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May 24, 2023 87 mins

Eddie and Lunchbox shared recent things they've done, and we debated if what they did was shady or not! Find out what happened! Plus, Eddie saw a celebrity at his sons' baseball game, and chickened out talking to them, hear who it was! Then, Bobby shares a scam alert because he almost got GOT and Amy revealed a sketchy text message she received.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Titting, Welcome to Wednesday show morin studio Morning Light. Everybody's here.
You could be anywhere in the whole wide world, but
you're here with us, and we appreciate that. Let's go
around the room first. He really wants his face to

(00:21):
be on one of the radio station vans, and he
loves that no parenting Sundays makes his family have zero
plans here he is Eddie.

Speaker 2 (00:29):
Everybody, guys, I chickened out. I had the perfect moment
and I chickened out. Let me set the scene. So
at our baseball games, my kids baseball games, all the dads,
we all hang out or whatever. And in time, I
mean we've been the same team for like three years,
so in time we've talked about like what do you
do for a living?

Speaker 1 (00:45):
Whow I do this, I do this whatever.

Speaker 2 (00:46):
So they know I'm on the radio and really like
every time I see him, they're like, hey, what you
do this weekend?

Speaker 1 (00:50):
Who'd you see Garth Brooks or whatever? So like Garth
is in the.

Speaker 2 (00:53):
Studio, Standy Bulton was in the studio.

Speaker 1 (00:55):
So that's kind of like they think you're connected everybody totally. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (00:58):
Well then the other day we're at the park, and
I see Eric Church my kids playing his team, Eric
Church's sons team. So Eric's there and then and all
the dads are looking at me like, hey, look.

Speaker 1 (01:08):
Eric's here. Why don't you say what's up? And I'm like, guys,
I don't.

Speaker 2 (01:11):
I don't know Eric, like really, like like I've met
Eric maybe three times. And he walks towards us, and
all the dads are like tapping me, like here you go,
here's your chance say hi, and I see connected exactly,
And then I'm waiting for Eric to make eye contact
with me. He walks awry past me, and all the
dad's are like, huh, he didn't You didn't say how

(01:32):
to Eric?

Speaker 1 (01:33):
It's okay, man, He's he's here with his kids. It's
like cool.

Speaker 2 (01:36):
So I think all the dads are like, oh, maybe
he's not that connected.

Speaker 1 (01:39):
Do you even know guard exactly? Yeah, that's embarrassing. Sorry,
sorry about that, buddy, rib What if you just said
Eric and then he'd been like, Hey'm Eric, nice to
meet you, Nice to meet you. All right? Moving on,
he spilled the tea on Morgan by saying she doesn't
know how to drive, and he keeps asking for money
for his car, just barely hanging on to survive. Here
he has lunch.

Speaker 3 (02:01):
Over the weekend, I stayed in my second Airbnb ever,
and I had an idea. It dawned on me because
this one was not someone's home. I didn't get to
snoop and find out about their lives.

Speaker 1 (02:11):
It was. It was Airbnb all the time. And I
sat there and I said, oh, you just wanted in
that very disat You were so excited to get back
in someone's business.

Speaker 3 (02:19):
I was ready to find out about their lives, see
what they do for a living, where they went to college.
All that's very disappointing. But then it dawned on me.
A light bulb above my head. It went off, and
I said, this is a business idea, Bobby, You and
I we need to own an Airbnb.

Speaker 1 (02:35):
I mean a business iem. I mean that's what people
do all the time. What's the light bulb. No, the
light bulb is Bobby and I like, we did I
not just if I were going to do that just
to get it, just do it myself.

Speaker 3 (02:43):
Well, because we're business partners now, and so when we
when you go into business, we're going in together.

Speaker 1 (02:48):
But you would have to be equal money because I'm
not going to trust you to run it. Could you
couldn't even run a storage Hey, I can run it.
I mean, are you going to pass on this one? No?

Speaker 3 (02:57):
No, no, we would be and we could advertise it as
Bobby Bones and Lunchboxes Airbnb. It would be sold out
every day of the week for three hundred and sixty
five days a year.

Speaker 1 (03:06):
Oh not a decade. Yeah, I mean, I'm good on
this one.

Speaker 3 (03:10):
We put pictures up from the studio and like an artist,
people would stay in that thing.

Speaker 1 (03:14):
All the time. Thank you, though, I'm going to pass
on that offer. I appreciate that. Thank you for thinking
about me though, for doing what I could already do.
I want it. We could do that together. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
I appreciate that though. Thank you, Lunchbox. Let's move on
to Amy. Creating connections with others is what she wants
to be remembered for, and she's been known to start
crying randomly in the grocery store. Here. She has Amy
everybody here.

Speaker 4 (03:37):
So my daughter wanted to use one of my old wallets.

Speaker 5 (03:39):
We start cleaning it out and I see all these
gift cards and one of them is to bed Back
and Beyond, and I'm like, oh, we actually need some stuff,
so I might as well go use this. It was
for one hundred and two dollars and seventy eight cents
from a while back when I guess I returned something.

Speaker 4 (03:52):
And I could put it on a gift card.

Speaker 5 (03:54):
Well, so I go, and I guess they stopped accepting
gift cards.

Speaker 1 (03:58):
Oh it died and died.

Speaker 5 (04:01):
On May eighth, they shut off gift cards, and I
was like, but this is actually money on here that.

Speaker 1 (04:09):
I Yeah, we know gift they do too, but because
they went out of business, I guess they had to
have a date to stop taking gift cards.

Speaker 4 (04:16):
So they're like, yeah, we don't actually have that money anymore.

Speaker 5 (04:19):
So so it's just a bummer that I found it. Yeah,
pro you know a couple of weeks too.

Speaker 1 (04:27):
Couldn't know though, If our listeners have bed bathroom beyond
gift cards.

Speaker 5 (04:30):
Don't waste your time, because honestly, a bed bath min
is not near me.

Speaker 1 (04:33):
You drove I saw that fair by the way that
you you took your daughter soon and it wasn't even
going yet. It's up now, but I know I drove
by and I was like, that's the fair.

Speaker 4 (04:41):
My son went yeah, yeah, and you.

Speaker 1 (04:43):
Have one of those rides that goes upside down and
slings you. And I was like, any one one of
those on the side of the highway, no chance, no
chance I'm getting on that on the side of the interstate.
I need that thing to be in a fixed position
for life, for me to get in it and know
that it's been there and it's been doing righting for
a long time. I can't prove that the thing works
at all. Anyway, Good job on you for sharing that.
I know that was painful, all right, Raight, go ahead.

(05:03):
From Mountain Pine, Arkansas. He's inspired kids to wear glasses
to school because being nerdy is cool. Bobby Bones, Thank you. Look,
I can't say what I want to say here, but
I'm gonna say just enough that you maybe can figure
out what I'm saying by me not saying it because
I've been told I can't say it. Okay, So but
I have to say it as an update. But I

(05:25):
can't say it and don't say it after I don't
after I not say it. Interesting, Okay? What's my favorite color?
Always gonna say it. You can say that that's my
favorite color. What do you think my second favorite color is? Green. Okay,
one of you is right. Okay, I'm gonna move on
from that. Let's say that. Uh remember the show Highway

(05:48):
to Heaven with Michael Landon kind Okay, John Travolta was
in a show and he wore wings. I was back Michael, Michael,
Now do you have me idea? What? Michael was an
angel cool now A while ago. I'm gonna be on
touch by an Angel. A while ago. I talked about
something that I said I can't talk about, and I

(06:10):
was like, should I even do this?

Speaker 4 (06:12):
Oh? Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1 (06:15):
Yeah, but you had you figured it out? Did you
guys already have it figured out?

Speaker 6 (06:17):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (06:18):
I think so. I'm I'm doing it. Like it's confirmed.
I'm doing it. I'm probably going to die doing it.
But it's coming up in a couple of weeks.

Speaker 4 (06:27):
Oh die, I'm.

Speaker 1 (06:29):
Scared to death. I know now. I was wrong too.
What did you think it was? Fortune?

Speaker 7 (06:38):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (06:38):
I was tires, Tires wheel No, but.

Speaker 1 (06:43):
I got Yeah. They called me yesterday and they were like,
oh wait, hold on, Yeah, you were wrong. It's not
what you just said. It's not will unfortunate, it's something
else where. I was like, I'm scared to death to
do this.

Speaker 5 (06:53):
It's a second favorite color. And that's it.

Speaker 1 (06:57):
And and John Travolta played this in a movie, got it?
So I'm gonna do it. I can't say thing about
it until after I do it. But they called and said,
don't eat. I mean, you can have a small meal,
but don't eat before you do it because you'll vombit
everything up. It's just the whole situation. Are we going
to know when I can tell you all three? I
just can't say anything about it until after it's over.

(07:18):
But I'm doing it. I'm letting know they know I'm
doing it. Okay, we're all there. Watch how do we watch?
I don't think it's payper viewed. Okay, just go do it?
And they have video, okay, okay, so if you know,
if you know, you know, If not, I'll let you
know later. I just want to up their audience.

Speaker 4 (07:32):
Have you told your wife?

Speaker 1 (07:35):
Yeez? Why aren't I answering that? No? Okay, you got
to tell her.

Speaker 5 (07:40):
Du Yeah, Like you might need to get some stuff
in order.

Speaker 1 (07:45):
I already have all that in order. On all right, Well,
we're gonna we all want to show here? Wow, started off?
Thank you. It's time to open up the mailbag, you
send the game mail and read all the air to
get something. We call Bobby that Yeah, hello, Bobby Bones.
My boss sent on an email trying to make us
all feel like part of the team and is now

(08:06):
encouraging an open door policy where he wants employees to
share our honest thoughts of him and with him. Admittedly,
I'm not the most subtle person in the world, and
I tend to play by the don't ask the question
if you don't want to answer mentality. I've never really
encountered this, but he's asked us all to submit five
suggestions on how we feel about our jobs, the workplace,
the management, including him, and so on. This question goes

(08:29):
out to those who have been through this before. Does
he really want this from me? Or should I just
play nice and continue to get paid signed honest, Abe,
It's tricky if you're not in a situation where you
have a relationship where the boss welcomes this. So my
advice to you is, if you are going to say
something that is not positive that is about him or

(08:52):
something that he influences, you better pad it with some
really positive stuff too. But that's not completely honest. Sure
it is if it's true. I just wouldn't throw all
the naggs. I put all those negatives separate. I'd hit
you with one and put four posites in there. You know,
I mean, I'm separating it.

Speaker 4 (09:08):
Oh do this ratio five to one.

Speaker 5 (09:10):
They say five positives cancel out the negatives.

Speaker 1 (09:13):
Oh, that's good. So that would be my suggestion if
you're going to do it first, though I wouldn't do it.
I would just be pretty generic and do something where
it's like, I just wish our computer screens were a
little brighter. But let everybody else, like, let them go
first and be chum in the water and see if
the shark attacks, because if he started, if it's the boss,
is the heat right, if he starts getting mad at
them and being offended, and let them go first, Canary

(09:37):
and the coal, my baby, let's say if they're poison
in there, so you could send a couple of things
in there aren't real, like, you know, I sure wish
when we came in the morning the coffee would be fresh.
Ooh good, Dorito's and the snack machines stuff like that. Yeah,
and then still compliment. But then let's see who he
kills first, and if it's nobody and he really values it,
then you can go hard.

Speaker 5 (09:57):
Yeah, because what if you really do have feedback that
would be home everybody does.

Speaker 1 (10:01):
It may not be helpful, but everybody's got feedback. But
just don't risk yourself. You make yourself vulnerable offering up
all this negative because sometimes people say, oh, I just
want to know what you how you really feel? Like
you don't. People really don't want to know how you
really feel. Most of the time they say it, but
they don't really want it.

Speaker 2 (10:15):
I work for a company where they would do anonymous
you know, like this is going to be anonymous, but
tell us some real feedback, and then they would ask
for your name at the end of the sheet.

Speaker 1 (10:23):
And I'm like, that's not really anonymous.

Speaker 5 (10:25):
I guess it means they're not going to publish.

Speaker 1 (10:28):
I would trust that. That's my advice, honest day. Just
take a second, let everybody else go first. If they
come back unscathed, then you can hop in the water there.

Speaker 5 (10:37):
I mean, we want feedback, right, well.

Speaker 1 (10:39):
We have to have it or we lose our job.
Like we have to have we get ratings, we get research.

Speaker 4 (10:44):
But do you want feedback from us?

Speaker 1 (10:45):
From you guys? I do not. Oh you know, No, No,
I get it from other feedback. I'm sure you do.
I get it from everybody else. I get listeners, I
get it from research, I get it from ratings. So no,
I'm all good, yeah, yeah, yeah, Well you have any feedback,
give me na, you're give me a piece. Nobody even
knows who's talking.

Speaker 4 (11:03):
Like your shirt, Thank you very.

Speaker 5 (11:04):
Much, your hat, Thank you. I like your joke even
more positive. I like your organization.

Speaker 1 (11:11):
Thank you one more.

Speaker 4 (11:12):
I like how you can react on the fly.

Speaker 1 (11:16):
Go ahead and the one negative. Hit him with a
good one, Amy, I was fired. Okay, you serious?

Speaker 4 (11:27):
I would like a show retreat.

Speaker 5 (11:30):
No terrible, No, I think not even retreating, like someone
comes to us.

Speaker 4 (11:37):
Retreating segment good enough, like bonding exercise.

Speaker 1 (11:41):
We'll send to you. You come back to us. How
it went. We got your gammail and laid on the air.
Now let's find the clothes.

Speaker 8 (11:48):
Bobby failed.

Speaker 6 (11:49):
Damn.

Speaker 1 (11:51):
I've talked a couple of times on the show about
that movie Air. Have you seen it not yet? I
thought you sorry. It's about Nike and Jordans and it's great.
Is the only movie I went to the theater to see.
It's on Amazon now you can watch it for free.
But Eddie, you try to watch it.

Speaker 2 (12:05):
Yeah, I just want to know what you liked about it,
because and I'm not saying it's a bad movie. I
just started watching it and I fell asleep, like forty
five minutes into it.

Speaker 1 (12:13):
Not only did I like it, but I'm looking at
the audience score from Rotten Tomatoes ninety eight percent positive,
and yeah, I mean it's they're all nineties.

Speaker 4 (12:22):
Maybe you were exhausted.

Speaker 2 (12:23):
I was tired. I'm always tired. But I just felt
like there was a lot of dialogue, like a lot
of like, oh, man, what are we gonna do?

Speaker 1 (12:29):
Do you need? Bombs? Do you need? I mean, I
haven't seen Jordan yet. Does Jordan come out of this movie?
I don't want to say anything about Can I say
what's up with that? Or no? Mike, Oh don't know, Okay,
just watch it, finish it. I can't believe you fell asleep.

Speaker 2 (12:46):
Man, Like he goes to the house and Jordan's in
the house, and I'm like, okay, they're gonna meet and
he never meets Jordan.

Speaker 1 (12:51):
That's that's the last thing I remember. And then I
don't know.

Speaker 2 (12:55):
I'm gonna stick to it. But I mean you say
it's really good. You thought there's a lot of dialogue.
I mean that you didn't lead to it. I was
so tired. Here's the deal too, Like I'm watching it
in my mind just went to like, oh wow, look
it's good to one hunting.

Speaker 1 (13:06):
But these dudes are like thirty years older. That's crazy.
So you're blaming me for you not enjoying talking in
a movie, h and for you associating with a movie
they did thirty years ago.

Speaker 2 (13:19):
Because I mean, every time Matt Damon talked to Ben Affleck,
I'm like.

Speaker 1 (13:23):
That's crazy, man like that. Yeah, yeah, I never thought
about that once, oddly really yeah. Oh, here's why I
like it. Sports one. Two, the history of a product
that I use. Three Phil Knight. You get to see
what he's kind of like for running me. Ben Affleck's
a good actor and not just the guy who's always
said smoking a cigarette dunkin Donuts. Five. Matt Damon's a

(13:44):
great actor. Yeah, he's pretty good. The return of Chris
Tucker from Rush Hour was awesome. The history of the
scout who used to go to these high school games
to find players, and how not only did he affect
Michael Jordan in this movie here and that, but also
he's the reason that athlete get paid now that same guy, wow,
because it all started the video game and a UCLA
basketball player and he was one of the front ones

(14:06):
that was pressing that case of the Supreme Court. Did
you get to that at some point? Nope, they don't.
I'm telling you right now, like I'm just a all
of those elements I love. What about the dialogue? I
think there was enough dialogue. I honestly I couldn't use
more dialogue. Actually, yeah, so it's on Amazon now, right.
Did you try to watch it or no? I've watched
the whole thing. Thoughts it was good. Too much dialogue.

(14:29):
I just felt some stuff was missing. But it was
like what dialogue?

Speaker 5 (14:34):
Dansing all in watching this and now I'm like, maybe
no dialogue missing.

Speaker 9 (14:39):
It was good.

Speaker 1 (14:40):
It was a strong movie. What's the cartoon? The kids
cartoon that flashes scenes every two seconds because it's Coco Melon.
Eddie needs Coco Melon a movie because he cannot stay
dialed in. I will not watch Coco Melon. Now. Don't
give me a fake rating on it, because I don't
want you acting now.

Speaker 5 (14:57):
Oh yeah, I.

Speaker 1 (14:58):
Probably will like it.

Speaker 2 (14:58):
Well, here's the I don't want to give a and
I haven't finished finished four and a half.

Speaker 1 (15:04):
That's an amazing movie, but you act to like you didn't. Yeah,
it's it's so good that I would watch it again.
But my five is my personal five. I'm just saying
it's a four. It's just all our five are our
personal five. Five. We're not on a scale that were
held accountable to. I'm saying it's a really good movie.
It could have been a five, just just missing bigger moments.
I wish you would confetti, huge song, too much dialogue, right,

(15:27):
no competti, more explosions and Scottie Pippen.

Speaker 2 (15:31):
I didn't see any chance for confetti. I didn't see
any opportunities for that.

Speaker 5 (15:35):
Oh I saw a really good Scottie Pippen quote, but
it was on social media.

Speaker 1 (15:40):
I hate Michael Jordan.

Speaker 5 (15:41):
I didn't get I'm gonna say it now because I'm
gonna I'm paraphraser, but it's like, hey, you may have
to wait ten years to get to that one year.

Speaker 4 (15:52):
It's going to totally change your life something like that.

Speaker 1 (15:55):
Yeah, I remember I thought that man to wait ten
years to get paid the money that you deserve. Because
Michael Jordan hates me. Is that it?

Speaker 5 (16:02):
No?

Speaker 4 (16:02):
But I just thought, wow, okay, that's a good thing. Like, hey, I'm.

Speaker 1 (16:05):
Looking at all the Scotty Pippin quotes. It's not on there. No,
Maybe Scotty Piper said, sometimes the player's greatest challenge is
coming to grips with his role on the team. Maybe
by some other Sometimes there's that one again. Once you
get a taste of success, it's a hard thing to
turn down. That's good. Sure it wasn't. Pippin's ex wife
on Real Housewives, Larsa Larsa, She's dating Jordan's son. That's crazy.

(16:29):
That's crazy. Michael Scotty's ex wife is dating Michael Jordan's son.

Speaker 4 (16:34):
Like.

Speaker 1 (16:34):
That's a slap on the face. Yeah, you know he's
doing that because he didn't get paid. That's crazy. Is
my Jordan hild it against it to him? Okay, look
we said it all. I don't even know when we
started this bit. Eddie finished the movie. Amy, you haven't watched.

Speaker 5 (16:48):
It yet, okay. Scottie Pippen posted this on Instagram. Sometimes
it takes ten years.

Speaker 1 (16:56):
To get thought. He ride it like that day, dude,
you like it's a famous that I should know it.

Speaker 5 (17:02):
Sometimes it takes ten years to get that one year
that'll change your life.

Speaker 4 (17:06):
Don't give up.

Speaker 1 (17:07):
Did he say it or do you post somebody else
saying it?

Speaker 4 (17:09):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (17:09):
Okay, he didn't say it. He just posted a meme
of somebody else if he were put Well, so if
I post like George Washington saying something, can I go
look at my quote? Like look what I said? Yeah?
Try it?

Speaker 4 (17:18):
Okay. I just went to his instagram.

Speaker 5 (17:20):
And you know how when you don't look at somebody
for a while, because like I just see him as
the young basketball player, like he's.

Speaker 1 (17:25):
You say him as the young BASKETBA player.

Speaker 4 (17:26):
That's the only time I see him is he's older.

Speaker 1 (17:29):
Now yeah, a few years, he's like fifty. And he
was rude to me. No, yes, yes, yeah, but you're
aggressive with celebrities. So that was twelve, I know. Can
you imagine you at twelve? Oh my goodness. That's the
only reason though I can't get on board with Scottie
Pippen was totally rude to you because of how you
run up and scare people.

Speaker 3 (17:48):
Now, well, I mean I did run up to him
with it. I mean I saw him at a mall
in Chicago. I ran in the store, bought the exact
same hat he was wearing, ran up to him as
he's walking towards the food court and I said, and
he's with one other guy.

Speaker 1 (18:00):
And I said, mister Pippin, can I have your autograph?
Mister Pippin, It just doesn't it doesn't seem like you
hate lunch. Like I had a walker and I walked down.
I was like, mister Pippin, all I need is one
autographed to save my life. And he looked down at
me without breaking stride. No, kept on walking. Who if
that is as you said accurate, he can call my
aunt Mary, she was there. Get his aunt Mary on

(18:22):
the phone. Call her up.

Speaker 3 (18:23):
She's the one that had to go back in the
store and yell, it's a store clerk to give me
my money back, because the clerk wasn't to give you
my money back for the hat.

Speaker 1 (18:29):
If that's a true story, that stinks it. Scotty Pippin. However,
you have a lot of strikes against you in running
up to celebrities. Yeah, it started young, twelve years old.
Everybody they said, don't touch Gwen Steffani. I put my
arm around her, to take a picture and said no touching.
Sometimes takes ten years to get to that spot in
the fox heard that before. Yeah, all right, go watch

(18:49):
air Amy. Let us know it's time for the good news.

Speaker 5 (18:56):
This man buys an engagement ring and his suit to
be step son accidentally flushes it down the toilet like
a kid.

Speaker 1 (19:05):
Just like putting stuff in the toilet.

Speaker 4 (19:06):
Oh my god. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (19:07):
So he hired someone to run a camera down the
plumbing and they were actually able to spot it, but
there really was no way to get it. I mean,
city maintenance workers were involved.

Speaker 4 (19:18):
They were they had their eye out for it. Let's
just say that fourteen.

Speaker 5 (19:21):
Months later they spotted and they're like, oh my gosh.

Speaker 4 (19:25):
There's the ring.

Speaker 5 (19:26):
So it went through a thorough sterilization process and has
been returned.

Speaker 1 (19:32):
Probably not really like bill at down dishwashing liquid clean.
Who cares? You got your ring bag? Yeah that's gonna
be How do you not get It's like being upset
at my dog if he eats a pin or he
chews up a twenty dollars bill. He doesn't know. It's
probably like the kid and then bringing the toilet.

Speaker 2 (19:49):
I mean, my four year old he ruined PlayStation controllers,
remote controls all in the toilet, I mean dozens?

Speaker 1 (19:56):
Is that like when a dog digs a hole and
puts the stuff in there? Is that what he would do?
We'd go to the toilet put stuff in there.

Speaker 2 (20:00):
I thought it was really cool that you just put
it down a hole and you never see it again.

Speaker 1 (20:03):
That is kind of cool, though, because I don't really
know where it goes. Well, that's a good story. He
got it. But would she want to wear the ring
when it's been in the sewer? Or do you sell
it back, get the money and buy another ring?

Speaker 4 (20:14):
It says again, thorough hear you.

Speaker 1 (20:18):
But does she go you know, I know you were
going to use this, but then.

Speaker 4 (20:21):
When you sell it, do you have to disclose all
in the house?

Speaker 1 (20:25):
You'll sell the ring? You said it thorough though. All right,
great story, that's what it's all about. That was telling
me something good. Here's a new game I just made
up called Shady or Not Shady, where each member of
the show that has one of these situations will give
it to us and we'll tell you if you're a
shady person or not. Okay, I like it. Okay, let's

(20:46):
go over to Let's go to Eddie first. Okay, Eddie shady,
not shady. What's your story.

Speaker 2 (20:50):
Okay, So last weekend, my kids wanted to go see
Fast and Furious, so they bought tickets to go to
the movie. They spent about ten minutes fifty minutes in there,
and apparently there was blood. There was a lot of
like there was like a little sexy scene, and so
they're like, we can't watch this, so they walk out.

Speaker 1 (21:04):
The kids said that.

Speaker 2 (21:06):
So it was my fifteen year old and my two
next kids, the nine and the eight year old, and
so they're like, we can't watch this. So they walk
out and they're like as they're going to the front,
they're like, hey, check it out. There's Gardens of Galaxy.
You just started. So they walk right into Guardians of
a Galaxy and I'm like, that's great. That's what you're
supposed to do. Back in the day, I used to
just like go from a movie to another movie to
another movie. Like for five hours, I've watched three movies.

(21:28):
So I said, that's great. Whatever you did was perfectly fine.
Shady not shady.

Speaker 5 (21:32):
But what I'm saying, listen, I'm torn because they left
a movie. It's not like they stayed and watched the
entire thing. Had they done that shady, But they just
did a little switch, So not shady, not shade, as
long as they didn't get the full other movie.

Speaker 1 (21:51):
Now here's kind of the economics of a movie theater
work for the most part. And I can bring a movie, Mike,
and on this. When you buy a ticket to the movie,
the movie company's getting that, not the theater, not the
local building you're in. What they sell is the stuff
that you buy, the food, that popcorn. That's why they
don't want you to sneaking stuff in, because that's the
only way they make money. They making it off the movie.

(22:13):
They're making their money off of the video games, the popcorn,
the the Joe gannots. Yeah, the candy. I don't even
know what those are anymore, milk goods. So if you
were to bounce to every movie, they ain't really losing
any money, gotcha? Is it a little dishonest, sure, but
not this situation. I think because you didn't watch the
movie and you paid for a movie, it had been
the same price probably to go to this one. That's

(22:34):
what I'm talking about. I'm gonna go not shady. Come
on now, we'd probably have a different discussion if it
was after the movie. But even then the movie wasn't
sold out. You could convince me since no one's actually
have a movie. Money taken from the mix up the
Big Company, even though it's probably not right.

Speaker 2 (22:51):
I wonder if they would have gone on the front
and told him like, hey, we've been in there for
fifteen twenty minutes, we want to.

Speaker 1 (22:55):
Go, they probably would have said, can go to the
other movie. Well, then I'm gonna go, not shady Eddie.
All right, all right, let's go around there, let's box
your up.

Speaker 3 (23:03):
So this weekend, this past weekend, we went to Oklahoma
City for a wedding, and I have a one year
old and we didn't have a bed for him to
sleep in because he rolls around, so he sleeps in
a crib. We didn't want to lug a pack and
play all the way to Oklahoma City, onto the airplane,
through the airports.

Speaker 1 (23:19):
All that explain a pack and play to me. It's
just a portable basically crib. It's a pop up like crib.

Speaker 3 (23:24):
It has four sides on its boom, comes in a
little case, really easy boom.

Speaker 1 (23:29):
So I went to the local store Big box store.
You have him in every city. Let the guy say.
I was gonna say, I'm not made yet. I like
to wait as a jar till all the evidence is out.

Speaker 3 (23:42):
When we arrived in Oklahoma City, I stopped by, went
to the kids section, bought one, paid for it, went
to the Airbnb, popped it out.

Speaker 1 (23:49):
Kids slept in it for nighttime naps. It was awesome.

Speaker 3 (23:52):
Kids slept great, used blankets in it, and then packed
it up, put it in the box boom on the
way back to the airport, stopped it into that same
big box store, and returned it.

Speaker 1 (24:03):
Shady or not shady. That's shady because you used a
product without giving them anything for the things I gonna
sell for the same price. Now you actually took value
from it. Oh yeah, I decided I didn't want it anymore. No,
you did it.

Speaker 4 (24:22):
You knew you were taking it back, went in with
the intent to borrow it for a night.

Speaker 1 (24:25):
I think if you took it back because there's something's
wrong with it or is the wrong side, then I
would go not shady. But you did it with all
intentions of taking it, buying it, returning it, using it,
but not actually paying for any part of it. Yeah,
I basically rented it. They didn't. You didn't rent it
because they didn't make any money off the rental.

Speaker 3 (24:42):
You didn't pay anything, you know, but it was like
rental and it was like, oh, you know if you
return it within three days.

Speaker 1 (24:47):
It's like a car if you buy it and you
get like two weeks. No, No, it's a rental car.
You have to pay for a rental car. It's not
like money on it. A rental car. You have to
pay for it to rent it.

Speaker 3 (24:54):
Correct this one, you got your money back. I didn't
give my money back and they said, oh, you just
want to back on a card. Yeah, thank you very much.

Speaker 1 (25:01):
Yeah, that's shady. I don't think anybody would disagree with that. Shady,
shady shady to buy something with the intent of you're
gonna go use the product and then take it back.
Now taking intent out, though, what's the difference? Your heart?
That's it. It's like people that wear a shirt. You know,
what's shady shady is your heart. Sometimes you may do
bad stuff and it may be on accident, but it

(25:23):
didn't mean that. That's not a shady thing to do.
It's an accident that sucks. It worked out there that's shady.

Speaker 2 (25:28):
But like with my story, you wanted to say, like, well,
this is how the movies make money. And so since
there was no money lost, it's not shady.

Speaker 1 (25:35):
They lost money. They didn't lose money. They did loose money.
They can't sell it back at the same price. They
can't know they can't return Now there's gonna be tape
on it. It's used. I'm gonna send it over to
one of these stores where they sell it for much cheaper,
because that's they're returned.

Speaker 3 (25:49):
So really, I did someone a favor that maybe they
can't afford it full price cheap.

Speaker 1 (25:54):
You're the Robin Hood of playpens. Actually I did something good, Eddy,
not shady, lunchbox shady. That's it. Court is dismissed. Was
this court shady? Court?

Speaker 5 (26:02):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (26:03):
Shady? Course shady, Cory call it in session. We don't
do this a lot, But I'm just gonna ask you,
how's divorce life? Amy? Wait? Why'd you go?

Speaker 4 (26:11):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (26:12):
We don't do it a lot, but sometimes I just
want to check in. She announced it. It's free to
talk about so big d don't mean Dallas. How's it going? Well?

Speaker 5 (26:21):
I have been proud how we've handled the whole thing
all along means we have our moments. But I had
to go by Ben's lawyer's office and someone that worked
there said to me, and I'm pretty sure she told
him the same thing, that like, y'all should teach a
class on how to get divorced, because we've never seen anything.

Speaker 1 (26:43):
Like this in what way good or bad?

Speaker 5 (26:46):
Good that you know, We've just remained thoughtful and kind
or respectful and kind, which has been our motto the
whole time, and we've been able to work together and
come to agreement quite honestly that our lawyers completely don't support.

Speaker 1 (27:05):
Wait, so you guys are the people that you've hired
to give ex ra opinions. You guys said we're gonna
do a different way. Yes, and they could be good,
and they really could be great.

Speaker 4 (27:15):
I think, yes, I know it's going to be good
like I have been.

Speaker 5 (27:20):
We've also just been together, open to creative solutions and brainstorming.

Speaker 4 (27:25):
I get it.

Speaker 5 (27:25):
As lawyers, like it's your job to protect your client,
and so I think both of us have heard multiple times.

Speaker 4 (27:32):
Okay, I'll write this up for you, but just so
you know, it is.

Speaker 5 (27:36):
My duty to tell you that I completely disagree with this,
but also at the same time, they're like, Wow, we've
done handled a lot of different breakups and this is
by far like the most amicable one they've seen. And
I just I can pap us on ourselves on the back,
and I want to celebrate things like that. It's not

(27:58):
al a braggy moment, but more so that I'm celebrating
the fact that we've done something really hard and we
navigated it.

Speaker 4 (28:07):
As well as we possibly could.

Speaker 5 (28:09):
And I don't take that for granted, knowing that some
people are not in a similar situation. One person might
be willing to operate this way and then the other
person is not. So I do have gratitude for the
fact that we're both have done a lot of work
and are on a path of continued work and healing.
And I think that that's brought us to a place
where we can, you know, make decisions that completely throw

(28:32):
our lawyers off.

Speaker 1 (28:33):
So divorce has been pretty good.

Speaker 5 (28:36):
I don't know what you mean by good. I don't
know that there's really anything good about it. I don't
recommend it, but I share this as hope for anybody
else that you know, what.

Speaker 1 (28:47):
Would you call your class, I'd have to talk.

Speaker 4 (28:50):
I don't know. I talked a bit about it.

Speaker 1 (28:52):
I advise that you're turning that.

Speaker 4 (28:56):
Let's see, I.

Speaker 5 (28:57):
Don't know how to do something hard and listen, We've
had our moments. Don't get me wrong, but but I
would say in a we have a quick turnaround. You know,
it doesn't linger. It's more so like in the next
thirty minutes, one of us is saying, oh, okay, good
step back.

Speaker 1 (29:14):
Well all seriousness. That's great because there are other people involved. You.

Speaker 4 (29:18):
Oh, I know, I hear from them, and so are
the kids.

Speaker 1 (29:21):
Oh yes, he's from them too. I hope you hear
from them.

Speaker 4 (29:24):
Well, that is our number one priority.

Speaker 1 (29:26):
That's what I'm saying. That's why it's great.

Speaker 4 (29:28):
Other listeners I've heard, and I know that people are like, yeah,
you do.

Speaker 5 (29:32):
I know people are going through something similar. They may
be starting the process, and I just want to share.

Speaker 4 (29:36):
This as hope.

Speaker 1 (29:38):
I like it. All jokes aside, that's great, right, that
is hope for a lot of people. As words, they're
on the very very front side of it. Which I
know when you were it was not a good time
for you. No, but celebrate selfishly me.

Speaker 5 (29:51):
Right, yeah, or you, but celebrate every win, and I
think that will lead you to more wins.

Speaker 4 (29:57):
And don't Also, just because your lawyer says something doesn't
mean you're.

Speaker 1 (30:02):
I'm just saying you should listen to it.

Speaker 4 (30:04):
You should, and then you can make your own decision.

Speaker 1 (30:07):
I'm okay with that. But most times, listen to the
lawyer because they know a lot. Yeah, because they've been
doing it a lot.

Speaker 4 (30:11):
Every I know we still have TVD some of the
scarback Car. I don't know.

Speaker 1 (30:16):
All right, let's play great. I'm glad to hear it. Seriously,
thank you voicemail from Annie in Pennsylvania. Here we go.

Speaker 6 (30:23):
I have a joke from warning Corny. What do you
call a man with nobody and no knows? Nobody knows?
And for fun fact, Friday, did you know if we
were one close, what even like one even inch closer
to the time, you would all die from being burned,

(30:43):
And if we were one inch closer to the moons,
we would all die and being cold. That's my fun
stuck Friday and my moving Corny.

Speaker 8 (30:50):
Bye.

Speaker 1 (30:52):
I'm not even gonna fact check it because it's so interesting. Well,
it was pretty cool. I started with all facts interesting,
don't need a fact check it. Great job, thank you,
Annie call us anytime leaves a voicemail eight seven, seven
seventy seven, Bobby Yours Amy's pile of stories.

Speaker 5 (31:06):
There's a trend happening on TikTok right now and it's
gonna help women feel better in their high heels. And
I had no idea this is a thing, and I
can't wait to try it out and see if it works.
It's got ten million views. And what you do is
you tape your third and fourth toes together, and it
releases pressure and makes wearing high heels more comfortable.

Speaker 1 (31:25):
Is it because that third and fourth toe all the
pressure goes down into that spot.

Speaker 4 (31:29):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (31:30):
I've never worn high heels good. Yeah, so I don't
really know. So explain to me why they think that help.

Speaker 5 (31:38):
It's a hack from a shoe company, and they're saying
this is legit going to bring comfort when you wear it.
It's the nerve that controls the most pain comes between
the third and the fourth toes, so when you bring
them together, it releases the pressure. The person that works
with the company that posts it said that their aunt
taught on that and it's good to go. You can
use a band aid or any other kind of like

(32:00):
tape that would be easy to remove.

Speaker 1 (32:01):
Why not tape all three of the toes together, the pinky,
the third and the fourth.

Speaker 5 (32:08):
I don't know that that's necessary, because why not taking
atween foot ankle all the way down like the NFL players?

Speaker 4 (32:14):
Why did they do that?

Speaker 1 (32:15):
What do you mean?

Speaker 4 (32:16):
Why did they tape it all the way down.

Speaker 1 (32:17):
Into their foot so they don't bend in like that's
like horl Yeah yeah, mostly for that, Yeah, all right?
What else?

Speaker 5 (32:24):
A dad spent twenty one one thousand dollars for last
minute Taylor Scraft tickets.

Speaker 1 (32:30):
Okay, so I did see this. I think they're rich though,
because didn't they buy other tickets for like twenty thousand
bucks too.

Speaker 5 (32:37):
No, his first round of tickets were eighteen hundred dollars
on stall.

Speaker 1 (32:41):
I thought it was eighteen thousand, No.

Speaker 5 (32:43):
Eighteen hundred, And then I guess with stub hub, you
don't get the tickets delivered till the day of or
the sent to you. And then he was like, oh,
I never got them eighteen hundred.

Speaker 1 (32:53):
I say a lot of them were happening, but okay,
so he never got the tickets.

Speaker 5 (32:57):
And his daughter with her friends, they were expecting to go.
They were the Christmas present, like, so he's thinking way ahead.
And then the tickets never showed up and he was
pretty determined, so he had to go to some other
seller and bought them for twenty one thousand dollars. However,
stub hub is supposed to refund his original price, which

(33:18):
will offset some of the expense, but not.

Speaker 1 (33:20):
Even two thousands. So I still pay nineteen thousand dollars.
Tickets go to the go to the venue. You can
probably get some for fun. It's still expensive, but in
front of somebody's scalping tickets, they won't be as good
as seats.

Speaker 4 (33:33):
But there is no way, no way, even if I
have the money.

Speaker 1 (33:36):
Well, if I have the money, who knows. It's all relative,
but I'm talking about normal folks. No way. You're talking
about a car. Did this guy say it was worth
a twenty thousand in the story? Like it was totally
worth all As a dad, he said, expectations met dad.

Speaker 5 (33:57):
You know he didn't want his daughter to be disappointed. Holle,
what's the craziest thing your parents ever did for you?

Speaker 1 (34:04):
Well, but I played my my biology. I played hide
and seek with me when I was like, oh, and
he rocks. I think he's a champ. Never found him ntil,
I was like, over thirty, he's good.

Speaker 6 (34:16):
Yeah, yeah, he was in.

Speaker 1 (34:18):
He was somewhere though, Yeah awesome. I just didn't know
how hard that game was. And for a lot of
my life, I just looked and looked and looked, and
I was like, dad, Daddy, never found him. And then
I even said stuff like Marco, hoping he'd go polo
and then we'd hug and be like, oh, how fun
is this? Never he was so good at hide and seek,

(34:40):
so when you found him, it's really awkward. He'd been
in the same place thirty years. Hide mind a tree.
I just didn't look behind that tree.

Speaker 4 (34:47):
Oh woish you clarify that in case someone's just listening
for the first time.

Speaker 1 (34:51):
I won't. He said what he said. I said what
I said. He was mad a tree for thirty years. Yep.

Speaker 4 (34:57):
Well, Jelly Roll is a.

Speaker 5 (34:59):
Very present father, as he posted him teaching his daughter
Baileyanne how to drive, and as a parent, I can
relate to this because he was, you know, kind of
using some language like oh my god, you know, like
very colorful words, and I thought that's I was recently
driving with my sixteen year old and both me and

(35:21):
her dad, we've both done it where it was like
a bad word has slipped out while she's on the highway.
It's just like that's the scariest place to be, Like
I need a map of all the back roads and
how to get there because I just don't think I
want her on the highway.

Speaker 1 (35:31):
Stars are just like us. Yeah, yeah, just like you.
Why in the world would you ask any of us
a question is open? And it is and you look
at me like, what did your parent ever do? The
surprise you like, you know where that's going.

Speaker 4 (35:44):
I think I probably knew where you might.

Speaker 1 (35:46):
Take it, but and it was you knew what It's
either that or I just be quiet because I didn't
have it. I don't have an answer.

Speaker 5 (35:54):
They maybe your grandma maybe did something nice.

Speaker 4 (35:56):
For you, say grandma, but she was pretty much am
to you.

Speaker 1 (36:00):
But you said parent. Maybe I'm okay. She adopted me.

Speaker 5 (36:05):
That is huge.

Speaker 1 (36:06):
What a surprise that was when I found out way
later because I didn't know it was a kid, because
she did that just so she had legal custody. I mean,
when my mom left any more stories in there, amy,
I was like going as good. I didn't bring them up.

Speaker 4 (36:20):
It added a little depth.

Speaker 1 (36:22):
Yeah, you know, I could be a little shallow. I'll
be honest with you. You know, a little too much
depth sometimes, Amy.

Speaker 4 (36:28):
That's my pile.

Speaker 1 (36:29):
That was Amy's pile of stories. It's time for the
good news. Bobby. Detroit traffic officer Lenda Edge received a
well financial boost when a TikTok influencer highlighted her monetary
struggles to his sixteen million followers. That's a lot of followers.

(36:52):
So what he did first is he gave her five
hundred bucks and a trip to a Detroit Tiger's baseball
game because she loved baseball, and so thank you for
doing what you do. Here's this posted on social media.
The video got to over ten million people and people
started watching going, hey, we'd like to actually give her
a little bit more because we're moved by what she
does and her story, which he shared. The campaign, which

(37:14):
wasn't even supposed to be a campaign, just kind of
organically happened, raised over fifty four thousand dollars within three days,
and it happened so quickly that they were able to
give her that check at the baseball stadium and she
didn't know what was coming, so she went to the
game to experience that they give her. They get her
down there and they give her a check in fifty
grand Wow, boy, that's wild. Like you're doing your job
and you don't even know somebody's recording you, and you're thinking,

(37:34):
what kind of shenanigans were they up to? But they
give you fifty bucks or a five hundred bucks and
that's awesome. You're like, I just had the greatest day
of her five hundred bucks and take you to a
baseball game and then you go in, they're like, Lenita Urge,
come down to first base. They give her fifty thousand dollars.
So pretty cool. It's viral kindness. I mean, what he
did was cool, but then what everybody else did because
they were removed, is awesome. That's what it's all about.

(37:57):
Right there, that was telling me something good. Over to Amy,
let's get in the morning corny, the morning corny.

Speaker 4 (38:08):
What do dentists call their X rays?

Speaker 1 (38:10):
What do dentists call their X rays?

Speaker 4 (38:12):
Toothpicks?

Speaker 1 (38:14):
Oh, pictures of two? That was the morning corny toothpick. Yeah,
sure got it. I didn't get that one second. I
actually got that Okay, So Corey Kent is my guest
on the Bobby Cast. We did an hour conversation go
search for the Bobby Cast. He had a number one

(38:34):
song last week with this one called Wild as Her. Keep.
He talked about having to go to work at a
pavement company in Texas. He'd been doing music, had to
quit because it wasn't working out for him, and this
is what he did until he got back on the
road and got his stuff straight.

Speaker 9 (38:51):
I was having to take off work at the pavement
company to go play shows, and that was kind of
the tipping point. While I'm still working at the pavement company,
I recorded Wild as Her every every opportunity I got,
I took for a whole year, lost so much money,
you know, just paying the band and playing one hundred
and fifty dollars opening slots for a whole year, played
one hundred and five shows that year.

Speaker 1 (39:09):
I mean hustled. It didn't work. Then he went to
work and then they just started grinding it out. He
still lives in Texas, which isn't common for artists now,
and he talked about why he does not live in Nashville.

Speaker 9 (39:21):
Twenty nineteen, I got dropped from my pub deal in Nashville,
and my wife and I were living here. We had
our first baby, and we were just kind of like,
you know what, the only thing that was keeping us
here is gone. And we had our first little girl,
and we had another on the way, where we're like,
we want to raise our kids around family if we can,
and there's nothing holding us back from doing that now.

Speaker 1 (39:40):
So he lives in Frisco, Texas. Oh well, and then
tours it up. So yeah, I got number one song
Corey Kent, which, by the way, his wife they're all friends,
like all the olklaone people are friends. His wife from
Oklahoma's from Oklahoma. They all went to like school around
each other. And so his wife was a photographer at
my wife's sister's wedding, my sister in law's wedding. Whoa
they all again, it's a very small world. And this

(40:03):
is him talking about he was upset with his wife
after that.

Speaker 9 (40:05):
She got back from this wedding and was like, these
people are so fun, Like what an awesome family.

Speaker 1 (40:10):
She's like.

Speaker 9 (40:11):
Bobby Bones was there and Grace's sister is married to Bobby,
and I was like, oh great, so you told him
about me, right, He's like, I.

Speaker 1 (40:19):
Was like, no, nothing got slid, no CDs, nothing, that's funny.
I was like, what are we doing here?

Speaker 9 (40:24):
You have a golden opportunity to help I mean nothing,
And she's like no, I just she's so funny like that.

Speaker 1 (40:31):
So check it out. It's a great talk Corey Kent.
Just search for the Bobby Cast wherever you listen to
music or wherever you get your podcasts in SA. It's
an hour long. It's great. Sorry about these prisoners that
escaped and then got it. Uber blows my mind. I
just would not have had the ability to stay calm
and wait for an UBER as I broke out of jail.
So let me just give you the story. Because two

(40:53):
inmates of Philadelphia planned they escaped. There was a lookout
on the inside, a hole in prison fence, and they
called Uber. Wow, that's how they got out of there.
So the two they're back in custody now. They were
over ten days there were Yeah, that's not bad. That's
a long time on the run. There were three states
that were being covered and they were traveling through. Apparently

(41:13):
they have four other people now that they've charged.

Speaker 5 (41:17):
So one of them was found in like women's guarb
but like trying to just disguise themselves as a woman
when that's funny.

Speaker 1 (41:24):
Some states wouldn't allow that. Now i'd straight, that's right.
So they the two people I can give you their names.
There's Grant and Hurst. That's what the last names you remember,
Grant and Hurst. Hurst and Grant slipped out of their
cells at eight thirty pm on May seventh. They crawled
to the shower area of their cell block, which I'm
just picturing in all these shows is like the white tile,

(41:45):
what kind of dingy? All the shared room, And they
waited for another inmate to come through and check the
guard tower, somebody on the inside, so it sticks. The
guard tower gives the all clear, Okay, you guys are
good to go, and then they start to make their move.
They snuck out the exit and they moved through a
hole cut in the prison fence, so they leave the

(42:07):
normal exit of the place. I don't know how they
cut a hole in the prison fits out somebody knowing.
Aren't there cameras everywhere? You should have three cameras everywhere.
They climbed over to barbed wire barriers, and how do
you climb over? Do you just get cut? Is that
a thing where you're like, I just got to get
cut up over But how do they get a sheet?
There's that angle where they lean back so too. So
unless you're like planning to take a barb in the butt,

(42:29):
you ain't going over that thing. So they did. So
all of this was caught on camera. Then how do
you not catch them cutting hole in the prison fence?

Speaker 4 (42:38):
So?

Speaker 1 (42:38):
And how does it They're not an alert that goes
off when the fence is broken, right, like some sort
of so all on camera they're gone. They called it Uber.
I don't know how they got the cell phone?

Speaker 4 (42:51):
Someone called for them?

Speaker 1 (42:52):
They did, okay, so I didn't know my cousin who's
in jail has a phone. So now it's just facetize
people and like is that how they call? And then
I was like, how do they get the money to
get Uber? So somebody else's phone?

Speaker 3 (43:03):
Also, how does the Uber driver not see guys in
pinstripes when they come I'm supposed to be picking them.

Speaker 1 (43:07):
I don't think they're an old school and maybe they
ditched the.

Speaker 9 (43:12):
The news.

Speaker 4 (43:13):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (43:14):
Well, like he like took a suit from the one
of the other guys, like the warden. Yeah, you know
that's how you did that either way.

Speaker 4 (43:21):
Guy, I imagine you're an uber driver and you're like, oh, shoot, okay,
you don't know and then you figure out.

Speaker 1 (43:25):
But he's like picking you up right outside of prison
and you're an orange and there's a hole you're bleeding
from barble. Wow. So but again it took ten days
for them to track them down.

Speaker 4 (43:36):
And then what about the guy.

Speaker 5 (43:37):
That was the lookout guy, Like he just not went
in on it, Like he just don't he don't want
to escape, Like they're just how do they get.

Speaker 4 (43:42):
Him to do that?

Speaker 1 (43:44):
I don't want to get barbed? And he probably is
like maybe it's the end of his sentence and like
a couple of years, Like there you go.

Speaker 4 (43:50):
What do you get for that?

Speaker 1 (43:52):
Probably less merits.

Speaker 4 (43:53):
Maybe they said hey, you can have all our credits
girl scouts.

Speaker 1 (43:58):
So they are back in jail. I have a cousin
that escaped the same cousin to escaped prison. And were
we here in this? Oh yeah, we were here? So
what happened was I get a call? I mean the
cops called the cops who the law, we'll call him
the law. The law called me like do you know
where he is? No, I haven't seen him in years?

(44:18):
Are you lying to us? Well, if I was, I'm
not gonna say yes right now. After you ask me
that question, do I know? Said no, I'm not lying.
I haven't seen him in years. Okay. So then on
Good Morning America, there he is running and jumping through
a small hole that you like, what hand like a
package through and he's a pretty jack dude. There was

(44:39):
a video of all that run runs through the gets
through the whole fight through, runs out the front and
just goes it takes off running. Yeah, he went out
the front door, so impressive, and there was through the hole.

Speaker 3 (44:50):
Because the slide through the hole, you think, Okay, he
has to be perfectly measured to fit and what if
he just gets stuck.

Speaker 1 (44:56):
What if it's not by other individuals to strike deputies
in order to escape from the Garland County Detention Center
was taken into custody for assisting the escape. That must
be another prisoner because he started chatting up. That's what
Edie said. Eddie said he would escape prison because he
chatted up the guards. Well the other guy. He was
chatting up to other people and that's how he got out.

Speaker 2 (45:18):
Yeah, man, Yeah, they become friends. Man, they start trusting you,
and then that's when you bite.

Speaker 1 (45:22):
Once deputies were away from the booking area window, he
jumped the counter, ran out the door. A woman which
was portly waiting in the parking lot from the passenger
door car open as she drove away with the escaped inmate.
A deputy tried to bust out the passenger window but
was unsuccessful to getaway. Car was abandoned a few minutes later,
a warrant s finished. They searched for him forever, and
it was on the national news. Where did he go? Missouri?

(45:43):
I think the Florida. I think they maybe Salomon Missouri
and got him in Florida or something.

Speaker 3 (45:48):
I mean, isn't it a little suspicious when you're just
sitting in the parking lot with the car door wide open,
like waiting, like revene engine.

Speaker 1 (45:53):
Like resigning, says walk them home? Crazy man? What's the
success rate of it? Can't be good and escapes and
even if you do escape, you're gonna live a life always.
He got forty years for that. Mic Oh no, what
was his original sentence? Well, oh, it probably was not
good anyway. Oh okay, Well, so what's that what's his sentence?

(46:14):
This is, by the way, first cousin, not second cousin,
not distant. But I have a lot of history of
my family being in trouble. Yeah, so it's an I
have another cousin in jail too, really yeah, for his
whole life. Oh no, oh my, there weren't a lot
of choices where I come from one or the other. Mike,
what does it say? How many sentences? Yeah? He initially
had a thirty five year sentence and then got another

(46:36):
forty years added in after he was caught another forty
so he's in there for seventy five years. His prison
term will runing currently with a thirty five year federal
Senates and posted after he played guilty to a bank
robby and carjacking.

Speaker 7 (46:45):
Damn.

Speaker 1 (46:47):
He was arrested on a carjacking case in twenty thirteen.
He was a rested in Florida with a girlfriend. A
month later, he's out for a month Florida. That was
a month of freedom. I'll tell you about us. I
can awesome, go hard.

Speaker 5 (46:57):
So it looks like if you escape, you got a
ten percent chance, because nine wall is just escaping or
living eventually getting found.

Speaker 1 (47:06):
No, no, no, no, that can't be true.

Speaker 4 (47:07):
It says ninety percent are eventually.

Speaker 1 (47:13):
Caught captured guys. So the ten percent of the ones
that I said, you got a temper get out forever
or like yeah, I'm chatting of guards like yeah in
the show for them One on one.

Speaker 2 (47:24):
I saw one of those shows where this guy was
one of the ten percent and he'd made it to
South America somewhere, got to get out of the country,
and he was chilling for years, and then he just
went to a bar and talked to a federal agent.
Federal agent was just like, hey, man, what are you
doing down here? Is like, oh, it is crazy, man,
I escaped for pretty long time ago.

Speaker 1 (47:42):
What why would you ever say done? Though you can't
tell people, how would you ever he thought the guy
was just a regular dude. I didn't know. Obviously crazy.
That's wild. Well, just three percent of all indmates escape
at some point during their time behind bars. Eighty nine
percentempts are committed at minimum security prison. Since you know
who could escape, Chris. How about that reality show Christly

(48:07):
Escapes the Big House. Oh man, Yeah, putt a go
bro on his head and let's see how far you
can get.

Speaker 4 (48:12):
Oh, this is what I was curious about. What if
you're innocent and you.

Speaker 1 (48:16):
Was Christly cracks Out. That's a great name. Love it.

Speaker 5 (48:20):
Unfortunately, even if you successfully prove your innocence and you're
completely exonerated, you could still face chargers.

Speaker 1 (48:27):
For breaking out. Well that's stupid. Well, because you have
to do it the right way. You gotta go through
the courts and stuff. Sometimes I'd watch Christly cracks Out
every Thursday seventh. I'm like USA Network, but yeah, yeah,
and every week it's just seeing what he's fat This week,
I'm gonna chat up to the guards. The next week,
I think he's had a pencil trying to get it yes,

(48:49):
and they go ahead and they commit to all twelve
years of his term. And every week we check in
to see if he's hilarious. That's pretty good. I'm onto something. Hey,
you think that the Alcatraz guys made it?

Speaker 4 (49:02):
No?

Speaker 1 (49:03):
Yeah, no, m yeah, it's close because that's tough, mostly
because the animals over there shark water, how cold it was.
But I when we were doing Breaking Bobby Bones, my
show on Disney Plus, I went right by. I went
to the water and I was like, oh, I could
probably swim this, except for elements like cold, old animals.
If it was like perfect day, it would still be tough,

(49:24):
and I think I could swim it. Keep seeing animals.
You mean sharks, right, yeah, sharks, otters or odds A
good order? Okay, Man escaping? I wonder if we got
everybody listens to escaped, he might like that guy in
the bar.

Speaker 4 (49:40):
We have a voice changer. Are we adding balls?

Speaker 1 (49:43):
Let's if you escaped prison eight seven seven seventy seven, Bobby. Okay,
shut up, just let them call eight seven seven seventy
seven Bobby. We do this segment where if we almost
fall for a scam, or a Namey's case, when she
falls for a scam, we come on and we say
scam scale up so you don't fall for it. I

(50:04):
almost got got almost you on my laptop. I had
the cursor over the link and I was about to
hit it. You don't get God. I don't get God,
and I didn't get God, but I almost got God.

Speaker 9 (50:18):
I go to.

Speaker 1 (50:19):
Facebook about every two days or so, mostly just to
check on my sister. I have like twenty friends. It's
not even a superactive account. I don't post anything unless
it gets posted to another social media site over to it.
I get a message from somebody that I used to
work with in Austin and it says, hey, just wanted
to let you know this person. It says, look who
died in an accident? Oh no, And I'm like, they

(50:43):
went for your heart. I'm like, who died in an accident?
Oh wow? And I almost hit the link. I thought
it was a news story or somebody used to work
with or somebody that we worked with together. Is a scam?
That's so funny.

Speaker 2 (50:54):
It's so funny too, because like we'll never say that, Hey,
guess who died in an accident?

Speaker 1 (50:58):
Let me tell you right, But it hit my emotional
trigger and my curiosity. Died in an accident? Who was
the accident? I was right there on it. So if
you see it, do not click it. Look who died
in an accident? Scam alert. Now here's a different kind
of scam alert. This is thought it was a scam,

(51:18):
but one when a scam scam alert.

Speaker 5 (51:20):
I mean, you've been doing so many scam alerts lately
that I'm on guard, Like I don't I don't want
to fall for anything. So I get a text message
telling me that I have a bill due to this like,
I don't know health recovery place like Geering. Yeah, I'm like,
what recovery this is? Haven't been there, And it's like
click this link to pay the bill. So I ignore

(51:41):
it because of course I'm not going to get got
and then I like, two weeks later, I just received
a call from my therapist office that I have a
bill overdue. They switched to a different billing method and
they are now sending out text messages.

Speaker 1 (51:58):
They should say, they're should be some warning or put
your name in it.

Speaker 4 (52:03):
Come to find out, I don't know the name of
a business was recovery at the time.

Speaker 1 (52:08):
Maybe they should list the five things you talked about
in therapy in that text so you can know what's you.

Speaker 5 (52:12):
Yeah, because I feel like the way I previously paid
it paid to like her name, and so anyway, I
guess they switched things up, and so dang. She was
like before we meet for our next session, we're gonna
to settle this up, and I'm like.

Speaker 1 (52:23):
Oh, it's tough. Though I would have felt the same
way anything in text, even if I get a bad
actual text and be like, hey, we're bringing your one
two days. Click here to make sure it's on like
no chance, buddy, and clicking anything if it just comes
to me from a number I don't know.

Speaker 4 (52:38):
Right, and then you don't get your package.

Speaker 1 (52:40):
I get them too. And it's like certain so banks,
as you wrote, I think they just throw random big
banks of people texts. Don't ever click those, and don't
be curious about who died. They would tell you in
the message okay, scandal arts, scable arts. I thank you, guys.
Let's go over and get into the news Bobby's stories.

(53:00):
I mean, who do you think complains more about parenting?
The mothers of girls or the mothers of boys. Oh gosh,
the mothers of boats? Ask you okay, girls, mothers of girls? Girls.

Speaker 5 (53:15):
I mean, my daughter is not as complicated, but I
was a teenage girl, and I feel like I was
very complicated and I had a lot of emotions and
a lot to deal with and it was very difficult
in my mom.

Speaker 4 (53:27):
You had.

Speaker 1 (53:29):
Had a lot of them.

Speaker 4 (53:31):
It's a great point, and I may still have.

Speaker 1 (53:33):
That's a great point. What is it the answer? Well,
I was going to say, I think boys, men, we're
like dumb. It can be jerks, but like you guys,
when you fight or you're like me, women are me.
It's a different level. Yeah, it's layered.

Speaker 4 (53:52):
So that's what I'm saying, like me and in.

Speaker 1 (53:54):
The face girls like hold it, like talk to it's
it's it's different, right.

Speaker 4 (54:00):
I was awful to my mom, like awful, thankfully my daughter.

Speaker 1 (54:03):
I think that's pretty normal, though. I mean, I don't
know how awful you were. One time she fell in
the whole and Amy ran off and left her.

Speaker 5 (54:08):
I just really kept walking awful. It was like one
of my word. I hate that memory, I know, but.

Speaker 1 (54:13):
I think that that's pretty normal for teenage girls and
their moms to really I just want you to feel
guilty about that.

Speaker 5 (54:20):
I said horrible things to her, like I would I
if I was so mad at her, I would pack
my bag. And I lived with my mom full time,
and my dad lived like fifteen minutes away, and in
high school, once I could drive, he had moved back
to town, and I would throw like an overnight bag
in my car and I'd be like, I'm going to
Dad's and I'm just leave her and go stay at
my dad's.

Speaker 1 (54:38):
So horrible, Yes, but I don't think it's abnormal for
you to have those feelings and act in certain ways
as a teenage girl. I don't think you should hold
that against yourself. Yeah, I would love to hold it
against you as like a bit ha ha amy, But
now I'm serious hold against yourself.

Speaker 4 (54:53):
There was there's another memory too.

Speaker 5 (54:54):
We were we were going to dinner to meet people,
and we were fighting the whole way there that when
we got there, I just said, I'm staying in the car,
and there was other moms and daughters like I was
supposed to be there with her, And she ended up
going to the restaurant by herself and I sat.

Speaker 4 (55:05):
In the car the entire time. I never went in,
and she was there to be with them like I
was supposed to be in there, and they were philic,
where's it? And I just was so stubborn.

Speaker 1 (55:14):
I hear you, you never got any real trouble. Oh okay,
well okay, yeah, I'm trying to protect you from your
here confessions. So the moms of girls are more likely
to report that they have hostile child rearing attitudes, feeling

(55:36):
that their kids a burden and their kids are always confrontational.
It was very challenging, complicated, that's the word they use
here too. So girls are harder to raise them boys apparently. Yeah,
you can't hold that stuff. You can't hold that stuff
personal to yourself. You can't hold hold that's not a thing.
Just understand when your daughter does it, what you learn
from it. When your daughter does it to you, if
she ever does it, that you shouldn't hate her for

(55:59):
it as you did the same thing. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (56:01):
I mean we've had a few moments.

Speaker 5 (56:02):
I think just because she's adopted and we've only been
together five years, like things are just different our dynamic.
But I do see her getting more comfortable and I
kind of like it because I'm like, oh, maybe this
means she's comfortable with me.

Speaker 1 (56:12):
You also went through a divorce that ain't easy, and
how do you react to going through a divorce? Well,
there is no standard reaction to it, and I think
that was probably part of the reason that you were
acting out. You were disappointed. Maybe you thought it was
your fault.

Speaker 5 (56:26):
Yeah, sure, as a child went through divorce. Yeah, and
then now, I mean my kids are going through it.
There was a reaction too to something that we had
made a decision on. And my daughter's reaction literally she
looked us and she goes stupid therapists, And I was.

Speaker 4 (56:41):
Like, so what I just I but I understood.

Speaker 5 (56:44):
I love that she could express that she didn't like
what we were doing, and she assumed we got it
from therapists, because I guess that's where we're getting a
lot no.

Speaker 1 (56:51):
Our books of books you read it. Yeah, I just
have been taking a therapy. I've been through a lot
of therapy where I try not to blame myself for
as many things as I used to. Like even you
know my mom pad me with you're sixteen and she
was already poor, but I made the situation a lot
worse and I have horrible guilt. But I've been working
on getting rid of that guilt, like why would she
even have me or not give me up? Because I

(57:13):
just ruined everything. But that's a similar situation. So I
say that coming up from a place that was like
and i't your fault. That's a normal reaction as you're
reacting like a normal teenage girl that went through a
bunch of stuff. Yeah, and you're hard to raise, but everybody,
that's to every mom, Yes, I forgive myself. Yes I
don't think you do, but I do you do?

Speaker 5 (57:32):
I even in this moment, like day to day, I
have to I do something sometimes just yesterday, and to.

Speaker 1 (57:37):
Be able to like, okay, no, no, I mean with
your mom, that's what I'm talking about it.

Speaker 5 (57:39):
Yes, that too from my childhood even to now, like
there's I've learned, like you said, you're learning it now.
Then I didn't have that grace for myself. I didn't understand.
But now as an adult I can look back and
have grace for younger me and forgive that. And then
also now I carry that with me now, like if
I do something today, I might have to be like, Okay.

Speaker 4 (57:58):
I don't have grace for myself, forgive my self, learned
from it, and let's move on.

Speaker 1 (58:01):
So if you fall in a hole and your daughter
walks off and leaves you, you just go I show
his baby, because.

Speaker 5 (58:06):
Oh my mom straight up said I hope payback is
big time, which she already my first day that I
had my daughter. And I feel like my mom did
this from heaven. She orchestrated it. I swear we were
in the Miami a report coming back from Haiti and
we were on those moving escalator things and my kids
had never been on an escalator before.

Speaker 4 (58:24):
So anyway we're like doing that.

Speaker 5 (58:25):
I'm making sure they're all good, and I have all
these bags and I fall, like I trip and fall,
and all these strangers rush to me and they're like
checking on me, are you okay? And there's video of
it because our friend was with a sort of filming
and Sashira literally steps over me and keeps walking like
she doesn't know me.

Speaker 1 (58:42):
She did full Kobe Bryant. Wow.

Speaker 4 (58:44):
Yeah, And so that was my ham. I feel like
my mom was like day one of being a mom. Gotcha.

Speaker 1 (58:50):
That's from Personality and Social Psychology Journal. Well, this dude
who has a ton of money. I think he's a
billionaire or at least like one hundred millionaire. He's attempting
to age himself with his biohacking and his latest thing
is using the blood of his teenage son in his body. Oh,
this guy's been in the news. Yeah, we've talked about

(59:10):
him before, right, And it's not that he's bizarre. He's
not turning himself to a Barbie doll for twenty thousand
dollars like that kind of thing. He's literally trying to
figure out the science in his body, trying to deage
himself so he can that's why he doesn't look that
so we can create and then sell or pass it

(59:30):
on to other people. So he's forty five years old.
His name is Brian Johnson. So he has been injecting
himself with the blood of his teenage son. They've done
this on mice though forever, to see if that works
from younger mice. And the answer is not no, but
the answers for sure not yes yet. So he's like,
all right, let's give it a run here and then
he lifts off. And I've said this before. How old

(59:51):
his different body parts are? He feels fitness tests says eighteen,
that his heart's thirty seven, his left ear is sixty four.
I don't get that one worry far.

Speaker 4 (01:00:01):
But what I was right here maybe he damaged that year.

Speaker 1 (01:00:04):
Okay, fair is diaphragm strength of an eighteen year old.
And he said, my son is seventeen, So I'm putting
that young blood into me and see if it helps.

Speaker 4 (01:00:12):
Yeah, so it has to be biological.

Speaker 1 (01:00:15):
No, I don't think so. I think that's what you
can get to know what illegally blood and free And yeah,
that's pretty crazy. I mean he looks like Edward from Twilight.
Oh yeah, like his skin. It doesn't like he's been
in the sun. I think he avoids the sun. He's
forty five, but he just look there's no real wrinkles
on him. But he doesn't look twenty two. He just

(01:00:38):
looks like a vampire kind of right now. But the
vampires are hundreds years old and they look Sure, would
you do this? Yes? No, I'm not going through all
that work.

Speaker 4 (01:00:46):
To do I don't think I'm not going to do
it now.

Speaker 5 (01:00:48):
I want a little more research, but eventually sure if
I if I can my chronological age me one and
my biological.

Speaker 1 (01:00:54):
Commune, I'm gonna be talking.

Speaker 5 (01:00:57):
Okay, sorry, if it can be one age, like say
when I'm sixty, but then my biological age can be forty.

Speaker 1 (01:01:02):
Yeah, I want to do it for like ten fifteen
years to get that done. You're not gonna be able
to do it in one day.

Speaker 4 (01:01:07):
Well, I already aged myself to sixty.

Speaker 5 (01:01:08):
I'm saying I'm putting myself in the future when this
is better, more advanced.

Speaker 1 (01:01:13):
Well, let's see what happens, all right. Next up, Netflix
is cracking down on password chairing. So seven ninety nine
a month for someone who lives outside your home has
affected you yet, lunchbox, I will check today because you
use someone else's account. Let's just say that.

Speaker 3 (01:01:28):
No, no, no, let's not just say yeah, I use
my in laws. I just log into their account wherever
I'm at, so let us.

Speaker 1 (01:01:33):
Know this week. Yeah, if they're charging you now, I'm
gonna go home see if I can log in. If not,
I'm gonna be very upset. What if you find out
that that seven ninety nine is being charged to your
in laws but they don't know it yet and it
automatically starts charging. Would you tell them no, you just
let me pay it. Let him pay it, all right.
That's from The Guardian. A guy twenty three years old
was made by a ten foot alligator after falling into
a pond behind a bar when he went out to pee.

(01:01:56):
Oh my god, Oh he's twenty three tripped and fell
into the water behind Bandido's Bar and Port Charlotte in
the early hours of Sundays twenty three. They heard him
screaming for help. People didn't know what was going on.
Did he get robbed? Did you get attacked? Well, he did,
but it wasn't by a human. It was by an
alligator who had chomped down on his right arm. Patrons
ran from inside the bar to rescue. I'm pulling him
out of the water. They made a tourniquet out of

(01:02:18):
some cloth that was there. They put it on a
severed arm. He ain't gonna have that arm. It's I mean,
it's it's done. But an alligator just got him. That
allegator must been sent there. Chill and wait for the
next drunk to walk out. Oh yeah, like somebody drunk
is gonna come out. This guy's wobbly. Yeah, oh, here
comes on right now. Yeah, that sucks. Florida Fish and

(01:02:39):
Wildlife Commission said a nuisance. They said a nuisance alligator
trapper removed the ten point five foot alligator from the property.
It was then euthanized. Man, So it's called a nuisance
alligator trapper. Like, that's the term a nuisance alligator. The
alligator's being a nuisance. Yeah, that's more than nuisance, bro, Yeah,
that's murderer. Annoying is like your neighbor that has a
TV on at eleven PM and you can hear it
to the wall. That's what NBC two Seline Dion sold

(01:03:02):
her thirty million dollar Las Vegas mansion. It was in
the Summit Club. It's the community. It was thirty one
thousand square feet. She bought it for a nine point
two million, and twenty seventeen sold it for thirty Wow.
The house, it's on one point four acres, four bedrooms,
twelve bathrooms. Now there's that thirty one thousand square feet
for the residents, but the basement, which is fully finished,

(01:03:23):
just fourteen thousand, five hundred square feet. There's also also
a three thousand, three hundred foot square foot parking garage pool,
a spall that overlooks the golf course.

Speaker 4 (01:03:33):
Thirty one thousand square feet. It's four bedrooms.

Speaker 1 (01:03:38):
That's probably just four bedrooms or bedrooms, twelve and twelve bathroom. Yeah,
binding these bathrooms. I just I still just different parts
of the house. I mean, if you're in the spall,
you don't want to go, We'll have to go walk
to Selina, take a poop, you know what? You want
to be able to go right there? All right, I
think I'm done here with this. I'll do one more.
Ashley Graham. You know, yes, guys, he's the model. She

(01:03:59):
is the what's her what's the term they use plus size?
That's it size model. It's a specific. Yes, she tapes
her mouth shut to sleep. And says she never has
slept better in her whole life. I don't know. Sounds dangerous, huh.
And what if you have a stoped up nose? Yeah
you can, that's really probably not something you can do.
What if your nose gets stoppedup while you sleep? Is

(01:04:19):
there any changes to die? Oh my gosh, that's scared.

Speaker 3 (01:04:22):
I don't know how you come up with that, Like,
you know, no, they I'm gonna tape my mouth shut
because get in trouble.

Speaker 1 (01:04:26):
Teachers get in trouble for doing kids is not their
own Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah yeah. I started taping my
mouth shut when I sleep, and I've never slept better.
Don't knock until you try it. Mouths taping has making
a popular home treatment over the last few years to
encourage people to breathe through their nose. But that popular
home treatment from TikTok? Is that fair to say a
popular home treatment? Probably not? All right, that's from the mirror.

(01:04:46):
That's the news. Thank you. Those couples get married, everything's great,
let's have the wedding, big party, family comes, so, all
the traditional normal things. But the story is this brutal
and how it kind of ends. A groom got revenge
on his cheating bride an untrustworthy best man, when he

(01:05:09):
dramatically revealed he had hooked up during their wedding during
his wedding speech when he got out, So he held
it all in and got up to give a speech
and let everybody know. You just had to let it go. Then, no, no, no,
he held it until then. It wasn't that he was like,
I can't hold it anymore. He purposefully and strategically held
on to release it. In this occasion, he announced the

(01:05:30):
betrayal to all of his guests by handing out photos
of the bride with the best man, and then left
the wedding. I might not say with it was with
with Yeah, he does, and we'll get to that in
a second. But here's the story. He said his family
had known all along, but he wanted to go through
with the wedding so that his bride. We have to

(01:05:50):
pay for all the food, which is probably her parents,
not her her parents. Since he's done, you brother, it's true.
So there was wedding, They did the wedding, lovely ceremony.
They set down for the wedding meal and the food,
and you know, you get ding ding ding ding ding,
tay a little something. He gets up to have a
little something. Father, the bride gets up, does this thing.
Groom stands up. So just before I properly get started,

(01:06:12):
there's some envelopes coming around. Now if you can all
open them up, you'll see pictures of the bride with
the best man. So I'll be leaving now. That's it.
So they got married, though, right, I don't I think
unless you sign that hopefully ceremony itself. That's a good point.
You can also probably that quickly get that thing and old.

(01:06:33):
But I would think they probably didn't sign. I don't know.
So when he like says the power in me, that's
not that's just that's like that we'll know. That could
be in the lord's eyes, Okay, okay, it could be
in the in the government. Is not legally married. You
have to sign some stuff. Otherwise you just walk around
and marry people and they don't even know it. Yeah
you're married.

Speaker 5 (01:06:51):
Whoever's marrying you has to sign it. He'd be like, yeah, yeah,
we'll do it at the end of the night and
then just turn that off. So that way, yeah, he's committed.

Speaker 1 (01:06:58):
That was holding on to something. That's I mean, that's
like a Scuba Steve's story. You're right, because Scuba Steve's
old wife, not this one. His ex wife was cheating
on him. He found out he saw he had seen
like some emails. Right yeah.

Speaker 10 (01:07:09):
I was like if she was passed out drunk, A
bunch of text messages from guys with the acronym a
M for Ashley Madison, but not emails.

Speaker 1 (01:07:16):
Em No, it was text.

Speaker 10 (01:07:17):
But then once I got into her phone, then I
found emails a first setting half naked photos to guys.

Speaker 1 (01:07:23):
So she's on that dating side. I don't know if
it exists anymore at Bashley Madison where Mary people get
on and do their things on Earth. But he found
out that she was doing it, and that he didn't
say anything about it now for a while because he
strategically decided to email her dad pictures. Oh yeah, those
pictures that I saw my wife to her dad, her dad.

Speaker 4 (01:07:40):
Okay, how old were you when this happened?

Speaker 1 (01:07:43):
Uh? I was twenty four to twenty five.

Speaker 5 (01:07:46):
Would Scuba Steve now, with maturity and time, would you
still handle that situation the same.

Speaker 4 (01:07:51):
Way I would murder her?

Speaker 1 (01:07:53):
Oh my good, it's a little different. He's all serious
man now with three kids, she's.

Speaker 6 (01:08:01):
Got to go.

Speaker 1 (01:08:01):
No.

Speaker 5 (01:08:02):
No, I'm not saying if your wife did it now,
I don't want to even put that in the universe.
I'm just saying, like, would you still if you were mature, would.

Speaker 1 (01:08:08):
You I didn't make annoyed the cases audio went to
court ing that. So you're quiet, I appreciate that.

Speaker 4 (01:08:13):
Would you send it to the dad?

Speaker 1 (01:08:15):
Yes, I would definitely do it now.

Speaker 10 (01:08:17):
Yeah, I mean, I'm still the kind of person if
you do me wrong, I will get you back in
the most creative, vindictive way possible.

Speaker 1 (01:08:22):
But again, what did the dad do?

Speaker 9 (01:08:23):
Like?

Speaker 1 (01:08:23):
Why is the dad? But the dad didn't see it
for days because he was older, it wasn't his email
every day. Yeah, and then he does what it was
weeks later. Then he like hit up his daughter and
was like, hey, Steve, send me what like what is this?
And she's like, oh my god.

Speaker 10 (01:08:37):
And then I came on from work and there was
this whole argument, and I was like, this argument is
doesn't matter. What were you doing and why were you
doing what you were doing?

Speaker 1 (01:08:44):
Did you pivot it to but you're in my stuff
because that's what I would have done. I've been like you,
I can't even have any privacy that doesn't work. What
it had saved me a couple like probably five minutes
of trying to figure out the rest of it in
my head. Yeah.

Speaker 10 (01:08:56):
No, it was more along the lines of, like we'd
started digging into our relationship as and then we realized
this is not going anywhere.

Speaker 1 (01:09:02):
Every time he tells the story was like a little
new factory that comes out and I'm st blown away
by the story itself. I think you told it three
or four times now, and I'm just like what cahonys, Yeah,
to send it to her dad and then just to
hold it in and not say anything to her for weeks.
Did you guys have married relations at all in that
week's leading up to that? No, we we had. We

(01:09:24):
weren't doing anything for almost I think six months to
a year. Okay, So you weren't like faking that part
of it.

Speaker 10 (01:09:29):
No, No, No, Like I kind of knew something was wrong,
especially when she was so she worked in a hotel
and worked late hours, oh boy, and so I kind
of had just like my gut feeling that something was
wrong and all of it was right.

Speaker 1 (01:09:41):
Did she even work at a hotel?

Speaker 4 (01:09:43):
No?

Speaker 1 (01:09:43):
She did? Yeah? Or did she work at a hotel. Yeah,
did she use the hotel for the hookups? That's what
I'm thinking.

Speaker 10 (01:09:50):
Possibly because she worked at a really nice hotel right
in the middle of the city, and why not you
have access to all the rooms.

Speaker 1 (01:09:56):
I'm sure she did.

Speaker 3 (01:09:57):
Yeah, Ashley Madison still exists over thirty four million members
in forty five different countries.

Speaker 1 (01:10:01):
Then married. It was gonna cheat. Why would you be
get an aastional Madison. It's just a fake name and
get on another one with people that aren't sleazy.

Speaker 5 (01:10:07):
Because yeah, this was developed before other like apps and
social media whatever.

Speaker 4 (01:10:13):
Right, how many users do they claim? Thirty four million?

Speaker 1 (01:10:16):
Thirty four million?

Speaker 3 (01:10:16):
You know, I'm gonna in forty five different countries, destinations
like New York, California, Texas, Florida.

Speaker 1 (01:10:22):
Sounds like an ad destination. It's like he got an
endorsement and now he fitted in as natural Integrations.

Speaker 4 (01:10:27):
Y'all do y'all remember.

Speaker 5 (01:10:30):
It was probably like two thousand and six thousand stuff
or I don't know early and oh, yeah, you're gonna
quit you y'all played a trick on me that that
Ashley Madison was going to endorse with the show and
that and I said Okay, fine if we if we endorse,
we do y'all want to need to endorse or y'all
that I would quit.

Speaker 1 (01:10:48):
It was like, I'm not doing those ads and I
don't want to be a part of show that does
the ad. And I'm like, sometimes, I mean, you have
to do things you don't want to do, and this
is one of those instances. We have to. We really
need the money for the show. It's like a paper salaries,
so we're gonna have to he real Ashley Madison fans
and she's like, I thought I'm gonna quit the show.
Good for you, Amy, Yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:11:07):
Also, is anybody else from this segment, like if you
made a mental note like don't.

Speaker 4 (01:11:10):
Don't mess with Steve or don't I thought that forever.
Don't murder me?

Speaker 1 (01:11:15):
You heard it here. I think he said murder and
then started to go in his head. I shouldn't have
said that, So I me to get out of that
real quick. What can I do? Okay, laugh Steve, That's
what I think happened in thats So he's great guy.

Speaker 4 (01:11:28):
I love him, Yeah, love him all right.

Speaker 1 (01:11:31):
You guys call us if you want eight seven seven
seventy seven Bobby eight seven seven seventy seven, Bobby, I
do want to talk about a surgeon getting fired because
of how he botched an amputation. No, it ain't good,
and it's not like you cut off the wrong leg.
It's something that's way. I've just not heard of this
version of the story because sometimes it's like, oh, and

(01:11:51):
am I right shoulder was messed up and they deserted
my left shoulder. It ain't that. The other thing is
this story about the guy in Idaho, the Ian Coburger.
How he say his name? I don't have to say
guy that killed those people. There's they allegedly killed those people.
There's still a trial, right, there is a there's some
new stuff that's come out about it, and it blew

(01:12:12):
my mind, blue my mind. So we'll come back with
that next. Okay, I got a couple of things, both
wild Number one officials at the hospital have expressed regret
after it emerged that one of their surgeons got someone
who was hired to clean the hospital to assist him
in an amputation because he just needed somebody like anyone
like Janet. He just got the jant you janitor? Yeah,

(01:12:34):
what on earth? The hospital's chief executive said. The surgeon
wrongly decided to go ahead with the routine procedure, even
though no qualified assistant was available. When the patient who
had received the local anesthetic became restless, the doctor asked
a nearby janitor, told the guy's leg and then pass
over social instruments. That's crazy. I would do it though
the cleaner had no medical experience, and you know what,

(01:12:55):
it probably went fine. You just can't do it because
it's like scalpel and then all think they hand you
a suction screwdriver. I mean, it's the encidate came to
light after the hospital manager spotted the cleaner bloody gows
and pads in hand in the operating room. That's crazy.
Caught him in the act. Wow, that's from ap that's wow.
But again, if you're there and they gotta get the toes,

(01:13:16):
got to go, maybe you don't do it with anybody.
Maybe you have to just do it yourself, walk back
and forth to do a two man job. One man,
oh man, that's hard. But if there's a guy with
a huge set of keys in the body, it can
help you because obviously maybe huget of keys where everything goes.
Why not just go and ask him to do it?
Here's the other story.

Speaker 8 (01:13:29):
And so.

Speaker 1 (01:13:32):
Brian Coburger, I think how he say his name? He
allegedly is the Idaho murderer who killed those people he
like stalked him going. He just pled not guilty. What
about the description of the of the murder lunchbots I'm
missing here, No, it's in.

Speaker 3 (01:13:47):
There was four college students sleeping in a house. He
went in and stabbed him to death.

Speaker 1 (01:13:51):
So there's a new allegedly, there's a new report that
says Brian Coburger broke into woman's home before the Idaho
murders even went down, acting some sort of he wanted
to make her feel uneasy in her life, so we'd
go in and move her stuff around like sus with her. Yes,
so it gets even then the reason he did it.
So uh, the NBC's Aline has the whole story. So

(01:14:14):
it became friends with her, and then he snuck into
her place after he became friends and started moving things around.
And then she went to him because they were already
friends and was like, hey, can you help me set
some cameras up? And so he did. But then he
had all the passwords because he could get into her WiFi.
This is from the report, and I'm me making it out.
This is from the report to them, not me, And
so that's what's up. The FBI guy says it wasn't

(01:14:36):
a friend helping another friend. He orchestrated all of it
so that she would come to him, he'd be able
to help her, and then he had control over it it,
could see it and control the whole situation. So so
like he could log into the cameras when she's in
the house and watch her. Yeah, oh yeah, I was
what I said, WiFi, she had WiFi password, he could
get into all that.

Speaker 3 (01:14:54):
Yeah, he did everything, so he had all the control
over it. So when she's in her bed sleeping, he
could just watch her if he wanted to. And he
gained her trust, but he was the one breaking into
her place to make her feel unsafe.

Speaker 1 (01:15:06):
To make her feel less trusting of the general world.
That's next level thinking like, yeah, it's him investing a
bunch of time early. Yeah, going, this is my target.
Now I'm gonna spend a lot of time creeping. I
don't know if he felt like he was going to
allegedly murder her or if he's just a freaking weirdo
that snapped. I don't know.

Speaker 2 (01:15:26):
Well, even the murders they said they saw his car.
Surveillance saw his car. How many times lunchbox?

Speaker 1 (01:15:30):
Oh ye, go buy a lot by drive by playing
planning with this guy?

Speaker 4 (01:15:35):
Her she was before the college kids, yes, And is
she alive?

Speaker 1 (01:15:41):
Yes, And she's probably like, thank god I wasn't murdered. Yeah. Oh,
she's thinking that. Oh my gosh, I was the intended victim.
That's what I think she's probably thinking right now. And
how do we We don't know. We don't know anything.
We're just speculating. If he did this to one person,
it's probably not an isolated incident where he just did
it to this girl, came up with this planned just
for this girl. Oh, the cameras. Yeah, he probably did

(01:16:03):
this and tried it with a few different people. Yeah,
and then no one came to him. They went to
someone else and got security camera or this did happen
with somebody else And she hasn't come out yet because
this story just now came out. Maybe somebody else is like, Oh,
I don't want to say anythingcause I don't want to
get in the news, but that happened to me too.
Let me say something that was crazy. They gotta make
a movie about this this guy. They will, I mean,
Netflix probably got to come out tomorrow very quick on

(01:16:25):
that stuff. Now, I it just freaks me out that
somebody because it's not I'm going to break into her
house and watch her as she sleeps. It's I'm gonna
befriend her, slide in her house, mix stuff up. Be
the person that she used as a consultant, because who knows,
maybe when he met her, he's else like, yeah, I've
somebody works up. He can like drop things about a

(01:16:46):
friend that works at a security company or something. Just
so when it's time for her to get cameras, who
does she go to? Well, somebody's probably already mentioned it
a few times. There's just so much planning in preparation.

Speaker 4 (01:16:55):
D oh, so she speaking about it, I just have
I wanna.

Speaker 5 (01:16:59):
I'm curious to see if she ever had a gut
feeling or felt weird around him, or had negative vibes,
or at any point in time.

Speaker 4 (01:17:07):
She was suspicious.

Speaker 1 (01:17:08):
I don't know the answer.

Speaker 4 (01:17:09):
No, I want to know.

Speaker 5 (01:17:11):
If she says it, let me know, because I didn't
know any of this. So y'all keep me up to
date on this. I just can't I saw a lot
about that.

Speaker 1 (01:17:18):
No, I would think he's creep to her because they're
not friends anymore. Like why do you not be friends
with somebody because something happened to make you not be
friends with them, unless you just was like, Wow, my
best friends murdered people. I don't know if that's the case.
I mean, I think it was the murder's happened, then
you're no longer friends with them, and then you're like, yeah,
that's the part that made him not be friends to
get it, but probably it was. And I would think
a weirdo eventually shows the weirdo shripes.

Speaker 4 (01:17:39):
Yeah, well, I just I'll rely on y'all.

Speaker 5 (01:17:41):
I don't ever do that no for information because I
kept seeing it and I just didn't have the you know,
have to.

Speaker 4 (01:17:47):
Have the space to click on some of this stuff.

Speaker 1 (01:17:49):
It's a lot even people that listen to these podcasts
podcast there are so many. If you go over to
our iHeart Radio app, there's so many of these podcasts
and people love them and they're really one that are
well researched and the story's told so good. But I
can't take them because then I have nightmares or I
start to feel bad or I'm just sad for people,

(01:18:10):
or then I'm mad, like why are we turning this
into entertainment? But then I'm like, well, I watch the
Ted Bundy stuff on Netflix. One. Yeah, it's just a
whole I just can't get into them. I don't like it.
What are you trying to say? And he keeps opening your.

Speaker 5 (01:18:21):
Mouthuse I guess I did you do because I liked
true crime stuff. But I guess more if it's in
the past, just something about it being in the moment,
or maybe it's just day to day, depending on my mood,
what I can take in, what bandwidth I have for
this type of information, but just currently going down, I
was like, oh.

Speaker 4 (01:18:37):
I don't want to click on that, but that is crazy.

Speaker 5 (01:18:40):
He did that, and it makes anything of that one
worker that I had to give him my code and
then he told me how I'm going to come and
kill you. But he was joking or was right, And
that was you think, like, I'm not going to give
codes to people anymore.

Speaker 4 (01:18:53):
I changed the.

Speaker 1 (01:18:53):
Code, but you were just rarely giving your codes of folks.

Speaker 4 (01:18:57):
No, I had to because they were working on something.

Speaker 5 (01:18:59):
But now I feel as though I'm a little too
trustworthy of times too, And this is a reminder to
all of us just to.

Speaker 4 (01:19:09):
Be on guard.

Speaker 2 (01:19:10):
Yeah, we didn't really need that reminder, Amy, but thank you.
Yeah I'm pretty good on guard. I'm probably overly on guard.
That serial podcast, that dude's still out of.

Speaker 3 (01:19:17):
Jail, Yeah, yeah, he's out seeing some of the I
don't think they're going to read Are they going to
retry him?

Speaker 1 (01:19:23):
I don't remember if they're gonna. I don't think they are.
Some of these podcasts, they actually do a great job
of proving innocence or guilt.

Speaker 4 (01:19:32):
In there.

Speaker 1 (01:19:32):
Some of them are pretty reckless. I don't like listening
to them. I did listen to Cereal. Anyway you like podcasts,
go to iHeart Radio. Our iHeart Radio app has everything.
It's really such a great app. You can listen to
our show live. If you want to feel like what
station you have? Pick a station. You can go to
the iHeart Country channel. You can listen to the Bobby
Bone Show. We also have a podcast where you can
listen to it on demand. But just so much over
the Four Things with Amy Brown, that is you. Yeah,

(01:19:57):
you don't need a true crime though, do you? I
was going to do a true crime podcast over on
the Nashville Podcast Network. I wasn't gonna do it about
some of the murders here in Nashville that have to
kind of do with interesting and I was just told
that I would for sure get sued. Really, even if
I'm even if I'm accurate, I'm going to get sued
because there are still people in this town that are

(01:20:19):
alive that they are just gonna have to sue for
the sake of suing to show that they have nothing
to do with it. They were like, it's not worth it. Wow,
that sounds if you're my thing thing, I'd be on it.
I'd go like, let's go. I don't give a crap,
but it's not my thing thing. I was just trying
that'd be fun to do one, So it ain't worth
it to me to get sued, so that I don't
really care that much about. But there's die I'll tell
you off the here. Okay, there's a lot of stuff's

(01:20:41):
at there's a lot of stuff around here. Really, they
don't be trusting. So yeah, check out the iHeartRadio app.
Thousands of specially creative playlists, all these contests. Let's go
check it out. Thank you guys. Bobby bone show Sorry
up today. This story comes us from Albertquirke, he knew Mexico.

Speaker 3 (01:21:01):
A tow truck driver got a call from a guy saying, hey,
there's a car part to illegally in front of my business.

Speaker 1 (01:21:06):
Will you come toe it? So he comes, hooks it
up z.

Speaker 3 (01:21:11):
Starts to tow it away, when all of a sudden
here comes a guy running out drum in ba start
shooting at him.

Speaker 1 (01:21:18):
Forty four year old man was mad that his car
was getting towed. You know tow truck drivers or repo
people who are actually some tow truck too. Yeah, that
when they pull up and go to work, they got
to work like a pit crew fast and get it back,
get that thing on and out because they're in danger.
They want to avoid this situation of getting beat up

(01:21:39):
or like somebody coming out Yosemite. Sam, And I'm imagining
that the guy didn't get shot or you going to
put it in the bonehead.

Speaker 3 (01:21:47):
No, he didn't get shot, but luckily he had a
camera on rolling so he always films when he tows
a car just in case something happens, and boom able
to identify the guy.

Speaker 1 (01:21:57):
I bet you something happens a lot that's probably a show.
They ever a show on that lunchbox where it's like
just guys who go in toe things.

Speaker 3 (01:22:03):
Yeah, it's called parking wars, and it's usually mostly the
guys that give you tickets for the meters, Like in Philadelphia,
you walk and if you're not paying it a meter
or you're party illegally, they ride a ticket or they
put a boot on your car and people come out.

Speaker 1 (01:22:15):
And scream, great show, very entertaining. But if they ever
followed a tow truck driver who has to either repo
or toe cars?

Speaker 3 (01:22:24):
Not exactly, I mean sometimes they do call a tow
truck saying, hey we got to tow this car.

Speaker 1 (01:22:28):
Oh, let's go. Yeah, this will be a show. Opernt
up they have in like ten places tomorrow, Mike, we
researched it there.

Speaker 3 (01:22:35):
They called Southeast South Beach Toe in Miami it was
Operation Repo.

Speaker 1 (01:22:40):
Oh there's two.

Speaker 4 (01:22:40):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (01:22:41):
I went to mister reality show, you let me down
parking Wars. I thought that was what they fought over
our parking spot.

Speaker 4 (01:22:48):
And no, what about is there a show of people
that have to deliver subpoenas? Because I always see that.
I always thought that would be a really difficult job
to see.

Speaker 5 (01:22:57):
In TV shows.

Speaker 4 (01:22:57):
I don't know if this is what it's really like,
but they always kind of have to.

Speaker 5 (01:22:59):
Be like, oh hey, oh hey, you like they're in
disguise Bobby Bones, right, and then they get you to
say yes, I'm Bobby Bones, and then they're like, you've
been served, and then they run away.

Speaker 1 (01:23:09):
Yeah, that's awesome, you've been served. I don't know, excite you.
You've been served somebody. I've just seen that. Like Amy said,
I wonder if that's how really happens.

Speaker 4 (01:23:18):
Though I don't know it is. And how do you
get that job? I want it?

Speaker 1 (01:23:22):
How does Lunchbox know? I mean, I know, but how
do you know? Have you? I got people that work
in the industry used Okay, thank you, Lunchbox. I'm Lunchbox.
That's your bonehead story of the day. Earlier we talked
about a Scammelert where I got a message going, oh
guess who died? Which hyther is a weird game, but

(01:23:42):
it was I didn't click it almost clicked it. Don't
fall for that one. We got so many messages there's
even more in this room. Scammelert Scammelert. So once we
went to break. Earlier, Amy said her niece got hacked
as well.

Speaker 5 (01:23:55):
What happened there, Yeah, someone took over her Instagram. Check
out this guy apace Yeah yeah, yeah, I don't know.
And there's pictures of a woman too, so it's someone
from Turkey And here's what happened. So I started texting her.
I'm like, what in the world did you do? Because, like,
her whole Instagram is totally hacked, And she said that
she got a notification that there was gonna her Instagram

(01:24:16):
was going to be removed or taken down because of
copyright infringement, and she's a freshman in college and she
loves her Instagram photos and stories and stuff.

Speaker 4 (01:24:25):
She didn't want to lose any of that.

Speaker 5 (01:24:26):
So she's like, I clicked on the link and I
filled out all the questions which asked for her name,
her email address, her phone number, like she gave it all,
and then within like a minute, she she was locked
out of her Instagram and had been taken over.

Speaker 1 (01:24:41):
By and she still doesn't have it apparently unless she
really likes those pictures and it's leaving a lot.

Speaker 5 (01:24:46):
Yeah, it's kind of weird and scared, Like, I don't
know what he gets out of like taking it over
and doing that.

Speaker 1 (01:24:52):
Like, what's it would be fun to take someone's over there? Yeah,
just for like twenty four hours. Yeah, and maybe they'd
do it to it. No, I mean like forever I
create a whole new account. Yeah, Like I wonder if
he does it to bigger accounts and uses them for
like fishing or something, and it just keeps the little
ones for personal fun. How many followers she have? Oh?

Speaker 4 (01:25:10):
Well, not sure.

Speaker 5 (01:25:11):
I can't check right now because he's well, does he
get her all of her phone?

Speaker 1 (01:25:14):
Yeah? Account?

Speaker 4 (01:25:15):
Okay, Well let me go. I mean she doesn't have
that many.

Speaker 1 (01:25:18):
That's a point. I guess you can get a blue
check marked account. You can use that to get other accounts.

Speaker 4 (01:25:23):
Oh, she has almost two thousand.

Speaker 1 (01:25:26):
Really, what is she going to do?

Speaker 5 (01:25:28):
She's already contacting Instagram and trying to fill out new paperwork.

Speaker 1 (01:25:32):
To over that.

Speaker 5 (01:25:34):
No, I mean she's she's she's going to try to
get it back, and.

Speaker 4 (01:25:37):
My sister's trying to help her. Like it's just you know,
as a freshman in college, this is the worst thing
that could happen to you.

Speaker 1 (01:25:42):
I almost fell for it once. Where not the one
I'm talking about where they're like Guess who died? Terrible
game show, by the way, too, I'm thinking about all
the things that would be bad at doing it. Welcome
to Guess who died? Questions. Yes, but somebody hit me
up on Instagram. It's a blue check mark, and I said, hey,
you got to keep your check so you need to
fill this out because we're going through all these changes.
And I clicked then, and I was so close to

(01:26:05):
putting name and password in there, and I didn't do it.
And I consider myself somebody who is just hyperd bit
about making sure I don't do it. They're getting so good. Yeah, Ray,
what happened to you? Yeah? I got this guy acting
like he works for Low's and I have a product
there that I got.

Speaker 7 (01:26:18):
To come pick up. But he's really professional sounding. I
got to give him props. I think he actually sounds
like he works at Low's. So you got a text, No,
it's a voicemail. And so then he wants me to
call him and give my credit card information. He was
like John here over, Low's gonna hear it.

Speaker 4 (01:26:34):
Oh you have it?

Speaker 1 (01:26:35):
Yeah, let's go all right, here you go hold him away. Sure,
it's a scam. This is not you don't have something Low's. No,
I know, I've never been to Low's before. Okay, here
we go.

Speaker 8 (01:26:42):
This is Sean calling you back from Loew's Home Improvement.
I just wanted to let you know that I turn
that over to Dian and appliances. Looks like we do
have some more in the warehouse, so I'm going to
try to get you one from the called the wrong number.

Speaker 1 (01:26:58):
Ray. I don't think this is a scam. I think
he's trying to get to somebody who actually has something.

Speaker 7 (01:27:02):
Right.

Speaker 1 (01:27:02):
But he said calling you back, I never called him.
That's the scam. He can still Yeah, I don't feel
like actually you could scam him and get the stuff
for free paid for you. What are the appliances?

Speaker 4 (01:27:15):
Yeah, that's my question. He's not being specific, right, he
never am.

Speaker 1 (01:27:19):
He keeps saying the item in the warehouse. He never
says what it is. I don't know. I feel he
sounds like a pretty honest guy. I feel like he's
just calling the wrong person back. But you think it's
a scam, Yeah, you right, think it's a scam. I
for sure think it's a scam. Do you have the number? Yeah?
Can we get lunchbucks to call it. We'll play it tomorrow.
Come on, Yeah, okay, let's do that. I think it's
an accident. You guys think it's a scam. You may

(01:27:41):
have free washing and dry waiting for you right there.
And Diane is going to be a part of that
getting it to you because he's got over heah yeah yeah, okay,
so Lunchbucks will do that. I'll call all right, we're done.
I hope you have a good day by everybody, get
your bones show
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Hosts And Creators

Bobby Bones

Bobby Bones

Amy Brown

Amy Brown

Lunchbox

Lunchbox

Eddie Garcia

Eddie Garcia

Morgan Huelsman

Morgan Huelsman

Raymundo

Raymundo

Mike D

Mike D

Abby Anderson

Abby Anderson

Scuba Steve

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