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August 1, 2022 87 mins

It's the big round of 2 Truths and 1 Lie with all 4 listeners from last week! Whoever can last the longest will win $40,000!!!! Bobby’s new TV Show “Snake in the Grass” premieres tonight on USA. Lunchbox is surprisingly supportive after Bobby reveals a new wrinkle. Bobby reveals he’s been having some issues with his jaw. 

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
We're good transmitting America. We are back. Hope you had
an awesome weekend Morten Studio. Morning Today on the show,
somebody wins over forty thousand dollars. We're just gonna give
it away. So that comes up a little later, but
I do want to start with this because speaking of money,

(00:22):
and the big lottery was this weekend, you know, the
billion dollars. Morgan says. A listener dmmed her about the lottery, right, yes,
so what they say? Okay, So this couple when they
were in Maine, they won a million dollars in the
lottery by listening to our show. Oh my gosh. Yeah, okay,

(00:44):
so let let me read this to you. So Cheryl
and Brian Vosson of Colorado, they went out to Maine
for NASCAR and then they ended up going over to
New Hampshire where they purchased their ticket because they were
listening to a country music station out of Nashville. See
this is a new story. Yes, so someone sent you
a link to a new story. Yes, because she lives

(01:05):
in this town, she got the She's from New Hampshire,
so she gets the daily email from New Hampshire Lottery.
Start over. Thanks, I need to listen to it like
a new story. I was like Morgan's talking to an
awfully broadcasting voice. Okay, go ahead, Okay. So meet Cheryl
and Brian Vosson of Colorado Springs, Colorado. It was the
love of NASCAR that brought them from Colorado to Maine
and then over to New Hampshire for the race. While

(01:27):
on their way back to Maine, they were listening to
a country music station out of Nashville, Tennessee, and the
radio talk show host Bobby Bones was talking all about
the big mega millions Jackpot. Cheryl asked Brian to get
a few tickets at their liquor store on the traffic
circle off I ninety five, and that's how the story goes,
claiming they're one million winning. Wow, how does that make

(01:52):
you feel? Luncherback, Hey, my life, Like, how do we inspire?
And they don't even give us anything, They don't owe
us anything because it wasn't our money. They use their
own money. Wow. So have you heard from the people
at all? No? I mean we could reach out to them,
obviously they listened to the show, but it was somebody
from New Handshire that they just happened to get the
lottery email every day and they're like this popped up

(02:12):
and it's because of you guys that they want that's awesome.
We have to talk to them, Scoopa. Can you track
them down? Yeah, that is an amazing story. And they
gave us a shout out in the news story, which
is yeah, which is pretty cool, Lunchbox. We want somebody
a million bucks. That is so cool. That does mean
no good, Like it's not about you. This is not
a new story. It is we want someone a million
dollars and they have not reached out to give us
a reward or like, hey, didn't make them go. We

(02:34):
inspired them. It's said in the news story. I was
listening to the Biby Bone show. Who's the one that
talks about the lottery? Let them inspire me. I don't
give him in my paycheck inspirations free facts. You did
not go buy a lottery ticket because David Letterman told you. Okay, well, Lunchbox,
I'm sorry that this news dampers your morning. I think
it's pretty cool and I'd love to talk to them
if we can get them. That is crazy, Lunchbox. It

(02:57):
should be a story of hope like this too could
happen to you and sits scratch offs For me. I
feel like that's where our winning is. And scratch offs, well,
we don't keep we don't do that. I don't play those.
We keep buying those. All right, there you go, Morgan,
thank you. Yeah. I'd love to start the show off
with a positive story in a big shout out to
Cheryl and Brian Boston of Colorado Springs, Colorado in the

(03:19):
stories from Lottery dot NH dot gov. That's what I'm
talking about. Let's give away some money today too. We'll
do that. Somebody's going over forty thousand dollars on the
show this morning buying two truths and a lie. We
also have a whole other week. We're gonna do it
this bit. So if you guys gonna be a part
of it, just go to Bobby Bones dot com and
sign up. It's right there. It's time to open up
the mailbag. Ye get something we call Bobby bag year. Hello,

(03:48):
Bobby Bones. I'm a boyfriend and I been together for
a little more than six years. His family keeps asking
when we're going to get engaged. Recently had a friend
slip up and tell me he was going to propose
me this year. But a while back I was joking
and I showed him a ring that I thought was
pretty so recently I went back online to look at it,
and the more research I did, the more I found

(04:10):
out the ring isn't really how it looks in real life.
Now fast forward to now, as he was trying to
show me a picture, I noticed he had the ring
saved to his phone. That picture. My question is, how
do I tell him the ring isn't that pretty? Or
do I even say something. I don't know if he
actually got that ring or if it's a reference picture
signed the not so pretty ring girl. Well, this is

(04:31):
what I would do quickly, as I would say, Hey,
I don't like that ring anymore. We talked about you
can find a way to bring it up. I don't
know he find it, But you don't want him to
buy that ring if you hate it, especially if he
hasn't already bought it. Like you just planned percentages at
this point, maybe he hasn't bought the ring yet. Fifty
fifty he's bought it, he's got it on his phone fifty,
So fifty fifty that you can save him and you

(04:57):
from having to live a life of having a ring
on your finger that you hat every day because eventually
it's going to come out, maybe ten years on the road,
and he's gonna be embarrassed and hate it, but you're
gonna have to wear it every day for that ten
years until it comes out. I would say something now,
So he may not have bought it, or the other
part of that is, if he has bought it, and
here cuts into that fifty, he may can just take
it back and switch it. Yeah, and you can go
with him and get something you really like. And that's

(05:20):
probably the case unless he bought it from his friend
Clint behind ihop. So I would say something. It's just
too big of a thing not to say something, especially
because you said something already to put him on that track.
And if you don't feel comfortable going, hey, remember that
ring I showed you. I don't like it anymore. You
got to find a way to bring it up. Like
so and so got engaged, make up a friend. A

(05:41):
friend Lucy at work, got engaged and he got her
a ring like I was showing you, and I saw
it. It It actually isn't that good. I don't like that
ring anymore. You can do that. You can make up
something just the methods to him, but he needs to know.
You shouldn't have to wear a ring you hate. Don't
make him buy a ring that he may not have
bought yet because you told him a long time you
liked it and you don't anymore. So you got it.

(06:02):
You gotta do it. You gotta go chase it down. Nope,
don't like it anymore. The end. I mean, listen, the
best way just go ahead, Remember that ring. I told
you I don't like it anymore. Yeah, that's it. That's
the easiest way. But if you want to do something
like I would do, I'd be like, yeah, my friend
losing getting lucy. No. I agree, it's okay to say something.
You just have to find the courage to do it
and know that you know, you don't know what his

(06:23):
response is going to be, And I would say how
he handles this could be very telling. Well, if he
handles it poorly and he gets his feelings hurt, that's
only gonna be temporary, though that ring is gonna be forever.
So I mean, he may have his feelings hurt for
a second and be like, oh, but that ring will
He'll be happy after his feelings are hurt that you
told him? Yes, take it from someone who gets his

(06:44):
feelings hurt. I'm always happy when my wife's like, yeah,
that joke's not that funny with you tail, and she
doesn't say it like that because I'll ask her. I'll
be like, hey, what do you think about this joke?
He should go, m I don't think it's as funny
as it could be. And I'm like, what, I couldn't
believe you would say that in my mind because I
know I just asked her to critique it. Then she'll go,
what if you move this word here and say it
like this? And I'm like, you don't even know what
it's like to do comedy. And then I'm like writing

(07:05):
it down on my phone and then I do it
on stage and it's so much funnier how she did it.
I'm so happy we went through that process having my
feelings hurt because I asked for it. Then she told
me and it's better, So there you go, so go
do it. Go tell them thank you. They're not so pretty.
Ring girl. That's the mail bag. Close it up. We
got your that was found the cloth. I do think

(07:29):
it's unfair. Well, you're about to say Eddie, what do
you mean, Well, because we dress like in pajamas our
sweats most of the time, regardless of whosam. But go
ahead and say your thing. Well, I just think that
whenever we have artists like Cody Johnson come in and
like good looking dudes, the girls all of a sudden
get dressed up, the dresses come out, the nice blouses
come out. Blouses. We never see those. Wait wait, wait

(07:51):
are they not call blouses? Okay, we understand your point.
By the way, Cody Johnson will be in a little
bit love Cody Johnson. You'll know him from this song
right here, you got He's gonna perform. But Eddie says,
when good looking dudes come, the ladies show out a
little bit, and I'm thinking, like, what do you think
you have a chance with these guys? Like, well, like

(08:12):
why get all dressed up? Why are you looking to
impress these dudes? Is my question. Let's morrigan. Yes, obviously
Edie's talking about you. He can talk about me all
he wants, because my face and my hair are done
every day, and that's one thing that matters because of camera.
That's why I said blausses and I like to make

(08:32):
sure that if anyone comes in studio that I am
more dressed up. It doesn't matter what artists is love it. Amen,
me too, Yeah, me too. Actually, go ahead, that's just
the case. So I want to make sure I'm always
a presentable person, and so yes, on the days that
I don't have to do that, I would like to
wear my more comfy clothes because it's also cold in here,
so I like to be comfortable. It sounds like the

(08:52):
story is that you guys do a lunchbox just stay
slobs all the time. Also, when people come over to
your house, do you not clean up a little more? Yeah,
if company's coming a little bit, a little bit when
you're answering the phones and you're not eve gon to
interact with them, No need to wear the dress interacts
with every artist. But also if people aren't going to
the kitchen, why I clean the kitchen? Why not let
the dishes? No, you clean the kitchen just in case. No,

(09:14):
not down with that. I appreciate when people dress up
and look a little more professional when guests come in.
It's a company coming over to the house basically, So
I don't and you guys look like slobs every day
and you know what, We're not trying to impress any
I'm not trying to hook up with anything. I'm not
trying to nobody's trying to hook up with an artist.
I'm trying to be best. So rude, Yeah, Abby, what
do you want to say about this? Because they're also

(09:35):
shining the light on you here. Yes, they're freaking up
because I have a dress on. But it's summer and
the like all their people are in here. Yes, they're
like fifteen people here, and I feel like I don't
dress up that much like Morgan does. And so hold on,
what were you saying with that? No, I was just saying,
so I feel like I need to when there are
artists in here, not any particular artists, but when there

(09:57):
are guests and visitors, that's when I do. And I
felt like wearing a dress today. Remember the time Lunchbox
had one of the executive show up and he was
in like his underwear. Yes, yes, And then she was
like why did was he just wearing his underwear? Yeah?
And then so he's like, oh, sorry, I didn't know
I need to get Yes. Yes, when people here, you
have to dress up. Okay, I'll just remember that. I'm
gonna make sure every artist they're dressed up then, every artist,

(10:18):
not just not the cops though, No, no, no no,
they say they do it for every artist, So I'm yes.
I would also like to say that you guys may
think we're more dressing up for the men, but honestly,
we dressed up more for the girls because we like
the respect of them. Of we dress uh both as
fashionably as they would, So we actually dress better when
the women come in because we want their compliments more

(10:39):
than we want the men. Yeah, they seem to think
that doesn't happen because that would bunk your theory. My theory,
Come on, your theory is what gets put it out there.
Your theory is that they get dressed up for these
artists because they're trying to like hook up. Oh my god,
man is so crazy? Are married? That maybe getting okay?

(11:00):
But like Cody Johnson is married forever exactly? They know that?
Did they know that before he came in? It's a
google away? Okay. I thank you guys are crazy. I
also thank you guys when you dressed like you are
today not professional. Yeah we're not. I'm not trying to
hook up with Cody. I'm number Cody Johnson coming in

(11:20):
a little bit. I would like to say thank you
guys for looking professional today. They don't have to you
every day because some days there are no We're just
in the studio doing it ourselves, you know, but there
are people coming in. You put your best foot forward.
I appreciate companies coming over. You clean the house. I
appreciate that. All right, well, you two you are sleavesball
The latest from Nashville and Tullywood Morgan number two thirty seven.

(11:45):
Skinny Tyler Hubbard will be releasing his first solo album
on January twenty seventh. In the meantime, he will drop
a six song EP called Dancing in the Country on
August nineteenth. Landy Wilson had to cancel some shows recently
due to a family emergency. She shared her father suffered
from a fungal infection and he had to have emergency

(12:06):
surgery done. He is now recovering. Anne Laney will likely
be back on the road this weekend. Jaco And revealed
on his social media that he has been sober for
three hundred and sixteen days. He made the decision after
an embarrassing night from drinking too much, noting that He's
better than that, and the people he loves the most
deserve better. I'm Morgan. That's your skinny. It's time for

(12:28):
the good news with Bobby. Last year, Mary Cormier got
a call about a dog with a broken leg on
the side of the road. The dog, Ranger, was hit
by a car roaming around, and so she went. She
picked up Ranger, and she found out that he'd been
homeless for seven years, which is crazy the dog survived
for that long. She took him in, she got him

(12:50):
the surgery that he needed. With the helpless of donations,
she had rescued several dogs and so she has a
like a way for people to help her help these dogs.
So she got it, put the dog up. She said, hey,
does anyone want this dog? This is what he's been through.
This woman named Judy said I will adopt Ranger. So
Rangers now live with Judy for about two weeks. She's

(13:10):
been a companion and a protector so far. However, Ranger
recently alerted Judy when her granddaughter was having a seizure.
He scratched on the granddaughter's door, whimpering very loudly, and
so Judy's like, what's going on? Scratch, scratch, and so
she went in and her granddaughter had a seizure, which
is crazy that a dog could recognize and scratched through

(13:32):
that could hear something was going on. And then Judy
was like, let me see. Sometimes my dogs won't shut up.
I'm just shut up. I don't go. I don't even
go see. Who knows how many lives I could have
saved if I would have just went and saw. But yeah,
you guys are good. But that's awesome. So shout out
to Mary Cormier for saving the dog and making sure
Ranger got the surgery, Judy for adopting Ranger, and then

(13:52):
Ranger for saving her granddaughter, which is a pretty remarkable story.
That is what it's all about. Was tell me something
good on the Bobby Bones Show. Now, Cody Johnson, Oh Cody,
after you had played our iHeart Country Festival, always searching
for you, I don't searching for anybody, and I was like,
I gotta go find Cody because I never met you before.

(14:15):
And I was like, where's Cody. I was tearing it
up back there, and they were like he had a
family thing, and I was like, all right, I respect
that and I'll see him some other time I got
out of there. Yeah, but man, you just do such
a great live show. I mean, yes, sang and I
already really liked your songs. I remember sharing your songs
here on this show a few years few years back.
But you were so good live that I left going okay, good.

(14:39):
You know I was right. But then like Scooba, Steve,
our producer who didn't really grow up on country music,
he's in love with you and he's got like the
biggest guy crush ever. So you're on too far. Yeah,
I know, bust on me here. Well he's already done
that to himself. We leave and he's just playing all
Cody Johnson all the time. But so first, just your
your live shows are so great. I imagine that that

(15:00):
is so important to you as a performer, and you know,
coming up the way you've come up, it's it's the
only ladies you had to stand on when you came
from where I came from, um, you know, growing up
playing in Texas and you. I came to Nashville and
I tried the whole thing and it was very much. Uh, well,
you got to take your hat off and we're not
singing about country cowboy stuff. I mean, at the time,

(15:23):
it was all very very platformed as far as for
world drive trucks and cut off shorts, and it was
very like it was a thing, and if you didn't
fit into that mold, you didn't you didn't get the spotlight,
which I was fine with. So when you go back
home with that and you're you just kind of appreciate
the skin you're in kind of thing. Your live shows
all you have and those fans that you create on

(15:43):
the independent level, they don't really care about, um, what
radio station you're played on or what let record label
you're with. And when you can build that, that's what
got us to the point where we were able to
merge with Warner Nashville and I was able to make
a partnership and get a deal that we're I still
got to maintain my independent spirit and now we're reaching

(16:04):
fans that only care if you're played on the radio
or you have a label deal. So there to merge
those two kinds of fans together, your live show has
to be on point every day. Every night. You have
to pretend it's the last show you're ever gonna play,
that this is the show that's gonna make or break
you with these fans. And so when you see me
on stage, it's not rehearsed, it's not a fake, it's

(16:25):
it's authentic. You know, often poke fun at artists who
will wear cowboy hats but not be a real cowboy.
You know, that's just like kind of a It's like
carrot top and a prop. And so however, I often say,
like a Randy Howser was in and he was a
real cowboy growing up. And John Party is a friend
of mine, he was a real cowboy. He can go

(16:46):
out now and wrote and he can do all that
with you. You're a real cowboy. So for someone to
be like, you know, we don't do the cowboy, but
you're like, I'm a real freaking cowboy. What do you
mean the cowboy stuff? Like this is a real life stuff.
I wasn't very nice for my manager. I wish I
wish half y'all could have been in the room. It
was we're I'm not even gonna mention the label, but
they said, uh, well we when we love your stuff,

(17:06):
we love you, But I mean, would you be willing
to take the hat off? And I was like, and
I literally said, oh, you thought I bought this to
come see you, and he kind of and my managers
are pretty large. Guy, he just kind of shrunk down
his chair and I shouldn't have said that, I still
said it. Do you you know? I have like a
couple of nagging injuries and it's stupid. It's from like

(17:28):
high school football or like a I mean, I maybe
I have to say this in front of you because
your real life cowboy. I did a dance competition once
and I hurt myself from when you were riding bull
Do you have any injuries that still linger where it's like, oh,
my back of my leg. It's funny you say that.
I actually just had neck surgery in December. It was
I had been in pain since twenty seventeen and it

(17:50):
just kept getting worse, kept getting worse, and I was
numbness and burning and my whole right arm was just
felt like it was falling off, and so we went
into an MRI and they put me an emergency surgery.
They pulled out my C six and my C seven,
so they did emergency surgery. You went in for an
MRI because of pain for a long time. I could
have been hurting. So you're like, well, I gotta get

(18:10):
this done. I guess I'll go now. You're just you know,
you've put it off. It sounds like yeah, and then
they go, we gotta go now, he said, he said,
we need to be in surgery within the next hour.
He said, because so this particular surgeon was retiring and
he's like, man, you gotta get this done, like you
gotta get this done. And I said, well, maybe I'll wait,
and he said, there's a chance you can lose the
functionality of your right arm completely. So there was bones,

(18:33):
spurs that were shaved off, of shaved off of the vertebrae,
completely ruptured disc, and they found thirteen bone fragments on
the nerve, which means at some point I fractured my neck.
And it was just I mean, he's like, when you
would know when you did this, and I'm like, no,
I do a lot of stupid stuff, so I really
don't know. I can't tell you one particular time. That's

(18:53):
crazy that they go, we gotta go now after you
had just kind of let it. I mean, I get
it too. You're hurt. You're like, can't go doctor anytime,
but they're like, no, we gotta go right now. And
then when they're digging down your spinal cord too. That's
that's real deal stuff. It was a five and a
half hour long surgery. You know, do you go are
you nervous going to listen? I had a colonoscopy and
I was nervous. I was like, I may die. But
you're going in and they're dating on like real parts

(19:14):
of your body, are you like? Oh man, I may
not wake up. I was extremely nervous, you know, but
whatever's gonna happen is gonna happen. And I was in
so much pain at that time. I didn't care. I'm like,
I'm not a pain pill guy at all. Like I
don't even take a tie at all. And I was like,
give me drugs, help me not to hurt right now.
And so I was. I was thankful. They're like, well,

(19:36):
we're gonna have to cut here and cut there. I
don't care, just getting rid of it. Just I'd had enough.
Do you think it's from falling, like being tossed off
of bulls or just the general wear and tear of
all of it. I mean, because you're you're constantly getting
tossed around and on my neck and on my head,
um more than a few times, bulls, horses and stuff
like that. But I mean, yeah, I've not been very
nice to my body. I don't want to brag, but

(19:57):
I've done quite the amount mutton busting. I don't, right, Cody,
I seven year old actually just want a mutton bust
And yeah, I was like seven year old. I was
like fifteen, fifteen, sixteen or so. Do you watch Rodeo
now or are you mostly like some of my friends
that played ball, They're like, you know, I've seen it.
I'm good. I don't need to watch it right now,

(20:17):
because it was it was pretty traumatic for me. No,
I so for a long time. I didn't a long time.
And if anybody's I don't know if you have or
you haven't, but my documentary Dear Rodeo kind of tells
that story. I was bitter for a long time because
I wasn't good enough to make it, and so I
didn't watch it, and I was pretty immature about the
whole thing. And uh, you know, I'm in a a different

(20:38):
place in my life now. I'm thirty five. I'm gonna
at the point when my music careers doing wonderful. I've
got a beautiful wife that's my best friend, and beautiful
kids and a cattle ranch back in Texas, and that's
what we do every day, is we rope and train
horses and work cows, and so it's like, it's funny.
I thought that bull riding was like that was I
was really mad that I didn't get to a cheer

(21:00):
that goal, when in all reality, like I'm so much
more involved in rodeo and so much more involved in
the cowboy way alife now than I ever would have
been trying to ride bulls. But yeah, we followed it.
Now We've got a lot of friends that are in
professional rodeo, and so it's fun to watch them compete
and succeed. And you know, I'm pretty handy with a rope,
but I don't have time those guys. They have to
chase that career like I chased this career. It is

(21:23):
every day, every night, day in, day out, grind, and
so it's there's a lot. Then they're not getting paid.
They're not like professional athletes that get paid whenever they
sit on the dal. Like you can hurt yourself in
baseball and sit on the bench and still get paid.
Non rodeo. If you're hurt, you're out, And so That's
why you see guys keep and girls keep going even
when they're hurt. It's pretty it's pretty intense. Man. Cody

(21:46):
Johnson's here. We're talking about the rodeo. I mean, would
you play deal rodeo for us? Now? Absolutely cool? Hey
introduced this to you. Your player here. This is my
fiddle player, Jody Bartola. He's my band leader. He's been
with me for twelve years. So twelve Jody, twelve years. Well,
what's what's Cody like? It's boss fantastic. I would have
been good answering, good answer. I'm sorry have been to

(22:07):
cut you off. I's been funny. What were I wouldn't
I wouldn't have been here for twelve years if he wasn't. Well,
let's hear a little dear rodeo from Cody Johnson. He rodeo,

(22:30):
I'll be lyin if I tried to two you. I
don't think about you after you roll the mouths and
the wild nights. Had we been through, lord knows we
had a few. I'd like to see it on to

(22:54):
the range away. No regrets on left, U says, just
turn the page. But you know better, baby twin almos
hat on ZeLing broken bombs, the dream of a buckleround

(23:14):
never put on. I'm jaded. Why I hate it? Somehow
the hines out way the loose and I do it
all again, even no, we both know I still have
to let you God do you on? Cody Johnson at

(24:05):
the studio awesome? We were watching your Cody play again
at our our country festival and you came out and
you played Human and you did that that song live
and you talked about how maybe it was going to
come out or did it just come out. I think
it's such a powerful song and I'd like to play
that now if you're cool with that on the radio.
Is that cool? Cody? Good with that? Oh? You want
to play Human on the right? I thought you meant

(24:25):
right now? Oh yeah, spin it, Bay, I'm gonna spin it. Yeah,
I'm gonna play right now. You call it that? You
be all right? So why let me ask you before
I played here? Why would you decide to cut this song?
What do it mean to you? It's real? Um? Following
up till you can't be in our first number one? UM.
It had a great message and I think I've lived
Human and I think it's something that we all have

(24:45):
in common. No matter where you stand on any issue,
we're all doing the same thing. We're all doing through
the same life trying to figure it out. And I
think that that's kind of my mark is I'm gonna
put out stuff that I can stand behind and say
I live that it's authentic. So on the Bobby Bones Show, Now, Cody,
all right, Cody's here, where this is gonna be. I'm

(25:08):
either gonna hit this note, I'm gonna drop it down
a key. What are you talking to me? I'll hit
it for you this point, nail. Hey, so you gotta
cheese take it? Take it while you gotta cheese. You
gotta dream chasing? What are you talking about? That sounds perfect? Yeah,

(25:34):
you nailed. I've never ever heard it better in my life.
Maybe should do your shows in the morning. Everything about that.
You gotta cheese take it? We practice that so you
don't want to go as high because it's early. Yeah,
I'm telling you down. But then it sounds weird. I

(25:54):
mean weird is not a way I would describe either
one of those. They were like awesome, but yeah, it's
up there, man, let's just can you play it? Drop down? Absolutely,
but don't get into it. Yeah, hold on, weld on,
unless you want to practice it again. No, we're good,
all right, Thank for me. I just that is one

(26:16):
of those things that I knew when I recorded it.
You'd have to sing it every night once you recorded it,
or do it right or it'll hurt you. Yeah, and
I'm not gonna you know what I mean? Yeah, don't.
That's why I don't blow it out. Don't blow it up,
all right. Cody Johnson's here, Uh, Cody watching you perform
live and I remember watching not just listening to your vocal,
but watching you and it looked to me like definitely

(26:39):
country music, but definitely a little gospel as well, because
I grew up in a Baptist church, and right or wrong,
I feel like I could see a little bit of
that in your performance. Was church when you were growing
up part of your like musical in the early years. Absolutely,
It's where I learned the basis of most everything. I

(26:59):
don't know. Um, you know, I learned drums because we
needed a drummer, and so I learned how to play.
The people in you know, like the church up and
so they were like, we don't have a drummer, and
so my dad knew drums, and dad just taught me rhythm.
And my dad played the piano, and so he was
like Floyd Kramer good and uh. I wanted to learn guitar,

(27:21):
and he taught me gc Indeed, it's the only things
he knew on guitar really, And so I would come
home from school and I would tape, like while I
was at school, I would take my cassette tapes and
I would record a channel. I would record, like the
country channel or the R and B channel or the
rock channel or whatever. And when I get home, I
would play the song and i'd pause it and I'd
try to play it and i'd play it back and

(27:43):
I'd do it until my fingers bled. But I didn't
get to play guitar. And in the church it was
just drums, and they didn't let me playing drums very much.
I played like I wanted to play like Zeppelin in church,
like you've never heard all Flyaway Old Glory like I
played it, And so that didn't last very long. So
you're playing drums, are you singing it all in church? Oh? Yeah?
That was so that was My parents grew up singing

(28:03):
like like quartet gospel types like Gaither vocal band type
stuff the Kingsman, and so I had to learn harmony first.
They wouldn't let me sing lead. It was you can
learn these harmony parts since but it was it kind
of gave me what I call an ear education, because
I don't know how to read music. I don't know
how to read a guitar tab like I can't even
do the number system in the studio with the studio guys.

(28:25):
But it's all from what I hear. And that's really
a blessing and a curse because I can hear things
that most people can't. But then it's hard. I can't
explain it. So, if your dad was such a good musician,
did he have aspirations of making it big back in
the day. No, I'm like, I grew up in a
really small town and a small town people, and I

(28:47):
think I might have been like the only guy that
just said I'm going somewhere and I didn't know how,
I didn't know what. But yeah, I'm kind of an anomaly.
Log me through. If you're at a piano with your
mom or your dad and they're teaching you how to
sing harmonies, are they playing and you're singing the harmony?
Of the notes on the piano or are you their voice?

(29:07):
Like what are you chasing? It was the vote their voices.
So this is the lead part, this is the low,
this is the high, you know, this is the what
is it the third up or the fifth? I can't
even tell you, but when you hear those different things,
and then we would learn to switch. When mom sang lead,
you know, Dad would be down here and I would
be up here, and when Dad sing lead, I would
be up here. Mom would be down here. And eventually

(29:29):
I got to sing lead. And then I was like,
I will start playing my guitar. And I went to
school and I played my guitar and girls liked it,
and I was like, Okay, there's something to this. And
then I graduated and started playing bars and I got
paid one time, and I was like, okay, there's something
to this. And that's kind of where it started snowballing.
So you're playing music, but you're also rodeoing two careers

(29:53):
where there's not a lot of long term promise. Well,
and you I've always said this like if I would
have grown up in West Virginia, I'd have probably been
a coal miner, because when you grow up in a
little small town, you'd grow up and you do what
dad did, and so that's what I did. My dad
worked for thirty three years at the prison system in Texas.
So whenever I turned eighteen, that's what I did, and

(30:14):
I went to work for the prison system. So that
was your stability, that was your paycheck work. That's about
as far as I looked. You know, it's a steady paycheck,
it's got insurance, and that was kind of my ceiling.
That's where I kept myself. And I just never was happy,
you know. And it took certain people in my life saying,
you're gonna you're gonna be old one day and you're
gonna regret not having taken this chance to go play music,

(30:36):
you know, and like my warden that I was working
for it. The prison system said, there's always going to
be people in prison, and there will always be room
for a job. Here, go try because if you don't
go try and you don't take this chance, then you're
going to regret it. And that's what we did. We
went full force. My wife worked two jobs and I
went out on the road, and we didn't make money

(30:56):
for like the first five years. I was paying you know,
like Joe here, I was giving him the hundred dollars
and whoever else one hundred dollars and one hundred dollars
went to the van, and so I was literally bringing
in absolutely no money. It was we were just riding
on her shoulders, and so I wish we had TikTok
back then. You know, it's interesting because I think sometimes

(31:18):
it gets overlooked by certain people, but you focused on
it here and highlighted it. Your wife is such a
critical part to your success and you being right here
right now. Absolutely, She's probably the only reason I've got
my head on straight, you know, and people like me,
you gotta think about it. Any kind of man that
would work at voluntarily work at a prison, ride bulls
and go out on the road with absolutely no guarantees

(31:39):
of money. I mean, I'm a little bit of it.
I mean I am what I am. Are you an
adrenaling guy, I'm absolutely an adrenaling guy. You like to
go fast and get be up, swinging highs, all that stuff. Yeah,
you know, That's the thing is she kind of makes
me realize, hey, stupid, stay down here on earth with
the rest of us. And it's a great reminder but
that's what you know. She did so much for me.
It's like I told her, you know, one of these

(32:01):
days you're not gonna work, you're not gonna want for anything,
and I'm gonna make it. And that's kind of the
drive behind what I've done. Cody Johnson is here. If
you don't mind, I know you got you still have
your instruments on? Would you play till you can't fry?
Absolutely all right? Here we go live on the show
this morning. It's Cody Johnson. You can tell you, old man,

(32:35):
you do some large mouth fishing. Another time just got
too much on you played to Pat and Castle line.
You can always pruting check in his hand until your kings.

(32:58):
You can keep prutting off forever with that girl whose
hearts you, swearing that you last Sunday further down, always
proto diming on her him to your kings. If you

(33:24):
got a chance, take it, take it. One ain't got
a chance. If you gotta dream, chase it, choose a
dream won't chase you back. If you're gonna love somebody,
hold on his own and as strong and as clothes
as you can until you can't chip can't a chance,

(33:48):
take it, Take it one gut a chance. If you
gotta dream and chase it, choose a dream, won't chase
you back if you're gonna love anybody told him his
song and as strong and as closer as you can't
until you can't, until you can't ship. Come on, Cody Johnson.

(34:28):
Here the most pure rush yell I've ever heard, right
on y I mean perfect, It's a controlled screen. It
shook me inside my guts. Okay, I got a couple
of things I want to say here. First of all,
you guys check out Human the double album, and we
played the song earlier, and I was looking at stuff
to promote and I still will. But everything sold out, basically, Cody,
It's a good problem to have. I mean, I'm like,

(34:48):
all right, what can I tell people? So this is
what I say, Cody Johnson and friends. So it's go
to Cody Johnson music dot com because it's you know,
different nights Easton Corbyn, Drew Parker, Randy Hows or I
could go through, but there are some shows where you
can get a couple of tickets. But holy maybe everything's
selling out. That's a great problem. We'll be in bigger
venues next year, Okay, I'd like to hear that. I

(35:09):
will ask you about this because I saw you talking
about you were just kind of teasing the three albums,
three projects you're working on right It just yeah, So
we just got through recording a live album, which is
something that we've always wanted to do. You know, you
mentioned at the very beginning of the show how important
the live show is. We've never been able to capture
the energy. And right now we're in a spot where

(35:29):
we're playing big arenas and big amphitheaters and we're getting
ready to make that next move into much larger venues
and that's a whole different animal. But before we made that,
while I say, before we graduate to that next step,
we really wanted to capture what we are as a band.
You know, Jody's not only that he's been with me
for twelve years. Bass players been with us, eleven drummer

(35:51):
has been with us for ten, you know what I mean.
We've we're tight. We're a very tight knit group. We
all wear the brand proudly, one of our tattoos together,
you know, for the rock and cjab, and we wanted
to capture that before we start adding anything to the show,
Before we add another player before we So we recorded
five shows and we wound up with what we feel
like as the best representation of what we do live.

(36:12):
No tracks, bare bones, no gimmicks. It's just a band
on stage. And I'm one of those people like I
complain on my plates full, but then as soon as
something gets off my plate, I filled the plate back
up again, like I'm a glutton for punishment or I
like pain or something. So we're I'm in the process
of I'm fixing to go record a new studio album
I'd like to have out next year. And uh yeah,

(36:35):
so we've got a lot. We've got quite a bit
going on right now. It sounds like you happened something
else too, you're not telling us, and that's okay. I
respect that. I respect that. Cody Johnson, dude, just just great.
I'm just honored that you would play. I mean, you're
a big star. I don't have to come play on
this show, but I'm I'm very appreciative that you guys
would come in and play this, both of you guys,
So thank you very much. And we'll be standing outside
the fence of your concerts. Go on, let us in.

(36:57):
I think we can, all right, there is Cody Johnson.
Everybody goes a big truck driver advocate, you know, having
to get a cdo myself. It's tough. And then people
don't care and they're they're swerving around and you're driving
this humongous truck and they're putting their own lives at
risk and then yours and your family, and it's a
hard job. And so big truck driver guy and so

(37:20):
I root for them. I try to share the safety
issues they deal with. And sometimes we'll get a good
call from a trucker as well. This is trucker Joe. Hey, Bobby,
I have a PSA for all your listeners, and since
you took your test, you can verify it. It takes
a football field for a truck to stock, so cutting

(37:41):
bright out in front of them is not a good idea.
And you're supposed to be three card links ahead of
them before you move over into the lane. If a
cop catch you're doing it, sooner you can get a ticket.
Is a truck here too, it's automatically your fault. And
trucks you have cameras in them too. Thank you, you're welcome.

(38:01):
Trucker Joe. Appreciate that call. And if you hit a
teen wheeler, regardless of whose fault, your fault, my fault. Default,
you lose because I think it's big when they're huge. Yeah,
you just lose. It's like walking across at a pedestrian walk.
If the light says go or not, you still got
to look both ways because if a car hits you, you you,
regardless of right or wrong, you lose. Yeah, so you

(38:23):
gotta watch out. I appreciate that call, Trucker, Joe. You're
Amy's pile of stories. A big decision for parents is
what age to get their kids a cell phone. We
talk about it on the show often, and data just
came out showing that most parents are doing it at
age ten. Thoughts on that, Amy, I mean, my son

(38:46):
is going to be twelve soon, and I know I'm
not getting him the phone. You've said, though, your son,
since he came from an orphanage in another country, maybe
is a little behind. He is, yes, so so. And
then my daughter same things, a little behind. She got
a phone at fourteen. Oh, your daughter rocking man, she's
so smart. Yeah. Do you think she's catching up? She's

(39:06):
she's catching up. She's very Uh. I feel like she's
street smart. It's some of the basic education stuff that
she lacked growing up in the orphanage and not having
some of the fundamentals that set her back, and then
English being her second language and only speaking it for
the last four years. Yeah, I forget that sometimes. But okay,
ten though too early in your mind, Eddie. It's not

(39:27):
a hard decision. I think once they start driving, you
can get him a cell phone. Six, but you fall
it used to be eighteen. There was eighteen. I came
down and my fourteen year old has one. But it's
kind of all my kids' cell phones. He doesn't take
it to school, he doesn't take it places. But if
we take it, no, if we leave him at home,
you know, that's not called a cell phone, that's called landline. Wait, so,
like what if he's out and about and he needs

(39:48):
to get a hold of you, Well, yeah, I get
a friend, special special occasions like that. Yes, okay, Well
ten is what the average American. Yeah, And I would say,
if you're doing ten, definitely take advantage of the parental controls.
And then those parents are also saying there's boundaries like
the kids can't have the cell phone up in their
room and no cell phones at the table, which I
did see an article too, saying that more and more

(40:08):
families are trying to get intentional about meals around the
table because that's the best way to connect to each other.
Yeah that's good. I like that. My wife enforces that
with me. Yeah that's how. Yeah. Well, and I don't.
I don't. I now, I don't even think about the
phone really at dinner. I put it away immediately. But
you know, when we decide to have kids, I'll probably
put a cell phone in the crib because if they
start using it early, it won't be a big thing.

(40:30):
They'll just know and they'll know all the rules. Right,
all right, What else, Bobby, When you went off to college,
did you know how to clean up after yourself? Like, yeah,
I raised myself, tidy up, dude, I could cook, I
could uh yeah, save a wounded human. I could do
all of it. Yeah. Well, in a survey, the majority
of college kids all said yeah, like when my room
is clean, I feel my best. But more than half

(40:51):
of them said that they went off to college completely
unprepared and didn't know how to clean up after themselves,
which is crazy to me. Not to clean up after
your self ridiculous like you know, you just act like
you don't know. So when you don't do it, like
I didn't know, you know how to clean up after yourself.
Everyone does. Okay, Well, I'm just sharing with you the survey,
and I too was shocked by it, and just a
heads up to parents, because we've got it. Maybe a

(41:12):
week or two before kids have head off to college,
and maybe you just them teach them the laundry, to
teach them how to do. Okay, laundry, that's a thing. Okay,
I don't really consider that clean up after yourself. But okay,
now I didn't know how to really do laundry except
for put it all in there and do it on cold.
That's a safe way, like that hight say in the dark,
say in the towel. That was a safe way. Yeah.

(41:33):
So when I got to college, I go to laundry Matt,
and I put it all on cold, put quarters in
the end. Now I still I really don't know how
to do it now else. Tyler Howard said that he
only had twelve dollars in his bank account in twenty
eleven before Cruise came out. I remember being over in
Barry Hill recording our first album and we were literally

(41:54):
working on cruise hood and own at the time that
that someone was going to do what it did. And
I was coming back from lunch and I was sitting
in the parking lot literally checking my bank account and
I had twelve dollars left him in my bank account,
which was you know, and at the time, you know,
I didn't I didn't have a resource to go to
other than what where the next car I'm gonna watch,
you know. And so for me, I knew the next day,
I can't go to the studio because I gotta go

(42:14):
work because I'm down to pretty much one mill left.
Is that for my podcast? Yeah? I pulled that okay,
because I got to tell the same stories everybody. I
was really confused and I was getting upset. I was like, oh, no,
that's the story he told me. It came out the
other day Friday. Yeah. I thought that part was interesting,
and you can search for it on iHeartRadio or whever
you listen to podcasts. I think the most interesting part

(42:35):
is when I asked him, did you guys break up
because your political beliefs? Yeah? Oh yeah, there's a good question.
And I'd like to get an award for that. One.
All right, Amy, that's my pile. That was Amy's pile
of stories. It's time for the good news. I love

(42:57):
when little kids inspire us. This time it's a seven
year old named Tuca Sorry lives in Pennsylvania, and he
started his own business, tiede by Tuca. He makes and
designs and then sells tight eye shirts, and he has
donated three hundred and seventy five dollars to Your Safe Haven,
which is a local shelter. Then he created some more

(43:18):
shirts and was able to give four hundred and twenty
five dollars to the Special Olympics of Pennsylvania. And he
continues to just make shirts and cut checks. Yeah, it's good.
It's a lot of money to a seven year old. Yeah,
a lot of money for anybody. Actually had a seven
year old who doesn't have a job, also had a
tied eye face for a little bit. Tidy shirts are
awesome for a little bit, were wearing them no where.
Everybody kind of has a tied eye phase for a

(43:39):
little bit where they're all like, tidi is cool. I
think the seventies were just a general tied I face
for everybody, but had a couple of little phases where
I thought tied eye was where it was? Did you Amy?
Oh yeah, I'm still I still wear it, lunchbox. I
had a tidye short for kickball. That's the only reason
I was given to you. So he didn't have a
phase yet. Don't worry. I would like to. I think
they look cool, but I don't know. I cannot pull
it off. Yeah, you can pull off anything that you

(44:02):
want to pull off. That's right. If you like it
and you want to pull it off, go ahead and
pull it off. Also, I feel like if you wear tide,
people don't expect anything from You're like, oh, that dude's
just chill. He has no responsibility, Like he's like they
think you're a hippie. Yes, stoner yep, because of a
tidy shirt. Yes. So I think I need to get
some of those. You won't expect much of me. Probably
a haircut first, Okay, it probably because yeah, yeah, that'll

(44:26):
be what it is. Have you someone trimmed your bank?
Someone trimmed your banks? No? No, all right, you can
get would you like us too? No? Maybe we bring
a style is in they give me a STYLI haircut STYLI. Yeah,
we'll see if that's on the menu of things they do.
All right, that's what it's all about. That was tell
me something good. Had an interview with Tyler Hubbard, who

(44:46):
is the lead singer of Florida Georgia Line. Except they're
not a thing anymore, Like they're playing some shows, but
they're broken up. Ain't doing it anymore. He talks about that,
and I pressed him and I was like, hey, what's up.
Why did you guys break up? Was it political? And
he answers all those questions, So go start for the
Bobby Cast, it's my latest episode. But also asked him
about the story of Garth Brooks showing up and just

(45:06):
giving him like a motorcycle and a jeep. Oh wow,
And so he talks about that. Here you go our
manager at the time, Walton, and said, Hey, Garth Brooks
just randomly showed up and wants to see you guys.
He's actually out in the street, got like a trailer
behind his truck. So we went out there and saw him,
and hey, Garth, how are you a holy cow good?
And he was like, well, you know, thank you for
being on this project with me. I actually got you
at Jeep BK and Tyler, I'll hear you like motorcycles,

(45:27):
so I got you a little something. It was awesome
Indian motorcycle. And then he just closes up the trailer.
He was by himself, drove his truck, parked it right
in the middle of music row, unloaded the toys, and
then closed his trailer up and drove off and hit
a sign on the way off. The best part of
the whole thing. Awesome story. That's great, so many great stories.
Go check it out. It's the latest Bobby Cast with

(45:49):
Tyler Hubbard. He's a solo artist now, but the lead
singer a Florida Georgia line. All right, time now for
the Morning Corny, Morning Morning. I just joined a dating
site for arsonists. This sounds like this would be a
real thing anyway. Yeah, oh yeah, well yeah, I vincent

(46:10):
a lot of matches. That was the Morning Corny. You
can feel the intensity right now. I'm freaking out. I
can feel the intensity. Lunch Box is freaking out. Somebody's
about to win forty thousand dollars. Do you understand that?

(46:32):
It's so unbelievable. Now we have everybody that's on now,
we're we're looking at them. We're all on zoom together.
So everybody get off mute for a second. We're gonna
do a big round of applaus from all the players
because you're super excited. Ready, everybody, welcome to the show.
Come on. There. They good. You can almost hear them.
But they all overmodulated because they all screamed. But I

(46:53):
would have done the same thing. Okay, so we have
all the four players. We have Tessa from Texas, Katie
from Tennessee, Grace from California, at Patina from Arizona. Now,
the first three lost and they didn't they didn't win
the five thousand, but Patina was on and she won
the five thousand dollars, which is a great But she
returns and whomever wins the game today wins it all

(47:16):
forty thousands and dollars forty thousand. Hey, Tessa, what would
you do with forty thousand dollars? I'm paying tuition for
college and I'm taking a vacation. I like that. I
like that. She like lunchbox all by an island for
an island. Okay, so we're giving away the money because
tonight it's finally Monday Night. Snake in the Grass premier

(47:38):
is on USA Network. I hope you watch at eleven
tenth Central. And on this show, if you catch the
snake one hundred thousand bucks, it's awesome. So can you
spot the liar? That's what the show was all about.
Snake in the Grass Tonight on USA Network, August first,
at eleven ten pm Central. All right, let's play the game.
So here's how it's gonna work. Since we have four
people on, I will go to them individually. These are

(47:59):
all facts about me. They say truth or lie. If
they get it right, they move on to the next round. Oh,
if they miss it, they are eliminated. Now they only
have fifteen seconds. Oh my gosh, and we're on a
hard fifteen second timer. And I'll give you five seconds out.
But I will need an answer in fifteen seconds or
I will have to bone you. Oh that's a different game.

(48:20):
That's a different game. It's a different game. So we
will start this for how much money? Forty dollars one
of us. It's the most money we've ever given away
in a phone call, ever, one phone call. We've done
contests and you go to the Grammys and but this
is the most money we've been given away. And seeing
someone's face in a phone call, all right, Tessa, are

(48:41):
you nervous right now? How how's your body feeling? Oh,
I'm very nervous. You didn't win the first time, you
didn't win five thousand bucks. Have you been able to
like show your face in public since then? How's that
been going? No, I've had to stay home and hide. Yeah,
the first day was rough because that question has lived
in my head for a solid twenty four hours. Definitely
felt that. Yeah, all right, Tessa. When I finished the question,

(49:05):
the second time, the timer starts. Okay, so I'll give
you a fact about me. It's more of a fact
a statement. The second time, after it finishes, the time
er will start the category's childhood, Bobby's childhood. I once
spent eight days in the hospital after I rupture my spleen.
I had to undergo emergency surgery after falling on a

(49:27):
boat trailer, and I almost died. So it's I once
spent eight days in the hospital after I ruptured my spleen.
I had to undergo emergency surgery after falling on a
boat trailer, and I almost died. All right, Tessa, fifteen
second starts. Now is that true or is that a lie?
That's true? That is true? And she moves on. She

(49:48):
commit a quick quick, she commit a quick Yeah, yeah,
she committed quick, crying. I don't understand, guys, this is
it's a lot of money. I mean, have you ever
had a chance to win forty thousand dollars? This? I mean?
Katie in Nashville, how are you this morning? I'm so good, Bobby.
It is good to see your face. You're in your
car right now, so I like it. There's nobody distracting you.

(50:10):
Hopefully you're not moving. You're just in the parking lot. Nope,
parked on the side of the street. Okay, a little
less safe, but you know what, we'll do it. We'll
do it all right. Here's Katie. Katie, are you ready
to play? I'm so ready. This is a truth or
a lie. I was named after Bobby Sherman, who was

(50:33):
a singer actor who became a teen idol in the
late sixties and early seventies. My mom loved him, so
she named me after him. Now the category's childhood now
written to you again. I was named after Bobby Sherman,
who was a singer slash actor who became a teen
idol in the late sixties and early seventies. My mom
loved him so much, so I was named after him.
Is that a truth or a lie? Katie? I'm gonna

(50:58):
go with lie. She's in quick. Eddie's looking at me
like he doesn't know. I don't know. Oh I loved
Eddie and we both go we did palms in the sky. Like,
what would you say, Eddie? I would say that it's
false a lie. Yeah, I would say lie because I've
never heard of Bobby Sherman. I'm leaning live, but I'm like,

(51:19):
I don't know. Katie says lie, and it is a lie.
Katie moves on to the next round. That was a
hard one. Let's go to Grace and fres No, California. Grace,
how is your morning going so far? Did you wake
up and you're just like, oh my goodness, today's a
day I'm planning forty thousand dollars. Oh yeah, good morning.

(51:42):
Immediately went to the gym, get out some of that
nervous energy. So let's go. I would have trouble sleeping
last night, I'll be honest with you. Did you have
trouble sleeping at all? Grace? I mean I usually do,
so nothing new there. I felt that then all right, Grace,
So you know how it works. I'll do it twice.
Here we go. I was runner up in the nineteen

(52:02):
ninety two Arkansas State Spelling B. I lost after incorrectly
spelling the word entrepreneurs. I got some school supplies and
a J. C. Penny gift card for coming in second.
So I'll read it again here. I was a runner
up in the nineteen ninety two Arkansas State Spelling B.

(52:24):
I lost after incorrectly spelling the word entrepreneurs to finish
your second school supplies and a J. C. Penny gift card.
So coming over to you. Yeah, fifteen seconds starting now, Grace.
Is that true or is that a lie? I think
it's true. Nineteen ninety two was the year, and in

(52:46):
that year I did not compete in the Spelling B.
I never really I did the geography be quiz bowl.
Oh no, you hit her with you hit her with
the he's really smart. We know he was on the
Oh no, yeah, I'm so saying, oh no, over, I
gotta I gotta like part ways. I don't want to

(53:06):
happen part ways to somebody. Okay, So Grace, by the way,
we are going to give you money anyway you're gonna win.
Twelve hundred and fifty dollars just for Bulley. So that's money.
So it's more money than you started with, and it's
a lot of money, but I compared to forty. Yeah,
but Grace, thank you for playing. That was a tough

(53:29):
one and I'm super happy to have met you. And
I hope you spend your twelve fifty and do something
nice with it. Okay, no, thank you. It's gonna blast
to play, and good luck to everyone in the next
few rounds. All right, great, there's she has twelve hundred
and fifty dollars to Grace. I love it. Okay, Now
only three remain, all right, the category is still this childhood. Hey, Patina,

(53:50):
you won five thousand bucks. You're already five thousand dollars richer.
It's crazy. So you come into this maybe a little looser, right,
I mean you already won five Are you still pretty nervous?
I'm pretty nervous, but I'm ready. Here we go, Patina.
As a kid, I would call into radio stations at night.
I want to contest where I got to be the

(54:12):
guest DJ for a night. I used a name, I'd
create it for myself. Bobby the Barbarian is that true
or is that a lie? As a kid, Sorry, I'm
gonna read it again for you. Sorry, I was being dramatic,
a little too dramatic, had too big of a pause. Yeah.
As a kid, I would call into radio stations at night,
I want to contest. When I was twelve, I got
to be the guest DJ for the night. I used

(54:33):
the name I created for myself, Bobby the Barbarian. All right, Patina,
I think that's a lie. Bobby, Bobby the Barbarian. What
a stupid name, right. The Barbarian was a wrestler that
I had watched the world in. The Barbarian were a
tag team, and so I thought that'd be an awesome name.
And it also was some illiteration, Bobby the Barbarian. That

(54:54):
is true, Patina, O. You were more like, hey, it's
Bobby the Barbarian. Yeah, I was twelve. I was twelve,
and I won the contest and I went in and
then there was a basketball game they aired on the
station instead of me going on. So then I got bumped,

(55:15):
and so then I went up. Christmas even did it,
and so it's awesome. It's awesome. But that's a true story,
that is it? And now there are two. Oh my goodness.
By the way, Patina, you didn't win five thousand dollars.
And then for planning today you get another twelve fifty.
So total prize for Patina sixty two fifty. There we go. Okay,

(55:36):
here's what we're gonna do. We're gonna take a break
when we come back in a minute. Oh no, no
size here, ladies, no size. Tessa and Katie are competing
for forty thousands. All right, two truths in a lie.
Don't forget Tonight on USA at eleven tenth Central, it's
snake in the grass up for grabs forty thousand dollars.

(56:02):
We have two people on right now, Tessa in Orange,
Texas and Katie, who lives in Nashville, Tennessee. Tessa, you're
one elimination away from winning four forty thousand dollars, so
you're getting closer to it. Do you feel the pressure? Oh,
palms are sweaty. Yes, you know. I like about Tessa.
She's got my book behind her. Yeah, yeah, I like

(56:23):
that like that about Okay, So Tessa, you're up first.
What's happening in Orange Texas these days? Well, it's hot, hot, hot,
and I work at a local elementary school. So we
are ready to kick off our school. You're are you
excited about school starting back? I am. This is my
twentieth year in education, and so I'm super excited. Well,
deserves this? What the Katie doesn't deserve it? Katie, be

(56:48):
ready with why you deserve it too. Okay, here we go, Tessa. Okay,
is it true or is it a lie? I'll read
it twice. At the end of the second reading, I
will start the clock. The category is movies and television.
All right, Tessa, here you go. I was supposed to
have a part in the movie Country Strong. I filmed

(57:11):
an entire scene with Tim mcgrawl that ended up being
cut from the movie. I was so embarrassed I did
not go to the premiere and I never talked about it.
So I was supposed to have a part of the
movie Country Strong. I filmed an entire scene with Tim
mcgrawl that ended up being cut from the movie. I
was so embarrassed that I did not go to the
premiere and I never talked about it. Is that true

(57:33):
or is that a lie? I'm gonna go with a lie.
You're pretty open about even when you have embarrassing moments.
So I'm gonna go with that's not true. Tessa's locked in.
She says it's a lie. Now, if she's right, she
stays on track to win forty thousand dollars. Country Strong

(57:57):
was a movie that I was never even supposed to
be in. It was a lie. That's corrected it. You
would totally talk about that, Yeah, for a month, every
day I wouldn't stop. I'll still we talking about it. Okay, Katie.
Now you heard Amy said that Tessa deserved to win. Katie,
why do you deserve to win the forty thousand dollars? Well,

(58:18):
I think Tessa's definitely deserving. I am actually a fellow educator.
Um I was a special education teacher, but i just
transferred out of that role and I'm now a behavior specialist,
mostly with kids with autism. So starting this new job,
some money would definitely help. Deserving. Now Anyway, I just

(58:40):
I hadn't heard from her yet, and now I want
them to vote win Katie. You're are you ready? Katie?
I'm ready if Bobby, I'm ready here forty thousand dollars.
If you miss it, Tessa wins the money if you
get it right, we go onto the next round. Everybody good?
Oh yeah, what all right, Katie? Here you go. The

(59:02):
timer starts after the second reading. My one request during
my time at American Idol all four seasons was that
everything in my dressing room had to come in threes,
as in, three protein bars, three bottles of water, three bananas.
I just wanted to see if they paid attention to detail,
since I wasn't one of the main four. So my

(59:22):
one request during my time at American Idol was that
everything in my dressing room or in threes, three protein bars,
three bottles of water, three bananas, just to see if
they paid attention to detail. All right, Katie, time starts. Now,
I'm gonna say that's a lie. Okay, she's committed to lie. Well,

(59:48):
if I did say I want all this this, it'ld
be an even number and be twos. But I didn't
do that at all, So that is a lie that
Hey you have things? Yeah, okay, all right, movies to TV.

(01:00:10):
Here we go, same category, Tessa. Okay, I've never seen
The Lion King. I only know about the plot of
the movie from pop culture references. I've never seen The
Lion King. I only know about the plot of the
movie from pop culture references Tessa true or true or lie.

(01:00:32):
I'm gonna go true, she's locked in it. True, I've
never seen the Lion King. Oh, okay, okay, okay, I
love this. You don't even she takes no time to
think about it, Katie. A Little Big Town. The group

(01:00:54):
The Man Right once thanked me during an acceptance speech
on Live TV. They won Vocal Group of the Year,
and they thanked me as they were being given the
rap music. So back in twenty thirteen, Little Big Town
they once thanked me in an acceptance speech on national TV.
They won Vocal Group of the Year, and they thanked

(01:01:15):
me as they were being given the wrap up music.
All right, Katie, if you get it right, you're still
in the mix. Time starts now. I know you played
a big role in Girl Crushed for them, so I'm
gonna go true. Well, so Girl Crush was many years
after that, Oh, Girl Crush. Girl Crushes probably like twenty sixteen.

(01:01:36):
This was twenty thirteen, but they did do it. It's true.
You're informing. In Katie's eyes, she thought it was over
all right. We'll changing categories. The category is Celebrity forty
thousand dollars up for grabs, Tessa. John's Damos tweeted me

(01:02:01):
congratulations after I got married. He saw the video of
Dan and Shay covering Forever at our wedding and said
he gave him goose bumps. John Stamos, who played Uncle Jesse,
tweeted me congratulations after I got married. He saw the
video of Dan and Shay covering Forever at my wedding
and he said he gave him goose bumps. True or false,

(01:02:23):
tessab That's true, that's true, that's correct. Let's go, Katie.
Category celebrities. I have a belt buckle signed by Garth Brooks.
He here me talking about how I was in country
music but did not own a belt buckle or a
cowboy hat. So he dropped off a belt buckle by
the studio, signed the back of and wrote me a

(01:02:44):
nice note. So is it true or is it a lie?
Have a belt buckle signed by Garth Brooks. He here
me talking about how I was in country music, but
I did not own a belt buckle or a cowboy hat,
so he dropped one by the studio, signed and wrote
me a note. If forty thousand dollars right here, Katie,
can you stay in the mid? Is that true? Or
is that a lie? I'm gonna say it's a lie.
It's a lie. Correct, that's correct. Correct, Okay, that's correct, Okay, okay.

(01:03:09):
So what's gonna happen is, guys, I'm gonna read you
one statement. When you know it, you buzz in with
your name. If it's a true statement or a lie. Now,
I'm gonna read it slow so you can jump in
at any time. And you need a buzz in with
your name, and I would encourage you not to scream
it so it doesn't overmodulate. I would just be like Eddie, Eddie,

(01:03:29):
I do like that. Let's practice, let's practice. Tessa, do
your name, Tessa good? I like it. Katie, do your
name Katie. Okay, there are there buzzers be listening in
case it's close. Oh my god, here we go, buzz
in with your name. I hosted a radio show in
Nashville on an alternative rock station. I did not use

(01:03:55):
the name Bobby Bones. Tessa, I'm gonna go false. She
says it's a lie. Now let me finish the statement here.
The show was called Slappy the Wonder Boy in Zeus.
I never publicly revealed that it was me. Now, Tessa,
you've heard the whole question. Would you have still said
that it was a lie? Yeah, I'm still going with line. Okay, Now, Katie,

(01:04:19):
what would you have said had you buzzed in that one?
I really don't know Bobby, So for fun, let's say
I would have said true. Okay, like what she do it? Okay?
So again it was I hosted a radio show in
Nashville on an alternative station. I did not use the
name Bobby Bones, though the show is called Slappy the
Wonder Boy in Zeus. I never publicly revealed it was me. Now,

(01:04:41):
if it's false, Tessa, who buzzed in wins forty thousand dollars.
If it's true, Katie, who sat back? She wins forty
thousand dollars. You know, I've hosted a lot of different shows.
Did a show for years on Fox Sports Radio, did

(01:05:06):
shows on pop stations, hip hop stations, obviously now doing this.
At one time, I did host a show on an
alternative station, and I did use the name Slappy the
Wonder Boy and Zeus. So Tessa, you were incorrect. It

(01:05:30):
is true, Katie. You went whoa wow, Katie, give me
your thoughts. She's crying right, Okay, to give me your thoughts.
I have no words. I'm such a huge fan of
the show. I have no words. Guys. I love you
guys so much, and you're showing so much to me

(01:05:52):
and I just wow, thank you, Thank you so much. Bobby.
Forty thousand dollars, she's rich. You should buy an island.
You can buy an island and the Lambeau. Oh, Tessa,
you still win twelve hundred and fifty dollars for playing
the game. So Tessa, you did great. Katie, you're the
big kite wins forty thousand dollars. That was amazing. It's crazy.

(01:06:15):
What do you want to say to our lunch barks,
Go buy lottery tickets. No, that's one I know. But
reinvest that time. When you buy a business, you gotta
reinvest your problem to go out forgive it out. We're
gonna play again tomorrow. We'll start a whole new round
for five thousand bucks tomorrow. Yes, everybody, thank you for

(01:06:37):
being here. Tonight. My show Snake in the Grass on
USA Network at eleven ten Central. And this is not
a promise, but it's I think I can do it.
If the show is successful this season, if next season
or season three, depending on how we're casting these, I
think I can get the morning show on to play
the game. There's a lot of demand for that. Let's

(01:06:59):
go people. There's been no demand, but there could be.
So if you watch the show and it does well,
I can go to the execs and go, this is
a team I want to come play. No, I hate
this is what you have to say to hype these
guys up. Let's go still. I mean matter, hey, my mottom,
my whole life. If I take three TVs in the

(01:07:20):
house and I have them all on, as wondered that,
what about computer TV? Um? You know, I want to
hesitate from talking about specifics when it comes to this
because it could cross some lines for me. Okay, what
about things? You talk about it well? But if you
don't know the answer, yeah, I'm like, what if I
go to a sports bar and they have fifty TVs
and they talk about all fifty. Now I appreciate that though,

(01:07:43):
but if you watch, if you DVR, then you watch.
If you can't watch, then that DVR and watch it back.
That's really good too. We appreciate it. So it does
work on the DVR. But I can't say too much
about that because then I crossed the line. But I
would love for to watch Snake in the Grass eleven
tenth Central on USA. It's a good show. And then
also if it as well, probably get this group on here.
That's all I'm saying. Two guys, you got a promise

(01:08:04):
to tell these five people today. Now he's these five.
He's the most support a friend ever. Can't support enough. Actually,
all right, let's do the news. Bobby's story. Four family members,
a mother, a father, a brother, and a sister were
all stabbed during a fight at their Texas home lunch box.
You see the story. Yeah, so I guess the brother

(01:08:25):
was drunk started fighting with the sister and then it
got violent and everybody pulled knives and started like hitting
each other. And I mean, that's a family who's probably
done this before in some way. I'd imagine there's been
a family brawl or two over the years. But they
all pulled stuff out. So the sheriff said the fight
started between two adult siblings. The brother came home intoxicated,

(01:08:48):
had a gun on him, and then they got into
a fire, him and the sister, and then everybody's like, oh, yeah,
you got one too. It's funny to think about, but
not really in real life. Like it's a fictional situation,
that's funny, but if it's like really like, oh, that's
sad for that family. Yeah, that's from Yahoo News. Here's
another one that I read and I thought funny fictional,

(01:09:08):
not funny. True. A family sues a New Jersey funeral
home for fifty million bucks after they put the wrong
body on display and then claim she looked different because
the embombers they just made her look younger. Oh my goodness, right,
Like fictionally, that's hilarious. There's like, you know, a small,
brown haired child and actually it's like a fifty three

(01:09:29):
year old woman that's supposed to be They're like, not
our guys, they just really did good work on But
that's really kind of what happened. The funeral home placed
the body of a woman with the same last name,
so that's where the confusion came. But the family's like,
that ain't her. I don't like we know her and
that ain't her, and they're like, no, you just don't
understand that. The process with our bombers, like they do

(01:09:50):
look a little different, and we're very sorry for your lord.
They're like, no, that' her and so they're suing for
fifty million dollars fifty millions. Crazy. Bill Russell, an eleven
time NBA champion, has died at eighty eight years old.
Bill Russell not only a champion as a player, also
as a coach and is one of the most important

(01:10:10):
figures in NBA history. I listened to Bill Simmons do
an entire twenty five minutes on him last night on
Bill's podcast, and so really, when it comes to the NBA,
one of the most influential people period in sports and
in basketball especially. That is from CBS Sports. Late night
clubs are a thing of the past. From Economist dot com,
especially in the United States, clubs is to open at

(01:10:33):
two or three am. They're making way less money than
ten years ago. Industry insiders blaying the pandemic. You don't
have enough staff. And then people are just spending more
time at home because they've realized how to actually have
a good time at home. So more people are standing
home making a drink or two than going out. But
I was thinking back in the day we used to
go to lecture Cowboy and Little Rock. Where would go

(01:10:54):
and that place would stay open until six in the morning.
Oh Well, when I moved to Austin and things closed
at two, I was like, what kind of MoMA pop
town is this? Because in Little Rock it's up until six.
We would we would drive up from Arcadelphia, Arkansas. We'd
go Lecture Cowboy and it was like Nellie and then
it was George Strait. It's one of those clubs. Yeah,

(01:11:15):
and so then we would see the sun come up
and we'd drive back and all my friends would be drunk.
I never drank, so I drove home in the daylight, easy,
easy as pie. It's awesome. Though I'd leave exhausted, wake
up like two pm. I was like, man, that was
a night. That's crazy, sober. We're in no girls like
everything you go to a club four, I never got.
You could have left that part at all, but I didn't.

(01:11:36):
I got. I didn't drink at all, and I never
got girls. So you know what I would do. I
would just dance. I would go and I would just
dance and mostly alone, if I'm being honest, but I
let her rip man until no, it's not I had run.
That's it. That's fun for dancing at the start. Oh, no, no,
not at all. So Johnny Depp sold his debut art

(01:11:57):
collection in hours, and I wanted to look at him,
so I went to a SI. I went to the
They're pretty good, you know. He put up all these
paintings and he made three million bucks in just hours.
Of the art that he painted. It was pictures of
Alpaccino and Bob Dylan, Elizabeth Taylor, Keith Richards from The
Rolling Stones. And the guy's talented. I mean, he's so weird.

(01:12:18):
He's got to be talented, you know. But he's sitting
in front of them. One of the pictures I saw,
and they're big paintings. I would say they're like four
feet tall. Oh so he did the paintings. Yeah, yeah,
his debut art collection thing. I thought he just bought him.
He's like, oh, this is my art collection. I'm gonna
sell him for a lot of money. But no, you're
right those are really good? Then, yeah, they're really good.

(01:12:39):
Yeah yeah, unless I read the story wrong, I feel
like he painted him. He painted those right, Okay, yeah, wow,
like almost too good. Though I thought the same thing,
like no way. Then I kept reading it. It was
like his debut art collection. He called when someone writes
a book for you. A ghostwriter. There's a ghost painter.
Can you imagine somebody get in trouble for you? Ghot
hear painting? That's from Yahoo. Well, I guess get to this.

(01:13:01):
There was a single ticket that won the one point
three three seven billion Mega millions jackpot, and that single
ticket was not us. That single ticket was bought in
a Chicago suburb, and now they have a whole lot
of money, lunch box. We spent how much on the
ti hundred dollars together? Yeah? Oh? We we did this
wild Goose Chase for the past week. Yeah, mine feels

(01:13:23):
like a month. Yeah, a month. How much money did
we go in all together? Oh? Man? Because at first
we started out we I think we did fifty bucks each,
and then you got scared and you started doing twenty.
That's scared smart because we didn't win, right, we probably
did at least over two hundred and fifty bucks each
as a group. Um, no, No, there's no way I
spent two hundred fifty bucks myself on this. No, probably

(01:13:45):
white a week a little of our hundred maybe maybe
a hundred bucks. Yeah, there's no way. I kind of
forgot we did fifty in the beginning, and now I'm
depressed again. I only did twenties after we lost the
first time. I remember pulling my wallet out a lot,
so I don't know exactly how I mean. I can't
do the math in my head. It's just so Yes,
I just remember lunch six and me. It felt like
every day, Hey Venmomi money. I didn't give it on Saturdays.
Yeah you would. Yeah, we didn't win. We went anything

(01:14:08):
this time. Yeah, we won six books new records going
up though. That is a new record. Go donate that
to somebody on the side of the road. It was
such a bad weekend. When I read that someone in
Illinois one, I was like, I'm bad to being just
a loser. Can you imagine one person winning that exactly?
That's what I'm saying, one person. I can imagine that
one person is a billionaire. They're just they dodn't want

(01:14:29):
a billion dollars. That is a billion dollars, but they
don't have a billion dollars. It's still more money than
anyone will ever see, but it's not a billion dollars.
They'll have to give away half of it more than
that with the lump sum. Gosh, I'm just it was
a bad week, every ten minute, making myself feel better
about going. They're not a billion dollars every ten minutes.
I'll sit there and go, Man, I'm not rich. It's

(01:14:51):
great things the lottery makes. We can do things to
be rich, like show up to work, I do work
really hard and figure out a way to just then
that nobody else has done it, or a different way.
You know. That's how most rich people get rich. I'm
taking people out that had have money handed to them.
I don't like them. I'm talking about people who actually
make it good, really good living. They find a way

(01:15:13):
to do something, they're very efficient at it, and it's
a slightly different way than's done before. Yes, but I
would rather win the lottery. I'd absolutely rather win the lottery.
They had to work all that many hours to do that. Gosh.
But okay, it doesn't matter. I can't get him in this.
He's trapping me. He's trapping me. Another story. A mathematician
creates a scientific formula for the best morning routine. Here

(01:15:35):
we go. I'm gonna read it to you now. So
if you guys want a great morning, this is what
you do. The ideal time to wake up at six
forty four am, I email that s to our boss. Hey, man,
come on, science have said this. Then you get out
of bed at seven twelve am, followed by a ten
minute shower, eighteen minutes to eat breakfast, twenty one minutes
to exercise, and then it continues on from there. But

(01:15:55):
twenty one minutes of exercise, that is something I could
subscribe to because it mine's a little longer than that usually.
But tell you this morning, I woke up and my
wife had made last night before I went to sleep,
because Eddie and I played at the Bluebird last night
pretty late, she made some overnight oats for me, and
I never really knew. I knew something happened overnight. I
didn't quite know what happened overnight. Is it like night

(01:16:16):
at the museum, thoughts come alive? I don't know. And so,
but I guess you make with dry oats and you
put the milk and stuff in it and then it
just like soaks up all night right there. Yeah, it
was great. Yeah, the liquid basically gives you the consistency
of cooked oats, softens them. Oh yeah, I guess that
was it. It tasted like just really good cold oats. Yeah,
it was good. So we had overnight I had overnight

(01:16:37):
oats this morning and there's a little surprise and I
woke up and I was like, should I eat this
because I I don't want to eat her breakfast if
she had made something. And there was a note that
was like, no, you can eat this, thank you, thank
you very much. That's from the New York Post. There
you go. Finally, I'm gonna say this story. It's too
good about this actress. It's like, I don't make enough
money to take a six month break. Okay, let us
feel sorry for you. Hold on a second, get to

(01:16:58):
this story. But I think that's gonna be it. That's
the news stories. Please watch Snake in the Grass tonight
on USA at eleven tenth Central. There's a story that's
a little relatable if you grind your teeth. I'm mister
a relatable here. I go to sleep at night and
I grind so hard the last month or so, and

(01:17:19):
I wake up and I can barely open my mouth
and I'll talk and the show sets me come in
and try to do commercials before the show, and I'm like, oh,
are your sleep number or gets your own sleep number? Shutting?
It's like Kanye rapping through the wire when he's rapping
in jail, when his mouth wire shutting. That's what it
feels like. And finally I guess this part of the show,
I can open my mouth all the way. And I

(01:17:40):
don't know because my wife ask miss She goes, what's
the stressors you're that's happening right now in your life
that is making you grind so much? And I was like,
I don't think I have any that. I proceeded to
list off like eleven, Oh you had some. I was like,
you know, I don't have real problems, and then I
listed off like eleven things happening and she's like, yeah,
that that whatever it is, it's manifesting through your body.
So I can't open my mouth all the way even now.

(01:18:03):
So for some reason, I sound like it's a little slurry.
I just got lazy and didn't fight through this jaw stuff.
But it stinks anybody the grinds. I feel for you.
I even wear a grind like a retainer when I sleep. Yeah,
so sometimes I go to sleep with it. I'm in
and I wake up and it's gone because I've eaten it. Kidding,
that's not true. That's not true, but I do grind

(01:18:25):
it really hard, so you know, I come in every day.
Hopefully this will be fixed in the next couple of months.
But that's the situation. I here's a story that's not
relatable at all. There's this actress. Her name is Sydney Sweeney.
She's in Euphoria, and she's talking about how actors don't
get paid what they used to, and she's upset about
that because she cannot even afford to take a six

(01:18:45):
month break. What I figure off, you want us to
feel sad for you because you can't take a six
month break. Sydney Sweeney talks about Sydney. I'm trying to
see which one she is. She's I don't watch you
for you, but yeah, I didn't see white Lotus. Oh yeah,

(01:19:06):
I know she is. Yeah, so I don't know her
from anything. She said. I wanted to take a six
month break, but I don't have income to cover that.
I don't have someone supporting me. I don't have anyone
I can turn to to pay my bills or call
for help. My point with this is she's complaining about something,
and I'm sure when she talks to her friends in
the same industry, They're like, wow, that really stinks. We're
doing this show or this movie and we can. But

(01:19:27):
when she says this in an interview that normal folks read,
you can't take a six two months to break, that's
got to be so sad for you. So she goes
the establishment. Everybody gets paid, but I got to get
five percent to my lawyer, ten percent to my agents,
three percent or something to my business manager. I have
to pay a publicist every month. And she just goes again,
you chose this profession. It's a pretty good profession. You're

(01:19:51):
at the highest point basically, and nobody feels bad that
you can't take six months off. And you know what,
if I talk about what I have to do, I
have to pay an agent, I have to pay I
have to do all this crap two and I think
I'm seven am every morning, Boby complains about stuff that's
not relatable at all. But you know what, I understand
that that's part of this job for me that I do. UM,

(01:20:11):
But I don't know anyone that could take a six
month break any well. It says here that she was
reportedly paid twenty five thousand dollars per episode in season
one for euphor you how many seasons though, because don't
be confused, no, no, how many sorry, how many episodes
per season? It's probably she probably will make and this
is a lot, but like when an athlete makes forty
million dollars and you're not to feel sorry for him,

(01:20:34):
but that's that numbers not real. He's probably making getting
like sixteen eighteen million out of the forty because you're
fifty percent going to taxes and all this stuff that
they say here, Yeah, it's says sixteen episodes, so season eight,
So she probably made about eighty thousand dollars for that
first season all in if she was making twenty five
thousand an episode, because you gotta imagine, you gotta go listen.

(01:20:56):
I'm not saying good, I'm just kind of landed out
for you. Twenty five thousand an episode. Cut that in half.
Just just taxes twelve and a half and then all
the feats you gotta pay because you're in a fee
based industry. No, I do not feel bad for her.
My point is you can't whine about this kind of stuff.
But also too, in your opinion, like actors, they will

(01:21:17):
ever be the way that it was here is an
issue that I'm gonna say this again, this is not
a real issue for us. Residuals aren't happening because shows
aren't going into syndication anymore. Now, like Friends, they paid
them much money, but then Friends one in a syndication,
so it seinfeld They made a ton of money. But
what's happening is a couple of shows still are. But

(01:21:39):
with streaming there is no syndication because it just exists
up there. You don't have to repay to put it
on somewhere, or you don't get paid again because somebody
else took it, because it just stays on a streaming platform.
Oh now I'm feeling really bad. He's hit up or
go fund of me. He's helping her out. How My
only post with this is nobody's gonna feel sorry that
anyone can't take a six month break. No, I don't

(01:22:01):
know that I could take a month break and not
go crazy though. Also me, But Sidney Sweene, she looks
like a pretty good actress. She's in the Handmaids Tail again,
I guess, but that's the situation she could. Probably they'll
make a pretty penny off Instagram. That's where you make
a good amount of money I would read a thing
where Mike, what's the sisters? Who are the sisters that

(01:22:21):
make a ton of money on Instagram? They had the
Demilio sisters that one of them makes one hundred and
ninety thousand dollars per TikTok post gang. And then the
guy who does all he's quiet and he's like, he
does his hands out, like he shows you something. He's like, ah,
he makes like one hundred and forty thousand per post. Like,
there's significant money in social media now, because that's where

(01:22:42):
most folks are. You know, it's not about getting a
TV show as much anymore. If you're younger, it's can
you build a following on social media? Speaking of that,
please watch USA tonight Centrals Snake in the Grass. It
is my show. My goal is to build a social
media following million. She does. Man, she's got some nice picks. Okay, Okay,

(01:23:04):
she's only twelve. He already checks. All right. I'm sorry
that she couldn't take a six month break down. Sorry
up to day. This story comes to us from Atlanta, Georgia.
Police got a call around two forty five am from

(01:23:24):
an apartment complex. Hey, there's three guys breaking into car
so police arrive, they arrest one guy. One guy runs
off and they're chasing a nineteen year old and he
runs up the parking garage. He's like, man, I'm gonna
get caught. He's on the sixth story jumps huh, and
he got hurt. He's in stable condition. Oh gosh, I

(01:23:45):
guess what would he expect to happen. He turned to
land out of canopy like they do in the movies,
because that does look fun, like a little trampoline. But
I feel like I would just go right through it.
They don't, or they landed a dumpster. Every time it's
happened to be full of cardboard boxes of marshmallows. Give
me a break, all right, I'm lunchbox. That's your bone
head story of the day. Oh yeah, it is time
for the good News Countdown. It's the good News Countdown,

(01:24:10):
counting down the biggest good news stories across the left.
Let's start at number three. Number three, an organization is
doing something special for wounded service members. Walter read National
Military Medical Center will help wounded service members transfer a
previous tattoo they had onto their prosthetic or artificial limb.

(01:24:30):
This is especially cool for those who lost sentimental ink
that they had on their arm or leg, and they
don't have their arm or leg anymore. So I thought
that was pretty awesome. A video is going viral of
a police officer in New York helping a baby deer
who is stuck in a chain link fence. Here's the
officer helping the fond get out of the fencing. It's okay, okay, okay, okay.

(01:24:53):
Just a baby here, almost there, buddy, I know we're
in need. Here we lay out. That's awesome. And the
music really it makes me feel fun in the end,
dancing here, here we go. Number one, an eighty four
year old woman named Gloria just fulfilled her lifelong dream

(01:25:14):
of graduating high school. She could not complete her studies
when she was younger due to financial difficulties a family
was going through. But then seventy years later, the mayor
of the town spoke at the graduation saying she was
an example for all and she did the tassel, and
she threw her hat, and she's eighty four years old
and now I graduate. Good job, Gloria. That's it. The

(01:25:37):
good News countdown all right tonight at eleven tenth Central,
I encourage you to watch Snake in the Grass. My
show is finally premiering on USA Network, and the reason
that the show now wants it to do well is
because I can probably put a good word in to
get you guys on an episode in season two or three.
If it does well, come on. If it well, I

(01:25:57):
don't know, I don't know what's going on, but let's go. Everybody.
Why we may need seconds, I don't know. I haven't
even talked to them, but I think I can put
a good word in and say, hey, we would like
to put the show on the show right. Yeah, but
it's got to do well. So it's up to you, guys.
Let's go, guys. You need to pump it. That's a
long as we care about it. Yes, And I want
to be the liar. No, no, no, you can't pig.

(01:26:18):
Nobody even knows until even the snake on this show.
They don't even know that the snake until hours before
because they don't even know what a show they're on.
It's gona be tough. So we'll say that if our
listeners watch, I'm gonna say there's a good shot if
we go a couple of seasons that you guys will
get on all right. I'm gonna get fired for even
saying that I think I could probably work the magic here.

(01:26:40):
All right, you guys have an awesome day. Watch it
tonight on USA Network or DVR, please, and we'll check
in with you tomorrow. Have a great Monday, Morgan, what's
on the podcast for our friends here listening? Cody Johnson
was on with us, talking about the early days of
his career and his recent emergency next surgery. Yes, a
great interview, great performance is what else? Some listeners of
ours won the lottery after listening to the show. It's

(01:27:04):
Crazy and Eddie called out some other show members for
something he believes they're doing. All right, that's it, Thank you, goodbye, everybody.
See it tomorrow. Hanging out with the Bobby bon Show.
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Hosts And Creators

Bobby Bones

Bobby Bones

Amy Brown

Amy Brown

Lunchbox

Lunchbox

Eddie Garcia

Eddie Garcia

Morgan Huelsman

Morgan Huelsman

Raymundo

Raymundo

Mike D

Mike D

Abby Anderson

Abby Anderson

Scuba Steve

Scuba Steve

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