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April 7, 2026 53 mins

Sheryl Crow commented on our Instagram to call out Lunchbox on going to her house. A listener wants to know if Eddie has eaten a hot dog since his challenge last year when he tried to eat 70 in 24 hours. A musician was denied access to enter a country. Bobby talks about a member of Congress demanding the Department of Defense hand over 46 classified military videos that insiders say capture unidentified aerial and underwater phenomena. Amy shared how she is manifesting her dream of doing something she is afraid to do alone. Eddie might be going to the World Cup and why a CEO of a company wants to meet him. We also discuss how impulsive we are when it comes to saving money.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:05):
Okay. So I saw Cheryl Crow comment on our Instagram
yesterday and Lunchbox was not at Cheryl Crow's house.

Speaker 2 (00:13):
Oh really? Yeah, She's like that wasn't my house?

Speaker 1 (00:16):
Was her parents house or something? Yeah? Parents, we start
the time. So it popped up in my feed. Lunchbox
said he went to an estate sale at Cheryl Crow's house,
and I was like, dang, that's crazy that she would
just have people at her house. Morgan, will you read
her message?

Speaker 3 (00:32):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (00:32):
She said, Oh, Radio Lunchbox, I love you and mister
Bobby Bones and Radio Amy. The house is my mom
and dad's and when my mom became very ill, they
moved back to our hometown. And yes, I have collected
what I love andly call interesting crap for years and
decided to unload. And we are actually selling the house. Lunchbox,
you should buy it.

Speaker 1 (00:51):
Yeah, so it did feel weird that he was at
Cheryl Crow's house.

Speaker 2 (00:54):
Yeah. She was just like out running errands or something
for the day while people shopped her home.

Speaker 1 (01:01):
I bought a brick and that when he bought like
two bricks or something. So there's that. I want to
play Ray play Voicemail number one Please Hi.

Speaker 3 (01:08):
This is Christy from Austin, Texas. My coworker has a question,
but he's too shy to ask you guys, even leave
a voicemail, So I'm going to do it for you, Randall.
Randall wants to know if Eddie has had a chance
to look at a hot dog or eat a hot
dog since the hot dog eating contest he did a
few months back, so he just wants an update on that.

(01:30):
But again he's too scared to call, so I'm doing
it for him.

Speaker 5 (01:33):
Thanks.

Speaker 6 (01:34):
Yeah, Randall, A funny question because I was it like
a week ago, two weeks ago, I had my first
hot dog since the competition, which I guess how long ago.

Speaker 1 (01:44):
Was that you were outside when you vomited, so it
must have been pretty winter.

Speaker 6 (01:48):
Yeah, it was warm.

Speaker 1 (01:49):
Had to be foolish.

Speaker 6 (01:50):
I was wearing shorts.

Speaker 1 (01:52):
Yeah, Eddie tried to eat what seventy.

Speaker 6 (01:54):
Seventy hot dogs and I made it to twenty one
and threw it all up.

Speaker 1 (01:57):
Was wow. So what I remember was watching Eddie's live
stream and he was outside, so that's how I remember.
It was warm when he vomited.

Speaker 6 (02:04):
Man, and I thought I was I thought I was
I was doing fine. I thought I was gonna do it,
and then man, I took twenty one down and it
just like it forcefully just all came out.

Speaker 1 (02:13):
Did you have a few months where you couldn't look
at a hot dog, couldn't smell it? Like, how was
it when you had it normal?

Speaker 6 (02:20):
It's almost like my body had gotten rid of that trauma, thankfully.
But therapy. He went to hot dog therapy just time,
because my kids have hot dogs all the time and
I would be like, oh, I don't want to look.
And then finally the other day it's like I think
last week my wife was like, I'm just doing hot
dogs for dinner, like I we don't have food, and
I was like, you know what, I'm starving, Just give
me one of those, and I ended up eating two.

Speaker 2 (02:42):
Nice.

Speaker 1 (02:43):
I love hot dogs.

Speaker 2 (02:43):
You're back.

Speaker 1 (02:44):
Yeah, there's a place where we go down to Urban Market,
which is nearish our house. They make great hot dogs.
I don't know what it is about him. Maybe it's
because most places, like real restaurants, don't have like an
adult hot dog where it's on the adult menu. And
I go, no, Ali, I'm not a big Ali guy.
I don't like mayonnaise is an Ali kind of a mayonnaise, yes, so,

(03:05):
and who puts aoli on a hot dollar?

Speaker 6 (03:07):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (03:07):
Well urban market yeah yeah.

Speaker 1 (03:10):
And urban as in it's spelled h g r b
an like herbs O.

Speaker 5 (03:14):
This plays on my list.

Speaker 2 (03:15):
They're good. Oh yeah, I haven't tried it yet. It's
so good. That's where the people that took my credit
card went.

Speaker 1 (03:20):
Yeah. Yes, and they ate on Amy's dime for like
six months.

Speaker 6 (03:24):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (03:24):
It's not fancy.

Speaker 2 (03:26):
Yeah, it's like a kind of a cafe, stand in.

Speaker 1 (03:28):
Line and it's got a grocery store in it too,
stand in line to order. But they had a hot dog.
It's like farmed a table and so if we ever order,
and sometimes I'll drive down because you can't really get
that delivered. Do you ever get delivered?

Speaker 2 (03:39):
No? I always pick it. I mean I pick it
up to go.

Speaker 1 (03:42):
No, nope. So yeah, good hot dog. Okay, let's go
around the room. Maybe.

Speaker 2 (03:49):
So, if you were planning on going to the Wireless
Festival in UK, what's that? Well, Kanye what ye yeah? Ya? Kanye?

Speaker 1 (03:57):
Is it yea yeah?

Speaker 2 (03:58):
Yeah yay Yay was headlining and the UK has denied
him access to enter the country because of his remarks.

Speaker 1 (04:10):
Like his behavior the two shows he did in California,
like eighty thousand people there, wow last week?

Speaker 6 (04:16):
Oh my, and this is like his return, Right, how
long has he been not playing?

Speaker 2 (04:21):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (04:22):
He continued to play a little bit in like other countries,
right Mike, occasionally pop up doing a festival or something.
He like, those.

Speaker 2 (04:27):
Countries must have been fine with him entering. But the
UK says for the last several years West has caused
outrage for a string of anti Semitic, racist and pro
Nazi comments and we are denying his access into the
United Kingdom. As a result, Wireless Festival is canceled and
refunds will be issued to all ticket holders.

Speaker 1 (04:45):
So my thoughts on this is, yes, all the things
that he said were terrible, and I do not agree
with him in any way. But I wonder where it
comes in because he did come out and say I'm
sorry and I had mental illness, and right Mike, he
came yeah, like maybe brain damage from his car wrecked.
Like he said all of these things to go. Dang,

(05:08):
I wish I wouldn't have said that. I don't believe that. Like,
where does forgiveness come in? Because he said literally the
worst thing you could say Nazis the worst. They were
literally killing Jewish people because they were Jewish the worst.

(05:31):
But then he says out of mental illness, and I'm
not taking medicine for it. I believe there's some nuance here.
And I'm not saying Kanye is forgiven. I'm not saying
we should. I just wonder how people feel about this.
What do you think you're Kanye? I mean, I love
Kanye's music, by the way, it's awesome.

Speaker 5 (05:46):
He was putting out merch and stuff like there with
this swashed I know I'm around him like you do.
You can't do that. I've stopped listening to him.

Speaker 6 (05:52):
I can't.

Speaker 5 (05:53):
I can't go back and little low I'm done.

Speaker 1 (05:55):
What if he continues to say I screwed up. It's
from the ur accident that I was in where I
had brain damage and I was off my meds.

Speaker 5 (06:03):
I think he went so hard on it for so
long that it was too much for me. I can't
look at his music the same way, and I'm just
I'm good.

Speaker 1 (06:10):
I feel like I wouldn't have gone to that show.
I feel like it's gonna take consistent years of him
being like I was wrong. I shouldn't have done that
in him doing things to actually build towards the community
that he was so nasty to for me to even consider, Hey,
that's a guy that I'll support, because I can't support

(06:33):
him now. But I do think there is a path
to redemption for everybody. But when you do really bad things,
it takes a really long time to get that redemption back.

Speaker 2 (06:44):
They just said overall, the decision was made because his
presence would not be conducive to the public good.

Speaker 1 (06:52):
He has much countries, he's doing his tour end, he's
going all over the world doing it. But yeah, they
did eight thousand people. I think two nights in la
played all the heads like Lauren Hill showed up. I
was just surprised she showed up. Yeah, I know she
played with him. I was justly showed up.

Speaker 5 (07:06):
Four hours late.

Speaker 1 (07:07):
Yeah at all.

Speaker 6 (07:08):
Wasn't he late? Like I remember like at Austin City
Limits Festival or something, he was the headliner and he
didn't he showed up like two hours late.

Speaker 1 (07:15):
I don't know. I'm sure this is like I don't know,
a few years ago. So yeah, oh.

Speaker 2 (07:20):
Oh, which Yay said, call him Kanye literally, Okay, sorry, Well,
I was trying to be Okay.

Speaker 1 (07:26):
You think weird, Like.

Speaker 2 (07:28):
No, So Kanye, Kanye understands that words aren't enough and
he'll have to show change through his actions if people
are open, like he's here for it. So for some
countries that are holding their boundary or some fans that
are holding their boundary, it may take time and maybe
through his actions there can be more of a like

(07:52):
like you were saying a redemption story here, But I
think it's going to take time.

Speaker 1 (07:55):
It's going to take a lot, and I don't even
know and who cares about me, right, I don't even
know if I would give it, But I'm open to
anybody trying to work away from the terrible things they did.
But the more terrible, the more work. And there's a
lot of work because that's some terrible stuff like the worst.
You're right, Mike, he's been out merch with watch on it,
and I.

Speaker 5 (08:14):
Think if you wanted to like double down so much
on it, it would have been different, like if you
just made one comment like Okay, I understand, but he
went so hard for so long it's it's too much.

Speaker 1 (08:23):
I guess there's just nobody in his circle that could
have that could stop him either.

Speaker 6 (08:28):
Now is there anyone in music that you've just completely boycotted.
And Mike said he can't listen to Kanye now.

Speaker 1 (08:36):
Boycotted Like I mean, I love. I believe I can
fly from R Kelly?

Speaker 6 (08:40):
Right, and if it comes on, you're still listening to it, right, it.

Speaker 1 (08:42):
Doesn't come on?

Speaker 2 (08:43):
Nobody plays it?

Speaker 1 (08:44):
Yeah, nobody. Where would that come on? I wouldn't chase
it down anyway, even if he hadn't done that. I
don't know that I'm going to track down. I believe
I could fly.

Speaker 2 (08:51):
I guess the way I would put it. Sometimes Popa's
in my head.

Speaker 6 (08:54):
I'll sing that's like coming back on.

Speaker 2 (08:56):
But then I'm like, ah, dang, R Kelly such a shame.
Uh did he see that?

Speaker 6 (09:03):
Popped on my playlist the other day? And I was
just like, all right, I didn't even think about it.

Speaker 2 (09:06):
No, it's such a bummer. It's a shame. Can't I
don't want to listen to it.

Speaker 6 (09:10):
Michael Jackson comes on all the time, Michael.

Speaker 2 (09:12):
Jack I don't I think he's innocent.

Speaker 6 (09:15):
Michael Jackson.

Speaker 1 (09:15):
I don't die, but I don't believe Michael Jackson ever
touched a kid inappropriately. Yeah, but people still say it okay,
but I don't believe he did.

Speaker 2 (09:22):
But did he We know he did, kid, no, no, no,
but we know he was abusive to women and men.

Speaker 4 (09:30):
Yeah. Chris Brown is another one for me. I can't
listen to Chris Brown.

Speaker 1 (09:34):
I don't anyway. Yeah, I never have to wrestle with
that because I don't listen to Chris Brown.

Speaker 6 (09:38):
Any Like one of his big songs, run It, Run It,
mm hmm.

Speaker 1 (09:42):
It's before you.

Speaker 2 (09:46):
Popular.

Speaker 1 (09:47):
It was before you when he was a pop artist.
And then you're not young enough to like him as
a normal as an artist.

Speaker 6 (09:53):
Now, okay, I guess, and you were in pop radio, yes, yeah,
that helps.

Speaker 2 (09:58):
Yeah, I mean the story. But when that broke, that
was huge for like, Rihanna and Chris were everything and.

Speaker 1 (10:05):
I don't know about everything.

Speaker 2 (10:06):
Well, we were playing them a lot and talking about
them a lot, and it was shocking that he did
that to her.

Speaker 1 (10:11):
Yeah that's true, but I mean I would say everything.

Speaker 2 (10:14):
No, no, I mean there it was like a.

Speaker 1 (10:16):
Top five pop artist. Rihanna was wasn't ever that level. Okay,
that's big, but he dirt bag.

Speaker 2 (10:24):
I don't know that they had a nickname.

Speaker 1 (10:26):
Uh yeah, dirt bag. That's bad news. That picture is
still bad news. Uh okay, thank you for your story.
Congress demands release of forty six secret government UFO videos.
A member of Congress is demanding the Department of Defense had
over forty six classified military videos at insider say capture
unidentified aeroline underwater phenomena and A. Paulina Luna of Florida,

(10:47):
who chairs the House Task Force on the Classification of
Federal Secrets, sent a letter to Pete Hegsith setting April
fourth deadline. Sources who have viewed the videos say they
include clear, full color footage. They're for sure hiding stuff
from us. They're for sure like I'm not even like
probably for sure, for sure, for sure, it's crazy and
it's a slow roll. And when we'll disclosure ever happen,

(11:10):
I don't know. I was talking about it yesterday. I
want to shay a picture with a guy named Drew
McIntyre on the Bobbycast. But I want to show you
a picture Drew before I tell you who he is.

Speaker 2 (11:22):
Okay, it looks big, looking very big, because you know
you're six one.

Speaker 1 (11:28):
How big do you think he is?

Speaker 2 (11:30):
He is six seven sixty six.

Speaker 1 (11:34):
And he's wearing shoes. But yes, probably six six six
seven on the shoes two seventy five. He was just
a WW champion wrestling. Oh okay, lost it. But he's
been world champion, he's been Intercontinental champion. But he's from
Scotland and when he was a kid, he like sent
off freedom of information to the FBI to get a
bunch of stuff. And he's way into I hate to

(11:56):
say aliens because it just is invokes the thought of
little green men. He's into that and we talked about
that a bit yesterday. Crazy those Scottish people, Man, they
eat some crazy food. They probably said the same thing
about us.

Speaker 6 (12:08):
What do they eat?

Speaker 1 (12:09):
They had something called black pudding. This comes out of
next week's episode. It's pig's blood.

Speaker 2 (12:13):
Oh what do they put it on?

Speaker 6 (12:16):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (12:16):
I eat pudding by itself.

Speaker 6 (12:17):
Put in like in a cup, right mind.

Speaker 5 (12:19):
Yeah, it kind of looks like like dried sausage. But
it's red really because it's blood. Because it's just blood.

Speaker 1 (12:24):
Do they put it's called black pudding? Yeah, you know
it's red. I didn't know that. I don't know, dude,
I don't like.

Speaker 6 (12:28):
I think it must put some kind of sweetener in that.

Speaker 1 (12:30):
I'm sure there's some added elements. You don't drink the blood.

Speaker 5 (12:32):
It's like it was so dark that it's like kind
of blackish red.

Speaker 1 (12:35):
Whoa they eat in Scotland pig intestines. Okay, we eat
cow intestines, oh for sure, But it's just weird to hear.
No Mexicans eat we eat everything white. We eat a
lot of hot dogs. And you know what, I know
what that is a bunch of butttholes Intestine that's just
got a better name. Yeah, but yeah, there's for sure

(12:58):
something going on. So they want these videos to come out.
If it does come out that there are things bigger, stronger,
faster than us, do you think the world freaks out.

Speaker 2 (13:08):
I think we've been we're slowly getting used to the
idea that it exists. And maybe that's the point. Maybe
that's what they're doing, is we because if they just
hit us with this stuff, I don't know that we
would have been able to handle it. But if you're
paying attention, then I feel like there's been enough the
last couple of years where you're sort of like, well, okay,

(13:29):
I'm not shocked by this.

Speaker 1 (13:30):
One of the reasons that these government officials say that
we don't share stuff is because we don't want other
countries to know what we have, because they may have
more than us or less than us. Meaning if we
have found we'll just say craft. It can be aircraft, watercraft,
whatever it is, and we have their technology that we're
trying to reverse engineer. And then China or Russia or

(13:51):
any of our adversaries find out that we have less
than they do and we know less than they do,
they may feel like, well, we're stronger than they are.
We can now overtake them. So if we don't what
we have, everyone is still going I wonder what they
have if we go at them, will they have more
than us. That's one of the reasons that we don't
share the technology that we found.

Speaker 2 (14:10):
That makes sense.

Speaker 6 (14:11):
You know those doomsday fish we've heard of those, Yeah,
the ones that keep coming up on shore and like
they're like for years they were never it was a
species that was so deep sea they would never even
come close to the shore. Now you start thinking, like, well,
why are they coming up? Is there something deep, deep
deep where they're just like get away from that.

Speaker 1 (14:30):
I looked into that a little bit and they don't
really have a good answer. But the plates like the
shift tectonic plates. Yes, yes, I have been shifting a
little more in the last decade or so. Which if
that is deep under the ocean, it literally can just
affect the fish, the animals.

Speaker 6 (14:49):
That are bulleted.

Speaker 1 (14:49):
Yeah, yeah, and so that could be a reason, or
it could be. There was talk of I was listening
to congressman I think Tim Burchett is his name, about
how a government official, a military official, was telling him
that there was something as large as a football field
as long as it going one hundred miles an hour underwater.
Oh what, And that we don't have submarines to do,

(15:11):
first of all, not near that big. And second of all,
mac speed forty miles an hour underwater.

Speaker 2 (15:17):
Well, so is it some sort of underwater aircraft that
is made by the aliens?

Speaker 1 (15:24):
See it's weird to say alien because everybody gives whatever
I know, because.

Speaker 2 (15:27):
It makes it the unidentified yes beans things.

Speaker 6 (15:33):
Could it be another country?

Speaker 1 (15:35):
Could Mike? What do you say?

Speaker 5 (15:36):
It says that he believes that non human intelligence may
have bases on her like underneath, but he's bases.

Speaker 1 (15:43):
He's in the committee. I'm drinking this Starbucks, my dragon fruit.
It's so good.

Speaker 6 (15:47):
I know.

Speaker 1 (15:47):
We talked about on the show, like for those who
think would just add like I'm seventy percent down here
and I'm trying to drink enough water too.

Speaker 6 (15:55):
But back to the ocean thing, which yes, I think that,
like the ocean would be a great place to get
on Earth and no one can see you.

Speaker 1 (16:02):
Yeah, because we haven't explored the ocean. We don't know
anything about the ocean.

Speaker 6 (16:06):
And I know that the crews we were only like
in the like close, you know, like barely in the Gulf,
barely in the Atlantic Ocean. But out there there was
so much traffic of you're talking about surface no, no, no, down,
we're talking about down. I understand. But they've got to
start somewhere, like I think they right. The theory is
they come from space and then go down from come up,

(16:30):
So they were there for to begin with.

Speaker 1 (16:31):
They could have been or there could be We don't
know what's at the bottom of the ocean in the
deep parts. It's unexplored completely, right.

Speaker 6 (16:36):
I thought it was more of like, oh, they came
and they're like the ocean is so unhabited.

Speaker 1 (16:42):
Uninhabited, but that's it.

Speaker 6 (16:44):
It's so like unknown that no human would even see
us going through the ocean.

Speaker 1 (16:49):
But there have been videos of things going into the
water as well.

Speaker 2 (16:52):
Right, so the are they are they going into the water?
They were turning to the water.

Speaker 1 (16:56):
Right, Are they coming from the middle Middle Earth?

Speaker 6 (16:59):
I always assume Bomed that they're coming from outer space.

Speaker 1 (17:02):
That's an assumption.

Speaker 6 (17:04):
I assumed they're coming from outer space, and that's how
they get to because if they come to on land,
like we're pretty much everywhere on land, cameras people everywhere.

Speaker 1 (17:13):
We have cameras. We're seeing them fly around already, and
we don't know.

Speaker 4 (17:16):
What they look like either, like you're assuming we know
that they don't look like us, or they're aversion of
us too.

Speaker 2 (17:22):
But to Eddie's point of if they were to come
from above space space, then the reason why this congressman
is saying unidentified human or whatever object or whatever it is,
if the if they are coming from deep down within
Earth's core, they're from Earth. Yes, so they're they're not

(17:49):
they're not aliens.

Speaker 1 (17:51):
That's why they don't say aliens. Right, That's why that's.

Speaker 2 (17:53):
Why I know, I was just putting that together of like.

Speaker 6 (17:55):
Whyn so non human could like Aquaman. Well, you're doing
very no, no, no, but that's a whole civilization underwater.

Speaker 1 (18:03):
Okay, sure, Atlantis Atlantis Atlantis was never real, but well, yeah,
I don't understand the point you're trying to make.

Speaker 6 (18:13):
The point I'm trying to make is when we were
on the cruise, there were a lot of vessels out there,
and I'm assuming Transatlantic traffic boats their boats everywhere, and
I feel like they would see anything.

Speaker 1 (18:28):
There are videos of things going into the water that
are unexplainable too, So if you're saying things are coming
from space and we don't see them.

Speaker 6 (18:34):
I never hear like sailors saw this, or sailors recorded this.
All the time I recorded. I hear pilots saw this.

Speaker 1 (18:40):
Yes, So I still don't understand your point. I mean,
if things can't go in the water because we haven't
seen them.

Speaker 2 (18:46):
He's saying because when we were out on our cruise,
he didn't see anything.

Speaker 1 (18:49):
So that's what I feel like. We can't even stop
pirates in other parts of the ocean because the ocean
is so big and vast and we're not everywhere, So
it's for us to be able to think we'd see everything,
and also that oir eyes could see if something was
coming from above under. We don't see all around us
right now, all of the different cell phone yeah, microwaves

(19:09):
in any.

Speaker 6 (19:10):
Of that cellular different planes. Yeah, which is crazy. Like
if we had a device to show all the waves
that are in the air right now, we.

Speaker 1 (19:18):
Probably freak out. We freak out. Okay, let's go, Eddie,
You're sorry.

Speaker 6 (19:24):
Yeah, mine's really cool. So you know the game Rocket League, Yeah,
where you play cars and you hit the ball into
the net with the cars. Yeah, so Amy, it's like soccer,
but with the cars, Like you can chow the cars
and the car hits the ball and you try to
get it in a goal. In Vegas they have real
life Rocket League. It's in the desert. They have a
course and everything, and anyone can do it. So next

(19:46):
time we go to Vegas, which is probably iHeart Festival,
we should go play Rocket League in cars.

Speaker 1 (19:52):
You act like we have the time to do that.

Speaker 6 (19:54):
You're right, it'd probably take a little bit. But how
cool is that?

Speaker 2 (19:57):
I have no desire.

Speaker 1 (19:58):
I don't have desire either really to like trying to
hit you get carsick playing car soccer. I think that
would be fun for some people.

Speaker 6 (20:06):
You're burst in my bubble forget carsick. Do you get
carsick when you drive or just passenger.

Speaker 1 (20:11):
If I'm driving a lot of curves. Yeah, Like whenever
we were driving the hun days on the racetrack, I
was driving. I got carsick when we.

Speaker 6 (20:17):
Were what do you call it? When we were drifting?

Speaker 1 (20:18):
Yeah, well, I don't know that I was drifting. You
people drifted without me. I was racing. I was trying
to beat speed time.

Speaker 6 (20:24):
Oh that's right, that's right. I drifted with a professional drifter.

Speaker 1 (20:27):
They wouldn't let me drift. I flip it. But I
was getting carsick driving it because of how hard the
turns were. I feel like Rocket League would be that.

Speaker 6 (20:34):
It's just funny. Like I remember watching it playing Rocket
League and be like this is so dumb, like this
is never realistic. But the fact that people are using
real cars and playing Rocket League, it looks so cool,
and there's videos of it. It looks awesome.

Speaker 4 (20:46):
Morgan, all right, So there was a woman visiting Florida
and she saw somebody struggling to swim in the ocean,
and she ran in to go help him, and she's
instructing him to get on his back, let the waves
carry him in and stuff. And she found out a
couple hours later. This man was a wanted murderer alleged

(21:06):
for killing his wife and her lover.

Speaker 2 (21:08):
She saved him.

Speaker 4 (21:09):
She tried, Yes, she was attempting, but he responded to
her when she kept trying to save him and said
that he was going on a long vacation. So it's
assumed he was trying to take his life after committing
the murder. He's still on the run. He's still not found.
Oh my, Yeah, but she didn't find out he was
a murder until a couple hours later. So she was

(21:30):
just trying to help a person.

Speaker 1 (21:31):
Weird and that person didn't want to be helped. But
now the person's running or.

Speaker 2 (21:36):
He already took his life. I don't know so, but yeah.

Speaker 4 (21:39):
So he had found his his wife of thirteen years
with her lover, and he told him.

Speaker 2 (21:45):
Both what a weird story of Like, now before you
help somebody have to be like, hey, are you cool?
You evil? Did you just murder anybody?

Speaker 1 (21:54):
There's a former US Air Force Master Sergeant Alan Hayward
James has cleayed a guilty to ann thirty seven million
dollar fraud scheme in which he manipulated it contracts to
inflate costs and siphon money to himself.

Speaker 2 (22:05):
Hmmm, thirty seven million.

Speaker 1 (22:08):
He defrauded the military at thirty seven million dollars.

Speaker 6 (22:10):
I mean, that's so gutsy, like you're gonna steal from
it's just people that do these kind of schemes. It's
gutsy anyway, but like you're gonna get caught right eventually.
But the fact that go after like the government, that's crazy.

Speaker 1 (22:22):
I would argue that they do them because other people
have instructed them how to do it and they never caught.
I think most people don't get caught doing this.

Speaker 6 (22:29):
I think only those people.

Speaker 1 (22:30):
Yeah, I would think most of these fraudulent schemes that
happen people get away with.

Speaker 6 (22:36):
But can they just stop though, Like I think a
lot of them just like, oh, we got away with that,
let's do another one. Then that's when they get caught,
when they do their fifth one.

Speaker 1 (22:44):
This guy was doing it for nine years. Wow, Yeah,
he probably never thought he get caught. There's probably some
mess up, But I would think most of these that
are happening by intelligent people know that they can do
it for a long time and they don't get caught.
And that's why such news when it does.

Speaker 2 (22:57):
Happen, Mean, how do you hide that amount of money though,
Like you're a mass so you're enlisted in the Air Force,
so you're not even an officer and you have all
this Like are you living a lavish life or is
the money hidden somewhere because like.

Speaker 1 (23:11):
I don't know. The stolen funds were funnel through shell
companies and fake salaries, even covering luxury trips for associates.
Prosecutor to say the scheme not only to try the taxpayers,
but undermined competition. Forty five years in prison, he's facing
and he's got to pay restitution. But you ain't gonta
get that money back.

Speaker 6 (23:26):
Money's gone.

Speaker 1 (23:27):
Yeah, sorry, money gone, Mike. We had me that sheet
that I have those other topics on. Moved down here.

Speaker 2 (23:32):
Forty five years in prison.

Speaker 6 (23:34):
It's a long time.

Speaker 1 (23:36):
I know, it's a lot of money.

Speaker 2 (23:38):
So it is a lot of money. I know, just
over here thinking it's so interesting how some people get
put away and some people don't.

Speaker 1 (23:44):
A Texas mother's been charged with medical child abuse after
allegedly spending years fabricating her three year old son's illness
to get him unecessary surgeries and treatments. She should go
to jail for forty five years.

Speaker 6 (23:54):
Why is she getting the like, what are the unnecessary treatments?

Speaker 1 (23:59):
Kaitlin Rose Laura, thirty one, was arrested in a late
March and felony charges including injury to a child causing
serious bodily injury. Investigators say she falsely told doctors the
boy at cerebral palsy, seizures and severe feeding problems, leading
to a feeding tube surgery he didn't need. At one point,
he was on seventeen different medications when separated from his
mother in February. The boy was eating normally had no
need for a wheelchair. Investigators also are looking into possible

(24:21):
Medicare Medicaid fraud and go fund me accounts. NBC News
with that she was dang collecting money, hurting the kid, terrible,
hurting the kid more. I don't even care about the money.

Speaker 6 (24:32):
No, I'm saying that's the reason why she did it.

Speaker 1 (24:34):
Oh yeah, for sure.

Speaker 6 (24:36):
Hurting the kid.

Speaker 1 (24:37):
That's terrible, Your own kid, that's wild. You still think
you're going to go to Paris?

Speaker 2 (24:43):
Oh I want to. I've been trying to manifest it.
Morgan gave me a little Paris book and a scarf
for my birthday, And in the card, she was like,
to help manifest your trip.

Speaker 1 (24:52):
You don't have to manifest it, you can just do it.

Speaker 2 (24:53):
I have the book out and I've got the scarf ready.

Speaker 6 (24:56):
You can literally just book it.

Speaker 1 (24:57):
But like manifesting something is something you really don't have
control over that you could hopefully influence and make it happen.
You can literally buy tickets and go to Paris.

Speaker 2 (25:04):
Right So am I going to buy tickets and go
to Paris by myself?

Speaker 6 (25:08):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (25:09):
Yeah, that's what I have to decide, which I will.
Maybe that'd be really good for me. I right now,
I don't know anybody that can go to Paris this
summer except for go buy your ex boyfriend who's already going.

Speaker 6 (25:23):
Well maybe oh he's going already.

Speaker 2 (25:24):
They're going to France. And so I was going to
be Bob, you.

Speaker 1 (25:27):
Can't go with your ex boy No, I know, I know.
I mean you could, but you can't.

Speaker 2 (25:31):
That's what I'm saying. Like they were this was a trip.
I was going to be included on the whole family,
his whole family, and then I was gonna be bop
on up to Paris because they were going.

Speaker 1 (25:39):
For three days by yourself. You're single, you have the money.
Don't go for longer than that, because by yourself longer
than that will feel like an eternity.

Speaker 2 (25:45):
That entire flight over there, big deal.

Speaker 1 (25:47):
You're by yourself, not a bad deal. You'll go. You'll
fly to New York. You'll fly seven a half hours over.
You'll sleep on the plane a little bit, and you'll
go on adrenaline. Day one. You'll sleep through Day two,
you'll do a little bit day three. Then you be
ready to come home. So you have three days.

Speaker 6 (26:04):
You don't want the whole second day.

Speaker 1 (26:06):
You don't want to be exhausted the whole time, so
you'll sleep a lot day right. I've done that. I've
done a trip by myself to foreign countries before multiple times.
If you go and you're exhausted and you're there three
days your whole trip, you're just tired. It sucks. So
you do want to get there and do a lot
of sleeping to catch up.

Speaker 2 (26:25):
You see what I got going on here? This is
my duelingo.

Speaker 1 (26:28):
I'm learning any language French too.

Speaker 2 (26:31):
Really, I've got French selected and you fill out this
questionnaire when you join the app, and it's like what
do you want to learn French word to be fluent
or to like just travel there and be like get by.
So I'm on the travel learning section.

Speaker 1 (26:46):
So I'm like, they look at you funny when you try.
I know, because I got.

Speaker 2 (26:49):
At least i'll maybe know what they're saying.

Speaker 1 (26:51):
You won't. I started French at college, and I know
that's a long time ago, but they talked so fast,
and I would try, and I remember being in the
mall and I said, uh, you know bojou whatever, and
the guy was like, dude, I speak.

Speaker 2 (27:04):
English and you're like, perfect, thank you.

Speaker 1 (27:07):
Well no, because I know English and I know they
know English, but I was trying, and so I took
it as a bit of an insult that even me
trying so hard was so hard for them to understand,
even though I knew the basic building blocks of French.
And he was like, ah, let's just get it, let's go.
Yeah he was working.

Speaker 2 (27:27):
Yeah, well, maybe I can just say it's.

Speaker 1 (27:29):
Fun to learn, though, but they talk so fast.

Speaker 2 (27:32):
Cafe what is that coffee?

Speaker 1 (27:35):
Oh?

Speaker 5 (27:36):
What is that?

Speaker 6 (27:38):
What does she say? She's I said, cafe. That's Spanish on.

Speaker 2 (27:42):
It spelled you in but it's like, uh, the way
they say, I don't know. At least they based on
here is.

Speaker 1 (27:48):
It's like, what's that.

Speaker 6 (27:49):
I didn't know if cafe was the actual coffee shop
or the actual coffee.

Speaker 2 (27:53):
Mad I missed one of the questions on here because
eat claire eat claire in French is eclaire in English?
And I got confused because I kept looking for a
different word.

Speaker 6 (28:05):
That's like the pastry.

Speaker 2 (28:06):
Yes, it's not different.

Speaker 1 (28:08):
All the words you can learn, you're trying to learn.

Speaker 2 (28:10):
I'm not learning Claia. This is the Traveler's Guide, Claire Croissant, cafe, T.

Speaker 6 (28:15):
No T T what's the bathroom?

Speaker 2 (28:18):
I haven't gotten the bathroom yet. I just see cibu play.
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (28:25):
They don't want to say it's so formal bonnoir.

Speaker 2 (28:30):
I don't know. One morning evening, guys, I don't know.
I just downloaded it. I'm on like day two.

Speaker 6 (28:37):
You should learn. Have you seen my wallet?

Speaker 1 (28:40):
Actually? I lost my phone.

Speaker 6 (28:42):
My phone, I accidentally hit that car.

Speaker 1 (28:45):
Somebody scammed me. Help.

Speaker 2 (28:51):
Maybe I do need to learn how to do first help.

Speaker 1 (28:54):
Eddie thinks he got offered World Cup passes like credentials.

Speaker 6 (28:58):
I got an email. I got an email. It's I
don't know. It looks legit, but it says you have
till Friday to claim your your FIFA World Cup credentials.
And I'm like, this is crazy.

Speaker 2 (29:10):
Did you see tickets have gone up to like ten
thousand dollars?

Speaker 1 (29:16):
Yeah, I mean even to buy them if you can
buy them from the World Cup, they're very expensive. But
if you're buying them, you know secondary you can. Some
of those tickets are fifty thousand dollars.

Speaker 6 (29:25):
Are they coming to Nashville?

Speaker 1 (29:28):
I think they're playing in nash I don't know, Atlanta
or something. Okay, Atlanta because they get to keep Mercedes
Bens on the stadium. The rest of them have to
remove all the names of the stadium. Yeah, wow, New York, Atlanta.
I don't think they're coming to Nashville. But what's crazy
is the World Cup and the Olympics are happening around
not at the same time, but like both in America.

Speaker 6 (29:47):
Yeah, I'm out.

Speaker 2 (29:48):
I'm not doing big crowd stuff.

Speaker 6 (29:50):
You're out at what the Olympics any of that?

Speaker 2 (29:52):
Like I'm not competing, No, no, but it would would
y'all go to that in field? I would go to
that stuff and feel terrified. I don't know.

Speaker 1 (30:01):
If I wanted to go, I would go and not
be fearful. But I don't. I'm not a soccer guy anyway.
Even the Olympics. I'm not going to go to California.
The Olympics feels like a mess just in general to
have to fight through. But LA does like handle massive
events really well, so it probably a little easier in LA.
But the Olympics they're having it all over North America.

Speaker 2 (30:19):
Oh, it's scattered.

Speaker 1 (30:21):
And the World Cup I think is too. That is
the World Cup is because the Olympics in America. They're
doing softball in Oklahoma City, so and then they do
soccer in the Olympics too.

Speaker 2 (30:31):
Okay, Well that I would maybe go to. I'd hit
up an Olympic game in Oklahoma. I don't want to
go to like yeah, yeah, I don't want to go
to Like.

Speaker 6 (30:40):
You don't want to go track and field?

Speaker 1 (30:42):
Can you pull that up? Sites because it's in LA.
But I think they're having you want the World Cup
or the I don't know, I'm confused.

Speaker 5 (30:48):
The Olympics have of the World Cup.

Speaker 1 (30:50):
Okay do World Cup?

Speaker 5 (30:51):
World Cup is Atlanta, Boston, Dallas, Houston, Kansas City, LA. Miami,
New York, New Jersey, Philadelphia, San Francisco, and Seattle.

Speaker 6 (30:58):
Oh wow, so just America.

Speaker 1 (31:00):
Shout out Kansas City forgetting Yeah Arrowhead, I guess, yeah, yeah,
but they have they have a really good, like followed
soccer team. But yeah, probably are ahead to the only stadium
big enough to fill. Yeah yeah, Like I think they
have a nice soccer culture there. But I don't think
you need a soccer culture really because I think the
culture will come to you in the World Cup Olympics.

Speaker 4 (31:18):
So the twenty twenty Summer Olympics are going to be
in Los Angeles, California, with some preliminary soccer matches and
a few specific events softball, canoe, solom are planned for
cities across the US and Oklahoma City. What cities are
New York, Columbus, St. Louis, Nashville, San Jose, and San Diego?
Are they de centralized events?

Speaker 1 (31:40):
So imagine this. You're you've been training your whole life,
you live in China, yeah, and you're like, we're going
to the Olympics. Where are you going? Columbus, Ohio? It
makes out the Columbus not a big city, so you
finally think you're gonna come to see Los Angeles and
you're you're doing some random event in Louisville.

Speaker 2 (32:02):
Do you get to go to the big ceremony and
then you travel to if you win?

Speaker 4 (32:06):
So the preliminary soccer matches are in those cities.

Speaker 2 (32:08):
I'm opening, like, do you get because I feel like
that's the whole experience, Like you're not yeah to be
at the opening?

Speaker 1 (32:14):
I would imagine, Yes, you'll get to the opening unless
you're unless your matches are because some of those matches
are before the Olympics even start, and so I think
timing is probably a big part of it. Yeah, if
you're like the next day, if you know you're playing
in Jackson, Mississippi the next day, I don't think you're.

Speaker 6 (32:32):
Gonna go do the JASP.

Speaker 1 (32:34):
Yeah you're in Mountain Pine, Arkansas. Can you imagine? Yeah
you made it? Wow, congrats you going Olympic before yet
Osmin's Arkansas?

Speaker 6 (32:43):
Did it? Say what's in Nashville because that'd be.

Speaker 1 (32:45):
Fow the preliminary soccer So they're going to play here
at the football stadium, Okay?

Speaker 3 (32:49):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (32:50):
And then softball and what salam canoe salam is going
to be in Oklahoma City.

Speaker 1 (32:55):
I don't know what that is. It's not slalom. That's
all I think about is skiing.

Speaker 4 (32:59):
It's spelled like that l A l o N slaloming.

Speaker 2 (33:02):
Maybe it's like skiing in a canoe.

Speaker 1 (33:05):
I would think if it's slalom, salom feels like something
religious or short for salami or saloni ias.

Speaker 4 (33:12):
They navigate through one hundred and fifty and three hundred
meter rapid course, passing between red upstream and green downstream.

Speaker 1 (33:20):
My point is, I don't think that the FIFA World
Cup is reaching out to you to try to give
you credentials.

Speaker 6 (33:24):
Well here's the thing too, It's in my personal email,
so like I don't do any kind of like business
on that. It's literally just like my.

Speaker 2 (33:33):
Kid's school and scammed.

Speaker 6 (33:34):
So but it's so specific, like with everything that I need.
Here's another theory I have too about that. I also
have gotten emails from another Eddie Garcia, who uses my
email for pet smart uh like a lot of other stores,
and he lives in California. So I'm wondering if he
legitimately applied for these and forgot like, oh no, this

(33:55):
is not my real address. So what if it's real?

Speaker 1 (33:58):
What if they just know every gar see a like soccer,
so they just send it to all garcias as a scam.

Speaker 6 (34:04):
I mean I could have gotten targeted for that.

Speaker 1 (34:07):
Uh. Also have a note here that CEO of Waterburger
wants to meet with Eddie. Yeah, Scuba hit me up,
the CEO of actual waterburger Whataburger, and he was.

Speaker 6 (34:20):
Like, Scuba is like, when are you available? The CEO
wants to meet you, And I'm like, dude, let's do this.
Why do you think he wants to meet me?

Speaker 1 (34:28):
Well, you're a big Waterburger guy, but Scuba just a
real ceo.

Speaker 6 (34:30):
Yes, yeah, Yeah, it's a woman. Her name's Debbie. Why
would she want me? Why would she want to? That's
very sexist on me. Yeah.

Speaker 7 (34:41):
Yeah, that's one of those things where like even before
I knew Eddie, I'm sure he's been a massive fan
of What a Burger and for six years we've been
trying to do something with it, and it's just.

Speaker 1 (34:49):
Like, I don't know what we're waiting for.

Speaker 7 (34:51):
So she reached out and she said, I'm gonna be
in town, and I guess her daughter is a massive
fan of this show, and so she wants to come
by and see the studio. And that kind of stuff.
So Eddie is also a fan of Whataburger, so it
just makes sense.

Speaker 1 (35:02):
Yeah, let them come up.

Speaker 6 (35:03):
Yeah, they're coming out.

Speaker 1 (35:04):
So actually she wants to come up and see the
show and then and you're also here.

Speaker 2 (35:07):
Well, but did Scuba pitch Eddie to meet her or
she wanted to meet Eddie?

Speaker 7 (35:12):
Well, there's been many conversations when have come by a
few different times.

Speaker 1 (35:15):
Know what I was told is Eddie said, the CEO
of Waterburger wants to meet him.

Speaker 6 (35:18):
Yeah, that's what Scuba told me.

Speaker 1 (35:19):
And she does.

Speaker 7 (35:20):
Yeah, she really does, because she she loves your passion for.

Speaker 6 (35:22):
The brand and wants to see you. That's me man.

Speaker 7 (35:24):
Yeah, yeah, and uh and see the studio and that
kind of thing.

Speaker 6 (35:27):
You think I should hit her with, like I can
be the face of Waterburger.

Speaker 1 (35:31):
Not if you don't want to be disappointed?

Speaker 6 (35:34):
What does that mean?

Speaker 1 (35:36):
They're never going to choose you to the face of
water burg when two reasons one your face, what's.

Speaker 6 (35:43):
Wrong with my face?

Speaker 1 (35:45):
And two they would they would get somebody like actually famous.

Speaker 6 (35:48):
No, sometimes people well it's a bad example, but sometimes
they use normal people.

Speaker 1 (35:52):
But not as the face of water Burger. They would
want to get someone like how long?

Speaker 6 (35:59):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (36:00):
Not.

Speaker 2 (36:00):
He has since been canceled.

Speaker 1 (36:03):
Jennifer Someway had a whole story, like, hell, you don't
just from Someway went from a guy who's extremely overweight
to losing like one hundred pounds.

Speaker 6 (36:10):
They just go out.

Speaker 1 (36:12):
But they didn't make that up though, Like you don't have.

Speaker 2 (36:14):
A story, start your story.

Speaker 6 (36:16):
I did not want to use him as an example,
but sorry, example of but that's.

Speaker 1 (36:19):
Not that's not a perfect example.

Speaker 2 (36:21):
That's actually not because Bobby's right, he had a he
built a story like if you were going to Watburger,
you know, twice a day every week, and you have
this whole thing and it changed your life.

Speaker 6 (36:30):
Okay, let me start brainstorming Burger changed my life.

Speaker 1 (36:34):
Let us know what you come up with. One in
ten Americans suffer from compulsive buying. Scientists to find this
disorder as uncontrolled urges to buy with significant adverse consequences.
Doing things such as buying to improve your mood, buying
for buying's sake, or getting into financial trouble with all
your buying counts as compulsive buying. The American Journal of

(36:54):
Psychiatry thoughts, Yeah.

Speaker 2 (36:56):
I see how that happens. I definitely feel better after
I buy something, but it's short lived, and with my maturity,
I have realized that, so I try not to seek
my dopamine from that. However, A slip up every now
and then, but I don't have that whatever that is. No,
I'm in a season of saving.

Speaker 1 (37:15):
You know where I slip up most is on Instagram.
They offer me some good deals like sweatshirts and stuff.

Speaker 2 (37:20):
Well, they just make it too easy, and.

Speaker 1 (37:22):
Then I feel good on a buy it. They feel good?

Speaker 6 (37:24):
Are they good shirts?

Speaker 1 (37:25):
Yeah? For the most part. Like I bought I don't
know why. I don't even like peanuts or Charlie Brown,
but I bought like a Linus oversized sweatshirt. It just
looked comfortable, and I bought it and I wore it
the other day, and I won't know, pretty good, but
I don't. It hurts me because I don't really wear
anything to wor unless it's a cardigan. So I don't
buy a bunch of clothes anymore. Shoes I do a
little bit, I'm not as shoey as I used to be.

(37:47):
But shirts, what do I I just wear cardigans the
T shirts all the time, so they cut down the
clothing buying.

Speaker 2 (37:54):
Yeah, I've been trying to just wait re wear as
much as possible. I used to shop a lot more,
and now I'm just like whatever. I used to think,
Oh I wore that last week, I'm not gonna wear it,
And now I'm like, it's a Friday, and I'll think,
oh I wore that Monday, Okay, I'm gonna wear it
on Friday. I don't care anymore.

Speaker 1 (38:11):
I mean I wear things two and three days in
a row. Sometimes Yeah, no, because I know who cares.
They're editing video clips anyway. There's no difference. When I
get home, though, I change immediately. Yeah, you're cut off
of shorts, okay quick? Every day. There are home tests
now to test your cellular age.

Speaker 2 (38:29):
Oh this I will buy.

Speaker 1 (38:31):
You may think you know how old you are, but
longevity experts say that that's not necessarily the case. You
were born on X day, but how many times have
you celebrated your birthday? But it's what's happening other than chronologically.
That is your cellular age and cellular level, and that
is your true age. There are direct consumer test kits
that determine your biological age based on whear and tear

(38:52):
of your body saliva based instead of blood based. Doctor
Douglas Vaughn, the director of Lene Deevity Institute, a Northwestern
University school of medicine, says biological test kits can figure
out health data diet.

Speaker 2 (39:05):
Well, so where do we get it?

Speaker 1 (39:06):
NBC News has a story it doesn't give a link,
ranging from three hundred to five hundred bucks. Some experts
say the test walks a fine line. How much three
hundred to five hundred?

Speaker 6 (39:15):
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, Amy, I can tell you right
now you're younger than your cellular age is younger than you're.

Speaker 2 (39:20):
Really yep, but I want to know what my cellular
age is. Hello, phone, give me a link.

Speaker 1 (39:26):
She's not pushing a button, she just wants it to hear.

Speaker 6 (39:28):
It'll come later.

Speaker 2 (39:29):
Well, it'll show up from my algorithm, no doubt.

Speaker 1 (39:32):
A California gas station is charging nine to ninety nine
a gallon nine the very remote Gorda by the Sea
gas station. A big sir is selling a gallon of
gas for nine ninety nine, and it would be ten
dollars or more, but the digital numbers on the gas
pump don't go higher.

Speaker 6 (39:47):
That's what I was gonna ask yeah, He.

Speaker 1 (39:49):
Claims he's not gouging. He's not making any money off
the higher prices. He says the whole central California coastal
town runs off gas generators, not electricity, which is the
reason his prices are so inflated. Also, the tanker truck
that fills the pumps comes from a hundred miles away.
The town is usually lest it's having the highest prices
in the country because of how hard it is to
get to ksbw.

Speaker 6 (40:08):
Ain't no good, ain't no good.

Speaker 1 (40:11):
I'm just so happy to have electric cars. We're close
to five here, like, we're so close to I So
I was like four eighty nine or something, and it
goes up like every day, like a couple cents crazy,
And I've never been that kind of like look at
the gas prices or comment about the bad but I'm
not dad now like driving the car and like, look, honey,

(40:31):
look at that.

Speaker 6 (40:32):
We went up two cents. But because it's climbing fast.

Speaker 2 (40:38):
What are you looking at me?

Speaker 6 (40:41):
What do you got?

Speaker 1 (40:43):
Good? Nothing? What this story is not?

Speaker 2 (40:45):
Oh? I thought you were showing me something. No, oh,
it was only probably going to get a little higher.

Speaker 1 (40:51):
Ready, I know they don't open it F and straight.

Speaker 2 (40:54):
I know. I was just looking at my phone and
I was like, Okay, it's ten thirty six.

Speaker 1 (40:58):
Right now, you have a crazy tweet. That's what I'm
looking at.

Speaker 6 (40:59):
You have.

Speaker 2 (41:00):
No I was checking the time because I'm kind of
scared for eight pm.

Speaker 6 (41:04):
Why is the Straight closed? Because they don't want to
chooseing them. I come to you guys for all my
political news.

Speaker 1 (41:13):
Do you well they've closed it. I mean, I wonder
what chat GBT would say the real answer to that's
to me giving misinformation. They're not letting us use it,
They're letting other people use it.

Speaker 6 (41:25):
This is the Let me just ask the boy, which
trait is this South America?

Speaker 1 (41:32):
So you know nothing? You literally know nothing.

Speaker 2 (41:33):
This is over in the Middle East.

Speaker 6 (41:36):
Oh, it's just straight over there.

Speaker 1 (41:39):
I'm not saying you know nothing is a bat like
you're an idiot. I'm saying you're coming from No.

Speaker 6 (41:44):
Yeah, I don't. I don't read those.

Speaker 1 (41:46):
But apparently if they don't open it tonight into civilization.

Speaker 2 (41:51):
Is going to be bad and we'll know by eight
pm which.

Speaker 1 (41:55):
Time zone I.

Speaker 2 (41:58):
I assume DC because that's where he was posting from.

Speaker 1 (42:03):
Yeah, Florida, boy.

Speaker 4 (42:04):
Can I omit something. I saw something the other day
talking about how like they were gonna Iran was going
to take out a bunch of our like tech companies
and banks and stuff. So I panicked and went and
got cash from the ATM. That's the first time something
online is ever like like a next me enough that
I would get cash, No, but just enough to like
because I was having like the last of us vibes

(42:25):
where I was like, We're going to need cash. That's
the only way we're going to be able to function
and go. I like panicked. It was the first time
ever that I really felt it, and I was like,
I'm just going to make sure I have cash on hand.

Speaker 2 (42:37):
It's not a bad idea, because.

Speaker 6 (42:38):
Isn't that like part of I mean, it would be
a huge issue if everyone took money out of the
bank at the same time.

Speaker 2 (42:43):
Well, yeah, because they need that. It is eight pm Eastern,
by the way, just kind of very bizarre behavior, you know.

Speaker 6 (42:56):
Yeah, And that's why our gas press are like the.

Speaker 1 (42:59):
War of quarter maybe're on that of oil travels through
this strait, and so it is definitely a big part
of it. It sits between Iran and I don't know
how to say this is the country omen so it's
the straight h O R m U Z.

Speaker 2 (43:18):
Yeah. I don't know how to say either about Hormuz hormas.

Speaker 1 (43:20):
It is a very important oil route and because about
a quarter of oil passes through it, there's no oil
going through it. If it's shut down to us, we're
not getting the oil, oils more expensive.

Speaker 2 (43:33):
So yeah, this morning at like seven o six a
m our president sent a very dire warning on his
social media, sending a message and making a declaration that's
going to be the end of a civilization.

Speaker 1 (43:46):
That's like a war crime, which is I don't think
it will happen. I literally don't think it will happen.
I think you just end up saying, oh, we com
we negotiate it, and I got what I want. Even
if he didn't, I think that's what'll happen. So, I
mean he was saying yesterday and a press briefing, he
could nuke it, they could wipe it out on the day.

Speaker 2 (44:09):
I kind of yeah, just can it be tomorrow and
we can know what's going on.

Speaker 1 (44:13):
Do you see all the people fooled by the AI
picture of the pilot that they saved, No, what.

Speaker 2 (44:18):
Which picture did I fall for it. What was the
picture the found pilot?

Speaker 1 (44:21):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (44:22):
Was it them on the helicopter?

Speaker 2 (44:24):
Total AI, Okay, we need a new there has to
be a well they're.

Speaker 1 (44:28):
Not going to show up his faces.

Speaker 2 (44:29):
All the seal team understand that.

Speaker 1 (44:31):
And everybody's face was right in like going. But even
Greg Abbott was like, this is a great picture. Is
it was so easily AI?

Speaker 2 (44:38):
So like what do what do we do? Like there
needs to be AI banner, you know, like when we
were kids and we would get proofs of our softball pictures,
our baseball pictures or school pictures, you know, yeah, like
a watermark, and there needs to be like an AI stamp.

Speaker 1 (44:50):
That's like kind of AI. They don't want you to
know what they want to get. On Twitter sometimes.

Speaker 5 (44:56):
When he reposted it, there was like a little watermark.

Speaker 1 (44:59):
First it was isn't marked, but then enough people do
community note on it that it ends up being marked.
But there were Congress people, the governor of Texts were like,
great picture, love it. It was obviously AI.

Speaker 2 (45:11):
Yeah, you can't. Government people need to We can't react
too quickly to things these days because then you're going
to look like you don't know what you're talking about
I can look like that, like AI.

Speaker 4 (45:22):
The point is to confuse us, so when stuff does
come out, we don't know what's true or what's not.

Speaker 1 (45:26):
Yes, and that's kind of the point, almost cartoonish though meaning.

Speaker 2 (45:30):
And then to Bobby's point, like showing their faces, like hey.

Speaker 1 (45:32):
Yeah, everybody was too good looking. The face was perfectly yeah,
the flag was in the perfect place. Everybody was like
celebrating a helicopter clean. It was to me so obviously fake.
I couldn't believe it. Now the incident wasn't fake. They
went and I thankfully to those Iranian people. They helped us.

(45:55):
Once he went down, he had to climb. He climbed
like six thousand feet to a higher place and then
and then hid for like thirty six hours, and then
we got there and saved him. Like shout out to
our guys for going and do But like the Iranian
people helped out, like they blocked traffic for a while,
Like it's crazy how that part of the country isn't

(46:17):
as aligned with who we feel as adversarial to us,
and so they helped.

Speaker 2 (46:24):
I can't remember what this is called in Afghanistan, but
in the Hindu Kush mountains, whenever. The loan survivor, I
can't think of his name right now, but he was
a seal member and he was in a shootout with
the Taliban. Everybody else in his unit died and he
was the lone survivor and he was hiding in the mountains.

(46:45):
And the villagers that lived in these mountains, they're af
again people, and they knew who he was. But they said,
regardless of who he was, part of their culture is
if someone is in need, you help them. And they
took him in and they helped protect him from the Taliban,
and it for it's got a specific name of what

(47:08):
it is in their in their culture. But they're like,
this is what we do. Like to them, it would
be a sin to not help the person that needed help,
no matter who that might be.

Speaker 1 (47:17):
I was reading some of the story about the rescue
of the pilot our soldier, and from what I read,
there were some of there were some of our equipment
we couldn't get back up once we went in, and say,
you know what we do if we can't get it
back up, we blow it up. We blow our own
stuff up so no one else, so no one else
can have it. Well, it's great was it didn't matter
the cost of the equipment, like we go, we get

(47:38):
our guy. Like that's that's cool, super cool, and so
we got our guy. But then I saw the picture
and I was like, obviously this is fake. Everybody knows
it's fake. It showed like every all the Seal members' faces.

Speaker 2 (47:49):
Like yeah, that's true.

Speaker 1 (47:51):
Then you have all these politicians like retweet it, go
on great picture, wonder like are you guys this Maybe
maybe they're just old. It's just they're just old.

Speaker 4 (47:59):
I think that that's where I first saw it was
because somebody, like the feed on for the show is
like so scattered, there's so much in it, and I
think what I saw was people reacting to politicians sharing it.

Speaker 2 (48:09):
And that's how I even saw the photo was because.

Speaker 4 (48:12):
Politicians were sharing it. It wasn't in my feet otherwise.

Speaker 1 (48:16):
Yeah, there's a I saw weimo this morning. Did you
guys se those driver on ever?

Speaker 2 (48:20):
No?

Speaker 6 (48:20):
Driverless?

Speaker 1 (48:21):
I don't know because it was dark when I was
driving in. But I saw it and it was at
a light and the thing was spinning on top of it.

Speaker 5 (48:27):
Yeah, they're driverless out here. They are for like the
last couple of weeks.

Speaker 6 (48:30):
Wow, cool because I saw one a couple of days
ago with still someone in it.

Speaker 1 (48:33):
Can you order a driverless one here?

Speaker 5 (48:35):
I haven't tried, but i've seen them. I don't know
if they're still like testing them without people because I
haven't seen anybody in the back. I've just seen solo weymos.

Speaker 6 (48:42):
You need to try one, because I really want to
know what you think about it.

Speaker 1 (48:44):
Yeah, waimo's for those that don't know. And I've never
been in one. I've only heard the news stories about.
I mean, you guys have been in them. Yeah, there's
no driver and they they it's an uber but with
no driver. But there was a story a weamo had
to be rescued from the floodwaters in San Antonio over
the weekend after it got stuck. There were no passengers inside.
Officers attempted to help but renavigate, but they couldn't. So

(49:05):
there's for San Antonio with this.

Speaker 2 (49:06):
How messed up my brain is like I just got
sad for the car for being stuck.

Speaker 1 (49:10):
Poor car.

Speaker 6 (49:10):
Oh you didn't you didn't think like wow, No.

Speaker 2 (49:13):
I know I did think that. I was like, wow,
there are no humans. But then I had this thought
of like I was sad for the car.

Speaker 3 (49:19):
The car.

Speaker 2 (49:21):
Help me, help me because it's a way mo because
it drives itself, and it had like this. I need
to I need intervention.

Speaker 6 (49:28):
Tell my family I love them now my.

Speaker 1 (49:32):
Oh gosh, all right, that's it. Do we got everybody's story.
Lunchbox is not here today, sick, So everybody everybody got
their story?

Speaker 6 (49:40):
Everybody good?

Speaker 1 (49:41):
I mean, anything else up with you?

Speaker 2 (49:42):
Yeah? No, yeah, no, no, I'm telling you. I'm just
going to keep I think I probably would take a
x INEX tonight at seven pm. Let's go maybe eight
pm Central, so I can just go to sleep. So
I don't know what's happening in the world.

Speaker 6 (49:56):
Oh got you.

Speaker 1 (49:57):
I've been completely medication lists for like six weeks. Well, yeah,
you're about to get back on it though, maybe you
want to do it Amy.

Speaker 2 (50:08):
I know now Morgan's got me. And now I got
to go to the bank.

Speaker 6 (50:12):
Sorry, don't don't do that. Don't do that.

Speaker 1 (50:14):
Well, just a little bit I do have I should
do have just a little bit anyway.

Speaker 2 (50:18):
Yeah, I have my gold nugget.

Speaker 6 (50:20):
Man, my cash doesn't last at all. Like I leave
my wallet and a drawer by the keys and the kids.

Speaker 2 (50:26):
The wife the kids have access to the cash.

Speaker 1 (50:29):
Well, I just leave my wallet there and then it's
the kids cash and piggy banks. That's his money.

Speaker 6 (50:33):
Dude. It's just terrible. And then and then I'll be like,
where's that ten dollars I had? And then my son
will be like, oh, I needed it for lunch, Sorry, dad,
I took it the other day. Like so, like all
the money I made on the boat, I made like
two hundred and fifty bucks on the boat.

Speaker 1 (50:44):
You got to hide it better.

Speaker 2 (50:45):
Oh, I still have that cash, and it's hidden. I
keep mine hitting well where exactly?

Speaker 1 (50:49):
Not by the gold bar, no, which is located in
the freezer, by the.

Speaker 2 (50:56):
I'm not telling you where the cash is, but I do.
I still have my boat cat. I call it my
boat cash.

Speaker 1 (51:02):
All right. That's gonna wrap it up for today. Thank
you everybody. A new Bobby cast up today with the
lead singer of switch Foot, So you can check that
out on podcast or on Netflix. What about you?

Speaker 2 (51:13):
I have a new Yeah Feeling things with Amy and Kat.
You can check it out not on Netflix, but just
download for if you to podcasts frame Big and Uh. Kat,
my co host is a therapist. She taught me about seagulling,
and turns out we find out in real time that
I've been seagulled before, and I.

Speaker 1 (51:35):
Sounds like somebody just pooping on your like flying over and.

Speaker 2 (51:40):
Cat reveals the crazy reason why she didn't go to
the University of Alabama. It's so crazy to me.

Speaker 1 (51:47):
Why don't you just tell me that?

Speaker 2 (51:48):
Okay? She said she had such anxiety as a high
school and she already had body image issues and she
started to freak out. That's really the that's where she
wanted to go. And she ended up going to a
much smaller school in Mississippi, and then she did her
grad program at Vanderbilt. But she was so dead set
on going to Alabama and last minute pulled it because
she heard that during sorority rush, they sit you on

(52:10):
a dryer and turn it on and then circle your
fat where at jiggles.

Speaker 1 (52:16):
Yeah, I've heard. I've heard a bunch with a bunch
of sororities.

Speaker 2 (52:22):
I had. I was in a sorority at Teixaaavies. I
have never heard that in my life like that. That's
and I just thought it was crazy that she made
a decision. And she's very education at schooling like she's
she loves school, she loves learning. She was always like
the number one best in class. That's just what she loves.

(52:43):
And she was so excited to go there. And for
her to pick a different school based on being put
on a dryer and having your fat circled, I just
maybe don't rush.

Speaker 6 (52:54):
What does a dryer do. It shakes your fat and
then you kind of.

Speaker 2 (52:56):
See what's Yeah, you see what jiggles and then they
circle it. Do they hear you want to confirming?

Speaker 4 (53:01):
I didn't have that experience. It was very popular in
southern sororities. And we had two roles come from the
same like tried out from southern schools to our tried
out and talked about it literally happened to them and
they had proof and it was crazy.

Speaker 1 (53:17):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (53:18):
Yeah, I just thought that that was like a I
would think, well, surely that's not gonna happen, or maybe
I just wouldn't rush and I would go to the
university I wanted to go to.

Speaker 1 (53:26):
I think now it's more of an urban legend. It
used to happen back in the day.

Speaker 4 (53:29):
Yeah, I don't think they can get away with it
as much anymore.

Speaker 1 (53:32):
It used to be like we started on this show.

Speaker 5 (53:35):
Let's do it hidden.

Speaker 6 (53:38):
I don't need a dryer to tell me where it is.

Speaker 1 (53:42):
All Right, we're done. You guys have a good rest
of the day. We'll seek Gus tomorrow By Buddy
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Lunchbox

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