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December 1, 2021 65 mins

We talk to Josh Turner about his new Christmas album, life at home with 4 boys and the anniversary of his song + album “Your Man”. Lunchbox shares the crazy theory he has about his arch nemesis, The Rock after he did something really nice for a vet. We all share the last favorite movies we watched.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:08):
Hello, Good, what's happening everybody? Thank you guys for hanging
out with us. Morning Studio Morning. Welcome to Wednesday's show.
In about ten fifteen minutes, we will talk to Josh
Turner where we normally do the mailbag. So let's start
the show now and open up the mailbag early. Let's

(00:28):
go get something we call ye Hello, Bobby Bones. I
lost my twelve year old dog after she passed away
a few weeks ago, and I am still struggling. She
was my first dog. She went through so much with
me college, moving, getting married, having three babies. I'm a

(00:48):
busy nurse practitioner at a nursing facility slash assisted living place,
and I'm a mom and three kids. I'm always working
and giving to everyone else. Now I feel like my
security blanket is gone. I want to get another dog.
I don't want to feel like I'm replacing her. Should
I get a new dog now? Or should I wait

(01:09):
a few years? Sincerely, heartbroken dog Mama. I think this
is something that Amy, you and I have both been
through pretty recently. Puppies are hard, though. If you have
three kids, oh yeah, adding that to the mix and
you forget sometimes if this dog was twelve years old.
You forget just how hard the puppy phase is. Just
gone through it twice again. Puppies are so hard. They're
so cute, but it's so hard. So let me start

(01:32):
by saying that that sometimes you can forget just how
difficult a small dog is. They take a lot of time,
a lot of attention. Also, it seems pretty quick, but
you know, I think you're the only one that knows
if you're ready for a new dog or not. For me,
I waited a year and a half or two years
until one just kind of was at the right place
for me to have, until Stanley kind of existed. Yeah,

(01:54):
I feel like if you open yourself up for the
opportunity for the right dog, then the timing will work
out for you. At least that's what we had to do.
We were saying open to getting a new dog, and
then when the time came and we got a call
that are you know, there was a dog available, like
someone we work with rescued a dog, and I was like, well,
we'll foster it. So we fostered the dog for about

(02:15):
a week or so, and then we decided to keep it.
But that way we weren't like totally committed, committed, and
then you know she kind of went from getting a
dog now or waiting a few years. And you don't
have to put that. Don't put a timeline on it.
Don't do it right now if you're not ready, but
maybe in a few months you will be. I would
just say, leave yourself open, yeah, and it will present itself.
It sucks when you lose your dog so hard, but

(02:36):
it's this is multi tiered because you also have three
kids and you're gonna get a puppy. That puppy's gonna
it's gonna be really hard to raise a puppy right now,
especially a full time job, so that stinks about your dog.
Be open to the possibility of a dog presenting itself
to you and when it does, scoop it up and run.
Yeah that's what we did. That's what you did. I mean,
that's what you need to properly grieve. Don't rush into it.

(02:59):
But yes, open, and you're not replacing the dog. You're
never never. In fact, your new dog will not be
the level of your other dog. It just won't. It
took my dog Caa, It took us, took me personally
over a year and a half to really bond with
her and I because I was obsessed with my other dog, Josie,
and I was like, yep, you'll never be at that level.
And guess what, now she's at that level. It just

(03:20):
takes time. Same. I remember when Stanley was ten months
old and what's with Caitlin? And I was like, I
don't know if I'll ever love this dog? Yeah, and
she will say that to me now because I love
that bulldog like nothing else. She's like, remember when you
said you didn't know if you'd love Stanley And I
was like yeah. She goes, look you do you know?
And that often comes into and I'm like, I don't

(03:41):
know if I have kids because I didn't have anybody
loving me. And I'm like, if I have a kid,
I don't know I'm gonna love it because I know
we're gonna ever love me. And she's like, do you
not see how you love your dog? So good luck
with that, don't press it. Don't run and get a
dog right now, but be open to the possibility that
one may present itself to you and get an older
dog too if that's the case, one that you don't
have to puppy so much. Maybe not too well and

(04:02):
then you're gonna be grieving real gland. All right, there
you go. There's a mailbag if you want to email us. Morgan,
what do they do? Mailbag at Bobby Bones dot com.
We've got your tea. Now, it's about the clothes Bobby mailbag.
Ye on the Bobby Bones Show now. Josh Turner, Josh,
what's up? Man? Celebrating Christmas? Early? Yeah? I see the

(04:25):
lit up Christmas tree and the wreath behind you. I
was looking at your Instagram though, and you've been talking
about this Christmas record since last August, so I feel
like you've been in the Christmas spirit basically all summer
until now. It's actually gone even further back than that.
I've started talking about making this record back in January.
Prior to that, I had been written for over a

(04:46):
year in preparation for this record. I did the photo
shoot for this record in April when it was in
the mid eighties and pouring down rain. So it was
the challenge to kind of get into Christmas spirits some
of those times you're gonna have to walk me through
this song, but it's the Millie Kalikui maka my Ohanna.
How do you say that song? Because I know it?
But how do you say it? That? Was it? Kali

(05:08):
Maca like me. He's Merry Christmas to the family. All right,
here's a clip of that song. This is Mella Khaliki
maka my Ohanna, Milli Kali maka Millie Kali ma. This

(05:33):
Chris the guy Jake Eddie. You met this the guy
that plays that you was it? Yeah? It's a ukal
Jake Shimabuku. How in the world did you get him
on the song? I've always admired his talent. I mean,
it's kind of hard not to when you hear him
play and see him play. But um, I had recorded
this song. I had gotten my friends Hokana to come

(05:54):
in and sing on it, and my producer Kenny Greenberg said,
you know, he said, what do you think of up
having Jack chum of a crew play on this song?
I said, man, I'd be awesome. He said, well, his
manager is a good friend of mine. He lives down
the street from him. I said, well, if you can
make it happn let's do it. I think it would
be perfect. So it was a great fit. Josh. It's

(06:15):
been fifteen years since the release of your massive song
Your Man, Like, tell me what that was like whenever
you recorded it. Well, I had come out of the
shoot with my first hit, Long Black Train, which obviously
is this old fashioned, old timey kind of gospel, you know,
traditional gospel kind of song, and it had really kind
of opened the country music door for me. But and

(06:39):
it became my signature song. But a lot of people
had already tried to pigeonhold me as that one type
of artists, and so me and my team we were
really adamant about coming with something very different from a
Long Black Train, And when we had come across Your Man,
we felt like it was a great choice to accomplish
that it really fit my voice well and we loved

(07:03):
what it said. So we put it out as the
first single off of that Your Man record, my sophomore record,
and it became my first number one, and that whole
record ended up going on to sell to million units.
And after that record had come and gone, I thought
that was the end of it. And then the next thing,
you know, Scott and McCreary singing it on American Idol

(07:23):
and kind of gave it a rebirth. But even before that,
I had gone and done the CMT Cross Country Show
with Randy Travis, and when that show took off, CMT
started playing it over and over and over again, and
so that the sales skyrocketed, the exposure of that song skyrocketed,
and you know, it's just kind of and then Chris

(07:44):
Stapleton kind of becomes the hit artist that he is
and people find out that he wrote it, and it
was just like this this you know, snowball effect and people,
like you say, people still to this day they love it.
Have you and Stapleton ever performed it together? Scotty and
I have, but not me and Chris Um. I've never
really thought about that, you and Scottie singing together. I

(08:05):
just feel like that would be a competition on who
can get lower. It's like the limbo, but with your
voice is like how low can you go? Chris and
I have written together before, and it was very challenging
because he's way up here and I'm way down here
and trying to find a key that he and I
both can sing in. It's kind of a challenge. You
have four boys, I'm going from memory here. You have

(08:26):
four boys, all right? Yea? What is what is Christmas
like at your house with five males and your wife.
It's it's a lot of energy, a lot of tests
offstron um. Well, I just try to make sure they
don't break anything, so that that's if we can get
through Christmas without breaking too much stuff. I mean, you
should have seen us that we've already put our Christmas

(08:47):
tree up and putting the ornaments on the tree. I mean,
it was like a demolition debut. It was like just
see it. I mean like we had there. We had
so much like broken ornament glass all over the floor.
It was it was, uh, just a hazardous area. It was.
It was kind of crazy. Do any of your boys
have your voice? Not yet? But I went did you

(09:09):
have your voice? Yeah? You had a voice change twice
in your life. Is that what you're saying. My oldest
is fifteen, and his voice is starting to change a
little bit, so he's probably gonna get there pretty soon.
I just imagine them being born with beards like that's
what I imagine. Josh Turner is on with us. He's

(09:33):
got a Christmas album that I hope you guys check out.
We're talking about that a little earlier, but I also
want to take a second and talk about Macy's wish
list Wednesday, which is one of the reasons that Josh
is on with us. And now it's the perfect time
to get gifts. Macy's has toys and games for the
whole family or the perfect gift for that one person
in your life who is still young at heart. All right,
there's a whole list here. And on the list, I

(09:54):
did see hot wheels and you do have four boys?
Are they into hot wheels at all? Josh, Oh, yeah,
they love wheels. They love all the monster trucks, you know,
all that kind of stuff, you know, a little rice
tracks and all that kind of stuff. So yeah, that's
definitely a you know, a good item for them. And
now Toys r Us is at Macy's, so it's games galore.
And so check out Macy's dot com slash wish list

(10:16):
to build your own wish list for all your gifting needs.
Or you can make your own wish list go to
Macy's dot com slash believe. You can write a letter
to Santa, because this week, for every letter submitted to
Santa Online, Macy's will double their donation to the Make
a Wish Foundation, donating two dollars for every letter up
to a million bucks, so that's in addition to the
one million they've already committed. Well, it sounds like the

(10:36):
Turner Christmas is awesome and just filled with love, and
that's really cool that the record is amazing. If you
look for a Christmas record, it is called King Size Manger,
and it's it's got classics, it's got originals, and it
is Josh's first Christmas album. Which why did it take
you so long? Josh? Uh? You know, I've just really

(10:57):
been focused on trying to establish myself as an artist
and just trying to have hits, sell records, you know,
just build my fan base. Making a Christmas records always
been on my list of things to do. But you know,
after I had made my first gospel record back in
twenty eighteen and we saw how much success we had
with that, we decided to do a couple more passion projects.

(11:19):
So I did the country State of Mind record that
came out last year with all the classic country songs
on it, and then, you know, the next natural step
was to do a Christmas record, and I have plenty
of time to work on it, so I did, and
I'm very proud of this record. You're all over the
place doing the Holiday in the Hits tour schedule, and
I was looking at some of the dates and a
lot of the cities that the show was in Vegas,

(11:42):
You're in Arizona, Iowa, Minnesota, Michigan, Wisconsin, Michigan, Tennessee. Just
kind of looking down the list. But you're playing Christmas
songs here? Do you still play your Man? Yes? Oh yeah, yeah,
I play you know, most all of my hits during
the show, and a good handful on the King Size
Manor record. My family's joining me on this tour and

(12:05):
we you know, we've played four shows so far, and
we're having a blast. Because if I go to a
Christmas show for Josh Turner and I want to hear
the Christmas songs, But if you don't play, why don't
we just dance on hometown Girl, I'm like, give my
money back. Josh sucks. Oh you know, I wouldn't let
you down. I gotta play those. I appreciate that, all right.
You guys follow him at Josh Turner Music. Check out

(12:28):
King Size Manger. It's the Christmas album now that's out,
and then Macy's Wishless Wednesday. You guys go to Macy's
dot com slash Believe. Write a letter to Santa. Also
help out a good cause, Josh Mary Christmas Buddy, Talk
to you soon Christmas, So Bobby, The Latest from Nashville
and Tullywood and Morgan Number two thirty six. Skinny Carly

(12:49):
Pierce released a live version of the song Oh Holy
Night from her performance at the CMA Country Christmas Special.
Here's a clip. Angel luke Holm's credits winning the CMA

(13:24):
Entertainer of the Year Award to his team and his fans.
My team stepped up for me when I needed him too.
And every show that we've done has been incredible. The
fans have been so excited to be there. It's been
so amazing to be a part of it every night.
And this really just feels like it's for everybody that
goes out on the road with me and sacrifices time

(13:46):
away from their family and loved ones to do what
we do every night. So Carrie Underwood is kicking off
her Reflection Las Vegas residency tonight. Here she is talking
about the show. Reflection is just kind of all about,
you know, obviously, we want to get there, we want
to do our hits, we want to reflect upon all
the things that we've been so blessed to be able

(14:06):
to have accomplished over the past a few years. That
I've been lucky enough to do this. I'm Morgan number two.
That's your skinny. It's time for the good news, Bobby.
A person will tell me something good from Tracy and Cleveland.
Who's on with us? Now? Hey Tracy, how's it going?

(14:29):
Hey Bobby, how are you doing? Really good? Thank you
for calling. What's going on? Of course? Well, I was
so honored that my friends heared a little bit of
my story with y'all. When my son was four months
he was diagnosed with a rare liver disease called billiaria trija,
and unfortunately, on the option for us, his liver was

(14:50):
in Serosi's condition, and he went from being the typical bubbly,
happy little four months old Hayter Tott to having a
liver that was dying basically, and he was just to
step away from liver failure. So our option was to
be to go through transplant, a liver transplant, And when
you go through the transplant world, you have two options.
One is a deceased donor, which is why it's so

(15:11):
important to be an organ donor and pass on that
gift of life, or the second one is to be
a liver donor. So when my little guy, Brodie was
five months and five days, I matched and was able
to be his liver of liver giver and donate him
a portion of my liver. And I'm happy to say
that he's six years old now and he's built like

(15:32):
a little linebacker and he's filled with life and we're
just so excited about where he is right now because
of the gift of organ donation and through that, you know,
when you ever you go through a life challenge, it's
you're surrounded, you lean on your network, and we had
this awesome tribe of people that really lifted us up
and carried us through and because of that, me and

(15:55):
my husband were so just so touched. We found in
a nonprofit organization called Brodie's good By Tribe, which is
also BGBT, and we now sponsor families who are going
through transplant, whether it's heart, liver, lung, pancreatic, whatever it
may be, We lift them up and you know, have
just one way to pay it forward and as we

(16:16):
call it, be the good so Um Depford story that's
an amazing story. Sorry you had to go through that,
you know, at the beginning of that story with your son,
But you've learned so much and now you're able to
teach others about one the value of organ donation, which
I think is the main takeaway here. And then two
you called yourself a sliver liver giver, that great term.

(16:40):
I mean, there's lots about out there, Bobby. I have
to tell you there's sliver of livergivers all around us.
If you don't even know these people who are selfless
and amazing. And I always say that liver. The liver
is a superpower organ well tracing. It regenerates like a
lot of people don't know that four to five weeks
after you donate your liver, it comes, it grows right back. Well,
thank you for sharing that wall. You say your your

(17:02):
group again, your what was it called, sir? So? My
son's name is Brody. So we named our nonprofit it's
called Brodie's Good Vibe Tribe and people can just search that. Yeah,
it's Brodie b R O d I E. Brodie's Good
Vibe Tribe and we're on Instagram and Facebook and we

(17:23):
continue to share the powerful stories of organ donation and
how people are fighting through and looking for a match,
and then we also fundraise for those people to support
them and just continue to pay it forward to be
the Good Vibe Tribe. Awesome. Thank you, Tracy, Thank you
for sharing that story with us. Thank you so much, Bobby,
and it's BGBT dot org. So thank you so much.

(17:45):
And be a donor, Be a donor, help those and
pass the gifts of life forward. There you go. That's
what it's all about. That was tell me something good
on the phone. Barbie in Oklahoma, Barbie, how are you?
I am? Great? Morning studio Morning? Is that year real name? Barbie? Yes?
It is? Did your parents name you after the actual

(18:05):
Mattel action figure? And I cannot get any clear answer
from anybody in my family about how my name came about.
And my grandmother says, my mom was just in a
bad mood and just picked the name. And that's what
I got stick with. Well, you always love getting named
while someone's in a bad mood. Huh, we're gonna play
I've been ready killed my whole life. Yeah, do you
ever think about changing it to barb No? Because I

(18:27):
don't like the people that are Barbara, that go by Barbie.
That irritates me. So it's an integrity thing. Could I
get well? I cant asked that all the time. Is
your real name, Barbara? No, it's Barbie. Well, good for
you for sticking with it. Let's play Who Wants to
Be one hundred Air and give her a chance to
win one hundred dollars in cash in the next segment.

(18:47):
One of these show members is going to play for you.
I have the one hundred sided dice picking up a
lunch box fifty five twenty one Morgan Ray seventy seven.
We're gonna let right back in. He's been banned, but
if I can. All right, the one hundred sided dice
is spinning and the number is ninety three Morgan. Yes.

(19:14):
I'm a little scared though, because I'm not very good
at this game. All right, Hey, so Barbie, you and
Morgan are going a team up and try to win
a hundred bucks in cash in the next segment. Okay, okay,
sound good? Who Wants to Be one hundred Air? We
wish it was more money, but I have to spend
my own on this game. Barbie, are you ready to
play Who Wants to Be a hundred air I am bringing.

(19:34):
So Morgan will answer the questions as she was chosen
before we came to the segment. Morgan, you'll answer them.
Every question that you get right wins more money for Barbie.
All right, you can quit at any time, and you
have to answer them because listeners have been caught cheating
googling questions. Okay, all right, Barbie, are you ready? Morganna,
get ready? I'm ready. Great. Your one dollar question, Morgan,

(19:58):
in which sport to two teams pull at the opposite
ends of a rope? I mean I believe that's tug
of war. That's the official name I'm allowed to talk to. Barbie. Correct, No,
you're not it? Yeah yeah, Um, well, I mean the
obvious name for it is tug of war. So or
tug o war. Tug of war is my final answer.

(20:20):
You don't think I've always called it a tug of
war a war, but that is correct. Its tug of war.
It's because I'm lazy. I can't give it the go
tug tug of war. Your five dollar question, Morgan, where
does a cowboy wear chaps? Like the physical body part?

(20:43):
What body part does a cowboy wear chaps? Well? They
go on their legs, and you know there's like butt
list chaps, so it's not their butt. Okay, I just
imagine one and they put it over there jeans, so
over their legs and it ties around their hips, So

(21:05):
I would I mean legs? I think legs is my
final answer. Legs is correct. All right, We're now to
the ten dollars question. Now, don't forget. You can go
to lifelines. Okay, you have the room, you can ask.
You have a fifty fifty coin, flip this coin right here,

(21:26):
or you have a paper watch shot. Okay, your ten
dollars question. Lance Armstrong won his sixth consecutive What in
two thousand and four? Oh gosh, it's not a marathon?
I think it's higher than one. He's the bike rider.

(21:47):
Was it a marathon? Eddie hlunchbox? You guys know sports?
Lance Armstrong won his sixth consecutive what in two thousand
and four? What is that? Cold? I think I'm gonna
I'm gonna go with a lifeline of somebody in studio
because I'm not sure the exact name. Okay, who are
you going with? Well? If he gets it wrong, then
I think I take away a sports Genius title. So lunchbox,

(22:08):
all right, lunchbox Lance Armstrong one is six consecutive? What
in two thousand and four? It's a tour to France.
That is correct, That is correct. Well, you can keep
ten dollars, Barbie, or you can have Morgan continue on
for twenty five dollars. It's up for you, up to you.

(22:29):
Let's just keep going. Let's keep going, all right, Morgan?
What does the W stand for in George W. Bush? Oh? Man,
I thought you were gonna say like WW dot com,
and then I knew that only two dot com? All right, um, Morgan,

(22:50):
what's the double stand for in George George W. Bush? Gosh?
I mean there's you know a lot of W names,
George William Bush, George. I don't think it's George Washington
that will be the first president Georgia. You have a

(23:10):
coin flip and a paper one that you can also
go to or you can just guess. This is really
hard because the paper wad I really don't have a
chance with you. Don't think you shoot a paper one
into the trash basket. No, it's just you know, my
gravity it's not working there, right, Like shooting a paper
wad into a trash can not good chances for me? Okay,
But the flip a coin is fifty fifty, and there's like,

(23:31):
William is a very common middle name. I'm a name
in general, and that's a fifty fifty for me at
this moment. So you think William is fifty fifty with
every other double name. I feel like it's a very
common name for twenty five dollars for Barbie. When does
the W and George W. Bush stand for oh Man?

(24:00):
William is my final answer. The W stands for Walker.
That's Barbie. I hate that for you? Well, that's okay anyway,
I like it. Do you want to give Barbie too
the chance tomorrow? Wow? Yow, I'm feeling pretty generous. We'll

(24:23):
give We'll give you one more shot. Okay, Barbie, okay,
sound great? All right? There she is, Uh, Barbie, hang
on the phone. Okay, Okay, Morgan, I'm so disappointed I
should have flipped the coin. I agree, because I didn't
think it's fifty fifty will your versus all other ws.
You know, George William does have a nice ring to it, though,

(24:43):
But what are the other times? Walker? William Walter wilbur M.
That's a good one. Wilt nowt yeah, okay, Wobbler, Welkin Webster, Okay,
we'll play with her again tomorrow. Give it up for

(25:04):
a Barbie, everybody who wants to be one hundred air
no winner today. I have two money stories I wanted
to share with you. This first one, there's a guy
in Houston who took out his PPP loan, you know,
his paycheck Protection Program loan that people were getting during
COVID because a lot of folks were legitimately struggling. Except

(25:25):
he bought a Lamborghini with his money, which is just
to think you're not going to be caught. But he
applied for more than two million dollars in loans. He
received over a million. He bought a Lamborghini, a Ford
F three fifty, a rolex office space, and a lot
of time at nightclubs. He played a guilty in September

(25:46):
to wire fraud and money laundering. He was sentenced. You
wonder how he got caught. I do. When they finally
vetted his applications, they were like, oh, this ain't right,
Like it took that long to even look at him.
They'd already given the money out because they were just
giving the money out to hopefully help people as often
as they could, as quick as they could. His Lamborghini
looked awesome. By the way. Let me say that I'm

(26:08):
not a big Lamborghini guy, but I saw this car
and I was like, holy crap, that's amazing. But he
wasn't caught until they finally got And I bet you
there are a lot of people who think they got
away with this. If they read this story, their butts
are puckered hard this morning. You know, I just had
that same thought, and even in my head, I thought, pucker,

(26:28):
that's weird. We're the same, amy, we're the same. That
story is from click to Houston if you want to
see it. But if he almost got away with it,
as much as I say that, there are people listening now,
they're nervous about it. I bet you so many people
got away with this. Yeah, maybe not doing it as dumb.
I mean, the guy went straight luxury in every capacity.

(26:50):
And I'm sure he's posting it on Instagram. Right. You
can't have a Lamborghini and up the person who has
a Lamborghini is also the person who has the Lamborghini.
To post the Lamborghini on Instagram or social idea, right, Yeah,
unless you are a true car collector. No. No, even
a true car collector wants to show off as Lamborghini,
Like Lamborghinis are made to be shown off, lunchbox, What

(27:14):
car would you have if you have any car in
the world, Lambo? And why because it's awesome and everybody
looks at it and everybody says, dang, that's what's that.
That's when they look at a Lambo like that person
made it in life, unless you stole it. Here's another
money story that I saw and kind of related to
Adam Driver or the actor. Do you know who that is? Amy? No,
he plays Kylo Wren in Star Wars. He's in House

(27:35):
of Gucci. It's hard to describe him. He wasn't the military. Yeah,
he's in the military. Eddie. You know who this guy is? Yeah? Yeah,
I know him from the Star Wars movies. What do
you think about him as a person? He seems kind
of like a douche. Okay, fair enough. He is reportedly
worth more than ten million dollars right now. But he
talked about the first thing he spent money on after

(27:57):
he got his first big acting check. He said, as
a kid, I couldn't really afford high end shoes, and
he went out and bought a pair of Air Jordan's,
the red and whites. That's exactly what I did. It
wasn't my first big money check, but it was like
my first check where I was like, I don't have
to live just paycheck to paycheck because growing up, and
I've told the story before, like I always wanted to

(28:19):
be able to afford a pair of Jordan's because all
the cool kids had Jordan's and I only got my
shoes from yard sales growing up, or when my mom
finally got a J. C. Penny's card, we would go
and put it on j C. Penney's card. And so
when I started to have a little bit of success
a radio, I went and I bought a pair of
all white Jordans and I wore them forever and they
eventually fell apart, but I still have the box because

(28:42):
that to me. I wouldn't say it was the sign
I made it, because I definitely hadn't made it at
that point as making forty five thousand dollars a year,
but it was a sign that I was able to
do things on my own and I was able to
finally take care of myself in a way that I
wasn't taking care of as a kid. And I know

(29:04):
that is a bit irrational. Go oh, we didn't have Jordan's,
but for me, like not having any shoes, any new
shoes at all, was a big deal. But I still
have the box. It's still I still keep a lot
of documents in him. But I thought the story was
cool from Adam Driver. I still have and I think
Scuba Steve our producers the same way. He loves shoes
because you couldn't afford shoes growing up, all right there,

(29:24):
Scuba Oh yeah, I would see the kids, I say,
with like the kids who could afforded, the rich kids
that have these really cool Pennies and Jordan's and Charles Barkleys.
I was like, man, one day, when I get my
first big paycheck, like Adam Driver, I'm gonna buy these shoes.
And so now I've spent a lot of my expendable
income on shoes that I couldn't get in the nineties
that are retro shoes. Now is your wife like, dude,
give it a rest. My wife hates me for it.

(29:47):
But I thought that was pretty cool, you know, Adam
Driver going out and buying a pair of shoes because
maybe I think it's cool because I did the same thing. Amy,
What do you have to say about that? But now
I looked him up. I recognize him from girls the
HBO Oh yeah show. I knew I had seen him
in something, and then yeah, sure he was. He was
a US marine and Eddie called him to do But
now I feel bad about that. You're Amy's pile of stories.

(30:12):
So this story just offers some hope and encouragement if
you're trying to conceive. A woman in North Carolina gave
birth for the very first time at age fifty years old.
Wow in America, Yes, in America, and her husband is
sixty one, and they welcome their first daughter, Lily, and
doctors didn't know if this would be possible. She worked

(30:32):
with some fertility doctor her O B G I N
and she was able to conceive. First of all, good
for them. Second of all, the sixty one year old
guy part is not that shocking to me, no, But
the fact that she's fifty. Most of the time, it's
like she's sixty three and she had seven kids. This
is from Indonesia. Those are the stories that we hear about.
But good for them. At fifty years old. Obviously this

(30:55):
is not common, right, it's anomaly. But maybe they've learned
something with her that they can pass on to others. Yeah, no,
that's why it's in the news. And she said, between
the two of them, her and her husband, they're like
Abraham and Sarah. That thing going on because God granted
Sarah her first child at age ninety, which, well, okay,
they're not like Abraham and Sarah. Let's let's pause, person,

(31:17):
She said, first of all, First of all, fifty and
ninety way different. Second of all, you shouldn't compare yourself
to biblical figures. Just generally every in someone else can
for you. If someone wanted to come out and go,
you know what, this is slightly resembles the story from
the Bible of Abraham and Sarah. And then she goes,
stop it, No, it doesn't. But you can't go, hey,

(31:39):
you know what, I'm like Jonah in the well. You
can't do that. Okay. I think she just for her
it's a miracle. And she finally, after all this time,
ten years of trying, was able to have a baby
and have y'all ever read that story to a child
in the Bible Genesis anybody recently. I haven't read it
to a child. I've read it to myself. Yeah, I

(32:00):
was Bible quizz champion for like four years in a row.
So yeah, but no, no kids, Okay, I know. I
just feel like when you read that out loud to child,
it's like very a lot of confusing. And then before
God gives Sarah the baby, then there's a time before
where Sarah gives you know, Abrahm Abraham, before he's Abraham
Abraham like her her helper, Hagar, and it's like you

(32:23):
you get to lay with her. It's like, I don't know,
it's very I'm like, this is PG thirteen or rated
R and I'm reading it to my child and it's
okay because it's Genesis of the Bible. Also, I'm predicting
they fudge the numbers a little bit on those ages,
just a little well, I know, okay, I'm stammering without
to say of any parent that has read that to

(32:44):
their child is like wait a second, whoa, this is
like next level stuff that's really weird. I hope my
son doesn't ask me any questions. Well, congratulations to them
two people that are blessed with a child. Later in
life that I shall not compare it to anyone biblic Well,
thank you, Amy, what is that? Yes? Okay, So have
you ever regifted a president before, Bobby, Yes, but only

(33:04):
because I think someone will enjoy it more than I would.
Never because I'm like, I don't want this crap. Yeah,
you know what I mean. Well, you're not alone. Majority
of people have admitted to regifting. What about if you
receive something and you don't like it, are you able
to do a good poker face and act like you
like it or you can't hide it? Well, this is why,
for the most part, I don't know. If open gifts
in front of people, you know this, I'll be like, oh,

(33:25):
thank you, I'll be sure to open this when I
get home. And then when I get home and I
open it, I don't like it to go, and then
it goes on the closet. Okay, and just heads up.
So people know. Pajamas are the most common gift that
gets returned, and then fancy toiletry type stuff. They're the
most common items to get regifted. Well, I got a
really nice set of pajamas last year from American Idol

(33:46):
and they're still in the pack because they're full. When
am I going to wear pants and long sleeves to bed?
And I'm not being I'm not cranky about the gift,
but I know they spent a lot of money, it
says Bobby on like the nipple written across it with
a pocket. But it's like, when am I going to
button my pajamas and go to bed? I'm not Mike Brady.
Is it not that Brady Bunch? So yes, yes, So

(34:10):
if anybody receives these American Idol pajamas, that's you're regifting. Well,
of course, says Bobby On it Eddie, if you get
some pajamas to say Bobby, it wasn't an accident. They
didn't accidentally write my name. Well, now I know the story,
so I'll expect that. So if you missed Reba McIntyre's
holiday movie on Lifetime called Christmas in Tune, I have
good news. You can watch it again this Saturday night

(34:30):
on Lifetime at eight pm nine eight pm Central, nine
pm Eastern. And here's the clip of Reba talking about it.
We filmed it in June. It was hot, because you
can imagine, even when we were inside, the air conditioning
couldn't keep us cool. Enough with all of our scarves
and sweaters and things like that, and we were sweating
up storm. But it's a sweet movie and I hope

(34:51):
everybody enjoys you and I will be watching that again.
That's this Saturday night, in case you want to catch
it on Lifetime. Could I ask a question? Yeah, and
you'll be honest with me, yes, because I don't know
what you're gonna put in the file. I just want pure,
honest to hear from me and the listeners. Okay, okay, yeah?
Was that a commercial? No? For what? For Reva? Yeah?
First movie? Did they like pay us to put that
in there? Or you just genuinely like caring about that? Oh? Yeah,

(35:15):
I don't get I don't get paid for that ever.
Is that an option? No? I don't know. It wasn't.
I never I never know. And so when you're Reva's
got a Lifetime movie at nine eighth Central, I'm like,
did they pay us to say? No? I was just
giving people the time in case they wanted to watch it.

(35:35):
And again, it's called Christmas in tune. I'm not getting
paid to say that, but I am obsessed with all
the Christmas movies and a Reba one. You know is
going to be good, and so some people might not
know that it's out because there's so many like yeah
everywhere and this one. Did anyone else think that was
a commercial? Though possibly had slipped in it kind of
sounded like one, but good Reba's like slipping me one

(35:57):
hundred or what you know, but the movie television networks,
Oh Lifetime, Yeah, yeah, yeah, okay, Now not an ad
I Mamy. That's my pile. That was Amy's pile of stories.
It's time for the good news. We gotta tell me

(36:17):
something good from Meg in Long Island and she's on
the phone. Now, Meg, how are you morning, Morning, studio morning.
What's going on? So I have a really fun tell
me something good for you guys. Okay. So I grew
up in a small town on Long Island. It's a
beach community. And after thirty four years, our ice cream

(36:39):
truck retired. Now it wasn't the ice cream truck that
you see mister softee in New York City. It was
a woman who bought this ice cream truck with her
own money at nineteen years old and was our ice
cream lady for thirty four years, and at the end
of her retirement, the whole town through her parade on

(37:01):
her last drive, led by our town Bagpiper. That's awesome.
The whole town came together to do that. You could
tell how much she went to everybody, and they knew
her from all those years exactly because when I was
a kid, I got sick ones and she brought me
ice cream when I got home from the hospital. And
she was that type of person. She took care of

(37:22):
everyone over the years, and we wanted to just give
back to her, so we threw her a parade. How
did she react to the parade? She cried. Her husband
had to drive the truck because she stood there in
the truck crying the whole time. And she had no
idea that we were going to do this. Do you
know her name? Yes, her name's Mary Beth. Well, Mary Beth,

(37:48):
go ahead, No, I was just to say, her name's
Mary Beth, and she's been amazing and we're all going
to miss her. But she needs to actually sit on
the beach with us, not just give us the ice
cream while we're there. That's awesome. Thank you for sharing
that with us. Meg. That is telling me something good,
and that is what it's all about. That was tell
me something good. Here are the top three songs in

(38:10):
country music this week. At number three, Luke Combs Cold
as You, They Got Whisker Ever, At number two, Dustin
Lynch and Mackenzie Porter Thinking About You, I'll Just Get Valley,

(38:32):
Get Side Out. And number one Zach Brown Band Same Boat.
We're all insane. I mean, how do you feel about
the state of the top of the charts right now?

(38:53):
Because sometimes we come on and we're like those songs suck,
or sometimes we're like they're great. But when I played
those three, just in general, how do you feel about
the state of it? I don't like playing this game.
Oh okay, I'll go. I think it's fine. I think
it's fine to pretty good. I think sometimes we played
the top three songs and I'm like that's garbage, Like
what's happening? And sometimes I'm really into it. I'm like,

(39:14):
those are good songs. I feel like it's pretty good here. Okay,
I'd give it a solid bee because there are sometimes
I'm like, what's what are radio people thinking making these
the big you know? Yeah? I mean I don't. I
don't disagree with the fact that these are huge songs.
There it's just not my favorite top three mh. But
that's I'm not asking if they're your favorite song. Like

(39:37):
I like the Luke Combs song a lot. I hate
that it's going to come and go so quick because
they just run it up the chart like it's nothing.
Um okay, but you feel okay about it? I feel
okay about it, yes, yea for them the number one
the number one rock songs from Papa Roach called Kill
the Noise, Amy, Papa Roach, What do you know them from?

(40:05):
What song? I don't? I mean if you gave me some,
if you gave me I need a hint though, No,
because limp biscuits in my head? Or how about'll give
you one word? Cut my life in two pieces? Yeah,
this is my last life in two pieces. This is
my last reason. Wow, I got that. Those guys have

(40:28):
to be like ninety now right and they're still rocking
that hard. Those are your top songs in music. Let's
go over to Amy now and get in the morning Corny,
Morning Corny. A gingerbread man went to the doctor complaining
about a sore knee. Oh yeah, the doctor asked him,

(40:49):
have you tried icing it? That was the morning Corney.
It took us while to get there. We went on
a journey when you were telling that joke. We went
on a journey, but you know what, we got there
and we're better for it. Lunchbox has a theory about
the Rock that we're gonna get to in a second.

(41:11):
We already know lunch has beef with the Rock because
the Rock pulls up beside tour buses and the people
freak out. And then Lunchbox tried that and people want who.
So there's already some animosity there just from Lunchbox to
the Rock. And I'm gonna get to what he's upset about.
But first, here's the story. So the rockets surprised at
theater full of people that had come to watch his

(41:31):
movie Red Notice. He learned about the people that were
in actually watching the movie, learned their stories, and he
said there was one person in the audience named Oscar.
He takes care of a seventy five year old mom.
He's a personal trainer leader at his church and provides
supportive meals for women, and so he gave him his
personal custom truck as a holiday surprise. And here is

(41:54):
a clip of that. I want to show you something
real quick. Yes, I wrote this card for you. It's
a little thing. What the heck? Thank you for your service. Brother,
enjoy your neutral what good God, Bro? Oh good? And

(42:15):
do a lot of good for people. Man, do a
lot of good for people. This is your truck, Bro,
It is my joy. This is my personal truck and yours.
Now you do a lot of good for people through
the Gem, the church, Mom, women women, we need that support.

(42:36):
We're going through it. Thank you, Bro. Just love you
know he's also a Navy veteran. What you heard the
Rock say thank you for your service? Like, don't you
hear that? And it makes you emotional and such a
positive way? Amy? Yeah, No, I mean there's I just
feel like any recognition, but especially something like that from
the Rock, And then yeah, I'm going to make anybody

(42:57):
feel special. That's super cool. Okay, Lunchbox, now to you
your theory. Once we've spent some time shedding light on
the positive part of it, go ahead. What is the
Rock hiding? What are the skeletons in his closet that
he is making up for that he's doing all this
stuff to make sure no one looks in his closet.
I mean he pulls up to tour buses and gives
them big screen TVs and money and trips, and now

(43:17):
he's given away cars and there is just something the
Rock is hiding, and this is all just hey, look
at all the good look at all the goods, so
he can sweep the bad under the rug, so no
one will look in his closet. There is no way
someone is this good. Can you stop saying people look
at his closet like that's a term, like like the
skeletons in your closet? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, I would

(43:40):
think with the reason I think your logic is flawed
is because if the Rock didn't want people to see
the bad things he's done, he would just stay out
of the limelight for anything. Because the more people are
talking about you, writing stories about you, learning, sharing, the
odds are they'll find whatever you're trying to hide. But

(44:00):
he's not doing that. He's out front and center constantly,
So I don't think there's anything that he's hiding. Aiming
your thoughts on lunchboxes theory, No, it never even crossed
my mind, like not once, Like he just gave away
his personal truck. Yeah, but that's nothing to him. I mean,
I'm sure it's his personal truck, but like the cost
of that is like literally nothing to him. I don't know, guys,

(44:21):
I'm just getting when when it comes out, you can
come back and be like, Lunch, you're a genius because
you always done what you think is going to come out.
About the rock Man, he's in Besley money. That's why
he's able to give away all this stuff. Like money's
nothing to him because he's just doing like an office
space where he's just taking a little bit off the
top every time. And what do you know, he's super
rich or he's just like a good dude. Is that

(44:42):
even a possibility in your mind? Very slim? What about that?
You're just upset because he has people that recognize and
adore him. I mean, and you don't and you don't
as much Okay, yes, because I no, No, people adore
me and recognize me all the time. It's just when
I do something good, it doesn't get a whole news
story and some dude doesn't start crying. Oh you know,

(45:04):
I'm like, thank you? What do you mean I thought
this was your truck? No? I mean, like you think
if I gave someone the ultimate that would cry? Yes?
Like I have to like, what am I gonna do
with this to fix this up? Um? Okay, Lunchbox, I
I hear your theory. I don't agree with it, but
I do give you a platform to voice it. Do

(45:25):
you feel better? I do feel better, And I just
want you to buy guys to be suspicious. If the
Rock offers you something, ask him what are you hiding? Okay, Well,
what's really cool right now is we do have the
Rock on the phone. Seriously, Yeah, let's see how much.
Let's see how much crappy. Let's go. Come on, Ryan,
he's not on the phone. On the phone right now

(45:51):
is Dylan in North Dakota. Dylan, what's going on with you?
I haven't seen a girl for two months. I've known
her for a years. We just started dating. She works
in a way to stop. I'm a truck driver. I
just got out of a bad lease. They wouldn't fix nothing,
so I got out of it. And now she's just
talking about buying a house when I'm the one that

(46:13):
makes all the payments and I have to do all
that stuff. Okay, so you need our advice to do?
What is she just using me for my money? Like? Yeah,
she makes four bucks? Now out the way to shop.
I look at it like lunchbucks. My money is my money,
her money's her money, And she's trying to push me
to buy a house so she has a place to live.
Does sound like that? Is she pushing you to pay

(46:34):
for all the other things too? Yeah, she just bought
a car. She's trying to push me to buy her
insurance pay for repair her cars. Well, here's the thing
about the house. Let me start with that. If you
decide you need a house and you want to buy
your own house, you buy the house with your money
and your name. You're not married to her, right yeah? No,
and yeah for you, and then she should help contribute

(46:57):
to whatever. Even if that's not the case, she doesn't
have to live there. You still own the house. Like
you can kick her but out tomorrow. It's still all
your house. Do not put if you do buy the house,
do not put her name on the house. It's my
point here. I don't care what she's your girlfriend. If
you want to buy the house, great, It does sound
like she's using you as a roof over the head
though her car insurance out no chance. Yeah, she should

(47:19):
be able to pay for that. No one, because you're
not get anything from that or a house if you
decide to do that, that's at least an investment, that's
at least a home and a place to live. There
is zero percent chance I'm paying for a girlfriend's car insurance,
especially if I already feel like something a little shady's
going on. Do you feel like some shady is going on? Yes?
Or no? Dylan, Yeah, okay, okay, well yeah, trust your gut,

(47:41):
and you know what your gut really is. When people
say trust your gut, do you know what your gut
really is. It's a part of your brain that makes
a very quick decision in the best way possible. Like
when people say trust your gut and you get that
feeling like I just feel this. It's really not from
any other part of your body except a different part
of your brain that doesn't spend a lot of time
doing the analytics. Why don't we just say that then,
because it's better to be like And sometimes you get

(48:03):
a feeling like down in your gut, it's like, you know,
my heart tells me to do this. Nope, that's a
different part of your brain. Your heart's pumping blood blood
through your body, right, beating, that's right, all right? Your
heart broken. Well your brain, your brain is hurt, your
brain broke. Oh wow, this is I didn't know all this.
Hey Dylan, that's a red flag? Yeah? Are you gonna

(48:24):
just bring this up to her? Like how do you?
How are you plan on handling it? Bring it up
to her? Like, hey, oh wow, you break up if
I find out that someone's trying to use me just
to buy a place so that she can live, just
to pay her car insurance. Yeah. Yeah, I think I'm
already in the place where unless she can say for
herself by explaining this in a way, I'm out. Okay.
Well he has to bring it up, though, because if

(48:44):
he hasn't had the conversation, he can't just assume and
accuse her. She might have a She might be like, Dylan,
she amy has a point. Are you going to bring
this up to her? I have brought it up to
her every time a brain up and she's like, oh okay,
and then she just hangs up on the phone. It's like,
oh okay, yet even finished struve station there you go, yeah,
yeh yeah, I'm gonna go back to Exhibit A kick rocks.

(49:04):
So if I were you, I would run first of all,
I'd go buy a new pair of shoes, put them
on your feet, and then run long and far like
Ford do they not stop running? So, Dylan, our advice
to you, just from hearing the part of the story
that we've heard is that she is not for you.
You need to run and hide. Okay, okay, and water shoes.
I wear boots. Hey, oh well, get some comfortable boots then,

(49:27):
or getting your truck and drive. Yeah, that analogy might
work better, Babe, Hey, Dylan, drive all right, Dylan, good luck, Bud,
all right, thanks, see later, it's time for the good news.
We gotta call her. Susan on the line, Susan story. Yeah,

(49:51):
morning studio morning. Yeah. So I'd bake cookies and in
exchange for the donation to my favorite charity is usually
Alzheimer's Association, but I've also raised money, a quite substantial
amount of money for some other organizations. But over the
last about five years, I've raised over one hundred thousand

(50:11):
dollars for Alzheimer's. Oh my god. And yeah, one cookie
at a time, you know, one mixer was one person
sitting in my kitchen doing the cookies. And I also
teach cookie classes, which helps me raise a little bit
more at one time. Let me ask a couple of
questions here. My first question is do you make the

(50:33):
best day cookies in the whole world? I think so,
and other people have told me so. And then I
tasted somebody else's the other day and I think so again. Yeah.
My second question I have for you is what has
inspired you to make all these cookies for a great cause?
So it started as well. I started with Alzheimer's because

(50:56):
my friend's mom had it, and then about fifteen years ago,
my mom was diagnosed as she passed away last October,
and so my mission just got stronger and more determined
to find a character that for Alzheimer's because it's just
an awful disease. Well, we appreciate you doing what you do.
It's very selfless. Sounds like you make some dang good cookies.

(51:18):
If for some reason your fingers are slipping and you
actually put like a label on some mail and you
mail them to us, we will eat them for sure. Um.
I hope you have an awesome day, and thank you
for sharing that story with us, and hopefully you'll inspire
others out there to do the same, hopefully just one
day at a time. Yep, one day at a time, right,
sounded like yeah, one cookie at a time. I sound

(51:39):
a little like lunchbox there, One day at a time.
All right, Susan, have a great day, Yes, are you too? Thanks,
and y'all do in the studio. By that was tell
me something good. There's a voicemail we got last night
from someone named Ron. All Right, I'm very impressed with Force.

(52:01):
I've heard on your shows late. Let's keep it up,
keep it up, all right, I'll take that. I'll take
that every day and twice on Sunday. Now I'm saying, guys, yeah,
I have no idea what he's talking about it or
if he even called the right show, but I'll take it.
You guys can leave us a voicemail anytime you want.
Eight seven seven seventy seven, Bobby. That's our number, eight

(52:24):
seven seven seventy seven. Bobby. If you're listening on podcast
or you can't get through during the show, call us
after the show. Leave us a message. Thank you. Let's
do the news. Bobby's story. Police in Alabama are talking
with the FedEx driver connected to the case of hundreds

(52:45):
of missing packages. This is from WBTM, an investigation launched
after hundreds of FedEx packages were dumped in an Alabama ravine.
Around four hundred packages were found dumped in the ravine
on private property near Hayden, north of Birmingham. Sheriff Mark
Moon said it seemed the packages had been left within

(53:05):
the past twenty four hours. He didn't know why they
were there. The driver has been questioned, but his identity
has not been made public yet. Meanwhile, FedEx released a
statement apologizing and saying they'll work to deal with any
damaged packages. Amy, what do you think happened here? I
have no idea. He got lazy, he didn't want to
do it. He just had fed up, so he just

(53:26):
dumped him and went on with his day like he
did all of his work, like he had something better
he wanted to go do. So he just got rid
of them and moved on. Thought he'd never get caught.
Oh I don't know. I mean, I think you'd probably
get caught. You're right. He had to think he'd never
get caught. And yes, I would think he's like, all right,
I can't be done with work until i'm packages, so

(53:47):
I'll just dump them real quick. But I would think
you would steal them at least if you were going
to have them just be gone, why don't you go
and dump them somewhere and then guilt to the package
later and steal the stuff out of them. Oh well, yeah,
if you're I think the big part here is he's lazy.
That would be a lot of work to steal it
and do all that. He just didn't want to work,

(54:09):
so he just threw them out. But you could still here,
I am convincing Amy how to steal now, but you
could steal. You could dump them somewhere and then go
back and get all the stuff out of them later.
I just think there's a lot of problem Lunchbox your theory. Look,
this guy got paid someone. There's something in those packages
that isn't supposed to be in those packages. And they said, look,

(54:31):
I can't tell you what boxes in, so I need
you to dump them all. Oh yeah, and so oh yeah,
he hadn't dump them all, and whoever was getting that
secret package they went down there and sifted through them
and picked out the one they needed. Well, if you're
missing any Christmas gifts, they're probably in a ditch in Alabama.
So sorry boy, that all right? Next up, authorities at

(54:53):
the Miami International Airport discovered a stowaway in the landing
gear of a plane flying from Guatemala. It was a guy.
He was in a days, but he was able to
sit and talk to first responders. US Customs and Border
Protection officers apprehended a twenty six year old who got
in the landing gear of the airplane and flew here
and there's a video of him getting out of it.

(55:14):
Here's a report from WTVJ News in Miami. The twenty
six year old man sitting on the ground as airport
workers try to give him water. The man surviving the trip,
a flight of about two and a half hours. He
was taken to Jackson Memorial Hospital. NBC six investigator and
pilot Willard Shepherd says, based on the flight data, the

(55:34):
temperature and the gear well dropped buying about one hundred
degrees while the plane was in flying, So this person
was in there a time period, probably about two hours,
where they were subjected to subzero temperatures. You can have
all the north face you want, it's gonna be cold
as crap in that thing. I'm surprised he lived because

(55:56):
people do that sometimes when they die, and he must
have really want to get the heck out of Guatemala.
You know, here is an aviation expert, John Day, talking
about the risk of surviving inside a plane's landing gear.
So you've got these four huge wheels in this massive
landing gear right here, and when this landing gear retracts,
probably less than a foot of space wide to really

(56:18):
fit into it's it's an incredibly narrow space where somebody's
just going to be almost in the fetal position for
five and a half hours. He'd have to kind of
be slumped over to survive. And if the plane had
any kind of turbulence, I mean, it'd be like riding
a roller coaster without a seat belt. I feel terrible
for this guy because he was freezing. He was, I

(56:39):
mean almost falling to his death the entire time. He's
just inches away from it. And I hope we don't
send him back unless he's like kill people or something
like we should keep him. He like, he just got
a ticket. I guess that'd be a bad precedent to
set though. Yeah, okay, but you can't for this guy only, Like,
we just do it for him. We don't do it
for anybody else. But this guy went through it. Man

(57:00):
and he lived. I've got people try this and they
don't live. That is wild. That's a sad story, ish right,
because he did get here and he lives. He's alive.
I mean if you would have died it when I
told the story, I exactly never happened, all right? Final story.
Zodiac signs Amy whatchersis? Lunchbox Leo Eddie Aries? Yeah, I'm

(57:24):
an aries. Anybody at Libra? I am okay, Morgan, the
stories for you? Okay. Dada has shown that Libras are
the zodiac sign most likely to cheat. Oh boom, how
you like that? Boyfriend? Not what I was expecting. Analyze? No,
go ahead, No he doesn't, No, he doesn't listen. That's

(57:47):
probably a good thing, right now. Libras make up a
whopping sixteen percent of cheaters. Does sign most likely to
cheat the source's best life? I don't know what the
crap best life is. It's something like a terrible act
of me if you're reporting this, But yeah, you can
take that. Have a dinner conversation with your boyfriend about
that tonight, Morgan. Okay, Well, I'll be like, how do
you feel about this? I bet it ain't good story.

(58:13):
Mike d was talking about Spider Man coming out. What's
the difference in this Spider Man and the nine other
Spider Man movies. It's supposed to be like the best
one ever basically. But don't they say that every time
a Spider Man comes out. No, this one has a
lot of anticipation around it. Yes, that happens every time
a Spider Man comes out, this one specifically. Okay, So
people are selling their Spider Man tickets on eBay and

(58:33):
one pair of them went for like twenty five thousand
dollars apparently, I don't know. So the websites are crashing.
Spider Man No Way Home hits theaters on December seventeenth.
Mike d has already bought his tickets yep day went
on sale. Does this give you hope that theaters aren't
completely dead? I think they're coming back. This is gonna
be the biggest movie of the year and showing that
when there's a big event like this, people will go

(58:55):
to the movie theater. Okay, I can agree with you
on that. I think if there's a big event, I
think the movie vies for the sake of just being
like a decent movie. I don't think people are going
to theaters anymore. Yeah, watch it at home. I think
big blockbuster movies obviously we'll pull people in. Would you
think about selling your tickets on eBay or not a chance? Really?
For five hundred bucks? Now, I have to see it

(59:16):
the day comes out. No, why are you gonna dress up? No?
Oh gosh, so for five hundred dollars you wouldn't sell
your Spider Man ticket. I've been looking forward to this
movie for years. Who's in it? I don't even know
who's in it. Tom Holland is a Spider Man. They're
also bringing back some older villains in it, and there's
a rumor that other Spider Man will appear in Has

(59:38):
Tom Holland been Spider Man before? Yeah? Two times? Then
why do we care? The new cares because of all well,
there's a lot of spoilers going out, but there's a
lot of hype around who else could be in the movie.
I'm disappointed that I can't watch it at home too.
I'm disappointed any movie now is only theater release. Like
I've kind of been reconditioned, much like when Netflix would

(59:59):
put out shows all at once, and then you'd have
Hulu come back and put out one episode at a time,
I'll be like, dang it, I needed my show because
I was conditioned to believe that I needed all the
shows to binge. Now I feel the same way about movies.
I'll still buy them. I'm happy to click on Disney
Plus and buy the Marvel movie or Amazon where I

(01:00:20):
buy stuff. Sometimes HBO Max sometimes they have movie new
movies up there. I do not want to go to
a theater and watch a movie, though. Does anyone else
care about Spider Man? Well but my kids? And until
this segment, I had no idea that these tickets were
highly sought after. Didn't even know the release dates. So
thankful that Mike d just getting his heads up and
so I don't know. They were talking about going to

(01:00:43):
see this movie, and I thought, Okay, you no worries,
We'll just pick a time to go. But doesn't seem
like it's going to be that easy. What's the last
good movie everybody's seen? I think that's a fair question.
Think about this for a second, because I definitely didn't
tell you guys, I was going to ask that, but
the last you know, what I started watching was Free
Guy Ryan Reynolds, and I watched like forty five minutes
of it in the hotel, and Kaitlin wasn't loving it.

(01:01:05):
I think I'm gonna like it because he just he
figures out he's a background character in a video game. Yeah,
and she's like, yeah, this is more your style. I'm
just gonna go and take a shower. But I'm kind
of into free Guy right now. Um, did you watch that?
Your review it? Yeah, that's pretty good. Oh no, I
thought that was great. That's okay. Last Mighty loves this movie.
It was pretty good. You would probably like it, though,
it's kind of like a more comedic Ready Player. One

(01:01:28):
amy last great movie I've seen. I guess King Richard, Okay, Mike,
I would say probably a shang Chi, which was the
last Marvel movie. That one was really good, Eddie Man,
I was gonna say shang Chi because I just watched
that with my kids. Definitely a top Marvel movie. So good. Really, yes, okay.
On the last good movie, I saw Parasite. Whoa, I'm

(01:01:52):
watching a movie keeping. Hey, guys, Housekeeping is beating on
the door right now in the hotel. I'm in no,
thank you. I have a good day. I don't know
if you guys could hear that you did. Yeah, for
listeners hanging out right now listening to us. I am
doing the show from a hotel in Central America somewhere,
and sometimes they I don't know, they could have come

(01:02:13):
over where people were complaining too, maybe because it's butt
crack early and I'm like, what's your favorite movie? Bones?
You don't need towels or anything, shampoo. You're all good.
I'm all good. All right, I'm all good, lunchbox, What
were you saying? I said Parasite because I really don't
know if I've seen a movie since Parasite that I
can think of off the top of my head. Yeah. Oh,
I take back, uh, free guy, because I'm not finished.

(01:02:35):
But watching Just Mercy X Oh yeah, I mentioned that
on my show five Stars um Five Gables, and then
I watched Frost Nixon and it was good, but it
wasn't as good as Just Mercy. So all right, we're good.
I mean, I kind of I'm shaking a little bit
by someone beating on the door this early in the morning.
I should probably go check that. Sorry. The day this

(01:02:59):
story comes, it was from Bellevue, Washington. A husband and wife.
We're out walking downtown Bellevue when a lady walked up
to him asked them for some money. They said no,
so she took a frying pan, and wow, who hit
him in the head? She walking around with the frying pan. Yeah,
I had him behind her back. I mean, if anybody
came up to me and asked for something while holding
something behind their back, I might actually give it to

(01:03:22):
them because I would think it was a gun or something.
Maybe that's her technique. That's also weird that you'd walk
around holding something behind her back, and especially a frying pan.
So what happened She was arrested a few blocks away.
That's like old school nineteen forty slapstick stuff. STU. Just
frying pan to the head, I ought to Oh, all right,
that's I'm lunchboxed. That's your bone head. Story of the day.

(01:03:42):
Fans of an Oasis cover band got stranded after a concert.
The guests were sheltering at a place called the tan
Hill in after a ten in the Friday concert of
an Oasis tribute band. The storm dumped three feet of
snow on them and they were stuck in the pub
for three nights, which probably on the surface sounds amazing,

(01:04:04):
but I think after twenty four hours, You're like, get
me the heck out of here. I remember once it
was snowing really bad in Arkansas where I grew up,
and I worked at a radio station one oh five
point nine Klazy and Hot Springs, Arkansas, and I worked
there the whole time I went to college. And they
were like, hey, big snowstorms coming. You know there maybe
snow for twenty four hours. Can you and add another

(01:04:26):
buddy named Matt. Can you guys come up to the
station and just work the whole twenty four hour period
and switch off until the snow goes away? Which was
quite the ask, but I was doing anything to make
any money, and I was just excited to being radio
and I was like sure, like twenty years old. The
snowstorm was like four days and we were trapped there
and we were delirious. We would do. We started off

(01:04:48):
first switching out every three hours, and then we weren't
getting any sleep, so then we started switching out every
six hours, and then eight hours. But like the last
three hours the eight hour shift, we were speaking a
different language. I mean it was like, all right, this
is Chumbawamba chumba. Like it's almost like we were I've
never been high, but it was like it was like

(01:05:09):
we were high on the air and we had to
do this for days. Miserable experience. It would have been
more fun to be stuck in a pub, but I
think i'd probably that'd probably gotten old too, because how
much how much beer on tap? Can you really drink it? Here?
You're right and then they're gonnay're gonna run out of eventually.
So also, I'm surprised that an Oasis cover band has
a bunch of people going to a show. Hey man,

(01:05:30):
Like I would totally go to that. That's like a
bar show though, that's like someone that would play that pub,
not you go to a show and then then to
the pub. But I saw that story, I wanted to
share it back tomorrow, Have a great day, see then.
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Bobby Bones

Amy Brown

Amy Brown

Lunchbox

Lunchbox

Eddie Garcia

Eddie Garcia

Morgan Huelsman

Morgan Huelsman

Raymundo

Raymundo

Mike D

Mike D

Abby Anderson

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Scuba Steve

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