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April 15, 2025 70 mins

We started with Bobby talking about one of his favorite movies, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind where the character erases people and bad memories. There now might be technology that would allow you to do what they did in the 2004 film. Bobby also talked about his idea for a new TV show he wants to explore. Then, Runaway June stopped by the studio to talk about lead singer Stevie getting engaged, new music and a crazy talent Natalie Stovall learned as a kid on fiddle that she hasn't done in years. We also talked about Katy Perry, Gayle King and the all-female crew who went into space yesterday.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Come on, man, I'm bib bones.

Speaker 2 (00:02):
There's a movie Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, and
I love the movie. And if you said who's you
favorite actor, I don't know that Jim Carrey would come
up just naturally. But when I think of my favorite
movies of all time, he's in all three of my
top three or four. Eternal Sunshine and the Spotless Mind
is probably at three, Truman Show is probably at two,
and the Andy Kaufman Man on the.

Speaker 1 (00:22):
Moon's one, oh yeah, and now the top. But I
did like it when I was a kid.

Speaker 2 (00:27):
But Eternal Sunshine at the Spotless Mind is all about
would you wipe out bad memories.

Speaker 1 (00:33):
If you could?

Speaker 2 (00:34):
Would you remove I'm not evenually traumatic, but just bad
experiences if you could. And so that was two thousand
and four. So if you go to today, this is
from the New York Post. Doctor Jonathan Rossouli, a neurosurgeon
at North Wales Staten Island University, says three emerging treatments
are changing with how we interact with memories. So there's

(00:55):
something called transcranial magnetic stimulation. So I think of it
as jumper cables because they kind of what it looks
like it uses magnetic pulses to stimulate mood related brain regions.
It's already being used for treatment resistant depression, meaning people
that are depressed but it doesn't matter what they give them,
they cannot, Like the medicine is not helping them, and

(01:17):
so this is rewiring how we emotionally process certain memories.
So this is this is jumper cables on the head.
That's one number two DBS deep brain stimulation. It's an
internal brain pacemaker involving implanted electrodes. It's used for serious
conditions like Parkinson's OCD and major depression, and also might

(01:39):
help reduce emotional intensity around traumatic memories. Very invasive because
they've got to cut your head and put.

Speaker 1 (01:45):
That in there.

Speaker 2 (01:46):
Yeah, but think about this, You're going, wow, that's crazy.
They put a pace maker in your head. Think about
the first time they said we're gonna.

Speaker 1 (01:51):
Put this in your heart.

Speaker 2 (01:52):
Like brain and heart very similar, and like how much
they mean to us to live? Like these are the
two things we need. And then number three is prop
and all prop and all therapy. The blood pressure. Oh oh,
it's the medicine. Okay, so I know what that is.
It's blood pressure medicine, So it's been found to dull
the emotional intensity of traumatic memories. This is the closest

(02:14):
they say they've they've come to eternal sunshine of the
spotless mind, a full on erasure instead of forgetting your
ex it just won't hurt as much to remember them.
So these are three different ways, all independent of each other,
that can somewhat mimic what the.

Speaker 1 (02:31):
Movie could do.

Speaker 2 (02:32):
Fully, I'd be all about the shocks, but that just
reminds me of like what they do people back in
like the fifties and sixties. Yeah, shot there, they just
shocked the piz out of them.

Speaker 1 (02:41):
They're like, you're sad shocked.

Speaker 3 (02:44):
So I don't think you're going to feel it.

Speaker 1 (02:45):
Is that what you bought me for my birthday?

Speaker 2 (02:46):
Which one of these similar transcranial magnetic stimulation.

Speaker 3 (02:51):
Yeah, it's sort of like you're being yeah, like shocked.

Speaker 4 (02:55):
The way I.

Speaker 3 (02:56):
Would describe it too, or it's been described to me
about what's happening with the rewiring of the brain using
the electrodes is like when your heart is out of
rhythm and you shock it back into rhythm.

Speaker 1 (03:06):
First time that's told to somebody.

Speaker 3 (03:07):
That's a great point right, so my brain person is
even said, it's almost like if your brain is out
of rhythm, not functioning the way we want it to,
we we shock it back in to operating as it should.
Because certain parts of your brain during traumatic events shut down,
go to sleep, and you can wake them up.

Speaker 2 (03:25):
That's wild now, it's not wild right now because it's
been happening for so long. But the first person that's
told that, hey, we're going to shock your heart right
and we're gonna make it beat differently.

Speaker 5 (03:35):
But inn't that usually before they die, like was last resort,
We're going to shock your heart.

Speaker 2 (03:39):
Maybe, but the the people that discovered the X ray
that figured it out, like they die doing it.

Speaker 1 (03:43):
But oh no, yeah, because yeah all the radiation radiation
oh mad me have his wife like yeah, yeah they all.

Speaker 2 (03:52):
I mean that sucks, but I would imagine it's that's
not a before they die type thing.

Speaker 1 (04:00):
No, that's good, that's like no, no, he's saying the
first time, the.

Speaker 5 (04:03):
First time they did the hey we're going to shock
your heart to get it back. And I don't know,
maybe though I think it's like you're dying, yeah, go
for it. Shock me.

Speaker 2 (04:08):
I would just think if somebody figures it out and
it's like, I give five hundred bucks somebody who.

Speaker 1 (04:13):
Let me do it like that.

Speaker 2 (04:15):
Yeah, it's got to be one of those two, right,
William Conrad Wrongtan, he discovered X rays. He died of
colorectal cancer. He did extensively experiment with X rays. The
dangerous radiation were well not understood in his time. They
say he took steps to protect himself. What about his
wife though, too, because he'd I.

Speaker 3 (04:36):
Don't know, I just remember something about her.

Speaker 2 (04:38):
But yeah, and so he did die of that cancer.
And the whole debate now is is that what caused it?

Speaker 1 (04:45):
Cancer? You know what I mean?

Speaker 5 (04:49):
All signs point to yes.

Speaker 3 (04:51):
So I had the first use of the defibulator documented.
Maybe there's other times that.

Speaker 2 (04:59):
I bet the first later was not documented and was accidental, Oh,
like a lightning bolt on a cave man or something like. Yeah,
but yeah, I would have to be one of the two.
Like somebody offering money to somebody or somebody, Yeah, that's
probably their heart's really left up that.

Speaker 3 (05:17):
For the first documented use was by doctor Claude Beck
in nineteen forty seven, to was used to restart the
heart of a fourteen year old boy undergoing open chest surgery.

Speaker 6 (05:29):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (05:29):
The wife of that guy they say did not die
for radiation. She underwent the world's first X ray in
her hand in eighteen ninety five, and her reaction was
likely due to the novelty of the experience and not
from radiation sickness. She passed away from chronic illnesses.

Speaker 3 (05:44):
What chronic illnesses?

Speaker 2 (05:45):
But in eighteen anything is a chronic illness. So you
get a cold, you probably die.

Speaker 7 (05:49):
That's crazy.

Speaker 5 (05:50):
Why didn't bro x ray his own hand?

Speaker 1 (05:52):
Why his wife?

Speaker 7 (05:55):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (05:55):
Someone that said the button the button man, that's long.

Speaker 5 (05:58):
That gots it to be like, hey, wife in there understood.

Speaker 1 (06:01):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (06:02):
She was probably wanting to be a part of his work,
I think.

Speaker 2 (06:06):
Or it's hey, if this works, my bigger house, right,
So she sticks her hand in there. I don't have
to pay somebody to come do this. Did you ever
happ when the guy paid the guy get his heart
he died immediately. Uh yeah, So I don't know all
that that brain stuff. I think for me, it's easy
to go. My trauma has shaped me because I don't

(06:27):
have sexual trauma, and I think if that were the case.

Speaker 1 (06:31):
I'd probably be all about it.

Speaker 2 (06:33):
For me, like, I have trauma that has absolutely affected
healthy and unhealthy ways that I live my life now,
and I'm very grateful for most of it at this
point because I think it's made me, it's put me here.
But I don't have like sexual trauma where I think
I probably would want to eliminate that.

Speaker 3 (06:50):
Yeah, I'm thinking like, yeah, sexual trauma, war trauma, oh.

Speaker 2 (06:55):
Man, yeah, especially war trauma that affects your day to
day like yeah, with people like crazy PTSD, Yeah I could.

Speaker 1 (07:01):
I can sign up for that one, but all that brains,
that's pretty wild.

Speaker 2 (07:04):
Man.

Speaker 3 (07:04):
Have you called them yet.

Speaker 1 (07:06):
Or their number?

Speaker 8 (07:07):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (07:07):
You know, you did send me their number? He just
has good to go.

Speaker 3 (07:09):
It is good to go, so let me send you.
You're gonna have to call though, or because I can't.
I don't know what information you want me to give them.

Speaker 1 (07:16):
They're really going to shock me.

Speaker 3 (07:18):
They're going to put electrodes on your brain. So yes,
but you don't feel the shock, like things are happening,
but you don't feel it.

Speaker 1 (07:27):
I want to do LSD.

Speaker 3 (07:28):
The wave links are like little let them talk, Okay,
I also am I also can support this.

Speaker 2 (07:35):
I want to do acid. Let's go baby, Yeah, I
want to do LSD. I've never done a drug. I
still think my idea of a show Bobby does Drugs
is a hit because here you go. It's like, here's
this guy's never done anything like this, and we're and
he's gonna do it for the first time, and it's like, okay,
here he is. I haven't drinking a six pack and
it's me drinking it. Then just me after if I'm
drunk or whatever, I do shots whatever it is, like

(07:57):
I go out the boys.

Speaker 5 (07:58):
Yeah, that'd be awesome.

Speaker 1 (07:59):
We see what next, next one up. It's like, all right.

Speaker 2 (08:02):
The thing about smoking, though I don't like heat, I
don't even like drinking hot stuff. I don't think I
would like to smoke anything like even if there wasn't
like even at like a like all a hookah with
nothing in it, no tobacco, because they can just put
I don't know flavors, I don't know. I don't know
it works smoking stuff. It doesn't feel good, like in
my chest. But it's like Bobby smokes weed, and so
that's what that does to me. I'm like, hey, man,
like I think that would be interesting, like to see

(08:24):
the effect of somebody who's never had it done to
them and how they feel about it, because I've just
done nothing.

Speaker 3 (08:29):
How do you do it in a way that doesn't
encourage other people just doing it.

Speaker 2 (08:33):
I don't think it's a bobby. I don't think it's
a non encourage or an encourage. I think it is
strictly a clinic. I would compare it to the making
of the X ray, yeah, or the defibrillator exactly.

Speaker 3 (08:43):
Because like I could get I could understand your desire
to do LSD for uh oh, for sure, therapeutic all
the new experience.

Speaker 1 (08:51):
Just watch the New Black Mirror.

Speaker 2 (08:54):
Yeah, I mean in reading like Steve Jobs and all
those guys that did LSD or acid as us, something
that you know changes the brain wiring a bit, like.

Speaker 1 (09:04):
These synapses.

Speaker 2 (09:06):
So they would do it like in closed rooms though, right,
like oh yeah, they don't like go to a rave
and then to acid, then come out and be like
I've changed. So that would be interesting, Like what's cocaine
feel like everybody else?

Speaker 3 (09:20):
I don't want you to try that.

Speaker 2 (09:21):
Well, I don't want me to try any of it,
but I think it's a funny. I think it'd be
a fun show.

Speaker 3 (09:25):
So you would do it if you get the one
did to one of.

Speaker 1 (09:28):
Them, baby, the one that.

Speaker 3 (09:32):
Interesting is like, I feel like that's just like But
because the rest of the seasons, Amy, I can sign
up for a controlled, like psychedelic type situation, but not
you just like snorting cocaine that could be laced with
fittanyl and then you die.

Speaker 2 (09:45):
I would make sure i'd have somebody I do, like
all the dictators did have somebody do.

Speaker 1 (09:49):
It before I did it to see if they died. Whatever,
bobbies on the street, you try cocaine like the show
is never going to end, you would get hooked.

Speaker 2 (09:59):
Well, so huge, Okay, But again, it's not about the
enjoyment of the drugs, which I'm sure there's enjoyment, and
I'm sure I would enjoy them immensely. I've just not
done any of it, not for any moral reason whatsoever,
but because I have always been afraid I would get
adicted because of all the addiction of my family. But
I just think I'd be really compelling to watch somebody

(10:19):
who's never done anything do it all and then show
the effects, like needles would start to be I probably
draw the line like the dragon probably wouldn't chase the dragon.

Speaker 3 (10:29):
What heroin yeah.

Speaker 7 (10:30):
The h oh my goodness.

Speaker 3 (10:32):
Yeah probably not.

Speaker 2 (10:34):
Yeah, that's probably, but I mean if ratings were down,
you're like, we really need you to chase the dragon.

Speaker 4 (10:39):
I mean.

Speaker 3 (10:41):
I feel like that's stuff you see on the.

Speaker 2 (10:44):
Like the dark web, like peote or like the Aaron
Rodgers stuff where it.

Speaker 7 (10:48):
Goes down al lusha alohusha.

Speaker 1 (10:50):
Oh that stuff would be interesting.

Speaker 5 (10:51):
What about fentanyl?

Speaker 4 (10:53):
Is that what you were trying.

Speaker 2 (10:55):
Ashwaganda's get over the counter?

Speaker 1 (10:57):
Yeah, that's like supplements now.

Speaker 9 (10:59):
Couldn't let's I was trying to say, honestly, got it.

Speaker 7 (11:01):
You haven't read about Aaron Rodgerson.

Speaker 3 (11:04):
Oh that's what I haven't watched a documentary, but he's
real into What did he do? What's it called.

Speaker 1 (11:10):
Ahwaca alwasca? Yeah?

Speaker 3 (11:11):
Yes, yeah, like ketamine type stuff.

Speaker 1 (11:16):
Interesting one.

Speaker 3 (11:16):
Yeah, I mean I did under the guide of a therapist.
Controlled it's legal here in the sty.

Speaker 2 (11:23):
But I was putting your hands like you're getting arrested
the guys, guys.

Speaker 3 (11:27):
Because some people go to like some shaman in the
middle of nowhere. I didn't do that. I went to
my therapist who has specialized in it for like seven
or eight years, and I took a very teeny tiny amount.
But let me tell you why. I was seeing some
crazy things, like like my sister was a frog?

Speaker 5 (11:43):
What really in person?

Speaker 10 (11:46):
No?

Speaker 3 (11:47):
No, Like you know, we were in the water and
she would pop up out of the water as a frog.
Wasn't there, she was not there, but she was my sister.
But she was a frog.

Speaker 1 (11:56):
But your sister wasn't there. You were visualizing yourself.

Speaker 2 (11:59):
She was a my brain, we were thinking you were
seeing her in person, and she was she.

Speaker 3 (12:03):
Was a person in my three hour my three hour
escape or whatever long I was laying there. Yeah, yeah, and.

Speaker 1 (12:12):
Then all that's great. I listen.

Speaker 2 (12:14):
I okay, look why LSD might help the brain, But
I still think Bobby Does Drug is a funny show
that probably never do.

Speaker 1 (12:19):
But that's six solid episodes on Netflix.

Speaker 3 (12:22):
Yeah, like yeah, but I'm gonna be nervous the entire time.

Speaker 2 (12:27):
Me too, Okay, But I mean, first you have some
shots the boys.

Speaker 5 (12:33):
Okay, that's that's the part of the I've always.

Speaker 1 (12:34):
Wanted to do that one.

Speaker 7 (12:35):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (12:36):
And then you smoke weed.

Speaker 2 (12:38):
Yeah, and then you're like wow, and then and then
what do order? Let me go, I go shots, I
go weed, I do cocaine, I do cocaine.

Speaker 1 (12:47):
Then I do cocaine crack.

Speaker 5 (12:49):
No, whoa, that's a big jump.

Speaker 1 (12:51):
It's a big jump. You're talking about dirty amount of drugs.
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (12:55):
Then they have like mushrooms, right, Amy's like one of mushrooms.
Amy's like, then we share needles, but she's like going
into the tark place. Hold on, let me get my
drop my six episode series here. Okay, Number one shots
with the Boys, I call that one. Number two smoking weed,
getting chill. Number three snort, uh, nose candy. There we go,

(13:19):
as I call that episode nose candy I've never even seen.

Speaker 3 (13:22):
Oh, and then Harroin with the Homies.

Speaker 1 (13:24):
Not I'm not. I don't think I'm doing heroin.

Speaker 3 (13:27):
Well, a lot of drugs.

Speaker 2 (13:28):
Number four, that's a lot more. Number four Ecstasy.

Speaker 5 (13:31):
There we go.

Speaker 1 (13:32):
Oh my gosh, you got a rave.

Speaker 2 (13:36):
I need a pacifier and a mess shirt with my
nipples cut out.

Speaker 3 (13:42):
Molly, yeah, same thing.

Speaker 1 (13:43):
Yeah yeah, So okay, hold on, So that's four ecstasies.

Speaker 5 (13:46):
Four Molly with Miley, Miley, cyrus with ecstasy with everyone.

Speaker 1 (13:57):
Uh, I'll have a name yet that one. They gotta
come back.

Speaker 2 (14:01):
Molly, it's not Molly. I'm taking ecstasy because I'm not
giving it the nickname.

Speaker 3 (14:04):
But won't you doesn't that mean doesn't it make you
want to take it? Does?

Speaker 5 (14:10):
Dude?

Speaker 2 (14:10):
Mostly already my shirt with my nipples off. Okay, so
that's four episodes. I'm gonna I want to do LSD,
so acid would be five and then my what's my
finale though, Like.

Speaker 7 (14:30):
It's gotta beth, crystal.

Speaker 5 (14:33):
Meth, crystal, Oh my gosh, dude.

Speaker 2 (14:36):
Like there's a lot of myth where I come from,
but it ain't crystal. Crystal is expensive. Crystal is like
clean expensive for the most part. Uh, we would we
where I come from, We do like draino meth, make
it with a bunch of chemicals.

Speaker 1 (14:49):
Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah yeah.

Speaker 2 (14:50):
So yeah, so you end on mass crystal meth, and
then I review them all at the end of each other.

Speaker 5 (15:00):
So yeah, like it would be you like all high
and everything. But then you would come afterwards and be like, oh,
so this is what happens.

Speaker 1 (15:06):
A bonus episode. I do bat salts if I come back.

Speaker 5 (15:10):
Will you sniff those? I don't know.

Speaker 2 (15:11):
People used to go crazy on though there for a while,
or I break off the top of those cans whippets,
Oh I don't even know what.

Speaker 7 (15:21):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (15:22):
A whippe it is if it's a part of another one,
but it's just like a breathing right, Yeah, I don't know.

Speaker 6 (15:26):
Yeah, Steve O was on those man that was so bad.

Speaker 2 (15:29):
To watch, So bad Man, Bobby does drugs beat the show.
Here's how LSD helps the brain. Under LSD, areas of
the brain that don't usually talk to each other start communicating.
Think of it, like your brain switches from email to
a giant group chat. This can lead to new insights, creativity,
and emotional breakthroughs. This is what Steve jobs would do.

Speaker 5 (15:49):
But like, does it know which ones it's communicating with?
Like what if like pooping communicates with handshaking?

Speaker 1 (15:55):
You mean the parts of the brain.

Speaker 5 (15:56):
Yeah, Like I don't want them communicating, it'll be difficult.

Speaker 2 (15:59):
It quiets the default mode network what they call the DMN.
This is a part of the brain tied to ego,
self criticism, and rumination and that little voice that never
shuts up. LSD turns the volume down on that part,
which is why some people feel free, deeply connected, or
like their sense of self has been dissolved in a
peaceful way. That's why It's also used for depression, anxiety,
and PTSD, and they've had massive success with microdosing LSD.

(16:23):
It can reset rigid thought patterns in depression or anxiety.
Your brain can get stuck in loops, same thought, same reactions.
LSD can act like a mental shakeup, helping the brain
form new pathways and perspectives. That's why researchers compare it
to hitting a mental reset button. It boosts serotonin. LSD
mimics serotonin, the brain chemical tide to mood, memory, and learning.
But it does in a very unusual way, activating serotonic

(16:44):
receptors more powerfully in a different brain regions than usual.
And it says important notes. This does mean lsdsa for everyone.
It's powerful and predictable and to be dangerous with that
proper context, use guided therapy sessions, small doses of medical supervision.

Speaker 1 (16:58):
Amen.

Speaker 3 (17:01):
You should watch that documentary. There's a book too, but
it's on Netflix Netflix called How to Change Your Mind.
A journalist did what you're doing. He went and did
like each episode is him trying a different He did
my show No not No, as different like psychedelic. He
didn't do like Shots with the Boys.

Speaker 1 (17:20):
I already drank.

Speaker 3 (17:21):
I have no idea. He's a he was older, like
a journalist. I know that he wrote a book and
I ended up my therapist when I was starting the ketamine.
She had me watch it on Netflix. What do tell you,
my sister the frog. I don't really know that she
told me anything, but I just felt things from her.
That was the first time. The second time she was

(17:43):
a zebra on a drum kit. And but you know
what that told me. Yeah, she was good. She was
like keeping the beat of my life and that she's
like my She's like my north star, you know, because like.

Speaker 1 (17:56):
Bob Marley Overer's been going at it. We had no idea.

Speaker 3 (17:59):
Because she and it showed me like she's like cause
my mom died, my dad died, like my older sister,
Like she's who about being I don't know, but like
even right now, like my throat starts to tighten up
when I think about it, because it was a real
emotional experience. Like I'm not crying in a bad way
at all.

Speaker 2 (18:16):
It's just a great wonderful metaphor the zebra.

Speaker 3 (18:19):
Keeping the meat, I know, And it's not like she
was a full zebra. It was just a zebra head.
She was just a zebra head, and she was like,
you know, like keeping the beat of my life. Like
anytime I felt lost there she was keep it with
the beat. And so it was like for me, she's
like my guide it. And yeah, my mom and my

(18:41):
dad they would they were like laying next to me
in the ocean, like I was alive and floating, but
they were next to me, dead and floating. But they
were there with me, and it was real comforting. It
was really wild. But I will say when I came
out of it, I vomited.

Speaker 1 (19:00):
Were you naked?

Speaker 11 (19:02):
No?

Speaker 3 (19:02):
Fully clothed with a blanket. The thing about ketamine that
I found to be good, I don't know anything about
all these other.

Speaker 1 (19:09):
Uh like what do you wear?

Speaker 3 (19:10):
You could take you you I would show up in
my clothes. You could show up in sweats, but sometimes
I wore jeans, and then I had like a blanket.
She puts a mask over your eyes, recording me. No,
she's there with you the whole time, like your person.
Nobody there's music.

Speaker 1 (19:27):
There'd be afraid fears. I'd be afraid.

Speaker 2 (19:29):
I would just start taking the dumb places like on
the open or waking off of the.

Speaker 3 (19:33):
Yeah, well, So the great thing about ketamine, which I
think is you know why she loves it so much,
is that that is one where I don't know if
some of the others you take and you're off in
this other world and you don't have awareness of where
you are in the moment what I was taking. I
was away in my La La land in my brain.
But I also was aware that I was in a

(19:53):
room and I.

Speaker 1 (19:54):
Could steel my hands.

Speaker 3 (19:56):
I was aware I was in It was like a.

Speaker 1 (19:59):
Dual, right, were you aware that you were in La
La land?

Speaker 3 (20:02):
Yes, like I was aware that sometimes that's on a
roller coaster in a rice field my brain and you
couldn't stop it, like I was like on like a
like a just imagine being in a rice field. A
lot of Asian influence in my would pop up, like
in my trips. I guess you call them.

Speaker 1 (20:23):
How many times you do this?

Speaker 3 (20:24):
Three?

Speaker 1 (20:25):
So were they all different? Frog? Zebra all different? Yeah?

Speaker 3 (20:28):
Zebra was two time two, Frog was one. Also in one.
I would emerge from the ocean like a you know,
like when a gymnast sticks her landing after she does
her whole routine, like she's done her flull routine and
then she yeah, Like you know, I kept emerging out
of the water with like a like a pose. But

(20:50):
I really feel like I was like it was me
being like you've got this, like here you are, like
have confidence emerge. You're okay because I did it after
my divorce and having to like take on a lot
of new stuff that I was just terrified of.

Speaker 2 (21:09):
But after the trip, call them trips, experiences, whatever you
call them, right, I'm not minimizing. I just don't know, Tom,
I don't know that after your experiences, what was the
long term benefit, Like did you feel were you rewired
in a way for months?

Speaker 3 (21:22):
A lot of my yes, I will say my inner
voice and that would speak to me. My inner dialogue
was so much kinder. It's almost like, yeah to your point,
when you know, when you go to the dentist and
you get that laughing gas and.

Speaker 1 (21:38):
You're like, I was like, love is what? Like was awesome?

Speaker 3 (21:42):
You're not anxious about anything, You're not paranoid, you're not
thinking about anything. I would say you was off though
I was honestly no, he didn't no, and you're not
doing again.

Speaker 4 (21:54):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (21:54):
Maybe can you imagine your dentist and with the laughing gas.
All a sudden they start wagging off.

Speaker 5 (21:57):
They wouldn't tell you that's terrible.

Speaker 1 (22:00):
Yes, sorry, go ahead.

Speaker 3 (22:02):
Where was I? I guess I'm just like you had
that freedom like that inner voice. I used to loop
a lot, like overthink thoughts, and I don't I have
freedom of that like it? Sort of it was described
to me like this too, like you have all these
little cobwebs in your brain and when you do a trip,
like it goes in there with a little vacuum and
sucks them all up. So my little cobwebs were some

(22:24):
of my anxious thinking and my overthinking and analyzing and paranoia,
and like all that was just gone.

Speaker 2 (22:30):
Final question, did someone have to prescribe this for you
could just show up somewhere.

Speaker 3 (22:36):
No, I had to. My therapist had to set me
up an appointment with the doctor here locally. I go
to him, then he prescribes it to me. I go
to a compounding pharmacy, I pick up my ketamine, and
then I take it to her and she puts it
in a little cup and we have a little ceremonial
experience with it in the wooden bowl, and then in
her office and I stick it under my tongue for

(22:57):
fifteen minutes and you can't swallow. You're sitting there for
fifteen minutes, no swallowing, and its tastes horrible and you
can't eat. You have to go on a fasted stomach.
And then all of a sudden, it's time to lay down.
And then you lay down and you disappear into your
little world and then you wake up, and good luck.

Speaker 1 (23:19):
Because and how quick till it goes away?

Speaker 3 (23:22):
I mean pretty quick, like if I my body just
reacts in like a sick way. So I had the vomiting.
But you can take let's say anti nausea pill. You
can take that. Pregnant people take it, dang it. Friend,
zo fran.

Speaker 2 (23:35):
Oh yeah, you can get Whenever I get like h
NA D injections, I'll do zo friends.

Speaker 3 (23:40):
So you can take zofran and that'll help you not
get sick from it. But it's it's crazy. I still
have one little loss and whatever left. I kind of
want to go back.

Speaker 2 (23:53):
Wheel sounds illegal fun, but okay, let's go to our
interview with the Runaway June. We had Runaway June in
and watch the performances on the YouTube channel. It's super good.
Super fun. Here they are runaway j on the Bobby
Bones Show. Now run Lady's good to see everybody.

Speaker 3 (24:11):
Good to see see you, Bobby.

Speaker 2 (24:13):
Let's go first to Stevie. When did you get engaged?

Speaker 4 (24:17):
December?

Speaker 2 (24:17):
Okay, so hold on December, j February, March, April, May.
I'm doing fingers five months?

Speaker 4 (24:22):
Yeah, I have to do that too.

Speaker 1 (24:23):
When do you get married? Do you know yet?

Speaker 4 (24:25):
We're getting married in October in Mexico?

Speaker 1 (24:27):
April, May, June, July.

Speaker 8 (24:28):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (24:30):
Months. How did it go down?

Speaker 11 (24:32):
So?

Speaker 12 (24:33):
I told him I didn't want anyone around. I just
wanted it to be the two of us. And we
were coming home from a show in Phoenix and we
had to go straight to the studio to do vocals.

Speaker 4 (24:43):
For a new song.

Speaker 12 (24:44):
And then when I got home, he had candles and
rose petals laid out in the house and had my
favorite song playing.

Speaker 4 (24:50):
And it was really sweet.

Speaker 12 (24:52):
When you say nothing at all, Allison Cross version, Yeah, yeah,
so it.

Speaker 4 (24:56):
Was really sweet.

Speaker 1 (24:56):
Did you know it was coming?

Speaker 4 (24:58):
Not that day?

Speaker 12 (24:59):
I knew it was coming this year because we had
talked about it last New Year's but I was in
full sweats glasses the whole nine.

Speaker 9 (25:06):
So I was talking about it at the airport. I
was asked, do you think it's gonna happen earlier that day?

Speaker 1 (25:12):
Did you have your nails done? Did somehow?

Speaker 9 (25:15):
That's what I asked to I think I.

Speaker 1 (25:17):
Did what to ask? Yeah, so your nails, your nails
were done.

Speaker 3 (25:22):
They were done.

Speaker 4 (25:23):
Yeah, he knew.

Speaker 1 (25:24):
Cong congratulations, Thank you so much. That's really cool. Natalie.

Speaker 2 (25:27):
I'm gonna go over to you. I've known you for
a long time. I did not know you were on
an exhibition jump rope team, So what does that even mean?

Speaker 9 (25:36):
It was in elementary school, but you would we tried
out for the jump rope team and then you would
practice after school every day and learn these skills and
we'd go around to other schools into just events and
places and like perform our routines.

Speaker 1 (25:51):
What's a.

Speaker 2 (25:55):
Was it like four jump ropes, like crazy amount of
jump ropes? Or was there like dancing? What was the routine?

Speaker 9 (26:00):
We would they would introduce all of us and we'd
come out with a single rope and we'd do our
individual tricks, and then there was double dutch. There was
single rope. I would do like round off back handsprings
into double dutch that.

Speaker 1 (26:11):
Kids would watch.

Speaker 9 (26:12):
I guess there was exactly did.

Speaker 4 (26:16):
You ever play fiddle while you were jump roping?

Speaker 9 (26:19):
Oh my god, you did the double dutch? Of course
fiddle was incorporated.

Speaker 1 (26:24):
Could you do double dutch now?

Speaker 10 (26:26):
Like?

Speaker 1 (26:26):
Is that like right now?

Speaker 9 (26:27):
I haven't tried in so many years?

Speaker 1 (26:29):
Wow? Can you double dutch?

Speaker 4 (26:32):
I don't even know what double dutch is. I don't
know what that means.

Speaker 1 (26:37):
And what I'm getting to.

Speaker 2 (26:39):
As much as Runaway June as a band, they are all,
they could all be successful solo artists as well. And
we can go over to gen who not only has
been on Amazing Race twice twice. Yeah, and is she
a golfer? But she was like a pro tennis player,
which is crazy.

Speaker 3 (26:55):
She can probably razy.

Speaker 1 (26:58):
You play basketball?

Speaker 3 (26:59):
No, I'm terrible at that's at all.

Speaker 1 (27:01):
I know.

Speaker 8 (27:02):
I just for some reason, I cannot get the shooting
down like I don't have the feel I pushed the
ball up like I don't know how to.

Speaker 4 (27:08):
I just don't.

Speaker 9 (27:09):
It's not good.

Speaker 2 (27:10):
You're also an accomplished songwriter. Yeah, so the songs that
you haven't saying, what's your most successful song?

Speaker 8 (27:19):
Well, I think she Don't Love You from Eric Palsley
That Don't want to get the highest but we Yeah,
we got a lot of awards. And you were a
big part of that song because it wasn't going to
be a single, but Bobby played it and then people
liked it.

Speaker 1 (27:33):
It was a good one. Keith, you wrote a song
for Keith Urban.

Speaker 8 (27:35):
Yeah, wild Heart, Yeah, which we play too. We have
our own version of it and it's pretty. It's badass.

Speaker 1 (27:41):
Really.

Speaker 4 (27:41):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (27:41):
Have you guys ever had to play a show when
it's just pouring down rain, Natalie, where it's just so
hard that you have to consider, maybe we don't do
it because it's gonna ruin our instruments.

Speaker 9 (27:49):
Yes, yes, Actually we have a couple of times, because
there's been a couple of times where you know, the
stage is covered, but then the rain will blow in
on you. And I remember there was one show where
we were like opening for Brothers Osbourne or something, and
I kept pushing the stuff back further and further because
if my if the fiddle bow gets wet, it doesn't
play sister. Yeah, but normally, I mean, if it gets

(28:16):
that crazy, you just I mean people other people will
call it because it's just not fun for anyone.

Speaker 2 (28:21):
But like a fiddle I'm assuming your fiddle is expensive
and old? H Are those both true? Yes?

Speaker 1 (28:27):
Like how old is a fiddle? Is that fiddle or
fid This.

Speaker 9 (28:30):
Fiddle isn't super old? But the one that the reason
I got this one was because I didn't want to
take my two hundred and fifty year old one out anymore.

Speaker 1 (28:36):
That's it was making me too nervous.

Speaker 9 (28:39):
But it's the one that I've played for years just
because I couldn't really I mean, I had already bought
an ice one, so I didn't want to buy another one.

Speaker 2 (28:45):
Steve, what's the hardest and what's the best part about
being in a band?

Speaker 12 (28:50):
Well, the best part is just being in a band
with these two. When I when we met each other,
it was like instant connection. We had like a friendship
and a musical connection right off the back. But the
hardest I don't really know.

Speaker 4 (29:03):
I mean, I think just.

Speaker 12 (29:05):
Traveling in general can be a grind sometimes, like really hard,
But again they make it so easy, so I think
I would say maybe the hardest is like trying to
compromise on things that like you want sometimes and sometimes.

Speaker 4 (29:19):
It doesn't work out.

Speaker 12 (29:20):
If two of the three of us, you know, don't agree,
then it is what it is, but it's it's all good.

Speaker 4 (29:25):
That's like growth.

Speaker 3 (29:26):
I feel like, how do y'all handle that with like
a vote, like an actual okay, say I or how
do y'all do that?

Speaker 6 (29:33):
We do?

Speaker 8 (29:34):
It's like if two out of the three of us
really believe in something, then the one who's out kind
of goes, okay, Well, I'm gonna trust both of you.
And so I think that's the hardest part too about
it is like sometimes you really want something else, but
you have to trust your partners.

Speaker 9 (29:48):
But it's good to have three because then it it's
an you know, there's always going to be a majority,
you know, like if you had four, if it was
two and two, it'd be even harder, But then you'd
be split down the mid And then how do you
make a decision?

Speaker 2 (30:01):
Does anybody ever ask who's June? I never thought about that,
but yeah, I could see which one's June. I think
would be a question.

Speaker 8 (30:12):
None of us ran away got it, two of them
ran away Junes right away.

Speaker 1 (30:20):
We're getting real here.

Speaker 2 (30:21):
Now. You guys have a new single, new song you're
gonna play for us. We do, so tell me about
the song.

Speaker 1 (30:26):
What's it called? And I don't know. Give me some
background here.

Speaker 4 (30:29):
It's called New Kind.

Speaker 12 (30:29):
Of Emotion, and it's a song that when the three
of us wrote it, we instantly just really loved it,
and it's one of our favorite songs we've ever written together.
And what makes it really cool is that we pull
from different experiences with this song. Like Jen had just
had her daughter at the time, you know, Natalie had
been married at this point for like sixteen years and
she's still in love with her husband, and I was

(30:50):
falling in love with my now fiance. And so it's
like we pulled from these different things and it became
like they could all mean what this song is, which
is really.

Speaker 4 (30:58):
Cool to us.

Speaker 2 (30:59):
Well, let's hear it. Then, this is New Kind of Emotion.
Natalie's got a dry fiddle bow. Yeah, Steve has a
gator head on it. Is that a Florida Gator?

Speaker 1 (31:07):
Yes it is.

Speaker 5 (31:07):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (31:08):
You celebrate the National Table Show all year long.

Speaker 4 (31:10):
Yeah, she's probably watched it twice this.

Speaker 1 (31:13):
Summerning this morning.

Speaker 4 (31:15):
Yeah, I'm watching highlights this morning.

Speaker 1 (31:17):
Okay, here they are with her new song, This is
Runaway June.

Speaker 13 (31:20):
Oh, I'm sorry we can't post the live performance on
the podcast, but.

Speaker 1 (31:25):
If you go to our YouTube page.

Speaker 5 (31:27):
You can watch it.

Speaker 14 (31:28):
There or maybe listen live.

Speaker 15 (31:30):
Okay, all right, now back to the podcast.

Speaker 1 (31:34):
Show, Thank you. I like the groups. I like to
when you guys sing together, that's cool, like in the
backgrounds going while the other ones do.

Speaker 2 (31:44):
It's like a much more civilized when we were kids.

Speaker 1 (31:46):
You go row row row.

Speaker 2 (31:50):
Yeah, but I would love and like advance and stuff. Yeah,
that's fun, that's fun. Question about the fiddle, Natalie, is
a fiddle like a harmonica? Do you need a different
one for every dip?

Speaker 1 (32:00):
Like different? Can you play everything on one?

Speaker 9 (32:02):
I can't because I'm not that good, But I have two.
So I have one that is down tuned to a
half steps so that I can play in the sharp
and flat keys with open strings, and then I have
the standard so that way I can cover every key.
So it just depends on what song we're playing.

Speaker 2 (32:17):
Which one I pick up is like the coup de
gras of fiddle doing the solo to double went down
to Georgia.

Speaker 9 (32:26):
I feel like it's one of yeah.

Speaker 1 (32:29):
What age did you learn that?

Speaker 2 (32:32):
Because you were good young, like you're on Oprah.

Speaker 9 (32:37):
Between my knees on Oprah. I didn't even get to
play it for real. It's like Orange Blossom Special and
Devil went down to Georgia. And if you're playing bluegrass,
you know, I mean Devil went down george is more
like in the Pop Country.

Speaker 2 (32:48):
World, show me whatever orange blossom is? Can you give
me a this is what's it called.

Speaker 9 (32:52):
Orange Blossom Special? Which is a train.

Speaker 13 (33:08):
You know.

Speaker 1 (33:12):
In there?

Speaker 9 (33:12):
To that was Yeah, that was like my party trick
as a kid because you get to the I get
to the middle of the song and I'm like, oh no,
there's a cow on the track, animal noises, chicken and
a hog and still works.

Speaker 1 (33:30):
How do you do a chicken? Like do animals?

Speaker 9 (33:32):
Donkey and the chicken.

Speaker 4 (33:39):
Hold on.

Speaker 9 (33:39):
The Hog's much better donkey because I'm from Mule. It's
like a mule.

Speaker 4 (33:52):
Amazing. My mind is blown right now.

Speaker 3 (33:56):
We have never seen her do that.

Speaker 9 (33:57):
By the way, like twelve, holy crap, we got to.

Speaker 3 (34:02):
Put that in a show.

Speaker 2 (34:04):
Those animals are so good by like, this is the
best thing we've.

Speaker 1 (34:08):
Been But it just shows you sometimes the simplest things.

Speaker 2 (34:12):
Although as a creator or an artist, you're like, I
must elevate, I must get to but a lot of
times the simplest things resonate. I think if you did
that on shreak and social media, people would think that
was hilarious. And you're probably going, that's what twelve year olds.

Speaker 9 (34:24):
Do, right, That's what I did as a kid that
it doesn't compute in my brain.

Speaker 1 (34:27):
But look, we're all like twelve.

Speaker 9 (34:30):
I mean, will credit it to you?

Speaker 13 (34:31):
No?

Speaker 1 (34:32):
No credit, no credit.

Speaker 3 (34:33):
I also feel like your next show in Arkansas on stage,
why do we got to do?

Speaker 1 (34:39):
I thought you were going to be like twelve year
old animals.

Speaker 3 (34:42):
No, that's your own insecurity.

Speaker 1 (34:44):
Hey, everybody else felt it too. Everybody else.

Speaker 3 (34:48):
He's piggybacking off of you.

Speaker 1 (34:49):
Because I like piggybacking.

Speaker 5 (34:53):
That's the stop.

Speaker 3 (34:54):
I was literally saying the hong in.

Speaker 2 (34:58):
Fayetteville and then can you give us some of the
Devil went down to Georgia solo?

Speaker 1 (35:02):
Can you pull that out with that? Doing the like?

Speaker 2 (35:03):
Can you get there without having to get there?

Speaker 14 (35:06):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (35:16):
That's crazy. Do your finger when you have to learn
fettal your fingers hurt. Like guitar, it's not.

Speaker 9 (35:22):
Nearly as bad as guitar. I get way worse calluses
when I'm playing more guitar.

Speaker 1 (35:26):
Stevie, when did you play guitar first.

Speaker 4 (35:29):
I got my first guitar at ten.

Speaker 1 (35:31):
So from where I don't.

Speaker 4 (35:34):
Even remember why I wanted one.

Speaker 12 (35:36):
I well, my dad played around the house a little bit,
but I got it for my tenth birthday.

Speaker 4 (35:41):
I remember asking for it for a long time, and.

Speaker 2 (35:43):
Jen, what about you, because you're like these dudes are
like great at sports and then get into music.

Speaker 1 (35:47):
So we're all annoyed. But that's you.

Speaker 2 (35:49):
You're the female version of like Sam Hunt. No, no, no,
So when did you start playing music?

Speaker 8 (35:53):
Not till I was older, Like I played piano when
I was younger, but like eighteen was when I first
got my guitar.

Speaker 3 (36:00):
I didn't know what I was doing.

Speaker 8 (36:01):
I just taught myself three chords and I wrote a
song the first day I got my guitar. So I've
never really been like I wouldn't call myself a musician.
I really started songwriting. I was like obsessed with writing.

Speaker 2 (36:12):
As you were playing, as you were training, you would
also do music sports?

Speaker 1 (36:15):
Or do you stop sports to play music?

Speaker 11 (36:17):
No?

Speaker 8 (36:17):
I stopped sports.

Speaker 1 (36:18):
Yeah yeah injury.

Speaker 8 (36:20):
No. I just was burnt out. And I finally was eighteen,
so my dad couldn't tell me that.

Speaker 4 (36:24):
I had to keep playing tennis. I'm like, I'm out
of here.

Speaker 1 (36:28):
Do you ever play?

Speaker 11 (36:29):
Now?

Speaker 1 (36:29):
Will you play tennis at all?

Speaker 5 (36:30):
Now?

Speaker 8 (36:31):
I haven't played in so long. I want to play.
It's the first time in like ten years where I
actually want to play.

Speaker 1 (36:35):
Well, what about play a man's game pickleball?

Speaker 3 (36:39):
I would love to play pickleball.

Speaker 1 (36:41):
I'm in tennis.

Speaker 9 (36:42):
Do you play?

Speaker 1 (36:43):
Yeah, I'll be known to dabble?

Speaker 3 (36:44):
Okay, yeah?

Speaker 8 (36:45):
Will you be on my team?

Speaker 2 (36:47):
I will have to evaluate your skills. There are no
songs out today. It's called New Kind of Emotion or
it's been out, but you guys can stream it and
all the tour dates are up at runaway June dot com.
Same thing following on social Runaway June Official. Great job,
great appearance, great performance. You guys are awesome. You guys
feel good?

Speaker 11 (37:05):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (37:05):
Yeah, that was fun. Give us the hog one more time.
Give it. Let's let me just call the animals. Let
the animals.

Speaker 2 (37:11):
Okay, get give it, hold hold on, give me the
train first to two choo.

Speaker 1 (37:16):
Nice nice oli, give me that. Give me the chicken.
Can I get the donkey? And let's end it with
the pig? All right?

Speaker 2 (37:37):
Runaway and everybody, so the female crew went up to
space for eleven minutes. And so I want to play
some of this and have some thoughts and then have
thoughts on other people's thoughts. So the Blue Origin rocket
went up. And so this is the Bezos machine. It's

(37:57):
Katie Perry, Laurence Sanchez. Who's Bezos is wife or fiance
or girlfriend one of those three. I'm not sure where
they are in the relationship. Aisha bo Gail King, Amanda, Wynn, Carrie,
and Flynn. Don't know who all of them are, but
I know I worked to Katie Perry for a bunch
of years. I wouldn't want it to do this, Like
if it's free, I'm still not doing it. I don't

(38:18):
like to fly, much less going up in spaceship.

Speaker 1 (38:20):
But they go up.

Speaker 2 (38:21):
They lift it off from West Texas at nine thirty
one am. They traveled to the edge of space, where
they experienced a brief period of weightlessness before returning to Earth.
The whole flight lasted about eleven minutes. And here is
a clip.

Speaker 1 (38:32):
Hey, please got to.

Speaker 4 (38:33):
Tell you something right now.

Speaker 3 (38:34):
You are officially an astronaut.

Speaker 4 (38:35):
Thank you so much. How do you feel?

Speaker 10 (38:38):
I feel super connected to love? So connected to love?
I think this experience has shown me you never know
how much love is inside of you, like how much
love you have to give, and how loved you are
until the day you launch.

Speaker 2 (38:57):
Sounds like she took Amy's lost ange Kenny, Yeah, it
sounds like he's like yeah, and Bezos was a frog
up there.

Speaker 1 (39:03):
It's crazy. Are they astronauts?

Speaker 10 (39:06):
No?

Speaker 6 (39:06):
No, No, that's the stupidest thing, and they've ever I mean,
what a dumb statement.

Speaker 5 (39:10):
You're not an astronaut. That's fun rode on a rocket ship,
I guess technically is what they're saying.

Speaker 2 (39:15):
But an astronaut, I think there is an education you
have to have to actually be an astronaut.

Speaker 3 (39:20):
Like we fly on airplanes.

Speaker 2 (39:22):
We're not pilots, yeah, but we don't go to space
and we didn't good point on the pilots, but we
don't actually navigate the plane. I would say astronauts, all
them actually navigate the ships.

Speaker 1 (39:31):
Some have other roles. But I think an astronaut has
to have an education.

Speaker 3 (39:34):
Okay, hold on, I'm.

Speaker 2 (39:36):
A citizens possessed at least a master's degree in a stemfield,
have at least two years of related professional experience or
a thousand hours as a jet pilot and passed a
NASA Long duration flight physical. That's an astronaut.

Speaker 5 (39:47):
So if you went to space, you're just someone that
went to space, had a lot of money.

Speaker 7 (39:51):
I don't think they paid for it.

Speaker 3 (39:54):
You got an invitation.

Speaker 2 (39:55):
Yeah, you wouldn't do this, God, no, really you would.

Speaker 3 (40:00):
When they were taking off, I was like, well, this
could be it like just like that.

Speaker 1 (40:04):
I think that every Southwest flight though too.

Speaker 3 (40:06):
Yes, I do too. I just I was watching Oprah
having to watch her best friend and be like, I
wonder if she's going to die.

Speaker 5 (40:12):
That's Gail King.

Speaker 2 (40:14):
Yeah, but I don't think there's any thread of them
dying anymore than driving the car down the road. What
There's never been one that goes up on his dot
people have died.

Speaker 5 (40:21):
They're gone for ten minutes.

Speaker 1 (40:22):
Yeah, I know.

Speaker 7 (40:25):
Off.

Speaker 3 (40:25):
I just thought like anything like it could just there's
just a.

Speaker 8 (40:27):
Lot of.

Speaker 1 (40:29):
I wouldn't want to do it. I don't like heids.

Speaker 2 (40:30):
I don't even like being walking on the balcony for
the record, Okay, I guess that for.

Speaker 1 (40:34):
Me is what it's about. I don't like that.

Speaker 7 (40:36):
So they literally just go straight up.

Speaker 1 (40:38):
They get to the edge. You can see the Earth's
curvature and then you come down.

Speaker 5 (40:41):
That's pretty cool.

Speaker 1 (40:41):
It is cool if that's your think. Is it only
you know one hundred people that have done it.

Speaker 6 (40:45):
So it's like five minutes up, five minutes down or
is it like two minutes up and eight minutes Like
that is so dumb.

Speaker 5 (40:50):
It's probably quicker down. I bet.

Speaker 3 (40:51):
I don't think it's dumb, but I think it's slow.

Speaker 1 (40:55):
With the gravity pool, with the parachute.

Speaker 5 (40:58):
Oh, I don't even know how they do it. I
would think.

Speaker 1 (41:00):
I don't think they can ball into the ocean.

Speaker 2 (41:02):
I think at one point the parachute comes out and
it's like when you skydive, Like the fastest part is
like that, the brief part, and then they pull the
freaking shoot and it grabs your nuts and then it
makes forever.

Speaker 1 (41:12):
To get down.

Speaker 3 (41:13):
Yeah, the free fallows.

Speaker 2 (41:15):
Olivia Wilde had a few choice words about Blue or
Origin's first all female flight crew. And so this is
where I kind of take a bit of issue, and
I'll tell you why in a second. But Olivia Wylde,
by the way, she was Harry Styles as X. But
she's a famous actress, Jason Sudeikis's ex wife, Right, Yeah.

Speaker 3 (41:31):
She was in the OC back in the day she's done. Yeah,
that thing that was her debut.

Speaker 11 (41:36):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (41:37):
So the whole thing about Olivia Wilde, she was like,
I guess that billion dollars bought some good memes. I guess,
meaning they spent all this money for something that really
doesn't make any difference in the world. Right, there's a
billion dollars. If you're gonna make statements like this, and
I agree, that's a billion dollars, it's a lot. You
could have done a lot with it, But then you
better not be wearing anything brand name. You basically have

(41:59):
to be a Buddhist if you're gonna make the statement
of well, look at what you're wasting money on, because
you could probably go to Olivia Wilde's house and find jewelry,
find expensive cars and go, oh, well, you could have
done so much.

Speaker 1 (42:10):
It's all relative.

Speaker 3 (42:12):
Yeah, because a billion dollars is Jeff.

Speaker 2 (42:15):
But even a billion dollars, let's say not Jeff Bezos.
In general, a billion dollars would have helped a whole
lot of people. But also for her to say that,
then she'd better not be spending a bunch of money
recklessly or buying things that don't matter, whenever that money
could go to help people as well. It's a very
glasshouse thing to say. When you're pocket watching other folks
or pocket watching other people's activities, you're gonna have your

(42:36):
own pocket watched back, which means, okay, you talk about
the peop's pockets, what.

Speaker 1 (42:39):
They have in them, let's look at yours.

Speaker 2 (42:41):
So, although I agree that's way expensive, they could have
done a lot a lot with that.

Speaker 1 (42:47):
Who knows what they're learning every time they go up.
I don't know what they're doing.

Speaker 2 (42:50):
But also, I'm just not gonna tell people what to
do with their money because I don't people telling me
what to do with my money.

Speaker 1 (42:54):
Secondly, people don't know really what I'm doing my money.

Speaker 2 (42:57):
And thirdly, if you're gonna say that about somebody's money,
you better be free and on your p's and q's
with your money. So I didn't really like that you
said that. I agreed in principle, but not really like.

Speaker 1 (43:08):
You can't do that. You can't pocket watch in general.
So I didn't like that. But who cares? Livy will
never hear this.

Speaker 2 (43:14):
So miles from are a Toronto or you're not? Are
You're not ours?

Speaker 3 (43:23):
Though?

Speaker 2 (43:23):
Are you you're just a friend. But I guess you're
not an art and art company, are you?

Speaker 7 (43:27):
Well?

Speaker 1 (43:27):
Yeah kind of Okay, I'm under the iHeart radio and
b A yeah got it.

Speaker 2 (43:31):
Yeah, So Miles is back here for a second day.
And what did you do last night? Because I know
last night you were kind of on your own?

Speaker 14 (43:39):
Yeah, last night I went out for dinner, just a
by yourself. Really cool Loki spot.

Speaker 1 (43:42):
Yeah, what's kind of the Because you grew up in
Scotland for the most part, right, yeah, England, Scotland.

Speaker 2 (43:48):
Yeah, yeah, where did you spend more years as a
young as a child?

Speaker 1 (43:51):
Manchester in England? Okay, yeah, you know what Manchester.

Speaker 2 (43:53):
Well, my wife wanted to go watch Oasis to their
first show on Manchester because that's where they formed.

Speaker 1 (43:59):
So this is a wild story.

Speaker 14 (44:01):
I don't know if there's any other Oasis fans in
the room or any of those kind of britpop nineties bands.
So my dad being a radio guys I mentioned yesterday,
I'm a radio neppa baby. So basically he purchased the
house that we grew up in had a recording studio
in the basement, and that's why he bought the house.
And it was Johnny Marr's house from the Smiths, the

(44:24):
guitarist of the Smiths. That also became like a really
iconic recording studio for a lot of Manchester bands and
Oasis recorded their album definitely maybe really in the basement
of the house I grew up.

Speaker 1 (44:36):
Yah, that's pretty cool. Did the studio stay there in
a form like did your dad use it in a form? Yeah?

Speaker 14 (44:41):
Yeah, that's that's the whole reason, because he wanted somewhere
soundproof with you know, the big heavy doors. It was
like a real old school. It had the window like
you guys have in here and stuff. It was crazy
and that was like our playroom as kids growing up.

Speaker 2 (44:52):
That's such a cool story if you're a nerd. Did
they still have the whole console? Was the console there?
Like the board?

Speaker 14 (44:57):
Most of the equipment was taken out, but like all
the soundproof in the rooms and stuff was still there.
And we used to get memorabilia and people like come
over from North America and like knock on the house
and like because they knew that that was the house.

Speaker 1 (45:08):
It was crazy.

Speaker 2 (45:08):
You were the full house house of Manchester. So my
wife not an Oasis fan, or she wasn't because she
missed it. She's eleven years and some months younger than
I am. But Oasis went super viral on TikTok in
general when they announced we're getting back together, so they
were on everything. So she's like, man, I kind of
like Oasis, like some of the songs, and so for

(45:29):
a while she's like, should we go to Manchester? And
should we go and go to the first Oasis show?
And we decided not to because I was like, il
to wait till they come here.

Speaker 1 (45:37):
I don't want to fly.

Speaker 2 (45:38):
But so Manchester is where you grew up? Yeah, I
almost did a TV show on Manchester because I like
James Gordon, a big TV producer, and I had talked
to them about doing a show, but we had to
go shoot the whole thing in Manchester. And first it
was like, hey, do you want to go to Europe
and shoot the show for two weeks? Was it?

Speaker 1 (45:53):
Ben Winston his producer guy, I think so yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2 (45:57):
So then it was Manchester and man Chester's not London,
though I learned it's not.

Speaker 14 (46:02):
It's I think it's cooler than London. I just think
it's like way easier to get around, and it's there's
just more I think there's just like more underground cool
places to.

Speaker 2 (46:11):
Go whenever you grow up in the UK. What's the
culture though, of going to do things by yourself?

Speaker 1 (46:16):
Hm hmmm.

Speaker 2 (46:17):
Is it different than here? Because here I did it,
but they all made fun of me in my whole life.
They're like, oh, you're a loser, and I was, but
that was in one way.

Speaker 1 (46:23):
What what kind of things? Movies, dinners?

Speaker 2 (46:26):
Yeah, uh, just stuff just in general, what you would
do for fun recreationally. I do a lot of stuff
by myself. So is that looked at as man, if
you do stuff by yourself in the UK, you're a loser.

Speaker 1 (46:39):
That's same.

Speaker 14 (46:39):
I think you're asking the wrong guy because I love
solo travel and I love doing things on my own.

Speaker 1 (46:43):
And I did a lot of solo travel, but because
nobody would I would have me to go with.

Speaker 14 (46:47):
But I think, yeah, there's a lot of big people
go out in groups, especially like the afterwork drinks culture
in the UK is huge.

Speaker 1 (46:53):
Go to a pub. Everyone's at a pub.

Speaker 5 (46:55):
I love that.

Speaker 1 (46:55):
You know, they're everywhere just like a bar.

Speaker 5 (46:57):
You just like that here too, You imagine after the show,
be like alright, one of the pub.

Speaker 14 (47:01):
Is a difference. Soon a pub and a bar. I
will say a pub is just this real cozy atmosphere
where you know the guy behind the bar, they know you.
You come in, your drink's being poored before you get in.
It's like the usual yep, and you know sometimes they
do what's called a lock in at the end of
the night.

Speaker 1 (47:14):
Isn't it just a small bar though?

Speaker 5 (47:15):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (47:15):
Yeah, yeah, like a small not the same. No, you
ever lived in America? Never.

Speaker 14 (47:21):
I've always wanted to. It was always my dream, always
wanted to live in the US.

Speaker 1 (47:25):
I don't know why.

Speaker 14 (47:26):
I just even when I because I told you guys
this week that I used to live in Dubai and
work in Dubai. Every single vacation day was used to
come to the US. I would fly like thirteen hours
to come to the US.

Speaker 1 (47:37):
Where have you been? What cities? I've been to New
York a bunch. I've been to La I've been to
Florida a bunch of been to So we're in Florida.

Speaker 14 (47:43):
Because to Florida, Miami, Orlando, Fort Myers, Fort loaded it out.

Speaker 1 (47:47):
Yeah, those are all different countries contes in Florida. Yeah,
I've been to Boston. Loved Boston. That was great. Awesome.
So you last night you went to dinner by yourself.

Speaker 14 (47:57):
I went to dinner by myself. Yeah, this real trendy,
kind of East Nashville spot.

Speaker 1 (48:00):
It's good.

Speaker 2 (48:01):
Do you like FaceTime your fiance wife?

Speaker 1 (48:06):
You know what you're calling?

Speaker 15 (48:07):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (48:07):
Now do you like at dinner and put AirPods in
and talk to her?

Speaker 14 (48:11):
No, I'll send her a pic of like the food
and make her jealous and be like, hey, this is
really cool spot.

Speaker 1 (48:15):
You would love it. Wish you were here. Why didn't
she come?

Speaker 14 (48:20):
We're saving she's trying to save all like her work
vacation days for the wedding because we're gonna try and
take a bunch of time off in July for that.

Speaker 1 (48:26):
Do you have enough work vacation days for the wedding?

Speaker 7 (48:28):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (48:28):
Yeah, yeah I do.

Speaker 2 (48:29):
He said for his bachelor party, doesn't know where he's going,
but except they all know where he's going. But they're
gonna put him on a plane and he's not gonna
know where he's going.

Speaker 14 (48:37):
Dude, I don't know if it's cool. I'm nervous, but yeah,
we'll find out. It could be Iowa. Yeah, yeah, you
better like it. I know, I don't know where he's
gonna be, but I know there's golf involved.

Speaker 7 (48:47):
Okay, so that's why in Miami because I got the
best strip.

Speaker 1 (48:49):
Well, I said, Arizona, and he goes no Portugal. I forget.

Speaker 2 (48:52):
He doesn't live in America, that's right. And a lot
of his friends are in the UK, so they're probably
all going closer to there.

Speaker 14 (48:58):
There's twelve of us going. More of them are from Canada,
including my fiance's dad.

Speaker 1 (49:03):
He's coming along.

Speaker 7 (49:04):
Oh that's weird.

Speaker 1 (49:05):
Yeah, but your dad's going to.

Speaker 14 (49:06):
My dad's going to Who's And he's sober. He's been
he's been sober for five years. And I think he's
gonna break up. I think he's gonna cave.

Speaker 5 (49:14):
No, I mean for his son.

Speaker 7 (49:18):
He might do it.

Speaker 1 (49:18):
I think he might, but I don't think he needs
to do it for a son though.

Speaker 3 (49:23):
Based on like it was just a choice. He decided
one day he wanted to be so like out of
like necessity.

Speaker 14 (49:27):
Because it's problem I think. You know, when when someone
says I'm sober. I mean, Bobby, you probably get this
a lot, but for people that don't know that you've
never drank. When you say I'm sober, people think you
had some crazy scenario. I wasn't alcoholic, yeah, but but
no he wasn't. He enjoyed a drink at the weekend,
like just a couple of beers. I think as he
got older, as he hit sixty, I think, or he

(49:47):
was he was nearing sixty, he was like, I really
don't miss this. The hangovers are getting worse.

Speaker 3 (49:54):
It's not like he's like working the program.

Speaker 1 (49:56):
No, no, no, okay.

Speaker 3 (49:57):
And then you're like, I think he might break it.

Speaker 14 (49:58):
And he couldn't do it without zero alcohol stuff. He
loves the none out beers. Fridge is full of it,
like he loves it. He loved the taste.

Speaker 1 (50:06):
So you have to, if I'm right here, you have
to acquire that taste. Like no one likes.

Speaker 2 (50:11):
Beer the first time, not the first, but then you
acquire it so much that it's good.

Speaker 1 (50:16):
Yes that's a question.

Speaker 5 (50:17):
Oh yeah, yes, yes yeah. And then you start realizing
that different beers taste different, and so you start gravitating
to like, I like this beer better than that one.

Speaker 2 (50:24):
So you hate it, and then you work your way
into liking it just enough to get drunk. But then
you work your way into liking it enough to where
you actually do like it where it doesn't even matter
if you get drunk. Now, so if you're not drinking,
you just drink what used to just taste bad without
getting the effect of being drunk.

Speaker 1 (50:36):
You'll see you'll see on episode one of Bobby Does Growths.

Speaker 7 (50:39):
Yeah, you pretty much summed it up perfectly.

Speaker 1 (50:41):
Yeah. Do you ever drink any of the non alcoholic beer?

Speaker 7 (50:44):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (50:44):
Does it taste like beer?

Speaker 7 (50:45):
It's good.

Speaker 1 (50:46):
Some of it's good, some of it's good, some of
it's like wow.

Speaker 5 (50:49):
Off, I've never had it. I just didn't see the
reason to.

Speaker 1 (50:53):
Yeah, unless you weren't.

Speaker 2 (50:54):
Yeah, unless you were purposely not drinking, there'd be no
reason to pursue it.

Speaker 5 (50:58):
I don't want the real stuff.

Speaker 1 (51:00):
Yeah, I hear you.

Speaker 2 (51:01):
You know he also has a wrestling YouTube showel really
like for yourself.

Speaker 14 (51:06):
No, I don't wrestle, No, yeah, but I but I'm
a big WWE fan.

Speaker 1 (51:10):
You have lifelong fan.

Speaker 2 (51:11):
So he was talking yesterday because we had Shawn michaels
on and Eddie's not really a wrestling fan, and so
Eddie's a big UFC guy.

Speaker 1 (51:18):
So on at UFC stuff, Eddie's.

Speaker 5 (51:19):
Like the expert.

Speaker 2 (51:20):
But if it's wrestling, I get really, Jack, I think
it's awesome. We had Seawn Michaels, who is a legend,
like he's one of the greatest of all time Hall
of Famer, and so he was on and we were
talking yesterday on twenty five Whistles and we finished and
we walked down to have lunch and he was like, yeah,
I have a I knew he was a fan, but
he's like, I have a YouTube channel and he start
talking aout all the wrestlers.

Speaker 1 (51:38):
It's pretty cool.

Speaker 2 (51:39):
I was like, oh, that's awesome because most people look
at us like, well, I should say, people in this
room look at me like I'm a child.

Speaker 14 (51:46):
No, when you said yesterday, when I was like, first
of all, me being here was like bucket list. And
then you were like, oh, yeah, show Michael's on the
podcast today, I was like what.

Speaker 1 (51:53):
I text my brother. I went to the washroom. I
text my brother. I was like, you'll never guess he's
on the podcast today.

Speaker 5 (51:57):
So are you into like current wrestling?

Speaker 14 (51:59):
Yeah, well were all last night WrestleMania. This weekend, I
made no pleans because I will be watching.

Speaker 1 (52:04):
The two nights in Vegas.

Speaker 2 (52:06):
Oh two nights.

Speaker 1 (52:08):
I've been to two. Hey, Eddie I've been to at
and T Stadium.

Speaker 5 (52:11):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (52:12):
Yeah, we were talking to Sean Michaels and this is
the end of the interview and I never know, and
if we're doing it, zoom and I never know. And
Shawn Michaels, he doesn't care about us. And also people
when they finish an interview with me, either they're like,
what the f was that? Or oh that was cool?
You know, it's rarely in sports? Is it just normal?

(52:34):
And so we were talking with Sean Michaels. I'm gonna
play this like thirty seconds and we're wrapping up, and
I was a little caught off guard with what he
said at the end of the interview and I was like, wait,
what tell me more? So this is us with Sean
Michaels yesterday.

Speaker 11 (52:45):
Yeah, thank you very much, And yeah, hell of an
interview by the way, thank you. There's a lot of
fun for me. I appreciate it. Why you're an interesting,
smart wrestling fan that sometimes it's a lot of the
same old, same old, and so not making it just
sort of a I don't know, copy and paste an interview.

Speaker 1 (53:00):
Would what would copy and paste?

Speaker 12 (53:02):
What?

Speaker 2 (53:02):
Like, I don't know what a copy and paste is,
but well, I don't know, what's a copy and paste question?

Speaker 11 (53:05):
What was it like?

Speaker 1 (53:06):
I don't know, winning your first champions got it?

Speaker 5 (53:08):
Got it? Got it.

Speaker 11 (53:09):
I appreciate the fact. Also I get I guess that
you've you know, you're a wrestling fan that understands both
sides of it and has an appreciation. I'm always interested
in compelled by the over selling and and how you
guys feel about kicking out of too many things and
stuff like that.

Speaker 2 (53:25):
So I was just asking him, like, hey, it's everybody
knows it's not real, and they talk about that now
like they'll have they'll talk about the storylines as it's
going on, like in different interviews, and I was just
kind of talking about that, and he was like, I
thought he was messing with me. He was like, heck
of an interview. And I was like, are you serious?
And then he kept going super cool, that's nice. Yeah,

(53:45):
When do you go home?

Speaker 1 (53:46):
I got a hunt tomorrow morning. How has the experience
been here? Amazing? Everyone?

Speaker 14 (53:51):
Like I told you yesterday at lunch, I had really
high expectations, having being a fan and a listener for
so many years and just meet and you old guys,
you will be amazing and work ethic is inspiring.

Speaker 5 (54:02):
Oh who's now we feel like, are you serious?

Speaker 11 (54:07):
Man?

Speaker 5 (54:09):
It's like Sean Michaels, Yeah.

Speaker 1 (54:12):
What do you mean by that?

Speaker 3 (54:14):
You're literally asking just like you did, Sean.

Speaker 14 (54:17):
I think, like, I think it's always good when you
do something for a living to see other people at
work and just you know, sit on the sidelines and
watch because I think it can give you new ideas
and just you know. Yeah, I just think how you
guys work and how you guys, you guys interact. It's
just a well oiled machine.

Speaker 1 (54:35):
It's definitely a machine. It just goes. Yeah, even during
break Yeah, nothing stops. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (54:40):
There are times where I have to remind myself that
people need to go to the.

Speaker 5 (54:44):
Bathroom, like I do, like right now, Yeah, like because.

Speaker 1 (54:47):
We'll just go and I'll just do you need just
to wrap this up?

Speaker 2 (54:50):
I'm just gonna yeah, Amy's got a little tub over there.

Speaker 1 (54:55):
But it's great, and.

Speaker 14 (54:58):
Yeah, we're all friends. It's but I will say that
I'm I'm a big radio guy, as are you, and
I know a lot of you are. But I'm not
a big fan of many people as in I just
don't I get annoyed when I listen to the radio
and when I like watch clips on social media and stuff.
But with you guys, I don't, and it's refreshing. Why

(55:20):
do you think that is because you're just not the
traditional radio morning wacky morning show that you know, just annoying.

Speaker 2 (55:27):
Do you think we're any different when the MIC's go
opt and when the MIC's are on?

Speaker 1 (55:31):
No?

Speaker 14 (55:32):
I mean, but you know, I think I suppose when
people meet radio people in person as well, they're like,
they expect them to be on twenty four seven, on
and on and on. But and I didn't expect you
guys to be like you. We sit here in silence.
But it doesn't mean that anyone's angry with anyone or
it's just you know, you just you're just on when
you need to be on.

Speaker 1 (55:52):
Yeah, it's great. Was that the right answer? I'm sitting
in silence? I just I was really yeah, I didn't
know what to say.

Speaker 2 (56:00):
Commit all right, awesome, we're doing a podcast today, lots
to say, the NFL Show, So you're gonna come over
to the house and do that.

Speaker 1 (56:10):
I would love to. Awesome, Okay, cool, everybody good?

Speaker 5 (56:13):
Yeah, yeah, let me.

Speaker 2 (56:14):
Say there's anything else I need to mention before we go,
I can run some voicemails.

Speaker 1 (56:19):
I should do this before we go. Ray give me number.

Speaker 15 (56:24):
Two morning Studio. So a little while back, Bobby was
teasing that somebody might be leaving the show, and here
we are a few months later and no one's left yet.
So I just wanted to get an update on that.
Is somebody still possibly leaving the show or have they
decided they're not going to do that? And could you
tell us who it was?

Speaker 11 (56:43):
Thanks?

Speaker 2 (56:43):
Everything still on? What everything else that's happening is still
in the mix, still happening.

Speaker 14 (56:51):
You know?

Speaker 3 (56:52):
Any think so?

Speaker 1 (56:54):
You think so? You know so?

Speaker 3 (56:56):
I know? So she does yea, you told me?

Speaker 5 (56:59):
No crap you did.

Speaker 3 (57:00):
It's fine. I'm not going to say anything.

Speaker 7 (57:02):
It's going to be a sad day.

Speaker 1 (57:03):
You don't know, I'll go.

Speaker 5 (57:06):
You don't know. You're acting like you're right.

Speaker 2 (57:07):
The other thing is the envelope, right Like I have
the envelope. I wrote a prediction of the envelope last year.
I know what's in the envelope. I would let one
of you guys read what's in the envelope, but I
don't know that I can share what's in the envelope.

Speaker 5 (57:22):
Why what's in the envelope? Different than what we were
just talking about.

Speaker 6 (57:28):
Yes, yeah, it's different than someone leaving he stop, you know.

Speaker 1 (57:31):
He said it to be in the years, and what's it?

Speaker 2 (57:33):
Can people ask, hey, what's the idea of the envelope?
What's in the envelope is true? All? And I think
what I could do is spin the wheel and I
could put you four on the wheel, Amy, Lunchbox, Morgan,
Eddie and.

Speaker 1 (57:46):
Whoever could just look and you can. I wouldn't.

Speaker 2 (57:50):
I can't allow you to say maybe at some point,
but I'm right that's awesome.

Speaker 5 (57:55):
I don't.

Speaker 1 (57:55):
Maybe it's not awesome that I'm right.

Speaker 5 (57:57):
No, no, no, let's spin the wheel.

Speaker 2 (57:58):
Yeah, you couldn't say, hey, and you're the only one
that could see it. So if Morgan want or lunch
Box one, you couldn't say what it was.

Speaker 7 (58:04):
That's fun?

Speaker 1 (58:08):
Well that we all do it right now? But right, Mike, Yeah,
so how do you know?

Speaker 3 (58:12):
You're already right? I know I'm right, but so, but
at the time it was a prediction, yes, and now
you're right.

Speaker 2 (58:19):
Well, remember you would play those games too, where like, oh, no,
I can put you, I I can read you, I
can put you wherever I want to put you, right
in the right environment. I literally can make you say
whatever I want you to say, but it has to
be right.

Speaker 1 (58:32):
I'm not I don't have any powers. I'm not you.

Speaker 5 (58:34):
Have powers, because like I remember, you made me draw
something and you didn't tell me to draw it, and
I just drew it.

Speaker 13 (58:39):
Is it?

Speaker 3 (58:39):
What's it? Can you say?

Speaker 2 (58:41):
I don't want to say too much, but people ask
for the update on that.

Speaker 3 (58:45):
This is not to say, Oh, so when will you
open it?

Speaker 2 (58:48):
I think I asked Mike like two weeks ago, I said, hey,
should we do it now? And he was like, I
wouldn't do it right now. So mostly as usual, Mike
tells me when I can have my thoughts, because I
have all my thoughts and I tell them all to Mike,
and Mike's like, I think it would be a good
time for your thought now.

Speaker 5 (59:03):
Mike is like, God, well, I have the thoughts.

Speaker 1 (59:06):
Mike doesn't give me the thought.

Speaker 2 (59:07):
But then Mike tells me was I give him the
thoughts where he thinks they'd be appropriate to put the
thoughts because I'm losing scale on what needs to go
where at times because there's just I'm doing like too
many show, too too many shows. The Allstone Show's over,
thank god, so that's done. But I was doing so
much content that I would just I don't know where
where I said what? And so Mike keeps track of everything,

(59:27):
and yeah, so someday, Oh the wheel though, That's what
I'm saying. Someday when Mike says we're ready, I'll do
wheel some day.

Speaker 5 (59:35):
Yeah, I'll do the wheel. Would be like tomorrow, and
then you would open the letter someday.

Speaker 1 (59:40):
But how do you know it's not about you?

Speaker 5 (59:42):
I'd like to know by spinning the wheel.

Speaker 7 (59:44):
That's a great point, Eddie.

Speaker 6 (59:46):
I felt like the wheel was like very soon, like
in the next forty eight hours.

Speaker 5 (59:51):
Yeah, me too.

Speaker 1 (59:52):
That's on Mike the Mike.

Speaker 7 (59:54):
When's that wheel going to be able to be You.

Speaker 1 (59:55):
Don't have to give an answer, but you can say
whatever you want to carry. I think we bury it forever.
You just never open it.

Speaker 3 (01:00:02):
Bury it. That's stupid, Mike, Like, but you're right, it's right,
so it's right, So why bury it?

Speaker 2 (01:00:10):
Because the way it became right I don't think is right.

Speaker 5 (01:00:15):
WHOA I would agree? What the some dark stuff? Man?

Speaker 4 (01:00:20):
What? But it has to do with one of us.

Speaker 7 (01:00:23):
You don't know that, Morgan, somebody.

Speaker 9 (01:00:24):
That's what I had said before, that it had to
do with somebody.

Speaker 7 (01:00:27):
Yeah, but that doesn't mean us.

Speaker 3 (01:00:28):
It's just somebody you would put in the show. But
if all four of us would.

Speaker 1 (01:00:33):
Be on in the room but on the show's on
the show, yes, yes.

Speaker 3 (01:00:41):
So, But if we're on the wheel, not to read us.

Speaker 2 (01:00:45):
No, it could be about you. You could be the only
one to read it and realize it was about you.
But here's the thing, my here's my problem with it.
The way it happened isn't the way that I envisioned
it happening, And it ain't. I don't It's just not good.
I thought it would be good. It's not good.

Speaker 6 (01:01:01):
That sucks.

Speaker 5 (01:01:05):
You're talking about it.

Speaker 1 (01:01:05):
I thought it would be good.

Speaker 7 (01:01:07):
That's what I mean. He said it's not good, So
I thought it sucks.

Speaker 2 (01:01:10):
The way that it manifested itself was not the way
that the expectation was.

Speaker 1 (01:01:14):
Therefore it is not good.

Speaker 5 (01:01:15):
Hold on, you predicted something, Yes, I nailed it, and
then it happened, absolutely happened, but yet we still can't
find out what it is. That doesn't make any sense.

Speaker 7 (01:01:26):
I'm kind of with you, but like, if it.

Speaker 5 (01:01:29):
Already happened, we should probably know it happened.

Speaker 3 (01:01:32):
So can we make guesses?

Speaker 5 (01:01:35):
Oh, his head's on the mic.

Speaker 1 (01:01:38):
No, so it's just gonna you can guess.

Speaker 3 (01:01:42):
It's gonna guess all.

Speaker 1 (01:01:43):
Day, or I can just we can just hold it
for longer.

Speaker 5 (01:01:47):
But and so Mike's saying barying it means just don't
ever tell anyone's what that means.

Speaker 1 (01:01:55):
But I will say it is real.

Speaker 5 (01:01:58):
It is real.

Speaker 1 (01:01:59):
I was absolutely right about it.

Speaker 2 (01:02:02):
I don't like that I was right about it because
it did not happen how I thought it was going
to happen, and then it happened, and then it wasn't
it for it's just it's not it's not positive.

Speaker 7 (01:02:12):
I'll say it doesn't feel right now.

Speaker 1 (01:02:14):
I don't know when it would feel right if ever.

Speaker 3 (01:02:17):
Yeah, it's not positive.

Speaker 1 (01:02:20):
It could be it could be positive.

Speaker 7 (01:02:22):
It's me not getting the job man. That's it's okay.

Speaker 5 (01:02:25):
We can talk about that.

Speaker 2 (01:02:26):
I didn't want to keep doing this because listener to
be like, what are you always kicked up? All I
wanted to do is say we I still know it
still exists in our world of thinking of what we
want to do.

Speaker 1 (01:02:35):
And that's the update. It may actually never get open.
It could.

Speaker 3 (01:02:41):
I feel like, I know, text mem oh no, text
me no, see how it feels.

Speaker 1 (01:02:52):
Well done?

Speaker 14 (01:02:53):
Well?

Speaker 2 (01:02:55):
I literally don't care. I just feel like it's not fair.

Speaker 11 (01:02:58):
I know. No.

Speaker 3 (01:02:58):
The only I'm just Joe. The only reason why I'm
scared to text you is because then if I'm wrong
else No, it's just I don't.

Speaker 5 (01:03:06):
But you won't tell her she's right if she texted you.

Speaker 2 (01:03:08):
I was watching a video this reminds me of I
was watching a video on TikTok and this teacher said
he was in class and he had six students and
he saw one of them was cheating, but he couldn't
catch them actually cheating. And he knew that something was up,
but he couldn't catch them cheating, and he couldn't see
the paper that were using. But he's like, I know
for a fact they were cheating. So he said, once
the test all came out, and all six of them
came in, and this is true, that he would all

(01:03:30):
six months in the class. He said, hey, I know
when he was cheating, and all good, he said, but
if you don't come forward, you're going to get a zero.
Because I know when he was cheating. If you do
come forward, you email me after class. I will let
you retake the test, but you can only get a fifty,
but you have to email me and say, hey, I'll

(01:03:51):
never do it again. He goes, I want to hold
it against you, but I'll give you a chance to
retake the test, but instead of one hundred, you can
get up to a fifty, which is going to be
better than the zero you're going to get.

Speaker 1 (01:04:00):
Because you were cheating. He knew who was cheating, he
could not find it.

Speaker 2 (01:04:04):
So he did this to see if the personal message
in five of the six people message said they were
cheating five of the six, so they were all five
of the six were He really only saw one, but.

Speaker 1 (01:04:16):
Five of the six were cheating.

Speaker 5 (01:04:17):
That's a genius.

Speaker 1 (01:04:18):
But he wasn't doing it for that. But yeah, his
mind was blown. He wasn't doing a trick.

Speaker 2 (01:04:22):
He was like, oh my god, five people said they
were cheating out of the six, I thought I only
caught one.

Speaker 5 (01:04:26):
I'm gonna do that with my kids. It was amazing.

Speaker 1 (01:04:29):
Yeah, yeah, I think for now we bury it.

Speaker 5 (01:04:33):
I agree.

Speaker 1 (01:04:35):
If you'd like to run it by me, feel free to.

Speaker 3 (01:04:38):
Well, I'm trying to think of something. I just said,
you knew you idea of something. I'm just thinking of
a scenario that didn't go well.

Speaker 1 (01:04:49):
Hey, Ray voicemail three, Just.

Speaker 16 (01:04:52):
Calling because I was listening to the podcast about the
three most Disappointing things and the palette that lunch Pop
can't get in controls. I sell things all the time,
and you just have to keep lowering the price by
five dollars every month or so. If you're not getting
anybody asking about it, is your price is too high.
And then I was thinking, Hey, Bobby, why don't you

(01:05:13):
go ahead and get the whole palette over for scuba.
Steve's due. I bashill love everything sold you a month.

Speaker 1 (01:05:19):
He would see that sold immediately.

Speaker 6 (01:05:21):
We're not talking about Yeah, but we're not going to
get pennies on the dollar for our We're getting zero
on the dollar.

Speaker 7 (01:05:25):
You're right, But you know what patience is a virtue?

Speaker 1 (01:05:28):
It isn't it is it is? It is with him,
it's not patients.

Speaker 5 (01:05:32):
It never gets done. Amy. You know that.

Speaker 7 (01:05:34):
You're one to talk, mister Kidney.

Speaker 1 (01:05:37):
But you just said patience it is a virtue. Then
you gave up.

Speaker 3 (01:05:40):
It is a virtue just in general.

Speaker 1 (01:05:43):
Yeah, but he was saying about him and this.

Speaker 3 (01:05:44):
Yeah, and with this, I have my patients ran out,
so I'm over it.

Speaker 13 (01:05:48):
Yeah, the last vers I have a morning corny for Amy,
although am I be a morning corny after God? So
what do you call an Italian hooker? Apasta tute? Thank
you love the show.

Speaker 5 (01:06:05):
Okay, that's good, so good.

Speaker 1 (01:06:07):
And that's not after dark. That's pretty good. That's like
at dusk. Yeah, good morning corny at dusk.

Speaker 2 (01:06:14):
More a win on this. Morgan has a photo shoot
happening Thursday.

Speaker 4 (01:06:19):
Yeah on Thursday.

Speaker 1 (01:06:21):
What's going on?

Speaker 17 (01:06:22):
So I got nominated by Abes Garden, which is the
place that Remy and I volunteer as an animal therapy team.
I am one of the fresh Faces of Philanthropy for
in Focus magazine also hard that fresh.

Speaker 2 (01:06:35):
Faces of Philanthropy. Yeah, oh that's awesome. Congratulations. So what's
the photo shoot?

Speaker 17 (01:06:39):
So they take like they have a stylist coming, it's
a whole thing, and they take our photos. We do
a whole interview with them, and we get featured in
the magazine and the June issue.

Speaker 5 (01:06:48):
Okay, that means she can change her like profile, right,
like to like philanthropist.

Speaker 1 (01:06:54):
You probably can do that anyway. If you give like
a lunchbox has a two bucks, that's it.

Speaker 7 (01:06:57):
Register Hell, in focus? Have you heard of me? I've
been doing?

Speaker 1 (01:07:02):
You want to be in focus?

Speaker 6 (01:07:04):
I mean, I didn't know what in focus is. But
I've done philanthropy for a long time.

Speaker 1 (01:07:08):
But what's the what's the last amount of philanthropy did?

Speaker 6 (01:07:13):
I hosted a charity event for kid Power, their whole
organization called CrossBridge, like a week ago.

Speaker 5 (01:07:19):
There you go.

Speaker 17 (01:07:21):
Why did kid Power nominate you?

Speaker 2 (01:07:23):
Oh?

Speaker 7 (01:07:25):
I have no idea.

Speaker 6 (01:07:27):
They're too busy, you know, saving lives, so they don't
have time to nominate me for a magazine?

Speaker 1 (01:07:33):
Is that what it is?

Speaker 11 (01:07:34):
Is it?

Speaker 2 (01:07:34):
Kid Power not about saving lives, about giving kidsup a
safe place to go.

Speaker 6 (01:07:37):
Yeah, But they also have other organizations under their umbrella
that is, like they have Restoration House where they take
people suffering from abuse and addiction and they get them
back on the right track of life. And I just
feel like you use that like, but they are saving
lives also, they're giving these kids a way out.

Speaker 2 (01:07:55):
But of and it's a great organization, very familiar with it.
But I'm saying you're using that as an excuse as
to why they haven't nominated you as my only thing.

Speaker 1 (01:08:02):
I think they probably would like the publicity. They probably
use it.

Speaker 6 (01:08:05):
Oh maybe maybe, but yeah, and yeah, they're you know,
they're busy getting grants to build buildings and things.

Speaker 7 (01:08:11):
You know, they're busy. They're over there, you know, raising money.

Speaker 5 (01:08:14):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:08:14):
Yeah, okay, Well, Morgan, congratulations. Are you feeling you better?

Speaker 4 (01:08:17):
I'm feeling a little bit better.

Speaker 17 (01:08:19):
Yeah, I still feel a little suggested though.

Speaker 1 (01:08:21):
Your little head cold in there?

Speaker 9 (01:08:22):
Yeah, it's hanging out.

Speaker 1 (01:08:23):
How's your and embargo going?

Speaker 9 (01:08:26):
My verdigo?

Speaker 1 (01:08:27):
There you go and a bargo.

Speaker 17 (01:08:28):
Thankfully it's not coming on. But like any type of
cold or illness can bring it on, So a little nervous.

Speaker 7 (01:08:33):
Oh no, this may ruin the foot photo shoot. Guys,
they may have to cancel.

Speaker 1 (01:08:37):
Maybe how do you go to that?

Speaker 7 (01:08:39):
He Oh no, I didn't know what it came back
with the new illness.

Speaker 17 (01:08:42):
This is good, potentially, potentially, but also lunchwalk is probably
the reason I'm sick.

Speaker 1 (01:08:46):
Oh yes, he's the reason anybody gets sick in this place.

Speaker 7 (01:08:48):
Here we go, no chance because of me.

Speaker 2 (01:08:53):
There is zero peron zero is not zero.

Speaker 1 (01:08:58):
You bringing illnesses all the time.

Speaker 7 (01:09:00):
Morgan, have you gone out in public. Yes, you know
all those people weren't sick. No, But her point is
I was the person she's been around. She's gone public.

Speaker 1 (01:09:11):
Then there are germs and been sick and you said
three inches from her.

Speaker 4 (01:09:14):
Yeah the morning.

Speaker 7 (01:09:16):
I've been sick in like a week. Guys, there ain't.

Speaker 1 (01:09:18):
No yeast up in here.

Speaker 9 (01:09:19):
Cough today.

Speaker 1 (01:09:20):
He wants coffee today like.

Speaker 7 (01:09:23):
I really wouldn't.

Speaker 2 (01:09:24):
Yes, you were we all heard you, all right, we'd
do bone had like four times. Not today, yes, today, yesterday,
literally today, No, scuba ain't correct.

Speaker 7 (01:09:36):
I'd be telling me something good. But you go getting
the way of a good story.

Speaker 2 (01:09:45):
Okay, Miles, I hope you have a safe triple. I'm
gonna see it obviously. But what's your social media so
people can call you?

Speaker 1 (01:09:54):
I'm at on air, Miles and Miles with little Y
and you do you're doing your show from here? I am? Yeah?
And what what you? What do you? What did you
talked about last night? Anything good?

Speaker 11 (01:10:02):
Anything?

Speaker 1 (01:10:02):
We could have stolen Candy Perry go into space? Did
you hate on it like I did a little bit?

Speaker 5 (01:10:06):
Yeah? Good, a little bit?

Speaker 1 (01:10:08):
Yeah, all right, there we go.

Speaker 4 (01:10:10):
Good.

Speaker 1 (01:10:11):
Thanks for having me. Yeah, you're welcome. Amy on your
on feeling things. What do you guys do? Yeah, we are.

Speaker 3 (01:10:15):
The title of it is peeing in public.

Speaker 5 (01:10:18):
Yes, I do it all the time, kids do it.

Speaker 3 (01:10:21):
No, it's like for women especially like when you have
to pee and you like have to do this little
squat thing. Fertility struggles and then also are feelings that
we're breaking down our shame versus guilt.

Speaker 2 (01:10:32):
Well that sounds funding.

Speaker 5 (01:10:39):
The pen in public sounds fun.

Speaker 7 (01:10:41):
And then it got a little sad.

Speaker 3 (01:10:43):
It's like a mixture of like therapy stuff but also
we laugh.

Speaker 2 (01:10:47):
Just good, great, check that out and then I have
Chris Tomlin on the Bobby Cast if you want to
check that out.

Speaker 1 (01:10:52):
Okay, that's it and we will see you guys tomorrow.
By everybody,
Advertise With Us

Hosts And Creators

Bobby Bones

Bobby Bones

Amy Brown

Amy Brown

Lunchbox

Lunchbox

Eddie Garcia

Eddie Garcia

Morgan Huelsman

Morgan Huelsman

Raymundo

Raymundo

Mike D

Mike D

Abby Anderson

Abby Anderson

Scuba Steve

Scuba Steve

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