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October 17, 2025 43 mins

Caller Summer shared an interesting theory on why she thinks that Lunchbox is lying to us about The Price Is Right. Happy Birthday Alan Jackson! He turns 67 years old today. We take a look back on the great stories he has told us over the years throughout our interviews with him. We play Easy Trivia where the stakes are the highest they've ever been as the show tries to put a slow down to Eddie's winning streak.

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
Transmitting this.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
Welcome to Friday show. We got a big one morning
studio morning. We're gonna play easy trivia. Eddie's one win
from the championship. We're recording this before Lunchbox leaves her prices. Right,
we know this is airing on Friday, but we don't
want Edite win the championship and Lunchbox I have a chance.

Speaker 3 (00:29):
So let me tell you something. What popping you again?
You can't We don't know yet.

Speaker 2 (00:34):
We don't know yet, right, Okay, let's go around the room.
The category is Spanish.

Speaker 4 (00:40):
All right, let's got.

Speaker 2 (00:43):
Nobody can go home on this one, Eddie. What's Spanish
for hellos?

Speaker 5 (00:52):
Because when the phone sometimes you're like when hellow, it's
Spanish for thank you, Amy, Lunchbox, what's abby?

Speaker 2 (01:03):
Oh oh oh Abby? Then lunchbox got it abby? What's
Spanish for goodbye?

Speaker 6 (01:08):
Audios?

Speaker 3 (01:09):
Good Lunchbox? What's Spanish for yes? See? Correct? Okay, if
you miss it, now you hear this sound you've been
ready ready.

Speaker 2 (01:19):
The category is famous John's Eddie your first what US
President gave the famous challenge ask not what your country
can do for you, but what you can do for
your country.

Speaker 3 (01:28):
That's John F.

Speaker 2 (01:30):
Kennedy Correct, Amy What British musical legend was a member
of the Beatles and wrote the.

Speaker 3 (01:36):
Song Imagine John Lennon Correct, you're just trying to keep
Eddie from winning guys. Yeah, one one way.

Speaker 7 (01:43):
I know I was a little feisty in the beginning,
and I'd like to apologize for calling you an idiot.

Speaker 3 (01:47):
Well you did say idiot?

Speaker 4 (01:48):
What hard?

Speaker 3 (01:50):
Yes, I didn't hear that either. I heard it.

Speaker 7 (01:53):
I did, and I've been thinking about it ever since.

Speaker 3 (01:55):
Sorry, idiot, Abby? What actor starred in Greece and pulp
fiction on Travolta?

Speaker 2 (02:00):
Correct? Lunchbox? What singer had to hit your body as
a Wonderland?

Speaker 3 (02:05):
Oh? That's John Mayer? Correct? Did you see where you
want to days with Cat Stickler the influencer. That's kind
of weird. You guys know she is us the youngsters now, Yeah, me,
Morgan and Mike. So they went on like two dates,
all right?

Speaker 2 (02:22):
Next up, nineties pop Eddie what Latin pop stars shook
his bond bond in the late nineties A bomb bon uh?

Speaker 3 (02:33):
Ricky Martin Yeah? Yeah? Did he? Yeah? Correct? Wow? Amy?

Speaker 2 (02:39):
What Canadian singer released the album Jagged a Little Pill
in nineteen ninety five.

Speaker 4 (02:44):
Uh, alanis Morrissett?

Speaker 3 (02:46):
Correct? Abby?

Speaker 2 (02:48):
What girl group told us they really really really want
in their debut You Want to.

Speaker 4 (02:52):
Be Spice Girls?

Speaker 3 (02:53):
Correct?

Speaker 2 (02:54):
Lunchbox. What rapper is known for his nineteen ninety hit
you Can't Touch This? That is see Hammer? Correct? The
category is famous blue characters, Eddie. What Disney character is
a blue alien who loves Elvis and destroys everything?

Speaker 3 (03:13):
Whoa one? Uh?

Speaker 8 (03:20):
Has he Leela or is he Stitch? I think he's Stitch?
Answer Stitch correct. What's the name of the forgetful blue
character in Finding Nemo?

Speaker 3 (03:33):
Amy?

Speaker 4 (03:36):
Hmmm, I know, so there's Nemo. I don't know.

Speaker 3 (03:45):
What's the name of the forgetful blue character in Finding Nemo?

Speaker 4 (03:51):
It's gonna take me out? Bluefish?

Speaker 3 (03:56):
We were looking for Hoodie?

Speaker 4 (03:59):
Name Hoody?

Speaker 3 (04:00):
No? Serious? Why is it not the explorer?

Speaker 7 (04:10):
The fish character dang Amy is out after she chunked
the word idiot around.

Speaker 4 (04:19):
It's okay, I also apologize. I'm sorry.

Speaker 2 (04:22):
What cartoon characters are tiny blue and live in mushroom houses?

Speaker 3 (04:28):
Correct? Lunchbox.

Speaker 2 (04:30):
What popular video game character is a fast blue hedgehog?

Speaker 3 (04:35):
Oh Sonic? Correct? The answer is answers that rhyme Okay,
all the answers are answers that rhyme eddie. What phrase
do people say when something is simple or guaranteed? That's all?

Speaker 5 (04:53):
What What phrase do people say when it's simple or guaranteed?

Speaker 3 (04:57):
And it rhymes simple guaranteed. The two words rhyme with
each Oh oh, oh oh. I see what you're saying,
simple or guaranteed. So like, I'm gonna explain the category.
Not this, not this question at all.

Speaker 2 (05:11):
But if if it were like, what's something that's a
vegetable that talks, that'd be a carrot parrot.

Speaker 3 (05:18):
That's tough, but it's not. That was just a stupid one.
I get that. Not a thing, that's not a thing. Okay,
repeat this question. What phrase do people say when something
is simple are guaranteed?

Speaker 9 (05:32):
It's simple guaranteed, it's no brainer, easier than a brainer,
brain a wainer?

Speaker 3 (05:44):
What simple? Let me give you ten seconds here, Oh man,
I got nothing simple or guaranteed.

Speaker 5 (05:51):
Uh, it's easy, easy breezy, easy breezy.

Speaker 3 (05:56):
Correct. That just came to me and I was almost out.
I want to put an abby there. I saw the
second the TikTok going down.

Speaker 2 (06:04):
Lunchbox was pumping his fist because he thought you missed
it when you said it easy and got off easy
way early out of here.

Speaker 3 (06:11):
Go to brainer, keep going with brainer. Okay, Wow, that
was crazy abby. What phrase means a quick glance or
a preliminary showing you will get a little extra time
on this one because this is our one quick glance.
Remember the two words rhyme and the answer quick glance.

(06:32):
What phrase means a quick glance or a preliminary showing.

Speaker 6 (06:40):
Glance? What's a quick glance? You look up a flush?

Speaker 3 (06:44):
You look.

Speaker 6 (06:46):
Say it again? Please?

Speaker 3 (06:48):
What phrase means a quick glance or a preliminary showing
a sneak peek? Correct? Thanks, lunchbox. What phrase means every
thing is fine or okay? Oh? That is oh wo?
I don't know if that rhymes, so you can try

(07:08):
it out. You'd be You don't have to commit to it.
A okay, Hey, okay? Does that rhyme? It does? It
doesn't rhyme A okay? Yeah? No, A rhymes with the
back part of okay, but his rhyme with oh. And
the only reason I would step in is because you
said something you shouldn't have said, influencing a contestant, because

(07:31):
I normally wouldn't step in.

Speaker 2 (07:32):
But you can't do that right, so it's not a okay?

Speaker 3 (07:39):
Eddie has given you that? Can you can you repeat
with them? Yes? What phrase means everything? Everything is fine?
Or okay? What phrases everything's okay? Or all right? No? No,
all right? Nobody said all right, but it does work?
But nobody said all right? What did you say? What

(08:01):
phrase means everything is fine or okay? What phrase means
everything's according to plan? Phrases?

Speaker 2 (08:15):
I mean, I'm gonna for give you ten seconds now,
a lot of time here, ten seconds.

Speaker 3 (08:21):
I'm just gonna go with what I got. If it's
a okay, it's not right, go with it, dude? No, no, okay?
All good in the hood, right good and good hood rhymes,
but all in doesn't. You've been booed? Does anybody know it?

Speaker 10 (08:40):
Again?

Speaker 2 (08:41):
I guess what phrase means everything's fine or okay?

Speaker 4 (08:43):
Oh, handy dandy.

Speaker 3 (08:46):
That's good? I had Oki dokie, that's it Oki doky? Yeah,
Abby and Eddie remain what's that?

Speaker 6 (08:55):
Let's go?

Speaker 3 (08:56):
All right? Rom Colms love them? Eddie What?

Speaker 2 (09:01):
Two thousand and eight movie stars Catherine Heigel as a
woman who's been a bridesmaid many times?

Speaker 3 (09:08):
What this one? Not so? Ok not so good? Not
say not so Okay, that's all good in the hood? Okay,
how many times? This many? You need to stop too?
Let me host the show.

Speaker 4 (09:25):
Okay, No it's a true question.

Speaker 3 (09:28):
No it's not. Let me just rephrase. Will you repeat
the question? Yes, you need to stop. You just want
him to lose. Let me do my thing. What?

Speaker 2 (09:34):
Two thousand and eight movie stars Catherine Heigel as a
woman who's been a bridesmaid many times?

Speaker 3 (09:38):
Got it? Twenty seven dresses?

Speaker 6 (09:40):
Correct?

Speaker 3 (09:41):
God, but I wasn't going to I had already thought
of twenty seven.

Speaker 4 (09:45):
Why did you say? How many times?

Speaker 3 (09:47):
Twenty seven? That would have been? That would have helped? Abby?

Speaker 10 (09:50):
What?

Speaker 2 (09:51):
Two thousand and one film features Rene Selwigger as a
British woman keeping a diary of a better love life.

Speaker 6 (09:56):
This is one I have not seen.

Speaker 3 (10:00):
Know that. I'm glad you know that.

Speaker 7 (10:05):
Hold on.

Speaker 6 (10:06):
It's going to come to me though, because I've heard
a lot about it.

Speaker 3 (10:09):
What Everybody Drunk? What?

Speaker 2 (10:15):
Two thousand and one film Idiot features I caller Rene
Wiger as a British woman keeping a diary about her life,
her love life?

Speaker 4 (10:30):
What is that?

Speaker 6 (10:35):
British woman. I love life. What is it? What is it?

Speaker 11 (10:39):
Amy?

Speaker 6 (10:40):
Channel it to me?

Speaker 3 (10:41):
Okay, okay, I'm going to read it one more time.

Speaker 2 (10:44):
What two thousand and one film features renee Zel Wigger
as a British woman keeping a diary about her love life.

Speaker 6 (10:51):
Can't I can't miss this, Eddie can't win?

Speaker 3 (10:53):
Wait?

Speaker 6 (10:54):
Can I get ten seconds?

Speaker 3 (10:55):
Okay? Seconds right now? Ten second starts? Now?

Speaker 6 (11:00):
Oh, what's her name? I'm not going to get it.

Speaker 3 (11:07):
Oh, I don't know.

Speaker 6 (11:10):
I can't think time, I can't think.

Speaker 3 (11:12):
I haven't said the word diary in the question. Diary diary.

Speaker 7 (11:18):
Okay, okay, diary of Diary of a mad black woman.

Speaker 3 (11:24):
Yeah, great, No, it's Bridget Jones diary.

Speaker 7 (11:28):
Oh Bridgete it is, but no, it's Bridget Jones, Brigie
Bridget Joneses diary.

Speaker 3 (11:34):
No secret, A very diary of a mad black Yeah. Yeah,
well then that feels weird. This one feels weird. It's
just weird, like I can't one like that. I'll take
I'll take the.

Speaker 5 (11:45):
Win and the championship, the championship, season champ but.

Speaker 3 (11:48):
Anyway, I'll tell I'll take it.

Speaker 1 (11:49):
Anything m again.

Speaker 3 (11:51):
Wow, Wow, okay, there my mom. Enough thinking.

Speaker 12 (12:01):
Anonymous sinbar, there a question to.

Speaker 7 (12:05):
Be come.

Speaker 2 (12:12):
Hello, Bobby Bones. I'm exhausted from taking every little comment
to heart. I know most people don't mean anything by it,
but my brain replays offhand remarks for days, and I
start avoiding people or conversations to stay safe. I don't
want to become harder cynical. I just want to stop
spiraling over every word or comment. How do you build
thicker skin without losing your softness? Side sensitive Sally, You

(12:36):
want to go, oh.

Speaker 7 (12:37):
Yeah, I've had to do this a lot at times,
and I think it's just where you put your focus,
Like it's easy to let the negative things loop, and
so it's not so much about building your thick skin.
It's just not letting those comments in and looping. You
can acknowledge them and then be like, I'm not going
to let that stay here and rule my day, Like

(12:58):
I'm going to think of more positive things and try
to shift your focus, Like every time it happens, you're
rewiring to go another direction. And the more you do that,
at least for me, it's been easier.

Speaker 2 (13:10):
I have found that for me it works in a
different way, and I think everybody is different in how
they deal with this. I have found that if I
can rationalize let's say, negative comments, I don't know anybody
that's healthy that is commenting negatively about things. If you
go to like negative even on social media. Any of
my friends that are like working, hard, fulfilled life families,

(13:34):
doing pretty they never.

Speaker 3 (13:36):
They don't troll.

Speaker 2 (13:37):
So anybody that does, that's a type of person that's
either really sad or really mad, really angry, really lost,
really really something that's not positive, and none has to
be bad.

Speaker 3 (13:48):
It can also be sad. So how I approach even people,
let's say, even in this town like industry, saying things
about me. I don't know any super healthy people that
are talking bad about people. I just don't, So I go, man,
that sucks. They are not feeling good about themselves or
taking it on other people. It's very much the bully
mentality of back in school too, Like there's a reason

(14:08):
bullies bully. It's because they're sad, mad, hurt, whatever you
want to insert there. So if it's like that, people
talking about you in that way, it's hard to go
up and you know, separate the forest from the trees.
But I don't know a single fulfilled person who talks
negatively about other people.

Speaker 2 (14:27):
So that's how I deal with it. It's like somebodys
talking a bad about me suck for them. They must
be having a pretty hard time right now.

Speaker 4 (14:35):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (14:36):
Sometimes though too, if we have a negative narrative already
and they happen to say something that we're like, oh, shoot,
maybe that is true about me.

Speaker 4 (14:44):
So yes, I think that's really good advice, Bobby.

Speaker 3 (14:46):
Also, you never develop a fully thick skin.

Speaker 2 (14:49):
You have thicker skin because you've been through the circumstance
enough times to realize that it doesn't affect you. But
I don't know anybody that's born with a super thick skin.
A thick skin or whatever that means is developed and
it's an understanding of well all this best. That really
doesn't affect me because I've learned over time it it
hasn't affected me. So a thick skin is, you know,
a development of circumstance over time. But so don't hold

(15:12):
yourself I wish I had a thicker skin. It's all experience.
So also everybody's not the same. And also people spiral
in different ways. Amy spirals in different ways than I spiral.

Speaker 3 (15:21):
I spiral and crazy hyper focused ways, and she eats
all over the place, and it's just different. We just
are different.

Speaker 4 (15:27):
Yeah, I'm all over the place.

Speaker 3 (15:29):
You don't think you are. I wish I could be
a little.

Speaker 4 (15:31):
I can be all over the place.

Speaker 3 (15:33):
I do see your paper after a show, Well, what's
on it right now?

Speaker 4 (15:36):
So that is my Ah? Yeah, I know exactly what
it looks like.

Speaker 3 (15:42):
It just but it's it's different superpower toodles.

Speaker 2 (15:45):
Like if you look at my papers, but it's all
blockly squared away, everything is finished and marked off perfectly.

Speaker 3 (15:51):
But I'm it's obsessive in the same way that yours is.
This is the difference in our two lives.

Speaker 8 (15:56):
Wow.

Speaker 7 (15:56):
Like I have my name written out in block letters,
and then I have these and the words written down,
oh interesting with eight exclamation points.

Speaker 4 (16:04):
I also have funny?

Speaker 3 (16:05):
Why did you write oh interesting with eight exclamation I
don't know.

Speaker 7 (16:09):
I have my name again, Amy Brown. I have the
number thirty three?

Speaker 3 (16:12):
Why did you have thirty three?

Speaker 6 (16:13):
Is that Mexican?

Speaker 3 (16:15):
Like? Is that weird? Did you write in Spanish?

Speaker 7 (16:18):
I have the word five eleven abby bye?

Speaker 3 (16:22):
Why did you write Mexican with a circle on the line? Threat?

Speaker 4 (16:26):
But it's so funny.

Speaker 7 (16:27):
I'm writing down like I don't even know what some
of this stuff means.

Speaker 2 (16:32):
Mine is so regimented, and I can hold up my
page and it looks like government redacted files.

Speaker 3 (16:38):
And my day is not done until it's fully redacted.
Every single part of it has to be blocked out on.

Speaker 4 (16:41):
Two three, four, five six seven stars and.

Speaker 3 (16:43):
Also has the word Mexican circle on line through weird. Okay,
we need to talk about it. They have a meeting
after the show. All right, that's all we say. Everybody's different.

Speaker 2 (16:50):
You got to find your way that you have success
with it, and then go back to that whenever it
starts to spiral like out again, That's what I would say, Yeah, yeah,
And like, what what was it?

Speaker 3 (17:00):
Exclamation points? I'm just really wondering what that was? Interesting?

Speaker 7 (17:03):
Oh no, it's oh interesting one two three, four, five,
six seven eight exclamation wits. And I even wrote I
outlined oh interesting, like multiple times.

Speaker 2 (17:13):
And you don't remember before. No, okay, all right, there
you go close it up. We have a caller on
that's going to present an interesting scenario. Lunchbox may have
said he didn't get on prices right because they didn't
allow him to say, like you could have let us
down a wild goose chase. She's gonna give us more information. Okay,
let's go to her. Now, Hey, Summer, you're on the show.

(17:35):
What's going on?

Speaker 1 (17:36):
So I was just listening to Lunchbox talk about his
experience with Prices right, and I was on it and
actually won the whole show years ago, and it's super
similar to him exactly how he explains it. I was
actually number thirty six, and I think so it's possible

(17:57):
that he still could have been on it, and he's
it's not sharing with you, guys, because as soon as
you get off, if you win anything, they make you
sign like everything. I'm sure in radio you guys know
how to like all the things you have to sign.
So like if the president came on and spoke at
the time that the show is supposed to air, you
get nothing. So if the show doesn't air, you don't

(18:19):
get anything. And so he could be kind of playing
with that of like, oh, I don't want to share
in case you know it doesn't air, or he might
still want to keep it a surprise. I don't know.
Because so also in the room where he talked to
the producer or the whoever it.

Speaker 3 (18:39):
Is, that you talk to.

Speaker 1 (18:40):
They did the exact same thing to me of oh, so,
what's your name?

Speaker 7 (18:44):
What do you do?

Speaker 1 (18:45):
I was like, I'm Summer, I'm a teacher. Okay, great,
and moved on to the next person. That's literally the
only thing that they talked to me about. I was like,
all right, cool one, I'm not on the show. And
I ended up being the first one called up. So
just my thought is that he could actually have been
on it and just not totally sharing the whole story yet.

Speaker 2 (19:07):
And I think she brings up a great point. But
do we think that he could have pulled that on us?

Speaker 4 (19:14):
Well, he was doing that weird smile thing.

Speaker 3 (19:16):
Yeah, but I think that was him just trying to I.

Speaker 5 (19:19):
Don't think he's capable of pulling that with us, Like
he's not that good.

Speaker 2 (19:22):
Could he have said, let's say he gets up on
contestant's row. Could he have said he got on contestant's
row but didn't win.

Speaker 7 (19:29):
Sure?

Speaker 1 (19:30):
Sure, I mean and well, I mean, y'all are different
because you're in public. Like I could have told my family,
but I don't know that I would say it in public,
because I mean, you can say it, but if it
doesn't air, then it's kind of like it never happened,
So being in public, he might not want to share
incause it doesn't or playing the long game, oh yeah,

(19:53):
or he could just doing the long game with y'all
because it was really fun. I ended up getting to
watch it with my whole fifth grade class, and no
one knew that I even made it onto the contestants row,
much less one, and so it was it was a
much bigger fun surprise to be able to watch it
with everybody and see it all together then them know
that I was on it in the first place.

Speaker 2 (20:12):
That's an interesting theory, but I okay, let's say he won,
and let's say he told us on the air. He's
not eliminated from winning the prizes if it airs, right,
so he could tell us and then it airs and
he wins the prizes and he still gets the prizes.

Speaker 3 (20:29):
It's only if it doesn't air. Yeah yeah, Well, will they.

Speaker 2 (20:33):
Hold the episode hostage because he says no, But if
something happens where they have to, Like, I wouldn't say
bad weather because it's not bad weather all over America.
The president anything that new story, but I think he
wouldn't care. He would just want us to know he
got on regardless, but that is something to think about
this summer.

Speaker 3 (20:53):
So I appreciate that. Thank you for calling. Hey, what'd
you win?

Speaker 1 (20:55):
By the way, Let's see, I want this horrible wall
clock to get on, and then I won, uh six
bars of gold, trip to Fiji and uh trip to Mexico,
like villas in Mexico.

Speaker 3 (21:08):
Did you go on the trip?

Speaker 4 (21:09):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (21:09):
Yeah, oh yeah, yeah was it cool? They were great,
They were totally legit. It was yeah, it was really fun.

Speaker 3 (21:15):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (21:16):
They do make you cash in your bars of gold
like that day though, so you get whatever the value
of the gold is that day. But I was like,
I kind of want to have a bar of gold.
Who doesn't want a bar of gold just to have
walking around? But now they make you cash.

Speaker 3 (21:29):
A man, how much was the bar of gold worth?

Speaker 1 (21:32):
It was right around a thousand I think at the time.

Speaker 3 (21:34):
That's cool. All right, well, thank you for sharing that
with us. We appreciate that.

Speaker 1 (21:37):
You're so welcome.

Speaker 3 (21:38):
All right, see you later.

Speaker 2 (21:40):
That'd be fun to watch with your class mm hmm,
although they're like, she wants to watch Price right one
random day.

Speaker 3 (21:45):
Okay, this is weird. It's time for the good news.

Speaker 2 (21:49):
Bobby Easton Peterson's four years old. At his school, it
is like pre K they have a rescue that they
raise money for K nine Straight Rescue League, and so
he's four and it's like he really wanted to do it,
and man, he did, and he went hard and he
raised hundreds and hundreds of dollars and it kind of
became a story of this four year old raising money

(22:11):
for dogs, and so it also became novel like here's
a kid that's out hustling for money, so everybody wants
to be a part of it. But not only did
he raise all the money, he was able to clear
their Amazon wish list for items for that shelter, which
is pretty crazy.

Speaker 3 (22:24):
And his mom and his dad are like, he's awesome.
Oh yeah, that's great. That's from click on Detroit. Four
years old, as somebody Eddie, Yep, it's had four year olds, yep,
four of them.

Speaker 5 (22:35):
Well I've had four four year olds, any of them? Like, No,
they would never do that. Never, They wouldn't even think
about doing that. They would think of hustling and making
some money extra cash for ice cream, gum candy.

Speaker 3 (22:46):
Yeah, yea yeah, but no, But isn't that kind of
on again not a parent yet, But isn't that kind
of on the parent?

Speaker 5 (22:53):
Look, I think the four year old, even in this story,
got the idea from the parents, right, there's no way
the four year old thought of like, do you want
to do this?

Speaker 3 (23:02):
Then? Isn't that on you for your four year old
to not doing it? Yeah? I guess so.

Speaker 2 (23:06):
Just making sure big shout out, that's a good story,
That's what it's all about.

Speaker 13 (23:09):
That was telling me something good.

Speaker 3 (23:15):
Round the room amy fun fact me.

Speaker 7 (23:17):
So, the plate that you serve your food on can
influence how your food taste or how much of the
food you want to eat. Like if you eat on
a round, white plate, it enhances sweet flavors, while a
black plate brings out savory notes. And then get this,
your favorite color, Bobby red. If you eat on a
red plate, you reduce the amount.

Speaker 4 (23:36):
That you eat.

Speaker 3 (23:37):
I don't know, I feels racist, but yeah, for sure
they do all based on color. Yeah, I don't like that.
That is where the horror brain is affected.

Speaker 7 (23:47):
And like some restaurants they know this. They'll serve food
on certain plates because they pay attention to the science
behind it, or they'll paint the walls a certain color
because it sets a mood, like it prepares people's brains
for like however long they're going to stay there and
eat be stupid patroon.

Speaker 3 (24:03):
Uh plates red than at a restaurant.

Speaker 4 (24:04):
Yeah, because you want people to eat more.

Speaker 3 (24:07):
More, order more. If I was at a restaurant that
you brought a bunch of black plates, that'd be weird.
I've never seen a black plate me either. Maybe I've
seen a red plate.

Speaker 7 (24:16):
Oh, I've seen black bulls and plates you have.

Speaker 3 (24:19):
Yeah, Oh I've seen black bulls.

Speaker 4 (24:21):
Yeah, I ate out the one the other day.

Speaker 3 (24:24):
Pace good for you. I've just never seen a black plate.

Speaker 4 (24:28):
Come to think of it, I did pick up on
the savory notes.

Speaker 3 (24:31):
Stop stop it stop stop. Yeah, okay, Uh.

Speaker 2 (24:35):
There's enough energy in one gallon of gas to charge
your iPhone for over ten years, which can't which you
can't put gas in our phones, right, you imagine, But
there's enough energy in one gallon of gas if you
were to have a little gap ten years.

Speaker 3 (24:50):
But then they explode and stuff and the whole thing
about fire.

Speaker 7 (24:53):
You're not even supposed to be on your phone when
you're getting gas. Yeah, what specifically I do it?

Speaker 3 (25:00):
What? Sometimes I leave the car running.

Speaker 7 (25:04):
I'm way too freaked out that I'm going to be
the person on the news that blew up because I
was on my phone.

Speaker 3 (25:10):
I just don't think that's a thing.

Speaker 2 (25:11):
I think leaving your car on is bad news because
there's heat and it's combustible and that something could. But
I don't think just having a phone, like a normal
functioning phone that hasn't been dropped and shattered and there's not.

Speaker 3 (25:24):
A spark that's coming out of a phone. What do
you see? You looking at it?

Speaker 7 (25:28):
I'm looking it up because, okay, you can't have a
phone by a gas tank because it is a precaution
against the real risks of static electricity and driver distraction.

Speaker 3 (25:40):
Okay, that's the part though.

Speaker 7 (25:42):
The idea that a phone can cause an explosion is
a myth.

Speaker 3 (25:45):
Yeah, I'm looking at the MythBusters episode. It's not in
bad form or a fire risk to use your phone
while pumping gas. Well, man, what is though?

Speaker 5 (25:56):
If you go sit in the car, you know, if
it's a winter time, winter time and you have a
jacket or something and you sit in the car and
you get back out and you touch the handle and.

Speaker 3 (26:02):
It sparks, you can get a fired. Going what I've
seen that happen?

Speaker 4 (26:06):
You touch the handle, brawl?

Speaker 3 (26:07):
Yeah, the electricity in your jacket? Yes, what are you
talking about?

Speaker 4 (26:11):
Amy raw hand to handle?

Speaker 3 (26:14):
How else do you? I put a sleevetel sleep?

Speaker 13 (26:17):
You're you serious?

Speaker 7 (26:21):
Like over where they have this squeegy thing for your windshield,
they normally have paper towels. I go grab a paper
towel and I wrap that around the handle.

Speaker 3 (26:28):
And I do not know if I have to go raw.

Speaker 4 (26:31):
I have hand sanitizer quickly.

Speaker 3 (26:33):
Yeah, give me. People have touched that thing to hands
in their butts. Another thing you shouldn't do while pumping
gas is take two pieces of wood and rub them together,
because that's vigorously cigarette. Yeah, vigorously because I could get
you in trouble there. Okay, lunchbox on the price is right.

Speaker 13 (26:50):
You know how Drew Carrey and Bob Barker have that
little Bob Barker's dead but have the real skinny microphone.
Yeah they do that on purpose because they used to
have a big microphone and people that have never been
on TV before got real nervous and wo're feel uncomfortable
about So they got a real sleek microphone to make
you not notice it and you just feel relaxed.

Speaker 3 (27:09):
I mean, the skinny microphone is awesome. It is so
cool looking a little ball on top.

Speaker 2 (27:13):
I think it's awesome because it's just existed for so
long in that space and that is awesome, which makes
the microphone, like Bob Barker was awesome. Yeah, it kind
of looks weird, kind of looks like an like an
alien antenna.

Speaker 3 (27:26):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, Okay, Morgan.

Speaker 14 (27:28):
The color pink used to be for boys, So before
the nineteen forties, pink was considered a strong masculine color
since it's a shade of red. Blue was more delicate
and meant for girls, but marketing flipped it forever.

Speaker 3 (27:41):
Yeah. I like pink. I like blue, I like light blue.

Speaker 4 (27:45):
Salmon.

Speaker 2 (27:47):
I don't like salmon color. I like straight pink. I've
been wearing pink for years. I've went pink before it
was even cool, twenty years. I've been wearing pink a
lot of times. I was last thing I was washing clothes.
I think that's when I really got into pink. Yeah,
I think that's when I really dedicated myself to warring.
Pink dancing was banned at Baylor until nineteen ninety six.

Speaker 4 (28:07):
I mean it was it really or there just didn't
change it in the Actually.

Speaker 3 (28:11):
It was banned at Baylor.

Speaker 7 (28:12):
You heard you heard the lass soborty. I guess if
you were in a sborty of attorney. Maybe if you
were off campus you could dance.

Speaker 3 (28:19):
All I know Baylor Baptist, right, is that? Yeah?

Speaker 2 (28:23):
I mean I went to I grew up Southern Baptist,
but we were They didn't force that really, not that
we were dancing at church anyway, but there wasn't a
you can't dance type thing.

Speaker 3 (28:32):
Chuck Lourie, you familiar with him?

Speaker 4 (28:35):
Yeah, this is a Saturday night love guy.

Speaker 3 (28:37):
No, he created two and a half men in the
Big Bang theory.

Speaker 4 (28:39):
Okay, that's that's what I meant.

Speaker 3 (28:41):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (28:41):
He wrote and performed the original theme song to the
original Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles cartoon. Oh Cool, wrote the song,
sang the song, and never received any royalties.

Speaker 3 (28:49):
What why not? I don't have the answer to that one.
I just fun back. Oh man, that's a good song.
Have you gone? I've not gone? Go ahead, Bobby, you
have two la boo boos? Or do you have more
than that? Oh? Yes, I thought we're being dirty. Yes,
I had too. Oh you have two Laboo Boo dolls.
I've one read a one for Halloween.

Speaker 5 (29:08):
Let me give you some background on that la boo boos.
So the creator of the Laboo Boo is Caseine Lung.
That's her name, and it all came from a book,
three books that she wrote called The Monsters. So they're
characters in the book and they're also elves. Everybody wonders like, well,
what are they? They are elves because the book is
based after some Nordic folklore and that's it's an elf.

Speaker 3 (29:30):
In case you're wondering. We can tell people now with
your la Boo boo maybe at the least fun fact
of the day. Yeah, no one was really wonder Yeah,
I stop listening, and I was.

Speaker 2 (29:44):
Today is Alan Jackson's birthday, sixty seven years old, and
I was talking with him and he said he was
wrong about Chattahoochi when he wrote the song.

Speaker 3 (29:50):
He thought no one was going to relate to it. Chattahooche.

Speaker 11 (29:53):
Well, Jim and Bride and I wrote, Dad, and I
just thought that it was, uh, you know, a title
of the name of the river in Georgia that I
grew up on and around and nobody, and let's say
you were from that area where you've don't know what
in the world I was singing about.

Speaker 3 (30:06):
I guess the song was really more than that.

Speaker 11 (30:08):
It was it was a growing up kind of coniv
age song in a small town. And I realized later
that everybody had a Chattahoochie or something like that, so
they related to it regardless of the title.

Speaker 3 (30:18):
I was wrong on that one.

Speaker 2 (30:19):
That's the number one song I think of, Oh yeah,
when it's Allan Jackson, it's Chattahoochee. He used to work
at TNN, and that was the old television network called
the Nashville Network, and the people that he worked with
knew he wanted to be a singer. That led to
his first break of like being on a singing show
he was working on.

Speaker 3 (30:37):
I worked at TNN in the mailroom.

Speaker 11 (30:39):
The people that worked there with me knew I was
inspiring to be a singer and songwriter. And one day
I was just standing around backstage when that show was taping.
They said, Hey, we need somebody else to sing going
into commercial because that they pulled people out of the
audience to sing, just a guest audience member just to
sing going into the commercial, and they asked me if
I wanted to sing, and so I jumped up there.

Speaker 3 (30:57):
That's crazy, how it's amazing.

Speaker 2 (31:00):
He'd a warm body that can sing you go, And
that was Alan Jackson. He has so many songs, so
many hits, that he can't put them all into a show,
and he doesn't like letting the fans down.

Speaker 3 (31:11):
But here he is talking about that it's tough. It's tough.

Speaker 11 (31:14):
I mean, I've had sixty or seventy singles you know,
that have been either one or five or top ten hits,
and it makes me feel really bad. Sometimes I'll see
a fan out there holding up a sign of a
particular song from twenty years ago that I hadn't sung
in a long time, and it makes me feel bad.
I know some people come to hear one particular song
and you just don't get to do it for him.
So I try to just pick the biggest ones and
the ones that have affected the most people or that

(31:36):
I enjoy as well.

Speaker 2 (31:38):
And with all those songs, I'm always curious, like what
are you open with? What do you close with?

Speaker 11 (31:42):
I usually kick off of gall Country because I just
it's just a great opening song and a good track
for that and what do you close with shadow Hoochie?
Like a running little set of five o'clock and shadow Hoochie.
And then I come to some Mercury Blues.

Speaker 3 (31:58):
Sometimes a team come on Mercury Blues.

Speaker 5 (32:00):
That's my jam.

Speaker 3 (32:01):
Oh I love it. That is my favorite one. I
think Brkery Blues. If I had money, tell you what
I do. I go downtown by a Mercury or two.
Crazy about Mercury so good? Yeah, And it was on
Home Improvement? Was it was we had to did ahole
music video on Homprovement? I remember about it. Mercury.

Speaker 4 (32:20):
Yeah, it was Alan Jackson on the episode.

Speaker 2 (32:21):
Yeah, he came in and he played yeah, stupid, so stupid.
I can't believe you didn't know. It was a random
nineties television reference.

Speaker 3 (32:29):
And he had one song that he thought his wife
thought was stupid, but it went on to be a
number one hit.

Speaker 11 (32:36):
Denise one time, I wrote this song that she told
me was stupid and it went on to be a
the number one.

Speaker 3 (32:44):
So you never know. And what song was that? If
we can ask, I mean from that's the one we're
going back in time. That's the one Denise said that
was stupid. You said corn bread and chicken. It's dumb.

Speaker 2 (32:58):
There's never been a number one with the word corn
bread in it.

Speaker 3 (33:01):
It's time for the good news, all right.

Speaker 7 (33:08):
So there's a dad, Bruce, and there's his two daughters,
Kelsey and Mariah. Now, their mom, Tracy passed away about
twenty years ago, but both daughters are now like living
their mom's best life because their dad Bruce restored their
mom's old mustangs.

Speaker 4 (33:24):
There's a nineteen sixty five.

Speaker 7 (33:25):
Mustang which he found on Marketplace, Andie confirmed that it
is the Mustang that belonged to their mom, Tracy.

Speaker 4 (33:33):
How crazy is that all these years later.

Speaker 3 (33:35):
Yeah, that's cool.

Speaker 7 (33:36):
I'd love for that to happen with my nineteen eighty
five Ford Bronco.

Speaker 3 (33:40):
Well that's just about so the you had, though, it's
like your mom's yeahs to do that? Yeah or do
you know No, I think she just wants it for her,
like when you said that that was for you.

Speaker 7 (33:51):
Yeah, yeah, okay, little yeah, Yeah, I guess that's a
good point.

Speaker 3 (33:55):
Yeah, I just want your old car restored for year.

Speaker 4 (33:58):
This story to work.

Speaker 7 (33:59):
What you're saying is I need my mom's nineteen eighty
four Buick.

Speaker 2 (34:04):
Or your kids end up getting your Bronco, but instead
you went to you getting your old Bard.

Speaker 7 (34:10):
Well it's just cool that he found it on marketplace,
you know, and was able to confirm I guess with.

Speaker 4 (34:14):
The then number, thank you?

Speaker 3 (34:17):
What are you gonna call it?

Speaker 2 (34:18):
Number A?

Speaker 3 (34:19):
Different things?

Speaker 7 (34:20):
Yeah, I knew that was wrong though, Okay, then number
and the daughters are just so excited. They said, before
winter hits, they're going to be driving around town the
local spots and their matching Mustangs that have been fully
restored thanks to their dad and a family friend named Jake.

Speaker 3 (34:33):
There you go, that's what it's all about. That was
telling me something good. Wake Up, Wake.

Speaker 12 (34:44):
And its radio and the Dodgady lunchbox. More game too, Steve.
It's trying to put you through fog. He's running this
week's next bit. The Bobby's on the box, so you
knowing this is the bottleball.

Speaker 2 (35:08):
Over to Amy with the Morning Corny, The Mourning Corny.

Speaker 7 (35:14):
Where do bees like to vacation? Where Stingapore?

Speaker 3 (35:19):
That's funny, pretty good? Yeah, yeah, that was the Morning Corny.
You got a voicemail here I want to play.

Speaker 1 (35:29):
I was wondering if Raymundo still has his truck.

Speaker 3 (35:33):
That Chase Matthew decked out for him.

Speaker 8 (35:36):
Love the show Bye Yeah.

Speaker 2 (35:38):
Raymundo had an old Bronco blazer blazer Yeah, And Chase
Matthew the artist came in and totally made it. It
looks awesome, put all the crazy stuff on it, in
it you still got it.

Speaker 3 (35:47):
Yeah, It's still got the rack, it's got the light strip,
it's got its hydraulics. There's a Wolfer in it, a tweeter,
It's got Why would I ever get rid of that thing?
Still run good? Two hundred thousand miles and it is
still on the road. Baby, I had that same vehicle
when I was in college. I just can't. My wife
said every day she goes, I can't believe you still
drive that thing. But it really does. It was it's

(36:07):
lipstick on a pig. Honestly, wait what you just said?

Speaker 2 (36:12):
It does?

Speaker 3 (36:12):
It run well? It does? It gets me from the country.
I don't think you understand lipstick on a pig. Lipstick
on a pig, the whole guts of it as a pig.
And what Chase Matthew did is lipstick made it look
really nice. Yeah. But the car that you said runs well,
it does? It gets me from place to place. I
would never give one of y'all ride. You wouldn't even

(36:32):
put us in the car to drive it somewhere. It's
so dangerous, but you would drive it. I'll drive I'm
fine with driving it, but I mean the there's just
issues with it. It's not great. But hey, I got
massive wheels, pretty cool lights to turn a bunch of
different colors on it. It's back to being a pig.
If you wouldn't drive us in it at all? Do
you drive your wife in it? No, she's written that

(36:53):
thing once or twice in the ten years we've been together. Well,
there's your update on that car.

Speaker 2 (37:00):
There's this account called World Languages on TikTok, and so
people that don't know.

Speaker 3 (37:03):
English how they hear English? And I would do how
I hear like Chinese and stuff, but that that would
get in trouble. So we hear if we don't know
the language, there's a certain we hear it a certain way. Right.
So here it is with an explanation.

Speaker 4 (37:15):
How English sounds to non English speakers.

Speaker 13 (37:17):
What you will hear now is just an audio that
simulates the phonetics of English.

Speaker 3 (37:21):
So there are no real words or sentences that make.

Speaker 10 (37:23):
Sense, blaneif glora of slent, wibbish, province, though ogo blood, Harnish, glodham, shanter, bluke,
Brendel's fourth keys, dowlift, blocks and trolley Flbbish CRuMs with
a nog sharni, credil stribley, fanteling, broabe, fled clint too, Grubish, flunderstrows, bleed, bend,
dou Jimmish, bloored, crinkly, shaven, wibbleswort, British blonde, term letto, grubbish, chine.

Speaker 3 (37:40):
So mostly that's the sounds they're hearing us.

Speaker 2 (37:42):
That's us without knowing what we're without knowing what we're saying,
because then I have a lot of languages. Like here's
how Spanish sounds to people that don't speak Spanish.

Speaker 3 (37:52):
Silks of solid n.

Speaker 2 (37:54):
The ones I don't that sounds to me, I'm gonna
be honest, sounds like Spanish. I don't know Spanish. That
sounds like when you guys are talking in Spanish round.
But to you, I'm sure that's what we heard.

Speaker 3 (38:02):
English. Yeah, they're saying nothing. They're saying nothing, but oh
that's crazy anything it's like the English thing.

Speaker 2 (38:09):
No, not they're really not saying words, right, Andy pointed
at you two and goes not even to them, same
with us, Amy, Okay, we hit the Spanish.

Speaker 3 (38:17):
One again, I either said to.

Speaker 2 (38:25):
So that to me sounds exactly the same as if
you guys were talking Spanish around.

Speaker 3 (38:29):
Its amazing like with you guys, I can pick out
a word or two.

Speaker 2 (38:32):
Yeah, because for a decade or so I was like
the one white guy you hear local yeah Greingo talking
about me? Yeah yeah, okay German to non German speakers.

Speaker 3 (38:45):
Booming clothes, chick fan tapashpets and casts and flow to bloom,
find chance to that just sounds like people talk German.
It really does.

Speaker 2 (38:55):
How Australian English sounds to non Australian English.

Speaker 3 (39:00):
Heres evil of rist at, d NA, trey luftan at
Twe talking here.

Speaker 2 (39:07):
But that's interesting And now let's do the English again
and realize there are no words here. But this is
how people hear us when they don't know what we're saying.

Speaker 10 (39:14):
One off glory of splent, wibbish, province, the ogle, glood, Harnish,
bloodham shanter, bluke, Rendel's sports keys, dowll of blocks and
trolley flobbish crews with.

Speaker 3 (39:21):
A lot of a lot of bishes. Yeah, it's just squabish, sloabish. Gleeps.
It almost sounds like the guy from the Muppets, the
chef Ebish slabbers slabish, remember the Swedish chef squabishlabsh interesting.

Speaker 2 (39:31):
Yeah, that it counts fun. That's at World Languages on
TikTok uh. But the Spanish thing, to you sounds exactly
the English thing exactly. I mean, yeah, it just sounds normal,
but no words.

Speaker 5 (39:43):
What's crazy about the English thing is like I feel
like all those should be words that we just don't
have because they do sound like English words.

Speaker 4 (39:51):
They didn't really sound like English words. They do, know,
they don't.

Speaker 3 (39:56):
Bobby Bone show. Sorry today. This story comes us from Washington.

Speaker 2 (40:02):
A forty year old man was upset on Sunday night,
mad about football, so he lit a fire in his apartment,
a real one, not like let a fire under somebody's butt.
He lit a real fire, yeah, and then he barricaded
himself inside. What gotta be a Cowboys fan, she didn't say.
And police arrive and there's a standoff and he's like,
the only.

Speaker 3 (40:22):
Way I'm coming out the only way I'm coming out
is if you give me a dairy queen blizzard. He
was on something, then what night of the week was it? Sunday?

Speaker 2 (40:33):
Okay, definitely probably a Cowboys fan. Bad loss, bad loss loss.
Probably what a blizzard made you feel better? I mean, sure,
this really makes you feel better. So what that's something
if you're a cop, you probably do right, you give
him one s it comes out. Yeah, So he got
a blizzard and he came out and they rested him.
They arrested all right, there you got, I'm lunchbox. That's
your bonehead story of the day. You can hire a

(40:55):
wedding nanny for a thousand bucks.

Speaker 4 (40:57):
What is she babysit kids that come to the wedding?

Speaker 2 (41:00):
Depending on the link of the event and how many
kids her team is watching, she charged one thousand bucks
to come to a wedding instead.

Speaker 3 (41:05):
Of like a wedding daycare.

Speaker 2 (41:07):
That's a great idea, Yeah, and it's so niche that
you're like, well, is that even needed? But if she's
like the only one doing it, and there are that
many weddings and there are young kids at weddings that
are just crying and spitting and stuff, is that what
they do. I'm learning they cry and that's what they do. Yeah,
pretty good, huh. She says that she has a background
in nutrition, child development, CPR certification, general knowledge of what

(41:29):
needs to satisfy the kids and keep them well behaved.
But she watches them at a wedding. That's a great idea.
That's a great like you know, tributary off the river.

Speaker 5 (41:41):
I feel like this could be a normal thing like there.
I don't know is the thing as apparent? When you
get invited to a wedding but they say no kids,
you kind of get like offended and it's difficult because like, well,
now we got to find a babysitter.

Speaker 2 (41:51):
But if they have a name, it offended little bit.
Why why it's not your event. We're a family like
like close, like say, like you know I had no
kids wedding.

Speaker 3 (42:01):
I know I got offended by them.

Speaker 5 (42:02):
Yeah, but like really it's stressful thinking like man, I
got to get a babysitter for the wedding. No, they
have an anny there.

Speaker 3 (42:10):
That's cool.

Speaker 2 (42:10):
You got to get a babysitter for anything you go to.
It's just your wife correct, yes, but just takes a
little extra stress off. It does cost a lot. Again,
a thousand bucks for the wedding, like the person's paying
for the wedding.

Speaker 7 (42:24):
Do the kids have to get dressed up like they're
going through a wedding or they can just be in
their pajamas?

Speaker 3 (42:27):
Not in here?

Speaker 5 (42:29):
Probably not. They're not part of the show on Little.

Speaker 7 (42:31):
Texas well, because I didn't know if it's like it's
a wedding where kids are already allowed, but if you
want your kid to go be with the nanny, but
it can also come out and dance if it wants,
or it can get food.

Speaker 3 (42:41):
Sounds like me talking about a good thing. I thought
it was a good idea. We're done. We'll see you
guys on Monday. By Everybody No Bobby Bone. Bobby Bone the.

Speaker 2 (42:54):
Bobby Bone Show theme song, written, produced and sang by
read Yarberry. You can find his instagram at reed Yarberry,
Scuba Steve executive producer, Raymond No, head of Production. I'm
Bobby Bones. My instagram is mister Bobby Bones. Thank you
for listening to the podcast.
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Hosts And Creators

Bobby Bones

Bobby Bones

Amy Brown

Amy Brown

Lunchbox

Lunchbox

Eddie Garcia

Eddie Garcia

Morgan Huelsman

Morgan Huelsman

Raymundo

Raymundo

Mike D

Mike D

Abby Anderson

Abby Anderson

Scuba Steve

Scuba Steve

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