Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Wake, go in the mall and.
Speaker 2 (00:05):
It's Alreadio and the dadgas he's on time, he already.
And then lunchbox mor game too Steve bred and it's
trying to put you through fog. He's riding this week's
next year. The Bobby's on the max. So you know
what this this is a battle ball.
Speaker 3 (00:29):
I want to go over and talk to Kylie, who
is ten years old. Hey, Kylie, how are you good?
Speaker 4 (00:33):
How are you?
Speaker 3 (00:34):
I'm doing pretty good, so tell me what's up.
Speaker 4 (00:37):
I'm ten years old and my father just walked his
two year battle with melanoma last this Saturday. I'm sorry
to hear that, but now I have the chance to
skate in my dad's honor at Scott Hamilton's Skate to
Eliminate Cancer events in Orlando, Florida on March sixteenth.
Speaker 3 (00:59):
Okay, so what do you have to do when you
say you have the chance? What does that mean?
Speaker 4 (01:03):
So I have to be in the top eight per
donation to be able to skate, and I'm from the
top donated. I get a special like shout out sort
of thing.
Speaker 5 (01:15):
They'll do a special recognition at the event and tell
her story.
Speaker 6 (01:19):
Basically, yeah, okay, got it.
Speaker 3 (01:21):
First of all, can you skate?
Speaker 4 (01:23):
Yes, I've been skating since I was about six years old,
since January twenty twenty one.
Speaker 3 (01:32):
Okay, well again, I'd like to say, I'm very sorry
to hear about your dad. I am very happy to
hear how passionate you are to do this. So how
can I help you?
Speaker 4 (01:41):
I just need about five hundred dollars worth of donation
to get up to first place. I'm in second currently.
Speaker 3 (01:49):
So are you telling me? And your mom's there with you? Yes, yeah,
I'm mom. What's your name?
Speaker 5 (01:53):
Jennifer?
Speaker 3 (01:54):
Jennifer? So if she gets five hundred more dollars, are
you sure this is what's going to happen? Like she's
gonna be able to do that.
Speaker 5 (02:01):
She has until March nineteenth to collect donations. March fifteenth, Yeah,
March fifteenth. She has until March fifteenth to collect donations
to be in first place. So if we get her
to first place, there's always a chance that the other
little girl, could you know, raise some more money to
get herself back into first place. But it's a pretty
(02:22):
is a pretty good shot. I think if we get
another five hundred dollars that she could. This girl has
been at three ten for a while.
Speaker 7 (02:29):
Now.
Speaker 3 (02:30):
Okay, so here's what I'm gonna do. I'm going to
give you five hundred bucks for this. Now I need
whatever link it is. I'm not sure. Maybe we can
get the link from if you'll, I'm.
Speaker 5 (02:40):
Gonna email it to Abby once we're off the phone.
Speaker 3 (02:43):
We can also post it and see if any of
our listeners will hop in. But I will go five
hundred in immediately and then do me this favor. If
you start to lose again, let us know because I'll
put more money in.
Speaker 5 (02:58):
Okay, Okay, that's amazing. Okay, wow, Bobby, thank you so much.
Speaker 8 (03:04):
So the final day is for sure the fifteenth, because yeah,
we'll like that's we can keep monitoring it and then we.
Speaker 3 (03:10):
Know, well, no, I'll forget monitoring you. They have to
call us back. If you lose, you call us back.
Because here's the thing I like. Listen, I grew up
with no money. Now I have money, so I like
to help as many people as I possibly can. But
also I'm wildly competitive and I don't even know who
you're competing against, and I know my brain's not right,
but I'm like, you must win, yes, like yes, Like
I'm with Kylie, we're here. We're gonna we're gonna win
(03:32):
this thing, so please keep us updated. Send the link.
IM happy to pay it. I hope you get to
do this. I'm very sorry about your dad. I'm super
pumped for you to be able to do this and
share his story and and go out and do this
for him. So uh yeah, let us be Let us
be part of the team.
Speaker 5 (03:48):
Okay, thank you, awesome, thank you.
Speaker 3 (03:50):
And you guys. Where do you guys live.
Speaker 5 (03:52):
We're in Tampa, Florida.
Speaker 3 (03:53):
Love it my favorite of all the Tampa's.
Speaker 5 (04:00):
And so I tell you what to Bobby. When she performs,
I will, I'll video it, and I'll email it so
that you guys can.
Speaker 6 (04:09):
See her skates.
Speaker 3 (04:10):
What would be funny is if she's never skated and
she's like, I would like to go skate from it.
Speaker 5 (04:14):
She has for years. She's been skating competitively for about
three years now. So I'm actually currently working on my axle.
Speaker 3 (04:25):
No way, that's awesome. I try to axle once and
fell down. I try to single axle, fell down. Okay,
you guys, stay on hold. I want to get your information,
and in the next couple of hours I will load
and I'll pay this money and then you let us
know if you're starting to get beat by somebody else.
Speaker 6 (04:41):
Okay, okay, okay, it's time for the good news already.
Speaker 9 (04:49):
David o'connory is just a dude that lives in Providence,
Rhode Island. But he recently found out that two local
nonprofits that helped homeless people went out of business, couldn't
operate because of back of money. So David said, no, no, no, no,
that's not going to happen. He took his own money,
found homeless people and said, what do you need a hotel, Airbnb?
We got these rental houses. Just stay in them. He
(05:11):
has helped over one hundred and fifty people. He says
he's not going to stop. He uses a crowdfunding, but
he also uses a lot of his savings.
Speaker 3 (05:19):
That's pretty good. I mean he cares enough to use
his own money. Yeah.
Speaker 9 (05:22):
For some reason, he's just always cared about ending homelessness,
and he said, this is my chance to make a difference.
Speaker 3 (05:27):
Here you go. Great job, dude, that's what it's all about.
That was telling me something good. Over to Amy with
the morning Corny, the Mourning Corny.
Speaker 8 (05:40):
Where's the best place to learn how to make ice cream?
Speaker 3 (05:43):
Where's the best place to learn how to make ice cream?
Speaker 6 (05:46):
At Sunday school?
Speaker 3 (05:51):
That was the morning corny. A couple things they say,
if you want to lose a couple pounds healthy without dieting,
you do this. You eat cucumbers in the morning. Ever
heard that? I have not, So I had to say,
compounds and cucumbers steady your blood sugar, and so what
it does. You don't actually lose weight from that, but
since it steadies your blood sugar, it kills hunger pains
(06:12):
and cravings that hit you earlier, so then you don't
eat more. So it's not doing anything bad to you
to lose weight, it's actually helping you. So things that
are bad don't like crawl in like.
Speaker 6 (06:24):
You're not attracted to them, you crave them.
Speaker 3 (06:27):
Yeah, Like, I don't know. I always wanted ice cream Sunday,
that's right. Yeah, Like I'll eat ice cream Sunday for breakfast.
Could you eat a cucumber for breakfast? Though? That's weird? No,
But I think I wouldn't do it because I wanted
to do it. I would do it because it would
keep me from wanting an ice cream Sunday, Like two
hours later. You know what I mean. I think you
guys are gonna like this, because I'm gonna come to
you for this as well. But I had it on
the Texas Tech basketball coach Grant McCaslin on twenty five
(06:50):
Whistles and I love this guy. But here's the question
I asked him. Is there a movie or like a
scene from a movie that you show your players every
year Shawshank Redemption which part climbing of the poo.
Speaker 1 (07:00):
Yes, that's the season, and I actually reference it during
games quite often because, let's just say, you've missed eight
shots in a row, you feel this like desperation, like
you never know where the end of the tunnel really
is and you don't really know exactly what you're gonna
have to go through till you get through it. And
so it's just this mental imagery of the freedom that
you have that you don't know when it's gonna break
through for you, but it's worth it when you finally
(07:21):
get there.
Speaker 3 (07:22):
That's the one I thought that was awesome, great metaphor
for life, like sometimes you gotta climb thro a big
poop pipe just to get to the other side. And
so I'm gonna ask you guys, like, give me like
your favorite movie scene or why it matters to you
amy favorite movie scene.
Speaker 8 (07:38):
It's from one of my favorite movies, Pretty Woman, And
it's for those moments where you've been judged or someone's
underestimated you and then you show up and well you
just let them know.
Speaker 6 (07:47):
It's a big mistake.
Speaker 7 (07:49):
Hi.
Speaker 1 (07:49):
Hello, do you remember me?
Speaker 6 (07:51):
No, I'm sorry. I was in here yesterday. You wouldn't
wait on me. Oh you were commission right?
Speaker 1 (07:58):
Ah?
Speaker 6 (07:58):
Yes, big mistake, big huge.
Speaker 10 (08:02):
I have no.
Speaker 6 (08:03):
Shopping now, so good, so good.
Speaker 3 (08:07):
Yeah, don't judge a bug by his cover, right right, lunchbox.
Speaker 11 (08:11):
Uh, it's William Wallace, braveheart, his countrymen of Scotland are
scared to fight. They're scared to fight for their freedom.
They're gonna run and hide. And he's like, listen, guys,
you got to stick up for yourself. You gotta fight
for what you want. Do you want to be free?
Then let's go out here in battle.
Speaker 12 (08:26):
It is amazing fight and you may die run and
you're left at least a while I'm dying in your.
Speaker 3 (08:36):
Beds many years from now, would you be willing to
trade all the days from this.
Speaker 5 (08:43):
Day to that for one church, just one chut.
Speaker 3 (08:47):
It's not come back here. I'm telling all right me.
Speaker 12 (08:51):
Then they may take out life, but they'll never take me.
Speaker 9 (09:00):
Good one Awesome, I got chills, do so almost famous.
There's a scene where one of the band members leaves.
He's mad at the whole band, and he goes to
some party and the band's upset because he's not there.
But they find him at the party and he gets
on the bus and they're all mad at each other
until Elton John's Tiny Dancer comes on and they all
(09:20):
kind of make up just with the power of music.
Speaker 3 (09:23):
The evening is over.
Speaker 9 (09:25):
We hope you all enjoyed yourselves.
Speaker 3 (09:27):
I will see you all again in nineteen seventy four.
Speaker 6 (09:31):
Good evening.
Speaker 1 (09:38):
I have to go.
Speaker 3 (09:39):
So they all start fighting, but this allows them to
come together.
Speaker 9 (09:42):
They get on the bus and they're all so mad
at each other, but then after the song comes on,
they all start singing the song together and smiling.
Speaker 3 (09:48):
I love it. That is kind of a jam song.
To do that too, Morgan, you have one of these, Yeah,
I do.
Speaker 13 (09:53):
It's the Avengers endgame where they are about to lose
to Thanos and they're like everything's over at the world
is gonna end, and then everybody shows up and they
fight this huge fight together, all the Avengers.
Speaker 7 (10:06):
Every like after they had just been dead and they
come back to life and they're like, oh, we're going
back to war.
Speaker 14 (10:11):
Here we go.
Speaker 3 (10:22):
Oh good. That's a really good scene too, because I
got kind of chills again, me too every time, and
all of these for some reason, I guess if we
look deep into them, they're kind of a metaphor for
different things, Like you're fighting with your friends, but like
something that makes you not fight lunchboxes. Don't know fighting
seventy hundreds.
Speaker 12 (10:41):
Don't you fight for it? We all need freedom in life.
You whatever you want, go fight for it. Ray, do
you have anyone rookie of the year.
Speaker 3 (10:54):
Oh, it's a great movie. What's the theme here? Then
he gets the ball hit to him. It's a home run.
And you just never know when you're gonna get your
call up to the majors in sports and in life,
so before you hit play. This movie is so old.
As a kid Henry Rowan Gardner and he gets a
ball hit to him in the outfield and like he
has like an arm, Like do you have a surgery?
(11:14):
Just had surgery, and then he throws the ball back
in and it's like, Blake, okay, go ahead.
Speaker 4 (11:20):
Here Henry okay, here goes.
Speaker 6 (11:38):
Dark bring me there.
Speaker 3 (11:43):
So then he goes in place with a cub. Then
he's like twelve. That's funny. That's a good one. So
that to you is you never know when you're getting
your shot. Be ready exactly, stay ready, never got to
get ready? All right, one more, Mikey, you have one. Yeah.
Speaker 15 (11:55):
So for me, one of my favorite movies growing up
was La Bamba and it has one of the best
ending scenes of all time. And on the surface it's
the story about Richie Allen's life, but really, underneath that,
it's a story about brothers. So whenever I watch this movie,
it makes me think of my relationship with my brother
and in this moment of thinking of losing somebody like
that and his brother in the movie doesn't show a
whole lot of emotion until the very end scene.
Speaker 3 (12:18):
Right, No matter.
Speaker 15 (12:23):
When I watch the scene, it still makes me emotional
and I always want to cry.
Speaker 3 (12:27):
It's so good, Mike, Yeah, I play it again. It's
just little.
Speaker 1 (12:32):
Right.
Speaker 3 (12:36):
Yeah, it makes you feel sad, but yeah, you're right. Uh,
mine is so those a guy named be Rabbit might
be Rabbit. I've heard of him. B Rabbit is Eminem,
but Eminem is playing himself with the name b Rabbit.
What is this? Yeah? Yeah, And so at the end
he's battling Papa Doc and I've watched this scene three
(12:58):
hundred times even without watching the movie three hundred times sometimes,
and he knows he's about to have all this stuff
said against him and be made fun of, be rabbitized,
because yeah, he lived a life that maybe hasn't made
a bunch of good decisions, and he was poor anyway.
So he's like, you know what, I'm gonn, I'm gonna
do almost say everything bad about me first. So anything
you have saved up you can't do because I already
(13:18):
said it, like this is like the ultimate for me,
seeing where like somebody's bigger and better than you. It's
like watch this before you cut my legs out, I'll
cut my own out and then I'll cut yours out.
I know whether thing he's not to say it picked me.
I am.
Speaker 10 (13:32):
I am a pump I tool me's in the trailer
with my mom my boy go I do kind of
come fright. They tek Bob and sits himself in his
leg when his tome kumb I did he come ball sixty? Chok?
Wait my girl, I'm still standing. He has tweeting a
free world.
Speaker 3 (13:51):
I never trying to touch me too.
Speaker 6 (13:53):
You don't know.
Speaker 10 (13:55):
Happen through but I know someumthing about you.
Speaker 3 (13:58):
You went to train, Well, that's a private school.
Speaker 8 (14:02):
What's the man I talk you with?
Speaker 10 (14:03):
Paris? This guy's a case.
Speaker 4 (14:05):
He's real man's Paris.
Speaker 3 (14:07):
The clevers to hold the Cloch parents.
Speaker 10 (14:09):
And Clarence's parents have a real good marriage at battle
because the ain't no stains, like he can't scared. Look
at his super cool friend Crooch.
Speaker 3 (14:23):
Clarence loves both parents and parents have a real good
marriage all the way. Win in on himself like he
took every bit of ammunition somebody could have used against him,
and he goes here, it is, this is every flaw
and fault that I have. Boom boom, and it rhymes
and then he goes in. I don't know that that
for me has kind of been out. I've done my
whole career, like, yeah, I kind of suck in a
lot of ways. So everybody can say whatever they want.
(14:44):
But clarence parents got a real good marriage. So yeah,
I love that one. But thanks you about Texas Tech
basketball coach for coming on because I thought that was
so cool. And I love the shawshank in Live You
gotta climb through poop to get to the other side
a lot of times.
Speaker 6 (14:59):
How old is that coach?
Speaker 3 (15:02):
Yeah, I don't think he's that old. Yeah, he'll probably
if I'm guessing, like forty eight, Mike, would you check out?
Speaker 8 (15:08):
Oh yeah, so that to me, that seems like a
coach like that.
Speaker 6 (15:12):
Yeah, it's awesome.
Speaker 3 (15:14):
Like, yeah, I'm a massive Arkansas razorback fans, my favorite
team in all the live basketball, football, baseball, whatever, like
massive fan. But there are certain coaches like the Texas
Tech coach McCaslin, like Bruce Pearl and Auburn who after
spending time with them, I'm like, man, I get white
people would want to go play for them.
Speaker 8 (15:30):
So well, I feel like you, I even know these
coaches because you've talked about them, But I don't know
anything about the Arkansas basketball coach.
Speaker 6 (15:37):
Why don't you do these kinds of things with him?
Speaker 3 (15:40):
It's a good question. The Arkansas basketball coaching staff really
has not been welcoming to me oddly.
Speaker 8 (15:47):
So like you couldn't do like the same kind of
things like you've done with these other guys.
Speaker 6 (15:51):
Like I guess if I begged, Oh, and you're not
gonna beg.
Speaker 3 (15:54):
No, I'm not gonna beg. Yeah, they haven't really been
I won't say cool, but they have wherever. You know,
I am a massive fan, and you know I don't
hate who cares. But yeah, the basketball coaching staff at
Arkansas has not been warm or welcoming to be nor
should they have to. I might go to tech detective
(16:15):
guys play recod, I might transfer. Have you met coach
cal yet for like one split second? I mean, and
I had to pay to do it, which is kind
of lame.
Speaker 6 (16:25):
Coach Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, because you did that thing.
Speaker 3 (16:28):
Yeah, and he was he was like, as it goes good,
okay next, Yeah, it's not it's not a good relationship.
Not a bad relationship. There is no relationship.
Speaker 6 (16:37):
Is his name Clarence. Does he live with his parents?
Speaker 3 (16:39):
No? No, No, he's got a lot of money.
Speaker 6 (16:41):
I think it's yeah, go to private school.
Speaker 3 (16:45):
He could own a couple of private schools. Probably. All right,
thank you guys for your movies. Yeah that was fun.
I watched about fifteen minutes of the Oscars last night.
I like Conan, but I just hadn't seen enough of
the movies. Chelamage did not win Best Actor. Huh. Now
he put on the Way, learned to sing, play guitar
all that and didn't win. Nah, I wasn't that good really.
Speaker 15 (17:07):
In the Bob Dylan movie, I could tell it was
him the whole time, Like that's Timothy Shadowmy trying to
be like Bob Dylan.
Speaker 3 (17:12):
Uh. It's not streaming yet, so I haven't seen it.
But Adrian Brodie, which I don't even know what he's
been in, but he won, right, Yeah, The Brutalist, that
three hour movie I watched was a brutal. It was good, Oh,
it was good. The Oscar swag bag is mostly what
I'm mentioned in. So if you go and you're a star,
they give you a bag filled with and I can
list to some of the stuff here. A four night
(17:32):
stayed a luxury resort in the Maldives, valued at sixteen
thousand dollars, offering private Butler's gourmet dining and spall retreats.
I don't know where the Maldives are, do you?
Speaker 10 (17:42):
No?
Speaker 6 (17:43):
I mean some weird island off the Coast of Something.
Speaker 3 (17:46):
A five night luxury wellness retreat at the Santana Resort
in Sri Lanka worth six thousand dollars, featuring personalized SPA treatments,
a five star stay in Barcelona, Spain. A gift certificate
to celebrity arms and liposuction it over twenty thousand dollars. Jeez,
how do you go to all the places? Though? If
you're working, they give you like three trips, but you're
(18:07):
still supposed to have a job. So that's mostly what
I was interested in. Best picture of Nora. Don't know
what that is. Best director Anora is that's the one
would like the Russian oligarch. Yeah, it's like.
Speaker 6 (18:19):
The Cinderella sex worker, like a mix.
Speaker 15 (18:24):
That's something I'm jumping into, Like a mix of Cinderella
and pretty woman.
Speaker 3 (18:28):
Yes, okay, now I'm now. I'd be curious to check
it out. The other description felt creepy Daredevil on Disney
Plus that's back, That's cool. I loved it on Netflix Watcher.
Speaker 6 (18:42):
No I tried. I don't think I could get into it.
What was my thing?
Speaker 3 (18:46):
I think it would be though, do you know what
his thing was? What his power was? You don't even remember, No,
it wasn't that he was daring.
Speaker 6 (18:52):
Devilish behavior is blind?
Speaker 8 (18:54):
Oh yeah, I was gonna about to say his eyeballs,
his eyeballs.
Speaker 3 (18:59):
Yeah, so Disney Plus it's back. So I haven't started
it yet, but that's that's pretty exciting. I will do
the news next and then we'll take your calls. Eight seven,
seven seventy seven, Bobby, Oh does it start so tomorrow? Oh? Dang?
When does Kerry come back on idle? Was that last night?
Did I don't start last night? Or is it next week?
Next week? Big week? Lunchbox should have made a bunch
of money in crypto if you listened to me last week. Yeah,
(19:22):
well we'll check on that too. We'll do the news
coming up next week. South Carolina dealing with over one
hundred and seventy five wildfires that have consumed approximately four
two hundred acres across various counties Corey, Spartanburg, o'connee, Union,
and Pickens. The governor has declared a state of emergency
to bolster firefighting efforts, and the fires prompted mandatory evacuations
(19:45):
in several regions. This is from NBC News. The pictures
look like they're so red. I mean, it looks like
the drawings of hell. Have you seen them?
Speaker 6 (19:54):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (19:56):
Do we know how they started? Or how and it
just started? Has anyone heard? I saw the pictures last
night and I pulled up what it was today. There's
a burning band that's been imposed. Obviously, the violations of
this band will result in criminal prosecution. It makes me
think that that's probably how it happened, Like somebody was
(20:16):
burning something and it caught fire.
Speaker 6 (20:18):
But no, I hear criminal prosecution.
Speaker 3 (20:20):
Yeah. A Florida woman spray paints the wrong car while
trying to get back at ex boyfriend.
Speaker 6 (20:24):
Oh my gosh.
Speaker 3 (20:25):
A Florida woman's accused of spray painting hateful messages, including devil,
on a car she thought belonged to her ex boyfriend
as part of a deranged plot to settle a debt
worth less than one thousand dollars. Okay, this is my
opinion here. I don't think it was just about the
debt that made her do this, I know, little more. Yeah,
I think she's probably.
Speaker 6 (20:44):
You got to make sure you got the right car,
you know.
Speaker 3 (20:46):
Yeah. Yeah. Evelina tried to get back at her past
love when she and her sixteen year old friend mistakenly
egged and spray painted a neighbor's car. Now, I've gone
in the parking lot like Kroger and tried to open
the wrong car thinking it's mine.
Speaker 6 (21:00):
Yes, I've literally gotten in the wrong car.
Speaker 3 (21:02):
Well I haven't done that, but yes, so I can
understand how you'd be confused by a similar looking car.
But I'm talking about this is a dark car. I'm
looking at the color here, and they went lime green
paint on it and painted all over it. But she
vandalized the black infinity about one thousand dollars and damages
on the car. Yeah, but how do you not make sure?
(21:25):
I think the reason I knew that wasn't my car.
You can like look in the middle and see what's
in like the cup stuff. And I was like, yeah,
I know, I don't have a doctor Pepper. There's no
reason that doctor Pepper would have been in my car.
And I was like, oh, wrong car, wrong car, wrong car.
How did you know it was wrong car?
Speaker 8 (21:37):
I think similar like there was drink also, I mean
it was a rental, so it wasn't my car that
I was used to, but I still it was unlocked
and I got in.
Speaker 3 (21:44):
You don't sound near as crazy. If it was a rental, oh,
thank you. Yeah, if it was your car, yeah. JFK's
underwear is sold at an auction for nine thousand dollars.
A pair of underwear worn by President John F. Kennedy
has sold at an auction in Los Angeles for ninety
one hundred dollars. The ivory cotton snapfly Boxer shorts, featuring
a hand sown label embroidered with the late Leader of
(22:07):
the Free World's nickname Jack, reportedly goes back to his
time in the Navies in the nineteen forties. Also on
the auction block a black Alternative brand hoodie worn on
numerous occasions by Mark Zuckerberg that went for fifteen thousand dollars.
I think I'd rather have the underwear from JFK a
nine thousand than a Zuckerberg hoodie for fifteen. I would
(22:29):
have thought JFK was tidy whities, though I don't think
anything's white after that long. They're pretty can yeah, I
mean boxer. Do they even have tidy whities back then?
I think that's all late development. I don't know. The
US Fish and Wildlife Services asking Americans to hunt more
nutria and a basive species that looks like a cross
(22:49):
between a giant rat and a beaver. I don't know
what this is. They're burrowing adversely affects water systems and
structural foundations. They also carry pathogens and paris sites. Their
meat is lean, mild, and taste like rabbit.
Speaker 6 (23:03):
It's too cute. I can't. I googled it. It's cute.
Speaker 3 (23:06):
What's it look like? It's animal like a little beaver.
Speaker 6 (23:09):
It's cute.
Speaker 3 (23:11):
They say they carry bad pathogens and parasites, but they're
also like they taste great. Those two don't go together,
insite each other right like gon' tek about the parasites
and tell me to eat it. Harvard University says that
women are naturally mourning people more than men are. Women's
internal clocks are set to an hour earlier than men's,
making them fall asleep earlier and wake up earlier. Women
(23:34):
also show a stronger inclination for activity earlier in the
day than men. This is from the proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences. Any feedback there, Amy.
Speaker 8 (23:41):
I just think we're probably wired to caregive and make
sure everybody's good and get ahead of the day. I'm
a morning person, but I have girlfriends that love to
sleep till noons.
Speaker 3 (23:51):
I'm not a morning person. And daylight savings on Sunday
boom oh thanks for the reminder. Oh, I don't need it.
You're here a one hundred times before then soon, but
I like it. I wanted to be I want to
play in the cul de Sac until nine pm some
of your friends. Yeah, I want us all to be
able to play and ramp our bikes and stuff. So
this Sunday it sets back. Finally, a researcher say, you
(24:14):
can approve for mental health well being an attention span
in just two weeks. All you have to do is
get off mobile internet. A thirty eight year old psychologist
at the University of Texas, Adrian Ward, decided to study
what it would be if he were to go back
to like when he was a kid, and so he
and his colleagues they agreed to download an iPhone app
that would block all Internet access on their smartphones for
(24:36):
two weeks. Participants could still use non mobile internet like
from a computer a desktop computer, but no Internet on
their phones. Average daily screen time to climb fifty percent
for more than five hours to just over two and
after the break, ninety one percent participant showed improved scores
in at least one category. Seventy one percent report of
better health, better mental health, better well being. That's from
(24:57):
newser Eddie.
Speaker 6 (24:58):
Our church is doing a digital he talks.
Speaker 3 (25:01):
I'm not partaking.
Speaker 6 (25:02):
That's basically that's it.
Speaker 8 (25:03):
You turn your phone and like you can use your
desktop like on anything if you need to check something
on your computer, but they're encouraging on your phone.
Speaker 6 (25:10):
Just totally dumb it down.
Speaker 3 (25:11):
It's funny that you have to download an by using
the internet to keep you from using the internet. Yes,
all right, that's the news. Bobby's story, Bobby. So let's
talk about asking people for autographs. Nicole Kidman was on
Colbert's Late night show and he was talking to her
(25:32):
about this.
Speaker 9 (25:33):
Have you ever asked someone for their autograph?
Speaker 3 (25:35):
Yeah, Philip Roth, Philip Roth, Yeah, that Elton John Oh.
Speaker 6 (25:42):
Yeah nice.
Speaker 11 (25:43):
Was that for an album or a book?
Speaker 8 (25:45):
That was because we bought lyrics?
Speaker 6 (25:47):
Oh what lyrics?
Speaker 15 (25:49):
Yeah?
Speaker 6 (25:49):
Your song that's maybe his best song.
Speaker 3 (25:52):
Yeah, like the handwritten lyrics, like when he first Bernie's yeah,
Bernie's lyrics. Yeah.
Speaker 9 (25:58):
So around the room.
Speaker 3 (25:58):
If you can remember the last time you asked somebody
for an autograph, I'll give you a couple. Oh, I
just bought a really cool autograph thing. I think it's
my favorite of my collection. I didn't ask for this one,
but I bought a Do you know Jerry the King
Lawler is no Okay, so he's a wrestler. But back
in like the early eighties, him and Andy Kaufman got
into this big fake fight where Andy Kaufman was like,
(26:19):
I can wrestle any woman and beat him, and Andy
Kaufman's like, to me, one of the greatest ever. And
I got a baseball that he signed to Andy Kaufman.
So Jerry Lawler signed a baseball to Andy Kaufman. So
I have that, which is pretty cool. I got Matt Castle,
the football player, to sign a jersey for a listener.
Does that count Yeah?
Speaker 9 (26:39):
Yeah, because they.
Speaker 3 (26:39):
Listened to our podcast and so I sent him a
Patriots jersey that he wasn't for me, but it was
for you.
Speaker 9 (26:46):
What have you asked for you? And that might have
been a long time ago, too, right.
Speaker 3 (26:51):
I literally cannot remember because I feel uncomfortable asking people
to sign things. I have Dirk s Bentley, who's a friend,
but he signed to get to Okay, he signed guitar
for me way back in the day. I didn't even
giving it to me, but he wrote every lyric to
the song I went number one. So I have a
guitar every lyric of one of his songs on it.
Speaker 9 (27:08):
That's cool.
Speaker 8 (27:09):
Oh of the one song?
Speaker 3 (27:10):
Yes, not every song was that like I hold on
it is?
Speaker 8 (27:13):
Yeah, that's cool.
Speaker 3 (27:14):
So I wrote every single lyric to that. Again, didn't
ask for it, but I think that's that's pretty cool.
But asking for mostly it's like a picture now, like
if you want something, you know, hey, can I get
a picture?
Speaker 8 (27:24):
Yeah, like a selfie?
Speaker 3 (27:25):
Anybody asked for an autograph at all lately for anybody.
Speaker 9 (27:27):
So we interviewed Stephen A.
Speaker 3 (27:29):
Smith.
Speaker 7 (27:29):
He's a.
Speaker 9 (27:31):
I guess, like a really opinionated sports for UH an
analysis guy.
Speaker 3 (27:36):
Like what was he? Yeah?
Speaker 9 (27:37):
Personality personality, but he like he's known to hate the
Dallas Cowboys. Hates the Dallas Cowboys, always talks about about
the Dallas Cowboys. So after the interview, I had my
Dallas Cowboys hat and I had him sign it.
Speaker 3 (27:47):
That's funny and he laughed.
Speaker 9 (27:48):
He thought that was funny that he that I wanted
his autograph on that hat.
Speaker 3 (27:51):
I had Fred Taylor sign a football card. Oh yeah, yeah,
I played for the Jaguars at his rookie card. I'm
signed that. I don't know, lunchbox man, I.
Speaker 11 (28:00):
Don't haven't asked for an autograph in a long time.
I mean, I can't even picture me asking for an
autograph now, pictures. I asked for pictures all the time.
Speaker 3 (28:08):
You ask Scotty Pippen for an autograph.
Speaker 11 (28:09):
That was when I was twelve years old and Scottie Pippen,
he had his little afro going. Michael Jordan retired, so
he was the face of the Chicago Bulls. I'm in
the mall in downtown Chicago and I see Scotty Pippen
going to the food court and I run into the
store and I buy the exact same hat that Scottie
Pippen was wearing. And I go up to him and
I was like, mister Pippin, can I get your autograph? No,
(28:33):
and just kept on walking. Didn't even break stride. Break stride.
I didn't have time for me.
Speaker 3 (28:40):
We went to work out with the Saint Louis Cardinals
and the guy plays for the Yankees now, but Paul
Gold Schmidt, who will probably be a Hall of Famer.
He was work was with us and we're interviewing him.
And in sports basketball all trade jerseys and football, all
tree jerseys and baseball, they don't really do that as much.
And I was like, hey, why don't we do a
trade because he when he was coming up playing ball college,
(29:00):
he listened to the show, and so let's do a trade.
So I signed a microphone and gave it to him
for his locker, and he signed a bat and gave
it to me one of his game used bats. That's cool.
That's pretty cool. Yeah, any autogast from you?
Speaker 8 (29:12):
No, I seeking the Yankees. You help me buy one
of those, like an autograph? Who was that?
Speaker 3 (29:16):
Derek Jeter? Oh, that's cool. Did you guys see the
George Harrison toast?
Speaker 9 (29:19):
It sold what like a piece of bread?
Speaker 3 (29:22):
Someone bought a piece of George Harrison's toast from the
nineteen sixties. You can't really sign the toast, but it's
his toast and it had been sold before, so it
wasn't like the first time, but it was from nineteen
sixty three when it sold last time. It sold for
(29:43):
ninety four thousand dollars, not on earth.
Speaker 9 (29:45):
Did he have a bite out of it or something?
It must know that's his toast, that's true.
Speaker 3 (29:50):
I saw Amy take a kept more a coffee cup
he left from last week and dump it this morning,
and I was like lunchbox to me, mad he wants
to keep that and sell?
Speaker 8 (29:56):
Oh yeah, no, it was still yeah, put it in
the trash, Like why'd you do that? Because were you gonna?
You don't need to do anything with that.
Speaker 3 (30:03):
I tried to sell Myrna labortea and how'd that go?
Speaker 11 (30:06):
I didn't get as much as I was looking, what
was it? I was trying to get five hundred for
what though? It was her coffee and a cup, so
I have but I saved the coffee in a water
bottle and I have the cup still, so you can
either keep it in the water bottle and have the cup,
or you can pour it out of the water bottle
back into the cup and have her coffee.
Speaker 9 (30:22):
And it didn't sell.
Speaker 11 (30:23):
They didn't sell for five hundred, so I didn't What
did you go for? It was like fifty bucks someone
offered me, and I offered, he being take it, no, no, no,
I thought I could get five hundred, so I'll just
relist it.
Speaker 3 (30:33):
There's such a difference. Fifty five hundred. That's never gonna
happen unless he dies.
Speaker 11 (30:36):
There's good. There's some point she's gonna do something big.
Speaker 3 (30:39):
It's never gonna go to five hundred. Oh, I got
Lunchbox just signed a ball card once a baseball card.
What car in the past few months?
Speaker 9 (30:45):
His card?
Speaker 3 (30:46):
Yeah, a Lunchbox has a card that he was playing,
like at a softball game and they made like a
charity card. Yep. And someone gave it to me and
was like, did you know Lunchbox had this car. I
was like no, So I had him sign it to
my house. It's in my collection.
Speaker 2 (30:56):
Wow.
Speaker 3 (30:57):
So I got a Lunchbox autograph too. I guess I
tried to sell it for a they only offered a nickel.
Speaker 9 (31:01):
Hold on to it.
Speaker 11 (31:02):
I gotta confess. I did get you guys all to
sign something throw throw a burrito game.
Speaker 9 (31:07):
Actually he does that all the time.
Speaker 15 (31:08):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (31:08):
I signed books and stuff all the time.
Speaker 9 (31:10):
No, but asks us to sign stuff all the time
for his friends.
Speaker 3 (31:13):
Yeah. One is like, I have a friend that we've
signed this, and I was like, yeah, dude, don't be
weird about it.
Speaker 11 (31:18):
It's weird and it was from my sister in law,
and I was, it's not weird.
Speaker 3 (31:21):
Who cares, I don't mind. If you're a big fan
of me, that's okay. I'll sign I'm not a big thing, fay.
These are movies that apparently shaped us anybody born nineteen
eighty and on. So I'll read you the movie say
if it was like a fundamental part of your childhood.
(31:41):
Number one, The Princess Bride.
Speaker 8 (31:44):
I mean, I recall it.
Speaker 3 (31:47):
We didn't watch it a lot.
Speaker 8 (31:47):
I didn't watch it a lot, but my.
Speaker 3 (31:49):
Wife loves it. Really, she's seen it so many times.
And I remember saying, I've never seen it that someone
with the flying dog, and she was like, no, no dog. Yeah,
but the big Mike.
Speaker 9 (31:59):
What's big dog?
Speaker 3 (32:00):
To Floppy ears?
Speaker 9 (32:01):
The never ending story?
Speaker 3 (32:03):
I never saw that. She was like, no, dummy, can
she quote Princess Bride? I don't know? And cathievable? I
don't know. I don't only seen it once, but she
knew the whole thing Princess Bride.
Speaker 1 (32:14):
You know.
Speaker 8 (32:15):
Yeah, I've seen it a few times.
Speaker 3 (32:16):
But like, not something fundamental. The Sandlot. Absolutely yes, I
think any baseball playing kid watched that movie a thousand times.
Jurassic Park. No. I remember our youth director would like,
he's like, we got her on VHS, do you want
to watch it? And like everybody was so pumped to
watch it. That's kind of bored. I think I may
(32:39):
have watched like half of it once. Scream, Yeah, yeah,
I went to the theater to watch Scream. I don't
know that I watch it again. But that was like
my introduction to like scary movies. I hate scary movies,
but I watched Scream because that was a big pop
culture thing more than it was just a scary movie.
Speaker 9 (32:54):
And then that mask was very popular.
Speaker 3 (32:57):
Mulan nineteen eighty eight. No, No, that is cartoon right, yep. Yeah,
I never watched it. The Big O'bowski ninety eight. It's
a dude thing. I watch it a couple of times.
I quote it sometimes that's what's the dude. Yeah, yeah,
but I would say it's not a top twenty five movie.
I think it kind of needs to be a top
(33:18):
twenty five movie to be like a fundamental part of
your life. The next one, for sure for me, the
Matrix We're living in it now, absolutely no doubt one
of the top, one of the best movies.
Speaker 9 (33:29):
Ever, what do you mean? We're living it now.
Speaker 3 (33:32):
Reality Also what we're told is reality, and we see
it all the time.
Speaker 9 (33:37):
We're in the matrix.
Speaker 8 (33:39):
I guess I need to rewatch that because I remember
not liking it when I went to see it in
the theaters.
Speaker 3 (33:43):
Like absolutely a fundamental movie to me.
Speaker 9 (33:46):
Not the one where the bullet he goes back in,
the bullet goes over his.
Speaker 8 (33:49):
Head, Pill, Red Pill.
Speaker 3 (33:51):
The Mummy, because it's like, you take one pill and
you keep living this life that you like, and it's fine,
but it ain't the truth. But you can take the
truth the other pill. But then you're about to see
what's really going on. You're gonna like it, but at
least it's the truth.
Speaker 9 (34:03):
Oh, that's kind of cool.
Speaker 3 (34:04):
It's awesome. It was so ahead of its time. The Mummy. Eh, No,
Lord of the Rings, Fellowship of the Ring, and a
million people would say yes to this, Mike, are you
a Lord of the Rings or No?
Speaker 15 (34:15):
I think it's an overrated trilogy.
Speaker 3 (34:17):
I'm gonna go no Tube. I get it. I did
watch it. But Harry Potter and the Sorcerer Stone Morgan,
is that you?
Speaker 16 (34:24):
Yeah?
Speaker 7 (34:24):
Oh yeah, I read my mom all the read all
the books to me growing up, and then I watched
all the movies in theaters.
Speaker 9 (34:30):
Your mom would read the whole book to you.
Speaker 7 (34:31):
Yeah, I was like our nighttime book, not the whole
book one night, but yeah.
Speaker 3 (34:35):
Over the course of crap at Eternal Sunshine of the
Spotless Mind two thousand and four, one of my top
three favorite movies of all time. It's so good. My
wife asked me other day, do you ever see this
Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind? I was like seeing it.
I think about it once a week like that. Would
you take basically a pill to forget the bad memories?
(34:58):
Like that's for boiler it down? Would you do something
different if it removed a lot of the bad memories
from your life? Because that's what he's going through. It's like,
can I just forge that hurt? So? Can I just
forget her? It's awesome? Mean Girls, Oh so good. Not
so much for me, but I have seen it, and
you know what I liked it?
Speaker 9 (35:17):
Never seen Mean Girls?
Speaker 3 (35:19):
Garden State?
Speaker 9 (35:20):
Oh I love Garden State, Zach Braff.
Speaker 3 (35:22):
I feel like I had to like Garden State. What
do you mean? I watched it and then all my
cool friends were like, you didn't love Garden State.
Speaker 9 (35:29):
Oh the soundtrack?
Speaker 3 (35:31):
Is it the Shins? Yeah? You ever heard the Shins?
I'll change your life?
Speaker 9 (35:35):
And then I was like, that's what she says.
Speaker 3 (35:38):
So I think that that mostly shaped my cooler older
friends at work. So I had to act like I
liked it. Super Bad absolutely great. Yeah, speaking of super Bad,
the guy that played mclovin, he's in super Bad, right, Yeah,
he's like a good looking dude now, Like, it's just
it's crazy that nerdy kid turned out to be like
(35:59):
just like a dude.
Speaker 11 (36:00):
Does he still act?
Speaker 3 (36:01):
I don't know. I watch him an interview on TikTok. Yeah,
Christopher Min's plus that's his name. Yeah, does he act?
Speaker 9 (36:06):
He's still a little bit. He's in like a band too.
Speaker 3 (36:09):
He's cool now, right yeah? And then finally Inception, which
blew my mind.
Speaker 9 (36:14):
I refresh my memory on that one.
Speaker 3 (36:15):
DiCaprio, are you dreaming?
Speaker 15 (36:19):
Okay, you're trying to go into a dream inside of
a dream to hack somebody's mind.
Speaker 3 (36:24):
Oh wow, maybe a little too deep think I missed
that one.
Speaker 6 (36:26):
I don't rewatch that.
Speaker 3 (36:28):
Which one of those? Of all of them, though, would
you put as your number one fundamental movie. Of those
fifteen movies, I'd probably go the Sandlot, but it's not
my all time favorite. It'd be Eternal Sunshine of the
Spotless Mind, but probably the Sandlot. I've probably seen it
the most, and I don't watch movies more than once,
so the Sandlot, that's the thing gets quoted all the time.
I'll go sand Lot, any of those for you, Amy
(36:49):
Mean Girls, Lunchbox.
Speaker 11 (36:51):
Obviously the sand Loot. I didn't watch most of those movies.
Speaker 3 (36:54):
Eddie Garden State, You're like.
Speaker 9 (37:00):
Into this, it'll change your life.
Speaker 3 (37:02):
The matrix would be probably three. You remember the first
movie you ever went to a theater? Ever?
Speaker 6 (37:07):
Oohoo?
Speaker 8 (37:09):
I mean I don't know. I saw Man Pretty Woman
when I was nine, but I've surely went to the
movie before that.
Speaker 3 (37:16):
That was your introduction to the cinema prostitute?
Speaker 8 (37:18):
Oh yeah?
Speaker 3 (37:19):
With my parents, mine was White Man Can't Jump, Arkansas,
Keith taking me to watch White Man Can't Jump. And
then right after that I went to watch The Babe.
But John Goodman, how old are you then? I don't know, twelve,
I don't know, but as far to matter remember in
the movies, but I remember going to watch White Man
Can't Jump, and I was like, this is crazy, lunchbox anything.
Speaker 11 (37:36):
Man, I couldn't tell you the first movie I went
to the theater to see, because I mean I remember going.
I mean I remember Jurassic Park. I know I saw
in the theater, but I mean I was what twelve
years old, so I had to go before then, right,
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (37:49):
If you ask me, I don't know.
Speaker 8 (37:51):
Maybe ask your parents, see if they remember Eddie.
Speaker 9 (37:53):
Think mine was Peewee's big adventure on Garden State.
Speaker 11 (37:57):
I know what it was.
Speaker 3 (37:58):
It was Rambo with Grandma.
Speaker 11 (38:01):
Grandma told me to see Rambo.
Speaker 3 (38:06):
The guy in North Carolina hit for one hundred and
ten thousand dollars in the lottery, and he says those
numbers came to him in his dreams, even the dollar
amount that he hit. Okay, stop, do you think he's
full of crap? Full of crap.
Speaker 11 (38:20):
It's just like, I mean, I don't want to call
anybody out, but there's a guy that works in this
office and he said his wife had a dream that
they should sell their house, and she had a dream
for how much they were going to be offered. And
that's the exact number they sold their house.
Speaker 9 (38:33):
Where I'm like, stop, that's amazing.
Speaker 11 (38:35):
That's stop. Guys like that's that's that's not real.
Speaker 8 (38:38):
That's pretty cool.
Speaker 3 (38:39):
I think it depends how trust that person is or
if they always have, you know, a fishtail. But this guy,
Robert told the North Carolina Education Lottery that he bought
a one dollar quick pick for a cash five and
he said he dreamed the night before he'd win. It's
strange because he even dreamed the exact amount that he
would win and then boomy it. I wish she'd written
(39:01):
it down before.
Speaker 11 (39:02):
Thank you. It's so easy to say it afterwards.
Speaker 3 (39:05):
Yeah, yeah, it is, but people don't say that afterward.
For the most part.
Speaker 11 (39:09):
Good story can't prove you lying.
Speaker 3 (39:10):
Can't neither can you. But you're that's true, but you're
yelling that he's lying.
Speaker 11 (39:14):
Yes, because there's just it's just full of crap that
you the exact dollar amount. Come on, unless he already
saw the jackpot the night before and it was at
like one hundred and ten thousand dollars and he had
a dream he one hundred and ten thousand dollars.
Speaker 3 (39:27):
That is that it can't prove his lying.
Speaker 9 (39:29):
That's so my wife said she had a dream that
we lived in a mansion and she drove by a man.
She said, that's the one I saw in my dream.
But she said she'd never seen it before, so.
Speaker 3 (39:39):
That would be more of wishing. No, she had never
did out to kind of thing. Maybe she's you know,
some past live or maybe she had seen it, but
she didn't remember seeing it like it was in her subcontract.
Speaker 17 (39:51):
Right.
Speaker 9 (39:51):
Well, hopefully it means we're going to move in that
mansion pretty soon.
Speaker 3 (39:54):
I think she liked that mansion. I want to play
this voicemail Joe Anne from Pittsburgh.
Speaker 16 (40:00):
I was so disappointed when you didn't tell us about
what you did for Valentine's Say, and you promised you would,
And then you're telling us that we need to listen
to your twenty five whistles, which I'll listen to, but
I don't think that you should try to. I don't know,
Coors force whatever, trick us into listen to another one
of your podcasts just to hear what you did for
(40:20):
Kidland for Valentine's Day. I just thought that was sort
of below you. Anyway, still would like to know what
you did for her and love the.
Speaker 3 (40:28):
Show first, Nothing is below me. I'd like to say,
that nothing is ever below me. Secondly, the plan was
to talk about it on the show that day, all
of ours, but we only really got the lunchboxes and
I didn't feel like coming back on like the seventeenth
and talking about Valentine's Day, and we didn't do a
post show, so we just did it on the next show.
No real plan there. But then once someone asked, I
was like, oh, yeah, it's on twenty five whistles. But yeah,
(40:50):
nothing is below me, that's the thing. But no, it
was no coercion. And while I talk, now, no, you
gotta go listen to twenty five whistles. Now, I man,
Now I'm totally in. I wasn't because I could have
just been like, here's what's up. But I feel you.
I understand the frustration. However, that was not the plan.
We ran out of time, mostly because it turned into
a debate about Valentine's Day and lunchbox so that took
(41:12):
a lot of the oxygen from the room. But it's
still up if you want to go hear it whistles, Yeah,
twenty five whistles. Go search for it. Give me number two, right, Hi, Bobby.
Speaker 5 (41:22):
I bought the book forth Wing after I heard it
on your show, and I only had it like a
week and a half, and I'm done and already bought
the second book. Where's Amy at?
Speaker 8 (41:37):
Yeah, I'm making progress, She'll say on twenty five whistles. Yeah,
I mean, I'm I need to Probably I gotta hunker
down with it this weekend. That's what I need to do.
Speaker 3 (41:47):
Finish.
Speaker 14 (41:48):
No, yes, I do.
Speaker 3 (41:49):
We're not rushing you. She's just asking where you are
in the process.
Speaker 8 (41:52):
Okay, Well, I don't want to spoil anything.
Speaker 3 (41:55):
Okay, where you are? You know what periods are the
way through the book? That's not a spoiler.
Speaker 8 (42:02):
Yeah, probably chapter twenty six of I don't know how
many shot, like thirty something. Okay, I'm I'm well into it,
but I want to finish it by now.
Speaker 3 (42:13):
Leaves the voicemail, by the way, we'd love to hear them.
Speaker 8 (42:15):
I still haven't gotten to anything crazy though, Like people
talk about the you gottay.
Speaker 3 (42:20):
No, you got the non explicit version. Maybe you talked
about music, you got the non explicit version version.
Speaker 8 (42:26):
Nothing's happening yet, like nothing like and I think I
will know. People have talked about it being so intense
that like you'll know. And I'm like, have I missed.
Speaker 9 (42:36):
It or maybe you just think it's normal?
Speaker 3 (42:39):
No, no, no, no, no, I thirty two chapters.
Speaker 8 (42:41):
So when I when well, then it must the.
Speaker 3 (42:44):
Hardcore dragon scenes. I don't know. You have to wait
and see thank you leave the boyemail all that. So
my phone users are staying their alarms aren't going off
like they set them, and it doesn't go off. Has
this happened to anybody here? No, I set multiples, So
even if it didn't, like I wake up in the morning,
it's like, you know, twenty one, twenty two. So if
(43:04):
it misses, I'm kind.
Speaker 8 (43:06):
Yeah, there's nowhere to go to sleep without a backup.
Speaker 3 (43:09):
Some iPhone users are still complaining about the phone's not
going off in time, and Apple acknowledged issues with the
reliability of the built in alarm feature. And so here's
a guy named Brenton State talking about what to do
if your alarm doesn't go off.
Speaker 17 (43:22):
I've been using the iPhone alarm for ten years, never
had an issue. Well, two days ago, I woke up
an hour and a half late to work. Well, last night,
I said a test alarm just to see what went wrong.
Maybe it went off and then it went silent. Couldn't
hear it, so I said another one, same thing happens.
Now I'm bugging Well. It turns out Apple decided to
(43:43):
add a future in one of the updates called at
tension awareness.
Speaker 11 (43:47):
Turn that off because that mutes your alarm. If it
doesn't sense you looking at the phone, turn it off.
Speaker 3 (43:54):
So there's something called attension awareness. If it doesn't since
you looking at it, it will not allow it. Is
that what I heard? Have you seen? Because they're putting
all this stuff, they have a motion sickness one too.
Have you seen that one with the dots on it.
Everyone keeps sending it to me, going, hey, you should
do this whenever you ride in a car. But I
don't ride in the car. I'd only drive in the car.
(44:17):
But if you have issues with your phone and the
alarm not going off, they say, go into it and
undo that attention awareness. Or you could do like I
do and be so attentive that you have ten of
them set back to back to back to back. More
gonna be heard about this at all?
Speaker 14 (44:29):
I haven't.
Speaker 7 (44:30):
I mean, I'm curious about it because I have to say,
like multiple alarms to wake up.
Speaker 8 (44:33):
So I'm curious.
Speaker 3 (44:34):
Attention awareness is if you look forward in general in
your settings do you ever see the stuff on TikTok
where they're like, these are all things you don't know
about your iPhone and then it's like twelve things people
use all the time and you had no idea.
Speaker 8 (44:46):
Yeah, I've learned some things.
Speaker 3 (44:48):
Attention aware, we have it here.
Speaker 9 (44:52):
Where'd you find that?
Speaker 3 (44:54):
Well, you can find anything if you go to settings
and just type it in. Okay, so you can go
to Attention aware allows voice control to start listening when
you look at your phone and stop listening when you
look away. Explain that to me. Allows voice control to
start listening when you look at your iPhone and stop
(45:17):
listening when you look away.
Speaker 8 (45:19):
Oh, so it's only gonna spy on you if you're
looking at it.
Speaker 3 (45:24):
That's what I thought too, Mike. Can you do you
know what this means?
Speaker 15 (45:28):
One of the attention to where in general is like
your phone will like damn if you're not looking at it,
So it knows if you're not looking at it, it's
going to go in like to sleep mode. So we
take that off. It might start Okay, bets see, even.
Speaker 8 (45:38):
If my phone goes to sleep, if I've set an alarm.
Speaker 3 (45:40):
I need you to I need you to wait, get
my attention ring it.
Speaker 8 (45:44):
You know, like everybody's got.
Speaker 3 (45:45):
Their phones up except lunchbox. You just get It's not
even jumping out.
Speaker 11 (45:47):
Because I mean, I'm not gonna able to figure it
out anyway. Technology is over my head. So I'm just
like all right.
Speaker 15 (45:51):
But it's saying if you have that feature on you
just look at your phone and it's like, okay, you're good,
you're awake, and I'll turn off the alarm.
Speaker 8 (45:57):
Yeah, it's oh my gosh, what oh but what if
you need what if you so seek? I set alarms
not just to wake up, but like you know, to
go reminder to pick up the kids at three.
Speaker 3 (46:07):
So if you're looking at your phone and you need
the alarm to remind you of something, it's to say
you're not asleep. It's not going to go off.
Speaker 8 (46:13):
That's okay, that's not got it for some people. Okay,
but that's not that's not cool because it's not cool.
I set lots of alarms with like different tasks that
need to be done.
Speaker 3 (46:22):
So George's what'd you say over there?
Speaker 7 (46:24):
Yeah, it says iPhone will check for attention before dimming
the display, expanding a notification when locked, or lowering the
volume of some alerts.
Speaker 14 (46:31):
So if you have it selected to turn off, it's
gonna do.
Speaker 8 (46:34):
You'll definitely turn that off.
Speaker 7 (46:35):
And I think it automatically turns it on because mine
was on and I never turned that on.
Speaker 11 (46:38):
You have to show me after this, because I think
I'm gonna just step by step on anything.
Speaker 9 (46:43):
So you go to settings and then you search what
attention awhare okay, and then you find turn It.
Speaker 3 (46:47):
Took us a minute to get there, but I finally
got there. I turned mine off. I don't need mine
adjusting if I'm looking at it or not. Yeah. You
just it's right here, life walk, Just go to do
you know how to go to settings? Okay? It doesn't
matter that story from the Verge?
Speaker 5 (47:03):
What so?
Speaker 8 (47:04):
What is it says? Command feedback, show confirmation, show.
Speaker 3 (47:08):
Him keep going down?
Speaker 8 (47:09):
Oh intention to wear Mine's not on?
Speaker 3 (47:10):
Okay?
Speaker 1 (47:11):
Oh.
Speaker 7 (47:12):
This is also if you've had problems with your face
ID like I have recently, my face ID will just
not work.
Speaker 14 (47:17):
And this is why, because.
Speaker 7 (47:19):
It adds another layer of security that you have to
be like dead set looking at your phone versus just
like popping your face up to your phone.
Speaker 8 (47:26):
I like to just casually look at it, and it
pays for things see, and it won't do that if
you keep it on.
Speaker 3 (47:31):
That's funny. Also, it does keep you from getting like hacked.
Like the good thing about Apple Pay with your face
is it's hard for someone to steal your eyes, so
it's hard for them to use that account. Like, if
you're using that account to buy stuff, were gonna need
you to tell me what you just said because I'm
not comprehending.
Speaker 7 (47:47):
So basically, if you have it on here, it's adding
another layer where basically you have to sit here and
hold your face very attentatively to for the face ID
to work versus before like you could just hold like
I could just face ID to lunchbox his face from
the side and it would work. Okay, So it's making you,
it's to your point, adding that additional layer of security
(48:08):
that really only you in the perfect situation, can unlock
whatever you have face ID attached to.
Speaker 3 (48:13):
You're seeing like crime shows where they steal their phone
and they put the phone up their face real quick
and get their unlocked. It's never that easy.
Speaker 9 (48:19):
No, And when you have sunglasses on too, it doesn't
read it You have to look down and be like, oh, okay,
then it opens it.
Speaker 3 (48:26):
Why don't you just love sunglasses? Up?
Speaker 9 (48:27):
Oh, I just I just look down, says sees in
my eyes.
Speaker 3 (48:29):
Are you doing that a lot?
Speaker 9 (48:30):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (48:31):
Okay, Well I feel like I learned about attention. Awhere
today Bobby Bone showad sorry up today.
Speaker 11 (48:38):
This story comes us from Boston, Massachusetts. A twenty two
year old man sees the police officer go into the
seven eleven. He's like, man, I've always won the duel
with the police officer. So he walks in, sees the
police officer shoves them. It says, what's duel?
Speaker 3 (48:54):
Duel? Okay? With what? With what?
Speaker 11 (48:56):
He didn't have a weapon, but he got that stupid
deal with your words in a rat battle. The cop
took him down, searched him, and he had some fentoyl
in his pocket, and he was under the influence of men.
Speaker 3 (49:10):
Probably why I wanted to I missed the days when
you can walk up to somebody, slap him with a glove,
challenge him to a duel.
Speaker 9 (49:18):
Will you take ten steps like opposite?
Speaker 3 (49:19):
Wow, but you disrespect him first with the slap of
the glove. You peel your glove off, pop slap you,
and you had to accept that slap.
Speaker 8 (49:25):
When was this what day?
Speaker 3 (49:28):
When last Tuesday? It stopped last Tuesday? Yeah yeah, okay.
Speaker 11 (49:33):
Lunchbox, that's your bonehead story of the day.
Speaker 3 (49:39):
Morgan has a first date story. Go ahead.
Speaker 5 (49:41):
Yeah.
Speaker 7 (49:42):
So I was messaging with this guy on Hinge and
we're debating where to go for a first day. He
was like, I'd love to go out with you. And
I had seen on his profile that he really loved
Olive Garden, and so I saw that that was like,
we should totally go to Olive Garden.
Speaker 14 (49:56):
He was like, wait really, And.
Speaker 7 (49:57):
I started talking to some girlfriends and I'm like, you
didn't not suggests Olive Garden.
Speaker 14 (50:01):
That's a horrible first aid idea.
Speaker 3 (50:02):
Why is it a horrible idea? I love Alive Garden.
Speaker 5 (50:04):
I don't know.
Speaker 7 (50:05):
Apparently, like they think it's just not a good idea
to do chain restaurants on first dates.
Speaker 14 (50:10):
They think that it could make.
Speaker 3 (50:11):
You look i don't know, not cheesy, not classy.
Speaker 7 (50:16):
Yeah, like the list of things, and I was just like,
I thought, Olive Garden looks like a fun spot.
Speaker 3 (50:21):
Olive's awesome, so good.
Speaker 8 (50:23):
He also had it in his profile, so that's cute. Yeah,
you know, don't.
Speaker 3 (50:26):
Let them shame you for being a normal Kansas middle
class Morgan, because I don't think there's anything wrong with
Allli Garden. I love Olive Garden. I love the soup
and breadsticks. Yeah, the soup and salad is because the
salad's unlimited. And then also I like the peppercini peppers.
I hate peppers and all ways except for the peppercinis,
and then obviously at the top of the salad and
(50:46):
they'll bring it back in and do it again and
with more fresh peppercinis. This is not a commercial. By
the way, Olive Gardens never paid us a knuckle. I
don't think there's anything wrong with Ali Garden. I don't
know why your friends are being haters.
Speaker 7 (50:56):
Maybe it's also because they're like, you're gonna eat so
much food and then that's how so happening on of
her steak because there's like endless breadsticks.
Speaker 3 (51:02):
Also cares is there a if you go out with
a guy, you're kind of letting him know your standard
immediately first impression. If your standard according to your girls
as Olive Garden, like that's not good enough.
Speaker 7 (51:13):
Yeah, potentially, But I've also always said, like you can
take me to Taco Bell on a first date.
Speaker 14 (51:17):
Like, you're you're just figuring out a vibe with somebody.
Speaker 7 (51:19):
And if you guys can't vibe at a chain restaurant,
then you're probably not going to vibe in other places.
Speaker 14 (51:24):
Has been my thought process.
Speaker 3 (51:26):
At least, I think Olive Garden is awesome at any
time makes me actually want to go today and just
have some soup and salad. So I think your girls
are they single?
Speaker 11 (51:37):
Uh?
Speaker 14 (51:37):
No, all of them are in relationships.
Speaker 3 (51:40):
They married rich guys, snobby.
Speaker 14 (51:43):
Only one of them has like a doctor for us.
Speaker 3 (51:47):
She the one that was anti Olive Garden.
Speaker 7 (51:49):
They yeah, they were like they were just questioning my
taste and was like, are you sure this is something
that you want to like put out there that Olive
Garden is okay for you for a first date.
Speaker 3 (51:58):
Well, first of all, he had it on his profile,
not a big deal. Second of all, Olive Garden's awesome,
and anybody that hates Olive Garden didn't get to hang
out with me, thoughts.
Speaker 8 (52:06):
Amy, Yeah, I think it's okay. I think it's cute
that you noticed that in his profile and you suggested
it as a date.
Speaker 3 (52:11):
And even if you didn't even I feel like, let's
go to Olive Garden.
Speaker 8 (52:13):
Yeah, that'd be fine. You're the ones suggesting it. I
think that there are guys, right, Bobby, that will take
all of this out of the equation. But they may
take you to a chain restaurant first date to see
how you react. It's like a test, don't don't some
guys do that.
Speaker 3 (52:27):
No, no, I know what none I know would do that.
They take you somewhere too fancy to try to show
you they're richer than they really are. Like that's usually
how guys if they're like trying to get action. Mm hmm,
unless it's somebody trying to hide that they have money.
Speaker 8 (52:40):
Oh yeah, yeah, that's what I mean.
Speaker 3 (52:41):
But that's like only on Hallmark movies. Oh yeah, that's
only Like there was some movie that were showing around
Christmas time with the guy was like a billionaire, but
he was a homeless guy and he was just trying
to find a woman by acting homeless, And that can
pop up on you guys's feeds at all. No money,
I say, pursue Olive Garden. That's a good one. Okay,
don't eat to wait?
Speaker 8 (53:01):
So have y' all gone yet or no, No, it's
it's in the it's in the works pending.
Speaker 7 (53:04):
Did he say yes, Yeah. You had to ask him, well,
he was like, are you sure. He's like, we can
go somewhere else if you'd like. I mean, I just like,
I do love it, but if you'd like to go
somewhere else.
Speaker 14 (53:13):
I was like, no, I want to go.
Speaker 3 (53:14):
Yeah, we support it. We support all of the Garden
you know what. Heck, we support Applebe's too, don't we
get Yeah, anywhere I mean, if you're not paying for it,
anywhere works, That's what I said.
Speaker 11 (53:24):
The Bobby Bone Show Bones.
Speaker 3 (53:26):
The Bobby Bones Show theme song, written, produced and sang
by read Yarberry. You can find his instagram at read Yarberry,
Scuba Steve executive producer, Raymondo, head of Production. I'm Bobby Bones.
My instagram is mister Bobby Bones. Thank you for listening
to the podcast.