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June 14, 2022 61 mins

Lunchbox calls the lotto office to see if they’ll mail him a giant check for his winning ticket, we play a game of name the famous song – marching band edition! Amy accidentally calls 911, we take a bunch of calls and more.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:11):
What's happening everybody? Good morning, Welcome to Tuesday's show More
in the Studio Morning. I had an interesting day yesterday
where Kayla says, Hey, I have this friend. We knew
each other in California and she lives here now and
she's gonna come over, but I want you to hang
out with her boyfriend. And I was like, okay. She
goes it'd be like a date. I said, you guys

(00:31):
have like a and I was like all right, and
so we were. He plays golf, so I came over
and we were hitting some golf balls at the house,
but they just left us just a blind friend date.
So awkward, and it feels like a blind date date.
At first. You're like, hey, how's it going, good man?
How are you so? What do you do? Oh yeah,

(00:54):
what do you want to be when you grow up?
But I feel like forty yeah, and he works in me.
He's like a songwriter and he's actually a really nice guy.
It just took us a minute because you're just staring
at each other and he's thinking the same thing. I
didn't think I was alone in this. We're looking at
each other going our women's God is here, and now

(01:14):
we're either gets going to be really awkward for the
next couple of hours, or we're gonna find a way
to get through this and be friends. But it was good.
It was it was good. So you'll be able to
go out with him again? Yes, that is the question.
After a flying day, will you go out on him?
I would go on another date with him. Okay, it's good,
that's great. I would, But uh, I don't know. I
don't know if he likes me though. Just be confident.

(01:40):
Are you waiting three days to reach out to him?
I don't even have his number. But I told Caitlin
we were hanging out having dinner last night, and she
was like, well, what did you think? Tell me everything?
And I was like, we had a good time. He's
a nice guy. He's a little awkward like I am.
He's an art he's a very artsy guy. I'm just
an awkward guy. And so I said, but after a
few minutes we really got along. Well, I know enough

(02:02):
about what he does. He knew nothing about what I did.
But we got through it, and we had golf to
kind of get us through it, as we're like hitting
balls and so, but I said, I would be happy
to go to dinner with her and him if we
wanted to go to dinner. Nice. So, hey, score off
a little guy. That's a big deal. I got a
new guy, a new boyfriend. I'm gonna read you. Man.

(02:22):
All right, it's time to open up the mailbag to
get something. We call hello, Bobby Bones. I would love
your input on what to do about a situation that
happened to me today. The UPS driver dropped off pack
just like normal, and after she left, I started to
open the packages without looking at the labels. One package

(02:46):
I opened turned out to be for the gas station
down the road, but was addressed by UPS for my address.
Inside there are four vacuum sealed books of scratch off
lotto tickets. Do I do the right thing and deliver
them to the gas station? Do I say sorry, money's gone? Thanks?
In Advanced Lucky Lotto and Idaho? Oh gosh, So you
just mailed lottery tickets a bunch of them. But are

(03:08):
they even good until you ring them in? Yeah, that's
a good question. And wouldn't they know if you just
launch what's your expertise here? Oh? Man? I would say,
I would say money's going sorry. I would I would
claim it as mind and say you know what, I
got this package and throw the box, Throw the evidence away,
Throw the evidence away. So you don't know that it
wasn't addressed to you. How can they prove that? Then
it wasn't addressed to you. Well, so it says, let

(03:29):
me read it again. One package I opened turned out
to be for the gas station down the road, but
was addressed by ups for my address. Yeah, that's what
I'm saying. So I was addressed for him accidentally. Then
it's your tickets. It was sent to your house. You
open that up, you scratch it off and say, let's go, Hey,
these are scratch offs. Yeah, yeah, that should I scratch

(03:51):
them off and test my luck. I would say that
I think that the gas station probably reports them as missing,
but you didn't take them, so and I'm sure they're
serial numbers when you try to redeem your wins. What
I would think. Now, they are serial numbered and they
are running a database. So like if you do, like,
if you run into a gas station and just rip
a roll of scratch offs, you're an idiot because they're

(04:11):
gonna when you try to cash it in, that's when
you get busted. But these were not stolen they were
mailed to her, But don't they have to beat them
when you buy them anytime about a scratch off, they're like, okay,
this one, well that's the price. That's how you know
how much it rang up as and how many tickets
have been set on. Guys, you have to take this
money and run. Okay. First of all, aside from how

(04:32):
to do a lotto ticket, don't keep it? What do
you You can't keep it? If a thousand dollars was
mail to you, would you keep it now? I'd be
scared if they sent drugouse. Yeah, you can't keep it
because if you win it, you're not gonna get to
keep it, right, But you can at least try? Why
not try? What? What? What's the harm in trying? What
if they say, you know what, You're right, they were
mailed to you. It's your money, so you might as

(04:53):
well try it. Like for all you know, someone sent
you a gift exactly sign them above and a lot
of law the lottery gods. This is really how they
send lottery tickets out. Just you think this happens more often.
If they're mailed, I would think they're all male. I
don't think they drive them to I don't think they
drive every single I just figure, like, just like they
unload gatorade, they unload. They don't have a lottery truck

(05:16):
that I've seen, ever seen called to a gas station
and they pull out the tills. Okay, I'm gonna say,
you need to take them to the gas station. That's it.
You just get You could get in trouble if you
try to cash them in and you're probably not gonna
win the money. I think there are more options and
bad things to happen to you than there are good
things here. You could call the lottery office and just say,
what if get my hypothetical, gay, like, what if I

(05:38):
got a roll of lottery tickets mailed to my house
and what if I scratch him in win a million dollars?
You could do that? What do you call? I'll call
the lottery office and see what happened. Andre, Like, what if? Yeah,
here's what we're gonna say, don't keep the tickets, but
we'll have a lunch box calling the lottery office to
actually be no, just don't keep the tickets. I don't
even want his call to factor end of that. I

(05:59):
am curious. What if? I mean, what if what if
They're like, hey, our mistake. You you benefit, you know, finders, keepers, losers, wheepers.
I don't think that's in the roll book. All right,
send the tickets back, take them to the gas station.
That's my answer. But thank you for the email. All right,
close it up. We've got your game. Now it's about
to clothe. Okay, we played this game once a month.

(06:24):
I'll give the adults in the room a riddle. These
are all kids riddles. Are you ready to play on me? This?
When I finished reading the riddle the second time, you
have twenty seconds to finish a riddle. When I say time,
pins come up. Riddle number one, I'm always on the
dinner table, but you don't get to eat me? What

(06:48):
am I? I'm always on the dinner table, but you
don't get to eat me? What am I? Riddle me this?
What always on the dinner table? But you don't get
to eat me? What am I? So many things? And

(07:17):
that noise means that's time. Okay, Amy, I'm always on
the dinner table, but you don't get to eat me?
What am I? Plate? Lunchbikes, terrible cloth, eddie, you're the plate.
I would have accepted plates, silverware or table cloths. All
three of you guys can't eat that stuff or you're
on the table. Next up, I am so simple that

(07:42):
I can only point. Yet I guide men all over
the world. What am I? I am so simple that
I can only point? Yet I guide men and women
all over the world. What am I? Rid on me this?
I'm so simple, but I can only point. Yet I

(08:05):
guide men and women all over the world. What am I?
Time is still ticking? Okay, Eddie, do you have it?
I got him? What is it? I am a compass lunchbox.

(08:27):
I'm a compass, Eddie. I'm sorry, Amy, compass. Compass is
right because we're playing a little possum up. You're acting
like you don't have it. Well, I know because it
just on that one. Next up. If you have me,
you want to share me? If you share me, you
haven't got me. What am I? If you have me,

(08:52):
you want to share me. If you share me, you
haven't got me. What am I? Rid on me this?
If you hire me? If you have me, you want
to share me. If you share me, you haven't got me.

(09:15):
Rid on me this? Share me? If you have me,
you want to share me. If you share me, you
haven't got me. If you have five seconds. There, we
have it. Amy. If you have love, if you want

(09:39):
to share, yes, But if you share a love, you
don't have love. I don't know. Doesn't fit. I was
just saying it. Maybe it was a secondary I know.
I don't know. Guys, Eddie, Yeah, I have a hug.
If you have a hug, you want to share me.
If you if you hug someone, you haven't got me
exactly because while you're hugging pretty dumb lunchbox feels like
he has it and if he, if he has it,

(10:00):
he's a champion. How confident are you? I'm feeling really
good about myself right Yeah. Like I'm sitting up high
in my chair. I had one thing written down and
halfway through you reading that, I erased it. And I
have the right answer and I cannot wait to share
it with you. Guys, you heard my pin drop as
you were still reading the clue over there. So I
am ready to go. If you have me, you want

(10:21):
to share me. If you share me, you haven't got me.
For the win, riddle me this. Let me take you
a little secret. It's a secret, guys, I can't tell
you who, he says secret. If you have a secret,
you want to share it. If you share it, you
haven't got me. If you share a secret, it is

(10:42):
not a secret. Yeah, because it's no longer a secret book.
WHOA that Works is Lunchbox riddle Master. Come on, let's go, everybody,

(11:06):
nice night. A nice Lunchbox is the new riddle Master
and WHOA in customary fashion, take us out Lunchbox with
the riddle me This who Like Cartmart was the latest

(11:31):
from Nashville and Tullywood Morgan number two thirty second Skinny
Lady I announced they have a new song coming out
on June twenty first. It's called Summer State of Mind.
Cole Swindell added more dates to his Back Down to
the Bar tour. The new leg kicks off September twenty
third in Texas. He's bringing special guests Ashley Cook and
Dylan Marlowe with him. Mickey Guyant is hosting a Capital

(11:54):
fourth the Independence Day Celebration special live from Washington, DC.
Fans can watch the show on July fourth on PBS.
I'm Morgan. That's your Skinny Call. It's time for the
good news. There's a charity group at Riverview High School
in Warsaw Ohio, and they're doing something really cool for

(12:15):
foster care kids. They're putting together these kits that these
kids can take to their new houses, stuff like toothbrushes, toothpaste,
dental floss and things like that because these kids they
go to houses with nothing, like really just the clothes
on their back. And so it's really cool there. They
just did twelve and they want to do more as
they go every week. It's awesome and it's also something
you probably didn't know was needed until you were exposed

(12:37):
to it yourself. Correct, I mean generally the same same
with you guys. Oh I went through and my kids
got to our house, they had literally nothing. I had
to go to Target and get toothbrushes, underwear, diapers, things.
Get the call last minute just I mean, they said
they were coming in less than an hour. So yeah,
that's great. That that's a great story. That's what it's
all about. Right there. That was tell me something good

(13:00):
on the phone is Jared, Hey, Jared, where do you live? Man? Texas? Well?
Appreciate you, Colin. What can I help you with? My
oldest dad daughter is getting married next year in January,
and huh, her dad wants to put her on her budget.
Hey really doesn't want to spend too much money on
her wedding, and so far my wife and I have

(13:24):
spent over or has faith over half of everything. And
in the end of it, he's going to be the
one walking her down all And don't get me wrong
about it. You know I love this kid that I
love both of my stepdolders play over my own. I
will do anything for him. I would take money out
of my safeties to pay for her whole wedding, just
to give her what she wanted. But her dad is

(13:44):
not like that. He don't want to. He don't want
to fish out nothing for her. I don't know how
I should feel like though, with him still walking her
down the ale whenever he really don't care about it.
So how long have you raised your stepdaughter? Run on?
Nine years and she's getting married and let's and I
don't even know that the paying for the wedding is
the most hurtful thing, Like you're paying for it and
not getting not not walking her down. I think probably

(14:06):
it's just not walking her down considering you've been such
an instrumental part of her life and I have a
similar ish background where listen, my real dad checked out
on me way young, probably younger than than than her
her real dad did. And when I was a teenager,
Arkansas Keith, who you know is my stepdad for a while,
I came into my life and he was, you know,
basically for five or six years, you know, before him

(14:29):
and my mom divorced, he was my dad. I do
understand the romantic idea of someone going, you know, I
want to have my dad dad walk me down the aisle,
right or wrong. I do understand how and how it
would be important to someone to have their biological father
walk them down the aisle. Maybe she feels like she
has to, you know, maybe I don't think it means

(14:52):
she loves you any less. And I'm saying that from
somebody who has and had step parents. I just don't
feel like I I would be hurt honestly too, and
it's okay to be hurt. But I don't feel like
she loves you any less. I feel like it's just
you're supposed to have your biological father walking down the aisle,
and that's where she is. I mean, has she said
something to you about it? Has she had that conversation

(15:12):
with you? You know? I understand where you're coming from
it into which where I'm coming from. My guessue, right,
because that's a very special part of her life, then
I would love to be a part of I'm going
to encourage you. You can be hurt, you should. I
understand being hurt by it, but I'm going to encourage
you to just be completely supportive, even if it feels uncomfortable,

(15:33):
because that's been your role the whole time anyway, to
be completely supportive even when it feels uncomfortable at times,
and all you're doing is continuing a legacy that you
have built and that you're there for her regardless of
her decisions, good or bad, wise or not wise. You're
just going to be there standing right beside her. Maybe
not that day, but for her entire life, you've been

(15:55):
doing that, and I think the best thing you can
do now is just fully support her even though it
cuts you hard, because I do understand where it where
and why it would it would cut you hard. So, man,
my heart goes out to you because that stinks. I'm
not gonna lie to you. I wish I could just
be like, hey, get over it, man, it can't. That hurts. However,
just knowing the kind of guy you are. By hearing
your voice and hearing how passionate you are about, you know,

(16:16):
being her dad or stepdad, I get why it sucks,
but also in the same vein, it's you got to
continue that if she chose to walk, who knows what
pressure she's getting from him. I don't know. I'm creating
stories in my head. Now. Did you think a reception
I had the DJ play she's my girl and dance

(16:36):
with her? Is that something that she wants? Or you're like,
are you saying at the reception you surprise her with that?
Because also you have the her dad is her dad?
Are you gonna dance with her? Though? Regardless, that's the question,
like are you planning to dance with her? Because I
think that would be great? Is there a a okay,
I don't. I don't care what a song you play.
They could pick a song for him, they could pick
a song for you. Okay. I thought if he was

(16:56):
like going to jump in and be like, I know
we're dancing, nobody knows about it, that would have been
a different issue. That's what it sounded like, and that
made me so nervous because I don't want that. You
don't want to make the dad uncomfortable, and then there's
like a the two dads duel it out in the
middle of the dance floor. You can have a dance
off and the winner gets hurt. No, here's the thing,
this is my honest heart reaction here that as long
as you're not doing or playing that song specifically to

(17:18):
go I told you, But you are playing it because
that's how you feel. Let her rip Tater Chip have
that dance. I think it's great. As long as there's
not a competition, and that's why you picked that song,
then great, you feel that song, go dance to that
song well. But also she'll she'll be a you should allow.
Hopefully she's a part of picking the song. You'll dance too,
it's not. This is her day. So if she's comfortable

(17:42):
with it, then yeah, by all means, have you talked
to her about it? No, I have not. I talked
to my wife about it. She said she thought that
was a good idea, and again, that's how you feel.
I think you should dance to it. I'd run it
by her. But I don't think there's anything wrong with
that at all. I feel I feel good about it. Listen,
I feel good about this wedding. Jared. I know that's
tough for you to not walk her down, but you
you know you signed the contract. You are her stepdad.

(18:03):
You're gonna love her regardless. I think he's working right now.
Tell him to hold those two about fours for a
second on the phone, Jared, listen. I love your heart.
I appreciate you calling, sharing your story. I think you're
in a good place. It hurts, but that's okay, aren't
you glad it hurts. That means you love her a
whole lot. I mean, it could not hurt, and you

(18:25):
couldn't give a crap, and that'd be even worse. But
the fact that you love her and it hurts, that's
actually a good thing because it matters to you. So
let her go have her day, dance, dance with her
to that song if she wants to, and don't let
this keep you from enjoying this wedding. Okay, it was
obviously working, have a low emotional moment and working at
the same time, and that I can respect, all right.

(18:46):
If you guys agree or disagree with that, you can
always call us up. Eight seven to seven seventy seven, Bobby,
Thank you guys. I want to ask some calls about
that topic. Jared's oldest stepdaughter was getting married. He says,
a real dad paraphrasing kind of a dead beat, but
a real dad is walking her down the aisle. He

(19:06):
is not. So a lot of callers are on, why
don't we go to k in Oklahoma? Hey, Kay, welcome
to the show. How are you No, I'm doing good
and you guys doing pretty good? What do you want
to say? Um? Actually, two years ago, March sixteenth, my
son got married to a daughter or to a daughter

(19:26):
that had a stepfather and a dad. And what she
did was she let the stepfather walk her halfway down
the aisle and then let the biological dad intercept her
there and walk her on up. I think it's great
like that. I'd probably go biological father first since he

(19:47):
was the first one to have you, and then i'd
let the guy who finished the race with her, which
is the step dad, but for me, you know, switch
it up. But you know they'll be drama between the
two dads too, like who's he gets to go first?
Who gets to walk her up? Yeah? And we're just
hearing this dad's side of the store. A right, she
might still have a good relationship with her dad. You know,
we only ever hear one side, right, But I thought
it was and I think that's a pretty good compromise.

(20:08):
But it's got to be up to the daughter to
suggest that. I don't think the step dad can go
elbow and then and be like, Okay, I got a plan, babe.
He'll do twelve feet, I'll do eight. Then I'll run
ahead and catch you back on the You know, but
I think that's a pretty good compromise. Kay, thank you
for sharing that. How that was a wedding awkward or
was it awesome? No, it was awesome At first they
talked about one on each side, and my daughter in law,

(20:32):
Megan said no, because that makes me feel like you
guys are walking me to jail. No, you doing that?
That's funny. Well, thank you Kay for calling. Have a
great daylight. Bye bye. Christy in Kentucky. You're on the
Bobby Bones Show. Hi Christy? How are you? I'm good?
How are you pretty good? What do you want to say?
I actually I heard Kay's comment, but I actually have

(20:55):
a daughter of this monthly married, and her stepfather and
her actual father are both going to be walking her
down the aisle, and the reason being is because there
they have come to terms with a long time ago
that you know, mine and his relationship didn't work out,
but my husband, my current husband, has stepped up and
they're just say they're in agreeance that you know, they've

(21:17):
both been a big part of her life. So they're
just gonna both walk her down the aisle. And when
they're asked who gives this daughter away? And they're going
to both say I do. I wonder who races first
to say I do. Listen. I love when everybody can
be happy, everybody can have worth. And I think if
that works, great, love it love the last one. Hey man,

(21:40):
whatever makes the bride happy, that's what should happen on
the wedding day, right, Yeah, like the whatever. Yeah, the
parents have their feelings need to be set aside. Thank
you for the call. Okay, tell me what you saw. Well,
it's an emergency SOS hack. If you have an iPhone,
it's a little button on the side which side, um,

(22:00):
not the volumes, not the volume, the big button that
you would power on power off. If you hit it
five times in a row, it'll shows up. Yeah, if
you do that, it calls emergency services, and it'll also
send a text your selected emergency contacts and it'll alert
them of your location. But it'll count down to three

(22:23):
before it does that in case you accidentally press it
five times. So if you just go one, two, let
me do it. But then what doesn't make a noise
or anything. Yes, really loud alarm, but after three seconds
after so if you're in danger, you do this, let
me do it yet now you okay, I'm in danger.
No you're not, though, Okay, you push it five times?

(22:45):
Then what happens? No, no yet, no questions. Okay, so
you press it five times, then it goes three two,
one at one it sounds a crazy alarm, okay, letting
people around you know you're in danger. It also contacts
emergency services for you. They know your location, services like
nine on one and I don't know. I don't do it. No,

(23:07):
it'll count down to three when we'll let's start making
that at the third second because I want to hear
the sound. We can't do that because then it'll have
alerted people to come help you. Also, but if it's
a test for people to hear, you're not gonna get
in trouble. That's what you say you got fine a
million dollars? Is this some test? Hey, Scooba Steve, let
me ask you about this. Shall we go through with

(23:27):
this or no? I think that because this isn't FCC related,
I think we should try it out and hit cancel.
If they call you, just say hey, I'm sorry it
was an accident. I didn't know because who knows about
that hack? Nobody. I feel like, okay, yeah, I had
no idea, and I've got an iPhone for how long
and I don't know when they they do. It's okay, Okay,
Bob Pittman, Scooba Steve told me to do it, president
of my our radio, all right, and then Bob Pittman

(23:48):
Bobby told me to do it. Okay, are you ready? Yeah, okay,
we're gonna hit it five times, count out loud. Okay, one, two, three, four, five, Okay,
what's your phone doing? Nothing? Happen? It turned off? I
didn't do it right, Hold on five quick, one, two
three four five, There to it. It's calling happens You're

(24:15):
just joking on one. That's what it did. So there
you go. Now we know it goes were and then
at the count of three, it immediately started dialing nine
one one, and then also my my sister and my
husband are probably about to get text messages with my
location because I added them as my emergency contacts. We'll

(24:38):
see what happens. Oh gosh, no, they said all time. Hello,
hello department, Yes, the police department. To hang up. No,

(25:02):
somebody say, hey, I'm sorry, that was the accident. I
was testing testing out a new feature on the phone.
And I'm sorry. You're fine to stay on the line.
We don't call you about okay, sorry, I got nervous. Okay,
thank you, No, you're fine, okay, okay, thank you, bye,

(25:24):
thank you. Wow? Why did you what all you had
to do? It? Again? Stop stop notifying. So that's a
good thing to know. If like say, you're attacker, get
your phone from you, it's gonna keep calling nine one
one until you cancel it. But even attacker knows, oh, accident,
that's an accident. Yeah, Oh my gosh, no. No, that's
when you say no, it's not in the background. Crazy baby.

(25:47):
They I'm sweating. Why all you had to do was stay?
Was an accident. It's like a nerve. You freaked outunder
pressure because this is against the law. The game on
the line. You had to freak the line I don't
want you up. You can get arrested for um misuse
of nine one one. We didn't misuse it. We were
showing our listeners what to do. Stop waving your face
like you're in truck. I am. My heart is hot,

(26:08):
hot hot. When Amy hung up on nine one one,
everyone in the room goes, no, it's the worst thing
you could have done. Okay, guys. Her husband kicks the
door in now, like, what's wrong? So I'm dizzy, but
now we know it works. That's awesome. Calmly, what people

(26:28):
do if they're in trouble is you gotta press it
fast five times. We learned five times boom boom, boom,
boom boom, because when I did five kind of fast,
it didn't work, but five, like you're in trouble, face
and then it goes boom and now and then I
hang up on them again. They're like, Okay, something's happening

(26:49):
over right, Okay, Amy, stop fanning yourself. You didn't almost
go to jail and exactly like she's just committed to
crime and got away with it a good thing, yes
she was. But sometimes nine one will be like, I'm sorry,
no matter what, we usend officers out, we see a
squad bust in. Can you imagine? Okay, Amy, great John,
thank you for sharing that with us. Welcome. The more
you know, the more you know. It's time for the

(27:11):
good news. Dave Wolf is from Michigan. He's a disabled
vet from Vietnam and he likes repairing bikes in his
spare time. He goes to salvage yards, he finds bikes
that are broken down and he fixes them. We had
nothing to do with those bikes. So he got with
this charity that works with former inmates and was like, hey,

(27:33):
they get out of prison, they need a way to
get to work. We can't buy him a car, but
guess what, we can get him a bicycle. They can
pedal to work, get their life together. And then he
teaches them all about how to repair their own bike
that breaks down. And a couple of these people have
even gone on to open their own bike shops. Yeah.
I know nothing about bikes or cars or anything. Shovels radio.

(27:58):
All right, good story, that is what it's all about.
That was tell me something good. Amy's joke coming up
in a second. First, a couple of weeks ago, lunchbox
got a package in the mail and the package was
lottery ticket. He scratched it. He won twenty five dollars.
But there was a problem. Yeah, the ticket was from Florida,
and so I can't drive down to Florida for twenty

(28:21):
five dollars, so I had to mail it. So he
called the lottery office to see if when they give
him his money, they'll give him a giant check for
twenty five dollars. You know, because I'm TV. They give
him that big check for the big jack potts. That's
their rule. So here's a clip. Hello, it's a great
day to win with the three. I got a question

(28:43):
for you. So I won twenty five dollars in your
wonderful lottery. I had to scratch off and I hit
it big for twenty five dollars, and I mailed it
to you guys, right, And so I'm hoping that you
guys can mail me one of those big checks that
I see on the news. Huh. No one's ever asked me,
and I've been working here for twenty years now, I've

(29:05):
never had anybody asked me for a giant check for
a twenty five dollars scratch off. Winner. I mean, I
kind of feel like you're laughing at me, like it's
kind of funny. But no, sir, it's just that it's
so unusual to get this call, you know it is.
You got to admit somewhat humorous to think that you
want a giant check for twenty five dollars. But I

(29:25):
want to walk into my bank with that big check
and be like, I'm here to deposit twenty five dollars. Sir,
you do realize that these checks are not legal tender.
They're just for sure. No, I didn't realize that. I
thought they were real. Like I thought they took that
to the bank and you cash it. Huh yeah, So
do we have a deal You're gonna be mailing me
that twenty five dollars big check. Well, I think you

(29:46):
can tell that we are not going to be sitting
you know check, sir, have a nice day. Possibly the
nicest guy ever the whole time. I felt like I
had a smile on his face. By the way, those
checks are like eighty dollars just to make what they
cost that much to buy, So you wouldn't want to chill.
I would owe them. Yeah, they'd invoice you and send

(30:09):
you the chill. How do you know how much those costs?
Because we've had to do them before. See you had
to buy it. Yeah, we've done big charity giveaways for
our big charity gives and if it gives a few
hundred thousand dollars, you pay like eighty bucks and get
one of those big fake checks. Yeah, but not for
twenty five dollars. I just go over to Amy and
get the joke, morning Corny. I always take my problems

(30:31):
to Tommy. He'll figure something out. Here's the thing about
that joke. Amy was laughing out loud. I've said it wrong, though,
Can I do it again? He'll figure, Tommy, he'll figure,
he'll figure I said, I said Hill, I said Hill,
And I should have said he'll he'll he'll figure. He'll
figure something out. Tommy. I'll tell you guys, I didn't
get that laughing over by herself because I thought it

(30:55):
was funny. You can say it again, but I think
you said it the right way I did. Why did
it not come in my head? It was so much
funnier than when it came out of my mouth. A
lot of times. Say it again, Okay. I always take
my problems to Tommy, he'll figure something else. Maybe next time.

(31:17):
Maybe that was the morning, Corny. Maybe just wear that
on the days you're wearing Tommy, he'll figure. Oh boy,
I don't know if I had one of them. Didn't
you used to run these about Mike d I don't
think so. I have creative control. All right, this is
a fun game. I'll play a very famous song, but

(31:38):
it's as if a high school marching band were performing it. Okay,
all you have to do is name the song. They're
very famous, they're easily recognizable. For example, here you go, Rocky. No,

(32:02):
it's the final countdown. It's the final countdown. I guess
I would have because I guess rock But that's the
hardest one I think. Okay, oh good, yeah, yeah, alright,
I write your answers down Amy, Eddie Lunchbox. It is
elimination style. Name the first song, yes, Amy, Sweet Caroline, Eddie.

(32:42):
I have Sweet Caroline, Lunchbox, Sweet Caroline. Next up, name
the marching band playing the song. Here you go. Amy

(33:24):
took her headphones off. It was gonna be the most
recognize I'm part of the song. I have the song.
I just can't think of it at all. Start of
that pray so good drugging over there? I have it,

(33:55):
but all I got let me know when you're in
over there? Okay, I can't think in the name, but
I'm in. You're writing down a lot of words. She's
seven words deep over here. Okay. And then Lunchbox, what
do you have uptown funk? That's it? What do you
have over there? Don't believe jess Ratt. That wasn't even

(34:18):
have been right, that's from uptown funk. Don't give it
to you. Yeah, don't believe just right? What is it? Yeah,
it's not just right? Watch well, whatever the words are,
I honestly whatever was over in my head was don't
believe Jess Ratt. Fuck it, none of that right there?

(34:39):
It is Eddie Bones, I have uptown funk. Okay, I'm
sorry to say. Oh, you have been eliminated. All right,
here we go Lunchbox and Eddio remaining named this one.

(35:18):
All right man, let's box for you. Ah, don't stop believing, Eddie,
don't stop believing. That's correct. Next up, can you name
this song? As played by the high school marching band

(35:56):
Let's Box All Star Eddie, I have a star? Nice
stop game on Hey now, let's get a little bit
harder here. Named this one, lunch box the middle, Eddie,

(36:31):
I have the middle? Nice job it? Are you just
making me name this one? Lunch box? Shake it off, Eddie,

(36:57):
shake it off? Nice shot? This is crazy all right?
Next one up, lunchbox? Oh, hold on, hit it again.

(37:26):
I'm going five more seconds. Alright, lunch box, alright time Eddie.
Oh no, I got this old Town Road back. Already

(37:50):
play that one again from the beginning. Here you go,
old Town Road. You're going right funny. I love this guy.
See if you can name this next one, Eddie is
our winner. Here's the next one, come on? Got it?

(38:19):
Blinding lights? Yeah? Good? Black super bowl? Okay, okay, next
one shallow? Nice have you can name that one? Got it? You?

(38:48):
And all ten for ten? So I got it? What
is it? That went down to Georgia? Fiddle hard Georgia
and the double deals hard? And if there's a winner
and high school bands aren't playing these songs, they gotta
get on it. These are so good. I can't see

(39:10):
I'm rushing to play shallow. Here's a voicemail we got
from Morgan and Pa. Here you go. I was just calling.
I was just curious whenever Bobby, you order anything to
your house, I don't know, like door Dash or Uber
eat or whatever you guys get or Amazon Prime, do
you put your actual name on the packages? I just

(39:33):
know I remember you guys had some like privacy issues,
and yeah, I was just curious. Yeah I do. But
it's my real name, so it doesn't say Bobby Bone,
but it does say Bobby. So I use real name you.
Sometimes it's me and sometimes it's another name, yeah, which
which confuses a lot of my friends at times, even me.

(39:54):
Sometimes I'm like, who's this And I'm like, oh, yeah,
you just sign a fake name, a different fake name. No,
I would sign mine. I'm just saying, for packages, we
have stuff that shows up all kinds of names. I
forget who all lives in my house? Quote unquote, let
me do a voicemail Number two. This is from Betsy,
my husband. I've been married for almost thirty five years
and we have moved within the last three years. So

(40:16):
we've unpacked a bunch of old pictures and paintings and photos.
He wants to just toss them if we're not going
to put them on the wall. I feel like I
want to keep them. For the kids. We have three children.
I would just love to hear your take on this.
Thank you very much. I hope you have a wonderful day.
I think if you have the space and it's not creating,

(40:39):
you know, some sort of distraction. I think you can
save them. I would like to have them save just
in case. Let them make that decision later, don't. You
can also use legacy box, who we use. Yeah, much
easy compromise which they take all those pictures and they
digitize them, so you still have them all but you
can have them on your computer or your phone, not
have them an actual paper for him, And if you

(41:00):
wanted them to pay for me, you just reprint them.
You know. You can go to legacy box dot com
slash bones if you do it now fifty percent while
supplies lash You can say that, but I say keep them, you,
I say, totally keep them. But yes, the legacy box
is a compromise where you can digitize it and then
you know, maybe he gets his way and get getting
rid of it. But for me, it's like it's worth

(41:21):
it to try to find a space to hold onto
the stuff even if you do digitize it. Now, if
you are a pack rat, period. That's it's probably a
different conversation. You're probably keeping a lot of stuff, and
it's like, look, babe, you're keeping everything. Yeah, but I
do like keeping the pictures if you have space to
keep the pictures. Yes, here's voicemail number three from Austin, Texas. Hey,
what's up, Bobby? Man? I'm over here chilling with my kids. Man,

(41:42):
I got your number. See on calling to say what's uh?
Think you'll believe me now, say what's upby number? It
sounds like a dad flex into his kids has my
number and it just he just called it eight seven,
seven seventy seven Bobby. Yeah, okay, Hey, I'm for that.
And finally, here is Kayla from San Antonio. Hi, I'm

(42:04):
calling because I'm not a little bar and they're playing
So I don't think I Betty's uncle, but it's definitely
the song excited. I love this. So what's the story
with your winning song versus the version? That version? So

(42:25):
I think that's the original version and my uncle just
covered it, and that's the version we play on the radio,
my uncle's band's version. But it's not that one, but
that that song though, has been done many many times. Yeah,
it's almost like La Bomba, you know where it's like
a very popular song and people cover it and my
uncle's one of the covers. How funny though, she said,
like a Mexican restaurant or whatever, and she recognizes that love.

(42:46):
Here's a story for you. A woman says she and
her husband are having some issues, and he said, why
don't we do the three by three rule? Now, listen
to this till me think this is good. The basics
of the rule is that each parent gets three hours
a week just for themselves, which can be taken all
at once or broken up. The couple also gets three
hours of simply together time. They say it's done, wonders

(43:07):
for their relationship, all resentment has been gone. They each
have three hours to themselves and three hours they dedicate
to each other your thoughts. I think it sounds like
something that could work for a lot of people, and
maybe you can't, depending on how you can do it.
Maybe you'd have to start off with the two and
two because it might be hard to figure all those
hours out, or if you got a lot of hours,
the four and four like I kind of like it,
or one yeah, eight for me and we have lunch

(43:31):
together resentment is especially if you have kids. That is
something that can add up real quick if you're not
dialed in to the other person, and maybe how time
is being allocated Eddie with you and your wife you
have four kids, do you guys try to set aside
an hour a week just for each other or Yeah,
that's usually after everyone's in bed and we just kind

(43:51):
of watch TV or we have a designated show that
we watched together. Other than that, like date night that
doesn't really exist in our life. But is that three
hours a week? Yeah? One round of golf for me
is like four hours. Yeah, well, so you would just
get to play nine holes. Nobody wants to play. Really.
I always love throwing that out as a compromise. Well

(44:12):
what about nine? Then I'm like, but if I shoot nine,
I want to know how good I really did a round?
Oh okay, yeah, So I don't know if I can
do that in three hours. Well, I mean you you
you apply what works for you. Maybe you need five hours,
five and five. Maybe you just do it per month.
You have twelve per months. Four they goes toward the twelve.
There you go. You can cater this to fit your lifestyle.

(44:33):
I did think that's pretty cool, though, I doo. It's
time for the good news, Bobby, right. This story is awesome.
There's a place in Albuquerque called this shop. I've been there.
It's my favorite breakfast I've ever had in my life.
Pandemic hit. They struggled to stay open. So this woman
who was a customer there today, I want to help them,
and I also want to help other people. So what

(44:53):
she did if she went by the shop and said,
here's a thousand dollars, so use it for your restaurant,
but use it when police officers come in, you buy
their food until you run out of money. So the
shop stand in business making money and police officers are
being fed that come in and just want breakfast or lunch.
That's a great story. She does not want her name

(45:14):
to be known. She is an anonymous nurse, So shout
out whomever you are. Anonymous nurse. And that's pretty cool.
By the way, I'll say it again, the shop is
the greatest breakfast I've ever had. I was doing a
show in Albuquerque and went by, made a note, and
I still preach about it to this day. You went without, man,
I remember, I've got my favorite breakfast and my favorite dinner.
I don't have my favorite lunch of all time. And

(45:35):
have had some good lunches, but it don't have one
that I'm just like, I'm gonna write that down on
my phone. So, but I have my favorite weekend brunch
that had one time. Man, I'm working to my next
my favorite mills. Ye, well, weekend is brunch. Not a
big brunch guy. It feels pretty fruit through. But when
it's what it says on the menu, and you can
either get lunch or you get it right, I get it. Yeah,

(45:56):
you get it all right. That's what it's all about.
That was tell me something good. We got this voicemail
last night. This is from Aisa Lee. She wants to
sing on voicemail. This is her shooting her shot. Hey,
how about it? Let's hear it. What's up Bobby bones? Soho?
This is day one of shooting my shot. She said,
here's your one chant, s facy, don't dawn, Oh, here's

(46:20):
your one chance, fancy. Don't let me down? Hold and
forgave me so but you say you do not. Don't
let me down? Honey, Molma gonna movie up town? Did
she just hung up? I need you to do blink

(46:42):
one day to two for tomorrow. We'll see how that goes.
I give her a whole arrangement and tell us where
you're from, Aisa Lee. All right, shoot your shot, always
shoot your shot. More people are coming forward about celebrities
being cool. Let's play the first one. Here, a guy
who worked at a high end clothing store says, Robert
Downey Junior came into a Christmas shop wearing an awesome jacket.
Here you go, he was wearing this really cool jacket.
So I was like, oh my god, that jacket. It's amazing.

(47:03):
And he was like, huh, thank you so much. It's
like the first time I've worn it. Fast forward, he
finishes shopping and everything in we're helping him out to
his car and he takes the jacket off and he
gives it to me and he says, Marry Christmas, and
this is it. And I have Robert Daddy Junior's jacket.
Oh my god. Yeah, that's awesome. All right. Here is

(47:24):
a former child actor talking about Robin Williams because they
worked together for a bit. So I'm an actor, but
I was a pretty successful child actor. I did a
bunch of movies when I was a kid. Nancy Drew
and Aceventure Junior and Graves game ever played. But I
want to talk about this movie Licensed to d It
was a rom com with Chark Krasinski and Mandy Moore,
who were also incredible and amazing people. But I want
to talk about Robin Williams. In the two months that

(47:46):
we worked together, Robin taught me everything that I know
about comedy and professionalism and being kind to people on set.
He was the funniest, sweetest, smartest person on the planet.
I don't care what anybody else says. A genius and
the kindest man. At the end of filming, Robin to
my trailer and he gave me a gift. It was
a signed copy of the Gratcho Letters, signed by Gratcho Marx.

(48:07):
He said someone gave it to him because he reminded
them of Gratcho, and Robin gave it to me and
said it's because that I reminded him of him. Pretty cool.
Oh that is cool. Here's one more. Here are here's
the guy talking about Jimmy Fallon. I was lucky enough
to hold the live studio a girl talking about Jimmy Fallon.
Thank you. I was lucky enough to be in the
live studio audience of The Jimmy Fallon Show, and during

(48:29):
the commercial break, he came right up to me and
my friends and had a whole conversation with us. We're
all college kids and communications majors, so he just talked
to us about that and gave us some genuine advice
and how he kind of got to be where he
is today. He seemed very genuine and at a time
when a lot of talk show hosts and late night
hosts have rumors about them being really mean behind the scenes,
it was really refreshing to have that experience with him.

(48:52):
So there you have three people telling three random stories.
Well here's mine. I think I've told this on the show.
Maybe I don't, obviously not, or I think we would
have guessed. Well, a few years ago, I think one
hundred people must have said no to this job, and
maybe too because I just started working on American Idol
and they were trying to get me on things to
promote American Idol. But they said, hey, come host Miss

(49:12):
America or no host, sorry, judge miss America, right, and
I was like, okay, cool, and so I fly up
to New Jersey, Atlantic City, which I had never been
before I'm going to the hotel and there are it's
famous people everywhere that are there's like ten famous people
and I'm the one the only one that's not famous.

(49:34):
And I'm like Dan, there aren't any other like f
list people like myself, and I'm like man, and it's
hard to go talk. Everybody has a little cruise with
them and I didn't have like a group of people
with me. And so we get on this bus. They say, hey,
get everyone, go down, get on the bus. We're gonna
take you across town. We'll go to this place and
learn how to actually judge the competition. So we go
and get on the bus and it was like Forrest Gump.

(49:56):
I'm like walking down. Everybody's got their people sitting with them. Here,
seats taken, can't so I keep walking down the bus.
Finally there's a seat in the very like two seats
from the back, and I sit there by myself and
I'm just looking around like, oh, it's gonna be a
long weekend because I don't know anybody and so and

(50:18):
it's about a twenty five minute bus, right, do you
guys want to guess who it is? Yeah? Pretty far
from it, though, Who who do you think Carrot Top?
I don't know why I guess Carrott Top. But is
it him? No? Would you guess Mario Lopez? Now you
say miss America? Okay, so, but I don't know if
he's still on Shark Tank? Is it Mark Cuban? He
is still on Shark Tank, but it's not Mark Cuban. Okay.

(50:38):
Mark Cuban's worth a billions, Yeah, not millions. So I'm
sitting and again awkwardly by myself, and this guy comes
walk I see him walking back and he's got a
good amount of jewelry on. So you can tell that
he's the famous one. And everybody looks a little different
in your life when you meet a celebrity, especially someone
that was famous, you know, famous eight nineteen years ago.

(51:02):
And he sits down beside me. He goes, yo dog,
Randy Jackson, He goes, yo dog, Do you not know
anybody here? I was like, no, no, I don't know anybody.
He goes, you know me, Now, I'm your friend. So
we sit on the bus like fifteen minutes. He gives
me I think I still have a cell phone over,
gives me a cell phone over. We drive all the
way across town. I'm like the new kid at school,

(51:23):
so it feels like he sits beside me as we're
learning how to judge this competition. He talks to me
for the whole next day as like my buddy partner.
We leave, He's like, yo, dog, whenever you need anything,
hit me up. And I was just like, what just happened?
He had no reason to be nice to me right there.
He didn't get anything from it. There was no gain,
There was no relationship for him that was like a positive.

(51:44):
He just saw me sitting by myself and near the
back of the bus and was like hey, He's like,
yo dog, you need a friend. And I was like yeah, please.
But there you go. There's my story about a celebrity hicle.
If you ever met a celebrity and they were randomly
really nice eight seven seven seventy eight seven seven seventy seven.

(52:04):
Up a little dinner last night. We ate late last
night eight seven seven seventy seven. Bobbies Okay, over on
the phone. Now we have people that have randomly met
celebrities and they're going to tell us stories. I don't
know if they're good or bad. Do we want to
roll the dice? Yeah? Ashley and Arkansas. You are on
the Bobby Bones Show. Thank you for calling. What's going on?

(52:26):
So I just said, I'm from Arkansas and I nannied
for a family while I was in college. And we
were at Lax and guy in front of me at
Starbucks started talking to the little girl that I was
nannying for, telling her how much they looked alike his
daughter and this little girl. So he didn't proceeds to
ask me how old she is? And it's Keith Urban.

(52:47):
Oh that's cool, and he ended up buying my Starbucks.
But I really wish I would have said, like, hey,
if you need a nanny, here's not some remember would you, Disgaret,
would you have moved to nash feel too? Nanny for
Keith Urban? Absolutely? Yeah. Me to college, I didn't have
you know, Yeah, I'm from Arkansas, I'm from You probably

(53:09):
come through my town a lot, and there's not much
in my hometown. So that's a pretty cool story. I
will double vouch that Keith's an extremely nice guy, just
a good dude. Never had a never had a bad
moment with them, and they've had a bunch of moments
with them, so well, thank you for that story, Ashley
I appreciate that he have a good day, you too,
have a good day. You guys can hit us up.
Eight seven, seven seventy seven, Bobby, Let's go over and

(53:32):
talk to Rose and Delaware. Who's on the phone. Hey, Rose,
I just wanted to tell you a story when I
met Rob Stewart okay in Tby nineteen seventy seven, nineteen eighty,
and he kicked out the soccer balls. I caught one.
Some drunk took it from me, threw me over the
railing security guard Cane gave me the ball back Rob Stewart.

(53:53):
Stewart saw it, came over to me, brought the whole
band over, signed my ball and the whole band and
I still have it today. Oh dang, that's cool, wonderful.
How did you have that song? Ready to go? Ray,
I'll be like, Bret, can you give me some Darius
and l It's like many we don't have a club
up in anywhere, and all of a sudden he's got
Forever Young by Rod Stewart ready to go. I'm bad

(54:15):
all right, Hey, thank you for that call. That's pretty cool.
Let's go over and talk to Rob and austin Texas. Hey, Rob,
you're on the Bobby Bones Show. What celebrity did you meet?
Probably the most memorable is I've done a lot of
extra and double work on sets, and the most memorables.
I'm sitting down having a lunch and all of a sudden,

(54:35):
from behind me, I hear a voice. Are the Vituals?
Good Son? And I look up and it's Clint Eastwood.
Oh that's cool, And I said, yes, sir, they are.
He said, do you mind if I sit down? We'll
have lunch together. Got pictures with the guy. He's probably
the nicest man. Him and Patrick Swacy I ever met
in Hollywood. Dan, But but I loved it. That's pretty

(54:56):
cool that you had lunch with Clint Eastwood and he
wandered about the vituls. Yeah. Yeah, he's quart squirts the guy.
He's a really cool, cool dude. And I had a
nice time. Women, I appreciate that. Call Rob, Hope, you
have a great day, are you too? Take on the
phone right now? Is Meghan in West Virginia? I need

(55:17):
some advice. Okay, I just started seeing this guy who's
ten years older than me. He's been married, how three hids.
I'm thirty and my parents we've been dating for nine
months and I just introduced them to my parents, my family,
and every single person in my family. Fine, mom, my dad,
my brothers are all against it because he's older and

(55:40):
has three kids. Okay, so first before you throw out
their advice or take their advice, yea again, why are
they telling you that they don't like him? Is it
only because he's older and has three kids? I think
so you didn't have like a big neck, tattooed face, tattoo,
prison record, or anything like that. No, if that's the
reason that they don't think you should be with him,

(56:00):
and you know those things already exist, I don't think
you should listen to the advice they're giving you. I
think when someone gives you advice, if you understand why
they're giving you that advice, that's a big help. If
you already know he's married, three kids his past and
you're like, you know what, I still love them, I
still have a great feeling and there's fulfillment when I'm
with him, I think you should pursue that. I don't

(56:22):
think you let your parents, your brother and sister, whatever
you have, walk you against that. If you already know
why they're saying what they're saying and you still disagree
with it. You're also not twenty two. If you or nineteen.
If you were nineteen with a forty year old that
had all this even I would go, hey, you don't
understand yet. You're just a kid. Like, listen to your parents.
They've been there. You're thirty, You're good. You know what

(56:46):
this world. You've spun around this planet enough times to
understand what's happening. So I think you're good. I think
you should pursue this until you don't feel like you
should pursue it anymore. Amy your thoughts, Yeah, no, I agree.
If she wants to be with him, then it's most lee.
She can hear what her family has to say, but
listen what but you don't. You're an adult and you

(57:07):
don't have to listen to friends and family. If it's
a decision that you feel good about. I would also say,
sit down and say, hey, tell me why, Like, actually
have a conversation and say, Okay, I understand everything you're saying,
but here's why I feel the opposite way. And then
you know, be an adult and go make adult decisions. So, Megan,
we're on your team completely here. We think you should

(57:28):
pursue this. If it makes you feel good. If he
makes you feel good, then go go to town. Oh
what about like my family, I'm close of them to
so that makes such difficult. Of course it is, but
I think they have to understand and love you the
same way you're understanding and loving them. You're listening, but
you also need to explain to them why you feel
the way that you do. They have some decisions to make,
but they're not running your life. You're running your life.

(57:50):
They're walking alongside of you, but they're not running you.
So this is a youth thing. You're a big girl,
you're thirty. Let's go Okay, that's a kick in the pants.
You need it today. And let's of course, there's some
reason why he don't listen. If he's if he's you know,
if it has to turn his porch light off at Halloween,
if you know what I'm saying, so kids don't come
to his door, that's an issue. However, if he's a

(58:11):
good dude and he has a history that you're fine with,
go let a rip. Yeah, but just honest communication with
your parents is in your family is what you need
to do right now and tell them how It makes
you feel like they will understand if they love you.
Megany and call us back in a week or two
weeks after you have this conversation. Okay, yeah, actually, um,
we are going to use with my brother. Let him know, then,

(58:33):
let him know, call us back, bonehead, Sorry up today.
This story comes to us from Florida. Last Wednesday, a
fifty nine year old man got out of prisonent or
eight years for robbing a bank, went to bed, woke
up Thursday morning, said what am I gonna do today,
walked into a bank and demanded one hundred and fifty

(58:53):
thousand dollars robbed up bank. That's what he's gonna do.
That's shawshank right there. Couldn't be out of prison, get
busy living or get busy done. It didn't feel comfortable
out of jail, right that happened? Yeah, me, I'm always
comfortable out of the big House. That's my true home,
I think generation that's my whole family has been in jail.
All right, lunchbox, I'm lunchbox at your bone head story

(59:15):
of the day. I mean and I were talking right
before we came back on air, and I was like, Hey,
what to dinner last night? At this place called like
Ulon what's it called. So I hadn't heard of it either,
But and so we go and I order this nooki,
which I've never been quite sure what noki is. I'm
pretty sure it's potatoes at that point. Okay, but if
it feels like a noodle in your mouth, it's like

(59:37):
a potato pasta. It's like potato on your plate, noodle
in your mouth. Wow, Yeah, sonoki is so good. Well,
and I didn't know if noki had meat in it,
and it didn't. I learned last night. But I looked
at the menu and it was a little expensive for
fornoki because most nooki is I get olive garden. I'll
be honest with you. That's how I usually roll. I
get the nooki with with some meat alive garden. And

(01:00:00):
so they bring it and they're like, oh, we're gonna
get you. We're gonna put some truffles on this. It
doesn't truffles. I don't do it. They do nothing for me,
like you just don't taste them. It looked like they
were putting tree bark. And I'm sure if you're a
truffles fan, it's amazing. But they're like sprinkled it on,
they're like shaving it, and Caitlin's like, that looks beautiful.

(01:00:23):
I just don't. For me. I just I guess I'm
not sophisticated enough to love a truffle. I love truffle,
chocolate truffles. Those those are good. That's not what they're
shaving on them. And that place was really good. It's
just a truffle thing. It's weird to me, but we
ate it, and it was. It was good. It was
good food. We were out probably way too late last night.

(01:00:45):
Oh that's way that's way too lazy nowadays. It was
a really good place to eat though, and it'd have
been a while since we got to go out and
just have dinner and talk and you know, not worried
about the kids. Yeah, yes, get away from the house.
You had that something. If you're a new listener, Bobby
doesn't have kids, have two dogs. The bommy mon Shoe
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Bobby Bones

Amy Brown

Amy Brown

Lunchbox

Lunchbox

Eddie Garcia

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Morgan Huelsman

Morgan Huelsman

Raymundo

Raymundo

Mike D

Mike D

Abby Anderson

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Scuba Steve

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