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May 12, 2025 73 mins

Bobby addressed the ACM drama between Riley Green, Ella Langley and Megan Moroney. Bobby had the list of the Top worst cities for allergies. Bobby shared behind the scenes from the ACMs and how he handles moments of chaos and something that went missing during the show and he is trying to get back. We talked to Paris Hilton who has come so far since the character she created on The Simple Life. She talked about advocacy, her music career, new true crime podcast, changing the perception of herself and her perfume empire. We also discussed A Body in the Snow: The Trial of Karen Read in full. We give our thoughts on if Karen did or didn’t do it. 

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
This is the Bobby Ball Show.

Speaker 2 (00:03):
Hey, Lobby, I want to play now our interview that
I thought was super cool. This is Paris Hilton, probably
unlike you've ever heard her before. There we go on
the Bobby Bones Show.

Speaker 3 (00:13):
Now, Paris Hilton.

Speaker 2 (00:15):
Hey Paris, how are you?

Speaker 3 (00:16):
I'm doing great?

Speaker 2 (00:17):
How are you doing pretty good? I was on my
for you page this morning, and oddly, and maybe because
they knew we were going to talk and they knew
everything about us. I was watching the video of Jack's
and you were standing with Jack that she was playing
a song about you, which thought was super cool, and
I think some of the things that she said was,
you know, I talked about your IQ and your advocacy.
Although that was really cool. Who approached to about that?

Speaker 3 (00:39):
Thank you?

Speaker 4 (00:41):
Jax came over to do my podcast, and then we
just did some cute special videos together and we've actually
been friends for years. She wrote one of the songs
on my last album, and I love her. She's just
so kind, so sweet, so talented, and I'm so excited
she's about to be a mom.

Speaker 2 (01:00):
Yeah. I think too, that showed a lot of what
people are now learning about you in different ways. I
think for me, what was really cool was when you
were testifying a Capitol hill, talking to Congress, and I
think that was a lot of people's introduction to the
version of you, like the real you that now you
want people to see. Is that description a bit accurate.

Speaker 3 (01:21):
Person that I always was?

Speaker 4 (01:24):
But it took time for me to become strong enough
to be able to speak about so many things that
I went through. But then when I found out that
there was hundreds of thousands of children every year from
the foster care system being sent to these schools and
being abused and dying in the name of treatment, and

(01:44):
they had no voice, I knew that I needed to
use my voice and do something about it. And I'm
so incredibly proud of all that work and it's been
the most healing experience of my life.

Speaker 2 (01:58):
Yeah, So after you did, do you feel like there
were some changes or at least there were some people
that listened that were making decisions that maybe you weren't
listening before you testified.

Speaker 3 (02:07):
Definitely.

Speaker 4 (02:08):
This is something that people have been trying to fight
for so many years, but for so long they were
ignored and not listened to or just you know, swept
under the rug. But when I came there and kept
going back and forth to DC and speaking with all
these senators and legislators and letting them know what's happening

(02:28):
behind closed doors, and then also bringing other survivors with
me who you know, had just gotten out of these places,
just to show that this has been happening for decades
and it's something that you know, people have just chosen
to ignore for so long, but I come in and
shine such a huge, right on light on it that

(02:49):
you know gets all around the world that they can't
ignore it or act like it's not happening.

Speaker 2 (02:54):
Where do you feel like the courage has come from?
You mentioned the courage a few minutes ago, that the
courage that you have now to actually speak as yourself
and for yourself for the first time. Where do you
think the courage came from?

Speaker 3 (03:04):
From? Life? Experiences?

Speaker 4 (03:06):
Everything that I've been through in life has made me
a very strong woman. And also just finding out and
doing so much research and speaking to so many other
survivors and just hearing the horrible things that are happening
and how it's boomed into this twenty eight billion dollar
a year industry and children are being abused, and.

Speaker 3 (03:31):
It's just been heartbreaking to hear these stories.

Speaker 4 (03:33):
So just to know that I can help be the
hero that I needed when I was a little girl
and make a difference in these children and their families'
lives gives me all the courage in the world.

Speaker 2 (03:46):
You're an entrepreneur in many ways, and again Jack's highlighted
to get highlighted in that video a bit, and not specifically,
but the macro version of it, like so many things
that you're doing. Why why be so involved in so
many things?

Speaker 4 (04:00):
Success is something that really drives me as well as
just creating. And I think also a big part of
it is I have ADHD and I will literally hyper
focus on things that I love and I have so
many different interests. And yeah, I love doing fashion, I

(04:21):
love music, I love entertaining, I love making incredible products.
I love using my voice to make a difference.

Speaker 3 (04:28):
I love.

Speaker 4 (04:30):
Just I don't know, I just I'm one of those people.
I feel like you only live once. You got to
make the most of it. And I'm so proud of
everything that I'm able to create and bring to the world.

Speaker 2 (04:43):
Were you good at math in school? Naturally?

Speaker 3 (04:45):
Math was with my ADHD.

Speaker 4 (04:47):
Again, it was a class I did not enjoy at all.
I was more into drama and art class.

Speaker 2 (04:55):
I guess I asked that because again, there's so much
that you're doing, and again even making music right. It's
not just because again you are now an accomplished DJ
as well. And I think many many years ago when
you started DJ, people are like, oh, that's pretty cool,
but now you know you do it on such a
high level. It's not just like slamming songs together. Like
there is really a formula to being a really good DJ.

(05:17):
I guess that's why I asked the math question was like,
how does your brain work when you're mixing music?

Speaker 1 (05:22):
M that way?

Speaker 4 (05:24):
It's just comes so naturally to me because I love
music and I love music my entire life and last
just years of training of you know, it's very technical
when you're up there.

Speaker 3 (05:38):
But if you know it very well, you just can
hear it right away.

Speaker 4 (05:42):
So it's just something that I've learned over the years,
and I think it's something that would come naturally. But
then if I'm in like a classroom as a teenager,
I was just so bored and just could not pay attention.

Speaker 3 (05:56):
But if it's something I love to do, yes, and.

Speaker 4 (06:00):
Plus with me It's something that I would have to
work hard to prove myself even harder just you know,
being a woman, being you know, one of the first
to you know, kind of step into this arena. It's
always been like a boys club. So yeah, it feels
amazing now to just be traveling and playing at the

(06:23):
biggest music festivals all around the world for almost like
fifteen years now, and.

Speaker 3 (06:29):
I'm really proud just how people see that I'm the
real deal.

Speaker 2 (06:35):
Do you have like a practice like a mixing station
in your house? I have a pick a ball court
in the backyard, so I go practice pickle ball in
the backyard. It's close. And do you have one near
the kitchen that you just go practice on.

Speaker 3 (06:45):
I try to just have everything at my house.

Speaker 4 (06:48):
So I have like next to my podcasting studio, there's
a recording studio, so I have all my equipment there
to record my album, as well as my whole DJ
setup with my CDJs and all of my equipment or
I'm trying out new equipment will bring it in. So yeah,
of course, I'm always practicing my sets and just figuring
out my favorite transitions and what I love, and then

(07:11):
also creating other remixes and different mashups of like my
favorite iconic kind of songs from like the two thousands,
but then bringing in like a more futuristic vibe.

Speaker 3 (07:23):
And adding in like epic drops. So that's something that
I love to do.

Speaker 2 (07:27):
Your new podcast that you didn't mention the studio, it's
called My Friend Daisy, a murder solved in DMS. So
this is a true crime podcast. So this is a
real story, right, Yes.

Speaker 3 (07:39):
This is a true card podcast.

Speaker 2 (07:43):
So tell me a bit about the story.

Speaker 4 (07:45):
Basically, my team and I saw this article about it
in the cut and it's about this nineteen year old
girl named Daisy Dellow and she was murdered outside her
apartment and the authorities could not, you know, make an arrest.
I could not figure out who it was. And then

(08:06):
her friends and family turned to TikTok and literally sparked
a viral manhunt that helped track down the killer.

Speaker 3 (08:15):
And I thought that.

Speaker 4 (08:17):
Was amazing just to see this community come together and
use digital activism to demand justice. And something that is
important to me is giving people who have a voice
who don't have a voice. And I'm really just proud
how hearing from the mother about how much this meant

(08:40):
to her and all of her friends, for Daisy to
not be forgotten and for this man to be held accountable,
and just to raise awareness also against standing against domestic violence.
And I just feel that women's voices are too often
gone unheard. Oh, this is something that's really important to

(09:02):
me to just advocate for a world where every woman's
story matters.

Speaker 2 (09:07):
Yeah, the podcast is called My Friend Daisy, a murder
solved in DMS. Whenever and I want to go back
to you testifying to Congress again. I think one of
the memes was that you were just talking in a
normal voice, like you're talking with me here. Do you
feel that people are a little surprised whenever you're not
talking in the old Paris Hilton character voice?

Speaker 3 (09:30):
Yeah, definitely.

Speaker 4 (09:30):
I think if people don't know me, or they're first
getting to know me, they assume you know the voice.
And the character that I played on The Simple Libe
is how I am in real life. But that's just
a character that I created back then because this was
the first reality show ever and the producers basically wanted

(09:52):
Nicole to be the troublemaker Paris.

Speaker 3 (09:54):
You kind of play the.

Speaker 4 (09:55):
Blonde airhead, so and I think also just growing up,
you know, during that time, I always looked up to
women like Marilyn Monroe and Pamela Anderson and they had,
you know, this kind of baby breathy voice. And also
just with all of the trauma I had been through
as a teenager being abused at these schools, I think

(10:18):
it was also a trauma response to that as well,
where I kind of just wanted to create this perfect
Barbie doll life and then all of a sudden, I
get thrown, you know, doing the simple life, and then
it's becomes like this character that people get to know
me for. So yeah, I think it's just been a
part of me for a long time, but it's not
who I really am.

Speaker 2 (10:39):
Did you feel a bit typecast for a while in
your early adult life that it was hard to actually
not have to be that person?

Speaker 3 (10:46):
Yeah, for sure. You know.

Speaker 4 (10:47):
It wasn't until my documentary This Is Paris, where I
started talking about everything in my life that I've went through,
that that was the first time that people, you know,
really got to see me and the person I really was.
But before I think that people just what kind of
look at me is almost like this cartoon character. And

(11:11):
then now can people can see there's actually way more
to me than I ever spoke about before.

Speaker 2 (11:19):
Do you think being a being a mom at a
lot of those layers as well.

Speaker 3 (11:23):
Yeah, definitely, just growing so much and.

Speaker 4 (11:28):
I and my babies are my world and they just
bring me so much happiness. And I'm just really proud
that I can finally be the person that I always
was and always was meant to be. But now the
world can see me for that because there's always been
so much more to me, and I've always, you know,
been underestimated and misunderstood, which I can understand. I was

(11:53):
playing a character, and I think people didn't realize that.

Speaker 3 (11:57):
You know, I'm not a dumb blonde. I'm just very
good at pretime to be.

Speaker 2 (12:00):
One Three Final Questions.

Speaker 3 (12:02):
Creating that blueprint as well.

Speaker 2 (12:05):
Yeah, so I'm sorry start Starry to speak over either
Three Final Questions. Uh, the new remix? If you're at
the spinning with Cia, I love Cia. Whenever you do
a new remix, do you go and say, Hey, I'm
going to do this, like, how do you actually go
through the process with this remix album?

Speaker 3 (12:20):
And anytime I do something I.

Speaker 4 (12:23):
Will a lot of the time just be at different festivals,
or I'll just like text my friends who are DJs
or producers. I'll send them the album and say like, oh,
I'd love for you to do a remix on BDA,
or I want you to do this one for Chasing
with me and Megan Trainer the song that Cia and
I wrote called ADHD.

Speaker 3 (12:41):
So it's kind of just.

Speaker 4 (12:41):
Like thinking in my mind my friends which ones, like
which type of remix I want for that certain song,
and just contacting the person.

Speaker 3 (12:54):
Or also I have my team.

Speaker 4 (12:56):
They'll send me a list of like other DJs producers
that they think would be great for these tracks, and
then I listen to their music, see what I think
and give them a yes or no. So yeah, it's
just like a process of just going through and picking
the perfect people that I think for each one.

Speaker 2 (13:16):
I have a question about Fragrances because I know, again
you've built an empire with fragrance. Do you just smell
stuff all day long when you're in the middle of this.

Speaker 3 (13:27):
Yeah, I just.

Speaker 4 (13:28):
Actually launched my thirtieth Fragrance and it's called Iconic, and
I love perfume. I've been in the fragrance industries or
this is the twentieth anniversary, and yeah, the process is
a lot of fun, just sometimes going over to the

(13:49):
propumeira and spelling all these different sense and notes and
kind of having fun like mixing things together. But now
just after making thirty perfumes, definitely a pro so I
know all of my favorite notes and which ones I
want to mix together and just create these beautiful fragrances

(14:09):
and then designing the bottles and coming up with the
names and the campaign and what the photos are going
to be like.

Speaker 3 (14:15):
So that's one of my favorite.

Speaker 4 (14:16):
Parts about that, is just being creative and then seeing
it come to life with this gorgeous bottle and this
incredible scent. And I'm just incredibly proud just with the
success of my perfumes.

Speaker 2 (14:32):
A final question and again everybody, my friend Daisy a
murder solved in DMS. I check out the podcast. It
is a ten part series that you can check out.
I think it's true crime, so it's the true story
I loved and still do love. Stars Are Blind. Do
you still play that? Do you still you know? Are
you still proud of it?

Speaker 3 (14:50):
Thank you?

Speaker 1 (14:52):
Yes?

Speaker 4 (14:52):
That song is such a huge part of my life.
It's so timeless, it's so iconic. I love that it
brings to much happiness to everyone around the world, and
I listened to it all the time. I was just
on a cover shoot yesterday and they played it probably
like ten times. So people anytime I'm around as well,

(15:12):
or if I walk into like an event or a
club or a party or anything, they'll always put it on.

Speaker 3 (15:18):
And I love performing it.

Speaker 4 (15:20):
Also at my concerts, it's always my favorite like finale
ending song to perform, and I can't wait to perform
it at World Pride in DC coming up next month,
and then also at Out Loud at Weho Pride.

Speaker 3 (15:34):
Next month too, So.

Speaker 4 (15:37):
Yeah, it's it's my favorite song in the world.

Speaker 2 (15:41):
World Pride Festival in DC Friday, June sixth. Paris will
be there, Yes, Paris, We really appreciate the time. Thank
you so much, and thanks for advocating for the things
that you do. You're making a big difference in a
lot of lives. So thank you for our time, but
mostly thank you for the time you're spending doing things bigger,
that's bigger than all of us. I hope you have
a great rest of the day and maybe maybe one

(16:02):
day I'll see you soon.

Speaker 4 (16:04):
I would love that, and thank you for being so
kind and lovely and I really appreciate you and I
hope to meet you soon.

Speaker 2 (16:10):
All right, bye, Parris get So have you seen the
tiktoks of people zooming in on Meghan Marony when Ella
Langley wins the award?

Speaker 3 (16:26):
No?

Speaker 5 (16:29):
What happened.

Speaker 2 (16:32):
So ACM's last week. Really haven't had much time talk
about it. I did not see it in person because
I was backstage, but I saw a couple where Meghan
Marony and I'm not sure she's given her side eye
or not, but Riley Green and Ella Langley had won
for Excuse me, you look like you love me a

(16:55):
couple of times, and the first time they get up
and it looks like something's a bit off between them too,
between Riley and Ella Langley not even not even normal,
but like off. Morgan would did you see there? Dono?

Speaker 5 (17:12):
I just well, I like the thing that I thought
was super interesting was she never like went to him.

Speaker 2 (17:17):
The second time, or maybe the first one of the time,
she never went to what do you mean went to him?
They both won, and she talked the whole time and
he's just standing back there, got it. I think it
was the second time. I think it was second time too,
but I was not able to watch it all. And
then somebody did. And again, I'm not going to share
anybody's business that I know, Okay, So I'm just going

(17:37):
to share things that I've seen. So it's a delicate
place that I get. I'm walking here. But I saw
a TikTok too where someone saw Riley at the airport
and somebody with a hoodie right behind him. It was
it looked just like Mega Maroney, like they were getting
back in Nashville. Hm, That's what it looked like to me.
I talked to Riley a bunch that night too. He

(17:57):
was backstage and we were talking about a podcast and
he was like, I've been thinking about taking or you know,
wanting to do like outdoor podcast. I like Riley a lot.
I talked to Megan Maroney a lot the night before.
Her and I were in the like the dressing green
room because all the artists that were doing the Brooks
and Done tribute were together, and she's freaking hilarious and

(18:17):
it was just me and her and Cody Johnson for
like twenty five minutes just sitting back there talking. So yeah,
I spent time with I don't know Ella Langley that, well,
I don't know what the drama is. I can probably
guess what the drama is. But yeah, I know I did.
They were zooming in on on Maroney given Ola Langley
the side. I like the ACMD did crowd footage. I

(18:41):
don't I don't know anything. You know me, Yeah, I
don't know anything. I agree, Well, you're gonna ask us, Yes,
I don't know anything.

Speaker 6 (18:47):
But did Riley Green and Ella Langley ever like officially date?

Speaker 2 (18:51):
No? Officially? No? Okay, well no officially. No.

Speaker 1 (18:55):
No, I'm saying, I'm just my question. No, not officially,
but I'm just saying, by the pictures of them holding award,
looks like two people that don't want to be around
each other.

Speaker 2 (19:04):
Pictures can be deceiving, though, because you can get anybody
in any motion. From the motion that they were, it
seemed a bit off.

Speaker 5 (19:11):
So I guess Riley. Once answered the question about them dating,
he responded with, ellis too smart to date me.

Speaker 2 (19:21):
I like it. He didn't say no an answer.

Speaker 5 (19:29):
I like that that also compliments her, you know, yeah,
Oh my gosh, I just saw a thing on TikTok
where they hug after they won, and she looks pissed.

Speaker 2 (19:38):
She looks it almost looked like she threw the trophy
at him too, and another one and he acts like
he's like like about to miss it. There was just
a lot of dynamic happening that night.

Speaker 5 (19:50):
Okay, that might be. I mean, I've been watching lots
of TikTok's ever since you brought it up, like.

Speaker 2 (19:54):
Followed Megan Maroney too. At some point I saw that one. Yeah, yeah,
So I like Riley a bunch. I like Megan Roney
a lot too. I don't know Ella, so I don't
have anything good or bad because I don't know her.
I'm rotten for him whomever. I just wrote for everybody
to be happy, that we want happy to be happy.

Speaker 3 (20:16):
Okay.

Speaker 5 (20:17):
It's weird because like she goes in right when she
goes to hug him, she sort of has a smile,
but when she breaks away from hugging him, she won't
little croppy. It's almost like she's like trying to fake it.
And then while she's hugging him, something comes over her
that's just like disdain.

Speaker 2 (20:33):
Yeah, she's up there and she's talking. I'm watching it now.

Speaker 5 (20:35):
Send that over, Amy, I'm sending it right now.

Speaker 2 (20:37):
It's like on her people. She points, she holds the
award up. Riley never talks. It's a music event of
the year two, so it wasn't even just like a
riding thing. It's event. It's two people that come together.
Anytime there's an event is two artists that like collab
that don't normally clab. And he never says a word.

Speaker 5 (20:56):
I don't know. Then on stage they side hug. It
seems normal side hug. Yeah, but you're they're on stage.
He just got on talking about.

Speaker 2 (21:03):
She did roll her eyes a little bit when she
came out of that hug.

Speaker 5 (21:06):
That hug was interesting.

Speaker 2 (21:08):
Oh yeah, they were showing performances because they had to
play that weekend too. In certain places. That song and
their body language was like sewed away from each other.
I mean, yeah, pretty people, you know right, I'm watching
her talk here so much and.

Speaker 5 (21:27):
Then yeah, Megan Roney's face when it cuts to her.

Speaker 1 (21:31):
So the camera knows what they're doing.

Speaker 5 (21:34):
Well, no, let me see there. They were just showing them. Well, yeah,
they definitely zoomed in on her, But I don't know
if that's the camera that zoomed in on her or
whoever was filming it. Like on the TV.

Speaker 2 (21:43):
Also, I've been in the crowd when that camera comes
out many times, and you know when it's on you,
is it right up on you? Well, it doesn't matter.
It's almost like a sporting event. You kind of know
when the camera is somewhere on you. You don't when you're
a nominated for something or they're going to come to you.
It's right on you. Even if it's in the crowd though,
or I was, it's enough on you to know that
you need to be again perfectly nothing clap and just

(22:11):
let life exist because it's not worth making any little
thing that'll be caught because the salutes on the internet
will figured it all out. Anyway. I saw that that
is a little dramatic, but I get it. I don't
know what happened, h I literally don't know what happened.
I know things that have happened prior, but I don't
know what happened here. Uh yeah, this is great, though.

(22:31):
I hope they make it whomever they is that that
TikTok Tho did look like that's all the airport did
look like Riley and and that's on them for being
in public. They know they're not people are going to
see them. Yeah, I could have swore it with her.
You see it, Morgan think yeah her? If not her,
he has something, Yeah, so it could it could not

(22:53):
be her. It's a weird place. We're cities for allergies. Ashville, Tennessee.
We didn't make it.

Speaker 1 (23:02):
Austin, Texas didn't make it Las Vegas.

Speaker 2 (23:04):
Okay, what is that gonna guess much?

Speaker 1 (23:05):
Cities nocause Las Vegas? I get them bad.

Speaker 2 (23:07):
That's not true. That's not true. You didn't make it
Las Vegas. That make it either? Which town number one?
New Orleans, Oklahoma City, Tulsa, Memphis, Little Rock, Raleigh, Richmond, Greenville, Greensboro,
North Carolina?

Speaker 3 (23:16):
Wait, which like wichtot Kansas.

Speaker 2 (23:19):
No.

Speaker 5 (23:21):
Falls, Texas?

Speaker 2 (23:22):
Yeah, but that'd be which Shaw Falls? Yeah, dang.

Speaker 5 (23:26):
I never had allergies until I moved to Tennessee.

Speaker 2 (23:28):
They're bad here and Austin they were really bad, so bad,
but I guess they're not the worst. The ten best
cities Boston. It's a lot of cold places for the
most part, and elevated places should go there. Then, oh,
hey do you want to do because we're live right
now and it's its own segment, but we should cut

(23:48):
this at like fifteen minutes and come back and talk
about Karen Reid if you want. I've watched it, I've
read all about it. I've done the whole thing. I
watched it too, I went, I went, I did re editing,
I did everything.

Speaker 5 (23:59):
I it went. Actually this weekend away deeper because my
friend sent me this lawyer that breaks everything down on you.

Speaker 2 (24:05):
We should talk about it in its own, its own
thing as All I'm asking is do you want to
do that later?

Speaker 5 (24:09):
Sure?

Speaker 2 (24:09):
I don't want to do it now because a lot
of people haven't haven't seen it, and it's not even
a spoiler. But in case, unless you know the case,
you're just not interested in.

Speaker 5 (24:15):
Well, you know, we love our Boston listeners, right.

Speaker 2 (24:18):
Yes, shout out Boston in Massachusett.

Speaker 5 (24:19):
Yeah, so that's where I've gotten a lot of messages
from Boston people and they're like, this is all we
talk about. I'm sure, and they have lots of thoughts.

Speaker 6 (24:29):
You did more research in the documentary, Yes.

Speaker 2 (24:31):
So did I? Oh, I didn't. Why I want to
know because anytime I watch a documentary, well, the episode
it was five and them only forty five minutes, and
I watched one a day. Yeah, it's not better traveled. Yeah,
it's easy. So I mostly want to know because any
sort of docuseries, it could be any docuseries. It has
an individual perspective and it doesn't mean it has to

(24:54):
pick a side, but they have their vision for how
they want things presented any document So I never wanted
to be totally overwhelmed by one side in a documentary.
So I go out and I seek other sides that
have created from a different perspective. And I think that's
what I did. But we can do a whole separate okay,
and we'll put it at the end of this podcast.
Basically Karen Reid. They said that she hid her boyfriend

(25:18):
who was a cop, with her car and he ended
up dying in the snow.

Speaker 5 (25:21):
It's called body in the snow.

Speaker 2 (25:22):
Yeah, so you have to say it like that, buddy
in the snow. We'll come back and do that. Don't
give your old car to your teenager from news Week.
Handing down your old car to your teenager could be
a deadly decision. A study found teens are nineteen percent
more likely to die in on fatal crash if their
car is more than five years old.

Speaker 5 (25:39):
What my daughter's literally driving my.

Speaker 6 (25:41):
Yeah, bar from and my son's driving a ten year
old car.

Speaker 2 (25:44):
Here's the problem years in this logic would be then
give your kids only new cars for the most part.
And that's not we're not doing that. It's yeah, because
they're going to wreck it. They don't not ab to
drive it as well. And also you got to go
buy a new car that costs money. Yeah, yeah, so
and you'd be like, well you have to buy you
a new car. Yeah, you know how to drive, so,
yeah's the dumb story. Wearable patches will now let you

(26:05):
feel the virtual world. Researchers at Northwestern University have created
new super thin wearable device patches called haptic patches that
will let you feel touch in virtual reality or other
digital settings. The patch is flexible, It sticks to your
skin like bandage, and it can send different feelings like vibrations, pressure,
or twisting. The researchers are now making it. I know
where i'd put it. The researchers are now working to

(26:26):
make it even smaller and wireless for everyday use day.

Speaker 5 (26:31):
I mean, this is weird.

Speaker 2 (26:33):
Mostly this would be yeah, getting in VR world and
playing games, right, you get shot and it probably won't
hurt as bad. It's like a real bullet people loved
ones in other countries deployed. You communicate a lot of communication.
With virtual reality, you could do a thing where you
can't really touch, but you could in essence, I don't know,

(26:53):
cyber touch, like like sure, I mean, all this cool,
but we all know how it's gonna end. It's gonna
be all porn.

Speaker 5 (27:00):
Yes, this is not good.

Speaker 2 (27:01):
Yes, I mean they're all I'm trying to listen all
the good reasons they're going to say it's for, but really,
in the end, it's just going to be dudes. Putting
this on.

Speaker 1 (27:10):
Leads a bad spots, you know.

Speaker 2 (27:12):
I think the one place that probably could do real
good is surgeries from far away.

Speaker 6 (27:18):
I'm sorry, what surgeries from far away?

Speaker 2 (27:21):
Like you're not there and you need like an expert
in India to do it, like a who's an expert
and I don't know, some crazy part of your neck
and you can touch something and beyond and actually precision
like cut. That's cool in a way that you because
it's going to take them a day to get here.
I think that would probably be a way that it
could be used to benefit humanity. I'll just put it

(27:41):
on your Wiener.

Speaker 6 (27:43):
Well, even just like a doctor's visit, I feel like
they're always just touching your tonsils, you know, just put
them right there, and.

Speaker 2 (27:48):
I guess if you could get that feel back you
put the package.

Speaker 5 (27:51):
You're getting information.

Speaker 2 (27:53):
Yeah, so you put the patch on on on a
bump or a lump or something and the doctor can
feel it based on that. That's a lot of medical Yeah,
but again there's no hope. That's that's probably why invented it,
and then they had to figure out ways to make
it actually be good for man. No, no, I wouldn't.

(28:16):
I wouldn't. I think it burn it. It's not even like, yeah,
I'm not doing V one of it. We'll let that
thing have a few different versions.

Speaker 5 (28:25):
Oh gosh, people are going to be like going to
the er.

Speaker 2 (28:29):
They're like, here's a voicemail from Ryan and Port Orange, Florida.

Speaker 7 (28:36):
Did a great job on TV. I just wanted to
let you know sellar performance and lasting all night to
really enjoyed it. Did you tell me was your highlight
of the moment and let's talk to you that makes
that make you happy? Is everything in between?

Speaker 1 (28:51):
I don't know.

Speaker 7 (28:52):
One of the t if you could tell us something
we didn't see on TV.

Speaker 3 (28:55):
That is worth hearing.

Speaker 7 (28:57):
Waited to have you guys on the radio tomorrow.

Speaker 2 (28:59):
Thank you. Ryan. Sure. When I did the ACMs, they
were like, Hey, you're gonna go out like three or
four times and do this stuff. And I'm like what stuff.
They're like, go, I do whatever you want. I'm like, well,
is there any sort of road map? They're like, nah,
I just go and do your stuff. I don't really
know what your stuff is, but got it. And so
I also was on stand by at any point everything broke,

(29:21):
and that happened and that never happens. And so I
also thought if everything broke, they would have a camera
that was mobile that I could go and actually talk
to people, which makes it a lot easier. But they did,
and they were like, something's broke. You got to go
to the jib camera on the right, which means I'm
in the corner of the whole room and it can't
go anywhere. And they're like you gotta be over there
in twelve seconds. And I'm like all right. So I
walk down and they're like, go, there's no timer on anything,

(29:41):
there's nothing in the prompter and they're just like start talking.
And so I did. I just talked, and what did
you say? So my initial instinct with any situation like
that is one, don't freak out. Two tease ahead. And
as I'm teasing ahead, think about what I'm going to
talk about. So I start teasing ahead. I'm like, hey,
coming up, Rascal Flats and Backstreet Boys are together. And

(30:06):
at the same time I'm teasing ahead, I'm also looking
around my surroundings that it's close. And so I had
told Tom, who is like part of my management team, Hey,
when this thing breaks, go get Lionel Richie because I
knew where he was and I had a bit planned
for Lionel in my pocket. I had one of those
Hello name tags Hello, I am oh Hello, Yes, yeah, yeah,

(30:29):
And so I had that ready going through and I
was like, just go get Lionel if it breaks. So
Tom goes to get Lionel as I'm in the middle
of just creating Space Killer, and he says, as Lionel's
getting because I know Lionel, and as Lionel's getting up,
because Tom goes, hey, Bobby needs you. The camera's broken.
He wants to do some content like last minute, and

(30:50):
Line's like great. Jerry Jones grabs. Line was like, Lionel,
let me do you to my family Jerry right as
they're getting up, So Lionel never comes over because Jerry Jones,
I grabbed him and just started introducing him to all
like family and stuff. So I went on for like
a minute, which is an eternity when you don't know
when it's ending. And it was fine. I think I
grabbed Matthew Ramsey from Old Dominion. There was another time

(31:11):
where they're like, hey, walk through the crowd. We'll give
you two points of business. One of them was acknowledging
a winner here. One of them was acknowledging something here.
And it was a minute ten seconds, which is a
long time for a live hit. And at about a minute,
because I don't have an earpiece in I have a
producer behind the camera, she goes at a minute and
so I'm about to wrap. Oh boy, and I'm like,

(31:32):
all right, so what do I do? I just start
walking and I do have a mobile camera, and this
woman walks up in a full leopard print bodysuit and
I'm like, holy crap, the real leopard How about one
hundred of those versus one man or something like that?
Whatever That meme was and I make that joke and
then I'm just in full roast mode and I see
a bunch of people in cowboy hats and I'm like,
then there's a good people that's never worn a cowboy
hat before tonight. So I'm just looking for anything to

(31:54):
comment on. But that happened a couple times where they
were just like, go and that's really why they have
me out there, not just to go out into the
crowd and show artists, which was part of it, but
if something breaks or if they need more time, just
continue to keep going. And so it was good. It
was good in that I don't freak out now, like
I'm comfortable. I have three paths in my head. The

(32:17):
path that I've created that if everything goes right when
I go do this segment, this person's gonna be in
this seat. This person's gonna be in that seat, and
that almost never happened, only once it happened the correct way.
The second one is if that doesn't happen, I can
do this, and the third one is worst case scenario.
So I usually have three plans in my mind, and
most of them were planned one, some of them were

(32:38):
planning two. Only one of them was planned three, so
it was pretty good. I did get a Smucker's jar
of jelly, and I was gonna have Jelly Rolls signed
the jelly just to be funny. And so I marked
off the Smuckers because I didn't want a logo on
screen in case they were like, yeah, you're bad. Once
I got in trouble for handing out fake ACMs to
people and they're like, you shouldn't give out awards. I
did that at the show. I was doing that on

(32:58):
the show. I didn't go out. I thought it was
a funny bit. I was giving them for ridiculous awards,
and so I was passing out fake ACMs for the
prop ACMs and I can't do that. So who knows
because they don't tell me what to do. They don't
tell me what not to do. They only time met
what not to do when I do it wrong. That stuff. Yeah,
So I go out and I have this Smucker's jell

(33:19):
Assy Jelly role and he's trying to walk off before
because as soon as the commercial comes on, everybody gets
up and they're like, go, go go. So I grab
jelly and I'm like, hey, before you go. I never
get to be a fan sign this jelly, and so
he gives me the jelly and I'm walking through and
I don't really know where Keith Thurber and Nicole Kidman are,
but I'm supposed to say that Keith Urban is winning
an award. Later and I see Keith back behind me,

(33:39):
and I go back and hug him and I give
them a cold the jelly and she was really funny
about it. And so I have this jelly roll signed jelly.
I took it back from Nicole. I'm like, you don't
have to keep that, and some photographer comes up to
me and goes, hey, let me take a picture of that,
and he takes it from my hand. I never saw
it again. What they stole it from me? The whole
night I was looking for my jelly he stole. He
literally stole the jelly and ran off with it. No
way the jelly roll signed jelly. He's never signed jelly before.

(34:02):
One of one a photographer.

Speaker 5 (34:04):
I thought it was hard for you.

Speaker 2 (34:06):
No, he dressed all in black, so I thought it
was a TV producer because they all are in black
because they try to blend in. And he grabs it, goes, hey,
when you take a picture of this I thought it
was a TV producer and they wanted something for like socials,
and I was like okay, and so I go to
walk and then nels sudden, he's gone with my jelly.
So if you see it, smuckers smushed out, blacked out

(34:26):
jelly roll signed jelly That's mine. So that that happened.

Speaker 5 (34:31):
That was funny.

Speaker 2 (34:32):
Couldn't get it back.

Speaker 5 (34:34):
Maybe a message, uh John Cheer.

Speaker 2 (34:40):
You know, Yeah he was there. Yeah, he was there,
but he wasn't like he's not like he wasn't like
in the set.

Speaker 5 (34:45):
Oh well, I was just like, do they have like
a photographer group. He'd be like, who has the jelly?

Speaker 2 (34:49):
He can go in the photographer dark web. So that happened.
I should do a whole It's because a lot the
Brooks and Done thing was. It was really cool. The
I hosted it on Wednesday night the night before, and
it was cool because everybody came up and did one song.
I told jokes, but.

Speaker 5 (35:08):
Oh yeah, how did how did the jokes?

Speaker 2 (35:10):
Good?

Speaker 1 (35:11):
Good?

Speaker 5 (35:12):
You didn't you? You took it to the right line.

Speaker 7 (35:15):
Hmm.

Speaker 2 (35:16):
It's a I'll talk about it in a separate, separate deal.
But my heart just stopped. I got him ebit.

Speaker 6 (35:23):
I did a Google search and as that eBay jelly
Roll signed and a.

Speaker 2 (35:26):
CD jelly Roll signed.

Speaker 6 (35:30):
Jelly Yeah, that's what I thought I was gonna say it.

Speaker 2 (35:32):
It is a CD. The people that came up and
played one song was it was Laney, Eric Church, Keith Urban,
Zach Topp, Cody Johnson, and then everybody played Brooks and done.
It's pretty awesome because they all did Brooks and Dune songs.
That's cool. Yeah, yeah, it was really good. So there
are some behind the scenes, the cowboys guys out there. Nope,

(35:55):
I only saw the cowboys because they were practicing when
we were there on Wednesday or Thursday outside the hotel.
How did they look good? It was all rookie. I
told you I saw Dak Yeah, and then he goes,
what was he wearing? I said, a sling, He was limping.
He had an eye patch on a boom had rk
all that. But yeah, it's good. Okay, thank you for

(36:16):
the voicemail there. You guys can leave his voicemails at anytime.
Eight seven, seven seventy seven. Bobby, why don't we shut
this one down and we'll do a bit on The
Karen Reid Show. That way people don't want to watch it,
they don't have to, and we can label it on
YouTube as that, so people that are just searching that
can also come and find that. All right, so podcast

(36:37):
we can keep going. You gotta shut the YouTube down.
Stay bye. Nah, Well just on the YouTube. Yeah, yeah, kids,
podcast going, and then Morgan on the YouTube just label
it and it's R E A D, which is a
weird way to spell read, right. I thought my captions
was mispelling it. Yeah, it almost looks like Karen read.

Speaker 5 (36:55):
Huh. Yes, I was curious if it was which way
it went it's read.

Speaker 2 (36:59):
I would put the whole name of it. The title
is read Karen Reid Trial Discussion as the oh man,
I have so much here. This is so good and
so if you guys don't know, if you go over
to Max, it's called a Body in the Snow the
Trial of Karen Reid. And I'll read you what it

(37:22):
says here because there's really no spoiler because it's a
news story. On a cold January morning, in a sleepy
suburb outside of the city, a local police officer named
John O'Keefe is found dead on a fellow officer's front lawn.
Let me know where back up. Excuse me, We'll do

(37:47):
opening statements. Okay, So these are our opening statements on
the Karen retrial. You want to go first, Amy, you
have one.

Speaker 5 (37:53):
Minute opening statements. Go. This type of situation confirms exactly
why I could not I wouldn't do well on a
jury because whoever is the last person to speak, I'm like, oh,
they did it or they didn't it. Like I just

(38:14):
I go back and forth all the time. I do
find it really really really suspicious, like the suspicious the
police officer that got rid of his SIM card and
stuff like that, and then also the other police officers
that got rid of his dog. Those things are all
just very confusing to me. And then and then the

(38:36):
woman that's like how long does it take a body
to die in the cold? Like all that stuff is
so suspicious. But then you have Karen who's like, I
hit him, I hit him, hit him. So I'm like,
I don't know, I don't know who to believe.

Speaker 3 (38:50):
I don't know what to do.

Speaker 5 (38:51):
There's just so much suspicion, suspicious.

Speaker 2 (38:54):
Okay, time, okay, I think you bring up a lot
of great points. First of all, if I'm ajur there
was no way I was convicting her because even if
she did it, the prosecution did a terrible job. They
could not have done a worst job at without a
shadow of it out her being guilty.

Speaker 5 (39:15):
Right, it's just some of the things that happened.

Speaker 2 (39:16):
At I'm just giving you background Backroun. I forgot my statement.
There is no chance that she should have been found
guilty in that trial. I'm not saying she didn't do it,
but there's no chance. They bumbled and fumbled their way
to losing that. And even the prosecutor who runs out
of time, he's up there and he's going and point three,

(39:41):
your counsel, you have one minute point dot two. In
the blood point council you have ten seconds, and I
think a council time, Can I have ten more seconds? Okay?
I granted she did.

Speaker 6 (39:52):
It, and it's like, dude, so that's so.

Speaker 2 (39:58):
And I'll tell you if I think she did it
or not. But there's no way they could have convicted
her because they and when they're reading the text, those
cops were too close to the situation. They were too
involved too. It is too shady for that to be
a conviction. You can't have people that are super involved
with the people also be involved with the case. My

(40:20):
time is up. I now see over to Eddie one minute.

Speaker 6 (40:23):
I think whoever made this documentary did a really good
job at trying to make us confused at who we
think did it.

Speaker 2 (40:31):
That's a great documentary then, because that's they're not pushing
from one side. Yeah, I think majority I talked during
your time. Sorry, no, you're good.

Speaker 6 (40:37):
But I think majority of the time you started to think, oh,
they're trying to protect her. They're trying to make these cops,
you know, the bad guys or whatever, an inside job,
if you will. But they did a really good job
at keeping it neutral, where like, oh, like Amy said,
one day, one episode you're like, she definitely did it.
The next episode is like, wait a second, that's not
that easy. So I like that aspect of it. However,

(40:58):
I have no doubt in my mind who did it.

Speaker 3 (41:00):
You have no doubt?

Speaker 2 (41:01):
You have ten seconds if you wanted no doubt in online,
shout your load now that she did it.

Speaker 6 (41:06):
Like what, I've convicted her. I don't think I have
enough evidence. I don't think I have enough evidence to
convict her, but no doubt in my mind she did it. Okay,
judge can have ten more seconds. Yeah, go ahead, she
did it.

Speaker 2 (41:17):
Okay, yeah, yeah, prosecution totally sucked.

Speaker 6 (41:21):
What about that witness that the sucked? The testimony of
the guy.

Speaker 5 (41:25):
The snowpli driver, No, not the snow driver, the guy.

Speaker 6 (41:28):
That really couldn't even say a sentence he was so nervous.

Speaker 2 (41:31):
Oh oh, the guy with no degree in physics, the
guy with no degree in chemistry, and he's so bad
for you.

Speaker 5 (41:40):
When her lawyer was asking him about whether or not
the body flew yeah, he's like, so.

Speaker 2 (41:45):
It flew through the air. Possibly he's drinking water. So
she you know, she easily probably did it. Yeah, really,
I don't. I don't know that she did or didn't.
I don't. I'm not even assigned to thinking that she
did or didn't do it. I'm assigned to thinking the
prosecution sucked so bad. And then how do you retry

(42:07):
that knowing that all your cops that were in it
are going to get brought right back up and embarrassed again,
because that's exactly what happened. Oh gosh, those text messages.
See the text messages between one the d agent or
she was like, she texted him, she goes you're hot,
and he's like the friend of the guy who dies
and he's like, so am I I'm like really, I'm
like what he is? So that part was weird. But

(42:32):
the cringier part was when the cop, one of the
head cops, was having to like read when he called
her the sea word, Like he's the one that's doing
the investigation, Like twelve hours after they started, he's calling
her a sea word. She has no budds saying she's
hot but has no a Yeah, that's so embarrassing. But
all that's going to get brought up again in the
next trial. And with that alone, there's so much like

(42:52):
odd bias there that she'll never get convicted. Yeah, so
she'll never get convicted. And the one thing I'm thinking
about the whole time as it's happening, as her legal bills,
I'm thinking like, yeah, I'm thinking like every hour that
they're all just chilling hanging out in the war room,
that's three people, hourly hourly. The whole time, I'm like,
how do I get out of that? What's not budget on?

(43:15):
And how did she get her money to do it? Yeah?

Speaker 5 (43:17):
Also, I know eventually you kind of just have to
get past that your your boyfriend died. I mean, your
boyfriend died. It's tragic, but it's hard as viewers. Sometimes
we're watching when they like, I know, they need to
celebrate because her life is on the line now. And
let's just say she is innocent.

Speaker 2 (43:31):
I don't know, but she's not innocent.

Speaker 5 (43:34):
How do you know that? You don't know that.

Speaker 2 (43:36):
Well, you can't say.

Speaker 5 (43:36):
That because she said, let's just say, okay, fine. In
my mind, I have to say she didn't do it, right,
I'm saying in my mind right now, if she didn't
do it, gosh, if she did. And they're celebrating the
way they do. But sometimes when they like get in
the car and they like high five and like yeah, like,
it just all feels weird because I'm like, somebody still died.

Speaker 2 (43:55):
I don't feel that way at all.

Speaker 5 (43:56):
You don't know.

Speaker 2 (43:58):
Your girlfriend died.

Speaker 6 (44:00):
Like I know, you're fighting for your life, but at
the same time, you got to feel sad for the dead.

Speaker 2 (44:04):
But your girlfriend. But she said to herself she mourned it. Yeah,
and no, no, she mourned it. That's also three or
four years ago, and now she could go to jail
for the rest of her life. You don't think you're
celebrating with your lawyers. Yes, if you had a great day,
I'd be like celebrating. You're not. You're not eternally sad
during the whole during the whole case.

Speaker 5 (44:21):
You know, I agree with you. What I'm saying is
is a viewer, it's just hard to watch the celebrations.

Speaker 1 (44:26):
Oh not for me.

Speaker 2 (44:27):
I was like, I'd be celebrating too, like we had
a great day. And here's where I get a bit
lost in the m I would say, in the motivations
of the people, because you have pink team and blue team. Basically,
you have pink team that's pro Karen Read and blue
team that's pro police officers. And it's just it's just

(44:49):
not that because they're like justice for John, justice for
John would be finding the killer, not just making Karen
read the killer right, and they assigned so much of it,
like the only way John can have just is if
Karen Reid has found guilty of murdyr. That's not justice
for John exactly. Justice for John is finding the person
who did this, and they have completely shut off any
idea it's anyone other than Karen Reid, which is so

(45:12):
unfair to John. If you're really caring about John's memory.
Justice for John isn't it must be Karen Reid. It is.
We must find out who did it. And I feel
like that's a really unfair way to divide teams because
justice for John is not Karen did it. Justice for
John is he died tragically, And how do we find

(45:33):
out who did it?

Speaker 5 (45:33):
Yeah, and if his girlfriend didn't do it, he's not
gonna want his girlfriend going to.

Speaker 2 (45:37):
Jail for Yes, And they're weaponizing justice for John to
be just against Karen, which I didn't think was fair.

Speaker 5 (45:44):
Okay, do you think now I'm saying she in my mind,
she did do it. So this is where I'm coming from.
Would you like those phone calls where she's like, you're
calling me back gifts?

Speaker 2 (45:55):
I didn't think that was weird at all.

Speaker 5 (45:57):
How can I know they're not weird? But if she
did do it, do you think she's like, Oh, I
better call him a bunch over and over and accuse
him of being with another woman. Because if I just
killed him or left him in the snow to die,
I wouldn't. I wouldn't do this, So I'm gonna do
that like premeditated.

Speaker 2 (46:12):
No, I'm gonna say why that all this wasn't premeditated
because you can't predict that the blizzard's happening. Yeah, it's
like they're saying, she backed into that car premeditated. You're
acting like she did this all accidentally in the snow
and then went home and she wasn't out of her
mind because it wasn't premeditatd Right, hold on, let me
tell me finish. But no, you're jumping in on what

(46:33):
I'm saying.

Speaker 5 (46:33):
But you're answering what I'm saying to sit it wrong,
thank you problem.

Speaker 2 (46:37):
You're to be premeditated. It all had to be planned,
meaning all the circumstances would need to be static in
how you've planned them. For the most part, they need
to happen and you need to follow through with the plan.
This was not planned, so it wasn't premeditated. So let's
say she hits him. He's in the snow dying. She
doesn't have a plan. She's not thinking clearly to go
and do. I'm gonna, Okay, first thing I'm gonna do,
I'm gonna back into another car and bus a till

(46:58):
Like now what I'm doing is call him were over
and over again, so it seems like, no, she's out
of her mind. Oh I thought she would.

Speaker 5 (47:03):
No.

Speaker 2 (47:03):
No, that that is next level somebody who's planned it all.
If you if it is premeditated, you've planned it all.
There were so many elements of this that could not
have been predicted that there. I feel like, there's no
way all of that was premeditated. So do you think
she premeditates? Out the word all of that was planned
after the accident happened.

Speaker 5 (47:21):
Okay, thank you, that's the word I was looking for.

Speaker 2 (47:23):
Do you think she broke the tail light on that car?

Speaker 1 (47:25):
Yes?

Speaker 2 (47:25):
Absolutely, that's the only Absolutely. The fact that those cops
were behind that tail light in that video flip flip,
and that dude was just standing there.

Speaker 6 (47:35):
And the fact that the prosecution reversed that image on
purpose to make you think that it was the other
side of the car.

Speaker 1 (47:44):
That's crazy.

Speaker 2 (47:45):
It's crazy. It's so it's so shady. The fact they
didn't go in the guy's house. The dog bite marks
on the arm, and you could go, well, maybe it
wasn't a dog bite. They couldn't find DNA. First of all,
they had an expert, because they get battle of the experts.
There one goes there's no DNA from the dog. And
then the other one's like, no, this is very consistent
with dog bites. I can show you the different parts.
There's a bridge in the mouth of the dog, and

(48:07):
that cop got rid of the dog. That's freaking crazy.
Same cop got rid of a SIM card. Yes, he
drove to a military base to a SIM card.

Speaker 5 (48:14):
The dog cop and the sim card cop are two
different people.

Speaker 2 (48:17):
No, same dude, No, same dude. You said that earlier.
We told you that, and you kept going same guy,
same guy. Uh, he's the owner of the house. Yeah,
the gray beard, the dude who was And apparently they
butt dialed each other over and over again six six
times after the murder.

Speaker 5 (48:33):
So did you get to have many people together to
in cahoots?

Speaker 2 (48:38):
Well, I would say no generally, but the fact that
they were all connected to the police force, that if
there is a line through which there is the police force,
and the line through could be many things. I think yes,
they could. They could be in CAHOOTI but I think
some of those people weren't lying on the stand because
they never saw him. He didn't go all the way
in the house. Because some people were like, we never saw.

Speaker 6 (48:59):
Him because he got hit by the car in Theront yard.

Speaker 2 (49:03):
I don't think you got hit by the car, because
even that expert said if he got hit by a
car and like sideswiped, that doesn't happen. It doesn't even
hurt you that bad.

Speaker 6 (49:11):
Well, they found his cocktail glass there, which they think
is the one he had from the bar, and they said, well,
the guy that was stuttering said that the car went
twenty free.

Speaker 2 (49:20):
Guy that was stuttering was terrible. You can't use he
doesn't He wasn't even an expert. He was just a
guy on the stand because they were like, what he
works for the police. But they were like, what degree
do you have to talk about the physics of this?
And he goes, I don't have an associates on like
criminology and they were like, okay, we rest our case
or whatever. I mean.

Speaker 6 (49:37):
The defense is good at throwing out all kinds of
theories like right, like just to kind of make you
think somewhere else, put your mind at a different place, like.

Speaker 2 (49:45):
They did it. Really they backed him all up. I
feel like they backed him all up.

Speaker 6 (49:49):
The one that got me though was the Google search right,
like I got so hook line and Sinker with a
Google search. She the girl what's her name, Jen whatever,
friend of the cops googled at two forty in the morning,
how long does a body stay alive in the cold?

Speaker 7 (50:03):
Yep?

Speaker 6 (50:04):
Right, WHOA, She's definitely part of it.

Speaker 2 (50:06):
Then they clarify that they didn't though, because it was
a bat all the experts. The other one said, Nope,
not the same operating system would not have done that
with the different operating system. People whenever like a certain
but you're using one, so you have to use both
if you're going to use one.

Speaker 3 (50:20):
I know.

Speaker 6 (50:20):
But whenever a party brings in an expert, it's like,
are they really an expert? That's like when we bring
Bobby Bones here an expert in them?

Speaker 2 (50:26):
Well, I'd have to have some sort of credentials in that,
though the other guy didn't. The expert the prosecution brought
in was terrible for that. But they both brought in
somebody that were that were specialists in Internet like for instics.

Speaker 6 (50:40):
So you do think she googled at two forty in
the morning and how long does the body, yes, stay
alive in the cold?

Speaker 2 (50:45):
I do? And she missed also embarrassed her. She misspelled
it every time a cho like three times. That was
like crap out had done.

Speaker 3 (50:52):
The more.

Speaker 2 (50:53):
I don't think she did it. I don't think she
did it. I think I think it was an accident.

Speaker 5 (50:59):
I think I don't know.

Speaker 2 (51:00):
And she also said she never said I hit him.
The only people saying that are the same people that
are all in cahoots begin with. It'd say did I
hit him?

Speaker 6 (51:06):
Did I hit him?

Speaker 1 (51:07):
Different?

Speaker 2 (51:08):
Did I hit him? That's different than saying I didn't
even say that though. I wouldn't even because you're freaking out,
and according to your logic earlier, if it's totally premeditated
and she was able to do all this stuff and
think about it, she would have never said anything like that.
But because it was a total freak out the whole time,
there's all kinds of stuff spraying around, and.

Speaker 6 (51:24):
Then no one saw the body in the art except
her because she knew where it was. She was the
only one that spotted it.

Speaker 2 (51:30):
There was a big lump in the yard. That part
was weird. Prosecution sucked. I don't think she did it.

Speaker 6 (51:37):
And you're right though, she's not going to jail, like
they can't convict her, Yeah.

Speaker 7 (51:41):
No way.

Speaker 1 (51:42):
They too.

Speaker 2 (51:42):
Too many comps had too many weird things for it
to be a conviction.

Speaker 6 (51:47):
But if they don't convict her and they can't ever
find the killer or whoever it is, I mean, I'm
still going to side on my decision. What decision is
that she's the one. I think it was an accident.
And then she freaked out. She didn't know how to
deal with it, so she started to saying, oh, right,
that's why she went home by herself for a few hours.

Speaker 2 (52:03):
Did all they were They were all drunk, though everybody
was drunk. That was very they met. They counted the
drinks everybody had. They were all wasted. She said she
had like five drinks. But even if she did it
and didn't know, that's not secondary murder, right, Yeah, no,
it's not. So so she didn't do it in your
mind like they're saying, like they're trying her.

Speaker 6 (52:23):
I think she was an accident, right, that was the
initial one. What was the initial arrest.

Speaker 2 (52:26):
But also his DNA would have been all over that car.
There was a little hair. There was one single hair
in the same spot where that tail light was. Yeah,
and they were like, how does a single hair stay there?
They transported like forty miles exactly, and they were right
behind it. Yet they had nothing on her. They had
nothing on her. So there's no way she's guilty. Now,

(52:47):
she might have done it, but there's no way she's
found guilty ever.

Speaker 1 (52:51):
Yeah, can I ask a question, yep, Eddie, So you
say she did it? Right?

Speaker 2 (52:56):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (52:57):
So can you tell me? I mean, I haven't seen
it all, so I don't know. Why did the cop
get rid of his SIM card and the dog? Then
if you are presenting the case and you're saying she
did it, but he did all this shittyrself? Why did
he do that?

Speaker 6 (53:08):
According to his testimony, he had some unwanted caller that
he was trying to get rid of, some stalker or
something that he just decided to get rid of the phone,
get rid of them.

Speaker 2 (53:18):
Day the day before they came to get the phone
a military base where nobody can go to the garbage,
per his testimony.

Speaker 6 (53:27):
Right, but I'm saying again though, like like like, there
could be all kinds of texts in there, conversations of
them just talking that could be taken the wrong way.

Speaker 2 (53:35):
Why would you throw your phone away the day before if.

Speaker 1 (53:37):
You know they are looking at you and they're gonna
come like looking and why get rid of the dog?

Speaker 2 (53:43):
And why get rid of the dog when you like.

Speaker 1 (53:44):
How long do you get rid of a dog when
it dies?

Speaker 2 (53:47):
I didn't die, I'm saying that guy.

Speaker 1 (53:49):
But when do you get rid of a dog? Usually
when it dies, not when a police investigation is going on.
You know, at all of a sudden, just get rid of
your dog for no reason?

Speaker 2 (53:57):
There's just.

Speaker 5 (54:00):
Right?

Speaker 1 (54:00):
But why would you rehome it?

Speaker 5 (54:02):
But but I did just confirm. I think maybe there's
confusion about these guys because they're both named Brian, but
they are two different police officers. There is Brian Higgins
and then Brian Albert. Brian Albert Albert Albert and he's
the one that got rid of the dog and the
SIM card. They both have goatee's. Guys, I'm looking at them.

Speaker 2 (54:24):
That's weird. Do they flirted?

Speaker 5 (54:26):
Okay, the flirty one got rid of the SIM card?

Speaker 2 (54:29):
No, because they had his phone, so they had his phone.
How would they have his phone and SIM card? Are
you looking that up?

Speaker 5 (54:33):
Because I'm looking at them on Court TV right now.
There's Brian Albert and Brian Higgins. They look similar and
one of them's bald though when the bald one is
the homeowners of the dog. Her phone is how they
got Yeah, I'm just I'm just clarifying for anybody else
that's listening right now. That's like, it's two different guys.

Speaker 2 (54:48):
But still they both did it. They but one got
rid of a phone, one get rid of a dog.
Two things that were they needed in this case.

Speaker 6 (54:54):
Her testimony, it's it's just weird because she has no
idea what happens. She thinks he went in the house
and then never came out.

Speaker 2 (55:02):
She was drunk.

Speaker 5 (55:02):
But Eddie, there's plenty of times where you've had plenty
too much to dream and you're like, I don't know,
I don't.

Speaker 6 (55:07):
Remember what happened. I was dreaming that I was in
the bathroom.

Speaker 1 (55:10):
But you've never blocked out like you you do things
all the time.

Speaker 6 (55:13):
Yeah it happened, No, for sure, I have.

Speaker 2 (55:15):
But I think the fact that she questioned it openly
made me feel like she was telling the truth, because
if you were lying, you wouldn't be like I was drinking.
I don't know if I did or not. If you
were lying, I would not even hint at the fact
it could be a possibility that I didn't remember. But
if you were telling the truth. There's nothing to hide
in the truth. And they were fighting earlier that way.
But no, but I'm countering what you just said, and

(55:36):
you just like scooted it.

Speaker 6 (55:37):
Passed that because they were fighting earlier that day.

Speaker 2 (55:39):
They fought all the time, and who doesn't they weren't
even married.

Speaker 5 (55:44):
I don't think they did that serious. But she was
texting that. Brian got that by the way.

Speaker 2 (55:48):
They're like, there's like stuff going on. But I want
to say again because you're like, she was like, I
did it, and she never said I hit him, And
I said, did I hit him? Did I hit him?
Didn't hit him? And she did I hit him? I
don't know what did I hit? I don't know did
I And if you did it? If I said that,
you'd be like, why do you keep saying that, I wouldn't.
I would think you were in a state of freaking
shock socks and your boyfriend's dead. If I were premeditative,

(56:10):
even if I were mid meditating, like it happened, and
now I got to figure out, I would not say
anything about hitting him. That would be the absolute worst
possible thing you could do. If no, no, no. At that point,
she nots Five hours later.

Speaker 5 (56:22):
Bobby just coined it. Bobby just gave it a name.
That's a good name for it. Mid meditated.

Speaker 2 (56:27):
Yeah, because if she's figuring it out as it's going,
you don't go back and even include you in any
part of it, because you're doing things to not include you.
You're thinking about it already. If you're a quarter to
your theory, you break your line on purpose, you're making
those calls on purpose. You don't go back and be like,
did I do it? You just go and be shocked
because you're playing a game anyway. You're just playing a role.

Speaker 6 (56:43):
But what if you think there's an but you don't
stability that there's cameras and they might see her did it.
But she wants to make it.

Speaker 2 (56:48):
Look like how you used it was you were drunk, right, But.

Speaker 6 (56:51):
Then you still are saying like, did I do it?
I don't know that don't know did I do it?

Speaker 2 (56:55):
If done it? If she were lying, I think she
would have said nothing because you don't say anything. You're
just shocked. If you're telling the truth like she is,
you show your vulnerabilities in it, which she did. She
had nothing to hide, so she's saying like, I don't know,
I was drunk. Who knows what happened. You don't do
that if you're lying, you're the guy that home the jury.

(57:16):
It's a guy like Eddie who everything is like right
there and he's still like, no, I'm married to that.
What would you What would you say is you're not guilty,
because you.

Speaker 5 (57:27):
Can't say that with the there's no there's somebody is.

Speaker 2 (57:30):
Still saying guilty. Somebody is still saying guilty. They're not like, well,
we don't know. Jerry gets hung because you have people
saying guilty and people saying not guilty. So you have
somebody one two three, right, that's Eddie still yes, because
there's no reason for him to think guilty.

Speaker 5 (57:44):
Because honestly we don't. I'm not saying I know who
did it. I'm saying I don't know, but there's no
way I could have said for sure she's guilty.

Speaker 2 (57:50):
So no, I agree, Eddie's the guy.

Speaker 5 (57:53):
That's he's the guy guy guilty.

Speaker 2 (57:56):
You're the guy. You have no reason to think that
if you're looking at the evidence, she listened, she might
have done it, and I'm not saying she didn't do it.
I'm saying, right, she has to be found.

Speaker 6 (58:08):
There is no other evidence, no other evidence of a
dog attacking and no other but nothing. It's all hearsay.
The one evidence that we do.

Speaker 5 (58:16):
Have on his arm.

Speaker 2 (58:18):
Yeah, but and there's no no, And there's an expert
that it specializes that wrote books on dog bikes.

Speaker 5 (58:24):
And then there's a dog missing, and there's.

Speaker 2 (58:25):
A missing dog.

Speaker 1 (58:26):
There's dog gone.

Speaker 2 (58:28):
You haven't watched it, I know, just hearing the dog
is gone. And there's an expert brought in to go,
these are dog marks.

Speaker 6 (58:34):
There's also an expert that brought in says these are
not dogs.

Speaker 2 (58:37):
That's not they No, No, the expert did not say
they weren't dog marks. The expert said that their tests
showed not that there wasn't DNA, but they didn't find any.
They found pig DNA. So you're wrong on that too.

Speaker 1 (58:46):
You ve DNA from bacon.

Speaker 2 (58:48):
Her nails could have bacon in the dog could and
he's the guy that hung the jury. But see where
did they come up with bacon in a treat like
all of a sudden, like it came up with It's
because said there was DNA. Did you watch this? No?

Speaker 1 (59:01):
I did.

Speaker 6 (59:01):
What I'm saying stop, what I'm saying is like the
defense is so good to being like, okay, bacon, bacon,
think thing, think, oh, treats have bacon in it?

Speaker 2 (59:10):
Like yeah, pepperoni, it couldn't. That's a good lawyer. Doesn't
mean that she's innocent. But but none of us are
fighting that she's innocent. We're saying she absolutely had not guilty,
and you're screaming she's guilty. And every point that you've made,
we've counted it with actual reasonable reason as to why
that shouldn't be the reason you think she's guilty.

Speaker 5 (59:30):
But this is what's happening in America, guys. Everybody's divided
over this case. People think she's.

Speaker 2 (59:35):
You have to make sure a joke's like, you know,
pick dumb people. Yeah, whoa just call me dumb in
this situation, Yeah, no, because she might have done it,
but there's zero chance you can find her guilty. There's
no chance because everything you're using as a reason, there's
an actual expert that goes, well, that's not true.

Speaker 5 (59:52):
So let me ask you this, Bobby, do you think
on the Google search thing.

Speaker 2 (59:55):
She probably did it? But but no, I know, I know,
I know, yeah, but but she's not guilty.

Speaker 5 (01:00:01):
Because I'm trying to think what if we were in
that situation. It would suck so bad to be accused
of killing your boyfriend when you didn't do it. And
now everyone's like, yeah, oh terrible. So anyway, but the
Google search of the how long does it take a
body to die in the snow? And like how if
you use the same page, like you know, if you
don't go to a new page the tab that's the thing,

(01:00:23):
like it is.

Speaker 2 (01:00:25):
For a certain operating system. And the guy, the second
guy said, that is true, but the operaing system she
was using on her phone is not that operating system
where that would be.

Speaker 5 (01:00:34):
Okay, okay, okay, So she was googling that before for.

Speaker 2 (01:00:39):
Sure based on the based on what the guy said,
is that the prosecution said, I mean, if you open
a tab and when you open it, that's the time
it's used, right, And if you do it at you know,
six am, but you open it too, it's still going
to show the two right, right. But the second guy
was like, yep, that's true, except they're not using the
operating system where that comes into play.

Speaker 5 (01:01:00):
Okay, I got confused on that part. That's nuts, Eddie.
You have to admit that.

Speaker 6 (01:01:06):
The one Google search was what got me. I'm like, okay,
maybe she didn't.

Speaker 2 (01:01:09):
Do it multiple Google searches, but she misspelled it every
single time.

Speaker 5 (01:01:12):
I mean, you think they were just sitting around like, hey, guys,
how long does it take a body to die in this?

Speaker 3 (01:01:17):
Now?

Speaker 6 (01:01:17):
She said that when the girl when Karen asked her, yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:01:21):
But she didn't ask that twil hours later at.

Speaker 2 (01:01:23):
Six in the morning.

Speaker 3 (01:01:24):
I know.

Speaker 6 (01:01:24):
That's why the whole tab thing made sense to me.

Speaker 5 (01:01:26):
Yeah, but the body said that the expert operating.

Speaker 2 (01:01:29):
The expert who's an expert. You're using the expert as
your argument, and the expert that came on, No, you
just never know who to believe you expert. The expert
came on and said the guy's right. He said the
first expert was right, but hold on, he said, the
first expert was right, except for he did not calculate
the operating was being used and this, and then the
prosecution didn't say no, you're wrong, said you're right.

Speaker 6 (01:01:50):
I understand. But the expert who whatever side brings them on.
That's what they say, Like, if there's that's why you
bring them on. I understand. So who do we believe?
That's why I guess these experts. I just like whatever.
I can't really I can't really believe. No, Yes, defend
brought in an expert. The propecution, you.

Speaker 2 (01:02:07):
Can argue that the expert is not being an expert
with the right perspective, which is what they did, and
they were correct. You don't need an expert to But
the dog expert didn't say anything about the defense expert
being wrong. The dog expert that the defense brought in
said that was a dog mark. The other one that
said they when they tested it, they didn't bring it
in to say it wasn't a dog mark. They said

(01:02:29):
they tested it for DNA, and they didn't say there
was no dog DNA. They said, according to their test,
they couldn't find any.

Speaker 6 (01:02:33):
That was a twist the defense that the lawyer made,
which is genius. The defense lawyer is awesome. He's really good.
Alan Jackson, he's legit.

Speaker 2 (01:02:41):
Anyway, exactly. His name is Alan Jackson's.

Speaker 6 (01:02:45):
She probably did it, but but.

Speaker 2 (01:02:47):
It's not even the point of it. The point of
it is, in America, you cannot convict somebody if you're
not without one hundred percent, without any doubt, and there's
so much doubt in the fact you're still convicting her. No,
I didn't convict her. Just guys, I'm a viewer of this.
She did it.

Speaker 5 (01:03:03):
But if you were on the jury, would you be
like in your deliberations being like.

Speaker 6 (01:03:07):
I couldn't, Like, you're right, I can't. I can't prove
my heart.

Speaker 2 (01:03:12):
You're given your heart by base on one documentary. Yes, yes, it's.

Speaker 1 (01:03:16):
Interually that you're not. I still think she probably did it.

Speaker 2 (01:03:19):
Now, I did watch it lunch, but I will. But
if I were betting money, see this is what would
the odds be, she'd be a favorite. No, I think
I think it's probably inside. I think it's probably inside job, Okay,
I do. I think there's probably a fight somebody got
he got beat up on because explained all the bruises
on the face. Because if he got hit in the arm,
why was his face so bruised up and get punk

(01:03:40):
you know, why was it? It doesn't make sense. I
think probably there was a fight, he died and they
had to come up with a story. That's if I
were having to bet money on it, that would be
the favorite. But I would have put her doing it.

Speaker 5 (01:03:54):
And yes, mid.

Speaker 2 (01:03:58):
And man, you know when that line that tail light
was broken they were like, Oh, we got the luckiest
freaking thing ever.

Speaker 1 (01:04:04):
Yeah. I mean, just because just outside perspective is them
being inside. They know how to get rid of evidence.
They know to go to a military base to get
rid of the sim card.

Speaker 2 (01:04:14):
You right, dog, Why.

Speaker 1 (01:04:16):
Go to if you're just trying to get rid of
it thrown a dumpster?

Speaker 2 (01:04:18):
It does.

Speaker 1 (01:04:20):
Because they can't search.

Speaker 2 (01:04:21):
The trash there, search the trash there, and they know that.

Speaker 1 (01:04:24):
So if you want to just be normal and get
rid of your phone, you were just throwing a dumpster
right down the road, but we were going to go
extra mile, go military base.

Speaker 2 (01:04:33):
I just felt too revolve justice for John when that
only meant Karen Reid was found guilty was a bit
of a misdirection that was also strategically planned, meaning the
people that did it. If we go justice for John
has to be her. It's not justice for John. You
got to find the real person. It has to be
her for justice for John. I think that was a

(01:04:54):
strategic decision as well, And that's what you would do
if you would weaponize that towards in person, not towards
just finding it, especially if you're the one who did it.

Speaker 3 (01:05:04):
Yep.

Speaker 1 (01:05:05):
So either way is her life over.

Speaker 2 (01:05:07):
No, No, thinks I think she could probably make a
lot of money off of it. Now she has to go,
but she has to get tried again.

Speaker 1 (01:05:12):
In the movie.

Speaker 2 (01:05:13):
Yeah, so hopefully the prosecution is better, but they Yeah,
the problem is there's only so much money for the prosecution.
It's not like you hire crazy. They're doing it right now,
right now. There is no way she gets convicted unless
they find some new some some new hard DNA. Those

(01:05:35):
cops just dicked around so much. And the cop that
was in the investigation was sending texts about her while
in the investigator. That alone, she'd get it thrown out, Like,
how are you leading investigation but you're also talking crap
about the first time you're investigating that alone. I'm out.
I'm like, I'm sure, I'm out this. There's no way
he can do his job that way. If he feels

(01:05:56):
this way, what do you see? That's just what's happening
right now. Oh, my screens mess up. Let me pull
it in, Okay, then we'll get off this. Jackson has
shifted gears there, which was Jackson? Alan Jackson's that layer, Yeah,
Alan Jackson. But Jackson's such a normal name. I don't know.

Speaker 5 (01:06:15):
There are two Bryan's, So we got.

Speaker 2 (01:06:17):
A Jackson presented a photo of the injuries of O'Keefe's
arm and questioned whether Buchhannick saw bruising from his waist
to his shoulder. H buchan Nick described what was pictures
last year, rations and abrasions. Jackson was asked about the
seizure of the SUV. He has about the discrepancy of
the time of the seizer. He said he did not
take action, corrected. So, but also the guy, the main

(01:06:37):
cop was suspended and they're investigating him federally. Is that new?
They said at the very end of the documentary that
he's been suspended since twenty twenty four and he's been
investigated and you're investigating a cop in the middle. Yeah,
So anyway, what's it happens?

Speaker 6 (01:06:56):
It's a great story, Amy, thank you welcome for bringing
that to our attention.

Speaker 3 (01:07:01):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:07:02):
I mean, she might have done it, but you can't
convict her. I mean I feel like she did but
I feel like she did it.

Speaker 5 (01:07:09):
But then why are all these others if she did it,
why is it reacting weird?

Speaker 2 (01:07:12):
Shout out turtle Boy. By the way, Turtle Boy shout
out turtle boy entire Yes, sir, Hey, it's your brand,
make your money off of it. We go back to
the betting odds there, because there are betting odds.

Speaker 5 (01:07:24):
Up where where?

Speaker 2 (01:07:25):
So if you scroll up to the top there, I
don't know Mike's putting it up here. Let's see Karen
Reid guilty on at least one charge. Yes at minus
three eighty, which means big favorite. But then yes could
now in voluntary? No, even do you?

Speaker 1 (01:07:40):
I you can get a d UI without getting busted?
Charge like that seems crazy to me, Like they don't
pull you over if you just admit to drinking and
driving two years later, it's like, oh yeah, we're gonna
give you the U.

Speaker 2 (01:07:50):
I don't think. But it is these odds. I don't
know who this is. Did they just make these odds
up Mike or Okay? Then never mind, this guy's an idiot.
Turtle boy nah, oh a frog girl the enemy? Yeah, hey, lunchbox.
By the way, before we wrap, check your bitcoin. Okay,
it has gone up tremendously. Oh really is crushedally.

Speaker 1 (01:08:16):
Let's check it out.

Speaker 2 (01:08:17):
Man. What I would do if I were you is
I would sell it.

Speaker 1 (01:08:21):
Oh, I thought you're gonna say, buy more.

Speaker 2 (01:08:22):
No, you don't buy it when it's at the highest
point of the year.

Speaker 1 (01:08:25):
Oh, I don't know, never done this before.

Speaker 2 (01:08:28):
It's at a one bitcoin. Well, so one bitcoin doesn't
mean you have that much? Right one bitcoin? Is it
one hundred and two thousand right now? And I think
you bought it in the eighties. I told you to
buy it. Yeah, it's down, it's not down.

Speaker 1 (01:08:41):
No, No, today I'm just whoa man, I've made one
hundred dollars.

Speaker 2 (01:08:45):
How much you put in their total?

Speaker 1 (01:08:48):
Here we go again. Let me see how do I
figure this out? So I put in five hundred and
twenty eight bucks, and how much five hundred and twenty
it's at six twenty eight.

Speaker 2 (01:08:58):
It's pretty good. It's over twenty percent gain. I'd sell
it for you lose anymore.

Speaker 1 (01:09:05):
Yeah, I've gained twenty point nine percent on there on
plus one oh eight seventy one. Today's returned down nine
to fifty five, so dropping a little bit. But we
can't can't bail that quick.

Speaker 2 (01:09:15):
What are you gonna do now?

Speaker 1 (01:09:16):
We're gonna hold man. Okay, well, look my experts say,
I don't say.

Speaker 2 (01:09:25):
Well, the tariffs are what's driving bitcoin right now and
a lot of things not coming from China.

Speaker 1 (01:09:32):
Oh that's not good. But I thought we got a
I saw a headline that we made a deal.

Speaker 2 (01:09:37):
Uh, the eighty percent different? But yes, whoa? Oh man,
what the video? Whoa?

Speaker 1 (01:09:46):
The video is on fire?

Speaker 5 (01:09:51):
Guys, which way up?

Speaker 1 (01:09:54):
We are flying down fire the video. We are plus
nine and eighty four dollars. There's boys and girls overall. Yeah,
that's twenty three percent increase.

Speaker 2 (01:10:04):
Okay, but that's basically what bitcoin just did. And you
did act like the twenty percent was much different.

Speaker 1 (01:10:08):
Well no, but n video went way down for a minute,
and now it's back. I was a little nervous Bitcoin
when I bought it. It only went down like six dollars,
So I wasn't too stressed. This one. I was kind
of stressing about. Kept me up at night.

Speaker 2 (01:10:19):
I say, so you get our money back. If it's
two out of three, you have to sell.

Speaker 1 (01:10:23):
Amy, let's keep it, man. Look at Amy. My experts flow, yeah, Amy,
Look my experts, Amy say bye. No, none of them
say sell.

Speaker 2 (01:10:30):
What's the expert?

Speaker 5 (01:10:31):
Bobby does really good at this stuff.

Speaker 1 (01:10:34):
This is sixty nine analyst ratings.

Speaker 2 (01:10:36):
They're sixty nine eighty percent, say bye twelve, want to sell?
I would mean I would sell mostly because he doesn't
give money back to anything.

Speaker 1 (01:10:45):
Ever, No, no, I do.

Speaker 2 (01:10:46):
It's like he knows us for the pallet, he owes
any money for for a golf thing? You do? You
only ten.

Speaker 5 (01:10:51):
Dollars my money back?

Speaker 2 (01:10:53):
All? Yeah, you want to all of it?

Speaker 1 (01:10:54):
Well, we got to pay taxes, guys.

Speaker 2 (01:10:56):
But that happens the end of the year. And the
taxes is the taxes are only on the positive of it.
So if we make two hundred bucks divided by three
or whatever we're making here, so do two hundred bucks
divide to my three seventy bucks each? Basically, taxes on
seventy dollars will give you fifteen bucks and you get
to keep the change.

Speaker 1 (01:11:13):
Just I'm just telling you, I don't want to get
in trouble with these.

Speaker 2 (01:11:18):
Very much is in there total.

Speaker 1 (01:11:21):
In our whole account? Yeah?

Speaker 2 (01:11:23):
No, no, and just a video.

Speaker 1 (01:11:24):
In the video we.

Speaker 5 (01:11:25):
Are at, I've decided I'd like for Bobby to take
over my finances.

Speaker 1 (01:11:32):
No, no, no, we have five thousand, two hundred and fifty
three dollars in the video. We own forty three shares
of that sucker.

Speaker 2 (01:11:40):
So that's awesome. How much five thousand, two hundred?

Speaker 1 (01:11:43):
So, guys, we are we can't sell it? Amy, Amy,
just trust Amy, don't don't give in.

Speaker 5 (01:11:50):
I'm consulting Amy.

Speaker 1 (01:11:51):
We are having so much fun with this.

Speaker 2 (01:11:53):
This is not fun the other name and it was low.

Speaker 1 (01:11:56):
Yeah, but but you want he wanted to sell.

Speaker 5 (01:11:59):
Then what are you what are you calculating over there?

Speaker 2 (01:12:02):
Not to understand how much we get back?

Speaker 5 (01:12:04):
How much will we get back?

Speaker 2 (01:12:05):
I mean eighteen hundred bucks or.

Speaker 5 (01:12:07):
So per person?

Speaker 1 (01:12:09):
But I'm making you money money right now, Amy, I.

Speaker 2 (01:12:13):
Don't know what is what numbers he's saying, So I
could actually do a calculating lunchbox.

Speaker 6 (01:12:16):
Won't you just cash them out? And then you keep
you keep doing your money.

Speaker 1 (01:12:20):
I like it as a group.

Speaker 2 (01:12:22):
We don't like being in a group with you cause
you give us our money. No, dude, no, I do.

Speaker 5 (01:12:25):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (01:12:25):
This is like our palate money. Give us our palate palace.

Speaker 1 (01:12:28):
We're telling seventeen thirty three, we're still working on the
palate now we're not.

Speaker 3 (01:12:33):
We're not.

Speaker 2 (01:12:33):
You have money already, so give us the money you
already have got.

Speaker 1 (01:12:36):
You guys are getting angry.

Speaker 6 (01:12:37):
Why why is he not responding to that annual Eddie
money for a golf thing.

Speaker 2 (01:12:41):
Ten dollars. Just give me ten dollars.

Speaker 1 (01:12:43):
Oh well, I mean yeah, sure.

Speaker 2 (01:12:45):
We want we want our pallet money.

Speaker 1 (01:12:47):
I guess I forgot it. I mean Eddie. He hadn't
mentioned the golf thing to me at all, so.

Speaker 2 (01:12:51):
Now I have to mention it to him. We want
our pallet money by the end of the week, or
we're taking our inno vide out.

Speaker 1 (01:12:57):
Yes, and you guys don't even want to I mean
you guys, okay.

Speaker 5 (01:13:00):
But you can give palette money.

Speaker 2 (01:13:04):
No, no, we're not bailing. You can keep making money
with it. But we want our palette money that we've
made so far, you guys, or we're taking you to court.

Speaker 1 (01:13:10):
Why are you so angry?

Speaker 2 (01:13:11):
We're not angry.

Speaker 1 (01:13:12):
We know it sounds like and there's a lot of
anger coming from that side of the room.

Speaker 2 (01:13:15):
We hire Alan Jackson, you're going to hire want I'm
gonna hire a freaking loan shark. I hired Alan Jackson's
kneecap out like little Johnny? What like a gangster Johnny?
That's the gangster. You hired a little Johnny? Is that
at a discount?

Speaker 3 (01:13:31):
No?

Speaker 2 (01:13:31):
I big one, Tommy now you're hiring one.

Speaker 1 (01:13:38):
Gangster.

Speaker 2 (01:13:38):
You get you that better gangster. Okay, thank you guys,
we'll see you tomorrow by
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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

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