Episode Transcript
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0:01
It's time for the Bobby Bones post
0:03
show. Here's your host,
0:06
Bobby Bone.
0:13
I want to play a few voicemails here.
0:14
This is Number one Morning Studio.
0:16
I just had a question for everyone. What
0:19
do you do when you see a dog walking
0:21
the street that has a collar. I personally
0:23
feel like I should make the effort to pull over, get
0:25
the job the safety potentially called owners.
0:28
However, I know that not all dogs are
0:30
approachable or friendly, and honestly,
0:32
I'm not trained in the situation, so I could
0:34
potentially make it worse. I just know if my dog
0:37
got out, I would hope that someone would make the effort to
0:39
get my dogs off the road and back home. So
0:41
when I do drive away and I don't make
0:43
the effort, I always feel really guilty
0:45
about it. So I just wanted your guys have sons
0:48
in the situation.
0:49
Those are my thoughts too. Anytime I
0:51
see a dog with a collar on it
0:53
that's not with a human running somewhere freely, it
0:55
shouldn't I always stop. If the
0:57
dog shows any aggression, I'll try to
0:59
chill, but I'll always call it, and not
1:01
because I'm some sat but because
1:03
I hope somebody would do that for my dog and
1:06
that people have saved my dog
1:08
before and like put Eller in
1:11
their yard. One time, we looked all
1:13
over and my wife heard
1:15
as we're like looking all over the neighborhood heard
1:18
er. She was like, I swear I hear Ella
1:20
and somebody had found her on the road running around
1:22
with a caller and put her in their backyard
1:25
so she wouldn't get hit by a car. We literally found
1:27
her, like how are howling? And so yes,
1:30
uh, now the dog's aggressive
1:32
or it's like a busy interstate and you can't
1:34
it's it puts danger to yourself
1:37
for others. There are decisions you have to make.
1:39
But yeah, every time, just
1:41
because I would want that to be done to me.
1:43
Yeah, the same. Yeah, And if
1:45
I don't do it for whatever reason, I'm
1:47
the same and that I feel really guilty.
1:51
Why would you not do it?
1:53
I just I'm just saying if there's
1:55
a situation where I had to walk away from
1:57
it, like if you're you can't figure it out
1:59
like that, like.
2:00
You can't get it to come to you, yeah, or it runs away
2:02
keeping or not.
2:03
I'm like, oh well not today for me.
2:05
Yeah, that's what I thought you were like, you know what let's love a coin
2:08
tails. Today is not the day,
2:11
uh, lunchbox. I'm assuming you're the
2:13
same.
2:13
I'm a chaser, man. I will do everything in my
2:15
power.
2:16
I usually what nine
2:19
one one?
2:19
Never nine one one?
2:21
Why not?
2:23
But I do. I usually have some dog treats
2:25
in the trunk, and I mean I
2:27
will go zooming through alleys. I mean, I do
2:29
everything trying to get those dogs.
2:30
For your dog. You have dog treats in the trunk, no
2:33
for other dogs. So it's like when Eddie keeps
2:35
bags of food for the homeless
2:37
in his car, but when we go check his car,
2:40
there's no.
2:42
You'd have treats, I mean, or I
2:44
have food that's left over for me that I can give them.
2:46
Yeah.
2:46
Yeah, that's a different thing that you just pivoted there. So
2:49
we went and look, no, no, no, I just wonder if he
2:51
really has because he but Eddie, cause what you
2:53
say is pretty not true, and.
2:54
It's very true. I'm out right
2:56
now though I don't have anything.
2:57
Call right now, okay,
3:01
Eddie dog.
3:02
It just depends like am I late
3:04
for something or if I if
3:06
I have all l if I have all day,
3:08
absolutely, But when do you ever have all day?
3:10
Never?
3:11
So really no, no, man. If
3:13
it's a crossing the road, though, what I have done is
3:15
like park my car with my hazard lights and just make sure
3:17
everyone stops, like when till the car till
3:20
the dog gets off the road. I've done that before,
3:22
and that's what crossing. Yeah, yeah,
3:24
Like I'll get in between. Like if it's a two lane,
3:27
I'll get in the middle and put my hats. Are you sure?
3:29
But what if it's a busy road. I've never seen or heard about
3:31
you do that?
3:32
Well. I don't talk about the stuff that I do, man, of
3:34
course.
3:34
But some of those dogs are fast, man, and
3:36
they don't want to be caught like you. You get up well, and
3:38
they're so frustrating.
3:41
You know what's really use your bags for homeless people
3:43
to get the dogs to come to you, Eddie chocolate.
3:44
They can't. You can't give the dogs chocolate.
3:46
Good point, chocolate
3:48
in your car. It's a little bag with chocolate
3:51
and they're they're
3:53
both full of chocolate.
3:54
Sounds like you're passing out stuff to kids.
3:57
Chocolate and a five dollars.
3:58
A homeless person wants a chocolate melt and chocolate
4:01
bar.
4:01
The chocolate's a weird thing to keep in a car really
4:04
because it melts.
4:05
Well, no, not a Nighty's car.
4:07
Okay, let me move on. This
4:09
is a Jacob go ahead.
4:10
Hey, Bobby, my wife Shelley is a huge
4:12
fan.
4:13
Here.
4:13
Hey, I called a few probably two months
4:15
ago about y'all's movie segment, and y'all
4:17
finally did it, and y'all did the new
4:19
movie Roman Holiday. We watched that and
4:22
we're just waiting for swinging get a new movie to watch
4:24
because we struggled to pick a movie, but we
4:26
love it.
4:27
Thanks Bobby, won't show sent them a
4:29
club.
4:29
They loved Roman Holiday.
4:30
By the way, not a new movie is from like forty
4:33
eight movie that they They
4:36
did that movie and then they did the
4:39
Stone Hinge in order stop.
4:41
Do you remember what Roman Holiday was about? Yeah?
4:43
Because they passed out on a bitch, the
4:45
dark haired ladies in it.
4:47
Yeah, Audrey Hepburn. It was weird.
4:49
She didn't want her life anymore as exhausted.
4:51
What was the princess?
4:52
What was weird about the movie? There's nothing weird about
4:54
it.
4:54
You find a woman passed out on a bench and you can take
4:56
her.
4:56
To your room.
4:57
Well, no, he saved her.
4:58
Well, he didn't do anything with her. Beginning, you think,
5:00
oh, what is going on here?
5:02
Here is we can do that bit, we
5:04
can do it in the next week or so.
5:05
Oh I didn't move.
5:06
I just get so annoyed at having to watch stupid movie
5:08
and mostly I signed that to Eddie because we had to watch more
5:11
Betties than anybody's.
5:11
What do you mean those are great, dude? Those are
5:13
cinema classics.
5:15
Yeah, let's do number three.
5:17
Okay, I saw it.
5:18
Bobby owned Ray moondos
5:20
y, but he keeps doing
5:23
it. And I noticed Ray Moondo is not having
5:25
to pay him twenty five dollars every time
5:27
he does, so that he still own it or
5:30
did no, don't.
5:31
Buy it as he did not buy it back,
5:33
but I let him use it for free. Right now,
5:37
that's a broken one.
5:38
You can do that with all you want.
5:39
Remember when those are a big thing?
5:41
What buying the.
5:44
Is it called NFT? NFT?
5:47
Yeah?
5:47
Stupid? Do you
5:50
still have yours lunchboks?
5:51
Yeah?
5:53
You bought like sports NFTs.
5:54
I bought a bunch.
5:56
Well, I would just say, don't give
5:58
up.
5:59
I'm not giving up when they come back over
6:01
thousands, I.
6:02
Don't know, But like I told you, I bought some
6:04
bitcoin being stupid. And
6:06
I didn't check this thing, and I look back on my
6:09
account and it did well how much?
6:11
Because it was it was at the bottom. Yeah, stupid.
6:13
I don't even know how you say it.
6:14
It's like you don't say it.
6:16
I'm not going to say that.
6:16
You don't know how to say a number that big.
6:19
No, I know how to say a number that big. But like happened
6:21
with what he started with, it started with him where it went like
6:23
I would know if something was like quadrupled,
6:25
but it's like more than that.
6:27
Oh my god, bigs at the bottom bottom. And I bought
6:29
it as kind of like, let's just if nothing happens. I didn't
6:31
spend that much. If something does happen, I made a little
6:33
bit, except I forgot I did it, and it made
6:35
it a bit.
6:36
You're so freaking lucky, dude, so lucky.
6:38
But had I not made the decision to buy it at the bottom,
6:41
that's not luck.
6:42
No, what it is like, it went up, It
6:44
went up a lot.
6:45
But still I had to make the decision to
6:47
go. This thing I think is at the botom where it'll be. Don't
6:49
think about bitcoin. I don't do any of that. But
6:52
and I should sell it because I'll go back down.
6:53
That's how all those like American
6:57
rich people like Rockefellers and Vanderbilts.
6:59
That's they made all their money. How they they
7:01
bought the market. They bought into the market when
7:03
it was like crashed at the very very very bottom.
7:06
My geography teacher in high school, miss Berghart,
7:09
she bought Dell stock, lots
7:12
of it before it was anything, and boom
7:14
it blew up.
7:15
She was a millionaire.
7:17
How is Dell doing now?
7:18
I never see Dell's Well, they're
7:20
like they do servers mainly, but like so.
7:22
They pivoted a bit from like the PC world.
7:24
Yeah, like they don't do computer like personal computers.
7:26
Oh my gosh, that's what PC is. That's
7:29
crazy, dude, I just figured that
7:31
out of my head. You were the DC world
7:34
and I was like personal computer.
7:36
Steve from Virginia, good.
7:38
Friend of mine, I went to school with you.
7:40
His name is Chris Hancock.
7:42
It's just one of the lets, you know.
7:43
I thought it was a pretty total small world. I'll listen
7:45
to your show every morning here from Chessseeake,
7:47
Virginia. We Love You Wonder six.
7:49
Point one and they play y'all all
7:51
the time.
7:51
I love y'all and love your morning shows.
7:54
How we going? Thank you, Stephen Virginia.
7:56
You know, Chris, I
7:58
thought your school was so small.
7:59
Though sometimes there are people
8:02
clam I'm their cousin. I don't know. It
8:05
couldn't have been in my class. He
8:07
could have been way older than me.
8:08
When your school was like kindergarten through
8:10
twelve and.
8:10
We were all there right, so on
8:13
a hill, the seniors would hang out with like the kindergarteners.
8:16
Didn't hang out, but we were on the same there's a hill and
8:18
k through six was on the bottom
8:20
of the hill. On the top of the hill, seventh through twelve, so
8:24
you could throw a rock to the elementary school.
8:26
So you didn't hang out, but everybody
8:29
was there. So I think over time,
8:33
I think I hung out with everybody in the.
8:34
Whole school except
8:37
Chris Hancock.
8:37
I don't I'm sure if there's a Chris
8:40
Hancock, I'm sure that at some point,
8:42
but he a memorable name, but he wouldn't
8:44
have been Yeah, Amy, we get
8:46
you.
8:46
Oh my gosh, you
8:49
got to grow up, William.
8:51
Mature right now?
8:53
Stop sure, like can
8:55
you put your John Hancock?
8:57
Yes, yes, that's exactly
9:00
he was biggest on the thing.
9:02
Okay, I
9:06
didn't.
9:06
Know that that meant anything else.
9:08
Well, no, it's two words.
9:10
Is it spelled like?
9:11
No, Hancock is one word.
9:12
But that's what I mean my mind.
9:14
Ye see, I think y'all's mind. No, mine
9:17
went acting like.
9:18
You had it all figured out.
9:20
No, it's okay, okay,
9:23
we know the real truth.
9:25
As she giggles, you know my parents,
9:28
Why do you think that's a memberle name?
9:30
No hand Cox's.
9:32
Saying it, Amy, Amy, it's.
9:34
Not your trip.
9:36
You said it.
9:37
Then you saying that now for.
9:38
Amy, You're saying a letter that's not even in the world.
9:40
Amy, you added a.
9:41
Letter just then I
9:43
did. But I
9:45
know Johnny Hancock, Johnny.
9:47
Nobody calls her Johnny.
9:48
I bet they did back in the day Johnny.
9:50
Johnny seventeen
9:54
that they say, hey, can I get you Johnny?
9:56
And Johnny Johnny sign right here?
9:58
Man, A part of me. Nobody calls
10:00
me Johnny. You're
10:03
nuts?
10:03
Okay? What?
10:07
Oh yeah, my parents they're optometrists.
10:09
Went to high school with me. That's weird. Oh yeah
10:11
yeah, And I mean they didn't. They just went to her and did
10:13
they know you? Yeah? Well she does she remember
10:15
me?
10:16
No, do they know you, yeah, like
10:18
you just hang out.
10:19
Yeah, like I think they
10:21
were at a doctor's appointment whatever. And then she
10:24
then my parents told her like, oh, we're going to go to Nashville.
10:26
Is my son and he does this? And
10:28
she's said, oh wait a minute, your son's who and
10:31
they said my name and then she's like, oh, my gosh,
10:33
I went to high school with him, but you remember
10:35
them. I remember her? Yeah, crazy.
10:37
I got a couple lottery stories. Oh great,
10:39
let me know if you know them. Lunchbox the
10:41
one point three billion dollar powerball jack quiet.
10:44
The winner is an immigrant who has cancer.
10:47
Yeah, cancer
10:49
for eight years and had his last
10:51
chemotherapy treatment last week.
10:54
That's amazing.
10:55
Forty six years old man, How cool is that?
10:57
Portland Charlie's his name
10:59
told him conference that he
11:01
and his thirty seven year old wife are taking
11:03
half the money and the rest is going to a friend.
11:06
A friend they.
11:08
Had chipped in one hundred bucks to buy tickets with
11:10
them. That would make sense. He's given the half to got it. Got
11:12
it. They're taking a lump sum payment
11:14
of four under twenty two millions, so each
11:17
of them will get little over two hundred million.
11:19
Yes, in the weeks leading up to the drawing,
11:21
he wrote out numbers for the game on a piece of paper
11:23
and slept with it under his pillow. He
11:26
said he prayed he would win, saying, I need some help. I don't
11:28
want to die yet unless I've done something for my family.
11:30
First ap news lunchbox
11:33
prayer, dude.
11:34
And he said, he said he's
11:36
going to give himself a good doctor.
11:39
Yeah, last last chemo treatment
11:41
though, So that must mean that
11:43
means one of two things. Either it's on the way
11:45
up or really bad. But I feel like it's on the way up.
11:49
I don't know, but his prayer said, I want to do something for
11:51
my family.
11:52
I think I would pray that way if I was.
11:53
I don't know, he said. He called his mom and
11:55
he said, we're rich. She says
11:58
rich. How rich? And he said, really
12:00
rich.
12:02
That's cool, that's really rich. Mylloy account
12:04
here is not really the bitcoin
12:07
hails. In comparison, In case you're wondering this story,
12:09
In case you're wont drinking. In comparison, an
12:11
anonymous Maryland woman won fifty thousand dollars powerball
12:13
prize after a boyfriend said, hey, you should just play the lottery.
12:17
The woman dubbed the Ola
12:19
winner because of that area in Maryland. Bought
12:21
the ten dollars quick pick. I
12:24
thought there's got to be a glitch, no way,
12:27
and they scanned it again. Fifty
12:30
thousand bucks doesn't really play the lottery.
12:33
That doesn't work for me.
12:34
Speaking of money, Peacock's raising prices.
12:37
Who else peak?
12:38
I've seen it?
12:39
I do?
12:39
I do. I
12:41
don't watch it unless there's like a special,
12:44
like a show that's specially.
12:45
The Office on it.
12:46
I don't want to watch the Office anymore. I don't sleep
12:48
with the TV on a night. I used to watch that every.
12:50
Night when we go to sleep. You guys got Peacock
12:52
for Yellowstone?
12:54
Had a Yellowstone? Wasn't on Peacock
12:57
if it is now, it's it was on Paramount Plush.
13:00
But then maybe it's on Peacock now. And some of the older episodes.
13:04
So the ones that are coming on like CBS,
13:06
are those new episodes? Are they just replaying
13:09
the old episodes of Yellows?
13:10
Great question. I don't, No, I didn't see
13:13
that. I don't watch a lot of tell it like linear
13:16
television.
13:16
Well I do, because I watched Survivor and Amazing
13:19
Race and all that and it's always on there.
13:20
I might see that. I don't know, because
13:22
it was never on CBS. It was only on whatever
13:25
that channel was. What was it on? It
13:27
is reruns, but they were never on the network. They were
13:29
always on whatever the original network
13:31
was. It was on I remember, no clue
13:34
Paaramount network. So you
13:36
get just yell stuff.
13:37
Sometimes I think it was an AMC show.
13:39
Isn't it Yelstone Paramount
13:41
network?
13:42
Yeah, MTV?
13:45
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, check
13:49
it.
13:49
I'm about to pull a lunch walk in.
13:50
Travis Kelsey is now the highest paid tied end in the NFL.
13:52
Good for them them, Yeah, him
13:55
and Taylor at the highest page. She's the highest
13:57
paid probably musician ever.
13:59
It's Paramount network. Eddie is
14:01
googled it. You can go double google if you want.
14:03
No because will
14:06
value go up because of his playing
14:08
or because of his notoriety,
14:11
like he's not.
14:12
His notoriety no two
14:14
year deal worth thirty four So
14:16
tight ends generally aren't paid as much as other positions
14:19
that are like skill
14:21
positions. However, the tight end is being used in a
14:23
way more skillful way now like at Travis Kelsey
14:26
catches a bunch of balls. It can also
14:28
block, but he's now the highest paid tight end. Also,
14:30
he's won multiple Super Bowls, like he deserves.
14:32
To be paid.
14:32
This is just his money from his team, not
14:35
like endorsements.
14:36
Correct salary seventeen
14:38
million dollars fully guaranteed for this season and
14:40
the rest of the money is set to be guaranteed on the third day of the
14:42
twenty twenty five league year.
14:43
That's awesome.
14:44
That's from ESPN. Let's
14:46
do a midrole here. Do you guys see the story about the cops
14:49
that were killed.
14:50
No, No, that's pretty said for.
14:52
The hostage thing. So
14:55
Charlotte, North Carolina, for law
14:57
enforcement officers were
15:00
just four two PM officers. We're trying to serve a warrant
15:02
on a fugitive wanted on multiple charges
15:05
when the suspect opened fire from inside
15:07
the home. After three hours
15:09
and over hundreds of rounds of ammunition fired,
15:12
three US Marshall Task Force officers
15:14
and a Charlotte Mecklenburg Police officer
15:16
had been killed. The suspect, thirty nine
15:19
year old Terry Clark Hughes, was found dead in the front
15:21
yard of the home, which belonged to a relative, and
15:24
the GoFundMe has been set up to help the
15:26
families of the slain officers. So
15:28
that's from WBTV, But I wanted to bring
15:30
it up because there is a GoFundMe if
15:32
you hear the story and you want to help, it's
15:35
easy to find. But yeah, this is a big story yesterday,
15:38
Like they went to a house looking for a guy and
15:40
he just starts firing on us.
15:41
So sad that's that one.
15:43
Yeah that sucks, man. I mean, cops never
15:45
know who's gonna again. A traffic
15:47
stop could result to me pulling a
15:50
gun and that's it. But
15:52
yeah, that go fund me is up if you guys want
15:54
to go and check that
15:56
out. Let's see what else I
15:58
have here. There's a pilot who
16:00
got popped for drinking before a flight.
16:03
Okay, man, what do you msn? He was
16:05
flying from Dallas Tokyo. Dang
16:08
he The flight was canceled after
16:10
the captain got drunk at a hotel bar.
16:13
Dallas to Tokyo. That's like a fifteen
16:15
hour flight.
16:16
It ain't southwest broh jesus.
16:18
The captain had reportedly dined with other crew members and
16:20
continued drinking into the evening, leading to a
16:22
hotel employee calling the police. Not
16:25
because he was a pilot drinking, but his disorderly conduct.
16:27
Around two am, they had to
16:29
cancel the flight to assess the captain's physical
16:31
and mental well being, and the airline helped transfer
16:33
the one hundred and fifty fourth one or fifty
16:35
seven passengers on too alternative flights, which I'm sure
16:37
wasn't the same time nightmare.
16:41
I would think, though, if you saw a
16:43
guy getting drunk at a bar in a
16:45
pilot.
16:45
Suit, I don't think he's in a pilot suit, but I'm.
16:47
Just saying, like, if you do see that, you should probably
16:50
like just investigate, right, yeah, you should probably
16:52
call.
16:52
Nine one one on that one.
16:53
Okay, not nine one one, but investigates.
16:55
But he wasn't wearing a pilot's he had. It
16:57
was called because he was disorderly.
16:59
Right in it.
17:01
Okay, pilot's going to drink in their uniform
17:03
unless they've already flown. And even then, but even
17:05
then you double check, man, unless you're trying to pick up
17:07
somebody, like show up in a uniform and like I just
17:10
got off a flight, pick up somebody at the bar.
17:12
But you don't. You wouldn't do that, like either
17:14
for no reason or leading into a flight.
17:16
Well, I definitely was picturing him like trying
17:18
to walk on the plane to fly the plane
17:20
drunk, but he got picked up
17:22
before that would happen.
17:24
Yes, but if that's a two am call
17:26
for disorderly and the flight was the next morning,
17:29
I'm sure the blood alcohol content, Yeah,
17:31
it probably wasn't.
17:33
No, I know I needed to be canceled, but I'm
17:36
just glad he wasn't.
17:37
You know, like already, you know, like you
17:40
might still been drunk.
17:40
You're co pilot's like, hey, what's going
17:43
on? And then you have to cancel the flight?
17:44
You know, So you're saying it was a good thing he
17:46
got disorderly arrested
17:49
or maybe not rest or whatever it was.
17:50
Yeah, they were probably able to handle it in
17:53
a different way.
17:54
He's like, do you know who I am?
17:55
I'm a pilot.
17:57
Okay, should have said that.
17:58
Sir, Yeah, wrong answer.
17:59
X Anessay x nsa employee
18:01
and in Colorado sentence to twenty two years in prison for attempting
18:04
to sell secrets to Russia. Dang,
18:07
how do you even get those secrets? It
18:09
is a secret, I do have it. None
18:11
of us know. Would you sell that to Russia?
18:13
No, well, for
18:16
a little more than my penalty. Oh yeah for
18:19
two, Yeah, yeah yeah.
18:21
Jer s Sebastian Dalki thirty two, pleaded
18:24
guilty to six counts of attempting to transmit national
18:26
defense information to a foreign government.
18:29
What the craw Like, how do you get
18:31
involved in?
18:32
Like? How do how does somebody get to you to even say
18:34
they want that?
18:35
Right?
18:36
It's probably somebody from our side, right.
18:38
Usually the person, like the
18:40
American is the one that initiates
18:43
contact with them, saying, hey, I have access
18:45
to this, this and this or whatever,
18:47
and I can give you classified information. And that's
18:50
how they start the relationship.
18:51
How do you know or something. Sometimes
18:53
that's not what happens. Sometimes there's somebody who's like
18:55
secretly working for whatever government who
18:57
knows these people work for this, and they create
18:59
a relationship and that's
19:02
how they get the information as well.
19:03
How do you know that?
19:05
Documentaries the Americans, Ah,
19:08
that's interesting and think about that. That's a good
19:10
one though, based on true based on a truish story.
19:14
And then you start rooting for you start rooting for him the
19:17
other country Americans that
19:20
show they're Russian spies and
19:23
they're in America and
19:25
they've just taken up. But it's based on a truish
19:28
story.
19:29
I know you're like, oh, shoot, I hope their neighbors don't
19:31
catch them, And then what.
19:33
Am I doing?
19:36
The defendant, who had who has sworn an oath
19:38
to defend our country, believed he was selling
19:40
classified national security information
19:42
to a Russian agent.
19:46
Wow, that's
19:48
just a whole.
19:49
He used encrypted email accounts to send classified
19:51
documents to the undercover agent, believing him be
19:53
a Russian official. He believed he would receive
19:55
eighty five thousand dollars for the act.
19:57
Wow, so the Russian official
19:59
was not working for.
20:02
The Russian government, got
20:04
them?
20:05
This is entangled webs.
20:08
Tangled webs indeed. Yeah,
20:11
well going to Russia right now will be a nightmare.
20:14
Like ever ever, why would you ever want to go
20:16
there?
20:16
Like that's not on my list because it.
20:18
Seems like it would be cool to like see that
20:21
what's the town called the in
20:23
Moscow.
20:23
Or all the pretty little rooms or whatever?
20:25
That would be cool to see. But I don't know what that.
20:28
Uh, it's not right.
20:29
What is that?
20:30
But like you often say, google it, red square
20:33
maybe something like that.
20:35
I think that would be kind of cool to see what's it
20:37
called that?
20:39
No, that's not it no, No.
20:41
I'm sure somebody type in pretty
20:43
buildings in Russia.
20:44
Yea, with all the little pretty like tops of the
20:47
buildings. Yeah, look like hats.
20:50
I mean that would be cool.
20:51
Bones just look at a picture of it.
20:53
No, here you I don't go anywhere, dude. You're talking to somebody who don't
20:55
want to go.
20:55
Anywhere, but you keep saying that'd be cool.
20:57
It would be cool, be coold, have wings in my button fly to
20:59
and I think that, but it would be
21:01
cool. I wonder
21:03
what that's called red
21:06
square. Did you say red square? Yeah, it's gotta be red square.
21:09
I've heard red square. I don't know really what Well.
21:10
Like, even China would be cool to go to if it wasn't
21:13
for well them
21:15
planning something on you, Russia too and putting you
21:17
in prison and yeah, and then
21:20
trading and then saying we have you and you're a
21:22
political you know, I
21:24
don't want I have a friend who went to Russia.
21:29
He's known, and
21:31
he was there for work. I'm gonna try to
21:33
keep this as vague as possible. And
21:37
he was being followed and
21:39
he was like by being followed, and
21:41
the guy came up and was like, I worked for the police. Uh,
21:45
you just like littered or something trivial.
21:48
He was like, no, I did it, And he was like I did. I'm
21:50
going to arrestue. How much money do you have on you? It
21:52
kind of felt like Mexico and
21:56
so he was like, I have whatever, and he gave him all
21:58
the money he had and then like, I'll let you go
22:00
this time. Don't do it again.
22:02
Dang, that's why you don't want to go to Russia.
22:04
Yeah.
22:04
Out. He also said when he got there, he felt like his phone
22:06
was tapped, Like immediately his phone started doing
22:09
weird things.
22:10
I'm sure I think that's for everybody, right.
22:12
Well, I mean he in particularly he landed
22:14
and he was from America, and he said his phone started doing weird
22:17
things that made it feel like that they had they
22:19
knew he was coming. Obviously he's an American and
22:22
they have to clear everybody to come into the country, and
22:24
that his phone started
22:26
acting in a way that he felt like his phone was being
22:28
monitored. What
22:31
a nightmare.
22:32
I had. A friend of mine, he went flew to Russia
22:34
for work. On the way back, his plane
22:37
crashed and he landed
22:39
on island stayed there forever.
22:41
That's awesome.
22:42
Then he eventually got found what They
22:44
made a whole movie about him. He worked for fed
22:46
X.
22:47
No, are you kidding? I didn't know he went to Russia
22:49
in that's at the beginning of it.
22:50
Yeah, never seen it.
22:52
That's crazy. How have you never seen Castaway?
22:54
I didn't know he went to Russia though. Yeah, I thought, I didn't
22:56
know if you're doing Gilligan's Island. For a minute, I thought
22:58
he was doing Lost, Okay, I thought it maybe, Then
23:01
you said movie. A family
23:03
wins a case against a mistress who
23:06
wanted sperm to conceive. A
23:08
court has just ruled against a woman who was trying to use a frozen
23:10
embryo to gain the rights to the estate
23:12
of her lover after he passed away in a traffic accident.
23:15
The woman was having an affair with the married man.
23:19
They had used a previously fertilized egg that had
23:21
been frozen to fertility clinic and later gave birth to
23:23
a son. Her argument was
23:25
a fertilized egg, and since it was a kid, and it was
23:27
his kid, she's entitled to some
23:30
of his money he died. Remember, he
23:33
had no will, which complicated matters, but
23:36
the court eventually ruled against her. Pointing
23:38
out that she couldn't proved that the embryo had been fertilized
23:41
by the person or that she had permission
23:43
to use the sperm.
23:46
That's valid.
23:48
I guess you have sign of permission slip anytime your sperm
23:50
is used.
23:50
Oh is that right?
23:51
Yeah, that's a weird story.
23:54
And then that missing emergency slide that fell
23:56
off the Delta flight was found. The slide
23:58
was found washed out in front of a house of a lawyer
24:01
whose firm is suing Boeing. I
24:04
don't think there's anything.
24:05
Wow, No, don't tell me that's a coincidence.
24:08
You think, like we're flying over this guy's doing their
24:10
maker drop.
24:11
No, he's suing them now because it dropped. He wasn't
24:13
already in a lawsuit with them, right I
24:16
would?
24:17
I think I think he's Bobby read
24:19
it. He was already suing him.
24:20
But the emergency side that fell off the Delta flight departing
24:22
from JFK Airport on Friday was found two days later,
24:24
washed up in front of the beach side house of a lawyer
24:27
whose firm happens to be suing Boeing over safety
24:29
issues.
24:29
What what are the odds of that?
24:32
That's like God was just like, here
24:34
you go.
24:35
I think the airline pilots were
24:37
like bombs away.
24:40
They're trying to destroy the house.
24:43
At all, especially when you're already suing them.
24:45
It's like double the reasons wild.
24:47
Huh. I thought he
24:49
was suing him because.
24:51
I thought that too, Amy, Eddie, what is your
24:54
son doing? You said, it's okay that my son is doing this?
24:57
What is he doing?
24:57
What is he doing?
24:58
Is he like riding something like
25:00
doing a movie script or something?
25:01
Oh, my son's doing writing a movie script, right,
25:04
But I don't think, I said, is it okay?
25:05
Oh?
25:05
Yes, okay, okay, he is writing a movie
25:07
script. But and it's
25:09
cool because he loves movies and since gosh,
25:12
man, he was like five years old, he's like this, I
25:14
want to make movies. I want to make movies. And he would make
25:17
little movies in his head or whatever. So I finally
25:19
told him, like, dude, it's time for you to start
25:21
writing a script. That's what you want to do. So
25:23
he started writing the script he got and I'm so
25:26
proud of him too. He like goes in a corner with
25:28
his computer and types away and he's there for hours
25:31
and then he comes to me and says, Dad, my
25:33
script's pretty cool, Like I'm really excited about
25:35
this, but I think this movie is probably gonna be rated
25:38
R.
25:39
Like so, but how old is he? He's sixteen,
25:42
okay, and then how old it to be getting radar movie
25:44
eighteen seventeen? I don't know, seventeen.
25:47
Okay, that's what I'm saying,
25:49
Like, okay, but what's the problem. Well, it's your first
25:51
script, Like why do you have to make it rated R? And
25:53
I'm like, so, I asked him what it's about whatever?
25:55
And he told me it's about like these kids that are
25:57
like trouble makers. And I read the script
26:00
and every other word is like an F word. I'm
26:02
like, dude, dude, Like, dude,
26:04
you don't have to like they don't. The teacher doesn't
26:06
say the F word, like, don't change.
26:08
That, don't don't mess with his art.
26:10
I think he's just doing it because he's like cool man his art.
26:12
I don't mess with his art. Next
26:15
thing, you know, he's gonna a sex scene in the middle of it, Like what are
26:17
you doing You're sixteen years old?
26:19
But Eddie doesn't think his kid knows what we
26:21
did.
26:22
No, no, But but
26:24
don't mess with his art that sucks. You can't
26:26
don't tell I don't change up his art.
26:28
Well, I just I think, is it apparent you can
26:31
have your kid.
26:32
I said, realistic sixteen year
26:34
olds that can act in movies
26:37
and do bad words. There are six year old to be professional
26:39
athletes. He can't write a script
26:41
and put a few bad words in it.
26:42
It's like Goodwill hunting. I'm like, they don't even live
26:44
in that like city where they talk like that.
26:46
But that's okay. They'll never be seen by anybody.
26:49
Let this script most likely will
26:51
never be seen by anybody that's gonna make a decision.
26:53
Oh don't probably don't tell him that.
26:55
It's probably a lead in damn writing better and better scripts.
26:59
You can't Russia, okay,
27:01
but Russia and China is who you are. You
27:03
are you're censoring. It is sad
27:05
to see if you were eleven, it will be different.
27:08
If he starts off like that. I mean, what's the
27:10
next movie going to be?
27:10
Like?
27:11
You think he's gonna be X what.
27:14
I don't know that the f wort is a gateway
27:17
drug exactly.
27:19
It could be, but hey, if but
27:22
if that's what makes him happy, no,
27:26
see.
27:26
He probably hears the F wort a lot in his life, and
27:29
so what he's doing is taking his life and putting it on paper.
27:31
Because he listens to hip hop music.
27:33
Oh my gosh, shitty.
27:35
Listens to hip hop music on the story, gets his vocabulary
27:39
from.
27:39
I would say, as
27:42
long as it's just something he's creating,
27:45
let him create. Why would you want to it all
27:48
stop what he's writing, what he's
27:50
creating because you think he curses a little
27:52
too much on paper that he writes.
27:55
I think like he's in church yelling and or acting
27:57
it out.
27:57
No, but I think he's using the script to just
28:00
like that's okay, whatever he wants
28:02
sixteen, that's okay, okay.
28:05
He's not publicly doing it anywhere.
28:06
I mean I didn't tell him I don't do that. I said, be realistic,
28:09
Like, don't just use the F word because you
28:11
want to use the F word. Why is that character
28:14
using the F word?
28:15
But why would they use any word? So maybe don't make it
28:17
about the F word. Make it about any of the things the character
28:19
that.
28:20
Way, not the only word he's using it.
28:21
Because if you're doing that, then he's gonna feel like
28:23
you're trying to
28:26
stunt his creativity
28:28
where if you're like, hey, they wouldn't say jolly
28:31
good when they live in Arkansas right
28:33
now, that would make sense if you put that
28:35
F word with like, maybe you're
28:38
using that too much and you're also using a British accent
28:40
whenever. This thing is, you know, shot in Mississippi
28:42
exactly.
28:43
So how's everything else for good?
28:45
No? Story is good? Man Story's cool. I'm
28:48
proud of.
28:48
Him, and I can't get it Eddie. I mean, I get
28:50
your like just you probably don't want
28:53
so much of it. It makes sense, but.
28:54
It's not his.
28:55
Eddie's should be able to have his own
28:57
thing, but he is writing the script in my house? Can
29:00
I always say that you can say whatever you
29:02
want? Well, you know, you know, like that's the power
29:04
you have over your kids. Sometimes you're like, not in my house,
29:07
he.
29:07
Can't even write. What if he's writing a bad words
29:09
in a journal like he's keeping
29:11
for his own thoughts and you're like, oh, you
29:13
can't write in your journal your thoughts. You can't write the F word
29:15
in my house, I guess he.
29:17
Can do that.
29:18
I mean, my daughter isn't using bad
29:20
words, but she writes really really
29:22
really dark things, like
29:25
it's really dark to where I've
29:27
been concerned at times where I'm.
29:29
Like, I would understand that should we show
29:31
this to her?
29:31
And then I mean I talked to her about it, and she'll
29:34
be like, Mom, it's
29:36
art.
29:37
I think it's all based in can you hide behind
29:39
art?
29:40
Whatever version of reality it is. If
29:42
she's writing dark things, she's probably thinking
29:44
of something that leads her to this. Eddie,
29:47
I'm sure your son's around a bunch of people saying fword
29:49
yeah, probably, or listening to it. Yeah.
29:51
And Seth Rogan started writing Super Bad at the
29:53
age of thirteen, and so just imagine
29:55
if his parents would have said, hey, man, you can't write
29:58
about that stuff. It's not good. You
30:00
got it.
30:00
You're in my roof, I mean my room,
30:02
in my.
30:03
Yeah, but I'm in my room. You
30:05
got a lot of an artist has to be an artist.
30:07
Man, Is that right? Man?
30:09
Say any better than that in
30:12
my roof?
30:13
I mean a lot of these artists when they're twelve thirteen,
30:15
they're writing songs. I mean that bad
30:18
words, bad words? All
30:20
right, Let it go, man, you're good.
30:23
Thank you.
30:24
I don't want to be on his team, but you're on my team
30:26
because you said that was the gateway to poorn.
30:28
I didn't Amy, didn't I say,
30:31
isn't?
30:31
But then you're like a good man.
30:32
You don't say that, But I have a buddy that does.
30:35
If you need actors, you have a buddy
30:37
that no. What's
30:39
his name?
30:41
His name is Sean alf Is that his stage
30:43
name? That's his real name?
30:45
What's his stage name?
30:46
Let me check?
30:47
How do you know?
30:49
Be posted on Facebook?
30:50
Okay, guys, I just want to say one
30:53
final thing here. We have
30:55
to stop saying that every like third
30:57
of an idea anybody's ever sput it out on the show
31:00
that when someone does it commercially successful
31:02
outside of this show, they stole it from us.
31:04
No, no, no, no, no, no, bro hold on, I
31:06
know what you're talking about.
31:07
This is that he made up life and
31:09
stress don't mix. What was it? Less
31:12
stress, more life?
31:13
Boom?
31:14
Didn't he said it, He didn't know where he
31:16
got it. Man made it up himself, but somebody
31:18
had trademarked it way before Ray Ever said it.
31:21
Okay, this other thing, the reservation,
31:23
this is a real go ahead. But my point is they
31:25
didn't steal this.
31:26
Okay, I'll just tell you what the story is.
31:29
But we're gonna know based on the person on the.
31:30
Show exactly because it was stolen.
31:32
Go ahead, stolen.
31:34
You don't know what I'm talking about.
31:36
This almost stole something from me.
31:37
Do you know what I'm talking about?
31:39
Go ahead?
31:40
Some guy is selling two
31:44
restaurants in New York City and has made
31:47
seventy thousand dollars
31:49
my idea, I.
31:50
Mean, absolutely stole my business plan
31:53
that I did on this show that I had
31:56
great customers.
31:58
That you had one customer, and there's all on
32:00
app that does this like you didn't build No, you
32:02
didn't build anything except say it out.
32:04
I shouldn't have gone and said it out loud before
32:06
I had everything lined up,
32:08
had the app going. I should
32:10
have had that all lined up instead.
32:12
I can't never lined anything up.
32:13
No, No, but I could have and I should
32:15
have. And that's what I'm saying.
32:16
I came.
32:17
He didn't steal it.
32:19
I spewed all the information
32:21
and he was like, man, great idea, and now he's making
32:23
seventy thousand a year doing my job.
32:25
Bones. Had you ever heard of that idea before?
32:27
Lunchbox?
32:29
It's big in California, it has been.
32:31
But he's been doing this for the last three years,
32:33
three years.
32:34
But he's been, but again, that doesn't mean to it
32:37
from him.
32:37
Oh he did, because he's in college, so he's definitely
32:39
younger than me. Never heard of it.
32:41
Kids listened to the show.
32:42
Yep, well
32:45
you can't prove that they don't.
32:46
I can't. You can't prove they do who he is.
32:50
That's crazy, dude. I read the story and immediately
32:53
thought, this guy stole Lunchbox his idea.
32:55
Okay, but even let's justle
32:57
it. Even if he did steal it, which
33:00
he didn't, Lunchbox didn't do anything
33:02
with it.
33:03
No I did.
33:03
I I get nothing by just your
33:06
one right, Yep, you get nothing by just going
33:09
I created this and just saying I
33:12
came on.
33:12
Here and talked about it, and you guys
33:14
like that's such a dumb idea, terrible idea,
33:17
and said how.
33:18
You were doing it?
33:19
It was terrible.
33:19
It shows I should have had my app
33:22
No, no running people
33:24
could go.
33:25
You would say I have a reservation at this time, and then
33:27
we'd go to any reservation site and there'd
33:29
be reservations open around it. We'd be like,
33:31
well, why does it why would you buy it? I think
33:33
get a six thirty instead of your six forty. Still
33:36
for free. There's more here too, go ahead.
33:38
So the guy said that he made so many reservations
33:40
that the restaurants were recognizing him, so he
33:43
had to do different voices like.
33:44
Hello dishes, and
33:47
I would like to reserve it.
33:48
When you think Lunchbox came up with this idea,
33:51
well yeah, so to two
33:54
thousand, oh, we have it here.
33:55
We actually have a club one thousand and one, so what
33:57
Mike?
33:59
Okay, so lunch The very first time he ever did
34:01
this was twenty and twenty two. The
34:03
actual Appointment Trader app was in twenty
34:05
twenty one. The company was founded in twenty twenty
34:07
one by Jonas Fray. He beat Lunchbox by a year
34:10
doing it. Okay, but that app already existed.
34:13
So how do we know that Lunchbox insteal that idea
34:15
from the person a year before.
34:16
I don't know who that is.
34:18
He may, I don't know who you are.
34:19
Oh yeah right, it's not possible.
34:21
And this is Jonas Fray guy. He went to some the.
34:23
Appointment traders on a versions
34:25
model that caters to clients are willing to pay for reservations
34:27
that are typically difficult to obtain but would be normally available
34:30
for free. Started the company
34:32
now just the idea. Had the idea another year before this started
34:35
the company in twenty twenty one. Lunchbox
34:37
started doing that in twenty twenty two.
34:40
But he said that he had to do different voices. Who does
34:42
different voices when they call people?
34:46
That's not your argument for the reservation CAGs.
34:48
I hear you. He does do impression
34:51
is Yeah, but he didn't
34:53
invent the idea, and the guy actually beat him by
34:55
a year.
34:57
No, this guy had doesn't make any money. Whoever, Jonas
34:59
Fray is, he's not the But.
35:01
I'm saying the idea was already invented, and this app
35:03
exists now a year before you ever said it.
35:05
Are we sure his first year was twenty twenty
35:08
two.
35:08
Yes, we're looking at it.
35:09
I want to check the records on that. You may have mislabeled.
35:12
Okay, well,
35:15
I mean it was.
35:16
Do you rest your case?
35:17
It looked like the identical business
35:19
model it is.
35:20
He stole it from somebody.
35:22
No, do you rest your case, Eddie? Yeah,
35:24
I arrest the defense rests
35:26
not guilty.
35:30
Do you find your buddy, yeah, show it to you.
35:32
Hey, Scuba, I think people
35:34
are concerned you're leaving the show. Who's
35:40
concerned, Well, what does it matter?
35:43
So Eddie is the one that brought this up to me.
35:45
I don't know anything about it other than people were
35:47
messaging me saying like hey on Morgan's
35:49
Best Bits podcast, like it sounds like Scuba's
35:52
wanted to leave the show.
35:53
So Scuba has his iHeartRadio
35:56
show, which is what time I.
35:58
Heard nineties and it's one to six
36:00
eastern Monay through Saturday.
36:02
And how's that going?
36:03
I feel like it's going. Okay?
36:04
Is it a lot of work?
36:06
It's only because I don't want because like
36:08
you can just rip and read and just like go from one song on
36:10
the next, but I can't do that in me. So I have to put a little bit
36:13
of research into it and find some facts
36:15
and pull some audio and do some stuff.
36:16
So I put more onto it than I should.
36:18
So it probably takes me an hour and a half each day to do
36:20
it, and it probably should take thirty minutes.
36:22
Have you talked about your other thing or
36:24
no?
36:25
I have not known.
36:26
Okay, then we'll leave that. I won't. It's not my business
36:28
to share. Yeah thing, it's got
36:30
another thing not my business
36:33
to share?
36:33
Oskaboo, do you want to share?
36:36
Not at the moment.
36:37
Now, what does it have to do with not
36:39
has been not? I mean it's not my business even common but radio.
36:42
But if you don't want to get pushed just at you, I plead the
36:44
fifth.
36:45
I'm not saying I won't say it at some point, but as of right
36:47
now, I plead the fifth just because it's not. That's
36:49
not the focus at the moment. It is, but I'm
36:51
building towards that.
36:52
Is that why people are saying he's leaving.
36:54
I don't think he mentioned this.
36:55
I never talked about that. Now there's
36:57
another reason why you only Bobby and my wife know that
36:59
one.
37:00
What I
37:03
know?
37:04
That's a weird triangle.
37:05
Scooba don't even remember telling me.
37:07
Did you tell Lunchbocks?
37:08
I didn't tell him anything.
37:10
You didn't, No, because I talked to Bobby about
37:12
maybe it was it two.
37:13
Months ago, three months ago over at my house,
37:15
at your house.
37:15
Yeah, yeah, but I'm talking about this the specific
37:18
newest thing that we talked about in
37:20
the garage.
37:22
Oh that one. Yeah, that one hasn't come yet. That
37:24
will that one will be sooner than the third one.
37:26
Yeah, there's another another one.
37:31
Scooba works towards stuff.
37:33
Oh the script No,
37:35
No, not that now.
37:36
So the question is Scooba, are you leaving the show
37:38
that he wants to know?
37:40
Uh, not that I'm aware of the So
37:42
what happened in best bits that people are thinking that what
37:45
happened?
37:46
Yeah, he was just.
37:47
Like we were talking about our years, what our year looks
37:50
like, and he said his is a year of growth.
37:52
And then he's working towards.
37:53
A lot of things.
37:54
And he said there's a lot of possibilities and
37:56
he doesn't know where that will lead.
37:58
You never said like even the show.
38:01
And by possibilities he means opportunities
38:04
he's creating for himself.
38:07
Roads he's paving for himself, and
38:10
opportunities that if he chooses to take them, then he
38:13
should because he's created them himself.
38:17
It's been awful a lot of talk about paving roads
38:19
and stuff lately. What's going on here?
38:24
A lot of paving roads recently? What's wrong
38:27
with that? Where are these roads
38:29
going?
38:29
Are you not paving any roads?
38:31
No? Yeah,
38:36
yes, So are you jealous that you haven't been, you
38:38
know, saving up your nuts for winter?
38:39
No, it's not jealous. I'm scared
38:41
now are you scared of?
38:43
You?
38:43
Guys? Are gonna have nuts? And leave for the winter, and I'm
38:45
moving with myself like I didn't.
38:47
Butts, that's generally what
38:50
happens in life.
38:51
Lunchbucks, you've been saving nuts, Eddy,
38:53
I got my own nuts.
38:57
Lunchbucks called me the other day about.
39:00
Paving roads too.
39:01
Nuts.
39:02
Are you just not realizing you have no nuts?
39:04
He was trying to, at least he's trying.
39:08
What what does that mean?
39:09
I don't know. Really it was his wife
39:12
more so.
39:12
But
39:17
hey, hey, Amy, speaking
39:19
of she said he make sure you talk to me about that
39:21
thing today.
39:22
Yeah, we figured it was his wife.
39:24
Yeah, well, good life, Guba. Thank
39:26
you for whatever we're not talking about.
39:28
Yes, thank you. I appreciate the support. I'm
39:31
gonna start smoking.
39:31
Some people are making moves
39:36
cigarettes.
39:37
Chickens, you said smoking
39:39
chick I need more chickens, you know what
39:41
it sounds like. Sounds like I need
39:43
to buy a lot of chickens to start smoking them, or.
39:45
A paper.
39:48
Roads.
39:49
All right, we're doing. Thank you guys for listening.
39:51
We will see you tomorrow. Goodbye, everybody.
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