Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Comitting.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
Welcome to Tuesday's show More in the Studio.
Speaker 3 (00:16):
A voicemail from last night, did I miss Lunchbox paying y'all.
Speaker 2 (00:20):
Back for the palace?
Speaker 4 (00:22):
And that is enough, lunch Bark.
Speaker 5 (00:24):
You need to get that money back.
Speaker 2 (00:26):
So yesterday on the show, Lunchbox brought money in for
everybody in an envelope, well a piece of paper that
was stapled. It wasn't even envelope, and it was full
of a fat stack of whatever was in there. And
before we opened it, he was short one pack. So
we said, if we all don't get it, we're not
opening it. It's how friends negotiated their last contract and
(00:47):
they all got a million in episodes, so we're hoping
for a million each. So he lostcubas or he just
lost one.
Speaker 6 (00:54):
I just lost one. It didn't matter. I didn't have
names on him. It was just one.
Speaker 2 (00:58):
So today he's got to give us all of them
and we will open it. We will count our money,
and then he will give us the reason that he
couldn't give us our money for two years. And what
are you gonna do?
Speaker 7 (01:09):
Oh two years, he says, We're gonna be like, oh, okay,
we get it.
Speaker 2 (01:15):
That's later this morning, I will not be like, Okay,
we get it. Yeah, but here is the next one.
Speaker 8 (01:21):
I have to stand up for lunch for a second.
I don't like.
Speaker 2 (01:26):
Him, I really don't.
Speaker 1 (01:28):
He drives me insane.
Speaker 9 (01:29):
But with the palette, has Mike given you guys any
money for the Disney cards?
Speaker 2 (01:36):
So that's a great question. Those were long term investments.
Abby bought these crazy bottles, Mike bought Disney cards. When
we bought the palette, we were to start selling immediately
because those were not investments. Those were a bunch of
returns from Amazon that you buy not knowing what's in
the palette, and you start selling immediately to make more
money for parts, then you spent on the whole thing.
(02:00):
So no, And as a matter of fact, I don't
want Mike selling the Disney cards yet, and I don't
want Abby selling the bottles yet because those are like
fine wine. Those need to age to make more money.
The palette does not. There was rope. The palette was
like hair curlers, toilet seats, irons, a pelican box rock. Yes,
so that stuff does not appreciated value. One hundred pounds
(02:22):
of rope where the one hundred pounds of rope was used.
They sold for one hundred bucks. So Abby and Mike's
have not sold yet. But we haven't even thought about
them selling yet anything to say. They've already gotten up
like one hundred bucks of what we paid for, so
they're gaining value. We're gaining. This is a stock, so yes,
that's why. Okay, But later on this morning, lunchbox will
(02:44):
unless the blank hits the fan yet again, give us
all our money. Okay, okay, give me my money. And
if we don't have our money today he gets his
knees broken, something happens bad. It's got to happen. I
don't know what it is, but something bad has to
happen today.
Speaker 5 (03:00):
Well aren't we?
Speaker 2 (03:01):
Are we?
Speaker 1 (03:02):
What Rember? I mean, he's he's ultimately just gonna lose
out on anything futures.
Speaker 2 (03:07):
You know what it is? He doesn't get any money. Oh,
so what happens to all the stuff? Or we fire him?
Fire m okay, yeah, Later on this morning we will
find out if he found that money and has given
it back to us.
Speaker 10 (03:22):
AMOUSO anonymous Sin Bob, there's a question to.
Speaker 2 (03:30):
Be Hello, Bobby Bones, my friend was broken up with
six months ago. They were together two years. I was
supportive in the beginning, dropped everything to be there for
her when it happened, but she has continued a shame
spiral over their breakup. I think there's a time and
(03:52):
a place to tell someone you just need to get
over it. If you're still complaining and whining about a
breakup six months later, don't you think it's time to
just get over it. Nowadays, it's tough to tell someone
to get over it without coming off as super insensitive.
Can I just tell her get over it? How do
I say that without sounding like a jerk? Signed best
friend got dumped? Well, first of all, everybody has her
(04:15):
own timetable, and second of all, she's not gonna get
over something she's still ain't over. That's what it is
to me. She's still in love with the dude. She
ain't gonna get over something she's not over. And you
don't stay that hung up if you're not still hanging.
So I think, more so than get over it, it's well,
you don't owe her anything, but she's not going to
(04:39):
get over it. You kind of have to get on it.
Let me do this, you know what I mean? Not
even on the horse, unlike she needs to get back
with the dude. I think she needs to. Maybe the
friend doesn't realize why she's not over it because she's
still like in love with the guy and like that's
(05:00):
something else to work through other than just getting over it.
Speaker 5 (05:04):
Yeah, maybe you just don't use the words like, hey,
get over it.
Speaker 1 (05:07):
Can it be more like, hey, I think it's time
we start making some moves in a different direction, and
that's fine.
Speaker 5 (05:15):
How can I support you in that?
Speaker 2 (05:17):
I think it's not that she I think is she's
still in love with that dude. I think that's the talk.
I think the talk is, Hey, obviously you're not getting
over it because you're not over it. Let's talk about why,
and then also give her like ten reasons the guy sucked. Yeah,
that's good lists, because a lot of times you romanticize history. Yeah,
that's why people are always like the good old days,
when actually they were just as crappy as they are now.
(05:38):
But you're just not in them anymore, and we're only
remember the really.
Speaker 1 (05:40):
Good things rose colored glasses.
Speaker 2 (05:42):
Yes, So instead of just saying get over it, get
over it, get over it, I would try to have,
if you're a real friend, to talk about, Hey, why
aren't you able to move on? Don't take it over it?
Like why aren't you able to move on fully? Do
you think? And then you be the person that has
the ability to identify the toxic factors and the bad reasons,
(06:04):
or if she was toxic to friend, it's hey, this
is never going to happen again. There's almost like a
morning period that needs to happen, even if you're the
reason it sucks. But yeah, you can't just say it
over it.
Speaker 5 (06:16):
Maybe she needs to encourage her.
Speaker 1 (06:17):
I saw this thing online from a neuroscientist about how
you need to do a breakup detox ife.
Speaker 11 (06:22):
She hasn't fully done that or shock therapy as shock
the crap out ever like five times.
Speaker 2 (06:29):
Yeah, it's uh, it's just different than what you're emailing
us about because she that's like telling For me, it's
like telling my wife to relax. She a' never gonna relax,
So I say relax, right, but like relax she's never
once been like okay, a cool, no problem saying what
telling somebody to get over it? They're never just going
to get over it because you say that, So it's
time to change up how you communicate about it. She
(06:51):
needs to get under it. How about that? It's good?
Thank you good? All right, close it up. Did you
watched a documentary on that guy that ate all the
liver the liver King? Okay, well did he just raw
liver all the time?
Speaker 1 (07:04):
Rall everything, rall liver, rall testicles from a cow?
Speaker 2 (07:12):
Was king? But he all raw meat? Yeah.
Speaker 1 (07:16):
So he lives in ancestral lifestyle and ancestral Yeah that's
where you eat. Like sometimes I get this ancestral meat
that's like ground beef, but it has ground up heart,
liver something else in it, because that stuffs supposed to
be good for you. But I think he's like full
on ancestral. So he like runs around barefoot and like
(07:36):
doesn't like a lot of Wi Fi a lot. I mean,
he's on Instagram, so he's got to have it now
really ripped. So so for years, like Joe Rogan even
was talked about him at some point. There's a clip
of Joe talking about it in the documentary. But he's like,
there's no way this guy's natural. Like, you don't have
a natural physique like that unless you're taking something, And
(07:57):
he adamantly swears he did not take anything. Now this
is part of the Untold series. So it's Untold the
Liver King, and I had never heard anything about him,
and so the whole time I'm watching, I'm like, well, so.
Speaker 2 (08:09):
Did he do steroids or not? Oh? I just think
did he actually only eat that? Because there are influencers
who have been busted for being like, oh, choose to
eat healthy, but they're all doing Ozmpic at the same
time and then they get busted and it's like, Okay,
you guys are full frauds. And I'm not saying this
guy is a full fraud.
Speaker 1 (08:24):
Well, he built an entire supplement company, like you know,
bottling up liver.
Speaker 5 (08:29):
Yeah, like people can take capsules like his his uh,
his kids.
Speaker 1 (08:33):
He's got these two boys and all they do is
like work out and eat eggs raw.
Speaker 5 (08:38):
Those drink eggs.
Speaker 2 (08:40):
The meats raw like he goes.
Speaker 5 (08:42):
They don't cook any of it.
Speaker 2 (08:45):
I've seen the guy though. He eats a lot of raw.
Speaker 1 (08:48):
I don't know if they cook some things. But he
has a chef like he was making so much they
cook it well to cut it all up.
Speaker 2 (08:55):
I guess that's called a butcher.
Speaker 1 (08:59):
Yeah, he's an interesting person.
Speaker 2 (09:02):
He just goy. He's so rip. He's so like his
muscles are so dense.
Speaker 1 (09:07):
Yeah, and he walks around with like heavy chains to
work out, and like will like toe a truck with
his body. I mean his friends are in the back
helping him push a little bit. But like then they
do stupid stunts with guns where they like shoot stuff, like,
I don't know, this guy is very interesting.
Speaker 2 (09:22):
Sure's ancestral, not ancestral, because ancestors, like your ancestry have
ancestrial is like you're doing with your cousins.
Speaker 1 (09:28):
Yeah, no, now he it's ancestral.
Speaker 2 (09:31):
So Ancestral meat isn't a formally defined scientific term, but
it's often used in health and nutrition circles, especially those
focused on paleo inspired lifestyles. Nutrient dense cuts traditionally eaten
by early humans oregon meats like liverheart, kidney, and spleen.
These were often prized by hunter gatherer societies because of
(09:52):
their dense nutrient content. Whole animal philosophy, rather than just
seeing the muscle. Ancestral meat advocates to promote no is
to tail eating, honoring the entire animal. He'll eat tongue too, well,
I mean I mean we've been doing every years. Yeah, yeah,
Like poor people in Mexicans not the same. I guess
there are some poor Mexicans.
Speaker 7 (10:11):
Yeah, but but I mean Mexicans. My dad, you say,
we eat the cow inside out, like that's how we
make sure.
Speaker 2 (10:16):
I wasn't saying poor people are Mexicans saying I was poor?
And Eddie's Mexican. Yes, right, tongue it.
Speaker 5 (10:22):
Like he would hold it. He just hold up and
be like time for me to eat the tongue, and
then he'd.
Speaker 1 (10:28):
I don't know, he just take a bite it the
tongue and then he I don't know, he sits on
like a throne and then.
Speaker 2 (10:38):
The incest ancestr yeah or whatever.
Speaker 1 (10:42):
I mean. Obviously some of it's just for show because
he knew he really like dove into his characters.
Speaker 2 (10:48):
This is wild ancestral meats equal organ meats plus traditional
cuts plus wild pasture race sourcing inspired by how humans
ate for thousands of years before industrialized food. And I'm
sure that that is great and healthy. But the raw,
I'd be afraid I was going to get salmonella. And
you're saying it's not all raw, but he does some wraw. Yeah,
I don't know raw.
Speaker 1 (11:09):
And the show you watched, yeah, like they would go
beyond on the land and they would kill an animal
up and then he was like, yes, I don't know
what body part. Maybe it was the testicles.
Speaker 4 (11:24):
I don't know.
Speaker 5 (11:24):
They cut open a little.
Speaker 12 (11:25):
Bit and then pulled it out.
Speaker 1 (11:27):
Well yeah, I give the show one testicle out of five.
Speaker 2 (11:30):
Oh you didn't like I did it? Just like? Was
it after all that? Only like it?
Speaker 12 (11:36):
I just was sort of like weirded out, Like I
was like this.
Speaker 1 (11:40):
Also, you have to watch it to figure out what
happens because you don't know is he steroid free or not?
Speaker 5 (11:45):
Maybe you do know because he did that, I.
Speaker 2 (11:47):
Kind of I care about his body. I mean, you
don't know. His body was ripped, and I'm all, that's
huge if he has steroids, don't care. It's just him
eating raw meat and living is all that interests me
more than is his body natural.
Speaker 5 (11:57):
He would catch a fish and then just like take
could buy them.
Speaker 2 (12:03):
That's for sure for Instagram, Right, that's for sure for Instagram.
Is if anything you could catch it, pullay it or
you don't have to flag lea the bones and whatever,
and you cook it with fire, and that still feels
like it'd be caveman. Yeah.
Speaker 4 (12:16):
Uh huh.
Speaker 1 (12:17):
I guess sometimes you don't always have access to.
Speaker 2 (12:20):
He also doesn't use the wheels. It hasn't been in
it yet in his life.
Speaker 1 (12:24):
He has a really beautiful house in computers.
Speaker 2 (12:26):
I'm sure I want to get you know what.
Speaker 1 (12:28):
He said at one point that he did once he
got into Instagram and learned about it, and of course
he hired a company. They were helping him like promote
himself and whatnot. But he had these computer setup in
like his office, and he would.
Speaker 5 (12:39):
Just loop his videos over and over. And he looked
back at the documentary camera.
Speaker 1 (12:43):
And he's like, hey, did you know if you just
loop your videos, keep it playing like helps the algorithm.
He goes, I keep these things playing all day long,
like his own videos.
Speaker 2 (12:50):
I was like, what, Yeah, I don't hate him for that.
Speaker 1 (12:52):
Stain untold the Liver King. What platform Netflix, That's where
you can watch all the untold. My next untold is
gonna be the Fall of Farv.
Speaker 2 (13:04):
This sounds good. He's still falling, by the way. I
will do mine real quick. I watched and I mentioned
that we watched the show live, but I didn't give
a review. The Stolen Girl. It's awesome. It's on Hulu now,
but we had to watch it on free Form. We
went and chased down a live finale with commercials, and
I'm like, what's happening right now? Why they're commercials? It's
called Stolen Girl. I think I think you love it.
(13:27):
What can you say about it? A girl gets stolen? Okay,
and that's it.
Speaker 1 (13:32):
And you say it's only a five part series another language.
Speaker 2 (13:35):
Yeah, British. Oh that's English. It ain't the same because
sometimes you're like, what do they say? I love the
Stolen Girl. I would give it four and a half
out of five airbnbs. Oh wow, that's all I'm gonna
say for now. But you can watch it on Hulu
if you have Hulu, or you can rent it on
Prime Video. But we have Hulu, so we watched it there.
(13:55):
So the Stolen Girl. So Amy gives raw Me guy one.
Speaker 1 (13:59):
Now that I think that change, and because I guess
I would sort it into I give him two testicles?
Speaker 2 (14:04):
Well what did you give him initially one testicle?
Speaker 5 (14:07):
Let's just make it two since two is typically what
everybody comes from.
Speaker 13 (14:11):
That's one.
Speaker 2 (14:13):
It's time for the good news.
Speaker 1 (14:19):
So there's this guy in San Antonio. His named Stephen Cash,
and he's an Amazon delivery guy. While he's delivering packages,
he notices a house, not even one that he's dropping
packages off to, like their doorbell camera had fallen off.
So he takes time out of his busy day to
go over and securely attached the camera back on to
you know, the side of the house. Well, the homeowner
(14:40):
when they saw that video, they're like, this is so
nice that he did this for us.
Speaker 5 (14:44):
So she posted the video on social media.
Speaker 1 (14:47):
It went viral, millions of views, and a news station
in San Antonio KBB, they're doing this whole thing called
Cash for Kindness, and so the anchor there, Ryan Wolf,
they tracked Stephen down, got him on uh, introduced him
to the homeowner. She gave him a big hug and
just said, hey, this is a small act of kindness
that seems rare these days. And then boom, they gave
(15:08):
him a thousand dollars as part of their Cash for
Kindness program.
Speaker 2 (15:11):
I liked the program. So the guy went to a
house that he wasn't delivering too. Yeah, maybe also find
that a little wit that story. How did he see
the doorbell camera?
Speaker 5 (15:20):
He's delivering next door?
Speaker 2 (15:21):
But you no, no, no, I'm not saying that is vishy.
I just it's just weird that you would see that
dam and then go up to it if you weren't
even there. Yeah, listen, that's super kind. Hey that that's
even kinder than kind. That's super kind. I just thought
that was a weird part of the story where he
goes to a house that he wasn't even at.
Speaker 1 (15:38):
Yeah, he was just like paying attention to your surroundings
and being helpful wherever you can.
Speaker 6 (15:43):
I'm gonna start creeping on other doors.
Speaker 2 (15:44):
Don't do that to be looking for something good to do.
Speaker 6 (15:48):
Oh yeah, is there anything.
Speaker 2 (15:50):
Cash for kindness program here?
Speaker 8 (15:52):
Uh?
Speaker 2 (15:53):
Okay, they're a little weird but still cool, but still good.
Speaker 12 (15:56):
That didn't stand out to me, is weird?
Speaker 2 (15:59):
Yeah that was small. All camera hanging down. Probably are
falling on the front porch of a house that you
weren't at. You notice that you go up to I'm
glad you did it too. Yeah, that's all I just
stuck out. That's all I'm saying.
Speaker 5 (16:10):
This is what it's all about.
Speaker 2 (16:11):
Okay, that's what it's all about. That was tell me
something good. I have the worst jobs people say they'll
never do again because they did it once. I'll give
you my worst job ever. It was washing dishes at
a restaurant. And I knew when I went to wash
dishes that I would soon hopefully get to move from
dishwasher to bus boy to waiter. And I did, and
I moved rather quickly. I hated washing dishes because there
(16:35):
was just food everywhere. It was disgusting. You were wet
all day. I would want everybody to have to wash dishes.
You ever see Billy Madison down so and that he
has to go all the way back to school in kindergarten,
first grade, second grade, all the way up. You don't
remember that part. No, I think that's a part of that.
If I can send everybody in America through a class.
(16:57):
You wash dishes, You do like maintenance, like lawn yard.
I did maintenance at a golf course. You wait tables
because you learn what's like to serve. You work retail,
because I worked retailed, hobby lobby like. I think that
gave me more perspective than anything else. And then you
can get back to your old job. But I would
Billy Madison because you have to do all that crap
to understand the crap people are going through every single
(17:18):
day that you don't even know. But what would we
do different if we were dishwashers?
Speaker 8 (17:21):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (17:22):
What would I do different?
Speaker 6 (17:24):
Understand?
Speaker 1 (17:24):
And you can have respect for that role.
Speaker 2 (17:27):
Yeah, I think you just have a perspective on the
gross jobs. You haven't had to do that people are doing,
so you can freaking have clean plates at a restaurant.
It was awful. That's my job, worst job ever. I
think anybody should have to do it though. Now so
here are some of the that they put on here.
Number ten hanging drywall. Number nine a certified nurse assistant
(17:47):
in a nursing home, probably because two things. One people
are dying. Oh and that sucks because you are probably
having an occasional like GI have a relationship with these
people and they're really old. And then to all the bathrooms,
the bathroom stuff. Number eight a truck driver had my CDL.
I'm gonna tell you ain't for everybody. And again there's
(18:08):
a different because truck driving, I think is a very
lonely job. I never had that. I drove for a
couple of days and for a TV show. Yeah, ouad.
But what I'm saying, what I learned by truck driving
is that people pay no attention to eighteen wheelers. They
flip boom, boom boom all around them, have no regard
for the safety of the truck driver or themselves because
(18:29):
all it takes is this truck driver one left, pooll
of the wheel boom. People are dead. They're just don't
jump up jumping in front of cars. I had eggs
in the back of my eighteen wheeler two. You've seen
the price eggs these days, probably more expensive now because
I run the eggs in the back of that eighteen wheeler.
Any kind of sales is at seven. A pharmacy tech
is at six. Data entry because it's so boring, is
(18:51):
it five?
Speaker 8 (18:52):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (18:52):
A roofer did that for two years. That sucked. Well
for one year I was only tear off and clean up.
But for one year, is hot retails at three. A
call center, a telemarketers at two. Raymundo, you did that. Yeah,
it's brutal. What's hard about it?
Speaker 4 (19:09):
The same calls every single day, and the same questions
and the same type of callers, people that are mad.
You never deal with a happy person. That's a good point.
Speaker 2 (19:18):
Yeah, what would they mostly complain about with you?
Speaker 4 (19:20):
It would be a UFC fight. They it was sometimes
it glitched a little bit. They wanted a refund, so
then I had to go in and I had to
partially credit their account, which took forever.
Speaker 2 (19:28):
And it's just a waste of time to give my
a dollar. So pay for reviews.
Speaker 4 (19:31):
Because you worked at a cable Yeah, every Monday it
was huge UFC. Everybody calls it hey glitched and a
lot of times they were probably making it up.
Speaker 2 (19:38):
So when you were doing this, would you go into
a center or would you just answer the phone at
your house?
Speaker 11 (19:42):
Oh?
Speaker 4 (19:42):
Into the center. People were cool though. We loved all
chilling together joking around. But then we got in trouble
because they said that you could hear other people swearing
in the background of other people's calls.
Speaker 2 (19:52):
So they said, hey, guys, no efforts. Number one is
social work. Yeah, they worked in foster caret and they're like,
it's like sad what people have to go through. So
there you go, those are the job. That's my job.
Any worst job you ever had probably in college.
Speaker 1 (20:07):
One summer I worked at a weight loss clinic and
it was just hard weighing people in.
Speaker 2 (20:15):
You know, that's tough.
Speaker 5 (20:16):
It would get real emotional.
Speaker 1 (20:18):
Listen because I wasn't a certified count, Like my job
was literally like when they checked in, this is horrible.
Speaker 5 (20:23):
I can't even have worked at a place like this.
But I did.
Speaker 1 (20:25):
Hey, I earned money for the summer. But they would
come in and they would have documented everything to eat
and then they had to get on the scale and
I'd have to weigh them and then if.
Speaker 5 (20:32):
They went up, they would just feel so bad.
Speaker 1 (20:37):
No, all I did, all I had to do was
write in the chart and then they would go meet
with a more official counselor type person.
Speaker 2 (20:44):
But it was sad. Yeah, that sucks.
Speaker 1 (20:49):
But sometimes they would lose and we'd celebrate.
Speaker 2 (20:53):
Yeah, it was what, like what do you do like balloons?
Like how do you celebrate cheesecake? Not care.
Speaker 5 (21:00):
Would get really excited and we tie five.
Speaker 2 (21:02):
Oh cool.
Speaker 1 (21:02):
Yeah, so there was that, But I just I would
definitely not work at a place like that. Again, it
probably doesn't even exist anymore, Eddie.
Speaker 7 (21:09):
Yeah, life garden sounds cool, right, Like you just sit
and watch people swim, you get a bunch of saves.
Speaker 2 (21:14):
Yeah, I have to two and a half saves under
my belt. Yeah, but that's not the problem. I think
your saves went down. Yeah, I think it went way
down two and a half. How do you have a
half a save the kid that counts as a half?
Oh that was a double, so I have three total saves.
But okay, you're right, it was three total saves.
Speaker 5 (21:28):
He doesn't even remember.
Speaker 7 (21:34):
It's crazy though about Life Garden is that if you
work at a city pool, you have to clean the bathrooms,
and so we had rotations of cleaning the bathrooms and
people do not know how to use the bathroom in
these places. Oh dude, that was the worst job ever
because we cleaned some nasty BATHO.
Speaker 2 (21:49):
That's bad. Okay, laxchbox man.
Speaker 6 (21:51):
I had some great jobs growing up, but I'd say
the worst was my buddy's dad worked for a construction
company and they'd build houses and when they were ready
to put it on the market, we would go and
clean up all the wood and stuff and you just
throw it in dumpsters in the Texas heat. That was miserable.
It wasn't a full time job, but it was like, hey,
once a week, you want to come and make some money.
Speaker 2 (22:08):
That was terrible. Yeah, sounds like roof clean offs is terrible.
Just hot, always sun burnt. All right, Well, I still
think everybody should wash dishes, okay, even though it's my worst.
So oh what a bit, all you guys we get
a restaurant, you guys have to wash dishes for a
couple of hours, like I was at my house. I'm
go no, no, But people you don't know coming in,
(22:30):
I'm good. That'd be a good spin the wheel. That
would be awesome. All right, I'll consider it. I'm considering
my own bit, you know what, I consider it. There're
some weird wedding traditions from other countries. Number one, in Scotland,
blackening the Bride's what they call it. Before the big day,
(22:52):
friends of the bride cover them in rotten food, mud
and trash. Then they parade them around town. It's prepare
than for any humiliation or hardship that may come in marriage.
Oh that's weird. Extreme. In China, the crying ritual. The
bride starts crying a month before the wedding, then her
(23:13):
mother joins her, then her grandmother, and eventually all female relatives.
It's seen as a way to show joy through tears,
and it becomes almost like a performance of layered musical weeping. Okay.
In India, marrying a tree if someone is born under
a certain astrological sign, they are considered cursed for marriage.
(23:35):
The remedy marry a tree first. After the ritual, the
tree is destroyed and the curse is absorbed by the tree.
I don't hate that one. I've yeah, yeah, okay.
Speaker 1 (23:48):
Not a big curse believer, but just in case, cay'
ellver heard when you're walking, if you're walking with someone,
you should always split the tree.
Speaker 5 (23:54):
Or sorry, don't split the tree.
Speaker 2 (23:55):
Now you confuse me.
Speaker 1 (23:58):
Like you're hiking and there's a tree, you're on a trail,
like you both have to go to the right or
to the left. You can't split it, or it's bad luck?
Speaker 2 (24:05):
Do I step on a crack break around his back?
Speaker 5 (24:07):
I don't know. I just learned of it, and I
didn't know if y'all about.
Speaker 2 (24:10):
It, Like one person just say that and then all
of a sudden, yeah, yeah, I didn't.
Speaker 5 (24:13):
Know if that was like, I don't know, I didn't
know if y'a had heard of it.
Speaker 2 (24:17):
Never heard of it. Uh. Toilet wedding in Indonesia. After
the wedding, the bride and groom aren't allowed to use
the bathroom for three days. They're watched closely and given
minimal food and drink to help. It's believe this prevents
bad luck, divorce or death of a child. What what did?
That's impossible? Yeah?
Speaker 6 (24:32):
I don't know how you would go three days?
Speaker 2 (24:34):
Is that going? Oh? Trust me, I spent like four
years doing that. Okay, well yeah, but that wasn't good. No,
not at all. I got like a horonoscopy. Yeah yeah,
yeah yeah. Uh. Kidnapping the bride from Romani communities. In
some Romani cultures, if a man is able to kidnap
woman and keep her for three to five days with
her permission and modern variations, they're considered married. So that's
(24:55):
actually the marriage you kidnapped them. That sounds like hostage.
I'm be honest with the America. We call that a
hosted situation. And you go to jail, but the bride says,
come get me like she has to be. Doesn't say
anything about that. I don't know.
Speaker 6 (25:07):
As they said, if you're able to keep her like,
who's coming.
Speaker 2 (25:09):
To rescue her? It does say with her permission and
modern variations, I don't know what that means. Uh. Spitting
on the bride and Kenya, the father of the bride
spits on her head and chest before she leaves with
her husband. It's a blessing. If he were to wish
our will verbally, it might be seen as cursing her.
In Germany, breaking dishes on the eve of the wedding,
(25:29):
guests smash porcelain and ceramic items, but neverglass. The couple
then cleans it up together as a symbol of teamwork
and preparing her future obstacles. Now this one I like
more than kidnapping. Yeah, this one seems like like us
in the West, with true this one and a couple more.
In India, there's a shoe stealing game. When the groom
(25:50):
removes his shoes for a religious ceremony, the bride's family
tries to steal them. If successful, the groom must bribe
them to get them back. What sounds more like a
game now. In the Philippines, Poland and Mexico, there's very
similar thing that we do in America, the money dance,
which is the dollar dance. Guests pend money to the
bride and grooms closed as they dance. It's a symbolic
(26:12):
way to help start their life and a good excuse
to make it rain on the dance floor. M Yeah,
but like, it's kind of creepy though, right. I think
other cultures would look at that and be like, the
she's dancing and you're putting money in her. That could
be seen creepy by other cultures or insulting to give
money type thing. Ten Fat farms and Matania. In rural
(26:38):
parts of Mauritania, girls are set to fat camps before marriage,
as obesity is traditionally associated with beauty and prosperity. The
bigger the bride, the more desirable she's considered. I'm a
little bit there. So they go to get her. I
get Oh, you go to get fatter.
Speaker 5 (26:57):
Yeah, I'm curious what.
Speaker 2 (27:00):
A fat camp always was? You sent fat kids there
to get skinny? But then I just heard fat camps.
I never thought of it. Other times fat farm, you
send them there to get fatter. That's like the greatest
church camp ever. I used to go to church camp.
Were there? They do that?
Speaker 6 (27:16):
Uh?
Speaker 2 (27:17):
And the congo. Newlyweds must keep a dead serious poker
face throughout the wedding ceremony. If they crack even a
tiny grin, it's believed to show they aren't taking marriage
seriously enough. That's oh, so get this in that country
that Mauritania. It's in Africa. It is crippled by food shortages,
so obesity is viewed as a sign of wealth. That's why.
Speaker 8 (27:35):
Wow.
Speaker 2 (27:36):
In South Korea, the real challenge comes after the ceremony,
when the groom's friends tie his ankles together and start
whacking his feet with sticks or dried fish. It's meant
to be hilarious, but sometimes it's painful, and it's way
to test his toughness before he gets into the toughest
part of his life. There that's crazy. And then finally,
some brides in China, it's custom to tie the bride
(28:01):
up and again they talk about crying for an hour
every day leading up at the wedding. Say's more than crying,
but they tie them up to boy like like astive.
Our weddings are pretty cool, I'll be honest. After seeing
all this, although fat camp will be fun. Fat farm,
the fat farm, okay, fat fat farm, those both would
be pretty fun. Wow, my mind's kind of blown. How
(28:21):
about you, guys? Some of those are like spainning on
your daughter. But okay, however, oh man, you do do
this when your kids spit spit hand and you know,
I've never done that with my kids. No, no kids
do it. Oh yeah, Ine of Blood Brothers. They just yeah,
I'm not. It's different culture, you know. I don't want
to insult them. Sure, in case they get to hacken,
(28:42):
I don't want to hack it in my stuff. I'll
give you three movies. Tell me the one actor. It
wasn't all three of the movies. For example, Forrest Gump, Castaway,
Saving Private Ryan Comggs. It's an easy one. Miss, You're out,
am you ready? Sherlock Holmes, Tropic Thunder, Iron.
Speaker 5 (29:08):
Man, Robert Downey Jr.
Speaker 2 (29:10):
Correct Amy Survives, It's good Lunchbox. The Notebook Wedding Crashers
Mean Girls. Oh mm, the Notebook Wedding Crashers Mean Girls.
Speaker 6 (29:40):
Well, I was gonna go with Ryan Goslin, but I
don't know about him being in Mean Girls. Lindsay Lohan's
not in the notebook, so it's only that other chick.
But I don't even know her name, So we'll go
with Ella Fisher.
Speaker 2 (29:59):
Fish. Sure, yeah, that's her name. Wow, I want you
Ryan because he's not in Mean Girls. But Ella Fisher
is not in any of these at least, then you
got like one in a million. It's Rachel McAdams. That's
her name. That's her name. That's correct, that's what I'm saying.
It was a chick. Yeah, you're dead. Yeah, that was funky.
Eddie The Devil Wears Prada, The Princess Diaries, The Dark
(30:26):
Knight Rises. I can see her face? Is it, by
any chance that chick? No? No, he was talking about
Anna Kendrick, Ella Fisher. Gosh, what's her name, Devila War's product.
(30:48):
She's tall, She's the Devil Wears Prada, The Princess Diaries,
The Dark Knight Rises. He's going to win this game.
She's going to win this game. Oh the way? Correct? Wow,
that just came to me. Eddie Survives Amy Moneyball, Once
(31:10):
upon a Time in Hollywood, Ocean's eleven. Correct, she's good, Yeah,
she quick. It's real good, Eddie. American Hustle, Silver Linings Playbook,
The Hunger Games.
Speaker 13 (31:26):
Mm hmmm hmm.
Speaker 9 (31:28):
Bradley Cooper, no gone, No, Lawrence Amy crushed at that, dude. Sure,
do you know what that means?
Speaker 5 (31:43):
Just swing away at the rest that you got.
Speaker 8 (31:46):
No.
Speaker 2 (31:47):
Run it back means play another game like do it again? Okay,
it just means run it back. You play basketball and
we lose. Just run it back. You just run it back.
You play a whole game again with same players, not
a redo, because you already won one again.
Speaker 6 (32:03):
Run back.
Speaker 14 (32:04):
What do you call it?
Speaker 2 (32:05):
Run it back? That's just what they call it. Run
it back.
Speaker 5 (32:09):
Okay, run it back.
Speaker 2 (32:10):
Okay, let's play Jela role. We'll run it back after
the song. All right, let's run it back. I'll give
you three movies. Tell me the actor blacks one Star
Wars Episode one, phantommnus the word m black Swan.
Speaker 1 (32:32):
There's two actresses. They look similar, and they often get
mixed up, at least in my brain.
Speaker 11 (32:40):
It's one of them, Ella Fisher, No, no, no, Karen
Knightley incorrect one the other one it's Natalie Portman.
Speaker 1 (32:49):
That's it.
Speaker 2 (32:50):
Okay, look the same, Lunchbox, The Fighter, American Psycho, The
Big Show.
Speaker 6 (33:04):
What name them again?
Speaker 2 (33:08):
The Fighter, American Psycho, the Big Short named the actor?
That was an all three of those movies. Give me
Wolburg incorrect? Eddie can win this one? Was he in
(33:30):
the Fighter? Christian Bale's the answer? The Bird Cage, Goodwill Hunting,
Missus Doubtfire for the Wind, Robin Williams correct. Wow, Amy,
thank you for running that back lay welcome, Well it's
one to one. You two want to battle it out
for supremacy. Let's go running back Amy versus Eddie for
(33:54):
the grand Champion, Amy, Barbie Blake Runner twenty forty nine, Drive.
Speaker 5 (34:05):
Margot Rubbi Is it the boy? Ryan Gosling?
Speaker 2 (34:11):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (34:13):
I didn't.
Speaker 2 (34:13):
I want to guess, Margo da Eddie. Come on a
simple favor? What Green Lantern? It ends with us?
Speaker 6 (34:30):
I don't.
Speaker 7 (34:31):
I haven't even heard two of those movies, So I'm
just gonna guess Ryan Reynolds.
Speaker 2 (34:35):
Wrong, Blake Lively, isn't he Green Lantern? Yes, but he's
not in the new one. He's only a new one.
Speaker 1 (34:44):
I'm sorry bad.
Speaker 2 (34:46):
Okay, So sudden death buzzing with your name at any point?
Oh when I say a movie? Okay, here we go.
Four weddings in a funeral Love actually nodding, Hill, Eddie, Eddie,
Julia Roberts wrong, Amy.
Speaker 1 (35:09):
God, I don't really know, but.
Speaker 15 (35:15):
Uh you grant Winter. It's time for the good news.
About a month and.
Speaker 2 (35:26):
A half ago, a little dog was found swimming in
the East River in Lower Manhattan struggling. Someone sees the
dog out there, they called the police. The police go
and they saved the dog. And they were like, and
it's one of those purse dogs in a massive river
in the middle of the river. So something wasn't right,
you know. They got thrown in the river. It fell
(35:47):
off something into the river, and so they go out
save the dog. They treated the dog for a respiratory infection.
No tags, no microchip, they posted photos. Nobody stepped forward
to claim her. Uh. In the end, it all worked
out for one of the guys who went and saved
the dog adopted the dog. Yeah. That somebody threw the
(36:08):
dog over I mean that East river, that's like one
of the main rivers, right, massive.
Speaker 1 (36:12):
That's gotta be terrible.
Speaker 2 (36:13):
And the person who saw the dog like, good for
them too. That's not even one where you can go
out and save the animal because it's so big.
Speaker 6 (36:19):
Yeah, and the.
Speaker 2 (36:20):
Police officer adopted the dog, the first dog. Maybe his
wife carries it around on the purse. Yeah, that's a
great story. That's what it's all about. That was telling
me something Good's go over to Amy with the mourning corny.
The mourning corny, what do.
Speaker 1 (36:40):
You call it when the lights flicker during a date?
Speaker 2 (36:44):
What do you call it when the lights flicker during a.
Speaker 12 (36:46):
Date a power move.
Speaker 2 (36:52):
That was the mourning corny. Fine, okay if Pattie said
it's fine, you know it's fine. He laughed at all
that crap.
Speaker 1 (37:01):
Yeah, well I guess you maybe if you work for
the power company.
Speaker 2 (37:05):
Oh yeah, it really is really niching. That joke coming
up inside the anonymous inbox. Her friend was in a
breakup six months ago and her friend will not get
over it. She's like, how do I tell her just
to get over it? We'll talk about that. But also
coming up the next few minutes, will we get our
money from the palette today? It's been two years? Lunchbox,
(37:26):
owes us all a bunch of money. Will we get
our money today? Have I mentioned it's been two years? Yeah? Okay,
thank you two years.
Speaker 6 (37:33):
Long years.
Speaker 2 (37:36):
We did not get our money yesterday. So a quick setup.
We all put in eighty five bucks. We bought this
returns palette. We don't know what's in the palette. It
was all stuff that people return on Amazon. We went
to like this warehouse. We bought it. We brought it
in studio, we went through it. You sell it all
individually and hopefully you can make money off of it.
We did this segment two years ago. It got really dramatic.
(38:00):
Then Lunchbox started selling this stuff because he wanted to
sell it. He would never give us our money for
two years. We wanted our money. Yesterday he comes in,
He's like, I got your money. He brings all these
envelopes in boom, except you forgot one. It was one
envelope sort. I don't even know how much money it was.
We chose not to open it, so Scuba did not
get his envelope. Yesterday we turned them all back into Lunchbox.
(38:21):
Today is the day that we get paid Lunchbox. It's
over to you. Yeah.
Speaker 6 (38:26):
So yesterday I went home and I even texted Scuba
and I said, hey, did you and Bobby go in
my bag and taking one of the envelopes before I
ripped this house apart looking for the envelope, Like, is
this some funny prank you guys were doing on me?
Because I wouldn't put it past you. It was like, seriously,
we didn't do that.
Speaker 2 (38:41):
You can even ask NLR, but we did not do it. No,
I know.
Speaker 6 (38:45):
So then I'm like, oh my gosh. So where I
was counting the money, there was nothing and I could
not figure out where it was. I was looking everywhere
outside in the yard. Did it fall out when.
Speaker 2 (38:55):
I really thought it could have fallen in the yard, Well.
Speaker 6 (38:57):
Yeah, like maybe my backpack was unzipped when I was walking. No,
And I mean I looked everywhere. An hour and a
half later, I finally find the envelope or was it
It was because I had done it on the couch,
so there was a blanket there. I guess it got
wrapped up in the blanket and the blanket got moved
to a different chair, so it was sitting in a
different chair, so I didn't think, oh, it would be
in that blanket. I didn't remember the blanket being on
(39:18):
the couch. So I picked up the blanket and it.
Speaker 16 (39:21):
Fell out, and I'm like, oh my god, God. I
were to have a searching and stressing and.
Speaker 6 (39:28):
Like, oh, man, feeling how people feel when they lose
envelopes full of money.
Speaker 2 (39:32):
You're pretty tight, oh.
Speaker 6 (39:35):
I was like, man, I'm gonna lose money on this deal.
Speaker 2 (39:37):
Well, what you could have done is split it all
up again, but we knew the amount.
Speaker 6 (39:41):
But I wouldn't have done that to you. I wouldn't.
I mean, as the as the head of the business.
You know what I mean. Sometimes you have to take
the bullet.
Speaker 2 (39:48):
Do you have the money? Now? I got the money,
let's go.
Speaker 6 (39:53):
Ready, Yes, all right, yes, I has been ready for
this two years.
Speaker 2 (39:58):
Yes. So we will now see how much money that
we have earned. Remember, we put eighty five in, so
the first eighty five is just getting back to even. Secondly,
he's going to then reveal why it's taking two years
to get us our money, and according to him, we're
gonna be like.
Speaker 6 (40:15):
Oh, oh, we get it.
Speaker 2 (40:16):
That's fine, that makes sense. Yeah, why didn't you take
another year or something like that? All right, pass him out?
Oh boy, he's walking around.
Speaker 16 (40:26):
Happy birthday.
Speaker 2 (40:27):
Okay, we don't need all the slabs. Let's just pass
him out here.
Speaker 13 (40:30):
That's hefty, feels light.
Speaker 2 (40:38):
Here's mine.
Speaker 13 (40:39):
Yeah, daddy's got your money.
Speaker 2 (40:49):
Okay. So are we allowed to open?
Speaker 13 (40:52):
Man?
Speaker 16 (40:52):
If you guys allowed to open, one, go ahead and real.
Speaker 2 (40:56):
Three open Okayoha? One hundred and ones.
Speaker 12 (41:03):
Yeah, but I didn't even think there was going to
be one hundred for two years.
Speaker 2 (41:07):
It better be like two hundred. But with the interest,
Oh my god, one, two, three, five, six, seven, eight
nine is one hundred and fifty dollars. So, h sixty
five dollars profit? So we have a Okay, everybody good?
Speaker 6 (41:21):
We have miscounted you miscounted? Yeah, one hundred fifty nine.
Speaker 2 (41:26):
Yeah, I think I got shortened.
Speaker 13 (41:27):
I might get short too short.
Speaker 2 (41:30):
Seriously, I'm being honest with you that it's one hundred nine.
So will you tell us why it took two years
to get our seventy five dollars profit?
Speaker 6 (41:40):
Guys, the reason they got it took two years is
because when you run a business with investors, you don't
want to go back to your investors and not have
a profit. You don't want to give them money when
there is no profit. You don't want them to think
they lost money.
Speaker 16 (41:57):
So once we sold the Pelican the Big Daddy, we
were finally in the black.
Speaker 2 (42:03):
We were in the positive.
Speaker 16 (42:04):
It was like Black Friday. We finally made a profit,
and so it was time to give you the money
because without that.
Speaker 2 (42:12):
I'm short nine dollars.
Speaker 16 (42:13):
Do you want to have no?
Speaker 2 (42:14):
See, there is no way I'm short nine dollars fifty
I have one fifty. I knew I was getting screwed.
There is no way count it. I've counted it twice.
Speaker 16 (42:24):
The money fall out my bag.
Speaker 2 (42:25):
No, no, no more money falling out. I'm short nine
dollars and not only that, that's not how business works.
You don't only pay people back when you make a profit.
You pay them back as you go.
Speaker 6 (42:35):
But do you understand that, did you guys forgot to
do the thing?
Speaker 12 (42:38):
Or you have like set dates were you paid?
Speaker 16 (42:40):
Hey, hey, guys, I wanted to make sure you felt
a profit. So that's why I waited.
Speaker 12 (42:45):
But I don't even really know.
Speaker 2 (42:46):
I have one sixty. You can't count. I have one fifty.
I'm nine dollars short. I have one your dollars.
Speaker 13 (42:53):
Anybody I keep losing count this light right there.
Speaker 16 (42:56):
But hey, you guys, you guys forgot to do it.
Speaker 2 (42:59):
You guys got to do it. That's not how business works.
Speaker 12 (43:04):
But that as me, that's how his business was.
Speaker 2 (43:08):
That's why we don't get in a business.
Speaker 6 (43:09):
Then with the eight dollars, give me, I'm gonna need
to count that again.
Speaker 2 (43:13):
Man, it's sitting right here.
Speaker 6 (43:14):
I'll count it. I don't know, man, what.
Speaker 1 (43:17):
Did we put in each again?
Speaker 6 (43:19):
I said so, I just I really wanted to be
able to come into you guys with the tops.
Speaker 2 (43:24):
We could have invested that in. I understand.
Speaker 6 (43:27):
You could you could have, you could have, but it
was tied up in the financials of the business. And
I wanted to come to you with.
Speaker 12 (43:34):
A profit, and I came to you a profit, Yes
you did, and I came.
Speaker 16 (43:38):
To you with a stack of cash.
Speaker 2 (43:40):
Eddi's still trying to count. I'm not going to say anything.
Oh my gosh, why so many ones?
Speaker 6 (43:45):
Well, because when I when I went to the bank,
I couldn't figure out what denominations I would need to
make it fifty nine each person, So I just got
five one bills and then I got.
Speaker 13 (43:58):
Like fifty nine. You got it one fifty.
Speaker 2 (44:02):
I'm short eight dollars.
Speaker 12 (44:03):
How interesting you ended up with the short envelope. It's
interesting that because you technically have the most of all this.
So it's okay, it's.
Speaker 6 (44:14):
Worse the business works.
Speaker 2 (44:16):
The person who has the most money doesn't go.
Speaker 6 (44:18):
It's okay.
Speaker 1 (44:19):
I mean, it's just it's like it's no, no, no,
because he didn't pass them out accordingly, Like he just
passed out randomly.
Speaker 12 (44:25):
So it's sort of like God handled.
Speaker 6 (44:27):
It, but you haven't.
Speaker 2 (44:34):
Yeah, I'm eight dollars short.
Speaker 6 (44:36):
That is so weird, Mike, you really had one six
one six.
Speaker 13 (44:39):
My gosh, man, did your kids count this?
Speaker 6 (44:42):
I don't say what I got?
Speaker 2 (44:44):
What do we learn? Guys? Everything's a learning lesson. Don't
know a business?
Speaker 6 (44:49):
And can I tell you something? Can I tell you
something about this?
Speaker 2 (44:51):
It took two years ridiculous to make a profit of
eighty bucks. It took forty bucks a year, twenty dollars
per six months, ten dollars per three months. Basically we
made three bucks a month with him?
Speaker 6 (45:04):
Can I tell you something? After doing the palate? This
is my final synapsis. We still have what a synapsis is,
and that what you say when you talk about like
the short version or what learned?
Speaker 2 (45:17):
Our conclusion, well conclusion would be the end.
Speaker 6 (45:20):
Yeah, well this is my conclusion for the palate I
have I didn't have. I had a hypothesis that we
were going to make a lot of money and Mike,
you still have stuff to sell to Yeah, yeah, it's
still up there for sale, it's still I'm still working avenues.
But my conclusion is, if I was going to do
this by myself, it may have been worth the profit
the eighty dollars that.
Speaker 16 (45:41):
We all made. It was so much dang work for
eighty freaking dollars.
Speaker 2 (45:46):
But I think if you were doing it by yourself,
you wouldn't have spent the six hundred or so.
Speaker 6 (45:50):
That's what. Yeah, that's the big part is if I'm
willing to take the risk of six hundred dollars by myself.
Speaker 2 (45:55):
Okay, then do it lesson how it goes? No, no, no, no, no,
I tell you it was so so much harder then
people made it seem online because also we talked about it,
so it got eyeballs on it.
Speaker 6 (46:07):
Yes, so I can't even imagine people that do this,
like as, how do they make this work?
Speaker 2 (46:12):
Okay? Do you guys want to gamble at all?
Speaker 6 (46:14):
Yeah?
Speaker 13 (46:14):
Well I'll play I do. What are we doing?
Speaker 2 (46:17):
I don't know. Maybe tomorrow we put all on money
and gamble it out in the way I like it.
That'd be fun.
Speaker 13 (46:22):
We're playing with house money has gone two years.
Speaker 2 (46:26):
What does use yours? That you have more than us?
It'll be God will what he said?
Speaker 6 (46:34):
Hey, guys, I just like you're welcome.
Speaker 2 (46:37):
Man, you're not going to do it, okay.
Speaker 13 (46:41):
I think we're still in business, right.
Speaker 16 (46:43):
Hey, we're still in business.
Speaker 6 (46:44):
Here's the crazy thing.
Speaker 2 (46:45):
The two items on the PAL twenty thirty two will
begin an other twelve dollars for.
Speaker 6 (46:49):
The total items on the palette value at four three
hundred and twenty nine dollars. So far, we've sold nine
hundred and fifty four dollars worth.
Speaker 2 (46:55):
And we're done.
Speaker 16 (47:00):
Big here in the mall.
Speaker 10 (47:03):
And it's on the radio, and the dogs keeps on
turn Ready in lunchbox, more game too, Steeve bred Have.
It's trying to put you through fog. He's running this
week's next bite. The Bobby's on the box, so you
knowing this.
Speaker 2 (47:24):
Is the boubyvollved So I'll watched the show called Your
Friends and Neighbors on Apple with John Hamm and he's
robbing his neighbor's houses because he needs money. It's a
really rich neighborhood. He loses his job. He needs money,
so he like knows them, so he goes to steal
a bunch of stuff. Pretty good show. I have the
top five unsolved heists in US history. Okay, number five,
(47:47):
this is nineteen fifty, So think of how much money
three million dollars was in nineteen fifty. It was a
brinx robbery. It was considered the crime of the century
at the time. It involved a team of eleven robbers
who dressed in bank uniforms and masks, broke into the
Brinks building took three million in cash. They were never found.
They were never recovered. In nineteen fifty. With what I
(48:08):
know now, if all the back in time, I'd be
the greatest robber serial killer. I do it all. I
mean I wouldn't do it all. But I couldn't do
it all because they have no way to trace anything.
Once you're out of sight, maybe you're kind of out
no DNA evidence. I mean, I guess unless somebody followed you,
they wouldn't even know and you should go. Yeah, see
he wasn't me, or we rat you out. I mean
that is awesome. Hey, Duney rat number four nineteen seventy
(48:32):
two the United California Bank heis for twelve million dollars.
A group of robbers flew in from Awaio. They flew in,
they all got on an airplane together to go do
some robin to steal campaign funds. They successfully robbed the
bank made off of twelve million dollars. The case remained unsolved,
(48:53):
fueling speculation about the involvement of high profile figures because
they stole it from Nixon's campaign, and they even had
to know was there inside job. Did you see the
head of the FBI says he saw the Epstein tape.
I'm for sure Epstein killed himself.
Speaker 1 (49:08):
For sure.
Speaker 2 (49:09):
Listen, no, no, I watched the video of him.
Speaker 5 (49:13):
Yeah, the video of him. But where's the video, like exactly,
and they.
Speaker 2 (49:16):
Say the video They said the video wasn't even working.
They still haven't really see Epstein files. By the way.
Fishy Number three the Pierre Hotel heist in nineteen seventy two,
worth twenty eight million dollars. A team of armed men
took dozens of guests hostage, stole millions in cash, spawns,
and jewelry from the hotel safe deposit box. The robbers,
(49:38):
likely connected organized crime, were never caught. Number two the
Stardusk casino heist. This is half million dollars in chips.
This is why this one's crazy wow. Nineteen ninety two
in chips. Bill Brennan, a casino cashier in Vegas, walked
out at the end of a ship with a bag
full of money and stuff with chips and just never
(49:59):
never came back, disappeared forever. But then you think he
turned that into real money. He pulled off the heist
alone without violence, and remains one of the FBI's most
wanted fugitives. In a theft case, it said cash and chips.
Speaker 6 (50:11):
Okay, I guess like you can slowly go back and
or he sells them to people on the you know,
like in your neighborhood.
Speaker 2 (50:19):
In the neighborhood, he does interesting he.
Speaker 6 (50:21):
Does a lemonade stand, like you give you fifty bugs,
I'll give you seventy.
Speaker 2 (50:25):
Five dollars and chips. That's literally what we do with
food stamps. I would sell food stamps for If I
had a twenty dollar food stamp, I would sell it
for ten bucks in cash. Wow. Oh, because it's the
only way we had money. And so we get food
stamps every month, and so I would sell my our
food stamps for cash if we needed it, so somebody
would get a little more money and food and we
would take the cash. Dan, no, no, not day. It's awesome.
(50:46):
It was like a little scheme we were running, but
it was it sucks for not foodstamps, right, hey, wow,
you know I mean that's the day. Yeah, number one
in nineteen ninety five hundred million dollars. Whoa the Isabella
Stewart Gardener Museum heist. This is often cited as the
largest art heist in history. Two individuals disguised as police
officers gained access to the museum, still thirteen priceless artworks,
(51:11):
including works by Rembrandt, Vermir and Dega, and vanished. The
total value of the stolen art is estimated to be
over half a billion dollars. The FBI has actively investigated
the case, but no arrests have been made and the
art has never been recovered. That was so inside that
I think to guided it himself. That was so inside,
like half a billion dollars. What do they do go
(51:35):
in in the middle of the night. Did they do
the put on the mask and do the flips of
the lasers? Like all that stuff I feel like would
have to happen. Is still a half a billion dollars
in anything? But I do feel like I could break
intoalysis and still like watching and stuff.
Speaker 1 (51:49):
I don't know.
Speaker 5 (51:52):
We're watching that show, aren't you?
Speaker 1 (51:54):
Like nobody in this neighborhood has cameras, like are you
kidding me?
Speaker 2 (51:58):
They have alarm systems, but he had to turn the
launch systems off. Also, just wear a mask. Everything's good
if you wear a mask.
Speaker 5 (52:06):
He knows there at a party, so he just strolls
over with his baseball cap on.
Speaker 13 (52:10):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (52:11):
Steals like.
Speaker 2 (52:13):
It's crazy to watch how rich people live though, because
there are like watches these people have that are like
two hundred and fifty thousand dollars watches. While you're doing
your face like that becuz I'm just there was one
necklace that was nine hundred thousand dollars.
Speaker 1 (52:25):
Yeah, there's purses and it's not just like one watch,
Like they have like crisple of them and they're just
like sitting in a dwar Yeah.
Speaker 2 (52:33):
Oh, and the dwells everywhere, and the dwells everywhere everybody.
This is now the most interesting segment of the day. Again.
Florida was arrested for having three different wives in three
different counties. Counties that's just down the road. Those are close.
He met them on different dating apps, and he made
(52:53):
sure they were in different counties. What is this Duke's
of hazards all right?
Speaker 1 (52:58):
Hit it sang three Florida women in three different counties
at the same time.
Speaker 5 (53:03):
He took each one of us to a county over
to get married in.
Speaker 17 (53:06):
If the counties did talk, it would have saved me
a lot of heartache, a lot of money, a lot
of stress.
Speaker 8 (53:13):
Michelle married Henry in Hernando County in November twenty twenty two.
Speaker 2 (53:18):
I met him on match dot com. We met in
early November. How soon did you marry Henry?
Speaker 5 (53:25):
It was very short, It was very soon. It was
within about three weeks.
Speaker 8 (53:28):
Fan Henry was still married to Brandy, who married him
in Manitate County that February.
Speaker 1 (53:34):
I met him on a dating app. He said all
the right things.
Speaker 2 (53:38):
When Brandy married Henry. He was still married to Tanya.
Speaker 17 (53:42):
Now meeting him on a dating site, and the way
he portrayed himself, he sold the perfect person when in
reality he was none of those things.
Speaker 8 (53:50):
Henry Betsy Junior was arrested for felony bigamy last year
after Tanya figured out she wasn't his only wife. Henry's
wives are hoping he'll be convicted and spend time behind bars.
Speaker 2 (54:03):
That is from K's t on TikTok. But here's the thing.
His middle name is Betsy. Do you guys hear that?
Speaker 1 (54:08):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (54:09):
Henry Betsy? Yeah, three wives, bro, You got to spread
them out over counties like you gotta do states.
Speaker 7 (54:15):
It sounds like they probably lived even closer, but he
married them in the different countries, so.
Speaker 2 (54:19):
They wouldn't see. And also, you don't you would think
there'd be a database where if one guy with his
social Security number marries somebody, it would go. But are
you sure you want to marry again? Henry, Henry Betsy.
Why would they give him the middle name Betsy? The
guy was stacked against him to begin with. That newser
for us sounded like mambo number five. Okay. Here a
(54:46):
pilot gets on and overhead to tell a passenger that
will not shut up or sit down, to sit down
or he's gonna call the cops. This is a United
Airlines flight from Houston. Go ahead.
Speaker 18 (54:57):
I need you please go.
Speaker 3 (55:00):
To your seat.
Speaker 18 (55:02):
Put on your seatbelt, please the instructions. They have asked
you several times to please protect your seat, put your set.
You have to have the aircraft net by complaint resolution
personnel as your captain. I'm asking you, and please.
Speaker 2 (55:24):
Comply with the plad attendants.
Speaker 18 (55:26):
And have a seat. Thank you very much.
Speaker 2 (55:30):
That's for sure, we're gonna turn this thing around. The
thing is they're over the ocean because they're going Houston
to Hawaii, so they can't really drop it down. Just
tape them to the seat. That's what I do, Just
tape them to the seat. Yeah, that'd be hilarious. I'd
love to see a good seat taping because you know
you're not gonna land. Can't land to Hawaii. But that's
(55:51):
from Rick Persian Princess. And then finally, this is mostly
the can you recline a seat back on an airplane?
By the way, they go back like two inches? The
answer is yes, it's made to recline, so yes, you
can recline. He only gets so upset about it. They're stupid.
Here you go.
Speaker 14 (56:07):
I just had a flight LA to Boston and I
reclaimed my seat for a portion of it. Behind me
said I was extremely rude for doing that. My simple
answer to her was, I wasn't supposed to reclaim my seat.
I wouldn't have the option on the chair.
Speaker 8 (56:20):
So I don't know.
Speaker 2 (56:21):
Am I being the bad person in this situation? All right? No,
you can put your seat back. It only goes back
like this. Okay, you're back now. If you hang your
hair over it, you suck. Yeah we've seen that. Yeah,
you suck because you're something about you is in their space.
It's not like the seat's a full recline. If it was,
that would be different. But they allow it to fall back,
(56:42):
so you get to fall back. Anyone want to argue
with that? No, No, When people get into big fights
about that, it is the stupidest thing. So okay, there
you go, thank you, and then I want to play
this voicemail. I hit that RAYMONDO.
Speaker 18 (56:55):
Bobby, you should not have been allowed to be the
judge or the jury in this case because you're bias lunchbox.
You actually won the case. It was murdered by Amy,
someone who is so smart on birds. She's been fascinated
with birds ever since her parents died, and she's cuckoo
for cocoa pus. So someone who is so knowledgeable of
birds and so fascinated with birds would have known that.
Speaker 2 (57:18):
The n sense.
Speaker 18 (57:18):
We're toxic, Amy. You are guilty of bird burger. Your
punishment should be you're never allowed to talk about birds
ever again.
Speaker 2 (57:28):
I could come off the joy to begin with, he's
anti Amy. To begin with, Amy's not a murder.
Speaker 1 (57:33):
He said, I was cuckoo for what?
Speaker 2 (57:35):
Co for coca puss?
Speaker 1 (57:36):
Yeah no, yeah, that's rude. Listen, you killed the birds
enamored with birds outside the visit my feeter is very
different than what they can tolerate inside my home.
Speaker 5 (57:48):
Like, I don't know that they have sensitive respiratory systems.
Speaker 2 (57:52):
Why are you stuttering? I didn't know this.
Speaker 1 (57:55):
Case also, doctor Josie our Vett, Doctor Josie, she said,
I did it wasn't the incense.
Speaker 2 (58:02):
She doesn't think it was, She said, I we should
have brought an expert witness, just speculation.
Speaker 5 (58:09):
Well, she have the bird, so if she wants to
perform the autopsis, she can.
Speaker 2 (58:12):
What do you mean you still have the bird? Bury
the bird. We're burying the get rid of the bird.
Speaker 5 (58:16):
But I'm waiting the.
Speaker 2 (58:19):
Bird, get of the evidence. What are you doing the bird?
Speaker 12 (58:22):
Birth bird dump in the river?
Speaker 5 (58:24):
No, I still have the little bird.
Speaker 12 (58:27):
I feel terrible.
Speaker 1 (58:28):
I felt terrible, And she said, look, you burn the
incense down stairs. Yes, it can't travel. Upstairs is Hre's room.
She was like, but the likelihood of that happening, She goes,
I think it was just a terrible coincidence, and that
the bird maybe had some sort of virus and what killed.
Speaker 2 (58:40):
The bird virus? I'm here for it me too. Okay,
we're going to spend a thousand bucks to autopsy a bird.
That's just the kind of stupid stuff we do on
this show though, Okay.
Speaker 13 (58:50):
Bobby Bone show.
Speaker 6 (58:52):
Sorry today, this story comes us from Florida. A twenty
four year old man was getting in the fridge. It
was apart, and he says, oh, man, my roommate made
of cake. There's one slice left. Go ahead and eat
that sucker.
Speaker 2 (59:05):
This ain't going good.
Speaker 6 (59:07):
And he eats that cake. Oh oh, allergic reaction.
Speaker 2 (59:12):
Oh I don't know, stab them or something.
Speaker 6 (59:14):
Yeah, me too with allergic reaction. He's allergic to peanuts
and the cake was made with peanut butter and you.
Speaker 12 (59:21):
Can taste that.
Speaker 2 (59:22):
So you're just gonna blindly eat a cake when you
have a major allergy like peanuts.
Speaker 6 (59:28):
And so they had to use epipin. And now he
wants the roommate to pay for all his medical bills.
Speaker 2 (59:34):
You know, I thought maybe there'd be a later twist,
like he's on the ground and he's like help me,
help me in the roommate's like, nah, you have my
last piece of cakes.
Speaker 6 (59:42):
Good luck.
Speaker 2 (59:42):
I can't believe someone would an because I now have
an intolerance toward dairy and I ask everything I eat,
is there any dairy because I'm still learning. If I
had a crazy like peanut allergy that could kill me,
I wouldn't be blindly jumping into any cake.
Speaker 12 (59:59):
Yeah, and it's not like peanut butter is flavorless, like
he had to realize like first bite, like probably.
Speaker 6 (01:00:05):
He's not a peanut butter. I mean there was peanut
butter mixed in. I mean there's other want to say this.
Speaker 2 (01:00:09):
I hate peanut butter, and I don't only want eat
peanut butter, and I would have I investigate things for
peanut butter. And I'm not even allergic to it. I'm
like a peanut butter in that. Yeah, that's crazy. I'm
glad he lived, but the roommate does not owe him
money for that. No chance, right, it's no chance.
Speaker 6 (01:00:23):
Okay, I'm lunch box. That's your bonehead story of the day.
Speaker 2 (01:00:27):
This is Shannon from Virginia One in studio.
Speaker 3 (01:00:30):
I just wanted to know how Eddie's brother is doing
since his stroke and his recovery, and I'm hoping that
he's doing very well and love the show.
Speaker 2 (01:00:45):
Thank you Eddie.
Speaker 13 (01:00:45):
Oh yeah, that's a good question. He's doing great.
Speaker 7 (01:00:47):
He He says that he still has so he had
a stroke and he lost most of the feeling on
his left side, like he couldn't move his arm, couldn't
move his leg, had a hard time walking. And then
he went through physical therapy and that all kind of fixed.
But he's still and he can walk, he can use
his arms and everything, but he still can't feel a
lot of things. He says, sometimes he just feels like
(01:01:11):
he starts walking into his leg starts to drag.
Speaker 2 (01:01:12):
He's like, physically, he can't feel physically. How old is
he he is?
Speaker 13 (01:01:17):
Let's see, he's six years older than me. Forty six,
you got it, come on, work it out. He's fifty two.
Speaker 6 (01:01:23):
A boy, Yeah, he's fifty.
Speaker 2 (01:01:26):
Clap for himself. He guys didn't see that, but he
clap himself.
Speaker 7 (01:01:29):
But he's doing really well, and he says that you know,
he's he forgets things so kind of the brain part
of it is to struggle a little bit just remembering
to do things around the house here.
Speaker 4 (01:01:39):
I know.
Speaker 13 (01:01:40):
That's why I told him about gosh. But he's doing
a lot better. Thank you for asking.
Speaker 2 (01:01:44):
If he was at a one when it happened, where
is he now?
Speaker 7 (01:01:48):
I would say he's at an seven, About to say
eight I was about to say eight, but but he
does call.
Speaker 13 (01:01:54):
And say, man, I left my garage door open and
swore I closed it. And I'm like, dude, that happens
to us too.
Speaker 2 (01:02:00):
I think I left the garage raw open. I swear
once a week and the dogs might get out.
Speaker 1 (01:02:03):
I think seven's valid though, for like you're suddenly your
leg you can't feel it.
Speaker 2 (01:02:07):
Yeah, I'm probably seven and a half.
Speaker 13 (01:02:08):
Then you have the leg problem.
Speaker 2 (01:02:10):
I have all these. I have lots of lots of problems.
That's seriously though, that's great. We will see tomorrow by
everybody Bones Show. The Bobby Bones Show theme song written,
produced and sang by read Yarberry. You can find his
instagram at read Yarberry, Scuba Steve executive producer, Raymond No
(01:02:33):
head of Production. I'm Bobby Bones. My instagram is mister
Bobby Bones. Thank you for listening to the podcast.