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December 27, 2019 57 mins

Jo Dee Messina stops by the studio for the 'Friday Morning Conversation'. Bobby opens up the mailbag and reads an email from one of Amy's neighbors about her being rude. Plus, Lunchbox spills the tea and calls out Eddie for stealing from the glass room.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Did your buddy and miss the Bobby trans America. This
is the Hey, welcome to Friday show. I'm more studio name.
All right, big show. Jody Messina comes in later. I

(00:23):
read this. The most attractive male body part is amy
male body part. The most attractive male body part is
it's easy amy biceps. A strong upper body is the
most attractive big shoulders. So I was sinking shoulders, chest biceps. Yeah, okay,

(00:43):
what about brain? I can't people like me just get
looked for our brain? You you asked for the most
attractive body part. I guess people automatically go physical and
they can't see your brain. By your head, it's never
nerdy guys like me to get the low air. Yeah yeah,
I read that this morning. One tip to instantly increase
your attractiveness for guys and girls, by the way, nodding

(01:04):
your head because it makes you seem more likable and approachable.
So if you're just nodding your head, oh yeah, a
couple of those. Okay, interesting Jenny and Chicago. What's happening? Hey, guys?
How all right? It's all good. Thanks just calling to
say that I'm a new country listener and love that

(01:27):
you guys are now in Chicago. Oh thanks, So how
long you've been listening to country music as of today? Oh?
Maybe like yesterday, like a couple of months. Okay, we'll
take that. Yeah. So why why why would you switch
over listen to country music? Now? You know a few friends,
but sudjust it and they started playing music when we
were at our house and I'm like, oh, this is country,

(01:48):
Like it's not old school country that I know. So
I started, you know, switching over in the morning. I'm like,
commute to work and love that. You guys are like
kids friendly songs are kids friendly? Um? Just really, you
guys are entertaining and you make my my commute every
morning just a lot easier. So thank you guys. Well
thanks a lot. Are there any artists being so new

(02:09):
your couple of months in? Who are your favorite artists
right now? I'm okay, so I don't really know their names? Yeah, okay,
sing it, we'll know it. Oh oh no, no, Um,
how about I am a little beautiful and crazy like
Luke holmbs beautiful crazy that one. Yeah, all about that.

(02:30):
He's a good dude too, Go ahead, Yeah, maybe like
sunrise sunset, sunrise, suns it sunt That is Luke Brian.
That's it. That's I like that dude too. Go ahead,
I got to bros up on my name. Yeah, so
I'm getting there. Those are your two though, those are
my two favorites. That's good. I like both guys that

(02:51):
you'd probably be like, Oh, they're actually cool humans too.
So well listen, let me welcome you into the show.
Everybody said, Hi, Hi, and welcome you to the to
the country music family. And yeah, thanks for listening, thanks
for calling, Thank you so much. Keep doing what you're doing,
all right, thank you, bye bye. That's a good call.
How about that. Let's go over to Ali and Maine. Hey, Ali,
what's happening? Hi? Bobby? You good? How are you? I'm good?

(03:13):
How are you? Yeah? I'm really good. What can I
do for you? M Well, there's a few things. First.
I'm a first time caller. I've been listening to you
guys for like over a year now, and listen to
you every single day. I love you, and I love
how like weird you are and you embrace it and
you just don't care about what anyone thinks of you,
and I just really admire that. And I love lunchbox

(03:33):
and when he tries to get sweights and then I
was eighty and how she's so funny. I really enjoyed
Pip and July and I just love everything. Well, how
about this, we should put her in a commercial or something.
I wish it had some money to buy a commercial,
I can put her in it. Yeah, well, that's very
nice of you. And you live in Maine. Huh. Yeah,
and that's what I wanted to talk to you about.
So a few weeks ago, a girl from Maine called

(03:55):
and all she said was like, there's just a bunch
of cows in Maine. Yeah. I thought it was odd.
I was like, cowls of all the animals. She's like, oh,
we gots cows. Yeah. I was like, no, no, no, no, no.
How much we have paths and we have cornfields and
potato fields, but we also have like a whole coast
of beautiful ocean and mountains and Portland. Maine is like
one of the best cities to live in and travel too.

(04:15):
So I think you should really come and do a
comedy show here. Yeah. I'm into the idea going to Maine.
I don't know when, but I'm into it. I've never
been to Maine, and there's only three states I haven't
been too. Yeah, I haven't been to Maine and that's
one of them. So, um, can I stay at your house? Sure?
Would that be weird? Really? If I was like, hey,
I called you off the year Alan, Gosh, what if
that's the thing you started doing it traveling from state

(04:35):
to state and staying with listeners After the show though,
I called her, I was like, hey, Ali, it's Bobby.
Um listen, I know this is weird. You called the show.
I saved your number. Is anywhere I can stay with
you for like a week if I come up there.
Oh no, I live on the water, so you can
enjoy the view. And I just didn't leave, was Ali?
Thank you for colling. We really appreciate you. I really
appreciate you guys, and I listened to you every single day,

(04:57):
even if I miss it. I listened to the pod
cast and I listen to your body cast and it's
just it's really really uplifting. Oh, thank you very much.
We have a wonderful day. That's a good call, and
thanks for that. We get a lot of notes up
here on the show. So I have a mailback, Bobbies
mail back. So this one's not for me, Amy, it's
to you, and it's not super nice, but we try

(05:20):
to be as honest as possible. I just thought you'd
like to respond to this as hi. Amy, I listened
every morning on the way to work, and I love
the show I figured out a while back. Amy, the
e love on my street. Believe me. I want to
tell you that when we wave hello as you're walking
by our house with your husband and your kids or
your friends, we're being neighborhood friendly like we have been

(05:41):
for ten or fifteen years we lived here. So when
you turn away ignoring, don't return the greeting, it's just rude.
Oh oh, we all have kids and would love for
your adorable kids to join in with the neighborhood kids anytime.
No one cares about your celebrity. We're all from here.
We have plenty of celebrity friends. We're a fun group
of mom so I like to drink wine on the
porch and have a good time, even if you're not

(06:03):
interested or give zero cares, as Bobby says, returning a
wave is hello or just polite sincerely the group of
moms near you. I thought that was harsh, but that's
not you. I don't know what the misunderstanding is there.
That's that is not amy, But I'm curious as to
why hater. I mean, I think the misunderstood. I've never
felt more misunderstood because I don't even I don't know

(06:27):
what mom. I don't know what moms could she could
be referring to on my street. Like I know there's
a single dat on my street with kids that we
hang out with sometimes, but I don't If somebody waves,
I wave back. Sometimes I wait first, like when up
with my husband, my kids, or my friends, I may
be engaged with them, so I may not see everything. Well,

(06:47):
then I can think is happening is if we've turned around,
maybe we're we've decided to go a different direction, or
go to the grocery store or go eat some like
my neighborhood is full, Like no, no, I don't know
who that is. I don't know a bunch of moms
on my street. I don't know. Also, it's like when
I heard that, it's like an email that kind of

(07:07):
goes like yusaki sucky, suck our kitchen hang out you suck.
Oh I did hear that too? Like that doesn't make
me Why would that just I feel very very misunderstood,
and I would not do that to somebody. And I, oh,
I will say that that is not that that whole
email is not what I know you as you're. You're
literally the nicest person I know, and like, I never

(07:28):
assume someone would know that I am. It's not because
I'm a celebrity. I'm like, okay, I'm not going to
wait because I don't even think I'm a celebrity. So
I'm an extend. I don't think you're either. If you here,
I'm extend grace to that email. And assume that she
thinks I saw her wave or thinks I turned around,
and it's just a lie she's told herself in her head.
We do that. I'm guilty of that too. There you go.
And that was Bobbies mail, bad and always pretty folks.

(07:52):
I mean, should I reply this woman? And Arizona was
just walking down the road and I guess the wind
blows and blows a bee hive out of a tree
and it lands on her head and then thirty bees
stung her. Oh gosh, that's terrible. She was doing anything.

(08:13):
Can I get on my car and walk under it?
It falled in my head, It fell in your head. Yeah,
it fell directly on my head. I heard it like
explode on. I just want to say that I'm happy
that I'm not allergic, and I'm happy that this didn't
happen to somebody that was. So I'm I'm okay with
it happening to me. Can you imagine if you were allergic,
like you could die? But she said that she ran
in the house and took a bunch of Bena drill

(08:34):
and jumped in the shower. That you went to the hospital.
She's all good, she's recovering. But she's just walking down
the street and a beehive lands on her head. That's
like from Dumb and Dumber or something. Yeah, or that
happens last night. I was at at the house and
I'm home. I'd have anything to do last night, which
is rare. So I worked until about two or three o'clock,
watched some of the Office. I guess that was about it.

(08:55):
I texted you last night. Now, yeah, there's just some
stuff for me to do. I guess. I guess. I'd like,
I'm still working my podcast. Oh, got it, got it?
Got it? Yeah, So I know you're like, hey, actually, no,
this is how Bobby hit me up. It said greetings,
and I was like, that's I hope most of my
text now I start with the greetings. Interesting and I

(09:16):
was like, hey, well you don't like that. It's very formal.
He kind of gave me direction on something with my podcast,
and I replied back okay, and then that was it.
I was like, good Doc. I mean, in my head like,
guess he's busy, But now I know he wasn't. I
don't think I don't think that's true. I think I
was busy in my own little way. Let's go to
South Carolina. Hello, who's this? Anna? Is Dana? Hey Dana?

(09:40):
I guess the d's cut off? Hey Dana, how's it going?
Hey Dana? Hey Bobby, Hey guys, Hey, what's going on.
I'm a first time caller. I'm excited to be on.
I've been wanting to call y'all. Oh cool, what do
you want to say? Okay? So I've been listening to
y'all for years. My fiance and I listened to y'all
every day. And I am a therapist at an Alzheimer's

(10:03):
day center here that's new here, and I feel the
morning corny, and they're telling me something good every day
for my patience and they love it. And it's pimp
and joy to my patients every day. And uh yeah,
look at you at that job too, a pretty selfless person.
Huh um. That's the answer I would expect from your data.

(10:27):
That's the answer I would expect. Kay. I appreciate you
because it brings joy to them every morning. Well, thank
you for the call, and thank you for sharing. And
you don't even have to credit us. Just take a
neck like you found it. We don't care where you
say you got it from, but we love that. Thank
you and thanks for calling, Thanks for listening downhead. Sorry

(10:48):
today this story comes up from Sugarland, Texas. Three guys
we're breaking into a best Vibe about three am when
one of them accidentally butt dialed nine one one. So
they were breaking into a breaking into Best Buy and
then they what are the odds? They pushed the emergency
nine one Yeah, I guess in their pocket, and so
the nine one one guy's like, what's your emergency? What's

(11:10):
your emergency? And when no one answers, they have to
send a police car, So they pinged the cell phone
to the Best Buy. That would be my luck if
I finally got into robbing. That would be what I
would accidentally do. Yeah, that's unfortunate for them. Oh so
fortunate for justice, I will say, Yeah, I munchbox, that's
your bone head story of the day. I'm assuming cops
showed up and the rest of the top showed up.

(11:30):
They ran, but the K nine unit, Oh the dog's
got oh yeah, got the dogs out. A dog takedown
always makes me flinch because they jumped, grabbed by the
arm and just yank. I mean they do fly through
the air. To watch when you watch Live PD your
cops who It's time for the good news. Robert King

(11:54):
second traffic on his way home in Chicago. He saw
an accident. He pulled over to see if anyone needed help,
because it was like, well, let me see someone did.
There's a doctor. He was an organ transplant surgeon. He
was trying to take donated organs to a waiting patient.
This is the guy that was in the wreck. And
then the guy was like, oh wow, uh give me that,

(12:15):
and so he takes them and takes the doctor and
runs into the hospital. How he just happened to pull
over and see this, see the wreck, and the guys
like I do need help? Because I got to get
out of here and get these organ Wow. And he did. So.
A man pulls over to check on wreck, ends up
delivering donated organs. That's a good one right there. That
was tell me something good, Bobby Bone. So this woman

(12:36):
came out of Acoma after nearly thirty years. Oh wow,
can you imagine being out for that long? And they
were waking up and the whole the all world has
changed everything, and you still have family and people around you.
I don't know. I would think if you're still alive,
you do because somebody's got to make that decision to
keep the bills being paid. The woman went to a

(12:56):
Comma after a car which she was riding in Kalida
with the bus in nineteen ninety one, when she was
thirty two years old. According to the report, she had
just picked up her four year old son from school
in the accident occurred. She was in the backseat with
the boy. Her brother in law was driving. The boy,
who's now in the thirties, said when she saw the
crash coming, she hugged me to protect me. He walked

(13:18):
away from the crash unharmed. He's still alive, so he
I guess he's the one. Yeah. Yeah. The mother would
not see her son for exactly twenty seven years, so
nearly thirty years. I never gape on on her because
I always had the feeling that one day she would
wake up. She continues to undergo medical treatment almost thirty
years in a coma. Aside from it being an awesome story,

(13:38):
how none you would be to wake up, Amy, because
you wouldn't know, Like when you're out, you just don't know.
You just close your eyes and wake up, Like if
you're just to close your eyes right now, wake up
with thirty years hover cars, I'd have a robot girlfriend
that I'd probably madly in love with, and you'd be
like I knew it. Yeah, I would wake up to that,
wouldn't night. Well, you don't have to like highlight that one,

(13:59):
especially of all the jokes. But yeah, anyway, crazy story. Huh,
that is crazy? Joshua, New York? What's up by Hey?
How are you guys doing pretty good? What's what's going
on with you? Hey? So I called you guys a
long time ago, back in August, right far I left
for basic training for the army, and y'all told me
to call you back once I got out, and now
I'm finally out of my basic training ai T and

(14:21):
now I'm stationed out here in Colorado. I thought i'd
call y'all, call you guys up, look at this, come on? Look. Yeah,
I remember Joshua, but back then his voice wasn't so deep.
Sounds like maybe growing up. Yeah, sounds like he's got
a little a little Harold's chest and up. Huh oh. Yeah,
I've definitely changed the last as I've joined us, for sure.
So what did you do physically? Did you lose a
munch away? Did you get in shape? So? Actually I

(14:43):
gained since I left. I gave about twenty pounds of
like like straight muscle, Like basic training just changed like
shaped me up like insanely am out. Did you like
it or did you not like it? Like? What do
you say about it? So it was actually a lot
of fun. Um, I enjoyed it, like I I enjoyed
shooting them flos. I enjoy doing like throwing grenades, doing
the FTX is, sleeping outside, doing outside training. I mean

(15:08):
the more the part I didn't really really like about
it was the annoyance of it, just like like some
just the dumb stuff they would have you do sometimes,
but I kind of figured like they're shaping you into
a soldier, so you gotta work through it. And that's
what you sound like. My friend there he is Joshua Hey, listen, man,
we appreciate that call. Good luck, but man, good to
hear from you again. Bobby Bone Show and the study

(15:31):
says that listening to sad music when you're sad can
actually make you feel happier, at least happier than upbeat
music does. The researchers think is because uplifting music is
just irritating when you're feeling sad. It's like being a
bad mood is amazing a good mood. It's like love it. Okay,
that makes sense. What's your favorite sad song? I mean
I would have to go with Coldplays Fix You. That

(15:53):
one gives me the feels every single time. And the
story behind why Chris Martin wrote it for Gwyneth after
she lost sure. It was her dad died and he
just wanted to fix her. It's such a good song.
It is sad, though I know, I like a little

(16:22):
Goosebone like. It's a good one. If you need to
feel that one will do it. My favorite three songs
period are slow songs slow and said, yeah, I guess,
like my favorite song ever is Ain't no Sunshine when
she goes said, it's the It's a love song, but
it's a sad love song. It's not warm when she

(16:45):
he loves her so much that when she's gone, it
ain't good. Ain't no sunshine when she's done, and she's
always gone to long any time she goes away. It's
Bill Withers, another one of my top favorites Blue Willie Nelson.
Why this is like one of the greatest songs face

(17:09):
so sad, Well West Goodbye, I knew we never we love.
I mean this is basically because I fly a lot
in my airplane playlist, because this is the music I love.
Because everybody am everybody hurts jam he put that by Lullaby. No.

(17:39):
These are all like the songs I listened to the
most hurt. Yeah, Wicklow Dancing, the Burning Room, John May.
You can see Wick stop this train stop, this train

(18:00):
walkt off. Have the lyrics right in my bedroom. I
can't take this. So that's only my favorite songs, not
me my favorite sad song. It's just my favorite song.
I know if tomorrow never comes, it's all just a thing. Man.
I think I'm sad soum no, but you do. You

(18:22):
do gravitate towards like I think it's part of you
just needing to feel. Sometimes you don't take the time
to feel. And whether you're feeling happy or sadder is
good to feel. And I think sometimes it's this is
what makes you feel and oddly makes you feel happy.
What are you laughing at, Eddie? Well, I mean it's
just got the list went sad to sadder. Yeah, I
love it that my favorite songs Tears in Heaven on

(18:42):
that list. I mean, come on, Bobby puts that on
for a good time. All right, party, everybody, Let's spill
the tea. Spilling the tea will be a lunchbox. He's
always spilling like he like looks for tea, spill good night. Sorry,

(19:04):
the t comes to me and I'm like, i gotta
spill it. So Chick fil A. We all love Chick
fil A here, right, And Chick fil A was nice enough.
I guess they're fans of the show. But they sent
us a little card and they said, here's a free
Chick fil A sandwich for everybody on the show. So
there was nine nine cards for a Chick fil A
sandwich for each person. And then there's one person named

(19:28):
Eddie that decided he should take all nine cards. Were
still all the cards? Nine cards? Nine? Well, nine of them.
Didn't ask, hey, is it okay if I take your card? No,
he just said, you know what, there's nine of them.
I'll take those. Thank you. You took all nine, all nine?
Can I explain? Did you take all nine? It's a
yes or no question? Oh wow, did you yes or no?

(19:49):
I took all nine? All nine, guys, they've been sitting
there forever. No. I didn't know that. There's so much
stuff in that glassroom that you guys don't even know.
Why don't you say, hey, show, Oh, Chick fil A
sent nine cards. I know you all love Chick Filate.
Would you like a sandwich? Or would you mind about
take these home to my seventeen kids? Because I saw them,
that's exactly what I saw them, saw them, and I

(20:11):
go free sandwich cards. I do have a lot of kids.
I mean that would be good dinner. So I took
them and we had dinner. Guys, I've had Chick fil
A for weeks. It's been amazing. Bragging you stole our cards. Okay,
so here's yeah, go ahead, hettie, it's all agree. Yeah, okay,
let me this is what I would prefer it. I'll

(20:32):
donate my card to you. Thank you. So that's eight
cards that I stold on. Let me just say this
to everyone here. There's a lot of stuff that comes
to the studio. It doesn't get to me. It rarely
gets to amy. If you're gonna take something, just run
it by it. I just saw him because I walked
every day. We know what cards are. Still, no one
approached me. Just just check. That's all just general for everybody.
Just check. Okay, I'm not mad, you know what. Keep

(20:53):
my sandwich too? Really this time? So I only stole seven.
I'll tell you what. They're all yours this time, and
if anyone's upset, I will buy you a Chick fil
a sandwich in place of eddies that he took. Thank you.
There's only one person upset bones Okay, I will give
you a dollar ninety nine. There are more nine you dang.

(21:14):
I knew it was gonna be about me. Um yeah,
when you steal nights, you get busted that if it
has anybody taken anything else from the studio. I did
leave the milkshakes, though they're still milkshake. You don't get
a prize for doing what your normal people are supposed
to do, Like you want me to reward you for
not stealing. No, okay, sorry, all right, I mean, wouldn't
you take You're not mad at you're at it? No,

(21:35):
he didn't. He was trying to make it not obvious.
He was trying to leave something. They're like, oh see, there'
stuff still there. He has extra kids, Eddie's foster two
extra children, and they enjoyed the same a little bit.
My heart is leaning your direction in general, for sure.
So you're not mad at me. No, okay, that's what
I was. Let's just spill all right. No, you're good.

(21:56):
You're good. It's time for the good news lunch box.
I'm good. Tony was driving to work in his pickup
truck and he looks to the right and he's like,
oh my gosh, there's a house on fire. He calls
nine one one, but he's like, I don't know when
they're gonna be here. So he runs into the house
because there's an eighty three year old man stuck inside.

(22:18):
He runs to the second four gets him out on
the roof and they can't get down, so other neighbors
bring a ladder and put it up there so they
can bring the eighty three year old man down. All
why the house on fire? All? Why the house is
on fire? All before the fire truck gets there? Wow?
All why the house on fire? Yeah? Multiple people? Yeah,
that's awesome. Dang, I probably eat like down three blocks legs.

(22:41):
Holy crap. Yeah, that's all. That's what it's all about.
Right there. That was tell me something good? Did your
buddy and missed the fibbing ball? This is a bobby shot.
That's right now. All right, time to laugh everybody. Morning Corny,

(23:04):
I just got over my addiction to chocolate, marshmallows and nuts. Okay, yeah,
how's that going? I'm not gonna lie. It was a
rocky road, yeah, alright, alright, alright. That was the morning corning,

(23:26):
the Friday morning conversation with Jody Messina. She comes walking
down the hallway right now, California, somewhere there she is again,
what's with you? It is good to see you? Gonna

(23:47):
so yeah, what kind of got me chewing video tape? Here? Everybody? No,
I have to see you here? There she is Jody
miss are you. I'm good, Yeah, good everybody you know
obviously right here we're I want to talk to you
about something here about you. First of all, you have
and this is a similarity to you and Amy have

(24:09):
that your son has drum kit and Amy's son. This
has happened with Amy right now too. Did you see
the Gretch that's told Christmas? No, I haven't. Yeah, well
I don't even know the story of about her son
and drum I saw on Instagram your son was playing drums. Yeah,
and so he has a kit. He doesn't have a kid.
You got a new Gretch kit for for Christmas and

(24:30):
it was green and I did it's a post. I'm
like the Gretch that stold Christmas because I get it.
I guess whole day he just beat it because Amy's
thing is he doesn't want her send just beating the
drums all day, just like to hit something. Oh well
that's a good aggression. Get her owner. You get a boy,
so they need a way to release that, like oh yeah,
and then you're about to hit the pre adolescent, so

(24:52):
they will he will need because he's about to go
through all these change like body changes and whatever. Um. Yes, yes,
at nine, and ten these days, and so he'll need
something to get out his aggression. So that's when you
just go, why don't you go to the room and practice.
That's what I do with my son now, like whenever
you get are you okay with that? Now? At this point, well,
I mean I grew up. My brother was a drummer too,
so I grew up rattled the neighborhood. We are the

(25:14):
ones that everybody was like, oh, there's those Messina kids
again making all this noise. Yeah, okay, well maybe maybe
I need to. I mean, it's good for him. He's
taking lessons and his teacher says he's a natural. There
you go. But I mean, we don't know if she's
just saying that, so you keep paying her. And I
was like, she just needs a little more of my coaching.

(25:38):
I said that to it. I was I was the
villain when I mentioned I said, Amy, she could just
be saying that to so he continues coming to class
and yeah, listener said, I was a bad saying that.
Oh oh oh they did well, no dollar being you're
being realistic, like, well, what's she gonna say? Well, you know,
I think you had better throw in the towel But
that's great though that he plays what does he play too?

(26:00):
Do you even recognize the songs? Oh? We just started
like this is very new. Yeah, it's been a big
debate up. Yeah, that's great though. That's great that he
picked it up. Now, my kids, you know, grew up
around it. So he grew up on the road. My
son grew up on the road and started playing drums
because his first kit when he was three, you know,
the little kid's kit when a little teeny tiny. Now
he's like, mom, it's too small. I'm like, I'm saving it, dude,

(26:21):
Like when you're thirty, you're gonna go my Well, I'm
saved this kit. It's awesome. You know. I've been at
the opera and played the opera nice even there too,
And so I was like, we know we should get
up here. Is you know Joy Massina And I'm glad
you can come up. Well, I'm glad you're asked. That's great.
So it's you're from Framingham, Massachusetts? Is that true? Well,
the hospital I was born in was in Framingham, you know,
when they came around and red the bio, that's where.

(26:42):
But I was born and raised in Holliston, Massachusetts about
thirty miles west of Boston. I know Framingham because I
have the a Car deal Ship that I've endorsed there
and Framingham Forward. Yeah, and so when I saw that
in your because they were like, hey, and I know
about you anyway, but it was like Framingham. Could we
drive through Framingham all the time if we're driving from
Boston like Northampton? Oh yeah, I'll play a bunch of
shows up in that area. Nice. So yeah, never mind,

(27:03):
you have been in the Car Dealer show. We lost
that point that we're not the same. Oh no, but
I've been there. My sister lives in North Framingham. It's
wild up there. We went for St. Patrick's Day and
played it uh in Boston and St Patrick's Day played
a show. Yeah, you guys are nuts. Yeah. Oh yeah.
The whole town was drunk. Yeah yeah, and the and
the river was green. Yeah yeah. But it's interesting. Yeah.

(27:24):
Do you should be there during sports events? I mean
that's you're you're either for the team or your like
life is in danger the whole time you're there. So
are you a Pats fan. I'm a supporter of the
New England Patriots and the Red Sox and the Celtics
and the Bruins. I was born into that and so
you still are. Yeah, I gotta as much as I
can be a part of that. Yeah, okay, but I

(27:45):
haven't seen TV in a long time. Do you have?
Are you watching television or you watching Netflix? Of the
Boys away. Netflix is a big thing in our house,
but we don't watch a lot of television. We spend
a lot of time reading or doing stuff around the
house or it's you know, people were telling me things
in the news that we're going on. I was like really,
I was like, wow, I'm out of it. There's a
conscious decision to keep your sons like off social media,

(28:09):
away from you know, the bubble um. Well there's seven
and nine. So yeah, I'm always with him. If my
kid wants to look up something on YouTube, he's looking
up you know, jang bricks and he builds legos, or
he's looking up you know, how to play this drum part,
or he's you know, it's very um and I'm there
with them because you know, you know, it's not really safe.

(28:31):
Oh yeah, you gotta watch that. It's like, hey, are
you happy click this button? He's like, I'm a happy
click click click, you know, and you're like, you know,
before you know it, he's like social media for your
ten year old. Not not yet. You know, if we
think at some point, I mean it's inevitable, but I
just not at seven and ten. You know, I still
want him to learn to play his drums right now?

(28:52):
You know what, I was looking to have your your
whole library up. You know what my favorite song yours is? Oh,
I mean I think most people wouldn't because you're gonna
play this in a minute. This is I love this one.
This is like when it comes out of the bar
all us girls way where I hang out. Yeah, I'm
gonna roll through somebody, So tell me what you feel
when you hear this one right now? Back. Energy. Yeah,

(29:15):
that's a good word. Me too. I can energy too,
just fun, fun energy. Which one was the biggest for you?
Had a bunch of number ones? Which one was the
biggest for you? Where you're like, oh, that actually moved
the needle more than anything else. I don't know that
I was keeping track of that, which is sad? Which
you said, I'm gonna say that because I was too
busy looking ahead of you know. Okay, well heads, Carolina's out,

(29:38):
what's next? You know? And I really was. I was
too busy looking. Okay, well let me play. That's my answer.
Here's another one. What do you think when you hear
this one? Um? I loved it. I remember the first

(29:59):
time I heard it, I was like, oh, I love
this song and just and then again it's energy. There's
a lot of energy behind the song and strength, you know,
I say saying about the strength that I think at
that point, I sang about the strength I wish I
could have had, you know, I wish I was that gutsier.
I wish I was, you know. Bye Bye? I love Meanwhile,
you know, and dating some guy that treats you like garbage,

(30:24):
like the facade has ruined you all. Johnny Messina is here?
How about this one? All right? We gotta get here?
You stay all yeah, yeah, I have to. I have to.
But here's the deal. The bulk of our audience is

(30:46):
eighteen to thirty five. So some of these songs, I
was like, how do you know this song? Do you
know what I mean? It's like, how do you know it?
And so it still resonates with that age. So Bye
Bye was you know, applicable when we were I keep
moving away from the boar Bobby's having to ride the switch.
I'm sorry. I'm sorry about that. But you know, when

(31:07):
we were to the age we were at, you know,
like twenty five and Bye Bye came out, We're like, oh, yeah,
you know, bye bye, I'll catch you later. Well, it
still applies to the twenty five year old now, and
so we're you know, there was a video we had
of a show we did in Texas and someone looked
at the video and they're like, that's all college kids,
and I was like, I guess, yeah, I mean because

(31:29):
it still resonates. And then we still got the hardcore
fans that have been with us the whole ride. So
it's fun. This is my jam here. Okay, somebody's gonna
give you a lesson the lead and somebod he's going
to duty and what you've been doing and by my
favorite yeah, I don't yeah, I mean it's up there.
It's gonna give you a lesson and bird and somebod

(31:51):
it's gonna leave you with your old firebird and no
way to foot it out there. Ain't what's crazy is
I like Heads Carolina and lesson leaving less like well,
that wasn't even number one that peaked number two, and
that's the song that I really feel like I know
you most from Lesson and Leaving or Heads Carolina Lesson
and Leaving for me because I was listen to Kissing

(32:12):
ninety six and this will come on. It just reminds
me of a certain period of my life. Yeah, but
it wasn't It was a number two songs. It actually
didn't hit number one. But to me, that's that's why
number one doesn't matter so much. Yeah it's a number,
but that's it's one we're all chasing, but we had
gotta still get to their play. She's like speak for herself.
I wanted that to be no, because I remember talking
to somebody who was in the number one spot at

(32:33):
the time and they were like, no, want to say
we can look it up. I better not tell the
story then anyway. Space Yeah, I just say not in
the universe. I no, But it was I was like, man,
I wish you'd get out of the way, you know,
And they were like, wa, whin you know? I mean,

(32:54):
who's who speaks like went went if we hadn't win, Well,
I think she's that's her way of not saying what
they were really I heard any actually said it's gotta
be a dude, the heartlessness find He's like, you know,
probably quit your crying, all right, let's have this guitar.

(33:17):
I guess so. Because of licensing roles, we can't play
anything with music on this I Heart radio channel or
podcast anymore. But you can't go to Bobby Bones dot
com to see it. We hate that we had to
take it down. Wasn't our decision, but I just wanted
to keep you up, and we wanted to keep up
as much as possible. So I go to Bobbybones dot
com to watch or here whatever you're missing right now,
And thank you for listening to the show. And sorry

(33:38):
about all the legal stuff. Who we uhould do more?
Say this here? That's so good. I don't know how
you stay. I don't know how you stay so good?
Sound just like the Rinker. I would say better more

(34:01):
more by here, just having you sing. And by the way,
wonderful harmon. He's over there. Look at that. Look at that.
It slid right in there, See this California. That's a
high though. I know I was respecting it, and she's
saying it respecting I was respecting it. We're on the
way here singing this morning and she's like, okay, just
want one run through. I'm gonna make you do this

(34:22):
on air. Yeah okay. So we're like laughing the whole
way down and I'm like, this is you know, this
is where you need the camera. It is on the
car ride where she's like, la, she's being all silly,
and I was like, that's Carolina ts California's somewhe greener,
some warmer up and mountains damn out of the ocean

(34:45):
where don't matter long, weird going somewhere. You're chasing the sky.
It was like I was watching you too. Yeah, this
is because when she goes out, you gotta go. But

(35:05):
she overshot that note and we just busted out. Yeah,
you gotta be good to be that bad. I'm gonna
tell you something. You know, I always like being around you.
You have a lot of energy. Made me smile. It's
just Bobby, you know, you just know you know where
your joy comes from. Well listen, it is a it's
a pleasure to see you again. Thanks, good to see you.

(35:26):
Thanks for having us. Yes, Johnny Messina following on Instagram
at Johnny Massina. You have your own name. That's that's treat.
It's hard. I don't have mine. What are you, mister
Bobby Bones? So everyone's like, oh, he thinks you should
be called nobody to see you. Women are hiring glam

(35:49):
squads because they take their first picture after they have
their baby, and they want to look good holding the
baby right after her Yeah. It's like hair and makeup
swoops in in the delivery room. Oh, which is wild.
Uh yeah right there here. It happens. Women around the
world are getting dolled up in hospitals right before and
during birth. Now, I am prevented a room where someone's

(36:12):
giving birth, But Eddy, you have, Yeah, I have, And
I feel like there's too many people in there already
to have like a glam makeup artist putting on makeup.
I don't know how that's gonna work. Some people get
pedicures and manicures during pregnancy. Some get their hair blown out. Yeah,
it's just blow drying it, making it look good. During labor,

(36:34):
they get their hair blow dry as they're having the baby.
I mean it is a distraction. Probably makes you feel pretty.
Oh I didn't think about that way. That distraction could
be good. Yeah, there's feel pressure to look good in
their first social post three hours after birth. I mean
that's a little much. We shouldn't have that pressure, you know,
like we need to remove that pressure from moms. When

(36:55):
your wife had her baby, how long until she you
guys took a picture with the baby. Immediately? Yeah? Yeah,
immediately once she was like ready to like take a
picture because she had a C section, so she had
to be under a little bit, so she's kind of drowsy.
But after she came out of that, it's picture time.
I said. Reading this thing about babies, would you sign
a baby nup? The new trend sees expecting parents drawing
up contracts to agree how they'll divide childcare and chores.

(37:17):
Oh wow, lunch box, how do you guys divide childcare
between you and your wife? Oh that's a tough one.
It's sort of like whoever's around. But if it's the
middle of the night, it's the wife. If it's you know,
the baby's in a good mood, I can take care
of the baby. But in a good mood, yeah, I
mean I've change diapers, and I mean I can put
him down for a nap, and if he needs to
be fed, I know how to feed him. So what's

(37:38):
the percentage on the diapers you between you and your wife. Oh,
probably sixty five thirty five her her her, just because
she's around more. But she's working full time too, right, Yeah,
But I'm saying, like at night and then in the
morning when she gets him up for school or whatever,
she has to change his diaper, and then I picked

(37:58):
him up from school. I'm only with them for about
two two and a half hours, so there's not many
diaper changes in that time. He means daycare vun Oh, yeah,
daycare whatever. He's like, Hey, so will you ever see
that your son has a diaper full and not change
it and just way too until she gets home. No,
I've never done that because it smells too bad. Like
if it's like when they go in the bathroom, it

(38:20):
smells and I can't take the smell. So I'll put
my face in my shirt and I'll go in there
and I'll dive in. Some couples are taking inspiration from
financial pre nups to create baby nuts, so legally you
have to do you know, x amount, divide chores fairly
between the two parents, agree on custody arrangements. If the
couple split up. I mean, that just sounds like zero fun.

(38:42):
Right there, But yeah, we had a baby. Preparation is
not fun just in general. There's no part of preparation
that's fun. Yeah. I just hope that without a legal document,
you could figure out a way to, you know, make
sure diapers are getting changed equally. Oh, you would hope
that about even divorce. You'd hope without a legal document
that everybody just go, you know what, we had a
good run. Yeah, pat on the bat's let's get out

(39:03):
of here. It's probably a little much, but it seems
like a rich person thing a baby, nup? Tell me
something good coming up? Positivity on the way coming up.
A woman saved your husband's life and then saved it
again two weeks later. Amy has the story and that's
what's coming up. Also, hop on, if you want to
be part of the show. Here's Jane, who I guess
is a big tell me something a good fan in

(39:24):
Saint Louis. Hey Jane, Hi Bobby, what's happening him? I
just wanted to call and say good morning and hello.
I am a fifth grade teacher in Saint Louis, and
on my way to work I always listened to the
tell me something good, and that's how we start our
day in our little morning meeting, and I just wanted
to say your show is a huge part of my
class and we love you so much and thank you well,

(39:46):
thanks a lot. Well we have it coming up on
like the next ten minutes, and say hi to everybody
in Saint Louis. It's time for the good news with
Amy Man. As a wife, I couldn't imagine having to
like stay calm to save my husband's life twice. So
this woman is at her house. Her husband was like

(40:08):
plowing snow, sat down on the couch, had a heart attack.
Then she had a call ninety one. She had to
start performing CPR. She kept him alive until first responder
showed up. Then y'all, it happened again. Her husband had
another heart attack shortly after. She was able to stay calm,
performed CPR until the first responders she arrived. Every In

(40:29):
both situations, her fast reaction and her ability to stay calm,
you know, saved his life and he's able to make
a four recovery twice twice. There you go, that's what
it's all about, right there. That was tell me something good,
Bobby Bone, So Miles and Rallie, what's happening Bobby, Good morning.

(40:49):
How are you doing. Good morning, man? You got a question? Yeah,
So I'm ready to propose to my girlfriend, but I
have a small issue because her sister is getting in
age this weekend. So I'm just curious your thought and
the team's thought on how long I should wait after
she gets engaged this weekend until I can ask the questions.

(41:11):
So I'm not stepping on anyone's toes. How close are
the sisters very close best friends? How long you've been
dating her going on two years? Okay, so all that
checks out. I would say you give it a week,
but you really can do it as long as it's
not in the next couple of days, because I think
they'd want to celebrate together if they're best friends. How

(41:33):
cool is that they get to celebrate together. Are you
proposing based on her dude is with her sister? No. I.
I kind of wanted to do it before, but he
had already bought his ring, so I was kind of
giving him his space and letting him plan it out.
But he's kind of been dragging his feet and taking forever.
But he's officially going to do it this weekend, and

(41:55):
I'm just, you know, ready over here eager to do it,
but I kind of want to make sure of him
his face and he had planned to do it first. Okay, Well,
if he's gonna do it this weekend, give him a week. However,
if he doesn't he drags his feet, you're free, fire
away like fire when ready? Or would it be fun?
If that's what I like to hear? Okay, I mean,

(42:16):
what were you gonna say? Well, I'm just wondering and
I could be wrong, but would it be fun if
y'all did it the same day? I don't know about
I'm not into that. Oh yeah, okay, sorry, A great
idea crossed my mind, but um no, it's not. Nobody
nobody thought. Well, they don't get their own like calls
to the parents and their friends to celebrate it. They

(42:37):
don't get their own day for their Instagram picture. They
don't get their own space like if it were proposing
to two sisters do it at the same time. But yeah,
I feel like you can give it a week. But listen,
if this knuck ahead doesn't do it this time, go
just pull the trigger beat him. All right. Well, if
he doesn't do it Saturday, I'm gonna do it Sunday.

(42:58):
How does that sound love it? As long as you
have that conversation with him, it'd be like hey, Chris
or mad or Dennis whatever his name is, Like, hey,
you have Saturday. I'm gonna give you a week, but
if you don't do it Saturday, I'm gonna do it Sunday.
That'll make sure he does it perfect. Sounds like a
game plan. Did you ask the parents for blessing? Did
you have to do that? Oh? Absolutely, yeah. I'm from

(43:20):
the South, so that's just a courtesy. We continue to
do here and I got the blessing and I'm excited.
But it's trying to be respectful to the other guy
as well. Well, you told him, you said, I'll give
you this time. If he doesn't do it, fire and ready,
my friend, that's what I like to hear. All right,
but Miles, good luck. Let us know how it goes.
All right, have a good day. All right? There is

(43:43):
you're Samy's pile of stories Suntact Friday. And in my house, sweet,
a lot of bananas, And I had no idea. Do
you know what you call a bunch of bananas and
then what you call a single banana? I would say
a bunch of bananas would be bananas in a single no, no, no,
no no, But a hand, a bunch of bananas is

(44:04):
a hand, and a single banana is called a finger.
Who knew? Didn't know that? Did you make that up?
I did not? Well, when do we call them bananas? Right?
So I'd say, can you hand me a hand of bananas?
Just a finger? That's weird? Fun BacT Cats don't have

(44:24):
sweat glands all of their bodies like humans do. They
only sweat out of one spot. Do your's gotta be
their tongue, No, where their pulse. All their sweat comes
out of their past? Know that? How fun? Give another one?
So while it's a myth that stress can turn hair gray,
because I definitely I definitely thought that that was true.

(44:45):
Stress can cause hair loss. In fact, hair loss can
begin up to three months after a stressful event. And yes,
that is true. I can attest to that. I thought
that's why I was getting gray hairs. But like as
a just age, but a lot of my hair fell
out after stress in my life. My gray comes in
one little spot on my chin and then my sideburns
a little bit. And I'll be honest with you, guys,

(45:06):
if I'm just fully admitting. Whenever they do my makeup
for American Idol, they they take like a mass scare.
I think in color on my sideburns a little bit.
That's awesome. Oh wow, that's cool though you're doing that.
If I had a girlfriend or a wife, I would
just let it beat that. Yeah, but I'm still peacocking
to make people think I'm cool. Still, I'm like young,

(45:27):
so I'm not. What else am you? Give? Another? One
more fun fact? One more? I'm more? Hey, um, ninety
percent of Americans live within fifteen minutes of work a Starbucks.
Good guess. Oh, I'm gonna go more rural Walmart. Okay,
the body you didn't like in your you grew up
in a really small town. But it's like, if someone

(45:48):
was going into Walmart, y'all would like go knock on
each other's doors and be like, hey, making a run
to Walmart? Do you need anything now? I'm Pinearcsall population
seven hundred and seventy two. And it wasn't Walmart. It
was going to town, and town included Walmart. Got so
if they weren't going to Walmart, let's say they we're
going to rent a video for a movie or something
and say, hey, we're going to town to get a
movie and you need some Walmart the rules. You stopped
at Walmart to get washing powders. You know we got

(46:10):
technology Amazon your door. That was Amy's pyle of stories.
I mentioned the story about trophy wives and rich husbands
because apparently all these scientists got together and they say

(46:31):
that having an attractive wife or a high status husband
makes a marriage stronger because these statuses seem to make
people feel successful, which strengthens their marriage bond. And when
there's confidence, people feel better. When they feel better, they
act better with each other. Experts say, in the context
of romantic relationships, maximizers, or people that seek a trophy

(46:53):
wife or rich husband, are those who look for the
best possible partner and over the course of their relationships,
continue to compare their partner. Anyway, if you feel good,
apparently you feel better, you work better. As Also, you're
chasing the rich husband or the truffy wife. You're chasing
that because I mean, if you're chasing the money, is
this personality awesome? Is he nice? Thinking? Probably? Both? All

(47:14):
humans are all different. Amanda's on in Tennessee, who has
a rich husband what up time handa. So how you
still have a rich husband right now? Yes? Yeah, so
tell me about this. How's that working out for you? Um?
It has those good days and by days. I will
say that it's kind of like Ammy just mentioned the money.

(47:37):
It's not about the money. They get to the point
where they're all about, you know, money, making money to
make you happy, but they're actent a lot to make
that money, and so it puts a conflict in the
marriage to where you don't see each other as much
and you're left home alone with the kids or you know,

(48:00):
paying out with your girlfriend. And so honestly, my opinion
would be I disagree with that completely because life it's
not about being rich and having money to make your
marriage stronger. So this nice woman here, Amanda, who has
a rich husband, is he older than you? Only about

(48:22):
two years? All? Three years? Not really? Well? Yeah, okay,
so it's not like twenty years older. Did you grow up? Yeah?
Did you grow up rich? I did not? Okay, So
it's it's a different thing for you to actually be
with someone with money, correct, Huh. And you think that, uh,
maybe it's not working out so good? It's not. I
here corect because they get so focused on making money

(48:46):
and working. They're all about money, and they try to
use the excuse. I mean, they use the excuse, Oh,
I'm doing it for us, so we could get this
and do this and go on this and go on
this trip. But you only go on that trip once year,
and you're losing memories at home with your wife and kids.
I love that you called and shared this with us.

(49:06):
There's a real reopen hold on. We need to ask
it of honesty. Ask her what if she has shared
this with him? Oh, have you shared this like with
your husband, how you're feeling? Oh, he knows, and his
family has told him he's been Apparently he's been a
workaholic his entire loss. So that's just his personality. But

(49:26):
over the years, with his career and his job, it's
just gotten a lot worse. Is he a country music singer?
Sing country music? Okay, yeah, that's gonna be one of
those wives. Have you one of those wives in that
Caroline Hobby podcast? Listen, Amanda, thank you for calling and

(49:49):
sharing your story. It's it's nice to have somebody with
firsthand knowledge, and thanks for listening. I'm gonna talk to
Ron and Florida Hey, Ron, Hey, you have a trophy wife.
I trophy wife. Love it? Tell me about this. She
is glrgeous. I've been with her for thirty four years,
been married thirty four years, and I was so far

(50:12):
she was so far out of my league that I
just went forward. Now, are you a rich guy? Am
I a rich guy? Yeah? How did you get a
trophy wife? I just got lucky? Man? Does she know
she's a trophy wife? She doesn't know enough. Oh, there

(50:32):
you go. She don't know she's beautiful. She don't know
she's beautiful. No, she's not that guy. Hey, Brittany in Florida,
you're have a rich husband? Yes? I do. Okay, So
did you marry him because he was rich? No? He
became rich while I was married. How do you like
having a rich husband? I love it. I mean he's

(50:53):
gone often, like he's only here for with us for
like a week out of the month, But he's here
with us when he's here, and I mean he's gone,
but he's doing stuff for us. And I think that's
amazing that he works that hard for us. And so
what do you what do you like get now? What
that you didn't get before? Do you get like findie bags. Yeah. Well,

(51:17):
actually I grew up rich too. Yes, look at this. Yeah,
it's a very safe place right now. We enjoyed this.
Go ahead. So you grew up, you grew up in
Like how big was your house growing up? I don't
even thirty five square feet? I don't really know. Did
you go to like private school, boarding school? We didn't

(51:38):
go to private or boarding school, but we could have
afforded it. But did you do a questrian or like,
what's the thing where you throw the ball lacrosse? No?
I lived. I lived on a golf course though, right
up on the fourth hole. Fancy fancy Yeah, yeah, yeah, Well,
well what'd you say? He woulded what he wanted to

(52:00):
give me the same lights that I had. He wanted
because he knew I had become accustomed to something and
he wanted to keep that going for me. Well, what
do I call that? Keeping up with the Jones? No,
that's a different thing. Oh that's like if your neighbors
doing so, then you do it just for that? Got it?
Are you super hot? Brittany? Um Uh, I don't know.
I have a nice body yet, I know, be confident.

(52:27):
I love it, Brittany, I take care of myself. That's
all I'm saying. Absolutely love it. Hey, thank you for
the call, buddy, and miss the Transdore. So what's the
story this pre dress really expensive shoes. Well, no, there's

(52:49):
a new Instagram account that's been created called Preachers Sneakers,
and it just like puts up pictures of these like
celebrity type pastors who have like, ye, these and like
Gucci belts and different things, and I don't know, just
kind of kind of interesting. So I started checking it
out and I'm like, oh, whoa. But they're like the
pastor to like Kanye and and and Justin Bieber and

(53:12):
so what's the debate like that? I just think it's
I think it's a fun follow But some people are like,
well so when when I'm tithing, like where is the
money going? But some of these pastors they may have
book deals or other things where they have money coming
in other ways, but they are pastors of like mega
mega churches. Do you know that tied them out is

(53:34):
probably pretty big. At Mountain Pine Baptist our preacher lived
in the house next to the church. Is that normal
where they put that Ye had a house, Yeah, and
they put them next to the churches right there, and
we just walk over and sometimes we just walk over
and like eat really over to the preacher's house, yeah,
and just walk over there to show up a lot
of times. And it's sort of like there's a pastor
in South Carolina. I think this past Christmas he bought
his wife a two hundred thousand dollars lambo, oh, I

(53:55):
saw that. Here's your thing. Come on, let me say
this about money. Don't tell people what to do with
their money. Oh yeah, if there's no sort of hey,
this is crooked going on. You can't tell people that
they can't have a Gucci belt, yeah, or by two
hundred don't you don't know how they got their money.
I'm just saying, like Amy said, when you're tired in
that money or teething whatever, I'm saying, that's what some

(54:16):
people are saying. The issue I don't. I don't have
an issue with this. I just think the page is
entertaining because then it shows you some of the shoes,
like how much they are, Like, well, you click on these,
and the pastor you think he's looking cute all stage
with his nikes, and then you're like a thousand dollars
and then there's like another pair for five thousand dollars. Yeah,
here check these out. Yeah, wow, those are five thousand

(54:38):
dollars shoes that pastor's wearing. Yeah, where are you getting
that money? I'm just playing. That's what everyone's thinking. It's
what they're thinking. But I'm just telling you to challenge
that thought. When you see someone that is spending money
on something, challenge that thought of they shouldn't be doing
that with their money. I don't care what they're spending
it on as long it's not illegal hurting anyone. People
be like, oh, they only donated so and so, Like

(55:00):
somebody's super famous would come out, he's worth millions, and
you'll hear, oh, they're done at five thousand dollars. People go,
that's all they donated. There's they they're worth millions. Okay,
you do what you do with your money, and you
let others do with their money, and who knows what
else they're doing. So right, unless there's any wrongdoing that
we find, where do you get that money? Oh god,
they would have been a gift. Yeah, they could have

(55:21):
been from a person. And church preachers get paid a salary,
not so much dependent on the tithing for the most part. Well,
they don't get the percentage of that. As far as
I know, you agree to be the pastor to church. See,
I don't know how the big mega churches work. But
like I grew up going to a really really really
small church and yeah, like things that happened at the

(55:44):
church were dependent on what you get super small church,
super small. Yeah. But so I don't know how the
mega things work. And they may have you know, curriculum
they sell or something. I remember when our preacher showed
up with a no fear shirt. I was like heady
for that. Yeah, that was so awesome. Did you have
no fear shirts? Amying? Yeah? What about those shirts? There

(56:04):
was like Baseball's life. The rest is just detailed. Oh man,
there was a jam. Those were good. It's so high
to see goodbye to another week? About that that good
or no? Pretty good? Thank you. Mom hit a lottery

(56:27):
seventy eight thousand dollars jackpot because she forgot how old
her kid was. You know how you pick on years
and days and stuff. She won seventy eight thousand dollars
because she forgot how old one of her kids wasn't
played the wrong number. Wow, one of her kids recently
turned twenty, but she forgot. She used nineteen as one
of her numbers, and that's what hit seventy eight thousand dollars. Wow.

(56:50):
Congratulations to her, Thank you, have a great weekend. We'll
see him Monday
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