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December 18, 2025 53 mins

Bobby shares why he opened his Christmas gift from his wife early. We talked about the Oscars moving to YouTube and why it blows Lunchbox’s mind. Amy shares how much money she won from a scratch off that she got at the Office Christmas party. Bobby talks about what’s inside the Golden Globes gift bags that cost over $1 million dollars. Bobby talks about the science behind internet trolls and them getting their anger out online. Amy reveals a situation where she could have dated someone in her family. Why does Elon say you don’t need to save money?

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
The Bobby Bones Silk's cool.

Speaker 2 (00:04):
I opened my Christmas gift from my wife last night.
It really wasn't the plan. But I got home yesterday
afternoon and I saw a truck taking a crate off
and they were unloading it into the garage. And I
got home a little later than normal, and I was like,
what's that? And I was told it was a crib.
I knew it wasn't a crib, and so I was like, no,

(00:24):
that's not a crib.

Speaker 3 (00:25):
I mean it's I think on the box, it's the crate.

Speaker 4 (00:28):
It's a two hundred It was covered.

Speaker 2 (00:29):
All that was covered.

Speaker 3 (00:30):
Oh you couldn't see that.

Speaker 5 (00:31):
Okay.

Speaker 2 (00:31):
Someone said that on Instagram to like, you know what
it was? You right, it's written in the box. It
was covered before I took that, before I took the
saw that I was gonna say what it was. But yeah,
it was a two hundred pounds bronze boar pig.

Speaker 4 (00:44):
That's awesome, dude.

Speaker 2 (00:45):
So it was in this big wood crate. And what
I was getting roasted for online wasn't the drill I
was using.

Speaker 4 (00:53):
I didn't realize it was a cheap drill. It's a
cheap drill. But did it work. It seemed like.

Speaker 2 (00:58):
That's what I am, and me like, well, okay, hey,
great gift, cheap drill. I put it on Instagram, and
I don't know how I got two songs up at
the same time. It sounds like a cluster, but I.

Speaker 4 (01:10):
Was just gonna do.

Speaker 2 (01:11):
I'm a hard working man, and all of a sudden,
now when you go to it and my Instagram is
mister Bobby Bones, you hear it should have been a
cowboy and hard working man playing at the same time.

Speaker 5 (01:20):
Here I'm a hard working man.

Speaker 4 (01:24):
Dang, how do you love two songs at the same time.

Speaker 3 (01:27):
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (01:27):
I don't know that was possible.

Speaker 2 (01:29):
So you can see me opening my gift, this two
hundred pound bronze bore. I'm a big razorback fan. If
you're wondering why I got a big pig, super heavy,
super great gift. And people are also like, why are
you opening it on Wednesday, December seventeenth, Well because I
saw it come and it's also in the garage, and
I think she would have hit it better had I
not been home.

Speaker 4 (01:49):
She's like, you might as well open it now, so
we went down.

Speaker 2 (01:52):
Yeah, pretty cool. It's massive.

Speaker 4 (01:53):
Where is it going your bedroom. Yeah, can you imagine
right in the middle. I pet it when I sleep
every night. Yeah, it's but you can see it. It's
super cool.

Speaker 2 (02:05):
She I'm not giving her hers yet because she hasn't
found it.

Speaker 3 (02:09):
Oh, you have it hiding somewhere.

Speaker 4 (02:11):
Well, I mean to hide every ali them.

Speaker 3 (02:14):
Well, I didn't know if it was like.

Speaker 2 (02:15):
She could often name the gift before it comes out.
She's like, oh's that mentalist. She was like, uh huh
mmmm a purse crap. Yeah, and she can also when
I bring the box, she'll see the size of the
box and just start guessing based on the box. I
don't think she's ever missed. Wow, she's like a box.
I so I got a little trick my sleep with
the box.

Speaker 5 (02:34):
This year.

Speaker 4 (02:35):
I got Eddie fire torch flamethrower. I saw you on
your Instagram last night playing with it. I finally used it.
Did you see me light the candle? Yeah? I know
you didn't need that for a candle. I know that
was the funny. That was the funny part of the videouse.
It's gonna burn down that. It's so cool.

Speaker 2 (02:48):
Thank you you guys can hop in eight seven, seven
seventy seven Bobby Ray hit me with this voicemail right
here on.

Speaker 3 (02:55):
The fifth day of Christmas, my true love gave to
me ni falling testicles.

Speaker 4 (03:03):
I can't believe I'm about to say this, but Lunchbox,
please go get your testicle looked at.

Speaker 6 (03:09):
Boom. That's funny.

Speaker 4 (03:12):
That's pretty good.

Speaker 6 (03:12):
We did that too.

Speaker 2 (03:13):
You go listen on the podcast. We sang the song
give Me Number one.

Speaker 1 (03:17):
Good morning, Bobby, Morning Studio. I I'm just curious to
see if you guys opened up your gift cards. I
don't know if I missed it or not, but just
let me know in the air. If I didn't miss
it or if I did miss it, thanks a lot
a great show.

Speaker 2 (03:33):
Thank you did I miss it. Keeps going tomorrow. Somebody
won a thousand bucks here in the studio, but somebody
also in the studio only win ten dollars. So you
can listen to that tomorrow on the show. Yeah, appreciate that.
Some are the oscars are.

Speaker 4 (03:47):
Going to YouTube in twenty twenty eight or twenty twenty nine.

Speaker 2 (03:52):
Wow Day out Bid ABC Crazy?

Speaker 4 (03:56):
No, I mean, who's gonna watch that? Then?

Speaker 2 (03:58):
Everybody?

Speaker 4 (03:59):
A lot of people on YouTube? Yeah, yeah, like I
didn't watch it when it was on a major network.

Speaker 3 (04:05):
Well that's why you're.

Speaker 4 (04:06):
Like to watch it.

Speaker 2 (04:07):
You think less people watch YouTube?

Speaker 4 (04:10):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (04:10):
YouTube is number one in total consumption of anything.

Speaker 4 (04:14):
I mean, yeah, I guess if I want to see anything,
I go to YouTube.

Speaker 2 (04:17):
Even versus all television together. YouTube woints much less a
single network.

Speaker 4 (04:22):
So like if I have Hulu, I'm not gonna be
able to watch the oscars.

Speaker 2 (04:26):
Do you have YouTube?

Speaker 4 (04:27):
I have YouTube the app, but I don't have like
YouTube TV.

Speaker 2 (04:30):
Yeahs not YouTube TV.

Speaker 3 (04:31):
It's YouTube, just YouTube, yes, not like YouTube YouTube TV too.

Speaker 4 (04:35):
Yeah yeah, okay, all right, that makes more sense. You
can watch on my phone.

Speaker 2 (04:38):
YouTube TV doesn't have its own channel, but they're like
the provider, the streaming provider. It would be like the
comparison is, Uh, you don't get Comcast and go to
the Comcast channel. Yeah, it's on YouTube, got it?

Speaker 4 (04:54):
Okay?

Speaker 6 (04:55):
So I'd go to YouTube dot com and it would
be right there on.

Speaker 4 (04:57):
The front, yes, dot or just the YouTube app.

Speaker 2 (05:00):
I think that's what. I don't really go to any
dot coms anymore. I mean, but on your TV, you
would have to go to YouTube dot com. You'd go
on thet I'd use it I go to the app.

Speaker 4 (05:10):
There's a YouTube app on your TV every TV.

Speaker 6 (05:13):
I don't have it.

Speaker 4 (05:13):
Do you have a smart TV?

Speaker 5 (05:14):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (05:15):
Then you do? You do?

Speaker 3 (05:16):
It's there.

Speaker 4 (05:17):
Oh you might have to download it.

Speaker 3 (05:19):
Oh I'll have to check that out or make it
like a But yeah, I don't really go to YouTube
to look for videos on my TV.

Speaker 6 (05:24):
Like, if I'm gonna look for a YouTube video, I'm
probably gonna do it on my phone or computer, right.

Speaker 4 (05:29):
At YouTube dot com on your phone.

Speaker 6 (05:31):
Yeah, I would open the Internet and go to YouTube
dot com.

Speaker 4 (05:35):
Yeah are you saying you don't? You don't ever type
in dot com anymore.

Speaker 2 (05:39):
People don't go to websites anymore.

Speaker 4 (05:40):
It's very very rare. It's it's a small section.

Speaker 2 (05:42):
Everybody watches everything on apps or looks at everything on apps,
or when I read new stories, I got to the app.

Speaker 6 (05:48):
Let me check and see if I got a YouTube
ap on my phone.

Speaker 2 (05:51):
That would be crazy if you didn't have YouTube app
on your phone.

Speaker 6 (05:53):
Hey, Morgan, do I have YouTube bap on my phone?

Speaker 5 (05:55):
Search it?

Speaker 4 (05:56):
Search it?

Speaker 6 (05:56):
How do I do that? I don't think I do.

Speaker 4 (06:01):
He does, look, Yeah, you have it?

Speaker 6 (06:03):
I did have it.

Speaker 4 (06:04):
Yeah, you can watch the oscars now. Man in two years.

Speaker 3 (06:09):
Sometimes I don't feel old, and then I feel old,
and then I'm like my peer when when I see
my peers, because we're the exact same age, you know,
it's struggling like that.

Speaker 6 (06:17):
I'm like for old old you too. It's on the
last page.

Speaker 2 (06:23):
That's why you don't ever swap that far.

Speaker 6 (06:24):
I guess I never get that far.

Speaker 2 (06:26):
Uh. The lottery ticket you guys got from your Christmas party, Yeah,
it was in your bag, Amy hit on hers.

Speaker 3 (06:31):
Yeah, if you all scratched him, yeah, I did. Okay,
I found you want and did you see how there's
like a bonus did you see the I won the
bonus too, So ine was a double winner.

Speaker 4 (06:45):
I have here.

Speaker 2 (06:46):
Why does that make you?

Speaker 3 (06:48):
It says, unwrap the cash that was the game?

Speaker 2 (06:52):
How much was the lottery ticket?

Speaker 4 (06:54):
One dollar?

Speaker 3 (06:55):
One dollar lottery ticket?

Speaker 6 (06:56):
So you probably won. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (06:58):
So like in the main thing, I scratch it and
I said, if you see a money bag, you win
whatever is under the money bag. And then over in
the bonus section, if there's a like a holly leaf,
you win whatever is under the holly leaf. And I
scratched it. Money bag, scratched it, holly leaf.

Speaker 4 (07:14):
That's awesome.

Speaker 2 (07:15):
Yeah, that's exciting.

Speaker 3 (07:17):
Since I never played, it's so much fun. Now I
need to know what to do. I just take this
to the gas station.

Speaker 2 (07:23):
How much you win?

Speaker 3 (07:24):
And they give me two dollars better.

Speaker 2 (07:31):
She didn't spend a dollar on.

Speaker 3 (07:31):
It's not a day time.

Speaker 6 (07:36):
Alabama.

Speaker 3 (07:37):
So but what I wanted to do is I was
going to give this to Lunchbox. Why because he's always
complained about he never wins a lottery ticket.

Speaker 4 (07:45):
And them as much like she didn't give them.

Speaker 3 (07:48):
No, what do you want it?

Speaker 6 (07:48):
Yeah, I'll take you fifty dollars winner over here would
not I'll take that too.

Speaker 4 (07:54):
Wait, that's a winner.

Speaker 2 (07:55):
Thanks that break even. I paid fifty four. It's one
of my mini scratch offs from the year. So I
have fifty here.

Speaker 3 (08:01):
Oh so what do you do with that?

Speaker 2 (08:02):
Take it to the gas.

Speaker 3 (08:03):
Station and now you're going to trade it in for
fifty another lottery to get for fifty dollars or have these?

Speaker 2 (08:10):
I'm pretty much done with scratch offs again. I bought
hundreds of them this year. Yeah, you don't really do
have the'se you don't. You can't take it in and
you can get all your money back and then buy
one for twenty one or thirty. Uh, the power ball
was last night nobody won again. Wow, the jack pot's
at one point five billion for Saturday drawing. It's going
to be a great christmasbody, you don't know the numbers yet,

(08:31):
So here we go, everybody, lunchbautch. You probably all the numbers, yep,
Eddie and Amy write down two, three, five numbers and
a powerball.

Speaker 4 (08:41):
Number one through sixty nine, right.

Speaker 2 (08:43):
Yes, And that powerball number can actually be the same
as one of the other numbers. I'm saying it is,
but I'm saying it doesn't have to be a different
number one through sixty nine, Okay. And the power ball
I don't think goes up to sixty. I think it
was twenty five or something. Twenty six is power Okay,
I'm in. Let's sa if you Gus would have won, Eddie,
you in, I'm in any what do you have?

Speaker 3 (09:04):
Nine? Nope, twenty two, keep going, thirteen, twenty seven, fifty four.

Speaker 4 (09:09):
Ediway, Jeff, I have sixty eight, three, fifteen, twenty one,
fifty four and powerball eight.

Speaker 3 (09:17):
Yeah my powerball is eighteen.

Speaker 4 (09:18):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (09:18):
You guys got nothing now, so you're no winners here.

Speaker 3 (09:21):
See that's how that's how it goes.

Speaker 4 (09:22):
Good thing.

Speaker 2 (09:23):
I didn't play twenty five, thirty three, fifty three, sixty two,
sixty six, and seventeen h but it'll be one point
five billion. The last big one was one point seven
eight billion, like massive. There have been forty three straight
drawings without a winner. That's wild, oh man, wo forty

(09:43):
three in a row no winners.

Speaker 4 (09:45):
I just think, like, most people aren't playing.

Speaker 2 (09:47):
Yeah, right, most people aren't not playing.

Speaker 5 (09:50):
You're right.

Speaker 2 (09:51):
A lot more people play as it gets bigger, because
it becomes more of a news story.

Speaker 4 (09:54):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (09:55):
It's not that people go, well, now that it's up
to a billion, perfect, it's that it becomes kind of
uh pop culture.

Speaker 4 (10:03):
Yeah. I don't think of it until you read a
story like that. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (10:06):
And I don't think of it until it gets so
big there is a story on it, which means it's
getting close to a billion dollars. But there were five
one million dollar winners Connecticut, three in New York, Pennsylvania
and Tennessee. And there was two two million dollar winters
Arizona in Massachusetts. How crazy would it have been if
your numbers am of you to pick? Just now, if
you'd hit the power ball and the numbers that you pick.

Speaker 3 (10:25):
That'd be very crazy.

Speaker 6 (10:27):
How sad? Would you be?

Speaker 3 (10:29):
Real sad I didn't play?

Speaker 4 (10:30):
Yep? Would you have been sad? Yeah?

Speaker 3 (10:33):
I mean yeah, I would well, I mean I would
know realistically the odds of me if I were to
have played yesterday, because that's when I would have had
to have played, I would have had to come up
with those exact numbers and that just probably wouldn't have happened.
So for whatever reason, I was able to happen to
them today, But I would know that's not what I
would have said yesterday.

Speaker 2 (10:51):
Speaking of a ward shows and money, the Golden Globe
gift bags that are coming up are valued at a
million dollars, and so the people that are getting and
they get all this free stuff, you do have to
pay taxes on it. Sometimes people don't take them. If
you're super rich, you probably don't take them. I wonder
if you could do what you said, only take some
you know what, the lottery ticket you're like, take hat.

Speaker 3 (11:10):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (11:12):
The Casa Bella mar three nights stay in San Jose
del Cabo, Mexico, at a beach front villa, twenty fourth,
twenty five thousand, dollars and it's available to five recipients,
like five people can stay, So that's in the bag.
I guess I don't get you there. It's just the
three nights at the place Celestia Fanisi. A five day

(11:34):
luxury yacht charter sixty thousand dollars. Would you guys like
to do that?

Speaker 4 (11:40):
Charter a yacht? Yeah?

Speaker 6 (11:42):
Yeah, why wouldn't.

Speaker 4 (11:43):
I don't understand.

Speaker 6 (11:44):
What's the downfall?

Speaker 3 (11:45):
Yeah dude, yeah, I needed to be like one of
those big ones. What is so they're smaller one?

Speaker 4 (11:53):
I was talking to someone in Florida that said that
there's a like catamaran that takes you from Naples, Florida
to Keywa and it takes.

Speaker 6 (12:01):
How long lunch boks, like two or three hours?

Speaker 4 (12:03):
Let's go, what's a catamaran? And it's like a sailboat?

Speaker 2 (12:07):
No, no, no, that's not the same as this. And
this is this as many nights on sleeping on the water.

Speaker 6 (12:11):
That sounds so I.

Speaker 5 (12:12):
Don't like that.

Speaker 2 (12:13):
Why pirates?

Speaker 4 (12:16):
No, this is in Indonesia, Oh it is, Yeah, it's
the Coral Triangle Indonesia.

Speaker 3 (12:21):
Some catamarans have cabins.

Speaker 2 (12:23):
Yeah, but they said two hours, you're not sleeping true.

Speaker 4 (12:25):
Now you just get to Key West and then party.
But hey, so I don't that changes things Indonesia. There
are pirates over there, right, I don't know. I don't
know how to get to Indonesia. Like Captain Phillips, where
was he?

Speaker 2 (12:35):
I think small like that makes not really the same.
I could go through this stuff. But it's a million bucks.

Speaker 3 (12:43):
It sounds like you also have you have time for
a lot of trips.

Speaker 2 (12:47):
M three nights in the Gulf of Thailand fifteen thousand dollars,
seventy thousand dollars for this island, A two nights stay
at the Morocco, the world's first undersea residence.

Speaker 4 (12:57):
Whoa wow. I don't know if I do that.

Speaker 6 (13:00):
That's a lot terrifying.

Speaker 4 (13:02):
But you don't want to sleep on the ocean. But
you'd sleep under the ocean only because his experience that
nobody else really has had. Yeah, no one's done that,
and there's a reason that crazy. What's gonna happen. It's
gonna bust and you're gonna drown. Yeah maybe, mm I
don't think that's gonna be the case. Pirates can't get you,
and they double check everything.

Speaker 2 (13:21):
It's all about pirates. It's crazy. This thing looks like
when you're in an aquarium, you're walking under it. Can
you put the picture up on the screen?

Speaker 3 (13:29):
Oh yeah?

Speaker 4 (13:30):
Or do you guys watch us on our YouTube at
Bobby Bone Show. If you're listening on the podcast, you
should look at this. We'll put it up on the screen.

Speaker 2 (13:36):
This is wild because it looks like when you go
to the aquarium and you're walking underneath it and you
can see everything, but your whole room is that no?
Oh yeah, I'd be into this. World's first underwater hotel
opens up in the Maldives. I've heard people talk about
the Maladians.

Speaker 4 (13:51):
I've heard of that too.

Speaker 6 (13:52):
Oh my gosh, that looks so cool.

Speaker 4 (13:54):
But that is you know what I'm worried about. There
a crack peeping scuba divers what.

Speaker 2 (14:00):
They probably keep people from going in that water, But
I could see where that would be something.

Speaker 4 (14:03):
You know what I mean, Like you got a scuba
dive in the middle of the night.

Speaker 2 (14:05):
Checking and you're sleeping.

Speaker 4 (14:06):
You're like, wait, what right?

Speaker 6 (14:09):
How do they you?

Speaker 2 (14:11):
Yeah, you're not that low, but funnel they're full tunnels underwater.

Speaker 3 (14:15):
You guys are acting that I know, But that even
though blow my mind, that's so cool.

Speaker 6 (14:20):
Maybe in my mind that they can build a bridge
and it doesn't sink. So this is crazy.

Speaker 4 (14:24):
Have you seen that.

Speaker 6 (14:25):
They're down sixteen feet?

Speaker 4 (14:28):
Hey, you think you have trouble sleeping, you imagine you're
sleeping in a little sharks tapping on it.

Speaker 2 (14:32):
I wouldn't mind the shop, it was more of the
people watching. Well that to scuba diverory not think about that,
but they probably keep people from going in the water,
like where the rooms are? Have you seen and I'm
not sure what country it is, Maybe you can help me, Mike.
They have the ice hotels.

Speaker 4 (14:48):
I've seen that I've seen like ice bars. Wasn't that
in a TV show?

Speaker 2 (14:51):
Yeah? It's in like Norway or Denmark or I think
maybe Sweden or Switzerland.

Speaker 4 (14:57):
Sweden?

Speaker 2 (14:57):
Yeah, can you put that up on the screen. They
have full hotels that are made completely of ice and
so much like this is underwater. These are obviously extreme
cold climates.

Speaker 4 (15:09):
No, what do you do you wear like a parka
the entire time?

Speaker 2 (15:12):
Yeah, it's probably kind of cold while you're in there,
but the ice is probably so thick too that you
can probably put heat in there and it doesn't melt everything.
But look at this, like your room is all ice.

Speaker 4 (15:21):
Yeah, I'm not about that.

Speaker 6 (15:22):
Yeah, it might be really cool.

Speaker 2 (15:23):
I like my room to be cold anyway, But this
is ice hotel in Sweden.

Speaker 4 (15:28):
That's wild.

Speaker 3 (15:29):
But then what do you do when it's bedtime?

Speaker 4 (15:31):
You go to bed and you're frozen? Have you never
been camping before? You're parka Well, look at that bed
they got oh fur, they got like a whole animal blanket.

Speaker 2 (15:39):
And now I'm imagining that the ice is so thick
it's probably warmer than no, twenty twenty.

Speaker 4 (15:46):
Degrees, yeah, or else it would miller.

Speaker 2 (15:47):
But also, haven't you been camping before?

Speaker 4 (15:49):
Yeah, but it's not that coold. Last I've camped in
five to ten degrees.

Speaker 6 (15:53):
Have you ever been to the ice display? It's abrey Land.

Speaker 2 (15:56):
It is so cold, it is brutal, thirty thirty one
one In there.

Speaker 3 (16:01):
It's still cold cold.

Speaker 2 (16:03):
But probably just cold enough to make sure the thing
doesn't melt all over you. You guys wouldn't want to
do that, stay.

Speaker 4 (16:07):
In that, that doesn't that's not exciting to me. You
guys have no adventure in you. No I want to
do the yacht says. The room temperature is twenty three
degrees fahrenheit.

Speaker 2 (16:15):
Making it chili but manageable. Chillis not dangerously freezing like
the outside art gara, which can plummet to minus forty
Guest sleep and thermal sleeping bags on beds of ice
topped with reindeer skin, staying warm by trapp body heat.
And it's colder outside than inside, but it's significantly warmer
than you think. You're provided with extremely warm sleeping bags

(16:35):
thermal suits, you do have to obviously stay warmer. So
like going to a hockey game, Yeah, it gets cold
in there.

Speaker 4 (16:42):
What about like breathing that cold air? Is that bad
for you?

Speaker 2 (16:46):
I just would think it wouldn't be so uncomfortable if
people are doing it.

Speaker 6 (16:49):
I mean you're in a thermal luxury bag.

Speaker 4 (16:53):
Reindeer.

Speaker 6 (16:53):
That doesn't seem very comfortable.

Speaker 2 (16:55):
It's a unique experience when you're surrounded by ice and snow,
but not as extreme as you think. You'll receive a diploma.
Note in the temperature after your stay and there are
warm areas too in the building.

Speaker 4 (17:04):
Yeah, diploma because you survived.

Speaker 3 (17:05):
Well.

Speaker 2 (17:06):
It's definitely something. It's an experience. It's not like you
go for full luxury like, it's not the the what
do they call that place? Swiss?

Speaker 4 (17:16):
Like the mountain. No, there's a really nice hotel, really nice.

Speaker 2 (17:20):
It's everywhere.

Speaker 4 (17:20):
Ritz.

Speaker 2 (17:21):
That's it Ritz, Carlton, Swiss, Carlton.

Speaker 4 (17:23):
I'm gonna call it. That'd be nice too.

Speaker 2 (17:25):
Yeah, that would be cool.

Speaker 4 (17:27):
I'll do that.

Speaker 2 (17:28):
I wouldn't want to do it a week there, but
like two nine. And obviously if you're staying in Sweden,
you're not staying in your room very much if you're
staying in this place, because this is the place you
only go because of the outdoor activities.

Speaker 4 (17:38):
Yeah, I just feel like you're Sweden and it's cold outside,
you're like, oh, I'm looking forward to getting back to
the hotel where it's warm, and then it's colder than
it is. No, you guys would not be fun to
travel with. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (17:50):
Scientists discover a creature with twenty four eyes that can
see three hundred and sixty degrees underwater.

Speaker 4 (17:56):
Yeah, of course.

Speaker 2 (17:57):
Scientists at Hong Kong Baptist University a new type of
box jellyfish. The jellyfish name the Tripidalia, is tiny. It
has twenty four eyes split into four groups of six,
has three hundred and sixty degree vision.

Speaker 4 (18:10):
That's crazy from popular mechanics.

Speaker 2 (18:13):
That is wild.

Speaker 4 (18:14):
Have you ever seen those videos where people like fish
and they pull up a like a fish that no
one's ever seen before and like Simpsons, No, no, no, like
real tiktoks. Well, I think they're real, dude. I think, yeah,
aid And the fish has like teeth, like human teeth,
and it looks like they're smiling. It looks like a person.
It's so funny.

Speaker 2 (18:31):
Well, there are fish with very human type teeth.

Speaker 4 (18:33):
Yeah, like they got lit.

Speaker 2 (18:35):
I think you got aied probably all right. Next up,
a man set a record for singing Christmas songs for
forty two hours straight. I feel like this is something
they could do. Yeah, not a singer, but I do
stuff for twenty four hours. Yeah, he did thirty eight
songs repeated eighteen times each for a total of six
hundred and eighty four songs, sets the new record. Sixty

(18:57):
three years old broke the world record by singing Christmas
songs for forty two hours. He did not lose his voice.
He did at a brewery and people popped in to
cheer them along. I think this is something that Raymondo
could do, and my wife would fall more in love
with me. Because she loves Christmas. It doesn't say he's
a good singer. It just says he sang for a
long time.

Speaker 5 (19:13):
So I literally hate singing.

Speaker 4 (19:15):
You hate singing.

Speaker 5 (19:16):
Yeah, it's one of my least favorite things to do.

Speaker 4 (19:17):
But you're so good at it.

Speaker 2 (19:19):
No, no, no, no, just know it's music. Isn't in
my family. So who hates singing? I'm not saying singing good,
but I don't love singing. I don't know anybody that
just hates sing. I know people that are maybe indifferent,
and they sing when something's fun, But you hate singing
in general.

Speaker 5 (19:34):
I'm a listener. I'm at church.

Speaker 3 (19:35):
I'm not singing, so at church you just stand there.

Speaker 5 (19:40):
Yeah, there's a lot of guys at church that don't
sing church.

Speaker 2 (19:45):
But most people don't sing in church because either A
they don't know the song, be their bored, or see
they don't sing well, so they feel like they're going
to actually make it worse than it is. But if
what's your favorite song of all time we're talking country,
we're talking Christmas time, I would have to say Chicago,
the new Stuff Country. I would say Ingrid Andrews, Sam Haunt,

(20:08):
wishfl Drinking Interesting.

Speaker 3 (20:10):
Yeah, so if that comes on, you're not just like.

Speaker 2 (20:12):
You don't have a good time sing sing I like
hearing them sing it, but I A'm joining in really
even when your car by yourself?

Speaker 4 (20:19):
No, what about Saturday in the park?

Speaker 2 (20:25):
I wish you was a photo Jula, not bad?

Speaker 4 (20:28):
Did you have fun doing that? Right now?

Speaker 2 (20:30):
Not bother your head?

Speaker 5 (20:32):
Rather hear it than me sing it?

Speaker 3 (20:34):
You know what song? I cannot stop singing and I've
been doing all yes, all the time, I cannot stop. No, No,
that's her one. No, it's just her. It's she's from Texas.
Iacon till by the way, and then it just makes
me want a two step.

Speaker 4 (20:51):
We'll do it.

Speaker 2 (20:52):
Wow, well by yourself, Hey, have about it, Mark Christmas.

Speaker 3 (20:56):
It's like all of in my feed now too. Like
there's some dancing cowboy at the airport. He like travels
and he'll set up his camera and yeah, he was
like too No, I don't know where he's from, but
he's having surgery. He asks for prayers.

Speaker 4 (21:10):
I don't really.

Speaker 3 (21:11):
I don't know this guy. I don't know. He just
shows up in my feet. I don't follow him, but he,
you know, does the little two steps shuffle around and
he was doing it to Choose in Texas or Chase
from Texas or whatever it's called. And it's just a song,
so good.

Speaker 4 (21:29):
Yeah, it's a good one.

Speaker 2 (21:30):
Let's go around the room maybe.

Speaker 3 (21:31):
So do you all ever shower in the dark?

Speaker 4 (21:33):
No?

Speaker 3 (21:34):
Okay, because I saw this trend and now I saw
it on TikTok, so I don't have like official research,
but a lot of times people will shower in the
dark because it's relaxing and they do it to unwind
and rest their nervous system. But a lot of the
clips that I saw, they said it's very important. Like
some people put on music, right and a lot of
people sing the shower. They said, you can't do any

(21:54):
of that, no music. You just cut the lights off,
nothing over stimulating at all, and you just shower in
the dark. And it's called dark showers the whole trend,
and people say it's deeply restoring. So if you're overstimulated
this holiday season or overwhelmed, try cutting off all the
lights and hopping in the shower with nothing else.

Speaker 2 (22:12):
That's how I fall in for myself.

Speaker 3 (22:14):
Yeah, yeah, I know, I have to be very careful,
like knowing like maybe have your soap and things set
out for you, but you could give.

Speaker 4 (22:20):
It a try. So no singing in the shower at all.

Speaker 3 (22:23):
No, no music, sorry, Ray, Nope, thanks, ma'am. It doesn't
sound like he sings in the shower much anyways.

Speaker 2 (22:30):
He's singing, guy hate's singing.

Speaker 4 (22:32):
Never heard of that before, all right, Eddie, Okay, So
we talked about forever. Michael Jordan was trying to sell
his Chicago home and it was listed for like eleven
million dollars. A guy finally bought it for like nine
point five million dollars, and now the neighbors are upset
because he bought it in hopes to flip it. Nobody
wants to buy it.

Speaker 2 (22:50):
So why are the neighbors upset? Then?

Speaker 4 (22:52):
Because he wants to turn it into a museum.

Speaker 2 (22:54):
Well I thought he was ringing it out in Airbnb too.

Speaker 4 (22:56):
Yeah, he said, that's not working. What I'm going to
do is do an immersive museum where I put all
this stuff. People can come pay a fee and come
visit the house.

Speaker 2 (23:03):
It depends what the zoning is. You can't have a
business in a lot of neighborhoods.

Speaker 4 (23:06):
Oh really, yeah, so.

Speaker 2 (23:09):
I don't know if that place is zoned for commercial
versus residential. It could be double zone. Some places are
zoned for both. I would bet it's not.

Speaker 4 (23:17):
Well what I like. So you have to go like
the city and get a permit and all that.

Speaker 2 (23:20):
If it's not zoned there, you can't have a business.

Speaker 4 (23:22):
There unless the city council changes that. They're not going
to They're not gonna grant a waiver in the middle
of a community. It'd be like in a neighborhood. In
your neighborhood, somebody goes, I'm gonna turn this house into
a business. Oh, that would make everyone so much.

Speaker 2 (23:34):
That's why they have zoning rules, zoning laws. You can't
do that now. Some places do have residential, like we
have a place here in town that we turned into
some studios that it was residential and like professional or
whatever the commercial like you, and it has both, but
it's rare.

Speaker 4 (23:53):
I don't know. It'd be kind of cool to see
the inside of Michael Jordan's house.

Speaker 2 (23:57):
I think it would be cool too. I'm just saying
for him. That's probably the issue you think putting up christaslights,
because growing up there was I think that they're called
the Osborne family, super rich in Liar Rock, and they
would put up a massive Christmas light displayed their house.
It was the biggest in America. I don't know if
it still is. He might have even died, I don't know.
But they were super wealthy and people would drive and
wait in line for like an hour and a half.

(24:17):
But that meant you couldn't really get out of the neighborhood.
It wasn't a business that's tough, and there were no
rules against it, but it drove the neighbors crazy because
you could not even get out of your driveway because
there was an hour long line just to drive by
their house. So all the roads were full up. I
have a friend that went to the In and Out here.
There's three of them now that have opened. There were two,
they opened a third one, and all in small towns

(24:42):
that are basically Nashville. So if you grow up there,
you're from Nashville. But if you live in Nashville, it's like, no,
it's Mount Juliet.

Speaker 4 (24:48):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (24:48):
So they opened three in and Out. It's three different places.
And he went the other day. I saw him post
on his Instagram story. I said, how long take it?
Because it took me only thirty five minutes, I said,
He said that I got the right when it opened
at ten am, and I said thirty five minutes to
be the first one in. He goes, yeah, he said,
but we drove by to eleven thirty and asked that
the line was two and a half hours long.

Speaker 4 (25:06):
That's crazy. My son's been trying to go, but he's
going like at two o'clock, three o'clock and he's like,
I can't do.

Speaker 2 (25:12):
It, dad, And that's an off hour.

Speaker 4 (25:14):
Yeah, that was his plan. He's like, Oh, I'm not
gonna go at lunch and I'm gonna go after lunch. Nope.

Speaker 2 (25:19):
It looks like if you want to get something, you
got to go at ten early, like wait before it
opens when they open. Has anybody been to the interne
out here?

Speaker 5 (25:26):
Nope?

Speaker 2 (25:26):
Not trying that Chick fil A is annoying to get
into it lunch, even here because at lunch that they're
wrapped around. Now they move that line really efficiently, but
it's daunting because you go, I don't know, I want
to sit in this thing because it's in the street
in a couple of like the one in our house.
There's cars in the street and it's in a strip center,
and it's like blocking all the so around, like eleven

(25:48):
fifteen to almost one. It's wrapped all around.

Speaker 3 (25:50):
It's hard to know if you want to go to
any of the other stores there. Sometimes you get caught
up in the Chick fil A line. You're like, wait
a second, I guess I'm getting to get.

Speaker 2 (25:58):
Over to the parking lot because the chick play lines
walking the whole place.

Speaker 4 (26:01):
But the in and out line, like that's going to
die down three months, three months.

Speaker 2 (26:05):
You think it'll it'll not die die down, but it'll
probably get Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 7 (26:13):
Morgan, all right, So Kristen, you know the hr exect
that was in the big cold Play scandal.

Speaker 6 (26:19):
Oh yeah, she's finally broken her silence.

Speaker 2 (26:21):
I was just waiting for this.

Speaker 4 (26:22):
She did her first.

Speaker 7 (26:24):
Interview with New York Times, and she said, I made
a bad decision and had a couple of high noons
and danced and acted inappropriately with my boss.

Speaker 6 (26:32):
It's not nothing.

Speaker 7 (26:33):
She feels that she took accountability and gave up her
career for that ordeal, But she more importantly wants her
kids to know that you can make mistakes and you
can really screw up, but you don't have to be
threatened to be killed for them.

Speaker 3 (26:46):
Is her big statement that she threatened.

Speaker 4 (26:48):
To be You get threaten to be killed for anything.

Speaker 2 (26:51):
You just do something and you get kind of famous
for it. If it's bad or good, you're gonna get
death threats in your dms. But death threats are also
I wish you would die, and people go, that's threat,
but they don't really mean that, they're just saying it's
also uh anonymous, So it's like accounts that don't even
have their avatar with the real picture and not saying
that it's It's not nothing, but used to when someone

(27:14):
got a death threat, it was from a known person
going I'm gonna come kill you.

Speaker 4 (27:19):
That's scary.

Speaker 2 (27:19):
Yeah, Now it's somebody randomly on a burner account wishing
you would die and you're going to I got death threats,
so it's not nothing. But the death threat has kind
of minimized itself over the last five years.

Speaker 4 (27:34):
And whoever gets killed.

Speaker 2 (27:38):
Who's famous it gets a death threat from social media
and ends up dying. I don't really nobody, Yeah I
don't know.

Speaker 4 (27:45):
I mean, yeah, I guess not a lot.

Speaker 3 (27:48):
To find out.

Speaker 2 (27:49):
Yeah, I'm not looking to find out either, personally.

Speaker 4 (27:51):
Remember the liver King liver King right, he had, didn't
he like threat threaten them?

Speaker 2 (27:56):
Well, that's a real one because you knew who.

Speaker 4 (27:57):
Was it's threatening. What's his name, Joe Rogan? Yeah, and
then flew to Austin.

Speaker 2 (28:04):
See that I would worry about. That's a real one
if you know who it is, or you know what
the group is, or there's something significant that someone would
threaten you over. Like, that's not a real thing to
threaten somebody's life over.

Speaker 3 (28:15):
You know. What I always get sucked into is when
girls will make these videos of like from the commenters
in their comment section of like a guy saying, like,
when I just saw the other day, this girl is
modeling the stress that she had, and like her stomach
is kind of sticking out a little bit. I mean
I didn't notice it at all, but you know, then
guys are in her comments like oh are you pregnant?

(28:36):
Or oh that you need spanks or whatever, and she'll
grab the comment and then she goes their profile and
gets their a picture from their page and then she
puts them on blast and it's rolling through and most
of the comments like they are they're older men that
are like.

Speaker 2 (28:53):
Would never have a chance, yes, like taking out their
anger on their life on her.

Speaker 3 (28:58):
Yes, and I I'll I'll spend time watching those because
it just is a helpful reminder of sometimes who's behind
the keyboard, and it's like, please don't let that one
comment ruin your day, because look who it's coming from.

Speaker 2 (29:09):
Also, it's a great way to get engagement. You can
find the one inflammatory comment when ninety nine percent of
the market and post it up and be like, can
you believe this? Here's the thing off and not really
it wasn't the message that was running through the comment.
You can just find the one articles do this where
they will go person thinks Justin Bieber's the Internet says
Justin Bieber's a terrible singer. And it's one comment from

(29:29):
a post you can grab. You can find anything if
you go into the comments to make your story to
create engagement.

Speaker 7 (29:36):
Well, and what's also interesting about this is she admitted
in it that she kind of had flirty feelings for him.

Speaker 4 (29:42):
She was like hooking up my nose, itch sold No.

Speaker 6 (29:44):
This was the first time they had ever.

Speaker 3 (29:46):
Yeah, she had some high news.

Speaker 6 (29:48):
She said, do we believe that?

Speaker 4 (29:49):
Because I know that's what I was thinking, Like, there's
no way.

Speaker 2 (29:52):
There's no way you're in public like that, and that's
the first time.

Speaker 7 (29:54):
But she did say that they both bonded over going
through separations, so I think both of them were going
through a separation at the time.

Speaker 6 (30:00):
They were both separated, and she said she she freaked
out initially because she knew the husband that she was
separated from was on a date at that Coldplay concert
and she goes and I felt like it was disrespectful, like, oh,
I don't want to and that's why she freaked out there.

Speaker 2 (30:15):
That was the first time.

Speaker 4 (30:16):
Well, I'm not talking about that. I just don't know.
That's why they jumped.

Speaker 2 (30:19):
Yeah, yeah, no, they didn't want to be seen, especially him,
like he had a wife.

Speaker 6 (30:24):
No, they were both separated.

Speaker 4 (30:25):
Well then just say that, like anybody.

Speaker 2 (30:27):
People didn't know that the guy was separated, so they
could have been separated, but people didn't know the guy
was separated because the first it was like married dude,
here's his wife and kids. She kicks him out of
the house.

Speaker 7 (30:36):
But like, isn't that crazy that they were both separated
And now both of them lost their jobs for that
because they were separated, but.

Speaker 6 (30:42):
They're not allowed to it's probably the boss, the CEO. Yeah,
I don't think you're allowed to do that.

Speaker 2 (30:49):
I don't think that was our first time. Yeah, I
would bet it just didn't seem like significant amount of money.
That's the first time they did that. Yeah, that's what
you can say.

Speaker 4 (30:57):
Now, Yeah, a couple of hinds.

Speaker 3 (30:58):
But it's like, why do this whole thing with The
New York Times if you're not gonna like she didn't
have to speak, so like, why speak if you're not
going to give.

Speaker 2 (31:06):
Probably because people are hounding her to talk and she
can finally say, well, I did an interview, I've said
my whole story.

Speaker 4 (31:11):
But who's hounding you to talk?

Speaker 2 (31:13):
Like, well, we're talking about it, so obviously it was interesting.

Speaker 4 (31:15):
And well we didn't I mean, we wouldn't have cared.

Speaker 2 (31:17):
It doesn't matter.

Speaker 3 (31:17):
It was one of the mag we talked about culture
moments of the year because she spoke.

Speaker 4 (31:21):
Though that's my point, Because she spoke, we're talking about it.
If she's nice, they stop talking about it. We would
forget like everything else.

Speaker 2 (31:27):
But people know that if she speaks and they get
the interview, people are going to talk about it and
click into it.

Speaker 4 (31:33):
Oh who wants that?

Speaker 2 (31:34):
Do y'all pay for.

Speaker 3 (31:34):
The New York Times. Was this New York magazine or
New York Times.

Speaker 6 (31:37):
It's New York Times, y'all be page six covered it.

Speaker 3 (31:39):
That's when people send me like a really interesting looking
article for New York Times, and then I click on
it and I lets you start to read it, and
then it's like, no, you need to pay to read
the rest.

Speaker 4 (31:48):
It makes it blurry. And then I try to zoom in.
I think I can read this.

Speaker 6 (31:52):
I try to click out and click back in real
quick and try to get it before they.

Speaker 2 (31:55):
I bet you there were one hundred different entities reaching
out to get an interview from her and non stop.
But you do it so they stop because you can go,
I've already done the interview. I've said everything I need
to say.

Speaker 4 (32:05):
That's who's hounding. Got it and got it?

Speaker 2 (32:07):
Everybody the public, Yeah yeah, yeah, clicks got it.

Speaker 4 (32:09):
That's not like her family like will you please speak
like oh no, no, no no.

Speaker 2 (32:13):
The people that want the interview because they're going to
get a lot of clicks because they know it's not
that we're so interested waiting for it, but if it
does pop up, we'll talk about it.

Speaker 4 (32:20):
Yeah, because it was a really stupid, huge but hilarious
and awkward story of the year.

Speaker 2 (32:25):
It's just crazy too. What what goes super viral so fast?
Like it can be nothing that you did or worked
hard on. It can be just something that randomly happens
in real life. They just get spread a little bit
and the algorithm goes, well, people like this, let's spread
it more.

Speaker 7 (32:39):
I have one video that's kind of doing it, and
it's the most random video, but it's one of my
elderly interviews.

Speaker 3 (32:45):
She said she had talked about how.

Speaker 7 (32:47):
Her parents for step children and they got married, and
that's what's going like doing something because their every step
brother and sister.

Speaker 2 (32:54):
Yeah, and they got married.

Speaker 4 (32:55):
It's her parents. They can't do that.

Speaker 3 (32:58):
No, you can totally do that.

Speaker 2 (33:00):
I think it's not that weird. If you are step
way older. Let's say you that you're they get married.
Let's say you're even like sixteen, because you're not. You
don't grow up together as brother and sister. Sixteen year
old's date.

Speaker 3 (33:11):
They were eight and twelve. I believe it's.

Speaker 2 (33:12):
Little more awkward, but also like the forties and fifties too,
So I just picture people out on a farm and
they're like, who else, We're not blood.

Speaker 3 (33:21):
Yeah, I was at college with my half brother and sisters.
Half brother got it. I thought about it.

Speaker 2 (33:27):
Quarter brother, Yeah, but.

Speaker 3 (33:30):
We're not blood related at all.

Speaker 2 (33:32):
Like you don't get explained to us.

Speaker 4 (33:33):
You want to hook brother my brother and sister. You
wanted to hook out your quarter brother half brother.

Speaker 3 (33:40):
And like sometimes we would all go out and like
our friends would be like, they'll be like, so y'all
could date, and we're like, yeah, we definitely could. And
he's like a straight up cowboy and I always been
attracted to cowboys. But we never dated. But I think
about that. I think about that sometimes. I think I
was attracted to his lifestyle.

Speaker 2 (33:58):
He also could have been a good looking and also
you had no blood with them. There's a way that
you are not related to them at all.

Speaker 3 (34:04):
And that's my half sister's mom married a different guy
and they had a baby. And that is him, and
that is him.

Speaker 4 (34:14):
That's him cowboy.

Speaker 2 (34:15):
Watch Fox your story.

Speaker 6 (34:16):
Yeah, there was a trucker in Indiana. He stopped at
a pilot gas station and he goes in, does whatever, showers,
comes back out, and he notices the safety seal on
his rig is messed with in the back. I guess
they have a seal, so you know that way. They
didn't put anything new in their trailer. He's like, huh,
that's weird. He opened up and there's a couple of
boxes that were not part of his original load.

Speaker 2 (34:39):
Oh wow, that's like at the airport. Don't take something
from somebody and all of a sudden you're traveling with it.
This is on the road though.

Speaker 6 (34:45):
And there was sixteen million dollars worth of cocaine put
in the back of his trailer.

Speaker 2 (34:49):
So did they know where he was going and they
were just trying to catch it a lift?

Speaker 6 (34:52):
Yes?

Speaker 4 (34:53):
Wow, And so he called police immediately.

Speaker 6 (34:56):
They don't know, they haven't tracked down whose it was,
but they took the cocaine and they were like sixteen
million dollars worth. Someone that knew his route.

Speaker 4 (35:05):
Yeah, they knew his route.

Speaker 3 (35:07):
Yeah, and they know him.

Speaker 2 (35:08):
I don't know about that.

Speaker 6 (35:09):
No, no, or else. He wouldn't have called the cops. He
wouldn't have all the cops if he was in there.

Speaker 3 (35:13):
I'm not saying he's in on it. And they know
I don't think they know him like they have a relationship,
but they know his name.

Speaker 2 (35:19):
Yeah, but he didn't do anything wrong. You don't go
kill him.

Speaker 3 (35:22):
He went to the police.

Speaker 4 (35:23):
Oh that's wrong. Yeah, but he didn't know anything though,
so we got to, like, you know, the drug dealers
have to give him.

Speaker 2 (35:29):
Grades trucker return trailer loaded with sixteen million dollars worth
of cocaine at a truck stop. I think the person
who did it probably gets in trouble, gets taken care of.

Speaker 3 (35:38):
Right, like you idiot, this is how you decided to transport.

Speaker 2 (35:40):
Not the trucker that did wrong. He doesn't get penalized
by the Yeah, hopefully.

Speaker 6 (35:44):
I figured they did this all the time.

Speaker 2 (35:46):
I bet they do. Probably if they're doing this significant.
You don't do this the first time. You have done
it right so many times.

Speaker 6 (35:52):
And the quickness that he's in a gas station and
you're putting sixteen million dollars worth of cocaine into his.

Speaker 2 (35:58):
Truck thirty it's crazy. It looks like it's about one
hundred and fifty bags of coke stacked into a pyramid.
They do the pyramid though on the table. It wasn't
in a truck, but it looks just in the truck.

Speaker 3 (36:10):
Yeah, I do not want any part of that.

Speaker 4 (36:13):
That's crazy that he noticed too, that the seal was broken.

Speaker 2 (36:15):
And I think also, if you're gonna have that much,
let me just play gangster for a second. This is
sixteen million dollars. So as much as it's a truck stop,
it's a pilot, it's a truck driver, it's a truck.
If you're going to put sixteen million dollars of anything anywhere,
you need to be elite at how you're doing it.
So I'm surprised they didn't reseal that or have a
new because with that kind of investment, you do the

(36:38):
little things right. Yeah, you learn, because this is obviously
something they'd gotten good at. The guy goes in, get
him asadipop, and they fill it his truck up. They've
done this many times, probably smaller levels. The fact they
did not put a new seal on it, however you
do that, Oh that's not good work. That's sixteen million dollars.
You got to protect it by doing every little thing
right and then have somebody when it's received that is

(36:59):
actually cutting this the only taking it. They're in on
it obviously where the truck was going. Yeah, look at that.

Speaker 6 (37:06):
That's just crazy.

Speaker 2 (37:07):
For sixteen million dollars, you have somebody that is so
efficient at this, they reseal it.

Speaker 6 (37:13):
Yeah, if you have this connection, you have the seals.

Speaker 7 (37:16):
I do feel like you've been watching that trucker for
a while, because how do you know if that truck
stops just him running in to grab something or is
he like running into shower?

Speaker 4 (37:23):
I don't think. My theory is that the people that
own the truck line and know the routes are in
it with the dealers.

Speaker 2 (37:32):
I would think maybe not that own the truck line,
but people that know the routes.

Speaker 6 (37:36):
Yeah, someone that assigns the routes and.

Speaker 3 (37:39):
Who's ever receiving it they have to know.

Speaker 2 (37:41):
Yeah, there's a receiver that's already in on it.

Speaker 3 (37:43):
Yeah. No, that's an investigation. Where was the truck headed?

Speaker 6 (37:48):
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (37:49):
I'm I'm curious now.

Speaker 4 (37:51):
I always like to know, why do you want to
know that?

Speaker 2 (37:55):
Like what it says it was in Indiana, but it
doesn't say where Indianapolis because I know Wi SHTV. I
have a friend that works there.

Speaker 4 (38:04):
It's sixteen million dollars worth of cousin.

Speaker 3 (38:06):
I'm saying, like, you know, like people aren't getting their
Christmas coke.

Speaker 2 (38:10):
And what's Christmas? You don't have Christmas coke?

Speaker 4 (38:12):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (38:13):
Man, that's not my favorite Christmas songs. Christmas coke, You're.

Speaker 4 (38:17):
Not having a white Christmas.

Speaker 3 (38:19):
That drug life, that's just not something I've ever understood.
I'm not talking about the dealer's side. I'm talking about
like the doer side.

Speaker 4 (38:26):
Yeah, im probably because you haven't done it. I bet
it's awesome.

Speaker 3 (38:28):
Oh no, my cousin said it is. She she was high,
high functioning on some stuff like executive, like high up
in her company and party by night, work by day,
and it worked until it didn't.

Speaker 2 (38:43):
That's where it gets.

Speaker 3 (38:44):
And then she went to a sober kicks in.

Speaker 4 (38:47):
But yeah, I'm sure while you're using it, but for years.

Speaker 3 (38:49):
She was very successful and high functioning and it's so
but I mean, her life was unraveling. She just couldn't
see it. But yeah, I don't know. That stuff just
freaks me out.

Speaker 2 (38:59):
For a couple of reasons. Most people will get into
drugs want to escape the crappy situation they're in, which
is which is why in a lot of the poor
parts of the country, like where I come from the South,
even like Appalachia. That's why the pills. It's not because
it makes people feel like, oh wow, this is the greatest.
They're in dire situations and it actually removes them from

(39:21):
that for a second. Or if you're in a good
situation and you just want to feel great, you want
to elevate it. Yeah, it's all elevation.

Speaker 3 (39:27):
Yeah. And I had like this therapy thing that focused
on that a couple of weeks ago. Just a lot
of like addiction and either alcoholism, and it's actually like
sometimes you want to think negative, like negatively of that,
and it's sort of like some some addicts are alcoholics.
It's like they're the ones that are like paying attention.

(39:48):
They're like something's all right, Like I need to escape this,
and other people that are just living in it. You know,
it's almost like we want to judge them, but they're
finding a solution to escape, like Bobby was saying, like
to get out. It's almost like, well, it works until
it doesn't.

Speaker 2 (40:07):
There is a scavenger hunt happening now with Survivor of
the TV show. They're hiding immunity idols in all fifty states.
I think the finale was last night.

Speaker 6 (40:15):
Well don't say anything, don't say anything.

Speaker 2 (40:17):
I don't know who won. It's got a headline, so
I don't know who's making sure The finale was last night,
But I did see this story that Survivor will launch
the nationwide contest will you hit the clip ray next season?

Speaker 8 (40:28):
Survivor hits a major milestone, our fiftieth season. This is
Survivor fifty and to celebrate, we were inviting.

Speaker 4 (40:35):
You to be part of the fund.

Speaker 8 (40:37):
This is your moment. For the first time ever, we
are taking Survivor across America. We've hidden immunity idols, fifty
of them, one in every state. Your job solve the clues,
find me out for a shot at an unbelievable prize.
You can scan the code or go to Survivor fifty
Challenge dot com.

Speaker 2 (40:56):
Be a part of Survivor history. That's something that you
should do.

Speaker 6 (41:00):
I'm already gonna do it, but I'm scared to go
to the website because I don't want to see the winner,
so I'll have to wait till I watch it today.

Speaker 4 (41:05):
You're gonna wait? Why not get a jump start on it? No,
because I don't want to see who the winner of
this something may find it while you're just No, dude,
you're gonna wait because you don't want to know who
the winner is.

Speaker 6 (41:13):
Yes, Oh my goodness.

Speaker 4 (41:16):
See I think this is why you don't get the
things that you want ahead.

Speaker 6 (41:19):
Oh, here goes this guy. What have you got nothing?
I'm just saying I'm in this.

Speaker 2 (41:25):
I'm in for this. I'm gonna sit back.

Speaker 4 (41:26):
Guys, I just don't understand like you have a spoiler.
I don't want to spoil my show when you have
a huge prize waiting for you, like it could be
right down the road. We're in the middle of the state, Like,
what are you waiting on? And you're always like, oh,
the world hates me, the world. You're not moving. I
would move right. I would scan that code right now
and start looking for this thing. Then do it.

Speaker 6 (41:48):
No, you okay, I will Thanks for that Pep talk Eddie.
You donate a kidney and I'll go find the idol. No,
I mean kidney. I'm gonna save a life. What are
you gonna sit there? I don't this chicken. I'm gonna
do a chicken, missus. What do you do? Sit there now?

Speaker 4 (42:09):
The chicken.

Speaker 6 (42:11):
I'm gonna do this seasoning in the world.

Speaker 4 (42:13):
There, it's sitting there.

Speaker 6 (42:15):
I have I'm gonna miss I'm gonna start selling it.
What do you do? I have to sit there.

Speaker 2 (42:21):
He doubled it up. Now I gotta get on the
d gotta get on the rhy.

Speaker 3 (42:24):
Sit there, sit there, I need some salt, SA don't worry.

Speaker 4 (42:29):
I got you. Okay, it's coming. So in conclusion. In conclusion, dude, like,
what's your point about him? The world doesn't hate you.
You're just not doing anything to get the things that
you want. Lunchbox, what you What is your point to Eddie?

Speaker 6 (42:44):
I mean, I'll talk. Just sit there, sit there.

Speaker 4 (42:48):
Got twice?

Speaker 3 (42:50):
Okay?

Speaker 2 (42:52):
Is there? Is it possible? There's truth and what both
of you are saying.

Speaker 4 (42:55):
But I'm not complaining about anything. He complains about it enough.
You're not complaining. You just so you do say a
lot you don't do, but you are. It's different, but
it's the same. I think it's more different than it
is the same. He complained, Oh, why does somebody want
the lottery? I didn't win the lottery. The world hates me.

Speaker 6 (43:15):
I do play the lottery. I wouldn't try to get
on prices right like I actually do.

Speaker 3 (43:19):
Still, I mean, this year you finally went.

Speaker 2 (43:21):
We kind of forced you to go.

Speaker 6 (43:22):
Now that didn't force me. You just said i'd never
go and I was like, oh, you know what, I'm
gonna do it because I didn't know. And then I
booked a flight and I was like can I really go?
And You're like yeah, and I was like, okay, good.

Speaker 4 (43:32):
So Eddie, your response, what are the prizes to this
Survivor thing? I don't know, man, I want to do
it now.

Speaker 2 (43:39):
If you went and tracked it down and found it.

Speaker 4 (43:43):
Then he can't say anything anymore.

Speaker 2 (43:44):
He can't be sit there, sit But you would only
be doing it out a fight.

Speaker 4 (43:48):
It's not you, oh, because this is my thing, So
I don't I've never watched Survivor, like, not one episode
of my life.

Speaker 2 (43:54):
Are there any clues up now?

Speaker 5 (43:56):
No, it's forty days.

Speaker 4 (43:57):
It starts, oh January thirty first. Oh, you're good. Then
to watch the show. Yeah, it probably starts.

Speaker 6 (44:02):
It probably starts the day the season fifty starts, is
what I would assume.

Speaker 2 (44:06):
Yeah, the motion will begin in January thirty first. That's
when the clues will begin appearing online. It'll run through
February twenty fifth. That's fun. Oh, I'd love it if
when you guys found that.

Speaker 4 (44:16):
It's crazy. I mean right, we're in the middle of
the state, like it's got to be are we I
have no idea like yeah, Like geographically we're in the middle.
What do you see on the contract there, Mike, I
just sleeping as the prizes.

Speaker 5 (44:29):
You get like a three day, two night trip.

Speaker 2 (44:31):
Oh in the Ice hotel. Yeah, you go from catamaran
to Ice hotel. Motorcycle midlife crisis. Over the past few years,
sales figures for hardy Days and motorcycles have been declining.
I'm not a motorcycle guy. I don't want to ride
a motorcycle, want nothing to do to motorcycles just because
I'm scared. Yeah, of this. It's the risk reward for me.
And the risk is not even my risk of what

(44:54):
I do wrong. If a car does wrong, it hits me,
I'm hurt or dead. Oh yeah, so it's not even
that I'm not believing in me, because I don't even
believe in me to ride a motorcycle or drive a motorcycle.
But I have to have faith in other cars.

Speaker 4 (45:05):
But what about like driving around the field but that fun? Yeah,
some people do that.

Speaker 2 (45:11):
Yeah, motocross, motocross, I'm not jumping crap now the sport,
Like I get that as a sport. Yeah, I think
I would be probably just how I am more prone
to do that than go on to open road or
the Harley where someone could hit you and kill you,
or you hit a big rock.

Speaker 4 (45:25):
And then like spin out of control. Dude, my six
year old, like I mean, since he's was three years old,
he sees a motorcycle and his eyes get big, like
he will be a motorcycle rider.

Speaker 2 (45:36):
I'm risk averse though when it comes to stuff like that,
so just not for me. I'm not risk averse in
every part of my life, but in physical I might
die type situations. I don't even like being up high
of a big fear of heights.

Speaker 4 (45:49):
Just it's cool.

Speaker 2 (45:53):
I see someone driving motorcycle like mountain, that's I think
it's cool. Like I wish I had that in me,
like the ability to just get out because you also
you can't be on your phone. Yeah, Like there's just
a focus that you have to have to do it,
and I think just having that would be cool. I'll
took a bath this morning. I've taken a bat six
days in a row in the morning.

Speaker 4 (46:11):
That's the risk taker.

Speaker 2 (46:14):
Yeah, I don't. I'm not on my phone in the bath.
I am for a second, but then I just put
it up and I'll do listen to three full songs
and just try to let my mind escape.

Speaker 4 (46:24):
That's good, Yeah, it's really good.

Speaker 2 (46:27):
Do you amy get exhausted at like four pm?

Speaker 3 (46:31):
I don't know that. I recall every day, like I mean,
it starts to get dark at four thirty.

Speaker 2 (46:36):
So I get so sleepy every day around three thirty
four o'clock to where it's hard for me to keep
my eyes open. And I do not a big nap guy.
So when I do go to bed at like eight
thirty or nine, as soon as I lay down, I'm like, Okay,
finally I can go to bed.

Speaker 4 (46:52):
I'm just like, but.

Speaker 3 (46:54):
You're yeah, so you're not taking a nap at four No?

Speaker 2 (46:56):
I If I do, I'll be up all night for sure.
Yeah so, M but I guess. So you guys don't
get so exhausteds like sleepy against.

Speaker 4 (47:03):
Mine's a little earlier. What time do we do the
Bobby Cast? Yesterday? Two? It's like two o'clock. You get
really sleepy where you get where my eyes are just
like doing that every single day. But then I fight through.
It lasts about thirty minutes and then they're like, if
I do the nap thing. I'm out. I'm out for
like three hours, but I never I rarely do that,
So I fight it and then about thirty minutes later

(47:23):
just goes away. My face is itching so bad today too,
Like my nose.

Speaker 2 (47:27):
Is it drink?

Speaker 3 (47:28):
It's so dry?

Speaker 2 (47:29):
Maybe the camera's been obviously doesn't noting to like do it?
Doesn't my nose just try to get it?

Speaker 3 (47:33):
Is it like even on the inside of the outside.

Speaker 2 (47:36):
It just it's just so bad everywhere.

Speaker 3 (47:38):
Oh, I'm just like, oh, yeah, it's gonna be dry.

Speaker 4 (47:40):
Is your throat still dry? Yeah, my throat's dry. Everything's dry.

Speaker 2 (47:46):
My eyes are dry.

Speaker 4 (47:48):
Oh sucks.

Speaker 2 (47:49):
All right, let's see what else we got. Roughly two
hundred fifty packages are stolen nation wide every day from
in facility or porch pirates, but two hundred and fifty
thousand packages every day these stores, these companies, they have

(48:10):
entire departments of people who just answer calls to get
people refunds. Like, think about the money they're losing because
of porch Pirates.

Speaker 4 (48:17):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (48:19):
I did see yesterday to a they Freedom of Information
Act a bunch of colleges to see what their balloon
budgets were for the athletic programs. Did you guys happen
to see this?

Speaker 5 (48:28):
Mike?

Speaker 2 (48:28):
Would you pull the list up if you could find it?
And so Texas was at number one. They had spent
like one hundred and eighty thousand dollars on balloons last year.

Speaker 3 (48:37):
Oh you literally balloons literally stands for balloons. I was
about to ask you what balloons stood for, Like.

Speaker 2 (48:43):
No balloons, like literal balloons.

Speaker 3 (48:44):
Party you mean literal balloons?

Speaker 4 (48:47):
Yeah, like blow them up. They're pretty colors.

Speaker 3 (48:48):
You know.

Speaker 2 (48:49):
I thought it was like a public university, it's all
got to be out. And the reason it popped up
with my Twitter feed is because Arkansas was like fifth
or sixth. They had spent like sixty grand last year
on balloons. Really, yeah, there was a whole for.

Speaker 3 (49:00):
The balloon company in the area.

Speaker 2 (49:01):
I guess there's a whole chart on balloon use amongst
public universities athletic It was all athletic programs, So Texas
was full athletics. Everybody else was college.

Speaker 4 (49:10):
But yeah, I'm not a big balloon guy. I mean,
but they're nice when they're cute, when they're around.

Speaker 3 (49:15):
They're vie.

Speaker 2 (49:16):
The average American will pay off more than one point
seven million dollars in debt between the ages of eighteen
and seventy eight, covering mortgages, auto loans, student debt, and
credit cards. Debt peaks twice, first at age thirty eight,
then at age sixty one. Mortgage consumes sixty two point
six of a lifetime debt one point one million dollars,
then cars, then credit cards than student loans.

Speaker 3 (49:37):
Like, I don't personally feel good with debt, don't like debt,
Try not to have debt. Someone I came across some
video of someone just surely it was satire, but I
don't know. But they're like, we all die anyway, so
who cares? Like rack it up?

Speaker 2 (49:50):
I saw Elon Musk say yesterday that no need to
save money because.

Speaker 3 (49:53):
The yeah, what money, it doesn't matter. Well, it won't
matter robots or something that he said, Yeah, I'm paraphrasy.

Speaker 2 (50:04):
So there's gonna be like an income he says that everybody.

Speaker 4 (50:06):
Gets and oh yeah from the government.

Speaker 2 (50:10):
Yeah, like a general income that And he's like, why
save money. There's everybody's gonna get mone anyway. But it's
easy to say when you have six hundred billion dollars,
number one, we'll put up on the screen. Texas with
one hundred and seventy thousand dollars in balloons.

Speaker 3 (50:23):
Last year one hundred and seventy thousand.

Speaker 2 (50:26):
Number two Texas Tech.

Speaker 3 (50:30):
Well that's quite the drop from one to two.

Speaker 2 (50:32):
Ok, at Texas going they go hard to be fair,
that's Texas All Sports is the biggest though, But that's
Texas All Sports and Texas A and M at fifty
five thousand, North Carolina and North Carolina state, so the
states of Texas and North Carolina are very balloon friendly.
Arkansas comes in at six, so we're the first non
North Carolina Texas state. Arkansas spent I guess thirty one

(50:53):
thousand and balloon money and just football and guys Virginia Tech, Nebraska, Colorado,
and California.

Speaker 4 (51:01):
You've been to a few games in Arkansas, You've never
seen balloons.

Speaker 2 (51:04):
Never a balloon.

Speaker 5 (51:05):
Huh.

Speaker 2 (51:05):
I'm gonna buy it to the balloon parties.

Speaker 4 (51:07):
I guess. Yeah. That's a really random thing. So what did.

Speaker 3 (51:12):
When it doesn't say all sports the other sports don't
get balloons or what?

Speaker 2 (51:16):
Texas probably classified all of those in their filing it's
just all sports. It probably did not.

Speaker 3 (51:26):
Because West Virginia or something I think was all sports.

Speaker 4 (51:28):
Oh you saw another one down there.

Speaker 3 (51:30):
So if you scroll down eight or nine. Oh no, no, Nebraska, Nebraska,
there you go.

Speaker 4 (51:36):
All sports. Still twenty three thousand, we find that Elon
Musk quote.

Speaker 3 (51:42):
Yeah, because in my head it was like, money doesn't
Money's not gonna matter because robots are gonna do everything.

Speaker 2 (51:49):
Elon Musk, don't save money? Quote, here we go. There
will be universal high income. Yeah, that's what it is.
There will be no poverty in the future and no
need to save money. There will be universal high income.
The statement was made in context of discussions of artificial
intelligence and automation, where he argues that technological advancements will
eventually make work optimal in money as a concept will
become obsolete. In this envisioned future, the production of goods

(52:13):
and services by AI and robotics will be so efficient
that everyone's needs are met without the current system of
labor allocation and financial savings.

Speaker 4 (52:20):
Okay, so money won't be super important. Important is that
he's saying.

Speaker 2 (52:23):
That's that's exactly what he's saying.

Speaker 4 (52:24):
But the money, how we see it now, there will
always be a currency that is traded, even if it's
not money. It then becomes how many.

Speaker 2 (52:31):
Wives do you have? How how many kids do you
So there's always something that puts people in tears. Will
always be classed.

Speaker 4 (52:37):
Oh that you literally meant tears, A lot of wives tears.
T I e. R. S.

Speaker 2 (52:45):
Elon Must has no need to save money. See cool
who said that?

Speaker 4 (52:51):
The richest person in the world. It's very easy to say.

Speaker 3 (52:56):
All right, money will disappear in the future.

Speaker 4 (53:00):
My money is just bearing now.

Speaker 2 (53:02):
Christmas time, Christmas time, it all goes. Thank you guys,
we'll see you tomorrow. I appreciate you listening to the podcast,
thanks for watching on YouTube.

Speaker 4 (53:11):
And that is it. Goodbye, 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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