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December 10, 2025 54 mins

Bobby gets triggered by a clip of Hilaria Baldwin challenging him to a dance off. Then we get into more podcast shade where Sophia Sansone was on Shannon Ford’s podcast, Probably A Podcast, recently, and talked about her toxic past relationship. Amy talked about Australia banning social media for kids and how she scared her son out of wanting it. We talked about how the biggest breakup day of the year is coming, why guys look at other girls, and the Top shows of the year. We also talked about the deadliest sports for kids.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
All right, here's a voicemail hit it which number was one?

Speaker 2 (00:06):
I have another theory.

Speaker 1 (00:07):
Bobby's foot surgery didn't actually happen.

Speaker 3 (00:11):
He's using it as a way to get.

Speaker 4 (00:13):
Out of things like going to Dancing with the Stars,
going to the Christmas party.

Speaker 1 (00:18):
There's a new theory to throw at you.

Speaker 5 (00:20):
Thanks nice.

Speaker 1 (00:21):
What do you think about that?

Speaker 4 (00:22):
Uh?

Speaker 5 (00:23):
I don't think so, because I mean, you really committed
to that. Plus, like the doctor calls you, like, who's
arranging that?

Speaker 1 (00:32):
You really could big doctor really could be into the bit. Uh.
The initial theory was I never had surgery. My wife
had the baby. Oh, and so that's what I was
doing is I was actually at home and we were
taking We just didn't want to say anything about it.
Yet I did have foot surgery. I did want to
go to the final Dancing with the Stars, and I
do not want to go to Christmas party. And I

(00:53):
wouldn't even about a healthy foot.

Speaker 6 (00:54):
Yeah here's the thing. You have no problem saying no
and not going to things.

Speaker 5 (00:57):
Yeah, because you can totally still go to the Christmas party.

Speaker 1 (01:00):
Yeah with a bad foot. Matter of fact, Yeah, no,
my my surgery is real. I went to I call
it ankle rehab and my wife's like, it's it's not
really that it's physical therapy. But I'm like guys at
rehab today because I go walk around the house singing.
They try to make me go to rehab and I
said no, no, no, for your foot.

Speaker 5 (01:20):
Yeah, I mean I would imagine people know if you
say rehab, they know you're talking about.

Speaker 1 (01:26):
Well, I only tell my wife, Oh, I not like.

Speaker 5 (01:28):
It about like a public.

Speaker 1 (01:29):
No, no, no, okay. And so man, they put me
through it yesterday. I'm like doing jumps on it, jumping
now like an elevated lift. They got this ice machine
and it's not so much ice. It's like a box
and they put your foot in it and it sends
water down a tube and it freezes your foot. I
looked it up. It's like I got to get one
of these, like three thousand dollars for the ice machine.
I was next to a major league baseball player yesterday though,

(01:51):
getting rehab. I don't want to say who. It is
a case he's injured and oh like.

Speaker 6 (01:54):
He's a current Yeah, off season though a lot of
stuff could be off seas because we don't have a
team here.

Speaker 1 (02:01):
Yeah, no, for sure, and it's off season because it's
not on because it's not in season. Yeah, yeah, I
hit me with number four. Please.

Speaker 3 (02:08):
My question is maybe I missed it. Is he upgrading
her like engagement ring or is he getting her ring
for a different finger? My ring, index and middle finger,
they're all three different sizes. All right, love the show.

Speaker 7 (02:23):
Bye.

Speaker 1 (02:24):
This is about Eddie. He was trying to figure out
his wife's ring size. Yeah, and how's that going? We
got it, you did it? But how we got it? Baby? Oh?

Speaker 6 (02:32):
Apparently she did have another ring and I found it.

Speaker 1 (02:36):
Does it still fit? I hope?

Speaker 6 (02:38):
I mean, I hope it looks about the same size
as the other one.

Speaker 1 (02:42):
But I found another ring in there.

Speaker 6 (02:43):
And I was like, that's it, that's the size, and
so I ordered it.

Speaker 1 (02:47):
How did you know the size? I took it to
the jeweler. Oh, you put it in one of those
little put in one of those little things and she
didn't hear it on the show. No, dude, no clips,
I don't think so. Do you purposefully not put this
up as a clip so she doesn't see that? Yes,
it's a video. Uh this reminded me of video. Want
to show you guys video. There was a guy who
was selling Santa Claus blow ups. But it's forty foot tall.
Look at this video I'm showing on the screen here.

(03:09):
This is a forty foot tall inflatable Santa. That is awesome.
How big is yours? Twelve? I mean, and that's big?
And that twelve is a big inflatable Santa. Look at
this as the it zooms in by the house. It's
it's bigger than the house. That is so cool.

Speaker 5 (03:24):
That's crazy.

Speaker 1 (03:25):
Would your ho a have anything to say about that?
Do you guys live in one?

Speaker 4 (03:29):
Uh?

Speaker 5 (03:29):
Yeah, but I don't think. I think my hoa when
it comes to Christmas is like, be jolly.

Speaker 1 (03:35):
I've never seen one that big. It's as tall as
the chimney almost on the house. It's huge. It's almost
as tall as yeah, the house.

Speaker 8 (03:42):
Well, look at all those ropes it takes to tie
it down.

Speaker 6 (03:44):
Yeah, that's what I would be worried about. Like a
wind would come and just is gone.

Speaker 1 (03:48):
That is the biggest thing I've ever seen. What would
you pay for that? Oh dude? I mean I don't
remember mine.

Speaker 6 (03:53):
Mine was It wasn't cheap, but like I would say,
that's probably like five half hundred bucks.

Speaker 1 (03:59):
Yeah, I mean, Mike gad hundred bucks. You have Christmas
step up in your yard?

Speaker 5 (04:03):
Uh? Yeah, I have some decorations out in like wreaths
and stuff, but I don't have lights. That's one thing
I wish. I wish I had those pretty balls hanging
from the tree.

Speaker 1 (04:14):
Outside.

Speaker 5 (04:15):
Yeah, they look they're beautiful, and every year I'm like,
I should get those, and then the year comes around,
I'm like, nah, too late.

Speaker 1 (04:22):
I guess for me, it's mostly like we're so close now,
why would I do it? Right? Like if I think
about it in October. But I don't think about it
in October because it's not time to think about it.
It's time to think about how I'm not putting up
Halloween decorations. It said, of how I'm not putting up
Christmas decorations. Uh okay. I want to play a clip
here of Hilario Baldwin, Alec Baldwin's wife. This is on
Nick Viles podcast, and I haven't heard this clip yet,

(04:44):
but apparently she challenges me to a chat Shaw. She
was on Dancing with the Stars this year.

Speaker 5 (04:48):
Go ahead, if Bobby, if Bobby said that, you know what, Bobby,
I challenge you to a chat chat Shaw, who's Bobby Bones, he.

Speaker 1 (04:57):
Is a disc jockey. Oh, I'm not a freaking disc jockey.
That's somebody who plays eleven song thirteen songs an hour
and that how do they even get that? Fifties?

Speaker 5 (05:12):
But who says? Who even says disc jockey?

Speaker 1 (05:15):
Right?

Speaker 5 (05:15):
Anymore?

Speaker 1 (05:15):
Unless that's like purposefully trying to get under my skin,
like they know that. That would that would be like
me going to that dude to be like all he
is is a reality reality show guy.

Speaker 5 (05:24):
Right, and he's definitely evolved into more than that. So yeah,
do you think that was intentional? Like like where are
people not familiar with the term? I don't know, radio personality.

Speaker 6 (05:34):
Probably not or just a personality yeah, or just.

Speaker 5 (05:36):
Now it's evolved like his podcasting, like you've been on
TV multimedia.

Speaker 1 (05:41):
I don't think anybody goes multi.

Speaker 5 (05:42):
Media, they don't, you know, Like that's interesting.

Speaker 1 (05:47):
Trying to beef with a bachelor dude kind of got
you a little bit that a little bit I feel
like that. It's like, yeah, it's like that, I don't
go dude, you do like a hooking up TV show?
That that's all you are? Like, I'm not doing that
because I don't think that I don't think that's the truth.

Speaker 8 (06:05):
He did it a lot too.

Speaker 1 (06:06):
What's that that show?

Speaker 8 (06:07):
He did it like five seasons?

Speaker 5 (06:10):
Oh the Bachelor?

Speaker 8 (06:11):
Yeah, like he was on Bachelor, Bachelor read Bachelor in
Paradise back in. I mean, he was all over it.

Speaker 1 (06:16):
I'm sure he's a nice guy. I don't know him,
and that was not what the focus of the clip was.
But then it totally set me off. That triggered me. Uh,
does say anything else? Do we know? Nope? Okay, it's
probably better to end it right there. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (06:28):
Yeah, I thought we were just gonna get oh hey, yeah,
I challenged him to a touch on.

Speaker 1 (06:31):
Instead of challenge boxing match.

Speaker 5 (06:34):
And not only went from I guess he had said
something to her about did you hear that? Bobby Bones
said this? So then she challenges you. But then after
she challenged you, she's like, wait, who is he? And
then he's like a disc jockey?

Speaker 1 (06:47):
I mean, do we need to compare resumes? Hmm? Oh,
we don't want to do that. We don't want to
he don't want to do that. We don't want to
do that. Let's see, all right, so we'll jump out
before I get too triggered. But I could even go like,
what does Hilaria Baldwin do? Who is she Alex Baldwin's wife? No,

(07:08):
I yeah, I know. I mean that's what I have
a lot of kids. Now she's upset. I wasn't supposed
to be insulted by this, all right.

Speaker 5 (07:16):
I mean maybe they genuinely weren't. There wasn't an insult
to be given. They just genuinely think that's what your
profession is.

Speaker 1 (07:24):
Right, Well, she challenged me, and then she's like, who
is he? Right?

Speaker 5 (07:29):
That part I thought it was weird that she went
in all in and was even challenging you, but then
asked who you were that part. That part was weird
to me.

Speaker 6 (07:36):
I just googled who is Bobby Bones? And nowhere does
it say this jockey?

Speaker 1 (07:41):
Like nowhere? I think the dude's upset. I didn't do
his podcast?

Speaker 5 (07:45):
What do you mean?

Speaker 1 (07:45):
I got an invitedy of doing and I was like,
I'm in a pass. Oh why I didn't have anything
to offer? They talked about TV shows, what I'll watch
the office.

Speaker 5 (07:55):
Oh, I don't know what his podcast is about.

Speaker 1 (07:57):
But I mean, I'm getting no you'd be quiet. I'm
getting tw trigger and I'm not going to get any
more trigger, Raymond, you can jump out, Bobby Boone. It's
a shady day. We got somebody else doing shade here.
Riley Green's ex throw shade at Riley during a podcast interview.
It's the day of podcasts, shade. This is Sophia Sansone,

(08:18):
who was on Shannon Ford's podcast. Yeah, oh, she was
on place either one of them.

Speaker 5 (08:26):
Okay, So Shannon Ford was on Kristin Cavalieri's reality show
back in the day. Look, she worked at her jewelry store,
I think, and was part of the reality show, and
since then.

Speaker 1 (08:36):
The on Luke Comm's management team.

Speaker 5 (08:38):
Yes, she's Luke's day to day.

Speaker 1 (08:40):
Oh, I've met her. We've met her. She's been in yes,
got it.

Speaker 6 (08:43):
Oh.

Speaker 1 (08:44):
When I see Shannon Ford's picture, she used to pop
up on my feet a bunch. I guess she lives here, right, Yeah,
she lives here.

Speaker 5 (08:50):
She lived in Nashville when she was recording Kristen's reality
show and then they had a big fight. I don't
think they are friends any longer, but she's sort of
built her own influencer type career after that.

Speaker 1 (09:02):
Springboard Okay they started talking about Now that you explain them,
I know who they are. They started talking about relationships
and Shannon asked Sophia how she feels when she sees
clips of him on social media with other girls.

Speaker 4 (09:15):
I just feel I just feel bad for anybody who
I just hope that it's changed the way that he is.
But a yeah doesn't FaZe man anymore. It's kind of
like best of luck, luck girl, Like I hope that
you find somebody else to look up to as a man,
because like I wouldn't describe him as a man the
way that we were and the way that he was

(09:37):
to me in my relationship.

Speaker 1 (09:40):
That goes hard.

Speaker 5 (09:41):
I read some an article about it that goes hard,
saying that like, yeah, I don't know how if you
like minimized her job or what she did. But then
also at the same time, he would take advantage of connection.

Speaker 1 (09:56):
She had her version, and I don't know that her
versions wrong, but I'm just say, we don't have him
saying what his perspective.

Speaker 5 (10:04):
This is absolutely her version. And then she also was
replying to some people on TikTok or something and someone
was like, oh, man, still can I get into his DM.
She's like, sure, he'll apply to anybody with a pulse
or something.

Speaker 1 (10:14):
Like that okay, And this isn't it to be fair.
This isn't to be fair. My to be fair was
this is her perspective, and she's probably a lot of
truth in that. But every dude, this also doesn't make
it right. Every dude that I've ever known that's a
new artist, is that that's not just a Riley Green thing.

Speaker 5 (10:31):
Yeah, and I.

Speaker 1 (10:32):
And I don't even know if it's really a Riley thing.
I don't know the truth. I like Riley, but also
her thoughts because she was.

Speaker 5 (10:42):
And she's that goes hard. He's successful in a way.
She has her own success and they had their experience
and successful together. Yeah, I think and her her her
cousin or brother or somebody is who wants to marry
a farmer? Reality show about farmer's wife.

Speaker 1 (11:02):
Did she fly back with us from Austin? What's her name?

Speaker 5 (11:06):
Sophia?

Speaker 6 (11:07):
No different, that's Riley's day to day.

Speaker 1 (11:12):
Got it? She got it? But she's Riley's X day
to day. I'm saying different kind of day to day. Yes, Okay, Well.

Speaker 6 (11:23):
Man podcast is really letting us like in on everything.

Speaker 1 (11:27):
But yeah, yeah, and there are there are so many
because people just let it rip on podcasts. It's so
hard to get anything to cut through, and if you
don't let it rip, nothing cuts through. Yeah. And also
I would imagine that they are friendly to have that
kind of relationship to where you'd go on and feel
comfortable to do that.

Speaker 5 (11:40):
I think that's a big part of a podcast relationship.
But sometimes when it's your friend, like, you feel more
comfortable to say what certain things. And I do think that, Yeah,
they have our relationships, so that probably made her more comfortable.

Speaker 1 (11:54):
Hey, get it, girl, tell your story.

Speaker 5 (11:58):
She's pretty okay. So Sophie Okay, I was trying to
figure out.

Speaker 6 (12:02):
Her which one is the day to day Luke.

Speaker 5 (12:04):
Comes Sophia, Yeah, Sansung.

Speaker 1 (12:09):
In here before. I think she's been to the studio
before with Luke.

Speaker 8 (12:13):
You're looking her up.

Speaker 1 (12:14):
At it you want to be picked? No, I don't
have any Okay, Well.

Speaker 8 (12:17):
Just type in Sophia and.

Speaker 5 (12:19):
Uh Riley look make Wake. She works for Make Wake,
Make Wake mw A. That's Kappi's business.

Speaker 1 (12:29):
Oh that's the name of it. Make Wake sounds like
a boating company, like a make a Wake. Yeah, yeah,
it sounds like something they have New Bronbels. Your story
that was very much an inside Texas joke because in
New Brombles they used to have this wakeboarding center that
everybody would go just for fun, just her fun was

(12:50):
like a jetski selling place.

Speaker 6 (12:52):
It was like rentals too. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (12:54):
So over a million Australian kids and teenagers under age
sixteen are waking up with no act access to Facebook, threads, x, Snapchat, kick, Twitch, TikTok,
Reddit and YouTube. They still can get on roadblocks, YouTube, kids, Google,
classroom and Pinterest.

Speaker 1 (13:13):
Yes, so the social media that kids don't want to
be on except for roadblocks, they want to be on that. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (13:18):
Other than that YouTube kids kids like it, I.

Speaker 1 (13:21):
Mean a little Yeah, twelve year old don't want to
be on They don't. Yeah, they don't want to see
cocoa melon. Yeah you probably tap out of that at
like nine of wanting to be on it. But yeah,
Australia said no social media for kids.

Speaker 5 (13:35):
Yeah, and I think we've talked about it before, but
the band just now is officially under like has taken place,
and they're wondering what it's going to do, like a
domino effector ribble effect across the globe, like what places
are going to follow suit? So I guess TVT.

Speaker 6 (13:50):
That's eighteen and under sixteen. Yeah, I mean I like it.

Speaker 1 (13:55):
Eddie's been I like having to do a bunch of
computer stuff today. We're working on new programs. That's like
the third time that we've been saying something and you've
missed it, even during the live show. But I knew
you were like working on stuff because I said that
stand as big as a house, and Eddie comes on
and goes you said, Tom, I did hear that. I
did set house before that.

Speaker 5 (14:11):
So we've got seven states here in the US that
are not far behind. Like, so this is state legislative,
state legislation in like Nebraska, Utah, Texas, Louisiana, and New York, California, Florida.
Those are ones that are having But you can say it.

Speaker 1 (14:23):
If you don't enforce it, it doesn't matter. You can say
every Yeah, like.

Speaker 5 (14:27):
In Nebraska, it's like platforms must verify users age, but.

Speaker 1 (14:31):
You can lie.

Speaker 5 (14:32):
Yeah, there's loopholes. Yeah.

Speaker 6 (14:34):
Is that why Instagram is doing the teen account like
they got Like I see that all the time, Like
you follow a bunch of them?

Speaker 8 (14:40):
No, you signed up?

Speaker 5 (14:42):
Guys, Come on, that's your.

Speaker 6 (14:45):
Never it pops up on yours, right, no, no, but
you have teenagers. It says like, you know, look up
teen account like for you for your kids.

Speaker 1 (14:54):
It's all your algorithm. No, it just pops up for you.
Page is all Geen accounts. Uh yeah, I don't. I
don't know if that's why. They're probably building that as
a way too before the law hits. Go, No, we
have built this that is much safer it is. It's
protecting teams. So yeah, it's probably a preventative measure from

(15:14):
this happening here in the States. But if you don't
enforce it, a rule doesn't matter, A law doesn't matter.

Speaker 5 (15:19):
Right, Like my daughter would find a way or on anything.

Speaker 1 (15:23):
And parents are probably involved in this too to go, oh,
we don't care. Just lie about your age. You can
have social media. I know parents who have like thirteen
year olds who let their kids have social media. They
just lie about their age on it.

Speaker 5 (15:33):
Oh okay, yeah, I mean I guess you could, depending
on what they're using it for and or to hook up.
Well I could see like if a parent, like if
your child's trying to you know, maybe seeings or has
a thing or yeah, but.

Speaker 1 (15:46):
You still aren't supposed to be on that. But my
point is parents are letting kids in certain situations have
social media at an age where social media says you're
not supposed to have this yet. Yeah, but it's easy
if you don't enforce it. It's easy to break the rules.
All you have to do is lie.

Speaker 5 (16:00):
Yeah, that's what I'm thinking, Like, miight, if there was
something like, she's the type of person she's gonna figure
out how to get it, because there's times where we
took it away, she figured out every which way to
get Like some we'd remove Snapchat app from her phone
if she was grounded from it or whatever. She'd be like, yeah,
I haven't been getting on the app. Well she hadn't,
but she logged in through the browser. So if you

(16:20):
go look at her apps, there's not Snapchat there. And
then finally it occurred to me, And this was like
a year or two ago, because now she's eighteen, but
it occurred to me. I'm like, I feel like she's
still on Snapchat. And then I sug her phone and
I went to the browser and went to the login,
and sure enough, like there she had been accessing it
that way. I was like, oh, smart, you a little sucker.
But my son, he's fifteen, and we've gotten so lucky.

(16:41):
Like he does not care about social media. Occasionally he'll
bring it up. But what's worked for us is when
the TikTok China stuff was big, he got real scared
about that, and so then whenever he got curious about
like Instagram, I just attached countries he's scared of to it, like, oh, well,
that's Russia, you know. He's like, oh gosh, I don't

(17:02):
want Russia having my Instagram or my Snapchat. And I'm like, yeah, so.

Speaker 1 (17:08):
You don't want to do that.

Speaker 5 (17:08):
That's Saudi Arabia, any country that's been in the news
like just.

Speaker 2 (17:17):
That.

Speaker 5 (17:19):
Yeah, and so far, that's that's worked.

Speaker 1 (17:21):
I saw a video of him last night on your story. Tall.

Speaker 5 (17:25):
Yeah, he've been tall and which is good, which is
good thought.

Speaker 7 (17:30):
I thought fast, tall and fast like that he's And
it's weird we've hit that stage because I remember my
guy friends when we were teenagers, like they would love
going to my dad's house because he would always cook
and have food and they ate so much.

Speaker 5 (17:45):
And now it's like, oh wow, I finally have that
fifteen year old kid that eats so he is never full.
I'm trying to teach him he's got to diversify his food.

Speaker 1 (17:53):
Though. I feel like I'm not full, but I have
to stop because if I chase that, then I will
be fat. Oh really, huh? You know really like you?

Speaker 6 (18:03):
You just are you today? You never get full? You
just eating it right today.

Speaker 8 (18:07):
Were you surprised you would get fat if you never
stopped eating?

Speaker 6 (18:09):
No, I'm surprised that you can't say, Okay, I'm great.
What you can't stop eating?

Speaker 1 (18:16):
You don't get full. I mean, eventually everybody gets full,
but I would I would eat well beyond that would
keep me in even moderate shape. I would eat so
much I would get fat if I didn't monitor it.
It's kind of what happens with your with your body
and you get over there. I don't understand that question.
Like Bushboks is reacting the same way, making fun of

(18:37):
making fun of you.

Speaker 8 (18:38):
Oh, I think he's a little flustered about the teen account.
And then it's just kind of snowball.

Speaker 6 (18:42):
Why want to be flustered about the teen account?

Speaker 1 (18:44):
All right, Morgan, your story Apparently.

Speaker 2 (18:47):
I'm getting a lot of ring camera footage. So there
was this couple who ordered take out.

Speaker 1 (18:52):
You're getting ring camera footage.

Speaker 2 (18:54):
I guess since I brought it up like twice and
now I keep getting it. So it's a couple order
food on door dash. It was Marby's and they got
their food. They started eating, well, the wife started choking, gasping,
and then she even started throwing up, and.

Speaker 5 (19:07):
The husband was like, what's going on?

Speaker 2 (19:09):
What just happened and starts looking at all the food,
realizes there's something on the bag that looks suspicious, so
he goes to the ring camera footage and sees So
this DoorDash delivery driver puts a food on the porch,
takes a picture, and then you kind of see in
the corner her spray something on it, and they think
it was pepper spray. This door driver sprayed pepper spray

(19:30):
on the order, and now the wife was sick from it.

Speaker 1 (19:34):
I have so many questions. One, did they know the
tip amount prior to putting the order down, because that
seems like something you would do if you were angry
about something with the person you were bringing the food to, Like,
if you brought the food, you put it down, you
saw only got a dollar for this, Well, now I'm
gonna hurt the food, right? Do we know if that
was the reason.

Speaker 2 (19:51):
We don't know if it's related to food. They haven't
done there's no like DoorDash isn't investigating it that they
know of. The county Sheriff's has been, but so there's
no relation as to why they don't know what happened.
But the couple is wanting her to be like prosecuted
for it. I do know like when you order, you
can tip in advance, but you can also tip after.

Speaker 1 (20:13):
Are they sure those fries just weren't spicy because Arbi
had spicy frieser fries? Yeah?

Speaker 5 (20:17):
Or is it did they recognize them from a previous Well.

Speaker 1 (20:21):
That would be a tipping thing too.

Speaker 5 (20:22):
Yeah, it's just not maybe on that specific order retaliation.

Speaker 1 (20:26):
It just doesn't make sense that they would do that
for fun because that's their job. Like if you go
up and you put poop on a porch and somebody
not ah, step it out, it's fire on the poop,
Like that could be funny, but that's not your job
that you're gonna lose. This is you're gonna lose your job.
And if you're not angry, it's not like a funny prank,
it's not even funny. You don't even get to see the payoff.

Speaker 6 (20:49):
So you think there's history here.

Speaker 1 (20:51):
I think there's something they're upset about. We just don't
know what it is.

Speaker 2 (20:54):
Yeah, And they said they didn't recognize the woman, so
at least from their perspective, they don't know who she is.
But there could be for that woman if she recognized him.

Speaker 5 (21:03):
I guess on the app.

Speaker 6 (21:04):
Lit like the husband knows the woman and he's.

Speaker 1 (21:07):
Not that would be a reason. That would be a reason.
But the husband was hooking up with a Uber eats
driver or door dash driver, would they really order Uber
Eats or door Dash Stay away from that risk, just
go pick it up himself, get it? Yeah, Yeah, that's

(21:28):
a crazy one, Eddie. Yeah.

Speaker 6 (21:30):
So there's a police station or in the Phoenix area
that's starting to use AI for sketches like chat GPT,
So if there's a suspect on the loose, they still
have the artists come in and they do their artists sketch,
but then they run it through AI and then they
kind of they get a better picture of like what
the suspect was.

Speaker 1 (21:49):
To draw it because those sketch artists one or few
and far between. They cut that out of a budget.
Earliest because it's needed the least, like throwing a lot
of crime in every town where they need somebody to
come in and draw the person. It is needed occasionally,
but it's not needed enough to keep somebody full time, right,
So they're finding a way to do this. I saw

(22:10):
the story and you give the descriptions and it does
like four or five versions too. And then it's almost
like you know when you walk in on TV shows
and they have the six guys standing up there and
you point, you go, that's the one. They kind of
were doing that with these drawings as well. But the
drawings are aren't like sketch drawings. They're like AI like,
they look real, except there's just a little plastic to it.

(22:30):
It's a little plastic y.

Speaker 6 (22:31):
Well, remember when Morgan was doing those little you can
have your own figurine they do look Yeah, that guy
looked nothing like me. Yeah, So like if it was
me that did the crime, they would arrest some other dude.

Speaker 5 (22:42):
Because that that's what I'm think. I'm like, what if
I and I gets this a little wrong? And then now,
because you know, I was trying to help my some
of his math homework the other day and Judge ept
got it. It did me dirty.

Speaker 1 (22:54):
They do. It's wrong a lot, Yeah, not a lot.
It's wrong enough that you can't trust it. I shouldn't
say a lot.

Speaker 6 (22:59):
Well, they can't get my face like I've tried millions
of times.

Speaker 1 (23:02):
Let me in my face. Yeah, let me see if
I can make.

Speaker 6 (23:06):
This sni it's gonna make me look like someone different.

Speaker 1 (23:08):
Okay, here we go. Let's see here a picture of me.
I can describe me. Oh, you gotta describe me. Oh,
I'm the suspect.

Speaker 5 (23:18):
How big did you say that?

Speaker 1 (23:19):
Okay, So I'm gonna describe my friend Eddie here, and
would you draw his face or make a sketch based
on my description of him? So I'm going to start now.
Don't offend me. He is a Hispanic man. He has
a slightly bigger nose. He has facial hair that is

(23:41):
dark with a little gray in it, but it's not full.
It's thin facial hair on the sides. It's not grown
in all the way, but more full of a goatee.
He has bigger, bushy eyebrows, and his head is slightly
he's square, and he's wearing a white Dallas Cowboys hat.

Speaker 8 (24:06):
Perfect. That helps a lot.

Speaker 9 (24:07):
So I'll picture Eddie with that slightly square headsheet, the
kind of thinner facial hair on the sides, and more
goatee in the middle, and then that weight cowboys hat
on top.

Speaker 1 (24:18):
I'll go ahead and sketch that up for you. Don't
forget he's a Hispanic guy as well.

Speaker 9 (24:24):
Absolutely, I've got that noted. I'll definitely keep his features
in skin tone in mind to reflect that he's Hispanic.
Let me put all of that together and I'll have
that's gets ready for you.

Speaker 1 (24:34):
How long does she take? A couple minutes? I don't know.
I mean the artist thing is crazy, dude.

Speaker 6 (24:41):
Like the fact that they were artists that just like
draw a person out of a description is pretty crazy.

Speaker 8 (24:47):
And they were a lot of times so good at it.

Speaker 1 (24:49):
So good. Okay, they're gonna work on that. Yeah, it's
gonna look nothing. I can send it over to Mike
when I'm done and we can put it up on
the screen. Now, I didn't get an elaborate description. I
just looked at you from here and gave it a rip.
But that's probably pretty good, depending on people get robbed
and stuff. So like the person sits in front of
them and goes what do you think about my features?

(25:10):
Take a look at my features.

Speaker 6 (25:11):
And you yeah, you were looking at me while describing me.
People have to like remember like video big guys, I
don't know.

Speaker 1 (25:17):
Oh no, no, David. They'd feel like if I ran
by and I'd be like, do they know how to
be huge among his head? No, No, they wouldn't know.
They'd know, boy, Eclipse of the Sun, lunchbox, you're up. Yeah.

Speaker 8 (25:27):
This hiker in Utah, his name is Austin. He went
for a hike on Sunday by himself in this Arches
National Park and he's going through a canyon. He puts
his left foot down right through the ground into quicksand
and he's stuck. He said he couldn't move his leg
a millimeter and it just kept sinking and he had

(25:48):
to get his phone, drop a pin to emergency personnel.
They used a drone. They sent a drone out found him.
They were able to trek in use all these boards
and stuff to get him out of the quicksand. He
was there for hours, stuck in quicksand.

Speaker 1 (26:01):
It feels like an episode of Full House. Yeah, because
quicksand is not something I've ever really seen, nor did
I honestly think it was real.

Speaker 8 (26:08):
He said, the same thing he said before this trip.
I honestly thought quicksand was just more of a folklore
or legend.

Speaker 6 (26:14):
And he goes, what is it like? Is it just
a bunch of sand in one spot to where you
step on.

Speaker 1 (26:19):
It and you just go down. I don't know the
answer to that, but it feels like it's the cousin
of a sinkhole. Yeah, because those things just fall and
you don't know. I make sure of fine sand and
water that behaves like liquid when agitated, trapping objects in
a seemingly solid but unstable so it just looks like
it's solid and it's not. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (26:40):
I picture it as being like like you're trying to
climb out and you make no gains, like you know,
it's just y.

Speaker 1 (26:46):
Yeah. Yeah.

Speaker 8 (26:47):
He said it felt like he stepped into wet concrete
and then it tightened round his leg and he couldn't
move it.

Speaker 1 (26:52):
It's terrible.

Speaker 5 (26:53):
That's scary.

Speaker 1 (26:54):
Everybody always gets out on the shows though, Yeah they do.
M hm, okay, I do have a couple pictures of Eddie.
I feel like I would go back to the sketch
artist and go make the nose bigger. Okay, I'm gonna
do that. It's very much.

Speaker 6 (27:14):
It's not that big dude so like, but this does
slightly big.

Speaker 1 (27:19):
Yeah, this just looks like a dude with a normal
like everything's That's all I would say to the sketch artist, Okay,
I'll bring it.

Speaker 6 (27:25):
How's the square head though, which is weird. I've never
been described as having a square head.

Speaker 1 (27:32):
Yeah, I'm having real I mean I could see where
I'm having real trouble with this. It's not doing a
great job. It's not doing a great job.

Speaker 6 (27:39):
It never does yeah with me when me for some reason,
it never does a good job. I'll give it my picture, dude,
and you'll still do a bad job. Well it's supposed
to do that, oh it is.

Speaker 1 (27:49):
Yeah, I can't do an exact replica or an exact
copy of the picture. I think they are copyright rules.
They can't even give you lyrics to songs, really, because
they'll say that song is copyright we can't give you
the lyrics. Because at times I'll go, hey, what are
the lyrics to so and so or what song? And
they're like, we can't give that to you. It's copyrighted. Eh. Yeah, okay,
let's see what else we got here. Do you want
to show the guy? Well, it's making the second BATCHU.

(28:12):
That's it. Make the nose bigger. It You just look
like a white dude from Wichita at this point. But
you told her I was Hispanic. Yeah, but it's a
black and white picture. Oh, it's a sketch art.

Speaker 6 (28:22):
So but they're not doing that with these though. They're
doing real color.

Speaker 1 (28:25):
They are, but I just had sketch it. I could
probably say, do real color. All right? What is that
podcast you're listening to? Beth's dead?

Speaker 5 (28:35):
I don't know what to say.

Speaker 1 (28:37):
Oh, you're worried about spoiling it? What's it about?

Speaker 5 (28:39):
Like a listener of a podcast that died Beth? Beth
was a listener Monica Badman, you know, with from Armchair Expert. Yes,
so she's she's doing this podcast with two other podcast
hosts that had a podcast back in the day that
they quit sort of abruptly, and Monica was a list

(29:00):
of the podcast and she's like, what happened? Why did
y'all end this part? They had multiple podcasts, but a
couple of them were her favorite, and she was like,
and y'all just suddenly stopped like, and I didn't know
what happened. Well, turns out they stopped.

Speaker 1 (29:12):
Because something happened. Don't don't spoil too much. Yeah, but
you like it?

Speaker 5 (29:16):
Yes? Yes. The co host of my podcast cat she
told me to listen to it and she's like, just
be ready, and I thought, okay, fine, I'll listen to it.
And then once I started, I couldn't stop. It's like
I was listening to it anytime I was doing anything.
My son was like asking me a question I have
at earbuds and I'm like, what love money, I'm busy,
like I have to know what's happening. Obviously I'm still parenting,

(29:37):
but you know, like it's it just it's I'm being
a little sarcastic to say that. It just drew me
in that much. And it's been a long time since
a podcast, like a true crime type podcast has done that.
And there's ten episodes.

Speaker 1 (29:52):
Didn't you didn't spoil anything?

Speaker 5 (29:53):
There falls under true crime.

Speaker 1 (29:54):
You did a good job amy spoiling.

Speaker 5 (29:58):
But do you know a little bit about what where
it go? Okay, this is all freaking a little bit.

Speaker 1 (30:03):
It's very much. We talked about what Parasocial was a
few shows ago. If you have a relationship with somebody
but they don't even know you exist, because it's like
I listen to shows and I feel like I know
these people, they don't even know I exist, or you.

Speaker 5 (30:16):
See them on Instagram and you feel like.

Speaker 1 (30:18):
Oh yeah, it's a parasocial relationship. This podcast deals with
that when you say yes, yeah, ry cool. I think
some of our listeners may like, like, if.

Speaker 5 (30:27):
You got a road trip coming up, obviously listen to us,
and then dead. That's dead, that's dead. How how old
did you say that Santa was forty feet? That was
forty feet?

Speaker 1 (30:40):
Okay, why don't we break? Might you get a picture?
Can you put it up? This is ai Eddie when
I just gave him. That's not too bad. Well they
can't see it. Oh sorry, sorry Samway, we're going to
the screen here. Yesterday we went to the screen and
nobody can watch it on YouTube. I got a bunch
of messages at the video. I just crapped out with

(31:00):
like five minutes left, and they only got audio on
the YouTube.

Speaker 5 (31:04):
Oh wow, that looks like Ray.

Speaker 1 (31:08):
Like that guy looks like a Ray?

Speaker 2 (31:11):
Did it?

Speaker 8 (31:11):
I doesn't look anything.

Speaker 5 (31:12):
It looks like Ray. In twenty years.

Speaker 1 (31:16):
I mean, there are facial similarities, but what's off about it?
His block chin maybe? Or is the chin he's like
a groom beard. He's too he's too like big, like
thick compared to Eddie. Like that guy looks like he
has muscle you didn't give you didn't give a weight. No,

(31:36):
I know he looks like a shorter guy that seems
like a little more barrel chested.

Speaker 5 (31:41):
Can't pinpoint it, but it's just not.

Speaker 1 (31:43):
Isn't it hard to describe somebody?

Speaker 5 (31:45):
Yeah, very.

Speaker 1 (31:48):
Honestly, what would you say different to make that.

Speaker 5 (31:50):
Sill have a beard on ray? And he did it?

Speaker 2 (31:52):
I feel like it needs bigger eyelashes, like his eyes
are different.

Speaker 6 (31:55):
Oh it doesn't. He doesn't have eyelashes this guy.

Speaker 5 (31:57):
That's true. Eddie does have right now.

Speaker 6 (32:00):
Yeah, women tell me that all the time everywhere you go. Yeah,
they tell me on the road. I wish I had
your eyelashes.

Speaker 1 (32:06):
Okay, we will take a break and we will come back. Okay,
I'm gonna show you the other ones that I put up.
You want to see the new eddies? I think you
got more of them. Well, I just said, hey, make
his face look like this. I only did three prompts.
This is the first one which does look a little

(32:27):
more like you.

Speaker 6 (32:28):
Uh yeah, better, still didn't look like me, though, it's
not gonna look exactly like arrest another dude. Okay, show
the last one that kind of looks like that's closer. Dang,
that's closer. He's got my eyes, but still not me.
It's not you, somebody else. But you show somebody and

(32:49):
you're like, look for this, dude. They're gonna look for
somebody similar that looks like you.

Speaker 1 (32:52):
Yeah, dude, that's pretty good. It looks like you. So
you corrected it, but three times.

Speaker 6 (32:56):
Just telling her like yeah, hey, biggers.

Speaker 1 (32:59):
But that's what you tell a skin artist too, like no, no, no,
go more on.

Speaker 6 (33:02):
The cheeks, skinnier, looking better looking.

Speaker 1 (33:04):
Yeah. Mean, I said make them hot, that's what we got. Like,
make me want to have my way with them, is
what I said. You said that, yeah, and that's what
they gave me. Dude. That's crazy. It puts out an
exact version of Eddie when I say that, it's actually me.
Uh okay. The biggest breakup day of the year is
December eleventh, So tomorrow, yeah, tomorrow, brace yourself. The most
popular day of the year to break up is December eleventh.

(33:27):
It's breakup day mostly because people are like, it's not
worth having to go through Christmas if I don't really.

Speaker 5 (33:32):
Like them, salid. So you do it like thirteen days
out a.

Speaker 1 (33:38):
Couple weeks because it doesn't feel like it's just about Christmas,
and it keeps you from breaking plans because you probably
didn't make them yet on exactly what you're going to do.
If you're not in a serious relationship, If your guy
looks at other women when you're out and about, it's
not a big deal. According to experts, stressful situations can
make people prone to distraction. When men glance at other women,
it may be a subconscious way of shifting focus away

(34:00):
from worries. Is a dud who wrote for Sure that
got caught and he wrote it under a fake name
and then send it to a girl to be like,
hey this this this writer wrote my story.

Speaker 5 (34:10):
I'm stressed and worried.

Speaker 1 (34:12):
It becomes a mental break, offering a momentary escape. It
doesn't mean it carries any deep meaning when guys look
at other girls. Recognizing this can reduce unnecessary tension and relationships.
From a psych called clever Dude dot com.

Speaker 5 (34:24):
Okay, yeah, this is clever. All right, We'll.

Speaker 6 (34:27):
Say though you see a pretty girl, it does make
you feel better.

Speaker 1 (34:30):
I don't think.

Speaker 5 (34:31):
Why did that sound weird?

Speaker 6 (34:33):
I don't know, Amy, why, I don't know, Well, why
does it make you feel better?

Speaker 5 (34:36):
Just you see a pretty girl?

Speaker 1 (34:37):
Yeah, it's like it's like, oh, that's cool, Like the
day's nice.

Speaker 5 (34:40):
You know.

Speaker 1 (34:40):
It's like when the sun's out.

Speaker 5 (34:43):
I just stopped.

Speaker 1 (34:44):
The day's nice, you know what I mean.

Speaker 5 (34:46):
It's like the sun's out.

Speaker 8 (34:48):
Like you could be in a bad mood. You see
a hot and you're like, all right, my mood's betters.

Speaker 1 (34:53):
Long as you don't focus and stare at the girl,
no one would even really know anyway. If you're not
breaking your neck, there are a lot of things that
are moving around that your attention goes to. As long
as you don't stay more than this amount of time,
you're good. They don't stare.

Speaker 5 (35:09):
Yeah, but Eddie, didn't you say at one point you
wear sunglasses so people can't see that.

Speaker 1 (35:12):
No, I walked behind my wife.

Speaker 6 (35:13):
Okay, but I'm not staring, guys. It's just so I'm
free to look. It's not like I'm like, oh, she's
pretty honest stare at her. No, Like it's just like
I want to be free to look because there have
been moments where I'm like, oh, look she's pretty and
I'll say something. My wife be like you didn't have
to say that. Fine, I'll stand behind you and I'll
just keep those thoughts to myself.

Speaker 1 (35:31):
I like this version, Eddie better. You like this guy.
This guy here is awesome.

Speaker 5 (35:37):
But what did he do? He's a suspect for something.

Speaker 6 (35:39):
Yeah, he did something bad, dude.

Speaker 1 (35:41):
Yeah, probably staring, That's what it was. Peeping Tom this guy.
The best TV shows of the year, and how many
of these have you seen? Number one Adolescents.

Speaker 5 (35:50):
Oh, I tried to watch that and it just freaked
me out too much because it's about a kid got
killed middle school, like a kid got free something.

Speaker 1 (35:59):
I don't know.

Speaker 5 (36:00):
They were refrained, but the kid was a suspect.

Speaker 1 (36:02):
My son said it was awesome. Yeah, we thought about it.
We were like, ah, we don't want to watch kid
murder show based on a true story. That's number one,
the pit at number two on HBO Max.

Speaker 5 (36:12):
Yes, I watched some of that, not all of it.
I don't know, probably, like I don't know how many
episodes are. I feel like I watched like fifteen, but
I don't think I'm done.

Speaker 1 (36:22):
My sister said that was awesome, and she's a nurse.

Speaker 5 (36:24):
It's what's crazy is it's all like each episode is
the hour of the day. So you're a what the
whole I've watched so many episodes and it's all in one.

Speaker 1 (36:35):
It's like twenty four. Yeah, the show twenty four. That's
what they did.

Speaker 5 (36:38):
Every episode was. Yeah, that was a good show, which
was a twenty show. Yeah, but this is called the pit.

Speaker 6 (36:44):
Back to adolescent is adolescents.

Speaker 1 (36:47):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (36:47):
My son said that each episode is one shot, like
no edits. It's kind of a fun fact. I didn't
know that, like a whole episode. I'm like, what if
somebody misses up a line, would you fact check that?
I mean, my son, research is a lot, so.

Speaker 1 (37:02):
The whole episode, that's not a single edit.

Speaker 6 (37:05):
Each episode is cut free, he said, and it was
all choreographeed out.

Speaker 1 (37:10):
You're probably right, I mean, let me see here, and
I hope I'm right now. No, I'm sure, I'm not
sure you are. Let's see. It's an intense, immersive experience
following a thirteen year old's arrest for Murder, lauded for
its unique technique using drones handheld cameras like the dj
I run forty in raw performances. Each episode is filmed
in a single continuous cut free take. Bom nailed it.

(37:31):
The ambitious method involves extensive rehearsal. Can you imagine getting
to twenty six minutes in and somebody goes Lebert, yeah,
you got to do the whole thing. You're like, oh
my god, Like Sean, where's the line? Focus back to
the one? Yeah, And you gotta be getting tighter the
longer it goes, because that's more pressure. You gotta start

(37:52):
over longer. Like, if you mess up in the first
five minutes's not a big deal. Start over you mess
up on minute twenty nine.

Speaker 6 (37:57):
I wonder if they coach them like, hey, if you
don't know, then just make something up and we'll move on.

Speaker 1 (38:01):
Well, it's not even not knowing it. It's not stepping
on your words. Yeah, yeah, not because I think you
could probably improve a little bit. And like the scenes
where they're I don't know, kid murders. That's tough y
and that's a true story, right.

Speaker 5 (38:19):
I don't know.

Speaker 8 (38:19):
Yeah, I think it's based on a true.

Speaker 1 (38:21):
Story that also Forever on Netflix. I don't know that show, no,
unless I watched it. And the think about Netflix and
the shows that get loaded all at once. Sometimes you
watch them all at once and you move on so
fast you don't even realize. Which is the difference in
shows that come out every week. They exist longer, you
talk about them longer because you're watching them over a
longer period of time. There are shows that we've binged

(38:43):
six episodes, moved on to the next thing, we don't
even think about it again, and someone will go, do
you watch the show now? We didn't. What's it about? Oh, yeah,
we did watch that. I don't know forever. I'm looking
at it here. The other one is Paradise, which is
great on Hulu. Yeah, that good. Out Blood of My Blood.
I never watched Outlander, like I have friends that love

(39:04):
it say it's fantastic, but we never watched Outlanders. It's
a bit of time travel too, right, Yes, I have
never seen it.

Speaker 5 (39:11):
I think I watched one episode back in the day
and yeah, I feel like she went back to a
different time.

Speaker 1 (39:18):
There's a show called A Thousand Blows that makes the list,
and on the surface, I don't feel like I watched that,
But I did watch.

Speaker 5 (39:25):
It a thousand blows.

Speaker 1 (39:27):
I watched all of it and it was pretty good.
It's like in England. Oh no, I haven't seen that,
and it's about kind of the mob that's like this women.
The group of women robbers is one part of it.
It's pretty good. It's got an eighty eight percent of
rot tomatoes Untamed on Netflix.

Speaker 5 (39:44):
Untamed. I watched that.

Speaker 1 (39:47):
Oh I thought it was terrible.

Speaker 5 (39:48):
Hold on, yeah, I watch untamed. I forgot. That's one
of those where, just like you were saying, I would
forget that, I watched it.

Speaker 1 (39:56):
It was like a park. It's like a park ranger, yeah,
or a game or or one of the two. And
there's like a murder and so they're trying to figure
it out. Woman falls off a cliff sounds it does,
but then all of a sudden, the guy's like an
outhouse and a bear comes in. It lost me. Then
when the bear came into the outhouse, I was like,
I'm out of this one. The Gilded Age on HBO.

Speaker 5 (40:17):
Yes, so good. I love The Gilded Age.

Speaker 1 (40:19):
Doesn't seem like a show for me. I don't like
those time periods, those not with dancing. I don't like
times with dancing.

Speaker 5 (40:26):
I mean there's a k they're doing the fancy dancing.

Speaker 1 (40:28):
I don't like that.

Speaker 6 (40:29):
It was like Renaissance days, like or victorm eighteen eighty two.

Speaker 5 (40:34):
It's the Gilded Age. Oh oh, you know, the late
eighteen hundreds.

Speaker 1 (40:40):
What stupid are you? Death in the Family are Murdoch?
How do you say that name of the murder?

Speaker 6 (40:45):
It's Murdoch, It just is uh, it's Murdoch, Jesus and
it looks like Murda.

Speaker 5 (40:50):
And Alex is spelled Alex, but it's Alec.

Speaker 1 (40:53):
So it's really weird. Which one is this one? Murd
Aw Death of the Family.

Speaker 5 (40:57):
That's the one on Hulu.

Speaker 1 (40:58):
Murdaw Murdoch Murdoch. It's like Tyler Shuck who plays for
the Saints. It's spelt show. Yeah, uh yeah, yeah, Alec Murdoch,
Alec Murdoch. Death in the Family. Is this the one
with Patricia Arkat?

Speaker 6 (41:13):
Yes, that's a good one, dude, it's really good.

Speaker 1 (41:16):
You like the acting of the recently real life? Yeah?

Speaker 6 (41:19):
Because you you you listen to the story or whatever,
or you get read all the articles and you picture
stuff like, okay, this is probably what it looked like.

Speaker 1 (41:27):
And then you do a real life version of it too,
like a real documentary.

Speaker 5 (41:30):
Yes, they have a documentary, and then this is like
the scripted.

Speaker 1 (41:35):
Yeah, which one did you like better?

Speaker 5 (41:37):
The scripted?

Speaker 1 (41:39):
Even though they could have taken a lot of liberties.

Speaker 5 (41:41):
There's definitely had to take some liberties. But I feel
like it's pretty accurate.

Speaker 1 (41:46):
Do you watch Gremlins one of my Christmas movies?

Speaker 6 (41:49):
I did because you put it on your Mount Russell
War and I was like, I haven't seen that in ages.

Speaker 1 (41:53):
A number four Mount Rushmore Christis movies.

Speaker 6 (41:54):
I was like, let me watch this, and I watched
it and like, dude, this is a horror movie. It's
like a Chris miss the movie. Like I forgot how
like into how bloody it gets. Like, I'm like, halfway
through the movie, it goes pretty gory, dude, I haven't
seen it. I mean it's fake, you know, obviously it's
like little machines or whatever, but like it gets.

Speaker 1 (42:13):
Gory, but they do Christmas in it.

Speaker 6 (42:14):
It kind of it's around Christmas, so it's definitely Christmas
music all.

Speaker 1 (42:18):
Over it and number four Christmas movie. Then it's like
people die. Yeah, that movie freaking me out. As a kid,
but it was like a it was like a family movie.
I saw that Bad Santa is the one Christmas movie
you don't want to watch with your kids. Don't think
that's a real christ movie. Yeah, it's so good though, Billy, yes,
f words in it.

Speaker 8 (42:35):
It's hilarious.

Speaker 1 (42:36):
So it's like, as you're looking for Christmas movies, this
is not one you should put on the list for
your family, just because it has the word Santa in it.

Speaker 6 (42:42):
And I would say Gremlins too, like just get them
ready that it's gonna because all gizmo is all cute
and then it gets all crazy.

Speaker 1 (42:49):
They do jump scares in that. Oh yeah, yeah, I
feel I probably wouldn't like it. Now you shouldn't rewatch
it just to see what you think. But the thing was,
you don't drink water after midnight, right, If they have
water after midnight, you turn it.

Speaker 6 (43:01):
No, No, the guys come on feed them after I
just watched. You cannot feed them after that.

Speaker 5 (43:05):
That's what.

Speaker 1 (43:05):
You can't get water on that asking a question I
didn't say that. Lunch was like yeah, yeah, yeah, uh.

Speaker 6 (43:10):
They can't get water on them, can't feed them after midnight,
and they don't like bright, like, can't get water on them.
Can't get water on That's how they multiply, and.

Speaker 1 (43:20):
No I knew something was up, Yeah, to get that
water on them, they multiply. Americans are more likely to
steal from self serve checkouts these cameras. Man, yeah, but
you just I mean, but they don't go the alarm
doesn't go off. No, so they have to notice something
is missing to probably go back and see it. If
it's something small, they probably won't go and check that.
They're not going to look and see who took a bar. Yeah.

Speaker 6 (43:41):
But the other day I had like a batch of
cilantro in one hand. I was like, well, I'll scam
that one.

Speaker 5 (43:48):
Why why do you do that? That's how make those
cooking videos and you're like they're really good. But you'll
be like, okay, are you ready to make myselfsa Like okay,
we have some limes and some cilantro.

Speaker 1 (44:01):
Yeah, that's how you say it. He is Hispanic, but
nothing else about him is he only tacos to he
like like street names. Go ahead like Manchaka manchaq exactly.

Speaker 6 (44:15):
That's that's crazy.

Speaker 5 (44:16):
But I went I went to Minchaka Elementary and it
was weird because we would call the street Manchac and
the elementary school was Manchaca.

Speaker 6 (44:25):
What's the river that celebrators separates Mexico in Usreo grand.

Speaker 1 (44:30):
Didn't you live near that though? The valley?

Speaker 5 (44:33):
How do you say Bronsville?

Speaker 1 (44:35):
It's Brownsville. That's brown, that's brown, that's what that's not
like browns Wood. I don't know how Mexico you do?
You do pick randomly? Sure, Mexico. That's no. I say
Mexico on that one. Mexico. So you're you're doing both.
You're doing white and a Spanish because us, your average

(44:56):
Caucasian would say Mexico. You said mex Eco. Oh you
say Mexico, Mexico, Mexico. How do you say Mexico. Yeah,
it's both. It's kind of the spanglish. Well I am
text mes. Yeah, you know a little bit of this
little bit of that. You are the on the border
version I am because on the border it was like
good text mex that it wasn't full Mexican. Yeah. Do

(45:17):
you guys ever go there? Yeah? They still have they
still make SENSEA do they still have restaurants?

Speaker 6 (45:22):
I don't know about the restaurants.

Speaker 5 (45:24):
We had one in College Station.

Speaker 1 (45:27):
College still out there.

Speaker 5 (45:31):
It's right next to Houston. Okay, what about the little dogs?
The little dogs?

Speaker 6 (45:38):
See that's funny because somebody pointed that out to me
the day too. I said, oh, you have a chihua
one and they're like, oh, that's weird.

Speaker 1 (45:43):
How you say that? Is it because your parents spoke English?
But also probably extra emphasis on the Spanish words, and
that's just how you learn the words.

Speaker 6 (45:52):
The majority they spoke a lot of Spanish and I
spoke English. So maybe it's just how I took in
the language and then spoken in English.

Speaker 1 (46:02):
Deadliest sport for kids amy, hmmm.

Speaker 5 (46:09):
For kids? Deadly soccer?

Speaker 1 (46:12):
How are they dying?

Speaker 5 (46:13):
I don't know, their head.

Speaker 1 (46:14):
Get hit in the head. Yeah, a lot of concussions soccer.

Speaker 5 (46:19):
Yeah. No, I was thinking, is it worldwide or in
America US?

Speaker 1 (46:23):
Oh it's a trick question.

Speaker 5 (46:25):
Yeah, I feel like is it something like?

Speaker 1 (46:27):
This? Sport has quietly become the deadliest sport for American kids,
according to a USA Today investigation that tallies at least
one hundred and fifty eight deaths of children and teens
since the year two thousand.

Speaker 5 (46:39):
Football.

Speaker 1 (46:40):
I mean that would be the obvious one.

Speaker 5 (46:42):
Oh bull riding.

Speaker 1 (46:44):
This sports fatality rate is there kid bull riding, and
I don't know if there's enough kids doing it. This
sports fatality rate rates seven times that of tackle football,
seven times.

Speaker 6 (46:57):
I mean, I did see a video where somebody got
elbowed in back and they ended up dying.

Speaker 1 (47:01):
So that happened right near where Kaitlyn lives. Really one
of her cousins is a referee, and he wasn't at
that game, but he referees as a side job, and
he said that in that I think it's in that conference,
but I think it was a college college, like a
maybe a junior college, but in the area that he refs,
that happened. And he was like, watch this video and
he showed it to me on it's like Rivals or

(47:23):
one of those sites, and you see him get elbowed
in the head and he just like holds his head
and goes to the bench and it's like a little
like woo wooed. I got a concussion and then went
back into the game, played some more, played some more.
Then after he died. After the game, Hey like brain bleeding. Yeah,
it's not baskets, basketball, cheerleading, motocross or moto cross. Sorry,

(47:45):
motocross has quietly become the deadliest sport for American kids nineteen.
The victims will aged ten or younger. The investigation points
to a pattern of lapses in basic safety, kids of
wildly different ages and sizes riding at the same time
tracks with trees and vehicles close to the track. Man,

(48:05):
you must have a parent or somebody that is very
familiar with motocross to pursue that as a sport as
a kid. Well, I just never grew up around it,
So there's no way I would ever end up in motocross, right, Yeah,
So you have to kind of be in that culture
to even be exposed to it, right, I would think.

Speaker 5 (48:20):
So there's also a transition between four wheelers.

Speaker 2 (48:22):
If you're like a big four wheeler, they often cross
like that kind of starts it, and you're a kid
in riding them. Because there's a lot of people at
my school who did motocross and four wheeling in general.
So we had trails all over town and a lot
of people rode them, Like a lot of kids.

Speaker 5 (48:36):
Got into it.

Speaker 1 (48:36):
We had tons of four wheelers. I mean, we had
a four wheeler when I was young. I wrecked into
a tree once and Keith got rid of it, like
he's got rid of it right after that. Yeah, But
there was never any sport to it. It was like
you got a old four wheeler, you fix it up,
you got it to work, you dragged your out of
the woods with it for the most part. But there
were no motocross tracks or anything nearby where people could
compete in motocross. It's motocross. Motocross. That sounds weird to me.

(49:00):
You know what else sounds weird? See why? Why?

Speaker 5 (49:03):
What did it sound better? Oft?

Speaker 1 (49:08):
Stop the cities that are the darkest corners of America
from newser What cities are the darkest corners of America?
Because the site looked at areas with all these categories,
so violent crimes, hate groups, theft's, fraud excesses, which are
like fast food restaurants per capita, drug and alcohol use,

(49:29):
teen birth rates, adult entertainment venues, tanning salons, searches for
plastic surgery online, and laziness. And they would put into
that like high school dropout rates, et cetera.

Speaker 5 (49:40):
So all of that, how many cities are on.

Speaker 1 (49:43):
There at ten?

Speaker 8 (49:47):
Ooh, Miami, A lot of plastic surgery, a lot of nightclubs.

Speaker 1 (49:51):
At number seven, Miami, New Orleans, ten, LA, three, Los Angeles.
How would you say that three?

Speaker 5 (50:04):
New York City or Manhattan.

Speaker 1 (50:06):
New York City did not make the list. Chicago did
not make the list. Eddie gets dicey.

Speaker 6 (50:14):
I don't want to offend anyone. You said New Orleans already,
let's go Birmingham.

Speaker 5 (50:25):
Oh man, did we say Vegas already?

Speaker 1 (50:28):
No Vegas? Vegas is number one. Birmingham did not make.

Speaker 5 (50:35):
You said night clubs like Tuscaloosa.

Speaker 1 (50:39):
It's Eddie has had a bad experience.

Speaker 8 (50:42):
Houston.

Speaker 1 (50:44):
Houston's at two, Los Angeles is at three. Next city
at four is in northeastern city. Oh, Minneapolis. That's more
Midwest northeastern Boston. Yeah. The next one is a southern city, Dallas.
Dallas is down. I don't consider Dallas to be the

(51:05):
South though, like Texas to me isn't the South. But
but I was sorry, I mean, like this considered the south.
Number five is no odd. Memphis didn't make the list.

Speaker 8 (51:17):
Maybe not enough clubs, yeah, maybe not enough plastic surgery.

Speaker 1 (51:21):
That's it. So South? Oh, Georgia, Atlanta, Yeah, Georgia, Denver
at six, Miami at seven, Dallas at eight, Phoenix at
nine in New Orleans, Phoenix. Those are the darkest corners
of America. Phoenix is very lovely.

Speaker 5 (51:41):
That airport is huge there in Phoenix. Yeah, a lot
of clubs. Yeah, I think that might be the biggest
airport in America.

Speaker 1 (51:48):
I remember going to Atlanta. Yeah, I don't know.

Speaker 5 (51:51):
I was in Phoenix recently and I feel like I
was so big.

Speaker 1 (51:55):
Define big, more people going through it? Like land area
is the biggest airport in square foot or acres? Is
We're all wrong?

Speaker 8 (52:07):
What is it?

Speaker 1 (52:09):
In the US? The busiest is Atlanta, so it's the
biggest as far as the most people in it, as
far as the most area. Let's think about the Denver.

Speaker 5 (52:20):
Yeah, I've had to run through Denver a lot.

Speaker 1 (52:22):
The biggest airport in the US by land area is
Denver International Airport thirty three thousand acres. The busiest passenger
is Hartsville Jackson Atlanta International Airport.

Speaker 5 (52:32):
Well, what is Phoenix, because I feel like they're claiming
to be big at something.

Speaker 1 (52:36):
Dallas Fort Worth is the second by busiest. I don't know.
Let's do a Phoenix falls on the list of anything.

Speaker 5 (52:40):
Just type in the biggest of what because I feel
like I saw a sign somewhere and they were claiming.

Speaker 1 (52:45):
Oh, it said that biggest airport in America then, and
one is Atlanta, two is Dallas. Phoenix comes in at one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight,
ten or eleven. Okay, let me take that building they have.

Speaker 5 (52:59):
Is Did they have more terminals than anybody?

Speaker 1 (53:02):
Though?

Speaker 6 (53:02):
I do remember getting on like a train thing Montreil
or whatever and being on it for a long time.
Yeah in Phoenix. Yeah, maybe I was going to the
rental car.

Speaker 5 (53:13):
The Denver Airport is so interesting to me, like the design,
like everything in it. I saw this funny reel or
this guy was like like acting like an architect by himself,
throwing back some shots and be like all right, time
to design the Denver Airport.

Speaker 1 (53:27):
They're crazy demonic horses out front, the lore of underneath it, yeah,
all the prairie dogs.

Speaker 5 (53:35):
Yeah, it went through weird scene in the airport and
like maybe what the architect was thinking when he drew it,
and he's like, oh, yeah, that'll be beautiful there.

Speaker 1 (53:43):
Yeah. Apparently there's a whole hidden culture underground.

Speaker 5 (53:47):
Which maybe that's why it's so big at the Denver.

Speaker 1 (53:49):
Yeah, but they wouldn't count that in the thirty three
thousand acres, I don't think I think that'd be hidden
acres underneath hidden hidden acreage.

Speaker 5 (53:55):
That's how they were able to hide it at the
airport's so big.

Speaker 1 (53:58):
All right, we're done, Thank you guys for being here.
We'll see you guys tomorrow our Saint Jude Radio ton
Us tomorrow. We will also, as far as I know,
still do a podcast aside from the Saint Jude Radio
time where we come on and do what we do
on part two here. I feel like we're going to
do that tomorrow as well. So unless something happens, will
be here tomorrow. You guys, have a great rest of
the day, and we'll see you guys on Thursday. All right,

(54:18):
bye everybody,
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