Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Wake Up, Wake up in the morn and.
Speaker 2 (00:05):
It's a radio and the Dodgers already Lunchbox more game too,
Steve Bread, and it's trying to put you through bog
He's running this week's next bit. The Bobby's on the box,
so you know what this is, the Bobby ball. Now,
(00:29):
Amy's Morning Corny, The Morning Corny.
Speaker 3 (00:36):
What's pink pinks and shoots arrows on Valentine's Day?
Speaker 2 (00:39):
What's pink pinks and shoots arrows on Valentine's Day? Pig?
That was the Morning Corny. That's pretty good. We have
to make Lunchbox leave the room just for a few minutes,
and he's gonna come right back in during this same segment.
This is a bit of a scieness experiment. Make sure
(01:01):
he can't hear out there, my guys, yes you miss me.
Just set him in my office. It'll be two three minutes, Max,
Lunchboxes walking out of the studio. I need a thumbs
up whenever he cannot here. Okay, they're walking out to
make sure that he can't hear looking at the guys.
(01:22):
They're putting Lunchbox in a controlled environment. He being stubborn
or and now I have a thumbs out, okay, Like
I'm gonna bring him in. And then there's this bit
that he sent and I don't know if he's bitfishing
where he believes it or if he's just like playing
a character to get a bit on the air. Okay, okay,
(01:45):
because he is outrageous and he does say stuff and
he means it most of the time. But sometimes I
think he can't be this dumb. I think he's playing.
I think he so we're gonna bring him in. He's
just gonna do this segment. I don't think he's this dumb,
but there's a chance. I just want you guys, so.
Speaker 3 (02:07):
When he's what do we do when he starts doing it?
Speaker 2 (02:10):
Just let him do the segment? Is what I just
want you guys to think about. Is do you think
he's don't make the know don't Is he being for
real or is he just creating this bit because he
wants to get something on the air.
Speaker 4 (02:26):
Is he this?
Speaker 2 (02:28):
Okay? All right? Bring him in. He doesn't know what's
going on. Obviously, he thinks we're playing a game or something.
So okay, Lunchbox is coming back in the studio. He's
also gonna act kind of weird because he doesn't know
what we're doing. He's gonna come and be like, Eh,
let's let's clap for him. Make HI feel like there
(02:50):
he is. Okay, you're back. Claps. That wasn't fake. I
don't know what's going on. No, there's no reason to
know what's going on. You'll find out later. Not so
much now, but you'll find out later. So Lunchbox is
a low irritated at Scuba Steve, maybe not even irritated
about his email.
Speaker 5 (03:07):
Oh yeah, he needs to be more professional, Like he's
the executive producer of our show, and like when he's
not in the when he's not here, he has this message.
Speaker 2 (03:16):
It's like, eh, I'm on vacation, like I emailed him
about something. It's an out of office reply, just so
everybody knows. Yeah, aka, so it's an out office reply. Yes, responsible, Yeah,
So what I say again? He said, ooh, I won't
be back till monday.
Speaker 5 (03:31):
I live you, I'm out of town.
Speaker 2 (03:35):
In people's face, like, why don't you say it? Can
you have the do you have the exact thing? Can
you read it verbatim? Yeah? You know what? I did
see this email lunch and I was like wow, man,
who knew you were going on vacation? Why are you
rubbing it in my face? Man, I don't think it
was vacation. I think he had a scooba took a
personal day off. So it said.
Speaker 5 (03:54):
Until monday. There might be a delay in my response.
I will get back to you as soon as I can.
If there's an emergency, please text me.
Speaker 4 (04:01):
Thank you.
Speaker 2 (04:02):
And I'm like, who writes that? Who writes it?
Speaker 6 (04:05):
Wait?
Speaker 2 (04:06):
Hold on? So it's.
Speaker 3 (04:09):
You say?
Speaker 7 (04:12):
I would go, oh, multiple multiple stop everybody stop? Everybody
stopped because.
Speaker 3 (04:22):
You got because I would be like, oh you want.
Speaker 2 (04:27):
Like everybody crazy? Is everybody?
Speaker 3 (04:30):
Bobby? You're okay?
Speaker 2 (04:33):
You were convincing me. Okay, thank you, thank you, thank you,
thank you. You're selling. Oh so you thought that that
was as blubbing it in. But if I just want
that to you, what if he had said it were
if you emailed him you just got, I'd.
Speaker 5 (04:49):
Be like, okay, why I don't need to be mean
about it. I just tell me that you're not gonna
reply till monday.
Speaker 2 (04:54):
I don't know why. I like, my email is gross written.
You're to right?
Speaker 5 (05:00):
Well, I made to put more o's too. I mean,
if you want to really rub it in and put
a lot of o's. But I got it, and I
was just like, Okay, I don't know why you'd write
that for a weekend, but okay, cool and how do
you how do you write?
Speaker 2 (05:12):
Oh? Oh oh, okay, would you mind hopping out of
the room for one second, good man, just real quick,
real quick science experiment. Okay, let me know whenever he
is clear. Okay, he think he's going back to my office. Guys,
I have to find another word, dude. Oh oh oh,
I mean everybody, we all know this right out of
office and out of office reply. Is there any chance
(05:36):
that's what I'm saying? Is he is he doing a
bit on us? Ooh? Or does he really think that
that's what Scuba Steve was saying in the email?
Speaker 3 (05:45):
I think that's what he really thinks.
Speaker 2 (05:48):
He thought.
Speaker 3 (05:49):
He doesn't know. He does not know any version of
shortened words.
Speaker 2 (05:53):
You think it's ooh?
Speaker 3 (05:56):
He knows like he.
Speaker 4 (06:00):
F y.
Speaker 2 (06:01):
I here's what we're gonna do. Can we prepare a
an acronym game. We're gonna run this by lunchbox later
and then in the middle of it, we're just gonna
go I'll do like yeah, p s A F Y
M V P oh oh oh do the A K
y what you know? But I'm gonna throw I'm gonna
(06:22):
throw oh oh oh oh in there and see if
he gets that. So the question is, do you think
he's full of crap and just bitfishing here because he
wants to get a bit on the air, or he
is ignorant as to what oh oh oh means? Which
is it? No, No, he's an adult man who's been
(06:44):
working in the office forever. It even says out. It
even says out of office like it's on the thing
is this discuss out of office reply until Monday, until
Monday and then says oh.
Speaker 3 (06:58):
Together. I don't think he's ever even used that though,
Like he's never put an out of office on or anything.
So I don't think he's putting two and two together,
neither of I I've never put that, have y'all?
Speaker 5 (07:06):
No?
Speaker 2 (07:06):
Never, No, But it does say on top of it
says in small like officials says out of office reply. Okay,
we're gonna do the game with him. We'll do it
next segment or something. Okay, But what's your vote? Is he.
Speaker 3 (07:23):
I still word ignorant? Ignorant because you've said before, like
if you don't know something, you haven't learned it yet,
you can't judge somebody.
Speaker 2 (07:30):
He worked in office though for twenty five years, right,
but not everyone uses it. And he thinks he's gonna
go ooh, okay, okay, we will do that bit coming up.
We'll bring we'll bring it now. We'll play the song,
but we'll bring him in during the song. But don't
say anything about it. I got it all right. We
have a game here. We're gonna play. Name the acronym Amy.
Speaker 3 (07:53):
If I said a I Artificial intelligence, correct lunchbox.
Speaker 2 (07:59):
If I say CEO, oh that's a chief executive officer,
correct Amy.
Speaker 3 (08:08):
If I said FBI Federal Bureau of Investigations investigation you.
Speaker 2 (08:17):
Lunchbox, I r S Internal Revenue Service, good, Amy, This
is tougher CPR. Can you get down?
Speaker 3 (08:30):
Uh?
Speaker 2 (08:31):
What's crazy is it's it's a little unfair, but go ahead.
Speaker 3 (08:34):
Cardio pulmonary respiratory or.
Speaker 2 (08:43):
CPR. It feels like it'd be three words, but yeah,
cardio pulmonary resuscitation. Lunchbox g P A grade point average,
Amy A S A P is it as possible? Good? Lunchbox?
D I Y do it? Yourself correct, Amy l O
(09:04):
L correct. Look at this lunchbox. Oh oh oh oh
oh oh m hmmm, uh.
Speaker 8 (09:21):
Oh oh oh officer open, officer open. That's not an
audition original five seconds? Oh oh uh no original operating.
Speaker 2 (09:47):
Owner incorrect? Uh oh is out of office? Oh I
get it. I get it. Okay, I get it. Never mind,
it just clicked. I get it. Ok What do you get?
What do you get? So it's not so? Oh gosh,
(10:13):
go ahead. So Scuba's thing when you emailed him and
you got a reply, you thought it said EW, and
now it's out of office reply out of office? Oh
three an hour of office? Oh my gosh. Okay, all right,
(10:36):
well maybe he was being professional, I thought so read
his entire message to you as you read it, because
you you send him an email.
Speaker 5 (10:45):
Yes, and I got a reply said EW until monday.
There might be a delay in my response. I will
get back to you as soon as I can. If
it's an emergency, please text me.
Speaker 2 (10:55):
Thank you. And I was just you're offended at the EW, like,
oh you're actually at work, Like what are you doing?
Why are you emailing me over the weekend? Don't do that?
So oh oh oh, now you realize is out of office?
Why not just write that? Why write why no one knows? Yeah? Yeah,
(11:17):
oh but why write g P A when it's great
point average? Why write any of the no one knows?
What is? Every one of us did. And the question
when you left the room earlier was, first of all,
do we know what O means? Yes? I told them situation,
and we said, were you bitfishing just looking for a
bit to get on the air, or did you really
not know? I've never seen that before in my life.
(11:39):
Above it like on the email that says out of
office reply and very small like there's a reply that
comes with it. That's okay, I don't even know how
to read. I don't Yeah, it's all good. So now, guys,
do we think he didn't know or he was committing
just committed to the bit because I didn't even know
he was gonna be he was what out of office?
(12:01):
What do you say I didn't know he was out
of office? Let's go to the judges.
Speaker 3 (12:05):
This is hard, I know, I mean, he's either fully committed,
but I guess I'll just go give him this one.
He doesn't know, you'll give him, give him that he's ignorant. On.
Oh oh oh, but now he knows I've.
Speaker 2 (12:20):
Never had someone reply to me oh oh before never
in my life, Eddie. I mean not everyone does reply. Oho.
So I'm saying that he had no clue. Bones, he's ignorant.
I'm gonna go now. I'm convinced he didn't know. I
did not know, Morgan. How do you feel?
Speaker 3 (12:37):
Oh? Yeah, he didn't know. There's too many times he's
been like this before where he doesn't know things.
Speaker 2 (12:42):
He's not above bitfishing yet. No, right, right, gosh, I'm
feeling an idiot. That was the experiment? Is that standard
office like tall? As soon as I saw it, I
knew exactly what it was, but we did. If it
bounces back immediately, it's an out of office reply and
his was out of office? Doesn't matter, got it? Just
(13:02):
not even your dumb if you don't know what it is.
We didn't know. If you were just messing with us
to get a segment on the air, No, I mean
I really hadn't you have it? Do you feel dumb?
I feel pretty dumb.
Speaker 9 (13:13):
He's looking through his email again, trying to under I'm
the one.
Speaker 2 (13:17):
That I like the inbox.
Speaker 3 (13:19):
I'm like, well, don't feel dumb, feel educated.
Speaker 2 (13:22):
Oh yeah, yeah, now now you know the more you
know weird melody to that. Okay. I watched a press
conference yesterday and represented Luna from Florida will lead a
new task force focused on the deep classification of federal secrets,
including records related to the assassination of John F. Kennedy,
(13:46):
Senator Robert F. Kennedy, doctor Martin Luther King Junior nine
to eleven COVID. And they continue to walk through a
lot of the stuff, wow, that has been classified hidden
or their conspiracies around UAPs and usos. You know what
UAP was new to us, which is the aerial phenomenon USO.
(14:07):
They've now added that you know what that is underwater
because so many of these things are underwater. They just
throw that out. They're like, we know what that means already. WHOA.
I want to play you a clip of Representative Luna
talking about this yesterday.
Speaker 3 (14:19):
We'll be conducting investigations into the following the.
Speaker 1 (14:21):
Assassinations of JFK RFK and doctor Martin Luther King. Unidentified
aerial phenomena also known as UAPs, Identified submerged objects also
known as usos, the Epstein client List, the origins of
COVID nineteen and the nine to eleven files.
Speaker 4 (14:37):
Wow.
Speaker 2 (14:37):
So to someone like me who I'm not a conspiracy guy,
I'm fascinated with conspiracies that end up being true. Most don't,
the occasional one does, and I think what social media
conspiracies can run wild. But there's just been too much
on the JFK, too many documentaries. Yesterday, somebody very prominent
(15:01):
mentioned that they were probably two shooters, really okay, and
which is the first time anybody had And again they
haven't released the files yet. The only thing that the
president had signed was we're going to release them. So
it has to go to somebody first who has to
look and then go, okay, we now released them. So
this is to me, I'm a I'm not even fully
(15:25):
believing it's going to be accurate. Though, here's what I
need from them, because we have to have full transparency.
If you're gonna act transparent, there has to be full transparency,
or don't act transparent at all, because you can't come
out and go, we're doing this and you get to
see it all. You can't give us a butt because
that is that where conspiracies grow live breed. So I'm
(15:47):
gonna need no reactions. If you're going to release it,
release it no reactions and release all of it, or don't,
because we're not losing anything by not getting them right.
If they don't release the JFK files, we're not being
withheld of food and water or oxygen. Nothing is taken
away from us. So release it no redactions. That's number one.
(16:11):
Number two, I'm going to need a bipartisan release. I'm
going to need somebody from both sides basically together holding
a file. I just need this to be the theater
of it to go. We together release this because depending
on the party, they can protect their own party, which
(16:32):
isn't full transparency. So I'm going to need it to
be bipartisan, and I'm going to need both sides to
have to take some shots, because if one side releases
it and it's all the other side taken all the shots,
I'm like, this is not true. You're protecting people in
your own party. That's why I need it to be bipartisan,
(16:52):
and I need somebody at the top of both sides
to go, we both sign off that this is legit.
If that happens, dude, this is better than seven Season
two coming out.
Speaker 3 (17:02):
Yeah, like how do they can they deliver us all
the information in the well digestible way.
Speaker 2 (17:08):
My third one was I need it to be there.
Needs to be like an explain like I'm five, Yeah,
like or like the keeen days version of the Bible
for idiots, you know, when you can read it and
it's written like people talk today.
Speaker 3 (17:18):
Jesus said, yeah, Jesus pulled up Yes, great little you
know cartoon or documentary that you can just break it
all down for us. So so you need everything. You
need the whole shebang, You need the whole donut.
Speaker 2 (17:33):
If they're saying they're going to be transparent, I don't
think it's too much to ask for full transparency. And
with that, because everything is so partisan, I need it
to be bipartisan or I'm not going to believe it,
especially when it comes to things like the Epstein client
list COVID, I need it. I need both people to
(17:54):
be taking shots.
Speaker 3 (17:56):
Yeah, we need that Epstein list.
Speaker 2 (17:58):
I don't need you to be protecting anybody. If you're
going to release it, you need to release it. So
aside from like the Epstein and the COVID stuff, which
is new, the nine to eleven files which I'm sure
there are things that we don't know.
Speaker 3 (18:16):
Yeah, but one way or the other, are there things
that maybe we yes don't need to know?
Speaker 2 (18:22):
Well, that's always tricky, right, Like when we've talked about this,
there are examples of our government doing things to us
in order to get sympathy from us so we can
attack other people. Remember talking about this. I'm not saying
this is what happened, but this is These are decisions
that they make that you're like, is this the best
(18:42):
interest or is this bad? And this could be with
any of this stuff. But like the Gulf of Tonkin incident,
where an alleged attack on US naval ships led to
escalated involvement in the Vietnam War, documents suggested because they
were classified, they became declassified that the second attack didn't
not happen as initially reported, which was they hit us
(19:03):
and that wasn't true. Looks like we did it to
ourselves in order to have a reason to go attack.
Another one was nineteen sixty two Operation North Woods. It
was proposed by the US Department of Defense to stage
attacks on American soil and blame them on Cuba to
justify an invasion into Cuba. However, it was never approved
by President Kennedy. And why I say this was this
(19:25):
is also one of the theories as to why maybe
he was shot because they took it to him and
said we want to do this, we want to attack
ourselves and say it was that. So your question is valid.
It's as parents, you could take this down to a
microcops and other things that you're doing that. You don't
(19:46):
need your kids to know why you do it, but
it's better for them overall, so you're going.
Speaker 9 (19:49):
To do it.
Speaker 5 (19:50):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (19:50):
It just makes me think of watching Liones because we
all watched that recently and some of the conversations that
are happening in the board rooms where it's like on
the news it's one thing, and the behind the scene
it's like, Okay, this is what America needs to know.
They don't need to know this part end of story.
Speaker 2 (20:04):
And yes, and that doesn't mean that those people are right.
They're having to make decisions based on the basically the
corporation that they're running. It is America.
Speaker 3 (20:12):
I know that's a TV show, but it stuff like
that happens.
Speaker 2 (20:16):
But when it comes to National security CIA, if they're
going to be transparent. I want full transparency. If not,
don't tease us, just don't tell We're good. Yeah, like
we're not missing anything by not getting this stuff, right,
I didn't tell us anyway. Normal Americans who are going
to work every single day are not missing anything by
not getting these files.
Speaker 3 (20:35):
I would like to know the Epstein names.
Speaker 2 (20:37):
So I would like to know the JFK stuff. That's
mine too, Yeah, why.
Speaker 3 (20:40):
I just want people to be held accountable if they
were a part of any of that. But I think
that's for all of this from But do you think
with JFK lick some people are dead? I think a
lot probably will. But I mean think about Martin Luther King.
Oh well, yeah that too.
Speaker 2 (20:56):
I mean so many, so many stories of the CIA
monitoring him the whole time. And that goes with other
people too, like John Lennon because of anti anti war
ideas and a war by the way, which it turns
out probably shouldn't have been in because we didn't win,
which is Vietnam War according to historians. I wasn't alive,
but just reading about it. So I want full transparency
(21:18):
or nothing. I want no redactions, and I want both
sides to take a lot of shots. Otherwise I'm just
not gonna believe it. I needed to be about bipartisan.
Let's go. It's exciting aliens that's not even.
Speaker 3 (21:34):
Unidentified submerged merged.
Speaker 2 (21:36):
Objects because so many of them are in the water.
Speaker 3 (21:40):
So many of them.
Speaker 2 (21:41):
Yeah, so many of the things that they say that
they can't figure out what they are are under the water,
whatever them is, if it's Russia or an unknown or
they're underwater. So yeah, that's what's up. And by the way,
season two is not even that of Severance. We're three
(22:03):
episodes in. You that season one's one of the greatest
television serieses I've ever seen in my life. I loved it.
I was moved by it.
Speaker 3 (22:10):
Wow.
Speaker 2 (22:11):
Season two, I think they realized how popular they got
and people were like, Wow, this show's really smart. And
now they've tried to outsmart and like be cool it.
We're watching it and we're like, did it just go
over our heads completely? So yeah, we're not.
Speaker 3 (22:27):
We're the Jumpingship.
Speaker 2 (22:29):
It's like the dumbest show Night Agent and like the
show that's way too smart, Severance, We're just lost in
between the floor and the ceiling. That's what's up. Was
excited about that, we can probably hopefully get the real
news what's happening here? All right, that's what's up. You
guys can call us if you want. Eight seven seven
seventy seven, Bobby eight seven seven seventy seven b oh
(22:52):
b B. Why schools are banning crocs all across the
country because they're a safety hazard. Dozens of schools in
at least twenty states across the US have banned crocs
because students are more likely to struggle to walk when
wearing the shoes and could be deadly in an emergency.
Amy thoughts deadly in an emergency, like if you got
to run there's a fire, okay, or a school shooting,
(23:14):
which probably happens more than fires, honestly, which sucks.
Speaker 3 (23:17):
I mean, I don't know. I feel like I could
maneuver well in crocs, but I guess maybe kids are
having issues.
Speaker 2 (23:23):
I can't maneuver well in crocs. What I like? Like bosoop?
Speaker 3 (23:27):
Okay, Well, I guess it's probably been a minute since
I wore them. But kids are going to be so disappointed.
So many of them wear crocs all the time.
Speaker 2 (23:35):
I like wearing crocs, but man, are they ugly?
Speaker 3 (23:38):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (23:38):
And you have to think the croc people are like,
we're gonna make this gonna be a couple of shoes.
There's no chance. Oh my god, this thing's catching it.
They got to be like blown away.
Speaker 3 (23:46):
Oh you know what I remember, like in the pile.
Not too long ago, we had like a doctor. I
told a story about a doctor that was saying kit
should no longer wear crocs because they're a hazard. Like
even the little holes could get caught in something like
while they're walking and make So. I mean, I guess
there is something to it, but I mean, gosh, that's
sad that you have to be prepared for emergency at school.
New York Post with that story, Well, yeah, I know,
(24:07):
you just be able to go to school, and now
we have to be prepared to run.
Speaker 2 (24:10):
Yeah, but that's been like last twenty years, not even
about crocs, you know. Next up, Dominoes is launching a
Pepperoni Inspire perfume for Valentine's Day. You know what, Most
of these are done, they're you know, just for news
fun pr I don't think i'd mind this one of
all the weird ones. I think that would smell interesting. No,
it wouldn't smell pretty, But I think that'd be fun.
(24:34):
I don't think that'usd be perfume. I think guys can
wear it too. Unisex. I think peperonizza is unisex. Yeah,
I'll say it is the guy who brings a purse
to work every day, I'll say it. This perfume is unisex.
I would like to smell it. Can we see if
we can get some of this scoop Steve? Yeah, who's
making it? Dominoes is launching a Pepperoni Inspire perfume for
Valentine's Day? All right, see if we can find it.
(24:54):
That's from ABC seven. Widespread outbreaks of diseases like measles
and polio starting to re emerge. What year, Well, it's
because now the people aren't wanted to do vaccines at all.
Oh wow, so it's bringing back these diseases. But like
back in the day, those were just normal vaccines. Like
you go to school and like, all right, put it
(25:15):
in my arm. Health officials in western texts are trying
to contain a measles outbreak among mostly school aged children,
with at least fifteen confirmed cases. This is the bad
thing when politics gets involved in medicine. When science and
politics start mixing this polio. Polio that's like when our
parents were young and great grandparents. It's the latest outbreak
(25:40):
of a disease. It's been virtually eliminated in the US
as vaccination rates are declining, jeopardizing the country's heard immunity
from widespread outbreaks polio. That doesn't feel That feels like
horsing and buggy. That disease. Okay, I think of being
in a wheelchair. Yeah, people that couldn't walk. That's from
CBS News. Next up, an ice cream craving leads to
(26:03):
a one million dollar lottery prize. Lunchbox Listen up, Kentucky
one went out to get some ice cream at Airy
cooin ended up warning a million bucks. The player told
Kentucky Lottery official she had a hanker in for a blizzard. Hey,
who doesn't a good blazz And while on her way
to the eatey, she stopped at the Mount Sterling Shell
station to buy a Kentucky Jackpot scratch off. She scratched
(26:24):
twenty bucks and won a million dollars. Twenty dollars. I
have been playing tickets every day since the beginning of
the year, and I am probably playing fifty dollars tickets
every day. I'm probably down about one hundred bucks. Now,
what's been your biggest price? Two hundred that's pretty good,
maybe two fifty one day, whatever was was on the air.
But I'm not quitting until I hit a thousand or
(26:47):
go broke or the year ends.
Speaker 3 (26:49):
That's crazy, you're only down one hundred.
Speaker 4 (26:51):
I know.
Speaker 2 (26:51):
I've had some pretty good scratches so far, pretty satisfying scratches,
like when you get to that one spot in your
back with your hand that you just get there. It's
been pretty satisfying so far. He wants to buy a landfill.
Why well, is hard drive with bitcoin that he can't
find is somewhere in the landfill. And so they were like, hey,
you can't be here and do this because he's like
(27:12):
searching for it, and he's like find out, just buy
the landfill. The bitcoin is now worth about six hundred
twenty million dollars.
Speaker 3 (27:20):
It's an investment, Like, how is this possible?
Speaker 2 (27:24):
He accidentally threw out a hard drive with eight thousand
bitcoin a bitcoin I haven't looked this morning. They're like
like one hundred thousand of coin. It's like ninety five
thousand yesterday a coin but he has eight thousand bitcoin
on it, wants to buy the landfill where it's ended up.
It may be gone forever, but they don't want him
there anymore. They don't want people there looking for it
because it's become a thing. You find it. So he
(27:45):
wants to just buy the whole landfill. And there's no
guarantee really that the hard drive will still work if
you find it. There's no guarantee on anything, but to him,
if he could buy it for a million bucks, that
is worth that investment. The government's going to stop making
new pennies. We saw this on Super Night, and so
for every penny tastes like two to make. Did you
know nickels it costs more to make a nickel than
(28:06):
even a nickel like this has been any thing for
a while. Yeah, experts say we'd have to make more nickels,
but nickels also are losing money. So it costs more
money to make a nickel than nickels. Worth is that
because nickels just expensive, like the well, it's bigger and thicker.
So I don't know, I don't know coppers penny and
(28:28):
you don't know if it's coppers cheaper or if the
penny is less copper than the nickel is made of.
Speaker 3 (28:33):
So should we start collecting some pennies and saving them later?
Speaker 2 (28:37):
No, No, there's so many. Nicholson made a seventy five
percent copper have your mind blown? And twenty five percent nickel.
So analysts say this will cause prices to rise for consumers.
If the penny is phased out, prices would be just
rounded up a five cent amount, and you know they're
gonna round up more than that. You give any of
(28:58):
these businesses an opportunity, do you get us for anything?
But Canada did this. They stopped doing one cent in
twenty twelve, but then they found out that the Canadians
paid about three dollars and twenty seven cents more every
So it's a situation. But yeah, it doesn't make sense.
I guess it does make sense. My brain just doesn't
(29:19):
know why it makes sense to spend two cents to
make one or seven cents to make five. I saw
an article where that was the play on words just
doesn't make sense? And then why didn't even mean that?
Speaker 4 (29:29):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (29:29):
I know, I was just to my little brain. I
just didn't get it. Amy I was thinking about the
news story we're talking about a minute ago where she
goes up and she's like, we're gonna release and have
a department about all these these files. JFK. Martin Luther King,
we talked about the Epstein List, and you mentioned the
Epstein List a couple of times. Why for you is
that so interesting?
Speaker 4 (29:51):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (29:51):
Well, because I just listened to all the podcasts and
watched all the documentaries, and it just made me curious
about all the different ways it was cover up for
so long, and like who powerful is involved? And I
just it's disgusting to think that some of these people
that we think that we trust, that are in charge
of so many things and making so many decisions, could
also be doing such terrible things to young women.
Speaker 2 (30:17):
To me, obviously, that is a terrible part of it.
I wonder who was controlling Epstein Cia Masad Like he
was obviously something. Yeah, he was obviously being used by
something of power to get other powerful people and then
have information on them by That's that's the only reason
he can one be known to be doing this. Have
(30:39):
all this money, they can't figureut where the money's from,
and then the prison guards are gone, the cameras aren't working,
when he's killed.
Speaker 3 (30:47):
It's just disturbing.
Speaker 2 (30:49):
So you know, one of the theories is, you know,
he was an asset of could be CIA, could be Massad,
could be any of those groups. And so like tell
us you think his death would be part of the
reveal or whatever they the documents? If full transparency, how
(31:09):
high does it go? Like that's you know, as absolute
high as it possibly could.
Speaker 3 (31:17):
Yeah, it's like presidents.
Speaker 2 (31:20):
Many probably see of other countries. The prince, Prince Andrew
like it was like his boy.
Speaker 3 (31:28):
Well yeah, I mean that stuffs already out there. Who
are the people that like, why did he get murdered?
Speaker 2 (31:34):
That's who that's because if he's in, if he's working
for a group, that's again just a theory. As a
CIA and any of these groups, they obviously have the
power to get in and going as well. So I think,
you know, the press conference is all cool and stuff.
There's I don't think there's anyway they could release everything.
And if they don't release everything, I'm not going to
(31:54):
believe anything.
Speaker 3 (31:55):
Yeah, but they probably heard your demands this morning, so.
Speaker 2 (31:57):
Maybe yeah, But mostly I need to explain like a
five or so, I'm not going to understand a lot
of it when it comes.
Speaker 3 (32:02):
They're going to be in a meeting. They were like, well,
Bobby Bones has three play it back.
Speaker 2 (32:07):
Let's hear about here what he has to say. Okay,
that's the news. Thank you for Bobby's I want to
go over to Jill and Saint Louis who's on the phone.
Hey Jill, Hi, how are you doing pretty good? What
can I do for you?
Speaker 3 (32:23):
So?
Speaker 9 (32:23):
I was listening yesterday and I have kind of had
a question for you first, Bobby, and I was just curious.
I've had stomach issues my whole life, and I was
wondering if you have ever been tested for Celiac's disease.
Speaker 2 (32:36):
I have, because that was a popular theory to maybe
this is what it is. Much like you're saying here,
I don't know if you have it, but doctor was like,
we should check this out because your symptoms are with
that tested with that. I've had the colon Oskby and Oscarby,
We've done the tubes, done the blood work. I mean, yeah,
(32:56):
it kind of boiled down to with you know, like
an ib sing. But then it's like why do you
have it? And it was like, maybe you just have
so much stress? But then possibly I have scar tissue
now that we've kind of learned about in my stomach
that's pushing all my organs from my surgery. So who knows.
I quit, I don't. I don't eat anymore. I give
(33:17):
up gosh, yeah, all liquid diet. Yes, I appreciate you
asking about that. Do you have sea leg disease?
Speaker 9 (33:23):
Yeah, I was diagnosed about twelve years ago. And I
don't know what even if you've just tried to eat
gluten free, because that is even just I mean, I've
heard people who have had stomach issues before and that
even just trying to eat gluten free is help them.
Speaker 2 (33:37):
Yeah, and I do for the most part, even though
again I've been tested specifically and gluten that really doesn't
affect me. I don't have a gluten allergy. But i'd
eat mostly gluten free anyway because my wife eats mostly
gluten free. Otherwise I would just literally eat handfuls of gluten,
even though I mean know what that is. And now
(33:57):
I don't really eat cheese, which sucks. I have to
avoid cheese. I love cheese. I avoid cheese just trying
to figure it out. But I got all these microplastics
in my brain anyway, So we all, Yeah, it's all
going to be over soon enough. What was your other question, Jill, So,
it's more of.
Speaker 9 (34:14):
A just telling you guys a little bit of a
story for Amy.
Speaker 2 (34:16):
So.
Speaker 9 (34:16):
I was listening yesterday and I heard you lost a
bet to read Fourth Wing. I don't really think that's
any sort of punishment because Fourth Wing series is amazing.
But I just want to let you guys know there's
like a huge I don't know how much you know
about it, U fanfare behind that Fourth Wing series. I
just went to an event with Rebecca Yaros and there
(34:38):
was over sixteen hundred people there. People were dressing in cosplay.
They were dressing up as dragons, different characters.
Speaker 3 (34:45):
From the book.
Speaker 9 (34:46):
They had like a bracelet making station and we handed
out bracelets. They were doing temporary dragon tattoos. There was
a photo booth. I mean we had to wait. We
were in a waiting room for over four hours just
to get tickets, and my friend Brittany was able to
secure them. I did not get any, but yeah, it's
it's like a huge thing behind her book. The question
(35:07):
and answer was actually about her third book that just
got released, sixth.
Speaker 3 (35:12):
Wing no ONYX something. Yeah, some of my friends are Yeah,
some of my friends are already on Onyx Storm.
Speaker 2 (35:19):
And the punishment, just so we can be clear, was
not because we thought the book was bad.
Speaker 3 (35:23):
It was so long and five hundred pages, and what
I thought would be funny is obviously if it landed
on Bobby Lunchbox, are Eddie because them reading a like
a romanticy would be hilarious.
Speaker 2 (35:36):
Yeah, yeah, I bet it's great. It's like I've never
watched the Prano. I was absolutely believe there's a reason
to watch it, and it's probably really great, right this book,
I'm sure because of the amount of success that it has.
I'm sure it's it's great. That's a wonderful story.
Speaker 3 (35:50):
I was at the Harrison the other day and a
listener came up and was like, oh my gosh, you
have to read Fourth Wing. And so she was really
kind of come say hi, but you said she said
Fourth Wing. And it's like something just went off at
a domino fell throughout the salon because someone turned around
I'm reading it too, and someone said, oh, I just
finished it, and it's like everybody there had read it.
Speaker 2 (36:10):
So I was like, okay, have you started? Yeah, what
are you in?
Speaker 3 (36:14):
Probably close to chapter ten maybe.
Speaker 2 (36:18):
On how many pages on the big words me neither.
I have pictures. I'd have to.
Speaker 3 (36:22):
I just know where I am. It's probably like that.
Speaker 2 (36:26):
But that book is this fat. Yeah, it's pretty fat book.
Yeah yeah, yeah. Thirty nine chapters overall, so you're about
a quarter the way through. That's pretty good. Good job,
that's heavy.
Speaker 3 (36:34):
That's a quick real no, I feel my I mean,
most of my friends have already read it, so I'm
trying to catch them because they're on the third book.
Speaker 2 (36:41):
In chapter twenty two, there's a steamy kiss, but I
don't spoil it.
Speaker 3 (36:44):
I don't know. I haven't gotten to anything steamy at all.
Speaker 2 (36:48):
Nothing and one explicit scene of dragon. I'm just kidding. Jill.
Thank you for the call. We really appreciate you listening.
I hope you have a great day.
Speaker 3 (36:57):
You two.
Speaker 2 (36:57):
Thank you, by bye bye, Bobby up today.
Speaker 5 (37:02):
This story comes us from Nashville, Tennessee. Amen needed a
ride to the bank and he didn't have a car,
so he calls an uber says, hey, I'm going to
the credit union, says wait for me out here. I'll
be right back, goes inside, produces a note says this
is a robbery, give me all the big bills, runs out,
jumps in the Uber. Well, they were able to get
(37:23):
the license weight from the camera and they tracked him
down pretty easily the uber.
Speaker 2 (37:27):
He was still in the uber. Well, no, no, the
uber had dropped him off back at home. But they
probably went home. He did get dropped off back at home.
Speaker 5 (37:33):
Yeah, yeah, but they tracked down the uber driver like, no,
I'm just an uber And so they went and said,
what account ordered this? And they went to the guy's house, got.
Speaker 3 (37:39):
Them easy peasy.
Speaker 2 (37:41):
Well, I can't believe he went home. Obviously, you go
somewhere else. You get dropped off with all your bank money.
Speaker 3 (37:45):
And you use somebody else's Uber account, Well.
Speaker 2 (37:48):
That may yeah, that may have been tougher. But yes,
Amy DC the stories I see him on TikTok where
and they were happening here in town. I don't know
if I believe it. I'm not saying I don't believe it.
But the girl was like I was in the backs
even Uber and this guy opened up like his middle
compartment and this gas came up and I started to
fowl woozy, and so I had him stop and I
(38:10):
jumped out of the car and I'm not saying it
didn't happen, But who's got like a gas compartment in
the middle of their uber that they can release? Like
I don't, I don't even know what gas knocks you out.
Speaker 3 (38:20):
Chloroform, Yes, that's what they say that it was. And yeah,
I don't remember which carrier. I think there's just warnings
going around that any ride share app or if you're
getting into the car, even if it's a taxi, you
don't know the person, so you need to be on guard.
So like, don't be distracted with headphones, looking down at
your phone, not paying attention. They were advising maybe even
(38:42):
call a friend when you get in, so that way
it's where you're talking to someone, they know where you are.
Speaker 2 (38:46):
And if you've seen all that I get out, all
that I get, no, no, all that I get. I
think that's great. You should do that when you don't
know who you're with. I'm talking specifically about gas coming
from the middle of the middle section I know, and
that I think history of the world. That uber driver,
again not saying that it hasn't has opened up an
apartment and chloroform floats in the air and knock somebody
out is that even possible.
Speaker 3 (39:07):
I do think it's possible. Yes, I don't know how
the driver avoids also getting, you know, impacted by all.
Speaker 2 (39:17):
They also say the one I saw he put on
a mask at first and then he opened it up.
But I'm thinking to myself, if you have the money
to build like a chreform department in the middle of
your car, like shit, well I guess you're only ubering
then to abduct people. You're not ubering for money.
Speaker 3 (39:32):
Well maybe a little bit of both. You do the
ubering to pay for the or you do the ride
share to pay for the looks in. I don't know.
Speaker 2 (39:39):
I re snopes that. I definitely think that there are
bad intentioned uber left taxi, milkmen, ice cream truck men, coaches, priests.
I definitely think there's bad intention people everywhere. But sometimes
could definitely be wrong. About the story about somebody opening
up a gas chamber in the middle of their car, well,
(40:00):
sometimes people will just say stuff for clout. The gas
chamber one felt a bit odd to me, Mike, can.
Speaker 6 (40:07):
You I found the story. There's no like credible source
recording it. It's the person on TikTok who said the
gas came out and the driver just put his shirt
over his nose, Like, how would he not be affected
by its?
Speaker 2 (40:18):
Yeah, I don't believe it. I would say, I don't
believe the chlor and you're believing something that, Well.
Speaker 3 (40:23):
What I want to know, and you just said for
clout is why would this girl who looks perfectly normal
when she's delivering her scenario, why would she put false
information out there like that?
Speaker 2 (40:36):
Why for clicks? For views? That's what TikTok is half
but you know, like half of that stuff a staged
on TikTok just in general.
Speaker 3 (40:44):
Well, I don't really like to think that it is.
I like to think that people, especially if they're telling
a terrifying tale like that, that it would be true
that one.
Speaker 2 (40:55):
I started sniffing on that one immediately and was like,
it's gonna be a hard I don't believe it that
an Uber driver opens up a gas container in the
middle only covers his nose, And I don't know what
do you even buy? It's just too again, bad people
everywhere could be wrong. Just felt like it was a
little too sophisticated for a random Uber pickup anything else.
Speaker 6 (41:16):
Mike over there on it, Well, she got two point
four million views on it, and then she also has
music on her TikTok okay no.
Speaker 2 (41:23):
Amy says she doesn't know why people would do that.
That's funny she's doing it gets people to go to
her page to find music.
Speaker 3 (41:29):
That's shady.
Speaker 2 (41:31):
Hey, Amy, that's the world. Whatever I got news for you,
I just.
Speaker 3 (41:36):
Want I don't know that's your way. I take it
as the morning to always be aware. Although I always
feel safe. I know that they've been vetted. There's nothing
to likely worry about at all. However, I just want
to be on guard and pay attention.
Speaker 2 (41:50):
Okay, good, I hope you do. They all get the
gas coming from the middle of the car. I just
knew that that smelled like a complete fabrication. But again
I could be wrong, but I'm probably not. All right,
Thank you, Lunchbox. Go ahead, Yeah, I'm lunchbox. That's your
bonehead story of the day. We have Kyler on the
phone now who Kyler calls us every year and he
(42:12):
keeps stats of every single game.
Speaker 4 (42:14):
That we play. Good morning, how's it going pretty good?
Speaker 2 (42:16):
We look forward to this call. What news? What information
can you deliver us?
Speaker 4 (42:20):
We'll start off with there's one person that went one
hundred percent won every game they played on The Bobby
Bone Show in twenty twenty four, and that man is
George Bursch went one for one win rate.
Speaker 2 (42:36):
What game did George play? Do you remember?
Speaker 4 (42:39):
I do not remember? That was like at the very
beginning of twenty twenty four. Okay, a memory decent, but
it's not that good.
Speaker 2 (42:45):
Okay the game or George or rather one? Okay, so
Georgie is one hundred percent on the year. Okay, go ahead.
Speaker 4 (42:50):
Eddie played one hundred and sixty seven games, Amy played
one hundred and sixty seven games, and Lunch played one
hundred and eighty nine games.
Speaker 2 (43:00):
Lunch beat them by twenty as far as games playing, Okay,
apparent played appearances, He's got plate appearance.
Speaker 4 (43:06):
Play, and Amy and Lunch tied with their percentages, though
Amy went fifty two for one sixty seven with a
thirty one percent win rate, and Lunchbox went fifty nine
for one eighty nine with the thirty one percent win rate.
Speaker 2 (43:20):
Boom, you guys, boom.
Speaker 4 (43:23):
Lunchbox had three ties and Amy had two ties.
Speaker 2 (43:27):
Okay, so so Eddie.
Speaker 4 (43:30):
Eddie went sixty four for one sixty seven with a
thirty eight percent win rate.
Speaker 3 (43:34):
Dang all I do is win.
Speaker 2 (43:36):
So Eddie is the grand Champion of the year.
Speaker 4 (43:38):
He is. So this is my third year in a
row keeping track. And in the last three years Eddie
has won one hundred and eighty four games, Amy has
won one hundred and nineteen games, and Lunchbox has won
one hundred and forty three games.
Speaker 2 (43:52):
So he did you keep track of my games at all?
Speaker 3 (43:55):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (43:57):
I didn't want a game.
Speaker 4 (43:57):
You had a You didn't do as good as last year.
You went one one out of four really, but it's
because you start winning and then you're like, okay, this
last one's worth you know, three points, you know, see
if you can beat me, and then you kind of
it's like you went one for four, but with an
asterix because like you start feeling bad and you give
(44:18):
them a chance to beat or something.
Speaker 2 (44:20):
I don't know. It's like dad playing with his kids
and he's like, okay, come on, guys, I'll give you
a chance. You make this for tens.
Speaker 4 (44:26):
This next shots worth ten points?
Speaker 2 (44:27):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, okay, okay anything else in your stat keeping.
Speaker 4 (44:33):
Everybody else went pretty like obviously the big three play
in the most games, but Morgan went ten for forty
seven with twenty one percent. Abby went three out of
twenty six oh for eleven percent.
Speaker 2 (44:44):
Wow, but Abby is going to therapy. That's true because
she gets really tight, it's really nervous for no reason whatsoever.
Speaker 4 (44:51):
Okay, I expect the twenty twenty five to be higher
than eleven percent.
Speaker 2 (44:54):
Yeah, again, because she's spent money to go to therapy
to get better at games.
Speaker 4 (44:58):
Absolutely, is there a game?
Speaker 2 (45:00):
Because you've got you've listened to all this and you
are a straight data analysis and at times that can
be very boring. Is there a game? After all? The
games that you enjoy hearing?
Speaker 4 (45:10):
My favorite games are like the one off, like, hey
we just thought of a new game, let's give it
a shot, because a little bit of chaos trying to
figure out how to play the game. Nobody really has
a strategy, So just new games in general. And then
but like the one that I always like is the feud.
I think the feud is the most entertaining and it's
(45:32):
just most fun to play along with.
Speaker 2 (45:34):
I think that's good to hear because you know, we
play these games so often, and you know, Mike and
I decide what games are going where all the time,
or like I don't know. Our people tired of this game,
so that matters to us when you say things like that.
So we appreciate that. So the feud, So keep going
with the feud. Okay, absolutely anything else you have asterisks
by or anything else that you need to share, because
(45:54):
I feel like this has been a thorough report. We've
kept notes of it. Eddie is the grand champion again. Wow,
for the whole year in three years. That's Hall of
Fame numbers right there. If you do another or four
now we're talking because Mahomes only got three titles, right,
gotta beat him? Okay, well, Kyler, we really appreciate anything
(46:15):
else you want to add.
Speaker 4 (46:16):
I have what's wrong with people?
Speaker 2 (46:18):
If you got time for you, we have time. Go ahead.
Speaker 4 (46:21):
If you notice I'm a little later this year. Usually
I try and call like the first week the show's back.
But I've had a crazy first month months and a
half this year. At the New Year's Eve, our whole
family was hanging out celebrate New Year's Eve, and then
within three days, my mother in law thought she had
(46:43):
like a pinch nerve. And then fast forward three weeks
later and she got diagnosed with stage four brain cancer.
So it's been a crazy beginning to this year, and
she is the breadwinner of her household, and so in
order to help the bills and stuff, we started a
venmo like to donate to like to help pay bills
(47:05):
and stuff, and it was Sheila ary or Dash Healing.
Within two hours of creating that venmo, somebody created one
with the same profile picture that was Sheila Eerie Dash
Healing with two g's, and we got donations to it,
and but we'll never be able to get those. So
within two hours somebody created a fraudulent venmo to steal
(47:28):
cancer donations essentially, And so I just want to say,
what's wrong with people?
Speaker 2 (47:35):
That one sucks? Hey, And so how is she now?
Speaker 4 (47:40):
We are so we live in the Springfield, Missouri area.
We're waiting to transfer her to Indy Anderson because they
are the best suited to It's a LEO sarcoma, which
is a really rare cancer, and like Springfield pretty much said,
they haven't they don't have the resources to really tackle
it properly. So we're trying to transfer all the PaperWorks, games,
(48:04):
all that to Houston, and then we're waiting on that
call to go down there and see see what they
can do.
Speaker 2 (48:11):
What say your name again, like the real one, because
unless you may donate to the fake one. What's what
is her? What's her name again?
Speaker 4 (48:18):
It's Sheila Yeerie Dash healing s h E l I
A y e a r y Dash healing with one G.
Speaker 2 (48:30):
There is a second one with two g's and it's
the same picture, but they like screenshot it and it's
not even good.
Speaker 3 (48:36):
Gosh, that's terrible.
Speaker 2 (48:37):
Yeah, so evil dang. Okay, here's all i'mna do because
I we know you, it's been years. I'm gonna I'm
gonna send over five hundred bucks to my venmo right now. So,
oh my god, pops this over here. Boom. I put
the pizza Moji. It was just the one I clicked.
You don't have to buy pizza with it, you know,
five worth of pizza. It's gonna give me the whole thing. Like,
(48:59):
are you sure you know this person? Last four digits?
We don't have to say that, but one G and
she's in.
Speaker 3 (49:08):
Okay, I'm just gonna for sure it's the right one one.
Speaker 2 (49:10):
We have no mutual friends? What sucks? I think Kyler
and I are friends. Okay, let's say that I'm gonna
push and let's let's sure. Let's make sure you're paying
the right Sheila, your payments on the way. Okay, I
know that wasn't the reason you call, but I'm happy
to help in a little way that I can. And
we always appreciate your calls.
Speaker 4 (49:29):
Much appreciated.
Speaker 2 (49:30):
And you can't argue with data, is what I always say,
So we're looking for you can't. I'm very sorry to
hear what you're going through, and please update us when
you can.
Speaker 4 (49:40):
I will, and I appreciate you guys. Like I know,
a bunch of people call and say, hey, you know
you give me your hard times. That really is true,
Like it's a it's a bit of normalcy, you know,
like life is absolutely not nothing's the same. My schedules
all out of whack. But I still got the podcasts
listen to and it it's just like I said, normally
bringing back a little bit, some take my mind off
(50:02):
of it, and it's always happy, uplifting. So I really
do appreciate you guys.
Speaker 2 (50:06):
Hi, buddy, we appreciate you. Have a good day. Man,
all right, you too, there he is, Okay, that's gonna
do it for today's show. Thank you see you tomorrow. Goodbyeverybody.
This is a Fibby Bone sing Bones, The Bobby Bones
Show theme song, written, produced and sang by read Yarberry.
(50:27):
You can find his instagram at read Yarberry, Scuba Steve
Executive producer, Ray Mundo, Head of Production. I'm Bobby Bones.
My instagram is mister Bobby Bones. Thank you for listening
to the podcast.