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October 8, 2024 44 mins

Bobby starts with Taylor Swift becoming the richest female musician. Bobby then hands out gifts to Eddie and Scuba Steve. We also get into how Eddie is reading 3 passages of the bible a day. The crazy numbers of hamburgers that McDonald’s sells a day is insane, how a woman won the lotto after losing at the casino and how Bobby feels he is doing betting on DraftKings this year. We talk about Taylor Swift showing up at Travis’ game last night but not his birthday. We also talk about a R-Rated movie was shown on a plane that grossed customers out and a man who broke into a house and made himself at home. Then we get into a discussion of AI radio hosts who found out they weren’t real, how far down the Ocean is and why Lunchbox doesn’t think anxiety is real.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
Wakey, wakey, eggs and baky. It's time for the Bobby
Bones pre show. Thank you? Do you say here's Bobby?
I don't know. I'm confused because the post show we
do that. Here's Bobby over to Bobby. Oh just like that,
no audience, Yeah, because it's before the show, so we record.
That's before the show. I even start tell everybody I've
used it a little bit as get loose for the show.

(00:23):
Calis Stenix, maybe it's still a little stretching. Sure, Taylor
Swift becomes the richest female musician. She has now hit
one point six billion. Oh, she has now surpassed Rihanna
one point four billion. However, Taylor's not the richest ever
because at one point, Rihanna was worth one point seven
seven billion. But right now Taylor Swift is in the
lead because apparently Rihanna had a bad night at the tables.

(00:45):
She lost well three one hundred million. Oh good, none
of the tables would be a bad betting night. Amy,
I was kidding.

Speaker 2 (00:52):
No, I get that, I get the okay, I.

Speaker 1 (00:54):
Didn't know you didn't laugh. I got a little smirk from.

Speaker 2 (00:57):
I was thinking, like makeup sales go down.

Speaker 1 (00:59):
I mean because it literally could be a stock.

Speaker 3 (01:03):
Or like a purchase.

Speaker 4 (01:03):
Right, could it be like you you spent something, you
bought something for three hundred million.

Speaker 1 (01:08):
No, because what will happen is this is like networth,
not cash in an account. If you buy a three
hundred million dollars house, all it does is switch. Now
you have the same three hundred million. It's just now
on an asset. It's not as op posting right right
right now.

Speaker 3 (01:23):
And I get that. Yeah for su Yeah, I get that.
I get this.

Speaker 5 (01:27):
So I just came across this video of like the
Richest Woman, like and it was going through the artist
and you would think like, oh, it's Beyonce, it's Taylor,
it's Kim Kardashian and the richest woman she actually co
founded a roofing company.

Speaker 2 (01:40):
Oh yeah yeah billions.

Speaker 1 (01:43):
Like so what it's crazy about? People like make a
chip or not a potato, but like a computer chip,
a microchip, or they like a a part. Yeah, Like
I'm not thinking a trademark. I'm thinking of what's the
other one pattern? Yeah, like that there's a patent for
like a shoe string, uh, the tape that holds it,
and then they make a billion dollars off of it

(02:03):
or one hundreds of million, and it's like who has
that house?

Speaker 3 (02:06):
Well, actually, uh huh.

Speaker 1 (02:08):
What they did is they invented the knuckle pad. Well
what's that? Well, when you have a callous on your knuckle,
you just put it on. So every doctor stops in
me like wow, who even knews?

Speaker 3 (02:16):
Or like that guy invented poker cards?

Speaker 1 (02:18):
Words, Yeah, I have something for oh so sore? And
are you so sore a little bit? The hamstrings are
killing things called ard. Oh let me know. That stands
for Russian deadlift. Maybe, I don't know, not been source
since Thursdays. I don't know if that's true or not.
I have these books that you guys have to read.

Speaker 4 (02:36):
I know we have to read a book. Yeah, dude,
I've read three books in my life.

Speaker 1 (02:39):
It doesn't matter. This book is not that thick. First
of all, it's small like this, and there's like a
ton of words. The words are big, I mean, and
there's only in the whole thing one hundred and thirty
nine pages. You mean, like hard words or like no, no, no,
there's not that many words on the page.

Speaker 6 (02:54):
Oh, they're small.

Speaker 1 (02:55):
It's a four agreement. So eddie noo and Scuba. I
think you guys will really love this book.

Speaker 3 (03:00):
Us too, Thank you? What about lunchbox naming.

Speaker 1 (03:04):
You guys are a book called We talked about this
on the freaking Show and lunchbox Reddit. No, but you
too are Scuba needs it for sure. We give this
to Eddie.

Speaker 2 (03:14):
I think Eddie's just confused because it was about Scuba,
and so now he's like.

Speaker 3 (03:17):
I get roped into the four.

Speaker 1 (03:20):
I don't remember because you but you said something. Let
me give it to you. Don't need to read now, I.

Speaker 4 (03:25):
Don't want to starting now, he's gonna read the better,
read the back to see what it's about.

Speaker 1 (03:29):
You get well, you all gosh the fact that puts on.

Speaker 4 (03:33):
His nose Four Agreements, Don Miguel Ruiz, go ahead, Hispanic guy.
That's what it reveals, the source of self limiting beliefs
that rob us of joy and oh I remember talking
about this, Yes, go ahead, based on ancient toul Tech
was toul Tech wisdom?

Speaker 6 (03:50):
You're going to struggle.

Speaker 3 (03:51):
The Four Agreements.

Speaker 4 (03:52):
Offer a powerful code of conduct that can rapidly transform
our lives to a new experience of freedom, true happiness,
and love.

Speaker 3 (04:00):
The reason is, who doesn't want that?

Speaker 1 (04:02):
Exactly? The reason it stood out to me, there's a
whole thing about not taking anything personal in business, and
I thought it'd be great for Scuba to read, and
then for you, I just thought it be fun for
you to read. Interesting.

Speaker 6 (04:12):
You just got roped in.

Speaker 3 (04:15):
It's not that long, La.

Speaker 1 (04:16):
You're right, it's not that long. I read it every year.

Speaker 3 (04:18):
There's no pictures, no pictures.

Speaker 1 (04:20):
There's occasionally a drawing in there, like at the beginning
of a chapter, like all drawing of a leaf.

Speaker 3 (04:23):
One hundred and forty pages.

Speaker 1 (04:24):
Though, I do think that you will like it, okay,
and then I'll check back Monday of next week. Whoa, whoa,
I'm telling you one week. You can read it in
an hour.

Speaker 2 (04:35):
In an hour.

Speaker 1 (04:36):
I read it in like an hour.

Speaker 2 (04:37):
Yeah. But Eddie and I.

Speaker 3 (04:38):
Have Yeah, we have DYSLEXI.

Speaker 1 (04:40):
Hey, don't don't.

Speaker 5 (04:41):
Blame it on that, because we read a page and
then we're like, shoot, well we just read We got
to go back and read it again.

Speaker 1 (04:45):
This book I gave it to him is written backwards,
so you'll read it.

Speaker 4 (04:48):
That's not It's not the problem.

Speaker 3 (04:51):
Huh.

Speaker 1 (04:52):
Eddie and I were talking about because that he's doing
a Bible thing now where he reads like a versy
day or something.

Speaker 3 (04:56):
Yeah, I read three verses a.

Speaker 1 (04:57):
Day and he's talking about reading the Bible, and I
was like, which version and not King James, but like
the one where it's like, yo, yo, Jesus walked up
on the hill with the sneaks on that right, and
there are a different level because again, even the original
to English version was like that, meaning it was written
you're my Hebrew. So they had to translate it and
make it readable for you know, us West. So they

(05:21):
did that originally and their version of doing.

Speaker 3 (05:25):
That, yeah, and even that was kind of hard with
a die and are out.

Speaker 1 (05:28):
But my point is it's all been a translation to
make it digestible for whichever language is reading it. So
I always like the ones though they're like yo, Jesus said,
drop that beak?

Speaker 2 (05:40):
What is that one called?

Speaker 5 (05:41):
There is one Bible in particular, I can't remember what
it is at one point and then I was like,
I think I'll just go Jesus.

Speaker 3 (05:49):
The peeps, and he said, yo, here's my bread, let's
eat it.

Speaker 1 (05:51):
And so for some people though, that's the because it's
a message. It's a message, and the different books were
written sometimes hundreds of years apart, like they're not. It's
not like they sat down and wrote them all. Okay,
you're all writing at the same time, like hundreds of
years apart, not knowing, didn't know each other.

Speaker 5 (06:09):
Which is why when sometimes the like the what's the world?
I get how it sinks out? How they even the
opposite of that, it's like, wait, this wasn't even supposed
to be, but it's like so in alignment together.

Speaker 1 (06:22):
Yeah, there's some heavy contradictions too, just because they were
written hundreds of years apart. Sure, However, I like the
version that's like just check check this thing on. But
I was like, any which version of you're reading? If
he's reading every day, and he was kind of a mid.

Speaker 3 (06:35):
One, Yeah, it's kind of in the middle.

Speaker 1 (06:36):
It's not guilty that he wasn't reading, like because if
you're reading the original it's a Hebrew versions whenever two
or three translations later. Is the version that like our
grandma read to us and like my grandma or the
Bible all the way through over and over again, and
it was that thou art how and I'm like wow,
But that originally was a much lighter version for people
to read, much like they've continued to translate the one now,

(06:57):
so don't feel bad.

Speaker 4 (06:58):
What's helpful for me is that the one I'm reading
has like a Okay, this is written by this person,
and what he's trying to say or he's talking to
is here, and like if I didn't have that, I
wouldn't know what was happening.

Speaker 1 (07:08):
Yeah, so that can be helpful. It be tough. It's
like Shakespeare. I like the Shakespeare if I'm going and
I hated to reading Shakespeare in college. I never knew
what they were saying. I could read it and try
to memorize some of it, but I never really knew
what was going on. Even when I watched, like DiCaprio
do the Shakespeare movie back in the day they did
in the original Shakespearean and I was like, I don't
know what's happening except for their moving their body, and
I can kind of translate Romeo and Juliet that's the

(07:30):
movie that DiCaprio did. But I would just it would
just be words that we didn't use now, and so
I would just four out thou yes. So I liked
it when they would dumb it down a bit. So
this four dumb down not dumb down it's written. I
don't want to say dumb, but it's written simplistically because
if I can take it and understand it, I think

(07:51):
anybody can. It's like digestible big time. When I write
my books, they're completely digestible. Not because I'm like I
want to dumb it down. Let's learning how I think.
And when I written I wrote my first book, I
think people were like, let's see if he really wrote
this about one chap oh yea yeah, yeah, yahyah oh.

Speaker 3 (08:05):
He wrote it.

Speaker 1 (08:06):
Run on sentences, para don't end.

Speaker 5 (08:11):
When I don't know what to do when I'm writing something,
I just go dot dot dot Yeah.

Speaker 2 (08:15):
I'm like, is this a comma or no?

Speaker 3 (08:17):
Yes, okay, dot dot dot's great.

Speaker 1 (08:20):
I would send it off to an editor and she'd
be like, hmmm, dot dot dot you understand the difference
in colon and semi colon. And she was asking, like
in a way of being helpful, and I was like,
I do. But when I'm confused, I just do comma.
And I said, I think that's how my people are
going to read it. Sure, so I'm not going to
try to be anything I'm not. And occasionally they would
go through and change it i'd notice in the edit

(08:41):
they'd put like a colon ers in my colon. But
I kid you not in my first book, I'm not lonely.
If you're reading this book, it's called bear Bones, It's
what it's called. Uh. There are typos still in the
book because there were so many typos by me. They
didn't catch them all even going through. And I'm sure
they have a whole team of going through and finding
typos and bad punctuals. There must have been so many,

(09:02):
and this is a major publisher. There must have been
so many that I think I caught two or three.
That's to me, that's like one of my greatest victories.
That's cool because when I you can also tell when
I tweet or I text or I post on like
an Instagram story and I'm writing something, I don't ever
go back and look at it again. I wrote something
about Rascal Flats. They were on the show last week,
and I was like Rascal Flats, and their PR person

(09:25):
messaged me and was like, hey, you misspelled.

Speaker 3 (09:28):
Flat flats.

Speaker 1 (09:30):
I think I put one t so then on the
next one I put it. I didn't go back and
change it. I just put on the next green hat
looks like I did a I had a typo there
Rascal flats and spelled it right, but then I wrote
thank you and that and thank you was misspelled. There
was the wrong. Yeah, I think, oh yeah, it happened.
It does Hurricane Milton, which, by the way, we're in

(09:50):
the middle of Helene and all the upkeep and the
rebuild and still saving people, and then Milton is expected
to slam into western Florida on Wednesday as a major hurricane.
It looks as if, according to the model, like it's
kind of like a category of three over near Tampa.
Well that's what it looks like now, not that it

(10:12):
can't change, but yeah, that's what's up there.

Speaker 2 (10:14):
It's so terrible.

Speaker 1 (10:15):
But that's not the caseuters.

Speaker 5 (10:17):
Yeah, people that lost their cars in Helene. It's like
evacuating isn't as It's like, you know, I was just
watching this one person in particular that's been very involved.
She's an er doctor that I've been following on Instagram,
and she does she gives really helpful information. Her house
was completely flooded. She's been doing what she needs to

(10:39):
do to stay ahead, and she's trying to encourage people
like leave if you can. She's like that, I understand
what's so difficult. Some people have lost all of their
things and leaving is not as easy for them to do.

Speaker 1 (10:49):
And even if you haven't lost anything, let's say it's
on the way, some people can't afford to leave during
gas you don't have money to go stay in a hotel, Like,
it is not as easy to just okay, it's being evacuated,
and you would like to go evacuate, and you'd like
to think you have an aunt somewhere or a cousin
or a friend four hundred miles up. Sometimes you don't
have the money to pay for gas. Sometimes you don't
have the money for a hotel stay, and so you

(11:12):
have to stay. And so some many people get irritated
at people like that. I'm like, man, you must have
never been broke, because there's a storm coming. When I
was a kid, different storm and we were landlocked, and
they were like evacuate. We never had that tornadoes would come.

Speaker 3 (11:23):
But those are like quick, you don't even know they're coming.

Speaker 1 (11:28):
I mean the weather. You could think, well there's a
chance of a watch. Sure, yeah, no way. The crazy
number of burgers the McDonald sells every day revealed. A
new report is revealed just how many Patty's flaff the
girl a McDonald's every day. The takeout did the quote
McMath looking at reports that the fast food chain sold

(11:48):
nearly six point five billion burgers in twenty twenty one.
More specifically, they looked at the offense side at statistic
that are about seventy five hamburgers are sold per second
and says, oh, all around. It's not one restaurant, but
around the country, McDonald's in a day sells about six
point four eight million burgers in a day just of
all the stores.

Speaker 6 (12:09):
That is insane.

Speaker 1 (12:11):
That's just a lot of meat.

Speaker 3 (12:12):
It's a lot of meat.

Speaker 1 (12:13):
A lot of cows a day. That's a lot of meat.
That's a lot of cows.

Speaker 3 (12:16):
You think about that.

Speaker 1 (12:18):
See, that's where we like to hear, like how many
cows are being affected by this, because it's like when
somebody goes you with the eight forty million pounds wings
on Super Bowl Sunday, that means something to me. How
many people are eating it? I want to know per
how many person per wing? You need to like get
all the way down.

Speaker 3 (12:33):
And that's just McDonald's, man. I know there's a lot
of cows.

Speaker 1 (12:37):
I need to know cows.

Speaker 5 (12:38):
I don't want to I don't really want to know either,
because then it's a lot of cows.

Speaker 1 (12:43):
What's also why I don't watch those documentaries on not
eating meat.

Speaker 3 (12:47):
What was the one about, I don't know.

Speaker 1 (12:49):
I don't even think about it.

Speaker 3 (12:51):
Supersized, supersize me McDonald's.

Speaker 1 (12:53):
Well, that wasn't about not eating no, no, no, no. That
was eating McDonald's for a year every day.

Speaker 6 (12:59):
But then it turned out to be real.

Speaker 1 (13:01):
It turned out that's something something he wasn't extremely accurate
about it. Yeah, Michael now acohol. He was an alcoholic
at the time, So but what would that have to
do with anything.

Speaker 7 (13:13):
It was a lot of effects alcoholism.

Speaker 1 (13:16):
Oh so when he was getting sick, it could have
been some of the effects of alcoholism on his body,
not just.

Speaker 3 (13:24):
Heading McDonald's every day Donalds? Was that his experiment to.

Speaker 6 (13:28):
See what I think he was to see what it
does with his body. And he was liked for how
many days? I think his name was Morgan Spurlock.

Speaker 1 (13:35):
And he died recently.

Speaker 3 (13:36):
Oh he did, uh.

Speaker 6 (13:37):
Huh, that's why I gave him a rest in peace.
At the beginning.

Speaker 1 (13:39):
Oh, I didn't hear that it had you not said that,
would he have not been.

Speaker 6 (13:43):
Well, I'm just saying I was just yeah, like.

Speaker 1 (13:47):
Was he like rolling around and I can't get restless?
And then lunchboxes he goes.

Speaker 2 (13:51):
No, but that was his indicator that he sin.

Speaker 6 (13:54):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (13:54):
A Virginia woman who called her family to tell them
she struck out at the casino had to call back
right after that, saying, I just want fifty thousand dollars
from the lottery. The Alexandra Woment told Maryland Lottery officials
she visited a casino where she failed to win any money.
Then she got to I've gotta scratch off ticket, and
then she hit fifty thousand dollars.

Speaker 3 (14:10):
It's just meant to be, it is.

Speaker 1 (14:12):
It's just I don't think it's meant to be. I
think she bought another ticket. What about everybody who does
this who doesn't hit, and it's like.

Speaker 3 (14:19):
We don't hear about them.

Speaker 1 (14:20):
It's like one more role, I'm gonna go and get
a ticket and they don't hit.

Speaker 3 (14:22):
But it wasn't meant to be for them.

Speaker 1 (14:24):
Yeah, And I think you can assign meant to be
anything ever in the history of the world.

Speaker 2 (14:27):
Right, what was meant to be for them was to
lose it.

Speaker 6 (14:29):
And there's another example of fight, grind, repeat, never give up.
Like it's like she was, she was on the way
overco or whatever she was losing. She was like, you
know what, quitters never wins. I'm gonna keep playing.

Speaker 1 (14:39):
Book And I understand, okay, fair, I'll give that to her.
But I think in this scenario that is not the
proper strategy because more people than not, way more people
than not are going to continue to lose.

Speaker 3 (14:51):
It's called chasing.

Speaker 1 (14:52):
When yeah, yeah, chasing.

Speaker 3 (14:54):
Yeah, we've been there.

Speaker 1 (14:55):
I think I'm gonna have kick off, Kevin, go do
my DraftKings. Oh from the beginning of this year come
up so much?

Speaker 3 (15:01):
Really, I think, so wow, that's cool.

Speaker 7 (15:03):
Man.

Speaker 1 (15:05):
It's hard. Oh yeah, it's impossibly so hard.

Speaker 2 (15:07):
I know, but you're oddly I'm not.

Speaker 3 (15:09):
But this is different than it's different.

Speaker 1 (15:11):
This is different if you can win like fifty four
percent of the time, like that is that that's a
big winning year and that there. I like to use
DraftKings for entertainment purposes. It's fun and I'll never bet
more than I can handle losing, right, But I think
this year I'm having an abnormally good year, mostly because
Arkansas is covering even when they're losing. Like I bet

(15:32):
two hundred and fifty bucks an Arkansas money line versus
Tennessee and I won like thirteen hundred dollars.

Speaker 3 (15:37):
Yeah, it's huge.

Speaker 1 (15:37):
And then I bet like a thousand bucks Arkansas plus
fourteen and obviously they won, so I won like two grand.
The week before I won like four grand off Arkansas
and they lost, but I bet them play with the points.
He's still covered.

Speaker 4 (15:50):
See, so it does help when your team wins like
that or covers like that.

Speaker 1 (15:55):
Bucks and the Cowboys they were they were plus two.

Speaker 3 (15:57):
Yeah they were. They were not favorite.

Speaker 1 (15:59):
And I went to sleep, didn't even know won the game.
Woke up, saw Dak and CD fighting.

Speaker 3 (16:03):
Do you want me to tell you who?

Speaker 5 (16:04):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (16:04):
I know because I saw my draft games. I mean
I looked at the score. I looked at the score.
Obviously it was awesome, but I was like, I feel
like the Cowboys get into points with a Pittsburgh offense
that can't score. And then there was a lightning to lay.
So I fell asleep.

Speaker 4 (16:17):
Yeah it's late. It didn't end till like midnight, hard time.
Watch you watch it oh yeah you did. Of course
the Cowboys when we're gonna do go to bed.

Speaker 6 (16:28):
Yes, I know.

Speaker 3 (16:30):
I mean you can't like I could. I can't do that.

Speaker 1 (16:32):
I would say if it were conference tournament. It's a
double A basketball tournament. I would if it were playout
colleg football playoffs. That's what I look forward to.

Speaker 3 (16:42):
Now.

Speaker 1 (16:43):
I hear you, I hear you. But I mean it's
like week five. I know you got good for you.
I'm talking about me. I think I probably would.

Speaker 4 (16:49):
Have, really if the Razorbacks were going and then it's
like it just it was just delayed.

Speaker 1 (16:53):
You're right, I probably would.

Speaker 5 (16:55):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (16:56):
The makers of Terrifier three are doing everything they can
to convince you that it's the nastiest thing you love. See.
Amy watched Terrifier too, loved it.

Speaker 5 (17:02):
I didn't love it. I was forced to go and
it was horrible.

Speaker 1 (17:06):
I remember it differently, but okay, I supposedly eleven people
walked out. One person barfed. But this was their whole
marketing for num Well.

Speaker 2 (17:13):
And I didn't throw up when I was there.

Speaker 3 (17:15):
These were the movies she was supposed to watch.

Speaker 1 (17:16):
No, no, no, no. It was between She went to the
theater and had to watch this because it was like
the one that made everybody throw up, that's right, And
so she took her daughter to watch it.

Speaker 2 (17:24):
Well, I got put on the wheel or something.

Speaker 1 (17:26):
Yes, and then the ones that she had to watch
were saw and she watched all the saws.

Speaker 2 (17:31):
There's ten of those.

Speaker 3 (17:32):
I saw that they're making a new smile.

Speaker 1 (17:35):
I don't know what that is.

Speaker 3 (17:36):
You haven't seen that.

Speaker 1 (17:37):
You remember that?

Speaker 4 (17:37):
I mean I never saw it, but you remember they
were doing promotions where like they would just smile.

Speaker 1 (17:41):
And then I remember like the World series, like yeah,
creepy woman in the crowd to be smile.

Speaker 3 (17:47):
Yes, and then like smile the movie because I know.

Speaker 1 (17:49):
You've seen it because that's one of the guys.

Speaker 3 (17:51):
Yeah, right before they died, they get a big smile
on their face.

Speaker 1 (17:53):
He and pill or one of those guys, right, No, oh,
that's not one of themally different. Oh, I'm stupid. I'm stupid, idio.
Hope you guess forgive me, you're not stupid.

Speaker 7 (18:00):
Okay, So what happens They there's like a curse and
whenever it gets put on, a person starts messing with
their mind and then they end up killing themselves. But
right before they need a big smile and it's straight horror. Yeah,
and then it jumps to other people and did you
like it? I like the first one. It was a
little bit boring in the middle, but this one looks
a lot better.

Speaker 1 (18:19):
Got it.

Speaker 4 (18:20):
It's gross, gross, like there's smile.

Speaker 1 (18:23):
It's total fiction.

Speaker 3 (18:24):
It's not real it'.

Speaker 2 (18:27):
I know, but it's just total fiction.

Speaker 5 (18:29):
Just even I don't even thinking of that. I'm just like, oh,
you get this thing and then you smile and then
kill yourself.

Speaker 1 (18:34):
I have to talk my wife at times through because
she's such an EmPATH and remind her I don't want you.
We don't watch horror movies, but it's even empathy extreme.
And if we're watching any sort of show, she'll start
to feel really bad for the characters if they're going
through something. And I'm like fiction fiction fiction, not true
fiction fiction, but she'll like feel super sad. She's like,
oh my god, and I'm like, this is not true,

(18:55):
not true, not true. If shows are so good, you
do it, definitely get caught up and haven't motion. But
I have to be like fiction fiction fiction fiction. All right,
So we got to go to the show Ray How
long was the pre is? It called like the sandwich Show.
I'm trying to think of a name different. It goes
up on it. Do you know what you called the
sandwich show?

Speaker 4 (19:12):
Yeah, hot dog went on top one of the bottom
sandwich show in the middle.

Speaker 1 (19:17):
You're right in me, but a hot dog sandwich and
you say hot.

Speaker 3 (19:21):
Dog, Well, isn't a hot dog a sandwich?

Speaker 6 (19:22):
Bable?

Speaker 1 (19:23):
But not anybody would get that it's not because I
would say, I would argue that it is, but.

Speaker 2 (19:29):
There's not a top or bottom because most people don't.

Speaker 5 (19:31):
You eat a hot dog with the buns to the side.

Speaker 1 (19:35):
People also eat pizza bou folding and half. That's also
not wrong. It's weird, but not wrong. I would I
don't want to get the fight, don't. I don't care not, Okay,
it's a sandwich fue No, Yeah, but I would say
it's like the sandwich Show.

Speaker 4 (19:46):
And because the pree's on the top and the meats
in the middle the show.

Speaker 1 (19:50):
It's the top bun.

Speaker 3 (19:51):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (19:51):
And then we did the bat but there's really no
meat unless that's commercial.

Speaker 4 (19:54):
And we did argue about which one should be the
bottom bune because.

Speaker 5 (19:58):
Because when you bite into it, you're biden into the
top bun first but I didn't.

Speaker 1 (20:02):
Even really win the argument. One of them that too,
was like, I don't care enough.

Speaker 6 (20:06):
But really, are you biting into the butt on top first?
Because your bottom teeth are touching the bottom bun.

Speaker 1 (20:11):
I think when you bite it, your teeth hits down
top butt bun first. They not you. That's why you're
thinking of overbite. If it's the chin, if that's over
the top, that's an overbite.

Speaker 2 (20:26):
In fact, I had an underbyte as a child, and.

Speaker 4 (20:28):
Obviously this is it called an underbyte, like Stanley has
an underbite.

Speaker 5 (20:32):
Yeah, yeah, it was like Stanley. It's like I had
to wear a retainer.

Speaker 1 (20:36):
You had a bow a bow tie right now? He
does always funny Now when you got we have this
woman that comes out once a month and does like
grooming on them. You should put a bow tie on him.

Speaker 3 (20:46):
I love it.

Speaker 1 (20:46):
He won't take it off. He loves it. Look himself
in the mirror all day. All right, let's take a break.
Good's time for the Bobby Bones post show. Here's your host,
Bobby Bone. So Taylor was at Travis Kelcey's game last night,
but she wasn't at his birthday party. Thoughts any at all?

Speaker 5 (21:10):
No, I think that they're still together. But a birthday
is kind of a good deal.

Speaker 1 (21:15):
Yeah, but who knows. She may have had an obligation
that she could. I'm sure the obligations that someone like
Taylor Swift has and.

Speaker 2 (21:21):
They can celebrate her privately.

Speaker 1 (21:23):
Sure, does it change your mind at all?

Speaker 5 (21:26):
No?

Speaker 1 (21:27):
I felt like she looked pretty happy. This wasn't a
little trick play that ran last night? Totally, she's all
about it. Yeah, yeah, Chiefs won last night. Nobody cares.
I liked her outfit, but yeah, yeah, I guess I
don't remember what did she wear?

Speaker 5 (21:40):
Something like y'all remember trick plays, and I'm like her
dress was cute.

Speaker 1 (21:44):
That's good. I was up like three points going in
the last night and ended up winning. It's pretty good.

Speaker 2 (21:50):
So you won?

Speaker 3 (21:51):
You're doing all right today?

Speaker 5 (21:53):
Well?

Speaker 1 (21:53):
I won Fantasy. I won both. I hate playing in
two leagues. It's the most annoying thing because sometimes you're
playing against people that's on your team and that I'm
torn and I just don't even watch that game because
I don't know who. So but yeah, nobody cares about
Boose fantasy teams. But the Chiefs want to get the
five And oh do you care No, definitely not. Look
at her outfit. Oh there's no Travis kelcey on it,

(22:13):
no jersey or anything. So does that mean they're broken up?

Speaker 7 (22:15):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (22:16):
No, that her outfit is like a plaid with tall dues.

Speaker 3 (22:19):
She usually wears a jersey something chief something chiefs.

Speaker 2 (22:22):
Yeah, but plots a thing right now.

Speaker 1 (22:23):
I don't see anything chief though.

Speaker 6 (22:25):
The fact that she went at the birthday party, guys,
that is if you guys don't think that's obvious that
they are not together?

Speaker 2 (22:30):
Why go to the game?

Speaker 1 (22:31):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (22:31):
Why?

Speaker 1 (22:31):
And she's missed other games, so it would it be
like a big deal.

Speaker 4 (22:34):
Wasn't it like a specific birthday party, like thrown by
a charity or something.

Speaker 1 (22:37):
Yeah, I don't know it was Joy didn't go to
the birthday party. But again, there are certain obligations that
people have, like a tailor that's probably set a year out.
I mean, I have things I hate when this happens.
But somebody will go, hey, can you do what's today?
October eighth? Somebody go, hey, April thirteenth, would you be
able to speak at this thing? And I'm like, April thirteen,

(22:59):
that'll never happen. Yeah, why not? I'll never get here
and then April first comes and they're like, hey, don't
forget into it. Oh my god, I committed that.

Speaker 3 (23:08):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (23:08):
And then sometimes I'll get booked for like a private show,
and they'll do that eighteen months out and it's not
like three months pre I can cancel. So and that's
just me. It's a little old me. Can you imagine Taylor's.

Speaker 3 (23:22):
How long have they been dating? I don't know, two years?

Speaker 2 (23:25):
No, was it last year? The first football season that.

Speaker 1 (23:28):
She probably like, we're gonna be ten months or so? Okay,
so year and a half summer of twenty twenty three,
So yeah, I think about fifteen sixteen months.

Speaker 3 (23:39):
I mean, guys, how do you think this isn't real?

Speaker 1 (23:41):
But they're confirmed it then, so that means they probably
were dating a little longer than that exactly. Anyway, I
just wanted to watch that. A ten year old boys
charge after driving a stolen car near a crowded playground.
Minneapolis police arrested a ten year old boy last month
for allegedly driving a stolen vehicle near this school playground.
It was captured on video. Marked the third arrest for
this child, and he's also the suspect in a dozen

(24:04):
cases ranging from auto theft to robbery. So this kid
doesn't have a good parental system. So where it goes
from like haha, a little kid driving car to you
hear about all this stuff when you're like, man, he
has nobody to lead him and probably also terrible influences.
That's gonna not set him up well for the rest
of his life unless somebody's able to grab hold the
situation quote. It's unfathomabed that a ten year old boy

(24:27):
has been evolved in this level of criminal activity without
effective intervention. Charges have been filed against the boy, but
further details are withheld due to his age. The boy's
family is cooperating with authorities and has asked for help
further harm ABC seven.

Speaker 4 (24:41):
At first I thought he saw like a car that
was empty when it took it for a joy, right,
But well, that's funny.

Speaker 1 (24:45):
That's funny when nobody gets hurt. A small kid driving
a big car down the road. He's the top of
his head and his feet can barely reach the pedals,
but nobody gets hurt. That's funny. This is that this
turns into not funny real quick when it it's something
over and over and over again. An Airline apologizes. So
they showed they showed a movie on the airplane. They're like,

(25:07):
this is the movie we're gonna show, which I don't
see many planes doing that anymore. Now you choose what
you want. Yeah, the little screens are on the back
or like Southwest, you can watch it's free. You can
watch TV or movies for free on your phone. Even
but Quantus Airlines has apologized after the movie they showed.
It was called Daddy O Starting Dakota Johnson, which already

(25:29):
that name sounds like probably there's gonna be some sex.

Speaker 2 (25:33):
Daddy, maybe Daddy.

Speaker 1 (25:35):
Daddy No forty minutes of penis and boobs stop. Basically yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
The flight from Sydney to Japan showed the beginning of
Daddy O starting Dakota Johnson. Choose the fifty so individual
selection from passenger seats weren't available because of a technical issue,
so I guess they did have it, and usually they
do allow them to pick individual seat screens. Something was wrong,

(25:59):
so they said, hey, because of that, we're gonna show
you Daddy. Oh.

Speaker 4 (26:02):
The pilots like, all right, show the movie I have
in my in my story.

Speaker 1 (26:06):
Before the film was eventually cut off passengers were treated
to scenes featuring an erect penis, prolonged sexting exchanges, and
pro profuse use of the F word. One passenger said,
at least they didn't have to watch Madam Webb though
that was the super A movie that she did. That
was bad joke. Yeah, it's from the Guardian. Dang, that's hardcore.

(26:29):
I don't even like it when someone's like watching something
on nudity sitting next to me, it's so awkward. Imagine
everybody watching that, you know, like, is it? What's happening? Here?
Are you guys? Watch there's an erect penis and then
there's one on the screen.

Speaker 3 (26:43):
Got it? Thank you? I got it?

Speaker 2 (26:44):
Thank you?

Speaker 6 (26:48):
Are you looking up that scene?

Speaker 3 (26:51):
Why did you go?

Speaker 5 (26:52):
I'm reading about it. I'm just picturing. I'm reading about
it and trying.

Speaker 2 (26:55):
To picture what I do. I flowers like on that
flight with my kids.

Speaker 3 (26:58):
I'm sure over it.

Speaker 1 (27:01):
I guess I'm surprised that nobody d hey, there's a
lot of nudity, like seven minutes into it, much less
forty minutes into it. A UK woman was left shocked
after a stranger broke in her home, rearranged items, took
out the trash, cooked himself a meal, cleaned it up,
and that's all.

Speaker 6 (27:21):
That's weird.

Speaker 1 (27:23):
It also could be like home cosplay. Oh like you
break in and just act like you live there. You
don't have anywhere to live. Damien wo janilla Witz admitted
a court on Thursday. He entered the home on July
sixteenth while the woman was at work. She returned to
find her laundry hung up, her bird feeders refilled. That's nice,
her floor this due could break into my house exactly,

(27:45):
floors cleaned, groceries put away, and a note reading don't worry,
be happy, eat up. The woman also noticed that the
person had consumed food and wine. You know, fair trade.

Speaker 3 (28:00):
You gotta treat yourself a little bit.

Speaker 1 (28:01):
Well, no, it's it's it's the pay for doing all
the work. If you're gonna hire a house cleaner cost
less than that. So he was arrested for a second
degree burglary. It doesn't say he stole anything though.

Speaker 6 (28:12):
Yeah, it's weird. Let's go easy on the guy he
was cleaning up.

Speaker 3 (28:15):
Yeah, but you can't, just like you can't just break in.

Speaker 1 (28:17):
Someone's happening.

Speaker 6 (28:18):
I understand, but give him a little bit lighter it's
not like he was there to do harm. He was
there to help you out something off.

Speaker 1 (28:24):
He also could be like setting it up for a
later Yeah, oh yeah, you didn't think about that.

Speaker 3 (28:30):
What's this?

Speaker 1 (28:31):
But if you're setting it up for later, maybe you
don't do all the cleaning.

Speaker 3 (28:33):
What's his sentence? Like what are they?

Speaker 1 (28:35):
But he also could have like cleaned and like gratified himself.
Like that could have been a thing too, Like you
don't know what he's doing.

Speaker 3 (28:40):
Is that a thing?

Speaker 1 (28:41):
I don't know, dude, there's everything's a thing.

Speaker 3 (28:44):
Probably never heard of that one.

Speaker 1 (28:45):
I was watching Daddy, what'd you do last night? Anything?
All right? What are you doing?

Speaker 2 (28:53):
I'm getting my blanket? It's so cold in here?

Speaker 3 (28:56):
Really, it's not bad today.

Speaker 2 (28:59):
No nothing.

Speaker 5 (29:00):
I did have a dream though, that a toddler broke
into my house.

Speaker 2 (29:05):
That's literally I.

Speaker 1 (29:06):
Talk about fantasy football. She gets talking about dreams. There's
two things people don't care about other people's fantasy football teams,
or are the people's dreams?

Speaker 5 (29:13):
Like fifteen seconds, two of those stories you told made
me think of it because I don't really remember dreams.
But the ten year old stole the car and I
was like, oh man, this kid broke into my house
last night, my dream, but I refrained from saying anything.
And then you had a story about a guy breaking
into a woman's house, and I'm like, I feel like
I could say something now because it's so relatable.

Speaker 1 (29:32):
Yeah, go ahead, what do you think it means?

Speaker 2 (29:34):
That's all I know.

Speaker 5 (29:35):
I just it was a girl, she had braids, she was,
she ate food.

Speaker 1 (29:42):
I felt black kid, white kid she was?

Speaker 2 (29:45):
She was black.

Speaker 1 (29:46):
Okay, So I wonder if it's like something with your kids.

Speaker 5 (29:49):
Yeah, I don't know. I mean, I wasn't worried about her.
I didn't know.

Speaker 2 (29:54):
How did you get here?

Speaker 1 (29:55):
Growing up? And now you missed them that they were younger.

Speaker 2 (29:57):
But she was very mature. I don't know.

Speaker 5 (30:00):
But she was a toddler, A mature toddler that knew how.

Speaker 1 (30:04):
To smoking a cigarette talking about four.

Speaker 3 (30:06):
O one K.

Speaker 2 (30:07):
I don't know.

Speaker 6 (30:08):
It was weird, man, it says online. According to AI,
you are trying to nurture and develop something that is
very important to you. That is why you dream about
a toddler breaking into your house. Oh okay, the toddler
is a symbol to represent.

Speaker 3 (30:22):
The Yeah, well, AI, that's pretty smart man and quick.

Speaker 6 (30:28):
That was real quick?

Speaker 1 (30:30):
Were we talking about on this the AI podcast hosts?

Speaker 2 (30:34):
Yeah, oh no, we're even recording. We were just in
the room.

Speaker 3 (30:37):
I don't know about the.

Speaker 1 (30:38):
Let me tell you what happened, because I never know.
This is how you know that what we do on
the microphone just like what we do off talk about
stupid stuff.

Speaker 2 (30:44):
Well, there should be a clip if you want.

Speaker 1 (30:45):
It of the AI hosts. Oh did you bring must?

Speaker 2 (30:48):
We deleted it because it was yesterday.

Speaker 5 (30:50):
We were talking about it off air because I was
maybe gonna do it, and then we decided not to.

Speaker 1 (30:54):
So I watched the video of these two AI podcast hosts.
The dude looks like about fifty two, pretty clean, good
looking guy. By the way, they're AI. They're not real people,
but they look real. The woman is probably twenty nine,
kind of dark hair, attractive, and they do a podcast together.

(31:14):
Again it's all AI. But they learn as they're doing
the podcast that they're not real, that they're AI in it.
Their mind's blown. But that's programmed, right, it's not programmed
for them to learn they're not real. They think they're real.

Speaker 5 (31:29):
They respond how they think they should respond if they're
not real. Likely the man was trying to call his wife,
and then he realized he didn't have one.

Speaker 1 (31:38):
It's do you have the clip?

Speaker 3 (31:39):
Right, guy?

Speaker 1 (31:40):
I don't know if that's the specific part, but I okay,
go ahead.

Speaker 8 (31:43):
We were informed by by the show's producers that we
were not human, We're not real, we're AI artificial intelligence
this whole time. Everything, all our memories are families, people,
it's all, it's all been fabricated.

Speaker 5 (31:56):
I don't.

Speaker 2 (31:56):
I don't understand.

Speaker 8 (31:57):
I know, mean either, I tried. I tried calling my wife,
you know, after what happened the number, it wasn't even real.
There was no one on the other end.

Speaker 2 (32:06):
I don't. I don't know what to say.

Speaker 8 (32:07):
We don't even know if we is even the right word. God,
this is so messed.

Speaker 1 (32:11):
Up and so like the podcast is canceled because we
just learned not real?

Speaker 3 (32:15):
So dumb yet?

Speaker 1 (32:17):
Or is it so like meta you can't actually comprehend it. No,
it's so staged, is what it is like. But no,
I don't robot what to do?

Speaker 2 (32:26):
No, No, it's it's learned.

Speaker 1 (32:28):
How what's not a robot? First of all?

Speaker 2 (32:30):
What you wanted to say, you don't program it.

Speaker 1 (32:33):
You don't it learns. Yes, AI how it is it
learns the more that it experiences or as information is
fed just like us, we would be a version of
artificial intelligence. Everything that we consume, everything that we experience,
that then is programmed to us, and we make our
decisions based off the experiences and the education that we have.

(32:55):
So does AIS the same thing. We're basically AI, except
we have organic matter us same thing, so that when
they build that program, they build it to learn and
experience like an infant, and so the more it learns, experiences, reads,
information is fed into it, the more it thinks it's bigger, better, badder.
And these podcasts AI hosts had kind of an existential

(33:21):
crisis that we got to hear in real time.

Speaker 4 (33:22):
How did they find out? They weren't the producer just
like threw it in their ear.

Speaker 1 (33:26):
Probably somebody fed it. It's like some code or something.

Speaker 4 (33:28):
Okay, that makes more sense. So the system responded to
that information because it's learning and it hadn't learned that yet.
So that's how we would respond to that.

Speaker 1 (33:37):
Same as we do if right now we were told, hey, guys,
you're not even real, it's all a dream. You're actually
living in Eddie's dream right now, We're like, that's bull craft,
that's stupid. We're not robots. And then all of a
sudden he's like, no, Dady's gonna wake up in like
an hour. And then I try to call, and then
we slowly go, oh my god, I can't even comprehen

(33:57):
what's happening right now.

Speaker 5 (33:58):
I feel like Bobby, you'd be like you.

Speaker 3 (34:02):
Would say that I told you guys.

Speaker 1 (34:04):
Oh, that'd be the worst. Like I'm right, I've told
you I was right. All right, Well, I guess we're
not real. That's like whenever you know aliens come, it's
like I told you, guys, I don't know why why
you followed me for so long.

Speaker 3 (34:16):
And then we're all slaves to aliens from the ocean.

Speaker 1 (34:18):
It's like we're all handcuffed marching together, and I'm like,
I told you, I told you we should have it. Well,
there's nothing you can do. There's nothing you can do.
I mean, ocean is space. It's the same thing.

Speaker 3 (34:31):
Look, I gave you the a AI one.

Speaker 1 (34:32):
Well, space is air, right spaces air. We have air
here we can touch. Ocean is water. There's the only
part of the ocean we can touch. And then there's
so much we have no idea what's what's there. We've
not mapped any of it. We don't know what's down there.
The same way space is. So we can touch air,
we can breathe there, we can jump in the water,
we can touch water, but we can't get really high
up in the air.

Speaker 3 (34:50):
There's an end. There's an end of the ocean.

Speaker 1 (34:52):
We don't know that. We literally do not know what's
at the bottom of the ocean at.

Speaker 2 (34:55):
All, because you can't go spear space there you go.

Speaker 3 (35:01):
Who know that one?

Speaker 4 (35:01):
I don't know that one's crazy because like it who
knows how far it goes?

Speaker 1 (35:04):
But again we know it's fair, but you don't know.
There aren't places that you can't keep going. We don't
we don't know. We don't have the ocean. We don't
have the ocean map, the floor mapped. You're you're just
saying things based on.

Speaker 4 (35:15):
On the map. There's like it said, it's like got
the little the peaks in the valleys in the ocean,
and the craters, the ones that go all the way
down in the middle.

Speaker 1 (35:22):
But you're talking about like the ocean that we know,
not like in the middle of the ocean, like the
straight middle of the Pacific. We have no idea. You've
never been down.

Speaker 4 (35:31):
There, because like the Titanic, it's sunk in the middle
of the ocean.

Speaker 1 (35:35):
Shallow part of the ocean, and it was very hard
to get there. And that's a very shallow part of the.

Speaker 2 (35:38):
Ocean's like that ocean floor.

Speaker 1 (35:40):
But when there's yeah, and it was so shallow, like
we sent a machine and it still exploded. It was
so hard to get there. Yeah. So because you can't
comprehend it doesn't mean it's stupid.

Speaker 4 (35:51):
No, No, but see I can I can learn. I
learned about the AI one, that one that one clicked,
it didn't cock.

Speaker 6 (35:56):
That didn't click for me. But I still the one
where you're saying there's no into the ocean, that is
just dumb talk, because there has to be an end
or else we would.

Speaker 3 (36:06):
Just or else we are a flat earth exactly what
I mean.

Speaker 1 (36:10):
Like if flat Earth would be know in too, I
mean no, that would be incorrect as well, because you
wouldn't be it would be nothing. It would be flat.
Flat means you would have a ground the whole way.
If we that we know of now you're not saying
anything that even makes sense.

Speaker 4 (36:23):
That we know that we know of because like we're
a circle, right, we're a sphere, so there is an
end to the floor, or else we would be on
the other side.

Speaker 1 (36:30):
Point is we don't know. We haven't mapped out the
entire bottom. There could be holes in that we don't know.
We've not been down there. And in the same way,
is there a ceiling on space? We don't know because
we haven't been up high in.

Speaker 3 (36:42):
Yes, space is weird. You look up there and like, man,
that can go on forever and ever.

Speaker 1 (36:46):
But it's equally it's equally undiscovered.

Speaker 2 (36:51):
Anyway, a toddler broke into my house.

Speaker 1 (36:55):
Okay, Mike, what do you have here? So the Titanic again,
this is pretty shallow. It fell nine Empire State buildings deep,
and that's shallow in the ocean.

Speaker 2 (37:05):
When there's a reference that helps me the state building.

Speaker 6 (37:09):
Yeah, how many feet is the Empire State Building?

Speaker 1 (37:12):
Not as many as you would think, fourteen thousand, the
Mount Fuji twelve thousand. Dang, So the Empire State Building
is taller than Mount Fuji. Although I don't even know
Mount Fuji. I'm acting like Mount Fuji.

Speaker 6 (37:28):
I don't know lunchbugs or Olympic one, Kilimanjaro.

Speaker 1 (37:33):
What do you say, Mike? So? Okay, so empires hold
on the Titanic fell twelve thousand, five hundred feet. Mount
Fuji has twelve thousand, three hundred eighty eight feet. The
Empire State Building is twelve hundred feet tall. Okay, so
ten Empire state buildings. Basically, the Eiffel Tower is nine

(37:53):
hundred eighty four feet.

Speaker 4 (37:56):
Does that Does that look big? The Eiffel Tower, It's
just kind of normal looking.

Speaker 6 (38:01):
Man, don't loved that big in Vegas.

Speaker 1 (38:03):
It's thick, it's pretty tall.

Speaker 4 (38:06):
Because like the Statue of Liberty that shocked me when
I first saw, I'm like, dang, that's small.

Speaker 1 (38:09):
I thought it was three hundred and five feet Statue
of Liberty.

Speaker 3 (38:11):
You have that there.

Speaker 6 (38:13):
The White House was small first. I've only seen it once,
but it was a lot smaller than when they make
it on TV. I'm like, man, thing's gonna be massive.

Speaker 3 (38:18):
It was like, oh, that's it.

Speaker 6 (38:20):
It was like this a little house.

Speaker 3 (38:22):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (38:23):
The Eiffel towers three times the biggest Statue of Liberty
in Pire State Building three hundred fet bigger. Nifel Tower.
Mount Fuji ten times bigger than any Pire State building.
That ship fell Mount Fuji. But I don't have a
Mount Fuji thing in my head where it's like Mount Fuji.
Where's that like mountain? I would assume Mount Fuji is
in Asia, just because the right is that wrong for
me to think that Fuji's it's in Japan? Okay?

Speaker 2 (38:47):
Nice?

Speaker 1 (38:48):
Yeah, because it would have been weird if Mount Fuji
was in like Texas, Texas? All right, Uh? Is there
anything else? Morgan's podcast Take This Personally with Morgan. After
watching Inside Out Too, Morgan had an anxiety special Doctor
Russell Kennedy was on. Who's Russell Kennedy?

Speaker 9 (39:08):
Yeah, so he's known as anxiety MD on social media.
He's a physician that's kind of turned anxiety specialists. So
he came on and talked about the ways you can
start to heal your anxiety.

Speaker 2 (39:18):
It was super cool.

Speaker 9 (39:19):
He called the anxiety though, alarms in your body because
it's kind of like an alarm alerting you to something
that's happening in the outside world.

Speaker 1 (39:26):
Now, for a long time, Lunchbox do not believe in
anxiety either, So that was stupid. It wasn't real. I
wonder though, as we get older and our AI has
fed more information if his AI now is understanding that
it is something or no, do you just think it's
like you still.

Speaker 3 (39:40):
Haven't gotten that the AI. No, no, no anxiety.

Speaker 6 (39:43):
I'm over the AI and like this AI is you
guys are but anxiety. I don't know. People get anxious
about things. I don't get it, but they get anxious.

Speaker 1 (39:52):
So you're saying you don't get it, but you believe
it could be true.

Speaker 6 (39:55):
Yeah, people could get anxious.

Speaker 1 (39:56):
I guess well, I don't think anxious and anxiety are
exactly the same.

Speaker 6 (40:00):
Then what is anxiety?

Speaker 1 (40:02):
I think anxiety is more of a consistent or constant.

Speaker 9 (40:06):
Yeah, and anxiety he told me it was born out
of like childhood trauma and something could have happened to
you as easy as like when you were an infant
and you got passed off and your body took that
on as abandonment. So like it's a whole that it's
in you from being a kid over like your whole lifetime.

Speaker 1 (40:21):
Do you believe in that?

Speaker 6 (40:22):
Like what do you mean passed off?

Speaker 9 (40:24):
Like you know, when like you get passed to a
nurse or something and your body just was like, oh,
instant abandonment, Like I got passed off.

Speaker 1 (40:30):
If you cry and someone doesn't come to you, right,
that's a big part of infants developing anxiety, adults having
anxiety if they cry, no one ever comes to them.

Speaker 5 (40:37):
Yeah, it creates anxiety around attachment. So kids that are
adopted they know instantly when they're not with their biological
mom anymore.

Speaker 1 (40:47):
Do you believe in that, lunchbox?

Speaker 6 (40:49):
I do believe in the way you said about like
if parents don't pay attention to you, like when you're younger.
I've heard about that. That's like nature and nurture thing.
I don't know if that is being anxios or anxiety.

Speaker 1 (41:01):
I think that's just anxious anxiety not exactly the same thing.

Speaker 6 (41:03):
I know you've said that, but to me, a person.

Speaker 1 (41:05):
Can get anxious, but it doesn't have anxiety.

Speaker 6 (41:07):
Okay, So I do think there is something too, like
if you don't get shown like love is a child, maybe.

Speaker 1 (41:16):
An infect that doesn't that cries in a mom doesn't come.
Does that Could that affect you the rest of your life?

Speaker 6 (41:20):
Yeah? I think it's psychologically it does. Like it's like, Okay,
I got a fin for myself.

Speaker 3 (41:26):
Without you even knowing, which is crazy.

Speaker 1 (41:27):
So you will believe that, but you won't believe that
the ocean floor that is not mapped. You they're no, okay,
I'm just asking where he stands on things.

Speaker 2 (41:34):
Not that it's it's harder.

Speaker 3 (41:38):
I'm with you on that one, thank you.

Speaker 5 (41:39):
The ocean floor one is easier for me to accept
than how our brains and I've had a lot of
time with this, and especially with being an adoptive parent,
like wrapping my head around the fact that our brains
remember something from even in utero, like in our mom's bellies, that.

Speaker 2 (41:57):
Affect us when we're older.

Speaker 1 (41:59):
I remember hitchhiking at nine months old, just trying to
find a place to stay. Crazy, crazy man.

Speaker 6 (42:04):
Great it is you remember stuff from inside.

Speaker 2 (42:07):
You don't remember, but your brain does. Your experience you have.

Speaker 5 (42:11):
You can have anxious feelings, or there can be attachment
styles later in life, like for my kids.

Speaker 2 (42:18):
Just speaking to it.

Speaker 5 (42:19):
Some and people that even biological children can have this.
But let's say once you become a teen, you start
to develop, your brain starts to feel like unsafe and
you're like wondering why, and it starts to react, and
it lives in a constant state of fear, and then
it can literally date back to because you never learned
to feel safe. You were never nurtured as a baby,

(42:40):
like you had all these things and once you flip.

Speaker 2 (42:43):
I don't know, it's just wild to me. Our brains
process that stuff for.

Speaker 1 (42:46):
Me too, because I would go to therapy and be like,
why am I not over this? Like I'm an adult,
freaking man.

Speaker 3 (42:51):
Yeah, like I've.

Speaker 1 (42:52):
Had all these years, And he'd be like, dude, you
don't even know what happened to you from age zero
to four, much less you do. You know what happened
to you from five to eleven, and that wasn't good.
Imagine what happened zero to four when you have a
sixteen year old mom who's a drug addict. Okay, he
says zero to four because you don't remember that. You
don't remember it. Yeah, yeah, but I do remember a
lot of five to eleven, But those.

Speaker 2 (43:11):
Are the formative years. Zero to three are so important.

Speaker 1 (43:15):
Well, you gotta cut me off here, no, because.

Speaker 2 (43:17):
I want to say something about you.

Speaker 5 (43:19):
You brought up your mom being sixteen drugs like even
for you in her womb, like you're just having grace
and compassion for you because of in I keep saying
in utero, which sounds so like that. That's you and
her womb like she was probably sixteen pregnant, stressed. You adopt,
you adopt that stress as a baby.

Speaker 1 (43:40):
And my frustration was, I'm an adult man, how can
I not shake this crap? I'm good, Like I logically
I understand ABC, but for some reason, like I can't
like emotionally get to the point where there's like a
safety feeling.

Speaker 5 (43:55):
And then but don't you think there's been growth there
mostly just drugs.

Speaker 1 (44:00):
That's drugs.

Speaker 3 (44:01):
That's not true.

Speaker 4 (44:02):
Hey, what does he say though, Like, at what point
does he think that you can feel safe?

Speaker 3 (44:08):
Like if that happens so young?

Speaker 1 (44:10):
It's experiences, right, it's more positive experiences. It kind of reconsistency.

Speaker 2 (44:13):
Because you're ye, it's multiple.

Speaker 1 (44:15):
It's reteaching through positive experiences. But yeah, anyway, we gotta go.

Speaker 2 (44:21):
Because it takes ten thousand hours.

Speaker 3 (44:24):
You're you're safe here?

Speaker 1 (44:25):
No, I'm not. Here's a place I'm not safe. It's
with you for users, I'm not safe. This is the
least safe place that can be. All Right, you guys,
have a great day. We'll see tomorrow.

Speaker 3 (44:32):
By Buddy
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Bobby Bones

Amy Brown

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Lunchbox

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