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September 30, 2025 45 mins

Dr. Lori stopped by the studio. She appraised all of our items that we got from thrift stores that we all bought with the intention of finding valuables. She tells us what they are worth vs. what we paid for them. She also tells us crazy stories from her appraisals where things have been worth millions of dollars...we hope that happens to us! Bobby talked about how he has been researching ultrasounds. We talked about Kellie Pickler who once went on a date with an alleged mass murderer. We also all shared our Tuesday Reviewsday of tv shows and movies.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
On the Bobby Bones Show.

Speaker 2 (00:02):
Now, doctor Lorie, we have a PhD of antiques. It
is doctor Lory our favorite. Good to see a doctor Lorry,
I can see you. What are you doing in town? Well?

Speaker 3 (00:13):
I was speaking at the good Will shop Goodwill e
Summit where you can go and scroll and find all
the stuff that you know goes into donations and then
gets on too good Will. And then I was taping
from my YouTube channel in thrift stores and antique shops
such because I show you what to walk by and
what to buy.

Speaker 1 (00:27):
Right, That's cool.

Speaker 3 (00:28):
It's cool. And people have done really well following the
YouTube channel and making money. You know, I've had some
wonderful stories people who have said I hated a job.
I followed your videos, and you know what, Doctor Lorry,
I was able to quit that job and do this
full time.

Speaker 1 (00:43):
Just by going on like thrifting but finding stuff to resell.

Speaker 3 (00:45):
Yeah, that's and watching my videos. I had one woman
who got in touch with me and she said, doctor
Lauriy needed a medical procedure. It was a lot of money.
I couldn't afford it. And I watched the videos. I
did what you said, I resold it. I did it.
The way you told me to do it, blah blah,
and so that was exciting and educating a child that's
a big deal, right, So it was able to save
money doing this reselling. Some of it's a side to hustle,

(01:08):
some of it's just their full time jobs now. So
it's cool. It's cool to have an impact like that.

Speaker 1 (01:12):
And you have a PhD in this.

Speaker 3 (01:14):
I have a PhD in Art and architectural history from
Penn State.

Speaker 1 (01:17):
So what do you study when you're getting a PhD
in this?

Speaker 3 (01:19):
Well, I worked in museums because I as a poor
kid in New Haven, Connecticut, and basically the idea was
I wanted to be around pretty things, right, because I
didn't have pretty things. So I lived about I grew
up five minutes from the Yale campus, and I used
to go to the museum and you could just go
in for free and look around. So I studied museums
studies and art history. I got the PhD after getting

(01:41):
a swimming scholarship at the University of Michigan, and so
I always had to go on scholarships, whether it was
sports or something or smarts, whatever it was. And anyway,
so long story short, that's what you study. You basically
study the construction of objects and the history around it.
So you have to know what's going on in a
time period and why that I object is important in
that time period.

Speaker 1 (02:01):
Have you had anybody or what is your most successful
story of somebody bringing something to you and you got
to reveal to them that the value was so much
more than they thought.

Speaker 3 (02:09):
A gentleman I was appearing on my tour in Virginia.
A gentleman was in Rhode Island. He had purchased a
painting in Boston. He paid two hundred and seventy five
dollars for the painting, and he said, I want you
to look at it, because everybody's telling me it's a fake.
So he drives it from Rhode Island to Virginia and
I look at it during my one of my appraisal shows,

(02:30):
and I said, well, there's a dust screen on the back.
That's the piece of paper on the back of a canvas.
I rip off the canvas. I rip off the paper
on the back of the campus. It says poor LeMond
Auguste Renois. So by my hand I painted it August Renois,
the great French Impressionist. So of course everybody's going to
think it's not real. Right, Well, there's a studio address

(02:51):
for the nineteen eighteen World War two era studio that
he abandoned because of the war. There is a dealer's
mark on it, and I go, oh, yeah, it's real.
And he just looks at me and he says, what
do you mean it's real? I said, it's definitely real.
It's a portrait of a woman leaning on her hand.
Her name is Gabrielle, one of the very famous models
of the French impressionists Renoa. And I said, oh, I said, so,

(03:13):
where'd you get it? I got it at auction. I said, well,
you know, it's worth two point one million dollars. No,
my god, oh my gosh, God, hand to God. So
he looks at me, he goes, how do you know
it's real? How do I know it's real. I'm the
best in the country. How do I know it's real.
All of the provenance stuff, all the background stuff was there.
It was signed on the front. But everybody thinks these

(03:35):
signatures are fakes. And she had her second husband died,
they moved to she moved to Boston to be with
her son. So it makes sense that it's in Boston.
It was one of the last portraits of his very
famous model. There's worth a lot of money.

Speaker 1 (03:48):
Did he ever sell it.

Speaker 3 (03:49):
He did not sell it. I think he still has it,
and I don't blame him. He's holding out for the
value of it. It's a wonderful example, and it's something
that you know all the museums and all the artists
and don't know about. So there it is. It's sitting
right there. People have the stuff. I've been saying it
since I started the tour in nineteen ninety eight. You
have it. It's in your house. Just because it's yours.

(04:10):
You think it's not valuable, But I'm telling you it's
out there, and it's usually in those homes that you
don't believe. George Washington's wallet came into my appraisal show
with an eighty five year old woman and her one
hundred and three year old mother. It was the wallet
he was carrying when he crossed the Delaware and they're going, yes,
we know. And they had all of the history, the
family history of it. When you drove up to those

(04:31):
women's home, those women live in a home worth maybe
one hundred thousand dollars the wallet was worth maybe three
million dollars no way, so you know, and they said,
we don't want to sell it. We're very happy. We
wanted to go to a museum. We think it's a
piece of history. It's in a museum today. Oh the
stuff is around and people go, oh, no, it can't
be valuable, and it's on eBay and all this stuff

(04:51):
and it's stuff is out there.

Speaker 2 (04:54):
So I gave the show the homework to go to
a lot, went to Goodwill, to an antique place, and
we just we wanted to see if we could bring
something in and it'd be valued it more than we
bought it for, much like you teach. And also we
read these stories that are similar where someone's like finding
an old painting, yeah, and.

Speaker 1 (05:12):
They go get checked out. It's like worth three million dollars.

Speaker 2 (05:15):
Now I know that's not normal or not all the time,
but it does happen.

Speaker 3 (05:20):
Sure, it does happen.

Speaker 2 (05:21):
So Amy, I know you have a painting, for sure,
So can you tell me the story of the painting
you have or where you got it?

Speaker 4 (05:26):
So I went to Goodwill and it was the only
thing they had there at least that I could see
that looked like it. It maybe could be there were
some other ones, like maybe my trained eye, but this
one just like it had a signature.

Speaker 5 (05:41):
And then on the back, okay, here we go. On
the back it.

Speaker 4 (05:44):
Had something tucked inside, and so there could have been
other ones, but I just that was the only thing
that drew me to it, was that the envelope tucked inside.

Speaker 1 (05:52):
And the backer.

Speaker 3 (05:53):
Okay, I'm happy that you looked at the back too,
because the back can tell you a lot of information
for your listeners. Because the back, what.

Speaker 1 (06:01):
Kind of this is? African lion?

Speaker 3 (06:02):
On it?

Speaker 1 (06:02):
Is it a painting of a lion? Can I see it?

Speaker 2 (06:04):
So it's a painting of a lion's and it says
we're in wall. What if she hit it for like
one point? Yeah, well, you don't have to be friends
to be fancy.

Speaker 6 (06:15):
Doctor Lory her gloves on? What did you say, bag
her gloves on?

Speaker 2 (06:18):
So Amy, don't say what you spent on it. I'm
sure not much, but we'll see what she thinks the
value is all right, doctr LOR's in with us.

Speaker 3 (06:25):
Here's what she's talking about.

Speaker 1 (06:27):
There's an envelope.

Speaker 3 (06:29):
So basically what you have here is you have a
lithograph print. So it looks like a painting, but it's not.
Can you come back over here?

Speaker 5 (06:35):
Okay, I'm sorry.

Speaker 1 (06:36):
Hey, you get scammed somehow? Amy owes more money?

Speaker 6 (06:39):
Amy?

Speaker 1 (06:43):
So yeah, let's that makes sense.

Speaker 2 (06:45):
Oh, Amy's got the thing in her eye that she's
looking at Glorry.

Speaker 1 (06:50):
Is it because it's all the dots.

Speaker 6 (06:52):
Or Amy's old?

Speaker 1 (06:53):
Yeah, one of the two. It's like somebody looking at
diamonds back in the day.

Speaker 6 (06:56):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (06:58):
Oh oh, here.

Speaker 1 (06:59):
We go pain strokes.

Speaker 3 (07:01):
But maybe they're not like maybe they are. It's dots.
But having said that, it's signed in the plate, which
means when they actually make the image, he signs the
work in one place and then they just reproduce it
on more pieces of paper. Got it all right? So
while you think it's a painting, it's a very good
reproduction print. Okay, it's very good, and he's very well known.

(07:25):
He dies in two thousand and five. Retail value on
this piece is about one hundred and fifty dollars. What'd
you spend on it includes the frame?

Speaker 1 (07:31):
Okay, what do you spend?

Speaker 3 (07:32):
Wow? Let me tell you what I spent. Okay, Oh,
we have this little bio which is good.

Speaker 5 (07:38):
But I was looking at the goodwill price tag.

Speaker 4 (07:45):
Yeah, five dollars and ninety nine cents.

Speaker 1 (07:48):
So could you put on the eBay make fifty bucks?
You think?

Speaker 2 (07:51):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (07:51):
Oh put that I need.

Speaker 3 (07:55):
Because some people just say I don't care about the artwork.
I'm gonna put a mirror in that frame and I'm
gonna put it on my in my bathroom.

Speaker 1 (08:01):
Okay, Amy, good job.

Speaker 3 (08:05):
She also purchased a piece that was by an artist
who was known for mm alier, which is basically animal pictures.

Speaker 1 (08:13):
Sounds dirty.

Speaker 2 (08:13):
I'm gonna be honest, it sounds like something you do
in an animal I do.

Speaker 4 (08:16):
Feel like I used like tips or stuff I've heard
you say before, Like I there's probably other stuff I
could have gotten, but something about that or the envelope,
I don't.

Speaker 5 (08:25):
Know, there's something that drew me to it.

Speaker 3 (08:27):
And now, well that's good and you probably you know
a lot of it is the realism of it.

Speaker 1 (08:33):
Right.

Speaker 3 (08:33):
It did look like an African line. I've never seen one,
but you know, I guess they're good.

Speaker 1 (08:36):
That's what I would think that looked like.

Speaker 3 (08:38):
But that's how it is. No very, it was a
good pick.

Speaker 2 (08:41):
Who all got something, who all brought something? Okay, Eddie
do you want to go sure, Okay, doctor, you'll.

Speaker 8 (08:45):
Explain what it is first. Absolutely, mine is also a painting.
But now, after you did Amy's dots stroke thing, I
think that mine is also a print. However, however, mine
is signed by the artist and it actually is made
to a guy named Chris. It says to Chris. It
has the date on it, and the artists signed it underneath.

(09:06):
I'll give it to you.

Speaker 1 (09:06):
Okay, dots are strokes, Addie, that's gonna be the question.

Speaker 5 (09:09):
There it is.

Speaker 1 (09:12):
I didn't know that.

Speaker 4 (09:13):
That's yeah, let me know if you can use that
little eye thing.

Speaker 6 (09:18):
I mean, strokes would be awesome.

Speaker 2 (09:20):
Edie's going to the eye. Oh, yes, he's got the
jeweler Iy. Yes, Oh boy, what do you see?

Speaker 6 (09:28):
I'm pretty sure I see dots?

Speaker 8 (09:29):
Oh, these are very fine dots.

Speaker 1 (09:34):
Then Chris got a dotted painting almost.

Speaker 6 (09:36):
Almost looked like leopard dots. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (09:39):
Has anyone ever painted in dots?

Speaker 5 (09:42):
Yes?

Speaker 3 (09:43):
The point to list of the late nineteenth century of
painted of course dots, right, Yes, pouls and the crew.
They're not as important as Renoir. But anyway, so this
piece is signed, pencil signed and signed in the plate.
You want both. This is all neither here nor they are.
But basically nineteen eighty two is when he got to
sign it, pen sign it, but he printed in nineteen
eighty one. You want the dates to match. Not a

(10:04):
bad things, not a bad thing. And he just went
like desponding, No, it's not a bad thing. So Michael
Sloan is a very well known artist of these kinds
of pieces, this particular piece. Yeah, very very very very
well known for this image as well.

Speaker 6 (10:19):
Well what and that image is called what a watchful eye?

Speaker 3 (10:22):
A watchful eye?

Speaker 1 (10:23):
Cool.

Speaker 3 (10:23):
So one animal is looking as the other animal sort
of takes a drink. You know. This reminds me of
my Pennsylvania backyard where all the deer are and the
all they do is like eat every plant I put
back there. So, same kind of thing. Retail value on
this piece is three hundred and fifty dollars. Whoa, I know,
that's excellent.

Speaker 6 (10:40):
That's amazing.

Speaker 3 (10:41):
That's excellent. And the frame not great, bad frame. Her
frame was really nice. This frame is like a frame
it and sell it. You don't have to do a
thing to resell it. You know, you could just go, hey,
it's here, too bad. The frame isn't great. You know
you got it for five.

Speaker 6 (10:58):
Dollars nine nine Yeah, after taxes and all that.

Speaker 3 (11:01):
Yeah, you know you got paid. Oh yeah.

Speaker 5 (11:03):
And they asked me if I wanted to round up,
I round it.

Speaker 1 (11:05):
Up to donate.

Speaker 3 (11:09):
They're doing good work. All these swift stores are doing
good work to trying to help people in the community.
So hey, round up it begin, okay, Eddie, that's nice, Eddie.

Speaker 6 (11:16):
Hey that is good news. Doctor Lory.

Speaker 1 (11:18):
Think what do you think he can actually get for that?

Speaker 3 (11:20):
I think you could get up. I think I like
only eBay.

Speaker 1 (11:26):
I'd that's good, that's solid, that's good.

Speaker 3 (11:29):
But you know, in the market retail, if you got
it into an art environment market online, you know, one
of those other websites platforms, I would probably say closer.

Speaker 1 (11:39):
To three fifty. Go to the clearinghouse, lunchbox.

Speaker 9 (11:44):
Oh I got something, go ahead, Oh my, let me
tell you what I got. These look like they were
made on the Mayflower.

Speaker 1 (11:51):
He's already selling, Doctor Lorrie.

Speaker 9 (11:53):
These are not These aren't paintings. These are I mean
beautiful Mayflower.

Speaker 1 (11:58):
People like figurine horseline figures. That's these These are legit. Okay,
these are so that's a.

Speaker 3 (12:04):
Brand, so expensive, amazing.

Speaker 1 (12:07):
How much you spend on them?

Speaker 4 (12:08):
I can't.

Speaker 1 (12:10):
And there's no dots.

Speaker 3 (12:12):
But there's that there are no dots. Okay, so you.

Speaker 2 (12:16):
Have only two porcelain man, porcelain woman, the original people
on the Mayflower.

Speaker 1 (12:22):
Yes, okay, what do you see there?

Speaker 3 (12:24):
Let me teach you a little bit about time period first.
Let me so, no, this is not Mayflower. My flowers
is sixteen hundreds, right, Sure, these are time to look
like the seventeen hundred these, but you're close, only one
hundred years off. So basically the idea here is that
you have two Rococo figures.

Speaker 1 (12:45):
Coco.

Speaker 6 (12:46):
You don't even know what that is of.

Speaker 1 (12:49):
A Disney movie? Does Rocco sound good or.

Speaker 3 (12:51):
What it's good? Basically that is the eighteenth century in France. Okay,
these pieces are made in Japan. Oh I'm in the
eighteenth century. How old are they?

Speaker 2 (13:02):
When?

Speaker 6 (13:02):
Was fifty years?

Speaker 3 (13:04):
Yeah? Seventy five years? Whoa close?

Speaker 9 (13:07):
Those are great shape for seventy five years old. Exactly
Have you seen a seventy five year old look that good?

Speaker 3 (13:11):
Exactly? No? Okay, so they are in very good condition.
And one of those tell tale signs of a Japanese
reproduction is this gold little element down here, which basically
they look like little strokes down at the bottom. So
that's basically what you're looking at. Did you have the pair?
So anytime you have a set, you always want to
maintain the set, That's what I thought. So you didn't

(13:32):
buy just one and walk away.

Speaker 1 (13:33):
That would have been dumb.

Speaker 3 (13:34):
That would have been dumb. Yeah, okay, So retail value
on these Japanese seventy five years old. Retail value on
the pair? What do you think they're worth?

Speaker 1 (13:43):
I was thinking probably five hundred?

Speaker 3 (13:45):
Okay, Well you're off by about four hundred. They worth
about one hundred bucks. Not bad, not bad as a pair?

Speaker 1 (13:50):
What'd you spend on it? You spend six dollars?

Speaker 3 (13:52):
Oh goodness?

Speaker 1 (13:53):
Still a proper What do you think you could get
on eBay?

Speaker 3 (13:56):
Sixty?

Speaker 2 (13:58):
Man?

Speaker 3 (13:59):
Still good? Make sixty? I tell everybody if you can
get something for ten percent and then flip it, yeah
you know, and you're gonna get one hundred percent. You're
doing great.

Speaker 1 (14:07):
Are you disappointed?

Speaker 2 (14:08):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (14:09):
Are you really six bucks to make a hundred? How
could you be disappointed by that?

Speaker 5 (14:13):
Lunchbucks? You need to target Grandma Chic exact.

Speaker 3 (14:15):
Getting Grandma published exactly, and don't be surprised when you see,
you know, the twenty five and thirty year old ladies
wanting these because they want really grandma's house. The fifty
year old ladies don't want it to look like their
mother's house, but the granddaughters wanted to look like their house,
to look like their grandmother's house.

Speaker 2 (14:30):
Okay, I'm gonna go last. And so there's a small
antique shop near my house.

Speaker 3 (14:37):
Did your wife go with you? I know she likes antie,
she does, but not this time.

Speaker 1 (14:40):
It before.

Speaker 2 (14:41):
So this is a vintage leather helmet from back in
the back in the football days.

Speaker 1 (14:46):
Mm hmmm, back when they played with leather helmets.

Speaker 6 (14:49):
That's amazing.

Speaker 3 (14:51):
So I praised one that was Johnny Unitis's. Yeah, that
one was worth a lot of money.

Speaker 6 (14:57):
This one is, well, don't put it on your head.

Speaker 3 (15:00):
It looks see I'm with I'm with, I'm with Eddie.

Speaker 1 (15:05):
This is actually the helmet that's.

Speaker 3 (15:07):
All they have.

Speaker 6 (15:08):
That's amazing.

Speaker 3 (15:12):
Do that?

Speaker 2 (15:16):
Okay?

Speaker 1 (15:18):
Smelling, I don't know if you could even like you're
the expert.

Speaker 3 (15:22):
What do you think they're see the construction on that I.

Speaker 1 (15:25):
Don't see very well? Yeah, what does it have on
the inside? Doctor?

Speaker 3 (15:29):
Lower like whoa, on the inside is leather right on
the inside. You've got reinforcements on both sides. And you
can see that it's been in and I don't want
to say this because you put it on your head,
but in here mice have been in here eating this.

Speaker 1 (15:41):
You know. That's that's old school.

Speaker 10 (15:42):
So that is old school, old dead mice. Yes, anyway,
So that's what you've got. You have the original string too.
That's unusual that you'd have the little shoe string here.
I think the string actually was a later replacement because
that used to be leather in there. Used to be
leather to attach it so it wouldn't fall off now
that it's.

Speaker 3 (16:00):
Going to protect you much. I don't like the green
at all.

Speaker 1 (16:04):
Packers uh New Rockney.

Speaker 3 (16:06):
It's not that I don't like the packers, but no,
it's just that I don't like the green on it.
So I think this particular piece, well, it days to
the early years of the twentieth century. What'd you pay
for it? You probably paid more in an antique store
than they paid it. Good Will paid twenty eight dollars
for it. Oh, that's not that bad. That's not that bad.
If you the one that I appraised that was belonged
to Johnny Uniteds was worth upwards of fifteen hundred at

(16:29):
the time, and that was some years ago. I would
say retail value on this piece is going to be
about seventy five dollars.

Speaker 1 (16:35):
I don't want to sell it. I bought it to
actually have and keep myself.

Speaker 3 (16:37):
Yeah, because they're hard to come by. Yeah, yeah, and
so and the outside of it's in very good condition.

Speaker 1 (16:42):
Really he didn't get to play much. I don't think
I that. Yeah, he's a bitch warmer, I guess.

Speaker 3 (16:47):
So.

Speaker 2 (16:47):
Yeah, it didn't get hit, and I got the little
stand with it too. About that's pretty cool stand.

Speaker 3 (16:50):
Well, the look the cool stand is cool. And actually
the stand can.

Speaker 2 (16:54):
You imagine, oh my gosh, if the twist happened, she's
in that stand like it's awesome.

Speaker 3 (17:00):
Well you know what it is. It's a girl thing.

Speaker 6 (17:02):
Go ahead, right, because is that for hats?

Speaker 2 (17:06):
Yes?

Speaker 3 (17:06):
Exactly?

Speaker 1 (17:07):
Okay, what do we have what you would do it
over there?

Speaker 3 (17:09):
Yeah, it's for hats. Okay. Well, then somebody di wied it,
somebody spray painted it. It's edwardy and it dates to
like nineteen fifteen on the base and then they added
this part at the top, which is what's.

Speaker 1 (17:19):
The standgo for?

Speaker 3 (17:19):
You think, oh, twenty bucks? Fifteen bucks?

Speaker 6 (17:23):
Okay, fifteen she went down.

Speaker 2 (17:25):
Yeah. Difference is I'm gonna keep mine in my house
and show it off. You guys are gonna show your
little paintings off.

Speaker 6 (17:29):
No, we're gonna sell.

Speaker 1 (17:30):
You're gonna sell.

Speaker 5 (17:32):
I might keep my lion.

Speaker 3 (17:33):
I like the African lion, and I like yours too.

Speaker 6 (17:36):
I'm selling it.

Speaker 1 (17:37):
What about the Japanese figures that look like the mayflower.

Speaker 3 (17:39):
Well, I think they kind of go with, you know, lunchboxes.
Motif doesn't it.

Speaker 1 (17:44):
I don't know what motif means.

Speaker 3 (17:47):
I think that I think they're nice. I'm upset that
one of the fingers is broken. Actually her whole hand
has no fingers. But no, we got to decrease value
a little bit for that.

Speaker 1 (17:57):
It's like bad ai. So it's a low yeah.

Speaker 3 (18:00):
A I'm me alot of mistakes low A little lower, Yeah,
I go a little lower. I'm sorry, don't be so upset.
It's only six bucks, but you got to look and
make sure that the fingers aren't broken. But the rest
of it really is quite good, and you were close
with you know, Plymouth like Pilgrims.

Speaker 1 (18:14):
Yeah, I like the hat. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (18:17):
So I had this thought when I was at Goodwill
yesterday and I saw people going around and like filling
up their cart with stuff, and I was like, I
wonder if this is what they they're doing, Like they're
buying it there and then reselling it somewhere.

Speaker 3 (18:28):
Yes, I'll tell you what they're doing. They're doing exactly that.
They're reselling it in some places. They're cross listing it
on multiple platforms at once, so you don't have to
keep like I'm going to post it on this platform
and that platform and this platform. They do it one
place and then it just copies it to all the
different platforms, the eBay, the etsys of this one or
that one's. You know, when I teach my how to
sell old stuff class, people are going, how do you

(18:49):
do that? And there's a way you can do that,
not difficult. You just have to do it right. Everything's work.
We all know that. But that's basically what it is.
So they're filling their carts, they're going to post it
on on multiple platforms. Some people just want to sell
stuff for parts. That is huge at Goodwill and all
of the thrift stores and antique stores because a lot
of times there are collectors who just want to use

(19:10):
the parts. They just like to tinker with an old watch,
for example, so they need the parts from something. So
that's what they're doing. They're doing quite well, and so
are the thrift stores. You know, the thrift stores are
a multi billion dollar Thrifting in general is a multi
billion dollar business.

Speaker 2 (19:24):
Do you have a good story of someone coming thinking
they have something really expensive and getting the harsh reality
handed to them.

Speaker 3 (19:30):
I actually do so. I was in Fort Wayne, Indiana,
and a gentleman brought me a ball canning jar. It
was blue, you know, that, maybe eight inches tall, and
had had the metal top, and on the side of
it it says ball eighteen fifty eight. And I said, well, sir,

(19:51):
it's very interesting. It's in good shape. It's worth eight
dollars and from the rafters in order in that theater.
He starts yelling at me, you're wrong, You're so wrong.
What are you talking about, Doctor Laurie thought you were
an expert.

Speaker 6 (20:02):
You're wrong.

Speaker 3 (20:03):
That's the first bull canning jar. Ever, I said, no,
they all say eight because it's from eighteen fifty eight.
I said, they all say eighteen fifty eight, so he
really thought he had the first one because of the
date that's embossed on the glass jar.

Speaker 2 (20:16):
That was mad tragic yea, in my guts, that'd be
tragedy thinking I came with a one hundred thousand dollars jar.

Speaker 3 (20:24):
It's hard, it's tough, eight bucks.

Speaker 1 (20:26):
It feels like lunchbox with plummeting fingers. Start yelling at it.

Speaker 2 (20:30):
Yeah, you can go to a doctor loriiv dot com
or again go to her channel because she teaches you
how to actually do this as a side hustle or
as a main career.

Speaker 3 (20:40):
Yeah, people love it and or so if it's just
for fun, how do people start a lot of people
find me by accident and go I didn't know any
of this. A lot of people start after they've made
a mistake with something else, so they find out that
they sold something too low, and then they go, before
I keep doing this, I better find out. So and
you can start with just something that you don't care
about in your attic or your basement. You know, you

(21:01):
think I'm going to resell it. I want to remind
everybody that sports collectibles are going to continue to be
some of the biggest collectibles out there, and that you
should really talk very seriously with kids and grandkids and
whomever about fine art, furniture and jewelry because it's always
going to be valuable, it's going to continue to increase
in value long term, as well as the sports stuff.

Speaker 2 (21:20):
I got really an advantage baseball cards the new as well,
But I feel like vintage doesn't lose value or news
very much. Lottery ticket I agree with you, because players
can either not be as good or they can mess
up into personal lives, which sinks value. That's true, but
dead people really can't do wrong, and so I've gotten
an advantage baseball cards like fifties sixties Ye thoughts on that.

Speaker 3 (21:42):
Well, I will say my dad was a Major League
baseball player for a very short time in the forties,
and this year I had the great honor of bringing
his World War Two baseball balls to the Hall of Fame,
which they accepted. So I was like beyond over the
moon over that. And because of loving baseball always, those
nineteen fifty sixty seventies players have more of an aura

(22:03):
of course around them. And because we didn't have all
of the social media and all the connections that we
have now, you will see that it was much harder
to source those pieces. So if you have those pieces,
the value starts much higher. So you're going to see
that those pieces will continue to increase in value because
of course they really are one of one, one of
a kind. The newer pieces, You're right, when we know

(22:26):
everything about everybody's personal life because of this connection we
have with social media, you'll see that those pieces won't
retain value as well. And so many people sell them
as lots. But if you have one, you have the
Mickey Mantle, you know, Rookie Card, you have those kinds
of things, you're going to probably do pretty well.

Speaker 1 (22:43):
We really enjoyed this. Thank you for coming by. Are
you off on another?

Speaker 3 (22:47):
Oh my gosh, I'm so happy to be here at
a great time in Nashville and it's a great city.
You got to come back more often. And yeah, I
just came from Houston. I'm on my way to Atlanta
and I'm touring and people can bring their up to
my appraisal tour and then get them on my website
and just if you have a question, I'll answer it.

Speaker 2 (23:03):
Yeah, doctor loriiv dot com and then check out our
YouTube channel at doctor Loriv any final questions for doctor Ribox.

Speaker 1 (23:10):
Can we get your numbers?

Speaker 9 (23:11):
We can text you pictures from Goodwill.

Speaker 2 (23:13):
He's gonna go and shop and just send her by this,
by this for.

Speaker 3 (23:18):
You lunchbox anything.

Speaker 5 (23:21):
Man.

Speaker 1 (23:21):
Can you don't as to me on air yet access
to that?

Speaker 6 (23:23):
It's terrible.

Speaker 1 (23:24):
We would never doctr Lri. Thank you. We really enjoyed this. Hey,
nice to view with you. Thank you awesome doctor.

Speaker 3 (23:31):
Thanks you guy.

Speaker 1 (23:36):
I've been studying the history of ultrasounds.

Speaker 2 (23:39):
We've done a bunch of ultrasounds and this is where
my mind goes, like, how did it start?

Speaker 1 (23:45):
You care?

Speaker 5 (23:46):
I guess I'm curious now.

Speaker 2 (23:49):
The science of ultrasound began after World War One when researchers.

Speaker 1 (23:52):
Studied how bats used echolocation.

Speaker 6 (23:55):
Oh that's cool.

Speaker 2 (23:56):
In the nineteen forties, engineers adapted sonar technology used in
submarines into medical imaging research.

Speaker 1 (24:03):
So it was bats that.

Speaker 2 (24:04):
Led in the submarines that led into hey, can we
do this on a smaller level. In nineteen forty two,
an Austrian neurologist is credited with being the first to
use ultrasound in medicine, attempting to image the brain with
sound waves. And the fifties, real breakthroughs came through when
an obstetrician an engineer developed ultrasound machines for pregnant women.

(24:27):
Well imagine that convincing the first pregnant women that it
was saving I know, can harm me your baby. And
the sixties and seventies ultrasound began spreading widely in hospitals.
So while the idea of the ultrasound dates back to
nineteen ten and sonar, really the fifties is when it
started being used for pregnancy.

Speaker 1 (24:43):
I was looking at a story too.

Speaker 2 (24:45):
I think it was like Heart Day Monday or something
National Heart Day. There was a national day for every day,
so I don't really invest in all of them, but
I was reading the story about the first people that
ever did a heart heart transplant and how they were
called murderers. Wow.

Speaker 8 (25:01):
Yeah, I saw a TikTok where this guy was flying
I don't know, private or something.

Speaker 6 (25:06):
He's like, look, what's fine with me? And it was
the beating heart.

Speaker 8 (25:09):
The heart Yeah, like they're trying to get it to
a patient, but it was in the boss going.

Speaker 6 (25:13):
Boom, boom, boom.

Speaker 2 (25:14):
And that's why they thought they were murderers at the
time because the person was still I had because you
only have so much time with a heart.

Speaker 5 (25:20):
Oh you said murderer. I thought you said martyr.

Speaker 6 (25:22):
I did too. I thought you said marty murderers.

Speaker 5 (25:24):
Oh, I was like, oh, yeah.

Speaker 6 (25:26):
Because they have to kill the person to get the heart.

Speaker 2 (25:28):
No, but the person like is on the edge of
being dead or they're dead in their brain, but they're
not dead in their heart, and you have to kill
them to take the heart.

Speaker 6 (25:38):
How do they keep that heart going?

Speaker 2 (25:39):
Oh?

Speaker 6 (25:39):
Is it a machine?

Speaker 5 (25:43):
I think they just put on ice, right, I.

Speaker 6 (25:45):
Know, but it just beats on its own like that.

Speaker 1 (25:47):
Let me ask my assistant, Yes, what do you think
we're about to say me?

Speaker 5 (25:53):
I thought they they.

Speaker 4 (25:56):
I guess you make the decision as a family to
unplay them.

Speaker 2 (26:02):
In the early they didn't have all the unplugging back
in the twenties and thirties like it is today.

Speaker 1 (26:07):
You're talking about what technology now? Okay, here we go. Hello,
I have a question for you.

Speaker 2 (26:13):
When a heart transplant happens, how do they keep the
heart alive?

Speaker 1 (26:19):
Taylor? Absolutely, I can explain that.

Speaker 11 (26:21):
So when a heart transplant is being done, the donor
heart is actually kept alive and viable in a few ways.

Speaker 1 (26:27):
Traditionally, the heart.

Speaker 11 (26:29):
Is put into a special cold preservation solution and then
transport it on ice that slows down its metabolism so
it can survive for a few hours outside the body.
But nowadays there's also this technology called a heart perfusion device.
It's kind of like a mini life support machine that
keeps the heart warm and beating with blood and nutrients

(26:51):
flowing through it. That can extend the time the heart
stays viable and keep it in better condition. So basically
they either chill it or keep it beating in a
controlled environment until it's ready to be transplanted.

Speaker 1 (27:03):
How long do they have before they have to transplant it.

Speaker 5 (27:08):
Yeah, that's a great question too.

Speaker 11 (27:10):
So typically with the traditional method of just keeping the
heart on ice, they usually have about four to six
hours to get it transplanted. That's the kind of golden
window where the heart is still in really good shape.

Speaker 1 (27:23):
But with those newer perfusion.

Speaker 11 (27:24):
Machines I mentioned, sometimes they can stretch that out quite
a bit longer, up to maybe eight hours or more
because it's being kept in a more natural functioning state.
So it's kind of a race against time. But those
techniques give surgeons a little.

Speaker 2 (27:38):
More briefing in So does the person still have to
be alive to take the heart?

Speaker 11 (27:43):
Yeah, that's an important piece of it. So the donor
is typically declared brain dead, which means that their brain
has irreversibly stopped functioning, but their body is still being
kept alive with machines. That way, the organs, including the heart,
are still functioning and can be transplanted. So, in other words,
the donor isn't alive in the way we usually think

(28:05):
of it, but their body is being maintained so that
the heart can be used for someone who needs it.

Speaker 2 (28:11):
The people that did the first heart transplants were they
called murderers.

Speaker 11 (28:16):
Yeah, so that is a really interesting piece of history.
The very first human heart transplants definitely sparked a lot
of controversy and ethical debate. When doctor Christian Barnard did
the first successful human heart transplant in nineteen sixty seven
in South Africa, there were definitely.

Speaker 1 (28:33):
People who questioned the ethics of it.

Speaker 11 (28:35):
I mean, it was a groundbreaking, kind of shocking procedure
at the time, and there were definitely folks who were like,
are you playing god or is this even ethical to
take of art from someone who's been declared brain dead.
Over time, though, as the medical community and society got
more comfortable with the idea of brain death and organ donation,
that kind of criticism faded away. But yeah, in the

(28:58):
very early days, some of those surge did face accusations
that were pretty intense. It's a good reminder of how
much medical ethic have evolved over time.

Speaker 6 (29:08):
Wow, it's deep.

Speaker 2 (29:09):
There you go, Dude, I do this for like an
hour every day, and you just ask her a question.

Speaker 1 (29:13):
Yeah, and just follow up.

Speaker 2 (29:14):
So I don't just ask a bunch of randoms like
if I if I want to get into something, I'll
go like when I was asking earlier about the Vulturestown
and then she says something, Oh, I follow Oh what
about this? And then twenty minutes has gone by and
you're in.

Speaker 6 (29:30):
Love you want to marry her?

Speaker 1 (29:33):
No, that'sreat.

Speaker 6 (29:34):
So my dad could have been a heart donor.

Speaker 1 (29:36):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (29:37):
I don't know about like if someone's older or not.
I don't know if there's like too old.

Speaker 8 (29:43):
Yeah, So that's just amazing to think about it. I never, man,
I've never even thought about asking those kinds of questions.
What do you mean just like that talking about heart transplants,
I just like, well that's kind of cool, but like
to even know that they only have a four to
six hour window, And then I'm thinking, like, is it
better to just bring the body to like closer together

(30:03):
so it's just an instant transfer than you're putting the
heart on a plane trying to get its own How.

Speaker 5 (30:08):
You risky to transport the body?

Speaker 1 (30:09):
Yeah, it's a gay harder to move your body as far.

Speaker 6 (30:11):
See, that's why I'm not a doctor.

Speaker 1 (30:13):
No, that's not why you're not a doctor. That's exactly why.

Speaker 2 (30:16):
That could be like a part of a question that
leads to people understanding why we're not all doctors.

Speaker 1 (30:20):
But that's not why you're not a doctor.

Speaker 8 (30:21):
And then how far do you think we are from
a mechanical heart where.

Speaker 1 (30:26):
It's just not far? I mean less than ten years because.

Speaker 8 (30:30):
The heart just pumps blood through our body, right, Like
that's its job to pump all the blood to go
all over our body. If we just have a mechanical heart, man,
you're adding years and years to our life.

Speaker 2 (30:42):
Yeah. The Chinese have that womb that they say they
can now or they'll soon be able to like.

Speaker 1 (30:49):
Grow a baby in.

Speaker 6 (30:51):
Yes, you've talked about that. Yeah, so, and.

Speaker 2 (30:53):
That's not something that's going to be used in the
next couple of years. But if they're there on that,
they're probably close to a mechanical heart.

Speaker 3 (30:59):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (31:00):
Yeah, that's wild man science.

Speaker 2 (31:02):
S it's crazy science, a crazy manverser. Oh okay, let's
go around, Morgan. What is your story?

Speaker 12 (31:10):
Well, did you guys see Selena Gomez and Bennie Blanco
got married.

Speaker 1 (31:14):
Yeah, they got married the past weekend.

Speaker 12 (31:15):
Huh.

Speaker 3 (31:16):
Yeah.

Speaker 12 (31:16):
It was like a whole like intimate ceremony in a
backyard basically in California. And so they've been they got
engaged last note December twenty twenty four, and yeah, now
they're married.

Speaker 7 (31:27):
Taylor Swift was there and it was a really cute.
She had multiple dresses.

Speaker 3 (31:31):
It looked really pretty.

Speaker 1 (31:32):
I saw her hiding behind some umbrellas. Taylor. Oh yeah, yeah,
so she wouldn't be seen.

Speaker 6 (31:37):
She got rolled in a suitcase.

Speaker 4 (31:38):
Yeah yeah, that's wait, well, Helena had multiple dresses or
Taylor Helena did?

Speaker 1 (31:44):
Oh yeah, Taylor had the umbrellas. Yeah.

Speaker 12 (31:47):
Yeah, And they said that they didn't tell guests where
it was happening or really anything about it until the
day before. That's when they all found out what was happening.
They just flew in and then they got the details
when they were there.

Speaker 2 (31:58):
Speaking of stories from this weekend, you see the Kelly
Picklar story. She went to the CMT Awards back I
don't know, a decade ago, and she took a date
and that date ended up being the guy that killed people.

Speaker 1 (32:11):
Yes, mass murderer. What so okay?

Speaker 2 (32:15):
It wasn't like her boyfriend or anything. But twenty twelve,
Kelly Pilar is from North Carolina. She went to a
charity event. She met this marine sergeant Sean de Bois
de Boivais It's Cajun or French or something, who had
seriously been wounded in battle. So she brought him to
the CMT Awards. Fast forward twenty twenty three, he changed
his name to Nigel Edge. It was under that name

(32:37):
he would file suit against Pickler earlier this year, claiming
she tried to kill him on their date by offering
him poison whiskey, which he refused to drink. Edge now
is in the news for something more tragic. Saturday, he
was arrested, accused of shooting and killing three people injuring
eight others. At the American Fish Company sloone in Southport,
North Carolina.

Speaker 5 (32:55):
Wo oh, he looks unwell mentally.

Speaker 2 (33:00):
But they always use a picture that because I think
you can find pictures of me and you're.

Speaker 1 (33:04):
Like, dude, for sure, for sure unwill that.

Speaker 2 (33:07):
Yeah, and you get me pissed if you're in the
front of the Oh yeah he's a booking photo.

Speaker 1 (33:10):
Yeah, you pissed if your hand take a picture of me.

Speaker 6 (33:12):
The first thing in the morning, murderer.

Speaker 1 (33:14):
Like, something's off, Eddie, what's your story?

Speaker 8 (33:16):
So I had a story, but I wanted to ask
you first, did you go to uh? I know you
didn't go, but John Mayer was here.

Speaker 1 (33:22):
I didn't go Sunday night.

Speaker 8 (33:23):
And it's crazy like that festival usually happens during iHeart
so I never even think about going, had no idea.

Speaker 6 (33:30):
It wasn't that weekend. It just happened.

Speaker 1 (33:32):
Pilgrimage.

Speaker 2 (33:33):
Yeah, I got a text going, hey, do you want
to come to John may Or Sunday night?

Speaker 6 (33:35):
And did not.

Speaker 2 (33:38):
Just didn't want to go do anything. I get it,
But John Mayor, you're one of your favorite artists, my favorite.
If it wasn't a festival, if it wasn't like out
there and if it wasn't like at the same time
NFL was happening.

Speaker 6 (33:50):
Oh that's a thing. Yeah, cow was, and it have.

Speaker 2 (33:53):
To work the next day. There were just so many
things that kept but most I just didn't want to.
I don't want to do anything.

Speaker 6 (33:57):
Kings the Leon played too.

Speaker 1 (33:58):
Not Sunday night.

Speaker 6 (33:59):
I don't think Saturday.

Speaker 1 (34:00):
Yeah, I would have much.

Speaker 2 (34:02):
If Mayor would have played on a Saturday night, you
would have gone. Probably not, but I would have. I
would have. I would have at least considered it. It was,
it was. It was an instant no for me on
a Sunday night.

Speaker 5 (34:12):
Wow.

Speaker 8 (34:13):
I keep seeing all the videos now and I'm just
kicking myself because like, and I'm not a huge huge
jump Are fan, but I've never seen him live.

Speaker 6 (34:19):
I don't think I loved to see him.

Speaker 8 (34:22):
It's great, and that festival just seems awesome, like all
that the whole line up every time it comes out,
so it's like those are my people.

Speaker 6 (34:28):
Like Eddie Vedder came one year. We were in at
iHeart every year.

Speaker 1 (34:31):
I said this one. It's been the same week in
more in Vegas.

Speaker 2 (34:34):
Yes, So I guess automatically I just thought like, well,
we're not gonna go to that one.

Speaker 1 (34:37):
Is that your story?

Speaker 6 (34:38):
No, that's not my story.

Speaker 8 (34:39):
My story is there was a heist, another awesome heist.

Speaker 2 (34:44):
Anybody died, because I need to know how cool I'm
gonna think this is no one's If nobody died, I
could think this is really cool.

Speaker 6 (34:48):
No one died.

Speaker 8 (34:49):
They were stealing whiskey, and so they got they went
to a big distributor in Washington State and they're like, all,
we're gonna go pick up the load of whiskey for whatever, right,
So they these people forged all these documents to make
it look like they were a legit distributor, pulled their
truck up, all the employees just lit it up.

Speaker 6 (35:04):
A million dollars worth of.

Speaker 8 (35:06):
Whiskey included like a million a million dollars, including like
this reserve kind of whiskey that's like very limited.

Speaker 2 (35:13):
The weird thing about whiskey being so expensive or worth
so much as you can drink it, Yeah, you can
drink that away. If you get a painting, you don't
eat it, it just goes up in value.

Speaker 1 (35:22):
It doesn't go away. Whiskey did you drink it? It
can just go away.

Speaker 8 (35:26):
But the problem that they deal with this whiskey is
like sometimes they store the whiskey for like twenty years.

Speaker 1 (35:31):
Yeah, I unders I get it.

Speaker 2 (35:33):
It's just a weird thing to like have that expensive
because I've seen like whiskey bottles that's like forty grand
for this aged whiskey, and I'm like, that's awesome to
have if you're only gonna have it and it's gonna
appreciate value and you're never gonna drink it. But you
take a drink of it, all of a sudden, it's
thirty nine thousand, eight hundred and twelve dollars.

Speaker 6 (35:50):
Down the drain.

Speaker 1 (35:51):
Do you just drink it? If you can, you get
the Mona Lisa. You can't eat it. There's no chance
it goes away unless it get stolen.

Speaker 8 (35:57):
See, I'm like that with food, Like I don't want
to go to a pensive dinner. I'm just gonna poop
that away.

Speaker 2 (36:01):
Well, I don't know, but the whiskey's in investment to
some people. But they'll also have some drinks of it.

Speaker 6 (36:08):
But once you pop that bottle, it's no longer worth that.
Whatever it is.

Speaker 1 (36:12):
It's like driving a car off the lot as soon
as you open it up.

Speaker 2 (36:15):
So what happened there, so they do all the paperwork
they I mean, they just drove off with the load
and they were supposed to be in New Jersey the
next day.

Speaker 6 (36:22):
Never showed up. Gone all of it, all of it gone.

Speaker 8 (36:26):
So the people they have an idea for the people
that I mean, they have names eleven type stuff.

Speaker 6 (36:32):
Such good stuff.

Speaker 8 (36:33):
Wow, speaking of Oceans eleven, my son wants to like,
we're kind of in the whole period of like, all right,
you need to watch these movies Days of Confused, shosh Ank, Redemption,
and he's never seen Oceans, So I think we're gonna
do that this week.

Speaker 6 (36:46):
I'm so excited.

Speaker 1 (36:47):
That's a good one.

Speaker 6 (36:48):
Of those other ones, though, are the other ones good?

Speaker 1 (36:50):
They're good, but they get they get a little bit worse.

Speaker 2 (36:52):
Last movie, Mike, my feeling is before you give the
actual real answer, Mike is loved the first one, really
like the same one, and they're all pretty good, but
they get a little less good as it goes.

Speaker 6 (37:04):
Is there at thirteen?

Speaker 13 (37:05):
Yeah, the thirteen is where they kind of drop off.
But I'd say one and two are solid, Like one's
really good, like Bobby said, And then they did another
one with all women.

Speaker 1 (37:14):
Ocean's eight yep. Is that any good?

Speaker 6 (37:16):
Nah?

Speaker 2 (37:18):
I just have sexes, but nah, hey, if it ain't good,
it ain't good, that's pretty cool.

Speaker 1 (37:23):
They fake that and just drove off.

Speaker 6 (37:24):
It is gone.

Speaker 8 (37:25):
But I feel like as soon as they start seeing
that reserve being sold places, they're gonna be like, well,
it'll probably.

Speaker 2 (37:29):
Get that three or four times black market before it's
ever even known that it's out there. And then by
the time it's like, where'd you get that from this,
there's no tracking it back or they just all drink it.

Speaker 1 (37:40):
What if that's it just drunk.

Speaker 4 (37:43):
I think there's a special task for for whiskey.

Speaker 5 (37:47):
Looking on the black market, task being sold.

Speaker 2 (37:50):
Possibly, Yeah, yeah, hey, speaking to that, you wanna do
Tuesday Rebuesday?

Speaker 6 (37:54):
Sure?

Speaker 1 (37:55):
Nothing?

Speaker 6 (37:56):
I have nothing watching task, but I have nothing.

Speaker 2 (37:59):
Do I have any I don't think I'm watching. I'm
now in a bunch of stuff. But yeah, I don't
have any conclusions, Mike.

Speaker 13 (38:06):
One battle after or another. The new Leonardo DiCaprio.

Speaker 1 (38:09):
Movie, Yes, my wife wanted to go see that. It
is so good.

Speaker 13 (38:11):
It's an almost perfect movie, has a little bit of everything, action,
a lot of comedy. Like Leonardo DiCaprio is like a
comedy person with something I wasn't really expecting.

Speaker 1 (38:19):
So good three hours though, huh, it's like two and
a half.

Speaker 8 (38:24):
Yeah, my son said that it was funny, like he said,
Sean Penn was hilarious.

Speaker 13 (38:27):
Yeah, he's like the villain.

Speaker 1 (38:28):
Oh that's what I watched. I'm glad you said that.
Keep going with your thing you're writing.

Speaker 13 (38:31):
Yeah, I give it four point five out of five bathrooms.

Speaker 6 (38:34):
But it's almost perfect.

Speaker 13 (38:35):
Yeah, almost perfect. That's four point five out of five.

Speaker 1 (38:39):
Theater though only theater theater?

Speaker 6 (38:41):
Can you go four point nine? No, oh, it's gonna
be a point five?

Speaker 1 (38:44):
Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2 (38:47):
What are we gonna say about champin Charlie sheen to
watch it all, both episodes of documentary documentary.

Speaker 1 (38:52):
He's in it a lot because our friends' kids. It's good.

Speaker 6 (38:56):
I give it.

Speaker 1 (39:00):
I'm gonna give it three and a half.

Speaker 6 (39:03):
So right down the middle.

Speaker 1 (39:04):
The first episode sets it up.

Speaker 2 (39:06):
It's a little long, and it the first episode is
a little weak. The second episode comes hard, and you're
reminded of all that winning and tiger blood and how
out of his mind he was, and he's so humiliated
by it. He's so embarrassed by it. Now because he
was like I was just so strung out. It's good
three and a half. He's just a likable person.

Speaker 6 (39:28):
Okay, I'm gonna ask you that you like him more often.

Speaker 2 (39:29):
Everything about him is like I shouldn't like him, rich kid,
great looking, super success.

Speaker 1 (39:36):
But I don't know. I watched it.

Speaker 2 (39:38):
I'm like, dang, I like Charlie Sheen, what'd you think?
Might'd you finish it?

Speaker 12 (39:41):
Uh? No?

Speaker 13 (39:42):
I got bored after the first thirty minutes of the
first episode and I couldn't go.

Speaker 1 (39:46):
It's tough.

Speaker 13 (39:46):
I found him opposite of you. I foun him kind annoying.

Speaker 1 (39:49):
I think if you watched it longer. But I don't know.
The first episode's tough, Like I said, man, when he's
like smoking crack, they show him smoking crack, Well.

Speaker 2 (39:58):
They don't he's not smoking, uh, like of him partying. Yeah,
but I don't know if they're like zoomed in on
him actually crack smoking.

Speaker 1 (40:06):
But I liked it. I didn't love it.

Speaker 2 (40:10):
And it's two episodes, and the first episode was kind
of weak. Second episode was where he got good like
crazy good man. He was going through women and then men.

Speaker 6 (40:19):
Oh really yeah, he was.

Speaker 2 (40:20):
Like I had everything I tried everything. He's like, so
you have a menu've eaten everything on it, Well, you're
gonna and he does this thing. He's like, well, you're
gonna flip it around and he was talking about he
was so is all when he was like drugged out
of his mind?

Speaker 3 (40:31):
What on earth?

Speaker 1 (40:32):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (40:33):
Wow?

Speaker 2 (40:33):
He was like, yeah, so tried dudes, and he was
uber famous. Yeah, and you forget how much of a
disaster that tour was. Whenever he went on that Charlie
Sheen speaking tour during winning and everybody's coming out going
this is the worst thing ever. It was just an
It's a disaster because he was a disaster.

Speaker 1 (40:53):
Yeah, it's wild. So I'm gonna get that three and
a half.

Speaker 4 (40:55):
Any everything, Well, I finally finished my rewatch of Scandal.
I'm done with all seven cs and so if nobody's
ever watched that, I highly recommend it. There was stuff
I definitely missed the first time I watched it, and
so I'm glad I did the rewatch because it got
added to Netflix. That's the only reason why I started
watching it again. And I give it four and a
half white hats out of five.

Speaker 5 (41:19):
Speaking of whiskey, like.

Speaker 4 (41:20):
Something they do in that show is drink whiskey. They well,
it's like whiskey or laka, Like I don't know, they're
always in the oval office or everybody's like everybody's like
they drink the whole time, like all day. I mean,
I get that that job is stressful or being in
politics is stressful, but I'm like, how are you y'all
drink all the time?

Speaker 8 (41:39):
I love in the movies when like people come over
to the office and like drink and they always just
like I love.

Speaker 4 (41:45):
That, or like when in Madmen and that show they
just drink all day long, and I'm like, what, how
could you imagine if.

Speaker 1 (41:56):
The end of the day.

Speaker 4 (41:57):
But yeah, that's where I'm just like, this is not real,
and like they always just wake up and report for
duty like not hungover or feeling crappy, Like can you
imagine if we were drinking scotch every day at work?

Speaker 8 (42:09):
And then you know what speaking of that too, like
you know, Dean Martin and all those guys and even
van Halen. The stories are coming out and I know
the rat Pat stuff that's been out for a while,
but van Halen was saying like they would come out
on stage and chug Jack Daniel, they all fake and
they're like it was iced tea.

Speaker 1 (42:24):
Yeah.

Speaker 8 (42:24):
And then Matt the Rat, Pat Guys, Dean Martin, all
them like they'd come out on stage like act drunk.
They were drinking like water what some Yeah, which is
crazy because they knew they couldn't perform.

Speaker 6 (42:37):
And the rest of us are like, that's so cool.
I'm going to do let's try.

Speaker 13 (42:41):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (42:41):
Yeah, obviously I know mad Men and Scannell that's the
TV shows that's fake, but I feel like they're a
good point. Well, but mad Men, that was an era,
and I feel like a lot of people did. Like
people that worked in that business. They're trying to paint
a picture. They were just smoking and drinking. That was
part of the like making a deal with a company,
like playing golf.

Speaker 5 (43:01):
Yeah, like just come up to my office, Morgan.

Speaker 1 (43:03):
Do you have a show?

Speaker 10 (43:05):
Yeah?

Speaker 7 (43:05):
I watched two movies.

Speaker 12 (43:06):
I watched el Eo on Disney and then I watched
Superman on HBO Max.

Speaker 1 (43:11):
I don't know what Elio is. I've seen a pretty before.

Speaker 6 (43:14):
It's a cartoon.

Speaker 7 (43:15):
Yeah, it's animated, it's dar uh no.

Speaker 12 (43:18):
But it's it's about this kid who wants to go
explore outer space and he really wants Aliens to abduct him.

Speaker 7 (43:23):
It's such a cute movie. I really loved it. Pixar
is really one of my favorites, just to watch her
every time they.

Speaker 3 (43:29):
Put out an animated movie.

Speaker 7 (43:31):
I love it that one. I'd give four out of
five planets.

Speaker 1 (43:35):
Yeah, Superman, Oh, Superman.

Speaker 12 (43:37):
I also love that As a dog, and I was
obsessed with the dog the whole time.

Speaker 1 (43:41):
I thought the dog was kind of stupid. I'm be
honest with you. The dog was really dog. I love
the dog, love dogs and stuff. Thought the dog was stupid.

Speaker 6 (43:46):
What was the dog's name?

Speaker 13 (43:47):
Crypto, Crypto?

Speaker 6 (43:49):
It's so cool.

Speaker 5 (43:50):
You don't like him?

Speaker 1 (43:52):
He wasn't like a real dog.

Speaker 6 (43:53):
What do you mean he was a real dog.

Speaker 7 (43:54):
He's a rescue dog that they pulled for my shelter.

Speaker 2 (43:56):
No, but he's not like a real dog on the show,
like he had weird superpowers.

Speaker 1 (44:00):
You know. I like my dogs to be dogs fast. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (44:02):
I want my dogs to be like Mortal. I don't
really like them to be I don't know, maybe that's
a dog thing. I don't like my dog to be
super super hero dogs.

Speaker 8 (44:11):
You know what I keep thinking about in that movie
that I really liked was the monkeys, the monkeys on
social media.

Speaker 7 (44:18):
Oh yeah, the troll monkeys.

Speaker 6 (44:19):
I love that.

Speaker 1 (44:21):
The troll farm that.

Speaker 7 (44:23):
Yeah, I loved it. I'd give Superman.

Speaker 12 (44:26):
Oh, I really want to do five out of five,
but I'm going to go four point five out of
five Cryptos.

Speaker 7 (44:30):
Just you know, because you didn't like him. I loved
him though.

Speaker 1 (44:33):
Oh it's you. You can have whatever, right. I don't know.
I'd like my dog to be dog.

Speaker 12 (44:38):
Cryptos to also in the comic. So I think I
knew that he was a superhero. I have watched another
TV show that was Crypto, was part of it with Superman.

Speaker 1 (44:47):
Yeah, I was a familiar with Crypto.

Speaker 8 (44:48):
So I'm surprised, Morgan, you didn't watch that, like when
it came out.

Speaker 7 (44:53):
I had planned to. Didn't that come out around I
hurt Fest or something? I hurt Country Fest? No, on vacation.

Speaker 1 (45:02):
You know it stands out right, it come out.

Speaker 12 (45:04):
I know I have a thing where like I have
to go and I see it in theaters like right
that weekend, or I'll just wait for it to come out.

Speaker 1 (45:12):
Thank you, guys, thanks to doctor Laurie. We're done. We
will see you guys tomorrow.

Speaker 2 (45:16):
Hope you have a good rest of the day, and
I have a new Bobby Cast up today with Dave Ramsey,
mister money Man. Go check it out Dave Ramsey, It's awesome.
Search for the Bobbycast. We'll see you guys tomorrow.

Speaker 1 (45:24):
By everybody,
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Amy Brown

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Lunchbox

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Mike D

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Abby Anderson

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