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January 3, 2020 27 mins

Amy was warned by a police officer as she was pulling out of a parking stall for not having her seat belt fastened. Lunchbox gets in a little trouble for signing a work document illegally trying to help a co-worker. Plus, show members try and guess the classic television show theme song!

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
The Bobby Bone Show. All right, I will play you
the theme to a classic TV show, just named the show.
These are old school, by the way. Song we number one,
I'm in champ Amy love boat Oh correct, lunch box

(00:33):
chips Eddie love boat man on alright, name when You're
a kid. Yeah, I've never heard that one before in
my life. Name this classic TV show theme song? What's
the show? Don't listen on your crime? As long as

(01:01):
the growing Pains, Growing pains, Family Ties? Whoa wow? It
was either one of the Hey, that's where I wanted
the two. Yep, that's where I was like, named this one.
Oh boy? Oh what what? Welcome back your dreams? So

(01:32):
your chicken welcome back, saying maybe you have it? I
got it. Maybe welcome back Carter. Oh yep, yeah, give
it the bugs you lost it. I put family Ties.
It's mister Carter. Welcome back Carter. What is it? Carta
spell it c O T T O R. I'll take Carter.

(01:56):
It's Carter, Okay, smelled Carter, you said, Carter, Yeah, there's
no R. Just no, no, no, don't okay us you
know you were wrong. Okay, Carter, you got that. I
really thought it was Carter. There we go. I'm in.

(02:24):
I'm in for the word, I'm in. Okay if Amy
had you're tied? Yeah, Amy five? Oh hai five? Oh
magnum p i Amy, Eddie, we gotta tie here? Nice
for us, all right in the TI tie Bobby mon So.

(02:45):
Want to go over and talk to Joan and Utah? Hey,
Joe wan, Hey, how's it going? What's happening? That's much? Hey,
my wanting friend marathon in Salt Lake City, and she
took first in the women's division. And the first hours
that she was running, she was listening to the body
Bow show. Oh wow, wait she finished first in her vision. Yeah,

(03:06):
she's finished first in the women's overall division. She won
a little bit of money, so that was cool. Holy cow?
How fast did she run the marathon? Do you know?
She ran it in three hours and fifteen minutes? Amy?
When you ran the marathon? What did you run it
in four hours and like some change? Thirty eight minutes?
Maybe something? I was three thousand, six hundred and fifty

(03:30):
third place, I think. But will you listening to our show?
Because apparently that's the secret ingredient to winning the show
didn't exist? Then, Joe, what's her name, jo want give
her a shout out. Her name is Jamie Alivizo. We
are both high school teachers at Grish High School and
Lee how you talk. She coaches cross country, I coach soccer.
And I'm actually one that tweeted you about those custom

(03:50):
shoes a while ago, the toy story shoes, know the
customed my shoes for like the anniversary, customized shoes for
her anniversary. I don't know. Oh, I don't know if
you remember that. And then surely after you customized sues
for for your dance partners. I thought you got the
idea for me. Oh no, I have no idea. Listen,
I'm to my favorite tweets. I was just talking to

(04:10):
Amy about it earlier today, right, yeah, yeah, yeah, he
talks about you, all right, Joan, You guys are also
we listening to you every day. Shout out to you guys,
all right, appreciate you, Bud, Congrats to your Congrats to
your wife. Let's say you were flying from here to
Texas and you're in the airplane. All of a sudden,

(04:31):
the cabin fills up with smoke, heavy fog. I'm freaking out.
Yeah yeah, yeah, what would your husband say about that
him being a pilot. Day, calm, Do I need the
breathing thing? I just drop. You should start punching the ceiling.
Give me that breathing thing. Yeah. Make sure to put
the oxygen on yourself before helping others. Stay calm, be prepared,

(04:56):
know where the exits are, stuff like that. Put your
shoes on. Well, you're getting ready for a crash. It's
just smoked. And Amy's like, brace for impact. Well, I'm
telling you what my husband would tell me to do.
Passengers were alarmed after a thick layer of mist started
filling up the cabin on a Delta flight going from
Jacksonville to New York. One of the passengers filmed the cabin.

(05:17):
I'm looking at it now. You can't see it. It
looks like it gets real foggy on the streets and
ahead of you. It was so thick. She said, maybe
it's from human weather. But the Delta flight attendants didn't
explain what was going on. I have a friend that's
the fly attendant, and I was like, Hey, what's the
deal if something goes wrong, Like, are you guys trained
to just show nothing is wrong? She's like, oh, yeah,

(05:39):
we're trained to do nothing that shows we're alarmed in
any way whatsoever. And you know, flight attendants only get
paid for when the plane is in the air. They
can be at the airport, they can be doing things
on the ground. They never get paid for that. Even
there's like a delay you're supposed to do, not get
paid for that. Wow, they only get paid when the
flight is in the air, off the ground. Isn't that crazy?
They get paid per hour. I thought they'd be salary.

(06:01):
They get paid while the flight isn't there. That's why
you want those European flights. Yeah, for a long time
that the pilots get paid the best. Those that get
like New York to Paris twice a month, they're like loaded.
How do you know, Well, my husband knows. I don't mean,
but I don't know. Would you say loaded? But it's
a very us like in the hundreds of thousands. Yeah, yeah,

(06:23):
I mean, and it's not it's not a hard gig.
Would you would your husband ever be a pilot at
a commercial airline? I don't think so. What's that transition
from military to commercial air line? Does you have to
a lot of tests? A lot of people do it.
I mean, yeah, you have to get checked out in
what they're aircraft or whoever you're working for. A lot
of people do it and they love it, and I
mean it's got some great friends that work for certain

(06:43):
Why would he want to do it? He just doesn't
want the whole You do start no matter where you are,
you kind of start at the bottom. Even though he's
been flying at the Middle East and like doing real
right and you can work your way up. But he
looked into flying like for FedEx or like if you
know someone in there and you can get in, that's
like a clutch job because you can fly through retirement

(07:04):
and the retirement is great. But I think just kind
of like the you have to start the you know,
the Austin to Dallas flights ten times a day. He
just can you imagine a pilot's like all right, rook,
come on, and he's like, Rook, I freaking starved our country. Yeah,
I shot down thirty two planes in one day. What
did you do? Yeah, Bobby mon show, listen to the story.

(07:25):
Here this guy twenty two years old, he scammed Amazon
at a three hundred and seventy thousand dollars by just
returning dirt to them. What so he didn't buy dirt,
so he would buy let's say he bought a Nintendo
and he would take it and he would take the
Nintendo out of the box and then he would fill
it to it its exact weight with dirt and ship
it back and they would never open the box sitting

(07:48):
in warehouse and they could potentially ship it back out,
so he'd get the money back, and then he'd sell
the Nintendo that he kept, and he made three hundred
and seventy thousand dollars twenty two years old been arrested
because he kept sending them dirt. He filled up the
boxes with the same exact weight of the product. Amazon

(08:08):
return policy says items ship from the website can be
returned within thirty days of re seat refunds or processed
in two business days, and customers can expect their funds
to show their account three to five days. And so
he has been released on bail and he has started
his own company with all that money. So now it's
like he's got his company going with a bunch of money.
He cheated Amazon out of Wow, it's almost like people

(08:29):
that were billing Amazon and Apple, I think maybe even
Google and Facebook with all these Hey, we did a
bunch of work at your place, and so they would
just pay them. Their massive companies scammed out like millions
of dollars today. This story comes us from Lancaster County, Pennsylvania.
A woman was driving in her car about four am.

(08:50):
She's like, it's awful dark outside. I think I'm gonna
light a candle. So she lit a candle in her car,
had it on the console. It slipped off and caught
the whole car on fire. That's just not good. Did
she wreck? She was able to pull over and get
out before she got inflamed, but the whole car went
up in flames. Pretty helpless feeling, I would imagine, and

(09:15):
the fire department said, the car is a complete loss. Wow,
there you go, lighting a candle in the car. I
don't know. I never thought of that. And I've thought
of doing everything in the car, everything, everything, everything all right,
Thank you, lunchbox. I'm lunchbox out your bone head story
of the day. It's time for the good news. So

(09:38):
it's like twelve thirty am, like middle of the night.
A woman sleeping, but her dog is going crazy and
she's like, why are you acting this way? Oh, So
she decides to get out of bed and see what
the deal is. He leads her over to the window.
She looks out the window and sees flames coming out
of her neighbor's house. Wow, her neighbor's house was on fire.
So then she grabs her brother. I guess she's an

(10:01):
older woman. I don't know, grabs her brother. They run outside,
knock on the door. They're able to get that family out.
Kids are in there by the way. Everyone got out
safe and sound, and there was severe damage to the house.
That dog, whether you're protecting his own people, he's practing
the neighbors. Yeah, that's a very good one. That's what
it's all about. Right there. That was tell me something good.

(10:24):
What happened to you yesterday? Well, so I was in
the gas station parking lot and I was reversing out
of a spot in the parking lot and I hear
like a honk and then a and I look over
and it's a police officer. And I rolled out my
window and I'm thinking something wrong with my car or what.
And he said, you might want to buckle up if

(10:47):
you're going somewhere, And I was like, I'm buckling up.
I'm going to buckle up. I promise I'm gonna buckle up.
But I had just put my car in verse. I
hadn't buckled up yet because I'm still in my parking
spot sort of what's the car moving? Yes, it was
in reverse, that's he I know, I know. But I
was like, oh, no, I was, I'm in a buckle,
don't worry. And he said you should buckle up before

(11:08):
that car even hits reverse or drive. And I was like, okay, yes, sir,
good thing he didn't ticket you, right, I mean, I
guess he could have, But how lame if I would
have gotten are you breaking law? Don't be telling the law?
You ever looked in the eyes of law and told
him a lame No, I didn't know. I said yes, sir,
and I showed respect. But then I and then I

(11:28):
was kind of bummed Stevenson wasn't with me, because he
would have loved that encounter and he would roll down
his wine. I would be like, you're right. I always
tell mom Mom, you're not buckled. Yeah, I was. And
we can't be on our phones driving here anymore, right,
you can't even hold it in your hand. And I
was sitting in a light yesterday and there was this
guy next to me who was texting away and I
grabbed my phone was gonna take a picture him, and

(11:50):
then I thought, oh, I'm also breaking the law by
taking a picture of him breaking the law. So I
didn't get it right. I was gonna get it and
be like citizens arrest on Instagram, but I didn't do it.
Probably lunchbox, did you sign for somebody here in the building. Oh, yeah,
I did do that. It wasn't you. Yeah, yeah, apparently
there's some drama now we mean drama. I didn't know

(12:12):
anything about it, but one of our bosses came to
me and said, somebody from the morning show signed somebody's name.
It wasn't them. Yes, there was someone in the building
that needed something signed by one of the bosses. The
bosses was not going to be back for three days
and he had to turn it in and I said, look, man,
no one's ever going to read the signature. I'll do
it for you. What were you signing for? It's something
about play like, it's something with a record label we

(12:34):
get to sign once a month. Sounds important. Well, like
HR called me and they were like, hey, who's signed
when they shouldn't have signed? What? Yeah, because you can't like,
you can't do that. But that's illegal, right. I'm not
sure the lenalities of it. But I didn't know that
you really did that. I thought it was just a joke. No,
he was. He seemed like he was in a panic.

(12:55):
He was like, I don't know what to do. I
don't know what to do. I mean, he goes, he
signs it every month. He didn't even read it. So
it's like, you signed it. Why would you prot saying that?
Who was saying I don't know what to do. I
don't know what to do a co worker, co worker,
I don't want to say names, like no need to
say names. I don't want to get anybody in trouble here.
But I was just like okay, just like and he
was like, I have bad handwriting. So I was like, okay,

(13:16):
here you go. Boom and I just kind of did
a little curly queue in a line and boom, just
kind of a generic signature, real easy. I okay, But
you did do it. I did do it. I was
trying to help a co worker out of a situation.
Why couldn't he just do it then? If he wanted
someone to sign it fake, because now you've put yourself

(13:37):
and like they're gonna have a meeting with you. Hr
as for signing for one of our bosses. He said
he was he has bad handwriting, so it would be obvious,
and he had written something on the note like he
had to fill out the paperwork so they would know
his handwriting. So I said, okay, I'll help you out. Man,
you come. That's what I do when co workers need help.
I helped them out. Now I'm a team player, like, listen, guys,

(13:59):
you need I'm done, I'll help you out. When we
think about this, because he's probably gonna get in trouble
for it, I don't know what I mean. I thought
maybe a package came and the package is gonna get
taken away, which is a whole annoying process if someone
doesn't just sign for it. So that would be super helpful.
So I think there's times for signature fraud and time

(14:21):
that is and then and then this is an FCC
thing like and then there's times to not do signature fraud.
And this I don't want to understand what he was
signing for. So it seems a little sketch and if
HRS involved, I would rather just bow out and play
the fifth. I don't think Lunchbox knew what he was signing,
But it doesn't matter. Why would you put yourself at risk?

(14:43):
The whoever the other co orgatis suckered you into doing
it because they could have done it doesn't matter if
you're handwriting is MESSI or need if you do a
line with a curlaque like I feel like they were
scared so they got you to do it. So now
you're gonna take the fall. Oh no, no, I think
I mean we're in it together because oh yeah, good
luck with that and other famous last words. Don't worry

(15:04):
warning it together? Wow, co conspirators. If there's anything wrong
with it, there's But there's nothing wrong. It wasn't It
was just one little sheet of paper. It wasn't even
like a like a huge book. It was one paper.
Co conspirators are still conspirators. Bones, what are we talking here?
A year? Two years? I don't know. No, there's no slammer,
but they do want to talk to him. We haven't
been in trouble with You have to see before what

(15:26):
this is gonna be. This is involving stuff like that. Yeah,
I thought he was gonna say he didn't do it.
Now you're just looking on the radio. Wait, and how
did he get back to you? Because yes, through hr
wo Edie's loving it. It's hilarious because most of the
time you're like, no, it wasn't me, and now you're

(15:48):
just like, yeah, there's no stick together. What's his name? Oh? No,
I thought you guys were gonna give you props for
helping a co worker out. That's why I took credit
for it. But now that you say it's bad, I
didn't do it. Oh, and we're downe with a segment, Raymundo.
Hit that button, buddy, there it is. You're Samy's pile

(16:12):
of stories. So fun fact Friday. You want something from
the eighteen hundreds. Nothing screams fun like the nineteenth century.
Go ahead. Well, single women would put an apple slice
under their arm during dances and at the end of
the night, when it was you know, nice and sweaty.
I guess they would give it to the guy they
liked and if he felt the same way, if he

(16:33):
was interested, you gotta be kidding me. You gotta be
kidding me. I had to finish it. He would eat
the apple. If he wasn't interested, he wouldn't eat it.
But if never been interested in a single girl during
the entire eighteen hundreds. I know, I thought put an
interesting way to I mean, now, are you so glad
we just have tender and you swipe? Well, no, this
is what I do. I take a chicken strap but

(16:54):
put it on, but I go for a run. If
there's a girl and she likes me, I'm like, oh,
that's so disgusting, that's so disgusting. I bet they didn't
even share the arn't pits back then either. Oh yeah,
all right, what else? Ammy? So, by the way, that
wasn't that fun. I'm just letting you know. That wasn't
that fun. I like my fun facts Friday to really

(17:16):
like give me joy. It wasn't a little more fun. Okay,
go ahead. Well that seventies show it debuted in nineteen
ninety eight, which was eighteen years after the seventies ended,
So based on that time difference, there was going to
be a That's nineties show it would have debuted last year. Wow,
what would I mean? Yeah? I mean, and it was
kind of cool to watch. I didn't watch a lot,
but the seventies show they did a good job and

(17:37):
it seemed so cool and like the bell bottoms. But
like if we were to watch a That's nineties show,
like what would people be doing? Well, I think it
would work right now. The nineties are starting to be
cool now, like much like the eighties were, and we
were just kind of in that the eighties were cool,
like nineties would be like hammer pants early nineties. Yeah. Oh,
I didn't know what's part of the nineties. Sorry, Yeah, no, no,
I was thinking yeah, because I was trying to think

(17:58):
of it too, like early boy bands. When I just
think of the nineties in general, it's like hammer Pants,
boy bands, the Dallas Cowboys, all right, what else? Any? Okay?
So men get pregnant pregnancy symptoms, and it's more common
than you would think. Like a study found that approximately
ninety percent of men um you know, have nausea breast tenderness,

(18:20):
sometimes severe enough to prompt them to go to the
doctor because they're like, what is happening to me? And
they're like, oh, well, you're just you know, you're significant other,
your wife, your girlfriend, whatever is pregnant and you're just
feeling it. So I didn't know if Eddie or Lunchbox
had breast tenderness when their wives were pregnant. No, no,
I think I have a little I like, I had
pizza last night and I don't I don't eat pizza, rare,

(18:42):
I don't eat I love pizza, but I had pizza
with a girl last night, right now, yeah, as pizza.
That's not a euphemism or anything, but pizza. Um. And
now she was like, let's because some New York pizza.
It's like, okay, great, now I fell a little pregnant.
I'll be honest with you. Oh bloated, Yeah, honey, carbs

(19:06):
like that. Yeah, I know the feeling. Yeah, but no,
you're not. And my breasts are kind of tender pregnant
sentence all right, thank you. That was Amy's pile of stories.
It's time for the good news. There's these guys out

(19:31):
on an oil rig one hundred and thirty miles offshore,
doing what they do on an oil rig, and they
see something paddling towards the oil ring. They're like, what
is That's a dog? How are they again? One hundred
and thirty miles from the shore people, And they don't
know how the little dog got out there, but it's
paddling in the ocean. Manages to cling onto one of

(19:53):
the poles, of the oil ring, and they were like,
how are we gonna get it up? They finally tie
a rope together, put it around the dog's neck, and
pu old the dog. The dog is swimming one hundred
and thirty miles off the land. He's just out there swimming,
and that's he had to fall off something, right, had to.
There's no way this because that's a little dog. It's
not like a huge, big old dog. Well I don't
even still think a big dog. It's swim one hundred

(20:14):
and thirty miles. But it made it and survived and
they rescued it. I would have dot that dog. Wow,
is that even real? Is that turtle? I mean? Do
they have food on an oil rig? I don't even know? Yeah? Yeah,
how do they sleep on those things? Rooms? Yeah, yes,
they're huge. I don't know anything about him. You've seen Armageddon.
I have seen Armageddon, but I didn't know if that's

(20:36):
an accurate description. Everything about that movie, accurate, historical everything.
All right, that's it, you guys. What's all about? That
was tell me something good, your buddy, and he missed
the bobbing. This is abo right, Let's do the morning

(20:59):
Corny with Amy right now here, we go, morning, Corny.
Why was the burglar so sensitive? Why was he burglar
so sensitive? He takes things personally? Oh takes them. Oh,
he takes them personally. He steals them personally. Get it? Yeah?

(21:21):
Oh like that one you do? Yeah, unbox, I'm still
trying to get it. But no, he takes things for
himself personally. He's a burglar. He's sensitive. So it's like
a play on the word I'm gonna know, and he's
gonna go. Yes, it's up the lunchbox. So it's up
to you, buddy. He doesn't hit which one the crickets. Well,

(21:41):
for all you burglars out there, you might like it.
That was the morning Corny. I want to go over
and talk to Tina in Kansas City, who's on the
phone right now. Hey Tina, good morning, Hey Bobby. What's happening?
Are you guys? Pretty good? I just wanted to call

(22:02):
in and let you know that I have been I'm
a new fan of yours a couple months now, maybe
a little more, but I had been a long time
listener of our morning program here probably twenty five years,
and I am just addicted to you guys now. I
just have to turn you on every morning, and thanks.
Just so funny and I love that you guys care

(22:23):
about kids and the whole foster and adoption thing that
you guys are doing, and it's just really great. I
just wanted to let you guys know that I gotta
be honest, We've got some good people on this show.
You talk about foster and adoption. Amy's two children are adopted,
and Eddie's got fostering two children, and I feel like
you guys also, yeah a bit foster me. Yeah, with

(22:44):
your love. It've adopted you with your special love. Yes. Yeah.
It takes a really big heart to do that, and
I've seen it done in personal ways even, and it's
it's great that you guys have put there's such good
people out there to do that. La Tina, thank you
and thanks for sing. And man, if you tell your
friends about us, that'd be awesome because they can listen
to the iHeart Radio right there. I will do so

(23:07):
all right, Thank you, Tina, see you later show. The
story is so funny and I'm glad I wasn't there,
But Disney World tourists did not have a fast pass
to a ride which it fast passes you can go
on you can buy one and you get to basically
cut line. Yeah, and you only buy one an hour
or so. She didn't have one of these, and she
wanted to go on Tower of Terror, which is that

(23:29):
ride at Disney that takes you up and drops you.
I think, yes, yes, I've been on it. It's amazing. Okay,
So she's like, I don't have a fast pass. I
want to get on this ride. They said no, so
she punched an employee and then started pressing all the buttons.
What yeah, like at the podium, started slamming buttons. It's
not good. A Chicago tourist who was angry she didn't
have a fast pass ended up punching a cast member

(23:51):
in the face and began pushing all the buttons, and
an employee said, hey, don't do that. That could have
an effect on the ride. The twenty three year old
woman wasn't charged because the Disney worker didn't want to
press charges. Oh too nice. The attack began when her
and her group. Oh, her group was so embarrassed, right,
it has to be. What if it's a church. They're
all obnoxious. They were upset their fast passes weren't valid

(24:15):
for the Tower of Terror, which because there's a long way.
They say, no fast passes on this line. Apparently the
incident um was right there and where where everybody watches
like the Twilight Zone introduction, they say, and so again,
the scene just continued to escalate. She goes, hey, you
should stop, and that's when she pushed the girl's hands away,
and then she punched the cast member in the face.

(24:36):
That she goes over starts hitting all the buttons is
a whole thing. What does she want to do with
all the buttons? I want to make a crash? Yeah?
Is that her goal? By hitting all the buttons? Like,
she can't be on it. Nobody's gonna have a good time. Well,
what are the people that're like break their legs? Oh,
that would be so awful. We don't tolerate unsafe behavior,
A Disney spokeswoman said. When I thought that store was funny,
I was laughing before went on the air with it.

(24:58):
She should be in trouble. The cast memb should press charges.
You know. It shouldn't be on the cast member. It
should be on the park. Okay, the park. Yeah, sure,
somebody if she punched somebody in the face. If I
was on that ride, it's almost starts hitting buttons when
I'm on the ride, and it could make it go
faster or stop, I'd be ticked. I saw where there
was some bad weather and they had to stop some
of the rides the other day, and they just they

(25:20):
just stick you. You're just there wherever you stop. Oh
that's the worst. I mean I've never experienced it, but
to be on a roller coaster upside down, Yeah, you
see that sometimes where it's hanging upside down for like
four hours. Oh my gosh. No, because I always am
nervous that my little harness thing is gonna come loose
on the ride. More about blood rushing to my head

(25:41):
just for a long time, more than that, because I
don't think that's ever gonna drop. I don't think the
harness is gonna let me go. Oh I do. I
think about how miserable it would be, just all the
blood pulsing into your head for hours. It's time for
the good news. I love recognizing our men and women
in the blue. They're out there protecting us, serving us,

(26:04):
even saving us. A pair of police officers in South Carolina,
they were in a walmart and there was a three
year old kid who stopped breathing and clapsed. Inside the Walmart,
officers Brandon White and Kirby Clapping found the little girl
on the floor in the clothing section and there was
a stranger trying to help her, and they were like, Okay,
let us we're trained, but really, how trained can you

(26:25):
be on a three year old? You know what I mean? Yeah,
because I mean you can try all the training in
the world, but when there's a little kid that's really
stopped breathing. So the officers did CPR until emergency personnel arrived.
The first responders got her, they kept her going with
the CPR. They found a heartbeat. They were taken to
all the hospital, the cops. The girl she was saved,

(26:47):
everything she wins, she lived. They saved her. And I
want to recognize them for hopping in and one just
being police officers because there's a lot to that. Your
life's on the line every day and then you save
people and that's cool too. So officers Brandon White and
Kirby Clapping, that's pretty cool. I see, that's what it's
all about. That was tell me something good. I canna

(27:13):
wrap it up for today. Thank you so much for
listening on Instagram. I'm mister Bobby Bones. You can click
and follow and we'll say, appreciate you guys being here.
Lots of lots of options for you. So the fact
that you listen to us, we really appreciate that. And
if you spend ten minutes or five hours, we appreciate that.
Listen to the show back on iHeartRadio or iTunes, just
search Bobby Bones Show. Thank you very much. B
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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

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