All Episodes

May 2, 2024 47 mins

Dr. Ragland is on the show to talk Eddie through about possibly getting a hair transplant. Plus, Amy and Eddie share what they like about Bobby and Lunchbox and more!

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Good transmitting Alsa.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
Welcome to Thursday Show More in studio. MONI, all right,
here's your question. Do you have any tattoos? They get
to know question. Do you have any tattoos and where
are they?

Speaker 3 (00:21):
Am you can go first.

Speaker 4 (00:22):
I have two on my wrist. One is joy in
my mom's handwriting. I got it probably a year before
she passed away from cancer. And then I have a
squaw under that because then I was in the adoption
process of my husband and we were waiting to get
these kids. It took years and years and espoa means

(00:43):
hope in Haitian creole, so I just wanted to have
a spa there to have hope that it would actually happen,
and it eventually did.

Speaker 5 (00:51):
Lunchbox, No tattoos, Uh, don't care about enough things to do.
Tattooed on my body. And when I'm older, I just
see people at the gas station. How those tattoos really
kind of like stretch out and they sag and they
look disgusting, And I'm out.

Speaker 3 (01:09):
At that gas station.

Speaker 5 (01:10):
Yeah, you don't see women pumping gas and they got
the tattoos like hanging down there is like it looks
like a bat wing and it's supposed to be like
a motorcycle.

Speaker 6 (01:17):
It's like, well, I don't even know what it is.

Speaker 3 (01:18):
I've noticed that.

Speaker 7 (01:19):
I'm good.

Speaker 2 (01:20):
I think it might just be the gas station more
than the first time. But I hear you are the tattoo.

Speaker 3 (01:25):
I have a few.

Speaker 2 (01:26):
I have my grandma's initials who raised me, adopted me,
and my mom's initials. I have a microphone when I
was put into the Radio Hall of Fame. I have
the state of Arkansas all my right arm. I have
mirror ball when I one Dancing with the Stars. I
have a C for my wife's name. I think that's it.

Speaker 3 (01:45):
You got a lot of tattoo.

Speaker 2 (01:46):
Well, I'm basically at that person as the gas station
in the lunchbox seat pretty much. Man, the motorcycle that
looks like a monkey. Its just saggy. No, but yeah,
and I never planned to be tattooed guy. But one
turned into the other. It's like gremlins feet of the
mill and I next thing, you know, popping up everywhere?

Speaker 3 (02:01):
Was the first one free? Or something like?

Speaker 2 (02:03):
How did that happen? I got my grandma's initials. Oh, okay,
I don't know why did it? You got that here
in Nashville. Yeah, and then I got my mom. Neither
one of them, my mom or my grandma who raised me,
are still living. But I got the whole black out
state of Arkansas. And that one hurts, yeah, because it's
all it's all boiled in kind.

Speaker 4 (02:19):
Of starting to bleed a little bit to where bleed.

Speaker 3 (02:22):
Like make you bleed or like bleed.

Speaker 4 (02:23):
Out, like bleed like the ink is spreading.

Speaker 2 (02:26):
Talking about you at the gas station too much.

Speaker 4 (02:28):
Lines on my wrist. But I did inquire about getting
them removed just because of that, because it doesn't look
the same. But then I'm like, well, what do I
do because I want my mom's signature, so to move it,
get it redone, you can.

Speaker 3 (02:42):
Widen it, right.

Speaker 2 (02:45):
I know nothing about tattoos, Eddie.

Speaker 3 (02:46):
You know, I don't have tattoos.

Speaker 2 (02:48):
But there's a road that I drive by every when
I take my kids to practice, like twice a week,
and there's a tattoo shop that I don't know why,
but I just look at it every single time I
passed by, because it's in on the side of the
road right there, and it's in your vision, and.

Speaker 8 (03:02):
It's got a big balloon guy that's got an arm
like you know, like the inflatable Why you.

Speaker 6 (03:05):
Look at it because that's inflatable?

Speaker 2 (03:07):
So fun?

Speaker 3 (03:08):
Do you want to get a tattoo? It's really nobody
you're open to it.

Speaker 2 (03:10):
If it was right. No.

Speaker 8 (03:11):
Oh, But like if I found something like Lunchbox, if
I found something where like I really really loved and
I want that on my body, I would probably get one.

Speaker 3 (03:18):
But no, nothing comes to mind.

Speaker 8 (03:21):
Sounds like I see what you're trying to say something
I don't want one.

Speaker 2 (03:25):
Well, there you go, Amy and I have them. We're hardcore.
You guys are bad guys. Lunchbox and Eddie do not
because they care about nothing.

Speaker 3 (03:31):
Would you guys agree with that?

Speaker 2 (03:33):
Enough, Tata, let's open up the mail bag.

Speaker 4 (03:37):
You send the.

Speaker 3 (03:38):
Game mail and read all the air.

Speaker 7 (03:41):
It's something we call Bobby's mail bag.

Speaker 2 (03:44):
Yeah, hello, Bobby Bones. Here's the deal. I mean the
friend zone with a good friend of about six years.
When I first met her, she was already with someone,
and I swear since today I laid eyes on her,
I was head over heels, but recently something tragic and
then their partner was taken from them. I still have
those same feelings for her. I don't want to miss out,

(04:04):
but I'm not sure how I go for it. I
do value our friendship. I don't want to lose it,
So the question is how do I get out of
the friend zone again. I'm head over hills for her,
but there was tragedy involved. Sign head over hills hopefully. Yeah,
the tragedy part makes it a little different. But here's
the thing about people that are desirable to be in

(04:29):
a relationship with. If you don't jump in, somebody else
will Because a lot of people see the value in
a very valuable person as far as the traits that
you see, they're good for a relationship. So at times,
if someone were to come out of a relationship and like,
oh she's on the rebound or he's on the rebound,
is dating whomeever, it doesn't matter. One of those rebounds
is going to be the next person she ends up

(04:49):
with or he ends up with. I think what I
would do, because I mean, the tragedy is a different element.

Speaker 8 (04:56):
That's what makes it tough. Like you want to jump
on it, but then you had to give her time
with this or him time.

Speaker 2 (05:01):
For this tragedy. But somebody else is going to come
along if you don't. Oh boy, So I think without
having an emotion attached to it, the best thing to
do is to just express your feelings.

Speaker 4 (05:14):
But then you know that, like, you run the risk
of no longer being a friend.

Speaker 2 (05:19):
Absolutely, but it sounds like he was only being the friend,
so hopefully he could have a shot at being more
than a friend.

Speaker 3 (05:25):
Wait, you can't be the friend after you tell him
you like them.

Speaker 2 (05:28):
Yes, but it'll never be the same.

Speaker 4 (05:30):
Yeah, you may, It just depends on the person. I'm
just saying you have to be okay with that being
a possibility.

Speaker 2 (05:36):
It'll never be the same even if you do remain
quote unquote friends, because then she will know, okay, he's
in love with me. I got to be a bit
careful man. So my answer would be, express your emotions,
express your feelings, And how do you do that? You say, Well,
what I would do is I'd write it out and
then read it from piece of papers. That's like, I

(06:01):
have a lot of things I wanted to say, and
I wrote it all down and I don't want to
mess it up or have anything be misconstrued.

Speaker 3 (06:08):
So here we go.

Speaker 4 (06:10):
Oh, that's so awkward, But I also think it's sweet.

Speaker 2 (06:12):
But if you also want to convey the message because
you know what it's like. When things get emotional or tense,
you tend to start taking little exits around what you
should say in order to make it softer or easier
for the You just read what you wrote.

Speaker 6 (06:27):
Now do you take them to dinner? Do you show
up at their house and say, hey, we need to talk, Like?

Speaker 3 (06:30):
How do you do it?

Speaker 2 (06:31):
I think you just make sure the environment's right. You
know her better than anybody else. You need to express
your feelings tears, good or too much, but don't keep
an onion in your pocket in.

Speaker 4 (06:48):
The letter's cry here, try not to do that, but
write it all out and then say exactly how you feel.

Speaker 2 (06:55):
Whatever happens at the end, at least you'll have some
closure either way, and you won't always be like because
it's also not gonna be good for other relationships that
you're in moving forward. If you had somebody who always
wanted to express your love for that you're doing with
somebody else but really you wanted, that's just not healthy.

Speaker 3 (07:10):
All the way around.

Speaker 2 (07:11):
Write it all down, get it exactly how you say it,
and then read from the paper, because if you don't,
someone else will maybe not the paper, but they're gonna move.
We got your.

Speaker 6 (07:20):
Game mail and laid it on the air.

Speaker 3 (07:23):
Now it's find the clothes Bobby failed that year.

Speaker 2 (07:28):
It's not for elder versus millennial, the old versus the young,
lunchbox versus Abby. In a trivia game of first, he's
a captain of Cringe, he says, all he.

Speaker 3 (07:36):
Does is win.

Speaker 2 (07:37):
He's up one point this season, but be careful because
he can get mad for no reason.

Speaker 3 (07:42):
It's lunchbox Dan, nobody, no.

Speaker 2 (07:49):
Silent treatment day, but no history of the show.

Speaker 3 (07:54):
That's never happened. No, she didn't did.

Speaker 2 (07:57):
Here are your three questions, like, wow, wow, Now these
are questions that Abbey should know the answer to.

Speaker 3 (08:01):
You dang, no claps, crazy dude?

Speaker 2 (08:05):
What pop star was the lead in Disney's Wizards of
Waverley Place?

Speaker 3 (08:16):
What is her name?

Speaker 6 (08:19):
Amanda cost Grove?

Speaker 2 (08:20):
Incorrect?

Speaker 3 (08:21):
What Abbey?

Speaker 2 (08:23):
What pop star was the lead in Disney's Wizards of
Waverley Place?

Speaker 7 (08:29):
I have two of mine, Give me an answer.

Speaker 3 (08:35):
Incorrect.

Speaker 2 (08:35):
There's nobody named Amanda Costgrove. There's a Miranda cost Grove,
yet it's still not her. It's Selena Gomez one lunchbox. Yeah.
The term on fleek was originally used to describe what
part of the human body. This term has now grown
to describe all almost anything that is well put together,

(08:58):
but on fleek was originally about what part of the
human body?

Speaker 3 (09:02):
Ooh, what part of the human body?

Speaker 6 (09:05):
Your your your shoes, your feet on fleek?

Speaker 3 (09:09):
Incorrect? Abby, you can steal.

Speaker 1 (09:13):
I'm not gonna be You've on fleet, your hair, eyebrows.
I'm sorry struggling here, I am struggling, lunchbox.

Speaker 2 (09:23):
What five letter millennial word is used to describe someone
in a bad mood or a person who is irritable?

Speaker 3 (09:28):
Oh? You, it's the age.

Speaker 5 (09:30):
Yeah, I know.

Speaker 3 (09:31):
By say it again?

Speaker 2 (09:35):
What five letter ive letter? Oh he's you know, he's
got his wordlepin. What five letter millennial word is used
to describe someone in a bad mood or a person
who is irritable.

Speaker 6 (09:49):
Hmm, I'm twenty four, sank.

Speaker 2 (09:57):
Five seconds? Got it?

Speaker 3 (10:02):
Angry?

Speaker 2 (10:03):
Incorrect? That's just the word, right, Abby? What vibe letter
millennial word is used to describe someone in a bad
mood or a person who's irritable?

Speaker 1 (10:16):
Are we sure I'm a millennial?

Speaker 4 (10:18):
I was gonna say angry? I love it.

Speaker 3 (10:22):
It's salty.

Speaker 2 (10:25):
No points for lunchbox now, his opponent.

Speaker 4 (10:27):
Help me.

Speaker 2 (10:28):
She's our phone screener and producer from her brain, she
hopes right, answers to send, and she recently went Instagram
official with her new boyfriend. It's Abby, Answer.

Speaker 3 (10:43):
Abby, these are older questions.

Speaker 2 (10:46):
I know what nineteen eighties TV title character had a
name that became a verb meaning to cobble a solution
together out of it. It on was like paper clips and
duct tape. So it was a TV character and this
person's name became kind of a verb that means to
cobble together a solution out of paper clips or duct tape,

(11:06):
et cetera.

Speaker 7 (11:11):
Put together.

Speaker 2 (11:12):
This was the worst round ever. Go ahead, incorrect, let's
about correct. Run the world, Abby, What company makes the
game Boy?

Speaker 7 (11:26):
That would be not cancel se whole season just like Nintendo?

Speaker 3 (11:35):
That's correct? Hey, okay?

Speaker 2 (11:38):
Uh Finally, which popular nineteen eighties TV show featured a
mohawked character played by mister t.

Speaker 4 (11:46):
I can picture.

Speaker 1 (11:47):
Him, mister t.

Speaker 2 (11:50):
Which popular nineteen eighties TV show featured a mohawked character
played by mister t.

Speaker 1 (11:58):
Im Not gonna get it in a different.

Speaker 3 (12:01):
Game, different game, different game, Never gonna get it.

Speaker 6 (12:05):
Hey, Hey, good way to go with that song lunchbox.

Speaker 3 (12:08):
He didn't get a single one right, and he wins.

Speaker 7 (12:11):
It's time for the good news.

Speaker 3 (12:18):
This is good.

Speaker 2 (12:19):
Thousands of inmates in the Washington State prison system are
also parents, and part of the broken system is if
kids have parents that aren't around in jail, statistically, they
tend to end up in prison more than kids who
have fathers. So you're not really fixing a broken system.

(12:39):
So what they've done is like, hey, if when your
kid comes in to visit, they have like ps, fives
and stuff that you can play with your dad if
your dad's in jail, to allow that kind of bonding
moment more so than just sitting at a table, you
can actually do something with them, which wasn't the case.

Speaker 3 (12:54):
So I like that they're starting there.

Speaker 2 (12:55):
You know what it would also be cool is if
these dads could put on headsets and play with their kids.

Speaker 3 (13:03):
At home an hour a week, and well, that'd be
really cool.

Speaker 2 (13:05):
I only thought of that because I was thinking about
this and how I like they're trying new things. Because again,
imagine you're eleven and you go see your dad in prison.

Speaker 3 (13:15):
What are you just sitting there?

Speaker 2 (13:18):
But if you could play a video game and actually
do something while you're also communicating, because for guys, we
kind of need that conduit to get us to that
place to be able to communicate. And then imagine if
sometimes you're not near where your parent is locked up,
you have to drive an hour, two hour, three hours.
Imagine if once a week you have thirty minutes forty

(13:39):
five minutes to be able to play against your parent
who's in jail on a video, that would.

Speaker 3 (13:44):
Also be cool.

Speaker 2 (13:45):
But I like that they're trying new things to fix
the system that is going to remain broken because the
system isn't there to fix itself. It's there to temporarily
put a band aid on something. And band aids actually
don't heal anything. King five with that story, But it's
a good story and I like it because we're trying
new things. Obviously the old way doesn't work. Yeah, it's

(14:07):
a temporary band aid, but I like it. I like
when people try to do better things. Thank you, that's
what it's all about.

Speaker 7 (14:13):
That was tell me something good on the Bobby Bones Show. Now,
doctor James Regland.

Speaker 3 (14:19):
Doctor, we appreciate you being with us today.

Speaker 9 (14:21):
I'm glad to be here.

Speaker 3 (14:22):
So we have a lot of.

Speaker 2 (14:23):
Questions and I would hope that you don't think that
these are legitimate questions. They may seem uneducated and stupid,
but that is what we are. So we just want
to state that up front. Okay, that's okay, that's fine.
Eddie is my best friend and he's bald on top
of his head, and we've suggested that he shaved both
sides of the side, just go fully bald. He doesn't

(14:43):
want to do that, but he also has been hesitant
to do anything like to wear to pay or anything.
So I said, Eddie, I will send you to Turkey
to go get a hair transplant, like I was going to.

Speaker 3 (14:52):
Pay for the whole thing.

Speaker 2 (14:54):
And he was super weird about flying to the Middle
East to get a hair transplant. Yeah, so before we
talk about your practice specifically, what do you know about
sending people to the Middle East for hair transplants.

Speaker 9 (15:05):
That's a very common thing that's grown a lot in
the last few years. Turkey has done a really good
job both in their country and their tourism industry to
promote that. And there are some I'm not gonna lie
that there's some very good hair transplant surgeons over there
that are known internationally, but there's an awful lot of
hair transplant facilities over there also, and so there are

(15:27):
many issues with it. You can have some great results.
I've seen great results, but it's a long ways to
go if anything doesn't go perfectly fine, And that's a
that's a long ways to follow up on because even
the best of surgeon's facilities, there may be issues come
up that could be handled easily. There may be issues
that are that are bigger, and that's a that's a

(15:49):
long migration to get back to.

Speaker 3 (15:51):
It's not as quick Southwest flight. I guarantee, it's not
really a hop skipping job. Now.

Speaker 2 (15:56):
So doctor Raglan is on and he is MD, chief
of staff, board certified head and next surgeon. And do
you actually do the surgeries, doctor Raglan?

Speaker 5 (16:05):
Like?

Speaker 3 (16:05):
Is it a scout?

Speaker 2 (16:06):
Like? Do you do that with your hands or do
somebody else do that?

Speaker 9 (16:09):
Well? I do everything other than the actual placement of
the hairs. And in the hair transplant world, placement of
the hairs, which we call implanting. There are specialized texts
that are far better than any of the rest of
us that I have do that port that portion in
the afternoon. But everything else I do. I see the
patient ahead of time. We go through a full consult

(16:31):
ahead of time. Sometimes I take thirty forty five minutes
to do that. I numb everything up, I harvest all
the hairs. Whether it be and I don't know how
much y'all looked into this, whether it be the older
fashioned strip procedure, which we still do sometimes, let's say,
whether it be the So two main ways to harvest hairs.
But essentially, yes, I do everything other than taking the

(16:51):
hairs and implanting them in all the little sites. So
two main ways to harvest hairs. There's a traditional way
of what's called a strip procedure. Take a little strip
of skin. Not to get too graphic, but back here
where we've got lots of extra hair, you take literally
a strip of that with all the hairs in it,
and remove it and then sew up the two edges

(17:11):
hair to hair, and you've got a fine little linear
scar that's only visible if somebody shaves their head, and
then all those hairs are dissected out individually under microscope
and then a plant it. There's a more modern way,
but we still use both, where you actually harvest individually
all of the hairs through the whole area back here
individually a little punch, and so they're taken out in
little groups together, So you don't have a linear scar,

(17:35):
but you could have a thousands of little bitty ones
that you don't.

Speaker 2 (17:38):
See, Eddie, which one of those sounds like something that
you would do where they cut the skin or they harvest.
My terminolog is probably wrong.

Speaker 3 (17:46):
I love that they call it harvesting.

Speaker 2 (17:47):
Yeah, well it feels like arming corn.

Speaker 9 (17:49):
Right, it's not seasonal. We can harvest it anytime.

Speaker 3 (17:53):
Kah we fair, I thought so far.

Speaker 8 (17:55):
I mean the scar is what bothers me a little bit,
just kind of having a scar. I was at the
convenience story the other day and I was behind a
gentleman and he he had one of those scars, and
he had his head shaved, which I didn't understand why
he would have the surgery and then have his head shaved,
but his scar was pretty visible.

Speaker 3 (18:10):
Like that's a pretty big scar it can be.

Speaker 9 (18:13):
And you bring up a really good point. A lot
of times guys will have a transplant at one point
in their life and they want their hair restored back
where it was five ten years ago. But yet they
progress on a lot more loss later on and so
they eventually decide they just want to give up and
buzz it like some other bodies of theirs, and that
scar is visible. And so that's one of the things

(18:33):
that in the hair world you really got to look
at where is somebody, what is their possible potential loss
in the future, and try to avoid those situations where
you transplant somebody young and then they give up on it.
Everything else goes away, they end up progressing towards more
baldness and they decide to shave it, and then they've
got that scar visible.

Speaker 2 (18:54):
You got to commit, Eddie. If you're gonna do it,
you gotta do it. Yeah.

Speaker 8 (18:56):
Is there another place in the body dock where you
can get it from?

Speaker 3 (19:00):
I have a lot of not the butt you get.

Speaker 9 (19:04):
Yeah, there are so you can harvest from from beard.
A lot of guys will have extra hair underneath the
chin airing harvest and beard. You can take chest hair. Now,
my caution with those is I don't like to go
into somebody's long term life plan of managing their scalp
hair by saying, oh, we've got this to take. You
generally want to take it and plan from here and

(19:27):
only down the road. If something is is you've run
out here and you need more somewhere else you can
fill something in, but I wouldn't want to plan that
long term.

Speaker 2 (19:35):
Doctor Raglan, Could I donate my hair? He's often remarked,
how great my hair is beautiful? Could I donate my
hair and put it in his head?

Speaker 9 (19:43):
You can't. People ask that all the time. You can't.
It's essentially an organ transplant. If you think about it,
it's it would be the same as taking and you know,
donating a part of a liver or kidney to somebody.
You'd have to be on immino suppression things for that.
It's it's it's not practical for hair.

Speaker 4 (20:01):
So no, So even if you're a match though, like.

Speaker 9 (20:04):
Correct, Yeah, even even a match quote quote match in
the organ transplant world, you still have to be on
You can be a match, but you still have to
be on medicines to suppress things that are not matched.
And so, uh, it's not feasible or practical with hair.

Speaker 2 (20:20):
Generally speaking, if you may get to what age and
you haven't lost your hair, that kind of means you're
not going to lose your hair.

Speaker 7 (20:28):
To an extent.

Speaker 9 (20:28):
Yeah, Now, even people who you know keep their hair
pretty good and thick through say, I don't know, even sixties,
there's a as we really age and you get eighties
and nineties, sometimes people, even a full head of hair
will start to thin just because of age. But if
you reach your forties fifties and you have no recession
or no thinning ball spot at all, you probably are

(20:50):
not going to lose much.

Speaker 3 (20:51):
I like that. That's cool, that's pretty good. Yeah, like
a guy like me.

Speaker 2 (20:54):
Yeah, yeah, So if Eddie and again I've talked to
him and I've told him all about your practice and
hair labs, and you know that you guys have really
great technology. You do a lot of hair restoration. If
you were to go in and you know, get on
the old gurney or whatever you urn I don't know.

Speaker 3 (21:10):
What you get on doo, then you get these places.

Speaker 2 (21:11):
Look they put you in the stirrups, I don't know,
and they do the surgery on your head. How much
downtime is it from when he goes in and then
is able to come back full head of hair?

Speaker 3 (21:21):
And we're like dang fabio.

Speaker 9 (21:23):
Okay, So that sort of time frame to full head
of hair, full what we call full growth or full results,
that can be up to a year, frankly, or maybe
slightly longer, but generally we say roughly around a year.
You're gonna see where you are from that. I've seen
six months. I've seen guys come back in six months
and man, everything just looks great. I've seen guys come

(21:44):
back at a year and we're like, I think you're
gonna get a little bit better over the next few months.
But somewhere in that six nine to twelve month time frame,
closer to twelve.

Speaker 3 (21:54):
What about when it doesn't hurt anymore?

Speaker 9 (21:56):
Oh, that's pretty quick. So yeah, there's the full growth
time frame and full result time frame, and then there's
the actual downtime and things. So when does it not
hurt anymore the next day?

Speaker 3 (22:07):
That's cool.

Speaker 9 (22:08):
But for the most part, you know, the strip incision
is is a little bit bigger surgery and all. But
when we do the more common what we call the
FU or individual harvest, people go home that night and
Thailand all and IBU probe and is generally all anyone needs.
And some don't even take that, but by the next
day they're pretty much good. It's not very painful once
we stop poking on you, and when we poke on you.

(22:28):
We numb it up anyway, so it's it's not a
bad procedure and you're not real painful afterwards.

Speaker 2 (22:33):
And he has gigantic eyebrows. Any chance you could use those,
that's really we could.

Speaker 9 (22:37):
But he's probably gonna want them. He's gonna want them.

Speaker 3 (22:39):
They're so big you give you half of them. I
like my eyebrows. That's the new that's the new trend.

Speaker 2 (22:45):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (22:45):
Women tell me all the time, like you have wonderful women.
Women just come up to you, unil you have a
great I've been around you a lot, never had a
single woman.

Speaker 4 (22:51):
Can say, okay, but do you do the eyebrow transplants?
Not to the hair, but like for women, some of
them are getting their moved to their eyebrows.

Speaker 3 (22:59):
All but we're talking Eddie here specifically.

Speaker 4 (23:01):
Well, he brought it up, so I didn't know if
he did.

Speaker 3 (23:02):
I brought it up.

Speaker 4 (23:03):
You brought it up, so I didn't know if he
did it. Though, what if he does it?

Speaker 3 (23:06):
Okay? Do you hear her though? Women are wanting eyebrows
like that? Doctor, would you please say, I'm sorry we
answer that question.

Speaker 9 (23:11):
Oh yeah, yeah, we we do those. Uh so yeah.
In the last few years, after years of women wanting
to pluck things and trim things and really find them down,
they found that, hey, they don't return, so they've kind
of overplucked things. And now we take hare from same place,
same place on women back here and move them to
their eyebrow because it's that that fine, little thin line

(23:32):
from the nineties and two thousands that's apparently out and
now we want big, normal, natural eyebrows.

Speaker 2 (23:38):
They get, you know, normal and bigger than Eddie's, right, Edie,
that's rude. No, I'm just saying. Women talk about it
all the time.

Speaker 3 (23:43):
They love them, they love them.

Speaker 2 (23:44):
I'll be with Eddie and they'll be lined up to
be like, we love your eyebrows. So do you want to,
I don't know, to show them your head?

Speaker 3 (23:50):
Yeah? Sure, do you want to see my head?

Speaker 9 (23:53):
I've not seen him other than just looking at pictures
of things.

Speaker 3 (23:56):
And I always have a hat on. So here we go.
This is the big reveal.

Speaker 2 (23:59):
Oh gosh, it's not even that bad. That's not acting
like yeah, okay, go ahead, sorry, doctor Eddie.

Speaker 9 (24:07):
Let me let me see what you've got back here
kind of over that crown spot.

Speaker 3 (24:10):
Let me say that's a bad at dog is it okay?

Speaker 9 (24:13):
Okay, all right, you've you've kept that one pretty good
in hit.

Speaker 3 (24:16):
Sorry about that. But if you, I mean, we're gonna
do this, you got to get vulnerable and just lay
it all out. I appreciate it.

Speaker 7 (24:23):
Eddie.

Speaker 4 (24:24):
You're not alone.

Speaker 3 (24:24):
You're not alone.

Speaker 9 (24:25):
Thanks, you're not you're not man and and you're you're
not alone at all. But I will every guy that
loses their hair, they do decide they would like to
have it back. Just sometimes you can't.

Speaker 2 (24:36):
Can you fix that that?

Speaker 9 (24:39):
We can definitely fix the We can definitely fix the front.
The front is something. So the front, when you look
at at hair loss and you look at the entire
area that some guys lose their hair, that leaves not
much back there. So the whole principle of hair transplant,
we're taking hair from where a person has extra and
you're moving them somewhere else. You're not recreating any new hair.

(25:01):
So if your area of loss is enormous, then by definition,
your area to take it from is small. So at
some point you reach a tipping point where you can't
cover everything, then you fallow down to well, you can
cover one zone. And for most guys, especially guys, on
radio and TV and things like that. They would say,
if you could get me that front back to where

(25:23):
it looks full, then that's a wind. So you've got
can you cover everything? If the area you need it
is small, then yes. If the area is bigger, you
have to pick one, and most guys will pick the front.
If the area is just too big and you've got
one of those guys with nothing but the little horseshoe,
there's not enough there to make a difference. So at
some point you reach a point of no return.

Speaker 3 (25:43):
Eddie, what are your thoughts so far?

Speaker 8 (25:44):
I think, if I catch what Doc is saying, is
that I have two zones on my head. Zone one
the front of my head, Zone two of the back
of my head. And if we're going to do this,
I think we work on zone one and just zone
two is what it is.

Speaker 2 (25:57):
Well, yeah, because we don't see zone two a lot
because we're not taller above you.

Speaker 8 (26:00):
And I'm really tall, so a lot of people don't
really see the top of my head.

Speaker 2 (26:03):
Oh man, What about though, if you just always have
like shocked eye surprised eyes, and your eyebrows are like
covering the front part. If you walk around like your
eyebrows up and you just comb the back like you
ever do a eyebrow.

Speaker 3 (26:15):
Come over, doctor, you heard of that?

Speaker 9 (26:19):
No, you you'd have to. I guess it could be
done now I think about it. You could transplant hair
from back in here which grows long. Eyebrows only grow
ya long, but you can transplant long hairs in here
and you could grow them back. I guess that you
want to Wow.

Speaker 2 (26:31):
Okay, So doctor Raglan is on with us m D
Chief of Staff, board certified Head and Neck surgeon at
MD Hair Labs, and we're, you know, trying to get
Eddie if he wants to, Yeah, because he's wanted to
to have a hair transplant surgery.

Speaker 3 (26:45):
Who doesn't want hair, right, you know? And I don't
have my hair, so it sounds good.

Speaker 2 (26:49):
Your thoughts after this brief conversation are what.

Speaker 8 (26:52):
The two zones kind of scares me a little bit.
The incision in the back of my head. I really
thought they could pull it from my buttet.

Speaker 2 (26:59):
It's not gonna be in a my tho bro what like,
It's not gonna feel good. There's gonna be parts of
anything in life. When you gain it, you have to
give a little I don't right now.

Speaker 8 (27:07):
I do like the idea of having a hair. But see, doc,
let me ask you this, is it going to grow
like over the back? Is it going to grow normal?

Speaker 3 (27:15):
Stick?

Speaker 9 (27:16):
Yeah, no, it's it's the same hair that is back here.
However long and much this would grow. It's the same hairs,
it is. These hairs move to a different spot, so
it will grow normal.

Speaker 8 (27:27):
Could I look like Bobby? So you look at Bobby's
hair right now? Can I look like that?

Speaker 9 (27:32):
So there's a principle with transplant it it won't be massive,
full density like you were when you were, you know, seventeen.
Here a lot of hair need that you don't need that.
You need a level of density that reaches that threshold
that looks like it's full. And no one notices then
until they get right up there and look, you don't

(27:53):
need that full density that you have when you're seventeen.
Here you can get away with less and still accomplish
the same look like you're not bald.

Speaker 4 (28:00):
In the front.

Speaker 8 (28:01):
Doctor, some of your patients send you pictures of them
with new hairdos like chick me out, I got a mullett.

Speaker 9 (28:06):
Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah. They get to style it different.
They come in with a different smile. They Yeah, well, I'm.

Speaker 4 (28:14):
Glad you didn't go all the way to Turkey to
find audios two zones.

Speaker 8 (28:19):
And what if I picked one of those random hair
places in Turkey that aren't very good.

Speaker 2 (28:23):
It's like going to New York or Chicago and there's
so many pizza places you don't know which ones are
the real ones, which popping up all of a sudden.
You go into Chicago Deep Dish and let's just say
they buy it off the shelves. You know you don't
want that, Okay, doctor Raglan, we really appreciate the time
you spent with us. EDI's gonna have some decisions to make,
lots of decisions. Yeah.

Speaker 6 (28:43):
Can I have asked you a question?

Speaker 5 (28:44):
Yeah, I love to talk to Hey, doctor Ragland, do
you also do something for noses?

Speaker 3 (28:50):
Why are you attacking this? He has a big nose, So.

Speaker 5 (28:53):
While you're in there doing his hair, I thought maybe
you could help him out understand why.

Speaker 4 (28:56):
He confused by your personal It's like you have to
his nose and then you make it about his.

Speaker 3 (29:04):
Nose and I don't want to fix my nose. I
like your nose.

Speaker 2 (29:07):
They have a great nose. I'd like to have your nose.
I'll give you my nose, thank you.

Speaker 3 (29:11):
Okay.

Speaker 2 (29:11):
So, doctor Raglan, I know that with Eddie especially, it's
a serious thing he's been talking about for a long time.
I guess I think he wants to ask, maybe I'm wrong,
will people be able to tell that he had a
hair transplant?

Speaker 3 (29:22):
Well?

Speaker 2 (29:22):
And what they laugh at him behind his back?

Speaker 9 (29:24):
That I can't tell you. I don't know. But down
the road, no, I don't want people to be able
to tell you've had a hair transplant when this fills
in a few years from now. No, in the immediate time, yeah,
you're going to tell you had that because generally, for
what the number that you probably need, and I think
it's a decent sized number of graphs, we're going to

(29:44):
shave everything. We're gonna shave everything down. And so during
that recovery period of a few weeks, you're going to
be able to tell you had something done. But down
the road, no, I don't want you to be able
to tell.

Speaker 2 (29:54):
Can you wear a hat whenever he's in recovery?

Speaker 9 (29:57):
Yeah, So my general rule on that is, let people
wear a very loose fitting hat, one that's not going
to touch anywhere near those fragile little graphs and only
touches here on about day five if you need to.
After two weeks, yes you can wear a hat, no problem.
But in that in that first few days they're very fragile.
I don't want to risk it. But at day five
you can wear a hat if it doesn't touch the graphs.

Speaker 3 (30:20):
So this is what I want to say for doctor Raglin.

Speaker 2 (30:21):
Super respected your social media, Doctor Ragline, will you because
I know I was looking at some of this. If
you have like over eighteen million view viewers that have
watched just yeah, it's crazy, like the good the quality
of work he does. Where can people see your work?

Speaker 9 (30:36):
Well, we have a we have an Instagram page, we
have Facebook page, and you know, if somebody comes in,
we can show you what we've what we've got in
our archives and things. But those are the those are
the main places. Those are our mdhair Labs dot com
is the website that we try to keep as many
updated as we can. That's the main place is.

Speaker 2 (30:58):
MD hair Labs md hair labs dot com. We really
appreciate you, Eddie. As you can tell by his face here,
he's still processing it. A lot to think of and
if there's any conversation that you want to have with
the doc off a microphone, Okay, feel free to have
that sounds great.

Speaker 3 (31:12):
I support you.

Speaker 2 (31:13):
You can have the time off.

Speaker 8 (31:16):
Doctor Raglin seems like a great person. Just it's a
lot to take in. Yeah, what ten minutes.

Speaker 9 (31:22):
You got great options? You're you're you're from what I
can tell, good candidate, you got great options.

Speaker 2 (31:28):
I would say, go look to at like their instagram,
which is MD hair Labs. Okay, okay, go look at it,
see what and then if you feel like you want
to do it, we'll make it happen. Okay, man, doctor Raglin,
thank you so much for your time, and we really
appreciate someone of your caliber coming on the show with us.

Speaker 9 (31:42):
Thank you, guys, thank you.

Speaker 3 (31:43):
There he is doctor Raglan, Eddie's savior. Maybe thank you.

Speaker 2 (31:50):
Here's the voicemail. It's the reason we're doing this bit
at all. I just finished the segment where you guys
talk about everything that was annoying on each other, and
as entertaining as it was, I do like what you
guys really enjoy about each other.

Speaker 9 (32:02):
And I know that'll be.

Speaker 3 (32:02):
Hard for Lunchbox, but it'll be really good, feel good.

Speaker 2 (32:05):
And I know Amy will love it too. Okay, love
the show. Thank you for that voicemail. If you want
to hear Lunchboxes yesterday's podcast, go listen to that. And
he did it and it was awkward, but in a
beautiful way. We have two left, Amy and Eddie. Eddie,
you go first, because I'm gonna let Amy close the show.
She'll be sincere and it'll like be awesome. I'm gonna

(32:25):
tell you he's tricky like Lunchbox in a while, dude,
I'm gonna be very sincere.

Speaker 3 (32:29):
Go toward Amy first.

Speaker 8 (32:30):
Okay, Amy, I want to start with you, and I
want to say what I like about Amy is that
she is very giving. She cares about other people, and
I think she's really the only one that gives people
gifts on their birthday out.

Speaker 3 (32:44):
Of all of us.

Speaker 2 (32:45):
Not true, I give everybody gifts.

Speaker 3 (32:46):
You do.

Speaker 2 (32:47):
It's always in the foremost they have a gift card
through a text message.

Speaker 8 (32:49):
Oh okay, see I don't see that. But every time
somebody's birthday, I always get you a gift on your birthday.

Speaker 3 (32:55):
No, no, no, I know you, and I like, like, that's
that's one thing.

Speaker 6 (32:57):
But like, if like, shouldn't you be worried only about you.

Speaker 8 (33:00):
If it's more if it's Abby's birthday, like a bag
and like a card, Happy birthday Abby.

Speaker 3 (33:06):
He's very thought me in lunchbox, we don't give anyone Yeah, yeah,
you know what I mean. So that's very nice. She
thinks about other people good.

Speaker 8 (33:13):
She's also the mediator of the show, like she likes
to like if someone's getting like attacked in any way,
she's like.

Speaker 3 (33:18):
Guys, guys, guys, it's okay. You know, there's there's two
sides to every story. Blah blah blah. And that's very
nice that she steps in and protects people, especially at times.

Speaker 2 (33:26):
Yes, yeah, yeah, yeah, okay, I'm gonna say I'm gonna
save him. Come to me now, okay.

Speaker 8 (33:31):
You I love that you're very knowledgeable, Like we can
ask you anything and you pretty much know what the
answer is.

Speaker 2 (33:39):
I don't feel like that's accurate, but go ahead, that's
pretty accurate.

Speaker 8 (33:41):
And you're able to see like two sides of things,
like if if I have an opinion on something, you're like, yeah,
but have you thought about this side of the story,
or or if like this person's been thinking about that,
and like that's really cool. Like most people are like, no, man,
I don't like people like this, but you're good. You're
able to see like both sides of stories, and I
talk about things.

Speaker 2 (34:01):
I like that. I think that's really cool. I get
people a birthday gifts too. I took offense to that.
I don't see that. I know I keep a secret
on the down low.

Speaker 3 (34:08):
So now I know, and let me add that on
the list.

Speaker 2 (34:09):
Thank you.

Speaker 3 (34:09):
Bobby gives people birthday gifts.

Speaker 2 (34:11):
Texting my say, so, it's not awkward because I'm not
good at the face to face things.

Speaker 3 (34:13):
That's really cool that way, all right, pretty much it.

Speaker 2 (34:16):
No, No, we're not going to conclude a segment there.

Speaker 3 (34:18):
Now you need to do Lunchbox.

Speaker 2 (34:20):
Say something nice about him.

Speaker 8 (34:23):
You know what Lunchbox cares about the earth. He recycles.
He does recycle.

Speaker 2 (34:27):
Like if we have pieces of paper on our desk,
he takes them and he I think he puts them.

Speaker 3 (34:32):
In his car.

Speaker 2 (34:33):
They stand in his car for a long time.

Speaker 9 (34:34):
Yes, but.

Speaker 8 (34:36):
Like we have bottles of water, he takes them and
puts them in his car.

Speaker 3 (34:39):
I say it for a long time. But he cares
about the environment. I think that's really cool, Lunchbox.

Speaker 6 (34:44):
You know, the one problem is the paper here. We
can't recycle him more because they took our recycle bin.

Speaker 2 (34:48):
But you put him in the car like everything else
you do.

Speaker 5 (34:50):
I know, but I'm just saying they make it a
lot harder. I used to be able to just take
it in the break room and slide it in a
little slot. Yeah. Very annoying, Eddie.

Speaker 2 (34:59):
Thank you for being vulnerable and showing what you like
about us.

Speaker 3 (35:01):
I like a lot of things about you, guys.

Speaker 2 (35:02):
Amy, you close the show, you're the headliner, You're the
Chris Stapleton.

Speaker 4 (35:05):
Okay, So go to Eddie first. Oh, Eddie first. Okay.
I feel like Eddie is like, you know, when something
is consistent and feels like it's called chronic, say no,
Like he's level like it's sort of like yeah, but
he still feels and has things like a motion to

(35:28):
offer in different things. But he's just a level sound person.
And I think he has a big heart as well.
I know we give him a hard time for like
wanting to do things like donate organs and whatnot.

Speaker 2 (35:39):
It's not that's not why we give him. It's that
he wants to it never does right, Yeah, heart, you know.

Speaker 4 (35:46):
I think he does have a big heart, and he
is very well intentioned obviously as a big heart being
a foster parent and uh and now an adoptive dad.
I get how difficult that it is. And I think Eddie's.

Speaker 3 (36:02):
What's he laughing for that? I don't know.

Speaker 4 (36:06):
Laughing?

Speaker 3 (36:09):
No, I'm not, I'm not laughing.

Speaker 4 (36:11):
Go ahead, okay, he fostered and then adopted and his
adopted mom, Like, I get it, that's it's that's not
an easy thing to take on. And whereas sometimes I
bring a little bit of that to work with me
and get emotional and whatnot and can't really do. But
Eddie's pretty leave level even like he stays the same,
Like I know he probably has stuff going on at home,
but yet he shows up and can still do his job.

Speaker 3 (36:32):
There you go, and in reality he is hanging out
with folks.

Speaker 4 (36:37):
I don't complain what but he does have a big heart,
regardless of how much we give him a hard time.

Speaker 3 (36:41):
Thanks, what is so.

Speaker 6 (36:43):
Funny he keeps I look at Bobby's head.

Speaker 4 (36:47):
Going because we joke, because I think one day Eddie's
gonna be.

Speaker 2 (36:49):
Like you could just say he has a big heart
and not have to do that.

Speaker 4 (36:52):
But but we do give him a hard time, and
I think one day he's going to show up and
be like, hey, guys, they donated organs.

Speaker 3 (36:58):
You're gonna die.

Speaker 4 (37:00):
I think that's the case.

Speaker 3 (37:01):
I do Luno.

Speaker 4 (37:02):
Okay with Lunchbox. I think that he is one of
the funniest people on the show. I think that I
are the first inclinations to be like, Bobby is so
funny and Eddie is so funny because still are Why is.

Speaker 2 (37:15):
She's taking shots of people during her compliment that's not.

Speaker 4 (37:19):
Just complimented you that you're funny. But I think he's
like sneaky funny, like improv type funny, Like the things
he can come up with, like so fast out of nowhere.
I think that's a that's a real talent and laughter
is good for the soul. Yeah, improv, No, y'all don't
agree with that.

Speaker 2 (37:37):
This is not us. This is you do saying what
you say, taking shots though.

Speaker 3 (37:42):
So much as an improv comedian.

Speaker 4 (37:44):
What shots did I take? Bobby?

Speaker 2 (37:46):
A couple first? You said Eddie's got a big heart,
even though we tell him he doesn't. You know that
we do?

Speaker 3 (37:51):
You guys give me a hard time.

Speaker 2 (37:53):
It doesn't matter. Eddie have a big heart. Lunchbox, you're funny.

Speaker 6 (37:56):
Improv doesn't matter.

Speaker 2 (37:58):
I wouldn't disagree with either one of those statements.

Speaker 3 (38:00):
You got just want to disagree in any way.

Speaker 2 (38:04):
With those statements. But I think they could just be said.

Speaker 4 (38:06):
I'll just say Eddie, Eddie, you're level headed. With Eddie
level headed, big heart, lunch box like sneaky, funny, go ahead,
Am I done? That's not it. And I think with Bobby,
just something that sort of offline people may not know.

(38:29):
I think any of us if we needed advice or
wisdom on something, we can call you and you're gonna
shoot it straight with us, and you're gonna tell us
your thoughts on it, and you offer encouragement and wisdom
anytime that's happened over the years. It's not like all
the time, but you're you would be there for any
one of us who had something else going on and

(38:49):
we needed to pick your brain about something. And I'm
I'm grateful for that because I think that's just something offline.
I mean, there's the even things about you that people
get to see, but that's sort of behind the scenes.
Is the encourager that you are. You want to encourage
us to go do other things. And when you've kind
of done stuff before us, so you know more your

(39:13):
overall whise more wise than us.

Speaker 3 (39:17):
Yeah, that's like I said, you're smarter than.

Speaker 2 (39:19):
Us, and so I don't think that's true.

Speaker 3 (39:21):
It is true.

Speaker 2 (39:22):
I think I know quiz questions.

Speaker 4 (39:23):
No, No, I'm not even talking about like you know,
what's the capital of this place? Or how do you
spell that? I'm talking about some business things with us
being able to come to you for wisdom and encouragement
and you take the time.

Speaker 3 (39:37):
To do that. There you have it.

Speaker 2 (39:39):
Thank you everybody for sharing what is good about each other.
I'll piggyback on Amy's real quick about you. Like when
my kids asked me, like, hey, dad, why is this whatever,
I'm like, I don't know.

Speaker 3 (39:47):
Google it.

Speaker 8 (39:48):
You never do that. You're like, actually, this is why
the Mongols rule China.

Speaker 2 (39:52):
That's annoying though of me sometimes too.

Speaker 3 (39:53):
No, but we can. We wouldn't ask you if we
didn't want to know the answer.

Speaker 4 (39:57):
But I'm talking about trivia.

Speaker 2 (39:58):
Oh I am Oh, yeah, all right, thank you. Look
it feels uncomfortable, but we've been doing the show. We've
all been together for double digit years.

Speaker 8 (40:07):
Why is it going to be uncomfortable that we can't
say positive things to each other.

Speaker 4 (40:11):
You don't like what I said.

Speaker 2 (40:12):
It's fine, it's fine.

Speaker 3 (40:14):
Obviously there's more. But dude, these are just a couple
of little.

Speaker 4 (40:17):
Tidbits to be the wise one with encouragement.

Speaker 3 (40:20):
Boom, It's just fine. You are the knowledgeable one.

Speaker 2 (40:23):
I all like Gandolf and I don't even really watch
Harry Potter or Rings.

Speaker 3 (40:26):
Who's either Wizard or the Rings. Yeah, he's the great Gandalf.
They had the long white beard. He knew everything. You're
the wise one.

Speaker 4 (40:32):
I know with encouragement much.

Speaker 3 (40:37):
What you saying about a Tony Robbins was nice.

Speaker 2 (40:42):
I was very creative.

Speaker 6 (40:42):
He was creative about the Wazoo.

Speaker 4 (40:45):
We can't.

Speaker 2 (40:49):
Do you know? He would he get such the shoots
on that show were so long. I never watched Brandos,
but the shoots on that show were so long that
you know, they'd be like thirteen fourteen day fourteen hour days,
and so he would get kind of cranky because he
would just have enough time to go home and go
to bed and come back, and they shoot five or
six days a week, and that his day off was Sunday,
and he had to spend it learning all the lines
for all the five six days coming up you. They

(41:12):
were always like, why was you so cranky on set?
Why did you think, Yeah, this guy's no time? Did
you know that Norm on cheers? Those were all real
beers that he was drinking, so he'd get really drunk
every time they shoot. All right, good job, everybody's pile
of stories.

Speaker 4 (41:28):
All right? Are guys with facial hair hotter?

Speaker 2 (41:32):
I'm not a big facial hair guy, and dudes, well,
she's asking you.

Speaker 3 (41:38):
I don't know, but I would say that.

Speaker 2 (41:42):
If you made me pick a type of guy, which
I'm not attracted to guys, but I can definitely tell
what I find which guys are more attractive than others.
It's never with facial hair.

Speaker 4 (41:50):
Oh, let me ask you this. Did you see that
doctored photo of Mark Zuckerberg social hair? Right, so it
was clean shaven Mark Zuckerberg next to a photoshop to
Mark with a beard, and women were going crazy talking
about how he looked more attracted because.

Speaker 2 (42:05):
He has an ugly face with the beard, like, I
could probably grow a beard to be hotter.

Speaker 4 (42:08):
Well, you just had a little bit of stumble, I know, but.

Speaker 2 (42:10):
I'm saying guys with ugly faces. I'll raise my hand here.
I don't think I have the greatest face. I think
I could probably grow a beard and take a little
bit of the attention from my face to the beard.
It's why I wear really thick glasses because you have
an ugly face. Yes, I do it to distract, so
a yeah, but I could wear glasses that there's that

(42:32):
that are not to wear a hat with.

Speaker 4 (42:34):
I got you.

Speaker 2 (42:34):
If I have a hat that has a curvy bill,
I can't even wear it normal because my glasses are
so like black rimmed and thick. So but yeah, I
would say for the most part, I'm not attracted to
do with beards.

Speaker 4 (42:44):
Okay, Well, a study found those sweet spot of women
attracted to men with beards, and it's the ten day scruff,
So that is where it looks the best. Anything like
way longer than that, they're not really into. But the
ten day scruff, I guess it shows more masculine and yeah,
defines the jaw line of the.

Speaker 2 (43:02):
Itch though, Like that's when it itches to guys.

Speaker 4 (43:07):
Try it out. Grow out your beard for ten days
and see if your significant other is more into you.

Speaker 2 (43:11):
Mine's too patchy. It's like at a little bit gray, get
a little bit brown, get little bit dark brown beard. Yeah,
but I'm talking about patchy color wise.

Speaker 3 (43:20):
It's got a little bit like if you went full beard, though,
it'd be like mountain man.

Speaker 2 (43:25):
I know, I've never grown it, grown it. I've grown
it for like a couple of months. You should try. Yeah,
I've had a full foolish beard before, but I'm not
as attracted to myself. Yeah yeah, what else?

Speaker 4 (43:34):
Okay, So this one thing could be ruining your relationship
in bed. And I'm talking about scrolling on social media
because a relationship expert was saying that you are decreasing
your chances of intimacy and affection and generally just engaging
with your partner, and everything starts to go downhill the
more you scroll while you're in bed.

Speaker 2 (43:53):
But what if you get intimacy and affection on social media.

Speaker 4 (43:58):
Is probably want to get it from your partner.

Speaker 8 (44:04):
Now, are you saying the partners on social media, I'm.

Speaker 2 (44:10):
Scroller and I'm feeling affection from social media? No, I
get it. I just I'm on my phone too much.

Speaker 4 (44:16):
Well, there's a name for this, Like when you're lying
side by side in bed and you're both scrolling it's
called parallel scrolling, and it's killing relationships.

Speaker 2 (44:25):
We don't do that. She's never on her phone. Sometimes
she forgets her phone for four hours and doesn't even
look at it, and I'm like, where's your phone. She's like,
I don't know, have you seen it. I'm like, where's
the last time we had it?

Speaker 3 (44:34):
I don't know. This morning, it's two pm.

Speaker 2 (44:37):
We have such a different phone life where I can
even text her sometimes and I don't hear back from
her for an hour and a half and I'm like, what, God,
I didn't have my phone and she really didn't. It's bizarre.
We should be connected to our phones way more than
we are.

Speaker 3 (44:50):
No good, Okay, what else?

Speaker 4 (44:51):
All right? So June Carter Cash passed away in two
thousand and three, and then Johnny Cash died less than
four months later, which is kind of sweet if you
think about it. But they were just born again.

Speaker 3 (45:01):
I saw those two babies.

Speaker 4 (45:02):
Isn't this crazy? Check out this coincidence. Two babies, one
named Johnny Cash and another named June Carter, were born
at the same hospital on the same day this month.
It happened in Huntsville, Alabama, on April tenth and two,
different families. They did not know each other. June Carter
was born at two thirty and then Johnny Cash was
born at nine point fifty.

Speaker 2 (45:22):
Now I'm sure they had last names.

Speaker 4 (45:24):
Yeah, yeah, June Carter Clark and Johnny Cash Davis. Yeah yeah.
And the parents were told about it. They couldn't believe
when they found out. They want to stay in touch,
and so people online are hoping that, you know, we
checked back in in twenty years, and maybe they're gonna
be dating.

Speaker 2 (45:38):
I hope we checked back in twenty years and we're
still here and the world still exists. You know that.

Speaker 4 (45:44):
I'm Amy. That's my file.

Speaker 7 (45:46):
That was Amy's pile of stories. It's time for the
good news.

Speaker 4 (45:54):
For years and years, there were the four sisters from
Nebraska and they've been searching for their biological brother. He
was put up for adoption when he was a baby,
and on National Siblings Day they posted on social media
asking for help. Like all they had was a childhood
photo of him. His name is Greg and miraculously people
recognized him and they were able to bring him all together.

(46:16):
He was only eighty miles away, which is so wild from.

Speaker 2 (46:19):
The kid photo. Yeah, they had probably knew Greg when
he was a kid. It was like, Oh, that's that's
old Greg from down the country store.

Speaker 4 (46:26):
He was kid, So they reached out. Greg found out
about this. That's somebody knew him.

Speaker 3 (46:30):
I was like, Hey, what Greg, but he was adopted.

Speaker 2 (46:33):
Yeah, well what if Greg wasn't looking for her sisters
and all of a sudden he sees on the screen.
I'm sure that's not the case.

Speaker 4 (46:39):
Yeah, I feel like these days adoption is kept his secret.
But I mean there was a time where it's like
people didn't want to know or they just kept it
a secret.

Speaker 2 (46:49):
But if all of a sudden you got four sisters,
I think about the birthdays. That's one every three months. Boom,
just like that. Now you gotta buy a gift every
three months.

Speaker 3 (46:57):
That's a great story.

Speaker 2 (46:58):
Though. Good for them for say how old they are.

Speaker 4 (47:01):
They don't have their exact age.

Speaker 2 (47:03):
I like them when they're like ninety, But then I
also don't like they missed the whole ninety years.

Speaker 4 (47:07):
Yeah, well if they're ninety, then that goes back to
the maybe Greg didn't know he was.

Speaker 2 (47:11):
Ever adopted to great story though, that is what it's
all about.

Speaker 7 (47:16):
That was telling me something good
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Dateline NBC
The Nikki Glaser Podcast

The Nikki Glaser Podcast

Every week comedian and infamous roaster Nikki Glaser provides a fun, fast-paced, and brutally honest look into current pop-culture and her own personal life.

Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

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

Connect

© 2024 iHeartMedia, Inc.