Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:11):
What's Happened to Friends? Welcome to Thursday's show, Morning Studio Morning.
I'll start with a little bit of controversy here. On
the show, Amy said that she didn't know it was
gonna be so controversial to have a cat. What did
you do? I bathed her the kitten. I gave her
a bath, and I put a picture up on like
a video online of her ins to shear's arms because
she looked so cute, wet, and I mean, people started
(00:32):
debating each other whether or not you should bathe cats,
and one woman or a guy I don't know exactly
with who they are, but they felt super passionate about
the fact that you shouldn't bathe cats. And she called
me idiotic for doing so, and I was like, whoa,
you know, I guess we had a couple of cats
growing up. We never bathed them because they licked themselves.
Yeah that's what That's what they were saying. And so listen,
(00:53):
I don't know, could you look it up? No, I
want to bathe a cat. I don't care. I I
saw some vets moment on there or one girl that
was in vet school saying it was okay to bathe
the cat and I saw that as my permission to
continue bathing the cat. Not all the time, but I
mean every so once a while. I mean they go
into inside of a litter box and then they come out,
and we're just supposed to be okay with that. I'm
(01:15):
bathing the cat, you know, I'm being told to shower
a little more of these days. And I consider myself
somebody who is clean, but I've been only getting about
one a day. Sometimes you're a little stinky, I guess so.
And I don't really get up in my armpits. But
when we lay down Caitlin's head, she's smaller than I am,
and so but she'll put her head on my shoulder,
(01:36):
which puts kind of her in that spot, and she's like,
shower or she go, did you forget to put on deodoro?
Because that could be another reason too. And when you
live by yourself, when you're just a man, live foot
loose and fancy free, yeah you don't have to worry
about that. But now she's like, hmmm, it doesn't. That
doesn't smell good. So I'm having to shower a little
(01:57):
more or deodorize a lot more. Sometimes finally do it
like a mild work out, and I think I can
get away with it. I'll just put deodoran on just
to see if she notices. That's like middle school. Here's
the thing she noticed that time, of course. So let's
look up if you should bathe your cat? Like, what
is the official rule on bathing a cat? What do
you think it is, Eddie? No, I don't think you should.
(02:19):
They can handle themselves. What if they get in like mud?
M No, they can lick it off themselves. I don't
think you're allowed to. I've never seen someone bathe their cat.
I mean because their claws they just get mad. They
rip your skin off. There's no less they hate it.
Those claws they do get me. Okay, here's what it says.
This is from the National Cat Groomers Institute of America. Okay,
(02:42):
cats do a good job of cleaning most debris from
their coat, but their self grooming won't get everything out,
nor will it make them smell any nicer. The National
Cat Groomers Institute of America recommends a bath once every
four to six weeks. Wait wait, this is the Groomers Association.
They want business, what they care about? Take it in
and spend money on where else? Are you going to
do it? Put it in the shower with her? How
(03:05):
did Cat feel about that? And she didn't really love
it so much. We might try the kitchen sink next time.
Speaking of your daughter, here's a voicemail we got about her.
Hey there, I'm calling for the sake of Dashhira. I
saw Amy posted something about her nails on her Instagram
story and Amy, I'm pretty sure you put the press
ons on upside down. I don't want her to get
(03:25):
made fun of forgetting me anything at school, so just
wanted to reach out. And even if it doesn't get
on the air, please tell Amy, Please tell she's crying.
You gotta cry. I put them on upside down. Yeah,
she's probably The subject is so much right now that
they've already come off like that. Yeah, they were on
for a little bit and they were flashy, let me
(03:47):
tell you, but she really wanted them and they're pushed on,
so who cares. It's fine, but I think, yeah, I
thought they looked a little weird. It's like, now that
you think about it. Sorry, we have something to anounce
later on in the show. Um Lunchbox, upon further review,
thinks his diamond his rocks are worth money. Oh well,
(04:08):
because we know it's not a diamond. We know it's
on a diamond, but he found something else. And he's like,
I don't know how I didn't see this earlier. Okay, okay,
So later on in the show, he went to the
diamond mine, didn't find any diamonds, but he's found something now.
He claims it's very, very valuable and quite worthy of
time to talk about today on the show. So I'm
gonna give him a few minutes later on to talk
about this. It is time to open up the mailbag.
(04:29):
You read it all year, get something we call Bobby Year. Hello,
Bobby Bones. I purchased a new side by side UTV,
which is a utility task vehicle, which is pretty fricy.
I had some friends over. One guy asked if he
could drive it. He decided to gas it and tried
(04:50):
to spin it around and he flipped it. Luckily he
was okay, but it did break some of the plastic
on the side, probably around two hundred dollars worth of damage.
He feels bad and keeps apologizing, but it's not offered
to pay for the damages. Now, I understand it was
my property and I decided to let him drive it,
but if the roles were swapped, I would offer to
pay for the damages. Should I ask him to cover
(05:12):
the damage cost or just consider it a loss and
not let him drive it anymore? From Kyle R. By
the way, these side by sides are awesome. We went
to buy one during COVID at bass Pro because they
have a similar one to what he has and they
were sold out in the middle of code. They had
one there. We were trying to buy. It was awesome.
Drive it over on the property, that's pretty cool. Then
(05:34):
COVID left and we're like, yeah, we don't need it anymore.
But but if you did that, it's really cool. It's
like a golf cart but basically a tractor golf Yeah,
it's buddy wrecked at two hundred bucks. Ammy, What would
you tell him? I mean, I would say that it's
a loss unless you feel comfortable asking for the money.
But it's a bummer that yeah he's not offering because yeah,
that's what you would do. It's what I would do.
(05:55):
But if it's if it's still it's something you're probably
gonna have to invest in and be out money if
you want to fix Eddie. I don't think there's anything
wrong with having the conversation of, hey, man, so we
priced the thing out. We gotta get a replaced. It's
gonna cost about two hundred bucks. Do you mind paying
that since you broke it? And then see where it goes?
If the guy's like, sure, you would have that conversation, yeah,
do you mind paint it is? Are you able to
(06:17):
pay two hundred dollars? You would have that conversation with
somebody that's not a super close friend. Yeah you would, yeah,
and then you see where it goes. If he says yes, boom,
I'll taken care of If he says no, then you go, okay,
all right, I'll take care of it. You can't afford
it right now, you take it as a loss, Good
for you. I don't think I'm sure enough to do that, really,
I think two hundred bucks, I would go, you know
what that's on me? Help? What's on you? You've done nothing?
(06:41):
You let him drive it? Oh, come on, sure there's
some sort of deductible that's like five hundred bucks or
a thousand bucks on this thing, So you don't want
to hit insurance. When that's true, I would probably just
pay for it myself and to be more careful about
who ill let drive it. Yeah, it's a lesson learned
for sure. Also, what's the idiot doing trying to do?
(07:01):
It's not even your property? What would you say? They
were probably drinking? Probably so two to one, Kyle, I
think you have the right to ask him for it.
I'm just telling you what I would do. I'd probably
be like, oh, because it'd be an awkward comment. I'd
be really awkward. You can, but I would choose not
to personally. But if you want to hit him up
text and be like, hey, the damage from that was
two hundred bucks? Would you mind help an out with this?
There you go. If you have the courage and the
(07:22):
maturity to do that, go for it. I do not right,
What would you do if they're already riding on it?
You're comfortable with there being something going wrong with it,
and that's exactly what happened, So you'd accept the two
hundred minute hundred buck correct? Yeah? Would you feel weird
though if you asked for the money? Um, I mean
just avoid that. Is it really worth it? I mean
if it was a major situation, that's one of those
(07:43):
you kind of gloss over right. Two bucks though that
sounds almost like super what is it like it's on
the very outside of something superficial, but it's not even
very major. Okay, thank you, Ramondo three to one. We'd
let it go, all right, thank you. That's the mailback,
close it up, We've got your now. They're doing a
(08:07):
documentary on someone they called a tender swindler who posed
as the son of a billionaire, called himself the Prince
of Diamonds, and then canned women out of their life savings.
Wow on tender. Yeah if you were, if you're so rich,
why do you need people's money? Yeah, Like like if
I'm a billionaire, but i need a little bit of
cash because I'm strapped right now so I can get
(08:28):
to my billions. I mean, is that the point? Yeah?
Maybe they they somehow presented as like it's all tied up.
It's not what's the word fluid, it's not liquid. Simon Hyatt, thirty,
was convicted of fraud in twenty nineteen after scamming women
claiming he was the Prince of Diamonds, the son of
a diamond merchant. He was snaring woman on Tinder and
(08:49):
using their cash for dates Wow. His story will be
told in a new Netflix true crime crime documentary by
Felicity Morris. That's crazy, Morgan. Do you ever have anybody
catfish or or maybe fish isn't the word, try to
deceive you when you were on these apps as something
they weren't. Yes, I mean I would. I would meet
people and they would look different than their pictures. That
(09:11):
would happen significantly different, Like they would probably use the
photos that were like five years old. So a little
bit of what their move is with that. Do they
expect that you get there and then when they don't
look the same, you just are like, and we'll just
give it a shot anyway. Yeah. I think some people
anticipate that because they're like, oh, personality, but then they
forget that most people like you have to be attracted
(09:32):
to them on some level, right, So yeah, I think
that's part of it. I think they just hope that
their personality will win out over the photos, or maybe
they think they can get back in shape before you
actually go on the date. Like, I'll put this up
there and it really motivate me in those six days
before I got to go meet her. And how do
you react to that when you get there and they
don't look like you thought they were. Most of the time,
(09:53):
I just go through the day and then I you know,
I'm like, hey, this doesn't this won't work, So I'll
go through the date. Because it was never bad enough
that I was like, okay, I just gotta leave. So
I just kind of put up with it for two hours,
and you know, wasted a little bit of my life.
But did you ever go you know what, I know,
he doesn't look the same, but I think I'll do
it again, go on a second day. No, that never happens,
(10:14):
And there was there was even sometimes like people will
put group photos in so you think you're going out
with one of their friends and then another one of
the guys shows up. No way. Oh yeah. But but
but I would think in those because I was on
dating apps for a while too, if that would happen,
you scroll to the second or third picture and there'd
be more of a solo picture. Oh no, some only
have group photos. See that's just setting up for failure. Yeah,
(10:35):
but at some point when you're communicating, don't you say, hey,
which one are you? Yeah? But one of them lied,
Oh they lied about which one they were in the group. Yes,
let's do a documentary on this. Yeah, this tender swindler
convinced a victim to open a line of credit in
her name so that she could pay for her expenses
and protect herself from her enemies. She eventually lost two
(10:58):
hundred thousand dollars to straw. She had to be admitted
to a psychiatric hospital. Oh my. He was eventually arrested
and imprisoned, but was released after serving five months of
a fifteen month sentence. I mean he must have been good.
That's a good that's a nice little trick. Though he's
not asking for their money for them. He's like, hey,
you need to hire this company to protect you if
you're with me, And he's also the company. That's next
(11:22):
level thinking, I've been catfished twice. One story you know
about from when when when the guy was acting like
the girl I never met him, and that thing all
played out on the air, sadly to my well not benefit,
because it all happened on the air. It was a girl.
She was like, I'm a guest Jean's model. It turns
out it was like a little bitty guy who is
tricking guys for money. I never I didn't even give
(11:44):
them that much money? Did you give any money? Now?
I didn't get any i'n't have anyone, or maybe I
would have um. But before catfishing wasn't thing. Somebody tricked
me and used to They were like, I'm want to
come up to the radio station to meet you. And
I was like eighteen, and I was like okay, and
I would wait in my car after radio Okay. She
she never came. She would call like three nights, I'm
(12:05):
gonna come meet you. Never came. So when she called,
like you were y'all had a connection, Like why did
you want to meet her? Unless you wanted to request
Mombo number five or something else. She was a girl
as eighteen, as a loser. I was like okay, but
like three times she's like I'm coming up, and she
never came up. So Catfish two Bobby zero, I didn't
have the skills of the tender Swindlers. The latest from
(12:27):
Nashville in Tullywood Morgan number two thirty second, Skinny Kane
Brown released his collaboration with her. The song is called
Less and Free. Pistolani's announced a Christmas album. It's called
(12:57):
Hell of a Holiday. Old Dominion talks about their song.
I was on a boat that day. This character in
our story is much like the world that we live in.
You know, he's gone through a tough time, and you
know he's just he's trying to get past a tough time.
So what better way to do that than to get
on a boat and get away from it all. So
you can't not enjoy yourself and get away from it
(13:17):
all when you're on a boat, right, I'm Morgan number two.
That's her skinny all. It's time for the good news
with Amy. So when this woman, Ashley Smith, was only
eight years old, her house burned down. She lost everything
as a kid, and her parents were definitely more focused on, Okay,
we need shelter, we need food. What are we going
(13:40):
to do to take care of ourselves it As a kid,
she was like, what happened all my toys? So now
that she's an adult, she's created a nonprofit that focuses
on getting toys into kid's hands. Who who's lost everything
because of a wildfire? And so she just donated twenty
thousand toys to the children affected by the Caldoor fire.
Great about that is is that there are groups are
(14:01):
out helping people get their life back on track. But
I think a lot of that comfort stuff is lost
because it's not felt as it's a primary need, right,
But for a kid, it is a need, and since
she experienced it as a kid back in two thousand
and seven, she knows what it feels like. And so
her mission is, Yeah, let the other people take care
of food, water, shelter, adult stuff. She wants to take
care of the kids stuff. That's awesome. That is what
(14:23):
it's all about. That was tell me something good. It's
time for Eddie the oldest on our show forty two
years old versus Morgant number two, the youngest on our Show,
twenty seven years old, answering trivia questions about each other's generation.
Let's play elder versus millennial. First, he's a dad of four.
(14:47):
The Hispanic who don't panic. He was born and raised
in McAllen, Texas. He's such a happy guy. His laugh
is infectious. Producer opponent. She runs all of our digital
She spends all morning doing the Internet and blogs and
(15:08):
loves to spend time hanging with her boyfriend and her dog.
It's Morgan number Eddie. You'll get three questions. Yes that
Morgan wouldn't know the answer to who sings the song?
Say so that's behind the popular TikTok dance. I'm gonna
play you a clip. I'll say so. Why the Soldier Cat? Oh? God,
(15:43):
didn't I get that right? What you say? So Soldia Cat?
It's incorrect? Oh dang it. I know how I messed up.
I know how I messed up. How'd you mess up?
Because it's not Soldia, it's another one. Well, she's gonna
get it, so you can doja Cat, Morgan, doja Cat.
There's there's no Soldia cat okay Eddie Question number two.
(16:09):
Kristin Cavalery has a brand of jewelry called Uncommon James.
She got her start on what MTV show in two
thousand and four? Oh, that would be The Hills And
that would be incorrect. That would be Laguna Beach. Correct,
The Hills was from Laguna Beach. That's not the same. No,
well it came from it. Yeah, it was a spin
(16:29):
off over to Eddie Okay. In the Disney Plus show
The Mandalorian. Oh, what was the child's real name? He
was referred to by fans as Baby Yoda. But what
was the real name? From the show? I mean, I
love Star Wars. But I've never seen the Mandalorian and
(16:50):
Baby Yoda. I know Baby Yoda, he's the little Yoda guy.
I'm gonna go with Grumlin Soldia cats. That's not true.
That's incorrect. Morgana grow grew. How did you know that
I watched The Mandalorian. I loved it. That's grow good.
That's correct. She got all three. Yeah, that's not good.
She gets even one of yours. Right, it's over, Morgan.
(17:11):
Are you ready? Yeah? I'm ready. Cosmo is the real
first name of what character on Seinfeld? I thought you
were gonna go Ferry Gobbers and then I was gonna
get it. But that's not it of what TV show?
Cosmo is the real first name of what character on Seinfeld?
(17:34):
Osmo Seinfeld. Never watched Seinfeld, but you know the name
isn't there, so Seinfeld would be a guess Seinfeld. Yeah,
that's all I got. Jerry Seinfeld, Cosmos Cosmo Seinfeld. Yeah,
that's incorrect. Eddie Cosmo Kramer correct? Is the name? Oh?
(17:58):
I thought Kramer was his first name. Asma. Next one,
Don't You Forget About Me by Simple Minds plays during
the opening and closing credits, of which iconic eighties movie.
Here's a clip of the song I Know this You
do the Breakfast Club. That's correct. The final question would
(18:23):
have been which Star Wars movie kicked off this Skywalker
saga in nineteen seventy seven? The sky Walker saga the gosh,
I don't know. Those are the old ones that I
didn't really enjoy. Um the Rise of Skywalker incorrect? Would
(18:45):
a New Hope, Yeah, a New Hope episode four? Well,
good for you, but our winners, Morgan though, that's why
you really No, it's not very good that. I feel
like I would emitted a better game. It would have
gotten in Dolgia cat right, But I've missed about one
lager not have a collection of money stories. So because
(19:12):
of that, an artist was given eighty four thousand dollars
by a museum and they said, take this money and
go make a work of art. Oh boy, that's cool.
That's quite the advance. This guy must be really good.
Big commission eighty four grands come on and say, go
do your thing, and you bring it back to us,
(19:34):
and we want to we want to highlight you, highlight
the art. And so when he delivered the piece he
was supposed to make it wasn't what they thought it
would be. Instead, the artist Jen's Hang gave the Museum
of Art two blank canvases and said they were titled
take the money and Run. See that's a real art
right there. I love it. I mean argue that it's
(19:56):
not art exactly, you can't tell the story, and then
put the canvases up. It made this news so cool.
You know what's like the person who took the banana
up against the wall. Do you guys ever see that one?
Or the person who did the invisible thing? Yeah? What
was that? Nothing like an nft of it or something
for a ton of money, more money. A con man
(20:20):
from Louisiana allegedly made over three hundred thousand dollars by
tricking airlines and believing they had lost his luggage on
more than one hundred and eighty occasions from twenty fifteen
to twenty twenty. He kept pulling this. He's looking it
up to twenty years in prison. I mean, I haven't
heard of that scam before. So he never had luggage,
but he would just tell him that it was gone.
(20:41):
I would assume this happened. This is me just assuming,
right the story I tell myself about this guy is
that he did at once because it really happened to him,
and he was like, it was that easy. Let me
do it again. Oh, let me do it again. Yeah. Yeah,
And he's flying that much. A fraudsterm made over three
hundred thousand dollars by convincing American arrow Lines United Southwest
they had lost his luggage on more than one hundred
(21:02):
and eighty occasions. Jet Blue in Alaska also fell victim
to Parnella Jones Junior's fraudulent lost luggage claims. Over a
five year period and now up to twenty years in jail,
he had been submitting fate claims for lost luggage. He
racked up hundreds thousands of dollars. I mean, at some point, though,
don't you go, I've just made six figures. I need
to stop. Eventually, I'm going to get caught. It's not
(21:24):
the way our minds were. We want more always. The
ploy involved him booking domestic flights using preloaded gift cards
in order to avoid leaving a trace of his real
name and address, so he could make bookings under a
fictitious identity. What he would then fly in or out
of New Orleans airport using a forged form of identification
(21:44):
before claiming the airline had lost the luggage for that
person that he made up the fact that he flew
like that is more scary to me. But I don't
know that he ever got on a plane and flew.
Oh it doesn't sound like he actually got on the
point but he oh, I don't know, doesn't Well, if
he did, That's what worries me, is like, why was
he able to fly if through security? Prosecutors claim Jones
(22:08):
became so brazen and his money making plot that sometimes
he wouldn't even bother bringing a bag along with him exactly,
he was still able to obtain a ticket for a
checked bag and then file a fake lost luggage claim
and then sometimes for like thirty five hundred bucks. He's
also charged with mail fraud. I don't see anything about
him actually going up in a plane. Okay, well and
maybe not up, but if he made it through security,
(22:31):
no security, But it just hit me how he did it.
He would go to those kiosks and say, one checked bag,
so you print out your little your don't they check
you there? When whenever I have to go to that
they also give you a ticket, Yes, because it's on
the thing. They just peel it off and you put
it on your own luggage. Boom. And then he would
just get the ticket and then go through security with
(22:51):
because they do say do you have a ticket? That's incredible?
Which parts more incredible to you the money or the
fact that you want to jail for twenty years? Well,
twenty years it's harsh. Come on, man, I mean all
he did was good. I don't think three hundred thousand dollars.
If you go rob a bank for three hundred thousand dollars,
that's twenty years. Well that guy went hard, Like that's
the kind I got. You asked like, hey, what other
(23:12):
stuff you're thinking about? So we can stop other people
from doing it? Like you use this kind of person
to your advantage, Like we'll pill a few years off creatively,
think of some other scams. You know. That's what they
do sometimes with terror activity, the hackers they bring in,
especially with things like terrorists, you know, domestic terrorist stuff.
They go, Okay, let's bring get some really creative people.
What would you do, how would you get how would
(23:33):
you terror rize us? And then they kind of do
you know, at one point in my career, last year,
I hired people to listen to the show and tell
me how they would beat my show. I mentioned this
on the air. Yeah, I paid two different people that
I trusted to listen to the show for a month
and then give me the game plan on how to
beat me if I were to launch a new show
against me like I wanted. And they did, and I
(23:53):
paid them in the my company kind of out of that.
But you know what, I did it because I felt
like that's how I could figure it out. And just
so you know, he did fly on those planes, he did. Yeah.
Upon landing, prosecutors say Jones would then tell the airline
and had lost his luggage. So you can get on
planes at easily like that. Yeah, So he was going
he was going through security. He was going up and
(24:14):
presenting a lost baggage claim. I'm surprised the idea would
go through because you have to swipe that out, don't
you have to, Like they look at your idea all
the time, Yes, they always always, but they don't always
scan it, but they look at your face. They don't
see a fake ID every time probably, or I mean
that makes it up. It We need more than twenty years.
You can't do this. People can't do this. You can't
(24:34):
fool that will pills. I'm back if he tells how,
because that's true. Luckily, his scam was, you know, luggage money.
What if he was like wanting to do something crazy
on an airplane? I mean, and can we not give
him all the credit? He had a buddy with him.
There was two of them, that buddy, fire Roster ransom arians. Finally,
one more story about money. It's unfortunate but common when
(24:59):
a fan on lyst fight over inheritance happens after a death.
This teenager got the money, and everybody else's nat at him.
A granddaughter's refusing to split her inheritance with anybody or
her sister, nineteen year old is taking care of her,
said grandpa for six months, so he left her sixty thousand. Wow,
everybody else is up. S Creek is the one that
took care of it for the last six months. Okay, yeah,
(25:21):
that's not a long long time. But taking care of
any elderly person, if you're the primary hairriver, that's a
lot of work. It's a lot. And Grandpa, did you
got her back? Grandpa's rights and those other family members
they weren't there doing it. And that's what we call money, money, money, money,
Thank you. I can't believe you got up on the plane.
(25:42):
The story I read never had him going up in
the plane. That's crazy. That makes it scarier. But he
wasn't doing it that. He was doing it for the money.
He was doing it for the money. But he has
to create a fake Eddy every time because you have
to pull your mask down for them to go okay,
that's you. Yes. And then with each name he's using
and the cost of tickets, So I mean, is he
really making that much money? Yeah? Yes, yeah, probably Yeah. Voicemails,
(26:04):
We get voicemails. It's the same number that when you
call the show. Just this line picks up when we
encourage you leave us a message. Eight seven seven seventy seven. Bobby, guys,
I'm about two weeks behind listening to the podcast, and
I finally got to the point where Lunchbox does his
celebrity bit next to a tour bus. You have officially
(26:25):
topped the cringiness of Scott's tots. Oh my god, Lunchbox,
you're not famous, dude. Just enjoy riding the kurt tails
of Bobby and Amy Scott's Tots is the cringiest episode
of the Office for sure. Gray promises all the kids
is gonna send him to college whether y're in like
first grade, then you have to go back and be like, sorry,
I can't afford it now. So that's our Scott's Tots apparently.
(26:46):
Here thanks. And I don't know what kurttails are, but
I mean, if anything, I ride my kurttails. True, we're
for sure riding your curtails. Here's number two. Hey, Bobby
Bones show first ten callers. My husband is a potter head,
and in fact, he has watched the movie hundreds of times.
I even caught him watching with closed captions on so
(27:06):
he could catch the names of all the characters and places.
So maybe Lunchbacks and Eddie should try that so they
could pass their quiz. Just some advice, guys. Oh yeah,
good point. I watch everything with close captions on. Still
don't remember them. Two. I watch everything now period. Why
do you do it every because I do it because
I have four kids. It's so loud. In order for
me to watch and listen to anything, I have to
read it. It's a different set of circumstances every time.
(27:30):
One it could be Stanley or bulldog snoring if it's
in the evening and he's in our bedroom just NonStop.
Two it could be I'm maybe losing a little bit
of my hearing forming headphones wholelie Man. Yeah. Three, our
living room, the TV sound. We've tried everything. It's not perfect,
just different reasons. Yeah, it works, it works for us. No,
I love it mostly. Probably Number two here's one more
(27:52):
morning Studio. I've been listening for a really long time now,
since two thousand and eight through iHeartRadio, and I had
just thought that I think Amy has just gotten fun
here over since she became a mom. I does anyone
else noticed that Kurt jokes are great? Now? She will
insult Lunchbox no problem really anyone on the show. So
just curious if anyone else has noticed that, love you guys,
(28:15):
you're a bit more insulting now. Ye I'm a mom,
that's true. I just realized that leebys your voicemails if
you want eight seven seven seventy seven, Bobby. It's mainly
a podcast listener thing, but if you're listening now and
you can't get in hit it up, you're Amy's pile
of stories. So McDonald's worker supposedly got back at a
rude customer by putting sweet and sour sauce all over
(28:37):
the top of their mcflurry instead of caramel sauce. Oh okay,
that's funny, but I don't like people messing with food.
You can't do that. Can't do that. It does look
similar and if a customer's rude that that stinks and
maybe they'll serve time for it and karma jail. So
when you know I don't like that, I don't like
mess with food. Yeah. So when you worked in food, though,
did you ever I know you would never do it,
(28:59):
but did you see other wits or anybody? And if
I did, that would have been the end of that
because I'd have beat him up. Now I'm just kidding.
I told on him. But no, you don't mess people's
food that I don't care. Either you don't serve them
because they're a jerk, or you serve them the food
that they asked for and let karma do their justice. Yeah.
So they the person I guess posted the video to
(29:21):
social media to be like hallo, what I'm doing, And yeah,
they were don't work happy. But it's like that's also
kind of a bonehead, because why would you put yourself
out there. I was watching a TikTok of a guy
who worked for we'll say one of the companies like
FedEx or Ups okay, or Amazon, like a delivery guy okay,
and he was like, if I see this certain political flag,
I don't deliver their package. Just take it back and
be like, oh, you weren't there. And then somebody else
(29:44):
stitched it, which means they did a TikTok on this
same one. And he goes, okay, hey, I just found
you tracked them on Facebook because their name reached out
to their FedEx manager told him the guy got fired. God, wow,
do you see that, Mike? He said, Oh company names?
Yeah what I said? All three of them? Yeah yeah,
like a FedEx or an Amazon, rat Ups or DHL
(30:09):
yeah yeah, yeah yeah yeah or what else? So how
do y'all feel? We're ninety days or less than until Christmas?
But a hotel has put up a Christmas tree in
their lobby and guests went to check in and they
were like, oh taking it back, like whoa, whoa, whoa,
Well hy pumped the brakes on Christmas? What hotel was it? Um? Glossflthers.
(30:30):
I don't know how to say it was in the
North Pole would be okay. I'm just saying the closer
to Antarctica, the more acceptable it is. Yeah. No, But
I mean, when is everybody gonna start decorating for Christmas
on the show? Because I feel like, fine with it.
Whatever makes you happy, have at it early man. Okay,
great for you. You had a snowman up in your yard. Okay, Santa.
(30:51):
By the way, Hey, everybody's got a reason. I feel
like Eddie's the kind of person if he walked in
this hotel and saw it, he would put in a
guest complaint totally. I would ride in that comment box.
It would be funny. But also they're probably doing it
for the exact reason we're talking about it, just for reaction.
Oh yeah, okay, good point y. I should put one
up on like July, like that would get real reacting. Yeah,
they do. Some places do do Christmas in July. I
(31:13):
never said a hotel do one, all right. Next, Alan
Jackson revealed to Jenneba Schager on The Today Show that
he has a CMT disease that he's inherited, which stands
for charco Marie tooth syndrome with the channel I was
the same disease that, yeah, very same letters. But it
affects the signals that your nerves into your arms, your hands,
(31:37):
your legs, and your feet. And he actually was diagnosed
ten years ago, but it's just now talking about the
condition and yeah, he inherited it from his dad and
that stinks. And we hope he's able to fight through
that and continue making music. But isn't it weird how
the body has all these little things we have no
idea about. One thing can mess you up billions of
like what is that? Again? Not the name of it?
(31:59):
Like what is it? It's like it affects the nerves
that the signals to your nerves that allow you to
move your arms, your legs, and he signals, we can
hurt it, that we can mess up a signal. And
he wanted to put it out there too, because as
he's performing, he didn't want people to think that he
was drunk on stage if he's stumbling at all, But
then he could get drunk on stage and just go
and blame it on that. He wanted to that. Steane's hope,
(32:22):
he's hope he's able to fight that and you know,
still go out and play music. All right, I'm Amy.
That's my pob. That was Amy's pile of stories. It's
time for the good news, Oh Todd. He's stressed out
in life. Things are just going bad. Had a stressful week.
Gonna go out and do some mountain bike and puts
(32:43):
his helmet on, gets on his bike, riding. Boom, he
crashes and hurts his chest. Paramedics respond and he's in
dire straits. Well, luckily there's another there's another mountain biker
that rolls up, happens to be a doctor, forms an
emergency tracheotomy right there on the mountain bike trail, hole
in his rope because he couldn't breathe. You know what,
(33:05):
All that's awesome, like the fact too, that you're so
lucky that someone comes up behind you that's also a
doctor and could do because not all doctor adiets ain't
gonna do a mercy. That being said, you used a
term we've never heard you used before, so you must
have been exposed to it recently. What was it called
dire straits? Yeah? I don't know how I got that?
Is that on the paper? Um? Not on here? I
(33:28):
thought that was just a band. Is that a real
it is? Yeah? And did he use it correctly? He did?
I think maybe I heard a news story about someone
was in dire straits. Maybe I was watching a date
line something, okay, and so I just heard it and
I was like, oh, that sounds like they're in trouble.
So I'm gonna use it something that smooth. Huh, Yeah,
sounded good. You owned it. Dire straits. The definition is
in a very bad or difficult situation. Oh, good job.
(33:51):
Volcabulary word of the day, hit it. You know those
cal hitting it. We don't have a sounder, you know,
hit We should. We should have a sounder about vocabulary.
Word say vocabulary. But I shout out doctor Jesse Conan
who happened to be mountain biking and did that tracheotomy. Yes,
got him out of the diner straits. Okay, now you
have it again. All right, that's what it's all about.
That was tell me something good your thinking caps on.
(34:15):
Let's try to figure out the investigative. Morning, Corny, here
we go. Morning. What's the cutest of all seasons? Okay?
We have ninety seconds, guys, Okay, all seasons spring, spring, summer, autumn, winter, winter,
the cutest of all seasons? Cutest when when a spring summer? Oh,
(34:44):
you gotta do this call and I'll be there. Yeah,
you got James k um Bones. I don't know where
to go. The cutest season. Okay, let's think about season.
What if it's a season? E nah? No, hey, let
me don't know me we're the cutest season? Season not
(35:05):
a holiday lunch bocks a season. There the spooky sea.
Oh there's there's a scissors though. Oh that's my vote.
He's kind of cute. Yeah, he's cute. That the cutest season.
There's winter, winter season. What's the time left? Mike's fall?
(35:26):
Fall is not gonna be it? Autumn automn is a season,
automn is fall, automn is fault same thing, Okay, I wouldn't.
I don't know why we have a different name for fall,
ring break season, autom cute season, bumping pumpkinson, thanks for
giving season, holiday, cutest season, Oh you're a little cute season,
(35:49):
the cutest of all look cute, little little something? Five seconds.
Springs offspring season, offspring offpring offspring offspring offspring springs are cute.
A little offspring of an offspring is not God. I
(36:11):
like Sissan, Raimundo, all right, do that one. Then I
like a personal choice that says in Raimundo, Okay, because
I don't think it's offspring, And I want to give
our voices on a shout out, why not morning? What
is the cutest of all seasons? Sisson Ramundo, what's the
cutest of all seasons? Ah? You were so close, Dan,
(36:34):
I mean we said it, but we didn't say it
like that? Does that count? And now spring officially in autumn?
Right now, I'm really getting into only Murder in the
Building on Hulu Steve Martin Martin short and and she's
really good and really yeah, I think that's her thing.
Her music's fine, yeah, but acting is where she well,
(36:55):
I guess maybe acting in music, well she's a Disney kid. Yeah,
but she's good in it. They're all really good to me.
They're only thirty minutes. If you have Hulu. The first
couple episodes, you're just trying to figure out what it's about.
But it's about these people who live in this apartment building.
They don't know each other, but they all listen to
this murder podcast and then there's a murder in their
building and they kind of come together and they start
doing a podcast trying to figure out who the murderer is.
(37:17):
That's cool, it's funny, it's kind of goofy, but it's
also like a murder mystery. But I recommend it. We're
not done yet. But it's called Only Murders in the
Building on Hulu if you have Hulu, anybody watching? Okay,
So I started watching a show called Ordinary Joe. There's
only one or two episodes out right now, and describe it.
What's it about? Okay? So Ordinary Joe. It's a guy
(37:38):
named Joe and he's graduating college and he's got three
ways to go. He's like, all right, do I go
with the girl that I've been kind of seen and
dating through college and go see where that life takes me.
Do I go straight and go with this girl I
just met on graduation day I kind of like her.
Or do I go have lunch with my family and
that could lead me to being a cop because my
(37:59):
whole family are all cops. Shoe story or fiction? No
fictions written? Okay, So he basically has to just kind
of he's staying there and goes, all right, what's my
life going to be in these three? If I take
these three different directions, and then it's hypothetical. And the
first episode is so good. It's like, oh he does
he plays out every scenario he thinks that his life
could be platform. It's on NBC, oh like TV, NBC TV,
(38:23):
and it's live, so we I think there are only
two episodes now, and it's going to come out weekly. Okay,
so I guess it's pretty easy to find. Then get
talking to your remote. Mostly those shows are just on
demand two if they've already aired. Like if I was
in a boardroom at NBC and they pitched that show
to me, I'm all in. I don't know if it's
gonna be good. I have no clue, but the first
episode got me ordinary. Joe, have you watched fifty percent
(38:44):
on Rotten Tomatoes? Oh, Loregan, what did you watch? So
there's a new show on Netflix. You could call it
a documentary. It's called Top Secret UFO Projects Declassified. And
I've always believed in aliens. I'm all about space and
all of that stuff, and this whole series is them
talking about, finally, all of the stuff we got in
(39:06):
that new law that got passed when they the government
had to release all of the information they had on
UFOs extraterrestrials everything, and I'm not going to give anything away,
but they're aliens. She doesn't want to spoil it to say,
there's so much that they've been holding from us. And
they have all these like specialists on talk about these
(39:27):
instances that happened so many years ago, like in the
nineteen fifties, and now we're in twenty twenty one and
seventy years later, we're looking back on it finally for
the first time. It's wild. Like the the imagery is
a little cheesy because obviously they don't have video of
these incident it's like gumbs, but they do, like they
have these panelists on and they talk about it, and
(39:49):
so the panelist part like, if you're listening to it,
it's so good and so interesting if you're into aliens.
I read a lot of those, or I read the
abbreviated version of them, and they say they really didn't
find anything. Oh yeah, that's a lie, they're lyne. Do
you okay? Eddie? Your show is called Ordinary, Joe Morgan,
your show is called Top Secret, UFO Projects Declassify, and
(40:10):
that's on Netflix, and mine's only Murders in the Building.
On Hulu. If I were to play this song right here,
what game show? Would it be? Jeopardy? Yeah? Maybe the
most classic game show music ever. That's not that's what
the theme song? Is it? Oh? Is that just when
(40:31):
they're thinking? Yeah, I don't know. I don't think so, Eddie,
don't think it starts like that. Yeah, but it is
that what we know Jeopardy from. Okay, so you guys,
write your answers down, Amy, lunchbox, Eddie. If you miss it,
you're out. Why do we do that? Like a good cock?
They're pretty easy. I like the good comeback story? Yeah? Sorry,
(40:53):
all right, here we go. Name this game show? Okay, Amy,
(41:15):
price is right, Lunchbox. One of my goals in life
is to be on the price and right the price
and right price is right? Okay, interesting, Eddie, price is right?
Next up? Name this TV game show theme song? What
(41:42):
I thought you said these are easy? Yeah? This is
not easy. I was that the whole thing, right, Yeah,
that's way harder than I thought it was gonna be. Okay,
we'll just play play a seven then. Okay, thank you.
That's that was almost impossible, especially because there's no more
do we guess anyway? Yeah, you can still probably get it.
(42:04):
I got something, Amy, ten thousands, ten thousand pyramids is
not right up the twenty thousand dollars pyramids. At least
that's a game, Eddie. The shopping's free. No will of fortune? Really? Watch?
I know? All right? Next up? Yes, Amy, who wants
(42:44):
to be a millionaire? Who wants to be a millionaire?
Who wants to be a millionaire? That's a strong game
that's still on a syndication. Oh, I don't know. I
think so we can do who wants to be one
hundred air on this show with one of you guys.
I am down, But can't we phone a friend and
do all that? Can we ask? I'll phone you, but
you can know I'm sing it. You can street shout out,
you can bone a friend from in studio. Okay, this
(43:08):
is fun. We can do that next week, later this week,
or something today Thursday. So either tomorrow next week we'll
play who Wants to be a hundred Air? But I'll
have to figure out who gets to play. You don't
want to a thousand air? Nah? Because I gotta pay
for the step. You guys act like the companies paying
for these bills. I was thinking ten thousand air. No,
I gotta pay for the step of my own money,
all right. Next up, this was pretty easy and the
(43:39):
count of three, everybody say it? One, two, three? Good?
We have a three more old school now. It would
(44:07):
be my dream to host a game show. I've tried.
I've gotten very close to some of the big ones,
but they've never hired me before. They've always like taken
real celebrities because I'm a fake celebrity. Based on your
track record, I think you have a good chance. I
don't know. I'm dude, I'm telling you. I've gotten so close,
and they're like, yeah, we have to go with someone
who's actually famous. But if any of those game shows
worked out or are you glad you really no, I'm
(44:28):
not glad it didn't get it? Yeah. No, they were
gonna bring me in for the new version of the
Weakest Link. Didn't get that, had meetings about that, then
the one no Wammy, Oh press your luck and they
have really famous actress that does that. Didn't get that.
So yeah, they're always like, you know, we're just gonna
actually go with someone who actually is famous. They tell
you that. Yes, they're like they test well because because
(44:50):
people know who they are right. Can you name that one? Go? Amy,
Love Connection? No, Lunchbox, new they went game, Eddie, love Connection.
It's the match game. It's so close, you were so close.
All right? We have two left named this game show
theme or this show theme? Oh? Amy, Dancing with the Stars,
(45:29):
lunch Bus, Temptation Island Eddie. Yeah, bats from Paradise. Well,
one of you is right, dance one of the stars.
That's up, guys, welcome to Dancing with the Star. Here
he is to tango now tangoing badly, Bobby and his
partner Shan Bobby. All right, Amy takes the lead. Last one.
(45:51):
Here we go. Do you know this, Amy? I mean
she put her pin away very confidently. No, But Lunchbox,
(46:11):
what do you have? A web game? Newly web game incorrect?
Are you sure? Yeah, Eddie, it sounds so old school.
I'm going to love Connections, not Amy. Twenty thousand dollars Peyramn.
I'll give it to you. It's the one hundred thousand
dollars Peo that game. That game grew in numbers as
it got older. I had the ten thousand. There's your winner, Amy,
(46:31):
Who Amy? Could you have named this one right here? Yeah?
Amazing race. Correct. Wow, could you have named this one
(46:55):
that's old? You probably wouldn't get that one. Anybody else can?
How old? It's not on anymore? Beer Factor? Yeah? Wow?
Death match? Wow? This one? Oh, oh my gosh, what
is that? Gun's like a life? I hope the Voice
(47:22):
two more named this one. I got it? Big Brother?
Do you watch that? This is my second season I
watched last season. This season you like it. This season
so much better. Last season was god awful. I thought.
I was like, what means you go back? Everybody kept
telling me, all these Big Brother fans kept saying, just
give it one more shot, give it one more shot?
So I did. Would you be jealous if Ray went on? No,
(47:43):
after watching two seasons a Big Brother, it seems like
the most miserable show to be on because they are
literally in a house for one hundred days, it feels,
and they have nothing to do, but they're getting famous.
You can't name one famous Big Brother person Johnny Ben Nope,
that's real world. That's real world, Key West than the
Challenge Final one gotta be eighties super market sweet Okay
(48:12):
Lunchboke spent the day out at the Diamond Mine. A
couple of days ago, and if you would have found
a big million dollar diamond, he was quitting the show.
But you found no diamonds, found no diamonds. H hard work, sweat,
backbreaking stuff. I mean, you're just bent over in the
dirt for eight hours. I'm like, not for me. So
what did you find that you come in so excited
about today? So I was sitting at home and I
(48:32):
was just looking at my what we're not, you know,
diamonds were rocks and I was looking I was like,
oh my gosh, guys, I have two rocks that we
need to put up for sale because I have one
that is shaped like Abraham Lincoln's face on Mount Rushmore.
I need to see this. Okay, Yeah, that's Abraham Lincoln.
(48:52):
I'm Mount Rushmore. Just you know, I mean you you
can't look at that and say that's not Abraham Lincoln.
Mount Rushmore the size of a pe It's it's gravel
in the driveway. It's not life size, guys, it's not
like yeah, okay, okay. And then when I hold up
this one, the first thing you see it's Woody the woodpecker.
You mean woodpecker. Let me see where wood the woodpecker
(49:17):
what do I say, I don't see him. You don't
see Oh my gosh, guys, nos, his hair. I see
it that way, Yeah, I see. I don't know what
you're looking at it. I don't wodecker, baby Google, Woody
the woodpecker. No, it's what woodpeckers that. There's no Woodpecker's
(49:37):
like say Mickey the mouse. No, it's no the woodpecker.
It's like Spider the man. There's no Woody the woodpecker.
It's what woodpecker. But where I was raised is what
the woodpecker. It's what do you woodpecker? Isn't it? Yes,
woody woodpecker. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no no.
Whatever you guys are saying, when you look at him,
you cannot help but see him right, you're amy, look, yes,
(50:01):
I do looking that way a little bit, so I
see it. That's the profile Woody the woodpecker. Okay, stop
calling the woodpecker. It's not woodpecker. So I don't know
which lunch of the box it is. Woody woodpecker. Okay,
I don't know which one's more valuable, Abraham Lincoln from
Mount Rushmore or Woody Pecker wood pecker. What do he Woodpecker. Yes, okay,
(50:24):
I mean, guys, I'm telling you, by the way, whoa
I can't throw one? Amy. Do you have a list
of other things that have sold? Yes? Because I looked
it up last night. I was like, how much money
can I make? Unless you know low end? There was
a jelly bean that had Kate Middleton's face on it
eight hundred and fifteen dollars. Her face looked like her face. Yeah,
it looked like her face, Kate Middleton. Yeah, that's low wind.
(50:44):
I mean, that's that's chump change, right, got it? A
chicken nugget that looked like George Washington sold for eight thousand,
one hundred dollars. I've heard about that one. I'm looking
at this chicken nugget now. It looks no more like
George Washington than his dang rock does what Dody Woodpeck really? Okay? Cheetos,
you know, like the Cheeto. I haven't thought about what
he Woodpecker and guys ten years. This is to me,
(51:05):
this is the greatest segment ever. Go ahead. It resembling
the gorilla Harrombe or whatever you know. Sorry, guys, I
don't know Harro. Look that cheeto does Wow? Ninety nine
thousand dollars. No way, okay, no way, I need to
start looking for Then the crowd jeweled them all a
(51:29):
McDonald's nugget again, shaped like one of the among US crewmates.
It's some video game ninety nine thousand, nine hundred ninety
seven dollars sold. That was recent, that was just brand new.
So you have again that you have. I have Abraham Lincoln,
like it looks like he's on Mount Rushmore. Or I
have Woody the Woodpecker, Woodpecker. Let me see Abraham Lincoln.
(51:52):
You cast it around here. Careful, but it's a rock.
Be careful. Okay, Well, you don't want to chip it.
And then maybe his exactly his no comes off, and
now you see what I mean. Yeah, let me see.
Let me say, but but no, let me see, but
bones it is the Mount Rushmore version. Yes, not top hat. Yeah,
(52:14):
there's no top hat. It's just Yes, it looks like
Ricky Gervais. No, it looks like Ricky Gervais. Okay, and
then this is let me see which way do I
turn it to get hold on? You got it that way? Yes,
there you go to me. It looks more like wait,
I don't know which way it turned. Well, now I'm
(52:35):
struggling to know which way it is. An that's it?
Oh stop, you don't see it? Bones stop, looks more
like a lama. No, a lama. They're a famous Lama
Lama Lama red pajama. What's that? It's a kid's book, dude,
put it up as both and see it. See if
it gets Yeah, so what are you gonna do? Put
him up on I'll put him up on eBay. I
(52:57):
see I saw the Abe two exactly. I'm telling you guys,
And you say, you see whatdy the woodpecker dude, I
would chase Lama Lama red Pajama. Oh, Amy, you need
a microphone. And he's just walking around nobody you know,
we're on the air right hanging out right now. He
would make so much money if he got all four
(53:19):
people from Mount Rushmore and lined them up. Oh back
to the diamond mind, he goes, Oh, man, so I'm thinking,
what do you guys think? How much do you think
I should listen? Abraham? That's the big, big press. I
think it's I'm telling you there's something I'm looking at.
Lamalama Red Pajama quite popular, very popular, even had spinoff books,
Lama Lama at home with his mama. Yeah. School. Yeah,
(53:42):
and there's another one we read another one Lama Lama something.
I don't know what it's called, but yeah, mama he
gets sick because they have to stay home from school,
and then he gives his cold to mama and he
knows what mama needs. Rest is best. Lama Lama home
with mama. Yeah. Yeah, let's call man. We got it.
So what do you think though? I think it's I
think you're gonna get more for Woody Woodpecker. Although it's
(54:04):
gonna be hard. You gonna have to draw, have a
drawing beside it. Oh, I mean it's not that hard.
You put the photo next to it, side by side,
and they're gonna be like identical. Wait you think Woody,
you think it's the pecker of the Lama? Is that
the pecker of the Lama? I don't honestly, guys, I
don't see either. I don't see either on that one.
We'll talk about. We'll post them, we'll post him. But
(54:25):
I think you should list them. But hey, what is
what are the starting prices? Oh? I think I mean
Abraham has to be at least a thousand, right, No,
you want to start low to create a bidding friends. Well,
but if you say ten bucks and you're gonna get
twenty three out of it, okay, Okay, so we'll do
at least five hundred. And I don't know what I mean.
I gotta decide what is this Woody the woodpecker, or
is the lama lama red pajama. I think you can.
(54:46):
I think Woody would probably be worth more. It's a struggle.
It's a lot more struggle for me to see what
because I can see the lama. But I think maybe
some old school cartoon people would want to get Woody Woodpecker. Okay,
we're going Woody Woodpecker, Okay, and we'll start that off
at one hundred. And I mean he would. Woodpecker was
created I think in nineteen forty, so someone that would
be really into him might visually not see as well
(55:08):
now and the pair were gopair point. I mean, I'm saying,
like blind folks, we got something for you, That's what
I mean. But elderly, like I'm at forty, my vision
is going So if you're like eighty ninety years old,
they might buy that from you. Do we even have
an eBay account. Do you have one? I don't have one.
I'm shocked you don't like I used to scuba Steve
(55:28):
raises hand. What do you think scuba? I've been an EBA.
I kind of have one since the nineties, so I can.
I can put it on my account if you like,
I'll take a fighter's fee or no. No, okay? This
five percent? How about your fighters fee? Is an apology
for putting me in that hotel. I'm not apologizing for that.
You get no fee. It was. I will take five percent,
since fair five percent I did all this takes takes
fifteen percent. His five agent takes ten percent. His five
(55:51):
percent is putting me in the roach infested motel. Okay,
with the water part with green water, Well, you ain't
been there. If it'll be with me for the rest
of my life. If he puts it up and doesn't
charge a finder's fee, will you never bring that up again? No? Okay,
then you can't five percent of this good buff you
(56:13):
load it, it sells, you get five percent. Job was
not to put on it's his own account. Oh my gosh,
five percent. Create a show account. That's your new job. No,
don't create a show account. I want I need to
do with this. Don't anything to do with money coming in? Okay,
here we go lunchboxing and I want to bid in here? No, no, no, Amy, No,
(56:34):
your kids will love it? Which one will? Well? I
mean you can teach them history by holding up Abraham
Lincoln in your house. Hello, kids, you know this is
Abraham Lincoln. He ladies and kids. He goes by the
name honest Abe. He was born in a log cabin
in Illinois. Okay, that's good. Surprised that you know that
he was our sixteen job. I don't know that. But
was he born in Illinois? There? He was born in Kentucky?
(56:57):
He was born in a log cabin in Illinois. I'm
telling you I did. Did you do a report on that?
I did a report in middle school on it, and
then I had to do a report in heih. Was
he born in Iowa? No, he was born in Illinois
and a long Abraham Lincoln was born in LaRue County, Kentucky.
I knew it, Oh my god, in the log cabin? No,
I said, why is he confused? Lincoln was born February twelfth,
(57:17):
eighteen o nine, and Hogdenville, Kentucky. His mother was a litter,
and his father was an uneducated carpenter and farmer. Moved
to Illinois. I don't know, that's not the point of this. Okay,
thank you all. I guess my report in eighth grade
and in junior year high school was wrong because I
just copied the same report from one page in the next.
It was a log cabin. He told you was right.
I said, hey, Mike, need give me credit, partial credit.
(57:43):
It's time for the good news producer Ready Ray Boost
Junior from Pennsylvania. A few months ago, he goes to
the convenience store, buys himself a lottery ticket. He wins
a hundred thousand dollars. Right, so cool. Well that was
a few months ago. That's good. To last week. His
wife sends him to the store again. Will you go
(58:04):
get me some milk? Sure, I'll go. He's in there.
I mean I do have some extra money. Let me
buy another scratch off. It's a scratch off ticket. He
sits in the car, scratches it. He wins one million.
Man doors partially. Did you tell that story to irritate lunchbox?
Of course? Yeah. I kept looking over my shoulder to
see what do you think? How is that to tell
me something good. That's like here Robert Lunchbox's face. Let's
(58:28):
he won a lottery twine. That's inspiration, Like, yeah, you
should hear that and be like others, hope I could win.
Edie's doing that to make me feel bad, so it's really, hey,
let me make you feel bad about your life. Then
I started thinking what would we do with that money?
And what Ray did? The guy's name is Ray Boost Junior.
What he did was he bought a house. It's already
under contract. He win that week, looked at a house
and put a contract on it. I know that I've
(58:50):
been buying an island, okay with what one point one
one point one million, and then that one hundred thousand,
one mill you're not first of all, you're gonna attacked.
So in the end you're gonna about six hundred thousand
out of that. We're not buying an island with that.
We'll see, give me that money, we'll find out. This
is not an argument I want to get into everyone.
(59:10):
I don't even know where to go. Eddie, great story,
that's what it's all about. That was tell me something good.
What's happened to friends? Let's do it. Let's do the
news Bobby's best. The search efforts for missing people can
be very intense, so you love it when anyone will
(59:31):
come out and volunteer at their time. I mean, this
is obviously a story with the Gavin Tito. For a
while they were searching for her. But a guy who
was reported missing on Tuesday, his family and friends couldn't
find them, lost complete contact with them, so they started
searching for him. Well, he had gone out drinking with
some friends. He had wandered into the woods, got a
little lost himself, which was why it took him so
(59:53):
long to reunite with them. But what happened. There are
a bunch of people in the woods looking for him.
He didn't know what was going on, so he joined them. Oh,
he helped for hours look for He was like, well,
i'm here, let me just help look for whoever you
guys are looking for. And so he looked. Eventually he
noticed that one of them was yelling his name. Oh,
and he's like, I mean, I'm right here. And then
authorities are like, yeah, that's you. They called off the search.
(01:00:15):
He went home, Oh, this is interesting and weird, Like
they weren't yelling his name from the beginning. Here's a
watch crew called him my name. That is so bizarre,
how bizarre the whole thing. Speaking of the Brian laundry search,
Gabby Petito, which, by the way, I'll say this Dogs
(01:00:37):
bounty Hunter, listen, if he goes down and he finds laundry,
like thumbs up National Hero because he keeps it. Yesterday
on TMZ they were like, Dog bounty Hunter said he's
gonna pull up to a spot in an hour, and
I'm like, why would he reveal that? And they I
don't think he did. But it's like a dog the
bounty hunter knows exactly where he isn't he's going to
(01:00:58):
get him, gonna be there according to the GPS, he's
there in fifty four minutes. Heads up, Yeah so, And
I'm sure Brian Laundry's not sitting there on some Wi
fi you know, watching it like on Twitter that sounds yeah,
you refresh. So I keep reading the Dog to Bouny
Hunter stuff, which I don't think there's anything new on
Dog to Bounty Hunter except yesterday said he's gonna find
him in an hour. Anybody finding new dog stuff. But
(01:01:19):
if he finds them, like, let's go more people the better.
They're trying to find this guy, but investigators aren't ruling
out that Brian Laundry could be somewhere along in the
Appalachian Trail in North Carolina. The Florida man walked away
from his home in mid September after returning from a
trip without his fiance, Gabbett Petito. She disappeared. Her body
was found in Wyoming, homicide listed as the cause of
(01:01:40):
the death. But again, they're not accusing him of anything,
yet they want him, They want to talk to him.
It's strange that he's gone. Do I think he's gone
for a reason. Yeah, probably, you don't run away like
this unless sums up. But dog to bounty hunter is
rounding up hiker survivalists and others. Has he heads to
(01:02:00):
North Carolina himself to track down Laundry. So yeah, but
he's he's a suspect, right, I'm assuming everybody's act. Yeah,
for sure. But it's just the point they keep saying
is we're not searching for him because we have a
worn out for his arrest. We want to talk to him. Oh,
I'm sure they know something, Okay, So that's just so
maybe he hears that and he's like, oh, they just
want to talk to me. Maybe I'll go in, maybe
because I'm like, you are you are wanted? Yeah, Like
(01:02:23):
in my mind he is a very wanted. How does
this guy person of interest? I don't know. Did you
take a bunch of cash with them? You wearing a wig?
Off the grid? Is he eating off the land? Like?
Is he eating berries and wild things and mushroom? Even
if you go to the middle of nowhere, there's someone
there and there's a drone somewhere, there's someone always there.
(01:02:44):
Like you can't go anywhere in this country where no
one's just not hanging out. Yeah, they see him in
Candida the candidate. Thing I knew was kind of a
far from the beginning. It's a blurry uh TikTok video
and it's a ball dude with a beard. Every ball dude.
Maybe he's wearing a wig, yeah, a shave. I'd wear
a wig. I'd go to Spencer's buy a fat suit.
(01:03:06):
I mean I do all that. Yeah, Like I if
I walked by someone that was had hair and no beard,
I wouldn't think it was him. Like every morning I
walk into see Scuba Steve, but one eye just to
make sure. But they can't. They can't find the guy
wild he might be dead. I mean, that's maybe why
they can't find him, because he went and killed himself
(01:03:26):
somewhere and they don't get But I was listening to
a guy who lives near the Florida area where they
think he is because there's like six places they think
this guy could be, and he goes, I don't think
he's here one because he wouldn't make it because I've
lived in this lamp for thirty years, like on the
edge of it, and you don't go in here. The
mosquitos will kill you if they don't. It's the snakes.
And he starts listing all the animals. Just secondly, if
(01:03:49):
there's a dead anything, especially a body, there are buzzards
and he says, I haven't seen any buzzards. Say so,
I don't think he's here. And if he is here,
I don't know how he's surviving. And if he has surviving,
well I never seen it before. But they cannot find him.
You're a theory lunchbox. Well, I like John Walsh's theory
(01:04:09):
about how he planted his car there and everything to
make it seem like he's there and he's somewhere totally different,
So everybody is searching in that area when really he
had a week's head start and he is somewhere else,
maybe out of the country or across the country. But
I think that makes more sense. And they did confirm
that he went to the phone store and bought a
Burner phone, but his lawyer said, I believe that the
(01:04:33):
FBI has that phone, that he doesn't have it with him,
and he has a worn out for his arrest for
using Gabby Barrett's credit card or debit card and you
spending a thousand dollars after she was dead. He's a
person of interest in her. Yeah, there's too many Gabbys
(01:04:58):
in my life. There's two Gabbies, I know. Yeah. The
phone thing's interesting because he started he opened an AT
and T account, yes, and then left that new real
life phone at his house like one day later. It's
like open an account, left it there, and the Burner account.
I think could have been his mom who had it
and gave it to him. So I don't know if
there's how they can't find him, I don't know. I
don't think find I feel like the government can find everybody,
(01:05:21):
and I can't believe you can't trace burner phones. Like
with all the technology, you would think he would be
able to trace every single phone that is sold. I
understand that. That's why I'll buying burner phones today. That's
why everybody buys a burner phone when you're doing illegal stuff.
But it's just crazy. An Illinois man who woke up
with a bat on his neck, Like, he woke up
and I was like, oh my godness, there's a bat,
like and bats are small sometimes, yeah, suck in his blood.
(01:05:42):
Well he died because because yeah, I beat him. WHOA
An Illinois man who awoke to find a battle his
neck weeks ago died this month in the state's first
human case of rabi since nineteen fifty four. Dang, And
not every bat has rabies, right, I don't know, haven't.
Like I would think some do, but not all of them.
I would think a lot of them do, because even
(01:06:03):
if you touch one, you have to get a rabies shot, right,
just to be preventative. Yeah, they found the animal on
his neck in mid August. He declined treatment. In a
month later, he got symptoms of babies and died. Man.
The CDC and Prevention confirmed the diagnosis Tuesday, that is crazy.
I didn't know he'd declined treatment treatment when I read
(01:06:23):
this story the first time, but that, yeah, that stinks
at a friend and it's not the same anymore. Listeners
have told me. But who had touched a bat? Because
bats look like almost big bugs sometimes are really cute too. No, no, no, no,
they are from Afar close up they're so cute. But yeah,
have you looked at their little face with a little pig. Okay, anyway,
they had to like shoot them with shots all in
(01:06:43):
the stomach for a long time. It's since then gotten better,
but in the last ten years it was like multiple
shots in these of rabies, the rabies. Yeah, and didn't
we have a listener calling and talk about it's like
super expensive to get all that done, like if you
and so that could be a reason if you decline
it too, if you don't think you need it. And then,
because I remember we were challenging, I was like, what,
there's no way it's like did the callers it was
like ten thousand dollars or something. Yeah, I don't remember,
(01:07:06):
but I think we could have got to go find
me up for that. Dude. Yeah, if it's like I
might die of rabies. Can somebody please help me? All right,
that's the news, Thank you boys. Story on the phone,
we have Lauren in Florida. Lauren, what's going on? Hello,
good morning studio. Okay, so living in Florida. We got
(01:07:29):
the whole scoop on the Brian laundry saying whatever his
name is. Um. First of all, did you see on
the news dog going and being in on his parents store?
We did dog walk right right up. I was like boom,
boom boom. Yeah. Yeah, he kept going back last night.
I saw him the news. He kept going back and back.
They don't show you that the news. But does he
think they're just going to open the door and like
(01:07:50):
welcome him in. I think he just wants to publicity.
He just wants the publicity. But if he finds him,
he deserves his publicity, you know. But yes, I think
right now it's just him wanting to be in the
headline as well. Yeah, he's grows sorry that he scro No.
So what they're saying on the news here is the
FBI does not want him helping because he can kind it.
(01:08:14):
I don't know what the word is hinder there. They're saying,
if he finds evidence and stuff it could maybe not
be used in court, so they don't have to help.
It's like, yeah, I don't think he cares, does he
loves his own rules. It's crazy to me. Sometimes there
can be something so solid and if there's like one mistake,
(01:08:34):
but it's like legit, something that could convict somebody, but
someone did something wrong like mishandled the evidence or whatever,
and it gets thrown out. I mean, Eddie almost went
to prison per extortion. But I know that's crazy. Oh
did they use a lot of detective that's not a
missable in core um Lauren, That's not true, by the way, Lauren. Yeah,
(01:08:55):
thank you for the call, Lauren. We appreciate that. Yeah,
you have a good day too. Let's go to Audrey,
also calling us from Florida. Audrey, what's happening? Good morning,
studio morning. So, in talking about Woody the woodpecker or
Woody woodpecker, I'm sure, I'm still not sure who's right
about that. But do you know what kind of woodpecker
(01:09:17):
would he? Well, let's go to Amy, our bird expert.
Amy is he redbellied woodpecker? He's not. Oh, I don't
know that. I don't know that's that's the only visitor.
That's the only woodpecker that comes from my feeder. Um,
Woody is affiliated woodpecker googling now and that and that
(01:09:38):
funny laugh that he makes, that's the sound that affiliated
woodpecker makes, this real loud sort of laughing kind of call.
Cool kid. Thank you, We appreciate that. So now you know,
Now we know. I know way more about Woody woodpecker
than ever thought I would. So the woodpecker goes. And
(01:10:00):
when I was walking in the woods the other day,
I heard I was playing a cliff in the cartoon.
It was a dang woodpecker. Hey, thank you for the call, Audrey.
I have a great day, all right, have a great day.
She brings that up because the lunchbox found her rocked.
It looks like Woody Woodpecker. He wants to sell it
for what's the opening price? One thousand dollars. We're gonna
get that up and see how much it goes for.
(01:10:20):
Can we put a picture of what he next to
this rock and put it up on like our Instagram
or Twitter, And don't forget about Abraham Lincoln. We can't.
We won't forget about em, all right, let's talk about
how you got famous for just a second. Michael in
North Carolina is on the phone. Michael, what is your story?
It's about my sister. Actually, she went to McDonald's on
(01:10:44):
the Monopoly game and said she won the Monopoly places
and they gave her a bunch of free food and
called the news media. And when she got home there
were like ten news crews at her house and she
couldn't produce anything. She just kind of made it up.
(01:11:07):
She didn't really win Monopoly, and she said she did.
That's hardcore. Wow. Yeah, she just kind of made it
all up. Did she admit to them she made it up?
Or did she just not come out? No, she admitted
she made it up. She just wanted the attention. Oh
my bere they don't ask you for proof. I guess not. Wow. Hey,
(01:11:30):
thanks for that, called Michael. All right, thank you. Fine,
that's a weird story. That's so weird. Let's hear Eddie's story,
because Eddie did get wildly famous for a day. Yeah,
what happened. I thought it would be longer than a day,
but I was working news. I was a cameraman and
it was on a Sunday. I'll never forget it. It
was a marathon. And I go out there and I'm
shooting video of the marathon, and I just put the
(01:11:52):
camera on a tripod and I shot a wide shot
of the actual marathon. I sat back and just kind
of looked around, and then I see a meteor in
the sky, like a fireball. And this is nine o'clock
in the morning, so it's daytime, and the fireball just
goes across the runners and I look at my camera.
I'm like, did I get that? And I rewind it
(01:12:12):
and I'm like, sure enough. So I run back to
the station and I said, guys, I caught a freaking
media on camera. And the people, I mean, they're only
three people working on the weekends. They're like, cool, thank you,
give me the tape and go back to work. So
they did nothing. Monday morning. The news directors like, let
me see that tape, and he says, oh my gosh,
this is amazing Eddie. So he starts sitting out to
all the media outlets. Everyone picks it up. I get
(01:12:34):
calls from CNN, ABC, NBC, CBS, BBC, Al Jazeera, all
of them. They call me at home. They said, Eddie,
come back. Everybody wants to interview you, and you did
all those interviews. Yeah, here's the clip of Eddie on
which one CNN. Here you go, take a look at this.
It is a fireball today over Austin, Texas. A cameraman,
(01:12:55):
his name is Eddie Garcia of our local affiliate News
eight Austin was filming a marathon when mysterious objects streaked
out of the sky. CNN spoke with him about his
amazing video. When you see something like that, it's uh,
I don't really know what it is, and you just
kind of you stare at it for a little bit
and then you just wonder for the next five minutes
what was that? And for me, I wanted to make
(01:13:15):
sure that I got that on tape and I sure did.
He certainly did, and everyone you did. The thing is
you did nothing, and good for you. I'm into it,
you know what, Like it comes out year after year,
like oh, meteor caught on camera. They're all doorbell cams,
not a camera man like meat. It was so cool
that the Astronomical Society gave they found the meteor, like
(01:13:38):
I don't know, three hundred miles away, and they gave
me a little piece of the meteor. Yeah, and then
you ask that guy and he said it was fake. No.
What the weird part about it is you did nothing? No,
I shot, I shot, But I think it's great luck
you didn't know it was coming, but you did nothing
like that could have had you stayed in that field,
that could have propelled you to other like camera jobs. Yeah. Yeah,
(01:14:02):
that would have been the start of my resume tape
up level one of them. Do you remember me running
to your house? I'm talking about it. I mean, it's
it's fine, but I'm also bore talking about it now, Okay,
all right, I guess my fifteen seconds are over. Yeah again,
let's have some more costs though. Let's seem Carl and
(01:14:22):
Georgia up online one. Carl, what's going on, buddy? How's
it going, sir? Good? What would you like to say? Well?
I was playmous whereas we had a Robert break into
our shore, and instead of taking the normal response, we
decided to offer the guy's job and had no idea
that the story was gonna go absolutely viral and end
(01:14:43):
up on CNN and Today's Show and wow, pretty much everywhere.
The guy robbed you and you offered him a job.
Because you're like, hey, you must be going through hard times. Yeah, exactly.
It was on the East Sunday, and I don't know,
I just felt like the godly approach to the situation.
And he broke in. I think it was like it
was a Saturday night or Friday night who were wrought
through our door and stole the cash register. And I
(01:15:07):
remember that out didn't harm anybody. Now I know he's
talking about this. I remember this story. Hey wait, so
whatever happened to him? So we um we had an
anonymous tip. We did find out pretty much here the
guy was and he has a pattern of doing this.
One of his friends friends breaked out to me and
was like, look, you can't say this guy un fortunately,
(01:15:30):
and believe it or not, he ended up getting picked
up in Thomasville, Georgia for the same crimes. Unfortunately. The
guy just doesn't just doesn't want to do right. It
sounds like, well, may good for you for reaching out
and trying to make a difference in that guy's life,
Like you did more than I think nine percent of
other people would have done. So uh yeah nice. And
then him being on CNN and the Today Show and
other people hearing that inspires other people to look at
(01:15:52):
things differently if something bad happens to them. Hey think
Ray got a job? Squatted living here at the radio station.
I was like, hey, come produce the show. Yeah, hey,
thank you, Carl. Appreciate that. Call man. She's like a
good guy. We love the show. Take care, see you, buddy.
Let's go. Randy and Texas is on the phone right now. Randy,
how are you famous? For just a minute? Well, I
(01:16:13):
ended up getting caught up in some crimes. I was
real bad in my younger days, about five and a
half years ago, and I was with an older woman
who decided she wanted to hire somebody to kill her husband.
What do you mean you were with an older woman
like you were eating her? Yeah? We were. We were dating.
She had a husband, they'd been split up for years
(01:16:34):
or whatever, and I don't know. We were on drugs
and everything, and she just had this wild idea that
she was going to call somebody and try to hire
them to kill her husband. What happened? How are you saying? Well? Well, well,
the FBI and the Texas Rangers they ended up catching
the case and we were on the run in Florida
for some other charges. And I went to Dale on
(01:16:57):
some local charges, and next thing I know, I got
the FBI and the Texas Rangers pulling me out of
the county jail to talk to me about this. And
I guess she had called somebody to try to hire
them to kill her husband and was going to offer
him like a hundred thousand dollars from some kind of
life insurance policy or something. I don't know, So whatever
happened with you? Are you calling us from the pen
right now? Are you good? You're straight? No? No, man,
(01:17:19):
I got out about a year and some change ago,
and I'm actually doing super great. Man. I got a
great career. I just had a baby about a month ago.
I got married in June in Vegas. I'm doing super
good now. But that's good to hear it. You keep
up with the old lady, thank man? Would she up
to now? She married some lesbian and lived in South
(01:17:43):
Texas somewhere. But so, y'all, this story got picked up
on the news. That's how you were had some fame
is because this is like a nationwide story. Yeah it was.
It was our nation wide news. It was okay on
ABC and all kinds of stuff. We've always wanted to know.
(01:18:05):
Sometimes we have stories where people hire hit man or
they seek them out. So I guess now it's interesting
to hear that y'all were on drugs and you thought
it was maybe okay, Idea, how is she not in jail?
What do you mean? Well, if she tried to hire
a hit man, how's she not in jail right now? Well,
she went to jail and they only gave her five
years because she told the fits that I was part
(01:18:28):
of it, so they gave her a lower sentence. She
actually got out before I did, and I really didn't
even have nothing to do with it. Well, you didn't
really have anything do with it. You didn't have anything
to do with it. No, I didn't have anything to
do with it. But like, do google someone to a
hit man? Or how does she find the person she's
going to reach out to? Well, she reached out to
one of her friends in North Texas and he ended
(01:18:50):
up having some charges. He wanted to get off, so
he just went straight to the cops. And I was like, Hey,
the sticks trying to hire me to kill her husband?
He said, what's up? He went to the cops and
I was like, what's up? I'm trying to get out
of these charges. That did they let him? Did they
help him at all? Did some of his charges? Yeah?
He got he got, He got off all of his charges.
Oh that's correct. We have to do is be lucky
(01:19:10):
and get something like a pyramid scheme because then someone
then then someone could go do that with her. She
could do that with someone. But yeah, say, you're gonna
never get off. It's like paying Peter. Yeah. Well listen,
let me say this about you, my friend. It sounds
like you made some bad decisions early, but it's not
where you start, it's where you end. And I'm proud
(01:19:30):
that you've cleaned yourself up, that you you're you're working,
you got a baby. You sound good, and you realize
now all those mistakes that you made. I think for
you as a person, that's pretty freaking cool. Man. Oh yeah,
it's amazing, man. And I don't regret my past. I
made some bad decisions, but it made me the man
I am to day, and I don't. I don't regret it.
I probably regret some of that, but that's just me.
(01:19:52):
That's just me. No, he can't. You're dealing with that.
You can't live that way to repair and move on right, No,
I get it, um all right? Well is there anything else? Yeah, Randy,
just yeah, keep doing what you're doing to make sure
that you stay the course. It's probably not asking a question, right,
(01:20:14):
be done with the questions with Randy. You just never
know we're gonna get Well, you can call that anytime, Randy.
How'd you meet your current How did you meet your
your current girl life? Well? I knew her. I knew
her a little bit before I went to prison, but
after I got out, I was in the halfway house
and I just was on Facebook, you know, for the
first time in like five and a half years, and
(01:20:36):
I just started going crazy and talking to girls and everything.
And I ended up talking to her and we hit
it off, and it turns out we're kind of soulmates. Nice.
What's prison like? Oh boy, Oh dude, it's terrible, really
because sometimes people like at that bad but it sucks. No.
I went to the FIDS and I was in like
a medium facility in Oklahoma for like two and a
(01:20:56):
half years, but I got transferred to maximum facility because
I got in too many fights. And then as soon
as I got there, it was like a crazy eye
opener because everybody stabbing everybody, and it was just wild.
Everybody stabbing everybody. That song sucks. So with like things
they brought in or they make shanks or what now
(01:21:19):
they make them in there. They cut them out of
their beds, they cut them out of their locking they're
legit nice. They sharpen them to where it'll cut the
hair off your arm. How many did you stab? Just
like one exected? You're all right? Does it? Sorry? We're
just we're fascinated because clearly we don't have a lot
(01:21:39):
of friend did you have a phone? Did you have
a phone? I want to have a phone. Didn't I didn't.
I didn't have a phone. But there was a lot
of people that had phones. But you could get like
six months extra time if you get caught with a phone.
So chance did you? Was key string? Real? People put
in their button? Bring it to you. It's super real.
It's super real, super real. What was the biggest thing
(01:22:00):
you thought would get key strad in? I've seen somebody
carry in a ten inch knife. This is the greatest call.
Let me just pause for a second. Friends, are you
listening to this show for a long time? Some of
you have since we've started this thing. We've been doing
it for a long time. This might be the greatest
call we've ever had. Yeah, I'm nervous, me too, Me too. Okay, listen,
(01:22:23):
Wall you've got to go because Scuba Steve says, we're
out of time. But Randy, you're our guy. You are
are you are? You are the guy you call in anytime.
I almost want to give Randy my cell phone number.
I'm not going to, but I almost want to give
Ready my cell phone number because this is a plus
material right here. Randy, I'm proud of you. You you've
shaped up, You're live in your life. Sounds like you're
living an honest life. Keep up the good work, my friend. Yes. Third,
(01:22:47):
y'all guys have a great day. All right, you too.
I'm just gonna say before, because we're way over time,
I'm just gonna say when I said, how many people
did you stab? Really thought it'd be a zero? Yeah?
You thought? I saw in your face and he are
he was trying to survive. He goes one. Hey, it's
not that bad man, just one. I mean, that's just good.
I'm listening. That's a scared straight call. Because if you're
(01:23:09):
a kid listening right now, stopped what No. He made
it sound like, hey, stay on the straight and narrow.
You don't want to go to prison because people are
getting stabbed at. Everyone has a knife. I'm exhausted. We'll
take a break, come back bye. And for some reason
you're just now turning us on. I implore you to
(01:23:31):
go and check out our podcast from today. We had
possibly the greatest caller of the past, well at least year.
I mean today September thirtieth. I would at least give
him caller of the year, but top caller in the
history of the show, Like if there's tough because I forget,
I forget. We've had some good callers over the years,
but that's that's really a great When we put up
in the Mountain rushmore of calls, he called because we're
talking about how were you famous for a second and
(01:23:53):
he goes, well, I was dating an older ladies try
to kill her husband. And we were like, well how
about that, And then he goes, well, then I got
put in prison because she kind of said I had
more involvement than I did. And they were like, whoa,
we'll look at there, and he's like, well, then she
ran off with a woman and they were like, okay,
how about that? Good for her? And then he's like, um,
I stabbed someone in print. When we're okay, then we
started to get nervous, like we were gonna get put
(01:24:14):
in jail for knowing this stuff. It's just searched for
the Bobby Bone Show podcast. Listen to that. Just think
to call Chef's Kiss. Listen. That's that's what you want
when you do a show like this today, throwback Thursday,
let's go, I bring it up because today. In nineteen
(01:24:35):
ninety one, Roping the Win by Garth Brooks Come On
became the first country music album to debut at number
one on the pop chart. Debuted one on the Pop chart,
It was also number one of the country chart. Yeah
No Where his other two previous albums, No Fences In
Garth Brooks also held the two and five positions at
the same time on the country chart. Think about that,
he had one, two and five. The only person I've seen,
(01:24:57):
album wise do something similar is Chris Stapleton, and that's
not pop. He didn't do the pop thing to be
sitting up so high on the chart, like when you
put out you know, from a room. And he also
had Traveler, you know, Stapleton kind of had this going on.
But the top five radio hits from Roping the Wind
that came out on this day at nineteen ninety one,
at number five, Rodeo, Yes, it's balls and blood. It's
(01:25:20):
a dust and bus roar of a Sunday crown. It's
the wide and nuts, the gold in the bufa wheel
wind in the next door around at number four, pap
Love Mama, Mama was a looking hard out to shine,
Yellow skind Mama Mama Love Man. Mama's in the graveyard.
(01:25:44):
Papa was in the bin. The jam was so good
jam at number three, one of my mount Rushmore of
Garth songs, The River You said will so it doesn't
matter what's happening in your life. This relates in some way.
This is the always relatable song. There's always crap happening.
These Waters are My Sky at number two, Shameless and
(01:26:16):
spending four weeks at number one. The biggest radio hit
from that record is what She's Doing. Yeah, just what
she's doing on this day in nineteen ninety one. That's
the deal. That record came out number one on the
pop chart, which is crazy. Wearing that blue and black
striped shirt, black jeans, skyboy hat did you have to
(01:26:39):
google that? I would? I would recreate it in my
bathroom mirror and stare at myself back in the day.
True story, Oh Eddie was Eddie nand Garth record cover
the back of it? What song goes on? What record?
I was in the fan club. My parents even spent
one hundred and fifty dollars to get the tour jacket
that year. One hundred dollars. My parents like, okay, there's
(01:27:00):
the only person you're getting for Christmas. Let's it. And
so you had the garth towards you. Yeah. I remember
going to a funeral and he was all shiny with
like diamonds on it. You wore a garth towards Jack funeral.
I look at looking back now, I shouldn't have done that,
but I remember my cousin's being like, what are you doing.
I'm like, this is my new garthwer like my Jack.
We're sorry about Uncle Tony, but come on sorry day.
(01:27:22):
This story comes to us from Iowa. A twenty three
year old man was driving to the store and he
was going one hundred and three in a sixty five.
When he gets pulled over. They're like, hey, what are
you doing. He's like, it's an emergency. I am going
to get sanitary products for my wife. What's the guy's name, Yeah,
I can't pronounce it. Okay, Justice for that guy. But
(01:27:44):
he's lying, well, you got lie listen, I don't know
and it could be an emergency. Okay, we're calling Peter.
Justice for Peter dangerous. You know, he should get off
of the morning A stern morning. Yea, how fast was
going one hundred and three and a sixty five because
he had to get pads for his wife. Okay, it's
(01:28:04):
not necessary. Interesting pads would be the term. Well, sanit
terry pads is what they're calling. We got it. We
got the point the first time, did he hit anything?
Didn't hit anything, but he put lives at risk? And yeah,
but you know what, every time Amy gets on the road,
lives or at risk too. Did he get in trouble? Yeah,
he got his license suspended in a four hundred dollars ticket.
Than justice for Peters. What I say all is that
(01:28:25):
I'm lunchboxed at your bone head store of the day
for a thousand dollars. Who would try out wearing a
bulletproof vest and letting someone shoot them. Can't do it.
Not thousand dollars, No, no, nope, okay, five thousand dollars,
No lunchbox, five thousand bucks man, five thousands a lot
of money, bulletproof vest and someone gets to shoot you man,
(01:28:50):
I just worry about them missing the bulletproof vest. I
thought about it, but no, no, you can't do the five.
I mean you put ten thousand. I think I could
do it. Ten thousand buckshot. Put the bulletproof vest down.
Let you. Police are investigating a report of a shooting
after an unidentified man received treatment. They said that he
and family members were trying on bulletproof vests when he
(01:29:12):
allowed another person to shoot a minute when he tried
it on. Quote something like this is definitely not a
good idea. We don't know much about what happened because
he wasn't saying, but a bulletproof vest is not a catchall.
While bulletproof vests are a good safety tool, they are
not one hundred effective and will not stop a bullet
all the way every time. Oh well, factors such as distance,
(01:29:34):
the bullets, caliber, and other things will affect the bullets
impact on the vest. He's in the hospital. Yeah, they
should probably change the name. Yeah, they should change it
to bullet maybe reproof. What do repellent bullet maybe gonna
go through? Maybe not? Yeah? Vest or like cops only
and this is not for sure? Yeah yeah, that's yeah.
(01:29:56):
Bulletproof is the only bulletproof. What about you? How much? Zero? Never?
A million? Oh my gosh, sign me up. You can
all take a shot an island of us. But then
what if you die? Launch vous? Is that worth it?
Sim's a millionaire? Okay. Sometimes when you get shot with
a bulletproo vest, just the impact of it hurts you
pretty bad. So so I hear TV two, I believe everything. Yeah,
(01:30:22):
that's crazy that bulletproof vests aren't really bulletproof, and I
just thought they were. Okay, you guys, have a good day.
We'll see you tomorrow. Elvie Shane is in. He sings
that song that Ain't My Boy, That's got my name
body feeling We'll see you tomorrow by Everybody Show