Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
It's time for the Bobby Bones post show. Here's your host,
Bobby Bones. You let's talk about our weekends. What is
your headline from the weekend? Amy, bird feeders can now
go back up, so I put mine up. I had
taken them down because there was this mysterious bird illness
(00:23):
spreading across several states, and I took my feeders down
and I missed my baby birds. So now we're back
in business. There was actually a question from which talk
about that morning Studio have a question for Amy with
our bird minute. I just want to know if you
get an update, because we haven't heard one for a while.
And also I am working from home and I sit
(00:44):
right by a window and I really want to get
one of those birdhouses that attach us to your windows.
I just want to snow, Amy, have you got one
or do you know if any good ones? If you
can give me some good face, I appreciate it. Thank
you for the show. Bye. I have seen some Cutlan
ones on Amazon that just have suction cups that go
right up to your window. So I think if you
just read the reviews on there, you could find a
(01:05):
good one. Mine mine I just have like on a
stand by my window. But I'm so excited you're back.
I'm back. I'm back. My birds are gonna be there.
I mean they're probably huh. I might get a whole
new group of birds. I don't know, the new class. Yeah,
maybe moved on. Yeah, I don't know, new freshman. Uh
mine would played pickleball with another couple, got really competitive.
(01:29):
Kaitlyn and I one and then me and you guys.
Then thank you. It's really it's really hot too. And
then me and the guy were like, we'll just play
one on one then, and we play one on one
and I beat him too. That's pretty good weekend there.
And Eddie and I played the Offery on Saturday night.
Saturday night, Yeah, and it's pretty awesome. I tried at
a lot of new jokes that I had written about
being married that I don't know. You don't know until
(01:51):
you try them if they're funny or not. And so
I walked out. I told one about Kaylyn. I'm talking
about what if one of us died? They got a
good laugh. Can you tell us one of the jokes? No,
because I don't want to put him here, because then
if you hear them, you'll already know the punch line. Yeah, okay,
I didn't use um well, if I didn't use it all,
I would tell you if I used one. And it
(02:12):
was there were a couple that were okay but still
got some laughs. But I'll just I'll craft on him
a little bit. But we played that regging idiots played,
you know, got another opera appearance and it was good. Huh,
that's awesome, man, that'd be my headline playing the Opry.
But I got to bring my foster son along, so
that was really cool to me. And I feel like
as we do this, we've obviously been able to do
(02:32):
some really cool stuff, you know, but I never have
included my kids in any of this. So I feel like,
before we stopped getting invited to the Opery, I should
probably at some point get all my kids to go.
So I've already gotten my thirteen year old, I got
my six year old foster son, and now we got
two more to go. So I'd love to eventually take
them all to go kind of see that experience. I
think the coolest thing Freddy's foster son at the Opry
(02:54):
was the popcorn and the lemonade. Yes, But when I
asked him, he said the songs were his favor, like,
and when I took my thirteen year old, which is
like two years ago, he said, oh, the best thing
is a lemonade. The backstage food is so good. I'm like,
what about the music. He's like, ah, that was fine, Dad,
I've heard you play. But my foster says, like, no,
those songs are great. That target song and then seeing
your grandma naked so good. I'm like, great, that's the
(03:17):
song you remember. They do have backstage as the Opery,
one of the top three sweet teas in town. So good.
I love sweet tea. I'm a kind of sewer of it.
They do have great sweet tea, and I don't do
a lot of sugar, but I always break down and
get me a glass of the sweet tea. They have
great popcorn because very salty and buttery. Yeah, they have
great sweet tea, and they have pretty good lemonade. Sometimes
they have those what are those candy bars that they
make here, the the goo goose or the goog clusters.
(03:40):
Sometimes they have them back there, but they didn't have
it this time. I don't need those, so do like
an Arnold Palmer with the tea and the lemonade. I
don't don't do that to the tea. Yeah, why would
you disrespect good sweet tea like a good old arnold
palmer though, huh, Eddie. When I was a kid, I
had one uncle that would always come and give me
five dollars. I was like that uncle was so cool
(04:02):
because I didn't really could see him a whole lot.
But I was like, I knew I would remember him
for giving me five. I remember him now. He's not
alive anymore, but it was my five dollar uncle. And
so I was like, I want to be Eddie's foster
kids twenty dollars uncle. Wow. And so they were leaving
and I was like, hey, here's twenty dollars. For no reason.
I was I hate when people do this. Wow. I
was only doing it look bad so he would remember
(04:25):
me because I've spent time with them, but the kids,
and I was like, hey, here's twenty bucks. And then
Eddie goes, well, there's not enough for everyone. I split
it up for He's what happens. He's gonna go home
and all the kids will be like whoa, whoa, whoa,
Bobby gave you twenty dollars, Like where's my twenty? Like?
(04:46):
So he helped me. He helped me memorize some jokes.
It was kind of like a paid thing because he
helped me memorize jokes. You didn't say that, though, Yeah,
but I just made that. But he didn't help me
him rise jokes. Yes. So I was like no, and
it's like I can't. You can't give him twenty bucks.
There's not enough for everybody. It's like, we'll split it up,
split it five five five five, yeah, And then I
(05:09):
was told that couldn't happen. So I give him all
the money in my wallet. I just get it, just
like here, take it all home. So did the rest
of your kids like me? Do you want to hear
the bad part of the story. Oh there's a wait,
there's a bad Yeah. I gave him all twenty bucks.
That's how I had a cool story, right, Okay, So,
oh man, I didn't want to tell you, but I
guess I tell you. So we're walking out of the offer,
and I got my guitar, my raging idiot's jacket, and
(05:30):
then you know, my foster son's got popcorn that he's
taken to the boys and something else he has in hand,
and the money like crumpled up eighty bucks eighty dollars
and he's like, I can't carry all the stuff. I'm like, well,
put in your pocket, put the put the money in
your pocket, and he goes, I don't have a pocket
I have do you have these gym shorts? As I
just put in your shoe. Then like, our car's right here,
puts in the shoe. We get to the car and
(05:51):
he's so excited. He gets in the back seat and
takes his shoe. Ever like, uh, daddy, that the money's
not here. I'm like, what do you mean the money's
not there? He said, it's not here. I just took
my shoes off and it's not here. And I'm like, well,
it must be somewhere. Like we we we just walked
from here to there. It's got to be bones. We looked.
I looked all over my car. I drove back to
the where where we did this little thing in his shoe.
(06:13):
We couldn't find the money. Money's gone. There was this
one man leaving behind us. I feel like he took it,
but I didn't want to like make a scene. So
basically I lost eighty bucks. Yeah nothing, yeah, but it
turned into a less a lesson, A good way. Wait, wait,
a good good lesson. Uncle sucks. Hold on the lesson guys,
when I got back, because because I had him tell,
(06:34):
you know, his brothers and everything, the story, just to
kind of tell him what happened. The lesson is, guys,
money comes and goes. That's a terrible lesson. Let's Chuck's wallen. No,
well he was talking about which is where you take
(06:55):
some of the money. But that was a joke. That's
that's not that's not a real thing. Yeah, so have
been less in the right several lesson movie Mike's movie
podcast if you guys want to check it out. Mike's
breaking down the highest earning actors made for one single
movie and then comparing it to their other iconic roles
where they made a lot less. For example, Julia Roberts
did a movie on Netflix called Leave the World Behind.
(07:15):
She made twenty five million back in nineteen ninety. For
Pretty Woman, she made three hundred thousand. Oh wow, well,
I've never even heard of this Netflix movie. Do I
need to watch? It? Is good? It's not out yet. Okay,
that's goodness yet. So check out movie Mike's Movie podcast.
I see Carol Baskin sold Joe Exotics former zoo. There's
just so many rules on it. Why she sold it, Well,
(07:36):
she owned it, Yeah, she got it. I think the
judge gave it to her. Carol Basket. Carol Baskin sold
Joe Exotics Zoo in Oklahoma under the condition that it
cannot be used as a zoo or to house exotic
animals for one hundred years. The new owners also cannot
name anything on the property after tiger, king tigers or
big cats. Wow, how do you say exotic in Spanish?
(07:59):
I mean I would find some loophole and be like,
welcome to Jose Exotics Kitty Palace. I don't assume it
covers translating into exotic. You'd assume, but you don't sold
it for one hundred and forty thousand dollars with all
those stipulations. Maybe just the land it was on a
good spot that it was worth one hundred and forty
thousand dollars, But you would think if you were buying that,
you were buying that for a reason to be able
(08:22):
to go this is where they shot. Yeah, those those
like Lion Queen, you can't do that. What is that
what they call? Well, you can't say Tiger King. Huh,
you'd have to find some way to do that. What
were you gonna say? No, I just saw something where
like Mickey Mouse is one hundred years, so it's always
crazy because he say like, oh, you can't do this
(08:44):
for one hundred years, and that sounds like a long time.
But at some point that's going to end, and it's
going to be a war music after one hundred years.
Public domain doesn't matter what the song is with Mickey
Mouse about to be public domain, but not the Mickey
we know. Steamboat Willie a readboat Mickey, Yeah, steamboat original
Mickey black and white, the very first one, the one
drive in the boat. So that version of Mickey is
(09:07):
free for everybody to use. It wasn't called Steamboat Willie.
That for some reason sounds right, said steamboat Mickey, Mike.
When you looked that up, and see why I said
steamboat Willie because there's no Willie in it unless his
name is Willie to begin with, maybe me Google, because
steamboat Willie sounds familiar. If you're putting stuff on my screen,
(09:27):
it's frozen. Steamboat Willie is a nineteen twenty eight American
animated short film directed by Walt Disney there you go.
Oh wow, that's it, dang retentional level high today. I'll
be honest with you. Yeah, man, good job. So it's
almost time we all get to do our own steamboat
Willie T shirts that happened to pay Disney for it.
A woman saves herself from an attacker by smearing her
(09:50):
dog's poop on his face. Got the story too, where
the kid got grabbed and they took like that's in
pain or something. They swiped it on the person's arm.
We talked about it. I'm not sure the person could
get caught. Yeah, they were like getting attacked and they
got out, but they had some patterson they swiped out
on their elbow or something, so they know that that's
the person and they were able to track him down.
(10:10):
They just kind of reminds me of whatever you have
and whatever you can use to get out of a situation.
A woman was walking her dog on a trail. She
saved herself for being kidnapped with poop. She was carrying
a bag of the pups poop and a man approached
her and said, kind of get some water. He didn't
grab her arm try to drag her into the woods.
She grabbed some of the dog waste and smeared it
(10:31):
over his face. He left, but came back with a knife,
stole her cell phone and took off. Someone recognized him
from the photo about the incident. He's now behind bars. Crazy.
He came back like he had poop in his face. Thought, O, kaim,
wipe this off good a knife and go back to more.
No he smelled that forever. Oh yeah, that would be terrible.
Saint Louis Man created a dating app or he's the
(10:53):
only guy. It's funny. He had two responses and now
he has thirteen dates lined up. Here's a clip. I mean,
it's been huge. It's like I think something now in
the ballpark of two hundred people, like eligible women have
reached out to me. I have something like I think
like thirteen dates on the books right now, and that
numbers just gonna keep growing. So put on there, like
(11:16):
you know, I wanted to put my weight on there,
like my tax bracket and stuff, and just be like, look,
this is what you're getting. It's not changing overnight to
impress you. Why are you guys giggling? It's pretty funny, y'all.
Are you jealous? Well, not jealous? Why do you think
he's nerdy? Well, he sounds nerdy. It sounds like, yeah, okay,
(11:37):
what's wrong with that? And do you act like you?
Sound like? Excuse me? Do you act like you sounds
like I'm perfect? End, I'm not bragging about having thirteen dates.
It's pretty cool. I think he's talking about how he
created a site. Yeah, like he now he has thirteen
dates lined up, which is probably more than you ever
had lined up lined up in your whole and lunch
(11:57):
all our lives. But I expect him lunch botch to hate.
I mean, we're just giggling tricks women into dating them.
Because he creates an app, a dark web five thousand
dollars murder for higher scammer, became an FBI informant. Dark
webs place you go and pretty much if you can
get there, you can find whatever you want, mostly bad news. Now,
(12:18):
how do you get there? I don't know, Mikene. Every
time I go to Mike Dy's house, he's on it.
He's in it doing something crazy. Mike, You've never actually
been on it though, right, but you know how to
get there? Sort of? What does that mean? I don't know,
and I don't ask any more questions. In February twenty twenty,
the anonymous scammer told the FBI about a five thousand
dollars order, saying, quote, I feel that all the targets
(12:40):
have been paid, who have been paid for are in danger.
Customers that pay to kill someone show they're serious about
killing that person. So people were he was not actually
doing it. He was scamming them, taking their money. But
then he's like, well, if they're paying me to do this,
they probably really are trying to kill somebody. He offered
to provide target information, pay it's evidence and other information
(13:01):
to trace to the customers who had paid the five
thousand dollars. And so while he was scamming, he also
became an FBI informant. So does he get in trouble?
Are they like, hey, bro, you give us that, Hey,
we'll look the other way. Just don't do it anymore. Usually,
what the informants get, right, They got me to be
informed about some stuff. What do you know? I don't
know nothing. I know some secrets, not secrets. You would think.
(13:24):
I got on my TikTok and was talking about how
songs become number one, and I said, hey, listen to
you get to the top ten, top seven. It has
to be heavily research. People have to like it, I said,
but number one's very political, and I've talked about it
on the show. Record Lable just go you take this
week and I'll take this week and switch it out.
But I wrote on my TikTok, a secret you may
not know about number one songs. You would have thought
I unveiled. It was like the Illuminati unveiling. Wow, because
(13:46):
I've said it on this show many times. But I
just wrote a secret you may not know and they're like, oh,
Bobby's exposed in the industry. But you know, when we
first moved here and we learned of the secret, it
was very mind blowing. No, I know. But my point
is I've said that on this show. Yeah, and I've
talked about that at least ten times. Meaning it's just
a different platform. And also it's about how you tag them.
(14:06):
I'm telling you do you might have a bunch of
different new viewers watching your TikTok that don't even know
who you are for sure, because people like mymage blown.
And then someone was like talking about a ward shows
being rigged, and I was like, well, not rigged, but
here's how they work. Record labels can vote in block.
Bigger record labels have more influence and smaller record labels
and people like, oh wow, that's crazy. Yeah, that's They're like,
(14:29):
they're gonna kill the guy. People were like looking out
for me. He's exposed in the industry and all the
stuff I've said on this show many times, they haven't
killed you yet. Well, no, I don't feel like it's
some big expose they did that needs to happen. Well,
we don't know that stuff though. I don't think you've
ever said that about them. No ward show. I've never
heard that. No I have, I for sure have. Oh
(14:50):
we weren't listening, then, you definitely weren't. I talked about well,
sometimes I just forget things that you say, whether it's
on air or not on air. Another one was I
talk about why songs get played so often. I'm like, well,
if they determined that the average listener of a radio
station listens for forty minutes at a time, we try
to cram as many hits in forty minutes, so we
don't expect somebody's listening for two hours at a time.
(15:11):
So you try to cram a lot of those top
pits in that second forty minutes as well. And so
you may hear a song all the time, over and
over and over again. But once HiT's number one, labels
like done next and they want to drop to move
to the next one. And so I talk about this
stuff on my TikTok. Now in country yeah, in country music,
so are there's still the big hits that get played later.
(15:31):
You know, the massive ones will test and they'll put
them in between, like some of the news. If you're
gonna play a really new song, you want to play
a song that's massive right after it. So people don't
go I don't know all these songs, okay, but I
did all kinds of stuff, ones like do you choose
what songs are played? Are you required to play certain songs?
And I tell them if I want to play a song,
I do, But we come in, we don't pick the music.
(15:52):
I don't want to come in and pick all the music.
I have no interest in being a program director. So
on my TikTok, I've been just been doing a lot
of that. They're gonna kill this guy, well, Renny, I
did come on and go, hey listen. Sometimes, like magicians
when they give up secrets, they end up missing or
dead and if I Yeah, So that's that's my latest thing.
(16:14):
I've been exposing secrets that I've already exposed on this
show like times. I like it. So that's over there
on the old TikTok um. Oh, you guys watch The
Housewife and the Hustler. Do you watch lunch? You watched
this is um Real Housewives of Beverly Hills. Yeah, Erica Jane,
there you go and her husband? What did you think
(16:36):
it's a documentary that you watched? It wasn't Real Housewives? Yes,
the documentary ABC News documentary. Yeah, and I've never watched
a Desperate Housewives, so I didn't know who she was
Real Housewives whatever. I don't know who she is. One scripted,
one isn't well, one is scripted on purpose on ABC,
and the other is okay, don't know, don't care. Hey, Ray,
I see Rod back? There is he gonna be around
for like fifteen rounds here we're doing the post. You
(16:59):
give me around for five minutes? Yeah? No, what who
does twe each other? You're saying the same Just talk
right now? Is it about me? Yeah? Is it bad
or good? Usually pretty good? No, But what's it regarding?
(17:19):
What's regarding? It depends on what Scuba tells us. Oh, okay,
got it? So is he gonna be around like fifteen
minutes for me to talk to him? Okay? Cool? Um
the housewife and the huspital beauty and the hustler. Um,
it's it's crazy story, crazy story. I felt like. Um,
I was very I was educated on who all these
(17:40):
people were. Whatever. I got really mad at the crime
that he committed. Basically the most powerful lawyer in LA
and maybe America. Um So, I mean, I liked the documentary.
It was cool documentary, but man, I just hate that
I wasted what two hours of watching this terrible, terrible
life that these people are living. Like, It's just terrible.
What he it was a very famous, very rich attorney
who would do a lot of pro bono work for
(18:02):
people who would plane crash tragedy. He would take on corporations.
He did the Julia Roberts movie. He was the real
real life guy Aaron Brockovich and so. But then all
of a sudden, the clients wouldn't get the money. He
would he would make these big settlements, make multimillion dollar settlements,
and the clients would never get the money because who
(18:23):
knows where that money was going. So his wife is
one of the real housewives and on that show she's
talking about how rich they are all the time. Yes, well,
they ended up finding out that he didn't turn over.
So now if the question is did she know lunch
talk about you think, uh, what did I think? I
think that this is what happens with criminals. You can't
keep your mouth shut. They're terrible people. Both of them
(18:43):
are terrible people. They're the scum of the earth. And
I think she absolutely knew what was going on. That
is why there was no pren up in the beginning,
because hey, if it goes down, you're safe and you
can go over here and you can have all this stuff,
and I'll just go and I'll be the one that's
in trouble at and I'll fake dementia and all timers.
And I think it's awful. I think she absolutely knew
(19:04):
she was in on it. And oh, I was just
just hear those people's story about they're already hurt and
got injured some way or lost loved ones and then
he just took their money and ran disgusting. The question
the question is did she know yes, or did she
just know he was super rich because he definitely would
have been super rich from what he was doing. Um,
(19:25):
I feel like it would be hard for her not
to know, well there was money, if she had an
LLC that then he ended up in there and she's
but she didn't know, and she's like, look, I just
didn't have a hand in any of that. I was
kept from it, she swearing. And I do believe that
could happen. But I mean some of the companies he created,
he put her on as secretary so he could pay
her through that, you know what I mean, give other
(19:47):
tax reasons to do that though, too, not just hiding.
I do think it's possible if she's like that detached
from their finances, that she could just kind of do
what like whatever she's told about the money and if
she knew. Don't get me wrong, but the argument now,
but the arguments against, like Lunch's arguments, rich people do
a lot of crazy tax things. All that can be
(20:08):
defined that too. And my question is the only reason
they got in trouble, right, the only reason people started
worrying about them is because they went on real housewise.
I mean, that's what I'm saying criminals, they get away
with one crime and then they go to another and
then they can't help but brag and she goes on
there and she talks about how they have private jets,
and that's when everybody was like, wait a minute, what
hold on to private jets? Yeah? Not so rich, that
(20:30):
could have happened. But that's what raised everybody's eyes, like
maybe we need to look into this. Yeah, because I
think that what he was doing, he should be rich.
But some people were like, but not that, and especially
if he's paying out the money to the clients. But
that makes me wonder if she didn't know. But I
guess he was featured on some of the episodes as well,
and but maybe he didn't know all of what she
(20:52):
was saying, because that's what makes me think maybe she
didn't know at all, because she would see the risk
in going on TV and flaunting all of that. Agree, Listen,
I don't know for sure, right if you're if you
put a bunch of money in front of me and
said did she know? I would think she knew something.
But again, the stuff they used in the documentary, it
still wasn't convincing that she knew because there are so
(21:12):
many weird things rich people do to make sure their
money is protected and they don't have to pay taxes
and they can keep paying their people if they pay
his wife. It's less taxes. A lot of things there,
and people are still con especially if you watch the
show Real Housewives. Yeah, but I still think she probably
knew something was up, like her clip in the Real
Housewives when she's sitting on that mountain and they're like,
(21:33):
did you know the lawsuits were coming? She's like no,
I mean I was like, I don't believe that was
terrible acting. Well, they all act on that show anyway.
They reset that stuff over and over again. It easy
to just marry someone for money and then not care
how he makes his money. Yes, and he's also thirty
years older than She's like, yeah, I think that's so
easy to just be like, just give me ten thousand
dollars a day, thank you very much. I don't care.
How can you make it? What when she married him
(21:56):
her life changed. Dressed, Yeah, she was working at a club. Yeah,
so like her her glam hair makeup was half million
dollars a year. Base there you go wild. She went
to do it. There was a part of the Yeah,
the documentary where the girls like I did a podcast,
she cameras a guest, There was no cameras, there were
no cameras, there was nothing on she shows up the
full glam squad saw that. Like with her, she was like,
she just spent like ten grand a day. But but
(22:19):
that is true. If you're thirty years younger and you're
married a multi multi multi millionaire, curious how he makes
his money, you're probably not asking a lot of questions
because you don't have the rights in your mind to
ask how you're making that money. Exactly made that money
before you got there, and they'd be like, why are
you asking how I made my money? So I still
think she bindly knew something was up. I bet she
wasn't deep in the weeds with it. But like Lisa Renna,
(22:41):
for example, is maybe in some trouble. What because well,
some of that money went to some of her stuff.
Are they friends she invested in something or they like
invested some of that money and some of her stuff
and her lips she's known her lish is a lip line.
But some of that money that they have as as
(23:02):
crossed into her world and not saying that she knew,
of course, Yeah, of course not. I mean, yeah, if
they're if you're friends with somebody and you've got something
going on and you have no reason to believe that
they're shady, and you know, then yeah, it's on Hulu.
It's called The Housewife in the House. Like, do you
believe he is Alzheimer's? No. I think he's just faking it.
(23:24):
But I don't know. It's hard for me to say
somebody's faking it when I don't know. I know, him
getting dementia is suspect, but I can't question somebody who
says they're sick. But the timing is definitely suspect. Nurses
are in high demand, so if you're thinking about a
career right now, nursing is for you. Shout out to
nurses out there, because I do not have the nads
(23:45):
that you guys have. I have friends and her nurses
and they deal with My cousin. A nurse caught someone
falling because she worked in like the geriatric like old
folks part caught her tore rotator cull Okay, whoa whoa
on them because she caught an old person. Your cousin
(24:05):
Alwena struggling right now, so, but nurses are in high demand.
But it's I mean, that's tough. I know it's so. Yeah,
good for you guys, we need you. Glad you exist.
I couldn't do it. You're a lot stronger than I am.
You can live in a real castles. Scoop on a
(24:27):
call still because I have him. It's okay, don't worry
about him. Let be on the call. I was gonna
bring up the story where Scooba Steve used to be
a home inspector. Do you guys know that? What? No,
you guys live ten lives whole inspectru from like when
you're trying to buy a root, Like now we'll come
back to maybe tomorrow on the Post show. Can he
just come check out our houses for us so we
can know what's up? Listen, my home inspectrum. I did
(24:47):
a sucky job, I feel because we have so many issues.
We knew some of them were there, but they're in
this new stuff that we're like, we were never even
told about this a roof. We had a whole issue
with a roof terrible, um, good or gross? There's a
new mountain dew lunchbox, tell us about this new mountain
dew it's flaming hot mountain Dew. It comes out tomorrow.
(25:10):
You can buy it, and it just they combine the
flaming hot Cheetos with mountain Dew and they put it
in a drink. Yeah, it's like, is that good or gross? Gross?
I don't want to drink hot. I love mountain Dew.
I would want to eat a flame in hot cheeto
and then you know, throw back some mountain dew after
like refreshing, but I don't want to drink it. The
company says it's a combination of the signature Mountain Dew
(25:31):
citrus flavor with a heat of flamon hot Cheetos. A
limited time offering August thirty first, that's tomorrow, and if
you're a real fan of mountain Dew, you can also
get some threads and other merge. They say cool. Oh oh,
that's weird because when something's hot, the first thing you want,
Like Amy says, like something to drink, but also it's hot.
Not if it's hot. I don't want a heavy carbonated
(25:52):
that also feels hot. I like water, I don't like milk.
I don't like to drink a coke if something's really hot.
As birds going down flaming Cheetos with a coke. Get
out of the diet coke. I'm not saying it's the
smartest thing. I see your point, like the hot and
hot feeling, but still yeah, but you'd think that carbonate
is like spicy, right it is. It's not. It's bubb
(26:14):
I know, but you think it's but it can burn,
you know that feeling of like burn, different kind of burn. Okay, Amy,
what happened with the air filter at your house? Well?
I realized I never changed them out done that, so
we had the speaking of someone coming to your house
to check out what's wrong. There was no like my
room was always so warm and the rest of the
(26:35):
house was not, and I'm like, what what is happening
with the flow? So I to pay to have the
air and heat people come out to the house, which
is always pricey, just to have them even come. And
they're like, um them. You have these singles called air
filters and you're supposed to change them out, and the
ones in my room they haven't been changed. And like
over you I've lived there for a year kind of
(26:56):
forgot about those, I guess so for sure over a year,
and that was causing the it was blocking the air.
So I paid money for someone to come to my
house and tell me to be a responsible adult. I
relate not so much in the air filter away, but
in the way I've done that, but like lent in
the dryer. Yes, sometimes I just forget and then you
pull it up and it's like a jack in the
(27:18):
box comes out on the top. Or I have an
electric razor. I was like, it doesn't work like I
used to. And I was like, oh, I should pop
this off. And I popped off the top and the
ladder and hair their like explode a boom all in
the room because I didn't clean it out. It's it's disgusting.
So I don't relate on the air filter front, but
I do get it because they're stupid things. I forget
(27:39):
about two all the time. Okay, I think that's that's
gonna be it for now. Oh well, what ray? How
long has this one ben? Twenty eight minutes? Oh it's
pretty good. What I was just gonna say, we could
just remind people about Pimp and Joy and Hurricane Ida,
and we don't know the exact needs yet, but we
do have some Pimp and Joy up and available all proceeds.
(28:00):
Are we going to whatever those needs are as they arise?
That is true? Oh well, I mean but we don't
know yet. Is we don't know what they need? Yeah?
I get literally hit yesterday and last night. So sure
they'll eventially go, hey we need water or we need whatever,
and that's where we'll come in to play. So if
you've been thinking about getting something that's any of the
Pimp and Joy stuff, if you go to Bobby Bones
dot com. We don't keep any of that money, so
(28:22):
that's what we will direct it. Yeah, I mean, as
and we just signed. We have so many listeners there.
I don't know there's needs all over, but this is
just one way where we can rally together and support
people in spread joy. And that's what Pimp and Joy's
all about. So Bobby Bones dot com to get that,
all right, that's all we're Is that a Nico Moon shirt? Me? Yeah? Yeah,
good time? But is that from him? Just got a bite?
(28:43):
Where'd you get that shirt? He gave it to me? Man?
Oh we did. It wasn't just a shirt, just a
good time and you wore it because Nico Moon right here?
Good time? All right? Do you like it? It's cool? Right.
I like Nico Moon a lot. I just didn't know
if it was like Jimmy Walker. I know, my yeah,
that's good times, yeah, good times. The show I know
what it is. I saw Jimmy Walker doing like a
commercial for uh like old people. I know, and he
(29:04):
looks real real old, but he still goes I don't
want yes, I like that show. All right, you guys
have a great day. I hope you liked the post show.
Goodbye friends.