All Episodes

November 2, 2025 29 mins

Clay ranks October as the best month of the year thanks to sports like the World Series, football, and fall festivities. Buck counters with his love for January in Florida, sparking a lighthearted debate about weather, vacations, and Halloween traditions—including Clay’s neighborhood “parent treats” and costume plans. Louvre heist of the French Crown Jewels. Clay and Buck give wedding and relationship advice.

Make sure you never miss a second of the show by subscribing to the Clay Travis & Buck Sexton show podcast wherever you get your podcasts! ihr.fm/3InlkL8

 

For the latest updates from Clay & Buck, visit our website https://www.clayandbuck.com/

 

Connect with Clay Travis and Buck Sexton: 

X - https://x.com/clayandbuck

FB - https://www.facebook.com/ClayandBuck/

IG - https://www.instagram.com/clayandbuck/

YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/c/clayandbuck

Rumble - https://rumble.com/c/ClayandBuck

TikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@clayandbuck

Follow Clay & Buck on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/clayandbuck

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
The Sunday Hang is brought to you by Chalk Natural
Supplements for guys, gals, and nothing in between. Fuel your
day at Chalk dot Com, Bold reverence, and occasionally random.

Speaker 2 (00:12):
The Sunday Hang with Playing Fuck podcast starts now we're moving.

Speaker 3 (00:19):
So the Laura Travis Halloween party that has been in
existence for the last decade or so is not happening
in normal fashion. But I suspect that my wife will
have something that she has planned for us to be wearing.
As you know, she gives out I think I've talked
about this before on the air. Every Halloween in my neighborhood,
all this I mean, I don't know. There's probably a

(00:40):
thousand kids that are sure or treating in my neighborhood.
It's super packed. Parents also walk around and some houses
give out parent treats, and a parent treat might be
alcoholic in nature. We have for the last decade or so,
Buck given out fireball shots on the Travis front porch
were twenty one parents. Parents. Yeah, we are not getting kids.

(01:05):
We're not getting eight year olds wasted. No, this is
parents only. And occasionally my wife will will request an
ID because there are sometimes teenagers that will that will
decide to be taking around their their nieces, nephews or
maybe little brothers or sisters and try to try to
take advantage of the largess here. But I believe that

(01:27):
will be going on. And usually my wife is dressed
up when she's passing that out. So yes, look, I
think Halloween is one of the most fun times a year.
Fall October. If you made me power rank my months,
I think October is the best month of the year.
That would be my power ranking. I don't know what
month you would go to.

Speaker 2 (01:46):
Overall.

Speaker 3 (01:46):
I just think I'm a sports guy. October is the
best sports month, weather treat, leaves changing, Halloween's my favorite
month of the year.

Speaker 2 (01:53):
May a second, by.

Speaker 3 (01:54):
The way, all my power rankings uh so, but but
but my favorite month of the year. And yes, there's
a lot of reason for optimism across the nation right now.

Speaker 1 (02:03):
As a New Yorker, I would back your October. But
just because I love fall and the temperature and the leaves.
I can't say that it's because I watch much of
the football, but as not just.

Speaker 2 (02:16):
The football, buck.

Speaker 3 (02:17):
You got the World Series and the Major League Baseball
Playoffs going on, and so it's kind of like everything
coming together.

Speaker 1 (02:23):
I'm glad to learn of those things. Yeah, but also
because I had forgotten that the World Series was going on.
But then there's as a Floridian, you gotta love January
the most.

Speaker 3 (02:35):
You gotta love you and cocky Floridians because you just
want to how much time do you spend now that
you live in Miami on your iPhone just occasionally flicking
over to check and see what the weather is in
New York when it is January. This is what Floridians
love to brag about, like, oh, what's the temperature where
you live right now?

Speaker 1 (02:53):
Not just weather Clay. I go through Instagram and I
check out all these shmos all over the country. Don't
live in South Florida in mid January with a big,
itchy wool sweater and a ski parka and a hat
with maybe another hat trudging through snow. That's when Florida
feels like a magical place. That's when all of a sudden,

(03:15):
So January is the best month in Florida. I would say,
I can't say December because I don't like our Christmas
celebrations down here as much as I cause snow and.

Speaker 3 (03:24):
Every year to be like super warm and have like
snow globes out and stuff.

Speaker 1 (03:28):
Yeah, you get, you get. The lights around the palm
trees is not as exciting to me as the stuff
you'll see in the colder parts of the country. So
I have to give the month of December to the
more temp the you know, the seasonal places across the country.
But once January hits and you're done with your New

(03:49):
Year's celebration and the Christmas and the Hanakah holidays and
everything else, are you walking around in sandals because US
Floridians are.

Speaker 2 (03:59):
How about August?

Speaker 1 (04:01):
I really, you know, it's not as good. If you
like melting all the time, it's fantastic. If you like
the constant feel of your clothing being wet, then South
Florida in August is great.

Speaker 3 (04:12):
So I will say there are very few feelings better.
I don't like cold weather, and I understand a lot
of you live in cold weather. My wife likes. My
wife grew up in Detroit, so there are very few.
I always say, it's not a vacation unless you put
on fewer clothes when you get off the plane than
you had on when you got on the plane. Right,
I always have ski right well, but I don't. I'm

(04:33):
not even a ski guy, right. Yes, I understand people
like that and ski villages can be fine. But if
you told me, hey, you can go to a warm
beach or a ski village, I'm picking warm beach every time. Now,
my family doesn't always agree, so sometimes we end up
out there. Look, I'm a Goodletsville, Tennessee kid. Nobody around
me knew how to ski, like, so you know I'm not.

(04:55):
Oh no, I'm just scrolling through and catching up on Twitter,
and I see that they shared my I was all
in an optimistic mood, and then I find out that
my senior class photos have just been shared by the
Clay and Buck Twitter feed.

Speaker 1 (05:08):
Here and have you seen this yet?

Speaker 3 (05:10):
I'm thirty minutes behind on social media and this thing
is going to go everywhere.

Speaker 1 (05:15):
Oh oh, Clay's hair if you haven't seen it, Clay's
hair was very much what I was describing as the
worst nineties haircut for men, which was very common. I
cannot lie. I think my older brother had it for
a while. There was a period of time, so it's
fun to take a little.

Speaker 2 (05:33):
Throwback Sunday Hay with Clay and Buck.

Speaker 1 (05:37):
Been a long time since I've seen The Pink Panther
or say Ocean's Eleven, a much more recent movie. But
if you were paying attention to the news over the weekend,
you might have seen that there was a stunning heist
at the Louver in Paris. Paris on Sunday. It was

(06:01):
open for business, tourists flocking in, probably getting close to
the Mona Lisa, where they realize they're in a very
packed room and it's a small painting, and it's behind
like ten inches of bulletproof, bombproof, nuclear bomb proof glass,
and it's not as exciting as you're hoping it's going

(06:22):
to be. Sorry, I'm just telling you the facts, but
there are all these tourists jamming in there, and some
guys dressed in construction worker garb managed to steal over
the course of about this is nine thirty am Sunday,
France time. They got on an electric ladder mounted on

(06:47):
a truck. They got to the second floor, the Apollo Gallery.
This houses Clay France's Crown Jewels, yes, the actual Crown Jewels,
and these guys used power tools broke in and a
couple of burglars broke into the most famous museum in

(07:10):
the world. And still the most priceless jewels that France
has eight pieces of jewelry, sapphire tiara necklace, earrings, royal
emerald necklace belonged to Empress Eugenie, the wife of Napoleon
the third Clay. What the heck is going on here?

(07:30):
I thought this was a made up story. I thought
to myself. Surely, surely France could stop people from stealing
things from the louver in Tom twenty five, France could
stop people from stealing the Crown.

Speaker 3 (07:45):
Jewels like jewel if this movie came out. I was
talking about this with my wife. If this movie came out,
it sounds crazier than an Ocean's eleven. Like I would
I would not believe that they could steal the French
Crown jewels in a movie. I would say, this is
too unbelievable. How does this happen?

Speaker 1 (08:05):
They took them ten minutes?

Speaker 3 (08:08):
How it would be in the Crown jewel room for
ten minutes and they can't catch you?

Speaker 1 (08:14):
Like I went?

Speaker 3 (08:15):
And why I read all about this because I was
traveling up here late last night and I just I
was reading every article on my airplane flight, because I
watched all the videos. They just pulled that. First of all,
how can you? I got so many thoughts on this. Everybody,
by the way, is reacting. Everybody thinks it's as crazy
as you and I do.

Speaker 1 (08:34):
Buck.

Speaker 3 (08:35):
It's an embarrassment to France that they could steal the
Crown jewels. If somebody could go in and steal this
sounds like a Nicholas Cage movie. Because it is the
Declaration of Independence or the Constitution, I would say, yeah,
we really blew it here. I would guess that's probably

(08:56):
the top thing that could be stolen in America. The
French Crown jewels just being stolen is embarrassing. As part
of all my reading about the French Crown Jewels being stolen,
I forgot. You know, they stole the Mona Lisa in
the early nineteen hundreds. So if you were France and

(09:21):
you had had previously the Mona Lisa stolen out of
the same museum one hundred years ago, don't you think
you would have said, hey, let's make sure that none
of our priceless artifacts ever get stolen again. And yet
France somehow allowed this to occur. And to your point, Buck,

(09:44):
it was the middle of the day. They just pulled
in a lift, they went in through the second floor window.
They were there for I've seen different reports seven to
ten minutes, which is a really long time time to
be in the most secure museum in your country.

Speaker 1 (10:04):
It should be.

Speaker 3 (10:05):
And then they left on motorcycles and now they have
no idea where they are. And you mentioned, you know,
it's hard to sell these, and I think that's probably true.
But my expert knowledge from the very high end television
show Outer Banks, one possibility would be that they just

(10:25):
melt this down for the jewels.

Speaker 1 (10:28):
But that doesn't seem like such a good move because
of the problem is value. You can't you can't. You
can't melt the jewels. These are diamonds and emeralds, so
you're not gonna melt those down right, You got to
keep them whole. Can you you melt diamonds? I don't
think you can.

Speaker 4 (10:44):
Know.

Speaker 3 (10:44):
Well, I think you melt the gold and then you
isolate all of the diamonds for the value.

Speaker 1 (10:49):
But out these diamonds and these emeralds are going to
be so big, Like you're you're not going to go
on the on the open market. You're like, hey, I
just happened to have this twenty carrot emerald that I found.

Speaker 3 (11:04):
You know, I am simultaneously impressed by the hutzpah of
the robbers because I mean, they decided we're gonna steal
the French crown jewels and they managed to do it.
I would imagine that they have been preparing for this
for some time, although the report is they dropped one

(11:24):
of the most valuable assets, like the one of the
crowns I think or something, and so it was left
behind and damaged. But I wonder, do you think this
is some insanely wealthy person who funds this, because what
is the motivation here other than embarrassing the French government,

(11:45):
Because I can't imagine that it pays actually that well
unless there's some super rich billionaire who just decided he
had to have the Impress's the Impress's necklace.

Speaker 1 (11:56):
Right, It's like you're going on Thomas Crown affair. Like
maybe there's somebody out there who's just so board with
his life he's like, you know what I'm going to do.
I'm going to steal the French crown jewels out of
the louver. So I don't know, I wonder if some
Middle Eastern shake or that's kind of my thought, Wonder
wants so badly to have the French crown jewels in

(12:17):
his in his safe that he would, but that's I
gotta run in high risks here. If that's true, it's
not the you know, Middle Eastern ruler.

Speaker 5 (12:28):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (12:28):
Also, just there's more fun thing like go buy yourself
a European soccer team or something. You know what I mean,
do what all the other super rich foreign guys do.
I mean the crown jewels. I don't know what you
do with them.

Speaker 3 (12:41):
My thought is, if it's true that it was some
Middle Eastern shake or something that says, hey, go get
the the Empress Josephine's you know, necklace, this is kind
of the Middle Eastern shake equivalent of when Kobe bought
his wife the twelve million dollar ring after he got
caught cheating on her, like one of those Middle East
her cheeks did something really bad and he's like, she's like,

(13:03):
the only way I'll stay with you is if you
get me the Impress Josephine's necklace. And he's like, all right,
I guess we got to get the Impress Josephine's necklace, right,
Like do you remember Kobe when he got caught actually
was the woman accused him of raping her, yes, right
of rape, and his wife stayed with him after the
rape accusation. But they had a press conference and she

(13:26):
showed up with a diamond that was like a twenty
carrits like twenty somebody look up how big the diamond?
It was like four carrots Clay, I don't think it was.
I think carrots is like is like a football. I
think she basically showed up with a with a flashlight
sized diamond. I mean like it blinded everyone at the
press conference. They were like, why did you decide to

(13:48):
stay with Kobe? And she like raised her hand and
four people lost their eyesight when they caught the reflection
from the diamond.

Speaker 1 (13:54):
Eight it was eight. So we kind of sput the
difference between us. I said four, You said twenty is
eight E twenty carrot ring would be like a baseball.

Speaker 3 (14:04):
Eight carrot ring is a ridiculous ring. And this was
pre all the fake diamonds, right, like the diamond industry has.

Speaker 1 (14:12):
On a second, they're not fake diamonds you're talking about necessarily,
there are such things as fake diamonds. You're talking about
lab dim and I know some people in the jewel business,
and they're real diamonds. They're just made under laboratory conditions.
Oh yeah, much less expense. Basically natural diamonds, and no
one's hands get chopped off in in Africa by the

(14:35):
warlords who are trying to mind them. You know, the
blood diamonds stuff. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (14:39):
No, it's basically destroyed the diamond industry because they're able
to produce the synthetic diamonds. I think is the technical
term that instead of fake. Uh that people to a
large extent can't tell the different lab.

Speaker 1 (14:52):
I believe lab dimond is synthetic is at a right
rod too. I don't know, by the way, until that's
probably accurate. But I'm just saying that they're usually diamonds.
Is how lab grown diamonds. I think. I remember this
from when I was buying carry her engagement ring and
people were I did not go LAB. I probably should
have gone LAB because that was I told her this
the most expensive thing I ever bought in my life ever,

(15:13):
because I didn't own a home, was was my wife's
engagement room.

Speaker 3 (15:16):
Well this is also where you didn't get married till
after you already made money. See, I didn't have any money.
I don't think. By the way, Kobe's ring was valued
at four million dollars twenty years ago, so this is
probably close to a ten million dollar ring in modern
you know, the way that Biden inflation has gone. I

(15:37):
didn't have much money when I got engaged. In fact,
I think I had. I certainly had a negative next war,
a negative net worth and when I got engaged, So
it was a lot of money to meet, but it
wasn't a lot of money in the larger context. You,
on the other hand, you get married, you're already you
had to you had to produce a good ring because
you got real money. Now, so well they do this

(15:58):
thing of three months of salary that's great, which is insane.
But guys, all right, I'm gonna tell you said, right,
for all the game, we don't have a lot of
unmarried guys listening who are still want to get married.
We have, we have some, but you know, I think
a lot we we we specialize our audience is overwhelmingly
gonna be people who are married or have been married, right,
I think that that's true. We don't have a lot

(16:19):
of guys in their twenties and thirties in particular who
are like looking to get married.

Speaker 1 (16:22):
But for any of you out there, we'll tell you
a few things. Do not go into debt for uh,
for diamonds, for vacations, or for anything that that that.

Speaker 3 (16:33):
You know, weddings do not go in debt for weddings
or rings.

Speaker 1 (16:38):
This is the next thing I was gonna say, right
because you brought up like, yeah, I'd already had, I'd achieved,
you know, a little bit of professional success when Karen
and I got married and and we I mean, I'll
tell you, like, our wedding costs less than it basically costs,
like the national average, but we're doing it in New
York City and Miami Beach costs less than a heard

(17:00):
of what the average wedding would cost. Because I don't understand,
you know, in those places, because you know, why are
people spending all this money on this stuff? I think
this is crazy, the pressure you get. You know, you
shouldn't have to get Napoleon's Empress Josephine Crown jewels for
a lady to love you. You know what I mean?
This is come on now, No, it's totally true.

Speaker 3 (17:18):
Look, I would tell everybody out there, and I know
there's a lot of dads and moms nodding along right now.

Speaker 1 (17:26):
I would I.

Speaker 3 (17:26):
Would encourage you have way less of a wedding, way
less of a ring, and use money to try and
buy a place like somewhere to live for you. Put
that into the house fund instead. I'm gonna tell my
kids this. I don't even know what the rules are now.
I've got three boys. It used to be the dad paying.
You're not paying for any wedding. By the way, technically

(17:48):
I'm paying for all the weddings. I bet that's probably.
That's that's probably I'm gonna end up paying for a
lot of the weddings. But I'm telling my boys, hey.

Speaker 1 (17:57):
You should. They're gonna go to your new house and
thirty and be like, you know what, Clay, I'm gonna
let you. I'm the father of the bride here, but
I'm gonna let you pay for the wedding. Buddy. I
think I think I can see Mexico from here. Yeah,
I think, yeah, you can almost see Mexico. Get up
there pretty high.

Speaker 3 (18:12):
You know what I've learned, Buck rooftop pool there, the
bugs don't get that high. It's a problem I didn't know,
Like the the bugs get in the pool when you're
down low. The higher up in the sky you go,
the bugs. Bugs don't fly that high. But it's something
that I've learned. There's no bugs in the pool the
high Like if you got a high level pool, there's
no bugs. It's like everything gets better. But I'm gonna

(18:35):
end up paying. But I'm gonna tell my kids now
I've already talked to him. Hey, weddings are great, it's
fun to celebrate them, but I will I would rather
help give you the money that I would spend on
the wedding to be in part of your house fund,
which actually benefits you and as a good investment, then
just throw a crazy extravagant wedding, which, by the way,

(18:58):
just to be fair, of weddings don't last. The marriages
don't last.

Speaker 1 (19:02):
That long, all right.

Speaker 3 (19:03):
Well, let's imagine if you were a dad and a
mom and you spend one hundred k on a wedding
and two years later your kids are getting divorced. I
would want a refund on my hundred k.

Speaker 1 (19:16):
I was one to a I was a plus one
to a very extravagant wedding in Long Island that lasted.
They were married six months? So I what do you
think the wedding cost three grand? Probably so, Matt, I mean,
this is insane. Imagine that you and and not even
for the people who throw it on. I think you
should have to return the gifts and get your money back.
You only last six months, I mean, whatever wedding register

(19:39):
you got, like why why should you not get your
money back on the gift too? But I'll just tell
you for all that for the guys out there, if
you if you give the ring and you get any
sense or you know, you say William Barry me, you
get any sense that the ring itself is some kind
of issue, and or you hear via the grapevine that
like the ring, like the answer is a yes, but

(20:01):
the ring is disappointing. Don't do it, boys, you need
to do don't do it. Run It's not good you really, Yeah,
you need to know, you need to know. And I
wonder if some of the ladies are gonna wigh on
this one. They know, they know we've got We've got
a lot of wise ladies who listen in here, and
they know that I felt the same way on the ring.
Would you rather have an expensive ring or a husband?

(20:25):
Who is going to be thinking about the long range
future here, and he's trying to think of a place
to buy. He wants to start a house fund. I've
said this before. I do think it's funny for girls
out there, if you got daughters, if you got granddaughters.
Knowing a guy's credit rating, I think is almost more
valuable than anything else I'm talking about. If you're getting

(20:45):
married to a guy who's twenty eight or thirty two
or thirty four, you know, in that range, does he
have a decent credit rating? That's where That's what I
would want to know.

Speaker 3 (20:53):
The job matters, but also is he capable of understanding
basic finance such that his credit rate is going to
be able to help get you a mortgage? That's what
i'd want to know. If I was a chick, I'd
be like, Okay, it's great. You know you're six foot,
you got a decent s out. What's your credit rating?

Speaker 1 (21:09):
Clay is what we would call a hopeless romantic, So
there you go. He's like, hey, baby, what's your credit rating?
I want to know.

Speaker 2 (21:17):
Sundays with Clay and Buck.

Speaker 1 (21:21):
Ken in Michigan wants to talk about wedding stuff. Ken
By all means, sir.

Speaker 5 (21:29):
Hey love listening to you guys. When my two daughters
have got married, when they were planning their wedding, my
wife and I sat down with them and our potential
son in law and negotiated a fair, a nice but
fair wedding cost. And when we got done, I said, Okay,
you're going to get half the money up front, you
get the other half on your wedding day, and anything

(21:50):
that's left over you can keep. And boy did they
change their tune and start cutting back on costs and
they kept them balanced.

Speaker 1 (21:56):
For avice, I love this. I love that advice.

Speaker 3 (22:00):
I mean, if you got rational kids that are getting
married out there, if you're the kid that is listening
to us right now who is going to get married
one day, financial issues gonna sound like an old man now.
Often derail marriage is more than almost anything, right. Couples
fight over money. There's very strong chance that you and

(22:21):
your spouse may have different standards of expenses or understanding
of how money should be allocated. And so starting off
with something that is a common goal, being able to
build a home and not starting off in debt, my goodness.
I just the choices that people make. Can you imagine
Bud getting married and owing fifty K to help pay

(22:43):
off your wedding.

Speaker 1 (22:45):
I would I were the guys, we're here to help
you out with this not worth it, you'd have a
not my actual wedding we had twenty five people. Yeah,
my actual wedding. We had twenty five people. Basically, I
think that was the number. Carry my correct meess you
would know better than it was something like that. And
we love that. It was perfect. It ever had a
great time. So you know, it was in the church,
it was our families and that was it and that
was all we needed. Now, we threw a big party.

(23:07):
But when you're just throwing a party without all the
wedding stuff, you know, Clay, you came to that. Yeah,
that's We had one hundred and eighty people at a party,
but the expense wasn't that much because it was it
was a three hour party. That's right. It's not the
thing with weddings is you get into all this other
stuff and it gets all all Yeah.

Speaker 3 (23:22):
They play up on everybody's insecurity by saying, well, you
could choose not to do this, but most people do.

Speaker 1 (23:28):
You know, and look, if.

Speaker 3 (23:30):
You are fortunate enough to have the money as a
dad or mom. And you want to throw a big party,
that's fine. You could spend money however you want.

Speaker 1 (23:37):
It exactly anyone who has the money to burn. We're
not telling you what to do with that. I'm just
saying it's not worth it to go into debt, yes,
which people do, which is bonkers. It's not going to
debt for a vacation. How do you enjoy your vacation
when you're running up a twenty thousand dollars credit card
debt on it?

Speaker 3 (23:51):
It's nuts, It's nuts. And again I would echo what
Buck said. If the girl is going to be upset
about the size of the ring, you need to run
in run other directions.

Speaker 1 (24:03):
Not gonna get It's not gonna get better, guys, it's
not gonna get better.

Speaker 3 (24:06):
And by the way, maybe you end up having success
in life and you want to give your wife a
bigger ring somewhere down as a testament to the success
you've had together. I think that's a cool idea.

Speaker 1 (24:17):
But I have a deal with Carrie, because you know
she she quit her job to take care of speed
and to uh, you know, run the household. I can
get her gifts and things for Christmas, like, you know,
things like we're a little jewelry and stuff like that.
But she's like, well, if I get you a gift,
isn't it just with your money? And I'm like, yes,
that's why. Don't do it. Just keep being a great wife.
And I mean it. You know, don't don't get me

(24:39):
a Rolex. I don't need a Rolex. I don't even
want to wear a fancy watch. I'm fine. I only
shop at Costco, so I don't even know what i'd watch.
The Sunday hang is brought to you by Chalk Natural
Supplements for guys, gals and nothing in between. Fuel your
day at Chalk dot Com.

Speaker 2 (24:56):
Sunday Drop with Clay Buck.

Speaker 3 (25:00):
Judy on the podcast Listening. Oh, I got two funny
comments Buck. One a friend, UH sent this through my wife.
I'm listening to yesterday show. Please tell Clay he's right
on weddings, also, you, Buck, My two sisters and I
all three got married in less than two years, three

(25:23):
huge weddings my dad paid for. He's still pissed about
how much they cost to this day. Listen to this Buck.
He actually made us sign a contract that if each
of our marriages did not last at least five years.
We had to pay him back for what the wedding cost.
Completely true story, Valerie, how this right.

Speaker 1 (25:45):
No problem, No problem with that at all, No problem
with that at all. You're gonna you want all the
bells and whistles if you're not gonna make this a
real union that goes to test that last the distance.
You got to pay that money back.

Speaker 3 (25:56):
I am team Dad. I've never heard of any dad
that did this before. But he had three daughters and
he had to pay for all of them within two years.
And Dad just said, hey, if they don't last five years,
you're on the hook to pay back for this.

Speaker 1 (26:09):
I don't have a daughter. You don't have a daughter,
but you know we're still trying, so maybe we'll get
a daughter here over at over in Team Buckland. And
I would just say this, Clay, if I was in
that situation, you know, let's say twenty years down the
line after having a baby, girl, I would I would
take the let's sit down. I'll give you a budget. Yeah,

(26:29):
and the budget is twofold. It's a wedding budget and
a down payment on your house budget. Yep.

Speaker 3 (26:35):
Allocate the resources as you see fit, exactly you get.

Speaker 1 (26:39):
To make the determination. But I think that that puts
it very you know, especially you get a lot of
people out of millennials priced out of expensive member the
price out of expensive markets. People can live in the
Tulsa suburbs in a nice place, no problem. But everybody
that's complaining about this, the millennials, they want to live,
you know, at the like you know, the Navy Yard
in DC, or they want to live in well Beacon

(27:02):
Hill in Boston. I don't know where do fancy people
in Boston live. I just don't want to say the
Upper Eastide in Beverly Hills because those are only fancy
neighborhoods that come.

Speaker 3 (27:08):
Yeah, look in Nashville, there are tons of places you
can live very affordably. All the kids want to live
in the Gulch, they want to live in Music Row,
they want to live in twelve South right, and you
could live very cheaply in Gallatin right. By and large,
you could live very cheaply in lots of suburban areas.
But I love your idea. Hey, let's sit down. Here

(27:29):
is your budget. If you're fortunate enough to have resources
to be able to help with the down payment on a.

Speaker 1 (27:34):
Home, make a smart, rational decision.

Speaker 3 (27:37):
But Dad there was like, Hey, if this don't go
find if this doesn't go five years, you're gonna have
to pay me back. Judy is weighing in. AA let's
see what she had to say.

Speaker 4 (27:47):
So I've never actually called the talk show before, but
I did just listen to Clay talk about the fact
that he didn't get to watch any football and that
his Tennessee volunteers loss. I'm really sorry to see this, but.

Speaker 1 (28:01):
Roll tide gude they did. Was she spiking the football
right in your heart? Clay's what happened?

Speaker 3 (28:08):
She was, now I got to watch some football, but
I was saying that I spent six hours because my
Alabama fan son of all, dropped his phone in the
toilet and we had to go get the Evidently, eventually
we found out we had to replace the battery that
was wired out or buzzed out or whatever it did.
And so I unfortunately did watch Alabama beat Tennessee.

Speaker 1 (28:29):
But yes, we were in ancient Rome. They would say
that this was an omen and that his dropping of
the phone was like dropping the vall's hopes. On that day,
I thought that that would actually be the case, except
he is an Alabama fan, and so he both tormented
me by having me spend six hours getting his phone fixed,
and then as soon as the game was over, I

(28:51):
picked him up where he had been hanging out with
a bunch of his friends and he said, roll Tide, Dad,
Tennessee sucks and I was like, dude, I spent six
hours getting your phone repaired.

The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show News

Advertise With Us

Follow Us On

Hosts And Creators

Clay Travis

Clay Travis

Buck Sexton

Buck Sexton

Show Links

WebsiteNewsletter

Popular Podcasts

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

I’m Jay Shetty host of On Purpose the worlds #1 Mental Health podcast and I’m so grateful you found us. I started this podcast 5 years ago to invite you into conversations and workshops that are designed to help make you happier, healthier and more healed. I believe that when you (yes you) feel seen, heard and understood you’re able to deal with relationship struggles, work challenges and life’s ups and downs with more ease and grace. I interview experts, celebrities, thought leaders and athletes so that we can grow our mindset, build better habits and uncover a side of them we’ve never seen before. New episodes every Monday and Friday. Your support means the world to me and I don’t take it for granted — click the follow button and leave a review to help us spread the love with On Purpose. I can’t wait for you to listen to your first or 500th episode!

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.