Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Transmitting Liza Hope you had a great weekend.
Speaker 2 (00:12):
Welcome to Monday Show Morning Studio Morning.
Speaker 3 (00:17):
Charging people for Thanksgiving dinner, now that is a new trend.
So this is from Fox five New York.
Speaker 4 (00:23):
The cost of Thanksgiving is getting so wild that some
hosts are reportedly starting to charge their guests a fee
just to cover the meal. And then get this, some
people even putting out a tip jar for extra contributions. Well,
it's definitely controversial. You have to admit that groceries are
getting expensive. So would you ever ask your family to
pay for their plate of turkey and stuffing tip jars?
Speaker 5 (00:45):
Hilarious? Like, just for the joke, that's funny. Any take care?
Speaker 6 (00:49):
I mean, I'm not gonna do it, but whatever, it's fine.
Speaker 3 (00:54):
I think if you say I'm the one hosting Thanksgiving,
I don't think you have the obligation to do everything.
Speaker 5 (01:00):
You just have to set the rules early.
Speaker 3 (01:01):
You can't invoice somebody after Thanksgiving if they didn't like
that can't happen. So I'm not somebody who's an absolutist.
You absolutely can't invoice somebody for Thanksgiving if they didn't
know they were going to have to pay for Thanksgiving.
Speaker 5 (01:14):
That'd being said if you're like, hey, I'm hosting Thanksgiving.
Speaker 3 (01:16):
Everybody's bringing something is a way of having somebody pay.
That's a different way because they're paying for the food
and they're bringing the.
Speaker 6 (01:22):
Food instead of bringing something. Like I'm thinking of a
way that might make sense is like, hey, I'm happy
to host everybody at my house, Like that would be awesome.
Can we divvy up some of the responsibilities or yeah,
come up with how we're going to divide all this,
even financially, but I'm happy to host it. Instead of
saying I inviting everybody and then giving them a bill.
Speaker 3 (01:43):
Yeah, because it's the same or even you say, hey,
everybody just been only twenty five bucks. Yeah, it's just fine,
and I don't care what you do, except you can't
charge afterward if you didn't tell. But I mean, it's
just easier to go, hey, everybody bring something. Yeah, that's
the same thing as I'm paying money. Okay, that's number one.
The other thing I wanted to mention you guys were
and I never watched it, but only because I felt
(02:03):
like you guys told me all about the Tender Swindler Netflix,
don't you.
Speaker 5 (02:06):
Yeah, Okay, he's suing.
Speaker 6 (02:08):
Yeah, he's crazy.
Speaker 5 (02:09):
Well, of course he's the swingler.
Speaker 2 (02:10):
Yeah, he's the con Yeah, he's an ultimate con man.
Speaker 6 (02:15):
And this is part of his con. If I sue,
it'll look like I'm innocent.
Speaker 5 (02:20):
So okay, this is from TMZ. TMZ asked him about
it during this time my lawyers.
Speaker 7 (02:25):
Certainly there is no case literally like a false allegation,
and all the case has been dismissed and I have
been released those allegations again, it's from twenty seventeen.
Speaker 5 (02:34):
This is that the movie came out and twenty twenty two.
So it doesn't mean any.
Speaker 7 (02:39):
Just allegation in the same people women nowadays doing a
lot of things in order to get famous, to think
you were TMZ in order better than everybody else. Do
you know any woman gave me any money or gave
me anything. On the contrary, I'm the one who gave them.
If you not call me the Tinder swindler, that should
pull me the Tinder donor.
Speaker 2 (02:55):
Nice. Now he's fair, like he said, the court did
not him. He's not guilty right then?
Speaker 8 (03:02):
What No, because they couldn't They couldn't charge him because
they were done in all these different countries.
Speaker 2 (03:08):
So do me thirty seconds of the Tender Swindler Lunchbox
exactly what he did. Man, He would meet chicks on
dating apps and he would whine and dine them and
have them for a nice dinner, and then he would
be like, oh, would you like to fly on my
private jet to this other country and they would go
like two days after meeting him, and then they would
get to that country and he'd be like, oh, my
(03:28):
enemies are out to me, and he would flee the
house and leave them there, and then he would just
build them for money, like hey.
Speaker 3 (03:34):
And he would send if they're trapped, probably well they
give him money they trapped, you know.
Speaker 2 (03:37):
He would like, I'll get you a plane home, and
he'd get them home. But what he was doing was
whatever money he was getting from one girl, he was
using it on the.
Speaker 5 (03:44):
Next girl to scheme type stuff. Yea yeah, And like
he would.
Speaker 2 (03:46):
Send bloody pictures of him getting beat up, like my
enemies are out to me, please help.
Speaker 8 (03:51):
It was the same picture of him in the back
of the ambulance every time.
Speaker 2 (03:54):
And then if he was found not guilty of swindling,
because to me, he's the tender donor, I agree because
they've voluntarily get He didn't say I need it for
medical reasons. They were just saying oh. He was like,
I'll pay you back. I mean, these girls also would
sell their houses. It was crazy that they were actually
giving them the money. Yes, it was they would sell
their houses so he could pay off his enemies.
Speaker 8 (04:15):
But this guy, man, if you went to his Instagram page,
he's driving lambos.
Speaker 5 (04:18):
It was awesome.
Speaker 2 (04:20):
His watches, it's hilarious, what a great I mean, I
never watched it because I felt like, you guys gave
me the gest of it and that's it.
Speaker 5 (04:28):
But now he's saying he's gonna sue Soe who. Yeah,
he's not gonna win because he's broke.
Speaker 2 (04:32):
He don't have any money he's swindling, is run out
so he needs money.
Speaker 5 (04:35):
He's found out so he can't swindle anymore. Okay, so
you don't believe that. You don't think anything's gonna come
from that.
Speaker 9 (04:41):
No.
Speaker 3 (04:42):
I want to present it to you guys, because I
thought maybe you would admit you've been wrong about him.
Speaker 2 (04:45):
And the way he talked it sounded just like the
way he would talk to those women, like, oh, the
enemies that they're gonna hurt me, Please help.
Speaker 8 (04:53):
Did he say he was like royalty or something, I
don't remember what he used, had a storyline.
Speaker 5 (04:58):
I don't know where he's he had money. He's like,
did you admire his grift?
Speaker 2 (05:01):
Yes?
Speaker 6 (05:02):
I didn't.
Speaker 5 (05:03):
It was incredible. Ray it was diamonds. He said he
was a diamond air.
Speaker 10 (05:08):
So even had a website and he almost just picked
the website of a person that kind of looked like him,
and so he played off of that.
Speaker 5 (05:14):
And no, I was never jealous of it. But talk
about a.
Speaker 2 (05:16):
Genius the way that he was able to get him
to donate this money, believe his stories, and then he
kept it going for years and he just kept jumping
different countries. America could be more tougher there. He would
just go from country to country to country.
Speaker 3 (05:28):
And Jet said, do you think he's a more like
the swinder the tender donor?
Speaker 2 (05:35):
Uh?
Speaker 10 (05:35):
No, He's definitely guilty, but I guess he's If he's
going after anybody, it's Netflix.
Speaker 5 (05:39):
The women are always going after.
Speaker 2 (05:41):
Yeah, the women are out the money and a lot
of the money was blown, so they're never going to
get that money back. But maybe Netflix only had one
source and maybe they had to get a couple of sources.
Speaker 5 (05:52):
Okay, we don't feel bad for him now.
Speaker 3 (05:53):
No, when these people melt down at airports, does that
make you feel uncomfortable?
Speaker 6 (05:59):
Oh well I just feel Yeah. I fell awkward for them,
and I hope they get the help they need because.
Speaker 2 (06:06):
Clearly or do you already feel sad for yes?
Speaker 6 (06:09):
I feel yes.
Speaker 2 (06:09):
What's your feeling?
Speaker 6 (06:10):
My feeling is they clearly have a lot of other
things going on in life and this was the breaking point. Yeah,
this is the straw that broke the camel's back and
they can no longer hold it together. So their meltdown
is very public and everybody has cameras at the airport,
so everybody's filming them. Like I prefer my meltdowns at home.
Speaker 3 (06:28):
Yeah, you can just go in your closet, Yeah, are
getting your pull with all your clothes on?
Speaker 6 (06:32):
Or if my close circle witnesses it, you know it's
not public.
Speaker 3 (06:37):
So this clip posted on TikTok Friday shows a woman
in white sweatpants and a green crop top breaking down.
And this is the Southwest flight. Here you go, why
is our plane of board?
Speaker 11 (06:51):
And you told me that I'm kick off because you
have a full of.
Speaker 2 (06:55):
Flights and you need to get the seat some one out.
Speaker 5 (07:00):
What happened?
Speaker 3 (07:02):
I have a different relationship with it. What would that
be because I think yours comes from a place of empathy.
I like that part of my relationship with this. I
don't like it when they are talking to other people
in a way that the other person feels like they're
being attacked for no reason other than just doing their
job because they had a bunch of jobs in service industry.
And I get it that people are Yes, I hope
(07:23):
they get help, but it's like, go go scream at
the window. That person is just doing a job, making
their wage, trying to go home, trying to have dinner
with their kids, and they're getting screamed at.
Speaker 6 (07:34):
Yeah. No, I mean that it's all around just a horrible.
Speaker 12 (07:38):
That like this.
Speaker 3 (07:39):
Yes, I think they've had to now, the same way
that I think flight attendants have to have training now
for when people just start peeing on other people, you
know how we I think they're probably trying how do
we tape someone to their seat?
Speaker 6 (07:51):
Yeah, because then it's a bad look. If everybody's flipping out,
if nobody's singing rationally, then now the airline looks bad.
Speaker 3 (07:57):
Well those ones too, were the ones that the people
like working that things start fighting with the person. There's
been a couple of those where they just call and
then you're like, oh mans Southwest guy, why'd you punch
that person?
Speaker 2 (08:07):
They were just having a meltdown. So then nobody wins.
Speaker 3 (08:09):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah that sucks. That's from TMZ.
I don't like that for anybody.
Speaker 6 (08:15):
Yeah, I don't know. Even with road rage situations, like
I try to ask myself like not what's wrong with them,
but like what's going on with them? And I was
trying to explain this to my I think I've learned
having a new revelation about my boyfriend. He has a
little bit of road rage, a little bit, a little
bitt No, not a deal breaker, but I was a
little caught off guard, Like I was.
Speaker 2 (08:35):
Like, oh, you saw it happen.
Speaker 6 (08:37):
He loves to like give people looks. Yeah, And I'm
like no, no, no, no, no, we don't look at people.
We don't we don't give looks.
Speaker 2 (08:44):
I feel like look is like the safest thing to do.
You can give people the middle finger. That's the next step. No,
well that's third second.
Speaker 3 (08:50):
That's your hands up like a look as one hands
up is two middle fingers three wave the old guns
for okay.
Speaker 6 (08:58):
Well it hands up with a look at the same
time is dangerous.
Speaker 2 (09:02):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (09:02):
Someone had pulled up, you know how, And I've done
it too. You pull a little too far in the
middle and then someone's trying to make that left and
you're like, I'm I'm sorry, I didn't mean to pull
up so far. And so I was up and someone
had parked right right in the middle. They couldn't get
up far enough and I need to go left, and
they're just sitting there.
Speaker 5 (09:18):
And so.
Speaker 3 (09:21):
They looked at me, and I looked at them, and
I gave them the thumbs up. But now that I
think about it, I think maybe they thought I was
doing like a sarcastic aggressive something.
Speaker 12 (09:29):
Yeah, oh, I thought that's what you were doing. No,
not at all, like good job buddies, I know.
Speaker 2 (09:33):
And that maybe because I've done that too, and I
did thumbs up like this, I like this was it
like that looks a little old, I know, I know,
looking at it now, I don't like it.
Speaker 3 (09:41):
It makes me look But what I meant was you're okay,
like I've done it too.
Speaker 6 (09:45):
Yeah, I know it's tricky because it's sort of like
text messages are hard to understand sometimes and and road
rage is hard to understand sometimes, or like motioning things
to people when the rage. I I know you didn't,
but just now I saw your look and I pass.
Speaker 2 (09:59):
I saw me in the CA and I was like,
I don't think I would have liked me doing that.
Speaker 12 (10:02):
Are you mouthing your no?
Speaker 2 (10:05):
I said, that's okay, Okay, that's okay.
Speaker 6 (10:07):
Yeah, I know what they're reading The.
Speaker 5 (10:09):
Loser Watch again.
Speaker 13 (10:10):
Yeah.
Speaker 12 (10:11):
Yeah, it's tough.
Speaker 6 (10:15):
Because the windows are up sometimes there's a tint. It's hard,
but that's what I'm trying to explain. I was like,
don't give the look. First of all, what if they retaliate.
Second of all, we don't know what they're going through,
Like what if they're driving weird because they've got something
going on.
Speaker 12 (10:28):
And most of the time they're late for something, they
just are on their phone.
Speaker 6 (10:32):
That too, okay, Well, I just I just get to
steer clear of them, just get away from them.
Speaker 12 (10:40):
And then they're funny that you always whisper it because
you know they're.
Speaker 5 (10:42):
Not gonna hear.
Speaker 2 (10:42):
Yeah, why waste my vocal cords? So there's no chance
they took this as a that's okay.
Speaker 6 (10:48):
I mean they maybe they may be watch again. It's like,
why are you squinting your eyes like that?
Speaker 2 (10:52):
Because it's the Ecelin extra emphasis.
Speaker 12 (10:54):
You look mad, dude, Yeah, you kind of look mad
a little bit. Yeah, it doesn't work.
Speaker 3 (10:59):
I was really trying to put myself in their shoes
because I've been in those shoes. America's favorite Thanksgiving pie.
Speaker 12 (11:05):
Oh, I'm not.
Speaker 5 (11:05):
Gonna tell you.
Speaker 12 (11:06):
What do you think it is?
Speaker 6 (11:07):
Pumpkin?
Speaker 2 (11:07):
I thought the same thing.
Speaker 6 (11:09):
Has it moved on to like pecan?
Speaker 12 (11:12):
No apple?
Speaker 3 (11:14):
So they pulled seven thousand Americans. It's one of these
food companies, chocolate pie. I've had chocolate pie and it's fine.
I like, I mean, I even like it. But with Thanksgiving,
it's not traditional. Yesterday we had a little talk at
the house about what I wanted for Thanksgiving and I
was told it wasn't traditional. That just because I get
it at cracker Barrel doesn't mean it's traditional for Thanksgiving.
Speaker 6 (11:35):
What is it?
Speaker 12 (11:37):
Think?
Speaker 5 (11:37):
Yes? Chicken chicken?
Speaker 3 (11:39):
No, because I'll turkey it. I'll turkey it. So I
have to eat dairy free. And I told my wife
because we're going to Oklahoma. I told my wife, Hey,
don't don't tell your family anything. I'll just manage.
Speaker 5 (11:50):
I'll pick around.
Speaker 3 (11:50):
I don't want to be making aything extra for me
because I hate being that I can't eat dairy. It's
like the wimpiest thing about me. Well now it's like eighth,
the eighth wimpiest thing about me. But it's annoying because
I don't people always having to make food for me
because my little allergy.
Speaker 2 (12:04):
And so I said, don don't do it. Don't say anything.
She said, my mom doesn't mind. She'll make a few
extra things. And he goes, what do you want specifically?
And I said, okay, mashed potatoes, because you can make
those without butter. You can do it with a different
kind of butter.
Speaker 5 (12:19):
Sure, I don't know.
Speaker 2 (12:20):
They have like weird butters that aren't even cow milk.
Speaker 12 (12:22):
I can't believe it's not butter.
Speaker 6 (12:24):
Yeah, you could do. But also a lot of people
put like a yeah, like a cream and their mush fittoes.
Speaker 2 (12:31):
But we'll I can't do any cream. I know.
Speaker 6 (12:33):
That's what I'm saying. Like you're basically just what like
a potato mash was like some salt and pepper.
Speaker 3 (12:38):
It's literally just a hammer on top of the potato
pumpom so that And then I said I like cranberry
sauce fresh, and she goes, okay, don't be saying fresh,
but there's no dairy in that, right, And then I
said I want fried okra okay, and she was like,
I don't think that's like a traditional for us, but
(12:59):
we'll get it. She's but we don't normally make that.
And I was like, but you asked me what I want.
I want it fried okra and she said, okay, we'll
go to Charlie's Chicken then and get some, which is
a fast food place that makes a really good fried
okra like Oklahoma area.
Speaker 6 (13:12):
Yeah. Yeah, especially if you're not used to making it.
I definitely pick it up.
Speaker 2 (13:16):
Do you guys do fried okra at Thanksgiving?
Speaker 6 (13:18):
Nope?
Speaker 12 (13:18):
Nope, okay, never done that.
Speaker 3 (13:20):
Yeah, she said they had never done it either, but
she did say what do you want? And I said
fried okra? And she said this is not cracker barrel.
Speaker 12 (13:26):
And cranberry fresh.
Speaker 2 (13:28):
But that that that is Thanksgiving me.
Speaker 12 (13:31):
But you're right, and some of it comes out of
a can.
Speaker 3 (13:33):
The people a fresh I can do the can though, Yes,
I can do that, but if you're asking me, I
like it fresh. Any chocolate pie is the winner, the
New America's favorite Thanksgiving pie.
Speaker 2 (13:53):
There's a question to.
Speaker 3 (14:02):
Hello, Bobby Bones. My husband and I are having our
second baby next year. We made a deal that my
husband would name the first kid, which was a boy,
I'd name the second, which is a girl. But this
past summer, my husband's grandma died. It took it pretty
hard because they were so close. She was in the
picture more than his mom. He's brought up wanting to
name our daughter after her to honor her. Do we
(14:27):
stick to our agreement or do I let my husband
name our daughter after his grandma? Signed baby naming dilemma. First,
I'd like to say condolences, and that sucks. It sucks.
Speaker 2 (14:40):
I also had a grandma who raised me and when
she died, destroyed me. She was my mom for a
while illegally she adopted me. And so yeah, that sucks. No, No,
you gets your name, mom, You could name the baby.
Speaker 5 (14:51):
Oh, okay, you doubles agreement.
Speaker 6 (14:54):
I know it's the agreement, but sometimes you can pivot.
Speaker 5 (14:57):
That's okay, you can pivot, but it's her to pivot
or not sure. Yes it is.
Speaker 3 (15:03):
It is fully her right to pivot or not, and
there should be no guilt. I think if you have
a name you've already settled on, the grandma should be
the second name.
Speaker 6 (15:12):
Okay, Yeah, you can work it in like a middle
name or a middle middle name.
Speaker 5 (15:15):
I'm always up for a compromise.
Speaker 2 (15:17):
But the emailer of this has all the cards they
can choose to do naming of the grandma, middle name
of the grandma. I don't want any name because the
agreement was and I'm in the middle of our situation.
We're trying to figure out names, so maybe I'm extra
sensitive about.
Speaker 12 (15:36):
This right now.
Speaker 6 (15:37):
I'm like, wait, is there an agreement.
Speaker 3 (15:38):
No, there's not an agreement, but it's just it's just
so permanent.
Speaker 6 (15:42):
Oh the name.
Speaker 2 (15:43):
Yeah, Grandma died and that sucks.
Speaker 5 (15:46):
I miss my I miss my grandma sometimes.
Speaker 13 (15:48):
M hmm.
Speaker 3 (15:49):
I that's the what I think about it. I always
I guess you always miss her. But the longer someone's gone,
the less that it's like a permanent part of the
prep of your presence. I just think in seven years,
you're gonna probably want a different name if you don't
like Grandma's name. Thought A lot of it comes to
what the grandma's name was too.
Speaker 6 (16:07):
Yeah, you can take grandma's name or grandma's middle name.
Find a way. Grandma's last name sometimes makes a good
middle name.
Speaker 3 (16:14):
If baby Mildred happens, I don't know that that works
for me.
Speaker 6 (16:17):
Yeah, I mean my grandma was Marilyn, that that loved her.
That wasn't gonna work. Like if I had a daughter,
I wouldn't. But middle name is Elizabeth, which is where
I got my middle name, and I love that.
Speaker 2 (16:30):
So my solution is at a solution it is you
are the owner of the rights to that second baby's name.
You get to choose what to do with him. Do
not feel guilty if you do not want to name
the first name of that baby after his grandma.
Speaker 5 (16:45):
You can offer a middle name. If you think the
name's fine, you can go with it. And that's great.
But I'm just telling you, in no way, why are
you giving all the rights to her? Though? No, that's
had he got the first That was their deal.
Speaker 6 (16:58):
It was the deal.
Speaker 5 (17:00):
It was that. But they thought Grandma was going to
live forever.
Speaker 2 (17:02):
Oh here's the thing, Grandma's don't I now wish Grandpa's
never died.
Speaker 5 (17:07):
Wise man once said, but they do. We're all gonna die.
Speaker 6 (17:12):
Yeah, I get it. You can't. Just a pivot is possible,
But you can't just automatically throw in the towel to that,
just because because if it was switched and it was
now his turn, yep, and then someone close to him
passed away.
Speaker 8 (17:27):
It was kind of weird that they didn't want to
name the kid after Grandma when she was alive.
Speaker 5 (17:31):
Anyway, like now that they're dead. It's very much a
visceral reaction.
Speaker 3 (17:38):
Yes, I would say, but it's substantial emotional feeling anyway.
Speaker 5 (17:44):
Chures, you own the rights to it.
Speaker 3 (17:46):
Don't feel bad if you don't want to name it that,
But I would go out the middle name or something
like that. All right, there you go, close it up.
So this guy found gold in his backyard. Go bars
in his backyard, Okay, listen to the story.
Speaker 9 (17:57):
His family was planning on building us pool in the
garden of their home. Their dig was interrupted when they
uncovered a plastic bag that contained five gold bars and
a handful of gold coins estimated to be worth one
point two million dollars record.
Speaker 6 (18:13):
So the gold was legally.
Speaker 9 (18:15):
Purchased about twenty years ago by the previous owner of
the home, who has since died. Under French law, any
treasure found on your property belongs to you unless someone
can prove a legitimate claim. It appears there is a
claim by the heirs of the man who bought it,
so he may not get the cash.
Speaker 5 (18:35):
From ten news AU.
Speaker 2 (18:37):
That's why would you go to the news Dude, why
would you even get a checked out? You've found the gold,
don't tell anybody. It's a great point, Like why go
bring publicity to it?
Speaker 5 (18:45):
Idiot there? Yeah, like so dumb, it's pretty dumb.
Speaker 3 (18:53):
What about the story of the guy who bought the
storage unit seven million dollars in cash in the unit.
We talked about this and he ended up selling it
from one and a half million dollars back. That's pretty smart. Well,
because he thought there was some nefario, as I did.
Because initially he buys the storage unit, which lunchbox and
I body, you know once, yeah, we made.
Speaker 5 (19:13):
Money, we did profit. It took a year whoa, whoa, whoa,
whoa whoa.
Speaker 3 (19:19):
But so he bought the storage unit for five hundred
bucks and he discovered in the safe and they had
to hire people to come and crack the safe. The
first person couldn't even crack the safe. They finally cracked
the safe. There's seven point five million dollars in the safe.
Speaker 5 (19:31):
Wow.
Speaker 2 (19:32):
And so now he's like, oh god, it's awesome. But
at the same time, why is there seven million dollars
in a safe and a storage unit? And so those
people contacted him and they negotiated and he ended up
selling it back for one point two million dollars.
Speaker 5 (19:46):
That's a win. Yeah. The gold bars though, man, that's
what a blessing.
Speaker 2 (19:51):
And then now because they're gone, Yeah, they're gone. But
how is The's like King Ralph with John Goodman back
in the day. He ends up randomly being like the
third cousin, only one a live and then next thing
he's the king.
Speaker 5 (20:02):
You remember that show Hi to the movie Go Ahead.
Speaker 8 (20:04):
How is the family going to prove that those were
his gold bars?
Speaker 2 (20:07):
Like?
Speaker 5 (20:07):
Is their paperwork?
Speaker 2 (20:08):
I would assume because they said they were legally bought.
That would be so cool. There's got to be other
bags of gold there too, though, you just.
Speaker 5 (20:15):
Started digging up off your whole yard. There would be
a backhoe in my yard in three hours. The yard
is just gone.
Speaker 3 (20:22):
There's this eighteen care gold toilet, a functional toilet that
sold for twelve million dollars. So it is a full
gold toilet and I guess you can pee and boop
in it. But it sold for twelve point one million dollars.
They thought it was going to be about ten million dollars.
A weigh two hundred and twenty three pounds. It's fully gold.
It's titled America. It was designed as a satire of
(20:44):
extreme wealth. Visitors weren't allowed to use it as far
as like, well, peer poop in it, but they pay.
It's literally just gold, all gold bars kind of melted
into a toilet.
Speaker 2 (20:56):
Oh, but you can't use it. No, it's functions. They
just wouldn't use it. Twelve Yeah, eighteen carret gold toilet.
It looks awesome obviously, and it's sold for twelve million dollars.
Speaker 5 (21:09):
That's from the New York Post. You have too much
money if you buy that.
Speaker 3 (21:13):
Yeah, that would be so cool though to have, and
like you have a party, Like we had a weird
bathroom at a house once. He went in there because
the people before, I said, put in these weird stroke
lights in the bathroom, like and so you hit a
buddy weird.
Speaker 5 (21:28):
We never removed him before we moved. It was just weird.
Speaker 2 (21:30):
Imagine though, if it did that, oh and there were
black urinals in there, it was just a weird.
Speaker 5 (21:35):
It is weird, like a club.
Speaker 2 (21:36):
Yeah yeah, yeah, but imagine that wasn't there and it
was that gold toilet.
Speaker 8 (21:40):
Dude, there'd be a line of people trying to use
the bathroom, people trying to steal it.
Speaker 2 (21:44):
Oh yeah, yeah, it's time for the good news much.
Officer Joseph Noonan was on patrol in Maynard, Massachusetts, driving
around when.
Speaker 5 (21:57):
Someone's waving their hands. Hey, hey, offics, are we need
some mol.
Speaker 2 (22:01):
He pulls over and she's like, hey, a truck crashed
into a utility pull over there, it's on fire. We
need your help. Officer jumps out, runs to the truck.
There's already smoke in the cab, a little bit of
flames coming from the hood, and he's.
Speaker 5 (22:15):
Like, sir, sir, I need you to get out of
the truck.
Speaker 2 (22:16):
And the guy's like what disoriented And so finally the
flames start getting bigger and he rips them out of
the truck and then boom, fully engulfed.
Speaker 5 (22:26):
Wow. Was he got drunk or anything?
Speaker 2 (22:29):
No, I must have had a medical emergency. They said
he was fine. They maybe lost control of the car,
but he didn't even have to go to the hospital.
Speaker 5 (22:36):
Wow. Uh yeah, shout out for living.
Speaker 2 (22:38):
I always think when people are disoriented, like I get
scared that my ears are gonna be ringing and they're gonna.
Speaker 5 (22:44):
Be like hey what And I'm like what oh yeah.
Speaker 2 (22:48):
And I'm like, like I have that's always going And all
they're saying is take three steps to the rider it's
gonna blow.
Speaker 5 (22:53):
And I'm like what, I stepped to the left. Boom.
Speaker 2 (22:55):
That's like my I have an irrational fear of that.
That whole scenario plays in my head.
Speaker 3 (23:00):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (23:00):
Yeah, interesting. You guys won't think about that like me.
So that's what it's all about. That was telling me
something good.
Speaker 3 (23:09):
I'm gonna give the lead singer, and you guys have
to give the band.
Speaker 5 (23:14):
But Eddie, we're not gonna play, okay, but you can pick.
We'll bet. How about my bet. I'll give you the pick.
Speaker 8 (23:18):
And the amount of money on a bet five dollars,
and I will go with Lunchbox.
Speaker 2 (23:23):
Oh dang, okay, all right, so I just named the
band no, so yeah, I'll give both of you the
lead singer, and you named the band.
Speaker 5 (23:32):
You got five bucks on you? Come on?
Speaker 2 (23:33):
Yeah, I got cash whytch you pick lunchbox.
Speaker 14 (23:36):
Uh.
Speaker 8 (23:37):
He secretly knows stuff about music, especially like bands, like
rock bands. He knows stuff about that.
Speaker 3 (23:43):
Okay, Amy, good, like you represent me in five whole dollars.
Speaker 5 (23:48):
I wish it was a little more confident. Five dollars.
Seems like you're not that confident in me, Eddie. You
want ten? No, no, you get to pick four already?
A five bucks? You sure you don't ickn up it?
I'm good?
Speaker 2 (23:57):
Oh, I got it now, I believe in her.
Speaker 3 (24:04):
You want to go four? Okay, here we go. I'll
give you a late singer. Tell me that band Dave
Grohl Man, I'm in for the wind Lunchboks food Fighters.
Speaker 14 (24:23):
Amy.
Speaker 2 (24:25):
Oh my gosh, Amy, No, no, no, sorry, I'm serious.
Speaker 5 (24:30):
Why don't you can't just one already? That was a softball?
Speaker 13 (24:33):
What do you have?
Speaker 6 (24:35):
Red hot chili?
Speaker 5 (24:38):
I struggle to get there, that'll be. That was a
tough one. That was hard. It wasn't this game is.
Speaker 6 (24:44):
You can see how I got him confused?
Speaker 5 (24:47):
For sure? Amy, I I I barely got there.
Speaker 2 (24:51):
Yeah, next up, Bradley Knowle, who You're in trouble. We're
gonna do we know the better?
Speaker 5 (25:08):
Brady nol what any band anything, any.
Speaker 6 (25:18):
Band of at all of all time, all time.
Speaker 5 (25:21):
I bet they don't.
Speaker 6 (25:21):
Bradley Knowle, Oh my gosh.
Speaker 2 (25:26):
Okay, I'm in Lunchbox, Oasis, Amy the Monkeys, Sublime.
Speaker 5 (25:31):
It's a good guest. Hey, good guess Amy, thank you?
The same genre?
Speaker 3 (25:36):
Okay, next up? Chester Bennington, mister, you can't fall back to.
You can't fall back to. You can't fall back to
you fall You're doing great?
Speaker 6 (25:49):
Is the British some sort of a British band? Chester Bennington.
Speaker 15 (25:53):
That sounds very England or something over there? Chester Bennington, Chester,
I hope I'm right, Chester Bennington, Okay.
Speaker 5 (26:09):
Lunchbrokes Lincoln Park. Yes, that was Fred Durst. This is awesome,
this is perfect. That's not Fred. So what do you
have to get? Oasis Lincoln Park.
Speaker 12 (26:30):
Is funny.
Speaker 2 (26:30):
It means like having the time for life. Stevie Nicks,
I'm in. I'm Lunchis Fleetwood, Macy, Fleetwood, mac Hey, celebrate me.
Speaker 5 (26:47):
You both got it.
Speaker 6 (26:50):
Joel, I'll do better if I get praise.
Speaker 5 (26:52):
Joel mad h What is her name? Oh man, Oh
my gosh.
Speaker 6 (27:06):
Is that them? Is that them?
Speaker 5 (27:09):
What is their name?
Speaker 6 (27:11):
Is that them?
Speaker 5 (27:12):
Joel Madden? Hold on, Joel, Joel Madden. What are you doing, lunchbox.
I'm trying to I'm picturing them. So you're playing air guitar? Yeah,
I'm playing guitar. How he hell out? He doesn't? Five seconds?
(27:35):
It's not right?
Speaker 2 (27:37):
Ah, Amy blink on two lunchbox some forty one know
the answer is good.
Speaker 5 (27:44):
Charlotte his brother, Hey, you feel about that? Amy?
Speaker 6 (27:51):
I felt fairly certain they were in blank one two.
Speaker 5 (27:54):
All right, we're just killing time now because Amy's not
gonna get eighties not feeling good? That's sure. Not Ryan Tedder,
I'm in.
Speaker 6 (28:04):
Really he sounds familiar like he dated somebody.
Speaker 5 (28:11):
Teddor Ryan Tedder. Oh my gosh, what are they called?
Speaker 13 (28:18):
Mm hmm.
Speaker 5 (28:20):
Ryan Teddor.
Speaker 13 (28:23):
Mm hmm.
Speaker 5 (28:26):
All right, time lunchbarks always Amy fallout boy one Republic.
Speaker 6 (28:30):
Oh that's it.
Speaker 5 (28:32):
We're just gonna go faster because I'm gonna lose.
Speaker 12 (28:33):
Yeah, it's over.
Speaker 14 (28:34):
Man.
Speaker 5 (28:34):
I couldn't couldn't figure that one out. I had that one.
Rob Thomas, I'm in.
Speaker 6 (28:44):
We're going faster, remember, time.
Speaker 5 (28:50):
Depends on Thomas. Five seconds I don't have it. I
do time.
Speaker 2 (28:57):
Marcy's playground, Amy match.
Speaker 5 (29:00):
Good, let's go. How many is she down?
Speaker 6 (29:03):
You smile?
Speaker 5 (29:04):
Three to two? Two?
Speaker 3 (29:05):
Okay? I mean we've done one, two, three, four, five,
we've done six, not out four or five, we've done seven?
Speaker 5 (29:11):
Yes, three left? Okay three lefts Hey, come on lunch one.
We'll slow down. Brandon Flowers.
Speaker 6 (29:24):
You know who that is?
Speaker 5 (29:25):
He's writing something down. Oh yeah, I know who that is.
Speaker 6 (29:28):
You know who that is? Are you still writing?
Speaker 2 (29:31):
I'm writing down number nine because I just had to
put the number number of bullet points.
Speaker 5 (29:36):
Yeah, like, I'm in the.
Speaker 6 (29:37):
Wind, I'm in Boy.
Speaker 5 (29:41):
Dashboard Confessional Killers, what.
Speaker 6 (29:46):
The killer?
Speaker 5 (29:47):
How many is that? Eight? Here's two left? Okay? Oh
I didn't mark off man, I really thought I had it.
Come on, dude, you got this studio. Next up, Brandon Yuri.
Speaker 13 (30:00):
Okay, Brandon Ury, let's see.
Speaker 5 (30:14):
You should know it. I'm in for the.
Speaker 2 (30:19):
I'm in Amy Boy, lunchbox dashboard conventional.
Speaker 8 (30:25):
I like it, guys, panic at the disc. At some
point we're gonna get there, right fall out boy.
Speaker 2 (30:31):
This is the last one, Mike, last one brought all
the marbles. Billy Corgan, I'm in I'm in he is.
He's smiling.
Speaker 15 (30:42):
Dang it, tonus out a.
Speaker 2 (30:46):
Five dollars that you are rich, lunchbox smashing pumpkins.
Speaker 6 (30:51):
Amy smashing pumpkins.
Speaker 1 (30:53):
Yeah, you have the money.
Speaker 2 (30:58):
No not, let's go, you low, you can't yo, Let's
go like you want. I'm peeling off cash for Eddie.
Speaker 5 (31:03):
And he was like, let's go, let's go. Thank you man,
thank you very much. Do you cut lunchbox in? No, okay,
I don't need it. Last bucks. I got you next time, dude.
I don't even worry about it. You know what I mean.
Speaker 12 (31:16):
I win you money.
Speaker 14 (31:17):
But you know feature horse, dude, I wanted, hey you hungry.
Speaker 5 (31:33):
This is not a bit.
Speaker 3 (31:34):
There was a time in our life on this show
where ray Mundo lived in our studio. He did not
have a home. Now he was making enough money to
have a home.
Speaker 2 (31:44):
I don't want you guys to think he was being
underpaid because he had a full time producer job making
a good salary. But he hid the fact he's basically
squatting in the studio and he would live underneath the
console where all the buttons are, and he'd sleep under
there on a couch, and like our green room.
Speaker 3 (32:02):
But before anybody came up, he'd get all dressed and
act like he just got here early. He had mail
that was coming to the building, Raymond, was any of
this wrong?
Speaker 5 (32:10):
Correct?
Speaker 10 (32:11):
And I still sometimes have mail sneaking through and getting
to the front office.
Speaker 2 (32:15):
So he lived here. How long did you use this
as your permanent residence?
Speaker 5 (32:19):
A month? It was just in between places. That means
three months.
Speaker 3 (32:22):
Right.
Speaker 5 (32:23):
If he's saying a month.
Speaker 2 (32:23):
That means my landlord lunch booted me out.
Speaker 5 (32:27):
I had nowhere to go. You guys did live together.
Did you kick him out?
Speaker 2 (32:30):
No, he said I'm out. He moved out voluntarily. So
I was there.
Speaker 5 (32:35):
I moved out and he moved in here. Yeah, like
he moved from you guys living together to the radio stage.
Speaker 6 (32:39):
Why are these stories so different? Like lunch folks was like, no,
he chose to leave, and raised like he kicked me out?
Which is it?
Speaker 5 (32:45):
Remember there was a lot of drama. Oh yeah, we
had no They used to fight all the time. Where
wouldn't leave his bedroom?
Speaker 2 (32:50):
Yeah, and he slept on like a couch pillow upstairs
like yeah, I don't know, and loves blocking.
Speaker 5 (32:56):
The dishes were never done. It was really dirty. You
guys were living together.
Speaker 10 (32:59):
I thought it was awesome. He gave me a great
rate and I could pay rent late. That's a good rule.
Pay whenever you want, I mean. And we did some
damages and he never charged me, so thanks. With the
fridge and stuff on the ceiling, the fridge and the ceiling,
there was like a leaky fridge ridge in the ceiling.
Speaker 2 (33:17):
No, no, Ray, because he didn't ever want to leave
his bedroom. Bought a fridge for his room, okay, And
it was leaking. It was leaking through the ceiling. And
did you own the place?
Speaker 12 (33:28):
No?
Speaker 2 (33:29):
No, Oh, you guys rented it rented, okay. And so
you kicked him out, never kicked him out. He voluntarily left.
So then I had to find a new place to live. Ray,
So what's your version of that story? He's probably right
on that, Okay, all right? Pair, Now, I thought it
was gonna be easier in Nashville to find a place.
Speaker 5 (33:41):
It wasn't.
Speaker 2 (33:43):
And the radio stage he lived here, yes, And then
so did work out in a shower?
Speaker 10 (33:48):
You would, Jim, twenty four hours. You can go there
in the morning and shower, go at night in shower.
Did you ever just feel like I just just wouldn't
feel settled. Did you ever feel unsettled?
Speaker 2 (34:00):
I was, so I was the opposite of you. I
was always settled in my life, so it actually felt
cool to be unsettled.
Speaker 5 (34:08):
Rebel.
Speaker 10 (34:08):
I was just a nomad. I didn't really have any
I moved from Texas to Tennessee. I just never really
had since home in Michigan. I'd never it was great.
I liked the feeling.
Speaker 3 (34:17):
The weird thing too, is Ray would bring chicks back
to his house, which was here, oh right, right right,
So he'd bring this is where he'd bring girls back
to his house.
Speaker 2 (34:25):
Well, and I would be funny about it, and I
would say, this is my apartment and they would laugh
and they thought it was hilarious, except he wasn't kidding.
And then when you finally moved, you moved where downtown
with my now wife girlfriend at the time, so you
started dating her, and then you were like, did.
Speaker 10 (34:44):
She know you lived here? Yeah, because it was kind
of a joke on the radio. So and then it
was also the same time when I lost my vehicle
to gambling, So rough time you did lose your car
to gambling. When girls would go on dates with me,
they would know that backstory, and then they would meet
me in real life and they'd say, oh my gosh,
is that true.
Speaker 2 (35:03):
I forgot when Ray lost his truck to gambling. That
hard times. So, okay, you move in with her? How
long did you date her before you moved in?
Speaker 5 (35:10):
A week?
Speaker 2 (35:11):
I don't know, guys, it's real quick. It was real quick,
real quick, and like they got married love a first sight.
But it's like she adopted a homeless man comes up
with me, I'm going to be charitable. Uh okay, I
say all that. I just want to get the backstory
in Ray. Are you sleeping at the studio again? No? No,
(35:32):
I have a house in the country okay, and a wife,
and you're not sleeping up here at all.
Speaker 5 (35:37):
No. And you haven't slept up here at all? Okay,
why are you?
Speaker 3 (35:42):
Why are you stuttering? Well, I mean I've taken naps
up here, Like you didn't go home and you slept here.
You just stayed here in crect.
Speaker 5 (35:49):
I don't. I haven't done that at this new building
at all. Okay. I just got a note that you
were No, that's weird. I don't know. I don't have
any pillows or blankets here, and no mail. No, mail.
I have a mortgage, I pay anybody, have any other
one to say, you'll have to say nothing. If you
don't want to say anything, I'll say something. Okay, I'll
(36:10):
say something. Okay, Eddie go.
Speaker 6 (36:11):
Ahead, because it came from Eddie.
Speaker 5 (36:13):
I wasn't gonna make him say anything.
Speaker 8 (36:14):
But I'll talk to someone who said that they regularly
see Ray brush his teeth and wash his face in
the kitchen sink early in the morning.
Speaker 5 (36:24):
Is what it used to be when you lived here.
Speaker 10 (36:25):
How else are you gonna brush your teeth three times
a day? If you don't do it while you're at work,
you do it before work, you do when you get
home from work, you do before you go to bed. Yes, no,
no, no no, I gave you the answer. I like to
eat breakfast and then brush my teeth. So yeah, If
I'm gonna do the dentist recommended three times a day,
you got to do it at work. If you don't,
(36:45):
you're weird. If you don't, you need to see your dentist.
If you don't, you need to fly us.
Speaker 5 (36:49):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (36:49):
You brushed three times a Day's crazy?
Speaker 5 (36:53):
What do you do?
Speaker 3 (36:54):
I brushed three times a day at least but I
have an issue with my tee at least, well, here's
my problem.
Speaker 6 (36:59):
At least would be two.
Speaker 3 (37:00):
I wear a mouthguard, and I think it's shifted my
teeth a little bit because I wear a mouth guard
all the time, and so right now there are like
little gaps between all my teeth.
Speaker 2 (37:07):
So I have to constantly brush and clean my teeth.
So sometimes six I brushed, like six times a day.
But it's only because of that. It's not like a
I'm like super hygiene. Okay, but you're good though, you
don't need help. You're not living up here, living in
the country.
Speaker 6 (37:21):
Wait, but okay, so brushing teeth is fine. That makes
sense after you eat. What's the face washing because.
Speaker 5 (37:26):
I don't know. I mean, I don't wash your face
up here, not.
Speaker 10 (37:28):
I mean, if my hair's a little messy, I may
put a little water on it. I don't know if
that is what the person saw me doing.
Speaker 5 (37:33):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (37:34):
You're okay, we're asking you as friends. Yeah, yeah, and
I do in the kitchen. I don't care if somebody
sees me brush my teeth. You're okay, then you're gonna go.
Are you still bathing at the gym? No?
Speaker 5 (37:43):
No, because I just do a little bit of weight work.
Speaker 10 (37:46):
If I ran, yes, I would shower at the gym,
But no, I don't shower at this gym.
Speaker 5 (37:50):
It's kind of creepy, kind of creepy. What is showering
at the gym?
Speaker 2 (37:53):
Yeah, there's you never know. I just feel like sometimes
the guys are looking at me. Uh huh, probably you do.
Speaker 5 (38:00):
You do think that? Why do you think this gym? Yeah?
And wait, why especially this gym.
Speaker 10 (38:05):
I guess it's a bigger gym, so there's usually a
couple of people that are around there, and it just
kind of maybe it's it's a metro gym, you know.
Speaker 5 (38:11):
Sometimes it just feels like metro gym.
Speaker 6 (38:13):
I think I know what he's implying.
Speaker 5 (38:15):
Yeah, I got it. It's a city gym. Yeah. Yeah.
There are just a lot of people that are looking
at your dinghy.
Speaker 2 (38:23):
They're always talking to me, always trying to work out
right next to me. Yes, okay, well you're okay. This
is just a welfare check on you. This could be
the luckiest couple in the world.
Speaker 11 (38:35):
A couple in New Jersey have millions of reasons to
celebrate their recent lucky streak.
Speaker 5 (38:39):
Be His parent from Orange.
Speaker 11 (38:40):
County won the top prize in the new thirty dollars
scratch off game three million dollars. The odds of claiming
one of the top prizes was one.
Speaker 5 (38:50):
And two million.
Speaker 11 (38:51):
That's incredible enough, But the same couple actually won a
million dollars back in April. This was in the one
million dollars Ultimate Spectacular. The odds of winning both games
is about one and two trillion.
Speaker 6 (39:04):
Okay, maybe they need to buy our tickets.
Speaker 2 (39:06):
Yes, I love news, anchor, humor, but they want a
million bucks and that's crazy. And then months later they
want three million bucks. Investigate. Oh that's where your mind goes.
Immediately have to like, who do they know in the library? Dude,
that's crazy. That doesn't happen. Man, I hate those people.
I mean, I do not understand how that happens. And
(39:29):
there has to be something fishy. If it's both scratch offs,
they have to know someone in the office says, hey, man,
we put the winning tickets at this gas station, go
buy them.
Speaker 5 (39:37):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (39:38):
Maybe it's just a coincidence, but that's a what do
they say, one in five hundred trillion gazillion coincidence? Oh
that's that's irking. They say, with our kids, we can'tet
really out of the house. So at the beginning of
the month we get scratch offs. When the kids go
to bed, we scratch a few off. We like to
make it a bit of a competition, so who can
win the most. It seems like we usually break about even.
Speaker 3 (39:58):
And again they hit in April for a meal and
then they hit again for three mili crazy amazing to
hit for a mill to hit for ten thousand, Oh yeah, I.
Speaker 2 (40:10):
Would go live on all social media scream. It would
just be crazy because I played.
Speaker 3 (40:15):
I played a bunch this year and I'm definitely way
I'm in the red for sure. Uh that to win
a thousand, I would go crazy. I was like, you,
well believe this.
Speaker 8 (40:26):
I knew someone who got twenty five thousand once on
scratch off, and then I worked with someone who hit
the lottery news anchor.
Speaker 5 (40:34):
He quit. Quit, dude never came back. He's been arrested
a couple of times too. He went he went hard.
What's that story.
Speaker 8 (40:42):
Uh, he just he bought a lot He split a
lottery with his buddy.
Speaker 5 (40:46):
Okay, so they bought the numbers. They bought the.
Speaker 8 (40:48):
Numbers and then they both hit it and they split
the money.
Speaker 5 (40:51):
It was in the millions. I don't remember the exact number.
And then he said peace. I'm out. Did he come
in one day and say peace or did he just
not show up again?
Speaker 2 (40:57):
No?
Speaker 5 (40:57):
No, no, he quit.
Speaker 8 (40:58):
They had a party firm and everything, but he stayed
on a segment. He's like, I want to come in
once a week and just voice a segment, just so
I can stay on the news.
Speaker 5 (41:06):
And so he would. But a couple of weeks later
he comes in a Ferrari.
Speaker 6 (41:12):
Hawaiian shirt and a Ferrari and then he got arrested.
Speaker 5 (41:15):
For what like just drinking and driving, you know, allegedly.
Speaker 8 (41:20):
I mean I think he went yeah, I think.
Speaker 3 (41:24):
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 5 (41:26):
I guess my mind doesn't go to some shady's happening.
Speaker 3 (41:28):
My mind goes to their playing and they got very
lucky and you both of you guys go shady.
Speaker 5 (41:33):
Just investigation. Yeah, I mean to win one. I mean
that's crazy, it is crazy. Did you hear what they
said the odds were? Yeah, sound like a yeah, that's it.
I mean like that's a little fishy, a little fish fish.
It's time for the good news. Jack Edward.
Speaker 8 (41:52):
He's a student at Stockton University in New Jersey. He
also runs track, but he grew up in the foster
care system, so he's always made it a goal to
give back and he's finally doing it. He started an
initiative called Bags for Buddies, where he collects backpacks. He
gives them to state workers, so when they go to
foster care houses or whatever, they have backpacks to give
to all the kids.
Speaker 5 (42:12):
That's really cool.
Speaker 3 (42:13):
And somebody who knows the situation because they've been in
the situation, now they can help the situation.
Speaker 8 (42:17):
Yes, and I was a foster parent and when we
got our kids, they had nothing.
Speaker 5 (42:21):
Would I have been considered a foster kid.
Speaker 2 (42:27):
According to the state, right because I had to, Like,
my mom left, my dad was already gone. Mom left,
Grandma had to take me over eventually adopted me. Right,
family the period before adoption? Was I a foster kid?
Speaker 6 (42:44):
You sure you're with family?
Speaker 8 (42:46):
Because if mom left and they had to take you
to your grandma's, well, I think I think she scooped
me up.
Speaker 2 (42:51):
All I remember is masked men showing up. Oh interesting, Yeah,
dressed like Hamburgler black and white. Yeah, no, no, no,
I just was that far?
Speaker 5 (43:00):
Is not true.
Speaker 6 (43:01):
But I think when you have family intervention it's different.
I mean, foster kids like you end up.
Speaker 2 (43:05):
In the Yeah, the system had to clear me to
live with my grandmother because she had to be my U.
Speaker 6 (43:13):
You were never in custody of Child Protective Services, got it? So? Okay,
so you have similar feelings and trauma.
Speaker 2 (43:22):
I'm just I'm happy I have a grandmother of the care. Yes, yes,
where A lot of kids don't even have that, have that.
So I just wondering if I was also considered a
foster kid. So Jack Edward too is foster kid, but
he also is an author. He wrote a book called
Your Biggest Opponent, and he's a college student. He's an athlete.
But it's like it, Yeah, I don't mean to make
that about me. I just didn't want. I don't know
if I was a foster kid or not.
Speaker 5 (43:43):
You might, I mean you might be.
Speaker 6 (43:44):
I don't know, dude, you're in a You ended up adopted.
Speaker 5 (43:48):
I was an adopted kid, but then I got unadopted.
How did that happen?
Speaker 6 (43:53):
How did you get unadopted?
Speaker 5 (43:55):
You age out? My mom moved back, she came back, Okay.
Speaker 6 (44:00):
Transfer you back, like I guess because if your grandma
became your legal guardian.
Speaker 5 (44:04):
Changed my last name.
Speaker 2 (44:06):
My last name was changed, but maybe grandma gave up
her rights and said here, I signed him back over.
Speaker 5 (44:11):
But then they changed my name again.
Speaker 6 (44:13):
Yeah, so that was part of that process.
Speaker 5 (44:15):
So I was adopted.
Speaker 6 (44:16):
So did you ever start introducing yourself?
Speaker 5 (44:19):
I never knew.
Speaker 3 (44:19):
I found out later in life when I found an
old soil security guard with a different last name on it.
Speaker 6 (44:23):
Well, shout out to her for going through all that paperwork.
Speaker 5 (44:26):
That's a lot of probably just like I'll just take it.
That's that is a great story. That is what it's
all about. That was telling me something good.
Speaker 16 (44:37):
Wake up, wake up in the mall and the radio
and the doctors and his lunchbox. More game too, Steve Bran,
I'm trying to put.
Speaker 9 (44:52):
You through the buck.
Speaker 16 (44:53):
He's running this week's next bite, and Bobby's on the box.
Speaker 2 (44:57):
So you know what this.
Speaker 13 (45:03):
About it? Ball?
Speaker 2 (45:05):
Now time for the Morning Corny, the Mourning Corny.
Speaker 6 (45:12):
What acting job did the green Bean audition for the
cast A roll?
Speaker 5 (45:23):
That was the Morning Corny? Not pretty good one.
Speaker 17 (45:27):
That voice lunchbox you kissing your parents on the lip
is absolutely wild And the funny thing is that there
was a segment back before that some guy was going
to give CPR to his dad and you thought that
was weird to give CPR to your dad.
Speaker 5 (45:43):
But you can kiss from Manama on the lip.
Speaker 2 (45:46):
Yeah, it's really to us, not the guy to guy
lip kissing. Like, it's just the person who's doing it
who is so anti guide to guy lip kissing because
he thinks it's gross.
Speaker 5 (45:58):
Not even can give CPR to a man.
Speaker 2 (46:00):
Yeah, because that's open mouth. I mean, this isn't open mouth.
When you're doing CPR, your mouth is open and like you're.
Speaker 6 (46:07):
It's life saving.
Speaker 5 (46:08):
So it would be like equivalent to like a French kiss.
Speaker 2 (46:10):
Yeah, basically when you're doing CPR, you're basically French kissing.
Speaker 5 (46:14):
And I don't do that.
Speaker 2 (46:15):
I do a little peck with my dad, but I'm
not open mouthing.
Speaker 3 (46:19):
Thank you for the voicemail. I'm glad we could actually
get to the bottom of that. I was really wondering
his strategy. Okay, you guys live as voicemail anytime. Eight seven,
seven seventy seven Bottle.
Speaker 2 (46:31):
Bobby Bone show up today. This story comes us from Missoula, Montana.
A fifty three year old man had just finished a
can of Budwiser. As he's driving down the road, he's
exiting the highway. It's like, man, really got to go
to the bathroom, Really gotta go to the bathroom, grabs
the Budweiser can, starts to pee in the can, not
(46:52):
paying attention.
Speaker 5 (46:53):
Boom, crash it into the car in front of them.
Speaker 3 (46:55):
Yeah, there's a lot of things here that will be distracting.
One just peeing in anything. You need a big hole,
because you can't be if you're trying to a cannie
that's such a little hole.
Speaker 12 (47:05):
Gatorade bottles doable because it's had a bigger.
Speaker 3 (47:08):
Mouth, because you could actually go in that to pee
with a can.
Speaker 5 (47:12):
You can't because you will.
Speaker 12 (47:14):
Cut yourself very sharp.
Speaker 5 (47:16):
Yeah, small, Yeah, well.
Speaker 3 (47:20):
Both But you did see did see the story that
Hitler has a micro Yeah?
Speaker 13 (47:23):
I did.
Speaker 2 (47:24):
It explains a lot, one and one and one.
Speaker 12 (47:27):
And a microft does explain a lot.
Speaker 3 (47:32):
So let's say and in that case scenario that you
can still make it work there, but if you one bump. Oh,
so yeah, just the whole situation is wrong and bad.
Speaker 5 (47:40):
Also, you wasted a beer. No, he had finished it finished.
Speaker 2 (47:44):
Yeah, and he was actually in the highway and it
was a red light. He wasn't paying attention as he
was going, crashing the car from him. You gotta rrested
for DUI.
Speaker 5 (47:51):
Makes me wonder if he's done this before.
Speaker 16 (47:52):
Right.
Speaker 2 (47:53):
Secondly, I think we all know or maybe you've done
the thing where you grabbed a like a drink but.
Speaker 5 (47:58):
It was somebody's dip cup.
Speaker 2 (48:00):
I wonder if somebody did that with.
Speaker 12 (48:01):
One of his before. It's growth all right, there you go.
Speaker 5 (48:04):
I'm lunchbox at your Bonehead Story of the Day.
Speaker 2 (48:08):
By Everybody by bone.
Speaker 3 (48:11):
Show, The Bobby Bones Show theme song, written, produced and
sang by read Yarberry. You can find his instagram at
read Yarberry, Scuba Steve executive producer, Raymondo, Head of Production.
I'm Bobby Bones. My instagram is mister Bobby Bones. Thank
you for listening to the podcast.