Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
Shoot.
Speaker 2 (00:04):
I started watching the Charlie Sheen documentary yesterday. You watched
it all?
Speaker 3 (00:07):
No, I haven't. Really.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
We're caught up on everything, and so we were just
kind of popping around. So we committed to it. And
it's two episodes or like an hour and twenty minutes each,
and the first one's a little slow, but it's pretty good.
He has three stages of life. He has partying, partying
with problems, problems, and so we got through all the
way of partying, and we got through partying with problems
(00:31):
some of it. But it's pretty good. O. You root
for him. He's likable, but you understand he wouldn't be
that likable if he was messed up. But he's likable.
But he's a really good looking guy. Like when he
was young. You forget because I don't see that now.
I just see Charlie Sheen, the dude that's out of
his mind. But he's been sober for seven or eight
years at this point.
Speaker 3 (00:50):
Oh good, a long time.
Speaker 2 (00:52):
He's done so much and he's done so many crazy
things that you forget some of the crazy things.
Speaker 3 (01:00):
Yeah, Like I just think of when Twitter first.
Speaker 2 (01:02):
Came out, Yeah, the winning and Tiger Blood and stuff. Yeah,
but even like when he came out and said he
was HIV positive, Like I forgot about that until the documentary.
Speaker 3 (01:09):
So totally forgot til you just said that.
Speaker 4 (01:11):
I just totally remember that.
Speaker 2 (01:12):
They forgot about his first wife that I'd only read about.
There was a model he did a commercial with. They
got divorced after like five months. Has anybody else watched this, Mike,
if you watched it.
Speaker 5 (01:20):
Yet, I started it but didn't get far into it.
Speaker 2 (01:24):
Like any book or documentary, they do a lot of
the this is how I grew up stuff that sets
the stage. So the first episode is a lot of that,
but also interesting, like Emilio Estevez was the star before him,
and he was the younger brother because Martin Sheen is
actually Martin Estevez and he had four kids. I think
(01:45):
maybe six, but maybe four brothers. I'm not sure, but yeah,
e Meli Escaz was a younger brother. But he made
it quicker. And my wife and I were watching it.
She was like, what do I know him from? And
I said, I don't know Mighty Ducks. She goes Gordon Bombay.
Oh yeah, and so Charlie. She was Carlos Estevez all
through high school even when he started acting, he was
(02:07):
Carlos Estevez and when he changed it up because he
wasn't having much luck, he said, I'm gonna change my
name to Charlie Sheen, after his dad's stage name, and
that's how it happened.
Speaker 3 (02:17):
Why didn't an Amelia do Sheen?
Speaker 2 (02:22):
I guess just wanted to use his real name maybe
in his documentary. They weren't a part of Charlie's The
two people that didn't want to be in it was
the dad and the brother. Oh really, they were like,
they will not take part in this. They put that
up at the very beginning. But him and what's the
guy's name, big actor very involved in Haiti older now
John pen were like kid friends. They grew up in
(02:44):
the same town in Malibu. So it's pretty good. I
think it's only going to get better. He talks about
one of it. He got to fly a plane with
like three hundred people on the plane, so he was
just he was drunk out of his mind and maybe
and the pilot was like a French airline and the
pilot was a big fan. And Charlie Sheen was like,
(03:05):
I was so messed up, and he said, I said
the pilot wants to take a picture with you. So
he goes up and he said, cool, wo'd be really
cool if I could wear the hat. Pilot somewhere the
hat goes, It'd be really cool. If I could wear
the jacket too. Pilot lets somewhere of the jacket. He's like, man,
this would really like round it out if I could
sit in the seat. So the pilot lets him sit
in the seat and Charlie Sheen's like, I was sitting
(03:26):
there and he said I knew it was on autopilot.
And he was like, this thing on autopilot, and the
guy the pilot goes, not anymore, and he said, I
sat there and I was like moving the plane. She said,
I had my hands on the controls and there were
it was a full flight, commercial flight. And he said,
I'm like moving it and you know it was slow,
but you know, going a little left, he's going a
(03:48):
little right. And he said, before I got out of hand,
because they knew it was going to get out of hand,
they went and put it back on autopilot.
Speaker 6 (03:55):
That is crazy.
Speaker 2 (03:55):
And he was like that was early. And then even
he was like, I felt like could get away with
anything but him and Nick Cage were like boys in
Hollywood at the same time, like they were running brothers.
We're doing lots of drugs. And apparently once Nick Cage
took over the airplane they talked about this where he
got on the mic and was like, we're gonna die
(04:16):
or so he yelled something out like that, and so
they got arrested. As soon as they landed. The cops
all got him and Charlie Sheen's I got a bag
of cocaine taped to the inside of my leg, and
I knew we were going to jail forever. If they
and the guys there were fans of them, They're like,
guys can go ahead and go oh. But he was like, yeah,
all this stuff was happening. I kept getting away with everything,
so I had no rules. Like, even if I knew
(04:38):
there were rules, I was showed over and over again
that I didn't play by the same rules. So super interesting.
He probably almost died five six times. But yeah, it's
pretty good. We'll probably finish it today.
Speaker 3 (04:52):
What's it on Netflix?
Speaker 2 (04:53):
Netflix?
Speaker 3 (04:55):
Yeah, I keep seeing it pop up, but he's.
Speaker 2 (04:57):
Doing a lot of interviews for it now.
Speaker 6 (04:58):
Yeah, I see the TikTok lips.
Speaker 2 (05:01):
Yeah, Uh, so you watch that? Do you watch do
you watch Task?
Speaker 3 (05:04):
Saving up? You can start that's no, I'm saving up
because that's why I keep seeing Charlie on Netflix. So
that's where Scandal is. And I'm just trying to get
through that. I'm almost done.
Speaker 2 (05:14):
But you're gonna some of the stuff's gonna get revealed
to you because that show is starting to be really big.
You're gonna see things.
Speaker 3 (05:18):
Online Task or I haven't seen anything about Task now
that I keep saying Task over and over to start
popping up. But no, no, no, no, no, I'm good.
Speaker 2 (05:28):
It's it's the best show out now.
Speaker 3 (05:30):
Okay. I'm looking forward to having multiple to watch.
Speaker 2 (05:34):
Mm hmm, are you watching anything now Scandal? No, anything
that's like actually being made. Like if you asked me
that and I said Gilligan's Island, you'd be like, no, Well.
Speaker 3 (05:43):
I was doing Summer Return pretty but it ended, and
so now I'm I'm waiting on Task. And then I
watched that Netflix movie and I think there's another one
that came out kind of similar, so I'll probably watch
that this weekend.
Speaker 2 (05:57):
We got to the point we hit play on a
Netflix series about it's called Billionaires and Bunkers or something
like that. It's a fictional series and hit player. We
always will look up Rotten Tomatoes and it was like
thirty eight percent. We're like, we're out, and that's how
we got on the Charlie Sheen one. But if you
don't have a plan going into a streaming service, you
won't find anything to watch. Like, if you don't have
a plan, you'll just deck around and look at the
(06:20):
thumbnail of like thirty different shows.
Speaker 6 (06:22):
So what's your plan.
Speaker 2 (06:24):
We're gonna commit the first five minutes to something, case
we're only gonna do it on Netflix. Like our plan is,
we're gonna go into Netflix, find something on Netflix, because
if we don't we go in, we don't find anything
on Netflix, Like, okay, let's go to Amazon. Look around,
I don't know this looks okay, let's go over to HBO.
Then we've just spent twenty six minutes looking for something
and not starting anything. At this point, we could have
watched a whole episode of something and realize something sucked,
(06:44):
and that's better than what we had done, which was
well nothing. So yeah, you gotta have a plan going
in When there are a lot of options, almost nothing
is good enough if you don't have a plan, that's
what's up. Let's go around the room. You want to go, sure,
go h So.
Speaker 3 (07:00):
I saw that. I guess the White House put up
this President Hall of Fame thing and it's like pictures
of every single president, and I'm like, what is wrong
with these people? Okay, So it's every president in this
long haul. If you've seen any pictures or videos of it,
you did. And then when it gets to Biden, there's
no picture of his face. It's an autopin because an
(07:24):
autopins have been used by presidents way back. Yes, it's used. However,
I guess they have documented how many times each president
used it, and Biden notoriously used it.
Speaker 2 (07:36):
Biden was I don't even know if you knew what
a pin was at that point.
Speaker 3 (07:39):
Could he grip it?
Speaker 2 (07:41):
I know? Well yeah, but they all used it.
Speaker 3 (07:43):
They all used it, so it's not just Biden, but
I guess he used it the most. And it's just
like such a little immature dig where it's.
Speaker 2 (07:50):
The greatest trolling administration.
Speaker 3 (07:52):
Yeah, like so you have all every president and then
it's just a pin, an autopin, a picture of it
kind of being like because and it also alludes to
the fact that did Biden even make some of the
decisions where he was signing it, or were other people
just signing stuff on his.
Speaker 2 (08:06):
Bath Probably both, Yeah, yeah, probably both.
Speaker 3 (08:09):
Anyway, I think I'm into like presidential White House stuff
because I am so into scandal right now. I'm so
deep in that. Season six threw me and I felt
like you, Bobby, because I was like, what just happened?
And I start researching stuff and I'm reading like threads
and everybody's comments about it, and then I have to
be like, this isn't real. This isn't real.
Speaker 2 (08:30):
I haven't seen that show in so long, and I
think I finished it all. I'm pretty sure I finished
it all.
Speaker 7 (08:34):
I thought I had.
Speaker 3 (08:34):
Too, but there's no way I finished season six because
if I had finished season six, I would have had
these exact same thoughts, and I know I didn't have these,
And it's having a resurgence because now it's on Netflix.
So even some of the threads were just written like
two weeks ago where people are bagging on season six,
and I found out.
Speaker 2 (08:51):
Six straight to a streaming service then, and it wasn't
on network television.
Speaker 3 (08:55):
No, I think it was on network television, but who
knows what happened with life like why we didn't finish it,
But what Shonda Rhymes had written or what the creators
or the writers had put together was too close to
real life. What was happening with Russia that last minute
they had to pivot the storyline and just write something
because it didn't make sense really to me. And I
(09:16):
was like, wow, I know these shows are not real,
but also they're kind of real.
Speaker 2 (09:21):
They bring in consultants who have been yes, close to
administrations that can say a lot but not all. So
a lot of these do mirror reality because they bring
in people that have dealt with the reality in a way.
Speaker 3 (09:33):
Yeah yeah, I'm like they should have just kept it.
Who cares if it was too close to being real,
Just keep what you got. But maybe they were scared
or something.
Speaker 8 (09:39):
Lunchwalks, Okay, this is the story that won't go away.
Coldplay concert kiss cam. Well apparently now they're saying the
girl that was in the CEO's arms, you know, and
they were swaying back and forth. Her husband was also
on a date at that Coldplay concert, but they were
already so otherwise they were already split. But I'm just say,
(10:00):
and like, this is just getting crazier that he's sitting
there with his chick at the concert and then there's
his what I mean, separated wife in the arms of
a dude, like so crazy.
Speaker 2 (10:09):
I wonder if they both knew they'd be at the
concert with somebody else, because they were separated from what
I've read, so it's okay they had the agreement they
could did other people. But I wonder if they both
knew they'd be at that same concert, if they communicated
enough to know that, because if they didn't and he
saw her up there, that's funny odds. Yeah, and then
(10:30):
it goes so viral because she did nothing wrong as
far as she didn't cheat. Now what she knew about
the CEO, if he was married, who knows. But she
didn't do anything wrong as far as she cheat. She
didn't cheat because they had a separation in place. But
he's the one that did wrong.
Speaker 6 (10:48):
Because he was married, and yeah, yeah, and there's been
no rule.
Speaker 2 (10:52):
It's also got to be something about that, because if
you're that smart of a person that's running a company,
because that's a pretty progressive company, you're that smart of
a guy to be the CEO of a billion dollar company.
You usually don't make really stupid decisions like you're going
to be a very public concert in your area and
have your arms around somebody else. I would understand if
(11:13):
you're doing that in a hotel room because everybody can't
see you. You're not out in the public. That just
seems like a really stupid decision to make by somebody's
supposed to be pretty smart, especially with an employee, Like
it's like doubly stupid. So, yeah, I saw that. Pretty interesting.
Speaker 4 (11:27):
I'm gonna go.
Speaker 6 (11:27):
Back and look at the video, like, so was he
the one that got away first?
Speaker 4 (11:31):
No, she does.
Speaker 6 (11:32):
She dove left, so weird.
Speaker 2 (11:37):
A lot of time in these situations, there are understandings
that maybe the gin doesn't know about me. I know
there are situations in our world in country music where
there are married couples and they bang other people and
I want, yeah who, and like I'm gonna say that
here and on online, like the happiest couple ever, happiest
(12:00):
couple of it. And either they're miserable in their marriage
or they've just agreed where he's just going to bang
other people, or the dude just is allowed to cheat.
Because when he's gone, hey, you do your own thing,
and I'll do my own thing. Like that happens so
and also will say that if it works, and it's
not cheating if you're honest about it. So cheating is deception.
But there's just a there's an agreement, there's an arrangement,
(12:22):
and it seems to me like there had to be
something in play here, especially with her for sure, because
they were separated. The play is probably who cares, we're
living our own lives until we get divorced. But with
him too smart of a guy to do something so stupid.
Now I don't know that, but that's what I think.
Speaker 3 (12:40):
Why do it takes so long first to find out
that her strange husband was also at the show?
Speaker 2 (12:45):
She wasn't the main part of the story. It was him,
he was a CEO. The part of that story was
she was HR and he was a CEO. So stupid
decision by him and also her, but also the other
employee that was with them. Like that just kind of
dominated the headlines.
Speaker 6 (12:58):
How do those arrangements go down? Like how do they from?
Speaker 3 (13:03):
Like, all right, why do you want to know?
Speaker 6 (13:04):
Now we can cheat a little bit?
Speaker 5 (13:07):
And so.
Speaker 6 (13:10):
I brought that up to my mark and be like,
what do you get out? We're done.
Speaker 2 (13:14):
I don't know how they're arranged and arrange it. Maybe
it is even the word. Like a guy could get
caught and he's like, yeah, I got yeah I did,
and it's like, oh, I don't want to get divorced.
I want to just make an agreement here, like our
relationship is not going to be the same, but you
can do that. But I'm gonna have this much money.
I'm gonna do this now. I don't know. I think
there are just a lot of factors in play. Some
(13:35):
people are just openly we'll call them swingers, even though
that's really not really the word. But yeah, everybody's different,
and if it works with the relationship, I have no
problem with it, Like what do I care. It's not
my life and you're not hurting anybody, Like, have at it.
If you both know and it makes you better people
and better for your kids, great, we got no problem
with it. I think traditionally it's hard for that to work.
(13:59):
But it's a very non traditional business though that we're
in too, so you don't have the most traditional people
doing non traditional businesses.
Speaker 3 (14:07):
I don't know it was called swinging.
Speaker 2 (14:09):
Swinging would be like if you're going and you're just switching,
and I mean, if you just have agreement, you can
go do what you want to do when you do it.
I don't know that that's exactly swinging.
Speaker 3 (14:18):
I think years you swing together.
Speaker 8 (14:20):
Yeah, you swing together. Usually it's like you and your
boyfriend go to Eddie's house.
Speaker 2 (14:25):
I say, you're thinking of an open relationship.
Speaker 3 (14:27):
Yes, that's what you call it.
Speaker 2 (14:29):
Yeah, No, that happens here. That happens here all the time.
It's like I would say, like forty percent of country
music couples are fake, right high, Like their presentation is fake.
Something about it of the presentation isn't true or real.
Oh that's what I would say, But what do I know? Okay, Morgan,
(14:54):
your story?
Speaker 7 (14:55):
Okay, so did you guys see the big theft that
happened in California. It's another jewelry store, but this time
there was thirty thieves that ran into this jewelry store.
Speaker 4 (15:04):
It was impressive.
Speaker 7 (15:05):
All at the same time, they took away a million
dollars worth of things, and like, so far they've only
arrested seven. So I'm really curious why this keeps happening,
Like are they doing it in hopes that they're one
of the lucky ones that gets.
Speaker 2 (15:18):
Away on the big ones, Yes, cause.
Speaker 7 (15:20):
You watch them just like it was like a mob
of just all these people dressed in black. There was
only three people with guns, and they just like rush
in and rush out and then it's done.
Speaker 2 (15:30):
Yeah, you can only catch a certain number of people.
Speaker 6 (15:32):
This is during business hours.
Speaker 7 (15:34):
Yeah, it was a like ten am. I think is
because the.
Speaker 2 (15:37):
Door's unlocked, so they don't have to break anything, they
don't have to pick a lock, or they just all
go in covered and they're only going to catch a
few of them. It's a numbers game. If you knew
that you're recommitting a crime and you're going to get
one hundred thousand dollars, but only ten percent of the
people we're going to get caught, would you do it?
(15:57):
Nobody gets hurt, by the way, so we're going to
make that rule too. Nobody gets to I'm in, I'm in.
Speaker 6 (16:01):
I like them.
Speaker 7 (16:02):
I have a really bad book.
Speaker 5 (16:03):
I think.
Speaker 7 (16:07):
That would be me. Also, I'd probably be the one
that gets away with like five dollars worth of something.
Speaker 2 (16:10):
You look down, Oh it's not even real gold.
Speaker 7 (16:13):
Yeah, Like I took the wrong thing. That's also the
other thing is how do they split up or do
they not split up. It's just whatever you grab is
what you use.
Speaker 2 (16:20):
Whatever you grab it Because that video I saw it,
like the door opens and they're all just running in
the door, back to back. It's like a line running in.
Some of them have bags and they're just stealing all
the stuff. So it's kind of what you can get
and then get out. And I don't think it's like
we still like pull tips at the restaurant, so you'd
I hated pulling tips because I was really good at
getting tips and it was like I now I got
to pull tips. And like with another way to the shot,
(16:43):
I don't think they pulled jewelry. I think what you
can get is yours. And so i'd want to be
one of the first ones in, not first overall, but
like fifth or sixth out of thirty. That way I
could still get prime stuff without having to be the
first one to the door.
Speaker 8 (16:58):
Oh interesting, see, I don't know how and if like
I don't remember I watched the video, but the first
one's in, did they go deeper into the store, because
I think I want to be closer to the door
to get out first.
Speaker 2 (17:07):
One in is shotgun. You get whatever you want.
Speaker 4 (17:10):
Yeah, they get to their pig. But oh man, that's
just crazy.
Speaker 6 (17:13):
Would you go for diamonds? Watches? What would you go
for first?
Speaker 2 (17:16):
Depends how we scoped out the store, because I'm sure
one or two people went in. I act like they
were buying something. Maybe did buy something. Looked around. I'm
probably just getting what's close, what's the closer ish, and
what's expensive or ish. I'm taking that what's the easiest
ish to get? So whatever kind of fits all that,
I'm gonna get.
Speaker 6 (17:35):
It sounds fun, well, canine I'm talking about that's fun.
It's say like there's just a game where like, no,
you're not a crime. It's just like here's a jewelry
store and you have yeah, like what are you doing?
Speaker 2 (17:54):
It would also be risky because there's thirty people. You
don't have thirty close friends. You don't know all those people,
and so you can't even show them your face.
Speaker 3 (18:04):
What if you have a mole, like on your face undercover?
Speaker 2 (18:08):
Oh yeah, with thirty people, I'd be a bit worried
about it on your face. Yeah, I'd be a bit
worried about that well, And.
Speaker 7 (18:13):
That's what I'm like picturing it is like when they
all gather, is there, just like they're all wearing masks
and like, Okay, this is the one we're going to hit.
Speaker 2 (18:19):
Yeah. I don't know what the group is, but yeah,
that's a big group to trust everybody.
Speaker 4 (18:23):
And also did they ride in the same vehicle?
Speaker 7 (18:25):
How did they all multiple vehicles?
Speaker 2 (18:26):
But like they didn't ride the vehicle. It was all
like they show up in a bus coordinated and then
they can't leave until the bus is full again.
Speaker 6 (18:35):
All right, Eddie, So this is crazy, Amy, you like this?
A rare bird was found in San Antonio. They spotted
it and it's a hybrid between a blue bird and
a green bird, so like a blue j and there
is a green jay which I didn't even know existed,
and there's a hybrid they made a baby together, and
which is so rare in birds because the little experience
(18:56):
I have in birds is that there really isn't a
lot of cross breeding in birds, Like cardinals breed with
cardinals'll swing. They don't speaking of swinging, which is crazy,
like out of all the birds on earth, like they
don't reproduce with other species. And so This is kind
of crazy that they actually saw this bird.
Speaker 3 (19:15):
Oh my gosh, a green jay is beautiful.
Speaker 6 (19:18):
It looks like a blue jay, but it's green.
Speaker 3 (19:20):
Oh my god, Eddie, do you know where the green
jays are typically found? Mexico, South Texas, Central America, So
we have a shot.
Speaker 6 (19:29):
I've never seen anything like that before.
Speaker 3 (19:31):
Me.
Speaker 2 (19:31):
I'm looking at a green j I would just think
it were a green bird.
Speaker 3 (19:34):
No way you would be If you saw that in person,
you would. I if I saw that in person.
Speaker 2 (19:39):
You would. But you care about birds. I give no
craps about birds, Like I hope they have a good
life and stuff, but I don't care. I would see
that and think there's a bird. When you say green jay,
that's interesting.
Speaker 3 (19:50):
Because it has a little blue head.
Speaker 2 (19:52):
Yeah, I hear you. I'm looking at a picture. I
would think nothing of it if I saw it.
Speaker 6 (19:58):
I saw like a red bird the other day I
had never seen before. I checked it off of my
book and I was gonna text you Amy, like, have
you ever seen one. It's called a summer tanglar. Tanglar.
Speaker 2 (20:08):
Yeah, you guys, I keep books and stuff. Yeah, and
that's cool. That's cool. I like it too. I like
it for you guys, but for me, I just wouldn't care.
If I saw a bird with two heads. Now we're
talking like that, I could be interested.
Speaker 6 (20:18):
I never see one of those.
Speaker 2 (20:19):
All right, let me go, Rey, give me voye my seven.
Speaker 1 (20:22):
I just wanted to give a shout out to my wife,
missus Lexie hind the line.
Speaker 4 (20:25):
Today.
Speaker 1 (20:26):
She took her test to become an official teacher in
the state of Ohio, and she passed. She has been
stressing all week and learning things that I don't remember
from high school. Opens gits played on the air, and
somebody she knows, hears it and knows how much her
husband wants her.
Speaker 2 (20:42):
Thanks Bobby, fine, all right, Miss Lexi high Line. Hind Line,
Miss Lexie hind Line, congratulations, it's awesome your husband loves yes.
Pretty cool. All right, give me a next one.
Speaker 9 (20:53):
I got a text on September and it had come
to my house for seafood dinner tomorrow. So I just
a number back and I kind of did what Eddie did.
I was like, oh, okay, I don't think that was
meant for me, but I'm always down for seafoods. And
they responded back, excuse me, is this Jimmy, I'm Josie.
I thought you said to my work number, and I
said no, sorry, wrong person, and they said the exact
(21:16):
same thing, like, oh my god, I dial was the
wrong area code. So I just think that's really funny
that we both got scammed by Jimmy or whoever from
wherever trying to get us food love the show things.
Speaker 2 (21:29):
I'm curious as to where the scam comes in because
we did this with Eddie, because Eddie got a text
and we're like, just follow up, be like what up?
I'll be your friend, And then you were getting other
texts from other numbers correct, like they passed you off,
like this guy's easy to get, right, So where does
the scam come in?
Speaker 6 (21:44):
I don't know because Judy, the person that texted me
two weeks three weeks ago, like we ended off with
I kept flirting with Judy and then she just stopped
talking to me. So if there's a scam coming, I
don't know what it is.
Speaker 2 (21:58):
Like what if it's just a bunch of loan people.
It's not even a scam, it's just people looking for friends,
and here we are going don't talk to them, because I.
Speaker 6 (22:04):
Even told Judy like I'm in Arkansas. She's like, oh,
this will never work. I'm in California, and I'm like, well,
and that's where it ended.
Speaker 2 (22:11):
Can you find Mike through a bit of research where
the hook is, because at some point this has worked
so many times because we're all getting these kind of messages.
It's just a random question where you're like, oh, this
must be a wrong number. Pick me up at the airport.
Speaker 6 (22:23):
I got another one fox the other day. Chinese food.
Can I treat you to Chinese food tomorrow? Please?
Speaker 1 (22:29):
Oh?
Speaker 6 (22:29):
Like, I love Chinese food. How do they know that?
Speaker 2 (22:32):
Yeah, if there's a hook somewhere that comes in and
this has worked many times, I'm sure, or we wouldn't
all beginning them. So I'm curious. Let me know when
you get that, Mike. Co buying a home is the
new way to make the American dream happen. This to
me feels like that story of creating these joint bank.
Speaker 3 (22:47):
Accounts with a friend.
Speaker 2 (22:48):
Yeah, gen Z is getting creative in order to become homeowners.
The median age of homeowners is now fifty six because
of the current market, so co buying is a new thing.
Nearly fifteen percent of Americans have purchased home with someone
who is not a romantic partner, and a lot of
gen z like seventy percent say they would or they're
going to do that. If you're doing that as an investment,
(23:11):
that makes sense if it's all drawn out. But man,
I can't imagine buying a home with someone else on living.
Speaker 6 (23:19):
What about a vacation home, like we split a one
in Hawaii.
Speaker 2 (23:22):
And that's probably fine because you're not going at the
same time, But if you're having to live there, it's
like having a joint bank account. Everything is going to
have to be written out exactly, we're gonna have to
each of us pay this month. If you're a roommate
in two like, I get it if it's what you
can do. But you're splitting the bills, you're getting equity, yes,
but I mean you and your friend get into a fight,
(23:43):
which roommates do, and you break apart that now it's
a legal deal, So I think the risk is too
much to take. But I get to understand why WJTV
with that story see anything about that, Mike.
Speaker 5 (23:57):
Essentially, it's a couple of things. One trying to find
somebody to know that that number is active. So if
they text you, they get a response to like, Okay,
this number is active.
Speaker 6 (24:05):
Either they're gonna.
Speaker 5 (24:06):
Start searching your stuff or your phone number and know
that somebody's attached to that, or they're doing the long con.
They're trying to build trust with you and then eventually
hit you with the here's some crypto. That first one
sounds good, give you crypto or like make you buy
like here's this link to Like I'm doing some kind
of crypto scam. That's what the FTC is saying about this.
Speaker 6 (24:24):
So the two number scam.
Speaker 2 (24:26):
One, you're active on that number, so I'll try to
attack you a different way. Yeah, or two. There is
a long con to it. I never heard the long con.
That's pretty fine, though, what are you doing? I'm in
the long con?
Speaker 1 (24:36):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (24:36):
The CDC says there's drug resistant nightmare bacteria on the
rise in the US. Researchers report that infections from a
drug resistant nightmare bacteria increase seventy percent from twenty nineteen
to twenty twenty three. These bacteria jump more than fivefold
in recent years, with only two antibiotics that's even effective
against them. Routine effect like yourn atrict infections could become
(25:01):
chronic problems. It's these bacteria spreads CBS News.
Speaker 3 (25:05):
It's not good, scary.
Speaker 2 (25:06):
I'll deal with it when it gets me. What are
you gonna do? What are you gonna do leading up
to it? Just wash your hands.
Speaker 6 (25:13):
That was the deal with my mersa what There was
no antibotic that could kill it. They had to try like,
I don't know, fifteen antaibotics and finally they found one
that can actually do something to it. You had to
try that many, Yeah, because my body was resistant. I
mean that was my well, I don't know, like tenth
tenth infection.
Speaker 2 (25:33):
My assumption is too. You had to try them individually,
so that was time. So you tried one and you waited.
You had to see if it weren't.
Speaker 6 (25:38):
Yeah, Like the first five it was the same doctor
and he would just give me the same one and
they would go away and then it would come back.
And then finally, like I got another one. I went
to another doctor and they tried other ones, and then
I think after so many tries of different antibiotics that
my body was just resistant to all of them. And
then they finally found one that was like super potent.
That was the one at Duke Hospital and then it worked.
Speaker 2 (26:00):
That's thinking about antibotics. Though you take them a lot,
they are less effective, so they encourage you not to
take them unless you really need them. I hit them immediately. Immediately,
people are gonna think Eddie's dead.
Speaker 6 (26:15):
Why?
Speaker 2 (26:15):
Why because of the golf thing that we're doing in
Amy's charity.
Speaker 3 (26:19):
Oh, because it says it not Oh, the sign says
in honor of Eddie's dyslexia.
Speaker 6 (26:28):
Yeah. But if you just look at it immediately you're
in and there's a picture.
Speaker 2 (26:32):
Of me on it by Amy hit me yesterday. I
was like, hey, can I you care if I put
a picture of Edie on the sign? I was like,
please do Yeah, I can bring it with angel wings,
I said, put you on clouds.
Speaker 3 (26:42):
The sign turned out really cute.
Speaker 2 (26:44):
How big is it?
Speaker 6 (26:48):
Big enough?
Speaker 3 (26:49):
Eighteen by twenty four?
Speaker 4 (26:51):
Nice?
Speaker 6 (26:51):
Maybe big box?
Speaker 1 (26:52):
Nice?
Speaker 2 (26:53):
Speaking of Eddie, Morgan wants to talk about.
Speaker 4 (26:57):
Here we go.
Speaker 6 (26:58):
What what does you want to talk?
Speaker 2 (27:00):
Well, you keep looking at her computer, Morgan, would you
like to take the send?
Speaker 7 (27:04):
Yeah? Yeah, so you keep whenever we reference my relationship,
you're like, well you said that before, You've said this before. Yeah.
So I wanted to bring some things to the forefront
that you have said before.
Speaker 6 (27:17):
Oh, it's a battle.
Speaker 2 (27:19):
Oh no, if you can reference things that she said
and hold that against her, she has some things that
you've said that she wants to hold against you.
Speaker 6 (27:26):
Okay, but it's only been one thing that I say
that she says.
Speaker 7 (27:29):
You keep referencing it. So I feel like it's time
that we show you that. We all say a lot
of things on the show over the course of time,
and it's just what happens in the moment. But I
just want you to also have a recognizable situation.
Speaker 6 (27:42):
Okay, go ahead.
Speaker 2 (27:43):
How many do you have?
Speaker 7 (27:44):
I have?
Speaker 6 (27:47):
Oh my gosh, look at the list.
Speaker 2 (27:49):
It's an extensive list, more than ten fourteen. Okay, here
we go.
Speaker 7 (27:54):
That I say, Oh, it's over the past year and
a half. Number one he said he was going to
sell smoke and check as a side business.
Speaker 6 (28:01):
I already answered that question. I can't do it, right.
Speaker 2 (28:03):
And he no longer is he no longer? Is you
could if you really wanted to, if you prioritize it,
you could risky right? He does not. He's not a
man of his word. Yeah, whoall, Yes, go ahead.
Speaker 7 (28:16):
He said he wanted to get a hair transplant, he
did not get one.
Speaker 6 (28:20):
I shaved my head, same thing.
Speaker 2 (28:22):
Okay. You said you wanted a hair transplant, though, and
then I offered to pay for it. Yeah, and sendy
the Turkey where they do the best. And you're like, ah,
I'm backing out. There's something else that you didn't live
up to. Go ahead.
Speaker 7 (28:31):
He said he was going to start a four oh
one K way back in twenty twenty three. Eddie, have
you started a four oh.
Speaker 6 (28:36):
One K twenty twenty three? Gosh, it's been two years. No,
I already. I have an existing one. You found out
I found out that I have an existing one.
Speaker 7 (28:45):
Yes, you don't have access.
Speaker 6 (28:48):
To currently, have not activated this one.
Speaker 2 (28:52):
It feels like somebody who lost their crypto password. Eddie
doesn't really know how to get into this account the
old one.
Speaker 6 (28:58):
Yeah, yeah, no, I don't know.
Speaker 2 (29:00):
Can you get into that four one K?
Speaker 6 (29:01):
I can probably tell someone like that exists. Can you
merge them?
Speaker 2 (29:06):
You probably can?
Speaker 6 (29:07):
Yeah, I do have mergent.
Speaker 2 (29:09):
That means you have another one with the one.
Speaker 6 (29:11):
I would start here, Okay, yes, because that would be
the best way to do it, right, like start with
a little bit of income.
Speaker 2 (29:16):
Then why don't you do that?
Speaker 6 (29:17):
I have a meeting with a finance guy in like
a couple of weeks.
Speaker 2 (29:20):
AB Nope, nope, Okay, what else, Morgan?
Speaker 7 (29:24):
He said he was going to do grayscale on his phone.
I think that lasted maybe a day.
Speaker 6 (29:29):
No, I did it. I did it. I have gray scale, right, I.
Speaker 2 (29:33):
Don't know what that means.
Speaker 7 (29:34):
No, you were going to do the full phone.
Speaker 6 (29:36):
That's not it's black.
Speaker 2 (29:38):
There's red. There's really red on.
Speaker 6 (29:39):
It, the red dots. But I mean, look everything on
there is black. Is that not greyscale.
Speaker 2 (29:44):
It's not all black, there's like.
Speaker 7 (29:45):
The whole thing is color bright red.
Speaker 6 (29:49):
Like even look my computer. I took all the whiteside
of my computer. So now like I ride on a
black screen.
Speaker 7 (29:54):
That's nighttime mode.
Speaker 2 (29:55):
That's nighttime.
Speaker 6 (29:58):
I guess I don't know what gray scale is.
Speaker 7 (29:59):
So you're going to there. You didn't even know what
it was.
Speaker 6 (30:02):
Okay.
Speaker 7 (30:02):
He thought he had stomach cancer, but he didn't it.
Maybe it was just gas.
Speaker 2 (30:06):
No, it's popcorn popcorn.
Speaker 6 (30:07):
I answered that. I went to the movie theater had
a lot of popboard popcorn.
Speaker 7 (30:10):
Go ahead, So there's that one. He said he was
going to get tested for a kidney donation, particularly to
his uncle, did that ever happen?
Speaker 2 (30:20):
All?
Speaker 4 (30:20):
Right?
Speaker 3 (30:21):
What else?
Speaker 7 (30:22):
He said he was going to be a consultant for
a company for their social media presence, But we never
really heard about that.
Speaker 2 (30:27):
Again, that'd be a nightmare for that company.
Speaker 1 (30:29):
Was that?
Speaker 6 (30:30):
What was that again?
Speaker 2 (30:31):
What did I say you were going to consult a
company on their social media?
Speaker 3 (30:34):
Oh?
Speaker 6 (30:35):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. We had meetings.
Speaker 2 (30:37):
I think of the one, two, three, four, five, six
people in this room. I would hire four people before you.
Speaker 6 (30:42):
Whoa wow people, I would for sure, well the genius you, her, Morgan.
Speaker 2 (30:48):
And Mike and Amy and for sure me all before
I would hire you to consult social media saying do
you not think so?
Speaker 4 (30:55):
No?
Speaker 2 (30:56):
No, because I don't know about social media. You literally
don't I know how to post? Yeah, rite a caption? No,
I don't think man.
Speaker 6 (31:02):
I met with this company and the feedback that I
got afterwards, they were like, that was so good. We
cannot wait to work with you again.
Speaker 4 (31:11):
And how's that been going?
Speaker 6 (31:13):
Well we only met one time.
Speaker 4 (31:14):
Yeah, but they couldn't wait to work with you again. Yeah.
Speaker 6 (31:17):
Yeah. They paid me though, though they paid me for
that one time, which is awesome. Can you imagine if
I travel to different companies and like just be like,
all right, let me check your social media.
Speaker 2 (31:28):
I can't because you're not good at it.
Speaker 6 (31:30):
Stop saying that. You saying that's going to make them
believe that I'm not.
Speaker 2 (31:36):
Working for them anymore.
Speaker 6 (31:37):
Correct, Well, what if they call me then I am?
I'm a floating consultant.
Speaker 7 (31:43):
He said he wants to be on Jeopardy, but he
actually never said Jeopardy. Wasn't it Jeopardy?
Speaker 6 (31:48):
Get your sorry?
Speaker 7 (31:49):
Okay, Wheel of Fortune. You said you wanted to be
on one thing.
Speaker 6 (31:54):
I like a lunch boxes in the background.
Speaker 7 (31:59):
So you won't actually do any thing to go on it?
Speaker 2 (32:01):
Yes, I am, okay, next up?
Speaker 7 (32:03):
Okay. He said he could eat one hundred and eight shrimp.
I ate him?
Speaker 6 (32:07):
Did I ate them in front of everyone?
Speaker 2 (32:10):
All hundred and eight?
Speaker 6 (32:11):
Yes?
Speaker 4 (32:12):
He didn't. Okay, you should have said hot dogs.
Speaker 7 (32:17):
You should have said, oh, it's on there, don't worry,
don't worry.
Speaker 1 (32:19):
Screw.
Speaker 2 (32:20):
I think I'm kind of over the list.
Speaker 7 (32:21):
Hold, there's three really good ones. He thought he had
hepatitis A after eating frozen fruit.
Speaker 2 (32:27):
I don't remember that.
Speaker 6 (32:28):
I don't remember that either.
Speaker 7 (32:29):
Yeah, there was a recall, and you assume, but it
wasn't even in our states.
Speaker 2 (32:32):
Look, if I'm ever if I'm like, if I'm a
woman and my dude's like, I got hepatitis and it's
from eating fruit, I'm like, you're lying. You are a
liar and likely excuse is hepatitis A STD. I don't
know that it's considered an st D, but you can.
(32:53):
But it is a disease that you.
Speaker 3 (32:55):
Can have well, hepatitis B and c R STD specifically,
Yes they are. It's an infection, but you can also
get them through sharing needles.
Speaker 2 (33:08):
I guess why considered an You could.
Speaker 3 (33:11):
Like mother to child during child birth.
Speaker 2 (33:14):
Right, Wait, didn't lunchbox have It's a It's just a
viral infection.
Speaker 4 (33:18):
Wrong, Edie tberculosis got it a lot of different, man.
Speaker 6 (33:22):
That is different.
Speaker 4 (33:23):
It is different.
Speaker 6 (33:23):
I'm sorry, she's done.
Speaker 2 (33:27):
Let's come to a conclusion here. Okay.
Speaker 7 (33:28):
Also, he said, I want to pick your best five.
Speaker 2 (33:30):
I would just picture best five. Now we at fourteen,
and now we're against her because we were born out
of our mind.
Speaker 7 (33:36):
Okay, but I had to go through all the whole
lists because that was even just in the last year
and a half.
Speaker 2 (33:40):
He tried to eat the hot dogs he did give
it an attemption, just through up.
Speaker 7 (33:43):
But I'm just making a point that, like, we say things,
and that's happening in the moment, and I think it's
something that we should let go. Eddie.
Speaker 2 (33:50):
What do you hold against her who Morgan? Yeah, nothing
that she said? What like, what is she talking about?
Speaker 6 (33:56):
What she's talking about when she talks about her boyfriend? Yeah,
and she says like, oh no, this is different, Like
we got it. She said that with every boyfriend.
Speaker 7 (34:03):
I really don't think I have. But also point proven that,
like you say things, and do you want to be
held accountable for every single thing you've ever said?
Speaker 6 (34:11):
Well, yeah, it's true. Okay, like the popcorn I can't
be held I mean that's not true.
Speaker 8 (34:17):
The popcorn shrimp, Like he really thought there was something
wrong with him with the popcorn.
Speaker 4 (34:20):
He thought he was dying cancer funny, and I don't
think that should be on the lead.
Speaker 2 (34:27):
Do you see the story about the It's like an
off duty deputy. He was in the porta potty and
somebody went and dumped the porta potty and so he
came out and he shot a fifteen year old kid.
The kid will survive, Okay, Yeah, so I can read
you some of this from Fox nineteen. A press secretary
for Cuyahoga County said the off duty deputy was working
(34:51):
a secondary security job in East Cleveland when he needed
to use the portable toilet. While inside, someone tipped over
the toilet. When the deputy got out, he reported encountered
multiple people, one of whom he reported pulling a gun
from his waistband. The deputy fired his weapon, the group
fled the scene. Later, a fifteen year old boy with
a gunshot wound showed up at University Hospital. Officers believe
(35:11):
the team was shot by the deputy. The team is
expected to survive. The deputy wasn't hurt, So that's in
Fox nineteen. There isn't any proof that anybody had a
gun on their waistband. But also why would the cop
start shooting if people didn't have a gun in their waistband?
But they did dump the cop over, And I think
I'd probably shot at somebody too. If they dump me
over in the.
Speaker 4 (35:30):
Port of body, that's not worth of shooting.
Speaker 2 (35:32):
They don't know that. I know it's not worth the shooting.
Speaker 8 (35:35):
I was exaggerating, know what I'm saying about the cop, Like,
what are you thinking like, I'm just I.
Speaker 2 (35:39):
Know the cop fire because he says somebody had a
gun in their waistband.
Speaker 6 (35:43):
What did they know the cop was in there?
Speaker 2 (35:46):
Like did they target I'm sure the security security guy
went in and they were like, let's dump the porta
body over.
Speaker 6 (35:52):
That's never a good thing. I know it sounds funny,
but that's probably the worst thing you can do to someone.
Speaker 2 (35:57):
That's a bad one. You think your kids are spoiled nowaddy.
Speaker 6 (36:02):
Oh yeah, Like I remember when I was a kid,
my dad would go to Vegas and he'd come back
and he'd give me like a chip, like a poker
chip or whatever. It was like worth a dollar, and
I'm like, this is so cool, thanks Dad. So when
we were in Vegas, I'm like, you know what, I
have five dollars in chips. I'm gonna take them back
to my boys. And I did the same thing. I
got back, pulled them out of my pocket, flipped it
(36:23):
over to them and they're like, cool, what is this
And I was like, it's a chip from Vegas. Isn't
that cool? Like if you turn that in, that's a
dollar And they're like great, thanks Dad, And they all
just left them on the table.
Speaker 2 (36:36):
Dang, they didn't take them.
Speaker 6 (36:37):
I'm like, when did a dollar become nothing?
Speaker 3 (36:41):
Like, well, they turn it in, they have to go
to Vegas.
Speaker 2 (36:44):
I gotta be twenty one. I don't think it's about
the dollar. It's not about the doll to you, it
was about the chip. It's about the souvenir.
Speaker 6 (36:51):
And they'd be like, cool, this is from Vegas, thank you,
and they put it like on their little dresser or something.
Leave it. That's what I did when I was a kid.
Speaker 2 (36:56):
Is that what you wanted them to do? Yes?
Speaker 6 (36:59):
And man, they just left except the baby. The baby
was like, this is cool. And then so he saw
all them on the table, collected all five of them.
Speaker 2 (37:05):
So he's got all the dollars. Yes, you can mail
them back in.
Speaker 6 (37:08):
Oh you can't, I believe so, Oh I should do that.
Speaker 3 (37:11):
Why haven't we done that with my twenty five dollars? Ones?
Speaker 6 (37:14):
You still have them where we're over your twenty five dollars.
But Amy, we've been to Vegas.
Speaker 2 (37:18):
Kind of like you've been to Vegas.
Speaker 3 (37:20):
You could have yeah, but I know, but it's like
something I just get busy or don't. I don't know.
Maybe something about me wants to keep them. But then
y'all told me. Now I'm too nervous because y'all told
me they switch the chips out.
Speaker 2 (37:34):
They do, but you could possibly still get your money back.
Speaker 4 (37:37):
I'll give you twenty bucks for him right now.
Speaker 2 (37:39):
I would take that.
Speaker 6 (37:40):
I would too.
Speaker 4 (37:41):
I'll give you twenty dollars for.
Speaker 3 (37:42):
Your chips, but it's one hundred.
Speaker 2 (37:44):
Oh they'sed to twenty five.
Speaker 3 (37:46):
I have four twenty five.
Speaker 2 (37:47):
Always trade that for twenty.
Speaker 6 (37:48):
What's the deal there, lunchbox, I'll give you fifty.
Speaker 3 (37:52):
Five twenty per yeah, eighty there you go. Yeah, because
you offered me twenty thinking it was one, so I
got four take.
Speaker 2 (38:00):
It or leave it eighty bucks, eighty dollars.
Speaker 3 (38:03):
I would do that, lunch Yeah, next time.
Speaker 4 (38:05):
Yeah, I'll take a twenty dollars profit. Give it to me.
Speaker 2 (38:07):
Okay, So, but if the chips don't cash, because.
Speaker 3 (38:11):
They should, but oh my gosh, like I was, it
was a pre pandemic.
Speaker 2 (38:18):
If they don't, he's just out of luck. That's the
risky takes, right. I would trade that in for you. Yeah,
you don't have to wait a bit to get that money.
Speaker 3 (38:26):
It's like it's a very vagasy thing to do.
Speaker 4 (38:29):
I'm willing to tell you. I'm willing to play the odds.
Speaker 7 (38:31):
Let's go.
Speaker 6 (38:33):
How do they not counterfeit this?
Speaker 2 (38:35):
There's a chip in them?
Speaker 6 (38:36):
Oh there is, yeah, a chip and a chip.
Speaker 8 (38:39):
And that's why they shine the light on them when
you take him to the cashier. Everything that they put
him on a little scale thing that has never win.
Speaker 6 (38:45):
Dude, that's why that's not true. I did go to
the cash here a couple of times this past weekend.
Speaker 2 (38:49):
The fact that you found one hundred bucks on the
ground crazy. Also, didn't lunch bucks find like a sports
bet slept?
Speaker 6 (38:54):
That was when I spotted it. We were walking to
my heart and I was like, is that a sports
bet slip? He picks it up.
Speaker 4 (39:01):
It was Duke minus three over in C State.
Speaker 6 (39:03):
He goes, it's a winner. I was like, are you
here to lie? He's like, it's a winner.
Speaker 2 (39:08):
So they dropped a live ticket, meaning the game hadn't
happened yet.
Speaker 8 (39:14):
It was over when we found it, so I don't
know how long it had been sitting there like. We
picked it up and it was like, oh my gosh.
And I looked and I was like, Duke minus three.
They won by twelve. They beat n c state.
Speaker 6 (39:23):
It did look like trash. It was kind of like
pushed against the wall a little bit like it was
just trash.
Speaker 8 (39:28):
And it was upside down, so it just looked like
a white you know or whatever from righting on the back.
And yeah, Eddie was like, let's go cash it, and
then he made me cash it.
Speaker 6 (39:35):
Well, I wou wasn't going to cash it because.
Speaker 2 (39:37):
You thought someone would come out and arrest you.
Speaker 6 (39:39):
There's no way. The same day earlier, I find one
hundred dollars in the hallway and like, I can't be
on camera twice. That would be too much.
Speaker 2 (39:47):
Well, it looks like you're stealing. Yeah.
Speaker 8 (39:49):
Then I'm worried because it had a little rip in
it and the guy had to type in the number
on the ticket, and I'm wondering if it came up
to someone like someone's name, because he.
Speaker 4 (39:58):
Goes, do you have your player's card with you?
Speaker 2 (40:01):
And I was like no, they asked that for everybody.
Oh yeah.
Speaker 4 (40:04):
I was like, yeah, man, here you go.
Speaker 8 (40:06):
And I'm like, oh, he just asked for my player's
card so he could trace it back to me.
Speaker 2 (40:09):
But do you guys ever have players cards places? I
don't every place I don't have a player's card either.
Speaker 4 (40:15):
Every place.
Speaker 6 (40:15):
What do you get from that?
Speaker 4 (40:16):
Nothing?
Speaker 8 (40:17):
Okay, let me tell you. They like they're going to
give you comps of this, comps of that.
Speaker 2 (40:21):
I don't you spend a certain amount of money. I
think what they do is they see how much you're betting,
and they go and type it in with your card.
Speaker 6 (40:27):
He spends a good amount of money.
Speaker 2 (40:30):
I don't know what he spends, but you got to
kind of be a mid mid roller to get good stuff.
Speaker 4 (40:35):
Yeah.
Speaker 8 (40:35):
But then someone else told me that you're supposed to
go by the concierge when you're leaving and they'll take
things off your bill, Like, oh, at dinner, I will
comp that.
Speaker 6 (40:42):
Oh that's cool.
Speaker 2 (40:43):
I've never heard of that happening.
Speaker 8 (40:44):
Yeah, my buddy Garrett's done it bunch, and he's just like, dude,
we did it one time, and now we do it
every time, and I'm like, man, I should do that.
Speaker 6 (40:50):
Let me tell you. When he went up to that
cashier to cash it, like, it wasn't quick. I was
just like, oh really, I was thinking, like, what is happening.
Oh my gosh.
Speaker 8 (40:58):
They're always standing back lost the room. So he wasn't
associated with me, and I'm like.
Speaker 2 (41:03):
After, he's the one that found it and made me
go up to the window, made me go up to
the window. And then what if they would have arrested him?
Speaker 6 (41:08):
I would have walked away.
Speaker 2 (41:09):
You would have straight up you would have fact like
you didn't know him.
Speaker 6 (41:11):
I would have gone to the festival.
Speaker 7 (41:15):
Bones.
Speaker 8 (41:16):
You would have got tackled man by who security because
they saw him walking with me.
Speaker 6 (41:21):
But they didn't know what we said. He didn't picked
it up.
Speaker 4 (41:25):
Man, I'd been like, man, my buddy Eddie gave it
to me.
Speaker 6 (41:28):
Isn't that crazy? Man?
Speaker 2 (41:29):
It had been like your buddy Eddie. We don't everybody
has a buddy Eddie. Sure, buddy, Oh stressful? But you
made how much money? Three hundred, two hundred, two hundred?
That's crazy?
Speaker 6 (41:39):
We split it? Yeah, because I found it.
Speaker 4 (41:43):
I should have given him less because I cashed it.
Speaker 2 (41:45):
But I think the fifty to fifty is fair. You
found it, he cashed it fair.
Speaker 4 (41:49):
But the honesty of me, I had to give him
a hundred.
Speaker 2 (41:51):
What did you do with the one hundred dollar bill
that one I kept that gambled later? Did you bet
it and win it?
Speaker 5 (41:57):
No?
Speaker 6 (41:57):
Man?
Speaker 2 (41:58):
Did you come back ahead?
Speaker 4 (41:59):
No?
Speaker 6 (41:59):
No, nope, it's a bad one. It was a bad one.
And you know what I was. I was playing Roulette
NEX to some guy and he kind of made me
feel bad a little bit because he was just like,
you don't know what you're doing. And I was like,
what do you mean, I'm just playing numbers. He's like, yeah,
stop playing numbers unless you have a lot of money. Like,
if you have a lot of money like that you've
(42:21):
made already, then dabble in the numbers. But if you're
just trying to pick a few four or five numbers
out of thirty six, you're stupid. You're never gonna win.
Speaker 2 (42:28):
And I was like, but is that like somebody who
gets mad when you play black jack a wrong way?
Like those people are so annoying.
Speaker 6 (42:32):
I mean, here he saw my frustration and then he
decided to chime in because what he was doing was
putting stacks of hundred dollars chips on like the ends,
so he would just cover a row two rows out
of three and he would hit a bunch. And so
I started looking like, maybe that's what I should do.
He's like, duh, yeah, do this instead of playing your
(42:53):
dumb numbers. So I don't know. I might do that
next time.
Speaker 8 (42:56):
I mean, because you do have a sixty six percent
chance of hitting, but if you don't, you lose double
the amount.
Speaker 4 (43:01):
Right, Yeah, so you're bet to win one hundred.
Speaker 6 (43:05):
It's always odd to me when gamblers tell just another
gambler like you're doing it wrong, Like how do you
gamble wrong, especially like on a slot machine, Like how
do you do that wrong?
Speaker 4 (43:15):
Well, if you're not doing the bet, you can't hit
the jackpot.
Speaker 2 (43:17):
But you're not doing it wrong. Maybe you enjoy slots.
Speaker 6 (43:21):
Yeah, that's what I think. Like if I'm doing I'm
gambling on red out of black and red, how am
I doing that wrong? Yeah, it don't make sense to me.
Speaker 2 (43:30):
There are a couple of bets that you could do
more right, but I don't really know that there's a wrong.
Speaker 6 (43:36):
Like the odds are better if you do it a certainly,
like if you're.
Speaker 2 (43:38):
Playing craps behind the line, like it's the same exact
bet you're already doing, except you get paid better on it.
So that makes sense to do that. But if you don't,
it's not wrong. Yeah, I agree. The most only people
are people to blackjack table who they're like you played wrong.
Speaker 6 (43:53):
You know who that is, lunchbox and he yells at you,
tells you what to do. Now, you got to hit
on that hit on that one. I'm like, dude, let
me play the hand.
Speaker 2 (44:00):
Like there are mathematic advantages to not taking hits on
certain but that's your money. You get to do whatever
you want to do with it. Yeah, And you also
can't predict what's in the deck. They're multi they're three
and four and five deck shoots. Like, you don't know
what's coming up. The fact that you took a card
and hit a jack doesn't mean you took anything away
from me because you didn't know what was coming.
Speaker 6 (44:18):
Up, right, And then then the dealer wins and they're like,
that's because of you. I'm like, how is that because
of me?
Speaker 2 (44:24):
Not amy?
Speaker 6 (44:26):
You do not want to be sitting there.
Speaker 2 (44:27):
I didn't play black jack one time. I don't like
playing black jack anymore because of that. Not too slow.
I like to get all that money out there and
lose quick or win quick with craps.
Speaker 6 (44:36):
Craps is fun, man, if you're winning.
Speaker 2 (44:38):
If you're losing, it goes quick and you better go
home or just get ready to take a big one
in the butt because that sucks. Yeah, craps is the
most fun, Morgan. Did you ever get your shoes from
that internet guy?
Speaker 5 (44:48):
No?
Speaker 2 (44:48):
Who DM you? I love your feet on to buy
your shoes?
Speaker 7 (44:51):
No, they never arrived, just like I don't know what happened,
but he never responded after saying yeah, I'll send him,
and then yeah, they've never arrived.
Speaker 2 (45:00):
Somebody want to follow up with her?
Speaker 3 (45:01):
No?
Speaker 7 (45:01):
Nah, No, I think I can just leave that word.
Speaker 2 (45:05):
I tried, and he has the address to the station.
If you wanted to send shoes, right, you didn't give
me your home a dress? No?
Speaker 7 (45:10):
Oh gosh no, yeah, so unless somebody like took them
from here, which is always possible.
Speaker 2 (45:15):
Did somebody else send you shoes?
Speaker 7 (45:16):
Yeah, Ashley cooked it.
Speaker 2 (45:18):
What kind of shoes?
Speaker 7 (45:19):
I'm wearing them today? They're these little leopard booties.
Speaker 3 (45:22):
Ok.
Speaker 2 (45:22):
Oh, those are actually nice?
Speaker 1 (45:23):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (45:24):
Why did you send those?
Speaker 7 (45:25):
So Ever since I've met her, her and I have
this same mashing pair of white boots with these steel tips,
and every time I've seen her, one of us was
wearing them. It's kind of been this inside joke that
we're twins because we have those shoes, and I mentioned
these last time. She was in here like, oh, we
need to get these, and she was like, I have those,
and I didn't think much of it. And then the
other day I walked in and there was a box
(45:47):
of shoes on my desk and.
Speaker 2 (45:48):
That's really thoughtful. Yeah, yeah, it.
Speaker 7 (45:50):
Was really cool and just that she was even thinking
to that aspect and then going the extra mile of
buying the shoes.
Speaker 2 (45:56):
So did you tell her thanks?
Speaker 7 (45:58):
Oh yeah, I exed her. Okah, yeah, it was cool.
Speaker 2 (46:01):
What artists do you have in your phone to text?
I like, who's the best, who's the biggest.
Speaker 7 (46:06):
I don't know that's any of the big Ones's a
lot of like females, Ashley Cook, Kylie Morgan, Abby Anderson
those I think that's it. I think I've had other
ones like Struggle Jennings is in my phone, Jelly Rull's friend.
But I don't know that I have any guys or
anything like.
Speaker 2 (46:24):
That I have, And I don't know if you guys
have had it on yours or not. But I just
got it on my Instagram, which is if I go
to like the post I did of my wife and
I are pregnancy announcement and I hit the comments, it
allows me to see newest comments, follow by follower account
or top comments, and if I hit by follower account.
(46:47):
I just saw this last night. It lists everybody in
order like descending order. At the top is the person
with the most followers leads a comment. So I just
did this this morning on our pregnancy announcement picture. Who
do you think commented that has the most followers?
Speaker 6 (47:07):
Ronaldo commented, oh, Kane brown.
Speaker 2 (47:15):
Caine did text me. I don't know if he commented.
He did text me. Jason al Dean is on it,
but he came in. He did not come in number one.
How many followers, Audine? He has four point five million.
Somebody has more than four point five million followers. That
commented Donald Ritchie did you comment? He did, He's at
number seven. Congratulations.
Speaker 4 (47:39):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (47:39):
Luke did not comment that I've seen so far. His
wife did, Caroline, but I did not see that. Luke commented,
Blake m think about why I would think about this,
because I didn't have this in my mind to talk about.
But somebody said something that made me go, oh, got it?
Remember this that record that thought.
Speaker 3 (48:01):
We just said, who does Morgan having her phone? We
were talking about who Morgan has her phone? So that
makes you think of who's come to.
Speaker 2 (48:08):
Jelly roll correct, Oh, jelly wow, Oh jelly Roll six
one five, number one, Al Dean at number three, Claudia Austrey,
oh the toasts. Yeah yeah?
Speaker 6 (48:26):
How many is you?
Speaker 2 (48:27):
Girl with No Job has three point one million followers.
Cooper Allen has two point six million followers day, Jamie
Lynn Spears two point two million. Wow, whoa Lionel Ritchie
one point nine million. I'm going to order here, Brandley
Gilbert one point eight, Cole Swindell one point six, Lauren
(48:50):
Lane one point four, Sharna one million.
Speaker 3 (48:58):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (48:58):
Anyway, I thought it's pretty cool feature and think about it. Oh,
there's Amy. She comes out at like seventeenth. Wow, Amy's
seventeenth six hundred and twenty one thousand followers.
Speaker 3 (49:06):
Dang Amy, Oh, I keep going down.
Speaker 2 (49:09):
Instagram's the hardest to keep followers. I don't even pursue
followers on Instagram. I don't know.
Speaker 6 (49:12):
Okay, that's a good point, Like why is she going down?
Like are they?
Speaker 2 (49:18):
My thought is at some point, thank you? At some point?
Speaker 3 (49:24):
I mean, but I also get followers. It's not just down.
But I'm losing more than I gain because it's weird
when I do look at insights, I'll be like, oh, wow,
I actually did get new followers today that I don't
know where they came.
Speaker 2 (49:33):
From, completely common, but then lost.
Speaker 3 (49:36):
More than I got. Yeah, but people are coming and
going every day. It's really odd. But I mean I
don't do anything stretch, Like sometimes I just go disappear
for a while, and I feel like sometimes if I
disappear for a while and then I pop up in
someone's page, like oh I forgot about her, unfollow you know,
because like I haven't thought about her in a while,
or what do I follow this person? Because I mean
(49:58):
I find myself doing that with people that maybe I
followed at one point and then I haven't seen them
in a little bit, and I'm like, oh, I guess
I didn't even really know I missed them, So maybe
I unfollow I don't know.
Speaker 2 (50:07):
Probably deactivated accounts or even body accounts that it followed
you at some point.
Speaker 3 (50:11):
And they are cleaning that up, yeah.
Speaker 2 (50:13):
Or yeah they just get deactivated. Yeah, that's probably what
it is. But that's very common on Instagram. Growth is
hard on Instagram because of that. It's much easier on TikTok.
Growth is like you can post enough on TikTok, and
if you're consistent and you actually have what you're you know,
what you're serving your niche with that, it'll grow. Yeah,
how you doing TikTok over there?
Speaker 1 (50:34):
Well?
Speaker 3 (50:34):
I changed it to my change Mind to a podcast
and only just started posting recently, so it's almost at
twenty six thousand. Yeah, but I never posted before, so
it's like basically all podcast stuff. And then we started
a podcast Instagram in April, and that one grows. That
one's still growing, like every day it grows, so that
(50:55):
that feels good to me, a like so knowing especially
that we just started in April, so I'll take the
growth there. But it is weird, and then I try
not to think about it because then I'm like, I mean,
that's not where my worth comes from. But it does
feel you're kind of like, won't won't, Yeah, just disappeared.
Speaker 6 (51:14):
Social media is weird?
Speaker 1 (51:15):
It is.
Speaker 6 (51:16):
Do you ever want to just talk about it?
Speaker 3 (51:19):
I don't need to talk about it.
Speaker 6 (51:21):
I can sit with you for a little bit.
Speaker 7 (51:23):
You can consult me.
Speaker 3 (51:24):
Yeah, no, console you you.
Speaker 2 (51:28):
Get social media consulto. We heard them wrong, social media
yeah yeah?
Speaker 7 (51:32):
Yeah, So all.
Speaker 2 (51:33):
Right, we're done for today. Thank you guys. We will
see you tomorrow. It's Thursday. Who has a new show
up today?
Speaker 3 (51:40):
I do?
Speaker 2 (51:40):
What do you have?
Speaker 3 (51:41):
It's our listener Q and episode called couch Talks, and
so this one we have a lot of listener updates
of previous listeners that have been featured on Couch Talks
and then they have emailed in updates based on the
advice that we gave them. So that's what's up today.
Speaker 2 (51:55):
Anybody else, No new ones today, all.
Speaker 3 (51:57):
Right, and it's Feeling Things podcasts. If you don't know, I.
Speaker 2 (52:00):
Got Brett Aldridge on the Bobbycast tomorrow. Get Colby Kelly.
That's up this week so you can check those out. Otherwise,
we'll see you guys tomorrow. All right. Goodbyey buddy,