Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
Transmitting this Welcome to Tuesday show more than studio.
Speaker 2 (00:16):
Explain the game, Raymundo.
Speaker 3 (00:18):
Yes, so it's gonna be famous songs and it's the
intro talking part.
Speaker 2 (00:22):
So can you name the song? And there's no music.
You've actually pulled the audio. It's dry audio. Correct. Okay,
play the example. Did you play this minute ago? Look?
If you add one shot, one opportunity sees everything you
ever won, one moment that you capture. Yeah, okay, correct,
all right, how many guys? We got five? All right, guys,
(00:43):
everybody and Morgan you should play too, since Amy's out.
All right, I'll do it and you're playing, I'm playing.
If you miss it, you're out. Elimination style, ready, Raymundo.
Oh yeah, you're gonna have to do that a couple
of times. Oh no, boy, this is very Oh man,
that was fun. I think I got it. Do it again?
(01:09):
Oh now you know what, We're not gonna do eliminador
because that's too hard. As number one, I have it,
but it took me a minute. Yeah, what is it?
Good luck lunchbocks. No, I got it. I'm in for
the whim. Oh now whoa now, whoa now, whoa Now.
Speaker 4 (01:27):
It's a song title, right, yeah, song title Morgan country
Girl Shaking for me.
Speaker 2 (01:32):
That's what I have, Lunchbox country Girl, shake it for me,
Eddie I have. That's my kind of night. Right, what
is it country girl? Oh? Eddie got good, good thing.
It wasn't. Eliminator said, no chance. All right. The intro
part of the song go ahead. Will you count me in? Oh?
(01:53):
Will you count me in? I'm in? I know the artist,
will you count me in? I'm in? Gosh? What is
the song title name? Will you count me in?
Speaker 5 (02:11):
No?
Speaker 2 (02:12):
It's not called that. Oh my gosh. She's having some
sort of debate with himself and his head. Did you
hear that? Guys?
Speaker 6 (02:18):
It is Colby Cawlay and it's are you counting?
Speaker 2 (02:23):
Starts in my rose? Starts in her rose. That's weird. Gosh.
Speaker 6 (02:28):
I wrote down an answer, but I don't know. Thank you, Ray, Lunchbox,
Kobe calay Toes.
Speaker 2 (02:35):
I have bubbly bub It's called bubbly Yeah, it's bubbly yeah, bubbly.
There you go. Ran into her on the road a
couple of weeks ago, like like in the road road.
She was walking on the street with her dogs, and
I pulled over. I was like Colby, she was like Bobby,
and I was on the phone in my car. She
(02:55):
was on the phone walking and we had it was
a really awkward interaction because we're both trying to tell
people to hold on. I got to have a conversation,
but it was great. So there you go.
Speaker 7 (03:04):
And then it's I bet it's cool to be like, sorry,
that was Cob whoever you were talking to.
Speaker 2 (03:09):
No, I would have done that immediately. What about her saying, hey,
that was Bobby Bones that'd be cool too. She is
gonna do an interview on my podcast. Because of that,
I was like, just text me, we'll do an interview.
All right, all right, next up? Oh well, go again.
I got it? What are you talking about? What you
know it? You guys know it? Do it again? What's
(03:33):
an alien? I'm gonna play it like two or three
times in a row.
Speaker 8 (03:37):
Here.
Speaker 2 (03:37):
I'm not playing it ray is, but we'll turn the
music down.
Speaker 9 (03:39):
Listen closely, Sana, Sana, I got a shocked.
Speaker 2 (03:52):
I don't know if that's from this planet. Like Morgan said,
set it up, I'm in but I don't have this.
I don't have it either much. Walk you in? Yeah, time,
(04:13):
what do you think it says. So it says words, yeah,
read would your music down one more time? Here it
is China? So I ended up. No, turn it up,
turn it up? Yeah, sweet home Alabama, Home Alabama. Oh
my god, he turn it up. Here it again China. Okay,
(04:37):
what do you guys have I have?
Speaker 7 (04:39):
It wasn't me shaggy kind of sounds, Sofa turned it up?
Speaker 2 (04:46):
Morgan, I had friends in little places. Maybe Garth was,
you know, speaking to Spanish. It wasn't Spanish that it
was English? Is that Spanish? I had Hotel California? All right?
Well I thought that was pretty I mean, now that
I hear turn it out? All right? Next Joe v
P Let's take it. I'm in. I'm in, I'm making it.
Speaker 10 (05:10):
Let's take it.
Speaker 2 (05:12):
I'm in for the whim uh Morgan chushaw.
Speaker 5 (05:16):
Slide her age got her on that one.
Speaker 2 (05:20):
Yeah, no, dang it to the left.
Speaker 4 (05:24):
I thought they did say something like that in the beginning.
Speaker 2 (05:26):
They don't say, Yo, v I P, let's kick it, Eddie,
I have ice ice baby, lunchbox ice ice baby. Correct,
so do I his baby? But ell iyes okay? And
one more chick? What side slide? Kick it? Are all tied.
(05:50):
I'm one. So you guys are fighting for a second. Yeah,
and obviously I have this one obviously. Yeah, I know
Bobby has a one. And I know I got this.
Speaker 9 (06:01):
You know it?
Speaker 2 (06:02):
Yeah, I do know this one. Man, I don't know this.
Yeah you wouldn't. I mean you would, but you wouldn't
if you miss Vanilla. I'm not gonna get this one. Yeah,
one more time, Ray, everybody in love rock roll? Okay,
yet not judgesh Eddie. I have fight for your right
to party, lunchbox.
Speaker 6 (06:22):
I have my friends, the Beastie Boys, fight for your
right to party.
Speaker 2 (06:26):
Whoa kick it? What do you have that? We played
that song a million times? Yeah, like as our band. Okay,
so I'm out. I'm out. I finished first, Morgan, you're out.
You finished the last. You two can do a tie break.
Let speed round, oh buzz in, but lunch by this
for a second place. I don't hear second place. Turn
(06:47):
it up song. I ain't gonna get that one. Turn
it up song. Well there, I hear the turn it up,
turn it up, So turn it up song? Okay, turn
it up song? Yeah, speed around? You hear I hear it,
I hear you turn it up? Song, Eddie eddie honky tonk,
(07:07):
but donk a dounk? Correct? Yes, second, no song. You
don't get a word with your second I do for
first place. But that was a good second place. Whoa,
you're unbelievable. All right, thank you. That's fine. Well another one.
We get it tomorrow next year. So that No, that
was Troy Akins right, yes, yeah, turn it out? Yeah, okay,
(07:31):
uh great, that's fun game, Mike. You make that. I
didn't make that. That was a good one, by the
question to be this is a funny one to do
(07:53):
when Amy's not here. She's not here today. By the way,
hello Bobby Bones. I started dating a younger woman and
my children just aren't feeling it. Well, I've passed away
a few years ago, and I got up the nerve
to start dating. The kid's issue is I'm fifty nine
and my girlfriend is thirty one. The fact that my
oldest daughter is thirty five is the issue. I'm guessing
they think it's creepy and gross. I think I've earned
(08:14):
the right to live my life and do what makes
me smile, and she does. I still want them involved
in my life, but this woman really makes me happy.
Part of me thinks I should talk with my kids
and let them see my side. Another part of me
pretends like I don't care, even though I do. What's
the solution here? Signed looking for love at any age?
That's funny. So first of all, I don't think fifty
nine and thirty one is that crazy. I think it's
(08:36):
a little odd, and just because it's all or weird
doesn't mean it's wrong. I think I'm numbed old dudes
like Bill Belichick in because it happens all over the place.
So fifty nine and thirty one, if you're over thirty,
is kind of like do whatever you want? Who cares?
Like as a female, if it's twenty two, that's weird,
but at thirty one, like you're full, if frontal lobe
(08:58):
is fully developed. Like so, I don't feel like it's
super weird. It's a little weird, not super weird. But
I think on this issue, if you ever have to wonder,
should I talk to this person about it? If it's kids,
if it's your parents, if it's your best friend. If
the answer if the question is should I, the answer
is always yes. If you even think, man, should I
talk to them about it? Or should I just ignore it.
(09:20):
If it pops into your head that you should possibly
talk to somebody that you care about about whatever the
issue is. The answer is, yes, you should talk to them.
It's your kids, for Pete's sake, talk to them. Also,
who says for Pete's sake? I haven't said that ever.
I don't think so talk to your kids. But I'm
going to tell you, I don't think this is some
kind of weird, like really weird. It's just a little weird.
Speaker 7 (09:44):
But I mean, yes, it's normal, right, Like you hear
more and more of this stuff happening, like the age difference.
But if I was the daughter though, and yes, is
my awkward Yeah.
Speaker 2 (09:55):
More than weird about them dating. It would be awkward
that your dad's dating somebody younger than you. Yeah, Morgan,
Hell are you? I'm thirty one? Okay, so what if
Morgan showed up with a fifty nine year old dude,
We'd be like, that's kind of weird. But he's not
like seventy three. Yeah. No, I think you guys have
given me crap for this. Sure, Yeah, we give you
crap for what you're in now, I know. Yeah, Yes,
(10:17):
you need to talk to your family. It is awkward
for the daughter because your dad's girlfriend's younger. Oh but you.
Speaker 7 (10:25):
Agree with him, just like let him live his life, like.
Speaker 2 (10:27):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, he earns what he says, it's not
earning a younger woman, it's he earns the right to
date whatever makes him happy. Yeah. Yeah. You need to
talk to your kids though, and you also need to
understand it's weird for your daughter because you're dating somebody
younger than your daughter. That's gotta be so weird for her.
It's tough you call somebody mom. Oh that's hard. That'd
be tough. That'd be tough. All right, Good luck with that,
(10:48):
because you do deserve to live your life the way
you want to live it. If you were twenty two,
were having a different conversation. Thirty one's okay, But yeah,
it's weird for your daughter. Thank you for emailing us.
That's it. Close it up. We have an artist doing
a concert and he messes up a gender reveal. Now
the artist is Zach Top. He's going to open it
up and do the gender reveal, and he opens up
(11:09):
the thing, except he opens it up backward, and it
flashes to the crowd exactly what it is. Something else
then reveal this baby's gender. But I'm going to do
this anyway. My mom didn't like it when I custom
the stage, so I'll leave the customer to you. I
(11:30):
messed that up. If you didn't see it, it's a girl,
that's funny. I messed up one bat in Saint Louis.
This couple came to me and I wasn't on stage.
I was doing a show that night, and so I
was in a theater. I was doing stand up. I
remember watching an Arkansas game before that. The things I
(11:50):
remember about this night are the messing up, the gender
reveal and Arkansas losing the game. Those are the two
things I remember. And they come back and they're like, hey,
would you let us know? We'll record it. I was
like sure, and so they started recording it, and I
did the stupidest thing. I said, what do you want? Oh,
because you.
Speaker 7 (12:07):
Know they'd be disappointed if it was one or the other.
Speaker 2 (12:09):
I shouldn't have asked that. I should have just opened
it and told him, because I said what do you want?
And he says, well, I want a boy, and she
says I want a girl, And so I opened it
up and I'm like, it's a girl. But I got
him going. It was just weird. Like my advice to
anybody that's doing any sort of gender revealed, don't ask
what they want, just open it and let them be happy.
Because I screwed that one. Was that the last one
(12:30):
you've done? Yeah? Last night? Yeah? I don't like how
it fell afterward. It was like too much control and
I still mess it up. Another thing, Hey, Abby, you
were at the airport and you saw a country artist
in the airport And what was weird about it?
Speaker 11 (12:45):
Well, he had his own bags and like guitar, Like
he's I think he's like a really big artist, and
he was pulling a huge suitcase and then holding his guitar.
Speaker 2 (12:54):
So I don't know who it is. And she thinks
that it's a big artist. She thinks it's too big
for them to be pulling their own back.
Speaker 11 (13:01):
Hey, yeah, like I would have thought somebody else was
going to handle that.
Speaker 2 (13:04):
You guys want to do ten questions? Yes, Uh was
it a guy? Yes? Eddie? Has he been in the
studio in this year? This year? Yes? Watchworks under thirty?
No Morgan?
Speaker 4 (13:27):
Is he playing Arenas?
Speaker 2 (13:29):
The tough question? That is?
Speaker 4 (13:31):
I know, but that gives you the size of him potentially. Well,
that's a weird thing to say, but.
Speaker 2 (13:37):
Not a headliner. Okay, opening for people. Opea thank you
for that. This is all weird though, because they're a
big artists that do support. It doesn't matter that will
keep going. Yeah, that's a hard one. Oh is he
does he wear a cowboy hat? Is he a hat?
Act u? No? Not cowboy? Okay, five down, five to go?
(13:59):
Eddie Yeah, yeah, yeah, does he? Does? He kind of
have a rasp me Boice? I wouldn't say. What kind
of question is going to you?
Speaker 7 (14:08):
Eliminated nothing because I eliminated Bai Bailey Zimmerman.
Speaker 2 (14:15):
He's not under thirty. Oh, he's older than thirty listening.
That's my bad. I'm listening. My bad, my bad. We're
keeping for a scholarship. You really blew that price watchworks?
Speaker 1 (14:26):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (14:28):
Question, has he recently lost weight?
Speaker 7 (14:33):
No?
Speaker 2 (14:33):
I don't think so. I don't think that's ever. That's
jelly Roll was doing arenas in football stadiums. Yeah, Morgan, I.
Speaker 4 (14:42):
Knew where you were going with that one lunch, but
I don't jelly Roll. No Smith, Oh possibility, but he.
Speaker 2 (14:49):
Lose a lot of weight too. Yeah, he talked about
his new diet. How do you know that? You don't
know he talked about it on this show, but you
don't listen to anything when it comes to you.
Speaker 6 (14:57):
You didn't talk about it with him, but maybe he
did a hundred minute or something. But you said how
he gave Hi up alcohol and something else because it.
Speaker 2 (15:03):
Was he thought he was killing him. I think you're
missing the point. We're surprised you listened to anything. Guys,
I listen. I don't have to be looking at you
to listen. I've always got my ears of the grinds.
You don't have. That's not a term, not a term,
ears of the grindstone.
Speaker 6 (15:16):
You know why Always I got my ear in other
people's conversations.
Speaker 2 (15:20):
Okay, does he have kids? Yes? Oh? Was it? Wait?
Where he has kids? Thinking we can talk? Right? Is
he Does he have a lot of muscles?
Speaker 11 (15:34):
I'd say average, I wouldn't say like overly.
Speaker 2 (15:37):
Okay. I think I was thinking to Kane, but I
don't think it's Kane and he's not an opener. And
also think about Kane I message because Kane was like
I posted a picture of himself. No. People magazine did
a post of Cain and they were like before and
after because Kane's really jacked right now, and some dude
was like, for sure he's on performance dancing drugs and
Kane was like, no, I'm not. And I was like, dude,
(15:59):
come up here and get tested on the show. I
was like, that would be a that would be what
he said. I don't know. I said it late last
night because I know he's doing it all natural. Anybody
else I don't haven't. I don't know who it is.
I have no idea.
Speaker 4 (16:14):
Did we ask you if we've been in the studio.
Speaker 11 (16:17):
You're not listening pretty recent sorry, honestly, like I think
it's in the last pretty recent.
Speaker 2 (16:22):
Within the last two months. Oh, I don't know who
comes in here now I'm fried. Look at the people
coming to my house, people coming in here. I don't
know who's coming anywhere. Yeah, that's who I was just nope,
that's the last guest Luke. Oh Chris Lane. Yeah, Chris Lane.
(16:42):
He has to carry us back once in a while,
songs like I Got Your Fix after Yeah, yeah, you
guys hate it. Why does he have to carry his
own no stopping at back out in trouble for real?
Because he's not that big. He is as that multiple
(17:03):
number one songs. He's got money?
Speaker 3 (17:04):
Are you?
Speaker 2 (17:05):
Somebody is not that big as hilarious?
Speaker 6 (17:07):
Okay, well, if you think he is, where would you
put him on artist level?
Speaker 2 (17:11):
I mean it would easily be seen. I think he's
got at least three number one songs. Okay, how many
do you have? Zero?
Speaker 6 (17:21):
And I'm just saying on an artist level of scale,
he would probably be D plus C minus level lunchbox.
Speaker 7 (17:27):
You think if people saw you at the airport carrying
your own bags, they'd be like, I'm shocked.
Speaker 2 (17:31):
Yes, he was carrying. No, no, no, we can play
Chris Lane now because he's got you know that he
got some big, big plans, big song. Yeah, he's got
I want jump fix, you say, And then he's got
I don't know about you? How's that one go? I
don't it's a number one Keep singing. I don't know
what you're trying to sing. Which song you're trying to sing?
(17:52):
I don't know about you? Yeah, it's a number one song.
I got too many songs in my head. Ray can
you play some of it? No? I did not sing it.
Speaker 11 (18:01):
I don't know about.
Speaker 2 (18:02):
You, Okay, give it, give it up. That's all I know.
I don't know de signed with deal Bird. Oh yeah,
that's a good one. What's your sign? Yeah?
Speaker 11 (18:11):
Oh my god. I felt like I should carry his guitar.
Speaker 2 (18:13):
Dang, I'm surprised if Carrien's back now too. After sinking
all those It's time for the good news, Bobby. Let's
go to Warren County, Pennsylvania. Grandmother of ten Nicole Walter
won over two million dollars playing the Pennsylvania Lottery shortly
(18:34):
after completing our final round of Chemo Wow for breast cancer.
She's starting a new life. Her jackpot is the largest
internet win in the lottery's history. She had been playing
the game since the twenty eighteen launch. She is going
to use the winnings to renovate a farmhouse that she
purchased from a friend. From the Miami Herald went through
all the cancer treatment, final day plays and hits for
(18:56):
two millions, And that's amazing. That's a crazy good one.
That is what its all about. That was telling me
something good. A study was just released that dogs and
humans have the same health conditions. Like that can be
a thing. Listen to this.
Speaker 12 (19:10):
Dogs can actually mirror their owner's health. Researchers in the
US monitoring more than twenty six thousand dogs. The study
revealing dogs and owners can develop many of the same
chronic conditions, including hypertension, diabetes, and arthritis, because they likely
share the same environment as their owners.
Speaker 7 (19:27):
Come on, is this like when girls are hanging out
with each other and they have their own periods together?
Speaker 2 (19:31):
I don't think quite the same. But it's interesting your
mind went there. I mean, that's crazy. So that is
ABC World News. My bulldog has chronic stomach issues. What's up?
You do too?
Speaker 9 (19:45):
Me too?
Speaker 2 (19:45):
Weird? What up? Man? My life sucks that I can't
eat dairy or drink dairy or anything it. I think
I never paid enough attention to it because it didn't
affect me. How how western of me? Like, doesn't matter.
Having a dairy allergy sucks. No cheese, everything's made with butter.
When I order things, I have to click dairy allergy
at the restaurant, I have to actually raise my hand
(20:07):
or say yes when anybody have any allergies?
Speaker 7 (20:09):
Oh, I thought nobody had to raise it exactly, have
an allergy.
Speaker 2 (20:14):
It's no, You're not nerdy for having an allergy. Telling
you it feels the nerdiest thing ever that I have
a dairy allergy. We went to dinner, like we were
on vacation last week, and we go to dinner and
I take all of my wife and her family to dinner,
and we're out there and and it's just like I
have to ask for like an allergy menu. That's annoying,
(20:35):
or like what can I have? I don't even want
to talk because I used to wait tables and I
don't like the people to ask one hundred questions. I
don't want to be that guy and so, and I
definitely don't be like what do you recommend? But I
have to go like what can I have?
Speaker 7 (20:46):
Oh, I've heard you before where you asked like does
this have I'm sorry being annoyed, just have.
Speaker 2 (20:51):
Butter in it? Or does no butter, no milk, no anything.
So I think that's why my dog always has stomach issues. Yeah,
same chronic and he is on. It takes me fifteen
minutes every morning to feed him because I have to
mix his fiber. So I have this little thing of
water and I pour the fiber and I mix it
up and so that takes ten minutes to harden the fiber.
Then I have a probiotic that I have to put
(21:12):
in to his food, and so I have to open
the probiotic and put it in. I do his food,
put the fiber in, and then he's on. He has
three pills. He has to take dang all time. How
do you do the pills? Pill pockets? Third greatest dimension
of all time? As you put that like in a
pill in a little thing. Pill pocket. You know, if
you know the pill pocket, you don't know great dimentions.
I don't because forever you just do it a breader turkey.
(21:33):
But they make these things that I have a little
gap in them. I've talked about him before. Greatest invention
iPhone up there. Uh huh, great invention. Yeah, that's like
seventh or eight. But pill Pocket's amazing. But dogs and
humans can have the same thing going on. There's another thing.
There's an invasive tick species known as the longhorned tick
fits hey fix No. It's spreading across the United States,
(21:56):
raising concerns among health officials. The tick has recently been
identified as a carrier of the bacteria that causes this
infection that completely is debilitating In May. Scientists at the
Connecticut Agriculture Experiment Station in New Haven have discovered that
this tick has this disease and if you get bit
by this tick, you get fever, headache, fatigue, muscle aches,
(22:16):
and then life threatening complications. The spread of the longhorn tick.
It's hilarious being Arkansas. That's hilarious because we grow up
you're taught in Arkansas to not like the Texas longhorns
because they're bigger. They're just bigger and they have more money.
So it's like Texas. The fact that the longhorn tickes
is bad. But yeah, and so it's thriving in all
(22:36):
these new areas. Do they say why it's called the
longhorn tick because they don't like Texas? That's what it is.
Speaker 7 (22:42):
Are these worthies family up north in New Haven, Well
that's where the size has been done.
Speaker 2 (22:49):
Yeah, in warm places, so everywhere is getting warmer constantly.
So they've even been found as north as Pennsylvania, but
Kentucky's got a bunch of them. But yeah, yeah, so, uh,
that story comes from iHeart dot Com. Oddly, really, it's
like a sight we own. We wrote that, but yeah,
(23:09):
you give it by a tick man. And also, growing up,
we had ticks everywhere all the time, and it didn't
seem it because maybe we just didn't know the diseases.
But like you got ticks every day, see disgusting seed ticks,
normal ticks. You really didn't have dog ticks because they
were on dogs. You would see those big bat ones yep,
the big gray ones. Yeah, yeah, tis it text kind
of disgusting. They're so gross.
Speaker 7 (23:30):
Man, Like my we found one on my son's head
and that freaked us out because, like you know, you
find one on your leg, you're thinking like, okay, it's
probably not no different. But you see one of the leg,
You're like, okay, that's a tick on the leg. But
it was in his head. You can see it through
his hair, and I'm like, oh, my gosh, that's straight
to the brain. If there's if it's oh that's why
you're freaking out. Well, it's going to go through the skull,
oh I know. But just the fact that it was
so close to his head freaked me out.
Speaker 2 (23:51):
I would think that you wouldn't see it for a
long time just because of the hair. And then it
takes a tick. If has a disease, it's going to
get in you. Yeah, Morgan thought she was dying.
Speaker 4 (23:58):
Yes, I had it for like sixty days, but the
tick wasn't on you, No, but it found it was.
I had a mark on me for like sixty days.
Speaker 2 (24:08):
It took forever to go away, and you sent it
off to be examined. Well, I went and got blood
work done. Oh you didn't get the tic sent off.
Speaker 4 (24:16):
I didn't because I just went and had blood work anyway.
And it because I you know, like Eddy said, I
had a lot of help for all Japaning. Still, yeah,
I do. And it didn't come back. I didn't have
any tick born illnesses.
Speaker 2 (24:27):
Do you have your smell or your taste bag? No?
How long do you have COVID? It was twenty twenty one.
Speaker 4 (24:35):
We're four years later, and I'm about to do a
really intensive detox cleanse to try and finally get rid
of it because they think, what is it a lot
of things, yes, but like this one feels she's this
person has helped a whole lot of people. She's an
integrative health specialist. And long COVID sufferers still have COVID
lingering in their body, essentially, like you have a dirty
(24:57):
gene and it attached just to this gene.
Speaker 2 (25:00):
Yeah, very much. So, So how do you get rid
of it?
Speaker 4 (25:03):
I have to do a whole detox, Like I'm gonna
be on a very strict diet. I have to do
a lot of different things to try and help my
body detox the covid from it.
Speaker 2 (25:11):
And it's like a two month ordeal. Do you guys
feel like when someone's again, that's awesome. Hope works for you.
I hope it doesn't do. When people are like we're homeopathic,
we're all natural, You're like, well, I ain't gonna work.
Do you guys feel that way? Me too? Immediately? That's yeah,
for im mediate, Like there's a vet that's like we're
all natural. I forget the term, but it's like we
only use the holistic. Yeah, all holistic. And I'm like,
(25:34):
that ain't gonna work. My dog gos stomach issues he needs.
I spend fifteen minutes doing medicine and it barely works
for him. I think I'm a hater when it comes
to holistic stuff. I'm sure there's some use for it.
Speaker 7 (25:45):
Like I asked my doctor and like, hey, what do
you think about probiotics And he's just like my grandma
takes him like, well.
Speaker 2 (25:51):
That's different though I know robotics, that's different. That's that's
almost a medicine.
Speaker 7 (25:56):
That's what I thought too, and he was just like,
what my grandma takes this all I can tell.
Speaker 2 (25:59):
You, like, doctor, yeah, are you sure you want a doctor?
Speaker 7 (26:03):
He's a doctor, and I think he just meant like, yes,
it's not it's not a medicine though, it's not like
but but it.
Speaker 2 (26:08):
Could be like a vitamin and a vitamin. We see
vitamins and our body only uses like probably five percent
of it and you pee out the rest. But it
does use a small percentage of what you're taking. Probodics
are different than holistic. You're getting on Like I just wondered,
like Morgan, you believe in.
Speaker 4 (26:20):
Medicine, right, yeah, I have integrative health as utilizing holistic.
Speaker 2 (26:25):
And yeah, I very much. I believe we're going to
all natural. And I was like, wait, but I think
if you've tried every other thing, go all natural. I
just know if I see all natural, I'm like, I
ain't for me. I need chemicals.
Speaker 4 (26:37):
Like my veterinarian is holistic.
Speaker 2 (26:39):
And also a fully holistic vet.
Speaker 4 (26:41):
And also provides so integrative.
Speaker 2 (26:44):
It's really not a scam. Organic firewood, Yeah, that's organic firewood.
That's not a scam because it all was organic. It's
just all Firewoods organic.
Speaker 9 (26:57):
Right.
Speaker 2 (26:58):
Let me ask my assistant here about Oh see what
she says, Hello, good morning. Can you tell me the
benefits of probiotics? I can talk about probiotics.
Speaker 5 (27:06):
So probiotics are basically those beneficial bacteria that can help
keep your gut microbiome inbalance. People often take them to
support digestion, reduce floating, or even boost immune function. There's
some evidence that they can help with certain digestive issues
like irritable bowel syndrome, and they might even have some
benefits for mental well being. So in short, they're kind
of like your goods, little helpers.
Speaker 2 (27:27):
She's like, my grandma takes them. I've seen on TikTok
these people that will go on a one day trip
and they fly somewhere far and come back the same day.
And I watched one person I think, fly from East
Coast to Denver and they did the whole day and
they got back on a plane that the night and
came back and it's exhausting. But I think, Morgan, you
have you seen this?
Speaker 4 (27:47):
Yeah, and I want to do it.
Speaker 2 (27:48):
It seems expensive for a day, not for content. I
get it. It seems expensive for a day because you're
going to be so tired. You have to wake up
like four in the morning, and then you got to
fly somewhere. But I want to play this this person.
I went from the US to Ireland for a one
day trip. They flew, landed eight came back home go.
Speaker 10 (28:06):
My round trip NonStop flight from New York to San
in Ireland was four hundred and fifty seven dollars. I
also rented a car for forty eight dollars and I
was having a blast up until I paid a mechanic
sixty dollars to change my tire. And I also got
charged two hundred and seventy five dollars because I didn't
get insurance. I ate a sandwich at the Clifs of
More for eight dollars. Oh, and I also had this
four dollars cappucine.
Speaker 3 (28:27):
I paid five dollars to park at the secret location
at the cliff of morem and I got this shirt
for forty one dollars, bringing my grand total of my
Ireland day trip to eight hundred and ninety eight dollars.
Speaker 2 (28:38):
That's really expensive for a day. You better be an
influencer and you're able to like write that crab off.
And even then, even if you write something off, you
don't get it all back. But it seems like one
you're going to be exhausted and then two you're going
to spend a lot of money. But there aren't hotels.
I guess there's no hotel. Where do you want to go, Morgan, I.
Speaker 4 (28:56):
Mean anywhere, because I haven't been to Ohio, I haven't
been to New Guy.
Speaker 2 (29:00):
I'm into Arkansas, all of these. I could go and
do a day trip and I could cross off the state.
But you want to fly, Well, yeah, you have Arkansas.
I know, people you can drive Arkansas. You can drive
Arkansas on four hours and that's cool. But like the
greatest Ramada you ever seen? Yeah, o, the horse races there.
You know, you can go across the border, get your
get little casino on. You're right by Memphis. You have
(29:21):
the pass pro shot go the pyramid. Yeah. Yeah, So
let's ask my assistant here here we go, Hey, good morning.
One of the members of my show named Morgan, wants
to do a one day trip where you go somewhere,
you spend the day there, and you come back the
same day, which seems very exhausting. And we're in Nashville, Tennessee.
Where would you recommend she go? Good morning, Sure thing.
Speaker 5 (29:44):
Let's find a fun day trip for Morgan that will
totally wipe around from Nashville. There's actually a bunch of
neat places you can do as a there and back
and a day kind of deal. One super popular option
is to head over to Chattanooga. It's about a two
hour drive each way.
Speaker 2 (29:58):
Too easy, so le me stop, you can you give
us somewhere that she has to fly, do the day
and come back. So not super close, Ah, got it.
Speaker 5 (30:06):
We're talking a little more ambitious, like a quick flight adventure.
Speaker 2 (30:10):
In that case, one fun option would be to do
a day trip to Chicago.
Speaker 5 (30:14):
It's only about an hour and a half flight from Nashville,
and there are plenty of flights going in and out.
She could fly out early in the morning, maybe catch
a nice breakfast or brunch in Chicago, spend the day
exploring some cool spots like Millennium Park or the Art Institute,
and then head back.
Speaker 2 (30:29):
Home in the evening.
Speaker 5 (30:29):
It's definitely doable and gives her a taste of a
different city for the day.
Speaker 2 (30:33):
You ever in Chicago, Yeah, it does. Got back from Chicago,
she just got back from Chicago. Sorry about that? Would
you give me another option? Oh, no worries at all.
Speaker 5 (30:41):
If she just got back from Chicago, we definitely want
to mix it up. Another great one day flight option
could be New Orleans. It's about a ninety minute flight
from Nashville and it's a totally different vibe. She could
head out in the morning, grab some Beignet's, a Cafe
du Monde, wander around the French Quarter, maybe so in
some live music, and then fly back home that night.
Speaker 2 (31:03):
It's a fun little taste of New Orleans in a
single day.
Speaker 4 (31:07):
We need Ohio Indiana.
Speaker 2 (31:11):
Somewhere in Ohio or Indiana, absolutely, let's switch gears and
head up to that neck of the woods.
Speaker 5 (31:16):
A great day trip destination could be Indianapolis. It's only
about an hour and a half lay from Nashville and
it's got plenty to do for a day. She could
check out the Indianapolis Museum of Art, stroll along the
canal Walk, or even visit the Indianapolis Motor speed Away
if she's into a bit of racing history.
Speaker 2 (31:32):
And give me give me an option for Ohio as well.
Speaker 5 (31:35):
For sure, let's give her an Ohio option to Columbus
would be a fantastic choice.
Speaker 2 (31:40):
Now screw it, would you give me something for I
want to send her to Cleveland? Like, what could you
do in Cleveland?
Speaker 5 (31:45):
Absolutely, let's send her to Cleveland.
Speaker 2 (31:47):
Cleveland's a cool pick for a day trip.
Speaker 5 (31:48):
It's a roughly hour and a half lay from Nashville,
and there's a lot to do in a single day.
She could definitely hit up the Rock and Roll Hall
of Fame, which is kind of a must if she's
never been, and then maybe wander around the West sid
Market for some cool local elites. She loves museums. The
Cleveland Museum of Art is also top nonchin free. So yeah,
Cleveland's got a little bit of everything for a fun
day out.
Speaker 2 (32:09):
Okay, I'm gonna say to Cleveland, you're gonna do it.
You're gonna do it on a show day Okay, And Mike,
could you say how much a flight is from here
to Cleveland? You gotta go and come back the same
day though. She's gonna do the day trip. Yeah, and
you're gonna pay for this. I'll pay for the flight. Wow,
that's amazing. Yeah, and that'll be so fun and she'll
just do all the she'll make much content out of it,
and we'll keep well doing on the bybone showing Wow,
that's cool. We had to like walk her to Cleveland,
(32:31):
like my assistant here, my computer assistant. But we'll send
you to Cleveland. Deal.
Speaker 4 (32:35):
Yeah, and I can cross off Ohio on my list.
Speaker 2 (32:37):
I don't care about that so much. Yes, this is
a crazy story. And I say it because we've talked
about this Diamond Mind in Arkansas many times. Lunchbox went
to the Diamond Mind. Abbey went to the Diamond Mind.
They didn't find anything. They complained the whole time that
it was hot.
Speaker 8 (32:51):
Here's the clip and New York City woman so determined
to design her own engagement ring, went to Arkansas to
mine her own diamond.
Speaker 2 (32:59):
She spent two years planning this.
Speaker 8 (33:00):
Thirty one year old Micherff Fox spent months searching the
crater of Diamond State Park. It wasn't until her very
last day in the park that she spotted something shiny
and discovered a two point three Karen diamond. And the
park allows the public to search for the diamonds and
has a finders keepers policy. If a lucky visitor happens
upon a gem, she found it, it's a diamond.
Speaker 2 (33:22):
Right, that's amazing. Yeah, so that's from NBC New York.
And it's probably like this big I'm doing a pinch,
but it's bigger than a small punch. It's a pretty
big pinch that looks like a big marble. It's a
big the diamond in the palm of her hand. You
can sure see it at two point three cares as
they said, congratulations to her. Now, why this is the
story to us again is because we talk about it
so much because Lunchbox hated the trip because he didn't
find anything. Not only that, he had Abby dig and
(33:44):
he went to sleep. I didn't take a nap.
Speaker 6 (33:46):
Under tree was so freaking hot, it was dusty, It
was just crazy.
Speaker 2 (33:50):
It was it was backbreaking work. How do you feel
about this?
Speaker 6 (33:55):
Well, I mean she had three weeks. I mean, who
has that much time to sit there and dig? I mean,
I don't know what you're doing with your life where
you have three weeks to just go hang out the
diamond mind But really sounds like she got not much
going on.
Speaker 2 (34:07):
But I'm pretty jealous Abby your thoughts. You spent the
day out there?
Speaker 11 (34:10):
Yeah, no, I'm actually annoyed. I looked at that dirt
there was. There is not much at all, Like it just.
Speaker 13 (34:16):
Looks like.
Speaker 11 (34:19):
Dirt.
Speaker 2 (34:19):
It's the only in North America. It is the only diamond. Mind.
And I don't want you guys to think you're like
going in a cave. It's like open fields and you
go and you dig in the ground and you find diamonds.
People do it all the time. We're talking about it
on the show. We read stories like every every few weeks,
somebody finds a diamond. I don't think. I don't think
you guys put enough effort in. Oh we put in.
And here's the thing, this girl's not even that ugly.
I thought she was gonna be why.
Speaker 6 (34:41):
I thought if she spent three weeks there that okay,
this girl's gonna be like weird and doesn't have any friends.
Speaker 7 (34:46):
But she looks like she wasn't she like trying to
get engaged or something. She said she wasn't even gonna
consider it unless you found a diamond.
Speaker 2 (34:52):
She's not even that ugly. So I'm saying I was like,
I wasn't saying that. I was just doing Oh you said, yeah,
uh so congratulations to her. Does it make you guys
want to go back?
Speaker 3 (35:04):
Yeah?
Speaker 6 (35:05):
I mean, I do every story, and when I drive
by there on the way to Texas, I'm like, man,
if I just took a right here and drove down
for thirty miles, but gosh, it's so annoying.
Speaker 2 (35:14):
We said thirty miles off the road. I don't know
exactly how far the next time. Let's see, if we
were to leave here and just drive from our studio,
it would take under three hours. Come on, no, it's
over three hours. It's like it's about three because it's
like home for me. Okay, do you want to walk
it or do you want to No? No, we're driving. Okay,
(35:35):
I don't want to do the walking man or the car. Uh.
Let's see, We're gonna go to the visitors center at
Crater Diamond State Park. It is six.
Speaker 7 (35:43):
Hours, so I mean that's not too bad. I mean
that that sounds awesome. Oh yeah, I mean I have
four kids. I can put them all to work, like
all of it, and.
Speaker 2 (35:54):
We're not leaving until we find a diamond. The thing is,
when you pull them out of the ground, they don't
look like no, no, don't you're going to Jennis Diamonds
or wherever. It's like it's a rock so how do
you know with shinies on it, it looks if you
were to see it, it'd be like almost like a crystal,
like a dirty crystal. And then you have to go
on in ding ding ding ding ding ding ding ding ding
and then get the diamond out of it. It's pretty cool.
(36:14):
She found that though, So congratulations to her.
Speaker 10 (36:18):
It's time for the good news.
Speaker 7 (36:24):
Brandon Roberts, he's eight years old from Massachusetts and he's
exploring the woods behind his house. He's walking around and
he smells a brush fire and he looks around. He's like,
no one's here, but there's a fire in the middle
of the woods. So he runs back to his house
about a mile away, and he finds a family member says, call.
Speaker 2 (36:41):
Nine one one, Come with me, there's a creek nearby.
Bring some buckets.
Speaker 7 (36:44):
And they get buckets full of water and try to
put this brush fire out, and then the fire department comes.
Speaker 2 (36:49):
They finally come.
Speaker 7 (36:50):
They put the fire out, and they say, this is
amazing how quickly he reacted, because if you wouldn't have
called nine one one, this fire could have destroyed the
whole forest. But what happened. They say, hey, come on,
come to the fire station. We want you to meet somebody.
I guess who was there, Smoky, Smoky.
Speaker 2 (37:05):
The Bear, you brought it back. I've been told though,
by our listeners that are jerks, not our listeners that
aren't jerks, but our listeners that are jerks. And they've
told me loud, it's Smoky Bear, not Smoky the Bear. Like,
get out of my DMS with that crap. This is
Smoky the Bear. Was myself, Smokey the Bear. The bear.
You were like, it's Smoky Bear. I don't care what
it is like. You shouldn't spend your time dming me
(37:27):
on that. Yeah, and we know who it is. Yeah,
we know Smoky the Bear. That's awesome. We love Smoky
the Bear. That's a great story. Good job, kid, that's
what it's all about. That was telling me something good.
Wake up, wake up in the mall.
Speaker 14 (37:42):
And it's turn the radio and the dogs ready, lunchbox.
Morking too steve red at trying to put you through. Fuck,
he's running this week's next bit. The Bobby's on the box,
so you know what this is.
Speaker 11 (38:04):
The bottle ball.
Speaker 2 (38:05):
Amy's out sick today, so we're gonna go around the
room with our own corny jokes, right hit that morning, corny,
I'll open and close. What did Elvis say to his landscaper?
What did Elvis say to his landscaper? Thank you for
the multch Oh, thank you, that's good, thank you for
(38:28):
the moltz. I like that, like Elvis. All right, let's
walk you up.
Speaker 6 (38:35):
What's the difference between boogers and broccoli?
Speaker 2 (38:37):
What's that? Kids don't eat broccoli? There you go, that's morgan.
Speaker 4 (38:44):
Why did the hamburger break up with the hot dog
at the barbecue? Why it was tired of being grilled
about their relationship.
Speaker 2 (38:52):
It's an amy one, all right, grilled Eddie.
Speaker 7 (38:56):
What kind of key doesn't open locks?
Speaker 2 (38:59):
What kind of key doesn't open locks? A monkey? Boy?
We did we fell off a cliff. You didn't like
the monkey, you didn't like the bugger? No, terrible, okay,
because it started really good though with Elvis. What did
the yoga instructors say when her landlord tried to evict her,
(39:21):
No mistake, it's good. I can do this. I could
this corny. Oh yeah, all right, I know Amy today,
so we hope we did adjustice. There are pregnancy robots
and they could give birth to human children and This
is every science movie ever where it ends terribly and
(39:43):
AI kills us like this is the beginning. Eventually, there's
just gonna be a wall of them and you look
up and there's just all these wombs with all the
babies growing. That's every science movie every like Into the
World Apocalypse. So China apparently has a bot that has
an artificial womb which will receive nutrients through a hose
(40:03):
in the abdomen of the robot, and we'll be able
to carry a fetus for approximately ten months before giving birth.
This from the New York Post. The pregnancy robot was
conceptualized by this doctor, and if all goes according to plan,
it will make its debut its official debut, able to
(40:23):
be used next year. For those struggling to conceive, hiring
a humanoid to carry their baby will cost about one
hundred thousand and one. What is that? Well, I'm glad
you asked, cause that, like myself, thirteen thousand dollars. Okay,
it's like squid game and it's like forty billion yin
or whatever it is, and you look at it, it's
like seventeen dollars. You're like, man, you guys should simplify
(40:45):
that a little bit, but yeah, it's way cheaper than
a human surrogate, which can cost in the States here
between one hundred and two hundred thousand dollars. The artificial
womb technology is already in a mature stage and now
needs to be implanted into the robot's abdomen so that
a real person and the robot can interact to a
(41:06):
chief pregnancy, allowing the fetus to grow inside. Many questions
are still an answer, including how the egg and sperm
will be fertilized and inserted into the womb. But that
won't be a problem because they can already do that.
So as I think, man, this is bizarre. I think
go back thirty years and when the first quote unquote
test two baby happened, and now that's happening everywhere all
(41:27):
the time, like IVF is very common. So is this
just another step where we're going, Holy cal can you
believe it? Think about this, Think about the first time
they use another person to carry babies that wasn't the
people's surrogate. Yeah, it's crazy, Like it's normal to us
now because technology has allowed it to become normal, and
(41:49):
because it's very useful for people who physically cannot do
it whose health do not allow it?
Speaker 6 (41:55):
This is that?
Speaker 2 (41:56):
So I'm the guy back then, Oh, I don't know
where can buy And then this sperm and egg outside
of the womb is not natural. And now because of
the advances in medicine, you go, man, thank god they
can do that. So many people get to have kids
now because of those technologies. But this is bizarre right now. Crazy,
I'm that guy right now, that's like, that's crazy.
Speaker 7 (42:15):
But to get this straight, so you have the baby naturally, right,
and we have well, well, like like you conceive it
naturally with a human.
Speaker 2 (42:23):
I don't think so, because I don't think you have
to do well. I no, no, you don't have sex
with a robot. No, although you probably could. No, But
I don't think the eggs are on the robot. I
think just like when you're doing IVF, everything's outside. Ah,
got it. And then you implant that, yes, implant that
into the womb. Probably that woe won't drink or smoke.
Speaker 7 (42:43):
Either, like no surrogate, No, no, no, it won't be at
the bar, yeah, definitely not.
Speaker 2 (42:47):
Lesson. It's weird. Weird doesn't mean wrong. And I just
know that the feelings that have about how bizarre it is.
Are the feelings that everybody had the first time that
it's like, look at the first test tube baby, look
at that. It's that we gotta.
Speaker 7 (43:00):
Worry though, if the baby starts loving the robot more
than their parents.
Speaker 2 (43:04):
But do people not worry about that with surrogates though,
because that's even a real human. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
I would want the robot if that's the question. In case,
I would want the robot more than the person, because
robot can't love back, and robot can't abduct in the
middle of the night. The baby, the robot mama, It
talks like a robot. I am baby. This is too much.
It's too much until it's able to really benefit people
(43:27):
who because of their health and for financial reasons, because again,
look at the difference in price. Thirteen thousand dollars versus
one hundred thousand. Yeah, it's not bad, Ray Mundo thought
about and you still may using a surrogate. Yeah. We
went to Vanderbilt and we sat in an office with
the doctor and he told us with a straight face, yeah,
it'll be one hundred thousand dollars. People usually pay that much.
(43:50):
And we're like, what, nobody ever told us it's a
six figure am out, So then you got to find
a family member, a listener, somebody. It's very when somebody
jumps up. I mean we had three emails people that
said they would that day be a surrogate if we
wanted to do it. Raise hoping for caller ten. But
(44:11):
my point is this in ten fifteen years could be
a version of that where you don't have to pay
one hundred thousand dollars. And also think back VCRs were
like fifteen thousand dollars when they first came out in
the eighties. In the eighties, you can get them out
for it well eight bucks eight bucks at like the
Salvation Army now. But anyway, I thought it was a
(44:32):
pretty crazy story. The pregnancy robots. It on the surface
very bizarre because it's like Terminator, it's like I am legend,
or it's like I robot or any of those crazy
to think of. But I think we felt the same
way about things like IVF early stages, like people hiring
other people, like surrogacy, and this is that And as
(44:55):
long as it doesn't take over the world, I think
it's a good thing. But that's like anything else. Speaking
of medical I just got a text from Amy. Amy's
out today and she said, and I quote, but I
gotta that she's listening, so thanks. Oh good, probiotics are
so helpful, Eddie. She would say that for sure if
you're here. So Amy's sick. I don't think she would
(45:18):
mind me saying that she does not have COVID. Oh
that's good. She is sick all the fever and apparently
her voice sounds like a man. All that stuff's happening
with throat and chest. So Amy is not here today,
but that's what's up. But she wanted you to know probotics.
She loves them. She's for them, h Eddie.
Speaker 7 (45:38):
Okay, got it, good, I'll tell my doctor.
Speaker 2 (45:41):
I don't think you need to tell you doctor. Okay,
I guess all right. Keep that. Yeah, let's go over
and talk to Tina real quick. We're talking about ticks
and there's this tick that now if it bites you,
you get this crazy disease. Tina, you're on.
Speaker 13 (45:54):
I AM, good morning, Good morning, studio morning. I heard
you guys talking about ticks and Eddie's saying about how
the one in his son's head was really bad. Well, my,
every time I think of ticks, for me as a
mom my son when he was younger, had one crawl
(46:14):
up into his private area.
Speaker 2 (46:17):
And parts sucks ahead.
Speaker 13 (46:31):
It was. It was absolutely awful and had he so
he started screaming and he tells me about it, and
I'm not sure what I'm going to do, and as
a mom I took little tweezers and and got it out.
We did end up taking into the emergency room just
in case, and they said, had we had he not
(46:52):
seen it crawl in there. You know how when a
tick gets big, it swells up. It would have happened
and it would have blocked him from going to the bathroom,
and then we would have had a really big problem
because it would have swelled up inside and then he
wouldn't have been able to go to the bathroom.
Speaker 2 (47:06):
Yeah, you made a lot of people told story, like
a lot a lotah what'd you call? Every guy is
like squeezing their knees together a little bit just but
everything came out okay, right at the end.
Speaker 13 (47:16):
Everything came out fine. Yep. Yeah, he he does not
like chicks to this day.
Speaker 2 (47:20):
But yeah, i'd be traumatized too from that. I think
I might be from secondary guess from hearing the story.
So you have two options when a tick goes into something.
If you can't do fingers, you can do tweezers, or
you can do which I'm glad she didn't do. You
can use a lighter. Oh no, no, no, no, I
I don't know. I want to light that that wick
on fire. Uh, Tina, thank you for your call. We
(47:41):
appreciate that.
Speaker 13 (47:42):
Yes, you guys, have a wonderful day.
Speaker 2 (47:44):
You too, see letters bobbed Bones show sorry up today.
Speaker 6 (47:49):
This story comes us from McGraw, New York. A thirty
two year old woman sixty one year old man are
getting in the truck. All right, got everything, put the
stroller in the back of the truck. Here we go
and they start driving down the road when woo whoo,
they get pulled over, like sir, do you know why
I pulled you over? Like no, you have a stroller
in the back of the car. And they're like yeah,
(48:09):
it's in the you know, the bed of the truck.
Like you left the kid in the stroller.
Speaker 2 (48:14):
Oh my goodness. All I heard was sixty one year
old dude and thirty two year old woman and a stroller.
I thought, is that Bill Belichick? Are you gonna tell
a story about It's wow that the baby was in this.
Did they at least have it strapped down the stroller
with the baby in it?
Speaker 6 (48:28):
Well, yeah, the baby was strapped in the stroller, the
stroller rolling in the bottle truck.
Speaker 2 (48:34):
No, no, no, that could have been so bad? Could
have been was it? No?
Speaker 6 (48:38):
Kid was okay? And they didn't say baby. They just
had a child in a stroller and then a stroller.
Though you're under four?
Speaker 2 (48:45):
Yeah, probably under three? Yeah? Okay, So are they married?
It's the whole part of the story. I'd be curious
to know too, because a guy I got at thirty
two year.
Speaker 6 (48:54):
Old both have the last name of Maybury. I'm gonna
assume their husband, wife.
Speaker 2 (48:59):
Or dad and daughter would be but yeah, and it
could be the daughter's kid.
Speaker 6 (49:02):
Oh think about that. All right, I'm lunchbox at your
bonehead story.
Speaker 2 (49:06):
Of the day. We'll see you guys tomorrow. Have a
great day, Bye everybody. Bobby Bones the Bobby Bones Show
theme song, written, produced, and sang by Reid Yarberry. You
can find his instagram at Red Yarberry, Scuba Steve executive producer, Raymondo,
Head of Production. I'm Bobby Bones. My Instagram is mister
(49:28):
Bobby Bones. Thank you for listening to the podcast.