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October 28, 2025 58 mins

Bobby reveals why he was invited to go back to Dancing with the Stars but the problem he has with the timing. We find out why Amy almost ended up being in the ER. Eddie shared the wild experience his son had where he almost got scammed in real life. Bobby shared his hot wedding take on what the couple should be responsible for paying when it comes to their guests. Can Amy win a prize in the Real Name Musician Game? Lunchbox also gets bad news as listeners diagnose the pain he is dealing with that doctors can't figure out.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
There we go come.

Speaker 2 (00:03):
Transmitting this gay Welcome to Tuesday show more in a studio.

Speaker 3 (00:16):
So, Eddie, your son took his car in for an
oil change.

Speaker 4 (00:19):
Yeah, I just needed an old change. He was over
three thousand miles. So he goes you warn him? No,
I just said, you know what you're doing. He's done
it before, and so I'm like, you know what you're doing.
Just head on over to that place right down the
street and you know, just to get your old change.
And then he calls me like three times in a row.
And that's why I know, like something's up, Like why
is he calling me?

Speaker 3 (00:36):
Somebody time he.

Speaker 4 (00:37):
Calls me and he says, Dad, Dad. They're saying my
car is completely messed up, like not only the oil change,
they need me to get my engine flushed, a new
air filter.

Speaker 5 (00:45):
And they said my battery is about to die. And
I was like, my bad, your battery's about to die.
And so I said, ask him, like how bad the
battery is?

Speaker 4 (00:52):
And then he like puts me on hold because back says,
they say that I may not make it.

Speaker 3 (00:56):
Home no way.

Speaker 4 (00:59):
So I go, no, there's no chance you drove over there,
no problem, it's right.

Speaker 5 (01:03):
Down the road. Just get your own change and come back.
He comes back. I have one of those battery testers
test the battery.

Speaker 6 (01:09):
It's perfect, there's nothing wrong with the battery.

Speaker 5 (01:12):
And the fact that they told him you may not
make it home.

Speaker 7 (01:15):
That's not so annoying because they saw a vulnerable young
adult he's seventeen years old, and thought, well, he's not
gonna know enough about it, so let's try to squeez
him for everything. They do the air filter thing where
they bring out the dirty air filter, checked it, and
I don't even They just get me on that.

Speaker 5 (01:30):
They compare it like here's a new one and here's yours.

Speaker 3 (01:33):
I'm not even sure the one that I go wof was
the one really in my car?

Speaker 5 (01:36):
Right?

Speaker 8 (01:36):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (01:36):
Yeah know, I think they would just.

Speaker 7 (01:37):
Have a dirty one back there they bring up and
be like, oh, do you want to keep driving with
this one?

Speaker 4 (01:41):
See I remember, like the air filter and then you know,
fill up your window your window washer fluid.

Speaker 3 (01:46):
Ye win, But that was like six bucks. I didn't mind.

Speaker 4 (01:51):
Washer fluid, but a new battery an engine flesh, like.

Speaker 8 (01:54):
You're not going to make it home.

Speaker 4 (01:56):
Like that's the one that got me. They said you
may not make it home, but they did say like,
I'm not the judge here, you know, like I'm not
an official mechanic, but you may not make it home.

Speaker 3 (02:05):
How does that make you feel about that place?

Speaker 5 (02:06):
Never going back? Boy?

Speaker 9 (02:08):
Why are you at a car place and they.

Speaker 8 (02:09):
Say I'm not an official mechanic.

Speaker 9 (02:11):
I don't you want a mechanic.

Speaker 5 (02:13):
They're just oil changers. Oh they're not okay, and like
I could put a new battery in. I don't think
you really need to be.

Speaker 9 (02:20):
A official mechanic. Okay, that's true.

Speaker 7 (02:22):
And also is there a such thing as an official mechanic?
I'm sure to specialized automobiles, like you probably get trained,
but do you is there just an all around here?

Speaker 5 (02:33):
Now?

Speaker 8 (02:33):
If you just a certificate, yes.

Speaker 3 (02:35):
If you just work on stuff, I think you're a mechanic.

Speaker 4 (02:38):
No, because a friend of mine he actually went to
school for it and he got certified as a mechanic.

Speaker 3 (02:42):
Probably, but specialized, but specialized in certain things, right, like
I know how to put this engine together? Yeah?

Speaker 7 (02:47):
I mean can't I just go out and work on
a car and be like, yeah, I'm kind of recreational mechanics.

Speaker 5 (02:50):
That's a good question. I don't know.

Speaker 3 (02:52):
So no more going to that place. No, we're done
with that. My body didn't fall for it. That sucks.

Speaker 5 (02:57):
I mean he said it was going to be like
three hundred dollars.

Speaker 3 (02:59):
Of course it was.

Speaker 7 (03:00):
And you know what, I probably got tricked two times
back in the day because I would fall for that crap.

Speaker 3 (03:05):
Wow, that's how bad mayor filter is. And I need
new tires.

Speaker 7 (03:08):
Yeah, I'll just take a new car, you guys, great point,
I'll take a new car.

Speaker 3 (03:12):
So what he learned from this.

Speaker 4 (03:13):
He learned that just go to the oil change to
get an oil change. Everything else we'll figure out later.

Speaker 3 (03:19):
Did he learned anything though, like bigger than that? Like macro?
Call your dad? Uh?

Speaker 5 (03:22):
Well yeah, I mean no, just yeah, call your dad dad.

Speaker 3 (03:26):
Okay.

Speaker 7 (03:26):
Amy had an issue too, she thought she was dying.
You swallowed a.

Speaker 8 (03:30):
Little teeny tiny chicken bone, which I made soup, but
to save time on the chicken, I just shredded up
a rotisserie chicken, and so in that process, I think
a little teeny tiny bone ended up in the soup
and then ended up in my mouth. But by the
time I realized it, because I sort of felt it,
but then I swallowed, and then it was too late.

(03:51):
It was sort of in my throat, and there was
nothing else I could do but just be like, Okay,
let's hope this is small enough and it's going to
be fine. So I take a gentle swallow and it
makes it down so that I'm like, okay, I'm fine now.
But what if it like does damage on the way down,
or when it gets to my intestines it starts like.

Speaker 9 (04:10):
Poking holes and stuff.

Speaker 8 (04:11):
I don't know. I just started to freak out that
the gentle swallow was the wrong move.

Speaker 3 (04:16):
Well, when it was in your mouth, you didn't think
to spit it out, No.

Speaker 8 (04:18):
It just sort of it was already in the back
of my throat. And then it's like the swallow just happened,
and I was like, okay, it's too late, Like I
don't know what else.

Speaker 3 (04:26):
To do, and so you consider going to the er.

Speaker 8 (04:28):
Well, I thought, what do I do here? So that's
when I went to google what do I do if
I swallowed a chicken bone?

Speaker 9 (04:35):
Like do I go to the ar?

Speaker 3 (04:36):
Okay, here you go, So.

Speaker 10 (04:38):
You probably don't need to go to the er if
you swallow a chicken bone. The things you worry about
swallowing are things that are really sharp or things that
are really long. If they're sharp, they can puncture the
intestines as they're working their way down. If they're really long,
they may not even make it past the stomach. You
got to figure most chicken bones you swallow are probably
going to be splinters off a chicken bone probably going
to pass with no problem. But if somehow you happen

(05:01):
to swallow a chicken bone that's longer than say three inches,
or a really big sharp piece, that's probably a reason
to go to the er and get a specialist there
to remove it from your stomach.

Speaker 8 (05:12):
So I knew that it was not that long and
it was probably more of a splinter like he said,
which that is from the University of Utah.

Speaker 9 (05:21):
It's so cool.

Speaker 8 (05:22):
I googled this and then it took me to their
website and they have something called the Health Minute with
a doctor explaining exactly what to do, and they have
tons of these like, whatever your scenario is, click the
Health Minute and a doctor's just telling you what to do.

Speaker 3 (05:34):
My luck with a chicken bone. It all goes down,
it's all doing good, doesn't cut anything up, and it
decides to get sideways, right, it's about to come out
the old bee hole.

Speaker 7 (05:42):
That's when it turns just sideways enough and I'm like,
all right, time to go there. That's my luck with
the chicken bone. Also, if you swallow over a three
inch chicken bone that you like, what were you.

Speaker 5 (05:56):
Doing with that chicken?

Speaker 8 (05:59):
I thought this through because like my kids, the way
they eat chicken, it's different than us. And I don't
know if it's just because like at the orphanage, like
they ate every single Like I said, it's like there's
two types of people. You kind of eat a little
bit of meat off the chicken bone, or you like
put it all in your mouth and suck everything off.
And that's just how they do it. And I was thinking,
what if you're in the process of trying to get

(06:20):
every piece of meat off that bone and someone says
something funny.

Speaker 3 (06:24):
Like a chicken wing, and I walk in through a
mouse and you're like.

Speaker 8 (06:28):
And then you like take a thing and then the
big bone just sort of like lodges its way back
there and you swallow it. That was the scenario I
went through in my head because I'm like, how does
that happen?

Speaker 3 (06:39):
Well, here's what we learned here. Don't trust old James.

Speaker 7 (06:42):
People never and if you swallow a chicken bone, a
pull out the tape measure sif it's blowed three inches.

Speaker 5 (06:48):
Right.

Speaker 3 (06:49):
I'm glad both of you guys came out of this thing. Okay, though, so.

Speaker 7 (06:53):
We talked about lunchboxes condition. He has some sort of
sharp pain near his hip, and all the doctors have
said we don't know what it is. Apparently he is
stumped medicine, and so we talked about it. Listeners have
weighed in. Here are the top answers. It's his gallbladder.
He needs an ultrasound.

Speaker 3 (07:09):
Oh, he may have diverticulitis, thank you. Another one, definitely
a hernia.

Speaker 8 (07:17):
Oh.

Speaker 7 (07:17):
Another one appendicitis because it can radiate to the left.
Another one, a colon oscopy would help his intestines.

Speaker 3 (07:24):
He may be dying.

Speaker 5 (07:25):
Oh wow.

Speaker 3 (07:26):
Another one.

Speaker 7 (07:27):
It's ass This muscle likely injured it during soccer. We
have a doctor though, that left his voicemail.

Speaker 5 (07:35):
This is doctor John.

Speaker 11 (07:37):
Sounds like you got diverticulitis. There will be one hundred
and fifty dollars please pay on the way out.

Speaker 5 (07:42):
Okay, you think.

Speaker 8 (07:43):
He's a real doctor, No, I mean, who knows.

Speaker 3 (07:45):
I don't think he would say doctor John.

Speaker 7 (07:47):
That sounds like a DJ from the fifties, doctor John
playing all the hits. I think it'd be like, this
is doctor John, doctor Wilson. He's a last name.

Speaker 8 (07:53):
So is the theory behind the diver tickulitis that lunchboxes
age is because he's gone to see profession? So why
haven't they suggested it? Is it because it doesn't match
his age?

Speaker 7 (08:05):
Diverticulitis? It is inflammation in the colon.

Speaker 12 (08:10):
Yeh.

Speaker 8 (08:10):
Like if it's that he doesn need to get a colnosky.
He shouldn't eat like popcorn, like Eddie, he shouldn't eat
strawberries or broccoli.

Speaker 3 (08:18):
Wax your thoughts.

Speaker 13 (08:20):
Good news is I don't eat popcorn very rarely. Don't
eat strawberries. That's what was the other one?

Speaker 8 (08:27):
Amy Uh broccoli?

Speaker 3 (08:29):
I don't eat broccoli.

Speaker 5 (08:30):
Huh. Maybe that's the problem.

Speaker 3 (08:32):
I don't need them. Yeah, so I don't know. I
don't need them.

Speaker 8 (08:37):
Well, I just know that those are certain things. Like
my mother in law had it once they were staying
with us, and now that I think about it, she
had to she was in so much pain, she had
to go to the er and turns out it was diverticulites.
It can always also be brought on by stress.

Speaker 3 (08:50):
Well that ain't it? Broccoli and no stress? Okay, what
do you eat a lot of sprees? Yeah? I do
eat sprees. Go and check out uh diverticket.

Speaker 7 (09:02):
It called.

Speaker 3 (09:05):
And it's like it's colon.

Speaker 5 (09:08):
Yeah, he did say is colon hurt? Right?

Speaker 8 (09:11):
Well, he said left zone.

Speaker 3 (09:12):
He said, would you rub his colon?

Speaker 5 (09:14):
He didn't say that.

Speaker 3 (09:15):
See if that would help.

Speaker 9 (09:17):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (09:18):
Lunchbox is in San Antonio this morning because what we
were told Lunchbox was that you went to go speak
at a UTSA event.

Speaker 5 (09:25):
How cool man.

Speaker 7 (09:26):
We were like, wow, they're asking him to come back
and speak. And then later we found out as you
were hosting a concert.

Speaker 13 (09:33):
Yeah, it was a fundraiser for UTSA Athletics and it
was Turnpike Troubadours and I got to host it. So
UTSA basically said, man, you are famous, you are our alumni.
Will you come help us raise money?

Speaker 3 (09:46):
We heard it was the radio station is the one
that did it?

Speaker 13 (09:49):
Yeah, But then UTSA was a part of it, and
so they're pretty proud of me that I went to
UTSA because I met someone that works in athletic department're like, oh.

Speaker 3 (09:58):
We had no idea you went to UTS.

Speaker 7 (10:00):
I was like, yeah, no, wait, that doesn't make sense.
Those two sentences didn't didn't go together. That they were
proud of it, but then they didn't know.

Speaker 3 (10:07):
No, no, But then he.

Speaker 13 (10:08):
Said, oh, that's really makes us proud. That's really cool.
Thanks for helping him spread the word about the university.
So it kind of like turned around where at first
he didn't know, but then he was excited.

Speaker 8 (10:19):
He didn't know, but when he found out he knew.

Speaker 3 (10:21):
Interesting, he was exciting.

Speaker 8 (10:24):
Did you tell him that you didn't graduate, Well, that.

Speaker 3 (10:27):
Doesn't matter, Yeah, details right, that cares well.

Speaker 13 (10:30):
You know, No, you can still be an alumni as
long as you went to the university.

Speaker 3 (10:34):
Is that true, Like if you just went for a
few hours. Yeah, I think as long as you attend
that Really, it sounds like that's true.

Speaker 8 (10:41):
How many hours makes you an alumni?

Speaker 5 (10:44):
It's a good question.

Speaker 8 (10:45):
Because I've taken three hours at Texas Tech and.

Speaker 3 (10:49):
Them teck them.

Speaker 8 (10:50):
But my degrees from Texas A and M and got
a shout out at Southern Pines Community College as well.

Speaker 5 (10:56):
We don't know that one.

Speaker 7 (10:57):
Yeah, yeah, but what do you see as the official definition.

Speaker 3 (11:03):
Of being an alumni?

Speaker 5 (11:04):
MIC?

Speaker 3 (11:04):
You have to get a degree. Okay, oh you do. Yeah,
you're not an alumni.

Speaker 5 (11:10):
That's sad man.

Speaker 3 (11:12):
You don't become an alumni based on the number of
credit hours by graduating from the institution. The specific number
of credit hours acquired depends on the degree level, and
then it goes through everything.

Speaker 7 (11:22):
Wow, I thought he was an alumni. We're gonna take
a call about someone saying yes to move is colon?

Speaker 13 (11:27):
Yes?

Speaker 3 (11:28):
What?

Speaker 7 (11:28):
Okay, let's go to Remington. Hey, Remington, Yes, what's up, buddy?
Tell me your story.

Speaker 14 (11:36):
Oh.

Speaker 1 (11:38):
I had diverticulatis, first diagnosed when I was like twenty four,
and I deal with it all up until like two
years ago. I finally had surgery on it.

Speaker 12 (11:50):
And I'm thirty nine now, so.

Speaker 1 (11:52):
Up until thirty seven. So fixt inches of my colon?

Speaker 8 (11:58):
Oh yeah, not everybody.

Speaker 1 (12:00):
Yeah, they removed six inches of my coal and reattached
it and I haven't had any problem since lunch.

Speaker 7 (12:07):
Fack, before you come back, Why don't you stop in
and get that done? I had in one of those
minute clinics.

Speaker 5 (12:11):
Yeah.

Speaker 13 (12:12):
Yeah, I don't know if they would be able to
do that at a minute clinic, but a surgery sounds
a little extreme for what I'm feeling right, that seems crazy.

Speaker 3 (12:22):
Well, medicine can't figure him out. They can't.

Speaker 13 (12:25):
I've stumped the doctors, Like the medical I'm like a
case study.

Speaker 3 (12:30):
And I'm telling you.

Speaker 13 (12:30):
When I went to the hernia doctor, she couldn't figure
it out. So she went and got another doctor to
come in and look at me, and that doctor couldn't
figure out. And they both just put their arms up.
They're like, we're stumped.

Speaker 3 (12:41):
You can go now. We don't know see your way out?

Speaker 8 (12:46):
Are you journaling and writing down like every time you
have a pain.

Speaker 3 (12:48):
The question is that not journaling anything? He didn't give
a calendar.

Speaker 8 (12:52):
Okay, well this is this would be helpful information if
he stumped doctors. We need to start writing down every
time there's a pain and then see if you can
associate any similarities in the pain, like oh, it's because
I ate this, or it's because I did this move or.

Speaker 3 (13:08):
Maybe then I would be writing down every second of
my day. No, it's could you read us some of
your journal? Amy should have said.

Speaker 8 (13:13):
Yeah, sorry, can you read us some of your Yeah?

Speaker 13 (13:15):
Okay, I got off the couch. It hurt, I laid
down in bed, it hurt. I got up to go
to the bathroom.

Speaker 7 (13:20):
It hurt, and it hurts like it's at number six
on that body scale.

Speaker 3 (13:24):
But where is that again? It's like to the left of.

Speaker 8 (13:26):
His belly button, he said, to the left of his
belly but.

Speaker 3 (13:29):
Above his hip section.

Speaker 15 (13:31):
Six.

Speaker 5 (13:31):
Got it.

Speaker 7 (13:32):
We got a lot of people now they're experts in
the water doctors. Yeah, yeah, yeah, well I don't know.
But now my Valley doctor John Wallace, is on Wallace
has this disease.

Speaker 3 (13:42):
Hey Wallace, good morning, studio morning.

Speaker 14 (13:49):
I've been living with darmatico letters about five years now,
and the pain is pretty bad. It is like lower abdomen,
left side around like sigmal with colon is where it's
really at. And uh, if that's what it is, you
would have to get a CT scan for it to uh,

(14:09):
for for them to see it.

Speaker 5 (14:11):
Okay, didn't he already get one of those?

Speaker 3 (14:13):
I don't know, he said. He walked in and both
doctors are like, we don't know.

Speaker 5 (14:18):
Never say anything like this, even showing it to that
doctor's office.

Speaker 3 (14:21):
Okay, Wallis, thank you. I appreciate that. Lunchbox. What's your
next move?

Speaker 13 (14:25):
I have an appointment with the gastrotologist.

Speaker 3 (14:28):
Plus uh, I don't know how you say it.

Speaker 13 (14:31):
That would be on Wednesday, because I already had a
CT scan and they couldn't find anything on the CT scan.
So everybody saying, oh, so I'm gonna ask him to
give me an MRI. I I don't know what else
you can ask for a pregnancy thing.

Speaker 3 (14:45):
What do they do their ultrasound?

Speaker 8 (14:46):
Yeah, you might need to be prepared for a finger.

Speaker 7 (14:51):
I'm just saying, oh, yes, yeah, maybe, and possibly the
middle one, because that's the longest one. It was the
if it's well, if it's really up there, they got
to go with the middle ones.

Speaker 5 (15:02):
They need to get the knuckles.

Speaker 9 (15:04):
Maybe it's a few of them.

Speaker 3 (15:07):
Oh, they may go two things.

Speaker 5 (15:08):
Oh my goodness.

Speaker 8 (15:09):
I don't know. I'm just saying he may not be
prepared for that.

Speaker 3 (15:13):
Are you ready for that? You may need to warm
up that you had this strong finger.

Speaker 8 (15:17):
I don't want you to be scared.

Speaker 3 (15:18):
No, I have not. I may not. I may cancel
my appointment.

Speaker 8 (15:21):
We've been there.

Speaker 7 (15:22):
Wow, Okay, lunchboxes in San Antonio this morning, you guys
a we can hold off on the calls regarding guessing
what's wrong with him for now. I just wanted to
read back a lot of what our listeners thought and said,
and then obviously doctor John's call. Hey it's doctor John.
That'd be one fifty. We'll come back in a second.

(15:42):
Let's go to New York and talk to Erica. Erica,
you're on the show.

Speaker 12 (15:46):
Good morning, Good morning, High Studio.

Speaker 3 (15:49):
What's happening?

Speaker 12 (15:52):
So I was just you were talking about expensive costs
of weddings and being in weddings. A few years ago,
my sister in law got married. My husband had received
the text message from her about six months before saying
we're not going to do a traditional wedding. Instead, we're
going to do a destination wedding and only in the
white family who want to go and pay on for

(16:14):
this all exclusive vacation. And we looked it up and
it was about sixty five hundred dollars.

Speaker 3 (16:20):
Yeah, I put you in a bad place, I guess
said earlier. I don't like it.

Speaker 7 (16:24):
I think if you're having a wedding for everybody coming,
every cost should be covered except the gifts they're going
to buy you. I think that's it, because now it's
costing a thousand bucks to be in a wedding, a
destination wedding of costing three thousand dollars. If I can
invite it to a wedding, all I want to have
to pay for is the gift. Otherwise, don't be mad
if I don't come. I think it's weird societal pressure

(16:45):
we've now put on weddings. I think the wedding that
Amy was in where they were like, just wear something black.
Now we're talking. So yeah, I'm over it. No more
weddings for me.

Speaker 5 (16:56):
And your wedding was cool.

Speaker 8 (16:57):
Yea.

Speaker 5 (16:57):
When you did yours, I was.

Speaker 3 (16:58):
Like, now we're talking, Yeah, that's rare, that's rare.

Speaker 4 (17:03):
I still kept my tucks, like you bought me a
tux for your wedding, dude, that's awesome.

Speaker 7 (17:06):
Yeah, I was pretty legit, but I think that's I
wouldn't have had a wedding and said, guys, you need
to go pay for something.

Speaker 3 (17:12):
So it was like, since I want this, I'm.

Speaker 7 (17:14):
Going to pay for I don't think everybody can do that,
but I don't think you should have a wedding and
then expect your people to pay something to come to
your wedding.

Speaker 3 (17:20):
It's the dumbest thing ever heard. That's all. I'm good.

Speaker 7 (17:23):
Now let's go to Kaylee in Wichita. Who's on the phone, Hey, Kaylee,
you're on the show mourn Studio.

Speaker 16 (17:32):
Well, I just wanted to touch on lunch Box, not
truly being alumni. Yeah, so like im mid thirties, I
worked full time to very active teenage boys in sports,
also going to school full time in the evenings online.
I officially graduate in May with my bachelor's and strategic leadership.

(17:56):
And my advice to Lunchbox is just do it. Go back.
Finish it. You can say you finish it, and I
think feels so good when you're done.

Speaker 7 (18:02):
He only has one class, he has three hours, and
he's done. But he has said many times he doesn't
need it, so why would he go back?

Speaker 2 (18:08):
Right?

Speaker 13 (18:09):
Correct, I don't need it, so I'm not going back.

Speaker 3 (18:12):
Just do you care to say that you finished it?

Speaker 5 (18:14):
No?

Speaker 3 (18:15):
I mean I walked the stage.

Speaker 13 (18:16):
I got pictures in cap and gown in front of
the compilcation center. I got pictures of me walking across
the stage. So no one's really gonna be like, hey,
let me see here to plow them up. I mean
for the Theater of the Mind, I already graduated. People
see it like, oh he graduated.

Speaker 7 (18:31):
But I think I think that's the difference in you
and a lot of other people. You're only thinking graduation
is for other people. She's saying, if maybe you should
make this important to you, because to you, it's like, well,
people have already seen me graduate, so that's all the matters.
I think it's more of a is there not part
of you that feels incomplete because you didn't finish something.

Speaker 3 (18:49):
It doesn't matter what it is. It just happens to
be this and you're so close.

Speaker 13 (18:52):
No, I don't really care about completing something. It's like
when I bring out a Lego set and I start
building something and like halfway through, I'm like, all right,
I'm bored.

Speaker 3 (18:59):
I don't care about going.

Speaker 13 (19:00):
Back and finish and didn't you know it's like okay, cool,
you know whatever.

Speaker 3 (19:03):
And this.

Speaker 13 (19:04):
I went to college because I was going to be
on the real world. It was a backup plan to
get a piece of paper. I was going to get famous.
Well guess what, I didn't graduate and I got famous,
So no need to go back?

Speaker 7 (19:16):
He said what he said, No boy, he's crazy. Yeah,
well he's three hours short. I mean he could do
it from home, but it doesn't matter to him, So
it's not a priority, so therefore he doesn't prioritize it.
I understand it's not me, but I understand. Okay, thank
you Hayley for the call. Thanks you play me this voicemail, Raymundo.

Speaker 11 (19:37):
The lady called in and said that she's never looked
you guys up. And that's how it was, probably like
six or seven years ago. But I finally decided to
look everyone up one day, and all I will say
is everyone met my expectations. Eddie was the only one
that I was like, oh dang, that's what he looks like,
but not in a bad way. But everyone else, oh,

(20:00):
you know, like kind of makes sense, you know, but
Eddie threw me off. So anyways, love.

Speaker 4 (20:04):
The show, But was it like my because I'm Mexican,
I'm Hispanic, it's probably it right.

Speaker 8 (20:09):
Well, no, I don't we talk about that.

Speaker 5 (20:11):
Yeah, maybe you missed those parts.

Speaker 3 (20:14):
I wonder what it was that made him go, what
the heck with Eddie? That's funny of all people, give
me this next voicemail.

Speaker 11 (20:22):
Just listening to some of the older podcasts, I'm curious
if there's anything left over from that Amazon ballon. I
love the show. Listen every day.

Speaker 3 (20:29):
Thanks Lautchbox.

Speaker 13 (20:31):
Oh, yes, there's still items if you'd like to buy it.
We still have items up. We have like wood that
goes under a mattress. Don't really even understand what it is.
We have some hunting thing. It's like I don't even know.
It's like it's retail values for like one hundred and
fifty dollars.

Speaker 5 (20:46):
What is it?

Speaker 3 (20:49):
Where are you keeping this stuff? It's in my bedroom.

Speaker 7 (20:53):
You're keeping all of this Amazon Palace stuff that we
bought it was all returns in your bedroom.

Speaker 3 (20:59):
Yeah, I don't have a garage. Huh wow, you know what,
just throw it out? No, no, no, no, we can't.
I'm not giving up. So that's the problem. He's held
this stuff for years.

Speaker 4 (21:11):
That's our business though he still has that. What like
you staw have a website right, lunch Box.

Speaker 13 (21:15):
Oh yeah, it's called Facebook Marketplace. I don't have my
own website. Oh my gosh, that would have been so
smart if I had just come up with my own website.

Speaker 4 (21:23):
Well whatever, Well, what I'm saying is that's still up
on the market. If somebody buys it and he throws
it away, like, what's he gonna say?

Speaker 8 (21:29):
Like, let's hope he doesn't have it listed as some
hunting thing, like, well.

Speaker 3 (21:32):
I have the exact details. I'm written down what it is.

Speaker 13 (21:35):
But when you're going off the top of my head,
I mean, some guy offered me fifteen dollars for it,
and I was like, click.

Speaker 3 (21:39):
Rocks, why not take it for fifteen dollars. That's so
much better than zero dollars. And that's all we're getting
for the stuff.

Speaker 13 (21:46):
I understand, but it is worth one hundred and fifty.

Speaker 3 (21:49):
It's not. It's worth what you get from it.

Speaker 13 (21:52):
And he goes, I'll check back with you in a
few weeks, and he checked back with me, and I
was like, nope, And then he's checked back with me
like five times.

Speaker 3 (21:58):
Sell it.

Speaker 13 (21:59):
And I'm not budgeting on it. I'm gonna make us
one hundred dollars on that sucker, all right?

Speaker 3 (22:03):
Play me.

Speaker 17 (22:03):
The final voicemail, Bobby said that his New Year's resolution
was that he was going to be late to work
at some point this year an hour to November and
I'm just curious, has he in fact been late to work? Bye?

Speaker 5 (22:17):
Nope, nope.

Speaker 4 (22:18):
I wait, every day, dude, I pull up to the
garage every day and like.

Speaker 3 (22:21):
It's today, the day he's gonna be late. Nope, So
what's up? What's up with you?

Speaker 8 (22:27):
No? No, this is about you. What's up with that?
I mean if you was your goal?

Speaker 18 (22:31):
Yeah, you said you're in the morning, and I step
outside and I take a deep breath, then I get
real high. Nah, scream at the top of my lungs.
What's going on?

Speaker 5 (22:42):
Was it just that you're gonna be late or you're
gonna miss the whole day?

Speaker 3 (22:45):
Because that'd be better late, that'd be weird. Why would well? No,
if I missed the whole day, I'm dead. Come looking
for me. It's not just a bit. No, I haven't
been able to be late yet. Anyway. You can leave
us a voicemail anytime.

Speaker 8 (22:59):
Just go over to been able? What like you haven't
been able to be late?

Speaker 17 (23:04):
Oh?

Speaker 5 (23:04):
I haven't.

Speaker 8 (23:04):
Well what what what is going to make you able
other than like you were Like I feel like your
doctor sort of prescribed this to you.

Speaker 1 (23:12):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (23:13):
I don't know about that doctor. Yeah, because it can't
be like a real reason.

Speaker 5 (23:17):
It's just gonna be like I'm gonna be late to it.

Speaker 3 (23:19):
It's like I have to like look at the clock.

Speaker 8 (23:21):
It's a purpose.

Speaker 7 (23:22):
I'm like gritting my teeth and sweating and not getting
in the car driving to work.

Speaker 3 (23:27):
There's no reason. There's no reason. That's I thought, there's
a dumb diagnosis.

Speaker 8 (23:30):
So diagnosis.

Speaker 3 (23:31):
Yeah, I've been diagnosed being late, and I don't like it.
I've not been late. It's all.

Speaker 8 (23:37):
If I'm late, there's still time.

Speaker 3 (23:41):
There's not.

Speaker 8 (23:42):
But do you remember you were like, I'm gonna do it.

Speaker 3 (23:44):
Yeah, you were all excited about it. I was not
excited about it.

Speaker 5 (23:47):
You were You're like, I'm gonna do it. I'm gonna
do it.

Speaker 7 (23:48):
It's a stupid segment. Hey call us and leave a
voicemail if you want. Eight seven seven seventy seven, Bobby.
It's the same as our phone number, Like you can
call us now a lancer. But anytime, day or night
you listen to the podcast eight seven seven seventy seven Bobby.

Speaker 3 (24:09):
Anonymous, sin bar, there's a question to.

Speaker 7 (24:13):
Me, Hello, Bobby Bones. I've lived in my house for
almost twenty years. Every Halloween I turned the place into
a full on haunted house. My kids are teenagers now,
but I still go out do fog, machine lights, sound effects,
big graveyard display. It's kind of become a neighborhood tradition.

(24:36):
I've never had a single complaint until now. I got
a letter from the HOA saying the display violates the
bylaws and it has to come down or I'll be fined.
The next meeting isn't until mid November, which means Halloween
will be over by then, but I want to keep
up all my decorations until then. One because I have
and two out of spite. I'm convinced it's my new

(24:57):
next door neighbor. My wife wants me to let it go,
but I'm fear Yes, should I confront the neighbor or
just let it ride or take them down? Find Halloween Harry.
So it's probably the neighbor. If no one's ever complained.

Speaker 3 (25:10):
Do you have a new neighbor?

Speaker 7 (25:11):
Yeah, that's annoying. So this is what I would do,
and then I can say what you should probably do.
What I would do is a letter ride. Here's the
thing about a letter. You don't know what's in unless
you open it. That's how we used to do bills.
We couldn't pay them back in the day. You just
don't open it. I'm not saying no, but that's.

Speaker 5 (25:30):
What you did.

Speaker 3 (25:31):
You didn't open it.

Speaker 7 (25:32):
If you got a bill and you know you couldn't
pay it, you just didn't open it, And so I
would do the same thing, or I would claim the
letter never got to me in the HIA like I did,
I never saw it.

Speaker 3 (25:42):
You're probably going to get fined.

Speaker 7 (25:44):
You're probably gonna get a fifty dollars fine, one hundred
dollars fine, whatever the case is. And then you're probably
gonna be told this meeting you can't do it next year.
And I don't know if you can ask to actually
find out where the complaint came from, because if you can,
for sure find out where the complaint came from, I
would have a conversation, not a prontation with the neighbor,
because it's probably that neighbor, but you do not know

(26:04):
for sure. So I definitely wouldn't fold it all, pack
it all in and put it in the house.

Speaker 3 (26:09):
If you've been doing this for twenty years, oh.

Speaker 9 (26:11):
Yeah, that's a long time.

Speaker 3 (26:12):
It could also be somebody new on the HOA board too.

Speaker 7 (26:14):
It's why I don't just want to go right after
the neighbor, because you go out to the neighbor, they
didn't do it. Now there's a new tense relationship and
it turns out somebody that just got on the HOA
board is the one that decided they didn't like your display.

Speaker 3 (26:26):
So there are lots of things here. That's why I
would leave it up.

Speaker 7 (26:29):
Again, I'm not saying that's it's going to come with sacrifice,
probably financially. But you can also say you never saw
the letter, like, prove I saw it. How do they
prove you saw something? Can't can't they can't get in
your eyeballs?

Speaker 9 (26:42):
Huh I heard you on the mail bag?

Speaker 4 (26:46):
No, just kidding, synonymous, Yeah, yeah, that's what I don't know.

Speaker 8 (26:50):
Yeah, I say, yeah, I'm with you, like, let it
ride and pay the fine. But you also can be like,
yeah I saw the letter, I'm letting it ride.

Speaker 3 (26:56):
No, no, claim you didn't see the letter.

Speaker 8 (26:58):
No, because then you're like, no, just maybe they'll never
ask you.

Speaker 9 (27:02):
Just let it ride and take the fine.

Speaker 7 (27:04):
What I would do is let it ride, take the fine,
and then I would try to find who is the
one that doesn't like it. How do you do that
but in a in a non confrontational way. Yeah, you're
gonna have to ask and act like you understand. I mean,
like I totally understand. I would just like to work
through what and as soon as I say, yeah, it
was me, then you go to town on them.

Speaker 9 (27:26):
No, you come up with a compromise.

Speaker 7 (27:27):
See, like I said, that's what I would do versus
what you would do. I think you have to find
out who it is, though, or you won't get to
do it next year. Yeah, but I would leave it up,
address it later, pay the fine. Claim you never saw it.

Speaker 9 (27:39):
Say you can say you saw it. What does it better?

Speaker 8 (27:42):
Just be like I saw it, and I've chosen to
take the fine.

Speaker 3 (27:46):
Find me, Marshaun Lynch.

Speaker 8 (27:49):
I'm just here.

Speaker 3 (27:51):
Fine, okay, whatever, we all agree there to leave it up.
In twenty years, leave it up. Yeah, he stopped being
weirdos all right there, you go, close it up. This
person worked at Avis Rental Cars and they stole allegedly
forty seven vehicles from their job and started their own
rental car business.

Speaker 5 (28:11):
That's gutsy.

Speaker 7 (28:12):
Here is Chief Justice Baum talking about the man accused
of doing this.

Speaker 3 (28:15):
Here you go.

Speaker 19 (28:16):
There was no point, at any point that we'd covered
in our investigation that there was any attempt by this
employee to bring the vehicles back.

Speaker 3 (28:22):
I know that he did.

Speaker 19 (28:24):
Have some insider knowledge that others wouldn't have had that
kind of made it a little bit easier than it
would have been for a normal person to steal these cars.
He was renting them out and then they were continuously
being used until they were put in the law enforcement
system and then stopped by a police officer or a
law enforcement agency to get them.

Speaker 7 (28:39):
How brave brave in the way of like, I wouldn't
have the guts to do that because but he had
to learn it from somebody else. So in my mind,
there's somebody actually getting away with this scheme because he
learned it from someone else that's doing it. That goes, hey,
since you work here, you know you can also do this.
That blew my mind. Here's another one that blew my mind.
And weddings in general kind of irritated me because I

(29:01):
think a wedding should be like a birthday party, where
I don't think just to just to come to any
party you should have to like spend money. I don't
think you have to have to go to a wedding.

Speaker 8 (29:11):
You should have to spend money unless it's a destination.

Speaker 7 (29:14):
But even then there shouldn't be pressure, even like for bride'smaids,
for airplane like, if you have a destination wedding and
you're inviting people, they should pay for them to come.

Speaker 9 (29:23):
What.

Speaker 3 (29:24):
Yeah, I said it because people.

Speaker 7 (29:26):
Don't have the money to do that. Now, all of
a sudden, the pressure to go to a destination.

Speaker 9 (29:30):
There was no pressure.

Speaker 7 (29:31):
Yes, there is no, Yes, there is no. You don't
think someone's like that. You're kind of mildly close to
we're getting married and the Bahamas, we're inviting you.

Speaker 3 (29:39):
You're like, I don't know if we could. We have
to stretch to do it. Even people are stretching to
do that.

Speaker 9 (29:43):
Yeah, I think you would understand.

Speaker 8 (29:44):
If someone has to stretch, then they're not gonna be
able to make it.

Speaker 7 (29:47):
Here is a clip from CBS Morning talking about being
a bridesmaid and that it's like two to five thousand
dollars to be a bridesmaid, especially at a destination wedding,
according to breakdowns from.

Speaker 3 (29:57):
Sylviel and brides Magazine. Are you ready for this already?
You do? Average cost to be a bridesmaid's two thousand dollars? Yeah,
two thousand dollars.

Speaker 19 (30:06):
And if that's it's a local wedding, if it's a destination,
that's a local wedding.

Speaker 3 (30:10):
Yes, bro, that's a local wedding. If you're talking about a.

Speaker 4 (30:14):
Destination wedding, it's three to five thousand dollars.

Speaker 3 (30:18):
I don't want to spend five to be your bridesmaid
suit me. Yeah, I know.

Speaker 8 (30:22):
And it's kind of hard to.

Speaker 3 (30:23):
The climb it is. That's my point.

Speaker 7 (30:25):
There's a pressure to it, and all of a sudden,
now you're going into debt to go to somebody's wedding.
I think if you're coming to my wedding, other than
like the gift, what are you gonna pay forty bucks
for a blender?

Speaker 3 (30:35):
Thank you? Other than that, it's like and then you
got a year for the blender, Like that's too much.
We have to stop that.

Speaker 7 (30:40):
We have to stop asking people to be a part
of things and expecting them to pay to be a
part of our thing.

Speaker 4 (30:45):
Is what goes into that price the dress and the trip.

Speaker 8 (30:48):
Well, probably the bachelorette party, fly hotel, the.

Speaker 3 (30:53):
Dress, possibly makeup.

Speaker 8 (30:55):
I don't know how I got to two thousand for
a local wedding, I would imagine, And it's just all
the festivities that you and then festivities the bridesmaids rally
together and get the bride a gift or they cover
stuff for her. Yeah, I've okay, So I've been a
bridesmaid probably five times in the last six years, and yes,
you spend every bit of that money. You have flights,
you have stuff you buy for the bride. You have
your own hair and makeup you have to pay for.

(31:17):
You have a dress you have to buy, you have
trips you have to go on, the bridal party, the
wedding itself.

Speaker 15 (31:22):
There's Yeah, there's a lot of money that you spend
just because you're also paying for the bride.

Speaker 9 (31:28):
Even on the bachelorette trip.

Speaker 15 (31:29):
You're paying for the bride to not have to pay
for her food and her drinks and stuff like that.

Speaker 7 (31:34):
So there should be nothing that you invite people to
with the expectation they have to stretch their budget to
come to your thing.

Speaker 8 (31:40):
Well traditionally speaking though, like being a bridesmaid, that's just
it's sort of it's rare, I know in your case,
like y'all paid for the bridesmaid's dresses and the groom's stuff.

Speaker 9 (31:51):
Yeah, yeah, common, that's not common.

Speaker 4 (31:56):
I know, but it's your party.

Speaker 7 (32:00):
When whenever I get down in times like this, I
think w W D R D O.

Speaker 9 (32:08):
Dylan. That would director b doub would d d R D.

Speaker 8 (32:20):
Us would not?

Speaker 3 (32:21):
Darius Rutger your d R somebody's d R d R
D would do?

Speaker 8 (32:27):
Dolly?

Speaker 5 (32:28):
What would Dolly something do?

Speaker 3 (32:30):
D R? Do you know what Russell Dickerson with the
letters are mixed up like Morgan? No, I don't know.

Speaker 8 (32:41):
I thought it was that would Dolly really do?

Speaker 3 (32:43):
But no, that's good? What would I would.

Speaker 9 (32:49):
W W d R D d R D yeah, d
R d R Dominican Republic?

Speaker 3 (32:56):
What the Dominican Republican do? What would Wood? Dave Ramsey?
Dude a bunch of money on a stupid dress and
he would call it stupid? Yes, stupid, that's yes. Did
you have to put on your credit card? That's stupid?
Longer you are an idiotol, then I guess you have to.

Speaker 8 (33:14):
Decline being a bridesmaid if you can't if.

Speaker 3 (33:16):
You're stretching your budget.

Speaker 7 (33:17):
Yes, that's why I think people shouldn't ask people to
do things where they have to stretch at all.

Speaker 8 (33:21):
So when I was in a wedding about like a
year and a half ago or so, something I thought
she did was really cool is she did have the
bridesmaids in all black, but you could wear whatever black
dress you wanted. So if you already owned a black dress,
good or if you wanted to go, it didn't matter
the style. It just needed to be black. And you
could wear your own black heels and your own black
dress and boom and that that made it really easy

(33:44):
because also I bought a new black dress for it.
But I've been able to wear it like twice since
because it's such a staple piece in my closet.

Speaker 3 (33:52):
Now w W D R D got it now Letters
to live by not Russell, Dickerson or Dickerson Russell or
D'Angelo ros or Dolly Row, Dolly Rarten or Dominican Republican.
It's time for the good news, Bobby.

Speaker 7 (34:10):
A pair of Rookie police officers saved a ten month
old baby who was choking at his home. Bodycam footage
shows the mom handing the boy to one of the officers,
who starts to pat the baby on the baby's back,
but inn like a weird way with like the bottom
of the palm. It looks like another officer holds a
baby and they got it, like they the baby lived.
And I guess there's a specific way, and I guess

(34:33):
you can't hand like a baby really hard.

Speaker 5 (34:36):
Fingers, everything's gentle. Yeah, I should learn this stuff. I
gotta baby.

Speaker 3 (34:41):
We have a baby coming soon.

Speaker 7 (34:42):
But yeah, you see how like calm these cops are
on that the bodycam, which is pretty cool. And the officers,
both with less than two years in the job, had
recently completed the uh CPR baby training that helps.

Speaker 3 (34:55):
Yeah, that's pretty crazy.

Speaker 7 (34:57):
Police say the child was found unresponsive due to an
airway obstruction, but quick action made the difference from the
New York post. My wife had asked me the other day,
she said, do you know how often she's twizzling me
that you should burp a baby? And I said, I
don't know about I don't know once a month. She
said that is not correct. I said, how awful was I?

(35:17):
She said every meal time they eat. Okay, well, there
you go, all right, that's what it's all about. That
was telling me something good. Dylan Ephron is on Dancing
with the Stars this season. It's zac Efron's little brother,
but he's bigger than he is, but younger brother. He
broke his nose during rehearsals for the show, and so

(35:38):
I broke a tooth during rehearsal, same thing. There's just
too many elbows and arms swinging around, and if it
hits you, I could see where I could explode a nose,
like I'm trying to hit me in the tooth. It
was my fault, obviously, but I had to go and
get a tooth replaced during it. But that show is
hard on the body, Like I tore my shoulder when
I fell. I got something run by you guys, now

(35:59):
that I think about it. So I got invited to
go back in two weeks to the show because there
if you were on the show, the whole audience is
going to be people that were on the show. So
not sure if they're like tearing this, you know, champions
up front. I don't know what they're doing. But I
got invited to go back and be a part of
that night. The only problem is I have ankle surgery

(36:24):
and then it's like five or six days later and
I'd be on crutches. Like do I want to fly
across the country on crutches go into the theater?

Speaker 3 (36:34):
Yeah? Yes, one doesn't. Doesn't it like explode your ankle
if you fly with with the altitude.

Speaker 9 (36:40):
And all that, Like all of a sudden maybe some
compression talks on or something.

Speaker 3 (36:45):
And then also do I want to have to go
on crutches?

Speaker 5 (36:48):
Yeah, they're not going to see the crutches on TV
right like you'll be sitting.

Speaker 7 (36:52):
No, but it's just like the whole thing, Like and
also my wife's not going to go because she's pregnant.

Speaker 5 (36:57):
So who am I going to go with?

Speaker 8 (37:00):
Well, you'll know people there is uh Sharna.

Speaker 5 (37:03):
Going to go, but to help them on and off
the plane.

Speaker 3 (37:04):
It's the whole thing, Like I need I get special
assistance up front. I go. You know, like anybody did
special needs, you go first. Here, I am whatever they say,
I go. I just feel like it's a lot of
I don't even know if you're fully healed by the
I mean, I mean.

Speaker 9 (37:21):
I think it's cool. You got to invite back.

Speaker 3 (37:23):
I had to do too, And I should I just
move the surgery, Yes, slide the right. I don't think
it's a dating app.

Speaker 8 (37:31):
No, not white. When you're on the calendar, if you
slide something to the right, you move it down a
few days.

Speaker 3 (37:37):
Yeah, I don't know if I can because it's been
scheduled for a while.

Speaker 8 (37:41):
Mhmm.

Speaker 3 (37:42):
I mean I don't want to go on crutches.

Speaker 8 (37:45):
Okay, listen, So it sounds like you're not gonna go.
Why are you even asking us You.

Speaker 5 (37:49):
Won't go on crutches, even if, like say I go
and help you.

Speaker 3 (37:53):
It's not even about that. It's like you're supposed to
when you go to that show. Do you have to dance? No,
just in case they ask you, Yeah, be ready.

Speaker 8 (38:00):
But look at you like Zach Morris, yes, and like
do Tho Yes.

Speaker 5 (38:05):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (38:06):
I don't think they're gonna ask me to do. They've
never asked me to dance. Like I think I'm one
of the few that's won the show. They've never asked
to come back and dance.

Speaker 8 (38:11):
I'm sort of like they've invited you to come back.

Speaker 9 (38:15):
I think you should go.

Speaker 7 (38:17):
But everyone that has been on the show got invited
to go back. I'm pretty sure. I think the whole
audience is former people that were on the show.

Speaker 8 (38:25):
So yeah, then it'd be so weird if you're the
only one that doesn't go.

Speaker 3 (38:28):
I don't think anyone would notice you're a chant man.

Speaker 5 (38:31):
I don't know.

Speaker 7 (38:32):
I go and they put me back in the corner
and the nosebleeds, and I just get offended. And there's
a big party afterward with like everybody who's won. But
I'm not don't go to parties. I would if I went,
I would go to that, but I don't really I'm
not really a party.

Speaker 9 (38:46):
I think you should go and let us know what
those parties are like.

Speaker 3 (38:51):
I just don't want to be crutches. Guy. I'm gonna
see if I can move my surgery.

Speaker 7 (38:54):
Okay, if I can, then, but then I'm not going
by myself.

Speaker 9 (39:01):
Okay, so Eddie just volunteering.

Speaker 5 (39:05):
You need me to go?

Speaker 9 (39:06):
Loves any reason to leave his family?

Speaker 5 (39:11):
Why put words in my mood? I have to check
with my family first.

Speaker 9 (39:15):
That was that was such a joke?

Speaker 8 (39:18):
Was yes, because we joke.

Speaker 9 (39:19):
How you stay up here all the time.

Speaker 5 (39:20):
You don't have to.

Speaker 3 (39:21):
Explain your joke.

Speaker 7 (39:21):
He knows.

Speaker 3 (39:22):
Okay, So I'm TBD. Let me figure out if I
can move my surgery so I can go to a
night of dancing with the stars. It sounds like it feels.

Speaker 9 (39:32):
You don't have to tell them why we're not even dancing.

Speaker 3 (39:36):
I'm just sitting in the crowd.

Speaker 8 (39:37):
The work obligation has come up. Are we able to
slide this?

Speaker 3 (39:40):
And they go they dancing with the stars that you
were talking about on the show. Yes, yes, yes, it was. Okay,
let me figure out I can move my surgery.

Speaker 5 (39:48):
Amy.

Speaker 7 (39:48):
If I said Marshall Bruce Mathers, the third, that would
be Marshall Mathers.

Speaker 9 (39:54):
Oh, that's eminem correct.

Speaker 3 (39:56):
So we get Danny on the phone. Danny, how are you?

Speaker 14 (40:01):
I'm good?

Speaker 7 (40:01):
How are you doing?

Speaker 3 (40:02):
Doing pretty good? We're gonna let you play for a
prize here.

Speaker 7 (40:04):
So I'm gonna give Amy seven real names of famous musicians.

Speaker 3 (40:09):
And all she asked to do is get a bunch, right, Well,
she get over under or under four. I think she'll
get over four, under four.

Speaker 7 (40:18):
She's going under under all right? If you get three,
he wins. Any more than three, I don't know, dude.

Speaker 3 (40:27):
Here we go.

Speaker 7 (40:28):
The numbers are confusing me this morning. Number one Catherine
Elizabeth Hudson.

Speaker 8 (40:34):
Oh hm, well shoot, I have two people in my mind,
and they're singers.

Speaker 3 (40:42):
These girls both sing in an answer, but.

Speaker 8 (40:45):
One of them is more of an actress. Are they
just famous people or singers?

Speaker 9 (40:48):
I'm sorry? Can you clarify?

Speaker 3 (40:50):
I will give you the name of a musician. You
tell me who it is, a musician.

Speaker 9 (40:53):
Okay, Because Kate Hudson.

Speaker 3 (40:55):
Sings, but Katherine Elizabeth Hudson.

Speaker 9 (40:58):
Okay, Jennifer Hudson, No, Perry all that.

Speaker 3 (41:02):
And you wouldn't want to hear too.

Speaker 7 (41:05):
I for sure thought you had that, all right. Next up,
Robert Alan Zimmerman.

Speaker 9 (41:16):
Robert Alan Zimmerman, Robert Bob.

Speaker 8 (41:22):
Zimmerman, Allen Zim, Bob Zim, Bobman, Robert Zim three seconds
Zimmer Okay, I'm in this is you, Bob Dylan.

Speaker 3 (41:37):
Correct.

Speaker 9 (41:39):
That's just a guess.

Speaker 3 (41:40):
We thought so after hearing, after hearing how your brain worked,
we figured that was a guest. Okay. Next up, Austin Richard.

Speaker 8 (41:49):
Post post like posty like a post malone.

Speaker 3 (41:56):
Austin Richard post.

Speaker 8 (41:59):
Austin Richard post post malone.

Speaker 3 (42:02):
Correct. Curtis James Jackson.

Speaker 8 (42:09):
Curtis James Jackson, Curtis kurt James jack.

Speaker 3 (42:20):
Yeah, good job.

Speaker 7 (42:24):
It's like someone was watching someone do a math problem,
and you know they're just like scribbling all kinds of
crazy stuff, but then they get the right answer. All right,
you get one more amy, You're the winner, okay. Next up,
Billy Pirate Baird O'Connell. Billy what Billy Pirate Baird O'Connell, Billy.

Speaker 9 (42:46):
Pirate Baird O'Connell. That is such an interesting.

Speaker 19 (42:58):
Name.

Speaker 8 (42:59):
Pirate It Baird.

Speaker 3 (43:01):
Almost like pirate Beard, doesn't it does?

Speaker 9 (43:04):
Pirate Bird O'Connell, j Jeremy Jim, Jimmy j Jerry O'Connell.

Speaker 8 (43:12):
Okay, I'm in Billy, Joel, Billie Eilish, Thanks, next up.

Speaker 3 (43:18):
Elizabeth Woolridge, Grant.

Speaker 8 (43:22):
Elizabeth Woolridge Grant, I mean with Billy.

Speaker 9 (43:28):
I don't know what is this, like Sabrina Carpenter or something.

Speaker 8 (43:31):
Elizabeth Wolridge, Grant, wool Liza Minelli.

Speaker 3 (43:38):
Liz Liz, Elizabeth Woolridge, Grand.

Speaker 9 (43:42):
Woolridge, Elizabeth Woolridge.

Speaker 8 (43:44):
This is like Lorilla.

Speaker 9 (43:47):
I don't know who this is. Elizabeth Woolridge Grant.

Speaker 8 (43:55):
Are you on a gonde? No?

Speaker 3 (43:59):
Well, all comes down to this, Amy. If you get
it right, you win. If you miss it, he wins.
Ready to go, Anna May Bullock.

Speaker 8 (44:10):
Anna May Bullock, Anna Ann May, Anime Bullock, Anime Bullock.
I don't know, guys, I never even heard of this person. Okay,
find Sabrina Carpenter.

Speaker 3 (44:32):
Tina Turner.

Speaker 8 (44:33):
Wow.

Speaker 3 (44:35):
Our winner is Danny.

Speaker 17 (44:39):
Wow.

Speaker 3 (44:40):
Amy kind of sucked with that game. I thought you'd
be really good.

Speaker 9 (44:43):
Well sometimes I like to call her to win.

Speaker 3 (44:46):
No, Amy, our games have integrity, yes, so tell the truth.
You just sucks.

Speaker 7 (44:51):
Ye okay, all right, Uh Danny, stay on the phone
and we're gonnaet surprised. We appreciate you listening.

Speaker 3 (44:56):
Awesome man, Thank you.

Speaker 7 (44:58):
This guy, Francis Ford Koppele is selling his watches. He's
can get like a million bucks from just one of
the watches. It looks like but I thought Francis fort
Copla was dead. I thought he was like with Gratcho
Marx back in the day. Oh he's the director, right, yeah,
he sounds like somebody who should be in black and
white like him, Gracho Marks, Walt Disney, the person are
all hanging out. I don't know he's alive. And so

(45:19):
Francis Ford Coppola, he made a movie with his own money.
The movie cost one hundred and twenty million dollars. The
movie only made fourteen million dollars. Oh yeah, that's right,
oh spagatios. And that's why his son is what so
he has to sell Yeah yeah, he's selling seven of
us watches because he's broke. Oh my two things here

(45:40):
one again. This guy should be walking around a black
and white Did you know he's alive?

Speaker 19 (45:45):
You know who he is?

Speaker 8 (45:45):
I had to google him and yes, I wouldn't know
either way.

Speaker 7 (45:50):
Yeah, right, it was like you think a Pablo Pacasto
and you realize he was alive and like the say
eighties and eighties, Yeah, that's great, that's crazy.

Speaker 3 (45:58):
And then two, Mike this movie that he made, do
you remember it? Yeah?

Speaker 5 (46:01):
Megalopolis came out last year.

Speaker 3 (46:03):
It bombed. It was terrible.

Speaker 20 (46:04):
The movie was terrible, but he wanted to make this
movie his entire life, so he sold a bunch of
stuff for it even before, but couldn't make anything back.

Speaker 3 (46:10):
What about Kevin Costner?

Speaker 5 (46:11):
Didn't he do that?

Speaker 3 (46:11):
Yeah, he did that with The Horizon. Same thing.

Speaker 20 (46:13):
They have these passion projects they've always wanted to do,
and then they funded themselves or they find the way
to get the money and then they can kind of
do whatever they want, whatever they want, and then the
movie just doesn't turn out good.

Speaker 3 (46:24):
So what do we learn from this? Don't follow your passions,
don't or you gotta sell all your crap.

Speaker 5 (46:29):
So yeah, didn't you have like a wine company too?

Speaker 3 (46:33):
Because I've seen, like, I don't know who this dude
is apparently.

Speaker 20 (46:35):
Yeah, he sold like his vineyard for like five hundred
million dollars.

Speaker 9 (46:38):
What and he's out of money.

Speaker 3 (46:39):
Bro, Well, he spent it all making Megatropolis or whatever.
That's crazy.

Speaker 17 (46:45):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (46:45):
The Springsteen movie looks good.

Speaker 5 (46:47):
It does look good. I watched it.

Speaker 3 (46:49):
Oh yeah, it's okay.

Speaker 20 (46:51):
Oh really, it's completely different than a normal music biopic.
It's basically just him making that album Nebraska, which was
like really low fi. So well, for a movie that's
almost two hours, there's only about twenty percent of music.

Speaker 3 (47:04):
Anything good. Huh.

Speaker 20 (47:06):
It's Jeremy ellen White who's in the Bear. He's really
good at it. But I'm also not a huge Bruce
Springsteen fan, so the movie on its own wasn't enough
story to make me invested in it. If it wasn't
about Bruce Springsteen, it wouldn't be a good movie at all.

Speaker 3 (47:19):
Really.

Speaker 5 (47:20):
Yeah, that's disappointing.

Speaker 3 (47:22):
Yeah for me too, because I'm not even a Bruce
Springsteen gap.

Speaker 7 (47:24):
But I like I like music documentary or no, no biopics,
because it's not a documentary.

Speaker 3 (47:29):
Can the guy sing?

Speaker 20 (47:30):
Yeah, he's saying all the music for it, and it's
surprising how much he sounds like Bruce Springsteen.

Speaker 3 (47:34):
You almost think that they're lying. That's cool. Well, I
mean marking that off the list of movies.

Speaker 5 (47:38):
I'm not gonna watch that.

Speaker 3 (47:39):
Well, I'm gonna mark it off my list of movies.
I say, I'm gonna see that. I'll never get around
to anyway.

Speaker 8 (47:43):
I feel like it's one of those one day I'll
end up watching on an airplane because it's an option
for free.

Speaker 3 (47:48):
How many Bruce Springsteen songs can you name?

Speaker 9 (47:50):
Born in the USA?

Speaker 12 (47:53):
One?

Speaker 2 (47:54):
One?

Speaker 9 (47:55):
One?

Speaker 3 (47:56):
Yeah, I'm not a massive Bruce.

Speaker 8 (47:58):
If you give me one word, I'll.

Speaker 9 (48:00):
Uh yaper pretty later, won't you come? Always close?

Speaker 5 (48:06):
You're thinking?

Speaker 3 (48:07):
Does sound a lot like you're just kidding? What? What?
What is it?

Speaker 8 (48:10):
Again? Pretty well?

Speaker 3 (48:12):
Saying that one? Eddie, which one?

Speaker 5 (48:13):
Which one? Are you doing?

Speaker 13 (48:16):
Daddy home?

Speaker 3 (48:23):
I know that I'm all fire.

Speaker 8 (48:27):
I feel like I was getting there.

Speaker 5 (48:29):
But you also born to run? Which is another born
to run?

Speaker 17 (48:38):
Uh uh?

Speaker 3 (48:39):
The dancing in.

Speaker 9 (48:46):
Whatever?

Speaker 3 (48:49):
You're born to run?

Speaker 5 (48:51):
Baby? We were born the road.

Speaker 3 (48:53):
That's good, that's good. What about the one about back
in the old back in the old days, it was like.

Speaker 13 (48:59):
The six no no glory day, glory goes glory days?

Speaker 5 (49:05):
Is that him? Camp.

Speaker 3 (49:07):
No, sure, No, I'm almost positive that's Bruce Bringsteen. See
all that right, There was more music than there is
in the entire movie. One of them going down Glory Days.

Speaker 9 (49:19):
Yeah, that's that's Oh on the Streets of Philadelphia.

Speaker 5 (49:23):
You look that up?

Speaker 3 (49:24):
Yeah?

Speaker 9 (49:25):
Oh what?

Speaker 8 (49:26):
Oh?

Speaker 9 (49:26):
I saw hungry?

Speaker 3 (49:27):
Oh this one?

Speaker 7 (49:28):
Uh did you know the human headways see ch God
show me the money and that from the movie.

Speaker 3 (49:36):
Yeah, yeah, but not the first time ever. Redid it
for Jerem maguire.

Speaker 7 (49:40):
They just put yeah anyway, anyway, movie socks, all right,
got it, It's time for the good news.

Speaker 8 (49:50):
So Caitlin Thompson and Tyler Grant are set to get
married in Bitton County, Washington, and then a windstorm blew
in forty eight hours before There's Sarah and pretty much
just destroyed everything. So they have no place to get married,
and family friends, all the people in their wedding party,
they're all on the phone trying to call places to

(50:10):
find a venue that is available.

Speaker 9 (50:12):
Will shout out to Sugar Pine Barn.

Speaker 8 (50:15):
In Benton City because they had availability the next day
and that was their only Saturday open of the entire year.
So I know what you were probably thinking, at first,
like before maybe or the place just like is kind
of meant it might not be good, but no, this
happened to be their only available Saturday and they were

(50:35):
able to get everything moved over, but not without help
from everybody involved, Like everybody had to pitch in to
move everything to the new venue and they were able
to exchange vowels.

Speaker 3 (50:46):
That's like when someone you have to help someone move
though you're like, oh, man, like I love them and
I really don't want to help them move. Can you
imagine there for the wedding and it's like, hey, we
need you to move everything that party to fun I know,
and then you have to move the art. Okay, that's
what it's all about. That was telling me something good.
Wake up, wake up in the mall, and the radio

(51:12):
and the dogs keeps on time.

Speaker 19 (51:16):
And ready in hunchbox, mor getcho Steve Bred out of
trying to put you through the fog.

Speaker 3 (51:22):
He's running this week's next bite. The Bobby's on the box,
so you know what this is? The Bobby ball over
to Amy with the Morning Corny. The Morning Corny.

Speaker 9 (51:41):
What a ghost where when their eyesight gets blurry?

Speaker 7 (51:44):
What a ghosts where when their eyesight gets blurry spectacles.

Speaker 3 (51:53):
That was the morning Corny.

Speaker 8 (51:55):
I thought you liked that one because you know you
had to work.

Speaker 14 (51:57):
For that one.

Speaker 3 (51:57):
Yes, because I'm visually imparent.

Speaker 5 (51:59):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (51:59):
Yeah, Tuesday reviewsday. I didn't finish anything this.

Speaker 8 (52:03):
Week, so you yeah, I watched that f one movie
that y'all loved with Brad Pitt.

Speaker 5 (52:08):
Yeah what you think?

Speaker 9 (52:09):
Like everybody gave it great reviews.

Speaker 3 (52:10):
We really liked it, so I always I loved I
really liked.

Speaker 8 (52:13):
It, Okay, but I feel like across the board everyone
was like, yes, entertaining, Yes, good. So then you know,
you go into something with these high expectations, sometimes it's
a little scary.

Speaker 9 (52:23):
Uh so good.

Speaker 8 (52:24):
I loved it. I thought I was like, okay, everyone
was right and it wasn't overhyped. I feel like y'all
set it up perfectly and I thoroughly enjoyed it and
I had you know, I think some of elseaw in theaters,
but you can now watch it at home. You do
have to buy it for like nineteen ninety nine, but
it was my son, my boyfriend, and myself, so.

Speaker 9 (52:43):
Three people entertained for nineteen dollars.

Speaker 3 (52:46):
It's pretty good when you break it down like that.

Speaker 8 (52:49):
Yeah, I know. I mean, and plus I think it's
something that my son will definitely watch again. Like he
really liked it.

Speaker 3 (52:54):
And did you guys watch anything.

Speaker 4 (52:55):
Yeah, we actually went to the movie theater and watched Ruffman.
Ruffman was the one Mike he was talking about. Dude,
it is awesome, Like, what's it about. It's a true
story about a guy that breaks out of prison and
lives in a Toys r us for like months while
they're looking for him. It's freaking unbelievable. Dude, who's the

(53:15):
main person in it, Channing Tatum. Which, here's the deal.
He lose a bunch of weight for this one or
was that another one? Yeah, he lost like seventy pounds
for it. It didn't even notice. I think he's you know,
he's not my favorite actor. It just kind of like
I want to see a movie with him. It's like,
he's fine. He did a great job in this movie.
The acting is phenomenal. Kirsten Dunes, phenomenal. He loved it, Huh, dude,
loved it. I will give it four and a half peanut.

Speaker 3 (53:37):
Eminem's do you think you loved it more? Because it
was true?

Speaker 4 (53:40):
Absolutely, the fact that it was real, and then what
was just happening over and over and over.

Speaker 3 (53:45):
I'm like, this.

Speaker 6 (53:46):
Cannot be real. But then I researched it all and
it was all real. Four and a half out of five.
On Root is a Roofman, A roofman, roofman, I call
it Roofman Roofman. Morgan, you watch anything?

Speaker 15 (53:56):
Yeah, I watched a few things. I went to the
theaters for tron As, which is the.

Speaker 9 (54:01):
New in that series.

Speaker 8 (54:04):
Yes, yeah, and I loved it.

Speaker 15 (54:06):
Maybe I love tron a little too much, but super
sci fi. It was very visually appealing. The soundtrack was
really fun, so I'd give that one four out of five.

Speaker 9 (54:15):
Main controls.

Speaker 3 (54:16):
Okay, I haven't seen any tron stuff.

Speaker 9 (54:18):
So you like sci fi, I feel like you could.
It would be like an easy watch for you.

Speaker 3 (54:23):
Watch all right?

Speaker 7 (54:24):
What else?

Speaker 15 (54:24):
And then I watched The Perfect Neighbor on Netflix. It's
all police footage, like from their body cams of this
neighbor who basically keeps calling the cops on their neighbors.

Speaker 3 (54:34):
True, it's a true story. Is it one story or
a lot of different ones? One story?

Speaker 15 (54:39):
And it is wild, like it really makes you like,
oh my gosh, who's living next to me and what's
going to happen in my life?

Speaker 3 (54:45):
Well you read it.

Speaker 15 (54:46):
I give that one three point five out of five police.

Speaker 9 (54:48):
But it's just because like it made me not feel good.

Speaker 3 (54:52):
That was more the rating of that.

Speaker 15 (54:54):
Okay, And then I finished Peacemaker this season finale so good,
so good. Yeah I didn't there was a lot of
things that didn't see coming.

Speaker 8 (55:02):
So I'd give that one four out of five eagles.

Speaker 7 (55:04):
Yeah. Peacemaker's not for everybody, but if it's for you, man,
it's awesome. John Cena is placed Peacemaker. He's a superhero,
kind of superhero superhero, he's superhero. Yeah, right, there you go.
That is Tuesday Reviews.

Speaker 3 (55:17):
Day, Bobby Bone show, Sorry up to day. This story
comes us from Mount Olive, New Jersey. An eighty nine year.

Speaker 13 (55:26):
Old woman was enjoying a slice of pizza at a
restaurant when from across the room there's a seventy year
old man. He's got a gun and he takes it
out of his whole star to show his friends. Boom
discharges the weapon bullet through her leg.

Speaker 5 (55:41):
That's great. A lot of old people at this pizza place.

Speaker 3 (55:45):
That's what you think of?

Speaker 7 (55:46):
She was eighty nine, and he was how old seventy huh?
And I don't think seventy is that old. You're almost there, buddy,
eighty nine, that is sure. But it's like that's what
you think whenever somebody's playing with a gun in a
pizza place and it goes off.

Speaker 4 (56:02):
When he said the ages, I'm just like, wow, these
are just older people at a pizza place.

Speaker 5 (56:06):
Interesting.

Speaker 3 (56:08):
But he wasn't playing with it. You don't show It's
not really the place to show it off.

Speaker 5 (56:12):
That's true.

Speaker 3 (56:13):
Like I said, you don't show it off while it's
also when it's pointing, you don't have it.

Speaker 7 (56:18):
Let's say you do pull it out to show somebody
for some reason in a public place. You never do
it where the barrel is pointed anywhere to where people are.
You must if you pull a gun.

Speaker 3 (56:28):
Out, it must be pointing down with the safety on.
That's crazy to me. Okay, go ahead, I'm lunchbox. That's
your bay.

Speaker 5 (56:37):
That's it.

Speaker 3 (56:37):
That's all I mean.

Speaker 5 (56:38):
I mean he got.

Speaker 3 (56:39):
Arrested, and then he got arrested, lady, he went off.

Speaker 5 (56:45):
You got I mean you gotta do the time.

Speaker 3 (56:48):
Yeah, you get arrested for shooting someone.

Speaker 8 (56:50):
It was an accident. I don't know why, because he's elderly.
I feel bad for him.

Speaker 5 (56:57):
He was gonna come into play here.

Speaker 13 (56:58):
Okay, I'm bunch box. It's your bonehead story of the day.

Speaker 7 (57:02):
So here's the question that was asked in this article.
I won't give you the answer. I want to hear
your answer. Why do women like to do the laundry?
Think about that, why do women like to do the laundry?

Speaker 8 (57:13):
Well?

Speaker 9 (57:15):
The first thing that popped in my head is we
do it correctly.

Speaker 8 (57:19):
And y'all don't.

Speaker 5 (57:20):
Oh, that's why they like it.

Speaker 17 (57:22):
Yeah.

Speaker 8 (57:22):
Well, I mean we'd rather have it done right than Yeah.

Speaker 7 (57:25):
I thought it might be we don't because I felt
like that was a weird question, like why do women
like to do the laundry?

Speaker 17 (57:31):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (57:31):
Instead of why do women choose to do the laundry right?

Speaker 5 (57:34):
Right? Do they like it? I didn't think they like it.

Speaker 8 (57:37):
I personally like laundry.

Speaker 3 (57:39):
Well, the answer is a majority don't trust our partner
to do it right.

Speaker 8 (57:41):
Oh well, so my initial yeah, you're right, that's yeah.

Speaker 3 (57:45):
I was offended for women everywhere when I read the question.
I was like, they don't like it. Some of them
just choose to do it.

Speaker 5 (57:51):
But then no.

Speaker 7 (57:52):
The number one answer was because they don't trust their
partner to do it right. But what if it's two
women that are married.

Speaker 8 (57:59):
Interesting, Well, then I'm sure it's not the same situation.

Speaker 3 (58:02):
They both like to doe two dudes, No laundry gets done,
buy new clothes according to this, according to that. Yeah.

Speaker 8 (58:15):
The first thing that popped in my head was that,
and the second one was like, well, maybe because we've
been conditioned to think we're supposed to.

Speaker 3 (58:21):
Classic cultural conditioning.

Speaker 5 (58:23):
We're done.

Speaker 3 (58:24):
We will see you guys tomorrow, Right bye, everybody.

Speaker 7 (58:27):
Bones The Bobby Bones Show theme song, written, produced, and
sang by read Yarberry. You can fight his instagram at
read Yarberry, Scuba Steve executive producer, Raymondo, 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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