Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Bobby. Let's grab a couple of calls here. Let's go
to Jason in Colorado. Hey, Jason, Yes, you're on Buddy.
What's going on? Oh?
Speaker 2 (00:12):
Nothing.
Speaker 3 (00:12):
I was just gonna call in with the comment on
the I heard it talking this morning about the guy
using the cattle prod, which is pretty rough, and then
I he reminded me I was gonna call on Talk
to talk about Eddie using the push ups. That's kind
of punishment for his kids. We've been doing that for
about two years and it seems really beneficial, and I
was just gonna say that oftentimes they're like acting out
(00:36):
and fighting because they're they got all this energy bubbling
up out of them, and the push ups seem like
a good way to kind of temper all that steam.
And then they're they're a little tuckered out afterwards, and
it really kind of resets the mood at the house
and kind of builds them up and get them a
little exercise in the process. And I don't know, it
feels like it's kind of building them up, and that
(00:56):
cattle prop thing sounds like it's tearing them down pretty bad.
Speaker 1 (00:58):
It also feels like you're building them up to beat
you up.
Speaker 4 (01:02):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:02):
Yeah, you're slowly raising them to take over.
Speaker 4 (01:05):
Like programming the robot.
Speaker 1 (01:06):
Yeah, like eventually they're gonna take you over.
Speaker 4 (01:08):
I got a question for Jason though, Jason, you like,
how many do you do though? Because the other day
I got really mad. I was like, you're doing fifty
and they were there for like an hour.
Speaker 3 (01:19):
Usually it's tens and twenties okay, and twenty seems like
it's kind of kind of at the upper end of it,
And rarely do we have to go back and do
like another set of them. Sometimes that's my son, he'll
like keep it going, He'll do one more set and
then he really doesn't go back for number three. He
learns and and it like it tuckers them out a
little bit. They're a little winded after the push ups.
(01:39):
It kind of just like tones it down at the house.
Speaker 1 (01:42):
It's funny that you set them up to do fifty.
Speaker 4 (01:44):
I didn't even think about it.
Speaker 1 (01:45):
One can leave until they do fifty, right, And I
said it.
Speaker 4 (01:47):
And I'm like, man, I couldn't even do fifty. I
don't think. Yeah, not that quick.
Speaker 1 (01:52):
Jason, appreciate that.
Speaker 2 (01:53):
Call me.
Speaker 1 (01:53):
I hope you have a good day.
Speaker 4 (01:55):
Well you too.
Speaker 2 (01:55):
Thank you.
Speaker 1 (01:55):
All right, see letter, Let's go to Danny in North Carolina. Danny,
you're on the show.
Speaker 2 (02:00):
Yeah, hey body, this is very Hey Gardnerald Caroline.
Speaker 1 (02:04):
How you doing doing pretty good? What can I do
for you?
Speaker 2 (02:07):
Great? So, my daughter Leila and I were we were
just wondering what are the top ten cities mentioned in
country songs? We thought that would be a great thing
for y'all to y'all play, let's figure out.
Speaker 1 (02:22):
Well, let's just talk about it. Nashville obviously has to be.
It has to be number one, just because most artists
either live here or have lived here at one point.
So I think Nashville is probably number one. Outside of that,
there are very famous songs. But I don't know that
(02:43):
Amarillo gets mentioned other than an Amerald by Morning or
maybe like I think Alden has a song Amorillo. Yeah,
like Amarillo. Yeah, Austin Austin, I thought, but you're talking
about one song really, t key.
Speaker 5 (03:01):
Yeah, Austin Amy's back in, Austin Amy's back in last three?
What song is that We're king Alazona?
Speaker 1 (03:10):
Oh, okay, if it's three, I think it makes a list.
That's good. There's got to be more than that too. Sure,
that's a good, good job.
Speaker 5 (03:19):
Let's sell to I bet your Memphis is a Lotmphis
ain't got a lot of pain in Memphis.
Speaker 1 (03:27):
Like I'm walking in Memphis. Yeah, that's not really a country.
Speaker 5 (03:30):
Song from I'm Still Gonna Fight for Stan Tone.
Speaker 1 (03:35):
Can you see if Memphis is in many songs like
country songs that mentioned Memphis, because I'm not married to
being right about that one, but I feel like it's
close in Nashville.
Speaker 2 (03:44):
M hmm.
Speaker 4 (03:45):
I know.
Speaker 1 (03:45):
I think Christ Abradon mentions it in that song Arkansas
that he does so it's going about to drive the
Memphis gets the rest in Arkansas. Okay, let's see we
got here. There are over one thousand songs that mentioned Memphis.
Speaker 4 (03:57):
Thousand.
Speaker 1 (03:58):
Yeah, but these are country songs. I don't know if
that's sure or not. Mm hmm. Let's see.
Speaker 4 (04:04):
Maybe it was Memphis.
Speaker 1 (04:05):
Yeah, yeah, that's how I got to Memphis. Tompty Hall,
Maybe it was Memphis. Pam Tellus, Wrong Side of Memphis,
Tushy Yearwood, Big train from Memphis. John Fogerty stuck inside
of mobile with Memphis blues again, Bob Dylan, you know
there are three at least here put on the list. Yeah,
(04:28):
I think that makes.
Speaker 4 (04:29):
The list, and Amy said san Antone.
Speaker 1 (04:31):
There's gotta be though, like songs talking about things that
aren't country where it mentions New York City has to
be m but I would think many other New Orleans songs.
Speaker 6 (04:42):
I was, I was singing baton Rouge.
Speaker 4 (04:45):
Oh, New Orleans is good. Mc graw, I was headed
down in New Orleans.
Speaker 1 (04:53):
Was Allison New Orleans. But that's like the that's like
the animals though, right, Yeah, I think so. Like back,
let's see New York. Johnny Cash has New York, New York.
That's just to cover obviously the uh Whiskey River mentioned
in New York City. Merle Haggard has the other Town
(05:15):
New York State of Mind by Billy Joel, but that
is not one look at New Orleans. Yeah, he's a
fact checked that if that's the animals, because it may
not be City of New Orleans. Willie Nelson, Nancy Griffith,
you're down in New Orleans. Jordan Davis leaving New Orleans,
(05:36):
New Orleans. Tim McGraw, Louisiana man By Bobby Gentry mentions it,
I'm walking to New Orleans. I don't know that way.
I mean, New Orleans probably makes it, because there's like
four or five that are fringe.
Speaker 6 (05:50):
What about Cheyenne?
Speaker 4 (05:52):
I think I think it's the garth one.
Speaker 1 (05:54):
Me too. It's a good place to start, though, like
find a very famous one to see if there are
others out you.
Speaker 5 (06:00):
Said New York. What about l A? I just stood
off of that LA Freeway out getting.
Speaker 4 (06:07):
Killed, Jeff.
Speaker 1 (06:10):
I could tell Honestly, I don't know the song, but
I could tell about how you were singing it and
how he sings really. Yeah, and also since Amy you
all the words like that, I figured it was somebody
she knew personally or George Strait. Yeah, La, there's got
l A go to California. Yeah, it's interesting. Yeah, it's yeah,
(06:31):
there's I mean, there's a lot to mention it.
Speaker 4 (06:33):
Oh, what's that? D Dwight yoking one? Bakersfield?
Speaker 1 (06:38):
A lot of Bakersfield. There may be some Bakersfield though,
because that was like the secondary hub of music. Hey, Danny,
we appreciate that. Thanks for the call. Gave us some
talk about for a minute. All right, see you later.
Top selling beer. There's a new number one.
Speaker 4 (06:55):
Oh, I think I got it?
Speaker 1 (06:58):
Are you just going by what you like? Or what
you make it is?
Speaker 4 (07:00):
You know what I see more people order?
Speaker 1 (07:02):
Okay, what do you think it is?
Speaker 4 (07:03):
Michelo Ultra.
Speaker 1 (07:05):
What do you guys think it is?
Speaker 7 (07:06):
That's not a bad guess.
Speaker 5 (07:08):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (07:08):
I feel like at some point it was either the
bud Light or Miller, but now people are just they
ordered a lot of Ultras.
Speaker 1 (07:14):
Do you like Michelo Ultra?
Speaker 4 (07:16):
Not really?
Speaker 1 (07:16):
What is it about it?
Speaker 5 (07:18):
They mark leslies?
Speaker 4 (07:19):
It's less calories?
Speaker 1 (07:21):
Is it actually?
Speaker 4 (07:22):
I don't know because there's the Miller commercialists that it's
not true.
Speaker 1 (07:25):
They do a whole commercial. Yeah, Michelobultra Hasser pass Medellodela
to become a ris top selling beer. This marks a
significant milestone for Enheiser Busch, the apparent company of Michelobultra,
which is capitalized on major sports partnerships to boost its
brand visibility. That's from Anheuser Bush. What's your favorite beer?
Speaker 5 (07:46):
I mean, mikel Ultra is not bad. I like Miller
Lite and Pacifico.
Speaker 1 (07:52):
Is that a fancy beer?
Speaker 5 (07:54):
I don't know.
Speaker 4 (07:55):
Is it a Mexican beer?
Speaker 1 (07:56):
Not fancy?
Speaker 4 (07:57):
No, it's just whatever. I mean, it's definitely on the
more expensive side of the aisle, but.
Speaker 5 (08:02):
It's not like if the I p A S or
something like that. I feel like it's not a dark
beer that I don't know. That's more like cool people drink.
Speaker 1 (08:13):
Yeah, like craft beers.
Speaker 5 (08:14):
Yeah, craft there.
Speaker 1 (08:15):
I don't know.
Speaker 5 (08:16):
I don't really drink much beer. I'm just telling you
what I liked back in the day.
Speaker 1 (08:21):
Your favorite beer ready, Miller Light, Miller High Life. No,
why did you laugh at that? I don't know that.
Speaker 4 (08:30):
It's cheap.
Speaker 1 (08:31):
Oh it is. Oh yeah, it's got it.
Speaker 7 (08:34):
It's like Milwaukee's best bush Light.
Speaker 4 (08:36):
Those are real. I think they call it like the
Champagne of beers, but it's not true.
Speaker 1 (08:40):
If you drink beer out of a can. Do they
make nice beers in cans?
Speaker 4 (08:45):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (08:45):
They do. Yeah. My beer knowledge is.
Speaker 4 (08:47):
Not Ray is a is an ultra guy.
Speaker 8 (08:49):
Ray mil Ultra used to be Cools And then I
moved here and my wife introduced it to me, and yes,
it is my favorite beer. Why four percent alcohol? You
can drink ten not even feel anything and believe one
carb So it is the healthiest. I would say, pound
for pound on the market.
Speaker 1 (09:05):
Question, why would you want to drink ten and not
feel anything? I would think if I were drinking beer,
I wanted to feel stuff.
Speaker 5 (09:10):
Yeah, maybe Ray is trying not to feel Thanks.
Speaker 1 (09:14):
No, no, Ray has one drink and is drunk.
Speaker 5 (09:16):
I know, but that maybe that's why this helps him
lasts longer.
Speaker 1 (09:21):
Yeah, I like to that sounds funny that.
Speaker 5 (09:26):
Yeah, well you know what I meant.
Speaker 1 (09:27):
I have the Yeah, I have axcel inventions that change
the world. So these weren't really meant to be invented
for what they were invented for.
Speaker 5 (09:35):
Speak going to last longer.
Speaker 1 (09:37):
Oh, that's one of my Viagara at number ten. In
the early nineties, Pfizer scientists were testing a drug meant
to treat high blood pressure and chest pain. The drug
did not do much for the heart, but test subjects
reportedly felt a very different side effect.
Speaker 4 (09:51):
You imagine.
Speaker 1 (09:51):
Pfizer pivoted Viagara became one of the most well known
and profitable drugs in history.
Speaker 4 (09:56):
They're like, can you get the doctor and hear something
else is happening.
Speaker 1 (09:59):
In it's been four hours. Maybe you should put it
in a commercial. It's so hot in this room, Like
I had to take.
Speaker 4 (10:04):
My sweater off.
Speaker 5 (10:05):
Oh I'm kind of shivering.
Speaker 1 (10:07):
Nope, yeah, we don't even have the ability to run
our air anymore.
Speaker 4 (10:11):
They have taken that away from us.
Speaker 1 (10:12):
Yes, they're taking all of our rights away, and so
it sucks. And so I come in and I'm under
bigger lights than you guys are also, and I have
more computers in front of me.
Speaker 5 (10:22):
And my legs that we're just saying like, no.
Speaker 1 (10:26):
You guys are making points like I'm shivering. No, I'm
burning my balls off, And you guys are over there
all fancy free, feeling good, and I can't even turn
the air down.
Speaker 4 (10:35):
It's pretty good in here.
Speaker 1 (10:37):
Yeah to you. You got one little screen. I'm sitting
behind a freaking force field of computers and humongous lights,
all right. The microwave. In nineteen forty five, the engineer
Percy Spencer was testing radar equipment when the chocolate bar
in his pocket melted. Instead of freaking out, he experimented
and invented the microwave. That's cool, that's weird. Something melts
(11:00):
and you don't really know why. Also, could he have
kids after that if it melted? Number eight potato chips.
A chef in New York was annoyed by a customer
who kept sending back his fried potatoes for being too soggy.
In frustration, he sliced them paper thin, fried them until
(11:21):
crispy to show him, and boom, the potato chip was born.
Speaker 4 (11:24):
That's awesome.
Speaker 1 (11:24):
There is this. I'm not a big sushi guy, and
I'm not even sure if it's sushi, but there's a
place that I will order from some and it's a
sushi place and they have this thing called the Great
White and it's a piece of sushi type thing. They
put a really fresh potato chip on it.
Speaker 5 (11:45):
Why do you say you're not sure if it's sushi because.
Speaker 1 (11:47):
It's from a sushi place. But I don't even know
what's on it. I just like the potato chip, and
why it's I just order potato chips, so it's like
a sushi.
Speaker 5 (11:55):
Fish on it. I can look in it, because like,
what makes it a sush she roll?
Speaker 1 (12:01):
Well, it's a sushi place. I don't know if this
is a sushi roll. All I know is has a
potato chip I like, and so I order it because
I like the potato chip and ate the thing with it.
My wife's like, that's stupid. You're spending all this money
and all you wants the potato.
Speaker 5 (12:12):
Chip, so you don't one. It's just one potato chip.
Speaker 1 (12:15):
It's two two little things with one with two little
tiny potato chips.
Speaker 4 (12:18):
You don't and you don't eat the actual.
Speaker 1 (12:20):
No, I eat the thing but potato just because it's there. Mike,
what did say on that when we read the description?
I don't know what escalar is ah vinigrette potato chip
and black truffle shavings escalar truffle vinigarette. Escalar has got
to be a kind of fish, Huh do we know?
Speaker 3 (12:39):
I never of it.
Speaker 5 (12:40):
I'm looking it up and it says it is a butterfish,
deep sea oriole fish or super white tuna tuna like texture.
Speaker 1 (12:49):
It's an oil rich deep sea fish also known as
a butterfish or super white tuna that contains wax Ester's
jim pleo toxin, which humans cannot fully digest. Why digest it?
Pretty good? That fish is good like?
Speaker 4 (13:01):
Do not recommend to eat.
Speaker 1 (13:03):
Velcros at seven. Swiss engineer George Demestrol went for a
walk with his dog in nineteen forty one and noticed
burrs sticking to his pants. Under a microscope, he saw
tiny hooks in the burrs. He then thought, how can
I use this to attach to other things? In bened
velcrow amazing because the crap was stuck to him.
Speaker 4 (13:22):
I mean it was his nature. Nature already does that.
Speaker 1 (13:24):
X rays at six. This physicist Wilhelm Rotchen was experimenting
with cathode raised in eighteen ninety five when he noticed
a glowing screen across the room. He realized he could
see inside objects. Even his wife's hand. Medicine was changed forever.
By the way, there's a myth that the inventor of
the X ray and his wife died from radiation exposure.
That's false.
Speaker 4 (13:45):
Oh, it's false.
Speaker 1 (13:46):
The inventor died of a completely different disease and his
wife passed away from a prolonged illness. The myth likely
originated from misinterpretations of two related events, because.
Speaker 4 (13:57):
I remember hearing that he would use her as a yeah,
me too experiment.
Speaker 1 (14:01):
I also buy sushi for potato chips, So what do
I know? Fireworks at five? Legend has it over two
thousand years ago a Chinese cook accidentally mixed charcoal, sulfur
and saltpeter while cooking and the mixture exploded. Again, they
can make this up two thousand years ago, no cameras.
I don't believe it. Yeah, that's tough post it notes
(14:23):
Threem's at company, a scientist at three M was trying
to make a super strong adhesive, but ended up making
one that was super weak. Years later, another employee realized
it was the perfect thing for bookmarks and notes that
could stick an unstick love posted notes super glue. At
three a chemist Harry Coover was working on creating clear
plastic for gun sights during World War Two. Instead, he
(14:47):
accidentally invented a substance that bonded almost instantly, super glue.
That's pretty cool. Number two Coca cola. It's a lot
of pharmacists or physicists doing stuff. In eighteen eighty six,
the pharmacist John Pemberton was trying to create a cure
for headaches. He mixed syrup carbonated water, and you know
(15:12):
there was some cocaine in early because we didn't know
what cocaine really was or out affected people and that's
how they got coke. It was a headache cure at first.
Speaker 4 (15:21):
So was it coke because of cocaine?
Speaker 1 (15:23):
Yeah? Coca cola cool, that's crazy. Not from the coca plant. Yeah,
I don't believe cocaine, but also potato chips. So what
do you know? What do I know, uh, number one penicillin.
In nineteen twenty eight, Alexander Fleming returned to his messy
lab and noticed mold killing the bacteria in one of
his petri dishes. That mistake became penicillin, the first true antibiotic,
(15:44):
which went on to save millions of lives. Those are
all accidental inventions that changed the world. Pretty cool. Boom
uh Coca coca did you know? Okay, so here's the
weird thing. M Coke is a source of cocaine. The
coca leaf.
Speaker 4 (16:04):
Okay, so the same one that makes chocolate.
Speaker 5 (16:06):
No, no, that's that's cocoa or cocao. Cocoa and then coca.
Speaker 1 (16:13):
Oh, Coca refers to the coca leaf. Coca Cola was
named for its original key ingredients, coca leaves and the
cola nut kola, which provided both cocaine and caffeine, respectively.
The name directly reflects these ingredients, which were included in
the formula when it was first developed and marketed as
(16:33):
a tonic. Coca is the coca leaf, the source of cocaine.
Cola refers to the cola nut kola nut the source
of caffeine. So cocaine and caffeine. That's the country song
that's crazy, I look crazy. I don't know. History is
a lot of things that we didn't know while we
(16:56):
were making it. For a reason, turns out it could
be used by humans really terrible way if used wrong.
And I'm sure if you use cocaine very lightly, I'm
sure there's a way for a lot of these drugs
that aren't like dirty math. No, but I'm sure like
there's probably some sort of good you could do with
cocaine if you just used it barely, I like Mike
(17:18):
grow I don't know, or normal dose. I don't have
no idea, never used cocaine, never seen cocaine.
Speaker 5 (17:22):
I just think that, like do people have the ability
to just know because then you want it more and
more and more.
Speaker 1 (17:29):
Right, But yeah, I mean there's a weird reason that
weed is well wasn't allowed forever and alcohol was, and
it goes to just what people decided would be allowed,
and that's it.
Speaker 5 (17:43):
Did you know that? I guess because you know right
now a big thing in the drug world is the
fentanyl and that they have strips where you test for it. Oh,
I did not.
Speaker 4 (17:54):
What do you mean you test well?
Speaker 5 (17:54):
Because I was thinking about all the people that are
doing drugs that are are you know, you might like
are business people? Yeah, because there's a lot of people
that do cocaine. And I'm like, you're telling me I
could see like if you're just down on your luck
doing drugs, you end up with the fentanyl and you're
like whatever, I'll take the risk. But you're not a
successful business person just at a party being like, oh, yeah,
(18:17):
I'll take that cocaine and run the risk. I had
no idea that they test it before they use it,
that there's these little strips and they or however they
do it, I don't know. My friend was telling me
about it. She said she was at a party and
they were offering stuff. She didn't take any, but that
they were like, it's all good, we've tested it. And
she's like I'm still good, Like I don't, I don't
(18:37):
want it. But that's when I was like, what, I
didn't know that that's what they do, because you would
think you'd have more successful people dying from the and
maybe they are, but you know what I'm talking about
those kind of people like.
Speaker 1 (18:51):
Yeah, people all listen. People with money, Yeah, there, like
actors Hollywood. They they don't buy as cheap of drugs
because cheap drugs a lot of times are mixed with
other things. Yes, horse, tranquilizer, rat, poison, anything that they
can make the actual drug, they can do less of
the actual drug and use more fillers to then have
(19:13):
more drug to sell. Let's go to our drug guy.
Speaker 4 (19:16):
Yeah, hey's good, pull them up there, he is.
Speaker 1 (19:18):
You're talking about cutting cocaine. Well, no, I'm yeah, I'm
talking about in the early stages. If they want to
sell it cheaper, they mix stuff with it. They're not
using as much cocaine exactly. It's it's broken down, it's
not as pure. You'll put other things, and I've I
had dealers that they would put like ajax. You don't
know what they're cutting it with.
Speaker 9 (19:34):
Yeah, because it's because again, like your point, you can
make it last longer by cutting it.
Speaker 1 (19:39):
Yeah, I mean it make it last long. Yeah, you're
just making more out of the same Yeah, yeah, exactly.
Speaker 9 (19:44):
And small amounts are fine, like key bumps in a
bathroom at a party.
Speaker 5 (19:47):
But I feel like these days you would just want
to test everything.
Speaker 1 (19:53):
Yeahs. It costs money to get the test though, and
the people that are getting the bad drugs, sadly are
the people that don't have money.
Speaker 9 (19:59):
Well, even like marijuana, it's not as hardcore as the
ones we're talking about, but those can have problems with
it if like they have like mold on it, growing
on it, or little mites. So depending where you're buying
yours you. If you're buying for a reputable place, they've
looked at it, they've tested it. But if you're buying
for some dude in the street, you don't know what's
in it.
Speaker 1 (20:15):
Bread sometimes got mold.
Speaker 4 (20:17):
Check you to eat around it.
Speaker 1 (20:19):
Ray play me voice on number one please.
Speaker 10 (20:21):
Hey, I'm just sitting here wondering if anybody else is
as horrified as I am that Amy driving around with
relations with an expired relaces as if it's not a
big deal. I mean, she should probably google the consequences
if she gets pulled over, have.
Speaker 1 (20:35):
A good day the consequences.
Speaker 5 (20:38):
Yeah, I think I'm scared to google the consequences. But
I'm going to say, not that big deal. I'm going
to get it off so fine. I'd be like, you know,
the whole real idea, real id situation.
Speaker 1 (20:48):
Oh, telling them it was a bit on the show.
Speaker 4 (20:50):
Yeah, that's all you got to do.
Speaker 1 (20:52):
Yeah, again, it's not that big a deal because she's
had her license for many, many years and it just expired.
So yeah, probably a fine and then you probably get
it wiped away as soon as you get your new license.
This woe exactly like going to Alcatraz.
Speaker 5 (21:05):
I mean, maybe we should google though.
Speaker 4 (21:07):
And it's not like you become a worst driver because
you don't have a license.
Speaker 1 (21:10):
Right, I'm actually already.
Speaker 5 (21:13):
But I am paying attention more because I don't want
to get pulled over for something silly.
Speaker 1 (21:19):
That's a good point. If you get caught driving here
with an expired license, you can face a Class C
misdemeanor offense with a potential fine up to fifty dollars.
Speaker 5 (21:29):
What's Class C?
Speaker 1 (21:30):
That sounds bad, court costs, late fees on your license renewal,
your car registration could be suspended. You're fine, you're fine.
Speaker 5 (21:39):
Well, my insurance and registration all up to date.
Speaker 1 (21:42):
You're fine. So let's do a couple stories, Amy, what
do you have over there?
Speaker 5 (21:46):
So Dawson's Creek had a reunion and James Vanderbeek was
just there with like on video because he couldn't be
there because he's sick. And I had not seen a
picture of him in a while or video, and it's
so hard to see him so frail. Did you see him?
Speaker 1 (22:04):
Yeah, I talked with him a bunch a few months ago.
I guess it was May in Austin. He lives there,
and you know he's been fighting cancer. But yeah, it
looks yeah.
Speaker 5 (22:16):
I just feels like sick. Yeah, Oh my gosh, Like
I don't know the image of the article I saw
had an old picture of him, and so I figured,
oh my, wow, he's looking really good. And then I
scrolled down and saw what he looks like and I
was like, oh man, that's hard. And Dawson's Creek was
such a show for us growing up, Like I remember
having watch parties and everybody getting together. But we're about
(22:38):
all that. We're their age, and it's just weird to think,
like we're getting older and we're going to start seeing
more and more of our people in situations aging and
getting and.
Speaker 1 (22:49):
The older we get, the more the more be able
to die in right, that's true. I know he's forty eight.
I didn't really watch Dawson's Creek, but I got to
know James a little bit because he was on Dancing
with the Stars. He did really well. He danced with Emma,
who friends with who's on the Bobby Cast last week? Uh,
and so I know they were still friends. And I
saw him and again we had spent a few times
together just saying what up. But it was the most
(23:10):
I ever talked abou him. And he's just talking about
living in Texas and how he got sick and moved
down there with his family and loved it. And but yeah,
I don't know if it has like I don't know
if the cancer like happened again. I don't know.
Speaker 5 (23:22):
He was diagnosed with stage three colorectal cancer in August
of twenty twenty three, shared it publicly November twenty twenty four.
And I mean stage three of.
Speaker 1 (23:33):
That is stomach problems over and my stomach is growling
like crazy.
Speaker 5 (23:41):
Like you're hungry or you I just ate a bar.
Speaker 4 (23:43):
I don't think I'm hungry. I told my stomach, so
now here's a bar.
Speaker 1 (23:47):
Dude that was loud, No eternally just keeps ying that's
or that Sucksford James Vanderbet. Hopefully, hopefully he's okay.
Speaker 5 (23:58):
I don't really you know, you said you met with him.
Linda May May and said he returned to acting in
May of twenty twenty five for the Legally Blonde prequel series.
L Oh, I don't know he's going to be part
of that.
Speaker 1 (24:11):
That's cool, Eddie.
Speaker 4 (24:12):
What do you have over there? So this is crazy,
Like who is Robert Kardashian. I don't understand his dad?
Very famous lawyer from OJ Simpson. That's yeah, very famous,
very rich lawyer. Yeah. So Priscilla Pressley, Elvis's ex wife,
is riding a memoir and it came out and she
talks about these are all like life after Elvis, who
I dated After Elvis. She was like in a whole
(24:33):
year long relationship with Robert Kardashian. And I'm thinking, like,
this is just a lawyer, and he.
Speaker 1 (24:40):
He's a very famous, rich guy, very famous, rich lawyer.
Speaker 4 (24:43):
And now like there's a picture of him, like he's
not that good looking kind I mean, I guess he
kind of looks like a porn star.
Speaker 1 (24:48):
He does kind of look like a porn star.
Speaker 4 (24:49):
You can know. And I started thinking like, this is crazy.
Speaker 1 (24:51):
This is very rich.
Speaker 4 (24:53):
So like he was rich in La and every girl
wanted to date him.
Speaker 1 (24:56):
I don't know that every girl does, but he was
in that rich circle you meet people.
Speaker 4 (25:03):
And then he married Chris Jenner. And but what's funny
about this In the book, there's a story about where Elvis,
I guess after they got a divorced, he was like
still stuck on her and he'd call her like drunk
late at night, and he said she said that one
night Elvis called and Robert was in the in her bed,
and she was like, and if Elvis would have found
out that Robert Kardashian was in my bed when he
(25:24):
was calling, like, Elvis would have come over and probably
killed him.
Speaker 1 (25:28):
She's because Elvis always carried like two guns. The irony
Elvis died.
Speaker 11 (25:33):
Oh no, no, no.
Speaker 1 (25:34):
OJJ because he represented oj He was his defense lawyer,
someone that didn't happen, or if it did happen, o
J would have never killed Ron Goldman and Nicole Brown
I would have nothing to do. It's dad, I'm kidding, Okay, Morgan,
(25:55):
what do you have?
Speaker 11 (25:56):
Yeah, So there's an ai now pet that you can
have that simulates having a dog or a cat without
the real responsibilities of a living thing.
Speaker 4 (26:05):
I like it.
Speaker 11 (26:06):
It's called a moflin and it kind of looks like
a little hamster or but it's super fuzzy and it
looks like you can take care of it in the
same capacity.
Speaker 6 (26:14):
It's just AI. It's a pet.
Speaker 1 (26:16):
A I just feel like digitpet or one of the many.
But what does this pet do? That's AI.
Speaker 11 (26:22):
It reacts emotionally to different surroundings, and it is designed
to offer comfort and companionship. So it's actually like literally
mimicking a real pet, just without it having living organs.
Speaker 4 (26:35):
You don't defeed it, take it out.
Speaker 1 (26:36):
It's not a real pet. The thing about a real
pet is that you actually get companionship, real companionship and
a relationship that grows.
Speaker 4 (26:44):
Wait, wait, but you liked AI. You like AI as
a relationship?
Speaker 1 (26:47):
No, I've never saw I liked it. I could see
me if I never met my wife, possibly using good
but I would know it's not real as a pet though,
like you get a pet for that, you don't have
to have a pet. I think humans feel the need
to have a relationship, like say, for me, though my
kids want a pet so bad, we have a dog.
But like you can train them with the AI and
have the AI score them, like back in the day
(27:08):
when they used to give us this electronic baby in
homech oh. Yeah, or a class that was like home
economics whatever. That electronic baby, it had like a chip
in it. Oh, I remember a kid punted it one
day at school, get kicked out of the class, got
a f See that's funny because they had because they
gave the results back. The baby had severe trauma.
Speaker 4 (27:25):
Oh that's not funny. No, it's not funny.
Speaker 5 (27:28):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (27:28):
So you could get an AI pet and see if
your kids do everything like feed it, take it out.
Speaker 4 (27:33):
No, no, no, We've had real pets and they never did that.
Speaker 1 (27:36):
In general, you could like warm it up, warm up
a kid that wants a real pet to see if
he can actually do it by getting this AI pet.
Speaker 6 (27:43):
Yeah.
Speaker 11 (27:43):
So it reacts to voice, touched and handling by adjusting
its behavior, and it develops a unique personality based on
how it's treated, becoming either shy, energetic, affectionate, or more reserved.
So it can display over four million emotional patterns.
Speaker 1 (27:58):
That's crazy, and it can give you a score. I mean,
think about that baby now being AI for kids, Like,
you're here to take the a baby home, and let's
see what your score is when it cries. You got
to get to it in a certain amount of time
because that was the joke.
Speaker 4 (28:11):
Like they would do eggs, you know, like and if
you didn't break the egg, you passed.
Speaker 11 (28:14):
Yeah, really had real babies like Bobby's talking about, and
they would throw up and they would create like.
Speaker 1 (28:19):
You know yeah really Yeah, ours didn't do that because
I'm obviously older, but no, tell me more about yours.
Speaker 6 (28:24):
Yeah, so it was. It wasn't much more advanced than yours.
Speaker 11 (28:27):
But yeah, I would either like throw up, like something
would come out of it or would have something come
out of its bottom, and you had to change the diaper.
If you didn't change a diaper, that counts as something.
You had to take it with you everywhere. If it
was too far away from you, it noticed. So it
was pretty close to getting up there. Now they're probably
a lot more advanced.
Speaker 1 (28:43):
Yeah, I would think now they could create a really
cool and give you a more realistic score.
Speaker 4 (28:47):
See those are good classes right there that finances everything else,
like science, like use science, well, well not you, but
you know, my son has a funny argument with that.
He's like, why isn't science an elective? Like if you're
gonna be a scientist, take science for all the rest
of us, Like we don't need to take science.
Speaker 1 (29:09):
I think mostly getting a high school diploma or a
college diploma is about actually finishing something more than it
is what you're doing. So finishing the class like you
have started, did the work, done the work, You did
the work, and you finished it. I think it's about that,
like a task is assigned, you have shown that you
(29:29):
have completed a task, more than it is about the
individual things that you learn.
Speaker 4 (29:34):
See, we should focus on learning things that we're gonna
need for the rest.
Speaker 5 (29:37):
Of We don't know at that age for sure, well.
Speaker 4 (29:39):
Like taking care of the baby's good, you know, like
money is good, like we're all gonna do is in
tenth grade.
Speaker 1 (29:45):
You really don't know where you're gonna fall in line.
Speaker 5 (29:47):
And I think they've rounded out, like these are the
good basics and fundamentals to build upon. Should you choose
a certain route If you don't want to go past that,
don't go past that. But you have a bunch of
people run and around learning how to balance checkbook and
take care of a baby that I understand the important
like life skills, I think should there should be more
(30:09):
of an emphasis on life skills.
Speaker 4 (30:10):
Yeah, etiquette in school, you know, like like tipping, etiquette,
like all that stuff.
Speaker 1 (30:15):
Maybe like senior year, you don't have to take those classes,
those specific classes something like that. Okay, in college you
really don't. There's some basics you have to take, but
really they don't push you in a direction if you're
not going to But yeah, I agree. I also think
the education should be free, even college. And I think
we should have health care, but that's a whole different topic.
(30:36):
Nice we're like the one civilized country that doesn't have
health care. Blows my mind. And I grew up with
that healthcare, so it double blows my mind. We're the
richest country in the world and people have to decide
between food and medicine.
Speaker 4 (30:48):
Yeah, Like now that my mom's older, we start dealing
with that, Like she has no insurance and she has
to buy her own insurance and that's really expensive, and
she's old, too old to kind of have a job,
and so.
Speaker 1 (30:58):
Sometimes it's hard to get into parents. Yeah, if you
have a pre existing condition, or sometimes the medicine, because
that that's a business right. Medicine is not a charity,
So they're gonna make that medicine as expensive as they can.
Speaker 11 (31:12):
Oh, and having a baby, my sister just got her
hospital bill back.
Speaker 4 (31:16):
Yeah, it's not cheap.
Speaker 1 (31:18):
How much costs have a baby?
Speaker 4 (31:19):
You don't want to know, No, he doesn't want to know.
Tell him.
Speaker 1 (31:23):
Actually, like to try how much cost of a baby?
Speaker 7 (31:24):
I think it was like twenty k oh.
Speaker 6 (31:26):
No, my sister is just so much higher.
Speaker 1 (31:28):
At the Chateau Marmal Where does she go hospital? Whether
he complications or anything.
Speaker 11 (31:34):
I mean she had her like the high blood pressure,
but she had planned to be at a birthing center
and they moved her over to like the hospital.
Speaker 1 (31:40):
Did her insurance cover any of it?
Speaker 11 (31:41):
Yeah, I've covered a lot of it, but the fact
that her bill was as high, like it's the price
of a brand new car really to have just to
have a child.
Speaker 9 (31:49):
It depends on the state though, because in California, my
son costs two hundred and fifty dollars for the whole thing,
but Tennessee, depends on where you live, it costs a
lot more.
Speaker 7 (31:58):
But interns didn't cover something like I mean my first child, Nick,
you so, I mean the bill was if I would
have had to pay for it would have been one
hundred thousand dollars.
Speaker 1 (32:06):
But insane go to California, have a baby and some
people don't have insurance. Yeah, so they just have. I mean,
one medical bill can bankrupt somebody all of a sudden,
you get sick or you get hurt, and it's not
like everybody has thousands of dollars sitting in a savings account.
But yeah, that to me is one of the things
that still blows my mind that we don't that our
politicians aren't fighting for health care. That's a human that
(32:30):
should be a human right, especially when you're living in
the richest country in the freaking world. I do watch
those people on TikTok to it. They're Americans. They go
to China.
Speaker 4 (32:39):
What do they do?
Speaker 5 (32:41):
They just go to China for what?
Speaker 1 (32:42):
Just to go just I don't know. I don't know
why they're there. One guy's a teacher, he works over there.
Speaker 5 (32:46):
Oh they go live there.
Speaker 1 (32:47):
Yeah, or they go on vacation. One guy's on like
vacation and you can't just go over there, get have
like ORG visa to get in there. And they're all like, yeah,
you've been telling America, even American has been telling you're wrong.
This place is awesome. Crazy, they crazy. There's like three
of them. I follow like the buildings the technology.
Speaker 4 (33:07):
But isn't TikTok China? Is it TikTok Chinese?
Speaker 5 (33:10):
Yeah, they're like, okay behind that.
Speaker 4 (33:14):
I don't know, dude, I'm just asking.
Speaker 1 (33:16):
It's great quiet, but they can't fake the cities. I
was talking to a friend that I used to work
at that GEO with my friend. He was one of
the people that hired me, and I was asking him like, Hey,
what are the coolest cities to go to that you
thought probably were unsafe or maybe as Americans we shouldn't go.
And he said Shanghai, China was one. He's like, it's
the greatest city. Oh yeah. He said he wouldn't go
to Russia right now, but Russia was really beautiful. But
(33:38):
he was like, I didn't feel safe there, not because
of getting attacked, but because they're probably hacking and everything
you have as soon as you get over there, Well,
let's go somewhere like Vietnam. I haven't been to Vietnam.
Speaker 4 (33:50):
No.
Speaker 5 (33:50):
Oh, my boyfriend went a couple of months ago. It
was awesome for work. Yeah, for work, well, I mean
he was working on but he said, yeah.
Speaker 7 (34:01):
What another day, you said, He's going to Paris for work.
Speaker 1 (34:04):
And I believe yeah, I was laughing. I just kind
of I believe he probably is doing all that stuff
for work.
Speaker 5 (34:09):
You don't think he's doing that for work? Is that
why that laugh was?
Speaker 1 (34:12):
No? I thought it was just a weird No, no, no,
when you know not even that. I don't think it's
a weird. When you said Vietnam, I was going to
say did you fight in it? And then I didn't, oh,
because I.
Speaker 5 (34:22):
Was like, wait, what did I say that? It's like weird?
Speaker 1 (34:24):
I just would I chose not to say it, but
I couldn't help but make myself laugh. And I didn't laugh.
I just smiled, So I like kept that down.
Speaker 5 (34:33):
Yeah. It wasn't anywhere that I ever thought of going.
But once he got back, I was like, oh, wow,
that would actually be a cool place to take a
trip to.
Speaker 4 (34:42):
And he goes back for a reunion.
Speaker 5 (34:47):
No, he's not that old.
Speaker 4 (34:49):
I know.
Speaker 1 (34:50):
If I didn't say it, that's the j I get
it now, And I didn't. I just smiled. I didn't
make a noise and you said it. I just thought
to myself, yeah, a me, I ain't no qutching him
on he's over there and fighting.
Speaker 5 (35:05):
No, no, no, no, that'd be kind of cool to
go over there.
Speaker 3 (35:08):
Now.
Speaker 5 (35:09):
Yeah, now that's what I just think. There's a lot
of places that just are never on my radar that
I'll probably never go to, but now I know, like, oh,
that would be cool to visit lunchbox.
Speaker 2 (35:21):
Yeah.
Speaker 7 (35:21):
Twelve year old boy in Sacramento yesterday morning decided to
take his parents' car for a joy ride, drove by
his old school, ran over some traffic cones. Police tried
to pull them over, he said, not so fast, seventy
mile an hour chase. They were able to stop him
after he hit a park car and no one was injured.
Speaker 1 (35:39):
Luckily, nobody was hurt. That's why it's funny. That's why
it was funny because nobody was hurt. Yeah, not funny
if he hits somebody. But that's crazy. I don't know
how some twelve year olds are taller, but to see like.
Speaker 7 (35:51):
The top of a head drive by barely and the
fact that he decided, I'm gonna go buy my old
school show by look at me, I'm driving a car.
Speaker 4 (35:57):
Probably the only place he knew where to go that round.
Speaker 1 (36:02):
If you saw a car coming at you and you
just saw the top of a head, I think I
would be afraid to call the cough because what if
it was just a little person, like an adult Morgan
and I. You know you don't have ducks in this No,
no duck.
Speaker 4 (36:19):
Don't they do like horses? What do they do?
Speaker 6 (36:21):
They know that, but they're supposed to do horses like Bronco.
Speaker 1 (36:26):
But you like your Bronco?
Speaker 6 (36:27):
I love it?
Speaker 1 (36:28):
Yeah? Like it better than the jeep?
Speaker 6 (36:29):
Yeah, a lot better. I named it too.
Speaker 1 (36:32):
What's the coolest place you've ever been? What do you
name it?
Speaker 4 (36:36):
I thought you're just moving on like no, no, no,
I was what'd.
Speaker 1 (36:39):
You name it?
Speaker 6 (36:40):
Band It? It's after one of my horses I had
grown up?
Speaker 4 (36:42):
You had?
Speaker 5 (36:43):
I can't it was it black?
Speaker 6 (36:46):
Band? It was white?
Speaker 1 (36:47):
Yeah?
Speaker 6 (36:47):
We had four horses, Eddie, Wow, horse rider.
Speaker 1 (36:51):
Coolest place you ever been?
Speaker 3 (36:54):
Hmmm?
Speaker 5 (36:55):
Maybe to watch a name ho is pretty cool? Where Mexico, Mexico.
Speaker 4 (37:03):
That's where any frame went.
Speaker 5 (37:04):
It's the beach where on Shawshank Redemption.
Speaker 1 (37:08):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (37:08):
Hm, so get busy.
Speaker 4 (37:11):
Say you wata Naho live in?
Speaker 5 (37:14):
I mean that was kind of cool, but I don't
like love the beach. But Hawaii's pretty cool.
Speaker 1 (37:19):
Cool splace you ever been?
Speaker 4 (37:20):
Eddie? Man? I think I would have said Hawaii like
a lot of time, Like Hawaii is definitely my favorite place.
But when I went to Zion National Park, that's pretty
magical because like I've never seen anything like that before.
Like they have mountains and rock formations so big and
so high, like you just can't believe that that's actually real.
(37:40):
Oh yeah, you know, like that's I've never my my
eyes have never seen I've seen the Grand Canyon, but
I guess I was younger and I don't really remember.
But these structures or whatever, these natural formations, and like
you'll have like a like a little mountain of a
of a rock and the on top is like a
bold it looks like a Looney Tune of cartoon where.
Speaker 1 (37:59):
The road like it's way too big and a moment
roll off.
Speaker 4 (38:04):
Yeah, yeah, doesn't it's crazy, Morgan.
Speaker 11 (38:07):
I think I would have to be North Cascades National Park.
It's at the very very top of Washington and they
call it the American Alps. I felt like I was
just like this tiny bug on a little planet when
I step on those mountains. I've never seen anything like
it in my life.
Speaker 4 (38:21):
Man, when you see big mountains, you're just like, dude,
I am nothing like I'm an ant.
Speaker 1 (38:26):
You travel at all, you feel like that, Like I've been,
like you have to travel a bunch for work for
some one of mine's Norway. When I went to Norway
for uh, I did bear Girls this first time. I've
not seen anything like that ever. We were up in
some remote part of Norway. Yeah, it's I don't even
know fjords.
Speaker 4 (38:48):
Oh yeah, that's right, fjord.
Speaker 1 (38:49):
Yeah. And the people are so nice, and it's so
much more of a community than we have here. You know,
we're very isolated. Even we live next to people, we're
very ice as America's a very isolated. We have our
own houses, our own spaces, our own fences, our own
it's just not like that generally there. That was super cool.
I think my favorite city I've ever been to is
(39:11):
probably Vienna, Austria. Very clean, very safe. That's super cool.
Speaker 5 (39:18):
I just thought of the when I went to Kenya
and yeah, went on a Hey, I forgot about this trip,
but it just popped into my mind. The Safari we did.
I mean we went over there for like two weeks
and we're working at a orphanage place. But then at
the end of the trip we went on a Safari,
and I think seeing some of those animals up close
like that was pretty crazy.
Speaker 1 (39:40):
Yeah, the more you travel, the more you realize it's
not so much about you, and that all the belief
system that you've had growing up is just a belief
system because that's exactly where. That's only because where you live,
and had you been miraculously sprout in another part of
the world, you have a different belief system, like in
general of how you mess with people, how you mess
with food, how you everything, and so much of our
(40:01):
life is just dictated by exactly where we were born
and what those how those surroundings influence you, the people
in those surroundings. But man, you travel around, you realize
just ant you like it, just ant lunchbox, best plots ever.
Speaker 7 (40:20):
Alaska absolutely beautiful, just everything, mountains, glaciers, I mean, just water, everything,
so much land.
Speaker 1 (40:30):
It's just it was amazing. Anywhere. You don't want to
go ever, India, North North Korea. Oh, I'd like to
go to North Koreage just to see.
Speaker 5 (40:40):
No, I want to go to South Korea or just Korea.
Speaker 1 (40:43):
Yeah, yeah, I want.
Speaker 5 (40:44):
To go there.
Speaker 1 (40:44):
That'd be fun. I like to go there too.
Speaker 7 (40:45):
I don't want to go to Russia.
Speaker 4 (40:46):
I'm scared. I'm good without Russia.
Speaker 1 (40:48):
I think I would love to go to Russia.
Speaker 4 (40:49):
It's too cold.
Speaker 1 (40:50):
I don't like the cold. Thing I would want to see,
like the Square, like it was real colors. I would
love to go to Russia to see that. I don't
want to be in Russia right now, but maybe at
some point, you.
Speaker 4 (41:03):
Know, when like when we're on an airplane, I take
pictures instead of you're just like, dude, just Google, you
get a better of picture images. That's kind of how
I feel about the square in Russia.
Speaker 1 (41:10):
I don't want to see it. Although the taj Mahala
would be cool to see, that's not Russia, that's India. Yeah,
that would be cool to see. But I've just seen
like too many. I'm just letting culture affect me negatively.
Like Guatemala, I was good. I'm not going up to
Guatemala and I was down in South America. I'm sure
there's some great parts of it, and I could be
very wrong.
Speaker 4 (41:28):
Bad PR, bad PR.
Speaker 1 (41:30):
It's exactly it snakes and Guatemala bad PR.
Speaker 5 (41:34):
You know as good PR as Dubai they do.
Speaker 4 (41:36):
They really do amazing great PR. Those buildings look crazy.
Speaker 1 (41:42):
Yeah, And I watch people on TikTok in Dubai and
they're like, they do a thing where they leave their
keys and their wallet on their car. Have you guys
seen this?
Speaker 5 (41:50):
No?
Speaker 1 (41:50):
And they go in and they have dinner and they
come out two hours later their keys and the wall
are still there, and they're like, this is the safest
city you could ever be in.
Speaker 4 (41:56):
Yeah, I wouldn't do that.
Speaker 1 (41:58):
You wouldn't hear what's the structure?
Speaker 5 (42:01):
Like, how have they built such a safe Is there
too much fear of like you get your probably been
chopped off?
Speaker 1 (42:09):
Yeah, probably probably fear, probably policing. But when I went
to Japan, there's no trash on the street. There's no
trash on the street, there are no trash cans on
the street.
Speaker 4 (42:18):
So is that people like collecting their trash and throwing
it wherever they need to, or people picking them up quick?
Speaker 1 (42:23):
It's there? You have trash to keep it with you
until you get home or inside somewhere else.
Speaker 4 (42:28):
I try to teach my kids.
Speaker 1 (42:29):
Man, there's like.
Speaker 5 (42:30):
Even no spitting. Yeah. Well I don't know the exact rules,
but like or what your consequences are if you get
caught doing that? I mean here it's illegal to litter
or you get fine, but people don't care.
Speaker 1 (42:43):
It's also not a fear based thing. In some places,
it's the culture. You don't you don't treat other people
this way, and by you doing that, that you treating
other people this way, by you literating, so we hear
it's like we're isolated and do everything for yourself. That's
our culture here.
Speaker 4 (42:58):
But it's really what your parents did, because like my
dad would just throw stuff out the window all the time,
so I did for years.
Speaker 1 (43:03):
That's very much the seventies and eighties thing. I don't
want to just make your dad feel bad, just like, yeah,
I remin uncle doing that. Just don't crab out the door.
Speaker 4 (43:12):
And what did I do the same thing? And then
my wife's like what are you doing? Like don't do that?
And then I stopped doing it.
Speaker 1 (43:17):
Yeah, yep, yep. You can get fined in like Japan
and Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan where I was, But you to
Tokyo is that where you went? Yeah, but people just
don't do it. But I remember getting there and being
like where I have this drink, I just drank it
where I put it, and there's there's not a trash
can outside. When I was in Paris last year, they
(43:42):
have these bathrooms on the street and you go up
and you you don't touch it. You wave your hand
on it, and this little door opens and it's basically
a fountain for guys. And the water's coming down the
fountain and you pee on the water and it just
renses away and nobody. And if it were an American,
people would pe on the building, right, they wouldn't even
(44:03):
go in. Yeah, and there's a sink. And I was
amazed because it was clean. It was just on the
street and there was a line of like three guys
and we're everybody's just waiting to pee on the street,
No problem America. They'd like poop in their hands and
like wiped it on it. Yeah, that's what's up. Hey,
let's talk about Hey, Ray, this is your thing. Would
(44:26):
you give up your seat in this scenario at the airport?
Speaker 4 (44:29):
Yeah?
Speaker 8 (44:29):
So it was at the airport and they said that
our flight wasn't balanced, so it wasn't even that they
needed an extra seat. They took somebody out because we
weighed too much, and so they made this offer, and
I wanted to see if you guys would do it
if you thought it was enticing.
Speaker 1 (44:41):
Or not, go ahead.
Speaker 8 (44:42):
It was five hundred dollars in vouch your credit, so
you would get a hotel, a shuttle to the hotel,
and food and you could well however you spent that,
you got five hundred dollars for all that. And then
they also offered one thousand dollars cash and it was
a visa gift card, so you could use it pretty
much like cash. You waited one extra flo or what
you would have to go the next day, so it'd
be a whole twenty four hours. You get pretty much
(45:04):
fifteen hundred dollars.
Speaker 1 (45:05):
It just depends if you have anything right yep.
Speaker 5 (45:08):
Like why are you going?
Speaker 1 (45:09):
Yep?
Speaker 5 (45:09):
Do you care about the amount of time you're there?
Are you trying to avoid people but you need to
show face? Then okay, But if you're gonna miss the
funeral that you're going for, then.
Speaker 8 (45:18):
No, And I couldn't because of work. But do you
guys think anybody decided to do it?
Speaker 1 (45:22):
Yeah, somebody would because they keep raising it until someone
finally accepts. Well, that was the first initial offer, and
a college kid, I'm just guessing Vanderbilt guy right away
that thousand dollars, he jumped up real quick. Yeah, that's heavy.
I wonder did they cover the hotel room though, if
you have to spend the night.
Speaker 2 (45:37):
Yeah?
Speaker 8 (45:38):
Well, I mean it was all part of that five
hundred dollars. You could get a really nice hotel room,
two hundred dollars, You could spend pretty much two hundred
dollars in food, and then I would imagine one hundred
dollars would cover a cab.
Speaker 1 (45:47):
I don't think twitter Buck gets a really nice hotel
room in Detroit probably gets a I don't know Detroit's
for nice again, man, it's not though, like the downtown.
Speaker 4 (45:54):
Then he was just there.
Speaker 1 (45:55):
I was just there.
Speaker 8 (45:56):
You're trying to make this thing called Greek Town that's
gonna come out in the next year. Every street pure Michigan, man,
look at the billboards. Every street is ripped up pure
in Michigan. It's it's not ready for you. Maybe a
couple of years it will be good.
Speaker 1 (46:09):
Not right now. I'll take your word. Okay, So one
other update we need to do. I tried to pay
for the present rights for Eddie's dyslexia walk. Yes, reached out.
It was like I got ten thousand Bucks have it
and they were like, we already have a presenting sponsor.
Speaker 4 (46:25):
What a shame?
Speaker 1 (46:26):
Now are you still doing it now?
Speaker 4 (46:28):
I'm still walking?
Speaker 1 (46:28):
Well you know no, no, no, no, I mean.
Speaker 4 (46:32):
Should I do it?
Speaker 1 (46:32):
I haven't cured your dyslexia? No, okay, then you should
go do it.
Speaker 4 (46:35):
I need to do it.
Speaker 1 (46:36):
You brought this whole thing up.
Speaker 4 (46:37):
Problem is, though I have a charity thing after the
next day with Amy.
Speaker 5 (46:42):
What you don't even know what day anything is is
Friday and the race is Saturday.
Speaker 4 (46:47):
Eddie producer Eddie hole on one challenge.
Speaker 1 (46:49):
Okay, but you don't know what day it is. You're
just saying stuff.
Speaker 4 (46:52):
I know it was butted up next to the race
because I was stressed out about that.
Speaker 1 (46:55):
But you didn't even know about this until I said
I'll sponsor this.
Speaker 4 (46:58):
Well, well no, when I talked about my race, you
talking about her charity.
Speaker 1 (47:00):
Yeah, but you didn't. My point is you didn't about
it till we talked about your race.
Speaker 4 (47:03):
What do you want me? Do you want me to race? Still?
You're the one that said you were doing it because
I thought we were going to raise money for this thing.
Now that you're not even gonna do the watering station.
What's the whole point of me doing this?
Speaker 1 (47:14):
Because of the reason of this.
Speaker 5 (47:17):
Are you hole in one thing?
Speaker 1 (47:19):
No?
Speaker 5 (47:19):
Not you? You paid for it?
Speaker 4 (47:20):
When is it?
Speaker 5 (47:21):
It's Friday? I met Eddie because this it says there's
a sign. It literally says have you seen the sign?
It says in honor of Eddie's dyslexia, pull in one
for ten.
Speaker 4 (47:33):
K Okay, I have to run it. Then the race, Yes,
that way I can go to because it's years in
the next day.
Speaker 1 (47:39):
No, it was the night before. She said are you
She said it three times?
Speaker 4 (47:43):
Okay, So then when.
Speaker 5 (47:44):
When Friday and the race is in the morning.
Speaker 4 (47:47):
So when I go to yours, I'll have that conversation
with people like got a race tomorrow, I got a
big race for it is you should have signed?
Speaker 1 (47:54):
Okay, So for everybody didn't hear it, Eddie's like, hey,
will you do this race? So I called and said
I'll sponsor it, and they said, we already have a
presenting sponsor. Amy also said I have a thing, we
sponsor it, and so I gave Amy seven hundred dollars,
which is weird, But okay.
Speaker 4 (48:04):
Well what's weird because I brought up the sponsorship and
then Amy ended up getting this, but he was going
to do both.
Speaker 5 (48:08):
It was really kind of him. And also I just
said I wasn't going to say anything, but now this
popped in my head, so I might as well shoot
my shot right now, because I thought we had missed
the deadline, so I wasn't but I was like, well,
maybe we'll just see if we can still make it
work because someone before has hit the Hole in one
and gotten ten thousand dollars. Really yeah, like I think
in Atlanta maybe or something like it, it could happen.
Speaker 1 (48:28):
Well, if you hit it, Eddie, give the ten thousand
to the race.
Speaker 4 (48:31):
Whoa, whoa, whoa.
Speaker 1 (48:33):
I'm a foster parent, true, So I gave Amy the money.
I said, I'd like for it to be named in
honor of Eddie, even though it's not about dyslexia. So
the hole that's called what is it called again?
Speaker 5 (48:45):
In honor of Eddie's dyslexia Hole in one for ten k.
Speaker 1 (48:49):
At an event for.
Speaker 5 (48:50):
Foster kids right for Isaiah one seventeen house.
Speaker 4 (48:53):
It's all over the place and it's.
Speaker 5 (48:57):
Yeah, so you know, like and people will I thought
that everybody at the event would just get to step
up and do one shot, and they said, oh no,
people are going to get multiple swings. And I'm like,
that's such a cool little treat for people that are
there for the fundraiser to be able to have that
little activity. So thank you, Bobby.
Speaker 1 (49:18):
What if I didn't sponsor it, would they still do it?
Speaker 5 (49:20):
We weren't going to do We were just weren't going
to have it there, and I thought we'd miss the deadline.
That's why when Eddie brought that up, I'm like, you
know what, maybe I'll just say something to see what happens.
And then that's why I was like, hey, I'm going
to circle back to you with the details because really
the deadline had hit. But then they're like, if you
have a sponsor, I think we can still make it work.
And then you had already been moting the money, and
I was like, slow down, I'm still trying to figure
(49:42):
this out. But then yay, it worked out.
Speaker 4 (49:45):
So how much did you donate?
Speaker 1 (49:46):
Seven hundred?
Speaker 4 (49:47):
So how did they cover the ten thousand at?
Speaker 5 (49:50):
So technically it was seven eighty five, but I threw
in the eighty five, so you gave it to me
and then I gave it.
Speaker 1 (49:58):
Why do you have to say that. No, no, why I
did have to say that there was no need for that,
because now you've minimize it bit, No, you did, There
was no there was no need for that, you know it,
And that's why he started smiling. Amy. You know that's
what I do. That's what I get for the Vietnam smile.
But I didn't mean to say that. She did say that.
Speaker 5 (50:14):
No, no, no, no, I'm going to explain to you
the cost of everything, the bay itself, to reserve that
bay is six hundred dollars, and then one hundred and
eighty five dollars is their insurance.
Speaker 1 (50:25):
No, I hear you, But you didn't have to say
that you paid.
Speaker 5 (50:27):
So did you want me to lie and say the
bay six hundred and no?
Speaker 1 (50:30):
One asked how much the bay cost, but.
Speaker 5 (50:32):
Eddie kind of just did.
Speaker 1 (50:34):
He said, how do they get the money? I said insurance?
I said insurance.
Speaker 8 (50:38):
You were cute.
Speaker 1 (50:40):
She was waiting dolls in there.
Speaker 5 (50:44):
That's not true.
Speaker 4 (50:46):
That's cool, though, Amy, you donated too.
Speaker 1 (50:47):
Look at you.
Speaker 5 (50:48):
I already don't.
Speaker 1 (50:50):
Hey, we're fifty fifty in this.
Speaker 5 (50:51):
I did donate.
Speaker 1 (50:52):
I had.
Speaker 5 (50:54):
No. I got some feeling things bays and we invited listeners.
Speaker 1 (51:00):
You paid six hundred bucks for a bay, well.
Speaker 5 (51:03):
Technically the bays that the home one base six hundred
the bays for listeners or a thousand you.
Speaker 1 (51:07):
Paid one thousand dollars. I wan's your charity, though.
Speaker 5 (51:09):
It's not my charity.
Speaker 1 (51:10):
But are you invited listeners?
Speaker 5 (51:12):
We selected listeners, so.
Speaker 1 (51:15):
Amy big time me twice in this segment.
Speaker 5 (51:17):
No, but you you were about to spend ten thousand
dollars on one hundred percent of the money is going
to the organization. Why wouldn't I.
Speaker 1 (51:27):
Okay, Yeah, like I've just been minimized.
Speaker 5 (51:30):
That is not okay.
Speaker 1 (51:32):
Never mind how Bobby donate not as much as her.
Speaker 5 (51:34):
He's giving everybody the opportunity to have fun and maybe
you win ten k. So I'm very grateful, and really I.
Speaker 4 (51:40):
Get all the credit. Someone's going to ask who donated
the money. They're going to read the sign.
Speaker 5 (51:45):
I know, well they had on the thing like oh,
I guess the director somewhere heard the segment and they're like, oh,
that's from Bobby Bones. So when they first sen out
the email, they had that and I'm like, no, no, no, no, no, correction, correction,
it needs to.
Speaker 1 (51:57):
Say get it twisted.
Speaker 5 (52:01):
I really need it to say in honor of Eddie's DYSLEXI.
I think they were like what.
Speaker 1 (52:05):
Of course they were like what, because that was the
reason they were supposed to be like what.
Speaker 4 (52:10):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (52:10):
Yeah, So no, they're a great, very thankful Bobby.
Speaker 1 (52:14):
So thank you Amy and mostly you though no other
things you did really could. It's like the one out
of here.
Speaker 4 (52:22):
Let's be real, I'm the real winner here. Okay, I
said no money. I have a banner at the is.
Speaker 1 (52:28):
Your picture on it?
Speaker 4 (52:29):
Amy, Because they're not gonna who you are.
Speaker 7 (52:31):
They're just gonna think Eddie.
Speaker 4 (52:32):
They're not gonna I'll be there and I'll tell him
I'm Eddie. Hello.
Speaker 1 (52:35):
Everyone like Eddie and photo.
Speaker 4 (52:37):
Well that's cool. Well they'll think I'm dead.
Speaker 1 (52:39):
Yeah like Eddie. Yeah, like you take the Rainbow bridge.
Speaker 4 (52:42):
They're like, tell us the story about Eddie and his dyslexia.
What kind of guy was he?
Speaker 1 (52:47):
Gather around everybody? Let me do one more story. Aston Martin,
which is a fancy car, has rolled out a new
three thousand dollars baby stroller. Now I don't know how
much strollers are anyway, So how much are strollers? Well,
twenty bucks average three hundred dollars.
Speaker 5 (53:08):
But the fancier ones like seven hundred.
Speaker 1 (53:11):
So when three thousand dollars hits it says it's a
stroller from Aston Martin, I think, well that's going to
be extremely expensive. Yeah, I didn't know what strollers actually are.
Speaker 4 (53:20):
Like, do you want the stroller with like it looks
like a camping chair and the wheels are tiny. That's cheap,
you know, like a little little handles.
Speaker 1 (53:29):
But maybe it collapses on the baby.
Speaker 7 (53:31):
No, no, no, no, no no.
Speaker 1 (53:33):
They're real small. They're just like the RinkyDink stroller that
you used to use as a kid.
Speaker 4 (53:38):
It's almost like they're it's very hard to push them.
Speaker 7 (53:40):
They don't have good wheels, they don't go over off roading.
Or you can buy one of those like bobs that
have wheels that you see people running with and you
push your kids kid. They're big old strollers. Those costs
about three hundred eight.
Speaker 4 (53:53):
Sometimes you can add a Bluetooth speaker in there and
it's it's already for you and it's for everyone.
Speaker 1 (53:58):
Oh, it's like motorcycles have a big.
Speaker 7 (53:59):
One to you add on with a fan that blows
right on the baby to keep them more and it's.
Speaker 1 (54:04):
The company has partnered with UK firm Egg to create
a high end stroller, and while it will cost less
than the two hundred thousand dollars plus sticker for a car,
it's three thousand dollars in up price tag will still
put it firmly in the luxury category. Let me see
this one. So, yeah, I guess. I don't know the
stroller world. So it looks cool, I guess. But also,
(54:25):
isn't this like a temporary purchase, Like you can only
use these for so long because the kid.
Speaker 4 (54:28):
Grows unless you have multiple kids.
Speaker 1 (54:30):
Oh, that's a good point.
Speaker 5 (54:31):
Then you can sell it on Facebook marketplace when you're done.
Speaker 4 (54:35):
I don't know. Like some of the baby stuff lunchbox
kind of hard to sell, right.
Speaker 5 (54:38):
A stroller though.
Speaker 4 (54:39):
The stroller may be easier trying to sell diapers, like cribs.
They don't like you reselling those whose they like.
Speaker 1 (54:46):
New parents, they're just like I don't like safety or no.
Speaker 7 (54:50):
Some parents want everything new if it's their first kid.
It's like, oh my gosh, everything has to be new.
But then once you have multiple kids.
Speaker 4 (54:55):
Like, who cares?
Speaker 1 (54:56):
Give me the used one? Yeah, that's that's pretty cool.
Speaker 4 (55:00):
Do they have the emblem on it.
Speaker 1 (55:01):
Yeah, that's what it's got it this again, I don't
think I've ever been looked at a stroller up close.
But it has like a thing that covers the.
Speaker 4 (55:09):
Baby, the canopy, the hood.
Speaker 1 (55:12):
Yeah, well it's got the hood. Okay, good hood comes
over the top. But it also has something that like
if the baby's laying in it, it comes over their chest.
Speaker 4 (55:20):
Oh that's cool.
Speaker 1 (55:22):
Is that normal on strollers? Mm hmm, it is, Okay,
that's where they.
Speaker 4 (55:25):
The front one. I don't know, I don't I've never
seen that. Have you ever seen the front cover?
Speaker 1 (55:30):
There is a hood, but this also has like a
zip up.
Speaker 4 (55:35):
That's pretty cool.
Speaker 11 (55:36):
It is crazy how many vehicles make strollers When I
was buying like baby gifts like Jeep make so.
Speaker 1 (55:43):
Do they do it for novelty because there can't be
a huge market in cars making strollers, Like they can't
be making money over in that part of the world.
So is it novelty to go along with their brand?
Speaker 4 (55:54):
I mean everyone needs a stroller.
Speaker 1 (55:55):
I mean there are probably stroller companies like baby companies,
more so than I got to get the new Jeep
stroller that's coming out this year, Like they probably do
it for part novelty. I'm sure it's a nice stroller,
but like Pottery Barn kids, here's a Bentley six and
one that's a trike, a kid trike six hundred bucks.
Speaker 7 (56:14):
I mean, and maybe it's like someone that can't afford
and Askton Martin Carr is like, I can get the
stroller though, it's like you feel like you're a part
of the luxury brand.
Speaker 1 (56:24):
All right, that's pretty cool. I do have a new
podcast up with Colby Calay today and she does talk
about you know, the song that she has It's in
My Toes makes Me Creak on my nose, where at
the very beginning she goes, will you come in? And
we talked about how she was like, I want that
out of the song. I wanted that out of the song.
No how it ended up in the song. So check
out the Bobby Cast with Colby Calay. She has a
new record that's out with a bunch of country artists
(56:45):
like read WHOA what is this? That's a six thousand
dollars stroller? Lambo Strollers six thousand dollars?
Speaker 4 (56:55):
So what does that one look like? Well?
Speaker 1 (56:58):
I don't it looks like a really cool black stroller
with Lamborghini written on it. But I don't know what
a real stroller looks like. I mean, I know the shape,
but I'm not sure what the like. The utility of
a strollers to put a baby in and roll around, right.
Speaker 4 (57:10):
Yes, that's it.
Speaker 11 (57:12):
Yeah, I do know that some of the strollers, they
can like advance with the baby. So some strollers are
only meant for a newborn or a very young child,
and then as they get older, some of them can change.
So that makes them a little bit more expensive too.
Speaker 1 (57:25):
This one looks like it turns into a car. It
looks like it turns from a stroller though into Is
there a version of a stroller where the kid just
sits in it?
Speaker 4 (57:35):
Yes, there's a lay down and then there's the same age.
Speaker 1 (57:39):
Yes, because a baby doesn't sit. Yeah it does. Yeah,
I know that baby's just laid dude, that's crazy. Six
thousand dollars.
Speaker 7 (57:47):
I mean, there's a cool stroller my neighbor has. It
turns straight into a car seat. Now, like, you don't
have to take it apart. You just press a button
classes right into a car seat.
Speaker 4 (57:54):
That's amazing.
Speaker 1 (57:54):
Wow, that is so cool. What's that cost?
Speaker 5 (57:57):
Where do the Hills go, I don't know.
Speaker 6 (58:01):
It's like a Transformer I just seen.
Speaker 1 (58:04):
I mean, you brought it up, man, and you treated
her like she's the idiot for asking. All Right, we're done.
Thank you guys. We'll see you tomorrow on the show. Goodbye, everybody,