Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
The transmitting.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
Welcome to Tuesday Show more in the studio more so,
you know FOMO, which is fear of missing out, but
fofo amy And I know what it is, Eddie, what's
fo FO? Fear of figuring it out? Kind of yeah,
it's close. Yeah, fear of finding out?
Speaker 3 (00:30):
Oh finding out?
Speaker 2 (00:32):
Yeah, it's becoming annoyed. Yeah. I used to always think
I had AIDS, so I never.
Speaker 3 (00:37):
Wanted to get tested.
Speaker 2 (00:38):
When I was like twelve and I see it on TV,
it'd be like, everybody has it?
Speaker 3 (00:42):
Got it? Not because of something you did?
Speaker 2 (00:44):
No, no, no, no. I was like in my twenties,
forever did anything. Like I was a virgin forever, right,
So yeah, nothing from that, but it was just like
you might have aides. And I remember being like eleven
or twelve and like, I have aides.
Speaker 3 (00:54):
They weren't talking to you, now, I know.
Speaker 2 (00:56):
But I had such a fear in my whole life
of like finding out because I thought, because all the
commercials had convinced me that I had AIDS. And so
that's the first thing that comes to mind when I
think of fear of finding out. And then yesterday I
was talking about much less severe than AIDS. But I
was talking about I wrecked my scooter and not my
motor scooter. But I have I've had ankle surgery, so
(01:17):
my I'm in a boot and I can't put any
weight on it yet, so I'm riding around on the
scooter or my legs and I wiped out. It hurt,
It felt like needles shoved into the bottom on my feet.
And I don't want to go to the doctor and
get checked if I messed it up again, because I
have fofo fear of finding out. Yeah, so you have
fear of finding out.
Speaker 4 (01:35):
In anyway, I think I would.
Speaker 5 (01:37):
I want to find out, like I s. I don't
think I fear of finding out. I mean, no, never
thought I had AIDS.
Speaker 2 (01:45):
I can get you on those commercials.
Speaker 5 (01:46):
Huh, But you know, I think I do like everybody,
I have a fear of finding out, but I don't
want to avoid it, like I want to go in
and just like, let's go ahead and tell me so
that I can know what I need to do.
Speaker 3 (01:55):
I'm mature.
Speaker 2 (01:56):
Because mammograms, yes, as TD checks, uh, cancer checks right,
people will avoid it. Yeah, they'd rather just not know
about a body issue and find out down the road.
Speaker 5 (02:08):
Now, I'm like, full body scan, let's go, which is
very It's scary to go and get any of that done.
Speaker 2 (02:13):
It's scarier to find out later that if you would
have got it done earlier, maybe it wouldn't be as severe.
Speaker 4 (02:18):
Early detection is everything.
Speaker 3 (02:20):
Yep.
Speaker 5 (02:20):
So like that's why I think with your fofo, you
need to power through because if you, you know, injured.
Speaker 2 (02:26):
Why don't have as I'm good I got checked. No,
I've been checked for all that. I'm clear.
Speaker 4 (02:31):
I was talking about your ankle.
Speaker 5 (02:32):
Oh, calm down with the AIDS.
Speaker 2 (02:36):
So no, man, I was convinced. They said just say
stuff on TV. They would like it'd be like you
or your friend, one of you probably has it. And
I'm like, well, well, I don't have friends. I've got
to be mean. Remember those commercials watching Roseanne and the
thing that the head and then after the opening, it'd
(02:56):
be like, so, who has AIDS in your group? And
I'm like, I don't have a group. It's got to
be me.
Speaker 4 (03:01):
I would always run to go do things during commercials,
run back.
Speaker 2 (03:04):
Kids don't even know about commercials these days, they don't know,
they have no idea what they're missing.
Speaker 5 (03:09):
I kind of been making my kids experience with it
a little bit because I downgraded to all the like
on some of our my streaming stuff, I have the
commercial kind.
Speaker 2 (03:18):
So I have peacock with commercials. I think just because
I bought the wrong package and I've been too lazy
to go back in. But you can't skip through the commercials.
It's like a little yellow dot that if you look
at the whole timeline to see where it is, there's
like little yellow dots placed that tells you where the
commercials are. You can't fast forward it now.
Speaker 5 (03:37):
Up in the top right hand corner, there's like a
second a countdown. Yeah, so you know you've got sixty
more seconds of commercials left.
Speaker 2 (03:44):
Whenever I watch YouTube TV, so that's my cable, that's
I watch television. So they do show commercials, but they'll
show YouTube commercials in and they do they put the
countdown up there or they go and I'm never at
my remote fast enough skip the commercial for Bliss. I
always want to hit Bliss, but I'm never I can't
get to my phone quick enough to change it.
Speaker 3 (04:05):
What they're doing now is so amazing is that if
you like the product, you can scan your phone and
buy it right there.
Speaker 6 (04:10):
Have you seen that?
Speaker 4 (04:11):
Yeah, I haven't done it yet. It freaks me out.
Speaker 2 (04:13):
I haven't been quick enough yet, right, because you gotta
kind of be quick drama girl on that and pop
it up and do it because you only have like
thirty seconds. Yeah, so anyway, yeah, yes, yeah, big time.
Speaker 3 (04:26):
But mine's not because like I want to put it off.
I just feel like my body will take care of it.
Speaker 2 (04:31):
No, that's terrible.
Speaker 3 (04:32):
I know it's not good, but that's where my faux
foe comes from. It's like, Okay, my stomach churrs. It's
been hurting for a month. I think it'll go away.
Let me just wait another month to see if it
goes away. And I understand that logic because I've probably
done that. I'm doing it on my foot right now.
But that's a surgery, and that's a like a tear
attendant thing. Yours could be something like you can't.
Speaker 2 (04:58):
Or cancer because we thought your thing might have been can't.
Like Lunchbox has not had FOFO about his, but he
keeps going to doctor.
Speaker 4 (05:06):
He keeps trying.
Speaker 2 (05:06):
Yeah, that's the problem I have fo.
Speaker 7 (05:09):
Of doctors being terrible because I've gone to so many
and everybody's like, eh, I don't know, go see a
different doctor.
Speaker 2 (05:14):
They just throw their hands up in the air, like
we don't believe it happens like that. They throw their
hands up in the air and they're like, well, galica, geez.
Speaker 7 (05:21):
They literally say, I'm stumped. I don't have any ideas.
Speaker 2 (05:24):
Stumped anytime I've ever been to a doctor, and you
guys can tell me your stories if it's different that
I've ever been to a doctor and they didn't know.
And I have been to doctors and I have a
main doctor and he doesn't know. It's never ended with them. Well,
guests will never know. It's always ended with let me
refer you to a specialist who will know. And if
that doesn't work, I'm often referred to another specialist. It
(05:44):
sounds like your doctors. You walk in and they're just
like that, up up, up up, don't know and I
mean you leave.
Speaker 7 (05:50):
One doctor said yeah, just like go some exercises on YouTube.
Speaker 2 (05:55):
But because that means he's seen it, I don't know,
but just not of the medical letter letters and doctrin
of letters. Anyway, Good luck everybody out there with the FOFO.
We encourage you to get things checked because you'll be
so much happier later on that you did. I have
a pump on my boot. It's like a pump, like
a rebuck pump. Oh that's cool, and ever I may
every want a walk in boot. Yeah awesome. Yeh's awesome.
Speaker 3 (06:18):
I did last year, but I didn't have it.
Speaker 2 (06:19):
Adds pressures, Yeah, pressures, yes, exactly. What does like? It
squeezes it in So when you do have to put
your foot down like a lot of it's taking a
lot of you the pressure off your foot because it's
going right out of the So I can't wait to
dunk again. That's my goal.
Speaker 3 (06:33):
Yeah, dude, it's coming.
Speaker 2 (06:35):
Be back dunking or in no time. Martha Stewart said
the perfect time to eat Thanksgiving dinner? So I'll ask
you first, what is your perfect time to eat Thanksgiving dinner?
Speaker 5 (06:44):
I mean, I'm thinking like four o'clock.
Speaker 2 (06:48):
That's dinner dinner. No, I'm not telling you you're wrong,
okay too, No, No, four o'clock is your answer?
Speaker 5 (06:55):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (06:55):
Is that because that's the time that you guys always
had Thanksgiving dinner.
Speaker 5 (06:58):
I feel like we've had it all over the play,
So four just feels right to me because I feel
like you still have like you can kind of snack
during the day and you haven't reached your peak hungry.
And then you do that and then it guides you
through dinner and then dessert, and you're not going to
bed totally stuffed.
Speaker 2 (07:14):
There's no right or wrong answer.
Speaker 5 (07:16):
Well that's my answer.
Speaker 4 (07:17):
Okay, what about you.
Speaker 2 (07:18):
Well, if I'm snacking all day, I'm getting way too full.
It's the bring me bread rolls staying at a dinner.
If you bring me bread roll like rolls period, and
I'm at dinner, I'm gonna eat all the rolls and
get full. If you hear me chips and queso chips
and salsa, I'm going to eat all that and I'm
gonna get full before the dinner comes out. So for me,
I don't like a late Thanksgiving dinner because if there
is snacking, I'm going to be so full of the
(07:39):
snacks I'm not going to enjoy the Thanksgiving dinner. Now
that's because I have no self control. So that's me problem.
Speaker 5 (07:44):
And also you're not the one in the kitchen stressing
about getting everything ready exactly on time. So I feel
like maybe that's why I also.
Speaker 4 (07:51):
Go a little later.
Speaker 2 (07:52):
But I'm stressing that it's not ready for me on time. True.
Speaker 4 (07:55):
True.
Speaker 2 (07:57):
My preferred Thanksgiving dinner time is eleven am.
Speaker 5 (08:01):
Okay, see exactly my point.
Speaker 6 (08:03):
That's brunch people.
Speaker 2 (08:04):
Yeah, eleven to twelve, so like it's an eleven but
really it probably gets extended like eleven thirty. And I'm
only thirty minutes annoyed.
Speaker 5 (08:11):
So whoever's cooking is waiting up at four in the morning.
Speaker 2 (08:14):
Not my problem?
Speaker 5 (08:15):
Oh yeah, yeah, I have other problems eleven am.
Speaker 2 (08:19):
I have a lot of problems. That's not one.
Speaker 5 (08:21):
You want eggs served at this meal.
Speaker 2 (08:23):
And I completely understand that. But I did not insult
you on your time.
Speaker 5 (08:26):
For the record, Okay, well I'm not trying to insult you.
I'm challenging the time.
Speaker 6 (08:31):
Bobby helps it cooking the dinner too, right.
Speaker 2 (08:33):
I chop a potato. I always have some kind of
I God, I think it's busy work. If I'm being honest,
Oh that anybody could do it. It's send me walking
around like anybody knows is gonna be done. They're like,
we chopped this potato, keep you busy in the corner.
Speaker 5 (08:45):
Well, I literally thought you just filmed yourself chopping. And
that was the extent of the chopping. I've done that,
like a thirty second video, thirty seconds of chopping.
Speaker 2 (08:53):
No, and you know what, you keep on insulting. I'm
just gonna take it because that's the kind of guy
I am.
Speaker 5 (08:57):
I thought that's what it would you did, though.
Speaker 2 (08:58):
No, here's what I do. I do some chopping, I
do some filming, I finish the chopping. I film all
that I finished chopping. Okay, there's definitely some filming because
I'm chopping something everybody needs to know because I don't
chop very much.
Speaker 6 (09:09):
Then after that you do some posting, and then I
do some posting, Eddie two o'clock.
Speaker 3 (09:16):
Why it's it's kind of between what you and Amy
were saying, Like you got to give whoever's cooking some
time because usually it's a lunch thing. It's not going
to be ready at noon, and then the Cowboys play
at three, so we have to be done eating by
three o'clock.
Speaker 2 (09:28):
I think I like mine at like eleven noonish, so
I can be fully hungry again by six or seven.
Speaker 5 (09:33):
Ish for leftovers.
Speaker 2 (09:36):
For a second Thanksgiving. Yeah. Now, and there are sometimes
like a Kaitlin's family, they'll sometimes they'll do they have
they have mini they're.
Speaker 6 (09:43):
Like three it's like different places.
Speaker 2 (09:45):
Yeah, or maybe get Christas mixed up. I don't know whatever.
Those holidays all our families get together. Those are still
new to me. But I think Thanksgiving she has like
there's like three Thanksgivings. There's like one with the extra
family is what you call, like yeah, yeah, and then
there's there's their main there's their main one, there's the
extra family, and then there's one at like a barn
(10:07):
with like extra other extra extend.
Speaker 6 (10:10):
That's like the town. Yeah, yeah, the rest of the town.
Speaker 2 (10:14):
So I like it. That's why I think that's part
of the reason I like it that early. I think
mcgrandawa used to always have it done by like eleven
or twelve, and most Thanksgiving mornings we would hunt in
the morning and come be back in and then eat
right away and you get back in around noon.
Speaker 6 (10:26):
You ever hunt the turkey?
Speaker 2 (10:27):
No, not on Thanksgiving Day. That's no, that's Freedom Day, buddy.
That it also wasn't. It also wasn't Turkey season. I
don't think Mark Steward says two o'clock, oh.
Speaker 6 (10:37):
Eddie, look nailed it.
Speaker 2 (10:39):
But that also doesn't mean it's right.
Speaker 6 (10:40):
She's probably a Dallas Cowboys fans.
Speaker 2 (10:41):
There's no wrong, there's no wrong. Some people that have
it at six pm, that's wrong.
Speaker 6 (10:45):
That's very wrong.
Speaker 2 (10:46):
Yeah, there's no wrong except that one. Then if you're
having it at six that's pretty wrong.
Speaker 5 (10:51):
I mean I don't hate it. Yeah, I guess it's
just as all day.
Speaker 2 (10:55):
I don't do all day drive by people's windows, watching
them eating it inside. Well, Christmas music is playing. I'm
driving by people in their windows, all celebrating and.
Speaker 6 (11:03):
They're walking on the streets stuffed.
Speaker 2 (11:05):
Yeah, so Charlie Brown, Christmas is playing on my radio.
Speaker 4 (11:09):
We covered it all.
Speaker 5 (11:10):
We've got eleven, two and four.
Speaker 2 (11:13):
Martha Stewart has said there's no room for debating. Oh yeah,
that's a name. We just had a room for debating
and we enjoyed it. She said the feet should start
at two pm. So guess Kennedy early, watch the game
and keep them drinks and dessert flowing. Later people drink
it Thanksgiving. Oh yeah, oh yeah, yeah yeah later. Morgan
just nodded to me too. Yeah, you guys drinking Kansas Thanksgiving.
Speaker 8 (11:35):
Yeah, we'll always put together a fun drink and everybody
drinks on it all day.
Speaker 5 (11:39):
It's stive.
Speaker 2 (11:39):
No, I'm talking about alcohol.
Speaker 6 (11:41):
Yeah, celebration Giving, thanks man, you have to drink.
Speaker 4 (11:45):
Yeah, I mean I've never given things correctly.
Speaker 5 (11:48):
Then that's when some people start at eleven ah.
Speaker 6 (11:52):
Whoever's like to kee?
Speaker 2 (11:53):
People drunk it Thanksgiving?
Speaker 6 (11:55):
Oh yeah, some people really.
Speaker 5 (11:57):
I guess it just depends. You can also just have
like zippers.
Speaker 2 (12:01):
No, I know you can just have that. But is
it Is it typical that someone gets drunk at Thanksgiving?
I've never been at one of this. We didn't. I'm
not anti alcohol in anyway. Heck, I wish I drunk.
I've never had a drink. I wish I drank, But
we didn't have alcohol at Thanksgiving unless the may snuck it.
Speaker 7 (12:19):
Well.
Speaker 5 (12:19):
Also, it depends on how tolerable your family is.
Speaker 2 (12:22):
You know, what do you mean to have?
Speaker 9 (12:23):
What?
Speaker 4 (12:24):
Like?
Speaker 5 (12:25):
Is it exhausting to be around them because you may
have another an extra drink or too?
Speaker 2 (12:29):
It is drinking like shots whiskey or wine like light I.
Speaker 5 (12:33):
Think wine or drinks like.
Speaker 2 (12:35):
Everybody's not lying again, Bob, or maybe like.
Speaker 5 (12:38):
A bourbon and coke or or like.
Speaker 4 (12:42):
That's why I'm Tuesday.
Speaker 2 (12:46):
I liked all of our everything. I'm not judging so
take remove judgment from this. It's just shot that people
are having their turkey and dressing and like drinking whiskey.
Oh that's crazy.
Speaker 6 (13:00):
Pretty normal.
Speaker 2 (13:00):
I just haven't been around it. Yeah, all of you
are nodding your heads.
Speaker 3 (13:04):
Like as crazy as my wife's family. Her grandma didn't
know anyone drank, but everyone drank because it was at
her house. So everyone would sneak drinks in the garage.
So she'd always wonder, like, what's.
Speaker 6 (13:14):
Everyone doing in the garage. They just hanging out, Grandma.
Speaker 2 (13:16):
Why is everybody so happy?
Speaker 6 (13:18):
They were all drinking in the garage.
Speaker 5 (13:19):
Oh, my mom used to do that when we were little,
Like she would put wine in her coffee mug and
so it looked like they were having coffee, but it
was purple coffee. Line.
Speaker 2 (13:30):
My mine's kind of blown right now that people drink
it things you think. Yeah, man, people drink a Christmas dinner?
Speaker 6 (13:34):
Yeah, yeah, same?
Speaker 2 (13:35):
Well wait what yeah, cheer Christmas.
Speaker 5 (13:38):
There are a little cranberries in there, well like festive.
Speaker 2 (13:43):
Yeah, you know, I get why you would put the
granberries in there, but why like, if you're going to drink,
they're red.
Speaker 5 (13:48):
And Christmas makes it red? Yeah, And then you put
some green things in there.
Speaker 2 (13:51):
My mind's kind of blown.
Speaker 6 (13:52):
Right now, peppermint stick in there.
Speaker 5 (13:54):
I get the people drink all dog eggnog has alcohol.
Speaker 2 (13:57):
But oh that sounds disgusted. I mean, you add the acohol,
But does agnog taste like eggs?
Speaker 5 (14:03):
More like milk, like a thick milk. I'm not a
big fan of eggnog, but.
Speaker 2 (14:08):
Never had eggnog, not even eggnog without because the name
sounds gross. I don't really like eggs rarely, well even
jumping and scrambled, So I'm not going to drink. I'm
not going to drink what sounds like a liquid version
of a scrambled egg. Right, So I never had it is.
Speaker 5 (14:26):
It's not my thing, but some people that love it
love it.
Speaker 2 (14:29):
Go Ai Kansas thing.
Speaker 5 (14:31):
I love eggnog, but I didn't really try it until
about two years ago, and I was like, oh, I've.
Speaker 2 (14:35):
Been missing out all this time with alcohol.
Speaker 3 (14:38):
No, I had it regular, and then I tried it
with alcohol, and I was like, yeah, no, I've really been
missing out.
Speaker 2 (14:42):
I can understand if you were drinking it with alcohol.
Eggnog in general, because alcohol itself, according to my sources,
taste bad like a lot of it tastes bad, and
you just do it because of the effect of it.
Speaker 6 (14:51):
Correct.
Speaker 5 (14:51):
So it looks like you can add a lot of
different whatever you want, bourbon, rum, brandy, whiskey.
Speaker 2 (14:57):
You can put a book in it. I mean, it
didn't matter, rules, paper towels, in't it? Okay? Well, my
mind's little blown and ball The drinking guys do it
the holidays. That's what we do, man, and everybody does. Yes,
that's crazy, all right? Eight seven seven seventy seven, Bobby,
that's our number here. I'm not sad, I'm not dejected
(15:17):
by it. It sounds like that, Amos Anonymous Sinbo.
Speaker 4 (15:27):
Here's a question to because.
Speaker 2 (15:33):
Man, Hello, Bobby Bones. My kids eleven and twelve are
starting to talk about having boyfriends and girlfriends, and I
have no idea what the right age is for that.
I want to do the right thing, but also don't
want to be the mean parent who doesn't understand what
it's like for kids these days. If it's not that serious,
how young is too young for my kids to have
a boyfriend or girlfriend? What are the guidelines? Thanks sincerely,
(15:57):
This topic scares me. I'm gonna check out of this one.
Speaker 3 (16:00):
Amy.
Speaker 5 (16:01):
Yeah, so I mean from my life personally, I have
my first boyfriend was in like second grade and then
third grade, fourth grade.
Speaker 4 (16:09):
I remember all my boyfriends too.
Speaker 5 (16:12):
It wasn't really anything though, like we just sort of
talked on the phone and then we ignored each other
at school and then in high school boyfriends. But like
my kids, same thing. Like my son he's had crushes
on girls and had girlfriends. I think you just, you know,
let them do their thing, but you gauge it, like
obviously you have to be appropriate, like if they want
(16:32):
to have their boyfriend or girlfriend over, we don't like
leave them alone or anything. Like my son had his
most recent girlfriend. They did just break up, but he
was friends with the brother too, and he used to
go spend the night over there all the time. But
then when he started going out with that guy's sister,
sleepover stopped because yeah, we had to shut that down.
So it sounds like you just have to go with
(16:53):
the flow, like let them sort of experiment with that.
Speaker 4 (16:57):
I don't mean we're with you, okay, yeah.
Speaker 5 (17:01):
Elevenwel specific, Yeah, age appropriate experientation. They can learn how
to communicate and interact and face the reality of like
it's not probably not going to work out. Then they
deal with the breakup. It's like good learning experience.
Speaker 2 (17:15):
I think Eddie have kids same age.
Speaker 3 (17:16):
Yeah, none of them have had girlfriends, you know that
I know of, But I just feel like eleven twelve,
Like what do you like? It's a distraction, Like you're
You've got all this other stuff to do. I had
a girlfriend when I was seventeen. She broke my heart.
It hurts your hers girlfriend, first girlfriend.
Speaker 2 (17:36):
Oh my goodness.
Speaker 3 (17:38):
I was like eight, and I'm like, I'm like, why
was I going through that at seventeen? Man bore my heart?
Speaker 2 (17:44):
Art? Can I counterpoint? You imagine? Like Amy said, you're
because eleven or twelve, boyfriend and girlfriends aren't real. Yes,
they're just like heightened companions. They're labeled companions of the
opposite sex. Probably, And so if you would have gone
through some minor breakups, maybe at seventeen, that first breakup
(18:05):
wouldn't have been so hard for.
Speaker 3 (18:06):
You like the breakups at eleven and twelve. They could
prepare you for the later.
Speaker 2 (18:10):
Yeah, they warm you up, okay for rejection from the
opposite sex.
Speaker 5 (18:14):
Yes, and Eddie, you can be an involved parent. It's
also an opportunity to parents get involved, like have open
dialogue communication, how's it going with them? When they experience breakup?
Then you walk them through that. It just it's another
part of life. But you don't have to rush them
growing up by any means. But you know, yeah, like
I think I think that too. My fourth grade boyfriend,
Oh mar san Miguel. You ever know when these guys
(18:36):
come in handy later because we were now in fourth grade.
Speaker 2 (18:40):
Also you can prove you're not racist's if you're a racist? Nope,
you say, oh mar sa Miguel, that's my first Yeah.
Speaker 5 (18:46):
But then later in college, like I was flying to
see a friend in like Europe for the first time
because they were in college over there, and I went
for a spring break.
Speaker 4 (18:55):
Guess who was working at the delta counter?
Speaker 2 (18:56):
Let me or mar san Miguel.
Speaker 4 (18:58):
Yeah, guess what, Because.
Speaker 5 (18:59):
Of course I had the cheapest ticket possible over there.
My first time going, I was sitting coach. Guess what, Omar,
did you know?
Speaker 2 (19:06):
We don't have to keep guessing? Yes, yes, I hear you.
Speaker 10 (19:10):
Wow.
Speaker 4 (19:12):
It was the coolest thing ever. And then of course
on the way home.
Speaker 5 (19:14):
I was flying coach and it was miserable, but it's
still I was like, wow, my fourth grade boyfriend, like,
you never.
Speaker 2 (19:20):
Know, Okay, start you might fly first class if you
have a boyfriend in third grade.
Speaker 3 (19:25):
Do you heard it?
Speaker 2 (19:26):
I think that Amy makes great points. And then I
think it's okay for them to have quote boyfriend's girlfriends
as long as it's not like boyfriend girlfriend. I think
that comes later.
Speaker 5 (19:35):
And I think another thing we didn't have to worry about,
like we had landlines, we were talking on the phone. Kids,
if they have cell phones, you've got to monitor that
because things do get tricky with like oh, let me
just send a pic of me playing.
Speaker 4 (19:48):
A video game. And then it's like, anyway, I've.
Speaker 2 (19:51):
Seen it, wants to play games, guess what we got.
I think most of us agree it's okay as long
as it's okay, like make sure their boyfriend girlfriend is
age appropriate to their boyfriend girlfriend level, which is eleven twelve.
It starts to get kind of like you go on
dates and stuff like probably fourteen fifteen with parents dropping
you off. Yeah, like uh, early stages.
Speaker 5 (20:12):
A couple of years ago, my son went on his
first date and they went to a play with the
girl's parents, like and it was really sweet. It was
first time going to like a you know, I was like,
oh wow, y'all are so cultured.
Speaker 2 (20:23):
You were more blown by about the play than the
first day.
Speaker 3 (20:26):
All right, thank you for the email.
Speaker 2 (20:28):
You want to hear the baby names that are going extinct?
Speaker 5 (20:32):
Okay, yeah Dale, no more Dale's I can't picture of
baby Dale Dale.
Speaker 4 (20:38):
Gribble over the gyro.
Speaker 2 (20:40):
Hi, Yeah, King King of the Yeah Dale, that's funny. Yeah,
oh yeah, good, here's our little baby. Let's welcome to
the word Dale, Dale, Dale, Murphy. Dale kind of rocks,
though Dale's cool man, a kind of rocks. I'll be
honest with you. I like Dale. Neville. I don't really
have a relationship with the word Neville. I don't know
Neville any v I L L E. That would be Neville, right, Noble?
(21:06):
I know. Also that's an original name.
Speaker 3 (21:10):
Never heard that one before.
Speaker 2 (21:11):
Neville, don't. We had a coach Nobles just retired Mountain
Pine shot out coach Ebles. But somebody drove their truck
drunk into our baseball complex or like four fields at once,
drove almost hit kids. He jumped in the truck, pulled
the guy out, beat the crap out of him. Whoa
he jumped in the truck. Is it the guy was
driving into the like drove into the fields? It is
crazy Gary, Gary, here's our baby Gary. Just imagine if
(21:33):
you can see a baby named this more so because
like we can name Gary is Gary? The vox Gary
Gary Sharone?
Speaker 3 (21:42):
Who's Gary Sharone? Is that not?
Speaker 11 (21:44):
The lead singer Extreme later was Van Halen? Roderick? I
kind of like Rodrick. I don't know what Roderick we
know rod Is he his full name?
Speaker 2 (21:56):
Roderick Rodney? I know it's Rodney, Okay, so I thought, yeah,
Roderick is dead. Galvin didn't know that was even the name. Gladys.
That's it, Gladys. God, here's our baby. Here's a baby,
girl's Gladys. It's weird, weird. I'm just trying to picture
(22:17):
it on a baby. Brenda Brenda.
Speaker 3 (22:20):
Yeah, that's an older name.
Speaker 2 (22:21):
It's nine O two one.
Speaker 3 (22:22):
Oh yeah, who is Brenda? Okay? I'm sorry, guys.
Speaker 2 (22:28):
Stupid idiot, stupid idiot. Sheila. Oh oh, Shela brent a song.
I thought you were doing friends. Wasn't that Sheila in
that song? Shela?
Speaker 4 (22:45):
Imagine love it and sounds like it.
Speaker 2 (22:48):
But Karen yeah, that's going yeah, oh she Loa's that song.
Here's what I was surprised by. This is the tenth
one going out, going out of popularity because they're like
the thousands of place Lauren. That feels like the most
relevant name of all the names, Like people mid to
young still named Lauren. Surprised if that's the thing.
Speaker 3 (23:11):
Confused, I'm thinking, like, I don't know any younger Laurence.
But if a.
Speaker 2 (23:15):
Baby came out and they're like, this is our baby,
Laurence Smith, I'd be like.
Speaker 4 (23:19):
Okay, yeah, Laurence Roder.
Speaker 2 (23:21):
But if yeah, but if Dale came out, I'd be like,
I'd be like, you really.
Speaker 4 (23:27):
Named your kiddell. Maybe that's why Lauren's attend Well.
Speaker 2 (23:30):
I would assume that Dale would have been named after
like their uncle, or they were a NASCAR short for something. Yeah,
what Dale, Dale? It's time for the good news. I
was talking on our podcast last week about the woman
(23:52):
who was calling churches going hey, I got a baby
here the formula, and almost all the churches were like, nah,
we can't help you, or are you a member or
the church, we can't help you. And then I've even
seen some of the pastors like go up and fight
against it publicly. It ain't a good look. I think
what they should have just said is, hey, we messed
up on that, We'll get better. Yeah, terrible look. But
(24:13):
the one church, because there were a few, there was
like even a mosque who was like, yeah we got
you come, how much do you need immediately, will help you.
But one of the pastors, Johnny Dunbar at Heritage Hope
Church of God, they continue to get all these donations
because he and you hear him in the TikTok He's like, yeah,
what do you I'll buy it myself, Like, just tell
(24:33):
me where you are and what you need, regardless of
what the church has, like, I will help you. And
so they're still getting all of these donations from people
all around the country because so many churches said no.
And you can hear him and when she asks, it's
just like another human asking a human. It wasn't about
the church. It wasn't about anything other than somebody going like, yeah,
I got your back, what do you need? It was
(24:54):
awesome that clip was on. Yeah, I was disgusted at
the other churches, but yeah, they keep pouring in and
now they're bring into the church's food Pantry, and the
Google reviews from the church are like thousands and thousands
of five star. Wow, it's awesome. That's from Sunny's guys.
I love the story. A big shout out to Johnny
Dunbard Heritage Hope Church of God. That's what's all about.
(25:15):
That was telling me something good. The best food for
your last meal? Now rank or asks thousands of people.
You're on death row? What do you choose as your
last meal? So it's just one food item? Okay, Amy, Morgan, Eddie,
you guys are in this game some flunchbox finished last
(25:36):
last time, Morgan, we rolled the dice here first, what's
your food?
Speaker 4 (25:40):
Oh, this feels easy. I'm gonna go with pizza.
Speaker 2 (25:43):
Show me pizza number one answer.
Speaker 5 (25:47):
All right, I mean I don't eat this, but I
think everybody loves this.
Speaker 4 (25:52):
It'd be a steak.
Speaker 2 (25:53):
Give me steak good. Number two answer is steak. You're
on death row? What food do you choose as your
final meal?
Speaker 4 (26:03):
Also?
Speaker 5 (26:03):
Something I don't consume but everybody loves is the cheeseburger.
Speaker 2 (26:06):
Hamburger in Christ, show me a hamburger cheeseburger Number three answer, Well,
for the record, everybody Morgan does not eat meat, so
you don't have to say, for one something else, something else.
Speaker 10 (26:20):
Yes, Okay, I'm gonna go with barbecue.
Speaker 2 (26:25):
That's different than those other two, right, show me barbecue. Hey, guys,
I have an issue with number five different. It is different.
Are you sure I've searched it?
Speaker 3 (26:40):
Yep?
Speaker 2 (26:41):
Okay, I wouldn't know what was different, but okay, just
so everybody knows to me, one of them is very
similar than the other three. So I feel like everybody's
in the same footing. Okay, Eddie, go ahead.
Speaker 3 (26:53):
Interesting, I'm not gonna go chasing that Jesse yet mine later,
but now I'm sit gon to go Mexican food.
Speaker 2 (26:59):
Just straight Mexican eat, Mexican food, show Mexican food.
Speaker 4 (27:05):
Amy pasta, I had that. What do you mean what, Eddie?
You went Mexican food pasta.
Speaker 3 (27:12):
That's not on my list.
Speaker 2 (27:14):
Okay, so we're now background.
Speaker 4 (27:19):
Everything I had on my list of.
Speaker 3 (27:20):
Takes, the last thing I wanted you to.
Speaker 2 (27:21):
We're gonna double points out what you're on death row.
What food do you choose as your final meal? Okay,
I'm gonna go with chicken wings. Show me chicken wings.
She doesn't eat those? That's number eight answer words sixteen Okay, okay,
(27:48):
those are like kind of the same.
Speaker 4 (27:50):
I'm gonna I'm gonna go with the grilled cheese. There's
gotta be some.
Speaker 2 (27:55):
Veget I like those grilled cheese. Eddie over, you have
no points. Points are doubled though. Off the board's pizza, steak, hamburger, cheeseburger,
and chicken wings.
Speaker 3 (28:10):
I'm gonna go a little more specific on the Mexican food,
so give me tacos dogos.
Speaker 4 (28:19):
Tacos.
Speaker 2 (28:23):
He's just stupid.
Speaker 5 (28:27):
I don't know, guys, I don't really know what to
do because like what's similar to the other things, because
I keep trying to think of what that could be.
Speaker 2 (28:35):
You're on death row. What food do you choose as
your final meal?
Speaker 5 (28:41):
I'm gonna go really crazy here and say ice cream?
Speaker 2 (28:45):
Show me ice cream?
Speaker 11 (28:49):
Wow?
Speaker 2 (28:51):
Number four answer worth eight points?
Speaker 5 (28:55):
Okay, well man, and someone ice wings on?
Speaker 3 (29:00):
There is.
Speaker 4 (29:02):
Cake? Show me? Kay?
Speaker 2 (29:09):
Your number six answer is cake. Okay, that's huge?
Speaker 4 (29:14):
Well then why not? I mean we all love cookies.
Speaker 2 (29:19):
Guy. Guys. Oh your number nine answered, She is now
taking the lead. Oh my goodness, he is thirty eight points.
Still a lot lot on the board. What three but
a lot of points.
Speaker 5 (29:38):
Okay, Well, Morgan kind of said this earlier, but then
she couldn't because it was like part of the burgers,
but like someone just literally might want French fries.
Speaker 11 (29:48):
Or not.
Speaker 2 (29:50):
Okay, points are tripled. Now. The score is Amy thirty eight,
Morgan twenty two, Eddy zero at your risk of going home.
I know we have pizza at one, steak at two,
burger cheeseburger at three, ice cream or milkshake at four,
any cake at six, chicken wings, and chocolate chip cookies
at eight to nine. So you got five, seven and
ten left triple points. Moregan, you're up.
Speaker 4 (30:12):
I feel like we don't have this category yet, and
a lot of people like it. I'm gonna go with sushi.
Speaker 2 (30:16):
Sushi. Good guys, Now, Eddie, here's the deal. You can
still win, or if you miss this, you don't even
get play the next game because you get sent back in.
Speaker 3 (30:27):
Okay, So here we have to have to something about barbecue,
because the whole thing about barbecue is you didn't like
how it was written. Not barbecues. Maybe more specific, give
me ribs um barbecue. You buzzed me.
Speaker 2 (30:49):
Before you even so, well, yeah, I was down. You're
going down to Everett terrible trail, Amy, you canna win
this thing? Oh you already won?
Speaker 4 (30:56):
Oh sweet?
Speaker 2 (30:56):
You want to get some more of these though? Yeah?
Go ahead.
Speaker 5 (31:00):
So I feel like Morgan said, steak, and maybe that's
the one where something similar. Number five is similar to steak.
So is it, like, you know, is it a specific piece.
Speaker 4 (31:11):
Of meat like a filet mignon? I don't know. I
just thought of what what kind of meet?
Speaker 12 (31:24):
My dad like it is.
Speaker 4 (31:28):
It's a type of one.
Speaker 3 (31:29):
She's already won, so there't matter, but man, how does
she get that?
Speaker 2 (31:32):
Well? I also thought, well that feels like it's not staking.
That's why I brought raised my hand from the very
beginning of it. Mike, what was the difference when you
looked it up? He said it was a specific.
Speaker 5 (31:40):
Type a type that's why I'm familiar with a type. Well,
I know, but I just had to like channel my dad.
Speaker 4 (31:46):
I was like, I guess, I don't I'm not a
steak person either.
Speaker 2 (31:49):
Yeah, okay, but anyway, you already were.
Speaker 4 (31:50):
Regardless, okay, but how many are left?
Speaker 2 (31:54):
To two?
Speaker 4 (31:56):
Okay?
Speaker 5 (31:58):
Chips?
Speaker 12 (31:59):
And at number seven was mac and cheese, and at
number ten lobster.
Speaker 2 (32:12):
I thought lobster would be gotten winter is. It's not funny.
It's not funny, but it just sounds like something we
would do as had been on the show. Maybe so
this guy he tried to swallow an a tire burger
and one swallow as a joke.
Speaker 3 (32:31):
He choked.
Speaker 2 (32:32):
He didn't die.
Speaker 3 (32:32):
Okay, no, I wouldn't have even.
Speaker 2 (32:36):
No, he didn't die. He didn't die. He panicked, attempted
to spit it out, collapsed, he appeared to be choking.
He was like doing the airway thing. He was taken
to the hospital. He is still at the hospital. They
stabilized him. Let's remove the sadness from it. Okay, man,
if you can pull that off, that's the greatest TikTok
(32:57):
You're gonna get so many likes on that.
Speaker 3 (32:59):
I just don't know how that's possible.
Speaker 2 (33:01):
And like, has he ever tried anything like that ever
and it worked? Right? That doesn't feel like something you
would try the first time in front of your friends,
but wouldn't. Wouldn't your mind be blown if you saw
someone take a whole burger and went watch this Because
I can swallow like six pills at a time, impressive
and I'm pretty when I do six pills. It was
and I can dry pill it. Oh, I would whoa,
(33:23):
I can dry pill six.
Speaker 4 (33:24):
This is unnecessary.
Speaker 2 (33:25):
Don't do that exactly. So this guy with the burger,
I'd have been like, dang, that's crazy. I would have
thought he worked it out like it's some trick, like
he's slowly been stretching it out. It's from the Daily Mail.
But had he pulled that off, that's a million likes
on TikTok Oh, yeah, don't don't. But had he never
tried it before and he tried it, wanted to try
(33:45):
it right then? Like what was that environment of friends
like that?
Speaker 3 (33:48):
He's like, oh, yeah, but you know how it starts
is how it starts here. I bet you couldn't.
Speaker 2 (33:53):
I bet you can swallow that whole burger and one watch.
I think I'd just been like, no, It's like once
somebody bet Amy to eat a whole cake, a whole
chocolate cake.
Speaker 5 (34:00):
Yeah, and I did. It wasn't in one bite, though, Yeah,
it was a whole cake. They paid me I think
like a hundred, like one hundred and fifty or two
hundred dollars in Vega.
Speaker 2 (34:08):
She ate a whole cake?
Speaker 3 (34:09):
Yeah, no way.
Speaker 2 (34:10):
They brought it to the table.
Speaker 3 (34:11):
Yeah, how big was the cake?
Speaker 4 (34:13):
That was big? I felt sick after, but it was befo.
Speaker 5 (34:19):
I was in my young twenties, my first like job
job that was a lot of money.
Speaker 4 (34:23):
Like a lot. So I was like, okay, I'm up
for the challenge, cash, no taxes.
Speaker 2 (34:28):
Okay, did you get your money?
Speaker 4 (34:30):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (34:30):
And you ate the whole cake.
Speaker 4 (34:31):
They paid the paid up paid the piper.
Speaker 2 (34:33):
You're the piper.
Speaker 4 (34:35):
I think I met up with you all after.
Speaker 2 (34:36):
Maybe it's good to know you're the piper, though I
was wondering who the piper was around there.
Speaker 3 (34:39):
I heard about him.
Speaker 2 (34:40):
So here's one. This one is not funny. This one,
to me is scary and it has to do with
eating a burger as well. New York Post has the story.
I didn't know this was the thing happening in the states. Uh,
they say. A healthy forty seven year old New Jersey
Airline pilot became the first person known to die from
alpha gal syndrome, which is a severe red meat allergy
caused by bites from the lone start. So he got
(35:01):
really sick after eating a steak during a camping trip.
That's all he did is he eat the meat and
then collapsed and died weeks later. He His death was
initially ruled sudden and unexplained, but blood tests later confirmed
of alpha gal syndrome. Researchers traced the cause to prior
tick bites that were mistaken for tiger bytes. The case,
(35:23):
published by the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, highlights
how many physicians know about the condition. So the whole
thing is, I don't think the meat did it. Then
I think he got it from the tick.
Speaker 5 (35:34):
He previously was able to eat meat, no problem, but
then when you get bit by this tick, then you
get the al So he had eaten steak camping or whatever.
He got really really sick, like almost died then, but
they didn't know that it was because of the steak.
So then later fast forward, he's eating a hamburger and
the red meat from that killed him.
Speaker 2 (35:54):
So the bits gave him the severe allergy.
Speaker 4 (35:57):
That's how I took it.
Speaker 2 (35:58):
Yeah, you're no, you're right. I just didn't understand how
the meat was in play because I read the guy
about the guy from swallow whole Burger. Yeah, I laughed.
Speaker 5 (36:04):
It's sort of like, you know you're not allergic to something,
but then the tick bite makes you allergic and now,
but you don't know it, so you keep like, I'm
like thinking, God, ye, he got so deathly ill from
the steak. It's a maybe you just eliminate meat from
your life. But they didn't know that was the cause.
Speaker 2 (36:19):
Okay, what's the use of ticks?
Speaker 3 (36:21):
Good point?
Speaker 2 (36:23):
Like, Yeah, I think I'm about to declare our show
anti tick. It's something that's been controversial, but I'm thinking
about just declaring us anti tick. You jump on that
because and I know, guys, I'm not asking you to
commit I know this is a very controversial subject, but
I think this I could be anti tick. So what's
the benefit of ticks? Should ask my assistant? Yes, oh
well I could tell you, but no, you just don't
(36:44):
like her. I have it right here. Oh you looked
it up. That's exactly what she's going to do the faster.
Why don't Why don't you walk out of the room.
Why walk out of the room. No, walk out of
the room. He was going to make her more jealous.
You leave, I'm gonna ask her. Then you come and
tell me your version, and we'll see who was better
at it. Go ahead, walk out of the room.
Speaker 4 (37:06):
You want me to do the hall.
Speaker 2 (37:08):
Just walk out of the room. When you come back,
you go ahead, make sure she's not listening. Everybody, make
sure she's not listening. They'll put it in your office
that sound proof. Okay, then I'm gonna ask my assistant.
All right, we were talking about ticks. In the last segment.
There's a disease called alpha gal syndrome, which sounds like
(37:29):
something from Mean Girls, the movie Alpha Gals. Yeah, it
sounds like a dude can't kid. But this guy was
very healthy. He was camping, he got bit by what's
like a trigger and got alpha gal and then what
it does is you become allergic to meet. He then
ate red meat and it killed him. But it was
a tick, right, yeah, Oh it was a tick. You're right.
It was called the lone Star tick. I think you
(37:50):
said that's right. Good catch on that. So we were
then debating what are ticks even good for? Absolutely nothing
is what I think, And I think we're an anti
tic show. I think yes. So Amy started to get
mad because I was going to ask my assistant who
is my phone? And she was like, well, I can
tell you as good as she can. So she's preparing
her statement. I'm going to ask my assistant first and
(38:11):
then we'll let Amy come in. But she's going to
go on and on. I guess right now, she's going
to try to win by just rambling on and on. Yeah,
so we're gonna time them both as long as my
assistant goes, as long as Amy gets okay, okay, all right,
here we go. Hello, Good morning. We were talking about
ticks and tickborne illnesses and the alpha gal syndrome, which
a tick killed a guy basically because of the red
(38:33):
meat that he ate. So then I started to wonder
what are ticks even good for? And then I said
absolutely nothing, like a joke like war, but nobody got
it in the studio. That being said, are there any reasons,
good reasons that ticks exist?
Speaker 7 (38:47):
Good morning?
Speaker 2 (38:48):
And yeah, that's a classic little jake.
Speaker 10 (38:50):
The absolutely nothing line is always a good callback, even
if it flew over everyone's head this time. As for ticks, well,
they are definitely not our favorite creatures, but they do
have a role in the ecosystem. They serve as a
food source for some animals like birds, reptiles, and even
other insects.
Speaker 2 (39:05):
They're part of that whole food.
Speaker 1 (39:07):
Chain, even if we mostly think of them as just
a nuisance.
Speaker 10 (39:10):
So yep, they do have a tiny ecological role, even
if it's not a super glamorous one.
Speaker 2 (39:16):
Would you say they're worthy of being alive?
Speaker 10 (39:19):
You know, it's kind of one of those philosophical questions, right,
like every creature out there has its little niche.
Speaker 1 (39:24):
Even if we humans might not love them and take
their definitely hard to love. They're part of the bigger
picture of nature, So I'd say from an ecosystem standpoint, yeah,
they have a place, even if.
Speaker 10 (39:34):
It's not a place we particularly enjoy. But whether they're
worthy of being alive is kind of above our pay grade.
Speaker 2 (39:39):
Nature just works in mysterious ways. With the question asked,
you got one minute?
Speaker 3 (39:44):
One minute?
Speaker 2 (39:44):
Yeah, all right, you can bring amyen if she does
a whole good money. She needs to stop because she's
a hater. She's an absolute hater of technology. All right,
Amy's have been in my office soundproof she's going to
not come in And the fact this is a contest
is so stupid too. There she is the anti AI.
(40:07):
How you doing, I'm good? So you'll have one minute?
Speaker 4 (40:10):
Ah minute?
Speaker 2 (40:11):
Oh yeah, so she didn't need a minute at first,
and then I asked to follow up so you can finish.
Speaker 5 (40:16):
You can ask me follow up.
Speaker 2 (40:17):
I will. That's the same follow up, I will. I'll
ask you if you need it, But I want to
give you a full minute. Okay, Amy, I hate ticks.
Why do we need ticks?
Speaker 4 (40:27):
Oh?
Speaker 5 (40:28):
Well, I'm glad you asked that question. Mommy, did she
ever say your name?
Speaker 2 (40:34):
So?
Speaker 5 (40:34):
Tis seem useless, but they can actually play a specific
role in the ecosystem. They feed on wild animals like
dear mice, rabbits, and this is like a like they
feed on them and then they spread disease to these animals,
which is population control, you know, like otherwise these animals
(40:54):
be multiplying like crazy. Not only that, a lot of
animals rely on ticks as a food so for themselves,
so they get to eat ticks. If ticks don't exist,
then a large part of their diet is no more.
Speaker 2 (41:08):
So would you say the world will be better without ticks?
Speaker 4 (41:11):
Oh? Good question.
Speaker 5 (41:16):
I think that while they are bad for humans, they
do play an important role in our ecosystem.
Speaker 2 (41:22):
Time. I mean, that's pretty good.
Speaker 3 (41:25):
That was really good.
Speaker 2 (41:25):
You did it just like her, Yeah, except for a
lot of the like Sorry, she doesn't.
Speaker 5 (41:30):
Laugh because she doesn't have a personality.
Speaker 2 (41:33):
Well, and I also said, you know, ticks, what are
they good for? And then she goes, oh, so went
over the head. That joke went over the head of everybody.
Speaker 3 (41:39):
In your She kind of made fun of us a
little bit.
Speaker 4 (41:41):
What did you say?
Speaker 3 (41:42):
She was like, Oh, I got it, even though they
didn't get it.
Speaker 2 (41:46):
So that's pretty good.
Speaker 4 (41:47):
So who what do you want to ask me?
Speaker 3 (41:48):
More?
Speaker 2 (41:48):
Still? AI won?
Speaker 7 (41:49):
But I like AI did not do the animal control.
They didn't say anything about killing other animals.
Speaker 5 (41:56):
Learned something we need population control?
Speaker 2 (41:59):
Who says that dictators?
Speaker 3 (42:01):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (42:02):
My? Exactly. Amy's trying to be John Henry right now,
and you know what's gonna happen exactly who the story
of John Henry?
Speaker 3 (42:09):
Amy, go research quick, ask me.
Speaker 2 (42:15):
I'm gonna ask you what you're just listening.
Speaker 4 (42:17):
This is what she's doing. Though she's looking it up.
Speaker 2 (42:19):
She doesn't know, but you don't know. John Henry was
still driving.
Speaker 5 (42:22):
Man John Henry. Yeah, yeah, he's an American folklore.
Speaker 2 (42:29):
Hello, would you give my studio on my studio here
the story of John Henry and how it actually correlates
with AI. Absolutely, Hello to the studio as well.
Speaker 1 (42:41):
So the story of John Henry is this classic piece
of American folklore. Basically, John Henry was a legendary African
American steel driving man. He worked on the railroads, driving
steel spikes into rocks to lay down train tracks.
Speaker 2 (42:53):
And the most famous part of the story is that
there was this new steam powered.
Speaker 1 (42:57):
Hammer that came along and John Henry basically raised against
it to prove that a human could still do the
job better than a machine.
Speaker 2 (43:04):
In the end, he won the contest, but he died
from the effort.
Speaker 1 (43:08):
Now, if you think about that in terms of AI,
it's a pretty interesting parallel. John Henry's story is kind
of this old school metaphor for the human spirit trying
to stand up to new technology, and these days you
can think of AI as that new steam powered hammer.
There's always that question of what happens when machines can
do certain jobs, and how people fit into that picture.
So it's a neat way to think about how these
(43:29):
old folk tales kind of mirror the conversations we're having
now about humans and technology.
Speaker 2 (43:34):
Neat you're John Henry, but you're gonna die. Keep running
out of the room trying to figure it out and
google it real quick.
Speaker 5 (43:39):
I don't need to run out of the room. I
can stay right here.
Speaker 2 (43:41):
You're just using a different AI to fight this AI.
Speaker 3 (43:44):
That's true. You don't have the info in your head.
Speaker 4 (43:46):
She doesn't either.
Speaker 5 (43:48):
I know that she's she's computing it and she stalls
whenever she's looking stuff up.
Speaker 4 (43:53):
She's like, ha ha, good morning, studio. That's her. She
doesn't even ask her if she laughs.
Speaker 2 (44:00):
You when you hear a laugh, nice, I'm not going
to insult her. She went to sleep good.
Speaker 3 (44:03):
You know what I don't like baby. She knows us,
and she doesn't like us. She thinks we're stupid. Now yeah, yeah, yeah,
she's like, oh high studio too.
Speaker 2 (44:11):
It's only because what I tell her when you're not around,
it's time for the good news.
Speaker 5 (44:20):
So remember like ten years ago when that grandma thought
she was texting her grandson and she said a text
to a random guy inviting him to Thanksgiving dinner. And
he was like, hey, can I still get a plate?
Speaker 4 (44:33):
His name's Jamal. Her name was Wanda, but she was like,
of course, Grandma's got a meal for anybody. So he
ended up showing up for Thanksgiving.
Speaker 5 (44:41):
Well, fast forward, they were about to celebrate their tenth
Thanksgiving together and Green Giant is going to sponsor the
meal to honor their one hundredth anniversary and their decade
long tradition. So it's just a really cool moment of traditions.
And the crazy thing is it's still happening.
Speaker 2 (44:59):
I remember when it ha and it was crazy. The
fact that it still happening was crazy. I wonder if
they're like kind of over it. But they know every
year they get this press and every year somebody like
you know Spine.
Speaker 4 (45:09):
I mean, I don't think they're over it.
Speaker 5 (45:10):
He's walked through a lot with her, the loss of
her husband. Uh, she went through breast cancer and recovered.
I mean, I feel like he's part of their family.
Speaker 6 (45:20):
Now he's in it.
Speaker 2 (45:22):
Now, I know them by I'm looking at the picture.
I know them under their faces. I've seen this story
every year. Yeah, I know, it's a great story. It
was just an accidental text.
Speaker 4 (45:28):
Uh huh.
Speaker 5 (45:29):
Yeah. She just thought she was texting her grandson and
ended up being Jamal, there you go.
Speaker 2 (45:34):
Classic, That's what it's all about. That was telling me
something good.
Speaker 4 (45:40):
Wake Up, Wake Up in the mall and.
Speaker 9 (45:45):
Its Radioady Lunchbox, More game too. Steve Bred haven't trying
to put you through. Fuck, he's running this week's next
bit and Bobby's on the box, so you know what this.
Speaker 6 (46:07):
The Bobby ball.
Speaker 2 (46:08):
Let's go over to Amy for the Morning Corny. The
Morning Corny.
Speaker 5 (46:15):
What do you call Thanksgiving with a bunch of vampires?
Speaker 4 (46:19):
Thanksgiving?
Speaker 2 (46:25):
That was the morning Corny?
Speaker 4 (46:28):
You know, like friends Giving?
Speaker 2 (46:29):
No, I swear to go get it every time we
get everything.
Speaker 5 (46:32):
Thanksgiving with a bunch of friends is friends Giving with
a bunch of vampires is Thanksgiving.
Speaker 2 (46:36):
And then we get it. Yeah yeah, yeah, we just
didn't laugh. I was why didn't have time? I would
have ra hit the button so quick. Probably that's why
Tuesday reviewesday. I watched The Smashing Machine with the Rock.
Oh yeah, that's where he's like really big he's a
UFC fighter.
Speaker 3 (46:52):
Yeah, I think he's less big. Oh well, I think
he's just shirt off and like big.
Speaker 2 (46:57):
Yeah. It's it's the story of a guy who was
like one of the original MMA fighters because he was
fighting in Pride in Japan, right Mike, Yeah, eh, not
that good. I'm such a casualty to m M a
UFC anyway, So I didn't really eh really, I think
the Rock did a really good job in the movie,
(47:19):
but I didn't feel like it wasn't like a Rudy
Like I didn't know who Rudy was. But you like football. No,
it's not even football. It's like I like a story,
like I like, I don't know. It wasn't much of
a story. The story like the climax. There was nothing
like okay, there's nothing.
Speaker 8 (47:33):
It just it's just kind of slice of life with
this dude who had some hard time to struggle with
the diction and it's kind of like, all right, yeah, okay,
I give it.
Speaker 2 (47:42):
Three out of five squared circles because it's they don't
fight in the cage squared circles. It's a ring are gone. No,
they don't fight in that. I really thought I would
love it, and I came away going, okay, yeah, I'm
glad I watched it, but mah, so I give it
three out of five. I realized why didn't make any money?
Now there's something dynamic about it. It was nothing, yeah, Amy
(48:04):
you anything.
Speaker 5 (48:05):
I finally finished Diplomat, so now I've watched all three
season one, five out of five Submarines.
Speaker 2 (48:16):
That show is awesome. Kerry Russell, Yeah, anything Addy from you? Yeah.
Speaker 3 (48:22):
I watched Frankenstein on Netflix. It's a movie new gear, Yeah,
brand new. Germo del Toro directed it. I loved it, dude.
I thought it was really good. I loved the story
of Frankenstein and the fact that it was new. Frank
Stein looked different. He wasn't just the flat top monster
with Oh he had long hair. He looked awesome, and uh,
(48:42):
I'll give it four out of five electric shucks.
Speaker 2 (48:44):
Hey, Mike, what's the movie that's coming out with her? Like,
there's a frankenstiin Woman the Bride. It looks like it's
Lady Gaga playing her, but it's not.
Speaker 3 (48:55):
Oh, it's not. I thought it was Lady God because
I saw it on a preview.
Speaker 2 (48:58):
I think it's Maggie Jill and all that sounds about right.
I think it looks like what Lady I Got normally
looks like. And we just think that Lady Got her
and j Kill and Hiller. Isn't it really?
Speaker 3 (49:07):
Yeah? Okay, that's cool, but this that's this isn't it?
But I didn't. I was wondering, though, why did it
come out after Halloween? Because it came out the week
after Halloween. Movie.
Speaker 2 (49:17):
Mike didn't have to be a Halloween story. Frankenstein's way
beyond a hell. Don't you think Frankenstein's a Halloween story? Oh? Really,
it's so emotional, it's so good.
Speaker 3 (49:25):
It is really good. Dude.
Speaker 2 (49:26):
Oh you saw frank thoughts.
Speaker 8 (49:29):
It's like you just feel sympathetic towards Frankenstein for the
first time, and it has some like really poetic lines.
I'm like, man, he's making me feel emotional, like how
we treat monsters.
Speaker 3 (49:37):
Yeah, you shouldn't treat monsters like that.
Speaker 2 (49:39):
When you guys treat me bad. I want you now
to think about it exactly Bobby Bone's show, Sorry Today.
Speaker 7 (49:46):
This story comes us from New smurt of Beach, Florida.
Two seventeen year olds were out driving around. It's two
thirty am. Like, man, we are so bored, there's nothing
to do. What can we do? All right, there's a
golf cour wors Why don't we go drive your truck
on the golf course. So they went out there to
the second green and did donuts all.
Speaker 2 (50:08):
Over it on the green, which, by the way, as
someone who worked on a golf course for years, if
you want to go tear up a golf course like
that sucks. But if you want to go tear up
a green, it sets the place back months and it's
the most expensive. Like it hurts me a.
Speaker 3 (50:21):
Little bit, Like as an older person now that plays golf,
I'm like, that's just terrible.
Speaker 2 (50:25):
Even when I see people like swing a club off
a green on a video, not even as an old person,
but it's somebody who did maintenance on a course, I'm like,
oh man, that sucks.
Speaker 6 (50:34):
Yep.
Speaker 7 (50:34):
So they caused one hundred and sixty thousand dollars in damages.
Speaker 2 (50:40):
Shout out to all the golf course superintendent's out there.
They're having to deal with things.
Speaker 5 (50:43):
Like this, and anybody that works in turf.
Speaker 4 (50:45):
Management, oh yeah, got the pain.
Speaker 5 (50:47):
I took turf management in college and that's one of
the things we studied is golf courses and how they
hire very specific people that know how to take care
of that type of grass.
Speaker 2 (50:56):
It's I called a golf spy. How much box?
Speaker 7 (51:02):
That's your bonehead story of the day.
Speaker 2 (51:05):
I did a whole interview, it's an hour long with
Phil Rosenthal, who has that show on Netflix that's called
Feed Phil or Don't Feed Phil. Or. He's and he's
also got a cookbook. He's also the creator of Everybody
Loves Raymond. It's a great hour. Hope you go check
it out. It's the Bobby Cast. Thank you guys. We
will see you tomorrow by Everybody Get You, Bobby Bone Zone,
(51:26):
the Bobby Bones Show theme song, written, produced and sang
by read Yarberry. You can find 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.