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July 22, 2025 47 mins

We talked about the tragic death of a celebrity that we reported yesterday. We talked about the states that tip the worst. A caller reveals the true intention of Lunchbox winning Prom King in high school and how it was all a sham. Lunchbox defends himself and these allegations.  We were baffled by the details of a couple who were murdered in their home and not discovered dead for 4 days.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Let's go get your bowles all. Malcolm Jamal Warner died
fifty four years old, drowned in Costa Rica. He played
THEO on The Cosby Show. I didn't know he was
only fifty four. It seems like you'd be a lot
older than that, since he was so famous when we
were really young. But Malcolm Jamal Warner, the teenage son
THEO Huxtable on The Cosby Show, was central to a

(00:21):
cultural phenomenon and that helped to find the eighties from
the ap News. Died at fifty four in an accidental
drowning in Costa Rica. Costa Rica's judicial investigation departments had
a Warner drowned Sunday afternoon on a beach in Costa
Rica's Caribbean coast. He was swimming a current pulled him
deeper in the ocean. He was rescued by people on
the beach, but the first responders from Costa Rica's Red
Cross found him without vital signs and he was taken

(00:43):
to the morgue. I didn't spend a lot of time
around the ocean. Still haven't not a beach, guy, Eddie?

Speaker 2 (00:49):
You did?

Speaker 3 (00:50):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (00:50):
You live down there? Would these.

Speaker 3 (00:54):
Rip tides rip tides. Yeah, but they happened down there.
Oh yeah, I mean it just depends on what kind
of of what kind of like weather activities happen in
the ocean that like affects those currents. So sometimes it's
stronger than other days. But what happens is you have
this current underneath the surface that's completely different than what's
happening above.

Speaker 1 (01:13):
Oh you don't see it on top, No, not at all.

Speaker 3 (01:15):
And then a wave will crash or something, and then
it'll just suck your legs right under and it just
takes you out.

Speaker 1 (01:19):
Have you ever had that happen in a smaller way
to you.

Speaker 3 (01:21):
Yeah, in Acapulco. I had no idea that this was
a thing. Apparently in Acapulco, Mexico, there is like the
beach slowly kind of goes into the ocean and then
there's a quick drop off which creates a current like
no other. Dude, When a wave crashes on the on
the shore and it goes back like it's gonna crash again,
it sucks you. It feels like it's one hundred pounds

(01:42):
sucking you back. I didn't know that.

Speaker 1 (01:44):
The top of the water and under the water, we're
doing two different things.

Speaker 3 (01:47):
Yeah, because you don't see it. It's not like you
look at the ocean and it's like, oh, look at
that current being sucked back. It's all underneath, so you
can't see it.

Speaker 1 (01:53):
Being uneducated with the ocean and beach, I thought, wow,
people are getting sucked out. How do they not see
the water in the the waves of the water going backward?

Speaker 3 (02:01):
Right?

Speaker 1 (02:01):
That's not the case at all.

Speaker 4 (02:02):
Uh No.

Speaker 3 (02:03):
And what happens a lot too is people just start
panicking like, oh, I'm going the opposite direction, so they
start swimming against it, and they start swimm until they
get tired. Then you get tired, and then you can't
swim anymore.

Speaker 5 (02:12):
I don't want to give up bad information, so I
just want to correct for a second. The undertow is
what you don't see. The rib tide you definitely see
the ocean forming forming and almost like where two pieces
of water coming together and pushing out or pushing in.
You're probably talk about the undertow that you don't really
see what you could feel the water, But the rib
tide you do see.

Speaker 3 (02:31):
You can actually see it.

Speaker 2 (02:32):
You can see I.

Speaker 1 (02:33):
Don't even know what rip tid is. I just used
that word it wasn't even in the story.

Speaker 2 (02:35):
Yeah, so what current?

Speaker 1 (02:36):
The current is the general they were using, and current
would be also the undertoo.

Speaker 3 (02:41):
That's what I That's what I assumed.

Speaker 1 (02:43):
Well, what are you supposed to do? I don't know,
just let it take you to not get in the ocean.

Speaker 3 (02:47):
I mean the thing, that's what I do.

Speaker 1 (02:49):
I don't get in the ocean.

Speaker 3 (02:50):
I mean really, they tell you to just relax and like,
you know, yes, if it takes you out, it'll eventually
let you go and then you'll come back. But I'm
waiting for that.

Speaker 2 (02:57):
I'm not relaxing. Yeah, that's tough. Just chill next thing,
you know.

Speaker 1 (03:01):
I'm on that movie where you just want out in
all the ocean, remember that one?

Speaker 3 (03:04):
Or like the Surfer recently they ended up in like
an island board. Yeah. Yeah, that's so sad.

Speaker 1 (03:10):
Yeah that sucks. Let's roll through some voicemails here.

Speaker 6 (03:14):
Number one, Eddie, I got you bro, the show ended
tomorrow and you had to find another job. Move on
down to Florida. We have lots of people who live
on boats down here in Florida. They'll have a dock
and they might pay like fifteen dollars a foot then
you can have short power, so you have electricity, and
they have a little bathhouse where you can go to

(03:35):
the bathroom and shower and everything. No real estate taxis
no utilities. It's excellent. Come on down.

Speaker 3 (03:42):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (03:42):
The problem is you have four kids.

Speaker 3 (03:44):
Yeah, they'd have to live on the boat too.

Speaker 1 (03:45):
Well three, because about that time your oldest would be done.

Speaker 3 (03:48):
We'd be out of the boat.

Speaker 1 (03:50):
Yeah, be out of the boat, never in the boat. Actually,
probably would never move down to the boat.

Speaker 3 (03:54):
Dude, that's amazing. Just listen and talk about that. Puts
a smile on my face.

Speaker 1 (03:58):
Good me.

Speaker 3 (04:00):
Wait, you wouldn't live out like dude. You wake up
and you're on a boat. That's amazing.

Speaker 1 (04:04):
I don't want to go to sleep on a boat,
wake up on a boat. I'll go out and fish
on a boat, but I need to get back in
pretty quick.

Speaker 2 (04:08):
Also, have you seen some of those boats that are
living on They ain't the nicest boats.

Speaker 1 (04:12):
Next out number two, I have a question for lunch spot.

Speaker 7 (04:15):
He was sitting there talking about a thousand dollars having
a baby. Is he gonna do it? Is he gonna
have a baby to get a thousand dollars? I'd love
to hear what his response to Love the show A
long time listener.

Speaker 2 (04:29):
Appreciate that lunchbox I said, if we were in it together,
I would do it like I wanted, you know, in
it together. Yeah, if other people were gonna do it,
have a.

Speaker 1 (04:36):
Baby fIF thousand dollars, I didn't matter what they're doing.
If you're doing it, I wanted it to be like
a group like investment. It's not an investment. It's by
the way, you don't get a thousand dollars. Once we
learn more about this, you get money to actually to
put into your kids' funds for different things.

Speaker 3 (04:52):
Oh, that's a kickoff.

Speaker 1 (04:53):
Kevin came in and said it right after the segment.
He was like, he's not saying exactly what it is.
They don't just write you a check for a thousand dollars.

Speaker 4 (04:59):
It's like invested for you or something, or an accounts
started for.

Speaker 1 (05:03):
Them like something like that. I stopped listening. Okay, by
the third way through that makes more sense. If people
talk about kids, I'm like, I don't.

Speaker 2 (05:09):
Have little but if you want to have them, this
is the time.

Speaker 1 (05:13):
Recent articles to discuss a one hundred one thousand dollars
credit for babies the credit is deposited into an account
that parents can contribute to an investor for their child's future.
So it's not like cash.

Speaker 4 (05:24):
You just get catch so no one can give you
a cut of it. Because if that was your deal,
I tell you about it.

Speaker 1 (05:30):
You funds must be invested in the low stock Mutual
funds are ETF tracking a US stock in debt.

Speaker 4 (05:36):
Okay, this makes more sense.

Speaker 1 (05:38):
What makes more sense?

Speaker 4 (05:40):
What the article?

Speaker 1 (05:41):
Then?

Speaker 3 (05:41):
What?

Speaker 8 (05:42):
Then?

Speaker 4 (05:42):
What he presented?

Speaker 1 (05:43):
You just get a thousand bucks and he wants to.

Speaker 4 (05:45):
Cut you get a visa gift card for a thousand
you to go spend it on whatever you want.

Speaker 2 (05:50):
I was misinformed that'd be cool, all right.

Speaker 9 (05:52):
Next up, I dreamed that the Bobby Bone Show retired.
I couldn't find anything to Let's two that make me
happy like you guys do. But I turned on the
podcast in there you guys were so I was so excited.
It was a nightmare that you guys quit. I'm so
glad that y'all are still around. Y'all make my day

(06:13):
every day.

Speaker 1 (06:14):
Thanks, thank you, thank you for that voicemail. By the way,
you can leave a voicemail at any point eight seven,
seven seventy seven Bobby. We do appreciate all you part
tours who listened to this part two of the podcast.

Speaker 2 (06:25):
Let's do one more Ray.

Speaker 10 (06:27):
I just finished Righteous Gemstones.

Speaker 9 (06:29):
Don't know if I'll reviewed it before. Way better than
I thought, freaking hilarious. Loved it so much. I'm curious
about your thoughts.

Speaker 2 (06:36):
Yeah, we finished it. It's great.

Speaker 1 (06:39):
I don't know what else. I don't know if we've
maybe I just watched it for so long I never
thought about reviewing it.

Speaker 4 (06:43):
How many seasons are I only watched season one. I
forget about it, so I need to go back.

Speaker 3 (06:47):
It's so funny.

Speaker 1 (06:48):
Did you even get to baby Billy?

Speaker 3 (06:50):
Oh well, then what.

Speaker 1 (06:51):
Season is that?

Speaker 4 (06:51):
Because I know baby Billy?

Speaker 1 (06:52):
Mmm?

Speaker 3 (06:53):
Is he two? He's in one light?

Speaker 2 (06:55):
Season one?

Speaker 3 (06:56):
Is it one?

Speaker 2 (06:56):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (06:57):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (06:58):
Yeah, we watched it.

Speaker 1 (07:00):
If we never reviewed it, okay, four and a half
out of five mega churches.

Speaker 2 (07:04):
Yes, in general, it's really great. Baby Billy comes in,
win Mike. I thinks he's a one.

Speaker 1 (07:12):
Yeah, it's great. I'm looking here on my mind that's
when baby Billy comes in. But it didn't even matter.

Speaker 2 (07:17):
Oh yeah, thank you.

Speaker 3 (07:18):
That's great.

Speaker 1 (07:20):
The states where people are tipping the least b Logic
Systems twenty twenty five generosity indexes out, revealing the states
with the stingiest tippers at ten, Florida at nine, Minnesota
at eight, Virginia at seven, Maryland at six, New York
at five, New Jersey at four, Massachusetts at three, Connecticut
at two, Washington and one California. I wonder why California

(07:43):
comes a dead last with an average tip of just
seventeen percent and the lowest generosity score in the country.

Speaker 3 (07:48):
It's so expensive to live there.

Speaker 1 (07:50):
That could be a factor.

Speaker 3 (07:51):
And then they're just like, I tip on top of this.

Speaker 1 (07:54):
M that's probably a good factor. So many businesses now
requesting tips on everything, not surprising. So many of us
are experiencing tip fatigue. But a new study suggests how
what people to tip depending on the zip Codeah, I
wish they gave us more.

Speaker 4 (08:06):
He Oh, well, it says here too. California does have
a higher minimum wage for tipped employees, which reduces the
reliance on tips for income.

Speaker 1 (08:16):
Oh that's actually good though, Yeah, that's actually good.

Speaker 4 (08:19):
I know it's like, I don't know, that's.

Speaker 1 (08:22):
Unfair to put them at number one. Then if they
have a higher minimum wage, for tip employees. It's unfair
to put them at number one on that list because
it looks like California people a bunch of douchebags, but
not really. They're actually their economy is stimulated differently.

Speaker 2 (08:32):
Yep, what are you going to say?

Speaker 4 (08:34):
Well, I was just thinking about my sister lives in Colorado,
and I think the minimum wage there's fourteen wows or something.

Speaker 2 (08:40):
Wow.

Speaker 4 (08:41):
Yeah, she has her coffee shop and we were talking
about it, like which she pays minimum wage? And then
here thing's like seven dollars on something, which is that's crazy.

Speaker 1 (08:53):
The states with America's worst quality of life we had
me that mic and what sucks is have the whole
list here and it's.

Speaker 2 (09:01):
Like all of our states.

Speaker 3 (09:03):
Oh no, yeah, so.

Speaker 1 (09:05):
The states with America's worst quality of life, and they
do have a bunch of different factors and this is competitive, competitiveness, crime, health, healthcare, childcare,
air quality, inclusiveness. And here we go, Tennessee. I want
to say your name please stand out. That's US Texas,

(09:27):
Oh oh yeah, Arkansas, Oh, Oklahoma, I mean yeah, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Utah,
and Indiana.

Speaker 2 (09:40):
That sucks.

Speaker 3 (09:40):
No, Kansas. Morgan made it out.

Speaker 1 (09:42):
Kansas did pretty good.

Speaker 2 (09:43):
Midwes Bedwest kind of rocking it there.

Speaker 4 (09:45):
They're more inclusive.

Speaker 1 (09:47):
All right, let's go around the room.

Speaker 2 (09:48):
Amy.

Speaker 4 (09:48):
So, Starbucks says that their Pumpkins Spice Latte is going
to return to the US to US Menus on August
twenty sixth, so like a month away ish from the
Pumpkin Spice Latte returning, which I didn't know it left.
I thought you would order Pumpkins Spice anytime you wanted,
but I guess it is left. And they have an

(10:09):
entire fall menu that's coming out on the twenty sixth,
and one item that a lot of people are apparently
are looking forward to is the Bican crunch Oat milk latte.

Speaker 1 (10:17):
I was watching Alice in Borderland on Netflix, and it's
in maybe like Hong Kong or Tokyo, one of the two,
probably Tokyo. And everything is written in Japanese in Tokyo
except for one huge buildings as Starbucks and English English.

Speaker 2 (10:35):
Yeah, it's such a brand. It is Tokyo.

Speaker 1 (10:37):
Alics in Borderland is set in an abandon dystopian version
of Tokyo. What is this show called Alice in Borderland?
Like Alice Sunderland Alice in Borderland. Okay, Yeah, it was
put out like a year before Squid Games. Before it's
very similar. They're about to go into season three, so
it feels a bit like Squid Games. However, it came

(10:59):
out before Squid Game, so if you were to watch
it differently, you probably think Squid Games was a derivative
of Alice in Borderland. Yeah, but it's also not derivative
because they came out like a year from each other,
and so they were already in production and it had
already been written, et cetera. But it's good. It's good
out of your story.

Speaker 3 (11:12):
So this is an update on a story I talked
about a few weeks ago about this guy that went
to Turks and Caicos with his wife and then he
went for a walk at three in the morning.

Speaker 1 (11:20):
We all came up with theories.

Speaker 3 (11:21):
Yes, we all have an answer, and we have an answer. Well,
there's no answer on what happened to him, but they
did confirm that it was him because they found a
body that was like twenty minutes away from where his
where their condo was. They found the body, they did
the DNA testing on his teeth. They confirmed that it
is the guy. No foul play. There's nothing that they're
to make him believe that there was foul play.

Speaker 1 (11:42):
Like slept on a banapillar.

Speaker 3 (11:43):
So I have no idea. So they're just leaving it at.

Speaker 1 (11:45):
That, like the dead.

Speaker 3 (11:48):
It could have been accident, could have fallen off the Yeah,
like I mean, he wasn't murdered, is what they're saying.

Speaker 1 (11:53):
Yeah, accidental.

Speaker 2 (11:55):
Okay, then what was the cause of death? They haven't said.

Speaker 1 (11:57):
No, Well, they found him in the water, didn't they
like washed up?

Speaker 3 (11:59):
None? Know, he was in bushes.

Speaker 2 (12:01):
What I'm saying, Remember he went for a walk up
three in the morning.

Speaker 1 (12:03):
I bore down an island or something.

Speaker 3 (12:04):
Yeah, Turks and Caicos.

Speaker 2 (12:05):
Maybe I thought that's why I.

Speaker 4 (12:06):
Was on the no foul play. He was found some push.

Speaker 3 (12:10):
But we did remember we looked at the video and
it looked like he went out for like maybe workout clothes.

Speaker 1 (12:15):
It feels like some sort of cover up. Honestly, however,
no foul play. However, he could have like hit his
head or something. Yeah, but that's what I'm saying. At
least released the cause of death.

Speaker 4 (12:24):
Well maybe they will.

Speaker 3 (12:25):
They have not really yet, but I'm sure they will.

Speaker 1 (12:27):
It does feel like a cover up.

Speaker 3 (12:31):
I mean, who goes running or out for a walk
at three in the morning when you're on a vacation.

Speaker 1 (12:35):
With your Let me throw another one out there. What
if he just overdoses. That's no foul play if he
goes out And.

Speaker 4 (12:41):
Why I want to see the toxicology report.

Speaker 1 (12:43):
Well, you don't deserve to see the tox college your reports.
You're invested.

Speaker 3 (12:46):
Does that work?

Speaker 1 (12:47):
Like can you request though I don't know. I don't
know if that's freedom information, Like you're talking about different
government of different country, it's not our government, and our
government cover stuff up all the time too.

Speaker 4 (12:58):
Oh yeah, uh uh.

Speaker 3 (13:00):
Man, could a government like say, something happened to this guy.
A government can decide not to release any information because
it could be foul play, it could have been a murder.
But it makes the country look bad.

Speaker 4 (13:10):
Because they don't want to they don't wanted to impact tourism.

Speaker 3 (13:13):
That's tough, dude.

Speaker 1 (13:15):
Our government covers up debts all the time like that.

Speaker 3 (13:17):
I know. But think you're the family of this guy
and you're just like, we just want the truth, man,
Like that's.

Speaker 1 (13:20):
Every family of every person that's ever happens too.

Speaker 3 (13:25):
Yeah, it seems a little weird. Yeah, it's done for
a walk and died.

Speaker 4 (13:28):
Yeah, I keep us posted.

Speaker 3 (13:29):
I'm gonna oh it's it's on. It's on a subscription.
Don't worry. I clicked any.

Speaker 2 (13:33):
Al on this.

Speaker 3 (13:34):
Oh yeah, lunchbox.

Speaker 2 (13:36):
Haley and Hannah Cavender. They used to play basketball at
the University of Miami. They're twins. They have a big
social media following. I just want to give you an update.
They are doing great. After they both got boob jobs,
they said. They said the first night was a little rough.
They had to sleep upright, and they don't like sleeping
on their back, so that was a little awkward. But
besides that, they are very happy and it went well.

Speaker 3 (13:58):
Who this has nothing to do with it, you know,
like when I broke my arm, I slept on my
back and I thought it was gonna be harder than
it was. Like I thought in the middle of night
I'd roll over and hurt my arm, But I never did.

Speaker 1 (14:07):
Oh No.

Speaker 11 (14:08):
When I had vertigo, I just slept sleep sitting up
for a month and a half.

Speaker 3 (14:12):
It was brutal.

Speaker 1 (14:13):
I didn't sleep at all.

Speaker 4 (14:14):
I like sleeping elevated.

Speaker 3 (14:17):
Not gonna do with the story, but very interesting.

Speaker 4 (14:19):
I liked it, Like I have a bed that goes
this is like a hospital hospital, and I sleep like that,
like I'm in the hospital. I'm like my daughter comes
in and she's like, you look elderly, and like I
am Morgan.

Speaker 11 (14:34):
There was a brawl on a plane. Okay, so you
know when planes dim the light for everybody to settle
down and you're getting some sleep. Well, there was these
three women who kept talking and a man was like, hey,
can you guys be quiet? They didn't, and he like
nudged him again, and then the girl just reaches over
and starts pummeling this guy. All happening on this air flight,
and I guess I'm curious. Do you think people are

(14:55):
supposed to stop talking like the entire plane when the
lights go down.

Speaker 3 (14:58):
That's a good question, because like why do they do that?

Speaker 1 (15:01):
Great point, they do it some people and get sleep
on this overnight No, no.

Speaker 3 (15:04):
No, I'm talking about during the day. Like even during
the day they're like, hey, guys are gonna lower the
lights and then we're.

Speaker 1 (15:08):
Gonna They don't really do it during the day.

Speaker 3 (15:09):
They do it gets dark in there, Like, dude, I'll
take a flight at nine am and they like make
it real.

Speaker 1 (15:14):
Nine am though is still morning if it's not morning
or night. They don't really do that. They don't really
turn the lights.

Speaker 3 (15:20):
I mean they do. They don't leave the lights on
for the flight at all.

Speaker 1 (15:24):
But the windows are able to be open, and it's
it lights up the plane. Ye's the difference. But when
they at nighttime, either the windows are down or it's
dark outside, so they lower the lights so people can sleep.

Speaker 3 (15:33):
I get that.

Speaker 1 (15:34):
It's a completely different thing. Yeah, Like I don't fly
it every.

Speaker 3 (15:37):
Day when we both fly, but I'm saying like even
during the day. I just don't understand why, like they
ever dim the lights, Like, man, it's daytime, let's everybody
wake up.

Speaker 1 (15:47):
But it's they don't need to have the lights on
if it's light outside because everybody's windows are able to
be open and most windows are open. I don't understand
your question.

Speaker 3 (15:55):
I just feel like they want us to take a sleep,
take a nap every time we get on a plane,
And I'm like, man, I don't on and.

Speaker 1 (16:00):
That I think to answer Morgan's question because I think
your question is weird and it makes sense. I don't
think it's against the rules. Stop talking but I think
it's understood you should if it's nighttime in general and
people are trying to sleep, possibly be nice to your neighbor.
So people don't talk. And if somebody's talking, because it's
not against the rules of talk in a theater, like

(16:20):
it's not like against the law or against the rule,
you just don't.

Speaker 11 (16:23):
Yeah, yeah, well, and I think they just didn't care that.

Speaker 1 (16:28):
I would be pissed to it if they wouldn't shut up,
because it you're just supposed to be quiet. It's like
if you ever go to like church camp and you're
all in the same room, they turn the lights out
and everybody's in their bunks. You don't have too they're
just talking normal level. But you know why, because you
start to learn when the lights go down and it's
at a time when people are going to sleep, you'd
be nice and you'd be quiet at least you whisper.
And so they got in a fight because somebody wouldn't
shut up.

Speaker 11 (16:48):
Yeah, I mean the girls who were talking loudly ended
up pumbling the guy who was bothered, and he ended
up like hiding underneath his you know, the little tray
that falls out. He's like underneath there and this lady was.

Speaker 2 (16:58):
Still playing because he can't hit him back, or can
well if he wasn't in the video at least that's
what I'm asking though, Like if he is just sitting
there and they start hitting him, like, what is he
supposed to do?

Speaker 3 (17:07):
You can't hit I.

Speaker 11 (17:08):
Mean, I think you defend yourself.

Speaker 3 (17:11):
That's the tray. That's the trade table, defending yourself.

Speaker 1 (17:14):
No, the trade table is protecting yourself, defend I don't think.

Speaker 11 (17:18):
There's anything wrong with a guy hitting a girl if
he's he's like protecting himself.

Speaker 1 (17:22):
If you're going to get hurt, you can step in
and hurt whatever is hurting you. I agree with that. Yeah,
Like if Morgan sort of attacking me right now and
I took two punches, I probably whooper one. I'm probably
going okay, and I'm looking at the bases recording. If
nobody's recording, then'm a pounder.

Speaker 3 (17:39):
You gotta make sure this did happen.

Speaker 11 (17:40):
I was sitting in a sauna and there's just me
and another girl, and she was on speakerphone the entire
time we were both sitting in there.

Speaker 1 (17:46):
That's just a rude person. That's just a rude person.
That's like the feel on the plane. They're just rude people.

Speaker 11 (17:50):
I feel like that's happening more often than not. I
feel like I'm encountering more people who don't have like
the consideration of others.

Speaker 1 (17:56):
Is that just happening to me?

Speaker 4 (17:58):
Do you guys feel like this is happening.

Speaker 3 (18:00):
Has been happening.

Speaker 1 (18:01):
I think technology allows it to happen more because there
are more ways to be in considerate.

Speaker 11 (18:04):
Now, yeah, that's probably true because it happens with phones.

Speaker 1 (18:08):
Yep, and having your phone on listen to podcasts with
a volume up in an area. So yeah, I think
technology allows it allows people to be more in considered,
presents more inconsiderate options for folks. And then were they young?
COVID probably stunned them. Remember that, Oh yeah, your whole
airplane trying lights on the daytime? That makes no sense,
Like I can't that's like Ray talking about how oldie is.

Speaker 3 (18:26):
No is no you ever get on a plane, they're
always just like three pm.

Speaker 1 (18:31):
I've never been sleep never.

Speaker 3 (18:33):
There's actually not a party going on in there. They
set it up to where like, hey, if you want to.

Speaker 1 (18:39):
At three pm on a flight, do they ever try
to get about to take a nap. No, they just
fly the plane the lights.

Speaker 3 (18:45):
That's only happened.

Speaker 11 (18:46):
To me if I'm on a really long flight, like
if it's a five hour flight, that they'll turn the
lights down.

Speaker 1 (18:51):
But in the daytime, it doesn't matter if the lights
are up or down because it's going to be the same,
same lit because the windows are open.

Speaker 3 (18:57):
I just get that vibe that they want us to
fallow sleep during a flight, no matter what time it did.

Speaker 1 (19:01):
It is just you do they want you just stop talking.
I want you to fall asleep.

Speaker 3 (19:05):
I don't sleep on flights.

Speaker 2 (19:06):
Okay, let's take a break.

Speaker 1 (19:08):
Come back. There's a show coming out on Netflix called
Age of Attraction and basically they're pretty much up to
sixty years old and down to twenty and they throw
them all together and see who like hooks up.

Speaker 4 (19:24):
So they're all single and they just.

Speaker 2 (19:25):
Mingle and yeah, but that's awesome.

Speaker 4 (19:29):
So like a twenty two year old could end up
with a fifty eight year.

Speaker 1 (19:32):
Old, Yes, but they don't share how old they are.

Speaker 3 (19:34):
Well, you kind of have an idea, right looking at.

Speaker 1 (19:39):
The hang haters, you know what I mean? Nick Vile
and Natalie Joyer hosting. They're eighteen years difference, But theirs
isn't crazy because he's like forty four and young and
good looking for forty four and she's twenty six. And
that's just like normal Hollywood stuff, right even eighteen.

Speaker 3 (19:55):
Years yeah, eighteen years normal now.

Speaker 2 (19:57):
And he was like on The Bachelor, Yeah, like sixteen
times he was Oh my gosh, she was on there
so many times.

Speaker 1 (20:03):
Age of Attraction on Netflix and I guess they just
throw them on an island and see who hooks up.
But what wouldn't they be boring off like all the
twenty year olds.

Speaker 2 (20:11):
So yeah, but each exactly. And they got some young
people that are attracted to older people like they probably
in the interview process, Hey do you like old.

Speaker 1 (20:19):
Men or do they have older people that look a
lot younger than they are?

Speaker 4 (20:22):
And also I assume there's older women and young men.

Speaker 1 (20:27):
I can't really see that unless people want to get
on screen.

Speaker 4 (20:30):
So you think this is auch of twenty year old
girls and fifty year old men sugar out and went around.

Speaker 3 (20:36):
It is more realistic.

Speaker 1 (20:37):
Yeah, we're not saying it's right or wrong.

Speaker 4 (20:39):
Women can date younger men, they can, but.

Speaker 1 (20:41):
They often don't. Yeah, it is an unfair societal condition
that older men date younger women, and whenever an older
woman dates a younger man, people like, oh see, we
told you, but it's like so rare that it happened.

Speaker 4 (20:57):
Share is seventy eight and her boyfriend's thirty.

Speaker 1 (20:58):
Eighth has one hundred million.

Speaker 3 (21:00):
Yes, she's very rich.

Speaker 2 (21:01):
Amy had a boy toy those twelve he was not
and he.

Speaker 3 (21:04):
Was not playing what no see the show sounds like cool,
but like do you really want to see them doing stuff?

Speaker 1 (21:12):
Well, so you're acting like sixty is ninety three, I
mean sixty is pretty old compared to twenty old.

Speaker 2 (21:18):
I mean that is so old compared to twenty.

Speaker 1 (21:22):
The eight episode first season was already filmed. A candidate one.
I don't think it's that crazy.

Speaker 2 (21:28):
I mean that's forty years. But that's if the youngest
gets with the oldest.

Speaker 3 (21:32):
What's going to be awesome is their conversations, Like what
are they talking about?

Speaker 2 (21:34):
Exactly?

Speaker 1 (21:35):
Well, my wife and I are almost twelve years and
there are even pop culture references that she doesn't get.

Speaker 3 (21:42):
And that's just.

Speaker 1 (21:43):
At eleven, almost twelve years.

Speaker 3 (21:45):
Even sometimes like you telling her about like artists when
you were younger that she had never.

Speaker 1 (21:49):
Heard of, Like if I make a Fresh Prince reference
lost on her. She makes a Secret Life of Zach
and Cody lost on me. Yeah, so yeah, that comes out.
Twenty twenty six Bobby Bone Show. This woman is staying
in a tent doing an adventure tour and a bear
crawled into her tent and attacked her. Dan the tour

(22:12):
suffered deep wounds after the bear tore her scalp. What
A medic treated the woman at the scene of the
attack before she was rushed to the hospital for immediate surgery.
She was also injected with the vaccines against rabies and tetanus.
She remains in intensive care. Dank bear God, I wonder
if she had like meat out or something, Yeah, snacks,
because a bear, generally speaking, is not going to attack

(22:34):
unless it is We've walked through this before.

Speaker 4 (22:36):
A hungry boom b sicared.

Speaker 1 (22:40):
Okay, both their answers scared, sick or sick, and the
other one is protecting injured, is kind of injured as
kind of sick an injured bear, yeah, or protecting And
it doesn't feel like it needs to be protecting a
cup right then, But.

Speaker 3 (22:57):
She's sleeping like in the tent and then just that's
a nightmare.

Speaker 1 (23:00):
This she was dragged from her tent and mauled by
the wild bear.

Speaker 3 (23:03):
Oh my goodness.

Speaker 1 (23:06):
I would have thought as soon as the bear came
has started dragging me. I was on some sort of
prank show for a minute, for sure, because I'm like,
this isn't happened to me? A bear come into my tent?
But yeah, that crazy huh. That's from Daily Mail.

Speaker 2 (23:16):
Her tent was out in the wide open.

Speaker 1 (23:19):
Next up, I guess it's a segment on terrifying things. Okay,
come on a terrifyingly simple trick that burglars are using
to follow victims home before invading.

Speaker 3 (23:29):
Oh no, don't tell Amy, this was framing.

Speaker 1 (23:31):
Ohio police have uncovered a cunning new scheme burglars are
doing to target victims. Criminals are preying on potential marks
by attaching cell phones to their cars and then using
the GPS trackers to follow them home. The latest scheme
involves criminals attaching a cell phone to the roof of
a car with a magnet, which is then used a
located driver's whereabouts using the phone's location tracker. Scammers will
then knock on the homeowner's door, claiming you have their

(23:52):
cell phone before forcing themselves inside. Other vehicles are positioned
in the street to assist in the home invasion as
they are lookout and get away cars. The criminals will
also tell the homeowner they called the police to try
to get the homeowner to open the door. This from
the Beacon Journal in Ohio. So you'd be like, well,
why wouldn't you put an Apple tag? Well, it will
tell you if there's an Apple tag nearby tract. It's

(24:14):
weird to put a phone in a magnet.

Speaker 3 (24:16):
It is weird. But the whole play of like, oh,
you I accidentally left my phone in your car and
you drove off with it. That's pretty that's next level.
And I thought about that.

Speaker 1 (24:23):
But if you put your phone on my car and
I drive off gravity, let's make it slip off? Yeah,
or simple science?

Speaker 3 (24:32):
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (24:32):
So they're going to knock on my door and say
you have my phone, and I'm going to say.

Speaker 2 (24:37):
Just the physics of a phone falling off a car
because it.

Speaker 1 (24:39):
Goes for I don't like.

Speaker 4 (24:41):
But am I going to sit? But are they going
to say, yeah, it's on your car? And I'll be like, okay,
hold on, let me go. There's no conversation they just
knock you out.

Speaker 1 (24:50):
Well, they just bust in your door.

Speaker 4 (24:52):
Yeah, tie you up?

Speaker 3 (24:53):
Okay, well well we jumped. Yeah I don't have that
depends how yeah.

Speaker 2 (24:59):
Yeah, thoughts.

Speaker 4 (25:01):
This is I mean just me to like check our
cars like every before we get in every time.

Speaker 3 (25:08):
Yeah, you're gonna walk around your car and look for
a phone. Now look on the top of it. When
do you ever look at the top of your car?

Speaker 2 (25:13):
Now?

Speaker 4 (25:13):
Exactly? That's why they that's why this works.

Speaker 3 (25:16):
Oh man, you guys are look the top of your
car never.

Speaker 2 (25:19):
Really, I don't look at anything. I mean I don't
even look at the passenger's side. If you're getting in,
you can have a flat tire over there and you
don't know until you start driving.

Speaker 1 (25:25):
You'm in the outside of the car passenger's side.

Speaker 2 (25:28):
Did you see that? Yeah?

Speaker 1 (25:29):
I don't walk around, but I.

Speaker 2 (25:30):
Think I say, the top of it, I would know
if someone on top of it.

Speaker 4 (25:32):
Did you know that American idol executive that got murdered?
Okay I didn't know if you knew her, But I
feel like I read somewhere that the guy broke into
their house and was like waiting there.

Speaker 1 (25:44):
Maybe I saw the story and I got a bunch
of messages and did you know them? I didn't know
many of the executives who like weren't on set.

Speaker 4 (25:51):
I don't know that story, so it was her and
her husband. But either way, ever since I read that story,
I've been thinking about how someone just breaks in your
house and they wait there. They wait, if it's hours,
they wait for you to come home. And so now
I'm like walking in and be like hello, after waiting
for you there and he.

Speaker 1 (26:10):
Got you, You're like hello, and they're like, yep, I'm here, trap,
no come out.

Speaker 4 (26:14):
I'm on the phone and the police.

Speaker 2 (26:16):
From what I read, is that there was a burglary
and they just happened upon the person in.

Speaker 4 (26:22):
Oh, okay, So they weren't there waiting for them, but
they were just already in there in an active okay,
So they were actively burglarizing.

Speaker 2 (26:28):
Correct.

Speaker 1 (26:28):
That's different than they were just waiting. That's a whole
different crime.

Speaker 4 (26:31):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (26:32):
Well, now I feel like I should look at the
story because we've already started talking about it. The man
accused of killing an American OL executive and her husband
inside there in seen a home allegedly used a couple's
own gun in the shootings. And then called police and
then called police.

Speaker 4 (26:46):
I didn't think he called police because I thought they
were there for four days because the welfare check found them,
because people were like, where where are they?

Speaker 9 (26:53):
You know?

Speaker 1 (26:53):
Lagman revealed the new information at a town hall meeting where
two hundred residents packed in Sino Community Center. Los Angeles.
Police officers conduct a welfare check at an inn Sino
home last Monday, discovered two bodies. The victims were identified
as and they listed them. A day later, police arrested
a twenty two year old man. They arrested him without incident.
Were having phenomenal numbers on crime reduction. That being said,

(27:15):
when two wonderful people end up dead in their own home,
those crime statistics fall kind of flats. As the LAPD
Deputy Chief Hawkman revealed more details about the killings, including
about the couple's gun being used. The DA also told
the crowd that Bouderian used his cell phone to call
police after the crime and provided his name, which was
ultimately how he was tracked down. Weird called and turned
himself in And why wouldn't you stay?

Speaker 4 (27:37):
Did he call in the I guess if he turned
himself in, maybe that was after the wealth. So maybe
after the welfare check happened and then they announced that
the bodies were found, did he then call and turn
himself in.

Speaker 1 (27:47):
This is after the crime, so it doesn't say if
it was like right after he did.

Speaker 4 (27:49):
It would be right after. They wouldn't have been dead
there for multiple days.

Speaker 2 (27:52):
Yeah, I guess he called and said there's an intruder
with a firearm. So police responded, did a search of
the perimeter, didn't see anything, and they left.

Speaker 1 (28:00):
He called right right. I don't understand.

Speaker 4 (28:03):
I didn't know he's the one that called it. So
their house is pretty fenced around, like it's not easy
to access, so police responded to that. I did not
know it was him that called the lunchbox, So.

Speaker 2 (28:15):
But why call right when it happened. Maybe he was
hoping they wouldn't like that, they would find him in
time and save him, Like you know, he didn't meet.
I don't think he went to kill them, and I.

Speaker 1 (28:25):
Think he he called to go like, hey, they've been shot,
come saved their lives and hopefully he could get away
with the crime.

Speaker 2 (28:31):
That's what my head goes to, is that he wasn't
he was just there to burglarize the house and he
he had stolen their guns and he used their gun.

Speaker 4 (28:38):
Yeah, okay, that's what that that it said.

Speaker 2 (28:43):
So that's what makes me think that he was there
just to steal stuff. And they walked in, he boomed,
and he's like, oh my gosh. So he calls nine
to one one hoping that they can come save him
and he can get away.

Speaker 3 (28:51):
But maybe give him their name.

Speaker 1 (28:52):
Though police responded to two burglary calls at the couple's home,
finding no signs of fourth entry, they left people dot
Com can exclusively confirm the second call reported an armed suspect.
The couple was murdered that same day. We're missing something.
That's why we would not be good detectives.

Speaker 4 (29:09):
Yeah, we are.

Speaker 3 (29:09):
We're just doing it on a whim.

Speaker 8 (29:10):
Man.

Speaker 3 (29:11):
We got a time.

Speaker 4 (29:12):
This is all alleged. This is just all I am
doing is inviting you into my brain. Ever since I
read this story of like, I feel like when I
go home, I check everywhere the helicopter came. Now I
need to say, if you're robbing my house, it's okay,
you can escape, don't murder me, just go.

Speaker 1 (29:30):
That's a weird way to come home every day.

Speaker 3 (29:32):
That is weird.

Speaker 1 (29:32):
To the every day a little peculiar to come.

Speaker 4 (29:34):
In, don't it, don't don't, don't choot me. It's okay.

Speaker 1 (29:38):
But what hadn't been made public until now is the
content of that second nine on one call, a report
of an intruder with a firearm. According to dispatch audio
exclusively obtained by People, officers were dispatched. When they arrived,
they walked a perimeter and a helicopter and then they left.
The police did not make entry. They didn't breach the door.
They didn't look inside. They didn't know who the couple
were or if they were already dead or dying. Their

(29:59):
bodies weren't discovered until four days later. Now investigator believe
the couple was murdered on the same day. Officer stood
outside the front of their home.

Speaker 4 (30:05):
But couldn't get in. Didn't go in, Yeah, but like
if you get a call like that, shouldn't you just
like try to get in?

Speaker 2 (30:12):
Well, but I said, there was no broken windows or glass,
so they didn't see any forced entry. They had left
a door open, as how the burglar got in.

Speaker 1 (30:20):
What you're saying, though, is how people get swatted because
you're going, hey, something's happened inside so then people just
come and bust in. The cops comeing to bust in.
That's swat That would be swatting if it wasn't true. Okay,
The day began like any other. The couple, both seventy,
entered their house unaware the intruder was inside. Investigates with
the suspect had been side for thirty minutes before they
arrived and confronted the intruder.

Speaker 4 (30:40):
See that's where I guess I got that he was there.

Speaker 1 (30:42):
I thought she was sure the victims were dead, brutally
shot execution style.

Speaker 3 (30:46):
Oh that doesn't seem acid and not an accident, wool, I.

Speaker 4 (30:51):
Think by accident? Who said accident?

Speaker 2 (30:53):
I don't like I'm saying like he felt like he
had to kill them now because he shot them because
he was like, oh my god, they know who I am,
and then he freaked out. I don't know. My thought
was he called nine to one one saying.

Speaker 1 (31:02):
But you don't know.

Speaker 3 (31:03):
Yeah, I don't know what that's my theory, got it?

Speaker 9 (31:05):
What?

Speaker 4 (31:06):
Sorry? I don't know what execution style means.

Speaker 1 (31:08):
Well, I think of somebody like down on their knees,
I think behind their back, and I don't it could
just also mean a gun close to head.

Speaker 3 (31:17):
I mean I've only known it as that.

Speaker 1 (31:19):
You know what I think I think of like World
War two? No, no, no, Mexican cartel yeah yes.

Speaker 4 (31:26):
Same, or the Taliban yeah same. So yeah, yeah that
sounds terrible. Like just tie them up and be like don't.

Speaker 2 (31:35):
They saw now?

Speaker 1 (31:35):
Then they saw you, right, we're a freaking mask. But
he didn't, so he's already caught.

Speaker 2 (31:40):
I mean they're wearing a mask in daylight. People see you.
They're like, oh, that dude's breaking into houses.

Speaker 4 (31:44):
We'll put it on when you get inside. Yeah, don't
make it my fault that I saw you and then
you kill me for it. I'm not asking to see you.

Speaker 1 (31:55):
Yeah, you didn't ask have your house broken into either.

Speaker 4 (31:57):
No, but if you're gonna do it, like just think,
go ahead a little bit, because you don't want to
have to murder somebody.

Speaker 1 (32:04):
I don't have any evidence of forced break in.

Speaker 4 (32:06):
That's the quote, Yeah, because he went in through a
open radio.

Speaker 2 (32:09):
Came around four to twelve pm. Huh.

Speaker 4 (32:14):
But it's like if he was able to hop the
fence or get through a fence somehow. I guess I
just wonder why officers don't just like hop and like
go see if they can open doors.

Speaker 1 (32:23):
I would imagine the person that hopped and went to
the door and then shuts the door and locks the door.
My theory, but I don't know. That's a tragic story.
You just go home and someone's robbing your house, and
that sucks by itself to get robbed. But then you
walk in at the very small window that you weren't home,
they didn't think you were home, and then they used
your gun. They probably found your gun while robbing you, yep,
and then use that as their protection to not getting

(32:45):
caught kill you.

Speaker 2 (32:46):
But then he turned himself in.

Speaker 3 (32:48):
Yeah that's weird.

Speaker 2 (32:49):
Yeah, that's weird.

Speaker 9 (32:49):
That weird.

Speaker 3 (32:50):
One.

Speaker 1 (32:51):
Just let's roll some voicemails here. Number one.

Speaker 8 (32:55):
Hey, a buddy of mine graduated with LaunchBox, and he
just told me that the football guys kind of to
be sarcastic voted Lunchbox in as Homecoming King, kind of
as a joke. So I'm not sure about that.

Speaker 2 (33:11):
That's such a void made up voicemail. Because I promise, no, no, no,
I'm talking about him. Him calling because I'm gonna tell
you about our football team. We didn't have enough people
to field a team our senior year. So they had
to go around to classes begging people to play football.
So to act like the football team was all against me,
absolutely stupid. Like my buddy Aaron, who didn't even play

(33:31):
football his whole life senior year started a tailback.

Speaker 1 (33:34):
But you're arguing something that But that was like one.

Speaker 2 (33:37):
Of my best friends. So I mean him saying that,
like IM.

Speaker 1 (33:41):
Saying, this guy's telling the truth. But your argument doesn't
make sense as a reason that this wasn't true. Uh yeah,
the football guy doesn't have to be involved, like six
of them could be and like rally the troops. I
don't know what troops there?

Speaker 2 (33:53):
What I mean, there's only like twelve people on the
football team.

Speaker 1 (33:57):
That well, that can't be true.

Speaker 2 (33:58):
Okay, so there was maybe maybe.

Speaker 3 (34:01):
They can't say from sixteen, but I wish to say
seven did.

Speaker 2 (34:04):
Maybe twenty five? I mean, I'm telling you there was no.
I mean, they literally went class to class begging people
to come out for the football team our senior year.

Speaker 1 (34:12):
And because of that, you're saying the football players did
not band together to vote for you, as as prom
king prom king as a joke. No, so couldn't all
twenty five twenty four could about Aaron his best friend,
our football team, or.

Speaker 3 (34:26):
Maybe Aaron started the whole thing.

Speaker 2 (34:27):
And then a lot of them were underclassmen, so they
couldn't vote because they're not seniors. So good good voicemail, dude,
And he sounded like he was from the Northeast. So
he didn't even go to high school with me.

Speaker 3 (34:36):
No, his buddy, his buddy did. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (34:39):
I think people are just upset because I was so popular.

Speaker 1 (34:42):
See if the Anderson High School yearbook is online?

Speaker 2 (34:44):
Love it? I can go get in my house.

Speaker 1 (34:46):
Well, we don't trust to ever bring it back.

Speaker 3 (34:48):
Do you want to see the football team?

Speaker 1 (34:49):
I'd like to see if there were more than twelve
or seventeen or twenty five plays? What year nineteen ninety.

Speaker 2 (34:54):
Nine, yep, ninety eight, ninety nine.

Speaker 1 (34:56):
Yeah, so Lunchbox will be a senior I can name.

Speaker 2 (34:59):
Let me see, I'll name the seniors. Kyle Hogan, Aaron Smith,
Travis Klepper.

Speaker 1 (35:04):
Oh, Clep, loved o Clep.

Speaker 3 (35:06):
And that's it.

Speaker 1 (35:07):
Just see if any other because Adam Johnson NBD if
he was a junior, All right, number four right, hit
that one.

Speaker 10 (35:13):
I live in an apartment building and got food delivered
for dinner tonight. The delivery driver sent me a really
nasty message in the app about how far my apartment
was from the door the side of the tip I
had left. I immediately went to go submit a complaint
in the app, but then I heard Amy's voice in
my head, and it got me really scared of retaliation.
What we do have done.

Speaker 1 (35:35):
I would have rated them a thumbs down, and I
would have pulled the tip, and I would have given
a bad review. Don't come at me with a bad
review for making it difficult for you to deliver. Dumbest
thing ever heard, Like, I'd have been upset at that, Like,
just deliver the food and get your tip, because I
gave you a nice tip anyway, I gave you the whatever,
the eighteen twenty percent, whatever suggests I always go up

(35:58):
one and you're gonna say crap to me out of
your mind. That's what I would have done. But I
wouldn't have cared about retaliation. It's hard to get to
me anyway. How are you going to retaliate?

Speaker 2 (36:05):
Oh right, hard.

Speaker 1 (36:06):
If it's so hard to get to be retaliate, good luck.

Speaker 4 (36:08):
True true?

Speaker 2 (36:10):
Would you have done anything.

Speaker 4 (36:11):
Let go and let love.

Speaker 3 (36:14):
Or something let go and let love.

Speaker 1 (36:15):
I don't think that they can tell who says what
about them? They could tell if you pulled the tip,
probably if they already had the tip. And I'm not
even sure how that works, meaning if you deliver and
you get your ten dollars tip or whatever the delivery
tip is, and then I realized, well, I didn't get
my food that they said, or they hit a tree

(36:36):
or something, and I'm like, okay, I'll make them less
of a tip. But it's already been given. Can you
pull it back? Does it have to sit in a
fund for a while before it's cleared? Like, I don't
know how that works. I don't fear retaliation.

Speaker 4 (36:46):
I do.

Speaker 1 (36:47):
I fear somebody else being treated wrong by that person
because I didn't stand up and say that person is
doing a.

Speaker 4 (36:53):
Badge And maybe they were having a bad day and
they were just frustrated and they be.

Speaker 1 (36:56):
Told, don't have a bad day and affect other people.
If you're having a bad day, need to be taught
a lesson. I love teaching lessons.

Speaker 4 (37:04):
I don't.

Speaker 1 (37:06):
You don't that's true? Give me the next one.

Speaker 2 (37:09):
Ray.

Speaker 12 (37:09):
I'm a fifteen year old singer songwriter here in Nashville, Tennessee,
and I'm gonna be doing the Singer Heart Out contest
at the Fair. I just need some advice on my
audition song. Last year I did When I Was Your
Man by Bruno Mars and got third place. But this
year I'm really trying to take home that first place title.
Any ideas on what audition song I could did this year? Thanks, guys.

Speaker 1 (37:28):
I have many ideas, and there's only one idea that matters,
and it's don't sing one of the songs that everybody's singing.
I was on Idol for four years, and everybody sang
the same songs. There's like six or seven songs that
people love to sing because they think it highlights their voice. Also,
don't do a ton of runs. They don't need to
see you do every time. So I would say google

(37:52):
top twenty audition songs for American Idol, like most saying,
and don't do any of those because that's what everybody
does for every type of show. Do something that most
people aren't doing, because the judges are gonna have fatigue
of hearing the same songs over and over again, regardless
it's good or not. And don't try any more than
like one strong run. If you're trying to show just
how awesome your voice is, you can do it in

(38:13):
one run. No need to do Don't do that. There's
no even if you're perfect at it, don't do that.
That's annoying. How many times we get anoy at christinat
you there to put your finger in the youar going
and she's awesome. Yeah, she's like the best. So sing
a song that isn't often sung and only chase one

(38:34):
vocal highlight, sing strong the whole time.

Speaker 2 (38:37):
Hit him with one vocal highlight and get out of town.
And good luck, Mike, any luck on the earbuok found it.
We have to pay to look at it.

Speaker 3 (38:45):
You have to pay Anderson Hi trying to make that money.

Speaker 1 (38:49):
Trying to make that money.

Speaker 2 (38:51):
I get it, Okay, well lunchbox, I don't. I don't
believe the guy. Yeah I know, I mean, who does
you don't believe the guy? I got the crown to
prove it.

Speaker 1 (39:00):
I think I would need to hear a whole bunch
of people calling in saying that in order for me
to believe it. And I'm not going to believe one
random person.

Speaker 2 (39:07):
John Hackelman. He was also in football senior year.

Speaker 1 (39:10):
I'm looking at the yearbook because Mike has it out
now we can't dive into it. Do you see any
pictures of the whole football team, Mike?

Speaker 3 (39:19):
The dumbnails are really small.

Speaker 2 (39:22):
I'm bringing in man.

Speaker 1 (39:24):
Yeah, but we're not for sure that you're going to
leave all the pages in unless they're all numbered.

Speaker 2 (39:29):
Okay, you can check it one by one. We can
go over every page. We can name every single person
in my high school.

Speaker 1 (39:34):
Yeah, what a bit that would be every person.

Speaker 4 (39:37):
I mean, it's kind of impressive.

Speaker 2 (39:38):
Yeah, I can't do it.

Speaker 1 (39:41):
We recover the names. He has the name every person in.

Speaker 2 (39:45):
My senior class. I'll be tough.

Speaker 1 (39:47):
I could do pretty senior class. I thought you met
in the whole high school. I could do everybody in
my senior class. But I got to I have forty kids.

Speaker 4 (39:54):
It's still even today.

Speaker 1 (39:57):
We got them. We got them.

Speaker 3 (39:58):
How small is that team?

Speaker 2 (39:59):
Very small?

Speaker 1 (40:01):
Okay, Mike, is there any way you can screen grab
that and zoom in, like what is the top or
the that's high school?

Speaker 3 (40:08):
Right?

Speaker 2 (40:08):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (40:09):
If that's high school, that's like forty kids in the
football team. Forty school.

Speaker 3 (40:12):
That's a big That sounds like more than enough.

Speaker 1 (40:14):
It may be more than forty three, ten, twelve, fourteen.

Speaker 2 (40:18):
But you may be having JV in that picture three, it's.

Speaker 4 (40:21):
More than twelve.

Speaker 1 (40:22):
It looks like at least forty in that top.

Speaker 3 (40:25):
This one on the left.

Speaker 2 (40:26):
Yeah, that's a big team. That's a full team.

Speaker 3 (40:29):
That's the size of every high school football team.

Speaker 1 (40:32):
Yeah, that's every football team.

Speaker 2 (40:34):
It looks like nine people per row.

Speaker 3 (40:35):
And there's like four roads there. We go do the math.

Speaker 2 (40:42):
That is not that looks like from nineteen fifty.

Speaker 3 (40:45):
Dude, but they were all black and white.

Speaker 2 (40:48):
I cannot see that. That's the hole.

Speaker 3 (40:50):
That's no, it's not.

Speaker 1 (40:54):
There's a there's a bottom picture of younger kids, which
is probably the JB freshman all different team. Only point
is I still don't believe it. But the point is
if you're telling non truths to fight for your story,
it makes your story.

Speaker 2 (41:07):
Oh, there was no non truth.

Speaker 1 (41:08):
There was there were twelve people. There were kids on
the team said twelve.

Speaker 2 (41:12):
They had to come and knock on every class play.

Speaker 1 (41:15):
I'm not saying that that's not true, but you said twelve,
and then you said like twenty six, and then we're
like wow, but it keeps growing. So your story constantly changes,
So why would we believe your story when the other
part of the story is constantly changing.

Speaker 2 (41:26):
I'm telling you, when the game was going on, there
was maybe eight kids standing on the sidelines because there
was so few kids on the football team.

Speaker 1 (41:33):
Okay, I still believe you, But just as a life lesson,
if like your defense is full of lies, we tend
to not believe what you're defending.

Speaker 2 (41:43):
I will have to go home and look at the
picture and I will figure it out.

Speaker 1 (41:46):
That can also be true, like we're looking at a
slightly blurry picture because they don't want you to have
access to it without paying for it. But it is
a high school yearbook.

Speaker 3 (41:55):
So if you misplaced your yearbook, you can go back
and buy a new one. I guess, so, like that's cool, Yeah,
because I don't. I mean I don't maybe have my
senior one, but I don't have my other ones.

Speaker 1 (42:05):
Oh you want, you want them?

Speaker 3 (42:06):
And then it'd be cool to show the kids they
do not care.

Speaker 1 (42:09):
I think it'd be cool for you to have.

Speaker 3 (42:10):
Dude, I loved looking through my parents you're oh, yeah, yes,
that's amazing.

Speaker 4 (42:13):
I think it's cool to have, like our kids will
want to look through it later, yeah.

Speaker 1 (42:16):
Later, your kids right now, they would give no crap. Really, yeah,
you're not even your oldest son, not yet.

Speaker 3 (42:21):
What I loved was reading the notes.

Speaker 4 (42:24):
Oh they really wrote notes.

Speaker 1 (42:25):
When you're like twenty three. That's fun to look back
at your parents when they were kids. Huh, when you're sixteen,
when you're ten. Yeah, you just want to look at
how funny their hairstyles or how ugly they were, Like,
that's what's fun about it.

Speaker 4 (42:36):
Yeah. Whenever I found out I gotta go look at
my dad's yar book again to figure out the name.
But when I realized he was part of a trio
Cookie and the Cupcakes or something, I was like, this
is like shit, But yeah, I was like my dad
and two girls. I was like at the same time, yes,
But then he had these letters from like those girls

(42:57):
who are like, oh, I've loved being in our group together,
and they would right, real long, they don't do stuff
like that anymore.

Speaker 3 (43:03):
They sure don't missed out.

Speaker 1 (43:07):
This is what annoys kids when their parents are They
don't do it like this anymore.

Speaker 3 (43:10):
That was major controversy on my dad's because somebody had
like circled his picture and said, my baby and my
dad would always say like, no, no, no, your grandma wrote that,
and my mom would be like, no, she didn't I
read that picture problems pretty funny.

Speaker 1 (43:23):
I'll give you a couple more. Here, a Sotheby's auction
just saw a dinosaur skeleton being sold. It was a
one hundred and fifty million year old dino skeleton. It's
an impossible question to answer, Amy, How what would you
put it that it was a one hundred and fifty
million year old Sarah Torris skeleton?

Speaker 4 (43:44):
How big is it?

Speaker 1 (43:46):
That's a great question. The skeleton was purchased by a
commercial paleontologist. This is from the New York Times. It
doesn't say the size of it.

Speaker 3 (43:53):
Okay, you're trying to figure out how much he spent
for it.

Speaker 4 (43:56):
I'm trying to figure out press I.

Speaker 1 (43:58):
Went for in the auction because the commercial paleontologist, I
guess he's the one who bought Wow. I guess he's
the one who bought it. Ohow, I thought he found
it since he's a paleontologist. Yeah, but I guess he's
bought it.

Speaker 4 (44:10):
I don't know. I'm gonna go crazy here a million.

Speaker 1 (44:13):
Well, they thought it was gonna go four between four
and six million dollars. It ended up selling for thirty
point five million dollars.

Speaker 3 (44:21):
Wow, he said one million. Like it is a dinosaur, I.

Speaker 1 (44:26):
Know, but it's one hundred like Michael Jordan's second year
rookie card goes for over a million. That's one hundred
and fify million year old dinosaurs. That's right, yeah, da,
I'll give you one more sciencey type story. Oh, how
tall it is? Hold?

Speaker 11 (44:40):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (44:40):
Okay, I bet you edits at its head at six
feet tall, and it looks like a big lizard. So
imagine the top of the head is six feet tall
and it goes down in lizard bodies.

Speaker 3 (44:50):
That is so cool.

Speaker 2 (44:50):
That's crazy to see that.

Speaker 1 (44:53):
A woman named Chelsea Miller says her ex faked DNA
test to avoid paying over one hundred twenty five thousand
dollars in child support after their son, Louis was born
in twenty twenty two. Three days after louis birth, Sheldon
denied he was a father and asked her a test.
It turned out Sheldon worked to the lab worker named
Robert to swap his sample source.

Speaker 4 (45:08):
No way, that's Robert shady.

Speaker 3 (45:11):
Sheldon. Just pay them money, dude, that's creative.

Speaker 1 (45:15):
Just pay them Listen, I don't stand for what he
stood for, but just pay them money, dud when it's
one hundred twenty five thousand dollars child support?

Speaker 3 (45:21):
Yeah, child support.

Speaker 1 (45:23):
Hey, no, I hear you. I heard the heart of
me says yes. But I'm saying, if you're a thief,
you're going to try to get away with something that
costs like ten thousand bucks up, Like that's significant money.

Speaker 4 (45:35):
So like, also, isn't it freaky to know that like
Roberts are out there in these labs that I mean,
they got caught, Like how many.

Speaker 1 (45:44):
Times I made a thousand bucks I switched out?

Speaker 4 (45:46):
And Robert's probably done this a lot, whether it's Robert
or ROBERTA.

Speaker 1 (45:49):
I don't think Robert's on the line. Probably not a lot.

Speaker 4 (45:52):
But just the fact that in labs like this is happening,
and there's cases in which it's not caught.

Speaker 1 (45:57):
Hey, don't get on Robert. He didn't do anything except
one thing.

Speaker 3 (45:59):
Ert Robert took some money.

Speaker 2 (46:00):
We don't know.

Speaker 1 (46:01):
We don't know Robert.

Speaker 4 (46:03):
Robert.

Speaker 3 (46:04):
Robie's a little shady. I think I think Sheldon's more shady.

Speaker 1 (46:07):
Might be in a pinch and need a little money.

Speaker 3 (46:09):
Maybe.

Speaker 1 (46:10):
It turned out Sheldon worked with a lab worker named
Robert to swap his sample. Both Sheldon Robert pleaded guilty
to conspiracy to conspiracy to come at fraud. Each got
jail time, Sheldon for fifty weeks and Robert for thirty
three weeks.

Speaker 2 (46:21):
That's ridiculous, That.

Speaker 1 (46:22):
Is Robert's ridiculous.

Speaker 4 (46:24):
Yes, jail time.

Speaker 1 (46:26):
It is fraud. It's fraud with like a total of
over one hundred thousand dollars, So that's probably what you're
trying to avoid. Chelsea says she feels let down by
the lab and people need honesty and respect. Amen.

Speaker 3 (46:38):
You know who suffers here?

Speaker 4 (46:39):
The kid?

Speaker 3 (46:40):
The kid does.

Speaker 1 (46:41):
Yeah, I'm all for that, but I'm just saying when
it gets to be high dollar amoullons, I don't put
anything past people. Try to get out of it, and
it's better than like him trying to kill the mom
or something much better. Yeah, if you're gonna try to
do something to get out of it, I hope you
go to Robert and try to get the swap swapped
instead of like doing something like kill somebody, because people
will kill somebody for one hundred thousand.

Speaker 3 (47:01):
But if they do research, it is Robert the dad,
because now Robert's got to pay the But here's the thing.

Speaker 1 (47:11):
This is my understanding of these DNA tests. It doesn't
tell you exactly whose DNA it is. It just says
you're what the percentage is.

Speaker 2 (47:18):
It says nine percent You are not the father, or
you are the father.

Speaker 3 (47:22):
Let's take the DNA and be like, so the dad
is Robert.

Speaker 2 (47:25):
This is Philip Johnston at twelve L No, no, it
doesn't go hunt down to who the dad is. All right,
that's going to do it for us today.

Speaker 1 (47:33):
Thank you guys for hanging out, Thanks for listening to
part two of the podcast, which, by the way, if
you listen to this and you don't know, part one
is what goes on the radio. Part two is us
just doing a different show where we get to actually
like stretch out a little bit. Sometimes it's more entertaining,
sometimes it's not. But we appreciate you being here and
we'll see you guys tomorrow. All right, bye, 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

Scuba Steve

Scuba Steve

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