All Episodes

July 28, 2025 48 mins

We address the drama that unfolded after the show on Friday because we were flooded with calls about how the show members were fighting.  Are we okay or are we still fighting? We get the REAL story of why everyone was mad.  Sam Hunt stopped by the studio to talk about football dreams, his musical journey, how he's staying connected to his roots and how he inspired Raymundo. Bobby shared a story about an AI machine that plays dreams back for you. Would we want it? It leads us to discussing whether people who believe in astrology are full of crap or if there’s some truth to it.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is the Bobby Bull Show.

Speaker 2 (00:03):
Well, what a podcast last Friday, because Part two had
a lot of drama on it. We got a lot
of calls. I want to play some of the voicemails.
Eddie was eating hot dogs, but then everybody got to
a fight on the podcast. Yeah, let's start with this ray,
give me this voicemail.

Speaker 3 (00:20):
First, five days ago, Eddie posted a picture of himself
on his Instagram holding all of these hot dogs and
he was at a grocery store because there were other
hot dogs behind him.

Speaker 4 (00:32):
So I'm confused as.

Speaker 3 (00:33):
To why if he was at the grocery store with
all of those packages of hot dogs in his hands,
why he didn't purchase his own hot dogs? All right,
have a good day.

Speaker 1 (00:42):
It's a good lesson. It's a good lesson. Don't believe
what you see on Instagram. I was at the grocery
store getting coffee and I saw hot dogs. Would be like,
that would be a great photo op.

Speaker 2 (00:50):
So the last and as you lie on Instagram.

Speaker 1 (00:52):
Yeah, I just took a picture of hot I didn't
buy them that day.

Speaker 5 (00:55):
Yeah, but why not if you were already in your hand?

Speaker 2 (00:58):
Because I wasn't going to buy the hot dog had
already said he was getting them God direct. But your
lesson is, don't believe everything you see on Instagram.

Speaker 1 (01:05):
Do not believe everything you see on Instagram. I wasn't
buying hot dogs that day.

Speaker 2 (01:09):
Okay, let's just roll through some of these.

Speaker 6 (01:12):
Go ahead.

Speaker 3 (01:12):
I just wanted to say that that drama right before
Eddie began his hot dog challenge that gave me life.
Let me tell you, I was living for every moment.

Speaker 1 (01:25):
I feel like I missed out, like I really didn't.

Speaker 2 (01:29):
Scuba called you a bee?

Speaker 6 (01:30):
He called me a be?

Speaker 5 (01:31):
He did you guys didn't tell me that.

Speaker 2 (01:36):
It was just so much happening, sensory overload. You had
hot dogs, you're craming memory, say it like you would
be in a bee and just do it. But he
said it kind of off my or you could still
hear them.

Speaker 5 (01:46):
Like you're being a little bitches.

Speaker 7 (01:47):
He did doing it again, and then.

Speaker 1 (01:51):
Like I saw, I didn't have headphones on and I
was trying to eat hot dogs.

Speaker 2 (01:54):
So, uh, what happened with Abby? Okay, we can get
to all that. Let me play some more voicemails. Hit
the next one.

Speaker 8 (01:59):
I think that Scuba was way out of line, his language,
his attitude, he's like aggressive. I don't know his nighttime
d Jane is making them tired and grumpy or what
she makes lunchbox seem reasonable, and that's saying some stuff.

Speaker 2 (02:18):
I think probably that's the case too. Scooba's been a
little grumpier. I think he's got a little more work.
He wanted to do the work, but I think he's
now adjusting to the extra work, and I think it's
making up a bit grumpy Scooba.

Speaker 4 (02:28):
Your thoughts particular Last week too, we did two live
broadcasts out in the sun for four and a half hours,
and that was day two of the broadcast, and so
I was a little tired and crankier than usual and
lack of sleep and all those things. So yeah, maybe
I wasn't in the best mindset for a day like that,
and so I do apologize for the overall way that
I acted. I was upset about some other things and
I projected it on people that were here in this room.

Speaker 2 (02:51):
Ah, thanks for apologizing. Of course, last week when they
were apologizing, both of you guys so full of craft.

Speaker 1 (02:55):
It was so genuine apologize though, like even if it
was fake.

Speaker 5 (03:00):
Did he apologizes?

Speaker 2 (03:00):
He did, just like you did. You guys both did
like a fake apology. Here's another one.

Speaker 9 (03:07):
Man just listening to Friday's podcast and Scuba Steve was
driving me crazy. You screwed up, man, own up, you
got the wrong dogs. You also said you don't make
excuses over there, you get stuff done. Well, how's that
sitcom coming along? And can we expect season one?

Speaker 4 (03:25):
It's also not a sitcom, so he's completely I think
we got the point, like you've been writing this TV
show forever, yes, but now projected myself into something I've
traveled or chased even longer, which is the stream of
doing my own radio show.

Speaker 2 (03:36):
Yeah. So yeah, I think when I look back, I
think there's a couple of things happening. One it was
my dogs get this sometimes like too many things happening
at once, and they started freaking out. And I think
that was happening with this group we had. We were
ending a Friday show. We had all these hot dogs
in here. There was a fight about the hot dogs.

(03:58):
Scuba was tired and grumpy. Eddie was getting ready to
his mind was not in the normal place. Abby was
kind of a little grumpy too. Abby did admit.

Speaker 10 (04:07):
That kind of I think it was warranted.

Speaker 2 (04:10):
Just I agree, but I think you were a little
on edge anyway, because you were you were going on
a big road trip that day.

Speaker 10 (04:16):
Yeah, I had my day planned out and then a
whole wrench was tossed in. But I feel like it
wasn't the first time there's been issues with challenges and
stuff we've done.

Speaker 2 (04:26):
I hear you, but if I can speak freely, you
just told me need to leave by eleven and so
any of the things that you did, I made sure
that you would be back and plenty of time from
when you.

Speaker 5 (04:37):
Needed to leave.

Speaker 10 (04:38):
Yeah, but then but I had other stuff I had
to do after, so she I was going to be
doing during that, you know.

Speaker 8 (04:44):
Yea.

Speaker 4 (04:44):
She was saying her going to the grocery store through
her behind on her other work, which was going to
cause a problem with her road trip.

Speaker 2 (04:50):
I think that's where she was angry, but she didn't
want to say that. She was just saying, I don't
want to go to the grocery store.

Speaker 4 (04:55):
But I realized that eleven o'clock out. I otherwise i'd
have been were mindful of that. Well, knowing the eleven
o'clock out o'clock day, well.

Speaker 2 (05:04):
No, and listen everybody sometimes leaves early or does it
come in late, And as long as it's talked to
me beforehand. She goes, hey, we're going on this trip.
Is it cool if I leave a little bit early
at eleven? Abby never asked or anything like that. I
was like, yes, just quietly disappear, because make sure all
your stuff's done, then quietly disappear. But then I did
that threw a wrench into her day.

Speaker 5 (05:22):
I guess yeah.

Speaker 4 (05:22):
And if I done that too, I would have because
I understand that as well. I would have been like,
you know, I'll go to the store. I don't care
I screwed up. I'll get the hot dogs.

Speaker 2 (05:28):
You would not have said you screwed up, because you
were not, but in that moment I would have not.

Speaker 5 (05:32):
But I didn't know yet eleven o'clock out.

Speaker 4 (05:33):
And if I would know that as well, I am
sorry because I also have those moments too, and we
all do dark's appointments whatever. So if I would have
known that, I would have definitely been more accommodating to
make sure that it was handled by somebody else.

Speaker 10 (05:44):
I think it was just all the tension everyone.

Speaker 2 (05:47):
I had no tension. I was enjoying it. I was
sitting at it. I was kind of interested, enjoying the day.
I had a fun time, and we stayed for three
hours and played Catch the Cup.

Speaker 1 (05:55):
Okay, so just to kind of recap here. So because
again I couldn't hear all this drama going on.

Speaker 2 (06:01):
So when that's right, you got none of this, none
of it. But you were eating hot dog like you
were miserable in your own way.

Speaker 1 (06:06):
Yeah, and I heard you guys like listening to what
they were saying. I could see their mouths moving in
the glassroom, but I couldn't hear anything it. So when
I made the whole thing about jumbo hot.

Speaker 2 (06:16):
Dogs, and you were right, and that's hilarious, it.

Speaker 1 (06:18):
Turned into Abby go to the store and buy the
regular hot dogs. She had a trip planned and she
had to leave at a certain time, so her going
to the store put her back on her work.

Speaker 10 (06:28):
No, it really wasn't that. It was like his attitude
towards me. He was talking to me, I appreciate that,
got it, and like just being like, it's not a
big deal.

Speaker 2 (06:35):
Go but I had your back, and I was like,
I was like, Scuba, you bought XXXL hot dogs, jumbos,
super jumps, yeah, you bought.

Speaker 7 (06:42):
Super jumps magnum.

Speaker 2 (06:46):
Those magniums.

Speaker 5 (06:47):
That really was the difference.

Speaker 2 (06:48):
I wasn't for that, and it wasn't that big of
a deal because it was still a bit early and
we had time to still get started on time.

Speaker 11 (06:56):
And then but now knowing she needed to have stuff done,
and then it makes sense.

Speaker 2 (07:01):
Scuba was doing stuff the bus or whatever you were doing. Yeah,
exactly for another radio station. Like everybody's adjusting to stuff,
and here we are. We live to fight another day.

Speaker 1 (07:12):
But is it an excuse to say, like, oh, I
had to be in the sun for hours.

Speaker 2 (07:16):
And it's not an excuse. It could be a reason
as to why he was acting that way.

Speaker 4 (07:20):
And he was like, I'm sorry, Oh yeah, I'm lacking sleep,
lacking all kinds of things, and so I just it
wasn't my best self.

Speaker 2 (07:26):
So you got what you got, because an excuse would
somewhat justify it. I think this is a learning moment,
and but I don't think it justifies his attitude. But
we all come in there. If I don't sleep and
I'm like, I can't even talk, I'm tired, Like then
I act accordingly. I'm grumpy, I'm quick I'm like, let's
get out of here quicker. Whatever the case is. We

(07:46):
all have ways that it manifests in us when we're
not feeling it. His was just a little more aggressive
than we're normally used to. And he called you a
b which that doesn't happen here.

Speaker 6 (07:55):
Crazy dude.

Speaker 5 (07:56):
Yeah, it's a gay good thing. I didn't hear that.

Speaker 8 (07:58):
Man.

Speaker 4 (07:58):
Yeah, I'm sorry by the way I slapped you at
that Jumbo no magnum that magnum dog.

Speaker 2 (08:05):
Okay, everybody good now, Abby still looks. I feel like
everybody's pretty good except for Abby. I feel like Abby's
not fully there because I don't.

Speaker 10 (08:13):
Want you to think that that was the reason. That's
not the whole reason it was what's going on in here.

Speaker 2 (08:17):
I also understand that. But that's why I stuck up
for you because I said nothing about you leaving at eleven.
I'm not even saying leaving early, because that's not We're
done with the show, and there are times everybody has
to be gone for something that is not out of
the norm. For somebody to go, I either can't be
there that day, or I need to leave early, or
I need to come in late. That happens all the time.
That's not an issue. That is zero percent an issue
to me, because again, if you weren't good, independable at

(08:40):
your job, it would matter.

Speaker 10 (08:42):
Well, for some reason, I thought he was gonna start
eating those hot dogs here, like he was just gonna
put him in the microway. So like I was trying
to hurry because we're like live on the Facebook. I
don't know on the Facebook. No, no, no, no, I'm
just saying I thought at that point you all were
waiting on me.

Speaker 2 (08:59):
I'm stressing out that we never said that. To be fair,
you thought that, and I think we were going to
shift to them, but we never said Abby, get back
quick because Eddie's eating magnums in an a.

Speaker 5 (09:10):
Fair because that, to be fair, I took down magnums. Yeah,
smaller ones got the guy can take.

Speaker 2 (09:16):
The guy can gobble a magnum.

Speaker 10 (09:17):
I know I was trying to. I don't know.

Speaker 2 (09:20):
I think it was it was just a mixture. That
was a road trip. I mean, was it amazing?

Speaker 5 (09:24):
How was the road trip?

Speaker 10 (09:25):
It was great? It was awesome.

Speaker 2 (09:26):
Where'd you go?

Speaker 10 (09:27):
Wisconsin? Lake Geneva?

Speaker 2 (09:29):
Wow, that is a that's a long drive you drove there?

Speaker 10 (09:31):
Yeah, it was a half hour and back.

Speaker 2 (09:34):
You're still there.

Speaker 10 (09:35):
Yeah, I'm there. No, they are still there. I I
flew back last night.

Speaker 9 (09:40):
Oh.

Speaker 2 (09:41):
I was like, wow, that is.

Speaker 10 (09:42):
It was a very quick trip.

Speaker 2 (09:43):
But got it.

Speaker 10 (09:46):
Oh they like you want my boyfriend and his kids?

Speaker 2 (09:48):
Yeah did you drive?

Speaker 10 (09:50):
I didn't drive.

Speaker 2 (09:51):
You rode?

Speaker 10 (09:51):
Yeah, passenger passenger seat?

Speaker 2 (09:53):
Who controlled the music or podcasts?

Speaker 10 (09:56):
We were just listening to music the whole time. And
then I was like giving the kids food and all that.
You know, they're reaching back, got it, iPads all that.

Speaker 2 (10:06):
No, I mean that's kind of what your mom say.
That's mom life.

Speaker 10 (10:10):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (10:11):
It was well good, Well, I'm glad that you have
a good time.

Speaker 10 (10:14):
It was really fun.

Speaker 2 (10:15):
And what would you like to say to Scooba that
you would not like to see happen again?

Speaker 10 (10:21):
I don't know, just be like a little more prepared. Maybe.

Speaker 4 (10:24):
Oh I thought she was gonna say, I've been doing
this for almost twenty half a year, let's go.

Speaker 5 (10:32):
But you get stressed out in.

Speaker 2 (10:33):
Situations you kind of weren't prepared.

Speaker 11 (10:35):
Me.

Speaker 6 (10:35):
I was prepared.

Speaker 5 (10:36):
Hot dogs, he asked for beef. Yeah, they were jumbo.

Speaker 4 (10:39):
But I got the ones that were there and they
had and the ones that had enough to get us
to seventy.

Speaker 2 (10:43):
Yeah, but jump, that was a mess up. It really weren't.
But that's okay that it's not even out. It's not
really out yet.

Speaker 10 (10:50):
What's not out?

Speaker 2 (10:50):
I mean it's not resolved, yeah, because it's everybody's true
feelings aren' out yet because we're talking back to it.

Speaker 4 (10:55):
And then you guys said that I act the way
I acted because of my situation. I think she acted
way she acted because she was stressed about something didn't
really matter, Like if you just get hot dogs and
come back, like it's not that big of a deal.
If it's not a deal, it's not You're just going
to get something. All the time, I thought it was
a big deal, and I appreciate you doing it. Now
saying I don't appreciate her for doing it, that's a
different scenario. I'm just saying, you're asked to get something

(11:16):
from Bobby. He does that very often. You come back
and that's just you move on with the day.

Speaker 2 (11:20):
I'd like to share a problem that's nothing to do
with anybody here in the studio. I think there's a
problem with us not being able to have interns, and
it sucks because I'm always asking Abby and Kevin things
I would normally have interns do only because they've been
here the least amount of time, but they've also been
here a long time.

Speaker 5 (11:38):
No total, they should not be doing those kind of thing.

Speaker 2 (11:39):
Yes, I agree, and I agree that Toby all the time,
I'm like, I am sorry, I have to ask you
to pick my tone.

Speaker 4 (11:44):
Else she's above, she's above the gopher. Yes, but unfortunately
that's that's what part of the role is.

Speaker 2 (11:49):
If someone has to go it's Abby or kick off
Kevin because there were last ones in the door.

Speaker 11 (11:55):
So what I know about sometimes how I react in life, Well,
hormones aside, let's just set that aside, because I don't know.
Those come out of nowhere sometimes. But sometimes I react
in a way that seems bigger than it should because
there's been a slow build.

Speaker 2 (12:14):
Sure, like that's what happened.

Speaker 11 (12:16):
It wasn't about And she keeps saying like in this room,
I don't know if something in there has been gradually building,
and this was sort of the not not a total
tipping point, but it's like like a slow drip and
like the lid is starting to off.

Speaker 2 (12:32):
I think, do you feel like there's a lack of
respect Abby.

Speaker 10 (12:37):
I mean sometimes I just I think for the challenge
it was more of like it should have been fun vibes,
but it turned into not.

Speaker 11 (12:43):
But it's much bigger than My point is if if
if it wasn't if the bucket hadn't been filling up,
like if it wasn't a slow drip, then it maybe
still would have been fun, fun vibes. Like on a
different day, if the lid and it's still you probably
would have gone, gotten the hot dogs and come back

(13:03):
and it have not been an issue.

Speaker 7 (13:05):
But because there's been a slow.

Speaker 4 (13:07):
Drip, what's the prior issue to this within myself and
Abbogai question?

Speaker 5 (13:11):
Just that me and Abby, I like that.

Speaker 4 (13:12):
I would like to know personally, what is it between
you and I, not me and everyone else or other
things that she does also feel safe to answer this,
That's okay. I'm feel I'm safe to hear whatever it is. No,
you're not because you're getting you're getting more you talk.

Speaker 5 (13:24):
You're saying, but.

Speaker 4 (13:24):
I'm just saying the perspective of between her and I,
not what she may be dealing with the company or
other people within the show.

Speaker 5 (13:29):
What is it directly with me that is the issue Prior.

Speaker 10 (13:32):
To this, I would say aggressive vibe the way like
speaking to people, like speaking to Eddie that way, speaking
to me that way, you are scary.

Speaker 5 (13:40):
So I speak to her aggressively on a daily basis.

Speaker 2 (13:43):
That's what you're saying. No, no, no, don't put words daily.
Don't put words in her mouth. She did not say
anything about daily. But even if you do it once
a week again, you could start to feel disrespected by
that overall, and you do have snap vibes. There are
two people we think can murder this whole round. Don't
say that definitely, I don't know.

Speaker 4 (13:58):
Can we talk about it, but they can murder some
of my words, but not physically. I would tear somebody
down if they came at me, for sure. But but
you said you blacked out once and you were choking
a dude. Marshals were saying, I remember that exactly. That's
our point, but that was like twenty years ago. My

(14:20):
point is aversations with her outside of what our daily stuff,
and I'm feeling there's other things that may be a problem,
not necessarily just me being a problem. So don't I
guess I'm trying to figure out how am I the
issue or I'm the main issue.

Speaker 2 (14:34):
Okay, I would like to say, it's me Eddie, are
you good good? Going back to oh, Eddie's going in
the back room, the camera on a felt weird. I
thought Abbie was leaving or Eddie was leaving to go like.

Speaker 10 (14:51):
Cry or something you wanted to hear the drama.

Speaker 2 (14:54):
Okay, I feel like there is and then I don't
know this. I think in the room, you guys are
asked to do a lot of things very quick, and
I think at times, because everybody communicates a little different
and it's very boom smashed go to the next thing.
At times, after a while, that can build up and
some people feel disrespected and not not valued just because

(15:18):
of communication. Abby, would you say that's correct?

Speaker 10 (15:20):
Yeah, I mean I've been here in five years. We've
been close quarters, just us three. You know, Ray's like busy,
so it's kind of just Ray and I or sorry,
Scuba and I in one room. And I don't know,
it's just.

Speaker 2 (15:32):
How would you like if you could we can put
you on, If you could ask for one slight modification,
what would you ask for?

Speaker 10 (15:39):
I don't there I mean, there isn't there is.

Speaker 2 (15:41):
If you could ask for one slight modification can come
and ask both of you this, what's your slight modification?
You would ask regarding communication or workflow in that room.

Speaker 10 (15:54):
Loaning up, I guess, or just like not being so
aggressive when you talk, great Scooba.

Speaker 2 (15:58):
Could you five percent? Even if you don't feel like
it's true, her interpretation of your actions are that it's
at times feels a bit more aggressive that she's comfortable
with in her communication. Well, yeah, so I gauge my
hold on, hold on asking you sorry, could you modify
that five percent for her?

Speaker 6 (16:15):
Yes?

Speaker 4 (16:15):
And that my answer to that would be that I
modify how I handle yes, yes, okay, But then but
then it also is I already do a version of that.
People get different versions of me because I know how
what they can handle, what they can't handle based on
how her No, no, no, not blaming her, I guess I'll
take it back another five percent to make sure that
I am at a level that is comfortable.

Speaker 5 (16:33):
But I work.

Speaker 4 (16:34):
Man, I've been doing this for so long that you
just kind of like you just go absolutely move on
to it, so numb to it that I'm like, do
it none.

Speaker 5 (16:41):
Of this crap matters? Does it does?

Speaker 4 (16:44):
But like it really doesn't, but it does. I mean,
we're not we're not carrying cancer.

Speaker 2 (16:47):
No, but what does matter is the communication and how
the person feels you feel about them. It's what we're
doing that the world. No, but she doesn't know that.
She thinks you want to fight her.

Speaker 4 (16:58):
I fight for her, but I don't. I'm not the
kind of person that goes I did this today, and
this is why I do. I just do it because
I do it, and I'm not. I'm not tatting around
what I do for people, but behind the scenes, I
five for people, especially my really close quarters. I will
I will kill for the people that are on my team.
From you, you'll kill anybody. Gray's got a problem, I'm
going for him. Listen, Kevin Paul, listen, I hear you.

(17:20):
I'm just saying, can you modify it five percent? Yes,
see the feeling of aggression that she feels, let's just
slightly change it. You're doing nothing wrong. You do nothing wrong.
She's just asking for you to do that. And what
would you like from her then? Also understanding my perspective, No, no, no,
that's what I'm good in my party.

Speaker 5 (17:36):
What do you like from her? To understand perspective.

Speaker 4 (17:39):
Just understand my perspective of where I'm at in my role,
of what I have to do in the pressures that
I have, not only within the show, within the content
of the show, with the sales of the show, with
the promo of the show, with the staff of the show,
and then me taking other roles within the excuse. I'm
just saying, to understand my perspective of where I'm coming from.
If you can understand my perspective, maybe I have a
little bit understanding of how I am the way I am.
It's get more aggressive, dog, I'm just telling you, I

(18:00):
don't I don't want to spend much time on it,
but half perspective and I'll and I'll be able to
then cater myself to a calmer, gentle or five percent version.

Speaker 2 (18:09):
No, no, I don't think it's a half respective And
then you will. I think if you just will, that'd
be great for both of me.

Speaker 6 (18:14):
I will.

Speaker 5 (18:14):
But he's going through some ship today.

Speaker 2 (18:17):
Abby, Will you listen? Will you go, hey, he is?
If he does freak out occasionally, you won't take that personally?
Can you change that five percent about you?

Speaker 11 (18:25):
Yeah?

Speaker 10 (18:25):
I can try it, just like I'm trying to do
a lot. Also during the show, I'm trying to answer phones,
listen to the show and Steve because he's making comments
and yeah, and so it's just a lot in my
head and it just feels like sometimes the environment's a little.

Speaker 5 (18:39):
Take that in times ten and I'm doing.

Speaker 4 (18:41):
No, it's not about you. Everything's not about you. I
know what I'm just saying. If you're gonna start calling
out like things and let's go through a list of things.

Speaker 2 (18:46):
No, but everybody gets a thing.

Speaker 4 (18:48):
But I am who I am, and I do what
I do, and that's where I am where I am.

Speaker 10 (18:51):
But he just asked why I'm feeling this way?

Speaker 7 (18:54):
What I feel you.

Speaker 11 (18:55):
My answer back greetings in him.

Speaker 5 (18:59):
As I didn't.

Speaker 2 (19:01):
I didn't hear. I'm there too, because we're not changing.
It's not good.

Speaker 5 (19:05):
I'm not afraid, and I'm not going to back.

Speaker 2 (19:07):
No one's asking you to backing down.

Speaker 4 (19:09):
Is but I'm not going to sit here and just
act like, oh, okay, all right, Oh.

Speaker 7 (19:13):
So what I'm hearing, what I'm hearing this is a
good especially.

Speaker 5 (19:18):
When especially when I respect the crap out of her
for her.

Speaker 2 (19:21):
But don't do especially I just say it's battle for
her and all of a sudden, he's like, she doesn't know.
He's battled for her because I'm not going to sit
here and be like, but how is she supposed to
know something you're not to charity?

Speaker 6 (19:33):
I don't.

Speaker 5 (19:34):
I just don'tate to charity. I don't even tell damn
person about it.

Speaker 2 (19:37):
Supposed to know I don't know her.

Speaker 5 (19:40):
Then you just need to know.

Speaker 4 (19:40):
That that's the kind of person that I am. I
don't need to I don't need to tell every single
thing that I do to everyone. Of what I do,
that's that takes someone from a nice person to a
kind person. Not nice as fake, kind is real.

Speaker 2 (19:51):
That's what I And again, you can't expect her to
know something she doesn't know.

Speaker 4 (19:54):
I think it's you don't know it at this point,
then that's bull crap, because there are so many things
that I do fight for you that I have talked
to you about, or things that I don't talk to
you about.

Speaker 5 (20:00):
I just do it anyways. And then maybe you realize
something's happening and you don't know why it's happening. Well,
I wonder why.

Speaker 10 (20:05):
I don't know what it is, but because like I've
just been doing my job. I don't know what outside is.

Speaker 2 (20:12):
I don't want this to roll over it. Emma, let
Amy talk because she's tried and no one's seen her.
She raised her hand even and I appreciate that. Amy
go ahead.

Speaker 7 (20:22):
I try to just kind of skip me. But I
think that, well, Scuba.

Speaker 5 (20:29):
Well it doesn't matter.

Speaker 11 (20:30):
Well, since you just said it, it's great that you
go to bat for Abby. But I also think that
just because we go to bat for people.

Speaker 5 (20:39):
Like thirteen freaking people, okay, and we.

Speaker 11 (20:42):
Are grateful because you go to bat for us, though
I don't think that that count that like cancels out
how Abby feels sometimes she's spoken to, So those are
two different apples and oranges. It's great you go to
bat for her, but also I think she would just
like a communication style adjustment. And then what I'm hearing
you say is you have a lot going on that

(21:02):
we don't realize, and you would like for us to
understand that. Sometimes if maybe you snapish, that's like we
take into account, like, oh, let me just reconvene with
Scuba later, because this is not the moment.

Speaker 7 (21:14):
He's juggling a lot right now. Is that what you're asking?

Speaker 5 (21:18):
Yeah, I guess the version of that.

Speaker 10 (21:19):
Yeah, listen, it's not all the time. It is not.
It's only in certain moments when it's like he did
intense moments.

Speaker 4 (21:26):
Yeah, that's very there's too far between, and so if
it is a few far between things, you're just kind
of like, all right, whatever, do we just move on?
Because there's so many scenarios where that's happened with me
and many different people here. I'm like, ah, you know what, they're.

Speaker 5 (21:35):
Just having a day. I don't really care.

Speaker 4 (21:36):
I can't take any of this to heart because it
doesn't it isn't that serious, or it isn't that I
guess a big picture type thing.

Speaker 10 (21:42):
I don't know, well, I take things personal, so I
will you know, maybe you should.

Speaker 5 (21:46):
Read, oh she should read for agreements. I think I
have that as a fellow rager man.

Speaker 3 (21:52):
Like.

Speaker 4 (21:54):
I think, and I love Abby and I love everyone
here like brothers and sisters, and so I guess I
look at it in a way where that and everythings
don't go the way they go.

Speaker 6 (22:01):
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (22:01):
I'm out of words now, and I'm kind of getting
to put over it. And you know, I don't think
you're days.

Speaker 2 (22:06):
I don't think you're over what did you say you're
counting your days?

Speaker 1 (22:09):
But like you're gonna what do you mean what day?

Speaker 2 (22:14):
What's coming?

Speaker 6 (22:14):
Doing it?

Speaker 1 (22:15):
Like you're gonna day or you need to be compty.

Speaker 5 (22:19):
No, just just say what you're gonna say. No, say it.

Speaker 2 (22:25):
I don't know what he meant by.

Speaker 7 (22:26):
That, I know, but I don't know that we should know.

Speaker 2 (22:29):
He's counting his days.

Speaker 4 (22:30):
I don't know what that means, Like he's got a
life clock on kind of days for we have a
life clock to do you have a life clock?

Speaker 10 (22:36):
Like get a let's just get along.

Speaker 5 (22:40):
But there's gonna be some days where they're gonna suck.
And that just says what it is you move on
from it.

Speaker 10 (22:43):
I know that's but he's asking me in this situation,
and they were just saying, what's stemmed up? And I
probably just.

Speaker 6 (22:49):
And I get it.

Speaker 4 (22:49):
And and I walked out of Friday and be like
all right, whatever, Monday will be fine. And then Monday's
here and it's not fine, and like, well, Tuesday will
be fine, and then we'll see if we get Tuesday.

Speaker 2 (22:56):
I don't know what do you count your days for?

Speaker 6 (22:58):
Man?

Speaker 7 (22:58):
Yeah? What did that mean?

Speaker 4 (23:00):
It's just like a saying no, it's not that's not
a saying my grandma never said that.

Speaker 2 (23:05):
Just count the days. No, that's not a saying, that's
your count your day till something like Okay. So, all
that I would ask is you've heard each other. I'm
not even saying change who you are at five percent.
Understand the other's feelings, and if you can just be
slightly open to the other person and their feelings about

(23:26):
the situation, I think you'll get along better. It's the
nature of being in the same place for so long
and so tight. It does not matter. You could be
best freaking friends and you're in that same room. It's
just like us in the studio. There are times when
Amy wants to kill me, stab me in the freaking
neck with a butter knife.

Speaker 7 (23:45):
Yeah, what this is, That's exactly what I'm saying.

Speaker 2 (23:52):
Just count the days all night. Like the nature of
this job, and as long as we've been together, they're
doing this. This is going to happen sometimes just because
we are here so often and so close. So all
I ask is that you you've heard each other. This
doesn't roll out of this podcast, and we'll try to

(24:14):
get a little better scuba trying not to be so
aggressive with your words only at Abby and Abby understand
that Scuba has a lot going on that at times
we probably don't all know. Mm hmm yeah, great, everybody, good, good, Thanks,
Thanks for the recap. Guys, you were called to be

(24:37):
in the last one. Okay, it was aw he's lucky
at in here that Yeah, taking that dull butter knife
to him.

Speaker 11 (24:44):
Now you get why at times. And it's probably been
a few years since I've brought up this specific Here.

Speaker 2 (24:50):
We go, we'll get another one.

Speaker 11 (24:54):
No, I'm saying no, no, no, I think I've I've
asked or thought like we had an outing on no, no, no, no,
like a therapeutic retreat.

Speaker 2 (25:04):
Awesome, we all hung out for like three hours.

Speaker 11 (25:06):
No, No, we would get it would be a third
part like account like it's it's a bonding way for
us to communicate more effectively.

Speaker 2 (25:14):
And that's what we do know.

Speaker 7 (25:15):
We would emerge from that communication.

Speaker 2 (25:18):
This would be a boring show too.

Speaker 4 (25:19):
Do you imagine, Amy, I hear what you're saying, I'd
like to acknowledge.

Speaker 11 (25:23):
That what I'm hearing you say is and then we
get to say, actually, no, that's not what I said
at all.

Speaker 7 (25:30):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (25:32):
Thank you everybody, Thank you.

Speaker 7 (25:33):
It make it better.

Speaker 2 (25:34):
Let's break and we'll come back into the Sam Hun
interview at Sam Hunt on the show. It's awesome on
the Bobby Bones Show. Now, Sam Hunt, Sam, How you doing,
Buddy good?

Speaker 6 (25:45):
How you guys doing. I'm good.

Speaker 2 (25:47):
Do you drink enough water?

Speaker 6 (25:49):
Not here lately?

Speaker 2 (25:51):
Like I try. I try so hard to drink enough water,
and I feel like there are two versions. There's I
drink enough water, but then I pee all the time
and I don't sleep through the night because I'm always peeing,
or I don't I'm just dehydrated.

Speaker 6 (26:01):
Or your days interrupted every forty five minutes.

Speaker 2 (26:03):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, you look like a water guy though.
Somebody to walk around with a jug?

Speaker 6 (26:06):
No, but all the healthy people I know, I have
their big like you know, nine plastic containers that carry
their water around in it is good for you. I
have had little health stints where I've like remembered to
do that for maybe two three weeks at a time.
I do feel better.

Speaker 2 (26:22):
Have you carried I've carried the jug where I've been
like it's yeah, I'm that guy for a bit, and
I'm like, I got my jug. I gotta hit my
eight hundred ounces of water. I've done that. But again, yeah,
I fall between having a pee all the time and
being hydrated.

Speaker 6 (26:35):
Because I'll forget it's there and then I think I've
got a whole gallon to finish, So around two o'clock and.

Speaker 2 (26:40):
You hull get it.

Speaker 6 (26:41):
Yep.

Speaker 2 (26:41):
Yeah, Sam and I are the same person. I don't
know if you guys knew this or not. Going back
to when you played ball speaking of water, now, I'm
only played high school ball, so nothing like you, but
I'm gonna make a comparison. We didn't get water all
the time. You kind of had to earn it.

Speaker 6 (26:53):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (26:54):
Oh yeah, Well for you.

Speaker 2 (26:56):
Were you still in that time where you had to
earn the water, because now it's like your watery time kids.

Speaker 6 (27:00):
Oh yeah, I remember having I mean it would be
one hundred degrees and we would have been out there
for an hour with no water and they would give us.
You know. I also remember I just heard a coach
in the back of my mind screaming water makes you weak.

Speaker 5 (27:16):
I totally understand.

Speaker 2 (27:18):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's not true though, No, no doubt.
They made giant leaps and science and tell us we
need water like hydration.

Speaker 6 (27:27):
Yeah, imagine.

Speaker 2 (27:29):
I remember back in the day, my high school football
coach name is Coach Kandalf. He had this PBC pipe
and he thought, man, how do we get more kids
water quicker? So then get back on the field. So,
because you only get water breaks, you wouldn't have this
sounds like the nineteen twenties, but you wouldn't have unlimited
water like you'd have to earn it. And so he
took this PVC vibe and he drilled like ten holes
in it, and they put a water hose to it,

(27:50):
and so then it sprayed and we'd all drink like
horses on the trough.

Speaker 6 (27:53):
Yep. Everybody went down holding their helmet about the past. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
you're right. We had that same system set up, uh
interesting enough, directly across from a graveyard. So we got
we looked up at this big cemetery and drank water
from the PBC pipe. But yeah, I think they've upgraded
to have happened since then.

Speaker 2 (28:14):
We also had like hard two days, which is two
practices in the same day. You get there in the morning.
Is miserable. They don't do that as hard now anymore,
did you?

Speaker 6 (28:22):
Was that? Yeah? For you two? Yeah? We had that
same deal. They that summer camp. I'm trying to remember.
Definitely two a days. There might have been days where
we had three practices, but yeah, it was rough. I
remember we had something called the County Fair, which was
this this whole deal where we went from station to

(28:44):
station for like an hour, I mean, and it.

Speaker 7 (28:46):
Was literally it wasn't. Oh yeah, the County Fair makes
it sound fun, but I thought you were pivoting to
a totally.

Speaker 6 (28:54):
Different This was the sick nickname for this, like torture
they've through. But yeah, I mean, I mean ninety of
the team was like throw threw up at some point
in time during the during this process.

Speaker 2 (29:08):
So what was the worst conditioning gassers for us? When
you have to run across the football field four times,
like uh not the link of it that cross it?

Speaker 6 (29:17):
Yes, those were those were worst. Yeah, that that went
all the way through. I mean yeah, my entire football career,
that was a go to gassers. You were thought about
that in a long time.

Speaker 2 (29:27):
In college though. Was it still hard or did it
lighten how difficult it was to just survive and it
was more on execution?

Speaker 6 (29:37):
M hmm. I think I in some ways it served
me well, in some ways it was tough. I ended
up with like hard a coaches. Like all my coaches were.

Speaker 2 (29:49):
Old school, not player coaches.

Speaker 6 (29:51):
Yeah, not player coaches. Like this, from the time the
whistle blows to the time the practice is over, it's
just hoarse voices, greamy at you and and cussing at you.
And you know, they were good men and they meant well.
But it was definitely, you know, it was the old
school like Bear Bryant, you know, kind of approach. But

(30:12):
so yeah. But but in college, it definitely they eased
up a little bit and it did become a lot
more about the mental side of things, just making sure
we understood the playbook. And obviously the playbook was a
little more sophisticated in college. So they didn't absolutely kill us,
but we had they had their moments.

Speaker 2 (30:30):
Do you miss playing ball?

Speaker 6 (30:33):
Yeah? I do occasionally. That still is funny. I still
have dreams about football and and uh and think about
you know, like in those dreams, I'll always be you know.
It's the things I never didn't quite get right that
I wish I had done. Other games we lost and
I wish we had one, But.

Speaker 7 (30:52):
Do you win it in the dream.

Speaker 6 (30:56):
Yeah, you just fall a little bit short. I probably
the complex, I'm sure from all that yelling back in
the day.

Speaker 2 (31:06):
Do you have to find a way to kind of
scratch the competitive itch? Or did you just love football?

Speaker 6 (31:12):
Yeah? And I think that's what I miss most about it.
I still it was a pretty good basketball crew in town.
Within the songwriter between the system songwriters and artists. You know,
Cane's got Caane Brown's got a gym at his house
and they they may have booted me out of the
text three because I hadn't gotten the text in a while,

(31:32):
but they Yeah, so I'll still play basketball to kind
of scratch that itch.

Speaker 2 (31:37):
Are you not worried about your achilles? Everything I do?
I sound like a Brian Adams song, the everything I
do I worry about my achilles popping all the time.

Speaker 6 (31:47):
Yeah, that seems like the Have you had a close
call with that or just seen other.

Speaker 2 (31:51):
I've just seen everybody, not only pro athletes, but like
buddies pop their achilles and they're done.

Speaker 6 (31:56):
It seems like the worst possible thing. Yeah, happened from Yeah, Yeah,
I worry about that. I have throttled down over the
years to to you know, going at about sixty five
seventy percent. But the age range is so broad that
you get that like kid twenty two year old kid
who comes in and wants to just like go hard,

(32:18):
extra hard, and you have to fight to keep your
competitive spirit from getting flared up and you know, pushing
your body to the point of you know, redlining and
starting to risk things like achilles and knees.

Speaker 2 (32:29):
I would also think that someone wants to show Sam Hunt,
I'll do finger quotes like the Sam Hunt like I
can go tell my friends I just scored on Sam Hunt.
Like you have to feel that a little bit too.

Speaker 6 (32:40):
There have been times when I can, since it's this
person who I'm playing against here is like specifically try
to he's trying to get one over on me.

Speaker 2 (32:51):
Hey, Raymundo, did you move to your house in the country?
Because of Sam Hunt's song country House, probably that one.

Speaker 6 (32:57):
What's that right? Yeah? What's up?

Speaker 2 (33:00):
And then ken folks.

Speaker 12 (33:02):
I think a lot of his songs kind of go
more towards the country type of people. But yeah, country house,
and I got a country house now, so I got
the dream?

Speaker 6 (33:09):
Yeah. Yeah, that theme has entered my music in the
last few years. But I think it's culturally too, Like
I don't know, just looking on social media, a lot
of people maybe it was the pandemic, but a lot
of people turned in that direction. I feel like, you know,
there was like a when I was coming, when I
came to Nashville, and I think several years after all

(33:29):
the small town kids who grew up in those rural
environments they wanted to move to the city where all
the action was. And then, you know, somewhere in the
last few years, it seems like there's a little bit
of an exodus. Now. You know, maybe it's just my
generation because we've gotten a little older, but a lot
of folks are getting back out, but getting back out
in the country, having kids and doing all the doing
the whole thing.

Speaker 2 (33:46):
When you have a song like country House does that
and this song specifically, are you in a room and
you want to write and you have an idea about that?
How did this song come up?

Speaker 6 (33:55):
This one was a A lot of songs will start
with titles. This one was was a title that my
Good but Good, my writing partner and buddy Josh Osborne
had and he actually may have had something started on.
I think he had an idea. The idea started and
he sent it to me, and I love the country house.

(34:17):
I just love that phrase, like I could if a
title connects with me. I just I know right off
the bat when I hear the words or see it
written down, like yeah, that should be a song. And
also there's the English connotation, which I've had this like
strange English phase in the last couple of years where
I've kind of reconnected with, you know, my brutes way back.
So you know a country house over there is is

(34:40):
I think that's probably where the phrase comes from.

Speaker 5 (34:42):
Where are your roots?

Speaker 2 (34:43):
Because I found out how a kingdom in Germany that
my family's from, where I got a genealogist. Yeah, I
don't know. Everybody's dead in my family or I didn't know.
My dad left, my mom died, so I don't know anybody.
And so I got a genealogist from Oklahoma State who
went and tracked my hole and she was like, you're
what's king King King Bobby something like that. Yeah, there's
a guy named, uh, not Hobbyer, that'd be Spanish. I

(35:05):
don't know, but he has like he lives in the kingdom.

Speaker 6 (35:07):
You've got royal blood.

Speaker 2 (35:10):
Okay, that's what they called it.

Speaker 10 (35:11):
I believe that's.

Speaker 7 (35:12):
More of like, you know, like we have counties here that's.

Speaker 2 (35:15):
A hater, Sam, I'd like to introduce you to a
hater in the room, Yes, or a parish.

Speaker 5 (35:20):
Yes, it's what's his.

Speaker 2 (35:23):
Name, Johan? So I just found it. So what is
your like? What?

Speaker 6 (35:33):
Yeah? So apparently all this new technology, maybe a I
has something to do with it. They're able to gather
all this information through I don't know, birth birth certificates,
old old will wills or property that's been passed down,
but in records like that. But yeah, So on my
dad's side, I always knew there was there was English

(35:56):
roots just from just sort of I guess, observing the way,
just the way like my grandparents house was decorated, the
way they acted, and you know, you get a little
older and and and can kind of connect the dots.
But yeah, I followed it back through up to Virginia, Virginia,
and then to back to England, to southern England when
they first the first I guess hunt came over. That's
as far back as I went. But I went over

(36:18):
to England recently and you know, I just past started
paying really close attention to the way houses were decorated,
the architecture, the way people behave, sort of the stiff,
cold kind of nature of those people over there, some
of those stereotypes. I'm like that kind of that kind
of works for my family in the way that they,

(36:39):
you know, the way the house is decorated, or the
way you know, they we don't say much at dinner,
you know, we don't show our emotions, you know, all
these things.

Speaker 2 (36:47):
So I'm looking at Churchill.

Speaker 6 (36:51):
Yeah, no, but he was obsessed with He was obsessed
with Winston Churchill. He had a room in his house
dedicated to uh, Winston Churchill. Yeah, he was in World
War Two and so he was obviously Churchill was a
big hero to those guys. So but he got every Christmas,
it was we got sweaters and I remember my granddad

(37:11):
getting another Churchill book of some kind. But but it
was it was pretty cool.

Speaker 2 (37:16):
When you were back there. Did it feel kind of like, oh,
this is kind of where I came Because I'm debating
going to my kingdom. I told them I want to
go to my kingdom in Germany. Sometime it was it
kind of like a feeling of like, oh, this is
kind of cool. I didn't even know what I kind
of am from here.

Speaker 6 (37:28):
There was like a there was something there. I don't
know what it is. There was some comfort or some
recognition of of of of being in that part of
the world that that I connected to. Now I could
be projecting that because I'm you know, I I don't know.
I probably I think there's more going on, you know,
as far as just in our in our DNA and

(37:48):
our environments and whatever that is. Then then maybe meets
the eye. So but I did feel like there there
was something about being there and that that really connected
me with that place.

Speaker 11 (37:59):
Well, Bobby had connection to the the sausages, like made sense.

Speaker 7 (38:03):
Now, you know, is there like a food connection?

Speaker 2 (38:06):
What are you talking about? What are you talking about?
Are you drunk?

Speaker 5 (38:10):
What are you talking about?

Speaker 2 (38:12):
I stopped in Germany and had I stopped it. I
stopped in Germany once and had it was the.

Speaker 7 (38:16):
Greatest He said, it was the greatest thing you've ever eaten.

Speaker 5 (38:19):
Dog, You've had in my life ancestral experience.

Speaker 7 (38:22):
Exact exactly that.

Speaker 2 (38:24):
It sounded weirdly, you said, you know that sausage you had.

Speaker 7 (38:28):
You had the connection with the sausage.

Speaker 2 (38:30):
Okay, that sounds weird.

Speaker 7 (38:34):
If Sam, there was like also a food connection.

Speaker 2 (38:36):
The next song is fish and Chips, though he's announced
that today his next single Sam hunt Fish and Chips.
It's going to be super exciting. Uh this uh the
country house and you were dressing and very jeans and
very country for a while, but today you're in button
up in slacks, just a new account phase.

Speaker 5 (38:55):
Like yeah, like what this is connecting?

Speaker 2 (39:00):
I think you look? I think you look?

Speaker 6 (39:01):
But what like go ahead?

Speaker 2 (39:03):
No, I mean like, what was that a season? Or
like what's happening here?

Speaker 6 (39:09):
Yeah? I think it's probably my final form. You know,
I've I've bounced around over the.

Speaker 7 (39:16):
Years, Ray coming to work tomorrow for.

Speaker 5 (39:23):
Ray do not coming up.

Speaker 2 (39:24):
You don't have to do everything Sam does. Okay, you don't.
You don't have to.

Speaker 6 (39:29):
I don't have to.

Speaker 7 (39:30):
It's gonna happen.

Speaker 2 (39:31):
It happen.

Speaker 6 (39:32):
Yeah. I've heard a psychologist say one time that people
who have like a creative bent have a more fluid identity,
and so I feel like I can relate to that.
Over the years, even you know, I've grown up in
such a broad cultural space relative to like my parents
or grandparents, that I've leaned this way, lean that way.
Out in high school, I was buddies with all the

(39:54):
different little different groups of people that you know might
have dressed differently or listened to different music. I sort
of just to fit in, blend in and get along
with everybody. So but a lot of it, I think
it is getting older having kids. Some of it is
connecting to I mean, it's really it's the way my
my dad dress and then and his dad, and if
you just keep going back, it's a little more formal.

Speaker 2 (40:16):
Look, I think it looked great by the way.

Speaker 6 (40:19):
It is a jump, But like I said, it's probably
just getting a little older.

Speaker 2 (40:23):
Do you remember the first time you were paid to
perform music?

Speaker 6 (40:27):
Mhmm, yeah. I don't know if this was the first,
but it would have been within weeks of the first time.
And I believe it was a a fair some sort
of festival down in Trustful, Alabama, and I opened up
for Steve Azar. Uh you remember him. No country artists

(40:49):
can act like I do. So he has a song
called what is it something about Monday?

Speaker 5 (40:56):
I don't shoot.

Speaker 2 (40:57):
Uh, it's called I Don't have to be me Till Monday.

Speaker 7 (41:02):
That is a song that I don't have to be
me till Monday.

Speaker 6 (41:06):
So you know it so I.

Speaker 5 (41:10):
Haven't heard that on the radio like that was. And
I think I got paid.

Speaker 6 (41:13):
You know, four hundred dollars or something like that, but
which was which was great for me, And I played
for I think my buddy's parents. That was about it.
And so there weren't many people out there, but I
do remember he had his tour bus park there by
the venue buy an empty the empty field. Of course,
it was two in the afternoon, and I remember thinking

(41:34):
how cool it would be, you know, to have a
bus that you could, you know, travel around and play
music in. So yeah, that was probably, if not my
first time, one of the first two or three times
I got paid.

Speaker 2 (41:43):
What song changed your life the most once it started
to be played money or people caring or just general lifestyle.

Speaker 6 (41:55):
Probably for my career as an artist. Uh, probably Leave
the Night On. I mean I remember just driving around
locally when you guys were playing it, and and that's
when I really felt this this momentum or this energy
bubbling up that felt like, you know, the wave had

(42:16):
gone from just a slow build over three or four
years to just this big jump overnight. So yeah, probably
that I don't know, three or four months span right
there when that song first came out.

Speaker 2 (42:28):
Did you ever hit a point where you felt like,
I don't have to prove anything anymore, either because you
found it in yourself or just because you had actually
proven it.

Speaker 6 (42:36):
I think I taggle back and forth between having a
piece and feeling like I don't have to prove anything,
and then maybe in my weaker moments, feeling like I
need to. I have done enough. I haven't you know,
I could have done this better or that better, And
you know, I don't want to rest on my laurel,
so to speak, and you know, so I go back

(42:58):
and forth. But generally speaking, I probably my default is
to not feel too much pressure to prove anything.

Speaker 2 (43:06):
Do you feel the more fame that you've gotten, the
more success you've gotten, the more you kind of don't
want to be in the eye because you have kids
and the kids are getting older a little bit.

Speaker 6 (43:14):
Yeah, I just don't know how. It sort of feels
like a unique experiment. I mean, how many kids kind
of experience that as children, you know, to be on
the fringe of some sort of public you know, experience,
And I just don't know how that affects a kid,
you know, And so it is intimidating, But I do

(43:36):
feel like God put me in this position for a reason,
so I don't want to completely run from it, you know,
and just tuck my kids away and not try to
just hide them from the world. So yeah, that's something
that I am dealing with, I guess right now, trying
to figure out where to land on that.

Speaker 2 (43:49):
All right, final two questions. When you're playing a show.
In the first couple notes, hit what song makes the
crowdgo craziest?

Speaker 6 (44:02):
Body like a back road has that that lick where
as we call it a lick at the end that one? Probably, Yeah,
you can tell there's like ten percent of the crowd
who is there to hear that song. You know, they
know the other songs, but they're like, finally he played
that the one we know.

Speaker 2 (44:22):
I've mount rushmore for people, for artists all time in
your life, your favorites, all genre or all genre of
your whole life. Not even like that inspired how you
do music, just like you get four.

Speaker 6 (44:34):
If it influenced me, man, if I had time to
think about it, I could probably come up with a
better list. But just off the top of my head, maybe, uh,
Chris Christofferson, I had a record that Willy did, Chris
Christopherson songs that my grandmother gave me that was really
impactful at a time when I was just learning to

(44:55):
write songs. And then Steve Earle had an album he
did Live with it, Bluebird, probably as far as just
down the Middle Country, Alan Jackson being from Georgia, and
let's see who would be a fourth maybe maybe Usher

(45:17):
because there was a lot of I did love R
and B music early on.

Speaker 2 (45:20):
Also from Georgia.

Speaker 6 (45:21):
Yeah, also from Georgia. There's definitely a southern, although Steve
Roll's probably Texas, but I have had a there's there's
been a southern. A southern blend has always sort of been.
I think what I've been drawn to the most.

Speaker 2 (45:34):
No, Steve is area, got it.

Speaker 6 (45:40):
Got it.

Speaker 2 (45:41):
Congratulations on Country House, Thank you.

Speaker 6 (45:44):
I appreciate you guys planning.

Speaker 2 (45:45):
And changed Ray's life because that's he literally moved to
the country and credited Country House for making him not
by the house, but pushing him over the edge.

Speaker 6 (45:52):
Are you glad you did it? Right? You enjoying it
out there?

Speaker 12 (45:54):
The commute forty five minutes, but it's awesome in the
morning when there's no vehicles. But yeah, dude, it's nothing
but cornfields. There's no skyscrapers.

Speaker 6 (46:01):
Yeah, it's peaceful.

Speaker 2 (46:03):
Are there a corn fields between here and raising house?
Like corn? Like literally corn growing up?

Speaker 6 (46:08):
Yeah? Something.

Speaker 2 (46:09):
I don't know that it's corn though. You guys gotta
come out there. Okay, we just haven't seen the right Okay, Sam, congratulations,
Good see abuddy everybody. Okay, now that's it.

Speaker 6 (46:21):
We're done.

Speaker 2 (46:23):
Thank you for being here. If you're listening, you're a
part tour. We appreciate you. If you're watching on YouTube,
thank you. We went up two thousand subscribers. It's awesome
for your hot dog eating.

Speaker 1 (46:33):
I mean, I'm probably a little bit of scuba too.
From what it sounds like, they like that.

Speaker 2 (46:38):
Am going crazy. People love that.

Speaker 6 (46:40):
I get.

Speaker 2 (46:40):
Some guy wanted that voicemails day.

Speaker 5 (46:42):
He was like, I was alive after I heard this.

Speaker 2 (46:46):
Okay, do you have any podcasts up today?

Speaker 3 (46:50):
What is today?

Speaker 6 (46:51):
Monday? Monday?

Speaker 5 (46:52):
It's just Monday.

Speaker 11 (46:58):
It's like Friday. No, I have one going up tomorrow.
But our mail Robins Deep Dive is getting a lot
of action. I bet, yeah, so you can still check
that out.

Speaker 2 (47:09):
Good Morgan, anything, what's your last episode? We went up
Thursday went up Thursday, last week?

Speaker 7 (47:17):
Last week?

Speaker 5 (47:19):
What day it is?

Speaker 2 (47:21):
What's happening?

Speaker 10 (47:22):
I had? Her name was Tasha and she reads like
food labels and stuff. She's kind of an expert in
food labels.

Speaker 2 (47:27):
So we talked about seed oils and if they are
actually bad for you and like the healthy things that
are kind of keeping you stuck. All right, there you
go take this personally with Morgan Heughlsman. Okay, cool, that's it. Everybody,
Thank you for being here. All the part tours out
there listening to this part two of the podcast. Thank
you leave us a voicemail. We love to hear feedback
on what you like or don't like. I will say
this too, Scuba, can you take a compliment you think?

(47:50):
Would you like it? Would you like a compliment?

Speaker 6 (47:52):
Sure?

Speaker 2 (47:54):
Scuba put all those voicemails in the voicemail page, even
the ones attacking him.

Speaker 6 (47:58):
Oh that's cool. I don't do this anymore.

Speaker 2 (48:00):
Oh you don't, never mind? I attracted did that? Who put?
Who put the voice? I'm really looking at them, thought
Scuba did it?

Speaker 7 (48:09):
And who does it?

Speaker 6 (48:11):
Abby does?

Speaker 10 (48:13):
We were getting a lot and those are the nicest.

Speaker 2 (48:15):
Ones they were.

Speaker 10 (48:16):
Okay, I try to do a ratio of what people
are talking about, and.

Speaker 2 (48:20):
So always be true, be honest, be true. But I
was really trying to give Scuba Conflix. I thought, look
at Scooba putting some up there hating on them.

Speaker 6 (48:27):
I wouldn't do.

Speaker 5 (48:27):
If I know you, I don't, I know you.

Speaker 2 (48:29):
What, I know you exactly yourself for the good of
the show.

Speaker 5 (48:32):
Always.

Speaker 2 (48:32):
Okay, thank you, We will see you guys tomorrow.

Speaker 6 (48:34):
By everybody,
Advertise With Us

Hosts And Creators

Bobby Bones

Bobby Bones

Amy Brown

Amy Brown

Lunchbox

Lunchbox

Eddie Garcia

Eddie Garcia

Morgan Huelsman

Morgan Huelsman

Raymundo

Raymundo

Mike D

Mike D

Abby Anderson

Abby Anderson

Scuba Steve

Scuba Steve

Popular Podcasts

The Breakfast Club

The Breakfast Club

The World's Most Dangerous Morning Show, The Breakfast Club, With DJ Envy, Jess Hilarious, And Charlamagne Tha God!

Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.