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August 20, 2025 47 mins

For the first time, scientists have created a brain implant that can "hear" and vocalize words a person is only imagining in their head. Would we want this? Lunchbox brings in audio proof that Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce are fake after they did their podcast together. A listener calls in to defend Lunchbox and his in-law situation where his wife wants to pay them $500 for babysitting. Bobby shared the draft results for the Best Songs that start with C. Bobby shares how he feels about leaving behind a legacy. We talked about a 22-year-old tycoon who shared brutally honest advice on getting rich and warned that having a social life keeps people 'comfortably mediocre'.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
All right, let's do a few voice smails here. Let's go, Ray,
give me this one.

Speaker 2 (00:08):
I'm talking to Bobby BOMs leave me alone, Yes, sir,
so now that my boss caught me, I'm just letting
you know that little riddle about say no. Within three minutes,
I've used it on five different bartenders and I've gotten
five free drinks. So yeah, it works.

Speaker 3 (00:26):
Thank you.

Speaker 1 (00:27):
What's you talking about?

Speaker 3 (00:28):
The game where you can make you say no? Like? Oh, yeah,
and you may.

Speaker 1 (00:33):
That's a good one. I was like, dude, listening to
the wrong show.

Speaker 4 (00:37):
Confused.

Speaker 1 (00:37):
I'm glad you knew that.

Speaker 3 (00:38):
And he's young a his boss like, dangn that's cool.
Why yelled at you like that? That would be good?

Speaker 1 (00:42):
No, I think he's like, hold on, I'm turning to
Bobby Bone, hold on, give me the next one.

Speaker 5 (00:48):
Because you have Mark Clarrason, former Bronco player. Is that
a spying that you're going to do the right thing?
I picked the Broncos and joined Broncos Country. Yes, so
I can't wait. Have the guys have a good one.

Speaker 1 (00:59):
But talking about our last episode of twenty five Whistles,
we had former Broncos player, former ESPN analyst Mark Schlerathon
and if you heard part one of the podcasts, you heard,
I'm now down to two teams. It's either going to
be the Panthers or the Broncos. Be a massive fan.

Speaker 3 (01:14):
Interesting could you have in Mark on the podcast be
an Easter Egg? Didn't think about that?

Speaker 1 (01:21):
Call me swifty baby.

Speaker 3 (01:23):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:23):
Tomorrow on the show, Abby is going to reveal a
PowerPoint presentation oh as to why I should be a
Denver Broncos fan.

Speaker 3 (01:31):
Oh, because she's a Broncos fan.

Speaker 1 (01:33):
Why are you a Broncos fan?

Speaker 6 (01:35):
My parents and brother have always been fans, like since
i've I was little, Like my grandma lives in Colorado,
so and they like got to watch them p practice
and so it's just always been a thing.

Speaker 1 (01:45):
So I stuck with it. So I have not seen
the power point. I know nothing of it. But she
will present a power point to convert me to the
Broncos side. Okay, get excited.

Speaker 3 (01:55):
It's interesting.

Speaker 1 (01:56):
I think I can still be shifted a bit from
where I think my mind is because I'm not totally
committed either side. I have an idea of what I
want to do, but I can be shifted or I
can be further convinced. Meaning if I'm already thinking Broncos,
Abby can boom dial it in.

Speaker 3 (02:11):
I'm still shocked that you eliminated the Cowboys first, and
I honestly thought you would pick the Vikings if it
wasn't gonna be the Cowboys. I thought you'd pick the Vikings.

Speaker 1 (02:20):
So you did everything wrong.

Speaker 3 (02:21):
Yeah, sound like you're yep.

Speaker 1 (02:24):
I just didn't want to do the Vikings. Excuse me
the Cowboys.

Speaker 3 (02:28):
And because all your friends are Cowboys fans, you guys.

Speaker 1 (02:30):
Are always like wounded, You're wounded, and I'm already wounded
all the time with my teams. I don't want to
pick another team to be wounded by.

Speaker 3 (02:38):
I understand, but I think that both teams that's in
the near future will turn around.

Speaker 1 (02:43):
Like, Yeah, you've been saying that there's a funny TikTok.
I'm sure you've had to sent you a thousand times
where the girlfriends like, hey, if it's like snowing every
day in Alaska, I'll paraphrase it, miss it a little bit,
because if it snows every day in Alaska for twenty
five years, what do you think it's going to do
on twenty five years? In one day? And he goes snow chosen.
Why do you think the Cowboys gonna win next year?
So mean, so that's why they picked the Cowboys, get it?

(03:08):
And the Vikings. Uh, I didn't like.

Speaker 3 (03:12):
The color really, you don't like purple?

Speaker 1 (03:13):
Not really? Wow, Okay, it kind of reminds me of LSU.

Speaker 3 (03:17):
I get that.

Speaker 1 (03:18):
And you know there's yellow in the Viking. Now, not
that I hate LSU, but.

Speaker 3 (03:22):
You're a Arkansas fan. Yeah, I just I get I
get that. Not really my color thing, different team, but
I get that. You start watching the Cowboys series, Yeah,
I started watching that, Mike. You watch it?

Speaker 4 (03:31):
Yeah, first episode.

Speaker 1 (03:32):
They only have one up the other day, but I
only watched one. It's so good.

Speaker 7 (03:35):
I like it a lot.

Speaker 1 (03:37):
Dude's so's it all about old school Cowboys?

Speaker 3 (03:39):
Yeah, it's about it's about building the Cowboys, like building
the nineties Cowboy.

Speaker 5 (03:43):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (03:43):
The first one is all about Jerry Jones buying the team.
I don't know all that drama. Yeah, I didn't know
a lot of that drama either, Like that's before us
in the sixties. You know, No, when did you get him?
Probably the eighties got him in the eighties, But I mean,
I didn't realize Jerry Jones been hated since the eighties. Hey,
he was seen as a villain buying the well.

Speaker 1 (04:00):
He also fired, and I haven't seen the series, but
he also came in and fired like the code, like
the guy that's the face of the Cowboys forever.

Speaker 3 (04:08):
He'd been there for the beginning.

Speaker 1 (04:10):
Yeah, so okay, well, good luck with that show, guys,
thank you. I think you sho watched the SEC shows
better and that's next. But I haven't seen the Cowboys.
Have no idea. They have a brain implant that can
turn thoughts into speech.

Speaker 3 (04:22):
I don't want that. I don't want that at all.
Why because like involuntary can you imagine?

Speaker 1 (04:29):
Like I don't know, that's involuntary?

Speaker 3 (04:30):
You see like oh she's hot that you can't have that?

Speaker 1 (04:35):
That's not good. This is from UPI. For the first time,
scientists have created a brain implant that can hear and
vocalize words a person is only imagining in their head.
The device, developed at Stanford, could help people with severe
paralysis communicate more easily, even if they can't move their
mouth to try to speak. Senior author Frank Willett, an
assistant professor of neurosurgery at Stanford, said quote. Future systems

(04:59):
could restore flui it rapid and comfortable speech via inner
speech alone, and it could get better than they have
it now with better implants and decoding software. The team
also addressed privacy concerns and one surprising finding, the BCI
sometimes picked up words participants weren't told to imagine, such
as numbers they were silently counting. To protect privacy, Research

(05:19):
has created a password system that blocks the device from
decoding unless the user locks it. In the study, imagining
the phrase chitty chitty bang bang worked ninety eight percent
of the time to prevent unintended decoding, so pretty much
had to think chitty chitty bang bang in order to
then let it work. It's for sure you put it in. Dudes,
all you're gonna hear is boobs, but boobs, but by

(05:42):
boobs boobs.

Speaker 3 (05:43):
But so that's good for people that are you know
that I guess can't really speak right. But next people
that can't speak at all.

Speaker 1 (05:53):
Yeah, Now, I think a lot of what they uses
they can type it, yes, or they can if they
can't move their hands, they can move it with their eyes.
They're all these different ways. But this is another level
up that's kind of cool. Yeah, if it gets in
the wrong hand, I don't want it. Well, the movie
version of it would be you get abducted. They then
put it into your head. You don't know it. You

(06:14):
just wake up and you have like a your head
story of a scar or something, and then all of
a sudden, they're knowing everything you're thinking on a computer
without you knowing. They're knowing everything you're thinking. And this
is like a senator, or this is like a scientist
of some sort, and they're able to go in the
back door and either stop you from doing something good
or you know. It's that.

Speaker 3 (06:35):
I mean, this would definitely be a movie you would love.

Speaker 1 (06:37):
Yeah, that'd be a good one. Did I just write
that script because I like it?

Speaker 3 (06:40):
I like that.

Speaker 1 (06:41):
Okay, we have some caller. We're gonna get on here.
It's taken lunch Box about a week to find a
clip from Taylor Swift on The Kelsey's podcast to bring
it in and go. I found a clip. It ain't real.
It's taking them a week.

Speaker 3 (06:54):
To do this. Here we go, So what do you have?

Speaker 1 (06:56):
Man?

Speaker 8 (06:56):
This just sounds like so fake and set up because
it's I was Kelsey and Taylor Swift and they kind
of do a recap of how Taylor you know, ghosted
him at the concert, didn't let him meet him, and
then she's like gets on the podcast and brags like, oh,
I'm so crying I didn't get to meet her, and
it's them talking about how then they got together.

Speaker 1 (07:16):
Okay, how long is the clip? Right?

Speaker 3 (07:20):
Thirty?

Speaker 1 (07:21):
All right? By the way, I don't stand with him.

Speaker 4 (07:23):
Just listen to this, Okay, it sounds so fake.

Speaker 9 (07:25):
Well, I was disappointed that she doesn't talk before or
after her shows because she has to save her voice
for the forty four songs that she sings. So I
was a little butt hurt. I didn't get the hand
her in one of the bracelets I made for her.
She doesn't meet anybody, or at least she didn't want
to meet me, so I took it personal. I'm upset
that you didn't meet me, even though you didn't know
I wanted to meet you because I didn't do any

(07:45):
proper logistical planning.

Speaker 4 (07:47):
But it worked.

Speaker 7 (07:48):
I'm glad it worked.

Speaker 1 (07:50):
I'm just circling back to New Heights to say thank
you for this is the world that doesn't sound fake?

Speaker 4 (07:58):
No, no, no, no, it sounds so fake.

Speaker 8 (08:00):
So he got on his podcast after going to the
concert and not being on to meet her and going,
I'm but her.

Speaker 4 (08:05):
Taylor Swift wouldn't meet me, and Taylor here's out.

Speaker 8 (08:07):
And it's like, you know what, if this guy's butt her,
I better reach out and meet him. It's like, come on,
Taylor Swift is not gonna give some guy the time
of day that gets on a podcast and goes, I'm.

Speaker 1 (08:19):
But it's not to butt her. Because he said it.
That's what he said. Yeah, you've said it four times
since he said it. Also, it's not some guy, it's
Travis Kelce, multiple super Bowl champion on a successful podcast.

Speaker 8 (08:32):
Yeah, but she had no interest in him until he
went on the podcast and did that. Like he tried
to meet her at the show, no chance.

Speaker 1 (08:38):
Because she has to say her voice also stop. Maybe
she didn't know she was interested in him, she didn't
meet him. She said, Morgan, you want to go you
want to say something?

Speaker 6 (08:46):
Yeah, I mean I've watched so many clips from this
and I have a whole set down to watch it
all because I think this is real. Like I believe
wholeheartedly that these are two people that just really care
about each other and they finally found each other's match.

Speaker 1 (08:59):
Yeah, I think so too.

Speaker 3 (09:00):
I think it's weird, like I'm a cue no no,
no no. I think it's real. But I think it's
weird that she likes him because he's still kind of like,
oh but her, and she's just Taylor Swift, who I
thought was just this sweet I don't know, like not
somebody that would date Travis Kelsey. But that whole thing
is weird to me.

Speaker 1 (09:19):
But I believe I believe it too, And yes, it
is weird. I can agree with that. I feel like
they match each other's energy super well.

Speaker 6 (09:25):
Though from what I've seen so far, she is super
goofy too, like she has that personality type. But we
put her on this like Taylor Swift pedestal, and I
think she does have a similar personality to him. They
just seem to really match what each other put out
into the world.

Speaker 1 (09:41):
I think if they weren't together and you saw them individually,
you would go those two don't match. But now that
they're together, they've been together, I think you're finding reasons
to make them work. But I think it works. Who cares, Yeah, man,
But yeah, it's weird.

Speaker 3 (09:51):
They're in love.

Speaker 4 (09:52):
I think they're agents.

Speaker 8 (09:53):
Her agent was like, look, you've dated all these artists,
you've dated this person, Taylor, doesn't you know? You know
what you have not dated. You have not dated an athlete.
So we're gonna go ahead and this guy that's but hurt,
We're gonna.

Speaker 4 (10:03):
Stop saying but her.

Speaker 1 (10:03):
You heard it one time, you said it five times.

Speaker 8 (10:06):
Let's hit him up and we'll put you guys together
and you guys, I play you like each other for
a little bit.

Speaker 1 (10:10):
It is no way, it's real. She doesn't need it.
It's the only issue I have with this. She doesn't
need it. She doesn't need to do the Super Bowl
halftime show because you do that for the publicity, you
don't do it for the money.

Speaker 3 (10:21):
She's gonna do it, though, well, no you didn't. You
didn't get that little Easter egg that.

Speaker 1 (10:27):
She well, there were many Easter eggs that she put out.
So they were talking about her making sourdough, and she
talked about how she makes sourdough six eepercent of the time.
The next Super Bowl is Super Bowl sixty. Not only that,
the mascot for the forty nine ers is sourdough, Sam, correct,
I know? Correct?

Speaker 3 (10:45):
So so she's telling us, guys, that would be amazing
if se dude, it'd be crazy if the Chiefs went
to the Super Bowl and she's sang the halftimes Joe.

Speaker 1 (10:55):
They also referenced the number forty seven multiple times during
the podcast. I think she said that Travis Kelsey. It
was like a forty seven second intro, you know, when
he and also the forty seven stop of her aristour
was at Levi Stadium where they're having a Super Bowl.

Speaker 3 (11:10):
That's so good.

Speaker 1 (11:12):
I mean, it's definitely. But she does so many Easter
eggs that you can just look at everything she doesn't
find Easter eggs if you just look hard enough, and
you can create fake Easter eggs.

Speaker 3 (11:21):
Oh, you don't think those are real? So you're saying, oh,
I don't know, man, there's a lot of Easter eggs
in one podcast for it not to be real.

Speaker 4 (11:27):
So you really think she's doing halftime?

Speaker 3 (11:29):
Who you at?

Speaker 2 (11:30):
You?

Speaker 1 (11:30):
I'm at, like, do you really think it's like these things?
I don't think so, because I think it would feel
like it's overshadowing Travis if you were to make it
back to the super Bowl.

Speaker 3 (11:40):
But I don't know.

Speaker 8 (11:40):
Also, it's awkward if he doesn't make it and then
he has to go and act like he's supporting his
girl friend, he would.

Speaker 1 (11:44):
Be supporting his girl.

Speaker 3 (11:45):
Yeah, yeah, he's not acting.

Speaker 8 (11:46):
But I'm saying he would have to act happy that
he's at the super Bowl when he's not playing in it,
like that would be weird.

Speaker 3 (11:52):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (11:53):
I think I think he's won multiple super Bowls, probably
has been there before. Yeah, I agree. I don't think
he's crying on his millions of dollars or his billion
air girlfriends. Yeah, I do think it's real. I'm rooting
for them.

Speaker 3 (12:05):
Did you listen to the whole podcast.

Speaker 1 (12:06):
I didn't listen to any of it. I watched a
couple of clips. It's just it's just out there everywhere.
It's like anything else that's out there all the time.
I feel like it's a bit overexposed or now I'm
just like I don't want see anything to do with it.
I'm not against it, but it's I just it's almost
like love island to me at this point. It's everywhere,
So I avoid it because it's it's all consuming, that's all.

Speaker 3 (12:26):
How much planning do you think went into, Like, all right,
you're gonna do the podcast.

Speaker 1 (12:29):
Oh, I'm sure a ton. I'm sure. I looked at
the video because they didn't do it live. They ran
it back live, they didn't do it live. I'm sure
a ton. But also I'm not sure, so I know nothing.
I know nothing. Yeah, we're rooting for the happy couple,
though I do think it's real though. Right's go to Chris,
who is listening in North Carolina. Chris, you're on the show.
What's going on?

Speaker 10 (12:52):
Not a whole lot?

Speaker 1 (12:53):
We're doing pretty good. What can I do for you?

Speaker 10 (12:56):
I wanted to come all on the behalf of the
lunch Box, and I don't know, don't take the side
of lunch Box. He's not really my favorite character on
the show, but I'm gonna have to side with him
this morning about his in laws. I think it's ridiculous
to have to pay your in laws to keep their grandkids.
I'm a pau Paul. I have six grandkids, and I

(13:18):
love spending time with my grandkids. I would fly across
the country to babysit down for my son and daughter
in laws to go somewhere. It's ridiculous. No, you do
not pay your in laws if they don't appreciate the
time they spend with their grandkids for free, then they
don't appreciate their grandkids at all.

Speaker 1 (13:37):
In my opinion, I feel why you say that, and
I think from your perspective, I can agree with that.
I can also agree with if they fly across the
country and they spend all this money and they're like, man,
could you at least help us out a little bit?
Or if you wanted to do it again later, it
doesn't hurt to do it again. It wasn't stated in advance,

(13:59):
So you really don't owe them anything. They're not going
to invoice you. If they did, that'd be awesome. Oh professional,
that'd be awesome if they invoice you. I don't even
think the grandparents are saying you owe us money. I
think it's his wife going can we give them money?
Because they did come here, they stayed all these days,
they paid for the flights. So I don't think anybody's
demanding anything. And I'm okay with it if you're going

(14:20):
to ask them to keep doing it, because that is
going to cost them a lot of money, and if
financially everybody's situation is completely different. So again it feels
a bit weird, but weird doesn't mean wrong, Weird doesn't
mean illegal, And if you want to keep flexing that muscle,
sometimes you got to do the work to keep that
muscle in shape. And if it's making sure that they
feel appreciated in whatever way, I'm okay with it. I

(14:41):
wouldn't have thought you had to pay them, especially if
they agreed to do it. But I don't know. I'm
not not in the room in the room, but I
understand what you're saying, Chris, and I agree with everything
you're saying as well. For you, that's awesome. But yeah,
I would just do it if I had it, because
I'd want to do it again. And now it's been
brought up. If it was never brought up, I don't
think i'd be like, we need to pay them. But

(15:02):
if it's been brought up and they know it's been
brought up, I think I probably do that.

Speaker 3 (15:04):
And then Lunchbox's parents when they come watch kids, you
got to pay them too.

Speaker 1 (15:09):
Again, every situation is different. There is not a blanket
to put over this. So if they come for five
days and you got to pay for their flights or
I think that's a nice thing to do. They're investing
a lot of time and a lot of money to
get there. But I don't think you have to do it,
And if you had to do it, you'd say in advance.

Speaker 3 (15:26):
I'm with Chris Man. They don't even like being grandparents.

Speaker 1 (15:29):
Fair enough like Chris, fair enough, Chris. I appreciate that, buddy,
Thank you for the call.

Speaker 7 (15:34):
Yeah, surey.

Speaker 10 (15:35):
I have a great day, right you too.

Speaker 1 (15:36):
Let's go over to Darren, who is listening in Tennessee.
Hey Darren, what's up buddy?

Speaker 7 (15:42):
Mandy? Two things? One, you were talking about the mother
with the concussion, so a letter or whatever. My grandson
plays in White House, loving you, and one of the
kids on his team got a concussion a week ago
Sunday in the first game.

Speaker 1 (15:54):
Is it happens for sure?

Speaker 7 (15:58):
When you talk about wrestling, need change the name from
wrestling to entertaining stump man the same to Amy and
liking it.

Speaker 1 (16:07):
Yeah, Look, i'd be hard to say, and don't think
people know what I'm talking about it if I was watching
entertainment stuntman last night, that'd be a tough way to
pull off a wrestling conversation. But yeah, I agree, And
as someone who trained as a stump man on one
of my episodes of Breaking Bobby Bones, which you can
get on Amazon.

Speaker 3 (16:22):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (16:23):
It's tough, and I think wrestling is even harder than
being a stunt man because you have to do that
over and over and over again. I let myself on
fire as a stunt man. Nothing to do.

Speaker 3 (16:31):
It ain't nothing.

Speaker 1 (16:33):
And you got people with standing by and you put
all this gel on you. No problem. I'm not flipping.
I'm not doing a backflip off the top turn buckle.
There's no one there to catch me. There's no one.
But I completely understand. And I hope Amy has a
little appreciation for it once she's done with the show.
But Darren, I appreciate the call. Buddy, Hope you have
a good day. I see buddy, Uh, Nick and Florida.

(16:53):
Here he is, Nick, what's up, buddy?

Speaker 5 (16:56):
Hey?

Speaker 11 (16:56):
I was I got interested in that Arkansas day once
you started talk around it.

Speaker 5 (17:00):
Turn you guys on.

Speaker 2 (17:00):
I heard it.

Speaker 11 (17:01):
I'm just, you know, superstitious and degenerates.

Speaker 5 (17:04):
I don't know if it's which one it is, if it's.

Speaker 3 (17:06):
A sign or not, but it's not well.

Speaker 1 (17:07):
First of all, bet, I'm not gonna it's not a
bet because I can't win anything from it. So, and
all I said was, if Arkansas makes the College Football Playoff,
the top twelve teams going to the tournament at the
end of the year, I will give a random listener
or random person ten thousand dollars. It'll be a listener
or a follower. I'm not going to walk on the
street and just hand somebody ten thousand dollars.

Speaker 2 (17:24):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (17:25):
And then my question was to the guys, you think
the money's safe, and they're like, oh, it's never been safer.
It's it's basically in Fort Knox, nobody can get into it.
So that's what's up. So Nick, but on the I
can't actually win anything except like joy happiness. Would I
pay ten thousand dollars for Arkansas to go to the
College Football Plaoff?

Speaker 3 (17:44):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (17:44):
Absolutely.

Speaker 3 (17:45):
I mean you even said you would cut off your
pinky toe to win a chambership.

Speaker 1 (17:48):
Yeah, yeah, I sure will.

Speaker 3 (17:50):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (17:50):
So what do you think about that.

Speaker 7 (17:51):
Nick Hedge?

Speaker 11 (17:53):
Well, yeah, it's a hedge. I was saying. You know,
at a sportsbooks you get there fifteen to one to
make it, so if you put a thousand on it,
then you're not having to you know, you only have
to that they come through. Then you only got to
pay ten thousand and you get to put five thousand
in your pocket, so you get the joy of them
going in the cash.

Speaker 1 (18:07):
That's bad hedge, though, because I can lose money there
both ways. Yeah, I lose if they don't make it,
which they probably won't, I lose whatever I just bet,
and so I don't want to lose. The only thing
I want to lose is money. If my joy is
higher than the ten thousand dollars, my joy would probably
thirty thousand dollars worth that I'm making twenty if they

(18:28):
go when I have to pay the money. Otherwise I
don't pay the money, I don't lose anything. The odds
are fifteen to one for them to make the playoffs
to be in the top twelve.

Speaker 8 (18:33):
Yeah, I mean I am looking at their schedule, and
the good news is, if I'm looking at this right,
you don't play Georgia or Alabama.

Speaker 1 (18:39):
We have the number one hardest schedule in the country.

Speaker 8 (18:42):
Well, I am saying Georgia and Alabama an't there, but
you still have a lot of tough games.

Speaker 1 (18:45):
We have the number one hardest schedule when seven twenty
five teams going in, which is the most of anybody.

Speaker 3 (18:50):
In the country. That's tough.

Speaker 1 (18:51):
Yeah, we do play Texas, we do. Yeah, it's a
brutal schedule.

Speaker 3 (18:56):
Notre Dame, we do play Notre Dame. Yep.

Speaker 1 (18:58):
Oh man, you know what now look at it. Yeah,
I still don't think you're going Yeah. Uh, appreciate that.

Speaker 3 (19:03):
Nick.

Speaker 1 (19:05):
Yeah, have a good one, see you later. All right,
thank you guys for the calls. A few things. One,
we did the draft of songs that start with C.
Now we didn't know it was going to be sea
leading into it, and that's all like we spin the
wheel and lands on seat. We have to start going.
And she's not here to accept our prize. But Amy

(19:26):
one she won Amy one with Carrying Your Love with Me,
California Love and can You Fill the Love Tonight?

Speaker 3 (19:34):
Those are strong.

Speaker 1 (19:35):
I finished second with Colin Baton Rouge, California Dreaming and
Coal Miner's Daughter.

Speaker 3 (19:43):
That's a pretty good feel like I.

Speaker 1 (19:44):
Lost you had, can't help falling in Love Elvis, California Girls,
Beach Boys, or Katy Perry because they didn't have it.
Oh you got a double there and chat y'all, slide
Solid lunchboxs Had Chattahoochee, Bam, Cupid shuffle.

Speaker 3 (20:00):
Oh poop, and I forgot about that.

Speaker 8 (20:03):
That's where I went downhill, try to go with country Road,
take Me Home.

Speaker 1 (20:06):
Raymundo had country girls shake it for me, country grammar,
and country house. The guy could only think of the
word country yes, followed country. Yeah. So when Amy won
me to lunchbox three, oh poop with poop poop yes? Four?

Speaker 3 (20:24):
Come on? Hey, oh yes, I made.

Speaker 1 (20:28):
It, Raymundo, you lost to poop. Well, I thought I
knew my demo. I thought we were a country show.
I think because you had country every song that probably
got hurt you a little bit. Yeah, And honestly, Sam
Haunt country house really isn't one of his most popular songs,
so maybe too new. I know, I kind of went
with the B side, I guess, yeah, kind of kind
of Okay, So there's that I wonder. I don't think

(20:53):
about my legacy much. I was reading this story about
do you want to leave a legacy? A new Pole
found fifty four Americans hope to leave their mark on
the world. I literally give no craps about legacy. I
think I'm gonna be dead, so it doesn't matter. And
maybe it's because I'm kids and so I don't really
think about them even living with a legacy of mine.
But I have zero interest in a legacy, leaving a legacy,

(21:17):
caring that people think about me from fifty seventy ninety years, like,
I have no interest. You ready, do you want to
leave a legacy?

Speaker 3 (21:25):
I feel like I'm living I'm leaving a legacy because
I have four kids already, but I don't care. Like
if you ask me, like, oh, leave your legacy, what
am I gonna do?

Speaker 2 (21:35):
Like?

Speaker 1 (21:36):
But a legacy is more than just having kids, Like
it's like you're known for something.

Speaker 3 (21:39):
Yeah, I think my kids will be like, oh, your
grandfather did this, and then later on, oh, your great
grandfather he was you know, whatever, what would.

Speaker 1 (21:46):
They say about you? What would what would your kids
tell their their grandkids when they're old about their dad,
Like what what would be your legacy?

Speaker 3 (21:53):
Probably he was on the radio and they're like, what's that?

Speaker 1 (21:57):
I mean really?

Speaker 3 (21:57):
Probably they're like, and then they would explain what it was.
Is this cool thing where like you got in your car,
you turn a knob on and you can hear your
great grandfather he was talking on there with all his buddies.
It's a crazy thing and then I'd go to school
and people would tell me what my dad said and
they'd be like, that's crazy.

Speaker 1 (22:14):
So your legacy would be I was on this thing
called the radio Watchbox. What do you think your legacy
will be?

Speaker 8 (22:22):
Man, that's tough. Hopefully I'm going to hit the lottery,
so that'll be part of my legacy.

Speaker 1 (22:27):
Can't predict your legacy. It has to be something you've done.

Speaker 4 (22:29):
Prom king okay, former jet ski owner.

Speaker 1 (22:34):
I mean a lot of people have done the jet
ski owning.

Speaker 8 (22:39):
I know, but that was something that was huge in
my life. Like, that's one of my top moments of
my life, is buying a jet ski.

Speaker 1 (22:45):
Think people know you for that? That's a bit what
a legacy is what you're known for.

Speaker 8 (22:50):
I mean, people knew me out there on the lake, man,
I see me cutting up those waves and maybe they.

Speaker 1 (22:55):
Didn't know as you though, you're just known as the wavecutter.

Speaker 8 (22:57):
That's a great point because when you're out there like
you're going so far, I ask, people may not known
it was me.

Speaker 3 (23:02):
Uh.

Speaker 8 (23:03):
And then legacy is, you know, being on this show
for I mean, however long I've been here a couple
of weeks and just really carrying the show and that's
about it. I mean, I don't really know much else
my legacy, but I do want a legacy. I want
people like I would love a statue to be put
up with me eventually. Like when when people go on tourism,

(23:24):
you know, like they go visit a city and they
do they go on.

Speaker 4 (23:27):
Tourisms, like on tour vacations whatever.

Speaker 8 (23:31):
Yeah, and they do tourists stuff they go on they
go on tourists and they go on tourisms. Yeah, and
they go to certain statues in a city, you know,
and they visit and they're like plaques there.

Speaker 1 (23:41):
What would you do to deserve that?

Speaker 3 (23:42):
Though?

Speaker 4 (23:43):
Man, That's what I'm saying. I need something.

Speaker 8 (23:45):
But I want that, like because like when I see
old statues, I'm like, dang, this dude has been passed
away for two hundred years and they have a statue
of him, so he never is going to go away.
I want that. I want everybody to remember me. I
don't want to just be a person that's forgotten. That's crazy, Morgan.
You have a legacy you want to leave. You know,

(24:11):
we haven't really done anything yet.

Speaker 1 (24:13):
I think she's done a lot. She got a magazine
with her on the cover when she just wants a
massive philanthropic award.

Speaker 6 (24:18):
That's not really Just because I don't have kids doesn't
mean I don't have a legacy.

Speaker 1 (24:23):
Oh, hold, no about kids, that's what you're relating it to.
Or jet Ski.

Speaker 4 (24:29):
I never said anything about my kids in the legacy.

Speaker 1 (24:32):
Go ahead, Morgan, what would you want your legacy to be?

Speaker 6 (24:35):
I would love to leave a legacy behind Lunchbox because
I want I just want to make sure that I
left the world better than I found it.

Speaker 1 (24:42):
So that's what you would want to be known for.

Speaker 6 (24:44):
Yeah, I mean, even if it's one person, even if
it's you know, working with one community, working with one animal,
whatever it may be. I just want to make sure
that I left things better than I found them.

Speaker 1 (24:55):
Is it important to you to leave a legacy where
people know you for doing X, Y or Z after
you're gone.

Speaker 6 (25:02):
Yeah, I think that's really important. I mean, not because
I need to be remembered, just because if people are
going to remember me, I want them to remember that
I did something good.

Speaker 1 (25:11):
I think if I were to get a statue of
any sort, want a while I was alive. I don't
care what happens after I'm dead. I'm not here anymore,
Like nothing affects me. I'm not here.

Speaker 3 (25:21):
But you know, don't you think George Washington thinks it's well,
he's dead, he's dead.

Speaker 1 (25:24):
I don't think he thinks anything.

Speaker 3 (25:25):
I mean, like we.

Speaker 4 (25:26):
Still talk about That's what I mean. How cool is that?

Speaker 3 (25:29):
Right?

Speaker 1 (25:30):
Like there are some people he doesn't he doesn't get
to enjoy that.

Speaker 4 (25:33):
Jesus, man, we still talk about Jesus.

Speaker 1 (25:35):
I think that's I think that's different, little difference. Yeah,
George Washington, Jesus. That's a tough comp I can read
just some of this and it says getting older changes everything.
A new survey of two thousand Americans reveals that fifty
four percent want to leave their mark on the world,
eighty percent care far more about the impression they make
on their loved ones, and then it goes on. I

(25:57):
think if there were to be one thing that's remembered
about you, it would be blank. Let me rephrase the question.
I'll give you mine. There's one thing that's remembered about
you for generations to come. You want it to be blank? Eddie?

Speaker 3 (26:12):
One thing? Oh man, I just I can only think
of just a generic like he was a good dude.

Speaker 1 (26:20):
Okay, that's good, fair enough, Like he's a good dude
because that's important to you.

Speaker 3 (26:24):
But I feel like when everyone dies, everyone says he's
a good dude. No one ever says like, hey, a
terrible guy.

Speaker 4 (26:29):
That person sucked.

Speaker 1 (26:30):
People do just not at the funeral.

Speaker 3 (26:31):
Correct, yeah found their bag.

Speaker 1 (26:34):
But I think it's fair, like you just want to
be a good dude. Yeah, it's good, and Morgan, yours
would be.

Speaker 6 (26:38):
I think it's still along those same line more just
that like I showed up with love, Okay, like I
showed up and everything I did with love.

Speaker 8 (26:46):
Lunchbox baller, I want everybody to remember me as a baller,
like someone that lived like that, the high life.

Speaker 3 (26:54):
Like, well, Lunchbox, say you died, but you never were
a ball That's what I'm saying. Say you die tomorrow,
you die tomorrow, Like you're not going to be known
as a baller. I know, so get working on that.

Speaker 1 (27:04):
But well, like, right now you die tomorrow, what would
people what's the thing about you that you want people
to remember? Uh, that's tough.

Speaker 3 (27:12):
If you're not rich, you're not famous.

Speaker 1 (27:15):
Super good looking. Okay, I think mine would be. You
don't have to start with an advantage to gain one.

Speaker 3 (27:26):
So like it.

Speaker 1 (27:27):
It kind of doesn't matter where you come from. Like,
if you work hard and strategize right, like, you can
pretty much get wherever you want to get.

Speaker 3 (27:36):
And you are saying that through example, Yeah, okay, got it. Yeah,
Like that's the life you lived.

Speaker 1 (27:42):
It's not listen, And it's not just about working the hardest.
There's the old saying if whomever worked the hardest was
in control, the donkey would own the farm. It's working
hard and you know, making decisions like proper decisions, taking risks.
But I don't think you have to start with an
advantage to gain one. I think it's harder for some

(28:03):
folks to gain one. I think it was harder for
me than a lot of people. I think they are
people that have had it harder than me that have
gained bigger ones. And I think that would probably be
the legacy that I would want to leave behind. But
I don't give a crap about legacy. And again, it
could be that I don't have kids. It literally could
be it. I'm out. It's not gonna affect me what
you think about me or say about me. I'm out.

Speaker 3 (28:22):
How does statues happen back to statues, like, how do
I get thing? How does that does that have? Is
somebody have to do? Or can you like buy one
and put it in a mountain pine?

Speaker 1 (28:30):
I probably could if I really wanted to, I could
probably put it in mountain pine, Like that'd be cool.
I didn't buy my street signs that say Boyhood Home
Bobby Bones.

Speaker 3 (28:37):
The city did that.

Speaker 2 (28:37):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (28:38):
I think for the most part, it's a celebration of something,
but also a celebration of something that also brings something in.
For example, when you go to Alabama football, all the
coaches that have won national championships, they have a statue,
and if you want it multiple times, you have multiple statues.
But what that's for is to not only recognize it,
but it's also for people to come and see and
take pictures with and share and be a part of that,

(28:58):
to bring people back to create this you know historic
stadium that people talk about. I mean there's a reason
for it, Like there's a motivation behind it more than
just celebrating someone. Because I was just celebrating someone. You
would do it in private, you know, build statues to
put them in private.

Speaker 3 (29:15):
Right, and no, they're out for everyone. To see man.
When I was in LA we went to the the
Staples Center where the Lakers play, and they have all
the players out there. But Shacks is the coolest one.

Speaker 1 (29:25):
Is he dunking.

Speaker 3 (29:25):
He's dunking and he's hanging like on the on like
the wall, which is really really cool.

Speaker 1 (29:32):
FDA Warrens and some shrimp sold at Walmart Radioactive. Oh no,
first things first, you know.

Speaker 3 (29:41):
What this reminds me of that the movie that Lunchbots
made us watch.

Speaker 1 (29:44):
Box Moonlight stuff. So I'm saying, you say movies that
he made us watch. I remember watching Box Moonlight and
it was all penises and I was like, why is
he making us watch this? He talked, I loved it
and it was it was like not only just penises,
but it was like penises was like old nineteen eighties
pubic hair everywhere.

Speaker 8 (30:02):
What dude, it was a nineteen nineties movie. Man, I
don't know no teeth, Keith.

Speaker 1 (30:07):
It wasn't that weird. He was showing that to you.
There was a kid.

Speaker 8 (30:09):
Well, what's funny is we were supposed to meet at
the movie theater and oh boy, he didn't show up
and I was already in the theater, so I was like, man,
But it turns out he was in there and I
was in there and we just didn't even see each other.

Speaker 3 (30:20):
You guys went to the movie, and you guys weren't
sitting together because he didn't know you all were there.

Speaker 8 (30:25):
Yeah, because it's before cell phones. It was like, all right, kid,
i'll meet you there after school. And I drove over
there after school and didn't see him. So I was like, oh,
he must be inside, and I guess I sat down
before he came in, and so he didn't see me
when he came in and he sat somewhere else.

Speaker 3 (30:38):
But I don't understand why you watched the movie. Like
I didn't watch the movie.

Speaker 1 (30:42):
I had to watch it because I think we did
a game where someone recommended a movie and he drew me.
So I told him Box the Moonlight. Hadn't seen it
in a long time.

Speaker 3 (30:50):
What's it about?

Speaker 1 (30:51):
Like?

Speaker 3 (30:51):
Is it good?

Speaker 7 (30:52):
At least?

Speaker 4 (30:52):
No, I'll tell you it is.

Speaker 1 (30:53):
It is good.

Speaker 4 (30:54):
It's about relaxing and living life.

Speaker 3 (30:56):
It's like this, I can tell from all it.

Speaker 4 (30:59):
Really resembles what I think Bobby does.

Speaker 5 (31:00):
This.

Speaker 8 (31:01):
He works so much that I don't know if he
ever enjoys anything. It's like this guy he's a businessman
and his car breaks down out in the middle, you know.
And there's this guy that just lives and he just
doesn't do anything, runs around crazy.

Speaker 3 (31:12):
He's like, why you.

Speaker 4 (31:12):
Worried about work? Won't worry about that tomorrow.

Speaker 1 (31:14):
Don't worry.

Speaker 4 (31:15):
And I felt like it was a resemblance of Bobby's life.

Speaker 3 (31:18):
And where are the Wieners come in?

Speaker 7 (31:19):
Though?

Speaker 1 (31:19):
Exactly did and should be called box of Wieners.

Speaker 8 (31:23):
Yeah, I don't know where the wieners came in though,
But but you always talk about how you want to
be rich and you want to be a baller, yet
you also want to just hang out and do nothing.

Speaker 1 (31:31):
You're right, it's one doesn't happen while the other one happening.
It's a double edged lottery, but the lottery's not gonna happen.

Speaker 4 (31:37):
It's a double edged sword. That's the problem is.

Speaker 1 (31:40):
I don't think you're using that term right. No, it is.

Speaker 8 (31:42):
It's because like one, I want one thing, and then
I'm like, man, but it is so nice to just
chill and do nothing. Like it's like, really, do I
really want to get up and do that?

Speaker 1 (31:51):
So it's a double edged sword.

Speaker 4 (31:52):
It's like I don't think you want to.

Speaker 8 (31:53):
If you want to be rich, you got to go
grind and be crazy and like work all the time.
And then it's like or you're just gonna relax and
then you can just your life can suffer. And so
sometimes I suffer. But I have those aspirations.

Speaker 3 (32:06):
I see it.

Speaker 4 (32:07):
I just haven't grabbed it yet.

Speaker 1 (32:09):
Uh So, anyway, there's some radioactive shrimp Wow. Inspections by
US Customs reveal the presence of celsium one thirty seven,
a radioactive isotope, in containers from the shrimps Indonesian supplier.
Oh boy, Walmart's working with the FDA to recall the
shrimp and ensure consumer safety.

Speaker 3 (32:26):
That sounds like crazy, like radioactive like in food. I
feel like that's what would make us have like two
heads or zombie apocalyps. Yes, zombies. It's probably what's.

Speaker 1 (32:37):
Killing us, not radioactive, but in food like process yes dies,
and it's like we don't know whybody's getting cancer and why.

Speaker 3 (32:47):
And the dyes are tough though, because I love red
drinks like I like.

Speaker 1 (32:52):
You know, that's one of our favorite flavors. My wife
makes fun of me because it's not strawberry or cherry,
which fair flavor red, red matter even like red jellow.

Speaker 3 (33:02):
I'm like, oh, I want that.

Speaker 1 (33:03):
It's weird that apple's green, and I get there are
green apples, but most apples aren't green. Like when they
were doing the color draft to go with fruits, Apple
must have been left over because if apple goes first,
they draft red. It's like, okay, all the fruits are here,
let's draft colors. They had to go with strawberry and
cherry first before they considered apple, because Apple would have
gone with red because most apples are red, and so

(33:25):
strawberry first. Pick overall, Well, we're gonna go red, okay, cherry,
what about you? We're gonna go slightly more red? Okay? Cool? Grape? Ugh,
I guess we'll do I guess we'll do purple. Yeah,
because green sucks apple. Well that's awkward. We gotta take green.
You don't even want it, and we wanted red.

Speaker 3 (33:46):
You tried those green apples, though, Do you like this?

Speaker 1 (33:48):
I hate apples?

Speaker 4 (33:49):
You hate apple?

Speaker 1 (33:51):
Let me reverse course. Well, you said when it comes
to fruit, which I like fruit, Apples like the worst fruit.
So I don't hate apples, but I don't Apple doesn't
attract me to anything. If it's apple jolly rancher, it's
the last one I'm gonna take. Like, I'll eat it.
I still get a little enjoyment from it, but I
don't care at all about it. And I think it's
because it's green. But I don't like apples. I don't

(34:13):
eat apples. My wife eats apples, she'll like chop them up.
Nothing about apples excites me other than I like them
if they're child really small and put into salads with walnuts,
and I like it as an added bonus. I just
don't like apples that much. I don't like apple pie
that much. Unless there's ice cream, then I can do it.
But it's mostly about the ice cream. But I can't

(34:34):
do ice cream NOx canny dairy Apples are like the
worst that's a hot time of good, which I think
fruits are good. Apples like the worst of the good.
Where does apples fall into yours?

Speaker 3 (34:46):
Apples for me probably top ten.

Speaker 1 (34:49):
I mean I would be a D minus for apples.

Speaker 3 (34:52):
Yeah, mine's a solid.

Speaker 1 (34:53):
But are there ten fruits though? That dominate the fruit
chart that you get normally? Because apples are a normal
old fruit. You can get bananas dominate apples.

Speaker 3 (35:02):
Bananas, strawberries dominate apples.

Speaker 1 (35:06):
I don't eat strawberry strawberry flavor. I'm not gonna just
gonna grab strawberries and eat them. Strawberries are really, they're
so good. Blueberries are good.

Speaker 3 (35:14):
Blueberries. Raspberries raspberries. No, they got a pee in it?
Go ahead, raspberries.

Speaker 1 (35:21):
Stop it. You're being stupid for the sake of being
stupid and getting us to talk about you. Now, No, raspberries,
how do you say it? Really?

Speaker 3 (35:30):
Raspberries?

Speaker 1 (35:31):
Okay?

Speaker 3 (35:32):
In it?

Speaker 1 (35:33):
It also is raspberries, not rass like a z rasberries, watermelons, mango, watermelon.
Watermelon is the number one fruit. Oh no, and I
like them genetically engineered? Do not have seeds?

Speaker 7 (35:48):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (35:48):
See that that can't be good? Like, how did that happen?
Have you had the cotton candy one.

Speaker 1 (35:54):
That that feels like it's the wet worst thing? E't
care if there's some kind of they is this genetically modified?

Speaker 3 (36:02):
It has to be. Yeah, it's a grape and you
taste it and it tastes like cotton can.

Speaker 1 (36:06):
It is delicious. It's a decade long process of cross pollination, okay,
which it's not genetic modification. If it's just making them
have babies and it's all equal, then I'm okay with it.

Speaker 3 (36:17):
Okay, so they're still naturally doing it.

Speaker 1 (36:19):
Sounds like it. Cotton candy, grapes, I don't know if
I ever had them. I think if I knew, I'd
probably run away from them. I like grape. I like
gripes better than apples.

Speaker 3 (36:25):
Grapes are good.

Speaker 1 (36:27):
The apples.

Speaker 3 (36:28):
Pineapples, yeahicious, delicious.

Speaker 1 (36:31):
Oranges the right setting. Oranges are good. Oranges are good.
This kid, he's twenty two, but they call him a tycoon.
He shares brutally honest advice on getting rich and warns
it having a social life keys people comfortably mediocre. Absolutely true.
A mill Bar, twenty two year old entrepreneur and Stanford MBA,
admits that pursuing work life balance is a trap that

(36:53):
leads to mediocrity. So I'm not going to say that
that is completely true there. It leads to mediocrity. If
your goal is to be successful when it comes to financing.

Speaker 3 (37:02):
To make money, yeah, yes, Now I think.

Speaker 1 (37:04):
You could have a family life and that's the most
important thing to you. That's not being mediocre. That is
you chasing your passion, building a strong family, a unit
that's your priority. That's not being mediocre, that's being awesome.
But you kind of can't have both, Like you can't
invest all into your family and still expect to be

(37:24):
rich unless it's handed down to you.

Speaker 3 (37:26):
That happens sometimes, and this is to like starting to
get rich right like intern But like if you've already
made money, oh yeah, yeah, then you can be like
a good family man because you can kind of just
step back a little bit.

Speaker 1 (37:38):
And yeah, but you have this theory that people like
to make it and then step back. That's really that
doesn't happen with people that really make it at a
high level because they're wired differently. You think a quarterback
can win a Super Bowl and be like, ah, I'm
just gonna chill for a few years.

Speaker 3 (37:49):
Yes, Barry Sanders, he didn't win a Super Bowl, not
make it, be the one of the best running backs
and be like I'm out.

Speaker 8 (37:54):
No, he got tired of losing, dude, Yeah, the best
running back everybody, he's tired of losing and quit.

Speaker 1 (38:00):
Yeah, and physically, like why would you put yourself through it?
He had enough money that he's like, I don't want
to do this anymore.

Speaker 3 (38:06):
Yeah, I just feel like that's what most I feel like,
if I were rich, I made it rich.

Speaker 1 (38:11):
That's why you're not rich.

Speaker 3 (38:12):
Oh, I so I got to change that whole mindset.

Speaker 1 (38:16):
People that are obsessed with something don't reach a point
and then be like, I'm no longer obsessed. Like Tom
Brady didn't win one or two Super Bowls and go, eh,
I think I'm good. I'm gonna coast. He's he was
unhealthily competitive. It ruined his marriage. Like the guy had
one goal and he chased it, probably a year longer

(38:37):
than he should have. They made the playoff. I think
they're one game under five hundred. They went in a
weird division. But yeah, people that have really strong desire,
the desire doesn't leave if they've accomplished it a bit.

Speaker 3 (38:50):
I'm interested to see what they say, like when they're
like eighty years old.

Speaker 1 (38:54):
Oh the lady, they all wish I wouldn't spend so
much time doing it. Yeah, but also if you're eighty,
you could be broken, be like I wish I had
to spend more time to dedicated to my career. I
don't think there ever is a right place you end
up where everything is right I don't think there is
just a place that you arrive and go. I arrived
at the exact right place, doing all the exact right things.
I think there's always parts of your life you look
back at, and I think you can do it at twenty,

(39:16):
at forty, at ninety, and go oh, looking back with
the perspective that I have now gained, I wish I
would have done this a little different. So I don't
think anybody arrives at the perfect place.

Speaker 3 (39:28):
It's tough, man, Life's just hard, Like how do we
live it? Do we want more money? Do we want
to spend more time with our family?

Speaker 2 (39:36):
Bo?

Speaker 1 (39:36):
It does yes, you want both as yes, and you
have to make the incorrect decision. Whatever it is is
not going to be right, but it's also not going
to be wrong until you have enough perspective to look
back on it. And once you have the perspective, you
can't actually go back.

Speaker 3 (39:49):
I feel like sometimes I spend too much time with
my family, Like I could definitely use a little bit
of space. I think you're just tired, you know, Like
some weeks I'm just like I've been around you guys
for too long.

Speaker 1 (40:02):
I filled out, and.

Speaker 3 (40:03):
Then I'm like wh I should go start a business
then be busy. But then I've never seen them. I
love being like, like, what's crazy now at my age
is having my kids play like sports and then their
practices and games start at five pm. And I see
other parents taking their kids, like dads in their suits,
like they just came from the office to drop their
kids off at practice at five. I'm like, how can

(40:24):
normal people who have a nine to five take their
kids to a praxic at five? It's a great I can,
because you know, we're done with work pretty early, but like,
how do normal people do that? That's crazy to me? Tough,
Like it's like they say, practice at four thirty. How
is anyone going to make their kids get to practice
at four thirty? That's tough if you have a job.

Speaker 1 (40:45):
When they have a job, yeah, a traditional nine to
five type job, but they do it.

Speaker 3 (40:50):
It's crazy. You see them rushing, their ties are flying
in the wind.

Speaker 1 (40:53):
What would okay, it's not a cartoon. Yeah, okay, stop,
we're not stop. What would you do right now this
stage of your life? What would you do different? What
would you tell the person twenty years ago to do?

Speaker 3 (41:05):
Oh easy, start saving money, start your four to one k,
start saving money, like I've made dumb decisions financially, and
not even dumb decisions. I would just live life, like
you want to go to Hawaii, Let's go to Hawaii.
Put it on a credit card. Hey, let's go drinking.
I got I can do. Don't worry, dude, I got
I'll buy your beers tonight. Like I could have saved

(41:27):
so much money and at this age i'd have I
don't know what i'd have, but i'd have enough money
to start a retirement. So that that's what I would
tell myself.

Speaker 1 (41:37):
Morgan, fifteen years, what would you get out of college?
What would you tell yourself? Because again, there's every stage
of life you're going to have be able to have
these conversations and look back and go, oh, if I
would have done this different. But the things that you
did different and we'll say wrong, are also what shaped
you into the person you are today. So even the
wrong decisions made you who you are. Yeah, I think
we lose sight of that sometimes. But if you could

(41:58):
go back and give yourself advice right when you left college,
it would be.

Speaker 4 (42:02):
I would have told myself to go travel.

Speaker 6 (42:05):
I think you're just traveling now, No, I think it's different.
Like then, I was so worried about getting a job
and I had an opportunity to go out to Australia
for a couple months and I didn't take it, And
I wish I would have, Like not it would have
changed the course of my life absolutely, But like, you
start to work and you start having responsibilities, and that
just makes life so much harder to go and do
things that you want to do. And I think the

(42:27):
people who do go and travel or go and do
the things that they really want to do before they
start work end up just being happier because they alread
accomplished like this giant thing before.

Speaker 1 (42:36):
They're in the workforce.

Speaker 4 (42:37):
You get in the workforce, and like you're.

Speaker 1 (42:39):
Focused on that. Yeah, you're right, because once you commit,
you're in.

Speaker 4 (42:42):
Yeah, Like there's no going back.

Speaker 6 (42:43):
I can't now be like, oh, I'm going to quit
my job and go travel.

Speaker 1 (42:46):
Because that it could, but it'd be a lot harder now.

Speaker 6 (42:49):
So I think I would have considered it a lot more.
I don't know that I would have done it, but
I would have considered a lot more of that option.

Speaker 3 (42:56):
When you say travel, do you mean like go backpack
in for a month.

Speaker 1 (43:00):
Yeah okay, yeah, just like a week of vacation. But
she means like spent some substantial time somewhere. Yeah, like
go and see the world.

Speaker 6 (43:08):
So that way, when you're back, you're settled and you
can really take on whatever's next, whatever that looks like.

Speaker 1 (43:12):
Or what if you fell in love with another part
of the world and you live there.

Speaker 4 (43:15):
Yeah, I mean your life could change in so many
ways just by doing that.

Speaker 1 (43:17):
But also could have gotten worse too, right, it could
have right, And that's the risk you take. Lunchbox man.
That is so tough.

Speaker 8 (43:25):
Because I mean I think, oh, take a weekend trip,
you know what I mean, Like, oh, just fly to
you know, different cities when you're younger. But I mean
I didn't have any money, So could you really do it?
You could do it on a bo because I didn't
know there was hostels that you.

Speaker 1 (43:36):
Could stay in. There are cheap.

Speaker 3 (43:37):
Oh yours is travel too?

Speaker 8 (43:38):
No, No, I said I could have been. But I
would say investments. I should have found investments earlier, like
investing in this, investing in that.

Speaker 1 (43:46):
Found But you just said you had no money. That's
true too. I didn't think about that, Like what advice
would you, because what advice would you give yourself twenty
years ago? You show up like in Scrooge, Oh the
Ghost of Lunchbox Screwge. Oh, you show up and you're like, yo, bro,
do this. You have the capability to do it. Gosh,

(44:09):
it's not like go invest in Apple, Yeah, because that's
would I'd say, don't go to college. I wasted too
much money in college.

Speaker 3 (44:17):
Really, Oh we never finished it? Yeah, but oh that's
true because he never finished.

Speaker 1 (44:21):
But even did you finish it? Does it? It doesn't
feel like a waste of money? No, but at least
you have some Oh you actually did something.

Speaker 3 (44:27):
I did, yeah, which was the radio television film. So
I went into television easier to get and and the
guy that got me the job I went to school
with him. He had already gotten a job there, and
he's like, come on, I'll hook you up.

Speaker 8 (44:39):
Okay, that that tracks, you know what I mean? But
I don't think my degree was speech communication.

Speaker 1 (44:44):
I mean, like, what was it going to do with that?
What a waste?

Speaker 3 (44:48):
Your degree was speech?

Speaker 4 (44:49):
You don't have the degree, you know what I'm saying?

Speaker 1 (44:51):
But what would I would have done? If it's not
about what you do with it? I think to some people,
it's can you complete the process? That's what a degree
is for for the most part, because a lot of
people do things that that's not even in their degree.
But I don't also think. I also don't think college
is for everybody, and even for creatives. I don't think
colleges for everybody.

Speaker 8 (45:08):
Yeah, I feel like I proved that I can complete
the process. I graduated high school. I mean I completed
the process. Like that shows you can complete the process.
So did I really need to go to college?

Speaker 1 (45:18):
Probably not?

Speaker 8 (45:19):
Uh spent money in college? Yeah, I had to pay
off the student loans for like eight nine years. Yep,
So I could have had all that money to do
whatever I wanted.

Speaker 1 (45:29):
So I just don't go to college at all.

Speaker 8 (45:30):
Yeah, but the parties were fun. See that's the problem.
You can tell party parties and females. Yeah, but you
showed to a college party. Did you go to school here?

Speaker 7 (45:38):
Nah?

Speaker 1 (45:38):
Man, I don't go to college.

Speaker 4 (45:40):
It's like, so then what do you want? Gosh, man,
this is what I'm saying.

Speaker 3 (45:45):
What are you saying?

Speaker 4 (45:47):
I really don't know.

Speaker 6 (45:51):
Would you say like to go and chase that reality dream?

Speaker 1 (45:53):
More?

Speaker 5 (45:54):
Like?

Speaker 2 (45:55):
Here?

Speaker 8 (45:56):
Well, here's the thing, When I was that age, there
was only a few reality reality shows weren't as big
as they are now. There wasn't as many career paths
in reality TV.

Speaker 1 (46:05):
But you could any other time for the next ten
years after you could have quit okay and gone and
done that. Yeah, that'd have been twenty years ago.

Speaker 3 (46:14):
Do that's two thousand and five.

Speaker 1 (46:15):
Oh yeah, there's plenty of reality lots of reality shows. Bananas,
That's what I'm saying.

Speaker 8 (46:20):
There wasn't reality shows won in a career then usually
ninety nine point nine percent of people like the only
one that I can go that has been around that
long as CT and Johnny Bananas. That's pretty much it.
Elizabeth Tasselback, she's not around anymore. She's not doing anything.

Speaker 1 (46:37):
Sure, a digital media is where everything is now. What
is Elizabeth Hasselback doing. She's probably making more doing a
podcast than you are doing this. If I were guessing, No, I.

Speaker 4 (46:47):
Really just don't know if she is doing something.

Speaker 1 (46:48):
I have no idea. I just saying like, I don't know.
But she had a cur she was made millions of
dollars in the view.

Speaker 8 (46:52):
She did a great job, she boomed, she was the
hot Nike chick on Survivor and that got her a job.

Speaker 6 (46:58):
I think, but are you kind of going back to
yourself fifteen years ago with some of the knowledge that
you have now to be like, hey, maybe you should
try this so you would have the knowledge that like reality,
it's like dudes.

Speaker 3 (47:09):
Do what Yeah, like try out?

Speaker 1 (47:10):
Try dude?

Speaker 4 (47:11):
No, no, maybe.

Speaker 1 (47:14):
Dude, like hey, lunchbox, make out with him.

Speaker 8 (47:17):
Maybe I should have been nice, like I should have
maybe made out with some ugly chicks, Like maybe I
should have been like, you know, not just pushed them all.

Speaker 3 (47:24):
You almost said be nicer, Like could you be.

Speaker 1 (47:26):
Nicer ugly chicks? Like give him a chance?

Speaker 3 (47:28):
Okay, but like what about be nicer to people? Would
you have been?

Speaker 1 (47:31):
I'm plenty nice to people like Adam Good? What about Abby?
What if his person came back to him? He's like,
I'm so excited to get knowledge, and he's like, be
nice to Abby. That's all that's all you're telling me. Okay,
we're out of time because I get some other stuff
to do. But all right, thank you guys, We will
see you tomorrow. Goodbye, everybody.
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Hosts And Creators

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

Scuba Steve

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