Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Mister bobbing headphones.
Speaker 2 (00:02):
I'd like to say, I think Morgan's headphones look fine.
Look at Morgan's headphones. They look fine, right, Morgan, do
you like your headphones?
Speaker 3 (00:09):
I love my headphones.
Speaker 4 (00:10):
Andy, we think on Morgag's headphones.
Speaker 5 (00:12):
I think they're normal. Great, they're purple.
Speaker 4 (00:14):
Yeah, they're purple, lunchworks cute.
Speaker 6 (00:17):
Morgan needs to be a grown up and get grown
up headphones, Like it is unbelievable. She buys these cheap,
crappy headphones off of Amazon that are fourteen dollars, and
they are breaking all of our equipment. Like, if you
put her headphones on, ninety percent of what you hear
is static.
Speaker 4 (00:32):
I don't know you have cheap headphones, Morgan. I just
buy them from.
Speaker 3 (00:35):
Amazon because I like the color. I don't want to
wear the.
Speaker 1 (00:37):
Black ones exactly.
Speaker 6 (00:39):
She doesn't want to be a grown up have grown
up headphones. She would rather have equipment that breaks and
then causes our equipment to break and shorts out, and
she's having.
Speaker 2 (00:48):
To take her headphones or the problem with whatever's happening
at your desk.
Speaker 6 (00:51):
Yes, she's having to take the bit off of my
headphones just so hers will work. Because and then she
has to use my headphones for games if there's clips
because she can't hear them in her headphones. I'm like, girl,
get some real headphones, like be an adult.
Speaker 3 (01:04):
So what's it's also huge on my head?
Speaker 6 (01:06):
Sorry, you can't wear purple headphones all your life. Get
some real equipment.
Speaker 3 (01:09):
The ones that you guys wear are huge on my head.
I have a small head.
Speaker 4 (01:13):
What's your beef?
Speaker 2 (01:14):
Is it the color and how they look or is
it that they're always or that they're cheaper and they're
not breaking our equipment? But when her equipment breaks, there
are things that we have to do in order. Uh Like,
like you said, she has to use your equipment.
Speaker 6 (01:27):
Yes, And I think that's part of it. I think
it's her cheapness headphones that she gets from wherever that
is causing our equipment to break. I don't think no
one else's equipment breaks except for hers because.
Speaker 3 (01:37):
Of her breaks all the time.
Speaker 1 (01:38):
Yeah, because of yours.
Speaker 5 (01:39):
That's not true.
Speaker 3 (01:40):
Yours is broken before mine.
Speaker 6 (01:41):
Sometimes mine is connected to hers, and it always breaks
when yours breaks.
Speaker 7 (01:44):
And they don't agree with Lunchbox, but Lunchbox actually has
actually correct. Her headphones are cheap and because they're from Amazon.
They have that cheap cord, which is like a phone
type cord. It does damage the system. It shorts it
out because they're not.
Speaker 2 (01:55):
Cord damages our system. I don't know how is that possible.
Speaker 7 (01:58):
They have like high technology, but it's your cord or
your cord is a cheap like Chinese Amazon cord.
Speaker 2 (02:04):
iPhones cheap. I think you have phones cheap, I no
doubt about it. I don't have a problem with their headphones,
and her equipment is cheap. And if you need new headphones,
I can buy headphones for you. But I don't think
plugging a headphone into any jack affects the rest of
the system.
Speaker 4 (02:18):
That's not how headphones work, but it's the long term.
Speaker 7 (02:20):
It does though, because it has that has that phone
feature and where you can push the button and all that,
and so it does damage the system. It shorts it out.
I've been told by it that it is the headphones
are the problem, and it is.
Speaker 8 (02:29):
Their little circuit because their circuit lunchbox and Morgans is connected.
Speaker 5 (02:33):
Then why, okay, let me just clear this up.
Speaker 2 (02:36):
Then why would we have not fixed it already if
it is like that thing's broken?
Speaker 4 (02:39):
Why? Yeah?
Speaker 3 (02:40):
Why is this the first time now telling me.
Speaker 7 (02:42):
That it's the headphone because they now just solve them
and I go, these are our headphones. That go, oh,
those should be using headphones, not this morning, like a
week or so ago. So I have to order her
some like new like adult headphones.
Speaker 4 (02:52):
I don't know, dude, hold on, the first of.
Speaker 7 (02:57):
All, ones aren't working anymore.
Speaker 3 (02:59):
They're not not adult headphones. Just because they're a fun color.
The only thing that's different about cheap.
Speaker 4 (03:06):
They're cheap expensive.
Speaker 5 (03:07):
They're saying they're adult. Doesn't matter.
Speaker 3 (03:09):
Just because I like colors and you like to wear black,
that doesn't make something childish.
Speaker 1 (03:14):
It doesn't necessarily mean that I like black.
Speaker 6 (03:15):
It's just I went to the like best buying, but
like real headphones, like like a sound equipment, Like I
didn't go to Amazon.
Speaker 3 (03:21):
Just type in and yours are falling apart. Yours literally
have like if you touch.
Speaker 6 (03:25):
Them, they still work and they are actually high quality.
Speaker 2 (03:30):
I would say I've never heard of headphones plugging into
something and affecting it. Now, I've been wrong many times,
but I have never heard of plugging in headphones and
affecting a full I've heard of it affecting how the
headphones are affected. I just did the whole Austin power
thing there, Mike, what do you see?
Speaker 9 (03:46):
I see that they can affect like the recording, okay,
like the actual recording. It could be like some interference
I don't know anything about actually, like breaking equipment.
Speaker 1 (03:53):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (03:54):
Well from my just short Google search, it says, yes,
a cheaper, low quality cord plugged into a jack can
absolutely impact the entire system, especially in auto audio applications.
Speaker 4 (04:06):
It's fair.
Speaker 3 (04:07):
But why is this the first time.
Speaker 4 (04:08):
We're larning that.
Speaker 6 (04:10):
I literally just saw your headphones the other day and
you had to borrow something.
Speaker 3 (04:12):
From hear you. But I'm saying this has happened like
eight times?
Speaker 6 (04:15):
Why are they just And I was like, man, let
me look at those headphones. I google my fourteen Okay,
this is the problem.
Speaker 4 (04:21):
But Scooba, if you've known for a week, why have
you not said something? Oh? I think she knows.
Speaker 5 (04:26):
We just found out about it.
Speaker 3 (04:27):
But we were talking about what headphones I needed to have,
and it became a whole thing.
Speaker 4 (04:31):
Oh so Morgan's known about this and this happened six times.
Speaker 3 (04:34):
Hold on, I just found out the headphones of the
problem this week, So not the whole time. I literally
just found out.
Speaker 5 (04:41):
Shocker, what lunchbox does is he overhears that.
Speaker 1 (04:44):
Yeah, that's a thing.
Speaker 3 (04:47):
No, I just found out. So yes, we're looking, but
I want to make sure I get the right ones.
And this is obviously a problem. I didn't know that until.
Speaker 4 (04:55):
I've shi grow up.
Speaker 6 (04:57):
And when you get color, when you get your co
when you get your headphones in, we'll paint them purple.
Speaker 1 (05:02):
We'll get some markers and we'll color them. I got kids,
they can do it.
Speaker 2 (05:06):
Why you can always get like ear, Amy, and I
use ears without full headphones.
Speaker 4 (05:11):
You can always do that, I know, but that's why I'm.
Speaker 3 (05:14):
Amy's is also meant for the phone too, So why.
Speaker 5 (05:17):
Well, but I switched over to a like the bit like,
I haven't plugged into a thing. And then also these
were made by Apple. They're not cheap.
Speaker 6 (05:27):
I'm not kids.
Speaker 5 (05:33):
One of cool colors.
Speaker 3 (05:34):
I didn't realize this was a thing.
Speaker 4 (05:36):
I just saw grow up.
Speaker 6 (05:39):
You guys are mean, I mean, Morgan, in the time,
you've gone through like twelve pair.
Speaker 3 (05:43):
Of headphones, three headphones in the seven years I've worked
on the show. That's what.
Speaker 4 (05:48):
I mean.
Speaker 1 (05:49):
How are you going through? Amy?
Speaker 5 (05:50):
This is the same ones, same ones.
Speaker 1 (05:52):
First phone.
Speaker 5 (05:53):
I think.
Speaker 4 (05:56):
That stuff is broken all the time over there.
Speaker 5 (05:58):
Oh yeah, knew it was Morgan's.
Speaker 3 (06:01):
Okay, And guys, had I've been told, I would have
fixed that problem. Okay, I didn't know until this week.
Speaker 1 (06:06):
And it's kind of cool to see you grow up.
Speaker 2 (06:08):
I still would say, though, it's probably not the only
thing that's affecting that entire system, or a pair of
headphones being plugged into them. Like, I've not heard a
pair of headphones absolutely infecting with a virus an entire
four racks of equipment.
Speaker 4 (06:21):
And Amy just read it. She she did a quick
little Google search.
Speaker 5 (06:24):
Just that's just quick research, don't you know it?
Speaker 4 (06:30):
Morgan, I guess it's time to get new headphones.
Speaker 2 (06:32):
But like, why is she still wearing the five minutes
after we just said it's affected?
Speaker 4 (06:37):
I don't.
Speaker 3 (06:37):
We don't have any other ones? Are other ones here?
Speaker 4 (06:40):
I have one right underneath my desk.
Speaker 2 (06:42):
And not only that, I have extra ears too that
you can use, especially if it's infecting with a virus.
All of the equipment on that side of the room.
Speaker 3 (06:49):
Yeah, I will use some if people, But Eddie, the
only ones here are your little Apple ones that are
down there. Those go directly in your ear things.
Speaker 4 (06:55):
The problem is the minor black. Morgan gets black. I don't.
Speaker 3 (07:00):
I just wanted a fun color.
Speaker 5 (07:02):
It's so dark in air.
Speaker 3 (07:03):
I wanted to wear a fun color.
Speaker 1 (07:05):
Doesn't drop them off the balcony.
Speaker 3 (07:07):
Don't hit somebody in the head. Also, the black ones
are really big on me. Guys, I have a small head.
I have to wear kids shoes. Sometimes I just have.
Speaker 4 (07:15):
Headphones.
Speaker 3 (07:19):
My feet are literally a six and a half. I
don't know what to tell you I have. I have
to buy little things.
Speaker 4 (07:25):
Let's before Monday show.
Speaker 2 (07:29):
Morgan needs to have new headphones because if they again
are affecting an entire part of the room, there's no
reason that she should continue to wear them, and then
we can find a suitable replacement that everybody's happy with.
Speaker 5 (07:41):
I have some.
Speaker 4 (07:42):
I don't.
Speaker 5 (07:42):
I think they're even still in their box, like some
Sony ones at my house that but.
Speaker 4 (07:46):
Are they black?
Speaker 5 (07:47):
They are black?
Speaker 1 (07:50):
Does your kids have many headphones she could borrow.
Speaker 3 (07:53):
No, I'll go on the hunt for some colorful, very
nice headphones.
Speaker 5 (07:59):
Okay, put stickers on.
Speaker 1 (08:02):
Yeah, we could do something.
Speaker 2 (08:04):
People are using AI chat bots to guide them through
psychedelic trips, what maybe maybe think about amy mm hmm.
Speaker 5 (08:11):
Well, I did do a guided trip of sorts, so.
Speaker 4 (08:15):
You could have just used your Google right there and
walk you through it.
Speaker 5 (08:19):
I guess I don't know about that. I liked the
fact that my therapist was right there by my side,
just in case anything, like if in case of emergency,
I have to sit up and type something into my
AI or I guess if you have an automated one,
you could talk to it.
Speaker 2 (08:33):
I feel like my fingers would all of a sudden
be lamp posts and I couldn't figure them out.
Speaker 4 (08:37):
And I'm like, I got lamp posts on my hands.
I can't do the automation.
Speaker 5 (08:41):
Uh, it's so yeah. Interesting.
Speaker 4 (08:44):
And you did ketamine?
Speaker 5 (08:45):
I did ketamine?
Speaker 4 (08:46):
Yes, needle or snort or what.
Speaker 5 (08:49):
Like a lozenge like that you put under your tongue
and it dissolves. You can't swallow. You have to put
it under your tongue and you have to sit there
and you cannot swallow for fifteen minutes and it does
not taste good.
Speaker 4 (09:00):
Can't swallow your like saliva at all?
Speaker 5 (09:03):
No, not for fifteen minutes.
Speaker 4 (09:04):
Well, swallow at all of the loss in.
Speaker 5 (09:06):
No at all? Like nothing. You cannot swallow it's very tough.
Speaker 2 (09:10):
Yes, or you can't swallow any spit correct, because if
you do, you throw up.
Speaker 5 (09:14):
Yeah, but you can't this. In dipping, you can spit,
and in this case you just have to keep your
mouth closed. You can't spit either, because the whole point
is to leave it in there. And one time I
accidentally swallowed and I freaked out that I was going
to mess up the entire process, and she's like, it's fine,
it's fine, just try not to do it again.
Speaker 4 (09:30):
Would you have trusted a computer because this guy talked
about an LSD and I did no, not me that again.
Speaker 2 (09:38):
I feel like if I took LSD all of a
sudden again, my finger would be football helmets. And I'm like,
I would forget how to use a computer, or what
letters were?
Speaker 4 (09:45):
What do you what? Do you remember? What you what
did you see?
Speaker 5 (09:50):
I remember? Oh, you know, I've told you, like, well,
my first one, I did it three times. My first one.
There was so much water, lots of water. We were
floating in water. I was laying in water. My my
dead parents were floating next to me in the water.
But then my sister was a frog in the water.
Speaker 2 (10:05):
Were you laying down, like were yourself were you clothed?
Are you wearing something special?
Speaker 5 (10:11):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (10:12):
We were.
Speaker 5 (10:12):
We were not naked, but we weren't clothed, like I
don't know how to describe it, Like I wasn't paying
attention to that part. But I don't remember us being
naked because I feel like it'd be like weird.
Speaker 4 (10:20):
No, I'm talking about in real life. We're talking about
real life on the trip, Yeah, talking about like what
were you wearing, Like were you on a couch? Are
you in a chair? Like physical?
Speaker 5 (10:29):
Oh? Oh okay. So I met her office.
Speaker 4 (10:32):
I had no idea where she was going. I was like,
what do you mean, actor, are you in a bikini?
Go ahead?
Speaker 3 (10:36):
No?
Speaker 5 (10:37):
No, So I went to her office and she makes
a little palette on the floor and there's blankets and
a pillow, and then you know, she has an eyemask
that you put over your eyes. And I remember the
first time because she washes everything between clients, and I
remember the first time being so thrown off by the
scent of everything because her laundry detergent was very strong
(10:57):
to me, And so then I had to tell her that.
And then the next time she washed everything and unscented.
I was like, oh, so much better, because I feel
like little things like that can do. You know, your
eyes are closed, so then your senses, like your smell,
gets stronger. So I remember that being very distracting to me.
But then once I got past that, I just laid there.
And it took about three hours from the time I
(11:20):
laid down, like I sit there. It's very She makes
it like a little ceremony, like she hands you your
lost enge in a little wooden bowl and then you
place it under your tongue, and then you set an
intention for your what you want. And during that fifteen minutes,
she'll talk to you. She'll read you, read you something
if you.
Speaker 4 (11:35):
Want anything my cat and the hat, bare bones, anything.
Speaker 5 (11:39):
Something more in alignment with what you want, Like she'll
you do a lot of talk therapy before you start
the sessions, like I met with her multiple times leading
up to that, so she knew my goals and my
intention and what I wanted, So therefore she would prep
me for that verbally, just to get my mind in
the right headspace. And then all I know is crazy.
After the fifteen minutes, you can either swallow the lotenge
(12:02):
or spit it out if you're done with it, boo pill.
I wanted all the bang from a buck, so I
just swallowed it.
Speaker 2 (12:08):
If she swallowed the lostenge, she comes back to this life.
If she spits it out, she gets what's real?
Speaker 4 (12:13):
That matrix? Yeah, that's matrix.
Speaker 5 (12:15):
So then I laid down and then you're on a journey.
It's crazy.
Speaker 4 (12:19):
You just okay, let this. Do you still have a
communication with this therapist?
Speaker 5 (12:23):
Yeah, I was just checking out her portal.
Speaker 2 (12:26):
One thousand dollars for a lost ange. And we do
it on the air starting at five am with somebody
on the show.
Speaker 4 (12:30):
We spin the wheel.
Speaker 5 (12:31):
Oh so I have a So I had to go
to a compound pharmacy to pick up the lotenge, like
I got the losses prescribed by a doctor. So she
wouldn't I have more? Yeah?
Speaker 4 (12:40):
More?
Speaker 5 (12:40):
What? Yeah?
Speaker 4 (12:41):
She has more? Let's all do it?
Speaker 5 (12:44):
Then?
Speaker 4 (12:44):
Can you imagine that show? Oh my gosh.
Speaker 5 (12:48):
I think I have two or three. This is in
my drawer. But if I want to go back to her,
I'll bring it. I suppose I could do it on
my own, but that freaks me out. I'm not into that.
Speaker 4 (12:58):
No, no, no, we're not saying do it on your own.
Speaker 2 (12:59):
We're saying we spend them with whoever it lands on
takes the loss age at the very beginning of the
show and then all show along we walked through the
trip with them.
Speaker 5 (13:07):
Is that responsible?
Speaker 4 (13:09):
No, no, no, one's saying it is at all. Yeah,
it's it's irresponsible.
Speaker 5 (13:12):
Actually, this does feel because I feel like I I
definitely went to someone that's licensed and everything I did
was legal.
Speaker 4 (13:19):
I don't that's legal. I don't prescription is legal.
Speaker 8 (13:23):
Amy, were you talking during your trip or did you
see so that that kind of be.
Speaker 4 (13:27):
Bad for the show, but it is.
Speaker 2 (13:29):
Well, we asked him questions, what do you see and
then they tell us a zebra's talking to me.
Speaker 4 (13:37):
Oh, that would be crazy.
Speaker 5 (13:38):
Yeah yeah, yeah, my sister, because the.
Speaker 4 (13:40):
YouTube usual would get if we stream that live. Oh yeah,
Amy sister was a zebra.
Speaker 5 (13:45):
Well that was in the second time. She was a
zebra on the drums keeping the beat.
Speaker 4 (13:49):
For me, that feels like Madagascar. I feel like I've
seen that somewhere. Amy's taking a drift of Madagascar. The cartoon.
Speaker 5 (13:57):
Oh, it was a very age, a lot of Asian
influence and in my lunchboks in Vegas, in my trip
like I would. I felt like I was on a
roller coaster ride through rice fields. Yeah.
Speaker 4 (14:09):
Oh, being in Asia.
Speaker 2 (14:10):
I was saying, Lunchbox always tooked up with Asian girls
when we were going to Vegas back.
Speaker 1 (14:15):
Yes, man, that was those were the time.
Speaker 4 (14:18):
He would always show up new girl. All right, that laugh. Amy.
Have you ever thought about just taking a lostage by yourself?
Speaker 5 (14:29):
Yes, it thought has crossed my mind because I do
have them, and to do it with her, i'd have
to pay again. Yeah, yeah, so I have thought and
I felt the three that three times I did it.
I was like, Okay, I put on a playlist, you know,
you got the music going, and then I just lay there.
I feel like I would want someone watching over me.
(14:51):
But then at the end of the day, I don't
think I could do it because I would want to
be with her professional just in case, because I did
get very sick after the first time. I didn't You're
supposed to take a zofran before, which is an anti
nausea medication, and I thought, I'm probably not gonna get nauseous.
Well guess what I did. And when I came out
of it three hours later, I was vomiting. Oh it
was horrible. So the next time I took the zofran.
(15:13):
So I guess, just in case anything wrong, I would
want to be with, you know, an expert. But I
have thought about it.
Speaker 2 (15:20):
I would be scared to do it by myself. I
felt like I would end up three blocks over for sure,
someone waking me up, taking a dump in the middle
of a street or something like people. I didn't have
on twitter pants around my ankles. I don't remember any
of it.
Speaker 4 (15:31):
The cop the cop cam, yeah, yeah, first body camp. Yeah,
that's yeah.
Speaker 2 (15:35):
That's why I stop taking sleeping pills on airplanes. That's
why I stopped taking sleeping pills because if I stayed awake.
And this is like right after like I had my
house broken into and I wasn't sleeping at all, but
if I couldn't sleep at all, So we tried everything,
and my doctor.
Speaker 4 (15:50):
Was like, you can try these sleeping pills.
Speaker 2 (15:52):
After we tried like five other things, and I would
look at my FaceTime the next day and I'd facetown
like three people and not remembered any of it, driven
off with a gas nozzle in my car.
Speaker 4 (16:02):
Amy's done that.
Speaker 2 (16:03):
Yeah, But I was drunk on sleeping pills. I think
Amy were just forgetful, right.
Speaker 5 (16:09):
I was just like sidetracked, Yeah, here to get gas.
The thing about Kenmine though, and Bobby, maybe you should
look into it. I don't know that it's for everybody
at all. There is this I don't know the proper word,
but I'll call it like duality to it. Like some
trips or some some drugs or things you take, you
aren't aware of where you are in the moment, you
(16:31):
completely go next level to this other place. With the ketamine,
I was very much aware I was laying on the
floor in my therapist's office. I had the well, you
were in and out of both. That's why I call
it like a duel. There was a dual feeling of
like I'm in this, my brain is having this journey,
but I'm also very aware that I'm laying here and
(16:54):
my therapist is next to me.
Speaker 2 (16:55):
It almost feels like VR glasses, like when you're in
it and this is it's a bad version of that.
But when you have your glasses on, you're in this
other place, but you can't pull them off anytime and
see what's happening around to you.
Speaker 5 (17:04):
Well, this you just can't. Once you take commit to
the lotenger. You can't pull it off. But like, yes,
I think that's a good comparison, because you you won't
go do anything, like you're not going to go dance
in the street naked, like you're very much you know
where you are and you have control.
Speaker 2 (17:18):
I'm so scared that I might, okay, because I've just
had those experiences with the only thing and it's not
even a hallucinogenic A sleeping pill is not a hallucinogenic
m But I had those experiences of it's like I
blacked out every time I took one, Like people would
be like I got drunk and did this and don't
remember it. But it was like that three nights a
week where it started to feel very dangerous, right, And
(17:41):
there were times where I would take one on an airplane,
like flying if I fly at night, like even overnight,
and I wouldn't remember getting back home, which meant I
had to drive and don't remember, don't remember it.
Speaker 4 (17:55):
So yeah, that scared me off. Yeah that's not good
to be fair.
Speaker 8 (17:58):
Though, Sometimes I drive and I get home and I'm like, man,
I remember that drug.
Speaker 2 (18:00):
I do that sometimes too, I'm like, how did they
even get here? Now I do that just normal, Yeah,
because you're like focused on other things like driving just
out of instinct or driving out of muscle memory. Like yeah,
I saw this story yesterday where Japan has developed we'll
call them spy bees. Oh I saw this crazy. Yeah,
(18:22):
So think of drones but the size of a bee,
and they can fly the places and like spy and
they could possibly use them for any sort of like war,
any I mean they could put them, not even war,
just like spying offices.
Speaker 4 (18:40):
And yeah, anything bees.
Speaker 8 (18:42):
Yeah, and think about it, like you're not gonna like
look at a b and be like is that a camera?
Like no, you just see it being like oh, get
away from that.
Speaker 4 (18:48):
And people are all like birds, come on, give us
some dude.
Speaker 2 (18:50):
They've been using birds as drones for fifteen years. The
government has yeah, of course when I don't know why cardinals,
but when they release at these Las Vegas Expo technology
and it's like, look how realistic this bird as anybody
can buy one once it gets to anybody can buy it.
The government's had access and been able to use them
for ten fifteen years, and so they're so realistic as birds.
Speaker 4 (19:13):
But they just mind. Do you see the story I
have seen the Yeah about the bees. The bees crazy,
they're I.
Speaker 2 (19:19):
Mean, I don't even know how big that is. You
pinch your fingers together and move it slightly apart, that's how.
Speaker 4 (19:23):
Big they are. And they have the ability to put
cameras inside of them.
Speaker 5 (19:27):
M I don't like that.
Speaker 9 (19:28):
Apparently even like get inside things and like destroy them.
Speaker 4 (19:31):
Isn't that what ant man does? Like, Yeah, it's up
in and then.
Speaker 9 (19:33):
Gets it into those structures and then like sets off
like some kind of circuit and then can fry something
or kill something.
Speaker 4 (19:38):
I just don't see a bird looking real like but
you're not close to it.
Speaker 9 (19:42):
No, true, if you saw it in the sky, you
wouldn't even think twice.
Speaker 4 (19:46):
You wouldn't think.
Speaker 2 (19:46):
You would be like, that's a bird. You're not evaluating
its movement. And honestly, how often do you look up?
Speaker 1 (19:51):
Like?
Speaker 4 (19:52):
Never?
Speaker 8 (19:52):
Like I'll go like us once in a while, I'll
just like look up the sky and be like.
Speaker 4 (19:56):
Thing, I haven't done that in a while. That's weird,
you know what I'm saying. Do you guys look up
to the sky a lot? Because I live where airplanes
fly over a lot.
Speaker 9 (20:03):
Oh you I looked at it last night.
Speaker 4 (20:05):
Yeah, I looked at it. Did you guys see the
pyramids and the clouds in Mississippi?
Speaker 2 (20:09):
No, Okay, I'm going to tell you why, and I'm
not listen. I think we all now at our age,
and with technology and the ability for social media to
work good and bad, we understand now that the government's
hiding a lot of stuff from us. Right, it's not
even crazy to say, like the government has been hiding stuff.
Speaker 4 (20:26):
From us forever.
Speaker 2 (20:27):
But now that there's access to things and people have
accountability and they're able to be accessed to people, they
have to answer questions. JFK files are a great example
of that. Now, I think it's not even a conspiracy
theory that what we were told happened did not happen
as it was told.
Speaker 4 (20:42):
So I don't want to go down the alien path,
but this is but I'll do that. You know that
tic TAC.
Speaker 2 (20:52):
Spaceship that they saw, that they've reported a few times now,
it's probably ours that came out much like the TikTok.
Speaker 4 (20:58):
Yes, it moves really fast, Yes, it came out yesterday.
Speaker 2 (21:01):
That now there are whistleblowers, and it's not that they're
not even blowing a real whistle because it's not like
there's something wrong happening, but that's probably been developed by us.
Speaker 4 (21:12):
To where but the government was going, that's not even real.
Speaker 2 (21:15):
But of course they have to say that because they're
protecting whatever technology they've invented, which goes back to the birds,
which goes back to the bees. You can even do
Epstein list, like you think there's just nothing there. Honestly,
who thinks there's nothing there and there's no list? And
he killed himself? Does anybody really think all of that?
I mean, right, there's been too much said. They have
(21:36):
Gizlaine in prison. Apparently there's no list. Who did she
traffic kids to? There's no list?
Speaker 4 (21:42):
That's the matter? Free yeah, if if that's the case.
Speaker 2 (21:45):
So at this point we realize the government's really good
at other hiding stuff from us, or this stuff in
Mississippi with the pyramids and the clouds. It's so funny
to see how this has worked. Because somebody took a
video of like a pyramid in the clouds and it
looks crazy.
Speaker 4 (22:01):
I don't think it's a spaceship, obviously. I don't think
it's a spaceship. It's like a real pyramid. It looks
it was a really weird cloud shape. It looked at
You wouldn't have seen it. You don't look up. Is
it this so different?
Speaker 2 (22:15):
It's a bit different. But I'm going to tell you
what's happening with that. This is my whole point here,
So you should look up some time. It's pretty well
up there. So what happens is there's this really weird pyramid.
It could have been a natural anomaly. Uh and uh
cloud formation, it could have been something happening with U.
Speaker 4 (22:33):
Because again, we even talked about how there are cloud.
Speaker 2 (22:35):
Seating technologies that can somewhat affect the weather. And I'm
not saying that's what happened in Texas at all, but
I'm saying there are things that we don't know. So
what's been amazing to see in real time is one
or two of these real videos. The cloud comes up,
and then somebody just inundates feeds with fake versions of
it to make the real versions look not real. So
(22:58):
let's say one or two people post this real crazy
cloud thing they've seen up there. There's like seven hundred
postings of people doing so fake. It's obviously super fake
pyramids and the clouds now where people are like, okay,
This is so stupid because what it does is it
waters down the reality of the couple by doing seven hundred.
Speaker 4 (23:17):
They're absurdly fake.
Speaker 9 (23:19):
I feel like this happens with aliens too. Remember that
thing in Miami at the mall. Yeah, and then they
were like, yeah, there were these giant figures walking around
and they didn't see any footage. But then people started
posting like fa all the fake stuff, like oh, that's
so blatantly fake, and then why were there that many
cops there?
Speaker 2 (23:33):
So what they do is they flooded with fake slightly absurd,
very absurd.
Speaker 4 (23:37):
So anybody that actually sees the real one.
Speaker 2 (23:39):
It doesn't stick out that much because it's not the
fakest or the most sensational.
Speaker 4 (23:42):
And then two, everybody's like, no, it's fake.
Speaker 2 (23:44):
I've seen it. That's crazy without even seeing the original.
And I saw this in real time with the with
the the clouds in Mississippi.
Speaker 4 (23:51):
So you saw the original when again, yes.
Speaker 2 (23:53):
And I thought that's weird, and into my mind, I
don't automatically go conspiracy. I go I wonder what's happening
with this, like the atmosphere, like something's happening obviously or.
Speaker 4 (24:03):
Just a really irregular cloud shape.
Speaker 2 (24:06):
I don't think aliens, I don't think the government's out.
But then once the flooding starts to happen, I'm like, Okay,
something is being hidden here because what they're doing is
they're they're flooding it with absurdity, so everybody thinks it's absurd.
Speaker 4 (24:20):
That's my point.
Speaker 2 (24:21):
I mean, that's that's it's brilliant.
Speaker 9 (24:24):
And it keeps people from not believing it.
Speaker 1 (24:26):
Like look at Lunchboks.
Speaker 9 (24:26):
If you ask them anything about aliens, he'll deny it
because it's things like that.
Speaker 2 (24:31):
Yeah, so the cloud thing was crazy. The b thing
that's crazy wild that they can do it that small
and get that much information. I also saw yesterday you
may see the country they have developed internet and maybe
Japan again. They've developed internet that's so fast they can
download the entire library on Netflix in one second.
Speaker 4 (24:49):
What will you google that? My it's funny what algorithms
give us.
Speaker 2 (24:54):
Because I don't trust my algorithm to give me accurate
I trust my algorithm to give me compel and then
I will chase down to see if it's accurate most
of the time, and so I started like seeing if
it was true.
Speaker 4 (25:06):
But Eddie was Eddie's algorithm is all nine one one calls.
Speaker 8 (25:08):
Now it's just weird because like two days ago, it
was all chit and like comedy stuff. Do it lady,
do it lady, And then all of a sudden last
night it goes to nine to one one calls and
I guess I watched one a little too long.
Speaker 4 (25:21):
And man, all I have is nine to one.
Speaker 8 (25:23):
One calls of different different situations, and then cop the
body cam videos of people getting pulled over.
Speaker 4 (25:29):
And then also I.
Speaker 8 (25:31):
Get confession videos people like being interrogated.
Speaker 4 (25:35):
That's like dark by detectives.
Speaker 8 (25:37):
And I'm like, I cannot get out of it. I'm
stuck in that world now, like or else, I would
have seen your pyramid.
Speaker 4 (25:43):
Like what you say, Japan's rocking us right now. They're
winning everything.
Speaker 9 (25:46):
The speed is one petabit per second.
Speaker 4 (25:49):
I don't like that name. That sounds like a pedophile.
I don't like that.
Speaker 9 (25:51):
That like pedo the equivalent of a thousand terra bits,
which is huge.
Speaker 2 (25:55):
Yeah, so you could do it and a tear a
bit like my phone one tear a bit and it's
the biggest iPhone, isn't it.
Speaker 4 (26:03):
Bite? Oh, I don't know.
Speaker 2 (26:05):
Mike saidush, it's written Tara bits here it is. Yeah, okay,
I don't know. So so like what does it say?
Does it give the Netflix analogy? Let's see see that
because what it said was because they have to boil
it down for me because I don't know really what
a tera bite or tarra bit is.
Speaker 8 (26:21):
Yeah, so it's like gigs like you give megas, right,
mega megabyte gigs terra And then I guess the next
one's petty.
Speaker 4 (26:28):
We don't like the name. It's weird, is it good?
Speaker 9 (26:31):
Also, download the entire Wikipedia ten thousand times in just
one second.
Speaker 4 (26:35):
Dang, that's faster Internet. That's crazy.
Speaker 5 (26:38):
In one second.
Speaker 4 (26:40):
I want that on my flight. Good luck, man, I
got Southwest. Ain't giving you that.
Speaker 8 (26:45):
I got gotten bought the Wi Fi on my trip
to uh Vegas and didn't work at all the whole time.
Speaker 2 (26:50):
Oh so then you're just out eight bucks.
Speaker 4 (26:53):
That's the worst. That's the worst. Did not work?
Speaker 2 (26:55):
All right, let's take a quick break, all right, uh Amy,
let's go over to you.
Speaker 4 (26:59):
What do you have?
Speaker 5 (27:00):
Okay, So here's the situation with my brows, and I
need y'alls input on it.
Speaker 2 (27:06):
Your eyebrows, Yeah, my eyebrower we're dudes. We can't go
slaying for brows because we don't.
Speaker 4 (27:12):
Do a browse.
Speaker 5 (27:13):
Okay, yeah, anybody okay brows.
Speaker 4 (27:17):
I know.
Speaker 2 (27:18):
I think that's normal terminology for you, but for us,
we would never be like, dude, you got something in
your brow. Yeah, you'd be like, dude, you got some
food in your eyebrow? How did they get there? Why
were you eating cheesecake?
Speaker 4 (27:27):
That's like if I just said my lids, my eyelids
got it.
Speaker 5 (27:32):
So's speaking of like algorithm and things like on TikTok.
I see a lot of people using that just for
men to dye their brows at home themselves. It's like
what men put on.
Speaker 4 (27:45):
Their beard lsd trip.
Speaker 5 (27:48):
Anybody here ever used just for men?
Speaker 4 (27:50):
I did.
Speaker 2 (27:51):
I have two gray spots in my beard when I
was doing television and I had a bit of a beard.
I dyed the two gray spots and they dyed the
wrong colors. Because I can't I'm colorblind. I should I've
had somebody pick the color for me. So I dyed
my beard and it was off, and so then I
had to shave it all off.
Speaker 4 (28:05):
Oh no, So I tried that because it comes with a.
Speaker 2 (28:07):
Little toothbrush, and I was like, well, let me just
do this. And then because I was just like stubble,
and I was like, let me try the stubble thing.
It was like an idol and look terrible.
Speaker 8 (28:15):
Here's the thing I mean with just for men, we
always know when someone's using just for men, Like the
beards are always a little darker than it wouldn't be.
Speaker 2 (28:23):
Really, I don't because I think I have a color difference. Oh,
because you're I can't really tell. Yeah, that's I couldn't
even tell my own.
Speaker 8 (28:28):
The rest of us we can. We can tell, like
anyone that that dies their beard, it's just darker than
any beard would normally be. So I think it might
be noticeable. Is that what you're asking?
Speaker 4 (28:39):
Well, you haven't noticed yours.
Speaker 5 (28:40):
Well, I haven't done anything with it. It's just on
my algorithm. That sort of thing is popping up. Like
girls at home, they're like, stop paying to get your
brows died. And you know, I've been on this brow journey.
I still have one or two more. Next week I
go in for another laser to get rid of the
redness under my skin because the microblading is still there.
So I have redness, but if I die the hair.
(29:01):
Because also what's happening with the lasers, which only girls
might be interested in this, but it's the laser is
color making my hairs gray. My eyebrow hairs, like I
leave there and they're white. They're like a white gray
color because the laser like sucks all the color out,
so I need to dye them. Interesting during all this,
and I'm thinking of using just for men, Like I
(29:23):
have to go to the store, I guess, and get
the hair color, and I guess I'm just gonna get brown.
I just didn't know if.
Speaker 2 (29:29):
Y'all had color match it like paint.
Speaker 5 (29:33):
I don't know. That's what I see the girls on
TikTok doing and so I'm like, well, this can't be
that hard and maybe I brush it on and then
so anyways, I'm probably gonna do it. I didn't know
if y'all had experience of just for men. But if
I come in and they're a little dark, just give
me a minute because they'll fade. Now. Eddie's like, I
don't think.
Speaker 2 (29:49):
I don't think we would have known even if it
was dark. I don't think we'd have paid enough attention
to it.
Speaker 5 (29:53):
Well, you notice my money pieces on my hair.
Speaker 4 (29:56):
Yeah, but those were like blonde.
Speaker 1 (29:58):
Yeah, those were pretty obvious.
Speaker 5 (30:00):
Well I know, but I didn't ask for them.
Speaker 4 (30:02):
Yeah, money pieces.
Speaker 5 (30:04):
Okay, Well anyway, I'm gonna try just ferment on my brows.
Speaker 2 (30:07):
I got a haircut the other day. My gray is
now my facial hair, not my hair on the top
of my head and like the back of my neck,
like any like body hair around.
Speaker 4 (30:17):
My hair is like turning gray.
Speaker 8 (30:20):
Weird, but it hasn't affected your actually not my no,
I mean not cool your hair hair.
Speaker 5 (30:24):
Well you could just for men your body hair.
Speaker 4 (30:26):
My body hair is not gray though, like I have
a little bit of chest hair. It's just to face.
It's just like my face weird. Yep.
Speaker 2 (30:33):
And that's and you can see I did a video
and a TikTok video during vacation and I was like,
I don't care. I didn't shave for the video or anything,
and you can just see I look like patches Santa
Claus growing it out. But I yeah, I'm not good
at colors. I have very sensitive eyes to light as well.
Speaker 5 (30:49):
I've learned, like sunlight.
Speaker 4 (30:51):
Just in general, like lights, light in general.
Speaker 5 (30:54):
I have.
Speaker 2 (30:54):
My eyes are really sensitive to light, probably more sensitive
than normal. I don't know the difference because I only
know my own eye. Same thing with my vision right,
like my right eye has never worked. It's eight percent,
But I don't know the difference. I don't know what
it would be like to work. So it's not like
I feel like I'm missing anything.
Speaker 8 (31:10):
That's why Bono wears sunglasses. These sensitive right, you should
do that roll with sunglasses everywhere you go.
Speaker 2 (31:18):
I was hating on Bono's glasses though, like three weeks ago,
your Morgan, what is your story?
Speaker 3 (31:24):
Okay, so I have the most expensive celebrity weddings versus
not because we just talked about all the bezos stuff
in there. Did you guys see the cost of their
total wedding.
Speaker 2 (31:33):
I've seen a few stories, but I don't know there
was ever like an actual factual cost.
Speaker 4 (31:38):
What do they say?
Speaker 3 (31:39):
So reportedly it costs fifty million in total.
Speaker 4 (31:42):
That's nothing. That's crazy.
Speaker 2 (31:43):
I wonder if they paid for all their guests to
get over there too, like privately.
Speaker 5 (31:47):
Well a lot of the g yeah, well that's what
I saw. So many people were frustrated that the guests
flew private, like on their own private instead of combined,
Like why couldn't some of them at least fly private together.
Speaker 2 (31:58):
Well if the planes only hold eight to ten and
like a Kardashian takes like fourteen people with them, Oh true,
I would say that there's just not enough room unless
they're getting one of those Air Force one and like
a jump in Mike what he says.
Speaker 9 (32:11):
That he did pay for them to try did That's
that's crazy?
Speaker 4 (32:15):
Wow? Fifty million bucks? Ah man, you ever look at that.
Speaker 2 (32:20):
When they're when someone spending that kind of money and
just go like or like I'll see Charles Barclay gambling
and go, man, he's just gambling per hand, Like.
Speaker 4 (32:30):
I was just like one of those just one. Yeah, yeah,
you guys have one of them?
Speaker 5 (32:35):
Do you think like childhood you Bobby or even some
people may look at you now and be like, oh yeah,
he buys like two hundred dollars baseball cards and just
opens up the box.
Speaker 4 (32:44):
It's all relative, absolutely right, yeah Morgan, what else? Yeah?
From that story?
Speaker 3 (32:49):
Okay, so you want to hear about some of them,
like the crazy ones. So Brad Pitt and Jennifer Andison's
wedding was about one million dollars and they had a
wall of Caviar and a performing from Billy Preston.
Speaker 4 (33:01):
Who's that?
Speaker 2 (33:02):
Billy Preston feels like a voice actor. It sounds like
Bill Preston, Esquire Bill and Ted's.
Speaker 4 (33:09):
Isn't that his name? Theodore Logan?
Speaker 3 (33:12):
He's American keyboard player and singer songwriter. He's like R
and B vibes Bill him Preston.
Speaker 4 (33:19):
Yeah, I'm looking at him here what I'm see? Fan
these songs? I know Billy Preston. Did he do the
first ever SNL? First ever? Maybe not? I don't know.
Speaker 2 (33:27):
He died of kidney failure. He played with the Beatles,
Ringo Starr and his all star band.
Speaker 9 (33:32):
Yeah, he's the first musical guest in nineteen seventy five.
Speaker 4 (33:35):
Wow, how did you know on SNL?
Speaker 1 (33:36):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (33:37):
Dang, I don't know where that came from as a
wild Yeah, that's crazy because I didn't even know who
it was.
Speaker 4 (33:41):
That's crazy. What else? Morgan? Who? Okay?
Speaker 3 (33:43):
So Chloe Kardashian and lamar Odin. You know, they were very,
very long, but their wedding was also one million dollars
and her ring itself was eight hundred and fifty thousand.
Speaker 4 (33:54):
I know, I'm sure that's not part of the wedding. Yeah, yeah,
I got it.
Speaker 5 (33:57):
Very different, Go ahead, okay.
Speaker 3 (33:59):
And then we have Russell Brand and Katie Perry. There's
cost two million dollars.
Speaker 2 (34:04):
The way, none of these have worked out, and I
don't it's I don't think it's just that they paid
a bunch of money, and that means if you paid
a bunch of money, it doesn't work out. I think
it is that celebrity culture, and they have a bunch
of money because they're celebrities in that celebrity culture, and
that mostly is why it's not working out. But it
is kind of funny to hear all these really expensive ones.
Speaker 4 (34:24):
What about theirs?
Speaker 3 (34:25):
And so there's they It was at a Tiger sanctuary.
Speaker 4 (34:29):
That's pretty cool. Tiger. I wouldn't want that. Joe Exotic
is up there. Do you take him? I saw that guy.
Speaker 2 (34:37):
The other guy got arrested Russell Brand, No, no, the
guy from Tiger Oh for like money laundering?
Speaker 4 (34:41):
Yeah too, Yeah, he was the villain of the show
kind of or some money crime. I should say. I
saw that.
Speaker 2 (34:47):
I just saw the headline. The guy with the soul
patch didn't click into it. But yeah, give me a cheap.
Speaker 3 (34:52):
One, okay, Hold on, let me go, let me go down.
Speaker 2 (34:54):
Luckily for when we had our Kaitlyn, I had our
wedding because when I hear a music guest, we didn't
pay any of our music guests, our friends.
Speaker 4 (35:00):
Yes.
Speaker 2 (35:01):
Can you imagine if I had to pay Ronnie dun Yeah,
Ronnie down for Brooks had done Dan and Shay sang
our first dance Rascal Flat.
Speaker 4 (35:08):
That's expensive.
Speaker 2 (35:09):
That would have been a to hire all of them.
It would have been a two million dollar wedding. Okay, Cramer, Kramer, Jay, Yeah,
go ahead, Morgan so.
Speaker 3 (35:19):
Dak Shepherd and Kristen Bell's wedding was at the Beverly
Hills County Clerk's office and it would cost one hundred
and forty two dollars including gas, and they had a
cake that said the world's worst wedding.
Speaker 4 (35:29):
Afterwards, it feels like a bit yeah, yeah, okay, I
doesn't feel real.
Speaker 3 (35:34):
So then we have Ed Sheeran. There's not an estimated cost.
But they did a quiet ceremony at his country estate,
so like they didn't even run anything out, They just
did it at home.
Speaker 2 (35:43):
Although I will say your celebrities, they did the cheap ones.
They're still together. I don't think the sample size is
big enough to just universe. Leg go, you spend a bunch,
but here's some celebrities and celebrity culture that spent very
little and both of those are still together.
Speaker 4 (35:54):
Those couples. Yeah, but I feel Bezos and his they'll
be together forever. I mean, I feel like older and
they have understandings.
Speaker 1 (36:02):
Yeah, she's not going anywhere. It's only if he wants
to leave.
Speaker 3 (36:06):
Okay, I got another one.
Speaker 5 (36:07):
Cameron is true.
Speaker 4 (36:08):
I mean I don't fully disagree with that.
Speaker 2 (36:11):
I don't know enough about them, but yeah, the point is,
Jeff Bezos, with that kind of money, you can have
any almost anything you want. And now that's why I
think there are probably understandings in that relationship. Like if
Bezos is out of town and he sees something he likes,
he probably gets it.
Speaker 4 (36:24):
I'm not talking about buying shoes.
Speaker 2 (36:26):
I don't know, but I would say guys billionaires like
that there aren't limits, Like they make their own limits
and they don't get in a relationship if all of
their needs aren't covered and discovered initially.
Speaker 4 (36:38):
That's crazy. But yeah, I see that, because.
Speaker 2 (36:40):
That's not something he didn't get rich while they were together.
And then get exposed to having whatever he wanted. He
already had the ability to have it, So I'm sure
whatever he likes, he gets to continue liking and she
probably is okay with that, and it has known that the
whole time, so there's no uh, there's there's no there's
no cheating, there's no dishonesty because it's all because it's
all always been the thing. But that's just me speculating.
(37:03):
But they're even like couples in Nashville that are famous
to do that crap, So it's not even that crazy.
Speaker 4 (37:08):
I've heard, I've heard of that. Yeah, like you who
I would know? Okay, like I would ever say that
right here?
Speaker 2 (37:14):
I don't know any it's not okay, But yeah, that's
that's kind of with some people. That's what they like,
and their partner knows what they like when they start
to be their partner, so when they do get married,
it's already understood what they like, so there's never an
introduction to something that's uncomfortable because they've always known and
it's nothing illegal, and it's not even dishonest if it
(37:36):
is talked about openly, So yeah, it's it can be weird, Yeah,
big time, it can be weird, but it doesn't mean
that it's cheating or within the restraints of that marriage wrong.
Speaker 8 (37:49):
But just because there's understanding, and all that does the
strength of the marriage.
Speaker 2 (37:54):
Like I think to define what strength is universally it
would be unfair to anything, because I think it makes
some marriage is stronger and I think some yes, it
could be polluted with distrust and dishonesty and it would
make it worse. But I think to universally say either
way would be wrong, because I know some of them.
I think it does make it stronger because one person
(38:16):
is out doing his thing on the road and he
does whatever, and the understanding isn't say anything about it
when you get home and I like, like, there's nothing there,
But I know.
Speaker 4 (38:23):
Oh that's crazy. I just don't know how that works.
Speaker 2 (38:26):
But he gets his and she gets hers, meaning she
has unlimited access to whatever she wants because they're they
both have different needs in the relationship. And if hers
and I may be switching up pis at hers for
the sake of the story, and if hers is I
want to spend all the money and I want to
go on trips, and sometimes you wear these sometimes you're
not and that's what I want. And he's like, cool, well,
(38:47):
this is what I want. They've talked about it, they
know it, they do it. If it makes a relationship
stronger for when they're together, then that's how they do it.
And it's weird, but it doesn't mean it's wrong.
Speaker 4 (38:58):
We need a documentary on this. One's gonna say.
Speaker 2 (39:01):
Mostly the people that are the weirdest are the ones
that act like they're not weird at all.
Speaker 1 (39:05):
Yeah, like the pool boy in that president of university.
Speaker 4 (39:09):
That's liberty most and the ones that are like against thinks.
You see a lot of.
Speaker 2 (39:16):
People that are especially in politics, that are secretly gay
being against gay people.
Speaker 4 (39:22):
So yeah, uh cool, cool marriage talk there, Wait.
Speaker 3 (39:26):
I have this is my last one. Cameron Diaz and
Benji Madden.
Speaker 1 (39:30):
They die.
Speaker 3 (39:30):
They got married in the back of their house in
a large tent with flowers and candles.
Speaker 4 (39:35):
They still married, I think, so, Lunchbox your story.
Speaker 6 (39:40):
There's this woman that I thought, I mean literally thought
she was undateable, but she was spotted out at dinner
with a dude, a former army guy now owns a
gun store, and it appears they are dating.
Speaker 1 (39:56):
And her name is Casey Anthony.
Speaker 2 (39:59):
This, this is my theory. Doesn't matter how crazy you are.
If you're hot, a dude's gonna not care a bit.
Speaker 4 (40:05):
Casey Anthony, can you give me a background?
Speaker 5 (40:07):
Killed her daughter? Allegedly but didn't?
Speaker 4 (40:11):
Okay? So yes, yet, now I know who you're talking about, Like,
was acquitted, right, yeah, not guilty. Yeah, it was found
not guilty.
Speaker 2 (40:18):
So I don't even think you say allegedly because I
think she was found not guilty, right, I don't know that.
Speaker 5 (40:21):
Then I said, but didn't, Well, you.
Speaker 2 (40:23):
Said killed her daughter? Okay, so allegedly she was thought
to have killed her daughter. Then the court system acquitted her.
Speaker 1 (40:29):
There we go.
Speaker 8 (40:30):
That covers all of it, but it still feels weird. Yeah,
and she she's pretty right, Yeah.
Speaker 1 (40:35):
Yeah, I think it's taking a toll on her.
Speaker 2 (40:37):
Guys, I would think so, yeah, a couple of things,
one just getting older and then two yeah I would
think that too.
Speaker 6 (40:43):
Like she used to look pretty hot, but when they
were sitting at this dinner, I was like, ah, man,
she looks kind of.
Speaker 8 (40:50):
Who took the picture though? Is it like just someone
sneaking in a picture?
Speaker 6 (40:52):
Yeah, I think if someone's sitting across the restaurant Yeah,
that's that's tough.
Speaker 1 (40:57):
And she looks. She has this short hair cut now
and just look.
Speaker 4 (41:00):
Very Does she live in Tennessee?
Speaker 1 (41:03):
I think so somewhere near here is what someone said.
She was moving here some once.
Speaker 4 (41:07):
I heard that too.
Speaker 1 (41:09):
Yeah, she was.
Speaker 6 (41:10):
Spotted leaving a Tennessee condo in September of twenty twenty four.
Speaker 2 (41:15):
I still stand by the fact that there's a guy,
there's always a guy that is so motivated by looks.
Speaker 4 (41:23):
They will date a psycho killer.
Speaker 2 (41:25):
That's that's murdered ten people once they get out of
jail if they're hot enough. Because guys are that motivated.
My dog Stanley is so food motivated. He'll run through
a wall for food. He wholl kol a man a wall.
He's food motivated. I think guys are generally speaking, completely
looks motivated, and then the other things need to fall
in place with some But with guys, you're not going
to get a bunch of dudes that will see somebody
(41:47):
they're not attracted to and continue to pursue it. Now,
they may find somebody that really attracts to and then
decide it's not for them. But I don't know any
guys who go man, I'm just not attracted. But let's
just give it a chance where women they have the
depth to do that to go. It's not just about looks.
I think guys are very visually motivated.
Speaker 8 (42:04):
But some guys that are in prison, don't. They like
fine love too, like where a woman will fall in
love with them, go visit them, and then when they
get out they get married.
Speaker 2 (42:12):
There are cases of that, yes, and I think a
bit of that that's a bit different than just looks.
I think the people compare it to like vulnerable people
to get scammed. I think there's a vulnerability to a
person who looks to have a relationship with someone that's
locked away.
Speaker 6 (42:29):
Yeah, there's a good reality show if you want to
check it out. It's called Love After lock Up.
Speaker 2 (42:32):
And now I bet those people don't seem like they're
fully fluid, Like yeah, I seriously.
Speaker 6 (42:40):
Yeah, it's interesting, But I mean I was just thinking
about this dude. He's sitting at dinner with Casey Anthony,
his pictures out there everywhere. Now my whole thing is like,
if he's gonna go home and meet she's gonna go home.
Speaker 1 (42:51):
And meet his parents. Hey, guys, I'm dating this woman.
Speaker 6 (42:53):
Oh we can't wait to meet her, and he brings
her in, like ah, this is Casey Anthony. The parents
have to be like what, Yeah, well you brought CAZy
Anthey to Miles.
Speaker 2 (43:03):
I mean the difference is the dude's not seventeen and
the parents aren't forty seven. If it's an adult man
with parents, they're like eighty and they're like yeah or
maybe not, I don't have the internet. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
I think it's a bit different though, but yes, that's crazy.
Speaker 8 (43:16):
Would you ask lunchbox? Would you ask her, like if
you were dating her, like did you do it?
Speaker 4 (43:20):
Did you do it?
Speaker 2 (43:24):
You got to ask her something about you guys, like
she has to say early though, she didn't do it.
I feel like before you can ask, I think when
she's like, yeah, I'm the person from the news like
you probably have read about me. I didn't do it,
I think that that happens unless.
Speaker 1 (43:35):
The conversation has the same place, right.
Speaker 4 (43:37):
I agree, Yeah, that's that's tough.
Speaker 8 (43:40):
Final story, Eddie, there's a surfer in Australia seventeen years old,
went out surfing and then never came home. And then
they're like the parents were like, has anyone seen him?
Speaker 1 (43:52):
Please.
Speaker 8 (43:52):
He went surfing at this time this beach, and everyone
went out looking for him. No one found him until
the next day. They found him seven miles away on
some like random island, on an island. He spent the
night on a random island. I don't even they don't
even know how like floated there, right, Yeah, I mean
that's obviously the only way.
Speaker 4 (44:08):
What I heard was he took a lozenge, he laid
down with his dogs, He laid down on the board.
Speaker 1 (44:14):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (44:14):
That stories because lunchbox had a story yesterday the guy
at the hotel, not this one.
Speaker 4 (44:19):
What okay, different story? Well no, who no, it was
who brought me?
Speaker 8 (44:24):
I'm telling you you won this weird algorithm, good point
missing missing.
Speaker 2 (44:29):
A missing surfer nineteen has been found alive after spending
a night on his long board. Darcy deaf Holts was
discovered by rescuers on a remote and uninhabited island. It's
one in a million who survives this, said his father,
without naming the teenager. They shared multiple video from the search.
What do you think happened? Were doing this?
Speaker 4 (44:47):
I mean floated?
Speaker 8 (44:48):
I think he just you know, I think currents are
weird and sometimes you go a little too far and
you just can't get back, and he just floated it
or but like was he on a float device?
Speaker 6 (45:00):
And so then he eventually just gives up paddling back
right and right. I'm just going to float wherever I.
Speaker 2 (45:04):
Can float until he sees some sort of land and
then he starts paddling that way.
Speaker 4 (45:09):
But is he speaking we have his parents yet, not yet.
Speaker 2 (45:13):
But he's also nineteen, so it's not like he's fifteen.
But no one's saying foul play at all. In any way,
it's just how lucky he is to survive. But he's
not saying like a current got him. Well, how lucky
is survived. I think one day, like we could all
survive one day. But what's crazy is they found him.
Speaker 1 (45:30):
Hold on, Eddie survived.
Speaker 6 (45:31):
He floated seven miles.
Speaker 4 (45:33):
Yeah, but you're just floating. But that's not a day.
Speaker 2 (45:35):
That's like the odds of you floating away and being
found at all, more so than the time span.
Speaker 4 (45:40):
Yeah, yeah, no, it's a crazy story.
Speaker 6 (45:42):
And then he just happened to come upon this island,
Like that's crazy, that's bananaous.
Speaker 8 (45:47):
Like sometimes we'll fly over the ocean and I looked
down and was like how could you find anything out here?
You do look down, though I look down, I don't
look up.
Speaker 2 (45:54):
Okay, I'm trying to get your world directional perspectives.
Speaker 4 (45:58):
I look down all the time when i'm walking. Step
in you'll make sure i'll step on a snake. That's
a good point there. Yeah, looking up, don't do it
very often. Let me do one voicemail then we're gonna run. Ray,
give me voicemail number two on the list there.
Speaker 8 (46:11):
Eddie has the tendency of backing out of challenges when.
Speaker 4 (46:14):
It's like the day before.
Speaker 8 (46:15):
So I feel like your heedbacks out.
Speaker 4 (46:17):
He needs to be on the wheel.
Speaker 2 (46:18):
Of punishment with no free spaces, and maybe throw this
challenge on the wheel of punishment.
Speaker 4 (46:23):
If he does back out, thank you.
Speaker 2 (46:25):
I understand your sentiment, and thank you for calling. The
difference is this was an offer to Eddie going would
you like to pursue this? Not you did something wrong.
You're going to pursue this. You're going to be punished.
So this was an offer seventy hot dogs in twenty
four hours for seven hundred dollars the money. When am
(46:46):
I five hundred and six hundred, I was like, okay,
now I think it's now that it's real.
Speaker 4 (46:50):
And then when lunchbox that's another hundred got real serious.
Speaker 2 (46:52):
Then it's almost like you gotta give it a run.
I gotta try it, like I might lift it another hundred.
Let's say I would have taken it to eight hundred.
Let's just say no, no, I'm not there yet. But
let's just say if you don't even do thirty, you
have to pay me back.
Speaker 4 (47:06):
You have to pay me fifty.
Speaker 8 (47:07):
Bucks thirty yeah, okay, go up to eight hundred, and
if I don't hit the thirty mark, I pay you
how much?
Speaker 4 (47:15):
Well, we're negotiations here. I like it. I like it.
Let's go to twenty five. I want to do forty five.
No thirty? You started at thirty? Where would you? No?
Speaker 2 (47:27):
I just do a number out there, okay, thirty? Fine,
then for thirty thirty and twenty four hours. Forty in
twenty four.
Speaker 4 (47:33):
Hours, No, forty thirty. If you're at thirty, I'm a forty.
We'll do thirty thirty five? Deal? How did you? How
did you just fall for that whole thing? And how
do I how much do I pay you? Fifty bucks? Okay?
Speaker 8 (47:44):
Because I could do thirty five Lunchbox.
Speaker 4 (47:45):
You can do thirty five hot dogs for sure, one
hundred percent. I can do thirty five, So you are
at least on the hook now for something.
Speaker 8 (47:52):
Yeah, because I don't want to pay you, you know,
pay and then eight hundred dollars.
Speaker 4 (47:56):
We're at eight hundred. Yeah, because I'll do six and
he does one hundred. Lunchbox does one hundred.
Speaker 2 (47:59):
Okay, if you do over thirty five, but you don't
do seventy, you don't make any money.
Speaker 4 (48:04):
Right, I just don't pay the penalty, right, I get it.
I feel better about that because then it's not like
you eat ten.
Speaker 8 (48:09):
And you're like, huh nah, you know, I don't know, dude.
I'm just oh, you back I'm not backing out. It's
just that like every time I eat a meal, I'm
so full after like two minutes of eating, and I'm like, oh,
I can't have another bite of chicken.
Speaker 4 (48:25):
Like, do you ever think it's because you keep yourself full? No,
that you're always snacking? I don't. I don't know what snack.
Speaker 2 (48:32):
No, I'm just asking if that's it, Like you always
fell so full because you're eating tight When you picture.
Speaker 8 (48:37):
Me with like bar snacks sit on the couch, no, dude, Like,
I eat three meals a day like everyone else, but like,
even after just a bowl of chicken and rice, I'm like, oh,
how am I gonna I.
Speaker 4 (48:48):
Just don't know how I'm gonna do it.
Speaker 8 (48:50):
I know that I can do if I if I
really challenge myself, I can do probably forty in twenty
four hours, so but seventies be so hard.
Speaker 2 (49:00):
Maybe next week, maybe the week after for sure, though,
And we will stream it on our Bobby Bone Show
YouTube page, So go and follow the YouTube page.
Speaker 8 (49:09):
And it's gonna be the biggest thing of the year.
It could be internet. Oh the whole the whole internet, dude.
Speaker 5 (49:15):
Yea, yeah, yeah, let me tell you.
Speaker 2 (49:17):
Like Joey Chest, it'll be vague, no doubt, it'll be
the biggest streaming thing that we've done in years. But
I don't think it's going to be the biggest thing
on the internet.
Speaker 4 (49:24):
I saw like this, but they've done it in like
a week or Like, I wouldn't.
Speaker 2 (49:28):
Pay six hundred dollars for something if I didn't feel
like it could be big enough. Number wise, I'm paying
my own money.
Speaker 4 (49:33):
I know.
Speaker 5 (49:34):
Oh, you donated one thousand dollars to watch me shoot baskets.
Speaker 4 (49:38):
Yeah, that was the charity. Though this is to Eddie,
which is a charity. No, it's not a charity.
Speaker 2 (49:45):
There's a y a bit of a difference. But the
basket thing was big. That was good, Like that was
a big, big thing for us.
Speaker 5 (49:51):
Well, I don't think we thought I could actually do it, Eddie.
We think you can do it.
Speaker 4 (49:55):
Amy, I don't believe in you. I don't believe you
believe Okay, okay.
Speaker 5 (50:00):
Why would I put my money in it if I didn't.
Speaker 4 (50:02):
Believe it, because you know you're not going to spend
that money. No, that's why Lunchbox do his name.
Speaker 5 (50:08):
Why to be clear, that's I did it way before Lunchbox,
and my motive was not the same.
Speaker 4 (50:14):
I think hers was. Eddie deserves the hundred to know.
Speaker 2 (50:17):
I think she wanted to actually see you trying to
attribute toward a really good bit on the show, and
I think she was like, well, he's.
Speaker 4 (50:24):
Gonna put five hundred up.
Speaker 2 (50:25):
I want to be supportive of the show because she
knows I'm using my own money because the companies giving
me money to do this crap. And so I think
Amy was being selfless and going I'll put a hundred
bucks up to hopefully get the bit going.
Speaker 5 (50:34):
Okay, exactly, Like, I'm definitely not in the same bucket
as why Lunchbox donated.
Speaker 4 (50:39):
I mean, Amy is.
Speaker 8 (50:39):
The only one that has vocally said, like I think
you can do it.
Speaker 4 (50:43):
I don't think you can do it, right, you don't
think I can do it? Lunchbox Definitely.
Speaker 2 (50:46):
I'm only paying the money, even lying. I'm paying the
money because I just want to see the spectacle. I'm
gone to take it to the carnival.
Speaker 3 (50:51):
Bro.
Speaker 5 (50:52):
That's it, okay, But what if part of it is mental?
Eddie can't be going into it with all this negativity
that he can't do it. I mean some of it.
He needs to believe he can do it.
Speaker 8 (51:01):
I'm not worried about the mental part, like I feel
like I can, Like I can tell myself right now
that I can do it. It's my body. I don't
know if my body can handle seventy hot dogs.
Speaker 2 (51:11):
Well, now he's on the hook though, for at least
fifty bucks, correct, So give him a different motivation. Yeah,
I love how you let me negotiate up from the
number I gave you to begin with.
Speaker 8 (51:19):
It's not even that, it's just that in my mind,
I already knew I can hit forty.
Speaker 4 (51:22):
Okay, I like it.
Speaker 2 (51:25):
We're done. Thank you guys, appreciate you being here. So
hope you have a good weekend and we will see
you on Monday.
Speaker 4 (51:30):
Byeybody