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September 16, 2025 52 mins

A listener wants to defend Eddie in the ‘dad bod’ debate. We get into a discussion of why being hot/attractive can be a bad thing.  We put together our list of the toughest guys in country music that we think would win in a fight. A noodle shop has stirred heated debate after charging (around $300) for a single bowl of noodles. We talked about the passing of Robert Redford and celebrities that were hot when they were younger. We got an update on how Bobby, Amy and Lunchbox’s NVIDIA stock is doing. Eddie shared how his 17-year old son wants Snapchat.

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):
This is the Bobby Bull Show. Right here we go.
Let's walk through some voicemails. Number one, Please, I'm.

Speaker 2 (00:08):
Calling because you guys are talking about the whole dad
thought thing. I've called in once before and told Eddie
that he was the hottest one on the show. Hands down.
There is someone to the dad boss. I would prefer
Dad bod over a ripped guy any day. Thank you,
have a good day.

Speaker 1 (00:24):
Eddie's so hot.

Speaker 3 (00:27):
My friend also agreed with this. She shared the segment
and she said that, yeah, she doesn't want to be
with them two ripped up because it's like a lot
of pressure that she would maybe have to look a
certain way, so she'd rather not have that.

Speaker 1 (00:36):
It's interesting, So I agree with all that. I agree
with all the things associated with someone that's in shape,
because you are attaching things that could be even unfair.

Speaker 3 (00:48):
Like she's still in shape, but you know, just like, no.

Speaker 1 (00:50):
I hear you. But I think people are like, well,
I don't like that because that means are always working out.
That means that means no, we're assigning things to a
picture of somebody ripped up. If it's just one versus
the other, someone in better shape wins it's just a
natural selection. People in better shape, they live longer, were
drawn to them. And because we want to live longer,

(01:10):
we want our kids to live longer. Genetically that means.
So that's why I think people that like quote unquote
dad bods is because they know more people that have
dad bods and they like them, and that's the association.
So that's my that's my theory on it. What about
the Eddie is hot? I like dad bods. People have
weird kings and that's just a weird one. And and

(01:36):
also she could hear you on the show and think, look, Eddie,
sounds nice. Oh yeah, without even looking at me. Were
you someone Eddie who girls would look at and think
and they would think you were hot?

Speaker 4 (01:48):
No?

Speaker 5 (01:49):
Never, I had to be friends with them first.

Speaker 1 (01:51):
Yeah, me saying no, like never, there was never a
girl that was like I just think you're so attractive
that I want to be with you. That never happened
in my whole life. Yeah, Like there had to be
an exposure to other elements, meaning I had to show
them that I was funny. I had to show that,
you know whatever it was.

Speaker 5 (02:08):
Yeah, what's that like to just have a girl be
like I've never met you before, but you were so hot.

Speaker 1 (02:14):
Or just to like be a girl and walk into
a room and every guy's like right like that, that
is a feeling that you and I will never know.

Speaker 5 (02:22):
Never.

Speaker 1 (02:22):
Let's go check out with Amy and Morgan. I'm sure
they know what it's like. What's it like, guys?

Speaker 5 (02:25):
I no, No, seriously, no, I don't.

Speaker 1 (02:29):
I don't because we're not We're definitely not saying you
guys don't have that. We're just saying that we don't
have that.

Speaker 3 (02:32):
Yeah, let's go back to seventh grade real quick. I
remember I had a crush on the sky then and
awkward age though I know, and I remember talking to
my friend about it, and then her talking to his
friend to try to get intel, and he reported back, well,
he really likes your personality.

Speaker 1 (02:48):
Awkward age though, seventh grade's unfair.

Speaker 3 (02:50):
Carry it with me.

Speaker 1 (02:51):
You're holding on to that one. Yeah, Morgan, I don't
feel that way.

Speaker 4 (02:57):
But there have been moments where I got my confidence
boost and I was like, oh, okay, this is nice.
If I get like a free thing or somebody gives
me a drink or something that I didn't ask for,
I'll be like.

Speaker 3 (03:08):
H that's nice.

Speaker 1 (03:09):
I'd like to present another perspective. It is that of
the attractive female and why it could also be bad. Now,
this is an alternative perspective because I think, man, if
you walk into a room and people just like dang
or you're just given more opportunities because you're a guy

(03:29):
or girl and you're good looking, Because that happens even
if the person doesn't know it, like just subconsciously. People
like to be around people that are attracted to. And
it doesn't just mean to have sex with. It means
even to work with or be around everybody with me
on that.

Speaker 3 (03:42):
Page, yes, pretty privilege okay.

Speaker 1 (03:44):
Yeah, or not ugly privilege if you're not so pretty,
you're just yeah. I've been on the other side, the
ugly side. But I would say this, I think it's
harder for women that are pretty when they get older
because they've been pretty their whole life, and now all
of a sudden, they're older and they're not pretty anymore,
and so they're not even getting way that they're used
to getting based on something they had no control of.
So you turn fifty two and all of a sudden,

(04:07):
you're walking in the room and people aren't giving you
that same attention anymore. I'm just making up a number
and you're like, what's happening? What's wrong with me? Now?
That wasn't wrong with me two years ago, eight years ago,
twelve years ago. Like, that's got to be really hard. Now,
I'd still rather be hot age. I don't want to say
zero because that means the baby's hot and that's creepy.
I'm gonna say age eighteen, but whatever. Sure you can

(04:30):
vote eighteen through you know, forty seven. Sure all that.
I still would rather have be hot in that area.
But I think you see a lot of people that
were really good looking that age, and age in our
society isn't considered attractive, and they go, oh god, life sucks.
Now what I've had my whole life, I don't have anymore,

(04:50):
and my baseline is lower and that's got to be
weird and hard, and I'd like to acknowledge that. But
I'd still rather be hot all the way. Leading. Yeah,
So yeah, that's what's up, Eddie.

Speaker 5 (05:01):
You're hot, man, Thank you. Man.

Speaker 1 (05:03):
Appreciate that everybody has weird kinks.

Speaker 3 (05:05):
Well yeah, it looks so relative.

Speaker 1 (05:07):
Not really, they're really not like a little bit but
not really like classic good looking people are good looking
to ninety five percent of the world. What do you
agree with that? Yeah?

Speaker 3 (05:17):
I also agree that, like, oh there are different but.

Speaker 1 (05:20):
Classic good looks are good looks to general the like
general public.

Speaker 3 (05:24):
But different eras there's We're conditioned at times to see
what's attractive, you know, because it's what we're fed a lot.

Speaker 1 (05:31):
And we don't depict the era, like we don't get gens.

Speaker 3 (05:34):
But it's evolved over time, like it changes.

Speaker 1 (05:37):
Yeah. So yeah, to all you hot ladies that they
get older, I feel sorry for you.

Speaker 3 (05:41):
Why was I plucking them all my eyebrows off in
the nineties.

Speaker 1 (05:45):
Yeah, well the tramp stamp too, that you have, I
don't have that. So cool and it still covers your
whole lower back and we're cool with it. We dont
judge you for it all. Thank you Eddie, your heart.
Don't forget that.

Speaker 5 (05:56):
Thank you man.

Speaker 1 (05:57):
Okay, go number two.

Speaker 2 (06:00):
Unchbox A deal with the draft Kings and on the
deal with giving Amy all the grief that he did.
But listen to Amy's voice a lot more soothing, more
pleasant to listen to. But look at her, look at you?

Speaker 6 (06:14):
Yeah, so you're not attracted me? You're attracted to chicks.

Speaker 1 (06:17):
I did watch that clip yesterday of those two fighting
about the DraftKings. Well, Lunchbox yelling and Amy just going.
He was being extremely aggressive, and I laughed, it's pretty funny.
Amy is doing commercials for DraftKings. I do commercials for
DraftKings in multiple places. But Lunchbox was mad because he

(06:38):
knows more about sports than Amy.

Speaker 3 (06:42):
But I think if it were but I have the
Draft Kings up and I do dabble.

Speaker 1 (06:47):
I think if it were, just if it were just
about sports, though they've already maximized that within our shows,
so there's nowhere else to put you. There is because
again you're with other dudes who know sports. So are
you gonna put another one? You're gonna go three deep
where there's not a girl who does it a little
who can go like, hey, this is also fun.

Speaker 4 (07:09):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (07:09):
I mean, I just I mean, if they looked at
her count, I mean she probably don't even know her password.

Speaker 3 (07:13):
Yes I do. But when Bobby tells me to log in,
I log in right in front of you.

Speaker 1 (07:17):
I'll let you down. In the Oregon game got back door?
We got back door? They put in that? Did you bet.

Speaker 5 (07:22):
It forgot what I tell you there go, Yeah, lucky you.

Speaker 3 (07:28):
It must have been my gut saving me from the
lost time.

Speaker 1 (07:31):
You didn't play the lottery exactly. You just forgot I
made some money on that one. Okay, it's okay.

Speaker 3 (07:37):
I don't want to revisit the hate.

Speaker 6 (07:39):
Oh yeah, well there's no hate. Like I said before,
I said there was no offense.

Speaker 1 (07:43):
Oh you did say that, but you didn't say anything,
and you're not said no offense, all right.

Speaker 2 (07:48):
Next up Gavin Nepcock and uh and Zach Byan saying,
you guys were to put a can of hill bracket
with the top twelve toughest country guys and country music,
who would you guys taking? How the bracket looks like?
Kind of stuff.

Speaker 1 (08:04):
I think this bracket's changed over the past ten years
because well, people get older where it used to be
guys like Trace Adkins. Trace is an older guy now,
so I think it's a new generation if we're gonna
put him in a fighting bracket. And I won't do
the bracket, but I can just list some that come
into mind that I wouldn't really want to mess with
because they're large and strong and in shape. And I
think Riley Green makes that list. Oh yeah, ex athlete

(08:24):
as well. I think Parker McCollum probably makes that list.
Large guy in shape, can move. I think like co
Wetzel makes the list. Drunk has fought a lot.

Speaker 5 (08:36):
Oh man, Yeah, he looks like he'd fight well.

Speaker 1 (08:40):
I think Gavin Adcott makes the list. Former football player drunk.
I don't think he's afraid to scrap at all. I
think that's four.

Speaker 2 (08:50):
Now.

Speaker 1 (08:50):
No athough too old, although I know that Jelly Roll
has lost so much way to get to wear like
Louis Vuittan. Now did you guys see that? Yeah, that's
pretty cool. More what he got? Branley Gilbert good one.
I think he's got a little bit left in the
I'm not as old as I once was, but I'm
as good once as I ever was. So like in

(09:11):
a fight, Yeah, Brantley's forty. I think he still got
a low in him. So I put Branley in there.

Speaker 3 (09:17):
Can they use brows? Knuckles?

Speaker 1 (09:18):
No weapons?

Speaker 5 (09:20):
Okay, no weapons?

Speaker 1 (09:21):
No weapons. I think Sam Hunt still probably makes it.
Oh yeah, large guys only forty in shape. Stammon is
a big part of this.

Speaker 3 (09:30):
Like, so what about like Kenny, No he get killed
any what. I feel like he's like, yeah, he'd like.

Speaker 1 (09:36):
What I think, you know, he'd give Kenny Chesney a run,
Kenny Rogers.

Speaker 5 (09:42):
Some get No, I no, I mean maybe he could scrap,
but I wouldn't put him in that.

Speaker 1 (09:45):
I think he could like run, yeah.

Speaker 3 (09:47):
Like he's agile, that strong.

Speaker 1 (09:50):
I think I think I'd put Kane Brown in there.

Speaker 3 (09:52):
Oh for sure.

Speaker 1 (09:53):
Meane's thirty one. He's a monster right now. Just like
I don't know if can can fight, but I don't
want to have to know if can can fight.

Speaker 5 (10:01):
What about Morgan Morgan walling now.

Speaker 3 (10:03):
I mean he's gotten bigger though.

Speaker 6 (10:05):
He No, no, he's not fighting.

Speaker 1 (10:06):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (10:07):
Cody Johnson tough.

Speaker 4 (10:10):
I feel like he's tough enough that he would like.

Speaker 3 (10:12):
He'd go after it.

Speaker 1 (10:13):
I feel like he's been through I feel like he's
been through it. Yeah, yeah, that's probably pretty good one.

Speaker 4 (10:19):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (10:19):
He also used to be a bull rider too.

Speaker 1 (10:21):
It's Cody Johnson. I think that would be a good question. Again,
I'm factoring age a lot because he's thirty eight. Yeah,
I put Cody in.

Speaker 5 (10:28):
He's still in it.

Speaker 1 (10:29):
Cody's like and I've not seen Cody with a shirt off,
but Cody's like one of those guys because I watched
these things called like redneck rumbles on TikTok or just
like two country boys going at it and they just
start fighting with each other. I feel like Cody would
be really strong in that. Yeah, Cody's good. I feel
about Chase Rice.

Speaker 5 (10:48):
How old is he?

Speaker 1 (10:48):
He's from forty?

Speaker 3 (10:49):
I think nine? Okay close?

Speaker 1 (10:52):
I think if he has kept himself in shape. I haven't
seen him a while. I think he's good. I think
he's on the list. Yeah, just a large football player.

Speaker 4 (11:00):
I feel like like he's his body is made for it,
but his mind isn't.

Speaker 1 (11:05):
Kip More, Oh, I don't know. Kip will kill somebody,
he like has that, but he's super peaceful. But he
is until he's not. Kip will ripped someone's throat out.
I put Kip in it for sure. Good one.

Speaker 3 (11:16):
Okay, So what about Yeah.

Speaker 1 (11:17):
Kip would take someone and rip their throat out and
then eat it in front of them.

Speaker 6 (11:20):
He just seems so like mindful.

Speaker 3 (11:22):
So that reminds me of Billy Carrington.

Speaker 1 (11:25):
It just depends what kind of shape he's in.

Speaker 3 (11:27):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (11:27):
I've seen Kip recently, well, last thirty four months. He's
a really good shit, and he yeah, I Kip will
kill somebody. Billy's fifty one.

Speaker 5 (11:36):
Billy's fifty one. Whoa, that's surprising to me. He does
not look fifty one. He was way younger than I think.

Speaker 1 (11:44):
Again, I haven't seen Billy in a while, but I
think five years ago, seven years ago, in shape, Billy
killed somebody. But when he had fifty it's you're fighting
twenty five year olds thirty year olds. I think it
gets tough then. Yeah, and any of the old guys,
like a Lee Brice, I think he's aged out.

Speaker 5 (12:05):
He would have been a tough one though.

Speaker 1 (12:07):
I think like the Housers, that any of the two
thousands bar guys are probably gonna get wooed by the
young guns.

Speaker 3 (12:15):
Now what about John Party, Well, I.

Speaker 1 (12:18):
Don't think so. I don't think John wants to fight.
I don't think his heart's in it.

Speaker 3 (12:21):
Yeah, he's too nice.

Speaker 1 (12:23):
Yeah, I don't think John's heart's in it. John's a
big guy, but you gotta get him really drunk. His
birthday today, Happy birthday. No, it's not.

Speaker 5 (12:33):
I'm just kidding, well done, good joke.

Speaker 1 (12:36):
It really I looked up his age and it said
he's forty, and it says happy birthday, he turns forty today,
and then next to it he goes May twentieth, and
I'm like, it makes sense. Yeah, I don't know that
we haven't bracketed that up obviously, we haven't thought about it.
But that's the list there. Who would be number one?

(12:57):
If I had to pick a winner.

Speaker 4 (13:00):
I don't feel like Tim McGrath previously would have been
on it, but now he's majorly injured.

Speaker 1 (13:04):
Well yes, yeah, all the surgeries. Yeah he's older, he's
sixty now, right.

Speaker 3 (13:09):
Yeah, I think we've eliminated any of the fifty eight,
you know, veterans.

Speaker 4 (13:13):
I feel like it was like before surgeries though, he
could have been in it.

Speaker 1 (13:16):
Man, he's old. Father time doesn't lose.

Speaker 6 (13:20):
Yeah, he's old.

Speaker 1 (13:21):
Like, it's not that you're worse or younger people come up. Yeah,
I can't. Ten years ago McGraw gets in it. I
think i'd probably go Caine's number one. Probably, it's pretty legit.
The thing about Caine, I haven't seen Cain like Angry

(13:42):
Drunk one to fight. I've seen a lot of these
other guys, either personally or through videos like Angry Drunk
and what they can do, and like, I know Caine.

Speaker 3 (13:50):
Well, I seen him throw some punches in the boxing ring.
It's pretty good.

Speaker 1 (13:54):
I'd probably go Caine is my number one overall pick
if I were picking somebody to fight from my own her.
I saw a picture he was with Pat Patrick, Mahomes
and Kelsey and Taylor Swift last night.

Speaker 3 (14:05):
Yeah, for well, or Sunday.

Speaker 1 (14:06):
Night whatever it was for Patrick's birthday.

Speaker 3 (14:08):
Yeah, for a dinner.

Speaker 5 (14:09):
Yeah really yeah, yeah, just running with that crowd.

Speaker 1 (14:13):
Well, that's what I thought too, because can I talk
a lot, well, a middle i'd say middle, And I
talked to him a few days. And he's in a
picture with my Homes and Kelsey. That's crazy, crazy and Taylor. Yeah,
pretty good. When was that picture, Mike?

Speaker 3 (14:28):
Sunday night? After the game?

Speaker 1 (14:30):
Oh dang, you're not allowed to smile after a game
like that.

Speaker 5 (14:34):
Who was smiling?

Speaker 1 (14:35):
Everybody? Oh yeah, Travis smiling. Yeah, you can't drop a
game and go oh and two and the smile just.

Speaker 3 (14:41):
To celebrate Patrick's birthday.

Speaker 1 (14:43):
Right, you can't have a birthday if you lose a
game like that. Yeah, you can't do that.

Speaker 6 (14:48):
It looks weird.

Speaker 1 (14:49):
It looks weird. That's that's cool, though, Give me the
next boy smail.

Speaker 2 (14:54):
Buffy is talking about his dog and he is referring
to dust See is Bradley. Did you forget Dusty's name?

Speaker 1 (15:04):
I wrote a instagram on this. We had been talking
about Bradley that day because that's the dog Arkansas Keith
told me was shift off to a farm. Dusty was
the dog after him. I mixed him up when I
was talking about dogs, but it was because I was
talking about Bradley on the show. Bradley is a dog,
a Boston Terrier I had when I was a kid.
Dusty was a dog. Like as soon as I moved
off a dog and I was like twenty two, twenty

(15:25):
three years old that I had, so yes, simple oversight.

Speaker 5 (15:30):
Dusty was cool, man.

Speaker 1 (15:32):
I remember Dusty could shut your door and blow my mind.

Speaker 5 (15:36):
He'd be like, Dusty, shut the door. He'd run over
and close it. I'm like, how did you make him
do that?

Speaker 1 (15:41):
He was a good one. Oh, there's a three hundred
dollars soup. A modest two table noodle shop has started
a heated debate after charging around three hundred bucks for
a single bowl of noodles. The eatery has reportedly sold
nearly ad of the expensive dishes, drawing attention and controversy online.

(16:03):
This is from VN Express. It offers prices that rival
those of high end Michelin starred establishments. The menu features
local specialties such as and they go through all this stuff.
I don't know, but the three hundred dollars bowls packed
the premium ingredients one hundred twenty g of onion, one
hundred and thirty ga egg, ten g fresh caviar, two
hundred and seventy g of swamp eel, four hundred g
of red prawn, two hundred g of small abalone. Customers

(16:26):
even add on twenty g of tomatoes. That's grant.

Speaker 5 (16:31):
What's the new groukit?

Speaker 1 (16:33):
So I would think if I saw this three hundred
dollars soup, first of all, I wouldn't get irritated. I
just wuldn't buy it. People get irritated at just seeing stuff.
I would think, Man, that thing must taste really good.
Once I got a Waggoo steak and they gave me
the paul print. The nose print wasn't the paw print
the nose print of the cow.

Speaker 5 (16:51):
I don't know what that mean. I've never heard of that.

Speaker 1 (16:53):
They gave me a certificate of the wagou to show
it was real and on it was the nose print.

Speaker 5 (16:59):
Of the cal because the cow doesn't have paused.

Speaker 1 (17:01):
It was bizarre, hoofs. It was bizarre. They were like,
we want to approve it.

Speaker 3 (17:06):
This is the cow you're eating. Yep, I don't need that.

Speaker 1 (17:10):
They said, we want to prove to you that this
is the finest of wagou, this cow was born at
this time, and here is a certificate and you take
it home with you, and it was the nose of
the cow. They made it nose print itself.

Speaker 3 (17:24):
Are there a nose prints unique to you? Know how
our fingerprints? No, two fingerprints are alike, no idea.

Speaker 1 (17:30):
They could have completely faked it. Yeah, it's not something
I have the ability to fact check. But I just
thought it was kind of bizarre. But they wanted it
to feel super special, so they did that and they
gave the print. Oh it's awesome. Yeah, but a part
of it could have been me mentally thinking it was
awesome because they gave me a nose print of the cow,
which meant it was super special. Yeah, it is weird.

(17:51):
The first selfree bar opens up in Washington, d C.
So no cell phones. If you've ever dreamed of a
night where nobody's glued to their screen. Your new favorite
bar may I've opened in DC. This is from Food Beast.
Hush Harbor is about unplugging and reconnecting. I would think
that they've done this so people can do drug deals. Wait,
what like if there's no cell phones in the bar,

(18:13):
I would think it's so they can do stuff in
the bar where nobody can record them. Oh right, right,
That's where my mind would go because I would also
think if I'm creating a bar and I'm saying nobody
can be connected, they're gonna be looking for reason to
get out of there earlier.

Speaker 3 (18:26):
But how do they even force it? They pat you down.

Speaker 1 (18:28):
No, you can take your phone in, you just can't
use it.

Speaker 6 (18:30):
You can't have it out, is what they're saying.

Speaker 1 (18:32):
Yeah, okay, I'm.

Speaker 3 (18:33):
Just like thinking, what do you do with your phone?
I'd like, at your wedding, didn't they get put in
a bag or something?

Speaker 1 (18:40):
We had the bags? Yeah, and this place does not
have the bags, but it's you can't have your phone out.
Went to a place once in Toronto and they were
taking us to eat at this place, and so I
think Mike and I went right, yeah, Toronto, And so
we go in and they're like, you can't have your
phones out, and I forget because where can you not
have your phone out? And I'm taking a picture of

(19:03):
Dan Levy Yeah? Oh really yeah, I was taking a
picture of him and they were like, put your phone down.
My bad. He saw me taking a picture of him
too in this place. Yeah, I know, total.

Speaker 3 (19:14):
Loser all Robert Redford died.

Speaker 1 (19:17):
I saw that. Really, I wasn't effective because the.

Speaker 3 (19:21):
Only reason why I brought up the story wait for It,
Wait for It, was the only person I thought might
be like impacted Eddie.

Speaker 5 (19:29):
I love his movies.

Speaker 1 (19:31):
What's your favorite Robert Redford movie? Probably Butch Cassidy and
The Sun Dance Kid? Is that really? I don't have
it is?

Speaker 3 (19:39):
I was looking up his movies and that is did
he do the original.

Speaker 1 (19:44):
La La La La la? Oh? Stars Born? I know
Chris Chostopherson was in Wow.

Speaker 5 (19:50):
You know he wasn't part of the Stars Stars Born.
He also did one with Barbara Streisan. It's really good.

Speaker 1 (19:55):
Maybe that's what I'm thinking about.

Speaker 5 (19:57):
It's the one that's a scattered picture, that's a good one.

Speaker 1 (20:02):
I think I was thinking of that one.

Speaker 3 (20:03):
Okay, so, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid came out
in nineteen sixty nine.

Speaker 5 (20:07):
Good movie. You guys should watch that one.

Speaker 1 (20:09):
Yeah, he was like the hottest dude. Yeah yeah, like
that was who America elevated for him, so so hot him.
And what's the guy's the salad dressing?

Speaker 3 (20:20):
Guy new Robert Movement, Paul.

Speaker 1 (20:25):
Heart Breach, No, you said it, Paul.

Speaker 3 (20:28):
Newman, the salsa salad dressing.

Speaker 4 (20:31):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (20:31):
It's crazy when you look back at old people that
were really attractive, but we didn't get to experience them.
We only saw pictures of them, and sometimes we only
saw them when they were older. But like Audrey Hepburn,
super hot, A plus. Do you see that with her?

Speaker 3 (20:46):
Yeah, yeah, Audrey Heppern, she's beautiful. Yes, I see it
with men and animum. I saw it with my dad, got
me and my mom, Like they were both very, very
very attractive people.

Speaker 1 (21:00):
Yeah, Audrey Hepburn A plus.

Speaker 6 (21:01):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (21:02):
The guy that died at twenty seven sunglasses James j
James Dean A plus.

Speaker 5 (21:07):
Yeah, good looking dude.

Speaker 1 (21:08):
Great looking guy. What was the guy's name who was
secretly gay? But he was a heart throb Carrie Grant. No,
was he gay?

Speaker 3 (21:18):
That's what I heard.

Speaker 1 (21:19):
That's what I heard. What you got people on the streets.

Speaker 3 (21:21):
No, Sam is Eddie, I thought that that was in.

Speaker 1 (21:24):
It's not rock rock Huts, rock Hutson, that's w yeah.

Speaker 3 (21:29):
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah yeah, sorry, Carry Grant. Maybe we
were thinking about rock Huts.

Speaker 1 (21:35):
Some really good looking guy. Yeah yeah, and I don't
even know the movies he was in, but you'd always
hear how he was seeing.

Speaker 3 (21:41):
Okay, so Carry Grant's sexuality is debated.

Speaker 5 (21:43):
There we go.

Speaker 1 (21:44):
No, but you heard he was married.

Speaker 3 (21:46):
Five times to women, but long term cohabitations. No, No,
he had a long term cohabitation with actor Randolph Scott.

Speaker 5 (21:54):
There you go.

Speaker 3 (21:55):
Man, So I think I did hear correctly.

Speaker 1 (21:58):
What what screams to me is the five times he.

Speaker 3 (22:00):
Was married and then the cohabitation with a man for
a very long time.

Speaker 1 (22:04):
Yeah, but I think I could have nailed it on
the five times he was married.

Speaker 3 (22:07):
Well, I mean my dad was married four times. He
wasn't gay.

Speaker 1 (22:11):
Well one more he would have been.

Speaker 3 (22:15):
Let me see here, who are you talking about?

Speaker 5 (22:16):
Rock rock Cutson?

Speaker 1 (22:18):
Rock Cutson, Yeah, good looking guy. Oh you know Elso
was really good like.

Speaker 3 (22:21):
Oh wow, godfather, he's cute.

Speaker 5 (22:23):
Oh Marlon Brando, when he was.

Speaker 1 (22:24):
Young, he was really good looking guy, but we only
know him as being old. Yep, you're dead now, right
he is dead? Yeah? Him at like twenty five, really
good looking guy. You know, al supposed good looking. That's
old now is she's still alive? I think she did
Martin Short, Meryl Street, Meryl Street.

Speaker 5 (22:46):
Yeah, yeah, she looks good for her age.

Speaker 1 (22:49):
No, when she was younger, I mean still yeah, but
I'm talking about young. But we don't get to see young.

Speaker 5 (22:55):
See. I thought Barbara streisand was never never got the
Barbaris anything. You watched the way we were and you're like, gosh,
she was kind of cute.

Speaker 1 (23:02):
I need to see a young Barbara Striis in, I
think I haven't. I just I thought Marcia Brady was
Marcia Marshall because I was a kid and I watched
the Brady Bunch from back in the sixties. I'd be like, dang,
I got a crush on her, But she was an
adult by then. Yeah, Barbara Stui's in. I don't. I
don't see it, man, Like I think if her talent
was lumped in probably I was.

Speaker 5 (23:20):
Always like I don't see it. And then I watched
the way we were and I'm like, gosh, she's really
likes she's pretty.

Speaker 1 (23:26):
Any other old people you guys want to put up there,
you can think of.

Speaker 3 (23:31):
Barbara Walters.

Speaker 1 (23:32):
I need to see her young.

Speaker 3 (23:34):
You'd love it.

Speaker 5 (23:36):
You'd love it kind of. I remember her young, like
I saw a documentary on her. I wouldn't put in
that category.

Speaker 1 (23:43):
It's pretty, but she's a she's like a pretty Martha
Stewart was she? Yeah?

Speaker 3 (23:48):
She was a model really and a trader, a day
trader or something.

Speaker 1 (23:53):
Marsha hold on Martha Stewart young. Oh yeah, she's pretty hot.
Really Yeah, who knew?

Speaker 3 (23:59):
Told you? And I don't know if they're called day traders,
stock trader, I don't know.

Speaker 1 (24:07):
That's pretty crazy. Like if you look at seventeen stunning
photos from a modeling career market h yeah, no idea
because yeah, she's just been in her life being older.

Speaker 5 (24:16):
Yeah, dude, you know who Elizabeth Taylor when she was young,
she was really pretty.

Speaker 1 (24:21):
I think so too.

Speaker 6 (24:22):
Let me take a look here, Jane Seymour.

Speaker 5 (24:25):
Yeah, I feel like she's still pretty, right, Yeah.

Speaker 1 (24:27):
That's what I'm saying. Elizabeth Taylor. Yeah, good good, no, no,
m man, she was so pretty when she's yeah, she's pretty. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (24:40):
And then when she was like Michael Jackson's friend, Like,
I didn't know what she looked like when she was younger,
so I'm like, oh, the old lady.

Speaker 1 (24:44):
Yeah, because when she was like Dynasty, right, when she
in a Dynasty, I.

Speaker 5 (24:47):
Don't know if I feel like she could be in
that show.

Speaker 1 (24:50):
Yeah, let me see Jane Seymour.

Speaker 3 (24:56):
What Jane Seymour's from.

Speaker 1 (24:58):
Yeah, doctor, qu medicine woman.

Speaker 5 (25:00):
Oh yeah, she's a civil shepherd.

Speaker 1 (25:02):
She was hot. You know who was really good looking?
Was the original Superman? Well, not the original, our original
Christopher Reeve. Yeah, when he was oh yeah young, it
was really good looking. M hmm. All right, well we

(25:23):
can move on. Yes, rest in peace too. Robert Redford.
All right, lunchboks.

Speaker 6 (25:29):
I love Taylor and Travis. You know it's my favorite
thing to talk about. Well, there's a farm in Missouri.
They are gonna make a bookoo amount of money because
they did a corn maze of Travis and Kelsey, Travis
and Kelsey, Travis and Taylor. Their engagement. It says Kansas
City is enchanted and it has their number Travis's number,
the number thirteen for Taylor. Two rings entwined and it's

(25:52):
their faces like holding each other. They're gonna make millions
of dollars.

Speaker 1 (25:55):
I don't know about millions, but that's cool. I mean,
that's that to me. I saw the other day Cornies. Yeah,
and they've done it for a few years. But the
fact that they do it and they can make it
look that close to real because it's big when you're
doing it down on the ground. It's like college bands
when they're on the field and they're making all these shapes,

(26:16):
Like the ability to put large people from nets from
zoom that far out and make it do little things.
They're pretty crazy.

Speaker 5 (26:24):
Agreed, Yeah, I wonder if they're using that technology of
the lawn. Have you seen that lawn mower that you
can program and it just kind of does whatever you want,
or even how they spray paint. They spray the football fields.
It's a it's a robot and they just like and
the thing machine just goes oood, spray's white, goes up,
a little more sprays white and next thing you know,
they paint the who footballield.

Speaker 6 (26:42):
You have a more they can do that's mow this
design and it mows it.

Speaker 5 (26:46):
Yeah, there's a mower that they just program on their
whatever and it just mows whatever you tell it to.

Speaker 1 (26:50):
It's a traditional grid based method and modern GPS technologies
with the designs often sketched on paper and translated to
a filled grid for manual cutting or imported into GPS
guided machinery for precise planning and the cutting of the maze.
There you go, that's pretty cool, awesome, uh, Morgan, all right.

Speaker 4 (27:09):
So there was this woman that got married back in
twenty twenty one and she got her pictures back and
there was this guy there, wedding crasher. Nobody knew him,
nobody had family friends, nobody knew who this guy was.
And so for four years she's been searching trying to
figure out just who was the person and why were
they at the wedding. But the hellp of social media
and influencer posted him everywhere, and within twenty minutes they

(27:29):
finally got a hit. This guy came forward and was like,
I was at the wrong wedding and I just kind
of got stuck there. So he's in these pictures and
he was like, my friend told me that there was
this wedding that I was supposed to meet him at
at this place and it turned out it was at
a different building.

Speaker 1 (27:45):
Yeah, he didn't really mean to crash it. Oh he
was at the wrong one. But he's in all of
the photos. He's everywhere else. That's also weird, Like, go
out of the pictures, dude, if you don't know that,
why are the pictures? I saw that story. That's a
good one, Eddie.

Speaker 5 (27:57):
There's a millionaire from Arkansas who went to Vegas one weekend,
fell in love with a stripper, started dating. They dated
for like two years, and they broke up, and now
he wants to sue her for thirty eight point five
million dollars, saying that the relationship wasn't real. She just
wanted my money.

Speaker 1 (28:15):
But does she have thirty eight point five million dollars?

Speaker 5 (28:17):
Oh she did. She took two point one million dollars,
but he went the rest is in damages, so she
really took two point one million dollars. He wrote checks
to her. She bought house with it, I mean bought
all kinds of stuff with it. And he's saying that, like, no,
she before they even met, she knew that that's what
she was going to do with me. So he's suing.

Speaker 1 (28:37):
I think the only way you could prove some sort
of fraud like that is if you had documentation of
her texting her friends saying I'm trying to defraud this
guy into marrying me. Otherwise that's just on you and
your little radar.

Speaker 3 (28:51):
Or if she had a whiteboard at her house like
her plan to meet him and seduce him, or that
she had retten newspaper clippings.

Speaker 5 (28:56):
Yeah, there's no word on any of that.

Speaker 1 (28:58):
Otherwise, Yeah, good luck with that lawsuit. You're not gonna
win because you can claim that if you divorce anybody,
if you're rich and it doesn't work out, you can
go Nope, they only wanted to be from the money.
That was such a terrible precedent. So unless there is
some sort of documentation of her and how dumb of
her she did, if she kept if she kept receipts
of her telling her friends, Hey, I'm gonna get this guy,

(29:19):
there's no way.

Speaker 5 (29:20):
Yeah, I thought that was crazy.

Speaker 1 (29:22):
It's a stripper and you're rich, what do you think
is gonna happen?

Speaker 5 (29:25):
And she bought her own house in Vegas with your money?
To me, that would have been like, wait, you're gonna
do what like, no live with me at least?

Speaker 3 (29:31):
Yeah, this guy seems like a dumb dumb huh yeah,
I mean his ego is hurt, so this is his
way of responding.

Speaker 1 (29:38):
But he should have known from the beginning. Like you're
dating a stripper in Vegas.

Speaker 6 (29:43):
It's kind of like, well, that's true love sometimes.

Speaker 1 (29:45):
I'm sure it does happen. I'm sure it does happen.

Speaker 5 (29:48):
We all have that friends like no due, she loves me?

Speaker 6 (29:50):
Oh we oh yes, sure we gotta go back, man,
we gotta go back. She come back tomorrow.

Speaker 5 (29:54):
She really likes me, for sure. It's different.

Speaker 1 (29:56):
Speaking of money, Raymundo wants to give us some advice
on what's DOOCKD buy. The last time he did this,
it was extremely profitable. I still have my Royal Caribbean,
which is up more than any stock I've ever bought
in my life. Right, what is your next piece of advice?
Go pro? You guys have heard of them, right, cameras cameras. Yeah,
and they used to have the knock them out, Like,
didn't they die in the market? They did.

Speaker 7 (30:15):
They used to have the market corner. Now they're basically
a penny stock, But it was at two dollars. In
this millionaire that I follow, he goes, Hey, I'm just
gonna give you guys, this low key go Pro has
a crazy ceiling and people have kind of forgot about them.

Speaker 1 (30:30):
They're gonna make a resurgence.

Speaker 7 (30:31):
And now I go on the internet and there's tons
of articles on if you get GoPro, you're gonna be
a millionaire.

Speaker 1 (30:38):
So it's two dollars, get go Pro. That's a pretty
like a vague thing to say.

Speaker 7 (30:44):
Vague but includes a word millionaire. Okay, so it's for
two dollars right now.

Speaker 1 (30:49):
Yeah, it's very cheap. That's not gonna make you a millionaire.
If it triples, he's gonna be six dollars. So you're
gonna make four dollars.

Speaker 3 (30:55):
So what's like give us an example of like what
your cruise stock has done, Like you bought it for
what and now it's what how much you bought?

Speaker 1 (31:02):
But I can tell you all of it go pro
at two dollars and twenty five cents right now on
bad ray. What's not bad that it's a low price.

Speaker 5 (31:09):
It's low. Yeah, you can buy a lot of stock.

Speaker 1 (31:11):
But that doesn't mean it's good just because it's low.
Actually would mean that the opposite. Well, Ray said he
can be a million millionaire. You gonna need to buy
half a million dollars in stock.

Speaker 5 (31:20):
Oh boy. So if it doubles, you make money.

Speaker 1 (31:23):
I'll buy one hundred shares at two dollars and twenty
five cents each. Yeow, And let's just see how it does.
I got to put a deposit in and it's a
guy I trust. He's uh, non't know him well, I
mean I know him from Instagram.

Speaker 7 (31:36):
But he was able to retire at fifty just because
he knows the stock market. He's a gambler now professionally.
Oh great, so he knows how.

Speaker 1 (31:42):
He Gettatrip married her.

Speaker 7 (31:47):
But yeah, I would, I would say trust him. He
created an insurance company and sold it and now he
just chis and does professional sports gambling.

Speaker 1 (31:56):
Let's see Royal Caribbean. I have made fifteen hundred dollars
about five shares, and I've profited fifteen hundred bucks. So
I don't really know what I bought it at. I
would imagine he's in the twenties twenty what No, it's

(32:18):
a three hundred and twenty bucks now a share? Well
then maybe it was around fifty, so I could do
the math here. If it's three twenty a share and
I have five shares, Yeah, I've made the most of
that than any stock aff in my portfolio.

Speaker 5 (32:31):
But you did buy that too. And during COVID when
like they weren't really running, right.

Speaker 1 (32:36):
Yeah, I kind of. Right after COVID, I think when
Ray said that, like they're about to hit, it's.

Speaker 5 (32:41):
A good fine Ray.

Speaker 7 (32:43):
Yeah, I mean that was my buddy in Fort Lauderdale.
He said he sees his ships coming in left and right.
They were still true.

Speaker 1 (32:47):
It's a crazy reason to buy stock though.

Speaker 3 (32:49):
He was buddy in Fort Lauderdale.

Speaker 1 (32:51):
Yeah, No, I know, I know. I just did it
as a bit to like follow it and it worked out.

Speaker 7 (32:57):
What Ray, Sorry, Well, no, I was just saying. He goes, hey, man,
you just put masks on. You can get on these ships.
Nobody knows about it if you live outside of Florida.
He goes, we're still rocking and rolling in the open seas.

Speaker 3 (33:06):
Oh, did they have to go by the same regulation
since they're in international.

Speaker 7 (33:11):
Wild Yeah, but he would the whole time he was
going on cruises.

Speaker 1 (33:15):
All you had to do is have a COVID test.

Speaker 5 (33:18):
Oh, so he was a customer, not an Employeeah.

Speaker 7 (33:20):
Customer, and it was dirt cheap, and he goes, dude,
wait until this thing's over. It's got to equate to
something good.

Speaker 1 (33:27):
And we did. You did? Yeah good. I've never sold anything, though,
so it's not like I've made money. I just have
I'm in the green on a lot of these, but
i haven't made money. I mean green's profit, but I'm
not like sold them. So I'm cracker burls. Back down.

Speaker 5 (33:43):
Oh they're back leveled out.

Speaker 1 (33:45):
No, back down, not even yes, boy, that whole thing
was a disaster. Get me started.

Speaker 5 (33:54):
I'll go there for lunch to thank you.

Speaker 1 (33:56):
Thank you. We thought, oh they're going to change, so
it's going to go back up. No, that's not what
happened at all. Okay, I did buy it when Tesla
bottom down. I did buy a bunch of Tesla really yeah,
I mean Tesla is a hot one, right. I don't
know what that means. Are you just saying that?

Speaker 5 (34:11):
No, well that's what they say, like Nvidia is hot
right now.

Speaker 1 (34:14):
Tesla was really doing bad for a while and now
it's back up, and so I got pretty fortunate there.
Tesla has made me a little more than n video has.

Speaker 3 (34:22):
Are we still Yeah?

Speaker 1 (34:24):
I would like my money back, though, When can I
get my money back?

Speaker 6 (34:26):
I'll give it to you tomorrow.

Speaker 5 (34:28):
Like you, you're gonna sell.

Speaker 6 (34:29):
No, I'll just give him his money and i'll keep
him mind in there.

Speaker 1 (34:32):
You're gonna keep it in If you want it, I'll
give it to you. What's what's the total at right now?

Speaker 5 (34:39):
Oh, he's getting the phone out and they take him minute.

Speaker 6 (34:44):
You guys don't give me any warnings. Man, let's see here.

Speaker 1 (34:53):
Off that WiFi.

Speaker 5 (34:56):
Past code.

Speaker 1 (34:58):
I won't my face be recognized the print.

Speaker 5 (35:01):
In the video.

Speaker 6 (35:02):
We're up three thousand, three hundred and twenty two dollars.

Speaker 1 (35:04):
I mean we're up one thousand each.

Speaker 6 (35:07):
Yeah, we're up seventy seven percent.

Speaker 1 (35:09):
So what's the total amount in there?

Speaker 6 (35:13):
We have a market value of seven thousand, five hundred
and eighty seven dollars worth of the video.

Speaker 5 (35:19):
Dude, that's crazy.

Speaker 6 (35:20):
We have forty three shares, so we have what forty
three shares?

Speaker 1 (35:24):
Now?

Speaker 6 (35:24):
How much total market value is? Seven thousand, five hundred
and eighty six dollars?

Speaker 1 (35:30):
Boom did by three? How much do we put in each? Remember?

Speaker 6 (35:35):
Well, you we put in about four thousand dollars total.

Speaker 3 (35:38):
What it must have been over time?

Speaker 6 (35:42):
Yeah, it was over time. It was over a few
month period. We kept I kept coming back to the
the table saying, guys, we need My guys are saying bye.

Speaker 1 (35:52):
I'm taking my cash to Vegas.

Speaker 3 (35:53):
That's when my shirt term memory comes in.

Speaker 6 (35:56):
Ninety percent of the experts still say buy the video.

Speaker 5 (36:00):
So lunchbox with you cashing them out and keeping the stocks,
that's like you just buying stock at the value now right, No,
it's just splitting the third.

Speaker 3 (36:09):
Yeah, he would only cash out you guys.

Speaker 5 (36:13):
Yeah, cash out you guys. But I guess, like what
my question is like, it's not the same.

Speaker 1 (36:19):
As if he would have bought back then from the beginning.
He's just cashing out what what we bought from the
beginning and are now?

Speaker 5 (36:28):
And then when do they take taxes out? Like do
you know how it works like when you pull a
stock out, like how they tax you? Then?

Speaker 1 (36:36):
No, they don't text you?

Speaker 3 (36:36):
Then okay, so you have to worry about that.

Speaker 5 (36:40):
Do you have to report it as Yeah, I mean
I don't know about this though, I don't know, I
will report it.

Speaker 1 (36:45):
Yeah, yeah, same, of course I will. Duh, of course
I just don't know who's of course.

Speaker 4 (36:51):
Well, I think they send you like a cheet I
don't know what kind of like one of those sing
a little delbie two.

Speaker 3 (36:56):
Yeah, something like that to give to your taxi. Twelve
forty nine. Yeah, yeah, for sure those numbers.

Speaker 1 (37:02):
Because i'm reporting, I'm pre reporting it. I'm reporting it
that I'm gonna have a report coming, so I'm gonna
take it and put it on a red. If I
can double it up, let's go.

Speaker 3 (37:11):
You probably will.

Speaker 1 (37:12):
Of course you're lucky. That's not true. We did not
hit our organ bet that you didn't bet. I was
feeling guilty about you, but I well, no, but you broke.
You didn't win.

Speaker 3 (37:21):
I didn't lose.

Speaker 1 (37:22):
He didn't lose.

Speaker 3 (37:22):
That's right, which is winning?

Speaker 1 (37:24):
All right? Ever, I have the stories out, Yeah, we
got stories.

Speaker 6 (37:27):
Is that all good?

Speaker 1 (37:29):
Eddie son wants Snapchat? But which son? My seventeen year old.

Speaker 3 (37:32):
Oh, every that's the way all kids communicate.

Speaker 1 (37:37):
My son wants tennis shoes.

Speaker 5 (37:39):
He has Instagram, he has TikTok. He just says, like, Dad,
my friends just communicate through Snapchat. And I'm like, yeah,
but that's also where they send like dirty picks.

Speaker 3 (37:49):
No, you sound okay, what happens, he can also vote
they could months.

Speaker 2 (37:54):
But.

Speaker 3 (37:56):
It has evolved. I do think I have to talk
to to co parent about this. Like my ex husband
who's he feels the same way about Snapchat, He's like,
you just never know what they could be sending back
and forth, which is like, okay, they could be doing
the same thing on Instagram, DM vanish or even text
they can do. I mean, Snapchat isn't what it used

(38:18):
to be and it is one hundred percent well I
can't say that, but I would say ninety percent of
the way they are. Well, it is going way back
where people used to send, but.

Speaker 1 (38:30):
They still do that. They still but the points they
can do it everywhere. Now you're you're penalizing one out
on one platform for what everybody can, right, But I.

Speaker 3 (38:37):
Would say that's not what they're using it for there.
It is their main form. They're send voice texts over Snapchat,
they send videos, they send all their texts, they make plans,
everything is on Snapchat. I watch it with my boyfriend's
daughter and she's seventeen. No, but he just got it
for his fifteen year old son. And of course you

(39:00):
regulate time like you can have only a certain amount
of time you can spend on it. But he's fifteen
and he's allowed it, and it's just my daughter has it.
I see how they use it. I'm paying attention, and
I'm like, Okay, she would be missing out on certain things,
which is not an excuse to get it. But we
think we want them to communicate by text, and they're
just not. They're doing it.

Speaker 5 (39:21):
Yes, we don't text that like they all do. They
all make their plans through Snapchat, and I'm left out
because I don't have Snapchat.

Speaker 1 (39:29):
The reason that you're worried they could be doing that
on the other platforms though.

Speaker 5 (39:33):
Sure, no one, And it's not that I'm just worried
about that.

Speaker 1 (39:36):
You're on Instagram vanished can send all the naked pictures
you want if you're worried about oh they send naked
pictures on this, He for sure could be doing it
on anything else.

Speaker 3 (39:44):
Yeah, they don't need Snapchat to do things like that.

Speaker 5 (39:49):
But don't you just open it up sometimes and then
you're just like, WHOA didn't want to see that?

Speaker 4 (39:54):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (39:54):
Yeah, like a while when I was on it, there's
a ding dong.

Speaker 5 (39:57):
See what I'm saying.

Speaker 1 (39:58):
Yeah, but I want my I Shaw Charlie Kurrk get
shot on Twitter. Didn't mean to right. There's so many
things that you can just open and be like, oh god,
I don't He's also an adult. He's like months away
from being an adult.

Speaker 6 (40:10):
Vote for the president almost, and you won't let him
have Snapchat.

Speaker 3 (40:12):
Okay, but I get that we've classified eighteen as adult.
But like their brains.

Speaker 5 (40:17):
Didn't say I didn't let him. I was asking you, guys, like,
he's the first time he's asked, really, like he's never
been there.

Speaker 3 (40:23):
And count yourself lucky because most kids start asking at thirteen,
I know.

Speaker 5 (40:27):
And then recently I've just been like, dude, why aren't
you like hanging out with your buddies. He's like, I
don't know what they're doing. I don't have Snapchat, And
I was like, well maybe, I was like, I don't
know if you should get Snapchat. And that's why I'm
going to ask you guys.

Speaker 1 (40:38):
Count yourself lucky.

Speaker 3 (40:40):
Yeah, that's that you're only dealing with it now because
in snapchat, that's one of the things. Ooh, you have
leverage with it, because that'll be the first thing to
go if we're in trouble. Snapchat is the first thing
that you're grounded from.

Speaker 1 (40:52):
Oh at your house, h both kids on it.

Speaker 3 (40:54):
Taking away Snapchat a lot. And then I realized and
then she deleted the app from her phone, but I
realized she was logging in through the browser.

Speaker 1 (41:01):
Got her.

Speaker 3 (41:03):
Yeah, so you know, you got to pay attention to
all things.

Speaker 5 (41:06):
Yeah, that's another question, like so how do you monitor Snapchat?
Like do you get on there?

Speaker 3 (41:11):
Do you have time limits on?

Speaker 5 (41:13):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (41:13):
Apps, yes, But also I've gotten on there before and
I thought that something I was seeing something that I
wasn't like at this one one of her friends had
posted a story and I thought she was like vaping
or something. So I took a screenshot of it, and
then the mom called me and was like, hey, my
daughter said that a screen shot came in from to
SHARE's account. But there's no ways to Share would have

(41:35):
done that because they don't screenshot because you get a notification.
And so she's like, I'm see she thought it might
be you, And I was like, well, yeah, there's this
picture of her and she's blowing out, but I guess
she was at some asthma treatment.

Speaker 1 (41:47):
Oh my god.

Speaker 3 (41:49):
Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah. I was like, well, I thought
you would want to know. She was like, well, thanks
for the heads up, but she's like, I just wanted
you know that the kids know if you snapchat or
if you screenshot their snaps. And I was like, yeah, yeah, yeah, noted.

Speaker 1 (42:04):
He's also almost eighteen and he's gonna have to start
making decisions that you don't get to monitor.

Speaker 5 (42:08):
Yeah yeah, I know I do.

Speaker 3 (42:11):
But to your point, Eddie, like you can in controls,
like I don't know how much he monitor phone, but
you can have like apps have a time limit.

Speaker 1 (42:17):
If he's eighteen it wants to move off, what do
you do?

Speaker 3 (42:19):
Move off?

Speaker 1 (42:20):
Where?

Speaker 5 (42:20):
Like out of the house? Good luck, man.

Speaker 1 (42:22):
And you're gonna just say that when you haven't even
let him have Snapchat the three months, gonna do hay.

Speaker 5 (42:27):
Wire on Snapchat? Like, dude, you can get Snapchat Like
I never It wasn't that I said, don't get Snapchat.
He has Instagram, he has TikTok. He's never had an
interest in Snapchat. The problem is is we have parental
controls for apps for him to download.

Speaker 3 (42:41):
Yeah, so that's monitor right.

Speaker 5 (42:43):
So no, no, no, So he hasn't had that app And
he said, I asked mom. A couple of times if
I get Snapchat and she just keeps brushing me off,
and I said, I don't know, let me think about it.
So I'm bringing it to you, guys. I'm not opposed
to Snapchat other than the reputation of back in the day,
like you see stuff you don't want to see, and
then with kids nowadays, they screenshot and then send it

(43:04):
to the whole school. And of course they could do
that on Instagram too, but he doesn't really post on Instagram,
but on Snapchat you think that it's gonna go away
in twenty four hours, so you're a little more free
about posting things.

Speaker 3 (43:14):
So like more so, it's a conversation of like, okay,
if you have it, like this is how we need
to use it, and these are some scenarios worst case
that could happen. So if we're going to use it,
let's be responsible with it. And if you trust him
in that way, then he can have it. Because I
think you're punishing him for worst case scenario, like you're trying.

Speaker 1 (43:31):
To I'm asking you, guys, wow, we're not a monitor anymore.
He's seventeen. I just think a seven year old is
way different than you guys. Do obviously you have them.

Speaker 3 (43:38):
Well, I have an eighteen year old. He's a monitor,
like's not. She's eighteen chronologically, but she's not.

Speaker 1 (43:45):
An orphanage in her But Eddie's kid did not.

Speaker 5 (43:48):
He's not there yet.

Speaker 1 (43:52):
It's because you haven't let him, because you know it's.

Speaker 5 (43:55):
Just the way he is.

Speaker 3 (43:56):
I'm like, why is your life three sixty off?

Speaker 1 (44:00):
I don't know. I just think of like a seventeen
year old. Like when I was seventeen, Well, no monitoring, nothing,
but you didn't have.

Speaker 3 (44:07):
Any but nobody was right, but I was trying.

Speaker 1 (44:10):
I was an adult. I was an adult at seventeen.

Speaker 3 (44:12):
You grew up a lot.

Speaker 1 (44:14):
I'm not saying like I'm an adult. I can't believe
he's not. I'm saying I have a different perspective because
when I was seventeen, full autonomy, not even just autonomy. Also,
I had to provide for myself, so decisions were made differently.
And now I'm thinking at seventeen, if someone were like, hey,
I want to monitor what you're doing? Yeah, right, like
I gotta pay freaking bills.

Speaker 5 (44:31):
I mean I know parents that are still monitoring their
kids in college, like through Life three sixty stay up
all night and be like, oh my gosh, they haven't
been home. It's three in the morning.

Speaker 1 (44:39):
No way.

Speaker 3 (44:39):
Yeah, well, some of that they're paying for college. You
paid for your own college. Some parents are paying for it.

Speaker 1 (44:45):
Again, I have no basis for this opinion. They're an adult.
You're paying so they can have a head start in life,
so they can get an advantage in life. Not so
you can control every aspect of their life.

Speaker 3 (44:57):
Yeah, I don't have to control. You just monitor but monitoring.

Speaker 1 (45:00):
No you No, you're monitoring so you can control. So
if something that you're monitoring you don't like, you can
step in and say something.

Speaker 5 (45:06):
Honestly, I'd rather not know, like when they go off
to college, Like I don't really want to know what
they're doing.

Speaker 3 (45:12):
So but I'm just saying what our parents had to
do because we didn't have any of those technology, so
were they're just like, I mean some of the things.

Speaker 6 (45:20):
They got to be just thinking the whole time. I
wonder what they're doing.

Speaker 1 (45:22):
Oh my god, it was the same thing. It's the
same thing, just different time. Because as soon as cell
phones happen, it's like I can call my kid at
any time. It's the same thing. Technology has gotten different
has grown, but it's the same the ability to connect.
I imagine back in the day when you could write letters,
Like can you imagine I can just send a letter
and hear what they're doing. Man, you need to stop
writing them letters every day. Let them grow. It's the
same thing. Just technology is different.

Speaker 5 (45:44):
This three point sixty though. I mean, you can tell
exactly where they are, like pinpoint better than like Apple
location or whatever. It's so accurate.

Speaker 3 (45:53):
It gives a little sneaker if they're walking.

Speaker 5 (45:54):
Yeah, they're walking. I saw him at a park that
en like, what are they doing? And then I'm like,
then I test him when he gets home, Like, what
you guys do?

Speaker 1 (46:01):
I went to a park. What do you guys do there? Oh?

Speaker 5 (46:03):
We were just like chasing each other. Got it, That's
what the sneakers were doing, running around circles.

Speaker 1 (46:08):
Got it. What about if your seventeen year old son,
here's a story that you will tell on the show
about being drunk at a park and leaving your wallet
back at my bachelor party. Do you worry about stuff
like that? No, because he's like, Dad, you're an adult
and you're drunk and making really careless decisions. You lost
your wallet.

Speaker 5 (46:30):
I didn't lose it because I was drunk.

Speaker 1 (46:35):
Listening to the story.

Speaker 5 (46:36):
I wasn't drunk. It fell out of my sweatpants.

Speaker 1 (46:38):
But you were wasted. You guys went to the bar
one in the morning.

Speaker 5 (46:40):
We've been drinking.

Speaker 1 (46:41):
Yes, you were drinking all day. Yeah, what did you do?
We're playing porn hoole.

Speaker 5 (46:46):
So we have that great idea going.

Speaker 1 (46:48):
Does he ever use that against you?

Speaker 5 (46:49):
No, I don't know if he knows those stories, but
if you ask, like, I can't wait for the day
that we can talk about that stuff, because right now
a lot of the conversations are very like, no, I
didn't do any of that. But once there's going to
be an age where like I'm no longer parenting you,
like we can actually be close and be friends. I'll
tell them all the stories.

Speaker 3 (47:08):
Like they my daughter of except her own little scenarios
of what happens. Like my brother in law and my
niece were in town. They're both of age, so my
and it was probably in our friend chases here. It
was probably like five thirty PM, and we were sitting
around the kitchen table and having cocktails. Mine was like
a mocktail, but they were all having like cocktails. My
daughter comes in from work and she's like, oh my gosh,

(47:30):
are y'all day drinking? And she had built this whole
story that we've been sitting around the table drinking all
day and we're like, it's five thirty. And I had
to convince her that we had him in sitting there
drinking all day, but like, that's okay, right.

Speaker 1 (47:44):
I can't understand. I don't understand what's okay and not okay.

Speaker 3 (47:46):
I don't know. I just didn't like her thinking that
we were Like I was uncomfortable the fact that she
thought we were day drinking.

Speaker 1 (47:53):
Oh was there anything wrong with that? Because everything was no.

Speaker 3 (47:55):
Because it was fine and everything. It was five thirty.
But I'm like, how are you having this perception that
we're sitting around day drinking. It's five thirty and we're
having a drink before we all go to dinner and
we're sitting around. But I got really defensive and was
like I wanted her to make sure she knew we
weren't day drinking, because I don't want her to be like, oh,
day drinking, I can day drink.

Speaker 1 (48:14):
I would assume it's because of the example you're trying
to set yeah, more so than what is right or wrong,
because I don't think it was wrong.

Speaker 3 (48:23):
No, I don't think so either. I guess it was
just a perception.

Speaker 1 (48:26):
A bit hypocritical, even though you weren't being and you
didn't want her to think that you were doing something
that you tell her not to do, and that in
turn could make you look like a hypocrite, which you
don't want to be and you weren't being.

Speaker 3 (48:36):
But then also in college, like I was day drinking.

Speaker 1 (48:39):
Yeah, yeah, but no, I just thought it was just.

Speaker 3 (48:42):
Funny, like how to fit I'm like day drinking, it's
five thirty. But also if it was three pm, who
you were.

Speaker 1 (48:49):
Worried about being a hypocrite and you weren't being a hypocrite.
But I can understand where that sensitivity would come in.

Speaker 3 (48:53):
It's just like a weird yeah, just thinking a back
let me just happened the other day and I hadn't
thought about it, but I just got so defensive and
it was a parenting moment where I was like, oh,
day drink. But then also if she's in college with
her friends, then they choose to do.

Speaker 1 (49:05):
That, like, and they're going to do it too. Yeah,
they're going to do that.

Speaker 5 (49:09):
I mean the other day, I was like, every day
when I got home from school, you know what I
did my homework.

Speaker 1 (49:14):
That was a lie.

Speaker 5 (49:17):
I never did that, but I want them to think
that that's what I did. And then later in life
of it, I never did that.

Speaker 1 (49:23):
Crowd and with their kids and your parents did it
with you? The never ending cycle. Yes, there is a
new Bobby cast up today with John Fogerty, who is
the lead singer of Creatid's clear Water Revival. Hope you
check it out. It's really great, especially if you love
like classic rock. Aim you have a pot up today.

Speaker 3 (49:40):
I do, and we started our four part series on
four Horsemen. Yes, good job, Eddie, I did.

Speaker 1 (49:46):
I was thinking about it when I left because I've
read a couple of books from that guy.

Speaker 3 (49:49):
Doctor John Gottman.

Speaker 1 (49:50):
Is one of the four horsemen. Contempt, Yes, got it.
That is the most.

Speaker 3 (49:55):
Evil one, maybe not the main but.

Speaker 1 (49:58):
The most evil, the main one that they see and
they're like it's over immediately.

Speaker 3 (50:02):
Yes, the main predictor for divorce or yes, write.

Speaker 1 (50:05):
Two of those books.

Speaker 5 (50:06):
What is contempt? I've heard that in Contempt at court,
I will hold you.

Speaker 1 (50:11):
I don't think hard one that's exactly the same. I
think content contempt, I'll go without a definition. To me,
is like a like a fundamental disgust, Like you're disgusted
based on like a rich history of being together. The
actual is the feeling that a person or thing is

(50:31):
beneath consideration.

Speaker 5 (50:34):
Dang, when you see your partner like that, it.

Speaker 3 (50:36):
Says, yeah under on his website, it's it's not.

Speaker 1 (50:39):
Just mad right now, you're just disgusted by the general
idea of them, and it's deep, deep rooted.

Speaker 3 (50:47):
That's like at the tough of his website says, contempt
is the worst of the four horsemen. It is the
number one predictor of divorce, but it can be defeated.
He offers an antidote. Yes, like it's your communication style,
that's rum we're in good. No, you have to actively
really try to because it is so destructive to relationships.

(51:07):
But if you choose to communicate in a different way,
you can save it. But if that's someone's main communication style,
gosh exhausting.

Speaker 1 (51:14):
Well, a lot of time with contempt too. There is
not a desire to remove contempt because it is it's
set in now. Contempt isn't something that happens today. Content
is something that over time vesters for a long time,
and then once it is understood that you have it,
it is so hard to shake it. And sometimes people
don't want to shake it because it's that ingrained into them.

Speaker 3 (51:36):
Yeah, so we don't touch on contempt today. Today's part one,
and we start with criticism.

Speaker 1 (51:43):
Yeah. I was thinking about that yesterday because I was like, man,
I knew more about that, but I didn't know how
I did. But I've read two books.

Speaker 3 (51:48):
Oh nice, Okay, So yeah, feeling things is amen caat.

Speaker 1 (51:51):
Criticism, Morgan said, a listener wrote us during our live stream,
and she's disappointed in the show. What was that about?

Speaker 4 (51:58):
So she's mad that we ever did the insider questions.
I believe she had called in at one point and
wanted you to do like ten insider questions.

Speaker 3 (52:08):
About the show.

Speaker 1 (52:09):
Oh, that's what it was.

Speaker 4 (52:10):
And she was mad that the segment never happened.

Speaker 1 (52:12):
Oh yeah, hey, listen, we've not gotten about one hundred
segments and just kind of forgotten. What did she write
the questions?

Speaker 4 (52:18):
No, I think we were gonna ask them from listeners,
like you were gonna be like, let's see what questions listeners.

Speaker 1 (52:23):
Have Okay, I will put a pin in that and
get back to that. I just forgot. I'm sure I
just forgot.

Speaker 4 (52:29):
So I guess if listeners have insider baseball questions, they
want to ask.

Speaker 1 (52:32):
Oh, that's why you said baseball. It's like she wants
it's not called insider baseball. That's why I was confused.
I thought she wanted me to talk about baseball, and
I thought that was weird. Inside baseball.

Speaker 3 (52:41):
Yeah, sorry, I don't know, no.

Speaker 1 (52:43):
No, no, easy, it's an easy mix up. Inside Baseball
isn't actually about baseball. Yeah, yeah, insider baseball, it's about baseball.

Speaker 5 (52:50):
I think there might be a show called that too.

Speaker 1 (52:54):
All right, we're done, Thank you guys. Hope you guys
have a great day, and we will see you tomorrow. Goodbye, everybody,
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Hosts And Creators

Bobby Bones

Bobby Bones

Amy Brown

Amy Brown

Lunchbox

Lunchbox

Eddie Garcia

Eddie Garcia

Morgan Huelsman

Morgan Huelsman

Raymundo

Raymundo

Mike D

Mike D

Abby Anderson

Abby Anderson

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Scuba Steve

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