Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:06):
Hi.
Speaker 2 (00:06):
My husband is a firefighter and I was telling him
about the testosterone stuff, and he was telling.
Speaker 3 (00:12):
Me that a lot of.
Speaker 2 (00:13):
Firefighters actually have low TEE because they don't get good
sleep at night, and when you sleep is when your
body produces testosterone. He said, somebody that he knows had
a testosterone level of forty. If aed he's having trouble sleeping,
maybe he needs to look into the core cause of
that and maybe it'll help.
Speaker 3 (00:30):
Thanks.
Speaker 4 (00:31):
That makes sense. There's a lot of reasons, not a
lot of excuses. Yeah, there's a ten million reasons reasons.
Speaker 1 (00:38):
Now you lost?
Speaker 4 (00:39):
Yeah, regardless, Like why is my regardless solow? I mean
we have some guesses. Just a low tea guy, I think. Man,
that makes sense. Though, lunchbox can sleep.
Speaker 3 (00:48):
Like a rock, so he's producing more.
Speaker 4 (00:50):
Yeah, okay, but still he has more.
Speaker 1 (00:52):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (00:53):
Yeah, I'm not arguing the results. I'm just saying, like,
you know, gotta got it. Are you embarrassed to have
low testosterone? I hope you're not.
Speaker 5 (01:00):
It's not a embarrasscene. It's the fact that every time
I talk to someone, it comes up, and.
Speaker 4 (01:05):
Maybe if it doesn't come up, they know it and
they're looking at you and they want to say it
but they can't. That's what I'm starting to think of.
Speaker 3 (01:10):
Just embrace it all.
Speaker 4 (01:12):
Right, next voicemail, please.
Speaker 6 (01:14):
Lunchbox, you're really out here bragging about beating Eddie. Your
testicles blow up during the day, or one does and
the other one shrinks when you sleep. Who's really struggling
with manhood right now?
Speaker 4 (01:26):
Seriously, that's an injury. I don't think that's fair.
Speaker 7 (01:29):
Yeah, that's not even relevant, Like it's an injury. Something
happened to my body. So there's something going on, and
it's the same one that goes up and goes down.
It's not like one shrinks and the other one.
Speaker 4 (01:39):
That would be weird if one testicle blew on Monday
and the other one blew up on Tuesdays.
Speaker 3 (01:43):
Yea way, And I think it'd definitely be worse if
the problem was one's getting really really small, right.
Speaker 7 (01:49):
Yeah yeah, yeah, So I think the desktops room is
stuck there.
Speaker 4 (01:53):
So if anything one has anymore, yeah, it's you. Guys
can leave us voicemail any time. Eight seven, seven seventy seven, Bobby,
that's our phone number. What did you do yesterday?
Speaker 3 (02:06):
I recorded some spots after I left this show. And
then what did I do on Tuesday?
Speaker 8 (02:13):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (02:13):
I had to make some videos at home, like for
work though here I guess I was supposed to do
them before I left, but I didn't, so I had
to do them at home.
Speaker 4 (02:20):
Anything non worky.
Speaker 3 (02:23):
Read my book. I don't know.
Speaker 4 (02:25):
Wow, pretty pretty easy day.
Speaker 3 (02:27):
Oh went to dinner.
Speaker 4 (02:28):
Okay, now we're getting somewhere ticke us.
Speaker 3 (02:29):
Okay, well, I can't remember all the things that I do,
but you buried the lead. Went to dinner. Now y'all
are thinking I went on a date.
Speaker 4 (02:39):
Well, I don't know. When I say, what'd you do?
And you said commercials at work? Like nobody cares about that.
Speaker 3 (02:44):
No, I went, okay, are you getting out? I went
to eat with Stevenson and we went to Chewi's and
then there was.
Speaker 4 (02:48):
Like I'm not getting anything. I don't know, you go
tell your story.
Speaker 3 (02:51):
Okay, Well so this I we go to dinner and
we get back to the car and there's you know
how sometimes they'll put like Silantra ranch in a to
go thing or Valapino ranch, and there was like a
jar of it by the tire and I almost bent
down to get it. And Stevens goes Mom, stop, no,
don't bend down. We need to search for suspicious people.
I've seen this on YouTube, and he was trying to
(03:14):
save me from bending down and getting distracted and then
getting knocked out or taken so that someone could get
my car or get me.
Speaker 4 (03:22):
Is that a thing?
Speaker 3 (03:23):
It's apparently a thing. He saw it on YouTube.
Speaker 4 (03:24):
So when I got home Cilantro Ranch specifically.
Speaker 3 (03:28):
No, but since we left Chewy's, I think, is that
yummy Jalapino ranch stuff that they have?
Speaker 4 (03:34):
It could be I think if if e were like
money or something you've bend down and get.
Speaker 3 (03:37):
It, it could be anything like it could be food. Yes, Bobby,
it could be money. It could be whatever item to
get you to bend down to get it. So when
I get home, I google this after he tells me
what he's seen on YouTube, and you might see it
might even be something stuck on your tire. You don't see,
but it would make a loud noise. So when you reverse,
(03:57):
you back over it, and it makes you stop and
get out to see what you hit, because now your.
Speaker 4 (04:02):
Car first way, they get you on the second you're
running over it.
Speaker 3 (04:04):
Well, now your car's running, your doors open, you're getting out,
so they just push you over and get in and
drive off with your car.
Speaker 4 (04:12):
I don't know this has ever happened.
Speaker 9 (04:15):
I googled it.
Speaker 4 (04:15):
I think sometimes people just make you ever see the
videos where people are like I do this every time
I go to a hotel and they do something like
put tape over the microwave and they write numbers and
they pull the tape off. It's only to get you
to watch, and there's nothing functional about it. I think
this is one of those. Okay, so Amy, did you
get knocked out?
Speaker 10 (04:30):
No?
Speaker 4 (04:30):
Steep, No, do you take your car?
Speaker 2 (04:32):
No?
Speaker 3 (04:32):
Stevenson borned me, Mom, we need to look around. He
looked around for suspicious people. No suspicious people. But then
this is what I found online when I got home
to look it up. Reasons random items might be sitting
next to your tire to create a distraction, like I said, Uh,
Marking they use it to mark the car as a
potential target to break into it later.
Speaker 4 (04:53):
Tampering they're using cilantro ranch to mark your car.
Speaker 3 (04:56):
To it later, or it might be something else. In
this case, there was a thing of the ranch tampering
to see if the car is monitored, noting that if
the object is removed, It indicates that the owner is attentive,
so like, hey, we probably don't mess with this person.
Experts say to do this, do not get out of
your car if you hear something crunch underneath of you,
(05:19):
drive forward and away, and then take care of the situation.
Look in rear view mirrors to see if anyone is
suspicious watching you were waiting, and then report it or
notify parking lot security or local police.
Speaker 1 (05:32):
Oh, please call the police. Are you go. There's some
Halopeno ranch by my line.
Speaker 4 (05:35):
I know, Sorry, it's a different ranch.
Speaker 3 (05:37):
No, no, I got confused. We were at Chewy's, so
it was the jalapeno ranch. It's it's Chipotle that has
the cilantro ranch.
Speaker 4 (05:44):
I literally was just asking what you did yesterday.
Speaker 3 (05:46):
Oh, well, I thought you were digging for something. I thought, well,
maybe I have a story here.
Speaker 1 (05:51):
You did.
Speaker 4 (05:51):
Remember when Amy was thinking that they would drop a
baby off at your front door and make it cry,
and then you'd be like, I must open the door
and see the crying baby. I'm a poor and as
soon as you do, a gang attacks you.
Speaker 3 (06:02):
Yeah, Or they put a baby carriage on the side
of the highway.
Speaker 4 (06:07):
And I'm not stopping for a baby carriage by itself on.
Speaker 9 (06:12):
A car seat, and then a baby.
Speaker 4 (06:15):
Carriage is sitting on the side of the road with
a baby. At least you're not going to the baby.
If you're on the highway, you're not slowing down because
you're not going to see it till you get right
up on it. You're not going to think there's a
baby in it. You're got to think it fell out
of somebody's truck.
Speaker 3 (06:26):
I know that these are likely myths, they're just hard
to shake when you know.
Speaker 4 (06:32):
How much time do you spend on all this amy
the real.
Speaker 3 (06:34):
Time I got home and I thought, well, Stevenson onto something,
and so when I google it, sure enough it could
be a thing. And I don't know what he's seen
on YouTube, like just warnings. He watched YouTube shorts, so
it might have just been like a heads up if
you see something by your car, suspicious people.
Speaker 4 (06:54):
Or they say they put zip ties on the door
handles or winchell wipers of cars to mark people. That'd
be fun to abduct, fun fun. Yeah, that's one of
the things. Yeah, but it's it's a myth.
Speaker 1 (07:05):
It's not real. That can't be real.
Speaker 4 (07:07):
Yeah, there's wencho wipers or jalopenia ranch right.
Speaker 3 (07:11):
I know, I know, I know it sounds ridiculous. Really,
the main point of the stories. I thought it was
cute that my son wanted to protect me.
Speaker 4 (07:20):
I thought it was just to be aware their surroundings
at all times.
Speaker 3 (07:24):
You should always have situational awareness.
Speaker 4 (07:27):
I literally was just like, what did you do last night? Well?
What did you do?
Speaker 10 (07:31):
No?
Speaker 4 (07:32):
I know what I did. The baby wasn't feeling great
all night, and so we kind of dealt with that.
But she slept all the way the night, which is great.
So we were worried she wasn't gonna sleep to the night.
But baby has a reflex issue. Her digestive system is
still growing, so like a hardcore reflex and so it
like burns her. And I have that too, as like
(07:53):
an adult, I have crazy digestion issues. But the doctor
has assured me that you don't pass digestion issues down genetically,
because I definitely feel like it's my fault, but Doctor's like, eh,
that's not it. This is a baby. That body is
growing and there's you know, it's all developing. So we
dealt with that all day yesterday and we were just
(08:14):
concerned she wasn't going to sleep, but she slept all
through the night, so that was that was wonderful news.
So that's what that's what we did. Literally nothing but
that because all the attention. I'll tell you guys about
it after the show. Having a baby's tough. Oh please
let us know. Yeah, I'll tell you. Well, we're so curious.
I'll give you guys some tips.
Speaker 3 (08:32):
I walked my dog and listened to you and Caitlin
on your Q and a podcast.
Speaker 4 (08:38):
You did that yesterday too.
Speaker 3 (08:39):
Yeah, I mean, I just need a little time to
think about what all I did.
Speaker 4 (08:42):
Because yeah, I we posted that. It's up on the
bobbycast feed if you want to go search for it.
A long time ago, I'd say a year ago. My
wife and I made a bet. I won the bet,
so she owed me episodes on the podcast that she
never wants to do them, honestly, and so showed me
twelve episodes because she kept losing the bet. She's done
one and finally I was like, hey, let's go down
and we'll go talk, and she was like great, she
was feeling good, but yeah, she talked about stuff that
(09:03):
she's never talked about, like she's been a chemo for
a long time, and she's to eat away at the
bad sales, Like she had to be on a certain
chemo medicine during her pregnancy, and so we talked about
that she had to have forty ultrasounds during her pregnancy
because with the disease that she has, they worried that
the antibody would go from her into the baby's heart
the whole time. So she's going in two and three
times a week to do all these ultrasounds, and so
(09:25):
it was a constant stress on I'd say us, but
her and she talked about that, and it was the
first time that she'd really said that. And to me,
what was kind of crazy was she had mentioned that,
like people were mad at her because I had to
leave the cruise a couple days early. We were one
two weeks out from her having labor. We went to
(09:45):
the doctor the morning I left for the cruise because
we didn't know if I could go at all. And
the doctor's like, if we get anything back, any report
back to the antibody's travel, because it travels, it has
the potential to travel most later in the pregnancy, Like
we have to put her in to labor immediately, and
so people were so mean to her about mely having
to leave the cruise two days early, and she finally
was like, that was really terrible. I didn't want to
(10:06):
say anything about it, but people were rude and mean
to me, and they had no idea what we were
going through. Like I was on this drug, doing three
ultrasounds a week, trying to make sure with the disease
that I have, it doesn't get the past to the baby.
The doctor saying you could go into labor at any
moment because if we so. Yeah, I was really proud
of her vulnerability. I didn't push her to do it,
(10:27):
and I'm glad that you're finally able to tell that story.
I wanted to tell the story because people were coming
to me too, but I'm just like, what am I
going to do? I'll just take it, take it on
the chin. I still went. Doctor didn't want me to
go at all, but I felt like I owed it
to go. But I just couldn't be water locked. I
had to have the ability to get off the boat
if anything went wrong. And so that was that part.
(10:48):
But it's on the Bobby cast if you want to
hear it. It's my wife and I talking about that,
and she was extremely vulnerable. She doesn't do a lot
in the public eye, but I was proud of her.
Speaker 3 (10:56):
Yeah, me too. I texted her saying, I know that
that's not easy to open up about that sort of stuff,
but it was I think would be helpful for people
to have a better insighting also to share that stuff
and other people that are going through difficult pregnancies that
they're not It's information not everybody knows about, and it's
a reminder that you don't know what someone has going
(11:18):
on in their life, so like be kind.
Speaker 4 (11:21):
Yeah. Yeah, like I knew, you knew. You knew the
whole time what was happening with us, and it was
a very stressful time.
Speaker 3 (11:26):
Yeah, that's why I didn't send her mean messages you
do other times. When you left the cruise, I let it.
Speaker 4 (11:33):
It's good. Yeah, Like people were even mean to you
guys on the cruise after I left about me having
to leave. That was awkward, and I was like, man,
I it's not anybody's business. My wife doesn't want to
shared what she's going through right now we're going through,
but what she physically was going through, like they literally
had to put her on a specific chemotherapy drug before
pregnancy because it was the one she could be pregnant
on to try to kill the cells of her disease.
Speaker 3 (11:56):
And yeah, she even opened up about the part about
how that's a and y'all had to make there were
other drugs available. They sound if you plan on having children,
you have to make a true there's only an option
that will allow you to still do that. And you know,
obviously having a family with something I wanted to do.
Speaker 4 (12:16):
But is it weird listening to that podcast when you
knew all that information? Anyway, It's like when I watch
The Office, I do it for comfort. I know everything's
going to happen, but you knew all that.
Speaker 3 (12:25):
Yeah, I wanted to listen because I knew that Caitlin
would be I mean, I don't want to speak for her,
but in my mind, like as a friend, I'm thinking,
like putting something out there like that, she's got to
be nervous about it, and I wanted to hear it
because I knew she'd do great, and I wanted to
listen to support her and then send her a note
and let her know like that I was proud of
her and that she did a great job, and to
(12:47):
be vulnerable like that is difficult, especially with a lot
of the negative stuff she receives from people randomly for
no reason, that she's opening herself up to maybe even
more of that for people that are just not nice people,
but more so that she's doing it for the people
that will appreciate hearing something like that or need to
(13:09):
hear part of her story because it may relate to
them in some ways. So I just I wanted to
listen to support.
Speaker 4 (13:16):
Well, it's up. Go start for the Bobby Cast. That's
that podcast and hit subscribe. That'd be cool. But yeah,
that's up. Back in a second. Hey, Ray, do you
watch Summer House. Yeah, that's definitely one of the three
reality shows that I watch. Give me a quick description
of what they do. They all work in New York
City on the weekends, they go party in mon Talk
(13:39):
Hampton's in a house. It's moved over the years, and
they're all thirty somethings.
Speaker 10 (13:45):
Now.
Speaker 4 (13:45):
The show's been on for ten years, so some of
them are now married. It's been not for ten years.
Some of them have kids. Yeah, the cast varies, but
there's like two or three of them that have been
on for all ten years. Wow, I had no idea
it had the longevity of a decade. Different House, better House.
And did they only do it in the summer?
Speaker 3 (14:01):
Oh?
Speaker 4 (14:02):
Did they film different times? They want you to think
it's the summer in New York City, we all head
to the Hamptons, but I would say it, you know,
sometimes it seems it's a little colder out where they
don't go in the pool. That's how you know, Yeah,
that's how you know. Eddie watched it for the first time. Ray,
you liked this show.
Speaker 5 (14:17):
Like, I'm just curious because I had, you know, a
few hours at the hotel when we were in Austin.
I'm like, man, we got time here, Like, let me
see what Bravo's all about. And they start showing Summerhouse
vander Pump rules that I don't know how people watch
this stuff. It's so much useless drama. Like as soon
as I turned around, somebody was crying because of the
(14:37):
way her Man was acting.
Speaker 4 (14:39):
At the pool, and I'm what is happening here?
Speaker 1 (14:42):
Ray?
Speaker 4 (14:42):
How do you watch this stuff? Well, here's how it started.
Before it was Actually they would work in New York
City Monday through Friday, and then they would go party
in the Hamptons, and then they would go to their
jobs on Monday, and it would show them on Sunday
still partying, and I'm like, how do these people party
and then go to work on Monday? That's crazy. Now
they all have influencer deals, none of them have jobs.
(15:04):
They sell alcohol, so of course you can party on
the weekends if your job is part time Monday through Friday. No,
he's just asking how you watch that though, That's what
I'm saying. I was fascinated by the work aspect. How
can they go that hard during the week and go
that hard on the weekends. Now I'm passively watching it.
Have I seen every episode this season? No? Will I yes,
But it's not musty TV for me.
Speaker 5 (15:26):
Like, I turn it on and within two minutes, this
girl is with her guy whatever, and she goes and
gets a drink. By the time she's coming back, her
guy's talking to some other girl.
Speaker 4 (15:34):
Oh he's talking to that, And then.
Speaker 5 (15:37):
She gets all mad, storms into the house and then
one of her girlfriend's like, oh no, I gotta go help.
And then they're sitting on the bed and the girl's like,
I just don't.
Speaker 4 (15:44):
Know how you could do that? And they goes like,
I know, I know, it's crazy, like and I'm just
I can't watch more of this. This is so useless.
I don't understand it. Well, when do you watch any
of this stuff?
Speaker 10 (15:53):
I don't watch somewhere else. I watch the Below Deck.
That one is entertaining, same deal though, right, yeah, but
they're on yeah, and they're working, and it's like with
rich people. So I don't know, it just feels not
as reality to be a little bit more like real life,
but it is still pretty Josh.
Speaker 1 (16:13):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (16:13):
In Summerhouse now they let them play on their phones
and the cameras. Sometimes it'll be three girls laying in
a bed playing on their phones and I'm like, what
are we watching? Literally, what is this show recording? How
is this put on broadcast television? Bravo?
Speaker 5 (16:28):
And then vander Pump So I watched just a second
of that one. But that's like a restaurant or something.
Speaker 4 (16:35):
I guess.
Speaker 5 (16:35):
The lady's name is Lisa vanderm Lisa vander Pump. She's
like the owner of the restaurant. And then everyone works
at the restaurant, but they're all hooking up with each other,
so of course there's drama with all the servers.
Speaker 1 (16:45):
It's pretty good though, No, that was good.
Speaker 10 (16:49):
I watched that one for a few seasons, but then
it got the like Gray said, they all got like
influencer jobs, and it wasn't then working at their restaurant,
so then it changed and I stopp watching it.
Speaker 4 (16:57):
A lot of times I'll get the question, hey, what
is your what do they call it something you're ashamed of?
Guilty pleasure? Yeah, you're guilty pleasure. I never really have
a guilty pleasure because I don't feel guilt about anything
that I do because I don't watch that stuff. Think
if I did, i'd be like, oh, that's funny. I
think my answer is going to start being wrestling. When
I get asked that, I don't really feel guilty about it.
But it's kind of a I'm a forty six year
(17:18):
old adult man, and I really like wrestling, So I
think that's gonna be my answer.
Speaker 3 (17:23):
Why.
Speaker 4 (17:23):
As you guys were talking about that, I was like,
that sounds terrible. It sounds so terrible that I'd be
embarrassed to admit it. But then it reminds me. I
get asked that question a lot. If I'm being interviewed
and I never have a good answer. It's always something stupid,
like I probably watch you know, more random Arkansas sports
that I don't even like, Arkansas gymnastics or something that
I don't even understand the rules. But I think it's
wrestling for now on. Yeah, wrestling is good. My guilty
(17:44):
pleasure is I love wrestling. I don't know. I really
don't feel guilty about it.
Speaker 3 (17:49):
But I don't think I feel guilty about Real Housewives
stuff when I was really into it.
Speaker 4 (17:53):
But just what it's called guilty? Or would you say
now though I.
Speaker 3 (17:58):
Know because I don't. I mean, Housewives definitely used to
be it. Good question? Do I even have one?
Speaker 4 (18:04):
Got to come up with one? Just to catch you?
Ever get asked? I mean maybe it's TikTok. What if
I say that too? I watched TikTok videos. It's just reels.
It's not even TikTok. It's reels. I'm embarrassed to say
I watched reels before TikTok.
Speaker 10 (18:17):
Man.
Speaker 5 (18:17):
I watched one street fight and now that's all I'm getting.
It's good watching knockout videos. Oh I hate them though,
but you watch them no to see someone just get
knocked out like it starts from like just two guys
shoving each other to a knockout on the street and
then everyone jumps in.
Speaker 4 (18:31):
I don't like them.
Speaker 7 (18:32):
What about the Rangers one when the Yankees fight great
one dude days all chirping his face. You have black
blah blah and the stands of the baseball game, and
then he holds his diet coke up and the Yankees
fan kind of hits the diet coke and then it's all.
Speaker 5 (18:44):
They start tumbling down the seats. Yeah, they start going
down like Roses seats.
Speaker 7 (18:49):
And then they're going up the stairs and the girlfriend
tries to attack the dudes, and the guy just shoves.
Speaker 1 (18:53):
The girlfriend and down she goes down the stairs.
Speaker 4 (18:56):
You're saying you don't like it, but if you're being
fed it, it means you are assuming it. I watched
one way too long one video, but then they'll send
you like three more, and if you don't watch those,
they'll stop.
Speaker 5 (19:06):
You're right now on one, You're right, I'm watching a
little bit to see kind of on that knockout punch happening.
Speaker 4 (19:12):
I don't like the hits. I don't want it comfortable.
I just pulled my TikTok up. The first video that
popped up, I was seeing what's my algorithm right now?
It's a guy talking if you play the quantity game
in art versus music, you create with quality that type
of thing, So it's art. I got a guy that
used to work on the Dan Patrick Show seating O'Connor
talking about his life. I have a ball and glove
(19:35):
baseball trick with a blue Jay second basement acts like
he's on the ball of the picture and he does
it and he tags them when he walks off. That's cool.
I have.
Speaker 8 (19:45):
W n B A.
Speaker 4 (19:47):
Have our show pops up my for you. Shane gillis
doing a bit. That's what. There's a wrestling viral video
shows a man knocking out drunk guy groped as why
New York Post Oh I know that story. That was
a big news story. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (20:03):
So and the dude come up with just clobb or
that might have been the one I saw that started
this whole deal.
Speaker 1 (20:08):
I was a good one. They were at the poo.
Speaker 7 (20:09):
I mean she's shooting pull and he comes up behind
and that that that dude just fat.
Speaker 4 (20:12):
Yeah, so you nailed him.
Speaker 9 (20:14):
Did you see the one of the sheriff hitting the.
Speaker 4 (20:16):
Umpire beat him up on the field. It was crazy.
Guess wild he got fired.
Speaker 11 (20:19):
Yep, he should.
Speaker 4 (20:21):
He went out the empire on the field in between
I think second and third base.
Speaker 7 (20:24):
Yeah, I was like fourteen you some baseball game and
he didn't agree with the call, went out arguing, then
fought them row.
Speaker 4 (20:32):
Like tackled him, just such a punching him. Then the
crowd come running. Can some of the kids get in
there and start fighting. It was terrible, crazy. You watched
like three times and been like, ohn't like it. They
watch it again, Amy, what do you have?
Speaker 3 (20:45):
So there might be a reason why the Devil Wears
prouded to earned seventy seven million dollars last weekend. No Toldia, well,
there is nostalgia, But then there was some research they
attached to white people like that sort of stuff. And
it turns out a lot of mayors can relate to
having a toxic boss like the character Miranda Priestley in
their Lives. Three and five American workers say they currently
(21:09):
have a boss who exhibits toxic behaviors. This is according
to a twenty twenty six Harris poll. It's mostly gen
Z workers saying this, though nobody in here is it
here gen.
Speaker 4 (21:19):
Z gen Z's lazy z.
Speaker 10 (21:22):
No, I'm a last like last.
Speaker 3 (21:25):
Millennial, but I'm an elder millennial.
Speaker 9 (21:28):
I'm like, I'm the younger.
Speaker 11 (21:29):
Oh yeah, the younger ninety seven to twenty twelve.
Speaker 3 (21:32):
Okay, so if you're born ninety seven to twenty.
Speaker 4 (21:34):
Twelve, what's toxic mean? Tonight? Unborn showing up on time?
Speaker 3 (21:38):
I haven't the behavior. The behaviors of the toxic boss
include blaming others when they make a mistake, not giving
credit for good work, and having unreasonable expectations for their employees.
Speaker 4 (21:49):
The first two I get like that. That sucks in
general for everybody, doesn't matter what what millennial falcon. I
don't know why. The other things you can.
Speaker 3 (21:59):
Be There's a few more fun statistics in the city.
Over half of the people surveyed said they have attended
therapy to discuss the toxicity of their current or previous boss.
And then, on the flip side of things, companies are
firing gen Z employees just months after hiring.
Speaker 4 (22:17):
Them because they want too much about the boss.
Speaker 3 (22:20):
Six and ten companies fired a recent college graduate after
they hired them just earlier in the year. Over fifty
percent of bosses say they fired their gen Z employees
because they showed lack of innovation lack of motivation. Bosses
also say they arrive late to meetings, communicate poorly, and
wear office inappropriate clothing.
Speaker 4 (22:41):
Well, consider, you guys are very fortunate have been a
great leader. Yeah, my talks a great leader. Show up
on time. If you're sick, go home, do your job.
Everybody's good. Otherwise, get that out of here. You know
what I mean?
Speaker 3 (23:00):
None of us are gen Z. That's why none of
us are late, and we all wear we all wear
office appropriate clothing. Yeah, but we had to be told
some of us communicate poorly moral.
Speaker 4 (23:12):
We had to tell you to stop wearing those miniskirts.
Speaker 3 (23:13):
Amy, Remember that this was a weird joke.
Speaker 4 (23:17):
What do you mean I think appropriate?
Speaker 3 (23:20):
This is a what I never have worn many.
Speaker 4 (23:22):
Of the Joe.
Speaker 1 (23:23):
That's why it's a joke.
Speaker 4 (23:24):
That's funny coming from and you think he's going to
tell you that and don't like that's what that means? Appropriate?
Speaker 3 (23:31):
Elderly millennial? What's what's eddie?
Speaker 4 (23:33):
A gen X? Amy, I'm two years older than you.
Like they do act like you're one hundred years old,
which is funny. All right, thank you for your story, lunchbox.
Speaker 1 (23:45):
Yeah, Pizza Hut's book. Itt it's back.
Speaker 7 (23:49):
Congratulations. They have announced they are redoing the Summer of Stories,
encouraging kids to read over the summer. The program opens
for kids pre k through sixth grade June first to
August thirty. First, you had to download the app track
your reading and free pizzas are back for the kids.
Speaker 4 (24:06):
Do you go in pizza huts anymore?
Speaker 8 (24:08):
Uh?
Speaker 4 (24:09):
Well, you going to pick it up, you drive through,
you go in the store. But that's not what I'm
asking like to eat because back in the day, all
pizza huts you go in, it'd be an awesome salad
bar and had that kind of weird lighting, all boots,
little table, a couple of tables in the middle. Yeah,
but like it was as excellent, like a plus. And
I just don't ever see those standalone pizza huts anymore.
Speaker 7 (24:32):
Now they don't have you just go to the like
all they do is the counter where you can sit
and there's a couple of benches where you wait for
the pizzas.
Speaker 1 (24:38):
There's no in room dining.
Speaker 5 (24:40):
I'm in there's one that I went to. I went
to because you go through a drive too to pick
it up and then you can. I saw people sitting
in there, but I didn't know it was open, but
I guess I saw people in there, but.
Speaker 4 (24:49):
They used to. All the buildings were all the same
shape too.
Speaker 5 (24:52):
Yes, I just wonder if they have those anymore, dude,
Friday nights after a football game, like, Pizza Hut was
the place.
Speaker 4 (24:58):
Awesome, and they still. It's tough because I don't get
to really have that kind of pizza anymore. It was
the best pizza to me. Now, maybe it's because that's
what I have when I was a kid, but the
super thin Pizza Hut pizza was my favorite pizza. I
mean by far number one. You know, Pizza Dominoes was good,
but pizza was number one.
Speaker 10 (25:18):
There's still the pizza that you're thinking of, like we
have one. It's out kind of, I guess thirty minutes
from here.
Speaker 9 (25:25):
We have like that typical Pizza Hut. That's like the
Pizza Hut. It has a salad bar.
Speaker 4 (25:29):
Really yeah, yeah, it says.
Speaker 1 (25:31):
That there are.
Speaker 7 (25:32):
In twenty twenty six, they started bringing back locations that
even have the buffet and salad bar. Right now, they
have locations in Tennessee.
Speaker 1 (25:40):
And Hawaii.
Speaker 4 (25:41):
That's it. Two states.
Speaker 1 (25:42):
That's it. That's what it says.
Speaker 4 (25:44):
If one in Georgia too, it's on my bucket list
to go check out, to go check out. You never
have one of it when I was a kid, but
I haven't seen in thirty years.
Speaker 9 (25:51):
Now there's a well had one here?
Speaker 3 (25:53):
Well you could tell. It was one in Pagosa Springs, Colorado,
where my sister lives.
Speaker 4 (25:57):
A eye doctor.
Speaker 3 (25:57):
Now, no, it's a shoe store now. But no, it's
crazy because you know pizza, because it has the iconic shape.
Speaker 4 (26:04):
Man, those were the days it really was. That's the best.
What was what's the best pizza? Do you what do
you think it was going on?
Speaker 3 (26:09):
Well, I mean growing up, I had a lot of
mister Gaddies, but so that was it for me. But
as an adult, I love thin crust dominoes.
Speaker 4 (26:18):
You can't do adult though. We got smarter as adults.
What was your kid favorite pizza?
Speaker 3 (26:22):
Well then, mister Gaddies and the ranch was the best,
hands down you.
Speaker 4 (26:27):
Mister Gaddies because there was one near.
Speaker 7 (26:30):
Yeah, there was one near and we used to go
there after baseball games and Parmelay and tavern was right
next door. Is a bar, and we'd run and opened
up and yell and run away, and we thought were
the craziest kids in the world.
Speaker 1 (26:39):
And then they bring those cinnamon.
Speaker 4 (26:41):
Sticks, Oh my god, and the apple pizza Applezza.
Speaker 3 (26:47):
Thin crust dominoes. Although I do think they've tweaked the
recipe a little bit and that makes me annoyed.
Speaker 4 (26:53):
But we believe you because you have the taste buds
of a superhero.
Speaker 3 (26:55):
You really do.
Speaker 4 (26:56):
Yeah, the dominoes I think was my adult too when
they did like the square dominoes and they would cut
it all the ways and you eat the square. That
was a plus as an adult. But I think probably
because when I lived on Brodie Lane in Austin that
there was one right there and that's it was just close.
So I had it a lot. Yeah, but they were quick, man,
they delivered quick. As a kid, favorite pizza, oh it.
Speaker 9 (27:13):
Was Pizza Hut.
Speaker 10 (27:14):
I mean Pizza Hut started in Wichita, so that's all
we had all I knew about for a long time.
Speaker 11 (27:19):
Now what is it now?
Speaker 9 (27:21):
I really love Donado's.
Speaker 4 (27:22):
I don't know if you guys have had is that
a place is only like you buy it at the
grocery store.
Speaker 9 (27:27):
No, it's a place.
Speaker 10 (27:28):
We used to have one, but I think it went
out of business here, but it has the best like
thin crust good pizza lion.
Speaker 4 (27:34):
Are we crazy that we love thin crustes because we
didn't grow up in a place that took pride in
their deep dish. Because anybody I know that like grew
up in Chicago or even on the Northeast, they're they're like, man,
you guys are like, you're not mature in your pizza palette.
They like that deep dish. Yeah, I mean that's I
guess what they they're good at. Does it mean like
(27:55):
deep dish? Like do you pick it?
Speaker 8 (27:56):
Well?
Speaker 5 (27:56):
Still my favorite is pizza hut pan, which is the
quick into a deep dish. It's not quiet as thick,
but the pan pizza has got a lot of bread.
Speaker 4 (28:04):
They had too much bread for me. I love it.
Speaker 3 (28:05):
Man.
Speaker 4 (28:06):
Was that as a kid, that's your number one?
Speaker 5 (28:07):
That was my number one and it's still my number one.
However as a family now, Pizza Hut's kind of a delicacy,
like as far as you tear the prices of like,
because we had to buy like four pieces for our family,
and like I'd say, Papa John's is probably the more
affordable one, and then Domino's kind of that thing. But
if we feel it, we're feeling it like a you
know what, let's first then that we'll do pizza.
Speaker 4 (28:28):
Hut.
Speaker 3 (28:29):
Oh. I didn't realize there was that much of a
price to between.
Speaker 12 (28:32):
Mm hmmm.
Speaker 4 (28:33):
Papa John doesn't work Papa John anymore? Does he know?
Speaker 1 (28:35):
He got Alsted so he's I think you said that.
Speaker 4 (28:41):
Shacks and owner, right, Yeah, he has idea of locations, yeah, franchise.
See what Papa John did. I don't want to put
that on him if that's not what he didn't do.
Speaker 7 (28:53):
Do you know those crazy story I saw about Shaq
but you looked that up, Mike, is that he wanted
so I'm security in Ring camera and he bought it
at best Buy, Like he just went and bought it
and he was on a trip overseas and he was
able to look at the camp. He's like, this is
the most amazing thing ever. And he went to Ring
and said, hey, I'm gonna endorse your product, like you're
(29:14):
gonna pay me, Like he went to them and said,
I use it. I bought it it best By, and
we are going to work together. I thought that was
pretty freaking crazy.
Speaker 4 (29:21):
You're saying something nice about Shack. That's that's like your
mortal enemy. You hate that dude, I.
Speaker 3 (29:25):
Know, but this wasn't him doing something good. That's when
he hates him making money and demanding money.
Speaker 11 (29:32):
Mike w Se Yeah, he said the N word on
the conference call back in twenty eighteen.
Speaker 4 (29:35):
Oh my gosh, what do you ever see his house
like when he took people in his house. It's crazy
big because I believe he lives or it is from Louisville. Yeah,
and it is a palace and he is the founder
of Papa. He is freaking Papa John Papa.
Speaker 10 (29:52):
Yeah.
Speaker 7 (29:52):
I mean, that's so crazy that you can get ousted
from your own company because I'm pretty sure the guy
that started Men's Warehouse he's out.
Speaker 4 (30:00):
Well, it all depends, well, it depends if it goes public,
like you sell it, because you don't as soon as
you sell. If when it goes public you sell a
percentage of the world, you're not. You can own a
big part of it, but you're not the guy. You
don't own majority of it anymore. As soon as it
goes public.
Speaker 10 (30:15):
I know.
Speaker 7 (30:15):
But that's crazy to me that you started this baby,
worked it all the way up, and then these guys
coming are like, hey, we're tired of you.
Speaker 1 (30:21):
We're just going to take over your company.
Speaker 4 (30:23):
Well, but you have to make the decision to sell.
That never happens if you don't sell it, if you
don't if you don't take it public. So there is
that he had to make the decision to allow people
to kick him out. Yeah, because that's a weird.
Speaker 1 (30:34):
Feeling like to be kicked out of your own business.
Speaker 4 (30:37):
But I'm sure the money's still really nice. Oh yeah,
what's he worth? He's got to be a.
Speaker 3 (30:44):
Billionaire, billion I would think so, right, I'm seeing wow, wow, wow,
seven hundred and twenty million to over a billion, it's
estimated between there.
Speaker 11 (30:55):
Well, you see, Mike, I see four hundred million.
Speaker 4 (30:58):
Are you guys asking different a Yeah?
Speaker 11 (31:01):
Forbes says a billion. That was in twenty seventeen, though.
Speaker 4 (31:04):
That's before the ouse order.
Speaker 11 (31:05):
I got fired in twenty eighteen, so maybe it's gone
down a little bit or up.
Speaker 3 (31:09):
Well, there's stock flux situations. Obviously obviously he had on
the market. Wow, he held a five hundred and ten
million steak in the company as of or previously held
that as of twenty eighteen. But it says, I mean,
that's quite the gap the estimated net worth around seven
and twenty million to over a billion.
Speaker 4 (31:30):
That means they don't know. Yes, nobody ever knows what
anybody is worth. It's all just people doing their best guess.
Because even if you're a big movie actor and the
amount of money that you've made is public based on
the movies, people have no idea how much money you've
made through other investments, which if you have a bunch
of money in someone guiding, or you're investing in things,
(31:51):
or that you've lost or that you've spent that you've
bought stuff. You may know how much an athlete has made,
but again, you really don't know how much somebody has.
Speaker 7 (31:59):
Yeah, what are you saying, Like, at his peak, the
guy owned one billion dollars worth of Papa John stock
and he was making one hundred and thirty six thousand
dollars per day for simply owning equity through dividends and
stock related payouts.
Speaker 1 (32:14):
That's crazy.
Speaker 4 (32:17):
It's a good job, you know.
Speaker 5 (32:18):
What all that means lunchbox like the dividends and all
the man but it sounds good. Not the monopoly it's
money they pay you.
Speaker 4 (32:26):
Even if you have the stock, let's say it makes
certain amount of money. They then even without you catching
out the stock, you get paid a little bit. That's dividends.
So I hope that was an okay description of it.
Sounds nice. I want dividends. It's usually a positive thing, right, dividends? Yeah? Yeah?
Is there negative dividends, like where they take money away
(32:48):
from you?
Speaker 12 (32:48):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (32:49):
I think it's all positive.
Speaker 7 (32:50):
I think dividends means positive, right, That equals positive.
Speaker 4 (32:53):
That's what I asked. I don't know if you're getting dividends.
I assume it's. Anytime I've ever gotten dividends on anything,
it's been positive. So I don't know if there's a
negative dividend. I don't even think those words go together.
But I'm not an expert in that at all.
Speaker 5 (33:04):
Okay, Morgan, you want to talk about the scientists another
one missing?
Speaker 4 (33:11):
I of course, I'll do an hour on this.
Speaker 9 (33:14):
Well, there's a crazy connection.
Speaker 10 (33:16):
And the reason I'm so invested is because so the
Department of Wars chief Technology officer had posted a tweet
yesterday confirming rumors about an energy weapon that they're now
being used. Basically, it's like a lightsaber from Star Wars.
Nice essentially what this weapon is, and he posted it
confirming it. After years of there being rumors about it,
(33:38):
nobody confirmed it. He did, And of course he did
it on May fourth, which is Star Wars Day, which
is wild also, but more than.
Speaker 4 (33:45):
The fourth be with you, Yeah, that's why it Star Wars.
Know that I've heard that, but I didn't know that
was Star Wars Day.
Speaker 10 (33:50):
But one of the notable figures who was kind of
sounding alarm on the technology is one of the deceased scientists.
Speaker 9 (33:57):
Her name is Amy S.
Speaker 10 (33:58):
Gridge, and she was really involved in research into anti
gravity technology, UFOs, extraterrestrial life. She was hit by one
of these weapons pretty quickly before she had died from
a self inflicted gunshot wound. So now that connection is
being investigated because they've confirmed the technology.
Speaker 4 (34:18):
So whenever we went down into Venezuela and took over
that and took their president, I thought you were talking.
Speaker 1 (34:25):
About you, and I was like America, I thought the
same thing.
Speaker 4 (34:30):
All right, my bad. Then when we the Americans, the
military went down got it. Uh, we used a weapon
like that. Is this a gun or a light It's
like a gun. It's it's sure more like a gun. Yes,
I haven't seen it with my own eyes, but it
shoots energy, and they would talk about how they would
go down and their nose would be bleeding. It could
(34:51):
it disables everybody.
Speaker 9 (34:52):
It kind of looks like a.
Speaker 10 (34:54):
Thing you go when you go to the eye doctor
and it shoots out like a laser beam from it
is kind of.
Speaker 9 (34:58):
What it looks like.
Speaker 4 (34:59):
And so that's really how we got in. We disabled
all their dudes that were guarding him. And it's an
energy weapon. Now you can't really go down to the
old gun store here and buy one of those. But
there's also something called Havana syndrome. Have you guys heard
about that? So this started happening twenty sixteen in why
(35:21):
it could have happened in Cuba the first time with
like our diplomats over there, and it's that it's all
the sudden intense sounds pressures. This is what happened. We
went down to Venezuela, which we did down there. Supposedly
your head starts to hurt real bad, big pressure, your
nose starts to bleed, and there was an energy attack
and supposedly it's happened a couple of different places here
in the States recently to our politicians that they can't explain. Yeah,
(35:46):
and so, yeah, there are these for sure, these energy weapons.
It's mostly mostly like pulsed radio frequency.
Speaker 5 (35:54):
Yeah, I saw something different, but I saw that firefighters
And when I did my research, I saw Scuba Steve
like this story too on Instagram, but like these firefighters
are putting out fires by using uh sound waves, so
instead of like a fire extinguisher, it's like a did
you see that Scuba?
Speaker 1 (36:13):
Yes, I saw it.
Speaker 4 (36:14):
It was pretty incredible what they're doing with that, Like
there was a fire in this whatever machine was it?
Just like when it I haven't seen the fire went out.
I believe it. That's cool. I still am gonna choose
extinguisher if the firefighters are coming. Can we go with
the extinguisher first fall? You do it like a bass
guitar if we play and I got a da vida,
it limits the fire the fire damage. So oh my gosh.
Speaker 3 (36:38):
What Yeah, the sound like wiggles the fire until it
starves a box.
Speaker 4 (36:43):
She and this AI No, no, it was real. It
was a this isn't Slanny Gomez at thet.
Speaker 7 (36:48):
Sam Bernardino County Fire Department has tested the technology and
demonstrations involving structure fires showing promise.
Speaker 3 (36:56):
The fire of oxygen.
Speaker 5 (36:57):
And you want to know what's funny, this is gonna
be my story like two weeks ago. But then I
was like, they're not going.
Speaker 4 (37:01):
To like this. Yeah, it's all on the setup. But
the energy weapons.
Speaker 3 (37:09):
Morgan might have Helena syndrome, vertigo, hearing loss, cognitive difficulties.
Speaker 9 (37:18):
Did I get him with a laser beam?
Speaker 4 (37:20):
We don't know it.
Speaker 3 (37:22):
Uh?
Speaker 4 (37:22):
Did you see there are different religious leaders claiming that
they have been briefed about UFO's UAPs because Charlotage post something.
Speaker 9 (37:33):
Wait why religious leaders?
Speaker 4 (37:35):
Because first of all, Trump says he's going to declassify
a lot of information. It's not going to be all
of it. The I'm going to back up behalf a
step and say that the theory is that a lot
of different countries have craft of non human origin and
they're all trying to reverse engineer it, and nobody knows
(37:56):
what each other has, or everybody's kind of scared of
what the other country has. Right, so said, we have one,
Russia has one. They have no idea what we've been
able to reverse engineer we have no idea what they've
been able to reverse engineer, so we're both going like,
what do they have? So it kind of keeps you scared.
You don't know their weapons, so you're scared of using
a weapon in case they have a bigger weapon? Am
I being descriptive enough?
Speaker 3 (38:15):
Is that?
Speaker 4 (38:15):
Okay?
Speaker 3 (38:16):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (38:16):
Am I explaining it in a way that makes sense?
So that's been said a while. You can believe it,
you cannot believe it. Whatever. Then it's hey, there's got
to be some sort of disclosure coming, which means the
full release, and you disclose what's been happening that we
haven't heard about scientists disappearing. Trump says he's going to
(38:36):
declassify some of the files. They've said it's passed on
to whomever. If anything's ever declassified, who knows when they
did the JFK didclassification has sucked? It was very very little.
The Epstein stuff sucked. They blacked out the stuff for
the people that really should go to jail. So in
the end, will they give up enough to where we go, Wow?
(38:57):
But the word is they've taken it's a major religious
leader to tell them what's coming, so they can start
to reinstruct what they preach to people because it goes
against what they've been preaching for their whole life being
a religious leader, going this is about to happen, and
what it's going to do, it's going to show you
(39:18):
that how you've been preaching it, what your message has been,
is not accurate based on what we now know. So
we're giving you a heads up to know that there
are going to be a lot of questions coming from
people that have been followers of yours for a long time,
and the way and what you've been teaching isn't exactly
now what we know.
Speaker 8 (39:35):
I mean.
Speaker 10 (39:35):
And that's like preparing and I assume for kind of
like a societal class, if you will, because of people
believe in a certain thing and then all of a
sudden everything they've believed.
Speaker 9 (39:43):
Is that kind of why they would bring them in
in that way.
Speaker 4 (39:46):
I think if there was a full disclosure and everybody
realized that we don't really have control. Sure, I think
they're although people, I mean perfect, you're trying to pay
their bills right now, Like it's really if they were like, yeah,
there's been a freaking alien interdimensional beings was probably what
it is, not from another planet, but from a different
a way, something we're not able to see. We'd be like,
(40:10):
all right, uh, I still got how mortgage to pay? Man,
like gas is almost five bucks a gallon? Right, Oh yeah, okay, yeah,
I think it'd be crazy. But I think right now
there's just so many distractions and so much hardship that yeah,
it'd be wild. But I don't think a simple sharing
(40:33):
of hey, there are these things that we don't understand
would actually create societal upheaval.
Speaker 10 (40:39):
Okay, It's just interesting to me because that like science
and religion typically you know, they don't join forces, if
you will, typically on opposite sides.
Speaker 4 (40:48):
Of things for the most part. But yeah, that's the
deal with those. Have you seen the pictures of Artemis?
Speaker 10 (40:56):
Uh?
Speaker 4 (40:56):
Yeah, the Moon? Yeah, just the different pictures they've released.
Oh no, I just saw the guy from cell Phone
Recording as they were going around.
Speaker 5 (41:01):
No, they released like, I don't know, twelve thousand pictures
or whatever, and like, man, it really is crazy just
to look at Earth.
Speaker 4 (41:07):
I saw the astronauts they were talking to in a
press conference after still in their suits. I like it
when they're in their suits. Yeah, yeah, it feels way
more official. Throw in their blue suits and one of
them I think it was a female astronaut because it
was a female, maybe two dudes, and she was like,
you know, I really didn't have a feeling about any
sort of extraterrestrial or interdimensional life until I did this.
Speaker 5 (41:27):
And she's like, there's no way we're alone. And you
see those pictures and it's just us in this big
dark abyss.
Speaker 4 (41:34):
Floating ball, just a floating blow rock ball that.
Speaker 5 (41:36):
We're all and you look at it and like, oh,
that's that's pretty right, like it's blue and green or whatever.
But then you're like, oh my gosh, we're on that
ball and around us is all darkness, floating rock ball.
Speaker 4 (41:48):
Yeah, it's crazy. It's pretty crazy. It's crazy. Thank you
Morgan for the story. Eddie.
Speaker 5 (41:53):
Yeah, so earlier this year, they there was a coyote
in on Alcatraz Island and they're like it's interesting, like, oh,
how to get there?
Speaker 4 (42:01):
How did a coyote get here?
Speaker 5 (42:02):
So some scientists got on the island and they found
some poop and sent it to the lab and like,
let's get some DNA. Initially they thought like, oh, the
coyote swam from San Francisco, which is probably the closest
about a mile away.
Speaker 3 (42:15):
But no.
Speaker 5 (42:15):
It turns out that the coyote came from a family
that lives on Angel Island, which is two miles away, and.
Speaker 4 (42:21):
The dog just swam. It's around the way, the whole
way from two miles. Question, coyote to me feels more doggye.
But is a coyote catty?
Speaker 3 (42:29):
I was saying that coyote was a cat.
Speaker 4 (42:30):
That's a dog dog? Have you ever seen one?
Speaker 2 (42:33):
I have?
Speaker 4 (42:34):
But I feel like I was straight. I feel like
I've been wrong about Oh, I guess maybe what is
a coyote cat? No, they're just if they look just
like dog. I hear you. I would bet dog. But
I feel like I've been wrong about that. What is it?
Speaker 12 (42:49):
A dog?
Speaker 11 (42:49):
Family?
Speaker 4 (42:49):
Okay?
Speaker 11 (42:49):
I have been called a canaday.
Speaker 4 (42:51):
It just looks like a dirty dog, you know, a
dog that hasn't taken aback. Okay, one of those I
was wrong about. We talked about it here. I was like,
that's not a dog, and you guys are like, no,
it's a cat. Remember that. Maybe I don't know.
Speaker 10 (43:02):
Is it the the ones that are in the trees
that people they're like near cities that are they are cats.
Speaker 9 (43:07):
They're in trees.
Speaker 4 (43:08):
Bobcats.
Speaker 9 (43:09):
No, they're they like stock people know they're a cat.
What are they called? Yeah, they'll stock them in the
trees and they'll follow them.
Speaker 4 (43:17):
We talked about videos stalk them or they stalk stock.
Speaker 9 (43:21):
Like they follow them, So stalk stock stock.
Speaker 4 (43:26):
With an L stalk Yeah, got it. So you say
like stalk, Well, no, I'm just trying to differentiate stock
in stalk. Those are two different words. Bobcat.
Speaker 10 (43:35):
No, Like we've seen them in like California and they're
in trees and they we've seen videos of them chasing people.
Speaker 1 (43:41):
Bobcats.
Speaker 4 (43:42):
No, three times.
Speaker 1 (43:46):
Bobcats called.
Speaker 4 (43:47):
I don't know.
Speaker 9 (43:49):
No, No, they're not ale.
Speaker 4 (43:52):
They're mountain. But that's a mountain. That is a cat.
Speaker 9 (43:57):
But like they I mean the.
Speaker 4 (43:58):
Word lions in that one mountains lie in.
Speaker 1 (44:01):
Yeah.
Speaker 10 (44:02):
But I just say like closely simil, like they're like
in our environment. So are coyotes mountains coyotes?
Speaker 5 (44:08):
Yeah, that dog swam two miles two miles, which now
it's like, all right, wow, if the dog could swim
two miles, Like did those people back in those prisoners whatever,
there's three prisoners that like they never found they're like
wonder like, oh, did they make it across?
Speaker 4 (44:21):
Don't know? But it started reading about this and it
says thirty six men had attempted to escape Alcatraz, and uh,
nearly all of them except those three were either died
in the cold or were caught. Oh god cold. Also,
there is a shark threat there. Yeah, not a major one,
but there is a shark threat there. The water is
(44:43):
really cold. I do think though other people could have
made it. I mean, I have no idea other than
I've been there and just driven by it.
Speaker 3 (44:50):
Do you feel like you could make it?
Speaker 4 (44:51):
It does look closer than you think. If my life
was online and I'd been and I'm in good shape.
You gotta train for that, I know.
Speaker 3 (44:59):
I I wondered the nourishment at Alcatraz, like were they
able to work out? Did they eat well?
Speaker 4 (45:04):
Were they you know they always go to the yard
in a baseball fell in the yard? Yeah still there.
Speaker 8 (45:08):
Really.
Speaker 4 (45:08):
He had a friend who went when we were there,
and they took a picture of it there and that
you can go out on it. It's like a little
it's like it's a beat up field, but it's like, uh,
you know, some somewhere they could play ball. What what
swimmer did we interview where he said he swam it. Yeah,
he wanted to go a medal in the last one.
I'm not an American for him. Michael Phelps, Yep, we'll
go with that. It wasn't him, but we'll go with that.
Speaker 3 (45:27):
Michael Phelps is in Beef.
Speaker 10 (45:29):
He is.
Speaker 3 (45:30):
Yeah, nobody still watched it in he has a little
cameo acting is kind of men.
Speaker 4 (45:35):
But we ever met him and I've never met him.
I don't think I've ever met Michael Phelps either man.
How famous was he for a minute? Still super famous
and I'm talking about like front of everything. Yeah, those
most famous Olympians go, Carl Mary lou Retten. Yeah, you
(45:56):
guys talking about before like in our life, she was
very famous, Ryan Lockete, Sean White good one good one good.
Speaker 3 (46:08):
One who dated Tiger Roots.
Speaker 4 (46:11):
None of the skier. Yeah. Ellen Norton was married to him,
Shawn Johnson, John Johnson and she's done a lot after too.
Speaker 10 (46:21):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (46:22):
Jenner, Yeah, Bruce the Olympia is the Olympian. Yeah yeah,
and then yeah, you know, but he got he was
famous and she was famous as an adult, but he
was famous to before he transitioned because he was the
dad on the show. I'd never heard of him until
he transitions. What about Greg Head, I know, I just
(46:43):
know him in his head because that was had Aids. Yeah.
I don't know if he dies, maybe just had Aids.
Not sure, but yeah, you can google what you got.
Speaker 11 (46:54):
I say, you say Bolt, oh good one.
Speaker 4 (46:58):
Michael Johnson him, I do only because I don't think
Amy would know Michael Johnson though. I don't think he
transcends pop culture. I think if you were just watching
the Olympics as a sprinter, he's steroid steroid runner. Carl Lewis, Yeah,
lunch Walk said him early, but that was before us.
I think we mostly just got Carl Lewis because.
Speaker 1 (47:16):
You didn't watch Carl Lewis.
Speaker 4 (47:17):
We're kids, Yeah, we were kids, really, No, Mary, I remember? Yeah?
They said remember Carlos sing the national anthem?
Speaker 1 (47:25):
Oh my god?
Speaker 4 (47:26):
Do you ever see that?
Speaker 1 (47:27):
So bad?
Speaker 4 (47:28):
What about Carrie strug good one?
Speaker 7 (47:30):
She was hurt, right, she's the one that landed the
flip on her one bad ankle, and they, oh they
are caban.
Speaker 4 (47:35):
I'm gonna say, if I can find dominate Mucian, who's
the Katie? Oh yeah, good one?
Speaker 1 (47:40):
Missy Franklin. She was a swimmer, she was dominant.
Speaker 4 (47:45):
Yeah. I don't know transcends pop culture though, that's true.
Good great olympian who in the Olympic part gets really famous?
But like after Olympics over a month later, Like who
do you still talk about?
Speaker 3 (47:56):
Oh?
Speaker 9 (47:57):
I feel like the one for like right now is
Elica Lee.
Speaker 4 (48:00):
Yeah?
Speaker 11 (48:00):
Am I saying that?
Speaker 1 (48:01):
What about Tara Lepinsky?
Speaker 4 (48:02):
Yeah, she's done some stuff too, Like she's also one
of the announcers. Yeah, and Johnny Weir, who is the
dude that murdered? Hey, can I play the car Lewis
Nancy Kerrigan? Good one hard. Here's Carl Lewis's national anthem.
Speaker 1 (48:17):
Oh my gosh, this is so.
Speaker 12 (48:18):
Bad, dirty Harry said in one of his movies, And
a Man's Kind of Noise.
Speaker 4 (48:22):
Yes, it's an ESPN left the hold on.
Speaker 12 (48:24):
Carl Lewis apparently didn't see the movie if his transition
to the Star Spangled Batner prior to the Nets Bulls
game last night. As any indication as a public service,
we present now only excerpts, ladies and gentlemen, our national anthem.
Speaker 4 (48:37):
All right, we already.
Speaker 8 (48:40):
Here we are? Oh see? Can you see?
Speaker 10 (48:57):
And the.
Speaker 2 (49:00):
Oh no.
Speaker 8 (49:06):
O the Land the Free.
Speaker 4 (49:16):
When you're singing it yourself and you go, oh now
that cracked.
Speaker 1 (49:21):
Uh yeah, who else? Any other Olympians?
Speaker 4 (49:25):
H yeah, you know who's the guy that killed the
the blade Oscar? I don't think you got it. That
guy was infamous. He also wasn't an American. I think
it's South Africa. Yeah, that's right. Yeah, but Usam Bolt
wasn't good point, great point, but that was crazy. The
great point. I think all the rest except for his bowl,
right do we mentioned Yeah, more airline bankruptcies could be coming.
(49:49):
Jet Blue in Frontier facing the highest risk. Yeah, Frontier
is kind of the same, same as Spirit. Those are
kind of like the two that's from view from the one.
More than seven one hundred and eighty thousand bottles of
afron nasal spray have been recalled due to the risk
of child poisoning. Uh oh. The crazy part of this
story to me is not the headline or the story.
(50:11):
It's that it's from AOL. Oh AOL dot com. That's
a thing still they not even the crazy stories that
it's from AOL. Yeah, because I think the spray was
just like the child safety thing was messed up. Recalled
after it was discovered the packaging was not child resistant
and lacks proper safety labeling. A California man does twelve
(50:31):
four hundred twelve pull ups in twenty four hours to
set a Guinness record.
Speaker 3 (50:34):
Who wants to beat it?
Speaker 4 (50:36):
We can't do that.
Speaker 1 (50:37):
Holy crap.
Speaker 4 (50:38):
I don't think you could do. I can't do five
right now? Or no? No, no, in twenty four hours.
One thousand in twenty four hours. No, wait, dude, one
would be hard. Five hundred and twenty four hours. Third
of Americans don't get enough sleep.
Speaker 3 (50:54):
That's it? Maybe higher?
Speaker 1 (50:58):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (51:00):
Searched from the US Centers of Disease Control found that
a third of US adults don't get the recommended seven hours.
Oh that's fine, it's now seven as the mainiambor Yeah.
Food pyramid not the same either, really?
Speaker 1 (51:12):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (51:12):
No, what's gone away or what's been added? I don't
I think that things are different now. I don't know.
It's just not the same. They don't teach that anymore.
No food pyramid, No eight hours, now seven. I'm actually
getting more sleep than I thought, just because the numbers down,
I realize I'm healthier. Cereal box toys may be making
a comeback.
Speaker 5 (51:28):
Nice, that's cool. They're non existent. They still have games
on the back though you can play. It's a nostalgia thing.
But with Toy Story five they're doing it and a
lot of cereals we're putting. That's a big deal in
my family.
Speaker 4 (51:40):
Do you know what's crazy too is now like we
buy bags, Like do they have name brand bags?
Speaker 3 (51:46):
Yes?
Speaker 4 (51:46):
Yeah, yeah, oh they do usuay just to be that
was a poor person cereal that we would get on
the very bottom. Now you can get Lucky Charms bags, cheerios.
Speaker 3 (51:53):
It's less pat I mean, I don't know why they
don't do that in general, because it's less.
Speaker 4 (51:57):
You don't have box costs less. Yeah, maybe they haven't.
Wonderf for get any plastics in your cereal because it's
in a plastic bag.
Speaker 3 (52:04):
But it's in a plastic bag inside the cardboard box.
Speaker 1 (52:06):
That's true.
Speaker 4 (52:06):
You get both or is that like a wax bag?
Speaker 3 (52:11):
Okay, we'll make it out of it.
Speaker 4 (52:12):
Yeah, I don't. I don't know. I'm asking questions.
Speaker 11 (52:14):
I think kids want to buy the box more.
Speaker 4 (52:16):
It's more appealing because it's got the whole time.
Speaker 3 (52:18):
I'd be like, hey, kids, you're not the one paying
for it.
Speaker 4 (52:22):
You tell them Amy, you get the bag, Yeah, I
will you tell them Amy.
Speaker 3 (52:28):
I think my kids, oh cereal. It's always like, well
we get this at Dad's house, and I'm like, well you're.
Speaker 4 (52:32):
Not at what are they eating dash like frosted flakes?
Speaker 1 (52:37):
Oh yeah?
Speaker 4 (52:39):
Do you think a bit there? The other parent does
stuff like that even because they know the other parent
won't give it to them, so they want to be
the favorite in that place.
Speaker 3 (52:47):
That's not what's happening here. I don't think so. I mean,
I hadn't thought about that, Like you think the bin's
intentionally buying.
Speaker 4 (52:53):
I purposefully didn't say is been doing it? I'm saying,
do you ever think there's a parent who goes I
know the mom's not going to give them cookie crying.
I probably wouldn't either, But because if I'm for sure
she won't, we're gonna do freaking cookie.
Speaker 3 (53:03):
Car Some people that might do that. I don't think
that's what's happening in my case, but that is what
I hear often of, like well at dad's house. Well,
Dad's house, you also have to go to bed earlier,
so you might get the cereal you want, but you
stay up later. Here.
Speaker 5 (53:20):
Yeah, there's a kid in one of my kids' sports teams.
His parents are divorced, and when the dad has him,
he comes in with like nerds and like a surpy
and then the mom picks him up, like what are
you doing with that and just like throws in the
trash every single time.
Speaker 4 (53:34):
That's funny. Oh gosh, all right, I think that's it. Everybody, good, good,
anything we didn't get to, I think we got it.
We got the story in yep. All right, every I
hope you have a wonderful day and we will see
you on Thursday.
Speaker 3 (53:48):
That's tomorrow, right, Thursday, borrow is Thursday, May seven.
Speaker 4 (53:54):
I'm telling you, man, having a baby mess with your days.
Did you guys do anything for Cinco the Mayo?
Speaker 1 (54:01):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (54:01):
No, it's going to drink over you guys.
Speaker 3 (54:03):
Did you know nothing any block?
Speaker 4 (54:07):
No, we never celebrate that. I had some tacos there
you go to as a white person thing there is, man,
it's not everyone's like, oh yeah, Mexican Independence Day.
Speaker 1 (54:16):
It's not.
Speaker 4 (54:16):
It's not even what it is.
Speaker 11 (54:17):
September.
Speaker 3 (54:18):
Yeah, is that when you celebrate.
Speaker 11 (54:20):
I mean I don't really celebrate it, but my family does.
Speaker 4 (54:23):
They do, My mom does.
Speaker 11 (54:24):
Yeah, that's cool.
Speaker 3 (54:26):
Well, Eddie, your wife is white.
Speaker 4 (54:28):
Fourth of July. She celebrates for we wish are the best.
Speaker 3 (54:32):
Yeah, but like in Mexico, don't they celebrate George Washington's
birthday or something. It's like a big deal over there,
and it's.
Speaker 4 (54:39):
Like, not what it is.
Speaker 11 (54:40):
I don't know that.
Speaker 4 (54:42):
I think Amy reads it.
Speaker 3 (54:45):
Wait before we go.
Speaker 4 (54:46):
Let's Amy's algorithm is to be fooled. That's all her
algorithm missed up. That's gonna trick her.
Speaker 3 (54:51):
Ah celebrated in Mexico coast.
Speaker 4 (54:55):
Find something.
Speaker 3 (54:57):
George Washington's birthday, that's discovering that one. Hold on. It's
not formally celebrated across Mexico, but a massive month long
festival in Laredo, Texas, which is the border, has been held.
Speaker 4 (55:16):
Ever everybody, thank you for being here. We will see
you tomorrow.
Speaker 1 (55:19):
By everybody,