Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Transmitting Liza, welcome to Tuesday Show.
Speaker 2 (00:13):
More in the studio, Bobby and Show calling you after
our wedding reception just.
Speaker 3 (00:20):
Over the weekends.
Speaker 4 (00:21):
We're sitting here and I said, I just really want
to tell Bobby and the show about our.
Speaker 5 (00:25):
Weddings because you're like friends to us.
Speaker 2 (00:27):
We had a great day.
Speaker 4 (00:28):
And we called when I was trying on my wedding dress.
Speaker 2 (00:31):
I just wanted to say.
Speaker 5 (00:32):
Hey, we're super grateful.
Speaker 6 (00:33):
And we love y'all.
Speaker 7 (00:35):
We love you.
Speaker 2 (00:36):
Thank you, Bobby Bones.
Speaker 7 (00:37):
You have been a godsend.
Speaker 8 (00:38):
So Julia love everything that you do.
Speaker 9 (00:41):
Thank you, sitting big hogs. We appreciate everything you do.
Speaker 2 (00:44):
Come on, yeh, I say this though, for such good
friends words our invite. Oh right, man, we want to
come have a little dancer too, and we want to
come and have some cake cake.
Speaker 6 (00:55):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (00:56):
And you notice when he yelled Dad, he said, hey,
I just want to say thank you for Julia had.
Speaker 5 (01:00):
Not for yeah, yeah, good for her.
Speaker 2 (01:02):
Yeah, no, we have been good for her. Hey, congratulations, guys.
That is that is really cool. Hey, I didn't want
to talk for a second about something that's pretty easy
that they say will help with panic attacks or high anxiety.
Turns out therapist say, using sour candy to ease anxiety
symptoms actually is not a bad idea. There's a TikTok
user explaining the reason that extremely sour candies actually gives
(01:26):
your brain something else to focus on, because all of
a sudden, it's like, oh, we got to focus on that.
And so here's TikTok or Life of Zinc explaining why
eating something extremely sour can help calm you if you
get really anxious or have a panic attack.
Speaker 7 (01:38):
I wish I would have known. A warhead will stop
an anxiety attack. Warhead will stop a panic attack. Warheads
are amazing. This is how you actually cope and overcome
a panic attack or an anxiety attack. Your cheeks start
to hurt a little bit because it's so sour. Now
it's in your saliva and spit, so it's moving around
and hitting all the different taste buds in your mouth,
and you're trying to swallow it down, and you can
feel it kind of burn coming down to your throat
because it's so sour. It's it's so overwhelming that your
(02:01):
brain forgets what it's having anxiety about.
Speaker 6 (02:03):
I've been even moreheads for the best couple of days
seeing if it works.
Speaker 5 (02:06):
Uh huh.
Speaker 2 (02:07):
These things are sours crap, and you know what it
makes me do? It burnt my tongue. Now it makes
us about my tongue because I kept putting on the
same spot and now those taste buds are burnt off
my tongue.
Speaker 5 (02:16):
It'll do that.
Speaker 6 (02:17):
But I have a green one. I hate to play
for Apple, but it's up for the show here.
Speaker 3 (02:20):
But you go in.
Speaker 2 (02:23):
Oh man, it feels better. Man, my anxiety has gone away.
Speaker 5 (02:28):
It's the scientific I guess.
Speaker 6 (02:30):
So it's like when someone sets, does your knee hurt?
You go yeah, and they punch it on the shoulder.
I feel like that's what this is doing right.
Speaker 5 (02:36):
Here, switching something off in your brain.
Speaker 2 (02:41):
Yeah, so I'm not gonna be anxious to all the
sour goes away. The weird thing about these, though, is
that once you suck all the sour off of it,
then it's.
Speaker 6 (02:49):
Just the worst piece of candy ever, And.
Speaker 5 (02:52):
Then the anxiety comes back.
Speaker 2 (02:53):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (02:54):
Just look at I just spent money out of the
bag of candy. Mmmm. Okay, I got all.
Speaker 2 (03:00):
But it's like gum where you chew the flavor out
and if the flavor goes away quick. It's like terrible gum,
but the warhead. If the anxiety goes away because of
the sour, all good. But then it's it's like a
jolly rancher with no jolly, and nobody wants just a rancher.
But if you eat something sour, maybe you do like
(03:21):
ten at once, that will help you with anxiety.
Speaker 6 (03:24):
I'm telling you, I've burnt a hole of my tongue
guns last week.
Speaker 2 (03:26):
I've been I've been living this this experiment for a while,
So don't take medical advice from us, though.
Speaker 6 (03:32):
Take it from Life of Zinc on TikTok.
Speaker 10 (03:39):
Sin by.
Speaker 5 (03:42):
Sin Bar.
Speaker 3 (03:45):
There's a question to be.
Speaker 2 (03:53):
Hello, Bobby Bones, My sixteen year old daughter has been
asking for a belly button ring for years. My answer
is always the same, No, not until you're eighteen. I
don't think it's appropriate for high school girls. I think
it gives the perception of sexy and sends the wrong message.
I had one, but I was in my twenties and
I know how it was perceived by guys.
Speaker 6 (04:11):
She says her friends have one, and she doesn't understand
what the big deal is. I'm not against her having one,
just not at this age. What are your thoughts? Do
you think guys see it as a certain message? Signed
mom of a sixteen year old going on twenty six
and you can go first.
Speaker 11 (04:26):
Oh, I don't know that guys see it a certain message,
but I think that as a parent, I would say
I'm not against it, and we're not going to do
it at sixteen. Like I think you just that's you
don't need to explain any more than that. But I,
y'all are the guys when y'all were younger, did y'all
see that as sexy?
Speaker 2 (04:42):
I'll agree with you first, and that she lives in
your house. She gets to make the rules. It doesn't
matter what our interpretation of the rules are. Like, you're
the mom, and if that's the rule, that's the rule.
So I think Amy and I both agree with you,
and you've created your boundary.
Speaker 6 (04:56):
She has to live by it.
Speaker 5 (04:57):
I've had to do that with my daughter.
Speaker 11 (04:58):
She is one of the nose rings the last couple
of years, and we're like, well, nope, when you're eighteen.
And guess what, she's turning eighteen next month, so I
think we're gonna.
Speaker 5 (05:07):
Have to deal with that.
Speaker 11 (05:08):
So then I'm gonna be like but you still live
in our house.
Speaker 6 (05:10):
I meant to say, nineteen oh yeah, yeah, until you
pay rent. Yeah yeah, yeah, I don't think that.
Speaker 2 (05:16):
Guys look at it and go, she's got a belly
button ring, she'll do stuff. I don't think that's the case.
I think maybe in like nineteen eighty nine.
Speaker 5 (05:25):
Or maybe that's the tongue ring in.
Speaker 6 (05:28):
Nineteen ninety six. Yes, those are cool, but even that
ended up going away too.
Speaker 11 (05:32):
Yeah. I just I look at more as like you're
you don't even know really what you want yet, and
you're gonna put this hole in your body that may
change and look weird over time as your body evolves.
Speaker 2 (05:44):
Okay, fair, I would think that's a hole that doesn't
really matter that much, that can fill up.
Speaker 5 (05:48):
I think when you I don't know.
Speaker 11 (05:49):
I never had one, but I know that my friend
struggled with it when she got pregnant.
Speaker 6 (05:53):
Organ you have a belly button ring.
Speaker 4 (05:54):
Yeah, I still do. I got mine at sixteen.
Speaker 6 (05:57):
What do you say to this mom?
Speaker 12 (05:59):
I mean, it's so my parents let me when I
was sixteen. It didn't feel like a huge gap difference
from sixteen to eighteen.
Speaker 6 (06:06):
Did you go work in a brothel immediately?
Speaker 5 (06:08):
I did not.
Speaker 4 (06:08):
I did not go work in a brothel.
Speaker 12 (06:10):
I don't feel like guys found me sexier because I
had the belly buttoning. I really did that for me
and because that was a thing that all of my
friends were doing at the time. It was just to
be participating with everybody else kind of in a way.
Speaker 5 (06:21):
And I still have it. I still like it. It's just
chilling there.
Speaker 2 (06:24):
So we stand with you on you made the rule.
It doesn't matter how we feel about the rule. It's
not our house.
Speaker 6 (06:29):
You made the rule.
Speaker 2 (06:29):
Cool, But I do not think that guys see a
belly button ring in twenty twenty five and go, well,
she got that pierced.
Speaker 6 (06:37):
I bet there's some other holes, you know what I mean.
Speaker 11 (06:39):
Yeah, I'm trying to read about if it changes over.
Oh yeah, I don't see what happens. Well, I'm just saying,
you can show pictures of.
Speaker 6 (06:48):
Like you know that doesn't work. You know that doesn't work.
But so a picture of like an infected belly button.
Speaker 2 (06:53):
Okay, to stand with you, But I don't think that
guys think what you think. Guys may think I think
times of but you're the mom. You make the rules.
All right, let's play the few we has two thousand
Bobby Bone show listeners on social media. What's the first
thing you'd buy if you won the lottery? Now we're
(07:17):
gonna roll the dice.
Speaker 6 (07:17):
Here to so who goes first?
Speaker 2 (07:19):
But what's the first thing you'd buy if you won
the lottery? The number is what lunchbox will go first?
Speaker 3 (07:26):
Perfect?
Speaker 6 (07:27):
Ten answers on the board. What's the first thing you
buy upon the lottery? House? Show me out house slash
mansion is number one? Yep, so I got on one point.
You have a nine left.
Speaker 8 (07:42):
Give me a car car number two. I'm up to
big three points. Give me that vacation.
Speaker 6 (07:58):
Number three.
Speaker 8 (08:00):
Wow, I'm crushing one, two three Now I'm out.
Speaker 6 (08:02):
Could he run the castle?
Speaker 3 (08:03):
Yeah?
Speaker 8 (08:04):
I don't know what else you buy with with this stuff?
Speaker 3 (08:08):
With money? Uh oh oh bomb.
Speaker 6 (08:12):
Show me a vote ya yacht? That's a big boat.
Speaker 3 (08:19):
Sure?
Speaker 8 (08:19):
Yeah yeah, man, Okay, yeah.
Speaker 3 (08:23):
That's gonna be.
Speaker 6 (08:23):
That's number eight. Answer by the man.
Speaker 3 (08:26):
That's what I'm talking about now.
Speaker 6 (08:28):
Two thousand Bobby Bone Joel listeners. We're as social media.
What's the first thing you'd buy if you won the lottery?
Now I have a question. I don't answer questions and
you know that.
Speaker 13 (08:38):
Give me memorabilia.
Speaker 2 (08:42):
I don't know, show me memorabilia.
Speaker 6 (08:49):
Eddie back, We're gonna come over to you.
Speaker 2 (08:51):
Now.
Speaker 6 (08:51):
You got a house off the board, car off the board,
vacation off the board. Uh, yacht off the board.
Speaker 3 (08:58):
I'm shocked he didn't say this. Give me a plane.
Speaker 2 (09:02):
Show the guy a private plane number seven answer? Private jets.
Speaker 10 (09:09):
Yes.
Speaker 13 (09:10):
And then I don't know you said vacation, but I
think you missed a big part of the second half
of that.
Speaker 3 (09:14):
Vacation home that was my question.
Speaker 6 (09:17):
He did home and vacation. That was my question that
so give me a vacation, hell me a house. That's
why you have a vacation, car the car?
Speaker 5 (09:29):
Okay, can you say what we have again?
Speaker 2 (09:31):
Sure can house at one, car at two, vacation at three,
private jet at seven, yacht at eight.
Speaker 5 (09:37):
Okay. You pay off all your debt?
Speaker 6 (09:40):
Oh responsible?
Speaker 2 (09:41):
Yeah, Amy says, pay off your debt number four answer.
Speaker 11 (09:46):
And then you buy your family house like you're like,
I mention like your mom.
Speaker 5 (09:51):
I don't know how it's listed there, but you might.
Speaker 6 (09:54):
What are you saying, I need to answer.
Speaker 5 (09:57):
Buy your parents a house.
Speaker 6 (09:58):
Another house?
Speaker 2 (10:03):
I kind of already covered that. And yeah, we tried
three houses. At this point, lunchbox points are doubled. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (10:10):
Man, I'm on the struggle bus.
Speaker 2 (10:11):
Now you got you spent years already on the house
and mansion on a yacht, so you really don't really know
anything else. House, mansion, car, vacation, payoff debts, private jet, yacht.
Speaker 6 (10:20):
Do you have four left on the board?
Speaker 8 (10:22):
Yeah, you're gonna buy a business.
Speaker 2 (10:24):
A business business show me b I d no, it's
a good guess.
Speaker 3 (10:34):
I'm gonna go with You're gonna buy stocks? Investment stocks?
Oh stupid? Yeah? Oh do you think that's a good one?
I mean some people do that. I wouldn't do it.
Speaker 2 (10:44):
Investments. That's the number six answered points are double This
round up for twelve points. Wow, wow, Wow, Eddie takes
a lead.
Speaker 3 (10:54):
Let's go with a driver.
Speaker 6 (10:56):
I'd buy a driver, demo driver for your car. Yeah,
someone of your riper for your car? Uh personal driver?
Speaker 2 (11:06):
Amy over to you, punch stock. He did show me
what he said. Okay, should I go with house?
Speaker 5 (11:14):
I was thinking I meant to say, does queen count
of stocks?
Speaker 6 (11:19):
Why are you saying something though that?
Speaker 5 (11:21):
Because that's what I meant to say.
Speaker 6 (11:23):
But I wouldn't go well, since you meant it. But
whatever points are now tripled.
Speaker 2 (11:28):
It has nineteen points. That's Lunchbox has fourteen points. Amy
has four and that's also the same amount of times
you guys have guest house, so points are tripled.
Speaker 6 (11:41):
Lunchbox, I'm gonna take a stab here. Crypto, show me crypto.
Speaker 2 (11:50):
That would be an investmenttor of stock. Yeah, yeah, Crypto's
an investment. Yeah, sorry, buddy, Okay, a business. No, not
an investment of a stock, Eddie.
Speaker 3 (12:00):
Man, I have to to choose from here.
Speaker 2 (12:02):
Three answers left by the way, an our house, car, vacation, payoff, debts,
investments or stocks, private jet and yacht or off the board.
Speaker 13 (12:09):
Three left, and I don't want to tell you what
my two are because Amy's still left.
Speaker 6 (12:13):
Dude, she's gonna guess house so it doesn't matter.
Speaker 13 (12:16):
Or something I just get, Yeah, give me a wife,
buy me a wife a mail order.
Speaker 3 (12:23):
Lunchbox didn't just run this cat.
Speaker 2 (12:25):
Are you saying like you get a trophy wife because
you have money or you're buying one?
Speaker 3 (12:28):
However you want to look at it.
Speaker 11 (12:30):
Not how it works, Well, it kind of is in
some ways.
Speaker 13 (12:36):
That's Lunchbox talks about this all the time upgrades.
Speaker 6 (12:41):
I think he calls them. Yeah, you better say I.
Speaker 3 (12:43):
Think he called I think he called me.
Speaker 2 (12:46):
Yeah, show me, Amy, you can win this thing because
points are tripled.
Speaker 11 (12:51):
Did you buy like an investment property investment house?
Speaker 6 (12:55):
Oh my gosh, she's going to investment house?
Speaker 3 (12:58):
Investment house?
Speaker 6 (13:00):
Points?
Speaker 5 (13:03):
You know something you can make?
Speaker 3 (13:04):
Maybe what was better?
Speaker 14 (13:06):
There?
Speaker 6 (13:06):
You have three answers left. You're gonna win if you
get them.
Speaker 10 (13:09):
Okay, jewelry, show me jewelry.
Speaker 6 (13:15):
Seriously, that was the number ten answer worth thirty.
Speaker 2 (13:17):
Points, like literally the worst at this one and just
walked away waiting what.
Speaker 6 (13:23):
You got two left? Go ahead?
Speaker 5 (13:25):
Yeah, so dumb.
Speaker 2 (13:28):
That's like, oh you never played golf, hits this ball,
hold on one the trap?
Speaker 5 (13:33):
Yeah, well what about new clothes?
Speaker 2 (13:36):
Show me clothes designer closed the number nine. That's where
twenty seven points go ahead? How many move?
Speaker 5 (13:43):
Okay, there's one more.
Speaker 11 (13:45):
More plastic surgery, good Joe.
Speaker 3 (13:49):
How many points did she get it?
Speaker 6 (13:51):
She got thirty four points, Eddie at nineteen, lunch Bucks
at fourteen, she got a lot more.
Speaker 3 (13:56):
I mean she got so many points.
Speaker 2 (13:57):
Oh she had sixty one. Yes, Amy, you almost had
the because when you were like, buy my family a house.
If you were to said give it to your family
and friends, Oh sure, I would have been at yah. Well,
because you wanted to get them. I guess we'd already
guessed four times.
Speaker 5 (14:13):
I know.
Speaker 6 (14:14):
Sorry. Yeah, but with.
Speaker 2 (14:16):
Sixty one points, there's your winner Amy everywhere.
Speaker 15 (14:19):
It's time for the good news.
Speaker 11 (14:25):
We got to love when a ten year old is
making a huge difference. Her name is Ryan Foreman, and
she created an organization called kind Is the New Cool,
and it promotes random acts of kindness in her community.
She herself, through social media and community outreach, is able
to distribute toys, gift cards, and kindness bracelets, and she
also leads initiatives, one of them.
Speaker 5 (14:47):
Called the id Doll Project.
Speaker 11 (14:49):
So she's providing free dolls through this and encouraging self
acceptance among kids, especially girls of color.
Speaker 5 (14:56):
So again, she's ten years old.
Speaker 6 (14:57):
Yeah, that's what I was gonna say. All this is
awesome regardless, but she's ten.
Speaker 5 (15:02):
It's like, what did I do this year, today, right now?
The last five years?
Speaker 6 (15:08):
Yeah, and you're you're older than ten. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (15:10):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (15:10):
So she lives in Hampton, Virginia. So shout out Ryan.
Speaker 2 (15:13):
Foreman, big shout out Ryan Formant. A girl a girl.
Speaker 5 (15:17):
Yeah, our h y.
Speaker 6 (15:19):
Hey, that's cool. I said, thank you. That is what
it's all about. That was telling me something good.
Speaker 10 (15:25):
So Bobby Bones Show Interviews in case you didn't know.
Speaker 2 (15:30):
It is Luke Bryan so many number one songs. He's
back on American Idol. We talk about that in music
and so much more, and we start with when he
got the call for American Idol.
Speaker 16 (15:40):
Here we go, Okay, I want this story about the
first time it was even an option for a conversation
that you might be on American Idol.
Speaker 14 (15:51):
So I'm at my beach house. My manager Carrie. She
calls me and says, we've been contacted about the reboot
of American I mean at that moment, I was at
the height of stadiums and I was like, man, I
cannot go to like La or New York and I'm
(16:11):
not going to go up there and do this meeting
that I don't want to do. Carry calls me and
she goes, hey, they want to come. They want to
come to thirty eight, and they want to they'll fly
to us. You know, two of the people you know
at ABC person and a Fremantle person. I will leave
their names out, but they know I love them. They
started pitching it and I told them I'm really probably
(16:35):
not interested. And what's funny about those the people that
like they have no idea Luke Bryan. They don't know
that I'm doing sold out stadiums and double amphitheaters, and
that I'm making enough money touring that I don't need
like give up money here to go spend more time
doing this. I just needed to go throw shows up
(16:55):
and go rocket. Either way, I went back and I
called I started calling Blake and Keith Urban, and I
called Blake. He was like, Luke TV opens up another
domain and dynamic and I called Keith Urban, and Keith
Urban said, man, he had loved it, and and after
(17:16):
when he did idle once, I got, I mean those
are two guys that I love and trust. And then
I said, you know, I mean we kind of threw
them out a crazy number and damn it, they paid it.
Speaker 6 (17:28):
Here that people knew how much money you made.
Speaker 14 (17:30):
I don't understand how that info leaks.
Speaker 2 (17:34):
Oh, I think you said you don't know why people
are in I'm like, I'm interested, but yeah, I get it,
like somebody, right, somebody knows.
Speaker 14 (17:40):
Somebody is leaking that info because I know it ain't
I know it ain't anybody on our side.
Speaker 2 (17:46):
When I was an idol those years, we go to
dinner everybody and it's crazy, who's gonna win that room
because it ain't me and Katie was big and lost
now and if your room, it was really cool to
watch you come in and you did not dominate the
room on purpose, but you have such a magnetic personality
(18:07):
and it is quite large where I could see that
people would and that's partly what allowed you to rise
was but well, then it got so big people wouldn't
see the other things that you could do, which is
why idol was so great, because you would sit it
a freaking piano and people would have their mind blown
to watch you go and then just pour a straight
vocal over keys and they're like, we didn't know we
(18:28):
could do that.
Speaker 6 (18:28):
Now you've been doing it the whole time.
Speaker 14 (18:30):
Thank you for saying all that. And I think it's
just every artist that makes the leap from throwing out
some radio hits, they got to have something that's like
takes them to that kind of like I didn't never
know I'd be like what's termed as a superstar. I mean,
(18:51):
every time somebody introduces me as Luke country music superstar
Luke Brian, like, it still freaks me out, Like it's
I'm still like, how in the hell did I pull
that title off? I think it was personality and my
willingness on stage to just go for whatever, to dance
(19:14):
and cut up and be and I think that was
different enough to set me apart.
Speaker 6 (19:19):
What's the most impactful song to put out?
Speaker 14 (19:21):
I think the most important song I ever, I ever,
obviously ever did was Country Girl.
Speaker 3 (19:25):
Shake it from me.
Speaker 14 (19:26):
When I look at the most maybe you know, when
I look at a drink of beer or most people
are good. Those were my opportunities at songs that I
thought would be up for Song of the Years, and
I never got a Song of the Year, which that's
when I was kind of like, man, you know, I
really thought those would at least get nominated for something,
and they never did. And then I was like, you know,
(19:48):
at this point in my career, I just need to
be free with what I do. I mean when I
look at one margarita and what that does for my career. Man,
it is fun in the room. It is fun in
the summertime. With twenty thousand people. You don't get no
more fun than performing one.
Speaker 2 (20:06):
Marta, Riita, Lukebryan dot Com all the tickets. I go
back and we talked about that. All right, buddy, I
love you, Thanks.
Speaker 6 (20:12):
I love you. Here's a voicemail from Andy and Upstate
New York. I'm just sitting here listening to the podcast.
Speaker 7 (20:19):
You guys are talking about your Riva songs, and you're.
Speaker 6 (20:21):
Talking about Cowboys Don't Cry, And.
Speaker 17 (20:23):
I'm just thinking, what do you guys think is the
sadest country song.
Speaker 6 (20:27):
I'll throw my hat in the ring. I think it
will always be for a whiskey Lullaby.
Speaker 7 (20:32):
That song gets me every time. I just get lost
in the lyrics listening to it.
Speaker 6 (20:38):
I think that's one of my favorite country songs.
Speaker 3 (20:40):
Ever.
Speaker 6 (20:42):
The bot against it pulled the trigger.
Speaker 2 (20:45):
Uh. The saddest country song I do still stand by
in my top three Cowgirls Don't Cry when Reeba comes
honest things that ride baby right, that makes me emotional.
He stopped loving her today, and I think people go
to that as one of the greatest country songs period
of all time. But he stopped loving her today is
(21:06):
the ultimate sad song because that's the guy who never
stopped loving his wife period, except for when he died,
Like that's why he stopped loving her today. He stopped
loving her today, But that's because he died.
Speaker 3 (21:19):
He couldn't love her anymore.
Speaker 6 (21:20):
Right, Yes, he's dead. Yeah, you don't have to keep
saying it's dead over and over.
Speaker 2 (21:25):
Yeah, because he.
Speaker 6 (21:31):
Yeah yeah, but that's not the point.
Speaker 2 (21:32):
The point is he loved her so hard he was
was Oh yeah, he's dead.
Speaker 6 (21:36):
Okay.
Speaker 2 (21:39):
The dance is sad like in our generation because nobody died.
But it's like, you don't want to have to have
this dance and it's the last thing you're gonna get
to do with the person and it's over after this,
and you could have not had this pain, but you'd
had to miss the dance. But I remember them music video.
(22:00):
It was all dead people, like we gotta step dead,
we got to have dead.
Speaker 6 (22:04):
Oh wait, they didn't just break up.
Speaker 2 (22:06):
But that's a bit about what it is about in
my mind, because again we have all the different versions.
It's like, this is the last time we get to
do this, and I could have not done this again,
but I didn't want to miss having this dance, Like I.
Speaker 6 (22:17):
Could have missed the pain, but I had to miss
No No No.
Speaker 3 (22:24):
Dance.
Speaker 2 (22:26):
He does go along in the last one, but you
can you can do a bit of interpretation because it
could be like a life thing, right, which is what
I was just why in the video they do show
like John f Kennedy Lane Frost, like you.
Speaker 6 (22:38):
Wouldn't have had Martin Luther Kings in the video.
Speaker 2 (22:40):
Yes, you wouldn't have had the experiences with these wonderful
whatever it is person life experiences. But you still do
it again. But it hurts that it's over. For me,
it was just like a guy dancing with his girl
for the last time. But I was also like eleven, uh,
don't take the girl. That's sad, because well that's the
(23:01):
one that I thought. I was like, yeah, country music
made it tough stories, that's great. I was a kid
that's not kissing ninety six and I was like, well,
I'm in. And then you wonder does she die at
the end, because it's not really left there in the video.
Speaker 6 (23:16):
He's just on his knee crying.
Speaker 3 (23:17):
Didn't we ask Tim this? We asked him if she
like my God?
Speaker 6 (23:22):
I didn't write song though, right, but we asked to think,
oh no do We asked.
Speaker 2 (23:25):
Maybe the writer, Well, so we asked Tim, but we
also had the writer a clip of the writer. Yeah,
and I believe she died according to the writer, but
it's not in the song. You should be here, Carl
Swindell comes up on my list of like newest one
because it's really about his It's about his dad, but
it's also like all these things in life are happening,
but not with the person that you loved being here
(23:50):
go rest high in the Mountain Vince Gill, which is
just like, like that one just just cuts my guts
out because I've just had it played at funerals of
people that I love, and that's like a tribute to
a lost one, one that people loved, I mean still loved.
But when it came out, I think maybe one song
of the year was I Drive Your Truck, Lee Bryce,
(24:11):
because it's military person dies and he's dead yep, and
so his dad's driving the truck remembering it. Maybe dad
or mom, I don't know which one it was, but
but there's that one.
Speaker 6 (24:24):
Every lot the music Sonso talked to me to sing it.
Speaker 2 (24:27):
But Trace Adkins every Light in the House, which a
guy is waiting for her to return, but she never does,
like nobody died there. She just loved him right every
lot in the House's O. I sound like trace when
I do that Neon Moon?
Speaker 6 (24:43):
People think it's a love song. Is that sad if
you think about it?
Speaker 2 (24:46):
No, not, if you think if you listen to the words,
you're sitting at an empty bar underneath a neon moon.
You're drinking, You're drowning in sorrow. It's been almost every
night beneath a lot of a neon moon.
Speaker 3 (24:58):
Why is he in there? Here's when?
Speaker 6 (25:01):
What was he in the bar? Because you go to
the bar when.
Speaker 5 (25:04):
You're said he lost his one and only?
Speaker 6 (25:07):
Okay, like is in your losion one and only? But
there's always room here for the lonely?
Speaker 5 (25:15):
Is there because all are welcome lonely?
Speaker 6 (25:17):
I'd also put like, where would you in the world
stop turning?
Speaker 2 (25:21):
Alan Jackson about nine to eleven, Yeah, that was one
I go on Forever Conquered Angel Martina McBride, which is
you know, kid facing tragedy. So yeah, well that's brought
us all down. But oh right, well did he did
ask that song? But great, great songs, you won't play
(25:43):
any of them. We do the dance into the dance,
do the dance man, and if heaven wasn't so far
away from Justin Moore, it was good like one more
visit with those who died?
Speaker 3 (25:55):
Was it grandma's recipe?
Speaker 13 (25:56):
That's that too, right, Grandma's recipe green being casserole.
Speaker 2 (26:01):
You're not singing the right melody does, so, you know what,
it's time for the good news.
Speaker 13 (26:10):
Zane Davis, he's ten years old, lives in Alabama, and
he wakes up in the middle of the night and
the house is in flames. He's like, oh my gosh,
I gotta get out of here. He goes through the smoke,
finds his way out. He gets out of the house.
He's got eleven relatives that live in that house. Everyone
is outside except his little sister. He's like, no, no, no,
I got to go back in. His family members are don't.
Speaker 3 (26:31):
Do it, saying no.
Speaker 13 (26:32):
He runs in, goes through the smoke, finds her in
the hallway, grabs her and takes her out and she
is safe. Everyone in the house survived and thanks to Zaying.
Speaker 3 (26:41):
And he said that.
Speaker 13 (26:41):
Everyone says he's the hero, but Zay, he says, you
know what, Yeah, I'm a hero.
Speaker 6 (26:45):
Yeah, of course he's a kid. He needs to say.
Speaker 3 (26:47):
That, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2 (26:48):
I mean if you're an adult, I got no problem
with you said it either. But if you're a kid,
heck yeah, get your toys and your ice cream. And
if you're grounded, you're not grounded anymore. All of that
great story, that's what it's all about. That was telling
me something good.
Speaker 6 (27:03):
Let's go over to Amy with The Morning Corny. The
Morning Corny.
Speaker 5 (27:10):
What do rich people say when they tickle their baby?
Speaker 6 (27:13):
What do rich people say when they tickle their baby?
Speaker 5 (27:16):
Gucci? Gucci, Gucci.
Speaker 6 (27:22):
That was The Morning Corny. That's pretty good.
Speaker 3 (27:25):
That's good.
Speaker 6 (27:26):
That's pretty good.
Speaker 2 (27:26):
One Tuesday reviewesday. I will go first. I finished Paradise,
which was on Hulu, which watched the preview. It's like
the guy from This is US and the president's been
killed and he's trying to figure out and they're like,
did you do it? And that's all you know going
into it, And that's all I'm gonna say about the
plot of it. But finished all eight episodes. Who else
(27:48):
finished it? I did four of us. It's awesome. It
was awesome. So I'm gonna go four and a half
out of five airplanes. I can't give anything a five
unless every element of it is perfect, and I hate
shows it a week to week. Yeah, it's just not
(28:09):
gonna get it. It's never gonna get a five for me
if it's week to week and I have to wait.
If I discover it later, I can watch it once.
I hate waiting for a show. But it was awesome.
So as hard of a four and a half Airplanes
out of five as I could give it, I give.
Speaker 5 (28:23):
It Amy, I give it four. I'm with you.
Speaker 11 (28:27):
I loved it too. I just give it a four.
And I don't really know what to say because I
don't want to give anything. Good for you, Good for you,
good job, give a good jar out of five.
Speaker 6 (28:36):
That's it, okay, and she didn't even want to say
anything else. Good good Morgan.
Speaker 12 (28:40):
Oh, it's a five out of five for me. I
am obsessed with the show. I can't stop talking about it.
It just makes me feel so many emotions. That's all
I will say.
Speaker 4 (28:49):
I'm gonna give it five out of five CDs.
Speaker 2 (28:52):
It's on Hulu again. It's called Paradise Mike four and
a half out of five Presidents.
Speaker 9 (28:56):
I think it has one of the single best episodes
of a TV show in the last.
Speaker 5 (28:59):
Five years, which one?
Speaker 6 (29:01):
I want to say that spoilers now, I'm curious.
Speaker 2 (29:07):
She's trying to get you on her team. Mike, did
you watch the Robert Pattinson movie?
Speaker 6 (29:12):
Yeah, Mickey seventeen? What is that a real thing? Is
it based on true story? No, it's based on a book.
Speaker 3 (29:17):
What is it?
Speaker 9 (29:17):
It's about human printing. So he's a guy down on
his luck. In order to get out of dep he
goes to like a new space colony takes place in
like twenty fifty four.
Speaker 6 (29:25):
Oh yeah, definitely not real. Then, okay, got it.
Speaker 9 (29:26):
Yeah, it's awesome and he every time he dies, they
reprint him with all of his memories.
Speaker 6 (29:31):
Oh cool.
Speaker 3 (29:32):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (29:32):
So it's the guy who did Parasite. So it's very
sci fi, like right up my alley.
Speaker 2 (29:36):
My wife wanted to watch that, but she said it's
the guy that did Parasite, And I was like, I
can't do a South Korean thing right now.
Speaker 3 (29:41):
But it's not.
Speaker 6 (29:42):
No, it's in English, he does. I'm mad, let's go. Yeah,
he'll do movies in Korean movies and English. Some one's
all English. Okay, review that first?
Speaker 3 (29:48):
What he got?
Speaker 9 (29:49):
I give it four out of five Space Suits I
think you kind of have to be into sci fi
because it goes kind of way into like more of
like a Star.
Speaker 6 (29:56):
Wars Wars kind of world.
Speaker 2 (29:58):
Streaming in theater only. I'm out and the Bob Dylan
movie is still not out streaming.
Speaker 6 (30:03):
You can rent it. I think it's still like twenty bucks.
Oh I'm in. No, you can rent it at home.
Now you're gonna go to the theater. It's been more
than that.
Speaker 3 (30:10):
Yeah, I know.
Speaker 6 (30:11):
I'll wait until it's like a part of streaming Man,
anybody else? Tuesday Reviuesday?
Speaker 2 (30:15):
Yeah?
Speaker 6 (30:16):
I Watch'd you watch Morgan?
Speaker 4 (30:18):
I watched Prime Target on Apple TV.
Speaker 6 (30:20):
I've seen the previews a good Yes.
Speaker 12 (30:22):
It's all about this conspiracy theory around prime numbers and
the guys a mathematician. I loved it more than I
thought I would. It really made me use my brain.
It's the only moment you can you can't really turn
yourself off.
Speaker 5 (30:34):
But I'd give it four out of five ancient things.
Speaker 6 (30:41):
What's a prime number? Do you want to explain it?
Speaker 3 (30:44):
Tom?
Speaker 12 (30:45):
Yeah, it's isn't it the zero? It starts with zero?
I told you I'd use.
Speaker 5 (30:50):
My brain a lot for the show, But I know
it starts with zero.
Speaker 6 (30:54):
What do you think of prime number? This is a
good learning lesson for the whole show.
Speaker 3 (30:58):
I have this calcula I have no.
Speaker 2 (30:59):
No, that doesn't mean you can't know what a prime
number is starts a zero. From what I just learned,
it's a number that cannot be divided by any other number, so.
Speaker 6 (31:10):
Other than itself obviously. So two, three, seven, seventeen, Are
those all right prime numbers?
Speaker 2 (31:18):
Yeah?
Speaker 6 (31:19):
Eleven, I don't know. I'm okay. Lunchbox h The Bear
season three.
Speaker 8 (31:24):
People have been bashed in it saying how terrible it was,
and I thought it was really interesting because it did
a lot of character development. They spent like one episode
each on each character, so you really get to know them.
So I thought it was pretty interesting. I'll give it
three and a half out of five restaurants.
Speaker 6 (31:40):
Well, thank you everybody. Nothing else.
Speaker 3 (31:41):
No, I'm not done, not done with mine.
Speaker 13 (31:43):
I'm in the middle of two shows.
Speaker 2 (31:49):
A mean, what's more impressive. I'll give you two things.
Number one, holding your breath for twenty four minutes or
standing on one foot for seventy six hours.
Speaker 5 (32:00):
Holding your breath for twenty four minutes.
Speaker 2 (32:03):
I would have said that too, because The current world
record holding one's breath underwater is twenty four minutes in
three seconds, achieved by Vudimir Sobot in twenty twenty one.
Because I would have said the same thing, holding your
breath for twenty four minutes. Actually, no one has stood
on one foot for seventy six hours, so that is
the record that has not been done.
Speaker 5 (32:22):
It's the longest they've done it. No, No, because no
one's tried.
Speaker 6 (32:26):
I don't know. People have tried all kinds of crape.
Speaker 13 (32:28):
There's people that held their breath that they die at all, And.
Speaker 6 (32:30):
No, I don't think that's part of it. I don't
think I know.
Speaker 5 (32:33):
I'm worried about them.
Speaker 2 (32:35):
No, it says the current world record for holding one's
breath underwater, which is called static apnea. What is twenty
four minutes three point five seconds. The record for the
longest amount standing on one leg blindfolded, which is oh,
which totally rips your balance. By the way, stood for
two hours and twenty one minutes.
Speaker 5 (32:53):
Oh well then I guess, but.
Speaker 2 (32:54):
This one's not blind anyway. I just wanted to see
what we thought the next one. What's more impressive growing
the longest finger nails ever, which were over thirty feet long,
and both of these are true. Or having the longest
mustache ever, which is fourteen feet long.
Speaker 11 (33:07):
Growing the longest fingernails because you have to use your
hands all the time and my nails break. I try
to grow my now like you know, a cinimeter.
Speaker 2 (33:16):
I feel like those people that have really long, long,
long fingernails like put like crazy gloves and stuff over
their hands to like protect it.
Speaker 11 (33:23):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (33:24):
I mean, but your mustache, what do you do? You
just gotta let it grow? Yeah, but you gotta eat Yeah,
no to the side, pull it.
Speaker 6 (33:30):
Back I'm looking at. Does grow long fingernails just go
so grow.
Speaker 5 (33:36):
Because they curl.
Speaker 2 (33:38):
And then they don't curl it. It's like they curl
and then they just give up and go straight together. Yeah,
I guess I'll go with fingernails. I feel like mustache
you can at least almost like roll up or like
if it hangs down, or you can like braid it
or something. Yeah, both of those are disgusting. This guy's mustache,
(34:00):
he's like holding so imagine this. You're holding the ends
of your mustache by your head, but they're so long
they go that part that hangs goes all the way
down to like your thighs. Whoa, how do you want
he's holding it up?
Speaker 5 (34:16):
Oh?
Speaker 6 (34:17):
Man?
Speaker 2 (34:18):
Both of those are disgusting. Okay, Next up, what's more impressive?
Someone who can juggle chainsaws or someone who can swallow
a sword.
Speaker 6 (34:27):
Both are true things people do.
Speaker 5 (34:30):
Uh, juggling chainsaws.
Speaker 2 (34:35):
I'm gonna go sword swallowing, but only because I can
juggle pretty well. Couldn't juggle chainsaws, no way, But I
can juggle pretty well, and I feel like that is
a skill that you could do a lot before you
actually turn the chainsaws on and get pretty good at it.
Speaker 6 (34:51):
You can't swallow a sword without it. Yeah, I guess
if you.
Speaker 5 (34:56):
Have a big throat, do you even feel the sword?
Speaker 3 (34:59):
Yeah?
Speaker 6 (34:59):
But how far? Don't you say?
Speaker 5 (35:03):
Have you have a big throat? Do you feel the sword?
Speaker 6 (35:06):
Mm hm ask for generation. No one can answer that question,
You're right.
Speaker 2 (35:11):
Next up, a guy who hula hooped for seventy four
hours because he did the longest marathon hula hooping record
is over seventy four hours.
Speaker 3 (35:23):
It's a lot of moving.
Speaker 5 (35:25):
And so like, they don't go what do they do?
Speaker 2 (35:26):
Do?
Speaker 5 (35:26):
They just pee? Like while the hula hoop or go
they go to the bathroom. Do they get it.
Speaker 2 (35:31):
I would imagine they get a little five minute break,
but I don't know. And then pogo sticking for one
hundred and fifteen thousand in a row, because that is real.
Speaker 5 (35:42):
One hundred and fifteen thousand. Well, does it say how long
that takes?
Speaker 6 (35:46):
Because that helped me.
Speaker 5 (35:48):
Whil hula hooping.
Speaker 6 (35:52):
That's more impressive because it's a time thing.
Speaker 11 (35:55):
Yeah, and it's also hard to like keep that emotion.
I feel like once you get bouncing like you're pretty good.
Speaker 6 (36:00):
Oh you do, yeah, you want to. I don't have
a little game on that.
Speaker 5 (36:07):
How many times is you one hundred thousand?
Speaker 6 (36:10):
Okay? What's more oppressive? Both of these are true.
Speaker 2 (36:14):
A guy surviving seventy six days lost at sea or
a guy falling out of a plane with no parachute
and living.
Speaker 11 (36:23):
A guy falling out of a plane with no parachuting living.
Speaker 6 (36:26):
By the way, this guy's boat sank, but he's in
the water. He's not on a boat.
Speaker 5 (36:30):
Yeah, but he's did he have something to hold on to?
Speaker 6 (36:33):
It says a drift, So he wasn't on a boat.
Speaker 5 (36:35):
Boats sound terrible, but a lot of people have survived out.
Speaker 2 (36:41):
At seventy six days seventy six days.
Speaker 11 (36:44):
Yes, they have and people don't. We don't know that
seventy I heard of stories and.
Speaker 6 (36:53):
It says stuff like on social media. It's like, no, no,
I know this for a.
Speaker 5 (36:56):
Found like watch movies in red.
Speaker 6 (36:59):
Seventy six to get a castaway?
Speaker 5 (37:01):
How was what about unbroken from World War Two? How
long were they at sea?
Speaker 6 (37:06):
They were in a boat though, Okay, seventy six day.
Speaker 2 (37:10):
In nineteen eighty two, Stephen Callahan survived seventy six days
that drifted in the Atlantic Ocean after his boat fully
sank or falling out of a plane. In nineteen seventy two,
uh Vesna Volvovic, a flight attendant, survived to fall from
thirty three thousand feet thirty three thousand feet.
Speaker 5 (37:23):
Like, that's that's sometimes How long did you go?
Speaker 2 (37:26):
We're not arguing with you, We just thought you minimize
seventy six days at sea.
Speaker 5 (37:30):
This is a flight attendant. This wasn't some person that's
used to would you like peanuts?
Speaker 3 (37:34):
Thirty three thousand feet that's really that's crazy that guys.
Speaker 6 (37:37):
I would imagine there was some landing and like in
trees or some stuff.
Speaker 11 (37:41):
Yeah, she had a break or fall somehow. How are
he going to be sexiest?
Speaker 6 (37:46):
Vesna, probably a female. I agree with you. It's a
falling out of the Oh it's a guy. No, it's
a guy. You're right, Vesna's a guy. We need to
have a talk. But I felt like you were minimizing
seventy six days at sea.
Speaker 5 (37:58):
I know that's terrible, but you me pick so I
had to make no.
Speaker 6 (38:01):
Then you fought for it.
Speaker 5 (38:02):
Sounded like I was it.
Speaker 6 (38:04):
It is a girl.
Speaker 3 (38:05):
It's a girl.
Speaker 6 (38:05):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (38:06):
Will you find out, Mike, how she did that crap?
She Michael, come back to us in a second with
the answer, I have that.
Speaker 5 (38:12):
Thing like a kid. I'll you know, they don't easily
break their bones.
Speaker 6 (38:16):
They're flexible. She had land.
Speaker 2 (38:19):
She had to, like land in a couple of pillows,
a factory that that was having their roof taken off.
Speaker 5 (38:25):
Yeah, or she could she land in the ocean.
Speaker 6 (38:27):
Listen to this.
Speaker 2 (38:29):
Air safety investigators attributed the survival to her being trapped
and by a food trolley in the fuselage as it
broke away from the rest of the aircraft. She was
in the fuselage as that plummeted towards the ground.
Speaker 5 (38:39):
So did everybody else on the plane crash and die.
Speaker 2 (38:42):
Because she was trapped inside the food trolley in the
tail section of the aircraft as it broke apart mid air,
which essentially cushioned her fall when it landed on a
snow covered mountain side. Everything had to happen right here,
investigators who also investigators, also believe her low blood pressure
caused her to quickly lose consciousness, preventing further injury on impact. Okay,
the plane exploded because a bomb detonated on the plane
(39:04):
she was working as a flight attendant. This story gets
crazier houses not a movie.
Speaker 6 (39:09):
And the tail landed again in a heavy wooded and
heavy snow covered mountain and she was inside the little thing.
Speaker 5 (39:15):
And then how did they I mean, I guess they
know where the tail landed.
Speaker 11 (39:19):
But did they think are they in like a hurry
to get there because they think they're survivors?
Speaker 6 (39:24):
Was she was injured in the wreckage?
Speaker 2 (39:26):
She had broken legs, vertebrae, other internal injuries.
Speaker 6 (39:29):
But she lived. That is wild, all right?
Speaker 2 (39:34):
Next up, that's crazy a mom giving birth to sixty
nine children in her lifetime, or a guy never missing
a day of work for fifty years.
Speaker 11 (39:42):
The birth sixties, says a woman yeah, Well, I've never
given birth, but I yeah, can't imagine doing it sixty
nine times?
Speaker 6 (39:52):
But it doesn't it get easier after like nine?
Speaker 5 (39:56):
Yes, good question. I don't know.
Speaker 6 (39:58):
I don't either.
Speaker 2 (39:58):
You just like tet It just seems you just like
tap your hills together like Wizard of Ods.
Speaker 6 (40:04):
It is a lot.
Speaker 5 (40:05):
Were some of them babies at the same time? Does
that count?
Speaker 6 (40:08):
It's also eighteenth century, so who knows how true?
Speaker 2 (40:11):
It was never missing a day work for fifty years
wild that's impressive, but there are documented cases of individuals
with perfect work attendants. I'll give you one more. What's
more impressive? A ninety five year old still running marathons
or a blind person climbing Mount Everest.
Speaker 6 (40:26):
Both are true.
Speaker 5 (40:29):
A blind person climbing Mount Everest.
Speaker 6 (40:31):
Was the blind person by himself though, great question. I
would bet no.
Speaker 2 (40:36):
But still, but you can say the ninety five year old,
how fast was he running?
Speaker 6 (40:41):
But he ran it?
Speaker 5 (40:42):
Oh, they're fast. I'm pretty sure someone in their nineties
when I ran the marathon beat me.
Speaker 6 (40:48):
You know, it doesn't mean they're fast.
Speaker 11 (40:50):
Well, I mean I wasn't terribly slow, and I'm pretty
sure I know it's the same guy. But he was elderly.
I'd put him in the elderly category. And he carried
an American flag the entire marathon, and he's still be me.
Speaker 2 (41:02):
I'm going to go a ninety five year old running
marathons because you can be a twenty five year old
blind person and be in great shape and just have
a little assistance and probably crush that.
Speaker 5 (41:13):
Okay, good point, Like I don't feel like.
Speaker 6 (41:16):
I'm not blind? Well yeah, kind of am. Let's be honest.
I have one eye that has eight percent vision.
Speaker 5 (41:20):
Okay, but not really but.
Speaker 6 (41:24):
Ye legally, hey, legally blind him my right eye.
Speaker 2 (41:27):
I would say, like blind people can do crap that
we can do for the most part a ninety five
year old person. I don't know if they can use
a bathroom like they have control over that. But I'm
going to go ninety five year old. But yes, he
did not climb it alone. He relied on his team.
The blind guy did. It doesn't matter if you do
it period, I go ninety five year old.
Speaker 3 (41:48):
There.
Speaker 5 (41:49):
What's the percentage of people that try to climb Mount
Everson Die?
Speaker 3 (41:53):
What?
Speaker 2 (41:54):
It's it's high, it's semi high, ili really and part
of it.
Speaker 5 (41:57):
Too, is I don't think it's a walk in the park.
Speaker 6 (42:00):
What's a walking up the mountain?
Speaker 2 (42:01):
It's different, Okay, it's actually it varies year to year.
Some years have been particularly deadly. What I read too,
is that a lot of times it's because there's a queue,
like a line to get it, and you can't get up.
So that's when people will like get sick or cold.
But it's only one percent, so you're NPR just called it.
Say it's only one percent.
Speaker 11 (42:23):
Still, you have to know you're going to go try
to climb that mountain and it might.
Speaker 3 (42:27):
You could die.
Speaker 2 (42:28):
Take you you gotta know when you're get in your
car drove to work, you could die.
Speaker 5 (42:32):
Yes, Okay, we'll never write.
Speaker 6 (42:36):
Wake Up, Wake Up in the morn.
Speaker 5 (42:40):
And it's on the radio, and the Dodgers keeps on.
Speaker 2 (42:47):
Lunchbox. More game too, Steve bread Have it's trying to
put you through fog. He's running this week's next bit,
and Bobby's on the mix.
Speaker 3 (42:56):
So you knowing this.
Speaker 2 (43:02):
About it?
Speaker 6 (43:03):
Ball here's a voice smail.
Speaker 14 (43:05):
We got big fan of the show, long time listener.
Speaker 3 (43:07):
But I will say I have been missing dude, NEOs.
Speaker 6 (43:11):
You need to bring that one back.
Speaker 10 (43:12):
Here we go dude news, Dude duds, just dudes doing news.
We do if dudes just did news? Raymondell, whatch you
do news?
Speaker 3 (43:23):
All right?
Speaker 17 (43:23):
So I got a question, Bones and Eddie, when do
you guys work out together with your trainer three pm?
Speaker 6 (43:31):
Right at three three o'clock, three o'clock?
Speaker 14 (43:33):
Does it?
Speaker 2 (43:33):
Ever?
Speaker 6 (43:33):
How long are the workouts?
Speaker 11 (43:35):
For?
Speaker 6 (43:35):
One hour?
Speaker 17 (43:36):
Okay, that's good, so maybe you get the effects towards
the tail end of your workout.
Speaker 6 (43:39):
They did a study and.
Speaker 17 (43:40):
You were your strongest for lifting weights between four and
six pm, so you might need to push those back
a little bit. Why I didn't say, why we're stronger
than So they did one hundred participants. They did morning, afternoon,
and evening and saw when they could lift the most
weight and they said it's circadian rhythm and testosterone is
the highest.
Speaker 6 (43:59):
Dude news.
Speaker 8 (44:03):
Yeah, lunchbox dude news is back and Playboy is back.
Speaker 6 (44:08):
Boys and Girls.
Speaker 8 (44:10):
After a five year hiatus, they are back in print
and they are back to.
Speaker 6 (44:14):
Doing fully nude. They tried to get away from the treepy.
Speaker 5 (44:17):
I don't know.
Speaker 6 (44:18):
I don't like to get go ahead. No, they were gone.
Why they even?
Speaker 7 (44:25):
What do you mean?
Speaker 3 (44:25):
They have great journalism.
Speaker 8 (44:26):
They have great articles, interviews and they highlight beauty and
it is back baby after five years news.
Speaker 3 (44:35):
How are you guys creeped out.
Speaker 6 (44:37):
By hot trip?
Speaker 3 (44:39):
Like you just didn't know about it? All? Right?
Speaker 13 (44:42):
So there are three dudes in New Zealand fishing, right.
They weren't catching anything. They were on a sixteen foot vessel,
not very big, and then all of a sudden, whoa boom,
A dolphin, a nine hundred pound dolphin lands on their boat.
Speaker 3 (44:56):
Wow.
Speaker 13 (44:56):
To give you an idea, they're on a sixteen foot vessel.
The dolphin was eleven feet long. So it started getting
on the boat, breaking everything, fishing rods.
Speaker 3 (45:05):
One dude almost broke his arm. Then eventually they just
left the dolphin out safely. The dolphin lived, but it
was crazy.
Speaker 6 (45:12):
I would imagine the dolphin let itself out.
Speaker 2 (45:14):
No, they had to flop so much and get leverage
to get out of the boat.
Speaker 13 (45:17):
You know, they had to go call the coast guard,
and the coastguard came and they had this little thing.
Speaker 6 (45:21):
Oh they had to train it out.
Speaker 3 (45:22):
Oh yes, dude, it was. It was almost the size
of the boat.
Speaker 6 (45:25):
Wow.
Speaker 2 (45:25):
Which that makes more sense because they would not have
been able to lift it out, I guess was my point.
If it's that heavy, No, and min last it was
after four pm when they'd have been the strongest ray
Circadian Ready.
Speaker 5 (45:38):
Dude news is what do dudes?
Speaker 6 (45:39):
And dudes did?
Speaker 3 (45:40):
News? All right?
Speaker 6 (45:41):
Final one.
Speaker 2 (45:42):
An influencer went viral after receiving an unexpected note from
a pilot.
Speaker 6 (45:46):
And my question is is this baller or loser?
Speaker 2 (45:50):
Steph Borer, twenty three, known for her travel and lifestyle
post on social media, posted an eleven second clip on
Instagram and TikTok says, I'm sitting at the airport. A
pilot just placed this note on my table and walked away.
So the note said the following, I've seen the whole
world and you are the most beautiful human in it.
(46:12):
She has nearly seven hundred and eight thousand subscribers, she said,
didn't see his face. Now the video has been seen
about twelve million times. She lives in Charleston, South Carolina.
She said, so kind, So the note again. On the
note it said the following, I've seen the whole world
and you are the most beautiful human in it. The
baller or loser lunchbys loser. I want to know why
(46:35):
he left no way to contact him. That is where
he messed up.
Speaker 8 (46:38):
It would have been baller if he left his Instagram,
his phone number, something, so she could at least reach
out and see if maybe there's something. He just left
this note, walked away, And he's a loser. And I've
seen her pictures. She is beautiful, she is a smoke show.
So I think the note is accurate. But he's a
loser because she has no idea who he is.
Speaker 6 (47:00):
It does no good. It does no good, Eddie. This
dude is one percent baller.
Speaker 13 (47:06):
Leave a note not even trying to get with this chick,
just being like, look, I've been all over the world
and you are the most beautiful dude.
Speaker 3 (47:12):
That is so cool. And this pilot he walks on
being like she just is awesome.
Speaker 6 (47:17):
I don't.
Speaker 2 (47:18):
I also think if she tried hard enough, she could
probably figure out who the pilot was, so part of
it two could have been like if she really cared
to look.
Speaker 6 (47:25):
And he also signed like but you can't tell what
his name is.
Speaker 2 (47:28):
It's like a weird Its signature is all like sloppy babe, Ruthie,
so you can't tell. So yes, she has no way
to know who it is immediately, but if she cares enough,
somebody will track it down. I think it's nice, and
again he wasn't all creepy about it.
Speaker 3 (47:40):
It's nice, But is it baller?
Speaker 2 (47:42):
I'll go, Yes, I want to do something we don't
normally do. I'm gonna have to open the door for
somebody that's not a dude. Morgan, you're not a dude.
You let her in, but she's gonna be have a
ceremonial winer for this. Now, what do you think?
Speaker 5 (47:56):
I think it was baller?
Speaker 12 (47:57):
I mean I would be complimented if this happened to me,
and I think it's a good movie. The only thing
he should have done was maybe at.
Speaker 4 (48:03):
His Instagram if he actually wanted something to come from it.
Speaker 3 (48:06):
But maybe he didn't. Just cool, Hey, did you see
your pictures?
Speaker 6 (48:10):
I'm lucky. I see the whole stories on people.
Speaker 3 (48:12):
Yeah.
Speaker 8 (48:13):
Yeah, yeah, I'm just saying, did you see her?
Speaker 5 (48:17):
Yes?
Speaker 6 (48:18):
She's pretty? Yeah, thank you for a question. That Bobby
Bones show up today.
Speaker 8 (48:27):
This story comes us from Holmes County, Florida. A man
was having a little get together at his house. Friends
were over there having a few drinks when one guy
shows up. He's like, I don't really want you.
Speaker 6 (48:37):
At my house. Man, you need to leave. He's like,
I'm not leaving.
Speaker 8 (48:40):
So the homeowner has to call police, and police say, hey, man,
we just leave.
Speaker 6 (48:44):
We want to rest you if you'll just leave. So
they're out there talking to him on the sidewalk.
Speaker 8 (48:47):
He goes, yeah, i'll leave. I just I just need
to text him one thing. Text the homeowner, Hey, I
left my baggy of white stuff on the table. Could
you bring it outside to me?
Speaker 6 (48:56):
I'm guessing that's a flower.
Speaker 3 (48:58):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (48:59):
No, So the guy brought up to him. The police
are like, man, what's that? So he brought it to him.
All the police were there, Yeah, and it was cocaine.
Yeah wow, we thought it was going there. We told
to make sure.
Speaker 8 (49:09):
So then so then they're like, all right, you're under
arrestler possession of cocaine.
Speaker 5 (49:14):
But only the guy who's the baggy.
Speaker 11 (49:16):
Like, if you carry it out to a guy, are you,
like now an accomplice.
Speaker 3 (49:19):
That's a good question.
Speaker 6 (49:20):
No, you can just act like you eating know it was.
Oh yeah, just say look he texted me, I need
to bring him that baggy.
Speaker 3 (49:25):
Yeah, I thought of sugar.
Speaker 6 (49:29):
That's just dumb. Dumb, was he drunk.
Speaker 2 (49:31):
He was under the influence of well, probably something, all
the white stuff.
Speaker 6 (49:34):
Okay, I'm lunchbox. That's your bonehead story of the day.
Speaker 2 (49:39):
They're saying, do not release goldfish into like creeks or
rivers because the goldfish get massive, they just keep growing.
Here is the report warning people. This is from CBS Morning.
Speaker 15 (49:52):
Go ahead, very serious warning from the United States Fish
and Wildlife Service about goldfish. These little thank you guys
you see right here, do not release them into the wild.
According to our government, because they can quote balloon into
giant football sized invaders. Yes, they're calling it the megalodon goldfish.
(50:13):
A couple of years ago. Huh, guy called it sixty
seven pounder.
Speaker 6 (50:17):
Sixty seven pounderesome.
Speaker 2 (50:19):
Like Arkansas Keith was a striper guide for a long time,
and stripers are massive. Stripers are My mom had like
a forty one pounder on the wall.
Speaker 6 (50:30):
Arkansas.
Speaker 2 (50:30):
Keith has caught some in the high thirties and forties,
and even those are not as big as a sixty
pound gold fish. That would be awesome to have mounted
on the wall, though, because everybody would think that was
fake as crap. No, I caught the megalodon It also
reminds me of the Simpsons episode where because of all
the toxic going in from the factory, it has three
(50:51):
eyes on it. Yeah blinky, yeah, blink blinky like with
three eyes. But if you have a goldfish, don't put
in the river or the creek or the lake.
Speaker 5 (51:00):
But if you have a goldfish in a normal thing, it.
Speaker 6 (51:02):
Can't grow bigger in the tank, stay small. Yeah, yes,
it adapts to its environment. Which that's crazy. What if
I just started growing and busted the tank?
Speaker 2 (51:12):
No?
Speaker 5 (51:12):
Yeah, I know, I mean, I just it's so fascinating
to me.
Speaker 6 (51:15):
The guy.
Speaker 2 (51:15):
I'm looking at pictures of the people that have caught him,
and they've caught like six of them, right, so it's
not like this is an epidemic. But if I were
to take my hands and put them about three feet apart,
like I'm going, it was this big. I turn them
over like I'm holding something. That's how big the goldfish is.
Gold Fish. We used to got suckerfish, worse fish ever,
because you can't do anying with them, couldn't really eat them,
and they were goldish, but they were nothing like this.
Speaker 5 (51:39):
Are other fish like that or just goldfish?
Speaker 11 (51:41):
Like if you caught other things from the ocean when
they were little, little and you put them in a
smaller thing, would they not grow?
Speaker 10 (51:48):
Well?
Speaker 2 (51:49):
So from different right, if you've caught something from the
ocean that over generations have grown bigger, it'd be like
if you caught a human and put them in a box, they.
Speaker 6 (51:57):
Still grow good point, he'd be bent.
Speaker 2 (52:01):
Up and it's but but yes, but there are other
fish too, They say, don't put because.
Speaker 6 (52:07):
They will out.
Speaker 5 (52:08):
Yeah, it's crazy.
Speaker 2 (52:09):
You know what I would do to talk about pond
with like one hundred goldfish, giant and then and then
just catch them. I'd have a whole pond full of
megaladon goldfish. That'd be awesome.
Speaker 6 (52:17):
That's it. Thank you, We'll see you tomorrow. Bye everybody.
Speaker 3 (52:20):
Bobby Bone.
Speaker 2 (52:22):
You can find us on Facebook too at Bobby Bones Show.
The Bobby Bones Show theme song, written, produced and sang
by read Yarberry. You can find his instagram at read Yarberry,
Scuba Steve executive producer, Raymond no Head of Production. I'm
Bobby Bones. My instagram is mister Bobby Bones. Thank you
(52:43):
for listening to the podcast.