Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
We'll go to mom Aliza. Hey, welcome to Wednesday Show
More Studio morning. Let's go around the room in easy Trivia.
He's about to one another season. The wisdom he has
from old age could be the reason here he is Eddie.
(00:21):
Everybody video produce.
Speaker 2 (00:23):
Hey, So shout out to my fifteen year old son.
He just passed his driver's test the written one. Pretty
cool dude, And I was his proctor. You get to
give him the test?
Speaker 1 (00:31):
Yeah? Is that legit? Parents can just gived you not
just pass your kid then?
Speaker 3 (00:34):
No, no, no, no, I was proctor for my daughter. And
you want them to pass because you want them to
be good drivers.
Speaker 1 (00:40):
Well, if you wanted to go pick up groceries, you
passed them a little easier.
Speaker 2 (00:44):
Well, here's the deal that he could take two chances
to take the test, So if you failed the first one,
he could take the second one.
Speaker 1 (00:48):
I can't believe they let parents cred the test.
Speaker 2 (00:49):
Wow, but I had to sign like five documents man
saying I wouldn't cheat.
Speaker 4 (00:52):
Yeah, you have to, Like there's this whole app you.
Speaker 1 (00:54):
Have to scan documents, scanned faces. Yeah, they had my face, dude,
it's legit.
Speaker 4 (00:59):
It makes it feel like they're going to come after
you if you do something wrong.
Speaker 5 (01:02):
So he passed, you passed, he nail it barely passed,
like barely.
Speaker 1 (01:07):
It was really really close.
Speaker 2 (01:08):
And what I would do is I would kind of
mentally take the test with him, like as he was answering,
and I wouldn't tell him if he was right or wrong,
but I would be like, that's definitely be in my head.
Speaker 1 (01:18):
And then dude, I don't think I would have passed, honestly.
Speaker 2 (01:21):
And it's those questions with like how many feet do
you need to stop? You know, and like I couldn't
do this. When does he drive? Then we do Driver's ed.
He's going to take classes like in the next couple
of weeks, and then we actually get the permit.
Speaker 1 (01:34):
What's a permit now, fifteen and a half?
Speaker 2 (01:36):
What do you mean, Well, he's fifteen, so I think
at any age fifteen he gets the permit.
Speaker 1 (01:40):
We could get him at fourteen in Arkansas. I don't
know if it's like that.
Speaker 4 (01:43):
Still, I think here you could do that if you
have a hard ship.
Speaker 1 (01:46):
Fifteen and a half, though, then became the age in
other states when you could actually get your permit with
somebody in the car. Back just fifteen. Now it seems
like I was fifteen. It's crazy, daughter drive it too,
I know, don't they seems so small and young? Yes,
that's wild. All right, Well, good luck Eddie, thank you.
This guy was once on Jerry Springer and there's no
way he could ever be a singer. Here he is,
lunchbox Amy. I got a question for you. Who does
(02:08):
who does Eddie try to be like? Who does he
try to act like and imitate and be like? That's
a good question, A good question, I'm gonna say, And.
Speaker 6 (02:18):
Generally, yeah, like who does he try to model his
like dresses? Like?
Speaker 1 (02:21):
He tries to do what this person Bobby's clothes, but
I give him my clothes, Bobby's clothes.
Speaker 4 (02:26):
He works out with you and your trainer.
Speaker 1 (02:28):
Yeah, because I said, hey, we're going to work out
at this time.
Speaker 4 (02:30):
He joined your band.
Speaker 7 (02:33):
Thank you?
Speaker 1 (02:34):
Answered my question, join my band, that's our band? Thank you?
Speaker 4 (02:37):
You had the band in high school?
Speaker 1 (02:38):
Yeah, but I didn't know him at high school. Yeah.
Speaker 4 (02:42):
Right now he's asking me questions I.
Speaker 1 (02:44):
Didn't join the band. That's not accurate or fair it
what's your point? He was five minutes for me, and
I'm like, hey, we're working on my segment.
Speaker 6 (02:51):
I am just glad that Amy realizes it also that
Eddie wants to be Bobby. And we have another example
for the five hundredth time Eddie does up now that
Bobby does. I look back here yesterday. Eddie now carries
a fanny pack.
Speaker 8 (03:05):
All of a sudden, he's.
Speaker 1 (03:06):
Carrying a fanny pack because Bobby carries a fanny pack.
It's hilarious. I don't have a fanny pack.
Speaker 5 (03:11):
Oh you did have a lot of That was a
Christmas gift.
Speaker 2 (03:14):
Yeah, and I only needed that because I ran out
of ziplock bags. And that's where I put my bowled eggs.
Speaker 1 (03:17):
I'd only seen it one time ever, And I didn't
invent the fanny pack.
Speaker 4 (03:21):
Did you put just boiled eggs in a bag?
Speaker 1 (03:25):
It's it's it's like one of those like keeps it cool.
You put it in plastic and then in the.
Speaker 3 (03:30):
Bag, just the shelled Okay, okay, okay, what's wrong with
you guys?
Speaker 4 (03:39):
Well, I don't know.
Speaker 3 (03:40):
I thought you had already peeled it and there's rolling
around in there.
Speaker 1 (03:43):
Nought you would just take it and put it in
a plastic bag and then put it in the fanny
pack and.
Speaker 2 (03:47):
I didn't have plastic bags, so I just put the
eggs with a shell on in my fanny pack.
Speaker 1 (03:51):
I saw the fanty fact too, and I was like,
look at Eddie. You didn't admit it. But different, I
have all different bags. I just have won this kind
of a fanny pack shape, but it's actually bigger than that.
I like you, but I'm not trying to be like Bobby. Okay,
but why do you say I like you? Then you said,
because it's like I don't want to. I don't want
you to feel like I don't. I think they're jealous.
Speaker 4 (04:15):
The questioning he.
Speaker 1 (04:16):
Joined my band, No, that's not true. You made that up.
But Amy, you could have said anybody and you knew that,
leading her to it in the room.
Speaker 4 (04:25):
Okay. I started with that he wears your.
Speaker 1 (04:29):
Clothes literally because I give them. Mike does too. Sometimes
I wear them once for TV and then I'm like,
you guys can have them if you want them.
Speaker 4 (04:35):
I'm not answering questions anymore.
Speaker 1 (04:37):
Exactly, you made the wrong decision that you can wear
a fanny pack if you want. Thank you? Yeah, all right. Next,
She's always looking for signs from above, and when we
make fun of her, it's nothing belove here. She is Amy,
everybody who is.
Speaker 3 (04:52):
So a lot of changes I've had to do just
being on my own in my house. And I changed
my alarm code and I don't have to ever enter
it manually though, because I have the app on my
phone and so when I go, I pull up ADT
and I proop arm and then I disarm, no code necessary. Well,
(05:13):
my phone was offline. Well, first of all, I didn't
remember that we set the alarm, and I accidentally opened
the garage door and the alarm starts blaring. So I'm like,
get my phone, get my phone, and I pull up
the app and it's offline for some reason. But everything
was My WiFi was kicked off or something, so I
had no way to deactivate it.
Speaker 1 (05:29):
So it just went off.
Speaker 4 (05:29):
It was going. But I mean, I know the drill.
They're gonna call me.
Speaker 3 (05:33):
And then they say, hey, missus Brown, is everything okay?
And I say yes, and they're like, we're gonna need
the safeboard and then I give on my word and
then they know that I'm me and I'm okay, and
then they're like, okay, we won't send the police and
we'll deactivate the alarm, have a great day, and that happened.
Speaker 4 (05:50):
That's what they did, and then I need So now
I still haven't reset the for digit code. I don't
know what it.
Speaker 1 (05:55):
Is saying the safeboord spanking.
Speaker 4 (06:00):
Is it safe word or is it code work?
Speaker 1 (06:02):
I don't know. I'm eat that safe word.
Speaker 9 (06:03):
I just let it go.
Speaker 4 (06:05):
I think it's safe for it, Like are you saying?
Speaker 1 (06:07):
I don't know. That's the thing. Usually it's secret word
when they call me, or.
Speaker 4 (06:11):
You're what I feel like she said, safe word? Okay, listen.
Speaker 3 (06:16):
So I had to reset my code. But it also
made me think at the time that my alarm went off,
I set it off and I didn't have time to
deal with it because I's be late to work, so
I just let it roll and Pop showed up.
Speaker 1 (06:28):
I don't know why didn't I call you though, I
don't know.
Speaker 4 (06:31):
Maybe at that time they called my husband. I don't know.
Maybe so I'm or maybe I'm missed. I don't know.
I just remember thinking.
Speaker 1 (06:38):
She was like, I can't be late to work, so
she stuck with the alarm. Was terrible.
Speaker 3 (06:40):
Her kids there, they were sleeping, but you know, not
my proudest around here, don't we waste. Now.
Speaker 4 (06:47):
I know you told me.
Speaker 3 (06:48):
You made it very clear. Hey, if that's the case,
just call It's fine. But I mean at the time,
I just sometimes you just you know, fire or flight.
Speaker 1 (06:56):
These guys who left their car on the side don't
know I was going to leave my car.
Speaker 6 (07:00):
We were so we were going we were going to
something with how do it was? It CMA Fest and
we had to be there to meet and greet listeners.
And we drive and we're stuck on a bridge for
twenty minutes and we're like, we're gonna be late.
Speaker 1 (07:10):
I was like, dude, let's just leave the Ultimore.
Speaker 6 (07:12):
Leave it right here, Just leave it right here. And
then he goes, are you sure? And I was like
I was like, yeah, dude, we'll just run. He goes,
I don't think it's worth it, dude, We'll just be late.
And I was like, I'm ready to get out of
Ultimore right now and just leave it on the bridge.
Speaker 1 (07:23):
He get pulled to the No, no, no, I was go
leave it right there in the lane. There's no side
on the bridge. Raymond No hit me up from Mountain Pine, Arkansas.
He doesn't really eat sugar now, and his persistence really
makes you go, wow, Bobby Bones, thank you. I'm gonna
say this every night at like one am, sometimes two.
But I wake up every night for like the past month,
(07:45):
and I know as soon as I wake up what
time it is, like one am, like one thirty. It's
just way before I should wake up today. I'm saying
this out loud so you guys can hold me accountable.
I'm gonna message through the portal my doctor and go
I need to do a sleep study because I don't
know what's happening here. My honest fear is they're gonna
put a big machine on me. Made me want to
sleep in a machine every night in my house. Oh
that's gonna be weird.
Speaker 8 (08:05):
Oh I don't know.
Speaker 1 (08:05):
That that's the case. But that's my fear is that
it's I'm gonna have to get into some chamber with
a thing strapped around my head. But I don't. I
sleep terribly, just terribly. I'm having a really bad like life,
so sleeping man, But no, But like the last few
months have been have been really bad. So that's all
I do. So you guys can hold me accountable. Check
back in a week or so.
Speaker 3 (08:26):
Okay, So when you're you're gonna do it at your house,
or don't you have.
Speaker 4 (08:29):
To spend the nights.
Speaker 1 (08:30):
I don't know. I go to doctor's office. You know, everybody, Relax.
I'm just gonna message him and say I need a
sleep study. I want to go from there because I
have no idea. Or we could do it live and
we could put a bed here. I never go to sleep.
I never go to sleep, and then we just do
the cameras live and we just I would never go
to sleep. Oh, I'd be forking. I'd be like, all right,
it's this bit bit. All right, that's what's up. Thank
you guys. It's time for the mailbag. Sail and.
Speaker 4 (08:56):
Get something we call Bobby's mail bag.
Speaker 1 (08:58):
Yeah, hellohohoh, Bobby bones. Last night, my sixth grade daughter
had a school recital that I attended alone while my
ex wife sat on the complete other side of the auditorium.
The ex wife thing is relatively new. That's apparently caught
the attention of one of my daughter's teachers, who would
I go on in too much detail, made it clear
to me that she was interested in me now that
(09:20):
I have an ex wife. As flattering as that is,
I was also getting the major league stinky from this
ex wife, and I know she knows. Do I go
for it? What are the pitfalls of dating a kid's teacher.
It's a weird world getting back in the dating scene.
I'm afraid this might be too weird for me. Signed
hot for teacher, Amy, I.
Speaker 3 (09:41):
Would say, let's wait until your child is out of
that class. If you then still feel the same way,
then you should proceed and ask her out on the date.
But while your daughter's in her class, Am, your daughter's
mom is still.
Speaker 4 (09:57):
Involved with that teacher.
Speaker 3 (09:59):
This is just I just wouldn't advise. It seems like
you're asking for trouble.
Speaker 1 (10:04):
Lunchbox listen, Man, if the heart is in love, you
gotta go for it. Look, she's a hobby, just say hey,
let's grab some dinner. It's not what is it going
to affect her GPA in elementary school? Who cares about
the gpa elementary school? Go for it, Eddie.
Speaker 2 (10:19):
I'm with Amy, like, just just wait, it's conflict of
interest here, Like, wait till next year.
Speaker 1 (10:24):
Wait till two years. Yeah, but what if in a
year a lot of stuff can happen? What if she
finds out it's not meant to be Then what if
you get a sign to go for it?
Speaker 4 (10:33):
Oh, yeah, I guess the sign is school's almost out.
Speaker 1 (10:39):
So well that's true. True, that's true. So lunchbox, you say,
go for it. Yeah, you see something you want, you
go get it. Don't wait around. What does Bobby always say,
quit making excuses, go get it done. I don't know.
This is kind of that kid is quote.
Speaker 3 (10:53):
I feel like you know your ex wife being involved
with the teacher of your child isn't really an excuse, it's.
Speaker 4 (10:58):
Just a fact.
Speaker 1 (11:00):
Here's what I would say. If it is affecting the
kid's life in any way negatively, you don't do it.
And if I feel like this, would do that for
this time, because the mom could be upset with the teacher.
The teacher could treat the kid definitely, not about a
grade that they could get. You could break up with
her while she has the There's just it could affect
the kid negatively, So I would go no for now.
(11:21):
But Amy has a point. Here we are, we're in May.
What's the school On's it end like this year? Sometimes
this month?
Speaker 3 (11:27):
Most say anywhere from May tenth to May thirtieth.
Speaker 1 (11:32):
Yeah, like I said, this year sometimes, let it end.
And I get it. If she's super cool, super supertractive,
you don't want to let it just have that conversation
about Hey, So the season is it called season four
years over? I know it's uh. I think it would
be good if she likes you. She'll wait two months.
(11:52):
That's it. It could affect kinder bad way. So you
don't do it, that's the mail bag, or you do
it secretly. No, no, no, no, never mind. I mean
that's absolutely be patient. Yes, all right, close it up.
We got your team mail and we ran it on
your Now it's found to close.
Speaker 10 (12:08):
Bobby's failed that you.
Speaker 1 (12:12):
Right now, we have Emily on the phone calling us
from Cincinnati, Ohio. Emily, good morning, welcome to the show.
What's going on?
Speaker 3 (12:18):
So?
Speaker 11 (12:18):
I received a call this morning from a woman named
Kathy in Florida. I do not know Kathy, but I
own a flower company called Pedal and Stem in Cincinnati, Ohio.
And she left me a voicemail and said, you don't
know me. However, I just heard you on the Bobby
Bone Show, and I feel like you should know about it,
and I'm really proud of what you guys are doing.
(12:40):
And it just completely made my day. So I called
her back, talked to her and now I'm calling you
guys this year. If this is true, and if so,
I'm super grateful. So thank you.
Speaker 1 (12:49):
Well, So it is true. We have a segment that
we called tell Me Something Good. We've been doing it
for like fifteen twenty years and Amy had highlighted you
on our show. Amy, what do you remember about this?
Speaker 3 (13:00):
Yeah, so, from what I recall, you have if you
have flowers left over, you don't let them go to waste,
like say it's for a wedding or a funeral or anything.
And you go around to hospitals so that they can,
you know, feel the joy because you yourself spend some.
Speaker 4 (13:16):
Time in a hospital.
Speaker 3 (13:17):
And then also you go to Ronald McDonald house like
once a month or so and teach flower ranging and
Trader Joe's donates the flowers.
Speaker 1 (13:23):
This whole thing, is that true?
Speaker 11 (13:25):
Yeah, yeah, that's true.
Speaker 1 (13:28):
It's all fine. So Emily, why why did you start
this and kind of what motivated you to actually do it?
Speaker 11 (13:36):
Well? Thank you. So I went to Zaber University in Cincinnati,
and at the end of my freshman year, I woke
up and could not feel my legs and was completely
paralyzed when I had been totally healthy my whole life.
And fast forward, you know, I just hit my eight
year anniversary at the Cleveland Clinic and have undergone over
thirty surgeries and a lot of treatment and it's changed
(13:58):
my life and the best way pass the ball and
I now live a pretty much normal normal life. And
my mom and I and my siblings who've been going
to Cleveland for eight years, and they have just shown
us so much love and gratitude, and I just want
to give that back to people. So I have a
service dog named Norman, and we go and visit patients
on Sundays and we bring all of my extra flowers
(14:20):
every Sunday to hospital nurses and patients and really kind
of give them some love, especially the ones that aren't
getting visitors.
Speaker 1 (14:27):
Wow, that's pretty great. So everybody, if you're in the
Cincinnati area or you're in like northwestern Kentucky, you know,
because a lot of my Kentucky friends are big Bengals
fans and reds Vans, its pedal and stem that's what
it is. Emily and Cincinnati there she is real life.
We hardly get to talk to them. How does she
make money off of this.
Speaker 4 (14:47):
They're the leftovers.
Speaker 1 (14:48):
I don't know. But how do how do you make
money off of that? I don't think she does volunteers,
I don't.
Speaker 11 (14:53):
So I make money normally just from selling flowers to customers,
and then whatever I have left over, you know, I've
already bought it if it's going to go to the trash,
So I give them, you know, to hospitals, and then
all of my bridle and event clients get to choose
if they want me to come at the end of
the night of their event. So this past weekend, Northern
(15:14):
Kentucky University had me come at the end of the
galave that I did for them, and I took over
forty center pieces the very next morning to a bunch
of er nurses at Saint Elizabeth.
Speaker 4 (15:24):
That's awesome.
Speaker 6 (15:25):
Okay, so she is a flower. I was just wondering,
like if she just did all that, Like, I was like,
she's gonna go broke us.
Speaker 1 (15:30):
Well, she has a company.
Speaker 6 (15:31):
I didn't realize it was a couple. That's why I
was asking how she makes money. I understood you said that,
but all I heard was that she got stuff away
for free.
Speaker 4 (15:38):
I said, it's like wedding.
Speaker 6 (15:41):
I thought she just went to weddings to collect these.
I didn't realize she was the one that actually made
the arrangements for the wedding and then got it.
Speaker 1 (15:48):
Thank you, hey, Emily, thank you for doing what you do.
We really appreciate it and I hope you have an awesome day.
Speaker 11 (15:52):
Thank you guys so much. This made my day.
Speaker 1 (15:54):
Oh yeah, see you later.
Speaker 3 (15:55):
And Emily, I feel like she added the extra layer
with the service dog.
Speaker 4 (15:59):
I don't know that we had that fun yact.
Speaker 1 (16:01):
Hey, it was up to you to read it to us.
Speaker 4 (16:03):
You don't know that it was in the news article.
I love it that.
Speaker 1 (16:05):
That's pretty cool. Here's a voicemail we got last night
as well.
Speaker 10 (16:08):
Hey, Bobby, I'm just calling to say thank you. I'm
listening into Thursday's podcast and you were giving Scooba Seave
a chick in the behind, telling him to take fifteen
minutes today. He is his own priority, and it doesn't
get easier when your kids get older, you still don't
have time, so making time is critical and I think
you've inspired me to find fifteen minutes today to do
(16:29):
what I want to do, So thank you for that.
There's things I've been procrastinating. And making business and excuse
have a good one, Thank you.
Speaker 1 (16:37):
Very much, and I'll check out with Scooba in a
few weeks. If he's been writing this show, yeah, he's
I got a great idea. I don't have time. We
have a list of priorities and we follow them based
on what we really want to do. We are our
priorities and that just isn't a priority. Or he's scared
to write it and it fail, because that's always a
fear like but really, you just, like a manufacturingly do
it and it doesn't work. That made us all these
(16:57):
years and it was a fit. So I want to
go and face that fifteen minutes a day. We'll check in.
What if it's like a massive show, that would be
so cool awesome? And then Lunchbox gets this person and
then he gets an Oscar. Oh I could do that.
I have a have an idea though for a bit.
I'll tell to you now. I want to get like
an acting coach, and I want both of you guys
(17:19):
to put something down on tape and they don't know
who you are, like they don't listen to the show.
Maybe we get Morgan to do it to anybody wholaims
they're an actor and have them judge who the best
actor on the show is. That's cool. Oh okay, you
can break some hearts though, or make one heart feel
real good.
Speaker 3 (17:34):
It's a legit, real acting coach. Yeah, okay, because I
mean I work with one.
Speaker 1 (17:40):
But like a real one like you. Yeah, I know,
I got like New York, Los Angeles, like in big production.
I have one.
Speaker 4 (17:47):
She lived in New York.
Speaker 1 (17:48):
Cool.
Speaker 3 (17:50):
Okay, okay, okay, knows you right, she'd be biased towards me.
I'm sure so. But this person may have also, Joe.
Speaker 1 (17:59):
It doesn't matter. That's the bet. That's the game we'll
play at some point. Thank you. Amy's like mine's a
real minded a commercial once for over ddenbacher. I don't
know she is.
Speaker 8 (18:10):
She really it's time for the good News, which.
Speaker 1 (18:13):
Bobby so John and Aaron Carpenter are their names. They
went on a cross country road trip in an RV
and they started realizing how important laundromats were across the country.
So there they go. They're stopping all the laudromats and
they're meeting people. They're seeing the laundromats where people can gather,
but also people. They can't afford a washer and dryer,
(18:33):
like they have to go to laundromats. So they get
back home, they're like, we're going to do this. So
they renovated an old laundromat and inside of it they
put seating a kids area, and then they started doing
free laundry days. And they noticed that a lot of
people in their town actually came and used the free
laundry days because even though the laundromat was there, sometimes
they couldn't afford it because that's quarters man and it
(18:53):
takes real money to do that. So they built this.
It was a big success, and they were like, we
want to do another one. So people started donating, and
now they're actually building laundromats all over the country, like
renovating them so that other people can use these and
not always for free, but at least a low price
so they can actually go and clean their.
Speaker 3 (19:10):
Clothes, and thinking of putting the kids area in there.
Speaker 4 (19:13):
I don't know that.
Speaker 3 (19:15):
I don't know that every laundry mat has that, but
they're thinking about all the elements of like having your
kid there while you're trying to do laundry, and they
could have entertainment.
Speaker 1 (19:22):
You guys, ever, go to like the McDonald's or chick
fil a when it has a kids area, especially when
they were young on purpose, oh because they had like
you would go to that one because the kids there
all the time.
Speaker 2 (19:30):
That was like, you know, we got an hour to kill,
We're going to McDonald's and you play I'll eat My burden?
Speaker 1 (19:34):
Would you use that? Let them just run their energy
out absolutely like a road trip.
Speaker 2 (19:38):
Yeah, oh that too, in the middle of a road
trip where we're like, all right, we need to take
two hours, stop McDonald's. They can play in that playscape
or whatever, and then we hit the road again.
Speaker 1 (19:46):
But most don't have that, right, you have to find it.
You got to find it, not.
Speaker 2 (19:49):
I mean, I would say one out of every three
bore that many.
Speaker 1 (19:52):
Yeah, oh yeah, Well, shout out to John and Aaron Carpenter.
Making their community a better place is pretty awesome. That
is what it's all about.
Speaker 8 (20:00):
Was telling me something good.
Speaker 1 (20:02):
So apparently lunchbox is a big work dilemma that he
needs help with. So what's the dilemma.
Speaker 6 (20:08):
So we have iHeart Festival like in a week and
a half whatever how many many days away that is.
But I've also been invited to the premiere of Fast
X in Rome.
Speaker 3 (20:21):
Fast like fast and Inferiendi?
Speaker 4 (20:24):
Okay, And why did you get invited to this?
Speaker 1 (20:27):
I don't know.
Speaker 6 (20:28):
I got in my email said come to the screening
in Rome. You're invited Rome? What Texas?
Speaker 1 (20:33):
Italy? Isn't that where Rome is? Do you have the email? Yeah?
Hold on, where did it come from? So it's either
next weekend.
Speaker 6 (20:45):
Yeah, it's next week and I either go to the
iHeart Festival or I go to Rome to see Fast X.
And so I'm like, well, of course I gotta go
to Rome.
Speaker 1 (20:54):
I share, that's not something scam. I don't know.
Speaker 6 (20:57):
It says you're invited, and it's like, akay, and there's
going to be the cast is going to.
Speaker 8 (21:02):
Be there and in Rome, Italy?
Speaker 1 (21:05):
Yes, I guess.
Speaker 6 (21:06):
And nobody else got this invite and maybe maybe that's
where the this one is set is Rome.
Speaker 1 (21:11):
I don't know.
Speaker 6 (21:11):
I don't I didn't do any research about the movie,
but I figure Mike knows because he knows everything about
the Fast you know thing but.
Speaker 1 (21:20):
Franchise.
Speaker 6 (21:21):
But I just got it, and I'm like, dude, how
can I pass this opportunity up?
Speaker 1 (21:25):
So what if you said I want to go to Rome,
which I still don't know that that's really the case here.
But you say I want to go to Rome to
this and the company said, no, you need to go
to Austin for Higher Country Festival. What would you do?
Speaker 6 (21:35):
That's why I'm coming to you, because you would know
how to operate the channels?
Speaker 1 (21:39):
Like what?
Speaker 12 (21:39):
What?
Speaker 1 (21:39):
How do I handle that?
Speaker 11 (21:40):
Like?
Speaker 1 (21:40):
Profession? Hold on? Still, there's nothing on this. I'm talking.
The more you're talking right now, just to do it right.
It's hard to put your hands down. He's talking with
his hands.
Speaker 4 (21:50):
Is it called fast X?
Speaker 1 (21:51):
Yeah, it doesn't be an adult movie. I mean that's
pretty cool though. Yes, I just think it's too good
to be true. And unless they're having it, but they
want him to pay for everything? Okay, here it is.
Speaker 2 (22:05):
It says attend a VIP screening of Fast X, and
it says Rome, May twelfth.
Speaker 1 (22:11):
Okay, but does it say you're invited for free? It's
a press thing. I don't say any of that.
Speaker 6 (22:17):
That's what I'm just I got the email and I
was like, wow, this is crazy.
Speaker 1 (22:21):
But it doesn't sound like they're paying for it. Like
when Eddie went to the Elvis thing, they paid for that. Yeah, yeah,
that was a full deal hotel and everything. Whenever you
go to California for some of these press screenings, they
pay for that if you fly out their hotel. But
it doesn't it.
Speaker 6 (22:34):
Sure seems like they're paying for me to go to
This just looks like a ticket that says here, like,
that's my ticket to.
Speaker 1 (22:41):
Go to Rome.
Speaker 4 (22:42):
It's like an evite.
Speaker 1 (22:43):
You think they sent you your airline ticket?
Speaker 2 (22:46):
No, no, no, this is a premiere, like a ticket
to the movie theater.
Speaker 1 (22:48):
Yeah, yeah, I feel like that's my Okay, I don't
think they're paying for it now that I hear this,
But what if they don't pay for it and you
have to Oh why I can't do that. I can't.
Speaker 13 (22:57):
I can't, Like, is it a free It doesn't look
like they say they're paying for it, any kind of
airfare or even that he has like a credential or anything.
Speaker 1 (23:04):
He's just like, hey, attend to screening.
Speaker 2 (23:07):
And it doesn't even say that Vin Diesel or Anyone's
going to be there.
Speaker 1 (23:11):
No, it does.
Speaker 13 (23:12):
No, it doesn't say that. But the actual premiere is
in Rome, so there is a room.
Speaker 1 (23:17):
I'm telling you, guys, I'm not joking, but I got
this SKay, here's the thing. If I'll make you this deal,
if you follow up and they're paying for everything, okay, flight,
your hotel, the whole trip, the movie, you get to
do it like the press gonna get to an interview
with the cast. I will make sure that you get
to go to that. Okay.
Speaker 6 (23:37):
I mean I was blowed away by it, like I
just so, you don't even know what it is.
Speaker 1 (23:40):
It's not like a free screening. If you have to
pay for yourself, it's going to cost you twenty thousand
dollars to this point. Well, it says attend a VIP screening. Yeah, yeah,
he already said that. Figure it out. And it says
the cast is going to be there, yeah yeah.
Speaker 6 (23:55):
And Mike did say it's in Rome, right, So this
ain't a lie.
Speaker 1 (24:00):
Yeah, yeah, it ain't a lie. But we think you
read it wrong and interpreted it wrong. I don't think
you were actually invited where they're gonna invite you and
make sure you get to watch it as press. Oh
I feel like why else would they send it to me?
So find out If they're paying for it, you can go.
I'll make sure you're cleared from Higer Country Festival.
Speaker 3 (24:17):
So you would miss that to go to that, you
would okay.
Speaker 1 (24:20):
You would do?
Speaker 2 (24:21):
What about all that clothes you're buying and like the
change and bracelets not.
Speaker 6 (24:25):
Getting I don't know if I'm getting bracelets, but I
can screw that outfit.
Speaker 1 (24:28):
I gotta get a new outfit for the premiere Fast Acts?
Would you go by yourself? Yeah? Okay, let us know.
I mean, I don't even know how far that is
from here. That's a long ways, right, Yeah, yeah, you
to fly to New York probably and then fly like
nine hours after New York, man, but that would be
it'd be cool. So if it's all free, you can go. Okay, deal, Yeah,
I'll follow up because I am I mean, who reply back?
(24:51):
How much are you guys covering? I'll be like, exactly
what do I need to do? My driver's like it
was weird to me. It was that nobody else got approached.
It was just him who got the email. Not that
you shouldn't get it, but they usually said it to
like the whole show weird. I don't know it was
in my advisory. It is definitely weird. On the phone,
is Lauren? Now Lauren knows a little bit about that
(25:12):
movie you were trying to get on Lunchbox? Oh were
you pulled up to the set and you're like, I
can do Yeah, Lauren, how does the lunchbox get in
this movie?
Speaker 10 (25:17):
If you go on to Facebook and go to Jenny
Allison Casting, she's been casting for that movie for a
while now.
Speaker 11 (25:24):
I actually got cast to be an extra.
Speaker 1 (25:26):
But I couldn't go because my kids got sick.
Speaker 14 (25:28):
But I think it would be hilarious if you went
on there and applied and actually.
Speaker 1 (25:32):
Got to go, and if you were doing stuff in
the background, like secretly, and they didn't see you, then
the movie came out and you're like, slick back your
hair or is this something you know, doing a peace sign?
Cool gravity ears on the cold kid? Then something that
would be hilarious.
Speaker 4 (25:45):
What's it called, Jenny, Oh?
Speaker 1 (25:47):
Amy, Amy's trying to get in? Oh no, your movie.
It's not your movies always trying to jump on my Lauren?
Speaker 11 (25:56):
Is Jenny Allison Casting?
Speaker 1 (25:58):
Okay, thank you, Lauren. We really appreciate that. Hey, do
you want to play a game by we have you? Yes, Okay,
we'll actually let one of the show people play for you.
But we're gonna do famous nicknames. Okay, of musicians. So
for a couple of reasons. Here, Eric Church turns forty
six years old. Today he is known as the chief
right Happy Birthday part Church and then he was the
(26:21):
most successful artist in R and B history, had more
than one hundred hits on the soul charts. Here he
is the heartest workingman showed business James Brown the hearts
workingman showed. But it's gotten bother a soul. He got
a lot of them, right, famous nick names. Okay, now, Lauren,
you can pick Amy or Lunchbox. You know what Amy
and Lunchbox combined versus Eddie. We're gonna wow wow. So
(26:46):
but you're playing each question together, not combined scores, because
he didn't have the option to do that, got it?
So you John, They have to decide on an answer,
right know. If either one of them get it, they
get home.
Speaker 7 (26:55):
Great.
Speaker 1 (26:56):
It's okay, Amy or Lunchbox are Eddie?
Speaker 10 (26:58):
I'm gonna go Eddie?
Speaker 1 (26:59):
Okay? Yeah, have you ever heard this thing? Two is
better than one? Okay, whatever you want to Amy and
Lunchbox versus Eddie. You got like you got like seven
of these? Are you guys? Ready?
Speaker 11 (27:11):
Yes?
Speaker 1 (27:12):
Whose nickname all in music is? Mister las Vegas. I
think I already got it name man, Yeah you're not.
Do you just write? I thought we had to. I
was gonna ring him, but I got it. Nay, don't worry,
you can miss it. Oh, you got it for sure.
Anybody have Wayne Newton Lunchbox, Wayne Newton, Eddie, Wayne Newton.
Speaker 8 (27:37):
Strect Wow.
Speaker 1 (27:38):
Good job, good job, Next step number two? Hovah excuse Meva, Amy,
I got it, don't worry. Whose nickname is Hova? That's
do you want to ask her? She wants to change
(27:59):
to us?
Speaker 4 (28:00):
You know it?
Speaker 1 (28:01):
I got it.
Speaker 4 (28:02):
I'm in okay Amy, jay.
Speaker 1 (28:04):
Z Lunchbox, jay Z, Eddie, Yes, jay Z really Eddie's
one back man. It's getting ugly over here.
Speaker 12 (28:17):
Got it?
Speaker 1 (28:18):
The Prince of Darkness whose musical nickname is the Prince
of Darkness? Oh, I'm in, Eddie. I mean I'm in confident.
It's early. Everybody good Amy, Ozzy Osbourne Lunchbox, Ozzy Osbourne, Eddie,
(28:39):
Ozzy Osborne. Right, we are.
Speaker 5 (28:50):
Next up, father of rock and roll, The father, Oh,
father of rock and roll.
Speaker 1 (29:00):
Let men think who says you are my father? Oh? Yeah,
that's playing for a fifty dollars Sonic gift card by
the way Sonic the father of rock and.
Speaker 6 (29:13):
I don't know, man, I have no idea.
Speaker 12 (29:16):
Amy does Father sing, latch Box, Rick Springfield, Eddie, Jerry Lee,
Lewis Answers, Chuck Berry, tell us your gods.
Speaker 1 (29:28):
Get a new hold Beethoven, I got I need to shout. Okay,
got it all right?
Speaker 6 (29:36):
Three left, come on, let's go Amy focus musical nicknames.
Speaker 1 (29:42):
Chairman of the board, What board?
Speaker 4 (29:45):
M hm.
Speaker 1 (29:46):
He was known as the Chairman of the board. He
was known as the Chairman of the board. This is
to tie it up? Okay, chairman or I don't even
understand what that means. But of the board? Got it?
Do you need an answer?
Speaker 4 (30:05):
Okay?
Speaker 6 (30:06):
Elton, John lunch Box, Frank Sinatra, Eddie, it's Frank Sinata.
Speaker 1 (30:12):
My god, how did you go from? I don't know
what that means? So much awesome? I don't even know
what that means means. George Jones, he's Bostole. Yeah, I
have no idea. What is the board like the board
of whatever? He's the leader that he's he runs it's it's.
Speaker 4 (30:34):
Not it's now that I hear it.
Speaker 1 (30:36):
It fits no idea, Eddie, your down one? Oh my goodness.
When you're pulling that out. It might be your day.
It might be those rabbits. Ziggy Stardust? What Ziggy Stardust?
I'm in? When he came in confident? Maybe she has
(30:58):
a T shirt and hers? There are about that? Yeah,
zigg Who iSIG ZIGGI has to Sunday Comics. It's that movie.
Speaker 4 (31:10):
It's okay, lunch I got you all.
Speaker 1 (31:11):
Right, I'll just put the lunch box. What do you have?
Eld Sean Amy, Bob Marley?
Speaker 11 (31:16):
What is it?
Speaker 13 (31:17):
Wow?
Speaker 1 (31:18):
Eddie? Did tie? Do you want me to tell you?
Go ahead? David Bowie? Correct?
Speaker 13 (31:25):
Why did I think it's I don't know?
Speaker 1 (31:27):
You believe it's so hard? Oh yeah, Ziggy Marley, you
believe that so hard? I believed you. You knew it.
Marky Ziggie starred us is the person's name? I needed this? Well?
Speaker 4 (31:36):
Okay, Ziggy?
Speaker 11 (31:37):
Alright?
Speaker 1 (31:37):
Seventh one, last one possible? Never heard of that? Champagne
Poppy mm hmm, yeah, yeah, what I'm in?
Speaker 6 (31:47):
Champagne Poppy Shane, Champagne Poppy lunchworks.
Speaker 4 (31:58):
You you should.
Speaker 1 (31:59):
Know this, but because if you know what though, it
doesn't matter.
Speaker 8 (32:01):
I think I know you shouldn't te him what he.
Speaker 1 (32:03):
Should I want to know he considered communicating much is cheating,
so I can just give Eddie the championship. Let's not
do that though, Let's try it on. I wouldn't Champagne
Poppy lunchbox did did you write chance to do whenever?
What do you have? Lunchbox? This was three oh five pibow.
They his name would be three five every one.
Speaker 6 (32:21):
I don't know anything about Champagne Poppy with Eddie.
Speaker 1 (32:24):
What do you want me to tell you? The inswer?
Already you go, Drake Amy Drake.
Speaker 6 (32:34):
Okay, we're gonna do three speed speed rounding, three speed
un down, three speed rounds.
Speaker 1 (32:40):
Say your name is the Buzzer. Okay, three speed rounds.
Say your name is the Buzzer. Here we go. The
nickname is the material Girl Amydon. Correct. Hey does she
want to switch our team?
Speaker 11 (32:55):
Now?
Speaker 1 (32:55):
So you want to switch? Okay, here we go the
motors City Mad Lunchbox. Correct. Yeah, she didn't win, right, No,
(33:21):
two is better than one? Yeah? What we're going to sunning?
Speaker 11 (33:24):
She's not.
Speaker 1 (33:26):
You're gonna getting the gift card, Lauren. I'm very sorry.
Speaker 11 (33:29):
It's okay.
Speaker 14 (33:30):
I only knew Champagne Poppy America fel proud of you, Eddie.
Speaker 1 (33:33):
Thank you, thank you for sharing the knowledge about the movie.
That was the second to hope you have a great day.
Thank you, Lauren, thank you all right, bye bye. I
don't like that format. I felt ganged up on. Oh
you got nominated?
Speaker 8 (33:47):
Pile of stories.
Speaker 3 (33:48):
So there's a startup it's called AFT. The CEO is
this guy, Brandon Cooper, used to work for Apple. He's
just this computer genius and he is trying to raise
money to clone you through an AI. So the AI
clone of you goes to work for you, and you
just stay home and.
Speaker 1 (34:04):
First, why work for Apple? It's called AFT. I'm already
a little suspecious. He stole some stuff, that's true. I
don't think it's very similar, and so to clone me,
it doesn't sound like it's the physical version of me.
It's that I spend a lot of time talking sharing.
They have all the stuff that I've done, and then
they know what I'm gonna say and think, so they
have the AI do it exactly. Oh that's the life.
Speaker 3 (34:26):
And he said he's getting a lot of questions about
how this whole system is gonna work, and people are
struggling to understand it. And to that, he says, what's
an iPhone to a caveman?
Speaker 1 (34:35):
He's got a point. What's an iPhone to me? Ten
years ago? Fifteen years ago? It's expensive, That's what it was. Yeah, listen,
AI is pretty cool. They have a thing now that
I've not been able to do. But I know there's
some talent that do it where they take this computer
and they listen to everything that you've done, or you
sit at a microphone and you say all these sounds,
(34:56):
and then they can have AI do the commercials.
Speaker 8 (35:00):
You.
Speaker 1 (35:00):
Oh, that's awesome. I wouldn't I wouldn't have to be
here half an hour early just recording commercials. They have
all my sounds, and they could easily make it sound
like I'm saying the commercials that too. They could also
say things like I put my hand in my butt. Well,
I say, I didn't just say that. That was really
putting those clips together. But they do have that AI
now that does that. I have not used it. I'm
just letting everybody now I have it. There are people
(35:20):
that use it. I don't do it. I mean what
I say about my commercials, Okay, good, yes I do.
Speaker 4 (35:25):
That's fascinating. I don't know those people.
Speaker 3 (35:26):
That use that.
Speaker 1 (35:27):
Well, like six months ago they were like, do you
want to use it? That's tempted. I know it was tempting,
but I didn't and I'm not. I'm not saying I
never will, but right now I'm not. It just doesn't
feel right.
Speaker 3 (35:38):
It makes me think about the some artists that have
their signature electronic.
Speaker 1 (35:43):
Oh yeah, there are people who a country music big
stars who sign things, but they don't sign it. It's
a it's a fake pen that signs it based on there.
That doesn't feel real, but that's you're actually paying for
something that's been hand touched by the art and it's
not I put my hand in my butt. See I
didn't say that again, but it sounds like I did.
Speaker 12 (36:02):
Know.
Speaker 3 (36:02):
You're making it really easy for someone to say you
said that fancy dinners in space are coming in twenty
twenty five.
Speaker 4 (36:09):
There's a company that's.
Speaker 3 (36:09):
Using balloons to send people up fifteen miles, so technically
you're not in space, but you're way above the atmosphere
and they're going to have dinner, drinks. You get to
hang out up there for three hours and it's one
hundred and thirty two thousand dollars per person.
Speaker 1 (36:26):
That's a lot of money. And I guess people that
want to go to space, well you're not really in space,
like you said. The other thing I'd like to say
is I put my hand in my butt. Stop hitting
that button. Oh boy, oh boy.
Speaker 3 (36:34):
So the first flights again, they're two years out, but
they're letting people pre book and people are putting down deposits.
Speaker 1 (36:41):
What's a deposit for one hundred and twenty thousand dollars?
Speaker 4 (36:43):
Eleven thousand dollars so.
Speaker 1 (36:44):
Basically ten percent almost percent. See, that is the ultimate date?
Can you imagine? That's stupid? I'd be scared the whole time.
Dinner tonight? Space you me?
Speaker 3 (36:52):
Yeah, I want to go?
Speaker 1 (36:54):
What else?
Speaker 3 (36:55):
Lady Wilson has been loving her experience on Yellowstone, but
she's just a confused as anyone else with all the
rumors and the fight between Paramountain Network and Kevin Costner
and what's going to happen to the show. So she
admitted she she really doesn't know what's going on with
the show or her character, but acting has definitely something
that she's loving, and she says it's even crazier than
(37:15):
the music business.
Speaker 1 (37:17):
Yeah, I don't even know what's going on, but that
means I haven't watched much of this season. I quit
like three episodes in because he's like governor and I
was like, this is bizarre. He's supposed to be the
guy and now he's the governor. That's weird.
Speaker 15 (37:29):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (37:29):
Yeah, I think we'll get back to it. But we
were searching for a show last night. We're like, well,
let's watch something new. We never even thought to go
back to Yellowstone.
Speaker 3 (37:36):
Yeah. Honestly, when I pulled up the story to share,
I was like, shoot, I probably got a lot of
episodes when they catch up on which I want to
because I want to see Laney too.
Speaker 4 (37:44):
Him Amy. That's my pile.
Speaker 8 (37:46):
That was Amy's pile of stories. It's time for the
good news produce a ready.
Speaker 2 (37:55):
Drew Maggie is a baseball player. He got drafted back
in twenty ten, but he went straight to the He's
been sitting in the miners for thirteen years. I mean
probably Tyl like, man, I gotta hang this up and
try something else. This is taken forever to just really
make that dream come true of playing in the major leagues.
Speaker 1 (38:11):
Well, that day finally came.
Speaker 2 (38:14):
He got the call the Pittsburgh Pirates said, hey, come up,
we want you to play against the Dodgers. He shows up.
He waits about seven innings. They got a huge lead,
so they say, all right, Drew, come on in.
Speaker 1 (38:24):
You're gonna game. He got in the game, he's up
to bat, three strikes, he's out. Oh. So he didn't
get a hit. But the next game he came in
as as a designated hitter.
Speaker 2 (38:35):
He comes in, he swings, He hits RBI single play.
Speaker 15 (38:39):
Ray Leek going to the record books is hot on
a major league hit in a major league Harbon thirteen years,
we're totally in the minor leagues.
Speaker 2 (38:56):
That's awesome, guys. Thirteen years he thought it was over.
He finally played in the majors. That's amazing.
Speaker 1 (39:02):
Yeah, I'm watching him here. He does like a little older.
Speaker 2 (39:04):
Yeah, but you see the smile he has his face
when he's on base.
Speaker 1 (39:06):
He looks like our uncle on first PA. That's pretty cool.
Nice job, dude, that's for him. And they dumped water
on him after the game. They did an interview and
you could tell the crowd knew who he was too,
because that loud of pop usually doesn't happen if it's
just a traditional RBI single. Yeah, it's so cool.
Speaker 4 (39:24):
I can sort of relate to this.
Speaker 3 (39:26):
Okay story we go Slide El Louisiana, nineteen ninety two Bosom,
the ninth All Stars were there for a tournament and
I hadn't played really the whole tournament at all, but
I get I get put into bat towards the end,
and I do a winning hit and it was crazy.
They like sort of really celebrated. They gave me the
ball like to keep forever. People signed it.
Speaker 1 (39:49):
I like it. That's a good story. He was in
the minors for thirteen years. Yeah, he's really good.
Speaker 4 (39:55):
Are you just sing? I was at the tournament the
whole weekend and didn't play.
Speaker 1 (40:00):
Like it. You did good? Yeah, all right, that's what
it's all about.
Speaker 8 (40:04):
Yeah, that was telling me something good or right.
Speaker 1 (40:08):
Here's a voicemail from Molly in Minnesota.
Speaker 7 (40:10):
Longtime listener, first time caller morning Studio learning. I'm just
curious why does Lunchbox no longer guess the weight of listeners.
I really want to hear him gas again and use
his magical superpower.
Speaker 1 (40:22):
Thank you for that voicemail. A couple of things. One
because people were getting upsets. Why don't you Stanley's fat
nicknames anymore either. They got upset about that too. They
get people get so mad, and then we start to
get accused of like fat shaming. Listen, if he looks
like fat, say Jack, he's a bulldog. He doesn't even
know what the word fat means. He's born that way.
(40:42):
And I'm like, yo, forest plump, listen here. And then
people will go, why are you using those names, like
because it's a dog, he's a fat dog. He's out
in the world, fatness Eberdeen. That's where it started, Large Simpson,
one after the other, and people get so upset. Lord Blubbard,
you know, I would do all these names thinking I
(41:03):
was just having a good time. The dog doesn't know
the difference. I was hitting him with the best shot,
like fat Benatar. Okay, So one after the other, we
would do them, have a good time. You know, we'd
spend Sundays with the Church of Saturday Saints, and but
people get so upset, and the lunchbox would guests. Ways,
people get so upset, and so you know, we just
(41:24):
peeled back for a little bit. Like my old friend
Fat Boone said, live life, be good to people. So
we stopped. We don't want to make this a house
or or a roadhouse like Patrick Swayze was in. You know,
so that was authentic. Names with the dog lunchbox isn't
guest wait anymore, at least not for now, because everybody
(41:44):
just gets so upset, and you know what, sometimes I like,
I don't care, but then they start like emailing people
and it's just a whole dramatic deal. So we just
paused for a little bit. That was a good segment though.
Speaker 12 (41:54):
You know, I liked it too.
Speaker 8 (41:55):
I thought it was pretty good. I'll be honest with you,
but I.
Speaker 4 (41:57):
Thought I made me laugh out loud just guessing what
their guessing.
Speaker 1 (42:02):
Wait, you know, like my friend who's a doctor. Patrick
Dempsey said he played a doctor. Sorry, all right, let's
go over to Amy and get in the morning Corny,
the mourning corny.
Speaker 3 (42:14):
I was going to propose, but my dog ate my ring. Okay,
now it's a diamond in the roof.
Speaker 1 (42:25):
That was the mourning corny. Right on, cue the dog joke.
That's perfect, right on it.
Speaker 4 (42:30):
I didn't flame that.
Speaker 1 (42:33):
It's known as the greatest mystery in American history. It's
Amy's water bill. We cannot figure out why it has
been so much. You first brought it to us because
you had a massive bill of how much six watter
that's crazy, and so you had somebody come out like
check it out, and then all of a sudden it
wasn't it's expensive. The next time.
Speaker 3 (42:52):
I've had multiple plumbers come out. The water company has
come out several times. They even put in a new
water meter, Suly, this will figure it out.
Speaker 4 (43:02):
I don't know that. I had another plumber.
Speaker 3 (43:04):
Say, hey, if you put this kool aid in here
to tell you if you need flapper flippy things for
your toilet. And so I got new flappers and every
toilet in my house. And then I've also spent hours
and hours on the phone with the water company.
Speaker 1 (43:15):
You got another bill, that other expensive bill was.
Speaker 4 (43:19):
Like fight wonder Yeah, I mean they've been yes in
that range.
Speaker 3 (43:22):
The only time I had a small bill was in
December and it was ninety dollars. And I remember coming
to y'all saying, I think we got it fixed.
Speaker 4 (43:29):
But no, no. I think whoever I.
Speaker 3 (43:31):
Was in the phone with that month, she was probably
like Merry Christmas to this girl.
Speaker 4 (43:34):
I feel so bad for her.
Speaker 3 (43:35):
I'm gonna go ahead and throw her a bone, and
here's a ninety dollars bill because nothing was done different.
Speaker 1 (43:40):
Basically out a couple thousand bucks overall. So we do
have an answer, ome on what do you think it is? Lunchbox?
What's the theory in Amy's water bill?
Speaker 6 (43:49):
I think they were accidentally connected to the neighbors meet also,
and so she was charged for other people around her
when it wasn't really her bill.
Speaker 2 (43:59):
Eddie, that's good, but I think that Amy. You know
she's forgetful. She has a sprinkler going on every night.
Oh she's never seen him. Doesn't realize that, Amy, what'd
you find out?
Speaker 4 (44:08):
Okay? So I hired this company. They specialized in leak detection.
Speaker 3 (44:13):
Apparently I have this these gradars or they have a
way to tell underground if there's a leak without even digging.
Speaker 1 (44:19):
Okay, that's rid dramatically ahead.
Speaker 3 (44:21):
They came to my house within twenty minutes, they found
the leak. They found exactly where.
Speaker 4 (44:26):
They're like, ma'am, do you see this?
Speaker 11 (44:28):
Uh?
Speaker 4 (44:29):
All this water built up right here?
Speaker 1 (44:31):
And I was like, oh, they were standing water in
your yard? Yes, Oh my god, oh how did you
never see this?
Speaker 3 (44:36):
Oh my gosh, stop stop before you accuse me of
not being aware of my surroundings.
Speaker 4 (44:41):
Yes, why, yes, I did know that was there.
Speaker 3 (44:44):
The water company told me that it was like a
drain thing from the rain and it was building up
because of this. The water company literally told me that
is from.
Speaker 1 (44:54):
Rain, built up though when it had it rain in
a few days, I mean I think Monday.
Speaker 3 (45:00):
But the water company when they were there, it wasn't raining. Okay,
go ahead, and they told me it's because of the rain.
And I said, I said, are you sure, and they're like, oh, yes,
this is exactly where the leak is.
Speaker 4 (45:13):
There's some tiny little pinhole.
Speaker 3 (45:16):
They said, it's the size of a pinhole in this pipe,
and that it is dumping half a gallon of water
per minute.
Speaker 1 (45:23):
Wow, that's a lot of water. And you didn't notice this?
Speaker 3 (45:26):
Well, I noticed it when my bill would come, but
I didn't know where it was coming from.
Speaker 1 (45:29):
And she would wait through a front yard. Never occurred
to her, Okay, I guess it rains every night when
I go to sleep. It never shows how my.
Speaker 3 (45:39):
I am painting a bad picture because y'all are picturing
this huge thing of water that you should notice.
Speaker 4 (45:45):
Of course, it's an area I know the moat.
Speaker 1 (45:47):
She has a moat the house of the moat on it.
Speaker 4 (45:52):
It is not obvious.
Speaker 3 (45:53):
It's not obvious, but yes, if it's got some water
built up or moisture.
Speaker 4 (45:56):
But then I'm like, well, water companies said, it's rain.
Speaker 1 (45:58):
How much you gonna cost to fix it?
Speaker 3 (46:00):
That I'm waiting on the quote they said, they're going
to get back to me with a quote. That's my
under my next steps. They're going to get me a
repair bill. And then I'm also going to call the
water company and say, hey, you told me wrong.
Speaker 4 (46:14):
You said that it was because of rain. So I
didn't look into that further.
Speaker 3 (46:18):
And I had to hire these leak specialists to come out.
So not only that, I don't even know my bills
from yes, so should they pay for my bill? Can
they give me a like pro rate or give me
my money back from all the money I've spent on
this water?
Speaker 1 (46:32):
You good good luck? Good luck with that one. I mean,
the little pinhole. This shouldn't be hard, A little tape
on it, right? How much again is it per per minute?
Speaker 4 (46:39):
Half a gallon of water per minute?
Speaker 1 (46:42):
A lot of water. Let's talk to Allison, who lives
in Texas. What can we do for you today?
Speaker 14 (46:50):
So, my husband and I are pregnant with our third baby,
and we're trying to figure out a fun way to
tell our families because we didn't really do anything some
last time. And my family seemed to hilarious that we
love that. I love you guys, and I've been on
the show a couple of times to pray game and
for a voicemail, and whenever we get together, my family
always plays it back.
Speaker 10 (47:09):
And listens to it together because.
Speaker 14 (47:11):
They think it's so funny. So I was wondering if
maybe you could say something for me that I could
play back to my family to announce that we're having
our third baby, because it would totally surprise them.
Speaker 1 (47:20):
Well, this could be awkward, but this is all on
the air right now. How do you feel about just
doing it live right now in the air.
Speaker 4 (47:25):
I mean that would be fine.
Speaker 14 (47:27):
They don't some of them kind of listen to it
on Great with the.
Speaker 1 (47:31):
Podcast All Good podcast that you can have on your phone.
You can save the clip. We'll send you the clip
an email. But what if we do it right now?
Speaker 14 (47:36):
Yeah, that'd be awesome.
Speaker 1 (47:37):
Okay, cool? So what do you mean to say exactly?
Because I'll say whatever you want.
Speaker 14 (47:40):
Oh, I mean, you're the professional.
Speaker 11 (47:42):
Whatever you think. Sure, I mean we're doing de Sumber.
Speaker 14 (47:45):
It's our third baby, so that's yeah, pretty much it.
Speaker 1 (47:49):
Do you know if it's a boy or a girl?
Speaker 3 (47:52):
Not yet?
Speaker 11 (47:52):
Okay, when we tell them, we'll be ten weeks which
is now.
Speaker 4 (47:58):
Yeah, well yeah on Sunday, okay, because we're not jumping.
Speaker 1 (48:02):
I don't want to tell them too early. But you
feel like if we say it now, it's okay, right, Yeah,
I don't think that.
Speaker 14 (48:07):
I don't think anybody's gonna hear.
Speaker 1 (48:09):
It to all of Allison's family. It is us here
at the Bobby Bone Show. We hope you having a
great day. We have something very big to tell you,
but you probably already heard. But Alison and her husband
what's your husband's name, Michael? Allison and Michael, not one,
(48:31):
not two. They're having their third that right, and it's
due in December, and they're naming it Bobby.
Speaker 11 (48:40):
Yeah, that's not part of it.
Speaker 1 (48:42):
That's not part of it. What Oh okay, So Allison's family,
congratulations of the babe is on the way. We wanted
to share that news with you, and so there we
have it. Another they don't know the sex of the day,
so don't ask them. They want to find out and
then tell you. But they have the name, right, Bobby.
Why are Allison? We think about Bobby.
Speaker 14 (49:04):
As a name, you know, I'm sure we can make
the shirt.
Speaker 1 (49:08):
Yeah, make it work somehow. Yeah, that's how somebody gets
out of something. That's like. I'll probably be in town
around sometime around that point. Maybe we'll go and have
dinner or something. Allison, congratulations on another baby, and may
it be everything you've ever wanted in the third kid,
and may this delivery be not painful at all, and
wrap this up. I'm the professional idea. May you have
(49:31):
plenty of diapers? Yes, Allison? So thank you, we just
announced it and amazing and congratulations.
Speaker 11 (49:38):
Thank you so much.
Speaker 7 (49:39):
I appreciate it.
Speaker 1 (49:40):
What a way to get a day going here, Bobby
Bones show. Congrats to Alison. And you know what, everybody
else is pregnant out there too. Congrats. Yeah, good job.
Thank you guys for hanging out a question or a comment.
We always welcome them. You know, we don't do a
lot of topics where we're like, just call, but what
we like you to do is jump in on what
we're talking about just like you have friends. So that's
(50:01):
the deal. It can be about anything but eight seven
seven seventy seven, Bobby, that's what's up. Let's do the
news Bobby's stories. You've heard gingerrell helps a nausea, upset stomach.
It's basically the pepto bismo and a hand. Yes, it's
not really true. It's just a myth that's been passed
(50:23):
down from generation to generation. It's almost like if your
head is wet and you go out in the cold,
you're going to get a cold. Oh yeah, I also
not true, but there is something that if you just
believe it, maybe it works. Like if you drink gingerrel
and you're like, I'm for sure. It's like Amy looking
for a sign, like you're gonna find a sign. She's like,
I'll look good for a sign. You'll just you'll find one.
Speaker 4 (50:41):
And if you like drink, sometimes the signs find me.
Speaker 1 (50:45):
Yep, but you're already I hear you.
Speaker 3 (50:46):
But also, it's not the same as placebo. But if
it's fine, if it's working, it's working.
Speaker 1 (50:50):
So if placebo works because you want it, you're being
told it's working. I want it. But you same with
a sign.
Speaker 4 (50:56):
Okay, okay, fine, if you want to compare the two.
Speaker 1 (50:58):
But gingerrel on a sign from above the same, are
you all right?
Speaker 11 (51:01):
Well?
Speaker 3 (51:02):
Ginger ale works for me, but it must be placebo
because my mom told me it would work.
Speaker 1 (51:05):
Ginger El is a soft drink made with sugar, artificial
flavors and ginger root extract. It really has nothing to
do with any sort of nausea easing effect. Fresh ginger
could possibly help, but any got no fresh ginger in everybody?
That's just ain't no fresh ginger in that, right, there's
(51:26):
no fresh ginger in ginger al.
Speaker 3 (51:28):
What great marketing though for ginger ale, though, I mean,
we buy it anytime anybody's got a nut set stomach.
Speaker 1 (51:34):
It's pure flac ebo, so you can have straight ginger.
There're even those ginger candies that are supposedly work a
little bit, but even they're candy, but they do put
a little bit of ginger in them, but also partially placebo.
Maybe just saying I do love some ginger ale, though
we have a sugar free kind. But then what I've
also learned about sugar free stuff that tastes good, there's
just something else in there that's equally as bad food
(51:54):
that just happens and not be sugar. It's just something else.
If it tastes good, this is what stinks. It tastes good,
it usually ain't good for you. Rarely is there something
that is just that tastes so good and it's also
that's so good for you. Go ahead, tell me something
a grape, yeah, orange fruit. Nature's candy is about the old.
(52:15):
But I don't ever eat a unless i'm like super hot.
Like a good soft peach is amazing, that's good. Yeah,
but fruit. Mostly it's like Nature's candy. If Nature's candy
was the ninety nine cent bag of candy at the
gas station. It's kind of like the fire hot red
hot or the big squishy peanuts, Like it's that good.
It's like, that's pretty good, but it is good? Is what? It?
(52:36):
A bag of rollos?
Speaker 11 (52:37):
Right?
Speaker 1 (52:37):
You know what I mean?
Speaker 3 (52:38):
That's what when I try to tell my kids, no, no,
we'll have God's candy today, they're like, they again, does.
Speaker 1 (52:47):
Your kids sports coach screaming yell at his team. That's
the question they ask, because they say, if so, it
affects the team negatively. New research suggests that being supportive
and pleasant instead of being a bully effectively motivates teams
and just loyalty and a proof's chances of success in sports.
Instead of yelling things they can work on well talking
(53:07):
positively in a huddle. Most time, yelling doesn't get heard
or leads to hatred if it happens a lot, If
anything happens consistently, it just becomes white noise. It doesn't
matter what it is. If you're just giving compliments like crazy,
and that's what you do, it becomes white noise.
Speaker 11 (53:24):
Right.
Speaker 1 (53:24):
I do think there is a place for all types
of communication, and you can be consistent, but you don't
want to be constant because constant doesn't feel real because
nothing is really constant. Like if I were to give
you compliments every single day, Amy, like, man, you just
so good today every single day? Wow, what your hair
look great? That your shoes look great. Wow, you'd be like, Okay,
you're just saying stuff all the time. You don't really
(53:45):
mean it. The the day when you walked in your
hair was different. I said, dang, your hair looks good.
Speaker 11 (53:49):
Now.
Speaker 1 (53:50):
That probably felt like I meant it.
Speaker 4 (53:52):
Well, yes, because you don't ever say.
Speaker 1 (53:53):
It unless I mean it right, Yes, Now if I
always yelled at you guys, which I'm not a yeller
at all, but if I, okay, switch it. If I
did yell at you m hm, and I was like,
why did? Wouldn't that be so effective? Were youve be like, man,
he must really either didn't sleep well yeah, or this
has really affected him, and that would be what it
feels like. So if a coach is screaming at you
(54:15):
all the time, yeah, it just turns into white noise.
If a boss is screaming at you all the time,
it's not that effective if you have to use your
communication in places that strategically makes sense. But Eddie, how
you coach your kids? Because you're the coach of the
basketball team, I am nine year old boys?
Speaker 2 (54:31):
Do you yell during the games, but it's mostly just
to get their attention because they're so far away and
a lot going on.
Speaker 1 (54:37):
To be heard is a different yelling then, for like
an intensity reason. I'm never really mad like that.
Speaker 2 (54:43):
But let me tell you, though, out of all the coaches,
we've had, the pleasant ones, we don't win.
Speaker 1 (54:48):
The ones that yell we win well. I don't think
universally you can be either one. I've had leaders and
coaches that have been mostly pleasant with a little bit
of yelling. We'll call it pleasant and aggressive. Yeah, but
it's the ones you can be. I just need consistency.
I don't care if you're working on the show where
what I'm doing, I just need consistency. So it's coaches
(55:10):
that can be consistent one thing, but also can flip
that switch if needed, to be yelling or to be like, hey,
you're doing a really good job, and then I believe
them because they're consistent with their message.
Speaker 7 (55:19):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (55:19):
So, and that's just in life. Now when we talk
about your kids teams, don't you have a baseball team? Yeah,
but I don't coach the baseball thing. I thought you
said you were assistant coaching. You want me to sponsor
the team, and no, that's my basketball team. Oh again,
we're doing a summer league. Have you thought about that?
But what were the stipulations? Did I make it? Listen
to demands?
Speaker 2 (55:36):
Yeah, like it's got to be called the Bobby Bones
or something, And I'm like, the Bobby Bones. Yeah, you
said something like that.
Speaker 1 (55:41):
Okay, well I don't want that then if I said it,
I mean, I don't remember that part. I got other
coaches I got to talk to all of them about that.
How much money do you need? What do we say? Lunchbox?
I think it was like three we need to do
basketballs and stuff. You know, listen, I give you three
fifty if they're called Bobby's bone, the bone, Daddy's wait wait,
(56:05):
knowing like that, okay the no, no, no, no, okay,
think about it, think about it. Bones is boys. I
thought either, I don't know, I gotta think of that
because all those not creepy in their own way. All right, right,
but I'm up. I'm up for we could find a nice,
healthy place to land about it. I could really use
(56:27):
that money. That's no, no, it's not you, Oh my god.
Empathetic Leadership a book by Peter Sears where I got
the screaming story Dancing with the Stars. We'll returned to
ABC after one season on Disney Plus. They went just
to Disney Plus and work out for them, like they hoped,
they're gonna go back to ABC. Imagine you were on
that one season in Disney Plus that nobody watched. It's
(56:48):
still a great experience, but it's like nobody like they
should get to come back. If they want to come
back and do it again that you get to do
it on on like real TV. Deadline had that story,
so congratulations to them. Voice notes are becoming more popular
thanks to gen Z. Hey, there's one thing that I
ain't great A lot of things. I'm pretty good. Some
things I've had to learn how to develop skills certain places.
(57:09):
I'm great at voice notes. I push. I can blindly
close my eyes and find the button. Push it, leave
a whole thing, send it, save it, whatever you need.
I can kill a voice note. Love sending them, and
sending them consistently for a couple of years. Ye yeah,
we longer hate getting them.
Speaker 3 (57:26):
Okay, did you see what I did for you the
other day? Did you even notice? Because I did it purposely?
What you sent me a voice text? And I thought, well,
I could easily reply and answer his question.
Speaker 1 (57:40):
Okay, I don't mind listening to them, but Amy sends
four minute long ones. It's basically it's four things Amy
Brown said to my phone.
Speaker 3 (57:47):
I started to break them up into thirty second increments,
but I just.
Speaker 1 (57:51):
Listen to all them. But it's mostly I can't listen
to things all the time. That's the reason I don't
like them. It's not that I feel like I should
be able to do something nobody else should. But when
I'm doing this show and I get a voice text
and I have headphones on and we're working, I can't
listen to it for like an hour. So I'm just weird,
I know.
Speaker 3 (58:06):
But I thought I could just easily reply and answer
your questions in three short little bullet points and you could.
Speaker 4 (58:11):
Read it and know it. Boom boom boom. That was
thoughtful because I wanted to reply back with my mouth.
Speaker 1 (58:20):
Michelin Star Chef inspired restaurant. He's adding fish seamen to
the menu. Michelin Star Chef inspired ed fish seamen at
this high end restaurant. His name is dad Is Munos,
a Michigan Star chef, Michigan.
Speaker 4 (58:39):
It sounded like you said, Michigan. I'm sorry.
Speaker 1 (58:42):
Both are awesome. By the way, Ray, no offense, thank you,
weak fish semen. I mean, I'll try it.
Speaker 8 (58:51):
You know.
Speaker 1 (58:52):
It's not like we don't eat grosser things that we've
been told is okay. I mean, we eat body parts
of animals, inside guts, we bone marrow. If you go
to certain places, it just is weird to us. It's
just so it's just weird. This is weird, but yeah,
I'd probably not want to know what it is then
eat it, and then if I liked it, I'd be like,
(59:14):
oh man.
Speaker 4 (59:15):
What do they do with this? Like a sauce?
Speaker 1 (59:17):
No, it's in like a wrap like a sushi thing.
It's on a thing. Yeah, I mean, how do they
get that much of that? Dude? I think it's inside
the fish.
Speaker 11 (59:27):
I see good.
Speaker 1 (59:28):
To the Fox News, a lottery player tries to work
after his jackpot win in Iowa didn't last very long.
Kelly El's was on his lunch break. He went to
the gas station. A lot of ticket is a big winner,
So here we go. You want twent fifty one bucks
with the two dollars cherry twist progressive. So after's lunch break,
(59:51):
I went back to work, started working, finishing his shift,
and he's like, screw this, I can't do it. I
can't do I read this. He was trying to go
back to work, to stack like it was a normal
day and right to work. Last of five minutes he
got it, went to the boss like, I gotta have
some time off. So that's from Yahoo, no word and
if he gets to go back to his job or not,
but he did kind of peace out. Zoning out is common,
especially for men. Men tend to zone out more at
(01:00:13):
meetings than women do, on average, two to three more
minutes during a typical thirty minute meeting. It's because men's
brains process about half the words that women's brains process.
Men more likely to zone out if discussions become lengthy.
We need a woman president, that'll be cool. We just do.
They're smarter than us, they're able to process. I mean,
there's science, right, this is from Forbes. We should have
(01:00:37):
a woman president. We should have had a woman president.
Can you We're almost fifty presidents and almost and there's
not been a single woman president. Now, because it's normal,
no one thinks much of it unless you really think
about it and go that that's a travesty. I'm not
even saying the last one or the one before that,
(01:00:59):
but at some point you're telling me we never decided
that there wasn't a woman. That is pure national sexism,
and that sucks.
Speaker 4 (01:01:09):
At least we're close to having a well not I
don't want to stay close.
Speaker 1 (01:01:13):
That sounds real Vice president those a closest's pretty right.
Speaker 3 (01:01:15):
I know it's close, and if something were to happen
then Booms should be president.
Speaker 1 (01:01:19):
Still though, the fact that we've never elected a woman
any party any year, that is national sexism. It is
so bizarre that and it's sad that that's not the case.
That that is the case and there's not been a president.
Oh yeah, anyway, we zone out. Eddy stopped listening to
that segment.
Speaker 2 (01:01:34):
That's what if therapist told me. With our boys, like
after three sentences, they don't listen to you. That's crazy.
Speaker 1 (01:01:40):
You only speaking three sentence breaks. So you've got to
be real quick, clean your roof. Don't talk about see
you boost your memory if you had picked me up
with fruit loops, tricks or apple jacks before you start
your work day. In a recent study of those who
ate sugary cereals performed significantly better on short term memory
tests than those who ate high fiber cereals. They were
able to recall information quicker. It's just because of that
that sugar pop. But they're not doing it's talking about
(01:02:02):
the six hours later when they're like, no, my son
does not name cereal.
Speaker 4 (01:02:07):
To get a hold of that study, love cereal.
Speaker 1 (01:02:10):
That's from Woman's World magazine. And finally, this is a
road rage story. An Alabama man threw a teen girl
to the ground in Florida because of a road rage attack.
Hot headed Alabama man who is a quote danger on
the road and off, was arrested last week for a
video that someone took of a road rage incident on
a sixteen year old girl and her boyfriend at a
(01:02:31):
gas station. Thomas Keebler, you know he's made fun of
m called the Elphis whole life. Yeah, get your tree,
l where's your cookies? He was pursuing a group of
teenagers and so he went in went into a store.
The Walton County Sheriff's Office responded to a report of
a fight at a gas station and said that Keebler
had tailgated the teenager and her friends, who were in
(01:02:54):
a red sedan, aggressively passed them, tapped his brakes in
front of them, and then let him passed again, and
followed them to the service station. Video shows that he
parked his car in front of their car to prevent
them leaving, then stormed out of a Chevrolet Silverado truck,
shouting curse words, lunging at them as a whole situation
and it's.
Speaker 4 (01:03:10):
Because they had done something to him on the road. Accidentally.
Speaker 1 (01:03:13):
That doesn't really come into the story. I don't know.
Speaker 4 (01:03:16):
I was like, why is he doing that? So I
was like, is this like beef?
Speaker 1 (01:03:19):
Fox thirty five has that story and something must have happened.
But remember everybody, sometimes people are just dumb and they
do things accidentally. It's hard to be mad at somebody
that is dumb Genetically, we don't always know that. We
assume the worst because like, oh they cut me off.
Maybe it was just an idiot and they've always been
(01:03:39):
an idiot, and lucky they didn't hit you being an idiot,
they just cut you off. That's why I did. I
just think most people an idiots, intead are getting angry
and think the most people are out to get me.
Speaker 3 (01:03:48):
I like to think that they're distracted by something because
they're having a really bad day and maybe something really
emotional just happen in their life and they.
Speaker 1 (01:03:56):
Accidentally it was the ad zone doubt. Sorry what are
you saying there? Three sentences? Sorry? All right, thank you,
that's not news.
Speaker 9 (01:04:03):
Bobbie had a long day of work yesterday and I
go home and my wife's like, hey, I'm not home,
but made lunch piece of chicken, and there's like a
little kill salad and vegetables, and.
Speaker 1 (01:04:19):
It's in the microwave, but I just put it in there,
warm it up. I'm like cool. I get home, I
don't know, like one thirty or something, and it's starving,
and I've picked the plate up and I'm looking at it.
I don't want any mushrooms though, I hate mushrooms and onions,
so I'm just I still do a little check because
sometimes you like to sneak some like little onions in there.
And so the chicken in slow motion, falls off the plate.
(01:04:41):
It's the only piece too. There's not a lot of
groceries our house because we can have to leave for
five or six days coming up for ACMs and by
our country fast and so the chicken and all I'm
thinking of is I gotta order Uber eats. It's gonna
take an hour. Yes, all this my life is lasting
before my eyes. And the chicken and it's got all
(01:05:03):
this sauce on it. Oh Man barbecues. Wow hits the ground,
and I see Stanley all in slow motion, my bulldog.
He locks eyes with that chicken. Oh, I could just
see him. He's probably ten feet away, and he doesn't
move fast for anything. But it's like the flash running
(01:05:24):
toward that chicken. Well, I got two options here, let
him have the chicken or make sure he doesn't get
the chicken. And that's also on the ground, and I'm thinking, well,
it's already on the ground, so to just give it
to him, I don't want to get sick. So I
kicked the chicken and then I stop him with my leg.
So I've now kicked the chicken. Firs. That's like when
(01:05:45):
you drop your phone, though times you can try to
save it with your foot. It landed. I saw him coming,
so I kicked the chickens. I don't know if he's
gonna get stick off. He gets sick off everything. I
kicked the chicken and I hold him back and I
wwitch over and I grab the chicken. Out here, I
am all I got is like a little salad, some
vegetable on a plate, and I got chicken in his hand.
What did I do they eat the chicken? Did I
(01:06:07):
throw the chicken away? Did I give some to Stanley
and then throw the rest away? What did I do
here in this situation?
Speaker 4 (01:06:12):
Amy, my gosh, I think you would never eat the.
Speaker 1 (01:06:14):
Chicken chicken, which's pretty ashamed of you are starving, though.
Speaker 4 (01:06:19):
And it's all you have.
Speaker 3 (01:06:20):
And I feel like maybe you would think if I
just microwave the heck out of this, it'll be fine.
Speaker 1 (01:06:25):
That's good.
Speaker 4 (01:06:25):
That's what you did.
Speaker 1 (01:06:26):
You think I microwaved the disgust off of it? Yes, Eddie.
So did you have shoes on or are you barefooted
when you kicked the chicken? Gad shoes? Oh man, that
changes my mind. I think that you threw it away
and uber eats and I had to workout. I had
a body cast yesterday. Yeah, you had to eat. My
days get so blurry. I don't know. But we did
(01:06:46):
an interview and then we had to work out, so
there wasn't really time. So you're you're you're a germophobe. No,
oh man. You picked it up, got a napkin, wiped
it off and ate it. Let'll tell you what I did.
I took I turned the water on, I gave it
a bath. You gave the cooked chicken a bath. I
had to. I didn't eat. I washed it, wash off
(01:07:09):
all the flavor pretty much, yeah, washed it. Then I
put it in the microwave, heated it up. Didn't put
the salad on the microwave though, because I learned the
hard way. You don't do that. You put it in
by itself and then ate the chicken and gave Stanley
a little piece too. Boom. But I would never have
actually kicked a chicken before. I was surprising to me.
And I'm telling you with my schedule, I unhealthily schedule.
(01:07:33):
It's so tight. I just had no room for error there,
so I had to eat the kick chicken. I love
that you gave Stanley a little bit though. Everybody wins there.
He deserved it and you washed it and it's fine.
Oh yeah, I gave it a full bath. I give
the chicken a bath. You ever had a jerk chicken?
You heard a kicked chicken?
Speaker 14 (01:07:48):
Never?
Speaker 1 (01:07:49):
No, that's right you have. Now I'm stressed to crap out,
and I shouldn't be. I don't want to get too
particular because I don't know IF'SPS to announce it. Yeah,
but I I was a there's an award, some award
of some sort they're honoring me with, and I think
it's pretty awesome and it has to do with home,
so it's it's an Arkansas award. I'm like, man, that
(01:08:10):
is really cool, pretty proud of it. And so they say,
can you be here to accept the award in October?
And I'm like, yeah, of course because some of the
past people that have won the award, like the former
governor of Arkansas, who have good friends with Asa Hutchinson,
the athletic director of the University of Arkansas. So it's
a substantial thing. And I'm proud of where I come from,
(01:08:30):
and I'm proud that hopefully I've been able to change
some lives there. It can change many more lives there,
and I'm like, yeah, sure. And it's a nonprofit group
and it helps some journalism kids go to school, Ada
ada auDA. That being said, when you get the award,
there's always kind of a thing where we're supposed to
(01:08:51):
help raise money for I'm supposed to raise like fifty
thousand dollars and the like. They're like, line up some
sponsors because I guess it's tax deductible, and you know,
recommend sponsors and we'll go to them if they want
to sponsor the event. And I'm like, I don't want
the award anymore because I hate asking people for stuff.
(01:09:12):
I don't want to go to a sponsor and be like, hey,
I want an award. Will you buy I don't know
what you buy? A table sign? I don't know what
it is. I don't know much. So I'm in this
place now where I know I'm supposed to be able
to just like, got this is really cool. I hate
asking people for stuff. I was gonna do the story
with CBS last week. Then we're gonna come and do
this thing. We ten years here. You know, there was
(01:09:35):
really no celebration for us. I don't know why, and
the company decided, you know, maybe ten years ain't that important,
but okay, but we've entered at this show ten years
and then we're gonna do a story on that, and
they were like, hey, would you ask an artist to
come talk about you? I canceled the story because I
don't want ask an artist coming to talk about me,
because I don't like asking anybody to do anything. Sure,
I don't want charity. Childhood trauma we get charity helped
(01:09:57):
us so much and I was always embarrassed. So it's
a similar type thing where I don't want to ask
anybody to help sponsor this deal. So I don't know
what to do. Amy I kind of need to talk
some sensit to me somehow because I just am about
to go. I can't accept the award.
Speaker 3 (01:10:15):
Well, I think that there's plenty of people and organizations
I'm not going to ask, So.
Speaker 4 (01:10:22):
How about you form a committee us.
Speaker 1 (01:10:26):
I appreciate that, But then I'm asking you guys to
do something. But what if we're volunteering to do what? Though?
Speaker 2 (01:10:33):
Raise a car wash and go door to door lunchbox? Okay,
I so can what a car wash? Amy, that's genius.
Speaker 8 (01:10:44):
I didn't say a car wash.
Speaker 1 (01:10:48):
No, That's where I am right now mentally.
Speaker 4 (01:10:52):
So I guess it is going to a good cause though,
because the money is not like the money for you,
it's the future.
Speaker 1 (01:10:58):
Get the money, I know.
Speaker 4 (01:11:00):
Yeah, So it's like it's about the people they're helping.
Speaker 1 (01:11:03):
That's a struggle.
Speaker 4 (01:11:04):
Okay, So where are you leaning?
Speaker 1 (01:11:05):
Leaning? And you tell my wife about it because she'll
talk me out of any sort of sabotage type thoughts
about this because I do it all the time. I'll
sabotage stuff. I don't want help from anybody, I mean.
Speaker 4 (01:11:17):
Even the CBS thing.
Speaker 3 (01:11:18):
I'm like, why couldn't you could You don't have to
directly ask, you could just be like, Okay, this is cool,
and someone could ask on your behalf and then that was.
Speaker 1 (01:11:26):
Even going to be a thing, and I was like,
I will not have it. But I don't want somebody
feeling like they have to come up and.
Speaker 3 (01:11:31):
They're but you know there's people that wouldn't feel like
they have to They would want to write. But I
don't think that you do that on other people's behalf.
Speaker 1 (01:11:38):
Yeah, but I'll like doing it.
Speaker 3 (01:11:40):
Oh, so we can't give other people the opportunity to
do it.
Speaker 1 (01:11:43):
We can't. I can't.
Speaker 4 (01:11:44):
I mean you also like donating to things, and now
they're what you're.
Speaker 1 (01:11:49):
Doing is taking something from I hear you. Everything you're
saying is right.
Speaker 3 (01:11:53):
You're this thinking takes the annual opportunity for other people
to do what you like to do as well. And
so imagine if you never had the opportunity like other
people are like, oh dang, I would have liked to
do that.
Speaker 4 (01:12:06):
I had no idea.
Speaker 1 (01:12:07):
My nine year old brain is speaking here and it's
going I don't want anybody to bring me presents for Christmas.
I don't want anybody to buy my shoes. I don't
want church to have to pay for my church camp membership,
because that was just humiliating to me, and so I
know I should get past it. I'm gonna go talk
to my therapist about it. But I still I ain't
raising fifty thousand dollars. I mean I would raise fifty
thousand dollars. How am I raising fifty thousand bucks? Amy
should start off the donation. I mean, if you want
(01:12:28):
to step up, Amy, I mean, what are you waiting? No,
I want to let you put your money, and there's
no where to put it. By the way, there's not
like a find or anything. I'm just saying I have
I have hoodies from my Instagram page. Is the link
up there?
Speaker 11 (01:12:39):
Do you hear me?
Speaker 1 (01:12:39):
Hoodies have to sell a lot of hoodies a lot.
That's a lot of hoodies.
Speaker 11 (01:12:46):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (01:12:46):
But that's where I am. I have to figure out
what the plan is the next few days because I
can't leave them hanging right.
Speaker 4 (01:12:51):
But then the money just needs to be raised. My October.
Speaker 1 (01:12:54):
I don't know learn it needs to be raised. I
just saw it and I was like, ah, I can't
do it.
Speaker 3 (01:12:59):
Well, So what did the governor do? I have no idea,
I mean truly, so he was able to probably makes
the committee and they go government politicians. They raise money
all the time.
Speaker 4 (01:13:09):
The athletic director at Arkansas I was told that.
Speaker 1 (01:13:13):
He said, the university said, hey, we can point you
towards the sponsors that work with us very closely. But
I'm not going to call Hey, Hyundai, it's Bobby here,
Hey sleep Number, it's you boy, b b oh Sonic. Anyway,
put those three together.
Speaker 4 (01:13:29):
That's easy.
Speaker 1 (01:13:31):
That's my point. I'm going to try to work through
it one way or the other, and I have to
do it, probably before the end of this week, because
I can't leave him on the hook. But I've turned
something that should be cool into now me just stressing
out about it because I feel like a total loser.
Speaker 4 (01:13:43):
Between this and the CBS. Think, what the heck else
have you turned down?
Speaker 11 (01:13:45):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (01:13:46):
I won't let anybody do it for me, no way.
I heard that Garth wanted us to do the whole tour,
but Bobby wouldn't accept the charity. Oh boy, so that's
the deal. I can sell ten thousand hoodies. I can
sell ten thousand.
Speaker 12 (01:14:02):
That So.
Speaker 1 (01:14:07):
That link is on my Instagram, mister Bobby Bones. So
that's what No, I wasn't. I just am looking like,
where can I do something? To donate money. But that's it.
I can also give my own money.
Speaker 4 (01:14:17):
I was to suggest that, which is weird, be.
Speaker 1 (01:14:20):
Paid for your own award. That's the problem I have
with it. That's exactly. Then I would feel like, well, yeah,
I paid for it, that's exactly.
Speaker 3 (01:14:28):
No, no, no, no, it would be clear that you
were selected before the donation.
Speaker 1 (01:14:34):
Who makes it clear though you?
Speaker 4 (01:14:36):
Yeah, I would like to make this clear.
Speaker 1 (01:14:38):
That's the that's the idea. I'm gonna try to get
through it the next few days. I'm talking about wife.
I'm going to see what we have and we're gonna
move from there. I'm not even saying the award because
I don't want people to like track the award down
to be like I'm gonna give you money. I don't.
I don't want that. But that's me.
Speaker 11 (01:14:52):
Hello.
Speaker 4 (01:14:52):
You know, you know we have google what Arkansas award did?
Speaker 1 (01:14:58):
The governor googles if you can find.
Speaker 4 (01:14:59):
It, and the athletic director and the event.
Speaker 1 (01:15:02):
Doing it right now, see if you can find it, Mike,
let's see if it happens. Okay, but don't say it
out loud.
Speaker 4 (01:15:07):
I mean the kinds of things some of our listeners
find out.
Speaker 1 (01:15:09):
Oh yeah, they're good. Yeah. Oh no, like, no, they're good.
They're real. Hey listen, No, but that's not a challenge. Listen.
Ninety five point five percent of our listeners A plus Austin.
The be team's amazing. They stand out for people, they
do great things. Point five scare me because they get
a little too intrusive. I got it, Arnie.
Speaker 16 (01:15:27):
Let's start with gee huh, okay, okay. October fifth was
the last one.
Speaker 1 (01:15:39):
I don't know if that's true. It doesn't matter. We're
gonna play this Bobby Bone show.
Speaker 11 (01:15:45):
Sorry.
Speaker 1 (01:15:45):
Up today. This story comes us from Wisconsin. This guy
Eric walks into a car dealership and says, yeah, I'd
like to lease a car for the next thirty six months,
signs all the paperwork. Thirty six months later, he is
shocked to find out he doesn't own the car.
Speaker 11 (01:16:01):
Oh.
Speaker 1 (01:16:01):
He goes in and thinks he thought least met by Yeah,
and goes I didn't read the fine print. And at
thirty six months they came back for the car. Yeah,
somebody should explain that to him. Even I would have.
What I would think happens is that the person who
is leasing you the car understands that you don't really understand.
And now I bet you that guy or girl who
leased him in the car probably knew and was like,
(01:16:23):
I'm just going to try to get the money off this. Wow,
because there's no way he understood that when he signed
the paper.
Speaker 14 (01:16:28):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:16:29):
So that poor guy paid, probably paid his bills on time. Yeah,
he paid it for thirty six months and he goes.
I was shocked to find out at the end that
I didn't own the car. I don't blame him. I
mean I do, but also not fully. As someone who
has been very uneducated on financial things in my life,
I'm very thankful at times that people have said like,
hold on, let me explain this to you. They're like, oh,
(01:16:51):
I think we all know what least me. Yeah, I
hear you, but maybe maybe not, maybe maybe rent to own.
I don't know, dude. Yes, it's his fault. Yes, however accountability, Yes,
I just think the person who least to him knew.
The guy didn't know. Oh, there's no way you can
get to the whole process without letting him know. That's stinks.
So then what happened? They get the car, then you
got the car, then got the car back. If you
guys see the golfer who he won the Masters. He
(01:17:12):
bought I don't know much about cars, some four hundred
and fifty thousand dollars, crazy awesome cars on like ten
of them that exist. It's in like Master's Green. He
gets it and it was up on the internet. They
were like, wow, this is it. And then randomly a
few months ago, because he won the tournament few years ago,
a few months ago, that car ends up on a
salvage shop website, not saying it was just totally destroyed,
(01:17:32):
nothing about it. Just there was so much just like
that looks like Patrick Reid's and that was it. So whatever,
that half a million dollar car was just wrecked on
a salvage Yeah, they got the vend number in it
matched and so they sold it for like one hundred
and twenty six thousand. Now huh, someone bid on it.
I mean it was destroyed, but that car was awesome.
And then all of a sudden just pops up on
a salvage yard site.
Speaker 13 (01:17:53):
Weird.
Speaker 1 (01:17:54):
Patrick was going hard.
Speaker 4 (01:17:56):
He hasn't explained it.
Speaker 1 (01:17:58):
He never even said anything about it. Somebody just have
to find see it and then look it up. Because
there's only ten of them that existed, and they sold
the beat up car for one hundred thousand bucks. Yeah,
I mean, how awesome is that it was destroyed too? Okay,
also a bonehead? Yeah yeah, there you go. I'm lunchbox.
That's your bonehead story of the day. I went to
watch Air, that movie about Nike and Michael Jordan, and
(01:18:20):
thought it was so good. Abe went to the theater,
which I swore I would never do. I thought I'd
have a beer before I went to the theater. I
never had a beer, but I went to the theater
and the movie was so good. I didn't even think
about all the people talking and their phones on and
the person yelling at the screen, and it was a
plus that good. That being said, before the movie started,
they showed a preview of Big George Foreman, which I
(01:18:41):
was like, d that's also a great preview. Oh yeah,
I got this movie is gonna be awesome. George Foreman
was a boxer. He was a heavyweight champion, but he
was really good. Then he quit and became a minister,
and he came back in his forties and won the
championship again.
Speaker 4 (01:18:53):
Well but I mean, I know him as George Foreman grill.
Speaker 2 (01:18:56):
Which is why he was able to do that because
he was so marketable, and I think he has a
bunch of kids named George.
Speaker 1 (01:19:00):
George, George yet Georgia second. Yeah he does. So that
being said, I was super pumped about the movie because
I remember the trail end of George Foreman. He was
a big deal movies coming out, Big George Foreman. I'm
ready to watch it. Mike d obviously goes and watches
it before me. He is my seeing eye dog. He
has my canary in the coal mine, Mike, Big George Foreman.
Speaker 13 (01:19:19):
Big George big let down. Oh no, it's a lifetime
quality movie. And you know the thing you hate about
biopics whenever they just quickly glaze over their story.
Speaker 1 (01:19:29):
It's like, oh man, I'm struggling. Next scene, I've had
seven million dollars. It's like, wait a minute, queen. You
didn't go from a band that didn't know each other
to Top of the Pops TV show in a single scene.
So yes, that is annoying to me.
Speaker 13 (01:19:41):
Yeah, the movie goes from him being a kid to
somebody teaching him out of a box. Next thing, heavyweight champion.
Speaker 1 (01:19:46):
But do they at least go like a super pass forward?
Speaker 13 (01:19:49):
I could do that maybe it's like a really quick montage,
but it feels very corny, very cheesy. The entire acting
in this movie is very sub par. That's disappointing, and first,
such an inspiring story. I left the theater not inspired.
Speaker 1 (01:20:03):
He was anti inspired. He took a nap afterwards. He
was de inspired. He had a lot of dreams going
in before the movie. Now he just wants to quit everything.
Speaker 13 (01:20:11):
And they showcase the match between him and Muhammad Ali.
And honestly, I was more interested in Muhammad Ali in
the movie than George Forman.
Speaker 1 (01:20:17):
Was that the rumble in the jungle? I believe, so.
I don't know what they called it. It was in
a different country though, Yeah, it was in like Africa, right, Yeah, yeah,
I don't know if that was the right one or not.
Because Mhammad only had a bunch of fights. They all
were named, so you wanted more Ali, Yeah, I would.
Speaker 13 (01:20:31):
Have watched another Ali movie instead.
Speaker 1 (01:20:33):
Dang, that is a disappointing big George Foreman gets what grade?
I give it two out of five boxing gloves?
Speaker 11 (01:20:38):
Dang.
Speaker 4 (01:20:39):
I mean, if it's lifetime quality, I'll probably like it.
Speaker 1 (01:20:41):
It's not Christmas.
Speaker 4 (01:20:42):
I mean, I like any lifetime movie that's.
Speaker 1 (01:20:45):
It, Mike, thank you, You're welcome. Now I'm de inspired.
I'm so uninspired one don't want to do nothing. I
hope you have a great day. Goodbye every Boddy, mister
Bobby Bogus