):
You'd have to really mess that up?

Speaker 1 (43:42):
Yeah, yeah, like I check her out like a backhand,
but be involved or something that true, Like Amy's like no,
I don't want to watch that. Wow, sure, I think
that's probably her going on. I don't feel so good.

Speaker 2 (43:55):
Like that would be a red flag. There are no
red flags.

Speaker 8 (43:58):
Like.

Speaker 2 (43:59):
She was like, I look forward to getting to know
him more, like he seems like a genuinely, really kind person.
And I was like, oh, that is how I would
describe him.

Speaker 1 (44:08):
He is.

Speaker 2 (44:08):
He's just genuinely kind and like.

Speaker 1 (44:10):
Easy, Raymond, are you doing Thanksgiving your house hosting this year?

Speaker 7 (44:16):
No?

Speaker 1 (44:16):
Like, is he doing his house?

Speaker 4 (44:18):
Okay?

Speaker 1 (44:18):
Yeah, but we are looking forward to it. It's our
first one.

Speaker 2 (44:25):
It's your first one hosting.

Speaker 1 (44:26):
Mm hmm okay, so.

Speaker 5 (44:28):
Are you cooking? Like what are you doing?

Speaker 1 (44:30):
I believe families bringing a lot of the stuff. So
we just really are a place to park your cars
and just sit around for a couple hours. So you're
the venue.

Speaker 10 (44:39):
Yeah, so you don't.

Speaker 1 (44:41):
You don't have any responsibility, not really except for from
the north some of my family staying with us, so
we got to provide shelter for them. But other than that,
we're good. And your terms are weirder. Yeah, I'm trying
to use Pilgrim terms.

Speaker 5 (44:54):
Why why?

Speaker 6 (44:55):
Because it's Thanksgiving?

Speaker 1 (44:56):
We will break bread? Yes, Yeah, who's handling the turkey.
Father in law Phil will be doing that. Do you
have you have to cut it? Or who gets? Because
you know, you know what they say, whoever cuts it's
got the biggest slong, Well then that would be brother
in law and father in law they have the bigger. Yeah,
so then I'm third, bigger.

Speaker 2 (45:12):
I was just like head of the house equals, So
who cuts it? When you're there, Bobby, Well.

Speaker 1 (45:18):
They keep bagging me too because they know. But I'm like,
I like to pass this down. Okay, you never heard that.

Speaker 2 (45:24):
I've not heard biggest.

Speaker 1 (45:27):
That's just what.

Speaker 2 (45:30):
I have never ever ready just said that.

Speaker 8 (45:32):
I know.

Speaker 6 (45:32):
I thought she was going to stop, and she did not.

Speaker 1 (45:36):
I'm not that's generally what it is.

Speaker 5 (45:38):
That's not what it is. What it is.

Speaker 1 (45:42):
All the guys go in the back. We don't we
don't normally talk about this, but I feel like this
is the great place to talk about it. I feel safe,
I can be vulnerable. All the guys at Thanksgiving, when
it's somewhere, they all go in the back and they
pull them out and measure, and the person who's got
the biggest one comes out and gets the knife and
cuts the turkey.

Speaker 2 (45:57):
Eddie do you agree with that?

Speaker 3 (45:58):
No, he can't tell. We've never done that, like the Illuminati,
never done that. There's a case I'd always be cut
in the turkey.

Speaker 1 (46:05):
That's the case. I'd be serving the corn saying what
do you like some corn? Ray?

Speaker 5 (46:13):
Is your brother in law older than you?

Speaker 1 (46:15):
Yeah? Hey, what about you and your twin? Do you
guys have different size winers? Bobbys twins have different size wingers.
Do you guys ever think about that? Never ever thought
about that? Right then, I've never thought about that. This
is where I disagree with Bobby. Question like the twins,

(46:36):
if they have different side like I guess is different
because he's bigger in general.

Speaker 2 (46:41):
Obviously anatomy is different because.

Speaker 1 (46:44):
But like identical twins, identical twins have the same size. Yes, right, Ray,
Amy is saying right now that your brothers is bigger.

Speaker 8 (46:53):
I didn't say that. I didn't say that. By the way,
you're rude. I was just asking a question. I was
asking a dumb question.

Speaker 1 (47:06):
You're rude, and you pointed at Ray backwards. You looked
at your hand to point backward.

Speaker 2 (47:13):
Because I'm saying I am not talking about personal parts,
talking about parts of the world.

Speaker 1 (47:21):
In the world I wonder if twin guys that are
the same have the same I don't wonder.

Speaker 5 (47:27):
Amy says no, Well.

Speaker 1 (47:29):
Amy said, well, Ray's brothers bigger.

Speaker 2 (47:30):
And then I said there are things that are different
when they're not identical. So who knows.

Speaker 1 (47:39):
Yeah, that's not what you said, nor is it what
you pointed toward. He looked at your hand. No, I
said anyway, But did do you not see that? You'd
be curious about that? Like, if that's the same you're
talking to me anybody? No, no, no.

Speaker 2 (47:54):
Question, No, already gassed at your the first time you
brought it up.

Speaker 5 (47:58):
You think about this?

Speaker 2 (48:00):
Why don't you ask your friend who which one?

Speaker 1 (48:03):
I did? Ray?

Speaker 7 (48:03):
Right?

Speaker 1 (48:04):
And her?

Speaker 6 (48:06):
Oh?

Speaker 5 (48:06):
Interesting, great question?

Speaker 1 (48:08):
I mean why did you bring her into the great question?
I mean, let me ask this.

Speaker 2 (48:11):
Well, is that way he can start to have these
conversations with her?

Speaker 1 (48:13):
And I'm just wondering. Hello, from a clinical standpoint, do
biological twin men have the same sized penises?

Speaker 2 (48:24):
Hello?

Speaker 12 (48:25):
So from a clinical or medical perspective, even identical twins
don't necessarily have identical everything. They do have the same DNA,
but there can still be small differences in how they develop,
including differences in the size or shape of body parts,
so well, they might be pretty similar. It's not a
guarantee that they'd have exactly the same size. Just a
little variation is totally normal.

Speaker 2 (48:46):
She won't say it's.

Speaker 1 (48:54):
Right, that was messed up. For example, Ray Mundo, she
said identical. I'm fraternal. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah right.
I think about stuff, man, I don't know. I Happy
birthday to Eddie.

Speaker 5 (49:06):
It's not my birthday, dude, Why why do you? Why
do you do this? Why do you post on Instagram?
There's my birthday?

Speaker 1 (49:12):
I got like.

Speaker 3 (49:13):
Ten texts, a bunch of d ms, and the awkward
moment of when I get a text, I have to
tell him like, thank you, man, but it's not my birthday,
and it's.

Speaker 1 (49:21):
Always so awkward.

Speaker 2 (49:24):
Why did you do that?

Speaker 1 (49:25):
I do it like five times a year. Yeah, Oh,
it's funny to me. Why do I wonder if twins
have the same size? Wiener? I don't know, I don't know.

Speaker 5 (49:37):
It's pretty funny anyway.

Speaker 1 (49:38):
Eddie came up to the house aastnight cook feed is
any Superman Superman costume?

Speaker 3 (49:42):
And they were good? It was good, which I wore.
I wanted to go pick up my son and practice
in it and he's like, what are you what are
you doing?

Speaker 1 (49:47):
What are you doing?

Speaker 5 (49:48):
Let's go.

Speaker 1 (49:48):
Oh he didn't know you were wearing it?

Speaker 3 (49:49):
No, no, no, because I put it on right outside your
house and then I got home. It was like, well,
I'm just gonna leave it on for the rest of
the night.

Speaker 1 (49:55):
He was like, can you zip me up? When he
gets to my house because it was it's.

Speaker 3 (49:59):
A weird it's a one amy like you have to
put your legs in it and then zip it from
the back.

Speaker 2 (50:03):
And the case sounds pretty normal for super never.

Speaker 5 (50:10):
Won one of those.

Speaker 2 (50:13):
Did you have your SALTA?

Speaker 5 (50:15):
Yeah, I brought the outside over, I guess. Don't get
me started. Oh yeah, really in the mood what it's
just stupid. It's just stupid.

Speaker 1 (50:25):
Like we can do it, we can end on it.
Let me do one other thing and then we can
end on it.

Speaker 2 (50:29):
What we don't have to do it. I don't know
what it is, but you're you're saying, don't.

Speaker 5 (50:32):
It's just frustrating. That's it, good dude. One more thing.

Speaker 1 (50:37):
We can't have stuff here, we can't have saucy here,
lunch fingers all in the salsa and everybody like don't
eat it. Lunchbox his fingers in it, and nobody got
I was all excited. I said, Scuba, did you try it?
He's like, no, I'm not trying your salsa.

Speaker 6 (50:49):
Man.

Speaker 3 (50:49):
Lunchbox had his fingers all in the bowl said the
same things. She's like, I can't eat it, Lunchbox.

Speaker 1 (50:54):
His hands were everywhere, and why are you defending when
you don't know when they said it, because I'm.

Speaker 2 (50:59):
Like, who would put their hands in the salsa?

Speaker 14 (51:02):
Uh huh, Scuba, Yeah, my thoughts on it.

Speaker 10 (51:07):
Yeah, I wanted to try.

Speaker 14 (51:07):
I was excited, but then I saw the guy who
has just got out of the bathroom with his uh,
with his you know, or his fingers in the salsa. No,
well he grabs it. So here's the thing. So there's
different layers to it. Goes to the bathroom, touches himself,
doesn't wash his hands.

Speaker 1 (51:22):
He does not wash his hands.

Speaker 10 (51:23):
Then he comes over with his hands and he touches
the chips.

Speaker 1 (51:26):
That touches it.

Speaker 14 (51:28):
Okay, it's wiener, Yes, that's better O his vinger hands
and he touches the chips, and then he takes those
chips that have been touched and he goes into the
salsa and then then and it's this constant back and
forth motion of dip dip, dip dip, and then his
hands are all up in the chips. So if you
use any of those chips and then those chips then
go into the sauce, washed hands in the chip and I.

Speaker 10 (51:47):
Was like, I'm out, I don't want to try it.
I'll try it your next batch before he touches them.

Speaker 11 (51:51):
Morgan that honestly, I hadn't even he was eating it,
and it didn't seem anything weird, like a normal person
dipping it in. But then Scuba put that in my
head and I was like, well, I don't know what
happened in the bathroom, so.

Speaker 1 (52:01):
I'm saying I was just like he was like his
hands were all in the chips and sausa, and I
was like, I'm.

Speaker 3 (52:05):
Like and I was all excited for everyone to taste
the sauce, Like what do you think Anyone's like, sorry, dude,
I'm not I'm not trying.

Speaker 1 (52:11):
Did you bring that to the party though he brought
a different one, yea different one. But if you don't
wash your hands on the box and you put your
hands in community bag of chips, you do not think
that it's grossed everybody.

Speaker 6 (52:19):
I'm not worried about you guys, right, I always it's rude, dude.
If other people were eating it, no problem, and they
they had no problem with it, and they enjoyed it.
We sat out there and I would dip the chip,
eat it, get a new chip, dip it, eat it.

Speaker 1 (52:34):
It's grossed it. He didn't wash it.

Speaker 6 (52:35):
There was no finger There was no fingers touching the salsa.

Speaker 1 (52:39):
Did you put your hands in the bag and when you.

Speaker 2 (52:41):
Went into the bag, did you just got one?

Speaker 6 (52:44):
Come on, what do you think I dug around to
pick a chip.

Speaker 1 (52:48):
Everybody goes in with hand. No one goes in with
like the claw machine to get one chip and lift
it out.

Speaker 5 (52:53):
Did you wash your hands when you came out of
the bathroom.

Speaker 6 (52:55):
I didn't even go to the bathroom. I don't know
where you got Scuba said that maybe like three hours
before that.

Speaker 2 (53:00):
Okay, But did you wash your hands?

Speaker 6 (53:02):
No? But I don't understand, like when you grab a chip,
you guys dig around in the chips. I just grabbed
one chip. Dip, get a new chip.

Speaker 8 (53:11):
Dip.

Speaker 2 (53:12):
If he puts his hand in there and delicately grab
no is.

Speaker 1 (53:16):
There anything like a no one gets their hands in
a chip bag and just because I'm just gonna touch one,
no one salsa now.

Speaker 6 (53:27):
Not here in my stomach.

Speaker 1 (53:29):
Did you like it?

Speaker 5 (53:30):
Though, you're since you're the only one that tried it.

Speaker 6 (53:32):
I wasn't the only one that tried it. Actually, there
was a lot of people that tried it. Pits tried it.
Uh mckittie, the afternoon guy tried it. I mean there
was all people stopping by. It was like a little
community thing. Everybody was trying it.

Speaker 1 (53:41):
Not everybody, because I was like, I'm out, Damn Morgan,
try you got your own? He brought them over last night.

Speaker 5 (53:46):
Yeah, did you try it?

Speaker 2 (53:48):
I didn't get to. No problem was I was also
still drinking my coffee at the time. It was salsa
and coffee didn't mix, so I just wanted to wait.
So that's why I didn't know if there was some
maybe would have it later today.

Speaker 5 (54:00):
No, it's done.

Speaker 4 (54:01):
It's done.

Speaker 1 (54:02):
There was a music event thing that Morgan hosted. The
Lunchbox is upset about.

Speaker 6 (54:07):
I mean, I don't understand. I see her at some
music event and I'm like, how is Morgan hosting this?
Like do these businesses not realize she's our web girl, Like,
she's not the face of the show, and they ask
her to do it. She don't hear that? Maan followers
on Instagram, it's like what are we doing?

Speaker 1 (54:24):
But mostly you just mean why didn't they ask you?

Speaker 6 (54:26):
Yeah, like I mean, if you're running the business, you
would want someone that's the face of the show that
has a lot more followers. It just seems like that
would be it. So maybe it's just because I'm not
a female and I you know, and they just need females.

Speaker 5 (54:39):
Oh you know what I'm saying. It did look legit.

Speaker 6 (54:42):
No, it looked legit.

Speaker 1 (54:43):
What was there was a red Bull event?

Speaker 11 (54:45):
Yeah, it was called Red Bull juke Box And yeah
it was for Roku. It's going on Roku.

Speaker 1 (54:49):
And how did you get involved in that? Oh?

Speaker 11 (54:51):
Well, it actually came from Ashley Cook and her people.
They suggested me for the position artist, you.

Speaker 1 (54:57):
Know, And why do you think they didn't ask Lunchbox?

Speaker 11 (55:00):
Well, I don't know that he has the best artist relations.

Speaker 5 (55:04):
That's a great way of putting it.

Speaker 11 (55:06):
If I had to.

Speaker 3 (55:07):
Guess, like, no way, dude, are you ever getting any
job from an artist?

Speaker 6 (55:12):
Uh, there's a couple of artists that was suggest jelly
roll he likes me.

Speaker 1 (55:16):
It doesn't mean gonna suggest you for a job.

Speaker 6 (55:18):
No, what I'm saying if there was one, if they
were you know, I'm saying like I have good artist
relations with him?

Speaker 12 (55:24):
Uh?

Speaker 6 (55:24):
Who else? Do I have good artist relations with? Bailey Zerermann?
That's two?

Speaker 1 (55:31):
Could you text either one of them? Well? No, I
don't know if I could text, as in, do you
have their numbers?

Speaker 6 (55:37):
I had jelly Rolls, but I bet it's changed probably
fifty times.

Speaker 5 (55:40):
Really you haven't tried it?

Speaker 6 (55:41):
No, I've never tried it. I mean, what was it?
What would I text him about?

Speaker 5 (55:46):
I don't know you have his number?

Speaker 1 (55:47):
What's up? I mean? I texted Bailey a lot.

Speaker 6 (55:50):
How's it going?

Speaker 5 (55:51):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (55:52):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (55:52):
Hey, face looks good without the beer, dude.

Speaker 6 (55:55):
You know, No, that's not really my spot to chime in?

Speaker 1 (56:00):
Okay, what is your spot to chime in? In text?

Speaker 6 (56:03):
I don't know, something like cool happens? I don't know,
That's what I'm saying, Like I wouldn't. I don't have
anything to text them about.

Speaker 3 (56:09):
Like when they want like when he won't wins a
big award, like congrats, man, I.

Speaker 6 (56:13):
Guess I could do that. Yeah, I didn't think about that.
Maybe I should, or when he goes number one or something,
maybe I should. Hey man, congrats on that number one.
Never thought of that.

Speaker 1 (56:22):
Yeah, so she was it was through a contact of her.

Speaker 6 (56:25):
Yeah that's how that makes sense. So the company didn't
find her, but the company.

Speaker 1 (56:30):
Does to use her. They send her, they pay to
send her places to do stuff.

Speaker 5 (56:33):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (56:33):
Yeah, that's what I'm saying. It was a So it
was good that she got it.

Speaker 11 (56:36):
But also like red Bull didn't have to even though
she suggested me, they could have been like, Okay, we'll
go with somebody else. Red Bull looked at my stuff
and said, yeah we want her.

Speaker 6 (56:45):
Yeah, who's with you? Who was the other person?

Speaker 11 (56:47):
Word gun through? He started whiskey Jim here in town.

Speaker 5 (56:51):
Well you know what that is?

Speaker 1 (56:53):
You think that could have been you?

Speaker 6 (56:54):
Yeah, I'm gonna look him up, gun Through word gun
through Ward Yeah Ward right, Yeah, Yeah, he's a good,
good guy.

Speaker 1 (57:04):
I knows a lot.

Speaker 6 (57:06):
He knows a lot. Yeah, okay, I'll see him.

Speaker 1 (57:07):
Also has I think he's over an Apple.

Speaker 11 (57:09):
Has Yeah, he has a show on Apple.

Speaker 1 (57:11):
Yeah, they give you a guitar?

Speaker 5 (57:13):
Yeah, what was that that was awesome.

Speaker 11 (57:15):
So a guy named Igor, I guess, dos custom guitars
for people, and he just like, I've never met him before,
and he just like went through my social media and
found things that like represent me and he created one
that says Morganland with a mickey on it and it's
bright yellow.

Speaker 1 (57:29):
That's cool.

Speaker 4 (57:30):
It was so cool.

Speaker 11 (57:32):
But I might need your help because I have to
put the strings on it and I'm trying to watch it.
You know, I just want to hang it and you
want the strings. But I was trying to watch on
YouTube and I got a little confused.

Speaker 5 (57:42):
Just bring it over. We'll get that down.

Speaker 1 (57:43):
So you were just upset that she was doing it
and you weren't, Yeah, because you have more followers.

Speaker 6 (57:49):
Yeah, I'm a bigger presence, and I just thought it
was just weird. But I guess since her friend was
playing it, that's why she got in. That makes sense.

Speaker 1 (57:56):
That's why really, anybody gets any job somebody they know
and they're qualified. Like, it's all relationships. Any job I've
ever forgotten, for the most part in relationship and skill,
but relationship is a massive part of it.

Speaker 6 (58:09):
Yeah, dang man, that's why you were all Buddy, Buddy,
with Astley Cook when she came into our booth.

Speaker 11 (58:15):
That hasn't even well, now, the event had happened at
that point.

Speaker 6 (58:18):
That's what I'm saying. That's why you were like, Oh,
I'm your best friend, Norman. I was just listening to
your music on the way over here. I just bought
your vinyl because I want to hear young.

Speaker 11 (58:24):
I didn't say anything.

Speaker 6 (58:25):
You didn't say like that.

Speaker 11 (58:27):
Her and I are actually friends and we were texting
the other day.

Speaker 6 (58:29):
So what did she.

Speaker 1 (58:31):
Text her about? Like him and Jelly Roll?

Speaker 11 (58:33):
No, I've never texted Jelly see hard lunch a relationship
Johnny claws Hey dud, Johnny claw Johnny Clawson.

Speaker 6 (58:42):
I didn't realize that, dang dude.

Speaker 5 (58:44):
Yeah that's that's awesome.

Speaker 1 (58:46):
Good for them, hit hey hit number one hit writer.
Johnny Clawson used to be my waiter. Yeah, yeah, that's crazy, dude.
He's the greatest. Yeah, yeah, that's super cool. All right. Well,
I'm sorry, sorry, Lunchbox, I didn't work out for you.

Speaker 6 (59:00):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (59:00):
Do you have your irons and any other fires.

Speaker 6 (59:05):
Right now?

Speaker 1 (59:05):
Not?

Speaker 6 (59:05):
Not many irons in the fires. You know, Holiday season's
kind of wrap years.

Speaker 5 (59:10):
Yeah, it's a slow time and it's a slow time.

Speaker 6 (59:12):
Everything's kind of all the fires going. Yeah, yeah, unfortunately,
I wish there was more going on.

Speaker 5 (59:22):
How much?

Speaker 1 (59:23):
Yeah, just the general markets as closed. Yeah yeah, it
really closes around this time.

Speaker 11 (59:27):
You think old Dominion will help you with something.

Speaker 6 (59:30):
Probably not. You know, they made me invite me out
to one of their shows or something, but I don't.

Speaker 1 (59:37):
Know, doubt that they have to know. He's kind of
kidding though, right, yeah, sure like they probably like you
can come to shake it if you ask. I think
they know it's just kind of your stick.

Speaker 6 (59:47):
I have no idea. All right, Well, he did say
he wanted to be slap me.

Speaker 1 (59:52):
Yeah, but he's been funny.

Speaker 6 (59:53):
I thought so too.

Speaker 3 (59:54):
Now, it didn't sound like you were nervous, you remember that.

Speaker 6 (01:00:04):
I don't think it was a nervous laugh. I thought
it was a pretty funny joke.

Speaker 1 (01:00:08):
I hope everybody has to go weekend. We'll see you
guys on Monday, and that is all she wrote. By everybody,
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Hosts And Creators

Bobby Bones

Bobby Bones

Amy Brown

Amy Brown

Lunchbox

Lunchbox

Eddie Garcia

Eddie Garcia

Morgan Huelsman

Morgan Huelsman

Raymundo

Raymundo

Mike D

Mike D

Abby Anderson

Abby Anderson

Scuba Steve

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