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June 4, 2024 45 mins

The guys on the show reveal moments they got in trouble at school, find out how! Plus, we play masterpiece theater and more!

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Ye show.

Speaker 2 (00:04):
All right, Bobby, here, we are about to start the show,
so it's before the show even starts today, so we're
gonna try something a bit different with the podcast. I
was never a super fan of how the last podcast
was done. We wanted to get a section of it
up early because some folks are like, hey, we don't
want to have to wait till noon to hear any
of the show. I got that, but I always hated

(00:24):
putting up like a second version of the show where
a part of that clip was the same as you've
already heard. So we would do like early bird and
full show, and we're gonna experiment like we always do.
So we're just gonna put up two halves of the show,
which could be fine.

Speaker 3 (00:44):
I guess.

Speaker 2 (00:44):
My only concern is if, once all dialed down, if
the show is only like an hour and thirty minutes long,
that one end of it isn't way shorter than the other,
or one's not like fifty minutes and one twenty five.
We'll have to kind of figure out our pace as
we go. But that's going to be the plan. So

(01:06):
you'll see part one and part two, and it won't
be any full show anymore. Unless the demand is just like, hey, man,
play the full show again. We're going to do part one,
which will load a little earlier to meet people's desire
to hear the show before noon or I guess one
pm sometimes in Eastern and two. I just don't want

(01:30):
to repeat anything. So that's going to be the plan
moving forward. That'll be what we try for the next
with today's June fourth, probably till like June seventh or eighth,
So that'll be the plan untill like June eighth, and
then we will move on from there.

Speaker 3 (01:45):
All right, cool, thank you.

Speaker 4 (01:50):
Transmitting.

Speaker 3 (01:58):
Hey, welcome to Tuesday Show More Studio morning.

Speaker 2 (02:01):
No Amy here today. I got the call that Amy
was sick and she was like, I still come in.
I have a fever and a headache.

Speaker 3 (02:07):
And you're like no, no, no. I was like, doun't.

Speaker 2 (02:08):
Then she was like, I can turn my microphone on
at home, and I was like, if you're sick, you're sick,
you know. So Amy will not be here today, so
it'll mostly just be a bunch of dudes. Later on,
we'll do dude dus they get to know your question
as our listeners are asking us questions to get to
know us a little bit better. How many brothers and
sisters do you have or did you have when growing up?

Speaker 3 (02:30):
Lunchbox.

Speaker 5 (02:31):
I have an older brother and an older sister. My
brother is two years older than me. My sister is
one year older than me. My parents, you know, real quick,
got us done, and we were all in school together.
It was awesome.

Speaker 2 (02:43):
And do you feel like you have any of that
you know, youngest child syndrome?

Speaker 5 (02:49):
Uh? Would the syndrome be like I need attention, look
at me? Hey, yeah, I gotta be loud so people
pay attention. Yeah. Absolutely. Because my brother and sister had
the same teachers as I did, They're like, oh, you're sure,
brother and sister, this is going to be easy. And
I host like, you guys, got no idea you were
different than your brother and sister.

Speaker 2 (03:05):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (03:05):
They were real quiet, never got in trouble, didn't talk
in class. One teacher in high school asked my mom,
same dad.

Speaker 3 (03:13):
Well, that's rude, that's funny. Was she kidding? I don't
know either way, that's funny.

Speaker 5 (03:19):
It was on back to school night and they were like,
they have the same dad.

Speaker 6 (03:22):
Hey.

Speaker 7 (03:22):
That's when teachers could ask that Eddie. I have one
older brother and one younger sister. I'm right in the middle,
middle child. Yeah, what is that? What does that mean that.

Speaker 2 (03:32):
You didn't get really like you fell alone a lot
of the times because all the Oh yeah, the younger
kid was getting all the attention because they were demanding. Again,
the older kid got all the attention because they were first. Yeah,
I kind of had a lonely childhood.

Speaker 7 (03:43):
Like I joke with my kids that, like, whenever I
throw the football up in the air and they catch them,
myself like that's all I did.

Speaker 3 (03:48):
When I was showing you a video of me as
a kid, kids, Yes, pretty much it I have.

Speaker 2 (03:53):
I'm the oldest. I have a younger sister, full sister.
She's four years younger than I am. I have a
half brother that I don't know from my biological father,
who I don't have a relationship with, but I know
he's out there somewhere.

Speaker 3 (04:07):
He's younger.

Speaker 2 (04:08):
He's younger. H I'm older than everybody. I've had a
couple step siblings through the years that aren't anymore, and
then who knows what else has happened and out there.

Speaker 3 (04:19):
Did you meet all your step siblings or no? Yeah,
I lived with them all. Oh wow, through different seasons. Wow.

Speaker 2 (04:27):
At one point, because we lived in a nine hundred
foot a nine hundred square foot house and there were one, two, three, four,
there were six of us living in a nine hundred
square foot house, two bedrooms. Wow, there are six of us.
So I slept on the couch because I never had
a bedroom. But then once it just got so crowded
even though I was in the couch, I moved and
lived in the camper. That's why I lived in the
camper for so long, little space, just to get away

(04:50):
from all. Yeah, I don't and it did have an
air conditioner obviously, and summer would be miserable. I think
it was just about having not so much space, but
like an ounce of privacy, because that was like fourteen fifteen,
sixteen years old. I would take the cordless phone and
just take it out to the camper. We would have
cell phone, so I took it out to the camper,
but then it would die and I'd be like, this

(05:10):
is a brick, so take it out, then charge it
all day and then take it back out at night.
And the camper had a table. There wasn't a bed
in there, but I had a table with two like
chair couches. Yeah, and so what you did is you
took the table and you turn it over and you
put a mattress on top of that, and that ended
up being the bed.

Speaker 3 (05:27):
That's like the design of it.

Speaker 2 (05:29):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, gotta be in the bed, so I
sleep in that. I never even made the table again,
there's no need. I just eat in the bed. Maybe
that's why I hit in the bed as I got older.
That's right, that's what you do, stayed in the bed.

Speaker 3 (05:37):
All right.

Speaker 2 (05:37):
Glad you guys are here. Thank you for being a
part of the show again. There will be no amy,
but we will do our best. Nah, we won't. Let's
see what happens. Yeah, let's open up the mailbag and
you send the game mail and we read it all
the air.

Speaker 1 (05:52):
Pick something we call Bobby's mail bag.

Speaker 2 (05:55):
Yeah, helloo, Bobby. I had a friend who wanted me
to take a picture for her. It was her and
a group of friends all out at the bar. She
insisted i'd be the one to take it. Well, during
the process, I accidentally dropped the phone. The screen cracked
because my friend didn't have a case on her phone.
She wants me to pay for it, but I don't
think it's my fault since she asked me to take
the picture and it most likely cracked because she chooses

(06:18):
to not have a phone case, who is at fault?
Signed Meghan the phone Dropper. What I want to say
first is I believe Meghan the phone dropper is a
little irritated because she was not asked to be in
the picture. There's always the one that's like you take it, like,
oh yeah, you want me to take it because I
wanted to kind of be in it. So I would say,
Meghan the phone dropper is probably a little irritated at that.

Speaker 3 (06:40):
I get it.

Speaker 2 (06:41):
It's not on you. You dropped her phone, but you
didn't say let me use your phone. It's very delicate
she said at first of all, have it? Where's the
phone case?

Speaker 3 (06:52):
She's that one. It's tough.

Speaker 2 (06:54):
If you had said let me use your phone and
dropped it, I would think you would be liable. The
fact she gave you the phone to use and it
was an accident.

Speaker 3 (07:05):
I think that's on her bones.

Speaker 7 (07:06):
Look when my kids like they say like, yeah, the
ball just like hit the window, Like no, no, no, no, you
threw the ball and the ball hit the window, So
you gotta take responsibility.

Speaker 3 (07:16):
But she wasn't your kid. You didn't tell your kids.

Speaker 7 (07:19):
Doesn't matter if I told them to throw the ball
or not. Their hand threw the ball through the window,
so her hands grabbed the phone, dropped it.

Speaker 3 (07:27):
It's on her, dude. She wasn't doing anything for herself.
It was an accident.

Speaker 2 (07:30):
It would be like somebody me going, oh, I can't.
I can't justify that.

Speaker 3 (07:34):
I can't. She's already mad. She wasn't in the picture.
I feel bad for her. There.

Speaker 2 (07:38):
There wasn't a case. I feel bad for her there. Okay, Yeah,
that's that's Dombe again said take this picture for us.
Maybe she was like, I don't want to take it.
I'm known as slippery hands, Megan.

Speaker 3 (07:48):
You can always say no, you can always say not
taking the picture. I'm saying, you don't pay for it.
I'm saying you don't. You say you do lunchbox, you
don't pay for it.

Speaker 5 (07:55):
Look, and I don't think it was an accidental drop.
I think it was an accident. I think it was that, hey,
you're not gonna let me in the picture. Oops, it
slipped out of my hand. But you're not responsible. They
asked you to take the picture. You not responsible. She's
responsible for not having a case on her phone.

Speaker 3 (08:09):
I'm gonna agree with Lunchbox not there's no on the
same page. You never do that.

Speaker 2 (08:13):
But I say, she asked you to do it. It
was an accident. Because she asked you to do it,
then it was an accident. You don't have to pay.
That's where we stand. Had it been let me use
your phone for something, and then you're I don't know,
sending a picture to yourself or anything else and you
drop it.

Speaker 3 (08:27):
That's then on you. What about offer to pay? Maybe
she'll say, now.

Speaker 2 (08:31):
No going to she asked her to not being a
picture of the friend. She has no person that says
a lot about it. All right, no Amy today, So
we don't get the motherly theory.

Speaker 3 (08:40):
We well we got it though. Yeah, then we had
to nail that. All right. That's the mail bag. We
got your game mail.

Speaker 5 (08:45):
And we laid on the air.

Speaker 2 (08:47):
Now let's find the clothes.

Speaker 3 (08:48):
Bobby mailed that yeam.

Speaker 2 (08:52):
Guy was sentenced for forging a Purdue professor's signature to
change his grades so he appeared to have a great
point average three. He changed the grades of F, D
and C to B plus an A his real GP
is one point six eight.

Speaker 3 (09:09):
Dude, that's rough.

Speaker 7 (09:10):
What was he trying to sign though, because doesn't that
stuff like go somewhere? And then the grades are like
electronically done. So they asked the professor why she.

Speaker 2 (09:21):
Changed the grades like the register's office said, and she
was like, I didn't. So they went and investigated. The
problem is you can't go from a one point six
eight to a three point eight, not just like that.
That screamed someone's up to something. Did you guys ever
do anything in school? What's the most trouble you ever
got into in school? Ever get suspended?

Speaker 8 (09:41):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (09:42):
Yeah? Every what you guys got suspended in school? Yes?

Speaker 5 (09:46):
In school?

Speaker 3 (09:47):
And then one outside raids you get in trouble?

Speaker 2 (09:50):
Yeah, Me and my buddy went the girls locker room
and we're both guys, no, we get that.

Speaker 6 (09:55):
What were you doing?

Speaker 3 (09:56):
I didn't do that? What happened?

Speaker 2 (09:57):
It was during I believe it was the school dam
in middle school, and we're just like, hey, we should
go in the girl's locker and they'd be funny. And
then we went in there and one of the parents
was in there chaperone, and what happened to you? She
told on us we definitely got detention my parents. I
think I was grounded for like two years. I don't
think I could stay at a friend's house, but no
suspension detention. Okay, you guys spent it out of school.

Speaker 6 (10:18):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (10:19):
Yeah, punched a kid and dude, he didn't fly back.
I just punched him. He started crying. Wait what Yeah.

Speaker 7 (10:26):
We were in choir and so we were watching a movie.
It was like, I think the sound of music maybe,
and I was sitting down and he was behind me.
He kept messing with my ear, like touching my ear level.
I'm like, dude, stop stop, stop messing my ear.

Speaker 3 (10:37):
This is a middle school, seventh grade I think.

Speaker 7 (10:40):
And he just kept doing it over and over, and
I said, dude, one more time, I'm gonna punch you.
He did it, so I turned around punched him where
in the face, right in the cheek.

Speaker 3 (10:49):
Dude, like just crossed him right in the cheek. And
then he just like and like, what happened to you? Nothing?
I was like, uh oh no, what happened? Do you
like the punishment at the time.

Speaker 7 (11:01):
Nothing. So then the classes over, I'm like, this is cool.
I got away got away with it. Yeah yeah, yeah yeah.
And then next period, knock on the door the principal's office,
Can I speak to Eddie?

Speaker 3 (11:11):
Come over here exactly that.

Speaker 5 (11:13):
The point in the Yeah.

Speaker 7 (11:15):
So I went there, like and then there he was.
He was like he's still crying and his face was
already like did you punch him?

Speaker 2 (11:21):
Like?

Speaker 3 (11:21):
Yeah, I punched him? All right? Suspension? How many days?
Just one? That was the one where I had to
go home? Like what did my parents say when you
were suspended?

Speaker 7 (11:30):
I mean, I don't really remember much, Like I don't
think that they made that big of a deal about it,
because at that time I got a lot of tarties,
so I was in attention all the time, but in
school attention in school.

Speaker 3 (11:41):
This is my first out of school suspension. Lunchbox.

Speaker 5 (11:43):
Yeah, seventh grade. I got in a fight in middle
school because the day before I was walking down the
hall and this kid it was like right when the
bell ring going to the buses, and some kid kicked
me in the back and then ran off. And so
the next morning I went up and he was getting
stuff out of his locker and I just took him
and bam, shoved him right into his larger turn around
hit him a couple of times and then teachers broke
it up sent me home for two days. And then

(12:06):
I got suspended in high school because we were playing
the volleyball playoffs and we were playing Conley and they
had a sign behind their bench said trash the Trojans,
and me and my buddy Don went over there and
ripped it all up and showered him with a paint sign. Yeah,
I got spend it three days.

Speaker 6 (12:24):
Wow.

Speaker 3 (12:25):
What did your parents say when you got in trouble there? Oh?

Speaker 5 (12:27):
Nothing, They're just like, ah, whatever, they don't really care.
I mean they sort of like my parents were. Like
my brother was two years older than me, and so
he was graduating and he was throwing away all this
stuff from school and he had permission slips to get
out of class, and he was throwing them in the trash,
and my mom picked him out. She goes, you don't
think your brother and sister will need those because they
were forged from the office. They already had stamps on him,

(12:48):
so you just had to fill them out. You could
leave class whenever you wanted, And so my mom got
him out of the trash for me. So I mean
it's kind of like, hey, you know what I mean,
you're just kids being kids interesting.

Speaker 2 (12:57):
And now we know why he's a lot like he
is now. I never got supended from school.

Speaker 5 (13:03):
Nothing, never like even sent out of the classroom.

Speaker 3 (13:05):
Yeah, I guess sent out of the classroom once.

Speaker 2 (13:08):
In French class on a record player, they used to
play this old Julius Caesar play once a year and
it was miserable, but it was It wasn't because it
was miserable, it was just sitting there and I used
to like the BC boys. So I went up and it
was like scratching the record wok in front of the class.

Speaker 3 (13:26):
The teacher walked down while I was doing it, like
a DJ. Yeah that's funny, man.

Speaker 9 (13:31):
I thought it was funny too.

Speaker 3 (13:32):
I was like, Julia, we can see. And so I
got sent out for the day. And I bet you
a lot of the teachers are.

Speaker 2 (13:37):
Like they had to go back and be like something funny. Yes,
Bobby's up to it again, but no, they kick me
out of class for day.

Speaker 7 (13:44):
Big My biggest scam ever though, was I used to
like just feel really bad at tests, So then there
it was a scantron's memory had to bubble in like
little A through D or whatever, and the teacher was
like you're really feeling these a lot, Like can you
see the scantron?

Speaker 3 (14:00):
I'm like, you know what, that's a good idea. I
really can't see.

Speaker 7 (14:02):
Him, and so I thought I was like, oh, perfectly,
she's just I'm just gonna get out of it. No,
she's like, all right, so you'll take a separate test
away from everyone else.

Speaker 6 (14:08):
And I.

Speaker 3 (14:10):
Cheating, Oh yeah, like coping looking over. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (14:14):
Hey, so I I think it was my junior year.
We had to say government. And here's the stupid part
is the teacher gave us the final beforehand, if we
just could memorize it and look at him. I was like,
why would I memorize it. I'll just write down every
single lands or A, B C. And I had it
was one hundred questions. So I had twenty five little
on each sheet of paper, little four squares, and I

(14:35):
was using them and I passed him to the park
he wanted to use them, and then as he was
passing them back, the teacher saw me and I slid
him under my butt and I just sat there and
the teacher just stared at me. Bell rings and I
just sat there because I couldn't go.

Speaker 3 (14:48):
I want to get up yeah.

Speaker 5 (14:50):
I didn't want to get up, and so finally everybody leaves.
I'm like, well, I gotta go, and I try to
slide my hand underneath and grab and he's like, can
I see what's in your hand?

Speaker 3 (14:58):
And why do you eat him?

Speaker 5 (15:00):
He was why, I mean, I don't know it was
what's up? And I was like, man, I'm busting. I
show it to him. He's like, I could fail you,
or you can come tomorrow. So the day after school
was out, I had to come and help him take
down all their stuff in his classroom. Man, that was bad.

Speaker 3 (15:16):
Yeah that stinks, like they didn't fail you.

Speaker 5 (15:19):
Yeah, but I mean who else. I mean, you get
caught cheating all the time?

Speaker 7 (15:22):
You got cheating, yeah, all the time in college or
high school. That was all My bad stuff was middle school.
I think I just had to get it out of me,
go ahead, And by the time I got to high school,
I was pretty clean. But it was just that, like
when people had cheat sheets, they just go around and
go around, and at that point when it come to
me and be like I'm like, yeah, I give it
a shake, I'd make a big deal out of it,
and teacher totally would see me do it.

Speaker 3 (15:43):
Or or he was the one getting caught with the
chea sheet user the one.

Speaker 7 (15:46):
Time five of us had the exact same tests, like
all the all the answers were the same, and she's
just like you five, like come over here, like why
did you guys get the exact same score? You got
this the right answers right and the wrong answer. It
was very suspicious. Sure enough we all cheated.

Speaker 3 (16:03):
Sure enough.

Speaker 5 (16:03):
Yeah, it's sort of like you have A day and
B day, and so A day would have the same
quizzes as B day and the English class. So they
took it on one day and then oh, tell us answers,
tell us answers, and we knew the answer. So we
went down we wrote down the exact same answers. But
miss Whiteside caught wind of it, and she had switched
number two and three. And if you didn't pay attention,

(16:24):
you wrote down all the answers, and we're likeuck, I'm
glad to see some of you guys actually were like
study study. She goes, no, cheated, I switched two and
three And we're like.

Speaker 2 (16:32):
Oh god, I never cheated off other people, but I
would let people cheat off me for a.

Speaker 7 (16:38):
Price, or I would just do their homework. You would
never just like let them be able to see your
paper on your desk for a price, you're like pay
per view. I had to hustle to make money, and
that's how I made money. At school, I was doing
people's homework.

Speaker 2 (16:54):
But also when I got to like eleventh the twelfth grade,
I was awesome at eleven the twelfth grade stuff because
I was doing people's homework and I was the seventh
eighth grade, so I'd have to learn what they were
doing eleventh, twelfth grade to get my dollar a page.

Speaker 7 (17:05):
It must have been nice being smart. I had to
work to figure it out. Dude, we had a cheat
just to pass school. Man smart. Look how we got here.

Speaker 3 (17:12):
You guys had a touch for the good news, Bobby.

Speaker 2 (17:21):
This guy named Thomas Gray and Idaho is basically it's
not only floating down the river like you guys do
where you get.

Speaker 3 (17:26):
Just get drunk. Not on the tube. Yeah, he's got
tube and with beers. That's fun. In southeast Idaho.

Speaker 2 (17:32):
It's like kind of rapid rivers and he goes and
he hits like a log jam and some rocks he's
thrown from his boat.

Speaker 3 (17:38):
He has to like swim over to the shore.

Speaker 2 (17:40):
But he's so far away from like any road, any people.
His phone doesn't have cell service. And so he spent
two nights there. Well one he was hurt because he
art his leg, couldn't walk too. He was exhausted, and
he dragged his leg about twenty three miles over the
days without food, relying on creaks for hydration. Oh my good,

(18:03):
until he finally ran into some people. You know, at
some point he thought it was over. Maybe, But I mean,
the thing is, he's in Idaho, and yes, that's its
vast wilderness, but it's not like the middle of the
ocean where you know you're not gonna be found, like
probably you're just like on high alert for anybody because
people are constantly through there. But still that sucks to
the people that found Thomas. Great job, the Sheriff's office

(18:25):
awarded them. And I don't know that, dude, if you
have to really want to live to drag your hurt
leg for twenty three miles, and you know what Thomas does, and.

Speaker 3 (18:32):
So do I. You guys that have given up five
minutes in not me. That's what it's all about. That
was tell me something good.

Speaker 2 (18:40):
We're gonna act out three famous movie scenes. The first
one's the easiest is if you can name the movie
Masterpiece theater. Ready, guys, ready, ready. According to my navvy computer,
the shut up. Just shut up, you idiot sheriff. This
is no time to panic. This is the perfect time
to panic. I'm lost.

Speaker 3 (18:56):
They're gonna move from their house in two days, and
it's all your fault, my fault.

Speaker 2 (19:00):
If you hadn't pushed me out the window in the
first place. Oh yeah, well, if you hadn't shown up
with your super little cardboard spaceship and taken away everything
that was important to me. Don't talk to me about
importance because of you. The future of the entire universes
in jeopardy. What are you talking.

Speaker 3 (19:14):
About right now? Poise at the edge of the galaxy?

Speaker 2 (19:16):
Emperors has been secretly building a weapon with the destructive
capacity to annihilate an entire planet. I alone have information
that reveals this weapon's only weakness, and you, my friend,
are responsible for delaying my ronevoo with dark command.

Speaker 3 (19:30):
You are uh ty scene? Wow, can you name that
movie from the nineties? This is the easy one.

Speaker 5 (19:39):
I got it.

Speaker 3 (19:40):
I was so lost for the whole thing until the.

Speaker 5 (19:43):
End, very end. I had no idea.

Speaker 3 (19:47):
Eddie, give me toy story, hunchbox toy story. Got it?

Speaker 7 (19:51):
Yeah, at first I thought maybe die hard like sheriff
thrown out the window balls emperors?

Speaker 3 (19:58):
Did that give you all that? I was like, all right,
this isn't real. All right, one one, let's try number two? Ready,
ray yep?

Speaker 5 (20:05):
All right.

Speaker 2 (20:06):
I assume everyone's time time to complete their poem except
for mister Donner. All right, anyone brave enough to read.
There's a loud bye will Lord, here we go. I
hate the way you talk to me, and the way
you cut your hair. I hate the way you drive
my car. I hate it when you stare. I hate
your big, dumb combat boots and the way you read
my mind. I hate you so much it makes me sick.

(20:28):
It even makes me your rhyme.

Speaker 5 (20:31):
I hate it.

Speaker 3 (20:31):
I hate the.

Speaker 2 (20:32):
Way you're always right. I hate it when you lie.
I hate it when you make me laugh, even worse
when you make me cry. I hate it when you're
not around in the fact you didn't call. But mostly
I hate the way I don't hate you, not even close,
not even a little bit, not even at all.

Speaker 3 (20:50):
See, I think I'm in do you have an idea,
lunch one?

Speaker 5 (21:03):
Yeah, I'm in for the wind Eddie boy.

Speaker 3 (21:06):
I mean context clues. I'm thinking the notebook. Is that
your answer?

Speaker 5 (21:09):
Yes, Lunchbox, well, I mean hate. So I put ten
things I hate about you.

Speaker 3 (21:16):
That is correct, ten things I hate about you. Okay,
I picked the wrong context clues.

Speaker 2 (21:22):
And finally Lunchbox is up one. This is the hardest
of them.

Speaker 3 (21:27):
Here we go. What are you doing?

Speaker 2 (21:31):
Help me?

Speaker 3 (21:32):
The pack's wasted, it's over.

Speaker 5 (21:35):
What's the matter with you?

Speaker 3 (21:36):
You can still do this, Jesus Christ, Listen to yourself.
You're obsessed.

Speaker 2 (21:40):
You've never seen what that thing can do, so don't
even talk to me about it.

Speaker 3 (21:44):
I just saw it.

Speaker 5 (21:45):
You've never seen it. Miss this house and missed that house,
and come after you.

Speaker 3 (21:48):
That what you think it did?

Speaker 2 (21:49):
Jesus, Why can't you just forget it?

Speaker 3 (21:51):
You don't understand. Okay, you never know. Talk to me. Listen.

Speaker 2 (21:55):
Things go wrong, you can't explain it, you can't predict it.
Killing yourself won't bring your dad back. I'm sorry, Die,
that was a long time ago. You gotta move on.
Stop living in the past and look at what you've
got right in front of you.

Speaker 9 (22:06):
See can you name that movie?

Speaker 3 (22:21):
Yeah, I'm in.

Speaker 2 (22:23):
I'm in for the world Watchbox Armageddon and you can
tie it Twister? Correct, what what? Let's go Twister and
we don't have any more scenes. It's just a tie.
We got to kiss each other. Yeah.

Speaker 8 (22:42):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (22:42):
See our main producer, our executive producer, Scuba Steve's Facebook
account has been hacked and taken over.

Speaker 3 (22:49):
He can't get back in.

Speaker 2 (22:50):
He's been like, that's not me because the person is
still living out Scuba Steve's life. So we have some
listeners that are called to share their stories. We have
TJ on the phone right now. TJ, what's going on buddy?
What happened to you? Uh?

Speaker 1 (23:02):
It was my brother's wife. I texted him. I texted
her trying to figure out what was going on with them,
and uh, I got a text later in the day
that says that she was hacked. So I texted the
account to try to talk to him, and they told
me that they wanted a thousand dollars Amazon gift calls
for me to give him a VIA for them to
give me the account log and info back, and they

(23:24):
wanted the money of the front first.

Speaker 2 (23:26):
How would you even trust that if you gave them
the card, they would give it back because, yeah, you
hate to have somebody hold that against you.

Speaker 5 (23:36):
Extortion, I believe, yeah, Bike, No, it's not blake mail extortion.

Speaker 3 (23:40):
So but you have nothing on them because you don't
even know who it is.

Speaker 2 (23:45):
Let's say somebody hacked Lunchboxes the account he's got, Yeah,
you know, a few hundred thousand followers. It might be
worth him giving a couple hundred bucks just going, you
know what, It's not worth the headache. I hate that
it's happening. But how do you know they even give
it back? And they just don't run with your card.
It's not like scammers are honorable or not.

Speaker 3 (24:00):
What did you guys do?

Speaker 1 (24:01):
TJ my brother's wife kept texting Facebook and email and
then calling trying to get the account back, and they
finally gave it back a few months later.

Speaker 2 (24:10):
They did the scammer did or Facebook? It took three
months to get it bout.

Speaker 1 (24:13):
Facebook actually gave it back to it.

Speaker 3 (24:15):
I don't think the scammer gives it back, dude, Why
don't either? Maybe he gets a conscious It's like they
steal a car and he's leave it somewhere. They don't
give it back.

Speaker 2 (24:20):
To you know what I mean, A scammer gets a
conscious that ever happened, Na, TJ.

Speaker 3 (24:25):
We appreciate that story. Have a good day.

Speaker 2 (24:26):
Man. Let's go to Jenny, who is on the phone
right now. Jenny, good morning, Welcome to the Bobby Bone Show.

Speaker 4 (24:32):
So I got hacked over a year ago and SAT
hacker went as far as seeing my spouse's name attached
to my account, and they messaged him asking for six
hundred dollars and they would give me my access back.

Speaker 7 (24:47):
So same kind of deal, like a wow, lost hostage.
Hey can you do like I want my account back?
I know where you live. I have a set of skills.

Speaker 3 (24:56):
Yeah, I will find you. Try that yet, So did
they play this six Did you guys pay it back?

Speaker 4 (25:02):
No? No, we no, we didn't pay it, but say
message everybody asking for money. I ended up running into
like my first grade teacher around town.

Speaker 8 (25:10):
And she was like, are you okay?

Speaker 4 (25:12):
I saw that you needed money? Oh, I just like
it from yeah like twenty thirty years actually yeah, thirty
years ago. I'm like, no, it's a small town. So
she reached out to people, but I'm like, oh my gosh.

Speaker 8 (25:25):
How embarrassing.

Speaker 3 (25:26):
Yeah, it's like at church they're doing a fundraiser for you,
and you're like, oh, no, no, no, no, I'm okay. That's
why I have like nine factor authentication. Nine. Yeah, they
need a text. They have me spitting a cup.

Speaker 2 (25:37):
I stole sample. They get it all before I can
log in. Once I got to give them pretty much
everything interest. Yeah, it's pretty good. I'm in hack sense.
So let's go to Elizabeth. Elizabeth and Louisiana is on
the phone. Elizabeth, what is your story there? Good morning,
thank you for calling.

Speaker 8 (25:49):
So I was can to tell you all by the
time my sister got damned out of five thousand dollars.

Speaker 3 (25:54):
Oh no, go ahead. Oh.

Speaker 8 (25:56):
So it's funny because at the time we were both
one of my moms planned. So I got a phone
call first and they were like this, this is a
Social Security office. There's like a breach on your social
Security number. And I was like, oh, well, that's weird
because y'all don't have recall solay's a letter it says
you're not real. So they got my held up. Then
they called her, Well, she lives in a different town

(26:17):
than me. She's like twenty one at twenty two at
the time, and they told her like she believed them,
so she started giving them information and they told her
that there was a car on the side of the
interstate in Texas with her license plate number. And she's like,
that's impossible. I don't live there, and they're like, well,
it's connected to a crime. So she started panicking. She

(26:38):
was like, well, what do I need to do? So
she they had her convinced that like this mob was
trying to frame her for a crime. She's crying her
eyes out. She loves work. They almost out with them
the whole time. Went and bought five thousand dollars worth
of gift cards and read them the numbers.

Speaker 5 (26:56):
Oh I'm not laughing.

Speaker 3 (27:00):
I'm not laughing as I would totally fall for this.

Speaker 2 (27:01):
I wouldn't fall for it, but I just imagine when
you're reading them the gift cards. The one who's got
a live was like, guys, come listen that you're never
gonna believe it.

Speaker 5 (27:07):
They're and then they have to hit mute so they
don't laugh on the other end.

Speaker 2 (27:10):
So okay, they she reads all the gift cards and
then what happens.

Speaker 8 (27:15):
So they tell her they're going to move it from
like her account to the gift cards to a secure
account and they should be you know, set free. Well,
my mom happened to call her, and so she puts
these people a hold and she's telling my mom my mo.
Mom's like, is the scam hang up? Is a scamp stamp?
But it was too late. So the funniest part, though

(27:37):
it's not funny, is that it was taken out of her.
She used her suit a loan money, but she's still
paying on it, so every month can remember, Oh.

Speaker 7 (27:45):
No, that's not funny, that's not is laughing at her
right now, that's not funny.

Speaker 3 (27:50):
I was never laughing. I hate to hear that. But
if you're laughing all out, like does your sister laugh?

Speaker 8 (27:55):
Now she gets a little like sor about it because
we mentioned it, like for the years.

Speaker 3 (28:01):
Together, you gotta stop doing that.

Speaker 8 (28:04):
We gave up all their money to rate like Reagan did.

Speaker 2 (28:07):
And what kind of gift cards did she send them?

Speaker 8 (28:12):
And it's like target gift cards, best by gift cards,
just like you're run in the middle, get cards you
find out like you know, the gas station or whatever.

Speaker 2 (28:20):
I hate that for her because she was freaking out,
wasn't thinking clearly, she was triggered obviously didn't want to
go to jail. The mobs after us, Forgot's sake, we
all do crazy think the mob was after it. I
totally would have fallen for the Elizabeth, thank you for
the call, and we hope, we hope it never happens
to your sister.

Speaker 5 (28:34):
Yeah, Reagan, I hope you're good.

Speaker 3 (28:36):
Reagan with Auntie prayers. Reagan.

Speaker 2 (28:38):
All right, thank you, Elizabeth. Bye, here's a boy smell
from last night. Hey, this is a red Nick and
Oregon and I got it.

Speaker 9 (28:47):
Morning Corny for Amy?

Speaker 3 (28:49):
Why are chicken so funny?

Speaker 5 (28:54):
I like that?

Speaker 2 (28:55):
So Amy's not here, So I'm geting to the morning
Corny and I have some specially prepared jokes. I've been
sitting on these waiting for my moment to shine. Yeah,
I even have some jvs. When you hear a couple j v's, yeah,
my grandfather used to say, when one door closes, another
one opens, wonderful man, but terrible carpenter.

Speaker 3 (29:16):
Look, hey, JV, knock it down. If I don't get it,
I don't think you get it. I don't get it
at all.

Speaker 2 (29:22):
Listen again, my grandfather used to say, when one door closes,
another one opens, wonderful man, terrible carpenter. Okay, fine, No,
he's what he's saying is my mother used to say,
the way to a man's heartest through his stomach. Wonderful mom,
terrible surgeon.

Speaker 3 (29:36):
Okay, oh man, yeah, these are good. The way to
a man's hearts through his stomach. No, I get it.

Speaker 5 (29:41):
I get it would be more through his chest, right, No,
you guys.

Speaker 3 (29:45):
Never you have a handful of these, what you're about
to do? I should have been penalized because you guys
don't get them.

Speaker 7 (29:52):
Hey, man, the Morning Corny is supposed to be kind
of dumb jokes, you know what I mean?

Speaker 2 (29:56):
Why does scuba divers always fall backwards into the water.
Why if they fell forwards, they would stand the boat
next level? Bobby's Morning Cordy.

Speaker 5 (30:06):
They're making me think anyway, I got some of those,
great man, I can't wait. Can you explain the carboner one?

Speaker 3 (30:13):
Nah, It's okay. Here's Amy's pile of stories.

Speaker 2 (30:20):
Amy's not here today. My name is Bobby. I will
walk you through this. Do you clean before you go
on vacation?

Speaker 3 (30:26):
Yes?

Speaker 2 (30:27):
I don't, but my wife that does, so you you
get the benefits of it.

Speaker 3 (30:30):
Right, I mean, but she's like, hey, guys, we got
to clean the house.

Speaker 7 (30:33):
Before we leave, absolutely, because because when you come back,
you want it to be clean.

Speaker 3 (30:37):
It's like starting fresh when you come back.

Speaker 2 (30:39):
Makes sense. My wife does the same thing. Never really
thought about it like that, I know about myself. I
really didn't have messes anyway, except for like one spot
of the house, and I could easily not go back
to that one spot. But yeah, seventy five percent of
people cleaned before vacation because after getting back from vacation,
you're usually tired. Yeah, and the last thing you want
to do is come back to a dirty house. The

(31:01):
top five things people feel like they must do before
going on vacation. Number one is the laundry, top priority.
Number two is the dishes, and the dishes. I hate
the dishes, but that seems like top priority because food kick.

Speaker 5 (31:11):
It all gross.

Speaker 3 (31:12):
That's got to be number one, because the smell.

Speaker 2 (31:13):
Number three the bathroom. Then number four to sweep, vacuum
and mop. That's from s w NS. Never thought about it,
but it does make sense. It's also why people make
their beds a lot of the time so they can
come back in the beds already made, more so than
making it just for themselves, right then.

Speaker 7 (31:28):
I mean think about it. Can you imagine going in
a hotel room and it just being like left used,
But that's somebody else's used, but say it was yours.
Even when you do like make a mess in your
hotel room and you come back later that.

Speaker 2 (31:38):
Day, they and clean it up so messy. Yeah, I'm
paying for that. I expect that to be like made
up though. O. J. Simpsons driver's license is going up
for auction.

Speaker 3 (31:46):
That's cool. Would you want it?

Speaker 8 (31:48):
No?

Speaker 3 (31:48):
But that's cool like that, that's pretty cool. He died,
by the way, in case your guests forgot.

Speaker 2 (31:53):
But the cards seller, Jonathan Lapour, now what he's doing
because he knows that if he's selling it, he's to
get some backlash. He says he's donating ten percent of
all proceeds to a domestic violence foundation, which is good.

Speaker 3 (32:07):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (32:08):
Smart.

Speaker 2 (32:09):
He told the website that he was initially gonna just
give the card away, but he's like, nah, I'm just
gonna sell it and get rid of it. The license
was issued August of two thousand and seven, about one
month before OJ robbed a Las Vegas sports memorabilia dealer.
That's why ended up getting put in jail, not the earners.

Speaker 3 (32:25):
Correct, he was acquitted of that. The auction ends June sixth,
so you have two days. I'm looking. It's a Florida
driver's license. I'm older. I didn't. I don't see a
price on this, not in this story. Would you want it?
I don't. I mean think about being in a bar, dude,
that would be tough and they would take it from you. No, No,

(32:49):
I bought that. You're making jokes in front of the balancer.
Who cares about the balancer? And I don't know. I
have trouble with some of that stuff. Yeah, criminals get
people that kill people, like painting from Hitler? Have you
ever see those people? Know those?

Speaker 6 (33:01):
No, I don't want that.

Speaker 3 (33:03):
Oh, the current bits two thy four hundred dollars. That's
a lot of money.

Speaker 2 (33:07):
And it has a signature on it. But it's not
his his signature, you know they do the you care
about the signature. An Amazon package was delivered to a
burning home and the Amazon driver did not call nine
one one.

Speaker 3 (33:18):
Oh, he's just completing his route. Man, it's almost as
bad as when they throw my packages in the bushes. Yes, almost.

Speaker 2 (33:24):
Amazon's apologizing after a video shows one of their drivers
delivering a package to a home that was on fire.
The family wasn't there at the time, and the driver
did not call nine to one one. So there's a
service for in garage delivery. They opened, you know, Amazon
goes up, opens the garage door, that puts the package inside.

Speaker 3 (33:39):
Dollar ninety nine. That's what the guy did, and there
was smoke out.

Speaker 7 (33:44):
Like my brother, he worked for FedEx, and he said
that if he didn't finish his route like a certain
amount of time, like it wasn't good and he'd be
backed up and he'd be at work for ten hours.

Speaker 3 (33:53):
So in this guy's mind probably like I've got to go.

Speaker 2 (33:55):
They were looking at some security footage. They saw the
delivery person opened the garage door, deliver package. The door
opens and the driver's walking through smoke. That's not the
package inside. The fire was in the early stages, so
it wasn't like engulfing the house, but it was a
cloud of smoke.

Speaker 3 (34:11):
It looked like a music video from the eighties, I
know called nine on the out man. I hear you.

Speaker 2 (34:22):
What he did to is he put the package down,
he took a picture of it like they do in
the smoke.

Speaker 3 (34:26):
He didn't call nine one one.

Speaker 2 (34:29):
The fire trucks didn't ride for three hours after that.

Speaker 3 (34:34):
The package was destroyed by the fire as well, but.

Speaker 7 (34:37):
He has proof that he dropped it off while it
wasn't destroyed front.

Speaker 5 (34:40):
Of the door.

Speaker 3 (34:41):
You bring up a good point. Maybe the guy thinks
it's like barbecuing or something. That's what was something happening.

Speaker 5 (34:47):
But man, if it's that much.

Speaker 7 (34:48):
Smoke, are you okay to drop off the package? Call
nine one one on the way out and just keep moving. Yes, okay,
so that's okay. He just didn't do that, correct.

Speaker 3 (34:55):
I don't think you have to call and then just
sit there and like maybe get a garden hose or anything.

Speaker 2 (34:59):
There's kind of billowing out. Yeah, you don't have to
fight it yourself. You can call and no, I w
want to move on. But he probably I'm gonna give
them the benefit of doubt. He probably thought, Okay, something's
happening in the alis. It's not my business. I don't
see a fire. Yeah, let's go with that. Let's go
with that. I know a flight attendant was arrested for
what investigators found to be a buttload of gold.

Speaker 3 (35:20):
Literally, she had the gold. She was oh.

Speaker 2 (35:25):
Keystern, Oh, nine hundred and sixty grams of gold and
she was.

Speaker 3 (35:32):
Traveling at Why can't you just check that?

Speaker 5 (35:35):
Yeah, why don't you just bring that on your carry on?

Speaker 3 (35:36):
Is that suspicious to have a bunch of gold?

Speaker 2 (35:38):
It must have been it must have been stolen, or
it must have been not her gold or yeah, I mean,
whatever it was, why not just put in your pocket? Well,
probably because you don't want it to be seen it anyway,
so you just put it in your butt.

Speaker 7 (35:50):
Have you ever seen that movie Maria Full of Grace.
That's where she's like traveling from Columbia to US and
when she has drugs in her yeah, and makes one
of them explodes, really and she only has a certain
amount of time.

Speaker 3 (36:01):
To like, I don't like that.

Speaker 2 (36:03):
Yeah, I don't like that. That's from News nine Live.
But a lot of people must be pulling this off
if it's if that's just the you.

Speaker 7 (36:11):
Know, dude, I'm not doing any of that. How Okay,
let me ask you how much to keist anything?

Speaker 5 (36:18):
Well, it depends what we're talking. Yeah, No, I got
a prize, I got a million dollars.

Speaker 2 (36:23):
Yeah, I'm in I'm calling misys a crazy.

Speaker 3 (36:27):
Right close it up. That was Amy's pile of stories.

Speaker 5 (36:31):
It's time for the good news.

Speaker 10 (36:33):
Ready.

Speaker 7 (36:37):
Marie is a teacher for twenty five years. She lives
in New York and her daughter was like, you need
to sign up for this HGTV giveaway. It's like money.
They give you a free house.

Speaker 3 (36:47):
And all that stuff.

Speaker 7 (36:47):
She's like, no, no, no, I'm not gonna do that.
Finally she's like, fine, I'll just sign up. Leave me alone.
She signs up. Well, a few months later they contact her, You.

Speaker 3 (36:56):
Are the winners. I don't think it was a scam.

Speaker 7 (36:59):
Oh for sure. Listen to what she wants. She want
a dream home in Florida, get home home home in Florida.
On top of that, a check for one hundred thousand
dollars and the Mercedes Benz E class what yeah, but.

Speaker 3 (37:11):
Check this out.

Speaker 7 (37:12):
So then, like what HGTV did, they called her school
and said, all right, get all the teachers, get the principal,
get her daughters together, and we're gonna make her think
that she wants some teacher appreciation thing.

Speaker 3 (37:22):
Get her to the school and then we'll present it.
And they did.

Speaker 7 (37:25):
They did all it, got everyone together, and she was like, wow,
I am a good teacher.

Speaker 3 (37:28):
Now it's not about teaching. That's a massive prize. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (37:33):
Is this only eligible for teachers? I know anyone, man,
I need to start looking into that. I've never heard
of this, and why don't more people tell me about this?
I just signed up one hundred times.

Speaker 7 (37:41):
It's the twenty twenty four HGTV Dream Home competition.

Speaker 3 (37:46):
Imagine winning a house.

Speaker 2 (37:47):
Imagine winning something that we give away, Like we give
away trips and stuff, and sometimes the people that win
will call us and go the trip was awesome, or
we feel like their celebrities dust because we're like, wow,
you actually want It's crazy. They rarely call us after
they win, but we give it away. I just think
it was a scam the whole time. I would be like,
there's no way this is real. But at what point
when you're driving the Mercedes, I guess even after I
sell everything and the money's my account, I'm like, I

(38:08):
don't know about this. No, here it is a smart
Home twenty twenty four dream home. That's what's pretty awesome.
Great story. I love the teacher got it.

Speaker 3 (38:15):
We love teaching. Yes, that is what it's all about.
That was telling me something good.

Speaker 2 (38:20):
If you guys get a minute, go and check out
the Bobby Cast with Zach Williams.

Speaker 3 (38:25):
Zach is a Christian artist. He's really good.

Speaker 2 (38:28):
But his whole story is he was in a rock band,
got on the road, was going way hard, but then
realize that he had a family and he couldn't continue
doing exactly how he was doing it if he was
going to stay healthy and if he was going to
do it for his family, So he quit mid tour.

(38:49):
He went home and he talks about finding God in
a closet, and then he talks about how he got
a record deal after giving up and just playing music
in church. It's a fantastic Bobby Cast. I'm only going
to play up part of it now, but I encourage
you to go check it out. Go search for the
Bobbycast on iHeartRadio and check out the Zach Williams episode.

Speaker 10 (39:08):
Here he is came home from Europe and canceled my shows,
quit my band Christal.

Speaker 3 (39:15):
What did they say?

Speaker 6 (39:16):
They were not happy? It was not good.

Speaker 10 (39:18):
I mean cause we were you know, we were. We
were as good as anybody at that time. We were
doing shows with BlackBerry smoking bands like that, and it
was like we could have been easily about to sign
a record deal, and but I was afraid if I
didn't get out of that band, I was not gonna
make it. And so I came home June tenth, twenty twelve.
My wife was getting our kids ready for school. When

(39:41):
the house was clear, everybody was gone, I walked into
my closet, got the shoes up, cleared them out of
the floor, got on my hands and knees and just said, God,
can you save me? And I said, I'm sick and
tired of being this guy. I don't want to do
this anymore. I don't care if I play music every again.
I just want to be a good husband, good father,
if you can use me, use me. And man, it

(40:01):
was like this weight just instantly lifted, and I was
like hmm, and I felt like God was just kind
of in the closet with me, just saying welcome home.

Speaker 6 (40:08):
And so that was that was where I stopped.

Speaker 10 (40:13):
And so we found a church, started going to this
church in her hometown, and six months into going to
church there, the worship pastor asked me to lead a
song and I sing Redeem for the first time. And
I still on stage that first time. Yeah, still on
stage that time at church for the first time singing
that song, and it was the first time that I

(40:33):
ever felt.

Speaker 6 (40:34):
Comfortable on stage in my own skin.

Speaker 10 (40:36):
There was no performance, there was no look at me, Hey,
I can sing good, look at all the stuff I
can do.

Speaker 6 (40:42):
It was just this emotional thing that I was attached to.

Speaker 10 (40:45):
And I come home until Christ I said, I think
this is what I'm supposed to be doing. And within
the year, the church asked me to come to work
for him part time and help them launch a campus
and become a worship leader. And so I started leading
worship at church, and I started writing songs, and I
was writing Christian music at that like new things, but
I was still writing them in kind of my southern
country kind of way. And I was testing them out

(41:07):
at church on people and playing them, and I was
hearing stories from everybody, and you know, hearing their stories
and sharing my stories. And so I was writing all
these kind of like songs coming out of these places
of my life. And I got invited to Nashville by
a guy named Jonathan Smith, who's a producer here in
town and a songwriter, and he was actually from my hometown.

Speaker 3 (41:28):
How do he find you?

Speaker 6 (41:29):
How did he know who you were.

Speaker 10 (41:30):
And so they come over to visit for Christmas in
twenty fifteen, and.

Speaker 6 (41:38):
I was singing. I was singing, I was leading a
Christmas service.

Speaker 3 (41:41):
They came to visit you or the church.

Speaker 10 (41:42):
They came to visit the church because they were Him
and his wife were both from Jonesboro. Her dad was
a deacon at the church. They were just coming to
visit family. They decided to come to the service. They
see this big, tall guy on stage singing and they're like,
who's that guy. We don't know who that guy is.
Jonathan takes me to coffee. He's like, what's your He's like,
you don't sing like that without a story. I tell

(42:02):
him my story. He says, well, come over, won't we
come to w once you come to Nashville and write
some music. And so a few months later I started
coming over and staying the weekend with him and we
would write songs, and out of that, out of that
six month time period, we wrote chain Breaker and Fear's
a Liar and all these songs that became my first album.
And and while all that was going on, I was

(42:26):
still working at the church and the record label here
in town. Sony Provident heard the demo for chain Breaker
and called me and offered me a record deal off
of that demo.

Speaker 6 (42:36):
What do you mean they heard it? Like, how did
they get it?

Speaker 10 (42:38):
Who? So I was coming over all the time and
they were seeing me in the offices, the studios were
there that we were writing in, and eventually somebody was like,
who's the who's the tall guy that's coming over here
all the time that's writing with you? And he's like,
oh this you know this guy name Issact that I'm
writing with. He's a worst leader in Arkansas, you know,
just been writing some music and and the and our

(42:59):
guy at the label was like, well.

Speaker 6 (43:01):
Let me hear some of the songs. So he sends
them some songs and.

Speaker 10 (43:04):
They flip out over him and play him for the
whole staff meeting. And when the president of the label
heard it, they called me. On a Wednesday, I was
getting ready to lead a college worship service at church
and called me in said hey, we want to offer
your record deal. I was thirty eight years old, have
been playing music for twenty years of my life, trying

(43:24):
to kick the door in to get a record deal,
and then I finally had stopped trying to get it,
and I was just doing.

Speaker 6 (43:30):
What I felt like I was supposed to be doing.
That's when it came. And then it falls in my lap.

Speaker 10 (43:34):
And I'm still working part time at the church, still
hearing people talk about how great these songs are, and
I'm kind of in the back of my mind going,
I don't know if I can go out and do
this again, Like, I don't know if I want to
do this. I just want to be a songwriter. And
so I have a meeting and they're like, man, like,
nobody's going to sing these songs the way that you
sing them, so you should probably think about this. I
don't want to lose my train of thought.

Speaker 2 (43:53):
But were you thinking you couldn't do it because or
you shouldn't do it because of your past experience of
doing it.

Speaker 10 (43:58):
Yeah, I was just thinking I didn't know if I
wanted to go back and get on the road and tour,
and I just didn't I didn't know if I yeah,
And so yeah, after talking about it for a while
and meeting with different people in Nashville, and I signed
my record deal and I was still working at the church,
living in Arkansas, and one of my first big tours

(44:18):
was Chris Tomlins worship night in America, and he put
me out singing chain Breaker every night and we were
I mean, it was awesome, and I was like, I
might be able to do this and make a living.
And I remember sitting in Florida at a radio programmers
conference with my booking agent and I was still living
in Arkansas. I was on that tour and I said, man,

(44:40):
I just want to be able to make enough money
to live. Can you guys figure that out? Help me
do that. If we can do that, I'm happy. And
wasn't long after that church I was working at let
me play a concert. They sent me away with a
big chunk of money to helped me get insurance for
a year and pay my rent. And I left out
and went on tour and it's been ever since.
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