Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Go on, Lisa, Welcome to Monday Show. More in studio morning,
but later on Easton Corbin will be in. Easton has
songs like I'm a little more country than that than
he has. Listen Loo LoVa d anybody knew I needed
(00:27):
it for that one. But he's gonna come in and perform.
It'd be good to see him. Been a while. All right,
let's go around the room here. Hey, yeah, yeah, Eddie,
you're up first. We do a segment called Eddie the
Dad and he recently made his son right one hundred
and fifty sentences for being bad. Oh yeah, here he is, Eddie.
Someone please explain explained to me how insurance works, because
somebody came to my door and told me that I
(00:48):
have a chance for a deal of a lifetime. It
was a guy that works on the roofs and he says, hey,
you've had hal come by, you know, the last few weeks.
I guess we got hale like a month ago, two
months ago? Yes, I don't know, Okay, my wife said
that we did. Okay, I wasn't home. We did, okay,
especially got it. Okay, I guess I wasn't there. So
then the roofer goes look, it's everyone in your neighborhood's
(01:10):
doing it. So you can claim on your insurance that
you have hal damage. I'll go up there check it out,
and if there's a little hell damage, you can tell
your insurance. We'll get you a whole new roof and
you just pay your deductible, which is gonna be cheaper
than replacing a whole roof anyway. I'm like, how does
this work? That's how it works. That's exactly how it works, dude.
If you have hal you call a roofer, they say
hail damage. You get a whole new roof. But what
(01:31):
is your deductible? Do you know? I don't know if
you need to find that out, because if it's really high,
it just depends if you're going to put a new
roof on anyone. You're telling me, I can get a
whole new roof, whole newf for what, like what's an
average adductible three thousand, three five thousand, and that's how
much is a whole new roof normally ten? Maybe I
(01:51):
would have said more for your house, damn. And it's not.
It's not a scam, and you can get the expensive
shing goes because it's paid by it's not it's interest,
it's it's borderline. I mean, I drive up and down
my neighborhood and everyone's getting their roost redone everyone everybody
was jumping off a bridge. Would you yeah, okay, I wouldn't.
I might. That's different though, But it's legit, right, So
(02:14):
if you do have hal damage, why do you have
insurance well to make sure that if you're damage, it
can fix it. So if they go up and go, yep,
he has damage, you file a claim, then they fix it,
you pay your deduct that's it's it's legit. But I
would have never known I had hailed damage, and if
this guy hadn't come to my door and told me
what's not legit? As sometimes they will do this and
there is no hell damage, or they'll go you don't
(02:34):
even have to Wi'll pay your deductible because we're gonna
make so much off of it. So that happens. But
they didn't say that. They didn't say that. They're probably
just doing all the roofs around the neighborhood. Yeah, they're busy.
Here's what I would say. I'm a man of integrity.
But if you have held damage, you have hel damage.
I would say, go check it out, let me know,
so I should get aladder inspecting myself. I wouldn't. You
don't know what it looks like, and you will die
and we need you on this show, all right. I
(02:56):
would just say yes, call him back, say we'd love
you to check it out, let me know if we
have it, and then let me find out my deductal list. Dang, Okay,
let's go, because that sounds like a deal of a lifetime.
If you had to get a new roof soon. If
you're not getting your room for five ten years, maybe
not okay, but a new roof soon. It's timing. Maybe
couldn't have been better, all right, let me check this
out right. Well, I'm just chucked at Eddie's like I
don't understand how insurance works because this is like you're insurance,
(03:20):
Like yeah, like if my roof fell off, I'd be like, oh,
insurance will cover that. I get that part, well, but
I feel like my roof is fine. This guy just
knocked on my door and told me it's probably not.
So it's that part because I'm like he does get it,
Like you're paying into it all the time, so like
it's not just free like, is my roof right now?
We're not having to pay for anything, but we're put
it under some insurance that we got like sixteen years ago,
(03:41):
and we've been paying into it and paying into it,
so it's probably all free. Yeah, you go for it.
I let him check it out. And if they say
hell damage good. And if they're doing the other roofs good,
if they're like from town good. They don't always have
to be from town. Because I used to travel and
we used to do roof houses. There'd be major storms.
We would kind of regionally drive and go and put
bids in all places because they didn't have enough roofers
(04:03):
for all the roofs that have been damaged. But just
make sure you're working with a good company, all right,
I will Van. Thanks. He hangs out in bathroom stalls
and he's a pro doing prank calls here. He is
lunch bags, celebrity in the wild guys. I was at
the driving range the other day and I'm hitting some balls,
working like golf swing and some guy comes walking up
and he's about three people behind me, three mates behind me,
(04:25):
and gets out a tripod, puts a camera up and
I'm like, who is this? Tool out the celebrity yet. No,
I don't know what's a celebrity yet. And I'm like
and so he starts filming himself and he in long
pants a vest, looking like a pro golfer at the
driving range. Yeah, and I'm like, wow, this guy takes
I was wearing shorts and a T shirt. That's just fine. Yeah,
(04:46):
that's John range the care. I was like wow, And
I'm like, this guy takes his game serious. And then
he starts hitting him. He's hitting them far and straight.
I'm like, wow, I do it's pretty good. But the
camera and everything low over the top, and I get
my bag and I start walking back to the car
and I'm like, that looks like that dude from Old Dominion,
And so I had to go home and google him,
which did Brad tercy. Oh yeah, Old Dominion guitarists. That
(05:08):
dude can play. I saw him in a golf cart. No,
that was the other. That was the other one. One
of them was Wayne Gretzky playing golf. Really one and
Brad's dark, dark hair. Yeah yeah, but yeah, I recognized him,
but I didn't know his name, so I couldn't say anythingything.
But it was just two celebs on the driving range.
But at first I was like, major tool, and then
I realized it's him like a celebrities. I wonder if
(05:29):
he was like, gets a driving range dressed out because
you're gonna play golf later, because that is I'll say
it to his face when he's in here. Why do
you get dressed up at the driving range? But he's
shooting video? Maybe for Instagram? Yeah, maybe he was making tutorials.
I don't know, It doesn't matter. Is that. Do y'all
make audition tapes for talent or what? What are you
talking about? Like he's dressed up, got to look his
(05:50):
vest like film it submitted to be a part of
some tournament. Not really, but it's funny. Last what a
tool dressed uff like that? Michael gotta make a note
to ask him about that. Yeah, but he he hits
it pretty well. Yeah. He invited me to play once
and I was like, how good are you? I'm about
a three handicap and I'm like, I'm busy because he's
real good. Yea. When I was watching Hit, I was like, WHOA,
(06:11):
next up? Her son will send her a million calls.
Her daughter's learning to play softball here she is amy everybody.
So I ordered this MEXI vegan salad thing and I'm
eating it so good and all the things, sweet potatoes, lettuce,
and I take a bite and I it's bacon, and
I guess it. Vegan salad, vegan, not fake bacon, No bacon.
(06:35):
I know bacon bacon because I eat. I'm not vegan,
but this salad is so good, so I get it.
So for me it wasn't that big of a deal.
But I was already like a few cheese choose deep,
like I've eaten the bacon, and so it made me
think of Mike d who's vegan, or Morgan who's a vegetarian,
And I'm like, what would they do if they ate
bacon in a salad that had fallen in there accidentally?
(06:58):
How would what would they do? It's a great question,
Mike and Mike Gut. Why did you become a vegan?
I was training for a marathon and somebody said to
try it out. Stuck with it ever since. And you
like it? Yeah? I like it. So you're eating, all
of a sudden you realize you had a couple bites
of bacon. It's happened to me before. What do you do?
I had a salad. I start tasting it. I was like,
this is a taste of heaven't head in a while?
(07:18):
It was bacon. He's like, I feel so good? And
then are you upset? I was a little bit upset,
but it kind of broke my streak. But I don't
care a shrink. But do you go ask for like, hey,
are you mad? Refund? I was a little bit mad,
but it was a takeout order. I'd already got it.
What was I gonna do? Find it off? An email?
Like ray everyone Rey accused the business of poisoning him
(07:40):
and his wife love it. That wasn't the case at all. Okay, So,
but if it were about animals, think it would be
a different situation. Yeah, I don't do it for a
more reason. Yeah, because you're not more at all? Who cares? Right? Yeah? Morgan?
What about you? Oh? I would definitely throw up because
anytime I've accidentally ingested me now, I almost in the
next five minutes throw up. It's like my body rejects it,
and I've sent it back and I've called places when
(08:02):
they've actually input meat on because it actually makes me sick.
So what if you've had meat and didn't know it
and you didn't throw up. Is it only when you
realize there's meat? Did it trigger something and you throw up? No?
Because there was one time somebody confessed it was in
something and I had like serious diary ever, like a
whole day, and I didn't know why. So your stomach
was sick, I was. I got that. We were good
(08:30):
on that, all right, Ray go ahead from Mountain Pine
in Arkansas. He has a ghost dog at his home
and I don't believe that he's ever been to Rome
Bobby bo. That's true. That's true. So I want to
let you guys in on something. It's something we've talked
about in the post show before on the podcast, but
we don't hide from it. But when an artist comes in,
we do a segment of that interview and we go, hey,
(08:52):
these are uncomfortable questions that listeners have sent to us
about the interview. We I make them up, might make
them up, and then we just ask them under the
umbrella of well, listeners sent this, so if you're mad,
you got to be mad at the listener. So that's
us making these up. Like with Tim McGraw, we were like, oh,
it's an uncomfortable question from a listener did you sell
an island? And he's like, yeah, that stupid listener, how
do they want to know? That was us? So when
(09:15):
we do that segment, we say, well, it's sign for
uncomfortable questions from listeners. No, it's us. We make them
up and then we just blame you guys the listener.
That's great because you're faceless to them unless they're in
your town. They're like, oh, these crazy listeners. So behind
the scenes we won't mention this maybe once or twice
ever again, but it's our inside joke that uncomfortable questions
from listeners is really just us figuring out way to
(09:36):
ask a question without making it weird on us. You
guys knew that too, right You told us one time? Yeah,
before I told you, did you know that? No? Of
course not. No, I had no idea. I was like,
you want to listen to the interview launch. I didn't know,
but I figured, yeah, we've been doing this long enough. Ye,
it's time for the mail bag something year. Hello, doctor Bones,
(10:04):
I need some advice. As someone who hates exercising, probably
even more than you do. I've started to put on
some white lately and have not been feeling my healthiest.
I know I need to start doing something. I just
don't know where to begin. I currently work five to
six days a week, twelve to fourteen hours a day.
I wake up for work at three am and on
a good damn home by five. Some days I'm not
home till six or seven pm. There's no way I
(10:26):
can wake up any earlier. By the time I get home,
I have no energy. How do I get myself motivated
to go exercise when I just feel dead to the
world when I'm at home. Any advice would be greatly appreciated. Sincerely,
Tired in Tampa. That's a great question, because I think
a lot of parents feel this way. A lot of
people to have, you know, long days at work, have
(10:47):
to have long commutes back home, and then they have kids.
I think it's a very common thing, and it's a
absolutely reasonable reason as to why people can't get in
exercise when they've got other priorities. So, first of all,
if you're not alone, and it's very difficult with your
schedule to try to go and exercise for an hour
at like a gym or something. Man, if you're working
(11:10):
six days a week, two that's tough. So I ain't
saying by kids or anything running And now I'm not
a big runner. I hate exercizing, but I'm not a
big runner. But when I hear your schedule, I go,
what can you do quickly and from home? Right? Because
it's gonna save time of going to the gym, driving
there and parking, going in, buying a membership, Like running
(11:32):
is quick, just don't want some shoes, a little stretch
and go. And also it's just going to be uncomfortable
and you have to know that, Like, it just sucks.
There is no easy answer. This is how to do
it and how it's going to be easier. It just sucks.
You have a hard job, sounds like life kind of
got you right now, and there's not an easy way
to do it. If you could run during lunch, if
(11:53):
you have an hour lunch, you could spend twenty minutes
of it running two miles yea, and go from there.
You could do a couple of miles here, a couple
of miles after work? What do you do that? What
do you call a prison workouts? Where you just like, yeah,
must people call a body way work out? Yeah? Because
you're just like it feels like you've got nothing else
to do in no weights or whatever, just work out
same type of running, like things you can do at
(12:14):
home where you don't have to go to the gym.
You absolutely can get the same. It's it's about the
amount of work you put it in, not how fancy
the equipment is that you have. Amy, what do you say, Well,
something that changed for me drastically was five years ago
and one day suddenly I had two kids, and I
went from being able to work out whenever I wanted
to not And one thing I changed was just releasing
(12:35):
that pressure of having to do it all at one
time or fitting in a certain amount of time, and
so breaking it up like sometimes I'll I'll wake up
in the morning and if I've got a carve out
ten minutes, I'll do a little something there, and then
later in the day get in twenty minutes of something
and just releasing that pressure. And then slowly over the week,
it'll all those little pops will will add up, and
(12:56):
I think you'll feel the difference, like mentally and physically
you'll feel good. And I think if you have this
job where you're work at twelve hours a day, like
if the job is done when you're done, not based
on a clock. You can work out in the middle
of it a little bit, yeah, and just extend that
work day and actually just be worse at work, tired
at work than tired to work. I mean literally, you
(13:18):
know you can do it in the middle of the
work day. There are a lot of options here, but
I promise you it can be done. There have been
weaker people that have had it harder and been successful
at it, So I believe in you. You just gotta
make it a priority. Sometimes it's not a priority. Sometimes
there are just other things that are way bigger than
having to get an exercise. You should we all all
get your exersiyes. Sometimes life just comes at you and
you can't. Don't be nodding your head, Eddie. That's not you, No,
(13:41):
it is, because it's not. If it wasn't for you
to say, hey, we're doing this at three o'clock, I
would never do it right. But you could right. But
I've said we're doing at three o'clock, right, And so
I'm like, whoa whatever, I'm doing. Like you said, split
your work day, that's what I do. I'm like, I'm
not done with work, but i gotta beet. Bobby at three,
we gotta work out. I've done with work at three.
Sometimes du say that comes with that show biz baby
(14:04):
and there's so many fish Oh he just are you
so busy? So busy? I am so we believe in you.
There's a lot of ways to be efficient with exercise.
Don't feel like you have to get the best new
ways or best treadmill or best. You can do it.
Like Eddie said, prison workout, man, you can also run
and you can do it the mail of the day.
You can do it later. And there's so many on YouTube,
(14:26):
like you can just type in prison no no, no
t just like you know, quick at home workout, no equipment.
Thank you, close the mail back, We got your That
was about the I think Raimondo has got a pretty
(14:48):
solid jaw line, don't you. Yeah, Like, I think he's
got the best jaw line of all the dudes here.
Thank you strong jaw like start it describe Ramondo, who
runs our board, who is our head audio engineer. He
kind of looks like Mark Ruffalo. You know it plays
incredible hole Yeah, Mark Ruffalo would like not a lot
(15:09):
of sleep. Okay, I'm tired, But I think Rai's got
like this, like a great jaw line. And so I
was talking about this is like a cump on his jaw,
and he goes, you know, some guys pay for this.
I'm like, what are you talking about? So he sends
me a story about how guys are now paying tens
of thousands of dollars to have their jaws broken so
they can actually rebuild it, reshape it, and give them
(15:33):
a manly or looking jaw. Oh wow, give you that interest.
That's that's strong jaw. So what they did it took
a bunch of the guy's pictures and basically, when they
got their jaw fixed, women found them to be one
to one point five points hotter than they were before,
without even knowing why they were judging these guys and
only bumped them up one point. But that's pretty So
(15:55):
if you go from a six to a seven, that's
a yeah jomp at a point? Okay, curry, but yeah,
solid jaw. Right, But you've had some procedures, Yeah, not
job procedures. No, go ahead. Did the botox? Uh? Did
(16:15):
the prp in the in the hair? That's that that's
scalp needle in the scalp right? Correct? Yeah, blood, but
way less expensive than ten thousand dollars. That's insane. I
had because I cracked another tooth. I had to get
the botox in the jaw again. I don't feel anything again.
You might need you might look at it this way. Well,
the first time I did, I did very very very
very little scouts. I don't want botox because I have
(16:36):
to admit that, even if it's just in my jaw
that I got botox. I don't want to be because
I'm okay normalize getting botox. No, no for me, because
I'll get made fun of. I get made fun of enough.
Anybody else can say it. Fine, but all these guys here,
Oh yeah, I am. I am, Miss Piggy. You've been
getting botox. Well, first of all, you know this because
you're being an idiot, because I told you none of
your wrinkles are kind of gone. No, I got it
(16:57):
in my jaw. There are no wrinkles on my jaw.
Have you've been doing your lips through well, I got filler.
I thought, no, no, no no, but that your jaw
is so strong you need more. Well, so I told you, guys,
I got a little bit because I was scared of it.
It didn't do anything. So this time, and Eddie was
with me like an hour later, so it's full. And
I was like, dude, I had to shoot needles in
(17:19):
the like dirty places of my jaw because I grind
my teeth so hard. I'm not even sure botox does what.
It paralyzes a muscle, yes, so remore my jaw hangs.
That's not good in that. No, it's just going to
allow you. You're so tense right there that it's going
to just relax that area so that the you you're
(17:40):
building that muscle, it's a muscle right there, and you
can even there are sizers there that like sometimes I
grind so much, I build that muscle, but I've gotten
it in my jaw as well. And I saw that
muscle relax and go down because I wasn't working it
so much. Yeah, mine, how long would I do that?
Like a week? Yeah? Over a week ago? This tip
I crack. Yeah, I say cracked it like chipped off
(18:00):
a bottom because I grind so hard. And Cantlin's like,
you gotta go and do more because you didn't even
give it a good try. If you do it again,
it doesn't work, we'll try something else. I'm wearing mouth guards.
I got needles in the face. And then they're like,
whatever you do, don't work out for like six hours,
and I'm like, no, Eddie, and I are working on
an how sorry, Like yeah, and I just really you
can't work, maybe just don't go upside down or well,
then they said you can't lay you can't get your
(18:21):
heart rate up like one sixty, which I live over
one sixty working because we go hard. And then two
they're like, don't lay down. And you know what, I
do a lot of laying down. You're such a rubble,
thank you. But the whole time I'm watching my appa
watch going Edie, one thing to down. We gotta slow down.
I don't want to face to be paralyzed. But but
are you going back again this week? No? I don't.
I'm not going back. No. Oh you're done with botox.
It should last for months, but it doesn't work yet,
(18:43):
is my point? You guys still see me come here
in the morning. In the first half hour I'm here, Yeah,
you're like stretching, stressing my jaws out because I grind.
I clenched so hard so and then I have all
my teeth are fake. Whenever I first started to make
any money, at all because I'd busted teeth in the hole,
even the bottom ones. Huh. Oh wow, I had bad
teeth in my whole life. Could we I didn't go
to the dentist until my twenties. So I said, there
(19:04):
are two things I was gonna do by my mom's
somewhere to live and get my teeth fixed. And so
my teeth are fake? What did they do with all
the old stuff they're hanging up in his office? Oh dude,
they really put them up. No, I have no idea.
I don't. I didn't ask, so that would be cool, though,
Like you know, you go to some places, it's like, oh,
they have a picture of your client, like, oh, this
person working out of there's teeth, and then there's that
person's teeth. Don't take your teeth out. Yeah, but you
(19:26):
know whose dad did my teeth? Caroline Hobby's dad? Really huh?
I went I went down because I know what I
was doing, and he lives in Waco did maybe probably
still does, and he was like, yeah, we'll take care
of it. And I was like, I'm still embarrassed in
my teeth. My whole life had really bad teeth and
didn't go to the dentist forever and he's like, well,
get you fixed up. And so they did the top first.
Couldn't do both at the same time. To the top first,
(19:48):
and I I had to wear like a guard. Couldn't use
my front teeth for like three months. Oh, put them on.
Then they had do my bottom. Can you have my
front teeth for another three much? It was like six months,
like it never is my front teeth. That's tough. No
apples for you, And now I gotta Now I'm just
cracking them, cracking my teeth. Okay, we're gonna play this.
Thank you guys for hanging out. Um anybody when he's
(20:09):
their job broken for I thought about it. Everybody go
online would be awesome. Yeah yeah, but you can get
a better jobs. It's time for the good news. So
when you think of firefighters, you think of them putting
out fires, rescuing peoples les. Yeah, muscles, men and muscles.
(20:33):
Yeah I know that really done cross online, but go ahead,
well there, yes, they were strong doing like all the things. Well,
you can add why's she going on on? Start sweating ahead?
You can add hooking high school girls up with graduation
dresses and prom dresses? Wow, what's up? Well, they decided
to rally together. This is the Louisville Firefighters Union, and
(20:55):
they hosted a pop up shop where high school girls
could come and shop for dresses and shoes and jewelry
and accessories and all the things totally for free. This
is something where otherwise these girls might not have the
things that maybe some other people at school would happen.
It's called giving, loving, and heartfelt. That's it. That's the organization.
(21:17):
The neighborhood or the town can donate to stuff. Yeah,
like they're actively looking for donations because they want to
make this a yearly thing. This is the first time
they've ever done it. And they were able to give
away two hundred and thirty dresses and that's just so far.
And then they're working on creating a whole nonprofit again.
It'll be an ongoing thing. So if you know of
something like this in your community, I think it's a
(21:37):
great thing to donate to. I felt like we should
guld a hoose and jose Amy down after that first
part of that muscles and rippling, I said, men and
women biceps. I just said, like your pictures and passing
out dresses, really, no, you're a picture them do a
lot of things. You're a picture them with muscles, Okay, pectorals, lots. Right.
(22:00):
That's a great story, thank you. That is what it's
all about. That was tell me something good on the
Bobby Bones Show. Now Easton, Corbetty Easton. It's been a while,
so we've seen your buddy. Yeah, man, it's been a
little bit. Yeah, good to see you again. YouTube. Man
was looking here some old show notes and you were
one of our first guests ever when we started here.
And we've been here now ten years. We just hit
(22:21):
ten years and so you've been on since then. But
you were one of our very first guests. We were
so new the day it was March nineteenth, twenty thirteen.
We didn't really start until March first, doing the show,
you know, in multiple cities. So our second week you're in,
you're singing. We got to know you a little bit,
do you happen to remember? Not that show specifically, but
at that time, I don't know. People thought we were
(22:42):
just weird. They still do, but they were they warned you, like,
these guys are crazy. No, not really. I mean I
knew it was a new show, you know, at all,
But man, you know, I do remember over the years
doing Settle shows, you know, with you guys. And then
he was like, these guys are crazy. So he learned
himself that's like crazy too. So trust I won't say who,
(23:02):
but somebody in the studio I had seen you somewhere
and they were like, I didn't know that was at first,
but a pretty good looking guy, pretty beefed up, pretty
like muscular. And then then they like it, Oh, it's
Easton Corbin. And so I went to your Instagram. It
was like a picture you're doing curls or something. Arms
are massive, Like, what's happening over here? Buddy? Man? Just
trying to be worth the thern. I hear you like,
(23:23):
are you like bodybuilding? No? No, man, I just I
just love to work. Tell me he doesn't look massive.
Oh he looks big, he looks massive. I just man,
I just enjoyed. It kind of sets the tone for
the day, and you know it just yeah, it just
makes you feel better. You're a Texas tech fan. No,
it's funny. They rescuing me that you have a hat on.
I was down home, uh and my high school is
a Trenton Tigers god, and I seen a kid with
(23:44):
his hat on I was like, dude, I love that
hat and it was just for the baseball team and
Trenton Tigers, and so I took a picture of it
and I had my merch people. I was like, well,
I'll bet you they could probably make it. So sure enough,
I called them. They're like, yeah, we could design that.
So I just hadn't make me want Oh yeah, because
it's it's orange. It don't work for me. That's well.
And I think because somebody told me there was another
(24:06):
high school in Texas and they were whatever, you know,
talent starts with the Tea Tigers, and I guess they
were selling them, and I guess Texas. I think, send
them like a Ceason assist. Good, All right, Easton Corbyn's
here and I want to get to your new song.
Into second. We're gonna play the whole thing. So it's
called Mary that Girl. So we'll come back with that.
(24:26):
But what i'd like to do if it's okay? I
know you and who's your friend here? Yeah? We got
lorn over here. Man, how long you've been with me now?
Twelve years? Twelve years and all the same capacity like
playing playing with him? Yeah for the most part. What's
he like? What's what's he likes Easton d D No,
he's rad, he's super, super super chill. Do you have
guys work out together? You both have big arms? Is
(24:47):
that you have to have a massive arms in the group?
And T shirts? Yeah? Yeah, dark tight shirts. Literally yeah.
Every time I will show up and he's wearing the
same thing. Now, hold on, I show up first, So
every time I show up, he's Eddie and I do that.
Sometimes that's not today. You guys look great. Before we
(25:09):
get into the new song, HESA, could I just make
up requests? Ye? Would you mind playing a little bit
of a little more country than that? Yeah? Like my
wife will just randomly singing this around the house and
Jim and she's and I'm like, I was like, what's that?
What are saying? She's like a little more country than that?
And she has this version of the highwayman in her
mind and you're one of them, all right? Yeah yeah,
(25:30):
so that's not bad confidence. It's not well, you don't
know who the three are. It's me, Eddie and Lunchbock.
We'll do that too, a little a little bit from
Eastern Corbyn. Here's a little more country than that. Um
easan when you went to school. Did you study AGG?
Were you a NAG major? Guy? I did, Man, I
went to the College Agriculture, University of Florida and basically
studied AGG business. That's what am Yeah from Texas A
(25:53):
and M. Okay they called it AGG development. Okay, Well
the official name was Food and Resource economics, but it
was basically an HAG business degree. So what did you study? Like?
What what were the classes? Um, A bunch of economics classes.
That doesn't sound very country, but it was economics of
corn yeah maybe yeah? Yours similar turf management? Uh? Oh?
(26:20):
All my lab all my labs were on farms, like um,
we would go out to chicken farms or and be
with cattle and that's where our lab would meet. I
took a chicken sex class. What was more? Really, if
you went to Texas A and M around two thousand
(26:41):
and two thousand and three, you know what I'm talking about?
Chicken You signed up for chickens eggs. I don't even
know if the teacher that is still there, but it
was a very in class. Well, moving on to Easton here,
so you have ANUE song called Marry that Girl. Uh,
you're one of the riders of the song. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
like what you walk in. I always like to know
(27:02):
kind of how the idea came about or if somebody
showed up with the idea. Yeah, it was me, Adam,
Craig Way Kirby and Shane Minor. And you know a
lot of those writing session as you know, they all
start for about the first hours a big BS session. Hey,
chewing the fat, like you talk about a song catching
up And h Adam started talking about and I don't
know how we got on this, but he started talking
about how he met his wife and he's like, man,
(27:23):
as soon as I saw her, I knew I was
gonna marry that girl. And I kind of looked at
some of the other guys. I was like, man, that
might be the title for the day. So I'm glad
we went down that road. So how long did it
take you to write this one? Probably two or three hours,
not too long. So okay, So like he came pretty quick,
you know, nine am to three pm b a lett
of standard writing session. You know, you do it, you
(27:44):
maybe record. Okay, that's pretty quick, kind of fell out
of you. Yeah, but that's only after an hour of
chewing the fat. So this one came even faster than
that on the Bobby Bones Show now Easton Corbin. So
here's a clipp oft Easton's new song called marry that girl,
Gonna change your name. But she don't know men, Ye
(28:05):
she's but I've been praying something God bunching. I hain't
never been the same since we first. Man, I'm going
on everybod girl. Thank Hey, were you raising on a farm?
I was? Yeah, I grew up kind of on a
small cattle farm in North Florida my grandparents. And did
(28:27):
you have to do like chores before school? Not before school?
Because that's always a story, like I couldn't even go
to school until now. My grandpa used took care of that.
But after after it was when the chores began from me?
What what were the life lessons you learned from living
on a farm? Man? You learn, like you just learn
about life in general. You know death, you know being born,
and you know through the cows and stuff, and you know,
(28:49):
just through all the hard work. Then you know and
usually it it you know, lands on you. You know
it's up to you get it done. You know, Well,
ain't that right? You guys always counting on me. I'm like,
wh't you counting yourself? It's constantly the thing that Bobby
do it for me. I'm like, no, if you do
it for yourself, go work on a farm. Learn a
little bit. I had story of every morning here in
this show. Easton's here and he's nice enough to play
(29:09):
a few songs for us. Here would you do all
over the road? Just a little bit of that to
it all? Right? Here's Easton Corbin and Lauren's guitar player.
Than you can. I ask your question about your na Lauren. Yeah,
because I got picked on a lot for my name
and Bobby because there were Bobby girls. There's Bobby boys,
and I was on like fifty percent girl A big dudes.
I want to be as completely but it would be cool.
(29:31):
We cool? Right? Everybody was cool? Yeah? Cool. I don't
know what dude named Lauren? Uh, there aren't many. I've
only met a few in my life. But uh, mine
is the man version the spelling l O R E N.
So that makes me feel better, right, yeah, Lauren? Yeah?
And Easton your name? Where does that come from? Man?
I have no idea. I think maybe I was one
(29:52):
the day after Eastern Maybe I don't know. They just
said it wrong. I just I guess like being from Arkansas,
wind its window and maybe yeah Easton East, oh, Easton, Okay,
well go we go with that one. So you put
out a record in January, but I was trying to
look at some of the time. It's five years between, right,
it's been a while. Yeah. I put out a few
EPs and things since then. Yeah, but full length record, Yeah,
(30:14):
it's been a while. Why what was the deal there? Man?
Just uh, you know, I separated with Mercury and then
went about three years doing my own thing and just
writing a bunch and taking my time and just kind
of you know, looking for that right label home and
and finally found it with Benny Brown and and uh,
you know, Stone Country Records over there, and I had
a ton of songs that I had just stalkpiled over
(30:34):
the three year period of just writing and and honestly, man,
it was a really good period because you know, they
say you have your your whole life to write your
first record, and that three year period was like having
my whole life again to write all record and just
take my time and you know, write songs I love.
How old are you when you learn to play guitar?
I think it was a thirteen and why guitar who
(30:56):
was like, here this put this in your hands, into
guitar man. I just always loved the guitar are and
uh I came across the sky down home. His name
was Peee Milton, and he was from Greenville, South Carolina,
and retired in a little place called steen Hatchey, Florida
that you've never heard of. And there was a local
music store about, I don't know, ten fifteen miles from
there called Dixie Music, and they just happened to be,
(31:17):
you know, offering guitar lessons over there, and my dad
took me over and away I went, did you come?
Did you? Did you practice so much that you got
pretty good? Like we're that passionate about it? Oh? Yeah, yeah,
I was. Literally my routine every day would be come
home from school, I'd practice about three or four hours
in my room, and then it was time to go
feed up and do the farm stuff. Ah, the chores.
(31:38):
Always back to the chores. Okay, Easton Corbyn's here got
a new song called Marry that Girl. Can we get
one more from you? Guys? Come might playing one more?
Of course? I mean I hope for you to bring
your instruments here and I know, get chores to do
it the farm land, but let's let's play all music here.
Wouldn't do this? How about um loving you as fun?
You guys do that one. It's perfect. Nice job Eaton Corby.
(31:59):
So cook, you kind of feel like this is a
new like iteration of you and your your career here. Yeah,
I think so. It's it's given me a really great
opportunity to reset and you know, I say those last
three years to really get back to my roots and
you know, just write music that I love and get
back to what I love about country music, because you know,
it's funny when you make your first record and you know,
(32:21):
you don't know if you're going to have success or
not yet. You hope to, but you know, being new,
you just don't know. And once you do have success,
it's almost like, okay, you did that. Then you got
all these these other cooks that want to get in
the kitchen and put their spin on it, and it's like,
well that works, so why are changing it? Yeah? I
hate a good cook, you right right, But you know
what I'm saying. They try to, you know, they want
(32:43):
to change it when it's working and uh, this has
allowed me to really get back and you know, do
what I do. And that's what I love about Benny.
You know he loves country music too, and we're got
on the same page and it just worked. It's got
to be cool to like feel fulfilled absolutely again. Yeah,
and doing this, well, that's really cool. You mountain biking.
I love the mountain bike. I love the dirt bike.
(33:04):
What in the world you're gonna break something. You're at
that point now where you can't break something. You need
like a contract from Benny to go. You could do stuff,
but you can't do stuff. It's gonna hurt you. Like
been like these quarterbacks that can't go skiing. All right, right, man,
it's I love It's fun. Man. So I was loving you. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
I got it. I just don't know it savy wrecked.
(33:27):
Oh yeah, yeah. You if you're riding hard, you're gonna
put it down for sure. Write that down for a shirt.
If you're riding hard, you're gonna put it down. Riding hard.
I don't know. Well, just like it just sounds cool
harding to do roast stuff, but you know, obstacles and
things like that where it's just yeah, I mean, like
you compete. I'm sorry, do you compete? No? No, no no.
I just love the trail ride just a Lauren and yeah, yeah,
(33:47):
that's right, one on one to the death. Look, Easton,
we're super pumped that you got some new music. You
came back in. When they said Easton, let's come by,
I was like, let's go, let's do it, let's let's
bring them in. And I don't know what to say
except was this for probably a bunch of times that
we'll be seeing each other. I hope the singles crushes it.
Congrats on the new deal with your record label. I
know you know, Benny was instrumental a lot of people's
(34:09):
careers and it's kind of started something new. So that's
that's it's really need to see you. And I won't
say who, but somebody saw you again and said, man,
that's a good looking dude. Oh you want to do?
Uncomfortable questions from listeners? Should we do before we go?
All right? These are uncomfortable questions from listeners. Is Easton
Corbyn single? Yes? Okay, okay, okay? How much can Easton
(34:30):
Corbyn bench press? Not that much? There's people a lot
stronger than me. Do you ever Max? Though? Not really. Yeah.
We were talking about this because Tim McGraw talking with him,
and I think somebody asked, how much do you Max
Bench president? It's like, I don't Max. Yeah, I'm not
seventeen trying to get a scholarship. Yeah exactly. And they're like,
can you believe timcgraw doesn't Max like challenging him after
he left, and I was like, why don't you challenge
(34:52):
him while he is here? Eddie Sorr? Okay, can Easton
Corbyn change at tire? Change a tire? Like we're gonna cry?
I don't know, like a car tire tire? Yeah? Sorry,
uh yeah absolutely. Yeah. Has Easton Corban ever been in
a bar fight? No? Actually, noon, but almost yeah. Has
Easton Corban ever had to stop a show because there
(35:14):
was a fight in the crowd? Oh yeah, yeah absolutely.
And then finally, does Easton Corban own the red Corvette
he posted on Instagram? No, I don't tell me. The
story is out into the picture. Man. We were it.
We were playing this dude's farm. Uh, it was a
big FFA event and he just happened to have one
of the new corvettes. And I think they're pretty cool.
So he let me drive it and I was like, yeah,
why not take a picture and act like it's mine? Yeah? Yeah,
(35:36):
why not? Why not? Okay, So here's the thing. Easton's
got an album that I mean, what is today Today's
I mean it came out like two months ago called
Let's Do Country Right. And if you love old school
like traditional country with like sonically, there's some definitely new
elements too, but it definitely a traditional country. If that's
if that's your jam, go check out Let's Do Country
Right from Easton new songs called Marry That Girl, and
(35:58):
then go over to Easton's website and I mean, you
got a lot of dates. They printed off all the
dates and it was like sheet and a half. Oh yeah,
let it say, Yeah, it's not complaining. I'm glad to
be busy. Absolutely, you play all the hits though, right absolutely,
I'm doing that bull crap where you show up you
don't play to hit because that's some bull craping artist
dude that they'll leave out their biggest songs. I hate that, man.
You play a little more country than that, right, absolutely,
because I'll be I would be give my money better.
(36:20):
Easton Corbyn, there is you guys go follow him at
Easton Corbyn. Good to see you, but it's awesome. There
is so much I appreciate you. Thank you. Ravings. I
have an hour long podcast to sit down in depth
with Chase Rise. It is fantastic. This is Chase Rice
talking about what he had to do to get his
dad to buy him his dream guitar. And then I
wanted I'd be in class like Google and Martin guitars.
(36:42):
I don't know why I wanted to Martin. I showed
it to my dad. My dad made me sit and
play the only time he's ever seen me play, which
is cool that he got to. He made me sit
in front of him and my mom in the living
room in their house in North Carolina and play like
four or five songs. He said, I'm not going to
buy you in the nice Martin that you want unless
you do this, and I did it. So he me
this the Martin that I still play today, and that's
(37:02):
like him in college. And he talks about his dad died.
He was playing football at North Carolina, had moved his
way up to basically being a starter and had got
himself hurt real bad, and his dad died, so he
had to sit out of season and his dad died
and he just never kind of got back at it.
Talks about all of it super in depth, not all
sad stuff, also some really happy stuff. But check it out.
(37:24):
It's the latest episode of The Bobby Cast with Chase
Rice that's up now and tomorrow Martina McBride for an hour,
which is equally amazing. You're Amy's pile of stories. So
I've got a list of stereotypes that most women still
face today that we're hoping to change. But Bobby, I don't.
(37:45):
I don't know if you are a candle to any
of it. I knew that was what she's gonna say
that most people, if the adden heard the show, they'd
be like, Bobby, do you do this to women? But no,
She's like, do you suffer the same stereotype? Some people
look at you. Do you feel this like we do? Okay,
go ahead, Okay, these aren't thing we can work on changing.
Girls are more delicate and emotional than boys. But I
(38:05):
think generally that's generally right because well, y'all are true.
But I also I'm delicate, So I mean I'm with that. No,
these are girls and you, yeah, because you were raised
by women. Yes, so it makes sense. But I mean
most men in this room were conditioned to not probably
show much even if they do feel delicate exactly not
to show it. But okay, go ahead. Boys are stronger
(38:28):
than girls. Well, physically, men are built bigger, but I
don't think they're stronger emotionally, intellectually. The only way guys
are stronger mostly just because we're built bigger physically. Oh physically,
we in ways, certain parts of our body are in
some of its mental because y'all could not handle a
(38:48):
monthly period. You just we couldn't. We could, and I
wish I had one that means I could have a baby,
and I always wanted to bond the baby. So, but
the only way that guys are stronger than girls, it's
like bench pressent curls, because we're not stronger than women,
right Like mentally there are women stronger than me though
for sure. Oh yeah, yeah, you're gonna f though. Like
girls are like pink and boys are blue. It's like
(39:11):
my favorite color, it's one red number one. I love pink.
If I can find something pink, I'm in completely. So
again I'm being stereotyped with you. Men are better drivers
than women. Probably. I think if you're saying that just
adds a whole different wrinkle because we just look at
you in this Yeah. So I don't know that that's
true universally, but in this room, yes, girls can cry.
(39:35):
Boys shouldn't cry. Boys are taught not to cry, even
though they probably want to, which goes into another one.
Boys are braver than girls. That is not true at all.
That's the dumbest one I've heard, but it is that
is a condition of like, oh, we'll have the man
go do it. He can handle it because he's not
going to be as scared as you. But I'm scared.
I told you football is a boys game. And well,
(39:56):
the only reason that is though it because they don't
let they don't really encourage women to play football at
junior high, high school levels. And if they do, it's like,
that's so cool. But there isn't that. This is from
one dot com. I didn't make it, so I'm not
I'm just answering your question. Sciences is more for boys.
Women are smarter. We're breaking the go ahead, Okay. I
(40:19):
have a list of celebrities that I've seen or communicated
with ghosts one like me, ghost Dog right, But I'm
not a celebrity, but I'm just I'm like a I'm
like a foe celebt, Like I'm not famous, but I'm
like got a little notoriety. Sound like a fake celebrity.
So I've seen a ghost. Dog well, lunchbox, he thinks
he's a celebrit he's seen a ghost. Yeah, I've had
an interaction. I was walking down the hall and pushed
me in the closet and I couldn't get out. Kate,
(40:42):
I was for me. Kate Hudson says that she and
her mom, Goldie Hawn, make him feel spirits. Share said
that Sonny Bono plays tricks on her. That's her ex
husband as a ghost. It is yes, you got Ariana Grande,
Demi Levado, Selena Gomez. Selena even has a ghost hunting app.
(41:02):
So that doesn't make you. I could download the app
that that makes me equal West. She found a ghost
who was telling her the names of people and full
of crap on that list are probably too saying oh really, yeah,
I mean shar Pryce is talking to a ghost. I
was thinking the Goldie Hawn k Hudson. There there there
a little way, but genetically, if one can talk to
ghosts passed after the next one. True, I feel like
(41:23):
they're free and open to it. I can't prove they
haven't talked to ghosts. I've never talked to a ghost.
I don't think we humans can talk to ghosts. I
don't know that there are ghosts, but I don't know
if there's not. Did you see the article about how
like twenty eight girls were hospitalized because of anxiety after
playing with a Wuiji board? No? Are you sure that
wasn't unlike the onion? Really? No, it's real. It's got
(41:47):
to be real, all right, And you're playing with it
at school and then they got they were so anxious.
It has nothing to do with the ghosts. I don't
really think that anything happened with it, but they freaked out,
got it okay. Country stars have named the weirdest things
that bands have thrown on stage. Thomas Rhett A packet
of breast milk. That's random. Maybe they know all the kids.
(42:09):
They're like, you probably need this. There's a practical gift.
I'm gonna throw up there. Go ahead. Kane Brown and
Ashley Bride say brawls at Ross walker Hays underwear, Hardy
a prosthetic leg interesting. Oh wow, that one. I would
be confused by all the rest. I kind of gets
in the culture and they probably wanted that back right,
or it was an accident. They were really just doing
a kick in the air, like, yes, jelly rolls is interesting,
(42:32):
um Men's whitey tidies and drugs, well, drugs I get
don't understanding my ahead. And then Jordan Davis said that
someone threw a boot like they did through a boot
on stage and it says he did a shoey out
of it. You know what that is before the beer
in the boot very famous in Australia. That's there a thing,
but it has slowly drifted into country music. Yeah, but
(42:56):
Jordan he can't, he can't do that drink out of
well you want be seeing me kiss? And soon that
was Amy's pile of stories. It's time for the good news.
There's a call that came into the Beth Maine Sheriff's
Department and they said that somebody was driving saw a
(43:17):
dog laying in the middle of the road. And it's
really cold in me in this time of year, freezing temperatures.
So Deputy Mark Anderson shows up. He looks you didn't
see a dog. He's like, this is the area, kind
of just checks it out. He looks in a ditch, Well,
there's the dog. It's a fourteen year old dog, almost
frozen to death. So he gets the dogs, wraps her
up in a blanket, puts her in the cruiser. But
he doesn't like just leave it there. He says, well,
(43:39):
let me go down the neighborhood and knock on all
the doors, see whose dogs is. He went through like
dozens of houses. Finally knock on the right door. They're like, oh,
my gosh, yes, that's our dog and she we took
her out last night and she hadn't been back. We
hadn't seen her overnight, and she finally got reunited with
the owners. I like that for a couple of reasons.
I thought at first it was like a dog abuse
story and then the cops saved him. But no, the
dog got out, the dog got out, and family went
(44:00):
their dog back. Yeah, dang, good thing that cop did that.
We had Eddie and I were working out and love him.
Stanley out my dog. He doesn't get to do much
because he tore his um. Second aco this is his leg,
him in his leg, so he's just always so restless
because he can't. We can't let him run yet. He's
still in rehab, and so I let him out while
(44:20):
we were like lifting, and it was like he rolled
a bowling ball into a group of small children. He
was like, he's just like, oh, I can't believe it,
and he's just running into Eddie and me, jumping on
Eddie's head. He could talk, he'd be like, oh, what
are y'all doing? Boom boom. It's like the Kool Aid Man,
but a small bulldog just running through. And I was like, okay,
since it is so much energy, and he would set
(44:40):
for a second as soon as I would turn my back, well,
yeah too. He sees y'all being all active and maybe
you wanted to work out. I'm thinking about that. He's
a bulldog. That's a great story. We love animal stories.
That's what it's all about. That was tell me something good.