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June 25, 2025 60 mins

Bobby found out that there are certain cities that will pay YOU to move there. Lunchbox lied about his past and we called him out on it. Bobby shared a list of crazy money stories that involve someone got paid millions by accident at work, a man who swallowed $770k in jewelry and how much we are all spending on subscriptions without realizing it. We discussed a new study that found people who have a lot of nightmares are more likely to DROP DEAD. Bobby found someone from his late-mother that he has never seen before. We also talked about Taylor Swift’s pop up performance in Nashville and why the Liver King got arrested.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
Therese there places that will pay you to move there.
Not bad. Mostly you're just gonna move if one there's
a job that's paying you and you move them for
your job, or you're moving back to a place, or
because you have support there. Let's see, have kids and
you have a grandma, uncles and aunts that can help
take care of the kids. Like those are probably the
most common reasons you move somewhere, right, Yeah, okay up First,

(00:27):
West Virginia assind West Virginia has it's a program and
move to one of their designated communities could score remote
workers a twelve K pay day along with a free
outdoor recreation package. So it's a whole program to get
people to move there. Basically, they pay twelve thousand.

Speaker 2 (00:43):
Bucks one time. Twelve k from what I.

Speaker 1 (00:46):
Read, Yes, you have to stay there for certain amount
of time, so you can't like opening grand clothes. What
I was thinking, I think they may give it to
you in segments or after you reach the requirement of
you've lived here a certain amount of time.

Speaker 2 (00:58):
And what's that recreational pass.

Speaker 1 (01:00):
Pools part national park probably like yes, memberships to things
like parks, that's cool. Yeah. Tulsa, Oklahoma, the Tulsa remote
program offers remote workers ten thousand dollars in rental cash
or a down payment on a home. So they're not
gonna give you a briefcase full of cash, but they
will credit you ten grand or they'll pay ten grand

(01:20):
toward part of the home purchase. And that's pretty cool
and money's money saved, money's made money. Topeka, Kansas. Yeah,
choose Topeka will provide. Why did you go? Yeah, that's
what I was born. How long did you live there?

Speaker 3 (01:33):
Nine months?

Speaker 1 (01:34):
I feel you. I feel like I'm born there, and
I know, I know, but I feel like he steals
the thunder from Morgan and Abbey, who actually are from Kansas.

Speaker 3 (01:41):
Were they born in Topeka?

Speaker 4 (01:42):
We were born in which is, but we were born
in Kansas. You didn't spend your life in Kansas.

Speaker 3 (01:46):
I was born in that actual city.

Speaker 1 (01:48):
Remember with that pen, the Kansas Jayhawk pen that was
such a hot item.

Speaker 5 (01:51):
Made out of the sports part.

Speaker 1 (01:54):
Yeah. Yeah, And it's like Abbey acident went to school there.
But he was like, I'm a bigger fan, and I
was like, I understand both sides of this. Yeah it
doesn't matter, but hold on home. I'm making it may
much do about nothing.

Speaker 2 (02:05):
But when you say like Houston, I don't go like,
whoa were you born born in Houston? No, I was
born in Texas. But like that's like, well.

Speaker 1 (02:12):
Though, to be on on Lunchbox's side, if he was,
I think living somewhere for nine months doesn't count for money.
Company conspiracy Amy always defends lunch conspiracy happens.

Speaker 3 (02:28):
Everyone was defending me. Also, he was saying Morgan and
Abbey claiming Topeka makes no sense because they weren't.

Speaker 1 (02:34):
They have no relation to right, That's like said, I'm
just talking Kansas in general.

Speaker 4 (02:37):
I just support Kansas in general because I love Kansas's
where I'm from.

Speaker 1 (02:40):
Yeah, And but Lunchbox does if he was born in Topeka,
it works, Yes, I was.

Speaker 3 (02:46):
I would go there for Thanksgiving and Christmas all the time.

Speaker 1 (02:51):
I feel like you just choose it randomly. When you're
tepeakan other times you're sentin tone. It's like you have
different here's you recognized that though that you like get
to choose. You have multiple cities that you can just
be like, that's where I'm from?

Speaker 3 (03:03):
Correct?

Speaker 1 (03:04):
Where are you from? Where are you from? I say
I was, where are you from?

Speaker 3 (03:09):
I was born in Topeka, but I grew up in Austin.
I'm telling you. I tell everybody Antonio, I say, I
went to college in San Antonio.

Speaker 1 (03:17):
But you're you're a code switcher.

Speaker 3 (03:19):
When people ask me where I'm from, yeah, I always say, well,
I was born in Topeka. And my wife says the
same nation. She goes, you were only there nine months. Like,
you don't have to say you're.

Speaker 1 (03:29):
You're telling the truth.

Speaker 3 (03:31):
I am from there, but I was raised somewhere else.

Speaker 1 (03:35):
Okay, but where's everybody from? Because you kind of Ray
does the same crap.

Speaker 3 (03:39):
I don't know where.

Speaker 1 (03:39):
One day Ray shows up and he's like, no, man,
I'm from Georgia. I'm from Michigan. I'm from Wyoming, he.

Speaker 2 (03:44):
Said one time, he's from the Four Points.

Speaker 1 (03:46):
Is this so, once and for all, where's everybody from?

Speaker 2 (03:50):
Raymondell?

Speaker 1 (03:50):
Where are you from? Well?

Speaker 6 (03:52):
This is gonna add a twist, no twist. I was
life flighted because of my twin brother in biblical core
was wrapped around his head. I was born technically in
Salt Lake City, Utah.

Speaker 2 (04:04):
I had never heard that.

Speaker 1 (04:05):
Okay, but all that, I just want to know where
you're from. I'm not even asking where you were born,
what hospital you were born? I just want to know
if some missus where you're from, where you're from, because
that's like your home, that's what that you represent Michigan agree?
And when did you move to Michigan in high school?
It's okay, you chosen where are you from? You're from Michigan, Yes, great,

(04:30):
I will accept that you also spent some time in
places you have a relationship with, then I think that's
fair and fine. But where you're from, that's like your
first team. You can't have two favorite teams, Like if
you're an NFL fan, you can't have two favorite teams.
You have one favorite team. Think you have other teams
you like and root for for different reasons, but you
have one favorite team. Ray, You're from Michigan. Yes, Now

(04:51):
what other places are you close to? So?

Speaker 6 (04:53):
I lived in Wyoming for fourteen years? What would bigger
junior varsity? If Michigan's that your team? What you univarsity?

Speaker 1 (05:00):
Texas?

Speaker 3 (05:01):
Okay?

Speaker 5 (05:02):
I went to college there, like he's from Wyoming.

Speaker 1 (05:10):
Walk us through your timeline. Right, you were born where?
I was born in Salt Lake City, Utah? And how
long were you in Salt Lake City? A day? So
basically you in lunchbox.

Speaker 6 (05:18):
Yeah, got it and lived in Wyoming, what for what
I thought was my entire life fourteen years moved us.

Speaker 1 (05:23):
He's from Wyoming.

Speaker 5 (05:24):
He's from that's crazy.

Speaker 1 (05:26):
Moved to high school in Michigan.

Speaker 6 (05:28):
For Peninsula College, two years in Chicago, then two years
in Texas. After college, met you guys in Texas, and
then you guys moved me here to Tennessee.

Speaker 1 (05:38):
But you get to declare whatever you want. You are
from Michigan. He's from Wyoming.

Speaker 2 (05:42):
He's from Wyoming. He's not from the north.

Speaker 1 (05:45):
Wyoming's kind of ish north, but not.

Speaker 2 (05:47):
I mean, it's more he makes it like I'm from
the north.

Speaker 1 (05:50):
And he is, because we have to respect he is
from Michigan, Michigan. But I would think if I spent
fourteen years in a place, that would be the place
I would be from.

Speaker 5 (05:58):
Yeah, he's from Wyoming, but he's not.

Speaker 2 (06:00):
Amy and interesting. He says Texas because he was only
there for college and maybe a couple of years after
two years college, two years after.

Speaker 1 (06:09):
Wyoming's kind of north, not as north as Michigan.

Speaker 3 (06:12):
Would you consider that west?

Speaker 1 (06:13):
That's west, It's definitely west, but it's north, it's above Utah.

Speaker 2 (06:17):
But it's not northwest because northwest.

Speaker 1 (06:19):
Is like, but is Utah? The north is north? It's cold? Okay, No,
Utah is a west mountain. Utah is above Tennessee on
the map.

Speaker 3 (06:28):
Why only we're north?

Speaker 1 (06:29):
No, we're in the mid But would anything above us
be considered north?

Speaker 3 (06:32):
Yes?

Speaker 2 (06:32):
But this also goes under like the whole Texas thing.

Speaker 1 (06:34):
You're like, Iowa south, correct, but what Iowa be north? Midwest'
the midwest? But Michigan's midwest.

Speaker 3 (06:42):
No?

Speaker 1 (06:43):
Yeah, and so it's Minnesota.

Speaker 2 (06:45):
That's the midwest.

Speaker 1 (06:46):
That's the north.

Speaker 2 (06:47):
I don't know, that's the north. I think that's the north.

Speaker 1 (06:50):
Wyoming is considered part of Yeah, the Mountain West subregion.
It's not part of the Midwest. But I'm just saying,
is it considered north to you?

Speaker 2 (07:00):
No? No, the same way Texas is not the south,
even though it's very south.

Speaker 1 (07:07):
What about South Dakota North? That's the north? Is South
Dakota the midwest?

Speaker 2 (07:13):
Though, no, too far up, that's more central, right, what
states are considered the midwest?

Speaker 1 (07:19):
Oklahoma, Oklahoma's not the Midwest. My wife from Oklahoma, Kansas.
He's like, we're not the midwest.

Speaker 3 (07:24):
Iowa.

Speaker 1 (07:25):
Well, let's look at the actual alloway, Indiana, Iowaka, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska,
North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, and Wisconsin. So yeah, Michigan
is considered the Midwest. It's also the North. It can
be both.

Speaker 3 (07:43):
So Ray, he's no longer from the North. He's from
the Midwest.

Speaker 2 (07:46):
Interesting.

Speaker 1 (07:47):
No, No, he's from the North because he claim Michigan.
You get picked. Oh, I see what you're saying. I
still think it's the North because it borders Canada.

Speaker 2 (07:55):
Yeah, Michigan is yeah, yeah, he runs up.

Speaker 1 (08:00):
No, Detroit's like right across the line, right right.

Speaker 6 (08:03):
Uh, the Lower Peninsula. Yeah, but I'm closer to Canada
than I am to the Lower Peninsula or even Wisconsin.
So that's why that's why I said the North, we
the North, Toronto raptors we the North. That's where I
came up with it.

Speaker 1 (08:16):
So because of Michigan.

Speaker 6 (08:17):
Yeah, just because I was so far north and people
didn't understand how far north I was.

Speaker 1 (08:21):
Yeah, okay, so.

Speaker 3 (08:22):
Like, how bored to Canada?

Speaker 6 (08:23):
From your two hours I crossed the border and I
see mounties and all kinds of stuff.

Speaker 2 (08:28):
That's crazy. I mean, that's north.

Speaker 1 (08:29):
You get to claim a place to be from, and
then a place that you're still attached to and that
you love. Amy, Where are you from?

Speaker 5 (08:35):
I'm from Austin. There's no debate about this.

Speaker 1 (08:38):
I was born No, No, you're from Alabama.

Speaker 5 (08:43):
No, I mean randomly, those are my roots.

Speaker 1 (08:50):
So you're from where?

Speaker 5 (08:50):
I was born in downtown Austin at Saint David's.

Speaker 1 (08:53):
And second degree, and I saved.

Speaker 5 (08:55):
There my entire same house till I was eighteen.

Speaker 1 (08:57):
Pick a second layer?

Speaker 5 (09:00):
Uh hm hmm.

Speaker 1 (09:03):
It could be wherever Texas. So Austin is first in
all of Texas. Second? Fair enough?

Speaker 5 (09:09):
I don't know. I mean I guess like I know
that that's where I would go back to my roots,
Like my dad is from South Texas and my mom
is from Alabama. So I feel like I have a
little bit.

Speaker 1 (09:19):
Of I think that's absolutely fair. You can be Austin
first and then just climb Texas a second. Okay, launch, bro,
where are you from?

Speaker 3 (09:29):
I don't know how to answer this question.

Speaker 1 (09:30):
No, where are you from?

Speaker 2 (09:31):
Man?

Speaker 3 (09:32):
I don't know what to claim here.

Speaker 2 (09:34):
Where are you from?

Speaker 1 (09:35):
Where are you from?

Speaker 2 (09:35):
I mean, I was born?

Speaker 1 (09:38):
Where are you from? If this is an exercise we're doing.

Speaker 2 (09:42):
We just met.

Speaker 1 (09:42):
This is not being written.

Speaker 3 (09:44):
Yeah, yeah, but this is hard because then if I
say Austin, then you guys do every time I bring
up Topeica.

Speaker 1 (09:48):
You're gonna we already do that every time. So you're
not really losing anything where you're from.

Speaker 3 (09:53):
I guess I'm from Austin, Okay.

Speaker 1 (09:55):
And you have a love of.

Speaker 3 (09:58):
That's tough too.

Speaker 1 (09:58):
I don't what about Chicago, San Antonio.

Speaker 3 (10:02):
I was gonna say, man, how do I leave out Chicago?

Speaker 2 (10:05):
When he goes to Chicago? He has so many landmarks
he loves to point out, like right there, my dad
saved this guy from getting beat up.

Speaker 3 (10:11):
Now he's a woman getting beat up by a man.

Speaker 2 (10:12):
That's it.

Speaker 3 (10:13):
Outside of Geno's East, right across the street.

Speaker 2 (10:15):
My grandfather's take me to that store right there.

Speaker 1 (10:17):
Ye, And what do you got because whatever you don't claim? Second,
it ain't on the list anymore. WHOA, Yeah, I know.

Speaker 2 (10:25):
You're doing amy just the United States.

Speaker 1 (10:30):
So you got Austin first? What second?

Speaker 3 (10:33):
Man, I can't you're saying I can't claim something?

Speaker 1 (10:35):
What's your backup quarterback? Because they don't play much, but
every once in a while they may get called in. You're
not building your franchise around him.

Speaker 3 (10:42):
Yeah, I know. It's tough, man. It's a toss up
between Topeka, Chicago, and San Antonio because I.

Speaker 1 (10:49):
Have so many Carmen San Diego. Bro, let's just pick somebody.

Speaker 3 (10:52):
I was all over the place.

Speaker 1 (10:54):
Yeah, no, you weren't. Really, No, family was in different places,
right right.

Speaker 3 (10:58):
But I visited, Okay, Eddie, you got a problem with
that visiting.

Speaker 1 (11:03):
No, don't just pick a second place. I mean, do
I pick Nashville.

Speaker 2 (11:13):
Oh, you've been here for twelve years.

Speaker 1 (11:15):
That's true.

Speaker 3 (11:16):
I mean had my three kids.

Speaker 5 (11:19):
I know. But there's no way if I'm in Nashville
and people will say, oh, where are you from, I
don't ever say Nashville.

Speaker 2 (11:24):
That would be disrespectful because there are people that are
from from here.

Speaker 1 (11:27):
Very few lunchbox more than me too.

Speaker 3 (11:33):
Go ahead, So what do you What are you saying?
Whatever I say here, what happens?

Speaker 6 (11:36):
Now?

Speaker 1 (11:36):
This is your You're already from Austin. There's no I
got that you're from.

Speaker 7 (11:41):
Okay.

Speaker 5 (11:41):
At the end of the day, you can also just
say whatever you want. You just have to put up
with what they say. Like I'm still going to roll
tide and I have to deal with them being that's true.

Speaker 1 (11:48):
No, tie, that's true. But that's how we feel.

Speaker 3 (11:53):
What do you mean I'd like it.

Speaker 1 (11:55):
You don't even have a memory of living there.

Speaker 3 (11:58):
Man, but I remember you're going to grand when Grandpa
wasn't driving up that gravel driveway.

Speaker 1 (12:02):
That's I remember.

Speaker 3 (12:03):
I remember when it was snowing one Thanksgiving and my
uncle part and it started sliding down the driveway.

Speaker 1 (12:07):
And what memory if you remember driving a second, you
get none?

Speaker 2 (12:12):
Go to Pika, dude, it's got to be the Pica.

Speaker 1 (12:16):
Okay, that's that's your backup quarterback, Tica Morgan.

Speaker 4 (12:21):
Well, definitely Kansas, everybody in my entire family, because Amy
did second.

Speaker 3 (12:26):
Yeah, as your first.

Speaker 4 (12:27):
No, it's my second. I'm just can I just talk first?

Speaker 5 (12:31):
Second?

Speaker 4 (12:31):
Well, your first, the entire my all my roots everything,
it's all southwest southeast Kansas. So Kansas is all of
my thing, but my home. My first is which Tuk,
So where are you from? Which Kansas?

Speaker 1 (12:42):
Okay? And then all of Kansas.

Speaker 4 (12:44):
All of Kansas is my entire roots. Nobody else is
everywhere anywhere.

Speaker 2 (12:47):
Else, Eddie, that's so dumb.

Speaker 1 (12:50):
That's not true because mine's going to be Arkansas as
a state. You guys can't do this whole stage family.
Everywhere Where are you from? I'm from Arkansas? What part Central?

Speaker 2 (13:00):
Since it's always gonna have to go.

Speaker 1 (13:02):
I moved all around. I went to all different schools.
I didn't have a single town I lived in most No, No,
I have memories. We moved to Mountain Pine in sixth grade,
so I spent six years there, but I spent way
more years than that with memories and other places in
the state.

Speaker 5 (13:16):
Every Christmas in summer I went to Alabama those weeks.

Speaker 1 (13:19):
So mine's Arkansas and Austin my backup.

Speaker 2 (13:23):
I'm going south.

Speaker 5 (13:24):
You could say you're from Austin.

Speaker 4 (13:27):
Wait, so years and you're from the entire state of Arkansas.

Speaker 1 (13:29):
Yes, but if someone's like, where else, it has to
be Austin. That's my backup, even though you lived in
Nashville longer now yes, yea, yeah, I think I think
so many of my early adult and I would have
moved to Nashville without Austin. Like I'm only here because.

Speaker 5 (13:47):
Of Austin, and we're only here because of.

Speaker 2 (13:49):
We're only here because of Austin. Yeah, man, mine South Texas,
That's That's where I'm from.

Speaker 1 (13:56):
Region.

Speaker 2 (14:00):
I mean it's the real Grand Valley.

Speaker 1 (14:01):
It's what you feel. And I said Central Arkansas and
he's like, no, that's the whole state. No, it's not
the whole state where you're from Texas. No, that sounds
is so much bigger. And there are so many areas
that are known independently of each other. If you have
to follow it up with what part If I'm not right, if.

Speaker 3 (14:19):
I say, okay, what part of the South Texas you're from,
it's all the valley.

Speaker 1 (14:26):
Different to Texas has many many major cities, many locations
that are different from each other. Houston is different from Dallas,
is different from San Antonio. It's different from East Texas. Arkansas,
it's kind of the same. We're small.

Speaker 2 (14:39):
Now you've got the Ozarks.

Speaker 1 (14:40):
Yeah, no, I'm not from the Ozarks, right, goes Misi too, Exactly,
you're not from there, but I'm from Arkansas. Where's home Arkansas? Okay,
well what part central? No one even knows where I'm
from where I lived for six years of my life.

Speaker 2 (14:51):
Yeah, I've witnessed that.

Speaker 1 (14:53):
Yeah, everybody keeps going like I had what part you like,
you don't know what? And then they're like, no, try me.
Mountain Pine no, no, I ever heard of it.

Speaker 2 (15:00):
I've seen that conversation go down South Texas. Uh, I'll
just say real Grand Valley, Okay, down in the backup
quarterback is dude, I might have to go in Nashville.

Speaker 1 (15:10):
That's fair.

Speaker 2 (15:11):
I don't have to go to Nashville in that one,
especially if I'm out of town. Where are you from?
I mean I live in Nashville.

Speaker 8 (15:17):
Well, yeah, different, that's different.

Speaker 1 (15:19):
That's like where do you live now? Like if you're
out of town and someone asks you, Hey, where are
you from? I say Nashville. That's where my addresses.

Speaker 2 (15:25):
But yeah, but no one says, like where do you
live now?

Speaker 1 (15:27):
They say where are you That's a different scenario.

Speaker 5 (15:29):
Where are you visiting from? That's what they're asking when you're.

Speaker 3 (15:32):
Sitting at a blackjack table. Okay, this is this is
a great scenario.

Speaker 1 (15:36):
Well that's Nashville answers, and they always.

Speaker 3 (15:37):
Say where are you from? I'm like, oh, I live
in Nashville, but I grew up in Texas.

Speaker 1 (15:42):
You're born. I say that.

Speaker 3 (15:46):
It's really weird, but I do add it every time.

Speaker 1 (15:49):
Other the fact that that are paying you guys Baltimore, Maryland.

Speaker 3 (15:53):
Oh I am not moving there.

Speaker 2 (15:54):
Why not? It's nice out there.

Speaker 1 (15:56):
Buying into Baltimore could offer you a shot at five
thousand dollars in down payment or closing cost assistance and
a five year forgivable loan. You have to stay five
years and they forget the loan. Hamilton, Ohio, their Reverse
Scholarship program offers up to fifteen thousand dollars to those
who've graduated from the STEAM program, which is Science, Technology, Engineering,
Arts and Mathematics. I know you're trying to correct me

(16:18):
and say STEM.

Speaker 5 (16:18):
No, I never I know.

Speaker 1 (16:19):
I said you you were you were yourself beyond yourself.

Speaker 5 (16:26):
Then I heard you say it and I was like, oh, Steam,
I've never heard of that there.

Speaker 2 (16:30):
Arts.

Speaker 1 (16:31):
Hey, hey, I turned my STEM off on TikTok team
I went in. I mean I was watching it for
a while. Yeah, I'm glad.

Speaker 5 (16:41):
Then I heard him say the rest of it, and
I was like, interesting.

Speaker 1 (16:44):
You jumped in with it before I got to the
A and arts.

Speaker 5 (16:47):
Steam. Well, my brain, sorry, was ahead.

Speaker 3 (16:49):
Of it so fast quick thinker.

Speaker 5 (16:53):
Yeah, sorry, I'll slow it down.

Speaker 1 (16:55):
Ketchick in Alaska, ketch is that what it's called?

Speaker 3 (17:00):
Awesome?

Speaker 2 (17:00):
Have you been there?

Speaker 3 (17:01):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (17:01):
Are you from there?

Speaker 4 (17:03):
Not?

Speaker 3 (17:04):
Calm down and then do that.

Speaker 1 (17:05):
Did you have like nine places you're from, because like.

Speaker 3 (17:08):
If you take the whole.

Speaker 1 (17:09):
State, choose ketcha Can offers free internet for three months
and up to two thousand dollars after you've lived there
for a year. For a year you get two grand.

Speaker 4 (17:18):
I'd lived there.

Speaker 2 (17:19):
I'm surprised you're not excited about the free internet.

Speaker 3 (17:22):
Yeah, I mean it's probably more expensive to get it
up there in Alaska.

Speaker 1 (17:26):
Ketchcan looks awesome.

Speaker 4 (17:28):
Yeah, it's pretty.

Speaker 1 (17:29):
It's just cold day day.

Speaker 4 (17:32):
It's not cold during summertime.

Speaker 3 (17:34):
Okay, okay, that's that's like two months.

Speaker 1 (17:36):
You know, daylight for six months, right and dark for
six months like that there, Yeah, in January, let's go.
The highest it gets there is in August. Sixty four
is the high. That's not bad for thirteen days. I'm
sure it's cool. I'd be cool. I've never been to Alaska.
Ketchcan winners are frequent, frequent rain snow. It's not as

(17:58):
brutal as other Alaskan regions. Boy, that's not really a pitch.
We're not as bad as others.

Speaker 4 (18:04):
I don't think it's as deep in Alaska as some
of the others.

Speaker 2 (18:08):
You can't play golf out there.

Speaker 1 (18:09):
Huh No, It's like Canada. When the guy was here,
it was in a candy. He's like, yeah, we get
to play for like three months. It's like I wouldn't
even I'd never join a club. I'd never want to
buy clubs because they're like, you wouldn't get to use them. Newton, Iowa.
The Newton Housing Initiative could give ten thousand dollars in
cash to new residents buying a home valued over two

(18:30):
hundred and forty thousand dollars or more.

Speaker 2 (18:32):
That's good money.

Speaker 1 (18:33):
Well that's from NBC Los Angeles.

Speaker 3 (18:35):
Well, they do have golf courses in Alaska.

Speaker 1 (18:37):
I'm sure they do.

Speaker 3 (18:37):
I just found a couple.

Speaker 1 (18:39):
Okay, let's take a break and we will come back.
All these are money stories. A newly released video shows
the moment cops pulled over this guy they thought he
had stolen some jewels, and he just eats them all
so they don't catch them. Seven hundred and seventy thousand
dollars worth of Tiffany earrings he stole, and he just

(19:00):
swallows them all.

Speaker 2 (19:02):
Didn't have to surgically remove those like they do with dogs. Sometimes.

Speaker 1 (19:05):
I think they just wait for him to boot.

Speaker 2 (19:07):
Oh.

Speaker 1 (19:09):
So, troopers from the Florida Highway Patrol were seen pulling
over jaythan Lawrence Gilder and fighting to search inside of
his mouth as he was escorted out of the car.
Guilder thirty two years old, began thrashing around as three
astonished officers wrestled him to the ground, and they were
trying to get them to open his mouth, like if
your dog has something, You're like, give me that, give

(19:30):
me that. A trooper pulled him over because they were
on alert about a robbery that had happened at the
Tiffany and Co. Store at the Mall. The cop then
noticed he was talking with a closed them out and
also moving an object around first death and Rusia was tongued,
and so they realized he was trying to swallow all

(19:52):
the stuff.

Speaker 2 (19:52):
Oh, that reminds me of the Goonies. Remember the Goonies.
One of the guys forever Ago, Corey Felman, he tried
swallow the duels and they're like, give me more.

Speaker 1 (20:05):
He pretended to be a representative for an Orlando Magic
player to get access into the Tiffany store and then, apparently,
according to wfla robbed it, So.

Speaker 5 (20:13):
Is that easy?

Speaker 1 (20:13):
You just the dash can video that shows him wrestling
and like fighting, Like literally, if my dog gets something,
I'm trying to get it out. That's what it looks like.
And that feels like it would hurt though. Yeah, but
I think that's it. Like you get caught cheating, swallow
the homeworks, wall the cheat sheets, you do.

Speaker 2 (20:27):
That with drugs, Yeah, then they freak out.

Speaker 1 (20:30):
Yeah, I guess So. A guy in Michigan got one
point six million dollars extra on one paycheck.

Speaker 5 (20:37):
By accident, one point six million.

Speaker 1 (20:40):
A county accidentally paid an employee one point six million extra.
It's a lot, that is a lot instead of his
hourly wage. He got basically one point six million dollars,
and so he reported the mistake and began returning the money.
Two employees have been fired, one has been suspended over
the air. The mistake is the latest and a string
of issues since the ca on. He switched to a

(21:00):
new Oracle run payroll system last year. Official say inadequate
training and unresolved system problems continue to leave this vulnerability.
W x y Z. With that, you get a check
for one point six million dollars, what do you think.

Speaker 5 (21:17):
I think, oh, this was an accident, and I inverter
say something so yeah.

Speaker 1 (21:22):
Immediately, I feel like I would go worse. I'd be like,
I'm being targeted somehow. They're trying to get me for something,
and they've pinned one point six million dollars on me.
I started to freak out immediately if I had seen that.

Speaker 5 (21:33):
Yeah, or is it a test for my company to
see how honest I am?

Speaker 1 (21:36):
Well? Yeah, they got to use one point six million
dollars just makes pet a test.

Speaker 2 (21:39):
I don't think I noticed it.

Speaker 5 (21:42):
Oh yeah, because you're kidding. Eddy doesn't log into his
stuff as.

Speaker 1 (21:47):
Well, saying like he's so rich he was making it.

Speaker 5 (21:51):
He's like, yeah, I thought he was saying detached from
his what do.

Speaker 1 (21:56):
You do lunchbox? If our company accidentally gives you one
point six million extra check, really, what do you do?

Speaker 3 (22:01):
I would be a resident of a different state, like
I mean that person was a Michigan resident. Their new
home would probably be in Pennsylvania or some I'd move
out of there that way, Hey, can't find me.

Speaker 1 (22:10):
Our companies in every state.

Speaker 3 (22:11):
Yeah, I wouldn't for the company anymore, so there's no
way to get it back.

Speaker 1 (22:16):
So you can still find you if you quit. It's
not like calling force Field no way.

Speaker 3 (22:21):
It is like they're not gonna like when I quit,
They're not gonna be like, oh you know what, now
they quit, let me go back and look through his paychecks. No,
they're just gonna be like.

Speaker 1 (22:28):
No, they're gonna know where They're gonna investigate. One point
six million and you can't call like, uh, Forcefield can't
get to me.

Speaker 3 (22:36):
I got a feeling that I could hide pretty well
with one point six million dollars?

Speaker 2 (22:39):
Can he leave the country?

Speaker 1 (22:41):
Like is that but you're gonna turn your whole life
around for one point six million? Yeah? Yeah, your kids,
your wife, you'd you have to leave your house. You'ren't
really not gonna be able to sell your house. Why
because they're gonna know when you're selling it and go
after whomever selling it.

Speaker 3 (22:56):
How long do you think it would take them to
realize like if that company has been having you know,
like probably pretty quick.

Speaker 1 (23:00):
One for six million, I think that's probably pretty quick.
It's probably like sixteen hundred bucks or something, and our
decimal points moved to the wrong place.

Speaker 3 (23:06):
I'm just saying I'd be a former Michigan resident and
then I'd say, oh, I didn't realize it. I just
thought i'd move.

Speaker 1 (23:12):
You'd have to get it all out of your bank
and have to be all cash, and you'd have to
run with that, because if it's in your bank, they
would just lock your bill.

Speaker 3 (23:17):
Okay, you just go put it in the Caymans.

Speaker 1 (23:19):
You don't even know what that means.

Speaker 3 (23:21):
Yeah, you put a bank account in the Caymans and
they can't touch Where are the Caymans down there?

Speaker 2 (23:25):
They got a Bank of America in the Cannons.

Speaker 3 (23:27):
No, that's why you don't do an American bank.

Speaker 1 (23:30):
A guy finds a fifty thousand dollars lottery ticket while
cleaning out his car A winner. A Maryland lottery player
said he was cleaning out his car he found a
forgotten powerball ticket that turned out to be a fifty
thousand dollars winner. The Philadelphia man, who travels for work
as an engineer, said he bought the ticket June fourth.
The man said he was cleaning his car more than
a week later and he found an old ticket. He
looked at it, so that's one fifty thousand dollars. He's

(23:51):
gonna use it to pay his bills. How does that
make you feel.

Speaker 3 (23:54):
It's annoying that that irresponsible with a ticket that you
just throw it in your truck and you don't even
know fifty thousand dollars. Oh, can you imagine me in
that irresponsible with something that can pay you so much.

Speaker 1 (24:05):
It didn't say it was in his floorboard. It could
have been in his medical compartment anywhere.

Speaker 3 (24:09):
I don't care.

Speaker 1 (24:10):
But he could have put it there, and it's where
he always puts his ticket and then he goes and
finds it later.

Speaker 5 (24:14):
And also he's acting like this is some golden ticket.
If you play a lot or you play for fun
and you know the odds aren't that great, you're likely
thinking it's not a winner because it's likely.

Speaker 3 (24:22):
No walk out the store and throw it on the ground.
If it's likely not a winner. I mean, this is
a crazy logic.

Speaker 1 (24:28):
It's not crazy logic because it's still there even if
you don't plan to win.

Speaker 3 (24:32):
But he didn't even He probably forgot all about that ticket.

Speaker 1 (24:36):
That's okay, now he remembered. But fifty thousand dollars. Yeah,
Americans are paying more than one thousand dollars a year
on subscriptions. A lot of Americans are feeling oversubscribed and
are considering cutting their subscriptions. According to a new survey
from c net, it finds the average American spends ninety
bucks a month or one thousand and eighty dollars on
them a year. But even worse, we're wasted two hundred
bucks a year or so on unused or unnecessary subscriptions.

Speaker 5 (24:59):
And he thoughts, yeah, true, I mean this happens. I
go through and I try to clean them up, does
not rocket money is something that has really helped me.
I use that and it will show me any duplicate
transactions that I have, like subscriptions, and I'll be like,
oh my gosh. Like there's sometimes where I've signed up
for two accounts of something and I'm like what, And
I've been paying for this like MGM streaming service, paaramount

(25:22):
plus two or whatever they are.

Speaker 1 (25:24):
Do you sign up for all of these trials.

Speaker 5 (25:26):
Because I need to watch a certain show? But then yes,
you forget about it. But then that's been a very
clear way for me as I've been involved in my finances,
to lay it all out. I have a pie chart.
I see where my money's going, and yeah, absolutely, subscriptions
are a money suck.

Speaker 1 (25:42):
I can't unsubscribe to the Halo account that I have
because we built a halo when our dogs were younger.

Speaker 5 (25:48):
What's a halo.

Speaker 1 (25:49):
It's basically an ELEC electric fence. Oh that yeeah, And
well we haven't had that in like three I haven't
had like three properties. I have no idea. I get
eight dollars every month and I can't get out of it.

Speaker 8 (26:00):
I may to help you.

Speaker 1 (26:01):
I can't remember name, I can't remember password. I've tried,
I can't. I don't know how to get out of it.
So like I have those and I guess I'm just
perpetually locked in forever. I think I'm just gonna be.

Speaker 5 (26:12):
To just cancel that car.

Speaker 1 (26:12):
I can't even get into the account. I don't know.
I don't want to cancel the whole car break dollars
a month. I'm cut you the pain of the button,
that is. But you know what's been awesome for me
is YouTube TV. It's I was so scared of just
getting like a television, like a cable app. But because
I was like YouTube TV, what even is that? It's
awesome is that where you watch all your every everything

(26:35):
and everything everything? Yeah, YouTube TV has been awesome, and
it's allowed me to cut some of them. But we
pay for so many subscription services though. I wish you
could only pay as you used, because there are certain
seasons where we're just so into Paramount Plus depending on
you know, whatever version of Yellowstone or whatever show he's making,
we're all on that. Then we'll have a couple of

(26:55):
shows a day, topbo Max. I wish you could just
pay as you used, Like him, I like, what's what's
the buffet called?

Speaker 3 (27:04):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (27:04):
Yeah, I just noticed a crunchy roll jellyroll I know,
and you know, my daughter loves anime, and I don't
know how it was overlooking this, but suddenly I see
the crunchy Roll on and then I talked to her
and she's like, I that was not me. I said
to Shira, there is nobody else in this house that

(27:25):
is going to sign up for crunchy Roll, like it
has you all over it. So like how, She's like, well,
I don't know, surely that can't be me. It had
to be a really long time ago. I said it was,
and we've been spending money every month, so I shut
it off. So I hope, yeah, canceled no more crunchy Roll.

Speaker 1 (27:40):
Well you got to get me a Halo over here.
I'm in Halo prison. It was it was great. We
just don't need it anymore. And for at least a
year and a half, I've been paying for it that
I just money out. What's cool about Apple though, as
you can go into your subscription I just didn't pay
for it with Apple. I should have. But you can
go into it and cancel anything in Apple if you
go to your subscriptions.

Speaker 5 (28:00):
That's another way because I always some of those apps
get me, like the you know, like there's one that
was going to help me with my clothing, and then
another one that was helping with my subliminals.

Speaker 1 (28:09):
What the heck are you spending money on?

Speaker 5 (28:11):
When I get if I get a little commercial, I
click on it, it's like download this app.

Speaker 1 (28:15):
Oh no, A mean, they're just She's like, but I
can't figure out why I keep getting scammed.

Speaker 5 (28:20):
You think it's not that big of a deal. Oh
Apple got me with Apple News. You know they'll pay
you can pay them for more news. Yeah, twelve ninety
nine a month or something.

Speaker 1 (28:30):
I do get like every magazine.

Speaker 5 (28:31):
I just canceled that. I mean for a while, I
was using it, and then I was like, this stuff
is I can find this elsewhere. I'm not going to
pay Apple twenty twelve ninety nine, although it's nice to
have it curated.

Speaker 2 (28:42):
But you know, I pay for my Gmail. What Gmail
like charges me monthly for like I guess storage.

Speaker 1 (28:49):
Yeah, i'd to do that. I'm gonna hear all my subscriptions.

Speaker 8 (28:52):
Oh whoa, yeah, whoa, that's a lot.

Speaker 1 (28:54):
Whoa eighteen Birdies go off ninety nine bucks a year.

Speaker 2 (28:57):
What do you subscribe there?

Speaker 1 (28:59):
Yeah, free version, it's a free I guess I thought
it made me better a the Oh no, Apple one
thirty seven ninety five.

Speaker 5 (29:09):
I don't know thirty a year or a month because
that's a lot.

Speaker 1 (29:13):
Oh, it's for storage. Apple won to storage.

Speaker 2 (29:15):
There you go?

Speaker 1 (29:15):
Okay, Betternet VPN ninety five bucks a year? About that
you need the VPN Disney Plus fifty ninety nine a month.
Fifteen Yeah, Dropbox eleven ninety nine a month.

Speaker 5 (29:27):
I pay for that.

Speaker 2 (29:28):
You're over the thousand already.

Speaker 1 (29:30):
ESPN Plus because I watch all the shows on ESPN.

Speaker 2 (29:33):
That's good though.

Speaker 1 (29:34):
I like that one hundred and nineteen dollars a year.

Speaker 5 (29:37):
Man, you should look into getting the Disney ESPN bundle.

Speaker 2 (29:39):
Yeah, you do need to get the bundle. But the
bundle includes another.

Speaker 1 (29:44):
Sixty ninety a month Microsoft three sixty five, which is
Microsoft Word ninety nine bucks a.

Speaker 5 (29:49):
Year Microsoft Word, all the Microsoft stuff.

Speaker 1 (29:52):
It's not you have to pay for a license. Yeah.
Netflix four screens, twenty two nine a month paramount plus
twelve ninety nine a month, Peacock yearly one hundred and
thirty nine ninety nine bro Prompt Smart, which is basically
a prompt on my phone so I can read when
I have to do. That's cool. We need that thirty
four ninety nine a year.

Speaker 5 (30:10):
So some of these are work expenses.

Speaker 1 (30:13):
We need this. No, he does it for videos Peloton.

Speaker 5 (30:18):
When is the last time you got on that?

Speaker 1 (30:20):
Don't be read. Well, I'm just saying you could probably
still treadmill. No, you still use it though, Yes, on treadmill,
do you.

Speaker 5 (30:26):
Take a class? Because I have a Pelton trymil. I
don't pay for the monthly. I just get you can
there's an option where you click just run that's what
you need, and then you can watch whatever you want
on your own TV.

Speaker 1 (30:36):
And then I think, like, who on stuff I have
on a different account I don't know. Do you guys
think a spill light?

Speaker 3 (30:40):
Yes, yeah, I think so.

Speaker 5 (30:41):
You're over that thousand of years, so I don't really
think you need Microsoft Word.

Speaker 2 (30:44):
Yeah, dude, download it.

Speaker 1 (30:47):
No I need, but for what? I don't understand license
how all those programs that I need they have to
be like if you have licenses for them?

Speaker 6 (30:55):
But what do you?

Speaker 5 (30:55):
What do you? What do you like when you're on
your Apple? Like do you use microso off word for
sale all the time?

Speaker 3 (31:01):
For what?

Speaker 5 (31:01):
Though? I'm asking like what to write?

Speaker 2 (31:04):
Yes, they have pages, Amy, he's a writer.

Speaker 1 (31:06):
Look at his books. I've got two, I got well
two and a half best sellers.

Speaker 5 (31:09):
I know. But there's like Google Dogs, there's there's there's
there is Apple pages.

Speaker 1 (31:16):
Yes, I do all that, but you know how many
times Microsoft Word that comes to me through emails almost
like I forgot this document and you can't even copy
and paste from it. It's his business expense. You just
told me that. Anyway, I'm done. I didn't mean to have.

Speaker 5 (31:31):
Maybe I'm just maybe I'm just jealous because I have
to figure all all the way.

Speaker 1 (31:36):
I can't cancel my Halo because it's not part of Apple. Yeah,
let's start with, nightmares can kill you. Sometimes you feel
like you die in a nightmare. But I guess they say,
if you hit the ground, you really are dead. I've
never hit the ground in a nightmare, like falling off
a bridge or anything. You ever hit the ground?

Speaker 5 (31:53):
No? No, I wake up kind of like shocked from something,
but not because I'm falling. I just do that thing.
What's it called?

Speaker 8 (32:04):
That's it?

Speaker 2 (32:05):
I jerk? Twitch?

Speaker 1 (32:06):
Any of those terms have worked there?

Speaker 5 (32:08):
Twitch?

Speaker 8 (32:09):
That's it twitch?

Speaker 1 (32:10):
I twitch, falling asleep, I jerk coming out of sleep
because I'll and sometimes I'll twitch so hard falling asleep
I wake up. But a twitch, to me is definitely
going in if I wake up. It's like an adrenaline
yank a jerk, which, by the way, those words can
mean anything. You can start.

Speaker 2 (32:30):
Sure, Yeah, what is this hitting the ground thing?

Speaker 1 (32:34):
Like if you fall while you're sleeping in your dream,
in your dream and you hit the ground, you're supposedly dead.
I realize that's always yeah, but people don't ever hit
the ground in their dreams, supposedly.

Speaker 2 (32:43):
But what if, like, uh, I guess, like you know,
some people die in their sleep. What if that's how
you realize you're dead that.

Speaker 1 (32:49):
You hit the ground. Yeah, and we'd have to dig
into that to see if that's actually true or an
urban legend. And I'll tell you this first. A new
study found that too many nightmares can kill you. People
who average at least one nightmare week or three times
more likely to die before they hit seventy. Oh no,
lucky for me. I never sleep and I don't sleep
pure enough to have dreams. Hey, no dreams on nightmares.

(33:09):
I left forever.

Speaker 5 (33:11):
I don't know how you function Like I was thinking
about you the other day. I didn't get sleep at all.
I tossed and turned all night long, and then the
next day I was tired. But then the day after
that so exhausted, like just my body everything hurt, and
I'm like, is this all this Bobby's baseline.

Speaker 1 (33:29):
I don't know what my baseline is, because again it's
my baseline, right, so I don't know the comparison to
the two, but I all my body hurts around noon again,
it starts hurting. My guts hurt.

Speaker 5 (33:39):
Yes, And I wasn't functioning properly, and I know it
was because of the sleep. The two nights before that
I didn't get It's not.

Speaker 1 (33:46):
A badge of honor either. I think at one point,
oh for you, let me just stay awake and get
as much done as possible. Now I realize you can
actually get more done if you're rested. By you going
to sleep, you can actually be more productive, and not
just productive and work, but productive and life at work,
as a husband, as whatever. Yeah, but that's why I'm
going today to my brain appointment, my first one today.

Speaker 3 (34:07):
That's exciting.

Speaker 5 (34:08):
Yeah, I have Are you nervous?

Speaker 1 (34:11):
Why should I be?

Speaker 5 (34:12):
You shouldn't. I was just if you weren't scare them.

Speaker 1 (34:17):
This is some kind of prank. I get there and
it's amy. Excuse me with a super super soaker. I
have this will probably be here today till noon or so.
Then I have a Bobby Cast with Sam Williams until
from one to two, and then I have my brain
appointment after three.

Speaker 5 (34:32):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (34:33):
So not nervous. I don't have time to be nervous.
I don't know what they're gonna do.

Speaker 5 (34:36):
They're not like I know, but I would just be
hopefully when you have the call with them, like you
got to be very transparent, like I'm not, I don't
sleep right, You're like, tell them.

Speaker 1 (34:44):
They didn't ask a lot of questions like that.

Speaker 5 (34:46):
They were like, you have to just be whatever it is.
You have to be so honest, Like I what the bed, like,
they can help you with anything.

Speaker 1 (34:52):
I don't what the bed though.

Speaker 5 (34:54):
If you did, like, they can try to work on
that part of the brain.

Speaker 1 (34:59):
Yeah, I'm not embarrassed about anything. Okay, Yeah, I don't sleep.
I don't know what that can they like put things
on my head and tell me what's wrong with me.

Speaker 5 (35:09):
Well, I don't know exactly how it works, but I
know like at my appointments, Yes, they've been able to
see what parts of my brain are overactive and what
parts are asleep in a sense, like in delta mode.
So there's different stages of your brain, like and my
son's brain for example, because you know, he lived in

(35:29):
fear a lot of his life, Like his mom dropped
off at a orphanage when he was really young. His
brain went into survival mode and his brain still operates
a lot in that, and so we spend a lot
of time trying to get him out of fight flight freeze.
But his brain is working really hard and it doesn't
need to work that hard, so we try to calm
it down and so I wonder if some parts of
your brain are exhausted because it's all subconscious and then

(35:52):
you know what I.

Speaker 1 (35:53):
Mean, right to find out, let's find out. I'll tell
you about how a six foot guard I'm walking in
teach me how.

Speaker 5 (35:59):
To like I went in onesday asked me if I
smoke weed every day and I was like no, But
they're like, well, your brain seems like it because I.

Speaker 1 (36:08):
Think so much trying to by drug nam I think
someone just wanted to buy some, So your brain seemed
like it was.

Speaker 5 (36:14):
There was there was parts of my brain that were
just so like off. I believe it's delta mode when
it's in like a sleep like that part of my
brain was. I just was not using, but it was
during a time where there was a lot going on
and it was helping me survive. So it was shutting
off certain parts so that I could because I was
a high functioning Like you're high functioning boby, like you

(36:37):
have a lot going on in brain, but you can
be high functioning depressed, high functioning anxiety bedwater.

Speaker 1 (36:44):
To be honest, dude, tell them everything I go in
overly honest. I'm therapist, Like right now, I went on
so you know the genealogist that was on that was
like tracking back my fan family. I got on the
site because she gave me. If you click and you
log in, you can see it. And I couldn't quite

(37:05):
get to where she got and I would see some
people and I did it, but they had a picture
of my mom up there, which was crazy, like as
a kid that I know, I was looking at it
and I was like, I've never seen this picture of
my mom before. And my wife doesn't know my mom
because my mom hasn't been alive in a long time.
But I thought that's pretty crazy that picture of her
was up on. I guess what they do is they
go and they search that name and try to find

(37:26):
any pictures associated with it and then pull them all.
But some of them were like graves gravestones of like people.

Speaker 2 (37:36):
That's all they got.

Speaker 1 (37:37):
And it went back to like I got all the
way back to like some people from what's the the
country people go to for like prostitutes, And you used
to go for a weeks Amsterdam where people were coming
over from from there. But I couldn't get all the
way back to my kingdom in Germany.

Speaker 2 (37:55):
The kingdom that you belong and where you were the king,
where I was the.

Speaker 1 (37:57):
King, Johann the king to them, I couldn't get back
to that point and that that map she sent me.

Speaker 2 (38:05):
Crazy that you've never seen that picture of your mom.

Speaker 1 (38:07):
Though, no idea, Like we don't have a lot of pictures.
I didn't have pictures of me growing up, very few.
If they did set proof on them, yeah, it's because
I just would keep it from school. We never buy
the pictures because it wasn't like now you'd have it
on your phone. You keep everything digitally.

Speaker 2 (38:18):
They still have proof on.

Speaker 5 (38:19):
Yeah, they still even.

Speaker 1 (38:21):
The digital ones.

Speaker 2 (38:21):
Yeah, you can't steal them. You try to screenshot it
put in your wallet.

Speaker 1 (38:25):
I don't know. A I probably could take the proof
off Mike, don't you think easily?

Speaker 2 (38:29):
Now, Okay, I'll screenshot and send it to Mike. Then, yeah,
have a bunch of pictures you can read.

Speaker 1 (38:36):
You can get to any of those guys.

Speaker 2 (38:37):
It is that funny about like school pictures now, like
especially the ones in my kids school, is they have
them do funny faces now, not just like the serious
one that goes in the yearbook. Like then they're just
like all right, stick your tongue out and they or
they do like little signs or whatever. So there's some
cool pictures out.

Speaker 1 (38:50):
There, probably to get it all out of their system too, right, No.

Speaker 2 (38:54):
I mean they give you an option to buy all
of them too.

Speaker 1 (38:56):
Yeah, all right, Well that's what I'm doing today. And
night mares can kill you if you have bunch. And
it is not true that you will die if you
hit the ground in a dream. According to multiple sources,
dreams are not real and events that happen do not
have physical consequences in the real world. Falling in a
dream and hitting the ground will not cause you to
die in real life, according to Laurie Loewenberg. While the
sensation of falling and hitting the ground and a dream
can be frightening and cause a physical jerk jerk when

(39:19):
you say jerk jerk yeah, yep, or startle when you
wake up, it will not result in death. This is
a common myth, but there is no evidence to support it.
Do you know why, Because anybody who died in their
dream can't wake up and say, like, I died in
my dream, right, they can't tell you. How about that, I.

Speaker 3 (39:33):
Can't tell you they hit the ground.

Speaker 1 (39:34):
Anybody who died can't tell you they died and they
hit the ground in their dream insufficient, So I say
I did a fun.

Speaker 4 (39:40):
Fact about that though, Like the jerk happens because your
brain is warning your body that like you're falling asleep
and you're safe. That's what the jerk kind of means.

Speaker 1 (39:48):
And my jerk I remember doing this is when someone's
always telling me a basketball my dream.

Speaker 2 (39:52):
I go and you're not ready for it.

Speaker 1 (39:53):
I'm not ready for it, and I wake up like
it's always basketball weird. That's the only jerk.

Speaker 2 (39:58):
Maybe something happened to you, like when you're kid, when
you didn't see a basketball coming and it really hit you.
That's your nightmare.

Speaker 1 (40:04):
No, I had way worse stuff than that happened around
the room.

Speaker 3 (40:07):
Amy.

Speaker 5 (40:08):
I came across this article about how emotionally intelligent couples
handle conflict. All right, tell me there's five things, but
one of them stood out to me for Bobby specifically,
and only because your words. I'm not saying this, you
have said it.

Speaker 1 (40:23):
They drive off and turn off their location settings so
you can't find them. No, oh, never mind.

Speaker 5 (40:26):
So one of the ways that emotionally intelligent people handle
conflict they take a pause when emotions run high because
we're not going to deal with this right now. They
focus on understanding, not winning. That's number two.

Speaker 1 (40:39):
I'm more of a winner.

Speaker 5 (40:41):
That's the one that stood out to me because Bobby,
you've said multiple times, no, I'm just I just have
to win.

Speaker 1 (40:45):
I'm more of a winner. Yeah, go ahead.

Speaker 5 (40:47):
What you need to do, though, is listen to your
partner's perspective, working towards understanding rather than proving that you're right.

Speaker 1 (40:53):
I know it's just harder.

Speaker 5 (40:54):
But you're emotionally intelligent, you've said, not only in parts.
I mean, I guess you're. Well, then what's the intelligent.

Speaker 7 (41:00):
You're just just smart, like no stuff, But you're not
emotionally Inellectually, I think I have a little lead intellectually,
not a time, but a little lead in electually blessed.

Speaker 1 (41:10):
But emotionally I think I'm a little stunted.

Speaker 5 (41:12):
Actually, actually what I meant.

Speaker 2 (41:16):
Because you don't do pauses like the pause, like don't
you just do silent treatment?

Speaker 1 (41:23):
Well that's my pause. I'm done talking about this.

Speaker 5 (41:25):
It's not a healthy pause.

Speaker 1 (41:26):
No, I hear you, and I've been it's a very
long pause, long one. I'll never I'll never circle back
like if there's an argument and it's like I just
need to break and my wife will be like, okay,
i'll give you a break, that's fine, but you never
the break's never over, and I'm like, well I'm not.
I'm never over. I mean I'm not there yet. What's
the one.

Speaker 2 (41:42):
Where you give her a date, like, well, tell me
when you're ready?

Speaker 1 (41:45):
Well yeah, well yes, in a disagreement, if it's like, hey,
I'm not in a good place to have this fight
right now, and she'll go, okay, when will you be good?
It's if it's like four pm and I'm like November third,
twenty twenty seven, she's like no, no, like today, and
like I won't be ready today. She's like, well, I

(42:08):
need give me a realistic time, okay, January fifth. She
wants to punch me in the face. But I can
resolve things in my own head, and I think with
one of the difficulties. One of the difficulty days are
being married to me is I spent so much time
alone and not in relationships or not even having a
family dynamic where we work things out. I had to
always just deal with it myself and figure it out.

(42:30):
So I will come to a conclusion, resolve it, move
on all in my head and never communicate it. And
I'm like, no, no work, I'm good. She's like, we
haven't shared with me, and I'm like, I got it
all figured out. I'm good. So that's tough and probably
not emotionally intelligent intelligent.

Speaker 5 (42:47):
The third one is acknowledge emotions before speaking, so you
sort of maybe acknowledge the emotions, but you don't speak
of them.

Speaker 1 (42:54):
I don't know, help me, I don't know what that means.

Speaker 5 (42:56):
So by recognizing your own emotions first, like when you're
able to do that, you prevent any escalation or avoid
saying things that you might regret, like acknowledging hey, I'm
I'm really upset or I'm feeling angry right now, instead
of holding it in and then the anger comes out
and yelling or something. I don't yell, but you regret
like you've never yelled, yeah, but.

Speaker 1 (43:17):
I mean almost never. It's not my go to.

Speaker 5 (43:19):
You go to silence, which is sometimes more than cutting
to someone than yelling okay, but I like, show you okay, fine.
I would want to be like okay, yeah, finally, yeah,
show me something.

Speaker 1 (43:33):
I can't be recorded being silent.

Speaker 5 (43:35):
Oh, it's because of recorded in your own home.

Speaker 1 (43:39):
No, just generally anyway, even here, it's like there, we're
always recorded. Have I ever yelled?

Speaker 2 (43:45):
No, I was thinking about that, like you.

Speaker 1 (43:48):
On the show. I mean we're on the air. Obviously
I've yelled, but like you thinking about realizing.

Speaker 5 (43:53):
Because I thought it was because it is, I was
just kidding shut down, not because you were scared.

Speaker 1 (43:57):
Not even I shut down. It's like, it's what's the use.
I just dealed it in a different way. I'm not aggressive.

Speaker 5 (44:03):
I'm not aggressive sometimes aggressive passive.

Speaker 1 (44:07):
Yeah, yelling is aggressive.

Speaker 5 (44:09):
I think you can.

Speaker 1 (44:10):
I don't think all aggressions wrong, but yelling is aggressive.

Speaker 5 (44:13):
Emotions are this information? Okay, Uh, we'll round out four
and five. Face tough conversations head on.

Speaker 1 (44:20):
I'll pass on that one.

Speaker 5 (44:23):
Call each other down during tension.

Speaker 1 (44:25):
I always say relax. I always do that.

Speaker 5 (44:31):
How to offer reassurance to a partner. Relax, you know, work, chill, relax,
calm down.

Speaker 2 (44:37):
I mean you're saying the right way, the right.

Speaker 5 (44:39):
Thing, like you remind each other, Hey, we're a team.

Speaker 1 (44:42):
Why so worked up?

Speaker 5 (44:43):
Okay, So yeah that's not gonna work. So anyway, those
are five ways emotionally intelligent couples handle conflict.

Speaker 1 (44:52):
My wife's very emotionally intelligent. I I lack lunchbox liver king.
I don't know if I saw this with Joe Rogan.

Speaker 3 (44:59):
Yeah, I don't know if it was Amy or Eddie.
Someone watched the documentary talked about him on here and
he talked about how he only ate raw meat. He's
his buff dude like, and turns out he was on
steroids all this stuff. Well, Joe Rogan is the one
that called him out and exposed the whole thing. Well,
he drove to Austin, was in the hotel and was
like live saying, hey, Joe Rogan, I'm here to challenge

(45:20):
you today. I'm taking a shower. I will find you
and I will challenge you today. And so then he
got arrested.

Speaker 1 (45:26):
Joe Rogan would kill that dude. By the way, Joe
Rogan is like three black belts in. Yeah, he's true,
like like he's a real fighter. Yes, I don't think
Joe Rogan wants to have to randomly fight somebody or
you don't ever want to feel the threat of somebody
near your property going I'm waiting for you. I think
that's different. But I think if Joe Rogan, and he
shouldn't he shouldn't like listen and then go and fight

(45:49):
the guy like that shouldn't happen. Shouldn't humor that. But
if he did, he would kill him.

Speaker 5 (45:54):
Why did he say I'm going to take his shower.

Speaker 3 (45:56):
I don't understand that he was in the shower when
he was doing like he was like, I'm in the
Four Seasons taking a shower and then I'm gonna come
challenge you.

Speaker 2 (46:03):
So the video was him in the shower.

Speaker 5 (46:04):
Can you imagine you were the Four Seasons and this guy, yes, yeah, okay, yeah,
true if he had his big like animal.

Speaker 8 (46:13):
Hat on and like no shirt.

Speaker 1 (46:15):
But he would like eat the raw liver, like eat
all the raw meal, yes, the raw nuts. And he
was on steroids, huh yeah.

Speaker 3 (46:23):
Joe Rogan's once said there's no way he's I did.

Speaker 1 (46:26):
Never find out he was on steroids.

Speaker 5 (46:27):
He eventually, yeah, crumbled his business supposed I was trying
not to thousand dollars a month steroid use of the documentary?

Speaker 1 (46:35):
How did that find out?

Speaker 3 (46:36):
The leaked emails and Joe Rogan like talked about it
on his podcast or whatever and was like, there's no
way that guy in his forties is that ripped and
not doing something.

Speaker 1 (46:47):
I wish the moone would accuse me of steroids. It's
not believed, Okay, it's yeah, But I wish I would
just be like out there, like there's no way he's
got that physique without steroids. That would be cool.

Speaker 2 (46:59):
That would be cool.

Speaker 1 (47:00):
But you may need steroids to have that physique. I
know that's the problem.

Speaker 5 (47:04):
What I was just going to say, if you need
to be accused, we can accuse you.

Speaker 1 (47:07):
No, but no one will believe it. But I wish
that it would just was like man, or if they'd
be like, man, that guy's had a lot of plastic surgery,
like how Grady looks.

Speaker 5 (47:16):
You know, you might get that start saying that's older
than you are.

Speaker 1 (47:19):
That's I don't want to do that because then.

Speaker 5 (47:21):
People be like what you'd be like, I'm sixty and
they're like what, I.

Speaker 2 (47:24):
Start selling a serum.

Speaker 1 (47:25):
It's all on the internet. Amy's got all kind of
serums and that stuff.

Speaker 5 (47:29):
Snail serum. That's my one serum. Serum, Serum serum, and
I love it.

Speaker 2 (47:34):
So the liver king, Uh, why do you get arrested
because of the video.

Speaker 1 (47:37):
It's talking at a hotel. No, no, but I think
I'm coming. I'm coming to get you.

Speaker 2 (47:43):
I said, like, I'm here, let's do this, I said.

Speaker 3 (47:46):
He says, I'm coming to challenge you. Doesn't say but.

Speaker 1 (47:50):
I didn't know.

Speaker 2 (47:51):
You get arrested for just being like, hey, man, I'm
here at a hotel in the shower, let's do this.

Speaker 1 (47:54):
Well, let me read the actual story. Would you click
into that mic for this from k x A and
Austin They at play department of arrest of Brian Johnson
note online is the Liver King. He faces one charge
of terroristic threat, a class by misdemeanor. The police department
confirmed Johnson made threats against Joe Rogan on his Instagram.

Speaker 3 (48:11):
Yeah, he said, I'm challenging you just as a man.
I don't want to kill you. Why would I want
to kill you? You have a family. I wouldn't want
to take you away from your family. Sounds nice, So
I hope this is not perceived as a threat. But wait,
have you Joe Rogan? You guys can all call the cops.

Speaker 1 (48:28):
Huh, maybe it's something before that he said before that,
But they even quote the Instagram video they posted on
June twenty third, Joe Rogan, I'm calling you out. My
name is Liver King. Man to man, I'm picking a
fight with you. I have no training in jiu jitsu.
You're a black belt. You should dismantle me. But I'm
picking a fight with you. Your rules. I'll come to
you whenever you're ready.

Speaker 2 (48:48):
Huh.

Speaker 1 (48:48):
That all seems kind of you know, you're right a
bit behign.

Speaker 2 (48:52):
Maybe there's threats, Like I get it shows up to
the house, he's trying to cross the gate edge to
the property.

Speaker 1 (48:58):
There's got to be something, right. That's kind of weird
to me me too, because it doesn't that alone doesn't
feel like stalking, but if someone had, it feels creepy.
It feels creepy.

Speaker 2 (49:10):
But he could be in the city anyway for like something, and.

Speaker 1 (49:12):
There's no rule against going to the city of your
arch enemy and just being in the city going like
if you want to go, I'll go.

Speaker 2 (49:18):
It could now could Joe Rogan call the police and
be like, hey, this guy's just scaring me, Like.

Speaker 1 (49:23):
Mike, what do you think here? How did he get arrested?
Because I don't see anything he did he's done wrong.

Speaker 8 (49:29):
Hmmm, it's a good question. I mean, just the posting
the threat enough to.

Speaker 1 (49:34):
Get it rest. What threat? I'm challenging you? He didn't
have going to break into your house and when you sleep.

Speaker 2 (49:39):
And he's even like, I'm not a good fighter. You know,
I don't fight, but I'll fight you.

Speaker 1 (49:45):
Lace Mark got terroristic threatening once. Yeah it dropped it though, Yeah,
I don't understand terroristics as be misdemeanor. I'm picking a
fight with you. I'm calling you out. My name's Liver King.
I'm picking a fight with you. I have no history
in jiu jitsu. You should wipe the floor with me.

Speaker 3 (50:01):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (50:02):
It just seems like a friendly little challenge.

Speaker 1 (50:03):
And text is a terroristic threat when charge is a classman.
Misdemeanor generally involves threatening to commit a violent offense with
the intent to place someone in fear of serious bodily injury.
But it's not a threat made against a family or
household member, but a threat. I feel like I'm more
of a challenge.

Speaker 2 (50:19):
He's not saying I'm going to hurt you. He's saying,
come on, let's fight. We both have the chance to.

Speaker 8 (50:24):
He's the word to kill, like, I'm not going to
kill you. Isn't that kind of a threat though, I'm
not going to kill you. But he was like saying that, Hey,
I'm not going to kill you, but I want to fight.

Speaker 1 (50:32):
That's kind of a threat. I'm going to kill you,
as saying you're not gonna kill you.

Speaker 3 (50:38):
Don't worry about why I'm not going to kill you.
Don't you have nothing to worry about, Like.

Speaker 8 (50:41):
I'm gonna say that what you guys, it'd be a threat,
like I'm gonna walk by you. I'm not going to
kill you. Though, Why do you even bring up killing you?

Speaker 1 (50:47):
But I think what you don't bring up doesn't make
it a threat. Okay.

Speaker 5 (50:49):
His arrest comes after he threatened Joe in a series
of videos, including one in which he appears to be
holding guns.

Speaker 1 (50:56):
Okay, now we're talking different. We didn't know all this.
Now we're talking so you know.

Speaker 2 (51:01):
Is he hunting while he's shooting the video?

Speaker 8 (51:03):
Don't worry, I'm not going to shoot you.

Speaker 4 (51:05):
I also saw a video of him like crawling on
the ground.

Speaker 1 (51:11):
I bet you it's been dropped from the very little
I know about this, and it's all from the last
seven minutes. I know nothing except the last seven minutes.
And yesterday I saw the story and read it a
little bit. I don't see anything he's doing or I
haven't seen that is directly a threat. Okay, Eddie, I'm
not going to steal all your money today.

Speaker 3 (51:28):
Cool.

Speaker 2 (51:29):
Don't feel threatened.

Speaker 1 (51:30):
Okay, thank you for telling me you're welcome. I'm not
going to kill you. I don't feel like I'm threatening
you with anything.

Speaker 2 (51:36):
Actually, feel good about the day.

Speaker 1 (51:37):
There you go, Yes, Amy.

Speaker 5 (51:38):
In one of the videos, he said, I know we've
said a lot, so if you said this, sorry, I've
been reading you never come across something like this. Willing
to die, hope that you'll choke me out, because that's
a dream come true.

Speaker 2 (51:51):
Again.

Speaker 5 (51:51):
But he's saying like you're gonna.

Speaker 2 (51:53):
You're going to hurt me Joe.

Speaker 1 (51:56):
Bang him or something.

Speaker 2 (51:58):
But again, not at threat.

Speaker 5 (52:00):
Okay.

Speaker 4 (52:00):
It says on here though, that it's not about so
making online threats can lead to an arrest. It's not
about whether the person making the threat is intended to
carry it out, but also about whether their threat is
perceived as credible and specific enough to cause fear.

Speaker 1 (52:14):
But the threat to me feels more like a challenge.
I understand it's creepy, and I think I would be
fearful too if I didn't have a bunch of security,
and Joe Rogan can have a bunch of security, or
Joe Rogan can kick his butt. I watch Joerogan kick
a heavy bag once kick a hole in person. Yeah so,
but yeah, I'm love with daddy. Like I feel like
you walked out line to where he's not really threatening

(52:36):
him from what I've seen, just kind of challenging him.
And there are no laws. You can't go to Austin
and hang out the four Seasons in the shower.

Speaker 3 (52:42):
I'm gonna I'm here for like I don't know. I
feel like if someone sent you a video on Instagram
said hey Bobby, I'm coming to Nashville and I'm gonna
find you.

Speaker 1 (52:51):
But he didn't say that. He challenged him, like if
you want to, I'll fight you. He didn't say I
will come to you regardless if you let me or not.
I will be there and I will punch you and
physically harmony.

Speaker 2 (53:01):
And he's not forcing his way to him. He's saying, like,
let's do this like when you're willing and ready.

Speaker 1 (53:07):
Also, it's creepy and weird, and yes it would scare me.
We're not We're not doing that. I'm just saying I
don't know how this based on what I've read, I
don't know how he actually has this charge held up.

Speaker 8 (53:16):
In one story, he also mentioned that Joe Rogan was
going to pay Okay, now, that's a.

Speaker 2 (53:20):
Threat for his whole video Holls his hotel room.

Speaker 8 (53:25):
Yes, and that was when he was mentioning that he
had guns his lunch.

Speaker 1 (53:29):
That's a threat.

Speaker 8 (53:30):
And then he took his entire family with of nain.

Speaker 5 (53:32):
Okay, see his kids too, he took his boys.

Speaker 8 (53:35):
I see his wife here.

Speaker 1 (53:36):
I don't know if his boys were there, if that
has ever said, and then he ends up going.

Speaker 8 (53:41):
The threats were so credible that the FBI was there
already waiting waiting for him.

Speaker 1 (53:46):
The FBI, I mean these are that means it wasn't
a threat. It was more of a challenge, like I'll
be there, I'll see that. If he said that stuff
for sure, And I'm sure there's tons stuff we're missing.

Speaker 2 (53:54):
Weird this firm was was presented. It didn't. I didn't
see the threat, but yeah, I'm sure.

Speaker 5 (53:59):
Well he's obviously mentally something's off a little bit, right,
so look at him, nothing is off, you know, it's
a little unpredictable.

Speaker 8 (54:10):
If I had to speculate after watching that documentary, I
think he's trying to obviously cling back to that fame. Yes,
because that documentary kind of spiked interest in him again,
and all this controversy that he went through like crushed
his business. So I think this is also like part
of him like doing a stunt, but probably taking it
too far.

Speaker 2 (54:26):
What are we learning about these kings? Tiger King, Liver.

Speaker 1 (54:30):
King, King of Germany, King of Mike, the Kingdom.

Speaker 2 (54:33):
That's you, it's your family. Yeah, but like all these
other kings, like.

Speaker 1 (54:37):
They're all self proclaimed though too right the real kings.
If you self proclaim yourself a king, it's probably coming
from a deep seated insecurity that you're making out for
many other ways to King James Lebron, I mean that's
the only other king he wasn't He didn't name himself.

Speaker 2 (54:58):
He did not himself.

Speaker 1 (55:01):
I wondered, did the Liver King name himself?

Speaker 5 (55:03):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (55:03):
I am the Liver King.

Speaker 4 (55:05):
If you were the king of something, what would you
be the king of?

Speaker 8 (55:08):
I think whenever he signed up with like a social
media consultant, they gave him the name Liver King.

Speaker 5 (55:12):
Yeah, because he definitely worked with a group to build
his brand and image. I mean he started to get
attention himself. But then yeah, once he signed on with
a influencer group, like they definitely molded. But they're in
the documunity. They talk about how he swore to us
up and down he had never touched steroids and they
believed him.

Speaker 3 (55:33):
Like they probably knew, they probably knew they were just
making money off of him.

Speaker 1 (55:37):
Yeah, well if you swore, Okay, Morgan, your story.

Speaker 4 (55:43):
Okay, So Taylor Switch was in Nashville last night.

Speaker 1 (55:45):
Yeah, story played. I think she had shaken off right
one song?

Speaker 4 (55:50):
Yeah, I love it for Kane Brown because Kane Brown
is the one who brought her out.

Speaker 5 (55:54):
He was performing for.

Speaker 4 (55:55):
Travis Kelsey's tight End University, which I don't really know
what that is, we can't, Okay, so camp, but also
that has concerts. I guess.

Speaker 1 (56:01):
I don't want to not credit George Kittle. George Kittle's universe,
it's here, Okay. So yes, there's a group of guys. Yes, Okay,
tight Ends from college in the NFL basically work out.
They work out at Vanderbilt and now it's become a
big thing where there are a lot of companies and
corporations and they do they raise money for charity.

Speaker 4 (56:20):
As well, do like other people pay to participate like
just normal people.

Speaker 1 (56:23):
No, you kind of have to get invited to be
a tight end. You have to be a tight end
or college players, but you have to you have to
play tight end. And it started as a group, a
way for them to just come together and like work
on their craft. Now it is you know, maybe your
three or four right, but yes, but yes, and now
they're doing the show.

Speaker 8 (56:44):
Okay.

Speaker 4 (56:44):
So, Kane Brown was doing a show here in Nashville
at Brooklyn Bowl and he started playing shake It Off
and then Taylor Swift came out and performed with him,
and everybody freaked out. But what was crazy was the
show actually wasn't sold out. I think you could get
tickets and I don't know why. I don't know what
it was like shown as But as soon as Taylor
so started popping up in Nashville like videos on social

(57:05):
media just that she's in.

Speaker 1 (57:06):
Nashville, the show sold out. She was at Aldans Bar
the night before she did the whole Broadway thing.

Speaker 5 (57:14):
But that was yeah, two nights.

Speaker 3 (57:15):
Yeah, I know, you just do it again that's what
you like to do.

Speaker 2 (57:20):
Okay, that's true that I have stories.

Speaker 1 (57:23):
Okay, Okay, yeah I did see that's cool. Yeah, and
it was.

Speaker 4 (57:25):
I was kind of shocked.

Speaker 1 (57:26):
She went to Aldans baro.

Speaker 2 (57:28):
She was packed and she wasn't like Vip section. She
was in the crowd.

Speaker 1 (57:33):
She no, she walked through the crowd to get there,
but she was vi palking.

Speaker 4 (57:38):
Have you been to that bar? You can the vi
p You are kind of associated.

Speaker 5 (57:42):
Still with the crowd.

Speaker 1 (57:43):
But that's Morgan's a king a Broadway.

Speaker 2 (57:47):
Hold on was one of your birthdays at Aldan's. Yes, Okay,
I've been there.

Speaker 1 (57:50):
She's the King of Broadway.

Speaker 5 (57:53):
Seven years ago.

Speaker 4 (57:55):
Basically Taylor sis An, I same level you know, Vip,
Jason Aldans, anybody.

Speaker 2 (57:59):
Have I already told you what I have? No, I
have a backup, I have a backup. Roseanne bar Yeah.
She came out on a podcast and said that she
had a baby when she was seventeen and had to give.

Speaker 1 (58:09):
Her up for adoption, which is she chose adoption. Yeah,
I mean there's something about words that you guys do.
Ay did not like the way you said no, it's
not no, it's not me.

Speaker 5 (58:22):
I'm saying it for other people listening that are like, oh,
it's yeah, Well, I guess the way to say it
just for is just they chose adoption. It just feels
better for people that were.

Speaker 2 (58:34):
Maybe no, totally, I get it. I think Roseanne and
the story says I gave her up for adoption.

Speaker 5 (58:39):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (58:40):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (58:40):
And the kid who's now an adult thought her mom
was somebody else, famous.

Speaker 2 (58:44):
Goldie Yea, because she thought she knew that her mom
was famous and in Hollywood. So the whole time, she's like,
wait a minute, it could be Goldie on like that.

Speaker 5 (58:54):
It's not funny.

Speaker 2 (58:56):
But they're they're they know each other, you know now,
and they're she's part of her life and everything. She's married,
she has kids. It's pretty cool, know the daughter. And
you're right, she's like in her fifties. Now people won't
get to be adult.

Speaker 1 (59:09):
It's weird. And the people that were adults doesn't now old.

Speaker 3 (59:14):
So does she look like Roseanne?

Speaker 2 (59:15):
There's no picture of her. I think she's kind of
keeping her.

Speaker 1 (59:18):
She kind of looks like a young hey, but she
also looks like she's like forty, right, Mike, like she's
an adult.

Speaker 2 (59:24):
So she looked like Goldiehan.

Speaker 1 (59:26):
No, she kind of looks kind of like Roseanne in
the face, like nose and mouth kind of.

Speaker 4 (59:32):
Yeah, isn't Goldiehn Kate Hudson's mom.

Speaker 1 (59:36):
Yes, So, okay you heard Kate doesn't sing.

Speaker 5 (59:39):
Yeah, it's good, really good.

Speaker 2 (59:40):
Really she can.

Speaker 1 (59:41):
Yeah, she's really good. She has no Tom Sandival he
can sing.

Speaker 4 (59:45):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (59:45):
That guy can say really good. All right, we're done.
Thank you, guys.

Speaker 2 (59:49):
We're out.

Speaker 1 (59:49):
We'll see tomorrow. Is there anything? What is today? Wednesday?
I'm good. All right, we'll see you guys tomorrow. Have
a great thanks to all the part to her, thanks
for listening to the podcast. We'll see you Guys Tomorrow
by Buddy
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Bobby Bones

Bobby Bones

Amy Brown

Amy Brown

Lunchbox

Lunchbox

Eddie Garcia

Eddie Garcia

Morgan Huelsman

Morgan Huelsman

Raymundo

Raymundo

Mike D

Mike D

Abby Anderson

Abby Anderson

Scuba Steve

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