Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Wake Up, Wake Up in the mall and it's on
the radio and the Dodgs. He's on Turn Ready in
his lunchbox, More game too, Steve red at it, trying
to put you through fock. He's riding this week's next bit.
The Bobby's on the box, so you know what this.
Speaker 2 (00:27):
Is? The Bobby Ball?
Speaker 1 (00:29):
What children shows the parents hate the most? I saw
I go with young kids lunchbox. What kids show do
you watch or that your kids watch that you hate?
Speaker 3 (00:40):
Uh? There's a guy. Uh he does I don't even
know what he does. His name is Blippy, and Blippy.
Speaker 1 (00:45):
That's the guy's that's the show, right, Yeah, But I.
Speaker 3 (00:47):
Don't even understand the point of the show. Like we
sit there and he just goes to like a zoo.
Speaker 4 (00:52):
It's like, whoa, look at this animal.
Speaker 1 (00:54):
Whoa, I'm in.
Speaker 3 (00:55):
A ballpit whoo And he does nothing. But they absolutely
love it and it is.
Speaker 4 (01:00):
So terrible, so boring, And.
Speaker 3 (01:03):
I am like, can we just turn this crap off?
But Dad, can we watch Blippy? Oh my gosh, don't
let your kids watch Blippy?
Speaker 1 (01:09):
Do you think partially it's because there's so much color
and he's doing things that are fun for kids to
watch and really that's sad.
Speaker 3 (01:15):
That might be because he's like blue and orange. I
guess this is what the color is. And he does
do cool things. And they always like, Dad, can we
go to where Blippy went? I'm like, no, dude, that's
like in California and it's like a petting zoo. Like,
I'm not gonna go all the way to California to
go to a petting zoo.
Speaker 1 (01:30):
But you can say like your dad did to you,
because remember he took you to.
Speaker 3 (01:32):
The Babe used to take me to the circus and
we would go and we'd pet the elephants in the
parking lot and then we would leave. Until I was
an adult, I thought that was a circus, but it was.
It was them just getting out of the cages in
the parking lot to go into the circus. Yeah, you
can blippy them just like your dad did. You're right,
but I mean Blippy is in his voice. I'm like,
(01:53):
oh god, kids.
Speaker 1 (01:55):
I think Blippy makes it like a ton of money. Oh,
a ton of money, like it has a normal family
and everything.
Speaker 3 (02:01):
Oh, he was coming to town. I looked up tickets.
Cheapest ticket seventy dollars to go to Blippy.
Speaker 1 (02:05):
Pippy's net worth is estimated to be between seventy five
and ninety million dollars.
Speaker 5 (02:09):
Oh my god, gosh.
Speaker 1 (02:10):
Forbes has him at a hundred and forty million.
Speaker 2 (02:12):
Oh and he really does do like just dumb stuff
like oh, let's get on this way.
Speaker 1 (02:18):
According to Forbes, he earns twenty five million annually through
his entertainment videos for children. His name is Stephen John Wow.
And you wouldn't recognize him, like in normal clothes, I
wouldn't think, so he looks really orange and blue here, Eddie,
what show is awful? Coco Melon?
Speaker 2 (02:34):
They just do these dumb songs, and I think it's
like in a different I think they're made in a
different country, so they don't they don't even sing the
nursery rhymes right like the way that we learned him.
So it's just weird and it's just very strange. Like
I had to cut my kid off from watching Coco Melon.
Coco Melon is from southern California, so good point. Oh really,
Oh that other country that is weird sounds like.
Speaker 1 (02:55):
Brazilion or something.
Speaker 3 (02:57):
But he does have catchy songs and the kids learned
the songs like by watching Coco Melo.
Speaker 4 (03:01):
You like it, I don't hate.
Speaker 1 (03:02):
It, So the children show that parents hate the most.
Number one is Coco Melon three D animated videos of
nursery rhymes. The critics say it's bad, dude, it's repetitive
nature and overly simplistic animation. Next was Blippy, an energetic
guy who shows kids factory zoos and parks.
Speaker 4 (03:18):
So, I mean it just trives.
Speaker 1 (03:20):
Me, not anything else on the list before I tell
you Number three Blue. I like Blue is fun. Blue
is so fun it is it is like it's good for.
Speaker 5 (03:29):
Adults, like it, yes, some kind of adult humor.
Speaker 3 (03:33):
Like it's like real life, like they the parents fight
and it's like man, because they leave the cabinets open
or whatever.
Speaker 4 (03:38):
It's like, man, that's really what happens. You know.
Speaker 3 (03:40):
Mom and dad get upset and they're like mom, Dad,
were you quit fighting?
Speaker 1 (03:42):
And the kids saying the same thing, like I was
watching on So I like Blue.
Speaker 4 (03:48):
I'll be honest.
Speaker 3 (03:49):
My older kid has got into Pokemon. I don't understand it.
I don't know what is going on. And I didn't
realize that the yellow guy is not Pokemon gets you
the whole time. I thought he was Pokemon and the
show was about him, but there's different Pokemons. Their names
are impossible to say. It makes no.
Speaker 4 (04:06):
Sense and I want my kid to get out of
it as soon as possible.
Speaker 1 (04:08):
Mike still watches Pokemon. Yeah he loves it. Maybe Mike.
Speaker 2 (04:13):
Oh no, okay, I know the third one? What Pepa Pig?
Why it's just annoying. That's from a different country. Maybe
that's why I don't like it.
Speaker 5 (04:21):
How do you know?
Speaker 3 (04:21):
Like Peppa Pig is hilarious and they just like peg
is so fun.
Speaker 2 (04:25):
So they call vacations holiday because I think it's like
Britain or whatever, and like so now my kids are
just like, hey, are we going to holiday this year?
Speaker 1 (04:34):
Like that?
Speaker 5 (04:37):
So sophisticated.
Speaker 1 (04:39):
Pepa Pig is number three. Yes, it's an animated female pig.
And the pig is at times disrespectful to her parents.
Oh yes she is. Does that? Does that ever come
back to you? She's British? Are they ever disrespectful to
you because they see pep That's a good one. I
have not noticed that, but I'll keep an eye out
for that now. Pepa Peg is from Britain. It is
a British animated television series for preschoolers.
Speaker 2 (04:58):
What is funny though, is the dialogue they do, like say,
like the dad's talking. He's like, so today we're gonna
we're going to walk to.
Speaker 1 (05:06):
The oh like as amazing, Like how are they talking?
And they snort in the middle of the sudden So good,
That's what I'm this guy's not that passionate about anything
but like the challenge.
Speaker 3 (05:17):
But those are those are shows that like when my
kids are watching those, I will sit down and I
will enjoy the episode like I'm like, that's funny and
you can you laugh at it? And other ones that's like, gosh,
please get off my screen. Guy's passionate.
Speaker 1 (05:30):
It's time for the good news.
Speaker 2 (05:36):
There's a high school in Wisconsin that received a huge,
amazing gift and they're like what on earth? Like who
gave this? It was a one point eight million dollar estate. Wow,
somebody donated their estate to the school and then they
just sell it and no, none of the schools like,
well what are we gonna do with it?
Speaker 1 (05:53):
Right? But first they were like who who is this?
So they did some research.
Speaker 2 (05:57):
They found out that it belonged to Millie Lindahl and
she went to school there like seventy years ago. Wow,
And she said she didn't. She didn't have any families,
she didn't have any kids, no close relatives. So she
wanted to give it to the high school because she
had such great memories there. And now the school is like,
I think we're going to turn into a performance center
and just name.
Speaker 1 (06:14):
It after her. So they're not selling it at the money.
They're gonna actually use the land. They're gonna use it.
Oh wow, school, that's crazy. I feel baffal. Nelly Millie whatever. Yeah,
just by herself. Yeah, no, one like just like, I'll
just give it to the school, I guess.
Speaker 6 (06:26):
But she had a lot of fun memories there seventy
years ago.
Speaker 1 (06:30):
I'm not fighting that. I'm just saying that. I mean,
that's crazy. I good story, that is what it's all about.
That was telling me something good over to Amy with
the morning Corny. The mourning Corny singing.
Speaker 6 (06:45):
In the shower is fun until you get soap in
your mouth. Then it's a soap opera.
Speaker 1 (06:52):
I'm just confusing the delivery, okay. And then then that
was the Morning Corning Tuesday reviewsday. Let's do a few here.
I'll go first, I watch the complete season one and
two of the Capture on Peacock. We actually started it
(07:13):
last week and finished it this week. It's awesome. I
mentioned it that we were going through it. It is
a show that's basically about surveillance government. It's one of
those it's awesome. So I don't want to say too
much because I'll spoil it. The first season was like
twenty nineteen. The second season wasn't until twenty twenty two.
Then we thought there were no more, but no, they're
(07:34):
doing another season. So it's The Capture on Peacock. I
give it four and a half out of five. Video Monitors.
Two seasons awesome. You definitely have a type like you
have a type of show.
Speaker 5 (07:46):
Right now for sure.
Speaker 1 (07:47):
Yeah, anything with like CIA, Aliens, the World Aliens, Yeah,
any of that stuff. I'm in for it. But this
is this is awesome and you gotta watch. I know
I've reviewed it before, but you have to watch A
Day of the Jackal also wanted. I started that Peacock's
in like they are in putting some good shows on now,
So I give it four and a half out of five.
Mike d What you watch?
Speaker 7 (08:07):
I watched Zero Day on Netflix. It's a series six episodes.
I'm kind of in that mode that you're in. It's
about a cyber attack that happens in the US where
all technology goes down for like a minute. Robert de Niro, Yeah,
and then a bunch of people die and he gets
hired to kind of lead the investigation.
Speaker 1 (08:22):
He's a former president. We've only watched one episode of this,
but I jumped on it since I saw, Oh, there's
people hacking stuff I'm in. So what do you give it?
Speaker 7 (08:30):
I give it four out of five cyber attacks. It
feels very realistic. Like some of these shows get a
little bit too bizarre on like what could happen in
the world.
Speaker 8 (08:37):
This one feels like it could happen right now.
Speaker 1 (08:39):
And Robert de Niro probably isn't going to be in
something bad right Probably. He also doesn' do TV shows
like this good point four out of five good Amy anything.
Speaker 6 (08:48):
I can't review anything. I've just been taking your suggestion.
So I've started those shows and that I can say
they're all good, like Paradise and Jackal whatever both good.
Speaker 1 (08:57):
Can't review it, Yeah, we heard nothing. All we heard
was when she said that.
Speaker 6 (09:01):
But I'm all but now people can take capture more seriously,
they can take your review of Capture more seriously, because
I'm saying.
Speaker 1 (09:09):
You're reviewing my reviews.
Speaker 5 (09:10):
Now you're on fire.
Speaker 1 (09:11):
I gotta take that Morgan anything.
Speaker 6 (09:13):
Yeah.
Speaker 9 (09:13):
I also watch Zero Down Netflix binged it all in
one night, so so good. I also give it four
out of five Electronic devices.
Speaker 1 (09:22):
Yeah, that's stuff. You know that suf's happening. You know
what's gonna happen.
Speaker 9 (09:25):
It was very real life. I was like, I feel
like this could be our lives.
Speaker 1 (09:29):
We'll get to some more coming up, just a little bit,
Bobby Bone, So more Tuesday reviews day watch WoT do
you have anything? No?
Speaker 3 (09:39):
I got one episode led to Apple Cider Vinegar, but
I can't review it because I'm not done.
Speaker 1 (09:43):
See that guy knows how to follow rule.
Speaker 4 (09:45):
Yeah, yep, I want to review it so bad.
Speaker 1 (09:47):
You can't one episode up, It'll be white noised, Eddie anything.
Speaker 2 (09:52):
Yeah. I actually went to the movie theater. I saw
Paddington in Peru. Bear. Yeah, so I guess the first
Paddington he's in London. That's the whole story of him
whatever being adopted by a family. Then now he got
a letter from his aunt who lives in Peru. I
guess Paddington's from Peru, so he goes with the whole family.
They go to Peru to go find his aunt and
(10:12):
she's missing, so they're in the jungle.
Speaker 1 (10:15):
Telling the story. Yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm good on that.
Speaker 2 (10:18):
I'm a verreal. I'm just dude. My oldest son is
seventeen years old. My youngest is six. I've been going
to these dumb movies for way too long, so i
don't care if the movie is good. I'm over these cartoons.
And it's not really a cartoon, it's a fake bear.
But I'm just over these kinds of movies. I want
to now take my kids to good movies. So Paddington
(10:39):
in Peru. It's not a bad movie, but I'm gonna
give it three oranges because I'm just tired of these movies.
Speaker 1 (10:43):
What's the best cartoon that you went to as a
dad that ended up being awesome for you?
Speaker 2 (10:47):
This is good. Coco was awesome, saw because that reminded
me of me.
Speaker 1 (10:52):
Finding me of me, But yeah, go ahead, Coco was good.
Speaker 2 (10:55):
Inside Outs, Oh dude, both inside Outs are really really good.
Speaker 1 (10:59):
I've seen one, I've not seen two, but two. Does
anxiety come into play inside Out?
Speaker 2 (11:05):
She's like almost a teenager, so it's different emotions.
Speaker 1 (11:08):
Yeah, are there hormones that come into Inside Out too
or is that too much?
Speaker 2 (11:12):
Is that three?
Speaker 8 (11:12):
Just the emotions?
Speaker 1 (11:13):
Okay, embarrassment, God, the hormones that happened yet, well you
said teenager. I didn't know they could get there with
Inside Out three.
Speaker 2 (11:20):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (11:21):
Inside Out one was so good, so good. I just
can't I guess I could. I haven't sat down and
said I want to dedicate time to a cartoon, even
though Mike doesn't like call them cartoons. They're animated movies,
animated movie, but those are they do a wonderful job
of doing kid an adult parallel at the same time. Yeah,
anything else.
Speaker 2 (11:39):
Yeah that I like.
Speaker 1 (11:40):
Yeah, I mean the toy stories are really good.
Speaker 2 (11:44):
Oh remember Soul. Soul was really good.
Speaker 3 (11:46):
Never saw that's like a movie that is an adult movie.
Speaker 2 (11:50):
But definitely the kids didn't stick to that. When the
kids are like, what is this soul?
Speaker 5 (11:55):
Yeah, when one tuck says that was an adult movie?
What is that?
Speaker 4 (11:58):
You know what I'm saying. I watched it, and I'm like,
there's no way kids should watch this movie.
Speaker 1 (12:02):
Like it's like, but it's a cartoon.
Speaker 2 (12:03):
No, No, it was a garden.
Speaker 4 (12:05):
It's like it's like death.
Speaker 2 (12:07):
Yeah, and it's serious.
Speaker 1 (12:08):
How they addressed it.
Speaker 3 (12:09):
It's very serious, and I'm like, this is not fun
for kids at all.
Speaker 7 (12:12):
It's about him having like a midlife crisis, like deciding
what he wants to do with his life.
Speaker 1 (12:17):
Have I seen Soul? I feel like, probably not watch it.
Speaker 8 (12:19):
You'd remember it will came out like in twenty twenty.
Speaker 5 (12:23):
Oh. I don't remember a lot from that year.
Speaker 1 (12:25):
I know. That's why I'm thinking. Okay. There was one
though that I watched up Up was good?
Speaker 2 (12:31):
You like that?
Speaker 5 (12:32):
Yeah, Cars is a oldly but a good either.
Speaker 2 (12:35):
It's a cartoon that's so good.
Speaker 1 (12:37):
I don't feel like that was like adult pointed though,
did you? I thought it was fine.
Speaker 5 (12:41):
It was great for adults. Though, I don't know, because.
Speaker 1 (12:45):
You can't listen. You you probably remember more than I do.
I don't remember watching that going. I really enjoyed this
as an adult.
Speaker 5 (12:50):
That was the first movie we ever saw together as friends.
Speaker 1 (12:53):
I know what you're saying, you too, Yeah, really, but
I remember being like, went to.
Speaker 5 (12:58):
Cart Out two thousands. It was a Big five or something.
Speaker 2 (13:02):
We were all trying something.
Speaker 5 (13:04):
No, I was dating.
Speaker 1 (13:08):
I was auditioning to say if I liked her enough
to be on the show. Was like, because everybody has
to be a friend.
Speaker 5 (13:13):
He said, as friends, I don't know.
Speaker 1 (13:17):
We've talked about it a few times a lot.
Speaker 2 (13:19):
Yeah, no, you're not.
Speaker 6 (13:20):
Talking about enough to where it could literally listeners could
answer that question of what movie did Bobby and Amy
c when they first became friends.
Speaker 5 (13:28):
Boom cars, I guarantee you.
Speaker 1 (13:30):
So we were trying something. I was auditioning her as
a closer friend to see if I could work with
her every day.
Speaker 2 (13:36):
How was that.
Speaker 1 (13:39):
Good?
Speaker 2 (13:40):
Good? Yeah?
Speaker 1 (13:40):
I remember telling her because she was dating her. Then
it became her husband. I was like, military far away,
no good, you'll never see him. Get out And I
was wrong, But then I was right.
Speaker 2 (13:53):
I guess long term, right, like.
Speaker 1 (13:55):
I hold on for the long term win. You were wrong,
hold on for But I didn't know.
Speaker 6 (14:01):
Since you gave I have nothing to do with what
I was like, he's in other countries.
Speaker 1 (14:05):
Who knows what he's up to? Divorced, Yeah, so that's all.
I didn't know him, but I think I was in
the end. I ended up coming out right.
Speaker 2 (14:11):
When did you guys talk about that before the movie
or after the movie.
Speaker 5 (14:15):
No, we didn't talk about it.
Speaker 1 (14:16):
I don't talk during movies. Ye, so definitely not during
I don't remember. I just remember going, that's tough. I
didn't live here like military, like appreciate military, but like
one of my friends is gonna be with the dude.
I was like, there, perhaps no good and maybe what
did you say to that, Like.
Speaker 5 (14:36):
Well, that wasn't the case.
Speaker 1 (14:37):
She was like no, because my sister.
Speaker 6 (14:39):
Is married and so fun kids. Yeah, Like it definitely
seemed like he came out of nowhere and then all
of a sudden, I was dating the sky and.
Speaker 5 (14:51):
Yeah, but I was.
Speaker 6 (14:53):
I put a lot in the fact that our families
knew each other, and yeah, I hadn't seen him in
a long time, but I first met him when I
was nine, and everybody always talked about how amazing he was.
Speaker 5 (15:05):
So I was like, well, this is gonna work out.
Speaker 1 (15:07):
I'm gonna take that from the old category put to
the w Yeah.
Speaker 6 (15:10):
But none of that had anything to do with like
a lot happens in seventeen years like that.
Speaker 5 (15:15):
We were married a very long time for sure.
Speaker 2 (15:18):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (15:18):
I know I wasn't right about why. I just was
right about all of it, you know, right, but.
Speaker 5 (15:23):
None of the fifty to fifty guests these days.
Speaker 2 (15:25):
Yeah, Like, just marriage in general gonna last.
Speaker 1 (15:28):
Anybody say don't do it, and then if they ever
get divorced, You're like, I told you exactly what other
one I'm thinking of another animated movie that I saw
that was really good.
Speaker 8 (15:38):
You liked all the Sing movies?
Speaker 2 (15:40):
Have you watched all of them?
Speaker 1 (15:42):
You've watched? No, no, no, I've watched Sing one with
my nephew who's just turned three, and I didn't want
to watch it, and we started by just watching YouTube
clips because he just wanted to watch the monkey play.
I forget what his name, Gorilla Gorilla, and I was like, oh,
that's fun because I do actual songs like and then
(16:03):
he only calms down for the most part when the
whole movie's on. So I was like, let's just turn
the whole movie on. And then I just got off
my just looked up and I was in it was
good because the real music that's good. Things are good.
Speaker 2 (16:13):
Have you seen the one with Bono in it? Yes?
Speaker 1 (16:15):
I saw, yeah, Bono he is the old kid comes
out with the guitar plays, So yeah, I've seen it,
but I haven't watched every second, I've watched that one
in YouTube video shorts because that's number two. That thing too, right, Yeah,
because he's got the guitar and he's like, I don't
know if I can go out there.
Speaker 2 (16:30):
He's like an old rock star.
Speaker 1 (16:31):
Is that spoiling animated kids movie? If you say kind
of what happens near the end, they don't care.
Speaker 2 (16:35):
They're not listening.
Speaker 1 (16:36):
I feel like it's just kids, right, not only kids
care about spoilers.
Speaker 2 (16:40):
Yeah, they don't.
Speaker 1 (16:41):
Yeah, that kids seen it a hundred times. He wants
to watch the same we're gonna do. Is there anyone
you'd like to apologize to that that's the segment. Eddie's
the one that suggested it. I don't know. Why are
you looking to public apologize? Yes, go ahead, Yes.
Speaker 2 (16:54):
I'd like to apologize to my wife. A few days ago,
she came to me and said that her tire was flat,
that it was indicating on the screen and her car.
Speaker 1 (17:03):
That one of her tires was going flat. I inspected
the tire.
Speaker 2 (17:06):
Myself, went punched it a little bit, squeezed it, moved
it around, like, this isn't flat.
Speaker 1 (17:11):
You're whatever's telling you it's flat?
Speaker 2 (17:13):
It is not flat. Fine, she went another day. She says, still,
tell me it's even more flat. I checked it. It's
not flat. Turns out she had a nail in it.
And then because she went against me and went to
the tire place, she went to the tire place without
telling me because she didn't believe me. But you are wrong,
and that's that's why I'm apologizing, because I was wrong.
(17:34):
But I'm just saying I was a little upset that
she went.
Speaker 1 (17:37):
She totally just just better ignored me. But her instinct said,
you're wrong.
Speaker 6 (17:41):
Needed to ignore you or she's going to end up
on the side.
Speaker 3 (17:43):
Of the road.
Speaker 1 (17:44):
Right, you're right, and that's why i'd like to apologize.
Did she end up on the side of the road.
Speaker 6 (17:47):
No, she did not thinkness because she was proactive.
Speaker 1 (17:51):
She said, my husband's stupid. I'm gonna go check this
out at a tireplace. Yeah. Did you get mad at
her when she told you?
Speaker 2 (17:55):
No?
Speaker 1 (17:56):
No, I was like, Wow, you were right. I'm sorry,
you were absolutely right. It's for you.
Speaker 5 (18:00):
So now you're just publicly apologizing.
Speaker 1 (18:01):
Yes, I'm publicly apologizing.
Speaker 2 (18:03):
And inside when she went against what I said, I
was kind of a little irritated, but I'm over it.
Speaker 1 (18:07):
Now, lunchbox, anyone you want to apologize to you.
Speaker 4 (18:09):
I'd like to apologize to my neighbor.
Speaker 3 (18:11):
There was a dead squirrel in my yard and I
didn't want the kids playing with it, so I got
two sticks and just flung it over into their yard.
Speaker 1 (18:20):
And they didn't do anything to you.
Speaker 3 (18:22):
No, they didn't do anything to me. But I didn't
have anywhere to put the dead.
Speaker 1 (18:26):
Squirrel trash bag.
Speaker 3 (18:28):
Yeah, I mean I was just outside and the kids
were outside, and I was like, man, I'll just fling
it over their yard.
Speaker 1 (18:33):
So now he has a dead squirrel in his yard.
Speaker 3 (18:35):
So they had a dead squirrel in their yard, and
the husband was out of town, so she had to
call her son, who lives somewhere south of town, and
he came over and got the dead squirrel. And I
was like, oh, I saw Jimmy was over there.
Speaker 4 (18:45):
She's like, yeah, I had a dead squirrel in my yard.
And I was like, oh, that sucks. But I like
to apologize my neighbor.
Speaker 2 (18:52):
That was me.
Speaker 3 (18:53):
I threw the squirrel in your yard because it was
dead in my yard and I didn't need it.
Speaker 1 (18:55):
Appreciate you sharing that, yeah, brave, Amy, Well I do.
Speaker 5 (18:59):
But it's private.
Speaker 1 (19:00):
It what No, that's.
Speaker 5 (19:03):
No, it's Bobby. I needed to talk to you in
your office, so we'll just see that.
Speaker 1 (19:07):
Apologize.
Speaker 5 (19:08):
Yeah, yeah, I'm good.
Speaker 1 (19:10):
I'll forgive you.
Speaker 7 (19:11):
I know what it is.
Speaker 2 (19:12):
I don't care.
Speaker 1 (19:12):
You don't even I know what it is. I'm holding nothing.
I I have no resentment. But if it's like she
stole a million dollars, oh, it could be. I would
rather not know because I don't want to get irritated
at something. Why would you? What if you apologize for
something that I don't know where I'm not bothered by.
There is a chance you're introducing me to being irritated
at something.
Speaker 6 (19:31):
Which means the deep down you are irritated by it,
which means I need to apologize.
Speaker 1 (19:35):
I don't know.
Speaker 5 (19:36):
I know what I want to.
Speaker 1 (19:37):
I know what it is that you know I want
to apologize for. Why. No, we're not I know what
it is. We're good, We're not good. I know what
it is. We're good, but we're not good. I know
what is, OK, we all know what you all know
what it is.
Speaker 5 (19:47):
I don't even tell right now. It's your tone.
Speaker 1 (19:50):
It's not good.
Speaker 2 (19:50):
Tone, weird.
Speaker 6 (19:51):
No, you're you're brushing it off like, no.
Speaker 5 (19:54):
We're good.
Speaker 1 (19:54):
No, I already know we're good. I don't know.
Speaker 5 (19:56):
I've known you for twenty years. It's not good.
Speaker 1 (20:00):
Oh my god. Okay, see Mike, do you know what
it is? I don't know what it is. You guys
don't know what it is? What it is? What it is?
I don't know what it is.
Speaker 3 (20:09):
It has to be.
Speaker 1 (20:11):
Don't even say anything else. You do know what it is?
Speaker 5 (20:13):
Okay, and I need I want to apologize.
Speaker 1 (20:16):
No need he Apology accepted. I know what it is.
Speaker 5 (20:20):
I know this doesn't feel genuine right now?
Speaker 1 (20:22):
Okay, apology accepted.
Speaker 6 (20:25):
Bobby, can can we meet in your office? This is
or you want to do it right now?
Speaker 1 (20:30):
Yes? Oh, we'll do it later. We'll do it later.
I gotta do my thing real quick. Okay, but I
don't think you need to apologize.
Speaker 5 (20:38):
I want to. There's a difference, fair enough, Okay, isn't
there a difference?
Speaker 1 (20:42):
Do some of you guys not know? Still? I don't
know what it is? Like Okay, later, we'll get to it.
We'll get to it. We'll get to it. Let me
do mine. I'd like to apologize to my wife because
I have a semi announcement here, but not really. I'm
trying to go pro and pickleball. So I hired a
pick a ball coach and we just bitter lip because
she didn't want to do I hired a pickle wall
He's a former tennis player, okay, who's like playing pickleball
(21:04):
at high level. And I was like, I need somebody
to train me because I'm trying to go pro and pickleball.
Speaker 5 (21:07):
Does he live here in Nashville?
Speaker 1 (21:08):
Yes, and so I hired. That's not the thing. Don't
judge me already, this is not THEO. I hired a
pick theball coach and my wife was like, hey, can
I come out and hit some with you in the coach?
I was like, no, business serious and I shouldn't have
said no. I should just should have just let her
come out and hear with us. Oh wow, I know
I got a little too competitive and that I know
I shouldn't have. That's on me. I'm sorry.
Speaker 5 (21:27):
So she did she end up coming out?
Speaker 1 (21:29):
No? No, no no, but I don't mind letting her
next time.
Speaker 6 (21:34):
Okay, she's probably gonna totally not want to go apologizing.
Speaker 1 (21:38):
I should she asked, I should have said, yes, come out,
but I was like, I gotta train. I don't want
to be, you know, doing anything. It's not up to
my level. Yeah, so I apologize.
Speaker 5 (21:47):
That's good.
Speaker 1 (21:48):
More get anything you want to apologize to publicly.
Speaker 8 (21:50):
I mean, I need to.
Speaker 5 (21:51):
Apologize to myself because.
Speaker 1 (21:56):
This is.
Speaker 5 (21:58):
Because of all my Verdico stuff.
Speaker 1 (21:59):
But I'm just my heads a little bit in the clouds.
Speaker 9 (22:01):
And I may or may not have loved tapped my
garage a little.
Speaker 1 (22:03):
Bit when I was trying to get out backed into
your garage.
Speaker 3 (22:07):
Yeah, like I thought it was totally up and it wasn't.
Speaker 1 (22:09):
And so there's a nice little.
Speaker 9 (22:12):
And I got mad at myself because I was frustrated
with the fact that I'm still.
Speaker 5 (22:16):
Dealing with it was a whole moment.
Speaker 9 (22:18):
So I need to like, I'm not very good at
giving myself grace when this stuff happens.
Speaker 1 (22:22):
So yeah, maybe get that checked out.
Speaker 6 (22:25):
All right?
Speaker 1 (22:25):
Okay, everybody good? Not now, another time we'll do it
on the air. Oh I love that. Good Okay, right, Okay,
thank you guys. May me, I want to run a
story by you, see how you feel about it. It's about
a guy that caught his wife cheating on him. Okay, okay,
and We went way in depth on this on the
twenty five Whistles podcast because I'm not going to get
(22:47):
into the texts because the text got really dirty. But
there's a former NFL player, name is Steve Smith, played
for the Panthers, played for the Ravens. There's a woman,
she's married. Her husband caught the text messages that she
was sending with Steve Smith. So he found out that
(23:08):
an ex NFL player was cheating hooking up with his wife.
Lots of dirty messages. I'm talking lots. They met because
she played in the band for the Baltimore Ravens and
he like led the band and like at times played
like a drum or something.
Speaker 5 (23:23):
What there's a band exactly?
Speaker 1 (23:25):
We didn't know that either.
Speaker 5 (23:26):
Okay, a professional team.
Speaker 1 (23:28):
For the NFL team, right, So it's like a pet band.
Who knows? So the husband finds out has all the
text saved up, puts them all online completely Number one
Front Street Avenue here it is. Sound went completely viral.
There was even a video of him calling Steve Smith going, hey,
(23:51):
you cheated, You hooked up with my wife and Steve
Smith says I'm sorry. That's basically all he said. How
do you feel about him putting all that stuff out
there on the internet.
Speaker 5 (24:00):
I don't like it. Why because, well, okay, do they
have kids?
Speaker 1 (24:06):
Okay, that's where I was.
Speaker 6 (24:07):
That's the number one reason why. Even if they don't,
I don't like it. But if you have kids, you
are being incredibly selfish.
Speaker 1 (24:12):
They're both married, meaning she was married and ninety nine
percent positive he is too with kids.
Speaker 6 (24:18):
It's like, I don't I'm I don't like what happened
to you. Sometimes just we have a choice when we're
going through something difficult of how to handle it, and
there's the high road and the low road, and he.
Speaker 5 (24:29):
Took the low road.
Speaker 1 (24:29):
Well, I don't want to be a hypocrite. I read
all the text, so I was totally h and that's fine,
wildly compelled.
Speaker 6 (24:34):
They did all of their kids' friends, which is terrible.
Speaker 1 (24:38):
Yes, that sucks. And we were talking about it yesterday
and going through all the text messages, and again you
can check out the twenty five Whistles podcast if you
want to hear it does get really dirty. And I
felt a bit hypocritical because I was in I was
reading it all. I was blown away. I was watching
the video. But then I felt bad and I was like, oh,
I shouldn't have done that, but I was still like
consuming the content, right, So I'm with you. When it
becomes real life, that sucks for them. It doesn't feel
(25:00):
like real life because it's like an internet story. It
feels a bit.
Speaker 5 (25:06):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (25:07):
So most of the guys that were like we were
for it.
Speaker 6 (25:10):
Most of the guys on the twenty five whistles okay, well,
I doubt that's why.
Speaker 5 (25:14):
They handle it.
Speaker 1 (25:15):
They're like, blow it up, blow it up.
Speaker 6 (25:17):
Yeah, okay, you're not really putting yourself in their shoes.
Speaker 1 (25:21):
He ended up completely taking his account down to the husband.
Speaker 5 (25:26):
But it's too late. It's already out there.
Speaker 1 (25:27):
It's already out there, lunchbox, What do you think about this?
I love what he did.
Speaker 4 (25:31):
I love what he did.
Speaker 3 (25:33):
She wants to shame him and want to ruin him
and go behind his back. Look, I'm gonna out you
from the terrible person you are, like, I did everything
to show you love and we don't.
Speaker 1 (25:43):
Know what we don't know what he did.
Speaker 5 (25:45):
He doesn't sound like a very much like.
Speaker 3 (25:49):
You come across these sex messages from your wife and
the description of these text messages, and you realize, man,
my wife has been doing this.
Speaker 4 (25:55):
For how long with this dude.
Speaker 1 (25:57):
That doesn't mean he's a good dude.
Speaker 5 (25:59):
And I that's what I'm said.
Speaker 1 (26:01):
I'm sorry.
Speaker 4 (26:02):
I love what he did.
Speaker 3 (26:04):
You could handle privately, but no, he felt scorn and
so you know what, if you're going to burn a bridge,
guess what, I'm gonna blow up your world?
Speaker 1 (26:12):
What about the kids? What about damage of what? Yeah,
she didn't think about the kids when she did it,
did she?
Speaker 5 (26:18):
Well, no, she probably doesn't.
Speaker 1 (26:22):
But that doesn't mean and I would say there's a
difference in maturity and being triggered. You can be immature,
but then when you get so triggered, you can be
wildly immature. Because you're triggered. That doesn't mean that he's immature.
That has been in the rest of his life, I know.
Speaker 6 (26:36):
But I'm just wondering, like, did he have anybody that
he ran this by, like or did he just like
well Price boys are like dude, because you would hope
that you have someone in your life. It's like, hey, look,
I get it. I would want to do the same thing.
Speaker 1 (26:48):
However, check with anybody. No Amy.
Speaker 3 (26:50):
One of the best things he did, though, is he
called the dude that was cheating on his wife. And
he called him and said, hey, man, I know you've
been sleeping with my wife. What do you got to
say is I'm sorry? He goes, uh, I'm.
Speaker 5 (27:00):
Sorry, and he recorded him something and the awesome boom.
Speaker 1 (27:05):
It was like Cheaters the TV show. It was so good. Yeah,
it was compelling a little gross about myself after I'd
spent a lot of time watching it and reading the
text messages. But I was I was enthralled. I mean
those texts were crazy, weren't they about what they were crazy?
Speaker 5 (27:20):
Yeah, I mean I can understand being.
Speaker 1 (27:22):
Like those dirty books you read Dragon.
Speaker 6 (27:25):
Well, yeah, first of all, Fourth Wing, I haven't even
made it to a dirty part yet.
Speaker 1 (27:30):
But Dragon cores No.
Speaker 6 (27:34):
But now I understand how the dragons are involved.
Speaker 1 (27:37):
I get it. I uh yeah, I check it out.
It's a wild story.
Speaker 5 (27:42):
I'll check it out.
Speaker 6 (27:43):
I'm not going to find joy in it.
Speaker 5 (27:45):
Like Lunchbox.
Speaker 1 (27:46):
We talked about would we release it and for what reason?
And I said, I don't think I would not because
of the maturity thing. I think I would be embarrassed.
Speaker 6 (27:55):
Well, it would embarrass me, like, oh, I can't believe
my spouse would do that to me.
Speaker 1 (28:00):
I'm embarrassed, and I said, because probably he's like, hum,
he's unhun no.
Speaker 5 (28:06):
Bigger no obositely Okay, all right, yeah, I me make
me a thing.
Speaker 6 (28:12):
I just yeah, I don't know. There's just there's a
better way to go about it. I think down the line,
he's going to really regret handling it this way.
Speaker 1 (28:19):
I think he already does because he took it all down. Yeah,
so all right, thank you for your feedback.
Speaker 5 (28:24):
I guess we all know how some people in the
room when handle it.
Speaker 1 (28:29):
From TMZ, two rappers have found mysterious coffins on their
doorsteps outside their Florida homes. The creepy black coffin was
dropped off at DJ Khaled's Miami residents. Two people claiming
to be from a delivery company arrived at the house
in a truck, pulled it out. If anybody's dropping a
coffin off at my house, I don't like it. I'm
not sure what situation is, what world I'm in. Police
(28:52):
had the Grammy Award winner security guard had the coffin
destroyed and disposed of. Fans speculated online that the ominous
to livery was connected to a rivalry between DJ Khaled
and a Canadian rapper. Oh it's Drake. Are they feuding?
Drake and DJ Calender feuding. He's feeding again with someone else.
He's lost too many. He need to take a step back.
(29:14):
Drake makes great music, but he needs to take a
step back in the feuds. Americans suffer from touch deprivation
from the Touch Research Institute. In other words, we don't
touch each other enough, especially common for people who live
alone and don't have much of a social life outside
of work. As humans, we should touch more. It lifts
your mood, it helps you fight pain, and touches better
(29:34):
than words for communicating true feelings like love, trust, and appreciation.
Side note from me, I wouldn't get touchy at work.
Speaker 5 (29:43):
Oh yeah, No, that's what they're saying.
Speaker 1 (29:45):
Yeah, if you're deprived, you gotta do it outside of
the business hours, or HR will not be deprived of
calling you and possibly letting you go. Does this include hugs? Yeah?
Speaker 6 (29:55):
Any touch Yeah, and you can hug at work.
Speaker 1 (30:00):
I don't even touch people in pictures anymore.
Speaker 6 (30:03):
We could hug each other, all of us. If we
needed a hug, we would give each other a hug. Yeah,
I'm good though, every get that you're good.
Speaker 5 (30:11):
Right now. Yeah, I'm good, but one day might need
a hug.
Speaker 1 (30:14):
You know, I tell you I take you up on that.
One day I might need a hug. A better title
is more important than a raise. From psychology today, right,
they said the size of a paycheck plays only a
minor role in determining where a happiness more important. It's
how far you've gone up the corporate ladder. Researchers found
the employees gained the most satisfaction not from getting paid
(30:36):
the most, but from ranking higher than others where they work.
So it's more of a status thing if they have
higher status and everybody knows it more than getting paid
more and nobody knows it. It's how lunch Bucks wants
to live his life. He would rather have a really
expensive car and be broke than have money and not
be able to show it.
Speaker 5 (30:52):
Yeah, so bizarre.
Speaker 4 (30:54):
Yeah, I mean I would rather have a nice car
than not.
Speaker 1 (30:56):
But no, it's not than not. It is would you
rather have a Lamborghini and have five thousand dollars in
the bank but no one knows that you only have
five thousand dollars in the bank, Or would you rather
drive your car that's Euro five ultima and have two
million in the bank. But you can tell nobody and
you can't actually, oh, the Lamborghini, see what I'm saying, Lamborghini. Why.
Speaker 3 (31:19):
I mean, if you can't have money and falling at,
what's the point.
Speaker 4 (31:21):
Of having it?
Speaker 1 (31:22):
That's my point.
Speaker 3 (31:23):
Like I get it at an office, like if you're
the CEO, but man, that is a cool title. But man,
have someone blow you making more money?
Speaker 4 (31:31):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (31:32):
A pilot with analogy to spiders has bitten in mid
flight by a tarantula. From the New York Post, A
pilot with a severe allergy to spiders was bitten, forcing
hours long delays as the plane was fumigated. So it
wasn't just about the pilot, since there was a tarantula
on the plane that had to fumigate the whole plane.
Speaker 5 (31:50):
I mean, what how does this happen?
Speaker 1 (31:53):
International? I don't know. Sometimes in a football stadium a
cat will run on the field and you're like, how
did kitty cat get in the field? Yeah, I don't
know how things going on there. Also, they're in these hangars, right,
so they're not always moving, true, so they'll stand a hanger.
Who knows what bugs or snakes can do?
Speaker 5 (32:06):
Like anybody that gets by tarantula is going to be bad.
It's just particular.
Speaker 6 (32:10):
Anybody that gets bit by.
Speaker 5 (32:12):
A antela, that's going to be bad. Like but he
also has.
Speaker 6 (32:17):
An aversion to spiders, so it's like a pilot double bad.
Speaker 1 (32:20):
So that's what bad.
Speaker 6 (32:20):
My brain instantly was like, do we need to look
into the co pilot.
Speaker 5 (32:24):
Did they release something? You know, someone tried to poison him.
Speaker 1 (32:28):
My brain didn't think that. Okay, I'll brain, you could
use a hug though, now that you mention it, I knew.
Urine test de Tech ninety two percent positive rate of
aggressive prostate cancers.
Speaker 5 (32:36):
That's amazing.
Speaker 1 (32:37):
A prostate cancer test now with this can nail if
there's an aggressive cancer. It's the second leading cause of
cancer for men living in the United States from the
American Cancer Society, but because of poor reporting, most cases
go under reported. Now there's a new at home urine
test developed by Michigan researchers and a study of two
hundred and sixty six men. The test identified over ninety
(33:00):
correct of aggressive cancers. Wow. The test looks for eighteen
specific genes linked to prostate cancer, provides a clear percentage
score indicating the likelihood of finding significant cancer from study fines.
Can we get this thing? Yes, I'm sure you can
order it. Oh, like on the show, we can do
a bit. Dude, what a terrible.
Speaker 5 (33:19):
Everybody peas to figure out if they have the time.
Speaker 1 (33:24):
Oh my, we all pee into the same bucket. Yeah,
we don't know it.
Speaker 5 (33:29):
Awareness awareness, like, how do you do it?
Speaker 1 (33:33):
And finally, the Border Patrol is seeing an up take
an egg smuggling on the Southern border From the New
York Post, the skyrocketing cost of eggs has prompted an
upticking attempts to smuggle eggs across the Southern border. The
eggs are more expensive now than they've ever been in
the history of eggs. I've invested in eggs collecting. Ah,
I need people to sign them, sell them on eBay. Yeah,
(33:56):
amid an egg shortage, don't worry. Turkey has promised to
step in and fill the void day.
Speaker 2 (34:00):
Thanks.
Speaker 1 (34:01):
Turkey's got a bunch of chickens over there. He's been
waiting for the moment, waiting for their time to shine.
That's the news. Bobbiest. Is there a widely hated food
that you love? So they ask people like, what do
you love that most of your people around you that
they don't anything come in mind for you.
Speaker 6 (34:21):
Well, Brussels sprouts, but I feel like they're having a
moment for the last several years, so people fancy fye,
But I mean I can just eat them pretty plain.
Speaker 1 (34:29):
I think Brussels sprouts their moment is based in people
putting stuff all around the Brussels sprout Like it's just like, watch,
would you like some honey Brussels sprouts? And it's like
ninety five percent honey and a little piece of a
Brussel sprout or bacon, which.
Speaker 5 (34:41):
To my point, I can just eat them pretty plain.
Speaker 1 (34:43):
Yeah, lunchbox tomatoes. I think people like tomatoes.
Speaker 2 (34:47):
Like tomatoes.
Speaker 1 (34:47):
Yeah, I don't think that's really a dislike food.
Speaker 2 (34:50):
Maybe kids kids don't like it.
Speaker 5 (34:51):
Seems shocked right now.
Speaker 1 (34:52):
Yeah, yeah, tomatoes doesn't make the list of even top
ten of dislike food. So something that people generally dislike
that you like.
Speaker 3 (34:59):
Sorry, I heard it backwards. I heard something that people
like and I dislike her. Maybe that's dyslexia, now you
have it.
Speaker 1 (35:06):
Yeah, Okay, oysters, I'm with you on oysters. I really
like oysters.
Speaker 5 (35:14):
Disgusting.
Speaker 2 (35:15):
There we go a.
Speaker 1 (35:16):
Lot of people don't like oysters. Like, there is that reaction.
So even if a lot of people like them, the
people that don't they hate them. Oysters comes in at
number four on the list. So here we go. This
is the list here of foods that people like that
most other people hate. Black licorice makes it. That's disgusting,
not like the licorice flavor is there? Y, yes, it's
(35:42):
terrible to black licorice. That's that flavor that's disgusting. Blue
cheese is on the list. Cheese when I could eat dairy.
I love blue cheese. I haven't had any long time,
but I love the blue cheese. Pineapple on pizza makes
the list.
Speaker 4 (35:58):
That is so good. Most people hated that.
Speaker 1 (36:00):
I'm indifferent, no, like, I'll eat it if it's there
and it's the only pizza. If it's that or cheese
or with vegetable. They ate vegetables on pizza. I'll eat
the pineapple. If it's with a meat. You don't like
it at all, you.
Speaker 6 (36:13):
Hate it, or you just like, I'm not gonna eat it.
If that's all that's available, I'll pick the pineapple off.
Speaker 1 (36:19):
Oysters there it is. Sixty five percent of people would
never touch an oyster. I didn't realize it was hated
that much.
Speaker 2 (36:28):
You know, my mom never had an oyster, and my
dad always wanted her to try oysters because he loved oysters.
And she said, for his birthday recently, because he just passed,
she went and got oysters. She's like, they're actually pretty good.
I'm like, mom, you've been missing out on oysters for
so long.
Speaker 1 (36:41):
The texture is what really turned people off about it.
They look kind of gross, but it's the texture that
is a slimy thing.
Speaker 2 (36:48):
Yeah, it's like a It's like a loogi.
Speaker 6 (36:50):
Yeah, fried in on a potato chip, some Chipotle mao.
Speaker 1 (36:57):
Has a lot of flavor to cola oyster. I like them.
I'm not gonna eat them raw. I'll eat them completely uncooked,
but I'll put a little bit of red sauce on
it whatever that is.
Speaker 2 (37:08):
Yeah, yeah, the cocktails on it.
Speaker 1 (37:09):
I don't need it.
Speaker 5 (37:10):
You're not gonna eat them raw, but you'll eat them
on cooked the same thing.
Speaker 1 (37:12):
No, No, I won't eat them fully with nothing on it.
Speaker 2 (37:14):
People just grab me slurp it.
Speaker 8 (37:16):
Got it.
Speaker 1 (37:17):
Yeah, My terminology is not My oyster terminology is not
corre Sorry anchovies.
Speaker 4 (37:22):
No, No, one gross gross.
Speaker 5 (37:24):
I feel like y'all made me eat those ones.
Speaker 1 (37:26):
The word anchovy sits wrong with us because we were
always taught anchovies and sardines are gross. Therefore, I don't
know that I've ever really tried them. If I think,
I cannot ever remember me going knuckles deep in some anchovies,
you're right, because.
Speaker 5 (37:38):
It's just a fish, right, parts of fish or something.
Speaker 1 (37:41):
One of them, either the end anchovy or sardine, is
a collection of fish parts. One of them is a
real fish, I believe.
Speaker 2 (37:49):
Okay, then the anchovy is probably the collection.
Speaker 6 (37:51):
I feel like at some point we put our names
on a wheel and it must have landed on me
because I had to eat one of those two out
of a jar.
Speaker 5 (37:58):
Yep, thanks to y'all.
Speaker 4 (38:00):
Or maybe you spoil the show and that was your puny.
Speaker 5 (38:01):
Maybe maybe maybe is disgusting.
Speaker 1 (38:04):
Sardines are small, oily fish. They're found in oceans worldwide.
They're known for being nutrient rich, So sardines are real fish. Anchovies,
I'm assuming this is the one that's the collection everything
you need to know about anchovies. Anchovies, they're also fish.
Speaker 2 (38:24):
It's just a fish named anchovy.
Speaker 1 (38:26):
Okay, here's how are anchovies different from sardines. Anchovies are smaller.
The flavor of anchovies is strong, salty.
Speaker 2 (38:38):
Yeah, it's just a different fish then.
Speaker 1 (38:39):
Yeah, but one of them, when they make them, they
can them up and.
Speaker 2 (38:43):
It's like chum. It's just like a bunch of fish pieces.
Speaker 1 (38:47):
Which one would that be, Mike, that's kind of the
fake one.
Speaker 8 (38:49):
Trying to find it. I think it has to do
with you. Whenever they can then.
Speaker 1 (38:52):
Yeah, anchovies were a key ingredient in the ancient Roman garum,
a fermented fish sauce similar to worsh sauce. Yeah. I
don't know, but one of them, when they do prepare
them for us, they shove in a bunch of other
parts too. It's like hot dogs, yeah, ground beef, because
hot dogs are just like pig penis, pig butthole, whatever
anything that's yeah, it's all just left over, okay, cool?
(39:16):
Anything you hate morgad, you jump in on this.
Speaker 6 (39:18):
Oh.
Speaker 10 (39:18):
I I love olives and people typically hate like.
Speaker 1 (39:24):
I have just jars of them in my fridge ready
to eat. At any point in time, developed a taste
for olives. I hated olives forever, and then all of
a sudden, I was like, let me get some of
that action.
Speaker 5 (39:34):
Green or black or both.
Speaker 1 (39:35):
I like them both.
Speaker 10 (39:36):
Now do you like purple olives?
Speaker 1 (39:38):
Purple?
Speaker 10 (39:38):
They're in Mediterranean food?
Speaker 1 (39:40):
Would know the difference in black.
Speaker 5 (39:42):
So when you have.
Speaker 10 (39:42):
Like hummus or go to a Greek or Turkish restaurant,
they typically have purple olives in their salads and their
foods similar. They're kind of a mixture between black and
green olives.
Speaker 1 (39:54):
Yeah, I wouldn't know the difference. I like them, though.
Speaker 2 (39:58):
I don't like cherries. Well it's like straight cherry.
Speaker 1 (40:01):
Like cherries, I just don't like to But like with olives,
I don't like that they have the.
Speaker 5 (40:05):
Seed, the heart seed, because you can get olives.
Speaker 1 (40:08):
Without them, right, I know, but sometimes you can't.
Speaker 10 (40:12):
True if you go to a restaurant and get alives, no,
but if you get candlves, they're always pitted.
Speaker 1 (40:16):
Sardines are the ones that are a mixture of fishes.
Speaker 2 (40:18):
Oh really?
Speaker 1 (40:19):
If yes? The sardines a fish, but a canned fish
that is often considered a mixture of fishes as sardines.
A sardine refers to a specific species, but in many
cases the canned product may contain a mix of smaller
similar fish like sprat, bristling or Harrying, all packed together
tightly in the can a medley. Yeah, A greatest hits
a bad fish. Okay, there you go, lobbed bone show Sorry.
(40:43):
Up to day.
Speaker 4 (40:44):
This story comes to us from Louisi.
Speaker 3 (40:46):
And uh An eighteen year old and nineteen year old
had a friend in jail. He's like, hey, guys, I
need you guys to get me some drugs in here.
All right, we'll think of a way. So they went
found a cannon and they were trying to shoot drugs
from a cannon over the jail fence.
Speaker 1 (41:04):
How do they find a cannon, like one of us
in the backyard.
Speaker 2 (41:07):
Maybe one of those T shirt cannons?
Speaker 1 (41:08):
Yeah, oh, but I don't think that's a cannon.
Speaker 5 (41:11):
That's like a T shirt launcher.
Speaker 1 (41:14):
Yeah, like I want a Civil War cannon.
Speaker 5 (41:15):
Oh yeah, I don't think it was like that.
Speaker 1 (41:18):
That kind of cannon, like we just put somebody in
it and shoot them over like the river.
Speaker 10 (41:21):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (41:22):
I mean, the real story is they were trying to
shoot drugs into the prison. But I'm just like, how
do they find a cannon?
Speaker 3 (41:26):
But the cannon supposedly shot up to three hundred and
fifty feet, so they were a little ways away trying
to shoot the drugs in.
Speaker 1 (41:33):
No link, I want to find a cannon ourselves. No,
did the drugs get in.
Speaker 3 (41:36):
No, but cops saw them and things flying through the air,
and like huh, went to investigate and busted them.
Speaker 1 (41:42):
There's that show Jeremy Renner plays, like the Ahead of
the Prison and Warden. Yeah, I forget what it is,
but it's the same guy that Yellowstone Tailor shared in.
And so at the beginning of it, they're shooting tennis
balls with drugs into the prison like they have like
a and that's how they're getting drugs in. They're filling
the tennis balls and cutting a slit putting the drugs
(42:05):
in because that they get over the walls.
Speaker 6 (42:07):
They allowed to have tennis balls and because I mean
they basketballs.
Speaker 1 (42:11):
Mayor of Kingstown is the show?
Speaker 5 (42:12):
Oh yeah, that's a good show. I forgot.
Speaker 1 (42:15):
It was pretty good.
Speaker 5 (42:17):
Oh you didn't like it.
Speaker 1 (42:18):
I don't think I didn't like it. I think something
else came along and I forgot to go back to it.
Speaker 6 (42:21):
Okay, Well, I just didn't know if Yeah, if you
see a bunch of tennis balls and you're not in
trouble for having them, what's going to make them go
look inside of.
Speaker 1 (42:28):
Them seeing a bunch of tennis balls. Yes, all right,
there you go.
Speaker 4 (42:32):
I'm lunchbox. That's your bonehead story.
Speaker 10 (42:34):
Of the day.
Speaker 1 (42:39):
Death is inevitable, right everybody. Yeah, sciences revealed what might
be the most painful ways to die.
Speaker 2 (42:44):
Oh we really want to know this. Oh, I mean,
fire has.
Speaker 7 (42:49):
Gotta be there.
Speaker 4 (42:50):
It's number one.
Speaker 1 (42:52):
So what would you say is the worst way? Fire?
Just from obviously none of us have died or some fire.
So number one is being burned alive. Oh, that sounds terrible,
because whatever keeps you alive while killing you, If it
the more intense it is, the worse it's going to be.
Because a lot of these ways to die you die quick.
It's not gonna be that painful, sure, but it's the
stuff that you don't die immediately from the hurts. Oh,
(43:13):
so being barred alive number one.
Speaker 2 (43:14):
Number two drowning that won't hurt.
Speaker 1 (43:16):
No, I think I think it's you feel crazy, sure,
and then I think there's a point where it doesn't hurt.
Speaker 2 (43:24):
Like you probably panic at first because you can't breathe,
but then you just kind of like you're done.
Speaker 1 (43:28):
So we've heard that's what they say, no, did not
make the list.
Speaker 4 (43:32):
Good hit by a car, Yeah.
Speaker 1 (43:34):
That would hurt. Sometimes you may not even die. Oh
my goodness, I didn't think about that. Next one up
is number two is radiation poisoning, because it's a it's
a version of burning, but you're poisoned from the inside
or from breathing it in.
Speaker 2 (43:49):
Is that actual radiation that you're or like an X ray?
Speaker 1 (43:52):
I don't know, schund the question.
Speaker 2 (43:54):
Well, I guess I don't know how you would get
radiational poisoning chernobyl.
Speaker 1 (43:58):
Oh, like a leak, nuclear war?
Speaker 2 (44:03):
Right, yeah, okay, any of that, Okay.
Speaker 1 (44:07):
Next up, getting eaten alive by bugs.
Speaker 4 (44:11):
That sounds like a bunch of ant bytes.
Speaker 1 (44:13):
I mean, yeah, anything eating you alive probably gonna suck.
Speaker 2 (44:16):
Could you die from a bunch of ant bytes?
Speaker 1 (44:18):
You die from a bunch of anything? The ant bites
would be an allergic reaction more than them eating you away.
It would be yes, if you're allergic you know, to
whatever they're doing.
Speaker 2 (44:28):
Oh, that would be terrible.
Speaker 1 (44:29):
And then finally, decompression sickness deep sea divers like coming
to the surface too fast because your stuff explodes. Oh so,
whenever I was doing breaking Bobby Bones. I did commercial diving,
which is these divers put on one hundred pounds of gear
and they go thirty forty fifty sixty seventy feet underwater
to work on pipes and like the infrastructure of the country.
(44:50):
So we're up in near Seattle, and I trained for
a full day with and it's one hundred pounds of
equipment that you're wearing on your body and you have
to go way down. But you have to go down
and come up timed because your lungs have to adjust
because if you go down too fast, especially up too fast,
they posture, they pop, and so even if your air
(45:10):
gets cut off and you have to come up and
you can't breathe, they can't pull you up because you
will die of being pulled through too fast.
Speaker 2 (45:18):
Do you feel the pressure in your suit as you're
going down or do you just think.
Speaker 1 (45:22):
I didn't because I did it in the appropriate way,
because it was like go down fifteen feet, sit, go
down fifteen feet, sit, And I think I went down
like sixty feet or so. But they said if your air,
and they would do these drills with me where they
cut my air off to then test if I knew
what to do how to get to the emergency path.
For me, they were just testing if I could get
(45:43):
to emergency. So they would randomly we'd be training and
they were not gonna tell you, but we're gonna cut
your air off and you'll see it because it a
little lever moves air and you're like eugh. And so
it's not to freak out. It's to move to your
secondary air. And then if your secondary air doesn't work,
they have to live you slowly up fifteen feet at
a time, fifteen feet at a time, because you're for
(46:05):
sure dead if they just yank you up.
Speaker 4 (46:07):
I'm out on that one.
Speaker 1 (46:08):
I'm out on the bugs eating me. I'm be honest
of all those. Really that feels like torture.
Speaker 2 (46:12):
Oh, I'd say fire number one.
Speaker 1 (46:13):
I'm out a number of ant bites. And if the
person weighs one hundred and fifty four pounds, they could
be killed by two hundred and forty five stings from
a bullet ant colony. This might be the most morbid
segment we've ever done. But I said, I'm at yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, okay.
The Bobby Bones Show theme song, written, produced and sang
by Reid Yarberry You can find his instagram at read Yarberry,
(46:37):
Scuba Steve executive producer, Raymondo, Head of Production. I'm Bobby Bones.
My instagram is mister Bobby Bones. Thank you for listening
to the podcast.