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July 31, 2024 52 mins

Haliey Welch, aka, "Hawk Tuah Girl," is in the studio! She shares how she felt about going viral, what she plans on doing with her newfound fame, how she ended up on stage with Zach Bryan and more! Then, Bobby got a secret DM from a listener about Lunchbox's negligence with his soccer team... find out what happened and more!

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:10):
Lisca, Welcome to the show, Morning Studio Money.

Speaker 2 (00:14):
I wanted to start with rejected segments.

Speaker 1 (00:16):
These are segments that did not make the show, and
I saved him to highlight why they didn't make the show,
because some of them were great ideas, but there's no
way we could have pulled it off. But some of
them were terrible ideas and there's no way we could
have pulled them off. I'll say this though, I did
have this listed as a rejected segment and we ended
up doing it. Oh okay, so it went from rejected

(00:37):
to non rejected. It was Lunchbox has a new business
he was doing in birthday party surprises where he show
up in the birthday party and people would pay him.

Speaker 3 (00:45):
Well, it made it because he did it right, and then.

Speaker 1 (00:47):
He had audio, but he submitted all of it with audio,
and I was like, okay, well, I mean it's actually
a good business, it's actually a good idea.

Speaker 4 (00:54):
Smart.

Speaker 1 (00:54):
I mean, you're a human cameo.

Speaker 5 (00:56):
Yeah, if you're going to be out of town and
you need a celebrity to show up on your behalf,
I'm here for you.

Speaker 1 (01:01):
You just have to build out the infrastructure to where
people can go pay connect. It's not the idea that
costs money. It's not the idea that people don't have.
It's actually doing things about the idea. So that was
a rejected segment, but we ended up talking about it. Boom, congratulate, unrejected,
unrejected them rejected segments. Let's go the number five rejected segment,

(01:24):
Number five.

Speaker 2 (01:26):
Hilarious idea.

Speaker 1 (01:30):
Didn't think we should pull it off because it was
a bit disrespectful, but funny. It's called the longest interview.
So Mike D submitted this. We book an interview, give
me in person. We keep going until the guest asked
to leave. It's like a torture chamber. We hold them
in here. We just keep interviewing them for hours and
hours and hours, and we have the whole.

Speaker 6 (01:51):
Hours as long as they stays.

Speaker 1 (01:57):
Also, I didn't want to do it for hours and
hours and hours, so you go take a break and
we continue this interview.

Speaker 2 (02:01):
Somebody comes in. Uh man, I'm in a little thirsty lunchbox.
Would you mind coming in?

Speaker 4 (02:05):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (02:05):
Tell me, I laughed out loud.

Speaker 1 (02:07):
This is Mike D's idea, he says, we book an
interview and keep it going until the guests has to
ask to leave before we take bets on how long
we can keep the interview going. We let each member
of the show ask questions, including the glass room in
the production room, like everybody gets a shot to come
in and.

Speaker 3 (02:24):
Sales like people walking by, how you got.

Speaker 2 (02:25):
A course show? How funny would the longest interview be?

Speaker 5 (02:29):
I mean, I think, listen, do it with a new
artist too, because they're like, oh man, I can't get
up and leave and it's uncomfortable.

Speaker 2 (02:36):
And there it would be hours long.

Speaker 4 (02:37):
It would be so I agree.

Speaker 6 (02:39):
An artist that doesn't show up with like management, like
timmergrawl will come by himself.

Speaker 2 (02:43):
But Tim mcgrawl will leave too.

Speaker 4 (02:45):
I got someone to be doing it.

Speaker 6 (02:48):
A manager through the glassroom and be like, hey, you've
got to.

Speaker 7 (02:50):
Wrap this up.

Speaker 2 (02:51):
I think that's hilarious. We can't do it.

Speaker 1 (02:52):
Maybe one day, maybe, like if we know we're getting
fired or we know our contracts are up in a
couple of years.

Speaker 3 (02:57):
We're just like, what about if you like pay off
of that? And you know one that's doable?

Speaker 6 (03:02):
Would be the shortest and just ask one question and
be like all right, thanks for coming in.

Speaker 2 (03:07):
Very funny, Like it's very funny.

Speaker 3 (03:09):
We're hey, glad to have you.

Speaker 1 (03:10):
All right, that's it, thank you. A bit disrespectful to
the person unless you let.

Speaker 2 (03:14):
Them out on the joke afterward.

Speaker 6 (03:15):
Of course we would, and then we'd do the real interview,
you know, yea.

Speaker 4 (03:20):
Only they get up and leave when they leave the hallway,
and they all right there you can come back in.
We're just messing with you.

Speaker 2 (03:24):
Okay, that's projected. That's number five, right, number four.

Speaker 1 (03:27):
Number four Lunchbox took a stand against society, and he
says he wants America to join him in the fight.
And so what I wrote about this one was it
was too over the top, a very little substance.

Speaker 4 (03:40):
No, this is huge.

Speaker 5 (03:42):
It is creating to a lot of waste in America
and we need to stop it. Party favors at birthday parties.
Had a birthday party for my son, and you know
what I did. I said, we're not giving out party favors.
And people are like, oh, do we get a party? No,
no party favors, guys, the party what favor is? We
had a party? Why are you am I giving you
gifts for you coming to the party. The point is

(04:03):
you bring a birthday president to the birthday kid, we
throw a party and you leave, I shouldn't give you
a bag full of goodies because you decided to come
to a party.

Speaker 1 (04:12):
And I think the goodies you're giving are for your kid,
for people to use it so your kid feels good.
But anyway, I felt like this is a whole stand
against society. We didn't really need it.

Speaker 4 (04:20):
No, we need it.

Speaker 5 (04:21):
We need America to adopt this because all it is
in that part of the idea.

Speaker 1 (04:24):
What I'm saying is the stand against society seemed a
little large, like we need to it doesn't matter.

Speaker 2 (04:30):
No. Next one, Yes, Amy has a bit rich.

Speaker 3 (04:37):
The way, I don't ever make this segment.

Speaker 1 (04:39):
She said, an invitation for Bobby and Eddie. I'm very
interested in ballet class. It's a beginner class for adults.
My friend took a class and said it was the
one It was amazing, but she was the only one
who showed ups was a private lesson. Yeah, so they
should do it. Too much access at ballet class.

Speaker 6 (04:55):
Yeah, I was thinking y'all could go with me try
it out, and then y'all, y'll Valerie, that's a pro athlete.

Speaker 1 (05:02):
I mean, if we were working with a professional ball arena,
that would be funny.

Speaker 2 (05:07):
Show too much the nationale ballet like somebody did the Nutcracker.
I demanded a Nutcracker.

Speaker 3 (05:11):
Only Okay, well whatever it is, Like, yes, you could.

Speaker 2 (05:13):
Go to Swan River Las one one.

Speaker 6 (05:18):
Y'all been doing softball, baseball, football, volleyball.

Speaker 3 (05:21):
Y'all could do ballet.

Speaker 2 (05:22):
Ballet's really hard and that is very difficult.

Speaker 3 (05:24):
But you and Eddie and your little two twos, not.

Speaker 1 (05:26):
Little big two twos. Okkay rejected segment Next one number
two Lunchbox wanted to do breaking news but that it
was fake news. And I don't know that he thought
it was fake news, but I was not gonna let
him do this breaking news because it was fake news.
Because he wanted to come on the air and announce
that Old Dominion had broken up as a band.

Speaker 4 (05:44):
I saw.

Speaker 5 (05:44):
I got an email that brad tercy Uh, formerly of
Old Dominion, was releasing an album.

Speaker 3 (05:51):
He's still in advance in the band.

Speaker 1 (05:52):
Well, I didn't know that I saw, right, which is
why we weren't gonna let you say they were breaking out.

Speaker 5 (05:56):
Like I literally saw the email and I was like, dang,
So no matter how good you think a band is
getting along, they don't really like each other on the inside.

Speaker 1 (06:03):
Which is not true, and they are getting along, which
is why they can also do little side projects for
their own creative fulfillment y form. He wanted to announce
that old dominion has broken up and that just wasn't true.
So that one's fake news that I didn't reject it.
Side we number two, number one, now number one Mike

(06:23):
D's booking did this thing. He had number five, the
longest interview and at number one Mike D has the
Craigslist dating game for Amy. She's tried hinge. But what
about what about Craigslist? What if we look up singles
on Craigslist, but the best personal ads we bring in
a panel of potential bachelors from Craigslist.

Speaker 6 (06:43):
What year is this Craigslist mouse.

Speaker 2 (06:48):
I don't know if they are. I can't imagine it's
the best.

Speaker 3 (06:50):
Picks fourteen years ago.

Speaker 1 (06:51):
I'm sure that draft is not a good draft. That's
all supplemental draft. At this point, I categorize that as
you might die. So we didn't do that.

Speaker 6 (07:01):
Yeah, so out of concern for my safety, we'll go
ahead and like the Craigslist.

Speaker 5 (07:05):
Man, I'm looking up for some people on Craigslist right now, like,
who would go to craiglist to put up an ad
of all places?

Speaker 2 (07:11):
Is it because you've been banned from Facebook?

Speaker 1 (07:15):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (07:15):
You mean a dating app?

Speaker 1 (07:16):
Oh?

Speaker 6 (07:16):
Because that's that's a way like people were doing.

Speaker 2 (07:19):
It, yes, back in the day before all the apps.
People are also getting murdered.

Speaker 5 (07:23):
Oh but Amy, there's a good discussion forum on uh
Craigslist called divorce if you want to get in there
and meet other divorces.

Speaker 2 (07:32):
Can you imagine getting on craiglist to meet dudes? You
know what would happen.

Speaker 1 (07:36):
It'd be one of those dudes you would meet that
you'd say not three times and I'll already be in
my room tied up and wear a mask, oh yeah,
and then leave immediately after and don't tell me who
you are.

Speaker 6 (07:45):
You could also be ran new to learning about the internet,
and you think that that's.

Speaker 5 (07:49):
What lunchbox justalking about podcast like this one says I'm
so incredibly angry. I feel used, and then the uh
skid mic replies, I don't blame you, and blame anyone
that does skin Johnny Salomi skid.

Speaker 3 (08:03):
Mark, that's your name, Johnny.

Speaker 4 (08:05):
Yeah, Johnny Salomi said you should be angry.

Speaker 2 (08:07):
Johnny salami and skid Mike about to go do a
two for one.

Speaker 3 (08:09):
Oh yeah, thanks guys, there you go.

Speaker 2 (08:12):
Rejected segments. Thank you, that was rejected segments the show
with that. Glad everybody's here.

Speaker 6 (08:21):
And Red on the air to pick something we call
Bobby's fail bag.

Speaker 1 (08:25):
Yeah, hello, Bobby Bones. I'm a single mom of a
ten year old. We've recently committed to the soccer season.
We've paid the fees. Now my son says he wants
to quit after playing for four years, he doesn't always
enjoy it. I'm worried he's giving up too easily. He
will miss out on teamwork and physical benefits. Should I
encourage him to stick with it for the season or

(08:45):
support his decision to stop? Signed soccer mom. You know
what's interesting. My general gut is to go, well, if
you committed, you got to finish. I don't always think
that's the case in life. I do think generally that
is a great rule to teach your kids. And I'm
gonna pass somewhere to Amy in a second, But I
do think if you think he's quitting and all of

(09:08):
a sudden it popped up really unsuspected, I think it
may be something that's not soccer that's making him want
to quit. There could be like a bully on the team.
There could be some sort of interaction that's happening that
he does not like and does not feel comfortable with,
and does not want to play soccer anymore. So I
would investigate that as well. He may not tell you,

(09:28):
but if all of a sudden he's not wanted to
play anymore, that's.

Speaker 2 (09:31):
A bit weird.

Speaker 1 (09:32):
I would also say this, you do want to teach
well anyone, anyone young that you can't really sign up
for things and then quit without there being a penalty.
So what I would do, because generally I would say
you started that, you finish it.

Speaker 2 (09:47):
That's what I would say. I feel like that's what
I would say.

Speaker 1 (09:49):
However, you did pay the fees and say, okay, if
you want to quit, that's fine, but I need you
to pay the fees back that we paid for it,
which would then and there would be some responsibility. There
would be a lesson that would come from this. I
would encourage him not to quit, and you could say
you never have to play again, just finish this season.

(10:10):
I would investigate why he wants to quit, But if
he's dead set on it. It's probably something that's not
soccer related that makes him want to quit, and I
think you should probably if it's something that really is
like hurting him, like not make him do it.

Speaker 2 (10:24):
But there is a.

Speaker 1 (10:25):
Penalty to be paid, which is he needs to work
off the fees. There's some nuance to that answer. I'm
a big nuance guy. I'm not big black and white
guy for the most part when it comes to stuff
like this. I also don't have a kid. I'm thinking
about me at ten. Amy, you do have kids, Go ahead.

Speaker 8 (10:39):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (10:39):
The first thing that popped up for me is what
happened and what fear came in around doing this, especially
if he knew he was signing up, Like why right
after you paid the fees and now the season was starting.

Speaker 3 (10:52):
So that was my first thought. And then I also.

Speaker 6 (10:55):
Can get behind you know when you force a kid
to do something like how is that going to impact
whatever else is going on, because then you're ignoring maybe
the underlying issue, and then they don't feel heard or seen,
and then that can lead to more problems. So, being
that the money has been spent, I think it's fair
to ask that the ten year old works it off.

(11:15):
Some way, so they understand that we need to contribute
towards stuff and that we can't just like spend money
and then make a decision to not do it anymore.

Speaker 1 (11:24):
If you was six, you're committed. If he was seven,
you signed up. You're committed. Tens, when you start to
have those social interactions and you start to feel where
older kids can bully you or that you don't feel comfortable.

Speaker 6 (11:37):
I guess I just also too at parenting two kids myself.
Both of their personalities are so so different, So I
would maybe even handle it differently depending on what kid is.

Speaker 3 (11:47):
Having it, But I know my first go.

Speaker 6 (11:49):
To would be the why, like what caused the why
or the what caused this? And figuring that out and
then maybe you as a parent can have better compassion
and understanding of where your kid's coming from.

Speaker 1 (12:00):
That's very healthy, because my first go to is no,
you're gonna finish without even really investing into why. But
then I would go, Okay, let me figure out why
all of a sudden. There's gotta be something new all
of a sudden, if he's feeling this way all of a.

Speaker 6 (12:10):
Sudden, and then maybe there's a commerce too, And maybe
if you get to the water or the why they
realize like, oh, I can't actually do this and I
want to.

Speaker 3 (12:16):
I was just scared and then boom, he still plays.
You know you're not out the money and good go.

Speaker 1 (12:21):
How fun would it be if I could go and
just like play ten year old soccer and everybody thought
I was ten, but I got to be me or
ten year old football and just dominate.

Speaker 4 (12:29):
That would be pretty fun.

Speaker 1 (12:31):
But no one knows that you're an adult. Like everybody's
in a ten year old body. No, I'm saying, body,
that's why I get to be stronger than everybody else.
But everyone's just like, yeah, I know he's a ten
year old and I just get to wreck ice football.
Can you imagine playing a ten year old football and
everybody's celebrating you.

Speaker 2 (12:45):
That would be a dream.

Speaker 4 (12:48):
That would be pretty good.

Speaker 2 (12:50):
Imagine playing baseball.

Speaker 4 (12:51):
You don't think about that any eleven year old because.

Speaker 1 (12:53):
There were kids who were so athletically gifted and so
much bigger than us.

Speaker 2 (12:57):
I think Lunchbox could agree to this too.

Speaker 1 (13:00):
When we were eleven and twelve, they were just so
much bigger, faster, stronger that everybody just worshiped them and
they dominated the game, and they and we were.

Speaker 2 (13:07):
Just like, man, that would be the coolest. So how
I'd like to have that.

Speaker 4 (13:10):
It'd be awesome.

Speaker 1 (13:11):
It'd be awesome. I don't want to be ten, sure, you.

Speaker 3 (13:15):
Just want to I mean I kind of want to
be ten.

Speaker 6 (13:17):
Sometimes I don't worry about some of the things I
have to worry about as an adult.

Speaker 2 (13:22):
Hey, good luck, mom.

Speaker 6 (13:24):
I think you're especially the single mom ye, I mean
you yes, pees or a single dad when you're paying
those fees, I get it.

Speaker 3 (13:31):
The first reaction is just be like, Okay.

Speaker 6 (13:33):
We're not going to waste money and to not see
where the child is coming from. But hopefully you can
and maybe that'll help solve some of the issue.

Speaker 1 (13:41):
And I think the lesson is you can't just quit
things in life. So if you are going to quit,
you've got to pay back to fees, even though maybe
they don't need to feed money. There's a lesson involved
in that. All right, thank you for the email. We
appreciate that. All right, close it up.

Speaker 3 (13:54):
We got your email and.

Speaker 5 (13:56):
We read it on your Now, let's find the clothes Bobby.

Speaker 1 (14:00):
That year, the story is a beautiful woman makes a
man stupid. Researchers found that men's performance with working memory,
with attention, any of the cognitive function declines after interacting
with a beautiful woman.

Speaker 3 (14:19):
I thought it would go up because y'all want to
impress her.

Speaker 4 (14:21):
No, run through the wall.

Speaker 1 (14:26):
Uh, guys are cavement. But I don't think it's us
that's the problem. I think it's thousands and thousands of
thousands of years of genetics.

Speaker 2 (14:36):
I think we're wired this way we are whereas not
our fault.

Speaker 1 (14:40):
We as men, as dumb as we are are looking
to mate and pro create, right.

Speaker 6 (14:47):
I know that that's part of all, like some of
us deep down different things we're attracted to or not
attracted to.

Speaker 3 (14:53):
But also, y'all aren't dumb.

Speaker 1 (14:55):
You're not in our in our like you've evolved some
of us have and some parts.

Speaker 5 (15:00):
Yeah, in like business maybe, but even then, but when
it comes to chick, wait to see him, and.

Speaker 1 (15:07):
I will say that, I don't think it's the same
way for women. Although you guys do get attractive, but
your brains are far more developed.

Speaker 2 (15:13):
In this way, this is an insult to us.

Speaker 6 (15:15):
Yeah, no, I get it, But I also just feel
like j'all hear that, and you're like, oh, okay.

Speaker 3 (15:20):
I can readumb. You're not.

Speaker 4 (15:23):
You're not.

Speaker 1 (15:24):
But I don't think you're dumb as in I mean
you don't know two plus two. I think you act
in different ways very soon after the interaction, or thinking
the interaction may happen again soon. Okay, pretty women make
guys act and do dumb things. So they fight a bars,
so they do all this crap.

Speaker 3 (15:45):
Yeah, okay, you've never fought at a bar.

Speaker 2 (15:47):
No I get beat up?

Speaker 3 (15:48):
Okay, Like, what's an example of I don't.

Speaker 2 (15:50):
Want to guess? I don't want to get beat up
in front of a pretty girl.

Speaker 3 (15:53):
Yeah, your wife is very attractive.

Speaker 6 (15:55):
Do you know of a moment where you just like
kind of felt I mean, I guess you often say
she's way smarter than you.

Speaker 1 (16:02):
She has way's way smarter, way funnier, everything that I
am celebrated for.

Speaker 3 (16:06):
That's because you're.

Speaker 6 (16:06):
Around her and you're so attracted to her that you're
getting You know what.

Speaker 2 (16:09):
Her nickname is for me now?

Speaker 1 (16:10):
And I I hate it, but I laugh out loud
what she calls me yankee doodle dandy?

Speaker 3 (16:17):
Is this between y'all like a little thing about.

Speaker 4 (16:19):
To tell you what a feather in your cap?

Speaker 1 (16:20):
Well? She goes she goes, what's up, yankee doodle? Now
she's been just been calling me dandy. Okay, why why
do you call me that? But she she'll have a
nickname for me and not tell me what it means
for a long time. Because I have dry scalp dan
drift really bad in the back of my head. So
she calls me dandy. He's like, you gotta get that
fick tankey doodle dandy. So she shows me dandy all
the time, and that's that's hilarious. But I didn't know
why forever. She doesn't care. She got her own little bits,

(16:42):
and so she's like, how's She's like, how's your head? Dandy?

Speaker 2 (16:45):
Like why are you calling me yankee doodle Dandy? And
then finally it was because I have dan drift that
falls onto my my shirt?

Speaker 3 (16:51):
What do you do about that?

Speaker 1 (16:53):
Nothing? I already have a pretty girl. What do I care?
You know? That's that's shobiz baby, You know what I mean.
I did get a DM and lunchbox. This is kind
of about you. You can tell me if this is
true or not.

Speaker 4 (17:06):
Oh what about me?

Speaker 2 (17:07):
I got a DM about you? They do not want
me to say their name. Did you coach or manage
your reg soccer team.

Speaker 4 (17:16):
Yeah, I'm the captain.

Speaker 1 (17:17):
Okay. What I heard from someone in DM is that
the captain was sent the reward for your team for
either winning or finishing second or third.

Speaker 4 (17:26):
Oh we got first place?

Speaker 2 (17:27):
Ye oh okay. So there's the league sends out like
a gift certificate.

Speaker 4 (17:30):
You got two hundred bucks to a.

Speaker 1 (17:31):
Restaurant, and Lunchbox did not give it to the team
and has not even mentioned it to the team.

Speaker 3 (17:38):
And so how many people are on the team.

Speaker 4 (17:41):
There's ten people, So is the you're.

Speaker 6 (17:42):
Supposed to take the two hundred and so everybody goes
out to eat.

Speaker 3 (17:45):
Because how do you divvy that up?

Speaker 4 (17:46):
Yeah, yeah, you have a team party. Maybe I don't know.

Speaker 2 (17:49):
So you are admitting this happened.

Speaker 5 (17:51):
Yeah, we got a gift certificate and uh, it was
valid until July thirtieth, and so it was coming up
on the end of the you know, and no one
had mentioned it on my team, so.

Speaker 4 (18:05):
Family didn't out.

Speaker 2 (18:06):
They didn't know.

Speaker 4 (18:08):
Hey, when you sign up for the league, it says.

Speaker 2 (18:11):
But they used to check in with you.

Speaker 5 (18:12):
So it says if you win, you will be giving
a gift certificate to this restaurant for two hundred dollars,
so you know when you sign up. But I wasn't
gonna say anything because I do a lot for the team.

Speaker 4 (18:24):
I sign us up every season, so.

Speaker 2 (18:26):
You think that's your prize. So the DM was they
think he took that.

Speaker 1 (18:29):
They get certificate it is expired now, it expired yesterday
because they think that he used it and didn't give
it to the team. He did, but now he's saying, yes,
he's not an apologize. I mean, he's just like I.

Speaker 5 (18:38):
Do the jerseys. And no one on the team said, hey,
did we get a gift gate? Are we gonna ever
use the gift? So I didn't think they were interested
in going. No one seemed to care. So I was like,
you know what, all this time that I spend away
from my family for this team, I'll reward my family
with a little dinner out and we went and had
a nice two hundred dollars meal.

Speaker 2 (18:58):
He's shadier.

Speaker 3 (18:59):
Now that's not shady, it's Shady's shady?

Speaker 4 (19:03):
How is it shady? If they wanted to go.

Speaker 1 (19:04):
They would have said, hey, no, I think they wait
for you, the captain to go.

Speaker 2 (19:07):
Hey, I got the certificate, we're gonna go. Let's sign yes,
let's set the date and I'll go.

Speaker 5 (19:13):
They knew that, Hey we won the season, and not
one in the group text was like, hey did we
ever get that gifts or two get No one even
said a word. All they said was, hey, are we
playing next season?

Speaker 4 (19:21):
Okay?

Speaker 2 (19:22):
How is that me to respond to this?

Speaker 4 (19:24):
I just say, you don't know anything about it?

Speaker 1 (19:25):
Okay, it's time for the good news. Sarah and Caid
they began dating on the first day of sixth grade
at Braydon River Middle School in Florida. They became friends
after sixth grade. They didn't date for a long time.

(19:46):
Then their senior year they started dating again. They went
to different school. They did a long distance thing, but
during the senior year they're doing the yearbook situation or
by signing it. Caid's yearbook quote, what twenty bucks I
marry Sarah Dill? Well they just got married.

Speaker 3 (20:03):
Oh that's so cute.

Speaker 2 (20:05):
I just got married.

Speaker 1 (20:06):
It worked out and Caide's friend gave him twenty bucks
because that was who we bet. So at the wedding
they had pictures that your books up so that his
what he wrote. They had it blown up as well.
That's pretty fun.

Speaker 3 (20:18):
That's really cool.

Speaker 6 (20:19):
I mean, you want to think of the times that
people have said that and it doesn't work out.

Speaker 3 (20:23):
This is cool that it did.

Speaker 1 (20:24):
That's from my son Coast. Yeah, they're actually when they
walked down the oil, they're holding up a small picture
too from the yearbook.

Speaker 3 (20:30):
I love that.

Speaker 1 (20:31):
That's pretty cool. What'd you write in your books? Did
you have like a saying? I remember my friend Evan
wrote of mine. He was like, those railroad tracks maybe
pretty close together, but they're really hard to get pasted
in life, meaning nobody ever left my small town.

Speaker 2 (20:44):
And I was like, dang, he went full Socrates.

Speaker 3 (20:46):
I know I didn't have anything that I.

Speaker 2 (20:48):
Lived in the saw mill town where I wrote that.

Speaker 1 (20:50):
He's like, the railroad tracks are hard to get over,
but you know nobody, nobody gets out gets pasted them. Yeah.

Speaker 6 (20:55):
My daughter was going through my high school yearbook the
other day and just making fun of everything.

Speaker 1 (21:00):
Does your daughter think, and I say this in her
parent daughter way, does your daughter think you're lame?

Speaker 3 (21:05):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (21:06):
She did.

Speaker 2 (21:07):
She think you were lame even younger when you were
young too.

Speaker 3 (21:10):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (21:10):
She was laughing at all kinds of things and just
nothing like even my boyfriend.

Speaker 3 (21:14):
I was like, what he's very cute. She's like like
she just thought he.

Speaker 6 (21:18):
Everything was hilarious to her, and I'm like, okay, never mind,
memory time is over all.

Speaker 2 (21:23):
Right, That's what it's all about. That was telling me
something good.

Speaker 1 (21:27):
Shit. So Bobby Bones Show Interviews. In case you didn't know,
her name is Haley Welch. She got very very famous,
very very quickly, because she is the hawk to a girl,
hawk to a spin on that thing. It has been
crazy to watch her blow up. She's twenty one years old.

(21:47):
She's from Belfast, Tennessee, population eight hundred. Her social media
has millions and millions and millions of followers in just
a couple of weeks. So she's in studio now, and let's.

Speaker 4 (21:58):
Talk to her.

Speaker 1 (21:59):
Oh, Bobby, Oh, so Haley, how are you good? How
are you good? I've got a lot of questions. So
do you remember that night? Do you recorded the video? Yeah?

Speaker 7 (22:10):
Nashville?

Speaker 1 (22:10):
Yeah? Do you remember actually recording the video or was
it just because I mean we've all been broad Away
five hundred times and it's like you just go one
bar to the next. There are people everywhere.

Speaker 2 (22:20):
Did you actually remember talking to that guy?

Speaker 7 (22:22):
A little bit? But I didn't think i'd ever see
it again.

Speaker 1 (22:24):
Yeah, because he's probably just a dude with a little
microphone out there talking to everybody, right, Yeah, and.

Speaker 9 (22:28):
You see all sorts of them on the streets, so
you don't ever think, oh, I'm just gonna wind up
talking to one that just happens to blow up.

Speaker 1 (22:35):
And why did you talk to that guy?

Speaker 9 (22:37):
Well, I'm friendly. I just talked to anybody. And he's
standing in a corner with his friend, and I was.

Speaker 7 (22:41):
Like, oh, hey, how are you?

Speaker 1 (22:43):
And even if he were to put it out, the
fact that we even get to you before it even
blew up would have been crazy. So who's the first
person that told you, Hey, I think I just saw
you in a video like way before it blew up.

Speaker 7 (22:53):
My girl group chat with my friends in it.

Speaker 1 (22:55):
What do they say?

Speaker 9 (22:56):
They're like, uh, Haley, and they just sent the video
and I was I went to Bedville early for work
and then I got up for work and I was like, oh.

Speaker 1 (23:03):
No, how quickly did you put it up?

Speaker 7 (23:06):
Maybe two days after?

Speaker 1 (23:07):
Okay? And so your friend says, hey, you saw it,
and then what do you think whenever you see that?

Speaker 9 (23:12):
I was like, Oh, that ain't gonna go nowhere. That's
just one of the videos they post. Nobody ever pays
attention to it.

Speaker 1 (23:18):
And how long was that until things started to get
like medium big?

Speaker 9 (23:23):
Probably like halfway through my workday, so it blew up
in a day, it blew up?

Speaker 1 (23:28):
And then were people trying to search you out? Because
were you on social media at the time?

Speaker 7 (23:32):
I was not.

Speaker 9 (23:33):
I had a Burner account, so I like, I'd creep
on there, but nobody could figure out who it was.

Speaker 2 (23:37):
Was there a reason you got on social media?

Speaker 7 (23:39):
I just never really.

Speaker 9 (23:40):
Got on it much and I didn't care to see
anything on there or post anything.

Speaker 2 (23:44):
What's your hometown Belfast?

Speaker 1 (23:46):
And sir? How many people there?

Speaker 7 (23:48):
Not a whole lot?

Speaker 1 (23:50):
What was the drive? Do you drive? Can you drive
to Nashville and then drive home?

Speaker 7 (23:54):
I cannot drive in Nashville.

Speaker 1 (23:55):
Could you drive from Belfast to Nashville and then drive
back the same day? Is it that close or you
need to say the night? Okay?

Speaker 7 (24:01):
You can drive back and forth.

Speaker 2 (24:02):
So you drove to Nashville, you record a video with
this guy?

Speaker 1 (24:05):
How long until people start you start to feel that
people are trying to find you? From when it's loaded?

Speaker 9 (24:10):
It was immediate They're like, what's her at and I
was like, oh, and.

Speaker 1 (24:14):
You were seeing all the comments and stuff like what's
her at?

Speaker 9 (24:16):
I was sitting that was giggling. I was like, they're like,
where is she? I'm like right here, but.

Speaker 7 (24:20):
You don't know it.

Speaker 1 (24:21):
And then you would hear like all the songs that
were made, and it was slowly blowing up to where
it then crossed over was on Instagram. Like that's when
you know something's really big when it like jumps platforms
and is in all the places.

Speaker 9 (24:34):
It went from Instagram to Facebook to tick talk, it
was everywhere.

Speaker 1 (24:38):
It was everywhere. When did you feel like, I'm gonna
have to come out of social media retirement and at
least be like cause I saw other people they thought
they thought many people were you, and I would see
like in the comments, this is her, this is her.
At some point though, you had to come out and
be like, hello, it's me.

Speaker 9 (24:53):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (24:53):
I come out maybe like a week and a half later.

Speaker 2 (24:55):
Why did you wait so long?

Speaker 9 (24:57):
Because I didn't want anybody to find me. I was like, Oh,
that's embarrassing. I don't want anybody to find me.

Speaker 1 (25:01):
Did any your friends hop in and say hey, cause
you were with a friend in the video. Yeah, Chelsey,
and you guys are still friends?

Speaker 7 (25:08):
Oh yeah, great friends.

Speaker 2 (25:09):
And what does she say about the whole thing?

Speaker 9 (25:10):
She's about the same way as it makes. She hid
in the house with me for about two wee And.

Speaker 2 (25:14):
Why did you guys finally decide to come forward.

Speaker 9 (25:16):
Well, everybody was like impersonating us, like making fake accounts
like oh I'm her, and then getting all these follows
and everything else. And there was one woman I can't
remember what state she lived in that was like the
teacher that got fired. They had like a bunch of
benefits for she got fired, And I was like, that
girl's making money and she's not even the one in
the video.

Speaker 2 (25:33):
Well, we had heard that you were a teacher.

Speaker 1 (25:35):
One of the first rumors, even that you said wasn't true,
And we had heard that you were a teacher. That
video got out and they had to fire you because
of that. So do you feel like that was somebody
else who made up that story just so they can
make money. Yeah, I damn, we got scam alerted. I
shouldn't have sent that money. No, I didn't any money,
didn't send any money.

Speaker 7 (25:54):
I was gonna say, you get.

Speaker 1 (25:55):
Your money, And then how quickly did all this stuff
start to get bigger than you ever thought it would?
It was really quick, Like from when you said hi,
I'm Haley, how long until people started reaching out going
we want to be in business with you?

Speaker 7 (26:10):
It didn't take long at all.

Speaker 2 (26:12):
And how do you find the people that you want
to work with?

Speaker 1 (26:14):
Because I'm sure you're DMS of whatever account you started,
it's all blue check marks going we're this company, we're
this agency.

Speaker 2 (26:21):
How did you pick?

Speaker 9 (26:22):
So my best friend's mama is like our parent label
in my hometown, and I told her, I was like,
I need an attorney because I need to do something.
So she reached out and found me an attorney from
up here, and then I signed with him and him
are good, and then he found me my.

Speaker 7 (26:36):
Team I work with.

Speaker 1 (26:37):
So you got a lawyer first to make sure you're
not getting taken advantage of. What was the first thing
you did to make money? Was it signed stuff?

Speaker 7 (26:44):
Yes, I've done the hats first.

Speaker 1 (26:45):
That's pretty cool.

Speaker 7 (26:46):
Oh yeah, it was fun.

Speaker 1 (26:47):
Was it unbelievable that you were making money by just
signing stuff?

Speaker 7 (26:50):
It was a little weird. Yeah, I will say it's
very weird.

Speaker 1 (26:54):
What was your job before what you're doing now.

Speaker 9 (26:57):
I worked in spring factory. I don't know what that means, know,
boing like a spring.

Speaker 3 (27:01):
Oh, actual springs.

Speaker 1 (27:03):
The seat, not the season, and not a brand. It's
literal points. Yeah yeah, what are they that you make
springs for all different stuff? What did you do there?

Speaker 7 (27:12):
See?

Speaker 9 (27:13):
I've done the shipping in the quality, so like if
somebody wasn't there, I'd have to do the quality. I
didn't like it because you have to sit in the
desk all day at a computer and I can't sit
still that long. But the shipping, so people would place
to order for like how many they needed, which we
had regular customers, so they'd order some of the same
stuff every other week. So I'd pack them out and
put them in a box, and then my other partner
that worked with me, she'd ship them out. And I

(27:34):
was in the process of learning how to ship them
out when I left.

Speaker 1 (27:37):
Not on that process anymore. You're done with that process?
Have you moved to Nashville? No? Still still living at home?

Speaker 7 (27:43):
Yep? I can't drive up here.

Speaker 1 (27:45):
Meaning it's it seems too crazy for you, yeah, or
you just can't try. You have your license though, right?

Speaker 8 (27:50):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (27:50):
Yeah, yeah, I'm from a town of like seven hundred people.
So for me, the first time I moved to like
even Little Rock, I was like, what the crap the
highways and interstates? Yeah, yeah, I have a feeling. You're
gonna have to catch on though. I have a feeling.

Speaker 2 (28:01):
And so have you talked about moving it all?

Speaker 9 (28:04):
Yeah, we've talked about it. I'm just not interested in it.
I like where I'm at, you're.

Speaker 1 (28:08):
Gonna stay there. I was watching a video. It was
one of the first videos that your team released that
you released, and it was of your hometown and it
was of all your family, Like do you love your grandma?

Speaker 7 (28:19):
I do?

Speaker 1 (28:20):
And how do you explain to them the first time?
Because it's funny when you're just on Broadway. But then
like my grandma raised me and from a small town
in Arkansas, and I don't know, I would have difficulty
explaining to her what was going on. How do you
bring that to your family? Is it a whole meeting?

Speaker 9 (28:39):
So it was just me and Granny when I first
told her, and I had to explain it to her
three times before she got it. And then she was
like walking around, she was like she's so goofy gode
bless her?

Speaker 1 (28:50):
Are you working to slowly move out of the hawk
Tua phase to just the Haley phase. I am yeah,
I would feel like that would be a priority. What
do you want to do, like aside from appearances and
the things that you're doing now, which get all the
money you can right now, but like, what do you
want to do? What are you investing yourself into that
you can build a career out of this.

Speaker 9 (29:11):
So I've been doing a good bit of charity work.
I like doing it. And then I've met a whole
bunch of comedians and I'm kind of standing in like
a podcast direction and we've had words about like a
what do you call it?

Speaker 7 (29:26):
You know, kind of like floor Bama.

Speaker 1 (29:27):
Sure, but not like a festival. No, oh, like a
TV show? I got it. So you want to do
like a reality show?

Speaker 7 (29:33):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (29:34):
Have you talked to the people that like CMT or?
I mean I feel like that's right up your alley.

Speaker 7 (29:38):
I've met with a few people.

Speaker 1 (29:39):
Yeah, I've bet everybody wants to meet with you right now.

Speaker 7 (29:42):
It's a little damn pat Yeah right.

Speaker 1 (29:44):
Are you flying all over the country?

Speaker 6 (29:46):
Yeah?

Speaker 7 (29:47):
Yeah, good bit.

Speaker 2 (29:47):
Have you been to LA I have first time first
time crazy.

Speaker 7 (29:51):
That was last week.

Speaker 1 (29:52):
Who'd you meet?

Speaker 7 (29:54):
Let's see. I met the Bile Files people. I like them.
Whitney Cummings, I loved.

Speaker 1 (29:59):
Her, She's very funny.

Speaker 7 (30:00):
I met just I've met so many people. I couldn't
even keep.

Speaker 1 (30:03):
Up with them. And when you introduce yourself, you say
you're Haley, right I do do you say? At what point?
Because I agree with you, I think slowly you start
transitioning away from hawk to us so you can kind
of have your own identity. At what point do you
say stop calling me hawk to a girl?

Speaker 7 (30:19):
I don't even really say it anymore.

Speaker 9 (30:21):
Like the phrase, I don't say it at all because
I just want to forget about it.

Speaker 1 (30:25):
That's good. People ask you to do it.

Speaker 7 (30:28):
They do. I just kind of yeah.

Speaker 1 (30:30):
If they do, like a selfie video, they'll be like, hey,
say the phrase.

Speaker 7 (30:35):
They do it a lot. They'll come up to you
with their camera, they're like, can you say it?

Speaker 1 (30:38):
And I'm like, you know what I would say back?
I would say, oh, can you say it? But be
like funny. That way they won't be like, oh, she's
so such a jerk. But if like, will you say it?
And be like, oh, how about you say it? All this,
I'll just laugh.

Speaker 7 (30:49):
Yeah, you say it.

Speaker 2 (30:50):
Go ahead, Dang, that's crazy.

Speaker 1 (30:53):
I bet you you could get You probably want to
stay awa from phrase though, you can probably make a
lot of money say in the phrase like I cameo, Yeah,
have they come to you and been? Stay away from
that for now, for now, stay away from that lunchbox.
You have a million questions for Haley, ma'am.

Speaker 2 (31:13):
Yeah, now, okay, this is already all.

Speaker 4 (31:16):
How much money have you made?

Speaker 1 (31:18):
You don't have to answer that. You don't have to answer,
so you can tell us. So I saw a story
that was like it was like, you know, multiple thousands
per event. That's probably accurate, right, Yes, I would feel
comfortable with saying multiple thousands in event. And you've done
a lot of events. Yes, more money than you ever
thought you would make in a few weeks time.

Speaker 9 (31:37):
Man, you're telling me id into my bank out the
other day and almost I've had a stroke.

Speaker 1 (31:45):
That's really you got somebody like for taxes though, right,
because this is different than working in the spring factory,
because I had to learn this too, because they would
always take the taxes out. Yeah that was at a
normal job. But they're not going to take the taxes
out of your money now, so you have to have somebody.

Speaker 7 (32:00):
To do that, and I do. Okay, so we're set there.

Speaker 4 (32:03):
Now.

Speaker 5 (32:03):
Wait, we got a question. How many dudes are sliding
into your dms plenty?

Speaker 2 (32:08):
Any famous ones?

Speaker 6 (32:10):
Eh?

Speaker 7 (32:10):
I mean you've had for you like, I don't want
to tell you that almost spot.

Speaker 1 (32:17):
Anybody that asks you anything that you don't want to answer,
just be like, I don't feel like answering that. I
don't feel like doing that.

Speaker 4 (32:21):
Okay.

Speaker 5 (32:22):
Have you chatted back and forth with these celebrity dudes, like, hey,
there's mutual interest?

Speaker 7 (32:26):
Yeah, a little bit, like to collab and stuff.

Speaker 4 (32:29):
Oh not date?

Speaker 7 (32:30):
Oh no, no, no no, do.

Speaker 1 (32:32):
You have a boyfriend? No? Okay, but just said a
pro tip. If anybody ask you any question you don't
want to answer, just be like, oh man, I don't
a full comfortable answer in that, because then you don't
look like a jerk and you don't have to answer
the question, and don't feel pressure to answer any question
you don't want to answer.

Speaker 7 (32:46):
What's your name?

Speaker 4 (32:48):
Lunchbox?

Speaker 7 (32:50):
Where'd that come from?

Speaker 5 (32:51):
In the third grade, I stole a Superman I tried
to steal a Superman lunchbox from Walmart when I wanted
it for school, and I stuck it under my shirt.
My mom let me walk around the whole store with it.
When we were leaving, She's like, is there anything under
your shirt? And said nope, And she went are you sure?
And I said yeah. She goes knock, knock, knock. I said,
I don't know how that got there.

Speaker 7 (33:07):
Mom, You're not got there.

Speaker 8 (33:09):
Yep.

Speaker 2 (33:11):
And that's a good tactic too.

Speaker 1 (33:12):
Ask questions back. If people are annoying to you, if
you just ask them a question, well, I said I
was annoying to her. Well, I would say a bit uncomfortable.
I mean, I feel a bit uncomfortable.

Speaker 4 (33:20):
Is it hard to walk around your hometown now? Or
are people just bugging you?

Speaker 1 (33:25):
That's a good question, non stop.

Speaker 7 (33:26):
I don't think I really went out into public since
all of this.

Speaker 9 (33:30):
Like I used to go to the grocery store all
the time and stuff like that, but I don't really
go anymore.

Speaker 4 (33:33):
Yeah, now you got someone that does that for you
because you got so much money.

Speaker 7 (33:36):
Huh No, I don't even do that.

Speaker 1 (33:37):
Just Uber Eats, Yeah I should do that. Uber EAT's
come to your house. Okay, I guess I have some
other questions for you now. When you decided to come
out at the Zach Bryan show. How did that get
lined up?

Speaker 8 (33:48):
So?

Speaker 7 (33:49):
I think that.

Speaker 9 (33:49):
Reached out to my managers, but we wanted to keep
it a surprise because I haven't like launched my social
media just yet.

Speaker 7 (33:55):
And they're like, where is she? Still couldn't find me?
And then I was like, okay, here I am.

Speaker 1 (33:58):
Were you going to go to that show?

Speaker 7 (34:00):
Yes? I had tickets beforehand.

Speaker 1 (34:02):
And how did they know who your management team was?
Because at that time I didn't know publicly it was
even out there.

Speaker 9 (34:07):
I really couldn't tell you, but I told my managers
we had tickets for it because we had these tickets
for like six months. So I'm sure they got in
contact with them and they're like, oh, she probably needs
like some security or something because she hadn't been out yet.

Speaker 1 (34:20):
So and you met Shack? I saw, Yes, I loved Shack.
Was he super nice?

Speaker 7 (34:25):
Yes? He's everything he's made up to be.

Speaker 1 (34:27):
How did you meet Shack? Where was that?

Speaker 7 (34:28):
We met?

Speaker 9 (34:29):
About perr in Nashville. I couldn't tell you where, but
somewhere up here.

Speaker 1 (34:32):
Look at a bar or something. Yeah, how did that
come together? Were they like Shaq wants to meet you
or were you guys in the same place at the
same time. Yeah, the second one, you were in the
same place at the same time as Shaq.

Speaker 7 (34:41):
Oh no the first.

Speaker 1 (34:42):
Oh, they say, okay, got it, got it, got.

Speaker 7 (34:44):
It all set up.

Speaker 1 (34:45):
But he's great, that's pretty good.

Speaker 4 (34:47):
Did he buy you a car or a house or anything?
Because he see everything.

Speaker 9 (34:50):
I dj' with him and he stepped on my toe,
but that would hurt. You didushed the paint off of
my toe?

Speaker 1 (34:57):
What do you mean you DJed with him?

Speaker 7 (34:58):
Why? I still beside him?

Speaker 1 (34:59):
I wouldn't. Oh, got it. You weren't doing well.

Speaker 9 (35:01):
He had a big red button over there, like when
you smacked it, like let the what do you call it?

Speaker 1 (35:05):
I guess fog the fog machine?

Speaker 7 (35:07):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, he let us hit that.

Speaker 1 (35:09):
So you fogged. You fogged while he dj I did. So,
when are you gonna start like your podcast? You know?

Speaker 9 (35:15):
Yeah, we're working on and I'm still deciding on like
an agency to go through and stuff.

Speaker 1 (35:19):
Can you sing?

Speaker 7 (35:20):
Absolutely not? Did you not see the Zach Brown video?

Speaker 1 (35:23):
Yeah, but that's such a big stage. You don't have ears,
and you know, maybe you can sing a little bit.
What did people in high school. What do they think, Like,
do they give you any like most likely to blank,
like what were you doing in high school? Most like funniest, Yeah.

Speaker 7 (35:37):
I'd say you can sound funniest.

Speaker 5 (35:39):
Yeah, yeah, superlatives yeah, most likely to go viral?

Speaker 7 (35:44):
Yeah, this I never would have partially thought that either.

Speaker 6 (35:48):
Well, Lunchock's asked you about guys in your dms, But
what about you know, long lost cousins or random people
you've never heard of and they're like, hey remember me
those yeah, or people.

Speaker 2 (35:58):
That were me and you in school, but now all
of a sudden they your best friend.

Speaker 7 (36:00):
Yeah. I've had some of that too.

Speaker 9 (36:02):
There's a girl that I went to school with that
went and real crazy about telling why she coming past
my house taking pictures of my house exactly?

Speaker 1 (36:09):
She went so nice to you back in like eleventh grade.

Speaker 7 (36:10):
Oh yeah, she tells us all the time exactly.

Speaker 2 (36:13):
So you're doing a lot of anti bullying stuff too, Huh,
why is that important to you?

Speaker 7 (36:17):
It's just not right. People need to be nice in
the world.

Speaker 1 (36:20):
And I'm sure with the Internet and social media now
you're probably dealing with because if you just get to
a certain spot, it doesn't matter how much you're beloved.
There's always going to be a group of people that
are angry, jealous, or mean.

Speaker 7 (36:31):
Yeah, you're exactly right, and.

Speaker 1 (36:33):
I'm sure you're dealing without yourself. Now probably shed some
new light to the whole situation. What have you learned
from this whole experience?

Speaker 7 (36:39):
Don't read the comments.

Speaker 1 (36:41):
You're exactly right. Don't read the comments. I say that too,
And every once in a while, I still I will
go over to like the Facebook page. You'll blint, yes,
And I always I regret it, every single time. And
I always find myself drawn to the negative ones the
more so the good ones. And I don't like that
about me. I think that's you the nature, but I do,

(37:02):
and I'll find the negative one sometimes. I reply never
to the nice ones.

Speaker 9 (37:05):
I think they're kind of funny though, Like you get
a couple funny ones.

Speaker 7 (37:08):
I'm like, where'd you come up with that?

Speaker 1 (37:11):
So people can your real account? Because I was looking
there's a lot of fake accounts. Yes, it's at Hey
Underscore Welch. Sure is was Hailey Welch already taken as
one name? Because people do you know?

Speaker 7 (37:23):
I really don't know.

Speaker 1 (37:25):
Was that your account before all this blew up?

Speaker 9 (37:28):
It was just Haley welch, like there was nothing in
it was just strike my name.

Speaker 1 (37:33):
That was your account before all this blew up. But
you're not using that one anymore, got it?

Speaker 7 (37:37):
I got rid of it like months before this.

Speaker 1 (37:40):
Okay. Her official socials are at Hay Underscore. Welch. Anybody
you're dying meat that you haven't met yet.

Speaker 7 (37:48):
I'm excited to meet Matt Rief in person.

Speaker 9 (37:50):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (37:50):
I saw with Whitney Cummings. He they did that FaceTime. Yeah,
do you have that lined up?

Speaker 7 (37:56):
Yeah?

Speaker 9 (37:56):
So he invited us to his show. It's sometimes it's
coming month in town or.

Speaker 4 (38:01):
Like here, what are you going on stage on that
one too?

Speaker 7 (38:04):
I'm gonna sit that one out and just watch.

Speaker 5 (38:07):
Do you get upgraded? Like so the Zach Brian Show,
did they give you upgraded seats because you.

Speaker 7 (38:13):
Yeah, I'll tag you along, don't worry. Who do you
want to go see?

Speaker 4 (38:16):
Let's go whatever?

Speaker 1 (38:18):
What do you mean?

Speaker 7 (38:18):
Whatever? You gotta tell me what he wants to go to?

Speaker 1 (38:20):
Anything and get him in for free? Okay, anything for free?
He wants to go. So this week, how many events
will you do? How many appearances will you make? Do
you know?

Speaker 9 (38:28):
Do you have a couple well, I'll go back to
Los Angeles, so we'll say, what's going on?

Speaker 4 (38:33):
What are you doing in LA?

Speaker 9 (38:35):
Finally getting to have fun up there? So I was
there last week, but I was there for business last week,
so I didn't get to have any fun last week.

Speaker 1 (38:42):
So this time you're gonna have fun.

Speaker 7 (38:44):
I get to go to the beach.

Speaker 1 (38:45):
Oh that's cool. Have you made any money off the
video alone? Or is that just that guy's property. Have
you talked to that dude question?

Speaker 7 (38:53):
Tell him thank you for what.

Speaker 4 (38:55):
Making you famous?

Speaker 6 (38:56):
Eh?

Speaker 9 (38:57):
Well, see, we reached out to him and I asked
him to stop posting those videos, and he never did.
He blocked us all on everything. I'm not telling him
thank you for anything really, So.

Speaker 1 (39:05):
You reached out to go, hey, would you chill on that?
And he blocked you because I.

Speaker 7 (39:08):
Mean, he posts.

Speaker 9 (39:09):
When I'd be like, oh, that's it, here would come
another one. A few days later, I was like, man,
maybe that's it. Here'd come another one.

Speaker 7 (39:14):
Then just so on.

Speaker 6 (39:16):
So in the beginning, you just wanted it to all
go away and make it stop, and you just continue
life at home and at the Spring Factory. And then
now since he wouldn't stop, you're just like, Okay, what
does this make possible for me? But you don't need
to thank him?

Speaker 3 (39:30):
I get that. Okay, Wow, what.

Speaker 1 (39:32):
Did you say to the people at the spring factory?
I assume you had a good relationship, but two weeks
in or did you go? This has gotten crazy? I
gotta go.

Speaker 9 (39:37):
So the day that was my last day, I decided
that morning, I was like, okay, well I'm fixed to
start traveling, so I can't use all my points and
stuff here because I'm going to be traveling so much.

Speaker 7 (39:47):
But they asked me like all week that week, They're like,
all right, when's your last day? And I was like,
I'm not quitting, y'all?

Speaker 1 (39:51):
Well, were they happy for you?

Speaker 7 (39:54):
They are?

Speaker 1 (39:54):
That's pretty cool.

Speaker 7 (39:55):
They're great people out there.

Speaker 1 (39:56):
That's pretty cool. Anybody driving by your house or anything weird?

Speaker 7 (39:59):
Yeah, I've had a few reporters going to my house.

Speaker 1 (40:01):
Really yeah, what do you say to them?

Speaker 7 (40:04):
Not a thing. I peeped through the blose.

Speaker 3 (40:05):
That look at them.

Speaker 1 (40:06):
They don't come on the property though, right, yes.

Speaker 7 (40:08):
They they run up on my Paull poll, which was
very good.

Speaker 1 (40:12):
What do you do? What do you say? Not good? Yeah,
you don't know that. Well, I'm super excited for you.
I hope you you run like crazy with it. Make
your money while you can, but start start building out
your thing while it's as well, while it's shiny hot,
you know, because you get big guests right now. What'd
you think? What happened to the jelly Roll Warren Zeider's concert?

Speaker 7 (40:32):
Oh it was fun.

Speaker 1 (40:33):
Yeah, it was really fun.

Speaker 9 (40:34):
I met Warren and I didn't get to meet jelly
Roll just yet. I was very upset about that, but
we had to go or we'd have been stuck in
like three hours of traffic.

Speaker 1 (40:41):
Did you watch the show? Were you able to say,
really good? You have like a side stage spot or
were you in the crowd?

Speaker 9 (40:47):
It was like a path you could go like the
crowds like back through here, then there's like a path
through the middle of them. I got to go through there,
so I got to see everything.

Speaker 1 (40:54):
It's pretty cool. And people weren't all over you the
whole time.

Speaker 7 (40:56):
They were just like a little bit.

Speaker 9 (40:58):
But it wasn't anything crazy or nothing them They're just
oh my god, it's up to.

Speaker 1 (41:03):
I was like, hey, well, what so? I appreciate you
being here and talking with us. What can we Is
there anything you're promoting right now other than your social
media handle, because I'm happy to promote whatever it is.
If you work your Homo drone, if there's something new
that you're like, hey, I want to promote this, let
us know.

Speaker 2 (41:20):
We're happy to go merchandise.

Speaker 1 (41:21):
Yes, that's it.

Speaker 7 (41:22):
There you go, I'm launching you get on Instagram.

Speaker 1 (41:25):
So if they go thewe minutes, what's say it again?
Sixteen minutes meaning more than fifteen Yeah, yeah, I like.

Speaker 7 (41:31):
Him say I'm a little bit of a smart delic.

Speaker 9 (41:33):
So like they're like, oh, she's got fifteen minutes of fame,
Well I want sixteen minutes.

Speaker 7 (41:36):
So that's where that comes from.

Speaker 1 (41:38):
So if they go to at Hey, Underscore, Welch, Lincoln.

Speaker 7 (41:42):
Bio yep, or a Spencer's store or with.

Speaker 4 (41:45):
Spencer's, Yes, that's you already have a deal with Spencer.

Speaker 1 (41:49):
That's awesome.

Speaker 3 (41:50):
Every Spencer's everywhere.

Speaker 1 (41:52):
That's a great deal. Good for you.

Speaker 4 (41:54):
That is crazy. What can I go by and Spencer's yours?

Speaker 9 (41:58):
I will take you in there myself and let you
frawl like and pick out whatever you want.

Speaker 1 (42:02):
No, no, I'm just saying the shopping spree like yeah, yeah,
well Haley, I am I'm super pumped for you. Uh,
you know, like my grandma used to say, you know,
eat while the sun's out. I know the sign is
out right now, So get all you can get and
start building and we'll be watching and rooting for you
and lunchbox. Any final question, Yeah, do you consider yourself rich? Now?

Speaker 9 (42:25):
I won't ever flunt like I'm rich because I know
where I come from and that's how I'm gonna stay.

Speaker 1 (42:30):
Do you consider yourself though, like secretly rich a little bit?
Because yeah, I mean the first time I made fifty
thousand dollars a year, I thought I was rich. I
was like, oh my.

Speaker 7 (42:38):
God, man, you're telling me it was a life.

Speaker 4 (42:40):
I mean, she's making twenty thousand night.

Speaker 1 (42:42):
I know different times, that's different.

Speaker 4 (42:44):
Now, question, what's it? What's the worst part about being famous?

Speaker 7 (42:48):
Everybody looking at you when you walk into a room.

Speaker 4 (42:52):
You don't like that?

Speaker 7 (42:53):
No, it makes me nervous.

Speaker 4 (42:55):
That's weird.

Speaker 2 (42:56):
Have you walked into any rooms in public by yourself
or non famous lately where you're just going somewhere and
then still and still everybody kind of slowly figures out.

Speaker 1 (43:06):
It to you.

Speaker 9 (43:07):
Yeah. I went to a gas station by myself to
get guests and everybody's just kind of looking at it.

Speaker 1 (43:11):
I was like, oh no, does that feel unsafe a
little bit?

Speaker 7 (43:14):
Yeah, it's a little bit, But most of the.

Speaker 9 (43:16):
Places I go is like in my hometown, so I'm
not really worried about them there.

Speaker 7 (43:19):
You've got a bodyguard when you go on the road
and big places. Yeah, but when I'm at home.

Speaker 1 (43:24):
Now, Amy, any final question for Haley.

Speaker 6 (43:26):
Yeah, I mean if you're working on the podcast, I'm
curious too. You said, you know you like comedy and
you like, well sarcasm is smart alec, but like, what
kind of content do you want to put out there
that you hope people will gain from listening.

Speaker 7 (43:39):
So I'm leaning towards more like a podcast for the girls. Okay,
that's what I want to do with it.

Speaker 1 (43:45):
It's like I can't listen.

Speaker 9 (43:47):
I mean you can, you can take in some advice
I could learn about women.

Speaker 1 (43:50):
I was really looking forward to it, Haley. Now I
can't listen to it.

Speaker 6 (43:53):
Golly, yeah, well we look forward to that and seeing
you you know what comes with that and stick with it,
like I love that. Your first answer when Bobby asked,
like what you've been up to with it and what
you're passionate about is giving back in charity, and.

Speaker 7 (44:06):
Well, somebody needs to.

Speaker 1 (44:09):
That's true. Somebody needs To's not enough of it, that's right. Remember, though,
you can only shine that light on a lot of
these organizations if you stay famous, So you have to
stay in the in the limelight, so you can keep
shining on the charity to do good.

Speaker 4 (44:24):
And don't give all your money to charity.

Speaker 1 (44:25):
You'll go broke. I've never met or heard anybody who
gave all their money to charity and went broke. I've
never actually heard that happen before.

Speaker 4 (44:33):
I'm just saying, don't get too like, oh, I have
all this money.

Speaker 1 (44:35):
I can give you so much more like waste it
on like dumb stuff. Yeah, more than give it all
to charity.

Speaker 4 (44:41):
Well, you can buy a couple of houses because you
can sell those back.

Speaker 1 (44:45):
Hailey, good to talk to you. Thank you for coming in.
You guys follow at hay Underscore Welch and the link
is right there in her bio and you can get
some sixteen minutes merch. That's that's cool, all right, there
she has Hailey Welch. Everybody next, yup?

Speaker 7 (44:55):
Thank you.

Speaker 1 (44:58):
Cooper Allen got Asi on TikTok. I would watch his
videos and he has a song on the Country Top
thirty that's called take Forever. Good artist like has blown
up like all naturally as far as like no record
label but just social media.

Speaker 2 (45:13):
And so he came over.

Speaker 1 (45:14):
We did an hour together and he talked about how
he started playing trumpet in middle school.

Speaker 8 (45:18):
Started playing guitar in sixth grade. I was playing the trumpet.
That was like my first instrument because I was like
heavy into disco, you know Casey in the Sunshine band Abba.
I think I saw Mama Mia when I was in
like third grade and then got into more of the
disco scene. Then my brothers were like, dude, you gotta
you gotta stop playing the trumpet. It's just there's nothing

(45:39):
cool about it.

Speaker 1 (45:39):
He's a young guy, but he played the trumpet and
loved like the disco stuff. And he talked about one
of the regrets because he got massive on TikTok was
how he handles mean comments and TikTok.

Speaker 4 (45:49):
I forget when this trend was.

Speaker 8 (45:51):
I was, but it's like me and my wife were
standing in the bathroom and it's like you flick the
light on with the beat and the light turns off
and it turns on and I'm more her clothes and
she's wearing mine, and like it was kind of weird.

Speaker 4 (46:03):
How how comfortable that'll last?

Speaker 1 (46:05):
And I get the shirt was, yeah, I get it
made you feel. Yeah, I found that.

Speaker 8 (46:07):
You just kind of have those days that like one
comment will just get to you. But most of the
time it's like, dude, they're not going to like you
whether you do something they want or not.

Speaker 1 (46:16):
That's a good point.

Speaker 2 (46:17):
You can do whatever you want.

Speaker 1 (46:18):
They already aren't liking you.

Speaker 2 (46:19):
But why do they follow?

Speaker 1 (46:20):
That's my thing. I get people that come to me
every day in my comments if I look the same person,
but like, why are you following me?

Speaker 2 (46:25):
So follow me?

Speaker 3 (46:27):
Yeah, I don't know. It doesn't make me follow.

Speaker 2 (46:28):
Me home sometimes when I follow me home.

Speaker 1 (46:30):
No. Check out Cooper Alan on the Bobby Cast. Go
search for it. It's a really good hour interview.

Speaker 4 (46:38):
Amy's pile of stories.

Speaker 6 (46:39):
So Americans love their sports right very invested and new
poll shows that sports fans watch one hundred and twenty
games of something per year.

Speaker 1 (46:49):
Wow, it is the number one rated everything when sports
are on football you football sports, And I'm saying it's
the number one of all shows all year long, not
even just the super Bowl, like twelve of the top
thirteen things are like Sunday Night Football, Monday Night Football,
like it dominates so much, even the bigger shows.

Speaker 3 (47:10):
But yeah, so there's different categories of fans.

Speaker 6 (47:13):
There's the raging fan, yeah, and then there's the moderate fan,
and then there's someone in between, like the average fan.

Speaker 8 (47:22):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (47:22):
I think that I am raging on the inside fan.
The only time that I ever see read ever in
my life is when ARKINSASLL loses a game, a close game.

Speaker 6 (47:31):
Well, it's not just how it impacts you emotionally it
makes you raging. It's the amount of money you will
spend on your team, whether it comes, whether it's like
seeing them live or buying little outfits or they're.

Speaker 2 (47:41):
Not called little outfits.

Speaker 1 (47:42):
First of all, and second of all, Jersey, if you
go to an away game and you lose, it's the
worst feeling ever because you just want to get home.
You don't want to be in this town. You hate
everybody in this town that's representing whatever team.

Speaker 2 (47:52):
It sucks. You don't want to be in the hotel.

Speaker 1 (47:54):
You figure the people that work at the hotel desk
are fans of that team too, and you hate them.
It's awful going to away game and losing terrible. I'd
really go to the dentists and have no novacaine or
whatever they do.

Speaker 2 (48:05):
It's it's the god.

Speaker 1 (48:07):
If I have to go to Tuscaloosa one more time
and get beat, it's it's awful.

Speaker 6 (48:10):
Well, in the amount of money it costs to be
a big like a raging fan and like going to
a game, the average ticket eight and seventy nine dollars.

Speaker 1 (48:19):
Yeah game, Well, no, that's that's not true. Yeah, a
ticket's nice.

Speaker 6 (48:22):
Raging fans say they spend on average eight hundred dollars
on the tickets concessions.

Speaker 1 (48:28):
Okay, now we're talking about the flight, We're talking about
everything on tickets eight seventy nine unless you're buying like
you're going in apparel.

Speaker 2 (48:35):
Yeah, okay, nobody's.

Speaker 1 (48:36):
Buying a new what a cute outfit for every game either,
it's not the Aras.

Speaker 3 (48:41):
Tour memorabilia is on here.

Speaker 2 (48:42):
Okay, we're not buying that. I mean I'm buying that.
I'm not out for the game.

Speaker 6 (48:45):
Okay, So some pregame pregame habits of people that love
sports flaunting team gear tailgating, chanting, dancing, and praying.

Speaker 1 (48:53):
I do all that before every play, I think.

Speaker 3 (48:55):
And then some people even light candles for their team.

Speaker 1 (48:58):
I get so excited. But the problem is I just
it's like I'm ready to be heard again. It's that
Michael Scott meme from the office. I think I'm ready
to be heard again because college football is about to
start back, and I convince myself every year we're gonna
be good. And I don't know how I'm doing it
this year, but I'm ready and I think I'm ready
to be heard again.

Speaker 3 (49:14):
Light candles, fruity.

Speaker 6 (49:16):
Speaking of sports, I saw just today Krispy Kreme is
doing something in regards to the Olympics, like you can
get a dollar donuts.

Speaker 1 (49:22):
There's no nothing more Olympic than a good Krispy Kreb
There's no limit.

Speaker 6 (49:26):
TikTok is dropping a new song search tool. All you
have to do is sing into your TikTok or hum
and then it's gonna let's good, tell you what the
song is.

Speaker 1 (49:35):
What if you're really bad, though, like I would bet you,
TikTok will not be able to identify lunchbox singing songs
into it unless he gets a lot of the words,
which he also doesn't do very often.

Speaker 6 (49:47):
What is that game we used to do with lunchboks
where he'd like go in the room with headphones and
like he wouldn't have anything and he'd have to.

Speaker 4 (49:54):
So, yeah, he.

Speaker 1 (49:54):
Would listen to the song, but we couldn't hear what
he's listened to it, and he would just sing it
as it was in we have to get the song
he was singing, Oh.

Speaker 3 (50:01):
Would bring that back? That's been like, I don't know.

Speaker 1 (50:03):
We've did there for a long time and a lot
of other shows started taking it from us, and I
was like, you know what, I don't want to be
one of the fifty shows doing it now. Oh even
though we said we just we could, but I don't
care about other shows anymore.

Speaker 2 (50:13):
But back in the day, I was like, man, everybody's
doing our bits, all right? What else?

Speaker 6 (50:16):
Hardy was recently asked out of every country music star,
who was the one that he would least like to
date his sister.

Speaker 1 (50:23):
He probably said Morgan because our friends, right, Yeah, he
was always picked a really good friends in that because
you know, I'm sure that awkward.

Speaker 6 (50:28):
He laughed and then said Morgan Wallen. He said he'd
only break her heart.

Speaker 3 (50:33):
Man, Yeah, you.

Speaker 1 (50:33):
Can do that to your friends. They do that in
the locker room. They'll go to players and be like,
who would you not want to date your sister? And
everybody ends up picking like a funny wide receiver player
that they're close to.

Speaker 3 (50:43):
Ye, yeah, I Mamy.

Speaker 2 (50:45):
That's my pile.

Speaker 4 (50:46):
That was Amy's pile of stories.

Speaker 1 (50:49):
Time for the good news how much box.

Speaker 5 (50:55):
Mackenzie Schaeffer from Ohio was in Pennsylvania at a festival,
going crazy, rocking out, having a good old time, and
then she looked down her custom engagement ring gone and
it's a festival, how is she going to ever find it?
She spent hours on the grounds after it was over
looking for it, came back with her family for two days,

(51:15):
looked everywhere, never found the ring. So she posted a
video on TikTok said hey, I'm looking for this ring.

Speaker 4 (51:21):
I need to get it back. It's my engagement ring.
She was crushed.

Speaker 5 (51:25):
We started getting shared and shared and shared, and this
girl saw it and said, hey, my friend found that ring.
So she goes to her friends like, hey, you need
to return the ring. Friends like I'm not giving it back.

Speaker 1 (51:36):
Oh, So.

Speaker 5 (51:40):
The friend stole it and gave it to a police
officer and said, hey, this is the ring.

Speaker 2 (51:43):
And the con wasn't going to give it back, NOE said,
went to.

Speaker 4 (51:47):
The friend, and the friend didn't want to give it back.

Speaker 5 (51:49):
So she took it and got it to a police
officer who facilitated the return of the ring.

Speaker 1 (51:54):
You know, if you were a real friend, you don't
tell on your friend for I want to give it back.
You just steal it and then give it away. That's
what I'm thinking. I was like, you have to sell
her out.

Speaker 5 (52:02):
But then I'm like, did she actually lose it or
did she set it down to wash her hands?

Speaker 4 (52:05):
And that friends stole.

Speaker 1 (52:06):
It and then also instead of the friend going I'm
not giving it back, why would she not just pawn it?

Speaker 2 (52:12):
But it was a really cool ring. She's gonna hold
it and wear it.

Speaker 1 (52:15):
I'm glad you got it back, And good for the
that second friend for stealing it from the other friend
and getting it back to her.

Speaker 4 (52:21):
But now they're not gonna be friends.

Speaker 8 (52:23):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (52:23):
I don't think any friends after that, because you'll probably
steal from you and then keep.

Speaker 2 (52:26):
It and I give it back. Yeah, good story. Glad
she got it back.

Speaker 1 (52:29):
Though. That's what it's all about.

Speaker 2 (52:30):
That was telling me something good.

Speaker 1 (52:33):
And that is the end of the first half of
the podcast, the first half of the podcast podcast, the
First Time Podcast. You can go to the podcast too,
or you can wait till podcast to come out.
Advertise With Us

Hosts And Creators

Bobby Bones

Bobby Bones

Amy Brown

Amy Brown

Lunchbox

Lunchbox

Eddie Garcia

Eddie Garcia

Morgan Huelsman

Morgan Huelsman

Raymundo

Raymundo

Mike D

Mike D

Abby Anderson

Abby Anderson

Scuba Steve

Scuba Steve

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