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April 10, 2024 79 mins

Elizabeth and Damian Hurley join us to talk about their new movie, Strictly Confidential, the one sex scene that has been all over the news and Lunchbox gets to ask 5 questions! Then, find out what we're currently boycotting from our lives! Plus, tomorrow Lunchbox will reveal his huge spill the tea threat unless someone confesses before....

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
Tom, Welcome to Wednesday show more than Studio Morning.

Speaker 2 (00:14):
All right, let's go around the room. He's a black
and white movie geek, and he's the oldest on the show,
so he could be considered an antique. It's produce steady.

Speaker 3 (00:25):
Hey, I was walking by Mike D's desk and realize
he's got like a bunch of bills like my twenties
and tens and maybe even a hundred like what I remember.
Like there was a point where we were just it
was like a penalty or something. We'd have to give
him money, but how do like, where's that game? No idea,
don't know what the game is, and the money's still there.

Speaker 2 (00:43):
Also seeing the money, I don't know if you guys
were like playing a game against me. I don't know.
So I didn't ask because do you know what's what
the money here? It is the rule work.

Speaker 4 (00:53):
You forgot something and you restated it after somebody just
said something. You had to pay twenty bucks and since
we stated that, no one's messed up. For two people,
who are the two people Lunchbox and Amy?

Speaker 2 (01:03):
No, no, Eddie and Amy. So if your notes are money,
and then you jump back in and ask the same question.
You have to pay the fine. I remember that. So
how does the money get awarded to someone?

Speaker 4 (01:15):
We were supposed to get it to one hundred dollars
and then decide what to do with it, but we've
never gotten to one hundred dollars.

Speaker 2 (01:20):
Where is it? It's just on my desk, Like, what's
the amount?

Speaker 5 (01:23):
Now?

Speaker 2 (01:23):
Forty dollars of just their money? Yeah, we should play
for it.

Speaker 3 (01:27):
Yeah, it's forty bucks man. I walked by and I'm
just like, what is that money?

Speaker 2 (01:31):
Of the week? We'll play for the money. We'll see
if anybody falls victim during the week.

Speaker 6 (01:35):
Yes, Amy, okay.

Speaker 7 (01:36):
And it's if you're questioning it sort of right after
it was said, because since this is already thing and
now Eddie's asking what it is, is that him restating No, I.

Speaker 4 (01:43):
Was like, Bobby just said, like, I was driving a
blue car yesterday, And then Eddie came back and said
what color?

Speaker 2 (01:49):
Like he wasn't paying attention. You're not paying them brought
it up as new.

Speaker 7 (01:52):
Yeah, but if enough time goes by, we can ask
what color the car was, because we forget what we.

Speaker 2 (01:57):
Have to do.

Speaker 4 (01:58):
In the same segment, there was a period of time
where everybody was forgetting and saying something right after somebody
like I just said.

Speaker 2 (02:03):
That I got it. Okay, So end of the week,
we'll play a game or something and somebody will get
the money.

Speaker 6 (02:08):
Okay, what part of the week? Just kidding, Oh, twenty
more dollars he said into the week.

Speaker 2 (02:14):
I know, I know, I know. Hey, was that real?
I don't know. I think he's just getting yourself a saver,
all right? Moving on, His opinions are always very strong.
And he just asked people at a restaurant to get
up and leave from their table because they were sitting
too long. Latch box.

Speaker 8 (02:30):
So back in twenty twenty two, we had Barbara Corcoran
on from Shark Tank and Ray had a great pitch
for about he wants to have some I don't even
understand what it was, some bar tab thing.

Speaker 9 (02:42):
Here here's Ray pitching to Barbara Corcoran. Yeah, Barbara, let
me introduce you to put it on my tab. We're
a bar tab service similar to after pay and lay
away for clothing at the end of the night. College
kids just say put it on my tab and they
pay later. There's a ten dollars fee to use the service.
Maxilim as five hundred dollars bars will benefit because these
kids are going to overspend. I need twenty thousand dollars

(03:02):
for the app. If you're not interested, do you think
this would work?

Speaker 10 (03:06):
I think it would work, and I am interested, and
I think he's mostly underestimating the twenty thousand dollars. It's
gonna quest you at least one hundred and fifty before
you get through, and I'm not putting that much money in,
but I'll give you twenty.

Speaker 2 (03:18):
Whoa the idea of the day.

Speaker 8 (03:24):
And so Ray came on earlier this week or and
was like, oh my gosh, tab X stole my idea.
Tab X stole my idea. Bad news for Ray. Tab
X was created in twenty nineteen, so Ray could have
stole the idea from tabat Ray may I stole their idea.
He pitched the barber three years after they launched.

Speaker 9 (03:47):
I mean, I'm guessing it took him a while to
build that up where they could afford to advertise and stuff.
So maybe that's at the ground floor when it started,
but I had no idea about it.

Speaker 2 (03:55):
Hand on the Bible. Well, Lunchbox said he invented tear
away pants thirty years after tearaway pants were invented. He
got mad, dude.

Speaker 8 (04:03):
It was in fifth grade, read elementary school. It was
in invent America, and I said, man, I want tearaway
pants because I go to school in long pants and
then it gets hot, so I need shorts. So I
invented where you tear them away at the knees. And
they told me dumb idea. But Michael Cox invents a
cup holder, and that's what they say was the best
invention in our school.

Speaker 2 (04:23):
He's still met at Michael Fox. I'm sure the cup
holder was a bit different than just a cup holder. Yeah,
I know, just one that hung in your car, and
I'm like, don't they already have cook hung? Yeah? Those
are cool. That pretty cool. Did he make a bunch
of money off that.

Speaker 8 (04:37):
I don't know if he did, but he ended up
going to like Rice University, a real smart guy.

Speaker 2 (04:40):
Yeah, yeah, Ray, I'm sorry though, buddy, that wasn't your idea. Yeah,
it's all right, all right, moving on. She's willing to
try anything if you let her, like going to see
a doctor in the woods just to feel better. It's amy.

Speaker 7 (04:53):
So we all use Life three sixty for tracking, like
with my kids, like you can see where they are
at any given time.

Speaker 6 (04:58):
I can see the speed.

Speaker 2 (05:00):
Like all in your house, not all of us. Yeah,
I don't have it. I don't have that, okay, okay.

Speaker 7 (05:06):
Well, like for example, I get updates like oh, your
daughter was just driving fifty three in a forty.

Speaker 2 (05:12):
We would love to have that though of just you
and we get your life three sixties. Well, Amy, just
back into a fire hydrant.

Speaker 7 (05:20):
The cool part is now my son has gotten really
into tracking his sister and he always knows when she's
on the move, Like even if she's just walking around
the house.

Speaker 6 (05:29):
He's giving me play by play.

Speaker 7 (05:30):
He's like, I can see that she's at home, she
must be walking.

Speaker 6 (05:34):
Around the house.

Speaker 7 (05:35):
But he's great, like it's one of his favorite pastimes now.
So anytime around and about and I'm like, oh hey,
oh I can't get hold of to share. He's like
one second place, so.

Speaker 6 (05:44):
I don't even have to take the time to get out.

Speaker 7 (05:46):
My phone, Like he's already on it, like he's like, oh,
she's driving down this road right now.

Speaker 2 (05:50):
Is it because he can tell hon her?

Speaker 9 (05:52):
No.

Speaker 6 (05:52):
I think it's just one of his things that he's into.

Speaker 2 (05:54):
It's a hobby. Isn't somebody here did they get approach
up putting something on their car for insurance?

Speaker 5 (06:00):
Yeah?

Speaker 7 (06:00):
Yeah, yeah me Eddie did it, and then I'd signed
up for it too, because I realized you can save money.

Speaker 3 (06:05):
I didn't sign up for it though, because people were
just kind of I guess they're all different kinds. There's
an app that you can have on your phone. There's
a track gets into it to get it going breathless.

Speaker 6 (06:16):
No, I have the app.

Speaker 3 (06:17):
So I decided not to do it because the discount
sid awesome, but I mean, dude, I mean I tried
it for about a week just to see if I
can stay under the speed limit, and every time I remembered,
I was already ten miles over the speed limit. So
I'm like, I'm going to fail this and it could
backfire and make mys even go more higher.

Speaker 2 (06:34):
So you just stop. So I'm like, I'm not going
to do this, all right? Right, Heyy from Mountain Pine, Arkansas.

Speaker 9 (06:38):
He invented the Nationale podcast network, and maybe he'll start
a pod with Little Dirt, okay, whatever.

Speaker 2 (06:49):
So we built this barn and it was an old
crappy barn and then we turned it into like a
barn that was like an a and it took us like
eight months. We didn't hand we hired somebody to do it,
and there are rules about building a barn on your property,

(07:10):
like h OA type rules. We thought we did everything right,
and they said, you can't have a place where people
can live if you're building it on your property. It
could be like something like a party barn or a
storage barn or a man It can't be bedroom fridge
of it. So we had a small fridge there that

(07:31):
met the rules, but we would notice that fridge wasn't
big enough. So we went and got a big fridge
and just stuck it in there. Somehow some inspector got
inside of our barn. I gotta go to court next month.
You get, you get, I have.

Speaker 6 (07:45):
To go to court.

Speaker 2 (07:46):
I got a summons. I don't. They're not giving me
a permanent court.

Speaker 6 (07:50):
It's like we're rewarding of the prom should you have.

Speaker 2 (07:53):
We just got a bigger refrigerator, put more waters in.
Are you going to jail? I think so? I think
I'm going to the bighouse. What I gotta And I
know what it was, And I went back. I looked
on the door. There's the summons, and it said you're
doing court on this date, and that's crazy. Do I
represent myself? Yes, lunch No, the lunchbus is your lawyer?
Yeah no No, the loan my whole house. If he

(08:14):
goes in, they'll go in to quickly negotiate that for
But I've never heard of such thing. I can't even
do anything except I have to go to court, and
all we do is like change refrigerators. How do you
have a how'd they get in my barn? How do
you have a property and you can't build whatever you
want on it?

Speaker 7 (08:28):
I mean, whenever I decided to build a garage with
the little apartment above it, we had to go get
a very specific permit, even though it was my backyard
and everything approved.

Speaker 2 (08:38):
There are rules about how tall things can be. What
if you building your backyards.

Speaker 3 (08:41):
Some's super tall and it blocks other people who like
a skycriss scraper?

Speaker 6 (08:45):
Was skyscraper historical district?

Speaker 2 (08:48):
About the Eddie and I are building a pickleball court,
and there are rules about that. It can't be so
close to somebody's house. So at night we had to
hit pickleballs to see how loud it would be, so
if people heard pickleballs.

Speaker 3 (08:59):
You better clear all that before I have to go
to court with you. When we're done with this pickleball court.

Speaker 2 (09:03):
I don't know if it's clear or not. I felt
like you hear it. But anyway, I have to go
to court next month. I don't even maybe even during
the show. Wow, that's crazy because live broadcast my trial.
You ever been to court? I want to call witnesses.
Have you ever been to court? I did Jerry dudey once.

Speaker 3 (09:18):
No, no, no, no, no, when you're involved in it, No, that's crazy.

Speaker 2 (09:22):
Have you No? No, that's crazy. Anyway, it's a rebel.
You're bad. That a cause we literally up great refrigerators.
But then how the person get in there? As I
want to know how the person get in the barn? Right,
that's all. Let's open up the mail bag.

Speaker 11 (09:41):
Friendly game mail and we read all the air gets
something we call Bobby's mail bag.

Speaker 2 (09:47):
Yeah, hello, Bobby Bones. I've worked with my coworker for
almost two years. We get along great. He's never been
anything but nice. But he sits at his desk next
to me, so I do hear what he says on
the phone. He's never lost his temper with me, but
I'm constantly shocked and how he speaks to his wife
and his teenage kids. It's so radically different from the

(10:08):
tone I'm used to hearing him speak that it's like
a different person altogether. I want so badly to have
a talk with him, because I don't know if he
even realizes how of course he must be viewed by
his family. Should I just my own business or is
there some way I can delicately talk to him about
his anger issues? Signed co worker of the Incredible Hulk.
Oh you're gonna meet Hawk if you talk to him

(10:29):
about that? Yeah, without asking, without him bringing it up. Yeah,
don't die. I didn't not your problem. That's weird. Yeah, yeah,
you don't do anything unless he says I don't even
know what he would say, but.

Speaker 7 (10:42):
Maybe he says, hey, I feel like I'm two different people.

Speaker 2 (10:45):
Do you ever if it's clothes start ripping off, it
was like, do you know what's happening? My clothes are
ripping you'd be like, well, you're incredible Hawk, It's just
not your deal. If it was like a great friend,
maybe you could step in make sure you don't no way,
you may get the wrath yourself. And also maybe his

(11:05):
kids are idiots, and maybe it's not your business. Maybe
the way he talks to his wife and children is different.
At work he has a work personality and at home
personality that is not well, that wouldeems awfully weird. No, no,
he seems he does. He has a work personality where
he talks to his kids and his work personality, but
then he gets home he's nicer than them. I guess
two personalities towards the kids now. I think he's probably

(11:27):
like that with that. But any of your business, that's
how you stay out of it. You stay out of it.

Speaker 6 (11:31):
Unless he says something has you worried about it.

Speaker 2 (11:36):
I'll kill you, and I'll kill the woman across from me,
and maybe you raise something. Yeah, yeah, I would just
chill out, don't worry about it, not your situation.

Speaker 6 (11:46):
Yeah, it's sweet of you to care.

Speaker 7 (11:48):
I mean, obviously you don't want someone to be spoken
to that way, especially kids. But you know that's just
sometimes we don't. We don't have to worry about that
stuff because not a problem.

Speaker 2 (11:57):
Yeh, don't, cause it will be your problem. If you do,
that relationship won't be good anymore. The Hulk will get you. Yeah,
all right, close it up. We got your mail and we.

Speaker 6 (12:05):
Laid on your air.

Speaker 3 (12:07):
Now let's find the clothes bobbiesmail.

Speaker 2 (12:09):
Yeah, you need to see a doctor. If dot dot
dot Eddie, I want you to listen. I know you
you've missed your doctor's point me twice. Now I think
you're allowed of control. But hold on. You need to
see a doctor. If when you stand up you feel
lightheaded a couple or a few times in a row
one time, it could be many things. What if we're

(12:31):
like working out, well, that that's one of the things.
That's one of the things. If you have upper neck pain,
consistently upper neck pain, which is different than the lower
neck pain, which is connected to the back. Oh yeah,
but upper a consistent upper neck pain could mean there
are some other issues happening. If you're sweating more than usual,
even in air condition room, and all of these separately

(12:56):
or if they're all together, you're lightheaded, you have upper
neck pain. And if you're sweating more your body, is
something fundamentally wrong in your body that you need to
get taken care of. Didn't Lunchbox have the sweats all
night long for no reason? What was itculosis? It's miculus?
Get hi confused. They're both like funny words to say, yeah,

(13:17):
they both in the assay is yeah, that was a
rough one. Man. I didn't know what was wrong with me.

Speaker 8 (13:22):
But every night, not every night, but probably four out
of five nights, I'd wake up like I'd run ten
miles and I'd be dripping sweat.

Speaker 2 (13:32):
Was like sleeping, and.

Speaker 8 (13:33):
I was just sleeping, and I'd had to get a
towel and dry off, and then I'd move to the
other side of the bed. But if a girl was
in the bed, I'd had to lay a towel down
and sleep on the towel.

Speaker 2 (13:40):
He just wants to bring up it every time he
was single, and he was drinking a lot too, and
he would drink. He would go out and drink all
the time. It wouldn't affect the show, not in the
way of like he would come and drunk, but he
would party hardy. Every Friday night, Saturday night, even Sunday day.
He would go hard. In the worst part of the
diagnos no drinking.

Speaker 9 (14:02):
No drinking for nine months, nine months.

Speaker 2 (14:05):
It was like they said, you can't wear shoes for
nine months. It's that big of a change, and you
have to take this pill.

Speaker 8 (14:10):
Every day for nine months, and so I had to
take a pill every day for nine months.

Speaker 2 (14:14):
But I'm gonna tell you what. Tell me what. I
started taking that pill and it worked.

Speaker 8 (14:18):
I stopped sweating, like maybe a week after I started
taking the pill.

Speaker 2 (14:21):
No more, no more sweat. Yeah, medicine. I mean.

Speaker 9 (14:23):
I bought new blankets, I tried a box fan, I
tried no tuberculosis.

Speaker 2 (14:28):
So now it's like you're reversing it. Already know how
it ends.

Speaker 9 (14:30):
But I'm saying that I tried everything, Like if you
do that before you say tuberculosis, like oh yeah, oh yeah.

Speaker 2 (14:35):
That's what I meant, like before the tuberculosis. Already we
know you're you're sick.

Speaker 8 (14:39):
And then Bobby starts freaking out and it makes me bring
a doctor's note, saying I can come back to work.

Speaker 2 (14:43):
It's contagious. And he was like, you may to bring
a doctor's note. Oh don't wear he listened to this crap. Yeah,
I'm like, yes, you have to bring a doctor's note
because you have tuberculosis. He comes in, gets a doctor's note, boom,
I don't know smash cut some days and he's like,
I think it YEP, I have tuberculosis Amy got tuberculos
from lunchbox. Where do you think it came from? Goodness? No,

(15:05):
true or false? You don't. You never took the pills, dude,
that's like when you.

Speaker 6 (15:09):
Started taking the pills. Yeah, then what And then I
was like.

Speaker 2 (15:12):
So you don't have tuberculosis, and she didn't sweat anymore,
so she ques that's not true.

Speaker 6 (15:15):
I never even had the nights. I never had.

Speaker 7 (15:17):
My TV was asymptomatic. It was let lying, non active.

Speaker 2 (15:23):
I never had COVID. Guess what play golf of lunchboxes
got COVID?

Speaker 1 (15:26):
You did?

Speaker 2 (15:27):
Yeah? After he was like I got COVID and I'm like,
oh no, I could have got it from you.

Speaker 3 (15:32):
No before. It's not how it works. You had tuberculosis first,
then Amy had it.

Speaker 2 (15:38):
You had COVID first, then I got it. Oh my goodness,
that's true.

Speaker 3 (15:43):
And remember when I got COVID though, like I was
out for two months.

Speaker 2 (15:47):
That was the early days, Like those were the best
two months of the show. Eddie was like checking in
from his bedroom.

Speaker 3 (15:52):
You're like, you need to get a negative test, and
I kept going back to like positive positive, like it's
been months and I'm like, just stick it up.

Speaker 2 (15:59):
My butter something mal going down.

Speaker 8 (16:01):
That was in the beginning when we a wouldn't be
too says wild as Wild West.

Speaker 2 (16:05):
It was, but Eddie missed two months of the show
because at that time it was like they have to
turn negative. And every time Eddie took the pregnancy test
positive is positive. Still got it. Baby's coming.

Speaker 7 (16:16):
And what's weird is remember like at events like iHeart
in Vegas or something that we could be back there
and any time you were walking around or anywhere without
a microphone, you had to have your face covered. But
if you were holding a microphone, you did not have
to have your face covered.

Speaker 2 (16:29):
It was like it was like an air.

Speaker 7 (16:30):
Grab a microphone, and it's like, I'm good.

Speaker 2 (16:33):
If you had a bag of peanuts in your hand
on an airplane, Happy New Year. No mask with the kids.

Speaker 3 (16:38):
We couldn't keep the mask on, so we're just giving lollipops,
like you just keep eating the lollipops.

Speaker 2 (16:43):
Keep feeding like theops over mask on. Uh yeah, Lunchbox
think looking back, Lunchbox gave Amy tuberculosis and meet COVID
and we're here.

Speaker 8 (16:51):
I mean, I'm eighty percent. I could say I gave
maybe gave you COVID.

Speaker 2 (16:55):
No, we eighty we played golf together. Zero percent chance.
I gave amy to work interest. How would she get
toberculosis right after you? You're crazy?

Speaker 8 (17:04):
Uh, you can get it anywhere. Where did I get it?
I had it for how well? Who knows when I
got it?

Speaker 2 (17:09):
You probably got it from the girl that was but
it still can take it. Hey, if it wasn't, how
did you get this? Even better? It turns on her. No, no,
this has been a medical minute. They're on the Bobby
Bone Shows.

Speaker 3 (17:34):
Five year old Grayson was born with a rare genetic
disorder that put him at high risk for kidney cancer.
So immediately doctor's like, we're gonna help save your life.
We're gonna have to remove both your kidneys, which means
they need a donor. And just two weeks after he
was put on the registry, two different people donated their kidneys,

(17:55):
and now Grayson is in recovery and he's gonna live.

Speaker 2 (17:59):
Man. I mean, do you know when you donate a kidney,
you know you have to get tested? Is it list
unless you know the person?

Speaker 3 (18:08):
Oh?

Speaker 6 (18:08):
I don't think.

Speaker 5 (18:09):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (18:09):
I think if you go specifically to that person, they
can get it.

Speaker 7 (18:12):
Match Like you can say I want to do this
because you know, like Selena Gomez's friend did it for her.

Speaker 2 (18:16):
And but so Eddie, do you know if it was
people that he knew, it's not.

Speaker 3 (18:20):
There were two strangers too, strange that they hear about
that specific story. They well, I guess they donated. They
wanted to donate their kidneys. They were like put on
a list to donate their kidneys, which is something I've
thought about doing myself. Now he thought about it, yes,
and once that's done, they checked the match.

Speaker 2 (18:35):
It works and they do it. But here's the crazy part.

Speaker 3 (18:36):
If I'm reading this correctly, Since Grayson is five, his
kidney he needs a smaller kidney, and these were adults,
they could use it for multiple people. So I think
they could use part of the kidney for Grayson. And
I'm going to part huh yeah, because they're saying, not
only did it help Grayson, but now there's some other
recipients that it could say I knew, like the liver regenerates. Yeah,

(19:00):
if that's true, which who knows? Which, if I'm reading
this correctly, who knows. That's a great story. Somebody that
don'tates an organ that is that is that's amazing. I've
thought about doing it now.

Speaker 6 (19:11):
I wonder if Harold.

Speaker 7 (19:13):
A lot of our listeners have tried to help Harold,
but maybe they haven't been a match.

Speaker 2 (19:17):
That is absolutely accurate. Some listeners have and they haven't.

Speaker 7 (19:20):
See like I think if they were, they could say,
I want this kidney to.

Speaker 6 (19:23):
Go to Harold.

Speaker 2 (19:24):
That's a great story. That's what it's all about. That
was tell me something good. Everybody got their listening ears on. Yep. Okay, listen,
I'm gonna play you a company. Sound you tell me
the company? For example, here you go, that'd be Netflix, Dell.

(19:45):
What on earth do you have Netflix?

Speaker 6 (19:50):
Uh?

Speaker 2 (19:50):
Yeah, I do.

Speaker 5 (19:50):
I do.

Speaker 2 (19:51):
My sister in law pays for it.

Speaker 6 (19:53):
Still, so if you don't pay for it, you don't
get the Yeah.

Speaker 2 (19:55):
Okay, all right, so again here's Netflix. Here it is.
It's going to be that. I have seven of these.
I thought it was the easiest. That's what was the
exact pretty write your answer down? Here we go number one?
What here it is? Again?

Speaker 6 (20:19):
That's it? Or is there more to it? And we're
just getting a sample.

Speaker 2 (20:22):
When do I ever answer questions for him? That's a
great question, Amy, I appreciate the question. It is a
good question else, but he won't answer it. Thank you.
Here's the question for you. When do I ever answer questions?
It's hence one more time? Please? Are you are? You're
looking angry. I don't ever build a whistle on anger looks.
But I'm close. You're standing again? You sure, starty dog.

Speaker 6 (20:42):
I have all on me, Amy, I don't Mario Brothers anything.

Speaker 5 (20:47):
Amy.

Speaker 2 (20:47):
I think you're right.

Speaker 3 (20:48):
It's McDonald's and we're missing the last part, said Mario Brothers. No,
I'm right about there's missing sound.

Speaker 8 (20:54):
Okay, lunchbox, Yeah, I was missing sound at the end.
It's like nationwide.

Speaker 2 (20:58):
It's played again, played again, it is, but where's the rest?
You cut it off? No, there's a difference in the
music of and then this person sings, I'm loving it.
You're right, so it's not cut off. That's the yea,
that's the sound, you guys. Okay, what is it? Everybody

(21:18):
except lunchboxes getting the whistle? Here we go. I got
a point, No you got, you got. Eddie got a
point and a whistle. Amy got just a whistle. Lunchbox,
We're good, bro. You just didn't get a point. No point. McDonald's.
One more whistle, you're out of the game. McDonald's dut
all right, number two, paste the rainbow. I'm in one

(21:42):
more time. I'm in for the wind, past the rainbow.
That sounds angry, okay, Amy, Eddie skittles, lunchbox skittles. But
I feel like Dan was cut off. That should he
like making fun of things? You got the whistle. Now
we're all even. I was making fun of Eddie. Second,

(22:03):
Oh no, you get kicked up for a second. The whistle.
You're out of here.

Speaker 6 (22:06):
Now here we go.

Speaker 2 (22:09):
Next up, I'm in for the wind zipping Amy. I'm
not gonna comment. Kick cat, Eddie, kick cat. You know
what I I removed lunchboxes whistle what I pulled it

(22:29):
within myself and I removed his whistle. So he's whistleless.
He's whistless. But you're about to get a second one.
Ok No, I'm just Claire. I'm asking for Claire whistle.
Next one. Bet you can't eat just one company? Sound?
What is it? Hit me again? I bet you can't
eat just one? Huh, Eddie, I'm in. Yeah. If you're

(22:51):
yelling your name or you're that late, I'm ship you're
not yet. I'm in. I'm the womb bet. You can't
he just one? Okay, Amy bring Eddie Lays Lunchbox Twicks.
You can't because there are two in there.

Speaker 9 (23:06):
That's right, it's las Yeah, oh yeah, that's where I
went with that.

Speaker 2 (23:11):
There's two. Next up. It's been good looking good. I'm in.
I'm in Amy, KFC, Eddie KFC, Lunchbox KFC. Correct two?

Speaker 12 (23:22):
Last who's one of Mike Eddie with five? Amy and
LB with three? All right, go ahead, I'm in. I'm
in for the win.

Speaker 2 (23:38):
Amy Pringles, lunch Pringles, Eddie Pringles. Last one. So I
got a question? Now, last one? Here we go. Now,
what's your question?

Speaker 8 (23:51):
No, my question is like everyone, we left the speaking
part in, but we cut it off in McDonald's really
threw me off for the whole game.

Speaker 2 (23:57):
Uh oh yeah, he's. That wasn't a question though, that
was just like a statement. Okay, go ahead, last one.
Hit it again. Hey, if you get it, you win. Yeah,
I got it to go and BC anyone else. Yeah,

(24:17):
we're gonna go around the room. It's a fun bit, right,
we're playful, everybody, Hey, playful?

Speaker 5 (24:21):
Right?

Speaker 2 (24:21):
Yeah, don't get me fired. What are we boycotting? That's
the question, now, I asked this because Mike d movie.
Mike is now boycotting a movie. I've never heard of
such thing. What movie isn't Why are you boycotting it?

Speaker 4 (24:33):
I'm boycotting The Crow because they're remaking it, and it's
the movie that Brandon Lee died while shooting the movie.

Speaker 2 (24:39):
But why why boycott it? Though?

Speaker 4 (24:40):
Because that movie should be his legacy. He died while
making that. They finish it after him. That has been
like a historic thing in movie history. It should not
be remade.

Speaker 2 (24:50):
I felt the way that that way about Simba's dad
he was killed. Yeah, they made they made a second one. Yeah,
saw a boycott. I've never seen it. Man, good for
you a little bit though, you're bad a little dramatic.

Speaker 4 (25:02):
Right, No, I don't think they should remake it. That
is what everybody knows them for. That is why that
movie has lived on. And they're doing it as a
cash grab, like, hey, you remember this dark thing that
happened with this movie. We're gonna remake it and it's
not gonna be any good.

Speaker 2 (25:14):
No, I don't think they're saying it's not gonna be
any good. You're inserting that now they say it's not
gonna be able to go, well that what if it's
the best movie comes out in his honor? Oh yeah.

Speaker 4 (25:22):
Ever, I was willing to give it a chance, but
the trailer came out recently and it looks horrible.

Speaker 2 (25:27):
Okay, it looks like a generic action movie.

Speaker 4 (25:29):
And the first one had just so much charm to it,
and now they're just gonna ruin it.

Speaker 8 (25:33):
So basically, he got high on his moral ground once
he saw the trailer and knew it was gonna be bad,
then he could step up and say I'm boycott.

Speaker 2 (25:40):
Yes, man, I knew for sure what it was like. Yeah,
it was like maybe I should boycott this, And he
saw that it was just kind of cartoony, and it's like,
I'm not gonna support it. Although I get it, everybody's
making cash grabs. You have to, but it doesn't take
away from his legacy in that movie. That's all I
think it does.

Speaker 4 (25:53):
Of all the movies to remake, I know they remake
everything at this point, but where somebody died, Uh, there.

Speaker 2 (26:00):
Are people who died on movie sets, didn't some of
the people down Wizard Ozz or that in the middle
of later in life.

Speaker 4 (26:07):
Anything from the makeup, Yeah, yeah, what I did not
know that movie.

Speaker 2 (26:14):
Mike tells more.

Speaker 4 (26:14):
Yeah, the ten man, the first guy who played him,
the whatever they used in that paint ended up suffering
from some kind of lead poisoning stuff.

Speaker 6 (26:24):
That's tragic.

Speaker 2 (26:24):
Oh man, I have never watched that movie again. Boycotting. Boycotting, Yeah, boycotting. Okay,
what are you boycotting? This is scary for me to
let you guys say this.

Speaker 6 (26:34):
Amy Mine's personal go ahead.

Speaker 7 (26:36):
So I'm boycotting my meds.

Speaker 6 (26:40):
So I quit taking this thinking about that. Maybe you
should like, nope, this is nope.

Speaker 7 (26:44):
But I feel like if yeah, when I was thinking, okay,
what's something, I'm not boycotting anything like crazy or public
out there that I'm like, I don't want to be around.
But i do open up my door every day, and
I'm like, okay, not gonna take my adderall. That's my
own personal choice, and I've I'm doing it.

Speaker 2 (27:02):
Okay, I hear you, And good for her. She's making
a decision.

Speaker 6 (27:04):
I like it.

Speaker 2 (27:06):
It's a little more difficult for me, sure, right, not
like it.

Speaker 6 (27:09):
When she doesn't boycott, I'll get to the other side.
I'm just still in that.

Speaker 7 (27:12):
I'm in a sort of a fidgety phase, and maybe
that will stick around. I'm not sure, but I would
just encourage anybody else if you're looking to do anything
like that, consult a doctor.

Speaker 6 (27:23):
I'm not here to say that you should boycott allness.

Speaker 2 (27:25):
It drops a matter on your water and you didn't know.

Speaker 7 (27:29):
Probably I'd probably noticed right away. And but I'm just
trying some alternative methods and we'll see how they work.

Speaker 2 (27:35):
Lunchbox, what are you boycotting? I am boycotting Disney Plus.

Speaker 8 (27:39):
I read an article that they are going to stop
the free loading and they are going to start charging
people for passwords sharing. So I right now am making
a statement I won't be watching Disney Plus.

Speaker 2 (27:50):
So you're actually doing the You can't fire me. I quit, yep,
because I got to kick you out anyway, because you're
not paying for it, that's right.

Speaker 8 (27:56):
Get My cousin Andrew and his wife Ellen have been
letting me use their Disney account and now it is
not going to allow that. So I have decided I
am boycotting Disney Well, I mean they've decided they're eventually
going to boycott you. So yeah, I liked you're getting
ahead of it.

Speaker 2 (28:10):
Yeah, I got ahead of them I'll show them Eddie. Okay.

Speaker 3 (28:13):
So I mentioned this a little bit last week, Like
Taylor Swift and Travis Kelcey, you know, there's too much
paparazza going on. You're gonna ruin their relationship. So I
am boycotting clicking on any article that says Travis Kelsey
and Taylor Swift. There's one that came out a couple
of days ago about a secret trip they took to Nashville,
and I'm like, I want to read, I'm not gonna
do it.

Speaker 2 (28:33):
Medication to help you?

Speaker 6 (28:35):
You have amy, yeah.

Speaker 2 (28:37):
Yeah, no no, no no no, of course not no, no.
I'm boycotting the Tampa Bay Buccaneer football team. Oh boy,
the whole team. Now, it's just I mean part of it, right.
I used to be a big Baker Mayfield guy, and
he's gotten too big to answer my messages now, and
so I supported them wholeheartedly last year. I was a
big Baker guy, big Baker show. I'm boycotting tant the

(28:58):
Bucks and that show biz baby. They don't even exist
to me until I don't know, I don't know what
he can do. Baker hasn't replied at all anything now
all of a sudden make a hundred million bucks.

Speaker 9 (29:11):
Yeah, maybe he's busy, Maybe he's on Baker, my guy
I know, was playing golf for them at a driver
at a driving really might say I see Baker up
there and go say something.

Speaker 2 (29:19):
I was like, I don't know who that is. Baker
Mayfield not even dead to me, never existed, boycotting him
until I don't even know. I don't even know what
it is. But all of a sudden, trying to answer
his friend anymore. So, Mike, good luck on your boycott.
You're doing you and your boycott. Yeah, yeah, Mike joins me.

(29:41):
I joined, Mike, good luck. I'm not watching the first one,
watching the second one.

Speaker 6 (29:44):
Now, this is the first one worth watching. I like it, Okay,
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (29:51):
That says that answers usually know, though I like it.
I don't know. Do you like that restaurant? Well, I
mean I like it.

Speaker 6 (29:58):
It's very protective of it.

Speaker 2 (29:59):
So pile of stories.

Speaker 7 (30:04):
Right, I have some money basics that all couples should discuss.
And this is coming from Jason Tartick, who was engaged
to Caitlin Bristow for a long time.

Speaker 6 (30:13):
They're the Bachelorette people.

Speaker 2 (30:15):
Does he have any background money.

Speaker 7 (30:17):
Yeah, it says he's a banking professional. He works in finance.
I know he has a podcast talking about that sort
of stuff too. And anyway, he was on Good Morning
America helping couples talk about finances, and he says that
you should absolutely be sharing your credit score with your
significant other right when you start dating, annual expenses, income,
and then all accounts.

Speaker 2 (30:38):
That you have. I don't know right about right when
you start dating, it's.

Speaker 7 (30:41):
As new couples, so maybe you've established like, hey, we're
going to be together.

Speaker 6 (30:44):
It's not like date to your boyfriend girlfriend.

Speaker 2 (30:47):
Yeah. Does everyone know their credit score? I don't? Yeah, yeah,
I know, I don't id out. I got a Discover
card when I was like eighteen. Did you pay it
when I never used it? Was that for a free
T shirt? Yeah? Free T shirt? So do you know
if you get a credit card and you don't use it,
therefore you have you don't miss payments, it helps your
credit really? Uh huh? Yeah, because I used to fill

(31:07):
out those things every time I could. Those for those
extra EXU R T shirts that didn't quite fit right. Yeah,
they were a little sandpapery. Yeah, yeah, yeah, I don't know.
It seemed a little bit bit early to start sharing
all those details.

Speaker 7 (31:18):
Yeah. Well, he says that this will keep you from
wrecking your relationships when it comes to money. And it's
one of the things in there too, was don't hide
any accounts.

Speaker 2 (31:26):
Okay, I could see that you may.

Speaker 6 (31:28):
Need your own little rainy day. Okay, So like, hey,
like you're saying no, no, no, no no.

Speaker 7 (31:35):
Yeah, so you you say, hey, I'm keeping this own account, like,
but it's mine, Like if we get together, I'm going
to go ahead and keep it separate.

Speaker 2 (31:43):
Lunchbox, does your wife? I know you guys don't share accounts,
but does she know how much is in your checking?

Speaker 7 (31:47):
No?

Speaker 2 (31:48):
Just no idea how in it? And if she asks you,
would you tell her? I'd tell her is enough?

Speaker 6 (31:53):
And she doesn't know your salary or your income?

Speaker 11 (31:56):
Right?

Speaker 6 (31:56):
Nothing?

Speaker 2 (31:56):
And then if she asked you, are you paid enough?

Speaker 6 (32:00):
That's this rule number one of Jason's list you need
to share.

Speaker 2 (32:03):
Look at Lunchbox and his wife, they're perfect. They're perfect.
What if she has way more money than him? He
doesn't even my Yeah, okay, what else? All right?

Speaker 7 (32:10):
I have the top five things you should never do
if you're getting pulled over by a police officer.

Speaker 2 (32:15):
Run yeah. Number one, brow things out the window.

Speaker 7 (32:19):
Okay, so this one, the first one is don't wait
to pull over. However, I will say, if it's dark
and you want to go to a lit area, I
think that you can go ahead and drive yourself to
a gas station or a lit area to get pulled over.

Speaker 2 (32:30):
I can agree with that, as long as the gas
station is on another town. Yeah, but they don't you
have like when you keep going or when you speed
out to keep going? Correct?

Speaker 5 (32:36):
Yeah?

Speaker 7 (32:36):
Yeah, do not get out of your car, stay in there,
buckled up, do all the things, Do not get out,
don't hide your hands. And Bobby's always said, right when
you get pulled over, the first thing you do is
put both your hands on the steering wheel.

Speaker 2 (32:47):
I'm shair well, and then I can I both out
the window, and then I wait and I don't care.

Speaker 7 (32:53):
Don't reach for anything until they ask, and then don't panic.

Speaker 2 (32:58):
Well that's how it helped that one. I panic as
soon as a cop gets behind me for any reason whatsoever.
But you have to remember, every time a police officer
pull someone over, their risking their own lives. And that
is a big deal to their family back home. It's
a big deal to them. So yeah, just show as
much respect as you can because every single time they
have to approach a car, they do not know what's
about to happen. And if you show them respect, they'll

(33:20):
show you respect. It's much like animals. You see a snake,
they don't want to mess with you. You think a
cop wants to like have any trouble. No, I think
a snake wants to bite you. No, we don't know though.
Oh you can't talk to snakes, man.

Speaker 10 (33:33):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (33:34):
I've seen some of those shows where it's like this,
those churches where they're like, oh oh yeah, yeah, you
know you do just yell a certain thing. Those snakes
stay just at bay and don't bite you. Do you
ever see those? But those are weird, dude, Yeah you
know how those feel? End U nine years they get
good by snake? Yeah all right?

Speaker 7 (33:48):
Next, okay, you know in Chattahoochie who says, you know,
it gets hotter than a hoochie COOCHI.

Speaker 6 (33:53):
Do you know what, chichi?

Speaker 3 (33:55):
And we'll move on so he does not get a fine.
That's why it's always weird with my kids singing I'm like, oh.

Speaker 2 (33:59):
What do you think of ujiji is?

Speaker 6 (34:01):
I never really thought about it.

Speaker 7 (34:03):
It says that it's a county fair strip show.

Speaker 2 (34:08):
No, a county fair strip. That's not what I thought.
It was like a strip.

Speaker 6 (34:13):
I think like that'd be hot to people.

Speaker 2 (34:15):
I thought it was just like, you know, like it
doesn't matter. That's not any better though.

Speaker 6 (34:25):
Okay, maybe that's my file.

Speaker 2 (34:27):
That was Amy's pile of stores. It's time for the
good news. Like Bobby, mister Beasts is like a celebrity
that actually changes the world. Dude, Big Beasts is amazing.
Just he changes the world because he does so much.
And yeah, he does it and he gets a lot
of views, and but it's like, you can build your
platform and have success, but it's what you do with

(34:50):
that success, but you have to keep the platform going
so you can continue to help other folks. There are
some famous people who would get really famous and get
rich and then go, I'm quitting this to dedicate my
life to service. And that's great because I'm sure that's
what filled them. But what it would happen is they
would get way less famous and have less of a
platform in five years. So it's kind of that balance,
But mister Beasts rocks. That dude is constantly doing stuff.

(35:13):
Mister Beast the YouTube star, he donated six hundred e
bikes to people in need across the country. And you
know how these stories were, like this person's walking to
where this person and a knee bike is cool because
you just had a little bit and then it just goes, oh, yeah,
I've seen those, and so people without a reliable means
of transportation. They him and electric e bikes gave six

(35:36):
hundred thousand dollars worth of electric bikes. Dang, that's crazy,
which is going to help so many people.

Speaker 8 (35:43):
I watched one another day where he paid some guy
ten thousand he bought a grocery store. Yeah, and he
paid the guy ten thousand dollars for every day he
could survive in the grocery store. And it may be
even more entertaining if I had the volume on. I
just had it playing during the show while I was
watching it, while you guys were playing you were watching
that video while we were doing the show. Yeah, it
may have been something I wasn't interested in, like a topic,

(36:07):
and so I mean I was just like they were
having him to do and they brought his kids in
At some point they were driving go cards around the
grocery store. I was like, this dude comes up with
the greatest ideas.

Speaker 9 (36:16):
Ever, how much did that dude in it? I didn't
finish the video. It was twenty five minutes and ran
out of time.

Speaker 8 (36:22):
He didn't even like Google it just no. I paused
it and I planned to go back eventually.

Speaker 2 (36:27):
Is he leaving YouTube? Mike? I saw him tweety gonna
leave YouTube?

Speaker 10 (36:33):
Yeah?

Speaker 8 (36:33):
See, because I'm so interested on how much Elon Musk
is paying him to go on Twitter now?

Speaker 2 (36:39):
Because they was he paying him? Are the end?

Speaker 9 (36:42):
They've been going back and forth a little bit because
now he's posting him on Twitter all of a sudden, he.

Speaker 4 (36:45):
Wants him to post like his main videos on on Twitter. Yeah,
which he has been doing sometimes because they get millions
of views, but he hasn't done it yet.

Speaker 2 (36:52):
And the fact he can pay somebody ten thousand bucks
a day, I mean, he's making way way way more
than that a day people watching it, so he's easily
able to pay the ten thousand a day for grocery store.
But they gave all these people e bikes. Thought it
was awesome. Mister beast constantly doing stuff that's helping folks.
That's it's a great story. That's what it's all about.
That was telling me something good. Over to Amy with
the morning Corny. The Morning Corny.

Speaker 6 (37:18):
How did the digital clock show off to its mother?

Speaker 2 (37:21):
Look?

Speaker 6 (37:22):
Mom, no hands?

Speaker 2 (37:23):
Funny? I like that. That was the Morning Corny. Tomorrow
is a big day on this show. Lunchbox has well
decided to put someone on blasts that no one has
come clean yet. Yeah yet, So you give it. This
is the last chance, your last chance. I'm looking around
the whole room, in the glassroom. I mean, no one

(37:44):
knows what to come clean with, like what he's given
little hints.

Speaker 8 (37:48):
Yeah, if there's some on your mind that you think,
oh man, I should probably admit to this.

Speaker 2 (37:53):
That would be the time I will say I do
not know what he's talking about. A lot of times
I need to get the heads up so we don't
get into legal trouble. He's looking around, He's looking at
everybody in the eyes. He's like, yeah, and Amy will
not look at me.

Speaker 6 (38:06):
The back of her head you were looking at supposedly.

Speaker 2 (38:10):
Lived when I was looking the other way. You didn't
want to make eye contact. Tomorrow Lunchbox puts someone on blast.
I mean, it would just it just seems like if
you want to admit something, that wouldn't be a good
move because it's probably not you anyway, and you may
actually admit something way worse he has, and there is
a chance it's clickbait with what he has. But I

(38:31):
believe in him and I love this segment and I
can't wait for tomorrow even though it could be me,
could be could be anyone, have anything you want to say?

Speaker 6 (38:41):
Could it be himself? Is he are you?

Speaker 7 (38:45):
No?

Speaker 2 (38:46):
No, that would be stupid. That's tomorrow. I'm not gonna
put myself on blasts around this time, Lunchbox will put
someone on blast. It just feels like it's probably Eddie
or Ray because that's who it always is. It's always me.
But I mean, I don't have anything.

Speaker 6 (39:00):
Why is he going like so extra with us this time?

Speaker 2 (39:02):
I feel like you really like romance to the stone
with him lately that he probably won't go after you, right,
You guys have a thing going on.

Speaker 8 (39:10):
Maybe she did something, so she's been trying to butter
me up, so I won't reveal it.

Speaker 2 (39:13):
That's a good one too, Okay, But I feel like
you go after Eddie first, Ray and Morgan in that
second tier. I'm the wild card. Hey, don't forget Abby.
He likes to go after Abby too easy. Yeah, I
don't think all this would be because of Abby.

Speaker 8 (39:30):
I just know the phone lines are gonna need to
be open tomorrow because they're gonna be flood.

Speaker 2 (39:34):
Is that a hint? The phone lines?

Speaker 6 (39:36):
Abby phone.

Speaker 2 (39:41):
Tomorrow? Lunchbox puts someone on blast. Princess Cruises wanted to
hire someone to gamble at their new casino. They want
to hire some Oh my god, Oh my gosh. Hold on,
I have time off our own money. They're going to
give you money from the ship. They're offering one person
in all expenses paid cruise to test their new casino. Okay,

(40:04):
you get free food and drinks. You'll also get money
to gamble with Princess Cruise and you get paid and
you can take a guess with you this one. You
two would be friends for that. Yeah, for sure, you
and me gambling the casino. Let's go and report back
about the experience. We could do that.

Speaker 8 (40:24):
Oh my gosh, this is right up my alley.

Speaker 2 (40:27):
They want you to rate the casino. I'll do it
on a scale of zero to ten. But then they
want you to go and do game variety, betting, limits
and aerospherest love all that. I mean, this would be
the job. It's from casino dot org. This would be
the job. You guys would job. Where do we apply?
I don't know, dude. I just saw the story and
thought it'd be funny if you guys like applied for it,
because I think if you two went together, I'd allow it.

Speaker 3 (40:49):
Yeah, absolutely, and we report every single day from the ship.

Speaker 2 (40:54):
I mean I would be I'd be it for that bit. Dude,
put us down. I find it. Oh my gosh, it's great.
He's like frantically looking for it.

Speaker 3 (41:03):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, son. Princess cruise. That's what's a nice, dude.

Speaker 8 (41:07):
A line is searching for a person interested in a
free luxury cruise who also likes to gamble on someone
else's dimes.

Speaker 2 (41:15):
Are nothing says to you guys like that?

Speaker 1 (41:18):
Man?

Speaker 2 (41:18):
Wow, speaking of that Amy, now I think she's moved
on from golf and she wants to play poker. Of course.

Speaker 7 (41:23):
Well no, I just realized it can be lucrative and
if my best friend from.

Speaker 2 (41:27):
High school be get it, isn't mostly.

Speaker 7 (41:29):
Okay, my best friend from high school, Andrew well or
I basically only know you because of her. And she
entered a poker tournament in South Austin and the entry
fee was one hundred dollars. She got second place and
won six hundred and fifty dollars. So in the evening
of just having fun, she walked away with five hundred
and fifty dollars.

Speaker 2 (41:49):
Is that legal? I think if the house doesn't get
a cut, it's it's a lot of that's yes. Oh,
if the house gets cut, it's illegal.

Speaker 6 (41:56):
I didn't say where shed.

Speaker 2 (41:57):
No, it's in South Austin. I used to play in
a lot of poker games. Well, so what do you want?

Speaker 7 (42:02):
Well, I don't know how to play, she said, it's
so much fun. And I'm like, okay, well I want
to I want to start playing with her. Maybe I
can enter tournaments with her.

Speaker 6 (42:10):
We can play.

Speaker 2 (42:11):
Maybe you would have the worst poker face.

Speaker 7 (42:13):
But oh, do somebody teaching me how to foot?

Speaker 6 (42:19):
Let's start having poker?

Speaker 2 (42:20):
No, no, no, no, no, don't. I don't think that's
for you.

Speaker 6 (42:22):
No, well, why is it for her?

Speaker 2 (42:24):
I don't know, Amy, you can't even squirrel. It's major
Patients like patients. I used to play a lot. I
used to play in like underground games of warehouses and
it got then they started getting robbed and I was out,
and then we go to Vegas lunch. And I'd go
to Vegas. I wanted one big tournament one time in
one you know, I think decade. But it took like

(42:45):
fourteen hours of me playing. Yeah, I think fourteen hours amy.

Speaker 8 (42:49):
Okay, Yeah, I went to the club, brought some chicks
down to watch the final table.

Speaker 2 (42:53):
Like he It was like, I went at dinner, started playing,
played for a few hours, and lunch Box came to
the table. I was like, I'm going to the with
some chicks. Never sold chicks, but you'd come back with chicks.
And then he's like, fourteen hours later, I was exhausted.

Speaker 6 (43:05):
That's yeah, I mean I get it. I don't know.

Speaker 7 (43:08):
I think just this time around, Uh like when we
go to Vegas for work, Uh, you won't.

Speaker 2 (43:12):
Even get We'll get out a poker table. Oh please.
We never see her all weekend.

Speaker 7 (43:16):
Maybe maybe, but you know what's fun to me and
I don't ever just take time to sit down and
do it with y'all is blackjack.

Speaker 6 (43:22):
Like I could do that in Vegas.

Speaker 2 (43:24):
So do you want to learn blackjack or poker?

Speaker 6 (43:25):
Whatever?

Speaker 2 (43:26):
No, not whatever?

Speaker 7 (43:26):
Oh no, I just think this is my this is
my time for that.

Speaker 2 (43:32):
You have a lot of money or no, you don't know.

Speaker 6 (43:35):
We can You don't have to have a lot of money, right,
you can play the cheaper tables.

Speaker 2 (43:41):
Yeah, okay, when we go to Vegas, we'll definitely take
You'll set aside whatever money you want. You'll slove an
off pieces of that pie, and then you'll say this
how much I have, and then we'll go out and
we'll spend it and try to take some money. But
do you want to learn poker like your friend?

Speaker 6 (43:54):
I'll leave that up to you. Blackjack or poker, those
are the options.

Speaker 2 (43:58):
But if you sit at the poker table, you can't ask.

Speaker 6 (44:01):
I do and I'm talking you can.

Speaker 2 (44:03):
Yeah, And if you go do blackjack with Lunchbox, he
will tell you exactly.

Speaker 5 (44:06):
What to do.

Speaker 2 (44:06):
And everybody on the table want to punch him in
the face.

Speaker 7 (44:08):
Yes, I've played with him before, but but I always.

Speaker 9 (44:11):
Just say, you want to gamble now, but you're gonna
to go to a higher limit.

Speaker 1 (44:14):
Now.

Speaker 2 (44:14):
They're doing a lot of this. If you and I
went and gambled at Princess Cruise and we left them.
We've already got what if we did submitted Tomorrow's the
big Day where Lunchbox puts someone on blast, whatever that means.
He says that somebody's done something illegal, and I don't
even know what else to say, because I don't think
it's me, but I don't know it's not me, And

(44:35):
no one's emailed him.

Speaker 8 (44:36):
No one's emailed me except for Wady to say screw you. Yeah,
we heard that one. We would say that though, like
you're not gonna get me.

Speaker 2 (44:43):
You think Tomorrow's the day? Is there a chance somebody
gets fired from the show. I haven't asked the bosses
about that. Is there a chance that it gets them
in so much trouble that they get I think so.
I do think so.

Speaker 8 (45:02):
I think the bosses are really gonna, like have to
sit down and have a conversation if they want this
person representing the show still.

Speaker 2 (45:11):
The thing is, and I promise you everybody listening, I
have no idea what it is. I do not know.
This is all in his hands. If it is a
big dud, he'll never get to do a bit like
this again. I'll never trust anything. However, if it's a
home run, he can pick bits every day. That's right.
So that's that's tomorrow. We were talking about before the show.

(45:31):
We were just trying to figure out what it was
like before we even came in this morning, Hey, what's
up everybody, Let's get to the news. I saw a
story about divorce rings. I know maybe we've talked about
divorce things that people wear, but divorce rings not super common.

(45:52):
But there are a couple different companies that are selling them,
so they're out there. They say a divorce ring, it
puts out an emotional statement saying that only I care
about me. I'm single. But the thing about divorce rings
is I wouldn't know it was a divorce ring unless
it said divorce on it. But I don't even look
at divorce the ring.

Speaker 3 (46:13):
Yeah, how do you look that close to a ring?

Speaker 2 (46:15):
And I think mostly it's just buying it for yourself,
Like it's like I'm just going to get myself something
it like to prove the love for myself.

Speaker 6 (46:22):
I think part of.

Speaker 7 (46:22):
It is using the engagement ring that was part of
your wedding or your engagement and you redesign it into
another type of ring and wear it elsewhere, but.

Speaker 3 (46:34):
It's still the same, like you can another finger.

Speaker 7 (46:37):
Like so I've I actually asked people about this the
other day what they did with theirs.

Speaker 6 (46:41):
A lot of people.

Speaker 7 (46:42):
You could tell how angry they are at any given situation.
When the people were like, sell it, like they wanted
to sell it, or they re what do you call it?

Speaker 6 (46:49):
Redo it?

Speaker 7 (46:49):
Like they made like a pinky ring or like a
ring for their other finger.

Speaker 2 (46:53):
But we said it, I would sell it.

Speaker 6 (46:54):
That's what it's called.

Speaker 2 (46:55):
Reset it, sell it, get a ring, you really like it.
I haven't dealt all the drama, not even THEO I
hear you.

Speaker 6 (47:00):
So those are the options I heard.

Speaker 7 (47:02):
Sell it, reset it in another ring or a necklace,
or save it in your jewelry box for one of
your children.

Speaker 3 (47:09):
The divorce ring, it's just the ring after the marriage
is over. It's just a diamond, right like, so you're
just saving the diamond.

Speaker 2 (47:17):
It's a symbol of something that didn't work right, or
it was.

Speaker 7 (47:20):
A symbol of something that did work for the time being.

Speaker 3 (47:24):
The divorce decided it didn't work.

Speaker 2 (47:26):
This is what you should do. The divorce ring should be.
It can be the same ring whatever, but that you
should put a piece of metal on it that looks
like a middle finger.

Speaker 3 (47:34):
What that comes down like it's and then it's lapping
you off.

Speaker 2 (47:38):
Yeah, and then it's like like tap, it pops up.

Speaker 6 (47:42):
What do y'll suppose I do with mine?

Speaker 3 (47:44):
Sell it it, get rid of it.

Speaker 2 (47:45):
If you want to do something for your kids, sell it.
Put in the college fund. What that ring doesn't mean anything?
You're divorced.

Speaker 6 (47:54):
Why my ring have to pay for the college.

Speaker 3 (47:57):
Oh well, it's going to have to come from somewhere.

Speaker 2 (47:58):
Yes. Yeah, I'm just saying you could sell that. You
just said it could be passed on to the kids. Yeah, yeah,
I'm saying they'd probably want it sold anyway.

Speaker 6 (48:06):
Okay, But isn't it cool.

Speaker 7 (48:07):
When it's like, could you passed the house down? And
it's like, oh, this ring you get from your gramd?

Speaker 2 (48:10):
That's great, But not a divorce ring.

Speaker 6 (48:12):
But my parents got divorced, and I have my mom's rings, But.

Speaker 2 (48:16):
I don't think she pitched as a divorce ring.

Speaker 7 (48:18):
She didn't, But when she died, that's what I got,
and I'm thankful for that.

Speaker 6 (48:21):
She kept it.

Speaker 2 (48:21):
But it wasn't a divorce ring. It was her wedding.
We're talking about literal divorce rings with the attachment of
this is my divorce ring.

Speaker 6 (48:28):
Okay, sorry, I'm with you.

Speaker 7 (48:30):
I'm just saying the divorce ring is what some people
are doing with their rings.

Speaker 6 (48:33):
So they're making it like that's an option. Like when
you look at what you can do with your wedding ring,
do you make a divorce ring?

Speaker 2 (48:38):
Do you sell it?

Speaker 6 (48:39):
Or do you make a divorce.

Speaker 2 (48:40):
Necklace it in the lake and then you go, dang,
I wish you want to have done that.

Speaker 6 (48:44):
It's complicated. It's hard because it's precious. I mean, think
about it. It can still represent.

Speaker 2 (48:50):
Love.

Speaker 3 (48:50):
Yeah, precious, But the divorce ring is going to go
back in your finger, like the same finger. No, okay, you.

Speaker 7 (48:56):
Have to wear it on a different finger because then
you look married, right.

Speaker 2 (49:00):
Put a middle finger on it?

Speaker 3 (49:01):
Yes, oh, stay away from that one. That was a
middle finger on it.

Speaker 2 (49:04):
Or she really likes to flip off the person that
divorced her.

Speaker 5 (49:08):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (49:08):
Treasure hunting to make money and it's not exactly what
it seems, but it kind of is. This is from
moneytalknews dot com. It's like thrift store treasure hunting. This
is the time of year, experts say because here we
are in April, and it's when a lot of people
are decluttering their houses and the stuff they're kind of
I don't know if I should or not. They usually
do because it's when you got to make those decisions

(49:30):
to make your house feel cleaner, more open. The Salvation
Army a goodwill see a big increase in close and
even higher value items. So it's mostly underpriced stuff as well.
If it's like a statue, like a head bust, or
if it's like some old books that are cool, they
say go now because it's stuff that just came from
people's houses that they normally wouldn't have gotten rid of,

(49:53):
except it's like, well I got a spring cleaned. Yeah,
so do a little little treasure hunting. Those stories when
like somebody finds an old painting, I buy it for
eighteen bucks and it sells for one point three million
dollars and sell the bees.

Speaker 3 (50:02):
It's amazing.

Speaker 2 (50:03):
That's wild. If you could eat your favorite food every day,
first of all, what is your favorite food? Give me
one favorite food that if you had to classify it
as your favorite food, it would be that favorite food.
Amy Okay, so.

Speaker 3 (50:14):
Okay, Eddie, easy pizza every day?

Speaker 2 (50:17):
Yeah, pizza strong. I could do it every day, lunch box,
but he eat us. I do chicken fried steak, white gravy,
like if it's my favorite food. I'm not saying every
day yet. That's what the story is about. If you
could eat that every single day, how long do you
think you would go before you could? You had to
crave something different and like you were over your favorite food.

(50:39):
Because I can. I generally it's not even my favorite food.
I can eat the same thing every single day because
to me, it's just part of the machine. Lunch I
have to get to a place, refuel my body. I
don't have time to enjoy anything. Dinner's different, dinner, I love.
You can do whatever, but lunch. I eat the same
thing every day, or I would if it were available

(50:59):
to me. But I think if I chicken fried steak
every day for my whole life, I die happy. Man.
Never want to change.

Speaker 3 (51:06):
I agree with you. Pizza every day.

Speaker 6 (51:08):
Yeah, because I mean pizza. You can switch it up.
I feel the same way.

Speaker 2 (51:10):
Oh, make them make them define it.

Speaker 3 (51:11):
No, but I would. I would be temporonium my shirts.
I said, I don't need to add onions to it
just to change it.

Speaker 2 (51:16):
I can't change it up every day.

Speaker 7 (51:17):
No, okay, I'm seeking because some days I have ground
beef in my caso.

Speaker 6 (51:21):
Other days I have black beans and avocados.

Speaker 3 (51:23):
No, you just have the plain cases.

Speaker 6 (51:24):
No, no, I'm out in it all. I'm having Bob
Armstrong dip to the max.

Speaker 7 (51:28):
That'll be my every day then, because I need more
protein and something different.

Speaker 2 (51:31):
How many days till you get bored?

Speaker 6 (51:33):
Month?

Speaker 2 (51:34):
A month? You every day? It never yeah, same for me,
never lunchbox sort about you probably ten days. Researchers found
that about eight days, wow, people start to get sick
of it. From Noodles and Company survey.

Speaker 3 (51:47):
If like pizza didn't make me like die have a
heart attack or like make my stomach explode like I would,
I would do it, no problem.

Speaker 2 (51:54):
There's a lot of stuff I feel like that, even
like drugs. Never tried one, but they seem fun. Do
them all the time. They went like bad stuff.

Speaker 3 (52:01):
They've hadn't ruined my life?

Speaker 2 (52:03):
Yeah, yeah, yeah yeah. If you don't wash new bed sheets,
you should.

Speaker 6 (52:08):
Yeah. That's like washing new underwear.

Speaker 2 (52:11):
You should always toss the new bedding in the wash
before you sleep in it. Today had the whole story
about and It started with replacing your bedding every eighteen
to twenty four months, like just in general, and then
cleaning experts are like, okay, cool, but you should also
when you get the new sheets, put them in the
wash because there's a lot of like chemical you know, uh,

(52:35):
chemicals over the packaging.

Speaker 3 (52:36):
Yeah of them, dangn and think about that.

Speaker 7 (52:40):
Or they're being tossed around, so they think about it.
When you go to the store, maybe you're looking.

Speaker 6 (52:44):
At some sheets in a package of sheets.

Speaker 7 (52:46):
They fall on the floor and they're the kind that
doesn't have plastic on the outside, and then it touches
the floor and then you you know, I mean, it's
loaded in a truck in people's hands.

Speaker 3 (52:54):
Then maybe just think of like paper plates or paper cups,
Like we don't wash those, We just go straight to
a party, and like.

Speaker 2 (52:59):
You can't watch them because the paper plates are disintegrate. True,
but I would think like the middle ones, it's like bread,
I don't eat the heels.

Speaker 3 (53:06):
Now you don't not.

Speaker 2 (53:07):
Because it's gonna kill me. I just don't like it.
But I took my paper plates like my bread, I
get rid of the hill in the front.

Speaker 6 (53:12):
You only get to get.

Speaker 7 (53:14):
Rid of the top paper plate, because the bottom one
would be the you know you're good.

Speaker 3 (53:18):
Well, I'm just saying, like everything's package, I don't know
where it was, Like, well, we don't.

Speaker 2 (53:21):
Know where anything is. Right when you comes from a
restaurant in the back, you don't know what happened, and
they probably going to steal your identity when they take
your credit card back to the dark room. One of
my favorite bits we're talking about this bed here is
when Lunchbox went to that mattress store and wanted to
test it out by sleeping, and he went to sleep
in the bed during the show. So funny, so funny.
He was like, ah, I tested literally fell asleep in
the bed. Also, they say you should change it again

(53:44):
eighteen to twenty four months because tons of like dust
mites start to exist in the beds, which you really
can't see.

Speaker 6 (53:53):
So eighteen to twenty four months new.

Speaker 2 (53:56):
Sheets seems a bit. That seems a bit much.

Speaker 6 (53:58):
Just stay on top of the I think, because that's crazy.

Speaker 2 (54:01):
A man pleads guilty to a solid gold toilet theft
six million dollars gold toilet.

Speaker 3 (54:09):
Who has that?

Speaker 2 (54:10):
Well, the word toilet kind of throws the story off,
and it's like that that's crazy, that's funny. It's just
six million dollars in gold. It just happens to be
where you poop.

Speaker 3 (54:18):
That's got to be like a like it make you
feel really like awesome thing, right, Like that's the only
reason you poop in a golden toilet's.

Speaker 2 (54:26):
Yeah, it's always anything's gold though, But like if you
wear a gold chain, like maybe it's a sal to
make you feel good.

Speaker 3 (54:31):
But dude, pooping in a gold toilet though, makes you
feel like, Yeah, that's how rich I am. I poop
in a gold toilet.

Speaker 2 (54:37):
I hear you. But it's all the same. It's all
the same depending on how much money you have. If
you are super rich, you get the gold toilet for
the same reason that you would get the gold necklace. Okay,
so it's all relevant. But anything we have that's gold,
or anything that's precious metal, or any brand that we
buy because of it makes us feel look cool. Okay,

(54:58):
it's all to make us feel better. But a cold
toilet made feel real good.

Speaker 3 (55:02):
I just feel like if lunch Box won the lottery,
would buy himself a gold toilet.

Speaker 6 (55:05):
I mean it's an investment because.

Speaker 2 (55:07):
It's because it's gold. Yeah, because that's gold. You know,
I got sent a gold for you know what it's called.
It's called like a gold buck or something like. Some
states have those. It's like a gold dollar and it's
like zero point one point seven pound gold. Is it
a coin? No?

Speaker 6 (55:21):
No, No, it's like a you got sent it randomly.

Speaker 2 (55:23):
It's like a dollar bill. Yeah, it's a gift my birthday.
It's like a friend friend of mine. Like, you should
have some of these gold tights. No, they're not. No
that it's like paper, but it's made of gold, but
it's very thin. Really, Mike, do you see what that is?

Speaker 5 (55:37):
Like?

Speaker 2 (55:37):
Colorado has them, Wyoming has them.

Speaker 3 (55:41):
It's like the Willywonker Golden ticket.

Speaker 2 (55:42):
Yea, it looks exactly like the Willy Wonker Golden ticket. Really,
I'd never seen them before. What do you got? I've
never seen these? What's it called? It just says gold
plated bills. I don't know if that's it.

Speaker 6 (55:53):
I should have play from Amazon everything.

Speaker 2 (55:56):
I No, No, the state has gold and then they
issued them the same way you would buy a dollar,
but hopefully you're buying them to hold the values at
gold backs. That's it goldbacks?

Speaker 3 (56:08):
And how much is this bill worth the gold back
I did give back.

Speaker 2 (56:13):
That's different.

Speaker 7 (56:15):
Oh yeah, there's Utah, Wyoming south to South Dakota.

Speaker 3 (56:19):
What state do you have bones Well, I didn't mind.

Speaker 2 (56:22):
Maybe Colorado or Wyoming nice, I'm not sure. But gold
back currency it's literally gold, but it's a square shape
like a dollar, shaved very thin and you can actually
put riding on it. If that's what it says a
gold back.

Speaker 6 (56:35):
Hold up? How many were you gifted? These are expensive?

Speaker 2 (56:39):
Uh? Three?

Speaker 6 (56:40):
Wow?

Speaker 2 (56:41):
But I don't think it was that expensive because it's
like point oh seven gold bar or something. Why how
much you said it worth?

Speaker 7 (56:47):
Well, there's like this is my this's one, there's one
here seventy.

Speaker 2 (56:52):
Oh my gosh. This was worth two hundred and thirty
four dollars. Yeah, idio get mine to forty. I thought
they were like worth a dollar.

Speaker 3 (56:58):
Can you get them?

Speaker 2 (56:59):
Almost like a dollar in gold?

Speaker 6 (57:01):
No, Bobby, these are worth far more this one.

Speaker 7 (57:04):
It depends on the year too, because this twenty nineteen
Utah one is five and fifty dollars.

Speaker 2 (57:09):
And I wonder if Don Maddingly signed it, I'd like
it even more. I go get it. I'll bring it
to you guys, all right, let's see a news anchor
is to be disciplined after an alleged drunken broadcast. Uh oh.
Disciplinary proceedings have begun against the news anchor. During the broadcast,
he's pretty drunk. He struggled pronouncing words, displayed unnatural behavior.

(57:33):
There was also a seven second pause for no reason.
While he's up there, he's just trying to figure it out.
You had to take a breath.

Speaker 3 (57:39):
He's trying to look at the teleprompter. U.

Speaker 2 (57:41):
That stinks. I'm gonna go get this gold thing, all right.
That is your news Bobby's story. He's talking about the
gold backs. It's like gold money, gold paper money. That's
one I don't know how much it's worth. Oh you
just touching it. Yeah. I think I thought worth one dollar,
but it says it's like it's South Dakota.

Speaker 7 (58:03):
I think, yeah, if I had a guess, this is
worth around two hundred and fifty dollars.

Speaker 2 (58:07):
How do you know that. I was research I thought
it worth one dollar.

Speaker 6 (58:11):
No, but this one's twenty four care gold.

Speaker 2 (58:13):
No, No, it's not that. It's not that that's the
value though. It tells you how much gold. Like look
at the bottom, it's like one.

Speaker 7 (58:19):
One one thousand of troy ounce right of twenty four
care gold.

Speaker 2 (58:24):
Wow, see if one one thousands of a troy ounce
of twenty four carrot gold of a South Dakota gold
buck back. Yeah, Mikey, what do you have up there?

Speaker 6 (58:36):
It's did you say that? You're it's twenty twenty three, mad.

Speaker 2 (58:40):
I didn't even know there were real things. I've never
heard of that.

Speaker 3 (58:43):
I'm concerned about how you guys are holding it though, Like,
can you fold it like you're folding it?

Speaker 2 (58:49):
Don't do to fold it. You can't fold it.

Speaker 3 (58:50):
You literally just did.

Speaker 2 (58:51):
You're doing it right now, and I can bend it,
but you can't fold it. Okay. So it's not like gold,
it's it's like gold paper. Yeah, but if you fold it,
I think it. Dude, that's kankey. I'm seeing one that
sold for six dollars dollars big, it has more gold?

Speaker 6 (59:11):
Yeah, one one thousand. I'm sorry, I didn't see that
in the tiny print.

Speaker 3 (59:15):
No, it's real big right here and bones like everything else.
You hang on to it for a few years and
the next thing you know, it's boom.

Speaker 2 (59:19):
I'm not even worried about I didn't even know what
it was My point was I had one of these. Yeah,
the ones that are really expensive are point nine gold.
What about one one thousands of a troy ounce? It
sounds small, and you got me all fired up that
I was rich, and now a sudden, I got no money.

Speaker 6 (59:34):
Here's the deal.

Speaker 7 (59:35):
If you had one twentieth of a troy ounce, it'd beat.

Speaker 2 (59:38):
Here's the deal. You built me a way up. Now
what do I do? Now? You want me to fty bucks?
You know what you need to do with that? Put
in your wallet and hold it up. Go somewhere and
start trying to pay with this worth about six bucks. Yeah,
all right, we're gonna play the sound game again with
the businesses. We got a second version of this hit
that sound raymondo. That would be Netflix. Correct, Yes, name

(59:59):
the business hit second one. I'm loving it. McDonald's correct. Boom.
We'll give you a round. We'll play that game. I
named the company sound. Let's go with this one first example.

Speaker 3 (01:00:13):
That's now this one right here?

Speaker 2 (01:00:20):
Yeah, next till we work. Have you ever used we work? No?
Have you ever heard the sound? No? I bet you have.
I've never heard that sound.

Speaker 6 (01:00:31):
Don't think we work has a sound.

Speaker 2 (01:00:33):
But played again, ray example.

Speaker 9 (01:00:36):
Oh, it's all Skype Skott scot Yeah, yeah, I know
you have.

Speaker 2 (01:00:43):
Oh man, all right, we got five of these. You
guys ready for number one? Write your answers down. Here
we go, go pizza, pizza. I'm in.

Speaker 9 (01:00:54):
I'm in for the win, Amy, Little Caesars lunch box,
Little Caesars, Little Caesars. Correct number two, I'm in.

Speaker 2 (01:01:06):
In for the wind. Oh m hm, oh you don't
go back to it, Eddie, go back to it. You
got that there was a bug flying around. Do you
have an answer?

Speaker 6 (01:01:19):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (01:01:19):
What do you have?

Speaker 6 (01:01:20):
Hill watch box?

Speaker 2 (01:01:21):
Hbo Eddie hbo. Goodness, Eddie. You can go back to
and change it. I was gonna change the max but yeah,
good thing. Number three go ahead. I'm in once more.

Speaker 13 (01:01:44):
Oh gosh what I just heard that the other day?

Speaker 2 (01:02:00):
Uh three seconds. I'm the when If anybody gets this, congratulations,
Thank you. Amy.

Speaker 6 (01:02:12):
A MC movie theater latchbox.

Speaker 2 (01:02:14):
Is when you go to the movie theater and I
put th h X THX txay it nice. That's really it,
Yes man, I would have never got that. Really, you
don't remember that? No, I can see it, but I
know the brand yet A little way up comes out. No,
that's Pixar. Oh well, dang, I got them all. Hey,
good job, that's allow next one?

Speaker 6 (01:02:39):
What then?

Speaker 2 (01:02:40):
What what name that company? Sound? I'm in for the wim.
You don't get TX, but you're gonna get this one.

Speaker 7 (01:02:53):
Amy, Well, I got a MC movie Theater. I mean,
I knew it was the movies that was wrong though,
but it was ok.

Speaker 2 (01:03:00):
Hey, let's go to the answers. Eddie, Nokia, Lunchbox, Taco bell, Amy,
Coco Bells. Did you play that again? I guess it
could kind of sound phony, but yea, yeah, all right,
last one? Yeah, haven't that one? Oh man, that's one

(01:03:25):
of the phone companies. I didn't know that. Shut up man,
Lunchbox four? Amy three, Eddie three? Playing him one more time.
Nothing's gonna help me. I know it's the same phone,
but I don't know which phone to me it is.

(01:03:45):
But I wrote one down. Let's hope it's right on. Yep,
right the one. And when we need Amy and an answer.

Speaker 6 (01:03:54):
Dang the other one? Three sag.

Speaker 2 (01:03:59):
Eddie, I have T Mobile launch box, I have Hozon.
Well the answer is for T Mobile, Ede ties it.
Let's go. We're going to extra innings out. First time
you miss one there we go writing it down. Don't
miss it. Here we go that quick.

Speaker 6 (01:04:26):
Huh. I mean.

Speaker 2 (01:04:34):
I have no idea, no idea. Wow, if you have
no idea, that's surprising. I mean it's something I've heard,
but I can't. I played again. I'll write that down.

(01:05:01):
I don't know. He's got to be playing possim. Yeah, watchbox,
I put Capital one, not playing possum. Wow, Eddie, that's
Home Depot and Scuba.

Speaker 3 (01:05:11):
I would like to take that endorsement because he endorses
for Home Depot and.

Speaker 2 (01:05:17):
The endorsement God. Okay on the Bobby Bone Show.

Speaker 6 (01:05:23):
Now, Elizabeth and Damien Hurley.

Speaker 2 (01:05:26):
Hey, good to see you guys. Thanks for spending a
few minutes with us.

Speaker 14 (01:05:28):
Hi, thanks for having us.

Speaker 9 (01:05:30):
So.

Speaker 2 (01:05:30):
I have a lot of questions. I want to start
with you, Damien. Uh. We were talking about the movie
before you guys came on. So you had this concept
when you were like seventeen eighteen years old? Is that true? Yeah?

Speaker 14 (01:05:39):
I first came up with the story in the aftermath
of losing a very close friend of mine to suicide,
and it was a really devastating time. You know, it
was the first major loss me and many of my
friends that I've known, and then my own father took
his life a couple about a year later, so I
pulled him that a lot when I was coming up
with the idea of this film.

Speaker 2 (01:06:00):
So when did it go from concept to I'm going
to start, you know, doing the granular work of actually
writing it.

Speaker 14 (01:06:07):
I wrote a treatment when I was seventeen, and then
I just decided I was a little too young, a
little too inexperienced to make it. I shelled it, the
world fell apart, COVID happened, and then I made a
short film after Lockdown ended, which an executive at Lionsgate saw,
and I got a call out of the blue when
I just turned twenty saying, hey, we love your short film.

(01:06:29):
Would you be interested in writing and directing a feature
for us? And obviously it was terrifying, but also the
most exhilarating thing ever. And I went away and I
found this idea that I've written when I was seventeen,
and obviously, you know, in the time since then, I
lost my father to suicide, my stepfather had also passed away,
and I'd also just grown up a lot more, and
I decided that I was ready to tell the story

(01:06:50):
and Strictly Confidential was born.

Speaker 2 (01:06:52):
So the movie is out now Strictly Confidential with Elizabeth
Hurley and her son who's the director that the writer
box is ready to go. Guys, this is lunchbox. Lunchbox.
You have a question. Oh yeah, I got a question.

Speaker 8 (01:07:04):
So, uh, you know, when you're making this movie and
there's an intimate scene and you think, oh, my mom
will be perfect for it, explain to me how that is.

Speaker 14 (01:07:14):
When I wrote this film, my mother's part was a
man's role, and so it was a very different I
don know if any of you've seen the film, it was
a very different dynamic. It's no secret now everyone knows
this is my mother's role and it has an affair
with a young woman. And so yes, it was a
very interesting, interesting to shoot. So, you know, so when

(01:07:36):
it came up, I decided to switch the sexes of
this part. Term the management woman and something. My mother
was perfect for the role. It was interesting, but you know,
we it's an independent film. We had eighteen shooting days,
so I've got to say, you know, every second count,
every minute matter. We were so frantic racing around trying
to get every scene that we didn't even have time
to think about it too.

Speaker 2 (01:07:55):
Much, Elizabeth, is you know working with your son? He
is your son, but now he's also your boss. Like
what was that line? Where was that line moved from
boss to back to being son? And how odd was
that relationship?

Speaker 5 (01:08:09):
Well, you know, it was mixed. But he'd sort of
in a very despotic way, been bossing me around since
he was about eight, and I gave him his first
cam quorder, so he'd been making little mini movies. He
chased us through airports with his camcorder. He'd make us
do films on airplanes. We'd humiliate ourselves for him, basically,
So in fact, this is just one step further. And

(01:08:31):
then it was this love.

Speaker 2 (01:08:33):
Yeah, it was an actual progression.

Speaker 5 (01:08:35):
So in fact, working together from that point of view,
we've kind of been doing it for years.

Speaker 8 (01:08:41):
Elizabeth, I got a question for you, because you've been
in our eyes on this big screen for a long time,
a hotty that everybody has looked up to. How have
you maintained being a haughty for so long because a
lot of hotties come and go and you have maintained
being hot.

Speaker 5 (01:08:53):
Well, it's thank you very much indeed for the compliment. Well,
there's a bit of blood, sweat and tears goes into it.

Speaker 2 (01:09:00):
Really.

Speaker 5 (01:09:02):
You know, when you're on camera, especially high death cameras,
you have to you have to look out for yourself,
you know, you have to watch for you eat, you
have to do some exercise, you have to get enough sleep,
you have to drink plenty of water.

Speaker 2 (01:09:16):
You know, same for everyone.

Speaker 14 (01:09:17):
There's no secrets.

Speaker 5 (01:09:18):
It's hard.

Speaker 2 (01:09:19):
Was there a possible no Elizabethan being in the movie
whenever your son, if he approached you about it, or
was it an immediate yes.

Speaker 5 (01:09:29):
I'd promised him right back when he was eight that
when you made a proper movie, I'd be in it.
And as Damien just said, at first, my part was tiny,
but then when he changed the gender of the two
grownups in the film, suddenly my part was way bigger.
So that was a little more than I'd initially agreed
to do. But I read it and it was just

(01:09:51):
a great part to play. I hadn't played that sort
of part before. I felt him very safe hands. Having
Damien direct me, I knew he'd have my back. I
just suddenly seemed like the right.

Speaker 2 (01:10:01):
Thing to do.

Speaker 5 (01:10:02):
It was also filming in the Caribbean. It was just
it was just actually I felt it was like a
gift to give to my son, to give all that
time for him to follow his dream. So it wasn't
a hard decision to make.

Speaker 2 (01:10:16):
It was a baby, very kind Damien. Whenever you watched
it back for because obviously you're going through the edit,
this is your baby, You've directed it, You've watched it
back a million times, scene my scene, But the first
time you watch it all the way through as a
whole piece, how did you feel about it? And in
any way, had you just been so involved in it

(01:10:37):
that maybe you couldn't even tell how good it was
because you had spent every second on every second. Well,
I was way too close to it.

Speaker 14 (01:10:44):
I still am, to be honest. I had to take
a week where I was banned. I had to sort
of slap myself on the wrist every time I even
thought about the film's name, because otherwise you're so immersed
that that you don't view it as an audience feeling
it for the first time. You view it as a
psycho desport perfectionist, which I am. So yeah, yeah, I
still the last time I watched it finally now, right

(01:11:05):
before just now, I felt really quite proud for the
very first time. Up until then, I've been so frantic
just only seeing what I hate and what I need
to change, when I need to cut, when I need
to redo. But no, I'm really I love our movie.
I'm really happy we.

Speaker 5 (01:11:19):
Got a little distance from it because we haven't seen
it all the way through for a good few months,
so until we started doing screeners now and the distance
is actually really good, so we can stop saying he.

Speaker 2 (01:11:31):
Only asked three more questions, but he's been dying in
this interview so much. Box another question, Yeah, Elizabeth, I
got a question.

Speaker 9 (01:11:36):
When you're doing scenes like this, does it guarantee more pay?

Speaker 2 (01:11:39):
And then also, he ever scenes like this, like the
you're talking about the one scene? Why you're so hyper
focused on the one part?

Speaker 9 (01:11:45):
Well, I haven't seen the movie. I've just seen that clip.
I've just seen it in ton of that online.

Speaker 8 (01:11:49):
Okay, and hold on, And my follow up question, it's
a it's a run on sentence questions, so it only
counts as one, like do you ever get these makeout.

Speaker 2 (01:11:57):
Scenes in any movie or anything?

Speaker 9 (01:11:58):
And it's like, oh, that person's a terrible kiss, or
like can we recast or how does that work?

Speaker 5 (01:12:04):
No, I've never asked for someone to be recast on
the quality of the kissing. Rest assured that doesn't happen.
Maybe it happens with some people, it's never happened for me.

Speaker 2 (01:12:15):
I mean, you've never had a bad kiss Because there's
another question. You only get two more? No, I only
get two more. So if you're gonna waste it, no,
I'm not gonna waste it.

Speaker 1 (01:12:23):
Give me.

Speaker 2 (01:12:23):
I'm asking real questions. Art come back to me, and
you're asking questions. It's embarrassing us.

Speaker 8 (01:12:29):
No, you know what I do want to say, though, Elizabeth,
you're shagged delic.

Speaker 2 (01:12:33):
Baby, yeah, baby, oh gosh, Okay, Like, what do you think?

Speaker 5 (01:12:42):
No?

Speaker 2 (01:12:42):
No, no, that's another question. That's another question. That's a question.
Answer that off. You know, I've been trying to dip
my toe in the acting thing, and so I answer
the question that you asked. What did you think, Elizabeth?

Speaker 5 (01:12:54):
I've forgotten it a kisses No, no, hey.

Speaker 2 (01:12:57):
Shagger delk what do you think of him doing that
terrible impression?

Speaker 5 (01:13:00):
Do you know what?

Speaker 14 (01:13:00):
It wasn't bad?

Speaker 2 (01:13:01):
Okay, yes, keez, keep at it. Damien. What's success with
this movie to you? Is it a number? Like a box?
Office number, like what is success here?

Speaker 14 (01:13:15):
I hope everyone who watched that takes something really valuable
away from it. You know, I think when you're making
art in any capacity, you know, you just hope people
love it.

Speaker 5 (01:13:24):
You know.

Speaker 14 (01:13:24):
It's been well over a year of my life, slaving
and slowing every day, and I just I really hope
I can bring something to people that they had, that
they take away something they didn't have before they set
out to watch it.

Speaker 2 (01:13:35):
I really hope people like it. And what would you
say your favorite genre to watch is Damien versus? Now
that you've you know, completed this first full length movie,
like do you want to do another type of similar movie?
Or are you open to doing comedy? Like what what's
the deal from here out? You know?

Speaker 14 (01:13:52):
I think I love quite sensual mysteries. I think, you know,
I not. I don't want to go full scale thriller horror,
but I also did it like things too light. I think,
quite sexy, quite mysterious, quite she You know. I love
films that are beautiful. That's really really important to me.
And the film funnily enough that I'm trying to put
putting together now as writer director, which my mother will

(01:14:12):
not star in but will produce as well that's a
little more grown up, a little.

Speaker 5 (01:14:17):
More adult than what we've just made, and European in field.

Speaker 14 (01:14:21):
Yeah, and a little more cinema, a little more cinema.

Speaker 2 (01:14:25):
Like last question, lunchbox. Yeah, this is it.

Speaker 8 (01:14:28):
And this is kind of for Damien because I mean
I've asked Elizabeth enough and I've told her how hot
she is, and I feel like I don't want to.

Speaker 2 (01:14:33):
Creep her out and not a creepy way on that.

Speaker 8 (01:14:36):
So yeah, Damien, I got a question like did you
know growing up that you had a hot mom? And
like what kind of pressure is like your friends like, oh,
your mom's hot? Because I know when my friends and
moms were hot, I'd be like, dude, can I come
over because your mom's hot?

Speaker 14 (01:14:50):
Lovel is at boarding school? No, it was, It's yeah, no,
I mean, yes, of course, it's It's been a big
part of my life. You know, my mom has been
working with us, the lawle the companies for maybe thirty
years now, so you know, beauty and photography and fashion
have been a huge part of our lives always. So yeah,
it's but you know, it's a business. Everyone always makes
a big deal of the fact that we take each
other's pictures super psychly pitters for Instagram. But it's just

(01:15:12):
it's business. It's it's the same as doing this film.

Speaker 2 (01:15:15):
Thank you lunch Box for your question.

Speaker 8 (01:15:16):
Hey, thank you guys so much. I really appreciate it. Elizabeth,
great to talk to you, Great to see.

Speaker 2 (01:15:22):
You in person. Yeah, strictly to strictly confidential in case
you just put on this on now. It's a story
of a honity young woman who finds herself drawn in
the world of seduction, duplicity, and betrayal as she desperately
tries to uncover the mystery surrounding your best friend's suicide.
And it is in you can watch it now. So
it's in theaters and on demand. What we're on demand.

Speaker 14 (01:15:44):
Prime, Apple TV, almost any streamer and select.

Speaker 2 (01:15:49):
Awesome. Hey, thank you guys for for being here. Damien
really cool to see so passionate about, you know, doing
this movie and getting into the art. And Elizabeth's great
to finally meet you. Even it's virtually and we apologize
for lunch oh be hey, thank you so much for
having us. All right, bye guys, bye, thank you bye,
Bobby Bones show sorry up today. This story comes us

(01:16:11):
from willow Wick, Ohio.

Speaker 8 (01:16:14):
Hey man went through the Burger King drive through order
two sausage, egg and cheese, croissants and hash browns. Pulls
up to the window and the guy goes, that'll be
eight dollars.

Speaker 2 (01:16:23):
The guy goes, no, no, no, you messed up my order.
It should be eleven dollars. Wait, hold none. He wants
to pay more.

Speaker 8 (01:16:31):
Yeah, okay, and the guy goes, no, no, no, we
have a promotion going on, so I gave you a discount.

Speaker 2 (01:16:35):
The guy goes, you're messing with me. It should be
eleven dollars.

Speaker 8 (01:16:40):
Oh, man, okay, and the guy says no, no, no, sir,
brog takes eleven dollars.

Speaker 2 (01:16:45):
By the way, I'm working. After I get one, I'm
taking the eleven dollars and saying, okay, thank you, have
a nice day. So what's the guy do? He pulls
out a gun and says, why are you screwing with me?
Why are you screwing with He pulls out a gun
and makes him take his money. It's like a reverse robbery.
Why are you charging me less? You pull out a gun.
It's even like you ever heard of these in the streets.
They pull out a gun and put a gun like, Okay,
I'm gonna give you all my money. No, I ever

(01:17:06):
heard about those. That's crazy, man, It's scary, but not really.
All right, lunchbox add I'm lunchbox. That's your bonehead story
of the day. Here's a voicemail from Aisha and Maryland.

Speaker 11 (01:17:16):
Y'all were talking about how half of Americans feel like
their car is part of the family. It's got me
thinking about our family. Who has named all of our cars.
My husband's truck is named Levi. My suv is named Gracie.
So do y'all have any names for your cars? I
feel like lunchboxes Ultima is such a legend that it
has to have its own name.

Speaker 2 (01:17:37):
So not one that you make up. Now, But what
do you call your car? Anything? Amy?

Speaker 6 (01:17:42):
No, No, I haven't named a car I had. My
college car was named But what was that Rosie Eddie?

Speaker 2 (01:17:49):
That's cute.

Speaker 3 (01:17:49):
Yes, So in high school I had a red Jeep
just like mine, but it is a smaller one.

Speaker 2 (01:17:52):
So that was a little twister. And so now this
one's Papa Twister. Do you call it that?

Speaker 3 (01:17:57):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (01:17:57):
Out loud, Yeah, my kids know that Papa twist. Do
I have to pop a tw Like, Hey, what car
are we taking? Pop a Twister?

Speaker 3 (01:18:01):
Boys?

Speaker 2 (01:18:02):
Let's go Lunchbox the honey Wagon. Okay, but why like
poop bear honey Like, what do you mean? No, No, I
used to get a lot of chicks in there.

Speaker 8 (01:18:10):
But then I can't really call that now because the
wife's around.

Speaker 2 (01:18:13):
So it's the secret name of it. Yeah, now it's
like on the down low, Morgan, your jeep, I don't
think so.

Speaker 6 (01:18:18):
I think I just called jeep jeep. Does that count
as a nick name?

Speaker 2 (01:18:20):
Sureep? Like name it a dog dog?

Speaker 12 (01:18:23):
Uh?

Speaker 2 (01:18:23):
Mine has a little thing where you have to like
on the this is an app It's named Bobby Jr.
But I don't call it that, but it is named
Bobby Junior because like, pick a name for your car.
I was like, I don't I'm naming this thing. I
don't even like it. I hope that's not what happens
to real Bobby. You know that's what. I don't even
like them. I used to like them. Yeah, that's it.

(01:18:44):
Thank you, you guys, have a great rest of the day.
We'll see you tomorrow. Lunchbox put someone on blast tomorrow
and they want to come clean beforehand? Yeah, do you.
Anybody want to come clean real quick. No, no, okay,
that'll be tomorrow. Thank you guys, have a great day
by everybody.
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