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August 12, 2025 47 mins

Eddie brought in a clip that he thought was going to change Bobby’s mind on 'everything that happens for a reason'. Quite the opposite happens and we get into a big discussion of fate vs. free will.  Luke Bryan stops by the studio and opens up about getting hit in the face on stage and why fans need to stop throwing things at artists. Luke talks about whether he’s ever been punched in real life, the coolest thing he’s ever gotten for free, what people misunderstand about him most and the unexpected illness that forced him to cancel a show in Rogers, Arkansas.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Bam So Babbit Bomb.

Speaker 2 (00:04):
Everybody, welcome Part two of the podcast. I appreciate all
the part tours out there listening. We're gonna get to
our interview with Luke Bryan. Now that was on the show,
so enjoy this. And then after this the big debate
about are.

Speaker 1 (00:18):
Things meant to be? Or do we have free will?

Speaker 2 (00:20):
It was like a half hour long, so we just
put this in this part so you guys could hear
the whole thing.

Speaker 1 (00:23):
So enjoy. Here is Luke Bryan on the Bobby Bones Show. Now,
good to see a buddy. Okay, I have questions. One,
did you get hit in the face with something at
a show?

Speaker 3 (00:33):
I did? That's recent, yes, very recent, very well. Yeah.
The most frustrating thing is, first of all, it was
like this little beach ball thing like a hackey sat
but I don't know the way this stuff takes off and.

Speaker 2 (00:52):
Goes well, it look like somebody hits you with a
nuclear bomb. According to the headline, it's like Luke Brian
almost dies because he gets hitt in the face with a.

Speaker 3 (00:58):
Nuclear Oh yeah, I mean when I'm sitting there and
I'm just doing my deal and it comes into my frame. Obviously,
I flinched and it got me. But then the problem
with it is is then it makes all of my
family members and friends that don't have all the social
media to go watch what actually happened. Then they called me,

(01:18):
and then it turns into I got hit by, like
I said, a baseball.

Speaker 1 (01:22):
So your official statement is what.

Speaker 3 (01:25):
My official statement is. People throw things at artists and
their idiots, and it's the deterioration of the moral fabric
of how your ass aught to act.

Speaker 1 (01:38):
I agree, don't throw stuff, literally, don't throw stuff.

Speaker 3 (01:41):
I mean, listen, I mean it's always you know, this
is not a new thing. I mean listen, that was
a that was a great thing to get thrown at me.
It was a little beach ball. I mean, I've had
cell phones get thrown at Oh gosh.

Speaker 4 (01:56):
Why somebody wants you to make a video with it.

Speaker 3 (01:59):
Yeah, it on video and they chunk it up there.

Speaker 1 (02:01):
So that's like throwing a rockets.

Speaker 3 (02:04):
The thing is that big and have not. Let's just
let's just let's just showcase entitlement. I've got an eleven
dollars iPhone that I'm gonna throw at an artist to
get a picture.

Speaker 4 (02:19):
But they're not going to get it back. Do they
just like go to their cloud and.

Speaker 3 (02:22):
Get the realize that it gets kind of scooped up
by either security guard. Then then they get then they
then they get to begging for it.

Speaker 4 (02:32):
I'd be like, tell those scurity guard they don't get
their phone back. You don't get if you throw your
phone at me, you don't get it back.

Speaker 3 (02:37):
Well, then they.

Speaker 2 (02:37):
Can say, somebody grab my phone and threw it up there.
I would lie, make up a great line, okay, and they.

Speaker 3 (02:43):
Know when the thing came in, like when when the
little ball or whatever it was came in. I mean
the first thing I do is I saw I see
red like I you know, and I get my composure
and then I'm like, I mean it's you know, it's
just a bunch of kids, you know, being being silly.
And I mean it's not like I could. I wanted

(03:05):
to jump off of there, and you know.

Speaker 2 (03:09):
And you're a big old boy, you p bright take them, well,
I don't know, bigger than most.

Speaker 3 (03:13):
It is is last song in the night. It's country girl.
It's fun. It's a highlight of the show. Everybody's fun.
I got pissed for three seconds and finished it.

Speaker 1 (03:21):
Have you ever been punching the face.

Speaker 3 (03:23):
I got punched in the face a couple of times
as a kid, like neighborhood brawls, Like.

Speaker 2 (03:29):
Because I wonder if that's what the feeling is at first,
Like if you get hit, you're like, oh God, because
you don't know what it is.

Speaker 1 (03:36):
And I assume when you get punched in the face.

Speaker 3 (03:38):
That the only the more the more thing is I
did I saw it coming at me. I didn't know
if it was like a zen can or whatever. But
I mean I had a one of my neighborhood buddies. Yeah,
he he kind of escalated faster than I thought, and
he just popped me right in the lip and we
we you know, we had to figure it out later.

Speaker 1 (03:58):
But did you pop them back?

Speaker 3 (04:00):
Nah? I mean it was he was a big kid
and he got me good it. You know.

Speaker 2 (04:06):
Let me ask about another situation. You were in my home, Arkansas,
and you you refunded the whole show. We played a
clip of that yet. So here's the deal.

Speaker 3 (04:16):
I've been playing that venue right is it's Rogers Bentonville,
And for some reason, that's the third terrible show I've
had in a row.

Speaker 2 (04:25):
There all three sick or just the other ones, all
three Sick, all three chest Coal, and this time I
was on stage as Covid was getting me in.

Speaker 3 (04:36):
I didn't know it was and then I just, I just,
I mean that crowd in that audience has been so
amazing to me. I mean that that little that that
that venue is amazing. I love it. It's a brand
new venue. All I want to do is go to Rogers, Arkansas,
put on a great show in my life. Like it
may become like it's gonna become like, uh.

Speaker 1 (04:57):
You're right, well dude, Yeah, yeah, it's gonna become.

Speaker 3 (04:59):
A for me. And so the bottom line is, yeah,
I got on stage. I woke up that morning. I
never worem up. I don't my voice typically is ready
to rock. I woke up that morning and I could
not breathe, and I said, Jesus, this is happening in

(05:22):
Rogers again. I've I started warming my voice up. At
five fifteen pm, I've got my guitar on the bus
and I sang from five fifteen to my VIP thing
at seven point thirty. I did some easy songs in
my VIP.

Speaker 1 (05:42):
So what's an easy song for you to sing?

Speaker 5 (05:43):
Well?

Speaker 3 (05:44):
Like hunting Fishing's pretty easy for me. Uh, country song
came on. My current single is not like a crazy vocal,
got to move a lot of air, and man, I
get on stage and what what what's been happened to me?
Is the like my first couple of songs have been

(06:04):
going great, and then I'm like, okay, I'm going to
breathe and I can't breathe. And then uh, I just
got up there midway or a couple songs in, and
I said, here we are Rogers, where I'm fixing a
deliver another terrible show for y'all. So I refunded the money,

(06:26):
had two more shows that week. It was crazy because
I had two more shows that week. I had sang
so hard in Rogers I probably blew my voice out.
I wouldn't have done the other shows anyway, I mean,
and then I got home and I'm I had these
symptoms of just weirdness. And then I was like, yeah,

(06:48):
I mean, I took a test and it was COVID
and then I held up in my bed or the room,
watched a bunch of new shows and stuff like that whatever,
stayed indoors, and then had some festivals the next week,
and then I was just like I just don't want
to be on stage doing horrible concerts. That's like the worst.

(07:13):
That's like where I'm at my lowest form of not
being happy when I have to go try to And
so Eric Church stepped in and did those festivals.

Speaker 1 (07:23):
How does that call go?

Speaker 3 (07:26):
Well? We man If the fans can take away anything
from this interview is when this is going on, like
your brain, in every fabric of your body becomes focused
on getting better to do the concerts, to the point

(07:48):
to where it's, like I said, it's about the lowest
I get as a human being, because I'm so frustrated
that I'm sick, because I want to go out there
and just smile and sing with ease. And when it's
all clicking, that's when you see me being goofy and
fun and cutting up. But when I'm having to just

(08:09):
focus on every word to go out anyway. So we
got a team of people gathered up and I'm singing.
I'm doing all my tricks at home. I go set
up my piano at home. I try to sing the
hard songs. Nothing's coming out. I got eleven tractor trailers
and I got twelve tour buses idling in Nashville, trying

(08:31):
to determine do they leave Nashville and drive to Kansas. Well,
if we send you know eleven all that, if we
send the whole circus to Kansas on Tuesday to get
to Kansas, and Wednesday morning, I wake up and my
voice is worse. Then we got to turn all the
trucks around. And you know, that's a five hundred thousand

(08:54):
dollars loss right there, and maybe more. I don't know.
I'll have to check it. At the end of the year.
We're going to settle the taxes. But but you know,
so it's a it's a very very frustrating, stressful and
we want this thing to go off for the fans. Well, well,
you know, we realize it's probably best. Well we start,

(09:17):
you know, I call my my booking agent. We start
calling people, and Eric's like, hey, I'm Eric's had the
weekend off and he he was able to go kind
of I think he did it acoustically or with Joanna
Cotton and they and he kind of subbed in and
and and I'm like, I love I love the fact

(09:37):
that I'll owe Eric. You know, if it happens to
Eric at some point, you know, very happy he stepped
in and and I think maybe Friday and Saturday I
probably could have limped through the shows. But still I
don't even want to limp through them. I mean, man,
I've been doing this for so many years, and it's like,

(09:59):
I think the fan have I think the fans. What's
funny is then people are like, well, why did you
let everybody know you had COVID? And I'm like, because
when you start reading socials and then the whole nother
dynamic of what starts people, then people are coming up
with a whole nother narrative of why I'm not able

(10:22):
to do the shows, which you know, if you can't
chase all that, but but yeah, it hung around on
me for about a month. I'd have a great show,
I'd have a rough show, like I'd have a show
and this so you know in summer allergies are me
for me or have been tricky my whole life. I
was like I was the little kid on the inhaler,

(10:44):
you know when and I was the kid that drink
drink the pink, you know, the pink of my whole life.
When I got sick. I mean, I don't think of me.
My Bama would be like snotty nose. Take this, it's
probably anyway, probably could have built a better immune.

Speaker 1 (11:07):
What songs of yours are the hardest for you to sing?

Speaker 3 (11:10):
Man? I think you know. Roller Coaster is a very
very tough song. Like Waves was really really tough. But
here's the deal. When my nose and chest and lungs
and voice are all in harmony, man, I'm I'm pretty,
I'm pretty. I'm having a good time up there. But

(11:33):
roller Coaster is a really tricky one.

Speaker 1 (11:38):
You have record one to go.

Speaker 2 (11:39):
Man, Now, i gotta go sing this every night because
it was very difficult to record in the studio.

Speaker 3 (11:43):
Uh well, we you know, me and my producer, we've
been really good about my producer who's been with me
for years. He knows where my voice is supposed to be.
And we'll go we'll go in with a new song
and I'll try to get him and he'll he's got
a note on the guitar and he's like, this is
your note, and I'm like, but I can do it,

(12:05):
He's like. And then after the fact, after we had
the showdown in the studio, we argue it out. Then
he always wins, and I'm glad, But you know, I think, Man,
I'm really lucky in I have a big, old, loud, booming,
healthy voice that, thank god, I've never when I'm going

(12:26):
through this too, like me and my E and T.

Speaker 1 (12:30):
Is that right?

Speaker 3 (12:31):
He knows throat, He knows the throat. We are actively
talking thirty minutes a day, trying to determine what's going on.
And right when I get like, right when I got
back from Rogers Friday morning, I went into the chair,
he runs a camera up my nose. You know, I
have that happen. You know. We're constantly checking my vocal

(12:52):
cords and they're like, I mean, they're like I told somebody,
like the swamp Things arm. You remember the swamp Things
arm that got off? No, what's you never met? You
don't remember the movie swamp Thing not.

Speaker 1 (13:04):
A movie, guy?

Speaker 6 (13:05):
Really?

Speaker 1 (13:05):
Oh god, that a big one.

Speaker 3 (13:07):
It's like a big old ezy eighties movie. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (13:11):
I didn't even watch.

Speaker 3 (13:12):
Like his arm chopped off and it grows back. It's
like my voice.

Speaker 1 (13:16):
I'm looking at it now, looks disgusting.

Speaker 3 (13:18):
Swamp things armed? Yeah, oh was in that movie. Fun fact,
that was like that was like her movie where you're
like a nine year old kid and you're like, who
is that.

Speaker 2 (13:32):
I don't think I've ever seen swamp thing. I'm looking
right at it. Okay, here's a few quick ones here.
What's the coolest thing you've ever got for free?

Speaker 3 (13:40):
The coolest thing I ever got for free was probably
back in the day when I got to go to
Carl Black Chevrolet and get my first truck. And they
used to do that with a lot of artists. And
when you roll into a Chevrolet truck lot and you
get to pick the biggest, jacked up, shiniest wheels and

(14:01):
drive off, it was pretty bad ass.

Speaker 1 (14:04):
The biggest fish you've ever caught, Oh.

Speaker 3 (14:07):
I mean probably I've caught like a two hundred pound
sell fish, but we've caught some three hundred pounds, like
bull sharks in the Gulf.

Speaker 7 (14:16):
How long do you sit and fight that thing? A
bull shark? Yeah, they're fun on the first one or two.
But like when you're out there grouper and snapper fish
and they kind of you'd rather they kind.

Speaker 1 (14:27):
Of just you'd rather not. You have other priorities.

Speaker 3 (14:31):
Yeah, we you know, like we pulled a like and
then you make the mistake of pulling a bull shark
onto the deck of your boat and don't ever do
that because it's a bull shark. You know. You want
the big photo, you know, and they're like, ah, but
after yeah, what does it does? It just kind of man,
you know they can do a couple of lex wipes,

(14:53):
Oh wow, like oh yeah, it's like pulling a Yeah,
it's a problem.

Speaker 1 (14:57):
How do you get it out?

Speaker 3 (14:59):
You just start poking everything your gas. You just shove
shovel it out in the back door and just get then. Yeah,
they're bleeding everywhere and you gotta don't know.

Speaker 1 (15:09):
What do you think the most misunderstood thing is about you?

Speaker 3 (15:12):
The most miss understood thing about me? I don't know. Oh,
I think that I think that I really care about
this stuff.

Speaker 2 (15:27):
And I think, uh, gosh, can I lend you one
since I'm out from I'm out outside perspective.

Speaker 3 (15:36):
Please that maybe that'll help me understand the missmiss.

Speaker 1 (15:39):
I think you're going there a little bit.

Speaker 2 (15:40):
But I think that the misunderstood thing about you is
you're not just a dude who gets up there and
shakes his button sings and that's you as an artist,
Like your music acumen is extremely high.

Speaker 1 (15:51):
I think the things that you.

Speaker 2 (15:52):
Do that people show on social media a whole lot
gets taken over for what you really are, and that
is somebody who really understands music at even a molecular level.
You play, you sing, you write, you play piano, like
I think, I think that would probably be what I
think is the most misunderesting think about you.

Speaker 3 (16:08):
Well, I think when I was at when I was
in Vegas, and I could go out there and do
a thirty minute set on piano and guitar, and when
you're in Vegas, thirty percent of the crowd may not
even be country music fans, And when I could kind
of hold the room for that moment, I was like,
I think that helped people maybe understand that, Yeah, you know,

(16:31):
I don't understand why Luke Brian wears tight jeans and
that becomes the centerpiece rather than all I mean, hell,
all the other tight jean wearing guys from.

Speaker 1 (16:45):
Maybe you wear the better every thinking about that.

Speaker 3 (16:47):
I don't know. I mean, I mean some of them
guys in the nineties, I mean, their genes really showcased
the front of their academy.

Speaker 1 (16:56):
You're right, so let's work on that. Let's showcase in front.

Speaker 3 (17:00):
That ain't that can't really happen.

Speaker 2 (17:05):
Okay, this song going number one Country song came on?
Why did you pick this song?

Speaker 3 (17:13):
Well, listen, I mean, I think about where I'm at
in my career. I think, listen. I mean, I've had
such a blessed career that I can be that I
can be the fun guy that does kind of beat songs,
party songs, bar songs, you know, back roads and tailgates

(17:35):
and the fishing songs and the hunting songs, and and
I think I think that, you know, I think people
there was a phase in my life when I was
a twenty year old kid that for four years the
only thing I played with my band was honky tonks
that look and feel just like the honky tonk in
country song came on. I mean, we we rolled into

(17:56):
bicker bars and we had to play David allen Coe
and we had to play uh. We had to play
all the the Haggard and the and the Haggard and
Willie and the and and and Jennings. We had to
play all those for years. So this this, this, you
know this uh and and etc. When I bring up
Earl Thomas Connelly and and all these uh, you know,

(18:19):
Keith Whitley's of the World I mean I played that
stuff for years as a as a as a nineteen
year old kid. So this this song really kind of
pays homage to that kind of honky tunkh lifestyle and
it's kind of a you know, it's kind of a
throwback sound for me. And I think as long as
I can, I can play in all the spaces of

(18:40):
little lanes and the fans feel like it's really authentic
to me as an artist. I mean, I love standing
up there and just kind of delivering that song in
a real relaxed singing situation where I'm not like that's
part of Leu's go you know. You know, So I

(19:01):
loved having it on the having it uh out on
the radio, and obviously as it's nearing number one, you
know you start to see the fans kind of sway
to it and had a real cool moment, you know,
somewhere I was playing it and just naturally the fans
through their their their their lights up on their phone.
So it felt really felt really cool. So I think

(19:23):
it's as I'm entering into this phase of my career,
I think like I'll look back and or I'll look
ahead and go like, well, what I want to what
do I want to stand on stage and play this
summer for the fans. Let's let's try to write the song,
find the song, put it out, and go make a moment.
It's kind of where I'm at.

Speaker 1 (19:41):
What song does your audience go the craziest for during
a live show?

Speaker 3 (19:46):
I think it's a time. I mean, I think when
you look whether it's I can't really tell between I
don't want this night to end? Play it again and
Country Girl? I mean play it again in Country Girl?
Are I mean, they're just the fact that I get
to do those for the rest of my life and
watch people react to them is about is? I mean,

(20:10):
you know, when you're doing oh my god, this is
my song and just watching the energy, it's really special
and pretty pretty crazy. Farm Tour Farm tour has been amazing.
We went to California this year. It was it was
a riot. It was amazing. We got them coming up
in the fall this year and farm tours Farm tours wild.

(20:32):
I mean, fifteen twenty thousand people in a wheat field.
It's pretty.

Speaker 1 (20:37):
It's literally somebody's farm too.

Speaker 3 (20:39):
It's people's farms. Occasionally we couldn't find a farm that worked,
but yeah, I mean we walk out there and there's
these farming families and they are happy we're there, and
it's a good deal.

Speaker 2 (20:54):
Farm Tour three dates September eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth Wisconsin, Illinois,
and Michigan. And also Luke's Country Song came on tour.
Still rolling through September or even longer than that.

Speaker 3 (21:04):
Yeah, we we we were wrapping around like right around
Labor Day or after Labor Day. But when I had
to reschedule, I think Dallas and Lafayette, Louisiana. That puts
me into the rescheduled U stuff in September. But I've
kind of you know, just so the fans know. I mean,
my son Bo is playing football, so I've kind of

(21:27):
loaded up, like you're gonna see my summers be really
really heavy so I can do his football games in
the fall.

Speaker 2 (21:35):
Congratulations on another big song. Thank you, great to see you.
Glad you're healthy. Are you gonna go back to darketsall
you think?

Speaker 1 (21:40):
Ever? Well, I have to, because I'll go with you.

Speaker 4 (21:45):
Let me.

Speaker 3 (21:46):
Yeah, let's do that. What I'd love to do is
like do two nights there and like just do two
completely different shows, two nights at like and call it
like flim jam or something.

Speaker 1 (22:04):
I don't like the name. The names prey disgusting, but
the idea is great.

Speaker 4 (22:07):
Oh yeah, yeah, I'm in your throat. Yeah no, no, no,
because these are gonna be awesome shows.

Speaker 3 (22:12):
We gotta come up with a swampting nights, you know
all that.

Speaker 1 (22:15):
It just feels. But if if you decide you want
to do it.

Speaker 3 (22:18):
A razor blade, razorback throat.

Speaker 1 (22:21):
Oh ray, oh that's good.

Speaker 3 (22:23):
There we go. Just give us a minute. Get ready, Rogers,
We're coming to uh redemption. I'm gonna I'm gonna do
some Pavaradi songs. I'm gonna do two opera songs, a cappella,
you know, a cappella stars playing old banner. I'm gonna
really show our showcase the vocals to Healing Health. I'm

(22:45):
gonna do my Christmas version of Holy Night. I want
to do yes, some some Whitney, some Celine Dion.

Speaker 1 (22:53):
Yes.

Speaker 4 (22:53):
Can you see what. He's very passionate right now about this,
and he's kind of like got his fist in the air.

Speaker 3 (23:00):
Heart will go home.

Speaker 1 (23:01):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (23:01):
I will build a uh yeah, I will build a
temporary tip of the Titanic and you'll get on it
and we'll get on there. We'll we'll do a we'll
do a sweepstakes where a fan gets to win and we.

Speaker 1 (23:15):
Can have our you hold arms out and you hold them.

Speaker 3 (23:19):
There, we'll go.

Speaker 1 (23:19):
Get ready, okay too, I'm in. We'll go. H Luke Bryan, Congratulations,
Good see you, buddy, always good to see you. Everybody.
Everybody go with Luke.

Speaker 8 (23:28):
Oh yeah, the ban everybody?

Speaker 3 (23:30):
Thank you.

Speaker 1 (23:30):
Lucy Eddie. What do you have?

Speaker 3 (23:36):
Do you?

Speaker 8 (23:36):
Guys believe in everything happens for a reason. No, that
is crazy.

Speaker 1 (23:40):
I don't.

Speaker 2 (23:40):
I believe we all make choices and then if not,
nobody would have to do anything. Ever, you just sit
back and let fate happen. So no, I don't.

Speaker 1 (23:46):
But anyway, why.

Speaker 8 (23:47):
Dude, I saw a TikTok that's going to blow your
mind and maybe change your mind on this. It's Owen
Wilson talking about kind of something that happened when he
was a kid and kind of helped him become an actor.

Speaker 5 (23:57):
I went to military school, I got doubt of high
school for us cheating, so something that seemed like a
terrible thing at the time, getting kicked out, and my
poor dad was on the board of trustees. That's embarrassing
for my family, and you know, to be kicked out
for cheating.

Speaker 6 (24:14):
But if I hadn't gone to military school, my roommate
at military school who was good friends with Wes Anderson,
and that's how I ended up meeting West, so we
would never have gotten into, you know, the entertainment.

Speaker 8 (24:28):
Come on, come on. If he wouldn't have gotten kicked
out of school and gotten to military school where he
met his roommate and his roommate knew Wes Anderson, the
big director, he would never become an actor. Everything happens
for a reason.

Speaker 4 (24:42):
Well, in the way he became an actor, he wouldn't have.

Speaker 2 (24:45):
Yeah, I think, in my opinion, I think fate or
everything happening for a reason is a way for people
to feel comfortable with what's happened in their life. Like
that is a bit of structure that you can go well,
it's supposed to happen this way, because it's supposed to
happen this way. I think using this story specifically, you
are minimizing all the hard work that they did in

(25:07):
military school, all the risks they took in writing and
moving to LA You're minimizing all that and just going up.

Speaker 1 (25:13):
Fate did that. Fate didn't do all that.

Speaker 8 (25:14):
We had to do a little bit of work, but
he would have never.

Speaker 1 (25:18):
What if they didn't do the work?

Speaker 2 (25:19):
Like, we're going to end up somewhere, regardless of where
we end up based on decisions and choices that we make.

Speaker 1 (25:25):
And wherever we end up we can go. Yeah, Fate
put us here.

Speaker 2 (25:28):
What if he was supposed to be a heart surgeon
but he ended up cheating and he wasn't now a
heart surgeon to save five hundred people because he cheated
on a test and now he's an actor and not
really saving any lives.

Speaker 8 (25:37):
You don't think that there's anything crazy about him meeting
Wes Anderson through a mistake. Well, probably when he caught
cheating and got kicked out, he was like, this is
the worst thing in my life. Like it's over, Like
I'm going to military school. What's going to happen.

Speaker 2 (25:50):
I think people make decisions and choices and then they
either suffer the repercussions of them, or if it's a
positive one, they you know, collect the words from it.
And I think everything is based off of that decision
or even micro decisions. It's a domino effect. I do
not think that. To me, that actually is the opposite
of what fate is. That is, had he not done

(26:10):
all the work, all the little minor things with Wes
Anderson through all those years, none of it, what have
ever happened. And by you going that's fate and he's
now famous again, it minimizes all the work that went in.
And I think if fate was absolutely real, we'd have
to do nothing. We could sit on the couch all
day and do nothing and just let it happen like
that is what you're saying fate is.

Speaker 8 (26:27):
But then your fate at that point is to just
send the couch and do not.

Speaker 2 (26:30):
So what you're saying is fate is whatever you decide
it to be, so you get to actually make the
choices as to what happens with you.

Speaker 8 (26:37):
Some people like this is.

Speaker 9 (26:39):
Like McConaughey when he went to the bar and met
the director. That's fate.

Speaker 8 (26:43):
That is fate. That's fate. Man.

Speaker 2 (26:44):
No, that is something that happened, and he made some
great decisions after that chance meeting that ended up turning
into those situations, those opportunities.

Speaker 4 (26:53):
Bobby, are you open to a combo of it?

Speaker 2 (26:55):
I'm open to anything except for his explanation of Owen
Wilson being where he is because of faith, and that's like.

Speaker 4 (27:02):
The viral thing online right now is your butterfly effect?
And like, what decision did you make that then led
to all these other different things in your life now
because of that one decision, like me running into Bobby
at Culver's and being a listener of the show and
being like is that Bobby Bones and then deciding to
go over and say hi to him.

Speaker 8 (27:21):
I don't think I could have just somebody put Bobby Bones.

Speaker 4 (27:24):
Therefore, maybe I'm with a combo of it. But also
like a lot of other things had to happen after
that meeting for then, No.

Speaker 1 (27:31):
It's fading. You got all this for just fate.

Speaker 8 (27:33):
Well, fait, I think we all are here because of you.

Speaker 2 (27:36):
Don't think it's because the choices that you've made to
do hard work, no chance, Well maybe you not, but
amy for sure.

Speaker 8 (27:41):
Not all of us. All of us.

Speaker 2 (27:45):
You're minimizing any effort or any anything that people are
doing to actually get places. You're minimizing by going no,
it's just bound to happen whether you put in the
work or not.

Speaker 8 (27:54):
But some people don't work their butt off so hard
and then end up just doing I mean, they get
a good job and they're fine, but they're not doing
their big dream job. But that's that that's their fate then,
according to you, because it is that they weren't meant
to do that for whatever reason.

Speaker 4 (28:08):
And they're choosing. Maybe they are choosing to not so
I work to put themselves in certain situations where maybe
something no.

Speaker 8 (28:14):
But I'm saying some people work at something and never
get there because that was just never meant to happen.

Speaker 2 (28:19):
Maybe they didn't make a correct strategic decision based upon
an opportunity they had.

Speaker 8 (28:25):
I saw this cliff, and it's gonna change Bobby's mind.

Speaker 4 (28:28):
None of this part the city's open to a combo
because I have a combo of it, and sort of
like when you get caught cheating, Okay, now you can
either let this take you down a path of like,
oh yeah, I'm a loser, or okay, what is now
possible for me? Because of this.

Speaker 1 (28:42):
It's also being prepared when something happens, and it takes time, energy,
effort to be prepared when something happens. Nobody I know
that's walked into an opportunity they weren't completely unprepared for
the opportunity. They had been practicing, getting ready, and then
they meet someone that allows them to continue that journey.

Speaker 4 (29:03):
And like even as part of our faith, because Eddie,
I know you're a Christian and like in our prayers
or our desires and expressing those like it's not like
God's like, okay, pray for it and just sit back like, yeah,
you got to make you have free will like you can, but.

Speaker 1 (29:16):
If you don't do the action, you should still get
it according to you, right.

Speaker 8 (29:19):
No, the opportunity though, like the opportunity is that not
that's but you're not explained yet.

Speaker 1 (29:23):
Sure, I think.

Speaker 8 (29:24):
Opportunity of being an actor was there for for Owen, like.

Speaker 2 (29:28):
It wasn't there Wes Anderson was nothing. Neither one of
them were they worked together. Neither one of them wasn't
like Wes Anderson was already a massive director.

Speaker 8 (29:34):
No, but they weren't supposed to be together and make
movies together.

Speaker 1 (29:37):
I met someone else you and I being together and.

Speaker 8 (29:39):
Make music together and do things together. The way we
met too is weird, like everything you but what.

Speaker 2 (29:46):
You're saying is we did meet and we were able
to forge something I could have met somebody way more
funnier than you, and I did not prove.

Speaker 1 (29:55):
That.

Speaker 8 (29:55):
I literally could have take that back, take that back
right now, it's fate.

Speaker 7 (30:00):
I think it.

Speaker 4 (30:01):
Could be a little bit of like who knows, go
on if you're praying for something like it could be
like you get a little nudge from you know, God
to be like, hey, maybe you should go get that
coffee today or hey, and then you're like, oh, man,
I kind of just had this like feeling during my
pro time this morning, I should go to this coffee
shop today, and then boom, I met somebody. So you
were put in the right place at the right time

(30:21):
because you were actively willing and praying, but you're also
doing other things like I think it could be a combo.

Speaker 2 (30:27):
I believe the decisions you make are the decisions that
you make for your life. Every decision, every micro decision,
ends up being a product. Whatever that product is is
based on you and the work that you put in,
the decisions you made, the work you didn't put in,
the decision you didn't make. And I think that there's
a comfortability for people to think that everything is happens
for a reason because that means, well, regardless of what happens,
it was supposed to happen for a reason. I do

(30:48):
believe that's like a safety structure people have, and I
don't think, Oh now it's changed your mind. Owen Wilson
being in a golf show on Apple Plus was fate?

Speaker 8 (30:58):
Well late, what do you mean like that? But all
that's a product of that, I know, But that's just crazy.
He what if he's done like some bad stuff we
don't know about. But it's only because he got famous
because Wes Anderson and him work together.

Speaker 1 (31:09):
So fate was him supposed to? You know?

Speaker 8 (31:12):
Sometimes sometimes that's put there too to learn a lesson, like.

Speaker 1 (31:16):
No, I believe we have complete free will?

Speaker 8 (31:19):
Yeah, oh, right, hand right now, because you.

Speaker 1 (31:24):
Can't believe both, you can't believe, you can't.

Speaker 8 (31:25):
But it's things are put in front of you for
a reason. Sometimes you get opportunities over and over and
then you don't take him, and then after a while
you're just like, all right, well you're not gonna do
it anyway.

Speaker 4 (31:34):
Oh that's like you with donating your organs.

Speaker 8 (31:40):
Like maybe my fate is to donate a kidney, but
I just keep putting it off, right.

Speaker 2 (31:44):
But then no, your fate. You have to live to
your fate apparently, which is what you're saying. You have
to do it if it's supposed to be done. I
think it's going to happen. If you believe in fate,
you can believe it. You just sit back and really
not put in the work, and everything's gonna happen.

Speaker 1 (31:56):
That's what that's fate.

Speaker 4 (31:57):
But can you believe in fate and where I am.

Speaker 1 (32:01):
Yeah, you can believe whatever you want.

Speaker 2 (32:02):
There are no rules. Can't believe. I can't even prove
that my side is right, but I definitely.

Speaker 8 (32:06):
Don't believe it.

Speaker 2 (32:07):
And I believe that the more work you do and
the more prepared you are for when an opportunity happens,
the better chances you have to make that opportunity happen. Absolutely,
And I think people that possibly don't do that just
believe in fate.

Speaker 4 (32:18):
Probably pretty a little bit of faith. That you went
to the Dancing with the Star show and ended up
being there and y'all got to go.

Speaker 3 (32:25):
Out, or did you do that?

Speaker 2 (32:26):
I think I had to work hard to get invited
back as I won the championship. I know you did,
and so, but yeah, I think all of that is
is your wife though you're well.

Speaker 4 (32:35):
Also, you were putting in the work to make yourself
available for meeting somebody wanting and finding somebody to love.

Speaker 1 (32:43):
It could have been a different scenario. It could have
been not at all.

Speaker 2 (32:46):
But I think all those decisions played into a way
that that presented itself because of all the work, all
the effort, all this strategy put forth through my career,
through that show. Listen, I was offered a different show
instead of going on Dancing with the Stars. I didn't
do it right to be really done that show and
died in a car wreck walk into the set.

Speaker 1 (33:04):
But that would have.

Speaker 8 (33:04):
Been that would have been your fate.

Speaker 1 (33:06):
No, it wouldn't have been because I would have done it.
It wouldn't have. So you just count just contradicted yourself.

Speaker 2 (33:10):
You just contradicted yourself then, because that's not my fate
because I didn't do it.

Speaker 8 (33:13):
No, it would have been if that would have happened.
What I'm saying is what's happening now is your fate.

Speaker 2 (33:18):
What's happening now is a product of all of the
decisions and micro decisions I make every single day. And
if I believed otherwise, then I would do nothing. I
would not put in the work, so.

Speaker 9 (33:28):
There's no faith at all. It's all just hard work.

Speaker 1 (33:30):
I don't think well one, I don't believe really in
luck either.

Speaker 8 (33:34):
Oh man, I've seen you.

Speaker 4 (33:39):
There's a little bit of that too, because for some people,
they're just.

Speaker 1 (33:44):
People have Some people have their hook in the water
more than others.

Speaker 4 (33:47):
I'm not even talking about you. There's just some people
out there.

Speaker 2 (33:49):
That I think people that always claim other people are luckier,
I got fate are the people that don't do the work.
That's what I think. That's my real feeling on that.
But I can't prove that I'm right, and you can't
prove you're right. So we can sit and discuss this
all day long. You know, people have done complete dissertations,
like some of the greatest theologies of all time.

Speaker 8 (34:10):
They've you know, but what do they know? Like it's
what it's fate, it's not what they're thinking about.

Speaker 4 (34:14):
Some people are unlucky, Like do you see that bitgoing?

Speaker 2 (34:18):
Yeah, I think it's easy to say it's your fate
because then that means that somebody else, something else, has
complete control over you. I believe something else is given
me complete control on my own actions and they have
put the burden on me to make good or bad decisions,
Like lately it's fate for like a child molester to
be a child luster. Well no, I'm just asking, is
it fate for a child moluster to be a child moluster?
Because you think everything that happens is happening for a reason.

Speaker 1 (34:41):
That's myself from.

Speaker 8 (34:42):
Ready now it's something where I don't like, I don't
know your blanket statement is.

Speaker 4 (34:47):
The lot of evil in the world is very hard
to understand, but that is still fate.

Speaker 1 (34:52):
So child lusters are by fate child molusters.

Speaker 8 (34:57):
I have to think about that, to think about that,
But okay, I don't know fate. It's it's a crazy conversation.
And when I saw this clip, I thought this would
change your mind, but obviously it didn't.

Speaker 2 (35:09):
If if like a version of me came to me
in like a dream and had a little talk with
me and then I met like the ghost of fate passed,
and so maybe I believe it, But I just I'm
wired to believe based on all my decisions and the
things I've been able to do that it's all decisions
and my cro decisions, but it is it is more
comfortable in life to believe that there is an absolute
plan for you.

Speaker 1 (35:30):
I believe there was. I was made.

Speaker 2 (35:32):
Given autonomy over myself to make absolute decisions, and if
I make bad decisions, that's on me. So do you
think the fate is for some people to go to Hell?

Speaker 4 (35:42):
No?

Speaker 8 (35:42):
I mean that's again you're taking things.

Speaker 1 (35:45):
You're not answering a question talking about You're talking about
something bigger. You're talking about something bigger.

Speaker 2 (35:50):
So I'm just asking, do you believe it's the fate
because if people go to Hell, which as a Christian
you believe if some people is that their fate to
go to Hell?

Speaker 1 (36:00):
Okay, but everything happens and is all fate.

Speaker 8 (36:03):
Yeah, but you can change that. No, No, you can't
change You literally can change that.

Speaker 1 (36:06):
One.

Speaker 2 (36:06):
You cannot. If it's all fate, you cannot. Fate means
there is an absolute plan. Here's the beginning, middle, and
end over.

Speaker 8 (36:14):
You can also to I believe you can. You can
battle your fate and that's where your free will can
take you somewhere that's.

Speaker 2 (36:20):
Different than what fate is because by your logic, then
where you battle and where you end up was actually
your fate to begin with.

Speaker 9 (36:28):
That is getting ugly Ford, I mean, that's ugly for me.

Speaker 8 (36:31):
I believe. I still believe what I believe.

Speaker 2 (36:33):
I just like so you believe what you believe, even
though you hear other perspectives that are countering what you've
said you believe.

Speaker 8 (36:40):
I don't really those those perspectives are just to throw
off what I believe.

Speaker 1 (36:44):
No, no, no, it's it's a presentation of what you say.

Speaker 8 (36:47):
You say it's just comfortable, Like my life isn't comfortable,
twenty think that's what makes you comfortable, Like sometimes being
your friend is uncomfortable. But it's still fate.

Speaker 2 (36:55):
But I'm saying that's what makes you feel comfortable that
regardless of what happens, it was supposed to you can't
do better, but it was supposed to be this way.

Speaker 8 (37:01):
Correct, and you can change the trajectory.

Speaker 1 (37:05):
The definition of fate is you can't change it.

Speaker 8 (37:07):
You can you can change You have free will, but
your fate is there, like your fate, whatever was happening,
there's a scenario that's put around you. Whatever you want
to do around it is up to you.

Speaker 1 (37:18):
No, that's called free will. That's not fate.

Speaker 8 (37:20):
The scenario that you're in is fate.

Speaker 2 (37:23):
No, this like the the beginning, middle, and end. The
end is fate. I don't think you know what fate means.

Speaker 8 (37:28):
I do. I know what I believe fate is.

Speaker 2 (37:30):
Yeah, fate is the development of events beyond a person's control.
You're saying you can control fate at some point, but
the actual definition of fate is you can't control the
events at all. So you're saying, now you can control fate,
then you don't.

Speaker 1 (37:43):
Believe in fate.

Speaker 8 (37:44):
I believe in free will. No, I believe I believe
in fate. I just know it's not. We still have
free will, but fate is there.

Speaker 1 (37:53):
What happens free will and fate the same thing?

Speaker 4 (37:56):
Answer the question, We'll remember how I believe like a combo.

Speaker 1 (38:00):
Answer the question is.

Speaker 4 (38:04):
Exactly No, I didn't say that.

Speaker 8 (38:05):
That's what you're saying.

Speaker 1 (38:07):
You're not even hearing now, You're so you're so you're.

Speaker 8 (38:09):
Saying, if one is one, fate is fate, free will
is free will, then you can't have both. Believing in
both is a combo.

Speaker 2 (38:16):
But you say you can change fate. That's not the
definition of fate. Fate is not the ability to change
it is.

Speaker 8 (38:22):
You have believe in both. Is believing in both possible.

Speaker 1 (38:26):
You can believe in anything. You can believe that I'm
a dinosaur. I don't right, I don't care.

Speaker 2 (38:30):
But fate, but fate itself is predetermined, and there's the
definition of it is an absolute end.

Speaker 4 (38:36):
It is absolutely see. I don't know the exact exact
definition of fate, but I think that we do. We
can have circumstances of like wow, like I talked about
meeting you, I think that that was a situation that
was right place, right time, that was like part this
is part of my story, like this was.

Speaker 1 (38:56):
Think you're more of a destiny person.

Speaker 4 (38:57):
Then yeah, I guess I don't know what it's called.
But I see where Eddie is coming from. I see
where you're coming from.

Speaker 2 (39:04):
He's not using the correct words because he doesn't believe
in fate. Then because fate is iron fate is iron clad,
it's absolutely predictab.

Speaker 8 (39:10):
Well, you brought in fate. I was literally just talking
about everything happens.

Speaker 1 (39:14):
You brought in faith.

Speaker 8 (39:15):
It is everything happens is that fate.

Speaker 4 (39:17):
It is kind of crazy at times when things are
orchestrated in a way that like don't make sense, and
it starts to come together and you know that it
seems more supernatural than just like it's like this was divine.

Speaker 2 (39:28):
But I think come together in a different way, and
you'd have felt the same way, and you wouldn't have
known they wouldn't have come together had they happened in
a different way, that is, you had never had the comparison.

Speaker 4 (39:37):
True. I think that, Yeah, I think that there are
just circumstances to me that have felt I guess the
word that I would use now that's coming to my
mind would be orchestrated and divine and felt like an
opportunity that yes, I had to make certain decisions to
nurture it and then see what was going to come
from it. But I think was I'm grateful it was

(40:00):
put in my path. I think could be a gift.

Speaker 1 (40:02):
Sure, but that's not fate.

Speaker 4 (40:04):
Okay, well that was just part of my faith.

Speaker 8 (40:06):
That's the word. Whatever the word is. I don't know.

Speaker 1 (40:10):
Yeah, I think I've shifted, daddy. I feel very successful
here today.

Speaker 8 (40:14):
No shift you.

Speaker 1 (40:18):
Here's what's about fate.

Speaker 8 (40:19):
The cliff didn't shift you at all. No.

Speaker 2 (40:22):
It further cemented that we are presented with opportunities constantly,
but we're only presented them if if we get us
if we, like Gamy would have she not decided to
go to a restaurant, would never met her.

Speaker 4 (40:32):
And it was not even just like I had to
make the decision to come over. I wasn't for sure,
for sure that it was you, and I had to
awkwardly come over and say are you Bobby Bones? And
then things snowballed from there, like a lot of different
things had to snowball and make it possible, Like or
even when I was deciding to leave my job to
come join this show, I remember feeling very uneasy about
it and going to my mom, and my mom tell

(40:54):
like being like, well, let's pray about it. So we
prayed about it, and then my mom I felt like
I'd looked to her as a guy, and in that
moment she told me like, if there's any or any
age where you can just up and make a shift
like this when you're single and don't have any responsibilities.
I made that move, but I did it prayerfully, and
then I started to see like, oh, wow, maybe Bobby

(41:15):
was placed at that restaurant for a reason, and now
this is my path. But I had to make choices.

Speaker 2 (41:19):
There's too much evil in the world for me to
believe that those things happen for a reason.

Speaker 1 (41:23):
I believe those are choices people make.

Speaker 2 (41:25):
The evil is what makes it like child molesters, murderers, Like,
that's not fate.

Speaker 4 (41:29):
I mean, I think that's saying is one of the
most one of the things we need to eliminate when
something terrible happens to somebody or you know, and sometimes
a comforting phrase quote unquote comforting that people think is
is like, oh, well, you know everything, everything happens.

Speaker 2 (41:42):
For And that's my point that it means a little
structure that people say so they feel, so they feel
better about whatever the situation is.

Speaker 4 (41:51):
But I do think that certain things do happen to
us and how we handle it and how we move forward,
Like that question what is now possible because of this?
And that could be your trajectory. Do you want to
go like down this path that's probably pretty terrible because
something terrible happened to you, or do you now get
to shift it and use it for good and come
alongside others that have gone through terrible things.

Speaker 1 (42:10):
And yeah, but that you get to make that decision.

Speaker 4 (42:12):
Yes, that's your free will.

Speaker 9 (42:13):
Yeah, so do we believe in it's if it's your
time to go. You're trying to go.

Speaker 1 (42:16):
No, I don't.

Speaker 2 (42:18):
But I can't prove anything is true or false because
I can't. It's not a tangible thing. There is, there's
nothing that you can prove it. My only point was
by Eddie's definition, he's not accurate in his belief.

Speaker 8 (42:30):
I don't even know what definition you're talking about, Like
there was no definition.

Speaker 1 (42:33):
All I literally was faith.

Speaker 8 (42:34):
All I said was do you believe and everything happens
for a reason? And I said, and then you put
a word into it, like I just That's all I'm
saying with this clip that I brought you to you
is like, do you believe and everything happens for a reason?
Good things, bad things? That's it?

Speaker 2 (42:47):
No, Because again I would have to believe that Chad Molester's, murderers,
pedophiles all happen for a reason. And I don't believe that,
or that you go to hell and that's a reason. Okay,
that's why I don't believe that, Okay, And I think again,
it's a comfortable structure to think that because that's an
easy way out to blame your problems on something else.

Speaker 1 (43:06):
That's that's my personal.

Speaker 4 (43:07):
Belief, Okay, But but the bones like, I kind of
just want to go to.

Speaker 1 (43:13):
Let's talk to where are you falling?

Speaker 8 (43:15):
This man?

Speaker 9 (43:17):
Eddie brought it starting with fate, Like.

Speaker 8 (43:20):
I never said. I never said the word fate.

Speaker 4 (43:25):
You believe everything happens for a reason.

Speaker 8 (43:26):
That's all I said.

Speaker 9 (43:27):
That's what he said at the beginning. Yes, oh man,
I thought you introduced fate.

Speaker 8 (43:31):
No, Bobby, but you bring in words and definitions. I'm like, dude,
I didn't study that.

Speaker 1 (43:36):
It happens, but everything happens for a reason. It is fate.

Speaker 8 (43:39):
Like you are cerebral, you think, you read about things,
you learn about things. I'm like, that's great, there's other
people have time for that. I'm like, dude, I believe
this because I've seen it with my own eyes. I
believe it. It's all I'm saying. And then this TikTok
clip came out. I'm like, oh, I'm going to bring
this for Bobby. That's it.

Speaker 1 (43:57):
What do you got?

Speaker 4 (43:58):
Okay? Well, often used interchangeably, everything happens for a reason
and fate are not precisely the same.

Speaker 8 (44:06):
Let's go, baby, do you want me to keep going?

Speaker 1 (44:09):
No, I don't believe everything happens for a.

Speaker 8 (44:10):
Reason, but who's saying this too, Like that's what I'm saying, Like,
who's saying this stuff?

Speaker 2 (44:13):
But again, if everything happens for a reason, I googled it,
and we can this, but I didn't. If everything happens
for a reason, why do pedophiles? Why do people go
to hell? Why is their murder? Why do babies die
out of that?

Speaker 9 (44:25):
There's no good out of that?

Speaker 4 (44:26):
What I wanted to know because I haven't thought about this,
and I do want to think more about it. This
is bringing up a good question, and I, Eddie, you
should want to research it and figure it out, so
we can do that. But it's I just googled. Is
everything happens for a reason? The same thing as fate?
And now I'll read more into it. I don't have
to do it here with y'all, but it says here

(44:47):
they often are used interchangeable, but they're not precisely the same.
And now I'm curious to see what people say about it,
and I'll read different articles. This is just amazing.

Speaker 9 (44:56):
Why we're saying that child pedophiles, everything happens for a reason.
What reason is that?

Speaker 4 (45:01):
Like?

Speaker 8 (45:01):
Tell me what that's?

Speaker 4 (45:01):
What's what I think as a person of faith. That's
one of the most difficult things to understand is the
evil of the world.

Speaker 2 (45:07):
And that's what keeps me from believing everything happens for
a reason or fate.

Speaker 1 (45:11):
Is that is the evil of the world.

Speaker 2 (45:12):
And people go, what's a greater plan, a greater plan
that a kid gets No, I don't that's not a
great plan that I believe in.

Speaker 1 (45:17):
If a kid has to be we're using We're using
the worst.

Speaker 4 (45:22):
Or natural disasters, I mean, all of it.

Speaker 2 (45:24):
Yeah, it's comprehend Okay, good talk everybody.

Speaker 8 (45:31):
That was heavy.

Speaker 4 (45:32):
I haven't even finished.

Speaker 3 (45:34):
Hey, don't bring a knife to a gun five.

Speaker 8 (45:35):
What do you mean I brought a clip of Owen Wilson.

Speaker 3 (45:37):
What was the clip?

Speaker 9 (45:38):
I don't remember the club I do.

Speaker 2 (45:40):
Owen Wilson would have never if had he not met
Wes Anderson, he would have never known.

Speaker 8 (45:44):
You know, if you wouldn't have gotten kicked out of
school for cheating.

Speaker 4 (45:47):
I mean, Eddie was doing more of like, yes, you
have lunch trugs. Have you seen the butterfly effect online?
And people make all these videos that.

Speaker 2 (45:53):
I do believe in that one small action affects actions everywhere.

Speaker 9 (45:57):
Oh yeah, that's a ribble event. Like the starfish things,
any effects happening?

Speaker 4 (46:03):
Again, I haven't even finished my coffee. We can give
me drink.

Speaker 1 (46:08):
No, I would do this for four hours.

Speaker 2 (46:10):
This is like what I read, and I love it,
and I know I'm also there's no way to be right,
but that doesn't mean I don't have feelings on it.
But also I'm not going to scream I'm the only
right one, because I believe that would actually be against
everything I'm also arguing for.

Speaker 4 (46:22):
Okay, can I just show say one quick thing about
because this is what Eddie was saying. I think this
might help him. But it goes on to say, here,
everything happens for reasons suggests a purposeful, often beneficial, underlying
cause for every event, while fate implies a predetermined course
of events that cannot be altered. So you were when
you brought in fate. Yes, that is the definition cannot

(46:43):
be altered. But I don't know that, Eddie was Eddie,
were you saying that I were.

Speaker 8 (46:46):
Talking about I was never talking about fate.

Speaker 1 (46:48):
Yeah you were, because you were like, everything's supposed happen,
It is supposed to happen. That's fate.

Speaker 8 (46:52):
According to Amy's definition, It's.

Speaker 1 (46:54):
No, no, AI Overview, AI Overview, all right right, thank
you guys and we will see you tomorrow on the show.

Speaker 2 (47:02):
Send us all your messages, thanks for being a part tour,
and you guys have a good rest of the Tuesday.

Speaker 1 (47:06):
All right, bye everybody,
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Hosts And Creators

Bobby Bones

Bobby Bones

Amy Brown

Amy Brown

Lunchbox

Lunchbox

Eddie Garcia

Eddie Garcia

Morgan Huelsman

Morgan Huelsman

Raymundo

Raymundo

Mike D

Mike D

Abby Anderson

Abby Anderson

Scuba Steve

Scuba Steve

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