Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Go on. Hope everybody had a fantastic weekend. We're pumped
to be back here on Monday morning. We started like
this morning studio morning, let's go burst up man. When
(00:23):
he walks out from behind the desk and you see
just how baggy his sweats are, it's like a flashback,
end of time. That's right, Welcome to the show, lunch boys.
I finally know what it feels like to be ghosted.
I mean, it's a terrible feeling. But I got ghosted
by Building Roots, Amy's sister show. I was supposed to
be on TV. They were supposed to come fix my house,
(00:45):
do some remodeling. We were all, oh, talk to the producer, email, producer,
do this, do that, have conversation, jazz zoom meetings, And
then I haven't heard anything in months. Well that's not
being ghosted. Maybe there's nothing to do. Let me go
ask Amy, what do you think? Oh, I don't have
an update on what's happened with him, but I guess
I could find out. But it could before with you,
I've had some stuff. Oh no, but there's no even
(01:09):
I mean, I gotta go. You gotta paid for it
season two. That's fine, I'll get a loan. But right,
but you haven't even been to that process. And I'll
get a loan, no problem. There's a lot of banks
I'm saying they would have to have you would have
to prove that you could do it. Yeah, that's fine,
but they any, I mean, they just totally just quit
talking to me. But were you also down with having
your whole family on TV? All we talked about it,
because you're very private, You're down. I'm down, Okay. I
(01:32):
just put a little smiling faces over my kids. I
don't think that's a lot of work. I don't know
if they do that, it's okay. So thank you, lunchbox.
I mean in hearts, I'm in texta Amy sister. Hey,
we building roots or building kitchens? What are we doing? Nothing? Oh?
You got no? Oh? Amy's sister as a show on
HGTV called Building Roots. If you guys are it won't
(01:53):
be on there for long. Listeners to the show. All right,
thank you lunchbox. All right, he's god forty two kids,
I mean four, he's got four kids. He's got so
many boys. There's testosterone everywhere here. He is our video
producer from McAllen, Texas. Listen, I know everyone's gone through this,
So stress no more. I recently lost my remote control
(02:14):
for my TV, and I'm like, what do I do?
I can't turn the TV on, I can't control it. Guys,
you can get on your app. There's an app to
control your TV, Apple TV, any TV. You have a Samsung,
you have a Visio. Yeah, as long as there's a
smart TV, right, well, I have no idea. Well, I
got one with a clothes hanger as antenna that you
turn with your hand or like the flintstone on the
(02:37):
for the Apple TV, because I do use it online.
You just pull down from the top right corner and
it's one of the options boom when you link it
up and you just use your remote there. That's legit. Okay,
because I phone Apple TV, but I didn't know you
could find any dude. I was stressing and then I
was like, what Now I can control my TV through
my phone. That is great to know. Thank you, Eddie. Yeah,
all right out Next, her son is now a football star,
although he hasn't scored a touchdown yet. No, he doesn't
(02:59):
really handle the balls. Soon enough, soon enough, he will
be all right, Amy, what you got? Okay? So, speaking
of my son. We were at the dinner table and
he had his elbows on there, and I said, oh,
let's get your elbows off the table. And then he
wasn't being rude or disrespectful in any way. He just
is a very curious kid. And he said, Mom, why
can't we have our elbows on the table? And great question,
(03:20):
Yeah we have. Let's think about this. Let me think.
Let first, let me sit. Tell me if I look bad,
I know you look comfortable, right, my elbows are some
the table. I didn't like poop on my elbows. I
was not poop on the table. Now I would understand that. Well.
I had to look it up, and I noticed when
you did that, your posture was a little off. So
that's one reason. Yeah, but that's one of the latest reasons.
(03:42):
Then there's also getting food on your clothes or in
your wrist or your elbow. You've got your elbows on
the table, your arms up, having dinner. But way way
way back in early civilization, it was more so as
a sign of respect to keep your elbows off the
table so you're in you're contained in your space, because
(04:03):
if your elbows were up, you were more likely to
fight or something like. So the answer is elbows for everybody.
A little rib it. Finally from Mountain Pine, Arkansas, host
of the show Bones, Right, can you do it just
a little effort and like saying something about me, I mean,
you got one to do, you know, not now you
can do it just the next day. But it's like,
(04:25):
and why does he go from Mountain Yeah, I don't know.
I mean, I mean we can switch somebody else. I mean,
I can have Eddie do it. Would you rather Eddie
do it every day? No, I'll put more effort to
do it. I appreciate that. You know. I have four
food groups in my life. Smoothies, soup, cereal, grab bag,
grab bag is everything else. Those are the ones that
(04:47):
I love the most and so but I love cereal
and I think I want to try this out. I'm
gonna order it until you guys if it's any good
or not. But kell Oggs is doing a cereal because
we used to get them at school, and they're being
a little little plastic palach so cool. Yeah, like apple
Jack's now they're doing just add water you pour water
in it instead of milk. Yeah, I don't know, because
there's powdered milk in the bottom of No, we used
(05:10):
we used to use powdered milk free. You stand in line,
you get milk and cheese, and we stand on line
to get free. So powder milk is not that gross
to me, and I don't think it would be gross
to you guys either if you just didn't know. Ye.
So kell Oggs is saying we're gonna do these new
insta bowls with powdered milk inside, so you literally just
pour water in. You didn't have to go get him. O. Yes,
you wouldn't even know. So I'm gonna get it. I'm
(05:31):
gonna get them, I'm gonna try them out, and I'll
let you guys know. It is one of my four
food grows, very cereal. Yeah, that's right. All right, welcome
to show everybody. Glad you were here. We got Breylon
coming into play a little later on. It's gonna be awesome.
We could do the mailbag in a second and some
blind karaoke later today Garth Brook's edition. All right, let's
open up the mailbag. You get something we call ye. Hello,
(05:58):
Bobby Bones, my son a bat turn eighteen years old.
His birthday's coming up. He wants us to get him
a tattoo now me, his dad and his mom. We
both are tattooedless. Now. We're not against them. We know
it's a social norm. We have no problem with the
thought of it. We know if we do not purchase
it for him, though, he can go and get it
without our consent. Our concern is with him turning eighteen
(06:20):
and being excited about the idea. He'll have regret for
years down the line for not thinking it through or
want to change his mind. For those on the show,
we have tattoos, what advice do you have for us
in regard to encouraging him to waiter a year or two?
Now let me know your thoughts. Thanks for your time,
continue being great, signed, non tatted dad and mom. Well,
he's gonna get it himself if you get it for him,
(06:41):
and there's never a time that you're not going to
have changes in your life. I don't know what he
wants to get. If he wants to get like a
bug's money on fire, like, I see how that would
not be in style, But it's also way easier now
to either get them removed or like tatted over, like
altern it or whatever. Yeahs in removing still hurts. I hear,
(07:04):
but have friends that are like, I've got two or
three removed, Like it's a lot easier than it used
to be. So at twenty is not going to be
much more than eighteen. Then you could say, well, wait
till twenty five, twenty five. So I would say, if
he wants a tattoo and you're cool with it, I
would just go and get him the tattoo, unless it's
something that you are so opposed to, like something that's
against your faith, a bad word, a ween, or I
(07:26):
don't know. There are a lot of options, yes, but
I would think at eighteen, so he can do it anyway,
you should just get him the tattoo. If it's seventeen,
I think we're having a different conversation because he can't
get it without you. But he can get it without you,
and he will if you don't. Amy. Yeah, go with him,
make it special, support him, and ask for advice on
making sure he's doing it. You know, something that he
(07:49):
really likes. Maybe they make it where you can order
temporary tattoos that is are exactly what you want. You
can submit the drawing, they'll print it for you, send
you the temporary be okay, just wear this for a
week and see what you think, because you got the
patience for that. I wanted to know. And I don't
even think he wants them to go with him. I
just say paid for Yeah, I don't want my dad
go on meeting a tattoos. I think it's like I
(08:09):
would go with my daughter and be like, oh no,
you would you mom? About your daughter doesn't want you
to go with She's get her tattooed poets with friends.
She doesn't want to go with me? Probably not, probably
not tattoos. I have them on on my right arm.
I got like five or six nothing crazy. My grandmother,
my mom, State of Arkansas. Caitlin said, also this mirrorb
off from I want to Dancing with the stars. But
(08:30):
I'm cool with all them. You know. I don't really
have anything that I regret, but if I did, I
would just have it removed because it's supposedly easy. I
don't know, Amy. Yeah, I have joy in my mom's
handwriting on my wrist and espoa, which means hope in
Haitian creole um because my adoption process with my kids
from Haiti took five years and I always had hope
that it would eventually happen, and it did so Freddy
(08:51):
to get his first one. They're special. I'm tattoo lists
and I just don't know. I mean, I don't know.
I have nothing against tattoos. I was really raised though,
where my dad like judged people with tattoos. Yeah, well
that was us kids, right, our parents. People automatically they
were like dyaling drugs or killing people they got tattoo.
That's criminal, really weird. Nobody nobody, Mike d has a
tattoo of like a band I never heard of, but
everybody else we're all tattooed. Scoobay have tattoos. No, no
(09:12):
tattoos at all. Seemed like you'd be tattooed. Guys. I've
always wanted to get a tattoo, I really do. I'm
afraid of what it's going to feel like. It doesn't
feel great, yes, and that is that I don't like needles,
can't do that. And I'm also afraid of what I choose.
Am I going to want it forever? We'll wait five
more years and then decide, Okay, you'll be room forty
and he's like, oh no, I'm still too young to
decide buying the tattoo. You want to go with him.
(09:33):
If you want you to go, great, If not, that's
great too. But he can do it himself if you
don't do it for him. We got your that was
found the cloth. Ye lunchbox went to a restaurant and
he saw something that he's calling this is what he
wrote very disturbing and disgusting. Do you want to say
what it was? Yeah, I can tell you. I was
(09:54):
in the restroom, uh, and I was at the sink
washing my kid's hands ends and one of the employees
came out of the stall and walked right past the sink,
and we walked out right behind him, and he walked
right back into the kitchen. Didn't wash his hands after
coming out of the stall. That's pretty grass, that's gross
(10:16):
and disgusting. But for you who doesn't, but you don't
wash your hands when you know I rent it with water.
Sometimes you don't see him out of the bathroom, correct, right,
But you're also not making our food. I'm not making
your food. I'm not serving you a meal. I'm not
working in the industry is trying to shake down a
restaurant of free stuff. So I called the restaurant here
is lunchbox calling to complain. Here you go, ay, good afternoon.
(10:40):
How can I help you? I guess this is Jason
Gibble And I was in there the other day and
I was using the restroom after eating my meal, and
I saw one of your employees come out of the stall.
And he went out from the stall and straight back
into the restaurant and didn't wash his hands. So I
just wanted to store he was one of bar employees.
(11:00):
Because everyone wears black, because we wear black polos. That
could have been a patron. Are you sure it was
an employee? Oh? Yeah, he had an apron on like
he had the apron on he was. He was going
back and he walked right back in the kitchen, And
I said, man, so I'm really just calling you because
I wanted to let you know, and I don't want
to I can. I was just really basically gonna say
it's kind of grown here. Okay, it's absolutely grows. Let
(11:24):
me start here first of all, let me apologize to you.
All right, Um, I don't know how often you come
to our but we keep a very high standard here.
I mean, we have a large patronage. We try to
please people as best we can and there's no sustement
as a good restaurant was not without clean employees. So
let me start with an apology. Yeah, that's great to
hear that. Yeah, I am too, and I was shocked
(11:44):
because I do come in there often. So I will
have to report you to the health department. Or we
could give me a gift card to kind of, you know,
make me happy, because I feel kind of like, oh,
I don't know if I want to go back. So
I was looking like maybe one hundred and fifty dollars
gift card or or I can call the health department.
Oh no, oh no, I don't like this because I
like this guy. This guy's awesome, this manager. Yea, let
(12:06):
me start with an apology, like this is the kind
of guy I would like to go to his restaurant.
I don't. I'm cringing right now. If you're cringing because
guy in Washington, what you're doing even legal? This illegal?
Can you call and say I'm gonna turn he's bribing it? Blackmailing, blackmailing, Yeah,
I'm black failing, Yes you are, Yes, what do youran
blackmailing is? What do you think blackmailing? If you don't
do this for me, email and saying drop the cash
(12:29):
in a bag in a trash can. That's black All
kinds of black blackmailing is if you don't do this,
I'm going to do that. Right, This is blackmail. This
is that if you don't give me a gift card,
I'm going to call the health department. Google say blackmail
is illegal because it can't be illegal legal because you
blackmail and low levels like if you don't trade meet
(12:49):
your door, it's okay. It is interesting. Note that blackmail
is a crime regardless of the validity of the information. Okay, lunchbox,
even if you are threatening to reveal real chrome activity,
it is still black million illegal. You just did something illegal.
That's a citizens the rest, my gosh, citizens rest. I
don't think what I did was illegal. You said I'm
gonna tell on you if you don't give me something.
(13:10):
That's blackmail. I am saying your employee did something wrong.
So if you'd like to make it right, you have
the opportunity to by giving you something. And if you
don't give me something, I'm turning it in. Okay, that
is giving That is giving you a choice. Like my kids,
I tell them, look, you can choose Plan A or
Plan b but you're gonna plan one. When I count
to five one, two, three, four five and they have
(13:32):
to pick one or else they go to this one,
I choose for them. This is blackmail, so I'm gonna
play the backside of this. I don't know what's going
to happen, lunchbox. What's the verdict? Do you think he
gave me the gift card? Like as a tease? Vertical verdict?
How much time going to spend the slammer? Exactly? Okay,
go ahead. Well, I'm gonna be honest. I'm well versed
in our restaurant, and all of our employees, at least
(13:55):
to my knowledge, have been extremely clean. And I know
are are you sensils and everything we use is up
to spot. But but you know what why, I don't
want to deal with the headache. I don't want to
do that. But I'll tell you what. Come to the
restaurant this Friday, ask for the hostess, tell them your name.
There may or may not be a two hundred dollar
gift card for you. All right, all right, I gotta go.
(14:15):
All right, Thank you very much. I appreciate it, and
I can't wait to come back and eat at your
restaurant with my gift card. I bet you do have
a great day. Who that's not nice. You just blackmailed
the guy for a good Yes, you can't just yell
know and then that he knows that they did something
wrong for dollars. I didn't even ask for that much.
(14:35):
What if he shows up and they jump him, that'd
be cool. This guy was not happy though, he was
not happy. You can't get If you go and accept
a gift card, they can arrest you and then they
know it you. Oh, maybe it's set up like a sting.
If you go and accept a gift card, they can
arrest you. Go check it out. For bailing him, you said,
if you don't give me this, I'm going to turn
you in. That's blackmail. Now we want you to go
(14:56):
pick it up. Yeah, I mean a good buddy, go
get it first of all, not cool, right, everybody, band
he didn't wash his hand. It's not cool. You guys
are burying the lead here. No we're not. We also
don't like that. Shifted, Yeah, they'll lead shifted hard. When
you went to some criminals, I was kind of like
shocking the employee didn't wash their hands. But now I'm
(15:16):
like shocking. Let's walk spend time in jail, right again. Yeah,
you can't get the gift card. What if we take
it out to you with it? No, I don't want
to part of it. I don't want to go anywhere
you're going where they know you're the guy that was
blackmailing them. Yeah, we can go to another location. Oh
so it's okay, So it's shame all right. Well, wow,
(15:38):
we'll see how this shakes out, because let's watch tried
to shake down. That's against the law. You can't get
the card. I mean maybe I'll send in my kid
take it. They Hello, my daddy, mister Gibb Wilson, I'm
gonna play this. I don't play this song. But I
think you should just call and go, hey, I don't
need that gift card. That's what I think, right Scuba. Yeah,
(15:59):
that's the right thing to do. Yeah, no, no, no,
it's illegal thing to do. It's not the right, it's
not about right. What he did's illegal. Yes, so yeah,
he should call back and say I shouldn't take this
gift card. No, he should call back and say what
I did was wrong. Yes, he's not gonna do we
know he's not gonna do that. Well, it's time for
the good news. The flight is on Spared Airlines flying
(16:22):
Pittsburgh to Orlando, and there's a baby on the plane
and the baby stops breathing. There was a meteorologist on
board and he starts to cover and he's reporting there's
three month old whose name was Angelia, stopped breathing and
her lips that turned purple. So you got a baby
on a plane who is not breathing. So there's obviously
panic because they can't really run to a hospital. Fortunately,
retired nurse Tamra Penzino was on the flight and was like, Okay,
(16:45):
I'm a nurse for twenty years, let me try some things.
So she massaged the baby's chest and legs. I guess ed,
you've done CPR and yet for babies. Yeah, is there
a different way with babies because it because again if
you go to massaging, which could be like a chess
pump for an adult, but also the legs. Was that
something you learned? Man? What I've learned was the chess compressions.
(17:06):
Instead of doing the hand thing, you just do two fingers,
your index finger in your middle finger right in the
middle of the chest. But I've never heard of the
massaging the legs. I like that, though, I wonder what
that does. Yeah, let's try come up here. No, so again,
the meat all just videoed it, and the nurse saved
the baby and they landed, and when they landed, everybody
was there to like, Okay, let's check on the baby,
(17:27):
and the baby's just chilling baby because the nurse was
on there and knew what she was doing. So that's
a great story. So a big shout out to everybody,
especially this retired nurse, Tamra Panzino, who nursed for twenty
years and then could rub a mean leg, save a lot,
could rub a mean leg. That's right, all right, that's
what it's all about. That was tell me something good,
(17:48):
Tell me if you believe this story. The headline is
the woman did not know she was pregnant until a
head popped out from under her skirt. Im nohore. The
stories they didn't get more and more absurd. Though she
didn't know she was pregnant, she had a baby, Okay,
she know she was pregnant. She looked down on the toilet,
there was a baby. Okay, she didn't know she was pregnant.
(18:10):
There was a kid. Waving hey, I'm your God. They
get more and more absurd every time. You'd think by
the time it crowned, she would have felt pain. A
teen mom revealed the shocking way she discovered she was
pregnant well by going into labor. The woman named Alexis
claimed that she had no clue she was pregnant until
her own mom spotted the baby's head popping out underneath
(18:31):
her uniform skirt. What the nineteen year old who gave
birth at fifteen detailed her surprising pregnancy. The clip has
more than two million views now. Despite negative tests in
regular periods, after noticing unusual heartburn, she carried it on
just some back pain. She thought maybe she heard something,
took some medicine. All good. One morning she went to
(18:53):
the toilet before school and she just felt the urge
to push. And listen, we all have and we're not pregnant.
We've all thought that urged a push, right, yeah, it's
like and so she was like mom. So her mom
comes and she goes, there's a baby. There's baby's head,
(19:14):
and that's it, and that's it. That's in the story.
That's from the New York Post. Now, now that I
given you more insight. Do you believe it? Amy, I
get yes, I believe that she was in some form
of denial or didn't understand what was really happening with
her body, and that is how it played out. Cho
I'm a fan of pregnancy shows, and I just don't
(19:34):
believe it. So you know a lot about Team Yes,
I know a lot about Team pregnancy, one of your
favorite thing, Team Pregnancy. Yes. What happens to the body
in that situation? And I just don't believe it. Who's
your favorite pregnant teen of all time? Oh? Chelsea House
goes pretty good? Macy book Out was great? Fair, I
was crazy that your favorite pregnant teen. I'm gonna go
to Chelsea House school. Yeah, she's great. And then Macy
(19:56):
book Out. Those two are one AM one one am
one A, but I can't be one. I didn't want
to put one above the other, so I just went
both one day. I tried to slide that in there, Eddie,
do you believe it? Look? Man, when you said teen pregnancy,
it made sense. When I was a teenager and I
lied about something, I try to lie and lie and
lie until you just couldn't anymore. The truth came out
(20:17):
in this case, she just lied and then the truth
finally came out and she's like, all right, now you
get Now you know I'm pregnant, I'm having a baby.
So she knew the entire time. So you think that
it's true. But the lie is actually not that it
didn't happen, like, it's just the lies she knew. She
told him, the lies she knew she was pregnant. She's like,
how am I gonna tell her? How am I gonna
tell him? You know what, I'm just gonna wait till
(20:37):
the baby comes out, and then I'm gonna act like,
oh surprise, someone would go to the toilet and go
even at fifteen, we're our dumbest. Yeah, you're dumbest when
you just want to get away with something. M that's
a tough one. That's my theory. I'm gonna believe it
because she's fifteen. We have no idea what's happening with
our bodies. We don't know. I'm looking at the baby,
so you know the baby's real. Yeah, I'm gonna go
(20:59):
with I believe it, but it's it's absurd. Even though
it's true, it's absurd. Lunchbuck, You're second favorite team is
Macy book out? Yeah? Third favorite team is which one
did you drive? Want to drive to the prison to
see why she was in Yeah, you sent her letters?
Why she I did send her letters because I didn't
want her to think she was alone in prison. She
got sentenced for you know, domestic violence. Her and Gary
(21:20):
they got into it, and so she went to prison,
and I felt like she needed to know that people
were on her side and we still cared about her.
So I sent her letters in prison, just saying, hey,
I hit him, punched him, domestic buy that's what. But
that's She's just like, yeah, like take a baseball back
to him. No, no, no, nothing like that. And she
still say that it saved her life, Like going to
(21:41):
prison saved her life, like cleaned her up, cleaned her up,
and so that's good and so straight I mean she yeah.
I mean what about them because they all got pregnant
as a teenager, which the show sixteen and Pregnant. Yeah,
why were you drawn to that initially? Like you because
you fell in love with it. Here's the thing. I
watched him TV and it was like, oh, that's it
was interesting. And then I would watch it and I
(22:01):
was like, this is fascinating that the struggle that these
people have and the craziness that they go through and
the relationships because you see a fifteen and sixteen year
old kid fighting with each other, you know what a
relationship is at fifteen and sixteen and what they have
to go through, and it's like, wow, how do they survive?
And then when they came out with teen Mom, I
was because you always wonder once they do sixteen and
(22:22):
Pregnant is like, huh, I wonder whatever happened one of them?
And then they come out with teen Mom and you
get to catch up with them. Oh, they got the
All Stars, you know, the ones that we didn't care
about some of them, like they weren't very good, we
don't need them. They brought to All Stars back and
it was just it's great they got love teen Mom.
He really does seen it. Pregnant, I've seen him. He
went in a book line for one of them, like
for hours, just so we could spend extra time with her.
I was the last one in line. It was Macy.
(22:43):
Did one of them come here? Yeah? We had Kaitlin
Lowry and uh and report when they both came in
the studio. Well, anyway, she had a baby, and she
said she didn't know until the head was poking out.
Pretty And then you watched sixteen and Pregnant. I watched
an episode I had too because we all did something.
I remember the bed, but I watched it and I
was like, I cannot, I feel creepy. Yeah, I feel
creepy watching the relationship. I feel creepy that I'm watching
(23:06):
the relationship because they had a baby, that she's a team.
That's weird. That's what he said. He loved about it. Yeah,
I felt it felt weird, it felt old, but also
it felt like my mom got pretty in the fifteen See,
it was a life a look in the life like
it was like, ah, I saw a look in the
life of my life. Well, yeah, like I saw a
firsthand with my life. So Bobby Bones Show Interviews in
(23:27):
case you didn't know. The first time I heard of
this guy, Breland, it was Keith Urban going, hey, you
got to hear this guy's awesome. I was like, well,
Keith Urban loves him, then let me give him a listen.
So again. His name is Breeland. Real smart guy was
a student at Georgetown University. He's the son of two
ordained ministers and they were very much into gospel music,
(23:50):
and that's affected him a bunch. It's influenced him a bunch.
But again, he's a music nerd, that's what he calls himself,
but loves country music and everybody in Nashville country music
has wanted to work with them. He's written songs with
Florida Georgia Line and Sam Hunt and Keith Herban, even
Justin Bieber. I'm a big fan of this guy, Breeland
on the Bobby Bones Show right now, on the Bobby
(24:11):
Bones Show. Now, I'm a big fan Breland. You know that, right,
I'm I'm also a big fan you know what this
of yourself. We're both Brian fans. I like that. I
like I like that a lot. This This new song,
Praise the Lord is so good. Thanks. I mean, I
heard you. I walked out during the commercial. I think
I heard you guys doing praise It or it just
runs in my head NonStop. It's one of us two.
It's either I think you heard of a looping thing
(24:33):
or you're gonna perform that here in a second. But
I'm just so curious about how your live performances have
been going, because I think you told me when you
went out to play for Dirk's. When Dirk's called, it
was like Breland, big fan, can play. You were like,
I hadn't performed like that live before, right, Yeah, I'd
only played two shows before that, one of which was
a whiskey jam and the other one was at my
(24:54):
former high school, which is crazy to think. And then
Derek's calls and goes come out and play. But I saw,
are you playing stage? We are? Yeah, So it has
gone from zero to sixty yeah, zero to one hundred
if you're in kilometers yeah, yeah, well I'm not though
I've been places like use kilometers and have no idea
what how far? No, you never know? So are you
you're on stage doing these shows now? Do you? Are
(25:15):
you kind of getting it? Are you feeling comfortable performing?
I would say after this summer, I definitely feel comfortable.
It just you you need the reps. You got to
be able to work through different types of problems, figure
out how your body response to different climates, different types
of audiences, people who are and aren't necessarily familiar or
receptive to what you're doing. And I'm starting to get
some of some of that competences, Like one of the
(25:37):
most cerebral artists that I think I've ever spoken to.
I can tell he just brought up brought kilometers. Yeah,
there are a lot of people in the world that
kilometers is not like a big word for the world,
But in the States we're like kilometers, kilograms. We don't
know what it is. This stuff is your parents gospel singers. Yeah,
and you know, I definitely, especially in this song because
(25:59):
it's an easy Okay, well it makes sense, praise the Lord.
But how much of that stylistically vocally do you think
that was passed on to you? I would say a
lot of it. Um, you know, you grow up in
a house with two people who have strong gospel of voices,
Like I would say, a lot of a lot of
my vocal choices are informed by some of the things
(26:22):
that my parents were doing as as singers and listening
to in the house. Did you sing in church? I did? Yeah?
Could you? Could you let it go? I mean as
a kid, did you have the power to do that?
Young where they were like that kid right there, he's
going places. I don't think I was that kid. I
think my sister was that kid. I think I started
to grow into it over time. I was a pretty
(26:42):
shy kid, so I you would have to like really
pushed me to get in front of an audience. Now
I'm more comfortable, but at like ten, eleven twelve, there
was vocal talent, but you would have you would have
to be really close to my family to probably know it.
There's so much vocal talent. When I say he hasn't
he wasn't performing. He still could sing his face off.
(27:03):
I'm gonna have you play right now. This is that
Praise the Lord and on the track if people spend it,
Thomas Htz on it with you? Yeah? Do you call him?
Do you? How does that get to him? Yeah? I
sent it through some channels seeing if I could get
it to him, and it eventually did a few months
after we wrote it, and I was like, I'm not
putting this song out until we get Thomas on the song,
(27:23):
and if he doesn't get on the song, I'm never
gonna put it out. You were never gonna put this
out without I wouldn't have put it out without him.
I knew. I knew I wanted him on the song,
and I was gonna stick to that. Are there any
songs you were like, you know what if I don't
get Harry styles ain't put it out, and then he said, no,
we never heard it. How many of those actually exist?
Some of those exist really, maybe not necessarily with Harry specifically,
but there are artists that I'm waiting for them to
(27:45):
get on it, to put it out. You let me
know who. We'll call him out right now. Yeah, probably
shame him. Yeah, tell Cane to quit playing, call him
right now. Feel different parts of my upbringing during that
song meeting. When I was really young, my grandmother went
to a Pentecostal church and I could feel her like
starting to like spoken tongues at times, yeah, like during that.
(28:06):
And then I grew up in a Baptist church and
I could feel them going, I don't dance too much
still a little. I know you want to. That's that
sounds awesome? Man. So you're playing I've heard it many
times obviously, are you playing it live? Holy crap? There's
a part maybe like the pre chorus or or you're yeah,
what is that part? I'm gonna try that. It doesn't
matter how you worship sent Us, say what come on
(28:27):
that winter lose? Every time he dials like, I can't
remember to bringing that up. You got it. You got it,
It's right there. What I don't have it? It's ok,
even going through puberty. Just try it. We'll try to
get a two PM. We're gonna drop it three keys.
We're gonna do it as a duet when or loose
I end up doing it. So you put out the record,
(28:49):
and you know you can tell them what you're respected
in Nashville by all the people that agreed to do
the record with you. Right. It came out like a
couple of weeks ago, September Nights, right, So just to
list some of them here, you got Ingridan Dressing again,
lady A, Keith Urban, Mickey Guidon, obviously, Thomas Rhett I
heard about you first. I was with Keith Urban, yeah,
and he was like, you gotta hear this guy. And
(29:10):
I was like, that's wow. He is good. But when
Keith Urban brings up somebody, you're like, Okay, well Keith
respects him, then I probably should pay attention. And I
know you've written with Keith. What does that like to
just sit with him? Because Keith's a genius and quirky. Yeah,
and it's thinking ten thousand things at once and you're
meeting him and writing with the same day, I gotta
assume that is there any pressure there at all? There
(29:33):
wasn't really any pressure because I knew that because he
reached out to me, that there was a level of
mutual respect creatively. So I was like, all I really
have to do is come in and do what I
usually do, and that was the thing that caused him
to reach out in the first place. So we should
be good. And Keith and I are both we think
about music very differently, but also very similarly. Like we
(29:55):
agree on melody pretty much all the time, and usually
when you write with people there's melodic differences. I might
be like, what about this melody, and they'll be like, oh,
what about this melody? We always agree on melody, and
we always agree on chords. But because he's such a
talented instrumentalist, he'll play a lick before he'll sing something,
and I'll sing something before I'll play something, and so
(30:16):
we usually will kind of come at the song from
two different perspectives and then land on something that we
both agree on. So every song that we've done sounds
very different. You know, a song like Crimson Blue that
he dropped for Nine Perfect Strangers is wildly different than
my song throw It Back, which is totally different than
the two songs that I co wrote on his project,
(30:38):
And all of them are the result of both of
us agreeing on a totally different side of music, whether
it's approaching it from classic rock perspective, approaching it from
a hip hop perspective, approaching it, you know, from this
like led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd classic, you know, whatever. We know,
we know what we want. I saw you on TikTok
(30:58):
with and I don't know if, I don't know if
you released this song, but I'm a big Mazie Peters fan. Yeah, yeah,
and so, and I was talking about her on this
show a few weeks ago because she her songs are
so hooky. Yeah, and you were singing one of her song?
Was it? Which one? Were you were you do editing her?
Kate's brother? Oh that's what it is. Yeah. So because
(31:22):
you were talking, was this were you set up? Did
you know you were going to do that? Yes? Okay,
because it looked like you were shooting your shot, like
like right on, yeah, we we you know, TikTok. Here's
the secret for those of you who are listening. Nothing
that looks like it's a surprise on TikTok is a surprise?
It is? It is like what, Yeah, it's very Everything
is planned in advance, Like I'm not trying to ruin
(31:44):
everyone's social media engagement, but yeah, everything is planned. They
probably filmed it like four or five times to get
it right. These tour announcements where they get a call
out of all those seems so fake. Yeah, those seems
so fake. It like I'm like, come on, like who
buys this? But some people buy it? So I just
wanted to pop that bubble real quick. It's all fair.
Well you sold it to me because I was like, oh,
(32:05):
I like Mazie and then I saw you and I
was like, okay, the Brillian shooting shots beaters and then
I was gonna ask you next time I saw you.
But it's all it was all set up. Yeah, it
was all set up. I'm a mark. Yeah I did
that song. I love I love Mazie. I think what
she's doing out in the UK and on a global
scale is massive. She's so talented as a writer, vocalist, entertainer.
(32:27):
I've seen seen clips of her live show. She brings it.
But that song, I've never done a song that was
in that kind of punk pop lane uh, and I
liked a lot of that music. It was reminiscent of
like early Avril Levine, yeah, aver like Hilary Duffy and
you know, I'm I'm a I'm a nineties kid. So
that was all the stuff that we were listening to
(32:48):
when I was in school. So for me to be
able to get on a song like that and kind
of add my sauce and flavor to it, tell my
side of the story, it was a lot of fun. Well,
I'm just said I was tricked, Like always talk about it.
I think about how big idiot I am. You've been bamboosle, Yeah,
I haven't, and I try not to be bamboos She
has a song John Hughes movie. I just I'm a
big fan of amazing people. That's when I saw that.
(33:08):
I was like, dang, I like both of them. So, look,
you're you're an amazing performing an amazing singer. You have
you do have a lot of followers on TikTok to you,
by the way, like don't you have like you have millions,
right that is like half a million? Maybe you have
all the light. I looked and I was like, dang,
like you already built a TikTok following too. Are you
making any money on social media yet? Uh? Probably somewhere. Yeah,
(33:30):
you're so rich you don't even know anymore social media money.
I don't even know where that would register, but I'm
sure I've benefited from it in some way directly or indirectly. Yeah, yeah, yeah, okay, Ammy,
you have anything for brillim, I'm gonna play his new single,
but yeah, well, I just want to personally know about
his energy. Like I when I walked in, I felt it,
and then the whole time you're performing, I had goose bumps. So, like,
(33:52):
what do you do to keep yourself? Maybe you were
just born this way? Definitely not okay, So what do
you do to keep yourself with whatever the center is
that you have? Yeah? I have become very intentional about
two things. One who I am and am, not spending
time around people who don't pour into me, who don't
believe in me, who don't hold me accountable. I don't
(34:15):
spend time with anyone who isn't a part of that.
And then two, just focusing on gratitude, being grateful for everything,
whether it's good or bad. That's why in the song
when it says win or lose, Praise the Lord, Like,
I really abide by that. I think it's easy to
be grateful for things when you're getting good news and
when things are going the way that you want them too.
(34:36):
It's really hard to do that and almost seems counterintuitive
to do that when you're getting bad news or when
things are tough. And I've been really mindful of just
being grateful for everything regardless. Ray, you saw Brylan ware
like Chick fil A the food, Yeah, you just went
through the straight up drive through. I think you walked
up to it. I figured you maybe had a person
(34:57):
go get you your food. Oh, you can't hear them.
I forgot so. Ray said he saw you at Chick
fil A and you you you walked up because there's
a Chick Fla, there's a window you can walk to.
And he was like, I was surprised. You have somebody
just getting his food for him. He I'm definitely getting
my own food. What do you do? This is my
first album. I'm like, I think it's going on here.
(35:17):
Like I had Keith pull up and play with me
at the High Watt last year and he came to
the sound check entirely by himself. Nobody just walked in
looking like Keith. I was like, this is absurd. So, yeah,
I'm definitely getting my own food. Until I passed that level,
I will be getting my own food. Well, we can't
wait until you do pass that level. I was still
gonna be getting I don't know. I don't know Ray,
(35:38):
so he was shocked. He was like Briland was getting
his own food. You'll see me at Chick fil A
in twenty thirty. Walk up, there's a window. Sure, you
can order on the app, and then I have my
people go get it for me. So they go up. Okay, hey,
let's talk about this single real quick because we're gonna
play it here for what it's worth now. For audience
who hasn't heard this, it's it's always weird to hear
(35:59):
a song for the first time. Yep, it's good to
have some background give me what they need to know
before they hear it. Yeah, the song is just my
take on a breakup song. I've had a couple of
breakups in my life, and anytime I've had one, I
hold myself accountable for the things that I may have
dropped the ball on. And I wanted to write a
song from that perspective, just maturely being able to say, hey,
(36:21):
I understand I may not have been the person that
you wanted me to be for you at that time,
and I hope that you're able to find that. He's
like so mature, you know, like I hate myself when
I hang out with him because I'm like, I just
want to be him. We are one and the same.
According to a study, early risers who then stay active
all throughout the day are happier and sharper mentally, especially
(36:44):
in older age. I'm a forced early riser. I do
identify with early risers. I wish I understood what it
was like to wake up early and feel good. And
people are always like, it must be awesome wake up
early to have your day done. One of my day's
not done, and know what sucks waking up early? I
hate it. I would go to bed at four am
as my natural bed time, to wake up at noon
or one. That's my body clocks crazy. So I'm not
(37:04):
this person. Now. I come in and the show starts
at six eastern, five Central, and we live in Central,
and I fake it for the first hour and a half.
It's tough where I'm not near as happy as I sound.
This is me on the inside, This is me on
the outside. Yeah, that's what it is every morning. But yeah,
so if you wake up early and you get things done,
(37:26):
you are apparently smarter. Could you wake up in the morning.
We're supposed to wake up in the morning, the natural
cycle of earth. Sun comes up, you get up, sun
goes down, you go to bed. That makes us healthy, wealthy,
and wise. Yeah, and you got to get outside in
the sun when you first rise. If you can to
get your circadian rhythms set up for the day, just
sounds too hippy for me. I like a good I'm
able to do that on Saturdays and Sundays. That's it.
(37:48):
A good tweet night, a tweet night, like a good
tweet night. Get on a phone, good Wi Fi. If
you guys updated dry phone because you have the new one.
You can send a message in the text and then yes,
but you have to they have to have the same update,
so everybody needs to get the update. Then if I
said Eddie at text was like I don't need I'll
take it back. You can then remove the text. But
if I don't update, you can do that. And so
(38:09):
there are all these videos of people doing it, like
sending all these real funny put down things to people
like I can just remove it and then they goes
guess if they don't have the update there, you're not
taking it all like, oh crap, it's funny. You can
also mark it for yourself, so you know if you've
read or unread like emails. You can do that with
text messages. Now you can do that for like four
generations of phone No this new, no tell me that
(38:30):
to this new tells. Like sometimes there's a bubble that
pops up when they're tell me it's new, because that's
the I need that, because that's the thing. I click
on it and I'm like, shoot, I read it and
then I don't remember to go back to because it
doesn't have a blue dot that's new, that is this update.
I feel like I can always do that email and
I can pin things. Show me how you're Amy's pile
(38:54):
of stories. This therapist name Jessica McNair shared some things
that parents should do to create a safe relationship with
their kids, and already tried out one of her tips.
Be there for them, make sure they have dinner. No
some like um no, it's things you might not think about,
like you should ask permission from your child if you
want to give them a hug. What the crown chance?
(39:17):
So I tried with my daughter and she was like, hey, yeah,
thanks for asking. Sometimes I'm really not in the mood
to she wanted to ask permission to get hugged. That's
what it says here. Also, that seems weird, right, specially listen,
I don't know. I still think of forced hug bya
grandma's or moms. They were the best, and you just
act like you hated you loved it. True, because if
(39:38):
you were to ask me, and I'm a boy and
I'm eleven, I'd be like, no, I don't want to hug,
but inside I really do. And then I have all
this trauma because I never get hugged, and it's my fault.
I'm a doctor to write that down. Okay, Never talk
about finances in front of your kids, don't comment on
your child's body type at all, and don't use fear
as a motivational tool. I mean, all I was told
you you're skinny, we did everything wrong on the all
(40:00):
of this, or we ain't got no money. So that
was finances? That all right? What else. Okay, so this
husband stole his wife's kidney and sold it on the
black market. How do you steal it? Well, you know,
Lunchbox always says you never know who you're sleeping next to,
and this story just I mean, it's so true. He
had her go to the hospital for kidney stones and
(40:22):
signed all this paperwork for her to get those removed,
and during the surgery he tricked her into signing something
that also removed her kidney, and then he sold it
on the black market. That's when you handed him in
a box after it like kidney ordered, Like, how does
he even get it? I don't know how what you
know what he had to do to finagle that whole
process with the other people involved, but maybe he cut
them in on some of the money. But she well,
(40:43):
now we got real, real conspiracy stuff happening here. Yeah.
But she obviously she had the scars because she thought
she was having surgery for something else. And then later
she went in for some pain and they're like, well
you're missing a kidneys whistling. Yeah, that's a bad dude. Yeah.
Are they still together as of September? They're working it out? No,
(41:05):
I mean I think he's in police custody now, yeah,
I think so. I don't know if they're going a
good divorce or what's going to happen, saw Michelle Branch.
They're working it out now. There are hatches they are
Patrick from the Black Keys. That was interesting, but then
I felt like, this is none of my business. I know.
But then it was in the news, I know, so
it was still wasn't. But he's read it. It still wasn't.
(41:25):
But they're working it out. We like that. That's a girl.
You like it. We hope works out with them, all right.
What else? Tracey Adkins thought that he killed Susan Surandon
while they were filming their new show on Fox Monarch.
What happened is they have a kissing scene and it
all went down, and then he heard he had COVID
and he thought, oh shoot, oh I was killed her.
(41:48):
I just killed Susan Surandon. But luckily she was vaccinated
and all the things and she never even got sick.
But yeah, he was very terrified for a little bit
that their makeout session was going to lead to her death.
But to make out for acting. We're going to need
a doctor here because I think I just murdered filled dreams.
That looks like a good show on Fox. I want
(42:09):
to check it out, and I didn't get to see
the premiere, but there's a new episode up tomorrow on Fox.
She does a COVID for the spoiler alert. Tracey is
funny where he talks so slow and so deep and
every time I see me makes fun of me. Oh
love that like two weeks ago. Just let me just hey,
and there's nothing you do about it. What are you
gonna do? What am I gonna do? Nothing? So I
(42:31):
just I just like it and laugh laugh with them,
all right, Amy's that it? Yep, But Mammie, that's my pile.
That was Amy's pile of stories. It's time for the
good news. So you know Missy Franklin, the Olympic gold
medalist swimmer. So her dad had kidney failure and he
got put on a transplant list, but the odds of
(42:53):
him getting a match or was in the years and years.
So in a last ditch effort, their family turned to
social media and so many people reached out after seeing
the post, but they got tested and unfortunately we're not
a match. No matches of all the people trying, all
the people trying, except for get this. Another Olympic swimmer,
Michael Phelps, Greg lu Gainess he's a diver, though, I'm
(43:19):
trying to think of another one, spits Ryan Spitz, Michael
Spitz a boxer. I don't know. I know Chrissy Perham,
who is someone that took him a gold in ninety
two Barcelona Games. And she saw the plea from the Franklins.
She got tested. Boom, she was a match, so she volunteered.
The surgery has already happened. It was successful. She loved
(43:40):
being able to help someone out. In her quote, swim family,
but now they really are like family for life. Yeah,
she saved his life. Yeah. I have a clip of
Missy Franklin talking about it. It was a very, very
surreal moment when we found out that not only did
we have a match, but that she was an Olympic
gold medalist and swimming. It was just such a full
(44:03):
circle moment. That's an amazing story. I tell you how
I went to social media immediately because she's she's famous.
A lot of people trying, but they did try, and
they weren't able to match. Here you go famous swimmers,
my Michael Phelps, Katie Ladecki. Oh, Yeah, she's now Ryan Locktey,
Mark Spitz, Ian Thorpe, the Thorpedo. Wait, you knew Mike Spitz, yeah,
(44:24):
Mark said Mark. Yeah, from like the seventies. I think
an old school Olympian. Other than that got Matt Beyondi,
whose name sounds a little familiar, Missy Franklin m uh nemo.
I'm retiring amoy else. That's a great story, though, That
is what it's all about. That was tell me something good.