Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
I had a story here about what one hundred thousand
dollars salary gets you in different places, and the whole
thing is a one hundred thousand dollars salary. The headline
may sound like a comfortable income, but it depends where
you live. So we'll talk about that coming up in
just a second. I do want to hit you with
some more of these. Can you name the voice actors,
Amy Oscar and Shark Tail. Okay, I'm gonna play the
(00:26):
clip here. Name the voice actor? What numbers that one number?
It looks like four? Got it? Here you go?
Speaker 2 (00:35):
So, uh, Hellola, my name's my name is Oscar? Sweetie
sight Hey?
Speaker 1 (00:46):
Got it?
Speaker 3 (00:47):
Ummm is that Will Smith?
Speaker 1 (00:50):
It is good?
Speaker 4 (00:50):
John?
Speaker 1 (00:50):
Okay, all right?
Speaker 5 (00:52):
Next up, we cannot let that that that that bully
steal our hopes and dreams.
Speaker 6 (00:56):
Look, I know this might sound crazy.
Speaker 7 (00:58):
If we got the theater back, We're gonna put this
show on, whether Crystal likes it or not.
Speaker 3 (01:03):
But first we're gonna jump out that window.
Speaker 1 (01:06):
Do you know what movie that is? Because it's easy
to hear Matthew McCain, I feel like it's easier Matthew McConaughey, Yeah, yeah,
sing yeah, and it's Matthew McConaughey, it's Buster Moon and sing.
Maybe it's can you name the character?
Speaker 4 (01:22):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:23):
I think it's harder that way. So this is Amy Poehler.
Can you name the movie the cartoon? This is go ahead,
all right, everyone, fresh start.
Speaker 3 (01:30):
We are gonna have a good day, which will turn
into a good one, which will turn.
Speaker 5 (01:32):
Into a good year, which turns into a good life.
Speaker 3 (01:34):
Tell you what, let's make a list of all the
things Riley should be happy about. Don't you worry. I'm
going to make sure that tomorrow is another great day.
Is that inside out?
Speaker 1 (01:45):
It is? Do you know the character? By any chance?
Speaker 2 (01:48):
Joy?
Speaker 1 (01:48):
Joy? Nice?
Speaker 2 (01:51):
All right?
Speaker 1 (01:51):
Next up, this is Jim Carrey. He's the voice actor.
Name the cartoon.
Speaker 5 (01:57):
Wow, that's awesome, and it's responsibility.
Speaker 1 (02:00):
I do not take lightly. I promise you a future
that is safe, sound, and stable.
Speaker 8 (02:06):
We will create a world where every who is endowed
with three inalienable rights to be determined.
Speaker 1 (02:13):
At a later date.
Speaker 3 (02:14):
Who will.
Speaker 1 (02:16):
No, you're you heard the context clear, But that's just
not what it's called. That's called guys.
Speaker 6 (02:20):
How the Grinch stole Christmas?
Speaker 2 (02:22):
No?
Speaker 1 (02:22):
No, No, it's Horton. Here's a who oh, because they
said all the who's Yeah, that's Horton and Horton. Here's
a who. This is James Earl Jones.
Speaker 4 (02:32):
Look, Simber, everything the light touches is our kingdom. A
king's time as ruler rises and falls like the sun.
One day, Simber, the sun will set on my time
here and.
Speaker 1 (02:47):
We'll don't miss us. You kicked off the show Lion King. Yeah,
character musa two more, This is Brad Pitt.
Speaker 9 (02:58):
Using my super speed. Decided to go clear my head
and I realized we had done this same silly charade
our entire lives. I tried to get my mind off
how I was feeling, but I just felt stuck.
Speaker 1 (03:14):
I have no idea. The movie Let's walk in the movie,
no idea.
Speaker 3 (03:19):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (03:19):
Is he up bright Pit?
Speaker 3 (03:21):
No?
Speaker 1 (03:22):
That is metro Man and Mega mind that what's Mega mind?
Speaker 3 (03:28):
Is that a new movie that just came out.
Speaker 1 (03:30):
It's gonna movie Mike No.
Speaker 7 (03:31):
Twenty ten.
Speaker 1 (03:33):
I mean it's a you know, like them called cartoons.
Speaker 3 (03:36):
There must be a Mega something that's in theaters right now.
Mega no idea?
Speaker 1 (03:42):
All right, next up, Danny Davito, Finecraft, megacraftft. Okay, it
starts with a Now you know you're kind of all right,
Danny DeVito.
Speaker 2 (03:52):
The big guy, he's your daddy.
Speaker 9 (03:55):
Miss the Lightning Bolts read me a book when your
dad that.
Speaker 2 (04:00):
Once upon a time.
Speaker 3 (04:04):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (04:07):
The Incredibles they said, he said zeus right, so Hercules
put him in the context clue and he plays phil
and Hercules. So that was a game where Luchbox lost.
Speaker 5 (04:17):
I should have done that game.
Speaker 6 (04:19):
You wouldn't know you did.
Speaker 1 (04:20):
You did.
Speaker 5 (04:20):
No, I didn't do the game. I didn't do the
voice after the first part of it. I did a
couple of Gosh, those those voices were a lot easier.
Speaker 1 (04:30):
Than I thought. You kept shaking your head in almost
every one of them, like I know that one.
Speaker 5 (04:34):
I was writing them down, like, oh, I know that one, Like,
oh my gosh, I should have got that.
Speaker 1 (04:37):
So you wrote down all the answers the first two.
Speaker 5 (04:39):
And then you changed by telling us the name, and
I was like.
Speaker 1 (04:43):
Oh my gosh, you almost got it. Instead, you're wearing
a syphilis hat and truck nuts should be flipped around. Yeah,
what the nuts? Yeah, because I don't see the veins there.
It is it is.
Speaker 6 (04:55):
Yeah, that was the back.
Speaker 1 (04:56):
Yeah, I need to see the veins, but.
Speaker 5 (04:57):
I can't help it flips and flops.
Speaker 1 (04:59):
Then your next US is on the wrong way right without.
Speaker 5 (05:01):
I don't know, man, I don't know.
Speaker 2 (05:03):
I'm just here.
Speaker 5 (05:04):
I'm just here.
Speaker 1 (05:05):
You know you look good.
Speaker 3 (05:06):
I'm just here as it don't get fined. And who
said that, mar Sean Lynch?
Speaker 6 (05:13):
Good job, good job aby.
Speaker 1 (05:15):
That one one hundred thousand dollars salary and this is
from the story here may seem substantial. How far stretches
varies greatly depending on location due to differences in a
taxes be cost of living after federal, state, and local taxes,
plus basically living expenses. Some cities offer far more purchasing
power than others. Worst value, What do you think? What city,
(05:37):
if you make one hundred thousand dollars a year, do
you absolutely have the worst doesn't go as far as
the other.
Speaker 3 (05:43):
Citi's Manhattan.
Speaker 1 (05:44):
That's exactly it. New York City one hundred thousand dollars
only has about thirty thousand in spending power, largely due
to high taxes and cost of living one hundred and
thirty percent above average. The two closest so New York
City was one terrible Honolulu to two because everything costs
so much money to get out there, and then also
it's expensive just to live in Hawaii the property and
(06:06):
then number three of San Francisco best Value. Now, these
are actual cities we've heard of, not just small towns
that are like because sometimes they'll do that like best
places to Live Collage and Block, Wisconsin. I'm like, I
never heard of Collage and Block, So it's a real
life city. I will say the first city has a
professional basketball team Best places for one hundred thousand dollars
(06:28):
a year.
Speaker 3 (06:28):
Memphis, Well no, no, well you do professional basketball team,
the Grizzlies.
Speaker 1 (06:34):
They definitely have one.
Speaker 3 (06:35):
Okay Thunder Oklahoma.
Speaker 1 (06:39):
City, Oklahoma City is at number one in places like
Oklahoma City at one, El Paso at two, Oklahoma City
spending power eighty nine thousand out of one hundred thousand,
and l Passo eighty nine thousand, just slightly less because
low costs and no state income tax in Texas. Like
a lot of ball players want to playing Texas or
(07:00):
Florida because of that. But what's weird about pro athletes
If they go play in a different state, they pay
taxes in that state they played. They don't pay it
on where they get their check. When I tour, I
have to pay taxes in every state I toured in.
Well really because I'm getting paid by that in that state. Okay,
(07:22):
Gaining ground Charlotte, North Carolina, plan No, Texas in Colorado Springs, Colorado.
Losing ground Queens, New York. Well yeah, it's just Queen's
is basically a suburb. But that's from Cairo seven. But
that would make like if it's wide open, it's like
where do we live? We get to go live anywhere,
but you have a job to kind of you probably
want to go to a place where your money allows
(07:44):
you to allows you to do more right, you know.
Uh So I saw it come out this morning. They're
doing this big gala for Brooks and Dunn at the ACMs.
So I will be a part of the ACM television
show on that Thursday night on Amazon. I don't really
know my role yet, but I'm gonna go up a
(08:05):
day early because Brooks and Dun are having this big
gala and I'm hosting it. And Eric Church, Cody Johnson,
Megan Maroney, Keith Urban, and Landy Wilson are all playing it.
And they're all gonna play Brooks and Dunn songs.
Speaker 3 (08:20):
Oh fun.
Speaker 1 (08:20):
Yeah, so that'd be pretty cool. The ACM just announced
they'll be honoring Brooks and Done during the Play Something
Country Gala the night before the ACMs take place. The
celebration of Brooks and Dunn goes down May seventh at
the Star on First Go, Texas, hosted about Bobby Bones.
I think I'm gonna where Ronnie's closed there Ronnie Dun's
closed that night instead of about the word. I know have
to do two things. And I probably wouldn't have hosted
(08:42):
it if it weren't Brooks and don because I know
them and they're like, will you do it? I was like, yeah, sure,
and really I was like, man, if it was somebody else,
I don't think I got but it'd be cool. It'd
be super cool. They're up for Duo of the Year
as well at the ACM Awards. They've won Duo of
the Year sixteen times.
Speaker 3 (08:58):
So sick sixteen times.
Speaker 6 (09:02):
Yeah, it's a lot.
Speaker 1 (09:04):
They get you, They get you. Yeah. A woman flying
to New York from DC posted a video after a
drunk passenger vomited all over her.
Speaker 3 (09:13):
Oh my gosh, terrible. That's disgusting.
Speaker 1 (09:17):
Yeah, that sucks. Huh, because I bet you they don't have,
like a kindergarten teacher, an extet of clothes.
Speaker 6 (09:22):
Probably not, because those.
Speaker 1 (09:24):
Kindergarten first grade teachers gonna have extra closed to case
someone poops of pants, right, But they don't have that
on airplanes, because what are you gonna do? You just
sit there in it. What was supposed to be the
short flight turned into a nightmare for Noela Voight, who
says she was projectile vomited on by a passenger seated
behind her. I would have expected it was the person
next to her going, but it was the person behind her. Oh,
(09:49):
the guy. Why would the guy vombit forward and up
and set it down to his feet?
Speaker 5 (09:51):
Though?
Speaker 1 (09:52):
But just projectile is still though. If I know it's coming,
I my head's looking down like you gotta go up
with some spunk, like.
Speaker 3 (10:00):
Yeah, like I'm gonna gather my shirt and just like
try to vomit in my own shirt.
Speaker 1 (10:06):
Void claims flight attendants offered only cocktail napkins to clean
up the mess. You'd think they got some towels in there.
There were some sort of wife. She was also unable
to change clothing because Delta had gate checked her carry on,
so she had nothing in her bag. After landing, shedd
to buy new clothes at JFK and carry her vomit
covered coat in a trash bag. She contacted customer service
(10:28):
and was offered three thousand sky miles. The airline later
bumped the offered a twenty thousand miles, calling the situation
a bio hazard and not a minor inconvenience. While she
doesn't blame the sick passenger, whom she suspects was intoxicated, see,
I think there's a difference to I think you can
get a little more upset if they were drunk, especially
if the airline was continuing to provide them alcohol. Then
(10:51):
if they were sick and like had a bug, I
think that's different. My sky miles have gone times five.
It's now x five if we're going to do that.
But yeah, that sucks for her. I remember sitting. Do
you guys ever have those like temporary classrooms or like
the trailers as they rebuilt the school. So we had
these these trailers in college, and they were always a
(11:13):
little warm because they didn't have central heaton near like
the other rooms, and so there was like an air
conditioner and just turn it on and it was warm,
and I'm sitting like six roads from the front, and
up a road to my left, there's this guy. He
just was jittery, and all of a sudden boa threw
up all over the kid in front of him, all
over his back again class, and that sucked. But what
(11:37):
really was terrible was the kid that got vomited on
was a foreign exchange student, and I think he was
embarrassed and he wouldn't leave.
Speaker 2 (11:44):
He just sat there, just took it.
Speaker 1 (11:47):
He just sat there and the teacher was like, you
can go, And I think he was so embarrassed and
also didn't quite know what to do. So we just
sat there and vomited on it. By the way, it's stuck.
It was awful, and we just the class just kept.
Speaker 3 (11:56):
Going, say hey, come with me, let's go.
Speaker 1 (12:00):
He was a college student, so the teacher wasn't like
holding his hand. But true, it was weird because somebody,
multiple people made a bad decision there.
Speaker 4 (12:10):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (12:11):
One, if you got to throw up, how do you not?
He aim it down right? Aim it down too. If
you get thrown up on, you should leave. Maybe he
didn't understand, but the teacher should have either a called
the class off right then, or like cleaned up, help
him clean. That's brutal.
Speaker 6 (12:29):
That's so weird. That happened to me. And when I
was in college too, like same exact situation, and the
teacher was like, we're done. Everybody's out of here.
Speaker 1 (12:36):
Really, somebody just go.
Speaker 6 (12:37):
And I remember the guy after he threw up, he
was like, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry.
Speaker 1 (12:41):
Did he leave?
Speaker 6 (12:43):
I think everyone just got up and left.
Speaker 1 (12:45):
The vomitor left in the my story, yeah, the vomiting,
but not the kid who got vomited on. I remember
once in high school we had a teacher has missus Johnson,
and she sat on the corner of a desk. She
wasn't mean, but she wasn't the most well liked because
she actually held people accountable. And she sat on the
corner of her desk and the desk flipped up in
(13:07):
the air and she fell hard.
Speaker 6 (13:08):
Do you all laugh?
Speaker 5 (13:10):
You have to?
Speaker 1 (13:11):
I mean the class laughed, right, Yes, everybody laughed, but
not to like point it. Anybody falling is just funny.
And and I didn't want to laugh. And I remember
I'm senior in high school. I didn't want to laugh.
And it's one of those like when you're not supposed
to laugh, you're like your head's about to explode because
(13:32):
you can't stop laughing. And so she just got up
and continued teaching.
Speaker 6 (13:36):
That's tough.
Speaker 1 (13:39):
I think if it were me, i'd be like, oh,
that hard. I'm gonna take a few minutes ago like
readjust go cry a little bit. But I think she
was trying to play it off and some of the
kids she kicked out because they wouldn't stop laughing really loud.
She was like, you think that was funny because they
were like just and me, I'm like, I'm I'm talking
about for twenty minutes trying to hold it in. I remember,
(14:02):
it's so vivid, and I think my eyes is about
to pop out of my head, because as soon as
you're told you can't laugh, there's nothing more you want
to do. Then get a good laughing and then she
says something that was kind of like funnier, inner, less
than you'd be like, and then you'd be like, Okay,
I got it all out. I got it all out,
and then you go back to it.
Speaker 5 (14:21):
Yeah.
Speaker 10 (14:21):
I kind of feel bad for her looking back, Yeah, okay,
yeah she was fine, But I think now, yeah, you
probably just take a minute and'd be like, whoa, I
expect that to happen, and you walk out for two reasons,
one for yourself and two let the class get.
Speaker 1 (14:37):
Their laughs out.
Speaker 3 (14:37):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (14:39):
It's like if a catcher gets hit in the neck
with a pitch, like I say, hits the ground, hits
the pitch, what the umpire will do. The umpire will
walk out and talk to the picture and be like hey,
and only to give time to that catcher to like
get their bearings.
Speaker 6 (14:55):
That's nice.
Speaker 1 (14:56):
Yeah, And it can happen when the empire gets hit
and the ketcherr nose that the ketcher will go out
to the picture because you're not going to stop the
game for something that's not a real injury.
Speaker 3 (15:02):
But you need to give a beat.
Speaker 1 (15:05):
Yes, so the unspoken rules of baseball are okay, go
and like have a meeting at the mound and give
everybody a second. There should have been a meeting at
the mound with that teacher situation, and there wasn't. But yeah,
that's a tough one man. An next versus gossiping could
be good for you like that, Why well, this wasn't gossip.
(15:26):
This was just like she fell and I couldn't stop laughing.
I could stop. It just hurt, like my stomach hurt.
It's like church is another time when you're supposed to laugh.
Speaker 6 (15:35):
Oh that's tough. Yeah, if something's funny you can't laugh,
It's tough.
Speaker 1 (15:39):
An nextpersus, gossiping could be good for you because it
can be a helpful way to protect us from harmful situations.
Speaker 3 (15:43):
What I don't get it.
Speaker 1 (15:44):
It can provide an emotional release and be a way
of showing the people around us what we don't want
for ourselves. Hmm, that's pretty stupid. Doctor Charles Sweet, a
board certified psychiatrist, explains gossip as were in human behavior. Okay,
I'll I'm all there. It can be a form of
social bonding, okay, all good. Therapist Alexander Horror notes that
(16:06):
in some cases, such as among women discussing dating safety
and gossip acts can be a protective tool. Well, this
is not the same gossip that I'm used to hearing.
Speaker 3 (16:14):
Yeah, Like, but if you're with your girlfriends and you're
updating them about like a date, and you're talking about
it assip, and then sometimes you may need to vent
if you have a safe space where you can vent.
But is that gossip.
Speaker 1 (16:26):
It feels like a euphemism forgot for for like shady gossip,
that's that goe.
Speaker 3 (16:31):
Venting and gossip, I think are different. You don't think so.
Speaker 1 (16:35):
I think if you're venting about somebody at works, it's
so annoying because don't.
Speaker 3 (16:39):
Is that gossip?
Speaker 1 (16:40):
Yes, yeah, yeah, about how other people's business that is
not you?
Speaker 3 (16:44):
Oh yeah, if that's their other business. But if you're
talking about someone that if it impacted you and you're
just venting, but it's about somebody.
Speaker 6 (16:51):
Else, Like if you're telling a story of something that
happened to you, that's not gossip.
Speaker 1 (16:54):
That's not gossip unless you are implementing somebody else.
Speaker 3 (16:58):
But if you start to yeah then and talk about situation.
Speaker 1 (17:01):
That's not them, okay, yeah, yeah, yeah yeah. Gossip can
also provide an emotional release.
Speaker 3 (17:06):
People do bond over gossip though, that's for sure.
Speaker 1 (17:09):
Here's the problem with what god I do is that
people that gossip tell you other people's secrets. You can't
tell them your secrets because gossip about you. So you
can take in all of what they're giving, but they're
not gonna keep giving it to you unless you give
some back. Because gossip isn't just a one sided thing.
And if you give some back, then you have to
(17:29):
understand that whatever you're giving back is being shared with
somebody else without you knowing. Like, never tell a secret
to somebody who tells other people's secrets, regardless of how
much you trust them, because they obviously do not hold
secrets to the same value that they should be held.
(17:50):
What if they say and where they get you right here,
they're gonna say something. They're gonna say something.
Speaker 3 (17:54):
You know, just like Okay, you can't say anything, but yeah.
Speaker 6 (17:57):
Yeah, then they do that with you.
Speaker 1 (17:59):
Yeah, if somebody tells you a secret, they're going to
tell your secrets to somebody else.
Speaker 6 (18:03):
Probably the same way too.
Speaker 1 (18:04):
Like I promised, I wouldn't say anything that's from Newsweek,
that story there, I'm not gonna say. Okay, let's let's
do a midroll here. We'll come back in a second.
Speaker 6 (18:17):
This the Bobby Bull Show.
Speaker 1 (18:20):
A couple of things. First off, I was walking out
in the hall with dudes the bathroom real quick and
an employee that's not part of our show was talking
about the Easter egg hunt and they were their words
were I got pretty pissed at lunchbox. What happened during
the Easter egg hunt?
Speaker 5 (18:39):
What do you mean what?
Speaker 1 (18:41):
I wasn't talking to her. I was not even in
the conversation. I just heard her telling somebody else it
was a part of our show.
Speaker 5 (18:47):
I have no idea, Morgan. I mean, everybody was running
around looking for Easter eggs, so I don't know why.
Maybe I got too many eggs and she didn't get enough.
That's her fault.
Speaker 1 (18:55):
Did I say she?
Speaker 2 (18:56):
Yeah, he did.
Speaker 1 (18:56):
She was making sure. I don't want to out anybody, okay,
but I did say she accidentally go he was out
of control.
Speaker 11 (19:02):
Yes, he was going like so competitive. This guy was
like you would have thought that he was about to
win a million dollars in this Easter egg hunt.
Speaker 1 (19:09):
Fine, cool, he was competitive.
Speaker 11 (19:11):
But then we got to the point where there were
still Easter eggs left on the table.
Speaker 3 (19:15):
We thought we found them all, we didn't.
Speaker 11 (19:16):
Our president hit him like majorly, and he gives us
all hint.
Speaker 5 (19:20):
So we go to the kitchen, and you know, in
our kitchen we.
Speaker 11 (19:23):
Have this whole setup of stuff for coffee and salt
and pepper things and all these kind of just dishes
full of condiments. Well, lunchbox comes over, because that's where
the hint was. He takes them all and flips them
all upside down, dumps them all out everywhere. Right as
this is all happening, and we're like, you didn't have
(19:45):
to go that hard and in when this was happening,
he literally straight up elbows me in the boob, like
straight up elbowed, like we're playing basketball.
Speaker 1 (19:56):
It was so aggressive.
Speaker 11 (19:58):
There was nothing worth that this egg could have had
handy in it, Like, there was nothing worth what he
was going after. And that was what I had experienced,
So I have no idea what everybody else experienced.
Speaker 1 (20:09):
Yeah, I don't know. I just heard her say that
that lunchbox had pissed her off, and I don't know
if she was only kind of kidding, But you know
how he gets this there's anything free? Yeah, I mean
once at all.
Speaker 5 (20:20):
Well, here's the thing. There was a five hundred dollars
diamond gift card on the line. I mean, sorry if you.
Speaker 1 (20:24):
Don't did he say the gift card was in that spot?
Speaker 5 (20:26):
No, but you don't know. So if there's a five
hundred dollars diamond.
Speaker 1 (20:29):
Did you get attention?
Speaker 11 (20:32):
Probably you would have known that that gift card had
already been found.
Speaker 5 (20:36):
I knew the two hundred and fifty had been found
that had been announced, And when I dumped everything over
and didn't find it.
Speaker 1 (20:41):
And why didn't you just go through the stuff, insaid
a dumping stuf. Did you clean it out at least
when you dump?
Speaker 4 (20:45):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (20:45):
Oh, I had to help him clean it up. Well
we all clean, I mean, we were all he got.
Speaker 11 (20:49):
He also got yelled at by our president that he
wasn't going to give a more hints until lunchbox picked
it up.
Speaker 3 (20:54):
That's how bad it was.
Speaker 5 (20:55):
Everybody was digging through the stuff, and I said, man,
and it was spilling on the counter anyway, So I
was like, well, if we're gonna spill some things, why
don't I just go for the five hundred dollars. And
then after we found whatever it was, it was like
a fifty dollars visa gift card in that one, someone goes, oh,
I already found the five hundred dollars one, and that's
when it was announced that the five hundred dollars one
had been found. So it was after I had dumped things.
If I would have known that five hundred dollars wouldn't
(21:17):
have been found. I wouldn't have dumped, But when you
got five hundred dollars worth of diamonds on the line,
you're going all out.
Speaker 1 (21:22):
Sorry, it was a five hundred gift card to a
diamond place, not five hundred bucks worth of diamonds, right right, right,
like raw diamonds had been fun. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (21:30):
So I don't think I did anything that anybody else
wasn't doing. Like everybody was running around the office digging
through drawers and you know, turning up plants and looking
under things. I mean, sorry, some people are competitive.
Speaker 6 (21:41):
Some aren't.
Speaker 1 (21:42):
You elbowed her?
Speaker 5 (21:43):
Well, no, here's the thing. We're all digging through stuff.
So she may have jumped in next to me in
my arm, you know. I came in and threw an elbow,
like get out of my way.
Speaker 11 (21:53):
Yep, that's definitely what it felt like. This was not
an elbow that was innocent. It wasn't like, oh sorry
I hit you. It was like throwing boats.
Speaker 1 (22:00):
What did you end up getting, Morgan from the East.
Speaker 3 (22:02):
Ke Hunt, I got a fifty dollars visa gift card
from from.
Speaker 1 (22:05):
An egg, Yeah, from one of the eggs and lunchbox.
What gift card did you get?
Speaker 5 (22:09):
I got one hundred dollars visa gift card. I got
three fifty dollars gift cards to Sam's Place restaurant. I
got a quarter zip hoodie, an iHeart Trucker hat, some candy,
and a couple other items. I mean I was crushing it,
man like. I mean I was looking like there was
a coat hanging up. I started going through someone's jacket,
found an egg in it. So you got to look everywhere.
(22:29):
Like everybody said, Oh, you can't be doing that, like
you're taking it too serious.
Speaker 2 (22:33):
I looked.
Speaker 5 (22:33):
I mean, if you don't look, how are you gonna
find it?
Speaker 1 (22:36):
Do you think everybody went as hard as you did?
Speaker 3 (22:38):
Yeah, like elbowing people.
Speaker 1 (22:41):
Was everyone going as hard as he was?
Speaker 8 (22:43):
Yes?
Speaker 1 (22:44):
For the actual hunt itself. Yes, everybody heard screaming in
the hallways.
Speaker 5 (22:48):
Yes, everybody was going as hard as I was.
Speaker 1 (22:50):
I just hit in my office.
Speaker 5 (22:51):
So that person being up set at me, I mean
they obviously a probably yeah hater because ninety nine percent
of the people were running around this place. People were
dripping sweat, running into each other. Get out of my way,
Get out of my way. I was looking there first.
It was my idea to go there.
Speaker 6 (23:05):
That seem safe in a workplace.
Speaker 1 (23:07):
Yes, like everybody going crazy. Do you think they'll do
it again here?
Speaker 5 (23:10):
Absolutely that the president he loved it, and he had
some good hiding spots. He'll have to rethink himself because
we all know where he hit him this year. He's
got to redo it. But man, it was it was awesome.
Speaker 1 (23:20):
You guys cheated in a way because you knew were
somewhere before it even started.
Speaker 11 (23:24):
It didn't even matter because that was like four of them. Honestly,
he hit him so well that like really really what
we found?
Speaker 12 (23:30):
Did he?
Speaker 5 (23:30):
And the ones we found were candy?
Speaker 1 (23:32):
Were you disappointed when you found one? It was just candy?
Speaker 5 (23:34):
And I was like, oh, it was stupid. I didn't
want it. I'm here for the five hundred dollars in
diamonds of the two hundred fifty dollars in diamonds. Like
you're running, you see when you're like, yeah, candy, ah,
stupid twicks.
Speaker 1 (23:43):
Do you have any of that candy?
Speaker 7 (23:44):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (23:45):
No, it was only like four pieces, and oh he
ate it all.
Speaker 2 (23:48):
Yeah, I'd like it was.
Speaker 5 (23:49):
My energy, it was my fuel. I kept you going, yeah,
And then I had to take off my pants because
I was sweating so much.
Speaker 3 (23:53):
Yeah much.
Speaker 5 (23:54):
We had shorts on. Yeah, I had shorts on. I
mean Morgan took off her top.
Speaker 3 (23:57):
Okay it was a jacket, but yeah.
Speaker 1 (24:01):
But he just wants to say that because it sounds
like right.
Speaker 5 (24:04):
And then people go watch the live stream, you know
what I mean, they can go back and watch it
and they see Morgan take off.
Speaker 11 (24:08):
They're gonna see you elbow me because Ray definitely caught
that on film.
Speaker 5 (24:11):
That's what I'm saying. So that employee adding like I
was the only one going hard, Morgan had to take off.
Speaker 1 (24:15):
There was nothing about going hard. All I heard her
say was she was pissed off of you. I didn't
hear anything else, so I didn't anything about it.
Speaker 5 (24:20):
Yeah yeah, because I mean Morgan was going hard. I
mean Morgan tried to run me over. I'd come around
the corner. She freaking body checks me. But she doesn't
talk about that.
Speaker 3 (24:27):
Body checked each other.
Speaker 1 (24:28):
That was a team effort.
Speaker 11 (24:29):
But you did straight up come in two spices and
just dumped them all over the kitchen counters.
Speaker 1 (24:35):
I did do that and through elbows. No, No, had
nothing to do with it. It was so fun. I
regret letting them out.
Speaker 2 (24:40):
Our lady do it.
Speaker 5 (24:42):
I wanted to say thank you Bobby, like that was awesome,
Like we couldn't have done that if we didn't bring it.
Morgan didn't bring it up, and Bobby was gracious enough
with five minutes before the hunt started. He goes, you
know what, you guys are all out, and I'm like,
oh my gosh. We get the hunt and we didn't
have bags. Eddie grabbed a garbage can.
Speaker 1 (24:56):
Did you do it, Eddie?
Speaker 10 (24:57):
Yeah?
Speaker 6 (24:57):
They said bring your own Easter basket. I couldn't, so
I found the waste basket and that's.
Speaker 2 (25:01):
What I took.
Speaker 1 (25:01):
Did you get anything?
Speaker 6 (25:02):
One egg?
Speaker 10 (25:03):
Man?
Speaker 6 (25:03):
One egg?
Speaker 3 (25:04):
Was it?
Speaker 6 (25:05):
They were so well hidden, like I looked everywhere and
confined them, maybe because lunchbox had all of them.
Speaker 1 (25:09):
But what did you get in your egg?
Speaker 6 (25:10):
A beanie? A branded beanie like an I Heart heart beanie?
Speaker 1 (25:14):
Think was this egg?
Speaker 12 (25:16):
No?
Speaker 6 (25:16):
It had it written like it was a piece of paper.
Speaker 5 (25:18):
There it tells you what and you go cash, you
go cash afterwards, it was it was awesome.
Speaker 8 (25:23):
Man.
Speaker 1 (25:23):
Eddie wants to auction off some for charity, which I
think is interesting.
Speaker 6 (25:27):
Yeah, make some money for the kids or whatever. So
after Amy uh successfully did her three point Challenge, her
basketball challenge. We had her autograph of basketball and there's
a cool golden basketball.
Speaker 3 (25:42):
It says, no I signed it. It's like a dirty
it looks dirty, a dirty ball.
Speaker 1 (25:48):
It is a dirty ball. It's a dirty use used ball. Oh,
she didn't use that one. That's how game used.
Speaker 6 (25:56):
That's it's one of one. It's not autograph, it's.
Speaker 1 (25:59):
Not game use the games.
Speaker 3 (26:00):
That's okay. Though I did have it out.
Speaker 1 (26:02):
It was at the court.
Speaker 6 (26:05):
I think we have footage of her maybe shooting a
three point shot on that.
Speaker 5 (26:08):
I don't know you made any with that ball.
Speaker 3 (26:11):
I didn't know why I was signing that. But it's
for Eddie to auction off.
Speaker 6 (26:14):
Yeah, for the kids, that's what you want.
Speaker 3 (26:17):
We can do that, auction it.
Speaker 6 (26:19):
Let's go one on one.
Speaker 3 (26:21):
Why can't we Why can't we find the game used one?
Speaker 1 (26:23):
Because he's going to.
Speaker 6 (26:25):
Do and who lost that one as my son's? But
then don't play with this one really much? The one though,
they're like, they'll know if it's missing.
Speaker 1 (26:33):
We want to just buy them a new one.
Speaker 3 (26:34):
Let's buy them a new one and auction off the
game used one. I mean, I don't know who's going
to buy it.
Speaker 1 (26:39):
But grabs some random once you didn't use I just
found it the court man. Yeah, yeah, well that's fine.
Speaker 4 (26:46):
Cool, so auction it.
Speaker 1 (26:48):
They what are you gonna use? Auction what do you use?
Speaker 6 (26:51):
Golden's?
Speaker 1 (26:52):
You think you're gonna send up the golden Yeah for sure.
I'm not sure how you auctioned it off, but I
would not auction that one. You can auction that one
with the game used, like get the practice ball, and
I don't even think she practiced with that one though
it was out there.
Speaker 3 (27:07):
I will say the the n B A one that
was normal colored. That was my lucky ball, and then
in second place was the Camo ball.
Speaker 5 (27:19):
Yeah, the blue and.
Speaker 2 (27:24):
What are you else?
Speaker 3 (27:24):
Kids like they know these balls, get a better.
Speaker 1 (27:29):
One, they're like, but he'll know that one's gone. That
one's not good to sign anyway. The other one, though,
we have get them. We'll get the practice ball with
the game us.
Speaker 6 (27:37):
Auction them together.
Speaker 3 (27:38):
Yeah, good idea.
Speaker 1 (27:41):
I don't know how you're going to auction it though,
because it's not like we have an auction site.
Speaker 3 (27:44):
I don't know, haven't you you'll figure it out, man, Yeah,
always follows through its.
Speaker 6 (27:53):
Amy has a beautiful signature. Look at that, I got
a little.
Speaker 1 (27:57):
Heart on everything, and what what you can do on
the other one to make it even more valuable? She
signs it, and then she writes, like an inscription that's
like one thirty one and thirty three minutes.
Speaker 2 (28:08):
That's so smart.
Speaker 1 (28:09):
Yeah, and then one of one, but then you can
never do another one and then.
Speaker 6 (28:12):
That's it, So no more basketball is for you after
that one.
Speaker 1 (28:15):
No, no, she just can't sign it up with the
same inscription, got it?
Speaker 3 (28:18):
Yeah, one of one. But y'all could also all sign
it too.
Speaker 6 (28:21):
No, no, no, no, no, you're you're the champ.
Speaker 5 (28:23):
You're the one that did it.
Speaker 1 (28:23):
You're the champ.
Speaker 3 (28:24):
Well, I'm just saying we can maybe get more money.
Speaker 5 (28:27):
Maybe we can sign the yellow one.
Speaker 1 (28:28):
That one means we can all sign the yellow one,
and you could have that'll health the yellow one. How
we're gonna sell it, but anything, it's up to you. Okay,
we'll let mister follow through follow Yeah, you can't wait
for sued good, there you go.
Speaker 3 (28:39):
Six months later, we'll figure it out.
Speaker 2 (28:42):
We get to it.
Speaker 1 (28:44):
Let's see what else do I have here? I saw
the movie Centers did pretty good, Mike, like sixty millions.
Speaker 7 (28:50):
Yeah, it's like the first original movie to open at
number one since like twenty nineteen.
Speaker 1 (28:54):
WHOA nice that long?
Speaker 7 (28:55):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (28:56):
Wow, yeah that we had on Ryan Coogler, the writer
and director of it. Michael B. Jordan's in it playing
Twins Hayley.
Speaker 7 (29:01):
Maybe it was twenty twenty one now I think about it.
Speaker 1 (29:03):
That's still a long time, even one year, because.
Speaker 7 (29:05):
I think it was the Jordan Peel's US. They came
Oh no, nope, came out in twenty one.
Speaker 1 (29:10):
And satat was good. It did well. Yeah, just didn't
to me. It didn't feel like what I know is
a horror movie. Yeah, but I think you do like horror.
Speaker 7 (29:19):
I just think you don't like slashers, which is what
you probably have in your mind as horror movies because
you usually reference like Nightmare on ELM Street.
Speaker 1 (29:26):
I don't like that stuff.
Speaker 7 (29:26):
So I think you like psychological horror, which is what
essentially the last season of Black Mirror was.
Speaker 1 (29:32):
Oh man, hey, Ray watched the first episode of Black Mirror.
It's my favorite show ever that in the office, and
none of the episodes are connected to each other. Well,
I shouldn't say that they're all independent, but that now
they're starting to make some bridges between some of the episodes,
but the show is all about technology and how technology
will affect us in the future. Raymondo, you watched the
(29:54):
first episode? Ever, Well, it wasn't the first episode. It
was my first episode. So I just went to a
in the one. Okay, what'd you watch? It was the
commercial lady or she does commercials out of her mouth?
Oh you so you watched episode one of this season?
Speaker 2 (30:09):
I guess, dude, Yeah, that what is wrong with that?
Speaker 1 (30:12):
One's dark?
Speaker 3 (30:13):
That one?
Speaker 1 (30:14):
That one's dark. It was awesome. Though it was awesome,
I wasn't right for days after watching that one. That
one gets you.
Speaker 2 (30:21):
Why do you guys subject yourselves to?
Speaker 12 (30:23):
That?
Speaker 1 (30:24):
Is that horror?
Speaker 4 (30:25):
Mike?
Speaker 7 (30:25):
That is a form of poor Yeah.
Speaker 8 (30:27):
Man.
Speaker 4 (30:27):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (30:27):
Like even my daughter when I was watching that one,
she walked in she was like, you watch black Mirror?
And I'm like, yes, I've been on this for years. Ever, yeah,
what are you talking about stuff?
Speaker 7 (30:37):
Acting like you're so two thousand and yeah, essentially like
the dark side of what healthcare could becoming.
Speaker 2 (30:42):
Oh my god.
Speaker 1 (30:43):
First episode. My wife did the same thing. She's watching
it with me. She's like, how do you watch this?
And I said, well, I love the series and I
love the different avenues that's showing us technology could lead
us down. She's like, but you don't like this is
so dark? And I said, I don't know. I'm like,
I'm giddy about that show when they were like new
(31:03):
and there were eight episodes. Maybe, yeah, it's all I
said for Tuesday reviewesday. But I finished it all, finished all,
I finished it all. It might be see you know,
the beginning of Black Mirror was epic, even transcendent with
it might be the best season ever. It's up there.
Speaker 7 (31:22):
Yeah, I'd have to go back to those first two
seasons that were so impactful. But since then, I feel
like it's got back to its roots.
Speaker 1 (31:28):
It's up there.
Speaker 2 (31:28):
It's so good.
Speaker 1 (31:29):
It's so dark, right, but you finished it all that episode.
Speaker 2 (31:32):
But I'm done. I'm one and done. Sorry you should be.
Speaker 5 (31:35):
It's that bad one.
Speaker 1 (31:37):
It's not Magic Mirror. It's not bad, but it definitely
takes you to a place like.
Speaker 5 (31:43):
It makes you sad in the press or what like?
What did you feel like? That's why I need to
know what what were you feeling?
Speaker 8 (31:47):
Right?
Speaker 1 (31:47):
No spoilers right, my feelings.
Speaker 2 (31:50):
I was sad, I was lonely, and I closed the
door and I didn't go outside for a couple of days.
Speaker 1 (31:58):
Wow, this show must be Have you not seen any
of them?
Speaker 11 (32:01):
No?
Speaker 1 (32:01):
I don't even know where you watch it on Netflix?
Speaker 2 (32:03):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (32:04):
Can I give you that easy? Mann?
Speaker 5 (32:06):
I like, literally I had no idea, like you talk
about it, but I literally have never seen like a
little clip of.
Speaker 3 (32:11):
It, Like I don't even know, Like, are you going
to assign him one?
Speaker 1 (32:14):
You have Netflix? I do have Netflix. Yeah, if I
were to assign my I think And it's been a while, so,
but my favorite episode has always been the White Bear episode.
Speaker 2 (32:23):
But this is crazy at this point.
Speaker 1 (32:26):
I don't even know if it would be my favorite
reevaluating everything I've ever seen, but I would if you
don't mind. This is not even a real assignment, but
if you if you would like to watch one that
isn't like going to torture you for days. This is
not the darkest of them, but White Bears maybe like
season two or season three, Like if you can find
out where that.
Speaker 6 (32:44):
Is, that might be one.
Speaker 1 (32:46):
Maybe season two episode two, and none of them, especially
early on, are connected to the others. But there are
some feel good episodes too.
Speaker 6 (32:55):
Really, yeah, you made me watch one and didn't make
me he told me watch this. It might have been
my first one that I watched, and it was The
Helicopter Parent the mom Oh that was about you though,
Oh bro, I was like, that's awesome.
Speaker 1 (33:08):
But the I with the technology Angel.
Speaker 5 (33:11):
So are the same actors in every episode? Are they different?
Speaker 1 (33:14):
Everybody's different?
Speaker 5 (33:15):
Oh that sucks if you can. It made my big
break and you're only in one episode.
Speaker 1 (33:18):
Occasionally they but and they got more famous as it went,
Like Paul Jimmody was in one this season.
Speaker 5 (33:24):
Okay, man, he's awesome.
Speaker 2 (33:26):
The acting.
Speaker 1 (33:27):
I don't even know acting.
Speaker 2 (33:28):
That's the thing.
Speaker 7 (33:29):
I think you do know acting was because if you
watch that episode and love Paul Giamati in it, you
know a good acting.
Speaker 1 (33:34):
He was so good in it because it's mostly just
him that you go, man, this guy can act. But
I never see somebody and go this person can't act.
Speaker 7 (33:42):
And what makes you say that this guy can act?
Speaker 4 (33:44):
Like what is it?
Speaker 3 (33:45):
What is it?
Speaker 7 (33:45):
What is it about the episode?
Speaker 1 (33:46):
The emotions, the nuance and emotions and how he would
go from one. I was just like, man, he's like
capturing it perfectly.
Speaker 2 (33:55):
That's good acting. Yeah, you know that guy's good bit.
Speaker 1 (33:58):
Yeah, lunchbox, if you watch Bear White Bear, Okay, I
think that kind of personifies what kind of what the
show is.
Speaker 4 (34:06):
A bit.
Speaker 1 (34:07):
I think you're like it, but yeah, Netflix is crazy
and are you done with it?
Speaker 3 (34:11):
Nope, I'm not done.
Speaker 5 (34:14):
Do you watch it by yourself and you feel okay?
Because Ray said he felt dark.
Speaker 1 (34:17):
And you go outside for days? We like, we've got
to hear at work today.
Speaker 5 (34:20):
But does it leave you feeling like that?
Speaker 3 (34:22):
Yeah, I don't feel great, but I mean I'm also multitasking.
Speaker 1 (34:27):
It's hard to do that on the show.
Speaker 8 (34:31):
It no.
Speaker 3 (34:31):
I know, I saw most of the one He's race
all that he's talking about, but sometimes I would come
back in the room and be like, shoot, what happened there?
But I got the gist of it.
Speaker 1 (34:42):
Yeah, just on this show though, isn't.
Speaker 3 (34:44):
Yeah, but most of the time I will. I'm just saying,
that's the one I've seen this season, and it was
scary to think that that could actually happen to us.
Speaker 1 (34:52):
Just gets just a game of thrown. That's what annoyed
me about Gamathroons. I like Game Thrones a lot, but
if you turn, if you like looked at your phone
for three minutes you were down.
Speaker 6 (34:58):
You're like, wait, what I tried to do, like, you know,
little work while watching a movie, but like I can't
do it movie or a show. I just end up
watching the whole show and don't do my work. I
can't do both like Amy does. Well yeah, yeah, I
guess like you're watching Friends.
Speaker 1 (35:15):
You know some shows you don't really have to pay
all your attention Visually.
Speaker 7 (35:18):
Netflix is starting to do things where they in the
script they'll write things specifically that actors are doing that
they'll say them out loud because they know people are
watching passively. They like, hand me this can of something,
so they know people are like kind of have it
on the background.
Speaker 4 (35:31):
It's weird.
Speaker 1 (35:32):
I screen went out.
Speaker 6 (35:34):
Oh that's what you're messing with it?
Speaker 1 (35:35):
Yeah, like black mirroring.
Speaker 6 (35:38):
Right right now, I start, yeah, do you hit the
power button? I know that sounds stupid, That is exactly
what happened. Okay, the wire hit the power button and
all of a sudden, now I start convulsing. It's like
when you call customer service like, yeah, my internet's not working,
Like have you restarted the box? Like shut up, of
(35:59):
course I did.
Speaker 1 (36:00):
And then you'd really do it and you're like, well,
I'm just going to give up now. But really they
fixed it by saying that right, heroin was invented by Bayer,
Did you guys know that the oh the medicine bayor
Beyer b a ye are heroin is actually like a
like for good at first? Well, so is cocaine. That's
a cocola if a cocina isn't a coke. The Bayer company,
(36:21):
developer of aspirin, also invented heroin in the early nineteen
hundreds and trademarked the name. They were hired to do
it by the US government because of Heroin's healing powers,
Heroin was initially prescribed as cough suppressant as well as
a cure for addiction to morphine. The story from Yel
School in medicine, and it feels like every generation, you
could even say, every decade, dish, there's something that was
(36:43):
normal that ends up not being normal two decades later,
and you look back and go, oh, my god, I
can't believe that was a thing. Like what's it going
to be for us? Bluetooth or something that's happening to
the air, something that's happening we're breathing in or because
in just looking at history, there is this for every decade,
something that they're doing in that decade, from a drug
(37:04):
to technology to that you look back and go, wow, cigarettes, Yeah,
you know three or four doctor, you just didn't know
what's so bad, So you wonder what it is now
that we're doing. I mean, if you look at the
eighties and you can go even like fast food, I mean,
or remember when red Bull was like you go work
(37:24):
out of the gym and they'd be like, drink a
red Bull.
Speaker 6 (37:26):
When you work out, it gives you wings, like you
just oh boy.
Speaker 1 (37:30):
So there's and those are very small versions of this,
but every decade there's something we're doing. We don't realize
how bad it is. But it's a bit of trying to.
Like vaping is probably gonna come back, and we know
it's bad for us, but twenty years it's like they
you know, directly to the lungs, it was eighty percent
more toxic than we even knew then.
Speaker 3 (37:49):
I feel like we now know, like we know vapings
like bad.
Speaker 1 (37:53):
Bad, bad, Yeah good. We know vaping is bad, okay,
but we don't know how bad, bad bad it really
is because it hasn't been around long enough to study
the full term effects on people that get to be
one hundred years old, eighty years old, sixty years old
at the level that the new vapes, because that's only
in the past like ten years where it's become trendy
and that we'll call it. The technology of vaping has
(38:14):
progressed to the point where it is now, so we
don't really have enough data to go long term. This
is what it's been able to do. We know what
it'll do as compared to smoking, as what it's doing
in the short term. But and maybe it's not vaping.
It's just an example.
Speaker 3 (38:26):
No, yeah, no, I get it.
Speaker 2 (38:29):
Black mirror.
Speaker 1 (38:29):
I just say that after everything now that's freaky black mirror.
Microplastics is one. Oh yeah, like no water bottles. Yeah,
like we're drinking eating all those plastic. It's in our brains.
Speaker 2 (38:40):
So it could just be plastic.
Speaker 1 (38:44):
In twenty years where we're going, can you believe they
used plastic as much as they did for everything? Yeah,
and we're like, yeah, we did, we use plastic for everything.
It was awesome. But yeah, plastic could be it because
now we're just starting to learn how these tiny part microplastics.
But very very tiny parts plastic in our brains.
Speaker 6 (39:03):
I mean, I thought about it the other day when
I was getting peanut butter out of a plastic jar.
Like the knife is literally scraping the plastic.
Speaker 1 (39:09):
You know what I'm I would compare two is asbestos, right,
so ye, this would be my comparison. My analogy would
be a specialist in every house they built a house
asbestos and it was in the insulation and so and
people would work, like my grandfather got asbestos poisoning because
(39:31):
once it goes in your lungs, it filled up that
part of your lung and there was no removing it
from your lung. Right, So imagine there's a bottle of
water and when you pour a little bit of water in,
that's the asbestos, and but it never gets to leave it.
Now there's only this much capacity in your lung, so
you can only breathe this much. So he had asbestos poisoning.
But my this is Arkansas Keat's parents. So so, but
(39:53):
his wife, Arkansas Keet's mom had it worse because she
would clean his clothes when he got home it was
covered in asbestos.
Speaker 3 (40:00):
Well it's terrible.
Speaker 1 (40:01):
So and like it was like the eighties whenever EPA
was like no more asbestos, but it happened for thirty
years where they put asbestos in all these houses. Nobody knew.
But that's plastic. That's whatever it is. Every generation black mirror.
Speaker 2 (40:18):
Yeah, we have it.
Speaker 1 (40:19):
We've always had something that was hurting us more than
we knew because we're always trying to be on the
edge of creating and selling and then saving for as
long as we can what we don't sell so we
can sell it. It's like preservatives in this country. Preservatives
rule and not only like it rules like it's the greatest.
It rules is in like they they put preservedves in
(40:40):
everything so they can make it last longer, so it
has a longer shelf life to sell so they don't
lose money. So it could be that black mirror.
Speaker 3 (40:50):
I just can't really think about it too much or
it gets overwhelmed. It does.
Speaker 5 (40:53):
It's a lot man.
Speaker 1 (40:55):
Yeah, you want to do that story about the medieval
wives he husband trick their husbands? Do you have that?
Speaker 3 (41:01):
Oh? Yeah, I gotta so.
Speaker 1 (41:03):
Amy, Amy has this story will remind me of it
was my Arkansas Keet's dad in his mom But isn't
that crazy that he got it, but she got it
worse because it was on all of it's clothes because
when he would go in, they would cover their faces,
not even for asbestos, they would cover for all the chemicals. Yeah,
and so he got the asbestos poisoning, but she had
it way way worse because she wasn't covering her face
when she was doing the laundry, like you come home
(41:25):
from work and she would clean his clothes, and that's
how she got and it got her so so much worse.
Speaker 3 (41:29):
All right, So yeah, I saw this crazy thing about
medieval wives. So in a fringe city during the Middle Ages,
wives would put a tiny dose of poison in their
husband's breakfast and give the antidote to them when they
came home. So if the husband stayed out too long,
they would start experiencing symptoms like nausea, headaches, vomiting, pain,
or shortness of breath.
Speaker 1 (41:50):
That's messed up.
Speaker 3 (41:50):
And the longer the men delayed going home, the sicker
they would get. So basically wives trained their husbands to
come home on time too was getting sick, that's messed up.
And then so my question to Bobby was is this
psycho or smart?
Speaker 1 (42:01):
So now like that that's probably normal.
Speaker 6 (42:03):
It's kind of smart.
Speaker 1 (42:04):
No, yes, smart, Yes, they can be both, though it
can be smart and mess it up. So I've Pully's
into you.
Speaker 6 (42:11):
Yeah, I'm coming home. I'm like, I don't feel good.
Speaker 1 (42:15):
That's crazy.
Speaker 2 (42:16):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (42:17):
Raymundo says he has a nickname. Raymondo is a nick
home for him. That's not even his name. But he
has a new nickname around the building. What do they
call you? Well, it's just one of the guys in
the other rooms. He started calling me night Owl, and
I don't like the nickname. So why does he call
you night owl? Because he sees me here at night
and she goes, what's up, night owl? Also when you
come in, it's still nighttime. Yeah yeah, And so I
(42:40):
mean we have a decent friendship we've started. So is
it offensive to tell somebody that I don't like the
nickname you gave me? Is that the only thing he
calls you know?
Speaker 2 (42:48):
Yes, it's been.
Speaker 1 (42:49):
Going on for months now, and every time he's like,
I hate that dude, and it's just not good under
my breath. But you see him enough that it bought
every day every morning, what's up, night Owl? That's not man,
I don't know night Out if you should tell him
or not.
Speaker 12 (43:02):
No, night Owl, I'm not night Ol, I'm not. No,
you might be night Owl now, yeah, you might be
night Out. Call yourself out, I'm not. You hate the
nickname though.
Speaker 2 (43:13):
Yes, because it's just sounds creepy.
Speaker 1 (43:16):
You feel like it's like someone looking at windows or what.
I'm gonna get him an equally bad one. I don't know,
night Owl.
Speaker 2 (43:21):
I mean that just doesn't come across as good.
Speaker 1 (43:24):
It's like, hey, so when he calls you that and
be like, what's that?
Speaker 8 (43:26):
Purp monsters, Let's see that was a little perf, a
little perve for no reason whatsoever, you sign him another stupid,
worse nickname.
Speaker 1 (43:41):
That's kind of funny. You ever got a nickname you hated?
At T Bone? I hated that name.
Speaker 2 (43:44):
Oh how was that?
Speaker 1 (43:45):
High school? Is awful? Awful, awful, awful? I don't know,
night Ill. Let me think about that.
Speaker 2 (43:49):
No, night Out doesn't like you, I'm gonna shut it down.
Speaker 1 (43:52):
You can't choose your own nickname, but you also want
to sign to you. You don't get to like leave
it either. It also kind of means he probably he
likes it, you know what I mean? Don't you give
nicknames the people you like, you want to be friends
with and stuff like lunchbox Eddie.
Speaker 6 (44:07):
I mean no, I mean that is that's not my
real name. Eduardo is my real But that's.
Speaker 1 (44:12):
A shortened version of your own name. It's not like
night Al over there, who you know? His name's ray
Mundo and now he's night al.
Speaker 6 (44:19):
His name's ray.
Speaker 1 (44:21):
Name's Raymond, It's Raymond. He's gone through like four versions. Okay, Yeah,
I think we're good there, Oscar. I was gonna hit
you guys with the CIA story, but I think I
just need more time. Wait, what the declass about c
a CIA report?
Speaker 8 (44:39):
Oh?
Speaker 6 (44:39):
This could be we need some time for this.
Speaker 1 (44:41):
I need I think I need some time. I'm gonna
save it for tomorrow. I love some CIA declassified reports
because a lot of times, not all the time, but
a lot of times, these conspiracy theories that are out
way like no way that's ever gonna happen. As soon
as it gets to classifyed, like fifty years later, you're like, wow,
(45:01):
they're now there's now an admission that everyone wasn't crazy
when everyone was told they were crazy for believing this.
Speaker 7 (45:11):
Yep.
Speaker 6 (45:11):
Yeah, Like like our Apple updates everyone thought were crazy.
Speaker 1 (45:15):
That's exactly it. JFK.
Speaker 3 (45:16):
I've been sitting on a fun fast about the c
I A so tomorrow, then what fun fact? No, I've
been sitting on it for fun Fact Friday.
Speaker 6 (45:26):
Hold away for Friday, then yeah, hold on Friday.
Speaker 1 (45:29):
Then thank you.
Speaker 3 (45:31):
You know how many times we've done fun fact Friday
and also now we divide it up. Fun Fact Friday
used to be all on me, like I run out,
just like I run out of jokes and run out
of fun facts.
Speaker 1 (45:39):
Yeah, that's why we do it for everybody now.
Speaker 3 (45:41):
But this one is good. Never seen it before.
Speaker 6 (45:44):
Build it up fun Fact Friday teas.
Speaker 3 (45:46):
And it's about the sea.
Speaker 1 (45:47):
Wow.
Speaker 11 (45:48):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (45:49):
I told Amy she had a cool shot on today
and Morgan goes sexual harassment.
Speaker 6 (45:52):
Oh yeah, you don't need to stop doing that.
Speaker 3 (45:54):
No, I said it was fine because he said cool. Yeah,
but I said something that was cool before and music harassment.
Speaker 1 (45:59):
So now I just don't know what is and is it?
Speaker 6 (46:01):
And I told Bobby Man I really like your hair
and you're like cool, thanks, Yeah, no one said my hair. Yeah.
I was like, I really like your hair.
Speaker 3 (46:10):
I think, guy to guy, it's fine.
Speaker 1 (46:13):
I know he doesn't wt to have sex with me.
I don't anymore, very close, I don't.
Speaker 6 (46:17):
Do that anymore.
Speaker 1 (46:17):
All right, thank you guys, we'll see you tomorrow. By everybody,