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August 5, 2025 59 mins

A listener shares her own traumatic experience while getting a massage. We may have a plan for Abby for massage redemption. Bobby shared the weird experience he had with an older woman. Eddie shared his theory why his passport hasn’t come in and its’ bad news. A couple got a huge surprise when they dug up their driveway and found a Nazi bunker hidden under their house. We get into a discussion of whether we buy homes owned by awful people. We also reveal who won and lost the draft.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Come. This is also all right, here's a voicemail we
got last night.

Speaker 2 (00:06):
I have a massage one time that could have been
a sitcom. I'm a school guidance counselor, and the massage
therapist came out sobbing. I never met her before and
continued to sob the whole hour I was having my
massage to tell me about for breakup with her boyfriend.
And basically one is a free therapy session.

Speaker 1 (00:27):
That sucks because during a massage, and I'm not good
at this, you're supposed to like distress most of mine
or if I don't really get traditional massages, I get
I've injured myself therapy.

Speaker 3 (00:42):
That's a massage, yeah, because.

Speaker 1 (00:44):
I'm like, I don't want to go relax. I'm not
a big massage guy, but I get them if I'm hurt.
But Abby had a weird experience where the guy pulled
the towel off her butt.

Speaker 4 (00:55):
Yeah I believe that, and say man, because apparently he
was sixty.

Speaker 1 (01:00):
I was watching the clip back on TikTok and I
was like, that's crazy. Yeah, he pulled the towel off
her butt and moaning, and it was like, do it,
do it?

Speaker 3 (01:07):
Abby?

Speaker 5 (01:09):
He's like, and I'm realizing the more I talk about it,
that's not normal.

Speaker 3 (01:16):
Not normal.

Speaker 1 (01:17):
Glad you shared. So what we're going to do. I
talked to Scuba Seeve yesterday. We were trying to figure
out how to get you into a decent massage. And
we have someone we're talking about being clients with anyway,
and we're just going to send you to them. Okay,
it'd be great, and so you can have a good
and we'll make sure it's a female therapist.

Speaker 5 (01:33):
Yeah, can we we can screen them.

Speaker 1 (01:36):
And I'm also not saying that dudes are bad.

Speaker 3 (01:42):
I don't want one. Oh yeah, no, but you don't.

Speaker 5 (01:45):
I would think you'd want the opposite, would.

Speaker 1 (01:50):
Oh yes, massage to you in your mind, it's just
sex if you want the opposite.

Speaker 5 (01:57):
No, you're right. I don't know. I heard wrong. Yeah,
you want a girl, it's less awkward.

Speaker 3 (02:03):
Well, it'd be less awkward less.

Speaker 1 (02:05):
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (02:06):
Have you ever had a man?

Speaker 1 (02:07):
Yeah, it's fine, it always is great. But again, dude,
I don't go in for like three stone lotion. I
go in because I've got like a shoulder injury.

Speaker 4 (02:15):
Or there's a more deep tissue.

Speaker 1 (02:17):
Yeah. For some reason, amy makes everything so perfect, like
the last three months, Like when she gets on the
wrestling stuff, she's always like deep and then she's like
Audible has asked me to like tie me up more, like.

Speaker 3 (02:28):
You know why, because you've been per three months. They're
seeing the appeal of it.

Speaker 4 (02:32):
No, they wanted me to say, you don't have to
be you don't want to be pinned down unless you
want to be. Yeah, yeah, or you can't be pinned down.

Speaker 3 (02:39):
Are you satisfied with your books unless you want to be.

Speaker 1 (02:44):
We're going to send you somewhere. Go Dabby, Okay, I
would rather have a female massuse. My wife would either
have a female massuse.

Speaker 3 (02:51):
There's just my same. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (02:52):
And I've gone to a guy. The first time I
ever went to a guy. He was massage in my
back in a really weird way, and he told me
he was tenderizing the meat. Oh that's so weird. No,
I know, but he was doing it like this weird
like on my back, just like really weird. No, there

(03:14):
was no moaning. But I remember coming on the show.
There was like two thousand and six, I think when
I got this done, and I remember coming to work
the next morning and telling you all about it. And
I'm like he was tenderizing the meat, and y'all were
all like, that's so weird.

Speaker 3 (03:27):
Yeah, we still feel that way weird. Something exchanged. We
still feel that's weird.

Speaker 4 (03:30):
But there was a massage at Barton Creek Mall, so
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (03:34):
So another thing is I have had dudes like the
like doctor Jeremy comes into my house and I've hurt
myself in multiple ways and he comes over and he.

Speaker 4 (03:46):
A chiroacter he is, so that's different. But he also
does like rubbie yeah, like deep muscle yep, And I don't.

Speaker 1 (03:52):
Feel any weird about that. But I also know, like
his story, Oh you need a background, So I think
so know the more about them, they're gonna be touching
me if they're a dude. Yeah, yeah, I did have
a weird interest. My only really weird experience was with
a woman. She kissed my forehead.

Speaker 4 (04:07):
Yeah, that was very weird.

Speaker 1 (04:09):
And that was a woman I don't need.

Speaker 4 (04:11):
That's so inappropriate.

Speaker 3 (04:12):
That was at the end.

Speaker 1 (04:13):
Yeah, she like did stuff like like rub stuff on
my eyes and forehead like or whatever, and then went.

Speaker 3 (04:20):
Right right.

Speaker 4 (04:24):
Like how old was that one?

Speaker 3 (04:26):
She was older? Yeah, that's weird.

Speaker 1 (04:28):
Yeah, that's weird, Abby, But we're gonna set you up.
Do we want to say where scuba or no, we waiting.

Speaker 3 (04:33):
We could say it's not closed yet, but the clay.

Speaker 1 (04:37):
Until we get it figured out, and then you're going
to have a great experience. I feel we're gonna send
you to We're not gonna be like give it, give
us your best. We're just gonna see, like make it
a female so we can show that it's not weird
to get one. That the only time you don't get
the good ones if you get the best, Like just
normal massage therapists are really good.

Speaker 4 (04:54):
I think Abby's gonna love it. She needs I think
it'll be helpful for her.

Speaker 5 (04:57):
Yeah, whole time.

Speaker 4 (05:00):
Yeah, that be good.

Speaker 3 (05:03):
Bad news for Eddie.

Speaker 1 (05:04):
He's been trying to get his passport because I'm like, dude,
we'll go out of the country, like just finally get
your passport and you've gone as far as.

Speaker 3 (05:11):
Oh, I like, I did everything.

Speaker 6 (05:12):
I went to the public library, I made an appointment,
I gave him all my documentation, I paid the money,
which wasn't cheap, and they said, thank you, we have
everything we need. We'll ship it out and you'll hear
from US in you know, four weeks, four to six weeks.
Then I get an email out of nowhere that says
your status has been on hold due to needing more identification.

Speaker 3 (05:35):
Did you send enough identification? Do I give everything that
was on the list?

Speaker 1 (05:39):
What do you think the reason is?

Speaker 3 (05:40):
Ice?

Speaker 4 (05:41):
Oh my gosh, you were born in America but your
parents are also American citizens.

Speaker 3 (05:49):
Okay, you want to know what's crazy? My wife hers
came in.

Speaker 4 (05:53):
Oh no, however, her last name is Garcia.

Speaker 3 (05:57):
Yeah, but not in her birth certificate. But her face
is white.

Speaker 4 (06:01):
Now they're just judging my picture. Yeah, that's crazy.

Speaker 1 (06:04):
Well, that's why they pull people. That's why they grab
people sometimes.

Speaker 4 (06:07):
I know, I just understand that that's a real severe
situation that is happening.

Speaker 3 (06:11):
But severe.

Speaker 4 (06:12):
What's happening?

Speaker 3 (06:12):
Money? My passport's on hold because Ice? Ice, Like, I really,
I really don't know what it is. But I say that,
I said.

Speaker 6 (06:23):
They said that I can call this week and find
out what it is, but I have to wait until
like that week goes by. They're like, we're gonna send
you the read what we need in the mail, but
unless it doesn't get there within this date, then call
the office.

Speaker 1 (06:35):
If you want it to go faster. Have the conversation
in Spanish.

Speaker 6 (06:40):
No, no, I'm gonna be like, I don't know Spanish.
I know no Spanish. More and raised here in America, Tennessee. Oh, man, Like,
what do you think?

Speaker 3 (06:53):
I don't know. I think there's probably a background or
something here.

Speaker 4 (06:56):
Here's what I think. My wife, my kids, right, yes,
he they whatever? For whatever reason did you did? They
go with you at the same exact time.

Speaker 3 (07:05):
We're all there, and.

Speaker 4 (07:05):
You had everything equal to what they had everything.

Speaker 6 (07:09):
The only difference, my wife said, is that I have
this weird birth certificate in a card form.

Speaker 3 (07:14):
No, she says, it's in a car, one of those two. Okay,
it's not a social Security card. My wife is a paper,
like a whole sheet of paper, and all my kids
are a paper.

Speaker 4 (07:23):
But mine's like half a piece of paper.

Speaker 3 (07:25):
Mine's like a card, a laminated card.

Speaker 1 (07:27):
Yes, mine's a card.

Speaker 7 (07:29):
Oh that's a problem.

Speaker 3 (07:30):
What is that, dude?

Speaker 6 (07:30):
That's what my wife things like, I've never seen a
card like that.

Speaker 1 (07:34):
I've got mine, know when I.

Speaker 3 (07:34):
Used that card, So it's I got it. It's ie, dude.
I'm worried.

Speaker 1 (07:41):
I had people so mad at me, and we've been
doing the bit for like Amy, So we've been doing
the show a long time, and we've been doing the
bit pre the politicalized stuff, and it's we do American
trivia and loser gets deported. We've been We've been saying
that forever, like if you don't it's nothing to do
with somebody being here illegally.

Speaker 3 (07:59):
It's just if you don't know America, we just send.

Speaker 1 (08:00):
You off somewhere. I had so many people like, the
IE situation is so sensitive right now, why would you
make that joke? First of all, I understand how sensitive
the I situation is. Then only my buddy I ed
to get a passport exactly, and I don't like that.
And it really is a real thing, and I do
feel like it has gone a few levels too far.
Quite frankly, it's it's now the most they have more
money than any other law enforcement body in America ICE, Yeah,

(08:24):
which is crazy. But I don't make that joke for that.
And also I'm not going to stop doing the joke
because it wasn't targeted anything. It's targeted at Morgan from
Kansas or me or Eddie who got we don't know
because I won't.

Speaker 3 (08:35):
Give him passport we don't really know Eddie's story.

Speaker 6 (08:36):
Now, I'm I really think that, Like if I would
have submitted my stuff.

Speaker 3 (08:42):
For a passport like three years ago, no problem.

Speaker 6 (08:45):
But but now I can't think of any other reason
other than this.

Speaker 1 (08:49):
Beautiful bill passed and I says, all the money, and
so now they're looking to track down.

Speaker 3 (08:52):
Like it's crazy, dude, I need my passport.

Speaker 1 (08:55):
Morgan, you said you had lamin it.

Speaker 3 (08:58):
Yeah, laminated card.

Speaker 8 (09:00):
It can't be laminated.

Speaker 9 (09:00):
I think that's why take.

Speaker 3 (09:03):
It out of the laminated.

Speaker 1 (09:04):
Well they're going to do that, But my card is
not is not laminated. It's plastic that's laminated. No, there's
no lad it goes to a machine. No, everything plastic
is not lamlatic.

Speaker 7 (09:15):
Your driver is plastic, but it's not laminated.

Speaker 3 (09:18):
I say that.

Speaker 4 (09:18):
I was like, your birth is like a plastic like
a driver's license.

Speaker 1 (09:22):
Yes, it's both. I have to have the paper and
I have the plastic. But I set the plastic in
because I thought the paper.

Speaker 4 (09:28):
Where did you get that?

Speaker 9 (09:30):
It's like it all has to be original copies and
it cannot be altered in any way, so.

Speaker 3 (09:34):
That you have not altered altered it. Got it. That's
how my parents gave it to me.

Speaker 1 (09:39):
From the original plastic or is it laminated?

Speaker 3 (09:44):
Dude?

Speaker 6 (09:45):
I don't have it with me, so all I can
remember is it's like a card. It's it's like it's
like a student ID, you know, but bigger. It's the
size and like plastic.

Speaker 1 (09:53):
It's not laminated.

Speaker 3 (09:55):
I would say it's plastic. Okay. I have a little
seal on it and it says where I was. That's
not dominated. That's what I have.

Speaker 1 (10:01):
That's not lamited. Your's this plastic. You just let us
astray for a minute. Well I'm back to ice now.
Now I'm back to ice for a second. I was, okay,
it's laminated. Morgan brings up a great point, but I
think you misled.

Speaker 3 (10:11):
Us a bit.

Speaker 6 (10:11):
So if say I need a new birth certificate, you
get one of those, what's that process?

Speaker 1 (10:16):
You just draw it on paper and send it in
as long as you sign it, it's true. Uh No,
I think you can get one of those in a
couple of weeks, a few weeks.

Speaker 3 (10:26):
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (10:27):
I'm just like, my mind is blown. I never plastic cards.

Speaker 1 (10:33):
Uh And apparently when the bank and is safe, my card,
your car certificates at home at home my bank my
birth certificate card, which is also have a sold security
card too, same exact.

Speaker 4 (10:46):
That's paper.

Speaker 1 (10:47):
Nope, I have a card as well. It's plastic and
it's also at the at the bank in the security box.
It was like an Arkansas thing, my Mickey Mantle rookie, what.

Speaker 4 (10:55):
Is this an Arkansas thing? I don't know.

Speaker 1 (10:58):
I'm from Texas and I know it is gathered around,
had sexual pigs and had plastic.

Speaker 3 (11:03):
Because Morgan, I think it's.

Speaker 9 (11:06):
A birth registration card, which is something you get before
you get the certificate of birth. So some people cross
both so like that. I was just reading about it
and some of.

Speaker 1 (11:16):
Them clo green, yeah, grayish, Well my pretty color blind?

Speaker 9 (11:21):
Is that kind of what yours looks like?

Speaker 1 (11:23):
I'm visually impaired.

Speaker 3 (11:23):
That's a certificate. No, this is not a certificate.

Speaker 4 (11:26):
It's a card.

Speaker 3 (11:26):
Eddie, get it if you get it. Mine looks like
the like the blue bluish one.

Speaker 9 (11:30):
Okay, that's a birth certificate. And if it's in something,
it's laminated. Birth certificates do not come laminated.

Speaker 1 (11:37):
We bring it tomorrow.

Speaker 3 (11:38):
What they have it?

Speaker 1 (11:39):
Oh they didn't send it back.

Speaker 3 (11:40):
No, they have it. And here's the thing though, Like.

Speaker 1 (11:43):
I just show the office, they arrest you and send
you away.

Speaker 3 (11:45):
Dude. It's a trap.

Speaker 1 (11:47):
This is like when the super when they were amy
back in the day.

Speaker 3 (11:50):
This is awesome.

Speaker 1 (11:51):
They were giving VCRs to people and they're also to
give a Super Bowl ticket that they've done this a
couple of times. But they would give VCRs people and
they'd show up and they'd be like, to get my
v are I'm here to get the super Bowl tickets.
But they were people that they arrested right then because
they had outstanding where yes, big round the doors behind them.

Speaker 3 (12:07):
Yeah, that's what they gonna do to me.

Speaker 1 (12:10):
Yep, sorry about that, dude.

Speaker 3 (12:12):
Yeah, I'll keep you guys updated.

Speaker 4 (12:14):
Yes, Eddie laminating a birth certific did.

Speaker 3 (12:17):
I didn't laminate it. Why'd you laminate it? And it didn't.
But here's when I went to the library. Why didn't
they tell me this isn't gonna.

Speaker 4 (12:23):
Work because they don't get it's like a boat. They're like,
we don't we don't figure out your own Like, we
don't get paid enough to help you figure out exactly
to do it. Thank you for the documents for oh
my good.

Speaker 3 (12:34):
Yeah, they don't get paid enough to do their job.

Speaker 10 (12:36):
Ready.

Speaker 9 (12:36):
Probably did that, Eddie, and they gave you the copied
birth certificate.

Speaker 3 (12:40):
They probably have the real one.

Speaker 7 (12:41):
Call your mom.

Speaker 4 (12:42):
But you can get more.

Speaker 3 (12:43):
Yeah, you have to get a new one.

Speaker 1 (12:45):
Operation Flagship one of the examples was a sting operation
conducted by the US Marshals in nineteen eighty five where
they lured wanted criminals to a fake event at the
Washington Convention Center under the guys of winning free Redskins
football tickets. The operation successfully led to the rest of
one hundred and one fugere.

Speaker 6 (13:00):
That's crazy, Like hearing it is crazy, but watching it,
I think it's a thirty for thirty.

Speaker 1 (13:06):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (13:06):
If watching it here and they interview all these people
and they're so excited, like and go to the.

Speaker 3 (13:10):
Super Bowl, Baby, they're not. They're going to jail. Okay,
let's take a quick break.

Speaker 1 (13:17):
We'll come back in a few minutes to talk about
the couple they were digging under their house they found
a Nazi bunker.

Speaker 3 (13:22):
What, Yeah, it's crazy, it's We'll take a break, we'll
come back.

Speaker 1 (13:30):
A couple got a huge surprise when they dug up
their driveway and found a Nazi bunker hidden under their house.

Speaker 4 (13:35):
That's crazy.

Speaker 1 (13:36):
The bunker had been blocked up since the nineteen sixties,
was still in good shape. It has two main rooms,
still has the original tiled floors and escape patch and
German riding on the walls, including a message that says,
be where the enemy is listening from BBC?

Speaker 3 (13:51):
Where is this Normandy? Wow?

Speaker 1 (13:55):
By the way, if you guys want to call us,
our phone lines are still open. If you're watching us
on YouTube right now and you want to call the show,
perfect opportunity eight seven seven seventy seven, Bobby.

Speaker 3 (14:05):
That's our number.

Speaker 1 (14:05):
Abby's on the phone, ready to go, eight seven to
seven seventy seven, Bobby. The bunker had been blocked up
since the sixties again, was in good shape, two main rooms,
a bunch of German writing on the wall, like old
school German writing. Not that it makes a different, but
it just looks very Nazi. That's from BBC. People often

(14:26):
visit now to see the history and things. Is important
to preserve it so people remember what happened during the war. Yeah,
I stall that a museum or something. The bunker, Yeah,
like the whole I don't know, I don't know. It's
such a negative, nasty part of the world, And I agree,
but if it's like in a neighborhood, you really can't
throw up a mus didn't write a mid of a neighborhood.

Speaker 6 (14:47):
That's a good point, right, Like just preserving history like that,
Like do you want to preserve history like that because
it was so bad and so negative?

Speaker 1 (14:56):
I think you want to preserve it so it doesn't
happen again, right, because if you lose the abilit to
share all the bad things that happen, bad things happen again.
They already almost happen again anyway. But hopefully you're able
to teach young people how bad this is so they
don't develop not thinking it's good, but always thinking that
this type of action is bad. And like the Holocaust Museum,

(15:17):
been to that one here in America, and yeah, it's
incredibly sad and it's a tragic experience to go through,
much less to have actually been in like times a million,
crazy what they had to go through. So I'm all
for preserving the past and for history to keep things
from happening again. It would just be weird because it's
in a neighborhood that.

Speaker 3 (15:36):
Is weird, Like what do you do with it? Probably
dig it up and move it. But what you could yeah,
I think right, like they move.

Speaker 1 (15:45):
Houses it's underground. Yeah, I'm sure they could remove parts
of it and then take it and kind of reconstruct
some of it. Yeah yeah, but different than moving a
house that you can lift up and go than having
to dig in. I'm sure you could, but this feels
like it would be time to have a process.

Speaker 6 (16:00):
Technology is pretty good now, Like they find dinosaurs and
they put it all together somewhere else.

Speaker 1 (16:05):
Yeah, but they're able to get that out. This is
like under the ground. You got to take the house up. Now,
you've got to go on and get that. It's also
is it worth the money to do that?

Speaker 4 (16:14):
But maybe you just like cut out that part.

Speaker 1 (16:16):
Whatever, resell. What if you were going to buy this
house and there's like, yeah, it's a great house, but
there's a Nazi bunker under it.

Speaker 3 (16:21):
Oh, sure, some weird.

Speaker 4 (16:23):
I'm good. I don't want it.

Speaker 1 (16:24):
I don't even know that has to be weird. It
could be weird, But I think, what if you just
love the house so much, would you take that?

Speaker 4 (16:31):
I've thought about that. On a similar ish note, like.

Speaker 1 (16:36):
Like murders to make its murder now murder or.

Speaker 4 (16:39):
In North Carolina. When we lived there, it was looking
at like really really old houses, and I was just thinking,
like what families used to live here? Did were they?
Did they have slaves here? I don't know. It just
like makes you think like that. I don't support that.

Speaker 1 (16:54):
It's a good point.

Speaker 4 (16:55):
You may buy a property or have a house that
once had that history.

Speaker 1 (17:00):
The land pedophile lived in a house murdered there. They
don't have to disclose that. Yeah they probably don't, And
no they don't.

Speaker 7 (17:06):
They would not advertised pedophile.

Speaker 1 (17:08):
Well, it's like they have to in some places you
have to say there was a murder. I think some
places you don't. I think it's I don't think it's
a federal law. But I think I'd rather live in
a place where somebody was murdered than somebody who messed
with kids.

Speaker 3 (17:21):
Yeah, I agree. What about where someone killed themselves?

Speaker 1 (17:25):
I don't know if that's not a murder, I'm not
sure murdered. I don't think that murder is a crime.
Murder you get charged with murderer, a pretty sad place
is someone and also murder is done with intent.

Speaker 4 (17:41):
I get it now. Yeah, I guess I was just thinking,
you know.

Speaker 3 (17:43):
But like chances that somebody died in a house are
pretty good, right in an older house at some point,
But what if they died of.

Speaker 1 (17:51):
Okay, well natural cause, Yeah, I think if it's like
all these things happen in the house, murders like maybe
top five, but not one too. I mean, because if
you're like a child molester used to live here. I
either live in the murder house, in the child moluster house,
or a bunch of Nazis lived.

Speaker 3 (18:10):
I don't know that.

Speaker 1 (18:10):
I think I'd rather have the murder house.

Speaker 3 (18:12):
This is the page out of Amy's book.

Speaker 6 (18:13):
But I wouldn't it be worse if like there were
murders in the house and they never caught the killer.

Speaker 4 (18:19):
Yeah, I don't want them coming back.

Speaker 1 (18:20):
I don't think that's the thing. If if an old house,
the killer's probably dead by now, and also the killer
PA had something.

Speaker 6 (18:25):
Assuming it happened, and the killer is still like six six,
and you know if he's driving around the house every
now and then, be like this, I did it.

Speaker 4 (18:33):
Right, and he's like would again no, oh no no,
or like his crazy expensive townhouse that he lived in. No,
just the if I had that much money, I'd find
a different one.

Speaker 1 (18:47):
Would you buy Epstein's. That was that was the biggest
house in Manhattan, Epstein's house.

Speaker 4 (18:51):
Now because cameras are everywhere.

Speaker 9 (18:53):
No, I'm not.

Speaker 7 (18:56):
Bernie made off Okay, he was just scamming some money.

Speaker 1 (18:58):
I agree with that.

Speaker 4 (18:59):
That's different than trafficking.

Speaker 3 (19:01):
What about the island, The island's kind of cool. No,
that's tough.

Speaker 1 (19:06):
Every kid who was raped there.

Speaker 4 (19:07):
No, I don't want to be there.

Speaker 1 (19:10):
And like he didn't murder that we know of Epstein,
But I would I live in a murder house in
his place?

Speaker 4 (19:15):
Yeah, I think that we know of. Yeah, yeah, he's
what I said. Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, I agree with
you on that.

Speaker 1 (19:21):
So in California, sellers must disclose any death on the property.
Alaska sellers must have disclose any murder or suicide on
that one, and South Dakota sellers must disclose any death
within twelve months. So in South Dakota, what did you
just wait a year to sell it? Nothing to see here?
Three hundred and sixty six days?

Speaker 3 (19:37):
All right, sell the house?

Speaker 4 (19:40):
Like did anybody buy?

Speaker 11 (19:41):
Like?

Speaker 4 (19:41):
Do new people live in the Meninda's home?

Speaker 1 (19:45):
I don't know, but if they do, they if they do,
and they were weirded out they could have easily knocked
the house down and built new on the land. So
then you get into the debate about Okay, murdered in
the house. It was also on the land. But can
you knock the house down and feel good about it
if you're building a new house.

Speaker 3 (19:57):
And I would say yes, yes, new place.

Speaker 1 (20:00):
But all that stuff's just physical stuff anyway. That really
there isn't anything that rubs off onto the net, even
if you moved into that house. It's just the vibe
is weird.

Speaker 6 (20:09):
Yeah, it's just the memory of that place. Like I
was watching the Idaho murder thing documentary and they tore
the house down, the one with the kids, the four
college kids. They completely demolished that house to get it.

Speaker 1 (20:21):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (20:21):
I think that that's also helpful for the college campus
and that memory to just be like, let's get a.

Speaker 3 (20:26):
Ridit of it.

Speaker 1 (20:26):
The infamous Beverly Hills mansion, where Lyle and Erick Mindez
murdered their parents in nineteen eighty nine, sold in March
of twenty twenty four to seventeen million, an LLC reportedly
associated with a wealthy Iranian family. They probably even tell them, right, you're.

Speaker 4 (20:41):
From another country, or you like.

Speaker 1 (20:43):
Gay especially one like Iran, where again we only hear
the bad version of the news over there.

Speaker 3 (20:49):
Right, Yeah, there's no good news.

Speaker 1 (20:52):
The good news network never puts any stories about it,
things happening in Iran. So I have this this terrible
idea of what it's unfair because it's obviously propagandaed what
we hear about certain places whenever they're pitched to us
as our enemy and the only thing that we get
or all these negative stories about it.

Speaker 3 (21:09):
We should find it. Tell me something good Iran, No,
can you find one? Why not?

Speaker 1 (21:14):
Like you think Iranian people are bad and it's just
there's just people. There's people that were happening to be
born there.

Speaker 3 (21:19):
So let's find some good. Tell me something good Iran.

Speaker 1 (21:22):
I agree, Michael, let me know when you get one.
I don't think it will be.

Speaker 3 (21:27):
Actually, they probably have good news over there.

Speaker 1 (21:30):
Yeah, they're probably. Again we are we are shoved into
areas because of what the creators want us to see. Right,
So our view of Iran is that only of what
the movies and television of the news show us, because
we ain't going there. I just said the same thing

(21:52):
probably about Saudi Arabia, like forever ago, until they were
like launched a whole PR campaign. Come here, same thing
with like Dubai.

Speaker 4 (22:01):
I've never I've personally never been scared to go to Dubai.

Speaker 1 (22:06):
You know why because of the PR campaign there. Like
you ever get on or on and TikTok and see
like the cities and how freaking beautiful they are. I've
seen it a couple of times. It looks awesome, but
I'm not going when I'm scared.

Speaker 4 (22:18):
Lindsay Lohan lives in Dubai and I saw her on
I don't know, some talk show and she was talking
about how it's she loves living there and you cannot
see any Yeah, I think, yes, she must have been
doing a circuit, but she was speaking on how it's
so great when she goes out to eat, Like it's
illegal to take your phone out and film anybody. It's

(22:40):
not just the celebrity, it's anybody.

Speaker 3 (22:42):
You know.

Speaker 4 (22:42):
We've like filmed all kinds of things everywhere and it's
just illegal there.

Speaker 1 (22:45):
And the only thing that I would compare it to
is other countries hearing about all the guns that we have,
and like, I would never go to America. That's the
most dangerous place ever. They have more gun killings than
any country in the world. Think about that, Like, what
we're known as is having more gun deaths anywhere in
the world. That's crazy, more than the stuff that we
see about other countries.

Speaker 4 (23:04):
They probably think like, oh my gosh, I would never
send my kids to school in America.

Speaker 1 (23:08):
People are just shooting people all the time everywhere. Gues's
what it seems like. So it's all about how the
news is fed to us. And if you don't think
propaganda still exists, you're out of your mind. We got
one mic maybe, okay. A volunteer doctor injured in Israel's
attack described how prisoner saved her life during the strike.

(23:31):
Oh so there was an attack on a prison and she
was a volunteer doctor and the prisoner saved her life.

Speaker 3 (23:35):
Oh that is good news and a prisoner good job side.

Speaker 1 (23:40):
I mccarrum, an infectious disease specialist who volunteered at the
prison for years, was treating inmates when Israel attacked the
prison and the doctor suffered severe injuries. I was half dead.
The prisoner's dragged me to a corner, brought me a
bucket of water and a blanket, and cleaned the blood
from my face. They could have fled, but they stayed.
One of them said you and you are our sister,
of course, won't leave you alone, sounding.

Speaker 3 (24:00):
Good, and that's good, but it's still like it still
gives the image of like, oh man, war and bad.

Speaker 1 (24:07):
I don't think there is technolog technologically advanced as we are.

Speaker 3 (24:09):
But is there anything where like a life guard saved something?

Speaker 1 (24:12):
Why is that bad?

Speaker 3 (24:13):
It just still has the imagery of like what was
the prison interest century?

Speaker 1 (24:18):
She treats prisoners every week in memory of her father,
who's now hospitalized with serious injuries. I also don't think
just because someone's in prison they're bad.

Speaker 4 (24:26):
No. I mean, my dad was going to Saudi prison
or jail.

Speaker 1 (24:31):
Vanilla, but you never know, this could be a van He.

Speaker 4 (24:34):
Wasn't stealing vanilla. He imported vanilla extract, which is alcohol
into the country quotes.

Speaker 1 (24:38):
I think it's probably a lot more than that, don't
you like you aspire or something? My dad, it's exactly
the person you don't think.

Speaker 4 (24:44):
It was, No, I guarantee you he went to jail
for vanilla guys abstract which Isolay's.

Speaker 1 (24:52):
Probably doing good stuff for America over there, and you
don't even know it.

Speaker 7 (24:54):
Was extracting information.

Speaker 4 (24:56):
Yep, Okay, that's okay, that's awesome.

Speaker 3 (25:00):
Yeah, you should be happy.

Speaker 10 (25:01):
With No, don't say that because you retaliation might hear this.

Speaker 4 (25:05):
No, I mean this was the late seventies were good.

Speaker 1 (25:08):
Yeah, before you By the way, I don't want to
go to Ron, I don't know.

Speaker 4 (25:11):
Or maybe eighty maybe nineteen eighty, I don't know. I
don't have to pull out the photos.

Speaker 1 (25:15):
Like I don't want to have the South Carolina today.
It's also ran Ron.

Speaker 3 (25:18):
You don't want to go to South.

Speaker 1 (25:19):
I won't go anywhere.

Speaker 3 (25:20):
Just stay here. Yeah, I'm good, We're you're content. Yeah,
I mean thinking.

Speaker 1 (25:24):
About flying all out to California and a few weeks
that you have to do South's miserable. I just want
to stay home. So Iron doesn't sound good to me
right now. It's it's too hot and sandy, and I
don't even know that's the case. It's just I'm just
thinking the show. I know, dude, that's crazy. Everything is
built in door, hecas it's been baked in there.

Speaker 6 (25:40):
Like whenever you see like snow in like Africa, Like
that's crazy, you just because you just like, oh, I've
always thought that it's just hot and desert.

Speaker 1 (25:47):
Ye there I went and I met with about a
show idea. I had a concept for something. This company
heard about it. They said, hey, come and we'd like
to meet with you about doing this concept with you.
And so I go and they do a lot of
international shows. This say is like eight months ago. And
I go and they just wanted like three or four
Emmys for some stuff that they do, like super international,

(26:09):
and my idea was international. And so I go over
and they've gone to most countries with their but they're American,
and I was like, I feel like this is the
same thing.

Speaker 3 (26:19):
I said.

Speaker 1 (26:20):
I said, I feel like we're taught growing up forever
what they want us to think of other places because
they're for whatever reason, we're fighting with them, and mostly
it's just about money, right if it's about us, we
want the oil or mostly And so I said, I
feel like there's an unfair version of these places that
we have. And I feel like there's an unfair version
of us because a lot of people, a lot of

(26:41):
countries hate us because we're big and loud, and you
can all the joke as you can always tell the
American is at the restaurant. If you're in another country
because they have no manners, and so I was like,
I want to go and work regardless of the concept,
and they were like, we love it. I said, what
when you guys travel, like, what have you found to
be the biggest miss misconception that we am Americans have
toward other countries. They're like, China's awesome.

Speaker 3 (27:03):
They're like, it's the safest.

Speaker 1 (27:04):
It feels very It's not the West, but it feels very,
very very West in that streets and cars and buy
stuff and you feel great and food's cheap and you
can live and that like China's we go and we
freaking love it. And they go, we're taught, you know,
they're so corrupt and communism, but they're taught the same
crap that how corrupt are politics is?

Speaker 3 (27:26):
And how many guns we have?

Speaker 1 (27:27):
Politics are corrupt. They're very corrupt, but there are so
we're like, well, not that bad, but there's corrupt as
anywhere else. So I still don't want to go down up.

Speaker 6 (27:37):
What about the Haiti though, I guess, like Haiti and
that's very dangerous, right, that's like.

Speaker 4 (27:42):
That, it's very dangerous. It's support country in the Western hemisphere,
and also it is the infrastructure. There is very weak
of like government and that's so corrupt over there, civil
unrest and gangs running.

Speaker 1 (27:56):
They don't have the infrastructure to stop the outward corruption. Well,
if we're dealing with a lot of inward corruption in America, well.

Speaker 4 (28:06):
Yeah, there's just it's sad because it's almost like it's
like a they just sabotage. They can't get out of
their own way, and it's so terrible.

Speaker 1 (28:16):
And it's a lot of people just trying to survive,
looking out for their own own self because survival is
looking out for oneself, and it's all those groups doing that,
just fighting they can have they.

Speaker 4 (28:25):
And those are the ones that are able to take
over because there are a lot of really beautiful, kind,
loving people in Haiti and it's just they have to
deal with the people that have overtaken it. And it's
I hate that my kids can't go back. I hate
it because like when we adopted them, I was going
there frequently, and then it got bad right after we
brought them to America, And our plan all along was

(28:47):
to have them go visit their families after they'd been
with us for about two years, and during that to
year timeframe is when it really just fell apart and
it's totally unsafe to go in.

Speaker 1 (29:00):
The end, regardless of wherever you go, humans are still
born human, and I think there is something inside of
everyone to be good and do good and look out
for others, unless it's corrupted. So you have to think
all these places, you just have a bunch of people
just trying to survive, just like here, and the culture
then dictates how they feel or what they have to

(29:21):
do in survival. But yeah, I've never been, and again
in the last ten years, so I've been. I'm to
travel a little bit. It's awesome to like see other
cultures and it opens you up because I never thought
I would leave the country. Heck, I never thought until
I was like eighteen or nineteen I would leave Arkansas much.

(29:41):
But it definitely opens you up.

Speaker 4 (29:44):
My daughter really wants to go to Japan and South Korea.

Speaker 3 (29:46):
Japan's awesome. Thanks for ever to get there, but it's awesome.

Speaker 4 (29:50):
I gotta figure that one out.

Speaker 1 (29:51):
It's like it's like the Jetsons. There's parts of it
where you're like, what are we in? Like we're two
thousand and late, there are three thousand and eight.

Speaker 3 (30:02):
Yeah, will I am it?

Speaker 1 (30:04):
Seems like such a movie. But it's real and it's safe,
and it's clean. It's safe for in cleaner than the
Indi big city I've ever been in America?

Speaker 3 (30:10):
Which city was that? Uh, Tokyo, I say like that
to talk about it, Yo, Tokyo. I'm taller than everybody.
It was awesome.

Speaker 1 (30:17):
Really, it's freaking amazing. It was amazing, dude, Okay. ABC
is developing a series based on a real high school
forensics class that solves cold cases. Cool true crime fans
are sure to love that. ABC is developing a drama
series based on the true story of a high school
club that solved these cases. The series, called Killer Class,

(30:39):
will be based on Keith Sharon's article from the Tennessee
and about a group of students and their teacher from
Elizabethan High School in Tennessee. The show tracks the unexpected
formation of a high school forensics club that proved shockingly
effective at solving real cold cases. As the series and development,
there's no word on casting our premier day.

Speaker 3 (30:56):
That's pretty cool.

Speaker 1 (30:57):
Where is that school? Elizabethton? Is that here in town?
Or is like Knoxville or that one? Yeah? I don't
know it.

Speaker 9 (31:04):
I know there's an elizabeths in Kentucky.

Speaker 1 (31:07):
Elizabethtown familiar. No, it's it's a Ton now I know
the one she's talking about town. Okay, Mike Cords el Elizabethton, Tennessee.
Johnson City. Oh, so it's far east in Johnson City, Tennessee. Yeah,
it's it's fardas. It's Bristol, Johnson City. I went over
there for a job ones and I was still in
Hot Springs. Oh, they offered me a job. They come

(31:29):
to the Tri Cities. So I flew out there.

Speaker 3 (31:31):
Yeah, roofing houses. What are you doing? No radio? Oh?
I didn't leave.

Speaker 1 (31:35):
I want to graduate college, got it. I was like nineteen,
and they were like, we want to hire you to
come do Knights and the Tri Cities. And so I
flew out there. Uh, there's issues in my mom at
the time. And then also I wanted to graduate college
and so went out to looked at the race track.

Speaker 3 (31:49):
There was no race Yeah, but yeah, that's where I
crossed the finish line on my walk.

Speaker 1 (31:54):
In Johnson City, Tennessee. No Bristol one of the Tri Cities. Yep,
cool story. The Poulter Guy's House from the nineteen eighty
two horror movie is now being rented out to the public.

Speaker 3 (32:04):
That's cool.

Speaker 1 (32:05):
We're talking about houses you could buy.

Speaker 3 (32:07):
But that's that's different because nothing happened there. It's just
a movie.

Speaker 1 (32:09):
Let's talk about this because polter guys like the real
didn't like everybody to like die shooting the movie and stuff.

Speaker 8 (32:15):
I don't know they died.

Speaker 3 (32:17):
That doesn't sound familiar.

Speaker 1 (32:19):
I think people died while making the movie.

Speaker 8 (32:21):
I know in one scene they used like real bodies.

Speaker 1 (32:24):
Uh, google it up. Homeowner Rachel Powers invested about one
hundred and sixty five thousand dollars to recreate the set
of the eighties classic and is now offering it Airbnb,
Verbo Future Stay. She purchased the property again put a
bunch of money into it. They did a two hour
season twenty nine premiere of The Ghost Adventures in April
twenty twenty five. They used a combination of devices including ITC,

(32:45):
spirit box, digital voice recorders, Polari cameras, and they found.

Speaker 3 (32:51):
Activity paranormal activity.

Speaker 1 (32:55):
The attempt to connect to the dead was a success.
They caught some electronic communication, an object moving unexpectedly, cold spots,
flickering lights, troublesome locks, energy drains, and activity around the
old TV from TMZ. Multiple cast members from The Poultry
Guys died during and shortly after filming, which led to
the speculation about a curse. Four actors in particular experienced

(33:16):
untimely debts that fuel these rumors.

Speaker 4 (33:18):
That's weird.

Speaker 3 (33:19):
It is weird.

Speaker 1 (33:22):
Boom.

Speaker 3 (33:23):
That movie freaked me out as a kid man.

Speaker 1 (33:24):
I never watched it. Don't watch that crap.

Speaker 3 (33:25):
You should watch it now.

Speaker 1 (33:26):
I don't like jump scares.

Speaker 3 (33:28):
Yeah, there's some jump scares. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (33:30):
I've realized, through the help of Mic and the Guide's
the Mic, that I don't much hate things just because
they're scary concepts. I don't mind zombies, but zombies really
are jumpstairs. They're slow.

Speaker 3 (33:43):
I'm okay with that.

Speaker 8 (33:43):
You don't mind the violence, I don't know.

Speaker 1 (33:45):
I don't mind the violence at all. I don't love
when things.

Speaker 3 (33:49):
That's come out of the schedule.

Speaker 8 (33:51):
Nothing supernatural, nothing like that.

Speaker 3 (33:53):
No, nothing nothing.

Speaker 1 (33:55):
We did some Tuesday reviewesday stuff today on the movies,
but we should do I can do a couple other
things I watched over the last few weeks. I watched
Alice in Borderland came out I think less than a
year before Squid Games. They're very similar I'm not sure

(34:15):
if like the writers like, I don't know what the
controversy is there, but it came out before Squid Games,
so if you watch it gonna be like, this feels
like squid Game, but it wasn't derivative of squid Game,
nor do I think squad Game was derivative of it.
But they do have the same voice in it that
it's like three minutes the next game is oh the
announcer and squid Game is about a bunch of people

(34:36):
who are put into one area and they got to play,
and only one person lives. This is about something happens
and all of a sudden they're in They don't know
what it is, they can't figure it out, but they
have to complete these games, these tasks in order just
to live. But people, it's crazy. Season one was awesome.
It's South Korean. No, it's Japanese Squid Games. Squid Game
is Korean, right Korean? Yeah, and Alison Borderland is Japanese.

(35:00):
Season one is awesome. I give Season one four and
a half out of five playing cards.

Speaker 8 (35:05):
Yeah, you made me start it almost halfway through season one.

Speaker 1 (35:08):
Once you get over wow, this is like a lot
like Squid Games. Then it gets a lot better. Did
you feel that way? Yeah, but then you go, it
came out before, so I have to look at it
like that.

Speaker 3 (35:18):
Second season.

Speaker 1 (35:19):
I give it like three and a half. The ending
of the second season is fantastic, and there's a third
season coming out in September of this year.

Speaker 8 (35:26):
Twenty fifth.

Speaker 3 (35:26):
Yeah, so yeah, that's what I give it.

Speaker 1 (35:29):
And then we watched Have you guys seen Lazarus Lazarus Project?
It's awesome.

Speaker 3 (35:35):
Four and a half time.

Speaker 4 (35:35):
Machines countries that fast?

Speaker 3 (35:36):
What is that?

Speaker 4 (35:38):
I just assume from another country, England.

Speaker 1 (35:41):
No, Lazarus died and came back like in the Bible. No,
it's it's not about the Bible. It's the Lazarus Project.
And it was on sci Fi. But it's British. They're
all British. But I think it was on sci Fi
here in America. It's great. Let me read the description

(36:01):
so I don't mess it up. Unaffecting exploration. Let me
just not read that part. George thinks he's beginning to
lose touch with reality when he finds himself living the
same day over and over again. A chance encounter reveals
that George is very much in touch with reality, George's

(36:22):
understanding of his perception and he has to choose anyway.
That's long. It's just about them being able to reset
time when something really bad happens. It's good, solid, and
the episode's like forty five minutes. It's like the perfect
time because it doesn't feel so short, like a thirty
minute sitcom, and it's not like an hour ten, which
does feel a little much. What rating did he get? Mike?

Speaker 8 (36:47):
One hundred percent?

Speaker 1 (36:49):
Dang so the Tomato got one hundred percent and then
almost eighty percent in the People.

Speaker 3 (36:55):
It's good. It's two seasons and it's over.

Speaker 1 (36:59):
You Google, the show comes up Lazarus, Oh not Lazareth.

Speaker 3 (37:04):
Oh Lazareth is a thriller twenty twenty four.

Speaker 1 (37:08):
I can't.

Speaker 3 (37:08):
I can't speak on that one. Okay, let's called the
Lazarus Project.

Speaker 1 (37:13):
Anything else in your Tuesday reviews.

Speaker 4 (37:15):
Kind of not that I finished, other than ah Amy
Bradley is missing.

Speaker 3 (37:23):
I need I need to or have you given anything?
A five?

Speaker 1 (37:27):
No?

Speaker 3 (37:27):
Nothing?

Speaker 1 (37:28):
I don't think so nothing's three. I don't know that
a five is able to be had.

Speaker 3 (37:31):
What do you mean, like the best best, best best best,
like Forrest Gump? Would that be a five.

Speaker 1 (37:35):
I don't know. I don't watch it now.

Speaker 8 (37:36):
I have season one.

Speaker 1 (37:37):
It was a squid game of five. If I did,
it's that's it. But I don't remember. I can't remember
giving anything a five ever. Okay, what's the definition of
a five for you? I just don't perfect. I don't
think there's perfection. Severn's possibly gave it a five season one,
season two not season two.

Speaker 3 (37:54):
Poop one poop.

Speaker 4 (37:59):
Declined real quick.

Speaker 9 (38:00):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (38:01):
I think it fell off so much because one was
so good. I think I still would have liked to
a lot if one wouldn't have been so good.

Speaker 3 (38:07):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (38:08):
I know now in my mind there's nothing's perfect, so
it's hard. I can't give it a five. But that's
only my scale.

Speaker 3 (38:14):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (38:14):
It's like, I don't think there's such thing as a
ten person a ten like a human being. Yeah, when
it's like he's a ten, she's a ten, I don't
think there's such thing as a ten.

Speaker 3 (38:23):
What long is that he's a ten?

Speaker 1 (38:26):
I don't know.

Speaker 6 (38:26):
I thought you were singing a song yellow, I don't
know she's a ten on the two, No way, I was.

Speaker 3 (38:35):
Thinking of that.

Speaker 10 (38:36):
And if you're bored with the Lazarus Project. There is
a movie you can watch with Paul Walker.

Speaker 1 (38:40):
But not the same. It's not based on the.

Speaker 4 (38:42):
Same Lazarus is a commonly used.

Speaker 10 (38:47):
Oh I don't know, man, I'm just saying I thought
it was the same thing. It's the Heaven Project.

Speaker 3 (38:54):
Like, leave that up. Let me read that. Oh, well,
there it is.

Speaker 1 (38:59):
Lazarus can refer to multiple things, most notably a figure
from New Testament who raised Jesus from the dead. Also
cross platform d for blah blah blah blah blah. Yeah,
anyway I think about the dead, another Lazarus appears. Na whatever.
All right, let's a bit else we got here, Amy, Oh, let.

Speaker 3 (39:16):
Me do the uh.

Speaker 9 (39:18):
Oh, I have a five out of five show for
people to watch.

Speaker 1 (39:21):
You have one?

Speaker 3 (39:21):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (39:22):
Is have Chad Michael Murray and oh problem, no, Ray, No,
it's actually a documentary. What is it.

Speaker 9 (39:27):
It's called The Wild Ones on Apple TV Plus, and
it's these three guys and they go and they're trying
to save these endangered species six different places. There's a tiger,
a bear, a rhino, a whale, and all these different
places of the world and they're trying to capture like
first ever footage of them to save the species.

Speaker 3 (39:44):
And it's so.

Speaker 9 (39:45):
Good really, like, I was so captivating, and there's short
episodes like thirty five minutes and you know it took
them years to put this.

Speaker 3 (39:51):
Together, and you give it five.

Speaker 4 (39:52):
I give it five out of five.

Speaker 9 (39:54):
I was so I was like wanting more and just
seeing what else happened, and they helped a lot of them.
So that was cool to see.

Speaker 3 (40:00):
Uh what.

Speaker 9 (40:03):
Platform Apple appalled the wild Ones. So if you like
documentaries and like or not geo anything of.

Speaker 1 (40:10):
That nature, it's very much that draft results. Lunchbox crushed
it as we felt you would. With testicular cancer, good job.
We did terrible things to start with tea that's so good, Tornado,
testicular cancer, and train to Railment. I don't know the
third one helped you a lot, but the first two
are super strong.

Speaker 4 (40:24):
Trading wrote, it's a pretty bad.

Speaker 3 (40:26):
It's a terrible thing.

Speaker 1 (40:27):
Yeah, it's like if you saw chips in it, you know,
you know wharehouse, the train goes off. It sucks, but
it's fine. Uh Morgan with toothache, tonightis and Ti.

Speaker 4 (40:37):
Die That was rough.

Speaker 1 (40:41):
Yeah, I panicked, So Morgan's out on back end. Next
time we do it, so congratulates this to lunchbox there,
good job, good job. All right, let's see what else
we get. Juggling is good for brain health. Who can juggle?

Speaker 3 (40:51):
I can juggle?

Speaker 1 (40:52):
You can. I learned how to juggle on the golf
course though doing maintenance.

Speaker 6 (40:54):
And what's so stupid about your juggling? Like you're always well,
the first time you did it was like, oh, let
me try this, judge.

Speaker 3 (41:00):
I do that bit all the time with people. I'm like,
and then you nail it.

Speaker 1 (41:02):
Usually it's somebody juggling, like the whole bit is this.
They're juggling a little bit and they're kind of sloppy
with it. I'm like, oh, you know how to juggle,
Like how do you do that? And they'll be like,
well take this, and so I do it like what
they're saying, okay, And so if I do this and
then I, oh my god, I got it, Oh my god,
and they think they talked to me for then I
start going like behind the back and stuff.

Speaker 3 (41:23):
And I'm like, okay, it's pretty funny.

Speaker 1 (41:26):
Undervalued skill juggling. I still don't know that's a cool
party trick very much. People feel like it's only a party.

Speaker 3 (41:33):
Trick that and spinning the basketball on your finger. I
can't do that.

Speaker 1 (41:37):
Research shows that juggling is a powerful brain booster. According
to a neuroscience, juggling improves hand die coordination, reactions on posture,
and motor precision. It enhances cognitive function of balance and
older adults. I don't know if Papal was gonna learn
juggling though it's juggling is hard. Now scientists are exploring
its potential for treating movement disorders like Sarahbellar a taxia.

(41:58):
I don't know if that is. But a new post
with that story, ammyob what do you have over there?

Speaker 2 (42:02):
So?

Speaker 4 (42:03):
Have you seen Kim Kardashian's uh face wrap for skims?
You know her brand, Skims came out with this.

Speaker 1 (42:09):
I've not seen the rap. I'm familiar with the brand.

Speaker 3 (42:11):
I actually have some Skims underwear.

Speaker 4 (42:13):
Oh okay, I just didn't know it was like all
over social media, at least in my algorithm.

Speaker 1 (42:17):
But by the way, skims underwear are, dudes, what are like?

Speaker 3 (42:20):
What special? You didn't like?

Speaker 4 (42:21):
You don't like them? I mean, I don't know what
they're like for guys, But I love I have socks
and I love them. Or like like spankx type things
like the compression.

Speaker 3 (42:29):
You have no type of things.

Speaker 1 (42:31):
No, they're normal. They make guy a normal underwear and
I bought them. Just try out like a three pack.
They're fine. I would spend the money on them.

Speaker 3 (42:39):
Briefs, boxer briefs.

Speaker 1 (42:40):
I don't wear briefs. I wear boxer briefs. Who wears
just normal brief Not me whitey tidies anymore, like in
that shape like lunch box you were, I think he
wears boxes. He's like a straight boxer.

Speaker 3 (42:53):
With the boxers.

Speaker 1 (42:53):
They always getting caught in my pants, like the bottom
of it, and you always see like the line, yeah, yeah,
tell me your story.

Speaker 4 (43:00):
Well, so she launched these and they are already sold out,
like and that also my algorithm now is a bunch
of plastic surgeons that are talking about how you can
put this thing on your face every night if you
want too, but it's not going to do anything at all.
So she just like made a killing off of these
compression things. But I have bought these things on Amazon

(43:21):
that are disposable that kind of do that, and it
does give you like a temporary jaw sculpting situation. But
that's what the doctors are saying, it's just that it's temporary,
like for fifteen minutes, you might look a little bit
more snatched as they say. So speaking of him, what's
that guy's name, but his in real life Anthony Hopkins.

(43:44):
He did a funny video with the Skims rap. He
put it on and he was like, hey kid, I
don't know why this is my You know how sometimes
we talk about what's your algorithm? Right now? My algorithm
is this, And so Anthony Hopkins showed up and he
did a whole parody thing with the Skims facelifter. Thing.

Speaker 1 (44:03):
Theory is they really don't put a lot out at first,
and they sell out so they can say they sold out,
which then makes the news they sold out. They do
this with shoes a lot, too, So I don't think
they had like a normal release. Oh.

Speaker 3 (44:15):
I think there's probably a mid to low.

Speaker 4 (44:17):
I'm I'm sure a lot of people want to buy.

Speaker 1 (44:19):
Them based on that it's Kardashian affiliated and Skims is
a good brand. But I would imagine you get more
press and people buy more if you're sold out for
a little bit, because this is common with digital products too.

Speaker 4 (44:30):
Yeah, and I think that the whole part of the
story too, is that if you're buying that and then thinking, Okay,
this is going to help you, Like Kim, Sure she
might be doing this as part of her routine, but.

Speaker 3 (44:41):
She just like does it.

Speaker 1 (44:42):
If you think that anymore, like I'm gonna buy something
that look.

Speaker 4 (44:44):
Like I don't know well or I don't know like, oh,
if I do this, then it's gonna get me this.
But like Kim's leaving out the laundry list of other
things that she does, or maybe she's not leaving it out,
but if you're not choosing to think about all the
access she has to make her face do certain things,
So just keep that in mind. And also if you
want to give it a go because they are sold out,

(45:04):
they do have disposable ones on Amazon that are like
from Korea that I bought before, and they're at least fun,
you know Girls' Night.

Speaker 1 (45:14):
Yeah, I was gonna say fun doesn't really come to
mind with it's.

Speaker 4 (45:16):
Like self care pampering, Like it's fun to do all
the little treatments and masks and stuff. So I'm not
anti itt, I'm just letting you know what I've what's
all my feed lunchbox.

Speaker 10 (45:25):
Man I'm here to step a stick up for miss
Escalera on TikTok. She's a hotty cop from Houston, Texas,
and she posted a TikTok and she said didn't get
cracked last night, So everyone is getting a ticket like
being funny, Like okay, she didn't have any she didn't
hook up last night, so she's mad, and now she's
being investigated by internal affairs.

Speaker 1 (45:45):
I think she probably has to be even if they
don't take it seriously. You can't say that and then
have somebody not because one complaint you have to investigate.
So will she get in trouble. Probably not if she's
not a bad cop.

Speaker 3 (45:56):
She's a hot cop.

Speaker 1 (45:57):
Also to me, if she's just like going, didn't get
cracked last night? Never the term cracked? Is that like
banged or yeah?

Speaker 7 (46:02):
I guess I never. I never heard that either, But
I was like, no, that's.

Speaker 1 (46:04):
A new one.

Speaker 3 (46:05):
It's a new one getting cracked.

Speaker 7 (46:06):
Yeah, she's good looking.

Speaker 3 (46:08):
We've heard. Yeah, you made that clear. So let me
get this straight. She is attractive.

Speaker 10 (46:12):
She is, and uh yeah, she put it on TikTok
and went viral, and now she's being investigated by internal affairs.

Speaker 1 (46:19):
If she puts that up and one person complains, they
have to investigate her. So I don't even think they're
investigating her, going we're gonna we're gonna show her. But
if somebody complains, they have to investigate the complaint.

Speaker 3 (46:28):
That makes sense.

Speaker 10 (46:29):
Well, like, why would people complain? They obviously anything. People
are such idiots, Like I said, I don't understand. We
do the bit loser gets deported, a hundred people complaining?

Speaker 1 (46:39):
Why are people so?

Speaker 11 (46:41):
Like?

Speaker 10 (46:41):
Why do people don't know how to joke anymore? It's like, goodness,
how fun would these people.

Speaker 3 (46:45):
Be with people still know how to joke?

Speaker 6 (46:47):
Because this is the people that don't know how to joke,
that never knew how to joke, they're the ones complaining.

Speaker 10 (46:51):
I mean, do we really think this woman is going
to go right? Everybody a ticket because she didn't get
cracked last night?

Speaker 3 (46:56):
No cracked.

Speaker 1 (46:57):
Now he's saying that, and he said, it's so normal, Eddie,
what do you have?

Speaker 6 (47:01):
So I want to ask you if you saw Weezer
come out with Olivia Rodrigo.

Speaker 1 (47:05):
Awesome, it was awesome. So Livia Rodrigo does the thing
where she brings out uh nostalgia X all the time.

Speaker 3 (47:10):
I'm Biga, Livia Rodrigo fank.

Speaker 1 (47:11):
I like her vibe, like she's like kind of punk
rock as a pop star, Like that's her thing. Even
her music, like some of it is, and it's very
much guitar based.

Speaker 6 (47:22):
It's believable too when she brings out these artists that
she's fans of them.

Speaker 1 (47:25):
She had Robert Smith and the Cure. Uh, that was
super cool when she did that. That's his name, Robert Smith,
the singer I believe. So that just came out, so
I don't I don't know his name, but that's cool.

Speaker 8 (47:34):
Yeah, they did just like Evan.

Speaker 3 (47:35):
Yeah, it's awesome, it's fantastic.

Speaker 1 (47:37):
And so she brought out Weezer and they did Buddy
Holly and they went back and forth and River started
it and it was they were off a little bit
at first, or if you saw it, but they missed
like the first word or whatever, and then you know,
River's like, what's and then she sings and I know
your mind. It was awesome.

Speaker 3 (47:54):
Yeah, it's super cool.

Speaker 6 (47:55):
Yeah, I watched I watched a lot of Lollapalooza just
over the weekend, just kind of just going back and
forth and seeing I saw it was cool to see
like girls like more in festivals and music festivals, being
like the stars because usually these music festivals, like you're
not used to seeing like a lot of girls in
a row.

Speaker 3 (48:12):
And Gracie Abrams was awesome. There was like.

Speaker 6 (48:15):
Olivia Rodrigoz, Sabrina Carpenter was awesome, and then there's another
rapper girl that was really good.

Speaker 3 (48:21):
But it was cool to see, like every.

Speaker 6 (48:22):
Time I went back, they were showing like a female
singer and I'm like, they're killing it on stage.

Speaker 1 (48:26):
She even came out at the Role Model Show where
she was the sally do you see that the kids?
Your kids don't know what us kids are doing?

Speaker 11 (48:34):
Then?

Speaker 1 (48:34):
In real life?

Speaker 3 (48:35):
Oh dude, I mean I was probably I probably know
what you're talking about. Yeah, probably you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 4 (48:39):
Say Sabrina, Sabrina's Sabrina Carpenter.

Speaker 3 (48:42):
Carpenter, He's like, he is saying it, probably right, Sabrina Carpenter.
That's weird. Any good catch, that's weird. Carpenter had what
do you call the band? Those two people husband.

Speaker 1 (48:57):
And wife, Sonny and chare no the what are we
talking about right now?

Speaker 3 (49:03):
Artists?

Speaker 1 (49:04):
Ok?

Speaker 3 (49:05):
Even lunchbox.

Speaker 1 (49:06):
He understands w I'm.

Speaker 3 (49:07):
You guys know the car you know, Oh, the carpenters.
You don't call them that.

Speaker 6 (49:14):
Jesus he was a carpenter, So you would say, I
don't know of any other way to say it.

Speaker 1 (49:20):
You don't say carpenter. Okay, you're right. You are saying
it right, carpenter. It's more of a R than a ter, really,
but you're saying it right, is the thing?

Speaker 3 (49:28):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (49:28):
You probably. I mean I say all kinds of things wrong,
So I.

Speaker 3 (49:32):
Would say the carpenters carpenters. Yeah, that's weird, but that's wrong.
But that's how I would say it. Okay.

Speaker 4 (49:39):
I wonder how Sabrina Carpenter says it?

Speaker 1 (49:41):
Does she say a carpenter?

Speaker 4 (49:42):
Right? Then? See I'm picking up Eddie, Like, does she say.

Speaker 1 (49:47):
Crack last night?

Speaker 3 (49:48):
Is that why.

Speaker 4 (49:50):
I'm scared?

Speaker 3 (49:51):
It's just another term. I'm just using another term.

Speaker 4 (49:53):
I know correct though.

Speaker 3 (49:58):
It's kind of cool.

Speaker 11 (49:59):
It is gon cool.

Speaker 3 (50:00):
I would never say it, yea, my wife, why.

Speaker 1 (50:07):
Hold on? Hold on?

Speaker 3 (50:08):
Say it again again?

Speaker 1 (50:12):
You say it right?

Speaker 4 (50:13):
A carpenter?

Speaker 3 (50:14):
Yeah, sabreena carpenter and the carpenters and J. C.

Speaker 4 (50:19):
Carpenter.

Speaker 1 (50:20):
Can you name any carpenter songs. I was just singing
one I know, just begune.

Speaker 3 (50:26):
Uh okay, Well, what's the one with the.

Speaker 11 (50:31):
W S birds suddenly up here every time you are near,
just like me, they long to be close to you.

Speaker 1 (50:44):
Do you know that one?

Speaker 3 (50:45):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (50:46):
But I feel like I know it from I don't know.

Speaker 1 (50:48):
The one you're singing was a Carpenter song?

Speaker 3 (50:50):
What was it? What were we singing? I know, we've
just begune?

Speaker 1 (50:53):
Maybe ye let me.

Speaker 3 (50:56):
Let me sing, let me get my assistant up. You
could be I don't know. I just looked. Yeah, we've
only just begun.

Speaker 1 (51:01):
We've only just begun.

Speaker 3 (51:03):
Yeah right, I don't know what that is though.

Speaker 1 (51:05):
It feels like a Carpenter song. It is by it's
the Carpenters.

Speaker 3 (51:11):
What's the what's the name of the song?

Speaker 1 (51:12):
We've only just begun? They it's by the Carpenters and
the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra.

Speaker 3 (51:16):
Oh wow, the whole orchestra.

Speaker 1 (51:18):
We've only just speak gone, yeah, good job.

Speaker 3 (51:20):
What else you got on the Carpenters?

Speaker 1 (51:23):
Let me just look, I was gonna go on to mind, Okay,
I have they long to.

Speaker 3 (51:28):
Be It's Sabrina Carpenter related.

Speaker 4 (51:30):
To Carpenter she related.

Speaker 3 (51:33):
She related to the carpenters.

Speaker 1 (51:36):
Mhm uh yesterday once more as one hundred and seventy
nine million yesterday more. I don't know, let me hit that. Okay,
they definitely have a sound.

Speaker 3 (51:54):
Did the guy ever sing where's it just backup.

Speaker 1 (51:58):
Top of the world? And that's like almost sounds country
with that still guitar type of thing.

Speaker 3 (52:10):
Oh yeah, I know.

Speaker 1 (52:11):
I don't know it, but I know it like I've
heard it. You know. We let's do it a lot
in our houses. Abba. My wife loves abba.

Speaker 3 (52:17):
That was good man.

Speaker 1 (52:20):
We've only just been good that. There it is rainy
days and Mondays? Which are that one?

Speaker 3 (52:25):
Rainy days and Mondays? Get you?

Speaker 1 (52:27):
Damn? Is that it?

Speaker 3 (52:28):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (52:29):
Okay?

Speaker 3 (52:30):
Who is that pro rapper? I saw it do? That
was so good. Doci was like so good. Here you
go to Lala. We should go to Lala one year.

Speaker 1 (52:42):
I'm not a big music festival guy anymore.

Speaker 3 (52:43):
Too many people.

Speaker 6 (52:44):
What have we got like a pass though I can
get to like stay.

Speaker 3 (52:48):
You have to go through people instead of park. Okay, yeah,
so you got to do all that.

Speaker 1 (52:51):
Yeah, we have a job that makes it not so
cool because we're always exposed to the cool. So it's
like you weigh what you're already exposed to, what you
get easy access to, versus having a and deal with
traffic park.

Speaker 6 (53:02):
I thought it was kind of weird that I enjoyed
watching a show on TV, which I guess I've done
that like my whole life with Pearl Jam and all
that stuff. But like the fact that I just sat
there and watched the music festival on TV is kind
of like after a while, like what am I doing?

Speaker 1 (53:14):
What channel? Who Oh that's what you said. Oh yeah,
I watched it. Line, I wish I got high because
they like to get high and watch music.

Speaker 3 (53:22):
Yeah, yeah, I wonder what that's like. I've never done that.

Speaker 1 (53:26):
Or like listen to music Like in the seventies they'd
put on Pink Floyd and just get high. Yeah, because
you don't have to do anything, you spend any money.
That's what I think about. You don't have to spend
money and you just you do.

Speaker 3 (53:34):
It's kind of expensive to get high, Yeah.

Speaker 4 (53:36):
You've just spent money on by product.

Speaker 1 (53:38):
Like if I had like a drug thing, i'd have
like hookups.

Speaker 3 (53:42):
No no, no, they don't give it to you. They don't
work that way.

Speaker 4 (53:44):
So you're the dealer.

Speaker 3 (53:46):
That's really the one thing where that they don't give.

Speaker 1 (53:47):
To you like you would be the I feel like
i'd have a couple of hookups these like to be
an influencer for it grower.

Speaker 6 (53:53):
Yeah, I feel like that's the one where I was like, hey, dude,
where's my twenty bucks?

Speaker 3 (53:58):
You thought that was free?

Speaker 1 (53:58):
I got twenty Yeah, that's fine, Okay, I'll do a
couple more things.

Speaker 3 (54:02):
Morgan do your story.

Speaker 8 (54:04):
Okay.

Speaker 9 (54:04):
So singles are using dating apps, mostly the ladies to
find men to do their.

Speaker 3 (54:09):
Home projects d I wise.

Speaker 9 (54:12):
Yeah, like their first or second date, they'll bring them over,
have him build a cabinet, have them hang a shelf as.

Speaker 3 (54:16):
A test, as a test or to actually get.

Speaker 9 (54:19):
It done, to get it done, and it's like, are
you boyfriend material?

Speaker 4 (54:22):
Can you do the project?

Speaker 3 (54:23):
Okay?

Speaker 1 (54:24):
So if it's like an audition test, that's funny. If
it's for like practical reasons, like if your pragmatic approach
to getting stuff fixed is getting on an app and
getting a dude to do it by saying you're gonna
maybe crack them, that dishonest.

Speaker 4 (54:37):
And the must be in the first like round of communication,
like do you drop like so are you handy?

Speaker 9 (54:43):
They're putting it on their dating profiles to be like,
I'm looking for a handyman. I didn't help hanging my shelf,
and guys will.

Speaker 1 (54:49):
Either do it or they won't.

Speaker 4 (54:51):
Oh, okay, he is.

Speaker 1 (54:53):
Hanging the shelf like get cracked, Like nobody came and
hung my shelf last night.

Speaker 3 (54:57):
So I think I'm gonna write tickets.

Speaker 4 (55:00):
Unless you want your shelf to be hung.

Speaker 9 (55:05):
As far as I know, it is not a connotation
for something else.

Speaker 1 (55:08):
But yeah, I don't think so. They're probably using dudes.

Speaker 3 (55:10):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (55:11):
It's like the women who would go on dits just
to eat for free, without the idea they would turn
that relationship into something more like it was only to
eat for free and trick the guy. If they're tricking
the guy in building stuff, I don't like it. It's
still kind of funny, but I don't like it if
they're using that as a way to Hey, I think
I'm out like you, and I want to get this done.
But I'm also using it as kind of an audition
to see if you're handy. I'm totally in for it.

(55:31):
Whatever it takes to get to where you know a
little more in that relationship.

Speaker 3 (55:36):
Yeah, build a whole cabinet.

Speaker 1 (55:37):
Though for him, the only time you'll do it's early
is once you to get married, and once you're in,
you're like, you.

Speaker 4 (55:43):
Know what I hold those guys Maybe they have in
their profile that they're a carpenter.

Speaker 3 (55:49):
Maybe they're a carpenter and they want to get cracked.
So just doing it all right, I'll end with this.

Speaker 1 (55:55):
Michael Jackson's dirty stage sock sells for nearly nine thousand
dollars in a French ox.

Speaker 3 (56:00):
Are dirty stage sock? Are they the glittery ones?

Speaker 11 (56:03):
Though?

Speaker 1 (56:03):
Because those are cool, that's probably like all of a
stage sock. I had a little something to.

Speaker 3 (56:06):
Them, right, because if they're just Hanes, like.

Speaker 1 (56:10):
Well, this one is a it's a dirty white sock.
But he doesn't say if it's just straight.

Speaker 3 (56:14):
Wide or had a little glitter.

Speaker 1 (56:15):
I would just think his outfits and have something to it. Yeah, yeah,
but it says a dirty white sock once worn by
the King of pop. Oh, it looks disgusting.

Speaker 3 (56:22):
It looks yellowish.

Speaker 1 (56:23):
Yeah, it's brown, brownish yellow, and I don't see any glitter.
As the first time I see the picture of.

Speaker 3 (56:28):
It, I feel like he always had like glittery song.

Speaker 1 (56:31):
Oh that looks gross. I'm surprised that only sold for
nine thousand bucks. But it does say the rhinestone covered sock,
but I don't see any rhinestones.

Speaker 8 (56:40):
Yeah, it looks like they've all been taken off of it.

Speaker 3 (56:42):
Or falling off your time.

Speaker 1 (56:44):
Oh maybe they Mike, looking there, Dad, it's kind of
there's a there's.

Speaker 3 (56:47):
A few in there, deteriorated. I mean, he only died, like.

Speaker 1 (56:50):
I don't think the rhiated as much as the whatever
the product is that is gluing them. It's probably and
they've fallen off off. But there's there's a few on
there than nine thousand bucks. Footage shows and performing Billy
Jean in the socks, but just a stage show. In

(57:10):
twenty twenty three, a buyer paid over eighty thousand dollars
for a Fedora Michael Jackson war that's cool for that
same performance. Michael Jackson died in two thousand and nine
and age fifty, from a fatal drug overdose. New York Post. Okay,
there you go. All right, that's it for the day.
We'll give you another day tomorrow. If you guys are
part tours, we appreciate that. If you got to this
part of the podcast. Part two of the podcast, send

(57:32):
me a DM mister Bobby Bones. I'd be curious to
know if you got to this part of the podcast.
All right, that's it. Amy has a new episode up today,
Feeling Things. What are you guys doing?

Speaker 4 (57:40):
Feeling Things? Is Amy and Kat. We talk about craving change.

Speaker 3 (57:42):
We know the name of it.

Speaker 4 (57:43):
You're good, Maybe someone else doesn't.

Speaker 7 (57:45):
He literally just said it, like literally just said.

Speaker 3 (57:48):
It before you do. Yeah, But it's like remembering a name.
I need to remember it.

Speaker 4 (57:52):
It's her show, Yeah, say it three times ahead. It's
about well. One of the things that we touched on
is craving change even when life is fine, because for me,
I just sometimes will chase chaos because it's like a
dopamine hit for me, and it's like life is fine,
like fine dopamine elsewhere.

Speaker 1 (58:09):
That's what I need.

Speaker 3 (58:10):
I need a little dope, little music.

Speaker 4 (58:15):
That's free inside of you. You just got created.

Speaker 1 (58:20):
Why did they feel dirty with anything?

Speaker 3 (58:22):
Like anything?

Speaker 4 (58:23):
It was not dirty.

Speaker 1 (58:25):
There is an episode of the Bobby Cast, the new
one up today with Matt and Scott, the brothers from
parme Y, and we really get into the time that
they were in their RV and the guys came in
to rob it and they had a gunfight in the
RV and Scott the drummer was in the hospital almost died.
It got way more in depth than I'd even plan
to get into it. It was great.

Speaker 3 (58:43):
Then we talked about the his PTSD after.

Speaker 1 (58:45):
But if you want to hear a really compelling story,
one those guys have really grinded and they've made it.
They have like five number ones, I think five number ones.
But how they came up. They were a cover band,
like most were, but that was their thing. They were
gonna make money money playing cover songs forever. That's why
Sugar Ray was. They were a cover band.

Speaker 3 (59:01):
Really.

Speaker 6 (59:02):
I saw a cool video on TikTok where Mark Mark
McGrath grath, Mark McGrath, Mark mcgrated, as you'd say, Mark
mcgrat magrat. He was driving down the road and somebody
was playing uh every morning. I think he goes, oh,
there it is, he's jamming my song.

Speaker 1 (59:16):
That's good.

Speaker 3 (59:17):
Uh yeah, check it out. We talk about that. So
that's up today.

Speaker 1 (59:20):
I have a great rest of the day and we'll
see you guys tomorrow.

Speaker 3 (59:23):
Bye. Everybody.
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