Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:10):
Welcome to Friday Show more studio. Let's go around the room.
We learned that smoking chickens is definitely his expertise, but
you better buy one. And when you do, though, watch
out for all the added fees. He will do that
here he is producer. Ready, watch your news story of
the day.
Speaker 2 (00:25):
So lunchbox always talks about, you know, businessman getting business
deals done and all that.
Speaker 1 (00:30):
Dude, this is crazy.
Speaker 2 (00:32):
So in Sun Valley, Idaho, every year there's a billionaire
summer camp. It's like a summit where billionaires from all
over the world flying to this little town and they
do a summer camp all week.
Speaker 1 (00:42):
It's been this week.
Speaker 2 (00:43):
The regional airport said there were over one hundred private
jets that landed this week and they all meet there.
I'm talking like, you know, Bill Gates, Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg.
Speaker 1 (00:51):
You think they do all dirty stuff or are they
talking business? They say that they sacrificing. You know, it's
probably maybe a little bit of both. They do activities.
I'm kind of active. Elephant walk.
Speaker 2 (01:00):
They don't say what those activities are, but they say
like billion dollars they want they know what the elephant
walk is.
Speaker 1 (01:06):
I know what it is. Yeah, how do you know
what it is?
Speaker 3 (01:08):
Because fraternities would talk about it happened. But I mean, honestly,
I think the first person that told me about it
was my death.
Speaker 1 (01:16):
What in the world. Look at all these billionaires just
showing up, do you do you know those people? Some
of them like there is the Sam altman I know
from the AI. I've seen him talk about AI. I see,
I don't know the Warner Brothers, Discovery guy. But they're
all getting off their planes. It's unbelievable.
Speaker 2 (01:35):
And so they say that billion dollar deals go down
at this sumomt I would imagine.
Speaker 1 (01:40):
What that's crazy. Imagine that's pretty good. All right? Next up,
he drove Richard Marx to and from our studio. But
the thing we don't know why is why he was
so awkward and he couldn't even look Richard Marx in
the eye. Here he is lunch.
Speaker 4 (01:53):
You guys know doctor Catherine Growl. She's also known as
doctor Roxy on TikTok. She's a plastic stir that likes
to stream her little surgeries and does dances the surgeries.
Speaker 1 (02:04):
Yeah, even with malpractice stuff.
Speaker 4 (02:07):
And so then she got busted. Her license was suspended
and she thought she was getting all these TikTok followers,
look at me, I'm doing surgeries. And now they have
permanently taken her license away. Why because she films? Oh,
I said, that's because that's why. That's I thought, Well,
I can't believe they.
Speaker 1 (02:23):
They don't like cameras anywhere they do anything, for the
most part medical, because of all the malpractice things that
could happen, Like.
Speaker 4 (02:31):
They see her like leaving surgeries, coming back doing dances,
looking at the camera.
Speaker 1 (02:35):
And she's doing a TikTok dance like she thinks.
Speaker 4 (02:38):
Oh, TikTok is cool, look at me, I'm getting all
these followers. And she did all that and she loses
her license that she were.
Speaker 2 (02:43):
I mean, so there's a patient passing on the table
and she's doing dancing.
Speaker 1 (02:47):
Famous practice surgeon has medical license suspended. I'm reading it
here for the New York Post.
Speaker 4 (02:52):
And she went to court to fight for it and
they said, no, it is permanently gone.
Speaker 1 (02:54):
You can't get it back. That's ridiculous. No, it's not
ridiculous that she did that. Oh I why would you?
Speaker 5 (02:59):
Why did?
Speaker 1 (03:00):
I just don't know what she was doing. She was
gaining TikTok followers. She thought, again, that's not gonna make
you lose your license gaining TikTok followers. And I don't
even think it's against the rules to film, But most
doctors don't allow cameras because if they mess up, their
insurance is so high for malpractice reasons. But I wonder
what she what happened in these videos specifically, maybe even
a patient didn't agree.
Speaker 6 (03:21):
To it, right.
Speaker 3 (03:21):
I was thinking a waiver to say, okay, yeah, you
have my permission.
Speaker 4 (03:25):
Some people, like one girl suffered a She was including
she a preferated.
Speaker 1 (03:31):
El You're to meet standards of care, is what it was.
Speaker 6 (03:33):
Yeah, oh, because she's busy doing something else that she's not.
She's not focused ONTI.
Speaker 2 (03:38):
But the TikTok parts legal, like you can do a stream.
Speaker 1 (03:43):
Again, I'm not going to answer that as a lawyer,
but yeah, you can watch surgery. Sometimes doctors will do
surgeries on You've seen those before, flipping through.
Speaker 3 (03:52):
Gray's Anatomy. They're a teaching hospital.
Speaker 1 (03:54):
Life altering mistakes. Board member said she focused her attention
on and on the TikTok and talking and like the
followers as it was happening, and it led to life
altering mistakes. I mean, that's what it is.
Speaker 3 (04:09):
What do you say, Well, Gray's Anatomy bases a lot
of things on real life, and they're a teaching hospital.
And when Twitter first got popular during that season, I
remember they were live streaming things on Twitter to show
other doctors or medical students what they were doing and
how as a way to teach, but you know, online
instead of them being present.
Speaker 6 (04:31):
So I don't know how they got the patient's permission.
Speaker 1 (04:33):
One patient who's cosmetic procedure broadcast to over eight hundred
thousand followers into emergency care a week after the surgery
when she reportedly perforated her intestine.
Speaker 4 (04:42):
Yeah, and they warned her back in September of twenty
twenty one it was wrong to live stream her operations.
Speaker 1 (04:48):
She continued to do so. She got warned wrong but
not illegal. Yeah, frowned on. But they got her because
she kept messing up. All right, that's the least of
the story, allegedly, I'd like to say, even if I
have no idea what allegedly all that happened? All right, Amy,
let's do your intro here. Sorry about that, all right, Amy.
She's so desperate to sleep that she hypnotized herself with
(05:09):
videos online and she's even admitted to drinking an entire
bottle of wine.
Speaker 7 (05:12):
Here.
Speaker 1 (05:12):
She is amy like.
Speaker 6 (05:14):
In one sitting going okay, okay, okay.
Speaker 3 (05:19):
So I love following BuzzFeed and a lot of times
it's funny things. But then everyone smiled something serious, and
this thirty seven year old woman was sharing her story
of how she realized she had breast cancer and it
wasn't a lump, and so I thought, oh, this is interesting.
Speaker 6 (05:34):
I want to talk about.
Speaker 3 (05:34):
This because she said, you know, she's aging, and she
saw a change in you know, the left one versus
the right one and started to sag a little bit,
and she went to see a doctor and.
Speaker 6 (05:42):
He was like, oh, yeah, this is normal, you know.
So she was like, oh dang.
Speaker 3 (05:46):
She was kind of embarrassed for going and freaking out,
thinking what's wrong with me? And she decided, huh, I'm
going to get a second opinion. So she went and
she did that. That doctor immediately ordered a mammogram and
sure enough, that was a symptom of her breast cancer.
She did have it, but it was like a saggy
it was just starting to sag, and again she thought
it was just something that was happening with age. So
(06:07):
two things here. If your body's changing, pay attention to it.
And then also if you get get two or three
opinions if you feel like something's wrong.
Speaker 1 (06:16):
Which we were talking on the show yesterday about Lunchbox
and his vomiting. He vomits and passes out, and he's like,
I went to the doctor. He says, I'm okay, but
like case, you try a different doctor, because when you vomit,
you pass out.
Speaker 4 (06:27):
Yeah, or sometimes before I even vomit, I pass out,
like as I'm getting to THEE.
Speaker 1 (06:31):
When he talks about vomiting, passes out. So I think
that's there's a second opinion, probably yeah. Second, who would
you talk to? Is there a vomit doctor, yeah, type
in type in vomit doctor images to what happens of
a mytologists, probably some kink like I mean, seriously, I
have no idea who i'd even talk to. I think
it's probably a question for like heart brain type thing.
Speaker 6 (06:55):
Maybe a ear nose and throat, Yeah.
Speaker 1 (06:57):
Maybe butt foot who knows, I don't know, hand mouthing
butt who knows one of those doctors? Al Right, go ahead?
From Mountain Pine, Arkansas. He's pretty tall and he likes
most sports that involve a ball. Bobby Bones. Thank you.
They've put out all the Emmy nominations. I wanted to
roll with it through you guys. If you've seen any
of these shows or all the shows Best Drama series,
just yes or no? The Last of Us No, Yes,
(07:20):
so good, it's awesome. It's the one on Max. Yeah,
Zombie's Yeah, you like that? So awesome? Succession Yes, starting
season four?
Speaker 5 (07:28):
Now?
Speaker 1 (07:28):
Yes, yeah, it's awesome. Yellow Jackets, Yeah, but it's kind
of lost its way a little bit. I want to
see that he see nothing. Did you have a TV tround?
I do, but I don't watch that Yellow Jackets amazing idea.
It's starting to get a little too nutty. Do you agree?
Speaker 6 (07:44):
I'm not into the next I need to watch the latest?
Speaker 2 (07:48):
Is it like they kind of just lose track of
like how they started, and they're just like, what do
we do now?
Speaker 1 (07:51):
They took a big jump and it's either gonna get
really awesome or really weird. And I think it went
a little weird. Okay, White Lotus, Yes, come on, yes,
never seen it? Oh and or I never heard of it?
That is better? Call Saul. Yeah, I think it's over.
Is that why it's in this mic? Probably? Yeah. I
watched Breaking Bad a little bit better call Sauce back
in the day, Early The Crown, Yeah, House the Dragon,
(08:16):
A plusn Thorn, Crown of Thorns your favorite show, Crown
of Thorns, Game of Thorns, yes, uh, A couple of
comedy ones here, Abvid Elementary. Yeah, yeah, it's fine. I
don't get it. It's like, you know, it's like the
Office this teacher, no, no, no, hold on. It is not
like the office. It's not like it like they did
(08:37):
the little interviewsitial interviews. Yeah, it's fine, Like.
Speaker 4 (08:40):
Everybody raves about it and I watch it and I'm like,
I'm waiting for this to get laugh out loud funny,
and it's.
Speaker 1 (08:44):
Just everybody loves Chris Kid is an everybody's an adult.
Yeah hates Chris. I guess it's yeah, but it's just like, uh, Barry, yes, no,
watch season one, liked it, just never went back for
another season. The Bear. Yeah I told you about that one. No,
you did not. I told you it didn't matter.
Speaker 6 (09:01):
Bobby was I think about it?
Speaker 1 (09:03):
He just didn't. Jerry Dudy, Yeah, that's win everything awesome.
One of the best endings I've ever seen of a
show period.
Speaker 6 (09:12):
It's still so crazy they were able to pull that off.
Speaker 1 (09:15):
Marvelousmis masl No, only murders in the building, Yeah yeah,
Ted Lasso, Yeah, Wednesday, Adam Stanley, girl, Oh yeah, those
are the shows. You have something else that's not Emmy nominated.
But just so everybody knows that show. Quarterback is on Netflix.
I know I've heard about it. Have you to watch it?
But I will probably this weekend. I've seen clips online.
(09:36):
It looks awesome. Followed four quarterbacks I think all season long,
had miked up during games. NFL allowed it all season home,
Patrick Mahomes, Kirk Cousins, Josh All there no those only
two I know, no Marcus Mariota.
Speaker 3 (09:51):
So, like, what's an example of something that's fun to
hear see miked up?
Speaker 1 (09:55):
The trash talks?
Speaker 6 (09:57):
Okay, because you're you already have watched the football game.
Speaker 1 (09:59):
So what's what he gets off the field. It's off
field stuff. It's like on the sideline, it's during the
in the huddle at one point. I don't want to spoiler,
but Patrick mums like you ever heard Amy in the
Bybone Show? WHOA He's like I fact checked her NP.
Harby's right, Patrick, So stuff like that. Yeah, time for
the mail bag. Been email and breathe it all the
(10:20):
air to get something we call Bobby's mail bag. Yeah, hello,
Bobby Bones. I want to say I love your show.
My issue is Lunchbox. I am sure many like him
or can tolerate him, but I cannot. He is very jealous.
He has an adult bully. And the listeners and the staff.
I'm very turned off when he comes on the air.
It actually makes the show not as enjoyable. Can I
(10:43):
ask why he's allowed to speak to others the way
he does? Is it for ratings? I'm sure after reading
this email he'll be rude like he is on the air.
It's obvious he doesn't like confrontation because he becomes rude.
You would be like better if you could, and we're
willing to accept constructive criticism. Lunch Box and Bobby. There
are times that you correct him, but then he's rudeer
(11:05):
and you allow it. I blame you, Bobby. Oh shut
his mic off? Thanks Daily listener, Amanda, talk about you
like to say, check check this is all good?
Speaker 5 (11:16):
All right?
Speaker 4 (11:16):
Just making sure it's not off And I don't know
what she means by the way I talk to people.
Just because I'm loud, people think I talk in a
bad tone.
Speaker 1 (11:23):
That's aggressive sometimes and you do throw names out like
hobby lames.
Speaker 4 (11:27):
It's just loud, and people don't like that, and they
don't like hearing the truth. They don't like having I
don't want to treat everybody with a little what do
you call it when you get hear kid gloves?
Speaker 1 (11:34):
No, not Amy. I would just say, gave it his
hands up. But you said sometimes you have to treat amy.
Speaker 6 (11:41):
And I actually I don't think it's kid gloves. He
has to treat me with like respect and kindness, sensitive gloves.
Speaker 1 (11:47):
Okay, it's not really what she was having a tough time, yes, right,
just read the room. But what I'm saying is they
get so upset.
Speaker 4 (11:55):
Because you're honest with them and you tell them what
they want. They don't want to hear that. They don't
want to hear the truth. Like when so one's bad
at something, when someone is, you know, they call in
with a stupid comment and you tell them that was
a stupid comment. Oh, it's not rude, it's just honesty.
Speaker 1 (12:08):
So I would say some people could definitely hear that
is rude. And just because you say it's the truth,
or you tell it like it is, that just means
you're giving your opinion forcefully. That's okay. But I think
that's why you get to talk, because you do say
how you feel. It's mostly not like us. Sometimes it's funny,
but it is rude sometimes, and I do try to
step in. Maybe I'll try to step in a little
more when he's rude, like when he attacks Abby for
no reason, like why we bring Abby into this? What does.
Speaker 4 (12:33):
If you want to bring Abby into this? I tell
her how it is. When she sounds terrible, I say,
you sound.
Speaker 1 (12:37):
Terrible, but she doesn't sound as terrible as you say.
It sounds pretty good. Sometimes I've said it.
Speaker 4 (12:43):
I've said that there's people that she's better than, like
for example that Arkansas chick, Yeah, pageant girl whenever.
Speaker 1 (12:51):
So, and how would you like to respond to her? Formerly?
And Amanda?
Speaker 4 (12:54):
I mean, without me, you would have nothing to complain about.
And how what do we I do in life complain?
Speaker 1 (13:01):
So you should?
Speaker 4 (13:02):
I'm actually argument Yeah, I'm actually providing you with an
outlet because everywhere you go people complain about everything.
Speaker 1 (13:07):
If I wasn't here to complain about it.
Speaker 4 (13:09):
Be complained about your lost dude. I'm trying trying to
help her out.
Speaker 1 (13:13):
Yeah yeah, well a, Maana, thank you noted. I will
do a better job of it.
Speaker 4 (13:16):
But my mic will not be turned off Amanda, So
you know what, turn off your radio.
Speaker 1 (13:19):
There you go. How about that solves the problem. We
kind of want her to listen. I felt that was
rude though, I like, I don't should I step in?
I felt like that was a rude thing for it.
How is that rude? Yeah? Man, thank you for your email.
We'll work on it. She did blame you too, so
you should be mad at Amanda too. Yeah, man, turn
off your radio. If you want to email less you can, Morgan.
What's that address?
Speaker 6 (13:38):
Nail bag at bobbybones dot com.
Speaker 1 (13:40):
Right, thank you guys, we got your email on. Now
let's find the clothes Bobby nail bag.
Speaker 5 (13:47):
Yeam.
Speaker 1 (13:49):
Charlie star On had no front teeth until she was
eight years old. She was pretty sick as an infant
in the antibiotics wrought at all our teeth. WHOA, Now
that's not that fun, admit it not fun at all?
Interesting but not fun. But she's good now. She's beautiful,
boom fun around the room, Eddie.
Speaker 2 (14:08):
Before the nineteen twenties, you couldn't mail your child for
just fifteen cents how anywhere in the world. It was
a loophole. The mail was started and they didn't really
define all the rules. So for fifteen cents, you can
be like, all right, take my child to New York,
thank you.
Speaker 1 (14:23):
And you didn't put them in like a box and
seal it. No, it's like uber the postman would take them. Okay,
all right, I will deliver in New York. How awesome
is that anybody? No, no, no, no, no no no no
no no no no.
Speaker 2 (14:34):
But they said that it was a lot cheaper than
a train ticket, so a lot of people did that,
so they did do it.
Speaker 1 (14:39):
Yeah, they would mail kids across the country. That's great.
Speaker 2 (14:42):
I mean mostly across town. I think because the mail
is faster that way, they can get there in a
couple hours.
Speaker 1 (14:48):
Morgan.
Speaker 8 (14:49):
The first public high five was between Dusty Baker and
Glenn Burke of the Los Angeles Dodgers on October second,
nineteen seventy seven.
Speaker 1 (14:58):
Dusty Baker major baseball player but also manager in one
World Series. Yeah, he's been around for a long time.
He wears the gloves. I think he's the oldest manager's
coach to ever win a championship period. Wow, And he
was the first person to ever do a high five.
That's correct. I didn't know that. That's pretty cool. And
what year nineteen seventy seven revolutionary?
Speaker 8 (15:16):
Then it was the first public one that got captured,
so there could have been more before that, but this
is the first public captured on film photo whatever it
would have been amy.
Speaker 3 (15:25):
In the Netherlands, employees can be absent for up to
two years while receiving seventy percent of their salary as
sick pay.
Speaker 1 (15:32):
Wow, a lot of trust happened in there.
Speaker 6 (15:34):
How long would be able.
Speaker 1 (15:35):
To well, lunchbox would just be good and he's sick
all the time anyway, and he shows up, Yeah, he'd
just be sick. I'm a t employer, man, You are
you gonna play hurt? Oh?
Speaker 6 (15:43):
Well, just something popped in my head too, because the lunchbox.
I saw that. In the US here, I think.
Speaker 3 (15:47):
We spend like over two hundred billion dollars in hangovers
or we cost our employees.
Speaker 1 (15:53):
Hen't get hung over though ever, in his whole life,
not one time did you know that he just has
like tuberculosis and all the other diseases, never got hangovers? Yeah?
Ever right now?
Speaker 4 (16:03):
That I mean, I see people that can't move the
next day, and I don't understand that. I've never experienced
that kind of life.
Speaker 3 (16:09):
That's I feel like you need to get tested for
something like submit your body to science.
Speaker 1 (16:13):
I didn't. I found out had the.
Speaker 7 (16:16):
Need.
Speaker 1 (16:18):
Let's give us your pooper p fact.
Speaker 4 (16:19):
I'm guessing five star resorts in the Middle East and
Asia serve this coffee. It's called black ivory coffee. Did
you know it comes from elephant poop?
Speaker 1 (16:28):
That's right.
Speaker 4 (16:29):
Elephants eat coffee beans sometimes and they are go through
their digestive system and they are so rich and they
take away the bitter taste that they can get five
hundred dollars a pound for those beans. So people will
go sort through the elephant poop and sell them.
Speaker 1 (16:45):
Wow.
Speaker 4 (16:45):
Oh like that that's crazy, right, fun, that's gross.
Speaker 1 (16:52):
No, that's fun. That is amazing that.
Speaker 4 (16:55):
It makes it like when it goes through the elephant,
it makes it kind of taste fruity.
Speaker 1 (17:00):
Interesting. Minor music a little category here. Someone like you
by a Dell came out in twenty eleven, and it
became the first strictly voice piano to ever be number one,
only voice piano, the only song to do that. I
guess she sings so good, so hard, so pure, that
(17:21):
I forget that it's just one instrument with her wow,
because her voice dominates. Creed has sold more albums in
the United States than Jimmy Hendricks. Sure, yeah, don't check
that below Korean. Finally, led Zeppelin, Rim, and depeche Mode
have never had a number one song. Led Zeppelin Rim,
(17:41):
depeche Mode never a number one song. Rihanna has had fourteen.
That's a fact.
Speaker 6 (17:48):
What depeche Mode is that reach out and touch things?
Speaker 1 (17:55):
Reach out, reach out and touche That's a good question.
I reach out and could I don't.
Speaker 2 (18:00):
That's the pesche Mode it is, Yeah, reach out and
touch faith down.
Speaker 1 (18:05):
Yeah, that's not really my vibe, jam.
Speaker 6 (18:08):
I would think that would have been The Black.
Speaker 1 (18:10):
Eye is a little before me and I never listened
to them, so I know a lot about them. Yeah,
personal Jesus, is that song?
Speaker 6 (18:15):
That's it?
Speaker 1 (18:16):
Reach Out touch Faith?
Speaker 6 (18:18):
Now? I know it's faith.
Speaker 1 (18:20):
What do you think it was?
Speaker 6 (18:21):
Reach out and touch them?
Speaker 1 (18:24):
I thought it was me for a long time until
I realized was personal Jesus the name of the song
that was.
Speaker 4 (18:27):
Fun fact, It's time for the good News.
Speaker 3 (18:37):
Back in two thousand and six, Ashley Payne graduated from
high school top of her class, started college, and then
she was diagnosed with a pulmonary embolism, so she dropped
out to prioritize her health. Now fast forward seventeen years
later and she's a mother of seven. She is finally
graduating from college, something she's always wanted to do, and
(18:59):
with seven it's school valadictorian. That's yes, And she said
you credits her family for helping her make it through
all of that, specifically a note she found from her
daughter that gave her motivation. It said this, aim for
the moon and if you miss, you may hit a star.
Speaker 1 (19:15):
Yeah. I'm Casey, case Yeah, keep reaching, keep your feet
on the ground and keep reaching for the stars. Yeah,
that's a great story. I mean sometimes Eddie came in
an exercise because he's got four kids and then she
went to college with seven. I know, right, Yeah, he's like,
oh man, I got four kids. I can't sit up today.
What does that have to do with anything? Oh? You know,
how do kids I don't understand how you have seven kids. Yeah, well,
it sentually happens. There's a burden, there's a bee No,
(19:37):
I mean, I don't know. I get that.
Speaker 4 (19:38):
But what I'm saying is you probably can't even spend
time with them every day.
Speaker 1 (19:42):
That's not no, it's true.
Speaker 4 (19:43):
If you're going to college, if everybody can, you cannot
spend time with all seven if they're in school.
Speaker 6 (19:47):
Listen, I don't know, we're right, but they're all space.
Speaker 1 (19:51):
They are space. But still, that's a lot of kids.
It is a shout out to her for having all
the kids and for going back to college. That's a motivator.
Speaker 6 (19:56):
No, that I think about it, she probably didn't have
a lot of time.
Speaker 1 (19:58):
Yeah, that's what it's all about. Kiddy. That was telling
me something good? Easy trivia Amy Ready ready. Answers did
start with a that's the category? What company makes the iPhone?
Speaker 6 (20:11):
Apple?
Speaker 1 (20:12):
Good? Lunchbox? What company has free shipping on millions of
items if you're a prime member?
Speaker 8 (20:18):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (20:18):
Amazon? Correct Morgan? What actor played the terminator and is
the former governor of California Arnold Swarzenegger? Correct? Abby? What
state was I born in?
Speaker 6 (20:28):
Arkansas?
Speaker 1 (20:29):
Correct? Good job? Everybody, you're still Yeah. Now, if you
wonder why you didn't hear Eddie, he's been been banned
from this round.
Speaker 2 (20:35):
I'm just gonna sit back and enjoy the game right.
Speaker 1 (20:37):
From now on. Your Mike off least, oh yeah, offers
Mike's soft Amy's because Amy's a champion. Let's go. Nobody's
clapping about me? Really, and a little bit of Morgan.
Speaker 9 (20:47):
Thanks.
Speaker 1 (20:48):
Why are you the villain?
Speaker 6 (20:49):
I don't know. I do you feel like anybody with
the tierra is the villain?
Speaker 1 (20:53):
Okay? The category is nineties movies. Now if you miss it,
you're gonna hear this sound.
Speaker 5 (20:57):
You've been booed.
Speaker 1 (21:00):
Don't get boned Amy. What Picks our movie debuted Woody
and Buzz in nineteen ninety five. Toy Story Good nineties movies, Lunchbox,
What Screwball Comedy is about two idiotic friends named Harry
and Lloyd Dumb and Dumber. Correct Morgan, What Disney Movies
about a lion prince named Simba and his father, the
(21:20):
Lion King. Correct Abby, which Tom Hanks movie is about
the history of the United States from the fifties to
the seventies from the perspective of Alabama. Man with an
IQ of seventy five Forrest Gump. Correct, good job, we're
all in going to round three? Toys? Is the category
amy the tickle me version of what sesame street character
(21:40):
was the IT toy in nineteen ninety six? Correct, lunchbox,
What plastic building block toy was invented in Denmark? What
what plastic building block toy was invented in Denmark?
Speaker 4 (21:58):
Building block toy? Building blocked? Uh mister potato.
Speaker 1 (22:09):
Hid everybody, what's the answer, Lego legos, Yes, that's correct, legos.
Everybody thought he was kidding. Every single one of you
guys like could be like, is he kidding?
Speaker 6 (22:22):
Did you say building block vegetable?
Speaker 1 (22:24):
Or I didn't know that?
Speaker 4 (22:25):
But I didn't know their name was I thought you
building blocks. I didn't know their legos.
Speaker 1 (22:30):
I thought was the toy like a type of toy
like that the category toys?
Speaker 4 (22:34):
No. No, what I am saying is I did not
understand that they were a specific toy.
Speaker 1 (22:40):
I don't know what you call those. I just call
them building blocks. I didn't. I didn't know they were
called legos building blocks. That's that's not true. They have
they have generic legos. Lego Lego was a brand. No,
what about the Lego movie?
Speaker 7 (22:56):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (22:56):
I thought, okay, that's a Lego movie. Cool.
Speaker 4 (23:01):
I mean I really thought it was. I just thought
it was a generic toy. Like I didn't know there
was a name that you. I thought there was a
specific company. Okay, Well, I'm sorry've been a limit school.
Speaker 1 (23:12):
I've been Bud Morgan. What popular doll is known for
iconic blonde hair and pink accessories?
Speaker 5 (23:20):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (23:21):
Oh, barbiere Abby? What toy is a cube shaped puzzle
that the player attempts to twist and turn so all
the squares on each face are the same color Rubik's Cube? Correct?
The category is science? Anybody every knew Lego is of
the brand?
Speaker 6 (23:39):
Am we always knew Legos? The answers to that quest, Okay,
he's like looking it up right now.
Speaker 1 (23:44):
Yeah, I mean there's all sorts of knockoff brands, That's
what I'm saying. Like, I know we're not arguing that
not knockoff brands, but.
Speaker 3 (23:49):
But even a lot of times like Q tip is
a brand, but you always call a cotton swab q
tip because they're so good at branding, like Legos is
so good at brand.
Speaker 1 (23:57):
Building.
Speaker 6 (23:58):
Yeah, or different?
Speaker 1 (23:59):
You say you just call him building block? Go get
You just described building. You said that the clue was
building blocks. The plastic building block toy was invented in Denmark,
and the Denmark parts tough, but everybody knew was toys.
It was easy. Yeah, So I thought building potato head?
Speaker 6 (24:17):
Do you have to build him together?
Speaker 1 (24:19):
Exactly? Science? Amy? What is the force that pulls objects
towards the center of the earth?
Speaker 6 (24:25):
Towards the center?
Speaker 1 (24:27):
What is the force that pulls objects towards the center there?
Speaker 6 (24:30):
Gravity?
Speaker 1 (24:30):
Correct Morgan? What's the chemical symbol for water? H two? Correct? Abby?
Botany is the study of what?
Speaker 9 (24:40):
Oh?
Speaker 6 (24:40):
Plant?
Speaker 1 (24:40):
Correct? Good job? Everybody famous? Characteristics of US states? Amy?
What state is known for being the home to Mount Rushmore?
Speaker 6 (24:51):
Uh huh, I want to go there. I have not been,
but I want to go to South.
Speaker 1 (24:56):
Dakota, correct Morgan. What the state is known for its
rocky coastline and delicious lobster?
Speaker 8 (25:05):
What state is known for that rocky coastline and lobster
would be main?
Speaker 1 (25:10):
Correct? Are good? Which state is famous for its cheese production?
Speaker 5 (25:16):
Cheese?
Speaker 6 (25:18):
Okay, I'm not going to mess this up. They like cheese,
curds and stuff Wisconsin.
Speaker 1 (25:24):
Correct? Historical figures. Amy. Who is the leader of the
Underground Railroad.
Speaker 9 (25:30):
Okay, okay, tur in my head? Two women women?
Speaker 1 (25:43):
Harry correct Morgan. Who is the famous scientist who formulated
the theory of relativity? Oh, gosh, theory? Famous scientist, theory
of relativity. I don't know as soon.
Speaker 8 (26:02):
As mister potato heads it's gonna come, that's gonna be
your answer.
Speaker 6 (26:08):
Huh, it's in there somewhere.
Speaker 10 (26:10):
But do you think of a famous scientist at all?
Thomas Jefferson Howard Einstein? Who's the Yeah, I told you
you're eliminated.
Speaker 1 (26:23):
You're not allowed to make funny. You're not even the game, buddy,
You're not even in the room. Yeah.
Speaker 6 (26:27):
What was the answer, Abbey?
Speaker 1 (26:31):
You needed to stay the game? Who is the civil
rights activist known for her refusal to give up her
seat on the bus rosa Park? Good job? Category Sports?
Two people remain? Amy. What does m l B stand
for as in money MLB, Major League? Correct? Abby?
Speaker 6 (26:50):
What does n f L stand for National Football League?
Speaker 1 (26:53):
Amy?
Speaker 6 (26:53):
What does n h L stand for National Hockey League?
Speaker 1 (26:58):
Correct? Abby? What does NBA stand and four?
Speaker 6 (27:01):
National Basketball Association?
Speaker 1 (27:04):
Correct? Next category Tall? The category is tall. What's the
tallest land animal, Amy a giraffe. Correct, what's the tallest
building in the United States? Is that the.
Speaker 6 (27:22):
It's in New York? Uh No, I know what it is,
the the building, I know what it is. Can you
say it again?
Speaker 1 (27:37):
The tallest in Yeah, what's the tallest building in the
kit of States?
Speaker 6 (27:41):
I want to giving myself time the no, No, you're
gonna say it.
Speaker 1 (27:54):
I'm gonna say the telest works. I always give the
answer when you didn't get it.
Speaker 9 (27:58):
I see it's the dollars one Why doesn't itcond to me?
Speaker 1 (28:03):
It's the it's the One World Trade Center.
Speaker 6 (28:06):
What she was thinking of the Empire state was Oh no, that.
Speaker 1 (28:11):
Was like in the forties, the dollars on that.
Speaker 6 (28:14):
Oh say it again?
Speaker 1 (28:16):
Just her future, one World Trade Center, one World Eddie,
turn your mic and Amy.
Speaker 7 (28:21):
You are the.
Speaker 1 (28:26):
Hey, all those questions. The building block to life? You
know what I mean? What do you mean like a
building block? Just you know, building blocks? You know you
build stuff like toys. Well some would say toys, some
would say just like little box that you put builds on. Huh,
mister potato, I haven't got you the same spot. No,
(28:47):
win doesn't matter, Thank you. Another one, ray A voicemail
from last night.
Speaker 7 (28:55):
Hey, so I was just sitting here wondering hoping you
could inform a all as listeners. Just in terms of
your typical morning routines. I'm always intrigued waking up so
early in the morning each day just to kind of
go through your morning routine.
Speaker 1 (29:08):
And what's that about wake up in the morning and
the month gunning? I don't think call of them get
a home time minute. Uh yeah, So I just set
my alarm about three forty five or four, and I
usually wake up thirty minutes before that.
Speaker 6 (29:22):
Yourself.
Speaker 5 (29:23):
Wow, I hate it.
Speaker 1 (29:24):
I hate it. I hate it. I wish I could
a sleep to my alarm. But I'm usually like, what
time is it? You were sleeping thirty minutes? Okay, I
can risk it and go back to sleep, I ask
grew it, just get up? So that happens. Sometimes it's
one in the morning. So my routine is that I'm
every morning I wake up running an obstacle course on time.
And then we have a situation now with the dog
(29:46):
and the dog door, so I have to have to
take the dogs out and be out with them in
a while for a while in the morning now instead
of just putting the dog door, so I do that,
and then I feed them. I do a lot. It
takes fifteen twenty minutes through the dog stuff. And then
I sit down, look at the notes from the night
before that I'd made, and talk to Mike, and then
I just start working on the day and then come
in and start the show. I usually put on Sports
Center while I'm working, just so I can kind of
(30:08):
understand what's going on in the world, in the world
that has nothing to do with this show, and then
I'll flip around to the news later. But usually I'll
watch the whole a whole Sports Center and then you know,
come in. Usually have us here of the studio, Mike,
I'm the first one here, so I come in and
do commercials before the show starts, just forever commercials and
local liners, and then Amy's quick to come in pretty
(30:29):
after me, and then Eddie and then every Lunchbok shows up.
Sometimes yeah, yeah, I try to get here before Yeah,
that's it. Amy, Your morning routine, Well.
Speaker 3 (30:41):
I mean my I wake up to my alarm and
I don't press news anymore because for years and years
and years I press news, but I am snows.
Speaker 6 (30:50):
Free and then I journal for three minutes.
Speaker 1 (30:52):
You still journal even in the morning.
Speaker 6 (30:53):
Yes, that's when I like to journal.
Speaker 3 (30:55):
See I said a timer for three minutes, and then
after that I go get coffee and then I get ready.
Speaker 1 (30:58):
Good few of the journaling are How long have you
done that? Is that like working out? You do it
for like a week and you're like this suck.
Speaker 3 (31:04):
Oh gosh, I mean I could go back and look
at the date in my journals. I've gone through an
entire journal. I had to get a new journal.
Speaker 1 (31:10):
Oh so it is now it's habitual. Oh yeah, question
what do you journal about that early in the morning,
like you just woke up? There's nothing to write, dear diary,
I'm sleepy. I can't wait to take it now.
Speaker 3 (31:21):
Well, I mean once you get used to it. But
there's journaling proms you can use. You can ask yourself
a question and then answer it.
Speaker 1 (31:26):
Or sometimes I'm your journal. Are you sleepy? Yes?
Speaker 6 (31:29):
You start off that way and then you end up writing.
Speaker 1 (31:31):
More pile of stories.
Speaker 6 (31:33):
What's your reason for working out?
Speaker 1 (31:37):
It's a great question. Training training for what exactly? You
never know? Okay, you know, well I thought too. Once
I got married, I wouldn't care as much and I'm
not in a place now where I'm consumed or obsessed
with how I look because I'm not doing anything on camera.
I really only care about that a whole lot whenever
i know I'm going to be on camera. But I
think it's just to be healthy.
Speaker 3 (31:58):
Well, it's it's making a shift for sure, because a
new study was just done and only like a handful
years ago, people were doing it for appearance and that
was all.
Speaker 6 (32:06):
But now it is for mental health.
Speaker 1 (32:08):
When I do it for appearance, I work out in
a different way and to eat differently. Now I had
a croissant for breakfast. Don't think anything about it when
it's only work related. If I'm like, I'm four pounds overweight,
that's because I know I got to be on camera
and they want me to look good. So it's a
pressure type thing. But generally, no, it's it's yeah, it's
it's mental stuff.
Speaker 6 (32:26):
Yeah, that's most people these days, exercise or mental wellbeing.
So if you haven't worked out in a while, see
how it'll help you mentally.
Speaker 1 (32:36):
Maybe we say, if you haven't exercised, working out feels
so like weight weight.
Speaker 6 (32:40):
Oh true, I mean yeah, because I've or.
Speaker 3 (32:42):
Been active, that's a good one too, right, because my
workout is a hike.
Speaker 1 (32:46):
Yeah, being active I think is great for mental health.
Like when I go play pickleball with my friends, that's
being active and it's a great workout as well.
Speaker 3 (32:53):
Yes, Okay, So if you're stuck at a red light
and you're like, why is it not changing? Well, the
light might not know you're there, So there's some things
you can do to let it know. Like there's sensors
underneath you that are buried in the ground. A lot
of times there's a rectangle notating where they are, and
you can kind of roll your car back and forth
over it. If that doesn't work, then you can start
(33:14):
flashing your high beam headlights over and over because somehow
that also could activate.
Speaker 1 (33:19):
The're a different kind of sensor that sees lights. Is
that for like emergency vehicles? I think it's a different
sences or like a like a red light, like a camera.
I think they're just different sensors that do different things.
Speaker 3 (33:29):
Right, And you never know what kind of sensors that
the light you're at. It may not have any sensors.
In that case, you're just stuck.
Speaker 1 (33:35):
But that's when you do number three. We look both
ways as go if it's been forever.
Speaker 3 (33:39):
Oh, exactly, honking a horn there's doesn't work at all.
Speaker 6 (33:43):
There's no noise sensors.
Speaker 1 (33:46):
No.
Speaker 3 (33:46):
But they do say if you do any of this,
please be safe about it. And then if you happen
to get pulled over, you can just explain the situation
to law enforcement.
Speaker 1 (33:55):
Yeah, that often works if you do something illegal, but
explain it. Yes, okay, what else?
Speaker 3 (34:00):
Full of fourth graders on a field trip in Louisiana,
We're singing Luke Holmbs, she.
Speaker 6 (34:05):
Got the Best of Me, and it's so cute.
Speaker 1 (34:25):
They want a fild trip.
Speaker 3 (34:26):
Yeah, they were on a field trip and they're on
the bus, and I just feel like, as a kid,
that's going to be a core memory. Anytime they hear
that song, they're probably gonna think of that field trip
when they were in fourth grade.
Speaker 1 (34:35):
That's definitely field trip vibes. Not going to school in
the morning vibes. Definitely not because they know why I'm
singing any song with everybody else on that bus going
to school. But field trip? You feel good? Is that it?
Speaker 6 (34:44):
I'm Amy? That's my pile.
Speaker 1 (34:46):
That was Amy's pile of story. It's time for the
good news.
Speaker 5 (34:51):
How much box.
Speaker 4 (34:55):
There's a student pilot, I'm gonna go out for a fly.
So they're out in Denver. They get in the airplane
like let's go, and they get a single engine Cessna.
Speaker 1 (35:06):
They take off.
Speaker 4 (35:07):
Yeah, we're approaching one hundred and all the power goes
out in the plane.
Speaker 1 (35:13):
Hundred feet in the air.
Speaker 9 (35:16):
That tower.
Speaker 1 (35:16):
Not quick.
Speaker 4 (35:18):
They just got off the ground. It says one hundred feet.
I don't know how far that is. Doesn't seem that far.
Speaker 1 (35:23):
But like, what do you do?
Speaker 4 (35:24):
No engine, no power, and it's just a student, Not
like it's like some expert flyer.
Speaker 1 (35:29):
I'd be freaking out. We're all gonna die.
Speaker 4 (35:32):
Not this pilot student says, you know what, just stay calm,
stay calm, guides it glides, hits two power lines.
Speaker 1 (35:40):
Booh, he didn't need to land it at the airport. No,
Like he didn't turn it around. Now there's no turning around. Man,
when you got no power, there's no turning.
Speaker 7 (35:46):
You just go.
Speaker 1 (35:47):
I didn't know if it was just the tools. Everything's out,
the engines out, engines out, everything, it's just you and
your passenger. Good luck. Hits a couple of power lines,
lands it safely in a field, surprise at perline did
like flip that plane over? Yeah, that's what I'm thinking.
But no one was hurt.
Speaker 6 (36:07):
Well that's amazing.
Speaker 1 (36:08):
Yeah. I don't know that I'm going to go up
again or I'm not afraid to go up ever again
because I just handled a situation. But me, I'm not
going up ever again like I did it. I'm good.
I'm gonna need a backup engine from now on. I
need a uh, some paper towels too, for you to
clean up the inside of the plane. Oh for sure.
Well good, and the person I was on the plane
with that's probably very happy to Oh.
Speaker 4 (36:28):
Just imagine if you're like, oh, hey, guys, I'm learning
how to fly, come fly with me.
Speaker 2 (36:31):
I got you?
Speaker 1 (36:32):
Are you showing off for a girl?
Speaker 5 (36:33):
Oh?
Speaker 4 (36:33):
D first date you had a power line. Never gonna
get a second date, guarantee that or purpose. And he's like, hey,
if you want to live and we're all assuming it's
a dude, huh, I think you said he?
Speaker 1 (36:47):
I did say he. Okay, you told us it was
a dude. All all right, that's it. Save the life,
that's what it's all about. Thank you was telling me
something good, lunch buck. Do you think people do win
the lottery a lot which is lucky or something's up.
I think they're just lucky in that I have no luck.
A Maryland family is celebrating a one hundred thousand dollars
(37:07):
one on a scratch off. It's their fifth lottery prize
in the past five years.
Speaker 9 (37:10):
What the like?
Speaker 1 (37:12):
How stupid? Twenty seventeen, they won fifty thousand bucks. Then
they followed with another fifty thousand dollars prize, then another
fifty thousand dollars prize, then another fifty thousand dollars prize,
and now one hundred thousand dollars prize five and five years.
The father said the winnings would go toward the new car,
home improvements, and sharing with his kids and grandkids from
upi dot com. When you hear this and you can
(37:34):
win none, but they went five times, that makes me sick.
It may think they know something, though, like what could
they know?
Speaker 4 (37:40):
Like if it's sort of like if the irs you
know what I mean, if you cheat in your taxes,
they would investigate. The lottery would investigate them if they
were doing something there.
Speaker 1 (37:48):
We're just that lucky, they must be. I watched mister
beast by a million dollars of those tickets on TikTok. Yeah,
he bought it and they brought them in a dump truck,
but a million bucks in lottery tickets and he ended
up well losing a couple hundred thousand bucks but ended
up with like seven hundred thousand. Wow after the million.
That's so crazy million dollars. Time I watched it, I mean,
(38:09):
I was like, I was watching like eight part eight parties.
Speaker 4 (38:11):
So cool to see that dump truck pull up and
just dump all the scratch offs off.
Speaker 6 (38:15):
Oh so, how did they scratch them all?
Speaker 1 (38:16):
No, he didn't even scratch. They had They did the
beeps unless it said they needed to check in at
the office for the or whatever it was. Yeah, and
then you scratch it and they were busy.
Speaker 7 (38:25):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (38:26):
No, he says that at the beginning too. It's like
we're just going to scratch the thing. But then when
it said you won, then they had to scratch and
see what they want. Yeah, but pretty cool. They spend
a million bucks and still didn't make their money back.
Speaker 6 (38:35):
It's crazy.
Speaker 1 (38:35):
Yeah, there you go, Amy's joke. Let's go the morning Corny.
Speaker 6 (38:42):
What happened to the guy that was addicted to soap.
What he's clean now?
Speaker 1 (38:46):
Of course that was the Morning Corny so Bobby Bones
Show interviews. In case you didn't know, his name is
Lucas Nelson. You know, I met him a long time ago.
He doesn't remember this. Maybe he doesn't, maybe he does.
But he bumped into me on a Southwest flight once
(39:07):
and I was sitting there and he bought my shoulder
he was walking through. Oh for sure. He remembers that.
I didn't say anything, Okay, interact, I mean he did no,
there was no interaction. There's nothing at all. But that
was the first time and I was like, that's Lucas Nelson. Wow,
it's pretty cool.
Speaker 6 (39:23):
He probably has the same story of like I I
Bobby Bones.
Speaker 5 (39:28):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (39:28):
So, but we became friends earlier this year. We hung
out for like three or four days, played a lot
of golf together. We were in California, and then I
watched him play and I was just like, this guy
is so good. He's obviously Willie Nelson's son, but his
band is Lucas Nelson. On the promise of the Real
got a brand new album out today called Sticks and Stones.
He's gonna play for us the Friday.
Speaker 6 (39:48):
Morning Conversation with Lucas Nelson.
Speaker 1 (39:51):
I'm such a big fan Lucas.
Speaker 5 (39:52):
Oh man.
Speaker 1 (39:54):
You know what's funny. He can't say he's a big
fan of mine because he travels all the time. But
I like that he tried.
Speaker 7 (39:59):
No.
Speaker 1 (40:00):
It's like I'm saying no.
Speaker 5 (40:01):
I was gonna say because because when we met and
at Pebble, it was a good vibe. And then when
you you posted some amazingly beautiful things and it just
made me feel so good. I appreciate that.
Speaker 1 (40:15):
Thank you. Lucas is just the nicest dude. And we
met like humans. It wasn't even a work or no.
Speaker 5 (40:21):
We were just hanging hanging out.
Speaker 1 (40:22):
And so I remember eating like sausages over on the
little table or something, and the world and they're like, hey,
Lucas Nelson here, you want to come and play? And
Lucas gets up and he's just you know, Dale gets up,
grabs a guitar and it was like going to church.
And I was a fan of your music already, but
watching you play live, there was just something about and
I'm jaded. I get to see everybody that's good all
the time. Yeah, there was something about that performance that
(40:46):
is unidentifiable by pointing a finger at it. But I
was like, there's only two or three times in the
past five six years I felt like that with music,
and it was.
Speaker 5 (40:54):
That it was you well, Clint Eastwood was there, so
I was trying.
Speaker 1 (40:58):
Real pressure, and there's a lot of friend we were all.
Speaker 5 (41:02):
We were all. I was in awe that guy you know,
and uh no, but you know, when something I've always
felt most comfortable in some ways just with an acoustic
guitar and and connecting in an intimate setting like that,
you know, that is a it is a nice format.
Speaker 1 (41:23):
And what what did we start with? I think we
started with did You Find Yourself? We did do find
Yourself song? Yeah, my wife and I have listened to
I think five hundred because she was with me. We
were all together, we've probably listened to five hundred times.
Speaker 5 (41:35):
Yeah, you were sitting with Jordans and and uh and
that crew and Jake Owen was there, and who else
was there? Was another friend of ours.
Speaker 1 (41:48):
Was there?
Speaker 5 (41:48):
Yeah? Yeah, those guys are all it was. It was
a very cool vibe. And that intimate setting with all
those golfers and and musicians there is uh, you know,
it lends itself. There's actually a pretty good sounding room
there for that too.
Speaker 7 (42:03):
You know.
Speaker 1 (42:04):
I just can't wait for people to hear you play now.
They have a new record out today. And what's interesting
is I believe and you can correct me if I'm wrong.
You wrote all twelve with these songs yourself.
Speaker 5 (42:11):
Yeah, Where is your rite?
Speaker 1 (42:13):
Where does it happen for you? Are you on the
road all the time? Are you riding in a bus
somewhere or do.
Speaker 5 (42:17):
You yeah, or on an airplane or you know. I've
been writing with Ernest recently. He's a great, great artist
that we met on the road with Jelly Roll. Jelly
was doing a show with Dad and I happen to
be on the road with Dad for a minute because
I had some weeks off, and I went and joined
(42:39):
him on his tour and Ernest and Jelly Roll were there.
So I like writing with other people. But I'm really
good at just sitting down and writing a song in
like thirty minutes. Generally, when it comes, it comes quick.
And then I just and I'm writing for my show,
you know, I'm writing for my audience, and I'm thinking
(43:01):
about my audience when I write a song and what
kind of rhythms and sing along choruses. Do I want
what kind of even pauses in the song to let
them respond in some way?
Speaker 8 (43:13):
You know?
Speaker 1 (43:13):
So, are you a perfectionist in your writing or are
you a guy that you felt it, that's how you
felt when you wrote it, that's the song.
Speaker 7 (43:20):
You go back.
Speaker 1 (43:20):
I'll go back.
Speaker 5 (43:21):
I'll go back sometimes and if I if I feel
like something is better said some other way, then I'll
write it that way.
Speaker 7 (43:32):
Uh.
Speaker 5 (43:33):
And I'll just there are times when I'll be in
the studio recording the song and singing the vocals, and
I'll think of a better way to say some phrase,
and I'll change it right there.
Speaker 1 (43:47):
What about melody and lyrics? What is your go to first?
Or is it a theme like?
Speaker 5 (43:52):
Melody and lyrics to me go very closely together.
Speaker 1 (43:55):
What comes first?
Speaker 5 (43:57):
Lyrics often precede the melody, but very closely. It's a
fraction of a second. It's like, you know, the time
it takes to perceive the you know, the world around
you in a way, because it as soon as I
hear the phrase, I start internalizing the syllables, the the
(44:22):
structure of the phrase, and then adding a melody to
it pretty dang quickly without an instrument, oftentimes. I was
writing actually with a friend of mine, and their approach
was to write the groove first, John Oates, And my
(44:42):
approach is to write the lyrics first.
Speaker 1 (44:44):
And so it's you know, so it's it's.
Speaker 5 (44:47):
It's kind of good when someone else is good at
grooves and one another guy's good at lyrics. But but
for me, I write the lyrics first generally, and I'll write,
I'll think of something funny, like, you know, some clever
twist or phrase.
Speaker 9 (45:03):
You know.
Speaker 5 (45:05):
What was Katie said something you know earlier my my manager,
This was like, I haven't seen a Friday in forever.
Speaker 1 (45:16):
You know what does that mean?
Speaker 5 (45:18):
But you you turn it into a song. I hadn't
seen a Friday in forever. It could be a drinking song,
it could be a you know, it's a work song.
Speaker 1 (45:28):
You know what is ever ends? What's your if? What's
the lane that you feel most comfortable writing? Is it
tempo wise? Do you like to write slow songs? You
like to write bangers? If someone like you gets to
write the best song possible, what is it for you?
What do you feel most comfortable?
Speaker 5 (45:41):
I do enjoy writing ballads. I think I tend to
there's a few songs that I've written in the past
that that I feel like have connected deeply to people.
Forget about Georgia as a song like that. There's songs
on on my self titled record that that still get
(46:02):
requested quite often on our live show, I set Me
down on a Cloud and find Yourself as a more
upbeat song that people. That's my favorite song to play
live because it seems to it's an evergreen song. It's
a song that I never get tired of playing. I'm
(46:26):
always thinking about live shows when I'm playing a show,
you know, So if I'm thinking about a moment in
the show where I can rock rock, rock, bounce, bounce, bounced, dance, dance, dance,
and then bring it down into a moment where then
I really can reach a heart or two and that
and that just connects people more deeply into the lyrics,
(46:49):
into the you know, when you strip everything down, they
focus more on on on what's being said, and a
lot of times I think that's that's important, you know.
Speaker 1 (46:58):
Can you talk about your aunt Bobby for a second. Yeah,
because I was talking with Amanda.
Speaker 5 (47:02):
Shires and yeah, Amanda's great and she.
Speaker 1 (47:05):
Did the record with your aunt, and then your aunt
passed away after they had finished the record, and so
I spent a lot of time listening to the record.
And your aunt was she wrote, and she played, you know,
in the same band with you and even your dad.
What was she like as a person.
Speaker 5 (47:20):
She was a literal angel, like an angel on earth.
I've never before since met anyone as kind and gentle
and compassionate. She had that old Southern charm, you know.
She you know, really she was beautiful, and she stayed
(47:43):
beautiful till she was ninety one, you know, And I
think that there were a lot of old men who
had big crushes on her there. But she was also
very strong and a musical force of nature.
Speaker 1 (47:57):
She was.
Speaker 5 (47:59):
Dad always says she was the best musician of his band,
and she is a great mind for music. She played
on one of my tracks. She played I have a
song called Just Outside of Austin, and I was lucky
enough to have her on that song. She plays the
introduction to the song and then of course throughout the song,
(48:22):
and it took her maybe two minutes to write this
little part when we were recording, and it was genius.
As she was a musical genius and still influences my
piano approach and taught me a little bit about piano
when I was growing up.
Speaker 1 (48:42):
So she had, like you say, it, it's church every
time with her. Do you feel like with you in
all the instruments that you play in how you grew
up nature nurture? Meaning were you born with a little
bit of it? Or was it just you were surrounded
by it? And maybe you were just born a blank
slate because you were surrounded by it all the time.
(49:03):
What do you think nature nurture and your music, the
hard work that you put in and natural ability.
Speaker 5 (49:09):
That's a good question because I've heard that there's a
theory that we carry genetic memory in our DNA, and
I'm not sure if that's true or not. I've heard
it from a number of sources that it would indicate
(49:30):
that it's possible.
Speaker 1 (49:33):
But I do know that I've been.
Speaker 5 (49:38):
Around it so much that and fallen in love with it.
I mean, you can be around it and it just
doesn't choose you, you know, And I got lucky enough
that it chose me. Music has saved my life on
a number of occasions and brought me just kind of
rerouted me from my excess and and reminded me that
(50:01):
I have a purpose and in a way, that's uh,
that's like why people go to church, why people have religion,
and so music has become that for me. It's become
a beacon of you know, of a path to follow,
and some people follow it, but peripherally, you know, some
(50:25):
people will say, Okay, I'll follow this path, but I'm
really following it because I want the lifestyle or I
want this or that, And I have the reason my
band name is Promise of the Reel is because I
had to. I want to see that. I want to
see that on the marquee every day and remind myself
of why I do it. It's about keeping the integrity
(50:47):
of the purpose of my life. You know, Promise of
the Reel is, okay, you remember that this is this
is the real reason you started playing music, and so
don't get pulled away in all these different directions. It's
very easy to get pulled away. I see a lot
of my friends and family and people that came before
me get trapped in these different on these different paths
(51:12):
that lead to dead ends in the music industry. And
so I didn't want that for myself. So I remind
myself every day with my band name promises the real
that this is why I'm doing it.
Speaker 7 (51:23):
You know.
Speaker 1 (51:23):
Is it a self awareness or is it is it
a learned self awareness or is it that you have
had experiences now where you're like, I just don't want
to go back to that both.
Speaker 5 (51:35):
Maybe I don't know if I don't know how self
aware I am in comparison to anyone else, But I
do know that I've made mistakes and I don't want
to make my kid.
Speaker 1 (51:44):
Do you feel like mistakes don't make good music? Like
I was always afraid of therapy because I was like,
if I go to therapy and I start to get right,
I'm not going to be on the air and have
all these you know.
Speaker 5 (51:52):
The irony of that is is that I make better
music now that I can reflect in a calm and
peaceful manner I can't back when I was going through it,
back when I was in my those days, which actually
this album really chronicles the first few songs of the album.
(52:16):
The album details a character who goes through the same
journey that I did. And in the beginning, it's all
party right and alcohol alujah. You know, there's a defiance
and you know, and I realized though that It wasn't
the It wasn't the the high that got me to
(52:38):
these places of creativity. It was the finding my way
back home, and that at these moments when I was
home in my mind. When I say home, I mean
the clarity. You have to have clarity in order there's
there's There were only flashes of clarity that allowed me
(52:58):
to write songs that, uh, you know that that helped
me look back and process the moments that I had.
Find Yourself, for example, was a breakup song, but I
didn't write it as I was writhing in agony, you know.
I wrote it as I found my way back. I
(53:20):
hope you find yourself before I find somebody else. Was
a statement of returning to where I was strongest and
taking my the power that I have back from this
person who had who had I had let take my
power away from me? You know, I know the love
that I deserve, you know the so my best work
(53:42):
comes when I'm looking back at the darkness and taking
the light from it.
Speaker 1 (53:49):
Does that sometimes get you through the darkness, knowing that
one day you're gonna get out of it and you're
going to have a perspective and even an empathy for
somebody else going through it.
Speaker 5 (53:56):
Yes, because I mean in my darkest moments were more younger.
I had a lot of my My my brother passed
away when I was really young. He it was it
was heavy on the whole family. It was a very
(54:16):
very intense and painful way to go. And I think
that influenced my upbringing in some ways. I think it
influenced why I chose certain paths and how I wanted
to relate to my parents. I didn't want to go
down too dark a path. I didn't want to repeat
similar mistakes and so but in my own pain in
(54:40):
and I realized there there were There's a great song
that I actually did with my dad that George Harrison
wrote called All Things Must Pass, And I remember being
in the darkest place and that repeating in my mind
that phrase that that you just got to Everything changes.
(55:01):
Everything morphs and and and and moves and goes from
up to down to up to down. The pendulum when
it swings one way, has to swing the other. And
so if I can just stay steady and persevere and
get through this time, I'm going to find the light
(55:23):
at some point. And so that's just been my my
process through getting through any kind of hardship, you know, always,
and it reminds me that I have the strength to
do it when I when I do, you know, And
that's a it's also very A lot of good music
can come from that, a lot of good reminding yourself
(55:44):
that your best self is your best self. And and
the the there's the trapping is, the temptation is the
idea is is that you've got to fly into the
sun in order to be who you need to be.
And I don't believe that's true at all. There's a
song called Icarus on my record. You know, it's about
(56:06):
it is sort of about that. It's like, you know,
it's a funny song, but it's you know, Icarus was
a Greek in the myth where the son believes he's
invincible and that he can fly close or even into
the sun, and his father keeps warning him, look, man,
(56:26):
you're gonna hurt yourself. And finally the wax on his
feathers melt and he falls to his death. And a
lot of young people believe that they're invincible and that
they can fly into the sun and that nothing will
happen to them. They can't imagine not being around, and
that's why so many people get lost, I think, And
so you know this my art is about always staying
(56:52):
true to where I believe perseverance is possible, and my
dad was a good beacon of inspiration for that as well.
Speaker 1 (57:05):
How do you feel about your voice? And I asked
that because I can't stand to listen to my voice
because and you know, I've do this at a pretty
high level. Yeah, but I'm like I I hear it
all the time. I don't like it. Can't when you
hear yourself. Are you like dad at that? Lucas nels
a concern. How do you feel about listening to your
own voice?
Speaker 5 (57:23):
Sometimes? You know, sometimes I think, oh that was pretty good,
and then other times I think, you know, turn that off,
you know, But and it depends, like, you know, I'm
getting better at singing all the time. I'm I'm the
last record that I did is not I listen to
(57:46):
this record more than other records that I've done. Now
I'm getting I'm at the point now where I don't
want to turn it off. I can just I'm you know,
it's like anything you just if you're good. And here
I was talking about this the other day. If your
ear is good enough to detect when it sounds bad,
you're ninety percent there, right, And that's what I tell
(58:09):
people who always want to sing. I tell I say,
if you've never sang before and you sing into a microphone,
you say, oh, that sounds terrible, you're actually in good shape.
Because the people who are really bad singers can't tell.
I don't know, you know, So if you can just
get it to the point where you kind of like it,
or you know, you can tell it's in tune and
(58:31):
you know. I mean, look, there's a lot of strange
and magical voices out out in the world. There's Neil
Young has a strange and magical voice that's vulnerable and shaky,
but right on key and right and pitch, you know,
Joe Walsh. I mean, all these different types of voices exist,
(58:51):
but I think what's important is the soul behind it.
And I think what's important, and I mean that by
the person. I think, the the experience, the passion, and
then making sure you're on pitch and the key is
the is obviously the most important.
Speaker 1 (59:10):
I only ask that because your voice is the best,
one of the best things I've been heard of my
whole life. And I was like, even if he doesn't,
maybe even if Lucas thinks sometimes like eh, like, maybe
that means I'm not so bad for me, you know,
maybe it means I'm not so bad.
Speaker 5 (59:22):
No. Well, the thing is is that my dad always
told me this. He said, you know, because he's got
an interesting, different voice as well. And I think that
he always said, don't don't be afraid to be weird,
and you, you know, or don't be afraid to be different,
you know, with your voice. Leon Russell's another example. They
were best friends. Uh, it's okay if your voice isn't
(59:46):
normal quote unquote, you know, because you know what that
makes you unique and uniquely who you are, and people
resonate with with people who aren't a to be who
they are.
Speaker 1 (01:00:01):
I think, you know, I never thought about, as you're
mentioning Leon Russell or George Harrison, I never thought about
the exposure to the great artists that you also just had,
just that were just around you, that other like that
either your dad knew or you're playing on tour with
and you're such a normal dude. I mean, this is
the best way. I just never thought about you hanging
out with a Beatle or even knowing a beat or
(01:00:21):
Leon Russell. But that's you know, people that your dad knew.
Speaker 5 (01:00:24):
Yeah, I mean, look, George, I didn't know very well.
I mean I don't think I ever met George Harrison.
He lived on Maui, interestingly enough, which I grew up
in Maui. But I know his son, I know a
lot of But like George, I never met Leon. I did.
Actually I met Leon Russell and actually had an adult
(01:00:47):
sit down conversation with him just before he passed randomly
on the island of Curosau off the tip of Venezuela,
and I was so surprised. It was it was a
gig that we did. It was on this island and
it was so random, and Leon Russell was playing it too,
And we met at this hotel and there's nobody else around.
(01:01:07):
We had a dinner and he was great. And then
I was grateful because I'd never had my own one
on one time with a lot of these guys. I'll
have very quick hellos. My dad will know them, they'll
come on the bus, they'll hang out with Dad. When
I was young, they were all smoking and drinking, and
(01:01:27):
so you know, I wasn't even allowed to be around
that a lot of the times. But my favorite moments
were were the artists that when I was a kid,
I was also into, like Leon, like Ray, Charles.
Speaker 1 (01:01:45):
I was gonna ask about Charles next, and you met Ray.
Speaker 5 (01:01:48):
Oh yeah, Ray, Ray was I've never seen Dad when
when when Ray sang I was so they did a
birthday tribute to Dad. I think it was his eightieth maybe,
or it could have been his seventieth, but I think
it might have been eighty. I can't remember. But every
(01:02:09):
decade he does like last. This last one was the
ninetieth and it was an incredible birthday celebration where all
of his friends came around. There were thirty amazing artists
on there, but one of them Ray was there. And
it was Ray and Leon and Dad and they sang
a song for you, which is a beautiful song. I've
(01:02:32):
been so many places in my life and time.
Speaker 1 (01:02:36):
You know that song?
Speaker 5 (01:02:37):
Do you well? If you don't go and listen to
it because it's a beautiful And there's a YouTube video
of Dad and Ray, Charles and Leon Russell and Dad
sings the first first, I believe Leon sings the second,
and then they just let Ray take the rest.
Speaker 9 (01:02:55):
Of the song.
Speaker 5 (01:02:57):
And I'm getting emotional thinking about it because when I
was a few years later, when I when it went
on YouTube and YouTube became a thing. I pulled it
up for Dad and I said, Dad, you remember this?
And we sat and watched it and he cried, I
never see. It doesn't happen very often. You know, he's
a very I mean, I'm not saying he's not. He's
(01:03:20):
just you know, he's from the quiet generation. He's he's
a cowboy. But I could see that he was so
moved that his hero Ray Charles was paying tribute to
him in that way. And so those are the moments
that really stick out. Muhammad Ali and Chris Christofferson coming
by the house, those are the those are the real
moments you know.
Speaker 1 (01:03:41):
That stick out. You know that's crazy. Well, let me
say this about your record. First of all, I'll say
it again in case you just turned it on. I'm massive,
Lucas Nelson fan. I can do this for three hours.
I often do when you're not here, just practicing. When
you are here, I do it. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (01:03:53):
They just talk to the chair like it's you waiting
for this time. All right, Bobby, Well you know what
you have me at a disadvantage. So I'm gonna I
promise you I'm gonna do this. I'm gonna listen to
all your podcasts. Can you imagine I'm gonna sit down.
I'm gonna be so well versed okay that when we
play golf next okay, I'm gonna be like you remember.
Speaker 1 (01:04:11):
Please don't you'll like me less. So you know we're
good how it is. We're just two dudes who like
to hang out. Okay. So Lucas is the record which
we mentioned before he came in, Uh, Sticks and Stones
it is out today. I am such a massive fan
of Lucas and you're gonna play Are you gonna play
Sticks and Stones now?
Speaker 5 (01:04:25):
Yeah, I'm just gonna do that. You want me to
do that?
Speaker 1 (01:04:26):
Now? It'll be awesome. Come awesome.
Speaker 5 (01:04:32):
Man. It was hard to sing that one early, but
I got it seeing you go he does.
Speaker 1 (01:04:38):
It's hard to sing and we're like blown away. That
was my point with the question, like do you ever
hear your voice? Because we're all like that that's crazy
and you're like, yeah, it'll do. It's awesome, man, thank you,
it's awesome. Okay. The record's out today, Stix and Stones
It is out today. It's twelve tracks. I know this
was I talked about and maybe you can indulge me,
maybe you cannot. You brought it up a couple of times.
(01:04:59):
Could you play a little bit to find yourself this?
See if I can do this.
Speaker 5 (01:05:07):
Oh boy, I might have to move this back because
I'm gonna enunciate more.
Speaker 1 (01:05:12):
Give it a rip, come on another one. I's gonna
start throwing dollars at it. I was like, I don't know,
give him everything.
Speaker 6 (01:05:25):
I was like, Oh, that's in the morning again.
Speaker 1 (01:05:29):
I guess that'll do. That's the greatest. Put that in
the Smithsonian, that recording right there. Here's what we're gonna
say everybody. His album is out today. Sticks and Stones
is all over as well. Go to Lucasnelson dot com.
He's all through where this show is everywhere from you know, Montana, Oregon, Idaho, Utah, Colorado.
Just look at some of the dates coming up, Kansas City,
(01:05:51):
Saint Louis. If you're hearing us, he's probably coming there
just the best and as good as he is here,
like even a better dude. I'm telling you, just that dude,
you the best, your mutual thank you, brother, super pumped
that you came in.
Speaker 5 (01:06:04):
And if you don't see us on the road coming
to your town, just know we're booking the whole rest
of the years, so.
Speaker 1 (01:06:11):
There's still gonna be out a lot.
Speaker 5 (01:06:13):
And if you don't see your talent on the tour,
don't worry. We're coming.
Speaker 1 (01:06:16):
Lucas Nelson and promise of the real albums out sticks
and stones all over the road, and there is thank you, Lucas.
I was great. What Lunchbox is gonna do is report
on JFK and the JFK assassination conspiracies. He's up there, though,
and he has no computer or papers, like nothing, not
even you could have you could have done this any
(01:06:38):
day and not missed two extensions. No, no, I know,
but that's what we need to talk about. What are
we doing this again? Or you don't have it? Listen, listen.
You guys told me I had to have wigs. Said no, no,
I was told that I had to have wigs. Okay,
go ahead, and so wigs would be like George Washington. Well,
(01:06:58):
you guys told me I had.
Speaker 4 (01:06:59):
To have it was like the point was you were
going to literally you said I had to have wes
are we going to do the report, so the wigs
are delayed in shipping, and so I don't have the wigs.
Speaker 1 (01:07:09):
Okay, you know what, I'm okay wiggless if we just
do the report.
Speaker 5 (01:07:11):
No, no, no, no, no, no no.
Speaker 1 (01:07:13):
You know I already spent my money on the wigs.
Saved the wigs for something else. Yes, exactly, So you
have the report, I have the Okay, let's hear the report.
But the wigs are gonna add so much to it.
How many wigs did you order? I ordered four wigs
for Why four? Who are the four? Are you doing?
Four characters? There's so many people. Okay, story, he's got
four wigs. Guys, I'm gonna have to give him extension
(01:07:33):
because I must see the full production. Interesting. I mean,
so for everyone you're talking about, you're gonna have a
wig for them. Yeah, this is the whole production. I've
got to see it, and I'm okay extending it. If
we're going to see a full production.
Speaker 6 (01:07:45):
Okay, that different.
Speaker 1 (01:07:46):
Who cares. I'm ready to see four wigs bounce on
it and you're not. You're not making this up. No
way did the wigs get here.
Speaker 4 (01:07:52):
They're supposed they were supposed to be here yesterday, okay,
but now they're delaying it.
Speaker 1 (01:07:56):
Says you should get them Sunday, you should get you.
Speaker 4 (01:07:59):
Know what I mean?
Speaker 1 (01:07:59):
Like when you look at that thing, it's like, I
don't know, so Monday I should be able to do it. Scooba, Steve,
what do you think about this? I'm just so do
you think he doesn't have it? And he's just like so,
I'm with you. I want to see the wigs too.
Speaker 11 (01:08:14):
But I also worry because I think he was thinking
he was doing a whole report on JFK like he
was born this day. I don't think he knows about
this conspiracy, but I thought that's what the whole report was.
But I think he's thinking something else, and now he's
trying to stall it to now figure that part out
to have the next one. Can you tell us just
something you've learned through this report?
Speaker 1 (01:08:29):
I've learned a lot. Okay, I believe him? No, No,
I believe him. He said that was such. I sure
he does that all the time. I think the guy's ready.
He just wants the wigs like it would you want
to see the maced out cats without a cat costume?
Speaker 7 (01:08:44):
No?
Speaker 1 (01:08:45):
Can we get one theory? I want to know he
has something. Okay, just give us a I believe. I mean,
he's good. I do not understand he's good. Okay, don't
don't sit it anymore. I'm on your side. And now
I want to see the see I wig whatever that is.
Speaker 5 (01:09:04):
Okay.
Speaker 1 (01:09:04):
Here's the thing with those wigs.
Speaker 4 (01:09:07):
The one wig is gonna play multiple people because there's
so many people.
Speaker 1 (01:09:10):
Like you can't name all the people. Yeah, yeah, yeah, okay.
Do you let me just ask you one question. Do
you think that Lee Harvey Oswald was the killer? No comment?
That is part of my that is part of my presentation.
Do you think that Lee Harvey Oswald, if he was
the killer, was told to kill by somebody other than
just himself? No comment. Okay, he knows, he knows. I question.
(01:09:33):
What what do you know about the grassy knoll over
the fence?
Speaker 5 (01:09:39):
You know?
Speaker 1 (01:09:43):
I know? Okay. We're waiting for the wigs.
Speaker 6 (01:09:46):
Okay, crazy, Okay, So no will of punishment.
Speaker 1 (01:09:49):
Let's give him the will of gifts wigs. Okay, So
Monday or Tuesday, whenever the wigs get here, we will
do that. We will do the bit it which, by
the way, lunchbox is in the chair would you like
some reverb?
Speaker 9 (01:10:03):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:10:03):
Can I get hello from the other side? Do you
hear that? Can you tell the difference?
Speaker 5 (01:10:11):
No?
Speaker 1 (01:10:12):
I know, echoes, echoes, that's what reverb is.
Speaker 7 (01:10:15):
Oh?
Speaker 9 (01:10:15):
Is that?
Speaker 1 (01:10:15):
Okay? It's like I'm in a hallway, ah way, hallway, hallway.
Do you want to hear your voice of auto tune?
Speaker 7 (01:10:20):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (01:10:21):
Yeah, I do. Okay, here you go and go leave,
Harvey Oswalt, that's perfect, that's somehow still out of tune.
There's no auto tune. I got a question. Yeah, I
really don't know how to say. His name? Is that
Oswald or Oswalt Oswald Walt Oswald? Okay, so okay, Monday, Miked,
are any other effect you can do on his boys
every day? Okay? Do chorus? What love got to do?
Speaker 9 (01:10:44):
Got to do with it?
Speaker 4 (01:10:45):
What love?
Speaker 1 (01:10:47):
But a second handy maotion? Who shot JFK? Who shot
John F? Kennedy?
Speaker 9 (01:10:57):
Was it you was?
Speaker 7 (01:10:58):
Oh? I don't know.
Speaker 1 (01:11:01):
You're saying thank you much much?
Speaker 7 (01:11:02):
No?
Speaker 1 (01:11:02):
No, I just I don't know what Mike was doing
the thing. So I was just trying to hear different things.
Thank you lunch bokes. Yeah, you're welcome back. Cool, thank you?
There he is we'll get that performance on Monday or
Tuesday show whenever the wigs get here. And by the way,
if you guys are on Wichita, Kansas, tickets to the
Saturday show has sold out, but the Friday show at
the Orphum Theater, we're gonna shoot a special there. We'd
love for you to come. Go to Bobbybones dot com
(01:11:24):
and get tickets. Wichita, Kansas would love to see you, guys.
There's a woman in the news. She's thirty four. She's
offering a five thousand dollars reward to anyone who can
set her up with a husband, and then she shares
the criteria for her ideal man. Her name's Eve Attilly.
She's thirty four, five thousand bucks, California woman, So here
you go. She wants her future husband to be between
the ages of twenty seven and forty. He likes sports,
(01:11:47):
be a good communicator, be at least six foot, have
good wit, banter, and the ability to poke fun at her.
The thirty four year old also know she doesn't want
the man that she marries to do any drugs, adding
that she has no preference on where they live or
what political or religious stance they have. That's a lot.
That's like a twenty thousand dollars reward to find that. Yeah,
(01:12:08):
that's rare, that's fine. Yeah, six foot dude is six
foot like a communicator that you wit the ability to
poke fun at her. But poking fun and making fun
are different, right, there's a very lot sensitivity there.
Speaker 6 (01:12:24):
That's probably because she wants to be able to poke
fun too.
Speaker 4 (01:12:27):
Well.
Speaker 1 (01:12:27):
Everybody always like to have the poke fun of me
until you get poked ify somebody's actually pretty good at it,
and then you don't like it that much anymore. But
five thousand bucks. But and that to me is not
really so much the story. But she does give her criteria,
what would what would your criteria be? Amy? Because HER's
is twenty seven to forty? Oh like sports good communicator,
six foot, good wit banter, ability to poke fun at her?
What would your be good?
Speaker 6 (01:12:46):
I thought we kind of went over this.
Speaker 1 (01:12:48):
Now hear the same. Let's do this the eight between
the ages of.
Speaker 3 (01:12:53):
Okay, so I'm forty two, okay, forty forty and fifty.
Speaker 1 (01:12:59):
I don't think you're going young. I'm getting you go
a couple of years younger. You go thirty seven. You know,
they think thirty four here, No, eighteen.
Speaker 3 (01:13:06):
This is my thoughts on that, Like, I am a mom,
I'm not going to have kids.
Speaker 6 (01:13:12):
Some men in their thirties, if they they.
Speaker 1 (01:13:13):
Already have kids, okay, you're shutting people down already with.
Speaker 6 (01:13:16):
The feel like they probably want kids.
Speaker 1 (01:13:19):
And let's say they have kids. There are thirty six
year old kids? Okay?
Speaker 6 (01:13:22):
How many?
Speaker 1 (01:13:24):
She starts to then be judge how.
Speaker 6 (01:13:25):
Old are they?
Speaker 1 (01:13:26):
Okay? So okay, I'm sorry. I don't want to say
your list for you, so ages uh, go ahead. I'm
sorry I overstepped when I said thirty seven. You said
forty forty to fifty seventy. Okay, forty to fifty you
should go old?
Speaker 6 (01:13:38):
Okay, fifty two, forty two.
Speaker 1 (01:13:40):
It's your list, not me. What am I doing? I
don't even okay. And then he likes sports to be
a good communicator, be at least six foot, So give
me to give me something he likes, something he's good
at in a height. You need something he likes okay,
hiking Okay, he likes hiking, something he needs to be
good at.
Speaker 3 (01:13:59):
Yeah.
Speaker 9 (01:14:00):
I think.
Speaker 3 (01:14:02):
No communication is a good one, but there's so much
more to that. It's kind of self awareness, like let's
be aware.
Speaker 1 (01:14:10):
We can be self aware, right, like I want him
to be good at that, So be at least how tall?
Speaker 5 (01:14:15):
Oh?
Speaker 6 (01:14:16):
I don't what?
Speaker 4 (01:14:18):
How?
Speaker 6 (01:14:18):
What is everybody's heights here?
Speaker 1 (01:14:19):
You know they're the only one six foot tall in
the whole place.
Speaker 2 (01:14:21):
And isn't he's nice? I'm six, I'm six one. We've measured.
If you're six one, I'm definitely.
Speaker 6 (01:14:27):
Six, then I mean under five? What's the five eleven?
Ray is four eleven, so five eleven to six five?
Speaker 1 (01:14:36):
You pay money to see Ray at the.
Speaker 6 (01:14:37):
Circuit five eleven to six five.
Speaker 1 (01:14:41):
Five eleven to six five, I mean.
Speaker 3 (01:14:43):
Six five, but I could I'm five to six so
really anything above five six?
Speaker 1 (01:14:47):
You okay with that?
Speaker 6 (01:14:49):
Wow, we're the same exact.
Speaker 1 (01:14:52):
So would you date someone raise height?
Speaker 6 (01:14:53):
We've measured?
Speaker 1 (01:14:54):
Would you date RaSE height?
Speaker 6 (01:14:55):
I I like Ray, so what it would be?
Speaker 1 (01:15:02):
Okay? She says. She has had to have good wit
and banter and the ability to poke fun at her.
So they need to have good blank and the ability
to do blank for you.
Speaker 6 (01:15:11):
They need to have good hands in the ability to massage.
Speaker 1 (01:15:14):
My neck back when her good hands in the ability
to give a good massage. Okay, she says, she doesn't.
Speaker 6 (01:15:20):
I don't want I do like wit and banter too.
Speaker 1 (01:15:22):
She says she doesn't want the man that she marries
to do any drugs. Now, you don't want the man
that you marry to do any blank or to date
even to do any blank illegal activity at all? Can't speed? Yeah,
I mean literal.
Speaker 6 (01:15:35):
Five over isn't illegal you have but illegal any walk?
Speaker 1 (01:15:39):
You're just saying illegal activity straight up.
Speaker 3 (01:15:41):
I mean I don't want him to be shady, like
I don't want him to be uh, you know, like
he seems like he's got it all together, super successful,
and then come to find out why call her crime?
I don't want time for that, like a scammer?
Speaker 6 (01:15:53):
Yeah, Like, what's the what is the guy Bernie made off?
Speaker 1 (01:15:58):
You don't want to date Bernie made off? Okay?
Speaker 3 (01:16:02):
Yeah, someone that like a lot of people trusted him,
Like this guy seems trustworthy and then boom you find
out he's just been stealing all your money.
Speaker 1 (01:16:11):
So no made offs, no Ponzi schemes. Yeah, a reward, I.
Speaker 3 (01:16:20):
Mean, yeah, sure, how much if somebody can buyd that
that exact guy.
Speaker 6 (01:16:26):
Wait, you already offered a reward, didn't you.
Speaker 1 (01:16:31):
Hey, Bobby, is this is another ring that's okay, five
hundred dollars. I'm on it. I'm on it all right,
only she's off into it. I'm here in the streets today.
There's a there's a social media page that's called are
We Dating the Same Guy? That Amy was telling me about?
Speaker 6 (01:16:49):
Okay, my friend told me about it. It's it's on Facebook.
Speaker 3 (01:16:52):
Apparently this is like a national thing, but it's divided
by cities.
Speaker 6 (01:16:56):
So there's a are we.
Speaker 3 (01:16:58):
Dating the Same Guy question mark Nashville, and my friend
was showing me the page when we went to it.
You have to ask to be a member, so you
have to submit yourself and they approve you. So I'm
not a member. But there's forty thousand women that are
in Nashville.
Speaker 1 (01:17:13):
So but what do they say? They're talking to out
people they've dated before.
Speaker 6 (01:17:15):
To let people know, yes they like.
Speaker 3 (01:17:18):
My friend sent me a thread of one that's like,
you know, super sweet guy. My impression was, you know
that he's fun but not looking for anything serious. And
then someone's like, oh, thanks for that heads up, because
if you think you're looking for someone serious and then
this is mister fun guy over here.
Speaker 6 (01:17:32):
And other things. I don't they have to have a
way that they're doing it.
Speaker 1 (01:17:38):
I know by the sight.
Speaker 6 (01:17:38):
Yeah they do. Hey, so this guy.
Speaker 3 (01:17:43):
I feel bad whoever this guy is because they're like, oh, yeah,
he's a fun guy, but he does not want serious.
He will lie to your face about any number of things,
including the number of women he's seeing and you know,
hooking up with right now. So if you're looking for
anything more than a fun night out, run far far away.
Speaker 1 (01:17:59):
People on Facebook just say means no.
Speaker 3 (01:18:01):
They have rules here though, and Morgan probably can speak
to it, but they're like, hey, this isn't a bash best,
this is meant to be Helpfulrgan.
Speaker 1 (01:18:07):
What are your thoughts on this page?
Speaker 8 (01:18:09):
Yeah, I mean, so they will post a picture of
a guy and his name, Okay, okay, so okay, it's
identifying them, and it's so. I mean, the reason I
got on it is because my ex ex boyfriend was
on it, and it was a whole thread and there
was a lot of things about it, and there was
girls verifying things that happened, and so.
Speaker 6 (01:18:27):
There's a lot of truth to what people say on it.
It's it's not nice.
Speaker 1 (01:18:32):
Yeah, I wouldn't think it would be didn't feel like
a place to go and be loved.
Speaker 8 (01:18:34):
No, but and it's there are a few that I've
seen there. It's like, Okay, this is a decent guy.
Not a lot of bad things to say, but most
of it is bad guys.
Speaker 1 (01:18:43):
I'm not going to say much more. But your EXX
is either one of the news recently. Yes, I said
Eddie that story, Yeah, I said Edie. Wait wait wait
he was in the news. I don't talk about anymore. Wait,
Morgan was in the news again. Morgan was all right,
what do you mean you're not going to show me
the story? Not on the air? All right now? We
(01:19:03):
don't want you to run with it right now. I
won't read though, I will just let me get a reaction,
like my reaction to what he's in the news for,
Like just but that's all you're gonna do. That's I'm
gonna make a big deal about. Move on. I swear
your reaction gonna be okay. I want to see it.
Just show on the headline. Are you sure just that?
Speaker 5 (01:19:21):
That's it?
Speaker 1 (01:19:22):
Though? Nothing? Are you sure? Moving on? Just the headline
in the news.
Speaker 6 (01:19:26):
I don't know what.
Speaker 3 (01:19:27):
I don't know it either, But because I know Morgan's
situation with that X I know it's nothing that's funny.
Speaker 6 (01:19:33):
I bet it's not good.
Speaker 1 (01:19:36):
Whoa, Yeah, you know what I'm saying there.
Speaker 6 (01:19:42):
So yeah, that'll probably make the there's that reaction. Yeah,
sorry Morgan. Yeah, he's been on the page before for
similar things.
Speaker 5 (01:19:50):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:19:50):
Okay, well, thank you guys for your time. Let's box.
Thank you for stalling that out. Wow okay, still that's
what I just said. Bobby Boone show up today.
Speaker 4 (01:20:02):
This story comes up from Marshall County, Indiana. A thirty
nine year old woman had a job interview with the
Sheriff's department. She drives down sitting in the room, they
start asking her questions like, oh, what's your previous work experience.
Speaker 5 (01:20:17):
Work?
Speaker 4 (01:20:18):
They're like, ma'am, are you slurring your word? Yeah, sir,
ma'am your eyes are kind of bloodshot. Did you have
some alcohol this morning?
Speaker 1 (01:20:27):
And she admitted yes. She was nervous about the interview,
and she admitted to driving to the precinct. They gave
her a tough place to drive drunk too.
Speaker 7 (01:20:35):
It is it is.
Speaker 1 (01:20:35):
You shouldn't drive drunk ever, And I get be it
nervous and wanted to do something about it, but you
can't do all that especially to the precinct. Never actually
driven to a precinct, but if I did, I heard it.
I have no alcohol on me at all. Yeah. So
she got a DUI and she was arrested and she
did not get the job. Did you get the job?
That's terrible? Hopefully she said thank you card? Though, could
(01:20:57):
you never know that thank you card? Sometimes it makes
a big difference. I'm lunchbox. That's your bonehead story of
the day. I was talking to Eddie and he said,
he's supposed to ask you about tubing. What was this?
Speaker 4 (01:21:07):
What was it?
Speaker 2 (01:21:08):
Somebody at church came to me and said, oh my gosh,
I'm a friend of Amy's and she needs to tell
you about this tubing story.
Speaker 1 (01:21:13):
What happened in a tubing story didn't show with us,
like an accident or something.
Speaker 6 (01:21:16):
I went tubing, Hey, go ahead.
Speaker 1 (01:21:19):
Oh something happened. Yeah, she just lowered her head in shame.
Speaker 6 (01:21:22):
Wait did she say that. No, it's not bad, it's
just embarrassing, because that's.
Speaker 1 (01:21:26):
Kind of what she said.
Speaker 3 (01:21:26):
I don't like to go fast at all, Like I can't,
you know, I get on and I freak out, and
so I think on a tube and my kids are like,
go faster, go faster, and I'm riding with them, and
you know, you do thumbs up for hey, good go,
let's go thumbs down for so my kids are.
Speaker 6 (01:21:43):
Like thumbs up and I'm like thumbs down, thumbs down.
Speaker 3 (01:21:45):
And she said she made it to like eighteen miles
an hour or whatever it was me and so they
were just thought I was lame, but I had a
good time.
Speaker 2 (01:21:55):
Oh, you were on the back of a boat, yes,
getting dragged by a tube. I had picture her on
the river. How she controlling the speed in the river? Oh,
I thought boat, Okay, she's getting pool. That's that embarrassing.
Speaker 6 (01:22:05):
Yeah, but I don't know.
Speaker 3 (01:22:07):
Apparently she's never my friend was driving the boat, and
that's probably wh already talked to.
Speaker 6 (01:22:11):
And she's never pulled a two bit eighteen.
Speaker 1 (01:22:15):
It's hard to even keep it floating.
Speaker 6 (01:22:17):
So yeah, apparently that's like so lamed.
Speaker 1 (01:22:21):
Ever a fast tuber order.
Speaker 3 (01:22:24):
And honestly, nobody's ever made me feel this way about
it until this's on her.
Speaker 6 (01:22:30):
Yeah, but she she's a good friend.
Speaker 1 (01:22:31):
So it's fine. I can wake escape pretty good. I
can wake surf okay, and I could finally wake surf
this last time with no rope, which I thought was
pretty cool, so I never tried it before. It never works,
wakes off a whole lot. I've wakeboarded some, but that's
so fast. Weitboarding is like super fast. You do jumps
and stuff and well, if you're good, I just remember
I would just face with the water. That's like super fast.
But I watched Walker Hayes flip a couple of days
(01:22:53):
ago on his Instagram story whitboarding oh where he hit
thing and did a whole flip and then landed it. Wow,
like between Jaco and probably the Watersport King of country music.
But Walker hay is just such a good athlete. There
needs to be an award for that Watersport king music.
Speaker 6 (01:23:06):
People still knee board.
Speaker 1 (01:23:08):
Let me check it's not eighty seven. Nope not Yeah,
I did to watch it, but j eight is still
But that's the only thing. Thank you have a great weekend.
We will see you guys on Monday. Byeyboddy Show