Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
There we go, transmitting Welcome to Tuesday show, more to
the studio. Morning. All right, here we go a little
something from each of your lives. Eddie, good morning to you.
What's going on with you? Good morning? So bones, you're
really big on the whole. Don't snooze, Just get up
(00:22):
right well, because you're gonna have to get up anyway,
And why not set your alarm to the absolute latest
point where you can actually get good, pure sleep the
whole time. I think you're actually robbing yourself of good
sleep by tricking your mind into going I'm getting extra sleep,
which you're not. So just sleep to the absolute latest
point and then get your butt out of bed. That's
your case, and I've tried case. That is your case,
(00:44):
and I've tried it and it just doesn't work. I
do like hitting snooze, But now my wife is on
your side of the story, probably because you have to
wake up early and wakes her up. I do, And
since the new year came around, I'm like, Hey, I'm
gonna try to wake up an hour and a half
before I normally do, just so I can like warm
up the void. But why would you do that? And half? Yeah,
I want to like, you know, maybe go walk outside
(01:05):
for a little bit, like it in theory, but go ahead.
And but what I'm doing is sitting the alarm clock
an hour and a half four I normally do hit
snooze for about an hour and a half. She's hating
life right now. And now she's like, just stop it.
I'm gonna sleep in another bedroom if you keep hitting snooze.
Just think about it like this, do you want the
most best sleep you can possibly get? I do so
(01:27):
instead of snoozing an extra fifteen twenty minutes, because there's
a point to where you just have to wake up.
You can't. There is the absolute minute where I'm like,
I have to get up at this. So let's just
say it's four am. Yeah, you have to get up
by four am. Why would you set you're alarmed to
three thirty and they have thirty minutes of bad sleep
snoozing up and on, up and on, because all you're
doing is convincing the less intelligent part of you that
(01:47):
that's extra. It's not. Yeah, there is another person at
three in the morning. It's not me, and they make
that decision. It is this is where it's not me
that people will feel better if you set you're alarmed
to the absolute laid point and then just get up
because you're getting the most best sleep. Okay, I'm gonna
try it, try it. I am amy used to snooze time.
(02:09):
Actually listening y'all talk about this, Bobby. You know how
sometimes you describe taking a sip of coke. Yeah, Like
right now, I'm picturing being able to snooze just one
and I'm like, oh, I know, it's amazing, like it
would be awesome, but I'm telling you it's better on
this side. And now I haven't. I haven't been snoozing
for a couple few years now, and it's great. The
only time the snooze works is if you get to
(02:31):
snooze past your absolute latest point, because that's a little
bit of extra's not otherwise, that's not a real snooze.
That's just you waken yourself up earlier than you have to. Yeah,
you just gotta do it. You gotta do it, Okay, man,
thank you, Eddie, all right to muncho ch box. Okay. Artists,
when they get a number one song, they have these
number one parties where we always get invited and they're
always the same lame thing. Come have a drink and pizza,
(02:54):
drinks and burgers. Jelly Roll, who's seeing son of a sinner.
I wouldn't have got it from his version of it.
What it sounded like? What nothing I've ever heard? Yeah,
your melody go ahead. So anyway, he sent out an
invite to his number one party, and you can get
(03:14):
tattoos at the number one party. It says tattoos by
Kobe Hunter. So Kobe Hunter is gonna be there giving
away tattoos at the number one party. Anything you want.
I guess it's just something that you're interested in doing.
I was just like, that is the absolute coolest thing.
So I thought, who wants to get a tattoo with
jelly Roll? Well, so never trust Launchboxer, depend on him,
because this has already happened like a week ago. Oh yeah,
(03:36):
this is a dumbbo all that happened. Yes, but that
was like last week. Oh I missed it then, yeah,
you didn't miss And also you don't have any tattoos,
and nor do you want a tattoos? How could you do?
Like free burger? So I don't understand why that one's
bad and this one's cool. I just thought that was
cool because they're all the same over and over again.
But this one actually had something different that It's like, man,
(03:58):
I'd go just to watch people get tattoo. Who you
want to watch people so boring? Is that your thing?
That's weird? I mean just random were getting a taptoo?
It up number one party, like, oh you know, I'm here,
might as well get one. I mean that's different. It's different.
It's different. But a couple of things you said were weird,
we're also different. Okay. So I was on Facebook Marketplace
and I saw a mausoleum for sale. It's like where
(04:21):
you put dead bodies, basically the big ones. This one,
in particular is a walk in one that holds six people.
It includes caskets. I think it can actually fit more
than six. That's just like when you walk in, it
says something like it comes with sixteen casketed in ground
burials and it's right here in town. So I was
(04:41):
thinking we could all the Bobby Bone Choke could buy this,
and there why I want you guys stop that. I've
barely been able to do this for twenty years. And
whoever buys that, I need to look at their starch
history on their computer. It also comes with two benches.
I mean, if you really want one, I get it.
You want to put who watch one families? Yeah, and
(05:02):
if you want to put it in a literal graveyard,
like you take it because they have to buy it.
You have to buy those anyway, and they get brought in.
So maybe they're buying one to put their cemetery. Well,
I think someone must have inherited this. Maybe someone else
in the family bought this, and I guess they don't
want it for whatever reason, and now they're selling it
on Facebook marketty five thousand dollars. I thought should have
two and forty five bucks. Yeah. Two. Wow, that's a
(05:25):
house because it's a lot of you know how much
it is to bury people. It's a lot or cream
a even sounds like they have in a nice place
that if you do come alive, you're like, well, at
least have shelter. I'm in a nice home. Okay, I'll
go there. It's a select group of folks have been saying, hey,
why do I keep fat shaming my bulldog? First of all,
animals don't know what shame is. He also doesn't listen
(05:46):
to the show. He also doesn't know what this show.
Eight he doesn't know anything. There's no sense of ethics
within an animal. By the way, ethics really bad idea
in general, because without ethics, there would be no bad
because ethics were made to show what was bad versus
what was good. But if you didn't know what bad was,
(06:07):
there would be anyway. That's the whole thing. Animals don't
have any ethics at all. My point is, I'm not
fat shaming a dog. He doesn't know what shame is.
And it's funny, and he is a fat bulldog. And
so I listen out all these funny names about him.
For example, the new one I came up with is
fatsy clin. Yes, I like that one. So I was
having to talk with him yesterday. Listen Garth Brooks, Well,
(06:30):
that's a good one. That was at dirty you know
what I was talking about. So I feel good. It's
a funny bit. I'm not fat shaming anybody. It's a
fat bull He is a fat bulldog, that's it. And
he doesn't care. So there's a lot of stuff I
say that people say it's contempart. This is not it,
this is not it. So that's all I'm not even addressing.
I'm not humoring this anymore. This is the one that
(06:52):
gets you canceled. Imagine on TMZ he called him fatsy
Clin America erupted. That's all said he went to the
Church of Latter day Saints. They protest me because I
say he's from the Church of Fatterday Saints. Okay, that's all.
(07:12):
Glad you guys are here. Time for the mail bag something. Hello,
Bobby Bones. I'm in eighth grade. I would like your
advice because I am the captain of the quiz Bowl
team at my school. We're going to state this weekend.
I'm a girl captain on a team mostly boys. I
(07:34):
would love some advice on how to be successful. Our
school hasn't won at state in a long time, and
I would love to inspire more girls to do quiz
Bowl by winning. What advice do you have on being
a good leader? Thanks? Signed, questioning quiz Bowl. Well, if
you want to win this thing, I have some advice
for you. First of all, and this is advice for
any high pressure situation, because you're going to be nervous.
(07:56):
You get nervous when things are worthy. Now could be worthy, happy,
it could be worthy, sad. And when I was a mentor.
All four years on American Idol, that was a question
people would ask me the most. They go, how do
I not be nervous? I'm like, no, No No, you have
to look at nervousness as a gift, because it's rare
in life that you get to be nervous about something awesome.
A lot of times we're nervous. It's nervous about Oh no,
doctor results, oh no, job, Oh no, how are we
(08:20):
going to get through the bills this month? Like that's
nervousness that you have, and it sucks, but you figure
out what to get through it. If you have nervousness
for something that is good, you have to look at
that as a gift that's being delivered to you and
appreciate it as much and don't treat it the same
way as bad nerves. So it's like, all right, I'm
be nervous for sure, but when they get here, godly,
how lucky am I that I get to be nervous
(08:41):
for something good. That's the first thing you have to do.
So it's probably be nervous number two if you can
keep your heart rate down a bit, because that's what
a lot of nerves do, is elevate the heart rate.
Think about when you're your best, your funniest, or your smartest,
you run the fastest. It's when you're normal and there's
no pressure on you. It's when you're just hanging out.
(09:03):
It's really needs the funniest, and so you're just trying
to get as close to that as possible. But then
a heart rate gets up, You're like, oh God, oh
gotta get you tighten up. Choking is when you perform
lesser because the pressure is on. Choking is not performing
bad if you just always perform bad, and that should
be a normal, but choking is you actually are way
(09:23):
worse when the pressure is on. But that's because your
body takes over with all the heart rate. Although, oh
my god, all the bad thoughts, I would visualize a
good things happening, and some of that visualations stuff is WHOI.
I'll be honest with you. But if you're gonna have
to visualize something, you might as well visualize something good.
That's how I see. It's almost like superstition. I don't
believe in superstitions, but just just in case, just the
cause I don't want to mess with it. In case
(09:44):
it so I visualize good things. And I don't think
me visualizing good things that is gonna make it happen.
But I do think there's possibility if I am well,
this is gonna suck, it's gonna suck because I'm gonna
will myself into it. So you're visualizing good things. As
far as being a leader with your team, remain positive,
be encouraging. If you go down a couple of questions,
hey we got this guy's hey, focus up. It's it's
(10:05):
positive talking to them, it's talking in between. It's making
sure that people know that you're not asking them to
do anything that you wouldn't do. Just set a good
example and go win the thing, and success breeds more
like people wanting to do it as well. I saw
Tom Brady wins Super Bowls and I thought, well, if
that really good looking guy, I can do it. Well,
I'm also a really good looking athletic guy. I might
(10:27):
as well go. I didn't, but I think he got it.
But that's what you do. And don't be upset, don't
be scared, don't be don't feel like your nerves are
a bad thing, because they're awesome. You're lucky eighth grade,
that's awesome. I was captain in seventh grade of the
twelfth grade team. Not to flex too hard, but it
(10:51):
is what it is. I'm like, that's like her, she's awesome,
so go have it. The only time I got kicked
out of a game, I did get kicked out of
a game. Once you argue no, But the question was,
what is the national holiday for trees? Armor Day? Yeah?
It is right, but I and I always buzzed in
so quick. I would buzz in, not even knowing what
(11:12):
the question was yet, what's a national halliday for Boom?
I would just buzz in because I felt like I
could get there. And so today, what's a national holiday
for and ron Wi? She was about to say trees.
I hit the button so she still got trees out.
I didn't know the answer, and my whole team's up there.
We were it's like semifinals, and I said, I don't know,
but I bet it's tremendous. That's good. I got jerked
(11:35):
out of the game. I was a captain. And she
was like, you can't be in seventh grade and do
stupid stuff like that. You can't make jokes. It was no,
not then so funny though not really, but I remember
that that was my style. I buzzed in all the
time I was. I was. That was the only thing
that I was like celebrated at because I got beat
up a lot. You know, life is tough as a kid.
(11:57):
But when I was in quiz bowl or like a
learning or geography b I was like the kid that
it was like when a good athlete is playing, like,
oh wow, there he is. It's a really good running back.
People are like, there he is quiz ball Captain's all.
It's only like two days a year, but it's awesome. Man,
good luck. I hope you kill it. Let me know
how ghosts. Thank you very much. Close the mail back.
We've got your game. And I was about to cloth
(12:22):
Bobby mail back. Ye, it's a Bobby Bones show. Interviews.
In case you didn't know Nate Smith. He is a
former worship leader, a lifelong music lover, and he's from Paradise, California.
Big Garth, Tom Petty Fleetwood, Mac fan Drove, an uber,
worked in the medical industry. Got a really big song
(12:45):
right now, I'll call whiskey on you. Here's a clip
serious last on Instagram at Smith and here he is
now Nate Smith. Everybody on the Bobby Bones Show. Now
(13:05):
meet Smith. Hey, Nate here you are, buddy, You're going
for number one? I mean, can you believe it? What up, Bobby?
I can't believe it. It's it's a weird thing because
I'm sure, like this was your goal and you knew
you could do it, But now that it's actually happened
and you have a song again that's battling for number
one on the chart, it's got to feel a little
surreal when you think about that. True or false? Definitely true,
(13:27):
definitely true. What's what's been different in your life over
the past five or six weeks since this song has
really started to take off. I just think this has
been a lot of excitement with my family and my
friends and everybody's. Everybody's watching the chart man, So it's
it's it's good to know that I got everybody around
me rooting me on. So I think Nate's turned into
a bigger story even in the past five or six week.
And I'll tell you why I texted him and now
(13:49):
I didn't get a text back. Oh oh yeah, indicator
right there. Well, actually I texted you a fake album
cover because our last interview we talked about being in
a nurseless and I said more poop than you can imagine.
And you're like, that's that's the name of my album.
So I did a picture with the album title on it.
I sent it see and you hearted it, and I'm like,
he hates me? Are you sure he said that to me?
(14:11):
We both have the wrong number, we're both texting somebody
that's not each other. At this point, I did did
I need to go? Look? What hour did you text
it to me? Though? Because if I was doing the
radio show, Oh there's yeah, I was still working. Okay,
I'll go back and check. But I did have a
new You have my new number? Right? We got to
do that? No, I think you do. I think that's
(14:32):
the only number you have. Okay, have you changed your number?
I did? I did change right number. Okay, that's the issue.
I'm texting whoever got Nate's old number. Well, also, he
thinks you hate him because you just hearted it. But
you should explain to him that, well, the heart's the
biggest sign of Oh yeah, it's like as much phone
affection as you could possibly get. I don't throw the
(14:53):
herd around, I throw the thumbs up around the hard
I don't throw around. That's good, not because I think
I always extra heart like little thing that someone gets
to kind of go. I received the message. I appreciate
what you said, and it's probably over the top. Yeah,
the heart is not I received the message. Thumbs up
is I receive it and I okay, I see it
and I got it, and I somewhat agree. The heart
is a make sweet loved you in your album cover. Oh,
(15:15):
the thumbs up is kind of like rude, though, isn't it? Like? Yeah, man,
it's kind of like passive aggressive. See, I don't think
it is, do you. Well. I have felt that way
in the past, but I think because you've explained to me,
it's just an effective way of communicating. It's very clear
that you're responding to that specific text with I got it,
and I'm giving a satisfaction on the thumbs up or
(15:36):
I see what you said, missus me acknowledging it, and
I will follow through with what you've said. The heart
is you're sexy. Okay. Look, Nate Smith is on with us.
He's got the song Whiskey on you. Hey, do you
have a cool story about when you wrote this song?
Like where did you ride it? Were you in like
a one of these generic rooms where you're just meeting
with other good riders. I don't know what what's the
(15:57):
deal here? The short version is me and my ex
from broke up. Obviously, uh, like she's an X now
because we broke up. But um, we broke up. And
then two days later I had a writer's retreat um
at Jim Katino's place, his lake house, and uh ended
up writing it out there, and um, we did the
whole demo that day. I sang the vocal at the
at the kitchen table on a on a like a
(16:19):
cheap mic, and then we went to Nashville and we
we uh, we ended up recording everything over at Blackbird
and stuff, and it just didn't feel the same. So
we ended up just mixing the demo and that's what's out.
That's that's the vocal we're hearing. That's the music you're hearing.
It's just the demo. Did you write a lot of
good songs that writers are treated? Did you think a
lot of them were good and be honest here or
did you think this one was like super special and
(16:39):
so you fought four it? Yeah? No, I definitely like
because we had two we had two rooms going at
one time, so I was trying to juggle between the
two rooms, but I felt like this was the one
I needed to spend the most time on. So I
probably neglected the other right, uh and uh, but I
spent most of my time on this one. So you
gave the other right the thumbs up, and you gave
this right the heart. That's what it's. You're too good.
(17:01):
You're too good at this. Yeah, that's what's going to happened.
You have I just looked at your TikTok. You have
like one point four one point five million followers. Do
you are you able to monetize your TikTok followers directly
or are you just hoping their fans that will come
to shows. I don't know how to do all the monetizing. Um,
you get a little bit money from like the Lives
and stuff like that, but I am hoping that that
people pre save songs from there and then obviously come
(17:23):
to shows. So his name is Nate Smith. He was
gonna come in live and I was looking forward to
it very much. So but what happened, Well, what happened
was I saw how much you've been thumbs up and
enough Harten so I said, let's hold the guy for
a few weeks. But actually he has a new album
that's going to come out now in April, so we're
gonna wait for his in studio appearance in April. Why
did the album get pushed back a bit? Wait? So
(17:45):
I'm in Bobby Bones purgatory. You are, You're in the middle. Yeah,
it got pushed because it was like, we're gonna drop
it in February with not a whole lot going on.
It was like, this doesn't really make any sense, Like
why do it while I'm sitting on the couch in Nashville.
Let's do it while I'm out stage coach the Thomas
threat to or like, lots of stuff happening so we
can promote it and push it. So I think it
makes more sense to do it with stuff happening than
(18:06):
just laying there. We have, well, first of all, we're
looking forward to that you coming in here. We have
a guy in the show Lunchbox who love to call
nine one one, and we're talking about that yesterday. Well,
how do you feel about nine one one? Have you
ever called nine one? Has there ever been a real
life emergency? Or are you scared to call like I
am because you feel like you'll end up in jail.
So when I was nine years old, I was with
(18:29):
my brother. We were at a dog training for one
of our dogs, and we used the pay phone there.
There was actually that's how long ago this was, and
I convinced my brother that it was Grandma at nine
one one and to make vivas and butt head jokes
and stuff. So we're like calling whoever's on the line
of butt head and all this kind of stuff. And
then we kept doing it, and then police officer showed
up and it was actually my dad because he was
(18:50):
a cop, so he showed up and he actually handcuffed us,
put us against the wall. We had to go in
and say sorry to all the dispatchers. And still to
this day by seeing him, my dad's old co workers
they call me nine one one boy. Oh my god. Yeah,
you put them in the penitentiary. They served six months
in jail, Like your dad really went through with it.
I like that. I was a bad boys, a bad boy.
(19:11):
Nate Smith's congrats. I think the song is gonna do it.
It's a great song. Big fan of you, even though
I don't have his new number. Apparently I've been texting
with some lady now who has Nate's old number. But congrats,
and we'll see you when the album comes out, and
anything else you want to say on you're on your
final trip here on the phone, Nate. Just just love
you guys so much. They appreciate all the help and everything.
And I will text you my new number right now
(19:32):
so you can stop, you know, feeling neglected. Well, I'm
gonna give this interview a thumbs up. Oh, I give
it a thumb now, you know what I get. I
give it a what are the other one? I give
it a haha? La Nah, I give it a haha.
All right, Nate, see you buddy. All right by there.
He is Nate Smith. It's time for the good news.
(19:56):
Four years ago, April Gavin returned back to a home
in Oregon after a flight from Chicago. Her suitcase did
not make the trip, so she spent several months searching
for the suitcase. The airline like, we don't know where
it is, but we'll pay you for it. She's like, man,
you can't find it anywhere. Now, we're very sorry. Here's
some money. Well, somehow, some way they located the suitcase
(20:18):
and they gave it back to April. Months later, the
suitcase had turned up at an airport in Houston after
arriving on a flight from Honduras. It thinks all around
the world. Wow, it was in Honduras, explained April the
video she posted on social media, and who knows where
else it went. The bag was slightly damaged and warned,
but everything else was a good shape. Nothing was stolen,
and there was some really important stuff in there that
she didn't want to be lost. And she got to
(20:39):
keep the money too. Hey that's a win win. And
what I want to do in this segment is let
you know you can put an air tag in your suitcase.
My wife and I went on a trip and I
talked about on the show because they were like, hey,
you don't have to travel back and put take your
big bags and put them through customs or security, so
we'll mail them back for you. And we're like, wow,
(21:00):
talk about it at perk. These are crazy. Luckily, we
put air tags on our suitcases and our dogs. We
don't want to lose all the one of them. And
so we got home and there were no bags and
there were no bags, and so we got on we
see what and they were just trapped in an airport.
We didn't get our bags for almost a month and
a half. And not only that, we had to go no,
the bag is right here, according to we had to
(21:21):
like argue with them because then they finally found our
bags and we got them back. One of the wheels
was broken, but we got paid too, And but we
got our stuff back because we could tell them exactly
where it was with the air tag. Yeah, I bet
they're they're not used to that. And those air tags
you can take them out and put them a different thing.
So as soon as I got back from the bags
and I put them, I got one of my keys,
I got one of my wallet. They're great for that.
(21:42):
But all that, it was a cool story in a
way for me to tell you guys, there and there aren't.
There are other options to other than air tags, like
the little cards. They're like, yeah, tiles. You gotta gotta
keep track of your stuff that you aren't able to
be with the whole time. You gotta put one maybe surgically,
I'm planning your kid. Yes, yeah, there's a lot of
where they are always all right, that's the good news.
That's what it's all about. That was tell me something good.
(22:05):
There's a new episode of the Bobby Cast up right
now with Jake Owen. It's an hour of us, you
know again, super personal with him, and he talks about
why his name is Jake Owen because that's not his
real name. His name's Josh Owen. But when he moved
to town, there was already a Josh Owen, and he
tried all these different names, but just with people to
see how they felt. And this is that conversation right here.
(22:26):
I'd never heard this story told like this, but here's
Jake Owen on the origin of his stage name. I
remember in that second apartment that I ended up getting,
there was a pool party going on that day when
I moved in. The guy below me that I met,
his name was Dave and his wife Kathy I still
talked to. They helped me move in, And at the time,
you gotta understand, like I'd gone through my whole life
know him as Josh. That was my birth given name, Josh,
(22:47):
and Jared my twin brother, but I didn't want to
be Josh. That was another thing that kind of felt
empowering in a weird way. People often say they're like, oh,
would you move them down town and then label made
you change your name and I'm like, nah, man, I
was Jake like the day I moved to town. Why
but in an instant, Like, in an instant, I changed it.
I remember talking to my mom on the way up,
like what am I gonna go by? Like I can't
go as Josh, and I'll tell you why. Josh Turner
(23:08):
at the time was on the radio. There was a
Josh Grayson, there was another guy on the radio. It
was great. And then there was a guy named Josh Owen,
which made me solidified even more. I dropped the CD
off under Josh Owen at BMI two weeks before I
moved to Nashville. I actually came up here to case
the place, you know, like can I live here? And
then I went back to Tallahassee two weeks later when
(23:29):
I called my parents and said I'm moving tomorrow. But
while I was here, I dropped a CD off at
the time to BMI upfront Josh Owen whatever. When I
got back, I called him on it. They're like, yeah,
they said you'd come by the day before and I'm like,
definitely did not, and they're like, no, we have your
album here too, and so I went back by there
and the album that they had was another guy named
Josh Owen from Texas, who I think was on Nashville
(23:50):
Star maybe even so there's already a Josh Owen. There
was a Josh Turner, Josh Grayson. So I considered since
my middle names Ryan, there was a moment there I
was gonna go by Jard Bobby Jr. Oh, and baby
just call me Jr. Like my mom watched Dallas as
a kid, So there was that guy Jr. Jr. Sounds
cowboy count kind of cool. Yeah, you know, consider Ryan.
So I know. But so this is the funny parts.
(24:12):
When I meet Dave and Cathy moving in that day
to my apartment, He's like, hey man, I'm Dave, and
I'm like, I'm Jr. Testing it out, dude. And my
mom had no idea. She overheard me, and I could
see her like like look at me, like almost laughing.
I'm like, I'm in my mind. I'm looking at her like,
don't say anything like I'm JR. Of this guy. He
knows no different. So I'm down on the I'm down
(24:34):
at the pool or whatever. A few minutes later and
I'm meeting some people. He's entroing me too, that are
that are I've already lived in this place, and it's
kind of the whole like, hey, he's the new guy
I moved here. He plays music too, And and I
said to this one other guy, I'm like, I'm Jake Man,
what's up? And uh I remember that's when my buddy
Day was like, wait, I thought you said your name
was Jr. And I was like, well it is, but
I go by Jake. So like the Jake Ryan, the Jared's,
(24:54):
I'm just gonna go by Jake and it was just easier.
And I started going by Jake that day at the
pool party. So this day, that's what everybody's called me.
And in a weird way, since I'm forty one now
and I was twenty two then, it's like half of
my life I was known as one thing and the
other half I've been known as this. And in a
weird way way, more people know me now as Jake
than ever knew me as Josh. I still don't mind
when I go home and some of my friends will
(25:16):
call me Josh. They do totally and they can't help it.
But then there's some people too that call me Josh
just to like kind of get at me because they
know if I'll call you Josh, then you know I
know you before, And they really didn't really and they
really didn't. All Right, that's jakeoing here. That full hour
up on the Bobby Cast. It's a podcast I do.
It is an hour long super in depth and personal
(25:39):
with Jaco and Slash JOSHO and Slash Jr. O and
Slash whatever. It's all there. Check it out. The only
way Lunchbox can go visit Todd Chrisley in prison in
Florida is if Todd puts him on a list, and
we've told Lunchbox, if he puts you on the list,
you can take off from the show and drive down
and go visit him. Have you ever visited anyone in prison? No,
(25:59):
just been visited in prison. You weren't in prison. You
were in jail and that's a bit. We did it
on the show and you were out in twenty four hours.
But that ain't a big house. That's a small house.
But they did say my name or the thing and
go to you know, visitation room too, and I walk
in there. It was just like on TV where there's
the window and that you pick up the phone and
you talked to another guy on the other side as
a lawyer. It's like yeah. And I was like when
(26:20):
they called my name, I was like, dang, my dad's
here to see me. It wasn't your dad though it
was a lawyer. I had no idea who it was.
I was like, how did my dad not to find me?
Lunchbox got one call out of prison for jail. Sorry,
now he commit We did a bit whatever Lunchbox with
to jail and he got one call and he called me,
and so I had to call his parents and be like, hey,
Leutsbox in jail. It's a weird call. Man. So lunch
(26:44):
wants to go visit Todd Christley and I think that's awesome.
And Todd was a guest host on our show. We
know Todd christ l We didn't know what he was
up to, but we know, so to go visit. He's
gotta be on a list. Id's gonna put you on
the list. The only way we can get a hold
of him is by writing a letter. You've written it,
how long is it? It's not that long? Okay. Here
is lunchboxes letter to Todd Chrisley, with the intention of
getting on a list to go visit him. Okay, here
we go, Todd. I hope you're doing well and settling
(27:07):
in and getting comfortable in your new digs. It's Lunchbox.
You might remember me playing with you in a charity
softball game a few years ago. I was on your
team then, and I'm on your team now. A lot
of innocent people get wrongly convicted everything, and it's a
shame that's happened to you. The Todd I know doesn't
deserve to be in prison. Women commit fraud every day
(27:28):
with their push up, brass spanks and all that makeup.
But they're still out here walking the streets. But they
have you locked up for the next twelve years. Seems
crazy if you ask me, I'm heading to Florida in
a few weeks, so I wanted to stop in and
catch up on life. If you could do me a solid,
I need you to add me to your visitor list
so I can get past the guards. Let me know
if you need me to bring anything, and keep your
(27:49):
head up. We will get through this together. I will
always be the captain of team Todd. T Teaper life,
your bff. Lunchbox. I like it the only thing I
think I put in there is I really want to come.
I mean, you really have to because he could think
it was a joke. He could think you're just kidding
with him, like put me on the list so I
can get past the guards. I would just say, I
(28:09):
do want to come visit you if that's cool, but
I need to be on the list, like seriously. But
ps like yeahs And as much as this seemed funny,
it was, but I would love to come see you,
so let me know if you can put me on
the list. Okay, there just needs to be a serious line. Okay, man,
that was good, right, you know? Is it okay that
he's like lying about the whole being on your side
(28:30):
kind of thing? You know what, Eddie, I don't care.
I mean went a little hard on me because he's
definitely not. He actually did the research that convinced us
of the opposite. Because I was like, I don't know,
what do I know about this case? Sometimes people and lunchbox, Well,
actually he did it. Here's how I think that. Yeah,
(28:50):
read into it. It It didn't seem like he did it. Okay,
but now you just contradicted, I know, but life for life, man,
send it off. Today, okay, and then every week or
so we'll just check in and see if you get
a letter back. What if he writes back? Are there
any rules? Can you send it next day air to
prison or do you have to send it regular? Like?
(29:11):
How is there a role on the envelopes coming in?
I don't know what kind of packages they can get
in prison? Like can I send a care package? I
could I send goldfish with it? No, probably have to
get and they're gonna look at every letter that's sent obviously.
Oh yeah, they check it for drugs everything. But I
wonder if you could just send because we use stamps
dot com, can we just send it like? Ups, that's
(29:33):
a good guy in the brown truck drives up. That's
Todd Chrisley. You should call the prison and ask them.
I will, Yeah, yeah, I do. That's cool. We'll check
with you about a week or so. We won't hear
anything in a week, but we'll check with you anyway. Okay,
all right, nice job, you're Amy's pile of stories. A
poll found that the average adult keeps twenty toys from
(29:53):
their childhood, mostly to pass down to their own kids
and grandchildren, and the three most commonly kept toys are
Barbie dolls, legos and hot wheels. Well, Barbie dolls, but
you just bought their new Barbie dolls. There Arkansas raids
and back cheerleaders from like the nineties. I don't have
any toys, but I really didn't have any toys as kid,
(30:13):
so I don't have any ed. Do you have any
toys you saved? No, I'm trying to think, but i'd say,
like maybe when we were in college. My wife we
were dating, and she kind of got me into the
hole like get rid of all your stuff, like you
don't need all that. She got you into it. She
forced to. But I was a rat whatever a pay yeah,
and I would keep everything. But she kind of turned
me into that mindset. Yeah, I have Madam Alexander dolls.
(30:34):
My grandmother bought them for me every Christmas and so
I had this collection. They're still somewhere, but that's all
I have. It's not a toy. You just look at it.
I got every toy ever owned. Do you have anything.
I have baseball cards. That's it. That's cool. That's cool
for the reason of because I thought they were gonna
be worth a lot of money and I would be
able to sell them. I didn't think about passing them
(30:55):
on to my kids, but now that I have kids,
I guess they can have them. But I have zoo
your road toys. Why don't you get those a praise
and see if they're worth any money? I should. I
still have some that like you buy the box like
packs and you don't open them because they're supposed to
be worth a lot of money later. So I have
a bunch of those in my closet in my parents' house, unopened, unopened.
If you bring those in unopened this week, just let
(31:18):
me look. I don't want to look at the cards.
I just want to see what the boxes are. Okay,
I'll make I'll make a bid day go in half
with you. You have to say yes, I'll just make
a bid, go in half on what on whatever he
makes when he sells them. Yeah, like I will buy
the rights to half of the cards, and we may
get way less later we may get way more. But
he can also say no, yeah, I'll have to look
(31:41):
at it. I know I got football, baseball. Bring bring
the boxes in. We'll take a look, and I'll go okay, oh,
so you have a nineteen ninety nine box clear I'll
give you ninety dollars like this, and then I owned,
and then we'll get them a praise, and like we'll
have Mike track somebody down and get him a praise.
Like we'll do all that work too. That's pretty cool.
So it's free money, right, I'm probably gonna lose more
(32:02):
money that go all right, go ahead. There's a doctor
who hasn't showered in about five years. That's crazy, and
he's doing it because he says, it's humans. We don't
need to shower like we do. We're killing that. I come.
Every other doctor says the opposite, and he's the one
that does that. So we're like, oh, maybe he's onto something. Well,
we're showering off all the back here that we're supposed
(32:23):
to have, even the good bacteria that ultimately eats the odors.
So yeah, yeah, But he says, you have to build
it up, like you'll stink it first, but then as
time passes, No, then you stop smelling yourself, but you
still stink. He said, you won't smell, you'll just smell
like a person. No, you'll just not smell yourself anymore.
(32:44):
It's like if you have cats or your house would
smell like cigarettes back in the day, you wouldn't smell
it anymore because you live there. But he walks around.
Everybody's like, oh my god, no, he's like And also
for some reason, people don't stand around you anymore. Yeah,
we probably shower too much. If you're like me, Yes, okay,
I get it, but I don't think you should not
shower for five years. Culturally, that and some cultures they
(33:06):
fared at dinner to show how good the meal is.
Look really, Yeah, what culture is that? Right? Loud to
they have? All cultures are different. Wow, this guy's culture
I'm not part of. I don't like it. I wonder
how many patients he lost when this story gave? Yeah?
What else? Okay, I got a personal question for you, Bobby.
If you're out at a bar and Arkansas loses, do
(33:31):
you have to go home? Or could you lead a
sing along? I've kind of done this, you've you've done
a sing along? No, but we played a show and
Arkansas lost and we had to go out and perform,
So yeah, had to perform. Yeah, this is like just
my choice having fun at a bar let a sing along? Okay, Well,
because that's what Toby Keith did. He's a die hard
Oklahoma fan, and he was out at a bar, an
(33:52):
OSU bar and let us sing along for should have
been a cowboy. It's Toby Keith. He's in a good spirit.
He's like beating cancer right now. I probably need to
sing along for anything if that were the case, because
some stuff is just bigger than games unless the start games,
and nothing's bigger. That was Amy's pile of stories. It's
(34:17):
time for the good news. A couple of weeks ago,
someone broke into the Make a Difference Dog Rescue in Detroit, Michigan.
It's like the fifth time in the last year people
have broken in. They stole four little pouchus R r R.
So they put up flyers. They found the dogs, but
they're like, guys, this has to stop happening. And some
(34:39):
donors saw the news story, it's like, we gotta help
him out. Wrote him a check five hundred thousand dollars
so they can get better security and find a new
place where it's a little bit more secure and well
security security. Yeah, that's that's secure, accord. I'm looking here
on Zillo for five hundred thousand bucks. It looks like
they got a tent and then back under of town.
(35:01):
It's the market now you know. You know how we
know this is not Lunchbox I do because he would
have put his name all over. It would have been
called Lunchboxes Dog Rescue. That's funny. He would have name
it that. Absolutely hearing guys, I'm gonna tell you what.
I'll donate five hundred thousand change the name. Because that's
why people give money to buildings, right, Like, that's so
cool to have your name on a building. Now they
pay for them something they know. No, it just depends.
(35:23):
So let's say you are heavily um, you work with
the hospital that does a lot of work for for kids. Okay,
I know a family who this hospital saved their kids life.
So they fell indebted to the doctors and the kids.
I don't know them, super colol. I thought it. They're
very rich. So what they did is they updated like
the entire wing structurally. They gave a lot of money
(35:43):
to it. So they just named wing in the building after.
That's why I'm talking about. But they didn't buy. They
didn't do that to get their name on the building. Correct.
But if you want to buy the higher rise, you
can pay to put your You literally can buy a place.
You can put your name in your house lunchbox. I'm
saying you can be named John Hopkins University, right, like
by donating a lot of money. No, not, you have
to start the university basically, well in they're a hospital
(36:06):
John Hopkins. Yeah, but yes, to your point, there's gym,
there's buildings at college like a high school. Like Jerry
Jones at the University of Arkansas has that Jerry Jones
Football Complex. That's what I'm talking that. He paid for it.
But he's also an alumni there and he didn't do
it just to get his name on it. Oh, I thought,
you do it. Just get your name on it. He's
passionate about the sport and keeping it. Or even if
(36:28):
it's small, buy something get your name on it. You
should call your high school to see if they change
the name to you don't know, a chair, a chair
in like the music room or something. Yeah, I mean
I am one of the most famous people to ever
come out of Anderson High School. So they could name
a wing after me. Call them and say you want
to do a locker a locker. You'll donate one hundred
bucks if they'll name a locker after you. I love it.
I'll tell you what. If they will, I will give
(36:48):
them the hundred bucks. Wow, will we go have a ceremony.
I won't go back for that, but we can digitally
get going. So call them and see how much it
would cost for them to dedicate a locker to you. Okay,
and if it's your bucks or so, I'll pay for it,
and then you'll go back and be at the ceremony.
I would be awesome. Maybe they put a plaque because
I remember where my locker was, one of my lockers. Well,
that's what it'd be, a plaque or something kind of like, Yeah, okay,
(37:10):
make the call. I'll call them, all right, thank you.
That is what this is about. Dogs, by the way,
that is what it's all about. That was telling me
something good.