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August 18, 2025 45 mins

Bobby shares why he thinks that being in water at the beach or pool is stupid. Bobby shared what he did over vacation. Mike D talked about going to New York to see Wicked for the first time. Bobby shared why Amy had to leave the show early. Morgan shared she finally got to live out her dream. Eddie shared how he tried to live as if he was retired during vacation. Lunchbox shared why he didn’t like London after going there only because he got a cheap flight. Raymundo talked about his staycation and what has changed about pool parties. Eddie shared what he and Carrie Underwood have in common after this weekend.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
The Bobby Bush on the polls.

Speaker 2 (00:03):
I think just being in waters overrated, Like being in
a pool is overrated. Just being in water. I get it,
Like if I just wanted to be in water, I
would take a bath or a shower. Now if there's
something to do, meaning like we went last week. We
spent a few days East Tennessee in the mountains and
there was a water slide and had fun on the

(00:24):
water slide, and then it's like, Okay, get out of
the water.

Speaker 3 (00:26):
So you needed a slide to have fun in the water.

Speaker 2 (00:28):
I just needed an activity. I think the beach is stupid.
Now I also know I'm in the minority. You are, like,
this is a very unpopular opinion. It's the only time
that I have ever got into my swimming pool for
the sake of just being in the pool was because
Kaylen's family was over and it was her her mom
and dad, brother in law, Kaylen's sister, kids, everybody was

(00:51):
there and so they wanted to be in the pool.
And you know, mostly I just hung out on the
side of the pool, but I did get in and
we threw nephew around like he's like two, so we
just were like chunk them in the air and that
was all fun. And but I got in the water
to do that. I didn't get in the water because
I thought the water was fun. It was the only
time I've ever got in my pool for like recreation.

(01:12):
I've gotten to swim and work out like I have
like an ankle injury that bothers me, a shoulder and
injury that bothers me. And I find swimming it's not
super bad on my joints. But I've never gotten in
the pool one time, not one time that we have
at our house to just swim like that's fine, crazy,
just not fun for me. If I just wanted to
be wet, I would get wet. I would just take
a bath.

Speaker 3 (01:31):
What about like a hot, hot day and like I'd
be nice to just jump in the pool.

Speaker 2 (01:34):
Air conditioning, and then I don't have to like clean
up off because there's like chemicals in the pool.

Speaker 3 (01:39):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:39):
Yeah, and I have to go and take another wet
to get rid of my other wet.

Speaker 3 (01:43):
Oh, shower after you're done. Yeah, I never do that.

Speaker 2 (01:47):
I have to. Well, you don't have hair.

Speaker 3 (01:49):
What does it have to do with any of this?

Speaker 2 (01:50):
Did you get chlorin in your hair?

Speaker 4 (01:52):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (01:52):
Okay, I have to wash my hair. I thought it
was just like chlorine to just get off your body.

Speaker 2 (01:55):
Well that too, though, can you smell like chlorine?

Speaker 3 (01:57):
And sometimes when I get in the pool, I'm like,
I don't need the shower exactly like I'm just.

Speaker 2 (02:03):
No, because again, there's too many chemicals in the pool.
Like my wife would never let me lay in the
bed covered in chemicals. So it's the only time I've
ever been in the pool. And I did get in
the pond because there was a water slide, but I
never stayed in the pond. I think being in water
to me very overrated. Couldn't be more overrated.

Speaker 3 (02:21):
Actually, dude, I love it. There's nothing better than like seeing.
Like if you go to a hotel, first thing I do,
let me check out the pool, and I go look
at the pool. I'm like, oh, I'm jumping in that
pool as soon as I got my trunks on.

Speaker 2 (02:31):
And I understand if you have kids and you need
something for them to.

Speaker 3 (02:33):
Do, no, no, just for me. Oh for me. Even when
we used to like tour, dude, I would like see
the hotel we're seeing, I had a pool because I
was gonna get in it.

Speaker 2 (02:40):
I understand it's a very unpopular opinion. But then you
have to go get wet to get rid of the
wet you just got. And I feel like that's such
a time because it's kind of consumer So we were
gone sort of last week, like we didn't work. We
take two weeks every summer, and so our second week
was last week. But we did new shows Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday.
Uh so the only reruns you got was Thursday Friday.

(03:02):
But we were off work. We went to the mountains
in East Tennessee. Like I said, with Kaitlyn's family, they
actually came in on Sunday of last week and they
left yesterday, so they were there for a week. Were
you on a boat or something? We were never on
a boat.

Speaker 3 (03:14):
Why does somebody posting like your water skiing or we did?
I saw you playing chess.

Speaker 2 (03:19):
We did a slide. Okay, so you're on a slide
and that's it. Yeah, no boat. We did water the pond.
I'm talking about the pond. We were at the pool
another day and I was like, I don't want to
get the poll. Kaitlyn's dad is sixty three and was
doing backflips off the diving board. That's legit. Did you
see the video ninety chance. Yeah, he's sixty three, still
has abs and it's doing backflips and it's crazy. It's

(03:42):
amazing the genetics that that family has. Like my wife, Oh,
it's genetics. Oh, to have abs at sixty three, it's
a big part of it. But I'm just saying they
all do.

Speaker 1 (03:51):
Like my wife.

Speaker 2 (03:51):
You you know my wife, she is a she's an
A plus athlete. Yeah, and without even really caring or trying,
you naturally gifted her sister state championship basketball player a plus.
Her brother played college basketball. Kaitlyn's brother played college basketball.
He's like six six sixty seven. It's crazy, and he's

(04:13):
sixty three years old doing not just backflips, like full
tuck your knee backflips. So but we did that. It
was very much dominated in a good way for the
most part, by the kids of Kaitlyn's sister. Oh. Yeah,
because there's a baby that's six months old. The baby
never cries. That's awesome, unbelievable. Yeah, it's unheard of. It's

(04:37):
the greatest baby I've ever seen.

Speaker 3 (04:39):
Like ever, even if the baby's hungry nothing.

Speaker 2 (04:41):
This is a hungry cry for that baby. Yeah, they
give them a little somethhit. Yeah, they'd give him a
little something and she's good.

Speaker 3 (04:50):
That's awesome.

Speaker 2 (04:51):
Baby never cried. The two year old. It's like Tasmanian Devil.
He's a boy and I don't know if it's a
boy girl thing or what the deal is. But the
two year old two, yeah, yeah, it's it's hilarious. But
he just like runs. I mean he's all over the play.

Speaker 3 (05:03):
What they call that Terrible twos.

Speaker 2 (05:05):
Yeah, yeah, so did that. We got a house over
there for a few days. We staid at our house
for a few days manage the dogs, which is difficult
because Stanley, my bulldog, the most loving dog in the
history of dogs, however, will run through things to play
with them. So yeah, it was good and we're back.

(05:26):
Mike d he went to New York. Yeah, he saw that.
You went to go watch Wick. It's awesome.

Speaker 3 (05:29):
It was awesome.

Speaker 5 (05:30):
I've never been to Broadway, never seen Wicked. I feel
like I changed as a person watching that.

Speaker 2 (05:34):
It's it's an excellent show because.

Speaker 5 (05:36):
I love the movie, but seeing them do it live
where they can't mess up, they seeing it perfectly. All
the production is just amazing.

Speaker 2 (05:43):
How was Arianna?

Speaker 5 (05:45):
I picture in my head. I was like, oh, yeah,
like she's down there, Like, oh, it's a different actor.

Speaker 2 (05:49):
I haven't seen the movie. I love the play, but
you'd only seen the movie and not seen the play.

Speaker 5 (05:53):
Yeah, so like the first act is basically the first movie,
where I guess the first part of it is the
first movie intermission, and then the second part is gonna
be the second movie.

Speaker 3 (06:01):
So now I can't wait for the movie.

Speaker 2 (06:02):
Yeah, oh that's cool.

Speaker 3 (06:03):
I didn't know that.

Speaker 2 (06:04):
And this is a good time to go to New
York because it's not freezing cold.

Speaker 3 (06:08):
Pretty odd? Is it hot though?

Speaker 2 (06:09):
Yeah, I'm okay with that. The weird thing about New
York is because it's not again, I never lived there,
just been there enough. Oh I'd love to live. Is
that a lot of people in New York don't have
air conditioners because it's not really that hot that long. Yeah,
there's no reason to put an air conditioner. So if
it's really hot, people are just like this sucks.

Speaker 3 (06:24):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (06:24):
A lot of the restaurants and stories went into just
didn't have any AC's we go in it'd be so hot, because.

Speaker 2 (06:29):
Why would you invest in an hvactor a full system
of any kind? If you don't have to use it,
but a month of the year.

Speaker 3 (06:34):
Same with cars, right, Like a lot of people don't
own cars there, oh.

Speaker 2 (06:37):
In the city unless they're driving it. If you live
in the city for the most part, unless you want
to pay a natronomical fee, you don't have a car
because you can walk everywhere or take public transportation.

Speaker 3 (06:45):
And I've seen some of the garages there are crazy
where like you just they lift the car up and
they put it up in a slot. So where are
you seeing that?

Speaker 2 (06:51):
Yeah, that's crazy. I've seen that with boats here.

Speaker 3 (06:54):
Oh that's true.

Speaker 2 (06:55):
Amy had to leave. By the way, Amy was sick.
She had to leave, and she kind of it was
in a haste, and if it's in a haste, she
texted me. Finally, she was like, maybe I shouldn't read it, but.

Speaker 3 (07:07):
I mean, what do you mean in a haste?

Speaker 2 (07:09):
She was out quick asked, yet you don't know the word.

Speaker 3 (07:13):
I've heard the word, I just never heard it being used.

Speaker 2 (07:15):
She said, went to bathroom, threw up, headed back home.
That was it. I texted her. I said, Uh, if
you're sick, don't come in tomorrow. It Maybe I should
be warmer, but I don't think she needs me to
be warmer. At this point in our relationship. What would
be warmer? You'd be like, oh, hey, I hope you
feel better. I think all that's understood. But I was

(07:36):
just like, don't push yourself.

Speaker 3 (07:37):
That's WoT.

Speaker 2 (07:38):
I don't even think to be warm. I'm thinking I think,
how can I be most effective the quickest?

Speaker 3 (07:43):
Okay? So but how are you at home with that?
Because that's where I have er a little bit of.

Speaker 2 (07:47):
A challenge different, but I've had to learn how to
be different. My bedside manner is different at home because
my wife has expressed to me how important it is
to treat her like a human and not like we're
in a lab.

Speaker 3 (07:58):
Okay, so don't you think it's it's important to treat
everyone else outside your house now?

Speaker 2 (08:02):
Because we were in the middle of doing stuff here
okay on the show, and so because.

Speaker 3 (08:06):
I understand what you're saying, like, dude, just get to
the point like, hey, go home, you don't feel good. Whatever.
But my wife also has pointed out that I should
probably be a little warmer when I say, like, are
you hurt or you're not bleeding? Get up?

Speaker 2 (08:18):
Professional setting and those are four boys you have correct
and we were in the middle of stuff. We're recording
some other stuff and Amy left and I do the
countdown and I was just like, Okay, don't feel like
you have to. I feel like it was warming me
to be like, don't push yourself tomorrow, like stay. I
feel like my warmth was in that message. Right, I'm
with you, dude.

Speaker 1 (08:34):
Did you want him to walk her to the car
or what?

Speaker 4 (08:35):
Like?

Speaker 2 (08:36):
Well, I could have been like, hope you feel better.
I didn't put that on.

Speaker 3 (08:38):
And that's one of my wife is saying stuff like that,
like oh man, but she knows.

Speaker 2 (08:41):
I hope she feels better because I need her to
come back to work.

Speaker 3 (08:44):
But they still want to hear it. Right, yeah again again, dude,
I'm with you one hundred percent. My wife is telling
me to work on this.

Speaker 2 (08:50):
Yeah, well you maybe you should because I've worked on
my mind at home.

Speaker 3 (08:54):
Su like tell my boys like, I'm sorry you're hurting. Gosh,
that must not feel very well. Morgan.

Speaker 2 (08:58):
I saw a bear. I gotta see one. You saw
one too? Yeah? Yeah, I saw one and thought of you.
It was probably a teenager in the woods.

Speaker 3 (09:06):
Teenage bear.

Speaker 1 (09:06):
Yeah, Well, because you're out the control mountains.

Speaker 2 (09:10):
And I'm assuming what color was your bear? It's a
black bear, that's what you want to see. Yeah, round bears.

Speaker 4 (09:15):
We were in grizzly bear territory, but we didn't see
any We.

Speaker 2 (09:18):
Just saw the black bears. So I saw you. Who
did you go with? You want your friends? And your boyfriend?

Speaker 1 (09:23):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (09:23):
I went to and your dog. No, he's got all
of her girlfriends. Go ahead, Nope.

Speaker 4 (09:29):
So we went to the new Epic Universal in Orlando
and I did that with my boyfriend. And we also
went to Disney and then came back for a day
and then I went on a girls trip to Bozeman, Montana.

Speaker 2 (09:39):
Oh you did two trips.

Speaker 3 (09:40):
Yeah, that's the one. I thought she was one to Brazil,
remember Belize or Belize?

Speaker 2 (09:44):
And you are you are sinking it up? Do you
know what that is?

Speaker 4 (09:47):
No?

Speaker 2 (09:48):
A sink? I mean I know what a sink is.
No s I and K like I'm sinking things. Do
some context here.

Speaker 4 (09:56):
So you said like I'm sinking like together?

Speaker 2 (09:58):
Yeah yeah yeah, but just s I ing K. So
you're not sinking down, but you're if you went on
two trips, yeah, and I say, man, you are full
sink right now? Oh?

Speaker 4 (10:07):
Like I put myself through it.

Speaker 2 (10:09):
Could that be fun? Both? It would be fun. I
think both trips be fun full synk right now, a sink,
You're a sink. I have everything in the sink? No?

Speaker 3 (10:18):
Is it an acronym?

Speaker 2 (10:19):
Yes, leave the word sink out like I mean, not
the word, but leave the picture of a sink in
the kitchen or the bathroom out of it. It's not
has nothing to do with an actual sink. It is
an acronym.

Speaker 4 (10:29):
Thank you so so solo single is person individual.

Speaker 2 (10:37):
Not you get the first word solo.

Speaker 4 (10:39):
Single, single, single, interactive single in tirpole.

Speaker 6 (10:47):
I don't have a lot of eyes interpol and interest
in intercourse single intercourse uh rady involves single income, no kids?

Speaker 4 (10:59):
Yeah, oh, I call him DS. I guess it's true
because I'm not married.

Speaker 1 (11:04):
Dual or double yeah, single income, no kids.

Speaker 2 (11:06):
Yeah, you get to do that because you're you have
your own money yeah, no kids. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (11:11):
I love having no kids, lots of money.

Speaker 3 (11:16):
I have nothing to say that.

Speaker 2 (11:17):
It's like, you can't retire.

Speaker 3 (11:19):
Is tough. It's tough over here, Like she's talking about
her vacation. You know what my vacation was. I did nothing,
Like I drove the kids to school, dropped them off,
I did play little golf, played golf, and then I
picked them up from school, taking the practice.

Speaker 2 (11:31):
The last because we take two weeks every summer. The
last vacation, I did nothing. I said home the whole time.

Speaker 3 (11:36):
Yeah, yeah, you're you're a sink.

Speaker 1 (11:38):
No, he's whatever.

Speaker 4 (11:40):
That.

Speaker 2 (11:44):
No, I'm not gonna do dogs, but dogs b d
one dog that's very expensive because he's always true. Uh
yeah yeah yeah yeah, so just kids.

Speaker 3 (11:54):
Oh me, yeah, I dude, nothing, I mean, I try
to I try to visualize my my in visualize not
a word visualize. I try to visualize my retirement life.
I was like, all right, if I was retired right now,
this is how I would live it because I didn't,
you know, I wasn't coming to work.

Speaker 1 (12:11):
So I'd wake.

Speaker 3 (12:12):
Up early, make the kids breakfast, take them to school,
drop them off, go to the golf course, squeeze in
a little tea time. I'd play for three or four hours,
and then I'd go home, get a little lunch, pick
them up. It was kind of cool, dude. The only
thing I didn't do is fish, which I would do
in my retirement.

Speaker 2 (12:27):
But if you were retired, your kids wouldn't be in school, right,
that's the thing.

Speaker 1 (12:30):
Like retirement is not having to run errands every day,
like take your kids to school. That would be terrible
because then you're busy every day. Retirement is where you
don't have to do anything.

Speaker 3 (12:37):
Oh, I think retirement's just when you don't work.

Speaker 2 (12:39):
Well then to work that would be that would not
having a job. Well, there's a difference retirement. You're probably older,
you have retirement saved up. Your kids aren't ten. Yeah,
I know you have kids older and kids younger, but
your kids aren't ten, so you don't have that because
usually when you retire your sixty five six, yeah, you know,
unless your al Pacino.

Speaker 3 (13:00):
I've seen, like I've seen like some athletes you know,
who are like don't play ball anymore, and they just
kind of like.

Speaker 2 (13:05):
They're retired because they made millions. Again, that is an
abnormality too.

Speaker 1 (13:09):
Now that would be awesome.

Speaker 2 (13:10):
It's awesome.

Speaker 1 (13:11):
They just sit around and they just just like you
wonder what they do all day.

Speaker 3 (13:14):
Like my wife says, one of them like comes and
brings donuts to the teachers, every one of like an athlete, Yeah,
an athlete take brings donuts to the teachers every morning,
like cause why he's a millionaire have anything to do?
And they love it. They're like, oh, here he comes.
He's bringing donuts to all the teachers. That's cool.

Speaker 2 (13:29):
Do I know the person? Yeah, yeah you do. Do
I know him? Know him? Or do I know of him?

Speaker 3 (13:34):
I don't know if you've met him, but you know.

Speaker 2 (13:35):
You do not want to say who is No? I don't, okay, don't.

Speaker 1 (13:38):
What's he looks like?

Speaker 2 (13:39):
Fair enough, he's big, dude, lunchbox? What you do?

Speaker 1 (13:41):
I went to London.

Speaker 3 (13:44):
And then we went whoa sink?

Speaker 2 (13:48):
No, they're too and they also have.

Speaker 3 (13:50):
But we have kids, oh right right?

Speaker 1 (13:52):
And it was four hundred dollars round trip for each ticket,
Like it was cheaper to go there than to go
to Vegas or to Texas or anywhere you're looking at tickets.
It's like nine hundred dollars to go somewhere like in California,
and pops up four hundred bus to go to London.
So we went to London, man, not London, Texas, No, London, England.

Speaker 2 (14:07):
How was it?

Speaker 1 (14:08):
London sucks?

Speaker 2 (14:09):
I really liked it.

Speaker 1 (14:11):
I don't really get London.

Speaker 2 (14:12):
The food kind of sucks, but I like the city
because they have things that were like from the twelve hundreds,
like five hundred years, seve hundred years, thousan years before
we even exist. It's amazing they have buildings randomly sitting
next to new buildings that are that old. What did
you not like about it? Ah?

Speaker 1 (14:26):
There was just not It's a lot of you just
walk and look at old buildings and it was like,
all right, cool, great, Like I saw an old building,
like and you walk to these to like what are
the cow the Palace, Buckingham Palace or whatever?

Speaker 2 (14:37):
See the guards.

Speaker 1 (14:39):
Yeah, but they're way away, like they're not you can't
get close to them. No, they're behind a fence like
way over there. So it's like all these videos of
people standing yoused to go the right time, they're outside
the gates.

Speaker 2 (14:50):
Have you not seen people standing with the No.

Speaker 1 (14:51):
That's why I was like, Oh, it's they're full of crap.
That doesn't happen because they're not outside the gates like
they were. There's a big gate around the thing and
they stand in in front of the house, but you
can't get anywhere close to them.

Speaker 2 (15:02):
Different guards, but there are guards that come out.

Speaker 1 (15:05):
Oh well there was I mean just people standing there,
and it was like, wow, okay, cool, it's a castle,
you can't pay to go inside of it. No one
lives there, so is it really that cool?

Speaker 2 (15:14):
No one lives there. No, in Buckenhead Palace, no one
lives there.

Speaker 7 (15:18):
I thought, like the Prince and I think they's I
think it's kind of like the White like the I
think there's a quarters where people live there in that area,
but they may not live in that part, right I guess.

Speaker 1 (15:30):
And so that's why I was like, so they don't
even live there. And then we went to where.

Speaker 2 (15:33):
I'm the worst on eight British car What is the
other ones?

Speaker 1 (15:36):
The ones that are still in part of it? William
and Kate there's a different castle they supposedly used to
live out, but they keep an apartment there. Yeah, right,
there's a gift shop in there. There's I mean, there's
no way they keep an apartment there. It's all turned
into tour like a gift shop. It's like, how lame
is that? And so I just didn't I didn't think
London was that cool. Yes, the old buildings were cool,

(15:58):
but it just was like, all right there, there's not
much really to do. The Big Ben it's just a
clock that stands there. It's tall. Cool.

Speaker 2 (16:05):
Buckingham Palace has been the official residence of the United
Kingdom's monarchs in eighteen thirty seven. The palace has five floors,
seven hundred and seventy five rooms, including nineteen state rooms,
fifty royal and guest bedrooms, ninety two offices in a
surgical room. Oh that's cool, as well as forty acres
of gardens. No one from the current royal family lives
there full time, but as he said, there's an apartment somewhere.

(16:25):
You wouldn get you a free T shirt.

Speaker 1 (16:27):
Gift gift shop. You can get some hot chocolate or
some coffee, and they have a cafe.

Speaker 3 (16:32):
Did they get on one of those big buses, the
double decker buses.

Speaker 2 (16:35):
No, So people do live there, but not in the
main building. So Queen Elizabeth the Second and Prince Philip
lived in the private apartments on the north side of
the palace. They're both dead though now right, I don't.

Speaker 3 (16:50):
Know Prince Philip, that's a dad.

Speaker 2 (16:53):
Yeah, he's dead. I know from that show The Crowd.
So they did live there, but when they died, I
guess that's when, because I guess what's the other guy's
name now, Charles, King Charles sound.

Speaker 3 (17:04):
To where does he live?

Speaker 2 (17:05):
I have no idea, I think question. I think he's
the first one that doesn't live there. Then we went
to the onewn Where does King Charles live? Guess what
it says? London?

Speaker 3 (17:15):
Thank you?

Speaker 1 (17:16):
Yeah, we saw where Princess Diana used to live, and
there's a garden there with like a statue because she
used to talk to the gardeners. I mean, but the
castle looked like it needed to redo, need a new roof,
needed to be powerwashed. It was dirty.

Speaker 3 (17:29):
But do you go to Abbey Road like where the
Beatles cross the street and stuff?

Speaker 1 (17:32):
Don't care about the Abbey Road, I'm not really.

Speaker 2 (17:36):
So why did you go to London then? Because it
sounds like all the things that it's known for the history.

Speaker 1 (17:41):
Because it's four hundred dollars, because it was cheap, Yeah,
I mean it was four hundred.

Speaker 2 (17:45):
Bucks long trip for just four hundred dollars. Though what
do you mean, like, I mean you could have spent
fur hundred bucks closer and that's something you liked.

Speaker 1 (17:51):
But did you try to know to like California was
like nine hundreds of Chattanooga well that's we can go
there any weekend.

Speaker 3 (17:58):
Did you think it was going to be cooler than
it was? Like when you booked the trip to London,
We're like, this is gonna be awesome, and then you
were just disappointed by it, or we were just like
this is probably gonna suck, but I'll spend four hundred
dollars on it.

Speaker 2 (18:10):
Yeah, what was your expecting?

Speaker 1 (18:12):
I name my wife more thought London, and so I
was like, okay, I mean everybody talks about London. You
always see those hard rock Cafe London shirts that people always.

Speaker 2 (18:21):
I really don't always see them, but I understand. I
understand that.

Speaker 1 (18:23):
And so we went and I was just like I
don't really get it. I just don't understand. It's just
another big city.

Speaker 3 (18:30):
What don't you get? Like it's just a city, right.

Speaker 2 (18:33):
Right, literally just it's a big city, a lot of culture,
Like there was just a big city.

Speaker 1 (18:38):
And like we saw the the jewel, I guess the
jewels big Ben.

Speaker 3 (18:45):
It's just a clock.

Speaker 2 (18:46):
Well everything's just a sounding but listen clocks. Could there
have been though for you to enjoy it?

Speaker 3 (18:52):
I don't know, naked women.

Speaker 1 (18:54):
I don't understand, Like Big Ben was just a clock. Okay,
it was fine.

Speaker 3 (19:00):
Was it working?

Speaker 1 (19:01):
Yeah, okay, But there was other clocks on old churches
that looked cooler than that big bend.

Speaker 2 (19:06):
And there are buildings that are bigger than Empire State
Building and buildings that look but Empire State Building is
cool because it's been there, it's historical.

Speaker 1 (19:14):
Yeah, that's what I didn't understand the clock. I was like,
what's the big deal. It's a big clock in the
middle of an area. But there's other clocks that looked
a lot cooler to me on old churches.

Speaker 2 (19:24):
That was like, man, do you go to a show?
We went to a show, like a Broadway show. They
have their own version of Broadway. Forget what it's called.
I think it's called London Way or something makes sense.

Speaker 1 (19:32):
Yeah we did. We went to uh Titanique, So.

Speaker 2 (19:35):
You did go to a show? Do you take your
kids this? No?

Speaker 6 (19:38):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (19:38):
Was just you and your wife?

Speaker 2 (19:39):
Yeah? Oh. I thought you should have enjoyed it more
than I thought the kids were keeping you from enjoying stuff.

Speaker 1 (19:43):
No, no, no, no.

Speaker 2 (19:44):
The end is what it is.

Speaker 1 (19:45):
And it was like a story about the Titanic. It
was a Titanic museum like and they were talking about
it and they're doing a tour and Clean Beyond interrupts
the tour and says, let me tell you what really
happened on the Titanic. I was there, and it was
a story about that.

Speaker 3 (20:02):
She wasn't there.

Speaker 1 (20:03):
Oh my god, Eddie, it's a written whatever play.

Speaker 3 (20:06):
Or whatever got you didn't like it.

Speaker 1 (20:09):
No, it was funny. The play was funny. My wife
liked it a lot more because they made musical jokes,
like about other musicals or whatever. And I had no
idea what they were the jokes were, but yeah, they were.
It was funny. And the girl was really good. That
did Sling Beyond because she did like facial expressions and
was like, oh, you guys are the best crowd. And
just like I thought she was funny because you see

(20:29):
clips of Slean Deon, that's how her facial expressions are.
But yeah, I didn't think it was all that cool.

Speaker 2 (20:35):
Sounds like you didn't know what to do when you
got there.

Speaker 1 (20:38):
Well, I mean, what do you mean? Well, I went
and look at things I walked through. I mean they
had some cool they had a lot of parts. No,
we didn't go to the museum.

Speaker 3 (20:48):
Did you do the subway? The underground yeah, we did that.

Speaker 1 (20:51):
The tube they called the Tube of the tubeeah, idiot,
Yeah what they called the tube? Yeah?

Speaker 3 (20:55):
What's the luge?

Speaker 6 (20:57):
No?

Speaker 2 (20:58):
The luge is an event where you and he got
to the No, that's the museum in Paris.

Speaker 3 (21:05):
Paris, got it.

Speaker 2 (21:06):
It's where the Mona lease is.

Speaker 3 (21:07):
Okay, I see, I would have been disappointed if I
went to London looking for the loss.

Speaker 2 (21:10):
Or love either.

Speaker 3 (21:12):
Yeah, you'll be disappointed.

Speaker 2 (21:14):
Ray, what did you guys do? We did a staycation
and then didn't leave the house anything any news notes. Eventually,
staycation was great. We dropped a hotel penthouse downtown for
the weekend. Oh you didn't stay at your own place.
You came here right, Nashville got it.

Speaker 3 (21:30):
But just said you never left the house.

Speaker 2 (21:31):
That's why I was confused.

Speaker 1 (21:32):
So he said, then he didn't leave the.

Speaker 2 (21:33):
House transition word. Got it. But the staycation originally was awesome.
We did a pool party. We had the Stand Up
Cancer event that aired on was it Friday Night? It
was a huge nationwide thing that was cool. Lor I
got to be part of it, and it was only
about i'd say two thousand people in there, so it's
pretty exclusive. It was like Jonas brothers, Reese Witherspoon, Katie

(21:56):
Kurk brothers, Osbourne, Dan and Shay. What was to deal
with a poll party? The pool party? Pool parties have changed.
I haven't been to one in a couple of years.
Now there's a guest list. Now you pay fifty dollars ahead.
Now the girls don't wear anything for bottoms, it's all songs.

Speaker 3 (22:14):
Oh yeah, I thought it was like bare bonds.

Speaker 2 (22:17):
Like what if you're wearing coverage, you're overdressed? Wait, so
where is this pool party hotel? I don't really want
to name it because I had some complaints as well.
But wait, wait what just because you complain or did
somebody complain about you? Well? No, I complained just because
our friends had to get seated away from us. They
were way too strict for something we paid for and

(22:40):
all of a sudden, we pay for something and it
doesn't even really get going. The DJ didn't get there
till four and we paid for one. If it says one,
it was very London based, like you didn't know what
you were getting into, true, and then you got there
and you're upset with what was there. Just didn't know
the pool party. I mean people just play on their phones. Now,
I mean, was the DJ really bringing us to music?
I mean I could have went to a my old

(23:01):
apartment pool party had been better than that one. It
just really didn't seem like I needed to be paid for.
That sounds to me like you don't like the water,
and I totally feel that.

Speaker 3 (23:08):
Oh yeah, no need to get the water. Yep. That
was in Vegas. Like Vegas pool you have to pay.

Speaker 2 (23:14):
Everybody's in thongs. You're paying for it. Yeah, and they go, oh,
if you leave your seat that somebody else can grab
it in thirty minutes. What So I got to like,
in thirty minutes, you're gonna come back to your seat
every thirty minutes. Well, if you got a drink and
you're in the pool talking with people, sometimes you lose
track of time. So I just got to keep one
of my hands on the chair. What just weird stuff
like that. It's like the hands on a hard body documentary,
or they can't take their hand off the motorcycle or

(23:35):
the car. Yeah, and whoever lasts the longest win's it
all right? But yeah, we dipped early on that and
then the staycation. I really just wanted to make myself bored.
I wanted to come back to work, ready to come
back to work, and that's exactly what I did. I
was so I was like, this is brutal.

Speaker 1 (23:50):
I don't know if I can do retirement.

Speaker 3 (23:51):
It was bad. That's crazy you guys think that way.
Like I could do nothing all.

Speaker 2 (23:56):
Day well because my wife was still working, so she
was working from home. And I'd wake up and I'll
be like, oh my gosh, what am I. I gotta
find somewhere to go. I can't. I can't hear one
more conference call, Like I'm just gonna go walk in
the neighborhood by myself aimlessly. I struggle with doing nothing.
You don't love it.

Speaker 3 (24:13):
I can do nothing forever for the rest of my life.

Speaker 2 (24:15):
What does that mean? Do nothing?

Speaker 4 (24:16):
Though?

Speaker 3 (24:16):
No, No, I would do stuff. I just wouldn't work. Like
the walk around the neighborhood. I'd love to do it.
I would love to wake up in the morning, have
my coffee, walk the neighborhood morning Jim, morning, Pam, Pam.
The yard looks great. I would love that. And they'd
be like, Eddie's awesome, Hey, you didn't do anything all day.
He just comes and says hi to me. It's like
sometimes I see him with his golf clubs. He go
somewhere for a little bit, comes back. My yard would

(24:38):
be perfect.

Speaker 2 (24:39):
Right, But don't you think sometimes people look down on
you though, because you're just walking the neighborhood.

Speaker 3 (24:43):
Who cares? I see?

Speaker 2 (24:44):
When I was walking the neighborhood, I was like, man,
those people really don't have a purpose. They're just walking
and retired.

Speaker 3 (24:50):
There's a lady that like, lives in my neighborhood. She
doesn't work, has a nice house, nice car, not married,
no kids. So we already have like this made up
thing that she's like she won the lottery or something. Oh,
you don't know how she I have no idea, but
like I think the stories around that's kind of cool
where people are like, do you ever wonder like how

(25:11):
she makes her money or how she can afford that
house or not to work.

Speaker 2 (25:14):
I always wonder how people got their money. Yeah, it's
always weird, like people that have a lot of money, like,
what did you do? Mostly I have found that most
people in most I'm gonna do most most people that
made their money through business in some way either knew
somebody that got them a good job, or they had
money left to them or their family had something. In
a business like business, art's the exact opposite. There's the

(25:35):
occasional rich person. It is just like a business. There's
the occasional person that came from nothing and built their
way up and started a business. But most most aren't
in arts. It's mostly people who had no money, who
had nothing and came up. So if they were like
a musician, I'm gonna put an athlete in the art

(25:55):
as well.

Speaker 3 (25:57):
But yeah, I met a guy that invented some kind
of bearing for like a wheel and then sold off
mold it to some company like the engineer. Yeah, and
like that season, I stopped working when I was like
thirty seven.

Speaker 2 (26:11):
Yeah, that's pretty cool.

Speaker 3 (26:13):
That's amazing.

Speaker 2 (26:15):
And I think I could retire now if I really
wanted to do that.

Speaker 3 (26:17):
You should, dude, you should, you would. I think you
would discover a whole new U.

Speaker 2 (26:22):
I don't want to know that me, Like, I get
a lot of joy out of And this job has
changed a lot in the past few years, especially like
how the company wants me to do all these different
things now because it's all about you know, monetizing this
radio show podcasts. But I think I just like to
build stuff. I don't know, that's fun to.

Speaker 3 (26:43):
Me, like like legos, Like what do you mean?

Speaker 2 (26:45):
Like shows? Like even shows that I don't do. So
I think I just I enjoy that cool. I enjoy that. Yeah,
but that's I mean, I got a lot of stuff
to say.

Speaker 3 (26:53):
Can't you do that kind of in the backseat? You
kind of just show up and be like, here, do
this show?

Speaker 2 (26:57):
I kind of I need structure. I like structure. I
like to build my structure.

Speaker 3 (27:01):
You like waking up? I hate it, That's what I'm saying.

Speaker 2 (27:05):
I hate It's the worst. That's the worst.

Speaker 3 (27:08):
I hate waking up by appointment.

Speaker 2 (27:10):
That's the only thing that I like about vacation is
that I can sleep.

Speaker 3 (27:14):
How late were you waking up?

Speaker 2 (27:16):
The first time six six thirty, which is not doesn't
feel good, But the second time nine thirty or ten,
let's go because I'll wake up and know that I
can't go right back to sleep. So wake up, eat
little something, walk around for a second, lay back down,
go back to sleep.

Speaker 3 (27:32):
That's awesome that I like.

Speaker 2 (27:33):
That's my favorite part about it.

Speaker 3 (27:34):
You do that with your in laws, like, oh.

Speaker 2 (27:36):
Yeah, I do. Now you just wake up late? Yeah?

Speaker 3 (27:39):
Where they've been up for like four hours, and you're like,
don't give a crap. That's good.

Speaker 2 (27:44):
Not that I don't care about them, I don't. I mean,
they know where they are, they know the way around.

Speaker 3 (27:49):
Yeah, I just I guess I just always feel a
little bad, like, oh, the sun in law that wakes
up after everyone.

Speaker 2 (27:54):
They also know I have a crazy schedule that I
wake up but crack early every day and and I
think they're kind of rooting for me to sleep.

Speaker 3 (28:02):
They want that.

Speaker 2 (28:03):
They Yeah, the only the only weird part is if
I don't turn the alarm off, I know they wake
up and they can't leave the house because I set
the alarm and if I don't wake up late, they
can't get out. And so I'll look and there's a
text from three hours ago that said they turned the
alarm off and no one has so they're just trapped
in the house. So that that's a thing. Yeah, that's different.
But yeah, we're done.

Speaker 3 (28:24):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (28:24):
Sean Kingston was sentenced to three and a half years
in prison after being convicted of a one million dollar
fraud scheme. Sean Kingston sings, You're just too beautiful girl.

Speaker 3 (28:33):
You met you met him?

Speaker 2 (28:34):
Huh, oh yeah, long long time ago suicide sue side
Da Doo doo doo. It was a one million dollar
fraud scheme which he leveraged his fame to dupe sellers
into giving him luxury items he never paid for. His
mom's in trouble.

Speaker 3 (28:53):
Too, so like he just it's just people bottom stuff.

Speaker 2 (28:57):
Kingston, whose legal name is Kashawn Paul Anderson, and his
mother were convicted in March by a federal jury of
conspiracy to commit wire fraud in four counts of wire fraud.
He was sentenced to five years in prison. I would
like for this to be broken down in a way
that I could understand it, because I understand. Let me
just ask my assistant here.

Speaker 3 (29:17):
She's so helpful.

Speaker 2 (29:18):
She is, Hey, hope you're having a good day. I
have a question in the news. Sean Kingston was sentenced
to three and a half years in prison, and it
says for a one million dollar fraud scheme, can you explain,
like I'm five, what exactly he was doing? Sure, so

(29:43):
imagine internet's bad. Sorry, go ahead, no problem at all.

Speaker 8 (29:51):
So basically, if we put it in like your five terms,
Sean Kingston kind of pretended he was gonna pay for
really fancy things like expensive jewelry, your luxury stuff, but
then he didn't actually pay for them. He used the
fact that he was famous to sort of trick people
into handing over those things, and that added up to
about a million dollars worth of stuff, and that's why

(30:12):
he got in trouble and has to go to prison.

Speaker 2 (30:14):
For a few years. Okay, So basically he would say,
I got to give it to me, and I'll be
sure to pay you, and then he just never did.
That's kind of what that sounds like.

Speaker 3 (30:21):
And people just came to collect and he didn't.

Speaker 1 (30:23):
Didn't have the money. I think he sent him fake
invoices saying he paid for it, like he had sent
the money and had never sent an.

Speaker 2 (30:31):
It's like eleven here where we are, and I think
the building starts to get on the internet. Crazy. Oh,
people are like, that's why my assistant's like, anybody watched
the Anna Paulina Luna Joe Rogan interview because she's a
congresswoman and she was talking about the stuff she had
seen and that oh man, I only watched it clips online.

(30:54):
But Representative Anna Paulina Luna said during Your Wednesday podcast
episode with Joe Rogan that lawmakers have seen that of interdimensional.

Speaker 3 (31:01):
Beings interdimensional What does that mean?

Speaker 2 (31:04):
Quote, I think they can actually operate through the time
spaces that we currently have. And that's not something I
came up with in my own that's stuff based on
stuff that we've seen. In February, she sent letters to
the Secretary of State Mark Rubio, to Secretary Defense Pete Hegseth,
and the SCIA director requesting a briefing on all the
records in their possession related to unidentified anomalist phenomena, which

(31:25):
is basically UFOs, but they don't just fly now, they
go interdimensionally. Based on testimony, She said that would be
based on witnesses that have come forward. But what I
can tell you is that what we're told and they've
seen things, and what I can tell you without getting classified,
there have been incidences that I believe are credible. People
have reported there have been movement outside of time and

(31:46):
space from the Hill. You understand what that means, Yeah,
because it's not people flying in from space, it's people.
How'd I explain this. There's a radio band, the old radios. Okay,
you move the band. You see all the numbers and
you see that little line go through. All of that
exists all around us. All the stations are all around

(32:09):
us all the time, but you have to put that
on an exact number in order to catch that frequency.
And it's saying there are things and other frequencies that
we can't see or here that are here around us,
and that can come into our frequency then we can
see them.

Speaker 3 (32:19):
At the same time with our same time length. Not
like stranger things where it's like another dimension.

Speaker 2 (32:26):
No, that's exactly what there is. I wouldn't say exactly
like stranger things specifically, but that's exactly what they're saying.
There are things that we can't see that are right
in front of us because although we're all here at
the same time, like the radio band, Yeah, if you're
listening on yeah one O two point three, but also
there's ninety six point seven. They both are there, but
you have to put that needle on one of them
for it to hear that. But it's all there. It's

(32:49):
like Netflix, all those shows are there. All you have
to do is go to one and hit that frequency
to receive it. And that we're on one frequency and
there are things on other frequencies that we can't see
around us, and that they know how to get to
our frequency.

Speaker 3 (33:00):
Oh so those could be the aliens.

Speaker 2 (33:02):
Well, alien is a word that little green men come out.

Speaker 3 (33:04):
Okay, I mean it is crazy to think that like
the our internet waves and radio waves and things around
us right now, our telephone, our phone signals, like all
that's around us right now, we can't see any of that.
So we can't see the air.

Speaker 2 (33:19):
What they're saying is just because we can't see it
or smell it or hear it, doesn't mean it's not there.
And that can be these beings that could take organic
form or not.

Speaker 3 (33:26):
Yeah, have a being part. That's where it's like I
get kind of lost. But yeah, I mean I understand
there are a lot of things that we can't see.

Speaker 2 (33:32):
It's crazy that's a congresswoman saying that.

Speaker 3 (33:34):
But she's like, she's what I mean, it's just a politician.

Speaker 1 (33:37):
Yeah, that didn't mean that she's smarter enough.

Speaker 2 (33:38):
That's not her running for office. But she has been.

Speaker 3 (33:41):
But she's just a person.

Speaker 2 (33:42):
But she has seen things that we're not allowed to see.
That's true.

Speaker 3 (33:45):
She has access to things that we don't have access
to because.

Speaker 2 (33:48):
She was elected to a place. She has access to
things we have not been able.

Speaker 3 (33:50):
You don't sound like a thing when you're out of
office where you're like, you can't talk about that stuff.

Speaker 1 (33:55):
I would assume you have to, like you can't reveal
our secrets.

Speaker 2 (33:58):
Right, it depends she did that. She said I can't
say this other stuff because it's confidential. She did exactly
what you're saying you can't do.

Speaker 3 (34:04):
But told us what she could say.

Speaker 2 (34:05):
Yes, she's also been like and I've watched her do
these panels where she talked, I won't spend too much
time on this. I'll just move off of it. No, No,
I'm interested more than they have to, like testify to Congress.
She's one of the main ones, if not the main
one up there.

Speaker 3 (34:18):
Oh, I probably see her taking into the question on TikTok.

Speaker 2 (34:22):
I'm going to read his story here. This is from
Fox thirty five Orlando, Florida. Man's cross that he was
wearing saved his life from a stray bullet.

Speaker 3 (34:30):
Quote.

Speaker 2 (34:30):
God is definitely real. Aiden Perry was at a friend's
house when he was accidentally shot in the chest by
a forty caliber pistol in June. Perry was rushed to
the HCA Florida o'calla hospital taken to the operating room.
He survived the gunshot wound. He was wearing his gold
necklace with a cross pendant, which medics believe could have
split the bullet, sparing his major organs from damage. The
bullet entered Perry's chest, exiting near his armpit. Now, I

(34:54):
believe God is definitely real, But I believe this is
a very selfish thing to say. What part that because
a bullet hits his cross, that God's definitely real? Because
what about all the people that were wearing something and
a bullet went in the body and killed them? Does
that mean God is not real?

Speaker 3 (35:07):
It could be could be God's real, but that just
they weren't wearing a cross.

Speaker 2 (35:13):
That are wearing crosses and it hits near the cross
but doesn't it doesn't cross, and it goes into the
body and kills them. Does that mean God? No, it
doesn't mean God's not real. I don't think this has
anything to do with God picking this specific person to go. Well,
since you're wearing a cross, I want to make sure
it hits the cross and saves you, because I'm going
to show you I'm real. Because that means everybody that
has died that's wearing a cross. According to this logic,

(35:34):
God is not real and I don't believe that, but
I do believe. It's selfish to say that. I wonder
if that because if that's the reason, yeah, because that
means everybody who died. It's unfair to everybody who died,
so that that means everybody who didn't make it. It's
like an athlete, It's like I like to thank God.
So did God root against the other team that lost?

Speaker 3 (35:55):
Does God even care? I don't know. I don't know.
Maybe did he have to spread? Is God gambling on it?
Don't know?

Speaker 2 (36:04):
So whenever, because you can believe, and I do, that
God is real. However, I don't think God picked some
people to die that were a cross and people that
don't die to wear it cross because it hit this
guy's cross.

Speaker 3 (36:15):
What would be cool, though, is if this guy didn't
believe in God and then when this happened, he's just like,
oh my gosh, now I believe in God because it
saved me. That's kind of cool.

Speaker 2 (36:23):
What about people who don't believe in God that gets
shot and die, or people that do believe in God
and get shot and die. Does that affect any well,
they're understood.

Speaker 3 (36:29):
I mean, whatever happens after they're dead. I don't know, Man,
they know. I know what you're saying. I see what
you're saying. But I'd say it'd be pretty cool for
this guy to believe in like, ah, God.

Speaker 1 (36:40):
Well he already believes in God because he has the
cross Nicholas on.

Speaker 2 (36:42):
Yeah, but if he did, but he could just be
wearing it to look like, yeah.

Speaker 3 (36:48):
How big was this cross?

Speaker 2 (36:49):
I don't know. I picture it was just a regular
little I picked, like flavor Flame's clock.

Speaker 3 (36:54):
You're like, well, yeah, we all wore that big.

Speaker 2 (36:56):
It was a small cross. And I'm happy that that
bullet was fortunate enough to hit the cross and it
basically it deflected off of it and went to another
parts of body.

Speaker 3 (37:07):
That's crazy.

Speaker 2 (37:09):
But by going well God saved me, that means God
has chosen not to save certain other people who got shot.

Speaker 3 (37:14):
He said, God is real, Yeah right, God, God.

Speaker 2 (37:16):
Is for sure real now so but the people that
were shot doesn't mean God's fake. My point is, I
don't think it has anything to do with that being
real or fake. Yeah, just yeah, pretty fortunate to hit
the cross and that's why wear nineteen crosses. I pulled
my shirt open. It's just a protect myself from.

Speaker 3 (37:33):
Bullet dude, just wear a bulletproof vest man.

Speaker 2 (37:37):
Kids took a joy ride in a train, a real train,
like they stole it. They use YouTube to figure ou
how to drive it home.

Speaker 1 (37:43):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (37:44):
Two teams were arrested in South Carolina last weekend after
taken a train on a joy ride. Authority said they
figured out how to drive it on YouTube. It caused
the derailment though, and caused major damage. They didn't have
to drive it well enough.

Speaker 3 (37:56):
That's crazy though, that it wouldn't do reeal, I would
think it's just on a track, like you just go,
oh yeah.

Speaker 1 (38:00):
It seems like it would think that.

Speaker 3 (38:02):
Like do they steer it? Is there a steering wheel
on a train? Because I've never been on a What
is that not a cockpit?

Speaker 4 (38:08):
What is that?

Speaker 3 (38:10):
The caboose?

Speaker 2 (38:11):
The caboos? Is the end?

Speaker 1 (38:12):
The engine?

Speaker 3 (38:14):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (38:14):
The engine, the conductor?

Speaker 2 (38:16):
Yeah, I don't know what it's called.

Speaker 3 (38:17):
I've never been up there, so I don't know if
there's a wheel or what.

Speaker 2 (38:21):
Two teams were rested in South Carolina. The miners broke
into the railroad facility started an engine, the engine right.

Speaker 3 (38:29):
The engine, that'd probably the cockpit.

Speaker 2 (38:31):
Drove it around the yard before taking it down the
rail toward a neighboring town. They reportedly went on YouTube,
but they probably should have watched a video on stopping it,
because on the way back from the joy ride, the
track switched and they ran into several cars.

Speaker 3 (38:45):
Okay, that's it. That's a problem. That's a problem.

Speaker 2 (38:48):
Yeah, that'd be why the durellment happened. From WJB, like,
we're rolling, we can't stop now, and they didn't know
it switched tracks.

Speaker 3 (38:57):
Yeah. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (38:59):
An Oregon guy lost an arm trying to stop suspected
car thieves by throwing a homemade grenade at them. I
think the idea, there's just a homemade hilarious. Florence man
faces serious charges after a homemade grenade accident left him injured.
According to a probable cause affidavit, he attempted to deter
suspected car thieves by throwing the device, resulting in a
loss of his forearm in hand. Boom, sounds like a firework.

Speaker 1 (39:22):
Yeah, and then he's the one facing charges.

Speaker 2 (39:24):
Wait, a homemade grenade.

Speaker 1 (39:26):
Just think about that. You lose your arm and you're
going to prison.

Speaker 2 (39:30):
Yeah, he reported seeing four individuals near his vehicle. He
called the Florence police, who discovered his injuries upon arrival.
He said the grenade exploded in his hands. He tried
to throw it at the suspects. He charged with unlawful possession,
manufacturer of destructive devices.

Speaker 1 (39:42):
Kazy guy, your car's not worth it.

Speaker 2 (39:45):
A thirty one year old postal worker in California's plug
guilty after stealing credit cards and checks from people's mail
and then spending the money on luxury goods and travel.
She got caught up big stacks of cash on Instagram.
I don't expect that from the smoking gun. Yeah, she
was posting big, big stax of cash like flexing.

Speaker 3 (40:03):
Are these like credit cards that come in the mail
that you can just open it up and then you
call that number?

Speaker 2 (40:07):
I guess. So investigators launched a probe after more than
one hundred stolen cards were reported along her route. So dumb.
It's so dumb to do that on your own route.

Speaker 3 (40:19):
I wonder. I wonder if she'd heard about this or
she was just like, oh, let me try this.

Speaker 2 (40:23):
They caught her in a hidden camera inside her postal vehicle.
A December twenty twenty four raid on her apartment and
covered one hundred and thirty three credit debit cards, sixteen
treasury checks, and eighteen gift cards. Dang, she flaunded her
lavish lifestyle. By the way, if my postal workers flauning
her lavish lifestyle, and I think sums up just at
the nature of that job. Yeah, it's a good job,
good benefits, but it doesn't allow you to have stacks

(40:45):
of cash. Yeah, grabbing a ferrari her handle was your
fucking mom, fawk, your falking mom.

Speaker 3 (40:55):
Oh that scary.

Speaker 2 (40:56):
She posted vacation shots and stacks of cash. She now
faces up a thirty years in prison is being held
ahead of her sentencing October twenty seven, smoking gun. That's
pretty crazy, our buddy.

Speaker 3 (41:08):
Then our buddy have like a mailman that watch.

Speaker 2 (41:13):
Yeah, I sent him a watch for a wedding A
odd yeah, he thinks allegedly, Yeah, I sent him a
watch because everybody else pretty much lived here. So I
got all my groomsmen a nice watch, and so I
sent him his and he thinks his mailman stole it. Oh,
in confront of him about it? The guy, I don't
remember the story, but I don't remember either. It was

(41:33):
very fishy. Let's see, I there's anything else. I think
that's it there. Let's see are you going to do
the carry underwood thing? I made a note talk about that?

Speaker 3 (41:47):
Yeah? Did you see it?

Speaker 2 (41:49):
No, I want you to say what you want to say,
and then I'll respond to it.

Speaker 3 (41:52):
So I'll start by saying, you guys made fun of
me for posting a picture with us playing golf with
Kane Brown. I posted it and then I put his
song Famous Friends on the post. You guys are like,
oh gosh, how embarrassing. That's so cringe. Well, if you
look at.

Speaker 2 (42:06):
You, you're leaving out what a lot of the stuff.
One you went and screenshoted it from my post. You
didn't have the picture one.

Speaker 3 (42:12):
You just I could have bugged before it.

Speaker 2 (42:14):
You just wanted to post it because Caine played with us.

Speaker 3 (42:16):
Kind a cool picture, okay, But and you know, playing
golf with Kane Brown that's kind of cool. I'd love
to share that memory.

Speaker 2 (42:22):
No, you just want to share it with people. And
also you don't even know Caine that way. You were
just there and buddy, no, you don't have his number.
He came to play because I was like, hey, come
play golf. And so you were there and he was there,
and it was just a flex. You're like, you're like,
you're a fucking mom. Careful with that. And then and
then you put the and I didn't even care who
cares the song. I'm giving you a hard time, But

(42:44):
then you put his song on top of it. It
was Kane Brown.

Speaker 3 (42:48):
I got some famous friends, Okay, go ahead. And then
if you look at Carrie underwood lunchbox, she just posted
a picture of her and Shaboozie. What she put she
put Shaboozi song on Boom boom Eddie.

Speaker 2 (43:01):
Listen.

Speaker 1 (43:01):
I don't see anything wrong with you posting the picture, man,
I mean telling.

Speaker 3 (43:04):
You it's a cool memory to share with people like
Carrie underwould No.

Speaker 2 (43:07):
No, it's first of all, I don't know which one
I should do first one. Carrie is more famous than
Shaboozi by far.

Speaker 3 (43:13):
Oh, So it's not okay. So I see what you're saying,
Like I would be the Chaboozie in that situation.

Speaker 2 (43:18):
I wouldn't even say you're just.

Speaker 3 (43:21):
People.

Speaker 2 (43:22):
It's like if Kane had posted.

Speaker 3 (43:23):
You, that'd be cool. He never do that, but he
didn't repost. You see Okay, did you invite him to
be a collaborator?

Speaker 2 (43:30):
No? Oh, god.

Speaker 3 (43:34):
Was that would have hurt my feelings if he wouldn't
have accepted.

Speaker 1 (43:36):
That except mine. It's very frustrating you collab with people. Yeah,
whenever I have a picture of video with them, I
always collab always.

Speaker 2 (43:46):
So Carrie is more famous. Yeah, so this is where going. Hey,
I finally met Shaboozie. It wasn't a flex. Carrie's famous.

Speaker 3 (43:55):
I wasn't trying to flex, yes, you absolutely no. I
was trying to share a cool memory we were. You
were like, look, Kane Browns in my golf group. But
I didn't even say that. I just posted the picture.

Speaker 2 (44:04):
You posted his song famous and you tagged it.

Speaker 1 (44:06):
What was your quote, just a day at the golf
course or something like what.

Speaker 3 (44:09):
You're hanging out with golf my golfing buddies or something
like that.

Speaker 2 (44:14):
Any tag Kane and you put it to Okay, I
didn't need to be tagged, and I think I tagged gator.
You stole it from my freaking Instagram by the screene shot.
I literally don't care. We were just making fun of
you because it was a little cringey, but not the
same as the carry and chaboozy thing because Carrie is
more famous than Shaboozy.

Speaker 1 (44:31):
Okay, yeah, I don't see anything cringe.

Speaker 3 (44:33):
I just saw it and I was like, look, see
Carrie me same thing, because.

Speaker 1 (44:36):
I mean, all you would have do was text Bobby.
He would have sent you the picture. So you just
took a screenshot, You cut out the middleman, saved time. Yeah,
I don't even care. That's not the worst part of it.

Speaker 2 (44:44):
It's that you put his song over the top and
tried to act like it was just a normal day.

Speaker 3 (44:48):
It was was an awesome day. It wasn't a normal day.
It was an awesome day.

Speaker 2 (44:51):
I literally don't care. But it was just funny. It
was kind of a dorky thing to do.

Speaker 3 (44:55):
Carrie's doing it too, man. Yep.

Speaker 1 (44:58):
And if Carrie does it and he can do it's good.

Speaker 2 (45:00):
For the goose, good for the gander. Is that what
you're saying? All right? I think that's it. With Amy
leaving a kind of throw off some of the stuff I.

Speaker 3 (45:09):
Wanted to talk about. No, it's a boring show.

Speaker 2 (45:12):
I didn't say that, but with her being out kind
of messing up messes things up a little bit, all right. Well,
thank you and we will see you guys tomorrow. Hope
you guys have a great day. And that's it. Everybody good,
all right, see you guys. Bye, everybody.
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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

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