All Episodes

June 2, 2025 38 mins

Bobby talked about how allegedly the FBI has video footage of Jeffery Epstein taking his own life. Do we believe it? Bobby went to the facts surrounding the mystery of his death. We lightened it up with the Top 10 most watched shows of the last year. We got a listener with a question: is it weird to have a housewarming party in your 50s? Bobby shared the weird reason we can’t tickle ourselves.  Amy shared why women also want to date younger. Raymundo has a million dollar idea for us.

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 (00:03):
I got three things I really want to talk about.
In a second, I'm gonna talk about why we can't
tickle ourselves.

Speaker 2 (00:10):
Wait, us like, we can't tickle each other?

Speaker 1 (00:13):
No, ourselves like yourself.

Speaker 2 (00:15):
You can't be ticklish from your own fingers.

Speaker 1 (00:16):
You can't tickle yourself. Okay, Yeah, science tells us why.
And I have other.

Speaker 2 (00:20):
Scientific to say, well, like hr why.

Speaker 1 (00:24):
That would be taking each other?

Speaker 3 (00:25):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (00:26):
First off, the FBI says that we'll release video that
proves Jeffrey Epstein killed himself. Yeah, right, there's no chance.
There's no chance. Remember the video is broken.

Speaker 3 (00:36):
Oh yeah, the cameras.

Speaker 1 (00:37):
The cameras were broken and the guards were like asleep, and.

Speaker 2 (00:41):
Could there be an other video? So now this is
gonna be like AI or what.

Speaker 1 (00:45):
There's no chance this is, this is not this is
never going to exist. They lied. They're like, we're gonna
put it out. They're like going to they would have
by now. Pam Bondi was like, I'm putting it out.
They ain't put it out. It's never gonna come out.
Jeffrey Epstein did not kill himself. Do you want to
hear the story or no? The FBI director promised to

(01:06):
release a new video that finally debunked conspiracy theories that
Jeffrey Epstein could have been murdered, insisting no one was
there but him. There is video. When you look at
the video when we release it, we're working on cleaning
it up to make sure you haven't enhanced, and we
will give you the original so you don't think there
are any shenanigans. You will see no one in there
but him. There's just nobody there. It'll be ai or
it'd be nothing. To remember the cameras were broken. Now

(01:27):
all of a sudden, why do they have video? Like
there's lying being done. We're being lied to. There's no
way too there's just too many factors, thoughts Amy.

Speaker 2 (01:42):
It's just a real bummer, Like I would like to
understand what really happened. And so is this footage that
maybe they did end up having but they told us
the cameras were broken. Could that be a possibility? Is
this another angle?

Speaker 1 (01:55):
I don't think so. I mean that one of the
women that was with Prince Andrew or whatever in the
picture he quote unquote died recently. She got a car wreck,
Oh she did. I think that's how she died in
a car wreck. You have to.

Speaker 2 (02:08):
Yeah, I gotta google that, so.

Speaker 1 (02:11):
I'll read you some things. Number One, he was under
suicide watch, but all of a sudden then he wasn't.
Jeffrey Epstein. He had reportedly attempted suicide just weeks earlier.
He was put on suicide to watch, but he was
removed shortly before his death. That alone raised eyebrows. Why
take a high profile inmate off suicide watch That means
people aren't watching him? Okay? Number two the cameras malfunctioned.

(02:34):
On the night Epstein died, two cameras outside his cell
allegedly failed, plus the footage from a third camera was
found to be unusable. Huge red flag. Number three the
guards fell asleep. The two guards asigned to check on
Epstein every thirty minutes allegedly both fell asleep and then
falsified records to cover it up. What are the odds

(02:56):
of both guards sleeping during the most high risk shift
at the same time the cameras are out. Number four
the autopsy was disputed. He died from neck injuries that
included a broken hyoid bone, an injury more common in
strangulation than hanging. This is, according to some forensic experts,

(03:17):
a former New York City medical examiner doctor Michael Baden
publicly states the injuries were more consistent with homicidal strangulation.
It's the doctor that said that. Next up, he obviously
had dirt on very powerful people. He was connected to
extremely high profile figures, politicians, royalty, billionaires. The speculation is

(03:37):
he had enough information to ruin reputations or careers, and
that someone wanted to silence him before he could talk.
The conspiracy minded people will say that the timing of
his death before trial, before naming names, felt a little
too convenient. All those coincidences, all the one or two

(04:02):
of those coincidences is crazy, Like wow, I can't believe.
That's the craziest thing, all of them together. No chance
that both guards fell asleep.

Speaker 3 (04:09):
All cameras went out.

Speaker 1 (04:10):
The doctor says, it looks like strangulation, not hanging, which
is probably why they strangled them. So it looked like
a hanging, so it'd go along with.

Speaker 3 (04:18):
The hanging, saying that that third camera went out though,
or that third camera is unusable, The footage is unusable.
Could that be the footage that they're trying to say
they're going to release.

Speaker 2 (04:31):
Yeah, if we get some video that's clear as day.
Then we're like, Okay, this is not clearest.

Speaker 1 (04:36):
But even if it's not, if it's so not clear,
we're also going to go that's not even the real body.

Speaker 2 (04:40):
So we need like they've lied.

Speaker 1 (04:42):
So much, why would we believe something we even lied
to already by the same people.

Speaker 2 (04:47):
Okay, So yeah, virgin Virginia I don't know how to
say her last name, like Guffree or whatever. She was
the one. Yes, it was with same Prince Andrew. She
died by suicide, That's what it says here. She killed
herself around April twenty fifth or so. And and I
remember her from the documentary she got with Epstein was
started sexually abusing her when she was sixteen or something

(05:09):
and then when all I know is she was under
eighteen by the time he trafficked her to Prince Andrew,
and she took her life.

Speaker 1 (05:20):
And she did put that tweet out too. You may
look that out of this and goes, I'm not going
to kill myself regardless of what happens.

Speaker 2 (05:24):
Oh my gosh, I don't know that part yet. But
back in two thousand and nine, Epstein's did a settled
a civil suit with her for five hundred thousand dollars,
and I mean, gosh, she had to live, I mean
her whole life. Like her, she's a She's holding up
a picture of herself here in this video. I'm looking
at where she's only sixteen years old, and that's when

(05:45):
a lot of this started for her. And that's crazy.
She looks so young and innocent and it completely took
her life on a different trajectory.

Speaker 1 (05:53):
Yep, there is no way we either were lied to
crazy right, powerful people are hiding this, She wrote. I'm
making a publican known that in no way, shape or
formed my suicidal I've made this known to my therapist
and gp.

Speaker 3 (06:08):
General practitioner.

Speaker 1 (06:10):
Maybe maybe if something happens to me, for the sake
of my family, do not let this go away and
help me protect them. Too many evil people want to
see me quieted. Gosh so still so yeah, that sucked.
I saw that come out this morning. We're never gonna know.
And even if we do get told something, we shouldn't
believe it because they've be lying to us forever. Next up,

(06:33):
the most watched shows of twenty twenty four. Thank you
little lighter.

Speaker 4 (06:37):
Yeah, I can.

Speaker 1 (06:39):
Go ten to one. It's like so this is just
the this is this year, right, So this is this
year you're going from, I'm trying to find that. The
Nielsen unveiled its new multi platform ratings. The most watched
show of twenty twenty four to twenty five season was
I'll get to that and number ten. Nobody wants this
on Netflix. I have no idea what that is.

Speaker 5 (07:00):
Oh, that's the Kristen Bell podcast one that everybody told
me not to watch.

Speaker 2 (07:04):
Oh yes, because Morgan can't watch it because her boyfriend
broke up with her because he was Jewish and wanted
to pursue maybe a Jewish woman, right, Yeah.

Speaker 3 (07:15):
And that's what this show is.

Speaker 2 (07:17):
She's a podcasts. He's a rabbi that ended up dating
someone that wasn't. So it was for Morgan, it would
have been watching something that where it worked out and
it was an actual rabbi and her boyfriend wasn't even
really a practicing.

Speaker 1 (07:30):
Eight is a tie for two monsters, the Lyle and
Eric Menindez story.

Speaker 3 (07:35):
You've seen that, right, Oh yeah?

Speaker 1 (07:37):
And then Zero Day. Oh Yeah, what's zero Dan?

Speaker 2 (07:41):
Oh that's the one Robert Robert that was good.

Speaker 1 (07:44):
Yeah, that was good. I didn't watch Monsters already knew
the story. Maybe I did watch Monsters you did, or
maybe I already knew the story, Maybe maybe I did.

Speaker 3 (07:55):
What's Zero Day about?

Speaker 1 (07:57):
It's a series of Robert de Niro and he's an
expert residents in it and there's like a major power outage.
They shut down everything and he has to they bring
him back in to help figure it out. It's good.
It's pretty good. Landman at seven, pretty good. Never watched
land Man.

Speaker 3 (08:14):
John Hamson that one too.

Speaker 1 (08:15):
Bad guy, A good guy, bad guy. I think I
like bad guy John ham That's awesome. Matt Locke at
six Mattlock. There's a new version. Yeah, but it's a woman, yeah,
and I think it has Kathy Bates. She is Mattlock,
and she may be like his granddaughter or something, or
maybe she's just Mattlock. I don't know. Madeline Mattie Mattlock, who,

(08:39):
after achieving success in her younger years, decides to rejoin
the workforce at a prestigious law firm. Yeah, Mattlock back
in the day was Andy Griffith. Maybe she wasn't.

Speaker 2 (08:50):
She's not related to Ben Matlock as too, but it
says just a reboot, but she's not related to him.

Speaker 1 (09:02):
At number five High Potential on ABC don't know what
that is? And number four Reacher on Prime. Oh I liked,
I liked Reacher.

Speaker 5 (09:09):
Have you watched all three seasons?

Speaker 1 (09:11):
Oh, by the way, High Potential has from It's Always Sonny,
Caitlyn Olsen, the female lead on It's Always Sonny. It's
really funny. No, yeah, no, I've not watched all three seasons.

Speaker 2 (09:22):
It's so I feel like it just got better.

Speaker 5 (09:25):
When most shows they kind of fall off, but Reacher
has just kept me going all three seasons.

Speaker 1 (09:30):
Tracker at three also phenomenal.

Speaker 5 (09:33):
Tracker's Yeah, it's justin Hartley.

Speaker 1 (09:37):
He is from This is Us.

Speaker 5 (09:39):
Yes, yeah, it's really good. He like Tracker literally he
tracks down people.

Speaker 1 (09:45):
Number two adolescents on Netflix.

Speaker 2 (09:48):
Oh no, I tried to start that as too messed up.

Speaker 1 (09:50):
Oh the kid by stabbing thing. I don't watch that. Yeah,
same thing we started it. We're like, we're not in
the mood like a child murder. Yeah. And the number
one Squid Game by far thankfully.

Speaker 2 (10:00):
Yeah, not interesting.

Speaker 1 (10:02):
Only what I've seen, it's awesome.

Speaker 3 (10:04):
Oh, Amy, you'd love it?

Speaker 2 (10:05):
No, No, no, seriously, season one.

Speaker 1 (10:10):
Season three is gonna come out in like a month.

Speaker 4 (10:12):
Oh, really.

Speaker 1 (10:13):
Yeah, it comes out the summer at some point.

Speaker 6 (10:14):
Okay, twenty seven to this month.

Speaker 4 (10:17):
All right, let's go.

Speaker 3 (10:19):
Why Why is Amy so resistant towards it? Quit? That's
what That's what it is.

Speaker 7 (10:26):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (10:27):
I just can't get into it.

Speaker 3 (10:29):
Oh, you started watching.

Speaker 2 (10:30):
It, I guess the first episode probably a long time ago. Yes,
I'm sure I did. I have zero desire to watch
it though.

Speaker 1 (10:38):
Then, don't we This is not Tuesday Reviews Day. But
we started watching a show called.

Speaker 2 (10:45):
Q, like the Letter or line.

Speaker 1 (10:49):
It's more than that. It's on Netflix. It just came out.
It's called like Q.

Speaker 2 (10:55):
Or but like Q, like get in line.

Speaker 1 (10:58):
The letter Cue Department Q. Yes, and we are probably
six episodes in out of nine. It is a It's
not British, but it's I think it's from like Scotland
or something. But they speak English. It's awesome Scottish. Yeah,
it's it's really great.

Speaker 3 (11:16):
That is British. Remember our guy came in and told us.

Speaker 1 (11:20):
That Scottish is British. Then why is the word why
does the word Scottish exists?

Speaker 3 (11:24):
Scottish like Scotland, Ireland, UK, all that is British.

Speaker 1 (11:28):
Depth. Q is a Scottish crime thriller as per written here.

Speaker 4 (11:33):
That's the same thing as British man.

Speaker 1 (11:36):
It says Scottish crime.

Speaker 4 (11:37):
I'm just telling you what this guy down to.

Speaker 1 (11:42):
Scots are British. Scotland is the country within the United Kingdom,
so people from Scotland are British citizens. However, many Scots
identify Scottish, not British. Dude. I don't know. You could
be right, I could be crazy.

Speaker 3 (11:57):
No, I think that guy, but it's just a kind
of what the guy that has a morning show came
in sat with us. Yeah, Miles, Miles, Yeah, he was
explaining that to us.

Speaker 1 (12:05):
Yeah, okay, it's great. It's not an official review. We're
not done with it. That's great. I want to play
some voicemails voicemail. It's called department queue by the way,
voicemail number one.

Speaker 7 (12:17):
I just have a question something I'm curious about. So,
if you've been married and in a relationship and have
moved houses, let's say two or three times, and all
of your personal items household items, clothing, kitchen wear, all
that go with you each move, what do you think
about someone in their fifties and sixties having a house

(12:37):
forming party's curious.

Speaker 1 (12:40):
I don't hate it. I think it is. I think
it's fine. You don't have to go. Here's think about
a party or something you're invited to. You don't have
to go. So is that a little weird? Sure, but
weird doesn't mean wrong. And you can have a party
for anything. So you want to have a housewarming party.
You're moving, you need stuff great, so who comes? It

(13:02):
may be like my eleventh birthday when nobody comes, when
you rent the old gym in Mountain High School and
nobody comes. It could be that, or it could be
people come and bring you stuff. I don't hate it.

Speaker 2 (13:12):
Because do you register?

Speaker 1 (13:14):
You can?

Speaker 4 (13:14):
Sure?

Speaker 1 (13:15):
I think so. I think you would to make it
easy on everybody. Register.

Speaker 3 (13:17):
House warming is when you ask for gifts.

Speaker 8 (13:19):
Ye.

Speaker 2 (13:19):
Yes, I thought it would be. You just start having
a house warming party because you want to gather people
together to they got to warm the house, break in
the new house, warm it up, and if they want
to bring a little something. But most of the time,
I guess if you're not registered, they're going to bring
a candle or some stop stuff you'll want.

Speaker 1 (13:36):
Yeah, So I don't hate it. I like it because
you don't have yeah, but you want seventeen.

Speaker 4 (13:42):
That's what I'm saying.

Speaker 1 (13:43):
Yeah, okay, fair enough. You don't have to go. It's
like a tip cup that's at Subway. You don't have
to put two bucks in that if you don't want to.
If they make your sandwich. There is nothing about it
that says you're forced to put two dollars into the
tip cup at Subway. But if you'd like to, good
for you. Same with this. I'm gonna put this on
those on the same same level.

Speaker 9 (14:03):
Next one, Ray, I just wanted to give a shout
out to Amy. I used one of her morning Corny's
on the local radio station and I won a four
pack of tickets to our local single A baseball team,
the Eugene Emeralds. Thanks Amy for.

Speaker 1 (14:17):
The joke, no problem.

Speaker 2 (14:19):
I wonder which joke it was, though.

Speaker 1 (14:21):
I'm like, which station?

Speaker 3 (14:22):
All right?

Speaker 1 (14:23):
Why don't don't steal from us to go another station?

Speaker 3 (14:25):
Why they and use it on their stage?

Speaker 1 (14:27):
Yeah? Next one, I'm.

Speaker 8 (14:29):
Just telling Lunchbox that he is right about Blue. It's
the best cartoon I ever watched. Watched all three seasons show.
That's all I want to say.

Speaker 3 (14:40):
Pa Pace's right.

Speaker 10 (14:42):
Blue is dude. I'm telling you it's good for kids
and adults. You sit there and you watch it like
that's funny, you laugh. Can't believe that he hates it.

Speaker 3 (14:48):
No, I'm just done watching those shows with my kids.

Speaker 1 (14:51):
Like I was just jealous of it because it always
kept me off with Breaking Bobby Balance. It kept me
off the top spot on Disney Plus.

Speaker 10 (14:56):
Yeah, I just don't. I don't know how you can
compete with Blue. I mean because kids, there's the age
range of Blue is so vast, So I don't.

Speaker 4 (15:04):
Think you should beat yourself up over it.

Speaker 1 (15:06):
I don't know any of the words.

Speaker 10 (15:07):
You're staying there, don't beat yourself up over it, Like
what of blak over your spot?

Speaker 2 (15:13):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (15:13):
Oh me, you're talking to you're talking to him. Your
tone was all aggressive, so I thought you were still
at Eddie. I got it.

Speaker 10 (15:20):
I was just saying the age range that watches Blue
is so vast, and your show is a little you know,
three year olds aren't watching your show, so it's a competition.

Speaker 1 (15:30):
It's also been three or four years since then. I'm
over it. I just have you should go home and
watch the season of Blue. I'm okay.

Speaker 4 (15:35):
No Tuesday Reviews day Man it's great.

Speaker 1 (15:39):
You can't tickle yourself. You have a try doing it
right now, it's not working. You can do your own
armped you can do your footsol there's nothing. It's because
your brain is playing a trick on you, one that
has stumped scientists for centuries and exposes gaps in our
understanding of human behavior. So an extensive review published in
Science Advances shows just how little we actually know about tickling,

(16:03):
despite it being one of our most universal experiences. This
from study finds. The research reveals that tickling remains largely
understudied compared to pain, itch, and touch, and even though
brilliant minds like Socrates, Aristotle, and Darwin all theorized about it,
we still don't know much. Also, this is me talking here.
Here's the thing about tickling. It's the only time I

(16:23):
ever laughed when I hate it. Any other time I laugh,
it's because something's really good.

Speaker 2 (16:27):
Oh I get angry, but you laugh.

Speaker 1 (16:29):
You'll laugh maybe a little, and.

Speaker 2 (16:32):
Then I turn angry.

Speaker 1 (16:33):
Scientists still can't explain why certain body parts like armpits,
and feet are more ticklish than others. Your brain automatically
cancels out tickling sensations when you touch yourself, but we
can tickle others because their brains can't predict our movements.
Tickling laughter is different from joy laughter. It may be
more like a reflex response than genuine enjoyment, which explains

(16:54):
how many people just like being tickled but still laugh.
When I was doing that puncture I do. I go
Wednesday evenings now the acupunctures, I can sleep, have like
four sessions I have to do. And when she's put
those needles in me, I was going and she was like,
are you okay, and like, I don't know. My response
is to laugh at that crass. No, didn't even tingle.

Speaker 2 (17:16):
No, tingle just made I get a.

Speaker 1 (17:17):
Really hard massage. Like if I'm like injured and they
have to go hard, I'll laugh. Yeah, And it ain't because.

Speaker 3 (17:22):
It's funny, but that that kind of tickles.

Speaker 1 (17:24):
When it doesn't take, it sucks.

Speaker 2 (17:26):
Have you ever laughed in really serious situations, like really serious,
like it's bad and I.

Speaker 1 (17:32):
Don't have that as much my wife does that something I.

Speaker 2 (17:34):
Have that it's horrible. I even told my therapist. I
was like, I don't even know why, I just I
laughed during this and it's horrible. But I couldn't help myself,
and she said it's for some people, it's a trauma response.
So I was like, oh, okay, that means he's like
because I really wasn't trying to be rude or but
I mean a few years ago I had to go
through something really difficult and I just started laughing and

(17:55):
it did not make them. It made the matter worse.
Actually it was pretty terrible.

Speaker 1 (17:59):
Yeah, my trauma sponsors just hate my biological father anyway.
So here's some other stuff. Oh my gosh, these are
other science things we kind of can't figure out, but
like weird science things about us. Number one, your brain
edits your memories every time you recall them. Each time
you remember something, your brain rewrites the memory like editing

(18:19):
a word doc and hitting saved. So technically your childhood
might just be a game of telephone with yourself. And
the longer you go, the more times you had to
recall it. It's like the more times it'd be passed
to you, so you remembering less and less. Sometimes you
create the in the gaps, so it's wrong.

Speaker 3 (18:34):
It's interesting.

Speaker 1 (18:35):
Your eyes see everything upside down, your retina flips the
image and your brain reflips it. You're seeing the world
wrong and fixing it without even knowing.

Speaker 2 (18:44):
It's a lot of work.

Speaker 3 (18:46):
It does it without you even thinking about it.

Speaker 1 (18:48):
You're paralyzed every night when you dream, walized, during ram sleep,
brim sleep. I don't know the band or rim whatever.
Your body turns off your muscles so you don't act
out your dream.

Speaker 3 (19:00):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (19:01):
If it's like if your brain were like, yeah, we're
about to do something stupid in here, like it down
so you don't do anything stupid. Some people, though, like
when they sleep walking, stuff is different. That's because their
brain is not acting in the same way. It's not
acting properly as it was designed right, Like Mike d
didn't you have like sleep paralysis like where you were
being attacked by a monsters.

Speaker 6 (19:21):
I felt like there was something on me while I
was sleeping and I could feel it, and then I
try to like make a sound or like talk, and
I couldn't. I was paralyzed.

Speaker 1 (19:28):
But you were awake or you were asleep thinking you're awake.
I was.

Speaker 6 (19:31):
I felt like I was awake and I was experiencing it,
but I wasn't really there.

Speaker 3 (19:35):
Like I could see.

Speaker 6 (19:35):
Myself like from the top of the ceiling, looking down
at myself and.

Speaker 1 (19:40):
So you're probably asleep then, probably, But.

Speaker 6 (19:43):
It felt very real, like I could feel like the
covers getting tighter and tighter on my body, and I
would like push him down and I could feel them
like coming back on top of me.

Speaker 1 (19:51):
The weird part about that is, and I've had PTSD
life like situations where people like breaking into my house
because they have where it's so real because my dream
is having me in the exact same spot that I am,
in the exact same house that I am. It's kind
of like your situation where you could be dreaming it
and it's so specific to what's exactly happening with you
and around you that it feels real. Where I would

(20:12):
have these dreams where someone's breaking in my house to
kill me, but it was a dream of exactly where
I was, So when I wake up, it's the same.
You're awake, but it's exactly what the dream was, so
you don't even know if you were asleep or so
I'd have to get up and like put my hands
and drag my hands across the walls to prove I
was awake and then walk back to every door.

Speaker 3 (20:32):
Yeah, and that's probably why you have trouble sleeping.

Speaker 4 (20:35):
Yeah, it's a part of it.

Speaker 1 (20:36):
Yeah, part of it. Right, You share about sixty percent
of your DNA with a banana. What do you mean,
that's what I mean?

Speaker 2 (20:46):
What do you mean, Like, we have a lot of
the same things that a banana has sixty percent.

Speaker 1 (20:52):
You can't smell while you're asleep.

Speaker 2 (20:55):
Bananas can.

Speaker 3 (20:57):
That's that's kind of why people like when their house
is on fire, they can't smell it.

Speaker 1 (21:00):
Oh that's a good point. Oh, basically your nose is
like I'm off the clock taking a break. Yeah, like
works over for the day. I'm gonna go ahad and
go to sleep. Time moves slower the higher you go
due to gravity. Time passes slightly faster at the top
of a skyscraper than at the bottom. So technically you're
up upstairs neighbors aging faster than you.

Speaker 2 (21:18):
So that's why when people go to space they age faster.

Speaker 4 (21:21):
Yeah, that's crazy.

Speaker 1 (21:22):
Your foot is officially longer in the evening. Gravity pulls
fluid downward all day, so all the everything in your
body going downward, so it stretches your foot slightly because
there's more liquid in it.

Speaker 2 (21:36):
Oh that's why my feet are swollen at the end
of the day.

Speaker 1 (21:40):
Yeah, there you go. I think about it like that.
But yeah, the voice you hear in your head isn't
your real voice. That's why people when they hear themselves
on something like I sound like that, this sounds terrible
because you hear it through your bones and internal vibrations
when you speak. So when you hear recording of yourself,
that's what everybody else here is not what you hear
inside your head because what you're hearing inside your head
is again, is all bones and.

Speaker 2 (22:00):
Talking about when we talk. What I'm hearing right now
talking because.

Speaker 1 (22:03):
I have talking right now talking because I have.

Speaker 2 (22:08):
I also have other voices.

Speaker 1 (22:10):
Yeah, yeah, that voice is different, the weird.

Speaker 2 (22:14):
Like when I'm not, when I'm not what other voices
while you're talking.

Speaker 1 (22:21):
There's no one internal dialogue that never stops. But it's
always my voice.

Speaker 2 (22:26):
Yeah, But I guess I don't really know what it
sounds like because it's not talking out loud, that's what
I mean it sounds.

Speaker 1 (22:31):
But in my head it sounds like my voice, and
sometimes it talks two times at the same time, but
it's always my voice. Yours, isn't your voice.

Speaker 2 (22:39):
I don't know I had. I never really thought about it.
I think it is my voice, but to your point,
we don't know what it really sounds like.

Speaker 1 (22:48):
That's the one there. The placebo effect can work even
when you know it's a placebo.

Speaker 2 (22:57):
Yeah. Yeah, yeah, that's what's crazy. That's crazy to me.
But hey, I'll take it if it works.

Speaker 1 (23:09):
Sign up for a dental Yeah.

Speaker 2 (23:13):
When I got my wisdoms, hee thought I didn't have
dental insurance, so I did a study. Yeah, I was
like twenty three or twenty two, twenty three years old,
and I went to get my wisdom teeth removed as
part of a pain study. So you were either going
to get placebo or you're gonna get the real pain medicine,
and you got I got the real pay medicine. Legit.

Speaker 1 (23:34):
Do you think they pick out the person they liked?

Speaker 2 (23:35):
The lad.

Speaker 1 (23:37):
Walk again and they're like, all right, we're gonna go
with him. He kind of was kind of rude when
he walked in.

Speaker 2 (23:42):
Not only that, I mean I got the surgery for free,
and then I got paid seventy five dollars.

Speaker 3 (23:47):
WHOA, you're rich, You're rich, Yeah.

Speaker 2 (23:49):
But I wasn't. It didn't cost me thousands for the surgery,
and I got paid seventy five and I got the
pain meds. I just had to sit in a recliner
with the twenty other people for how long as long
as they monitored us. I don't really remember. I mean
my mom picked me up.

Speaker 4 (24:05):
That's wild.

Speaker 10 (24:07):
So it wasn't like you could have got the They
would have done it with no pain medicine in your mouth.
They everybody got the pain medicine in their mouth. It
was just afterwards.

Speaker 2 (24:14):
No, no, some people got the placebo.

Speaker 4 (24:17):
Like so they did it while they were just awake.

Speaker 2 (24:19):
And no, I don't really know. Maybe it was just
after they gave you something. I think I can't imagine
when you're coming off what.

Speaker 1 (24:29):
They puke you on, all right, not like because I
think we can identified. Yeah, it was.

Speaker 2 (24:36):
That's why we had to stay in the recliners for
hours later.

Speaker 1 (24:40):
Got me. I think it's a guy crying in the
corner over there.

Speaker 4 (24:45):
I was checking on thank you Amy.

Speaker 1 (24:47):
All right round the road.

Speaker 2 (24:49):
So it turns out that women they want to date
younger guys just as much as men want to date
younger women. So a lot of times people just think
that's a guy thing. But research is showing that women
are really into younger guys as well, so we don't
need a stereotype of men anymore. I guess just.

Speaker 1 (25:09):
To say research, though I need to know who researched it,
because here's what I think, and this is not my theory,
but I think men are able to create children much longer,
so I think the basis of them liking younger women

(25:30):
is that they can continue to create to have more
children longer. So I think back hundreds and thousands of
years ago, older men could still have kids where women
their age could not, so they would continue to procreate
with younger women. And I think that's where that comes from,

(25:50):
is over thousands and thousands of years or on the
other side, I feel like maybe women like a little
quick young ding dong. However, I think that women generally
from thousands thousands of years ago, they were the smaller
of the two, and men would go out and hunt
and gather and fight and kill. They were larger, like built, bigger. Therefore,

(26:13):
they wanted their man to be a provider or protector,
and I think that is where that comes from. Now.
I do think that again women now everyone's walking like
young ding dong, But I don't think that that is
what generally when it's not equal. I think there's a
reason genetically now we are men. I'm not was much younger,

(26:34):
She'll always be twelve years younger. But I think that's
what it's based in. So they could now be like, yeah,
women like young guys, but I don't think generally women
want to marry a young dude.

Speaker 2 (26:43):
So this was a study of four thy five hundred
blind dates, and there's no gender differences in attraction to
young partners. It was a major new study.

Speaker 1 (26:52):
Okay, so you're talking about just a date then one date,
I'm talking about lifelong.

Speaker 10 (26:58):
I got a question back in the day, like you're
talking the old ku.

Speaker 4 (27:01):
Do you think they were.

Speaker 10 (27:02):
All like we are like all that chick's hot or
was it just she's there, like we need to pre
pro create.

Speaker 4 (27:08):
Do you think they thought about hotness?

Speaker 1 (27:10):
I think there were probably physical attributes to women that
could give the most children. Okay, don't you think a lot.

Speaker 2 (27:22):
Of now with societies there's conditioning behind what's hot and not.

Speaker 1 (27:27):
Yeah, but that's different.

Speaker 2 (27:28):
I know.

Speaker 1 (27:29):
But I'm saying I'm not saying hot or not. I'm
just saying what was considered we'll use the word hot.
Wasn't like an aesthetically pleasing thing like we talk about now.
But I think men knew that a young woman could
also produce more children over Like the younger they were,
the more kids they could have over the next ten
fifteen years.

Speaker 3 (27:46):
So that could have been attracted attractive to them.

Speaker 1 (27:49):
Yeah, so not the same. So I don't think it
was an aesthetic thing like now a visual except the
visual was young, so they'll have more kids.

Speaker 10 (27:57):
Okay, see I see it now still is like younger
their body stays.

Speaker 1 (28:03):
Curvy figures have always been a thing, even like in
the ancient times, like the curvey. And again that could
be big boobs because of the milk. I mean really it
could be.

Speaker 4 (28:11):
So yeah, I like those.

Speaker 3 (28:14):
You think there was ever a caveman or something that
was like I don't want to.

Speaker 2 (28:17):
Fight like because yeah, and he probably didn't live long like.

Speaker 1 (28:21):
A sensitive Yeah, I don't want to kill anything. We
just hung out with the ladies, right right, probably could
he could he sew.

Speaker 3 (28:29):
And he would just tell jokes, you know, and there
he's funny. You're staying home. Oh you're not fond with
us because we're not going to get an animal if
you come with us.

Speaker 1 (28:36):
Either he died quickly, as Amy said, or he had
another use. Okay, yeah, I think you had to have
a use back then, like your usage rate needed to
be high in some area. They know what it was,
but yeah, but I don't know. I know, Lunchbox Your.

Speaker 10 (28:50):
Story fifty season Video Survivor. They announced the cast and
there's a celebration of the past forty nine seasons, and
I gotta say, I'm disappoint because they have so many
people from the New School, Like the last season that
just aired was forty eight. They have three people out
of twenty four from the last season. Like, if we're

(29:11):
doing all forty nine seasons, don't we think we need
to have like beginning, middle, and end. There are so
many people from the last five or six years they're
gonna be on the season fifty.

Speaker 1 (29:20):
I think an age thing though too. You go all
the way back, and I'm gonna have that many because
they're a lot older now and are gonna be on
an island. So I think it's gone even harder to
find people from that many years ago, I think. And
now White Lotus creators on there.

Speaker 4 (29:31):
Mike White, Yeah, he's going back.

Speaker 1 (29:33):
He was on to begin with.

Speaker 4 (29:35):
Yeah, he got second place.

Speaker 1 (29:36):
Oh, I didn't know that. I just saw he was on.
I didn't know he was going back.

Speaker 3 (29:39):
And hasn't he casted like people from Survivor, Like people
that were in.

Speaker 4 (29:43):
His season are in white lotus every season.

Speaker 1 (29:45):
Was he famous before?

Speaker 4 (29:46):
Yeah? He wrote school Rock and.

Speaker 1 (29:48):
Then he went on Survivor as the guy who wrote
School of Rock. Yes, got it? Oh that's cool.

Speaker 10 (29:54):
Yeah, And so he's back, and I mean there's a
lot of people that are back, but it's like all
the new school and I'm like a little disappointed they on,
you know, they did the whole announcement. I'm like, I'm
expecting a lot of old school players. There's only a
few old school players and a lot of new players.

Speaker 3 (30:07):
Stupid question. Seasons not years, right, Like you can have
like two seasons a year, right, Okay.

Speaker 1 (30:13):
Like Dancing with the Stars just celebrated their twentieth year,
but they've had way more seasons because I was season
twenty seven, Champ. I think there's been like thirty one
or something another number. But yes, it used to be
one a year, but now they will put things on
twice a year. After it'll make money and then keep
the ratings up and got it.

Speaker 10 (30:31):
Yeah, So Survivor usually premiers in February, ends like late May,
and then comes back in like August or early September,
ends in beginning of December.

Speaker 1 (30:42):
Thirty four Seasons of Dancing with the Stars, Morgan.

Speaker 5 (30:47):
Okay, so you've been having sleep problems still correct? Sure,
this is kind of an ongoing problem for you. Well,
there's a city in China that's trying something new, and
I feel like we should try this with you.

Speaker 4 (30:56):
Oh my gosh, I saw this.

Speaker 1 (30:57):
Go ahead. I'm listening. I haven't heard this.

Speaker 4 (31:00):
This is crazy.

Speaker 5 (31:01):
People are hanging from their necks with a belt and
gently swinging for a few minutes, and everybody who's tried
it is like, cool, I can sleep now, and excess died.

Speaker 3 (31:11):
It's fixillation erotic.

Speaker 1 (31:16):
Some people like to choke themselves and then do their
own thing, you know, to themselves.

Speaker 2 (31:21):
Okay, it's not that.

Speaker 1 (31:22):
Oh it's not that, because I was like, maybe that
doesn't know.

Speaker 5 (31:25):
It kind of looks like a soft just like little
belt right here.

Speaker 1 (31:28):
And it's a really wide belt. I'm watching it now.
It almost looks like a COVID mask, but it goes
under your chin. But it's very thick and strong and
you swing on it. Why do they that's what's do
I don't know?

Speaker 2 (31:38):
They said.

Speaker 5 (31:39):
Everybody who's tried it has cleaned that their sleep problems
have significantly improved, So why.

Speaker 2 (31:43):
Not try it with you?

Speaker 1 (31:44):
Yeah, if you can find me a machine, I feel
like we can make this.

Speaker 2 (31:47):
Eddie could build this.

Speaker 3 (31:48):
You want me to build something that I built?

Speaker 1 (31:51):
We can have Morgan build up.

Speaker 6 (31:52):
But I never get tell you why.

Speaker 1 (31:58):
Did you do that? That's fun?

Speaker 3 (32:01):
Okay, anybody you have so good news? Bluebell is coming
up with a new well. They're bringing back a flavor
that existed in twenty twenty and for some reason they
stopped making it. But it's back. It's the cookie Cake
ice cream and it has like ice cream, vanilla ice
cream in it with chunks of chocolate chip and cookie
cake and squirreled with vanilla icing.

Speaker 1 (32:22):
I love cookie cake. It's the most underrated cake. People
never bring it up when it's like which favorite cake?

Speaker 3 (32:28):
Cookie cakes?

Speaker 1 (32:29):
Cookie cake is so good?

Speaker 2 (32:32):
White icing?

Speaker 3 (32:34):
Yeah, what's your This is tough. I don't even want
to ask you. Before the whole dairy thing, what was
your favorite ice dude?

Speaker 1 (32:39):
It's okay, it's not like I want to be a NOM.

Speaker 3 (32:41):
I don't. I don't want to bring that up before nom,
what was your favorite ice cream flavor?

Speaker 1 (32:47):
I can don't eat ice cream as far as you
can do. There's a vegan No, there's vegan out ordered
some last night.

Speaker 2 (32:53):
Yeah, it's made ice.

Speaker 1 (32:55):
Cream, but it's really good.

Speaker 2 (32:56):
It's made from what it's made from some cream.

Speaker 1 (33:00):
It's I'm telling that you. I can still eat ice cream.

Speaker 4 (33:02):
Okay, well it's like real.

Speaker 3 (33:03):
Real ice cream, dude. Uh, like you know some people like.

Speaker 1 (33:08):
Rocky Road, Sonic Cone, Oh ice cream. Yeah, and it's
not just vanilla but like Sonic Soft serve on a cone.
If you're like name a specific that's the one.

Speaker 3 (33:18):
It's pretty good.

Speaker 2 (33:19):
Speaking of Bluebell, though, they messed up.

Speaker 4 (33:25):
For years, but they're back. They recovered. They messed up.

Speaker 2 (33:28):
They no, I know that was rough patch. I love Bluebell,
but they changed their mint chocolate chip ice cream how
they It used to be shredded chocolate. Are shaved pieces
of chocolate in the mint chocolate and it was perfect,
Like I grew up on this. It's so good, and
now it's like chunks, like chocolate chunks. That's no way

(33:49):
to why'd they do that? Who? Who made? Who authorized
that change?

Speaker 3 (33:54):
Who did?

Speaker 9 (33:57):
Like?

Speaker 2 (33:58):
They should go back?

Speaker 1 (34:00):
Had it in a while?

Speaker 3 (34:00):
I can't realad ice cream, Dude, mint is so good.

Speaker 1 (34:03):
I don't like ment and ice cream very much. Toothpaste, Yeah,
it's like toothpaste, like medicine.

Speaker 3 (34:10):
Yeah, weird. Okay, okay, because I honestly I would see, like,
who wants green ice cream? That's gross looking, But when
you have it, you're like, it's pretty good.

Speaker 2 (34:17):
Yeah, well when you had it, because you can't eat
it anymore or not from Blue.

Speaker 3 (34:19):
Belt, you can still have mint ice cream.

Speaker 1 (34:22):
Not the kind she likes because it's Bluebelts. Screwed it up.

Speaker 2 (34:25):
Parently they did. I'm telling you they lost my money.

Speaker 1 (34:29):
Raymundo's got a million dollar business idea that he wants
us to possibly consider it go ahead.

Speaker 11 (34:35):
The business is called Painted Tree or Painted Door. It's
in town somewhere. It's like consigners, so they have two
to three hundred consigners. You just come up with anything, crafts, arts, bracelets,
t shirts, cooozies, I don't know, and you go sell
it there. But the beauty of it is you pay
one hundred and twenty five dollars a month. You don't
really ever have to be there, and they just sell
it for you. So what is the business. We have

(34:56):
all kinds of crap here sitting around the studio. We
can just put in this booth. People buy lunch's nut
necklace boom that goes in the booth, and that necklace,
maybe some of your memorabilia booth, your books booth. And
then at the end of the month we just go collect,
see how much money we made.

Speaker 1 (35:11):
Why was my stuff mentioned more? It's more prominent? Ut necklace?

Speaker 11 (35:16):
Yeah, I mean how long is this gonna sit back here?
Remember nut necklace testicles?

Speaker 9 (35:21):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (35:22):
Got it? Got it?

Speaker 11 (35:23):
I mean that is massive. That's a fifty dollars seller
right there.

Speaker 1 (35:26):
It ain't hold on.

Speaker 10 (35:27):
So you're telling me I could take this stuff, the
leftover stuff from.

Speaker 1 (35:29):
The palate, Well, it's gonna be pay a hundred and
a half a bucks a ble.

Speaker 11 (35:33):
Oh, so you gotta make more than that to make
it worth it. Just an idea. We get so much
stuff up here, crap from the bag boom, put it.

Speaker 3 (35:39):
In the booth and it's a brick and mortar ray.

Speaker 1 (35:42):
Yeah, it's awesome.

Speaker 11 (35:42):
And you just go in there and it's a bunch
of consigners from all over Tennessee and they sell their
stuff and then every month they send them a check.

Speaker 10 (35:48):
It's actually smart because we could sign a bunch of stuff,
put it in the booth, tell our listeners which booth
we're in.

Speaker 1 (35:52):
They go, boom money. Well why don't you do it
with your own money? And do you just sign stuff
and see what you make?

Speaker 3 (36:01):
Well, what do you think, man?

Speaker 1 (36:02):
Yeah? I mean, if it's so easy, why don't you
do it? Spend your money and then you just signed stuff.

Speaker 4 (36:07):
I just said we could all sign stuff.

Speaker 1 (36:10):
No, no, no, no, you can make your own money. Don't
worry about us.

Speaker 4 (36:13):
Why would you guys not want to be in?

Speaker 3 (36:14):
Like you can take your nut necklace and sign it
and then just sell it.

Speaker 4 (36:20):
All right, Well, I don't think the necklace would make
one hundred and twenty five dollars.

Speaker 1 (36:23):
Well, that's why you need to sell both of them.
We have a flesh tone, we have a blue one.

Speaker 4 (36:27):
Yeah, that's just rough.

Speaker 10 (36:29):
I mean, but I would have to tell the listeners
exactly where it is. Yeah, if someone would want it, yeah, okay.

Speaker 11 (36:36):
And really the business is not necessarily our stuff. That'd
be the big ticket stuff. But all the the artists
sending us their memorabilia. Guys, that's going in the booth.
We're not wearing these T shirts. We're not wearing a
hat that says darling. It's going in the booth.

Speaker 1 (36:48):
Okay, we'll consider it, thank you. Let me do the
draft results and then we'll this is the one.

Speaker 3 (36:55):
With all the poops. Yeah, Amy had poop and Ray
had a poop.

Speaker 1 (37:01):
Right, So we did two thousands country song draft results
and the first overall pick was from Ray Mundo and
he picked a song that was from nineteen ninety nine,
So that goes down as poop. Ray Mundo had poop.
You Belong with Me and need You Now? I still
like it. Yeah, the poop hurt you though, but Amy

(37:23):
had it, so they nullify. But Amy had blessed the
Broken Road poopoop because she guessed a song that had
already been fixed, the song that already been picked, and
then beautiful mess. So I will tell you too. You
did finish in the bottom two, Okay, Morgan, you won
big time.

Speaker 2 (37:38):
I had such good songs.

Speaker 1 (37:40):
You got live like you were dying Red dirt Road
in Austin forty six percent. Amy, your last you.

Speaker 3 (37:47):
Oh, Ray didn't finish last.

Speaker 1 (37:49):
He didn't and he had poop and didn't finish last,
and he finished the last every game. So Morgan is
the champ. Amy's out. Sorry, Yeah, all right, we're dying.
Thank you guys. We'll see you tomorrow. Tomorrow, have a
great day and goodbye every body.
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

True Crime Tonight

True Crime Tonight

If you eat, sleep, and breathe true crime, TRUE CRIME TONIGHT is serving up your nightly fix. Five nights a week, KT STUDIOS & iHEART RADIO invite listeners to pull up a seat for an unfiltered look at the biggest cases making headlines, celebrity scandals, and the trials everyone is watching. With a mix of expert analysis, hot takes, and listener call-ins, TRUE CRIME TONIGHT goes beyond the headlines to uncover the twists, turns, and unanswered questions that keep us all obsessed—because, at TRUE CRIME TONIGHT, there’s a seat for everyone. Whether breaking down crime scene forensics, scrutinizing serial killers, or debating the most binge-worthy true crime docs, True Crime Tonight is the fresh, fast-paced, and slightly addictive home for true crime lovers.

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

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

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.