Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
Hey, everybody, Welcome to Wednesday's show. Morning Studio. Lunchbucks has
some late breaking news about the iHeartRadio app brand new,
so he wants to share it with everybody. Go ahead, man, I'm.
Speaker 2 (00:21):
Gonna tell you what.
Speaker 1 (00:22):
Guys.
Speaker 3 (00:22):
They have playlists on there, which is pretty freaking cool.
Like on our road trip, my two kids or my
three kids wanted to fight over two songs and I
was like, guys, we can't do this, and so we
pulled up the app. Let me tell you. They had
a fourth of July playlist, and then they had a
summer party playlist. We jammed those for hours and the
kids were happy. It was I'm telling you about check
(00:45):
it out. They got pre made playlists, so you don't
have to go like I thought, Okay, I'm about to
go through and search every single song. They put it
together for you pretty easy.
Speaker 4 (00:54):
Now.
Speaker 1 (00:54):
They do a great job of that. Yes, but he's
just discovering this. It's been like our company been telling
us to say this like years.
Speaker 5 (01:00):
I'm sure I feel like he's probably had to say it.
Speaker 1 (01:02):
Yeah, yeah, it's like we have great but he discovered
it for himself and then brought it to us as new.
Speaker 6 (01:09):
It's always better when you experienced it for yourself, because
it's more I hear it the authenticity in his voice.
Speaker 3 (01:15):
Friend and the fourth of July playlist had new and
old songs, which was like really good because then you show, hey,
here's an old artist, like are they and they always
ask are they still alive?
Speaker 1 (01:28):
Who asked that?
Speaker 2 (01:29):
My kids?
Speaker 1 (01:30):
They meant the app. I was like, no, no, no artists.
That's a fun playlist. Are they still alive?
Speaker 7 (01:36):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (01:36):
That'd be one I would listen to, And then everybody
song that comes on, you're like, I want to debate anyway. Yes,
they've been doing this stuff for like seven eight years,
but I'm glad you experienced.
Speaker 2 (01:46):
Didn't know that. I did not know they had a
pre made playlist, but man.
Speaker 1 (01:49):
It, what did you think the iHeartRadio app was?
Speaker 3 (01:52):
I thought you got to go in and listen to
like our show or other shows on it, and then
like you could pick a song and listen to the song,
and then you'd go pick another song.
Speaker 1 (02:03):
A podcasts, Yeah that's what I'm saying our podcast. Oh
you listen to live radio?
Speaker 2 (02:08):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (02:08):
I didn't realize that there was playlists like they already
had songs cueued up.
Speaker 1 (02:12):
We make one every week for the Friday morning dance party,
and we have for years. You make one, Morgan does. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (02:18):
Oh, and we put it on there. Uh huh oh.
Speaker 1 (02:21):
And we should start doing the list of are they
dead or are live? It's a good idea. It's a
heck of a playlist, all right. Well, thanks for sharing
that with us. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (02:26):
Thanks. iHeart radio app save my family from a lot
of fights. I appreciate it.
Speaker 5 (02:32):
Shout out, shout out.
Speaker 8 (02:33):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (02:35):
So the question that I asked Eddie Amy and listen
to this, because Joey chestnutt over the weekend eight seventy
and a half hot dogs in ten minutes, which that
wasn't even his record, but he won by far. He's
the champion eater. He's famous, like he's literally famous because
he's the greatest hot dog eater of all time. So
I asked Eddie, could you eat seventy hot dogs in
(02:56):
twenty four hours? And I offered it five hundred bucks.
So think about that, because then we broke it down.
Not in ten minutes, not how many can you eat
in ten minutes? You have twenty four hours? Can you
eat seventy hot dogs in twenty four hours? So that's
thirty five in twelve hours. Okay, so let's do it.
(03:17):
So let's just say it's thirty six. It makes a
dividing easier. So that's eighteen and six hours. So it's
three basically three an hour. Yeah, yeah, sounds easy.
Speaker 5 (03:28):
Three an hour.
Speaker 1 (03:30):
It's a little more than that. But yeah, and I
have to sleep. Yeah, you can't count the eight hours
that I'm planning to sleep.
Speaker 2 (03:36):
You don't have to. If you want to make five hundred.
Speaker 1 (03:38):
Bucks, I think about that.
Speaker 2 (03:41):
Well, stay up all night, yeah, I mean eating.
Speaker 1 (03:44):
Do you think he could eat seventy hot dogs? Yeah,
because it's not quite if you stay awake every hour,
it's not quite three hot dogs. It's like two point
nine to two. But he is going to have to sleep,
which is why says is gonna be more than three.
Speaker 5 (03:57):
He doesn't have to sleep, right, I have to. I know,
I know, you do.
Speaker 2 (04:03):
I have to sleep.
Speaker 5 (04:04):
You could sleep, Okay, it's funny.
Speaker 1 (04:08):
You don't because you even get hungry or while you slept.
Speaker 5 (04:10):
Well I would do this, Eddie. Just don't do it. Sedentary,
stay walking, walk, You're gonna be.
Speaker 1 (04:16):
Burning while I eat. Yes, I have to sleep for
twenty four hours.
Speaker 6 (04:20):
Just walk while you eat, get on the treadmill, go
to the park, eat some hot dogs.
Speaker 5 (04:26):
It's basically you'll be burning energy.
Speaker 2 (04:28):
Go to a baseball game.
Speaker 1 (04:30):
If he stays awake for twenty four hours, because I
just heard he doesn't have to sleep, it's basically one
hot dog every twenty minutes.
Speaker 6 (04:38):
Why is hot dog every twenty minutes for the whole.
Speaker 1 (04:40):
Time he's basically because it's three an hour. It's less
an hour a hot dog. Guys with buns, I feel
like keeps on a hot dog. And Eddie was worried
about his health, right, But I mean, I'm gonna tell
you this, I would even First of all, do you
think you could do it?
Speaker 4 (04:55):
Now?
Speaker 1 (04:56):
Do you want the math if he goes to sleep
for eight hours?
Speaker 5 (04:58):
Yes?
Speaker 1 (04:59):
Because I need to have a good night's rest.
Speaker 5 (05:01):
Yes, Okay, let's give you sleep.
Speaker 1 (05:04):
You don't have to sleep.
Speaker 2 (05:05):
You don't have to say you used to go to
the bars and sayut all night. That's true, but do.
Speaker 5 (05:10):
Not respond well to that anymore.
Speaker 1 (05:12):
Okay, So you're left seventy hot dogs divided by sixteen hours,
So that's four point three hot dogs per hour while
you're walking. That's one hot dog A little less than
eighty fifteen minutes. But what does the walking do? I
don't understand that because you're energy. You know, I'm not
burning the hot dog? The hot dogs? Still am I?
Speaker 5 (05:31):
Still?
Speaker 2 (05:32):
But you are?
Speaker 1 (05:33):
How do you Why do you think you need food? Energy?
Speaker 2 (05:36):
Fuel? Right?
Speaker 1 (05:37):
Yes?
Speaker 5 (05:37):
So why do you think I'm suggesting you walk?
Speaker 2 (05:39):
Maybe?
Speaker 1 (05:40):
And your digestive system? Yes, when you walk, it does
help your food digest It gives you more room. Exactly
because Mike said something like how many calories? Was that
mic that you figured out? I don't do that? Oh
you will?
Speaker 5 (05:52):
Still doesn't do it?
Speaker 9 (05:54):
That would health.
Speaker 1 (05:55):
Scare right there?
Speaker 5 (05:57):
One day isn't.
Speaker 1 (05:58):
This is what I'm gonna tell you, guys. This is
the deal I'll make with you before we even do it.
Come on, so Mike, you can tell them God twenty
one thousand with the button, But that's twenty twenty four hours.
You're talking about thousand calories an hour. Who has a
crab that's look at that?
Speaker 2 (06:14):
How many calories you do you get in a day?
Speaker 1 (06:15):
I have no idea two thousand thousand you're eating more
and two day? Hey man, that's what you need. We
do though, because and I'm telling you I don't think
you would know the difference because they taste good every
fourth hot dog. Because you're worried about your health, we
do an impossible dog interesting so that they do have
(06:36):
those No, and you wouldn't know the difference in the taste.
Seventy is definitely possible. Like, it's definitely possible. I don't
know if I can do it because I've been eating
well for the past three weeks and like, now.
Speaker 5 (06:48):
Take your prime and ready to go walking out?
Speaker 1 (06:50):
You don't I feel like my stomach has gotten smaller. Hey,
a month ago, I could have eaten this easily. I
feel like if I heave in a long time, my
stomach is better for more food, not the opposite. No,
doesn't your stomach shrink and it's smaller, Like, I don't
know if this is possible. One, I really don't know what.
Speaker 5 (07:07):
I just said it's possible, and then now you're saying.
Speaker 1 (07:09):
It's not because I feel like I hurt myself if
I do this. Yeah, pain is glory five hundred bucks.
Would you wouldn't do it? You don't think you could
do it.
Speaker 5 (07:18):
I definitely could not do it.
Speaker 1 (07:20):
I know I can't do You think do you think
he could do it, or do you just want to
see him try to do it.
Speaker 5 (07:24):
I think Eddie could actually do it.
Speaker 1 (07:26):
Honestly, it's the closest thing to a competitive eater we
have on this show. That's a good point. And I'm
not sure if that's an insult or a compliment. I
don't know. I don't know either, But I do like
to eat one hot dog every thirteen point seven minutes
if you sleep for eight hours. Just think about it.
It's something I have to I feel like you might
as well try five hundred bucks and kee. I love
(07:47):
a challenge like love the challenge five hundred dollars in cash.
Oh my gosh, it sounds amazing. I just don't know
if it's possible, Like, I don't know if my body
can handle seventy hot dogs. If you're making a side
bet Lunchbox would Betty could do it?
Speaker 2 (07:59):
No? Wow, Because I'm gonna tell you why.
Speaker 3 (08:02):
The first few hours, fine, You're gonna enjoy the hot dogs.
Speaker 2 (08:04):
It's cool. It's sort of like the.
Speaker 3 (08:05):
Power Hour, where you take a shot of beer every
minute for one hour. Those first forty minutes you're like,
this is so easy, but by the end you're like
it's already been a minute.
Speaker 2 (08:14):
That's what he's gonna be like with the hot dog.
Speaker 3 (08:15):
It's already been thirteen minutes and I got to eat
another one.
Speaker 2 (08:18):
Oh my gosh.
Speaker 1 (08:19):
Yeah, but you're talking in minutes like this is I
can be hours, like you could eat one hour five
and then chill for a little bit.
Speaker 4 (08:25):
Is it all?
Speaker 5 (08:25):
Are they all on standard buns?
Speaker 2 (08:27):
Yep?
Speaker 1 (08:28):
Good question, yep. Standard.
Speaker 10 (08:32):
You're gonna dip the butN in water, right, No? No,
I'm not trying to speed. That's your speed. You're eating
the same amount. There's nothing to make it worse tasting
if you're not trying for speed. Oh my gosh, never
make it so much easier.
Speaker 1 (08:45):
No, I'm gonna grill it and everything. Yeah, I would
make it tasty, right, Yeah, there's any chance.
Speaker 5 (08:51):
I think you can.
Speaker 1 (08:52):
But are you being real?
Speaker 5 (08:53):
You're just trying to a hundred six hundred bucker rooms.
Speaker 1 (09:01):
It's just sounding better. I don't want you to commit
anything that you're not committed to anybody else. Want to
add any money to it.
Speaker 3 (09:07):
I mean, I'll bet Eddy one hundred dollars that he
can't do it, So if he loses, he gives me
a hundred that's stupid.
Speaker 5 (09:11):
Nice.
Speaker 2 (09:11):
You don't have to do that.
Speaker 1 (09:12):
You're going straight six hundred bucks from Amy and I no,
if you lose, you just quit.
Speaker 2 (09:17):
You don't lose.
Speaker 1 (09:17):
Anything, right, I'll be looked. I'll be seen as a
loser though. Yeah, but kindie, are you what? Nothing nothing's changed?
Speaker 11 (09:26):
Ray?
Speaker 1 (09:26):
Can you think you can do it?
Speaker 8 (09:28):
No?
Speaker 1 (09:28):
And I'm with lunch. I would be willing to do
the one hundred dollars bet.
Speaker 2 (09:31):
We're not betting.
Speaker 1 (09:32):
I don't want him to have something penalty. We're not
doing that. Yeah. The penalty is I'm eating seventy. He's
gonna feel terrible when he quits. Like I could kill
myself doing this. You really couldn't. But I do believe
it's impossible.
Speaker 5 (09:44):
I think that he can do it.
Speaker 6 (09:46):
I just think we need to prepare his body for
the calories in the sodium.
Speaker 1 (09:50):
Yeah, okay, good, good point.
Speaker 5 (09:51):
I don't know we can research that.
Speaker 1 (09:54):
I pray.
Speaker 2 (09:55):
Okay, that's true, say prayer.
Speaker 1 (09:57):
And yeah, you have twenty four hours think about it. Okay,
let us let's call my doctor see you. No, No, don't
do that. No calling any medical professional.
Speaker 2 (10:06):
You don't tell me aboard.
Speaker 1 (10:07):
Joey has nothing.
Speaker 2 (10:07):
To do that off the board.
Speaker 1 (10:08):
No calling any medical professional. Boy, I don't know.
Speaker 5 (10:12):
I guess no, no, no, no, that's off the board.
Speaker 1 (10:14):
If you call medical professional, money goes down. You call
my lawyer, no, and every money goes down even more.
I have twenty four hours. Let us know you're called.
Speaker 5 (10:22):
The lawyer would be more than like you.
Speaker 1 (10:25):
No, no, no, they work like if I die, they get
pro bono.
Speaker 2 (10:29):
They're gonna go pro bono.
Speaker 1 (10:30):
Hot dog. Yes, twenty four hours. You're on the clock.
Speaker 8 (10:33):
Okay, have a question too, because.
Speaker 1 (10:48):
Well, hello, Bobby Bones. My girlfriend's having a birthday next weekend.
I want to get her something nice. She and I've
been dating for six months, and I've asked her if
there's anything that she'd like. I've asked her a couple
of times and she says anything is fine. Some kind
of at a loss, what exactly do you get someone
who says anything is fine for her birthday? Signed boyfriend
(11:11):
birthday shopping? Now, you have three three options. Number one
is do you want to set a precedent? I would
recommend not taking this option, but this is one that
you can do. The president is if you say anything's fine,
I'm gonna get you anything. And just always expect in
the future. If you don't give me guidance, I'm not
gonna be guided to the thing you want. So you
could get a flower anything, because anything's fine, and then
(11:36):
just be confused. That's not the way I would go.
But if you want to teach her a lesson, also,
I don't advice. I know, I know, teacher, that's teaching
her a lesson that you're an idiot. That's the lesson.
Everyone does this, even not just with birthdays, but all
guys will act dumber at something so we don't have
to do it anymore. And this is a version of that.
Speaker 5 (11:58):
But shud he y'all want.
Speaker 1 (12:00):
But option one is not not the good option. But
that's option one. Be bad at getting her a gift,
because then she'll never expect you to get her a
gift when she doesn't give you the guidance to get
her the right gift. If you don't use that here,
you'll use it later At folding clothes. You'll be like, oh,
I don't know how to fold, and she's like, don't
worry about it, I'll do it myself. Like that's a
bit there. Number two is more macro than micro. Listen
(12:23):
to what she talks about, you know, when her birthday is,
so listen to what she talks about when she's not
talking about her birthday. This is something I try to
incorporate with my wife. I hear her and I try
to listen anyway. But sometimes when they talk a lot,
you just hear, you know, you hear most, you don't
hear all. So I mean that's on us. That's like
(12:44):
you hear most.
Speaker 5 (12:45):
And sometimes.
Speaker 1 (12:47):
Yes, I purposefully is human.
Speaker 6 (12:50):
I know, I feel like Bobby hears one thing and
I'm like, do you like text yourself or email yourself
or you just make a mental note.
Speaker 1 (12:55):
And you know, I have a folder on my phone.
Oh okay, and I will listen to my wife five
months out on what she talks about, what she likes.
Speaker 5 (13:03):
And you got to the folder.
Speaker 1 (13:05):
Absolutely.
Speaker 4 (13:05):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (13:06):
So then when it's time, I can go into the
folder and go, oh, I can do this, we can
go here. So for anniversary, that's stupid for she was like,
let's not do anything for anniversary this year because when
our vacation comes up, we're going and we're taking her
whole family. She was like, we're already spending a bunch
of money to do that, so no gifts, nothing, And
(13:26):
I was like, all right, fine by me, but really,
in my head, that's not where I am. But I
was gonna take her to watch Jurassic World at the
movie theater because that's all she wanted to do is
go to the theater. But she already she already did
that last week. So let's go to the movies. And
I'm like, no, does aniversary gift because she'd been talking
about the theater for so long and I was planning
like a night out.
Speaker 2 (13:42):
Of the movies.
Speaker 1 (13:43):
So I had to scratch up from.
Speaker 5 (13:44):
A box, how's your anniversary gift?
Speaker 1 (13:47):
She said, no gifts. I was also going to get her.
I was also going to get her a gift, but
that was gonna be our thing that we do because
we always go to dinner or something and it was
like a Tuesday night and I plan that. But my
point was she had mentioned she had been to the
movies in a long time, so I made a note,
let's go to the movies on her anniversary with the
gift that I'm not supposed to get her. Yeah, so
(14:09):
but that's that's scratched. But I would say, keep a tally,
keep a list of things that she mentions that you
can always go back into to get and pull from.
The third one is just tell like you go and
look at her Google. So if she gives your phone
for any reason, you can check her Google searches. You
can look at our social media and you can tell
(14:30):
exactly what you've been looking at and find something there,
or like her cart and ask her friend and all that.
But her friend's gonna tell her. That's the problem with friends.
Speaker 6 (14:36):
Your friend, what kind of friend is like, Hey, by
the way, your boyfriend, like what bull crab?
Speaker 1 (14:43):
A friend will be like this six months? Huh he
he asked me for a gift.
Speaker 5 (14:47):
I feel I feel like that's like a kind thing
to do.
Speaker 1 (14:50):
Anyway, The answer here is pay attention to what she
says leading up to it. H That's the number one.
Number two is jey jory basic very basic jewelry.
Speaker 5 (15:02):
Or if she likes massages, what about that?
Speaker 1 (15:04):
Sure, But that's like getting some money gift card to Applebee's.
Speaker 2 (15:06):
What like that?
Speaker 1 (15:07):
That's like you, that's like you nothing nothing, But it's
like you didn't put a lot of specific thought into it.
Because you're right, everybody loves Apple's. I love it. Everybody
not just your girlfriend, and that's a massage, a gift
card to Applebee's, fifty bucks, a foot locker like that.
Speaker 5 (15:25):
It's only six months. They've only been dating a lot.
Speaker 1 (15:28):
Though Morgan's had many six month boyfriends. Oh right, Morgan,
Why did I just.
Speaker 5 (15:33):
Morgan didn't do anything. I guess, I just I guess
I just really like a massage.
Speaker 1 (15:39):
Right now, we're all being very selfish in awesome. Now
that I've laid out the answers, this is what I'm
gonna say. Start started listening to what she says. Because
Christmas is coming up, buddy, Yeah, so start thinking about that.
If you have no idea, don't do that. Just get
her anything crap, don't get her a massage. You can
get her a massages as with something. But I would
get her something basic but nice. Okay, that's it. That's
(16:01):
my advice. And you may have no money, so you
don't have to go and spend thousands of dollars, but
basic and nice and a massage. Oh, don't do that.
Why that's just cringey. If it's bad, it's If it's good,
it works. If it's bad and not, everyone's a good poet.
I mean, you can go to chat GBT and I'm right,
(16:21):
you have poem, but it's some details. Yeah, uh, just listen.
That's just such a cliche thing. But cliches are for
a reason for the most part. But I'll get her,
get her little, get a little joy, little or something.
We'll cross.
Speaker 5 (16:33):
I can't believe we've made it to six months.
Speaker 1 (16:37):
This year doing a poem. Oh god, I'm gonna play
Tom Hanks movie clip name the movie? Here you go
number one? Stupid is stupid? Does Miss Blue?
Speaker 2 (16:52):
Pretty easy?
Speaker 1 (16:53):
Huh?
Speaker 2 (16:54):
Here's another one? Pretty easy?
Speaker 1 (17:00):
The way good good. Tom Hanks is sixty nine years
old today, almost seventy years old. That's crazy. I don't
know what's crazy. You're Brad Pippyan's sixty your Tom Hanks
being seventy. Yeah, both crazy or us also getting older?
Who knew? He was born July ninth, nineteen fifty six
in Concord, California. Maybe our greatest American actor. There's a few,
(17:22):
but of our generation, there's a few. So I will
play you with Tom Hanks clip. We'll see who can
last the longest. Amy Lunchbox Eddie Ready to Go Ready
clip number one from nineteen ninety two.
Speaker 2 (17:34):
There's no crying.
Speaker 1 (17:37):
There's no crying baseball, and I'm in.
Speaker 2 (17:43):
I'm in for the Wind.
Speaker 5 (17:44):
Amy, league of their own, lunchbox.
Speaker 2 (17:46):
A league of their own, A league of their own.
Speaker 1 (17:48):
Correct one, Tom Hanks movie down number two, Houston, we
have a problem. Play it again, Houston, we have a problem.
I mean, I'm in for the wind.
Speaker 2 (18:02):
Didn't realize who was in this movie?
Speaker 1 (18:06):
What Amy's struggling.
Speaker 6 (18:09):
It's like, I know I have it in my brain.
Speaker 1 (18:14):
You've probably even seen it. Just chase it down, chase
it down, got it? What do you have?
Speaker 5 (18:18):
Chased it? Apollo?
Speaker 1 (18:22):
What did you write down?
Speaker 5 (18:23):
Apollo?
Speaker 6 (18:26):
You just have apollow yep, because I chased it down
and I know it's Apollo thirteen, but you just have
a I only wrote a follow.
Speaker 5 (18:32):
It's fine, honest. Yeah, good for.
Speaker 1 (18:35):
You for your honesty. You're rewarded with nothing, but we
trust you next time. Okay, So good.
Speaker 5 (18:41):
Job, thank you.
Speaker 1 (18:42):
You're out there, lunchwaks. Apollo thirteen, Eddie a follow thirteen, right,
and you got no benefit what so everybody you might
as well just lie. Okay, So Amy's out.
Speaker 2 (18:53):
Next one.
Speaker 12 (18:54):
I've delivered a million passages over forty years in the air,
but in the end I'm gonna be judge on two
hundred and eight seconds.
Speaker 1 (19:02):
I'm going to play it again, name the Tom Hanks movie.
Here's the clip again.
Speaker 12 (19:07):
I've delivered a million passages over forty years in the air,
but in the end, I'm going to be judged on
two hundred and eight seconds.
Speaker 1 (19:15):
I'm in.
Speaker 2 (19:16):
I hope this is the name of it? Is it
just that name? Or is there the are you in?
Speaker 1 (19:29):
Are you on the toilet there? What are you doing?
Speaker 3 (19:31):
I'm trying to decide if I want to leave that
first board in front of his name.
Speaker 1 (19:34):
I need an answer, lunchbox captain solely Eddie. I wrote
down just Sully. The answer is just Sally. You are
a big Tom. Thanks guy, though, Yeah.
Speaker 2 (19:48):
I've never seen that movie. Is that a good movie?
Speaker 1 (19:49):
I mean it's fine.
Speaker 2 (19:51):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (19:51):
He was not that nice to me when I met
him one Sally. Yeah, so I protested boycott. You know.
He wasn't nice to a couple people that day.
Speaker 4 (20:00):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (20:00):
Yeah, maybe maybe's had a bad day. Maybe maybe, Uh
what that game a quicker on? I thought you want
to hear it. You'll try three more eddies.
Speaker 2 (20:06):
Let you go all right?
Speaker 1 (20:07):
Next for this that's toy story.
Speaker 2 (20:12):
Correct?
Speaker 1 (20:13):
Next, what I mean face I have aids? Oh? Whoa
uh Philadelphia?
Speaker 2 (20:22):
Correct?
Speaker 11 (20:24):
Next, on the day of my judgment, when I stand
before Dawn and he asks me, why did I did
I kill one of his true miracles?
Speaker 1 (20:35):
What am I going to say?
Speaker 2 (20:37):
Who?
Speaker 1 (20:37):
I just got chills? That's a green mile good. This
is your category. I think I've seen them all except
like one or two? Next one.
Speaker 5 (20:49):
Chill.
Speaker 4 (20:49):
Business.
Speaker 1 (20:50):
To achieve truly.
Speaker 11 (20:51):
Great things, one must make truly great sacrifices.
Speaker 1 (20:54):
You will have to be free of any entanglement. You see,
my boy, show business is small.
Speaker 12 (20:59):
Business, and the fans need to believe that you are
always available.
Speaker 1 (21:05):
That's right. There is Elvis. Yeah, I didn't like that role.
Oh you don't like him as a as a colonel? No,
we felt like he's a carnival man. I love it
like no teeth Keithbox's mentor, Yeah.
Speaker 2 (21:17):
Mentory old coach?
Speaker 4 (21:20):
Uh?
Speaker 2 (21:20):
Confident friends? What confident? What you know? What you call him?
Speaker 5 (21:27):
Like?
Speaker 2 (21:27):
When you talk to someone confident?
Speaker 1 (21:31):
You know what I'm talking about?
Speaker 2 (21:32):
What are you saying?
Speaker 1 (21:35):
I don't know?
Speaker 2 (21:35):
How do you say it?
Speaker 1 (21:37):
Confidant?
Speaker 2 (21:39):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (21:39):
Confidant? Confident? Confident is if you have confident. Confidant is
somebody that.
Speaker 3 (21:48):
I thought maybe it was the same thing. Confidant using
a sentence no teeth, Keiths is my confidant when I
need advice that works. Confidant. That sounds weird to say,
like that does sounds like it from another country when.
Speaker 1 (22:03):
You say it sounds weird too, because now he's like
you put extra emphasis on dawn again.
Speaker 2 (22:07):
Confident.
Speaker 1 (22:08):
Yeah, that sounds that's good. Yeah, he's a confident, a
person with whom once here is a secret. Oh, there's
no hold on, hold on talking about he was your confident.
Speaker 2 (22:19):
There's no secrets except for just he's amazing.
Speaker 1 (22:22):
There you go, and that's not a secret.
Speaker 3 (22:24):
That's not a secret. America knows, the world knows what
amazing person he is.
Speaker 1 (22:29):
One more, one more with Tom Hanks, Guad.
Speaker 13 (22:31):
There's a million tiny little things when you add to
them all up, it just meant that we were supposed
to be together. And I knew it, and I knew
it the very first time I touched her. It's like
coming home, only to know home I'd ever known. I
was just taking her hand to help her out of
a car, and I knew it.
Speaker 5 (22:48):
He whistling, that's.
Speaker 1 (22:51):
The magic dude. All these are giving me chill bumps.
That's sleepless in Seattle. That's correct. It's time for the good.
Speaker 5 (23:01):
News, Bobby.
Speaker 1 (23:07):
Last week, while visiting Crater of Diamond State Park in
Murphy's Borough, Arkansas, a place in lunchbox has been and Abby,
they dug forever and found nothing. This couple discovered a
three point three six carrot white diamond.
Speaker 5 (23:19):
Wow point three.
Speaker 2 (23:20):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (23:21):
Scott and Jennifer Fradis of Tampa found the diamond after
just three buckets of sifting. How many buckets you guys sipped? Oh?
Speaker 2 (23:29):
Like ten thousand bucket? It was so tedious. I mean,
I mean, I can't even tell you.
Speaker 3 (23:35):
I mean we sifted through because it was just dirt
and dirt and it's all over my face and I
was sweating and I found nothing.
Speaker 1 (23:42):
Ye Abby, ten thousand buckets. There's the guy draining a
little bit.
Speaker 5 (23:45):
I mean, that could be accurate.
Speaker 1 (23:47):
There was a lot, so they found this three point
three six carrot white diamond. The diamond, which is a
lot bigger than the park's average of people when they
do find them, is estimated to be worth a bunch
of money. The park, which is the only public diamond
search site in the US US averages one to two
diamonds per.
Speaker 2 (24:02):
Day day day there won and he found we were there.
Speaker 1 (24:06):
You got to go back one spot. You talked to
everybody that was there.
Speaker 2 (24:09):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (24:09):
I was talking to people by hey, and there was
people that had diamonds from over the years, and they
had them in a little boxes and they were showing them.
I'm like, do you have that many diamonds? You haven't
sold them? No, it's just for the memories. No, not
for the memories.
Speaker 1 (24:22):
I mean every they could be holding them to for
like investments something later, well, like an engagement ring.
Speaker 2 (24:28):
Forty years they've been there, going there every memories. Yeah,
forty years.
Speaker 1 (24:32):
Oh my gosh, does it make you want to go back?
Speaker 2 (24:34):
No?
Speaker 1 (24:35):
Even they d two diamonds.
Speaker 3 (24:38):
I drove by it on the way to Texas, and
I was like, man, what if I just swung over.
Speaker 1 (24:44):
There in twenty minutes and got a diamond real quick?
Twenty minutes for a diamond. Anyway, Congratulations to the couple.
That's what it's all about. That was telling me something good.
This is a crazy story, but all these felt crazy
to me. This guy was on a motorcycle. He stopped
and took a selfie with a cub and then you
get mauled by the mom by the cub.
Speaker 2 (25:06):
I'm like, well, that's no cup.
Speaker 1 (25:07):
If you give me up by a cub, that's kind
of on you, little bear. But the mom got He
was riding his motorcycle and so he gets a selfie
with the cub and the mom bear attacks him, drags
him into a ravine. And we don't do a lot
of stories where people die, but if we can prevent
other people from taking pictures with wild animals, don't do it.
Speaker 2 (25:29):
Dude.
Speaker 1 (25:29):
I gotta say, like, it will be cool though all
those stories, I feel like I would do that me too.
Some of them, like the elk and stuff will be like.
Speaker 5 (25:34):
Look, yes, you get this reminder.
Speaker 1 (25:38):
I think I do it for me though, now that
I talk about it. So police and emergency services in
a joint statement that tourists had alerted them to the attack.
That's crazy because he was gone and missing, and they
went searching for him and they found a series of
pictures on a Facebook page that he had and he
was taking a picture with a bear cubs and then
(26:01):
after that the mom bear got him.
Speaker 2 (26:04):
Yeah, here's the bear.
Speaker 1 (26:05):
And then and he posted a video how beautiful it's
coming towards me. Oh gosh, And that was up and
you see the the bear behind him with a thumbs up.
He's got his helmet on and the thumbs up. And
then mom, bear just got I'm about to attack.
Speaker 2 (26:16):
Guys.
Speaker 1 (26:18):
Don't take pictures with wild animals. Yeah, that's it. I know,
it sounds easy. I know. And you know what, and
I may not listen to my own advice here all
the time. I may just judge while I'm there, Like,
but this guy probably thought that's a small bear. And
by the way, he's not hugging the bear. The bear
is like five feet behind him. He's like, look, boo
(26:39):
got him. So that was the first story. I brought
it up.
Speaker 5 (26:42):
To his name, do we know it?
Speaker 1 (26:45):
Omar?
Speaker 5 (26:45):
Okay? So yeah, remember Omar.
Speaker 1 (26:50):
I didn't know Omar.
Speaker 11 (26:51):
I know.
Speaker 2 (26:54):
Amal, remember it?
Speaker 5 (26:56):
Omar okay?
Speaker 1 (26:57):
Oh Omar? The same no to the selfie, say no
for oh marre we go, Just say no mare, we
got there. Just say no more. And we're not laughing
at that. He doesn't knew monic device has helped me
a lot of times. Just say no more. That's right.
Here's another one. This is from the Smoking Gun. This
(27:18):
guy's fifty years old, lives in Kentucky. He won one
hundred and sixty seven million dollars in a powerball jackpod
in April of twenty twenty five. The guy is a
convicted felon with a sixteen page long rap sheet and
he hits it. Then he hits the lottery for one
sixty seven. He can't keep. That's again, there's no loss sense.
If you're a felon and you've done every you're out
of jail, you get the money. But he got arrested
like two days after he won. Wouldn't you just the general?
Speaker 5 (27:40):
What did you get arrested for?
Speaker 1 (27:41):
Celeb so shortly after claiming his prize, his seventy seven
year old mom, with whom he said he'd split the winnings.
He what did he do? It doesn't say you say,
get arrested.
Speaker 2 (27:53):
Yeah, I think he like punched the cup.
Speaker 1 (27:55):
And uh, that's a party, like not a party i'd
like to be a part of. But that guy's going hard,
like he's probably partying hard. Did he punch the cop
because he was drunk with his winnings?
Speaker 3 (28:04):
I'm pretty sure he was drunk and maybe he got
in a fight with his girlfriend or something. He was
down in Florida, I believe was where he got arrested.
He went down to Florida without telling his prolloffs. I
guess yeah, Okay, so he may have that money, but
he may be back in the pen.
Speaker 1 (28:15):
He spent most of his times in his life in
county jails in Florida and Kentucky. He was a persistent
felony offender with a thirty five year criminal history spanning
at least nine Kentucky counties. His rap sheet involves violent assaults,
drug trafficking, bribery, smuggling, weapons charges, even implicated his mom
and a drug scheme. He won one hundred and six
(28:36):
to seven million dollars a lottery winner.
Speaker 2 (28:38):
Did they give?
Speaker 1 (28:40):
Did the wrong person get blessed? Did they miss it
by one those lottery gods?
Speaker 6 (28:46):
If this helps lunchbox any It's like, yeah, the Karmel
people can actually wins.
Speaker 2 (28:52):
Gotta be nice for people to win. I'm not true.
Speaker 1 (28:55):
Good point, right, Remember what's his name? No, mar this is?
This guy's name is James Farthing, a fifty year old
from Kato. He wanted one hundred and sixty seven million dollars.
Speaker 2 (29:07):
He probably got arrested.
Speaker 1 (29:09):
That's crazy promptly though, But he's been arrested so much.
That's just a normal part of his day. Did they
say when he gets out. It doesn't say that what
he did was significant that would keep him in for
a long time. But if you have such a long history,
they keep you on longer because you're an idiot and
you keep getting arrested.
Speaker 5 (29:26):
Did he choose the lump sum?
Speaker 1 (29:28):
It doesn't say anything. I was reading a story though
about the two billion dollar winter a few years ago,
and he's like in his thirties or something, and he
won two billion bucks. So he took the lump sum,
which was like one points on the billion. Then after taxes,
it was like eight hundred and sixty million, so he
had eight sixty I'm just doing rough math here. And
he bought like a forty million dollar mansion, a twenty
(29:49):
million dollar mansion, but all these massive houses, bought all
these crazy cars, and I know what you're thinking, but
it ain't true. He still got tons of money. Yeah,
oh yeah, so richvestments. You know, I don't know that
he invested anything. But he doesn't even need investments like
he has that much money that he did, all that,
he spent all that on all those properties, and he
still had like five hundred million dollars left.
Speaker 2 (30:11):
I remember that, dude. Yeah, Yeah, lucky people.
Speaker 1 (30:16):
So what's up? Why did the guy with all the
criminal history win the lottery lunchbox?
Speaker 3 (30:21):
I'm trying to figure that out. Oh oh, I've thought
about it, and I think maybe but he bought the
ticket because he said he'd split it with his mom,
maybe his second Maybe the lottery gods are saying, look, man,
it's time to go straight. Like you struggled for so long,
you were doing all wrong. This is your one chance.
And two days later he's like, we'll.
Speaker 1 (30:42):
Pay you one hundred and sixty seven million dollars to
not commit crimes. That's a job I'd like to have.
Speaker 3 (30:47):
Yeah, And then he couldn't even do it. Two days later,
he's committing crimes allegedly.
Speaker 1 (30:51):
What if you commit a crime, if this go because
you've tried other things other winners have done, you go
and commit a crime and then buy a lottery ticket
right after?
Speaker 3 (30:59):
Okay, try dude. Well what says you had an altercation
with a police officer?
Speaker 2 (31:02):
So I'm gonna try that. Let us know how it goes.
Speaker 1 (31:05):
Get back with this. Bride put all the plus size
that's what they say, plus size wedding guests at one table.
Speaker 5 (31:12):
Okay, I saw this. This is crazy.
Speaker 6 (31:15):
Did she did the news article dub it the weight
watcher's table.
Speaker 5 (31:18):
Or she did?
Speaker 1 (31:19):
What did she think?
Speaker 9 (31:20):
So?
Speaker 1 (31:20):
Okay, that's crazy. Yeah, so I'll give you the story. Then.
I'm glad you've seen this from the New York Post
under the guys of body Positivity, A bride zilla set
all of her plus sized guests, including chunky close relatives,
at a table labeled weight watchers. Oh my goodness.
Speaker 5 (31:41):
That she labeled the table that.
Speaker 1 (31:42):
Yeah, I don't think we watch her sponsoring it.
Speaker 5 (31:44):
I don't think they were all she didn't know if
that was part of the article.
Speaker 1 (31:48):
I want to hear more. Thank you for asking. I'd
like to give you more. What a bad Okay, I
don't know if she's a bad person, but this feels
like the texture of something that feels like a bad person, right, yeah,
or like somebody around Yeah. Okay, my sister sat me
at a table specifically reserved for overweight people at a
wedding reception. The bride's older sibling, a thirty two year
old woman virtually known as Basic dash Donut twenty nine
(32:11):
oh three. Okay, that's also funny. Their hands Basic Donut
as a screen name, and her idd got a new
screen name to write about being put at the weight
watching table. But yeah, I hear you, I hear you.
After assisting her little sister in perfecting all the big
day arrangements, the outraged sister was stunned learn she had
been sequestered to the heavy set seating area.
Speaker 5 (32:34):
What this is so crazy too, quo quote.
Speaker 1 (32:38):
I go to find my table and I swear to
God the little name card says weight Watchers wrote Basic
Donut twenty nine oh three not a cute table name
or a funny inside joke, just weight watchers. I thought
maybe I misread something. This is so absurd, it's almost inhumane,
which is why it seems funny, because it's like something
in a comedy movie.
Speaker 6 (32:59):
Not real, right, Like I almost am like were she
was she trying to get national attention, you know.
Speaker 5 (33:05):
Like I trying to create something?
Speaker 1 (33:07):
What nobody that's funny?
Speaker 5 (33:09):
It was so funny at all.
Speaker 6 (33:11):
Like I just was thinking, was she trying to do
something that would land her a news story.
Speaker 1 (33:15):
I pulled my sister aside and asked her what the
heck is this about? And she literally laughed. Noting that
she is the only member of her immediate family who's plump,
She goes, oh, God, don't be so sensitive. I just
thought I'd be more comfortable if people were with the
others like them. What it's a body positively, this is terrible.
Speaker 2 (33:31):
It's terrible.
Speaker 1 (33:33):
Man. It was the bride's way of turning a positive
into a negative, she thought.
Speaker 5 (33:37):
So was the bride like fat phobic or something.
Speaker 3 (33:39):
No, she said she wanted to feel more comfortable because, like,
if you're the.
Speaker 5 (33:42):
With their own kind, she well, yeah, yeah, like.
Speaker 3 (33:45):
Skinny people to the table. Are you sitting there going, oh, man,
I feel out.
Speaker 6 (33:48):
Of living at a wedding and you're having a good time,
you don't need to worry about how somebody like I
can't even.
Speaker 5 (33:55):
Wrap my head around this.
Speaker 6 (33:56):
And then and then the person that's marrying her is like,
this is normal, let's get married. Or did he was
even aware that she had a weight watcher's table?
Speaker 1 (34:06):
My assumption, I'm going to do full assumption here because
would he doesn't know of the weight watcher's table, but
he knows that she's like that. Could you don't marry
somebody that does a weight watcher table without knowing they're
like that? And like that can mean a bunch of things,
but like that, that is one of the craziest stories
I've read in a long time. They had a like
an obese table.
Speaker 2 (34:28):
Did they have different food or anything? There's a trough?
Speaker 1 (34:34):
Like she did everything insulting is completely crazy.
Speaker 5 (34:38):
She disguised it under body positivity.
Speaker 1 (34:41):
It's just like because she wanted them to do with
their own kind right.
Speaker 6 (34:44):
That would be like could you imagine if someone put
like at their wedding all the certain races at each
table because feeling same thing?
Speaker 5 (34:54):
I mean, there have like a kid's table. That's the
only thing that's appropriate.
Speaker 6 (34:58):
Like that's the only time that you like segregate as
like adults from children.
Speaker 1 (35:05):
I'm kind of for kids' rights or what can.
Speaker 6 (35:07):
You imagine sexuality or something like people have lost here.
Speaker 2 (35:12):
But it's her sister.
Speaker 1 (35:13):
She did it to her sister too, so yeah, she's
lost her mind by doing that table. But she also
put her sister at the table, and which is like
double bad.
Speaker 6 (35:19):
And you don't even know you go through the whole ceremony,
thinking like everything's fine. You're at this wedding and you
don't even know till the reception when you're like, oh,
I wonder where my seat was?
Speaker 1 (35:28):
Why does this table only have five chairs? And then
she told the sister like, you've been too sensitive. Yeah,
that's wrong with you.
Speaker 5 (35:34):
Oh that's the worst thing to anybody at any time.
Speaker 2 (35:37):
But relaxed.
Speaker 3 (35:41):
Could it Could it be that maybe this table is
away from the dance floor that way when the camera
is shooting, they're not taking up every picture, like maybe
I can't.
Speaker 1 (35:55):
And that's a stupid justification. However, I would say that
you're you don't have the table anyway, regardless before the
table is. If you don't have the table, there's not
the table is not close for it's not in the pictures,
like you don't have the table.
Speaker 3 (36:11):
Yeah, because I'm thinking that maybe they were thinking, if
we look back at all our pictures and we don't
want the bigger table, but the.
Speaker 1 (36:17):
Bigger table shouldn't exist, is my point, regardless close, middle.
Speaker 2 (36:19):
Or far away.
Speaker 1 (36:20):
Yeah, And you're drawing more attention to the bigger table.
Speaker 3 (36:23):
And it was our sister what her sister is bigger?
She has to be at the bigger table. That would
be like if she excluded her sister from the bigger table,
I'd be like, why'd your sister get special privilege and the.
Speaker 1 (36:34):
Fact that she named it Wait watchers, yeah yeah, yeah,
Like that dude is marrying her again, he is in
for a treat.
Speaker 5 (36:43):
Unless he's equally as obnoxious.
Speaker 1 (36:46):
If it was his idea, they found the perfect they're
perfect for each other. All right, all right, here's a voicemail.
Speaker 4 (36:54):
So I've been busting but at work, and I think
I'm gonna ask for a raise.
Speaker 9 (36:59):
I already see some money for the job I do,
but I think I deserve more. I do really well
at my job. I don't break anything and I don't
ever get complained about. So I just want to know
what do you guys think.
Speaker 2 (37:10):
I should do? Do I have the awkward conversation with
my boss? Please give me some advice. Love the show.
Speaker 1 (37:15):
It is an awkward conversation if you have to have it.
But this is what I would suggest you do. Number one,
when you have the conversation, or if you're going pre conversation,
like have proof, like be prepared with proof for what
you do. That would constitute you getting a raise, have
specific examples of your value. In the end, you will
(37:37):
only get a raise if it costs more to replace you.
That's the truth of it. You'll only get a raise
if they're like, well, if he ends up leaving, it's
going to cost us more to get somebody new than
it would be to keep them. So what you need
to do is have proof first of all. Secondly, know
your number. Never go into a raise situation and say,
(37:58):
I think that is O a raise. Do you think okay?
I think no, I think a nickel. So go in
with what you know is your number. So you're gonna
notice here a lot of things are very direct. So
go in with your value. Go in with your number,
and also be very confident. But don't be cocky. If
(38:19):
you're cocky, again, if it's on the fence and I
can hire somebody cheaper to do exactly the kind of
work that you're doing, again, it's business, so I'm probably
not gonna keep you. So but be confident and that
this is what I do and this is why I
deserve it. So have the conversation. I would even send
an email to go, hey, I'd like to have a
(38:41):
conversation regarding a raise. Here are the points I plan
to bring up. And yes, they can plan against you
and go, well, i'll counter this, but if they want
to do that anyway, uh, maybe you start looking around.
So you just need to be very direct and express
why you deserve a raise. But just know when you
open that little box up, there's a chance, and I
(39:02):
hope you ask for it. You should ask for it,
but there's a chance though they're like no, And then
you got to make your next decision. Do you go
back to work, tell it between your legs? Do you
look for a new job? Like that's a part of it.
So if you don't ask for a raise, you're never
going to get a raise. You may get a cost
a living raise because that could be standard in whatever
with the company you work with. If you don't ask
(39:23):
for it, you're not going to get it. Then, yes,
it's very awkward, but it's not as awkward for the
person having the conversation from the giving the raise as
the person asking for the raise. Oh totally, because I
have that conversation four or five times a year. You
may have that conversation once every three years, once every
four or five years, So it feels way more awkward.
(39:44):
To you. That would be my advice as somebody who
has had to have these conversations. I mean, then you
want to add.
Speaker 5 (39:50):
To that, I just agree with having a number before
you go in.
Speaker 1 (39:53):
Yeah, no, no, no.
Speaker 6 (39:55):
The number and then just say it with confidence and
then pause. Don't You don't have to like over explain
or say anything else, like, just say the number and
be confident in it, because that's the scary part.
Speaker 1 (40:05):
You need data and also know if it's cheaper to
hire somebody else in your place, that's a risky run. Yeah,
because it's not your cousin, it's not your dad, it's business.
And as Eddie read in the book to Four Agreements,
I haven't read that yet. Oh I gave that to you.
What does it say? Tell me? You know the part
about nothing of business is personal because it's you.
Speaker 2 (40:24):
Never that part?
Speaker 1 (40:25):
No, no, no, no, okay, hey, good luck, except.
Speaker 5 (40:27):
For it feels personal, it does.
Speaker 1 (40:32):
I know.
Speaker 5 (40:32):
That was the part of the Four Agreements that I
struggle with it, just like.
Speaker 2 (40:35):
God, have you read it?
Speaker 5 (40:36):
Yes, a long, long, long, long long. I'm just but
I am a sensitive creature.
Speaker 6 (40:45):
Whoever who's emailing, Yeah, you're probably not a sensitive was me?
Speaker 5 (40:49):
So you're good.
Speaker 1 (40:50):
Yeah, email, This is what I want to do. This
is why I think I deserve it. Let's have the conversation,
prepare them for it, and be very direct, not me,
not angry, not defensive, be very direct. And you also
might get a no, but you might get a yes
or you might get a yes.
Speaker 5 (41:06):
And nothing in business is personal. It just feels that way.
Speaker 1 (41:10):
All right, Good luck, buddy, It's time for the good news.
Speaker 3 (41:18):
There's a guy in Minnesota that's trying to help people
in his community.
Speaker 2 (41:22):
It's like, how can I give them money in a
fun way?
Speaker 3 (41:25):
So he started doing things online called loot drops, and
he is known as mister Minnesota loot Drops. He takes
money to the bottom of something and then he leaves
clues online and lets the community goes search for it.
Speaker 2 (41:39):
And no one knows who he is.
Speaker 1 (41:41):
That's fine. I saw on TikTok a guy that and
he did this for his own financial reasons too. But
he made this book and in this book it gives
clueses to where he's hitting all this stuff like a
Michael Jordan Rookie card like m rolled like all over
the country and you have to buy the book. In
the books like nineteen ninety nine or something. But then
(42:02):
it gives you clues to where and go and find
the things. That was a pretty good idea by him.
Like he invested the money and putting all this expensive
stuff in places and then he sells the book to
people to find the clues.
Speaker 6 (42:12):
And like there's confirmed, like he really puts stuff somewhere.
Speaker 2 (42:15):
That's a great question.
Speaker 1 (42:17):
He just makes it hilarious, hilarious. I don't have the
confirmation personally, but I believe it because he was the
one talking to you guys like, yeah, I've hit all
this stuff, and he was. But he's doing that for
money after it was fun. But this guy's doing it
just for like helping the community.
Speaker 2 (42:31):
Yeah, he's not even.
Speaker 3 (42:32):
Rich, he says, he's just doing it because he thought
it's a fun way to give money back to his
community and it brings the community together. Mister Minnesota loop
drop taping money. So wherever you sit down people, whenever
you're selling, Now, I don't grab.
Speaker 1 (42:45):
Underneath tables all the time. That's good one. Now, that's
what it's all about. That was telling me something good.
Over to Amy with the Morning, Corny, Corny.
Speaker 6 (43:00):
Why does James Bond love to barbecue. Does James Bond
love to barbecue because he has a license to grill?
Speaker 1 (43:12):
That was the morning corny to think about that. That's
James mind is so old? License to kill? Yeah, yeah, no,
I got it. I know I got it.
Speaker 2 (43:21):
That's all that man came out in like nineties.
Speaker 1 (43:24):
I mean I know it like came out again maybe
before the night. You got any Wizard of Jokes over
there the Honeymooners or he got over.
Speaker 5 (43:32):
There, well, Eddie got it.
Speaker 1 (43:33):
Licensed to kill. The actual movie was nineteen eighty nine.
It wasn't even born.
Speaker 11 (43:42):
Wake up, Wake up in the morn.
Speaker 2 (43:46):
And the radio, the Dodgors.
Speaker 6 (43:52):
Ready lunchbox, mor game too, Steve Bred haven't trying to
put you through buck He's riding this week.
Speaker 4 (44:00):
Next bit.
Speaker 1 (44:00):
Nobody's on the mix.
Speaker 8 (44:02):
So you knowing this.
Speaker 4 (44:08):
About it all?
Speaker 1 (44:10):
All right, let's go to the voicemails.
Speaker 7 (44:11):
I wanted to get your all's opinion on my wife
falls asleep as we're watching the shows, and so i'll
finish the episode. What's sort of the cutoff before you
cheated on your wife? Two episodes? Three episodes, or if
you just go the whole show. Thanks love the show.
Speaker 1 (44:30):
That's a great question. There's a nuance to that question.
I appreciate that if my wife and I are watching
a show, which we have, and she's falling asleep, if
there's half of the show left, or if I'm falling asleep,
one of us will go, I tap out, turn the
show off. If there's more than half the show left,
we will turn the show off. We kind of have
a rule if there's like ten minutes left and the
(44:52):
person's falling asleep, the rule is, Hey, I'm falling asleep,
you go and finish this episode. I'll watch the other
ten minutes tomorrow or the next day. So there is
definitely the equator. When you go over the equator, you
can go and finish it. But if it's in the
first half of it, we don't. We stopped the show completely,
So that'd be my answer.
Speaker 5 (45:14):
Yeah, you can't.
Speaker 2 (45:16):
I can't keep going.
Speaker 1 (45:17):
You also can't keep going. So you're awake enough to
tell him like, hey, I'm falling oh yeah, or well
she often is able to go, hey, I'm falling asleep
with me. She'll look over and I'm asleep, right, You're gone.
Yeah with me, I fall asleep. So I kind of
count on her to watch me, which is very selfish,
but I kind of count to watch me if i'm
but also apparently I start twitching, I fall asleep, so
(45:39):
she kind of knows because I'm twitching. But I would
say in a relationship, there's an understanding end. But what
point you can continue and finish. The other person will
catch up. You can't do a whole other episode or
two episodes like that's against all rules. Uh go with
Rick in.
Speaker 4 (45:53):
California, Lunchbox's wife watching Traders season three without him. I
don't know if this makes it difference. That show premiered
January ninth, twenty twenty five, so it's been out for
six months. He probably should have expressed a desire within
the last six months that he wanted to watch it.
Don't you think it's just my thoughts?
Speaker 2 (46:15):
No, I think a.
Speaker 1 (46:16):
Lunchbox if you guys had the deal to watch the
show regardless of when it came out, it's a together show.
Speaker 3 (46:20):
Yeah, because we were in the middle Survivor, and we
usually do one show at a time, and Survivor was
coming out every week. We were watching Survivor and maybe
something else catching up on Squid Games, so there was
no talk of it being out. We're like when it
was coming out, we're like, oh, it's about to come out.
But then we didn't really mention it after that, and
she went ahead and watched it without me.
Speaker 2 (46:38):
I don't care if it was out a year ago.
Speaker 1 (46:40):
Dirty Dog Yeah, get you dirty dog, mean.
Speaker 2 (46:42):
Get fired out. She did dirty Dog me.
Speaker 1 (46:44):
It was so rude in that Rob And I'd love
to take his wife side on this because I like
to be in that position, but no, that's on her,
and she did you wrong. She did really dirty, like
very Just are you guys now back on the same
same place?
Speaker 3 (46:56):
I mean, we're on the same place because I still
don't have a show that I can really revenge you
watch without her yet?
Speaker 1 (47:01):
Perfect, So you're looking for a show that she wants
to see so you can jump ahead.
Speaker 2 (47:05):
I really am.
Speaker 3 (47:06):
I want to get in there and watch it and
be like, oh so I already watched that, but there's
not one right now?
Speaker 1 (47:12):
You like that show. I never watched Traders. It's really good.
It's so fun.
Speaker 3 (47:17):
Like just the dynamic of the first season was really
cool because they did reality people with normal people, so
people that never played reality shows, and I mean, they
were getting their feelings hurt when the reality people would
lie to them, and then they brought all reality show.
And I don't even know what third season is because
I haven't seen it. My wife could tell.
Speaker 1 (47:33):
You, good point. Yeah, it doesn't matter if it came
out five years ago or a week ago. If you
watch it together, you should talk about it before one
starts the season.
Speaker 2 (47:44):
Yeah, and her excuse to you was, oh, I just
you know. I didn't think you wanted to watch it, but.
Speaker 1 (47:50):
Let us know what you revenge watch. I can't wait,
man me either man I'm coming or he's coming. That's
right on the Bobby Bones Show.
Speaker 5 (47:57):
Now, Trisha, here would are.
Speaker 1 (48:00):
People are used to you where they don't in your
hometown here now and I won't say bother, that's not
the word. They don't make you extra busy if you're
go into town.
Speaker 14 (48:08):
Yeah, it's really interesting because because Garth and I do
everything ourselves, it's not rare to see us at the
grocery store. And I think that's when people like if
you never go out and do stuff, I think that's
when you do it becomes a bigger deal.
Speaker 5 (48:19):
But it's interesting to me.
Speaker 14 (48:21):
He and I can be We'll just take the grocery
store for an example, we can go there one hundred
times and ninety nine times it'll be chill, and then
that one day it'll just be autographs, some pictures, And
I don't know why that is. I don't know if
it's Sometimes it's like, man, my friend Deb says, she
sees you guys in here all.
Speaker 5 (48:38):
The time, and I've never seen you.
Speaker 14 (48:39):
Kind of get my picture and then that kind of
starts the ball rolling, which probably that happens to you too.
And most of the time people just want to tell
you they love your music, or with me, they'll want
to say, you know, hey, I'm making this recipe for
blah blah blah, and my husband's a diabetic, can you recommend?
Speaker 5 (48:51):
See, So there's a whole lot of different questions.
Speaker 1 (48:53):
Now, Amy, on my show, we were talking about you
on the air, and she said talking about something from
the Bluebird and she said, you know, Church said that
when she starts, I did that. She was just kind
of told to sing these songs that and I'm paraphrasing,
so you can tell me if I'm wrong. And she said,
but you know, now this new album, this new project
she has, she's actually writing some of the songs, and
I was like, I did not know that.
Speaker 14 (49:11):
How accurate is that the writing the part is accurate?
I wasn't told to sing the songs. But I was
not a confident songwriter. So I picked every song I recorded,
and so I don't look back and go, man, I
would not have recorded She's Alone with the Boy. When
I was in college at Belmont, I had a guy
tell me that I was not a songwriter.
Speaker 5 (49:27):
I believed it.
Speaker 14 (49:28):
And so when I did write some in the early nineties,
and I never recorded anything that I wrote, but I
just didn't. When I went to work with Growth Fundus,
I never said, Hey, I'd like to write some for
this project. It just never occuraged me to even say it.
He wouldn't have said no, you can't. But I didn't
believe in myself, and so anytime anybody would say they
wanted to write with me, I'd be like, oh, you
don't want to write with me. I'm I'm not really
a writer. And something just happened where the switch flipped
(49:52):
a couple of years ago, and I was like, this guy, who,
bless his heart, you know, probably doesn't even remember. He
said it didn't mean anything to him, but apparently it's
suck with me. But I just kind of said that
doesn't have to be the truth just because somebody else
said it about me, and it just kind of opened
up this whole new world. So it's not a doesn't
take anything away from I mean, I feel so lucky.
I have found the best songs in the world, like
(50:12):
the song Rivers Win and walk Away Joe and She's
in love with the boy. But it's just another level
that I kind of got out of that shell and
was like, that doesn't have to be the truth, and
it's opened up a whole new world for me. I'm
loving it so much. Never intended to make a record
of it. It was really therapy. It was like songs
on my younger self, and I never thought I would.
Speaker 2 (50:30):
Make a record. Did you ever give up the big
dream while you were here?
Speaker 13 (50:33):
No?
Speaker 5 (50:33):
I never did.
Speaker 14 (50:34):
I mean I thought I always believed that this is
what I was supposed to do because I didn't want
to do anything else.
Speaker 5 (50:39):
I didn't have a backup plan.
Speaker 14 (50:40):
I didn't have a well, if I can't be an artist,
I want to be in the music industry. That would
have been a torture to be in the music industry
and not doing this. This was all I ever wanted
to do. I actually during my demo days. One of
the guys that heard me sing this was in the
nineties when or the eighties when paul At Carlson was
the lead singer for how Wan on One. She was
leaving the band and they were auditioning singers to take
(51:03):
her place. And I got asked to audition, and I did,
and I made it to the final couple of people,
and they flew me out to Denver to meet the manager.
Speaker 1 (51:11):
And when I got home, I.
Speaker 14 (51:13):
Thought, I don't know if they're going to offer this
to me or not, but I feel like if I
take it, I'm stepping into a successful group that no
one's going to be able to be paul Atte Carlson
or make people forget that such a successful group. And
then I'm also kind of saying, well, you believed in
yourself your whole life that you could be a solo artist,
but now you're going to give up and do this.
And so I sent a letter and said I'm going
(51:35):
to take myself out of the running Wow, And I did.
And I don't know if they would have offered it
to me or not. I think the way they tell it,
they rejected me. But I don't think that's but that's
not what happened.
Speaker 1 (51:45):
Lobbed Bones show today.
Speaker 2 (51:49):
This story comes to us from the Open Seas.
Speaker 3 (51:52):
A thirty nine year old woman was on a cruise
and she has to post pictures on Instagram. Look at me,
all dressed up, and she has all this fancy jewelry on.
And her employers like, huh, that kind of looks like
the jewelry that she reported got stolen from her store.
Speaker 2 (52:09):
And they bring in the pictures.
Speaker 3 (52:11):
Yep, she had stolen one hundred thousand dollars worth of
jewelry and got busted.
Speaker 2 (52:14):
Posted the selfies on the cruise.
Speaker 1 (52:17):
Dang, I mean, you have them so you can wear them.
It's way supposed to do not post them.
Speaker 3 (52:24):
So when the cruise ship got to port, guess who
was waiting authorities.
Speaker 1 (52:28):
I wonder if she I wonder if she knew the
cops were going to be there when they got off,
or if it's like you call and it's like, don't
say anything about it because she may throw them overboard.
I guess jewelry like swallowing something if you get pulled over.
Speaker 2 (52:41):
Yeah, it was diamonds, silver and gold.
Speaker 1 (52:44):
Like, if I knew the cops were gonna be there
waiting for me when it ended, I would chuck it
all overboard and be like, I don't know what you're
talking about. So they probably said nothing to her, nothing
to her, and when they pulled it, she's like, oh,
wonder while the cops are here pro protect us as
we get off. I can't believe she wore on social media,
probably even think about it, probably just wearing it and
didn't think I'm wearing something I stole and we'll get
in trouble for it. All Right, there you go.
Speaker 2 (53:04):
I'm Lunchbox. That's your bonehead story of the day.
Speaker 1 (53:08):
Does anybody on this show like good news?
Speaker 5 (53:10):
Yes?
Speaker 1 (53:10):
Yeah, great, Lunchbox has good news for us. And he
set it up with who likes good news? And so
I would like to brace everybody. When we talk about
the palette, he usually turned into a fight.
Speaker 5 (53:21):
Okay, if it's good.
Speaker 1 (53:23):
News, then I know I hear you. Is this about
the palette? It's about the palette. But he says, who
wants good news? Lunchbox?
Speaker 2 (53:30):
I mean, who wants good news?
Speaker 4 (53:32):
We want?
Speaker 2 (53:33):
I mean, last time, did I have good news for you?
Or did I have good.
Speaker 1 (53:36):
News for you? By the way, for everybody listening, we
years ago, like literally years ago at this point, we
all put in like seventy bucks and bought this Amazon
returns palette. We didn't know what was on it, no
one does. And then you get it and you sell
it individually. Years go by, and we made like fifty
bucks something like that. Yeah, someone, and it was a
(53:57):
huge fight. Lunchbox, go ahead.
Speaker 2 (53:59):
Yeah, I told you.
Speaker 3 (54:00):
I got the email about someone wanting to buy all
the remaining stuff on the palette. Right, so you guys
want good news, you want sell it.
Speaker 1 (54:10):
He's going he's got he's got like a bag.
Speaker 5 (54:14):
Are the envelopes he's got?
Speaker 1 (54:18):
Okay, oh, payday, pay day. He's throwing out envelopes to everybody. Okay, hold,
I don't say what it is. Don't say what it is.
Speaker 3 (54:28):
Oh my gosh, you're running for some good news.
Speaker 1 (54:32):
Okay, we're all over. He's they're not envelopes. There are
pieces of paper and they're staple.
Speaker 2 (54:37):
That's right.
Speaker 1 (54:38):
And I've opened it and there's one dollar.
Speaker 5 (54:40):
Wait for it, fifty cents.
Speaker 1 (54:42):
Why is only one dollar fifty cents?
Speaker 2 (54:44):
Because I've never heard back from that person. Once I
emailed him.
Speaker 3 (54:47):
But I did sell the like mosquito sprayer big gallon
jug for nine.
Speaker 5 (54:52):
Dollars, so we each got a dollar six.
Speaker 1 (54:54):
So why did you do? Do you want good news? Guys?
This was my point.
Speaker 6 (54:56):
Well, I mean it's good news a dollar they have money?
Speaker 1 (55:00):
Hey, clickbait.
Speaker 2 (55:02):
No we sold another item.
Speaker 1 (55:03):
No, but you did remember when the guy wanted to
buy it all?
Speaker 2 (55:06):
Well I never heard from him.
Speaker 3 (55:08):
Well I thought you guys were gonna think it was that,
and I was not wanting you to get excited about that.
Speaker 1 (55:13):
Click click, make box, click, make.
Speaker 2 (55:15):
More money, more money in your pocket.
Speaker 1 (55:17):
We do appreciate the dollar fifty.
Speaker 2 (55:18):
You get money, keeps the lights on, m.
Speaker 1 (55:26):
It buys me a candle, another cell. Okay, let us
know the more you We don't need a whole production
though every time, Just why don't you just drop it off?
Be like hey guys, here's three bucks.
Speaker 2 (55:35):
No, No, it's it's more exciting when you guys unstaple.
Speaker 1 (55:39):
Not one, it's a dollar fifty. Because then we go
like I saw Amy's face when she opened hers, and
I knew mine was destined for sadness as well.
Speaker 6 (55:45):
Well, I'm just was like, okay, he's stayfoled up these
little things for all of us.
Speaker 1 (55:50):
It's like when you just spend more money packaging it
between the paper and the staples.
Speaker 5 (55:57):
Okay, well everybody, guys, everybody say thank you, thank you, No,
keep it, yes, just say thank you.
Speaker 1 (56:04):
That was worth two dollars in sadness the negative way,
and I got made a dollar yes by everybody on.
Speaker 5 (56:10):
Twitter and Instagram.
Speaker 1 (56:12):
Mister Bobby Bone the Bobby Bones Show theme song, written,
produced and sang by read Yarberry. You can find his
instagram at read Yarberry, Scuba Steve executive producer, Ray Mundo,
head of Production. I'm Bobby Bones. My Instagram is mister
Bobby Bones. Thank you for listening to the podcast.