Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:11):
What's happening? And everybody, welcome to the show Morning Studio.
I forgot to tell you the story. It was about
two days before New Year's Eve, that would be the
twenty ninth, and my tooth broke, like this tooth at
my two in the middle. So so let's go and
there are two up front teeth or teeth, right, so
(00:33):
go one tooth over and then go one more tooth over.
It's like the pointy one, the sharp one. Yeah, so
that one breaks and so and I was biting my
nails watching a game, a bowl game. I was on
Draft Kings and I got a little money on him.
So but I was just biding my fingernail and it
goes boom and my tooth snapped off, like the tip
of it, like halfway up. And I'm like, oh no,
I gotta do this show in two days. And so
(00:55):
I call our dynist Amy and I share dynist. He's
also been on the show a bunch of times. And
I was like, I broke tooth. What do I do?
And he's out, I mean, it's Christmas, New Year's it's vacation,
and he's like, WHOA does it hurt? I said, not really, like,
I'm okay with the pain, he said, but I gotta
be on camera in a couple of days. And he's like, okay,
(01:16):
meet me in the office tomorrow. So I drive up
to the office and I still have a temporary on.
I should have already got it replaced, but he put
something on that it's a tooth. It looks like a tooth.
He's like, this only last for a little bit, but
it'd get you through the show. But at the same time,
because it's so close to the front of my mouth,
they had to numb my gums to do the work.
So they had to numb like above the front tooth
(01:37):
up almost into my cheek. So I get all this
numb and get to fake tooth. Caitlin and I had
planned a really nice dinner that night because we had
been gone for Christmas, and we had been gone pretty
much a whole month before that when I was in
Costa Rica, and so we go to this nice dinner
we had planned, and we had got reservations like three
weeks ago. But not only was my mouth numb, my
(01:57):
lip was numb, you know, gums, my nose was all
the way numb because of how high they had to
numb me. So the whole dinner, I'm slapping myself in
the face. She's like, you gotta stop. I'm like, sorry,
I just want to see if I have the feeling again.
So i'd eat something and I go and then or
something to be hot, and then put it up against
the not inside my lip, at the top of my
lip and be like if I can feel it. She says,
(02:17):
what are you doing. You're putting food on your lip.
It's like, I'm seeing if I had the sensation bag.
So I humiliated her for a whole dinner basically because
it kept slapping myself and putting food up against my
face to see if it had any feeling yet. But
I'm back. Shout out yard doctor doctor Jeff Termley, who
is great and fixed it up. And you know, no
one likes going to the dentist when there's an emergent.
I hate going to the dentist. I didn't go to
(02:38):
the dentist the first twenty some odd years of my life,
and so I really have, you know, some some trauma
because of that, because once I started to go as
an adult and could afford it, it was all needles
all the time. So I don't have a good relationship
with the dentist. It's a great job. Face is better now,
it's and it's not it went's numbed to You'll look
weird because you're like, oh yeah, it looked like a
(03:01):
big dope. And also I was talking to the waiter.
He'd said like, what do you want? I was like,
what do you go? It's not too hot because it
was too hot. I want work, And she's like, stopped
all order for you. You're being really crazy right now.
And I was still a little bit on laughing gas
because I had been so drugged out because I went
straight from the dentist to the dinner. So that was
a fun little story that happened over the break. I'm
(03:22):
so glad he could help you out. That would have
been awesome. Freedom show up on camera. I was already
deciding I was gonna have to do everything faced to
the left. Oh yeah, I like, guys, I'm just gonna
point my body this direction the whole time. But no,
he nailed it. Um back, I gotta go back again.
Have this taken off though, and a real one put on.
At some point I should have already gone back, but
(03:43):
I hate going to the didnnist so much I continue
to not call him. Yeah, that one will you. Yeah,
You're gonna live in that one for as long as
you can. Probably the goal is for this to stay
on longer than your fish is alive. Oh I do that.
We know we're good. Okay, it is time time to
open up the mailbag. Hello, Bobby Bones. My name is Jason.
(04:13):
I'm a college baseball player from North Carolina. I have
listened to your show in the morning for years. I
have lately found a love for singing. I keep being
recommended to take a singing career seriously, but I doubt
myself a little bit. I was hoping, with your expertise
in the business, you could help to recommend whether it's
worth trying to book shows and take it somewhere, or
(04:36):
if singing just isn't my cup of tea. I've attached
a clip of me singing in color by Jamie Johnson.
I would love to hear what you think and your advice.
Signed Jason, and before I play the clip, I want
to say this. You should go for it. If you
want to go for it, if you're if you have
the time, and it sounds like you're young, you have
(04:57):
the energy. You're going to regret not going for it.
If you don't, you're gonna ten years down the road
go dang. I wish I would have just tried to
book some shows and play some bars and play some clubs.
Even my friends that are artists now that have made
it weren't that great when they started. They had to
not be great in order to get good, in order
(05:17):
to get great. And I haven't even heard the clip yet.
Because if I heard the clip and I'm like, oh,
that's not very good, that doesn't mean you shouldn't continue on.
Maybe it means you should go to someone who can
help you get better. But if you don't go for it,
you're going to be thirty five years old going why
didn't I just go for it? I was young. I
(05:38):
didn't need a lot then. So after all that being said,
here's a clip. Oh boy, but well, I mean, it
could be amazing. It could. Most aren't. When this happens,
most aren't amazing. Here is a clip of Jason doing
in color by Jamie Johnson back in thirty five. Was
trying to survive. He looks like scared to deal, like
(06:08):
a couple of kids just trying to save a singing
pretty good. Yeah, you know, you're singing a song by
another person, so you're singing like the other person. So
it's hard to go, hey, you're a real star because
you're singing like Jamie Johnson there um. But you have
(06:30):
enough vocal ability to figure out your vocal ability. So
most of times I get those people are like, hey,
am any good? I'm like, oh god, I don't have
to tell them they're not. But yeah, and he listened
his last name here. I just wouldn't say it because
it may have been terrible, but it wasn't. So Jason
Arrant is his name, Jason. Here's my advice to you.
(06:50):
Go play restaurants, and go play bars, and go do whatever.
You play little assemblies, because the more that you you
play in front of people when the pressure is on,
not just you recording and being able to record it
over and over, if you don't do good, that's gonna
make you better. Chase your dream. Man. Yeah, I believe
in yourself. Chase your dream. So I say yes. I
(07:12):
was gonna say yes anyway, but I'm just so glad
I can say yes, and you're pretty good. That makes
it a lot easier. Thank you for that email. I'm
looking at him here a good looking guy. I mean,
obviously in country music there are a lot of athletes
that also see yeah, but yeah, go for it, man,
do your thing and let me know how that career goes.
Maybe one day you'll be in the studio and we'll
(07:32):
play this clip back and be like, yeah, all right,
thank you, close it up. We've got your game. That
was about the best thing you watched over the couple
week break that we had. Amy, Oh, Man, I really
liked Tammy Faye Baker. Did you watch that on HBO? Yes?
(07:56):
I saw it. Jessica Chastains in it. It was like
the Rise and Fall of Tammy Faye. Yes. I couldn't
commit because I was like, it's a movie, but I
was almost there. Oh, I feel like you'll love it
because it especially made me want to pull up Wikipedia
on all these televangelists read about the Yes, Jim Baker
like their whole story, just how they even came about.
I mean, I just remember as a kid seeing them
(08:18):
on TV. But it wasn't like an overnight thing. Obviously.
The Eyes of Tammy Faye is what it's called eighty
seven percent positive on Rotten Tomatoes. I almost watched that. Yeah,
I think you should. You would like it, and then
you're gonna love You love researching things, so you'll love
reading more. I watched Hawk Eye the whole series on Disney.
Loved it. Wait, what's that? It's Jeremy Renner's character Hawkeye.
(08:39):
Who is watched that with the kids. Yeah. And Hailey
Steinfeld is like the girl who's in school, but she's
like an archery expert and they have to get It's
really good. Anybody else watch? Might you watch it? Morgan? Yeah?
I watched it. I loved it. Right, wasn't it a
great series? Yes? I still think Wanda Vision is better.
I would agree, but I love both are really good.
Want of it was just made different? Yeah, it was
(09:01):
super creative. Um. I liked Loki. I thought Loki was
really good. I mean I watched that five months ago.
But the only one I didn't watch was the Captain
America one. Oh you should all three of them, then,
I think you should. Captain America is the most boring
Avenger to me. Oh, I like him, Like I can
pack Captain America and take him or leave him. You
didn't really have a power, but neither the Hawk guy
(09:23):
He's just good at you know, Bowe Arrows. That was good.
I watched the Atlantis More Set documentary on HBO Max,
which was great good. Yeah, it was great, especially if
you're like a nineties kid who I mean, she was
nineteen twenty years old when that was happening. Wow, the
Rise of Atlantis. I liked those music documentaries. I watched
The Juice World one, which was good. You know, he
died um, so I would say those were probably my
(09:45):
favorite things. Watched a lot loose, the Lucy movie Lucy
Ball Movie with Nicole Kidman. That was good. Did you
end up watching the Beatles documentary on Disney Plus? Yeah,
but it's seventy two hours long, so I'm still in it, okay,
And I only go to it when it's like, well,
I put something else on if I wanted to. But
I really like, I really like the rest. Just that
isn't something i'd recommend. It's very long, very long ed.
(10:07):
Did you watch anything I did? I watched Don't Look Up,
and that was cool because I mean, there just aren't
very many movies out there that I'm gonna watch at home,
and the fact that that was so good, creative and funny,
I loved it. I really like that too. It we
watched that pretty recent so I didn't put that on
my list yet. Yeah, but that was also really good.
Lunch Rocks. I watched the first season A Mythic Quest.
(10:27):
It's on Apple TV, and it's like this video game
company and it's it's hilarious, really funny mythic question. That
sound like something you'd watch, It's like something you'd make
fun of. Well, my sister in law was like, oh,
I think because we didn't have anything to watch, and
she was like, let's watch this. I was like okay.
And I sat there and I was like, that's pretty funny. Okay.
It seemed like a real of dorky at first. I
was like, this is gonna be so stupid, but it
was actually pretty funny. Morgan, why did you watch anything?
(10:49):
I watched the Harry Potter reunion on HBO Max Heard.
It was great. It's the best reunion I've seen. Like,
I love Friends, but Harry Potter like blew it out
of the water. I cried, I laughed, like I relived
everything of those series. What was the big takeaway for
you from them all getting back together? Well? I think
it was learning that they were just kids when they
(11:11):
shot it, and they had this insane director who was
able to direct kids as they were still kids in
growing up, like they were twelve years old when they
were shooting the first Harry Potter and you don't even
think about that when you watched the movie. But this
director was able to get them to be these great
actors and now they're huge actors all because of this
movie series. We'll make a whole list. We'll put this
(11:32):
up on our Facebook page. Search for Bobby Bones Show,
the Latest from Nashville and Tullywood Morgan number two thirty
seconds Gay. Last year, Luke Colmes was a musical guest
on Saturday Night Live, and he wants to be invited back,
but for something different. I would honestly love to host
an entire episode. I think that would be fantastic, you know.
(11:53):
I think that would be really fun. I don't know
if they do that with country singers or not, but
I'm right here if they're looking. McGraw talked about working
with actor Billy Bob Thornton again for the Yellowstone prequel
eighteen eighty three. Billy Bob was so fantastic. I'm a
big fan of his when he showed up and said
it was great to see him again. We've been friends
and kept in touch and hung out together a lot
since we did Friday Night Lights. He taught me a
(12:15):
lot during Friday Right Lights. He was like the angel
on my shoulder. Matt of Old Dominion talks about the
inspiration behind the band's new single No Hard Feelings. Something
you hear people say those are typically the ones that
catch my ear. Is you know you hear people say
it throughout their daily lives. Ain't no hard feelings? And
I just thought that seems like an interesting idea. I'm
(12:36):
Morgan number two. That's your skinny hat. It's time for
the good news, Bobby. A shocking discovery on Christmas Day
as a very happy ending thanks to some kind hearted
cops in Oklahoma, someone abandoned a Duffel bag with five
puppies zipped up inside at a Quick Trip convenience store.
(13:00):
Tulsa Police Department reports that someone dumped the bag on
the stores counter and then took off. An employee found
the bag full of puppies and when responding officers arrived
on the scene, they were like, man, we should we
should take these dogs. So quote overwhelmed with Christmas feelings
for the officers immediately adopted for the puppies, and the
(13:20):
fifth went home with a quick trip. Employee Wow, a
veterinary partner with the Oklahoma Alliance for Animals check the
puppies out, did the work that they needed to do
on the dogs and said, these dogs are five weeks old.
You're gonna have to be their mom like and make
sure that physically they get everything to a bottle even
at times. But they're all the dogs are taken care of.
They've all been adopted. Yes, you know what. Who put
(13:41):
those dogs there? Go to the camp find them? Is
it darable though? Or is it they were zipped up? Yeah?
I forgot that part. I thought maybe they were saying, like,
here's these puppies. I can't care for them, Like someone
abandoned a dumple bag with five puppies zipped up inside
that person. Yeah, that's a bag. I was picturing them
in a little basket being like I can't take them,
(14:06):
you know, I don't know. Well, shout out to those
police officers in Tulsa. That's awesome. That's what it's all about.
That was tell me something good, Amy, what's up? Well,
got my daughter her first iPhone. Oh yeah, that's right,
big deal. That is a big deal. I was over
at your house and she had a phone. Yeah, and
you know she's fourteen and a half. A lot of well,
(14:28):
I'd say, I don't want to make a blanket state
every single one of her friends at school has an iPhone,
but in church, every single one of friends school and
church has an iPhone. So it's just been a thing
that was inevitable was going to come. We need a
way to contact her. Quite honestly, there's sometimes where she
was at the school and she would have to call
us from the office if she needed us. We had
gotten her a different kind of phone, but again, she
(14:49):
just wasn't really feeling it, so she didn't want to
carry that one around. How did it make her feel
all of her friends and peers were trusted with a
phone that she was She was only trust with a
special phone that couldn't have any apps or do anything.
I mean, that's a good point, Like it was kind
of like, why can't I have this? There have been
some situations that have happened where you know, trust was lost.
(15:11):
So we had to work through some things and we
did and she proved to us that she can do it,
and I mean, the iPhone actually is great, though I
had no idea. You can just from your phone control
so many things, like I can shut her down, like
we can just turn every half off. There's a certain
time where it stops working. And then we implemented a
role that it has to it charges in our kitchen.
(15:34):
We have a little nook area where all electronics now charge.
And I'll admit I was not always that parent. I
would let tablets upstairs. I still let some alone time
with it upstairs, but I really wanted to be set
a boundary here and so it has to be used
in a common area. And I'll go back to the question,
how did she feel that she wasn't trusted with a
phone while of her friends were. I think that it
(15:55):
bummed her out, and then she ultimately ended up sneaking
stuff and then that caused other issue shoes. So we
made a repair with that and now we're moving forward
and we trust her with the iPhone except where we
can shut her down. So what's the most surprising thing
now about her having an iPhone? She has a screensaver
and it's not I thought, Oh, what's this new screensaver.
(16:15):
Is it a picture of our family, a picture of
your cat, your fish? What is it? No? It is
her celebrity crush again. She's fourteen. And the kid she
has a crush on he plays a kid on TV
Cobra Kai. He's like the Robbie team guy Robber. Yeah, yeah,
he's I don't watch. So who's that the blonde hair
(16:37):
since his son? Yeah? Okay, so that kid, the bad
guy from the original Karate Kid moves Johnny. Yeah, well
in real life his name is Tanner Buchanan. Because I
had to google him and he's twenty three years I
watched Cobra didn't know he's twenty three. Well at least
that's what is the Wikipedia said twenty three and I thought, okay,
(16:58):
but that's okay. I'm sure I had rushes on the
older guys when I was fourteen. He doesn't look twenty three,
but he hits his entire face as her screensaver. He's
right there. Hello, How do you feel about that? I
think it's fine, it's cute. I mean I had I
was obsessed with, you know, new Kids on the Block,
and we had posters. They have screensavers, digital devices, perfect example,
(17:21):
when you were fourteen. Let's go around the room. When
you were fourteen, well to say, who would you have
had on your iPhone screen as your celebrity crush? Yeah,
I mean there's probably so many, but I think Dawson's
Creek was picking up around them, so I would have had, like, um,
what is the main guy from Dawson's Creek? Vanderbeek, Yeah,
James Vanderbeek. I would have had either Alissa Milano from
(17:44):
Who's the Boss And maybe that was a little before fourteen, yea,
or Danika mckeller, who played Winnie Cooper on The Wonder Years.
Was a big fan of both of them when I
was a kid. Yeah, Morgan, I'm curious about you because
you're a bit younger than us. But when you were fourteen,
who is your crush? Probably would have been Aaron Carter?
Oh yeah, yeah, Well he's saying beautiful soul. He showed
(18:06):
up on Disney Channel all the time. I mean like
he was the hot guy singing beautiful, soldier Jesse McCartney
sing beautiful Oh yeah, and they combined. To me, they
are very similar. So are you still sticking to Aaron Carter?
I'm still Aaron Carter because he showed up in Lizzie
McGuire and from there, I'm pretty sure everyone my age
had a crush on him until we got into high
school and realized we didn't like him anymore. I mean,
(18:26):
I'm assuming Jesse mcartney thinks, what do I know about
that pop stuff? That Eddie? You're fourteen? Who was on
your dude? Back then? Kathy Ireland was everything to me,
and she was probably like thirty, you know how thirteen
she was thirties though, yeah, that is yeah, she was
one model. Yeah, for sure. Lunchbox guys, it's easy. Cindy Crawford,
(18:49):
Oh my goodness, that little mole she had. She was
the most gorgeous woman in the world. Had her poster
on the wall and she would have been on my
screen saver. Who her daughter looks exactly like? Exactly Kara Garber.
I mean she her daughter was probably twenty one or
twenty two. Now, Yeah, she's good looking, the same, looks
exactly the same, Raymond, No, what about you? Yeah, Katie Holmes,
(19:10):
I had that poster of her coming out of the water.
I believe it was Dawson's Creek. She was awesome. Katie Holmes. Yeah, yeah.
So she did a poster coming out of the water.
I think you're thinking of Kathy Ireland or no, that
was my girl because I had it on the wall. Well,
I'm sure one quick find it. I never knew she
was coming out of the water. Pretty wholesome name. All right,
we're gonna play Blake Shelton, God's Country Bobby. Oh there
(19:33):
it is Ray. You're right. Wow. I don't feel like
I should be looking. How old was she? When do
you see it? Yes? I got it. It's all you
can get an autograph on sale thirteen ninety nine. She
looks like a kid. No, I know what I'm talking
about me. I don't even though I was a kid
then too. I don't feel comfortable looking at this, this
(19:54):
kid version of her. We made the decision over our
a couple weeks vacation at our house to go to
some clutter. And that's old clothes. That's a pillow, my
favorite pillow we tossed. It's called Stainey the pillow. I've
had it for so long and it's got all these
It had the rest and pe stain, it had all
these weird stains on it, and like weird colors, like green,
(20:18):
green brown. I don't know how a pillow gets all
that because I never used it without the pillow case.
But Stainey was in my life for a long time,
and we've been searching for another stainy. We just can't
find one. We bought four different pillows, and every every
night I sleep on it and and I'm like, oh, just not.
I cannot find a new stainy. And Caitlin's also grossed
(20:39):
out that I call it stainy, and then I kept
sleeping on it even though it was so stained. My
point is, I don't see it and have a pillowcase
on it. Who cares? Have you not put it in
the washer? Washing pillows sometimes? Yeah, If you do, it's
like washing shoes, yeah, or a hat in the dishwasher.
Good luck. It may come back, but it may be
run forever. So I missed Stanny and I'm on the
(21:01):
way to finding a new pillow. You don't remember where
you bottom, amy. I've had this pillow fifteen years, okay,
which is so that's disgusting too. Um. I also have
like a razorback cut out shirt that I wear th
hogs across the front that's got holes all in it.
I've had it probably since I was nineteen and she
she begged me to throw that away. Why it's a disaster.
(21:21):
But I love it. Even the hogs is like all
you can't even sew it back together, it's so bad.
And so I love it so much that I did
not give up on Stanny. I gave up on the
hog shirt. I have not given I still have it.
I just gonna keep it, but not wear it. No,
I still wear it. I still wear it. Yeah. Yeah,
let me go over and take this call from Alan
(21:42):
and Virginia. Alan, you're on the Bobby Bone Show. What's
going on? Hey, Lollie, Hey, I just had a question. Man.
I read a lot of leadership books. I'm in project management,
you know, I have a lot of people that I'm
responsible for, and I just thought I wanted if you'd
ever considered, um writing a leadership book. I think, um,
(22:06):
you know, le just listening to you and some of
the ways that you leave your people there, and you
know how the crew actually, you know, loves to work
for you and stuff like that. I think any leader,
you know, that's what you shot up for. So I
was just curious, have you ever thought about that, Amy
on a scale of one to ten. How much do
you love? Be honest, Amy, I don't want to fight
(22:28):
this game. Um. I did write a book. It's like that.
It's called um No, it's called fight repeat. No, what
is it called. It's called fail until Yeah, that's it.
You're right, initially, fail until you don't fight, ground and repeat.
So it's a motivational book about success. Um. But it's
mostly about leadership within yourself. Um So I did write that.
(22:51):
If you want to check it out. It was a
best seller. Yeah. I don't know if he's picturing us
in around how like leadership meetings they work or anything. Yeah,
I'm a big lead by example guy. I'm not a
big raw raw guy. I'm a big I will show
up earlier than everybody else. I'm gonna work harder and
hopefully that that vibe hangs with everybody else. And we
are never late, let me tell you what. And this
comes from a few people that used to just be like,
(23:13):
he doesn't Amy and Eddie. It's lucky to get them
in on it Tuesday. Yeah right, but we respect that's
not us anymore. Everyone's time. That's true, because if you're late,
that's showing that you don't respect them exactly. And not
only do I do that at work, bones, I do
that in my life because of you. That's good. I
like that. And we've been a really successful show from
for twenty years now, which is pretty crazy to think about.
(23:33):
I mean, it's weird. It is weird when you think
of like long running things like Simpsons and like in Cis. Yes,
I can't believe it either. Um. Yeah, So I'll tell
you what, Alan, I will just send you. Can we
put Alan on hold and I'll sign and send you
a book Alan, And maybe I don't know, maybe this
can help you a little bit. Thanks Bobby. I really
(23:55):
appreciate it. I love you'll watch it or listen to it.
Watch it. I listened to it every morning on my
way to work and while I want at work. But
you guys are great and I really appreciate everything you
guys do. Thanks man. And what Amy meant to say
was ten, she loves it. I do you went? I
don't want to answer that would actually give the terrible impression.
(24:18):
It doesn't. Why did you you? You said, Amy? I
thought you were looking for me to say that because
you were like Amy dull. But sometimes you know, communication different.
We're all have different styles here and so so you
we've learned how to navigate each other. I think over
(24:38):
the years you say all the time, you have to
handle me with gloves. Oh yeah, yeah, you're very sensitive.
You handle me differently than you handle someone else. That
is a leadership skill of knowing how you need. You
handle every person on the show differently. Probably, I say
probably because I don't know. I only know from my experience. Well,
all I'm gonna send you a book, but I appreciate
that call. Thank you very much, Bobby, all right, your
(25:00):
man stand hole man. Let's go over to Corey in Ohio. Corey,
you're on the Bobby Bone Show. What's happening, buddy, Hey,
let's go pretty good? What you need? I was actually
wondered a while back you posted about those beady babies
you had that lady all dare. Yeah, and uh, I
(25:21):
was wondered, did you decide to sell all those or
did you take her words and hold of until next
year for the anniversary. Well, I have all of them
sitting behind me, and I told Ray Mundo he can
list them and then take a share of the profit.
But he really hasn't got onto that yet. Um, I'm
just gonna start giving him away. I'm gonna give about
two more weeks and then I'm just gonna give away
(25:41):
the beanie babies on the air to have anybody who calls,
would you like a beanie baby Corey? Yeah, all right,
hold on, let me let me reach in the grab
bag here and see what we got. Let's see, all right,
Corey has got a kangaroo beanie baby with the head
coming out of the belly. That's a baby, yeah, but
(26:02):
it's a head that sounds like a double beanie baby. Oh,
this one's worth what's this ten thousand dollars? Okay, no,
it's not, but it is. Core I'm gonna send you
this beanie baby. Okay, I appreciate it. I don't know
if it's worth anything, but stay on the phone. I
will give me sign the tag or love it fresh
and what there You don't need to give away the
tie very rare and retired pouch beanie baby. I found
(26:25):
it on Etsy for five thousand dollars. What's the style number?
Oh my gosh, here we go. This is where it's
gonna get confusing. Um, don't sign it. I don't. It's
from the nineties. Yeah, This one's from ninety six. I
just typed in Kangaroo Beanie Baby and it came up
(26:47):
five thousand dollars. I'm like, what else does it say
about that one? It says it's rare and it's retired.
It's a collector's edition. Date of birth November six, nice
is eleven six, ninety six. Oh my goodness, put it back. Well,
don't sign it, you'll taint it. Give him something else. No,
hold on, hold on, hold on, we'll go back in
the back bones. You do, give it to him and
(27:08):
sign it so it's worth that looks like, let me
keep down one. Let me keep down here. You can't
give him. This is what I will do. If this
one's worth money, I'll cut him in on the profit.
Oh okay, we'll keep it. We'll keep us number. Mike.
Can you look this one up specifically? I mean, Mike,
(27:32):
huh will you take Mike? Take this one? Guard it
with your life. You gotta look at all that stuff
on the tags. Mike Dollar, Beanie Baby. Race is gritting
his teeth right now because he sold all these to
me for one hundred bucks. Okay, I have a different one.
I'm gonna send him who is that grateful dead baby?
This one is a Garcia stime. Yeah, Jerry Garcia. Jerry Garcia.
(27:54):
Steve said, don't give away any of the bears. He said,
don't give away any bears. How much is that one?
Oh my gosh, hold on, god, what how much this one?
There's one on here listening for thirty one thousand. There's one.
There's one for ten thousand and one. Wait, hold on,
hold on? What's the day of birth on the good
one here? Let me see the thirty one thousand dollars one. Yeah,
(28:15):
we'll say it at the same time. Let me know
when you have it ready. Okay, let's how are you
going to say it with numbers or yeah? Numbers? Okay, numbers.
Hold on, I'm trying to find he's gonna be like
January February. This guy's just gonnaim getting a sharpie in
the mail because I'm not gonna give him beanies. It
doesn't list the birthday. Okay, I don't see it. Um.
The beanies used to follow him around because Garcia travel
from town to town. He's pretty poplar as you can see.
(28:36):
Somebody even says legendary. This is Garcia style. Four oh
five one okay, well, we're gonna try hold on this one.
Let me reach back into one more here. It's nice.
Don't Google get a bear. You're looking at Garcia one. Yeah,
there's I'm trying to find, like there's nine thousand dollars
one wait what here was yours? Uh? This one is
ninety five? Okay, oh look was that ninety three? This
(28:59):
one's ninety three? Read that I found. Okay, I'm gonna
save this one anyway. Yeah, okay, yellow ducky, I give
him a yellow duck. That's gotta be worth nothing. That's
gotta be worth yeah. Yeah. This is Quackers, the duck,
backers the duck. Yeah, okay, Corey, I'm gonna send you Quackers,
the duck, and possibly Beanie Baby, and I'm gonna cut
him in on the profit of the kangaroo. That's good, okay, Yeah,
(29:21):
I appreciate it a lot. Lunch box, the Quackers pop
up anything, Yes, two thousand. I mean there's all I'm
telling you. Anyone you type in, you've got to be
very careful which one you need to give ones. In
this boxing, they send a whole new box. Who sent
box Beanie Babies? It's like the new edition I send
us a bunch of beanie babies in the told you
(29:42):
they're all new edition. Are you trying to squeeze these
new beanie babies out of me? These are the bigger
beanie babies. Okay, well, okay, we'll send him one of those.
But shouldn't we keep them some of the in twenty
twenty years? Okay, because you're gonna get something in the mail.
I don't know what it is, but we're gonna send
you something. Everybody, all right, I appreciate, all right, all right,
(30:02):
all right. And we do a show every year called
the Million Dollars Show. It's Eddie and myself, the Raging Idiots.
We bring a bunch of arts. We raise money for
Saint Jude, and we were going to do it in
a couple of weeks. I've told you this postponed, right Eddie, Yes,
you've told me. We've discussed this because we do it
at the hospital and we have kids who are fighting cancer,
(30:23):
because they're a big part of the day. We can't
have that show right now because if one of them
get COVID. I mean, I don't care if people in
the crowd, they make your own decision to come to
a show or not or even us we would have
it if it wasn't the Saint Jude component of it,
where there are patients that come to the show makes sense.
But we'll do it in a couple of months or
maybe three months. But right now we can't do it.
(30:44):
I can't have a kid fighting cancer getting sick with COVID.
As much as I'm like, hey, get your vaccine, but
then go live your life, I'm just not going to
have that show with those kids. Because I want to
have that show with those kids in a few months. Yeah,
because they're what it's all about. Yes, so we've postponed.
We never really announced it officially, but he's postponed. It
(31:06):
will not be happening in January. I'm glad that you
already knew this because we didn't talk about this. I
found out through I mean through our people, like the Instagram.
Our people officially reached out and told me what's up.
It's during the break, you know. I would text Eddy
and be like, hey man, how's it going. He would
only send me a picture of him back with a gun.
About's going on. I'd be like, hey man, what have
you been doing? And he just sends a picture back
(31:27):
him holding a gun in the field. I'd be like,
all right, Eddie's being all right out bird hunting doing
something in shorts. All right, you're Samy's pile of stories. Well,
the RS ANDALDE reminder to report any illegal income that
you have. So if you have any stolen property, you
(31:47):
gotta report it. They want to know about it. And
that if you're a drug dealer and you've received income
from these illegal drugs, you need to report it. They
promise you won't get in trouble. Good question, No fingers crossed.
If you do turn in illegal income, yes, yeah, I'm
not sure about that, but they did. They didn't really
clarify if you could ride off any things you have
(32:09):
to buy for your illegal activity, like ski masks or
crowbars growing in your house. Yeah, stuff like that. I
mean it is your business, but I mean it says
here quote if you steal property, you must report its
fair market value in your income in the year that
you steal it, unless you return it to its rightful
owner in the same year. They ain't happen anywhere. That's
(32:30):
just not happening because if you're committing crimes, you probably
aren't telling the truth about it. Anyway listen. And also
it feels like one of those things where it's like
you want a free VCR and then the person with
twenty felony shows up to pick up their FREEVCR and
they get arrested right then? Got them? Quote Income from
illegal activities, such as money from dealing illegal drugs, must
be included in your income on Schedule one form Tim forty.
(32:52):
I hope at least one person doesn't. And we can
see if someone kicks in their door, you know, like
ither run the meth lab. This is for all the
funnels I've needed to write this off, and then see
if someone actually kicks in the meth lab and arrest
them or they go, hey, thanks for being honest. You
know we're gonna let this one slide. I don't think
that's the how it work. All right, What else you got?
So I'm gonna tell you what a wife found and
you tell me if you would be worried or weirded
(33:13):
out by it. But she found a list that her
husband was keeping, and it was of all the fights
they've had in the last year, every detailed list. So weird,
not weird. No, do you do that mentally? Oh, you
don't have. You don't have to write it down. I
don't think it's weird because you can use that list
for many things. How did I react, what was the
(33:35):
final outcome? What can I do better next time? What
can I do to not get into this situation again?
What it is? Also things like she was wrong in
this and I was right? Great if that's how you
failed the wonderful Yeah? Okay, well she found it. She
was worried, so she wrote in to see like, Hey,
is this something I should be concerned about? And an
expert told her no, No, of course not. That's right.
(33:55):
She said, this might be the right way that he
processes his feelings is by writing everything down. She basically
found his diary and now she's taking it to Front Street. No,
but it would be difficult to find an itemized list
of fights. But what if you found a journal with
him writing long form about the fights and how it
made him feel. It wouldn't be that weird. This is
just how it communicates with himself. Speaking of writing, were
(34:19):
you guys are a test audiences? Yeah? Speaking of writing
things down, Kelsey Ballerini said she wrote pages and pages
of things that she wanted to do better for herself
in twenty twenty two and then basically she threw them
out the door and was like, wait, why am I
putting on this pressure on myself? It's causing me too
much anxiety. So she put a post up on socials
relieving anybody else of the pressure if they're feeling that way,
(34:41):
and she said that her only goal for this year
is just to do her best. That's it. Yeah, good
for her. Yeah, I do have a list of things
to get better or to do more efficiently, but I'm
also on that list. Number one is do less. Yeah,
but but I want to do the less things I
do better. So it's a good plan. Yeah, so do
but the things that I'm doing less of really focus
(35:04):
in there. Okay, so it's probably equal out ye where
I was last year. I really that's my file. That
was Amy's Pile of Stories, Kid's Time for the Good News.
So this is proof that advertisements work. And one specifically
was for a good cause. It was from be the Match,
(35:25):
which is a registry that connects people in need of
bone marrow with donors. And this guy saw it, an optometrist.
He was like, you know what, I think I'm gonna
try to donate some bone marrow. You never even know
if you're going to ever be a match with someone.
The process is really long and grueling, So shout out
to him for even doing it. But like within a
few months, he got a call that there was a match,
(35:48):
but he did not know who he was donating too.
And they keep that secret in private for like a year,
and then they asked the recipient the patient, like, hey,
do you want the person to know? And the kid
was eleven years old and he said, yes, I want
him to know. And so now they've connected and this
man knows that he saved an eleven year old boy's
life and it's just really cool. So also a little
(36:09):
psa here too, maybe donate bowmarrow if you feel like
it or blood. You were kind of leading me to something.
I thought it was gonna be like a son or
something like. He didn't know it was as long lost son. No,
but it's just cool for him to know that he
saw an ad for be the match. Then he ended
up saving a kid's life and now this kid is
going to go on has a whole life ahead of
him thanks to this guy. Yeah, that's awesome. That is
(36:29):
what it's all about. That was tell me something good.
Your top three songs in country music this week at
number three, Chris Stapleton, You should probably leave probably the jam.
(36:51):
Number two Michael Ray, Whiskey and Rain. I hear this
one and I like it. I never know who sings it.
I'd a good song, but it's really good. Yeah, like
a when I said I didn't know what the song
what even was as it was planned? Like, oh, you
hear this one? I like this song. That's good, but
I don't know who. I never knew who's sang it.
(37:11):
It gets lost in all those dudes. I guess that's
a good one. Michael Ray, Whiskey and Rain. Number one,
Dustin Lynch and Mackenzie Porter Thinking about You. Pretty good
one too. I like that one too. Your number one
pop song right now is Adele Easy on Me So good.
(37:35):
That's really yeah. When that comes on the pop station,
I'll leave it on one another cravadunt anymore. That's a
good one. All right, Let's go over to Amy and
get in the morning. Corny Morning, Corny. What do you
call a nice ghost on a cold January night? What
do you call a nice ghost on a cold January night?
Cassper well, you had a good one yesterday. Huh, yesterday?
(38:00):
You It's hard to keep up that level though, I
get it, Amy, It's okay, Yeah, that's tough. Okay, all right, Sorry,
you can't win them all. That was the morning corning.
But do you have to the nice ghost he gives me? Like,
what do you call a ghost on a really cold night?
Because Casper's a nice ghost? No, I guess he's a
friendly ghost. Maybe you say friendly for the better Okay, okay, okay,
(38:25):
a comedy guy. Hey, I can take constructive comedian, not
a comedy guy. Here's the story. Parents who reward their
children with more screen time for good behavior and punish
them for a less screen time for bad behavior are
likely making their youngsters even more into those objects. So
(38:49):
who will admit to taking away screen time for bad behavior? I? Yeah,
I do it all the time, do you. I'm not
punished with taken away screen time. They've lost screen time
because of other things, like or like if they were
inappropriate use of their screen that's just like punishment. Okay, No,
(39:11):
like having an app you're not supposed to have, Like okay,
well you just lost your tablet for a week. You're
not losing screen time because it's something else bad you did.
You're like looking at your tablet. Experts agree quote, when
you give food as a reward, it makes children like
the carrot less and the cake more because you don't
give them a caret as a hey good, you give
them a cake. Yeah. Same thing with electronics. Kids become
(39:31):
obsessed and almost in love with their phones and computer
experts agree that when it comes to punishment, it's best
to send them to their rooms or take away friend
of time, not screen time, thoughts Amy, that's interesting. I'll
have to keep that in mind. The food analogy is strong, yes,
very because otherwise that have been like this sounds dumb,
but all right, you're like, oh, you get a cupcake
(39:53):
because you do. I love cupcakes. I'm associating that with
good behavior. It tastes good. But it is difficult as parents, though,
because kids due value their screen time, and so it's
like when you're trying to make them feel something of like, oh,
I want you want to take away something that, but
I mean I totally get what they're saying. Out of
the box approach. Yeah, punish them with more screen time,
(40:15):
punish them with's being able to do nothing but beyond
their screen. It's like as a kid, it's heavens approaching. Okay,
I never I never smoked, so I never got caught smoking.
But you would see or friends if they got caught smoking,
the parents be like smoked. All back to it now,
it's like you must overdo, right, So what if Okay,
(40:38):
I'm gonna punish you for twelve hours, you can do
nothing but look at your screen. And if your eyes
come off your screen, then they have a negative feeling
about the screen. I like your attempt, but I've seen
them watch TV all day yes, and then love it.
So I don't think it's gonna work. I don't either.
I'm just saying I was thinking about it in a
different way. Smoking at least like burns and it hurts then,
(41:00):
like they're just getting dobamine hit after dopamine hit. With
more screen time. Yeah, I do like screen time. I
like screen time too. Let's do a little update here, updates.
So before we left for our vacation, Eddie said his
son was only getting to eat Bologney sandwiches for lunch
and dinner every day for how long until I got
his final exam grades? But how long do you think
(41:22):
that was about two weeks. So for two weeks for
lunch and dinner, only blogny sandwiches and no no mustard,
no cheese, no condiments at all, just the white bread
with bologny in it. And what was the purpose of this? So,
I mean, he's been getting bad grades for about six months,
so finally it was like the last straw. Like, dude,
if you don't work hard in life, and right now,
your priority is your grades in school. If you don't
(41:43):
work hard, you're gonna not be able to afford you
whatever you want. And in this case, it's eat good food.
So oh, because he loves going to restaurant, he loves
he's a foodie. So it's like, all right, but here
you go. This is a taste of what life will
be like. If you don't work hard, you're gonna eat
bologny sandwiches for the next two months. Did he get
two weeks? Did he get tired of the any sandwiches? Yeah?
Like he would beg for like soup, and I'd be like,
you can't afford that because for soup at home. Hey, dude,
(42:07):
And that's the thing when you come up with something
like this, you have to stick to your guns. So
I would be like, you can't afford soup because you
didn't work hard, So let's get your sandwich. Would you
have ever done a punchment like this, I don't think so,
just because he has biological children. I have children adopted
from an orphanage that had different food insecurities, and I
don't think I can ever use food. Plus my daughter,
(42:28):
she's the fourteen year old, but really at the orphanage,
if they served her something, she didn't eat. She just
didn't eat. If I'm serving something she doesn't like. I
told her that Eddie's was doing this to a son,
and she's like, I just wouldn't even trust me. I
can go days. Well, that wasn't an option. Oh they
go full gandhi. My son tried not to eat and
I was like, ah, you're eating this. Yeah, but she
she's like she'll prove it. She's not scared to prove it.
She's like, I've already done that at the orphanage. Like
(42:50):
if well, on days they had served stuff I didn't like,
She's like, I just didn't eat because I tried that
approach of like, well, think back to when you're at
the orphanage, like this is what this is what we're
eating right now. You used to have to do that.
You didn't have a choice in anything, and she's like,
yeah I did, I wouldn't eat. I was like, okay,
good thing. He didn't do that. No he didn't, but
he ate blogny sandwiches every day for two weeks. Two weeks.
How the grades turned out? So, I mean he studied
(43:11):
his butt off, dude, I've never seen him study so
so so hard, and in return he got mostly a's,
a couple bees, and one seat and that C was
from the class that he got like f's over and
over and over. So to me, it worked. It was
the experiment was a success. I love it bones and
the best thing about it is I may not have
(43:32):
to do it again because he hated it so bad.
And he's got three younger brothers that are watching him
do this and say I do not want to do
this when I grow up. So I love it. Anytime
he starts to slide, you just do some blowney on
the table the back, Yeah, all right, you want to
go back down? Did we want to do this again?
Was his c and like um, you know meets from Kroger.
It was no No, it wasn't science. He struggles with science.
(43:54):
But but and when we came back from the break,
I'm like, dude, do you want to I mean, notice
how hard you study and how hard that was. You
can avoid all that by working hard every single day.
So I think we're on the good road. You've had
a couple of interesting tactics where you've locked him in
the bathroom once and made them listen to Michael Jackson
man in the mirror. Yeah, because these are all last
I mean, this is the last resort. I'm looking in
(44:14):
the mirror. I know what else to do, So let's
get creative. So yeah, now blowney sandwiches. You can't wait
for Eddie's parenting book to come out. Eddie will get canceled.
Nice word though, it were Yeah, good, So thank you. Yeah,
you're welcome. I don't know what I did, but you're welcome.
I don't know. I don't know why I said that.
I don't. Let's go over and talk to Kelly, who
(44:36):
is listening to us in North Carolina. Kelly, what's going on? Hi,
Oh my gosh, this is amazing. So my daughter is
turning nine years old and she is a huge Bobby
Boone fan and she we were listening in carline like
we do every morning, and um, she was talking and
(44:57):
you were talking about giving away the being babies, and
she was like, I would love something from Bobby Bones.
And I didn't know if she could just get a
shout out. She turned nine on the third paint, so
next Thursday, and I just wanted to see if you
could you give her a shout out for her birthday
or I didn't know if there's a chance of even
(45:19):
potentially getting one of the newer, not valuable style beanie
babies that she would treasure forever. You know what you
sold me. I don't want to get into the habit
of just someone calling and asking for stuff because I'll
never end every line will be like can I have this?
But I would love to give your nine year old
daughter or about to be nine, a beanie baby from
(45:41):
the collection here. Would you like me to sign it
or send it to you in mint condition? No signing it?
That would be more valuable to her. Okay, absolutely amazing. Well,
stay on the phone. What's her name? Her name is Lily, right,
Lily Hope your ninth birthday? Okay, Well, I was just
gonna say it here, but in case you sign it,
(46:03):
I hope your ninth birthday is awesome, and I'm going
to send you a little beanie baby from the collection here, which,
by the way, we don't get paid anything by beanie babies.
But we found one this morning. There was a kangaroo,
and Lunchbox said, don't give that one away, and we
looked it up and it's the same one that people
are selling for five thousand dollars on eBay. So we've
put it up. We've listed it right now. It is
(46:25):
the very rare and retired pouch with kangaroo and tag
errors near Mint nineteen ninety six. We've listed it starting
at nine dollars and ninety nine cents. Oh ray, you
could buy your own back. And I'm guessing it's still
at nine dollars and ninety nine cents. Well, we just
put it up. Oh, how do they find this? Mike?
(46:45):
What's what's the name? It's under his personal eBay account? Yeah,
I know, but was do you not want to say
what it is? Okay, Well we'll tweet it out, we'll
put it on Facebook. It this goes what are we
looking for? Like how much? I don't know, millions a
couple of million dollars, but we'll post it up there.
(47:06):
Lunchbox found it and said it was worth five thousand dollars,
so we'll see what happens with it there. Uh, let's see.
A TikTok user has gone viral for tipping a waiter
with a twenty five dollars Amazon gift card. On the surface,
how of that feel? Oh? I'm like, oh is that
all I add? Um? I think it's great as long
as the server has Amazon. Maybe, well that's the problem, right,
(47:28):
What if he doesn't have Amazon? You know, in the
video from the restaurant, the customer's bill came out to
ninety five dollars and twenty four cents, So it's over. Yes,
But okay, let me say. Let me say this. Let's
say you wanted to tip and pass. You're right, I know,
well that may be a currency you can't use because
you may not be in a place to spend it.
(47:50):
So is it okay that he tipped in an Amazon
gift card? No? I would not do it. And if
that's all that he had. I was trying to explain
this to my kids. You can't if you can't afford
the tip, then you don't eat somewhere where someone's serving you, Yes,
where the tip is expected exactly. Yes, this is from
the New York Post. So is it okay or is
it not? You say not okay, lunchbox, It's absolutely fine.
(48:12):
It's a tip. It's just like giving cash. Because everybody
shops on Amazon. You can go buy exactly what you're
going to spend that twenty five dollars on Amazon. Well,
that's not true. Everybody doesn't shop on Amazon. And secondly,
sometimes or when I wait at tables, those tips were
used to pay my bills or get gas. Yeah, and
you can't. You can't pay a water bill with an
Amazon gift card. Okay, walk to your coworker and be like, here,
(48:33):
here's a twenty five Amazon gift card. Give me twenty
five dollars in cash. Boom, who would make that deal?
I know that five dollars in cash every single time. Eddie. Nah,
it's bad. It's a I mean you don't have cash,
don't use it like you don't. You don't need to
give a card. If you said, I can either tip
you fifteen dollars in cash or would you like twenty
five dollars an Amazon gift card and they chose the
gift card different. Absolutely, but in general, you can't do
(48:58):
this right, Yeah, I mean, are you get a tip
in Coloni's like Central American money. It's not even an
accepted currency here. It's like giving them bitcoin. It's worthless
until it's accepted. It's really just money cash stuff like that. Well,
the guy did go to the waiter and go, hey, so,
okay if I tip you, So that did happen. But
I wonder what you guys would think about that. If
someone just you know, back in the day, people would
put down those religious dollars instead of money for me,
(49:21):
and it would look like a dollar or look like
seven dollars, and I'd be like, oh man, it's awesome.
And then you'd be like, you know, this did look
like money, but the real currency you can only spend
in heaven and it wouldn't be money. And they would
that's what the tip that would leave me. That's awful,
And I would be like, guys, thank you for the
fake money, but where's the real money. It's been an
hour and a half. It was an eight top with
a baby. There are crackers on the floor. Yeah, and
(49:41):
you left me seven dollars in church money. Yeah, if
they If they do that, it needs to be wrapped
in with appropriate tip and then include that, or you
just wait till you die. What do you mean, nuture
reward in heaven? L Well, I had to. I saved
him a cash. Get the bigger when you get there,
Get biggest way when I get up there. What do
you do if you're trapped in your car during a snowstorm.
(50:03):
This is from the New York Post dot com, and
this happens because the story yesterday where on the Interstate
people were trapped for thirty hours, people were running out
of gas. I did see where it's all clear now.
But here you go, first and foremost, it's never a
bad idea to have an emergency kit stashed in your car. Blankets, flashlights,
nonperishable foods, liquids, extra batteries. My car ain't that big,
(50:24):
that's gonna take up the whole back seat. They can
come in handy if your car is stuck in freezing
weather or broken down in remote location. If you're caught
in snow and shelter or help isn't visible within one
hundred yards, the best thing to do is to stay
in your vehicle to avoid exposure, if possible, putty brantly
colored cloth out your window or tied to your antenna
(50:46):
to indicate distress. If I were to see a car
with something tied on its antenna, I would think they
were like, like, don't if it ties on the door,
don't come in. That's what I would think of, Oh,
I shouldn't go over to that car because they got
something going on in there. But I'm glad I read
this because now I know. Now you know, yeah, you
(51:07):
never know. It's not college dorm room. Like that's what
I would think, like, Oh, they must not want me
to go near the car. Okay, in cold temperatures, run
the vehicle no more than ten minutes every hour to
heat the cabin to preserve fuel, especially at the tank
isn't full. Also make sure the exhaust pipe is clear
(51:27):
of snow, because if it's not, to go back to
the car and you'll die of carbon monoxide poisoning. Keep
covered and huddle together in the car. That depends how
I'm riding with. But also you may have to. You know,
it's um you stay warmer if you huddle with no
clothes so naked. Amy wants somebody to get pregnant Okay, Well,
we just happen to be car pulling and now this
(51:47):
is our sun. No, baby, this is a little snowy.
Try not to sleep if you're alone, but if you're
straight for an extent a period of time and there
are several passengers in the vehicle, take turns sleeping and
keep an eye on each other. Okay, and I always
watch for polar bears, isn't it. Oh no, it doesn't
(52:09):
say that. Well, maybe somebody heard this and this will help.
I think it's good to know. Even if you don't
live in a snowy area, if you're ever traveling and
driving through like some people were on ninety five. Probably
they don't. They were taking a road trip and they
got stuck in that, yeah. Or they were just going
to work. Yeah, I know, but they if they live
in an area where there could be those conditions, they
might know that. But if not, I feel like that's helpful.
(52:29):
It's time for the good news lunchbox. A couple was
trying to get home for Christmas. They're stranded at the
Lax Airport because all the cancelation of flights. They were
trying to get home to Utah. Well, there's a search
and rescue group out of Utah that has a private
plane that whenever hikers go missing, they go find lost
(52:50):
people in the wilderness. Well, they saw the post, they
contacted the people said we'll come pick you up, and
so they flew to Lax pick the people up and
brought them back to Utah. Wow, get home in time
for Christmas. Just for Christmas, like sick or anything. They
weren't sick. They were just saying, hey, people are stranded
for Christmas. We'll come pick you up. That's crazy. And
a private plane too, let's go hear it. I just
(53:12):
want to say, I'm stranded. Will anyone pick me up
in a private plane? That's awesome. May good for them
for reaching out, going hey we have these you know
we can do this. Let's do it. That's a cool,
good story. That's what it's all about. That was tell
me something good. We were talking about this old shirt
then I still wear it's sleeveless. I'll cut this. I
(53:32):
mean I've had us. I was nineteen. It says hogs
on the front. It has an Arkansas razorback on the back,
but it looks like termites have gotten into it. They haven't.
It's just an age thing. But my wife's always like, well,
let's just throw that away today. And I'm never throwing
it away. It's going to have to fully disintegrate off
of my body for me to throw it away. But Tina,
who is calling us from Tampa, has something to say
(53:54):
about that. Tina, what's going on? Hell, Bobby. So I
can totally relate with this razorback shirt. My husband has
a shirt that he keeps wanting me to purge and
get rid of because the neck is all holy, there's
like holes in the armpits, and I use it as
a sleep shirt because I cannot get rid of it.
(54:15):
It says preserve our species on the front of it,
and it looks like a little underwater scene. But I
have pictures of me with my second daughter when she
was like one day old, brand new newborn, and it's
you can clearly see it says preserve our species, and
I'm holding this tiny little baby on me, and so
(54:36):
it has like this significant value to me that I
just cannot get rid of it. I also have pictures now.
I took it to the hospital with my third daughter
when I had her because it just was like, this
is too perfect. It's just so symbolic and I cannot
get rid of it. What kind of heartless manage? Your
husband wanting me to get rid of that shirt that
means so much to you? No, he gets that, but
(55:00):
like every time we're pershing stuff, he's always like, you
should get rid of this dirt, and I'm like, I
can't and who wants to. I've thought about turning it
into a pillow and I can't do it. When it
says preserves CC's that CC's pizza because I agree, no
species like human race, species because it was oh species,
(55:21):
Oh I thought it. You're saying cecs. I don't know what, okay,
And now it makes sense with the babies preserving species. Yeah,
y'all think your dad have CC's pizzas mister Gattish similar
though my mind. Yeah, mister Gattis and CCS similar type
of pizza. There was just something there to do. Do
you guys go to CC's ever? Oh yeah, there's video
games there too. Yeah, like mister Gaddad gaddy Land wasn't
(55:44):
allowed it. I'm just kidding to go to ZC. Hey,
thanks for sharing that story, ten, I hope you have
an awesome day. Yeah, well, excited to see you at
the play at foot Ea Strawberry Festival too. Yeah, it
works out of a play. Any The Ragging Idiots are
playing in March, I believe, yes, March anyway. Okay, Raging
(56:04):
Idiots dot Com. Hey, thank you very much, Tina. We'll
see then you guys, Bay bye bye. Yeah, March twelfth.
We're in plant City, Florida, right aside of Tampa. Get
your tickets at Raging Idiots dot Com. All right, let's
do the news. Bobby's bet. I'll start with this. Since
she brought up babies, a premature baby declared stillborn by
(56:25):
doctors has been found to be alive as it was
being prepared for burial. This is This is in Brazil.
I don't know if that means anything. The child, whose
name was Augustus, was born to an eight year eighteen
year old mother last week after she sought medical attention
for severe pain. She was turned away by doctors who
(56:46):
did not notice she was pregnant, and later gave birth
to the baby, weighing two pounds three ounces without any
medical help. Doctors declared the child, born at seven months,
is stillborn and called a funeral director, but during preparations,
the baby had a heartbeat and immediately returned the newborn
to the hospital where it was placed in the nick
you there. He has understood to be in stable condition
(57:08):
and is responding well to treatment. The mother was discharged
the Daily Mail. That's crazy. Here's the one that's a
little more crazy. I don't say a little more crazy
in a different way. There's a former United Airlines flight
attendant that has been charged with stealing the identity of
a four year old in Lanta boy who died in
a car crash in nineteen seventy nine. Ricardo Caesar Wittez
is accused of overstaying his tourus to Visa and then
(57:32):
getting a Soul Security car in the name of that kid.
Oh wow, that died. Stole the Soul Security number, use
it to get an American passport, buy a house, a car,
got a job, and has been doing it for seventeen years.
Oh my, Ricardo Caesar wedd has forty nine. It's facing
federal charges for stealing the identity of the Atlantic kid
(57:53):
who died in the nineteen seventy nine car crash. It
was seventeen years after he died he apply for the passport.
He bought a house whenever he went for renewal last year.
They matched his fingerprints to those in the Brazilian documents,
so they arrested him. But he lived under that person
sell security card in identity for a long time. I
(58:14):
always wonder, that's from the Daily Mail, how hard it
is to have to because do you answer to that
person's name. They're like, hey, Michael, and that's not your name. Yeah.
You have to like slowly like train yourself to be Michael. Yeah.
And that means you have to release your identity of
who you are. Yeah. You look in the mirror and
say over and over again, Mike. I look in the
(58:34):
mirror and go Bobby Bones every morning. So people call
me that the Washington football team may have spoiled the
Bigger bill of their new name. Do you know what
the Washington football team? You know what their mascot is
right now? Oh? The one they're changing from Redskins. That's
what they used to be. Do you know what they
are now? No, the Washington football team, that's their name.
(58:57):
But then they're revealing a new one. But they've accidentally
they think they spoiled. The Admirals could be the new
name of the team, because if you go to Washington
Admirals dot com. It goes right to the page of
the Washington football team. It's a pretty good name though.
I like it. Yeah, yeah, I like the Admirals and
nobody really has that. That's one of the things I
like about the Razorbacks is nobody else has it, you know,
with the Arkansas Razorbacks, you know there are a lot
(59:19):
of Lions and Tigers, Bears, Bears obviously, yes, but that's
pretty cool Washington Admirals. But if if this is and
someone did accident linked that and it's spoiled like some
interns getting fired somewhere. All right, that's the news, Thank
you Bobbies story. Let's go to Lauren, who is calling
us in Texas right now. Lauren, you are on the
(59:41):
Bobby Bones Show. How are you morning, studio morning? How
are you guys today? We are pretty good. What's going
on with you? I just wanted to say thank you
so much for all of these support and everything that
you do for first responders. I just finished the Fire
Academy and I'm starting MTUM in a few weeks, and
(01:00:02):
I just wanted to say thank you so much for
all of all the things that you do for first responders. Hey,
good for you. Congratulations, Lauren, thank you so much. That's
pretty cool. I bet you know how to do a
lot of things, right tye and not save life, jump
a car, clean wounds, Yeah, all the important stuff. That's
that's chat. Yeah, that's cool. Hey, Lauren, thanks congratulations. Let
(01:00:24):
us know, once you finish Firefighter Academy, that's a whole
different skill set. I mean, it's one that's equally as valuable.
But you went from EMT to now do you have
to like go run up ladders with you know, heavy
bags in your shoulders. Yes, So I finished the fire
Academy and I start EMT in a few weeks. So
(01:00:45):
did you do that? You ran up the stairs with
a bag in your shoulders? Well? Yeah, and we do
like a lot of like ladder climbing and we run
into buildings and live fires and it's it's pretty difficult,
but it's well worth it. Appreciate you now, I will
appreciate you probably in five years when you have to
come and save a fire at my house or you know,
(01:01:05):
me in a car wreck or something. Yeah, I just
go ahead and just put it out there. Let's put
it out there, all right, Lauren, thank you for the call.
Congratulations and good luck than so much. All right, see
you later. Eddie's got a beard. It's a new beard.
It's he's way long. It's nice. Right. I'm gonna hold
my judgment because what we've all done. What of his beard?
(01:01:29):
And it's hard to answer to your face. But I've
heard all sorts of cool answers, like sophisticated Oh no
one has said that. No one person I'm gonna pull randomly.
These are people that want to remain anonymous. But this
is how people feel about your beard. I bet you
I know who it is. You really, it's a no
for me dog. Someone please get this guy some clippers immediately.
(01:01:51):
That's you. It's not me, I'll promise you. You promise, Yeah,
it's not somebody used. It's a no for me dog
to make you think it was me. Ray, Okay, that's one.
Here's the next one. Looks terrible. You look like George
Lopez and gand Off the Gray had a baby. Rude money.
(01:02:14):
I gotta admit it, dear Eddie, I hate your stinking guts.
Your beard makes me vomit. It's the scum between my toes.
And we're talking about we're talking about my beard and
my guts. That's what somebody. Here's another way. Don't grow
it any longer and make sure to keep it groomed.
Otherwise you look old. That means brushing it, shaping, and
adding some oil. Okay, that's goopa, Steve, appreciate it. I
(01:02:35):
don't know who they are. Beards are supposed to make
you look cool, not make you look like you're living
on the streets. It would only look cool if your
beard and hair and hair were swamped. That funny. I
can't say this one. Does it really mean you want
to see it? I can't. I can't I I can't
(01:02:58):
say this one. Here. You just gonna give it to me.
I don't show it, don't show it, don't let me
see it. This who did eating? I know I didn't
have this. I don't know is the racist? I didn't
have nothing. I can't say say it. Now. Let me
see it. This will never pass it over to Eddie away.
(01:03:18):
Let me see it. I don't think amy, nothing offends me.
Just give it to me. This might you say you're
just gonna hold it. I mean you can either eat
it or give it to Eddie. If you eat it, it
it goes away. Forever. But if you go to Eddie
and give it, then give it to Eddie. Come on,
(01:03:38):
don't show it to anybody else. Good throw What does
it say, Eddie? Don't say it? Don't say it? Say it?
Could he say it? What it starts with? No handwriting? No? No, no,
no no no, that's terrible, that's not nice. Don't say it?
All right, here we go. I've heard that before though.
An anonymous comment on Eddie's beard. I like it, but
(01:04:00):
as your face looks odd without hair, so even though
it's not amazing looking, it's better than the al Is
there anything positive out of these? Anything it looked good
definitely needs to be trimmed or totally shaved. Trimmed for sure.
It's way too long, kind of dirty, not really dirty,
(01:04:21):
just dirty looking, Okay, And that's all that. That's advice.
That's like nice little comment. So generally the room doesn't
like your beer. They hate it. Wow, and made me
feel like crap. One of them we couldn't even read
on the air so bad it was so bad. Yeah,
that's not good. We're most people telling you to your
face they liked it. Yes, people are saying good, look,
I like that. I like it. A lot. I think
(01:04:41):
it was great. Wait, no, which here is the bad
one that you can read? Yeah? Right, Um, So I
don't know if that means anything to you. Yeah, I
mean it just means that you guys are a bunch
of haters. That's it. No, it doesn't mean we're haters. Yeah,
because I like to keep it, groom, oil it, you know,
take care of it. I like that, So you don't
do it. It's not well know, guys, I'm just starting.
(01:05:02):
This is the first part of it. That's not just starting. Okay,
thank you, Eddie, thank you. Let's talk Tom, Holly and Alabama.
We're talking about screen time. We're having that conversation on
the show. Lord Holly, you're on the air. What's going on, Hey, Bobby,
Hey mornings. Hey. I was just calling about the screen
(01:05:28):
time or these tablets, and first of you know, like
discipline and stuff. I know that was mine personally. I
can mention you won't get your you know, tablet come
a you know, an hour before bed or something like that,
and they go ballistic, and I mean my house is spotless,
so for you it works as a punishment. I think
the point of you know that that story was not
(01:05:51):
that kids don't love their tablets, but if you punish
them by taking it away, they want it even more.
So you can go, all right, go do this to
get it, but it means they wanted even more than
they already did. I don't have kids. Yeah, I just
think that's not even possible. They love it so much
that they can't want it more. Like, but if you
(01:06:11):
don't give it to them, they I think you want
it even more. Yeah, because the more they use it,
the more they're addicted and attached. And then if you
take it away, they're like, ah, I need it. I
get it like me and my phone. I can't get
enough of it. My best friend, thank you for the call.
I appreciate that, Holly. I hope you have awesome day.
Thank you. I see later. Curtis in North Carolina wants
to make a little comment about this. Hey Curtis, what's
(01:06:33):
happening with you? Hey Bobby, how is that boy doing?
We're doing pretty good. What can we do for you?
I just wanted to let you know the truth own
on your tablet. Yeah. I had a little theory of
just make them use the tablet for hours and hours
and hours, like if you'd bust your kids smoking, you
make them smoke a whole pack of cigarettes. I'm surprised
(01:06:54):
that somebody agrees with me on this whole planet shop Curtis.
I'm anxious to know how why you agree with me,
because we use it. So what you do is you
make them only use it for educational purposes, so they
have to be studying on it and then they have
to give a report back to you after they do it.
So you make them, let's just say, for four hours,
(01:07:14):
study the history of the waffle, and so they have
to learn who made it, when they made it, how
to make it, the ingredients in a waffle. So they're
using their tablet, but they're forced for four hours and
then report back to you. Is that basically what you're saying. Yeah, yeah,
I'll give you a better example. Well, our son got
a ticket we're going to seventy eight and fifty five
(01:07:35):
when he was sixteen, So we made him do seventy
eight hours of community service and then do a research
paper on the dangers of teenage speeding and then give
that report back to his class. Yeah, it's a tough one.
That's that's a much better example than the waffle than
the history of the waffle for sure. Okay, Well, I
like your style, Curtis, because when I mentioned it to
these guys, they said I was the worst parent in
(01:07:56):
the world. Parent chain guys, if they're there's one thing
I hate Barren Shane. All right, Curtis, we appreciate that.
Anything else you'd like to say about that, Nah, that's
all y'all. Guys, have a good one. Hey, did your
son like shape up? Yeah? He actually graduated with his
associates degree from college before he graduated from high school. Okay.
(01:08:20):
And he still speed though, and he didn't get an
accident from speeding. It sounds like there you go, drive
twenty everywhere he goes. He's a guy in the highway
with this with his hazards on. All right, Curtis, appreciate that, buddy.
Have a good day. YouTube as this guy in Florida
scammed two point one million dollars in pandemic loans to
(01:08:40):
buy a Lamborghini Rolex, a hub, a lot watch. Not
sure what that is, probably a brand and designer closed
from Louis Batan, Gucci and Channel. The thing is, I
bet you a lot of people did this, stole the money,
have the money, will never get caught. The people that
got caught are the ones that went absolutely bonkers with it.
(01:09:01):
Like you make sixty grand a year, but all of
a sudden, you're driving a Lamborghini. It's like this year,
let's remove this year. But in the past, it's like
a college athlete, you know, driving up in a tricked
out hummer. Yeah, you're like, wait, how'd you get that?
You're like, we should probably investigate this a little bit.
Um this year not so much because players can now
be paid a little bit. But that's what got him
(01:09:22):
in trouble. All of a sudden, he's Gucci had to
tell too hard. Two point one million dollars and you
didn't think you would get caught. That is wild to me.
The Secret Service says it has over nine hundred active
criminal investigations into pandemic fraud, with cases in every state
and one hundred billion dollars embezzled into that's from the
Daily Mail. These Huba a Lot watches, now you say it,
(01:09:45):
Mike huba a Lot nice. Heck yeah, there's one for
forty thousand. Whoa, there's one for six hundred and sixty
one thousand. So he needed that and a Rolex and
a Lamborghini and Gucci had to toe. I don't even
think I seen a Lamborghini ever just driving down the road.
I've seen one valeting at a fancy hotel before. You
haven't seen one on the highway, have you? Yeah? I
(01:10:08):
can't remember, like what highway, but yeah, have you? I
saw one over Christmas. Man, I was in Houston. Drove
right by me. I was like, dang, I need that
guy's life. How do you know you want to full life?
He just didn't go I on his car? You want
his life? Yeah? I don't know him, but he was
driving a Lambo and let me tell you, he had
a smile on his face, just loving life. I was like,
I need that man, do you know anything about Lamborghini's
(01:10:31):
nothing about him. I just know they are awesome looking,
they are fast. They everybody looking whenever whenever that guy
was driving. Everybody's head was watching that guy drive by,
and everybody would like I wouldn't like that, absolutely look
at me goo. Like I was sitting at the stoplight.
He was at the stoplight to the right, and he
came through the intersection. I was just like, man, look
at his life. It's called hubb lotubat. I don't know.
(01:10:55):
It's called laat whenever you learn how to say it.
Hub hubb lot, that's what is it? Play that side again,
hub blot? Yeah, I don't have a hub blot. Watch.
Let's go over and talk to Raoul and Loving on Tennessee. Hey, Raoul, Hey,
how are you doing? Man? Pretty good? What's going on
with you? Oh? Not much. I just wanted to give
(01:11:17):
a little heads up to these audible bills full wheelers
we call them because we're an my subdrivers. And this
morning I was coming in from Indianapolis and I was
some of them north of Lebanon, and this guy pulls
out in front of me, which he caught away, but
he just didn't speed up. He just kind of just
hung there and I had to slam on my brake
(01:11:38):
to keep from running over him. And then he just
stays there and we'll not speed up. And I'm like,
you really could have pulled out in front of an
eighty thousand pound truck and play with me. Yeah. People
they don't think, and they don't know. When I had
to go and get my CDL to drive on breaking
bobby bones, heck, I learned that people don't care because
(01:11:59):
I'm driving that eighteen wheeler and Chattanooga. I'm scared to death.
I'm gonna hit somebody, But I'm realizing how reckless everyone
else is around me driving the eighteen wheeler, and one
false move and I crush you, and then we're all
in trouble. And so now I do drive with a
bit more care around Semis because I know it's the
opposite of a motorcycle. We're in a motorcycle. They say,
(01:12:23):
you drive, you gotta watch yourself, obviously, but you gotta
watch for everybody else too. And you're doing that for
your own good because somebody hits you, you you fly from motorcycle.
Now it's the opposite. The same people's lives are in danger.
But as a truck you have to watch out for
other people in the same way because if they make
a mistake, you don't die like on a motorcycle, they
(01:12:43):
die because you're an eighteen wheeler. The ways five hundred
million pounds. I don't know that's accurate. You've in fact
check that, yeah, yeah, yea whatever, yeah yeah, but yeah, row,
I'm glad you said that. I listen. I've always respected
people to drive trucks because you know, our infrastructure does
not allow us to to thrive without truck drivers. But
(01:13:03):
now that I've done it myself, like, I really respect
you guys. I'm glad you called in and share that
with us. I do. I appreciate that, and I looked
out for you guys one hundred percent all the time.
I got to fix what you're gonna do and participate
anything they might do that makes cause you harm because
I'm the one that's gonna be fun. And you know what,
the driver of the truck is probably gonna be fine.
(01:13:24):
It's the person in the car that made the mistake
that's gonna have to suffer. U way of an eighteen
wheelers about thirty thirty five thousand pounds empty, about eighty
thousand pounds loaded, and I was loaded with eggs. So yeah,
very heavy. All right, Raoul, appreciate that call, no problem.
But hey, Teddy Rock that beard, Buddy Rocket, Hey I'm
(01:13:47):
talking about Hey Rol, do you watch Yellowstone? No, but
funny too, I've been wanting too. Yeah, it's good. Okay, Well,
I will keep you on for this. Then I'm gonna
have a little little opinion about it. But I appreciate
your call. No part of see later. I'm done with
all four seasons, and I posted a whole thing on
my Instagram, mister Bobby Bones about this. But if you
watch Yellowstone, this is not a spoiler. But they've tried
(01:14:10):
to make Jamie the brother the son a villain, and
I just I can't buy into that he's a bad dude,
can you. No. I watched your well you put up
about this, and I have to say I agree with you.
They've really tried to make him the bad guy on
the show. But the thing was, his dad murdered his mom,
his dad went to jail, his mom died. He grew
(01:14:31):
up an adopted kid that hads all this trauma, and
so he's made bad decisions. But he's like a kid
that had, you know, so many things go wrong and
so much trauma that I kind of get why I
made a lot of those decisions. And so they they've
made in the bad guy though, and I just can't
buy into him being the bad guy. I root for him.
I'm rooting for the villain. Oh, I don't know that
I'm rooting for him, but yeah, I do feel bad
(01:14:54):
for him, and yeah, the decisions he made and it's
not like his adopted family was still a little toxic
up in there too. So yeah, it's like, what do
you I don't know what I expect from these characters.
But yeah, some of the acting is so by the way,
I love yellow Stone, can't wait of season five. Some
of the acting is so bad. And I'm not talking
about the people that are real cowboys they bring in
because that's pretty cool, and they're bad actors, but they're
supposed to because they're not actors because they're cowboys. Yes,
(01:15:15):
they bring in real life cowboys that have done significant things.
But the acting on the show is terrible. And at
one point they found dinosaur bones. They've never addressed that again.
When was that like five six episodes ago? Oh I
missed that. All of a sudden they find dinosaurs. They'd
never go back to the show. Okay, yeah, well know
what's up with the bronosaurus? Where'd you go? Yeah? I mean,
(01:15:36):
what's it? Uh? Not all the acting's bad. They don't
spoil it. I'm just gonna remind you again we're on
the air right now because not talking to each other
because you do love to spoiler show do I have
been working on that and it has been a very
long time, and I don't like beating still being in
that box. Not all the acting is bad, but Kevin
Costner's voice has gotten more annoying as the show goes.
Why I don't find anything he does annoying all it
(01:16:00):
sounds like Batman and Baine, like a mixture. Oh do
you feel about the ranch? I feel pretty good. Is
he just getting older? Like? What is it? I think
he's getting older and his acting it's just his voice
is more effective like his character. It's gold out here,
So that's weird. No, I'm actually I'm against those shows,
(01:16:24):
but I do a second hand. My wife watches them
all here against those shows, Yeah, I mean I used
to live through it. I lived in Wyoming for fifteen
You lived in Wyoming for fifteen years? Yes, and everybody
wrote Cattle and the racal Pies and everybody had a
ranch and it wasn't cool. But now fifteen years Yes,
my entire life growing up, I lived in Wyoming. I
(01:16:44):
went to high school in Michigan, so that's where identified as.
But I'm from Wyoming originally. What ages? Did you live
in Wyoming? And do not lie from zero years old
to fifteen years old? Is this new inference? By the way,
high school When is that? So you moved right at
high school? Yeah, the first year of high school. Well,
and interesting, did anyone ever know that Ray lived Wyoming years?
(01:17:04):
I don't know, it's fifteen years, but he says Wyoming Denver.
I mean he's been all over and I'm like, when
did you live in Denver? If you were at Wyoming?
I guess he always went to Denver for vacation. I
don't know. He talks about Denver a lot in the
Colorado Rockies, but yes, I knew that. But then he
claims Michigan. So he's just a very confusing dude, Ray,
what do you claim? Claim it? Now? That's all true
what Lunch said. I have lived in those places, but
(01:17:26):
I'm from the north. But what do you claim I'm
a northern guy? What do you claim Michigan? Okay? Wow?
But like, what do you claim? Well? No, Texas? Okay,
but do you claim the Texas or do you claim Austin.
I claim Austin, but I'm from I could, but I
mean my family like got Texas South Texas roots, which
brings me to a question for Ray. Can you ride?
(01:17:50):
Of course he can't. He can't. Everybody know he lived it,
But he can't do it. Can you ride a horse? No,
I don't know how to ride. Oh this is I
thought we were about to learn something new about ray
And can you do anything on a ranch? No, my
dad was a lumberjack. Then you didn't really live it.
You just were around, you drove by it. Correct. Okay,
(01:18:13):
all right, buddy, okay, So what do you claim? Amy?
What do I claim? You said South Texas and you
said Austin. No, I guess you didn't claim anything you want.
I claim Austin, you claim Austin. Any what do you claim? Texas?
The whole state of Texas, the whole state, lunchbox. I
claim Vegas. No, you didn't nothing about you that. Kansas, Kansas? Definitely?
(01:18:34):
What do you claim Arkansas? Of course it's the whole state? Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Today this story comes on us from Hartford, Connecticut. A
thirty one year old man was out on bond and
he was supposed to appear in court and he's like, man,
I don't want to go back to jail. I don't
want to go back to jail. So he took a
screen shot and made a fake COVID test said, oh,
(01:18:55):
I'm positive, send it to the judge like, huh, that
doesn't look like an official documentation, and they start looking
no such doctor by that name. So he got a
rusher for forgery charges. It shouldn't be on construction paper.
It looks handwritten, so he forgery and then had to
go back to jail. I got to go back to
jail and his other charges, so U double whammy. There
(01:19:17):
you have it. I'm lunchboxed at your bone head story
of the day. I always think it's weird when these
stories come out and they're like, this is how much
the person was worth when they died. Even when you
mentioned that about John Madden yesterday, yeah, I still felt
like I feel like that's weird. I don't know why.
Maybe we wait six months because I don't mind. Like
Charles Schultz, the guy their own peanuts worth one hundred
(01:19:38):
million dollars, he's been dead ten years. I don't feel
like that's a I feel like that's weird. But I
feel like Betty White just died. How much would seventy
five million? And what was John Madden worth? A one
hundred million, one hundred million, two hundred million from Madden
the Game? I mean so interesting, Like let's let him die,
have the funeral three months after three months talking about
(01:20:00):
what they're worth. They worked hard, They're probably like, okay, yeah,
maybe it's because we're getting in their personal business. You know.
It's like, let them like just go away for a
little bit, then we can talk about him. Well yeah,
but Betty White had no kids, So you know, where
does the money go to? Dogs? Probably? I don't know
another organization she cares about. On her birthday the seventeenth,
they asked that you donate five bucks. They people on
(01:20:22):
the internet in honor of the Betty White challenge. Did
you see when she died? Her last word? You see
what it was? No, it was her husband's first name,
and what was member? His name Mike was Adaman? Alan
Adam seems like a young name. Yeah, her husband's name
is Chad, Chad. It was Alan. So that was the
(01:20:44):
last word. She said. So what does that tell you?
That is? Wait? Is Alan alive or dead? Good? Okay,
it means that she's just I feel like she's going
to see Alan. Oh that's good. I felt like people
were taking that she was seeing Alan okay, well yeah,
or she's ready. She could be. But I liked you.
She was saying his name because she was actually seeing him. Wow,
(01:21:06):
that's what a lot of people were thinking, and they
were like, wow this, let's this makes us feel good
because she was like leaving earth and she said Alan.
I mean I wasn't there. Don't know if she said that,
but that's what the Internet was saying. And you know,
we blame We believe anything the Internet says, right of course,
at least until the Internet tells us not to. That's
it for today. We will see you guys tomorrow. Everybody