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October 12, 2023 90 mins

Lunchbox found out that the original pallet he was going to buy was probably not a good investment for the show. Everyone wanted their money back unless he figured out a solution, and now he has a possible update on it...Then, we reveal the nerdiest things we do that we're passionate about! Plus, we play another round of Elder vs. Millennial! Hear if you know the answers to these questions and who wins!

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Mom transmitting Liza, Welcome to Thursday show Morening studio morning.
Let's go around the room. Everybody's got a little something
to say. Let's check in with Eddie first. On Sunday,
you can catch them watching football and if Cowboys are playing,
he will not answer your call. He producer. Ready, let's go.

Speaker 2 (00:22):
That's true. Hey, help me out on this. I just
do not understand the whole idea on this. There is
a pair of pants in the back room over there,
that's like in the glassroom, no, no, in the production room,
in the bat and it's right there on a road case.
Got it and they sit there fold it. And I
asked someone like whose pants are these? And they say, oh,
that's lunchboxes. Those are his jeens. When a guest comes in,

(00:43):
he goes in, puts the jeans on, comes in the studio.
When the guest leaves, he takes his pants off, puts
them back over there.

Speaker 1 (00:49):
What I don't understand the point of this, Like the
rule was.

Speaker 2 (00:53):
If their guests come into the studio look presentable, wear pants.

Speaker 1 (00:57):
Where jeans.

Speaker 2 (00:58):
He literally just puts on the jeans for a guest
and then takes them off again.

Speaker 3 (01:03):
Well and uses the road as a closet, right, why
not just wear jeans to work that day? Eddie, try
riding a bike with jeans on.

Speaker 1 (01:10):
Okay, but then just put them on when you get
here and just leave them on like Driss for work.
You're not Riba. You don't need three outfit changes.

Speaker 3 (01:16):
Yeah, I understand that, but I am sweaty when I
get here, so I need time.

Speaker 1 (01:19):
Well, then get five minutes before you get here to
dry off.

Speaker 3 (01:21):
No, it didn't take five minutes to drive. You need
a few, like an hour to dry off. Let's the
sweat dry and then I can go put my pants on.

Speaker 1 (01:29):
That's what I do.

Speaker 4 (01:29):
Bring a towel.

Speaker 1 (01:31):
We shouldn't be using production spaces for closets.

Speaker 5 (01:35):
Yeah, I feel like I feel like we need to,
you know, like when you go to a pool, there's
like a list of rules.

Speaker 4 (01:41):
That are written out everything you have to do. We
have no, but I mean I.

Speaker 5 (01:46):
Feel like we need like a list of rules for
everybody to see, like pick up your space, plants the studio.
Don't treat it like a closet. Wear your jeans, don't
be late, I.

Speaker 1 (01:57):
Mean long pants. I was told that winter I can
ride your bike anymore, so we're figuring that out. Okay, uh,
moving on. He can't get employed the month for October
because he's been blocked. When that happened, none of us
were shocked. Here's lunch. Okay.

Speaker 3 (02:11):
Look, man, I've got an issue with my neighbors. I'm
kind of in a spat, a disagreement, a silent war,
because they've already carved their pumpkins, and they have their
carved pumpkins sitting on their front porch. And so every
day my kids are like, Dad, ak, can we car
pumpkins today?

Speaker 1 (02:29):
Dad?

Speaker 6 (02:29):
Ak?

Speaker 1 (02:29):
Can we car pumpkins today?

Speaker 3 (02:31):
But if you carve them already, they're going to be
rotten by Halloween.

Speaker 1 (02:35):
When do you deem it appropriate to car pumpkins? I
do it about.

Speaker 3 (02:39):
The twentieth because that's eleven days before Halloween. I feel
like that's about enough time that they won't rot before Halloween.

Speaker 1 (02:47):
You said something very important there, and I hope you
caught what you just said, because I do agree you
said I feel what what do you mean? I said
that it is just your feeling. It is not an
absolute truth. There's no reason to be upset at somebody
because they don't feel the same way you feel. They're
not hurting anyone.

Speaker 3 (03:03):
Yes, they're making my life difficult because I get my
kids every day saying data, they have their pumpkins carved?

Speaker 1 (03:09):
Can we carve our pumpkin? Why don't you carved? Leave
it out for a few days and do another one
on the twentieth multiple carvings. Oh my, that's a lot.
Do you understand how it's a lot to carve a
pope dude a mess in the house and then have the.

Speaker 5 (03:20):
Carved pumpkins out for the early part and then don't
have them around Halloween.

Speaker 1 (03:24):
Just a lot of solutions here instead of being in
a silent war with a neighbor. All right, thank you,
But do you think I have al be No. She
was on the new season of Building Roots, her sister's
TV show. She's been on camera so much she's basically
a pro. Here's Amy.

Speaker 5 (03:38):
Okay, I got got well, I guess an Instagram ad
got my attention, and now I just keep thinking about
how our cell phones are killing us and giving us
a brain tumors. I mean, this is an ad that
stopped me in my tracks and I watched it like
three times.

Speaker 1 (03:52):
There's an ad about cell phones giving us tumors.

Speaker 5 (03:54):
Yeah, because I guess they have a product that'll help us.

Speaker 1 (03:56):
Like, are you endorsing this product?

Speaker 4 (03:57):
No, we don't have.

Speaker 5 (03:58):
To say the product because I've no edy if it works.
I'm just saying it showed up. Like, but the fear
in the voice and what they're saying, and then the
images like it has this graphic of your brain and
tumors growing on it feels legit.

Speaker 1 (04:09):
Right here, play it.

Speaker 7 (04:10):
Radiation from our five G and Wi Fi devices in
excess can be harmful to our health.

Speaker 1 (04:15):
Okay, so I'll get you two words here. Can be
number one, radiation in excess. They're not defining excess. He
doesn't then can be okay, that's like saying promotes growth
of something. What does that even mean? It means it's
Environment's exactly right, it might help. First of all, you
don't think these funds go been tested a thousand times?

Speaker 4 (04:34):
This is he addresses, go ahead.

Speaker 1 (04:36):
Oh, nobody is talking about it.

Speaker 7 (04:37):
The real problem is that the government did not update
safety standards for these devices. The last time they were
updated was in nineteen ninety six, when smartphones didn't exist.

Speaker 1 (04:47):
Now it's probably right, all right, moving on, there's one
making right now. Well, I've always said we had we
haven't done enough testing on the phones. But it's either
we're gonna believe this dude or the government and both
kind of seeing crokend Let's be honest. Yeah, so I
don't believe him anymore. But I mean, there's there's got

(05:08):
to be something to waves, skull, head, brains, radiation, all that.
But do I think it's just gonna pop up in
an Instagram ad where he's the one that knows the secret.
How much it cost us? I can get it?

Speaker 5 (05:20):
Wow?

Speaker 1 (05:20):
Is it hat?

Speaker 5 (05:21):
No, it's a chip that you like put on the
outside of your film right here, and it helps, like
I guess, suck up some of the.

Speaker 4 (05:26):
Radiation, not all of it.

Speaker 1 (05:29):
Oh, I'm going to google.

Speaker 5 (05:30):
Do you want to know what he said about time
or do you want him to say it?

Speaker 1 (05:33):
Well, you're killing time right now, so just say something.

Speaker 5 (05:36):
Okay, Yeah, he said that seventeen minutes a day on
your phone for ten years is where we really get
into trouble. And you know that for the last ten
years we've been on our phones for seventeen minutes a day.

Speaker 1 (05:46):
But I don't know he's telling the truth, Like, what's
what's the source trust me, bro I don't know he.

Speaker 5 (05:50):
Mentioned a bunch of scientists. I edited him out.

Speaker 1 (05:55):
I know this stuff gets me too sometimes, but I'm like,
how does he know? And then I'm like, what if
he's the only person who does know? And he's like yelling,
I got the info and no one will listen. In
the end, though, I'm not gonna buy it from Instagram
because they've popped up a sad I appreciate you sharing that,
but I would they have done the same thing, and
I'd have been like, I gotta bring this to the show.
They're gonna freak out, all right. Let's go Ray from
Mountain Pine and Arkansaw. His therapist says he missed out

(06:15):
on being a kid. So we get some pringles and
pop the lid, Bobby Bone, Thank you, thank you, thank you.
This is a sad song. I want to play here,
just a little sad music. This has been very difficult.
I want everybody to know that the last six weeks,

(06:35):
five weeks been hard. This whole fall has kind of
gone to s because you feel like I have no value,
no worse because Arkansas just they can't win. I thought
they were gonna be good this year. Put a lot
a lot into it, and I have dreams now being sad.
That's where it comes to me. They came to me

(06:57):
last time. I had a dream about being sad because
Arkansas couldn't win a game, and my dream it's affecting
my dreams. That's sad on sad like that's my dream
of being sad, that I'm sad, and I wake up
and I'm so I need to reevaluate my priorities because
it's affecting me in other places and just watching a
game and doing a sports show, I'm having literal dreams
about how sad I am the Arkansas is losing. So

(07:19):
I'm just letting you guys know I will be talking
to my therapist about it. I'm gonna try to lose
some of the prioritization of letting a game affect my life.
Express trying because when I woke up this morning, I
was like, did I have a dream that I was sad?
Or am I just sad? In both?

Speaker 5 (07:37):
It's both.

Speaker 1 (07:38):
I had a dream I was walking around and sad
music was playing over the speakership where I went because
Arkansas couldn't win a game. So you're not gonna watch
football on Satdays, No, I want to Yeah, okay, I have
drunk kings, baby, I watch us play Alabama eleven the
draftings okay yeah, never taken me out. I still got
my Arkansas hoodie on. I bleed red. Yeah we all do.
But still I'm blood throat. Yeah yeah yeah.

Speaker 4 (07:58):
What would you ever like?

Speaker 1 (08:01):
I'm never gonna stop watching it fast.

Speaker 4 (08:04):
It was my question.

Speaker 5 (08:06):
Because just begin of betting, and I know that's fun
for you too, but would you ever like if you
knew Arkansas was gonna lose? Like, would you ever bet
for Alabama?

Speaker 8 (08:15):
Ever?

Speaker 6 (08:16):
Walk?

Speaker 1 (08:16):
Never? Wow? I would rather take all the winnings because
on our show twenty five Whistles, I tell people exactly
how much I bet for the whole week, every single bet.
Like I said, I bet all this much. This is
my plus or minus. I would take everything I won
this last week, which is a lot, and give it
all up for a win. Amy, you just don't bet
that game get away from that game. Was just asking
so because I had a dream that I was sad.

(08:38):
I feel like it's a little too much and I
need to reevaluate my priorities. So everybody, now, don't go
too drastic.

Speaker 4 (08:44):
Keep us posted this is good.

Speaker 1 (08:46):
I come in a hate football. I hypnotize it out
of myself completely. So that's where we are. I just
wanted to share that with everybody. And I do have
them Arkansas hoodie and still love Arkansas. I also love
Kansas State, though now never never as much so Arkansas.
That's pretty good, pretty good, I like them. Let's open
up the mail bag.

Speaker 9 (09:03):
You friends the gay mail and were reading all the air.
It's something we call Bobby's mail bag.

Speaker 1 (09:09):
Yeah, hello, Bobby bones. I attended a parent teacher and
I with my fourth grade daughter about a month ago.
While I was there, her teacher was very friendly towards me,
too friendly, let's call her miss A. Once miss A
confirmed my single status through small talk, she started centering
her attention on me, very obviously, not paying as much

(09:32):
attention to the other parents in attendance. As we were leaving,
miss A asked me to stay back for a second
while my daughter waited in the hall. She asked me out.
I politely declined for two reasons. One she's my kid's teacher,
and two I really wasn't interested. She seemed okay, it's time.
But now two months later, my daughter, who was getting
straight a's and b's is getting c's and d's. Oh.

(09:54):
When I asked her what had happened, she said she
didn't know, but that miss A didn't like her very much.
I think, I see what's happening here. But believe if
I confront her with my suspicions, she'll say I'm being eocentric?
And how do I prove otherwise? How do I deal
with this? Sign single dad? First of all, the a's

(10:15):
and b's, two c's and d's. I think if there
is no difference in how your daughter is acting, or
if she's not getting any trouble, that is a weird
drop off.

Speaker 4 (10:23):
It's a weird drop off, a huge red flight.

Speaker 1 (10:25):
And if it starts happening right when that happened, right
when she says you want to go out and you
say no, don't. But let's first about you. What are
you being ecocentric? Do you even think? Do you think
it's about you? There's a chance it's not okay? If
you for sure, like, no, I really think this is
about me. I have the perfect solution. You call miss
A and you say, hey, look, I know it was

(10:46):
awkward a little bit when I said I didn't want
to go out with you. But I do want to
go out with you, but it needs to be when
my daughter's out of your classroom. He's not attractive to her, yes, esh.
And then once a dad believes the classroom, you don't
never go out with her.

Speaker 4 (10:58):
Oh yes, we need to lead this all for a year.

Speaker 1 (11:01):
Anything on you just say hey, I've been thinking about
the conversation that we had. This is if you really
feel this is happening, you're not doing it for you,
doing it for your daughter. Yeah, I really I've really
been thinking about this, and I just couldn't say yes then.
And here's why. One, my daughter is still in your class,
and I don't want her to be getting favor because

(11:22):
she's in your class. Other kids, other parents will be upset.
So if it's okay with you, I'd love to go
out with you. But after my daughter ends up finishing
your grade, and then boom, she finishes the grade, and
then you decide you don't go out there anymore, and
then everybody wins, except for the teacher who is mean
to begin with. But then you set up a date
and then you don't show up. You don't do that,
you just cancel it. After she finishes her grade and
gets her final groa.

Speaker 4 (11:41):
The teacher already sounds a little off her.

Speaker 1 (11:45):
Feelings, but she can't affect your kid anymore.

Speaker 4 (11:48):
She'll kill you this right.

Speaker 5 (11:49):
That's okay, you kid, this is a Lifetime Original movie
in the works.

Speaker 1 (11:55):
You're not saying you're keeping yourself from dating anybody, or
everybody changes their mind on going out with people. I
would listen if it were me. That's what I would
do to save my kid.

Speaker 4 (12:03):
I mean, you could do like a hand something about you.

Speaker 1 (12:05):
Oh my god, that's even worse.

Speaker 3 (12:06):
You just like took it from zero. I mean, you
could do Forrest Gump.

Speaker 1 (12:12):
What's up, Jenny? You know when Forrest needs to get
in school with better grades.

Speaker 2 (12:18):
Oh oh, he's on vacation, comes over. Your mama sure
does care about your school. Yeah, but I wouldn't do
that though. I would just say, hey, I've been thinking
about it. I'd actually love to go out. I just
feel comfortable saying that.

Speaker 1 (12:31):
Then. But after she finishes.

Speaker 2 (12:33):
Your grade, if you did tell her that and the
grades changed immediately, I mean, there's your answer.

Speaker 1 (12:37):
So that's good. Boom oh true. But waiting the whole
school too much? What do you mean waiting. You never
have to do anything, you know, I think principle do
you want none of this is go to the principal. No,
I don't think so. Then they're gonna move your kid
from her class. It's going to be all dramatic. I'm
just trying to keep my kid uninvolved.

Speaker 5 (12:56):
Okay, okay, there is a one percent chance the kid
just as making that greats now.

Speaker 1 (13:01):
I agree. Yes, That's why I'm saying, like, has their
attitude changed over the last few months or anything in
her life that would have caused her to drop off?

Speaker 5 (13:07):
Right, That's why I think you could go to maybe
the school counselor or something.

Speaker 1 (13:10):
I fake it because even if she has had her
grades fall off for real, maybe teacher boosom because she
was about to who with you, so she thinks that's
my advice. I like it. It's risky, maybe your best
advice ever. Thank you. I'm not saying it's integrity filled,
but I'm looking out for the kid number one. Oh good,
that's it. Thank you. That's the mail bag. Close it up.

Speaker 4 (13:28):
We got your game mail and we read on you.

Speaker 9 (13:32):
Now it's finding the clothes Bobby fail.

Speaker 5 (13:34):
That you.

Speaker 1 (13:36):
My Bobby Bone show. Recommends something to watch. Can everybody
go around the room and recommends something to watch? Eddie?
I watched Beckham.

Speaker 2 (13:45):
It's the documentary on Netflix about David Beckham. I thought
it was gonna be more about the Beckhams, like Posh,
Spice and David, But it's more about David's career and
all that.

Speaker 1 (13:54):
That's very sports. Uh no, because I need a new
sport because I told you I'm sad about Arkansas. Right Hey,
so football, yeah, you can do that. But it's it's interesting,
like living in America.

Speaker 2 (14:03):
I don't think we realized how important David Beckham was
to his country and to Europe in general. Pretty amazing
and so his story is crazy. But a few things
I learned about him is that he, uh, kind of
a selfish dude, Like, kind of a selfish guy.

Speaker 1 (14:19):
I have to be to be a superstar. Yeah, what
do you mean selfish? Like he wouldn't give hungry kids
a by of the taco Oh wow, no, no, no.

Speaker 2 (14:26):
Like like so when he got married to Victoria and
all that, like he kept changing teams and like she'd
be having babies and he'd be like, I'm moving to Madrid,
I'm moving to Milan.

Speaker 1 (14:35):
I'm moving to America's married and she was like, what
the crap, I'm having a baby like chill and he's like, no,
I gotta go. I don't feel like that selfish. She
feel like he sent up their life for the rest
of their life.

Speaker 2 (14:45):
And here's another thing I learned, Like man, the British,
the British soccer fans are brutal, like they were mean
to him. But then at the end of the documentary,
I'm like, do I feel bad for David Beckham because
he kind of has it all? I know he got
bullied a lot by fans and all that stuff, but
like pretty good?

Speaker 1 (15:03):
Who do you feel worse for David Beckham? Or like
night Jones with the Patriots it's a bit of that happening, right,
but bigger scale.

Speaker 4 (15:09):
What what's what's going on with Mac Quarteback with the Patriots?

Speaker 1 (15:12):
Sucks? But the team sucks and it's just dramatic now
because it sols. But Beckham the documentary is really good. Hey,
thank you, Eddie. One episode or a series? It's a series.
I think it's four episodes. Hey, Abby, would you come
to the microphone the Bobby Bone Show? Recommend something to watch?

Speaker 10 (15:27):
What did you watch so it's it came out in
twenty sixteen on Hulu, but it's called eleven twenty two
sixty three, and that's the date JFK was assassinated.

Speaker 1 (15:35):
Eleven twenty two sixty three.

Speaker 10 (15:37):
Yeah, and so this guy goes back in time to
the sixties to try to stop it and like solve
who did it and all that, Like, it is crazy.

Speaker 1 (15:46):
I'm watching this.

Speaker 4 (15:46):
It's I could not stop watching it.

Speaker 1 (15:48):
What artist goes two sixty three? I didn't I do? No, man,
that's not it. You were just making it up. No,
it's a song and it goes it's like it yells
at date or something. What the heck is that? It's
like a hip hop artist. I don't know why that's
in my head TONI, Oh man, we're all gonna go crazy.

(16:09):
He's I'm gonna go crazy if we don't figure this out.
What's the name of this show? What?

Speaker 2 (16:14):
He just?

Speaker 1 (16:14):
Who cares yours about? Twenty so good?

Speaker 4 (16:20):
You have to watch it?

Speaker 1 (16:20):
That does sound good?

Speaker 11 (16:21):
Yeah, and it's like, BlimE, No.

Speaker 1 (16:26):
It's an artist. It's an artist who does it. It's like, uh,
it's a rapper. Yeah, Oh my gosh, tip my tongue anyway. Yes,
Caitlin will know. I'm gonna drive everybody crazy until I
get it. Ask hello, can you help me? What's the

(16:47):
uh whatever? The artist in a song he does like
a melody like that, like a rapper. He says nine,
all right, thank you, let me know. Thanks. It's not Drake.
He'd be like, I'm busy, Like, oh, I know, I
know a bit. Okay, thank you Abby. Yeah, all right,
let's go over and check out with Morgan number two.

(17:07):
What do you got?

Speaker 12 (17:08):
It's a show called Lions on Paramount Plus and we've
got Zoe Sedona and Nicole Kidman in it. I know
I'm pronounced that wrong, but it's really good. It's like
about a special ops team in this Liones program where
they basically send somebody in to be like a spy
under this big action thing that happens.

Speaker 1 (17:25):
I did commercials for Paramount Plus because that Paramount Plus,
and that was one of the shows that I mentioned.
Hey you checking this out? Is that cool?

Speaker 5 (17:33):
Oh?

Speaker 13 (17:33):
It's so good?

Speaker 1 (17:34):
Zoe Saldonna, Zoe Saldona. I looked it up, so it's good.

Speaker 12 (17:38):
Huh Yeah, it was really good, Like I binged it
in one day.

Speaker 13 (17:41):
That's how good.

Speaker 1 (17:41):
It was Wow. How many episodes did you watch?

Speaker 4 (17:43):
I think there's eight.

Speaker 1 (17:44):
Wow, that's great. Twenty get that whatever that is? Natia two,
Natia two. Okay, lunchbox, do you have anything? Yeah?

Speaker 3 (17:53):
Big Brother, let me tell you a great seasons. No,
it's a great season of Big Brother. They made a
twist where one of them in the house is a
mom and a son and no one knows. So a
mom and a son are in the house and they
can't let anybody know where else. They're gonna get voted
out immediately. Dude, you want to talk about drama, them
trying to hide it and not show that they you know,
like they can't.

Speaker 1 (18:11):
Hug and kids. Me like, oh, I love you mom.
Night Mom. It's just you go doact like they're random stranger.
How hard would that's crazy? Finally, mine is called Invasion.
It's on Apple TV. Plus. My wife's like, we should
watch the show called Invasion, and I'm like, Aliens, sign
me up. I should to get turned on aliens. And
so really it's about what happens to the world as
aliens invade. It's not like the Will Smith movies where

(18:34):
they're fighting all the aliens and like the first five
or six episodes, and it's literally about how everybody's reacting
to it. So it's very much a sociology type thing
until later. There's some real dramatic stuff happening now later
in the first season, but they just started a second season,
and that's why she figured out about it. It's crazy,
so we don't fight them where I am now. I
don't want to spoil too much because at first I
just thought it was only the sociology of how people

(18:55):
would react in groups in different parts of the world
when aliens invaded. I would think that too, but it
is good. Earth is visited by an alien species that
threatened humanities existence. Events unfold in real time to the
eyes of five ordinary people across the globe. They struggle
to make sense of the chaos unraveling around them. Aliens.
Here we go, we found it. Bet You know who
told me, Taylor, hold on right when you turning that

(19:18):
old turn out down. Here's Kyle's message. Are you talking
about like seventeen thirty eight A.

Speaker 4 (19:24):
I'm like, hey, what's Setty?

Speaker 8 (19:28):
Well?

Speaker 1 (19:28):
Pretty well, but that's not the day. I didn't know
the date. It was a melody of the numbers. I
knew she had me seventy eight. Our abby show was called, uh,
all right, thank you, that's stuff we recommended. It's time for.

Speaker 5 (19:46):
The good news produce already.

Speaker 2 (19:52):
Ashley is a mom of two lives in Evansville, Indiana.
She decided to take the kids to the west Side
Nutclub Fall Festival.

Speaker 1 (19:59):
I love the old nut one of the best. Yeah,
one of the best.

Speaker 2 (20:01):
So she's out there with the kids and her three
year old son, Maddox is a pitching a fit.

Speaker 1 (20:06):
He's throwing a tat in tantrum. He's upset about something. No, no, Mom,
I'm not gonna go there. No, I don't one, I
don't one. And Mom's embarrassed. Oh my gosh, what do
I do? And I've been in that situation.

Speaker 2 (20:16):
It's embarrassing when your kid is throwing a tantrum, there's
nothing to do. So Ashley's sitting there, Oh my gosh, Michael,
Mike want.

Speaker 1 (20:23):
To stop, Please please please, Maddix stop stop.

Speaker 2 (20:25):
Sixteen year old Michael he's playing a carnival game. Boom,
he pops the balloon, wins a big red panda, and
he's walking down the fair.

Speaker 1 (20:33):
He goes, oh my gosh, that kid's crying. Maybe this
panda will cheer him up.

Speaker 2 (20:36):
What he gives Maddox the big panda that he just won,
and Max is.

Speaker 1 (20:41):
Like, Okay, I feel better now. So thanks to the
sixteen year old who gave this kid. Would I wouldn't
give the kid a panda? And I'm an adult man
that you worked hard for. Yeah, that I probably am
just gonna like, let sit in the house and get
dusty anyway. But for that moment, I'm walking around like
him dingling because I just knocked the barrels down. When
you get that big red panda, you're like, what am

(21:02):
I gonna do this? But it's so valuable For a
bit when they hand it to you, you're like, oh,
I did it, And then like half hour later, when
you got to find a place to put in the car,
you're like, what am I going to do with this? Exactly?
Good for that teenager, that's really cool, hey man, For
a sixteen year old, that's a big deal. That's a
big deal. That's really good. That is what it's all about.
That was tell me something good. The oldest versus the youngest,

(21:23):
elder versus millennial. It's Eddie and Morgan answering questions about
each other's generation. Let's go to the questions. First, Eddie,
come on, who played the ball the role of Bella
Swan in the Twilight film series? What is her name?
Bella Swan? Hmm?

Speaker 14 (21:41):
What is her name?

Speaker 1 (21:44):
Cannot remember her name?

Speaker 2 (21:47):
Oh my gosh, Eileen Edwards.

Speaker 1 (21:53):
Oh that's Shania Twain. I'm sorry, Morgan. Would you like to.

Speaker 12 (21:57):
Steal Yes, Kristen Stewart stealer point.

Speaker 1 (22:00):
Now, let me choose the player here first. He's a
dad of four. I call him the Hispanic who don't panic.
He's the best friend you could ever choose. But don't
talk to him after the cowboys lose It's producer readit? Okay, Morgan,
over to you. What nineteen eighty two Toto song experienced

(22:23):
a research in popularity in twenty eighteen when Weezer recovered it.
Here's a clip of the song I forgot correct. She

(22:43):
runs all our digital on her jeep's dash. You can
see more than one duck.

Speaker 4 (22:52):
Who you can ride with that?

Speaker 1 (22:53):
And she's looking for a partner that she'd like to
have luck with. Oh boy, Oh yeah, scared? Yeah me too?
Yeah yeah, Eddie on What Disney TV Show? Oh Boy,
Hannah Montana's best friend has a name? What's her name? Oh?

Speaker 9 (23:15):
No?

Speaker 1 (23:15):
On the Disney TV show Hand Montana, what's the best
friend's name? Oh, that's gotta be Eileen Aileen Edwards and correct? No, yes,
that's nine Twine Morgan.

Speaker 4 (23:26):
Her name is Lily.

Speaker 1 (23:27):
That's correct. No clue. Morgan, over to you. What American
TV show from the seventies and eighties still holds the
record for the most watched finale ever with more than
one hundred million households tuning into the finale of this show.

Speaker 4 (23:41):
From the seventies and eighties?

Speaker 12 (23:46):
I mean, I mean there's a few that like records
come to mind. Here, Grays in cis.

Speaker 4 (23:57):
Record for the finale this song? Can you read it?

Speaker 1 (24:03):
Or read a long time? Yes? And did an answer
pretty quickly. What American TV show from the nineteen seventies
and eighties still holds the record for most watched finale
ever with one hundred million households tuning in n cis incorrect?

Speaker 8 (24:15):
Seventies and eighties? Yes, Eddie, you need this to stay alive.
I do, I do, And you're alive during this time
and I know it. It's mass that's correct. Let's go, Morgan.
Three Eddie one, Eddie, you have to get this right.

Speaker 1 (24:26):
I know, in order to move on. Give me an
easy one, man, No, I'll give you. Whatever's the list
to hear In the Harry Potter series. What's the name
of the school that Harry Ron and Hermione attend Hogwart? Correct? Morgan,
get this for the win. According to the hit nineteen
eighty one song by Tommy two Tone, if you dial

(24:49):
eight six seven five three oh nine, you will reach
a woman with what first name?

Speaker 5 (24:56):
What?

Speaker 1 (24:58):
Here's a clip you never heard that before? I never
heard that eight six seven? I mean we were born either,
I mean, I mean yeah, okay? Who as if you
call that number? Who answers?

Speaker 15 (25:16):
Rhyme?

Speaker 1 (25:17):
Nine? I guess I was one years old. You know it?

Speaker 7 (25:22):
No?

Speaker 1 (25:23):
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (25:23):
I do, Yes, Bobby, did you know it?

Speaker 1 (25:26):
Yeah? Okay, yeah, boy can answer Eileen?

Speaker 12 (25:31):
Line time?

Speaker 1 (25:34):
Do you need this to tie the game? You go
to sudden death? So here's the clip again, who answers?
If you call this number, Caroline? That your answer? That
your answer? Yes?

Speaker 4 (25:57):
Amy, Jenny, Jenny, Jenny? You around with nine.

Speaker 1 (26:02):
I didn't know that. Morgan.

Speaker 14 (26:03):
You win?

Speaker 1 (26:03):
Nice?

Speaker 9 (26:11):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (26:12):
The season and she did all some powers in your face.
I mean, I need your device and how to handle
the situation because we have somebody on the show wants
to do something nice for somebody else on the show,
but then we have somebody else on the show, that
person who wants to do something not nice to the
person that was going to do something nice to them
without knowing of each other's motives.

Speaker 5 (26:34):
Okay, so what what what what do you need.

Speaker 1 (26:37):
Me to I don't know. I need to help because okay,
so look, so Morgan wants to do something nice for Lunchbox. Right,
Lunchbox has something he wants to do. This is not
nice for Morgan, and they don't know about.

Speaker 4 (26:45):
Each other's Okay, well I just see you.

Speaker 1 (26:49):
Do you want to do Morgan's first?

Speaker 5 (26:50):
I feel like, yeah, we just let this play out, however,
I mean, and then but Morgan has every right to
take back take that, like she you can do it first,
and then lunch fucking do his thing, and then she
can decide this thing.

Speaker 1 (27:04):
Morgan, Yeah, you go first. You want to do something
nice for Lunchbox, go ahead.

Speaker 12 (27:08):
Well yeah, he came on here and he said I'm
not a team player because I didn't get him a
free Titans box that has some merchant.

Speaker 1 (27:15):
It two years in a row, Tennessee Titans, the football
they send jackets and hoodies and yeah, it's awesome. You
did not get one, did not get one two years
in a row. But I mean nobody got one except
for Morgan, I'm exactly.

Speaker 3 (27:24):
But whenever stuff comes to the studio, school was like, oh,
this person got left off the list, and they hit
up the people and be like, just so you know,
these are all the people on the show.

Speaker 1 (27:31):
So never said, Morgan, what did you do?

Speaker 4 (27:34):
So I went to.

Speaker 12 (27:35):
My guy Nate at the Titans and I said, hey, listen,
Lunchbox has been crying about not getting his own box.

Speaker 1 (27:41):
Is there any way you can send one up here?

Speaker 13 (27:42):
And you know what, he.

Speaker 1 (27:44):
Did one for him. And if there's a jacket at
hoodie Yeah, talking about yes, how is there a catch?

Speaker 12 (27:51):
Well, I was going to make him have to give
everybody on the show one compliment in order to.

Speaker 4 (27:56):
Receive the box.

Speaker 1 (27:57):
So sincere compliment.

Speaker 4 (27:59):
Yeah, like a genuine complement. Everybody has to have one.

Speaker 1 (28:01):
Okay, Lunchbox, you need to compliment everybody in the room here,
and you do that Sincere, And if you feel like
it's a joke, at ol Morgan, don't give him the box,
all right, I will do that Amy. First, Amy is
a good mom.

Speaker 4 (28:13):
Thank you.

Speaker 1 (28:13):
Wow, there you go. We're starting strong. Good job Eddie.
Eddie's a good editor. Well, thank you. Thanks.

Speaker 12 (28:23):
Let's try to take two on that one.

Speaker 1 (28:24):
Yeah, try to be it's a little more personal. Yeah,
Eddie's a copanic No, but that's not that's that's data
as Amy says. Yeah, go ahead, try hard, dude, you
can do this.

Speaker 7 (28:37):
Eddie is.

Speaker 1 (28:40):
Now reliable. Bobby's turned him into reliable, Like he shows
up now reliable.

Speaker 4 (28:45):
I thought.

Speaker 5 (28:48):
That's a compliments like eighty percent.

Speaker 12 (28:52):
You said now, or you could have just said he's reliable.

Speaker 1 (28:54):
Yeah, you give it to him. We'll circle back. Okay,
we'll circle back on Mike. Mike d is reliable. It's reliable.

Speaker 4 (29:07):
You can't use the same one first.

Speaker 1 (29:08):
That didn't count. Ready, you can do a different one. Well,
she said I couldn't use that, okay, but but I
just said, you can't waste it.

Speaker 3 (29:17):
Yeah, I gotta usually feel that way. He is why,
like whenever he had something to do, he's there.

Speaker 1 (29:22):
Okay, Okay, we'll take it. Morgan. Uh, Morgan has a
good personality.

Speaker 4 (29:29):
Yeah, wide.

Speaker 1 (29:34):
Bobby is a go getter. You can look at him
when he's just using like one that he keeps looking
down when he says it. I'm looking Morgan, look at
the person. I gotta look at Morgan once I say
to see. What she says is go get her? Acceptable?

Speaker 4 (29:50):
You feel compliment?

Speaker 3 (29:53):
It doesn't even It's just you know you're a go getter.
You see something, you want it, you go get it.
That's a go getter.

Speaker 4 (29:59):
You can say Bobby is very hard working.

Speaker 1 (30:01):
No, don't give him.

Speaker 12 (30:04):
No, I'm just trying to help you.

Speaker 1 (30:05):
You you give me a different one. Since here I did,
I said, go get her. Guys, be kind. This is
hard for I know, real hard. This is why I
did it. Bobby is talented, Yeah he is. I just
feel like I want to get off this part. Okay,

(30:27):
let's go back to Eddie. Eddie can cook a good chicken.
That's true.

Speaker 4 (30:31):
That's a compliment.

Speaker 1 (30:33):
Okay, let's give a lunchboxes box now much box before
you open the box, before you open the box. I
think we should go and let you see what you
were gonna do with Morgan. Oh yeah, but the problem is, Morgan,
I don't even know if I felt comfortable with him
saying it. It's one of those where I have to like,

(30:53):
I feel like I should run it by her because
Lunchbox has he didn't care. I'll just say whatever, which
we love him for. But also, what is it co
sho favor. Lunchbox wants to expel the team Morgan and
say he saw something here. We go, Oh, I know
what it is. I know what this is. I know
what this. Do you think he can say it? Amy? Yes? Amy?

Speaker 4 (31:17):
Yes, Okay, I think he can say it.

Speaker 5 (31:19):
And I have my reasons why reason why?

Speaker 3 (31:23):
Yeah, say, I'm just saying happy birthday, though, Morgan, I
am so impressed that you celebrated your thirtieth birthday in style.
And I mean talking Hickey style. I mean she comes
back from California and she thinks, oh, I mean, Cali,
I'm drunk.

Speaker 1 (31:39):
I can make out with some random dude and no
one will ever know.

Speaker 3 (31:41):
The only problem is he got a little sucky sucky
on her neck and next thing you know, it's like, Oh,
I got a.

Speaker 1 (31:48):
Cali Hickey alert.

Speaker 3 (31:50):
That's what he's Hicky alert, Hicky alert, and I got
photo evidence of the hicck he said.

Speaker 1 (31:55):
It last night? Yeah, Well, what do you want to
say about this?

Speaker 12 (31:57):
Okay, I would like to say, I do have something
on my next that it's a burn.

Speaker 4 (32:01):
I literally burn myself with the girl.

Speaker 1 (32:03):
Every girl would say that. Every girl says it's always
a burn. You do want to know why because they
never admitted a hick lunchbox.

Speaker 4 (32:09):
I would like to you know here, let's this is.

Speaker 12 (32:13):
Also now the second time he has done this, and
you said last time that if he brings that he
spilled the tea, that is not accurate.

Speaker 4 (32:19):
He gets the pillory.

Speaker 1 (32:21):
No, that's not how it works. It is that's not accurate.
She didn't have a hickey. Also, box is not a hickey.

Speaker 5 (32:28):
She just did.

Speaker 1 (32:29):
Literally you look at it on the other side of
your neck. Let's do it, Morgan. Do you want him
to keep the box?

Speaker 12 (32:36):
The box if he goes in the pillary Look, that's
a good good stuff.

Speaker 1 (32:40):
You can keep the box if you go on the pillory.
What do you wanna do? I keep in the box, Okay,
then go in the pillory pillar later. Yes, Yes, here's
a voicemail from last night. I just want to say
I love Bobby Bones every morning, take my kids to school,
going to work, having a bad day, having.

Speaker 13 (32:57):
A good day.

Speaker 12 (32:58):
I seriously just enjoy listening to Bobby Bones in the morning.

Speaker 1 (33:02):
Levey guys, thank you by me. She means all of us.
I don't enjoy listening to me. I enjoyed listening to
all of us. Yes, here's another.

Speaker 16 (33:11):
One, scambler scammel Ert. This is probably a non scammel Ert,
but just got got onto Morgan wall And tickets for
his shows in Atlanta. Currently trying to dispute the payment
with my bank. The tickets were not real and I
got got. Don't fall for the too good to be
true cheap good seat tickets that are listed on Facebook

(33:34):
because I got.

Speaker 1 (33:35):
Got Yeah, everything was wrong with that too good to
be true Facebook? And what's the normal price? Note not
too good to be Here's the next one.

Speaker 15 (33:48):
I just saw lunch Box on stage at the iHeart Festival.
I'm watching the rerun of it on Hulu. Totally saw
lunch but up on stage for thirty seconds tomorrow. Sounds
great way to go lunch fuck.

Speaker 1 (34:06):
And you can watch this too. Just go to Hulu
and search for the iHeartRadio Music Festival. The whole festival
is up until Halloween. Did you watch you? No? I
haven't seen myself yet I'm surprised. Why not. You're on TV, dude.

Speaker 4 (34:16):
Yeah, yeah, well I'm seeing video.

Speaker 3 (34:18):
People sent me videos of it, so you've seen it
that way, yeah, but I haven't gone back and watched it.

Speaker 1 (34:22):
Here's another voicemail.

Speaker 17 (34:23):
Hello, Bobby Bones Show. I have a morning corny for
Amy's Why didn't it the sculeton want to fight a
crocodile because he didn't have the ducks to do it.
I hope you have will great day. Goodbye.

Speaker 1 (34:37):
Yeah, it's all delivery for that awesome Yeah, speaking of jokes,
Tickets go on sell today at ten eastern for my
charity show down in Vero Beach, Florida for the Ja
co Oen Foundation. That show is December eighth. It's in December,
maybe December eighth, I'm pretty sure, and would love you
to come all for charity tickets at ten am Eastern time,
and you can get those of Bobbybones dot com. Amy's

(35:00):
Pile of stories.

Speaker 5 (35:01):
So if you've got a problem and you want to
solve it creatively, you should let your brain handle it
as an overnight job. So what that means is, right
before you go to bed, you think about your problem
and then.

Speaker 4 (35:11):
Let your subconscious mind.

Speaker 1 (35:13):
Yeah, to think about it, fascination, this never never, this
will never work, says.

Speaker 5 (35:19):
Your subconscious mind will come up with solutions while you sleep,
and then you can check on the problem again the
next morning and see if your brain came up with anything.

Speaker 1 (35:26):
Dumnest thing ever heard? Bones, do you like to like
nip it in the butt right then and there?

Speaker 8 (35:29):
Right?

Speaker 1 (35:29):
Guess if I'm gonna go to sleep and plan on
my brain getting work done while I sleep, why I
even go to sleep? You're not even resting your brain?

Speaker 5 (35:36):
No, No, your brain is doing all kinds of things
while you sleep, Yeah, trying to sleep. It's tiling things away,
deciding what you're gonna remember, but also can't check in
with it.

Speaker 1 (35:44):
Be like, hey, brand, you're good. I'm gonna go back
to sleep. If you can still got this, There is
no way I would trust that. It's like trusting an alarm,
no alarm clock. I'm gonna let my internal alarm clock
wake me up, risky. Now, my alarm clock maybe wakes
me up once a month. I'm up every morning before
my alarm clock goes off. However, I would never go
to sleep without its set because I know the one

(36:05):
time and I just don't want to risk it, and
I'm not going. Hey hey Brad, I'm gonna go to bed.
Would you mind finishing up this report? I gotta do.
Let's catch you in the morning.

Speaker 5 (36:12):
Never sounds dumb, well read Hoffman. He's the founder of LinkedIn.

Speaker 4 (36:16):
He says that.

Speaker 1 (36:17):
Liberals made up and he's talking about it.

Speaker 4 (36:20):
An overnight John.

Speaker 5 (36:21):
I think it was like not like actual war, like oh,
I need to write a whole comedy sketch and go
to bed and you wake up and you have written.
That's not it. It's more so what I used.

Speaker 1 (36:30):
To do with Napster overnight when we had Napster. I
download every song I started with l and I just
go to sleep and I wake up. I want to
have ten thousand new songs. It's awesome.

Speaker 4 (36:37):
Yeah, you know what I mean. If you had a
problem like.

Speaker 1 (36:40):
You're sounds illegal or dumb.

Speaker 4 (36:42):
Okay, Hey, I'm gonna try it.

Speaker 5 (36:44):
So have you ever noticed at checkouts like see, you're
at the gas station and you're buying a bag of
chips whatever, and you look up and there's a mirror
and you see yourself.

Speaker 1 (36:52):
Why sorry, mirror above the funions now up there.

Speaker 5 (36:55):
Like at the behind the cash registered.

Speaker 4 (36:57):
Do you see a mirror? I always thought it.

Speaker 5 (36:58):
Was for the store or to have extra security cameras. Yeah,
and it's a way for other people in stort to
like see you or the clerk or whatever.

Speaker 1 (37:06):
I see, like the corner mirrors look like balls up there.

Speaker 5 (37:08):
Well, there are there are mirrors specifically put in stores
when you're checking out or certain places so that you
can see yourself. So if you are a thief and
you're thinking about taking something, there is something too you
looking at yourself and then feeling guilty and deciding not
to do it.

Speaker 2 (37:24):
So I'm starting with the man in the mirror, Ooh,
I'm not gonna steal these funians.

Speaker 5 (37:32):
Yeah, it deters potential shoplifters. It turns out that mirrors
have been bound to make people feel guilty if they're
doing something wrong.

Speaker 2 (37:39):
So the reflections like, hey, we shouldn't steal these funions.

Speaker 1 (37:42):
It's like a TV show. And I start to talk
to you, ay, man to me, you know, I'm you no, Okay.

Speaker 5 (37:48):
It doesn't mean you won't do it, but you're less
likely to. So maybe that could work at home too.
You're making a decision, go look at yourself Luke Bryan
performed with the zipper down.

Speaker 1 (37:58):
I've that.

Speaker 4 (37:59):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (38:00):
He was doing a show in Florida, and an audience
member finally let him know, and after zipping it up,
he pretty much scolded everyone else in the crowd for
not telling him sooner.

Speaker 1 (38:08):
Yeah, that stinks and I've done it. I did a
million dollars show too. In the Yellow Show.

Speaker 4 (38:13):
He was in Florida. You're in Florida.

Speaker 1 (38:14):
Yeah, Florida. The gravity in Florida is very zippery right down?
All right?

Speaker 4 (38:19):
Em Al, maybe that's my pile.

Speaker 1 (38:22):
That was Amy's pile of stories.

Speaker 3 (38:24):
It's time for the good news, Bobby.

Speaker 1 (38:30):
Earlier this week, after grabbing some items from the grocery store,
Linda Martin went back to a car and noticed that
two of her three dogs were gone. She said, I
went to one little of groceries and there was only
one dog in the car, not three. So she gets
on social media, it's like, did we see these dogs?
Oh my god, I'm here. One of Linda's friends saw

(38:51):
her post. I was like, all right, I'm coming out
to look. So then as she's driving to go look
near the grocery store, a car drives by and she
sees what looks like two of those dogs in somebody
else's car driving down the road.

Speaker 4 (39:02):
Oh, like they were stolen, so hase.

Speaker 1 (39:05):
This person follows the car, the car stops. Her friend
takes a picture of the dogs, sent it to her
shows that's them. Took a picture the license plate. Police
were alerted at the situation, responded and then arrested the
thief who took the dogs because the thief said that
you wanted to save the dogs. Now here is specialist

(39:25):
Jeffrey Williams talking about animal crimes here in seaside. We
don't take animal crimes lately.

Speaker 3 (39:31):
We will prosecute to the fullest extent of the law
for animal crimes.

Speaker 1 (39:34):
So they save the dogs, what about the third dog?
You're sitting there by themselves going, am I not good
enough to be taken? Exactly? If you want to save them.

Speaker 5 (39:40):
Save all three, they ran out of time.

Speaker 1 (39:42):
That's fum the judge, I'm like, you're lying because you
didn't save all three. Correct, the pups were reunited. Everybody's happy.
But that is crazy. It's all so crazy that she
saw it driving by in the car. Yes, it is
thank you in rhythm, that's what it's all about. That
was telling me something good Lunchbucks. Do you know John Brennan,

(40:03):
John the Real World?

Speaker 5 (40:05):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (40:05):
Yeah, yeah, okay, John Brennan. He would be the cowboy
from it, like season two.

Speaker 1 (40:11):
John Brennan was an eighteen year old, a spiring country
singer when he was scouted at a studio by an
MTV exec who said, you're the kind of person we're
looking for for the Real World Los Angeles. Man, see,
I never got scouted like that. So did you like
him on the show? Yeah, he's good.

Speaker 3 (40:26):
He was interesting. He didn't really party or anything. He
was kind of like and he didn't do the you know.

Speaker 1 (40:35):
I don't know anything. No, No, he was waiting for marriage.
Got it. So People Magazine has a story where he's
out talking about now how that the reality thing was
a bit of a struggle, and he's driving uber now
and he's doing anything he can't so and I guess, oh, man,
the point is one, I'm glad he's out sharing a
story and he's working hard, probably just providing living for
his family. Wait, he's a singer, though, we should bring

(40:57):
him in. And then two that you think if you
just go on Real World you're set for life. Yeah.
Back in the well.

Speaker 3 (41:03):
I mean, he obviously didn't do a good job of
parlaying it into the challenge like he right now to play.
He should still going to be on the challenge right now.
If he's driving Uber, he can take time off from
that and go on the challenge. They are always looking
for people.

Speaker 9 (41:17):
I know.

Speaker 1 (41:18):
You consult them, then I'll tell them. He said that
a big problem was that he would get recognized and
record Laels will be like, wait, oh your reality star.
Oh that'll never last, flashing the pans.

Speaker 3 (41:27):
Oh yeah, they didn't understand what reality TV was back then,
and that's crazy that he was just trying to get
a record deal. They recognized him, said put him on
the real world, and then he came back and he
didn't make it.

Speaker 1 (41:37):
In the nowadays, that would be huge.

Speaker 3 (41:39):
Every record Labe will be like, oh yeah, sign that guy,
Sign that guy.

Speaker 1 (41:42):
He has a song called true Story, which is number
twelve on the Positive Country Music charts. There's a positive
country music I don't know, but where's the negative country
music chart? That'd be tough too. We could play a
bit of it in a second, if you guys want. Oh,
I'd love to hear it. I'd love to hear it.
He occasionally regrets what reality fame did to his life.
He stayed true to he was and open about his

(42:02):
faith while making friends. It's from People magazine.

Speaker 5 (42:05):
Which could we give lunchbox the language to what he
was like couldn't say, and it's abstinence.

Speaker 4 (42:10):
He was practicing.

Speaker 1 (42:11):
At somebody couldn't say he didn't know the word. Okay,
he was holding it back. No, no, no, he was
not doing it until marriage, right, right, couldn't. But why
do we have to say abstinance? We don't say abstinance.
You just say he wasn't doing it until marriage.

Speaker 4 (42:27):
Okay? Is the word for it?

Speaker 1 (42:28):
One word for it as abstinence? Yep. Everyone, Then you'll
be like doing what And then you got to talk
even more because I feel like you're trying to sound
smart when you say that. On the words are there?

Speaker 5 (42:38):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (42:38):
Okay, to abstain from something. Okay, we're gonna go do
the investigative, Corny. We have ninety seconds and then we're
going to play some of this song in just a minute. Okay,
here we go. This is Amy Ready, Ready, Ready, team ready,
all right, let's go.

Speaker 5 (42:54):
Where do spiders do their Halloween shopping?

Speaker 1 (42:57):
Web? The world Web.

Speaker 4 (43:00):
Okay.

Speaker 5 (43:00):
What do you call a skeleton that won't do any work?

Speaker 4 (43:05):
Bones? Okay? What's a vampire's favorite kind of dog? Okay?

Speaker 5 (43:12):
Okay, okay, where do vampires deposit their pay check?

Speaker 4 (43:18):
My gosh? Okay? What do you call a ghost? Hornet?

Speaker 1 (43:23):
Booby record record? Okay?

Speaker 4 (43:31):
What's a vampire's favorite TV show?

Speaker 1 (43:34):
Was very hard blood?

Speaker 5 (43:36):
True?

Speaker 1 (43:36):
That could be. It's got to be whatever they do
in your sheet.

Speaker 4 (43:39):
No, yeah, vampire, you cannot is good.

Speaker 1 (43:42):
No, it has to do us on the page, and
we will not accept the championship. That's not real. What
us is? Blood? Blood? Dragon blood? Okay, do it again.

Speaker 5 (43:51):
What's a vampire's favorite nerdy TV show?

Speaker 1 (43:54):
You can't give us hands a legitimate I can big
big blood during keep going, big bloody, big blood, big bang,
big bloody, big thing.

Speaker 9 (44:05):
Yes?

Speaker 15 (44:09):
Why?

Speaker 16 (44:10):
Why?

Speaker 4 (44:10):
What?

Speaker 5 (44:10):
What's a ghost favorite soft drink?

Speaker 1 (44:14):
Boo drink? Doctor Pepper? Who's soda PSI?

Speaker 3 (44:16):
Scary soda sprite sprite his spirit by giving up?

Speaker 5 (44:27):
Why are you giving How can you spot a wealthy vampire?

Speaker 11 (44:32):
Yes?

Speaker 5 (44:33):
Okay, okay, we can't have that.

Speaker 1 (44:41):
We can't have big fant white in the middle. I
didn't I didn't feel good about it.

Speaker 4 (44:46):
Lusbock's got mountain boo.

Speaker 1 (44:47):
Okay, we can have that one, but you can't. That
was already over. But you can't give us tints or
it's not a legit champion.

Speaker 5 (44:53):
I should have said I didn't even think about true Blood,
so therefore I needed to insert the word nerdy, or
y'all would have never gotten there was that one.

Speaker 1 (44:59):
I big fang theory. I don't like I don't like
people giving me charity. That wasn't So did we break
the record? Yes? Oh, I know we broken news. It
didn't feel good. It feels great. Come on, let's celebrate. Okay,
go ahead, let's celebrate clear Eyes Borts. We got six
new record. Yeah, and that's awesome. I don't think I

(45:24):
don't feel good about it. I do want to feel good.
I want here's some positive country. Oh, come on, we
have it. We have it now. Okay, here we go.

Speaker 3 (45:31):
Right.

Speaker 1 (45:31):
The name of this song is True Story by John Brennan. Okay,
here we go. A New amerriaging dream on me.

Speaker 9 (45:37):
May good?

Speaker 1 (45:38):
Understand all right? Healthy super fans or super dorks, they're
Costco super fans who have traveled over two hundred and
twenty thousand miles. They visit over two hundred Costco warehouses.
They've done them all here in the States and in
fourteen countries total. They they love the Mega store. Now

(46:01):
I'm gonna read you this story, but I want to
ask you, what's the nerdiest thing that you do. I
don't think it's gonna be as nerdy as this. I
can appreciate if they love doing it, good good for them.
But in the last seven years, David and Susan Schwartz
have went to visit over all these Costcos. Wow, I
mean hundreds of Costco stores that they've been too. Well,
what's the difference. Nothing? Yeah, they're all kind of the same. Yeah,

(46:23):
they said, we went to Paris and didn't visit a
single museum just to Costco. Our friends really struggled to
understand that. They went on a one thousand, five hundred
and eighty two mile road trip from New York to
Omaha to see the Omaha store. When they checked off
their final Costco in Ohio, they gave him a big
old cake, saying congratulations you do to all of America.
He is a former investment banker, and he was just

(46:46):
kind of like, what do I want to do? I
love Costcos. Let me go drive around to see them all.
Maybe I'll write something about it. But yeah, so that's it.
They're seeing the costcos so healthy super fans.

Speaker 3 (46:55):
Or super dorks super dorks. I mean this is the
dork is the dorks. They've wasted so much money traveling
to costcos when they are literally almost all the same
and they got a cake. I mean the fact that
they said, oh, our friends don't understand the fact they
have friends a shotgut you super dorks.

Speaker 1 (47:13):
Would you go to and think it was fun to
do every major League baseball stadium? Yes, okay I would
say that, but it's all different. No, there are every
major League Baseball They don't have the basis that are
exactly the same distance. They all play by the same
exact rules. Just like every store they built the same dimension.
They probably saw hot dogs there. Yeah, they're very similar. No,
I think going all the costcos to me feels lame.
But I can't really say it's super dork if I'm

(47:35):
not going to call myself a super dork.

Speaker 5 (47:37):
Yeah, but also for Lunchbox, I mean he would travel
the US, visiting all the real world homes.

Speaker 1 (47:41):
And he waited hours to meet a pregnant teenager. Yeah,
she was not pregnant. She already had a kid.

Speaker 5 (47:47):
She was a team mom, though she was famous because
she was a pregnant How long as you way?

Speaker 1 (47:51):
Hour and a half. So what's the nerdiest thing you do? Amy?

Speaker 4 (47:56):
Bird bingo? What bird bingo?

Speaker 1 (47:59):
Yeah? Bingo? Cards was on them.

Speaker 9 (48:00):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (48:00):
I see when you put.

Speaker 5 (48:01):
Up, I mark through it, so I have a laminated
thing and then I have like a dry erase marker,
so that way you can start over, like once you've finished.
And when you see the birds, because sometimes I have
regular visitors at my feet aer and I have others
Like just this week, an owl showed.

Speaker 4 (48:18):
Up in my backyard. I've amazed.

Speaker 5 (48:21):
I've never been able to cross off an owl in
my yard. It's bird being in my yard, not just
you know, if I'm hiking in the park, I don't
get to cross anything off.

Speaker 4 (48:29):
But bart ol check this week.

Speaker 1 (48:33):
Yeah, Eddie, that's cool, Amy uh Man. Okay. So I
spent a lot of time on Google Earth.

Speaker 2 (48:38):
So I watch I watch old black and white movies
and then I find out where they were shot, and
then I go to that location on Google Earth to
see if anything's changed. Sometimes the buildings are still there
and like, that's crazy. And then you move the Google
Earth camera to match what's on the TV screen and
I positive TV screen, Like that's really cool.

Speaker 1 (48:56):
That's so do lunchbox.

Speaker 3 (48:59):
Oh man, I'm gonna admit this. I keep my stats
for my soccer games.

Speaker 1 (49:03):
You're adult rec leag soccer games. That is awesome.

Speaker 4 (49:07):
Can you keep them?

Speaker 16 (49:07):
Were?

Speaker 1 (49:08):
I just write them down, like on a piece of paper.

Speaker 3 (49:10):
Want to get home And I'm like, all right, two
goals scored, one assist, and however many minutes played?

Speaker 1 (49:16):
That's amy? Why do you turn your chair away from him?
Are you cringing a.

Speaker 4 (49:20):
Lot of it?

Speaker 5 (49:21):
I'm like, how many minutes played? Like, have you ever
had to go home and be like one minute?

Speaker 1 (49:26):
No?

Speaker 4 (49:27):
No, okay, what's the lowest?

Speaker 1 (49:29):
Oh, twenty minute. I don't think you would go play
the game if they didn'tell him?

Speaker 3 (49:31):
Yeah, one minute? I wentn't even worth my time. No,
So I just keep the stats. At the end of
the season, I look at him like, oh man, you
had a pretty good season.

Speaker 1 (49:38):
And that through it in the trash and then next
keeping the binders. Do a diary. That's a dear diary.
I made a goal at the three forty mark. Hey,
it felt good.

Speaker 4 (49:49):
You have a little diary now. I don't know if
you made to ask that. I don't I need to
ask about it right now.

Speaker 5 (49:53):
But you have something you're writing in lately. I've never
seen it before I saw this. Yeah, I keep so
many notes on things here with the desk.

Speaker 4 (50:00):
That's new.

Speaker 1 (50:01):
So I keep notes on everything, all right. Notes I
put on my phone, I put. I just needed a
different place for a different set of notes. I like it.
That's what I do, notes, notes, Those are scribbles. I
have daily things I need to accomplish in my phone
that I check every day. I have things during the
show that I need to talk about or do. And
this is other creative projects that I'm working.

Speaker 4 (50:19):
Okay here all right. I just when I watch to
your officeivity you were writing that.

Speaker 5 (50:23):
I was like, Oh, is he journaling? I don't know.

Speaker 1 (50:25):
I think Amy's amazing. That's funny, lunch. If I was
one of us doing it, though, you'd make fun of.

Speaker 4 (50:30):
Us for sure.

Speaker 1 (50:32):
That's why I've never admitted it. Yeah, that's good. That's good. Morgan.

Speaker 12 (50:34):
Do you have anything Yeah, so every Thursday night when
there's a Marvel movie releasing, I go to the premiere.
Like ever since I binge watched the first part of it, now,
I have not missed a single Marvel movie premiere.

Speaker 1 (50:45):
On you, you've been a big Marvel person, Like mm hmm,
Like you're a little too normal to be that into it.

Speaker 12 (50:51):
Oh No, and I love it And I'm dressed up
as multiple characters.

Speaker 1 (50:53):
That's a bad thing. I just don't assume people that
have good balance in their life really get that into
stuff and you're dedicated to that. Yeah, yeah, because again,
you're not hurting anybody. It's fun. No, I like them
going to all the costcos. So super fans don't hurt anybody.
They're enjoying their life and know what it's all about.
I probably one of mine, similar to Eddies. I'll go
on deep dives of every ninety sitcom person in the

(51:14):
history of sitcoms, and I'll read their whole Wikipedia. I'll
go search their Instagram see what they're up to now
or if they're dead or so. I do that. I
think that's why everybody's name that was in a show.
But probably the nerdiest thing is I followed football and
basketball recruiting rankings with all the high school kids. That
was curzy starting in tenth grade. Tenth grade, I mean,

(51:36):
like you want to get their junior year from ten
to eleventh grade, you get your first rating. And so
I'll follow them and I subscribe the man.

Speaker 4 (51:43):
Describe to services following them Now.

Speaker 1 (51:45):
I don't follow them on Instagram, no, but I like
following see where they go. You ever go to their
games or anything, like if they're in town, listen. I
don't want. I know, I don't, but I'm not saying
to It just already feels weird because I'm following what's
sixteen seventeen year old kids are with their life. Yeah,
but somebody's doing that for a job. I know, it's
not my job. Like I'm paying two different services to
do it, just to see where they're going. So that's

(52:06):
probably it now on borders, it's not creepy, but I'm
just really invested. If you follow them on Instagram that
every group, I'm not. I don't follow a single one
of them. That's right. Morgan, did you see Bigfoot?

Speaker 4 (52:18):
I feel like I did.

Speaker 1 (52:20):
Well. I didn't know about the story until Morgan sent
it to me, and then I saw it everywhere, maybe
because I clicked it and yeah, they said it to me.
But they're on a train in Colorado, right, yeah, And.

Speaker 12 (52:29):
You just see this figure walking and I'm telling you, guys,
it doesn't.

Speaker 1 (52:32):
Look like an animal.

Speaker 12 (52:33):
Like I watched this video multiple times, be like it's
a bear, it's a deer, it's something else. This thing
is on two legs and it's huge.

Speaker 1 (52:40):
It's big. It's walking like through the sage brush. This couple,
there's a lot of people on the train. They just
have their their phone and you see it out there
and they're like, what is that. It almost looks like
it's pooping. Yeah, oh yeah, well squad and to hide.
I thought, oh, I thought it was see I went
to pooping, was pooping. So the guy from Wyoming is
a forty four year old contractor. He's not somebody that

(53:01):
hunts big feet. Yeah, so this is not his thing. Yeah.
So they say it was only six seven feet or taller.
It matched the sage in the mountains, so it was camouflaged.
If you asked before our trip, we would have said maybe.
But now we're convinced that's from the New York Post.
What I'm Can you ever see that beef jerky commercial
with a big foot Yeah, that's funny. What I'm convinced

(53:22):
this is somebody screwing with the train.

Speaker 5 (53:24):
Yeah, because to me, I felt like it looked like
they had on camouflage.

Speaker 1 (53:28):
Yeah. No, they just look like the sagebrush the color
of the stage. And that's a really big dude, Like,
come on, all right, but if you put that costume on,
you're gonna be big because the costume's big. But you
believe in aliens, I don't, like. This is the clearest. No,
I don't believe in aliens. What I believe is there's
so much we can't see. I would say bigfoot on Earth.
We've seen everything on Earth. Basically, we have helicopters. We

(53:50):
can fly over all that parts of Earth. Unless it's
in the water, We've seen it.

Speaker 2 (53:53):
This is the clearest footage I've ever seen a big
and it ain't even clear.

Speaker 1 (53:57):
It's not that clear. Why didn'ty zoom me with their
little pinchy and get closer to big butt. I do
not think it's bigfoot. It definitely is not a bear.
He just looks like the Sasquatch commercial, the be shirky guy.
He does look like that. Dude. We'll put it up
you guys want to see it on our Facebook and Twitter.

Speaker 5 (54:15):
You see the video, Yeah, I don't think it looks real.

Speaker 1 (54:18):
What I think it's my messing with the train, like
it's a prank thy.

Speaker 12 (54:20):
He's also out in the open, like it's not like it.
There's things around him that he could be coming from.

Speaker 4 (54:26):
Where where did he come from?

Speaker 1 (54:27):
His mama's bomb? And not only that, you can park
a mile down the road and be like, hey, where
are most of the people in the train? Oh, you're
still in the fake thing? Okay, I think it's a fake.
I think it's a main of costume. You can live
in the mountains, man, You could just be out in
the day like it's just a hairy dude, just one
of the guys. Some czy top a teacher made fourth
graders watch Whinnie the Pooh of the movie. How do
you feel about? That's fine? Right? Fine? Except it was

(54:49):
the horror movie version of it.

Speaker 4 (54:51):
What that exists?

Speaker 1 (54:52):
You don't remember when it came out? No, because whennye pooh,
Whinnie the Pooh, I believe is public domain because it
was written so long ago. You can do whatever you
want with that story. And they made a horror movie
with Winnie the Pooh like a year ago or so.
Didn't know that. You didn't you never saw the po
We talked about it, we did remember you guys ever
listened to the show?

Speaker 13 (55:10):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (55:10):
Something even while it's happening. A fourth grade teacher in
Florida got in trouble for letting his kids watch the
movie Winnie the Pooh, Blood and Honey, Oh My, the
live action horror movie then came out this year. That's
crazy that a teacher would do that on purpose. If
they did it on purpose, if they think they're watching
Winnie the Pooh and Piglet and they put in the
wrong one, I get it. Like the time our teacher

(55:33):
showed us for his hump, that's pretty cool. Do you
want to hear some of the real movie? No, I
don't know if it was. If it was, because we
told it all the time it was. If it was,
it was not a clean movie. And so he says,
you know, he asked the kids what they wanted to watch,
and they said Winnie the Pooh. They turned it on,

(55:53):
they watched it for twenty or thirty minutes, and now
the school's upset. It's called the Academy for Innovative education.
It's pretty innovative, he asked me. It's the charter school.
They decide who to hire and fire. Sounds like keeping
a job. That's okay. If he's a good teacher, and
this is his mess up, he said to me, need
to be fired.

Speaker 5 (56:10):
This does not look like it's for kids at all. Well, no,
it's not a horrible I know it's not, but I mean,
like it's I just question his ability to make decisions.

Speaker 4 (56:20):
But I mean, I'm sure he's a great teacher.

Speaker 1 (56:22):
It is Winnie the Pooh.

Speaker 5 (56:25):
The movie is not even a cartoon right now, I'm
looking at a girl in a hot tub with a rikinion.

Speaker 1 (56:31):
Maybe he wanted to watch it. He was like, Oh,
you guys got six options here.

Speaker 5 (56:34):
It's not even it's not rated, although it is under
the horror category.

Speaker 1 (56:38):
There's no way he should have showed it. But if
this is his first offense, we don't fire him for this.
We just don't be an idiot, because we're all idiots
at times. Agree, Great, Okay, thank you, Let's go to.

Speaker 4 (56:47):
The news Bobby's stories.

Speaker 1 (56:51):
Just twenty eight percent of Americans love their job. Most
Americans are not satisfied with their employment situation. The poll
of thousands of US adults, twenty eight percent said, ah,
it's good. The rest of them like, ah, it ain't good.
I feel like most people myself included, especially early, I didn't.

(57:13):
I thought work was supposed to be miserable because everybody
around me was miserable with their job. Oh yeah, Like
that was my association with going to work. You just
went and you hated it, and that's just what you did.
You put in your time. It's like daytime jail, and
you make money to hopefully pay the bills and struggle
and then you started again next month. Like that was
always how I associated work. It was just misery. And

(57:36):
so I'm very fortunate now where I've been able to
kind of create in carbon paths to have a job
that I love. I love it. I love everything about
it except the early hours, even the pressure of it.
Sometimes it's cool, like I like because you know, I
have to maintain a certain certain rating because I need
that competitive part of it. But I love my job.

Speaker 5 (57:53):
You Yeah, I love my job, and those numbers that
helps give me perspective if I ever don't like it
makes me very thankful that I am one of those that.

Speaker 4 (58:01):
Loves my job because so many people don't.

Speaker 3 (58:03):
Yeah, my job is all right, Okay, I don't hate it,
but I don't. I mean, it's not the most amazing
thing in the world.

Speaker 1 (58:11):
What would be the most amazing job?

Speaker 3 (58:12):
Really?

Speaker 1 (58:12):
What would be the most amazing realistic job? You have
to work though?

Speaker 3 (58:16):
Reality TV star to w's a job, but you would
just do your whole life.

Speaker 1 (58:21):
You can't do that? Why they do it all the time?
Johnny Bananas? What does he do reality TV? I mean
there's probably a few that have.

Speaker 3 (58:29):
CT I mean he just does the challenge ever once
while wins it, wins a million bucks, disappears for a year,
comes back, wins again.

Speaker 1 (58:36):
I mean, what else do you want to do? Let's
take entertainment out of it.

Speaker 3 (58:41):
Oh man, I don't know what I'd do.

Speaker 1 (58:45):
I'd be pretty miserable. I wouldn't like I used to.

Speaker 3 (58:49):
I mean, cart guy at Sam's was pretty good. Delivery
driver wasn't bad. I mean I was making straight cash.
It was enjoyable.

Speaker 1 (58:56):
It's probably different though, now because of all the apps.

Speaker 3 (59:00):
Yeah, that's the problem is that in a lot of
places don't have delivery drivers because they use the grub
Hub and the Uber Eats.

Speaker 4 (59:07):
And all that, or what about a school soccer coach?

Speaker 3 (59:11):
Man, I don't want to because I got to be
a teacher. Like that sucks.

Speaker 1 (59:14):
You could teach history. We had we had coaches that
were awesome coaches, but they didn't care about teaching. They
were garbage teachers. Yeah, and they knew that. You knew
they were garbage teachers. Yeah. I'd had to teach health
because that was you just show videos. You can probably
make anything easy if you're the teacher that's from yahoo. Uh.
Doctors disconnect half of a six year old's brain and

(59:36):
a life changing surgery saw that crazy? Huh? And and
they're not going to reconnect that and they say that
you can. I still have a functioning, like quality life.
So she's six years old. She underwent a ten hour
surgery disconnect half of her brain. She was diagnosed last
year with rats muscins and cephaladis. It's a disease that
in flames your brain. It happens to about five hundred

(59:58):
kids every year. After surgery, her entire left side of
her body has now been turned off. Before the surgery,
she had daily seizures that led to learning disabilities and
temporary paralysis, but it could have been forever paralysis.

Speaker 5 (01:00:14):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (01:00:15):
She was treated with the anti seizure medication and steroids,
but the disease just continued to progress. And the surgery
is now completed. But now the right side is trying
to figure out and they say it will figure out
what the left side's not doing.

Speaker 5 (01:00:28):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (01:00:29):
And doctors say, with a half brain, you can still
live a whole life. It's amazing. She will still be
the same person. They say, the six year old may
lose a bit of peripheral vision and some fine motor
skills with her left hand, but even they don't know
that that's permanent, because again, this is such a rare
thing that they did much less the disease five hundred
kids a year. That's a lot. That's not many. That's
a rare disease. But like shutting off part of your

(01:00:49):
brain is not a normal procedure they do. So whenever
anyone has it done, they obviously monitor and study them
because the brain is so full of nuanced it does
every little thing differently for different reasons.

Speaker 5 (01:01:01):
I'm just sitting here thinking about the people that you
know come up with this sort of stuff, and.

Speaker 1 (01:01:06):
You wonder if at some point you can cut off
half the brain and donate it if only half the
brain is needed, Like, is this temporarily like a back
in the day when they realized you could donate an
organ or cut off part of an organ. Sure, and
they're like what it grows down Now everybody'd be like,
I'll give half my brain. I don't even that anyway.

Speaker 5 (01:01:24):
Yeah, I feel like that's in that case.

Speaker 4 (01:01:27):
So the part they had.

Speaker 5 (01:01:27):
To turn off was the one causing Like if you
removed it and use that somewhere else, oh.

Speaker 1 (01:01:33):
You would, You wouldn't use that part that was that's broken,
Okay broken. I would say if somebody had a completely
healthy brain and somebody had in the future had some
sort of brain cancer disease, ye could could you? I'm
sure you can at some point. Listen, we'ren't going to
advance far technology with technology and technologically until the world
explodes and then it starts over again, the New World whatever.

(01:01:56):
That's just what happens. Have you guys seen that documentary
Terminator too, right? Yeah? Making Sure as a go to
crazy one, Jada Pinka Smith reveals her and Will Smith
have been separated since twenty sixteen. Well, then why they
put us to all this crap. Yeah, I mean smacks
Chris Rock because you're talking about my girl. He'd been
with different six four seven.

Speaker 5 (01:02:14):
Seven years, but even in separation he probably still loves
her in a who knows what kind of way.

Speaker 1 (01:02:19):
But no, but they were making it seem like they
were together, right, and they would do that constantly, like
go hold hands Awards show. It's not our business. But
I mean they were like, here we are and then
people will be like, oh, they're dating other people and
they're like, no, we're not. Yeah, no, you were, you
were not together. No, she admitted it.

Speaker 4 (01:02:38):
She admitted it.

Speaker 1 (01:02:39):
Yeah, yeah, on the Red Talk Table she did. She
came out and did, but she didn't at first. Oh yeah,
did she have a book out?

Speaker 8 (01:02:44):
Now?

Speaker 1 (01:02:44):
Is this what all this stuff's coming? It's from a
primetime special? Oh okay it with Hoda Okay, so yeah, yeah,
she admitted that on the Facebook podcast that they were doing,
but only after it had been a thing for a
long time. And well, a lot of rumors about will
Smith too, but a lot of rumors about me, and
almost all of them are true. Dating apps not really
for dating, some people say. Researchers found that a surprising
number of people are using dating apps for a few

(01:03:06):
reasons that aren't dating. Number one for entertainment, number two
to pass the time, and number three for boosting their
self esteem. I would assume people that say they're using
the dating apps for those three things just aren't getting
enough matches, and so they got to have a reason
they're on the dating apps. It's like, yeah, yeah, I
just use this thing for entertainment, man, Yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:03:22):
Well the boost of self esteem part. Something has to
be coming through, like a match or a compliment or.

Speaker 1 (01:03:27):
A or it's just you just try to match with
people that you feel are lower on the number scale
than you.

Speaker 4 (01:03:32):
Oh, you're not really interesting anyway.

Speaker 1 (01:03:35):
Like me, if I were a six, then I we're
on there. I'd be looking mber twos tell me how
I ought I was okay, wouldn't be looking for raids
to tell me because I wouldn't. That's from cyber psychology,
behavior and social networking. The age old question elevator versus stairs.
We know it's healthy to take the stairs because it's exercise.
It's also faster now to take the stairs if you're
in a hurry. I study from the University of South Carolina,

(01:03:56):
because that's what they do they study elevator versus stairs.
That's what they're doing over there. That roughly, walking up
one flight of stairs was twice as fast as riding
an elevator. Now it starts to get a little different
once you go up like six flights, you start to
get tired. You have to add that in. Yeah, so
if it's like one hundred flights, take the elevator. You
can't keep out that.

Speaker 2 (01:04:13):
But it also depends how many people are in the elevator,
how many stops are you mall factors too.

Speaker 1 (01:04:17):
But I think if you go over like six or
seven flights and just take the elevator, yeah, because it's
gonna take your while, and you're gonna be sweaty, and
you want to me be sweaty here to the bathroom
and wipe your back off of the paper towel. I mean,
so you do that still, I've heard Health magazine with
that story. When did you completely stop gett assistance from
your parents? Financially complete assistance complete? No, we're not giving

(01:04:37):
you anything. What age Amy twenty five, Eddie around thirty,
lunchbox probably eighteen. You live back with your family when
you're working on the show. That's yeah, you lie. You're out, Morgan.
Oh no, that's not financial assistance. You live, you live
with being rent to them, and they were giving you

(01:05:01):
a sit. I'm not believe in that, Morgan.

Speaker 4 (01:05:03):
I think twenty six I remember correctly.

Speaker 10 (01:05:05):
So.

Speaker 1 (01:05:06):
Researchers from North Carolina State University suggest most Americans rely
on their parents for financial support long past their twenties.
They found that two third of adults rely on their
parents for some form of material support between their late
teens and early thirties. Parents continue to help with kids
into their twenties and thirties with monetary gifts, vehicle purchases,
mortgage assistants, business favors, loans, or letting their kids live

(01:05:27):
with them after college. Yeah, mine was a car, like
they gave me their car. That is from sociological perspectives
a research journal. I did not mean to lie to enough.
You lie. I never trust you. Know you're known as
the honest guy around here. The honest guy always tells
the truth. Honest abe over here.

Speaker 3 (01:05:44):
I didn't realize you counted me living with them as
financial assistants.

Speaker 1 (01:05:50):
That's okay, No, I really I didn't realize you meant
financial assistance. You said financial I'm a security expert. They say,
this is from the Daily Mail. It's a cybersecurity expert
that says four words you should never click on to
avoid your account being drained or being scammed. So a
cybersecurity expert to this whole interview, and he says, never

(01:06:12):
click these words. Agree, Okay, no or yes? If it
comes up in a pop up. Just if a pop
up pops up, get it out of there. It ain't
pop up videos on VH one. You need to be
looking at it, you know, no, yes, and what else?

Speaker 4 (01:06:24):
Agree?

Speaker 1 (01:06:25):
Anything? Pop I'm just gonna say this. If it pops
up because you're on a website, get out of it.
Get off of it. But people will click agree, like
I don't want to do this. Agree, But then what
you're doing is actually clicking a button. It's a scam anyway.
They're not playing by any rules. So you find the
X and then spy. Yeah, and sometimes sometimes they do
an X. It's like a fake X. Oh gosh, man spy.
Where can stealthily record sensitive personal information and financial information

(01:06:48):
on your computer like user names, passwords, credit card numbers
that you're typing in. That's from the Daily Mail. If
it's a pop up, just get out.

Speaker 5 (01:06:56):
I add therapy yesterday on Zoom and like a little
mojis kept popping up while I'm on with her, and
then all of a sudden, fireworks were going up.

Speaker 4 (01:07:03):
You know how I was watching. I was watching it,
so we didn't she was.

Speaker 5 (01:07:08):
She wanted to x out and come back in, but
I mean I only have fifty minutes and I didn't
want to waste time.

Speaker 1 (01:07:12):
Like so you just stood there.

Speaker 5 (01:07:13):
I was like, hey, it doesn't bother me if it
doesn't bother you, And she's like, well, I'm not comfortable
with it.

Speaker 1 (01:07:18):
But if you're saying, okay, crazy you stayed on there
even though it was doing.

Speaker 4 (01:07:21):
But what could it possibly be?

Speaker 1 (01:07:22):
Somebody was watch somebody was watching. Were they doing emojis
based on what you were doing at the time? Oh
they cry face, cry face, cry face, cry face.

Speaker 4 (01:07:29):
Not in cry yesterday there was the party confetti.

Speaker 1 (01:07:32):
But was it when you would say something good?

Speaker 4 (01:07:34):
I started to say.

Speaker 5 (01:07:35):
Words elan if that would happen, I was like, okay, experiment, experimental, experience.

Speaker 1 (01:07:42):
You didn't want to get out and getting back in
even though it took thirty seconds.

Speaker 5 (01:07:45):
Well, no, now you're making them feel like I should
have but it takes no time to do that.

Speaker 8 (01:07:50):
X I.

Speaker 1 (01:07:51):
It was interesting to the fire mixtush okay, camera video audio.

Speaker 4 (01:07:55):
It was just zoom. Well who can get into zoom?

Speaker 1 (01:07:58):
Anyone? I think a lot of people. Yeah, really, yeah,
it's pretty funny.

Speaker 4 (01:08:02):
All right.

Speaker 5 (01:08:02):
Well, okay, if anybody heard anything in therapy, please give
it to.

Speaker 1 (01:08:07):
Yourself, and they will because if they were hacking, they're
on us. Good people. Yeah for sure. All right, thank you.
That's the news Bobby's story. Okay, Now, you guys can
call us if you want. Eight seven, seven seventy seven, Bobby,
we'd love to talk to you in about forty five
minutes from right now ten eastern, depending on when you

(01:08:28):
hear this and what time's on you're in, but ten eastern.
Tickets to my comedy show down in Vero Beach, Florida
with the Jake Owen Foundation for Charity go on sale
at Bobbybones dot com. So Bobbybones dot com at ten eastern,
go and get your tickets there. Next segment, we've had
some drama with the palette business. We tried to buy
this palette. Lunchbox has really screwed us over a few times.
But he says today he's got good news for us.

(01:08:49):
Oh okay, we'll talk about that coming up. And then
what are the rules of somebody spoils a TV show? Oh,
just making sure.

Speaker 4 (01:08:56):
We be cause, Oh it's fine, have grace.

Speaker 1 (01:08:57):
No, that's not it. No, that's not it. We have
people that have spoiled a show people. Oh no, yeah,
I recently, we have a rule that may be punished. Oh, Amy,
what'd you do? I'm not saying it's Amy, she's already out.
She just thinks it's her because she spoils everything accidentally.
Those all that's all coming up next, like thirty seconds

(01:09:20):
to reset this segment. We were all pitching ideas for
us to do funny little investments so we could sell
it back. For example, I saw another one where Michael
Jackson's Pepsi jacket from nineteen eighty four is going up
on the auction block and they think it'll get four
hundred and sixty thousand dollars. Wow. So it's like pop
culture memorabilia stuff. We were like, let's buy something all
with our money together that stories from TMZ by the way,

(01:09:43):
So Lunchbox goes, we should buy a palette, and we're like,
of what it's all returns from Amazon, and you don't
even know what's in it, but you buy it. They
try to sell them back individually and make money. Sounds
and I'm like, that sounds so fun. So he gets
eighty bucks from all of us, and then we find
out he doesn't know what he's talking about. No, that's
not accurate. You say we had to have insurance. You
said we had a No.

Speaker 3 (01:10:03):
No, there are some places that won't sell to you
unless you have a reseller's license, a business license.

Speaker 1 (01:10:07):
You presented that to us, like that was the place
where we're trying to go to.

Speaker 3 (01:10:10):
Well, that was the That's where I had been doing research,
and so I was trying to find a new place.

Speaker 1 (01:10:15):
Yes, that's my point. So okay, I can't So did
he find a new place right now? I want? That's
the bit, right, So that's what we've been trying to do.
We all, he still has our money. What's the latest news, guys?

Speaker 3 (01:10:26):
I have been calling places, emailing places, hitting the pavement,
running you know what I mean, pounding on doors like
an entrepreneur.

Speaker 1 (01:10:32):
In the pavement and hitting the ground running of the tube.
I like how you combined it. That's good.

Speaker 3 (01:10:35):
Yes, yeah, like you're an entrepreneur, you got to grind
and that is what I did. And I got a
hold of a place called wholesale Wholesale Pallette Outlet and
I called them and I got to talk.

Speaker 1 (01:10:46):
To the owner, Matt. Where is this place? It's about
thirty five to forty minutes from here, so it is local. Yes, Okay,
can we play the club that he clear it? Oh?
He cleared it?

Speaker 9 (01:10:54):
Man.

Speaker 1 (01:10:54):
Okay, here is a place called.

Speaker 3 (01:10:56):
Wholesale Pallette Outlet and Lebanon, Tennessee.

Speaker 1 (01:10:59):
Can they just sell pallette with nothing on it? No? No,
they sell pallets of stuff. Okay, here we go.

Speaker 10 (01:11:05):
Yeah, thank you for calling.

Speaker 1 (01:11:06):
Also, palettes, how can I help you? Uh?

Speaker 3 (01:11:08):
Yes, man, I got a question for you. I am
trying to do some research. So can I just show
up and buy a palette?

Speaker 1 (01:11:14):
Yeah? How so I raised five hundred and twenty five
dollars for my coworkers.

Speaker 3 (01:11:18):
What type of palette can I get for five hundred
and twenty five bucks.

Speaker 6 (01:11:21):
There's a wide selection of palettes from several stores in
the area Cracker Barrel, Walmart, Amazon. They range from probably
two ninety five all the way up to one thousand
dollars or higher. Most of them are in the range
of four hundred to six hundred dollars.

Speaker 3 (01:11:37):
If I come, will I be able to fit the
pallette in the back of a pickup truck or do
you deliver them?

Speaker 1 (01:11:42):
And do I just show up?

Speaker 3 (01:11:43):
And it's like a normal like Walmart and it's open
from nine to five.

Speaker 6 (01:11:47):
Yeah, it's open to the public. You can come in,
no appointments or anything like that required, and all the
palettes for the most part, do fit in the back
of a standard pickup.

Speaker 3 (01:11:57):
What kind of items can I get in these palettes?
Are talking like like used underwear? Or are we talking
like high priced items like vacuum cleaners, TVs.

Speaker 6 (01:12:06):
Power tools, literally anything that's sold at that store. So generally,
the way that it's broken down is we'll say we
have a palette of Amazon mediums. Basically, what that means
is that you will get a palette full of Amazon
merchandise of approximately medium size. And yes, that could be
a TV, it could be a camera. None of that

(01:12:26):
is guaranteed. Yeah, but that's what makes what makes fun
open up. Every box is always kind of like Christmas.

Speaker 1 (01:12:32):
Dude, this sounds amazing.

Speaker 3 (01:12:34):
We are gonna come get a palette maybe two pallets,
and we are ready to make that money money money.

Speaker 1 (01:12:43):
So my question is, how do we know they haven't
looked through them already? He said, they do not look
through them. Well, then, well, what's your source? Trust me, bro,
trust I mean listen.

Speaker 3 (01:12:52):
Matt sounded like an honest dude, and he said, look
what we do is we buy a.

Speaker 1 (01:12:56):
Trailer full and they just put them out on the floor.
They take them straight from the semi Well, that's the
business buying the palate and reselling them. Yeah, yeah, right
in the middle guy.

Speaker 3 (01:13:05):
And that's what I asked him. I said, so what
do you do? Pay fifty dollars for a palate and
then sell it for five hundred? He goes, we're not
allowed to disclose that exactly, but he said, I pay
more than fifty dollars.

Speaker 1 (01:13:13):
That's pretty cool. Okay, so now we can go get one.

Speaker 3 (01:13:15):
So now we can get one, but he said two
could fit in the back of a pickup truck.

Speaker 1 (01:13:19):
Here's the issue. Do we want to get too? You've
strung us along and held our money hostage, so it
doesn't feel good. But do we want to get two? Hind?

Speaker 11 (01:13:26):
Yeah, but or I want to get a bigger one. Oh,
why can't we just do what we already committed. I
know he just for starters. I know I just glutton
for punishment because he just gets excited. Well I get excited.

Speaker 1 (01:13:38):
I mean Christmas, Well my dog I started. If I go,
I'm like, whoah, my dog gets excited because it just
sees me doing it, Like that's me and lust fox.

Speaker 3 (01:13:46):
Yes, and this guy said, we can follow the Facebook
page and that's when we can tell when they get
new shipments. But they have them all the time, but
sometimes they get a truck on Tuesday, and that's when
you get the brand new ones.

Speaker 1 (01:13:56):
So so do we want to buy two?

Speaker 10 (01:13:58):
No?

Speaker 1 (01:13:58):
This is buy one's voice of reason. Oh thank you?
And what store are we going with cracker barrel? What
are we doing? I don't know the options, so Lunchbox
have to go out there. Oh, I know we're getting
I've been doing research, guys, but you don't get to
decide where it's a group. We all have the same
amount of money in I understand, But I believe we
want Amazon Medium because if you do as he said
that night call, that's literally the research. You listen back

(01:14:19):
to it.

Speaker 3 (01:14:19):
No, no, like if you get like Amazon small, you're gonna
end up like a bunch of with a bunch of
box of markers.

Speaker 1 (01:14:25):
Watches and stuff. Well, then why not go Amazon extra large?
Oh like a house. You can get pillows though with that,
like who wants pillows? Like?

Speaker 3 (01:14:32):
Medium is the sweet spot according to all the blogs
of people that do this, Amazon medium is what you want.

Speaker 4 (01:14:40):
So how much is that one?

Speaker 15 (01:14:40):
Again?

Speaker 1 (01:14:41):
If that's the five hundred dollars range? Okay, we got it.
How much do we have total? We have five hundred
and twenty five dollars. Let's go and if it ends
up being like five sixty or five seventy, go ahead
and get that. Yeah, we will cut you back with
the ten twenty bucks. Man, guys, are you sure you
don't want to right now?

Speaker 5 (01:14:56):
No?

Speaker 1 (01:14:56):
Okay, but there is options to reinvest. Right now, we're
just getting the pallete. No, scoob, we take into one
pallet because I'm yeah, like he said, we just stick
with the basics.

Speaker 11 (01:15:05):
One man, this is so awesome, ess because you still
throw the legwork of selling this to make them money.

Speaker 1 (01:15:10):
Oh, we don't worry about that. That's no problem about that.
We will write everything with you now. Because the trick
is when can we get this. We can get it
next week. They said, you know we're open. Can we
do it by Tuesday show? Yeah? On Tuesday show?

Speaker 3 (01:15:24):
So yeah, I mean we can go after the show Monday.
I mean I'm ready, Okay, I just need my driver.
You need your partner.

Speaker 1 (01:15:32):
He has a truck. Yeah, exactly, literally a driver partner.

Speaker 3 (01:15:35):
So I just don't know if he's available to go
on Monday after the show, we'll work it.

Speaker 1 (01:15:39):
Or May. We need to be right there when it opens.

Speaker 3 (01:15:41):
May we need to buy it and they just bring Hey,
they bring the fork, Cliff, that's cool, and they put
it right in the back of the truck.

Speaker 1 (01:15:48):
Later on Friday. But you're the only one find out
what's up. Maybe we do that if it opens it
like eight am or something. We just go out there
and have you ready. I don't know why I let
him get it. Me excited because you just know ends
up crapping on it all. It sort of is a
little bit of exciting. We're finally doing it Amazon Medium.

Speaker 3 (01:16:06):
Oh, I just got a text from a buddy and Chris.
He said, I actually lived near the Pallette place. I've
been It is amazing, all right, that's so loll if
your buddy says it, I'm in all right. There's a
video these people on airplane and there's a whole swarm
of mosquitos on the airplane too. Ooh ooh, that's terrible,
that dirty, that's nasty, that's gross, and that sucks.

Speaker 1 (01:16:27):
Mosquitos like awful. And sometimes they'll hit you and you're
like do like get got and then like twenty minutes later,
you got a big knot you like, I got got out? Yeah, dang.
Sometimes I'll be on the toilet and they'll be one
flying around. I'll be like, well, I can do nothing.
Just let them live. Can't go, can't get up. That's
a pretty helpless feeling. Got to be what they feel
like when they're on the airplane. But yeah, they're on
this flight. It's public. It's a you know, commercial airline

(01:16:50):
and cell phone shows these flight intents waving their arms
and like trying to get but they're in the plane.
There's nothing they can do. While the flight was suppoke
to land. They they had to like land it, I
guess at the same spot, but they got there earlier.
Can they not just go faster? Then generally maybe everything's
timed out, meaning there's a certain speed you can go,

(01:17:11):
but if you have other flights landing, because why not
is our speed limit? If we can get their faster,
why didn't we get there faster to begin with? Holy crap?
Uh yeah, that would suck if they're a Mosquitos there.

Speaker 2 (01:17:20):
You ever think about the Mosquitos though, Like they woke
up in Florida and then they're going.

Speaker 1 (01:17:25):
To like New York. I don't think Mosquito's know the
difference on what they know or even if land has
been qualified or quantified. Oh, I thought they'd get out
of the plane and be like, dude, we're in Arizona
and the poetry John.

Speaker 9 (01:17:38):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:17:38):
So, I do want to talk about this for a second.
We have a role on the show. We try not
to spoil movies or TV shows, absolutely, and if we do,
there is always a punishment, just to remind people that
we're watching out and to remind people that we're also
making sure people pay for their So there grew up whatever.
Stay Yeah, So I don't want to say what the

(01:18:00):
show is yet, but it happened during yesterday's post show
and two of you went on and on and run something.
We can't do this stuff. Hey, Mike, do you want
to come to Mike Wonder brought it to my attention
because I didn't even realize it without saying even the
show or the people just kind of acknowledge what happened.

Speaker 14 (01:18:15):
Eddie said the name of a show in relation to
something Bobby was talking about, and then Amy went on
about what happened in this.

Speaker 1 (01:18:20):
Show A clear spoiler. I did not even realized it
was so clear a spoiler. Yeah, I remember that. Well, whoa, whoa, whoa.
I just said a name of a show. I didn't spoil. No,
I was talking about probably energenics or something. I'm not
gonna say what the show is. And you yell out
the name of a show and the namy goes, oh yeah,
let me tell you about this.

Speaker 5 (01:18:39):
Oh I don't feel like that's oh.

Speaker 4 (01:18:40):
For sure know that.

Speaker 1 (01:18:41):
No, that's like a major spoiler. Yeah, And I'd like
to apologize all of our listeners who were listening on
the post. I didn't even hear it then, or I
would have probably taken it down. It's up now, it lives,
So what should their punishment? Bell? Whoa?

Speaker 2 (01:18:57):
Really, I shouldn't be part of this. All I did
was name is show? Like you could have se hey cornuts,
and I was a Seinfeld And if I.

Speaker 1 (01:19:05):
Would have ruined that, there was a big part of
sign because.

Speaker 5 (01:19:08):
This is how it happened. If you said hell and
then he says the show name.

Speaker 4 (01:19:14):
That's absolutely he was a spoiler.

Speaker 1 (01:19:15):
And then you've heard it and you were like, well,
then here's what happened episode six. If you said hijack
and I said hijacked, No, that's.

Speaker 4 (01:19:21):
Not How do you not see what surp? What I get?
What I did wrong?

Speaker 1 (01:19:25):
How do you know I don't get what I did wrong?
You will be put on the will of punishment next
week the door just for sure. Eddie started it. Yeah,
so you'll be put on the will of punishment next week.
Whatever it lands on, I hate it for you guys.
What's on there we don't know yet. We have some ideas.
You go to a breakfast place and you tell a
series of corny jokes out loud until someone laughs. Bunch
Buck puts on a blindfold and tries to apply lipstick

(01:19:46):
to you. I mean, yeah, text our CEO of Random
Memer photo and.

Speaker 4 (01:19:55):
That yes, I've already emailed him.

Speaker 1 (01:19:57):
Put a blindfold on and let someone else feed you
a mystery food. I don't find there's just a bunch
of these. But we'll do it next week, and both
of us have to do. I need you to admit
you're wrong though the judgment.

Speaker 5 (01:20:09):
Okay, Amy Eddie, Yeah yeah, I don't even think how
that was.

Speaker 1 (01:20:15):
I mean, when you don't admit it, your punishments were.
I know the judge is about to go next. Yeah,
so I got to plead guilty. Contest. Let's go to
a walt in Saint Louis real quick, wal We appreciate
you calling the show. What's U buddy?

Speaker 9 (01:20:29):
Good morning studio. There was a winner last night in
the Big Lottery, but unfortunately it wasn't in Tennessee. But
there's some fifty thousand dollars winners out there, So checking
on your finances for lunchbox to buy more palettes if
somebody had a big winner there.

Speaker 1 (01:20:47):
That's true.

Speaker 9 (01:20:48):
Scuba bother you guys participated in.

Speaker 1 (01:20:50):
Did you already check all the numbers?

Speaker 8 (01:20:52):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (01:20:52):
Yeah, that tone sounds like we want Yeah, I know
it's always California that wins. I feel like fifty thou matter.
I was going for the one point. No, no, no,
would be awesome if we won like five thousand bucks,
it'd be crazy's pretty cool. Yeah, but we didn't. We
won nineteen dollars. Okay.

Speaker 4 (01:21:07):
I thought he was gonna say nineteen thousand.

Speaker 1 (01:21:09):
I was like, okay. The California Powerball one point seven
three billion dollars. The winner's out there, one winner, one winner.
That is always going, always one winner. It's always come
ye in Fraser Park near La and Baker's filled in
between those two places.

Speaker 11 (01:21:25):
The remote area in the middle of nowhere, which I
want to investigate to Steve.

Speaker 3 (01:21:28):
It's even true, No, it's I always tell you it's
a remote, middle of nowhere gas station.

Speaker 1 (01:21:31):
Investigate though, fly out there, go to the place. See
I they even sell a lottery. It's not even a
gas station, Like, what is what's going on? It's like
a liquor store. And you don't think that they've already
invested when it comes to one point seven billion dollars.

Speaker 11 (01:21:41):
Remember that one they had recently where a woman claimed
that she won and she didn't win.

Speaker 1 (01:21:44):
They still haven't identified who the winner is for they
never gave her the money. I know, but I feel
like there's something going on here. This is shady. Why
is it always there's a difference too in like bingo.
I played bingo and my grandma we played like the
Elks Club or the Benedictine Manor, and you go and
you have your dabbers and yeah bing out. Everybody's like,
oh god, dang. They started, but then the person would
accidentally mess up. They'd be like, oh, looks like we

(01:22:06):
don't have a bingo here. G forty six was not called,
and so then half people throwing their cards away already
and the other one like, we gotta keep going. They're like, oh, man,
now they didn't give that person the money. They're not
gonna give this person the money if it's not real.
But I'm sure it's real. I guy should being like
crazy ingo was fun. Then my grandma got in trouble,
got arrested. Then she drove around a van and bingo.

(01:22:27):
Well it was like gambling, and so they were like,
you can't do that anymore. They like raided the place.
And so my grandma always on top of it. She
rented a van, big van and put a bunch of
old aig in the back of it and they drove
around playing bingo in the van for money. That's awesome. Yeah,
she found a way around.

Speaker 2 (01:22:42):
That's like that's like the gambling boats on the water, Like, yeah,
get us international waters.

Speaker 1 (01:22:48):
Okay, so we didn't win the lottery. We got two
people being punished next week for spoiling a show. Wow, yes,
I owned it. What do you want me to do?
What do you play? What do you plead guilty? I
guess that's guilty.

Speaker 4 (01:23:00):
I guess that doesn't.

Speaker 1 (01:23:02):
It works. It works, I mean the people know, the
people know. The real story is the spoiled the show.
Uh on on Stars shut down a car that's being carjacked.

Speaker 4 (01:23:11):
Oh, that's cool, it's cool an sary.

Speaker 1 (01:23:15):
The alleged carjacking happened at Pilot Travel Center. That's just
one of those pilot gas stations on the coins where
the car's owner said he had gone inside to buy
snacks left the engine running because he didn't want the
chocolate to melt. Like I felt that, Like, I get it.
Sure you shouldn't be grinding and running. Also like it
A don't want the chocolate melt. I know it's terrible,
Like I get it. I did the same thing. Car
was stolen, so they tracked it with on Star. They're
going boy one hundred miles an hour, twenty minutes into

(01:23:36):
the chase. After cops got into it, they just called
on Star like, hey, he shut this down, shut it down, Yeah,
no problem, they shut up. They shut it off. The
car then lost control. The car started flipping multiple times. Whoa,
the car landed on the roof upside down. The guy
was only mildly injured. He then got out and ran
from the wreck. What I'm talking about, They caught him

(01:23:58):
and now he's facing a dozen charsarges and he probably
won't you know, get to have that chocolate because he
flipped it all.

Speaker 5 (01:24:04):
Yeah, so they don't like just slow it down slowly,
they just go to an abrupt halt.

Speaker 1 (01:24:09):
Well, and you know what's crazyest about the story is
this guy who stole the car was in applying for
a job at that gas station and he sees it
and then steals it. So they like to know who
it is of everything.

Speaker 2 (01:24:23):
So I'm assuming they shut the car down, but he
probably reacted to that like, oh what's going on?

Speaker 1 (01:24:27):
I don't know if a shutdown means like a lock up? Yeah,
like does it go? Does it does it stop and
slowly fades out, or does it go and lock itself
up tight? That would be great. And then start going
boom boom boom. Yeah. Uh ten Eastern tickets to fifteen
minutes from right now, depending on where you are. Tickets to
Mike Comedy Show with Jacob and It's a charity show

(01:24:50):
in Vero Beach, Florida at Bobby Bones dot com. If
you wanna get tho tickets like fifteen minutes. All right,
thank you guys, Bobby bone showad Sorry up today.

Speaker 3 (01:24:58):
This story comes us from Anneapolis, Minnesota.

Speaker 1 (01:25:02):
A woman went on a trip to Kenya.

Speaker 3 (01:25:03):
She's on her way back and she's like, ooh, there's
some giraft poop. I want to make a necklace out
of that. So she puts it in a box a thing.
By the way, I've never heard of it. Okay, go ahead,
but you're not allowed to bring that stuff back. She
tried to smuggle it into the US and got stuck customs.

Speaker 1 (01:25:19):
You can't bring like me for anything that has any
You can't bring food really much less that. Yeah, but
as a new as a necklace interesting, yeah, I mean,
as bart Bonehead just wanted to make a poop necklace.
I think there's probably something to that, though, if I
don't think she just sees random poop and goes. I

(01:25:40):
like to wear that on my neck. There's got to
be something about diraft poop necklaces.

Speaker 5 (01:25:43):
Is it?

Speaker 4 (01:25:43):
Do they have an interesting form?

Speaker 1 (01:25:46):
I have no I have no idea. I never heard
of it before. But I'm just saying I don't think
anyone just sees poop and goes. I want to make
it into a necklace. I mean they look like Hershey's kisses,
I mean Hershey kisses. So it looks like you wanted
a bunch of Hershy kisses. Hey, you know what's good?
Those Hershey kisses that are cookies and cream. Oh yeah,
I accidentally got some of those, and they're really good.
I just wish they weren't individually wrapped.

Speaker 5 (01:26:04):
You accidentally got some of them, that's what.

Speaker 1 (01:26:06):
Kisses are, eally wrapped. Well, I was clicking Walgreens because
I needed some milk for cereal and it popped up
as one of those things you may want to accidentally push.
Oh yeah, so I actually pushed it.

Speaker 4 (01:26:16):
Is this how you talk to your wife?

Speaker 5 (01:26:17):
Is it?

Speaker 1 (01:26:19):
What happened was, yeah, so they're pretty good. I like them.
So then what happened to her?

Speaker 3 (01:26:26):
They said she could face up to a fine of
a thousand dollars for trying to smuggle the poop.

Speaker 1 (01:26:29):
And yeah, you can't even walk fruit across the border
from Mexico.

Speaker 2 (01:26:33):
I thought that was because of the seeds. You can't
like plant that fruit.

Speaker 1 (01:26:36):
Sure, I think it's all because of either bacteria or
seeds or disease.

Speaker 3 (01:26:41):
Yeah, oh it's I thought it was the seeds too.
What you're saying you can't bring it because of disease.

Speaker 1 (01:26:46):
There's a lot of stuff you can't bring across because
of even the seeds could have disease. Mees, idn't think.

Speaker 4 (01:26:52):
I was always nervous.

Speaker 5 (01:26:53):
I always like to take my own lemons when I
would go to Haiti to visit the kids, and I
would always feel so nervous I was gonna get busted
with what are you in.

Speaker 1 (01:27:00):
For smuggling limons?

Speaker 9 (01:27:02):
Right?

Speaker 4 (01:27:02):
I know now my new girlfriend, Hey, I always need it.

Speaker 1 (01:27:05):
All right, thank you, I'm lunch box. That's your bonehead
story of the day. Big charity show in Florida on
December eighth. It's the Jaco and Foundation. I'm headlining. Eddie
and I will be there too, with the raging idiots
you want to come. We're not getting paid, but we're
asking you to pay. That's right because the money goes
to a good cause. Vero Beach, Florida will be their
tickets going sell today. They may already be on cell now.
As a matter of fact, they want to sell it

(01:27:27):
ten Eastern. So have added at Bobbybones dot com. Let's
do a movie review now with Mike Hey. Now movie
Mike's movie minute.

Speaker 13 (01:27:35):
Is the movie you can watch at home on Netflix.
It's called fair Play. It's an erotic thriller.

Speaker 4 (01:27:39):
It is erotic.

Speaker 1 (01:27:41):
Yeah, like they're doing it. Yeah, you know what that is?
It like Cinemax, like Cinemax, like Skinemax, soft stuff.

Speaker 13 (01:27:49):
Not as hardcore as that.

Speaker 1 (01:27:50):
Soft core. I was gonna say, Yeah, it's more softcore. No,
that's what I was gonna say. But there's a lot
of doing it.

Speaker 13 (01:27:55):
Yeah, there's a lot of it. This is a movie
probably Actually Amy would enjoy it.

Speaker 1 (01:28:01):
Okay, Amy, thank you. She's say Yeah, it's a I
would not even stop if it's an erotic thriller. That's
an erotic thriller. I like cul intentions. Yeah, like that
if they were young in that wait and cool like
Sana michaelle Geller.

Speaker 5 (01:28:17):
Yeah, what's another what's another erotic thriller because I didn't.

Speaker 14 (01:28:20):
Know I would even classify I Don't Worry Darling is
an erotic thriller.

Speaker 13 (01:28:24):
What was that one with Harry Styles?

Speaker 1 (01:28:26):
They never didn't. Oh, that was really good, and I
wouldn't say that's erotic. I would say erotic would make
me feel Rotti right right, That only didn't.

Speaker 13 (01:28:34):
Make me fe or like wild things back in the nineties.

Speaker 5 (01:28:36):
That is from this.

Speaker 1 (01:28:38):
Scene in the roller Coaster Fantaus scene.

Speaker 4 (01:28:40):
Lunchbox has taking notes. Listen. I never saw Don't Read Daring.
I forgot about that because they the movie say it was.

Speaker 5 (01:28:47):
Don't Worry Darling, the drama. There was drama with that one,
right with Olivia.

Speaker 1 (01:28:51):
Wat Florence Pugh. Yeah, yeah, it's given to Mike's movie.
It's an erotic thriller.

Speaker 14 (01:28:56):
So it's about this couple who works on Wall Street,
but they have to keep their reallylationships secret, so they
get engaged but can't tell anyone at work because it's
against company policy.

Speaker 13 (01:29:04):
And they're both going for this big promotion.

Speaker 1 (01:29:06):
The girl against each other.

Speaker 13 (01:29:08):
Yeah, the girl.

Speaker 14 (01:29:09):
Gets it over the guy, and then it's all about
how he reacts to it and how he hates the
fact that she makes more than him and got the
job he wanted.

Speaker 1 (01:29:16):
But it's lunch. But it's erotic.

Speaker 13 (01:29:18):
It's erotic.

Speaker 1 (01:29:19):
Okay. So also, you didn't spoil anything, right, that's the
that's all in the trailer. Okay. Oh, it's a good,
good rule to live by. It's in the trailer. Okay,
thanks Mike. It's called fair play on Netflix. And what
do you give it?

Speaker 13 (01:29:30):
I give it three out of five. It's a worthy watch.

Speaker 14 (01:29:32):
But if you don't like it after the first scene,
stop watching the first scene.

Speaker 13 (01:29:36):
It's very intense in the first scene.

Speaker 1 (01:29:37):
It starts off with that huh.

Speaker 13 (01:29:38):
It's pretty jarring.

Speaker 14 (01:29:40):
It sets the stage, man, like I would encourage all
you just to watch the first ten minutes.

Speaker 1 (01:29:45):
Of this movie. You got it. If I have to
do it, I'll do it. And you's for work.

Speaker 13 (01:29:49):
Your job will be on the floor after that first scene.

Speaker 4 (01:29:51):
Okay, Like, what in the world could the impossible?

Speaker 1 (01:29:53):
But if you took the ati out of it, but
it's still be good.

Speaker 14 (01:29:56):
It's yeah, without the erotic it's still a good thriller.

Speaker 1 (01:29:59):
Is this how work bones doing? No, No, I'm not
assigning you anything erotic for homework. Eat this erotic cake. Okay,
three out of five. It is called fair play on Netflix.
All right, Mike, thank you very much, Thank you, see
you tomorrow, John Party in studio tomorrow. Bye, everybody,
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Hosts And Creators

Bobby Bones

Bobby Bones

Amy Brown

Amy Brown

Lunchbox

Lunchbox

Eddie Garcia

Eddie Garcia

Morgan Huelsman

Morgan Huelsman

Raymundo

Raymundo

Mike D

Mike D

Abby Anderson

Abby Anderson

Scuba Steve

Scuba Steve

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