Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:02):
Show, Bobby Boom, all right, I appreciate all the part
tours for being here on the podcast part of the show.
The Karen Reid trial was yesterday. I wrapped up yesterday.
She was found not guilty. Although my wife the day
before did get me in the trend of did you
hear Karen Reid's guilty? She has a video of me
going what, no, no, really and then she starts laughing.
But that's the TikTok trend. The day before it came out,
(00:23):
everyone would do the vid Karen Reid was guilty, and
it's everybody being disgusted. What but yeah, I got got
I'm working. I was sitting on my computer at at
the bar and I was just and she goes, wow,
Karen Reid found guilty. And it was also like six pm,
Like what am I thinking? The jury's not deliberating and
coming to the judge at six pm? They're coming the
next morning, but I'm like no. It was like that
(00:45):
video trend where Taylor Swift died. People would be like
Taylor Swift dead at thirty four and you'd see adult
men go what they'd be like fifty three? Do you
guys see these trends? That am I the only one
that are you guys even on TikTok Mike Morgan, you've
seen him, right, yeah? Okay, I mean hey us, the
young ones, we've seen them your crew.
Speaker 2 (01:04):
Yes. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:05):
She was recquorted to murder. Good she didn't do it.
Karen Reid was clear of murder charges yesterday and the
death of her boyfriend, Boston police officer John O'Keefe. A
jury founder not guilty of second degree murder and other
serious charges. She was convicted of drunk driving. That drunk
driving charge is kind of weird too, because when they
tested her blood alcohol the they did it the next
day and they just guessed based on what she was
(01:28):
the next day. There was no real take and have.
There was a we'll take it hours and hours later
and just guesstimate what you were then, because it wasn't
like they pulled her over and yeah, so I bet
She's like, yep, do you mine me up, baby, I'll
take it all day. All those folks were driving drunk,
all those cops were driving drunk. She got one year
(01:48):
probation for the drunk driving charge. Prosecutors said she hit
o keep for their car and left him to die.
In a snowstorm January twenty twenty two. It was weird
how they announced the verdict. And there's a new Bobby
cast up today where I talk about this. The Commonwealth
first of all, the fact they call themselves the Commonwealth
and shout out to everybody in Massachusetts as people love you.
(02:10):
Your state does weird stuff when it comes to the
judicial system. First of all, it's the Commonwealth versus Karen Reid.
Got it in Louisiana. They don't have counties. Do you
know what they have?
Speaker 3 (02:21):
Oh oh oh oh oh dang.
Speaker 1 (02:24):
Where are you from Louisiana somehow?
Speaker 4 (02:25):
Yeah, Texas and Alabama. It's family moved there and so
we'd visit. But yeah, I drive through Louisiana every time
I go to Alabama, and it's like a parish.
Speaker 1 (02:38):
Exactly, thank you. Because of its unique historical and cultural
backgrounds a former French and Spanish colony, they are called parishes.
But the Commonwealth is weird. So fine, But they were
announcing the verdict yesterday and they were like fortsarth tooth
see it guilty, not guilty, verdict.
Speaker 2 (02:56):
Just juror was like, huh what does that mean?
Speaker 1 (03:00):
And then finally not guilty Foreman, do you say it?
Hold on, Yeah, not guilty. It was just bizarre, weird,
just do what they do on TV A second degree murder.
Not guilty, got it. It just felt it was clunky.
Speaker 2 (03:18):
I feel like I should wear wigs.
Speaker 1 (03:20):
Maybe that's what it is. They're so attached that their
identity is so attached to colonial America and that is
a big part of it. Boston tea party, Boston massacre
tea party. Yeah, I didn't really Boston. Jeff Thomas Jefferson
probably was there. But yeah, they're so attached to that.
Speaker 2 (03:37):
Maybe they have to.
Speaker 1 (03:37):
They keep a lot of that for that reason. It's
like why the royal family still exists. Yeah, because they
really don't have any power or in England when they
go to the courts, like the lawyers and the judges,
they wear wigs.
Speaker 2 (03:49):
Yeah, it's weird. It's so weird because I mean they've
been doing that for what thousands of years?
Speaker 1 (03:54):
They wear like the George Washington wigs in court. Now,
so she is not guilty rock and roll and now
hopefully she doesn't get sued civilly because here's the fear
that they are so attached to it being her, that
they're not going to open up and go we wonder
who it was, do you know why, because it's probably
one of them.
Speaker 3 (04:13):
That's could be.
Speaker 4 (04:15):
I might be friends with the only person ever right
now that thinks she's guilty. Really, yes, like my vest
or from high school. She texted me yesterday like so annoyed.
She just texted me, I cannot believe they found her
not guilty. She definitely clipped her voice from while driving
drunk and angry and then left in there. She's pretty awful,
brilliant defence team.
Speaker 1 (04:35):
Well, to be fair, in the last trial she was
also found not guilty, but they wouldn't take the charges separately.
The jurors in the last one said, we found her
not guilty, but we couldn't go not guilty on all three.
We were hung on one of them, so they had to
hang the whole jury. The whole jury was hung. So
that's two trials in a row that she was found
not guilty.
Speaker 3 (04:53):
Yeah, I know, I'm just telling you.
Speaker 4 (04:56):
She's so passionate about it's your friend at cop in Boston.
So here let me tell you this part. I replied, Okay, yes, maybe,
but also like if that's the case, then why are
the police acting so shady, and she said, because it's
Boston cops and they think they run everything. If they
would have investigated properly, she'd be in jail. She's free
because they are idiots and honestly, they should all be
(05:17):
convicted of drinking and driving. All were caught on tape.
My uncle and cousin are both Boston police detectives, and
they think she did it, but all agree she wouldn't
go to jail because of the blank, crappy police work.
And I go crazy, she had big time. I said,
I love your perspective, and she goes, it's just cut
and dry to me. You can read it into all
the conspiracy, which I typically love. But those cops are
(05:38):
too dumb to keep stories straight. And she's a psychogealous person.
She lost her boop and hit him, probably too drunk
to realize it right away, but definitely started to realize
it throughout the night. You can tell by her psychotne
and the voicemail where it turns to her putting the
guilt on him.
Speaker 1 (05:52):
She goes, I'm doing with your friend.
Speaker 3 (05:54):
Well, that's it, that's it, You're lucky, you're done. Yeah,
But I guess I'm just saying, that's the only person
I know, like everybody else I know has.
Speaker 5 (06:05):
Well, did you hear what she said in that?
Speaker 1 (06:07):
Well, I think you know Karen Reid and think the
Karen Reid's awful and is psycho. And that doesn't mean
she murdered anyother Yeah, because she was. I would be
her friend. She has family, their cops and of course
a friend her family. Cops are gonna be like, that's
what we lose sting with the cops.
Speaker 4 (06:21):
Well, no, I think she still thinks the cops are
idiots too.
Speaker 1 (06:24):
But yeah they are. But there's just too many things
that they did.
Speaker 3 (06:27):
I know, it's so weird.
Speaker 1 (06:28):
There's like nine shady things. If there was one, I
could understand it, maybe two. You're like, Okay, the guy
broke his SIM card into three parts and dropped it
into different because I could convince myself that he did
that because there was other stuff on the phone that
had other cases that he didn't want to know in
a vacuum. I'm like, you know, it does seem shady,
(06:50):
but I can wait and go. It absolutely does not
mean that it frees her. Okay, But then you go, well,
there were like four experts that said, the lacerations on
his face and how he fell and the how the
car that that couldn't have happened, like based on every
(07:12):
single thing that we learned in uh not biology. What
was the other one we took, not chemistry, oh, forensicsics.
Speaker 2 (07:22):
The other science classic chemistry, biology, physics, physics.
Speaker 1 (07:26):
Based on all the physics, there's no way his body
would have ended up like that if that was exactly
how he was hit. Also the glass.
Speaker 3 (07:33):
It's funny. I never took physics up the.
Speaker 1 (07:35):
Level I can remember the name of it, so I
definitely wasn't good at it. Just too many the dog
bite on the arm, them tearing their their their carpet up,
Jim carpet up, selling the hat. There's just like eighty
four different things that happened that in a vacuum. Individually,
you could go, okay, it's like Epstein. Any of those
(07:57):
one you're like, okay, the camera went out. But when
two cameras go out and two guards go to sleep
and they just take him off suicide watch, like all
at the same time and he ends up dead, that's
too many things happening at the same time. That doesn't
make it a coincidence.
Speaker 2 (08:14):
Did they ever talk about what was going on in
the house, Like, did they ever get down to why
he went in and she didn't.
Speaker 1 (08:20):
Well, they don't know for sure because there are different reports.
Some people say that he never came in. I watched
one guy I had a real long beard. I watched
him last night, say they were having a swingers party.
Now that was just some guy in TikTok talking act
like he knew.
Speaker 2 (08:32):
Oh he wasn't on the stands.
Speaker 1 (08:33):
No, no, no, Yeah.
Speaker 4 (08:36):
That's the one I've heard too, is that she they
went and they were going to go in, but then
they were like, wait, what's really going on in there?
So she's like, go in there and check it out
and let me know, because I don't know that they
wanted to she wanted to swing. But then later when
she's calling him a pervert on the phone, she's thinking
he stayed in there to swing or something.
Speaker 1 (08:56):
And there's also the charges, the accusations that the kid,
the nephew whatever, was like selling drugs and that's why
his fists or there was a fight in the house.
There are just so many things. The defense did a
great job, but the defense in her first trial wasn't
a dream team that she grabbed all the greatest lawyers
forever that have existed. It wasn't like there were those
(09:19):
are people that came and said, Okay, you're being underserved
here and we're gonna come and jump in and prove
you didn't do it. And they did. They just hold
the jury because they it's probably the dui charged, so
twice she was found not guilty. Anyway, I'm glad it's over.
I'm tired of thinking about it. It's all on my feet.
And also it just makes me mad because people that
(09:39):
don't have resources, people that don't have money, There are
a lot of them in jail that didn't do it
because of cover ups ye that are very similar to this,
Like think about it. There are people in jail all
over the country right now because they don't have the resources,
and that sucks.
Speaker 2 (09:55):
And she didn't pay Alan Jackson right like he.
Speaker 1 (09:57):
Was second time. She didn't. Second time they agreed to
do it for free, and they're like, we're doing it
because we want to see the justice is served. And
I'm like, you're doing because you're gonna be able to
get hundred TV shows and but who cares.
Speaker 3 (10:08):
Get paid for that documentary?
Speaker 2 (10:10):
I don't know, or maybe just the exposure.
Speaker 3 (10:13):
I mean there's because people are to hire Alan Jackson.
Speaker 1 (10:16):
She can't write a book. Really, she needs to make
some money.
Speaker 6 (10:20):
So that's what I'm saying. Like, how, now, where does
she go from here? Because when she goes applies for
an office.
Speaker 1 (10:24):
Job, she will never apply for an office shop.
Speaker 5 (10:26):
No, you're not going to work in here.
Speaker 3 (10:28):
What did she do?
Speaker 1 (10:29):
I don't mean she did analytics?
Speaker 2 (10:41):
Did she work in like? I don't know, I don't remember.
Speaker 3 (10:43):
That has been lost.
Speaker 1 (10:44):
And she was an adjunct professor at Bentley University teaching finance.
She also worked as an equity analyst at Fidelity Investments.
She was fired from both positions after her arrest. Justice
for Karen read, oh fire, Dad was in money? Okay
remember the documentary.
Speaker 3 (11:00):
No, I didn't remember that part at all, Like that
escaped me.
Speaker 2 (11:04):
But minor details.
Speaker 3 (11:05):
Yeah, so she could there's work she could do.
Speaker 1 (11:08):
It won't be in that She's not going to set
it into a spreadsheet. She will have one hundred opportunities. Well,
and she could go speak. She's just be on speaking
to her making one hundred grand a pop, if not
for the next couple of years, more than that and
that'll probably normalize into fifty seventy thousand dollars.
Speaker 4 (11:23):
Okay, that makes me curious, like what is someone who
she's speaking to?
Speaker 2 (11:28):
Like, what are anyone?
Speaker 3 (11:30):
Well not anyone?
Speaker 4 (11:31):
Yeah, right, Like someone brings her in, Like there's going
to be a purpose?
Speaker 1 (11:34):
What is it? Like?
Speaker 3 (11:34):
What's it? What is the is it?
Speaker 4 (11:37):
Resilience, perseverance, don't give up on yourself?
Speaker 1 (11:40):
All I assume she'll get an agent and they will
start to identify what she can speak about and actually
be educated on.
Speaker 2 (11:52):
Yeh or the.
Speaker 1 (11:53):
Education she's gotten through this process, gotcha? But yeah, all
that also of our guess investments.
Speaker 2 (11:59):
Sure, money finances, but.
Speaker 1 (12:01):
I'm sure the system, how rigged the system is, I'm
sure she could do a podcast and make a ton
of money, probably more doing a podcast and doing a book.
Speaker 4 (12:12):
Maybe she could because she has so much exposure. She
could dedicate some of her time or her life to
helping others.
Speaker 1 (12:21):
That both they don't have any media exclusive you can
make money and also help others.
Speaker 3 (12:25):
Oh exactly, Yes, That's why I said some of her time.
Speaker 1 (12:28):
But you can even take the time that you're making
money to help others the.
Speaker 2 (12:32):
Goal right there? Huh, that's the goal right there.
Speaker 1 (12:34):
Sure Amanda Knox is public speaking mm hmm, Like she
speaks all the time. That's probably how she makes a
lot of her money.
Speaker 2 (12:41):
And then she trying to be a lawyer to she's
a lawyer now right.
Speaker 1 (12:44):
She does mediathics and she does justice reform. I don't
know if she's an actual lawyer, Mike, can you see
if she's a lawyer, but I know she speaks on
that like like basically what she went through now hers
was in Italy. Amanda Knox is not a lawyer. You're
spreading fake news and probably in what I just told you,
she's trying to be like, no, that's Kim Kardashian.
Speaker 2 (13:04):
No, there was someone that.
Speaker 1 (13:06):
She's become an advocate for criminal justice reform and wrongful convictions.
She does not have a law degree or practice law.
She is primarily known for her own case where she
was wrongly convicted a murder and later exonerated. She has
leveraged her experiences to become an author, podcaster for a
public speaker.
Speaker 4 (13:21):
There you go, Okay, so that that could be a
career path for Karen, but not lawyer.
Speaker 1 (13:27):
She'll have a winfall of money in the next year
and then it'll come and then she'll know how to
investate pretty regularly for the next five or six years.
Monica Lewinsky still speaks, and she didn't do anything wrong.
She didn't eve get accused of doing anything wrong because
Karen Reid didn't do anything. I guess she duied. So, yeah,
she did something wrong. But if you have notoriety, you
(13:48):
can speak on something because something happened to you, good
or bad, something that you learned from, something that you
can teach people about. Absolutely, Monica Lewinsky might be a lawyer.
I don't know that that's true. But now you have
me searching thinking.
Speaker 2 (14:00):
Of them, thinking of someone that got arrested and then
wrongly convicted. And then now they're like, isn't that book
you read that mercy? I don't know.
Speaker 1 (14:14):
Anna Klownski a lawyer.
Speaker 2 (14:15):
Mike by any chance, he's not a lawyer.
Speaker 5 (14:16):
Yeah, well, Kim Kardashian.
Speaker 1 (14:20):
Kind of a lawyer, not a lawyer, kind of not
a lawyer.
Speaker 5 (14:25):
She passed some tests, I said.
Speaker 1 (14:27):
Like four times. Yeah, not Kardashian. She's not a lawyer.
She has not she's not passed the test she completed.
Speaker 2 (14:36):
She completed.
Speaker 1 (14:36):
That's not that's not. That's not the bar.
Speaker 2 (14:38):
The wet bar, that's also bar.
Speaker 1 (14:40):
She completed a four year like law office study program.
Speaker 3 (14:44):
Like palegal type of thing.
Speaker 1 (14:46):
I don't know the difference really, so I don't want
to insult anyone, but that is not the bar. She
has not taken the bar. She took like a basically
a practice s A.
Speaker 3 (14:53):
T oh okay.
Speaker 1 (14:57):
She passed the Multi State Professional Responsibility Exam, a required
test for bar admission in several US jurisdictions. So that's
what's the baby bar. It's like taking the baby sat
or baby act.
Speaker 3 (15:11):
I called it mini.
Speaker 1 (15:12):
Yeah, no, no, you said baby Eddie said Minnie.
Speaker 2 (15:14):
I think she said many. Oh you said I said
what bar said?
Speaker 1 (15:17):
He said there was some sort of elevation that was funny.
Speaker 5 (15:20):
Uh yeah.
Speaker 1 (15:21):
So Karen Reid Karen Reid not a jew, not a lawyer.
I don't know. She might be Jewish. How old Karen read?
No way?
Speaker 2 (15:32):
What's that her age?
Speaker 1 (15:33):
Mike, there's no way that's right. That can't be right.
How old Karen read amy.
Speaker 3 (15:38):
Forty five?
Speaker 2 (15:39):
A nono? They're older?
Speaker 1 (15:40):
I thought Karen read out of guest are like forty six?
Speaker 2 (15:43):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (15:43):
Same, that can't be right. She's fifty okay, good, we
googled it. She's forty five? Is that sixty five?
Speaker 2 (15:50):
Okay?
Speaker 1 (15:51):
And that was like bro's right, plastic surgeries. We didn't
get hers because she's crushing it.
Speaker 2 (15:56):
That's what she's not, right. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (15:57):
Yeah, what about turtle boy? He wrote, turtle boy, think
about it. Turtle boy not a.
Speaker 2 (16:06):
Lawyer, That's what I was thinking. Who's turtle boy? Come on,
no clue.
Speaker 1 (16:12):
The guy that started doing it online started talking about
the Karen Reid case as well.
Speaker 2 (16:17):
Oh turtle boy, Yeah, I mean it was first case.
He was. He was the one that got all the attention.
And I will give credit to Amy. Amy is the
one that brought to us. We would have never really, don't.
Speaker 4 (16:27):
I think eventually you would have caught on to it,
because then it got big.
Speaker 3 (16:31):
I just happened to have a friend tell me.
Speaker 2 (16:32):
If you did it before everyone else though, you're like,
there's this body in the snow, dug.
Speaker 4 (16:36):
Well, my friend said her group of friends it was
like a challenge to all watch it, and they weren't
sharing their perspective because they wanted they didn't want to
influence each other. And so then that's what I brought
to us of like we should watch it and not
share and then see what we think.
Speaker 3 (16:49):
But anyway, she.
Speaker 2 (16:50):
Was guilty to me immediately.
Speaker 1 (16:52):
She has a guilty face. Yeah, guilty face is guilty
face for sure.
Speaker 2 (16:56):
Just like, man, this this woman's odd.
Speaker 1 (16:59):
Yeah, just looking at are you root against her? But
then you're like, you know, I don't think she did it.
Then you get mad at the system because the system's
uglier than any person can seem. I'm not to talk
about physically, but the system when it's against somebody, it
almost doesn't matter who that person is, how they act,
if they're stiff and waiters or waitresses, you're still like,
I vote for them. Yeah, that's it. Let's start with that, Amy.
(17:22):
What do you have over there?
Speaker 4 (17:23):
The Dallas Cowboy cheerleaders got a four hundred percent pay rose.
Speaker 2 (17:28):
They were good for the team.
Speaker 1 (17:29):
Wasn't really about paying That job was never really about
making money. That's almost like a prestige job.
Speaker 3 (17:36):
Yeah, it's like an honor to be chosen and selected
as a Dallas count.
Speaker 1 (17:40):
That's what I always thought it was. So what were
they making?
Speaker 4 (17:42):
Like they were making around fifteen to twenty dollars an hour,
and now they revealed this on their Netflix series America
Sweethearts officially back as of yesterday, seventy five dollars an
hour for veterans, and then like new.
Speaker 1 (17:58):
People they served in the war, they're also.
Speaker 3 (18:01):
No just they've been on the team before.
Speaker 1 (18:04):
I wonder when those hours count though, Do those hours
count of practice? Do those hours counted events? Or is
it only the hours during game?
Speaker 4 (18:09):
I think it's got to count as good good question,
but I would assume it counts as practices. And then
I think they get like a lump sum for like
a game and appearances are different, but it's got to
be like any work you're doing around it.
Speaker 1 (18:24):
So they don't get paid by the hour for games.
Speaker 3 (18:27):
Let me see it says here.
Speaker 4 (18:29):
Previously they were reportedly making fifteen to twenty dollars an
hour and five hundred per game.
Speaker 1 (18:34):
I a lot. They count hours by tracking their time
dedicated rehearsals, games, appearances, and other activity. So it's all hourly.
Speaker 4 (18:39):
Okay all but then but they do get a per
game like month on top of it. Yes, five hundred
dollars per game.
Speaker 2 (18:48):
I wonder if you can make like the practice squad
and not play the game.
Speaker 1 (18:52):
Well, you know, it's not so much a practice squad
like football, as it is like when a jury has
an extra person.
Speaker 7 (19:00):
M hm.
Speaker 2 (19:02):
You like, so like they practice with everyone, but then
well the juror goes down.
Speaker 1 (19:06):
Well, no, they have the rule like an understall team. Sure,
if you want a Broadway at sure, but no, we
don't have to learn like a specific person's role. An
understudy would learn a specific person's role.
Speaker 3 (19:15):
Gotcha that that's a good point.
Speaker 1 (19:17):
So just steer back up like an alternate, an alternate juror.
So you're an alternate. If Tracy goes down, Monica, you're
in just waiting. Yeah, I would assume like you.
Speaker 2 (19:28):
Yeah you.
Speaker 1 (19:30):
Dallas Cowboy cheerleaders have recently secure to four hundred percent
pay increased, resulting in veteran cheerleaders making more than seventy
five dollars an hour. Prior to this, they were making
twenty bucks per hour or five hundred a game. So
they're not making the lump anymore. It's all seventy five
bucks an hour, which is more money.
Speaker 3 (19:46):
It says.
Speaker 4 (19:47):
The new pay structure also includes increased compensation for game
days and promotional events.
Speaker 1 (19:51):
Yeah, they make more money because they're there are more
hours than the five hundred would have paid that, Okay,
I literally don't care. I was just like, look, I.
Speaker 2 (19:58):
Mean Jerry's dealing with that negotiation.
Speaker 4 (20:01):
I think his daughter does I believe it, Charlie Yah, Yeah,
I still her In the documentary.
Speaker 1 (20:07):
The Daughter thirty six women on the team, it seems.
Speaker 4 (20:11):
Grueling, quite honestly, to be the one A lot of work,
and I don't know if grueling is the term.
Speaker 1 (20:18):
Would It seems like they really want.
Speaker 2 (20:20):
To do it. I mean there was a whole like
I mean, I'm.
Speaker 1 (20:22):
Not saying it's not hard.
Speaker 2 (20:23):
There's a difference, Okay, Like the trailers I've seen, the're
like crying, like.
Speaker 1 (20:27):
That's a tryout, right.
Speaker 8 (20:29):
I watched the first episode last night, and it gets
kind of sad that people who come back who have
been trying to make it for years, you feel bad
for them.
Speaker 1 (20:37):
Grueling is when you don't want to do it and
you still have to get through it. I feel like
that would be a definition of grueling. Hard work that sucks.
It's hard work, but it's also awesome because you get
to be a Dallas Cowboy cheerleader.
Speaker 4 (20:50):
Okay, So the exact definition of grueling is extremely tiring
and demanding.
Speaker 1 (20:56):
Negative connotation on grueling though, Okay, so give me the
word then, I mean, like it's well, I'm not the
word police, so I really can't. But I would say
I just want the right word. That one works. You
can have Groulingling feels negative, like you don't want to
do it and you still have to do it.
Speaker 3 (21:13):
Okay, I see what you're saying.
Speaker 1 (21:15):
Where these people want to be, they're dying to be
done with a cowboy cheerleader.
Speaker 4 (21:17):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (21:18):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (21:18):
So is it taxing?
Speaker 7 (21:19):
No?
Speaker 5 (21:20):
Sure, Oh, TAXI might be good, I.
Speaker 2 (21:24):
Think and that thought the plane goes around the tarmac.
Speaker 1 (21:26):
That's tax tax Wait, Mike, literally none of the matters.
I wouldn't fight for any of this.
Speaker 3 (21:32):
I haven't watched the first ep. It was it good?
Speaker 1 (21:35):
I like it.
Speaker 3 (21:36):
Okay, I do too.
Speaker 4 (21:37):
I'm saving I'm I'm gonna save it up to when
I can watch more other things that are grueling.
Speaker 9 (21:45):
Oh.
Speaker 3 (21:46):
I think people that have to do fill in potholes grueling.
Speaker 2 (21:50):
In the hot summer suns grueling.
Speaker 4 (21:53):
Or like road construction taxing, Like I see, there's been
a lot of work around where I live right now,
and I'm like, that'sling.
Speaker 1 (22:00):
I would also say grueling has to do with physical
So I think taxing has to do with mental taxing,
because I think when you do your taxes, you're thinking
about it.
Speaker 5 (22:13):
Seeing definition is physically or mentally demanding.
Speaker 4 (22:16):
Yeah, I think being a Dallas cowboy cheer later is that.
I think it's physically mentally demanding.
Speaker 2 (22:21):
Amy's talking about construction. There's some of my house too,
And like early in the day, I'll see the people
you know that say stop, they turn down the signs
to stop and go or whatever, like I wave to them.
They're all friendly, and then later in the day come by,
they're just like exhausted, like theyre did not want to
be there. You can just tell that's so hard for
them just to stand there, and they're not really evening
(22:42):
the sign.
Speaker 1 (22:42):
I drove up yesterday to one and they had stop
on and I sat there for three or four minutes
because I could see the backo that was right on
the side of the road that was digging, and so
I'm just waiting. I'm not in a hurry, and they
have stop and I keep waiting and I wait for
five seven minutes, and then finally the looks at me
and goes. I just turn around to get out of here,
and I was like, I just have for five or
(23:03):
seven minutes, and now you're telling me to leave or
you're never get to set me through.
Speaker 2 (23:07):
That's a long time. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (23:09):
I wasn't in a hurry, but then I would like
to go through.
Speaker 2 (23:11):
What if you hurry tho?
Speaker 1 (23:12):
They just decided you can't even go through? Just turn
around and go man, like tell me that at the beginning.
Let me find an alternate route to begin with.
Speaker 2 (23:18):
Well, their jobs taxing, so be patient.
Speaker 3 (23:21):
It's grueling.
Speaker 2 (23:21):
Grueling.
Speaker 3 (23:23):
I found the word. I found the word for the cheerleaders.
Speaker 1 (23:26):
You can have any word you want all I was
associated with. What if I were using the word grueling
would would not be a word I would use for
the Dallas Cowboy cheerleaders.
Speaker 4 (23:33):
And I agree with you now that we've talked it through. Okay, man,
it's very rigorous.
Speaker 1 (23:38):
I agree with that training process. Rigorous.
Speaker 3 (23:42):
There we go. We found I knew we'd get there, guys, rigorous.
It just takes banter.
Speaker 2 (23:48):
Yeah, this is like hard, right heart and tough.
Speaker 1 (23:51):
I bet you somebody will read the definition for us.
Speaker 4 (23:53):
Oh one second, please, I shall, I shall, guys, I
got it.
Speaker 3 (23:58):
Don't worry.
Speaker 4 (23:59):
Rigorous coming at you extremely tough, exhaustive, and hard or accurate.
Speaker 1 (24:10):
I hate when a definition you look it up, it's
like rigorous to be full of rigor.
Speaker 7 (24:16):
Down.
Speaker 1 (24:18):
They just lead you on a breadcrumb trail to a
different one.
Speaker 4 (24:20):
Oh, it doesn't even say tough, it's as thorough. The
problem is I can't read.
Speaker 1 (24:24):
And I don't like them borrow exhaustive or accurate. Yeah
you couldn't.
Speaker 3 (24:29):
No, I didn't have them on. That's the problem.
Speaker 4 (24:30):
I don't like wearing them that then I can't see.
Like the last night, I'm trying to read a bottle
to see how much sugar was in it, and I
literally could not see it.
Speaker 3 (24:37):
But on my glasses I could see it perfectly. Fifteen grams.
Speaker 1 (24:40):
It's like it's no contexts.
Speaker 3 (24:42):
No, it's just for reading smaller letters. And like, just
now that.
Speaker 1 (24:46):
Your eyes is going bad, so maybe we're contacts. I
don't know.
Speaker 3 (24:50):
Do you get contexts for reading glasses?
Speaker 2 (24:52):
Not that I know what I'm saying.
Speaker 1 (24:54):
Isn't it bigger than just reading? It feels like it's
if you just can't read letters.
Speaker 4 (24:57):
I can read letters if there are certain size. It's
when they're a smaller print that I struggle So.
Speaker 1 (25:05):
Isn't that your eyes getting worse though? Just in general?
Speaker 3 (25:08):
Yeah, I don't know, Bobby. I just went to the
eye doctor.
Speaker 4 (25:10):
In the definition, please, I went to the eye doctor
and they said this is what I needed, reading glasses.
They didn't say anything about contexts because I mean.
Speaker 1 (25:18):
Overall, like get a monocle.
Speaker 2 (25:20):
Oh, let's bring that back the one lens.
Speaker 1 (25:24):
But it is like the chain from her pocket, like right.
Speaker 4 (25:27):
Now it says some word under it, like that's a
similar word, a synonym, and I can't.
Speaker 1 (25:33):
See what it is. I'll have a synonym roll.
Speaker 4 (25:38):
Please, Okay, So now i'd put on the glasses meticulous nice.
Oh no, I'm saying it's a synonym torigor I get it, lunchbox.
Speaker 5 (25:50):
You listen to here, brother, I'm not dying.
Speaker 6 (25:53):
There's all these rumors that Hulk Hogan is dying. On
his last breath, he said, I'm just in the hospital
for a little back issue.
Speaker 5 (25:59):
Don't worry about me.
Speaker 6 (26:00):
I'm alive.
Speaker 5 (26:00):
I'm well, so don't bury me yet.
Speaker 1 (26:02):
Brother. I saw the headline that the hul Cogan's not dead.
I never saw the headline that Hulkogan might be dead.
I think this is the Hull Cogan created story.
Speaker 5 (26:12):
That's what it is.
Speaker 1 (26:13):
I never saw the Hull Cogans waits rush to the hospital.
Never he was I don't know, had some kind of surgery.
Speaker 4 (26:19):
Do you think maybe he had the surgery and let's
turn it into this maybe I'm dead.
Speaker 3 (26:23):
Yes, okay, because I never like wrestlers, this is your sting.
Speaker 2 (26:26):
That could be kind of fun.
Speaker 1 (26:27):
Like once I sent a letter to hol cogaan and
I thought he was hurt for real when I was
a kid and got a postcard back. He just went
off shoot a movie. But in wrestling he got hurt.
So I sent a letter because they said you can
send a Hull Coogan letter to the hospital, and I did.
I got a postcard back.
Speaker 2 (26:38):
That's cool.
Speaker 1 (26:39):
Yeah, I was nineteen anyway last year.
Speaker 5 (26:44):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (26:44):
I think that this is just the Hogan team creating
this story after the fact, because I never saw anybody
thinking Hulkgan was dying. I only saw the story Hulkogan's
not dead.
Speaker 6 (26:55):
I'm with you because I'm I was like, I guess
I missed it, and I'm that's crazy that.
Speaker 5 (26:58):
People thought he was there.
Speaker 6 (26:59):
But sometimes on Twitter, people do start trending and everybody's like, oh, no,
are they dying, but I never saw.
Speaker 5 (27:03):
With huld Cogan. But good news is, brother, he's not
going anywhere.
Speaker 2 (27:07):
We got your brother.
Speaker 3 (27:09):
Okay.
Speaker 9 (27:10):
So, and a former employee of a bank is suing
her ex company because they put a doll in her chair.
Speaker 1 (27:18):
Okay, tell me more about the doll.
Speaker 3 (27:19):
Okay.
Speaker 9 (27:20):
So this woman she had filed and said like she
had a fear of dolls, and ask.
Speaker 3 (27:27):
Oh my gosh, that's exactly what we would do.
Speaker 2 (27:29):
Here, yeah, lunch.
Speaker 1 (27:30):
Yeah, but this is a bit. We have a show
where we do bits. We've done snakes for him, but
we would be like, hey, everybody, we're going to do it,
and our whole show is that you're working in a bank.
Speaker 2 (27:39):
I don't know, dude, that sounds fun.
Speaker 1 (27:41):
Someone's fear, go ahead. Morgan finished up.
Speaker 9 (27:43):
So basically she had like filed when she first started
with this company that she had some like depressive disorder
and anxiety autoimmune vidalago. And she believes that her employer
was using like retaliation for basically filing for disability and
putting the doll because they knew she had PTSD around dolls.
(28:03):
And then she claimed further PTSD from the doll incident,
and now she's suing them over this.
Speaker 1 (28:08):
You work at a corporation, though, that's just dumb, regardless
of how you feel about the doll. I don't know
her backstory. When you work at a corporation that has
an HR department and there are all these filings that
are on record and you're gonna take what she's filed
and then put it in her chair, that's just stupid
because you're gonna be in trouble. You're probably gonna get fired.
It's gonna be on your I don't know if there's
such as the permanent record, but when someone else tries
to hire you, they're going to look us up and go, hey,
(28:29):
why were you fired from that last bank? Put a
chucky doll in a girl's seat? Well, okay, that's kind
of funny. Why Well, we didn't like her because she
said she had PTSD and it's.
Speaker 2 (28:40):
Just a bit of le goo.
Speaker 3 (28:42):
Yeah.
Speaker 9 (28:42):
And it wasn't even just like a regular employee.
Speaker 3 (28:44):
It was a manager.
Speaker 1 (28:45):
A former employee a North Krona based company is suing
after the manager placed a chucky doll despite knowing she
had a tremendous fear of dolls.
Speaker 2 (28:53):
And chucky is like the mother of scary dolls.
Speaker 1 (28:57):
According to court documents, during her final week in June
twenty twenty four, the manager, despite knowing her fear of dolls,
put a chucky doll on laughed. The incident worsened her condition. Look,
do I think that I'm gonna speak completely uneducated on
this situation. It's stupid this she's fad of dolls. But
I don't know what happened with the dolls. She could
have been like assaulting with the doll as a kid,
(29:19):
and that could have, but honestly created that fear. When
you just hear somebody's afraid of dolls, you go that stupid,
It's just a doll. But then if you think about
the reasons it could Now we're inventing the story. But yeah,
you don't mess with somebody with what they've been messed
with before and they're they have it listed as something
(29:40):
that they are scared of or they've been affected by.
Speaker 2 (29:44):
Yeah, one of my boys when he was younger, one
of the boys that we've adopted, when he was younger,
he would I guess they would watch a show that
really scared him. And he cannot see that character. He's
ten years old though, like that character if he just
something about it, just doesn't want to see it brings
back bad memories.
Speaker 1 (30:01):
He's not an adult in an office.
Speaker 2 (30:02):
Though. I'm saying, like, I don't know if that'll ever
go away.
Speaker 1 (30:07):
I'm not going to discount your story. I don't care
enough about it. Not your story, just this story in general.
But I'm saying that manager is stupid. Even if you
hate the person, it's documented she scared of dolls. Even
if that doll didn't scare, all she has to do
is go, oh, I'm scared, and I shall follow awsuit,
and then everybody gets in trouble, like, don't be an idiot.
(30:28):
I'm also fired up about the yogurt thing that you
guys don't know anything about.
Speaker 2 (30:32):
No, no clue.
Speaker 1 (30:35):
You guys caught me fired up for this thing.
Speaker 2 (30:37):
Did you figure someone was up?
Speaker 5 (30:39):
I was won?
Speaker 1 (30:40):
Why did you figure? Ready?
Speaker 2 (30:41):
I don't know, it's just you look a little upset.
Speaker 4 (30:44):
Over something I didn't But you did challenge my word
and then you said you weren't gonna be the word police.
Speaker 3 (30:47):
So then I was like, what's going on?
Speaker 2 (30:49):
And then I figured yogurt has something to do?
Speaker 1 (30:53):
Somebody put a doll in my seat?
Speaker 3 (30:56):
Did somebody give you darry.
Speaker 1 (30:58):
No, there were bug at my desk this morning and
our last office that were bugs, and so that yeah, sure,
but isn't that not a bug?
Speaker 3 (31:09):
Well, I'm just being specific.
Speaker 1 (31:10):
Hey, you mean a way shut up? There are bugs
round my desk, and I'm like, why they're bugs. I'm
like stopping them and hitting them. And in my trash
can for the last two days there's been an open
purple yogurt. No. First of all, who's been in my desk?
(31:31):
Second of all, who eats a purple yogurt and puts
it in the trash can?
Speaker 3 (31:35):
Wow?
Speaker 1 (31:35):
And third of all, somebody take the trash out back here.
Speaker 2 (31:39):
That's tricky because it's locked. But I'm sure they can
open it. I'm sure they can open it. I'm sure
there's ways.
Speaker 3 (31:42):
Well, guys, I came in here and vacuumed the other
vacuum too.
Speaker 1 (31:45):
I vacuumed all into my desk with that red thing
because it was so disgusting.
Speaker 4 (31:48):
Oh, I went and got the legit huge vacuum and
did a whole thing because I was like, I don't know,
do you?
Speaker 1 (31:53):
I'm not even worried about it? Who ate a yogurt
at my desk. Well, I just don't know who eats
purple yogurt.
Speaker 2 (31:59):
Somebody better for us up, Yeah, I don't need.
Speaker 4 (32:02):
Yogurt is up right now, somebody just admit to it.
Speaker 1 (32:08):
If you come forward now, I promise you will make
Mike's thinking. Do you know who had a purple yogurt?
Speaker 8 (32:13):
I mean it could have been me, but I don't
eat yogurt.
Speaker 3 (32:16):
Well, then it wasn't you.
Speaker 1 (32:18):
It was like some purple I do naughty purple containers
and I don't.
Speaker 4 (32:22):
Do you know my purple like the yogurt was blue
or like it was in a purple k like purple
container container is purple.
Speaker 1 (32:28):
That's why it's been in there for like two days.
Speaker 3 (32:30):
But do we have a brand?
Speaker 7 (32:32):
No?
Speaker 1 (32:32):
I didn't go through like forensics.
Speaker 2 (32:33):
When I try to, do you still have no?
Speaker 3 (32:35):
Well?
Speaker 4 (32:35):
I guess have it because if it's vegan yogurt, Mike
is still in the running.
Speaker 8 (32:39):
If it's not, if it's not yogurt and it's my mush.
Speaker 5 (32:43):
The purple uh, that's what it is.
Speaker 2 (32:46):
Found. It found the compress and you said.
Speaker 5 (32:49):
They would be punished and don't back down.
Speaker 2 (32:50):
Now, get the wheel lay across my legs.
Speaker 3 (32:55):
Wait, what that's just got weird.
Speaker 1 (32:57):
Let's spank him. Can we not? Just in general, not
put any food in the trash in this room? Period?
If we do, because there are times I'm eating something
a froggle on the up, put the trush, I take
it out immediately.
Speaker 2 (33:13):
Rubbing.
Speaker 1 (33:13):
The show's over. It goes out because now we have bugs, Sorry, Nats.
Speaker 2 (33:18):
I usually just throw it over the balcony. Was so, yeah,
just to make sure we don't get bugs.
Speaker 1 (33:22):
Here, you know, I'd rather you litter. I'm okay with that,
then get bugs here. Yeah, I'm okay with that.
Speaker 2 (33:27):
Edie, No, I didn't. But so I ran into a
TikTok and I want to just run this bike. You guys,
see what you think is a picture of a guy,
older guy and a younger girl, and it says at
twenty four, I married my dad's best friend. Oh, he's
fifty two, and then it goes into how they met.
Speaker 1 (33:44):
Okay, so let's just evaluate twenty four and fifty two
a little weird, not super weird.
Speaker 3 (33:50):
Twenty eight years apart your best friend.
Speaker 1 (33:53):
The dad's best friend thing makes it odd. But I
sped me. People these days, I'm just saying, we've heard
much much crazier to win then twenty four and fifty two.
So yeah, that's it's odd. Yeah, and I don't know
what you're gonna talk about, but Bill Belichick and Jordan
Hudson or whatever her name is, they're way beyond that.
Speaker 2 (34:10):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (34:11):
So yeah, weird but not criminal. Well so what's the story.
Speaker 2 (34:17):
So the story is she went she was in a
coffee shop and she was sketching on art, you know,
some art whatever, and some guy comes up. As the
guy he comes up and like, oh, what are you
working on? That's cool. They hit it off and then
they talked, and then they'd start doing that, like every
week they would get together and have coffee. Then finally
they found out they were kind of in love. They
wanted a date, and.
Speaker 1 (34:35):
They found out they were kind of in life.
Speaker 2 (34:37):
It just kind of chemistry. That was chemistry there, there's
a connection. Then meet the parents. So she's like, I
want you to meet my parents.
Speaker 1 (34:47):
I already don't believe that.
Speaker 3 (34:48):
I don't believe it my best friend unless.
Speaker 2 (34:52):
From twenty years ago, yeah, she said, from his bachelor days. Yea,
like before they were married. They were friends.
Speaker 3 (35:00):
So they get together and then they're like, yeah, Bob, uh.
Speaker 2 (35:03):
Huh, they recognize each other immediately, and then drama.
Speaker 1 (35:08):
Drama.
Speaker 2 (35:09):
Oh there's drama. He's like, what are you doing with
my daughter? Absolutely, then they said a few years later
they get married, they have a child together, and everything's cool.
Speaker 3 (35:18):
Yeah, once you have a kid, it all starts to
seem normal.
Speaker 1 (35:21):
Yeah. I also don't think that that. I think it's
I got a couple. Probably not likely scenarios. One. Do
I think they just met? I don't know. It sounds
like maybe he met her when she was much younger,
like fifteen now twilighted that thing.
Speaker 3 (35:33):
No, no, no, no, no, that's not no. They haven't
seen each other in twenty years.
Speaker 2 (35:37):
Well, she says she's twenty four, married now and has kids,
a one daughter with her, a two year old.
Speaker 3 (35:43):
She was like, how old was she when they when
she was scary, That's.
Speaker 2 (35:46):
What Bobby is saying.
Speaker 1 (35:47):
Well, I'm also saying, like, if this happened, I'd initially
think he met her when she was way younger. I'm
not saying that he raised her or had or like
hit on her or had anything creepy but newer, and
then got to know her again later when she was
of age. That that's weird.
Speaker 2 (36:03):
I don't know about as soon as you find out
that that's your friend's daughter, Like, are you like, let
me back up?
Speaker 1 (36:09):
Depends how much I'm in love.
Speaker 3 (36:11):
Yeah, there's already that connection.
Speaker 1 (36:13):
Depends if I've hit it.
Speaker 3 (36:15):
What why would you say?
Speaker 1 (36:17):
Because that changes it? It does because you've already done
it with her.
Speaker 2 (36:20):
Then you can go You can't.
Speaker 1 (36:21):
Yeah, you kind of can't go back on that one.
You can't. You've already done.
Speaker 3 (36:24):
It, you say to him, I've already done it.
Speaker 2 (36:26):
Yeah, I go back on this, but I've already hit it.
Speaker 3 (36:29):
That's true, Sorry, Bob.
Speaker 1 (36:32):
I think because if you've been dating and you haven't,
because that happened somewhere recently. There was a news story
where it was they were dating, but they never did it,
so it was okay, I don't remember.
Speaker 5 (36:45):
What what are you talking about?
Speaker 2 (36:47):
Never Arkansas?
Speaker 4 (36:49):
I didn't know if I saw like, because like, where
did I I felt like I saw something online but
maybe it wasn't related, but maybe it was.
Speaker 3 (36:58):
But what I'm thinking of it's probably not what you saw.
Speaker 4 (37:01):
But it was like they had gone out a few times,
they met on a dating app, and then they found
out they related. But luckily they hadn't done anything physical,
so they were able to like stop right there. But
the question was if they had already been physical and
they'd already done it, and then they find out they're related, Well,
you've already done.
Speaker 1 (37:18):
It, so like what's the problem. You already did it.
Speaker 3 (37:20):
You already did it.
Speaker 4 (37:21):
And then I think some people are like, well the
problem is if you continue doing it and you have
a baby.
Speaker 1 (37:27):
But how close were they cousins?
Speaker 3 (37:30):
So probably I don't remember.
Speaker 1 (37:32):
Because I think once it gets a third, cousins have
at it.
Speaker 3 (37:36):
Once it gets a wet third.
Speaker 1 (37:38):
Yeah, I think it's weird if you meet them in
a family or union and then you have at it.
If you one, like you meet them random and it's
a random and you find out your third cousins right
which country you're related? Get it on I related third
cousin though it's like three percent DNA share.
Speaker 2 (37:54):
As soon as you hear I'm related to you.
Speaker 6 (37:57):
Do you think second cousins is a coin flip? Like
could you go for could you not? I feel like
second cousins kind of coin flip. You don't really see
your second cousins.
Speaker 1 (38:07):
Yeah, I think that's too close.
Speaker 3 (38:10):
It's probably you do that. What do y'all have that
crazy hot ratio?
Speaker 1 (38:13):
It's cousin hot ratio. Now cousins here? Second, what country
is it?
Speaker 4 (38:21):
Maybe it's Iceland where they have to have an app?
Speaker 3 (38:25):
Is it Iceland?
Speaker 4 (38:25):
There's a special app where you can check to see
if you're related to whoever you're going on a date with,
because the population is so small that you're likely to
be going out with somebody that you're really that's smart.
Speaker 1 (38:37):
And it's an island, so you really can't get off
unless you fly or boat. It's called the Yeah or
boat that's a long boat trip though I'm being honest.
Mostly you gotta fly. But it's called the islendinga app
which helps people determine if they're related to potential romantic partners.
Due to iceland small, relatively homogeneous population, and comprehensive online
(38:59):
genealogy data base, the app allows users to bump phones
and instantly check for family connections. Bro, we needs this
back home too. Just bump phones, it said, We bump
and hope later.
Speaker 2 (39:11):
Hoping are we all kind of related? But like that's
crazy though, like I'm kind of related to you, but yeah,
I probably could be related to you.
Speaker 1 (39:21):
Okay, that's crazy kind Yeah, I did care and read.
I think I'm good. All right, let's take a let's
just end this. We've already done that. We're about an
hour in, right, We're good, all right, cool. We have
doctor Marcy Yates on with us, who is a forensic
(39:43):
genetic genealogist at Oklahoma State University. We rarely have highly
educated people on the show. Let's clap your hand for
someone educated, doctor Yates, thank you for coming on. Hi,
no problem at all, so I said on the air,
I was looking to figure out where I was from
because I want to go on to pilgrimage voyage. I
don't know. I don't know where I'm from. I don't
(40:03):
know I don't know my you know, I don't like
want I know my grandparents. My grandma raised me, her
husband died before I was born. My other side of
the family, I don't know my dad, but that grandfather
died when I was very young. That grandfather, that grandmother's past.
So I just don't know. And I did one of
those little results where it says where you're from, and
it's like, basically, you're just from where white people come from,
(40:24):
which is like all Europe. It it was like a
big map of Europe. So she messaged me, she was,
so what do you do? And I don't want to
ask you about anything specific you do for other people
specifically because that's their information, but like what do you
do day to day? What is your job?
Speaker 7 (40:39):
Yeah? That is a good question. So kind of in
lay terms, what we do here is we work with
unidentified human remains and we use forensic genealogy, DNA extraction
and different methods and then kind of open source intelligence
and with genealogy, then we use that to work on
(41:01):
identifying who these remains are.
Speaker 1 (41:04):
Crazy? Do you ever get called into court like Karen Reid?
Will they be like doctor Yates, come talk to the
Karen Reid trial.
Speaker 7 (41:12):
I'm not that cool, but my boss does for sure like.
Speaker 1 (41:15):
That you bring in an expert.
Speaker 2 (41:17):
Awesome.
Speaker 1 (41:17):
How did you get into this? What made you want
to get into this field?
Speaker 7 (41:21):
Yeah? So I started working in forensics. So I teach
in forensics and they said that we're trying to build
up the forensic genealogy program. Would that be something that
you're interested in? And I said heck, yeah, let's freaking
do it. And so that just opened some doors and
then we work on forensic genetic genealogy cases all the time. Now.
Speaker 1 (41:45):
So I saw her message in my general I was
just and I don't get to all of them, but
I was drawing to that message for some reason. I
clicked and opened it and she was like, I'd like
to help you find your story. And I was like,
that's so nice of you. And so I got her
number and we called her up. Now, just to protect
a bit of I mean, I'm not very private, but
my privacy or my dead relatives privacy, if you know anything,
(42:08):
let's just call them by their first names. I don't
even know what their first names are. So what did
you find out about me? Or have you? Because I
googled me and I couldn't find anything other than like
my grandpa.
Speaker 3 (42:18):
Yeah, but you have access to database or bones?
Speaker 1 (42:20):
Did you go find their bones?
Speaker 2 (42:22):
See?
Speaker 4 (42:22):
I was thinking she may need to see you in
person and like withdraw things from your body, take.
Speaker 1 (42:26):
Some of your hands, going on, do you need any
do you need do you need like stool? Blood? What
do you need from me?
Speaker 3 (42:32):
Bone?
Speaker 1 (42:32):
Marrow?
Speaker 2 (42:33):
No?
Speaker 7 (42:34):
That yeah, definitely not stool. But since you are identified,
it is pretty easy to find you on the internet
just because of who you are, and so I started
with your first date and your name, and then from ancestry.
There's a lot of kind of public documents, so it's
(42:55):
not even really you have to have all these paid
subscriptions to know any pres it details. You just kind
of need to know where to look, and then from
there then it's just kind of off to checking different
public records. So I can see, Bobby, like your yearbook pictures,
which they look great, by.
Speaker 1 (43:13):
The way, your door tell me that's not a dorky kid, though.
Speaker 7 (43:21):
I think it looks great. I think you're born to
be a star.
Speaker 1 (43:23):
So thank you.
Speaker 7 (43:24):
It's not your fault.
Speaker 1 (43:25):
Yeah, okay, so what did you find? Okay, so did
you see my parents?
Speaker 7 (43:31):
Yes? Yeah, I can see your parents. I can see
I found your mom's obituary, and so different kind of
public records like that. You can't always find obituaries, and
the thing is is that family members write those and
so they're not one hundred percent accurate all the time,
but it does kind of give you a good picture
of what you're looking at. And so I kind of
(43:53):
got a family picture from the obituary, and then I
know who her parents are. And then you just go
from there. So I've traced you back to about about
the fourteen nineties.
Speaker 1 (44:06):
No way, what if it's Columbus, Yeah, oh, no, fourteen
two my great great great great uncle.
Speaker 3 (44:13):
There.
Speaker 7 (44:16):
There's one fun fact is I saw which I have
not like gone through every public document to absolutely confirm this,
But back in like the fifteen hundreds or so, you're related.
You're about tenth cousins with James Madison and Teddy Roosevelt.
Speaker 2 (44:35):
President who cousins?
Speaker 1 (44:41):
Aren't we all tenth cousins to like Adam and the
you type thing? Or is it tenth? Is this?
Speaker 7 (44:44):
I mean basically, but you don't see that in everyone's tree,
So you can see a direct line to their grandfather
in your tree?
Speaker 1 (44:53):
No way? Okay, So where am I like from, like
if I were going to go on a trip, because
I don't know anything above my grandparents, Like where did that? Where?
When did we come here?
Speaker 7 (45:08):
Come here as in the US?
Speaker 5 (45:10):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (45:10):
Yeah, yeah, like not to Arkansas? Good point? Good point?
Do you know like where my ancestors lived in one
of the countries?
Speaker 7 (45:22):
Yeah? You have some German lines, you have some Dutch lines,
some French, and then obviously some English. So I'm trying
to see exactly when over into Virginia you are, Yeah.
Speaker 1 (45:41):
I'm a Native Virginian.
Speaker 2 (45:42):
Whoa Arkansas helmet? Off your desk?
Speaker 1 (45:45):
Oh no, I'm Hochy. So okay, So if you had
to pick one place, where do you think I should
go to? Look at my homeland?
Speaker 7 (45:55):
Okay, this is going to be surprising, Well not surprising.
You have a lot of ants. That's you're sure in Tennessee.
So I feel like you're in the right spot.
Speaker 2 (46:03):
Wow, you were destined to come here.
Speaker 1 (46:05):
So I could run for governor of this state too,
not just Darkansas.
Speaker 2 (46:08):
Goodness.
Speaker 1 (46:09):
So I'm already okay, But if I wanted to go
to one of those European.
Speaker 4 (46:13):
Places, find out like I related to two presidents and
now you're running for governor again.
Speaker 2 (46:17):
Oh yeah, he's got a political background.
Speaker 1 (46:19):
Now wow, I'm back, baby, I'm back. Yeah. So yeah,
tell me like European because I obviously right. I wasn't
I but my family they were immigrants at some point.
We all were, for the most part, lifter native American.
Where do we come from?
Speaker 2 (46:33):
Uh?
Speaker 7 (46:33):
You come from Ireland, you come from Germany. I'm trying
to find the exact places for you.
Speaker 1 (46:40):
Yeah, Like I need a town to go to and
be like I'm home, Like I want to picture me
with my arms up in whatever town this is going,
I'm home. Let's see if you got Richmond, Virginia go,
I've been there like four times. I didn't know that
was home. That was.
Speaker 7 (47:03):
Let's see. I'm trying to find all this were.
Speaker 1 (47:06):
My family, like all criminals or anything, because like this
version this the last few years, there's been a lot
of we had, we had a lot of issues, were
a lot of they're still in jail, a lot of them.
Like my family didn't like burned down towns or anything.
Speaker 7 (47:18):
Right, No, not not that we can see on a
public document. So don't worry.
Speaker 3 (47:23):
Perfect, she doesn't come across that.
Speaker 1 (47:24):
Good Yeah, good, good good.
Speaker 4 (47:27):
I mean yeah, what if you you're like, oh, we
can tell you were related to John Wilkes Booth exactly right.
Speaker 1 (47:34):
I don't want any part of that. Yeah, Or if
you're like you were Boris Yeltson, who's that Russia?
Speaker 2 (47:43):
Right?
Speaker 1 (47:43):
Right?
Speaker 3 (47:45):
So so far you have no Russian lineage.
Speaker 1 (47:47):
Okay, all right, all right, I'm just giving her time. Okay,
did you find a home for me to go to?
Speaker 7 (47:55):
Okay? On your mom's side, No, now I'm going to
look on your dad's side because it just will get
the general Ireland on your mom's side, lien on your
dad's side.
Speaker 1 (48:06):
I've been to Ireland. They didn't treat me like I'm back.
Speaker 3 (48:08):
Did you get a feeling when you landed there.
Speaker 1 (48:10):
Like yeah, like I wish I drank. That was the feeling.
Maybe that's all my family we have alcohol issues because
we're born in Ireland. You like to drink just the
culture you brought it over, brought it over on the boat.
Speaker 7 (48:27):
Okay, let's see. I'm sorry, I'm getting no here.
Speaker 1 (48:30):
Take your time.
Speaker 2 (48:31):
What if it goes to Mexico.
Speaker 4 (48:32):
I'm trying to picture what she's doing. Is she like
flipping through papers or on the internet.
Speaker 7 (48:37):
I'm on ancestry and okay, what happens when you build
out a family tree you can go back, I mean,
depending on your tree, but your ancestors double every time
every generation if you can find your grandparents and then
their grandparents. So from Bobby's tree, there's actually a ton
(48:58):
of people that we can see, you.
Speaker 1 (49:01):
Know, bigger than but I add double cousins.
Speaker 4 (49:04):
But that's closer to you. But as you get further
away from that, you expand.
Speaker 1 (49:07):
I just affected them all to be marrying each other, cousins, sisters.
Speaker 7 (49:11):
I did find some cousins married to each other. So
sorry to tell you that makes sense.
Speaker 1 (49:17):
We don't know it doesn't it all. Shut your mouth,
shut your holes.
Speaker 3 (49:21):
If she pulled up our family trees, you find the same.
Speaker 7 (49:23):
Thing that's in most trees.
Speaker 4 (49:29):
Actually, okay, why do y'all think y'all are immune to
so all?
Speaker 1 (49:36):
My goal here with doctor Yates is I just want
to find a homeland to go to because I don't
really have a home. And so whenever she tells me
this this is, I'm putting it on a map and
I'm going to this home.
Speaker 7 (49:49):
But you have multiple homes. So is there like a
country that you are leaning towards.
Speaker 1 (49:55):
No, I just want to go where they where everybody
knows my name.
Speaker 2 (49:58):
Yeah and always.
Speaker 1 (50:00):
And they're always glad I came. You know, I want
to go where people you know.
Speaker 2 (50:05):
Where would that be.
Speaker 4 (50:06):
Cheers, where things are all the.
Speaker 1 (50:11):
Same, yeah, cheers.
Speaker 7 (50:16):
Okay, sorry.
Speaker 1 (50:16):
I She can literally also just make up a town
and be like, yeah, I know, Berlin looks like that's
your There was an Instagram Posty telling her friends I
totally lied I wasn't. I don't even work for oclombs
state what she's like.
Speaker 3 (50:30):
North Korea.
Speaker 1 (50:32):
Oh that's a tough one.
Speaker 2 (50:34):
I am who I am?
Speaker 7 (50:35):
Wait?
Speaker 1 (50:35):
No, I am who I am? I can't deny me
for so long. Kim Jong Bones, it's got a nice
ring to it. It doesn't.
Speaker 5 (50:45):
It doesn't have a n no, no, nothing nice about
that one.
Speaker 1 (50:48):
Bobby. Let's give it. Let's give her time.
Speaker 3 (50:56):
Let's give her time to focus.
Speaker 1 (50:58):
Yeah, you know, I wouldn't be able to focu.
Speaker 2 (51:00):
Maybe she's just taking time on how to break it
to you whatever it is.
Speaker 1 (51:05):
How do I tell him it's like Germany? Hitler?
Speaker 5 (51:09):
Yeah, I was thinking Middle East?
Speaker 1 (51:11):
Who say, oh, well, that's that's my life. I'm not
Middle Eastern. Like the Eddy, I'd be like, okay.
Speaker 7 (51:17):
Track, yeah, okay. There is one place that I'm gonna
absolutely butcher. But it is the Kingdom of Wurtemberg, Germany.
Speaker 1 (51:29):
I'm a king. No, no, no, no, I'm a king.
Speaker 2 (51:34):
You might be a villager in the kingdom.
Speaker 1 (51:36):
No, okay, how do you spell it?
Speaker 7 (51:39):
Okay, it's w you are t T E M B
E R G.
Speaker 1 (51:48):
Oh of course that's my middle name, Bobby Bones.
Speaker 2 (51:55):
That's crazy.
Speaker 3 (51:56):
Maybe that's why you like that big Wien or thing.
Speaker 1 (51:59):
Other people what other theories, But you do like broad works.
I do big ones.
Speaker 3 (52:03):
Wasn't that in? Was that in Germany?
Speaker 1 (52:05):
It was in Germany? And that was your favorite? So
where this this Adultumberg, Germany? Who lived there? Do you know?
Speaker 7 (52:17):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (52:17):
His name is Johann Whitman classic Johann.
Speaker 2 (52:20):
Hey, that's that's your great grandfather. Dude.
Speaker 1 (52:22):
Yeah, what and what did be further than that great
great What is he to me? Do you know?
Speaker 7 (52:29):
He would be? Yeah, let me check, he's your seventh
great grandfather.
Speaker 3 (52:37):
Wow, like on his dad's side.
Speaker 7 (52:39):
Yes, No, on his uh actually yeah, on his dad's side.
Speaker 1 (52:44):
So my seventh great grandfather. So that would be let
me walk walk down the road with you guys. There's
my grandpa. There's my great grandpa. Now do I do
seven more? Or is that already two down?
Speaker 7 (52:57):
It's okay, So your grandpa and then you're great grandpa is.
Speaker 1 (53:00):
One, so so six more so my great great grandpa,
my great great grandpa, my great great great grandpa, my
great great great great grandpa, my great great great great
great grant. That's my that's who it is, my great
great great great great grandpa seven times. No, because my
great my grandfather would be one. So it's six sixth grades.
Speaker 3 (53:22):
That's what she said. You you don't count one until
you get to great grandpa.
Speaker 2 (53:25):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (53:25):
Will you tell us again what you said?
Speaker 7 (53:27):
Yeah, it's it's grandfather and then great grandfather would be
first great grandfather, so he's seventh great grandfather.
Speaker 1 (53:35):
So great great great great great great great, So seven greats,
it's seven great.
Speaker 3 (53:39):
I made that way too, coms because the grand isn't great.
Speaker 1 (53:43):
So seventh my great is from Rutenburg. His name is
Johann Whitman. Johann Wow. And it's both. It's both, and
it's a kingdom.
Speaker 7 (53:55):
That's what it says.
Speaker 2 (53:56):
Was Johann the king of great great question? Gotty want think? So?
Speaker 1 (54:01):
I bet he was? Do you mean King Whitman? Is
that what you meant to say king? Or was he
a radio person he yelled from a tower.
Speaker 7 (54:10):
I can't tell you no, so we'll just go with yes.
He's not here to say no.
Speaker 2 (54:15):
He would be so proud of you worth Enburg.
Speaker 1 (54:18):
So okay, I'm going through Worthenburg, Germany, and I'm gonna
go look for the home of Johann Whitman home.
Speaker 2 (54:26):
You can find the hut.
Speaker 1 (54:28):
It's got to be a historical mark or he's he
was something. He had to be something there. Okay, Wow,
that's cool. I had no idea. Is there any way
one that do you have? I don't know. Is this
stuff like printed out as in like a PDF file
or something?
Speaker 7 (54:42):
Yeah, I can. I can download it and then definitely
send it to you.
Speaker 1 (54:46):
And then is there like some sort of at your school,
do people like donate so you guys can do projects
or something, because I'd be happy to do that. I
know you didn't ask for anything, so I will. I'd
rather help the.
Speaker 2 (54:57):
Cause that I mean, like n I own money for
for Yeah?
Speaker 1 (55:01):
Ye is there something like that I.
Speaker 7 (55:04):
Mean to our program? Yes, yes, definitely. Don't donate your bones,
but money we are sure, we'll take it.
Speaker 1 (55:11):
Okay, So what I'll do is I'll put on hold
and we'll get it. Get her the email address, and
I'll get the organization, and that's how I'll pay my
debt to this information that I've just learned.
Speaker 4 (55:22):
Well, yeah, and your money is going towards the program
of Unidentified bodies.
Speaker 1 (55:28):
Right, I don't the doctor yates at Starbucks.
Speaker 4 (55:31):
Yeah, but I mean that's cool because you're going to
be part of like helping people understand where their loved
one and maybe missing people. And I'm very curious, like
how many of those do you have in like a
week or a month, Like how many cases are there?
Speaker 7 (55:49):
Yeah? Uh so these are typically cold cases, and so
we're kind of working backlogs different places and it depends
on who kind of reaches out to us. Right now,
I think we have about five cases in the works,
and then we already have a couple lined up beyond that.
But then then it's just kind of different like sheriff's
(56:12):
offices or stuff like that. Who they have cases that
have been sitting on the shelves for a while because
they're cool.
Speaker 3 (56:18):
King. Can you imagine so you have this body and
you have no idea who it is.
Speaker 1 (56:22):
Have you seen Department Q on Netflix?
Speaker 2 (56:24):
Yeah, there you go, Garrison Cold Case Files, There you go.
Speaker 1 (56:28):
There it is. Wow. I think I'm doctor King. I'm
not saying doctor King, Bobby, I'm TV shows Hey, doctor
and a fake King. And I'm pretty excited about that.
Speaker 2 (56:37):
Awesome.
Speaker 1 (56:37):
Hey, thank you, doctor Yates. We really appreciate this. You
have one given us a lot of stuff to talk about,
but too like, I'm generally curious about this because I
didn't know. I really don't know anything other than kind
of my grandparents. So thank you for the time, and
thank you for the time spent with us.
Speaker 7 (56:52):
Of course, no problem.
Speaker 1 (56:54):
Abby, will put her on hold. Good information. Awesome. There
she is, doctor Marcigates. Let's give her a boss Oklahoma
State University. In this instance, go pokes.
Speaker 2 (57:03):
I said it.
Speaker 1 (57:05):
Amy's friend went into a we'll call it an athletic
store to buy some athletic clothes and the manager of
this store hit on Amy's friend, which, okay, that happens,
but what it felt like to me was the manager
went over the line and was like touching her clothes,
going a baby. I don't know if it'said, hey baby,
but that's what it's called. Like right, yeah, I mean
(57:26):
she felt like was close, she was trying on, he
was touching. It was weird.
Speaker 3 (57:30):
He was obvious about a lot of things.
Speaker 1 (57:32):
So we debated should she contact his boss, and I
was like, I would just email the company, the head
of the company. Do you have the email?
Speaker 4 (57:41):
Yes, The subject is concern about inappropriate store behavior.
Speaker 1 (57:45):
That is solid and that will definitely be read and
forwarded to HR.
Speaker 4 (57:49):
Go ahead, dear MANK team, I want to report an
uncomfortable experience at one of your stores. While trying on clothes,
the manager commented that I was hot as and.
Speaker 1 (58:00):
We determined she was. Yes, that's okay so far. We
just needed to know if she was hot as blank.
Speaker 3 (58:08):
Don't say that to customers.
Speaker 1 (58:10):
I agree with that, but we just needed to know
for our own sake and.
Speaker 4 (58:13):
Hit on me then touch the clothes that I was
trying on and wearing on my bodys. I generally don't
get easily rattled, but this behavior crossed the line. I
believe all customers should feel safe and respected in your stores.
I'm happy to share the store location and other details
if needed.
Speaker 3 (58:31):
Thank you for taking this seriously. And she hasn't heard back.
Speaker 1 (58:35):
She will, and hopefully with a five dollars gift card.
At least. That's creepy. That shouldn't have done that, But
let's just make sure all the facts were true. Interest one.
Did he touch her? Yes too? Is she hot is blank?
Speaker 4 (58:48):
Yes, and she would not. She only said this email
because we.
Speaker 1 (58:56):
Aside. You can't be touching people.
Speaker 4 (58:58):
I know, yes, I know, and she stands that she's
like even though she's like, I feel like I can
handle that. I don't thought it was weird, but I
was like, okay, whatever day, I know. But she that's
just her personality, Like she's like.
Speaker 1 (59:10):
This, I kind of want to go to the store
and see if he hits on me and then hit
him with a knuckle sandwich. He tells me the same
thing and like, touch my clothes, but he makes you
feel good. He's just trying to get me to buy
clothes and I walk out with two bags and.
Speaker 3 (59:22):
Tell me I'm hot. Why haven't you told me I'm
hot yet?
Speaker 1 (59:24):
Or I get mad at him for not telling me?
What are you gonna say?
Speaker 6 (59:27):
That's exactly what I was going to say. Is this
a sales tactic? He tells everyone there hot is? It's
that part to me was weird but not emailable. When
he touches her, that's when it's emailable.
Speaker 1 (59:39):
I got a question.
Speaker 6 (59:39):
When he touches her like a touches her butt like
it doesn't like she's.
Speaker 4 (59:45):
Wearing He's like, oh, like and then touch the clothes
like you don't there.
Speaker 1 (59:48):
Yeah, you don't touch elbow, you don't touch that if
she's wearing a long sleeve. Let's say, dry fit shirt
because she likes to ski or something. You don't rub
the elbow of the shirt and go your hotest blank.
I have a portant, important question, a question, Harry, thank you,
very important. Go ahead.
Speaker 2 (01:00:05):
Does he like women?
Speaker 1 (01:00:07):
Great question?
Speaker 3 (01:00:08):
Because different I think she would have given me that detail.
Speaker 1 (01:00:11):
Okay, because that's and I think.
Speaker 3 (01:00:13):
That's that's a valid question.
Speaker 1 (01:00:14):
If he's like, girl, your hot is blank.
Speaker 2 (01:00:16):
All of that sounds like that.
Speaker 3 (01:00:18):
I don't think she ever would have texted me about it.
Speaker 1 (01:00:21):
If if so, I'm going in and I'm going to
get that.
Speaker 4 (01:00:24):
You know, because her text to me was like, hey,
this just happened to me. She's like, and I know
that I don't normally get bothered, but this is weird, right.
Speaker 3 (01:00:30):
And I'm like, yes, this is weird.
Speaker 1 (01:00:32):
I think that's a great question. And I don't think
anybody should be touching anybody anyway, but I don't think
it feels creepy.
Speaker 3 (01:00:38):
If it is not sexually attracted, right, and.
Speaker 2 (01:00:40):
Then the fabric of the clothes is different than touching
her body, right, like no, you're.
Speaker 3 (01:00:44):
No, you don't touch it. If somebody she was trying
on one of those.
Speaker 1 (01:00:48):
Nights, it doesn't matter. What's nice. You're doing your hands
like she's running long and he's.
Speaker 3 (01:00:54):
Like she's trying to know, like a tennis dress.
Speaker 1 (01:00:57):
No, like a it doesn't matter. You can't touch the
person's clothes and they're wearing it. And the real reason
why he shouldn't have done it. Two, you got to
protect other people from that happening.
Speaker 3 (01:01:08):
Yes, because he decided to send the yes.
Speaker 1 (01:01:11):
All seriousness where a jokey show all seriousness. Somebody that
does not have the courage or the ability to deflect
the situation might actually feel pressured and trapped. And we
don't want that to happen.
Speaker 4 (01:01:28):
No, it's not good, right, And I was like, why
didn't you put just go ahead and put out the
store and location in there? And she's like, cool, I
feel like if they're taking this seriously, she said, I'm
happy to share the location and other details if needed,
And I was like, you.
Speaker 3 (01:01:42):
Should have just put that out there.
Speaker 4 (01:01:44):
But I guess she's thinking, if they're going to take
it seriously, they'll reply and then she can give that information.
Speaker 3 (01:01:49):
But I just would have given it out of the gate.
Speaker 1 (01:01:51):
Live and learn, not my email yet. Not you're chilly,
that's right, I would have put that too, though. Does
she know his name? Good question?
Speaker 3 (01:02:00):
I mean, I know she knows exactly, like you could go.
Speaker 1 (01:02:05):
Is there any chance? Definitely? You sure I'll text her?
Speaker 3 (01:02:08):
Is definitely because he's really stupid, because what you're.
Speaker 1 (01:02:13):
Gonna lose your job?
Speaker 3 (01:02:15):
Want me to say?
Speaker 1 (01:02:16):
Are you sure he wasn't Any.
Speaker 3 (01:02:17):
Chance that manager is gay?
Speaker 2 (01:02:21):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:02:21):
Question mark.
Speaker 1 (01:02:22):
Yeah, and he still shouldn't do it. He shouldn't touch
people regardless, but I can see that being a little
more normal. Yeah. Okay, frankly i'd like it the compliment,
you know, but but joking, joking, show that can't happen.
I'm proud of her for sending the email. Let us know. Okay,
(01:02:44):
all right, let's go Morgan. Last night, yes.
Speaker 4 (01:02:49):
I said, any chance that manager is gay? And she
just replied no.
Speaker 1 (01:02:52):
Shot she full of herself? Yes, it was so quick.
Speaker 4 (01:02:57):
Yes, full of herself A little bit, A little bit
she has though, But I mean I also find that
endearing about her, like.
Speaker 1 (01:03:05):
Shoot, you know, all right, or jokey show look, joke
show all seriousness. You can't touch. You shouldn't even say
that stuff at your job. Save that for the sidewalker
construction sites.
Speaker 4 (01:03:16):
Obviously, the way the story. I say, so when we say, okay,
are you cooling yourself?
Speaker 1 (01:03:24):
Cool? Let us know when you get a reply okay, okay,
it's Amy sending text for herself.
Speaker 3 (01:03:31):
Okay, okay. Oh oh oh oh what oh hold on,
wait a second.
Speaker 1 (01:03:41):
You know the guy why slunchbox.
Speaker 3 (01:03:46):
Number? She just sent me a text message that Okay.
Speaker 1 (01:03:50):
Hold on, we're going to come back to this. This
is to breaking news, right, breaking news. We're going to
come back and find out the rest of the story next.
So quick recap. Amy's friend eyes creeped on at a
store by a store manager. Amy's friendstance an email to
the head of the store, going, hey, this happened. Amy's
(01:04:11):
friend just texted her back something what happened?
Speaker 4 (01:04:14):
So I texted her like whether or not he was gay?
And then she was like no, And then she sent
me a screenshot where he texted.
Speaker 1 (01:04:23):
Her wait, how does he have her number?
Speaker 2 (01:04:25):
Well?
Speaker 3 (01:04:25):
Good question, because I said, what, how does he have
your number?
Speaker 4 (01:04:28):
And she's like, well, when I gave it for my account,
I don't know if he took it.
Speaker 3 (01:04:33):
She hasn't responded or replied like how did you get
my number?
Speaker 4 (01:04:37):
But she said I did have to give my number
for my rewards.
Speaker 1 (01:04:41):
Yeah, this is exactly why she has to tell on
this dude.
Speaker 4 (01:04:43):
I know I'm telling her to save all of this information,
but he just put his name the store and then
he said, it was very nice to meet you, but
for two he goes, too.
Speaker 3 (01:04:56):
Very nice to meet you.
Speaker 1 (01:05:00):
The type of I know, I'm not judging that I
messed that up all hater? What was the text?
Speaker 4 (01:05:07):
And then he said what a or two hater?
Speaker 2 (01:05:11):
Damn?
Speaker 3 (01:05:12):
I mean I can mess it up too, but I'm like,
we need to be you can mess it up too,
d o, and then.
Speaker 4 (01:05:18):
He goes, uh, I would a like to hear more
about you. Sometimes have a great rest of your day
about you.
Speaker 1 (01:05:27):
This guy is right from CATFI. I say, we can't
fish them. Oh how do we do that? I get
his numbers art texting him show me your butt? I mean,
I'm here, this is my real number, show me your butt.
Speaker 3 (01:05:42):
Yeah this is getting weird.
Speaker 1 (01:05:44):
Yeah no, no, it sucks. So she should not reply.
Speaker 4 (01:05:48):
And that's that's that freaks me out because do you
know how many stores that I go to and I'm
checking out and they're like, do you have your phone number?
And I just casually say it, or you know, what's
your address, or like if you have to like so
many people have access to all your information, if you
have an account with a company, or like, what's your email?
Speaker 1 (01:06:07):
Interesting, you made this about you.
Speaker 3 (01:06:09):
I'm not making it about me.
Speaker 4 (01:06:10):
I'm making it about any people, any of us out
there that just give our numbers.
Speaker 1 (01:06:16):
Hey, me, neither.
Speaker 3 (01:06:18):
But if you think about it.
Speaker 1 (01:06:19):
Bobby, like you thought someone was coming on to you
one time at the grocery store, I was one time.
Speaker 4 (01:06:22):
It's a grocery store. And then y'all made it very clear.
Well he made it clear when it was well.
Speaker 1 (01:06:26):
He said, he said, what what's your name?
Speaker 3 (01:06:28):
Don't even remember what your number?
Speaker 4 (01:06:30):
Yeah, and it was from my store points whatever phone
number I had attached to You.
Speaker 1 (01:06:37):
Were like, he's hitting on me, And it turns out
he just needed your number to put into the store. Yeah,
you know, you're right. It's vulnerable. It's vulnerable. I hate
that for her, and you know what, I hope it
doesn't happen to you.
Speaker 3 (01:06:48):
I know it's a place she likes to shop too.
So now she's like, great, Yeah that's tough. So anyway,
be careful out there.
Speaker 4 (01:06:56):
Create a fake We need fake numbers and fake emails.
Speaker 1 (01:07:02):
I do have that. Yeah, you can just make those
up l O l l ll z dot com that
in all the time, what's your emailalls dot com?
Speaker 2 (01:07:10):
They're like, this is a weird one, but okay, then.
Speaker 3 (01:07:12):
You don't get the text messages with the deals.
Speaker 1 (01:07:14):
I don't want the wants those that's how you end
up getting scammed.
Speaker 4 (01:07:18):
I want the twenty percent off early access.
Speaker 1 (01:07:21):
I need you to tell your friend not to reply,
and when they do reply from that store to the
email she sent, to take a screenshot of that and
send it to them back and be like, not only that,
I got this text message from this guy, because I'm.
Speaker 3 (01:07:34):
Telling you and your manager can't Hey, no jokes.
Speaker 1 (01:07:37):
Hey words show the jokes around a lot dramatically correct
the time. Well, don't do the two two and two yet,
but say because that could be somebody who makes a
bad decision filter as vulnerable and messages them back next
you know, they're murdered, I know, or abducted. I know
that's weird, but yeah that's awsome. Well, the escalation would
(01:07:58):
be abducted, the murdered. I went murder hard in that back.
Speaker 2 (01:07:59):
To off right.
Speaker 1 (01:08:01):
Yeah, that's that's Sam, Yeah, and who knew?
Speaker 3 (01:08:04):
Who knew? I had no idea when I texted her
she was going to see me that screenshot and I was.
Speaker 1 (01:08:07):
Like, what she didn't reply, right? What if they date? Now?
Oh my goodness.
Speaker 3 (01:08:11):
I mean so if she ended up.
Speaker 4 (01:08:13):
This is one of those stories where it's like, if
he's cute and y'all are attracted and.
Speaker 3 (01:08:16):
It works out, then it's like, oh, what a sweet story.
Speaker 4 (01:08:18):
And if he's totally creepy, then it's like, oh, what
a stalker weirdo.
Speaker 1 (01:08:22):
Yeah, I'm thinking he's not cute. Huh, it can't be cute.
Speaker 3 (01:08:25):
Let me ask honestly, what celebrity does he look like?
Speaker 1 (01:08:28):
And rate him one to ten? Is the hey, is
he cute too? W o? Guys?
Speaker 3 (01:08:36):
Oh boy, the guys want to know.
Speaker 1 (01:08:40):
You can't even say me, I want to know. I
want to know.
Speaker 4 (01:08:42):
What what else is I supposed ask her? Oh, what
celebrity does he look like? Okay, okay, so we'll get
an answer back apparently. I mean, she's one of those
friends that's annoying, like she always replies back immediately.
Speaker 1 (01:08:56):
Yeah, that's so annoying.
Speaker 4 (01:08:58):
Annoying, Well, she gets anod if people don't reply promptly,
and I'm like, well, it might.
Speaker 3 (01:09:03):
Take me a few days.
Speaker 1 (01:09:05):
Okay, then just update us later. Okay. If she doesn't
hit you back, you got a bubble or no, you
don't know, I don't.
Speaker 4 (01:09:10):
I feel like if she was by her phone, she
would already be replying. She could be oh hmm, she's replying.
She goes, hmm, semi cute.
Speaker 3 (01:09:19):
How's an ethnic.
Speaker 1 (01:09:19):
Vibe black dude, Mexican dude? Which one guys want to know?
She just said, you can't. We'll bleep it.
Speaker 4 (01:09:33):
She said he's very tall. She's still sending more bubbles.
She goes, I don't I dky what celeb? So I
don't know what celeb. She's one of my younger friends.
Speaker 1 (01:09:48):
What other ethnic though, it's probably like your Mexican dude.
Speaker 3 (01:09:51):
She goes, we should try to find him online.
Speaker 1 (01:09:53):
No, no, stop looking for doing anything around him.
Speaker 4 (01:09:57):
And then she has the thing I can't say. Okay,
all right, I'll say it to you all.
Speaker 1 (01:10:00):
But don't respond to him in any way. Okay, it's
creepy though, like a white dude would do it. Though
this is like a white dude, because white dudes are
the creepiest dudes.
Speaker 2 (01:10:09):
Doesn't sound like it though.
Speaker 1 (01:10:11):
Like serial killers.
Speaker 3 (01:10:14):
Oh white guys. She did text me. I forgot to
tell you all this part that she had texted.
Speaker 4 (01:10:19):
She goes, I moved my Aura ring to my left finger,
pretending I was married.
Speaker 1 (01:10:23):
Okay, that's never going to be a wedding ring. It's
never going to be a wedding ring or engagement ring
a piece of plastic. Okay, Amy, thank you. Let us
know how it ends up with the company, everybody. No
one deserves to be treated like that inside of store
period