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May 31, 2023 44 mins

Lunchbox attempts to spill the tea on Morgan by calling her out for being "drunk" on a Wednesday afternoon but find out what actually happened! Then, hear how Lunchbox attempted to crash Nicole Kidman's movie and if he was able to successfully get a role in the movie this time! Mailbag: A listener found out his dad has another son with a different family, and there's been a lot of drama from it. He's not sure what to do so we share our advice!

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:10):
Alisa, Hey, welcome to Wednesday Show Morning studio like Tuesday,
but I know, I know, get that Monday off and
so everything's all all wonky now. But let's go around
the room. When it comes to content, he does the
most into a bunch of nine year olds, they call
him coach.

Speaker 2 (00:25):
Here he is he Here's the question, who did Bobby
play golf with?

Speaker 3 (00:31):
Because I have a buddy that works at a golf
course and he says, hey, look, he texted me. He says, hey,
I think Bobby's playing today.

Speaker 2 (00:36):
And he sent me a picture of the tea time
and it said Bobby Bones Eddie Garcia, which I had
to cancel.

Speaker 3 (00:42):
I wasn't going.

Speaker 4 (00:43):
And Willy Wonka, and I'm like, what does Bobby playing with?

Speaker 3 (00:48):
A celebrity? But he can't put his name in there,
so did Willy Wonka?

Speaker 1 (00:51):
That's my question, is a question I will not answer
on the air. Come on, but I'm not gonna throw someone. Yeah,
I should use a better name than I should just
be like Chris Johnson or something. Willie Walker is WILLI
Walk is always my placeholder name for if I don't
want to put the name of somebody. But now that
I think about it Willy Wonka. Actually, Garner's more attention
than if I were to just put yeah, you think

(01:13):
generic name. So I will not answer your question, but
I will say, yeah, it was somebody who I didn't
want it to be known that he was gonna play.

Speaker 3 (01:20):
That's what I figured. That's amazing. Now I'm like, Bummada canceled.

Speaker 1 (01:23):
Well now, but Willy Walker does I shouldn't do well.
But okay, moving on. He does a sports podcast with
Ray and he's just now learning about four oh one
K Here's lunch box.

Speaker 5 (01:34):
Does Netflix have like a celebrity exception rule? Because everybody's like, oh,
Netflix is gonna block you from shrif passwords. You're not
gonna be able to use Netflix because I borrow my
in laws, like I don't pay for it, like I
use their account. Guess what, I'm still rocking Netflix, guys.
So all this, oh he's gonna get canceled. You're not
gonna be able to use Netflix. They must have something
where they can like no, it's a celebrity TV and

(01:55):
they just let it go because do you think they
think you're a celebrity. Yeah, for sure, you're less famous
than any single person on Netflix. Oh yeah, right, Yeah,
I mean they put a lot of stuff on Netflix.
I mean no one watches I mean, they have so
much stuff on there, all right, no one's watching it.

Speaker 3 (02:12):
I would just.

Speaker 1 (02:13):
Assume that it's like when social media has a new feature,
not everybody gets it at first they roll it out.
I would imagine that they probably just haven't rolled it
out completely or it and Mike, do you know, has.

Speaker 3 (02:22):
It rolled out at all yet? As far as Yeah,
I'm seeing to kick people off over the weekend. So
what do you think is happening here?

Speaker 1 (02:28):
Yeah, I think they're cleaning everybody out but him. He
probably maybe they haven't got to his account yet, like.

Speaker 3 (02:35):
A social media rollout type thing.

Speaker 1 (02:36):
Yeah, yeah, got it, So I bet you unless there
is some celebrity.

Speaker 5 (02:40):
Yeah, I mean they had a celebrity exception rule. They're like,
all right, you know what, he can stay because I mean,
I'm just laughing my butt off at everybody.

Speaker 3 (02:47):
Oh, I cancel it. It's not gonna work that whatever.
I haven't seen anbody get canceled. You have, I haven't.

Speaker 5 (02:53):
But I read all these years on the news story,
all the news stories. Oh you know, you're not gonna
be able to use Netflix past this day, it's gonna
be done.

Speaker 3 (03:00):
Guess what, Bill rocket Epper free all right.

Speaker 1 (03:03):
When it comes to moms, she thinks she is cool,
and she thought it was a sign when she saw
ducks in her pool.

Speaker 3 (03:08):
Here she is Amy.

Speaker 6 (03:11):
I took the kids to see the New Little Mermaid,
which is the live action version, and it was so good.
I loved it. My kids loved it. We give it
four Mermaids out of five.

Speaker 3 (03:24):
That's pretty good. Well would you like about it?

Speaker 6 (03:25):
I mean for well, I asked the kids. They just
said four. But then for me, it's like, oh, I
just so nostalgic, like the original, like the cartoons. Sometimes
like the real life stuff. I was like, hmm, Prince
sometimes was throwing me off, but I totally enjoyed it. Prince,
I don't know his name.

Speaker 1 (03:43):
People think that the Little Mermaid it's about a woman
doing anything for a man.

Speaker 3 (03:48):
Actually not true.

Speaker 1 (03:49):
It's about a mermaid wanting to be human, and that
just is part the huge She wants to be a human.

Speaker 3 (03:56):
Part of it is sure, this experience of love.

Speaker 1 (03:59):
But I would see people complaining about the Little Mermaid,
and you know, oh, can't believe she would give it
all up for a man, this is not the message.

Speaker 3 (04:08):
But I don't think that's it at all.

Speaker 1 (04:09):
I think she gives it up to be human and
that falling in love is a human experience.

Speaker 3 (04:13):
Yeah, the man just gave her the idea. Yeah, I mean,
where are your world?

Speaker 1 (04:16):
Isn't that I only know this because I danced at
the song on Dancing with the Stars.

Speaker 3 (04:20):
I've actually never seen a little mermaid.

Speaker 1 (04:22):
I've just asked a lot about it and so, but
I would know the words of part of your world
come on, where they walk.

Speaker 3 (04:28):
Where they were run up, where they.

Speaker 6 (04:31):
Stay in the sun, wonder and free. I wish I
could be.

Speaker 1 (04:39):
And that'sn't even really about it, dude, It's just about
being able to be a human.

Speaker 6 (04:42):
Yeah, she's she's she's very interested and curious about the
world humans and collecting their things.

Speaker 1 (04:49):
Like she looks like a human anyway, Let's be honest,
she's a human with a paidole fish tail. I'd be
weird it out too. I like pick one made me
a human, right me a fish? Don't leave me looking
like this.

Speaker 6 (04:58):
And also as a parent watching her dad have to,
you know, release her, she does want to be part
of that world. It's also a message of like, hey, parents,
sometimes we have to release our children and let them
be who they want to be.

Speaker 1 (05:12):
So this movie also is controversial in some parts because
the Little Mermaid's not white anymore.

Speaker 6 (05:16):
Yeah, no, she's not her.

Speaker 3 (05:17):
She's one of the.

Speaker 1 (05:18):
Dumbest controversies I've ever seen. Yeah, go ahead, case lor mir.
It's fictional anyway. They're like the Little Mermaid, she's not
white like she you know, this is all like fairytale, right,
she's a mermaid tune and there's no half fish, half humans,
like all of this is me whatever color they want
her to be.

Speaker 6 (05:33):
Well, yeah, I think that that's very important because my daughter,
I mean, she's Haitian and for her to be able
to go to the movies and see someone that looks
like her on the screen, that's really really cool. And
the actress's name is Halle Bailey, and she was so talented,
so good.

Speaker 3 (05:47):
So close to Halle Berry, so close.

Speaker 1 (05:49):
When I see it, I'm like, Halle Barry's Little Mermaid
little old yeah, yeah, but no, it's Halle Bailey Bailey.

Speaker 3 (05:55):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (05:55):
And she's got a sister or something, somebody Chloe Bailey.
They have a girl group, their whole thing. And then
I don't know. Somewhere I saw they were related to
Charlottne and the god.

Speaker 1 (06:06):
That I don't know, okay, right, what he got from
Mountain Pine, Arkansas. He loves to work out with Eddie
every day and for some exercises they have to lay
bobby bones.

Speaker 3 (06:14):
What.

Speaker 1 (06:17):
By the way, they post that picture of Eddie doing
lifting weights, you see me post it.

Speaker 3 (06:21):
Hey, come on, tell me, tell me he's not looking ripped.
I was like, Eddie, hold the way right there. Yeah,
I was about to go to the airport after that.
I'm like, I don't know they're gonna let me on
the plane with those guns.

Speaker 1 (06:34):
I didn't want to bring up all I'm saying about
the Shania twenty concerts.

Speaker 3 (06:36):
Have you guys been seeing this?

Speaker 1 (06:38):
It's like all over my feed where apparently you go
to a Shanaia show according to TikTok, and it's terrible.

Speaker 3 (06:46):
People are like leaving halfway through.

Speaker 1 (06:48):
There are people that are recording, like people just walking
out of the the venue or the outdoor amphitheater, like
I didn't even know what that way. And they show
clips of it too, and they could be cherry picking parts.

Speaker 3 (06:59):
Of the show.

Speaker 1 (07:00):
But there are so many of them, of course, Ray,
what do you have there? Do you have a clip
from TikTok?

Speaker 3 (07:04):
Yep?

Speaker 1 (07:28):
I'm watching it. I'm just lost and what's happening? It
almost Hanks like a mice cutting in and out, but
it's not. She's like randomly just jumping in. And even
that's still the one. She's the background singers where she's
supposed to go.

Speaker 3 (07:39):
I still don't want to hoo the only she just
doesn't do it. It's weird. I don't know what's up
with the Shania shows, but it makes me.

Speaker 1 (07:46):
Want to go.

Speaker 3 (07:46):
I never wanted to go until I saw the TikTok.
So that's fun. Yeah, if it's working, that's what it is.
It's working.

Speaker 1 (07:50):
I want to give me a ticket and go because
it looks like absolute mayhem.

Speaker 3 (07:53):
And you guys haven't seen any of this. I saw
some clips in the news. That's the news had this. Yeah,
it'saw an article on it.

Speaker 6 (08:00):
I saw Tom Hanks.

Speaker 3 (08:01):
Was it one of the shows Oshanaiah?

Speaker 6 (08:03):
Yeah, I just saw a picture of him there. It
looked like im having a good time.

Speaker 1 (08:07):
Well, I hope that she's okay. I hope she just
sucks at singing it, but she's still healthy. Yeah, you
know what I mean. Sometimes you get older you just
can't sing as well as you used to. I hope
that's the case and that she's not sick. She had
line disease that kept her from singing for a long time.
I remember that.

Speaker 3 (08:23):
This one's juicy. Time for the mail bag?

Speaker 6 (08:26):
Do you send the game email and read all the
air pick something we call Bobby's mail.

Speaker 3 (08:31):
Dig Yeah, Hello Bobby.

Speaker 1 (08:34):
I recently did a DNA test from one of those
ancestry sites and was surprised to learn that I had
a whole family had close relatives that I knew nothing about.
My father has always said he doesn't really have any family,
but because my mother did the same DNA test before
she passed away, I can clearly see that all these
cousins are on my dad's side of the family. None

(08:55):
of that was too surprising, but I was shocked to
learn that I have a half brother. He and I
have emailed, and he's never met our father and says
he doesn't want to. So I was hesitant to say
anything to my dad about what I've learned. Should I
keep it to myself or should I say something to
my dad? Signed brother from another mother This is interesting
because the dad may not even know the kid exists, right,

(09:16):
I don't know that this dad had a kid and
left it and was like peace out. I don't care
about you or her. I'm running as far as that's
I think where our mind goes, because a lot of
dudes arescuzzes, for sure. But there are also instances, and
we've talked about him here on the show, or the
dad doesn't even know, like they got somebody pregnant, and

(09:36):
maybe the woman didn't even know who got her pregnant,
or maybe she was with somebody else and she just
acted like that's who got here pregnant to avoid the drama.

Speaker 3 (09:42):
There's just a lot of different possibilities here.

Speaker 1 (09:46):
And it is your dad, and I do think you
should tell them. And yeah, it could be uncomfortable, it
could be awesome, it could be a disaster, yes, but
it is your dad, and I think you have the
conversation with him.

Speaker 2 (10:00):
That's the real life thing that you got to talk about.
You tell him privately, right so he can Yeah, I don't. However,
he wants no family dinner man. Yeah, I don't think
I put on a sign. You know, it's like graduate
at twenty twenty three. I don't think you're like new Dad.
And he walks with something New Dad's sign.

Speaker 6 (10:13):
It's definitely prevace it with's like, Okay, I'm about to
tell you something that may or may not shock you,
So sit down.

Speaker 1 (10:21):
I don't think you may not shock you well, because
here I think you go, Hey, I.

Speaker 3 (10:24):
Need to talk to you.

Speaker 1 (10:25):
I took his DNA test and I learned I had
a whole lot of other family members and.

Speaker 3 (10:33):
Come on out, Oh, oh my god, is you're the father?
Mary comes out? He got forty.

Speaker 1 (10:41):
Yeah, it's like you're the The answer is, yes, you
need to have it.

Speaker 3 (10:45):
You know your dad, you know how you need to
talk with him. I would tell him he may not know.
That's why.

Speaker 1 (10:51):
That's the only reason why, because if he were like
hiding it or he'd run in your adults, I don't
know that.

Speaker 3 (10:58):
I want to jump in that mess that he may
not know. So I would tell him.

Speaker 6 (11:04):
You Yeah, I would tell him absolutely. And even if
maybe who knows, he had that happen a long time ago,
and he maybe made that decision, but he probably has
a lot of shame around it, and he could I.

Speaker 1 (11:16):
Don't know that this happens. I can't use the word probably,
we don't know, But I'm.

Speaker 6 (11:19):
Saying both scenarios. Like you said, you know, say something
because he may not know, but also you could say
something because he may know, and there could be room.

Speaker 3 (11:26):
For repair if he knows.

Speaker 1 (11:28):
I don't think he wants to be repaired, but I
don't I'm gonna bet he doesn't know if I'm betting,
but we don't know.

Speaker 3 (11:32):
Lunchbox, listen, this is why you don't take these tests.

Speaker 5 (11:34):
But what you do is you wait for a family barbecue, okay,
and you bring him as just a friend and yeah,
and see if they like, oh, who's this, Oh, this
is my friend Jim. And then if he reacts like,
oh gosh, he found him.

Speaker 3 (11:45):
But what about Jim. Does Jim know that's his dad? No? Oh, so,
but then you have to go be friends with Jim
and like form a relationship. I think that's great. And
that way you you.

Speaker 5 (11:54):
Form a bond organically, and then he's like, Jim, guy
is really cool.

Speaker 3 (11:59):
You should bringhim aroun more often. I like that guy.
And then all of a sudden they have relationships buddies
and then just.

Speaker 5 (12:03):
Like, well, that's your half or that's your son and
my half brother.

Speaker 3 (12:06):
Oh, there's your dad. And then it's like, wow, it's
not TikTok.

Speaker 1 (12:09):
You can record it boom anyway, tell him that's what
we say.

Speaker 6 (12:13):
We got your.

Speaker 3 (12:13):
Game, man, and we laid on the air. Now, let's
found the clothes.

Speaker 6 (12:18):
Bobby's failed that.

Speaker 1 (12:19):
Yeah, Lunchbus is trying really hard to get in this
Nicole Kinman movie. They're shooting here in town. So you
found the set the first time and you just drove
up to it and you tried to get a roll.

Speaker 5 (12:32):
Yeah, I just drove up like they didn't have the
street block nothing, So I just rolled up right in
front and try to get a job.

Speaker 3 (12:38):
And this is a guy that's like working security. What
we got going on?

Speaker 1 (12:42):
Oh you need me?

Speaker 3 (12:44):
You need me to act? My man act all you want?
What do you need me to do? I'm perfect for
a role.

Speaker 5 (12:49):
I was in bat out of Hell, I was in
Friday Night Lights, wasn't yep.

Speaker 3 (12:53):
I don't know how long you guys can be the
actors suck. Let me know how I can jump in. Yeah,
I'm trying to get a roll. I'm trying to get cash.
You cannot get in. I can't be on the movie. Nope.
Life is like a box of Charla. You never know
what you're gonna get.

Speaker 7 (13:08):
I need to get in metro ball.

Speaker 3 (13:10):
No, no, I'm just trying to get a roll in
the movie. Man, you're missing your break.

Speaker 5 (13:14):
But let me know what I'm trying to get in
the movie.

Speaker 3 (13:20):
Just so many things to say.

Speaker 1 (13:22):
Again, One, if you don't know he's in his car
blocking the road, you have found out quickly to he
wants to be on a movie on.

Speaker 3 (13:30):
It and then he does life.

Speaker 1 (13:33):
But like a box of chocolates, their break. Okay, so
that happens, we get a good laugh out of it.
But he is still obsessed with finding this movie and
being in this movie. So now what happened new location? Guys,
luckily stumble on it or somebody tell you stumbled on it.

Speaker 3 (13:53):
Do you get tipped off? Tipped off? Okay, why did
you lie the first time? I don't want m I
get anybody in trouble.

Speaker 5 (14:00):
And so I went up and they have this time,
they have the roadblocks. I'm walking and they're shooting. I
would say, seven houses down, and they got the barricades up,
and so I start screaming for Nicole.

Speaker 3 (14:14):
Did you see nic call. I start screaming, Nicole's in
the front yard. Oh so she's you know she's there.
I know she's there. My gosh, okay, so you're out
of your car, you're on foot, on foot. You may
hear my kids in the background.

Speaker 1 (14:28):
Kids are there too, at a standing one of those
wooden like barricades.

Speaker 3 (14:33):
It's like wooden barricades like that they blocked the roads with.

Speaker 5 (14:35):
There's like three of them or two and a half
across the street, whatever they are.

Speaker 3 (14:38):
And you're yelling at the yelling at Nicole, kidman, Nicole, Nicole.
It's lunchbox, Bobby boat Shop. We met one time. We
can do a romance scene. I already asked my why
we can smooch Nicole?

Speaker 6 (14:56):
Nicole?

Speaker 3 (14:56):
Hi, Nicole, why are you?

Speaker 1 (15:00):
Even your kids are like, stop it, Hey, we get it.

Speaker 6 (15:02):
Why are you trying to kiss another girl?

Speaker 1 (15:06):
I don't like it that yells my name, even if
it's a show. I don't like it that he yells
that out.

Speaker 3 (15:10):
But that way she knows I'm legit. Let you know.
Oh okay, I don't want her to know that you're
part of the show.

Speaker 1 (15:15):
In that circumstance, she's trying to act and do it
like a sad scene.

Speaker 3 (15:21):
The kids go pull in short, stop your dead, you're
embarrassing and stop please did she see you? No? But
after yelling that much, but security did come up to me. No, no, no, no, no,
come on, no.

Speaker 5 (15:35):
No no, And let's just say listener of the show.

Speaker 3 (15:37):
He was like, I know what you're doing. You need
to stop. He goes.

Speaker 5 (15:41):
I don't want to hear me on the show tomorrow.
He goes, But if you promise to not talk, I
can take you down to a porch down the road
and you can sit and watch.

Speaker 3 (15:50):
And Eddie check out my video? Is that Nicole Kidman agting?

Speaker 1 (15:53):
Or what.

Speaker 3 (15:55):
That looks like? Nicole Kidman was across the street from
the shoot yep? But whose foot is that?

Speaker 1 (16:06):
One of the ladies watching this is miserable sitting there
watching somebody act.

Speaker 3 (16:11):
It looks like he's maybe with a group of people
just watching.

Speaker 5 (16:14):
That's where they allowed me to go sit on the
front ports. They had a designated watching area.

Speaker 3 (16:18):
And did you use that as your break?

Speaker 7 (16:19):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (16:20):
No, He told me, do not talk. He said, I
can't yell like. He was nice enough to move me
down the street.

Speaker 3 (16:28):
When heat comes on l Fox kind of wil yeah,
oh yeah, you have to zoom in real far. Wow
about that. That's pretty awesome.

Speaker 1 (16:40):
And you didn't like network with anyone else there, like
be like, hey, has it gone lunchbox?

Speaker 5 (16:44):
No, these were all just people that lived over there,
Like these weren't workers, so I didn't get to talk
to anybody. All the workers were across the street, like
doing the scene or whatever. And this guy brought me.

Speaker 3 (16:54):
But I mean, any tips learn anything in acting?

Speaker 5 (16:57):
I learned that they shoot the same scene about fifty
times and it was literally just a kid walking down
the sidewalk and hugging his mom and that's it.

Speaker 1 (17:06):
But what did you learn from her? From I don't know,
one hundred feet away on your phone tuning in.

Speaker 5 (17:11):
I learned that she has a great demeanor, stage presence,
like her her facial expressions like I mean, they are
she's dialed in. Nothing distracts her, distracts her like if
somebody else cut she immediately and then she gets right
back into character when they say action.

Speaker 6 (17:26):
Well, obviously nothing distracts her. He was yelling, told she
near it.

Speaker 1 (17:31):
Okay, Well, this was an experience and made you want
to be an actor more or less?

Speaker 3 (17:34):
Oh more, I got a taste of it.

Speaker 1 (17:36):
Wow, hey, listen, he's getting closer and closer. Yeah, he
got a taste of it. He sat with the people
who lived in the neighborhood and watched it from afar.

Speaker 3 (17:43):
But I mean, I.

Speaker 5 (17:45):
Can't give that guy a shout out. And I'm supposed
to say, but that was pretty cool. But he didn't
tip you off. No, he didn't tip me off. But
he was working security. He may have had a gun on.

Speaker 3 (17:55):
His hip then down that secure so the criminals get
close to.

Speaker 1 (17:59):
The h.

Speaker 3 (18:02):
Thank you. You know what a good good person says.
They don't reveal their sources. What a good.

Speaker 5 (18:07):
Person said, good reporter, huh, because you know, like when
they write articles are like, oh my, yeah, you can't.

Speaker 3 (18:15):
I don't like source. Yeah, because like some people go
to jail for not revealing their sources. Yeah, but this
isn't one of those. It doesn't matter. I was gonna
play song.

Speaker 1 (18:22):
But I mean, great, I love it, great story, almost
got there. Almost are you stopping? No, I'm not gonna
give up. Don't give up, Shadowy, never give up.

Speaker 3 (18:33):
Okay, thank you much, It's time for the good news.

Speaker 6 (18:42):
Char Toobin is eighty five years old and last weekend
in ben Doregon, she ran her one hundred half marathon.

Speaker 3 (18:51):
She's eighty five.

Speaker 6 (18:52):
Yeah, she started running decades ago. Obviously it's taken her
a minute, but she wasn't really like, you know, trying
to hit a hundred as a goal. She was just like,
oh wow, this happens to be my one hundredth half marathon. Now.
She was recently injured, but not from running. It's because
a dog behind her came up and hit her legs,
so she heard it, so she had to get physical therapy.

(19:13):
So something cool about this one hundredth race is her
physical therapy team decided to run with her. Her daughter runs,
her granddaughter runs, and her granddaughter even said, I want
to run with my mom when she's eighty five. Doesn't
become a family affair.

Speaker 3 (19:27):
Half marathon is like thirteen miles, right.

Speaker 6 (19:29):
Thirteen point one because the full and twenty six point two.

Speaker 1 (19:33):
She's eighty five. Yeah, I never run thirteen miles in
my life. I used to do ten when I was
training for triath launch. I that's wild. She's eighty five
but can still do that? You ever time?

Speaker 3 (19:43):
Oh gosh, it doesn't matter. I just wonder, it doesn't matter.
It doesn't matter.

Speaker 6 (19:49):
But I was just wondering, how bet that's good hour's
lunch bugs.

Speaker 3 (19:52):
I don't know that's true. That's why what i'd run
it in. No, you run jin splints after a block, Bobby, you.

Speaker 6 (19:57):
Could run a full marathon and under.

Speaker 3 (19:58):
Six I don't know that's true. I do, I do.

Speaker 6 (20:00):
I know that about you. It's seventy five percent mental
and it's the same thing I know about you mentally.
You're strong.

Speaker 3 (20:05):
But to prove you're wrong, he'll just walk it. Yeah,
watch it now. If you know anything about me, I
will prove her wrong. That's right. That's a great story.
What's her name again?

Speaker 1 (20:13):
Chartobin chartopin Good job by you, eighty five years old,
still rocking.

Speaker 3 (20:17):
That's what it's all about. That was telling me something good.

Speaker 1 (20:22):
Just something that you the listener, hopefully you probably already know.
But if you don't, the show doesn't know what segments
we're gonna do until I pull it up. You all
sit here every single segment and you just kind of
wait and you see what I say and where I go,
and you just go. It keeps the show. There's no script.
You don't even kind of know where we're going for
the most part.

Speaker 3 (20:40):
Sometimes it's nerve wracking. Yes, well, this is spill the
Tea this segment. Here we go nerve.

Speaker 1 (20:45):
I just want people to know. Nobody knows, so go ahead,
spill the tea. That's also why sometimes it sounds like
dog crap, but also why it sounds so great sometimes
because they're just being themselves. But this is the only
time in Spill the Tea this has ever happened. There's
something that's happened that in all the times of you

(21:05):
guys tittle tattling or tattletaling or whatever it does on
each other, this is the only time it's ever happened
where two different people came at me, unrelated and spilled
the tea on each other at the exact same.

Speaker 3 (21:16):
Time, on each other two different things.

Speaker 6 (21:20):
So let me guess Lunchbogs and Eddie.

Speaker 3 (21:23):
No, yes, Morgan and on each other.

Speaker 1 (21:27):
Okay, interesting, And I don't know if one new one
was doing it, so they were firing back at each other.

Speaker 3 (21:32):
But I get two different notes.

Speaker 5 (21:34):
So Lunchbox, Oh, she must know how spilling tea on her,
that was the question.

Speaker 3 (21:38):
And she must know. Yeah, yeah, probably did you know? No,
I didn't, you didn't know Okay, did you know lunchbox? No,
I don't know what. I don't know what I could
have done that was tea worthy. Oh mine's so good, lunchbox,
you go first. She spilled the tea on Morgan. What
do you know?

Speaker 1 (21:52):
Guys?

Speaker 3 (21:52):
Let me tell you. I gave Morgan a call.

Speaker 5 (21:54):
It was a Wednesday afternoon at three pm, and Morgan
was drunk at three pm on a Wednesday after noonday.

Speaker 3 (22:02):
And I am like, how do you have this kind
of exactly?

Speaker 5 (22:08):
I called her to ask her a technology question and
she's like, it's just it's such a bottle.

Speaker 3 (22:16):
She slurred her words. I'm like, what is this right
there in the bottle? And I'm like, no, no, I said.

Speaker 5 (22:22):
To a screen shot, I don't have any screamshots and
she's hammered.

Speaker 3 (22:26):
It's three and I was like, are you okay? Yeah?

Speaker 5 (22:29):
Why She wasn't asleep, like just waking up. No, No,
she was just slurring her words. I was like, this
girl is drunk. And I don't know if she thought
she played it off well because she was giggle after
she would talk, and I was like, she's obviously hammered.

Speaker 3 (22:41):
So I'm gonna have to bring that to the show.

Speaker 5 (22:42):
I was like, I need the life where I could
be hammered at three o'clock on a Wednesday afternoon?

Speaker 3 (22:46):
Are you napped for hours and hours? Right? But just why?
When you were single? You probably did that.

Speaker 1 (22:51):
That's true, But I'm like, there you go, well again,
do you have any response to this at all?

Speaker 6 (22:55):
Yeah, I was not drunk.

Speaker 3 (22:57):
I had just got back from the dentist.

Speaker 6 (22:58):
And I had two fillings. I was a little drugged up.
And she was slurring because you did.

Speaker 1 (23:04):
She answered the phone for your work even though she
had just been to the dentist.

Speaker 5 (23:09):
Okay, you might want to say that when someone calls
her and she's slurring her words.

Speaker 6 (23:13):
I thought I was doing pretty good at talking.

Speaker 3 (23:14):
I thought you not come on there and just screams
someone's drunk. Just assuming, man, Well, what.

Speaker 5 (23:19):
Would you assume if you call someone three o'clock on
a Wednesday eternoon and they're slurring their words and giggling
like they don't mention anything about anything, you're probably.

Speaker 3 (23:26):
Drunk, exactly.

Speaker 6 (23:29):
Bobby said it. You say, hey, are you okay?

Speaker 1 (23:31):
I did I just wake you up? You sound funny that,
but it didn't sound like sleepy. Okay, Well you sound
like slurring.

Speaker 3 (23:37):
It's been unsuccessfully skilled.

Speaker 6 (23:39):
Wow, I was a little drugged up, I will say,
but it.

Speaker 1 (23:42):
Wasn't intention Yeah, okay, lunchbox is tea unsuccessful. Now Morgan
has tea on lunchbox. Morgan, you have the stage, all right.

Speaker 3 (23:51):
So I was walking in the hallway and I hear
somebody just kind of talking on the.

Speaker 6 (23:54):
Phone and it starts getting louder.

Speaker 3 (23:57):
I knew it was a lunchbox. I see him, he
doesn't see me.

Speaker 6 (24:00):
I'm like behind the wall, and he says on the phone,
do whoever he's talking to. He's like, yeah, yeah, I'll
get some snacks from our our green room to bring
home for the kids lunches.

Speaker 3 (24:10):
So he's stealing snacks that we have for guests to
take home.

Speaker 5 (24:12):
Yes, And he was reiterating it, and he was talking loudly,
which I don't understand why, Like I don't know if
he didn't care if anybody heard.

Speaker 6 (24:18):
It, but like he was straight up admitting to stealing the.

Speaker 5 (24:21):
Snacks that are not for him for his kids lunches.

Speaker 3 (24:23):
Lunchwikes.

Speaker 5 (24:25):
I wouldn't say I was admitting to stealing. My wife
was just reminding me to steal that I was supposed
to bring home a couple bags of peanuts and a
couple of bars for their lunches for the next day.
And I was like, I will remember, because she had
already texted me and then she had called me, and
I was like, I already got it. I know what
I'm doing. So I wasn't admitting to stealing. I was
just reaffirming my wife that I was going to grab them.

Speaker 3 (24:46):
But you're steal them.

Speaker 6 (24:47):
But does she know? Does she think you're going to
the store or you're bringing them from No?

Speaker 3 (24:51):
I told him, I get on my work. Hey schoch Stevid,
what's the deal here with this stuff? This is my
first time hearing it.

Speaker 4 (24:57):
Kind of makes me upset because we buy this for
the guests, for you and your family, and you make
a lot of money, you can afford you on damn snacks.

Speaker 3 (25:03):
That's true.

Speaker 5 (25:04):
And guess what, those artists make a lot of damn
money too. They can afford their own their guests. But
they're coming to be a guest of our show. That's
like going, Hey, I'm gonna buite you over dinner party.
But since you make money, you bring your own food.

Speaker 3 (25:15):
Are they going to fight? I?

Speaker 5 (25:20):
Fine, Fine, what I'll do is I'll have my kids
come in sit in the green room.

Speaker 3 (25:24):
There'll be a guest to guess. The absolutely could be
booked to guests.

Speaker 6 (25:29):
No, please don't bring them up here.

Speaker 3 (25:30):
But we can. Why not because we're all going to
get that's true. I mean, who's been sick for like
three weeks, Eddie.

Speaker 5 (25:38):
He's been discussing the weeks and you're just kidding.

Speaker 1 (25:41):
We can't take stuff from this building that we buy
because we don't have much anyway. I have to give
away prizes out of my own pocket a lot of
times for the show. So we can't take stuff from
this unless you talk to Scubasteve about it. And if
he's like, you know what, this stuff's gonna go bad,
then you can have.

Speaker 3 (25:55):
It, right. I mean, you can't agree with me when
I'm talking about what you did. Yeah okay, yes, Amy.

Speaker 6 (26:03):
Well, so like Eddie makes coffee out of there, is
that allowed?

Speaker 1 (26:07):
But he's doing it on the Showy blooch Box is
starving on the show and he's like, I yeah, blood
sugar slow, he needs to go eat a snack.

Speaker 6 (26:13):
Okay, then he can go because I've taken a bar too, and.

Speaker 3 (26:16):
That's great and you need to eat it.

Speaker 1 (26:17):
You sure, okay, but you can't take it home for
your kids after you told your wife you're gonna get
at the store.

Speaker 4 (26:22):
I have also bought coffee and dropped it off there.
Oh that's nice, thank you. I'm contributing. We're twelve or
twelve we're drunk or thieves? Okay, No, Morgan wasn't drunk.
Oh yeah, because we are thieves. We are okay.

Speaker 3 (26:38):
That is spilled the tea. Spill the tea.

Speaker 1 (26:44):
Like a horror movie. They may have even made a
movie somewhat like this. Was it based on this Mike
d movie? Mike, It just happens to be similar. So
Natalia Grace Barnett, she's a little person with a rare
bone growth disorder. She was adopted from Ukraine. I have
family here who thought she was six years old, because
that's what she was portraying.

Speaker 3 (27:05):
She looks six.

Speaker 1 (27:07):
Her adoptive parents later claimed she was a sociopathic adult
pretending to be a child.

Speaker 3 (27:11):
Oh my god, can you imagine she's faking six? Wow,
you have to act six all the time because.

Speaker 1 (27:20):
All of a sudden, all of a sudden, you're smoking
a cigarette in the backyard.

Speaker 3 (27:23):
Wait, what You're like, you can't do that.

Speaker 1 (27:26):
Michael and Christine Barnett of Indianapolis said the Natalia wanted
to harm them and their biological children. Meanwhile, authorities charged
the parents was neglecting their disabled daughter. So they're too
coming from two different directions.

Speaker 3 (27:40):
I'm no, I'm looking at the girl. I don't know.

Speaker 1 (27:44):
Part of me goes she's six, and it's like one
of those seeing eye You look at it and the
thing would come out.

Speaker 3 (27:49):
You'd stare at it long enough, it would come out.
Like if I just look, she looks like a kid.

Speaker 1 (27:53):
But if I stare at it long enough, one of
those posters, it's like an adult comes out of it.

Speaker 3 (27:57):
It's crazy.

Speaker 1 (27:58):
So there's a whole series, the Curious Case of Natalia Grace.
It's on Investigation Discovery. The filmmakers are holding. It's like
MythBusters back in the day, except trying to figure out
what the deal is behind this girl.

Speaker 3 (28:11):
Here we go.

Speaker 1 (28:11):
In the film, Barnett says that Christine gave h Natoia
a bath the day after the adoption.

Speaker 3 (28:17):
He said that his ex wife was shocked to discover.

Speaker 1 (28:20):
That their six year old brand new had at let's
just say adult hair, yeah.

Speaker 3 (28:24):
Yeah, down there.

Speaker 1 (28:27):
Oh right, Oh oh you didn't like that? Wow, because
it's European. I mean you could say, there's a lot
of things.

Speaker 3 (28:35):
I don't think you can. I don't know, I don't know.
That's that thing.

Speaker 1 (28:38):
So they said that she just displayed the starving behaviors,
like she'd pee in the cars, poop in the cars,
she'd smear the windows with the stuff, she'd throw herself
out of the passenger door for attention. In the documentary,
they say she started hoarding knives and once told them
to kill you in your sleep. Another time, the father
said she appeared at the foot of their bed with
a knife in her hand. The same year, the parents
successfully petitioned a court to change to Tagia's birth records,

(29:02):
citing that she hadn't grown at all in their care,
which was another tip off that she If she hadn't grown,
that means she could have stopped growing forever ago. So
it determined that she was born on September fourth, nineteen
eighty nine, some fourteen years earlier than she had claimed.
The court order said she was a twenty three year
old adult. That's from insider. Yeah, I'm looking at another

(29:27):
picture of her and she this one's six years old.
It's wild how young, not just small, but how small
and young faced, like no signs of being in the twenties.
And I wonder if she thought, I'll never get out
of the situation in my country. Do I just act

(29:48):
six to get out? Do I just act lost in six?
And you?

Speaker 3 (29:53):
I don't know how did she get busted? Like when
did they turn her in? Well, apparents, yeah, they started.
They just like say, hey, somethings up here.

Speaker 6 (30:02):
The suspicion started with the bath. Let's be honest, men,
it goes to like what you're saying, like your child
is gonna start growing at some point she doesn't. But also,
I mean you could start just getting suspicious. Like as
a parent, you have all these feelings of because some
of that behavior. Honestly, as you're preparing to adopt or foster,
like you're told like, hey, there's there's trauma here. There's

(30:23):
a lot going on, so some of that you might
not associate with like something really really being wrong. You're like, oh,
they're taking out their trauma in this way with the
sure the poop and the pea and the last six.

Speaker 1 (30:32):
But I'm telling you, oh, there's some pictures you can
find o or again. If you start like the icing eye,
push her, it comes out as an adult.

Speaker 6 (30:38):
Does she show up like at the I guess if
she was at an orphanage, she just ye act abandoned
Like how.

Speaker 3 (30:44):
That what I was saying, like, how do you? And
then you have to just stay with it.

Speaker 1 (30:48):
That's tough if you're six and you're this girl but
you're really twenty, don't you just play it cool for
a while and then go ba just kidding out twenty one.
I'm gonna go now, I'm here in the States. I'm
I'm gonna get out here. Thanks, guys, good looking. He's
steal a card too.

Speaker 3 (31:03):
Yeah, you don't like Catch Over the Night? Yeah?

Speaker 1 (31:07):
Wow, you know there's another thing here. American Idol ended
a couple of weeks ago. I didn't watch any of
it this season. Succession was off and on against it,
and I don't know, I don't not like the show.
The show was awesome to me, but I didn't really
watch a lot of singing competition shows and so I
didn't watch. But then I started to like get involved
after it was over because this guy, I don't even

(31:28):
know how to say his name, but he was the
Hawaiian kid who was kind of the guy that was
going viral at the beginning.

Speaker 3 (31:35):
I think his name is Im. I might say this
is wrong, Am Tongy? Did I say it?

Speaker 1 (31:39):
So?

Speaker 3 (31:39):
Ray? Can you play the club of em Tongy? At
his audition, I'm not just so you're not my father?

Speaker 6 (31:49):
Watch too grown saying goodbye, no, no, fugget no, Nato fugget.

Speaker 3 (31:59):
I mistakes.

Speaker 1 (32:01):
He's an eighteen year old from Hawaii, looks like he's
like the traditional Hawaiian picture were often shown. And so
he won turn five thousand bucks and then a recording
contract with Hollywood Records. But wins, right, So, but everybody's mad.
Everybody's episode so like it's rigged. All the stories start
to go with American I a rigged. Here's the thing,
not just about this show, but about life in general.

(32:22):
The most talented person doesn't always win. The person who
can sing the best, or ad math the quickest, or
the person they don't They often don't win. It's a
series of things that's are you pretty good? Are you competent?
Are you nice? Fun to be around? Do people like you? All?

Speaker 3 (32:41):
This matters? Being liked matters?

Speaker 1 (32:43):
And I think he was, if not the best singer,
he was the most liked. I think his dad died.
You know, they talked about that. There's a lot that
goes into these shows. It wasn't rigged and the headlines
it was just I hate what a headline is is American,
I don't rigged. And then you click in. It's like
to Twitter comments where someone's like it's rigged. Yeah, total clickbait.

(33:04):
The person that they thought should have won was his
name's Colin Stowe. This is him singing simple Man by
Leonard Skinnyard. Lots of the fixes in. There are people
in country music in Nashville who are really great singers
who haven't popped for one reason or another. They are

(33:25):
better than some of the stars. There are some stars
that just are okay, but they have that factor about them.
People like them. You know what they're able to do
around their music. So it's like I want to dance
with the stars. I was a bad dancer, but you
know why I won because I got to people. We
got the people in. That's like life. You don't have
to be the absolute best. It's great if you are.

(33:46):
If you don't have to be the absolute best to
actually be the best. You gotta have people like you too.
I just felt so bad for this kid because there's
a whole story, Like you know, he's like, you know,
I just have to embrace it.

Speaker 3 (33:55):
And I enjoyed the hate. No, you don't.

Speaker 1 (33:57):
Nobody ever enjoys the hate if they're doing it purposefully
to get hate. Sometimes I will troll. When I troll,
I enjoy the fruits of that. But if I'm not
trolling and people are like, oh it sucks, it don't
bother me as much.

Speaker 3 (34:14):
But I never like it, and never I'm.

Speaker 1 (34:16):
Like, makes me feel good that people think it suck.
I just feel bad for this kid. Wasn't rigged. Part
of life. A big part of life is getting along
with the folks, people liking you.

Speaker 3 (34:27):
That's it. So I hope he does well. Iam Tongy.

Speaker 1 (34:32):
I saw just Sam, who won when I was on
the show, was like playing in the subway again, and
she was like embarrassed to say that she's back playing
in the subway.

Speaker 3 (34:41):
Yeah, but she won them the COVID year as well,
and that show is not obviously what it used to be.

Speaker 1 (34:47):
None of them are. I mean, look at the people
from the Voice. There's almost nobody from the Voice. Who's
I mean, I don't know if I can name one
that's like a star star.

Speaker 3 (34:58):
Anybody a winner? No, I don't even did she win?

Speaker 1 (35:02):
Yeah, daniel Barberry, Okay, but I would say if she's
the I like Danielle, but if she's the top of
the Voice, the Kelly Clarkson, the Carrie Underwood, we could
do that.

Speaker 3 (35:13):
Like the Idol has put out much more massive stars.

Speaker 1 (35:16):
That being said, that show, the show's not or even
get Gabby Barrett from when I was on.

Speaker 3 (35:23):
I mean, Gab Burrett didn't even win the show American
Idol when I was on it. I was working with her.

Speaker 1 (35:27):
But those shows now, you don't win and your world
is handed to you. You win, and you have a
platform for a minute, for a minute, and you got
to kick it right in the nads for that minute
when you get it. It's not about you one. You'll
always be the Idol, You'll always have a place here. Nope,
you won this show. You got to be on that
show longer than anybody else. People get to follow you
on social media. You have to use that to your advantage.

(35:48):
That's what the show is.

Speaker 3 (35:49):
Now.

Speaker 1 (35:49):
You win some money, you can get some followers. A
little bit of notoriety, that's it. So I hope im
Tongy uses it. And I hate to see somebody go
through that. So that's what's up thinking. Adding.

Speaker 6 (36:01):
I mean, I just I think of like Miranda Lambert,
who what was she on the Nashville Star and like
she didn't win that, And so for anybody that comes
in second, third, fourth, fifth, like there's still hopeful. It
doesn't mean you're not talented, and look at other people
that have done it.

Speaker 1 (36:18):
Well, I don't sure, and I don't think she got
famous because of Nashville Star. I think she went on
the show, but I think she herself.

Speaker 6 (36:24):
That's what I mean.

Speaker 3 (36:25):
Sheould putting mad To on that show to end up
being Miranda Lambert. Which show was Morgan Walling on. I've
seen the voice the voice there.

Speaker 1 (36:30):
He was like an R and B singer, short, hairy
to you know, pop R and B guy, you know
didn't make some regardless, I hope the kid is happy
and I hate that that's happening to him. I have
all your number ones. Your number one pop song right
now is from Miguel share Thing. The number one alternative

(36:55):
songs from Food Fighters rescued and the number one country
song is Morgan walland it's his fastest ever number one.

Speaker 3 (37:08):
It's last night.

Speaker 6 (37:11):
We lit the liquor.

Speaker 5 (37:13):
I can't remember everything we sambo, we said it.

Speaker 3 (37:18):
He told me that you wis somebody because he kind
of like half wraps a little bit.

Speaker 1 (37:25):
Last night we left the liquor talk and everybody looked
at me and his like worst clock and I was like, yo,
yo yo, I get on TikTok yo and then what's
the mocking Bird?

Speaker 3 (37:32):
And I'm like dang, and then he goes back into it.

Speaker 1 (37:34):
I'm like, oh, it's like Sam Hunt walked, so Morgan
Wallan could run.

Speaker 3 (37:38):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (37:39):
Wow, that's a good songs pile of stories.

Speaker 6 (37:44):
People are skip lagging when they're booking flights so that
they can get cheaper tickets. And what this means is
you book a flight with a layover, uh, and the
intended destination you don't even want to go there. You
want to stay where the layover is.

Speaker 1 (37:58):
So the layovers in Chicago you gotta say there for
an hour before you fly somewhere else.

Speaker 3 (38:02):
You really just want to go to Chicago the whole time.

Speaker 1 (38:03):
But how do you find how do you make it
where your layover is where you want it to be exactly.

Speaker 6 (38:07):
You have to do a little bit of research. You
can like start to look, you could you can see
where your layovers are. But people are just saying, like, WHOA.

Speaker 3 (38:15):
That saves you money? Yeah, how much we saving here?

Speaker 6 (38:17):
It can save you like in the hundreds of dollars.

Speaker 3 (38:21):
So I'm like, I just made that number up because
there was an um there.

Speaker 1 (38:24):
No Listen, I get how occasionally that probably works out
that way where the layover city. If you wanted to
go to Chicago, you can find a cheaper ticket if
you want to go to Chicago trying to get from
Nashville to Tulsa with Chicago layover the Nashville to Chicago, right, So.

Speaker 6 (38:38):
It's called it's also called throwaway ticketing because that final
ticket you're basically just a no show.

Speaker 1 (38:42):
It's too complicated. I'd booked the wrong thing. I'm gonna
tell you right now. I try to do skip lagging,
I end up in another country or something and I'd
be like, I don't know where I am.

Speaker 6 (38:50):
Okay, well it could be cheaper than an onn stuffly,
so give it a try.

Speaker 1 (38:53):
Or I would accidentally get on like I would go
to my place Chicago, and I'm like, well, oh, Tulsa,
go Now, I'd go out this I'm not I'm supposed
to stay here.

Speaker 6 (39:02):
Good point. You have to remember what your plan is.
But it essentially becomes a NonStop even though it wasn't
meant to be. All right. I love a good road
rage story, which you love a good one because we
get to use it as a reminder to people.

Speaker 3 (39:17):
To people meeting Eddie, oh boy, here we go.

Speaker 6 (39:19):
And listeners that might have a little bit of anger,
because really, what road ragees is you have angers stored
up in you, and this is your excuse to get
rid of it. If you're like I'm on that.

Speaker 3 (39:28):
No, No, I'm usually happy.

Speaker 1 (39:32):
You're so happy all the time that there's something inside
of you.

Speaker 3 (39:35):
Right, I don't know.

Speaker 6 (39:36):
And then you get to say, well it's okay, I
have road rage. You use that as your way to
get it out. Well, man, this one road rage incident
resulted in a crowbar and a gun.

Speaker 1 (39:47):
This guy right now, we can go to the next
door because if they're fighting, gun wins.

Speaker 6 (39:51):
This guy goes to this woman's car and starts beating
her window with a crowbar.

Speaker 3 (39:56):
Well, geez, like a light. Does he follow her into
a parking.

Speaker 6 (40:00):
Yeah, I mean they were. It was a rush hour incident,
so I assume you're kind of sort of trapped with
traffic and beats the crowbar. But she is licensed to carry.
She's probably got some target practice because she gets out
her gun and shoots him in there growing good show.

Speaker 3 (40:17):
Well you don't have to be licensed.

Speaker 1 (40:19):
Yeah, you just have to have five I have four
fingers whatever, I can hold the gun.

Speaker 3 (40:24):
As long as you have that, you can.

Speaker 5 (40:25):
Well.

Speaker 6 (40:25):
I liked that she was carrying properly, and she called
the police, reported the incident. The man got in his
car tried to drive away, but then he handed up,
like getting out of his car and falling out because
he was so much pain. But she was cooperating with
the police because she did nothing wrong.

Speaker 3 (40:40):
That's true.

Speaker 1 (40:41):
So I starts beating in my window with the crowbar.
But I wonder what she did on the road, and
it made him so mad.

Speaker 3 (40:46):
That's what I was thinking.

Speaker 4 (40:48):
Yeah, that what you were thinking, Amy says, though he
was already mad.

Speaker 6 (40:52):
Allway says his road rage incident well. Jelly Roll says
that his criminal record recently cost him his dream home.
Is it a gated community. His offer got accepted, but
it never went through because they wouldn't let a convicted
fellon live there. And he was talking about it with
Joe Rogan.

Speaker 7 (41:09):
I've carried that unexpungable felony for twenty something years. It
prohibits me from getting houses. I mean a life insurance.
Homeowner insurance is higher if I can get it at all.
I can get life insurance at all. Most of them
won't give you a decent policy as a felon. Dude,
I can't volunteer at the YMCA, the Young Men's a
Christian academy. Me and my wife just got turned down
for a house. I'm in a place in life where

(41:30):
I go to buy my dream home. Guard gated community,
golf course. Man, I'm crying they accept my offer. Everything's
going crazy. I'm like, it'sing to be real. They turned
me around, say the golf course won't let a felon
be a part of the community.

Speaker 3 (41:41):
Are we sure it's a felon and not that his
name is Jelly Roll?

Speaker 1 (41:43):
When he signs up on the application, they think that's
let's see here, who's up next with border Let's look
at the application of mister roll jelly roll.

Speaker 3 (41:55):
Yeah. I mean that's the rules. That's the rules.

Speaker 1 (41:58):
If he's a felon, that's the other you know, do
we adjust the rule, that's the question. Do we fix
the rules. I don't think he's being wronged because that
is the rules. But rules can be changed, and maybe
there's a limit. Maybe there's a limit, like if you're
a good guy for ten years, nothing else, some of
that stuff comes off for your record.

Speaker 6 (42:17):
Well, and then I think he's also proven he gives
back to the community so much trying to keep the
young people out of jail.

Speaker 1 (42:22):
Or if you're famous, yeah, check checked famous.

Speaker 3 (42:28):
He has a ten felonies, he's a but who is it?
Mister roll good, we're good.

Speaker 1 (42:34):
Let him.

Speaker 3 (42:35):
I don't know that he has sent felonies.

Speaker 6 (42:36):
All right, go ahead, I'm Amy. That's my pile.

Speaker 3 (42:39):
That was Amy's pile of stories. It's time for the
good news. How much box? It's a bird, it's a plane. No,
it's a doggy Angel.

Speaker 5 (42:52):
Vicky from Tampa is known as the Doggy Angel who
saves dogs on the highway.

Speaker 3 (42:57):
Back in twenty.

Speaker 5 (42:58):
Nineteen, she found a dog on Interstate two seventy five.
She made the news well, Mother's Day this year, she
sees another chihuahua on the same stretch of Interstate. Sure,
she's dodging cars left right, ooh, back to the shoulder.
Then the dog gets hit by a car. Oh oh yeah.
Chihuahua goes to the hospital. The vet says, Oh, don't worry,

(43:18):
non life threatening injuries. Band aid here, stitches here, little
you know cone here.

Speaker 3 (43:23):
And then she had to find the owner.

Speaker 5 (43:25):
And she found the owner who had been searching for
her dog who escaped the backyard. And here's her talking
about getting her princess back.

Speaker 6 (43:32):
I was in tears right away and so happy.

Speaker 7 (43:36):
I couldn't even explain it.

Speaker 6 (43:38):
Just it felt like a Mother's Day blessing.

Speaker 3 (43:40):
So find my little girl.

Speaker 1 (43:42):
Man, getting your dog back's awesome because I lost I
mean I lost Eller for eight hours, drove around like
four I don't know. She was missing the whole time
we were gone, because Stanley was in the hospital. She
was waiting for a breakout. Time she Eller broke out
because other dogs in the hospital. She planned the socks
and your dog's gone. You don't know if they could
have been hit by car. And this one did get
hit by a car and still this one was there

(44:03):
to save it.

Speaker 3 (44:03):
Yeah, doggy angel, I mean got her wings, so the
angel flies. No, no, no, she didn't get it, so she
didn't die.

Speaker 4 (44:10):
Oh okay, Well he just says, look at the bird plane,
doggy angel.

Speaker 3 (44:13):
So I figured she No. No, it's like what comes
and saves it. Is it a bird? Is it a plane?

Speaker 1 (44:17):
No, it's a doggy angel. No, no, no, it's a
bird as a plane. That was for supermancas he would.

Speaker 3 (44:21):
Fly because he fly, you know what I mean. Oh okay,
I was still into it.

Speaker 5 (44:26):
I still think she's kind of like an angel because
she's looking over these dogs on the interstate.

Speaker 3 (44:30):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (44:30):
And then my question is like, man, are you really
getting out there and stopping try like how do.

Speaker 3 (44:35):
You get a thread?

Speaker 1 (44:36):
Dog?

Speaker 3 (44:36):
Yeah? I'm like I like dogs, but.

Speaker 6 (44:41):
I just thought of a really sad story.

Speaker 3 (44:42):
No, we don't want to hear. No, we're not doing
it here. No, this is tell me something good.

Speaker 1 (44:46):
No sad stories, lunchbox, great job, that's what it's all about.

Speaker 3 (44:50):
That was telling me something good.
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