Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
What's Happening with Friends? Welcome to Friday's show, More in Studio,
More Morning. So there's a TikTok trend and they say
if you put lemon into your coffee, it helps contribute
to weight loss, and so people have started doing it,
and now they're saying, listen, it's not true. Quote adding
lemon into coffee will not promote weight loss, just like
drinking lemon water has a little impact on body weight.
(00:32):
Wasn't that a thing for a while too, Well, it's
still it. I mean, the lemon water. Lemon is good
for you, and it can help, you know, with different
parts of your body, like cleansing and detoxing. But yeah,
it may not equal weight loss for people. So if
you're doing the lemon juice and the coffee thing for
the sake of losing weight, they say stop doing it.
If you like it, do it, yeah, I wonder if
it tastes good. No way. However, drinking more calorie free beverages,
(00:55):
especially warm beverages, can help to increase the feeling of fullness,
which may lead to eating smaller portions and weight loss,
But it is not the lemon causing the weight loss.
Earlier this year, there were a few TikTok accounts and said, hey,
this is it, this is the thing, and so on TikTok.
Everybody starts just running with it and doing it, and
then some people fake it just so because they get
a lot of views. They're like a fourteen pounds by
(01:16):
doing that and it didn't happen, but they know they'll
get a bunch of views. The other story from earlier
this week was doctors are blaming ticks like a not
the bug, like when you get a tick, Oh yeah,
when your muscle twitches. Yeah, that's a good on to
TikTok because these girls have ticks now from too much TikTok.
(01:37):
It's weird to say tick and TikTok. Yeah, So doctor
no I thought it was like an onion story at first. Two.
But doctors around the world are reporting a surge in
the number of teenage girls looking for medical attention for
ticks they've developed, like physical jerking movements and verbal outbursts.
The surge was baffling until doctors in the US, Canada,
and Australia started talking. They all realized that girls would
(01:59):
come in with this. They were all fans of TikTok
and they would be on TikTok for hours and hours
a day. Wow. They had been watching videos of people
sharing their experience with turette's and then doctors say teen
started developing these ticks because they had watched too much
of it. Wow, that's crazy. One of them I was
watching was these girls yelling the same word over and
(02:20):
over again. I think it was it was it beans?
Was that one of them? I saw like three of them.
They were just yelling out the word beans. You well,
then another one was yelling, oh, yeah, I get into
weird parts of TikTok. Another one they were yelling out syrup.
And again it could have been fake, yeah, because i'mlike,
people want views, But at the same time, if this
is real, then it's just showing how impactful stuff like
(02:41):
that over and over can be on our brain. Yeah.
These girls were going syrup yeah, and they were like,
we got this from watching too many TikTok's, But you
and I can do that, like we can you know.
It was like flowers yeah and just and we go viral.
But I don't think we will. We're older men, Okay.
But they're obviously at the doctor because they feel like
something is wrong unless they're doing that as part of
(03:02):
their act. Well, doctors around the world are saying that
people are coming to them because exactly teen girls are
getting ticks from tikto He might be time to take
a tick, break a tick or break or TikTok break
TikTok break break from the TikTok. Doctors said that teens
developing the ticks are likely to have pretty existing diagnosis
like depression or anxiety, and this is what's actually bringing
it out. This is doctor saying this. Yes, yeah, I'm
(03:25):
shocked at at all this, like if this is a
real thing, like that's crazy, like that TikTok would cause this. Well,
I think they had under yes of what got it?
Like if they're watching it over and over and they
have things and it um then it manifests like Bones,
keep us updated. If you started doing this, we know
what's up. I will stand. You're on there for how long? Well,
(03:45):
I don't know, toilet thirty minutes. I don't think that
we're on as long as these girls. I don't either talking.
I have a job, yeah, yeah, yeah, it is time
to open up the mailbag. You send something, Hello, Bobby Bones.
(04:08):
I heard the mailbag last week where you helped a
mom with her Halloween costume dilemma. I wanted to see
if you could help me with mine. We always let
our kids choose their Halloween costumes, but this year, the
only thing my eleven year old daughter wants to be
is a devil, a sexy devil. Oh no, what all
of her friends are dressing up in similar costumes like
(04:28):
sexy nurse. This outfit has a short red skirt, fishing
net stockings, and knee high boots. It just seems a
little limp inappropriate for her age. My husband and other
parents think it's fine, but I feel like they're too young.
Am I making a big deal out of it? Or
should I stand my ground? From Casey we eleven, it
feels extremely inappropriate to me for an eleven year old
(04:50):
Amy Europe. Oh yeah no, she said it seems sexy
because it is sexy, and no, no, no, And I'm
shocked that your husband is okay with it and these
other kids parents because hate when other parents are doing
things and you have to like, then your kid's the
odd kid out. But no, that doesn't make sense to
me at all. I would absolutely have to just work
hard to try to find an alternative like great, yeah, yeah,
(05:12):
how about that a non sexy great hot dog. I
don't know. Eleven just seems too young for anything to
be labeled as a sexy devil, sexy anything, Eddie. Yeah,
she's making a big deal out of it because she
needs to make a big deal out of this is
not appropriate. And her husband, what's wrong with you? You
need to be on the same She cannot let her
(05:33):
daughter be this. Why would he want his eleven year
old to be a sexy devil? That's red flag right
there too, mate, I don't know. That's the red flag
on the dad. Maybe maybe they costume a sexy devil,
but it isn't like a twenty five year old will
wear it. I don't know. I don't like it, but
I don't know. I'm just trying to justify the dad
going ham okay with that. Yeah, maybe he's just not
dialed in really, Maybe he was watching football. He's like yea, yeah, yeah, yeah,
(05:58):
that's what I mean, Like he's not really paying at ten,
because I don't see how he could be paying attention
and then think this is okay. But I do think
that it's going to be hard for her because all
of her friends are doing this, so you need to
like validate her feelings. She has every she can be
upset with you, she can be mad, but you have
to set this boundary now because now we're all forty Morgan,
you're in your twenties. Still, do we sound old? No?
(06:21):
And I don't think sexy is it? But I do
think she could be the devil. She just it's not
sexy devil like. Maybe she's just an all red and
she has horns. Maybe it's a compromise. What if it's
cute devil, I can take a little the sexy out.
So no fishnets but our fish nets itself, yes sexy, Yes,
that means sexy fish net HUDs are equal sexy. But
(06:44):
what if the fish net hose are like under shorts
and boots and you just see it like over your knee. Okay,
I don't feel like just fishnets for itself. Mean, well,
if you if you, if you put it that way,
then okay, fine, Maybe that's what I'm saying. I mean,
I mean, if you were fishnets, does that mean you're
automatically No? No for an eleven year old, No, No No,
I know That's what I'm saying. Like if an eleven
year old wards fish nets and you only see her knees. Okay,
(07:05):
is that still sorry? I didn't say that. I all
I heard was sexy devil. So I'm assuming it's like
a short skirt with like lots of fish nets. No,
it could be, But I said, what if you manipulate
the costume and turn it into like a devil. You're
saying the devil wears Jeane shorts with the fishing energy.
I'm saying she could in this situation. That way, it's
a compromise between the two. Maybe honest, something like, hey, yeah,
you get to put on this whole outfit, but then
(07:26):
we're gonna put a sheet over you. How about the
devil's wearing like overalls? Not sexy? It's unless you're on
Farmers Only, and then you know what it is. See,
this is so hard. It's eleven. You can't be sexy, right, No,
but it's it's hard for parents with kids like wanting.
I just feel like they're yeah, growing up so fast,
(07:49):
Casey mom, were on your team, Well you just can't
figure out your husband. I think that's what it is.
More than anything, Yeah, can he ride in? Send a
picture of this outfit to Eddie and I didn't want
to send to anybody, but I make okay, I'll take it.
I'm curious. Okay, there you go. We say no, you're right, Casey,
thank you for the email. Close it up. We got
your That was about to close Bobby's mail bag if
(08:15):
you want to email us, Morgan, what do they do?
Mailbag at Bobby bones dot com. We're gonna draft our
favorite cartoons. So the first first show you think of
Amy when I say what's the best cartoon? Is what
I go with? The longest running The Simpsons, Strong Simpson's.
(08:35):
It's a tough one. There are so many good cartoons. Yeah,
Flamy drafts the Simpsons as the first overall pick Eddie, Roggie,
give me scoolby Scooby Dude. Come on, Morgan, I watched
it all the time growing up. So SpongeBob SquarePants. That
(08:56):
was gonna be the one I took. Under this that's
a little Mermaid. Oh what does he say? What does
friend fromp says? What I just said? You didn't? I
just said under the z the Pinnacle, under the Sea cartoons,
and they can be any cartoon, right, this is your show.
(09:21):
Tell us what you want. I mean the list is
just cartoons. Okay, Oh, raise up, go ahead, Ray, I'm
gonna go with family Guy. Okay, m hm, it's up
to me. Now I'm gonna go with the Lion King.
(09:48):
Oh wow, does a TV show? No? Was a cartoon movie? Cartoon?
Oh well, let's just open a world of things. I
thought it had to be a TV show. I never
said car I just said cartoons. Well okay, then okay. Secondly,
I'm gonna go Shrek. Okay. Well we all entered this
(10:14):
as TV shows. You do see that when it gets
around to you, you're getting like the good movies because
you guys didn't pick them. We can also go good
movies too. Ay, there's a lot. Okay, bring it back around. Wait,
but what did I do wrong here? Nothing? Nothing, that's
your choice. Well, she's jumping all over. Let me tell
you something though, bones the voter is gonna be like, ease,
that a real cartoon or is that an animated movie?
So that's on you. But what's a cartoon? I get it? Great, Ray,
(10:38):
this is wide open right now, Garfield. Interesting, you may
have just lost her right there. Ray. I went with
my favorite cartoon. Back as a kid, I went with
my favorite cartoon as an adult. So I don't know
what else to do. Morgan regrets, but I got laughed at.
(11:00):
Well the last draft you did one, you yelled, this
is for the chick. You got like no votes? True, Eddie,
give me the classic. I mean, this reminds me of
every Saturday morning in my life Looney Tunes. Amy so
torn with what to do right now? Um toy story,
(11:29):
there you go. I like, hey, you jump on me,
then you jump then you get on the train too.
I like it, Amy, Why not, Eddie? Nobody's gonna be
judging our things, being like, I don't know if this
is an animated movie or a cartoon. Ever jumped on Facebook.
I don't want no, I don't okay, last round up?
Good one, Eddie, Yeah, I wanted that one. Bones. I'm
(11:52):
between two really good ones. Should I go traditional cartoon
or movie cartoon like you've done, just go, I'm gonna
I'm gonna add the movie. Give me Frozen, the biggest
movie cartoon out there, Morgan, I'm sticking with all of
the animated cartoons. I watched Younger and I'm going fairly
odd Parents Ray, King of the Hill. I think my
(12:19):
final pick is going to be. That's not the last one. Here.
Here's what I'm weighing. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, good one,
Beavis and Butthead good one, Noah, Rick and Morty, I
love Yeah, you love that. Looney Tunes already got it.
(12:42):
That was my second. I'm gonna steal it. You can
do like Bugs Bunny. I'm gonna go. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. Okay,
all our teams drafted. Yeah, you know it. Feel so
good about it? Really? I mean it's because I had
Charlie Brown kind of as a backup, but that whole
movie thing threw me off. But you're right, that's a
(13:02):
cartoon too, so who cares. Amy has the Simpsons toy
story in Flintstones, Eddie has Scooby Doo, Looney Tunes and
Frozen Let it Go. Morgan has SpongeBob, Rugrats and fairly
odd parents. Feel good about it. Raimundo has Family Guy
Garfield and King of the Hill decent, not going to
(13:24):
be last place, but not first. And then I have
The Lion King, Shrek and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. So
we'll see if my strategy of picking movies works. We
shall see a vote at Bobby Bones dot com until
six pm. We'll be taking your votes. Pick the whole
team you like, you know, not just the first round.
First round pick is easiest for the first person. Pick
the whole team you like, all right, Thank you good.
(13:46):
The latest from Nashville and Tullywood Morgan number two thirty
six Skinny Tim McGraw released a Christmas song called Christmas
All Over the World, Join the Jojoga freend to every
Boy This Christmas gard All. Lady A's new album is
(14:14):
out today called What a Song Can Do. Here's their
collaboration with Carly Pearce, Thomas Rtt and Darius ruckerd called Friends,
Don't Let Friends. This is gonna be all friends. You're
gonna little listen to the mos song Gonna make Acisions
(14:41):
and no Friends Friends. Lots of new holiday albums out today.
Brett Eldridge is called Mister Christmas, Brett Youngs called Bright
Young and Friends Sing the Christmas Classics. Pistolani's called Hell
of a Holiday. Antonil Town's EP called Songs for Christmas.
(15:04):
I'm Morgan number two. That's your skinny hat. It's time
for the good News. So a few weeks ago in Michigan.
Some firefighters were called because the kitten was stuck in
a drain, So they rescued this cat. This guy, Brandon mulvaney,
he's the firefighter that went down. He went like ten
feet down a pipe till he got to the kitten,
(15:26):
rescued it. Then they had to turn the kitten over
to the county Animal Care center. Then the kitten got
cleared by a vet, took a couple of weeks healthy
enough to get adopted, and the same firefighter Brandon that
saved the kitten showed up to adopt the kitten. Don't
you have to name it something like based on the situation, like,
we'll pipe your do you think pipe? No? Fire training
(15:49):
makes me feel like I'm having some sort of allergy issue. Well,
he named him Huntley, Okay, maybe after somebody in his life.
And then I wonder if as it's sitting there, the
rest of the fire crews looking, I'm like, dude, you
gotta adopt that cat. Well pressure in him? Yeah, Like dude, bro,
come on, you saved the cat, Go adopt the cat. No,
it wasn't so. Where the cat went down the drain
(16:10):
was at the intersection of Huntley and bridgeton road. There
you go. There had to be some themed about that
cat's name. Okay, that's what it's all about. That was
tell me something good fun. The five most fun facts
of the week, as curated by Amy. Let's go number five.
(16:32):
So Bill Withers wrote Ain't No Sunshine when he was
working at a factory making toilet seats for airplanes, and
he intended to write more lyrics for the part where
he repeats I know twenty six times. Yeah you know
the story, Yes, I'm big Bill where there's a guy no, yeah,
but he just other musicians were like, no, you should
(16:55):
leave that. But I mean it was just filler for
him until it wasn't Bill. Where there's Other songs include
lovely Day, Lovely Day, Lovely Day, lovely Day. He could
have put something in there. He just kept repeating it. Also,
le know me well not strong? Yeah, Bill Willis was
awesome man. All right, what else you got here? We go?
(17:16):
Number four. So Barry White was a gang member as
a teenager, but after he went to jail, and while
he was there he heard Elvis's song on the radio.
He decided, Hey, when I get out, I think I'm
gonna try to get into music. I love very for him.
Do you know any other Barry White songs? Oh no, Yeah,
(17:37):
on the top of my head either probably know him
if I heard him. But it's a good love making music.
That's when they made a lot of money, though. But
I think it love making music. I think at al
Green more than I do Very White one very White song.
But I think at al Green when when it's love
making music, I go Al Green. Okay, thank you for asking.
(18:00):
Number three. So gin and tonic popular little mixture for
a drink. It was invented in the early nineteenth century
simply to make anti malarial medication more palatable. So it's
like a chaser to anti malarial medication. Yeah, I guess
I'm just supposed to make it easier to take and
down and then it's stuck and now people get gin
(18:21):
and tonics all over. Also, cocaine used to being coked.
That's right, that's a fact. Oh not very fun though,
then it is. It is kind of fun. That sounds
pretty fun. Yeah, it sounds like Coke's rock. Next number two,
So kitcats are made using imperfect kit cats. It's kind
(18:42):
of cool. So nestly leaves no kitcat uneaten. Ever, so
every rejected kitcat is mashed into a pace that's used
to fill the wafer part of a kitcat. So every
time you're eating a kitcat, you're consuming layers of kit
cats within kitcats. I just had some Halloween kit cats
that were green like white chocolate grain and saw that
they're not good. I guess if you like white child,
(19:02):
I don't need a white chocolate kitcat. I don't even
like white chocolate. I know what. I saw a key
lime kit cat also, Oh yeah, I think we need
the mess with kitcats. Remember you like the best candy
on Japan and Edmond? That's right, green tea kit cat? Yeah,
you brought all kinds. When did green tea even become
like a good flavor of stuff? No, it's not. It's
just it's not a good flavor, like green tea should
be retired from flavors. It's good for a tea flavor.
(19:27):
That's it. Number one. So I thought this was cool.
In Germany, a McDonald's has a mic boat location, which
it has a float through instead of a drive through,
so you can paddle up on a dock, place your
order and then it's brought out to you by the
staff and it's called mcnote, mcmuonton, and it's cast it's
(19:50):
called it's a mick boat McDonald. That the best part
of a fun fact. Sorry, but hey, if you're ever
to Germany find the mc boat. What if you just
went to Germany to find this? Okay? In Late Lake
Travis and Austin, they had a barbecue place on a
lake on a boat. You could drive up to it
(20:10):
in order barbecue sandwiches at school. Or they also had
a jet ski and you could order it run it
out to you. When I was in Florida last time,
there was a guy on a like a little motor
inflatable boat selling ice cream. I thought that was cool too,
that's smart an inflatable boat. Yeah, it's an inflatable boat.
It's almost like a life raft. But I had a
motor in the boat. Oh yeah, yeah, ice cream and
you just like, we'll come over to your boat and
sell it to the shore. Yeah, not to other boats. Okay,
(20:32):
pretty cool. I maybe that was on my five phone. Fact.
Here's a voicemail we got from Emily. It was how
much I'm in Nashville. I have my eyes peeled to
run into y'all and I never see. But we're gonna
be there Thursday through Sunday, and you guys believe that
I'm run in y'all. As long as y'all are eating,
(20:55):
I'm gonna come up to y'all. I wish I out
a bit, do it? Come on, especially if Eddie's eating,
They're not gonna find me. I don't go anywhere. I
literally go nowhere, Sam, I don't need that. Kisily. Here's
a voicemail from her. I'm nine years old. I have
a more morning cornish for you. What's more amazing than
a talking dog? A spelling bee? Why did the football
(21:17):
coach go to the bank to get his quarter back?
That's all for now, FeelA love it. Amy's comes up
in about fifteen minutes. Here's one from Dan. I just
wanted to point out that happily married here. But Amy's
voice is probably the best radio voice I've ever heard.
She could read the Bible, I think, and I think
(21:37):
I would just enjoy listening to it. Oh, I gotta say,
have a great day, guys. Interesting and now, okay, maybe
he finds the Bible to be boring. That's what I think. No, no,
I know, but I'm saying that's. I mean, Bible really
has some interesting stuff in it. I know, yeah, fascinating stuff.
Here we go, here's the next one. For the love
of God, please tell Bobby that he is rolling a
(22:00):
I who die? Make a dice? Okay, singulars die, plural
dice play seas and gay A little dramatic there. If
I go, hey, guys, I'm gonna roll this die, everyone's weird.
Everyone's like, okay, Bobby, who are you fruit fru? What
are you going to Wall Street next? Fancy boy? I
would think you're talking about like dying. I'm gonna roll
one of these dice because who rolls a dice? Yeah?
(22:22):
I guess I'm just dumb. Please stop doing that, please,
So when we roll the die, I don't think I
can call it die. It's hard. It's not that I'm
sure it's right, but it feels weird. Yeah, thank you
for your call, though a little dramatic, but thank you
for your Call's pile of stories. So a third of
people won't sit down when they go to the bathroom
(22:44):
outside of their house, and I was like, only a
third what I used to be like that? But if
I really gotta go, I just gotta go, I'll do
things to make it easier, like I'll wrap the toilet
seat and toilet paper. Yeah, but y'all have it easy
even too. Number One, you stand and that's true. Yeah,
that's so fifty percent of the time. It's still if
(23:06):
you have to go, I'm just I'm not gonna hurt
myself and I'm having so many stomach problems anyway. But yeah,
I don't know. I expect people use the bathroom if
they had to at them all. According to a survey,
the scariest places to go are the office, a bar,
friend's house, or sporting events. The office is nothing. You're
there so much, feels like second home. Oh, except we
don't have hot water in our sink in the bathroom,
so I have to wash my hands in the sink
in the kitchen, which is weird, tough. Do you have
(23:31):
to wash your hands with hot water. That's the only
way to do it, That's the way you're supposed to
do it. Yeah, yeah, but I mean I have soap, Yeah,
but I like hot water, and sometimes I'll do cold
water soap if there's other people in the kitchen because
I want to walk out and not have them not
hearing me wash my hands, so I'll do cold water
wash sometimes. What else? So from the COVID people in
the room or people that have had COVID smell and taste,
(23:52):
where are we with that? It's all back organ. Nope,
still don't have my smell, my taste, but I have
how to get more again, smell back. Okay, I saw
a study to restore loss of smell, and sciences are
zapping people when they like an odor comes by and
then you zap them and then it shocks their brain
into selling what it is. We still have the dog shocker.
(24:15):
So what we'll do is we'll put some meat in
front of you, put right in front of your nose,
and then we'll shock you right when it's there. Oh
my gosh, that's very intense. We'll see if it brings
it back. Is there any more science to that other
than just shocking somebody. Well, it's technically an implant that's
going to zap the brain and it'll help people get
their smell back. But I mean we could do our version.
I'd rather just not have my smell than risk put
an implant in my brain and seeing what happens. What else?
(24:38):
So do you know the most dangerous sport. I mean,
I'll go to choose fromycle race, car driving. I'm thinking
of stuff on foot, Um, okay, probably something on it,
or it could be on a machine. What do you have? Well,
horseback riding that has been determined as the most dangerous
(24:59):
sport for hospitalizations and stuff like that. Which Ashley McBride,
she's on Women of Ihart Country this weekend and I
interviewed her and she was talking about her horse riding
accident and the one I was on got a little
bit spooked and mustrup was just long enough that I
lost my stirrup on the right side. It knocked me out.
Couldn't walk unassisted, so we had to wait until I
(25:19):
could walk, and they put stools on the stage at
different areas so that I could balance myself. Because when
you have a grade three concussion, you're really dizzy a
lot of the time. Just turning your head too fast
can do that crazy grade three concussion. So if you're
ever on a horse, be careful. And she's a seasoned rider.
I canceled my equestrian lesson for today. Yeah, you should
be safe. I know what that is, all right, go ahead, Hi, Amy,
(25:42):
that's my pile. That was Amy's pile of stories. It's
time for the good news producer. Ready. There's a fourth
grade teacher at Benjamin Franklin Elementary School in Bethel Park, Pennsylvania,
and a couple of years ago she started a Facebook
page called Franklin Bedtime Stories, where every Thursday, a student
(26:03):
or a teacher reads a Facebook live story. Well, a
few weeks ago she got surgery because she had a
brain brain tumor in her head. She got it removed,
but just to show her students that she's all right,
she went live last Thursday to read a bedtime story
to them. Pretty cool from her hospital bed. Dang from
the bed. Yeah, and I mean makes it real real.
Obviously it was a tear jerker, but everyone was so
(26:24):
glad to see her in good spirits and ready to recover. Dang,
a brain tumor big time. I know, it's big time.
Like I got nervous just getting put under whenever I
was getting a colonoscopy. In an endoscopy. Yeah, imagine you're
getting put under because they've got to go into your brain.
That's that's that as scary as crap, because I'm thinking,
(26:44):
what if I never wake up? And all they're doing
is putting a tube on my butt. Right, that was yours,
that's all. It was a real serious wow. And then
she did it from the hospital bed. That's amazing. That
is what it's all about. That was tell me something good?
What's happening everybody? According to this survey, seventy two percent
of men admit to eating whenever they're stressed out. For me,
(27:09):
it's now video games. If I need a second to decompress.
I don't know about stress, but to decompress, I will
go and put on my headset, or I will mute
the TV and list to a podcast, and I'll play
Madden Football like that's it. And I don't get in
there and play for hours at a time, and I
don't evenally play it with people online anymore. But I
will go in and mine is video games. Food is
(27:32):
number one for dudes. Then drinking, which doesn't feel safe, No,
it's not good. See that's a slippery slope. You go
down stressed when drinking might make you more stressed. And
then watching sports is at number three, Eddie, If you're stressed,
what do you do? You're due? I used to drink
and I used to eat a lot. But now I
just like to go play golf. Like my big thing
is like, just let me go play golf. I'll be
(27:52):
back in four hours. Oh it's hard to go do
that though, Yeah, I do about like I try to
do it once a week, but I haven't in like
a month. So that or walk the dog. I'll be
back in two hours. Say that one's easier just to
go do Sometimes I just get lost, disappear for two hours.
Does your dog look up at you and go do
Let's go home? The dog won't stop. The dog will
go for three hours if I let her. Amy, what
(28:12):
do you do? You're not a guy? Yeah, I mean
I go. I swing both ways, like I will either
not eat. It's an interesting way to describe that. Sorry,
go ahead, okay. So I either don't eat if I'm
stressed or I eat when I'm stressed, and either is fine.
I just kind of do whatever I need to do
to make myself feel okay in the moment. She is
(28:34):
an interesting way of describing thingth way she swings both ways. Okay,
I should say the pendulum swings for me. There you
go a let's go over and do the morning Corny
with Amy. Morning Corny, Where does a ghost go on vacation?
Where does a ghost go on vacation? Maliboo? All right,
(28:57):
that was the morning, Corny. If you get COVID pretty
much now, you can get it again after about a year.
That's what they're saying. The Yale School of Public Health
analyzed data unnatural immunity to estimate how often unvaccinated people
can expect to become reinfected with COVID, and it is
(29:21):
twelve to sixteen months or so. Eddie, you haven't got
it twice, have you? No? And I got it a
year and a half ago, right, but you also got vaccinated.
I did be. I got vaccinated obviously. I'm a big
backskuy and I think if I would have gotten i'd
have gotten it by now because I have friends that
got back vaccinated and still ended up with COVID. But
(29:41):
when I went to the Razorback football game, I was spitting, kissing, hugging.
Is a home is a homecoming? For sure I would
have got it then. Yeah, it's been very interesting to
think about. Yeah, all the places we've been and we've
never gotten studied me because I am invincible famous last
words the next week, extremely famous Morgan, how long ago
(30:04):
did you get COVID? It's been about two months now,
close to two months, so you're good. I'm good for
at least another ten, right, But I mean Morgan went
a long time without getting it and then wula does
that sound again? What's the sound of getting COVID? Just
like that? Like I just think, I yeah, I think
any day one of us could get it, even if
(30:24):
we haven't gotten it yet. The Whitney Houston Hologram Concert
debuts on the Strip in Vegas on the twenty sixth.
So next week, would you rather go to a concert
like this with a hologram of Whitney Houston or would
you rather go and watch like a tribute show with people,
real humans who are paying tribute to Whitney singing song.
Good question. I go hologram because I guess it's just
(30:47):
be kind of cool. The debut of an evening with Whitney,
the Whitney Houston Hologram Concert, is set for October twenty
six at Harris, Las Vegas. A live band, singers, dancers,
and Whitney as a hologram singing with the band in
the dance. So there's gonna be other people up there, yes,
but I wish they were all holograms. I watched like
Chucky Cheese or like Showbiz Pizza the rat don't. Yeah,
(31:09):
what do they call it is animatronics? Yeah, and they
were terrible. It's so bad. Don't get too close because
you can hear all the pumps and the springs going
in and out. Which one was that Showbiz or was
that they both had the band? Yes, Showbiz had the
big bear and the closer you got to it, the
creepier it looks. It had like three emotions, but it
(31:29):
was awesome as a kid. That was the coolest, craziest thing.
I want to hate on this hologram thing, but I've
gone to the Pink Floyd Laser Show before and loved
it too, And it wasn't even them as a band.
It was like just doing lasers of like images idols. Yeah. No,
Showbiz Pizza Fiesta and they had the full band up
the I'm looking at it now. I guess they both
(31:50):
had it, But I'm looking at Showbiz Pizza Fiesta right now. Man.
As a kid, I mean these machines and one of
them would always be broken, so like one of the
animals up there wouldn't move at all, and the rest
of them were like the symbols were never exactly right on.
Maybe they wouldn't even touch and you're still here. Oh.
I just was thinking, like a hologram festival would be cool.
(32:10):
Of all you have, like Whitney, Tupac, Elvis. It's like
a music festival of all the people that have passed.
A little dark, yeah, but cool. Joe Diffy, you know
Joe Diffy in Tupac on the same stage. You'll definitely
be into. How many times do you think you cry
in a month? It depends on the month, but okay,
(32:34):
there's thirty or thirty one days. Oh man, that actually
just kidding, but I mean it could be. It could
be up there, may be up there, Okay, my din
of the days maybe ten times a month, ten of thirty. Yeah, Eddie,
you I don't cry, man. My son asked me the day.
It's like, Dad, if you ever cried, I'm like, man,
not really. He choked up on the air the other
(32:54):
day when I did Elvie, Shane played my boy, you're right,
And then I think when I announced my adoption and
I probably cried a little bit there. So two days, yeah,
two days a month. Let's just go with this month.
A new survey found the average man cries four times
a month. Whoa, while women cry only three times a month. This,
I do think it to bend on what you have
going on. Hey, let's not skip you. How many times
(33:16):
you cry this almost this week? No? None, no, no none.
I am not a big crier. I wish I were like,
I'm not someone who goes out. You shouldn't cry. I
am so dead on the top and bottom part of
my emotional scale, like I never get that hat and
never gets so happy and I never gets so sad
because I just kind of had those things cut out
from my life, where I'm always like, you know what,
(33:38):
it's probably not gonna work out anyway. So when it
doesn't work out, I'm not that sad. And if it does,
I'm like, you know, it's probably not gonna last that long.
So I kind of stay in this little dead part,
you know, for a lot of my life. But I
would say maybe three times a year. Wow, interesting, maybe
once every four months. I told you. Ted last, So
the Jamie Tarts scene came on, and as Dad as
(33:59):
there and they hadn't really spending time together, and it's
a whole situation, and I started crying and I was
like I can't stop, Oh my goodness, and can I's like,
are you all right? And then once you realized I
was really crying and not kidding crying, you know, she
was quite comforting. But for her, she was like, wow,
are you crying? It was like seeing a lion at
the zoo. Wow. Wow to look at this, it is real.
(34:20):
That's crazy. So maybe you're crying more and more, you know,
like more and more? Says three times a year? Yeah,
I know, but I mean, how many times did you
cry ten years ago? None? None for ten years exactly.
I do think that I am. I think you're onto
something there where I think I have opened myself up
up a bit. I cried at my wedding, So yes,
I think you're right. I think I do probably allow
(34:40):
more emotion in now that I am married than I
ever have before. And ten years you're gonna be like
Amy crying every day. I'm like, how many twenty days
in this month? Okay? Well? Less? Also, I want to
talk about Raimundo for a second, because he's been invited
to be part of a show. There is a documentary
on HBO Max called the way down, and it's about
a church that's basically a cult, and it's like twenty
(35:01):
minutes basically it is, right, it's like twenty minutes from
where we do the show, okay, And so Raymundo was
at that church trying to get in the front doors,
and you put it on social media. Who reached out
to you. One of the producers of the show said hey,
can we use your videos? And they asked me some questions.
She said, the chase scene, there was a point when
I go, oh my gosh, somebody's chasing me. And she said,
(35:22):
was that real or you just faking? Then I said no,
there was Alexis that circled me three times and made
sure that I left the church parkulent. Wow, I'll call
that a chase scene because honestly, I thought it was
fake too, but I just thought it was a car
behind you in the practically like a poor innocent car
drives by and raised leg. There they go, how did
they find you? Possibly somebody following me and they're like,
(35:42):
oh my gosh, this is a guy that was able
to get because there was security. I told you, guys,
there was other people that tried to get in, and
they did cop cars on both the entrances. I got
lucky one of the entrances didn't have a cop car,
so I rolled through, did video, and they said we're
gonna use that in the next I believe it's early
twenty twenty two. Yeah, they're gonna put it a couple
more episodes. The Way Down is crazy great, it's a
great show. It's it's three episodes of a documentary on
(36:04):
HBO Max about the woman who started a diet plan
that said, hey, if you're skinning, you're you're closer to God,
and this is how you control eating. You just pray.
And so then she took that success, that money and
started the church. And there's a lot of trouble down
the road through and twists and turns that I was
(36:25):
not expecting that. I thought, oh my goodness, So are
they going to pay you? I mean, I stand need
you guys to help me negotiate it. Maybe, Oh I
don't think your footage is worth anything. Well I'll sign
and release you. Just do that. Don't get paid. Your
footage is not worth anything? What a rip off? Like nothing,
not even like some gupons. You should charge what Amy charge.
(36:47):
Put her daughter on that box let met. We could
at least get you a free HBO Max subscription. What
did you tell them? We're still talking, she said, I'll
send it over the sign and release, just sign and release.
I mean, it's you don't have anything that good. I know.
I just did three Instagram videos. I didn't know it
was good being in a documentary. And that car wasn't
(37:09):
really chasing you, it was drove by you. Oh my gosh,
it's times. Do you still keep do you have it?
What all that videos? Yeah, it's archived in Instagram. Okay,
send back it, say ten thousand dollars and just see
what they say. They're gonna laugh. Just see what they say. Okay,
they have money. See what they say. Found this list
(37:33):
of amendments to the Constitution that were never approved. I
think if these would have been approved, Okay. Eighteen seventy eight,
they submitted that an executive council of three replaced the president,
so it would be three people instead of one. Wow,
that would just be I don't know better or worse.
It would just be different, right, it'd be more Supreme
Court feeling than executive president feeling. In eighteen ninety three,
(37:56):
renaming this nation the United States of the Earth. No sounds.
Listen to America, Best Baucci, whatever, you know who were
named after. That. Whole thing's kind of a crappy situation anyway,
but United States of its Earth is interesting. Nineteen sixteen,
All acts of war should be put to a national vote.
(38:16):
Anyone voting yes had to register as a volunteer for
service in the arm. Let's go. That's a wild like, Okay,
if you say we go to war, then go fight war. Yeah,
put your money where your mouth is. Don't be sending
off people that you think you're better than to fight
while you sit your fat butts at home. That's basically
what that is. Nineteen thirty eight, The forbidding of drunkenness
(38:37):
in the United States and all of its territories will Yeah,
like drunk would be illegal. Well, that's probably prohibition. Time
to right where no alcohol? Nineteen thirty three an attempt
to limit personal wealth to one million dollars. I think
we could probably limit that. I mean, listen, we got
some of these guys with two hundred billion dollars. We
got some people who can't afford to eat breakfast, but
(38:59):
that was one million back then. My point is maybe
it's a billion. Maybe once you hit nine million, the
rest of it starts to get done because I'm a
big capitalist guy. But there's a point where it's just like,
what are you gonna do with that? And we got people,
we got homeless people everywhere, and you got two hundred
million dollars. You're you're having fun shooting rockets into space
while some people, you know, can't buy school clothes. Was
(39:20):
that a direct shot at Elon, No, that would have
been more of a Jeff Bezos. But I guess both
of them because anybody who's super rich wants to go
to space. Another one was an attempt to allow the
American people to vote, period later on on whether the
United States should go to war. Another one was the
right two citizens to segregate themselves from others. Well, that's
(39:43):
that one seems tricky. There's a lot of these, and
some of these were just making marriage between races illegal.
Oh yeah, that's crazy. Whoever submitted that we should like,
can we cancel them now? Yeah? I don't even know
who wrote that to even be submitted, like reveal that name.
Let's go and canceled them from back end the day.
But anyway, I thought that was. That was super interesting.
(40:04):
It's always very small decisions that make huge impacts on
you know, how we're living our life today. Like somebody
sat in a room and had to go through these
and they had to decide, you know what do we
call ourselves States of Earth? Dude? People have to go
in the army if they vote yes on war. I
don't hate that one. And I wonder how long those
discussions were. If they were like long discussions, like, well,
let's think about how many people are involved. People vegin
there in their white wigs in a house with no
(40:26):
ac sitting in a room. Yeah, it's time for the
good news. The New York Department of Sanitation helped the
Bronx woman by rescuing her family photo albums from the garbage.
Her name's Patricia. She had to move out of her
apartment because it was damaged by Hurricane Ida. She moved
(40:48):
in with her niece, leaving everything behind, including five photo
albums containing one hundred and twenty five years worth of
family photos. She said her niece's step son was cleaning
out the apartment and through the albums in the garage.
She's obviously upset, but she called and said, hey, there
anyway you can go looked at the trash in the department.
Supervisor went and found the truck that was at that
(41:11):
apartment on that day still had trash, and it went
into it, dug in it and found all of the albums,
which he easily could have just said, no, the trash
has already been dumped off at the dump. Ye. And
it's also a photo album. It's just so to some
people that could be like, well, it's not like it's
jewelry or a diamond ring. But he didn't. Edward Clavelo
(41:32):
tracked down the truck, got in found all the photo albums,
which is pretty cool and it definitely didn't need to
do that. But that's what it's all about right there
at Great Job. That was tell me something good. The
Friday morning conversation with Larry Fleet. Larry, how are you man? Man?
I'm hanging around about you. I ain't sending you a
couple of months that you've been over to the house.
I know what I tell people all the time, how
(41:53):
good you are? Thank you. I'm like, wait till you
see this guy. I know you guys heard him sound
check a little bit sound so good, jeez, played like
fifteen seconds from making sure everything sounded good and you
started playing and they were like it got good. Well,
I'm trying. I've been practicing good for you. I've been
the bedroom, yeah, learning some chords. That's where you get
(42:14):
the best rebb. You know. I do kind of want
to walk I know you and I walked through it before,
but just for for new listeners, because I feel like
there's so many people that are just now discovering you.
You were like out of music and you were working
back in Chattanooga doing what well, I was working in
the concrete really. Um it's kind of doing a lot
of construction work. But I had done that for a
(42:35):
long time, so I kind of knew a lot about
you know, I've done asphalt, paving and concrete and heating
air whatever it was, you know, a bunch of stuff.
So I got with this company and I've become the
guy that got to go around of job sites and
messed with concrete, rebar, asphalt, whatever it was. It kind
of knew a little bit about it a lot. So
(42:55):
that was my job, which was cool because I kind
of worked my way up in that and UH didn't
have to you know, cut rebar and tie all that
stuff anymore. I was getting to watch other people and
make sure they're doing it right, supervising at exactly. Yeah,
it was. It was good and so and well fast
forward just a bit. But you're at a wedding and
you're also doing playing a little music on the side
(43:17):
just to make some money. Yeah yeah, and you love music,
and but you had to work a real job at
this point. So you're playing at a wedding. And then
who was at the wedding who noticed you? A little
guy named Jake owen Um and he, uh, yeah, I
was making a little money on the side just well,
I mean it was it was for fun and somebody
needed me to come and play some songs. I said, yeah,
(43:38):
I'm do it. And there was money involved, so that
was good too. But uh, I'm sitting there and Jake
walks in and it was kind of the middle of
nowhere too, like it's a beautiful farm. But I wouldn't
expect Jake to come to this thing. And somebody said
he was, and I thought, yeah, they're probably drunk or something.
And sure enough he come out there, and uh he
(43:58):
sat and watch me play for a long time. And
at the end of the night. We just we got
to talk in a little bit and he tried to
taught me into quitting my job and I was like, well,
I can't do that. Yeah, Like what am I gonna do?
He's like, well, you should go for this thing. I said, dude,
I've I've tried to do this thing for a long
time and it didn't really work. So I can't, you know,
(44:18):
just equipment job and go play touchoos or something. I
mean that I ain't gonna cut it. And he was like, no, no, man,
I think you got it. And so I tell you what,
just take me on a road with you and we'll
see what happens. And he did, and a couple of
weeks later, I was on the bus with him and
we went down to Florida and play some shows. And
next week we're headed somewhere else and he's like, you're
(44:38):
gonna quit that job and I said, yeah, I guess.
So so I went in and quit it, and no, Lie,
it was like I don't know. A week or two later,
I was like, well, I don't need you anymore. You know,
I got these other shows going on. I can't really
take you on it. And I was like, what am
I supposed to do. Now you know, I can't. I
don't know what to do. So I kind of hung
around a bit and I just got back into right
(45:00):
and songs with everybody, and and that started leading into
other things. But and then I got one of my heroes,
Willie Nelson. He uh. I got the call to go
on a road with him right after that too. So
I was traveling around with Willie and uh playing this
old guitar here and just uh sanging for his crowd.
(45:21):
And they got it and it was cool and it
was fun getting him to meet those guys and William
they were real good. Timmy's yeah, And so here he
is and there's some more. Yeah, yeah, it's it's a
really an amazing story. And there's more to the story
that I want to tell him a second. But you
did kind of prime up the studio here with the performance.
I do want you to get to get to this
song here before we talked some more. Larry Fleet is
(45:41):
here and this song is so good. It's called Where
I Find God. You may have heard on the radio,
you may have streamed it. I don't know where you
heard it, but if you do hear it, everybody kind
of reacts the same way and they're like, dang, Like
I felt that, Like, I feel like there's a message
in this song for pretty much everybody going through something,
they tend to find their own message in this song.
Did you get a lot of that from people hitting
(46:02):
you up about it? Yeah, I mean because there was
a lot of different when we wrote it. And I
wrote it with Connie Harrington and she's one of my
favorite writers. She wrote I'd drive your truck for Lee Bryson,
all those all the good stuff, you know, and uh,
it was her idea. She was like, I got this
this title where I Find God, and she hit me
(46:22):
up wanting to write it with me. So I said
all right, And I said, well, I find God and
a deer stand in a hay field and driving. You know,
I live in Chattanoogas. I'd drive back and forth to
Nashville all the time writing songs and stuff. And I
said that's kind of where I do do my you know,
praying or whatever. And she was like, well, yeah, I
find you know, God at the lake. And so we
(46:44):
just started pretty much putting all of our places that
we talked to God and find God or whatever, you know,
in a song. Then I put some few chords to it,
and while we got a song. But uh yeah, a
lot of people come up to me and and that's
it's helped. You know, people have fought addiction or whatever,
and they ask me if I haven't, not necessarily, but
(47:06):
I can see where where they feel that. And uh,
you know a lot of people, just guys I go
duck hunting with. We listen to that going to the
duck blind, you know. So it's uh people use it
for weddings now and funerals. So I mean, I feel
like anybody can find their message in this song. You know,
it's so here it is. Here's Larry Fleet. Let me
(47:27):
say his name again because you need to know it
so you can respect it, so you can search it.
Larry Fleet. Here is where I find God, not of
(47:50):
his rock bottom sitting on on Ballston, ain't my tad
and put me in a can. It didn't have to
he see I was hurting. I always. I got his
name because I didn't feel worthy. He saved me just
(48:19):
the same day out on the water. Fish just wasn't
by put my pole down on the float around. It's
just a quiet I could hear old man saying song
(48:46):
speA still as you can't find peace side bottle or pill.
I'm from a bar stool to that heaven room Sunday
morning in a church Pep and de stain on Hafy
(49:10):
and then it stay back to nashby shaving lane with
winds down, me and him just riding around sometimes whether
I'm looking for him now that's where I find God.
(49:38):
Come on, Larry Fleet, Yeah, great job. You ever get
tiny people just going You're amazing all the time. Larry's
got a record out It's called Stack of Records. It
is really good. I'm gonna play a little bit of
that track number one. Hear a Stack of Records if
you want to know. Gotta know. So we're gonna come
(50:12):
back with Larry in just a second. One. I mean
a really hilarious story that again that I want to
tell about how good of a dude you are, but
also kind of an awkward conversation where Jake was like, Hey,
come over to the house. Can I tell that story? Yeah?
Because that one, that one's hilarious. Okay, so another Jake story. Well,
I'm kind of still stuck on that. Jake's I quit
your job and then he's like one more Jake's story,
(50:35):
but it's not really about Jake as much as it
is about Larry, and they kind of got it. Larry
is all right, and so we'll come back. I only
know these stories because I was hanging out with Jake
and Larry at the same time. The Friday Morning conversation
with Larry Fleet. Love Larry Fleet. He's here. Here's a
clip of the song that he just played here where
I Find God. And then I want to play a
(51:02):
little bit of track number nine, in Love with My
Problems with our friend John Party this suitcase say some
words coming back baby. That's just what I need. Get
sick of me if I can in love with my problems,
(51:28):
my problems, my problem. There you go. How's the record?
Mad people from loving it? Oh yeah, yeah, we messed around,
made us a country record. It's a lot of people. Yeah,
they people get it, and you know, it's a I'm
proud of it, like it's it's it's a singer songwriter
kind of thing, and um, you know, I write with
(51:49):
a lot of good songwriters and they're pumped up about
it because you know, it's it's country music. And and
the whole thing with Stacker records. Is I want to
each song to kind of be a little different. Like
when I was growing up, I had a stack of
records and my parents had and it was everything from
Ozzy Osbourne to Willie or Murrow or whoever you know,
or oldist reading. So I got a little influence from
(52:12):
all that, and I've tried to put a record together
of stuff that I've written. It kind of goes with that.
How was it playing the Grand Old Library for the
first time. You did that in September. Yeah, that's pretty wild. Uh.
You know, I kind of dreamed of getting there one
day and I tried to downplay it, you know, so
I wouldn't be nervous when I get up there. But
(52:33):
it didn't work, and uh, I mean it, and I
wanted to kind of do it a little different. So
I brought my upright bass player and my my buddy
who plays dough bro for me, and we went and
stood in a circle, just us three and I played
this guitar and we just did it old school and
it was really cool and people they were nice to us,
and and uh they seemed to like it, and it
(52:55):
was it was a It was a great moment I
had my little boy and my little girl with me
and my wife and stuff. So they don't get to
go to a lot with me. But you know, if
I'm going to grandall Opry, They're coming with me. And
so it was cool the story. I wanted to share
it because I learned it because I was hanging out
with Jake and Larry at my house and apparently Jake
had invited you come over because they were having like
a like a bonfire, like they're hanging out of his house,
(53:16):
right and he texts you and goes say, he says, what,
first off, we'll go back. I had worked fourteen hours
that day or something like that, thirteen or fourteen hours,
and I was tired, and I was sitting on the
couch and I get this text and it was like, hey, man,
you want to come over to this little bonfire. What
We're gonna have some people over and have big bonfire
(53:36):
and you know, have some drinks and just sit around
and pick a little bit. And I was like, honestly,
I was like, I don't know, man, I'm tired. You know.
My wife's like, I mean, it's Jake Owen, you know,
like you know, this is when I first got to
know and she's like, maybe you ought to go. I
was like, God, I'm tired. And I was like all right.
So I got up and got ready and I'm gonna
(53:57):
make my drive. So Jake's like, where is Larry. He's like,
I talk. I just texted on me. He said, he's coming.
I feel like it's been an hour. It's been to
Jake didn't realize letter was driving from Chattanooga. I was
on Moneagle Mountain when he called. He's like, where you at, bro.
I was like, I'm on mon Eagle Mountain. He's like why.
I was like, I live in Chattanooga. Like, You're gonna
drive like two and a half hours over here. I
(54:18):
was like, yes, I am. And we it was you
know what? It paid off. That was cool because we
got over there. We played a lot and it was
that night I had started. I never messed with social
media very much, you know, and so I had a
hundred followers on Instagram and that night Jake is like
posting about me, and I was like, look at this.
If all these followers are coming in, I had like
(54:39):
a thousand. By the end of night, I was like,
I have made it now. So Larry says he's not
big on social media, but him and I were talking
and I was like, yeah, I got on like one
of these apps and bought some bitcoin whatever and then
it like it bottomed out, like two weeks later. I
get a messed him going, how's that bitcoin doing? And
that's all I said, And I was like, I'm gonna
leave that on red right where I got them. Yeah,
(55:00):
but you guys, check out check out his whole record.
It's it's stack of records. Um. It came out in
late September, but it's so good. It has where I
find guy that he performed here earlier. Um, let me
play one more ray, play me track ten because this
is one of my favorites. Three chords in a lie
(55:24):
need sold good stuff. Man, thank you you got the
whole thing. Are you now having a little success where
you can put like lotion in your beard because it
looks very like full like are you beard? Take care
of your beard? In a new one. I've been I've
(55:44):
been that. You have been that guy. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
it's that's how you that's how you get it. I
mean it didn't nothing helps it grow, but I guess
it's manhood and or something, you know. But yeah, I got.
I got a guy in Chatto Chatogo Beard Companies. They
U Matt Patty is his name, which I think is
a cool name. And uh, he just he hooks it
(56:04):
up and he makes it all right there in his shop,
like it's got little waxes and all kinds of stuff.
So I go by. They're about to make my own sin.
So and what is your own sin? What would that
consist of? Um, he'd probably smell like winter green snuff
and maybe some bourbon or something like that. Odd combo.
But I'll take it. If that's Hey, that's you at
(56:26):
him at Larry Fleet. You guys follow Larry Fleet, great artist.
I do think you'll love the record. And where I
find guys doing great Larry Good to see your friend,
Yeah you too, yeas, hopefully I see him. There is
Larry Fleet. Everybody. Sorry, day Eddie is filling in for
lunch box. Oh my goodness. An elementary school teacher. She
(56:47):
has a reward box and when a student gets an
answer right, she says, hey, get something from the reward box. Well,
a couple students went up and got some marijuana edibles. Yeah,
I saw that. One kid in particular picked the edibles right, yeah,
one of them did. And then they went back back
and said, oh, I think I have some marijuana edibles,
and she said put that back, and then they go
back to get another one. Well it was another pack
of marijuana edibles. I wonder if she knew that's what
(57:08):
that was, because I saw the picture I read the story. Well,
the scary thing is sometimes it looks like just candy. Right,
That's what I'm wondering. Was there a confusion on what
she was putting in the box. And also, these kids
don't look like they're nine, Like, how old is this class?
They looked like fourteen, fifteen years old? They said elementary school,
that would be he's a tall kid. They blurred out
(57:29):
his face in the picture because he's a kid. Oh
so he knew what he was getting. I don't know
if he did or not. But when I read the
story and saw the picture, it's like a blonde, you know,
pretty school teacher. And they blurred the face out of
the child because they didn't want it in the news.
And he looked tall enough to be fifteen or sixteen,
So I guess the kid wouldn't have known that. The
kid just thought it was candy then, right, right, yeah, yeah,
out of all the other candy in the reward box. Yeah,
(57:51):
so then what does he do? Did he take it
to someone and go, hey, look at the candy I got,
and then they go, that's not candy. Well, I would
think when you get into a box of candies, you
know which ones are candies, because this one doesn't look
like candies that you've ever seen before. I don't know
what kind of does. It looks like a gummy style? Yeah,
like some can look like gummy, A little sprinkle, the
sugar coating on top, it looks like it would be
(58:13):
like gummy squares but there, but there is a certain
smell that comes along with it. But if it's in
the box, you don't really smell it. That's my point, Like,
did the kid get it thinking it was candy? And
then how did someone say, hey, that's not candy. But
you're missing the point. The teacher shouldn't have had her edibles. No, no,
no, no no, no, I'm not missing that point at all.
I'm just wondering how the edibles were found out. Yeah,
(58:33):
and how they got in there. Someone ate it and
was super chilly, man, No one raises their hands whatever. Yeah,
she's in Trouble. I'm looking her mug shot here. Yeah, oh,
mug shot, mug shot. She no longer works at the
school or the school district. Marijuana edibles found and teachers
reward box had to be an accident. Yeah, sure of
(58:56):
course it does. It's not a place to hide your edibles.
And South Carol Line as a state where you can't
even have those periods, correct, Okay. If it were in Colorado, yeah, California,
Washington State, places like that, I don't think she would
be in the big house. I think she would probably
got a slap on the wrist, like in Trouble for
having beer at school, right, more than having an illegal drug.
(59:17):
I mean, you couldn't even have beer in a reward
box though. I'd be pretty nice, though, it would be. Yeah,
that's that stinks, all right. Yeah, that's your bone head
story of the day. Let's do Flashback Friday, nineteen eighty eight.
Flashback Friday thirty three years ago today, nineteen eighty eight.
I was eight years old. The biggest country song don't
(59:39):
play it yet? It is Randy Travis. I told you so,
can you sing it? Oh? I don't know. I can't
you pull that music down and I told you so.
I think that's dam damn ice. Listen to my grandma
time turn that out. I told you someday you little
(01:00:04):
too deep Brandy Travis song for you. No, I know it,
I love Why do you sing it? You were looking
at adi a look getting anybody? Oh? Well, I don't
sing now, Amy Jeter Lorgan. You ever heard that song?
I think so, but I couldn't sing it back to you.
She was born in the nineties. Yeah, it's crazy. It
(01:00:24):
was eighty eight, right, but she was born in the nineties.
But do you know I was alive within this. I
don't know this song. You don't at all? Oh, he
must not, must not be down a deep deep deep
South Texas. I mean, I guess we're gonna listen to that.
I told you so, jam Man. I got the tape
of the gas station. I remember, Oh, my grandma got
at the gas station. The biggest pop song is Bobby McFerrin,
(01:00:47):
don't worry, be Happy, Be Happy. That's what I was
listening to. The Happy now the biggest thing in pop culture.
In nineteen eighty eight, Rosanne debut on a by See
This show was so good back in the day. My
mom loved it. We watched it all the time. I
loved it because my mom loved it. And then it
(01:01:09):
came back and then she started tweeting, and then she
killed the show. And I think the Connors is still
on now. I'm doing really well without without her. Yeah,
that's gotta hurt. It would be like if I left
and this was the Raimundo Show and it just did
even better. I got root for you guys that I'd
be like, dang, like that hurts a little bit. That's
a stretch, though. No, I don't think I don't think
it is. I told Amy one time, you're very talented.
(01:01:30):
It would be difficult to do what you do. He
told me that. I told you. Why would you not
tell me? That's weird. All right, that's the deal. We're
done with today. Have a great weekend. Barbara Corcorane from
Shark Tank will be on Monday and hopefully you'll be
back with us. We'll see it in by everybody.