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February 19, 2025 47 mins

Bobby admits he was wrong about something he shared on the show yesterday. Bobby talks about a kid's toy he had no idea was so valuable that is part of a new crime wave. A listener wanted an update on Eddie's chicken business and he tells us the excuse he used to get out of his last big business meeting with the grocery store that approached him about carrying it.  Amy asks Bobby questions that are meant for kids that are ways to have more than surface level conversations with them beyond 'how was your day?"

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Wake Up, Wake go in the mall and.

Speaker 2 (00:05):
It's a radio and the Dodgy lunchbox. More game too,
Steve Bred and it's trying to put you through fog.
He's riding this week's next bit and Bobby's on the mix.

Speaker 3 (00:20):
So you know what this this.

Speaker 1 (00:27):
The Bobby ball right, This is Amy segment.

Speaker 3 (00:32):
On the Time on the Time.

Speaker 4 (00:35):
So, according to experts, in order to have better communication
with our kids, we should be asking them sock questions
s o c K specific, open ended, creative, and kid friendly.
And I have a list of the questions and as
a parent, I feel like this is great, but I
want to ask them to you, Bobby, like how your
day went?

Speaker 1 (00:54):
Yes, so what's the point of this?

Speaker 4 (00:56):
Like when your kid gets in the car, I think
a lot of times as a parent, your go to
is like, so, how is your day? And that's just
like it not enough, Like we can be more specific,
Like I.

Speaker 1 (01:05):
Don't think it has to be a kid.

Speaker 5 (01:06):
Then I think this is just general communication because we
are so vague and we don't even care.

Speaker 1 (01:10):
We're asking open end to stuff. Fine, well, it's.

Speaker 4 (01:13):
Apparent like we do care me when our kids open
up and then answer. But when I think of you.
You don't give a lot sometimes, like if we're genuinely
wanting to know about you and what's going on, Like
if you're in front of the microphone at talk Talk
Talk Talk Talk, but you know at home, maybe you
could be like, so, Bobby, what was the most challenging
part of your day and how did you handle it?

Speaker 5 (01:35):
So I guess I'll do yesterday because the days started. Yeah,
yesterday the most challenging part of my day. Well, thank
you for asking the most challenging part of my day.
I think I'm in the middle of a vitamin D
deficiency season one. I'm not getting any sun when I
do my physical. How to go do my physical? And
he was like, you're way long on vitamin D. So

(01:55):
I'm not getting any sun and now I can't drink milk,
so like something's odd. I think I'm having a vitamin
D deficiency self induced. So I think that's the hardest
part of my day. I went and got me some
vitamin D capsules and I'm seeing if that's it. Okay,
thanks for asking, all right, So you would.

Speaker 1 (02:10):
Have never got that. If you'd say, how's it going, I've.

Speaker 4 (02:12):
Been like fine, right, So did anything surprise you yesterday.

Speaker 5 (02:17):
I would say, you know what, what surprised me was
I was able to We were talking about sleep earlier.
I fell asleep early. I was looking at my sleep
tracker here. I fell asleep early, but I woke up
like three and a half hours later. So I was
a little surprised how early I fell asleep. Man, But
I'm reading a new book, and that gets me.

Speaker 4 (02:32):
What are you reading?

Speaker 5 (02:32):
Pretty tired? I don't know the names of book. We
just did this on a did a podcast. I don't
know the name of books or songs, but I can
tell you it's not Fourth Wing.

Speaker 1 (02:42):
How's that going for you? By the way, it's good.

Speaker 4 (02:44):
I really like it, like I'm in like now, I'm
going to have to read all five books in the series.
I think three of them are out.

Speaker 1 (02:50):
Are you done though with the book?

Speaker 4 (02:51):
No, I'm not done, got it.

Speaker 5 (02:53):
I am reading The Life Impossible by Matt Haig because
I read his other book, The Midnight Library, and so
I'm reading this one.

Speaker 1 (03:00):
I thank you for asking any more questions.

Speaker 4 (03:02):
Yes, did you help someone yesterday or get help from someone?

Speaker 1 (03:08):
Okay, yeah, I help somebody. I think.

Speaker 5 (03:10):
I mean I went to Sonic and I got me
a water because I like the waters with nerds and
cherries and fruit in it.

Speaker 1 (03:17):
And I tipped a sonic carp one hundred blocks.

Speaker 4 (03:19):
What wow, so generous. Okay, so you did help somebody.

Speaker 6 (03:25):
Okay.

Speaker 4 (03:26):
Did you have any interesting conversations with your friends or
teachers yesterday? In your case, maybe a mentor.

Speaker 5 (03:33):
I don't have a mentor a boss, and I rarely
have friends, so shut up.

Speaker 4 (03:38):
Did you have friends?

Speaker 1 (03:39):
You know what?

Speaker 5 (03:39):
Okay, would be an interesting one. It's going to be
on the podcast today because we did. We have a
show called Lots to Say. It's Matt Castle, the NFL quarterback,
and I used to play in the NFL for years.
At the very beginning, he was talking about all the
teams he played for, and he played for, got drafted
by the Patriots, went to the Chiefs, Vikings, briefly with Buffalo,
and play with Dallas, and started some games with the Cowboys,

(04:02):
and so he was talking about of all the teams.
The only thing he does A team he doesn't have
anything from is the Cowboys. He doesn't have a helmet
or any of the jerseys. But every other team he
had kept something from. He regretted that I'm not kidding you.
I saw a game issue jersey of his online and
I bought it last week to give him as a gift.
I had that at the house to give him as
a gift that day.

Speaker 4 (04:23):
He said that and you didn't know that before you
bought it.

Speaker 5 (04:25):
Nothing, complete weird coincidence. And I was like, this is so.
I had a game issue jersey that they put in
his locker that someone had taken and sold it, and
I bought it and gave it to him.

Speaker 4 (04:38):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (04:39):
So that was the.

Speaker 5 (04:40):
Interesting conversation where that just happened to all have to
fall like that. It's on today's episode where it was
not set up at all, and I was like, oh
my god, this is very crazy.

Speaker 1 (04:48):
Give me one more question.

Speaker 4 (04:50):
Okay, what was the most interesting thing you learned yesterday?

Speaker 1 (04:55):
Okay.

Speaker 5 (04:56):
So I've been reading the last couple of days about
Canton's hierarchy of infinity, which there are different ways to
measure infinity, which I never knew about, and so you
would think infinity's only measured one way. There can't be
a bigger infinity than a smaller infinity. So I've been
reading about that and it kind of broke my mind for.

Speaker 1 (05:15):
A little bit.

Speaker 5 (05:16):
But then I go into chat GBT and like explain
it like I'm five, and then they do. And so
now that's what I've been reading about. The infinity can
be measured in different way. Some infinities are bigger than other infinities. Really,
I didn't know that, I mean either and how But
then I kind of learned his theory and.

Speaker 1 (05:31):
That's what I learned.

Speaker 4 (05:32):
So because some infinities are smaller, does that mean it?
But it's still going on forever.

Speaker 5 (05:37):
It's exactly the paradox of an infinity that is bigger
or smaller, because an infinity goes on forever. But he
proved that infinity can't be bigger. I can explain it
to you off the air because yeah, I'm lost. Yeah, okay, well.

Speaker 4 (05:49):
See like this, we had more of a conversation than
we would have if I just said, so, how was
your day? Yeah, because and that's what happens when kids
get in our cars are like huh, and then we're
sort of sitting there driving like, man, I wish they
would open up a little bit more. But if you
get specific and you stay open ended and you get
a little creative, then and kid friendly of course with
you a week ago. Adult.

Speaker 5 (06:11):
That's okay, thanks. Those are sock questions. You can probably
look those.

Speaker 1 (06:15):
Up the time. It's time for the good news.

Speaker 4 (06:21):
How much box?

Speaker 7 (06:26):
Last week Tulsa, Oklahoma, Ashton is going into labor. She's like, honey,
we gotta go. You gotta drive me to the hospital.
The babies are coming. Hurry, hurry, hurry. And they drive
and they pull up in the hospital's circular drive and
she's like, the baby's coming out. You gotta hurry up,
go go. He runs to get a security guard in
a wheelchair. When the security guard gets to the car,
he notices the baby's coming. He gets down, puts his

(06:50):
hands down, catches the baby.

Speaker 5 (06:52):
The wait his whole life for this, that security guard's point,
his whole life for this moment.

Speaker 7 (06:55):
But then here's this crazy part. The umbilical cord was
wrapped around the baby's neck three times times, and the
security guards, like I've had empt training, I know what
to do, uses his fingers to press on it, loosen it,
unwrap the umbilical cord.

Speaker 5 (07:09):
WHOA, I probably do like I do my phone chargers
and just leave it. I'll try to undo that. Sometimes
I'm like, ah, I.

Speaker 1 (07:16):
Don't know too much work.

Speaker 5 (07:17):
I'm just gonna leave it plugged in crazy. The one
he had empty training too, that he had to like
get in there.

Speaker 1 (07:25):
That's not his in there, No, No, he's just there
to protect the hospital. Yeah no, I mean I'm talking
about in there in there.

Speaker 5 (07:30):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (07:31):
The cool part is he did go to their room
later and meet the baby. Yeah, that's cool, that's awesome.

Speaker 5 (07:35):
They're very fortunate that it was him with that training
that also didn't freak out when he got in there.

Speaker 7 (07:41):
And I should shout him out. His name is Marco Edmondson.
I'm sure you you butchered that a little bit, probably,
but he's the security guard in Tulsa, Oklahoma, at the hospital.
So thank you to him at Saint Francis Hospital, so
he knows who he is.

Speaker 1 (07:56):
The show. All right, there you go. That's what it's
all about.

Speaker 5 (07:59):
That was tell me something good over to Amy with
the Morning Corny.

Speaker 1 (08:07):
The Mourning Corny.

Speaker 4 (08:09):
What do you call a fibbing cat?

Speaker 1 (08:10):
A fibbing cat?

Speaker 4 (08:11):
What a lion?

Speaker 1 (08:12):
A lion? Got it? That was the Morning Corny Morgan.
Your mom watched my comedy special?

Speaker 4 (08:21):
Yeah she did.

Speaker 1 (08:22):
Did she like record it and then watch it back?

Speaker 8 (08:24):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (08:25):
She loves to record stuff. There's all kinds of things
on her DVR.

Speaker 9 (08:28):
But she recorded this and she's like, you know what,
I watched Bobby's comedy special yesterday and I laughed out loud.

Speaker 1 (08:33):
Oh, that's very nice of her.

Speaker 4 (08:34):
She loved it. She even gave me a rating on it.

Speaker 1 (08:36):
M Am, I gonna, I am I either going to
think she's lying or that she hates me.

Speaker 5 (08:40):
There's really no positive for me hearing a rating, because
if it's really good, I'm gonna go Okay, she's lying
just to be nice. And if it's bad, I'm like, well,
she must not get the joke, so she hates me,
but go ahead, Well I did.

Speaker 9 (08:50):
I prompted her. I was like, if you give it
a rating, what would you give? And she goes five
out of five safety pins.

Speaker 1 (08:54):
Okay, I believe. I believe her.

Speaker 9 (08:56):
Then she said it was fun to listen to the stories,
like me working on the show and having met you
a few times, getting to like hear some of the
other stories.

Speaker 4 (09:03):
That she just loved it.

Speaker 5 (09:03):
Well, thanks for telling me that, and everybody's watching on CMT,
thank you. We're gonna release it a different way. We
just I just got to figure out how I'm gonna
do that, because I can't let it die now. Apparently
people in Kansas love it.

Speaker 1 (09:16):
Morgan's mom.

Speaker 5 (09:16):
Yeah, you know, you often ask, hey, what can we
invest in now that's gonna be worth a whole lot
of money in the future. Yes, people flip Lego sets
like crazy because when they put out these sets, they're
pretty limited as to what the theme is. So if
it's like Lion King Legos, there's only a certain amount
of them. I got on this whole thing on TikTok
because I like memorabilia where there are Lego flippers that

(09:38):
buy these sets and they set on them for like
a year and then resell them at like one hundred
and fifty percent.

Speaker 1 (09:43):
Wow, you know, not like ten times.

Speaker 5 (09:45):
But Lego flippers are a thing, and people also will
target and steal Legos. Thieves used a U haul truck
to hit this place that stores and sells Lego sets.
They got about ten thousand dollars worth of Lego sets.
You don't really think about Legos as being, like, you know,
part of crime, but here is the owner of that place,
Scott Nelson, talking about the burglary.

Speaker 10 (10:06):
About ten thousand dollars worth a Lego a lot of
high end retired collectible sets. I think they were literally
in here under five minutes, but we're pretty sure that
they'd been in the store before looked how easy it
was to probably take these particular items. This hasn't been
an unusual thing in the Lego community.

Speaker 1 (10:23):
For the last few years.

Speaker 10 (10:25):
There have been smashing grabs, targets, Walmarts, all the big
box stores and now have all their Lego locked up.

Speaker 5 (10:33):
Legos are valuable, That's the thing I would tell you, like,
if you must do this by Legos, if you hold
up for a year, like limited edition sets, you can
sell them back for more because they're not making any
more Legos. I mean so much so that again people
are targeting Lego stores. I mean, how sad you have
to be to target a Lego store. You can't go
to bait.

Speaker 4 (10:50):
Maybe they diversified.

Speaker 5 (10:52):
I don't think that diversifying is really what these burglars
are doing. They're probably just finding vulnerable places and going
after them. So they're looking at like camera footage they
want to put whoever took the bricks behind bars k
to you with that story there.

Speaker 1 (11:05):
Did you ever use Legos as a kid?

Speaker 4 (11:06):
No, not at all. My nephew is so good though,
Like he'll dial in and he'll do this entire, really
complicated set, and his brain just works that way to
where you can do it so fast.

Speaker 5 (11:18):
What about legos? As a parent ever step on him?
Did your kids ever get them?

Speaker 8 (11:21):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (11:21):
I mean it's pretty painful.

Speaker 1 (11:23):
Was that a thing in anything in your house? All
the four works every day?

Speaker 5 (11:25):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (11:26):
Where we have so many legos? There used to be sets,
but are now all just pieces all over the hell.

Speaker 1 (11:31):
You can't even tell them now, they're all mixed up exactly.

Speaker 3 (11:33):
Weal.

Speaker 4 (11:33):
I need to actually see if my nephew has any
of these values.

Speaker 1 (11:36):
They need to be sealed though. Yeah, you can't use them, definitely.

Speaker 4 (11:39):
They're definitely not sealed. He gets it as a gift
and starts putting it together right away.

Speaker 5 (11:45):
A guy in Maryland won fifty thousand dollars in the lottery,
but waited six months to cash it in, just days
before it would expire. He said, I just want to
hold on to it, but I sure was excited about it.
Lunchboxes are lottery expert. If you hit for fifty thousand dollars,
how long until you'd be thing?

Speaker 1 (12:00):
In twelve hours, Max.

Speaker 7 (12:03):
Yeah, because I mean the drawing happens, and I assume
the lottery opens at like nine in the next morning.

Speaker 5 (12:07):
You're saying from the night you just can't get in. Yeah,
what if you want to scratch off at noon?

Speaker 7 (12:13):
As long as it takes me to get to the
lottery office ten minutes, twelve minutes, eight minutes, whatever, I'm
going straight there. There's no Oh, let me hold on
to it for six months? Why what's the point.

Speaker 5 (12:23):
A Prince George County man claimed a fifty thousand dollars
Pick five prize and they waited because no one ever
cashed in, and just days, like two days before it expired,
he was like, Hey, I won this.

Speaker 1 (12:34):
I would never be able to sit on it. Why
would you want to sit on it?

Speaker 5 (12:36):
Dude?

Speaker 7 (12:36):
It's like the point of playing the lottery is to
win money. It's not to wait six months months to
get your money back. It's like, hey, I won, let's
go get it.

Speaker 1 (12:44):
What's he doing?

Speaker 5 (12:45):
The married father max the numbers when the lucky player,
so I want He celebrated by jumping up and down
and then put a stick in the drawer and didn't
share the news with anybody.

Speaker 4 (12:51):
Yeah, that's crazy with anybody, that's stupid, that's wild.

Speaker 1 (12:54):
He didn't even tell me until yesterday, said the winner's wife.

Speaker 5 (12:57):
Oh my god, I'd be afraid someone would throw that
thing out, Like I want to go and look at
it every hour just to make sure it was still
there until I put it in.

Speaker 1 (13:03):
Do you know what the lottery office is in town?

Speaker 11 (13:05):
No?

Speaker 1 (13:05):
Because I never had to go.

Speaker 4 (13:08):
Yeah, but you should know just in case they.

Speaker 5 (13:10):
Should manifest yourself drive by it over. I don't even
believe manifesting, but you could just like drive mi it
over and over. You figure it out, find out where
it is.

Speaker 4 (13:17):
I can picture yourself walking in.

Speaker 1 (13:19):
Maybe I'll go in and talk to him that once.
It feel like the cash ticket. What's the biggest ticket
you ever saw come in?

Speaker 3 (13:24):
Like?

Speaker 5 (13:24):
That's interesting. I don't know if they can talk to you,
but that's interesting. The doomsday fish ended up washing up
on a beach. Now researchers believe, well, the legend is
a doomsday fish only washes up on the beach wherever
if something really bad is gonna happen. So this happened
a couple of years ago. It happened the other day.
Here is some audio of what researchers believe about the

(13:46):
doomsday fish.

Speaker 12 (13:48):
Doomsday fish just washed up on a southern California beach.
It's an oar fish, which is extremely rare but still
to have washed up in so Cow since August. In
Japanese Okla, the doomsday fish was said to come before earthquakes,
but researchers say there's hardly a connection between these fish
showing up and the occurrence of earthquakes. Or fish usually

(14:11):
live in the messopelagic zone, which is one of the
least explored areas of the ocean that's more than three
thousand feet deep, and researchers say they usually only come
to the surface when they're sick, dying, or disoriented.

Speaker 5 (14:24):
Yeah, so something had to happen down there deep where
they're like, we're getting the crap out of here, and
then something so bad that they end up washing up.
Like it looks like a gar from like when we
used to fish, we'd see it go. You never wanted
to catch a gar, but at or fish I'm not
super familiar with. If you were to see in the water,
you would think it was a snake.

Speaker 4 (14:44):
Yeah, it looks like a snake.

Speaker 5 (14:45):
And so the one that has washed up recently, was
on a beach in Mexico. Hers was that last one
in California. But that's what they think they come up
for because there's something bad, bad happening down below, so
they're trying to get out of town. So also i'd
like to say this, I like to oologize to everybody
because I watched finally the full clip of that plane landing,

(15:07):
because they put it up after the show ended yesterday.
They lied to us it didn't roll over because of wind.
That pot They hit the ground hard like butt hit
and it went boom a flame. It was on fire.

Speaker 1 (15:17):
It was on fire. That was the crash.

Speaker 5 (15:20):
When we were told about it, they were like icy runway,
very windy, it rolled over. No, when you finally got
the footage of whomever was sitting in the car recording
it from their phone, that thing lands and butt hits
and flames. So the guy that was on the show yesterday,
I wouldn't go to work either. It was like, I
have a work trip. You gotta got on a plane

(15:41):
to Mexico.

Speaker 4 (15:42):
Backing out now, especially now that the Doomsday fish was.

Speaker 11 (15:46):
In Mexico, Well, it doesn't wash up beds North America.

Speaker 1 (15:52):
Yeah, because that's Toronto.

Speaker 5 (15:55):
Yeah, that plane they misled us because they made it
seem like it handed. I see runway wind blew it over.
No note, it catches fire as soon as its butt
slaps the ground. So I'd like to apologize to everybody.
I now say it was a crash. Nobody died though,
thank god. That also tells you, like things can happen,

(16:17):
and those planes are built in a way that most
times when there's an incident, people are able to survive.

Speaker 11 (16:22):
And nobody died. I think boom fire. Did you see
the video of the people getting out of there? Yeah,
upside down.

Speaker 4 (16:27):
Woo the side didn't like, Please hurry, don't worry about
your things, just get out for sure.

Speaker 5 (16:33):
Been getting my stuff though, I know, yeah I've been.
I'm like, hold on, hold on, hold on, and that's
on the ground. You ain't got to reach up, it's
on the ground.

Speaker 1 (16:40):
Pull it right out. Let's play. Jason Alden here, Bobby
Bone show. Thank you guys for hanging out.

Speaker 5 (16:44):
Call us if you want eight seven seven seventy seven,
Bobby eight seven seven seventy seven, Bobby.

Speaker 1 (16:52):
Thanks. Do you want to hear about Tom Brady's testicle?

Speaker 4 (16:57):
Okay?

Speaker 1 (16:58):
Sure, kaph good.

Speaker 5 (17:00):
So we do this segment on our podcast called Lots
to Say, And so Matt Castle was the backup of
Tom Brady, and then when Brady got hurt, he played
a whole season. So that was Matt's entry as Brady
goes down Game one and then Matt Castle's starting quarterback then.

Speaker 1 (17:15):
Goes to the Chiefs, on and on.

Speaker 5 (17:17):
But we do this bit called Goat Stories, where we
talk about people that we've worked alongside. They're like the
goats in their world. And I told a real fun
Ryan Seacrest story, and then he told a Tom Brady story.

Speaker 1 (17:26):
Here you go.

Speaker 13 (17:26):
This is my rookie year and we're playing Tampa Bay
at home. Third quarter in the game comes off and
he's standing up on the sideline. I see him. He
starts wincing him and I said, tell me, okay. He's like, yeah,
I just got a lot of pain down low. We
ended up winning that game, but we go into the
locker room. His locker's next to me, and he's like,
oh my god, his left testicle was the size of
a grapefruit.

Speaker 1 (17:47):
Du It looked like a helmet. Ferry comes in. They
go in and I don't know what the heck they
had to do.

Speaker 13 (17:51):
But he had a sports orney that opened up and
was leaking fluid down into that area, and he goes
and plays in the playoffs.

Speaker 1 (17:58):
Now, I was like, where are you to.

Speaker 4 (18:00):
Do about this?

Speaker 1 (18:00):
And all he said was I'm going to put on
two jockstraps. Pretty wild. That's a goat? How about that?

Speaker 5 (18:07):
It was so big, like he noticed it, and so
they want a playoff game. They ended up losing a
playoff game after that, but it was like super swollen.
But that's his goat story, which I thought was hilarious. Yeah,
the podcast is called Lots to Say, so check it out.
It's our NFL show with Matt Castle. But I did
not expect to go deep into Tom Brady's testicle that day.

(18:28):
And that story can't be told unless you're right there
looking at it and they're lockers right next to each other.
I want to play a voicemail from Karen and Pennsylvania.

Speaker 6 (18:36):
I have a game suggestion and a question. My question
is what happened to the employee of the Month segment.
We haven't heard that in a really long time.

Speaker 4 (18:44):
And my game suggestion is Morgan.

Speaker 6 (18:46):
Versus Mike d and Marvel Trivia. Let me know your thoughts.
Love the show Studio.

Speaker 1 (18:51):
We do Employee the Quarter.

Speaker 8 (18:52):
Now.

Speaker 5 (18:52):
We were doing Employee the Month every month and it
was just all the time, and that's having to deal
with that. So we do Employee the Quarter. So I'm
sure what January February we'll do one of Mark Perfect
and then Marvel triviah Yeah. If there's ever something they're
playing for or a shocker if they lose, well that'd
be a fun game.

Speaker 1 (19:07):
I appreciate that. Go James in Virginia.

Speaker 8 (19:10):
Ay morning, Bobby Money Studio. It's been a while since
we've heard anything about Eddie smoking a chickens at one
point meeting with somebody from Costco or Samplup or interest
in carrying his product. I don't know if we ever
got an update on how that meeting turned out or
if he shoulders recipe. So Eddie won up with Eddie smoking.

Speaker 6 (19:34):
Out chickens anyway, I love both family. Awesome Bye Eddie.

Speaker 3 (19:41):
Yeah. I mean I did meet with Kroger, not any
of those other places.

Speaker 1 (19:44):
It was Kroger.

Speaker 3 (19:44):
We had a meeting.

Speaker 11 (19:45):
I told I pitched my chicken to him, and they
said chicken is just not a good investment for us.
So they passed on the chicken and that really kind
of just stopped my operations. Man, just kind of just
you didn't have an operation. I took him a chicken. Yeah,
you didn't have an operation. And I don't think you
have the IP, Like, there's no thing you owned the
intellectual property. You're just making a chicken.

Speaker 5 (20:02):
Yeah.

Speaker 11 (20:03):
I guess the recipe i'd kind of own, but they
didn't want the recipe. They do rotisserie chickens whatever.

Speaker 4 (20:07):
That's basically what we were doing, right, But you talked
about maybe doing a ruby, you know, Yeah, but why
do you take one? No and just stop.

Speaker 3 (20:14):
I didn't. I just stopped for the moment.

Speaker 11 (20:16):
That was last year, and then my dad passed away
right after that, so like, well, no, hold on, I'm
a serious. Meeting was going to be the week that
my dad passed, and I had to call Kroger from
the hospital because they called me ten times.

Speaker 1 (20:29):
Are we doing this meeting?

Speaker 11 (20:30):
I said, But you had the meeting the first, this
is the second, the follow up meeting on the rubs
that Amy was talking about. And then I just had
to say, like, hey, guys, I'm just dealing with something.
I will come back full circle, and we never did.
That's he never did. I can't let him use his
dad as an excuse.

Speaker 4 (20:45):
They called ten times, they did, and if.

Speaker 1 (20:48):
That's true, they really wanted it, and then you'd be
a moron.

Speaker 4 (20:51):
To not call them back. You're finished?

Speaker 1 (20:53):
Yes, Oh no, why you're curious?

Speaker 5 (20:55):
No? No, no, Well sometimes it's hard.

Speaker 4 (20:57):
To put things to the side. You don't.

Speaker 1 (20:59):
Yeah, nah, I would do it. I'd grieve and I'd
make the call.

Speaker 4 (21:02):
It's okay, that was all really sudden, Like Eddie, I
like this conversation.

Speaker 1 (21:05):
This is what I was going through right there. Well,
my mom died and I was like, I gotta keep
working and I gotta grieve.

Speaker 4 (21:10):
You process differently, Yeah, if I had a rub, I
process differently.

Speaker 13 (21:14):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (21:14):
I mean, let's call it a seasoning. Rob sounds weird.

Speaker 1 (21:17):
But you never called him back.

Speaker 11 (21:19):
I did call him back, and I say, hey, let's
just just just push things off a little bit. I'll
get back to you when things are heard together and
I'm working on a few things.

Speaker 1 (21:25):
It's just slow run. You're not like what seasonings you are?

Speaker 5 (21:33):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (21:34):
Yeah, called like Eddie's smoke, He's gonna make something else.

Speaker 13 (21:38):
Seasoning.

Speaker 1 (21:38):
What do you mean make something up, lunch boxes up.

Speaker 7 (21:42):
Eddie is full of crap, dude, Like if you right
right when you get back from your dad's like, you
came back to work, so then you're done grieving.

Speaker 1 (21:49):
Uh you call Kroger and say, hey, let's have that meeting.

Speaker 3 (21:51):
But here we are.

Speaker 7 (21:52):
I mean, I don't know your dad died four months
ago and you're still working on it. So what were
you going to say in that meeting? Hey, I don't
have anything for you.

Speaker 11 (22:00):
No, I had something, which is it was a whole
presentation I had to come up with, and I didn't
have I wasn't ready for all that.

Speaker 4 (22:04):
Let's be clear, grieving never ends, hold on, so he
wasn't ready for that.

Speaker 7 (22:08):
So his dad dying really saved him because he didn't
have anything to present.

Speaker 3 (22:12):
Kind a weird way to look at it.

Speaker 5 (22:14):
But also when I understand interesting, well, he's not doing anything, James,
we appreciate.

Speaker 4 (22:18):
That call that though he says he is, he says
he's working on.

Speaker 6 (22:24):
That.

Speaker 1 (22:25):
That ship is dang, he's dead.

Speaker 4 (22:26):
That's hard dead, because.

Speaker 1 (22:31):
That's a rough way to say that. I'm sorry your dad.
That's guys like that just taking it from the New
York Post.

Speaker 5 (22:38):
A doctor charges six thousand dollars per eye to change
the eye color forever. An ophalmologist three point four million
followers on TikTok has gone viral due to his specialization
that changes people's eye color. The procedure changes the color
of the eye by injecting pigment into the cornea, of

(22:59):
course the American Academy of Optomology also referred to as
eye tattooing. The process permanently changes the cornea from clear
to opaque and covers over the natural iris color inside.
So basically, the ink then covers up the iris. Six
thousand per eye. One, that's weird. Two an injection into

(23:22):
the eye feels really painful. And can you numb that?
Can you numb an eyeball? And then three twelve grand
to change your eye color? Is eye color even that important?

Speaker 1 (23:33):
Ay?

Speaker 4 (23:33):
No, I mean not to me. I don't want to
mess with my eyes like I what if something goes
wrong and then now I can't see just because I
wanted my iris opaque.

Speaker 5 (23:42):
And that's how I feel too about people the tattoo
their eyelashes or tattooed there whatever like eyelinerer on and
again that's safer because you're not going into the eye.

Speaker 1 (23:51):
But man, it's sure is close.

Speaker 4 (23:53):
Yeah, but it's a little different.

Speaker 1 (23:55):
It is different, but it's sure as close. And if
there's a mess up, it pokes you right.

Speaker 5 (23:58):
In the eyeball. But I don't think I would change
my eye color. I don't even have good eye color.
Mine's just like blue green or something.

Speaker 4 (24:06):
Yeah, people do contacts. I mean that's just like a
safer Yeah.

Speaker 1 (24:09):
I don't want to get injected into the eyeball.

Speaker 5 (24:11):
Selena Gomez and Bennie Blanco bought a thirty five million
dollar home in Beverly Hills, and this is why he
does stuff like tortilla cheap chips leading to a bathtub
full of nachos.

Speaker 1 (24:21):
When you have that much money, you got to do
crazy things in order to impress the other person.

Speaker 5 (24:24):
But they went all in for a Spanish style house
with seven bedrooms and twelve bathrooms for thirty five million dollars.
The resort Light Grounds comes with structures including a library
and a grand swirling staircase, a glass greenhouse, selarium, a
fitness center, and a pool. It's been owned by other
famous people, but thirty five million dollars for the house.

(24:46):
You think they have a mortgage.

Speaker 4 (24:48):
I don't know. I wonder what their financial people will
advise them, depending on Probably not because the rates are
so high. I would imagine if rates are really low,
they may say, who's day?

Speaker 5 (25:01):
Yeah, I wash your legos, they say from readers Digest,
we're talking about legos recently. Parents, they say, wash your
kids legos because germs can linger on plastic for months,
and these things can harbor different bacteria and diseases. And
you don't have to scrub each piece by hand. You
can disinfect them by putting them in a mesh bag
on the top shelf of your dishwasher and washing them

(25:23):
like dishes. Just run normal cycle. Okay, readers Digest again
with that story. There's a whole story from Career Builder
about annoying coworkers. What makes a co worker annoying? Okay
the top he says, Okay, go ahead, you're fired up.

Speaker 1 (25:35):
Give me one no. What makes a co worker annoying.

Speaker 4 (25:39):
If they don't pull their weight?

Speaker 1 (25:43):
Okay, I can agree with that.

Speaker 4 (25:45):
Annoying Eddie.

Speaker 1 (25:47):
What makes a co worker annoying?

Speaker 11 (25:48):
Someone that kind of bothers you while you're trying to
work all the time like, talk to you, lunchbox.

Speaker 1 (25:53):
Uh suck ups?

Speaker 4 (25:56):
Oh oh oh, someone that eats stinky food.

Speaker 5 (25:57):
See. I feel like you're all taking shots at each other.
Butiled what No, he or she is a downer or
is always negative? Is number one? Is I think we
have one of those. Number two, they're incredibly nosy and
loved to gossip. I think that could be No, it's
not physical nose, but I think that could be both

(26:18):
both of you. The next one, they bring smelly food.
That's eddie edie, that's boiled eggs. They leave common area
as a mess and don't clean up. That's lunchbox. They
blame others.

Speaker 4 (26:29):
That's lunchbox, both of them a little bit.

Speaker 1 (26:36):
Everybody probably does it a little bit. This is like
who does it the most? Who does it the most?

Speaker 4 (26:40):
Lunchbox?

Speaker 1 (26:41):
And then pass the buck when it comes to responsibility.

Speaker 3 (26:45):
Amy answer that.

Speaker 1 (26:46):
Amy answered that one.

Speaker 4 (26:49):
I think he does what he's supposed to do to you?
What is that I think if y'all are.

Speaker 1 (26:54):
Looking to No, I'm not saying, I just asked what
you thought.

Speaker 4 (26:57):
Well, I think that the elephant in the room right now.

Speaker 1 (27:00):
Would be the elephent would me.

Speaker 4 (27:03):
I think he does exactly what he's supposed to do,
and when there's something like technology, he needs to ask
for help, which he does.

Speaker 5 (27:10):
From Guinness World Records, an eighty seven year old man
in Oklahoma just scored the Guinness Record for the largest
brick collection. He has eight hundred and eighty two different bricks.
So it's not like a house built of ten thousand bricks,
but it is eight hundred and eighty two different bricks.
Who knew there were that many different bricks. But he's
from Tulsa. He's been collecting bricks for the last forty years.

(27:32):
And he says each brick tells its own story. That's
a lot of stories. That's a lot of bricks.

Speaker 1 (27:38):
He's a retired mathematical engineer and real estate developer. So
smart guy.

Speaker 5 (27:43):
He has a storage facility full of all these bricks. Dang.
And then finally, a child shoots and kills two home
intruders in self defense. From WSAZ, a child shot and
killed two men during a home invasion in Kentucky. According
to Kentucky State Police, troopers were dispatched at the home
four thirty am Saturday, there was reports of a shooting.
When they arrived, they found two men with gunshot wounds,
Jeremy Allen fifty one and Roger Smith forty four. They

(28:07):
were both pronounced dead. Police said the two men had
broken into the home with the intention of stealing firearms.
During the break in, at juvenile living in the home
saw them in holding firearms acting in self defense. Police
said the child retreaved a handgun I shot both men
before escaping through a bedroom window. Police to not give
the exact age of the child who was shot or
who shot the alleged intruders.

Speaker 1 (28:24):
Wow, they say child, So I'm thinking twelve or under.

Speaker 4 (28:28):
Well, then it's a juvenile.

Speaker 1 (28:30):
Yeah, I think that's anybody under eighteen though, because you
go to JUVI at nine.

Speaker 4 (28:35):
Okay, yeah, I didn't know what makes juvi because when
you first said child shot intruders, I'm like, were they four?

Speaker 5 (28:42):
Yeah, I would think it's nine or younger, but I
don't know. But also, don't break into somebody's house like
play stupid games when stupid rises.

Speaker 4 (28:51):
And obviously, if those people were breaking into steal firearms,
it's a home that maybe they're used to having around.
The child knew how to use it.

Speaker 1 (28:59):
Like that's what you get that sucks. People had to die.

Speaker 5 (29:02):
But if you're breaking into somebody's house and you're a threat,
good for this kid for knowing how to use a
firearm or protecting himself and possibly as family.

Speaker 4 (29:09):
Members psychologically at such a young age to have to
do that.

Speaker 5 (29:12):
The age of which child can be sent to juvenile
attention varies by state. In general, children under eight are
not considered mature enough to be held criminally responsible. There
are exceptions for serious offenses, and Florida, no one under
seven can be arrested, charge or adjudicated unless they've committed
a forcible felony. There's always an unless, So you can't

(29:33):
at seven unless. So that's crazy. Now that sucks. The
whole story sucks. But I'm glad that kid knew what
to do. And then he wasn't found and then something
bad happened to him. That's the news Bobby's stories. This
guy forged his grandparents' death certificate to get off work.

(29:53):
They didn't really die, but he proved to them that
they were dead by their certificate.

Speaker 1 (30:00):
He was like, can't come in.

Speaker 5 (30:02):
Do you guys ever do anything to not go to work?
Not here, because if you guys are sick, stay home.
I have no interest in anybody. If you like, if
you're not even good, you having a bad day, I'm
good if you stay home.

Speaker 4 (30:12):
If you find out my dad's alive. And I took
like two weeks long.

Speaker 1 (30:15):
Oh that's exactly what happened here.

Speaker 5 (30:18):
So he requested time off and his supervisor was like
what four and he's like, well, my grandparents died bereavement. Yeah,
And then the supervisor said, can I see their death certificate?

Speaker 1 (30:30):
So I'm thinking this guy.

Speaker 5 (30:31):
Wasn't a good worker anyway, because if any of you
guys said anybody died, I want to be.

Speaker 1 (30:34):
Like, I'm gonna need to see that death certificate. Yeah,
that'd be crazy something.

Speaker 5 (30:37):
And this guy probably had some issues in the past anyway.
So then he forged the document for his grandfather on
his laptop and there was a QR code. He made
the whole thing.

Speaker 1 (30:47):
You go to it like he went through all the effort.

Speaker 5 (30:49):
Wow, he forged a death certificate can be fined ten
thousand dollars or jailed because that's a government document. So
ever lied to get out of work. Let's say, back
in the day lunchbox, I felt he got.

Speaker 1 (31:02):
A few of these.

Speaker 7 (31:02):
I mean, I always lie about being sick, or I
have a project at school or something like that. But
one time I called in sick with this girl that
we worked at Walmart together, and she just told him, Oh,
my grandma died. And then they said, okay, give us
the funeral home. We're going to send flowers.

Speaker 5 (31:16):
Oh that was their way of saying, get us the
death certificate. And do you think they trust Do you
think they were checking her or they trusted her and
we're being nice.

Speaker 1 (31:22):
I think they were being nice. And we were sitting
there going, oh my gosh, what do we do?

Speaker 5 (31:25):
What do we do? What do we do?

Speaker 1 (31:26):
What did you do?

Speaker 7 (31:28):
She just gave him a funeral home in her hometown.

Speaker 3 (31:31):
They got flowers, like, what are these for?

Speaker 1 (31:33):
Who's Gertrude ed? Do you have anything? Well?

Speaker 3 (31:36):
I called in sick, and what I did was really bad.

Speaker 11 (31:39):
I've never talked about this, but I was working for
the news station and I called in sick because I
got offered to shoot a wedding and I was on call.

Speaker 3 (31:47):
So I took the job and I went and I
shot a wedding. I was in the news van and
everything and chicked the news van.

Speaker 11 (31:54):
Oh yeah, because that was with me, Like that was
my car when I was on call. So I went
to the wedding, parked it right in front of the venue,
and everyone's like, wow, the news is covering the wedding.

Speaker 1 (32:02):
Oh that's funny.

Speaker 3 (32:03):
But my job thought I was sick.

Speaker 1 (32:04):
Amy, I've not good for you.

Speaker 4 (32:07):
Yeah, I can't think of anything.

Speaker 3 (32:08):
Are you just saying that?

Speaker 1 (32:09):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (32:09):
I really have not.

Speaker 1 (32:11):
I have not when you worked the White Lost Place
in college.

Speaker 4 (32:15):
No, why would I do that? Because I'm making I
get paid by the hour, Like if I didn't show up,
I wasn't gonna get paid.

Speaker 1 (32:20):
Yeah, but that's most jobs. I mean, I know, but
that's why I had a job.

Speaker 4 (32:25):
And I wasn't working a lot of hours, so I
had no reason more than anything.

Speaker 9 (32:30):
Yeah, both both Buffalo wild Wings and my sheep.

Speaker 4 (32:33):
Job that I had.

Speaker 1 (32:34):
What was the Buffalo wild Wings excuse?

Speaker 4 (32:36):
They were both the same. I both I called in
sick for both of them.

Speaker 9 (32:39):
But I was actually hung over and I was sick
from alcohol poising, not actually like six sick.

Speaker 3 (32:44):
That happens.

Speaker 6 (32:45):
That's so sick.

Speaker 4 (32:46):
Yeah, that self induce sick. Yeah, but still sick.

Speaker 1 (32:50):
Yeah, that's self induced sick.

Speaker 5 (32:51):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (32:52):
No, I would fight through all those things and go
to work.

Speaker 3 (32:54):
Yeah, of course.

Speaker 5 (32:55):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (32:57):
Never did you think about ever doing it?

Speaker 13 (33:00):
Ye?

Speaker 1 (33:00):
Did you ever have the urge to be like? Man,
you know what, I could go to the beach, or
I could go to the lake, go on a you know, anywhere.

Speaker 3 (33:06):
That didn't sound like Bobby.

Speaker 1 (33:07):
Yeah, I don't have any friends. I think you do stuff.
You call in stuff, you have friends and stuff you
want to do. Yeah, I know.

Speaker 5 (33:14):
I guess like Amy, I never called in to lie.
I didn't even even if I was hurting, I would
go to work. I would do the opposite. Everybody's dead,
I'm going in anyway. I just turned my hat around
backward and go in. If I'm sick, go in, go in.

Speaker 1 (33:27):
Ray you have anything, Yeah, I mean mine was just school.

Speaker 3 (33:30):
Back in middle school.

Speaker 14 (33:31):
Friend's parent died and they said, hey, kids, if any
of you guys are grieving, this take off as much
school as you need.

Speaker 3 (33:37):
Yeah.

Speaker 14 (33:37):
So me and a buddy, I mean the whole week
we would just go to his parents' house every day
in the afternoon and just said, oh, yeah, we're grieving,
we just need some more time off.

Speaker 5 (33:45):
Oh my gosh, that's kind of dirty, dog though, But
you were young. You haven't done that here, we're gonna
do a special scammeler. Wow. Tax seasons coming up, scammers
are going to be crushing like this is their money

(34:05):
making time, and so they want you to believe they're
the IRS.

Speaker 1 (34:09):
And so here's some things.

Speaker 5 (34:10):
Number One, there are reportedly text messages going out that
say they need, if you get it, to click a
link to receive a fourteen hundred dollars payment from the IRS.
So the scammers are using recent news and the best
lies is always a shred of truth. In late December,
the IRS that it was sending two point four million
in total to people who didn't get all their federal
stimulus checks or the pandemic. So they're using that news

(34:33):
story as a way to lure people to clicking the link.
But those payments are happening automatically, and the link in
the text takes you to a fake site that looks
exactly like the official site. The IRS is saying again
the only way they contact anyone is through the postal service,
never through texts or emails. Now, what I would say

(34:54):
first of all to that that feels so old, like
if you're only reaching out through mail, like hardcore letter mail,
either saying that because then people know. But we could
probably got to change that system too. Oh, I don't
ever open an envelope.

Speaker 4 (35:06):
Seems like I would think that was scam now.

Speaker 5 (35:08):
Yeah, even like Christmas cards, don't even open those. I'm like,
this could be a scam. CBS News with that story.

Speaker 1 (35:13):
So two things.

Speaker 5 (35:15):
One, remember IRS never gonna ask you to click something,
no emails, no texts.

Speaker 1 (35:23):
And then two and this is not.

Speaker 5 (35:24):
A commercial, but like LifeLock is awesome if for some
reason you do click something. And I think the bones
LifeLock dot com slash bones, I don't know who knows.
This sounds like a good one promo code bones over there.
Lifelock's awesome, But that's a scam alert looking out for
you guys.

Speaker 3 (35:42):
All right.

Speaker 5 (35:42):
This whole story is about technology addicts having withdrawal. I
think if I were an addict, i'd have withdraw when
I put my phone away. That's why I don't think
I'm an addict.

Speaker 4 (35:51):
But you don't put it away long enough.

Speaker 1 (35:53):
Sure, I've put it away for days before literal days.

Speaker 4 (35:57):
But did you have access to it, like when you
put it away for days, like could you have gone
to get it or what?

Speaker 5 (36:02):
But that doesn't matter if you're taking off drugs. Sometimes
you can't go get drugs, you still have the same
withdraw symptoms. Phone addiction is running your life. And they
talk about how technology addicts suffer the same withdraw symptoms
as heroin addicts.

Speaker 1 (36:15):
There's no way.

Speaker 4 (36:16):
Wow, that's crazy.

Speaker 3 (36:18):
There is no way, like shakes and all that. That's
what they do, right.

Speaker 5 (36:21):
Lee Fernandez, an addiction specialist at UKT, an organization that
offers inpatient rehab treatment for people struggling with drug issues, alcoholism,
and even behavioral addictions such as gambling, gaming in the Internet,
says in the past five years he's seen a significant
rise in phone, technology and social media addictions, and those
who try to quit can suffer from withdraw symptoms that

(36:43):
are as serious as those experienced by drug users trying
to quit heroin Wow, such as shaking, sweating, and insomnia.
I think that's just them throwing a fit. I don't
think that's them actually going through There's no way, there's
no way.

Speaker 4 (36:54):
What if there was no way, why would you be
saying this.

Speaker 5 (36:57):
He's witnessed clicks and it also the word is those
who try to quit can suffer when those little words
give you a lot of freedom to say whatever you want.
It's like when they have certain products that are like
can promote young skin, can and promote there's nothing attached
to those words. Those are just words that they put

(37:20):
so people think that it's a cure for something sneaky.
So when he goes, those who try to quit can
suffer from withdrawal symptoms that are as serious as those
experienced by drug users. I'm thinking there's somebody getting off
heroin is also giving up their phone. Yeah, and the
guy's like, oh, look, we told you and that that
gets clicks.

Speaker 1 (37:39):
That's why we were reading.

Speaker 5 (37:40):
There's no way maybe one person ever, But you read
stories aout people getting off heroin like having to lock
themselves in a room, screaming, sweating. I've never seen anyone
except when you take a kid's phone away. Ah, that's
a different scream. So I'm gonna call BS on this
only because he used the word can suffer.

Speaker 4 (38:01):
Maybe we just don't know a severe phone addict or
internet gambling.

Speaker 5 (38:06):
I'm gonna say gambling or internet is even a bit
different than someone just on social media, because gambling can
be an addiction. We don't even need your phone for
you just could be an addict having to go to
the casino, having a bookie, like that's a part of
your life. I think that's a that feels more substantive
than someone that can't get off TikTok.

Speaker 4 (38:25):
Yeah, I know, but maybe we just don't. We don't
know anybody that has it.

Speaker 5 (38:30):
M I think this is complete bs that there's there's
no chance that it's anything close to someone getting off heroin.

Speaker 4 (38:39):
Yeah, I would definitely put it in a different category.
But I still think that people may have if they're
getting like like a lot of hormones are being released
in their body every time like they get alike. That's
what I found interesting about that. Did anybody else start
that Apple Side of Vinegar that we talked about that show?

Speaker 1 (38:55):
So how they do it?

Speaker 5 (38:56):
Oh?

Speaker 4 (38:56):
Yeah, so how they do it on that? It's it's
a scripted story. But like she gets these little hearts
and emojis that come out like every time she gets
a like or a comment on her stuff, and she's
getting a dopamine hit, and she feels it in a
different way than like anybody here in this room would,
Like it was just obvious that that fed her problem.

Speaker 7 (39:17):
I mean, that's also the chiefs a haulic. You watch that,
you know what I mean, the guy and I mean
when he would pose up on Twitter and he would
just get all excited because all the comment.

Speaker 5 (39:25):
And I hear you, I just think it's everything injecting
an actual drug into your body like significantly.

Speaker 4 (39:33):
No, I yeah, I get you, but I'm just saying
that was a good visualization seeing how they did it.
And she had a mental disorder.

Speaker 1 (39:40):
But the so she faked she was sick.

Speaker 4 (39:41):
She fakes that she had cancer and healed herself through
food and started this whole blog and she got a
couple of million followers I think on Instagram.

Speaker 5 (39:50):
Did she fake she had cancer or was her start
of her story she never had it? No, no, no, no,
you're missing my question.

Speaker 4 (39:57):
Sorry.

Speaker 5 (39:57):
Did she ever have cancer outwardly though she was faking it?
Or was her start was a I used to have
cancer and this is how I beat it, Like was
part of her process ever with people publicly that she
had cancer? Or was it just I had cancer and
this is how I beat it.

Speaker 1 (40:11):
This is what I did.

Speaker 4 (40:13):
Yeah, I'm trying to. I mean, I think I will
lose She was like, I have a brain tumor.

Speaker 1 (40:18):
Have so it was in current tents at first.

Speaker 4 (40:22):
Yeah, but like she never did like scamanda and had herself.
Well I take that back, because she would have her
boyfriend drop her off at the hospital for treatment.

Speaker 1 (40:31):
So okay, so she in her store, her lie, she
had it. I didn't know because it would be much easier.

Speaker 3 (40:36):
To do that lie.

Speaker 4 (40:37):
You mean just writing about it if you did it.

Speaker 5 (40:40):
All in past tense, because you don't have to write.
She had to perpetuate.

Speaker 4 (40:44):
She stuck a port in her chest.

Speaker 1 (40:46):
Yeah, that's crazy. Yeah, and the other parts is a scam.
That's crazy and a scam.

Speaker 4 (40:50):
Yeah. So she I think she forgot her computer one
day and that's how he found out.

Speaker 1 (40:55):
Don't tell everything. Oh goodness, oh my god, are you
willing to show?

Speaker 4 (41:03):
It's a true story.

Speaker 1 (41:05):
But we don't come on to just screen.

Speaker 6 (41:07):
I know.

Speaker 4 (41:08):
Sorry, you started asking questions and then I got him
on a roll. I'm addicted to telling.

Speaker 1 (41:13):
You she's going through with.

Speaker 5 (41:17):
Sorry, Okay, we'll move off. That Treasured Banksy owned by
Mark hoppis from Blank one eighty two. You from with
Banks the Artist. You ever see that documentary like Stop
at the Gift Shop whatever it's called.

Speaker 1 (41:27):
Let's exit through the gift shop. Yeah, it's you know,
it's crazy good about banks Yeah, I remember being really good, right, Yeah,
it was good. He is gonna actioned off. It could
fetch six million dollars.

Speaker 5 (41:38):
Wow. A painting by street artists Banksy with an environmental
message and an estimate of up to six point three
million dollars going up for auction with the with some
of the proceeds benefiting the Los Angeles wildfires. Mark Oppas
is putting it up.

Speaker 11 (41:51):
Well, it's cool that it's a Banksy and it's cool
that Mark Hopliss had it too, his Hopless Yeah he
bought it.

Speaker 3 (41:58):
But that's cool. Like you get like, oh, this used
to be blink wit two guys and it's a.

Speaker 1 (42:01):
Big s oh it's like a double Yeah, dude, I'm
looking at picture of Mark Happas. I thought it was me.
He does kind of look like dude from a distance
because it's far away. I thought it was me with
the glasses. Well he has the glasses on it. Yeahah,
and he's just like a normal white dude, Like there's
there's just generic as can be. Yeah, that would be cool.
I really want a bob Ross. They're so expensive though,

(42:23):
there must be so.

Speaker 11 (42:23):
Many though, right, because he did won every episode.

Speaker 4 (42:27):
I'm not like, how much.

Speaker 1 (42:29):
Thirty thousand on the low low end that's expensive. Oh yeah,
that's really expensive.

Speaker 5 (42:36):
I got an auction for one on like that Golden
app and I was like, oh, I might get with
this for like five thousand dollars, and I was in
and all of a sudden, it's with one minute left.
I went to like forty seven thousand dollars and I
was like I quit. I was like, I'm out no chance,
But that would be awesome to have a Bob Ross.

Speaker 11 (42:51):
And then find the episode that he painted it on
to me like, this is my painting being made on TV.

Speaker 1 (42:56):
Some of them aren't in the episodes.

Speaker 11 (42:57):
It's just his art, correct, because he would do two
versions as well. He would do the first version and
then he would recreate it on TV.

Speaker 4 (43:04):
Wow.

Speaker 5 (43:05):
Oh, I'm thinking of the ones because I would think
anything that was on TV still counts as on TV.
I'm because I didn't know that. I was thinking just
the ones. He wasn't for TV at all, Like he
just painted. He's obviously just a painter, so those count
as Bob Ross's too.

Speaker 1 (43:18):
I didn't know that. Fun fact about the two Uh huh.

Speaker 3 (43:21):
Yeah.

Speaker 11 (43:21):
He'd always like come up with it first and then
be like, all right, now that I know what I'm
gonna do, I can recreate this on TV.

Speaker 1 (43:25):
I'd be so legit to have a bob Ross.

Speaker 4 (43:28):
Maybe we'll pitching, don't know, don't all right?

Speaker 1 (43:34):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, we'd buy you one percent of a
bob Ross. You have to get the other ninety nine percent. Okay,
Bobby Bone show.

Speaker 14 (43:42):
Sorry up to day.

Speaker 7 (43:43):
This story comes up from Kitsap County, Washington. A Carr
was driving down the road when she accidentally cut off
a truck and she said, sorry, sorry.

Speaker 1 (43:53):
Truck wasn't having it. Pulls up in front of her.

Speaker 7 (43:56):
Passenger, leans out the window, pulls out a Roman candle,
lights it, and what starts shooting fireworks at her car.

Speaker 1 (44:06):
Oh my gosh, you shouldn't do that.

Speaker 3 (44:09):
It's different.

Speaker 5 (44:09):
It's only funny because it wasn't a gun, and he
led us to think it was going to be a gun.

Speaker 1 (44:14):
But also for sure their risk got little burnt with sparks.

Speaker 4 (44:17):
It's still dangerous, yeah, but I'm.

Speaker 1 (44:19):
Saying they took a little bit of that too.

Speaker 5 (44:21):
If you're lighting a ronmacandle and you're holding it out
of your car and the winds blowing.

Speaker 1 (44:24):
You're getting a little burned back on your list. So
I don't like it. But it was a half step
down from a gun. Now that's a whole step down
from a gun.

Speaker 7 (44:32):
What happens then she had dash can videos, they have
the license way to the truck and they're able to
track them down.

Speaker 1 (44:37):
It's very dangerous because the person can wreck their car.

Speaker 5 (44:39):
I don't think the roll mccandle is going to hurt
the person if it hits them, but they can wreck
their car because of that.

Speaker 1 (44:45):
Okay, I'm much box.

Speaker 7 (44:46):
That's your bonehead story.

Speaker 5 (44:47):
Of the day.

Speaker 1 (44:52):
We were sitting here yesterday and we got an amber
alert on our phone.

Speaker 3 (44:56):
Yeah. What do you guys do when you get that?

Speaker 11 (44:57):
Because I go into detective mode, especially if I'm about
to hit the road and I get that amberler, I'm like,
all right, I'm looking for an oldsmobile.

Speaker 5 (45:05):
I think it matters where it is. I mean, if
it's right near me, I'll probably think about it a
little longer. But I think they're playing a numbers game
where they're sitting it out everywhere and they're just hoping
someone sees it. And basically looks up and sees the person. Right,
because it went to everybody's phone in the room, I'm
not sure if you guys got it.

Speaker 4 (45:20):
Yeah, I got it.

Speaker 5 (45:22):
But Eddie claims he goes and searches for the lost
car here. Absolutely, I can't claim that because I will
be lying.

Speaker 4 (45:28):
No, I'm like you, I look and I have the information,
and I'm like, if I happen to come across this,
but a lot of times it's a county.

Speaker 1 (45:34):
Over, yeah, and it will. Yesterday it was like a
county over.

Speaker 11 (45:37):
He's Tennessee or something. But that is But when they
send it to you, that means that they could be
coming your way.

Speaker 1 (45:42):
Yeah, yeah, right.

Speaker 4 (45:43):
I think it's good to be aware totally.

Speaker 11 (45:45):
And that's why they send it to you, Like, don't
ignore that they're sending it to you so you could
be on the lookout.

Speaker 5 (45:51):
Yeah. I think though it's a numbers game to where
they want to send it to so many people that
someone looks at it and in the next thirty seconds
sees the person. Because I don't even I don't know
if it makes me a bad person. I don't remember it.
After I readidn't think about it for a second, unless
it's like hit me through four times like Amber alert,
and then it pops up as like a headline on

(46:12):
some newsfeed that I have I'm subscribed to. I don't
really remember anything, but I definitely don't go searching. I
don't think you do either.

Speaker 4 (46:19):
We talked about it at dinner last night because well,
my daughter hadn't been on her phone much and well,
this is what happened. She pulled up her phone for
the first time. She was like, oh, there was an
Amber alert and I was like, yeah, that was a
while back. She goes, yeah, they're long gone now. She
put her phone down, like, but I like it. She's
paying attention to it. Yeah, And then it made my

(46:40):
son go look and he's like, we need to make
sure sort of. He sort of like edited, like, we
need to make sure we're on the lookout for this,
and my daughter's like, eh, what.

Speaker 1 (46:48):
Do you remember about it?

Speaker 11 (46:48):
Then private Eye it was a little girl I think
she was maybe I think and maybe five years old.
What kind of car as an oldsmobile And they said that, uh,
like I followed up on it when I got home
and they caught the dad.

Speaker 3 (47:01):
The dad they were looking for the dad.

Speaker 5 (47:02):
You actually followed up on it, of course. Man, Okay,
I I retract part of my making fun of you.
So you didn't speak about it long enough to look
it up.

Speaker 3 (47:10):
So Amy's daughter is wrong. She was not long gone.
They caught her dad.

Speaker 11 (47:14):
She's the girl safe, and the dad's arrested for aggravated kidnapping.

Speaker 5 (47:18):
Okay, I think we should take twenty percent of our
laughing at Eddy back if he actually followed up, because
I didn't even follow up.

Speaker 1 (47:23):
I didn't think about it after like one minute, I know.

Speaker 4 (47:25):
But it's not like he dedicated his data.

Speaker 1 (47:27):
Well, but if he kept thinking about it though.

Speaker 11 (47:29):
Look, if I'm on the couch, I'm not gonna get
up and oh, I gotta go find this girl. But
if I'm on the road, I'm looking.

Speaker 1 (47:35):
I believe you. I believe you a little bit, all right, Guys.

Speaker 5 (47:37):
Check out the show podcast, Yeah two year Old Found Safe,
a Bobby Bones show theme song, written, produced and saying
by read Yarberry. You can find his instagram at read Yarberry,
Scuba Steve executive producer, Raymondo, head of Production. I'm Bobby Bones.
My instagram is mister Bobby Bones. Thank you for listening

(47:58):
to the podcast
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Hosts And Creators

Bobby Bones

Bobby Bones

Amy Brown

Amy Brown

Lunchbox

Lunchbox

Eddie Garcia

Eddie Garcia

Morgan Huelsman

Morgan Huelsman

Raymundo

Raymundo

Mike D

Mike D

Abby Anderson

Abby Anderson

Scuba Steve

Scuba Steve

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