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July 28, 2022 24 mins

We bring you the first post-show of the week! Bobby has been slammed traveling and promoting Snake in the Grass but are here for you now! We get into a big discussion about the Mandela effect and examples. Bobby changed his sleep number for the first time in years and gives a breakdown of his sleep patterns. Lunchbox was made that Mike D made it on the news before him. Eddie is considering starting a small business. 

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
It's time for the Bobby Bones post show. Here's your host, Bobby.
All Right. We have not been able to do many
post shows, if any this week, right, Mike, first one
of the week. Hey, we're back. Look at celebrate good Times.

(00:22):
I've been on the road a little bit. And then
when i haven't been on the road, I've been promoting
Snake in the Grass. So I'm sorry about that. But
we're back today. A seventy nine year old man torches
a bunch of cars decades after a dealership sold him
a bad jeep. Oh, he held that girl a man
excuse upsetting fire to vehicles at two dealerships. This comes
from Indiana officials. The seventy nine year old has charges

(00:45):
four counts of arson after he was seen on video
around one am. The man said he started the fires
as a revenge gets the dealership which sold him a
jeep with a bad motor in nineteen eighty six. Six
right there. Yeah, he's have been holding that one a
little bit. They refused to make it right, he said.
Quote he said, it's time for the chickens to return
to the roost. That's funny. He's like saying sayings on

(01:08):
the camera in case he gets out, he's feeling like
all the movie sayings. The video footage shows the guy
opening the fuel door of a twenty nineteen jeep compass
and placing an ignited road flare inside the fuel tube. Yeah,
he was trying to let it go the whole thing. Um.
That's from Center Daily dot com. While watching the footage,
the man identified himself to the police and said, yeah,

(01:29):
he was upset he did not get to watch all
of the fires that he set because after he saw
the damage, he's like, he just jumped out, got out
of there. Scammers told a Michigan woman to send four
thousand and eight hundred dollars to claim Publishers Clarenhouse prize.
That's the thing back in the day, Publishers Clearinghouse. Who's
the guy? Go ahead, you tell me, don't nobody say anything.
Go ahead, there's Publisher's Clarenhouse Guyed Sullivan. Well, no, Ed

(01:52):
Sullivan's a different guy. He was the guy black and
white Elvis did a show. Dang h he's Sullivan though,
No h, he was um, um my momm the late
show guy. What was Johnny Carson's side guy. His name
was Ed McMahon. Ed McMahon. Anybody agree with that. I disagree.
Ed McMahon never worked for Publishers clearing here. That's a

(02:14):
Mandela effect. Everybody thinks it, but it never actually happened.
What who wasn't? And I would have thought that too,
But I've just heard the story so many times that
he didn't because we all think he did. Um nobody.
I mean, so Ed McMahon was a spokesperson, but not
for Publisher's Clearinghouse. I thought so too, honestly, really, but
there's no evidence that edmit Man ever worked for Publisher's Clearinghouse.
He worked for another organ was a spokesperson for American

(02:36):
Family Publishers and old television commercials. The publishers appears so much,
but he was never Publishers Clearinghouse. So he wasn't the Okay,
so it was just the word publisher I guess got
my my brain jumbled up. But he wasn't the one
that would Yeah, he would knock on the door. No,
you won. There's a whole check and everything, not him. Wow,

(02:56):
But what happened? Do you know what the Mandela effect is? No?
Where we think we see things, Mike, will you definition
me because I want to say it wrong. But we
all think we've seen something one way, the whole everybody
earth society. But in reality, it didn't happen that way,
and people wonder why. It's like a bunch of the
population has a significant event that they all remember wrongly.

(03:20):
So did it actually happen that way? We all remember
that everyone. That's so weird, and there's a lot of them.
So here's the official definition. The Mandela effect is an
observed phenomenon in which a large population misremembers a significant
event or shares the memory of an event they did
not actually occur. And so because of that, they are
all these theories as to why that's happened. Did it

(03:41):
actually happen and they changed it? And like the specime spectrum,
that's so weird. Another one are those bears, you know
the bears the book the Bears in the books, Go ahead,
lunchbox bears. Do you already know about this though? Are
you spoiling it because you know all about this stuff? No,
I know what you're gonna say, But I just I
just said the name of the book. No. No No, But

(04:02):
I'm saying, are you gonna say answers? Because you know
the real answer, because answers that you know I said
it how I say it? Okay, but even but the
last one you knew about. So that's what I'm saying.
I'm asking if you know anything, Mandela ish about the
burn Steam Bears. No, it's barren Stein whatever, Burnstein. Who cares?
It's the what is it barren Stein Bears? So I

(04:22):
believe it's the burn Stain Bears, but we all think
it's the burn Stein Bears. Oh so it's little things
like that. So anyway, I didn't do any research on
this before I came, but I've heard podcast about it.
There's a uh, what are the other ones there? Kit
Kat was one? What about it? Jeffy that the innut
butter panut butter? Is it Jeffy or jiff Oh jeff

(04:44):
not Jiffy because you're thinking skippy? Am I? Yes, Jiffy lube? Yes?
The okay, the guy, the Monopoly guy. Do you wear?
What do you what do you wear? Monica? Monica? He
never wore a Monica. See, that's crazy. There's no monocle.
Eddie lived in a different timeline than all the rest

(05:04):
of that's crazy, man. So anyway, look it up, Mandela.
You know why It's called Mandela fact because people let
go from memory here, people think Nelson Mandela died I
believe in prison, right, am I right? He did? Yeah?
What he died in prison in the eighties. No, no no, no,
I'm talking to Eddie because Eddie said he did. He did.
He didn't, But that's what happened. A lot of people

(05:27):
did think that for some reason, they were communicated that happened.
They misremember it. He didn't. Yes, scob my computers about
so so far, Eddie's very susceptible. Eddie lived in a
different timeline than right. No, no, no no, no, guys, the
Mandela effect is getting me right. That's what December twenty thirteen,

(05:48):
Nelson Mandela died, but most people think he died in
the eighties in prison. M so, but that's why. That's
that he did go to prison though he did for
a long time. Yeah, so anyway, published clearing how she
got Well, whoa, whoa, whoa pause. One second lunchbox has
the Monopoly guy and he's wearing a monocle, probably as
a picture. Yeah, it says that he never wore one,

(06:11):
but yeah, it's probably a picture like putting a monocle
on him, going he never wore a monocle. Okay, they're
trying to mess with us. All right, what do you
what do you see over there, Lunchbox. Well, they're just
saying that it never happened. I'm I just googled it
and it pops up a picture says you think that's
the guy, but it's not the Monopoly guy that he
never had a monocle. So I guess this is a
different person that just has a money bag and you
associated with monopoly. Hey, Mike, go back some these are

(06:33):
some of these really interesting. That's so weird. Keep going,
go back. Okay, so here's one. Let's do sketchers. Yep,
the shoes spell it s k E T c h
E R s H. There's no t in sketchers. Stop
it got us again? A s k ec sketchers. This

(06:54):
Mandela effected. Maybe you think like sketchy. Maybe that's one,
but the sketchers. Give me another one, Mike. I'll let
Lunchbox to this because I feel bad about myself. You've
missed every one of them. I know. Maybe the screen froze, Mike,
unless you're given me one, or maybe it didn't freeze,
or maybe i'd remember a freezing, but it's actually going

(07:15):
all right anyway. Uh, let's see, so she was scamped?
How is she scamp? But we lost our story. Um,
a big winner told you have to send a check. Yeah,
never pay money to win something. You should never pay
That's what happened here. You should never pay money to
win something. But like the lottery, you pay money away
then to get a ticket to have a chance to win.

(07:35):
They don't say you want, but you gotta pay to
get your money. Yeah, okay, I got it. And ednye
the eyeglass for Monopoly, if you've ever seen it, those
are unofficial drawings, not associated with Monopoly. Someone just created it.
You know who wears a monocle peanut? That's mister peanut.
That's one Looney Tunes lunchbox. Spell it l o o

(07:58):
any y tu any It makes almost zero sense. But yes,
the cartoon was spelled tunes, as in not not cartoons.
But tunes isn't to us? Yeah, yeah, did you just
spelled tunes? You think that? No? I just I remember
seeing I can see it written on the screen. I
just remember it's it's tunes t O O n S right, tunes,
it's t U N S which I would have guessed

(08:21):
t oo like jaficas of cartoons. Yeah, that's I thought
that was the play on words. Give me another one
like that. Okay, Um, you know Joe curious. This one,
I wouldn't known it either way. Curious George. Did he
have a tale? No, I have no idea. Every night

(08:41):
you do have a tale like for fun. No, my
kids love Curious George and I love Curious George. He
doesn't have a tale, though, so he reads a hotel Yeah. Um,
okay that show. Amy, hop out of this one with
an answer because you'll know it. But the show where
four women were in New York and the first word
of sex sex in the city, lunchbox, sex and the city.

(09:03):
What sex and the city? Okay, Eddie, sex in the city,
because that's where they're doing it. It's sex and the city.
Eddie thinks they're all just having sex in the city. Well,
that's what it's like suburbs, isn't it. Aren't they doing
that in the city, Eddie? All right? Next, Eddie lived
in a different time, like literally a different You knew

(09:24):
sex and the city? Bones, yes, because I don't think
it was sex in the city. That sounds like a porno.
I think that's what that show was. Um, Oscar the
the the meat. Yeah, go oh, Oscar Meyer, go ahead,
spell it, uh Meyer amy y e r. Yeah he's

(09:44):
an idiot. M A y e r. It is Oscar
John Mayer. There there's an a mayor told you in
a year, I would have guessed Ei though bones At
this point, I'm just trying to be different so I
can get it right. Okay, Hey, oh that's good. Uh
are doing about fruit loops? Yeah? I know this what

(10:06):
I mean? Fruit? Oot? What do you mean two os
on the fruit? Nos? F you are f r u
I T No, it's fruit with the two os. But
a lot of people remember it f r u I
T if they're re spelling it taking a test. Yeah,
I think this is just like people's radiots. And I'm
part of the idiots too. Yeah. Everyone, I don't care
about hen any that you go ahead, monopoly man, Pika

(10:28):
juice tail, I don't care. Kit Kat hyphen or no hyphen,
no hyphens hyphen no, no hyphen there's no hyphen yeah, Kitcat,
I don't know what hyphen is. All right, Okay, let's
see here minus I mean okay, okay, um fruit of
the loom. The logo, what was it fruit grapes? No? No, no,

(10:50):
all fruit okay? And is there anything else in the logos? No? No, no,
that's not a fruit. Anything that's not a fruit. Yeah.
And the logo like a cornucopia, that's all I was thinking, Oh,
what's that. Probably it's a bunch of like it's a
smorgas board of like the horn looking thing. Yeah, there's no,
there's no cornucopia. But a lot of people think there
is that horn thing like yeah, h yeah. So anyway,

(11:15):
people remember it all wrong, so they have theories about it.
You know, who was in Chazam Shack? Nope, never was
who What do you mean I don't see that on
the screen are you talking about? Don't look it up yet,
don't look it. I don't see that on the screen.
But can you look that up? Oh? Maybe it was Shack?
Who it was in bad? Yeah? Yeah he was. Yeah.

(11:36):
I was like, dang, I'm wrong too on that one.
He was also a genie somewhere though. What's that Mike? Oh, oh, Kausam, Hey,
you're the idiot. No, it's right, Shack was not good
Chasamy's right right going on here? Yeah, I don't know.
I don't even know what happens u Sho. Is that
the movie with the dark haired guy who like a kid? Yeah?

(12:01):
What's that one about Shazam? Basically a kid who gets
superpowers but then he turns into an adult. That's what
it is. Um. I changed when I sleep number last night,
and I'm gonna tell you the true that had a
pretty good night's sleep. I made it a lot softer
last night, like first time in your life in years? Yeah,
first time in years. And so I got on it.

(12:24):
Let me get it up here, because I did it
all my app and I put it down at fifteen.
Now a real man does it about sixty. Sixty is
pretty hard. So it was fifteen softer like a cloud. Wow,
I'm just in it. And so I put it fifteen.
I said, let me try this out. And I slept
pretty freaking good. And so because maybe that's what your
body needs. You just need to feel like you're like

(12:45):
relaxing and melting into something so that you can truly
relax it. Only I was so tired last night. We
were traveling a lot in New York and doing a
lot of airplane stuff. We got delayed like five hours
six hours on one of the trips was terrible, so
I was really tired. And then we got last night,
we had done it with a couple of friends. Fell asleep,
it says in four minutes. Oh wow, that's cool. And

(13:05):
I might sleep all the way through the night once
a month, maybe twice a month, maybe on a good month.
I was restless for an hour and eight minutes last night,
and I actually got five hours of sleep, which is
pretty good for me. It's not bad. Yeah, So there
you go. And if you get out of the bed
at night. I don't know if you guys have a
sleep number, but I do, and they there's a light

(13:27):
that comes onto the bottom of the bed so you
can like make sure you don't kick stuff and it
doesn't wake up the other person. Oh that's cool. Yeah.
So it's like you go down, it's like a look
slight night light under the bottom of the bed so
you don't fall or step on something. So but yeah,
I turned to my setting. I had a don my
app and alone in a few months, but I made
my setting IF fifteen pretty good, pretty soft. I felt
like I was on a cotton ball. What does Klin do? Forty?

(13:50):
My wife does eighty. Wow, she likes a hard match.
I mean it's like sleeping on a two by four.
I'm like, what are you doing? That's our thing though,
Like she likes it, she loves it, and I'm like,
what do you do? Oh, I'm a thirty Do you
like squish in beside her? That's what's happening. It's like
a hill and see Caitlin. Yeah, she's off on her
farm and I'm like, hey, yeah, there's a hill right
there in the middle of we're gonna roll over if

(14:10):
we're gonna go see each other. That's funny. You're like
a booboo bear. Like me, I am a booboo bear.
Tell you that eighty. I'm like, we go, like when
we go back to her parents house, like for holidays
wherever we sleep on her old bed. I mean, I
wake up in pain because my back hurts so bad
because the mattress is so hard. So you need you
need to really soft matches. Yes. Scientists say that the
existence of the Latonist monster is plausible because that whole channel,

(14:32):
and but plausible it means possible, not probable. So they're like,
there could be based on the size of where they
could swim and live. Not probable, but plausible. So they're
now finally saying that, Ah, let's see here, Mike, you
are the news. What's the story about Mike on the
Oh my gosh, Mike. I mean, there is a news

(14:53):
story and Mike is all over the freaking news. And
Mike is such an idiot he doesn't even he doesn't
even take advantage of it. He doesn't sit there and
wave at the camera, he doesn't get up there and
get in all over the news. It was like there
were some they were doing, some like school supply or
like health like packing thing where they were putting toothpaste
and toothbrushes and kind of charity drive in a box,

(15:14):
and the news is they're covering it, and they're doing
a story and you see Mike. Oh there's Mike. There's Mike.
There's Mike. There's Mike. There's Mike's wife. And they're interviewing
people and Mike is act like he doesn't know what
a camera is because he won't look at the camera.
He doesn't offer to give him an interview. Who doesn't
do anything except for pack the boxes. I think that's
probably what most people would do in that situation. Hey, Mike,

(15:34):
did you remember seeing the news there? Yeah, that's not
the news there. They were just covering it. What was
it exactly? It was this organization here in town who
was putting together these hygiene kids for homeless kids students,
and we were just there to take all the materials
and put them into little boxes. And I was working
the whole time, so I wasn't being addity to cameras.
Why didn't you want to go get on the news?
They interviewed like the people who run the organization. They

(15:56):
weren't just talking to people. So I was like, you're working, Yeah,
you shouldn't be, Like, hey, Miked by Bone show, you
want to talk to me about this? You know? You
should have let him know? And he didn't even wave.
Would you do that? Though? Absolutely you're more you have
more pull and reach than the head of that organization.
But I don't think it's about reach. Think it's about
actually highlighting what they're doing and why they're doing well.

(16:17):
He could tell them, but Mike Tribe doesn't know as
much about the history of the organization or why, or
are the amount of money. He doesn't He probably is
just there to do it. And he didn't wave at
the camera, like he put his head down, like the
camera beyond him, and he'd be like, no, look at it.
I gave him one cool shot. They put the camera
down the table, so I took the box like right
in front of the lens and like pulled it down.
That made it on the news, his shot made in
his hands. Yeah exactly. But oh man, hey, I'm ticked

(16:40):
off that Mike gets on the news for that, like
come on, and then he didn't even take advantage of it.
Doesn't even you want them to be behind the reporter
being like, hey, yes, I hold up a sign. Hey
what a Mike d by Bone show. You would have
done that. Yes, Eddie's thinking about starting a small business. Guys,
I'm serious about this, but lunchbox already he comes that
he wants to a small business, and he hasn't told

(17:01):
you guys what it is, right me. Yeah, I know
you know now? Oh yeah, because you laughed at him.
I thought it was a pretty good idea, Amy laughed
at Yeah, Sorry that I laughed. It's probably a good idea.
Did you know a small business? No? I don't, as
he started his small business. No, he does start many things.
One though, right, lunchbox. We started our small business of
buying the lockers. That's right, And you know, I think

(17:23):
that took me getting involved, had to do. But what
is your idea? Okay mine, guys. And I stumbled it
by accident. I was cutting these sweet potatoes and I
started thinking like, oh, these slices are kind of small,
maybe I should try to fry them and make chips
out of him. Guys. They were delicious, so good that
as I was making them, my kids were just eating
them and they were gone, gone, I thought. And there

(17:45):
is a little farmer's market, you know that every I
think it's maybe once a month, like on a Thursday.
They get together by my house and you have to
buy a little stand, you know, like a venue stand,
a tent or whatever. I can take my little fryar.
How much of that I'm priced it, I'm prized to
how much the venue stand is. But I can take
my fryar. Get local, because that's what they're all about.

(18:06):
Local sweet potatoes, slice them in front of people, fry them,
and sell the bags for like ten dollars each fresh fried, uh,
sweet potatoes, and I'll call it sweet Eddies potatoes. So
you're just gonna sell sweet potato ships like everybody else
who who sells Jackson the local though he gets buying

(18:28):
for the local store and here's actually grown local. Well no,
I'll just say that. Yeah, the groceries. Who's Jackson and Tara?
These are companies I just google sweet But they're not
freshly made. Guy, this is fresh like when you're at
a carnival, right, don't you like smell in the funnel cake.
Oh my gosh, I gotta get me a funnel cake.
That's what this is. But like, do you have to
do the farmer's market? Do you have to have like

(18:50):
like your official like a DBA, like have a license,
your food perbet doing business as file when you're c
I don't know. I just see people and they're little
tents doing bracelets and you know, like but with food,
I don't know about a permit, but I mean it
could work. Here's the problem. So I tried it at
home and I made the sweet potatoes like I said,
and I tried to bag them. And the problem is

(19:13):
the next day they're all soggy and gross. So it'd
have to be like a eat now while they're hot,
So you wouldn't even put him in a bag. You'd
put them in with those food traces. Yeah, if you
make them right there? Can you make them there? Oh
for sure? Because I think that's the attraction right long
to make well? I mean with my fryar, I can
probably make one bag in five minutes, so to keep

(19:34):
them fresh and organic but not soggy. Put a lot
of preservatives on them to keep them from not melting.
That's not very farmer's market that stuff. But that's one
customer every five minute. But say fresh local preservatives. Yes,
the word is fresh, right, they love that. And organic yeah, fresh, organic, local,
low and locally no matter what you say after that, yes, um,

(19:57):
are you really going to do it? Or are you
just being I'm dead serious? Is the next farmer's market
there every weekend? Oh it's not once a month? One
by houses over there every weekend? I think mine's every
once a month, like on a random Thursday. And it's
cool that you can travel every weekend. Yeah. Yeah, here,
let's start small. Maybe once a month. I'll start to
see how that day goes. And here's what I think

(20:18):
is cool is I can get my kids to work
and I get one of my boys to run the
cash register one of my boys to like do magic tricks,
you know, like in front of the Standard. You know,
you don't have a cash register right like at the
farmers market. Usually you just swipe a card the calculator
what the square calculate? Yeah, guys, just put them to work.
How much it is? How much the venue table invest

(20:38):
in this business? Would you like to help you physically
come out and maybe basically sign a few things. I
have an idea here that So there's a whole story
about how police are saying watch out for people playing
a violin in front of stores every see because their
acts like to play a violin and they're just getting
your money. They're like, hey, I need some help. They're
faking it. Sometimes they have music playing by them that's

(21:00):
a violin, but they never actually play the violin. So like,
it's happening everywhere, so don't fall for it right the end,
right this story that's from CW seven, Michigan. They talk
about a story right there on news channel three. But
it's happening all over the country. You guys have seen
it here. Yes, the idea was, this is Scooba Steve,
that we send lunchbox to Broadway with with a guitar
and he can't actually play guitar, but he tries as

(21:22):
hard as you can say, much money he can make
in an hour? Yeah, I mean people will give you money.
He but but you're not really you're playing a little bit.
You're playing like a string and you're singing country songs
and you're just seeing what money people give you. If
you're really trying, you're not begging them for money. You're
not going you know, it's a bit for the radio

(21:42):
or hey, you're pretty, but you're just really like I
feel into burning ring and its if people will drop
money in your case, how much do you think you
can make in an hour? Probably bucks? No way. You
don't think Broadway drunk people are gonna see you playing guitarurnament,
but you're not really gonna be playing the guitar. Yeah,
you don't know how to play the guitar. I don't
think any of those people do. I don't even think
you can sing the song. Oh, some people do. Going

(22:04):
down and I'm burning ring of Fire. That's pretty good.
You're right on. Thank you do like that? Amy? You
have a new Amy Amy four Things today I do. Yeah,
it's um all four totally different things. So I've been
doing a lot of interviews lately, but I took it
back to like og style, where I do four totally
different things and it's just me. Lunchbox was in the

(22:25):
room when I was doing the intro, so he hopped
in and like talked about a few things and shared
some you got vulnerable, No no, no. I had to record.
I had to record a spot and Amy was like, well,
I need to do a podcast in here, and then
she was like, well, you want to be on my
intro and I was like, I guess. And I thought
the intro would be about two minutes, and with Amy,
I also thought. I also thought it would be about

(22:47):
sixty seconds, but it was longer. But we talked about
like well, gratitude, also holding on tightly to things and
how to let go, and then the butterfly analogy. So
check it out today. A new episode of four Things
with Amy Brown. Tomorrow. Tyler Hubbard, the FGL lead singer
who doesn't want to be an FGL anymore. He stops
by the house and we talk about that his solo career.

(23:07):
I asked him the tough questions that everybody wants to know.
Do you hate each other. Why did you break? It's
all up there to be out there tomorrow. I hope
you check it out. I'm also really close. I have
been I'm not gonna say avoiding, but I'm trying not
to put anything else on my plate that I just
don't really want to do. Now. I believe in my career,
if I just don't really want to do it, I
ain't doing it, and I'm not doing anything anymore to go.

(23:28):
I think this is strategically a wise decision. I like it,
I ain't doing it, and so I really haven't done
anything in the sports world. But if there's been this
one organization that's been pursuing me to do something and
I couldn't do it, and it couldn't do it, and
it used to do Fox Sports Radio and I did
the draft for ESPN and ABC, I couldn't do it.
I couldn't do it. Finally, I think we're really close

(23:49):
to me doing something in sports, and that probably gets
announced next week. We're just just a signature away. Wow,
I'm a signature away. A big deal? Is? It? Sounds
like a medium deal. I've been pursuing you for a year,
but I just don't want to do it if I
can't do it right, And so maybe Monday I announce
a little something. But so in that world, I might

(24:11):
be dipping the toe back in a little bit. So
we'll let you know about that next week. I think
that's it. Hey, do we need to do this ide
image commercial? No, no Legacy Box commercial today? Or can
we do tomorrow or mon or next week? Or what
Legacy Box commercial? If so, I need to wrap into
these commercials. We need it today. Do you need to
do Legacy Box today or can I wait one of
the optional ones? Optional? Yeah, optional, I guess optional. Oh yeah,

(24:35):
you got time, you don't have to do today, Okay,
all right, Uh we're done, Thank you all. Hope you
have a great day. That's it, goodbye everybody,
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