Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Wake Up, Wake Up in.
Speaker 2 (00:03):
The mall.
Speaker 1 (00:05):
And it's a radio and the doctors. He's on time.
Speaker 3 (00:11):
Already and his lunchbox.
Speaker 1 (00:13):
More game too, steve Red and it's trying to put
you through the fog. He's running this week's next week.
The Bobby's on the box, so you know what this this.
Speaker 4 (00:27):
The Bobby Ball.
Speaker 1 (00:29):
Time for the Morning Corny, The Morning Corny.
Speaker 5 (00:35):
Why did the windows all go to the doctor? They
had a lot of pains?
Speaker 1 (00:39):
Okay, that was the Morning Corny. You did it in
character too, Thank you. Pins. Tuesday Reviews Day, what'd you finish?
We finished the audio Murders on Netflix. Anybody else watched this?
Speaker 5 (00:57):
Oh okay, I've been reading it as are.
Speaker 1 (01:00):
Yeah, but it's a different country. It's got two little dots.
It's called The r Day Murders. Okay, so it's Swedish.
We did English subtitles and made them speak English even
though they mouse didn't match. And so it's based on
this book. That's all I want to say. It's on Netflix,
five episodes only. For the whole thing, I give it
three and a half out of five snowfalls. It's a detective.
(01:22):
It's like a thriller detective murder type series and it's
spelled Ari but it's the Audi Murders, but in the
other language it's a one word. So we did that
and then we watched and we finished Say Nothing on Hulu,
which it was crazy good and it's real life too.
This was based on the IRA the Irish Republican Army
(01:47):
and how they were fighting to get Northern Ireland back
from the British and it was the story of basically
these kids that were in the Irish Republican Army. I
don't want to say too much about it. You have
to put this up. They speak in English, but it's Irish,
so you don't know half the craft they're saying, so
you have to put the subtitles on to read along.
And it's all true. And the story is about Gene mcconmbell,
(02:10):
a single mother of ten. The first episode, she's abducted
from her home. All her kids are there and the
whole time you're trying to figure out what was up
while actually learning about the history of that war. It's
really good.
Speaker 5 (02:23):
I made note of that.
Speaker 1 (02:24):
There are certain things that they say the elicate like
I means yeah, oh yeah, I lots of Irish I
give it four and a half out of five, four
lead clovers.
Speaker 5 (02:34):
I'm Irish, so.
Speaker 1 (02:35):
There's not one forty clover in the whole series. And
I think it's like nine episodes but irish, but four
leaf clovers. I give it four and a half really
really great, and then especially when you learn something like
that makes it even better. So that's what I got there,
Amy Anything chiefs Aholics, Oh you watched it a document
and gosh.
Speaker 5 (02:51):
My homework assignment. And I give it three point five
out of five wolves.
Speaker 1 (02:56):
Oh, this is the documentary on Amazon about the guy
who would go to a way Kancity Chief Games. He'd
rob banks on the way to fund his lifestyle. Yeah. Crazy.
Speaker 5 (03:05):
I just felt like in the beginning it was a
little bit slow, we could have gotten there, and then
I felt like it was really dramatic towards the end.
So three point five, I don't want to give anything away.
Speaker 1 (03:15):
Kind of blew your mind.
Speaker 5 (03:16):
That was real though, right, Yeah, Like I knew nothing
about this, Like if y'all talked about it, I have
one to hear out the other because I was just
not familiar with the entire story and it is kind
of crazy how it all played out.
Speaker 1 (03:26):
He's a super fan of the Chiefs and wanted to
have money, so we'd rob banks on the way to games.
Speaker 5 (03:30):
And it was bizarre to me, is people were actually online
trying to support him.
Speaker 1 (03:34):
And for another Chiefs fans Chiefs Kingdom and they stick together.
Speaker 5 (03:37):
Yeah, I know, but I mean, at some point have
to realize this has gone too far.
Speaker 1 (03:40):
Mike d Did you watch the new Marvel movie Have
New Captain American movie Brave New World Theater. Yeah, okay, thoughts,
I think after thirty five Marvel movies, my expectations they're
a little bit higher. It was really average, and it
kind of felt like a bait the switch, Like the
whole trailer was like him fighting the Red Hole. It's
a very little part of the movie. Who's him the
New Captain America? Anthony Anthony Mcki? You got it? Morgan,
(04:03):
did you watch it too?
Speaker 2 (04:04):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (04:04):
I went to it. I'm opposite. I loved it.
Speaker 6 (04:06):
I thought it was great, It tied up some loosens it.
I feel like it started a new side of the
Marvel movies that's coming. And I really like him as
the New Captain America.
Speaker 1 (04:17):
All right, Mike, your review, your you're rating. I give
it three out of five shields.
Speaker 5 (04:20):
Morgan, I give it four out of five pills.
Speaker 1 (04:23):
Yeah, I don't get any of the references and pills.
There's been thirty five movies. Thirty five you've seen them all?
Seen them all because you passed ten times? Yeah, multiple times.
Which one have you seen the most? Probably Avengers Endgame?
I rewatched that one every few months. Wow. Yeah, it
isn't that one like three and a half hours. Yeah,
but you just put it on, come back to it later,
(04:44):
rewatch it all. Right, there you go. Tuesday reviews days.
We'll put those up up on bobbybones dot com. The
question is if you can steal one skill from any
person in the world and you instantly have that skill,
whose would you take and why would you take it?
You just get to go boom. I'll take John Mayer's
(05:05):
guitar playing skills. I'm not selecting that, but that can
be a thing. It can be a musician if you want,
whose do you take? Why do you take it?
Speaker 5 (05:11):
Amy Adele's voice, because I don't know, it's so beautiful.
Speaker 1 (05:16):
How would you use that a singer?
Speaker 5 (05:19):
Obviously I'd be a star.
Speaker 1 (05:22):
So that to you is the voice?
Speaker 5 (05:24):
I mean, maybe we've just been listening to a lot
of her around the house. My son's sort of obsessed
with a del right now. So yeah, she's top of
mind for me. And I can't think of anybody that
doesn't like Adell's voice.
Speaker 1 (05:36):
Yeah, I think I would take Steph Curry's shooting skills.
I think he's the greatest shooter of all time, and
I think he's probably the only player now that has
the greatest of all time skill like active player. I
think of football like a skill, basketball, Baseball. I mean,
I mean Otani, but he's got a couple of skills.
Speaker 5 (06:00):
Practice like he does, or you just have you just
have it.
Speaker 1 (06:02):
It's just in you cool. So you have Adel's voice,
I have Steph shooting skills.
Speaker 5 (06:05):
You don't even have to practice there.
Speaker 7 (06:08):
Eddie Elton John's piano skills because people have pianos everywhere right,
Like you walk into a house. I can kind of
play like chords. I can sing like Long December by
counting crows. But to sit down and like just and
everyone be like, wow, he's so good. I wouldn't even
go professional. I wouldn't go on tour. I would just
do it so I can impress people. When to go
(06:30):
to their houses.
Speaker 1 (06:30):
Yeah, until you wanted to make money, then you go
on talk. Yeah, you and Amy be torn together, lunchbox man.
Speaker 2 (06:36):
I would love to have Johnny Banana's Challenge skills, like
the way he can navigate a season of the Challenge,
Like he can come in as the underdog, have no
one on his side, and turn the whole house to
where he has protection everywhere and make it all the
way to a final. And he's good at all the
weird like challenges that they have, the daily challenges, the
(06:58):
team challenges. He's great in the final. So I would
take his skills on the challenge of every skill of
every human that's the one, you think, I love it?
What do you mean original?
Speaker 1 (07:11):
That is huge? I mean, is he the goat of
reality shows?
Speaker 2 (07:16):
I don't even think he's the goat to the challenge man.
Speaker 1 (07:19):
His favorite? Yeah, No, I mean it's his. I'm totally
down Morgan.
Speaker 6 (07:24):
I think I would go with Meryl Streep's acting skills.
I've always wanted to be an actor, and she's so
iconic and she's so good at every role she does
that being able to like live a day in the
life of Meryl Street would be insane.
Speaker 1 (07:36):
A lot of range. Yeah, she's Johnny Bananas, but a
lot of range. Hey, Ray Mundo, whose skill would you steal?
Give me Usain bolt speed. Gosh, that's a good one.
Just run fastest man in the world. I could use
it in the Olympics. And then well he's he's old.
If you take it now, he does, he's not to
(07:57):
pass men in the world, right, he's retired. Like you
don't get them at their prime, you get them right now.
But he's still gonna fly. Yeah, that's a five second
rush you're not getting with anything else. Yeah, that's true. Abby,
What skill would you steal?
Speaker 5 (08:09):
Keith Urban's guitar playing?
Speaker 1 (08:11):
You should have said someone's voice. You need someone's voice,
you said, Johnny Bananas. How are you judging anybody in
this game? But she can play guitar, but she can't sing.
It's not gonna help her. She can sing, but good. Well,
so you were taking a shot at her voice more
than you are her pick. Yeah, okay, got it. Yeah.
I was gonna say we're taking shots at picks. We
(08:32):
got it. You made it personal. Thank you of course.
So your voice, yeah, I could see Urban's playing.
Speaker 6 (08:39):
You can already sing, right, like I want to well, yeah, okay,
ian to sing too really good like guitar playing, because
I can only do basics like three chords.
Speaker 1 (08:47):
So yeah, I didn't understand, but now I get it.
One more might d I would take Mark Zuckerberg's programming skills.
I studied coding a little bit in college, but I
feel if I would have applied myself more, I could
have been better at it. So give me his skills. Question.
Do you feel like he's still an elite programmer or
has he gone so high up that he doesn't have
to program anymore?
Speaker 4 (09:06):
Now?
Speaker 1 (09:06):
I think nerds like that stay with it. I just
think he's still elite. Okay, there you go. The Johnny
Bananas one's weird it is that's a weird one because
you could have been a millionaire, like a multimillionaire. With
the skills, you could have been bezos. He's probably a millionaire.
I have no idea. I don't know that if you
walked in out, and I mean this in the most
complementary way possible, he wouldn't know who I was. I
would I don't know. I don't think I know who
he is. Man. You would find out real quick. I agree.
Speaker 2 (09:29):
Let me see jo I'm trying to google net Worth.
Let's see, he has to be a millionaire.
Speaker 5 (09:32):
That's not accurate.
Speaker 1 (09:35):
We could be a few years out, only a few
years out from humanoid robots doing our chores. Now, this
is proming gadget. And when Meta gets involved with things,
because Meta is Facebook and Instagram, you start to believe
there's some reality to it. And so Bloomberg has the
list of things they think these robots will be able
to do in the next few years, not twenty a
(09:55):
few folding laundry, carrying glasses of water, putting dinnerware on
the dishwasher, other small home chores. Now, as I read
more about it they're working One of the companies they're
working with is the company that does that robot dog
that already exists, and they use it. It's it doesn't
have a dog head, but it has a dog body
(10:16):
and is able to move around. And so the fact
that they're working with a company that is already doing this,
and it's Meta that's doing it, that makes me feel
like we're really probably only a few years away from that. Wow,
pick one chore the robot could do.
Speaker 8 (10:30):
I kind of like my.
Speaker 5 (10:31):
Chores because I'm like, what am I going to do
when I need to procrastinate?
Speaker 1 (10:33):
Like you watch something, you hang out, do more work.
I don't know anything chores.
Speaker 5 (10:38):
Oh I love like when I'm stressed, I love vacuuming
and stuff Like, how am I gonna I can't have
a robot doing that for me?
Speaker 1 (10:48):
Wow? You know as soon as robots exist, though, creepy
dudes are gonna turn them on.
Speaker 5 (10:53):
Oh yeah, no they will.
Speaker 1 (10:53):
They they're gonna start making like robots Like.
Speaker 5 (10:56):
My ex Husban's company has one of those dog robots
and it's so cute, like I when I hung out
with it, I was like, I feel bad, Please don't
ever rude.
Speaker 1 (11:06):
It looks like it's dangerous, like it's going to kill you.
Speaker 5 (11:09):
Yes, but also you're like, oh, look at it. It's
sort of cute and it starts walking, and then you
associate it since it looks like a dog, that it's
a dog, and you don't want it to go into
like any dangerous situations.
Speaker 1 (11:20):
You care for it. You can try to feed it.
I know you're hungry.
Speaker 2 (11:24):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (11:24):
So we had a guy in earlier left his voice
mel and he was like, I want to fly, but
I'm scared to fly. I'm trying to get out of
this work thing, so you listen to it on the podcast.
I read up a bunch of data about plane crashes
and car wrecks and all the things that pilots know
and secondary things airplanes can do in case there is
a crash. I did not bring up the Toronto plane
(11:45):
because I don't was that a crash. I feel like
it landed him because the it was icy. It's weird. Yeah, no,
and nobody died, but it has been a lot of
air And also I didn't want to bring up another
one because he was already scared. A Delta Airlines flight
flipped upside down in Toronto. I can play you this clip.
I did not bring this up with them because I
(12:07):
don't feel like this was a plane crash. I felt
like it was very windy. They had landed and it
was icy, and the plane flipped over because of the wind.
I feel like, am I cherry picking?
Speaker 5 (12:17):
Yeah, you're cheir picking, But I think it's okay to
not if you have a situation where someone's scared to fly.
If you're like, well, guess what this just in from
last night?
Speaker 1 (12:25):
Okay, uh, this is audio from the tower and the
pilot to go ahead. We I'm okay, were you able
to go to two thousand? We can't give it a
try for the weather, like want this airplane is crashing
two three.
Speaker 5 (12:44):
Play a moment. I got no traffic here, so just
let me know what you like to do.
Speaker 1 (12:47):
We just have a crash on thraight here.
Speaker 9 (12:49):
Yeah, we've got a beercraft.
Speaker 1 (12:50):
There's up right down and burning. Yeah, they're so calm.
Oh yeah, we got a crash here. None of those
were the pilots burning. It just says it's the tower
and pilot. I don't know if it was the pilot
or somebody watched other Yeah, because you're right, they were
very calm. That is Coole's cucumber. But we're upside down burn,
they're on fire. Yeah, let's know if you can get
out here anytime soon. I hear nobody died. So again,
(13:12):
when I talked about secondary things that can happen, there
are a lot of things that can happen. It doesn't
have to be plane hits ground everybody dies, which is
what we think because we watch these stupid shows like
Manifest where you're on a plane. Next thing you know,
you land and it's twenty years later. That's what I
worry about. You go over the ocean all a sudden,
You're like, you get off the plane and everybody's got
(13:33):
gray hair, and you're like, what just happened? New details
this morning. This is from UK are in go ahead.
Speaker 10 (13:39):
This is now the fourth major aviation accident in North
America in just the past three weeks. All eighty people
on board survived after the jet flipped on its roof
while landing at Toronto's pearson At Airport yesterday.
Speaker 5 (13:51):
Snow was being blown at the.
Speaker 10 (13:52):
Time by winds up to forty miles per hour. Airport
officials say at least eighteen people were taken to the hospital,
according to paramedics, and none of their injuries are considered
to be life threatening. Overnight, Delta provided an update saying
some of the customers have been released from the hospital
and they've also sent their incident response team. The airline
says they will not have any planned operational changes today now.
Speaker 1 (14:13):
The FAA says.
Speaker 10 (14:14):
That the Transportation Safety Board of Canada will lead this investigation.
Speaker 1 (14:19):
I don't feel like it's.
Speaker 5 (14:19):
A plane crash, yeah, I feel like they it is
the word crash a lot.
Speaker 1 (14:25):
Yeah, but that's what gets clicks it a very unfortunate situation.
Speaker 5 (14:29):
The air traffic control. Oh, like, yeah, we've got a
plane crash on Uh.
Speaker 1 (14:32):
Yeah too, You're probably right. I'm so scared to fly
too that I'm just trying to taught myself out of
it as well. That does this make national news if
all the other stories aren't national news?
Speaker 5 (14:43):
Yeah? Do we have any trips coming up where we
have to fly?
Speaker 1 (14:48):
See, that's where it gets you start to like freak
yourself out because then you're putting yourself in these scenarios.
I can read the stats again, like one in one
hundred chance you get a bad car accident, one in
what was nine million? Getting a plane crash? Pretty good?
But this was like a plane that's like a rollover plane.
What are the four major this year? Like she said,
so you had there, everybody died. That's what I'm talking
(15:09):
about this morning where it hit the helicopter going into DC.
You had the small plane, the ambulance plane and from
Mexico right that crashed near Philadelphia. Those are the two
I remember. I just remember clicking the other ones. And
there was another private.
Speaker 5 (15:26):
Well there's the plane that went missing in Alaska, but
it was found.
Speaker 1 (15:30):
It was a small private plane as well. Is that
like those happen all the time?
Speaker 5 (15:34):
Was it found?
Speaker 1 (15:35):
Yeah, they found lunchbo said they found it. Reported on that. Yeah,
they all they can find them when they died.
Speaker 5 (15:41):
I already forgot that part.
Speaker 1 (15:43):
Yeah, but again that's a small private plane. We don't
know one how credential the pilot was right, because it's
you can get a pilot's license and not flown that much.
American Airlines in DC on January nineteenth and Philadelphia the
Meta METAVC that's what you call them, metavac. Yeah, medical
plane February sixth in Alaska. That's a good memory there.
(16:06):
And then in Arizona, two private planes, small private planes collided.
Was that the one with the Motley Crue. That's gotta
be that. Yeah, it was his plane, the lead singer
of Motley Crue and his girlfriend was on it. I
think the pilot died there the two planes hit each other.
I think had that first one not happened, these small
planes that are flipping over, I don't think that would
be in the news as much as my only point,
(16:28):
it feels like it's so much more because when there's
one big story, it's like Morgan wall And becomes massive
hit and another four artists. It sounds just like Morgan Wallan.
So you got one massive tragedy in every other tragedy.
Now is like, well, let's make a bigger deal about
it because it's kind of like the other tragedy and
they're all tragedies. But I'm gonna go not a plane
(16:49):
crash with the Delta one. I'm gonna say it was
a rollover accident. Yeah, rollover?
Speaker 5 (16:53):
What what you want?
Speaker 1 (16:54):
Yeah? I think I will. It's America. A plane flipping over?
Speaker 4 (16:57):
Yeah, that does?
Speaker 1 (16:58):
When right? When the plane roll when's that ever happen?
On my TikTok algorithm? I get fed what I would
call rough around the edges country music. It's a new
genre where they're not that good in the classic sense,
(17:22):
but they try really hard, like I would put our
friend's land Law, who I'm really rooting for. I hope
they get a lot better because they have a big passion.
Two brothers from Arkansas.
Speaker 5 (17:33):
So wait, you're putting them in a category of like.
Speaker 1 (17:35):
Rough around the edges. They have a lot of work
to do. They're probably a little earlier than they should be.
But I got a lot of Hope and these guys,
and they got a really good song that we like
this country to the bone and the hollows where we
call our home country as it gets. If it's broke
crown here, we just fix it, apple pie, moonshine jam.
(17:58):
It's called rough around the edges kind.
Speaker 5 (18:01):
Do you think because of them you're getting said more?
Speaker 1 (18:03):
Absolutely, because I'm land law to the bone, and so
now I just and they're they're they're good and rough
around the edges country. You know, they have these sub
categories of country and going. Dude, I get some people
that I'm like, is this even serious? It's my algorithm
now just feeds me really terrible people. I think my
standards are getting lower now because I just see. I
(18:25):
used to work on a golf course. Let me give
you an example here. I did like maintenance on a
golf course. I did traps and mode greens, a lot
of weed eater, a lot of mowing, and it was
all old people all the time because it was in
a retirement community. So if there was a woman who
was like fifty two hotty over on whole number eight,
(18:48):
we'd be calling her, there's a hottie. She's boys, she's
young and hot. She's like fifty two and I'm like it,
eighteen nineteen year old kid. But my standards were lower
because everybody was one hundred years old. When there was
a fifty two year old. I'm like, whoa, we got
a young one over here. Boys. I think I got
so much rough around the edge of country that my
standards get lower. Okay, it's all I get fed.
Speaker 5 (19:10):
So when you get like mediocre, you're like, we got
to go.
Speaker 1 (19:12):
I'm not, we gotta go. Get me a deal. Yeah,
I'll sign on myself. I'll create a label, sign on myself. Okay,
but I'm big Landlow Guy, hashtag Landlow forever. But yeah,
it's all. I just wonder if you guys get fed better.
If it's just me, I don't I get some of it?
You do? Oh yeah? My wife last night was like,
do you ever get fed pov on TikTok And I'm
like no, and she showed me. She goes, wow, I
get a lot of this. It's so cool. AI does
(19:35):
povs of coal miner in eighteen fifty six, and it's
like they wake up in the morning, what their day
looks like. Oh, that's it's awesome and she's like, you
don't get this. I'm like, no, I don't get that.
So all our algorithms are giving us what we want
or what they think we might want, that we haven't
been exposed to yet. But I thought the POV stuff
was really cool. Anybody get POV look it up. It's awesome.
(19:58):
That's why I want to do Yeah, yeah, yeah, sorry
about that. Yeah, point of view.
Speaker 5 (20:02):
Like POV of you know, someone that was living during
the Great Depression.
Speaker 1 (20:06):
Yeah's cool. Yeah, yeah, same as coal miner probably, but yeah, right,
very closely.
Speaker 5 (20:11):
Well, I'm just trying to think back of things like
that would be helpful to learn, like POV, like you're oh, Abraham.
Speaker 1 (20:17):
Lincoln, POV, You're a chef at a five star restaurant,
and it's all the things coming and going. But anyway,
rough around the edges and POV, that's what I'm doing
on TikTok right now. A woman in Daphne, Alabama, was
arrested personally twenty thousand dollars in cash from a woman
she was caring for. But she replaced that twenty thousand
(20:39):
dollars in cash with movie money. The fake movie money,
which looks so real because we had some up here,
I could for sure see how you be fool by that?
She stole over twenty thousand dollars from the victim, used
the prop money. The crime was discovered from the victim
noticed the counterfeit bills, which police They are usually seen
in drug investigations, but not in cases like this. Man
(21:00):
good eye, because I would have never noticed it. I
would have tried to use it. You see, people are
not tipping more with this fake money. You say that
story or waiters, and they probably don't. This is not
Yeah I know, because it looks so real.
Speaker 5 (21:13):
Yeah, I would just because you're so busy and on
the go, like I would maybe not notice it till.
Speaker 1 (21:16):
Later instead of in God, we trust it says improps,
we trust the bill. Yeah, I didn't know that. Little
things like that. In Alabama, a gun discharge, we had
two Alabamas in a row. A gun discharge in had
a second graders backpack. The bullet shot out hit another
student's backpack, where it thankfully was stopped by that student's laptop.
(21:37):
No one was injured. The student with the gun was
not able to explain how it got there. I wonder
how old the kid is second grade? Eight years old?
So probably you're old enough to take it if you
see it, probably not apparent hiding it in there.
Speaker 5 (21:50):
And then feel bad about it and be like, I
don't know how it.
Speaker 1 (21:52):
Got there, m hm. Place that the kid was not
able to explain. Further investigation could not determine how the
fire arm was placed in the backpack. That's from al
dot Com. Luckily no kid was hit. A forty two
year old woman in Florida was arrested for firing a
BB gun at two teens riding their dirt bikes near
her home. Just the headline alone, to me, does not
(22:13):
seem like she should be arrested. That sounds normal if
it's just a BB gun. But let's go further. In
a Vero Beach, woman was arrested for firing a BB
gun to two teens riding their dirt bikes near her house.
Indian River County Sheriff's deputies responded to the disturbance. Deputy
is located the two teens, who told them as they
were riding past the house that somebody stood outside and
pointed a gun in their direction. They heard two loud bangs,
(22:34):
which they assumed was the gun being fired. Neither BB
pellet hit the teens on their bikes. Loud bangs, BB gun.
It's like, like, that's it. One of the teens took
a video of the incident, and it does show her
in the front yard yelling go home right now. She
pop probably has a gun in her hand, so deputies
(22:56):
contacted her. She said, yeah, she was holding a BB
gun to scare them off. But she said I didn't
fire the weapon. The BB gun was found with pelots
inside of it. I mean she didn't hit the kids.
It's also a BB gun and they may be on
our property. I'm gonna give you a very light sentence
pick up trash for a date. We'll call it these
don't but don't do it again WPBF. With that story,
parenting experts say, the next time your kid is angry,
(23:16):
use this magic phrase to calm them down. The phrase
is I see you're upset. Now I'm here for you.
Speaker 5 (23:23):
Oh that's good.
Speaker 1 (23:24):
The phrase may seem simple, but it carries a lot
of power. It does three things at once. It acknowledges
their feelings, reassures them they're not alone, and creates space
to calm down without feeling judged. I see you're upset, right,
now I'm here for you.
Speaker 5 (23:38):
Yeah, that would also work for me.
Speaker 1 (23:40):
That's from Ten Days to a Less Defiant Child by
Jeffrey Bernstein, PhD. So you're saying for adults.
Speaker 5 (23:46):
Too, Yeah, I think, especially if you didn't get that
as a child, you may need to be reminded that
as an adult, like, I see that you're upset, and what's.
Speaker 1 (23:55):
The back part? I see your upset and don't shoot?
What is it?
Speaker 4 (23:59):
No, it's not don't shoot.
Speaker 5 (24:00):
Don't troot me with a BVB guy.
Speaker 1 (24:01):
Yeah, my story is mixed up here. Yeah it's I see,
I understand. What is it?
Speaker 9 (24:05):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (24:05):
I need to write this down.
Speaker 1 (24:06):
Yeah, I tossed my story. Is this what we're here for? Yeah,
that's what it is. I see you're upset right now,
I'm here for you.
Speaker 5 (24:11):
Yeah, you are safe.
Speaker 1 (24:14):
Well, now we're adding to it a scam the scammer
called USA. On Wednesday, a woman gave birth on a
New York City subway train around eleven thirty am. The
unidentified twenty five year old reportedly dropped to the floor.
Several people rushed over to check on her. Others went
to the conductor, urging him to stop. You're a conductor,
(24:34):
if you run a subway, that's cool. I didn't know that.
Yeah either, I didn't even think there are people on it,
just robots. Moments later, a baby could be heard crying.
One passenger even whipped out a pocket knife to cut
the umbilical cord. WHOA, that's but I'd be like, and
is it clean? Da? The name of the baby girl
hasn't been released. Oh it's got to be subway, right,
(24:56):
ABC seven, New York.
Speaker 5 (24:58):
Now, whatever stop it is? Maybe?
Speaker 1 (24:59):
Oh right? Or at Madison Avenue, Madison's that's a cool name.
Matt Stell is on the Bobby Cast this week. He's
got number ones like Prayed for You, And we talked
about his life growing up in a small town and
going to college, and you know, his first interest was
heavy red dirt. That's what he did, that's what he wrote,
that's what he tour to do forever. And he talked
(25:21):
about how Prayed for You wasn't exactly the type of
song he thought would be his first hit.
Speaker 9 (25:25):
I wasn't a person on the radio then, Like we
put that song out in that EP out. If I'm
being honest, I wanted that song to be a multi
week number one for Blake Shelton or for whoever, Like
I thought that's what I was doing. And so when
that song hit like it did, we started getting calls
from some labels, and then we got a call and
(25:46):
signed a deal and blah blah blah. I always want
to make music that matter to people, but I never
thought I was going to be as someone who wrote
one of the bigger wedding songs.
Speaker 1 (25:54):
It's interesting because his whole career it was like I
was a red dirt guy trying to write red dirt
songs all my heroes of red dirt guys. And then
we write the song called Prayed for You, and I
did not expect that to be the song they just launched.
Now I'm having and he's in a good place with it.
But he's like, now I'm singing this ballad all the
time that I never really thought would represent me. But
it's so good. It's so good when he plays it,
(26:15):
Matt Still, this has Prayed for You Bobby Bones Show.
He is a guest on the Bobby Cast this week,
So search it out Bobby Cast one word subscribe, listen
to that interview. It's really cool. Thank you guys. All Right,
this is called the selfish will. And so everybody's names
on the wheel. And I've not spoken any of you
about this bit, but you're going to see. This is
one of those try it out segments. So everybody's name's
(26:37):
on the wheel. This is not a bad will, this
is a good will today. Oh okay, this is called
the selfish will. Yes, so I will spend the will
whomever it lands on. You'll get to do a segment
or whatever you want.
Speaker 4 (26:49):
Anything.
Speaker 1 (26:50):
You can be as selfish as you want.
Speaker 4 (26:52):
Okay, how do we know?
Speaker 1 (26:56):
Well it lands on you. You're talking about whatever you
want to talk. We want be as selfish as you want,
so much so that I don't know what you would
talk about if it landed on you. Well, you can't
do is something like a free commercial? Mm I look
at lunch I look at all you guys that I
really just focus on lunchbox. Yeah, yeah, it is an
(27:18):
Maybe it's something that you would normally want to suggest,
and you're like I, that probably wouldn't get on the show.
It doesn't matter. It's called the selfish will, so we'll
spin it. You do not have to have anything prepared,
so I don't feel like now if you don't have something,
but I also don't want to know, so I don't
know about again, this is experiment day. I don't know
(27:40):
if I would give you guys the heads up befo
we're going to do it or not, because I think
it may take away some of that some of the
fun of wondering kind of where everybody's head is if
you're preparing. Okay, everybody good.
Speaker 4 (27:55):
I'm a little more confused now, but I think okay, so.
Speaker 1 (27:59):
It's just gonna on your name and you can talk
about whatever you want. Well, you don't have to just go.
You literally can take a second and go, you know
what I like to talk about this?
Speaker 4 (28:07):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (28:08):
Okay, okay, and okay.
Speaker 8 (28:12):
Why does this feel weird?
Speaker 1 (28:14):
And let's let's see how it goes? All? Right, here
we go.
Speaker 3 (28:16):
Let's boy, Eddie, you got the selfish.
Speaker 1 (28:25):
Will today you can talk about whatever you want. It
can be about your uncle and his band. Oh, it
can be about your kids. It can be about any
injury you have. It literally could be a segment that
was maybe not rejected outwardly but never got used. It
doesn't matter, okay, but it can be whatever you want.
Speaker 4 (28:44):
I think I have something.
Speaker 7 (28:45):
What would you like to talk about And the reason
I probably wouldn't want to talk about it is because
you guys would make fun of me and you probably
wouldn't believe me. But I something has happened to me,
and I swear this is real.
Speaker 1 (28:55):
Okay, Well, we still might make fun of you.
Speaker 4 (28:57):
You don't.
Speaker 1 (28:58):
Yeah, there's no immunity here, Okay, Okay, go ahead.
Speaker 7 (29:01):
So I have a bird feeder in the back. Amy
knows all about this. Amy's bird lady. I have a
bird feeder in the back. I've been feeding birds for months,
I would say about four or five months now.
Speaker 4 (29:11):
I swear these birds know my face.
Speaker 7 (29:15):
I'm dead serious, because if the kids go out there,
like the kids go in the backyard, the birds they
take off. Okay, I walk out there, I'm snow white.
They look at me and they're like, oh, keep eating.
Speaker 4 (29:27):
It's the weirdest thing ever.
Speaker 7 (29:28):
And I have these bird feeders on my window that
are right by my living room. When I'm sitting there
watching TV, Dude, they come up, they eat, they stare
at me while I'm watching TV. My wife's there, they
see her, whoa, they take off. I think birds know
our faces and they say, hey, you know what, Hey
that's Bobby.
Speaker 4 (29:46):
Oh he's cool. I've known Bobby for.
Speaker 1 (29:48):
Years and they tell their other boys and girls like, guys,
we're all good here.
Speaker 4 (29:50):
Dude, I've been flying around Bobby's window forever. He's cool.
He won't kill you.
Speaker 1 (29:53):
But if the kids come out, the birds act different.
Speaker 4 (29:56):
Absolutely.
Speaker 1 (29:57):
What kind of birds are we talking?
Speaker 7 (29:58):
Blue jays, cardinals, chicka, these Carolina tit mouses. You're talking
all kinds of birds, sparrows, finches. I saw a tough
didn't know.
Speaker 1 (30:10):
Was it so cute? Cue? You saw a pair of
tit mouses?
Speaker 5 (30:16):
Yeah?
Speaker 8 (30:17):
Okay, so they do?
Speaker 3 (30:19):
Do they know a face, a smell?
Speaker 8 (30:21):
They can recognize faces.
Speaker 5 (30:23):
They've even said that pigeons can recognize people even if
they change clothes. So it's not about having a yellow
shirt and they recognize it. It's facial recognition.
Speaker 1 (30:33):
So, for the record, I would have never put this
on the.
Speaker 4 (30:36):
Show, right because it's boring, no fun of me. No,
they know your face.
Speaker 1 (30:41):
Because it still can be boring and we still can
make fun of you. But I didn't know this, and
I think I probably at the risk of putting in
on the live shows, Like I don't know where this
is going to go. I don't even know the options.
And if I were to mostly out percentage in my head,
what's the percentages? Is boring? Seventy three percent?
Speaker 4 (30:57):
But is that your true number? Seventy three percent?
Speaker 1 (30:59):
Probably hard to wait it out, but I don't like
to stand boring. No, I don't either, because I like
to learn things. So I'm going to say, can birds
recognize recognize people?
Speaker 4 (31:15):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (31:16):
Also, while Bobby's looking that up Eddie, we should be
considering the fact that Eddie lost his dad and one
of his dad is one of these birds.
Speaker 1 (31:23):
You're doing too much that which ten mounce is your dad?
He thought it'd be funny to be a that would
totally be him. Yes, many birds can recognize individual people,
especially those they interact with regularly. Facial recognition studies show
that birds like crows, pigeons, and magpies can remember human
faces and distinguish between friendly and threatening individuals. Voice recognition.
(31:47):
Some birds, like parrots and crows, can recognize familiar voices
and respond differently to them. Behavioral memory. If a person
feeds them or treats them kindly, birds may associate that
person with a positive experience. Conversely, if someone scares them,
they'll remember that and avoid them.
Speaker 4 (32:04):
That's the kids.
Speaker 1 (32:05):
This is a list of smart birds that can recognize people,
and it's probably not all of them, but they list
crows and ravens. Apparently these crows are are smart in
the ge class.
Speaker 4 (32:15):
Yeah, for sure. Nobody likes crows too.
Speaker 1 (32:17):
It's weird, yeah, because they fly around trying to eat
dead stuff, and.
Speaker 5 (32:21):
They're black and they're associated with Yeah, it's the association.
Speaker 8 (32:25):
But really they are very smart.
Speaker 1 (32:27):
Crows and ravens, pigeons, parrots. I don't know. I've ever
seen a magpie. Do I know what a magpie is?
Are they here where we live?
Speaker 8 (32:35):
I don't know.
Speaker 4 (32:36):
I have not seen one of those in my feeter.
Speaker 1 (32:37):
So if you're kind to a bird, don't be surprised
if it remembers you. Oh, a magpie. I mean it
doesn't look like something I haven't seen. I just haven't
spent much attention to birds. Like I wouldn't know a
tipmouse from a butt mouse.
Speaker 8 (32:48):
Oh you would tip mouse.
Speaker 7 (32:49):
Once you start looking at birds, though, like you will
be like, oh man, it's the tip mouse.
Speaker 1 (32:53):
I see a toughted tip mouse. Now can I see
the other tipmouse.
Speaker 8 (32:56):
I've definitely never seen a magpie. These are beautiful. I
would remember if I saw one of these.
Speaker 1 (33:01):
What is Eddie? What are the other tip What are
the other tip mouses at your house?
Speaker 4 (33:04):
Carolina mouse?
Speaker 8 (33:07):
I've only had tufted come to mind.
Speaker 4 (33:08):
I think it's just toughted.
Speaker 1 (33:09):
There's such a bird following here between you two. It's
like forty percent of the little room here.
Speaker 4 (33:15):
But it's crazy because like.
Speaker 8 (33:17):
You're probably thinking of the Carolina chickadee.
Speaker 4 (33:19):
Oh is that the Carolina chickatye? Ok okay?
Speaker 8 (33:21):
They look are the little one small?
Speaker 1 (33:23):
Yeah? Dang, that's crazy. You know what these birds are?
Speaker 5 (33:25):
Oh?
Speaker 8 (33:26):
I used to play bird bingo?
Speaker 1 (33:27):
Yeah, I know.
Speaker 4 (33:28):
Did you stop?
Speaker 5 (33:29):
Well?
Speaker 4 (33:29):
I mean he's got a lot of bingos.
Speaker 1 (33:31):
She's only planet. She got me over time.
Speaker 8 (33:34):
Yeah, I had. I chilled out a little bit.
Speaker 5 (33:36):
I think I was depressed, but that's an activity it was.
Speaker 8 (33:40):
It was good for me during the time that I
had that.
Speaker 5 (33:43):
I still have my birds and I love them, but
I don't I don't play bird bingo anymore.
Speaker 1 (33:48):
Yeah, but I know a lot about birds though, which
is crazy. Both of you guys do so? Are you
a bird watching Morgan?
Speaker 11 (33:54):
Yeah, well, my dad always has we buy the bird
fetures every year for Christmas. He has a whole thing.
He's like snow white back there. But I was actually
going to say, have you heard the story about pigeons.
Speaker 1 (34:03):
Give it to me.
Speaker 11 (34:03):
How pigeons used to be domesticated and then one day
everybody just because they used to be carrier pigeons so
people would own them, and then everybody just basically let
them loose and now pinge it when you see pigeons,
that's why they love people so much, is because they
used to be domesticated.
Speaker 1 (34:17):
Didn't know that, you know, I've seen carrier pigeons on
a lot of shows like Game of Thrones. Unbelievable if
that's true, Like they really sent messages to someone like
how they knew to come back. Yeah, they were called
homing pigeons too, so they were absolutely real. They played
a major role in communication for centuries that this blows
my mind. Get a bird. I can't get my dog
to come back muchles, I's almost send a bird off
that I cannot communicate with. Certain pigeons have a natural
(34:40):
ability to find their way home from long distances using
the Earth's magnetic field and visual landmarks.
Speaker 4 (34:46):
It's amazing.
Speaker 1 (34:46):
Messages were written on small pieces of paper, But I
don't know how to get them to where they're going though,
Like I could understand a bird coming back home, but
how do you get to go to dairy Queen? Right? Like,
how do you say dairy queen?
Speaker 8 (34:56):
Can you look that up?
Speaker 1 (34:57):
Messages were written on small pieces of paper, placed in
tiny tubes and attached to the pigeon's leg. The pigeon
would then, Oh, they would mostly just send them back home,
so they would take the pigeon with them, and that
most of the messages were sent back home.
Speaker 4 (35:11):
That makes sense.
Speaker 5 (35:12):
So that would so it would know you would bring
it with you, yes, yes, and it would know how
to get.
Speaker 1 (35:17):
Back home, but it wouldn't know how to get to
dairy Queen because that's anything that's too much.
Speaker 2 (35:22):
Might Tyson training pigeons at one point?
Speaker 7 (35:24):
Yeah, yes, he was really close to pigeons. And then
when he was a kid, one of his bullies killed
one of his pigeons, and that's when he learned like
to get rageful and he beat up this kid. And
that's kind of like, man, I can kind of fight
for a living because of the pigeon, just because the
kid killed his pigeon.
Speaker 1 (35:40):
I'm one amazed that carrier pigeons were real. I wouldn't
have fought you over it. I would have been like,
I do not know. I've seen enough shows that it
plants the seed that it could possibly be real. But
then I would have maybe argued, well, they don't know
how to get places if they'd never been, so they
can't be real. But then read that you would take
(36:02):
them places with you and send messages home. So you
travel out with them and send them back.
Speaker 4 (36:07):
That's so smart.
Speaker 5 (36:08):
So the last pigeon post service in the world closed
down in two thousand and eight.
Speaker 1 (36:17):
Used by the Romance, Egyptians, and Persians midial period World wars.
In World War One and two, pigeons save lives. In
the nineteenth century, newspapers use pigeons to get stock market
and sports results faster because they'd go to game, just
stuff and send the pigeon back to the place that
lived at the newspaper center.
Speaker 11 (36:33):
This is me, But isn't it even like crazier that
we just stopped using them and now you just have
a bunch of it. Think about like dogs, we all
domesticate them, right, and then we all just stopped having
our dogs that's like pigeons.
Speaker 1 (36:44):
Now, I would say the reason they did is because
their use was no longer needed. So if mail horses
mail carriers happened, you don't need the pigeons to do
it as much. And why would you have a pigeon
as a pet? Mostly you had as a pet to
send messages?
Speaker 4 (36:58):
You think the pigeon was like, why am I not
need it anymore?
Speaker 1 (37:01):
I'm outside, I got fired today, I'm outside pitching. Now,
what the crap? Yeah? That's wild. Okay, see this was interesting. Yeah,
I to have No, we had a little room, a little.
Speaker 4 (37:11):
Space for this space.
Speaker 1 (37:13):
So that's the selfish will. Okay, everybody, Okay, you never
know when the selfish well is gonna come out.
Speaker 4 (37:18):
Oh boy, gotta come up with another one of these.
Speaker 1 (37:21):
No, you don't have to come up with anything. Just
see where your mind takes you. I encourage you not
to come up with anything. Just see where your mind
takes you. Bobby Bone show up today.
Speaker 2 (37:32):
This story comes us from Wisconsin. Hey man broke into
our house, stole the keys to a BMW, and he
takes off. Police are called. They see the BMW on
the highway, high speed chase. He gets in the neighborhood
ditches the car. Cops can't find him, except footprints in
the snow lead him to a backyard and there he
(37:55):
is hiding in the garden.
Speaker 1 (37:57):
What do you do though, Let's say you have still
the car. All that's done. Okay, you don't still cars
cudes all the good stuff. Right, you're still the car.
You gotta get away, You're in the snow. What do
you do?
Speaker 8 (38:07):
Slither like a.
Speaker 4 (38:09):
Snake but your path was still.
Speaker 1 (38:13):
Everybody in the town freaks out of the gigantic serpent
now running on? Yeah, I know, but you want to
do it hastily and slithering. I guess you're unless you're
really good at the worm.
Speaker 8 (38:25):
I'm just saying that.
Speaker 5 (38:26):
They may be like, oh, yeah, that's like a weird
or you roll, Like.
Speaker 1 (38:30):
Now we're talking a little more. Rolling makes a little more.
Speaker 4 (38:33):
They still know where you're rolling to.
Speaker 8 (38:35):
I don't know.
Speaker 4 (38:37):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (38:37):
You track a roll.
Speaker 8 (38:38):
They're gonna be like, where are the footprints. They're not
gonna be like.
Speaker 1 (38:41):
Yeah, they're not gonna go what's that long five foot
nine length of wide thing.
Speaker 7 (38:48):
Yeah, even though it's coming from the car, Well.
Speaker 3 (38:53):
It's where the footprints in and the roll begins.
Speaker 1 (38:55):
I think what you have to do, mess up with
some of the prints. You have to get to like
a part of a road where there's not as much snow,
run down it for a second, and then jump into
where some other people have walked.
Speaker 4 (39:07):
There you go.
Speaker 1 (39:08):
So I think that's what I would probably do quickly.
I mean, the serpent the snake excellent idea, the role
not terrible, But I think if I had to think fast,
I would try to jump on the road where cars
were real quick, run down it away from the car,
and then find where other footprints were and use that
to at least start my run. Right, How do you
(39:28):
feel like that.
Speaker 8 (39:28):
That could work?
Speaker 1 (39:29):
Okay?
Speaker 5 (39:30):
Or if you could be like can you walk on
your tippy top tippy toes and then they think you're
a deer?
Speaker 4 (39:34):
Oh yeah? Or a dog?
Speaker 3 (39:37):
Thank you, lunchbox, I'm lunchbox.
Speaker 2 (39:39):
That's your bonehead story of the day.
Speaker 1 (39:42):
I've been obsessed with this asteroid, and maybe a week
and a half or so ago, NASA was like, there's
a one point three percent chance it's gonna hit Earth.
A few days later they were like, there's a two
point six percent chance it's gonna hit Earth, and I'm like, well,
how did that jump so quick? So here is YouTuber
and sign It's communicator Haint Green talking about this asteroid
(40:02):
that I've been obsessed with.
Speaker 12 (40:03):
The current NASA projection is that there is a slightly
more than two percent chance that this object will hit Earth.
An important additional piece of context because we don't really
feel this way because we live our lives where we
live them. Most of the Earth is empty, so about
three percent of the Earth is cities and a lot
of the Earth is the ocean. Now we actually know
(40:25):
where this object if it were to land on Earth.
We have like an idea of where it would hit.
It would hit around the equator, and it would hit
in an area that stretches from South America all the
way to India. It wouldn't hit in all of those places.
It would hit in one of those places, and we
don't know which one it would be. Over the last
fifty years, we have built up an asteroid monitoring system,
or like an object monitoring system that figures out where
(40:48):
stuff is and where it's headed, so that we can
know when stuff like this is happening. We live in
a moment where we have very powerful rockets that could
potentially launch a mission to stop this.
Speaker 1 (41:00):
Fact they have an asteroid monitoring system is crazy, Like,
who's the first one to go? We figured this out.
We can monitor an asteroid from five years away and
know exactly where it's going to land. That's wild that
we have the technology to do that. Now they have
like hit an asteroid before and just like moved it
a little bit, very armagedin style, And they say, this
(41:22):
one probably won't destroy Earth, but it doesn't mean that
it won't kill a whole lot of people if it
lands there because it is large. But again it's only
two point something percent chance. But the fact that I
jumped a whole percent blows my mind. And then we
can monitor where this thing is going blows my mind
because it's not until twenty thirty two, you know, about
seven years from now.
Speaker 4 (41:39):
We got time.
Speaker 1 (41:40):
Yeah, but that's what everybody thinks. Until seven years from
now happens.
Speaker 4 (41:42):
We run out of time.
Speaker 1 (41:43):
That's always Like when they announced the Olympic Cities, You're like, well,
that happened it forever.
Speaker 3 (41:46):
Next thing you know, they're having the Olympics there.
Speaker 8 (41:48):
Should we live it up the next seven years?
Speaker 4 (41:49):
For sure?
Speaker 1 (41:50):
Well, so again, it's not going to really hit us,
but it will hit the South America spot. But things
are going to happen and the people may have to
come up here.
Speaker 7 (42:00):
Yeah, what do you think about that three percent occupied
Earth number?
Speaker 1 (42:04):
Kind think though, what they're saying is it can still
affect the cities. It just may not hit there because
if it hits that big, it's going to create dust
and cloud, ocean idle waves. Sure, unless it's like right
in the middle of the ocean. But I'm fascinated. I
can't stop watching the story. I'll let you guys know
if it changes. I'll be watching it every day. You
(42:25):
get the monitor at some people watch talk Market. I'm
watching this every single day to see if it goes
up or down. And we will see you guys tomorrow.
Speaker 3 (42:30):
By everybody.
Speaker 1 (42:31):
Bonez Bones The Bobby Bones Show theme song, written, produced
and sang by read Yarberry. You can find his instagram
at read Yarberry, Scuba Steve executive producer, Raymondo, Head of Production.
I'm Bobby Bones. My instagram is mister Bobby Bones. Thank
you for listening to the podcast.