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October 24, 2024 27 mins
Join Bobby Bones and the crew as they dive into the most unforgettable moments from the show! In this episode, we celebrate the resilience of the human spirit with heartwarming stories of kindness and community support in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene. Discover how local heroes, like the Asheville Police Department, are going above and beyond to reunite families with cherished memories lost in the chaos.

But it’s not all serious! Get ready to laugh out loud with our classic Morning Corny segment, featuring pun-filled jokes that will leave you in stitches. From ghostly breakups to vampire poker games, Bobby and the gang keep the humor rolling!

Plus, we tackle a listener’s dilemma in the Anonymous Inbox: after 12 years of dating, a proposal leads to an unexpected “no.” What does this mean for their future? Tune in as we dissect this emotional rollercoaster and offer advice that could resonate with anyone navigating love and commitment.

And don’t miss our fun Halloween segment, where we explore bizarre state laws and share our own trick-or-treating plans. With stories of luck, love, and laughter, this episode is packed with everything you love about The Bobby Bones Show!
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's time for the good news, Bobby.

Speaker 2 (00:06):
A lot of stories of people going above and beyond
to help other people after the hurricanes, and this one
was from Hurricane Helene. And again there's so many people
on the ground trying to make sure that people get
their live back together. What's crazy is, yeah, it's not
in the news anymore. So if you don't live there,
you feel like it's over. And it's not like these
people are just starting to get their lives back together
after the hurricane hit. And even little things like the

(00:29):
astral Police Department has been recovering hundreds of photographs and
so hurricane hits and there are people stuff strowed everywhere,
but there's like a couple of specific officers that are
out trying to find personal things of people and then
return them to the owners, knowing that probably they would
not get them back.

Speaker 3 (00:48):
People just on in the garbage.

Speaker 2 (00:49):
So as they're out doing other rescue efforts or making
sure that people are okay, they're gathering all the small things,
the photos, the photo albums, personal things and then putting
them up on social media and then making sure people
get the thing that kind of remind them of their home.

Speaker 3 (01:01):
That's a big deal.

Speaker 2 (01:03):
Other detectives, female workers, volunteers, they're all doing this. And
a big shout out to the people in Ashville because again,
these police officers have been going out of Ashville to
help people as well. So yeah, everybody out there is
still fighting it. Like, sorry, that happened to you. That sucks,
and good luck as you guys rebuild. We haven't forgotten
about you. ABC eleven with that story. That's what it's

(01:25):
all about. That was tell me something good. How many
mourning Cornyes? Can we get in ninety seconds?

Speaker 4 (01:33):
Team?

Speaker 3 (01:33):
You ready?

Speaker 5 (01:34):
Right?

Speaker 3 (01:34):
All right, let's go the mourning corny?

Speaker 6 (01:40):
How did Casper break up with his girlfriend?

Speaker 3 (01:44):
Let's go, baby go. Wow, nailed it, boys.

Speaker 5 (01:47):
Why don't vampires play poker cheating cars because they poker
face bloody vampires.

Speaker 4 (01:56):
Let's tell teeth Royal flush two pears.

Speaker 2 (02:02):
Uh, Garland for Garland Empire. A steakills a vampire poke
poker high.

Speaker 3 (02:08):
Steaks high? That's good?

Speaker 5 (02:10):
Way is that it high stakes because they're afraid of
the steaks.

Speaker 3 (02:13):
We'll take it.

Speaker 6 (02:13):
Yeah, that's good. Okay. What's a ghost favorite Italian meal?

Speaker 2 (02:19):
A ghosts boorghini booge boo lean. I have feeling there're
gonna be no booze because we argued so against boo
sheet h SCARLINI.

Speaker 3 (02:31):
What are Italian meals? All I know is is all
the garden, ral lasagna.

Speaker 6 (02:37):
What's a ghost favorite Italian meal?

Speaker 3 (02:39):
Pizza, salad, salad? You think olive garden? Yeah, that's all
I think I know. To spaghetti and fettucini, Italian parmesan, chick.

Speaker 2 (02:52):
Chickens, spa, booty boom, spaghoody spa.

Speaker 3 (02:58):
What's it again, spook?

Speaker 6 (03:00):
What is a ghost favorite? Italian's pretty good?

Speaker 3 (03:04):
That's not it? What's a ghost favorite? Italian?

Speaker 2 (03:06):
Mill?

Speaker 3 (03:07):
And some spaghetti and meatballs?

Speaker 5 (03:10):
I don't hate I don't hate it either, Bobby, you
said right of the gate, and I was like, okay,
get warm.

Speaker 3 (03:18):
Is the hint?

Speaker 2 (03:18):
Like what beta china, fetichini, alfrey, fetcini, fetaccini, I'm afreido
or something like that.

Speaker 5 (03:25):
That's afraid is what it Isini Alfredo.

Speaker 6 (03:29):
Wow, you would have gotten it.

Speaker 3 (03:31):
That's that's that's good.

Speaker 2 (03:32):
You got there, like no, I never got there though,
Like I would have never never gotten.

Speaker 3 (03:37):
I did not accept that compliment.

Speaker 2 (03:38):
We got two three two two. We didn't get fetacini
Alfredo Alfredo.

Speaker 3 (03:46):
Yeah, I like salad though. That's pretty fret chicks. Yeah,
that's good stuff. Clear eyes arts all right?

Speaker 2 (03:56):
Coming up in the anonymous inbox, which is next. He
waged twelve years to propose. He finally proposed, She said no,
we'll tell you why. We'll talk about that anonymous sin ba.

Speaker 3 (04:08):
There's a question to be.

Speaker 2 (04:16):
Hello, Bobby Bones, my girlfriend and I have been dating
for twelve years. We started dating back in high school,
and finally I'll pop the question.

Speaker 3 (04:24):
But to my surprise, she said no.

Speaker 2 (04:27):
She admitted that she'd given up hope that it would
happen two years ago. She also said she doesn't want
to break up, but at this point she doesn't want
to get married. I'm wondering what I should do. Signed
boyfriends sitting on the pot. Boy, twelve years is a
long time. Let's just imagine high schools. Ninth grade though, right,
Let's give him the absolute benefit of the doubt and
go ninth grade for some is high school. For me,
it was high school because that's the first year you
play high schooloball team. They were freshmen, yes, so four

(04:50):
years there, then eight after. Let's they have the four
years of call. Let's say they went to college it's
four years, and then it's four years out of college. Man,
that's still a long time to wait, even if we're
going the young youngest. Yeah, that's still a long time wait.
I wonder why he decided to do it then, though.

Speaker 4 (05:03):
Okay, but but but they got she finally asked, and
then she said, no, I hear you.

Speaker 3 (05:08):
I'm not there.

Speaker 2 (05:09):
I wonder why I started to do it then, because
if she's not pressuring him and it's been twelve years,
there had to be some sort of pressure coming from someone,
because that's just not a realization you wake up and
have one day.

Speaker 3 (05:19):
We've been together eleven. Oh, I think it's time.

Speaker 2 (05:23):
That is a hooper get off the pot time limit
type thing, because that's forever.

Speaker 5 (05:28):
Okay, Well, maybe it's get through high school, get through college,
start a career. Maybe you have a time like you
know that could equal twelve years.

Speaker 2 (05:35):
But I don't think that it's like having a kid.
They're like, you're never actually ready. There's never a real time.
I feel like, if you waited that long, you aren't
even thinking about it. So something must have happened to
make him propose to her that She now is like,
I'm good if this is why you're proposing. I don't
think we need to get married, because why be with him?

(05:55):
Then I think it has to be the reason for
the proposal. Hidden in this mess is there's some reason
he finally decided to propose after twelve years, which is
way too long. Which you don't just wait twelve years
and then go wake up one day. I think it's
time because there was a time a long time ago.
I don't think there's ever like a day where you're like,
I've made it in my career. No one ever feels
I don't. I don't feel like I've made it in
my career.

Speaker 6 (06:16):
Well, I just like at least like make a paycheck.

Speaker 3 (06:19):
Why did you propose? Buddy?

Speaker 2 (06:20):
That's why I want to know, because it's not a
random after twelve years, you don't just randomly propose.

Speaker 5 (06:25):
Did he have a near death experience and maybe it
just realized to what he wanted in life?

Speaker 2 (06:30):
Twelve years is will we all grew? Twelve years is
way way, way too long. Yeah, it's long. It's a
long time. And the only way you proposed after twelve
years is being told Pooper get off the pot, Ray
got it, Eddie got it, and they weren't even twelve years.
We were also doing the absolute worst case scenario of
ninth grade. It also could have been twelfth grade. You're right, so.

Speaker 3 (06:46):
There is maybe he was going to his doctorate.

Speaker 2 (06:48):
There's no way possible something happened in this proposal or
why you proposed and made her say no. Because she
obviously loves you and wants to be with you. That's
what you gotta go figure out. You got to unstring that.
Otherwise she wouldn't want to do you anymore. If she
wants to stay together, that means eventually she wants to
marry you. But something happened in the journey to this proposal.
It's up to you to go figure out. Boyfriend sitting

(07:09):
on the pot. I don't like that he signed your name.

Speaker 3 (07:11):
It's gross. It's still weird. She said, no, it's not.

Speaker 2 (07:14):
Whenever, the reason I feel is something about the proposal.
If like her dad forced him, I'd be like, no,
I don't want to because you're only doing this because
you were forced to do it.

Speaker 3 (07:23):
What you're saying, it's you, buddy, it's not her. It's you.
You're the problem.

Speaker 2 (07:28):
It's you. You need to figure it out, because if
it was something bad. She wouldn't want to be with
you anymore. I was diagnosed that I should charge it
for that one.

Speaker 3 (07:36):
Like you read to go deep? How to go deep?
In that one?

Speaker 2 (07:39):
I'll endvoice you sitting on the pot. That's a gross name.
I don't like it all right, thank you?

Speaker 3 (07:43):
Close it up?

Speaker 2 (07:44):
Y understanding. Look up the state laws before you go
trick or treating. For example, the state of Alabama has
some odd laws. You cannot dress like a priest in
Alabama on Halloween or any other day. According to the
Alabama law, you may be a rested or find if
you dressed up as a member of the clergy. If
you're attending a church on Halloween, Alabama, you cannot wear

(08:06):
a mustache, or you could be questioned by police.

Speaker 3 (08:11):
What is that all about? I found some other ones though.
No trick or treating.

Speaker 2 (08:15):
If you've passed the age of eighth grade in Belleville, Missouri,
I'm down there.

Speaker 3 (08:19):
Yeah, that makes sense. Arrest them and the parents like
kicking their door.

Speaker 2 (08:23):
In the town of Belleville, Missouri, you can't ask for
candy on Halloween if you've passed the eighth grade or
the age of an eighth grader trick or treating is
meant for children only. Sid no Halloween celebrations on Sunday.
In Rehoboth, Delaware, you cannot celebrate Halloween on Halloween Day
October thirty first, if it follows if it falls on

(08:44):
a Sunday, trick or treating must take place on October
thirtieth on these certain years between six and eight pm.
If you do celebrate on a Sunday, you can find
up one hundred and fifty bucks. Wow, Halloween's not like
a real holiday. It should always be on a Friday
or Saturday.

Speaker 5 (08:55):
No.

Speaker 2 (08:56):
Yeah, it should always been a Friday or Saturday because
it's not attached to a day like Chris or Easter,
where that's actually on a day based on the calendar.
Halloween's like a made up day, the thirty. It should
just be on a Friday or side.

Speaker 6 (09:07):
It's sort of like.

Speaker 5 (09:08):
With Thanksgiving, it's always the fourth Thursday of the month
of November, so Halloween should be the final Saturday or
the month day whatever.

Speaker 3 (09:15):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (09:16):
Silly string is prohibited in certain towns, mostly just because
of the environment. Yeah, the environmental applications. Do people still
buy silly strings? Yeah, and it's annoying and so you
you are for that.

Speaker 3 (09:31):
I don't parent. It's super annoying. You gotta clean it up.

Speaker 1 (09:34):
So that was about a slime. Slime should be outlawed everywhere.
That is the worst on the plane.

Speaker 6 (09:38):
Your kids will just make their own slign My kids
don't make any They.

Speaker 3 (09:41):
Don't make it.

Speaker 1 (09:42):
They use it, and it gets on couches, it gets
on clothes. Slime is still a thing where you guys
get yes and everything. Birthday party and they gave it
as like a whatever party gift and it's like, oh great, cool,
Now I slim all over my house and then they
start putting it on their clothes.

Speaker 3 (09:56):
Doesn't come out.

Speaker 1 (09:57):
Then they're outside playing on the furniture and they put
it on outdoor furniture and guess what doesn't come out
of that slime is the devil.

Speaker 3 (10:04):
What are you doing for Halloween?

Speaker 5 (10:06):
I guess we're gonna go trick or treating. I mean,
my son's fourteen, right, I'm like, what's the technically he's
Thursday next week, seventh grade Thursday.

Speaker 3 (10:16):
Yeah, that's fine, ish it should be a Friday though.

Speaker 5 (10:19):
Yeah, started working on his costume. He's gonna be men
in black. It made him a little badge. It might be, yeah, sunglasses,
a little earpiece, a little black suit, black tie, and
then the m ib like put his face on it
and everything like a lanyard and I'm taking it to
like FedEx and gonna laminate it.

Speaker 4 (10:36):
But who else is gonna be? Who's going to be
as other men in black? Yeah, you should be the
other one.

Speaker 3 (10:41):
You should. You could do one. They could do like happening.

Speaker 2 (10:43):
I saw God Dresses Whole Coke and Ultimate Warrior and
he just turned sides and he was one and he
was the other one.

Speaker 3 (10:48):
Hey, what are you guys doing? Trigger Treating man the normal?

Speaker 2 (10:51):
You know?

Speaker 4 (10:51):
I think we got Spider Man. We have two skeletons,
and then I don't know what I'm going to be.
I always want to be something gory, but my wife's like, no,
this do the whole glory thing. Kids scare the kids,
especially my little one. So I don't know really what
I like to do. I'd like to stay and be
the one passing out candy.

Speaker 3 (11:08):
Sounds terrible? Why because I eat it all? Well that's
that's it.

Speaker 2 (11:12):
That's why we don't keep its watch Trigger treating.

Speaker 3 (11:15):
I mean, I don't have any plans. Just go knock
on doors the trigger treat with your kids obviously.

Speaker 2 (11:20):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (11:20):
Yeah, with my kids.

Speaker 1 (11:22):
I mean my kids will do the knocking on the
door and that'll be it, and do it for about
an hour.

Speaker 3 (11:26):
They'll get tired.

Speaker 2 (11:27):
Do you guys give your kids all the candy the
night of Yes, yeah, it's fine, it all eat it.

Speaker 6 (11:32):
Yeah they don't. They don't. My kids are good about
and they're like, okay, they get full real quick.

Speaker 1 (11:36):
Yeah, your kids are older though. That's why younger kids
they don't know when to stop about school on Friday.
Gres there doing Okay, I don't know how I'm saying.

Speaker 2 (11:46):
You want to eat all the candy and stay up
late even on a Thursday if it's on a Friday. Yeah,
I figure they go to school on Friday. Yeah, they'll
still go to school. We're talking about you still give
them unlimited candy? Yeah, on the school night.

Speaker 3 (11:54):
I mean my wife will have to deal with them always.

Speaker 6 (12:00):
It's called the parent tax.

Speaker 2 (12:03):
You want to know what's the luckiest thing that ever
happened to you? And I'm want to tell you a story.

Speaker 3 (12:06):
First.

Speaker 2 (12:07):
There's a woman she had been suffering from kidney failure,
and she went to a bar and so she's talking
to the bar owner walking behind the bar, so what's
going on? And so the bar owners starts asking people
for their blood types like in the bar, and so
somebody matches and she's like, yeah, I do, gives her
kidney wild like literally went into the bar, was just

(12:28):
talking to the person, like going through diet. She was,
let me just ask around, found a match and then
that person who did match was a kidney match and
she got a kidney.

Speaker 3 (12:38):
That is the luckiest coolest thing ever. Drinking pays off.

Speaker 2 (12:42):
I don't even know she was drinking because it was
like in a mall. Right, it was like tavern on
the mall. I work in the bar. Oh okay, yeah,
so okay, luckiest thing that's ever happened to.

Speaker 3 (12:52):
You, Amy.

Speaker 5 (12:52):
I was gonna say the time that I went to
meet my friend at cole first randomly and I met you,
because it completely changed the trajectory of my entire life.

Speaker 3 (13:01):
Where do you think you would be had we not met?

Speaker 5 (13:02):
Well, let's see, I was doing sales, so probably was
selling stuff.

Speaker 6 (13:08):
Still have that job, but actually I still.

Speaker 5 (13:10):
Think I would have met who I married my husband,
because I don't think that would have changed because that
was through my family circumstances, So I probably would have
met him and moved to who knows.

Speaker 3 (13:21):
I don't know.

Speaker 5 (13:22):
Just life would be crazy because we would have never
moved to Nashville. So then that part of our life
looked different. So he might still be in the Air Force,
we might still be married.

Speaker 3 (13:29):
Oh, Eddie, Yeah, luckiest thing that happened.

Speaker 4 (13:33):
So you guys were always talking about bingo bingo, Man,
let's go play bingo.

Speaker 3 (13:36):
I went and I went to go play bingo with
you guys, and.

Speaker 4 (13:39):
I won twice in one night, my first time playing bingo.

Speaker 3 (13:43):
Dang, that was a lucky night.

Speaker 2 (13:45):
What's crazy is the whole story too was Lunchbox have
been playing every week for you and Ned never won
a single game. Eddie shows up. I remember hits twice.
I never I still have won, never, never won. I
thought you had gone back and like hit something.

Speaker 3 (13:58):
Never never.

Speaker 1 (14:00):
I played it for over two years and I never
won a single time.

Speaker 2 (14:05):
Eddie said down hit twice. He had hundreds of dobbers
like yeah he had the bag and the like. He
showed up Lunchbox, luckiest thing ever happened to you.

Speaker 3 (14:13):
I went to an.

Speaker 1 (14:13):
Astros game when I was like twelve years old, and
I snuck down to the expensive seats behind the visitors dugout,
and there was these two older ladies. One was like
probably sixty at the time, the other one was forty.
And they started yelling at me, and I started talking
trash back and forth with them, and then I became
friends with them. And now anytime I want to go
to an Astros game, I just call them and they
give me free tickets behind the visitors dugout.

Speaker 3 (14:34):
That's really lucky. That's pretty cool, Morgan, luckiest thing ever
happened to you.

Speaker 2 (14:37):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (14:37):
So I went to a college mingle my freshman year
and I entered a raffle just one ticket and and
I ended up winning a year of free sandwiches.

Speaker 6 (14:47):
So awesome as a fresh Oh yeah, that was come handy.

Speaker 2 (14:50):
So how did that work? A year of free sandwiches?
Did you get like one a week, one a day?

Speaker 3 (14:54):
It was one a day.

Speaker 7 (14:55):
I don't think I went every single day, but I
think I would eat some weeks.

Speaker 3 (14:58):
Like six sandwiches a week. That is really lucky.

Speaker 2 (15:01):
Yeah, as a freshman too, I was thinking about mine
because I'm just pure luck that I had nothing to
do with, like I could influence no part of it.
Was in Las Vegas once with lunchbox and I hit
red eight times in a row on the light well,
I had read eight times in a row. I won thousand,
thousands of dollars, and we just kept just kept playing,
and they were like sending people over, being like do

(15:22):
you are you?

Speaker 3 (15:23):
We were like trying to go to the airport. We
were like trying to leave. Did you let it ride
over and over?

Speaker 2 (15:27):
I did a lot of times, but then I would
get a little nervous because I don't want to lose it.

Speaker 3 (15:30):
Also, i'd pill a little back, but I but yes.

Speaker 2 (15:32):
I just kept it, just kept hitting red eight times
in a row, and then before it hit back.

Speaker 3 (15:38):
I don't even know if we lost, we left. Let's
be really, you're the luckiest luckiest man alone.

Speaker 2 (15:43):
You guys confuse luck with hard work, determination and keeping
your hook in the water, Like, how was the hitting red?

Speaker 3 (15:51):
That's that's the luckiest. That's that's what I'm saying.

Speaker 1 (15:53):
That's what when it comes to that, you are so
freaking No, that's lucky.

Speaker 2 (15:58):
But you guys say a lot of things that happened
to me or for me are lucky when they are not.
I just don't share when I don't hit. So you guys,
oh wow, look at this. He's so lucky. It's like, no,
we don't talk about the things that don't work out.
Hit eight reds in a row. It was they thought
I was a big baller. I started with one chip. Amazing,
and then had to like holding your arms and go

(16:18):
to the cash.

Speaker 3 (16:20):
It was amazing.

Speaker 2 (16:25):
This woman takes care of her husband for six years.
He was paralyzed and she's there for him. He had
a car accident, gained use of his lower extremities, and
then dumped her.

Speaker 6 (16:37):
I broke up with her.

Speaker 3 (16:40):
That's like, I mean, that's.

Speaker 2 (16:41):
First, that's first, that's ticket to at Doble Hockey State.
I mean, that's almost George Lopez level. His wife gave
him like a kidney and then he I think, this
is like worse. This is way worse than I mean,
that stinks. The woman recently revealed it after six years
of caring for her bedridden husband fllowing car accident, he
divorced her and married another woman.

Speaker 3 (17:02):
Oh that is six years. That's a long time, for
a very long time.

Speaker 2 (17:07):
She had documented her life as his caretaker on social media.
She fed him through a two, bathed him, tended to
his needs. Oh and then so, but I would like
to just say, we never know exactly what's happening, like
we don't know?

Speaker 3 (17:20):
Sure?

Speaker 5 (17:20):
Yeah, what if this is like behind the door, just
like misery? Remember that movie she tortured him?

Speaker 2 (17:27):
Yeah, well, so she gained a following on Facebook because
she was like documenting it all. Maybe they do was
just tired of that though. Maybe it was like you
use me to gain Facebook. I don't know, but just
on the surface, that stinks.

Speaker 6 (17:39):
How'd he meet somebody? If he was.

Speaker 3 (17:43):
Could have been a nurse social media? Yeah, especially if
he's paralyzed ways down. You can take your thumbs.

Speaker 6 (17:49):
Oh I know, I just couldn't move. Tell Me something Good.

Speaker 2 (17:55):
During a recent bus ride, the driver had a medical emergency. Luckily,
the passenger thought quick saved a bunch of people's lives,
including the bus driver. Lunchbox has this story coming up
next and our positivity segment called tell Me Something Good.

Speaker 3 (18:10):
Yeah, it's time for the good news Lunchbox.

Speaker 1 (18:18):
Some passengers are enjoying their ride on the bus in
Colorado Springs, just hanging out when all of a sudden,
the bus driver ah falls out of his seat.

Speaker 3 (18:27):
What was that impression, Ah, like grabbing his heart. Oh
sounds like a cramp. I didn't know what happened. Yeah, yeah,
yeah he had a little context to that.

Speaker 1 (18:34):
Yeah, go ahead, falls out of the seat and they're
still driving down the road. So two passengers jump up,
take control of the steering wheel, get on the radio. Oh,
we got a medical emergency here. Bus drivers having a seizure.
Bus drivers having a seizure. They pulled the bus to
a side of the road, paramedics arrived.

Speaker 2 (18:49):
Wow, I like you that bus and crash into something. Yeah,
Like that's quick thinking. Also, it's brave to grab a
bus driver's steering wheel, like you really don't know.

Speaker 3 (18:58):
I mean, that's a big thing.

Speaker 2 (18:59):
I know. It's also like if something has smoke coming
out of their house, like kicking the door in, Like
that's a commitment, Like either you're gonna be a hero
or that's gonna be a bad story for a while,
Like you either broke in or somebody.

Speaker 1 (19:08):
Also, I'd rather be the guy on the Oh we
got bus driver having a seizure here, Let someone else steer.

Speaker 2 (19:14):
I'll do the call into the metro. Both get the credit.
It's a commitment thought of grab the steering whe of
the bus driver. It is because he'd be like, what
are you doing? Like he's actually fine. Yeah, good story.
They save lives. That's awesome. That is what it's all about.

Speaker 3 (19:26):
That tell me something good.

Speaker 2 (19:30):
About it.

Speaker 3 (19:30):
Balls.

Speaker 2 (19:31):
Time for the news, Bobby's this is a major breaking
news story that's gonna affect a lot of people's lives.
Goldfish Crackers announced they are changing their names and they're
breaking news. They're not called goldfish anymore. They're called Chilean
sea bass crackers. Now, why you say would they change
their name to something so dramatic? Well, because mostly adults

(19:53):
eat the crackers. The kids do a little bit, but
it's like, we're not gonna call them goldfish anymore for
most of our audience. Most of the people that are
buying it can are adults.

Speaker 5 (20:01):
So but what does it matter? As an adult, I
can call it a goldfish? Like, am I going to
feel more sophisticated if I'm eating a Chilean sea bass?

Speaker 3 (20:08):
Probably?

Speaker 4 (20:09):
No.

Speaker 2 (20:09):
But I think what's happening is, first of all, Chilean
sea bass does not sound good to me. No, just generally.
But they've they've done a ton of research. I'm sure,
and it's mostly not about customers they already have. It's
about new customers that are probably looking for a cracker
snack and instead of buying goldfish because it looks like
it's f eight year olds, maybe they're going to try
the new mature Chilean sea bass.

Speaker 5 (20:29):
Well, they need to redo the packaging too, so that's terrible.
Change the name.

Speaker 3 (20:33):
I don't sea bass, it's just weird. Is that good?
I don't know.

Speaker 6 (20:37):
Cracker it's a little teeny tiny cheese cracker.

Speaker 2 (20:40):
Uh. Anyway, the Chilean SeaBASS crackers dot com is the
website now if you guys want to get on. This
is not a commercial. But they change the name, and
you know what, the box it looks exactly the same.

Speaker 3 (20:51):
Okay, the crackers don't even look like their age. They
still look like kids. It's a dopey cracker. Yeah, and
Chilean sea bass that should be like gray.

Speaker 5 (21:01):
No. I feel like, yes at a nice restaurant or something.
This is not They're gonna go back to just goldfish.

Speaker 2 (21:08):
The new research suggests that regular exercise may be the
key to reducing pain from hangovers, not what you eat.
Scientists found the people who exercised regularly in the study
had less intense hangovers than those who didn't. They typically
had some sort of physical exercise three or four times
a week. It's also important they hydrated properly. This is
from Addictive Behaviors, a research publication. What it sounds like
to me is it's just like the healthier you are,

(21:29):
the less hangover hurts you. Yeah, your body can be
more than get on the treadmill when you have a
terrible hangover.

Speaker 5 (21:37):
Yeah, I think that. Yeah, your body's functioning at a
high level.

Speaker 3 (21:40):
I never had a hangover, Eddie. If you have a bad,
bad hangover, what does that feel like? Like death? Like
the like what disease? A flu?

Speaker 6 (21:48):
Headache?

Speaker 3 (21:48):
Body aches, headaches?

Speaker 2 (21:50):
But do you know it's a hangover so you can
fight through it because of flu which I've had. You
don't fight through it because you're like, I have to
rest and I have to let this thing do run
its course. With a hangover, it goes away regardless, right,
make it all day, man, maybe even one day, right,
one day, it's I gonna be worse because you go
and you play pickleball.

Speaker 4 (22:09):
Correct, It just hurts while you do it, but nothing
helps it like Thailand Hall doesn't help it. Nothing helps it. Apparently,
exercise menu though that helps it.

Speaker 3 (22:19):
Is that a tradition, Yes, I.

Speaker 4 (22:22):
Mean that's what my parents always say, like, oh, eat
some manu, it'll feel better as a kid at of
your eight But when you're hungover, have some menudo.

Speaker 6 (22:29):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (22:29):
I mean you have thoughts like I'm never having alcohol
ever again for the rest of my life. And then you.

Speaker 2 (22:34):
Eventually you do planning to drop junk food from your diet,
well heads up. The first week you will face withdraw
just like an addict trying to stop smoking or using drugs,
especially if feed a lot of junk food. It's best
to slowly cut things out of your routine at first.

Speaker 3 (22:49):
They say.

Speaker 2 (22:50):
This is from Appetite Research Journal, because if you do
just stop eating or drinking cokes, that's a big one
for me, mountain dew or coke or pepsi, although everything
was a coke when I was growing up. But if
you drink a lot of soda and you do stop
all of a sudden, you will get headaches, not just
from the caffeine, but because your body expects the sugar
as well.

Speaker 6 (23:06):
Sugar too.

Speaker 2 (23:07):
So here's a woman in Georgia who thought she was
going on a first date and it took a horrifying
twist after she found herself at gunpoint as the man
demanded she hand over her dog.

Speaker 6 (23:17):
No.

Speaker 2 (23:19):
Alicia Green had just moved to Atlanta. She's deciding she's
going to do some dating, meet new people. And she
meets somebody I guess online and she gave the address
to her town home. Person meets her and he had
to snatched the dog gun.

Speaker 3 (23:37):
What kind of dog was I.

Speaker 5 (23:41):
I wonder if in her dating profiles she had a
picture of her and her dog. And so then he's like, oh, perfect,
which is the reason why on first dates they don't
come to your house.

Speaker 3 (23:51):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (23:51):
Still, it's a cane corso puppy. I'm looking at it.
It looks like many of the bird dogs that we had,
but it's a puppy, so it doesn't fully developed. What's
the price of a cane course o puppy? When they
so they go and they rob her. She didn't have
any money, so that's when they grab her puppy. The
dog is still missing. This this dog costs anywhere from

(24:12):
like two thousand and four thousand dollars. But they try
to get money. First, it looks like so they go
and they just trying to rob her. That's from eleven alive.
And then they take the dog. And that's why you
shouldn't have people at your house ever. People you shouldn't date.
That's why you shouldn't guess. A family is shocked to
find the wrong dead man wearing the loved one's clothes

(24:34):
that had died in the casket. It's a funeral home. Basically,
it was a clothes they brought for their dead relative,
but another body was in there wearing those clothes. A
New Jersey family filed a lawsuit against a funeral home
after the alleged undertakers placed the wrong body and their
loved ones clothes, Like, not just the wrong body in
the casket, they dressed it in the clothes like they
doubled up rolls.

Speaker 6 (24:53):
Something you would sue over.

Speaker 2 (24:54):
Yes, really, I don't think it's a state, I agree,
unless there was some unless there was a reason they
did it, or they knew they did it and still
went through with it. Yeah, I've never sued anybody, so
I'm like, oh, no, I don't know. Answ would be
no because I've never sued anybody, and I don't feel
like I would have been hurt by this, especially if
they're like, we're so sorry, we did not mean to

(25:16):
do that. Right unless they like sold the body of
my loved one and tried to get away with like
somebody a doppelganger dead.

Speaker 6 (25:21):
Body, well then there you go. Yeah, now we can
get a little litigious.

Speaker 2 (25:24):
But the funeral homes, accused of failing to use the
accepted degree of professional skills and negligence and causing infliction
of severe emotional distress on the plaintiffs. The family are
now demanding a trial by jury. It does feel a
bit much. It sucks. It sucks.

Speaker 5 (25:39):
No, No, it should not happen, and it's absolutely horrible.

Speaker 6 (25:42):
But also I just don't know, and I've lost.

Speaker 5 (25:44):
Like both of my parents, and I've tried to picture
this before when other stories have happened, and I'm like,
if that were to happen, I don't know that it
would cause me emotional distress, to be like, as long
as they knew.

Speaker 6 (25:53):
Where my mom was and we figured it out and
then we got it all straight, we'd be good.

Speaker 2 (25:57):
And it wasn't on purpose exactly for some reason that
they benefited. Yeah, meta has taken a stand on accounts Meta,
which is Facebook that revealed tracking information of private jets
owned by celebrities, et cetera. I feel like they only
did this so Zuckerberg can fly and they not track him,
and that this is probably not why, but that's what
I feel like, Like Zuckerberg's like, I don' wanta be track,

(26:18):
so let's just make a rule and say we can't
track anybody because but it's all personal, I mean, public information.
It's not like anybody's hacking anything. It's all public information
and they're just sharing it. But there's one guy named
Jack Sweeney who he started doing it was in high school.
He's a college kid now, and he would always just
say where people were going public information.

Speaker 6 (26:36):
He would do Taylor right.

Speaker 2 (26:37):
He would do Elon Musk. Can we do Taylor Swift? Yeah,
because he would go like, this is all up on
the internet.

Speaker 3 (26:43):
Here you go.

Speaker 2 (26:44):
He did Donald Trump, you do Jeff Bezos. But now
Meta has said we're not going to allow that. I
feel like it's just Zuckerberg not wanting his crap tracked. Yeah, probably,
don't you. That's why you have four planes goal Once
you know Elvis used to leave the building. They'd have
like four limos out and you really there'd be a
lot of hubbub around fore lemos. You don't which twenty
got in. They all went four different directions so that

(27:05):
the crowd could track him. So if you're like Zuckerberg,
you do four.

Speaker 6 (27:09):
Jets, that's what they do. I mean some some people
do do that. Don't need to get with the president.
Those are two pans.

Speaker 3 (27:16):
I don't think it's the two our furse ones out.

Speaker 6 (27:18):
I don't, Are you sure?

Speaker 3 (27:19):
Yeah? Sometimes no, I don't think so.

Speaker 6 (27:21):
Don't huh Where did I read that?

Speaker 3 (27:23):
Trust me? All right, there you go. That's the news.
Bobby's stories
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