Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
It's a Bobby Bones show.
Speaker 2 (00:03):
This woman who has thirty six M sized boobs is
making a desperate plea for surgery. What thirty six m?
Speaker 3 (00:12):
Yeah, that's gonna be painful on her back?
Speaker 2 (00:14):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (00:15):
Is a the smallest? Yes? So? And do you not
know this? Why would I know that?
Speaker 2 (00:22):
He Eddie, you know you're a man.
Speaker 1 (00:25):
You don't know what a bra size? I've heard like,
oh she has DS. I'm like, oh, that's big. I
didn't know they started A Is there like double A?
That's like super small?
Speaker 2 (00:33):
Is it like like like a ball?
Speaker 3 (00:41):
It's like and then does B come next?
Speaker 4 (00:43):
No?
Speaker 2 (00:44):
I know that big mom is putting out a desperate
plea for help with breast reduction surgery. Melissa Ashcroft has
experienced serious back pain from hauling around. That's a funny
term to use their hauling. It does feel like Gott
put them to wielbarrow. There, So thirty six m breasts.
Now that she's got two kids, only gotten worse. She
(01:04):
says it takes her an hour to get out of bed.
She can't even pick up her eight month old daughter.
Now the National Health Institute is telling her that just
some stuff she's doing to go fund me but thirty
six m. I don't know that I've ever seen that.
Speaker 3 (01:18):
I don't know.
Speaker 5 (01:19):
You can google them there.
Speaker 2 (01:21):
You would think, I don't know that she'd want to
do that.
Speaker 5 (01:23):
But she can make so much money. She can make
so much money.
Speaker 2 (01:27):
You got to kind of compromise your only fans. Yes,
you have to compromise your values. I don't want anybody
to do that.
Speaker 5 (01:33):
She could do one month, make a couple of million,
pay for the surgery.
Speaker 2 (01:37):
I don't think you make millions in one month.
Speaker 5 (01:41):
I mean, have you seen Sophia Rain No.
Speaker 1 (01:45):
Who's that?
Speaker 2 (01:45):
But that's somebody who's very famous. Whomever that is.
Speaker 5 (01:48):
Yeah, yeah, you know how she got famous. Only fans,
she makes like millions a month.
Speaker 1 (01:56):
Kay.
Speaker 2 (01:57):
Anyway, I'm rooting for that that lady.
Speaker 3 (01:59):
Yeah. Hoefully she can get enough because yeah, she's got
a pay for surgery. It'll be life changing for her.
Speaker 2 (02:05):
This is one of those stories that we wish would
happened to us a previously. Well, I got two of
them here. The first one is a dusty garage had
old painting in it and someone grabbed this painting and
it's worth nine hundred thousand dollars.
Speaker 1 (02:19):
Oh my goodness.
Speaker 2 (02:20):
The long forgotten painting, dubbed Madonna and Child, sparked a
frenzy after hitting the website at JS Fine Arts in Banbury.
Private buyer, I think it's going to sell for nine
hundred thousand dollars. It was just laying next to some
power tools, covered in dust. It's are you familiar with
(02:43):
when I say that Madonna and Child. It's not the
singer Madonna. It kind of looks like Mona Lisa holding
a baby. But it's not Mona Lisa, but it's that
kind of person. She's got a baby beside her. Oh okay, yeah,
but yeah, it was just chilling. That's crazy. There was
(03:03):
just there's a million dollars just sitting in someone's garage
covered in dust.
Speaker 1 (03:07):
Like they say that we all have some They don't
say that they do, doctor Lawry, they have a talent.
Speaker 2 (03:13):
They don't say we all have a million dollar paintings somewhere,
but we might.
Speaker 1 (03:16):
That's what they say, Like you never know what you.
Speaker 3 (03:17):
Have to day.
Speaker 2 (03:18):
You keep saying today generically tabbing.
Speaker 1 (03:21):
They I heard doctor Laurie say that.
Speaker 2 (03:25):
A previously unseen ren wall painting sells for over two million.
Now this is not one they found in the garage.
So it's really not that exciting unless you own it.
But yeah, sold for about two million bucks CBS News.
I don't know the Bob Ross stuff. I saw one
of those paintings sold for a million. We were talking
about those.
Speaker 1 (03:42):
You're still trying to get one of those?
Speaker 2 (03:43):
No, they sold for way too much. I'm not going
to pay that kind of money. I don't have that
kind of money to spend on a p.
Speaker 1 (03:47):
There's a lot of them, there's a lot out there.
Speaker 2 (03:50):
Yeah, those were going to fund public access television, I
think Yeah, I think John Oliver was a big part
of it. And one of the paintings was a million
million bucks. Jason Momo will ever ask you for one
hundred thousand bucks? On Facebook? In case you're wondering, another
woman has fallen victim to a social media scammer pretending
to be a celebrity. She only wants to be known
(04:11):
as Jane. She says, someone whom she thought was Jason
Momoa started chatting her up on Facebook. After things got
more comfortable, the Momoa impostor asked if their chats can
move over to WhatsApp because it's encrypted safer, and you know,
he's a big celebrity, so he wants to go somewherehere
it's safer to talk. Eventually, the conversation turned into money,
and she believed she was talking with Momoa's agent, lawyer,
(04:32):
bank representatives and daughter. Wow, they all jumped in too.
Speaker 3 (04:35):
She was on like a WhatsApp group chat.
Speaker 2 (04:38):
Kind of and that one person's doing them all.
Speaker 3 (04:40):
What country was this person?
Speaker 2 (04:41):
Frown It doesn't say.
Speaker 3 (04:42):
I feel like anytime anybody wants you to come on WhatsApp,
they're from some other country.
Speaker 2 (04:46):
For sure. That's like the one part of meta that
hasn't really taken off here. I'm pretty sure WhatsApp's meta, right,
I don't think so, is it? I think they bought it.
You may look, but when I was in South America.
Speaker 3 (04:56):
You have everywhere else they usually that's all they used.
Speaker 2 (04:59):
Was WhatsApp and all she was taking for more than
one hundred thousand dollars. So everybody out there, they're not
gonna ask for money. Celebrities, Mamoa, DiCaprio, Pitt Cloney, none
of them bones. We get all put in the same category.
A lot day about it for nineteen billion, whoa, it's
the biggest everywhere but America. It's like soccer.
Speaker 1 (05:19):
Yeah you can say that.
Speaker 2 (05:20):
Yeah, WhatsApp is basically technology soccer. Play me voicemall number three.
Speaker 4 (05:26):
Please listen. I'm twelve years old, so I don't know
a lot about anything. Okay, but stop riding my boy
Eddie just because he said something and doesn't follow through
with it, which he does a lot. I'm not going
to deny. That doesn't mean you'll have to give him
that much grief for it. I know it's repeated. She's like,
lay off of it.
Speaker 1 (05:44):
You know, what's this kid's name?
Speaker 2 (05:46):
No names?
Speaker 1 (05:47):
That's an awesome twelve year old right there.
Speaker 5 (05:50):
He hold are your kids?
Speaker 1 (05:52):
I have seventeen, twelve, ten, and six.
Speaker 2 (05:57):
He did get in there. Just because he's said something
it doesn't follow through with it, which he does a lot.
Speaker 1 (06:02):
I can't argue that.
Speaker 2 (06:04):
Hit me with the next one.
Speaker 1 (06:05):
I just wanted to say that Eddie's been cracking me
up this week, like audibly.
Speaker 3 (06:10):
I'm laughing in my car listening to the podcast.
Speaker 2 (06:13):
Eddie, just keep doing you. Hope you guys have a
great Thanksgiving. Were we on your case last week?
Speaker 1 (06:18):
I don't know. I don't know, but I mean I'll
keep doing me.
Speaker 2 (06:21):
Yeah, you shouldn't keep doing you. I don't know if
you thought about that recently. I had a couple of those,
and I don't pick the voice mouse, so they just
go through and put him up on a sheet. Were
we on him hard last week?
Speaker 1 (06:30):
I mean, Amy's always on me.
Speaker 2 (06:34):
On on your mic.
Speaker 3 (06:36):
I did hit up my bike, you know I didn't.
My arms are crossed. I didn't touch it. I don't know.
I don't think I'm always on you, no, a little bit.
Speaker 2 (06:46):
You two just battle it out to win all the
games that go into seconds.
Speaker 3 (06:51):
Yeah, it's like, you know, competition.
Speaker 2 (06:53):
Wise guy is learning the hard way because he put
fabric paint all over himself to be the incredible hulk,
like coats of green paint on his body, and now
he can't get it off.
Speaker 1 (07:05):
Six coats that's a lot.
Speaker 2 (07:06):
Oh yeah. So, worried that real body paint would melt
off in the heat, he put on fabric paint, and
hours later he appeared miserable, still heavily stained, admitting he
couldn't get it off. According to his friend he filmed
the ordeal for TikTok, it took him three days six bats.
It extended time in a steam room to remove some
of the paint, but he still can't get some of
(07:27):
it off.
Speaker 3 (07:27):
That's terrible.
Speaker 2 (07:29):
That's funny. It minds me of the scene and Friends
with Gray hand over and over and over again. Yeah, dude,
he is so green. Really still, that was the greatest
I've ever seen you like, lived this way. We don't
have the ability to put stuff on a screen yet, do
we We're close? Oh my god. My dream is to
be able to call something out and have a scene
on the screen.
Speaker 1 (07:49):
Your dream will come true pretty soon.
Speaker 2 (07:51):
And the thing is, this has been other people's reality
for seven years. I know this is the greatest green.
First of all, he's younger. He looks like he's what
twenty two? Yeah, he is so green, shout out, dude.
He looks like a big green bean. And the fact
that he can't get it off of him, he's just
super patchy. That's funy.
Speaker 3 (08:10):
He's so uncomfortable.
Speaker 2 (08:11):
Yeah, it's hilarious. Wish you guys could see it on
the screen. That'd be fun, huh.
Speaker 1 (08:16):
I know, it'd be awesome.
Speaker 2 (08:18):
Dang. Any stories from Thanksgiving, Amy.
Speaker 3 (08:23):
That was pretty low key. I mean, we had an
awesome Thanksgiving dinner and then the next day we were
considering going to Auburn. My boyfriend took his kids to
the Auburn game Alburn, Alabama.
Speaker 2 (08:34):
Yeah, they didn't win, but they played close to the end.
They fumbled at the end. He's a tough one.
Speaker 3 (08:38):
He said, it was hard, but it was a really
fun game. And I kind of wanted to go because
I was like, well, all just cheer for whoever has
the ball, because you know my family from Alabama.
Speaker 2 (08:52):
He gets one of those jerseys and sews them together
and half Alabama.
Speaker 3 (08:56):
But then, and I guess we were planning on going
maybe like a week before, but then a week before
that's also when we started planning Stevenson's run. So we
were like, well, shoot, I think we're gonna have to
do it on Saturday. So we're going to stay back
and do the run. And so they went to the game,
We stay back, We did the run, and there's pretty.
Speaker 2 (09:10):
They did go to the game.
Speaker 3 (09:12):
Yeah, they went, and I mean they left yeah Friday night,
got back Sunday.
Speaker 2 (09:17):
That was a tough one.
Speaker 3 (09:18):
Yeah, he said it was hard, but he's excited because
Virginia made it to the triple double.
Speaker 2 (09:23):
A c AC Championship a c A.
Speaker 3 (09:26):
There's a double letter double letter in there.
Speaker 2 (09:30):
Okay, this is he has too many teams?
Speaker 3 (09:32):
No, he really only has two.
Speaker 2 (09:33):
No, you can't have two is too many? You have
one and that's it because you can't be having one
team be good. If your team sucks, you have to suffer.
I can't have a second team. Otherwise I'd be like, well,
Oklahoma's my second team because my wives and they're really good,
and I'm not. I'm miserable because we suck. Yeah, so
if your team sucks, you have to be miserable.
Speaker 3 (09:51):
Okay, well, then his one a his one, his number one.
It would be Uba.
Speaker 2 (09:55):
It's not only because they're winning right now.
Speaker 3 (09:57):
No, I think that that's because that's where you went
to school.
Speaker 2 (10:00):
Then you go to Auburn too, No, his.
Speaker 3 (10:02):
Dad did, so he grew up an Auburn fan.
Speaker 2 (10:04):
Drop that, and we can't let him come back to Auburn.
Speaker 1 (10:07):
Why he's got to drop one?
Speaker 2 (10:08):
He's you can't have two favorite teams. It's the number
one rule in spor.
Speaker 3 (10:11):
What a bummer. If like, you grew up a fan
of one team and then you ended up going to
another college because you could run track.
Speaker 1 (10:16):
There, then stay then the old one, then you.
Speaker 2 (10:19):
Just got to pick you got to commit. It's like
a relationship. Well what a bummer? If you have a
girlfriend and there's another good girl, what a bummer? You know,
you know, you got to pick one and that's like.
Speaker 3 (10:27):
His big one, which is uva, and then just have
like a he can be another one he cares about.
Speaker 2 (10:31):
I don't want to make it just about him. Nobody
can do this. This is not a correct your boyfriend thing.
Speaker 3 (10:36):
Oh yeah, no, I'm not taking it that way. I
guess I'm just trying to have two favorites.
Speaker 2 (10:41):
You can have a favorite and another team you casually
root for, but you can't be claiming it. It's like
having multiple fantasy football teams. Been like, I won, I
won a fantasy football Yeah, no, I get it. I'm
the greatest. Well, talk U about the team that you
the league. There's a green guy. Hey, oh wow, I
don't know how you guys got that up there. But
tell me that that his green is not so good.
Speaker 1 (11:00):
The middle that's pretty good.
Speaker 5 (11:02):
That's really good green.
Speaker 1 (11:03):
And then the other pictures are kind of where he's
at with the removal process. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (11:08):
So if I start on a segment ten minutes earlier,
so basically Scuba has to google it.
Speaker 3 (11:14):
No, I put it up.
Speaker 2 (11:16):
I just need like a minute heads up and I
they're watching on YouTube, you're seeing this. Wow, what a breakthrough.
That was the whole reason I wanted those screens. Yeah,
we can all do it. It's just not the one
that you normally see it.
Speaker 1 (11:26):
We can't put it up there yet, but we will
get there.
Speaker 2 (11:29):
Which one do I see the mic one?
Speaker 1 (11:32):
So what we need is access to Mike's computer, so
when you see it, I can just pop it up there.
Speaker 2 (11:37):
Then just give Mike the access to it.
Speaker 1 (11:39):
It's a little more difficult now, it's not that easy.
It doesn't have to be.
Speaker 2 (11:43):
I know, trust me, I'm with you. But I got
friends that pulled like eighty cents on their podcast equipment.
They're running full videos and stuff. Corporation man, corporation man,
what happens? I have to remember Ricky, Yes, the other
video that raks off for a Yeah, I haven't, I haven't.
That has not left my head. I've also told with
some of my guys like on my team, to sit
and teach her. If she's serious about that. She is,
(12:04):
she really is. That's awesome. I love somebody who wants
to learn. Hey, how about that guy green.
Speaker 5 (12:09):
Huh, he's green.
Speaker 3 (12:10):
That looks painful.
Speaker 1 (12:12):
I can paint it, it's kind of come off, yeah.
Speaker 3 (12:14):
Like and then if it's on you, and then who
knows what's seeping into his body?
Speaker 1 (12:19):
I mean, your skin is.
Speaker 3 (12:20):
Your largest organ.
Speaker 2 (12:22):
Whatever your eating is gonta kind of crap in it too.
I agree with you. We're putting some fabric paints. It's true.
Speaker 1 (12:28):
I just found that out though, Like, if you put
stuff in your skin, it goes in your body.
Speaker 2 (12:31):
What about like lotion, that too, shampoo some block? H
crazy makes sense though, right, your skin has pores.
Speaker 1 (12:39):
It totally makes sense now. I just never made the
connection before.
Speaker 2 (12:44):
New studies found there are five major stages of life,
and your brain doesn't fully shift into adult mode until
age twenty five thirty.
Speaker 3 (12:50):
Two, Oh, but it fully develops the twenty five.
Speaker 2 (12:54):
I think that's kind of the the general thought on folks,
as we know that human body is not the same
two people are never the same. Yeah. Scientists studying nearly
four thousand brain scans from infancy to the age of
ninety identify five major parts of brain development. And here
we go, uh, ages nine, thirty two, sixty six, eighty three,
(13:14):
and I guess death.
Speaker 1 (13:16):
That's the last stage.
Speaker 2 (13:17):
I guess that's not a really a.
Speaker 3 (13:18):
Stage nine two, sixty six, sixty six, eighty three, eighty
three and.
Speaker 2 (13:27):
Twenty What that song? What am I doing?
Speaker 1 (13:31):
I don't know? What is that?
Speaker 3 (13:33):
Do?
Speaker 2 (13:36):
Come on somebody calling? What am I trying to get?
Speaker 4 (13:43):
On?
Speaker 1 (13:45):
Twenty? That's not the one that where he is like
when I was twenty two?
Speaker 2 (13:50):
No, it's like no, it's in like a twenty I
don't know. It's like a jay shan or like a
pibowl or something.
Speaker 1 (14:00):
Thirty that's it?
Speaker 2 (14:00):
What is that?
Speaker 1 (14:01):
Thirty wap?
Speaker 2 (14:02):
That's what it is?
Speaker 1 (14:03):
Seventeen thirty? Yeah?
Speaker 2 (14:05):
Nine? How are dude?
Speaker 1 (14:07):
We like his song fetty Wap?
Speaker 2 (14:09):
Which song?
Speaker 1 (14:09):
Go all on my chain?
Speaker 2 (14:11):
Oh that's fetty Wah. They found that early childhood is
marked by a network consolidation. Nine years old is when
it goes to like an older brain stage of a child,
thirty two as adult. I know the difference in sixty
six and eighty three though.
Speaker 3 (14:28):
Oh, I mean three, that's just when things start to
go a little bit downhill.
Speaker 2 (14:32):
Like at sixty six, an early aging era begins, followed
by late aging around eighty three. Kind of sounds like
Northern North Ireland and normal Ireland. Yeah, like there's just
a barrier there, but you don't really know why because
it says early aging and late aging. Researchers say these
distinct phases show the brain development is not a smooth
linear progression, but shaped by major transitions and may influence cognition, personality,
(14:53):
and vulnerability to mental health disorders. To Guardian, I don't know.
I saw Kim Kardashians. They're so great at teasing that
show because every time it's like Kim Kardashian she lost
a leg, Kim Kardashian her brain's gone, and everybody goes
crazy about it. I'm like, oh, wow, is she sick?
And then it's just a tease for the television show.
Speaker 3 (15:10):
Yeah, because you got a brain scan, didn't she And
it showed that like some parts of.
Speaker 2 (15:13):
Her brain were not working or something.
Speaker 3 (15:15):
Like operating slow or a sleep something.
Speaker 2 (15:18):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (15:20):
Yeah, I can't remember the teas exactly.
Speaker 2 (15:22):
I thought it was like she was like dying or something.
It was just a tease for the television show.
Speaker 3 (15:25):
Yeah, And I was like, oh man, what's wrong with
her brain?
Speaker 2 (15:27):
I saw Whitney Love it as doing Broadway. What is
she doing Chicago.
Speaker 3 (15:33):
Oh, so do.
Speaker 2 (15:34):
You know who that is?
Speaker 5 (15:34):
Everybody?
Speaker 1 (15:35):
Nope, sounds familiar.
Speaker 3 (15:38):
Yes, But how I only see her on Social.
Speaker 2 (15:41):
Mormon Wives and she was on Dancing with Stars. I
don't know her of it. Yeah, I never matter. I
only know her from being on Dancing with the Stars
and I've never talked to her. But after she was
kicked off the show, she was like in a hotel
room holding up some sides which are like lines from
and they're like, Oh, I think she's auditioning for Broadway
and she made it. That's pretty cool for her.
Speaker 3 (16:00):
She's got to be pumped about that.
Speaker 2 (16:02):
The Broadway Company of Chicago will welcome Dancing with the
Star semifinalists and actress of the Secret Lives of Mormon
and Wife Whitney love It. She'll be making her Broadway
debut as Roxy Heart beginning Monday, February second, twenty twenty six.
That's awesome.
Speaker 1 (16:16):
Yeah, sides are like lines like the script. It's cool.
Lunch Boss is almost there man, and.
Speaker 2 (16:26):
Hell dude, Well that was Vegas.
Speaker 5 (16:29):
Yeah, it was totally different.
Speaker 1 (16:30):
They call it off Broadway on Vegas.
Speaker 2 (16:33):
Yeah, there's just a strip, a play on the strip.
Speaker 1 (16:36):
Got it?
Speaker 2 (16:36):
Yeah, all right, let's see what else do I have.
Speaker 5 (16:42):
So I got a question, Eddie, did you really know
who it was? Or did you just try to sound
cool there and act like you knew who she was?
Speaker 2 (16:47):
I think everybody did that. Everybody was like yeah, and
then they try to figure out I knew she.
Speaker 3 (16:51):
Was, like I've seen her a lot on socials within Yeah,
she was the reason why I was familiar is because
I do.
Speaker 5 (16:57):
I think Eddie had no idea who she was, because
he has no idea who the the real lives of
the Norman wives are.
Speaker 1 (17:02):
After he said dancing with the Stars, I remember seeing
her on there. I saw the picture.
Speaker 3 (17:06):
Yeah, and she's been in the news a lot lately.
Speaker 1 (17:09):
What do you think I'm trying to be cool?
Speaker 2 (17:10):
I think she got kicked the play that fifteen year
old the twelve year old. Again, it wasn't me.
Speaker 4 (17:16):
I'm twelve years old, so I don't know a lot
about anything. Okay, but stop riding my boy Eddie just
because he said something and doesn't follow through with it,
which she does a lot. I'm not going to deny.
That doesn't mean you'll have to give him that much
grief for it. I know it's repeated, She's like, lay
off of it.
Speaker 1 (17:33):
You know that one just came out of nowhere to stop.
Speaker 2 (17:35):
Yeah, of nowhere.
Speaker 1 (17:36):
Either you're cool because you know her what No, no, no.
Speaker 5 (17:39):
Because you just tried to act like, oh, yeah, I
know who that is.
Speaker 1 (17:41):
And then you're like, well, now I do, because at
first I thought it was Whitney the girl that had
that TV show, Whitney Coming, Whitney Cummings. And then I
thought it was Whitney Carson who just won Dancing with
the Stars.
Speaker 3 (17:51):
Right now the boy won Dancers.
Speaker 1 (17:53):
No, she's the dancer, she's the pro. Yeah yeah, yeah yeah.
And then finally, Mormon wives, you literally don't have to
explain yourself.
Speaker 3 (18:00):
Well, okay, we got there. Actually I do. I do
need to explain myself.
Speaker 2 (18:07):
A study found doing a social media detox might might
not make you use your phone less. They had three
hundred young adults avoid social media for a week, and
they actually spent more time on their phone. They just
use it for other stuff. Fordicipants cut social media use
by about nine hours per week, but they still increased
overall screen time every single day. But they said depression dropped,
(18:27):
anxiety felt insomnia decreased during the detalks week, but loneliness
didn't improve. Improve Self reported problematic behaviors like comparing yourself
to others predicted mental health issues better than total screen
time did.
Speaker 3 (18:40):
Okay, Yeah, because if you're busying yourself on other like
if you're on your phone playing games, that's not gonna
you know, like, you're not comparing yourself to.
Speaker 2 (18:49):
People unless you're playing plants versus aliens and the persons
that you're competing against wooping your butts. Did you guys
ever play that? Yeah, it's like the one game I played.
All right, let's do some stories, am you go?
Speaker 3 (19:01):
So the Campbell's executive did you see him? He got
fired for he was an executive and he was caught
on a secret recording.
Speaker 2 (19:09):
Morgan did the story and we talked about it and
oh my go just for campbell Soup and I.
Speaker 3 (19:15):
Do remember that part.
Speaker 2 (19:18):
Go ahead and finish, go ahead and finish? Amy, is this?
Speaker 3 (19:22):
Why did he catch my attention this morning?
Speaker 1 (19:26):
Okay?
Speaker 2 (19:26):
Just kidding, act like we didn't stop you.
Speaker 3 (19:29):
And then Eddie was like, we talked about the little Yeah,
I mean I remember. Now I'm out.
Speaker 2 (19:40):
So the update is they fired the guy?
Speaker 4 (19:42):
Yes?
Speaker 2 (19:43):
No, no, don't act like that's you didn't know. Just
for the update can Gimble's fire.
Speaker 3 (19:48):
That's the headline. So that's why it is in the
news again because it's like brand new.
Speaker 2 (19:54):
You need to have a discussion here. Oh man, it's okay.
Speaker 1 (19:57):
What happens is like when you see these stories, you're
like that sounds so interesting, and then like everything starts
to sound familiar.
Speaker 3 (20:03):
Because also regarding Campbell's, I just saw this TikTok or
this guy because his wife can't stand the bits and
pieces inside there, like the little mushrooms or the little
corn like whatever. So he anytime there you like a
recipe calls for chicken of mushroom soup or something, or
Campbell's mushroom soup, you know, the one that's in rescues
a lot of cream of mushroom, that's what's called. He
(20:25):
strains it out and those soup part comes out and
he collects all the bits and discards them. And he
said every single time, that's what he does for his wife,
and it takes forever.
Speaker 2 (20:34):
And I was like shouting to save the story right now.
Speaker 3 (20:36):
No, Campbell's, it's just been on the brain, like I
just saw that video. I don't know it keeps popping
up in my feed, and like, maybe because it's Thanksgiving
two and a.
Speaker 2 (20:44):
Lot of people are reading to have a meeting with
the team.
Speaker 3 (20:46):
It's okay, I have a meeting. I mean, it's fine.
Speaker 1 (20:48):
You're gonna get a lot of sympathy from me.
Speaker 3 (20:49):
Can I show you my sheet?
Speaker 4 (20:50):
Though?
Speaker 1 (20:51):
Guys? Did she?
Speaker 3 (20:53):
Oh, Bobby, can I show you my sheet? On your honor? Ah? Okay?
So I write podcast story and I just put three
words that remind me of what my story is, and
I go to it and I wrote Campbell's exec fired.
Speaker 1 (21:05):
I have here so well, So when Morgan did the story,
he wasn't fired.
Speaker 2 (21:09):
Yet, correct, But it's Morgan's story to update.
Speaker 3 (21:12):
Oh you can't okay?
Speaker 2 (21:14):
True, I mean you really you don't want to keep?
Speaker 5 (21:16):
But I think Amy was adding like it was the
first time we ever heard the story. She for sure,
so she didn't even think it was an update. She
was just doing the story.
Speaker 3 (21:24):
But maybe subconsciously I knew because I put Campbell's exec fire, Like,
those are the three words I wrote, Campbell's exec fired.
Speaker 5 (21:32):
I may season maybe we you know a little forgiving
And Morgan, was that your story?
Speaker 3 (21:36):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (21:37):
Yeah, I know, that's the worst when someone I got.
Speaker 2 (21:41):
A back up, the worst, Morgan, What do you have?
Speaker 6 (21:45):
So there was a man in Maine who broke into
somebody's apartment, unwrapped the Christmas gifts, and then napped on
the couch, and then he refused to leave when the
tenant came in tried to get.
Speaker 2 (21:57):
Is that Christmas squatting?
Speaker 1 (21:58):
Is that an?
Speaker 2 (21:58):
Is that a new movie coming out the Hallmark Channel?
Speaker 1 (22:00):
Interesting?
Speaker 6 (22:01):
Seems like, I mean, the guy's fifty years old.
Speaker 3 (22:03):
Who did this?
Speaker 2 (22:04):
It's one hundred, yeah, but I mean.
Speaker 1 (22:10):
Four years it's me?
Speaker 6 (22:13):
Do you know better not to break in and unwrapped
something else's Chriss gifts?
Speaker 2 (22:16):
Was it drunk? Do you think it was the wrong house?
Speaker 3 (22:18):
No?
Speaker 6 (22:19):
They just they called the cops on him and they
had to get him arrested to get him to leave.
They didn't really say why he chose to do it.
Speaker 2 (22:25):
The homeless.
Speaker 1 (22:28):
I was in college. Some dude broke into their apartment.
Four girls lived there, and he just like went to
the fridge, made a sandwich, slept the couch.
Speaker 2 (22:35):
Drunk. Yeah, just made not a decision to hurt anybody
or steel went into the wrong place and probably everything
felt a little off, but he was drunk.
Speaker 1 (22:45):
Right, he said it was like she said, it was like,
you know, the one girl screamed and then another girl
ran out of the room scream then he screamed and
then ran.
Speaker 5 (22:52):
Out and this, I mean, what stuck out to me
this story is that someone already has Christmas presents wrapped
under the tree. Like, wow, man, I do.
Speaker 3 (23:00):
But they're decoys.
Speaker 1 (23:01):
You have decoy present?
Speaker 2 (23:03):
Yeah, what to look Christmasy? Or yes, you're like them all.
Speaker 3 (23:07):
They're wrapped in every year, they just go in a
storage box and then.
Speaker 2 (23:10):
They're pulled out esthetics Christmas sthetic, got it.
Speaker 3 (23:13):
Yeah, So it looks like we already have presence under there,
but we don't who.
Speaker 1 (23:16):
Wrapped those well years ago.
Speaker 2 (23:18):
I think they're stayed there.
Speaker 3 (23:19):
They've been wrapped. Do you wrap them for a long time?
Speaker 2 (23:21):
No?
Speaker 3 (23:21):
My friend Keaton Claws.
Speaker 2 (23:23):
Okay, shep ever heard? Oh we have something like that too, Yeah, yeah,
ever heard of her?
Speaker 3 (23:27):
It's part of her.
Speaker 1 (23:29):
Okay. So there is a girl she's let me see,
she's twenty eight years old, and she does a twenty
three and me finds out that she's related to her dad.
She finds her dad long lost dad didn't know him. Uh, finds.
The family turns out that the dad was sick. Okay,
he had like some some illness. He dies. They end
(23:50):
up suing the hospital her. His family sues the hospital
and gets twenty eight million dollars. So the family is like,
so this girl comes out of nowhere. Wow, says that
she is proves proves because but proves proves that she
is the daughter of their father slash husband, and she
(24:11):
wants to cut the money. Wow. And so now she's
suing Now she I think she deserves part of it,
but she never knew him.
Speaker 2 (24:19):
That's not her fault. Matter he left her, Yep, yeah,
that's child support.
Speaker 1 (24:24):
Well, I mean you can look at it that way.
Speaker 2 (24:28):
Yeah, he left, I don't know what happened. It's not
her fault. And if there is money that when someone
dies it goes to their next of ken.
Speaker 1 (24:37):
They're also thinking it's a little convenient that he was
dying when he was like, oh, look, i'm your.
Speaker 2 (24:42):
Daughter when she was dead.
Speaker 1 (24:43):
Yeah, Like so he was already kind of dying and.
Speaker 2 (24:46):
It doesn't matter. It doesn't matter if if you can
prove it, it doesn't matter.
Speaker 3 (24:49):
But there's two ways to look at that. It could
be like, oh, now a convenient time for you to
come or like, oh shoot, I'm almost out of time,
Like I better and you're scared to do it, but
you finally need to do it because you want to
do it.
Speaker 2 (25:00):
We had that money either, like didn't the twenty eight
millions from the hospital.
Speaker 1 (25:02):
For sure enough later came later?
Speaker 2 (25:04):
Yes, yes, the family just wants that money not have
to cut somebody new in. It sounds like, but if
she's a daughter, she deserves as much as anybody else does.
Does he have other kids?
Speaker 1 (25:15):
Yeah, he has two kids. Yeah, right, so that would
have divided by four we divide into force a million?
What is that? What do you mean a million to before?
Speaker 2 (25:25):
Four times seven.
Speaker 1 (25:27):
Twenty one, two twenty seven? Literally, I don't have I
don't have the fingernis.
Speaker 2 (25:34):
I just gave it to you.
Speaker 1 (25:35):
What is it?
Speaker 3 (25:36):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (25:36):
Seven twenty eight goys? Yeah yea yeah, yeah yeah yeah.
Speaker 2 (25:39):
Seven million each boy. How fortunate for her though you
think she's gonna win, yeah, of course, but how fortunate.
First she didn't have to like mourn, wasn't like her
dad was a big part of her life. And then
she made seven million bucks. She made seven million bucks
off doing a DNA test that's crazy, a right lunchboks.
Speaker 5 (25:57):
Well, that high school football coach. There's been an update,
the one that was the police wanted to talk to him,
he disappeared into the woods. Then it comes out there
was all these charges about child pornography and soliciting a
miner online. The lawyer came out on Friday and confirmed
that he was last seen with a gun heading into
(26:18):
the woods and.
Speaker 2 (26:19):
The white he can't find his body.
Speaker 5 (26:21):
They can't find his body.
Speaker 2 (26:22):
He said.
Speaker 5 (26:22):
It's a heavily wooded area. And the wife has now
scraped her social media. She is no longer on social media.
And she was like the town social media person updating
about football team and football games, and she no longer
has her accounts. So it's most likely. I think they
believe that he went to the woods too ended. Yeah,
(26:43):
but they haven't found him yet because it's very heavily wooded.
Speaker 1 (26:46):
That's been what a week, it's two weeks.
Speaker 2 (26:49):
The guy was like a really good coach too, huh. Yeah,
and he was a state champion type coach, right, yeah,
And he.
Speaker 5 (26:54):
Was a really good football player. He went to Virginia
Tech play quarterback. Yeah. His dad was like a legend
coach in that town or whatever, and.
Speaker 2 (27:06):
Probably they can't find the body.
Speaker 1 (27:07):
Yeah, unless he just hasn't done it yet and he's
still on the run for a week. Yeah, he's just
run the run. Maybe the plan wasn't too to get
rid of himself.
Speaker 5 (27:19):
I don't think you take a gun. If you are,
you're not going to yourself.
Speaker 3 (27:23):
Yeah, but he might be thinking about it, and then
thinking and doing is very different, like I I don't
think I could do something like that.
Speaker 2 (27:30):
But you also you also wouldn't be talking to kids.
Speaker 5 (27:35):
He thinks his life's over if the police are coming
to him, and if he knows he did this, Yeah,
he's like, well, I.
Speaker 3 (27:41):
Mean desperate circumstance.
Speaker 2 (27:43):
Yeah, hey, there's a story. Why you can't just move
to an empty seat on an airplane. I've had well,
I've had this written on this page for like, oh
I've heard that. I know this. I've had it for
like a week, and I don't even know what it's like.
I haven't wrote a note. Last night I was like,
I forget what this is?
Speaker 1 (27:58):
What is it yours?
Speaker 3 (28:00):
Now?
Speaker 5 (28:00):
I didn't send the story, but I know what it is.
It's because a weight distribution. They don't let you move
because they have a certain amount of people on a
plane and the weight distribution has to be a certain place,
so they have people in different seats for that reason.
Speaker 1 (28:14):
But they don't ask you your weight when you book it.
Speaker 5 (28:17):
Light right, But I think it's just basically a number
of people. You can't have one hundred people on the
left side in twenty on the right side.
Speaker 2 (28:24):
I guess, yeah.
Speaker 3 (28:26):
Looks like one open seat, like you can't move to it.
Speaker 2 (28:29):
It's weight. It is a weight balanced thing. But yeah,
so here's the story. You're exactly right. Last week m
underscore Stony was venting on TikTok about being seen in
the back of a flight with fifteen empty seats in
front of him. When he tried the just walk up
there and said he was told, well, you can't. It's
the policy. And so it's not about just paying more
(28:50):
to get a better seat. Before the flight takes off,
gate agents calculate the balance of the plane based on
where passengers are sitting and where cargo was also placed inside.
Even a yes, seemingly insignificant change can affect how much
a plane burns feel and one person's like gonna change. Oh,
but you just can't let people go running.
Speaker 5 (29:06):
Because if one person does it, then the second person
does it, then the third person does it, and it's
a domino.
Speaker 1 (29:10):
How many empty seats are there?
Speaker 3 (29:11):
He's a fifteen.
Speaker 2 (29:12):
Even that, I don't think it is going to change.
I just think it's it's probably a way too to
get people from moving up and not have to pay
for the fee. And they're using science as the actual backer.
All right.
Speaker 5 (29:24):
I didn't like the way people scoffed when I gave
my description of it, and.
Speaker 3 (29:27):
I scoffing, scoffed, No, no lunchboks. But it wasn't at you.
It's at the thought of like, why would one person matter?
And yet, to Eddie's point, they don't weigh us before
we get on, so they have no idea who's sitting left, right,
center and what they like. I like it.
Speaker 2 (29:43):
I like to paint a full picture. How did I
take a breath? I want I take a breath. No
more scoffing, it's it's yeah, scoffing, begone for a second.
You guys did scoff at him? However, he's so confused
as to why when he did nothing but attack you.
He's done nothing but attacking you, guys, the whole time,
and then when you guys do anything back, I'm so confused.
Speaker 3 (29:59):
Yeah, crazy, But to be fair, I really wasn't scoffing
at lunchbox.
Speaker 2 (30:05):
It was more no, not even talking about that. I'm
just saying, well, that's a very victim behavior when you
were being so aggressive the whole time, and then all
of a sudden Eddie goes back at you after you
were going at him about Whitney love it when he
confused the Whitneys he didn't know who she was.
Speaker 5 (30:20):
I'm that's fine.
Speaker 2 (30:23):
You might be factually whatever you want.
Speaker 1 (30:27):
But back to the story though, Like you're telling me,
if ten fat guys book a flight and they all
want to sit on the right side, like they're gonna
get that seat, maybe once they bored, they're like, you
can't have ten fat guys on the right side.
Speaker 2 (30:42):
I don't think they're gonna change anything. What they might
do is, mate, I don't think you're gonna have to
find ten really fat guys.
Speaker 1 (30:48):
Just say what if like they're just all buddies, right,
and they all book it on the same side, they
all want to sit together.
Speaker 2 (30:53):
You have to be fat. You could be like wrestlers,
like six six guys, monster dudes, basketball players. I think
you probably adjusted with you put cargo on that side,
but I really don't think it's enough to matter.
Speaker 1 (31:02):
And I think we scoffed that.
Speaker 2 (31:03):
Yeah. No, My only point was he gets aggressive. But
he's he's been aggressive, and he's like, why are people
coming at me? It's like you set the table, now
everybody's eating.
Speaker 5 (31:13):
Yeah, but at least I came aggressive when I was right.
He scoffed when he was wrong, is what I was saying.
Speaker 2 (31:19):
Eddie has found a new talent of his. You think
you're better than eybody else.
Speaker 1 (31:23):
Youre on the show, dude, I think I'm pretty good
at this. I had no idea, but my sister bought
me a puzzle. I killed it, finished in one day,
six hundred pieces.
Speaker 3 (31:32):
You finished a six hundred piece puzzle in one day?
Speaker 1 (31:34):
Why myself?
Speaker 3 (31:35):
Why yourself?
Speaker 1 (31:36):
And this is like and this is like one of
my kids comes up, He's like, ooh, can I put
the last piece? I'm like, get out of here. I
did this whole thing by myself.
Speaker 3 (31:42):
I need to see what it looks like. It was
the difficulty scale six hundred pieces pieces.
Speaker 1 (31:49):
I don't know what the difficulty scale is all gray,
no color. Yeah, she did buy me one one year
that was all crystal and like that. It's called the
impossible puzzle. I could and do it like the impossible puzzle.
I cannot do. But six hundred I'm working on one
thousand and one right now. I started it yesterday. I
should be finished by tomorrow.
Speaker 2 (32:09):
What do you do when you're done with a puzzle?
Speaker 1 (32:11):
Take a picture?
Speaker 2 (32:12):
Then he did it?
Speaker 3 (32:13):
Thought a way, Yeah, put it back in the box.
Speaker 2 (32:15):
No somebody else to use.
Speaker 5 (32:16):
I mean when you're Amy was nice enough to get
me a puzzle and puzzle glue so I could put
it together and glue It's Chris. That was my Christmas present,
and it was like, wow, that's really cool.
Speaker 1 (32:26):
My sister said, like yeah, like glue it and frame it.
I'm like, of what this is called sassy pants?
Speaker 3 (32:31):
Also hater over here just attacking one of my gifts
from like two thousand.
Speaker 2 (32:35):
And seven, wasn't your gift? In response to crap he
got you? They before?
Speaker 3 (32:39):
Who knows?
Speaker 5 (32:40):
So then in the next year I did do it,
and I glued it and I gave it back to her.
That was a good present. What tells me is Eddie
was really involved with his family that day.
Speaker 2 (32:51):
But then you don't understand why people come at you.
Speaker 5 (32:53):
No, no, no, I'm just pointing out things.
Speaker 1 (32:55):
I was doing it in the living room. Dude, everyone's
hanging out. It's not like I was by myself in
my room doing the puzzle.
Speaker 2 (33:01):
I get that. I'd understand though I was.
Speaker 1 (33:04):
I was there around everyone. But dude, pretty good at
doing puzzles.
Speaker 2 (33:09):
I think that I we're betting. I'd bet on Amy
to do a puzzle against you.
Speaker 3 (33:14):
Six hundred pieces in one day.
Speaker 2 (33:15):
Let's go and marrying her dark ages. She was pretty
puzzled in that was.
Speaker 3 (33:19):
Very is part of my I don't know my I
don't know. My therapist was telling me this, but she said,
you know, when I was sitting at my kitchen table
watching birds and doing puzzles twenty four or seven, she
was like, no, no, no, this is exactly what your
brain needs, like when you're depressed. Sort of like my
circumstances were depressing me, and I'm just differentiating, like I
(33:43):
wasn't full blown depressed, but I had circumstantial depression and
I have that.
Speaker 2 (33:47):
Right now totally. We're doing but that was.
Speaker 3 (33:52):
What I was. It was a coping skill for me,
and it was helping me survive the days.
Speaker 1 (33:58):
Maybe that was me during the thing skin and break,
surviving all the people in my house.
Speaker 2 (34:04):
I still would bet money on Amy against you in
a puzzle off, no chance, just because I've seen her
again during the Dark Ages. You go to our house.
It's just about puzzle. Fe like she'd invite people ever
to do puzzles and be depressed with her.
Speaker 3 (34:14):
Pretty sure. So we did on my birthday.
Speaker 2 (34:16):
Yeah, we did on your birthday.
Speaker 1 (34:17):
You want to do a puzzle.
Speaker 3 (34:19):
This is a dark time.
Speaker 2 (34:20):
It was Dark ages, yeah yeah.
Speaker 3 (34:21):
But also it was like still we were coming out
of COVID and people weren't really doing my I don't know.
Speaker 2 (34:25):
We're in enlightenment now, we're enlightenment Amy.
Speaker 3 (34:28):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, which that makes me think of I
was laughing last night, which is like not funny, but
also like looking at what happened on Saturday with Stevenson
and Ben and I being there supporting him together and
Stevenson even doing that, like we were like golly, like
in twenty twenty, twenty twenty one, like I would have
never pictured that day happening ever, And it's just so
(34:50):
cool just because like everything that was going on and
all the different things and so and some of that
Stevenson's story to tell later, like it's.
Speaker 2 (34:57):
Personal, but I thought you met between you and Ben
and me.
Speaker 3 (34:59):
And Ben, and yes, no, all of it, like all
of it. It's not stuff that we're public about. But
I will say that if you're in a season where
it's like something like that would never seem possible for
your family, it's crazy, like the fact that Stevenson's doing
so great in his heart and how like he's just
turned into this awesome kid. And he's always been awesome.
(35:21):
He just had some like a rough patch and Ben
and I had a very rough patch and now we
co parent so well and just there's just a little hope,
a little sprinkle of hope.
Speaker 2 (35:32):
I had a little moment like that last night. We
were at Brett Elders just Christmas show and which they
had a really Brett had a really good comedian in
front of him, which I'm close with Brett and I
know his manager really well, and so we were there together.
We were sitting with Brett's manager John, and so I
was like, hey, how'd you guys find the comedian? And
(35:52):
he said, well, we went through like an agency, and
I said, you have to find somebody like super clean
and safe, because Brett does like twenty shows every night
on Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday through you know, all the cities.
But it's like the most family show as possible. Old people,
young people, green people, blue people, everybody. It's just if
you love Christmas, bring it. And so the comedian I
(36:14):
wish I knew his name. He was super safe and
like made you like feel like he wasn't going to
just start saying the F word. And apparently that had
been an issue before where they had like had somebody
and they promised they we're gonna be clean and they weren't.
Speaker 5 (36:29):
Oh no, So I know.
Speaker 6 (36:33):
Steven Rogers, I'm assuming.
Speaker 2 (36:34):
The same guy. Yeah, I know. And so I got
there like halfway through his set, but I just sat
down and I was just watching him. He was funny
and he was super clean. That's when I asked. I
was like, hey, you guys, find the comedian. He said,
we just wanted somebody clean told the story because again,
that's such a safe environment, like nobody should feel like
anything's going to come out of any part of a
microphone that's going to make people feel weird, and so
(36:56):
it was good. And then Brett Show is awesome. Morgan, you
went right, Yeah, it was, that's great, right, Yeah.
Speaker 6 (37:00):
And I loved the stage setup. Yeah, it's very classic.
Kind of took me back to like an old game
show vibe.
Speaker 2 (37:07):
And so the moment I had as I we're like
halfway through. I don't do good at just sitting, like
at a show anything for that long. And I don't
really go to stuff, but obviously we're gonna go to
a Bread show. We go every year and it's like
an hour and ten minutes or so, so it's not
even super long, and it's the traditional classics and it's
his original Christmas songs. But I never do that well
(37:28):
with just sitting anywhere for very long. Probably a little
hyper add type action there, and so I have to
like start thinking about stuff. And I kind of have
always hated Christmas just because I spent a bunch of
Christmases alone or we didn't have good Christmases growing up.
And then I was just like, I wonder if things
are going to change like for me when we have
a kid, Like will I not hate Christmas basically or
(37:58):
or while I love it immediately or while I learned
to love it. I don't know, but I was having
that kind of little, that kind of little moment. I
was like, I wonder what because in a year, we're
gonna kid's gonna be existing, and so like, what the crap?
Because we don't we do our house on the inside
with lights and stuff. Like Keaton Claus who is a
(38:19):
close friend. She does like Christmas decorating, and so she
comes and does our house. We pay her and it's
awesome inside, but we don't really do a lot outside.
And so even my wife was like, you know, there
was the last year we're not doing lights outside. I'm
like why because we got a quote and it was
super expensive and she was like things change, you know
when you have a kid. And I was like, we'll
see about that. So I just kind of win that
(38:41):
phase now of I wonder what's gonna happen because I
have no I don't have a good relationship with Christmas
at all, like none, nothing positive, if anything. I always
root for it to just get by. The twenty sixth
could not come fast enough for well pretty much most
years of my life. But last night, as he's like
it's the move, I'm like I wonder I'm gonna hate
not this, but I wonder if I'm like gonna like
(39:03):
have a negative feeling about Christmas this time next year.
Speaker 3 (39:07):
I would venture to say not.
Speaker 2 (39:10):
I hope.
Speaker 3 (39:11):
My hope for you is that it gives you, like
you turn into over a new chapter with it, and
you start your own traditions and you start your own
things that get you excited about Christmas. It's like first
thing I would different giving.
Speaker 2 (39:27):
Back to September that it's just it's just it's just
too close.
Speaker 3 (39:34):
No, it's not, it's perfect.
Speaker 1 (39:36):
Say that's interesting because my experience with Christmas is I
was always like it was always like eh, presents and
songs and lights and decorating and everything, and then when
you become a parent, it's like, oh great, now I
gotta buy all this, you know what I mean. So
I don't know if yours is the opposite.
Speaker 3 (39:54):
Though, Yeah, but he's buying things.
Speaker 1 (39:56):
Isn't stressful, right, So you might have the opposite of that.
For me, I'm like, Christmas.
Speaker 5 (40:00):
Again, here we go.
Speaker 3 (40:02):
Yeah, be fine. I think you're gonna have fun with that.
Speaker 2 (40:04):
Yeah, dude, I think So that feels a lot like
when Edie and I were talking about our college experiences.
Where were we Auburn, no, Vanderbilt. We're walking around work
with the coach here and he's like, man, godege, Well,
it's just so awesome like parties and like always like
doing stuff. And I was like, no, dude, it sucked
(40:25):
at like two jobs and had to eight am class
and drive an hour to work every day. It's like,
oh yeah, very different, very different experience. Let's do one
more thing because I now have stuff on my list
that I'm just going to start clearing off because we're
getting to the end of the year and I'm just
but when we leave our last day before break, we're
not done until the end of the month. But I
(40:46):
want to have everything off my list. So we had
talked about doing a segment I Know Ball if you
guys remember this, and it was a list of things
that you probably know way more about than people give
you credit for. Because the traditional sets if you go
like that dude knows ball, it means he actually knows
more about football than you would think. He actually knows
like the inner workings of the game. But that's turned
(41:09):
into just TikTok vernacular of what do you know? What's
your ball? Like what are you good at? So I
have some some things here, I mean, what would you
say yours this? First of all?
Speaker 3 (41:20):
Well, so I'm well, maybe this is frush on my brain.
So like I know Ball, Like this is something people
would not expect me to know ball on, but I
like I know ball on like interventions and boundaries, like
I know Ball.
Speaker 2 (41:37):
Okay, I would say, and I have you listed as
healing and self work. So not exactly the same, but
the Vin diagram, they definitely cross over with each other.
Speaker 3 (41:45):
Yes, because a lot of that stuff is led. But
like it's and it's not one specific person or thing,
it's multiple, and it's I unfortunately know.
Speaker 2 (41:53):
Ball and he goes ball and intervention.
Speaker 3 (41:57):
Yeah, and each time it gets a little better.
Speaker 2 (41:59):
Guys, I've done a couple by better.
Speaker 3 (42:02):
I mean, you exercise the muscle, so therefore you're stronger,
and you're you can you're more. You know how to
detach with love, You're in a non dramatic way.
Speaker 2 (42:13):
You're not as emotional because you know that there is
there is a need for what you're doing and to
get the best result. Emotion being a part of it
actually hinders that. Yeah, Hey, good for you, Happy holidays,
every buddy.
Speaker 1 (42:28):
Eddie gardening. I know people don't think I know how
to put you grilling. Well well people know that though,
but it doesn't matter if people.
Speaker 2 (42:36):
But I still say, let's go like, like, Amy, why
do keep turning your mic off?
Speaker 3 (42:40):
You just says the off buttons closer than the cough button.
Speaker 1 (42:42):
But that was you, so you did it the last.
Speaker 3 (42:47):
But Bobby saw my arms cross.
Speaker 1 (42:49):
Go ahead, cooking. I'll go with cooking. I mean, yeah, dude,
I can grill like it, you know mother?
Speaker 2 (42:54):
Yeah, people would. I think grilling is your strongest Like, yeah,
like anything, I can do it. What are you gonna
say about gardening?
Speaker 1 (43:02):
I think people just don't know that I know ball
when it comes to gardening. Like my wife will come
to me when the plan's dying. I'll be like, all right,
here's what we need to do. We need it needs
to have a hole in the bottom because it needs irrigation,
and we need to put a little thing underneath. And
let's trim those dead leaves so that way that we
could gro grow new ones. I mean, I do that
stuff all the time, and I don't think people know
that about me.
Speaker 2 (43:23):
I agree, we don't know that about you.
Speaker 1 (43:25):
Gardening and I love it. It's weird. I love guard.
Speaker 2 (43:28):
You ever thought about doing gardening content?
Speaker 1 (43:30):
No, I have not.
Speaker 2 (43:32):
Lunchbox. What is your ball?
Speaker 5 (43:34):
I know ball, teen mom?
Speaker 2 (43:36):
I have you teen mom casts.
Speaker 5 (43:38):
Yeah, it started with sixteen and pregnant and then it
just morphed into teen mom and I think I am
just very knowledgeable, So I know ball teen mom.
Speaker 2 (43:47):
I also have you how not to get on television?
Speaker 1 (43:51):
You know, boy, what do you mean by that?
Speaker 5 (43:55):
I just think Friday Night Lights got on?
Speaker 3 (44:01):
What else?
Speaker 4 (44:02):
I mean?
Speaker 5 (44:04):
Yeah, what else I get on?
Speaker 2 (44:07):
Exactly?
Speaker 5 (44:09):
Yeah, that's rough, And it's.
Speaker 1 (44:12):
The fact that you really want to be on.
Speaker 2 (44:13):
You want it so bad.
Speaker 5 (44:14):
I want it so bad, man, it's so bad, and
it just it doesn't seem to work out right now.
Speaker 2 (44:19):
I think I would put mine it probably shoes, you
know ball, definitely music.
Speaker 1 (44:29):
But like the shoes, Like I've seen you talk to
people about shoes and I'm like, I doesn't know all that. Oh,
those are the seven forty seven school dudes playing whatever
you know what I mean.
Speaker 2 (44:38):
And then the ten year olds like yeah, ninety sitcoms.
I think the one that would surprise people is probably
I think if you were just to watch me clean
an animal. That would probably be.
Speaker 1 (44:53):
Address them killed.
Speaker 3 (44:54):
Yeah, not like bathing.
Speaker 2 (44:58):
Well, both would be surprising. If I'm just in the
that is true.
Speaker 5 (45:01):
If you're in the mouth with an animal would be weird.
Speaker 1 (45:03):
Yeah, what man, I'd love to see that would be
I'd love to see clean air.
Speaker 3 (45:08):
Like you should film a video of you doing it
and then just look at the camera and be like,
oh no.
Speaker 2 (45:12):
Ball, I probably am not years good. It's been a while.
But when I did Bear Girls the first time, when
I cleaned the sheep, he was like, you know how
to do this? Because I think that was the thought,
like give me somewhere uncomfortable and then find something. And
I was like, yeah, yeah, I got it. So I
was cutting off all the dead meat immediately because the
sheep had rotten. Part of it had rotted that was
above air because it was in the water, frozen water,
and the part frozen obviously had been preserved, and so
(45:35):
I'm cutting off the rotted part. Apparently Babby knows how
to clean the animal. Yeah, so there you go. All right,
I think we're probably done.
Speaker 1 (45:45):
Amy said, clean a squirrel, You clean squirrels. You don't
clean squirrels.
Speaker 2 (45:50):
Oh yeah, probably more than any other animal.
Speaker 1 (45:52):
Really, deer probably would be.
Speaker 3 (45:54):
I'm just saying a squirrel is like, we can get
one of those, like.
Speaker 2 (45:59):
Right now, I have no interest. I have no interest
in it. I don't feel like I have to defend
my honor at it.
Speaker 3 (46:03):
And it's small, like it wouldn't take a long.
Speaker 2 (46:06):
We have birds that fly into our windows.
Speaker 1 (46:09):
Small, don't don't touch those. Don't touch those dead birds.
Speaker 2 (46:14):
Amy saw a woman asleep in her car in the
turn lane.
Speaker 3 (46:16):
Yes, she was older. I kind of got freaked out
for a second.
Speaker 2 (46:20):
So she was in like I thought she had died
or what.
Speaker 3 (46:23):
Yeah, So I was in traffic, like not moving, and
she was opposite the direction of me, so I had
eyes on her. And she's in the turn lane and
the light is green, but nobody's honking at her because
nobody's behind her in the turn lane. But the other
cars are going straight and she's just not turning, and
I'm like, why is she not turning? And I'm staring
like right at her, and I'm like, is everything okay?
(46:46):
And I started to debate. I get out of my
car and check on this woman because she was probably
like in her seventies and I'm starting to think, is
there been a medical a situation and I probably need
to act well. A car came up behind her and
honked and she woke up, and then.
Speaker 2 (47:04):
She she just do you think she was asleep or
was she just being.
Speaker 1 (47:07):
Old or maybe looking down at her phone.
Speaker 3 (47:11):
No, she was not looking down at her phone.
Speaker 5 (47:12):
She was because don't you do that? You close your
eyes at stop lights?
Speaker 2 (47:16):
What I think you said that one time, like ninety
seven she said she took a nap.
Speaker 5 (47:20):
No, literally, you said you took naps that stop lights before.
Speaker 3 (47:24):
When we like when we first started the like you're
going way back when when Bobby used to like to
get to this station at three thirty in the morning.
Speaker 5 (47:34):
But did you or did you not take naps to
stop lights? So I'm asking I would rest my eyes,
That's what I'm saying, your eyes, thank you.
Speaker 2 (47:41):
That's all not a nap.
Speaker 3 (47:42):
Anyway, that was not taking a nap. She I think
like sleep or had some sort of situation. But anyway,
it kind of freaked me out.
Speaker 2 (47:51):
But imagine you're old though, that probably just happens.
Speaker 1 (47:53):
Yes, my father in law fall asleep everywhere. Now it's sad.
Getting old just looks like I don't know, cool in
a way because you don't care about things anymore, but like, yeah,
they fall asleep just anywhere. Slavery and stuff.
Speaker 2 (48:07):
My bulldogs are old people.
Speaker 1 (48:09):
Same sounds like the same boats are about the same.
Speaker 2 (48:12):
All Right, we're done, Thank you guys. Tomorrow's show on Tuesday,
big announcements. So I'll just say that big announcement on
Tuesday show. Also on the Bobbycast tomorrow, I have Mariy
Pobitch not the father. You're not the father, except you're
not the father or you are the father. That's what
they would do.
Speaker 1 (48:32):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (48:32):
I think people are always hoping for you're not the father though.
Speaker 1 (48:35):
Yeah, that was his thing mainly.
Speaker 2 (48:36):
Yeah, that was his thing. That was his here, Bobby,
in the case you're a little baby, you are the father.
Speaker 1 (48:46):
That's so cool, dude. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (48:48):
So anyway, that's that's tomorrow. All right, Thank you guys.
We will see you tomorrow show. All right, everybody,