All Episodes

March 20, 2024 42 mins

Mark Miller of Sawyer Brown is on the show, and he talks about his life and career journey, including the time he water skied as Pinocchio at Disney World and more! Then, learn more about the new digital series Bobby is dropping about memorabilia! Mailbag: Listener's son and his friend were playing ball in the house. The friend threw the ball and hit the PlayStation. Now our listener thinks the friend's parents should be responsible for replacing it.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
Transmitting what's up.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
Welcome to Wednesday Show Morria Studio Morning. Let's go around
the room and check in with everyone. He went oh
for three when he lost his Oscar bet to Mike
d and lost a lot of money.

Speaker 1 (00:23):
It's Eddie.

Speaker 3 (00:23):
Yes, Hey, guys, Remember so I told you I had
a pain on my side and I think I have
stomach cancer.

Speaker 1 (00:29):
Okay, that's not exactly how it went.

Speaker 2 (00:31):
Well, but you said it was hurting, and then you
google the web, indeed, and the worst thing they said
with stomach cancer.

Speaker 1 (00:37):
So therefore you attach yourself to that.

Speaker 3 (00:39):
I mean that was mostly what it was, saying that
I have stomach cancer. So what I did was I
called my doctor. I said, hey, I'd like to go
in and get screamed from cancer because I have a
pain in my stomach. Guys, the nearest the closest they
can get me is April third, Like that's supposed it's
two weeks. Like I still have the pain on my side, Okay,
so so if I die, it's on them.

Speaker 2 (01:00):
But I don't think two weeks is a long time,
considering that sometimes it takes months. All of those dogs
my sleep study took like four months to get into
and he doesn't have cancer and his stomach he right,
How do we know that? Because I think you told him.
I think you told whomever what the symptom was, and
they probably thought, this is not something I need to

(01:22):
get in with him today. A pain in my abdominal,
in my butt every day with you, and you not
so much you at.

Speaker 4 (01:31):
They should literally be like, yo, man, we'll get you in.

Speaker 1 (01:34):
And then everybody would get in that day.

Speaker 2 (01:36):
If ever, if they went immediately with everybody who thought
they were dying based on some weird symptom.

Speaker 3 (01:40):
Well, why do we have doctors?

Speaker 2 (01:42):
Got two weeks that's nothing, and you're like, oh.

Speaker 4 (01:44):
I got white spots on my throat. I think I
got shripped. We can see you in July. Really, that's
not really good.

Speaker 1 (01:50):
Strap.

Speaker 2 (01:50):
You can go to the minute Clintic. Come on and
go to the place right down the road. That's what
I do.

Speaker 1 (01:54):
Go right in there, sit for ten minutes, they put
you in, boom, in and out.

Speaker 3 (01:57):
I'm going to go to the medic clinic and say, hey,
can you check me for answer.

Speaker 1 (02:00):
You don't need to do that because in two weeks
you're going to the doctor.

Speaker 4 (02:02):
But do you know how fast cancer can spread.

Speaker 2 (02:04):
Fast sometimes like that a doctor is going to make
a more educated decision on when you need to be
seen versus when others need to be seen, and how
quickly it needs to happen. I think it's great you
got into two weeks, but some people like that you
can't get in.

Speaker 5 (02:16):
For months one that you have healthcare and stuff.

Speaker 3 (02:19):
I'm sorry, I feel if you're falling for him. Dude,
if my diets on them.

Speaker 2 (02:24):
Of anything, of anything, ye like, it's my shoot cha alright, man,
all right?

Speaker 1 (02:31):
Moving on.

Speaker 2 (02:31):
His goal for this year is to give his opinion more.
But we don't know how that was different from what
he was doing before.

Speaker 3 (02:35):
It's lunch ball. I hate to admit it, but I'm
getting older. You can see the gray and my beard.

Speaker 4 (02:41):
And another day I'm at the playground with my kids
and there's this tube slide, you know, like it's all enclosed,
right Dad, I go down the slide and I'm like, yeah,
I'll go down the tube slide. Only problem is you
gotta like duck your head to get in the tube
slide because I'm so big and I pinched.

Speaker 1 (02:56):
You mean you're an adult, that's what you mean?

Speaker 2 (02:57):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (02:58):
Yeah, yeah, And I'm going on my all this it's great.
And then I get to the bottom and I go
to scoot out because I don't go all the way
down the slide, and I pinched a nerve like in
my neck slash right shoulder, and I can't really turn
to the right, and I'm like all from going down
the slide, like it hurts so bad, and I've just
been popping ad Bil trying to get it to like
go away.

Speaker 1 (03:17):
But you should go to a chiropractor and it'll.

Speaker 3 (03:20):
Probably take me about.

Speaker 1 (03:22):
Yeah, that's true.

Speaker 2 (03:22):
I bet you though, since we have a connection that
he comes on the show, he could probably see you.
Do they do?

Speaker 1 (03:28):
Like is that what they do?

Speaker 5 (03:29):
They can take care of like a pinch nerve.

Speaker 2 (03:31):
I didn't know much about chiropractors until like a year
and a half ago, maybe two years ago.

Speaker 1 (03:35):
And anytime I've been injured, they can't.

Speaker 2 (03:37):
It doesn't fix immediately, but it's so much faster because
it's not like your body is just like a click.

Speaker 1 (03:43):
Okay, you're good.

Speaker 2 (03:44):
But if it is a nerve that has been pinched
or is currently what would you say, like conflamed?

Speaker 1 (03:50):
Yeah, yeah, they can do things to make it better.

Speaker 4 (03:53):
Oh man, because I trying to look over it might
be I got to turn the whole body, because man,
it hurts.

Speaker 2 (03:57):
The weird thing about being an adult is it's like
my iPhone. I would compare me being an adult to
my iPhone screen. I can do a lot of stuff
and I don't get hurt. But if I just drop
it my body in a weird way, even not even
that hard, just that slight angle, it shatters. Well.

Speaker 3 (04:11):
He probably shouldn't be going down slides anyway, I hear.

Speaker 2 (04:13):
You, But sometimes you just gotta go down a side.

Speaker 4 (04:15):
Yeah, like your kids like go down the slide, Like
I'll show them my good on the slide.

Speaker 1 (04:18):
I could throw my iPhone across the room and the
screen wouldn't break.

Speaker 2 (04:20):
However, it could fall out of my pocket as I'm
sitting down and it hits just wrong, a little crack
in the screen.

Speaker 1 (04:26):
Same thing with our bodies as we get older.

Speaker 2 (04:29):
Like I was carrying a chair, not even a heavy chair,
and I put it up on my shoulder and I
just lifted my shoulder to hold it tight.

Speaker 1 (04:36):
I lift the chair and I couldn't move my shoulder
back down. I was doing nothing.

Speaker 2 (04:39):
But Yeah, we walked out work with heavyweights. No, I'm
telling you it's like iPhone screen. Well, good luck lunch,
but I would hit up the car chiropractor guy. Okay,
you can probably help you out, all right, move it on.
Amy ready for years? Okay, here she is for eighteen years,
she's been my co host, and out of everyone on
the show, she believes in signs from above the most.

Speaker 1 (04:58):
It's Amy.

Speaker 5 (05:00):
Okay.

Speaker 6 (05:00):
So I just have a question for the guys. It's
really simple. Want to know around the room, who knows
it the sidewalk rule.

Speaker 1 (05:07):
I know it, So I'll be quiet. Okay, what's the
sidewalk I mean, I try to live. I try to
live the sidewalk rule a little bit.

Speaker 3 (05:12):
Yeah, you walk on the sidewalk, right, don't walk on
the road.

Speaker 1 (05:14):
You guys win, good job.

Speaker 6 (05:16):
Okay, Eddie, you fail lunch once you fail when.

Speaker 2 (05:20):
Walking with my wife, there's a certain side. I think
this is what it is. There's a certain side of
the sidewalk that you walk on which keeps her out
of danger and me and more danger that the one
you're talking about.

Speaker 5 (05:30):
Yeah, so closest to the road.

Speaker 3 (05:33):
So you get hit by the car and she doesn't
Why what happened to equality?

Speaker 1 (05:37):
I know it's just now coming about what happens.

Speaker 2 (05:41):
Yeah, I would say, yeah, mostly we try to abide,
but I try to remember that. But also in every
single wet spot or mud puddle, I take off something
and let her step on it instead of the water.
Sometimes I button neck it after if it's a wet day,
I take my shirt off, put the steps on into
my pants. All said, We're walking down the road, and
I'm like, hey, chivalry baby gently. Yeah.

Speaker 6 (06:00):
I just didn't know how many guys knew it because
it is pretty awesome.

Speaker 1 (06:03):
It's old school.

Speaker 5 (06:04):
A guy does it.

Speaker 6 (06:05):
Yeah, Anya has nothing to do with equality, lunchbox.

Speaker 2 (06:08):
It's just why you do that bit where she walks
into the road and you act like you're pushing a
harm of a car.

Speaker 1 (06:12):
That's funny, all right, Raymon Dead go ahead from Mountain Pine, Arkansas.

Speaker 2 (06:17):
He loves doing a memorabilia break and the helmets and
jerseys are real, not fake. Bobby Bones, thank you very much.
Speaking to that, I've bought no new memorabilia. As far
as I'm done. I put the trailer up to the
show that we're doing. It's on my Instagram, mister Bobby Bones.
It's called I Saw the sign, which is also an
Acea Base saal, and he goes I saw the sign,
and the show is called I saw a sign.

Speaker 1 (06:37):
It saw the sign.

Speaker 2 (06:38):
Whatever, it's just not about ASA Base and so I
stopped no memorabilia.

Speaker 1 (06:42):
However, here's the thing about eBay.

Speaker 2 (06:46):
Now, just for fun, I just pulled up what I bought,
one thousand cards, unopened baseball cards and from like the nineties,
and you're not gonna You're not. It's not to make money.
It's just to open nineties players. A thousand cards for
like sixty bucks, and they come shipping these huge boxes
and it's just like, I just it's just fun to
go through football cards, all different kinds of stuff.

Speaker 3 (07:09):
Wow, so you can get Jordan's in there.

Speaker 1 (07:11):
I guess.

Speaker 2 (07:11):
But again, they're that's my new weekly. That's what I'm
obsessed with, old school. Well, yeah, because I'm doing the show,
I'm trying to make money back. I put way too
much money into this.

Speaker 3 (07:21):
Yeah, but the show's I mean, this isn't part of
the show anymore. No, this is just fun. You're just
buying stuff now.

Speaker 1 (07:26):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (07:27):
I called U my friend Andy Roddick, who's a professional
tennis player, because I had a pack of tennis cards,
and I was trying to find him just to be funny,
and I was like, I try to find you.

Speaker 1 (07:37):
Are you even in these cards?

Speaker 2 (07:38):
And he goes, I got like a hundred like rookie
cards of mine already graded.

Speaker 1 (07:42):
He goes, do you want some of these?

Speaker 5 (07:43):
I was like, yeah, sign them.

Speaker 1 (07:47):
They've all I think they're already in the pack. Though
it's hard to sign.

Speaker 3 (07:49):
Oh you can't take him out and sign them.

Speaker 1 (07:51):
I think so that you.

Speaker 2 (07:52):
Send them to a place they tell you that it's
how good a condition the cards in, So then if
you want to sell them, people already know. But anyway,
I may bring some of the studio. We can open
some of them, like on the Post Show or something,
just old cards. Another fun show idea would be going
to somebody that played like nineties in the nineties or
early two thousands baseball and opening cards from their year
and they tell you stories about or if they have

(08:14):
any stories about any of the players as you're opening
and they don't see any who it is. That's really cool, dude.
So I was thinking about, like, my favorite player ever
is Mark Grace? Call him Mark Grace, going to Arizona
where he is and going, all right, we're gonna open
these from ninety eight and then you open them on
camera and you go through and you tell stories.

Speaker 1 (08:29):
You can do wrestlers, you can do anything.

Speaker 3 (08:31):
He seems like a players like man this hate Yeah,
but it'll be fun, like a fun little Yeah.

Speaker 2 (08:36):
All right, that's it. Yeah, I'm totally totally in this
world now.

Speaker 6 (08:40):
So you started buying the cards, and the cards are
now leading to another show.

Speaker 5 (08:45):
This is how your brain works.

Speaker 1 (08:47):
I just thought it'd be a good idea. It's like
a show. It's content, you know.

Speaker 5 (08:51):
Yeah, yeah, I get it.

Speaker 1 (08:53):
Let's open up the mailbag.

Speaker 3 (08:55):
You mail and we read it all the air.

Speaker 5 (08:58):
It's something we oh Bobby's mail bag.

Speaker 2 (09:02):
Hello, Bobby Bones. I have a ten year old son.
Last weekend, he had a friend over. While they were playing,
his friend knocked over my son's PlayStation while throwing a
football in the living room. This was after I told
him they had to take the football outside because I
don't allow balls in the house. It was an accident.
PS five now won't turn off and it looks like
something is broken inside of it. I told his parents,

(09:23):
but they brush it off. His boys will be boys,
but I think they should be at fault and offer
to either pay or repair the PS five.

Speaker 1 (09:30):
Do you think they'd be liable? Sign mad Mama. No,
I did not.

Speaker 2 (09:33):
Your son was playing ball in the house too, Yeah,
I do not. In any way I think they should
be liable. Yeah, two to ten go, Yeah.

Speaker 1 (09:38):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (09:39):
It's not like the neighbor came over and started playing
dodgeball with a football at your son in the house
and hit the PlayStation and in that case still questionable.
And but that's not the case. No, you lose because
your son messed up.

Speaker 5 (09:56):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (09:57):
So my son had a friend over the other day
and my friend's car was parked in the driveway and
she told her son specifically, don't throw the football in
the driveway because I don't want you to dent any
cars or whatever. Well, what did my son do and
that other kid they went out to the driveway and
they started throwing the football in the driveway and they
hit her car boy, and yeah, and it was my

(10:19):
son that threw it, but.

Speaker 5 (10:20):
It was her son that didn't catch it.

Speaker 6 (10:23):
But still when they came in, it was Stevenson's like, well,
he is the one that missed it. And then and
then he said it's fine. We can play right here,
and I said, well, Stevenson, this is your house and
we told y'all specifically don't throw it in the driveway.
So I already knew at that moment my son is
at fault as well. And I think sometimes we just
we have to it's our home, our rules.

Speaker 5 (10:44):
We have to take responsibility too. I felt horrible.

Speaker 1 (10:47):
Yeah, boys will be boys.

Speaker 2 (10:49):
However, uh, your boy was involved in the throwing and
allowed that to happen in the house, even if he
wasn't one to throw it.

Speaker 1 (10:57):
And nope, it's on you. That's all.

Speaker 2 (11:00):
PlayStations aren't cheap. But boys will be boys. So your
boy is out of PlayStation. Now, how about is giving
it a shot? See the parents, I mean it sounds
like they were like, boys will be boys, they shouldn't. Again,
if that sound like sneaks in a window and throws
the ball in different Yeah, they didn't do that. So
that's that's the easy one there. All right, thank you,
close it up.

Speaker 5 (11:21):
We got your game mail and we ran in on her.

Speaker 1 (11:25):
Now let's find the clothes Bobby failed back.

Speaker 2 (11:27):
Yeah, something we've done on the show that we just
thought would be good content and ended up being useful
for a lot of folks. Was a bit where we
had a PhD come in to test everybody for dyslexia,
and Amy and Eddie were diagnosed with dyslexia. And turns
out one of your friends so she trained with teaching
people with dyslexia.

Speaker 5 (11:47):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (11:47):
Well, so Andrea, she's a teacher and she's been my
best friends who were like fourteen and her she's a teacher,
but then her son was diagnosed with dyslexia, so then
she got trained on how to teach.

Speaker 1 (12:01):
What does she say to you, Well.

Speaker 6 (12:03):
She's coming in town this weekend, so she said she's
going to work with me on somethings.

Speaker 5 (12:06):
Oh, so we're gonna help.

Speaker 1 (12:07):
So like too, how does that make you feel?

Speaker 3 (12:10):
Well?

Speaker 6 (12:11):
I mean I think she was encouraged further testing, and
so I reached out to the miss Kelly who came
and did the test to us, and so I made
a zoom appointment with her for further testing and to
figure out a plan as well, and.

Speaker 2 (12:25):
To maybe be specific about where yo dyslexia lives so
you can address that.

Speaker 5 (12:31):
Yeah, yeah, and so we can expand my world.

Speaker 2 (12:34):
Do you feel like that you have moved beyond shame?
Because during the show you started crying.

Speaker 6 (12:40):
I think the tears were I think there it wasn't
so much shame. I think it was more like, oh,
I've known something was a little off, I just didn't
know what. And so now here I am in a
very public way figuring it out. And I think some
of my high school self, my younger self, my call
like parts of me that were school was really hard.

(13:00):
I was talking to my sister about it yesterday and
she was like, yeah, you've said a lot how you
don't know how you graduated college, and I really don't
like I just I don't have the same memories that
other people do when it comes to that. And I
think it's because I was just trying to get through it,
get by. But we'll see, We'll see once I do
the zoom and do follow up and see really where
it is, because I guess there's it's.

Speaker 5 (13:22):
On a spectrum. So where do I fall right?

Speaker 2 (13:24):
Because I can read and you can also certain address
the issue if you know exactly what the issue is.

Speaker 6 (13:30):
We know you can read it, and I know that
other it's just foreign to me. I don't I was
I was surprised by it. I knew it was something
a lot of times I thought it was my ADHD brain,
but now some of it may be because of the dyslexius.

Speaker 5 (13:42):
We'll just see what that means.

Speaker 1 (13:44):
Lunchbox has a question for you guys. Okay, what is
that question?

Speaker 5 (13:47):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (13:47):
I was just wondering, like, in public, have people treated
you any differently, like giving you like nice advantage of store,
Like if you're at the grocery store and you see
someone on crutches, You're like, oh, can I help you
get that? Or if you're someone's really short, people like
we'll help them get things off the shelf. Have you
guys noticed any difference when you guys have been going
out in public?

Speaker 5 (14:06):
Not one single bit?

Speaker 3 (14:07):
No, how would they know? Man, they know that we're dyslexic.
You know, like an older person you open the door for,
you can tell they're old.

Speaker 4 (14:17):
Like what about I'm just saying, like, maybe you're looking
at the prices, Oh, you can't read that, and then
they help.

Speaker 1 (14:21):
You read the price it's nine seventy four four seventy
nights their.

Speaker 4 (14:23):
Yeah, I just didn't know if you guys had noticed
anything people.

Speaker 2 (14:27):
He wants to know if people have any different because
of your diagnosis.

Speaker 3 (14:33):
Or handicap.

Speaker 6 (14:34):
No, if anything, we what we've learned, and I've learned
from other people commenting to us that also have dyslexia, like, okay,
it's a gift for us in a way, like we
can you use it to our advantage. Our brain thinks differently. Yeah,
the word and it's not it's nothing. It's not bad.

Speaker 1 (14:53):
No, I didn't say it was bad.

Speaker 3 (14:54):
The word they use is superpower. They say that we
have superpower.

Speaker 2 (14:57):
You have to develop it because of the traditional way
of teaching doesn't teach to where you guys would be equal,
So you have to develop a different way to learn
so you can develop a strength.

Speaker 3 (15:07):
It's pretty amazing think about it.

Speaker 2 (15:10):
But he Lunchbox thinks you guys are suffering from a
form of no, like a disability, right.

Speaker 3 (15:16):
Because I'm normal or not.

Speaker 6 (15:18):
In a way, we were at a disadvantage because Lunchbox's
brain happened to learn the way that he was being taught,
so he probably was able to.

Speaker 5 (15:25):
Absorb a lot more.

Speaker 3 (15:27):
But he didn't writ No, he did, Lunchbox.

Speaker 1 (15:30):
He's making fun of you, guys. No, I'm asking making
sure you guys, I was asking.

Speaker 5 (15:35):
I know that you're asking me. You can't be you're
not serious like I am.

Speaker 2 (15:38):
He is serious, Like he said, if you say someone
with the crutches and they're like struggling, you help him.
He wanted to know if you guys had people struggling reading.

Speaker 5 (15:44):
Or well, if I was, I would hope someone exactly.
That's always I was hoping that fine, but it's not.

Speaker 2 (15:49):
We're all he's being caring right now. So when you
would read out loud in school in class, did you
have problems with that?

Speaker 5 (15:58):
I don't. I don't know they'd.

Speaker 2 (15:59):
Be like, okay, Amy read this paragraph.

Speaker 5 (16:02):
I don't remember.

Speaker 6 (16:03):
I don't know that I I don't know that tea.
All I know is a narrative I've always had is
in my head as teachers didn't expect much of me.
And I know that sounds horrible to say back, but
it's true and like, I'm sorry. So that's why the
narrative in my head was just even as an adult
in therapy, one of my friends that's a therapist cat

(16:25):
she even said she was like, gosh, she goes, I'm
surprised none of this ever came up in therapy, that
you maybe thought you were dyslexic. And I said, well,
I never thought. I never knew what it was, and
she and I said, but it did come up, and
she's like wow, and I was like, well, I just
tell him I think I'm stupid. And that was a
constant conversation in therapy. And then I do think when
you have those thoughts about yourself, it does piggyback, and

(16:46):
then you don't think you're capable, so therefore it limits you.
And so now what, yeah, yourself allow it? Yes, so
now if I can open that up a little bit.
It's still a work in progress. I wish I had
come further than I had, because I would easy tell
someone else this advice, but it's like taking the advice
for yourself is more difficult, and I'm.

Speaker 5 (17:06):
Excited to see where it takes us.

Speaker 2 (17:08):
Until you have not hit your ceiling, right, I haven't
watch peaks like years ago, right high school.

Speaker 6 (17:14):
I know I have not, and that's encouragement to anybody else.
So whether you're getting any kind of a diagnosis as
an adult, because there's tons of other things that are
out there too that you might be learning about yourself.
And it's like, okay, yay, now you have this information,
what are you gonna do with it.

Speaker 1 (17:27):
Eddie, how's your life changed?

Speaker 3 (17:29):
It's not changing it at all. No one helps me
at the grocery store. I don't care, really, and Amy
props to her for trying to better her life. I'm like,
I'm forty four years old. What am I going to
do now? It's over? So it is what it is, man,
I'm gonna live my life the way I've been living it.

Speaker 2 (17:43):
I'm gonna try to encourage you not to give up myself.

Speaker 3 (17:45):
Yes, that's it.

Speaker 5 (17:46):
Yes, I don't know. Apparently I may learn better with
colors or something, but.

Speaker 3 (17:50):
What are you going to learn more?

Speaker 1 (17:51):
I can't even see what am I gonna learn more?

Speaker 6 (17:53):
I feel like I'm gonna learn things for the first time.

Speaker 1 (17:55):
Doesn't even Yeah, there are things she may not even know.

Speaker 6 (17:57):
I really, yes, No, there's so much I don't know that.
I just did what I needed to get by in school.
I'm proud of you, like when I would do well
in school. There was one time I was real proud
of myself. I gave a speech at school public. It
was my first time ever, and I don't know how
I got a sign that position. But my teacher in
a meeting afterwards was like overly proud of me to

(18:18):
where it sort of deflated me because I was like, whoa,
she didn't really think I could.

Speaker 5 (18:22):
Do that at all?

Speaker 6 (18:22):
But she goes, well, how about that Amy the cheerleader,
who would have thought? And I'll never forget it? And
then I was like, I'm so proud of myself and
then immediately was like whack them all. I was like, well,
whack me back down to where I was like, well, dang,
I just did good, but now I don't feel good
because she clearly didn't think I'd ever do good.

Speaker 2 (18:37):
Yeah, which affected your entire perception of yourself.

Speaker 5 (18:39):
Yes, which is why ways crazy.

Speaker 2 (18:42):
You know, I get Eddie, But for you who cares
that it's over? I'm good, all right, George Bursh this
is Cowboy Songs, Bobby Bone Show.

Speaker 1 (18:52):
Thank you guys.

Speaker 7 (18:54):
It's time for the good news Bobby.

Speaker 2 (19:00):
So, there's a band mostly from the eighties called Van Halen.

Speaker 1 (19:03):
Familiar with them? Yes, can you name a song?

Speaker 2 (19:05):
If you can't, that's okay, I can give me a
hint by the band Van Halen.

Speaker 5 (19:10):
Right, but just a different lead singer. Okay, I know,
I know what.

Speaker 1 (19:14):
Can you pull the music down so I can try
to get there?

Speaker 2 (19:16):
Too. So there's like Panama Panama one.

Speaker 5 (19:23):
Yeah, I didn't realize they were saying Panama.

Speaker 1 (19:25):
But yes, what did you think there was saying. I
don't know if you had to guess.

Speaker 5 (19:31):
On yeah, something like that. Yeah, but that's not even
close to Maybe it's a similar song.

Speaker 2 (19:36):
No, I think that you're probably singing Panama just wrong.
Another van Halen song might as well jump jump duh, duh.

Speaker 1 (19:44):
Joe, I thought, I said dump No, I know that one.
So the band's van Halen.

Speaker 5 (19:49):
We jumped rope to heart to it, jump rope for
Heart in.

Speaker 1 (19:53):
The charity thing as a kid.

Speaker 6 (19:54):
Yeah, in like fourth grade, you jump rope as long
as you could to raise money for the American Heart Association.

Speaker 2 (19:58):
And you did it to jump songs, jump jump it.
So van Halen's band, Eddie van Halen, was a guitarist.
His son, Wolfgang van Halen, is now big in a
music education.

Speaker 1 (20:10):
Eddie died, by the way, cancer. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (20:12):
So Wolfgang van Halen is has donated one hundred thousand
bucks to kick start a campaign that helps schoold buy
instruments for their music programs, which thought was a big deal.
He said, music has been a big part of my
life and our family's great pleasure. It helps fort music education. Also,
they didn't even know they affected Hearts Jump Broke for
Heart for Heart? Do it keep another one?

Speaker 3 (20:29):
Another Van Halen's song? Yeah, yeah, Hot for Teacher, I've
got it Bet.

Speaker 2 (20:36):
For Teacher singing early on. That's like davidly Roth. Yeah,
that's right, it's like, you know that's how it started.
You don't get that one? You do any other ones?

Speaker 3 (20:48):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (20:48):
Let's see what else? So I bet you when you
sing a hundred of them?

Speaker 2 (20:51):
Probably if Weight with the Devil, I.

Speaker 6 (20:55):
Know that on you. What do you think it was
running with the Devil? You think that's very very clear?

Speaker 2 (21:00):
Okay, how about see jump Hop for Teacher?

Speaker 7 (21:06):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (21:07):
They did a cover of Oh mhm, what do you got? No,
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (21:12):
There's like, I know they did a cover if You
Really Got Me? That's not their song.

Speaker 3 (21:16):
Got thet Me?

Speaker 2 (21:18):
That was big one for Van Helen too. And then
there's like, ain't talking about love?

Speaker 1 (21:22):
I don't know what that is.

Speaker 3 (21:23):
Ain't talking about love? It's gonna rock you to the core.

Speaker 2 (21:28):
Yeah, your older brother listening that was his favorite band.
Uh why can't this be loved? Uh? So tell me
why can't this be love?

Speaker 3 (21:39):
I know that was Sammy Hagar.

Speaker 5 (21:42):
I don't know that one.

Speaker 1 (21:43):
No, okay, well, all we're done. I just thought it
was a cool thing. Oh, ice cream man, ice cream.

Speaker 3 (21:47):
Man, stopping one and stop being by. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (21:50):
They also did a.

Speaker 2 (21:50):
Cover of pretty woman walking down the street like a
Roy Ebson song. All right, Ben Halen, Hey, shout out
van Halen. Wolf Wolfgang van Halen. That's a cool name
for kid. Yeah, wolf who's Wolfgang name?

Speaker 1 (22:01):
Don't answer? Whos Wolfgang van Halen named.

Speaker 5 (22:03):
After Wolfgang Puck.

Speaker 3 (22:06):
The chef.

Speaker 1 (22:08):
He might be as old as Wolfgang. Yeah, well if not,
Wolfgang was like six.

Speaker 5 (22:12):
No, it's the only Wolfgang I know.

Speaker 1 (22:15):
Not true. Not true that I know, not true. Okay,
think you know it.

Speaker 5 (22:19):
Okay, go ahead, tell me.

Speaker 3 (22:20):
Why would Eddie van Halen name his son that?

Speaker 5 (22:23):
Who's another guitar player?

Speaker 1 (22:25):
Sort of? Let's go piano.

Speaker 6 (22:27):
Oh yeah, I've seen that on a piano before, now
that I think about it.

Speaker 2 (22:30):
No, No, let's go somebody with white white like like,
think about gray hair, a big old fashioned costume.

Speaker 5 (22:37):
Wolf Gang?

Speaker 3 (22:39):
Come on, come on, come on.

Speaker 6 (22:41):
Okay, So there's Beethoven and then there's Now we're talking.

Speaker 1 (22:45):
You have three names, so it's Beethoven's cousin, Mozart.

Speaker 5 (22:49):
Oh, Wolfgang Mozart.

Speaker 2 (22:51):
Wolf Wolf Mozart. They're not cousins. I just think of
them the same kind of person.

Speaker 5 (22:55):
Okay, now I know. I didn't know that.

Speaker 1 (22:57):
And he ended up being a member of Van Halen Mozart.

Speaker 5 (22:59):
No he didn't.

Speaker 1 (23:00):
There you go, that's what it's all about.

Speaker 2 (23:02):
Thank you.

Speaker 1 (23:02):
That was telling me something good.

Speaker 2 (23:06):
I love Clier Brown so much that Eddie and I
had invited Mark, the lead singer, to come out and
play the Million Dollar Show with us a couple of
years ago. Sounds exactly the same, freaking awesome, like love
the dude.

Speaker 1 (23:16):
You got to talk one them forever.

Speaker 2 (23:17):
And I was talking with them and we were talking
about because they went on Star Search. That was the
way that because they tried in town forever and they
went on Star Search, which is basically pre American Idol
American Idol, And he talked about all the money they
want on that show.

Speaker 8 (23:30):
We win the first show. We don't even know what
that really means. So Steve comes back into the dressing
room after everybody's like all excited and we're kind of
but they'd given us five different dressing rooms, but we
all dressed in one. You know, we were so intimidated.
So we're all in this dressing room and he comes

(23:50):
in and he says, Okay, we have another show in
three days, blah blah blah. And we're sitting there and
we're kind of stunned, and he goes, what's wrong, and
I said, and we just brought enough clothes for today,
and so he goes, hang on. So he goes in.
He comes back and he's got like five vouchers. He says,
we have you booked on a red eye and he

(24:12):
looks at me and he says, Mark, I want you
to bring back a lot of clothes. So we were
out there for six and a half months.

Speaker 1 (24:19):
Did you get the money?

Speaker 2 (24:20):
You actually get one hundred thousand bucks and a recording
contractor was.

Speaker 1 (24:23):
It like one hundred thouars?

Speaker 8 (24:24):
Was No, they weren't allowed to offer because of the
California laws at the time. We were getting like sixteen
hundred dollars for after scale and then five thousand for
winning each show. We kept winning, and then the ultimate
prize was one hundred thousand dollars.

Speaker 1 (24:37):
And you got the money. Yeah, oh yeah, and so
everybody will that was a big show.

Speaker 8 (24:40):
It was huge. You know, we found out really quick.
I mean the first show we did after that was
an afternoon show in Palm Beach and they had crowd controllers, like,
you know, twenty thousand people.

Speaker 1 (24:54):
Life it changed.

Speaker 2 (24:55):
Yeah, So we talked about how nobody in Nashville give
him the time of day. They go win Star Search
all this money, and then all of a sudden, everybody's like.

Speaker 1 (25:01):
No, we knew it, we knew you were great.

Speaker 2 (25:04):
And he talks about how he knew Some Girls Do
was going to be a huge song for them.

Speaker 8 (25:08):
When I wrote Some Girls Do, I thought it was
the only song that I've ever written that I knew
I had one. I thought, okay, I've written one is
this is? This could be something they say. You'll know
when d one comes on and Some Girls Do changed
are everything. Some Girls Do took us into arenas.

Speaker 1 (25:28):
That's what that song did on the Bobby Bones Show.

Speaker 6 (25:31):
Now.

Speaker 5 (25:32):
Mark Miller of Sawyer Brown.

Speaker 2 (25:34):
Mark Miller was an athlete back in high school, then
in college. He still looks good like he's like sixty
something and looks like he could beat any of us up.
When you guys agree yes, And then it's always interesting
to me people that got super successful, like what were
they doing before they got successful, Like what were some
of their other jobs?

Speaker 8 (25:51):
My job in high school, in college, I was a
trickwater skier at what Disney World. I was Pinocchio in
the wader Ski Show. You would have to do like
we would do shows over at the Polynesian Hotel, the Contemporary,
and you would have to do like beach starts, doc
starts and all that kind of stuff.

Speaker 5 (26:07):
So you have to learn.

Speaker 8 (26:08):
You have to learn that later, like once you see
this is the job, you know.

Speaker 1 (26:12):
As Pinocchio though you're doing it.

Speaker 8 (26:14):
Yeah, that was the toughest part because you've got this
this this helmet on inside of this rubber head, and
you've got these little eyes that you have to see
out of and when you get they get wet. You
can't see. It's like a screen door. The screen gets wet.

Speaker 3 (26:29):
And when you lie, the nose gets bigger.

Speaker 1 (26:30):
And if you're like I can see exactly.

Speaker 2 (26:36):
Guy's funny, Like I wanted to hang out with them
after we ended up talking. So saw your brown Massive
Back in the day. They're doing a documentary with Blake
Shelton producing it. Blake produced a new record, you know,
he wrote a book that's super interesting.

Speaker 1 (26:49):
And then Eddie signed my Larry Bird.

Speaker 2 (26:51):
Basketball and Larry Bird and Mark of Sawyer Brown apparently
our friends that have been friends for a long time.

Speaker 1 (26:59):
And Larry Bird played for Celtics way back in the day.

Speaker 2 (27:01):
An honest book which is book by the way, is
called The Boys and Me in My Life and.

Speaker 1 (27:05):
Country Music by Mark Miller.

Speaker 2 (27:07):
Larry Bird writes a little blurb on the back and
he was like, Okay, let me see if I can
call Larry. But he talked about the time he went
golfing with Larry Bird.

Speaker 8 (27:15):
So I get a call from Larry and to golf.
He picks me up. It's about twenty five minutes to
the golf course. So we golf, you know, like four
and a half hours. He doesn't say a word to
me nothing.

Speaker 1 (27:29):
Wait, you mean, not even a single word, not about.

Speaker 8 (27:32):
He would he would say, you know, there's a there's
a trap up here on the left hand side, there's
you know there, there's you know, are you.

Speaker 1 (27:41):
In the same cart in the same car. That's so
awkward now, yeah, weird, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 8 (27:45):
And we finished the whole day. We go back to
the hotel. He doesn't talk to me on the way
over or on the way back, and we get to
the hotel, he said, hey, man, that was a blast.

Speaker 1 (27:55):
You want to go tomorrow.

Speaker 3 (27:57):
He got a great time.

Speaker 2 (27:58):
That's funny. So but you're interpreted. Was he just so competitive?

Speaker 8 (28:02):
And just so he's very he's very introverted in very
quiet and very private.

Speaker 1 (28:08):
That would be my best friend. We could just go
and say nothing. Yeah, it's on.

Speaker 2 (28:11):
Mike d and I go along so wonderfully. We don't
say a word to each other for days and we're like, I.

Speaker 1 (28:14):
Love you too, man.

Speaker 8 (28:15):
Okay, So so so week off, like every day for
five days, and we're gonna take the next day off.
He said, I'm gonna take the tomorrow. So so he
calls me late that night and he says, hey, can
you go with me tomorrow? He said, I just got called.
I got to go, you know, do a favor for
a guy. And he said, I want you to go
with me and ride in the cart with me because

(28:36):
I don't want to have to talk to anybody.

Speaker 2 (28:39):
It was such a good interview and we're playing some
clips of it here, but the full thing and it
was probably been forty five minutes or so is up
on the Bobbycast if you guys want to go listen
to it. But Sawyer Brown amazing. They still sound amazing.
Go to Sawyer Brown dot com to check out their
tour day. It's the new album Desperado Troubadour, it's out.
The book The Boys and Me My Life and Country
Music it's out, and they're doing a documentary with Blake

(29:02):
Shelton as well. So I hope you check it out
on the Bobbycast. Hope you check out all this stuff.
I know you said on the show before that you
could possibly be pre menopausal I am, which made sense
because not that I know a lot about menopause, but
pre means before. What's the difference in pre and perry menopausal?

Speaker 6 (29:20):
Listen, I can't quite figure it out, but I think
I'm perry menopausal.

Speaker 5 (29:23):
So I think that's what I am.

Speaker 6 (29:25):
And I google and read it and maybe it's just
my comprehension or my attention span, but I would love
to consult an expert. I've talked to my obgim, but
she's sort of like an in and out kind of girl,
like I really respect her. She's busy, but she comes in,
she does her thing, and she's like, okay, any questions,
and then I feel like I have so many that

(29:45):
I just am like, no, I'm good.

Speaker 1 (29:47):
I looked up perimenopause.

Speaker 2 (29:49):
Yeah, I just know the difference in pre and perry prefix.

Speaker 6 (29:54):
They are okay, they're both before, but I don't know
why they're different.

Speaker 2 (29:57):
Perimenopause is the time around menopause when you're overy's graduate
stopped working. This is a natural process that causes physical
and emotional symptoms. It does not need treatment, but treatment
can help lesson symptoms. Treatments include hormones, uh and the presence,
lifestyle changes, et cetera.

Speaker 1 (30:10):
Yeah, was this why you were sick last week?

Speaker 5 (30:14):
Yes?

Speaker 6 (30:15):
More than flu Like it wasn't like yeah, I didn't
know what was going on. And then now I know,
based on an order of events last week, I was like, oh,
this all makes sense. And you know, she had told
me that she could do this particular I u d
you know in me that would help my hormones, and

(30:37):
so some of perimenopause what I was experiencing. Sometimes you
can some women think they might be pregnant because they
get nauseous, and I was like, well, no, I'm not pregnant,
and I had so much nausea.

Speaker 5 (30:49):
Like it, I just felt, Did you test?

Speaker 6 (30:51):
No?

Speaker 5 (30:52):
I don't need to.

Speaker 3 (30:52):
Are you sure?

Speaker 5 (30:53):
There's no way that.

Speaker 2 (30:54):
I've never heard of somebody called Mary Well.

Speaker 5 (30:57):
I mean, but I do you? Did you need to
tell which she had tested positive? I don't know.

Speaker 2 (31:02):
So perimenopause means around menopause. Pre menopause means before menopause.

Speaker 5 (31:07):
Okay, so I'm the pre pri I guess Perry is pre.

Speaker 1 (31:09):
Pre You know what we're writting for.

Speaker 2 (31:10):
You.

Speaker 5 (31:11):
Look see how I.

Speaker 6 (31:12):
Just surrendered to it and I give up because I
don't know. But last week is the worst I've experienced it.
And I was at the obgu I n probably a
month ago, and she told me, well, yeah, it's not
it's not gonna get any better. This just is how
it is when you're in your forties to fifties, and
you know that's right where I am.

Speaker 5 (31:29):
I'm right there and there to show your tail? No,
what would she do about my tail?

Speaker 2 (31:34):
I would tell everybody if I had to like show
any of my body parts and I had a tail
like Amy does, I'd say it immediately so they didn't
get shocked by it. Doing something else. They're coming in.
They're like, hey, we care to check out your broken foot?
Look at my butt, abbatail?

Speaker 3 (31:45):
Check this out?

Speaker 5 (31:46):
I got. I mean she sees a lot of things.
I guess I could ask her.

Speaker 1 (31:49):
Then have you ever seen this?

Speaker 5 (31:53):
And then and then I would feel more comfortable when
she said, yeah, absolutely see that all the time.

Speaker 6 (31:59):
I don't know either way, just heads up morning, it's
not going to get better.

Speaker 2 (32:03):
Warning to us that you're not going to get better,
or warning to us what happened to us too.

Speaker 5 (32:06):
No, we're good, right, Oh y'all don't have overar eas Yeah.

Speaker 1 (32:09):
Are you sure? I don't know. Look in the mirror
and I'm like, well, I don't know what. I don't
know the car? Do we get you for this?

Speaker 5 (32:16):
Okay?

Speaker 1 (32:17):
A card like you'll never Yeah, you can't do it.
Get well soon because you're never gonna get with and
get better.

Speaker 5 (32:23):
Really well maybe once I'm.

Speaker 1 (32:25):
Thinking about you after fifty.

Speaker 5 (32:26):
I'm not sure. But it's like hot flashes.

Speaker 3 (32:29):
And lifestyle change.

Speaker 1 (32:30):
How's that changing my lifestyle?

Speaker 3 (32:32):
One want to say lifestyle change?

Speaker 6 (32:34):
Yes, yes, so I've started some herbal supplements and.

Speaker 1 (32:39):
You've always been doing that.

Speaker 5 (32:40):
Yeah, But they say on the bottle menopause. Oh man,
this is time marches on.

Speaker 1 (32:45):
But sure, I.

Speaker 2 (32:48):
Love my age golden girls in the morning.

Speaker 5 (32:50):
I love where I am. I just am trying to
figure it out.

Speaker 6 (32:53):
And I know and a lot of other women are
in the same position as me, and I just you're
not alone.

Speaker 1 (32:57):
Are you too early for it? You're forty three?

Speaker 5 (32:59):
Right, Yeah, I'm not too early.

Speaker 1 (33:02):
He's just like so young a vibran That's why I ask. No,
it's like better than a card.

Speaker 6 (33:06):
This is She even told me I was Perry, like
over a year ago. But symptoms have just gradually gotten
worse and worse. And last week it was the first
time I experienced that type of nausea surrounding it and
that type of just low like I don't know what's
wrong with me a feeling.

Speaker 1 (33:22):
Are you sure that's what she said?

Speaker 2 (33:23):
You didn't say, like, do you know the band Perry?

Speaker 1 (33:27):
You could confuse that. Here's a voicemail we got last night.

Speaker 3 (33:32):
Hey, I have something for the voicemail bag.

Speaker 1 (33:35):
I'm from the state of Iowa.

Speaker 5 (33:37):
Let's say I work in a small office and I
wouldn't give my coworkers uh special treats.

Speaker 3 (33:44):
Well, that's not legal.

Speaker 6 (33:45):
In Iowa.

Speaker 1 (33:46):
But like I'm a pretty good baker. So is it allowed?

Speaker 5 (33:51):
Is it not allowed?

Speaker 2 (33:53):
Will I get arrested for this?

Speaker 3 (33:54):
It just seems easier to call you guys and have
you guys actually check it.

Speaker 1 (33:58):
Sometimes Bobby Bounce is better than Google. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
in fact check not our strong point.

Speaker 2 (34:02):
However, if it's illegal in the state, first of all,
I would not do it at I wouldn't do it.
You can do it and listen, do it and you're
probably not gonna get in trouble. But I'm saying officially,
I wouldn't do it because it's illegal. And if something
were to happen to somebody that aid it, it killed them,
you will get in trouble. Yes, that the law will

(34:25):
come down on you. However, I'll go to the other
side work. Let's say it was legal in the state
you arem but you're doing it at work. You can't
do that either. It would be like let's see Colorado,
where special treats would be legal because you can buy
the stuff at a store, but that doesn't mean you
can go into work with a forty and where beer
is legal here sure and just drink beer all day.

Speaker 1 (34:45):
Either, that is against the company laws.

Speaker 2 (34:49):
So I would say, where it's legal, you still don't
do it, and where it's illegal, you still don't do it.

Speaker 1 (34:55):
But if you want to do it, make sure they
know what's in it.

Speaker 3 (34:59):
But I mean, I can bring a bottle of whiskey
to lunchbox, right, he just can't open it, just can't
open it. And so can she bring a sealed if
it was not.

Speaker 1 (35:06):
The answer to her is no, because it's illegal in
her state. So it's illegal all the way around.

Speaker 5 (35:11):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (35:12):
Now, in your personal free time, you do whatever you want,
but if you do get caught for it, you won't
get in trouble.

Speaker 2 (35:16):
But in a place where it's legal, you could probably, Yes,
you could do it and give him whatever, and you
can just take it home, but you're not gonna be
able to sit at work and eat them. You can't
get Yeah, I would. I would advise against it in
a state where it's illegal.

Speaker 3 (35:29):
Well, man, she sounds like she made good ones, sounds
like she's a good friend, good good coworker.

Speaker 7 (35:34):
Motions, pile of stories.

Speaker 5 (35:37):
Phone brain is a real thing.

Speaker 6 (35:39):
So experts are saying that if you have some serious
thinking to do, put your phone out of the way
because it's distracting you even like glancing at your phone
will slow your brain down by over twenty percent. And
if you want the absolute best thinking environment, you should
go outside in nature, find a quiet spot. Avoid having
a laptop or phone within reaching.

Speaker 1 (36:01):
Distance or kids. It's all distraction.

Speaker 3 (36:03):
That's a big distraction.

Speaker 2 (36:04):
I keep my phone face down well all the time, fish,
just to have it because I know what are you hiding? Man, exactly,
And that definitely can be seen as that. Like I
would always tell people, like, if your dude's living his
life with his phone face down, you better be really
aware of what's going on. However, with this job, if
I have my phone face up, any alert I get,
even if I'm doing the show, I'm just drawing to

(36:27):
let me just eyeball that real quick. That is extremely distracting.
So I agree with that. Although I'm very prophone when
I run for office, prophone.

Speaker 3 (36:35):
Oh man.

Speaker 6 (36:36):
I saw this whole article about how high percentage of teens.
I think it's like seventy percent or something of teens
are actually feeling happy and peaceful without their phone.

Speaker 2 (36:48):
I would think that would be basically one hundred percent
of people after a certain point. Yeah, there's probably that
withdrawal stage where like, oh, what's happening? I need to know.
I needed to check when I went to I went
to this place for a few days for like some
intensive therapy, and they take your phone from you, and
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (37:03):
The first twelve hours was really weird.

Speaker 2 (37:05):
And then it was awesome, just because I knew I
couldn't get to my phone and do stuff. So that
thought of I need to get to my phone to
see what's up, not even to social media, but work,
it was great. It felt great, But I don't really
like go one to that place. I like.

Speaker 1 (37:17):
I like the place where I can go to it
all the time.

Speaker 6 (37:19):
Well, so my son got a phone for Christmas, and
so far we had avoided the whole with him, like
anything social media, like, it's just never come up until now.

Speaker 1 (37:29):
Now what's he wanted to do?

Speaker 4 (37:30):
Oh?

Speaker 6 (37:30):
He said, Mom, everybody he starts rattling off. So some kids,
he's like, they have they have Snapchat, they have Instagram,
they have TikTok, they have Twitter, they have I mean,
and I thought, well, as parents, could we have a
meeting and be like, okay, let's just pick one or
do we have to have.

Speaker 1 (37:44):
Them all well, the problem is some parents are idiots.

Speaker 2 (37:47):
Correct it just in general because some humans are idiots, yep,
and what we feel our idiot. We all have different
views on the world, and our views don't always meet
with everybody else's views, and so you could have that meeting,
but then they'd go viral because I'll.

Speaker 3 (38:00):
Be a fist height You know what I do, Amy,
When I pick them up from school, I rolled the
winter down like, hey, hey, come on, we ask one
of his friends. You have TikTok no? Okay, thank you.
I didn't think so.

Speaker 1 (38:08):
Unless he's hiding it from his pa.

Speaker 3 (38:11):
Yeah, my son said everybody did my bad.

Speaker 1 (38:13):
I'm sorry.

Speaker 5 (38:13):
Okay, but what if you get one that's like yeah,
I do, then.

Speaker 3 (38:16):
I go ask another one.

Speaker 2 (38:17):
Okay, cool, you go away, But then you're trying to
find one that's not everybody, right, find one that's not everybody.

Speaker 3 (38:22):
Correct.

Speaker 5 (38:22):
Any's son totally has a TikTok no.

Speaker 3 (38:24):
It doesn't do anything, you know, Okay.

Speaker 5 (38:29):
She pops up in my feed Dan, that's funny. Okay.

Speaker 6 (38:33):
So Cheetos is particularly hot Cheetos. Get them all you can,
because apparently flaming hot Cheetos might be banned. What in California,
and that's where it all starts.

Speaker 1 (38:44):
Is it a chemical? A specific chemicals.

Speaker 6 (38:46):
We're going to have to get rid of red dye
forty and yellow dye six they're in seven is my favorite?

Speaker 1 (38:52):
Seven?

Speaker 3 (38:53):
Yeah?

Speaker 6 (38:54):
Yeah, TALKI some Dorito's flaming hot Cheetos and so that's
what's you know, turning your fingers or and so there's
a bill that is being considered in legislator that'll yank
the snack.

Speaker 2 (39:04):
I'm sure that's accurate. I mean, who knows what these
chemicals even are. But they'll be able to add a
different sure, yeah.

Speaker 5 (39:11):
Like skutiles.

Speaker 3 (39:11):
Remember they were going to stop doing that, but they.

Speaker 2 (39:14):
You know, they figured a way to do it differently.
They're not banning skittles.

Speaker 5 (39:17):
Right, but they banned that particularly.

Speaker 1 (39:19):
Yeah that's what you say.

Speaker 5 (39:21):
Yeah yeah, yeah, like you can get red, like can't
you get.

Speaker 2 (39:24):
Like blood beats blood of a baby?

Speaker 6 (39:29):
Jelly roll I was talking about how he's doing a
little self care. You know, he's talked about his health
journey and something that he's adding to that is his smile.
He had some veneers that were twenty years old, and
he decided to go to the dentists get those replaced
had some wisdom, teeth pulled, cavities filled, and he gave
his mouth like a complete overhaul. And he's feeling like

(39:49):
he just wanted a pretty smile, which been good for him.

Speaker 2 (39:52):
Yeah, and his health and fitness and wellness journey. I
worry about him just because I mean, he's stretching himself.

Speaker 1 (39:58):
Then, like, I get it.

Speaker 2 (40:00):
Jelly Roll went hard forever with very, very my old
success and now he's crushing it, and I know what
it feels like on a different level of like I'm
finally get his opportunities. I didn do every opportunity because
it's not gonna last forever because everybody wants a piece
of jelly Roll. Now it's really cool for him. I'm
super happy for him, But what my hope is for
him is that he prioritizes and doesn't kill himself because

(40:22):
long term that'll hurt him. I struggled with habits and
health issues because I was and again not to the
level of jelly Roll, but I was.

Speaker 1 (40:28):
All over the place.

Speaker 2 (40:29):
Once I had like a little bit of uptick and
people were like, oh, you should do this. I did
it all, and I think in the end I ended
up being physically. It was so negative that it probably
hurt me long term more than the short term gain
I got of it. But I root for jelly Roll.
It seems like it's going great for him. Hope he
stays healthy. All right?

Speaker 5 (40:47):
Is that itath?

Speaker 1 (40:49):
That was Amy's pile of stories.

Speaker 7 (40:52):
It's time for the good news.

Speaker 6 (40:59):
So this woman teary on a road trip with their
husband Randy. They're driving through Wyoming and they made a little.

Speaker 5 (41:04):
Pit stop to take their dog out.

Speaker 6 (41:06):
Well thirty minutes later, back on the road, she looks
down and she's like, oh, my wedding ring, It's not
on my finger.

Speaker 5 (41:12):
I don't know where it is. So they start to backtrack.

Speaker 6 (41:15):
They look at Google Maps, they see where they had stopped,
because she's like, oh, yeah, I mean I think when
I was putting lotion on my hands, it must be
back there. And so they posted it to social media
with it marked on Google Maps where they were, and
a woman named Brandy saw the post volunteered to go
look for the ring, and she found it, so they
didn't even have to turn around and drive back and

(41:35):
get it because Brandy mailed.

Speaker 5 (41:36):
It to them.

Speaker 6 (41:37):
And it was extra special because it was sentimental because
Randy's uncle gave them the wedding ring.

Speaker 2 (41:43):
It's cool that somebody would find it and give it
instead of finding it and sell it. And also smart
them to do the Google map thing too, and also
good for her to know where she kind of left
it and to actually be there right because a lot
of times I guess I'll probably left it here, it's
not there, And I think it's.

Speaker 6 (41:59):
Like it's like a special shout out because not like
Brandy just found it and then tried to figure it out,
like she saw the post and went and made an
effort to try to find it.

Speaker 2 (42:07):
That's good, well, great story shout out to everybody involved.
That's what it's all about. That was telling me something good.
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Lunchbox

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