Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
Alright, welcome to the Craig Robinson Podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:05):
Eddie.
Speaker 3 (00:06):
At first, that's funny, Okay. So BuzzFeed had an article
about these the times, like famous people try to be
normal for once and realize, like they're too famous. I
can't do this.
Speaker 1 (00:17):
Oh that's interesting.
Speaker 3 (00:18):
Yeah. So some of the ones they mentioned here was
Naomi Watts back in like two thousand and seven.
Speaker 1 (00:24):
Exactly, blonde, blonde, English, English, British. Okay, got it.
Speaker 2 (00:29):
Yeah, there's different Naomis Miomi Watts, Naomi Judd, Campbell, Campbell,
Naomi the shoplifter.
Speaker 3 (00:36):
No, that's why, that's why not a Judd. Okay, too many?
So yeah, she Naomi Watts decided to go to the
grocery store. She had just had a baby, so the
public hadn't seen her in a while, and she went
to Whole Foods. Next thing you know, there were thirty
photographers outside. She had to call the cops just to
leave the store. She's like, I can't do that.
Speaker 2 (00:56):
I think of Michael Jackson renting out the grocery store
and he would pay pay extras to like walk the
aisles and be shopping because he wanted to see what
it was like to be normal. He couldn't even do
what you're saying, like famous people going to attempt to
be normal, He had to pay for a normal experience.
That's crazy, that's crazy. That makes you start to feel sad.
Speaker 3 (01:14):
Yeah, And I remember too. We had Kenny Rodgers on
the show and he was talking about Elvis, how he
met with Elvis in Vegas and he was like, they
were playing poker some in the room, Like, why don't
we go down and play like a real game down
in the casinos. I was like, I can't do that, baby, Like, like,
there's no chance that he can go and play a
regular game of poker at a casino because they would
get mobbed.
Speaker 1 (01:33):
Yes, says Michael.
Speaker 2 (01:34):
Jackson rented out a grocery store and paid actors two
thousand and three so he could experience shopping like a
normal person, and in two thousand and three of Florida
Supermarket was closed and staffed with his friends and family
who pretended to be shoppers and employees. This allowed him
to fill his dream of pushing a shopping cart and
putting items in a basket. That's crazy, what who whilse
you got out there?
Speaker 3 (01:52):
Michael Jordan. Back in nineteen eighty nine, He's like, I'm
gonna go to church at big mistake. The church was like, no, Mike,
You're like distracting the whole church. Everyone wanted autographs, pictures.
Speaker 2 (02:04):
I still today, if those people were the same today,
I think they could do more normal things because famous
so fractured now. And back then, if you were famous,
there were like eleven famous people, right. I mean it's
like that in KFC urban spices like same amount, not
that many. So there just weren't that many famous people
because there were like four channels that were magazines. Those
(02:25):
were hard. Now, what is your favorite thing? Is it
hinges on doors? Is it you love basketball? Is it aeronautics?
Like you can find somebody and they're famous in that
world where even the most famous people aren't as famous
because it's so fractured. Now they're still DiCaprio, there's still
like the super superstars. But I think it's different now.
(02:47):
Or I think Michael Jordan probably even today could go
to church. He'd still like to get bothered, but he
could go to church.
Speaker 1 (02:51):
What else?
Speaker 3 (02:52):
This was a weird one. Justin Bieber. He said he
was at the beach and decided he didn't see anyone around,
so they decided, like, just get nude.
Speaker 1 (03:00):
That's weird. Probably a young kid though, huh.
Speaker 3 (03:02):
I don't know how long ago it was. But then
Popper he saw paparazzi there, and then the pictures came
out and became a big deal.
Speaker 2 (03:08):
He couldn't have been under eighteen then. And then also,
are you on something if it's.
Speaker 1 (03:13):
Not a nude beach, you can't get nude?
Speaker 3 (03:14):
Like when do you realize you at the beach, Like
I just take all my clothes off.
Speaker 2 (03:18):
I don't think if you're remember like Katy Perry and
Orlando Bloom they were on that powder board together and
he was naked and his schlong was like ten feet long.
Speaker 1 (03:25):
Do you remember that?
Speaker 4 (03:26):
No, I don't remember looking at that one. I remember
them being You just said, yeah, you remember that. I
remember them being on it. There was pictures of them
on a paddle board. I'm pretty sure she was.
Speaker 1 (03:37):
I don't think she was.
Speaker 5 (03:41):
You would think you would remember if Katie Perry was topless.
Speaker 1 (03:43):
I don't think she was. I don't know.
Speaker 2 (03:45):
I remember it was his wiener because it was humongous.
And then I remember I dinner with them, and that's
all you think it wasn't all, but it definitely was like,
how weird is it? I know, No, that's weird his
packtor size. Yeah, I remember thinking that at dinner anyway.
Speaker 3 (03:59):
And then lastly to Taylor Swift, she I guess she
went to Jack. What's that guy's name, Jack Antonov? He
was getting married and they had a rehearsal dinner at
a restaurant. She shows up and they were like one
hundred fans outside chanting Taylor's name. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (04:14):
The problem is they knew she might be there because
their friends. He's her producer.
Speaker 3 (04:19):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (04:19):
Yeah, that's a good story.
Speaker 3 (04:20):
Let's tough.
Speaker 1 (04:20):
What about Craig Robinson do with h stuff?
Speaker 3 (04:22):
Nothing yet, but if you wait July twenty third of
those big news on Craig Robinson, let's go.
Speaker 1 (04:26):
I can't wait. Let's walk through some voicemails. Number one.
Speaker 6 (04:31):
I was just wondering if you, Bobby, could let us
know about that brain appointment you're going to be going to.
I mean, if it actually works or not. So yeah,
that'd be awesome if you could like let the listeners
know what you think, if you think it's a florace
ebo or you think it's actually changing her brain anyway,
I love to show I.
Speaker 5 (04:48):
Love you guys.
Speaker 6 (04:49):
Thanks bye.
Speaker 1 (04:51):
I'll back it up for Christmas or Birthday. Like four
years ago.
Speaker 2 (04:56):
Amy got me this gift of go going in and
I did not explain it because I don't I don't know.
I know what I've been to. Three sessions. Yeah, so
I can tell you what to do, but I don't
know how to explain what the science is.
Speaker 5 (05:11):
It's called it's a version of I don't know exactly
exactly what you're doing. Again, I bought it. Yes, it
was Christmas four years.
Speaker 1 (05:17):
I can look it up though this Christmas.
Speaker 5 (05:19):
I think five. I think it was Christmas twenty.
Speaker 2 (05:21):
Four, not to this Christmas yet, so we can't say five.
We're halfway. No, no, we're half a year. You can't do that.
That's completely unfair.
Speaker 3 (05:27):
So it's still four.
Speaker 2 (05:28):
Yes, it's yeah, you can't go this Christmas it'll be okay,
and three Christmases it will be eight yeah, four and
a half yeah, okay, by okay, I can read to
you now.
Speaker 1 (05:39):
I have it up here. Okay.
Speaker 2 (05:40):
This place says it's a wellness experience. It helps you
relax your brain, to manage stress, restore hope, and finally
achieve RESTful sleep through the patented brain echo neuromodulation technology
that empowers the brain to reset itself as it hears
and sees its own reflection. This place enables your brain
to fully relax and reset itself to its natural balance.
Speaker 6 (05:59):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (05:59):
So, how was explained to me once, which I think
is helpful, is you know when your heart is out
of rhythm and you you know, they restart it to
get it boom boom boom boom shocked. I'm think right,
So it's sort of it's not shocking your brain, like
you don't feel it, but it is like you're putting
these electrodes on your brain and it's putting it back
into its natural rhythm. Because during life events, whether you
(06:23):
hit your head physically or you experienced emotional trauma, certain
parts of your brain can be hyperactive or totally shut off.
And this helps get everything turned on if it needs to,
or turned down if it needs to. It's like tuning
it to its natural rhythm.
Speaker 2 (06:38):
So I have five sessions total. I've been to three.
I go to four in a row, take a week off,
and go to the fifth. They gave me a whole
print out of all my brain pre they give me
one after four and then after five, and I don't
know what everybody's prout looks like, but mine looked missed
up like some of my lines. And she doesn't know me,
and she wouldn't know me because she's not somebody who
(06:58):
would listen to this show. She's like a hippie doctor,
not a hippie doctor. But there's like a little bit
of hippie to her, but a little bit of doctor
to her.
Speaker 3 (07:06):
She a doctor doctor.
Speaker 1 (07:07):
I don't know. We don't talk.
Speaker 2 (07:10):
I kind of go in there and you sit in
an office and they're like, uh, Bobby, and everything's it's quiet,
but there's nobody else there, but it's really quiet, and
maybe it's consisting nobody else there. But I walk back
in there and I get in the seat, and they
stick these electrodes on my head, and then I see
the computer start to reflect something that's happening with my brain,
(07:31):
like little things.
Speaker 5 (07:32):
Are you watching the kind you're doing? Are you watching
a TV show or a movie or anything? Nothing?
Speaker 7 (07:38):
Okay.
Speaker 1 (07:38):
I just sit there and raw dog it okay.
Speaker 2 (07:40):
And so they then she puts headphones in my ears
and it plays sounds, but all this sound they're like
not in the same key.
Speaker 1 (07:49):
It's like.
Speaker 2 (07:51):
And it starts to drive me crazy because I'm not
a musician, but I can play music a little bit,
and I've been around music so much that it really
bothers me when the song when things are not in
the same where they're supposed to be right.
Speaker 1 (08:04):
And so then I have to like play games of
like okay.
Speaker 5 (08:08):
What why to play games?
Speaker 4 (08:09):
String?
Speaker 1 (08:10):
I can't what string was that? Like, it's a whole thing.
Speaker 2 (08:13):
And then I figured out if I open my eyes
real fast, I can make the screen bounce.
Speaker 5 (08:18):
So now you're playing games.
Speaker 3 (08:19):
Well it's an hour raw dog in so you know,
like if you do something, you see react on the
screen like what I what?
Speaker 2 (08:24):
Didn't mean to but I like blinked once and I
saw the screen go up and down, and then I
was like the up.
Speaker 5 (08:30):
Do they recommend that you close your eyes?
Speaker 1 (08:32):
They don't care what you do.
Speaker 5 (08:33):
They don't Okay, you can't be on your phone.
Speaker 1 (08:36):
You can't do anything.
Speaker 2 (08:37):
I wonder if you can go to sleep. I've been asleep.
I've fallen asleep before.
Speaker 5 (08:40):
This thing good because I wonder though for you specifically,
if you should put a blindfold on or something so
that way, you can't.
Speaker 1 (08:49):
Turn out a discovery.
Speaker 2 (08:50):
When I realized you can't turn it into I'm trying
to like to wave it a baseball.
Speaker 1 (08:56):
So I've been going.
Speaker 2 (08:57):
Every time that I go in, she'll say, have you
noticed and you difference? And I'm honest and I say
not yet. She's like, okay, great, some people don't notice anything.
Speaker 5 (09:06):
Are you tied? Do you sleep better than night? You
get it because my brain I haven't had this exact
one you're getting at all, because I didn't even discover
I bought that for you just hearing about it again.
I think I heard about that place specifically from Amy
Grant talking about it somewhere, and I thought, well, maybe
Bobby like to try this. And then a couple years
after I gave that to you, my son did some neurofeedback,
(09:27):
and so then I started to do that, but I
went somewhere else. So we have a different experience because
I watch like Netflix, and the screen changes it.
Speaker 1 (09:35):
It's so nice. I do nothing. I just go heard blinking.
Speaker 2 (09:40):
Yeah, that's my entertainment is making the lines go up.
But I don't know that the whole time, because then
I realize I'm messing with the money.
Speaker 5 (09:45):
Okay, Yeah, I don't know if you would like it though,
because like the screen goes like this.
Speaker 1 (09:50):
Oh, you don't get to pick your show.
Speaker 5 (09:51):
You can pick the show, But what I'm saying is
you're not just like watching it on the screen is
doing work to your brain. Like the screen, what you're
seeing on the screen gets really small. So like sometimes
I'll watch Seinfeld and then it'll get really big and
even the volume will get really quiet and then get
really loud.
Speaker 2 (10:07):
Oh maybe I like that better though, But anyway, I
don't know yet. I don't know yet, so I don't
want to give an complete answer. But I have done
three of the five sessions and I have another one
on Monday.
Speaker 5 (10:16):
I just saw the wonders that it did on my
son's brain, and he was in a constant state of
survival mode. And I believe your brain, and you know, gosh,
he's a kid. Your brain has been in a constant
state of survival mode, and you're in your forties now,
So I just hope we can find something that can
(10:38):
relax your brain.
Speaker 2 (10:39):
You know what I try to do now, and I'm
not good at it, but it's I'm being very deliberate
in that when I wake up, I try not to
redline immediately. I've been talking about that in therapy because
what I do. I wake up and I'm like, time
to go, mother.
Speaker 1 (10:54):
I mean, that's it. It's like time to go. I
only got so much time to the day to get
all these things done. I wake up. I hate waken up.
Speaker 2 (10:59):
I wake up and I'm like, all right, I don't
need to go pedal the metal to start. Let me
just go out and they gotta feed the dogs, do
the things I do in the morning.
Speaker 1 (11:09):
Nobody else is awake from me, and.
Speaker 2 (11:10):
I tried just but that's it's so difficult for me
because I am conditioned to run one hundred miles an
hour from the minute I wake up right, So, but
I think it saves me a bit of energy on
the back side of the day.
Speaker 1 (11:23):
I don't I.
Speaker 2 (11:23):
Don't go into full fatigue as early. I feel anyway,
Thanks for the voice smail.
Speaker 8 (11:30):
Give me number two lunchbox wife having a bathroom off
side of the road. I have two daughters and a wife.
There's no way he shows them that it's not that
hard to stop. He's there at a resktop Or gas station.
I know he ain't gonna get out and soon number
two on the side of the road with everybody watching.
(11:51):
I love the show, watch out every day.
Speaker 3 (11:53):
Thanks Thanks Mane.
Speaker 1 (11:54):
Give me three to two ray lunchbox.
Speaker 5 (11:57):
How in the world is your wife you'll marry to
you or Heaven's sake, take her to a toilet at
bathroom a gas station.
Speaker 1 (12:08):
Two voicemails.
Speaker 4 (12:09):
Your response, Yeah, I would not make my wife do
number two on the side of the road, So that
voicemail was pretty stupid. I wouldn't go number two on
the side of the road. Yes, you're right, we would
not poop on the side of the road. It's just
urine that we do on the side of the road.
So thank you for your voiceman. Well, yeah, I mean
I didn't understand what he was saying. He's like, you
wouldn't do number two on the side of the road,
and my wife didn't.
Speaker 3 (12:29):
Either, because you have to like squat to do number
two like the way she does number one.
Speaker 1 (12:34):
That would be the point he was making.
Speaker 4 (12:36):
Yeah, yeah, but it's totally different because.
Speaker 1 (12:38):
It doesn't matter anyways.
Speaker 4 (12:40):
Yeah, and then uh, yeah, it does take time when
you go to a rest area or a gas station.
It takes thirty minutes because you get out, you gotta
walk in there, gotta wait in line. Oh, get in,
all right, get out? And then you know what I mean,
Like it's just everybody getting in and out of the
car and walking across the parking lot.
Speaker 1 (12:55):
And I think thirty minutes. Probably no, understand your point.
Speaker 4 (12:58):
You have a kids. You know how it takes thirty minutes.
Speaker 2 (13:00):
Doesn't take thirty minutesteen twenty minutes. It doesn't take thirty minutes.
Speaker 4 (13:04):
But okay, and so yes, my wife is still married
to me because I make good time.
Speaker 2 (13:08):
I thought he's gonna say money. I thought he's gonna
say money time.
Speaker 5 (13:13):
She doesn't even get.
Speaker 4 (13:14):
But she does enjoy the lifestyle. I mean we get
the lifestyle, get to do cool things, and I mean
I am a catch, Like there are women beating down
the door to get to me. So if she wanted
to leave, she would be like, man, there would be
another one knocking right when she walked out.
Speaker 2 (13:29):
So that's a bit of her concern. She doesn't raise
a flag because she knows that she raises too many flags.
You're gonna be like, hey, yeah, kick.
Speaker 4 (13:36):
And she has fun. I mean I'm a good dude,
Like she loves being with me because I'm awesome.
Speaker 2 (13:40):
I don't think anybody's arguing any of what you're saying.
I think the guy's just bringing up a point. We are, No, we're,
but we're not arguing with it.
Speaker 3 (13:48):
Yeah, chick's knocking on the door. You're not arguing.
Speaker 1 (13:50):
Okay, do you get a mystery Venmo?
Speaker 5 (13:53):
Yes from you? For one hundred dollars?
Speaker 1 (13:56):
Think about it. I have no idea, so Amy sent
me a message. I got a Venmo for me for
a hundred bucks? Is an accident?
Speaker 5 (14:03):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (14:04):
Because go ahead, think about it.
Speaker 5 (14:05):
I thought, sometimes you pay the wrong people.
Speaker 1 (14:08):
So only one time have I ever paid the wrong person?
Speaker 5 (14:10):
Well, I didn't know if you like pulled up a
like you were supposed to pay Andy and you accidentally
take Amy or something. But I was like, who's what
is this hundred dollars for?
Speaker 1 (14:20):
It wasn't an accident?
Speaker 5 (14:21):
Okay, well it feels random.
Speaker 3 (14:24):
Oh Amy, come on, think about it.
Speaker 1 (14:27):
Okay, you know what it is?
Speaker 3 (14:28):
Yeah? Of course? What was it? Easy trivia?
Speaker 1 (14:29):
Yeah you want I'm a surprised for this was a buck.
Speaker 5 (14:33):
I did not know that.
Speaker 2 (14:34):
For the hundred questions. Oh I forgot easy Trivia super challenge.
Speaker 6 (14:38):
Wow.
Speaker 3 (14:39):
It must be nice.
Speaker 1 (14:40):
So you got a hundred bucks. Okay, and now I
pay my debts. I'm a lanister. Lanister always pays his debts.
Speaker 3 (14:44):
What's a lanister?
Speaker 1 (14:45):
Game of Thrones? Oh yeah, that's why it was. It
wasn't wrong. That's that's your hundred bucks.
Speaker 5 (14:49):
Oh well, I just wanted to make sure I didn't
want to keep it. And then you know, it's like
getting extra money on your paycheck and you're like, what, I'm.
Speaker 1 (14:58):
Gonna come back and then force getting it back.
Speaker 5 (15:00):
Yeah, so okay.
Speaker 1 (15:02):
All right, Amy, what's your story?
Speaker 5 (15:03):
All right? Speaking of money, weighted vest sales have jumped
over fifty percent to twenty seven million in the last year.
Speaker 1 (15:11):
Now, like forking and what do they call it? What farking?
Speaker 5 (15:15):
Rocky? Rocky? No, far, waking is walk running, But rocking
is when you used to see a lot of men
doing it where they put on a weighted backpack or
vest and they hike and whatnot. Well, now this is
just a very common everyday thing for any woman in
my age. Everybody that I know has a weighted vest.
My friend came over to walk the other day and
(15:37):
she's like, I forgot my weighted vest. You have an
extra one and I was like, what, like, you think
I have an extra one. She's like, well, I don't know,
but that's just how common weighted vests are now with
my women in their forties and I'm like, dang, we
should have gotten in on this. But it's not too late.
I don't think it's too late if I think that
(15:58):
it is still catching on.
Speaker 1 (16:00):
To make them or to buy them to here's my proposal,
but I understand to make them or to buy them,
to make them too late? Buy them not too late?
Speaker 5 (16:07):
No, to make something actually cute, because they're not cute
at all. I am embarrassed sometimes when I have it on,
Like I'll be like I should probably go. If I
have a white shirt on and I've got it on,
it's so obvious, and I'm like.
Speaker 1 (16:22):
People think you're in the FBI. Probably, I feel.
Speaker 5 (16:26):
I think at this point people are like woman in
her forties, like they just know she's paing me in
a pozzle because.
Speaker 1 (16:31):
Like you think people say that when you walk by,
I do.
Speaker 5 (16:35):
When I see a fellow person with their best son,
I'm like, definitely verimanal pozzle. I know who they follow
on social media, Like you just get fed all this
information of like all the things we need to be doing,
because the benefits are like help us with balance and
bone density and osteoporosis, like all the things we're worried about.
Speaker 2 (16:52):
It like you're a hundred dog's gonna interview your for
a podcast over in Sherman's village or where she works.
Speaker 1 (16:58):
What's called guard.
Speaker 9 (17:03):
That's me.
Speaker 5 (17:04):
That's me. I'm just I'm trying to keep myself out
of an assisted living home because when I fall later,
I want to get back.
Speaker 1 (17:13):
What's your point?
Speaker 5 (17:14):
My point is I want to create one that's actually
sleek and she can cute. And I had this idea
probably over ten years ago for sneaky weights, and that's
before that lady and Austin invented those balla the cute
little ankle weights and wrist weights that are so cute.
Like she nailed it, she made it cute, and then
every started copying her. Well, when I used to walk
(17:35):
with my hand weights back in the day, I was like,
I wish these were cuter, wish we could design something cuter,
And I just never took it to the next level
to think of what would have been cute. So shout
out to her and now I feel like we need
to make a cute weight ad base.
Speaker 1 (17:46):
You keep back.
Speaker 5 (17:47):
Well, if you all want to get in on it.
Speaker 3 (17:49):
I want to. I want to, but I do want
to know how she's going to make it cuter.
Speaker 1 (17:52):
No, but you all got up the here.
Speaker 2 (17:54):
Now, what's the science? How much are they going to
cost you? There are other questions.
Speaker 3 (17:57):
Before you before I want I'm not in yet. Then
I'm in good point.
Speaker 5 (18:01):
So I got the thing with the weights is I
tried to figure out how to make an element that
could be really sick, like.
Speaker 1 (18:06):
You called a g vest.
Speaker 5 (18:08):
Oh no, what's called the g vest?
Speaker 1 (18:11):
It's two hunde dollars.
Speaker 5 (18:12):
That is outrageous.
Speaker 1 (18:14):
Yeah, it looks really good.
Speaker 5 (18:16):
It's only five pounds.
Speaker 1 (18:18):
I waited one. I'm looking at now. I don't know.
I'm new into this world.
Speaker 3 (18:22):
How's it cute?
Speaker 2 (18:22):
They have a GVES it's three pounds. They have a
one pound shirt that's called a micro load shirt that
you wear.
Speaker 1 (18:27):
That's pretty cool. It's weighted. I waited shirt.
Speaker 2 (18:29):
Okay, I have a ten pound all the gvs is
pretty awesome. Okay, this is ten pounds for man.
Speaker 1 (18:34):
I think I buy one of these. Wait, don't buy
that one buyo.
Speaker 3 (18:38):
Wait, wait till we're done with our prototype.
Speaker 5 (18:40):
Okay, these are You're right, Bobby, these are actually good.
Speaker 1 (18:43):
Yeah, kind of cute and.
Speaker 5 (18:44):
I like that they're snug.
Speaker 1 (18:46):
They are.
Speaker 3 (18:46):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (18:46):
And then like, because you have to have even weight distribution,
like I've learned. If my vest because it gets a
little loose, like tilts to the right, it hurts my back.
So I got to get it on just right.
Speaker 2 (18:57):
You know what's annoying? What just in general with our group.
I'm not saying you.
Speaker 5 (19:02):
Oh, just coming up with ideas and not executing.
Speaker 2 (19:04):
Well, everybody going okay, I'm inventing this, I'm going to
do it, and then you never do it, like nobody
ever does crap.
Speaker 5 (19:09):
Well, I don't care who does it. Just somebody do it,
which maybe.
Speaker 1 (19:12):
Well you should do it. My point is not that
we can't do it.
Speaker 5 (19:15):
It's for me to make it affordable.
Speaker 1 (19:16):
I don't talk about it. Be about it. Okay, that's cool.
Speaker 5 (19:20):
I have something I'm working on for the last two
months that I said a word about because.
Speaker 1 (19:24):
It's about it. Be about it, like bringing up.
Speaker 5 (19:27):
It's not an invention. Something I'm working on. Good, I'm
not talking about it though.
Speaker 4 (19:30):
Good and when you're ready the show.
Speaker 5 (19:32):
If it happens, it happens, you're like.
Speaker 2 (19:34):
Hey, guys, I've done this and I've invented this. If
you want in let me know. But I've already done
all this leg work. Don't talk about it, be about it.
The other thing that's annoying is when someone has an
answer and someone says the answer when it's their turn
and they're like, oh, I had that.
Speaker 1 (19:47):
Dad annoys me more than anything else.
Speaker 5 (19:49):
I do that. I know it's annoying.
Speaker 1 (19:50):
Sorry, we all do that.
Speaker 5 (19:52):
Well, I could work on.
Speaker 2 (19:53):
I'm putting the group as can get better. I'm not
saying I don't do it.
Speaker 1 (19:58):
I do that. I do that crap too.
Speaker 3 (19:59):
We all know the people that do it.
Speaker 1 (20:01):
Yeah, for sure.
Speaker 2 (20:01):
Do you do it too?
Speaker 3 (20:02):
Sure?
Speaker 5 (20:02):
Okay, I do it a little bit, Bobby. These best
are ute. So what we need to do is make
them affordable because this is too much. Nobody's paying three
hundred dollars for a vest.
Speaker 4 (20:14):
Obviously they are, Well, how do we got four reviews?
Speaker 5 (20:17):
Let me work on.
Speaker 1 (20:18):
There's how I make it affordable.
Speaker 5 (20:19):
I'm going to work on that.
Speaker 1 (20:20):
We steal them and tell them we love it. We
break in the factory I mean, that's a fool profit.
Speaker 2 (20:24):
I watched a story about a guy who found I
don't know what stor it is, and it wasn't tractor supply,
but I'm gonna say tractor apply just as an example.
Speaker 1 (20:31):
Maybe it was Low's. It was one of those.
Speaker 2 (20:32):
Stores, and he found seed where they had accidentally marked
it like thirty percent lower than it should and it's
this one store. So he bought like the whole palet
of it, and then he drove to another store and
it was marked down like all through all around the
country accidentally, and so he buys like six pallets of it,
like puts it on eighteen wheeler, and because they messed
up and he had bought I'm just gonna make up
(20:53):
number thirteen pallets of it, and he'd spent like forty grand.
He ended up selling it all back for like two
hundred and thirty thousand dollars, not to them, but to
people online because he found that they had lowered their
price a little too much, was paying attention and went
and bought it all and then resold.
Speaker 3 (21:06):
It's crazy, it's crazy.
Speaker 1 (21:07):
It's a cool story.
Speaker 2 (21:08):
Like he did nothing illegal, but it was funny because
he was driving all through the Midwest once he realized it,
trying to buy as many as possible with the big
truck because he realized the store had lowered it a
little too much.
Speaker 3 (21:17):
But somebody got got in trouble for that, right, it's.
Speaker 1 (21:20):
Such a big company whatever it was. Maybe but to scale.
Speaker 2 (21:24):
They lost twenty grand and a billion dollar company. Yeah,
but yes, yeah, somebody did.
Speaker 1 (21:29):
Amy let us know.
Speaker 2 (21:30):
Okay, remember, don't talk about it, be about it. I'm
not talking to you in general, all of us. Let's
do less talking about it and more being about it.
Speaker 5 (21:40):
Let's talking more dewey.
Speaker 1 (21:42):
Yeah. The New York Post was wondering should we normalize
baby showers for men?
Speaker 5 (21:46):
No?
Speaker 4 (21:48):
Simple?
Speaker 3 (21:50):
But why why not?
Speaker 5 (21:51):
Why would Okay, well, wait, tell me what is a
baby shower for exactly?
Speaker 2 (21:55):
I would assume because they're traditionally mom focused, and the
mom goes having a shower and everybody brings stuff for
the mom to be a mom.
Speaker 1 (22:03):
That's what I think.
Speaker 2 (22:04):
And this could be wrong, but because I've never really
been to a baby shower, it's not for moms.
Speaker 3 (22:09):
It's mostly for the baby, right, but.
Speaker 1 (22:10):
It's the mom. The baby can't have the shower, but
the mom has it.
Speaker 5 (22:13):
About for me women, mostly women, but there are co eds.
Speaker 3 (22:16):
Sometimes we do that now too, where like they both
have a.
Speaker 5 (22:19):
But I've never heard of one just for men.
Speaker 1 (22:21):
They say normalized baby showers not just for the gifts,
but for the symbolism. And okay, that's fine, but are
you going to get.
Speaker 2 (22:31):
Dudes just aren't gonna want to sign up and their
gifts be divers That's my point because we're we should,
but if the mom's already doing it, no, dude's gonna like,
I'd like to have one too, and I hope you
get me things to help be a parent.
Speaker 1 (22:44):
They're going to go, I want golf balls.
Speaker 5 (22:45):
I don't know a man that would want a shower
thrown for him.
Speaker 3 (22:48):
Well the gift or is it about just the party,
like let's just come over and have some beers. Yeah,
bring whatever you want.
Speaker 2 (22:54):
I think it works if it's altered, if it's modified
a bit, you can have a dad baby shower, But
the gifts are and it's unfair that the one baby
showers just like things you need.
Speaker 5 (23:06):
So is your your bff going to throw it for you?
Because that's what happens, like your best friend or your
mom or.
Speaker 7 (23:11):
Your sister, my brother in law is having one a
dude shower shower together.
Speaker 5 (23:16):
Yeah, because we'd.
Speaker 3 (23:17):
All get there and no, that's not it.
Speaker 7 (23:21):
Well, they talked about doing like a co ed one
and then one of his guy friends just wanted to
throw it for him. And there's going to be diapers.
But like it's also like beer and they're all hanging out.
Speaker 1 (23:30):
I think a modified version really works.
Speaker 5 (23:33):
Okay, like we're celebrating that.
Speaker 1 (23:36):
You have to modify.
Speaker 2 (23:37):
I mean it's yeah, it's unfair that you have to
modify it because when you have it, the female version
of it is, let's get all the things that are needed,
the essentials to diapers, to being a good mom, cloths, crib.
I don't know if people get and for a dad,
you know again it's gonna be golf balls and Graham crackers.
Speaker 1 (24:00):
Five, yes, five, Well.
Speaker 7 (24:01):
They are doing the diapers for dad's so they are
bringing a bunch of diapers. But I do think it's
more they have like beer, and I think they're going
to play games and stuff.
Speaker 1 (24:09):
Yeah, I don't mind.
Speaker 5 (24:10):
Normally like poker or like shower games.
Speaker 7 (24:13):
No, like like I think basketball, like yard were playing golf.
Speaker 4 (24:17):
I mean that okay, But if you're playing, like, oh,
smell the diaper and what candy bars melted in there?
Like that's for the one I'm also disgusting.
Speaker 5 (24:24):
Yeah, but that's a game that you.
Speaker 3 (24:27):
Can drink the beer out of a baby bottle. Those
are cool.
Speaker 5 (24:30):
I guess the beer.
Speaker 4 (24:33):
Before chugging contest through the bottle.
Speaker 1 (24:38):
Now you're talking, that's the invention a big fake beer boob.
The dudes have it.
Speaker 5 (24:43):
There existed, Spencers.
Speaker 2 (24:45):
I thought I invented something a few weeks ago. By
the way, I was like, I have a great idea,
and I was already trying to like I was looking
at how to patten something. And it was one of
those things where I'm like, I've never even heard of this,
and I looked it up and there was one person
that invented it and had the patent for it, and ye,
fel pretty stup.
Speaker 5 (25:00):
No, No, don't feel stupid. I think it's great that
our brains worked that way because I the same thing
happened to me. What was yours? So I'll tell you mine?
Speaker 1 (25:08):
Yeah, I'll tell you mine. My wedding ring.
Speaker 3 (25:10):
This is it?
Speaker 5 (25:11):
Uh huh?
Speaker 2 (25:11):
And I wear a red one love red and it's rubber.
I'm not a big jewelry guy. I say that as
I wear or ring now to try my sleep. But
I'm not a big jewelry guy in general. I don't
even have a watch on today, and I'm trying to
be a watch guy. But I have a really nice
wedding ring, but I never wear it because I'm afraid
I'll lose it. And there will be times where I
would try to wear it. I would just forget it
(25:32):
because I would I don't sleep with that on, and
so I would just go to work and not have
a wedding ring. I'm like, oh man, So I thought,
what if because the one thing that I always have
because you have to have to leave.
Speaker 1 (25:42):
The houses, your keys. So I thought, what if.
Speaker 2 (25:45):
There was a little holder that you put your wedding
ring in on your keys when you went to bed.
That way, even if you left and didn't think about,
it's still on your keys because you always have your.
Speaker 1 (25:52):
Keys with you, Okay, and so is that exists?
Speaker 2 (25:55):
Yeah, and so it was a little thing. My idea
was obviously somebody else is too. Was it on your keychain?
And at night when you take your ring off, you
just put it in your keychain and it kind of
locks and then.
Speaker 1 (26:05):
You wake up, you put it back on.
Speaker 2 (26:06):
But if you do happen to forget it, well, the
one thing you have to have with you are your
car keys, so you actually have it with you. And
so I was like, oh, that's a pretty pretty good idea,
and I liked to have somebody somebody done that, bummer.
I was pretty proud that because I don't know, my
mind has never invent stuff. My mind's always like, come
up with on the creative, write a joke, write a song.
But yeah, I invented something until I didn't.
Speaker 5 (26:27):
I know, I hate that feeling. I thought so too.
I thought, man, this one was genius to me because
I've been into pimple patches right, and they're great. You
just kind of put them on. They're clear, and when
I get a mosquito bite, I want to scratch them
so bad. And they're also they stand out on my skin.
But if I put a pimple patch over it, it
covered it up, so it kept me from scratching the
(26:49):
mosquito bite and you couldn't see it. It wasn't as obvious. Well,
I thought, well, what if in the pimple patch there
was anti itch medication to help heat and then stuff
that would all to bite faster. And I'm like, byite patches?
Did these exist? Like I was thinking, like, well, I
had a different name than a byte patch. I was
(27:11):
working on names because I think I was too scared
to google it.
Speaker 1 (27:14):
I know, I feel like I was like, I don't
want to google it. It's almost like when I'm come.
Speaker 2 (27:17):
Up with podcast names for other shows, I'm like, I
don't want to google because I know there's already going
to be one.
Speaker 1 (27:21):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (27:21):
I was even texting my boyfriend and I was like,
oh my gosh, this is great. I was like sending
names and his dad as a trademark lawyer. I was like,
can I get a meeting with your dad? Like I
was already that.
Speaker 1 (27:30):
Far where I'm sending the meetings by failure.
Speaker 5 (27:32):
Well, I mean it's just his dad. So I was like,
this could be easy enough. And then I google it
and sure enough they already exist, and I was like,
dang it, sorry about that. I know, but I was
thinking a little medicated bug bite patch.
Speaker 1 (27:46):
It's pretty good. Sorry, it was already invented.
Speaker 4 (27:49):
But couldn't you make better ones? Couldn't you make? I mean,
because eiter one, I don't think so. Is there only
one company that makes.
Speaker 5 (27:54):
Me There was multiple?
Speaker 7 (27:56):
Ye, you can.
Speaker 2 (27:57):
But a difference in inventing something that isn't that doesn't
exist and trying to better something because you're an expert
in it. You're not an expert in it. Now you're
gonna try to better somebody that's already doing it. If
it were something you're an expert in, you could better
it because you have an expertise in it.
Speaker 5 (28:10):
So I will say what I'm working on right now
definitely already exists. It could be considered saturated market. But
I think if I can make something better, which I
think I can, then I'm good for it.
Speaker 1 (28:21):
But great adventures ones right when it.
Speaker 5 (28:24):
Comes to the Mosquito patch, like I don't think I could.
Speaker 1 (28:27):
It is what it is, so lutchbox without your story.
Speaker 4 (28:32):
My dream has always been to do running with the bulls.
It's called your dream. I've always thought it would be
so fun to go do that. You can do that. Uh,
And so it just started in Spain and yesterday was
the second day, and so there was only eight people
that got injured yesterday. One got gord and seven others bruised.
But the guy that's gord is in the hospital and
he's going to be Okay, why don't you do it? Well,
(28:54):
it's a long way. It's over in Spain.
Speaker 1 (28:55):
I'm familiar.
Speaker 2 (28:56):
Yeah, it's hard to get there, and it's expensive to
get there. I haven't I mean, it's not hard to
get there. It's actually pretty easy. It is expensive to
get there, right, And so that's like if you had
to go buy boat, that'd be hard to get there.
Speaker 4 (29:07):
I see what you're saying. Yeah, yeah, so, and it's
like at a weird time, like right now we're working.
Speaker 2 (29:12):
So I would let you go for the running of
the bulls and to come back. Oh if that's a
dream of yours and it happened in summer.
Speaker 5 (29:18):
Go for it.
Speaker 4 (29:18):
I always thought it'd be so cool to run with
the bulls, Like I see that on TV and I'm like, man,
that looks so awesome. Pamplona, Yeah, Pampolona, Pamplona.
Speaker 3 (29:28):
That's where it is.
Speaker 1 (29:29):
Yeah, that's at least where the most famous one is.
Speaker 4 (29:32):
Yeah, thousands of people lining the street and every day
they release the bulls and you run and whenever you think,
oh it so how to get out? You jump over
the wall. It looks so cool.
Speaker 1 (29:41):
I'm reading this now.
Speaker 2 (29:42):
You have to be eighteen sober and wear appropriate clothing,
close host shoes, white shirt and pants, and a red
handkerchief and sash. You don't have to register, but you
have to arrive earlier on seven am to get a
good spot.
Speaker 1 (29:53):
This is what I would do.
Speaker 2 (29:54):
I would get out there because I think I would
do it. But as soon as the bull was like,
I don't know a football filled the way, I jump
on the fence like, oh did it?
Speaker 1 (30:00):
Like I would.
Speaker 2 (30:03):
Because I don't really care to do it, but I
would check it out some people like get really close,
like get really close to them.
Speaker 4 (30:08):
Like I'm looking at a bowl, like looking at the
people as they're making a turn, and the guy is
looking at the bowl. The bull's looking at him. It's like,
oh my gosh, how crazy is that?
Speaker 1 (30:16):
It's crazy?
Speaker 4 (30:17):
Like what an adrenaline rush.
Speaker 2 (30:19):
I would just get off the road quick, so my
adrenaline would never really rush. I'd get out there and
be like, all right, let's go, so three blocks away,
I would get off the side of the road.
Speaker 3 (30:27):
Why do you do it?
Speaker 2 (30:28):
Just to say I wouldn't do it, but yes, I
think most people that really do it and actually let
the bulls get pretty close to them do it so
they can say they ran with the bulls.
Speaker 1 (30:34):
It's pretty cool because it's very famous. We all know
what it is. You should do it?
Speaker 4 (30:39):
What a tradition? Like, how does that? And then just
generations people just do this every year.
Speaker 2 (30:45):
The other one that's pretty wild is the chase and
the cheese. You've all seen that, right, That is the
one I would never want to do. No, it's a
race and so it's Cooper Hill's cheese rolling. I watched
the documentary on Netflix and it's like a race down
the hill, but people like wipe out. It's straight down
the hill. They throw the cheese and it's first person
(31:07):
to get the cheese, right, isn't that what? The race
is the first of the cheese and people are like
going head over feet rolling because the hill is so steep.
I don't know how more people don't die because it
is adults, like, we don't bend like we used to.
Speaker 4 (31:22):
Oh man, some of those wipeouts are so funny.
Speaker 1 (31:25):
It's in England. It's so funny. It's like cartoon character wipeout.
Speaker 4 (31:29):
And I can't stop themselves and they roll.
Speaker 1 (31:32):
It's not like we would roll down the hill sideways
like horizontal and you just roll down it.
Speaker 3 (31:36):
It's in England, yeah, and they should do that here
like in Wisconsin.
Speaker 1 (31:40):
They probably can. But this is like hundreds of years.
Speaker 4 (31:43):
Old, right, this is a tradition. Oh, it's awesome.
Speaker 1 (31:46):
People have jerseys and teams.
Speaker 3 (31:48):
Hilarious.
Speaker 1 (31:49):
It is so funny.
Speaker 2 (31:50):
Like I don't know where you are right now, but
go look it up on YouTube later today and search
for the cheese rolling contest I think was what you
can search. So fun super funny. Ray give me voicemail
five and six please in six.
Speaker 9 (32:04):
Months, you said you would bring the game back, bring
back your Thursday game of Elder versus Millennial or if
Battle of Those Sex is aka Amy Verse lunch Fox.
Speaker 2 (32:15):
Thanks bye, so aggressive man, shout out of a cannon
right next one I played that came.
Speaker 9 (32:21):
With you guys several weeks ago.
Speaker 8 (32:23):
I end up losing Love to get back and play
another game, I'm gonna use past for Kentucky.
Speaker 4 (32:28):
Love you guys.
Speaker 9 (32:28):
Let me know if I can play with Love to
get back into the game. See you guys later.
Speaker 1 (32:33):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (32:33):
I don't have a name on that one. We can
get him back on though. I don't know what he
played and lost, but yeah, we're always thinking for people
to play games. How long did the phone line stay
open Scuba and when we do like this show, did
they close it?
Speaker 3 (32:44):
I think I'd changed it recently to ten forty five
or eleven central.
Speaker 1 (32:47):
So people could still call in now if you wanted to.
Speaker 2 (32:50):
You have a few more minutes, not for the game,
but if you guys want to call us, you can
if you're watching live right now on YouTube eight seven
seven seventy seven. Bobby Guys getting backlashed because there's a
TikTok of him continuing to participate in a fitness event
even though his partner, his girlfriend, passed out and was
getting treated by paramedics, Like he didn't stop whenever she
passed out.
Speaker 4 (33:11):
What's wrong with that? What's roll with them?
Speaker 5 (33:15):
Because I have thought that the only reason why he
should continue is if they had some conversation ahead of time. Hey,
if either one of us passes out, keep going. I
want you to keep going. We've worked too hard.
Speaker 1 (33:27):
It was like a death. That's like a will.
Speaker 5 (33:29):
Other than that, don't you stop.
Speaker 1 (33:32):
A viral video from High Rocks Fitness and the event
shows a man continuing to race, and it looked kind
of like a what's the thing people talk about all
the time.
Speaker 3 (33:41):
They'renying about it?
Speaker 2 (33:41):
Mary, I did it too for a while, so uh,
it's it looks like a CrossFit competition like that type
of thing, and his girlfriend, who's also his teammate, collapsed,
paramedics are there and he just keeps going with the race. Others,
including the woman involved and another witness, said the suation
was misrepresented, noting he did look and check on her
(34:02):
real quick before he went and continued quick.
Speaker 5 (34:05):
Yeah, I think there's no way to know if she's okay.
She's passed out.
Speaker 4 (34:08):
But there's paramedics. He's not a paramedic like his thing is.
They're there to compete. Like if I am running a
race and my wife twists or ankle, am I gonna stop?
Speaker 2 (34:17):
There's ankle twist is different because I watched the video
to see the paramedics. I am as competitive as unhealthily competitive,
probably from a lot of trauma in my life. However,
when the paramedics went over her, I would have stopped
because it looks scary.
Speaker 3 (34:32):
I feel like, I don't know, I feel like if
I felt i'd be like.
Speaker 5 (34:35):
Oh, just she's passed out. She passed out, so she
can't say just go. That's why before they raced, she
had to.
Speaker 1 (34:43):
Have said, it's not a twisted ankle if I passed out.
Speaker 4 (34:46):
You know what's crazy is in NFL they get stretchered
off and guess what they do? They keep playing?
Speaker 2 (34:50):
Yeah, but they get taken off, so a game can
keep going. And do you think if somebody's mom.
Speaker 5 (34:56):
I don't know, but it's like, that's this is a hobby, right,
they stopped it.
Speaker 2 (35:00):
They stop the game. Your analogy as they stretch them off. No,
they stop the game when somebody gets hurt on the field.
Speaker 3 (35:05):
But isn't that why that you have a partner? Right,
you go down? I got it.
Speaker 1 (35:08):
But I'm just saying his analogy isn't true because they
stop the game.
Speaker 5 (35:11):
And there's also a difference in like what it being
your partner, like your spouse, your girlfriend, your boyfriend, being
your job versus something recreational like they have a job,
like the team has to get back out there and perform.
They're doing a job. So if their teammate gets carried off,
which yes, to Bobby's point, there is a time out,
it's not like they just like keep playing.
Speaker 4 (35:31):
Don't you think the paramedics would say, hey, man, this
is dire.
Speaker 1 (35:34):
No, because I think the paramatic is doing paramedic things.
Speaker 4 (35:37):
Oh my gosh, she's dying. I mean they know. You
can get a sense of the seriousness of it being
around the paramedics.
Speaker 1 (35:44):
There's like four of them on top of her.
Speaker 3 (35:46):
Man.
Speaker 2 (35:46):
The sense is something's really wrong. And I don't think
in the end it was really wrong. But again, I
feel just by reading the words, maybe I wouldn't. But
when I saw them over I would have stopped. And
they're like, oh my god, what was the price?
Speaker 3 (36:00):
I don't know. I mean, no, it was metal.
Speaker 2 (36:05):
Uh yeah, okay, let's do a couple more. This happened
to Pakistan, but it would be crazy anywhere. The owners
of a pet line were arrested after I jumped a
wall and attacked a woman and two children. Yeah, but
that wouldn't happen in Cedar Rapids.
Speaker 1 (36:18):
I'll be honest with you, Am.
Speaker 3 (36:20):
You can't.
Speaker 1 (36:20):
That's from CNN.
Speaker 3 (36:21):
Can't have a pet line.
Speaker 2 (36:22):
I don't think you could have one a Pakistan either.
I just don't think they enforced the rules.
Speaker 5 (36:25):
Well that's what I mean, Like it could still happen
if people have them ill legally.
Speaker 3 (36:29):
Lions.
Speaker 2 (36:31):
I've seen tigers, but even then when they do it's
it's a big deal. Like Mike Tyson Morgan, you have.
Speaker 1 (36:39):
A story, Yeah, I do.
Speaker 7 (36:40):
Jelly Rolling The Rock met for the first time in
ten years.
Speaker 4 (36:43):
Hasn't watched this video?
Speaker 1 (36:45):
Yeah, I saw the video.
Speaker 7 (36:45):
It's super sweet and which is crazy. They've known each
other for ten years and this is their first time,
like ever meeting in person.
Speaker 6 (36:51):
But it was really cool.
Speaker 7 (36:52):
I felt like those two really cool, good humans coming
together and meeting.
Speaker 1 (36:57):
How do you know somebody for ten years but you
haven't met them.
Speaker 7 (36:59):
So The Rock said that he had texted him like
when The Rock was going through a whole bunch of stuff.
I guess like over ten years ago he had heard
the song by Jelly Roll and got his phone number
and texted him, was like, I really love this song,
like you're getting me through a really rough time in
my life, and they kind of became I guess you
could say pinpals.
Speaker 2 (37:16):
That works because I had a friend Eddie and I
both have frien named Andrew who we met to playing
video games with a headset and then we got we
got to know him later.
Speaker 1 (37:24):
Yeah, yeah, he did graduated right law school's lawyer.
Speaker 3 (37:27):
He's a lawyer.
Speaker 5 (37:27):
Now.
Speaker 3 (37:29):
We knew him before all that.
Speaker 1 (37:30):
Yeah, we knew him when he was like in like undergrad.
Speaker 3 (37:32):
Yeah, he just graduated undergrad and was going to law school.
Speaker 1 (37:36):
He ended up meeting up in person with two and
then he's been he's been in the studio too.
Speaker 3 (37:39):
Yeah, good dude.
Speaker 1 (37:40):
And he came to that dude anyway.
Speaker 7 (37:42):
Yeah, and he gave him like a cool postcard that
was from So I guess the Rock is also from Tennessee,
which I did not know.
Speaker 3 (37:49):
That doesn't sound familiar.
Speaker 1 (37:50):
I felt like the Rocks from Hawaiian.
Speaker 7 (37:52):
Well that's what I thought too, But in this post,
let me pull it up because the Rock posted this, I.
Speaker 1 (37:56):
Don't know, from Hayward, California.
Speaker 2 (37:58):
Maybe he's like lunchboxing claims everywhere he's ever, like if
he's driven through the Stadius from there.
Speaker 1 (38:04):
So, okay, Bohemia, Okay, here, this is what it is.
Speaker 7 (38:08):
When he was fifteen years old, he was forced his
family was evicted to leave Hawaii and they made it
to Nashville to live with his dad. So he lived
in Nashville for several years with his dad, this is
like way back when, and I guess there was this
like guy who like there was this old hotel that
really reminded him of like old Nashville. So he gifted
him this postcard and it was just like really cool
(38:28):
memorial thing that he gets.
Speaker 4 (38:30):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (38:31):
Dwayne Rock Johnson lived in Nasville a few year during
high school year, especially when his father's wrestling career blah
blah blah.
Speaker 1 (38:36):
Yeah, okay, so I didn't know that.
Speaker 5 (38:37):
I didn't know I lived in Toca.
Speaker 6 (38:39):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (38:40):
Slow Horses has been renewed for its seventh season. They
haven't even put a season five out yet. That show's awesome.
Speaker 1 (38:46):
Did you ever watch it?
Speaker 5 (38:47):
I did, and I remember liking it, but then I
guess I forgot about it.
Speaker 2 (38:50):
The offbeat spy drama Slow Horses is coming back for
a seventh season an Apple TV Plus. The announcement comes
as fans are still awaiting the premiere of season five.
The series starts Gary Oldman and there are a bunch
of other British people. Slow Horse is one of the
most popular shows on Apple Plus. September twenty fourth, season
five debuts. It's awesome, It's a this is not a
punt it's a little slow first. Oh slow, yeah, but
(39:12):
it's a spy show. It's not about horses. I never
wanted to watch it because my wife would be like,
let's watch slower horses or slow horses, and I.
Speaker 1 (39:17):
Was like, I'm not in the mood to watch sea biscuit.
Speaker 2 (39:19):
Like I wasn't really there. It's like, I don't think
it's real horses, you idiot. And forever I just refused
because there was I thought it was about horses. It's amazing.
It's a really great show. So Slow Horses is coming
back for its seventh season. You can now get paid
thirty five dollars per poop in Japan, but only if
your poop is good enough. There's a pharmaceutical company that's
researching gut bacteria. Ooh, only five to ten percent of
(39:41):
people have poop. It's high quality enough, but they're offering
thirty four to fifty per poop. Oh, so it's got
to be high quality, high quality poop, high quality poop
Sore News twenty four.
Speaker 1 (39:53):
How do you know if you have higher quality? They
test it, so you have to send it in and
then you can say you have guy.
Speaker 3 (40:01):
Instead of sending it in.
Speaker 1 (40:02):
That's a good question, or you live somewhat close.
Speaker 2 (40:05):
I would assume it loses some generations if you mail it,
unless there's like it's like you seal it somehow.
Speaker 4 (40:10):
I don't know, unless they send you something in the
mail and you got to catch it in there and
then mail it back.
Speaker 7 (40:14):
Okay, you kind of do that for like the colonoscopy thing.
Speaker 1 (40:17):
Now we're in the mail.
Speaker 5 (40:18):
You can send in your stuff.
Speaker 1 (40:22):
Colony is a tube.
Speaker 5 (40:23):
Sorry, it's a it's a version of it.
Speaker 1 (40:26):
Like it like testing your poop.
Speaker 5 (40:27):
You're testing it.
Speaker 1 (40:28):
I'm sure you can because you can do that with blood.
Speaker 7 (40:30):
You can do that. Yeah, so and then you send
it in. So you are sending that in through the mail,
which is crazy to think about. There's packages out there
that just have a human poop.
Speaker 1 (40:39):
Munch poop packages closing around.
Speaker 3 (40:40):
It can't be that man.
Speaker 2 (40:41):
Thirty five bucks seems like a little low. Let's see,
let's do a couple more. Detroit tops the list of
the most stressed cities in the country from wallet Hub.
Detroit at won Cleveland, Baltimore gold for Mississippi. Memphis feels
like it's probably and I'm not sure if Detroit is
still full of crime I feel like Detroit has actually
(41:01):
been really cool in the past five to ten years.
They invested a bunch into their downtown area especially, But
I feel like there's a correlation here with crime. Yeah, Detroit, Cleveland, Baltimore, Gulfport, Memphis, Reeport, Philadelphia, Toledo, Birmingham, Jacksonsissippi.
The data set ranges from average weekly hours to unemployment
right to divorce and suicide rates. Most dangerous cities Memphis,
(41:22):
Saint Louis, Cleveland, Detroit, Baltimore.
Speaker 3 (41:24):
Little Rock, Little Rocks in there, deer tracks.
Speaker 1 (41:29):
There was a road rage incident in southern California where
one of the people involved left the scene with the
other's keys.
Speaker 4 (41:33):
That's funny.
Speaker 3 (41:34):
That's funny, like reached in, turned it off and took them.
Speaker 2 (41:37):
A road rage incident resulted in heavy delays in the
two one five in San Bernardino when people involved left
the scene with the other driver's keys.
Speaker 1 (41:45):
That's hilarious. Better than a gun. Yeah, and also the
ultimate prank. You ain't going anywhere, neithers your car.
Speaker 5 (41:51):
But then do they have your house key and stuff?
Speaker 2 (41:53):
Probably you're always about retaliation. My mind doesn't go there.
I just think we're trying to get their cars there
in the road. Now the internet was reported shortly after
seven am. How do they know who you were though
to go find your house?
Speaker 5 (42:04):
I don't know yet, but they maybe figure it out.
Speaker 2 (42:07):
When the drivers of a van got out of their vehicle,
both drivers began fighting on the freeway because the van
had cut the other off. The driver of the van
called CHP, saying that he had been kicked and his
keys had been stolen by the other photors who drove
away with the keys. It's funnier if the person who
drove away with the keys was the one that wasn't awful.
Speaker 3 (42:30):
Yeah, yeah, that would be good, like the hero in
the story. Yeah, yeah, you know what I was thinking
about the other day, Like we have all these fobs, right,
Like everyone has key fobs. How do they not like
go to different cars.
Speaker 2 (42:42):
Well, it's like a TV remote not working on all
the televisions, right, do I think the different frequencies?
Speaker 5 (42:46):
Well, universal remotes do, but no.
Speaker 3 (42:49):
I think like the same company, Like if you have
like it's like the TV's in here, Like one remote
does all the TVs in here.
Speaker 1 (42:55):
Because they've all been Yeah, it's all frequency base.
Speaker 3 (43:01):
Every time I'm in like a parking garage, and I'm like, oh,
I wonder if like there's another car.
Speaker 2 (43:05):
They have unique codes in them too that match whatever
the server is and the serviage really and the receiver
of it.
Speaker 1 (43:11):
It's all unique.
Speaker 3 (43:12):
Let's technology talk.
Speaker 4 (43:13):
And you can steal the car right as long as
it's on, but then once you turn it off, you
won't be able to get it back on. Like, you
can drive as far as you want without the fob.
How far does this?
Speaker 6 (43:22):
So?
Speaker 1 (43:22):
I have done that, I've driven off without the keys before.
Speaker 3 (43:25):
What happened?
Speaker 1 (43:26):
You can't turn the car back on, like he's saying, okay,
you can just drive. Yeah. I think what happened was
there's our car.
Speaker 2 (43:35):
We don't have to have a key in the ignition,
and I think I put my keys my wife's purse,
dropped her off at home, kept driving. Realized as I
was driving down, I think I was going to get
a smoothie or something. I don't have the keys anymore.
Realized that when the car wouldn't start back up, had
to have the keys brought to me.
Speaker 4 (43:53):
So yes, So is car stealing going to be out
of business in a few years.
Speaker 1 (43:59):
So there's always a new way to steal No, No.
Speaker 4 (44:01):
I'm saying like once the every car is a key
five because eventually you're gonna get there. Right, So how
are they going to steal cars? Uh?
Speaker 3 (44:13):
What do you mean? Yeah? What do you mean?
Speaker 5 (44:15):
Well, he could you steal hot wire it?
Speaker 3 (44:19):
Yeah? I think right.
Speaker 2 (44:20):
I don't understand the question. You would steal cars the
same way that you would steal cars back in the eighties,
where then you had a key that would unlock it,
but then you found a way around having to use
that key to get in a different way. You would
get in a different way, or you would reprogram or
you'd have like a universal.
Speaker 4 (44:37):
Because they used to like stick a screwdriver.
Speaker 1 (44:38):
We just use technology. Let me say this in the
best way.
Speaker 2 (44:41):
They would just use technology to steal better because technology
is better.
Speaker 3 (44:45):
Okay, but how happened do they steal cars these days?
Speaker 2 (44:48):
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (44:48):
Like I've heard of like people they walk by a
car and it has the keys and it's still running,
so they steal a car, but actually breaking into a
car and turning it on hot wire whatever and stealing it,
I really haven't heard of that.
Speaker 2 (44:59):
There's something Well, because the cars aren't wired now, it's
mostly computer that's what I mean. There's something called relay
attacks where they steal your key fob signal and then
you can use it against you.
Speaker 1 (45:09):
They do it for houses. But it's like this is
like high level stuff.
Speaker 5 (45:12):
But maybe maybe Lunchbox is right. They're going to be
out of business.
Speaker 2 (45:15):
Bus technology, so you have to improve with technology and
use technology to steal, which.
Speaker 1 (45:21):
Is what's happened.
Speaker 5 (45:23):
You know what I think about sometimes please tell us.
But at a hotel, the housekeeping they have a universal key.
They can get into every single room.
Speaker 3 (45:37):
So like that's why you don't leave your stuff in there.
Speaker 5 (45:40):
Well, I know, but the I trust them going in
there and do other thing. What I don't trust is
someone that maybe what would stop someone from stealing that
from a housekeeper. It's happened, and then they go and
they just start robbing it.
Speaker 2 (45:52):
You can probably deactivate, right, I'm sure that's happened. I'm
also sure housekeepers have stolen Well.
Speaker 5 (45:59):
I'm not putting it on that. I'm thinking. I'm putting
it on like if I was a housekeeper, I'd be
worried someone was gonna push me in a closet and
take my universal key.
Speaker 1 (46:09):
You are just concerned. I give you one more story.
Speaker 2 (46:12):
Denise Richards is getting a divorce and her husband says
that she makes two ndred fifty thousand dollars a.
Speaker 1 (46:17):
Month only fans. Her husband does, yeah, because I getting divorced,
all the financial divorcing.
Speaker 5 (46:23):
Yeah, they're doing all the discovery.
Speaker 1 (46:25):
All of that headline.
Speaker 2 (46:27):
All I see is she makes two hundred and fifty
thousand dollars a month only fans.
Speaker 1 (46:33):
So that's a million dollars every four month.
Speaker 5 (46:35):
I don't think. I don't think she gets naked.
Speaker 1 (46:37):
Does she three million dollars a year from just doing
only fans?
Speaker 3 (46:40):
It is crazy.
Speaker 2 (46:42):
Now this is just from the story on page six,
But I mean, who wants I mean, I mean, I
don't know if she gets naked.
Speaker 5 (46:48):
I'm googling it.
Speaker 3 (46:48):
It's okay nowadays what lunchworks?
Speaker 4 (46:51):
Denise Richards like used to be a smoke show. Now
she looks a little weathered. Well she's older, That's what
I'm saying. Like, I can't believe she's still that popular
with the crowd.
Speaker 2 (46:59):
I think her fame helps for sure, And she's also
Real Housewives fifty four.
Speaker 5 (47:03):
I think she does go nude.
Speaker 4 (47:05):
Right now, you're in or.
Speaker 1 (47:10):
Log into your account.
Speaker 5 (47:11):
No, I met the Hollywood Gossip dot com.
Speaker 1 (47:16):
What are you saying? Final result?
Speaker 5 (47:18):
Well, I just don't know if the You know, headlines
are tricky sometimes clickbait. Clickbait because it says Denise Richards
explains why going nude on OnlyFans was an easy choice.
Speaker 2 (47:26):
Maybe it's just boobs only top no bottom, because aren't there.
I've never been to strip club, but aren't there? Some
strip clubs don't even have bottom.
Speaker 3 (47:34):
Yes, yes, and it says sign nude.
Speaker 5 (47:39):
She has a very good reason for feeling comfortable posting
nude content.
Speaker 1 (47:42):
Yeah, she gets turned fifty thousand dollars a month. That's
a pretty good reason.
Speaker 3 (47:45):
It's crazy.
Speaker 1 (47:46):
It's also just the human body, you know.
Speaker 4 (47:48):
She said, it's empowering for people to still want to
see me that way.
Speaker 3 (47:51):
Yeah, let me show you some power.
Speaker 4 (47:52):
Look at this.
Speaker 3 (47:54):
Wait what we so sorry?
Speaker 5 (47:56):
Did you go into that article?
Speaker 1 (47:58):
More like?
Speaker 5 (47:58):
Do you see how much they would spend.
Speaker 1 (48:00):
On like phone bill food? I saw that.
Speaker 2 (48:02):
Yeah, I just the only thing that stuck out to
me because I can read you some of that rent
costs for eighteen thousand dollars, which does not include the
eight thousand they spend on utilities. Five thousand they spend
on maintenance and repairs, five thousand they spend on laundry
and cleaning. A month I felt on a laundry and cleaning.
I saw one of my car agains was like thirty
five bucks to be dry cleaned. I don't send them anymore,
almost very rarely.
Speaker 3 (48:23):
So you don't watch them, she said.
Speaker 1 (48:25):
I try to be I try to be very careful
and not get it. I will send them in.
Speaker 2 (48:28):
But I used to just be will and nilly reckless,
like to wears, throw it in for dry cleaning. Saw
the bill come back on a car again. Thirty five bucks.
Speaker 3 (48:35):
Wow, that's a lot.
Speaker 1 (48:36):
Yeah, it's a lot.
Speaker 3 (48:38):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (48:39):
Anyway, all right, we're done.
Speaker 2 (48:41):
There's a new episode of Lots to Say, my NFL
podcast with former NFL quarterback Matt Castle. You can check
that out. Hope you check it out, Hope you subscribe.
Lots to Say, Thank you guys, Hope you have a
great day.
Speaker 1 (48:51):
We will see you tomorrow. By everybody,