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April 17, 2024 79 mins

Lunchbox feels he deserves Royaltie checks for appearing on an Amazon Prime show. Plus, Amy finally finished her punishment of having to watch all 10 'Saw' movies, find out her thoughts and more!

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Committingla.

Speaker 2 (00:10):
What's up? Welcome to Wednesday show. More than studio. Let's
go around the room and check in with everybody. He
won't shave his head because his wife doesn't want him
to look like his dad. But once he stops trying
to hang on and he shaves it, he'll probably be
pretty glad. It's producer ready, Yeah.

Speaker 3 (00:26):
All right, all right, now's the time that you come
up and tell me if you did it or not.

Speaker 2 (00:31):
I don't know what it is. He stole my shoes?
What shoes? Somebody sent me a pair of shoes from
Brooks Running? Shoes come out? Because I didn't steal any shoes.
I have too many shoes. I'm good.

Speaker 1 (00:42):
You had a box from Brooks Who.

Speaker 2 (00:43):
Stole my shoes? There we go? Who stole our shoes?
I don't know. I didn't know this.

Speaker 3 (00:48):
Abby sent me a text and said, hey, your shoes
are in the kitchen.

Speaker 2 (00:51):
They're in a box they sent. They sent them to you. Great.
I show up the next day, they're not there. Who
stole my shoes? Hey, Scoop Steve. So we were set
shoes by Brooks Running? Where are they? I don't, I don't,
I don't do Brooks running. Don't know what that is. Well, no,
they sent us shoes according to Eddie, apparently me too,

(01:12):
and they're not here.

Speaker 4 (01:13):
Yeah, I see this everyone, huh, Yeah for you too.
I don't know anything about the Brooks shoes or how
they get here. I'm not a part of that, but
I have seen him every once in a while.

Speaker 2 (01:21):
Amy, What do you know?

Speaker 5 (01:22):
I don't know anything other than I saw a box
in the kitchen area.

Speaker 2 (01:27):
Your name on watchbox. What do you know?

Speaker 6 (01:28):
I know that I have a pair of Brooks running
shoes from Brooks that came.

Speaker 2 (01:31):
They have your name on him and my name on
him taking picture, So your name on it. Yeah, because
you a lot of times either steal or don't get stuff. Nope,
And then you know I can I got a pair
with my name. No, no, I'm not asking about it.
I don't keep track of anybody's mail. What about Abby's

(01:52):
the one that sent us the message? Abby, will you
go look see if you can find him during during
this segment?

Speaker 1 (01:56):
Yeah, I can all look.

Speaker 2 (01:57):
Okay, thank you.

Speaker 1 (01:58):
I didn't see him yesterday. Well, just the guys get choosing.

Speaker 2 (02:01):
What Well, if maybe there's something for you, don't come
back without them, Okay, I'm upset he isn't a fan
of music despite working in country radio, and he provides
the bonehead story of the day right here for this show.
It's lunch Bob. It got me thinking.

Speaker 6 (02:15):
We talked about me being on Garth's reality show, how
they showed me over and over and over again. So
I was just wondering, how do I get my royalty checks?
Like I know Bobby was in Bandslam and he gets
a check in the mail of rooms a while for royalties.

Speaker 2 (02:29):
So how does that work? You were not you didn't
have a role you want credited. You were just in
the crowd, so you weren't even in an extra. You
just went to an event and were filmed at a
public place, so there are no royalties. And if you're
not credited, you're not even a part of the show.
You didn't even exist. Actually, And I think it was
a docuseries, not a reality show. Well wasn't that the
same thing? Not quite a docuseries a little more integrity,

(02:53):
a little more honesty. A reality show. They can definitely
flub on some of the narratives, but it's reality show. Yeah,
that's the thing about Well they lie about that word
right there, But I don't think you're gonna get any
checks if you weren't credited. Did you check the credit
to say like random guy who appears ten times?

Speaker 6 (03:09):
No, I haven't even checked the credits. I've just been
getting sent screenshot.

Speaker 2 (03:12):
At the screenshot, check the credit shot, check the credits,
and if it's there, then we go to court. Because
I mean that is twice Garth has used me in
his documentary. You O boy would not leave Garth alone.
There's a big difference, like you were on his hip
all night.

Speaker 6 (03:24):
Yes, but then also in his Vegas residency he made
a video, he made a docuseries.

Speaker 2 (03:29):
Who's in it? But you're going in the crowd, just
sitting there. I know when they were you in the credits. Nope,
I'm sorry about that. Check the credits. Let me know. Amy,
We're going on twenty years of being friends, and we
can catch you on your Women of Buy Our Country
show on the weekends. Here she has, Amy.

Speaker 5 (03:43):
Okay, So I watched my saft stuff over the last seven.

Speaker 1 (03:48):
Months, saw the movies. That's right, it feels like it
was six months ago.

Speaker 2 (03:52):
She lost the challenge. I had to watch every Saw
movie one through ten.

Speaker 5 (03:56):
One through ten and my daughter loves horror movies, and
so she watched most of them with me.

Speaker 2 (04:01):
Am I saying that cr well, I would just go
with the put a little or horror or horror. Yeah,
like because if you forget that second or it sounds
like a movie that maybe your daughter shouldn't be watching it,
but I got you horror horror.

Speaker 5 (04:14):
And even she's like kind of over it, especially the
one like in this last batch I had to watch,
they were like chopping off their own body parts for
weight to be and I was thinking like, if we
were all in that situation and it was like whoever
could produce the most body weight because they were gonna
weigh whatever body part on the scale.

Speaker 1 (04:32):
I'd be like, would we be capable of doing that?
I'd be like, kill me now, I could cut off something?

Speaker 2 (04:37):
What would you anything? Everything? You would cut it off yourself? Yeah?
I could do it to live. You guys don't even
know things I've done just to hang, not even to live, right,
I tell you? Well, So what so you watched all
ten Saw movies, your thoughts, your review?

Speaker 1 (04:52):
Are they gonna make more? Because this should just be done.

Speaker 2 (04:54):
Mike movie, Mike got this one coming out next year,
saw Levin. There do you go watching Amy?

Speaker 5 (05:00):
I mean, I might just kind of keep it going.
But I guess if you're into that sort of thing,
I could see it. But like I said, even my
daughter is, and she was sort of getting over it.

Speaker 2 (05:08):
I would think they're watching them in a set too much.
It's not really meant how sal was supposed to be consumed.

Speaker 1 (05:14):
Yeah, I'm supposed to be consumed over like a decades.

Speaker 2 (05:17):
Well, like you know, every year you'll watch another one
or something. Yeah, but thank you for finishing up on
your bed. Amy's watched all ten saw movies all right, right,
going from Mountain Pine, Arkansas. He's rocking the old school
MTV shirt today. I love it. Nineties kids all the way,
Bobby Boone. So I have an old Bronco, old seventies Bronco.
It's pretty cool. I was ready, the weather's got pretty good,

(05:40):
got in it for the first time, ready to pop.
And the only music that plays in it is from seventies.
Uh turn the key? What what's that? That was it? It
did nothing nothing. I don't know. I don't know anything
about her. Oh my goodness. So I turned it again
even less than the first one. First one was like
this second was like this, So it's it's basically a

(06:01):
pair of weight right now. No idea how to fix it.
I have to get somebody to come get it or
to work on it. Is it the first time you
turn it on like this year? Yeah? Okay, I mean
the battery could be started up, like yeah, man, No,
you can't start it up. I tried to start it up.

Speaker 7 (06:14):
No.

Speaker 5 (06:14):
I meant like, is there when the last time you've
taken it in? Are they like, Hey, even if you're
not going to drive it because it's cold out, just
go ahead and give it a start.

Speaker 1 (06:23):
Every couple of weeks.

Speaker 2 (06:24):
They should have told you that. No, no one's ever
told me that. But it doesn't work right now. So
that was my first time firing up the Bronco. But
I'll let you guys know. We'll go on a groop ride.
Oh that'd be fine.

Speaker 1 (06:34):
Man.

Speaker 2 (06:34):
Can you imagine there are no shoulder seat belts, It's
only waist belts.

Speaker 5 (06:38):
I'm picturing y'all like Zoolander getting gas at the gas
station in your Bronco.

Speaker 2 (06:44):
That's because you it turns you on to think about us. Interesting, Yeah,
because she spray, She's spraying all of us with water
in the hand. That's what you want to do. I'm
picturing it a horror movies. You want to get us wet, amy,
I don't understand how Oh.

Speaker 1 (06:56):
This is right before y'all get murdered.

Speaker 2 (06:58):
We're done. Okay, let's open up the mail bag. You
send the mail and we read it all the air.
It's something we call Bobby's mail bag. Yeah, hello, Bobby.
My fifteen year old daughter has a pet rat, and
now she claims it's her emotional support animal. Though she's
done some rather ballsy things, this is the one that

(07:20):
takes the cake. She discovers she can pretty much take
it wherever she wants, and then raises stink about it
because it's her support animal, so dope. She seems to
be getting addicted to the attention she's getting, and I
can assure you there's no emotional need for this rat
to be a part of her life, unless, of course,
you count attention addiction any thoughts and had to break
this disturbing trend short of feeding the rat to the

(07:41):
neighbor's cat. Signed grandpa of the rat, So it's the
dad here. It's that's hilarious. Maybe, But if she's like
treating the rat. Good. No, it's the problem. I am
mouse too, by the way. Now, rat's how you describe
it when you don't like it. Oh, is it the
same animal, just one's bigger and dirtier. I would think
it's not a big, dirty rat that she has. It's

(08:02):
probably a big mouse. It's hard to get a rat
as a pet.

Speaker 5 (08:06):
So could it potentially be a cute hamster?

Speaker 2 (08:08):
I think this is a phase. Yeah, think she'll go
through the phase, be out of it. It's hilarious. She
has a support animal that's a hamster. Dude. I bet
the attention is awesome, though. Was that a rat? Can
I touch your rat? And you know why? She's learning responsibility.
She got to keep the rat alive.

Speaker 8 (08:26):
Yea.

Speaker 2 (08:27):
And they don't live that long anyway. It's not like
it's gonna live three years. I would say, let her
have the emotional support animal. It will the sun will
go down on this one way or the other. She
will move on to something else. She is a teenager.
It's pretty funny. And you also have to let and go.
That's pretty funny. Had a ferret in high school, now,
take her around. Yeah, she'd be on my shoulder. She'd say, Yeah,

(08:48):
she was awesome. How long she live? Age? Nine years? Wow?
Did you keep her all nine years? Yeah? And then
she got pancreatic cancer. But nine years is probably long
time for a Yeah.

Speaker 3 (09:01):
We had a chihuahua and a fare at the same
time and they lived around the same time.

Speaker 2 (09:05):
Both of them did were they like married? Like old couple?

Speaker 3 (09:08):
One well as the other one goes well, one of
them look like Wren And then she looked like Stimpy,
so we named her.

Speaker 2 (09:12):
Stimpy recipe Stimpy. Yeah, Dad, let her have the pet
long as it's not hurting anybody. All good? All right,
that's the mail bag. Close it up.

Speaker 1 (09:19):
We got your.

Speaker 2 (09:20):
Game mail and we laid on your Now let's find
the clothes Bobby fail bag. Yeah, Eddie. What's the question
for the room?

Speaker 3 (09:28):
Question for you guys? How long will you wait for
a table at a restaurant? What's the longest?

Speaker 7 (09:34):
Uh?

Speaker 2 (09:35):
Anymore specifics or details? I mean, would you know?

Speaker 3 (09:38):
Just like if you show up to like a chili,
if you've got to wait in the little waiting area,
how long will you wait?

Speaker 2 (09:43):
No reservation, just show up? Yep, fifteen minutes. So if
they say twenty minutes, is your weight you're like, I'm
out unless my wife is like, I think twenty is cool,
but I don't want to wait more than fifteen. I'd
rather go and have food not as good, but get
a quicker. We're big reservation people because we just do

(10:04):
it on the app. Yeah. Yeah, so mostly I wouldn't
even try. And also I ated a weird time four
thirty five, five thirty, no one. I really don't to
worry about that for the most part, and I really
got into the habit of just booking on the app.
It's open table, just but I would say fifteen twenty minutes.
I'm not going to wait an hour. It's like a
ride at amusement park. Yeah, forty minutes to go eleven

(10:25):
seconds down at tube. That sounds terrible. Of fifteen twenty minutes, Amy,
kids and.

Speaker 5 (10:31):
I went to dinner last night and we went up
to the counter and she said it'd be thirty forty
five minutes, and I was like, well, okay, So I
put my name down and then we tried for about
five minutes, and my kids were like, we're hungry, We're hungry,
and I was like, so I go, and I go
remove my name and we went somewhere where we got
it fast. So I think I could do it, But
it just depends on how hungry everybody is.

Speaker 2 (10:50):
Do you think that they're always a bit conservative or
do you think they're a bit aggressive with their time,
meaning if they say thirty minutes, is it really forty five?
Or if they say thirty is it really twenty? But
they just want to protect people from getting mad.

Speaker 5 (11:01):
These people were this place was covering their races. They
said thirty to forty five minutes.

Speaker 1 (11:05):
They to a big window, big windows.

Speaker 2 (11:07):
Sometimes they go up and they say like it's gonna
be an hour, and it's really like twenty minutes that happens.

Speaker 1 (11:11):
I'd rather be that way.

Speaker 2 (11:12):
I'll go to a longer one. If it's like, oh,
so we went to UH with Kaitlyn's family and we
go somewhere. We're driving into Tulsa and they were like,
we'll go to this place and we get there like
a thirty five to forty minute. Wait. I'm not afraid
to say my opinion even with them, but I think
they like, I don't know, they like to hang out
with each other, and so they were coold, just all

(11:34):
just like hanging out and talking. People do that. So
we waited like forty five minutes, and I'm like, this
is crazy, Like what is happening here? So yeah, I
would never wait that long Lunchbox.

Speaker 6 (11:45):
U thirty minutes because you have to calculate how long
it's going to take to get three kids back in
the car, drive to another place, take the chance that
they're going to have a wait. So if they say
thirty minutes, we're staying. But if they say thirty minutes, also,
I'm like, do you know who I am? And then
they still say thirty minutes, I'm like, all right, well
I guess I'll wait.

Speaker 2 (12:04):
Hey why did this come up?

Speaker 3 (12:05):
Yeah, because we went to eat somewhere and it was
a forty five minute wait, and we're like, ooh, this
is tough. But I took into consideration what Lunchpot's is saying,
like we're gonna have to get the family go somewhere else.

Speaker 2 (12:15):
What if they have a wait?

Speaker 3 (12:16):
So I took the forty five minutes, but they let
us sit in the car. So it was kind of
one of those like we'll text you when the table's ready,
not just how long?

Speaker 2 (12:23):
Noough, what dovean? How long did it take? Yeah? Twenty
five minutes. See, usually they're yeah, lot shorter than they say. Yes,
it was coming up yelling. I'm like, I've better forty minutes.
It's just better to be on the conservative side, dude.

Speaker 3 (12:35):
I went to a place where the guy just said, like,
I'll be honest with you, man, it's gonna be like
maybe an hour two hours.

Speaker 2 (12:39):
Like I would go somewhere else hour two hours tomorrow,
he said, I would go somewhere else while you're crazy.

Speaker 1 (12:46):
Always perplex me.

Speaker 5 (12:47):
When I was a hostess, is like you would tell people, hey,
it's going to be a twenty minute wait, but then
every two minutes in that twenty minutes, so like has.

Speaker 1 (12:56):
Anything come available yet?

Speaker 5 (12:58):
And they come back, hey, are we houses still and
it's like still the same or something I can do.

Speaker 2 (13:03):
Maybe some people left or maybe people because we used
to have a list of the restaurant I worked at, Yeah,
write the names in and they'd be like, well they
didn't show up, so you'd move up the list pretty quick.
I love going up to check that, Yeah, that's all. Hey,
how are we doing? And I'm not really asking I
just want to look over on the stand and see
where I am.

Speaker 1 (13:17):
I to call their name when it's time.

Speaker 2 (13:19):
No need to get mad at us what.

Speaker 1 (13:23):
It took me back.

Speaker 7 (13:24):
It's time for the good news.

Speaker 5 (13:31):
So this nurse Lou in Madisonville, Kentucky, she's working her
shift and a patient comes in.

Speaker 1 (13:37):
It's actually one that's been there before.

Speaker 5 (13:38):
So they were returning in the same old, worn out shoes,
and she remembered it and she's like, gosh, I just
really feel like I should donate my shoes to this person.
Like inside, she was telling herself this, so she do,
but then she's like that might be weird, So I'm
not going to do it. That might be weird, and
she's like, Okay, I'm going to go do it. So
she went and she did it, and she donated her
shoes and it was just such a kind gesture. She
even left the hospital. I like those socks with the

(14:01):
rubber bottoms.

Speaker 1 (14:02):
On the soles that you get at the hospital, and
that's how she left, and other people saw.

Speaker 5 (14:06):
So the story started to spread and then Brooks Footwear
they heard about it and they sent her a brand
new pair of shoes to make up for the ones
that she donated.

Speaker 2 (14:16):
The company that sent the shoes that somebody stole. Yeah,
the shoes that we don't have the same. Yeah, let's
get update. Just a complete coincidence. By the way, is
Abby in the room over their ray answerphones?

Speaker 5 (14:27):
You?

Speaker 2 (14:27):
Hey, Abby? Did you find out a running shoes? Somebody stole?
Find the running shoes? Somebody's no from Brooks? Okay, who
got shoes? I got shoes? Who took shoes? Mike and lunchbox?
Did we had? Abby? You've got shoes? Right? Yeah?

Speaker 9 (14:43):
So I got them and then Mike d, Eddie and
lunchbox because like I told, I had some.

Speaker 1 (14:50):
Yeah, I don't always saw a box from Brooks.

Speaker 2 (14:52):
Let me go look and then where's Eddie's.

Speaker 1 (14:54):
Then I don't know where Eddie's are.

Speaker 2 (14:56):
So I saw Eddie's shoes.

Speaker 9 (14:58):
Yeah, I saw everybody's in there. Someone we're there, But
I don't see Eddies anymore.

Speaker 2 (15:02):
How would I not have some sin to me?

Speaker 1 (15:04):
I don't know.

Speaker 9 (15:05):
Well, because I'm doing the half marathon. And then Mike
d runs and then.

Speaker 1 (15:08):
They gave me when I walk I used to run.

Speaker 5 (15:12):
Yeah, I'm gonna go look right where.

Speaker 1 (15:16):
I saw it.

Speaker 2 (15:16):
Okay, we're gonna look for these shoes. Thank you. Because
somebody stole shoes. Somebody, there's some we have a nurse
donating shoes, and then we got somebody stealing shoes.

Speaker 6 (15:23):
You just blood tell me that's okay.

Speaker 2 (15:28):
You got going Oh no, no, she literally gonna look
for the shoes. All right, thank you. That's what it's
all about.

Speaker 7 (15:34):
That was telling me something good.

Speaker 2 (15:37):
I'll give you three famous actors. You tell me the
nineties movie they were in together. One movie for example,
say it if you know it. DiCaprio, Kate Winslet, Billy Zaye.
Correct with Billy Zaye. He's a bad guy.

Speaker 1 (15:54):
Oh okay, the thick eyebrows.

Speaker 2 (15:56):
Here we go. Write your answer. Now there'll be five.
Question Number one Julia Roberts, Jason, Alexander, Richard Gear. What
nineties movie were these three actors all in together? Julia Roberts, Jason, Alexander,

(16:17):
Richard Gear.

Speaker 10 (16:18):
I'm in Amy pretty Woman, Eddie, pretty Woman, Lunchbox, pretty Woman.

Speaker 2 (16:23):
Correct. Number two Sally Field, Gary Sonise, Tom Hanks, Sally Field,
Gary Sonise, Tom Hanks and Amy Forrest Gump Lunchbox, Forest Gump,

(16:45):
Eddie Forrest Gump, Good Job. Number three Robin Williams, Ben Athlack,
Matt Damon say it like the duck, ben Affleck, you
do say it like the Robin Williams, Ben Affleck and

(17:07):
Matt Damon Amy good good will hunting, good will hunting. Correct, Okay,
those words are good hard. Number four woop Be Goldberg
to me more, Patrick Swayze, wooll Be Goldberg to me Moore,

(17:31):
Patrick Swayzee.

Speaker 10 (17:33):
For the wind and Eddie Ghost lunchbox ghost Amy.

Speaker 2 (17:40):
Number five Renee Zeliger, Coopa Gooding Jr. Tom Cruise, Renese
Coopa Geting Jr.

Speaker 10 (17:54):
Tom Cruise, I'm in the wind lush box, Jerry Maguire, Amy,
Jerry mc Eddie, Jerry Maguire correct, three way time.

Speaker 2 (18:04):
Yeah, all right, keep going, you miss it. You're ound.
Number six John Travolta, Bruce Willis, Samuel L. Jackson. We'll
shoot John Travolta, Bruce Willis, Samuel L. Jackson. I am

(18:26):
in in for the win.

Speaker 1 (18:28):
John Travolta and Bruce Willis and Samuel L.

Speaker 2 (18:32):
Jackson heard of them.

Speaker 1 (18:34):
Yeah, Samuel L. Jackson's on Fish movie.

Speaker 2 (18:37):
I can think of you in.

Speaker 1 (18:39):
Oh he's in Saul mm hmm you really not?

Speaker 2 (18:45):
Five seconds? Amy, you need an answer?

Speaker 1 (18:52):
Okay, sixpence.

Speaker 2 (18:55):
That's tough. Huh, that's a tough one. Fore your list,
it's also incorrect.

Speaker 1 (19:02):
I didn't think she.

Speaker 2 (19:04):
Meant to say pulp fiction, box fiction correct to remain
never gotten. Maybe you have been a lemonade. I'm sorry,
maybe sorry about that next time? Okay, John Cusack, John Malcovich,
what Nicholas Cage. Oh, John Cusack, John Malkovich, Nicholas Cage.

Speaker 1 (19:34):
Holy, I'm just gonna play by myself over here.

Speaker 11 (19:37):
Hold on, same that nineties movie, Sean Malcovich, Sean say
the names again, John Cusack.

Speaker 2 (19:49):
John Malcovich, John Cusack, Nicholas Cage.

Speaker 3 (19:52):
WHOA, that's tough, dude, did you get it?

Speaker 2 (19:56):
I'm in oh man, that's tough. Didn an answer, yeah, box,
I put being John Malkovich. That is a movie that
John Malkovich is in.

Speaker 6 (20:12):
Because I don't know who he is, but I'm like,
was he inn? He could have been in conn Air, though,
and I should have just guess conn Air. That had
been the smart thing to do.

Speaker 2 (20:18):
Gosh, my gosh, I think I got it. What do
you have American Treasure? I know it's conn Air. I'm
such an I know you're thinking of treasure. You didn't
get the a movie, right, John c Saxon conn Air? Yeah,
that's said. I'm so dumb. Dang it, I'm so dumb,
all right, next one? No, No, you don't know the

(20:39):
thing where you get it when you're already out. You know,
you get so annoyed when they do that, when they're
knocked out already and they're like, oh God, and you didn't.

Speaker 7 (20:48):
Are you sure?

Speaker 2 (20:49):
Yellow card?

Speaker 8 (20:50):
I was?

Speaker 2 (20:50):
I was so wrong on American Treasure. I tried to
be so it was wrong, all right, speed around. So
you can buzz in your name at any time. That's tough,
so yell your name. I'll give one, then two, than three.
Oh my goodness, here we go. Kirsten Dunns, Bonnie Hunt,

(21:14):
Robin Williams, Eddie Eddie, Jumanji correct Winner.

Speaker 10 (21:19):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (21:20):
Yeah, Let's do a couple of romantic updates. Let's go
to Morgan first. Morgan has been seeing a guy called
the Man in Uniform. He's been gone for a bit. Yeah,
and we think possibly because he's been gone, there's been
time for you to really build up, maybe get a
little too over excited about it. Amy thinks the guy

(21:41):
could be living a double life.

Speaker 1 (21:42):
We've had a potential, but maybe not.

Speaker 2 (21:46):
Maybe not sure, maybe not. So you've been pretty excited
about it. Which is not normal for you. No, not
at all. So he's back.

Speaker 12 (21:53):
Yeah, he has returned, and we've hung out a few
times since he's returned, and it's still going really great.

Speaker 1 (22:01):
Like he's a really good person.

Speaker 2 (22:04):
I can't glow. She's smiling so hard that she's hard
for her to talk.

Speaker 9 (22:09):
Wow.

Speaker 12 (22:11):
Yeah, I mean he when I first saw him, he
showed up with some flowers to my house. You saw
him this time, Yeah, for the first time since he
had been gone and you weren't able to talk. He
showed up with sunflowers at my house and we ate
dinner together.

Speaker 2 (22:25):
Do you like sunflowers? Especially my favorite flower? Got it?

Speaker 7 (22:28):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (22:28):
And she's from Kansas. Isn't that the sunflowers?

Speaker 7 (22:30):
Ye?

Speaker 2 (22:30):
Shy, her favorite flower. This is good.

Speaker 1 (22:35):
He pays attention.

Speaker 2 (22:37):
He does because he has to, because he lived a
double life. How does he do that.

Speaker 1 (22:41):
This has nothing to do with that.

Speaker 2 (22:42):
This is me. You're the one who threw that out there.
So now you're just like no, no.

Speaker 1 (22:45):
I'm just like wow, he pays that's he's good.

Speaker 2 (22:48):
Okay, So you he brings you some flowers, you have dinner.
That's the first time and you guys have seen each
other a few times, yes, okay, and what anything else
you want to share?

Speaker 12 (22:59):
I just but it's going really good. There's still no
red flags. I'm about to meet some people that are
important to him, so it's moving along.

Speaker 2 (23:07):
Are you guys off the apps and the with the
option to date other people?

Speaker 12 (23:13):
Have you had that conversation to your conversation hasn't happened
quite yet. It's kind of like things have been dropped
and said, but nothing official yet.

Speaker 2 (23:22):
If he were to be on if you were swiping
and somebody said, hey, is this your guy and you
were to see him on the app, still, what would
your thoughts be?

Speaker 12 (23:30):
I'd be bummed. But at this point I still can't
be mapped because we're.

Speaker 1 (23:34):
Not exclusive yet.

Speaker 2 (23:35):
Do you feel differently about him at this stage than
you have your last couple of serious relationships. Yeah.

Speaker 12 (23:41):
I don't think I've ever felt this feeling.

Speaker 1 (23:44):
And it's not it's not like.

Speaker 12 (23:45):
You know, oh my gosh, I'm in love or whatever.
It's I feel very secure. I feel very confident in
where it's going, and he's very consistent, so I don't
have any questions. There's no lingering like what's happening?

Speaker 1 (23:57):
What is going on?

Speaker 12 (23:58):
I just feel, and that's an new feeling for me.
I'm not used to people giving me that kind of security.

Speaker 2 (24:04):
Five second instant reaction, Eddie, I'm so happy for her.
This is so great. I love it. Five second instant
reaction lunchbox love bombing and it's fine. It's it's working
like a charm. Coming back to that in a second, Ammy,
five second instant reaction.

Speaker 1 (24:16):
I'm happy for Morgan. If she's happy, you.

Speaker 5 (24:21):
Have, but no, I'm happy for Morgan. It is consistent
with like I get, she wants consistency, which he has
been that. But how many times has she? How long
has she known him? And how long has he? Oh yeah,
how long? Sorry, I get used to just looking at Bobby,

(24:41):
But how long have y'all?

Speaker 1 (24:44):
Actually this has been going on?

Speaker 5 (24:45):
Like just a recap because some people might be just
diving into this.

Speaker 1 (24:49):
A little over a month and a half. A month
and a half, that's all.

Speaker 5 (24:53):
How much of that has he been out of town
those three weeks?

Speaker 2 (24:56):
So he's been here for two, gone for three, been here.

Speaker 1 (24:59):
For three, that'd be three and three a month and
a half.

Speaker 12 (25:02):
Yeah, like three, Yeah, we're going we're a little bit
over a month and a half.

Speaker 1 (25:06):
So we're getting closer.

Speaker 5 (25:07):
You're a month and a half, but three of those
weeks he's gone with no communication.

Speaker 2 (25:10):
Right, Amy, Stop looking at me like you want me
to say double life. I'm not saying double life. I'm
not jumping into anything.

Speaker 12 (25:18):
This is just how it's very slow progression, Like we're
not moving quickly at all.

Speaker 2 (25:23):
You're about to meet people that are very important to
his parents.

Speaker 12 (25:27):
No, I'm not meeting his parents like friends. Yes, like
this is a normal progression aggression check.

Speaker 2 (25:33):
I agree. Amy just really wants someone else other than
her to think double lives and leading us.

Speaker 1 (25:37):
Wait, nobody, why No, nobody has to join me? And
I don't even think i'm all the ways sold on
a double life.

Speaker 2 (25:44):
I didn't think you said you were. Though some of
the life is kind of weird.

Speaker 1 (25:49):
It's not one hundred percent.

Speaker 2 (25:51):
Maybe double life. Lunchbox thinks maybe love bombing one hundred
percent love bombing. This is what love bombers do. You're
they're in your.

Speaker 6 (25:57):
Life for real quick, and they shower you with every
time they see you. They have something for you that
you like or you love. They know like they give
you a purse, they give you flowers, they send you
a package.

Speaker 1 (26:08):
He's not giving me like big gifts. These are thoughtful intentions. Yes,
it does.

Speaker 12 (26:13):
When it's love bombing, they're like, I want to marry you.
We're getting married. Here is every piece of meat, and
then they disappear.

Speaker 6 (26:21):
Three weeks and you said you have never felt this
way about someone.

Speaker 1 (26:26):
It's a new feeling for me.

Speaker 12 (26:27):
It doesn't mean like there's love bombing.

Speaker 2 (26:29):
The security is.

Speaker 12 (26:30):
Something I haven't felt because I haven't met a lot
of guys with that kind of intention.

Speaker 2 (26:34):
Also, is it just a sign of how crappy dudes
are now that when someone brings flowers it's such a
big deal and so ordinary. They were like, something must
be up.

Speaker 3 (26:44):
Yeah, it's sad that she's used to like, oh, I
gotta look for a red flag. I gotta what's wrong,
Like it's something weird about this, Like that's sad, like sad, but.

Speaker 2 (26:52):
That's general dating. It's just the first time where she
feels like so secure about it. This is awesome. This
could be the one. Oh boy, here I'm getting there
because it's still early. But I'm also not on their team.

Speaker 12 (27:04):
I am.

Speaker 1 (27:04):
I don't know that I'm on lunchboxes. So I made a.

Speaker 2 (27:07):
Guy hanging out. You know, I'm rooting for my friend.
It feels a little intense, but I like it.

Speaker 5 (27:12):
I'm just saying I'm probably a little more protective in
that I think that it's not as long as it
seems that has been and we need to make sure.

Speaker 2 (27:21):
It does seem like it three or four months.

Speaker 5 (27:22):
Where we proceed with caution because and maybe because he
does have to leave for work, like he does go
hard in these extra areas to make sure that like,
maybe it's not love bombing, that maybe it is that
I want her to know that I care and it
sucks that I have to be gone, so I better,
like go hard.

Speaker 2 (27:42):
I'm rooting for you.

Speaker 1 (27:43):
Thank you.

Speaker 2 (27:44):
I'm excited for you, and I think that you're you're
still being aware. You have your heads on a swibble.
You can you can keep your head on a swibble
and look around and see what's up while still enjoying
when something's going good.

Speaker 1 (27:54):
Yeah, that's very much what's happening.

Speaker 12 (27:55):
And I'm still aware that the other shoe could drop
at any point in time. So it's more I'm just
trying to also be in the moment and know that
this is just could.

Speaker 1 (28:03):
Potentially be a good guy.

Speaker 2 (28:04):
Are you weirded out? And because I don't know the
scenario and I don't even know what to dude looks like,
are you have you learned anything about his past relationships
that kind of weird you out?

Speaker 1 (28:13):
No?

Speaker 12 (28:14):
I mean he talks very kindly of all of them,
so no, me like's there.

Speaker 1 (28:19):
That would be.

Speaker 5 (28:20):
It's like if you're trying to nobody.

Speaker 1 (28:27):
Yeah, but you're not a psycho.

Speaker 12 (28:29):
Okay, but I can't talk like I wish I could
be like, oh.

Speaker 1 (28:32):
They were great, just but that's not the case.

Speaker 5 (28:34):
But if I'm trying to make someone seem like you're
an awesome guy, then you talk awesome about your mast guys.

Speaker 1 (28:39):
Guys, aren't that smart?

Speaker 13 (28:40):
I'm telling you.

Speaker 2 (28:41):
I would say that if I were and a guy
was talking about how psycho his ex'es are, that's not
a good move.

Speaker 12 (28:46):
That's not a good thing, right, And they do that
more often than you think.

Speaker 2 (28:49):
Yeah, I would think they do all the time.

Speaker 1 (28:51):
Yeah, like they were like, oh she was crazy.

Speaker 2 (28:53):
Yes in reality, No, dude, you've had four crazy girlfriends
on a road. Let's find a common denominator here later, right, Okay, Morgan,
we're rooting for you. Thank you, you are keep us
up and oh, I love it. And when do we
get to meet him, Like, when we're not pushing that
Morgan make the move to what bring around Speck. I
don't think we're her first string special people. I think

(29:13):
she knows better because we will not. It'll not be
healthy if we get all day. You know what I
mean by.

Speaker 1 (29:18):
Yeah, And I'm rooting for you too.

Speaker 7 (29:21):
You know that, yes, you know that.

Speaker 5 (29:23):
Even off, I'm like, this is just what if I
feel it and.

Speaker 2 (29:27):
Think it, say it if your instincts say he's living
a double life, and say it.

Speaker 1 (29:31):
I don't know that it's a double double life, but
I'm just.

Speaker 2 (29:34):
A double single. He sneaks off and.

Speaker 5 (29:36):
I'm just didn't like Morgan. Let's just make sure to
make sure you can't rush these things.

Speaker 1 (29:41):
And she's not boom.

Speaker 2 (29:43):
Well, I don't know that she's rushing anything. I think
it's happened right kind of fast that she's feeling. But
that's okay.

Speaker 5 (29:49):
I'm okay with what Morgan is doing. I'm just a
little weary of him.

Speaker 2 (29:53):
But you don't know him.

Speaker 1 (29:54):
Correct.

Speaker 7 (30:00):
Amy's pile of stories.

Speaker 5 (30:01):
So the scam where you get a phone call and
you pick it up and they say.

Speaker 1 (30:04):
Can you hear me? Right away? It's back, it's making
the rounds.

Speaker 2 (30:07):
So they going can you hear me?

Speaker 5 (30:08):
And the goal is to get you to say yes,
and then they record you saying yes, and then they
use that yes for authorization elsewhere with your voice.

Speaker 2 (30:16):
We're screwed. We say yes all the time on the show.
We're going to fall for that. I mean yes, but yeah,
I mean us, We're like yes, no, yeah, here's my
social here's yes, yes, you know we do we do
all that. But yeah, So so what do you do?

Speaker 5 (30:27):
I would think it says here, when you pick up
the phone, if you hear can you hear me?

Speaker 1 (30:33):
As the first thing? Hang up immediately?

Speaker 2 (30:36):
But I guess if it comes from a number you
don't recognize, we're all gonna say yes. I really wouldn't
answer the phone from a number I don't recognize. I
rarely do, right, unless I'm expecting go yeah, I mean
ninety are wrong. I tell you a story real quick,
yeah I will. I will keep some names out of it.

(30:58):
So we're the old house that we used to live in,
and so we've moved. But there's a gate and the
front gate has a button you gotta push and so
someone pushed the button. It still comes to our phone,
and the guy's like, hey, I'm just gonna say Sabrino

(31:18):
because that's not who it is, but it's a it's
a country star, but I'm gonna use Sabrina. They call
and they go, hey, Sabrina invited me. Can you let
me in? Now I realized that quote unquote, Sabrina would
never have invited this dude, weird dude in a van
like yelling at the camera, and I'm like, I'm also

(31:38):
kind of cognizant of I don't want him to know
Sabrina does or doesn't live there. He can think she
lives there for all I care because nobody's there. I
don't want him to go, oh, Sabrina doesn't live here.
Let me go try another house. Remember Sabrina as a country artist.
And so I go, hey, Sabrina didn't invite you. You
weren't invited, and he's like, I was invited, so will

(32:01):
you please let me in? I said no, I don't
open the gate. I record the screen, push the button,
recorded on my phone. I then text Sabrina and I say,
there is a first I don't say weirdo in case
it was like Sabrina's brother or something. Smart. First, I say, hey,
are you expecting anybody at your house? And Sabrina says no.
I said, do you recognize this persons in the video?

(32:22):
She goes no. I said, here's what happened. And Sabrina
was like, thank you for letting me know, because obviously
there are weirdos and this one was looking for her
and they were in a van. They were in a van. Well,
and no, you can do a lot more damage, guess
I mean. And Sabrino, what I think too, is Sabrina
wasn't at home by themselves. And because Sabrina was like, hey,

(32:48):
what would you do in this situation? I was like, well,
make sure everything's locked up. I'm sure you get you
know gates, like I said, And I just live a
little bit down the road from Sabrina. And I was like,
and if you like need a shotgun, I got one.
I can bring it over to you.

Speaker 1 (33:00):
And so you bring it over to her.

Speaker 2 (33:02):
But does she We don't know for sure, Sobrinas spring
as a girl.

Speaker 1 (33:05):
Oh, we don't know.

Speaker 2 (33:07):
There could be other one. So but I would take
it just so they would feel comfortable. But they didn't
need it and all good. That's crazy. But they called
me on the gate an't and I didn't even say yes, nothing, So.

Speaker 5 (33:20):
You think they were just shooting their shot with like
you know a house with a gate on that street
and they're like, I'm just going to go try to see.

Speaker 2 (33:26):
These tours drive around, these celebrity tours, and they tell
people where people live, and it makes it really unsafe
for people that live where these people are pointing out
and general vicinity. They just pulled probably pulled into the
wrong place. But it was I I say, that's what
it is. Because people would drive down the side road

(33:47):
to once they would like, guess who lives here? So
it's unsafe. Yeah, uh go Sabrina. I hope, hope Sabrina safe. Yeah.
Weird story else.

Speaker 5 (33:56):
In a new poll, the average American says they rely
on Google more than their four education and the average
person google's five basic questions every day.

Speaker 2 (34:04):
Well, I don't think we know. We rely on our
education because it's naturally inside of us. We don't ever
have to go let me get into my natural education brain. Ah,
that's the answer. No, anything we've been educated on, be
it through high school or college or like street like me,
it's just in there Google. You have to actually make
an effort to go and search for it. So I

(34:25):
would say, we do probably go search for but we
know things now because of our education.

Speaker 8 (34:29):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (34:29):
Then I second guessed myself, and then I go to
Google thinking I need to confirm.

Speaker 1 (34:33):
This because I'm not right.

Speaker 2 (34:34):
You need a better education.

Speaker 5 (34:36):
I'm I'm thinking about going back to school.

Speaker 2 (34:38):
I happy school could be anything. I know, it could
be the streets. Like I said, thrown from Okay, thank you,
all right, that's it.

Speaker 5 (34:43):
No, jelly Roll is being sued for copyright infringement by
a wedding band called jelly Roll.

Speaker 2 (34:48):
One word though, they're jelly roll. Oh really yeah, jelly
as I'll call him for the sake of the lawsuit
and I will testify. I just know miss jelly that's
his first name. You mean, mister roll either one, it
depends formal or not. Yeah. Also, jelly roll is not
really it's it's such a vague and generic thing, isn't it.
As we should all just be called jelly roll for

(35:10):
the sake of justice. For jelly rolls. What I say?

Speaker 1 (35:13):
Would they say it's causing confusion in the market place.

Speaker 2 (35:15):
It's not they're not getting high for any less weddings
because their name is a single jelly roll. Probably more well.

Speaker 5 (35:20):
They have some notoriety because they were hired by the
Bush twins for something and then Laura but they came
to the White House and Laura Bush used it for
their high school, her high school reunion or something.

Speaker 2 (35:29):
Notoriety. Let's compare that with a bunch of awards. You know,
I know, stop stop jelly Roll the band, chill out, Okay,
jelly Roll, mister Roll the artist. Totally different things that it.

Speaker 1 (35:41):
There's a room for everybody. I'm Amy. That's my pile.

Speaker 7 (35:44):
That was Amy's pile of stores. It's time for the
good news.

Speaker 6 (35:53):
Brandt is from Fremont, Nebraska, and he stopped into the
supermarket to get some lunch. He wanted to order a salad.
And as you waiting for his salad to be made,
he looks over. He says, Oh, I don't buy the
lottery tickets very often.

Speaker 2 (36:05):
Let me give me a couple of make a Million's tickets.
Let's see here.

Speaker 6 (36:08):
All right, goes home that night after eating his salad.
Salad was delicious, by the way, it's like a recreational player,
like not somebody who's yeah, got a hardcore I just
kind of you know, salad a you know, might as
well get some tickets. He's looking at his tickets later
that night, and he won a million dollars. Wow, he's
a single dad.

Speaker 2 (36:24):
That's awesome. Man. What's what's the good thing about this?
I mean he won a million bucks. Yeah, and he
had a salad. So he's eating healthy, good good. We
like it. Yeah, you happy for him? You feel like you.

Speaker 6 (36:40):
Went a Baker's supermarket. I mean Baker's congrats.

Speaker 2 (36:44):
There's a little negativity in your tone. We don't like that.

Speaker 8 (36:46):
Oh.

Speaker 6 (36:48):
He returned to the store a week later, uh and
told them, don't pass out when I tell you this,
But I want a million dollars here.

Speaker 2 (36:56):
It were you being able to do that though, Dude,
if I that's what we need to write this reflection,
go ahead.

Speaker 6 (37:02):
I would run into that store and jump up and
down and hug whoever I mean sold me that ticket.

Speaker 2 (37:09):
One day, the store.

Speaker 3 (37:10):
Gets a cut, right, they get some money, would they
get like yeah, they.

Speaker 2 (37:13):
Get snag or no? No, like a flat feed of
like fifty thousand or something. Yeah, depending on how big
the prize is.

Speaker 6 (37:17):
There's like set things that the store gets, but it
doesn't come out of your lottery winnings.

Speaker 2 (37:21):
What a positive day, what a positive story?

Speaker 6 (37:24):
I mean, how amazing would it be able to go
back to tell someone that, hey, dude, because of you,
I want a million dollars?

Speaker 2 (37:29):
How good do you feel? Is that? I would feel
pretty good because you feel is you gonna tell his story?
It's not as good as winning myself? Okay?

Speaker 8 (37:36):
There?

Speaker 2 (37:37):
Would you agree? It's rather him win than you? He says,
a single dad. The story said, single dad. Okay, his
money's tight. He could be a single dad. He's not,
though I could. How much am I gonna win? All right?
That's what it's all about.

Speaker 7 (37:54):
That was telling me something good.

Speaker 2 (37:57):
Lunch Buck said on this show that if you live
in Las Vegas, Gus, if you just live there, you gamble,
and I was like, I don't think that's really what
it does. The industry is there, but I don't think
every single person who gambles. And you said, well, there's
like slaw machines and gas stations, but that doesn't mean
everybody has to like do plots.

Speaker 6 (38:12):
I mean, it's kind of hard if you walk in there.
At least once you're putting some money in there and
you're like, ah, get that itch.

Speaker 2 (38:17):
A lot of calls from Vegas on this. Here you go,
this is Terry.

Speaker 8 (38:20):
I was just calling to let you guys know that
not everyone that lives in Las Vegas gambles.

Speaker 1 (38:26):
I have been here for thirty.

Speaker 8 (38:28):
Five years and have never gambled. Most of my friends don't,
so just to let you know.

Speaker 2 (38:34):
I think a lot of people work in the industry
maybe gamble a little bit. It's legal, so, but I
don't think every single person does. Terry's at least one
that doesn't.

Speaker 5 (38:42):
My brother lives in Vegas for a long time, him
and his wife, and they never gambled.

Speaker 2 (38:47):
It's interesting. Some people just don't like to gamble. It's
kind of dumb. It's weird. Honestly. Here's Amber and Sacramento.

Speaker 14 (38:54):
I have a morning corny for Amy, the urge to
sing the line sleeps tonight always just a whim away,
a whim away, a whim away, a whim away. Thanks,
have a good day.

Speaker 2 (39:08):
I get that's part of the song, But what's a
whim oh a whim like on a whim a whim away?
Yeah I didn't, I did away. I get it now.
I get it. Let's go now and do Amy's Morning Corny.

Speaker 5 (39:25):
Mourning, Corny, why can't you tease egg whites?

Speaker 2 (39:29):
Why?

Speaker 1 (39:29):
Because they can't take a yolk?

Speaker 2 (39:36):
That was the morning Corny was watching a guy on
Twitter and his whole thing is you've been doing it
wrong your whole life. And he was showing how to
make scrambled eggs. And he was like, you've been doing
it wrong, and so he takes a puts butter down.
I never put butter on my scrambled eggs. You got to,
because well, I don't know how to cook really, but
I can make scrambled egg because you just cracked the
eggs and you just mush them, you know, you just scramble.

(39:57):
And he's like, you put the butter down. And then
but you take the oven, you put the eggs in,
and whenever you scramble them, you take them off the heat.
You let it heat up, but it's still cooking while
you're doing it, and it's not cooking so much that
it makes them a weird texture. It's really interesting. And
then and then you do that a couple of times,
and then you put one more thing, a butter in,
pull it off. Scramble it again, and he's like, Waila,

(40:19):
and I was like, dang, I've been doing it wrong.

Speaker 5 (40:21):
Is that if you want them like kind of fluffyish
or softer?

Speaker 2 (40:25):
I think just scrambled. I don't know, tasty.

Speaker 5 (40:28):
I just feel like eggs. So it's like everyone likes
it their own particular way.

Speaker 2 (40:33):
Well, he's like everybody leaves their eggs on the flame
when they cook. But it's not even like the chemistry
of it. How do you like your eggs scrambled all
the way? Over easy?

Speaker 1 (40:44):
Over easy? And I'll turn the heat off just like
the whites and.

Speaker 2 (40:48):
Get the people that do sunnyside up. Though this is weird.
I don't even know what that means me either, but
I heard him order it. I don't even know what
over easy? What is yours?

Speaker 1 (40:58):
Running up?

Speaker 3 (40:59):
Mine's the one Yeah, where it's like like a pancake
with a with.

Speaker 2 (41:03):
And you pop it. Yeah, okay, that's over easy. Yeah,
that's okay. I kind of like I'm on the sunny
side up. Okay. So the doorbell cameras are everywhere, which
is good and bad. Good because everybody can kind of
watch out for other folks. What's bad is big Brother
can probably hack in and watch everybody. But big Brother
can actually be just a hacker. I want to hack
into stuff.

Speaker 5 (41:22):
But if they want a hack and watch my front porch,
you know, is that okay?

Speaker 2 (41:28):
You know it depends pretty boring. Yeah, who wants to
see that. They're adding new elements to these doorbell cameras
all the time for security reasons. And so the next
innovation is the doorbell camera that shoots paintballs. Yes, yes,
and there's even an elevated version that releases tear gas.

(41:51):
But normal people can't get those yet. That's too much.

Speaker 1 (41:53):
Okay, you can't.

Speaker 2 (41:57):
Like a nuclear bomb, that is that your door No?
But that so the paintball and let's talk about that first. Oh,
it's basically it looks instead of it being built into
the door, it's on a little stand, not right in
front of the door knob, but to the side of it,
where kind of the frame is. And if someone pushes

(42:19):
the door boot, it kind of tilts up and looks
at them. And if you want to push the fire
button because you feel threatened, yeah, the problem is if
like Eddie came over, I would just fire paintballs. Hilarious.
I would never ring your doorbell. The doorball cameras are
armed to shoot with paintballs. It's called paint cam eve.

(42:39):
It has the capability to fire paintballs at a target
with ultra high precision. An intruder, a kid who's TP
in your house, yea ding ditch. You can even put
them like take multiple ones and like put them on
like posts where you can watch and move. And there

(43:00):
are very few and I don't know what you gotta
do to get the really crazy ones. And maybe they're
just for security like government places, but a few of
these will also shoot out tear gas. Yeah, that's got
to be like you have to get one of those,
like either on the black market.

Speaker 1 (43:14):
Or make it yourself.

Speaker 2 (43:16):
Well you could probably do that a long time ago.
But like at a some government like they're using them
to guard military bases and stuff. But yeah, that's the deal.
The paintball thing's hilarious. Like porch pirates, that'd be awesome.
Oh you got to catch them though, right yeah, but
you watch right, like you see you sense the motions
in submarine, I know your phone on your phone, it

(43:39):
looks like it'll shoot fifty to sixty feet with precision,
like even like you know how they show like sometimes
these jets and it shows like the little scope and
if the plane is in that little thing, you hit
it and it follows it. Yeah, Like on top gun,
it's got like that little scope thing. So if it's
in the scope of the paintball, the paintball tracks it
because that's what the misslet doesn't try. Nobody's got a

(44:01):
scope though. It's like a scope on a gun, okay,
and so within a certain distance it is pretty accurate
where it shoots. That's amazing. We have a thing and
we don't use it that much anymore. Where we were gone,
we could feed the dog because it would have this
little machine I don't even know where I got it
where you could talk to it and be like, hey,
what's up Stanley Noller and they'd be like, what the
heck is that? But also you could push him it,
throw out a treat. It throw out a treat, It

(44:22):
throw out a treat. So I think this is just amplified,
but no, I'm looking at it. It says you can actually
sign up to get this now, notify me on launch,
and it's the first security system of integrated real time
face recognition and game changing paintball making marking for preventive
and reactive safety.

Speaker 5 (44:39):
Someone's like, I'm not here to harm you, Like, I'm
just here to talk to you about the Lord or something.

Speaker 2 (44:48):
You love the Lord both you need to buy this.

Speaker 3 (44:52):
And like when Jake Owen comes over, you just pop
them and you send them, you put the video online.

Speaker 2 (44:56):
It would go viral constantly. Anybody. I would just invite
people over. Hey, Jake, I need you come over a
little bit, dude. Okay, dude, why'd you do that? Hey?
Come back over though, so I will do that again, Okay, dude.
It's like when someone would get up without the car.
You're like, all right, go ahead and get in, you drive.
I hate that. And it'd be like, oh, this time, though,

(45:19):
I want to spend two minutes talking about the lottery
where Lunchbox plays every two weeks and he has forever.
It doesn't matter what job he's had, doesn't matter how
much money he's made. He isn't I'm not saying invested.
He has spent money on the lottery since he was eighteen.

Speaker 5 (45:36):
Yeah, well, depending on how much money he's made, he's
increased his investment where.

Speaker 2 (45:40):
They don't say investment because then he says it. Yeah,
we say that because he's strict and is saying it. Okay,
so but he's never hit more than your max is
two hundred and fifty dollars. Whoa do you should get that?
When you when the lottery should go to a doctor. Yeah,
it's every week. It's a new disease two D. So
we've done different things and had ideas about how you

(46:01):
can win. You would go to like small gas stations,
not in a city, but very small towns because apparently
they always win there.

Speaker 6 (46:08):
Yeah, the Rundown gas stations you always see on the
news like this hole in the wall gas station is
the one where they sold the winning lottery ticket there.

Speaker 2 (46:14):
I'm like, that's where I gotta go. Or he's had
them pick the numbers at the gas station because sometimes
people go like I won, but Betty picked the numbers,
and so he's like, will you picked the numbers for me?
He's done that. He's like tipped extra at the gap,
like he tried everything. The one thing he hasn't done
yet is go to church. Yeah, I'm still looking for
a church. There are a million churches.

Speaker 8 (46:34):
The church.

Speaker 2 (46:34):
It's like I got a weekday, like at noon, what
you could go to like a Catholic. Yet, yeah, just
go in and maybe i'd go to confession. The church
is open, what maybe I'll go to there? You are
I'm Catholic. I don't know about that. He does claim
to be, there's no claim. The only time he claims
it is when he wants to take a day off.

(46:56):
Let me have it off. Okay, So because you can
go right after work.

Speaker 8 (47:00):
You can.

Speaker 2 (47:01):
Yeah, you don't have to go that day regardless. A
woman went to a tarot card reader and that's how
it was. Her numbers were picked, You're gonna win the lottery,
and the tarot card reader predicted she would win the
five hundred thousand dollars lottery prize. In the same day
she won the five hundred thousand dollars lottery price. Whoa,
oh man, so that's real. During my tarret card reading,

(47:22):
I was told this money would be coming into my
life very soon. I tried to think a way as
that it might happen, but I didn't even think about
possibly the lottery tickets in my purse. And so I
guess she already had the tickets from tarot card readers.
Like you have money, you have money.

Speaker 1 (47:38):
You think that thousand specific a lot.

Speaker 2 (47:42):
They said a lot. It wasn't a small amount. I
think you should go to a tarot card reader. All right,
I'll find one, and but I wonder if the church
and the terrt carder can'cel each other out. You're back
to evenings, right right? The devil? Wait? Are tarot card
readers considered the devil?

Speaker 12 (47:56):
No?

Speaker 2 (47:56):
I would think though, that if you look at it
as somebody who's just entertaining, then that's fun. Yeah. But
if you believe eric cart reader could be like a
psychic too, depending on what you feel about psychics.

Speaker 5 (48:08):
But my psychic is a Christian. My psychic cousin is
a Christian.

Speaker 2 (48:12):
Yeah. Yeah, I'm just saying it's all about huh, you're
feeling on connecting with something from a different space, well,
or yeah, you should do both of these. I will
do tarrar card if she's gonna give me to win
the lie. So slow on church? But church? No, No,
I'm saying, like I'm not right now.

Speaker 5 (48:32):
More difficult to find a tart card reader than it
is to find this.

Speaker 2 (48:36):
Can I find one on Sundays? I got a window
on Sundays for like nine to one.

Speaker 6 (48:42):
What I was saying is I'm not worried about messing
with the like art car is not going to bring
me like bad juju.

Speaker 2 (48:49):
Why don't you go to church too, because the guy
at church went to church and he heard a message
that led him to the right place to win the lottery.
And I'll find a church today. Sorry, man, it's not
even about finding one. Sure it can be a Sunday
and you can drive down the road about nine fifteen.
Just make sure you're in some pants.

Speaker 1 (49:08):
Now we're in the south. There's literally yeah, like every.

Speaker 2 (49:12):
Block, this one. You must not really want one the
lottery he following Jesus building leaders. Is that your motto?
Or is that a churchy found? Is the one I found?
There one today? That's what I'm looking. I typed in service.
It's Wednesday. That could be a Wednesday night. Submit a
prayer request. Yeah, I need to no, no, that this
is terrible. We're good, all right, We're good enough to

(49:36):
do the news. I just started disco music in my ears,
and that's good dance party. I got my glow blow
sticks out. Hey, so glad everybody's here. It's time for
the news bodies stories. If you want to avoid road rage.
Parentheses Eddie, what's up? Turn the air conditioning in your
car on high and allow yourself to cool down, like

(50:01):
literally and figuratively. That's not that's not right. I drive
a GEP, so it's always.

Speaker 1 (50:05):
Open, I know, but you may you can still blow
the air.

Speaker 2 (50:08):
Out on your face. Yeah, dude, it's wide open. The
wind's always blowing up, but there's still the air. It's cool.
You just don't want to not have road rage.

Speaker 1 (50:14):
Have you found that when it's warmer out, you're angry
you're on the road.

Speaker 2 (50:17):
No, I haven't been angry in a while. Good for anybody.
People have been driving pretty well? Is that what it is?
More bad then than you?

Speaker 11 (50:22):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (50:22):
Man. Researchers have discovered that the warmer the temperature, the
more aggressive people or drivers become. That's why we keep
the studio so cold. Oh that's all. Hey, that's really working.
It is okay. In fact, statistics show road rage accidents
happen way more in the summer. It's from Women's World magazine,
so you're not in Women's World. But I think that's

(50:43):
something you can learn from. Ready, Okay, if you start
to get a little hot, turn your ac on and
just put your face in it. I'll remember that only
twenty six percent of Americans say they get at least
eight hours of sleep on average a night. Yeah, I
mean about a quarter. I guess I thought it'd be
maybe even less than that. The Gallup poll release Monday
found that almost sixty percent of American said they'd feel

(51:03):
better they could get more sleep, Like put me in
that category thirty eight percent or so. So they're getting as
much sleep as they need. Who are those people?

Speaker 1 (51:10):
I feel like I'm getting there?

Speaker 2 (51:12):
Yeah, all humbug okay.

Speaker 1 (51:14):
But I mean I worked towards that.

Speaker 2 (51:15):
I'm jealous and I'm angry. Yesterday, I was so tired.
I couldn't stop laughing about that guys last an being wang.
How tired I was. It doesn't even make sense. There's
a lot of names that have like a meaner sound.
But I couldn't stop laughing about it, even when I
got off the air, and I was delirious, and you
said it over and over. When I told Mike, I
was like, pull a pardon off the podcast because I
just went too much about the guy's waning. But I

(51:38):
was so tired because I only got two hours sleep.
It affects my brain chemistry. So much. Yeah, that it's
a different person. And I'll give warning to some people
when I come in, like I got no sleep, heads up.
It's almost like you'd be the scooba and Michael be
my bumper bowling bumper rails. I mean we enjoy it. No, no,
because I'll I'll go anywhere. He's out of control. But

(51:59):
the sleep man. The poll also said how many hours
do you get a night? Twenty five percent, so they
got eight hours or more fifty percent, so they got
about six to seven hours twenty percent, so they get
five hours or less. I've been wearing the seapap machine.
It's a thing. My wife last night told me I
should get a smaller nose. You can't whole thing. It

(52:20):
goes in your nose, the hole because the one is
kind of big, and it comes off my nose at
night sometimes and when it comes off, because the air
is just shooting up. It's like an air pump if
you'se had it on. And she says, a couple of
nights ago, I went over and I put it back
in your nose, and you woke up and you opened
up your eyes and you went ah, and I went no,
I did it and then she goes, you talk when

(52:41):
you're asleep in your dreams, you talk feminine. She's like,
so that's your real sell. Yeah, I went how to
do it. She goes, Ah, so I'm gonna try to
get a smaller nose thing. I wear the seapap every night.
I would say that my quality of sleep has gone up,
that love has got up exponentially fourteen times better. I

(53:03):
don't know that my quantity of sleep has gotten a
lot better, but my quality has. So that is that
is a small win as I'm building. But the machine
has changed my life, and that if I only get
five hours of sleep, it's five hours sleep better than
I've ever gotten. And I only got five hours of sleep.
And the machine works where it just shoots air NonStop
into your nose and if you open your mouth, oh,

(53:25):
it comes shoots out of your mouth. That's crazy, like
a dragon. You're still dreaming, Yeah, yeah, I have dreams.
Had a dream last night, Well was it? I don't know,
but I woke up going add a few dreams.

Speaker 1 (53:34):
That's good when you can.

Speaker 2 (53:35):
Mostly it's really cool. Yeah, Mostly it's about what I'm
doing the next day on the show. That's not it
where it's like that's a dream, dude.

Speaker 3 (53:42):
Dream is like you're at a pool, dude, It's like
spring break and like there's just people having fun.

Speaker 2 (53:46):
In mind, I hardly ever have those, but I always
having dreams of like things where we're gonna do on
the show, and like I got to make sure to
get it all done in time, and like I say,
it's a successful show and I get to my meetings
on time. Like that's a great dream where I'm like, danmn,
we got the whole day done. Oh boy, you got
a lot of dreaming to do. Yeah, probably did. It's
not good. In nineteen forty two, the same poll was done,
like almost seventy percent of people said they slept eight

(54:08):
hours or more. I think partially it's because there's been
this culture of sleep isn't as necessary, But now we
know it is sleep and water, like the two fundamental
things we don't do enough of, and the two things
we were like, well, we can make up for it,
or we could get it anytime, so we don't focus
on it, and so I've tried to be better at it.

(54:28):
I mean, listen, going to a sleep study's the weirdest
thing ever because you say you sleep in a room.
They put all these littles on your body and they
monitor you and they sit there and they watch you.
And but I would recommend it to anybody. Don't do
the one at home. They don't get as much data
from that. You get weird out for twelve hours if
you can do that. And it takes forever to get in.
Took me forever to get in it because there's like

(54:48):
a list apparently, like it's the front of the club.
It's like you're not on the list. Oh well, finally
they moved that little velvet RoAF and I got in there.
Let's see. Taste of Country has the whole story about Target,
and the latest change is really upsetting folks. So they're
closing self checkouts way earlier, but they're not really adding

(55:10):
more employees. And there are big long lines at Target,
like in the evenings and people are just like there's
like three registers and the lines are way long.

Speaker 1 (55:18):
That's weird.

Speaker 5 (55:19):
I thought that the men they were going to go
back to more people checking you.

Speaker 2 (55:23):
Out here and maybe, but maybe such certain stores can't
find the humans to work sure. The US Sun reports
that most Target stores open at seven or eight am,
and they close around ten or eleven PM, but the
self checkouts closed like three hours before then, So you
got people there at night going, we don't enough people working,
and you can't call everybody to the front. Having worked
in retail, if you call everybody to the front, nobody's

(55:43):
watching the rest of the store. And then people steal.
Oh that's why one of the reasons. And there's nobody
to help anybody. So why are they trying to shut
down the self checkout? So what's I think that was about?
That loss? Yeah, increase money being lost. So I guess
they're gonna steal. Let's just make it easy on. I'm
gona keep sel check out. Experts a treat yourself to
a store bought a cup of coffee at least a

(56:04):
few times in the morning throughout the week, a few
days throughout the week.

Speaker 1 (56:08):
Who put this out in coffee shops?

Speaker 2 (56:10):
Well, I thought I was like Starbucks Inc. With the story. Yeah, Well,
and good dot com has it because they say psychologists
had the story that, especially in the morning, that being
able to order a coffee that's made specifically to your
unique taste gives you a sense of importance. I am
king of my coffee. Don't make I shall choose. Yeah,
it's just it's just a very expensive luxury if you

(56:36):
have to choose your luxuries.

Speaker 1 (56:38):
Right And they said they said in there times a week.

Speaker 2 (56:41):
Yeah, well not every day. They don't every day.

Speaker 1 (56:44):
You would think like do you really need to make
sure you feel important?

Speaker 2 (56:47):
Like I agree, you don't need to. And it's the
ordering part, like where you're like, exactly what you want.

Speaker 1 (56:53):
It's like they made this just for me, and it's like,
well yeah.

Speaker 2 (56:55):
Because no, I don't think so it's not just for me.
It's you can have all the ingredients you like that
make it taste just like you liked it. You may
not have at home, so you don't have chai at home,
you don't have vanilla, you don't have apple maple sauce.
You get it your exact way, and then that makes
you feel like, oh, this was made for me exactly
how I like it. Okay, but you know what's also

(57:16):
made for you exactly how you like it? Your bank
account if you don't have it and you're going three
times a week, Yeah, well it is good. It's fine. Though.
I'm not a big coffee guy, so I that culture.
I never understood the coffee culture. Yeah, because I just
don't like it. I don't like coffee. Every once in
a while I'll do like espresso and just it's torture

(57:36):
because like it tastes so bad and I just like
I gotta I gotta get going to swallow it up.
And I hate cold coffee. I hate coffee period. But
the reason why would you do it cold?

Speaker 1 (57:48):
I love?

Speaker 8 (57:48):
Well?

Speaker 2 (57:48):
Why it's it's like both. Sometimes you're although the appeal
was like it was hot and it's like morning, and yeah,
why'd you do cold coffee?

Speaker 5 (57:56):
Because sometimes it's hot out and you want something a
little It's a great point.

Speaker 2 (57:59):
See, I'm not part of the coffe culture. Finally, a
man picks up a sharp stone and finds a fifty
six hundred year old artifact. You know, you're making good
money off this thing if you choose to sell it
and not donate it immediately to a museum. Sometimes I
gets you though, you're like I found that, Yeah, like
would you like to donate it? Yeah? Could have sold

(58:19):
out on the black market of one point two million,
but no. He was walking and there was this cool
rock that he saw, so he picked it up and
he discovered an ancient artifact. Which is a different kind
of carved stone. That was a bladed dagger. It sounds
like an uh indi uh like airhead aarowhead beer. That's
like their version of an arrowhead. Heck, we find those

(58:41):
all time Arkansas. Yeah, dude, show the roughly five inch
long dagger and it was used and it's ribbed and
it's used to kill people. But that's what arrowheads kind
of were, right, Yeah, I mean they were the tip
of the errors. Yeah, pretty cool though. It looks like
if you took a snail out of the shell, it

(59:03):
just stretched it. That's like the color and the size
of it. But it's ribbed and pointed. That also sounds
like the.

Speaker 7 (59:12):
Bob stories.

Speaker 2 (59:15):
See I'm not fully over the exhaustion I thought I was.
I'm still a little bit like sleep deprived. H OJ's
white Bronco one point five million dollars cool? Cool? Would
you like to have that? Y?

Speaker 8 (59:30):
No?

Speaker 1 (59:31):
No?

Speaker 2 (59:31):
Why no part of the murder? Let me ask this
so I'm not saying would you like to have it
as in would you like to have it too, because
you think the murder and all that stuff is not
a big deal, But would you like to have it
as just a value piece. Yeah, everyone knows the white Bronco.

(59:52):
Everyone like kill it like murder psycho murderers. You know, no, no, no,
this had nothing to do with it, but also had
nothing to do when somebody who's a serial killer signs
a piece of paper for a check. Sure, like paying
their insurance has nothing to do with it, But it
still feels because there's a connection to something really bad

(01:00:12):
that happened. We were talking about this the other day,
like everyone watched the Chase. Well, yeah, because every channel
and we only had four channels. Correct, there was blood
found in the white something. But who's whose blood was it?

Speaker 6 (01:00:26):
They just said there was blood found in O. J.
Simpson's white Bronco on a pair of socks.

Speaker 2 (01:00:30):
Yeah, but if it was blood, but if his blood
like Kurt Schilling when he was Pigeon in the World Series,
I don't know whose blood it was. But still it's
a weird piece to have, and I don't think I
would have it. I would if they say go buy
and buy some memorabilia and you have one point five million.

Speaker 1 (01:00:45):
Dollars, that's not it.

Speaker 2 (01:00:47):
That's not that's a tough one.

Speaker 1 (01:00:48):
Wow.

Speaker 5 (01:00:48):
I would That's like, did y'all watch that documentary The
Dark Side of Kids TV, and it's really good, but.

Speaker 2 (01:00:54):
I didn't watch it because I didn't want to feel
terrible about the kids.

Speaker 5 (01:00:58):
You do, yeah, you do feel terrible, Yeah, but no,
I'm telling this telling it.

Speaker 1 (01:01:05):
Related to this. It's related to this, Okay.

Speaker 5 (01:01:07):
One of the guys that worked on set that ended
up being a pedophile.

Speaker 1 (01:01:12):
It's crazy.

Speaker 2 (01:01:13):
Will you tell everybody that the story of.

Speaker 1 (01:01:14):
The yeah so dark sited kid TV.

Speaker 5 (01:01:15):
It's about shows on Nickelodeon and how some of the
people that worked there it just wasn't a healthy environment
for children. And I don't want to give certain things
away because you should definitely go watch it. But there's
one guy on there and he had John Wayne Gacy
paintings in his home.

Speaker 2 (01:01:32):
Was he the predatory?

Speaker 11 (01:01:34):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (01:01:34):
He was mister Pickle on some of the episodes.

Speaker 2 (01:01:36):
I don't know what that, but I'm saying, was he
predatory in the show? Was he one?

Speaker 1 (01:01:40):
Yeah?

Speaker 8 (01:01:40):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (01:01:41):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (01:01:41):
He ended up doing really bad things too. Josh and
Drake that show that Josh guy is really terrible.

Speaker 1 (01:01:47):
But it's like they he would host parties at his
house with kids and he'd like he'd be like yeah,
and it's signed by John Wayne Gacy.

Speaker 2 (01:01:54):
So the fact that he was fascinated or intrigued by
John Wayne Gacy, the clown, the serial Kills, serial killer.

Speaker 5 (01:02:01):
Yes, he also do art, and this guy is hosting
parties and working with kids, and yet people were still
let like parents are still like letting their kids like, well,
he's a really nice guy, and it's like.

Speaker 1 (01:02:14):
There's red flags everywhere.

Speaker 5 (01:02:16):
I'm not saying he was gonna be a murderer, but
that's like a weird thing to collect and be obsessed with.

Speaker 3 (01:02:21):
Yeah, but you like gangs and stuff, and like you
would go on gangs, but I'm not.

Speaker 2 (01:02:26):
So much anymore.

Speaker 1 (01:02:28):
Onto that stage. And I've never went on a gang
you wanted to, sure, yeah, butch gang memory and it's
more so.

Speaker 5 (01:02:36):
The cartel, and I'm fascinated by how they operate. But
I would never purchase something to keep him home that
belonged to El Choppo.

Speaker 2 (01:02:44):
Right, But you're not supporting you're not supporting him because
he's not getting the money. But you are I would
saying celebrating, Wow, I have somebody famous, and he's famous
for doing all these terrible things. Yes, by the way, Lunchbox,
to your point, these the blood on the sock. Whenever
they found the blood, the blood was forensically tested and
it was traced back to OJ, his former wife and

(01:03:08):
her friend.

Speaker 6 (01:03:08):
Which, yeah, so there was blood on that sock. That
was and the prosecution. Prosecution argued that it was planted and.

Speaker 2 (01:03:16):
That, okay, you know whatever, a lot of wild. So
the Bronco nineteen ninety three four Bronco people have offered
about a million bucks before the murder and now it's
one point five million. And I have become interested in
sports memorabilia for the most part as of late.

Speaker 1 (01:03:39):
Well this would fall in that category.

Speaker 2 (01:03:40):
Would you know this is murder memorabilia. No, he's a
running back to he didn't get two thousand yards in
a season in this Bronco. But even because I'm on
a lot of these sites and now I just I
just like to watch sports memorabilia. I'm trying to sell
it now more than have it. His helmets and stuff
have gone up in value. Yeah, because he died. I
saw a doctor law posts like hey all your OJ stuff,

(01:04:02):
Yeah it's gone, it's going up. It's like USC helmets.
So I don't think I would want the Bronco. I
don't think I want the Bronco.

Speaker 1 (01:04:11):
But would you want a helmet?

Speaker 2 (01:04:13):
Though I didn't buy a helmet, and I'm just curious, guys, No,
because I wouldn't buy it simply because he was he
want the trophy? I don't know. I don't either, but
I wouldn't buy it because he was the last guy
to rush for two thousand yards in a fourteen game
season anyway, So that would mean I would want to
buy it then because he was a murderer and a

(01:04:34):
great running back and so no, no, he won, yeah, Heisman,
So I just didn't want to say they take that
away from No. Oh, I don't know, like Reggie Bush. Yeah,
I don't know. Maybe I don't.

Speaker 6 (01:04:47):
I don't think so, I don't think for committing a crime,
but he wasn't convicted.

Speaker 2 (01:04:52):
You're right, the trophy?

Speaker 3 (01:04:56):
He yeah, So what's the problem, guys, what's a problem.

Speaker 2 (01:05:02):
But the problem is it's.

Speaker 1 (01:05:03):
Associated at It's a problem.

Speaker 2 (01:05:07):
The problem is it's that to me, I wouldn't want
it because it's associated with the murder. Right I have
been like my member Millia kick is still happening. My
wife's asked me again last night, Hey, when is this
obsession going to be over? Not in the way of
like hurry up, but she knows what's the timeline. Well,
I just run from one obsession to the next. Yeah, dude,
we haven't played golf none, not one time at all.

(01:05:28):
I haven't played one time because I'm just like, so
I bought what I'm into. Now. Are these things called
auto cuts? So it's an autograph, right, but it's not
autographed like big things. They are autographed. They are cut off,
cut out of things, and they're put into like a
baseball card sleeve, and then they are authenticated and it
says so you know it's for sure and you can
file it away with your other ones. And so I

(01:05:50):
have a John F. Kennedy, right, I got the George
Washington word. It's just in the auto cut with the
has the most popular word in America, like the country
would have been without the word. D Okay. I just
ordered I order two more. I got them. I just
offered somebody money on eBay and they took way less.
I got two more and I actually shipped them here
to the office. And for sure somebody's gonna steal them.

(01:06:12):
Oh for sure. Scuba and Amazon. I have two things
coming and I don't know why the work is in
my send it here. I have a Harry carry Auto
Cut Harry, Okay, that's pretty cool. And I have a
Ernie Banks. They give you tracking numbers so we can
follow it. Yeah. I think if you.

Speaker 4 (01:06:29):
Can send me those, I can. I can help you
out better and see when he gets here.

Speaker 2 (01:06:32):
Yeah, it's on eBay. I'm still not very good at eBay,
and people will send me messages because I can help you.
Afterwards you I'll find the tracking numbers then we can
look at it. Because I like sell stuff that I
got in any profit I make, I give away, I donate.
But people are like, hey, can you put it out
like a sign book with this? And I was doing
that with a lot of them at first, but I'm
it's now it's costing me money again because having to

(01:06:54):
get books and sign them for listeners and put them
in the in the jerseys.

Speaker 7 (01:06:58):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:06:59):
And somebody was like, I bought this and I'm not
even a real fan as a Derek Carr helmet, I
bought it and I just want to say thanks. I
was like, I feel guilty. I put an anthe Richard
helmet with it. Oh you threw just out of nowhere.
That's nice.

Speaker 8 (01:07:10):
I know.

Speaker 2 (01:07:10):
I just feel guilty. No one does that. No, it's
the opposite of what I should be doing. Okay, I've
been on the White Bronco. God, let me alone. Just
do it, dude. Yeah right, drive around town and nothing.
Yeah right, call us if you want. Oh, I do
want to grab these two calls. First, THEO from Saint Louis,
who's been hanging on for like half an hour. THEO
welcome to the Bobby Bone Show. What's going on, buddy

(01:07:32):
Marie Studio?

Speaker 13 (01:07:35):
So I was watching you guys might have already talked
about this, but I was watching that Garth Brooks special
and I was getting to the very last episode and
I had to pause it, and I said, I think
that it is Lunchbox. So of course I rewind it.
There he is. So my questions for Lunchbox. Do you
think you are due royalty? Is due to your guest appearance.

Speaker 2 (01:07:57):
So what's hilarious is and we don't set anybody to
ever hear all five hours of the show, but Lunchbox
brought this up this morning as soon as the show
started at five am. So THEO, this is a great call, Lunchbox.
What are your thoughts on you being in Garth Brooks' docuseries.

Speaker 6 (01:08:11):
Yeah, I think I should be getting paid because I
didn't sign anything saying hey you could use my name,
image of likeness. I just went to a bar. I
was invited to a party and there was cameras and
they filmed me. So I feel like I'm part of
the reality show. I was on the episode more than
almost Garth was, So.

Speaker 2 (01:08:29):
That's not true. So the reality of it is. And
I did check. There were signs when you walked in
that says, hey, this is being recorded for an Amazon show.
If you come in, you will probably be on camera.
They have to put that up, and they did put
that up. Secondly, he's not credited because he didn't have
any lines or reason to be there. And then he
just actually chased Garth around all night so he could
get on camera. Now, it is funny and you just

(01:08:51):
see you a lot, and I like that. But you
don't really need any money because you didn't do anything
of value to that show.

Speaker 6 (01:08:58):
I made that bar like it was so fun and
everybody's having a good time.

Speaker 2 (01:09:02):
Every picture I'm in, every.

Speaker 6 (01:09:05):
Spot, it's like, oh man, that's the spot I need
to go check out.

Speaker 2 (01:09:07):
Oh look at me? Is look at that stage. I mean,
so you're not going to get an official royalty check.
What would you like that would kind of settle it? Like,
what do you feel like you honestly deserve? I feel
like I deserve a dinner with Garth. Oh okay, that's
a bit above what I can provide. So why what
were you thinking not a dinner with Garth? Like was

(01:09:30):
that too much ten bucks or something? I don't know,
you think maybe I think Garth would do it at
dinner with they had nothing in commonly, bring eight buffers.

Speaker 1 (01:09:40):
That's what I do, buffers. I don't know. I feel like, but.

Speaker 2 (01:09:48):
Don't you think about He's like, I gotta go to
dinner with this guy because he was an extra. He
showed up to my bar, and what are they gonna
talk about? And shouldn't you pay them for put letting
you be like you got to go to that party
with Garth Brooks and then you probably got free food.
I didn't see any food there. Oh, good point. Dinner
it is? Yeah, see, I mean dinner, and thank you don't.

Speaker 5 (01:10:09):
Why don't you just go ahead and say dinner were
Tricia Cooks and locas.

Speaker 2 (01:10:14):
He'll actually get all of this if we're not careful.

Speaker 6 (01:10:18):
Yeah, I like that and we all sit around and
just talk about life.

Speaker 2 (01:10:22):
What would what would you talk to him about? Like,
I guess because I don't want to do this because
gar wind up calling out and going, you know what,
I'll do it, and then well I'll be miserable because
much walk dinner with Garth.

Speaker 6 (01:10:30):
Okay, I don't know what we talked about. I mean,
whatever is going on in that day, current events. I
mean they probably read the news, are probably scroll on.

Speaker 2 (01:10:36):
Twitter, entrepreneurship. Garth's like, so lunchboks, here about that Bronco
one point five million. Okay, thank you THEO. It's a
great great point, great question, and glad you're listening.

Speaker 13 (01:10:47):
Thanks you guys.

Speaker 2 (01:10:48):
Thank you to Garth. One more. This is Candace and Rogers, Arkansas. Candace,
you are on the Bobby Bone Show. Good morning, Candace,
Good morning.

Speaker 1 (01:10:57):
I was just wondering if you ever found the like,
he's a bag jacket you were looking for from the
baseball game.

Speaker 2 (01:11:03):
Okay, So this is what happened. I went to the
Arkansas razorback baseball game. There was a kid, he's probably
fifteen years old. I was like, that's the coolest jacket
i've ever seen. He's a kid though, that's that. I
love that jacket. I gotta find it. Because he ended up.
He may have been seventeen, I'm not sure. He posted
a picture of us together he tagged me, so I
reposted it and I was like, I gotta find his jacket.
And my wife's like, he's a teenager, Like it looks

(01:11:26):
like a teenager jacket, and I was like, we gotta
find it. I found it.

Speaker 13 (01:11:30):
I have it.

Speaker 2 (01:11:31):
I wear it around the house.

Speaker 5 (01:11:32):
Oh, so you which is a sports jacket.

Speaker 2 (01:11:35):
It's like a hoodie. Gosh, that's the cool raiseback jacket
i've ever seen. So did people think it's like too
young for you? It possibly could be. I think maybe
that I'm living my best life. And so I weared
around the house. I'll go winning the poo though nothing
else on except that really yeah, no, not no pants,
nothing just that? All right? Thank you can't Yes, Candas,
I did find it. It was sold out a lot
of places, but don't you worry. I got my ways,

(01:11:57):
and my way was to search it on eBay. I
got some yesterday. I was on eBay. I'm new to eBay.
I never you've used it. I was searching, and I
was getting so frustrated that I couldn't find. Like I
was looking for two or three things, and none of
that I could get none of them primed, Like none
of them were close? Could you can use prime to
get it to my house at all? Debate exactly? It's
not Amazon? Who knew Bones? I was like, why nothing?

(01:12:18):
Why can't I get prime on any of this stuff?
Because it's not freaking Amazon? Ye idiot, Bobby Bone show.

Speaker 8 (01:12:28):
Sorry.

Speaker 2 (01:12:28):
Today, this story comes to us from Ohio.

Speaker 6 (01:12:32):
Hey man was caught doing over one hundred miles an
hour in a sixty five mile hour zone, gets pulled over.
Please say, hey man, what's the hurry? Where's he headed?
Gotta get that laundry done.

Speaker 2 (01:12:45):
I wonder what his wife told him before he left. No,
not a wife. He had a date that night. He
had to make sure you get the laundry done. I
would just think it was somebody going you gotta get
the laundry done.

Speaker 1 (01:12:58):
No, he's got to get his laundry done so you
can go on and look good, because.

Speaker 2 (01:13:00):
Usually dudes have no interest in laundry. Zero. If you're
living by yourself, you go and you find the piece
with the least amount of stain on it, unless it
has to do with somebody telling you to get the
laundry done, or are you thinking if you don't get
it done, maybe you don't get it done later that night?
You know that's awfully fast, lunch box, I'm lunch box.

(01:13:21):
That's your bonehead story of the day. When they made
the Titanic movie thirty years ago, so I didn't know
the story, but more than fifty of the cast and
crew members got really messed up because someone spiked some
of the food with angel dust. Angel is that? So
I I had to look it up to it's PCP.
But even then I was like, what are that? Even?

(01:13:43):
You know what's It's a hallucinogen. So a suspect was
never named. But now the police are about to release
more information from their investigation. If they've been investigating this
for thirty years, we got kids that are missing, we
got yeah, yeah, yeah, I ain't know what we're doing.
Who's the cop on this beat? Who's had to focus
on this for thirty years? So the PCP chowder incident

(01:14:03):
is what it was called. It happened during the filming
of Titanic in nineteen ninety six fifty cast and crew,
including Bill Paxton and James Cameron, were dosed with angel
dust because someone spiked the soup. Weird, not not nice,
not funny, but because no one died and it's been
thirty years, that's pretty and it's I'm intrigued. Why would

(01:14:27):
people waste their drugs on like that a science experiment,
I guess, or like watch like let's check this out.
Maybe unless they thought it was like salt. It was
like the chef and he's like two doses assault my
angel dust. A story that's been told in a lot
of places, but no one even really could confirm it
was true because it sounds like an urban legend that

(01:14:49):
the whole cast and crew gets drugged. But they say
that some news could be coming out as soon as May.
That's this is a weird investigation. AV Club has this story,
but James Cameron said he is the guy that directed
it director. In an interview, he said people are moaning
and crying, whaling. They were collapsing on tables and gurney's.

(01:15:11):
There was a number of crew down the hall though,
doing a conga line. Oh so they were loving well
some differently, we like the party differently so it's called
finn cyclodine. It's also known as angel dust. It has
a bunch of names. Angel dust feels like a very

(01:15:33):
eighties name. I don't think anybody calls it, Hey give
me the dust? Hey man, you want some angel dust? Yeah?
What would it be called now? As a Is it
just PC? Did they even call it that? Like what
people call it now? Is that? I don't think, But
I don't know for sure because acids also hallucinogen, and
it can go like sublingual under the tongue. It can

(01:15:53):
go like they're away. Why why don't we ask Scuba?
Is the woman not a drug guy? Scuba? What what's up?
Anything about it? But believe it or not, people still
call it angel dust.

Speaker 4 (01:16:03):
Really the angel dust or the angel or PCP the angel.

Speaker 2 (01:16:07):
It's really one of those ones. If you're doing this,
you have a real problem. Is it an old school drug?
Though people still do it now?

Speaker 4 (01:16:13):
It's it's kind of in that same class of like
a methamphetamine or an opioid, where you don't feel pain,
you don't have any receptors.

Speaker 2 (01:16:19):
You kind of are like invincible, can you. I shouldn't
ask because he may be wrong. He's not a doctor.
But can you be addicted to angel dust? I think
you can be addicted to anything, just depending on your personality.

Speaker 5 (01:16:30):
True, Okay, yeah, that's what I wonder if like this
was someone's introduction to it and then they can't they
couldn't stop it. It's a great point and they would
have never tried it, but then once they did, then
it ruined their life.

Speaker 2 (01:16:42):
I don't know that PCP is that type of drug. Okay,
by reading about it now, it's hi.

Speaker 4 (01:16:50):
But you can be addicted to the feeling though, if
you're addicted to the shaman.

Speaker 2 (01:16:53):
So one time of a feeling, I'm not saying this specifically,
one time a feeling is it going to create an addiction?
But I guess the person less unless it's something like
a drug, like a chemical, like a myth. Yeah, but
it doesn't matter. I don't know anything I don't know about.
I don't know Angel does abou chriss Angel. I'll watch
that show bull full of crap too, so I know nothing.
PCP is also known as I read web MD, which

(01:17:16):
I shouldn't even do that it like gives some people schizophrenic,
so it's not even good. Like some people take it
and everybody reacts everything differently, and they have like schizophrenia,
like a version of that. It's not forever, but that's
you know what some people say they're tripping, and some
it's they're tripping in a good way. But some people
they're tripping and it's like gross fingernails are coming at
you and it's tripping in a bad way.

Speaker 3 (01:17:36):
Well, it's like, you know, some people were doing the
Congo line and some were like going, oh.

Speaker 2 (01:17:40):
This is terrible. Regardless, I don't know anything about PCP
or angel Dust.

Speaker 1 (01:17:44):
That's just wild that they were drugged on.

Speaker 2 (01:17:47):
That someone would waste that much in soup.

Speaker 1 (01:17:49):
And James Cameron of all people.

Speaker 2 (01:17:50):
Like dies like how would you waste that wanted? So
Leo didn't like the chowder, Like what, I guess he
wasn't big chowder guy.

Speaker 10 (01:17:56):
Okay him unless he's, oh, who's got enough money to
support angel Dust?

Speaker 2 (01:18:04):
For everybody?

Speaker 1 (01:18:05):
I don't know that he did then?

Speaker 2 (01:18:07):
Oh yeah, man wild. He was a child actor.

Speaker 1 (01:18:10):
Yeah, I mean I know he was in Who Eats Gilbert? Grape?

Speaker 2 (01:18:13):
What's Eating Gilbert Pains?

Speaker 5 (01:18:15):
Oh yeah, I don't know that he made a lot
from that.

Speaker 3 (01:18:19):
I remember him in a lot of like those teen magazines,
like he was just always on the cover of those.

Speaker 5 (01:18:23):
My daughter we were talking about Leonardo DiCaprio the other day.
She's sixteen, her and her friend and they pulled up
pictures of him the other day and they're like, ugh,
he's greasy.

Speaker 2 (01:18:31):
Yeah, I'm like gross. She's like, I missed him. I
missed him being hot because he's never been hot to me.

Speaker 3 (01:18:36):
Right, she didn't miss him and he's dating like twenty
year olds, now, well she did.

Speaker 1 (01:18:40):
We all see him as a heart throw.

Speaker 2 (01:18:42):
I don't even see him a heart throw. I see
him as someone everybody says is a heart throw that
I can't understand. But I'm like, maybe I just don't
get it.

Speaker 1 (01:18:47):
Oh man, he's cute.

Speaker 2 (01:18:48):
Same thing with like Jack Nicholson because back in the day,
you know he's slaying him too. But I only see
Jack Nicholson and like, yeah, Jack Nicholson is like a
big old dude on the front of the Lakers your
sports sie Morgan.

Speaker 8 (01:19:03):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (01:19:03):
DiCaprio.

Speaker 12 (01:19:05):
I mean, I've I found him attractive in certain movies,
but I've never like understood the full blown he's so hot.

Speaker 2 (01:19:11):
You can't judge him on his movie rolls. Like because
he that's how you find that's what everybody judges. He
can be playing you think everybody. No, we even just
hit what his face is. Like everybody falls in love
with him from seeing him at the malt shop. What's
the one where he.

Speaker 1 (01:19:25):
Makes love with the bear?

Speaker 2 (01:19:26):
The like You're not gonna fall in love without you.
But it could be like how good he looks in
the movie?

Speaker 12 (01:19:33):
Yeah, like Great Gatsby, he was in that.

Speaker 1 (01:19:35):
He looks good in that, Like did you know what
I mean?

Speaker 2 (01:19:38):
Yeah, certain movies. Yeah, he looks not the character. What's
eating you over grape? Like, dude, he don't even like grapes?
And I was like, that's hot. No his last name?
Oh all right, we gotta go see tomorrow.

Speaker 7 (01:19:49):
Get your Body, Bulls b
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