Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
It's time for the Bobby Bones post show. Here's your host,
Bobby Bones. Hello, dear friends of the Bobby Bone Show.
We are in a different studio. Maybe haven't be a
penn just anywhere independed all. We're in a different studio
because our studio broke halfway though, sorry, halfway to the show,
(00:23):
and so we're not streaming this, but we are doing
this today. It was kind of a disaster. It's kind
of an s show because our microphones would not go
off even during songs, so then even during commercials. So
then we just stayed on the air. You'll hear it,
or you may have heard it already. Okay, Mike, deal
all the pages because we're in a different room. We're
(00:43):
just trying to figure this out as we go. Why
don't we start with the twelve year old who reeled
in the big old fish by himself. Oh, that's cool.
It tied the Idaho state record. It is a monster sturgeon.
And these fish stories sometimes I get irritated at people.
They go that fish ain't even that big. Well, if
it's a trout and it's eight pounds, that's humongous. Yeah,
(01:07):
because they're normally not that big. Right, It's like seeing
a thirty pound mouse. Now, are there lions that are
over thirty pounds, yes, But if you see a thirty
pound rat or a mouse, you're like, that's huge. This
one here actually massive though. According to KTVB Tyler Grahamshaw,
twelve years old, tied the catch and release record for
(01:27):
the state when he landed a nine foot eleven in sturgeon.
I mean that's huge. Ven, that's huge. That's bigger than
the tallest basketball player. Right. He went out fishing, he
hooked into him. He fought it for fifty minutes. I
mean he stayed with it for fifty minutes. When you
hear of a cat most catfish that are caught that
are massive, most or like on a trot line. That's
(01:48):
where we would catch most of our big catfish. We'd
set the trot line, we'd leave it, we come back, boom,
it's there. Legal. Are we worry about that? All the
game wards are like, what are you just saying? Well,
I think I think it's situational and used to back
in the day, because I do think it's legal, okay,
or we wouldn't have done it, okay. But we also
we had to learn how to do it with using
(02:11):
no money. So we would take like big buckets, big
jugs oil and cut off the bottom and then float
them like those were are are jugs and so we would. Yeah,
back in the day though, I think I'm pretty sure
as legal. Anyway, caught almost a ten foot fish, which
is crazy. Um, let's see. I don't know if I
(02:33):
can go to these clips, Mike, do I have like
the Lunchbox? Like, can we show the example that's it? Yeah? Yeah, okay, good.
So if you remember Lunchbox, you repeated a segment and
we had rules on that. Oh yes, I didn't repeat it.
I was doing research when you were talking about it,
but during a segment. But you're not a researcher. No,
(02:54):
But sometimes when you say people are rich, I like
to see how much are how rich they are? Okay,
so this first one's the rule, right, I don't need
to hear. Here's a clip from the Post Show on
January twenty fifth of this year. The first offense is
a twenty dollar fine. Nice, we'll put it into the jar.
Second offense a temporary tattooed on your face on your face.
Third offense, you have to go to breakfast or a
(03:14):
coffee place during the show and bark like a dog
until the asking no start paying attention. I think we
switched those though. First is the money. Second should be
bark like a dog. Third should be temporary tattoos. Tattoo
big one. That's hardcore. Yeah. So we made these rules,
and here we go. This is lunchboxes offense. And it
(03:37):
was twenty bucks, not five bucks. I was told five,
So I paid five. But have you heard the rules? No,
I was taught when you're implemented a fine, you're given
a ticket, you pay what you're giving. Did you get
a ticket. Yeah, from Mike, you get a ticket? Yeah,
he said, you want me five bucks? Okay, here we go.
Mark wahlberg net worth is three hundred million dollars. He's
that rich. Wow, A fully equipped jim a movie screening room,
(03:58):
and then separate quarters for hired help, plus a media
entry space. It's from TMZ. I want all that. Yeah,
me too, to that, says his net word. I just
said that, you now punish. Okay, if you said five,
it's gonna be five, it'll be twenty f now on,
Oh come on, well we're there. Though, the lunchbox has
a point. It was enforced on him. We enforced them improperly.
(04:21):
We're not going to reinforce them. But your second one
will be barking like a dog. Yeah. I mean it
was just look, I mean, I was trying to do
research for the show and then I had people texting
me for pictures for social I mean it was just like, hey,
they're texting you during a segment. Yeah, okay, that's a lie.
That's a lie. Yeah's a lie. Morgan maybe needed something.
(04:41):
But you can wait till song or why can't you
just accept it? Yeah? Do you do? You find it?
But you know it's going to happen to them too,
Just wait, it will it happens to the best of us. Um, Mike,
you watched Ambulance? What's that? Oh? That looks good? Okay,
this is the one where they're Jill and Hall. Knew
Jake Jillenhall movie. He plays like a really sophisticated bank robber,
(05:03):
and then him and his brother rob a bank and
then the entire movie is just them getting chased in
an ambulators trying to get away. It's a it's a
Michael Bay movie, so it's total like explosions, dumb action,
but it's a really fun movie. What do you give it?
I give it three point five out of five money bags.
It reminds me of that movie that he did during
the pandemic where it was always inside the call center,
(05:23):
The Guilty and they never really loved a call center.
It's just him answering nine one one call. Yes? Is
this similar to that when you say they don't leave it?
It's it's kind of like speed the whole thing, like
in the bus. It's just like that with an ambulance.
But I thought it was fun. I don't think you
would like it because you don't really like cheesy like
action movies. I yes, I like action movies a lot.
(05:43):
I like cheesy action. If we know it's going to
be cheesy action. If they're like, this is cheesy action.
If they if there's a little bit of realness to it,
it almost runs it like fast and furious, so dumb.
Not the first couple, true, they just got way more ridiculous. Yeah. Yeah,
they're going across the bridges. They went to space. Yeah, yes,
(06:04):
let's see. Do we have the clips on this wall
of amy buffering? Okay, you we're in a different room, guys,
so bear with us. So this is some examples of
Amy buffering buffering on the air. You know how like
want something that hangs up. It's like it's like the
(06:26):
screen goes but just barely. Yeah, if the Internet kind
of hangs up. Yeah, okay, so you're watching Netflix's Internet
slow right, and it takes a little wheel comes out.
So I think we've had a few of those with
Amy recently, and so somebody grabbed all these clips for me.
Here's some behind the scenes talk before Friday's pile. Amy
asked if I'd be interested in a list of the
shortest female country artists, and then couldn't get out the
(06:47):
words most of them are. Instead, she just made the
sound all right, can you play the first one? I
do you care about? The list of the shortest female
country artists? Are they current? What? What the here? I
don't know? That makes me worry from my brain for
a second. This is Amy, by the way, because I
(07:08):
don't have a like my daughter does that ten sometimes,
but she has a little bit of a stutter and
so I expect that. But that's not normal for me.
So mate, it's weirding me out that I wasn't able
to say that word yeah, because it's not really a stutter,
I know, but that's how well okay, here's here's it
is the small clip and I couldn't say it. That's weird.
(07:32):
That's a brain thing. Yeah, that's a brain thing. Um.
So here's one we saved from a mess up during
a fun fact Friday when she also suffered the same
buffer problem. By the way, this is not a stutter.
I don't want people to think Amy does not have
a stutter. This is her not I think her not
being able to focus on one thing and she's got
another thing going on at the same time and she
can't commit so it comes out twisted. Is this the
(07:54):
same sound or a difference? Well, here you go. Okay,
there's a make boat McDonald's located in Germany, so it
has a float through instead of a drive through. You
paddle up to the dock, you place your order and
it's brought rut to you by the staff. Here's Amy
delivering that fact and messing up trying to say mcboat.
So you can paddle up on a dock, place your
order and then it's brought out to you by the
(08:14):
staff and it's called mcnote mcmuonk. That's tough though to
say I don't know that. I don't know the sound
she made. Yeah, let's hear that clip again, the last
part we nicknote mcmunk. It's like a different language. That's
my point. You're trying to say like three things that once,
(08:35):
because you get your mind different if another language is
somewhere in me and it's starting to come out played again,
Here we everybody quiere, Here you go, nicknote mcmunk, And
I want to hear the whole clip of context again
because it is just a weird group of sounds that
I'm messed up in words all the time. But it's yeah,
(08:56):
I don't even know why I did that. Here we go,
so you can paddle up up on a dock, place
your order and then it's brought out to you by
the staff and it's called mcnope, mcmunt, I don't even understand. Again,
we all suck at talking, oh for sure, yes, but
I've just not heard that right there. That's crazy mcknote mcmunt.
(09:21):
I love it. And just for fun, here here's Amy
trying to say fundraising. So on Kickstarter there's people fund ways, Yeah,
that's that's elm fund if I ever seen Okay, well
there's that okay, I had a little a little something there. Um,
(09:43):
so Ray said that Lexie Hayden are old intern got
job by MTV. Have we talked about this at all,
just that she was on the show? Yeah, kind of
off the year, we've talked about it. So what happened
on the show. So it's been a hot minute since
she got eliminated. But they start she even getting said
and she goes, hey, it was started out is becoming
a video EO star on MTV, and then it just
changed out of nowhere to becoming a pop star. So
(10:04):
I feel like the producers are almost like, we gotta
get this country person out. We can't have a country
person winning becoming a pop star. It makes no sense.
And she didn't even said that. She goes, I was
never originally supposed to be a pop star, so she
was easily. Me and my wife watched it together, one
of the better ones on the show. Her music videos
were dope. She had the best producers, good video stuff,
good dress, people make up. All the other people unproduced
(10:26):
looked really bad and out of nowhere. They just let
her go on the show and they go Lexie. I
think it was Jonas he goes fortunately, we got to
let you go, and even she was like, what what,
You're letting me go out of all these terrible videos.
So I feel like they just had to make a
push to get her out of there because she was
a country person. It was weird. Why we should bring
her into play. I think we'll bring her in this week. Okay,
I like that idea. Also, she's a former intern if
(10:50):
Ray said she was really good. She was. Did she
ever played your House? Do you be here sing? I
haven't heard her sing? I haven't. I haven't heard her
sing it since she was here seven eight years ago. Yeah, yeah, no,
but I do follow her online, so I see her
post videos like singing in her car? Are they good? Yes? Okay?
I wonder if she'll admit MTV robbed her. Mmm. Maybe
(11:12):
they signed India. I doubt it. She could probably say that.
I'm we're episode five of speaking of India's of the
dropout Elizabeth Holmes story. Yeah, they're they're a gun. Then
what does that have to do with NDA? They have
all signed India's to work there? Oh yeah, yeah, So
I watched the documentary a couple of years ago about that,
and they said they could take a drop of blood
(11:32):
and do all these blood tests on you, and then
how they lied and they were just trying to develop
it like they were still trying to develop it it all.
It wasn't a fraud from the beginning. It was like
what a lot of these tech companies do. They promised
they can do something, and then while they're raising money
they actually figured out then yeah, like there's a window. Yeah,
it's just like she didn't quite get there. I do
(11:54):
think yeah, Eddie just was like shady, and it's like, yes, shady,
but so for sure. But also she really did think
it was possible and they were trying to figure away
and had it worked, it would have worked. Like all
these things like I'm watching we crash or whatever, all
these things start with just a bunch of bs like
oh yeah, I can do this, I can do this,
I can do this, and then they're just like, oh crap,
what do we do? Like it always starts with a
(12:14):
shady promise. You know, well I wouldn't and I'm not
sticking out for this, but I have in my career
many times. I've not stolen money from people doing this
but said oh, yeah, for sure, I can do that.
You need forty five minutes of material. I'm like, what
do I don't know how to do this. Yes, that's
different when you're dealing with investors, though, agree. But my
point is people that try to do big things promise
they can do it because they think they can learn
(12:35):
to do it in the time. And then to do
what she does, she had to take money. Where they
got in trouble was they just started stealing stuff? Yeah,
bus Yes, it just was. But I understand why. But again,
someone said, i'll pay you this much money. Can you
do that? Sure? Absolutely? And I'm like, oh god, I've
never done that before. And they want me to write
this and oh they just paid me before I even
(12:57):
did the work and you just figure it out. Yeah,
so much smaller scale. I understand what she was thinking.
There were just choices she made that probably other people
made and it worked out probably many right, and how
sort of just certain Well, I mean there was a whistleblower,
so had that person not when they did, how long
(13:20):
would it have continued? Oh so they're in trouble because
they broke the NDIA. Huh, Well I don't. I haven't
seen that episode yet because of some of the stuff
I know by some of the stuff I don't really
know yet. Yeah, I just remember stuff from the podcast.
I mean maybe that that's what I'm saying, Like, if
you're a whistleblower, you obviously broke the law by breaking
the India. So can you be sued also or is
it like you're protected. I think some whistleblowers get in, yes, some,
(13:44):
but some are actually given a bit of freedom because
I mean, if someone I don't know, if you make
them sign anything I want and not get in trouble
the government, whistle blowers the don't get in trouble, but
they don't sign India like a tittleteller, right, like something,
But it's for a moral right. Like people's lives are
(14:08):
on the line at this point. Because Walgreen's invested. They
started putting these things in Google that lunchbox and you
know what if you repeat something while you're googling, that's okay, okay, okay.
You know, because like they start, the scientists that were
working there were like starting to freak out because they're like, okay, okay,
those is all funny games that begin with but these
are people's lives, and people are taking these tests thinking
(14:30):
they're getting their results and they're not accurate. So and
we're not spoiling the show, no, because this has all happened,
and yet as part of a documentary as well, I
guess I will say, even though I listened to the
podcast a couple of years ago, watching this act scripted
show of it, I learned some stuff that I thought,
no way, this is real. This is just part of
(14:51):
like adding fluff because it's scripted. But I googled it
and sure enough, and I was like dying, I didn't
know that part. My assumption is lunchbox that some whistleblowers
are whistle blowing even though they know they're going to
get in trouble. Yeah, according to the law office of
this guy. Of this guy it's a good agency, he's
a lawyer. But oh, Mike, it says your attorney can
break down those specific aspects of the ndiay not hold
(15:11):
up in court and a session yours is the easy answer.
If you're whistle blowing and it's illegal what they're doing,
you cannot get in trouble. Okay, cool, So you can't tell,
thank you, Mike. You can't tell if it's not illegal,
and you're just like, I don't like it. But you
can if it's being really illegal, right, because like you
could sign an NDA working with someone and then you
(15:33):
find out they murder somebody in the building and you're like, sure,
I don't want to get sued. But if they're a
jerk and you tell everyone that's not illegal, right, and
you can get in troub over that. Yes, got it.
So and the show is pretty good. Kaylin's over it.
But we're just finishing it now. I mean bones you were,
you were saying that you can't spoil it because it's
(15:53):
like real events. See, I feel like there's something there
because again, watching we crash like but she's also not
saying the end end. This is all the stuff that
I think is generally known. It's in the news right now.
But even like you know, watching Winning Time and all
those shows that those are true events that really happened.
I'm still watching not knowing what really happened. But I
would say that what she's talking about our points of
(16:14):
the news stories that have been out recently, not character
things that happened during the show. Yeah, Like I just
didn't say something that I was like, whoa that I
learned in the scripted show that I didn't hear in
the podcast. But I could have. I'd blow your mind
with it right now, but we're not going to A
young kid from Modern Family plays like a grandson of somebody.
(16:36):
He's also in U thirteen Reasons. Why, Oh, maybe it's
not same kid. Then I'm thinking I doe. He just
looks like just like Google, that's same kid, Baker. Let
me see it looks like him, but that might not be. Yeah,
that looks like him. We see it, Eddie is we work?
We crash good. Yeah, I'm in the middle of it.
It's good. And we watched the first episode. We were like,
(16:58):
it gets Jared Letto. That's doing not doing it for
you because it's weird seeing him in that character. No
one where it's like where you work from a building. Yes, okay,
once we figured out he was Israeli, it made more sense. Yeah,
because he's like, oh, it's hard for me to look
at him and forget that. Let marry him. But that
show they spent so is that the Sonny people scoop?
(17:18):
But going too the room? Yeah, I mean we're still
nine minutes from do you want to go and tell him?
We'll be there in a second. What's up? It just
looks like a no doesn't he but it is the
thirteen reasons why kid looks like the kid from the Well. Also,
they did a great job of casting, because I look
up everybody from Oh Yeah show. Yeah, I've been looking up.
That's so much fun to see how you guys do
(17:40):
that when they die or when they leave the show,
or when it's over. That's why I'll do it. I
won't do it until something happens on a show with them. Well,
it's not so amzing because because you'll see spoiler about
what happens to the person. If you don't know, you
look it up. But I want to see how much
of it is true. Where are they now? What are
they doing? Um? So, what's your problem with We Work?
No problem? We just we watched We Crashed that We Work.
(18:01):
That was a documentary on Hulu about the real life
version of that watch a documentary, but it's not a
documentary series. It's a documentary. It's like an hour because
We Crash, just so people know in case they want
to watch. It is on Apple Plus. And it's good.
It's good, it's entertaining. But I think what helps it
for me is that I don't know the story of
we don't either, so I love that I'm learning as
I go. Okay, and even now you can miss some base.
(18:23):
You don't even work, so it doesn't you know, It's
so I was all new to you. That's still around, right,
we work? I don't know, Yeah, yes, okay that my
husband offices out of Ali work. We the reason that
shows so different than Amy show to drop Out, even
though they're both true and they're both about I don't
know if we worked about fraud or I don't tell me.
I don't know, okay. Um is that they spent so
(18:45):
much money on the Apple Plus version because they got
two A list actors. It looks cleaner. The episodes are longer,
where the one on Hulu looks good in a solid
and a man a Seprey does a great job is Elizabethlms.
She even looks like her in a lot of ways
and does has all the mannerisms and like the eye
twitches and stuff. But yeah, there's that. It's good. It's
pretty good. I say it's pretty good. Caitlin says it's
(19:05):
not good. Have you gotten to the scene in the
drop Out where she's on the boat and she's like,
I'm gone get the money and then she with the
other rich guy. Yes, I feel so awkward during that scene. Yeah,
she like. I was just like, is that really how
she acted? I know it's weird. Are you watching Winning Time? Like?
Are you up to see? I mean the second it's
put out Sunday. I didn't watch it last night. We did.
(19:30):
We went to dinner last night. We usually watch it
Sunday evening. We had to dinner last night instead because
I played golf yesterday and I was like, I'll be
gone to golf, but I'll take you to dinner tonight, compromise, um,
and then I'll watch it tonight. That's my favorite show.
It's so good. They just did season two season Oh yeah,
oh my gosh, even better. See that's one you watch
And I'm like, I have to google to see if
(19:52):
that was true, just because it's just so crazy. How
can all that crazy stuff happen? If it's in something,
it's true? Yeah, lie to me? Um, all right, well
that's it. We will see you guys tomorrow. Goodbye, And
I haven't Yeah, you made the four mcdote mcmunk. I
(20:15):
thought you did that, lie maby. I was like, that
was really funny. Can you say that back exactly like
you did, mummonthicknote mcmont, I don't know mcmon. I was
looking at Amy and I thought that came out of
her mouth. I was like, I'd love to see those Like,
what do they put electrodes on your brain? You know
when that happens. I want to see what all the
lights do in there. It just get dangled. It looks
(20:36):
like it looks like Christmas lights. Music plays, all right,
We're done, all right, Thank you guys. Byebody