Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
Mitting Welcome to Tuesday Show more than studio more.
Speaker 2 (00:16):
Two things. If you're a dude and you're going bald,
it is not from one side or the other. It's
literally not. That's old old medicine talk. It's like, if
you walk outside and your hair's weg, you're gonna get sick.
Not gonna happen. That being said, I made a comment
in a video. I was joking. I said I would
rather have my hair now than my biological dad come
back into my life. And it's pretty funny, and people
(00:38):
were like, well, that's the hell it works. It's not
your dad's side, So I've done the research here. Contrary
to the old myth, that's not just your mother's side.
Hair loss genes can come from both sides of the
family and involve many different genes. And if you look
at a dude and look at their dad, it's almost
always the same Eddie that's bold. It was bold looked
just like them. You know what.
Speaker 3 (00:58):
My kids though, they're kind of they're screwed because both
of their grandpas were bald, right.
Speaker 2 (01:04):
But it's it's not generally passed down through just one side.
But if one side is bald, you're gonna get it.
So that's one of those really old things. It's like
using ten percent of your brain. That's not a thing.
We use all of our brain, we just don't use
it in ways we don't understand all of the brains.
Speaker 3 (01:19):
So is eventually is everyone going to be bald?
Speaker 2 (01:22):
If? Like?
Speaker 3 (01:23):
Oh, like if that if that's the case, like everyone
has one bald grandfather?
Speaker 2 (01:28):
Right?
Speaker 4 (01:28):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (01:28):
Because genetically, I mean you could be overridden. I don't
think all your kids will be bald. Well, I guess
you have two on both sides they're both bald. Yeah.
My point was, it's just not a dad thing, or
it's just not a mom thing, and it's just not
your mom's dad. It's literally not I looked it up
in four different places.
Speaker 3 (01:44):
It's so not fair, Like it's just one of those
things where like why how do you get selected to
be one of the bald ones?
Speaker 5 (01:51):
They care?
Speaker 6 (01:51):
Ray?
Speaker 2 (01:52):
You don't think you're saying that every day by being sure? Yeah,
you which would you rather? Well, I'm just saying we
all have things you don't think. I'm like, my right
eye doesn't work. I was born with a non functioning
right eye. That sucks. I've never been able to see
out on my right side. So we all have physical things.
It's like, yeah, it sucks.
Speaker 3 (02:09):
Like the other day you were talking about like, yeah, man,
I've been slicking my hair back and I don't know,
it's got this cool curl thing going, and I'm like,
I can never.
Speaker 2 (02:15):
Talk like that. And sometimes I'm like, Eddie could see
out of both eyes. Man, that's so cool.
Speaker 7 (02:20):
And he's not color blind.
Speaker 2 (02:21):
Yeah, and your Mexican, that's cool. You got you good skin,
brown loved. I'd love to let's lick it, you know,
really well, okay, okay, So that was the first thing
I wanted to address. The second thing was someone's out
and about claiming they're my mom. That's weird because she's not.
What if that was all just a prank and I
(02:42):
had you guys come. I did a faint funeral for
my mom so I could like hide the truth. A
listener sent me this, Hey, Bobby, I have a message
for you. I met the sweet old lady at the
bus stop. She says, she's your mom, hadn't seen you
in a long time, and I promised to her i'd
send this message. So that's what I'm doing. If this
is real, I hope you find this lady, And she
(03:03):
said she loves you. I'll send the pick in the
note and said she had a picture of the picture.
She's no, is this an Arkansas? No, it's an Austin. Okay,
what's she being Austin? You think, well, she's an angel,
And I wrote, Hey, big news if true. But it's
not true. My mom died a long time ago.
Speaker 7 (03:23):
But in Arkansas.
Speaker 2 (03:27):
Yeah, that's right next to Texas. I mean, but it's
not alive, I know, but just extra. Someone out there's
claiming to be my mom. It is not my mom.
Speaker 3 (03:36):
Amy, you think an angel at a bus stop, I
saw a picture.
Speaker 2 (03:41):
They sent a picture, and they sent the note. It's
not an angel, got it? I did, you know? I
was curious. I want to see what she looked like
and what if it would have been crazy or it
looked really really like her that had been crazy, too crazy,
But it wasn't at all. And the note just had
(04:02):
like the number of the radio show on it. It's
had some stuff. It had the number of the radio show.
So my mom is not out there looking for me.
But thank you for messaging.
Speaker 7 (04:10):
Men of sin by.
Speaker 2 (04:15):
Anonymous sinbar.
Speaker 6 (04:19):
Of the question to be.
Speaker 2 (04:28):
Hello, Bobby Bones. I genuinely thought quicksand was gonna be
a much bigger problem in adult life based on everything
I saw on television shows. What is something you believed
as a kid that sounds ridiculous now signs still embarrassed?
In Nebraska, I thought, probably way too old, that babies
(04:48):
came out of the belly button?
Speaker 7 (04:50):
Yeah, what age did you clear that up?
Speaker 2 (04:53):
Twelve? And it's because a friend showed me a picture.
You shouldn't have one of those friends who's like, look
at this, And I was like, oh, and for someone
I feel that was a pretty smart kid book smart
kind of shocking that I did not know which hole
the baby came from. I thought it was the belly
button because the belly got big. That would be my
dumb one. Anybody else have anything that they probably thought
(05:16):
a little too long? Well?
Speaker 3 (05:18):
I thought that like gorillas, every animal lived in the
United States, Like I thought, like, oh, we learned about
all these animals. And I remember as a kid being like, wow,
it's crazy if we saw an elephant like today, but
then realize they don't live here.
Speaker 2 (05:32):
They're heavy zoom, you know, I'm in the wild. But
what's crazy like now?
Speaker 3 (05:37):
In Florida, like they have like pythons and monkeys, but yeah,
animals that I never thought would be the United States
living in Florida.
Speaker 2 (05:47):
One of the great things about our country, one of
the many is that you go one side to the
next and you do hit different climates. You hit mountains,
you hit desert. Yeah, you hit fields of wheat beautiful.
It's just there's so many different versions of our country.
(06:07):
And that's pretty cool because that doesn't happen in a
lot of other countries where it is different all the
way through. America rules, I said, I said it, America rules. Lunchbox,
go ahead.
Speaker 8 (06:17):
Uh.
Speaker 9 (06:17):
They used to have DWI commercials on TV like don't
drink and drive, go to jail, things like that. And
if we'd go to like McDonald's and my dad would
order a coke and he would drink it on the
way home. I would be sitting in the back seat going,
oh my gosh, he's going to jail. He's going to jail.
I still remember that feeling when he would order a
(06:39):
coke and the McDonald's drive through and me just be going,
oh my gosh, oh my gosh, oh my gosh, and
worried the whole way home.
Speaker 2 (06:45):
They weren't specific enough. I agree.
Speaker 3 (06:47):
You know what freaked me out is whenever like my
parents would take a right turn and the light was
red on the road that they were turning on, I'm.
Speaker 2 (06:53):
Like, oh my gosh, you just ran a red light.
But it wasn't It was for the other side, Morgan.
What'd you just learn? Oh?
Speaker 7 (06:59):
I learned. I used to think that popping my knuckles
all the time would give me arthritis and my knuckles
would get really large, And that was never true. My
mom just never wanted me to crack my knuckles around her. Yeah,
some people still live by that. Is it really not
true at all?
Speaker 2 (07:13):
It is not true. It's just air bubbles, right, It's air. Yeah,
But I think a lot of us were told that
the same thing, like wearing a hat makes you bald,
also not a thing. Or having a wet no, or
having wet hair and walking outside the cold makes you sick. No,
you get says it. No, you get sick.
Speaker 7 (07:26):
Because this is when I learned, All.
Speaker 2 (07:31):
Right, thank you for oh sorry, go ahead.
Speaker 7 (07:32):
Did you guys also think that having the light on
in the car would make you to get pulled over?
Because I believed that up until this year.
Speaker 2 (07:39):
Oh oh, that's a late one.
Speaker 7 (07:41):
What it can't impact your vision?
Speaker 2 (07:44):
No, you're not going to get pulled over for a
light inside the car. Well it, but we were told
that because your parents or grandparents or whomever was driving.
You just don't want to be annoyed by a light
on in the car.
Speaker 10 (07:53):
Right, What about if you flash your lights to warm
people of.
Speaker 7 (07:57):
A cop that I know? But in case you do
that to a gang?
Speaker 2 (08:02):
Memory? Now all right, there you go close it up.
That boat those people were on when the haunt of
virus hit killed those people. It's no, it's ready to go.
So it's fully cleaned, Yeah, deep clean and disinfection. The
ship is ready to sit.
Speaker 7 (08:20):
Are there any discount prices?
Speaker 2 (08:22):
Like? All I know is there are no longer any
obstacles to putting it back to see still sounds risky.
Do you have to tell people that's the one? Yeah,
because I would hope you wouldn't have to. What I
would do if I own that boat, I'd go get
it mixed up with a bunch of other boats. We
know which is which? Then I did drive it down.
You're like, gap, you don't know that which one it was?
Speaker 10 (08:42):
Did you see for men that the haunt of the
haunt of virus is doing to y'all.
Speaker 2 (08:46):
Oh no, what's it doing? Is our wieners going.
Speaker 7 (08:48):
Any reducing it by three inches?
Speaker 2 (08:51):
Really? Three inches? And you know what I'm gonna say,
add honta virus. That's my excuse. I had honavirus three inches.
Speaker 10 (08:59):
Yeah, it's like an eaty thing where it's like it
just not where.
Speaker 2 (09:02):
It used to be the easiest explanation for guys. Now, Yes,
you gotta see that story hunter Byrus back four years ago. Yeah,
I was on that boat. It's just never been the
same since before. Man, would you if it was cheap,
like a fun cruise cheap, would you end up on
that ship?
Speaker 7 (09:20):
I'm sure that it's totally clean, not asked.
Speaker 2 (09:23):
Would you probably not? Every doorknob that I would be
touching my sleeve over my hand. And that's not a
real cruise ship, Like it's much smaller than a real
cruise ship that the had like one hundred and thirty
five people like our cruise that we do. There's like
a million. That's a cruise ship. Yeah, that is a
(09:45):
cruise ship. There was a story and I saw this.
It was on a cruise ship where this person that
was working on there. I don't know what a cabin
steward is. I've only been on one cruise and it
was our cruise last year, scubasteep. What's a cabin steward.
My guess that'd be the person cleaned your room because
they're in your cabin. That's a person that comes in
your right. A cabin stewards a crew member responsible for
(10:08):
maintaining passenger cabins. All right, they got a five thousand
dollars tip from a passenger. That's awesome, named Bobby Reeves.
That's pretty that's pretty cool. Yeah, what five thousand bucks there?
He's known as Bluff and Bob. He's a gambling content creator.
Highest tips she ever got before that was three hundred bucks.
He hands a five thousand bucks in cash.
Speaker 8 (10:27):
Pretty cool, I mean three hundred's pretty good. Yeah, no,
damn three. It's from Fox News. We have a cruise.
We're doing it next year. No haunt virus. We should
put that guarantee.
Speaker 2 (10:40):
All you have to do if you want to come,
it's all of us, and Riley Green is going to
perform Lauren and Elena topshelf Country Cruise dot com. If
you want to come on the cruise. It's going to
be awesome, all right, voicemail, Good morning studio.
Speaker 11 (10:53):
I was just wondering if Amy ever planned to date again,
or if she's going to get into it, or if
she's been talking.
Speaker 2 (11:00):
To any guys.
Speaker 11 (11:01):
I feel like she hasn't been talking about that much lately,
and I just wonder what she had planned love the show.
Speaker 10 (11:07):
I mean, no plan, but I would imagine I will
date again, but I'm not and I'm over do it.
Speaker 2 (11:16):
Yeah, Like, do I.
Speaker 10 (11:16):
Want to be alone the rest of my life? Considered it,
but I don't think that's for me.
Speaker 2 (11:26):
You know why? Being alone?
Speaker 7 (11:29):
Here's the thing.
Speaker 10 (11:30):
I think I probably could do it, but then that
would be very lonely.
Speaker 2 (11:33):
But are you going to find someone to say you're
not alone?
Speaker 10 (11:37):
No, I don't think that's the goal. I just want
That's what I watched my mom do. My mom never dated,
She never got it was crazy that she went so
many years just and she got content. And I know
I could be like her and I could get that way,
and I'm not going to let myself. So that's more
so I'm I want to experience life with someone.
Speaker 2 (11:58):
Are you actively no? Are you on any app no, oh,
do you plan to be No?
Speaker 7 (12:08):
I mean I did the app thing.
Speaker 2 (12:10):
And expect change then I know. No, no, no, I'm
just literally asking you.
Speaker 10 (12:15):
Yeah, hey, I've got this friend match maker.
Speaker 7 (12:19):
He wants to go out.
Speaker 2 (12:20):
What happened with your last boyfriend?
Speaker 7 (12:21):
Right?
Speaker 10 (12:22):
So I could that? So maybe that could happen again.
I'm not sure or to you know, organically. I know
my friend just talked to me about that this weekend.
She was like, well, what what what did you do?
I was like, well, it was rainy. I didn't do
much of anything. I mean, so it's hard like she was.
(12:43):
She's single. She goes out with groups of friends and
they meet people and she loves doing that. Like I
don't have the desire to just go out.
Speaker 2 (12:51):
And meet people. Yeah, I don't either.
Speaker 10 (12:54):
Right now, and that might change, Like maybe there'll be
a day that comes up for I'm like, okay, yeah,
let's go.
Speaker 7 (13:01):
I want to go. But that's just not where I am.
Speaker 2 (13:03):
All right, Well, thank you for the question. Lave's voicemail
eight seven, seven seventy seven Bobby. They had to divert
a flight here because of a hijacking scare, and so
Chicago to Minneapolis and I'm just going to play the
cliff from ABC World News.
Speaker 12 (13:19):
An investigation after authority say a seventy five year old
man repeatedly attempted to breach the cockpit door on a
United Airlines flight from Chicago, five members of law enforcement
on board, struggling to subdue.
Speaker 2 (13:31):
Him in the aisle.
Speaker 5 (13:32):
It's actually a situation where we might have to close
the airfield due to a potential hijack.
Speaker 12 (13:38):
The Boeing seven thirty seven bound for Minneapolis with one
hundred and forty seven passengers and six crew on board,
the captain diverting the plane to Dame County, Wisconsin.
Speaker 11 (13:47):
Yeah, we'll land take a lef terren just a long
fortmates stamp by the air past of these foot I'm
very competent.
Speaker 3 (13:54):
With the five that we help.
Speaker 7 (13:55):
Awful with that too.
Speaker 2 (13:57):
The guy's probably having a mental breakdown or he is drunk, right, Yeah, yeah,
So if he keeps trying to breach the cockpit, doesn't
some dude just end up beating the crap out of
him and then you just go about your day, keep going.
Speaker 3 (14:09):
They said there were five law enforcement officers on board.
Speaker 2 (14:13):
Is that normal? Like just chilling? They could have been
going to a law enforcement convention. But I don't know.
But it's like if if we got a couple of
dudes who can beat up some crazy guy and then
tape them to a seat. I just want to get
to my destination. If we feel like there's something going on,
like a real life hijacking, I get it. Let's go
land at some airport and get this guy off of
here and get him in prison, and do all these
(14:34):
guy's seventy five years old? Yeah, are you scared of
a seventy five year old? No? No, he also could
have just having like a mental episode. Don't get to
beat him up, just tape them. He can't be that strong.
Tape him to the seat. But yeah, the word hijack
makes all the headlines whenever that's happening. There was also
the story remember the dermatologist who was accused of poisoning
your husband's tea with dreno. Yes, story in case.
Speaker 7 (14:57):
Dismissed, which is crazy.
Speaker 10 (15:01):
I mean, I guess it's it's I I have found
it hard to believe that she would do that anyway,
but apparently it's just totally dismissed.
Speaker 2 (15:08):
There was surveillance footage in the home showing her contaminating
his drinks.
Speaker 7 (15:13):
He set up the cameras.
Speaker 2 (15:14):
Yeah, yeah, because he thought something was up because he
had all these stomach injuries. The judge dismissed the indictment
after learning prosecutors had withheld evidence that may have been
favorable to the defense. So it wasn't even about, Hey,
she probably didn't do it. You got attorneys doing shady
stuff like not allowing people to see stuff, and so
(15:34):
she might my donna. Well that's unfortunate, I know, right,
so they're going to refile the case. I would assume, right,
and then do it again.
Speaker 7 (15:42):
I would think so.
Speaker 10 (15:43):
But it's just crazy that one wrong move from I mean,
this happens, and that happened that.
Speaker 2 (15:49):
You guys were talking about them, yeah, murder case, Yes, yes,
and I am followed that case. But apparently like somebody
just help withhelds some evidence or something, and now they
got to retry the whole thing. Do you guys want
I gotta be free because I never know, I never
followed it. I don't know. Oh no, well, we know no,
because like making a murderer, I always felt like that
do should be freed Stephen Avery. Yeah, just because I
(16:11):
watched the documentary and was kind of possibly tricked into
feeling a certain way. But this dude, I don't know
this guy.
Speaker 7 (16:17):
I'm gonna go ahead and I'm in.
Speaker 10 (16:19):
I'm putting any money on that he's guilty.
Speaker 2 (16:23):
All in all, in this family had their camera footage
because their cat was gone. The Amazon delivery driver stole
the cat. That's terrible.
Speaker 7 (16:34):
Do you think it was a straight outdoor cat?
Speaker 2 (16:36):
A family says they're devastated after an Amazon delivery driver
was caught on the doorbell video taking their cat, allegedly
from outside their home in Bakersfield. Footage shows the driver
stopped to pet the cat before picking her up and
just carrying her back to the vehicle. The owner says
the family has had her since twenty twenty two. The driver,
they'd say, the driver may have thought it was his
own cat, but stop that your cat? Is he used
(16:58):
to live in that neighborhood?
Speaker 10 (17:00):
Oh well, so was it before they got it?
Speaker 2 (17:04):
That's interesting because I don't think so. But I don't know.
I wouldn't need to know the backstory that cat. I
guess what a twist that would be. I know they
said they're not focused on pressing charges, they just want
to pet back kg e T. I just want to
know what's up with that, because you see him, he's
in the vest. He picks up the cat and he's like,
all right, we got my cat. He's like, good, there
(17:26):
you are, top off the package.
Speaker 12 (17:28):
Ca.
Speaker 2 (17:29):
Yeah, he's actually to sneak it.
Speaker 7 (17:30):
I mean, if my cat disappeared for four years and
I saw her, I would know it was her.
Speaker 10 (17:34):
I would know cats look so no, no, I would
know my cat really yes, and I would check her
rear left.
Speaker 7 (17:43):
Paul has it's.
Speaker 2 (17:46):
Like again, he's putting it down. He sees the cat,
he pets the cat, then he just scoops it up.
Cat's got a caller on it. It's at the door.
Speaker 7 (17:52):
Oh, if it has a caller, you can't.
Speaker 2 (17:54):
But don't you know that everybody has a doorbell cam
like most people. If you're amazon ing and your mind,
everybody's got a doorbell, Kim. Even if they don't, you
just have to think they all do. You're gonna get
caught stealing that cat. That's crazy story justice for I
don't know who. I think the family, what if that
was his old cat.
Speaker 10 (18:13):
Well, he has a responsibility to look at the caller
and then go through the proper steps of like, hey,
this was my cat and he needs to produce evidence.
Speaker 2 (18:21):
If it's my cat, I'm stealing the cat back and
dealing with the repercussions later and going this is my cat.
If it's really my.
Speaker 10 (18:26):
Cat, it just seems like you're making more trouble for
yourself doing it that way.
Speaker 2 (18:30):
We also don't know. We made this story up just
to be fair. We made that part up. About to
talk to Sean Johnson, Olympic gold medalist gymnast. She won
Dancing with the Stars. She just won that show on
Fox's Special Forces. She was like one of the only
people to remain. They have a new book called The
Courage to Commit, and she's awesome. Here she is Sean Johnson.
(18:57):
The study on Olympians that finished second versus finish third,
and I think just generally that represents anything but the
people that finish second or more piss than third because
second was so close to winning.
Speaker 7 (19:09):
I will put an asterist by this for you.
Speaker 13 (19:12):
So at the Olympics, I won three silvers and a gold.
And this is just how my brain worked in my sport.
I knew my sport inside and out. I knew like
what I was capable of. I knew what other people
were capable of. My silver medal in the all around
was my favorite medal that I won.
Speaker 7 (19:29):
I could not have done any better.
Speaker 13 (19:31):
My gold medal was not my best performance, so I
almost value the silver more. It's still as hard like
when you get silver, you're like, oh, I was so close,
But knowing how the performances went weights those medals for
me differently, because after the silver, every single person responded,
They're like, what could you have done better? How does
it feel to lose? And I was like, I don't
think you understand, like that was? That was perfect for me?
(19:54):
It was my perfect performance. I wouldn't change anything. I
would love to have had the gold medal, but that's
up to the judges. I can't control that. The gold.
It was almost comical because every single person the second
after I got the gold, they're like, that was perfect.
It's most beautiful routine I've ever seen. And I was like, no,
it wasn't. Go watch the five other ones that I
did the competitions prior.
Speaker 7 (20:13):
They were better. You're just saying that because the judges think.
Speaker 2 (20:16):
It is after that Olympics did you retire? Yeah? Why
I was tired.
Speaker 13 (20:21):
I started competing professionally at twelve, and so I was
trying to balance the scales as a twelve year old
between my love for gymnastics and now it was a job.
Whenever I would have to go work for the USA
national team, it was a job. I had to act
like a professional USA flag bearer basically, and I.
Speaker 7 (20:38):
Also had to balance being a twelve year old.
Speaker 13 (20:40):
I traveled to twenty some different countries by myself at twelve.
I just knew by the time I was done with
the Olympics that I was just done. I couldn't see
myself doing for more years.
Speaker 7 (20:49):
I was just tired. I wanted to go be a kid.
Speaker 2 (20:51):
So then what do you do? Most people and they
were tired, They, I don't know, play golf. I that's
interesting scene.
Speaker 7 (20:57):
You have to start over.
Speaker 2 (20:58):
But was it hard to start over because you had
some fame. Now you're a famous gymnast and you're a teenager, Like,
that's weird. Yeah, it's awesome, but it's weird.
Speaker 7 (21:08):
It's really weird.
Speaker 2 (21:09):
So how do you come back to home and it be.
Speaker 7 (21:11):
I mean clinical depression. It was really difficult.
Speaker 2 (21:15):
I what was difficult about it?
Speaker 13 (21:18):
I was still a child that fell in love with gymnastics.
In my mind, the math equation that made sense was,
I was going to go to the Olympics. I was
going to compete. I was going to finish that. I
knew I was going to retire. I was going to
go back to high school, finish high school. I wanted
to go to Stanford University. I wanted to be an
orthpeedic surgeon, and that was what life was going to
be like like, I had my life planned out the
(21:38):
Olympics finished, had no idea fame would be a part
of that. I didn't know I was going to be
a household name for a while. Like that never played
a factor in my mind. Came back to high school.
I was too much of a distraction. I had to
leave the high school, which was very odd because now
you have all these kids who were my friends now
thinking I was such a big deal, which didn't make
(21:59):
sense to me. I couldn't finish high school. I had
to go tutor and kind of isolation. Then I got
sent on this whirlwind of just the aftermath of the Olympics,
of TV shows and dancing with the Stars, and then
college got further and further and further away, and it
snowballed into something that I had never envisioned. I felt
very out of control of my own life and I
didn't know where it was going. And not knowing where
(22:21):
it was going really stressed me out. So yeah, I
had I struggled for a while.
Speaker 2 (22:27):
Sean Johnson won the Olympic Goald medal. She also won
Dancing with the Stars when she was sixteen years old,
and the injury that she suffered was pretty bad. Here
we go, let's go on the Bobby Bones show now,
Sean Johnson, why'd you say? Yester? Dancing with the Stars.
Speaker 13 (22:42):
When I was sixteen on the show, I was coming
out of gymnastics.
Speaker 7 (22:47):
A lot of that I loved.
Speaker 13 (22:48):
There was a lot of toxic culture in gymnastics that
we've all heard about. When I went to dancing at sixteen,
my partner Mark Ballas and the show for me at
sixteen became a very healing place for me. Took me
under their wing as like a little sister, and I
got to see good people who cared about me as
a human and not as someone who just needed to
(23:08):
work and win medals, and so it was very healing
for me at sixteen, though traumatizing in the sense of
like I would lock myself in the room because I
was so embarrassed to go on and dance in these
little skimpy dresses and stuff, which are so out of
my comforts up. But it was very healing. I found
a family there that I trusted. So when I retired
the second time, Indina called who's the casting director of Dancing,
(23:31):
it felt like my family. There was so much chaos
going around when I retired, a lot of very disappointed people, sponsors, agents,
everybody did not like that. I retired right before the
Olympics of twenty twelve, and Dancing felt like I could
come home. It was people who loved me for me
though I was still performing on the show, but it
just felt like a safe place to go. And so
on Dancing with the Stars. My second day of practice,
(23:53):
I was sixteen at the time. I locked myself in
the bathroom stall and like cried and called.
Speaker 7 (23:59):
My mom and said, I want to quit. I want
to go home.
Speaker 2 (24:03):
Okay, So yours is not so much about the physical part.
Speaker 7 (24:06):
No, the physical part was.
Speaker 2 (24:07):
Nothing for oh mine. It was all physical yeah, And
I don't care if people watch me like, oh.
Speaker 7 (24:12):
No, I can't.
Speaker 2 (24:12):
Yeah, I mean it is the exact time.
Speaker 7 (24:15):
Yeah, I'll switch you.
Speaker 2 (24:16):
Yeah. So for me, it was all physical.
Speaker 13 (24:18):
Oh no, I wanted like my face is going to
explode on that show.
Speaker 7 (24:22):
I was just like, I can't do it.
Speaker 2 (24:23):
You're only sixteen when you did the show.
Speaker 7 (24:24):
I had sixteen the first was it fresh off the Olympics?
Speaker 2 (24:26):
Yeah? So you hit you won? Yeah, and then they
call you and go come to the show.
Speaker 13 (24:30):
I finished the Olympics in August. I think the season
I did was starting in January.
Speaker 2 (24:35):
Did you get hurt it all doing Dance with the Stars.
I think I got a.
Speaker 7 (24:37):
Concusion from run the finale in the first season.
Speaker 2 (24:41):
Did you get kicked in the head? You fall hit?
Speaker 13 (24:43):
I just felt we were doing flips in our finale
dance and I went.
Speaker 7 (24:47):
To the hardwood.
Speaker 2 (24:49):
Did you see it on camera?
Speaker 7 (24:50):
No? No, no, it was during like training.
Speaker 2 (24:52):
Okay, Oh you think you had one going into it
into the final?
Speaker 7 (24:56):
I think I just hit my head pretty hard.
Speaker 2 (24:57):
You probably had one and didn't say anything purposely because
you don't take you out.
Speaker 13 (25:00):
Well, it didn't. It didn't bother me too much. Strong me. Remember,
it did hurt for a day, and I was like
it was fine by the next day.
Speaker 2 (25:12):
Did you not want to say anything because you thought
that possibly they'd pull you out.
Speaker 7 (25:16):
I don't think I had anything to do with the show.
Speaker 13 (25:18):
I think it had everything to do with how I
was trained in gymnastics, Like injury is not yeah, yeah,
injury is not allowed in gymnastics.
Speaker 6 (25:27):
Wake up, wake up in the morn and it's already
and the doctors already in lunchbox. More game too, Steve Brand,
and it's trying to put you through the fog. He's
running this week's next bit. The Bobby's on the box,
so you know what this The Bobby balls.
Speaker 2 (25:55):
And now The Morning Corny, The Morning Corny.
Speaker 7 (26:02):
Why can't Cinderella play basketball?
Speaker 2 (26:05):
It's got to be a ball thing, right, the ball?
Speaker 10 (26:07):
Oh yeah, yeah, because her coach is a pumpkin.
Speaker 2 (26:13):
Her coat, Oh her coat, you're riding a coach. Okay,
that is better than I thought. Yeah, that's better. Okay,
that was The Morning Corny.
Speaker 10 (26:27):
There's another one where it's like, because she keeps running
away from the ball. Yeah yeah, but I've done that
one before.
Speaker 2 (26:33):
Yeah yeah yeah. Tuesday Reviews Day. I gotta say I
don't watch anything. I watched a lot of Baby, so
right now, I finished nothing. It's a good show. Yeah,
baby that it's my wife's favorite show. The Monitor. Baby,
It's sleep from the Monitor.
Speaker 10 (26:48):
Always watching that. Tuesday Reviews Day anything Jack Ryan. The
movie I think it's called Ghost Wars.
Speaker 2 (26:54):
Almost watched that with Jim Halpert.
Speaker 7 (26:56):
Uh huh, Well Krasinski.
Speaker 2 (26:59):
Yeah, you call him John Krasznski's real name. I call
hi Jim Hopper from the office. Yeah, what do you think.
I like the show.
Speaker 7 (27:05):
Yes, I love the show. I love it. Now for
the movie, I'll just be like I liked it.
Speaker 2 (27:10):
It was fine.
Speaker 10 (27:11):
I give it a three point five out of five
CIA agents.
Speaker 2 (27:14):
Long or short, just right, I love it. Just writing
a movie like an hour forty.
Speaker 7 (27:19):
It felt just right.
Speaker 2 (27:20):
Yeah, that's good. That's good. Huh all right, and then
oh more, go ahead.
Speaker 5 (27:23):
Yeah.
Speaker 10 (27:24):
I watched another movie, Housemaid, which this is the one
where I read the book and the book was so good.
I also think the movie was good. Of course the
book was better. I give this four out of five.
Speaker 2 (27:36):
Handsome husbands okay, Housemaid Sidney Sweeney.
Speaker 7 (27:39):
Yeah, and which they're very similar to me.
Speaker 2 (27:44):
You get a mix up except for yeah, except what
the boobs are you gonna say, yeah, I mean it
is interesting. I met Amanda Syfree to watch It was
really really nice, talked to her for like five minutes,
like we had an extended conversation. We were kind of
trapped together. But where Yeah, backstage at the Kennedy Center Honors.
I was performing there and she was there for some reason. Yeah, Edie,
(28:07):
have you met Sidney Sweeting? No, man, I wouldn't forget that, Eddie.
Speaker 3 (28:11):
Okay, I saw a crazy documentary called The Crash. It's
on Netflix and dang Okay. So it's three high school
students they get into a car accident to die.
Speaker 2 (28:22):
One of them lives. Was there really an accident or
was it done on purpose? Have we talked about that
on this show?
Speaker 7 (28:28):
Probably?
Speaker 2 (28:29):
I don't think so, because I know about that and
people are like, you go to watch it.
Speaker 10 (28:33):
It could have been a while back that we talked
about when it was a news story because she's in jail.
Speaker 2 (28:37):
Oh, this was a big news story, talked about on
twenty five Whistles. We talked to you on the same.
Speaker 7 (28:41):
Show, Yes, because is it sports at all?
Speaker 2 (28:45):
No, not at all. We just we just go over
there and you know, shoot the ship.
Speaker 3 (28:49):
Yeah, dude, you have to watch this just so we
can have the conversation.
Speaker 10 (28:53):
Okay, what do you think I thought about it?
Speaker 7 (28:55):
I saw some stuff about her on TikTok.
Speaker 2 (28:57):
Don't spoil anything.
Speaker 7 (28:58):
I'm not.
Speaker 2 (28:59):
I'm not.
Speaker 7 (28:59):
That's all I'm gonna say is that when.
Speaker 10 (29:01):
I saw the stories and then I saw the thing
on Netflix, I was like, Okay, should I invest time
into this?
Speaker 2 (29:06):
Okay? So I give it four.
Speaker 3 (29:08):
I give it four out of five black boxes only
because of what Amy's talking about. I saw a lot
of clips on TikTok's TikTok that wasn't in the documentary.
Speaker 2 (29:15):
I'm like, why wasn't that in there? So that's weird.
And the entire documentary is one hour, thirty two minutes perfect.
That's just right, all right? Voicemails.
Speaker 4 (29:25):
He didn't sand Eddie from playing Easy for like two months.
He is so cockey it ruins the game.
Speaker 5 (29:32):
Let's show.
Speaker 2 (29:34):
I'm going to ban Eddie from games because I went
too much.
Speaker 7 (29:38):
Well, I think it's your demeanor rafter you in maybe.
Speaker 3 (29:41):
Where I yell like everyone else does. Eh, you get
excited because you want a game. I don't see what
the big deal is. All right, there you go. Next up.
Speaker 11 (29:49):
What did the drummer name is two daughters and a
one and a two. Remember here's the second one.
Speaker 7 (29:56):
Michael Jackson's favorite fast.
Speaker 11 (29:58):
Food restaurant, Bobby A good one.
Speaker 2 (30:04):
That's pretty good. I wonder where Michael Jackson thing was going.
I'm glad I went to see She one more.
Speaker 4 (30:09):
I'm so thankful for your second book. Right now, I
am a first responder and completely burnt out of my job,
and it's been very hard to figure out what I
want to do next. And your book has definitely drotten
me through. Thank you.
Speaker 2 (30:28):
I thank you for reading it. It's called Fail Until
You Don't, and it's up on Amazon. I think it's free.
No it's not free, but no it's not. It's I
thought I thought it was. It's not. That's close. That's close.
Fail until you Don't. I appreciate you saying that. All right,
you guys can call us any time. Eight seven, seven
seventy seven, Bobby Amy. Someone was out running it's been
(30:49):
raining here and some dude's like, hey, you want to
rye oh yeah oh.
Speaker 10 (30:54):
He got back from his run and came inside and
it was like some guy asked me if I needed to.
Speaker 2 (30:58):
Write home, so instead of stranger danger. Can I again
just be Devil's advocate a little bit? Your son looks
like an adult. No, No, he's a teenager, but he's
a tall teenager. If it were like a seven year old,
I would go stranger danger for sure. I almost feel
like that's just somebody trying to help somebody out running
(31:18):
in the rain. Was it a pickup truck or like
get in the car?
Speaker 7 (31:22):
No, just to hey, no, like I don't know.
Speaker 10 (31:25):
He said a small suv and the guy asked if
he needed to ride home, and he was like no,
and then he just ran off.
Speaker 2 (31:32):
Smart. I would have also ran off. He did the
exact right thing. But if it's an eleven year old,
it's different. Right. Did your son feel like he was
trying to abduct him?
Speaker 4 (31:43):
No?
Speaker 7 (31:43):
I think he thought it was odd.
Speaker 10 (31:44):
He's never had somebody pull over and ask him if
he needed to ride before, and all he's ever heard
if someone offers to get in the car and take
you somewhere, like you say no. And so he just
was a little I don't want to say shaken up,
but a little like, mom, that was weird, right? And
I said that is that is weird? And he it
could have been a kind gesture. However, I'm thinking, as
(32:06):
an adult, would I pull over and ask a teenager
if they needed to ride.
Speaker 2 (32:10):
Home they're running in the rain? No? Probably not unless
you're a runner, and he did.
Speaker 7 (32:16):
He knew it was he went out to run specifically
in the rain.
Speaker 2 (32:20):
The guy doesn't know that, right, I'm just saying I'm
glad he didn't get in the car. No change, don't
get in the car. Yeah, nope. However, your son is
bigger than like a kid that can't fight and like
punch and beat somebody up. And then also it was raining,
I know.
Speaker 10 (32:34):
But would anybody in this room ask a kid if
they need to ride home?
Speaker 2 (32:37):
No, it's a rain, But your kid's a weird thing.
How about a young adult? He is a kid, I
mean an adult. I wouldn't even ask him if they
need a might you would? Am? I? Yeah? If it's
pouring down rain and they got themselves caught out there,
hey man, you need to ride? And I'd be sitting
there like, oh gosh, no, cover himself walking lunchbox. Man.
Speaker 9 (32:55):
I feel like I wouldn't offer, but I do feel
like when I hear it, it does think he sees
a guy and he's running. So he's like, oh, mane,
he just got caught in the rain. He's trying to
run to get out of the rain. So he's like, man,
I'm gonna do something nice. I'm asking if he needs
a ride home. That's yeah, Maybe I don't right, he
did the right thing.
Speaker 10 (33:11):
Maybe I just have a bad taste in my mouth
about people general, because because I was like, who does that?
Speaker 7 (33:20):
Who asked?
Speaker 10 (33:21):
And he was run It's like Stevenson was seeking shelter
under a like he was running, and I think it
was that there's this part on the street where he
has to cross the road and you have to wait
for the crosswalk so you have to press the button
and he was waiting there.
Speaker 2 (33:32):
Now he looks like he's stuck in the rain, in
the rain, but nobody he.
Speaker 7 (33:36):
Was waiting for the walk button so he could.
Speaker 2 (33:39):
Go stuck in the rain.
Speaker 9 (33:41):
Right the guy sees him stuck in the rain, like,
oh my gosh, he's standing at a crosswalk getting drink.
Speaker 7 (33:46):
I can't imagine being like some might say.
Speaker 2 (33:50):
He looks twelve, No, he's tall.
Speaker 7 (33:52):
He's fifteen. And how tall do you think he is?
Speaker 2 (33:55):
I was with him a month ago. He praised. He's
like here, okay me.
Speaker 7 (34:00):
He's here, okay, yeah, that's all his hair is tall.
Speaker 2 (34:06):
That could be it. I'm glad. I'm not advocating for
him getting in that car. I'm just saying I don't
necessarily think that was stranger danger. It just could have
been somebody out of the goodness of their heart, looking
to help someone who got stuck in the rain.
Speaker 7 (34:19):
I know, normally I can see the good.
Speaker 2 (34:21):
If I were going to be a predator, I would
pick somebody more vulnerable, not a tall, strong, sixteen year
old boy could beat me up. Yeah fifteen? Sorry?
Speaker 5 (34:30):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (34:30):
And was he dressed like he was running? See? Like,
all that doesn't make any sense. What does that mean?
He's dressed like he's It doesn't look like he's walking
from school.
Speaker 7 (34:40):
Right, He's got his headphones.
Speaker 2 (34:41):
Like he was on a run. I just challenge you
to not lose faith in Yes, humanity, thank you, that's right.
But eighty percent chance creep, twenty percent, just a good
person trying to help somebody out a bad day.
Speaker 10 (34:55):
My main thing was I wanted to ask everybody in
the room, like, would any of you stop and none
of us would?
Speaker 2 (35:00):
I think lunchbox would well, it just depends if it
were an adult and I felt like they were trapped
in the rain. I possibly depending on what Carmen right,
I don't want to get anything. Well, instead of the
bride just taking the groom's last name, they played a
game to battle it out for the last name. It's funny,
it's hilarious. They called it the Battle the Surname. You
(35:23):
know you like that because there's a change. You could
lose that game, dude, is bad. Move the name one
family versus the other family. Whichever family scored the most points,
that person took the last name of the winner.
Speaker 10 (35:39):
Yeah, because they couldn't decide, and they didn't want to
do it the traditional way, so they no chance.
Speaker 2 (35:45):
Two names enter, one name leaves. That's funny it is,
and who cares, it's just a name. Wif's last name
would I don't think it.
Speaker 3 (35:53):
Would look weird because because it's a white last name.
That's true, but you know, I don't care. That's true.
Speaker 7 (36:00):
She had to take his Hispanic cloud.
Speaker 2 (36:01):
That's true too. I was going to say that good
call because I have friends that are white that married
a Hispanic dude, and there's white as could be, and
they have a nickname like Gonzales and people people were like, wait,
you're why Yeah, great point. I wouldn't have That's funny
to me, Like, I don't think I would have. If
my wife would have really fought me over it, I
think I'd have been like, yeah, sure whatever. Yeah, so
(36:23):
she didn't want to do it. I even was like,
you can keep your last name because it meant a
lot to her, so you can keep it all good
and her hers was like, yeah, when we have kids,
I want them to have the same name. Let's hyphenate it.
Get no problem with that that. She's like, yeah, that's confusing,
but just her keep it, not you change it. But
if she would have fought for it hard, I don't.
I would have negotiated something in my settlement out of it,
(36:44):
but I don't know that I would.
Speaker 7 (36:45):
Have been a hiking You get that, But I'm going
to get this something else?
Speaker 2 (36:48):
Well yeah of course, yeah, no way, we don't have
to do that.
Speaker 7 (36:52):
We're not negotiating anything, I know.
Speaker 2 (36:55):
But I'm just saying I'm not totally against it. Yeah,
you are totally.
Speaker 9 (36:59):
Totally against percent. She wants to play a game. The
game is you marry me or you don't and you
want to take the last name or go home?
Speaker 2 (37:05):
Sucks. That is not a matel game. It's taking. It's
called take it or leave it. Then your vowels. Ye,
remember he cried in his vowels. Yeah, see this where
you guys lie and it's okay. I cried. Who cares?
I would love?
Speaker 9 (37:23):
I mean, anybody show me visual and me crying, and
I'll admit it. Visual of you cry. You we didn't
record your vowel?
Speaker 2 (37:31):
Shocking. Do you have the wedding video? Yeah?
Speaker 9 (37:34):
No, I don't think we did because it costs too much.
I can pull up every picture. There's not one tier
in a court of law.
Speaker 2 (37:47):
If you have three witnesses, they go, yep, we saw
him do it, Yep, we saw him do it. Yep,
we saw him do it. Okay, that person did. It's
not your say. We were there. And then I'll bring
my wife on the stand.
Speaker 9 (37:58):
I'll bring me, I'll bring my grooves been wall say nope, And.
Speaker 2 (38:01):
Then what do you do? Your wife says that you
didn't cry. She knows I didn't cry. No, that's not
what we said.
Speaker 7 (38:06):
Yeah, would she say when we asked her?
Speaker 2 (38:09):
And don't take the microphone home? And be like, hey,
it's whatever, it doesn't matter. I'll take it. I'll go
home and ask it before. Yeah, right, we believe you.
Speaker 10 (38:18):
We saw you.
Speaker 2 (38:20):
Ship, all right. I was drunk. I went there.
Speaker 7 (38:24):
He made the wedding.
Speaker 2 (38:25):
He got so drunk he missed the wedding. I will
call her. I will right out of the show. I
will go in that room and I will call her.
And so you could text her. You stay on Facebook
Messenger the whole show, so you can. She's out on
Facebook messengers.
Speaker 7 (38:36):
Got the three kids are messaging?
Speaker 2 (38:38):
Yeah, why are you messaging people the whole show?
Speaker 14 (38:39):
Then?
Speaker 9 (38:39):
Oh, it's usually like Genny, my friend that works in Austin,
and some other people.
Speaker 2 (38:44):
Amy, did you see lunchbox cry? Yes, me too, Eddie.
I saw my own also. I cried.
Speaker 7 (38:49):
I mean I thought it was sweet.
Speaker 2 (38:51):
There's nothing wrong. Okay, Yeah, you look like a little bee.
That's fine. You know what I was and that moment,
I'm proud that I was. I was gonna be.
Speaker 10 (38:59):
I don't think that makes anybody a little Oh, it's
an emotional experience, like you're.
Speaker 2 (39:05):
I was crying, Eddie, who's my best friend, was crying
behind me? No, I think I was sweating, you were crying.
It was like, you look really sad.
Speaker 3 (39:13):
You're crying sad anyway, if you were getting married, my
friend's getting.
Speaker 2 (39:17):
Married battle to surnames. I thought I was a good idea.
If a company said we will come and clean your
house for free, or a house cleaning company, but we
want our people to wear cameras, would you let them
do that.
Speaker 7 (39:30):
Cameras were what?
Speaker 2 (39:31):
Well, it's like a tech startup and where they want
to teach their robots how to clean houses. So when
they send people over to have the cameras, it's like
showing everything like where to clean, how to clean.
Speaker 7 (39:41):
No, no, no, I don't want to take No, this
is going to take jobs away from people.
Speaker 2 (39:47):
But the jobs, let's hear me out. The jobs are
going to be taken away regardless if you do this
or not.
Speaker 7 (39:51):
Well not not on my watch, Like I'm not contributing.
Speaker 2 (39:55):
So the people that come to clean your house, they
have a hat and they have a little camera on
the bottom bill of their hat. And this company that
is a tech startup, a cleaning tech startup company says
we will come and clean your house for free. Our
people are humans now just have to capture everything so
the footage can train the robots. No, because the robots
are getting trained regardless.
Speaker 7 (40:16):
And then what else is the footage being used for?
Speaker 2 (40:18):
Right, That's all I was asking. So you would not
let them come clean your house for free?
Speaker 3 (40:23):
No, Eddie, No, just because what Amy just said, like
there there's always somebody in that group that's like, you
know what, I want to take this footage, send to
my friend and we know they have this at the
house and we'll rob them later. But I mean the
person could actually do that too, true, according to that life,
that's too risky. I don't want any cameras in my house.
I'm saying, no, like free, good, free, you had me
(40:45):
at free. What are you going to film in my house?
There's nothing in there, so you go ahead and film away.
I have nothing you want to take. Do you want
some dirty clothes?
Speaker 7 (40:53):
And I think if they film his house, the robots
are a little confused.
Speaker 2 (40:57):
Yeah, the robots can be like what is this? Is
this the dump? You know that's true?
Speaker 9 (41:01):
Like, so yeah, film away, you want to clean my
house for free?
Speaker 2 (41:03):
Bring it on? They say, names, faces, personal information is
automatically anonymous. Any sensitive details are blurred before it's ever used,
including information from screens, ID cards, pieces of paper, cell
phones to help protect you in your home. Don't trust.
Does that change your mind at all? Nope? Nope. Yeah,
I don't think I would do it either. It's not
about jobs because those jobs are going to be replaced
(41:25):
by robots anyway. If the robots actually work.
Speaker 10 (41:27):
If we all collectively say no, everyone everyone says no,
So goodluck training robots.
Speaker 2 (41:33):
Lunch. You're doing something for free, and for me, I
am taking it. I love free stuff. We were talking
about on the show last week. This company comes up
to me, these guys and go, hey, we'd love to
clean your car for free, but we just want to
show your car on our socials and I just I'm
not gonna do that. I just don't. I decided no
because I don't want to know where I live.
Speaker 7 (41:54):
Well, it okay, meet them in up parking lot.
Speaker 2 (41:56):
Then I got to sit there in the parking lot
while they clean my car for forty five minutes or
an hour.
Speaker 7 (42:00):
Yeah, it's investing in.
Speaker 2 (42:01):
I'm good. I'm good. Amy, we were right. It came
down to him being like, I don't need this. It's
just like I don't want my house. I don't I
don't know them, so I don't want him at my
house that that think there's another story where so they
need these they're making huge data centers. Right, they're taking
over towns and it's terrible for our country, but they're
taking over full towns. But now this company says, hey,
(42:23):
if you'll put a single box at your house, we'll
pay for your electric bills and we'll even give you
a little money every month. Would you do that?
Speaker 7 (42:30):
What's happening with the box though? Like it's generating power,
but is it what's it doing to my environment? Like
in my bubble? Is that box impacting my well being?
Speaker 2 (42:40):
No? I mean not anymore your house? No more? Okay?
Speaker 7 (42:45):
Is that a better plan?
Speaker 2 (42:47):
Well, you're offering to pay for your electricity and your
internet and also with some of them, you know, one
hundred fifty bucks a month and all you have to
do is host one of their mini data centers. So
basically they're just spreading it out.
Speaker 7 (42:58):
So it's not is it if it's spread out?
Speaker 10 (43:00):
Because it's the issue is the data centers collectively all
together are causing a lot of environmental issues and water
and I.
Speaker 2 (43:08):
Think it is what it is. I think they just
can't find enough places to put all the data centers,
and so they're going, well, what if we do it
individually and we pay people, because with the data centers
now that they're building out, they're not paying people. They're
buying land and putting it there and then getting okayed
by the city. And what do we get for free
the electricity and internet? Now I'm in Yeah, I.
Speaker 7 (43:32):
Don't know the long term because I don't know. There's
this too new dude.
Speaker 3 (43:35):
You know how much of a stickler I am with,
like turn the lights off? Like, oh my gosh, the
A C has been running all day. I wouldn't have
to worry about any of that.
Speaker 2 (43:43):
Well would you didn't just run all like all the time?
The lights off? Let it rip?
Speaker 7 (43:49):
So I'm about you.
Speaker 2 (43:50):
They also, again this is in the very very early stages,
they'll also give you a thousand bucks up front, apparently,
so they can install it.
Speaker 10 (43:57):
It just feels like, let's take advantage of people that
don't know any better, and we're going to give them
a thousand dollars and they'll bite.
Speaker 2 (44:04):
But what do you know better? Though, Just to be
Devil's advocate.
Speaker 10 (44:08):
I think they want to take advantage of people.
Speaker 2 (44:13):
But if the data centers are going in regardless.
Speaker 10 (44:16):
Well, some people are still trying to fight it, and
Utah are cracking me up by the way. They are
so fighting back against Kevin O'Leary. It is because he's
calling them out on national news sources, like saying they're
China operatives like most more people now, like every single person,
he'll call them by name and then and then they're
(44:37):
fighting back on social media and there's just these normal
women and they're like, hey, hey, Kevin, I'm you know,
I'm Cindy who you just talked about on Fox News
or whatever, and I'm actually not anything you just said.
It's just funny because they're using social media.
Speaker 2 (44:50):
To fight back. Well, there are all these people too,
out in these parts of the country and it's just
beautiful land, and they're going they're trying to put a
data center here running on this beautiful land. Yeah, is trying.
I don't like that, but I mean, but but do
you care? Well, I mean, like, how do you care?
Speaker 3 (45:04):
Like Zion National Parks so beautiful if they put data
centers all over that, I would care in random parts
of states where no one is living.
Speaker 2 (45:13):
Not really. I think that's how most Americans really feel
unless it affects them directly, We're we're generally pretty selfish beings. Yeah,
so a thousand bucks and they pay electricity and they
give one hundred fifty bucks a month, do it Amy
Data Center box? Now, yes, yes, see.
Speaker 7 (45:36):
Yes, at the county exactly, they want to take advantage of.
Speaker 2 (45:44):
Struggling. Yeah, Bobby Bone Show today.
Speaker 9 (45:48):
This story comes us from Monroe County, Michigan. A man
hurt his ankle playing pickleball, went to the doctor and
they said, yep, you're gonna need surgery. So he's hobbling
around on crutches. He's like, my summer is ruined, and
if I can't play pickleball, no one can. So he
headed to the two local parks, took a knife and
(46:10):
slashed all the nets, cut them all down.
Speaker 2 (46:12):
I thought this was about me at first, summer is
over my summer? Well, my surgery was in November, thankfully,
love last year. Yeah, that's crazy.
Speaker 7 (46:22):
Doesn't seem like pickleball behavior.
Speaker 2 (46:25):
You know, it's to the point we've done so many
of these. I'm just glad he didn't go shoot people.
That's true. It's like, you know, what if you only
took the knife to the nets. Good for you, buddy,
We'll take it. Good for you. Okay, I'm much boxed.
That's your bonehead story of the day, all right, voicemail.
Speaker 5 (46:39):
I don't know what was funnier the fact that lunch
Box's wife where's the pants and she actually made the
decision about right on his car, or the fact that
when he said two thousand dollars, his wife's kind of
perched out. Come on, lunch Box and the man, are
you your wife gets excited about two thousand dollars?
Speaker 2 (46:56):
Well, the second part I don't understand. Yeah, I don't really.
The first part's funny. Yeah, we heard in real time
his wife say no and he said ish ma'am. And
then secondly, yeah, the two thousand dollars, I get excited
about two thousand dollars. Yeah, what do you think his
point was there?
Speaker 5 (47:09):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (47:11):
Me either, but anything to say Lunchbox.
Speaker 9 (47:14):
Oh yeah, my wife doesn't wear the pants. It's her vehicle,
so I can't really force her to do anything with
her vehicle that she doesn't want to do. That would
be frowned upon if you force someone to do something
they don't want to do. So it's her vehicle. She
has to make the decision. I put the offer out
there and she said no. So I can't really argue
too hard with that.
Speaker 10 (47:34):
I think the thing is what I My thing with
it is that before he had to put out the offer,
he was acting as if it was going to be
no big deal, like yeah, I'm definitely doing it, and
then he has to go home and make the offer.
Speaker 9 (47:47):
Well, I was shocked that she said no. Honestly, I
was shocked, Like I couldn't believe that she wouldn't be
on board with that. I thought she would think, Oh,
that's a cool idea, But you know what, do you
gotta get a car?
Speaker 2 (47:57):
I don't know. When you borrow her card, do you
have to ask her like, hey, can I borrow your card?
Speaker 9 (48:02):
Like it it's just like, hey, you know what do
you have going on today? Can I use it for this?
You know, we kind of go over the schedule and
see if I can use it, and.
Speaker 2 (48:09):
She can say no, right she could yeah? Yeah, apparently
all right, next up.
Speaker 14 (48:15):
So I was just wondering, is Lunchbox does he not
want his real name to be used because he just
knows it's like really lame. Daniel is just so basic,
and he's like, Lunchbox is so much better. And so
he's just like really insecure about his real name. Every
time it comes up, he just shuts it down like
he wants us to get buried. Now that it's out there,
(48:39):
I'm just curious.
Speaker 2 (48:40):
I think Daniel's a fine name.
Speaker 9 (48:42):
Nothing lame about it, man, nothing lame at all.
Speaker 6 (48:45):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (48:45):
I think Daniel's fine name is the other name. I
think it's biblical.
Speaker 9 (48:49):
It is actually biblical.
Speaker 2 (48:51):
Went down in alliance, then Daniel did the deal, came out.
Speaker 9 (48:57):
Came out of the Bible. That's where my mom got it.
Speaker 2 (49:03):
All right, guys, you can leave us voicemails about anything.
Eight seven seven seventy seven, Bobby. That is our number.
We're going to go. We will see you guys tomorrow. Bye.
Everybody's The Bobby Bone Show. The Bobby Bones Show theme song, written,
produced and sang by read Yarberry. You can find his
(49:23):
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.