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Raymundo wants to know what a listener meant by saying they would “hook it up” at their BBQ restaurant. Does that mean it’s free or just a discount? We also try to get to the bottom of why people don’t like Lunchbox on the golf course. A famous actor got arrested after an altercation with a rideshare driver.  A genius invention we can believe no one thought about until now. Bobby has a conspiracy theory on drone delivery. A listener tells us about how her mom won $1 million dollars on a scratch off. We tried to figure out if she got ripped off after she revealed how much she ended up going home with, which seemed like a drastically low number to us.  A listener calls in and is adamant that she saw online that the NFL is scripted. Listener Tye calls in to remind us we are 1 month away from Valentine’s Day and the guys share if they’ve thought about their plans yet.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:04):
Hey, Ray met a guy that works at a barbecue
place and he said come by sometime, he'd hook it up. Yeah,
so that was his exact line. He goes, hey, anytime, man,
I'll hook it up for sure. Where'd you meet him?
Golf course? Oh so we're just ran only paired with him. Yeah,
and then you played a whole round. Yeah, so we
got to know each other. Really nice guy and he
said he was a cook, and so that just got
me to thinking. So say I go buy this barbecue

(00:26):
place and he's gonna hook it up. What was he
gonna give me a ten percent discount? Oh that's a
good question. I mean it's free, like go by or
do you have his number? I do? Yeah. I would
text him first and be like, hey, I know you
extended the offer to hook it up. I'd love to
come by and then see what he says, and he
may go, come by, I'll get you free lunch something

(00:48):
like that. I think that's what hook it up means,
like hook you hook it up, hook you.

Speaker 2 (00:51):
Up, yeah, not like a discount. Dude, you're good.

Speaker 3 (00:54):
So if you were to ever hook up tickets and
you go, hey, I can hook it up.

Speaker 1 (00:57):
Yes, that's for sure, free all the way around. Yes, okay,
if I can hook it up, that means I'm going
to hook you up with something, not I'm going to
get you a discount one time, unless I say hook
you up with the discount specifically, Yeah, go ahead.

Speaker 2 (01:10):
One time.

Speaker 4 (01:11):
A buddy of mine and he texted me and my
other friend, three of us, and he said I got
Spurs tickets.

Speaker 1 (01:17):
Let's go okay, But he didn't say he's going to
hook it up.

Speaker 5 (01:20):
He just said I got Spurs tickets.

Speaker 1 (01:22):
Means that's an invit. I would feel like that's an invite.
So what happened when we got there?

Speaker 4 (01:27):
He's like, all right, they're like sixty bucks each, and
we're like, whoa, Well, we thought you had I.

Speaker 2 (01:31):
Thought it was I thought this was on you.

Speaker 1 (01:33):
I would have thought that too, for sure.

Speaker 6 (01:35):
The wording is I got Spurs ticket. It's not like, hey,
I got Spurs tickets. Uh, there's sixty bucks each? Would
you guys want to go?

Speaker 7 (01:41):
Right?

Speaker 1 (01:41):
I think he needs to declare he expects you to
pay for them, But.

Speaker 4 (01:46):
He didn't use the words hook it up, which I
think when you say hook it up that means free.

Speaker 1 (01:50):
Man, I got and do you want to go. That
means I have something and I'm inviting you to go
with me. I could see where you were confused by that.

Speaker 2 (01:56):
Yeah, we were both confused, me and my other buddy.

Speaker 5 (01:58):
Right.

Speaker 1 (01:58):
I would text him and say like, hey, it's right
from the golf course you you know, Uh, so I
should come by some time. I would love to come by.
And the awkward thing is he's not front facing, so
he's kind of back in the kitchen.

Speaker 3 (02:09):
So if I was to ask for him and he
comes out and gets me a sweet tea, now he'll man,
he'll know that's why you text him, and you get
an exact time, okay, and then he'll.

Speaker 2 (02:20):
Just look for you, and then do you text I'm here.

Speaker 1 (02:22):
Yeah, that's exactly what you do. The whole pig's got
the awkward.

Speaker 3 (02:29):
See offering his furs tickets, and it's a busy place,
so I mean, it's not like you could really time
it out perfectly.

Speaker 1 (02:36):
If you want that hook up, you can get it.
And I feel like he will hook it up. But yeah,
you're right, there's probably a couple obstacles.

Speaker 2 (02:45):
Honestly, Ray, it sounds like a lot for.

Speaker 1 (02:46):
A That's why when he told me I was like
hook it up. Huh, the whole pig, a whole table
for all my boys. What catering. I think he was
extending something nice. I know, Hey, come by, I hook
it up.

Speaker 6 (03:02):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (03:03):
I still think about the time Lunchbox got paired up
with Jamie Johnson playing golf and Jamie Johnson bailed on him.

Speaker 2 (03:07):
I think about that all the time.

Speaker 1 (03:08):
I anytime I see a TikTok clip of Jamie Johnson,
all I think about is how Jamie Johnson did not
want to play golf on Lunchbox.

Speaker 2 (03:14):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (03:14):
We did get paired up and the guy said, oh,
you're gonna be playing with that guy out there. You
probably know him. And I'm like, honey, Jamie Johnson, since
you're in the industry, and I'm like, oh, okay.

Speaker 1 (03:22):
And so I go out and you know what he's saying.
Uh I looked it up in color? Yeah, yeah, and
look like he's man and do so that is man, dudes,
It couldn't didn't color.

Speaker 6 (03:37):
Yeah, go ahead, And Jamie was his buddy. So it
was us three and we tee off and it was
a par five. The first hole we hit three shots
and then we're about to hit our fourth and he goes, hey, man,
you're going to go ahead. We're gonna go back and
start over.

Speaker 1 (03:52):
And I'm like, if I ever have Jamie Johnson on,
and I've thought about just having him on so I
can hear that story, because I bet he doesn't remember,
probaly not, but the fact that he was like, I
don't want to play golf with you, you just go That's.

Speaker 8 (04:04):
Like do people ever do that where they decided to
start over? I mean, did they have like bad noos?

Speaker 6 (04:11):
They just say we're gonna head back and tee off again.

Speaker 1 (04:13):
You go ahead and go on?

Speaker 6 (04:14):
Not not Hey, do you want to go back and
tee off again?

Speaker 1 (04:16):
Right, we're all gonna start go ahead, you go by yourself. Yeah,
I've not heard of that happening before.

Speaker 2 (04:21):
Did you talk to him before that happened, Lunchbox.

Speaker 1 (04:23):
We're in the business.

Speaker 2 (04:24):
Yeah there, no, I know me.

Speaker 6 (04:26):
I just said hello, blah blah blah, and then we
teed off on the first hole. It was literally nine
or ten minutes golf round with Jamie Jones.

Speaker 4 (04:33):
I'm telling you there's something on the golf course with Lunchbox,
Like people don't like him on the golf course, Like
I don't know what it is. I remember we played
one time and this old man was like, so every
shot I hit, good shot, Eddie, God, it's a great shot.
Oh good put Eddie, and the lunchbox hit a perfect
one laying on the green right by the stick.

Speaker 2 (04:51):
Nothing you say a thing to Lunchbox that weird?

Speaker 1 (04:56):
Do you find that people are turned off by you
while playing golf?

Speaker 6 (05:05):
Sometimes? Yeah?

Speaker 1 (05:06):
Is it because you're so aggressively angry your club and curse.

Speaker 6 (05:11):
And maybe, But I think that's the sound of a
golf course. That's what happens on a golf course.

Speaker 1 (05:17):
It's not oh man.

Speaker 6 (05:20):
I did play like there was one time and I was.
I played with a father and a son and the
son was getting really mad and the dad was like, man,
I don't have a wedge anymore because we played the
other day and I got mad and I threw it
up in the tree and it got stuck. And I'm like,
is that ho why I'm looking sound on the golf course?

Speaker 1 (05:39):
But every all and yeah, it was very awkward.

Speaker 6 (05:43):
So I can see how it can be awkward if
you know, when you get angry and get upset. But
I do feel that when I'm out there that people
don't really. They're not really receptive to me, if you
know what I mean. I don't know. I'll tell him
good shot, They're like thanks, I had a good shot,
and it's like nothing.

Speaker 1 (06:01):
What do you think it is?

Speaker 4 (06:03):
I think he kind of just it's kind of rough
around the edges, you know, and people are just like,
I really don't want to interact with.

Speaker 6 (06:10):
So do you think Jamie Joneson got that feeling after
like three shots?

Speaker 2 (06:14):
I don't know what Jamie Johnson was thinking. I don't know.

Speaker 1 (06:17):
All right, let's go around the room.

Speaker 8 (06:19):
Amy he up, So did y'all see Keith for Sutherland
was arrested.

Speaker 1 (06:24):
No, he like fought with his ride chair guy.

Speaker 8 (06:27):
So he got into ye ride hail. That's what Gardles
kept calling it. I don't know if his uper lyft whatever,
and all it's saying is that he physically assaulted the driver,
and they the driver didn't need medical attention, but the
driver called nine to one one and then he was
arrested and taken to jail. They've reached out for comment.

(06:50):
I just really want to know what happened because his
bail was set at fifty thousand dollars.

Speaker 6 (06:54):
Oh that's a lot and.

Speaker 8 (06:57):
He was in jail for a few hours. Imagine if
you're in jail and your twenty four walks in yeah,
or designated survivor.

Speaker 2 (07:04):
Yeah, do you want to beat him up? Or do
you want his autograph?

Speaker 1 (07:06):
Or like?

Speaker 2 (07:06):
How does like?

Speaker 8 (07:06):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (07:07):
I think you see if you're someone who is bordering
on being a litigious person, you see a rich person
who just hit you, and now you're gonna make some money.
I think that's what you see.

Speaker 2 (07:16):
I'm talking about in jail.

Speaker 1 (07:17):
Oh, I thought you mean by the right, the right.

Speaker 4 (07:19):
You're in jail, right, and you see keeper settling walking
like I know. Jail's a rough place. Do like, does
he get roughed up in there?

Speaker 1 (07:25):
Or does he liked jail though it's not prison? Okay,
big difference. I watched I think nineteen ninety two locked
up on TikTok yesterday, No, not locked up, scared straight,
and I watched like five five minute clips in a row,
and they take these kids in and this guy is
going there's like a twelve year old and he's like,

(07:48):
f you, you love effort if you ever see me again,
and he's going at him hard. Right, that's the whole
purpose of that show Scared Straight. They take people in
there and show them what prison's like, and this other
guy makes him, makes the kid hold his pocket and
walk around. Oh dang, they went hard on that.

Speaker 2 (08:03):
Show, Scared Him Straight.

Speaker 1 (08:06):
I mean, these little kids are just little punks.

Speaker 2 (08:11):
So they're trying to teach him a lesson.

Speaker 1 (08:12):
They're trying to scare them. Not well, yeah, they're trying
to scare them into not making bad decisions because they
will end up in jail.

Speaker 2 (08:19):
Okay, and then locked up.

Speaker 1 (08:20):
That is more of let's just say people in prison. Yeah,
all right, so Scared Straight people that aren't in prison,
but they're giving them a taste of what it will
be like if they continue to make bad decisions. And
I think this was nineteen ninety two. It was wild
to watch that was on television. Like they had a
kid carrying a pocket. You know what a pocket? You
carry his pocket? That means you're doing you're doing stuff
to them sexually. There are your be and they were

(08:42):
obviously they weren't making the kid do the stuff, but
they were just showing them what it was like. Is Yeah,
I watched twenty five minutes of it. I went one
TikTok clip.

Speaker 8 (08:50):
To the next on prison break.

Speaker 1 (08:52):
The the guy's like, I'm crazy Eddie whatever. His name was,
Crazy Calvin. He was up in his face.

Speaker 2 (08:57):
Sorry, well, I don't know.

Speaker 8 (08:58):
I was just thinking of the pocket holder that he
had a nickname a tea bag or something. I think
that's stood for something else. But yeah, anyway, we don't
really know what happened.

Speaker 1 (09:09):
You know what a tea bag is though, right? It's
like if you were laying on the ground and I
just hung my nuts on your face, that'd be a
tea bag. Like when you do a t bag in
a cup.

Speaker 8 (09:18):
Okay, got it, Yep, you just dip it down.

Speaker 1 (09:20):
Yeah, what do you call that when you dip it down.

Speaker 2 (09:23):
A steep?

Speaker 1 (09:24):
What do you call steeping?

Speaker 2 (09:25):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (09:25):
Yeah, that's what a tea bag. If you're tea bagging
someone like they did, then I mean.

Speaker 8 (09:30):
Now that you're telling me, it sounds familiar.

Speaker 2 (09:33):
You brought it up.

Speaker 8 (09:33):
Maybe I did? Uh So. Keefer he hasn't been He
hasn't been in trouble with the law in more than
a decade. His last arrest was in two thousand and seven,
when he spent forty eight dales days in jail following
a dui conviction, So so.

Speaker 2 (09:49):
They don't have details on what happened in.

Speaker 1 (09:51):
That not yet.

Speaker 8 (09:52):
I didn't. I was hoping. I don't. If you'll maybe
saw something else, but.

Speaker 1 (09:55):
I love I just saw I beat up a ride
share Remember Michael or beat up a ride here? Mid Yeah,
let me look that up.

Speaker 8 (10:01):
He's a gentle giant.

Speaker 1 (10:02):
Let me say allegedly for now.

Speaker 2 (10:04):
I just saw him yesterday.

Speaker 1 (10:05):
You did where basketball?

Speaker 8 (10:08):
Kid?

Speaker 1 (10:08):
I se him all the TI basketball and he plays
one agains him by Wednesday.

Speaker 2 (10:11):
Yeah, me and Michael what every Tuesday?

Speaker 1 (10:13):
Here we go from twenty seventeen. Load it up for me, buddy.
We have slow internet today. What here you go? Thanks Mike.
Carolina Panthers offensive tackle Michael laur has been cited for
allegedly assaulting an uber driver in Nashville, Tennessee. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (10:34):
I mean's a big dude.

Speaker 1 (10:35):
Yeah. The incident was reported April fourteenth, and m or
has been ordered to appear in court for a misdemeanor
assault charge. He's best known for the blind side man.
If there's somebody that don't want to get asaulted by,
it's Michael Loare.

Speaker 2 (10:49):
No man, he's huge, like I wouldn't ever pick a
fight with him.

Speaker 1 (10:51):
We are aware of an incident occurred involving Michael. Team
spokesman Steven Drummond said, we have no further comment at
this time. Yeah, I hope that everything's got straysencent. It's
been a while ago. But I just think about that
when people beat up ride chairs. I'm like, imagine you get
beat up by Michael Lore. God, that's a great story,
and it's like, somebody don't get beat up by He's
he's massive. This happened in Nashville, but he's playing for

(11:14):
the Panthers at the time, and I think he was
still living here from when he played with the Titans
six four three fifteen.

Speaker 6 (11:19):
Oh that's a big human.

Speaker 7 (11:21):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (11:22):
Yeah, you know what I think about with big guys,
Like they die earlier, not even like just tall, even
like that. I saw a clip of like Kevin Garnett
doing an interview and he was talking about how tall
people that are really tall just die earlier. Yeah, big people,
their body's doing more and they die earlier. Big dogs, Yeah,
big dogs die earlier.

Speaker 4 (11:42):
A buddy of mine, his dad is he's really big,
and he said he's just had health problems for so
long because of his size.

Speaker 1 (11:48):
It's like you don't see any seven foot seventy year olds. Yeah,
pretty crazy. They studies consistently show that taller people die younger,
with shorter individuals living two to seven years longer, primarily
due to increase risk of certain cancers and cardio of
vascular issues.

Speaker 2 (12:03):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (12:03):
I was gonna think that because like they're so long
that like does the blood just take forever the heart
has to the.

Speaker 1 (12:10):
Heart's got a pump, But then you could argue all
the heart's bigger. But just generally, I think that's why
Asian people live longer.

Speaker 2 (12:18):
It's more compact, Like people.

Speaker 1 (12:20):
That are generally smaller in these countries live longer, have
longer lifespans.

Speaker 2 (12:24):
It's interesting.

Speaker 1 (12:25):
Rayo, congrats buddy. I'll see you guys at one hundred baby.
That's why list of the best. All right, Amy, thank
you for that LUNCHBOXX.

Speaker 6 (12:37):
Yeah, there was a big fight at a Georgia prison
over the weekend, like thirteen people injured in three inmates dead.
And what's crazy is one of the ones that died
he had just been transferred there. He was getting out
on Wednesday.

Speaker 1 (12:52):
No, what was the fight about?

Speaker 6 (12:54):
They say gang related?

Speaker 8 (12:56):
Was that during visitations.

Speaker 6 (12:57):
Yeah, so like a lot of the visions, they visitors
had to be escorted out, but it was out in
the yard and they just started fighting. So the guy
had been in for twenty years and was getting out today.

Speaker 1 (13:08):
So was he a part of the fight though, or
was he caught up in the fight?

Speaker 6 (13:12):
They don't say. They just said that they were sitting.
They released the name of the three guys that died,
and his family was saying he was supposed to.

Speaker 8 (13:19):
Get out with or was he the reason.

Speaker 1 (13:21):
There's a difference, like if he's part of the fight,
there's a difference that if he just got caught up
in the fight and he was getting out wednesday.

Speaker 8 (13:27):
Right, or if it's like, hey, we were supposed to
kill him and he's getting out wednesday, but he had
just gotten transferred.

Speaker 2 (13:32):
So like, you can't. You don't have that much time.

Speaker 8 (13:33):
To start making of me everywhere.

Speaker 2 (13:37):
As soon as you're there, you're just.

Speaker 8 (13:38):
You arrive and they've got you on a list.

Speaker 1 (13:41):
I know about the list.

Speaker 2 (13:42):
How do you know that? How do you know all that?

Speaker 8 (13:46):
Just experience in life watching things.

Speaker 6 (13:51):
Yeah, but they said the fight lasted about ninety minutes.

Speaker 1 (13:54):
You probably couldn't stop the fight.

Speaker 6 (13:55):
For non lethal things to stop the of brawling, like
pepper spray and like bean bags.

Speaker 1 (14:04):
And oh yeah, and they got people just keept fighting.
They're like, that doesn't hurt me. I guess so Eddie your.

Speaker 2 (14:09):
Up, all right?

Speaker 4 (14:10):
So Heines Heines is coming up with a cool invention
that they had that they were releasing.

Speaker 2 (14:15):
It's called the fry box. All right.

Speaker 4 (14:17):
For the first time ever, some restaurants and some stadiums
and venues are going to have a fry box where
you order your fries with a little pocket on the
side that comes with ketchup in it.

Speaker 1 (14:28):
Yeah. I like it. I also like what water Burger does.
I like that kind of ketchup that is a box. Yes,
that way you can sit in your car. I mean
it's all about being able to have it sit somewhere
and not get super messy.

Speaker 2 (14:40):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (14:40):
And you think, like a stadium is a great place
for it to all be there in one spox.

Speaker 1 (14:44):
Yes, yes, yes, so that's excellent.

Speaker 2 (14:46):
Oh cute, isn't that cool?

Speaker 8 (14:48):
I see the way they're doing it now. I was
picturing it in my head. That's pretty cool. Oh, it
looks like look at it, it's like a little it's
like a little pocket.

Speaker 2 (14:57):
Yeah, a little pocket with a ketchup in it.

Speaker 5 (15:00):
Okay, Yeah, because the packets are the worst, right, the
packets are so okay, let me say if I can describe this,
because to me, it sounded like you got a box
and there was just a little portion of it in
the box that was ketch up.

Speaker 1 (15:11):
This think of when you go to McDonald's when they
put it inside that little hole doer, they scoop it
that whole leaf. Yeah, on the back of that sleeve
there is a pocket that has ketchup in it.

Speaker 8 (15:23):
It opens up, so you're Yeah, the people at the stadium,
they're like, okay, fill the friesen and they're like boop boop,
pump the ketchup in and then you don't have to
open or mess with.

Speaker 1 (15:31):
Their pockets bulped into the Yeah, it's good. You just
like it wasn't event already.

Speaker 2 (15:35):
That's what I'm thinking.

Speaker 8 (15:37):
And Heinz is the best.

Speaker 4 (15:38):
My favorite though, My favorite are the ones where you
go to the restaurant and you pump the ketchup in
a little cup.

Speaker 2 (15:44):
Then you can bring like four little cups to your table. Yeah,
that's my favorite.

Speaker 1 (15:47):
I just don't like that because I don't like touching
things other people have touched, like hundreds of people. Of hell,
that's all over that crap.

Speaker 8 (15:52):
Well, you can get a napkin and then use the pump.
That's what I do at the gas station.

Speaker 1 (15:56):
You use many things.

Speaker 2 (15:57):
You can do.

Speaker 8 (16:01):
Or sleeve.

Speaker 1 (16:02):
Yeah, okay, Morgan.

Speaker 9 (16:04):
So a dog has won the first ever film award?

Speaker 6 (16:09):
Did you guys?

Speaker 1 (16:09):
Dog has won the first ever film award? What award? Yeah?

Speaker 9 (16:12):
So, Indy, the real life dog of director Ben Leonberg,
plays the protagonist in the movie Good Boy, which is
a horror movie told from the perspective of the dog,
and so he got the Best Performance in a Horror
Thriller Film at the ASTRA Film Awards. It's the first
time that's ever happened with an animal that's gotten award
Astro Award, Mike.

Speaker 10 (16:33):
It's one of the side ones a major one.

Speaker 1 (16:36):
Wait, is that a union got Best Actor?

Speaker 11 (16:38):
Yeah?

Speaker 9 (16:39):
He beat out Ethan Hawk, Alison Bree So we thatcher
Sally Hawkins.

Speaker 4 (16:43):
But maybe the dog was really good in it. It
was Yeah, maybe it was a great performance.

Speaker 1 (16:47):
You got an award. Dog doesn't even know it's acting
for acting. If I don't know it's acting, but.

Speaker 10 (16:52):
They would spend like hours making sure the dog was
comfortable and like it would take that long to do
one scene.

Speaker 1 (16:57):
Yeah, yeah, dog doesn't always acting.

Speaker 9 (16:58):
It was like the dogs rainer that gets the well
and there wasn't really a trainer on board. They were
saying like they just had the camera in the right
place at the right time, and they were coaxing him
with a combination of everyday commands, weird sounds, physical gestures.

Speaker 1 (17:11):
And food. This dog's on the Truman Show. He's not acting.
They're recording him and he's living his life. They're putting
in situations and then recording him.

Speaker 2 (17:17):
See I bet Lassie would be upset about this.

Speaker 1 (17:19):
I had multiple lasses.

Speaker 2 (17:20):
Oh they do.

Speaker 4 (17:21):
Yeah, okay, we'll forget that. What about Marley and Me
or the dog that played Marley? Like, there are some
dogs that.

Speaker 1 (17:28):
Dogs on other acting.

Speaker 6 (17:29):
That's what I'm saying, Like, really a dumb thing. They're
just trying to get attention and it worked.

Speaker 2 (17:33):
You think Ethan Hawk's out about that?

Speaker 1 (17:35):
Oh yes, If they recorded Ethan Hawk not acting, they
were just putting him in situations and recording him. That's
Truman's show. Someone not knowing they're being recorded.

Speaker 2 (17:45):
So you think this is dumb.

Speaker 1 (17:46):
I don't care. Well, they said.

Speaker 10 (17:47):
By the end of it, he started to associate the
camera like okay, it's time where they're gonna start filming me.
So now he became and they pulled the camera out,
he was like, okay, I kind of know what we're
doing now. So maybe he didn't know he was acting,
but he kind of had association of the cameras out
per form a little bit.

Speaker 1 (18:00):
It's a bitter ring in the bell.

Speaker 2 (18:03):
Havelov.

Speaker 1 (18:05):
If every time you see a camera, there's an expectation,
and if you meet the expectation, you get something. You
then understand the expectation when you see the camera. So
is that acting, No, it's not. A dog doesn't understand
the concept of acting.

Speaker 2 (18:18):
You think the dog watches a movie, it is like,
that's me.

Speaker 1 (18:21):
My dog's They go crazy if there is an animal
of any kind on the screen, not even barking, it's
just up there. Ella goes crazy. It's weird that you
can see that flat thing and know that that's a
window into other things because it's not three dimensional, and
she just goes crazy. She thinks it's an animal for

(18:42):
her to play with. And then Stanley just does what
Eller does, so just copies. He whinds now at the
like if like delivery guys, and he doesn't whind, but
Eller will whind. Be like oh and so he'll now
see someone and go and he howls like the sirens do.
Stanley does, like a copp will come by or an
ambulance drive by, and he'll start going, Oh wow, that's cute,

(19:04):
it's crazy. What are you saying?

Speaker 7 (19:07):
Oh?

Speaker 4 (19:07):
Have you seen that TikTok where there's a dog sitting
next to a cake that's like a dog and the
woman cuts through the cake and.

Speaker 1 (19:16):
A lot of us are AI, though, is it?

Speaker 9 (19:19):
Ha?

Speaker 2 (19:19):
Oh?

Speaker 8 (19:19):
Come on, man, not the only one that falls for it.

Speaker 1 (19:22):
I don't think that most of them ones that I've
seen here AI, but maybe the one you saw wasn't.
But I've seen a lot of those. Most of them
I've seen an AI and the dog looks kind of
like the dog and they cut through it and they're like,
what are you doing? Most of them are AI. Yours
may have been real, could have been the first one
that inspired all the AI. Speaking of AI, so remember

(19:44):
I was talking about in Saint Louis maybe yesterday all
those monkeys, yes in the city. No, I'm asking Amy,
because she looked at me like, I don't remember.

Speaker 8 (19:51):
No, no, I do. Because then it led to us
talking about the other monkeys that got had had the
diseases and they got shot.

Speaker 1 (19:57):
So would you show me what a vervet monkey looks like,
because again they're dead, sat on letting us know. These
are vervet monkeys, and I don't know if they even
look like monkeys, but oh cute. So they were on
the loose and north, I can't see that. I have
no vision. You have no brain to have no vision.
We need people to patch us together. So they're all

(20:17):
over Saint Louis, and so they were making these efforts. Oh,
those are real monkeys.

Speaker 2 (20:21):
So cute.

Speaker 8 (20:23):
They are cute and.

Speaker 1 (20:25):
They're not tiny. Huh. That's a real monkey.

Speaker 2 (20:32):
Wow. Uh.

Speaker 1 (20:34):
So they could have just said monkey, but they were
they wanted to say vervets. So I thought maybe it
was like a micro monkey or something.

Speaker 8 (20:39):
But their vervet might be the coloring.

Speaker 1 (20:41):
Oh, I'm sure, I just didn't. But they were acting
like we either knew what that meant or it meant
something that would change our perspective on what the monkeys
were doing. No, there're just like like monkeys a monkey.
So anyway, uh, they started to try to find them
and people were posting videos like with them and holding
the monkeys, but it was people making AI videos. They
all through Lewis, so reports started coming out that people

(21:02):
had captured them and they were posting pictures and videos
of themselves with the monkeys. The Department of Helped spokesperson
Willie Springer says his office, along with police, they're having
a challenging time because the people are posting pictures. They're
not even real they're doing AI. They're like, look at
the monkey, I guy that's hanging off of them and
it's AI. Right now, they say there's about four more out,
but they're not exactly sure how many are gone. How
do you not have a total inventory of how many

(21:23):
a monkey you dad and how many you're missing?

Speaker 2 (21:25):
Yeah, you should know exactly.

Speaker 1 (21:26):
That's from the Associated Press. But hilarious people are making
AI monkey pictures and videos.

Speaker 4 (21:32):
Any chance some of these monkeys never get found and
then we now have monkeys in America like wild monkeys.

Speaker 1 (21:41):
Oh, I thought you may they be dead?

Speaker 4 (21:42):
No, no, no, like pythons, you know how they're pythons in
Florida because who knows.

Speaker 1 (21:46):
It's got to mate with something another monkey, So no, okay,
unless they find another monkey. I don't think there's enough
out there to create a whole new monkey habitat.

Speaker 4 (21:59):
Because I did see another tic talking Florida where a
lady was kayaking and a bunch of monkeys were jumping
in the water. But I know that was fake because
there are no monkeys in Florida.

Speaker 1 (22:08):
I have a feeling you didn't think it was fake,
and we just told the other one was fake.

Speaker 2 (22:11):
Now I think everything's fake.

Speaker 1 (22:13):
South Carolina reports one hundred twenty four new measles cases
since Friday.

Speaker 2 (22:16):
Since Friday.

Speaker 1 (22:17):
Since Friday, measles continue to run rampant in South Carolina.
The state yesterday reported one hundred twenty four new measles
cases since Friday, bringing the outbreak total to four thirty four.
The South Carolina outbreak beginning early October. Georgia, Oregon, Virginia
also reported their first measles cases of twenty twenty six.
Last year, the US saw two thousand measles cases, the
highest number since nineteen ninety two, all with unvaccinated people.

(22:40):
The CDC recommends two doses of the MMR vaccine which
is ninety seven percent effective against measles. That's from ABC News.
What's crazy is the vaccine is literally a top five
invention ever in the history of the world, and it's
become so pro just black and white, pro or anti vaccine,
and it has created this. My mind is blown. My
mind is blown by this, and my mind is still

(23:02):
blown that we're protecting people at rape Kids files. It's
my mind is blow. Like they the court said that
those files had to come out with December nineteenth of
last year. I believe that to day they did and
they put out one percent of them and they blacked
out everything. My mind is blown that we are protecting
child rapists. I just can't believe. I can't believe it.
There should be no political affiliation association with anything. If

(23:23):
people rape kids, we should know and they should go
to jail. That's it.

Speaker 8 (23:29):
Yes, I mean this is a little bit on similar vein,
but Sharon says so on Instagram she posted a thing
of like some of you would have would be people
that would say where Ann Frank was hiding, and it shows.

Speaker 1 (23:47):
Yeah, it's just like the worst thing you could possibly do,
just like a is I guess kill the kid but
I don't know. Same, kill a kid, rape kids. Same.
It's the worst, the worst thing you can do. And
the fact that we're protecting them, our government is protecting them.
It's the craziest thing in my life that I've ever seen.
But it's become so normalized because it's been such a

(24:07):
slow role. If you were just put in a vacuum,
every single person in America would say the same thing.
Let's think about this last night. It is literally the
craziest thing that we're protecting pedophiles. So anyway, there's that
Walmart is expanding drone service delivery. Have a theory about
this too, not about Walmart, but just in general. I

(24:29):
love it make life easier for me. I'm all in, right,
and so I'll talk about this first. Working with the
drone company Wing, Walmart is rolling the service out to
one hundred and fifty more stores Los Angeles, Miami, Saint Louis, Cincinnati.
They already do it in northwest Arkansas because that's the hub,
and I'm very familiar with it because we're there a lot,
and so they're going to start doing more. The drones

(24:49):
can carry up to five pounds and travel up to
sixty five miles per hour. And this story is from Engadget.
I think the CIA is involved in that just in
general they want this all to happen because the more
drones that are flying over, the more normal it becomes.
The more drones are flying over, and the more normal
it becomes, you can fly drones over all the time.
We just think it's a Walmart drone service. Something can

(25:11):
fly over our house pretty low with a bag on.
It doesn't have to actually be anything in it, or
like that's Walmart delivering.

Speaker 8 (25:19):
So what just another way for them to spy.

Speaker 1 (25:27):
Theory theory. But if I were to CA, that's what
I would do. I would help I'd help help these
companies do this because it does nothing but help me.
And the CIA is really not supposed to do much
on Americans.

Speaker 8 (25:39):
Thinking, could it be more like the FBI.

Speaker 1 (25:41):
Yeah, it could be total surveillance, but yes, all right, boom.
Over four hundred, over forty thousand dollars worth Pokemon cards
were stolen from a game store last week. I mean,
it's why that seems weird is because it's the word Pokemon.
But if someone said over forty thousand dollars and old
baseball cards or football cards be like dang. But because

(26:02):
I was like a cartoon, people go, oh, that's hilarious,
it's Pokemon, but they're just as valuable. I've never gotten
to the Pokemon cards because I don't know anything about Pokemon,
and also I call it Pokemon until I hear people
talk about it that actually know it, and it's Pokemon, right, yeah, Pokemon?
How do you really? How do they say it? And
is it from Japan? Yeah?

Speaker 10 (26:22):
Because it's short for pocket monsters.

Speaker 2 (26:24):
It is, yeah, pocket pocket mon.

Speaker 6 (26:27):
Who knew that breaking short for pocket monsters?

Speaker 1 (26:31):
But that's not Japanese.

Speaker 10 (26:32):
I think they were thinking long term and making it worldwide.

Speaker 1 (26:37):
Huh, mine's blown pocket monsters. That's Pokemon.

Speaker 8 (26:41):
So if it's short for pocket monsters, wouldn't be pocket
pockemonomon but.

Speaker 1 (26:47):
Po Pokemon Pokemon Confused?

Speaker 8 (26:50):
How nobody says poke it?

Speaker 1 (26:51):
I think what? I think it's okay. I think they
just want how it was spelled, like they shortened it.

Speaker 8 (26:57):
I get it. I just was thinking, do people.

Speaker 2 (27:00):
Pronounce pocket differently in different places?

Speaker 1 (27:02):
Pokemon poke the words were combined and then you spread
it like that. But I don't know. I didn't know
it's pocket monster me neither. Wyoming is the best state
to retire.

Speaker 2 (27:14):
Oh yeah, it's so.

Speaker 1 (27:17):
Cold to me.

Speaker 6 (27:17):
Yeah, it seems freezing.

Speaker 8 (27:19):
It also seems beautiful and peaceful.

Speaker 1 (27:22):
I hear you. I don't like the cold Wyatt.

Speaker 8 (27:24):
Unless you're on Yellowstone.

Speaker 1 (27:26):
I get why people go to Florida warm, no state tax.

Speaker 2 (27:30):
Oh, in the ocean, the beach.

Speaker 1 (27:32):
Yeah, that's the warm part of it, right, I mean,
I sorry my head, I associated warm with beach boats. Yeah. So,
but I Wyoming seems like it'd be fun to go
to for a minute if you don't like cold. But
I don't want to stay there in winter. But the
population of Americans age sixty five and older reached about

(27:54):
sixty one million, and more and more people are moving
to Wyoming. Secondly, it's New Hampshire cold, Vermont cold, Montana cold,
South Dakota cold.

Speaker 2 (28:04):
Oh all cold.

Speaker 1 (28:06):
New Jersey was the worst state to retire because of
high cost of living, and then Massachusetts, New York, Alabama,
and Mississippi also right near the bottom. From Fox News.

Speaker 6 (28:14):
You know what I find interesting, though, is you live
your whole life in one city and then you retire.
You made like all your friends, and then you just
move and have nobody that seems weird.

Speaker 1 (28:24):
I think because there's retirement infrastructure built in certain places,
meaning there's a lot of retired people there, so it's
other like minded old people. There are tennis courts, botchi bar,
there's like entire areas in these places that are built
for retired people, okay, and a community that gets built
of just retired people that are there. But yeah, and

(28:45):
then your family flies down to sea, I guess. But yeah,
that's why for the most part. And also want to
gets cold, like your joints hurting stuff experiment. I'm done
with the cold here. It sucks.

Speaker 2 (28:56):
I've hit my I don't think we've gotten I've hit.

Speaker 1 (28:59):
My threshold, I feel, but it's been cold a couple
of times. And I hate having to take the dog
out at night it's cold. I hate having to take
the dog out in the morning and it's cold. I
hate cold. I'm done. I would leave. I would move
for three months of the year if I could beach.
I don't care about the beach, but where I would
go would have because you can go to beach when
you can go to North Carolina for the beach. Sure,

(29:20):
it's cold there, yeah, yeah, but like you can't Arkansas
like it's cold there. I wouldn't go to Arkansas for
those three lines. I would go to the Keys, Florida
or Texas. Yes, I don't want to go to New
Mexico Arizona because the time difference going back an hour.

Speaker 2 (29:35):
Should we move the show?

Speaker 1 (29:37):
Can't?

Speaker 2 (29:37):
It's moved the show to Florida.

Speaker 1 (29:39):
There's no state income tax here though, either yeah or
state yeah, state tax no, which is nice. A lot
of the colleges when they were doing and the portal
is still open, but they do. It's not really an IL,
but they are paying players now from revenue share from
the schools. They started to do and make images of
people holding up money and going no state income tax

(30:01):
in Texas, so it'd be like, here's why you should think,
and then they would list it out because again, these
players are going to where they can get the most
money for the most part, and they'll list it out.
If you come to Texas and we give you half
million dollars after taxes, you're going to get three hundred
and seventy thousand. If you go to a state like
I'll just use Arkansas because they're a state tax, you
only get three hundred and forty thousand dollars even though
you get in the same amount. So that's a selling point.

(30:23):
That's why some players will choose to play in Florida, Texas,
even Tennessee because it's less money from their contract they're
having to give up. And even that would be great
to go play in California because the weather's great and
if you're you know, you want to be around you know,
media institutions if that's your goal to The taxes are

(30:45):
significantly higher out there, so all that is considered New
York high, but high because it's the most desirable places
to live generally, because that's where everything is. New York
in La Chicago.

Speaker 4 (30:57):
Do you see that UCLA guy that died and left
all that money to do to footparts?

Speaker 1 (31:01):
Yeah? To sports?

Speaker 2 (31:02):
Yeah yeah, it reminded me of you.

Speaker 1 (31:05):
Yeah yeah, because.

Speaker 2 (31:08):
Like he dies, Like, what am I gonna do with
my money? Hey?

Speaker 4 (31:10):
Will you just give it to sports so they can
get better. I'm not gonna be around, but.

Speaker 1 (31:13):
Let's give it to the u c LA needs it too.

Speaker 8 (31:16):
But yeah, how much was it?

Speaker 1 (31:19):
It's millions. It was like thirty million or something.

Speaker 2 (31:22):
It was the most that I think the school's ever gotten.

Speaker 8 (31:24):
Million.

Speaker 1 (31:24):
We can look up the real number. It wasn't like
a tea boom pickings at Oklahoma State type money.

Speaker 2 (31:30):
How much was that?

Speaker 1 (31:31):
Well, there are people that leave hundreds of millions, but
this was a lot, and it was to me. And
why it stuck out was it was sports. It was
just sports. I did see the Magnolia baseball field at Baylor.
You know who built.

Speaker 8 (31:43):
It, Magnolia context Clothes. I know they built it.

Speaker 2 (31:49):
So it's got like a bunch of antique stuff around there.

Speaker 1 (31:51):
I don't know if the basis or target collection, but
it is like the Baylor field at Magnolia something like that.
That's school, which I thought was pretty cool.

Speaker 6 (31:59):
Yeah, the guy left seventeen point three million to football
and men's basketball. That's it, just those two sports.

Speaker 8 (32:07):
That's still so much for something you're not even going
to be here to enjoy.

Speaker 4 (32:14):
Yeah, but if you love it and then the kids
are like, all right, dad died, Like I wonder.

Speaker 8 (32:18):
If there were kids, and who knows, maybe they got
twenty million maybe for the kids, and this is how
he divvied it up. But if you, oh, that would
be I would be.

Speaker 1 (32:31):
But I think he left all of it.

Speaker 6 (32:32):
I think that was all of his mind was now
because it says Lane's pledge includes eleven point four million
to ucl UCA UCLA Health and then also the Anderson
School of Management will receive five point seven million, rugby
three point eight million.

Speaker 1 (32:49):
All from him. Oh okay, he diversified that. I did
the story when I read it because I read the
headline of the first paragraph. It just seemed like he
was giving it all. The football and basketball.

Speaker 6 (32:57):
And the Center of Art Performance will receive one pointine million.
Lan played rugby at u c l A and was
the first coach of its women's rugby team.

Speaker 1 (33:06):
He was yep, wow, oh he's really connected.

Speaker 8 (33:09):
Yeah, okay, that better. It's a little better. It's all
the same, but yeah no, I was just thinking if
that was your family and that's what they decided to do, like, okay, cool,
and you get nothing.

Speaker 1 (33:24):
Yeah, like Warren Buffetts. You know, he says, I'm not
leaving any money to my kids. But he sets them
up right, not with money, but with education, with gives
them the opt to make their own money. So if
they leave all the money, but then he sets his
own kids up and they've started to make their own money,
I get that.

Speaker 8 (33:42):
They get some benefits from some good old nepotism.

Speaker 2 (33:46):
Sure, all you got to do is just say.

Speaker 8 (33:47):
I'm Warren buffets Son.

Speaker 6 (33:50):
Come on in.

Speaker 1 (33:52):
He retired.

Speaker 2 (33:53):
Yeah, what's he doing now?

Speaker 1 (33:55):
Nothing?

Speaker 2 (33:55):
Flaying, all tired.

Speaker 1 (33:57):
The guy lived in the same house whole life.

Speaker 2 (33:59):
That's crazy.

Speaker 1 (33:59):
And Nebraska, I believe, is where he's from. Same house.
Oh okay, I got a couple other things here. I
have the top the ten TV shows that are coming
to an end this year. Tell me if you watch
these good omens, Nope, never hurt. Okay, it's coming to
an end. It's a number one. Outer Banks.

Speaker 7 (34:17):
Nope.

Speaker 2 (34:17):
Saw the first season.

Speaker 1 (34:18):
Yep, Yeah, I used to h it is wrapping up
this year for good. It's a teen adventure that throws
me off. I watched like the first five minutes in
the first episode and thought, I'm too old for this show.

Speaker 2 (34:29):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (34:29):
It was like driving a boat and the kids, you know,
if they start making out, I feel uncomfortable watching this.
The Comeback on HBO is Lisa Kudro's comedy I know
of it. I never watched it. Yellowjackets is ending. I
watched the first two seasons, liked them, and then it
just got too weird. Yeah, and I like weird. It
just got too weird, Like, just give me some cannibals
in the freaking woods trying to survive. I like that dynamic,

(34:53):
but then it just got odd hacks. That's good the
g smart comedy. She's from Designing Women that they're wrapping
that up for good. Outlander never watched it, Have friends
that love it's some time traveling that yeah. Queer Eye man,
that show is crushing.

Speaker 12 (35:10):
To be on.

Speaker 1 (35:11):
I think it came back though.

Speaker 6 (35:12):
Right, it's a long time.

Speaker 1 (35:14):
Then came back all American on the cw Oh I
watched that really?

Speaker 9 (35:20):
Yeah, it's it like it's like reminds me of One
Tree Hill Friday Night Lights type of vibe.

Speaker 1 (35:24):
It's wrapping up for good The Boys, which is an
excellent show. It's right up my alley.

Speaker 2 (35:28):
Though, how many seasons is that?

Speaker 1 (35:29):
Maybe it's the fourth or fifth?

Speaker 2 (35:31):
He's the fourth.

Speaker 1 (35:31):
Yeah, it's awesome. It's if superheroes are real, because you'd
also have people that were like scheming fraud.

Speaker 2 (35:40):
Yeah, they're like humans too, right, yeah.

Speaker 1 (35:42):
Yeah, ridiculousness on MTV.

Speaker 6 (35:45):
Well that's ending, huh, that's all they show now, that's crazy.

Speaker 1 (35:50):
That's from screen crush I have ten TV shows returning
in twenty twenty six finally, and I did some of
this on my Instagram story because I love some of these.
Paradise is coming back Onbruary twenty third. That show is awesome.

Speaker 6 (36:02):
Oh I watched that show.

Speaker 1 (36:03):
Yeah, it's really really good. So if you have Hulu,
it's probably the perfect time now, because get you all
lined up for whenever season two starts. I mentioned the
Boys that final season starts on April eighth. Scrubs, Now,
I'm assuming Scrubs came back. It's gone a long time,
came back. Okay, so they came back. And the ending
that Ted Lasso coming back is gonna have season four?

Speaker 2 (36:25):
What?

Speaker 1 (36:26):
No, I never watched all of season two.

Speaker 2 (36:30):
Oh it is good.

Speaker 8 (36:32):
I thought the last one was the last season though.

Speaker 1 (36:34):
I thought it was over ted last Season four comes
mid to late twenty twenty.

Speaker 2 (36:39):
Sixth Wow, I'm gonna have to get Apple again.

Speaker 1 (36:41):
Hijack on Apple. That's pretty good, little corny at first,
but then got good. It has Eater's elbow.

Speaker 8 (36:49):
Yeah, oh yeah, that was good.

Speaker 1 (36:52):
The Night Agent that's the corniest show I've ever seen
in my life.

Speaker 8 (36:55):
But I like it.

Speaker 1 (36:55):
But it's still pretty good. It's so corny. They telegraph
every everything.

Speaker 8 (37:02):
What does that mean.

Speaker 1 (37:02):
It's every trope, well, you know, phone call, you can
see the name. It's every old thing they used to
do in television shows that we look back, go corny.
They do that in these shows. Oh yeah, you four? Yeah,
season three, I've never watched that. I felt the same
about it, like his teens making out, so I'm like,
I don't need Yeah, I'm sure it's a great show.
I just never jumped in because I felt uncomfortable watching

(37:22):
teenagers do it. A House of the Dragon season three
comes back this year Your Friends and Neighbors April third,
which is really good. John Ham there's another one coming out,
season two.

Speaker 2 (37:33):
I love that one.

Speaker 1 (37:34):
The Agency on Paramount Plus. That show is awesome.

Speaker 8 (37:38):
Oh yeah, that was good.

Speaker 1 (37:39):
It's a type show with Richard Gear Yeah as the
old Yeah, not as the main character.

Speaker 8 (37:47):
But yes, I think I let that one fall off. Man,
I gotta go back.

Speaker 1 (37:53):
It's so good. Michael fastbenders in that he's the main character.
It's it's Cia or FBI.

Speaker 8 (38:03):
I'm Cia because he was you know, there's people in Russia.

Speaker 1 (38:08):
And yeah, it's good. The Diplomat season four comes back
on Netflix.

Speaker 8 (38:12):
I'm ready for that one man.

Speaker 1 (38:13):
Diplant's a great show. The Bear and then I watched
it in one and liked it. Never got back into it.

Speaker 2 (38:19):
I gave up on that one.

Speaker 1 (38:22):
Ww unreal, that's good. January twentieth, I like that show
all right. Amy has an update from her friend about Lunchbox.
He's taken sialis now.

Speaker 8 (38:31):
Yeah, so she said that it can be prescribed for
what he's using. I just wanted to double check because
my friend is a physical therapist specifically for the pelvic floor,
and I wanted to get her thoughts on what Lunchbox
was told. She even recommended some pets for him to
call here so he can actually go get that done.
And she was like, yeah, the his prescription seems legit.

Speaker 1 (38:55):
I think it's legit too. She said, it's of it
on him while sitting near.

Speaker 8 (39:00):
Yeah, so it can help with urinary flow, which he
said his flow was fine. So is it just for
the pelvic discomfort?

Speaker 6 (39:08):
I thought it was for the infection?

Speaker 1 (39:12):
Yeah, remember it, because that was different the oh, pelvic
was the stomach. He had an infection and his oh.

Speaker 8 (39:19):
This is the okay, So that's for the okay. Well,
she said, hey, hey, so you're maybe you're getting a
double because it can help with pelvic discomfort.

Speaker 2 (39:25):
But does it still have the effects of.

Speaker 1 (39:29):
What it does? And he's been staring at you a
lot to know he's not he's no, I'm telling you,
he's been looking at you a lot.

Speaker 8 (39:37):
Are you constipated?

Speaker 1 (39:39):
Oh no, are you turned on?

Speaker 6 (39:42):
No?

Speaker 8 (39:42):
Well, that was one of our questions because.

Speaker 1 (39:45):
No, I don't want to talk it.

Speaker 6 (39:49):
Guys. It's science.

Speaker 1 (39:51):
Yep, it is.

Speaker 6 (39:53):
I'm sorry, I have an infection, she said.

Speaker 4 (39:54):
Seriously, though, you know you can take it at like
two o'clock every day and that's daily.

Speaker 8 (39:59):
Yep, or before you go to bed end of the night.
It's far far away.

Speaker 1 (40:04):
From a Denver area gas station. I think they accidentally
had diesel in their gas.

Speaker 2 (40:11):
Oh no.

Speaker 1 (40:13):
Drivers across the Denver metro area are bringing cars to
repair shops after diesel mixed and gasoline was sold at
local stations.

Speaker 2 (40:20):
So it's the guy that was putting gas in the front.

Speaker 1 (40:23):
From the Colorado Sun State official say the contaminated fuel
came from a supplier and reach locations including Costco, King
Soupers and Murphy Express. Vehicles shut down soon after fueling
and repairs involved draining and cleaning the fuel systems the
companies A loaded distributors. Over two hundred complaints were made.
Oh that sucks, you know.

Speaker 4 (40:39):
I would probably do that one hundred times if it
wasn't a different size. You know, like when you grab
the diesel pump, different color.

Speaker 2 (40:46):
It's green, right, usually green.

Speaker 4 (40:48):
But if you're not thinking and you just grab it
and put it in there and put diesel in your car,
your car's done. But they make it a different size
so it doesn't fit in your gas tank.

Speaker 1 (40:55):
Oh, I didn't know that. I never grabbed it. It's bigger,
so you must have grabbed it before then.

Speaker 4 (40:59):
I did, not even thinking. I'm like, well, that's not
going in. I'm trying to push it in, and then
I realized, like, oh, that's the diesel pump.

Speaker 1 (41:05):
You got to see alis pump.

Speaker 2 (41:07):
It's too big.

Speaker 1 (41:08):
Yeah, all right, Uh, that's it. Let's go take a break.
Thank you, everybody. Let's go to Tracy in North Carolina. Tracy,
you're on the show.

Speaker 11 (41:24):
Hey, Bobby, Yesterday y'all were talking about the lottery in Texas.
My mom won a million dollars a year ago when
she got done at the lottery, office. She only brought
home four hundred and twenty seven thousand dollars, and then
she's going to turn around and pay eighty seven thousand
dollars again in taxes this tax season.

Speaker 2 (41:45):
WHOA.

Speaker 1 (41:46):
So they didn't take it all out, but I mean.

Speaker 11 (41:49):
Yeah, you don't get a million.

Speaker 1 (41:51):
She got the lump. They probably took out a state
or a some sort of, but they take right.

Speaker 2 (41:57):
I forgot about the state tax.

Speaker 1 (41:59):
Well, it depends on what state you're in, So you listen,
it's awesome. First of all, I would to say, that's awesome,
she won a million dollars, except she didn't win a million.
It's like when you make fifty thousand dollars a year,
you don't go home with fifty thousand dollars a year.
You go home with thirty eight thousand dollars a year.
Same here sort of because as soon as you win

(42:20):
a million, you're up in that upper tax bracket. But still,
I don't know that. It does sound like a lot.
I know it sounds like a whole lot more than
half a million gone.

Speaker 2 (42:31):
Yeah, four hundred thousand.

Speaker 8 (42:33):
Did she get?

Speaker 1 (42:34):
Also, you sing your mom telling you when, But just
like baby mom didn't want her to know about the money.
She's still hard, Like.

Speaker 8 (42:39):
If people reach out to her and they're like, this
is a tax bill, you have to do wink wink.

Speaker 1 (42:43):
How did she win a million dollars?

Speaker 7 (42:46):
Like?

Speaker 1 (42:46):
What is a scratch off lottery? Scratch Off's crazy?

Speaker 2 (42:50):
Yeah, that's crazy.

Speaker 1 (42:51):
I can't believe people can go kick and they see
a one million dollar winter. Aside from Wes talking about
the money, what does she do with the money?

Speaker 11 (43:01):
Oh, it's invested, saved and invested smart.

Speaker 1 (43:06):
Yeah good. I feel like your mom's keeping a lot
from you the generic term. Yeah, I feel like you know,
mom didn't say exactly what she got, so she went
in they sent her home with how much again after
the million?

Speaker 11 (43:18):
Four hundred and twenty seven thousand.

Speaker 2 (43:21):
Yeah, that's a lot.

Speaker 1 (43:22):
I'm gonna ask it in North Carolina, because again, every
state has different rules. I'm gonna ask my assistant here, Hello,
I have a question about the North Carolina lottery. We
are talking to a woman who won a million dollars
on a scratch off ticket, and apparently she came home
with four hundred twenty seven thousand dollars and then had

(43:44):
to pay eighty thousand dollars in taxes this year. Can
you tell me why it would be that way, or
if maybe this person is a little misled.

Speaker 13 (43:55):
Absolutely, so, winning a lottery prize like a million dollars
is exciting, but the final amount you actual to heme
is quite a bit less because of taxes and withholdings. Typically,
what happens is that when you win a large amount,
the lottery automatically withholds a portion up front for federal taxes,
usually around twenty four percent or so for federal withholding.
After that, depending on where you live, there might also

(44:17):
be state taxes. North Carolina, for example, has a state
income tax that would apply to lottery winnings. So if
she ended up with around four hundred and twenty seven
thousand dollars initially, that means the lottery probably took out
a chunk for federal taxes right off the top. Then
when tax season came around, she likely owed additional taxes,
maybe because of her total income bracket or because the

(44:37):
initial withholding wasn't enough to cover her full tax liability.
It's not that she's necessarily being misled. It's just that
lottery winnings are taxes income, and sometimes the final tax
bill is a little higher than what was withheld. It
can be a bit of a shock, but it's pretty normal.

Speaker 1 (44:54):
But does do those numbers check out? Meaning if you
win a million, is there any reason that someone should
end up with three hundred and sixty thousand dollars overall? Yeah,
let's break it down a little more.

Speaker 13 (45:07):
If you win a million dollars in North Carolina, typically
the lottery will withhold that initial federal tax let's say
roughly twenty four percent of a million, which is about
two hundred and forty thousand dollars. Then you've got North
Carolina state tax, which might be another few percent, let's
call it around five point two five percent, or about
fifty two thousand, five hundred dollars. So after those immediate withholdings,

(45:32):
you might be left with something in the ballpark of
seven hundred thousand dollarsish. But that's not the end of
the story, because your total tax liability might be higher.
When you actually file your taxes, you'll likely owe more
federal tax because a big lump sum can push you
into a higher tax bracket for that year, and depending
on your other income deductions and how everything shakes out,

(45:52):
you could owe another chunk of money when you file
your return, like that extra eighty thousand dollars she mentioned
in the end, it's totally plausible that a million dollar
win might net out to somewhere in that three hundred
and sixty thousand dollars.

Speaker 1 (46:05):
Doesn't makes sense. And if we were talking about earlier,
like they don't take all the taxes out whenever you
win the million dollars because that twenty something percent is
not the upper tax bracket, and you're in the upper
tax bracket. Once you have this, they have to take
out more taxes. You have to pay them later. I
don't know, Tracy, I think your mom was holding something
back from him.

Speaker 11 (46:23):
Just well, i'd beg I went with her to a
lottery place, so I know that that's what they gore.

Speaker 8 (46:30):
Oh so she was there, I mean, and you're you're
just insane. That's a no.

Speaker 1 (46:35):
She when she laid it out, that's not what she said.
She said, you should have like seven hundred thousand dollars
by them taking out the first part of taxes, like
that's what you go home with, and then when you
pay the rest of your taxes because you go up
into like the thirty three percent tax bracket of paying
taxes thirty three thirty four percent. It doesn't matter. I
think it's awesome. She won money. That'd be crazy to

(46:56):
win a few hundred thousand dollars, But man, seventy percent
of all of it gone a million.

Speaker 2 (47:00):
I'll that you want a million dollars And then you're like, no,
I didn't.

Speaker 6 (47:03):
You didn't.

Speaker 1 (47:04):
We're probably wrong, but I would bet. I don't know.
I don't know what I wouldn't be better.

Speaker 2 (47:12):
I gotta think about this for a little bit.

Speaker 1 (47:14):
It just seems like if you want a million dollars,
even if they take out a part of taxes, you're
gonna go home with more than four hundred and twenty
seven thousand dollars up front. But Tracy, what, I don't
know anything. You were there, but I appreciate you sharing that.
That's crazy. Did did it feel like it changed your
mom's life whenever she won?

Speaker 7 (47:30):
No, not really, she just buys more lottery tickets.

Speaker 1 (47:33):
Now, Oh wow, there you go, I can pay it
all back. Yeah, all right, we appreciate that call. Thank
you so much for sharing that, and hopefully we'll talk
to you again soon.

Speaker 7 (47:41):
Thank you, Bye bye, bye bye.

Speaker 1 (47:43):
We weren't there. We don't know the whole story, but
as told, I have a tough time believing it is
just that from what I know about what they do,
what they hold, and what I've learned a lot about
tax percentages in the past five six years. Uh, Tina
and Flora, let's go talk to Tina. Tina, you're on
the show.

Speaker 14 (48:05):
Good morning, Bobby. How are you this morning?

Speaker 1 (48:07):
Doing pretty good? What can I do for you?

Speaker 14 (48:10):
Well? I heard you comment this morning, long conversation about
gentlemen in a fancy car and a Lamborghini or what's
sexy what's not sexy?

Speaker 7 (48:18):
If you look.

Speaker 14 (48:19):
Around, you know, if a gentleman's in the car, there's
nothing sexier than seeing a man in a beautiful pickup truck.

Speaker 7 (48:26):
In my opinion, when.

Speaker 1 (48:27):
You say beautiful, does it be some of those new
and shiny or can it just be like a big
like work truck.

Speaker 14 (48:36):
No, big and new and shiny.

Speaker 11 (48:37):
No.

Speaker 14 (48:38):
Some of those pickup trucks cost more than any car
put together. You know, you were talking about suburbans being
a family car. If you look at some of those
four in f three fifties or the Dodge Rams, a
man in one of those, make sure I's look that way.

Speaker 1 (48:54):
What I would assume based on this cause that she
knows some guys they're really looking, or that she's attracted
to that also drive the truck.

Speaker 12 (49:02):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (49:04):
It's like when there's a name that you find not
attractive as in like romantic, but you're like, I really
like the name, it's usually because somebody that you know
and like has that name. And if you're like, oh,
I don't like that name. If you're naming a kid
or something, it's usually because maybe somebody you don't like
growing up had that name and yet or a villain
something you have a negative association with has that name.

(49:25):
But I hear you. I think there are a lot
of people that feel like Tina does they want to
dude in a big truck because of what that represents. Tina,
I appreciate the call. I hope you have a great day.

Speaker 14 (49:35):
Thank you.

Speaker 1 (49:36):
Let's go to Matt in Richmond, Virginia. Who's on the phone.
Hey Matt, you're on the show.

Speaker 12 (49:42):
Hey, good morning, Bobby morning, what's up buddy, Hey, good morning.

Speaker 7 (49:46):
Studio morning.

Speaker 12 (49:49):
And I was wondering what your thought was on an
ASCAR going to back to the chase format and getting
rid of the playoffs situation. With the elimination racist.

Speaker 1 (50:00):
I'm glad you asked that. I gotta tell you I
work for the NFL. I do an NFL show. I'm in.
We do a show called twenty five Whistles at a
sports show Baseball, basketball, football, Eddie's big UFC guy. Heck wrestling,
all good. I don't know anything about NASCAR, like I
was not brought up around it. I probably know as

(50:23):
much about NASCAR as I do soccer. So like I
can weigh ankle deep in it, Eddie knows more than
I do.

Speaker 2 (50:30):
Well, I just bet on it.

Speaker 4 (50:31):
I really like when you're saying those words, I don't
know what that means.

Speaker 1 (50:36):
I didn't grow up around NASCAR, so I don't, Matt,
I don't have an educated or knowledgeable answer to that.
How do you feel about it?

Speaker 12 (50:46):
I think it's a great move me too, because the
whole going from you know, three races and then eliminating
four drivers, and then another three races, and then you
go down to the final race and you have four
drivers and whoever finishes best out of that race the championship.
You could have a driver that has never won a
race all season long and win the championship if he
runs well enough. But I think it's a great move

(51:08):
that it has to be consistency wins the championship.

Speaker 1 (51:11):
Philia, and I don't know much about that. But in golf,
like when they do the FedEx and they give away
all the money, you cannot win a tournament the whole year.
But if you score high enough and all the turms,
you finish second third, second third, second third, and then
you have enough points and you win, you can win
the whole thing. Because you've not won a single tournament,
but you've placed high enough, and some of those guys
that won didn't maybe didn't make a cut. I hear you.

(51:32):
I don't know enough about NASCAR to have an educated opinion,
but now I do know they've shifted. I appreciate that
because this is how I got my news from Matt
in Richmond, Virginia. All right, Matt, thanks buddy. Let's go
talk to Ty, who is in Tennessee. Hey, Ty, Hey, good.

Speaker 7 (51:48):
Morning, studio morning.

Speaker 11 (51:53):
I wanted to call with a reminder that we are
one month away from Valentine's Day, so Eddie and lunch
Box need to to get their step in order.

Speaker 1 (52:01):
She almost sounds like a robot car. I'm calling to
let you know you have one month. It's like our
wives paid for this. It's a service, guys. Tie says,
you have one month to Valentine's Day. Okay, your thoughts,
your feelings, Addy mine is thanks for the reminder because
I wasn't even thinking about that. So yes, that's coming soon.

(52:22):
Will you think about that? How will her saying that
change your day to day or your month leading up
to her?

Speaker 4 (52:27):
Because there is something I've been wanting to do for
Valentine's Day, So now I will jump on the planning
process this week. Yes, I'm gonna book whatever I've been
thinking about. I'm not going to talk about it, but
I'm gonna book it.

Speaker 1 (52:38):
Okay, lunchbox, it's not going to happen.

Speaker 6 (52:40):
It's a Saturday night that's going to be super busy
everywhere you go. Uh So maybe we'll do something on
like the sixteenth, which is President's Day.

Speaker 1 (52:51):
Or what if you do something at home? What if
you it's a nice gift. What if it's I don't
do gifts like gift?

Speaker 6 (52:57):
What am I going to get her? I've given her.

Speaker 1 (52:58):
I don't think she needs like you, like.

Speaker 6 (53:01):
Meet three kids, a roof over our heads.

Speaker 2 (53:04):
I mean, it's a romantic like gifts or not.

Speaker 6 (53:08):
So I already gave her a Christmas present like so,
I don't know, I don't Saturday is that's tough, m.

Speaker 1 (53:16):
I mean, but it doesn't have to be. But she's
also giving you a month, right, and you make a
reservation now at all these places where you're acting like
you can't get in, if you do it now, you
actually can get in.

Speaker 6 (53:24):
Here's the problem. You go out on Valentine's Day to
a restaurant. Guess what, they have a set menu. They
charge you extra money just because it's Valentine's Day. You
go to that same restaurant two days before or two
days after, half priced.

Speaker 8 (53:35):
Okay, So if that's your problem, just playing something romantic
at home, like cook her something something appreciative.

Speaker 1 (53:41):
It doesn't even have to be like you get in
a tuxedo and deliver a piece of jewelry on a knee. Literally,
it's just an acknowledgment, like like.

Speaker 4 (53:49):
You automatically think dinner. I'm not thinking dinner like dinner.

Speaker 2 (53:52):
I don't. We don't even do dinner.

Speaker 1 (53:54):
Right, I don't either.

Speaker 8 (53:55):
I kind of want to know what your thing is.

Speaker 1 (53:56):
I think I think a gift. A gift is like
a a token of appreciation more so than a dinner.
I just go on. My mind takes me when someone say,
say Valentine's Days coming up, I think, oh, I'd like
to get my my wife a nice gift for Valentine's Day.
I don't think dinner. You think dinner.

Speaker 6 (54:14):
Yeah, I think like an event. But it's like at
the same time, I like, I'm tired of it being
a woman's holiday, but you never do.

Speaker 1 (54:21):
It holiday, You never do it, So what are you
tired of? You never do That's what I.

Speaker 6 (54:26):
Got burned out, Like, I got burned out of always
being the one that the responsibility is yours, yours, yours, But.

Speaker 1 (54:31):
It doesn't have to be some massive undertaking.

Speaker 6 (54:35):
It kind of does the way you guys calling you
got one months get something done.

Speaker 4 (54:38):
It's like, guys, you know what I realized, Like my
kids are watching me on Valentine's Day, and like, if
I don't get my wife anything or like treat her differently,
they're not gonna treat their wife.

Speaker 1 (54:48):
You are like that.

Speaker 2 (54:50):
I just thought of this.

Speaker 1 (54:50):
You're representing men everywhere to your kids and what they
hopefully they model you.

Speaker 2 (54:56):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (54:56):
Good you can put an end of the cycle.

Speaker 1 (54:58):
You model for them.

Speaker 8 (54:59):
Yeah, you've put an end of the cycle, show.

Speaker 2 (55:01):
Them that you're not going to do anything.

Speaker 1 (55:03):
Everybody has a different relationship with Valentine's Day, and I
don't care about that, but I'm saying, if it is,
if you want to do something, She's giving you enough
time so it's not two days before and you're like,
oh my god, I can't do anything because there's nothing
left to do. She's saying, here, you go one month.
If you want to do something, do it. You can
set it dinner reservation right now pretty easily because nobody
has booked anything. A month out. You can remember to

(55:25):
get a gift. You can do nothing. Sure, but don't
be complaining about it when it gets closer, because she's
telling you now. But you're right, Eddie, your kids are
watching you.

Speaker 2 (55:34):
They are. I realized that last year.

Speaker 1 (55:36):
They're not just Valentine's Day every day and how you
treat your wife.

Speaker 4 (55:40):
It's true, man. My therapist told me that a couple
of years ago.

Speaker 1 (55:44):
It just now resonated.

Speaker 2 (55:45):
Well, no, no, I just thought about it because.

Speaker 1 (55:46):
Of Valentine's It took a while. Thank you for that tie.
I appreciate that we shall have her. She leave us
all right, tye, okay, thank you, bye bye. A new
born in Texas weighed thirteen pounds. That's crazy. Oh my
wife is super pregnant right now and we do the

(56:08):
thing where you go on and they measure even then.
I can't imagine a thirteen pound anything coming out.

Speaker 8 (56:13):
Double me from when you were born was six pounds
eight ounces or eight pounds six ounces.

Speaker 1 (56:21):
DYSLEXI we go Wednesday morning.

Speaker 8 (56:24):
Slex one of the two.

Speaker 1 (56:26):
Marky Smith, gave birth to her son Canyon, just days
before Christmas at a hospital in Arlington. They had to
get it out by c section, and I guess they
were surprised. They thought maybe it'd be around a nine
pound baby, and even that's a large, large baby. But
it came out thirteen pounds. The average full term newborn
weighs seven pounds. It's it's basically two. She had twins

(56:49):
and one baby.

Speaker 8 (56:50):
One based on average. I guess I was probably one of.

Speaker 4 (56:53):
My boys was ten ten and every time I go bowling,
I show them the bull and ball it do.

Speaker 2 (56:57):
How heavy you were?

Speaker 8 (56:58):
Wow?

Speaker 1 (56:59):
Local twelve with that story.

Speaker 8 (57:01):
When you're biological huh?

Speaker 2 (57:03):
Our second one.

Speaker 1 (57:03):
Do you know how much your adopted ones Wade? No,
I didn't know if you had that that information.

Speaker 12 (57:08):
There.

Speaker 1 (57:09):
Let's go to Alicia in Texas. Alicia, you're on the show.

Speaker 14 (57:15):
Hey, Bobby, Morning studio, Morning, Hey, listen.

Speaker 8 (57:19):
I just want to know.

Speaker 14 (57:21):
What do you think about the NFL being scripted?

Speaker 11 (57:24):
What are your thoughts on that.

Speaker 8 (57:26):
The NFL is not scripted like like wrestling, is that.

Speaker 1 (57:35):
You're cutting out, you're cutting out? Start over.

Speaker 7 (57:39):
They've got videos on it, They've got they've got some footage, they've.

Speaker 11 (57:42):
Got some audio of what, like, tell me morning, Okay.

Speaker 14 (57:47):
The game, the Broncos game.

Speaker 1 (57:49):
The Broncos didn't even play last week?

Speaker 7 (57:52):
Who Bobby?

Speaker 14 (57:53):
I learned it on Instagram. You know how we are?

Speaker 6 (57:59):
You know how we are?

Speaker 14 (58:00):
Was sential media.

Speaker 11 (58:01):
I'm getting ready to cross the bridge onto Porpus Christie.
I don't want to get a ticket.

Speaker 14 (58:05):
So I just wanted to know what your thoughts was.

Speaker 1 (58:07):
Okay, thank you. The NFL is not scripted. To run
an operation like that, you would need thousands of people
abiding by a sacred rule of we're just not going
to talk about it. Somebody would leak after one hundred.

Speaker 8 (58:24):
Who is Darryl Baker Jr.

Speaker 1 (58:27):
Nobody.

Speaker 8 (58:27):
Okay, it says you're Tennessee Titans. Darryl Baker Junior. Stirs
the NFL as scripted.

Speaker 1 (58:33):
Pot Oh, that was stir stirs the pot there. I'm
telling you, it's not even about the NFL an operation
that big over six decades, seven decades. If it were scripted,
you would for sure know it was scripted.

Speaker 2 (58:51):
Yeah, there are a lot of players that could say anything.

Speaker 1 (58:53):
That's what I'm saying. Coaches, trainers, and thousands and thousands
of people. Yes, the NFL is not scripted. It's too
big of an organation.

Speaker 6 (59:01):
Oh my gosh, he said. He was joking, Like, he said,
oh my gosh, I followed the script all season, guys,
before every game, we're giving a script. And people believed him,
and he was like, guys, obviously he's a joke. You idiots.

Speaker 1 (59:11):
Some people don't get to the end of videos. I
appreciate you calling because she probably saw it immediately and
called in and was like, I got to share, but yeah,
you got to get to the end of these videos. Yeah,
NFL definitely not scripted.

Speaker 8 (59:23):
That'd be crazy.

Speaker 1 (59:23):
If it was, though, it'd be called sports entertainment. Then,
like wrestling. Wrestling scripted, right.

Speaker 6 (59:31):
People would still watch.

Speaker 8 (59:33):
They sure would because wrestling is very popular.

Speaker 1 (59:36):
But wrestling has storylines. Wrestling has soap opera type storylines.

Speaker 8 (59:39):
We have storylines in flate Gate.

Speaker 1 (59:42):
The one thing Amy knows that was a storyline was
opposite in flay Gate. Try something else. We don't even
know that.

Speaker 8 (59:53):
Ultimately, exactly exactly. I mean, it's a show, think about it.
It leads up to the big show.

Speaker 1 (01:00:00):
It's definitely entertainment. It is entertainment, and they do make
it to be a great product, but it is not scripted.

Speaker 8 (01:00:04):
But the shady is sport. Okay, so wrestling take it
out because that's scripted, but the shady is non scripted.
Sport is basketball. Boxing is a boxing Oh I thought
that was predetermined too.

Speaker 1 (01:00:14):
You thought boxing is pretermined.

Speaker 8 (01:00:16):
Well, they're all in a ring.

Speaker 1 (01:00:17):
Like probably anything in a ring. There have been instances
probably of judges being paid or influenced. Sure, okay, but
not the fighters.

Speaker 8 (01:00:29):
No.

Speaker 1 (01:00:29):
But boxing, they have a board, they have a commission.
It's supposed to be on the up and up. But
I would say that's probably the most crooked sport.

Speaker 8 (01:00:34):
Okay, So, now a sport with a ball basketball.

Speaker 1 (01:00:39):
Right, yeah, but there's sure like there's been a referee
that's been in trouble. But I mean, if you have
subjective umpiring or reffing, it could probably be influenced heavily
where baseball as home plate.

Speaker 2 (01:00:53):
There's definitely been cheating, cheating in baseball.

Speaker 8 (01:00:56):
But I okay, you know what, but boxing, okay, so
but big picture here is the football is real.

Speaker 1 (01:01:04):
Yes, it's nuts.

Speaker 8 (01:01:06):
She was very confident in whatever she saw on social media.
What's the guy's name, Oh, oh, the guy from the Titans, Darryl.

Speaker 2 (01:01:14):
Darryl.

Speaker 1 (01:01:17):
Let's go over and talk to Tony real quick, Kazan, Hey, Tony,
you're on the show in Denver, Colorado.

Speaker 7 (01:01:22):
Hey, martin studio man So regarding the coming out of
surgery and speaking a different language, a number of years ago,
I had heard something about this happening, and I was
actually having surgery planned. I had a knee surgery and
abdominal surgery at the same time, so I was going
to be under anesthesia for a while, and I told
my wife before I went in, when we were in

(01:01:44):
the pre op area, I said, Hey, when I come out,
I'm only going to speak Spanish. And at the time
I was reasonably fluent in Spanish, and she's like, no way,
you won't remember. Et ceteras are like Bobby said. And
so I go through my surgeries and I'm coming out.
I'm starting to wake up. Of course I have completely forgotten.
But the guy in the recovery they next to me

(01:02:05):
was a Spanish speaker, and I heard him speaking to
his family. I'm like, oh, that's right. I'm only supposed
to speak Spanish. So when the nurse came in and
it was the same nurse we had before, I went
in kind of like the familiar face thing. And so
she comes in and she's like, oh, you know, how
are you feeling? And I'm like, oh, tangling the water
and me ask the miles on me for Neil. And
she's looking at me, going okay, and you know, I'm

(01:02:27):
not quite sure what it is. So she's like, okay,
how's your pan. I'm like, oh, showing the way, you know,
and so I'm just going with it. So she makes
her notes and she walks out, and then she comes
back a little later, you know, checks in with me again,
same same story. And so she goes out, shuts the curtain.
I hear her say to another nurse. She's like, oh
my god, I don't know what's going on. I had

(01:02:48):
this guy before surgery and he and his wife were
speaking perfect English, like they're as white as can be,
and now he's only speaking Spanish. I don't know what
to do. Come back when we go through this three. Yeah,
but it's just a number of years ago.

Speaker 1 (01:03:02):
You're not as white and you're not as white as
could be anymore.

Speaker 9 (01:03:05):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:03:05):
Yeah. The story was this guy who didn't know Spanish
came out speaking Spanish, and my thing was, you could
play a prank on somebody we'd have to remember. But
also this guy knew a little Spanish obviously, so this
was Joe, you know, and he's as white as can be.
I appreciate that story, Tony. Thank you all for listening
to Part two. We really love and respect the Part

(01:03:27):
twurs more than just the Part one ers who just
listen on the radio, and you know what, they're never
going to hear this, so it doesn't matter. We actually
only kind of like them. We really love Part Twurs,
but don't tell any of the Part one ers that
because they but again, they'll never hear it unless they're here.
So thank you for listening to the podcast and we'll
be back tomorrow. That I feel like that's good, all

(01:03:49):
right by everybody,
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