title TUES PT 1: EMT Busts In Our Studio! + Eddie Banned From Website + Hot Air Balloon Lands In Backyard

description We bring in Chad the EMT to describe the science behind the blood drawing between Eddie vs Lunchbox in the testosterone competition. Eddie reveals he was banned from AirBNB for partying too hard during rental. Bobby has a crazy story of how a hot air balloon carrying 13 people landed in the backyard of a home. We debate whether or not Amy or her cousin are actually psychic.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

pubDate Tue, 21 Apr 2026 16:00:00 GMT

author Premiere Networks

duration 3274000

transcript

Speaker 1:
[00:11] Welcome to Tuesday's show. Morning, studio.

Speaker 2:
[00:14] Morning.

Speaker 1:
[00:16] I do want to start with the story of a hot air balloon landing randomly in a backyard of a family. They go in their backyard, and there's a freaking humongous hot air balloon with people still in the basket. Have you seen this? No. So this was in California, and 13 people are in this, and the wind is blowing, the hot air balloon all good, and the wind just dies. And if there is no wind, the balloon doesn't go anywhere. It can go up and down.

Speaker 2:
[00:41] Yeah.

Speaker 1:
[00:44] So listen to this clip, ABC 7 LA with this.

Speaker 3:
[00:47] A hot air balloon carrying 13 people landed in the backyard of a Temecula home.

Speaker 2:
[00:53] Hi, everybody.

Speaker 3:
[00:55] The homeowner was watching television around 8.30 Saturday morning when a neighbor knocked on his door.

Speaker 2:
[01:01] So I go into the backyard, and I open the sliding glass door, and there's a basket full of 13 people in my backyard. The balloon didn't catch on anything, no one was injured.

Speaker 3:
[01:14] The homeowners say the hot air balloon pilot told them the wind died, forcing him to make an emergency landing.

Speaker 1:
[01:20] I want you to see this because the fact that it A, didn't hit the house, and this balloon is gigantic. And when they walk back in the back, and this basket is just full of people, it looks like AI.

Speaker 4:
[01:36] It's not like it's a massive backyard either. It landed perfectly in the grass.

Speaker 1:
[01:41] In Mrs. Gates' house, no power lines.

Speaker 5:
[01:43] That is hilarious.

Speaker 1:
[01:45] Everybody from the neighborhood is now taking pictures of it. They've all run over. How crazy is that?

Speaker 4:
[01:50] That's nuts.

Speaker 1:
[01:51] Yeah. So there you go.

Speaker 4:
[01:52] Wow.

Speaker 1:
[01:54] If you're that family, too, you're like...

Speaker 6:
[01:56] They're carrying it down the street now.

Speaker 5:
[01:59] That is crazy.

Speaker 1:
[02:01] There is a story about plastic surgery with dudes, and a lot of guys are going and getting plastic surgery to get a larger chin because defined jaw lines are more masculine. So I guess I don't notice guys' chins.

Speaker 4:
[02:16] So the chin sticking out more helps the jaw line, I guess.

Speaker 1:
[02:21] Yes. Eliminating double chins, increasing projection and sharpness. I guess I don't notice chins.

Speaker 4:
[02:29] Well, you've got a good jaw line. So it's probably something you've never thought about.

Speaker 1:
[02:32] But again, I've never looked at anybody else's jaw and thought, that's a weak chin.

Speaker 5:
[02:37] You like my chin?

Speaker 1:
[02:39] You know, I have no thought on it. I don't look at it.

Speaker 4:
[02:41] Yeah, but now that you know that it's perceived as...

Speaker 1:
[02:45] I could understand that people would grow beards if they had like a wimpy face. It would hide like features.

Speaker 4:
[02:52] What's a wimpy face?

Speaker 1:
[02:53] I don't know. No chin.

Speaker 5:
[02:55] There we go. Start there.

Speaker 1:
[02:58] So yeah, there's that. And then people with ADHD are more likely to become millionaires. So I'm going to play you this. This is from a podcast. Sarah Pearl went on a podcast talking about what people with ADHD are more likely to be rich.

Speaker 5:
[03:10] Who's destined to become a millionaire?

Speaker 7:
[03:12] ADHD people. There's not a single substance in this world that truly comes close to what an ADHD hyperfixation feels like. They might have laundry piling up, dishes in the sink. They might be late to everything. But what an ADHD person has is obsession, okay? They will out-obsess you on anything. And zero time distance between idea and execution. They are impulsive. When they want something, they go and get it. People with ADHD are nearly destined to become millionaires if they monetize what gives them dopamine.

Speaker 4:
[03:45] Why is Eddie laughing?

Speaker 5:
[03:46] Because Amy's listening to this clip and then she sees like a bug on her shoulder.

Speaker 1:
[03:50] So she's not hyper focused?

Speaker 8:
[03:53] Do you have a different version of ADHD?

Speaker 4:
[03:57] She wasn't saying you hyper focus on when people are talking.

Speaker 1:
[04:00] She hyper focused on the bug.

Speaker 5:
[04:01] She's like, look, a butterfly.

Speaker 4:
[04:03] It's when you have a particular idea or project in mind, you can focus on it.

Speaker 1:
[04:08] You have distraction ADHD though. Is that a different ADHD?

Speaker 4:
[04:12] Yeah, no, but anybody with distraction ADHD can hyper focus on something and hyper fixate on something for sure. But that's a generalization about laundry being piled up and dishes in the sink because I like to keep laundry going and have things where I have my certain piles, but laundry is not one of my things. And yay.

Speaker 1:
[04:34] I keep waiting for Amy to run out of the room after a squirrel.

Speaker 4:
[04:38] But yay for me, this is great news.

Speaker 1:
[04:41] I didn't feel like that described you.

Speaker 4:
[04:44] She's describing certain, like yes, certain, it's a generalization, I believe.

Speaker 1:
[04:51] But you don't fit in that generalization.

Speaker 4:
[04:53] No, I think there are things that if I set my mind to something and I get hyper focused on it, I will absolutely dive all in.

Speaker 1:
[05:01] Is that common for everybody though?

Speaker 4:
[05:05] I don't know. I mean, most ADHDers get hyper fixated on whether it's a food or an idea. But then, you know, self-doubt will creep in and then you're like, well, I'm a loser. Why would I try that? And then you have to be like, you're not a loser. Go for it. And then you're like, oh, somebody else.

Speaker 1:
[05:19] It's like you're divided with all your mental. Like you got one creeping and knocking another one out.

Speaker 4:
[05:25] Yes, yes. So some of it is believing in yourself and then having other people believe in you and then just doing it anyway. I got some, I mean, you know, a goal I'm working on and it has to do with my financial side. And I'm dialed in. I told you about it at your house on the couches.

Speaker 5:
[05:42] He's like, remember?

Speaker 8:
[05:43] He's like, no, no.

Speaker 4:
[05:47] But yeah, and I am getting there and I'll get to where my goal is. So I think in that way, yes. And I have an idea for an invention. Don't worry.

Speaker 1:
[05:56] Invention. Okay. Okay, Granville. All right. Hello, Bobby Bones. Just had my first daughter in September. While I was pregnant, my sister was also expecting, but she kept her baby names as a surprise. I told her the whole time I planned to name my daughter after our mom and my mother-in-law, Collette Coral, so Coco. I even had things made with the name. She ended up having surprise twins in August and named them Cole and Letty, also inspired by our mom's name. Now she's upset. It constantly brings up how similar the names are, reminding everyone her babies were born first. I admit it can be a little confusing, but she never told me her name plans. Now I'm considering swapping my daughter's names legally just to keep the peace, but it feels like admitting I did something wrong. Do I change my daughter's name? Is it too late to change my daughter's name? Sign Mom to Coco. A couple things. I would never change the name. I would not change the name. It's not so the same, right? No. Should we walk the names back here? Collette Coral with the name Coco, like nickname. Yes. Okay, Collette Coral. The other one over on the other side where they had twins, Cole and Letty.

Speaker 4:
[07:23] Okay. Yeah, this, no, you don't need to change the name.

Speaker 1:
[07:26] Oh, okay. I get the Letty though now. I didn't get it at first. Let, Collette. I agree. Still, no, no, no. But I was like, twins are like Cole and Calvin.

Speaker 4:
[07:36] No, I would, no, nope, nope, nope.

Speaker 1:
[07:38] Okay. So I have three things here. Number one, do not change your names simply because they're not that similar. I'm all good with that.

Speaker 4:
[07:45] And to both be inspired by an important person in both of your lives makes sense.

Speaker 1:
[07:50] Yeah. So don't change because of that. Number two, when is too late to change a baby's name? Aside from all of this, didn't your sister change her kid's name?

Speaker 4:
[08:03] No, she just left the hospital without, like after being there for several days without having a name. And it was their fourth child. So she's like, we don't know.

Speaker 6:
[08:11] We've used all three.

Speaker 1:
[08:12] We don't know anymore.

Speaker 4:
[08:14] Yeah. So yeah, good question. I mean, I don't know, like when a child starts to really understand and know their name, I would think at that point, that would be the deadline.

Speaker 1:
[08:27] When they can say it back.

Speaker 4:
[08:28] Right. Well, I don't know at what point their brain starts to understand. So that way you don't like cause any confusion. But I mean, kids are probably used to being called different things, too, because there's nicknames, there's actual names, there's.

Speaker 5:
[08:41] But Amy, didn't your daughter change her name? Well, that was when she was a teenager.

Speaker 4:
[08:44] She did that on her own as a teenager and it wasn't legal. And should she want to now, she legally could do whatever she wants. But that's her choice. Like for a kid, you just don't want them, like, confused.

Speaker 1:
[08:56] I'm asking Chad GBT, when's the latest you can change your child's name? But I want to say not my kid, because I don't get that confused. Not my kid, just talking about it on the show. So that's the second thing is that, let's find out. You can technically change it at almost any age. Usually have a few days. Yeah, but they're just saying...

Speaker 4:
[09:18] But like cognitively, it's not impactful in any way. I mean, maybe it's not. Because, you know, sometimes kids are adopted at an older age and people will change the name, especially if there was the kid is coming from a traumatic situation and just sort of, you know, a chance to rewrite their story a little bit.

Speaker 1:
[09:42] Zero to two, basically no impact. Okay. Kids don't have a stable sense of identity yet. They respond to tone and repetition more than meaning. You could switch names and they'd adapt quickly. No real confusion. Three to five years, mild confusion, quick adjustment. Six to ten years, this is where it matters. Eleven to seventeen, high identity impact. Well, that would be weird.

Speaker 9:
[10:03] Yeah, yeah, yeah, that would be weird.

Speaker 5:
[10:04] Just change who they are.

Speaker 1:
[10:06] The real takeaway, it's not about an age illegally. It's about identity psychology. So it looks like zero to two. You shouldn't do that here with this email though. Don't change it off somebody else. And also they're not that similar.

Speaker 4:
[10:21] No. I would really just ask yourself, what is really bothering me here? Because this is true. This cannot be it. Sometimes there's an underlying reason of what's going on. I dig a little deeper.

Speaker 1:
[10:33] Yeah, but it's about her sister.

Speaker 4:
[10:34] Well, I know. That's what I mean. Like, is there...

Speaker 1:
[10:36] I know.

Speaker 4:
[10:37] I'm saying, is there something deeper going on here with the sister, with whatever? I don't know. It just seems like an odd thing to get all twisted up about.

Speaker 1:
[10:47] The third one was the point I was going to make was, remember the friend that I had, they had a baby name. They wrote all the stuff on it. They told everybody their baby name, all their family, and then one of their family members had a kid after, and was like, I like that name and named their kid that.

Speaker 4:
[11:01] Yeah, that's totally different.

Speaker 1:
[11:03] That's totally different. It's so screwed up, and they'd be on minimally two-year family suspension. I would not talk to them for two years. It looks like...

Speaker 4:
[11:12] They did them dirty.

Speaker 1:
[11:13] Well, it looks like my friends who had the name, had all the stuff made, had shared the name already. It looks like they're going to have to change the name. I know. It sucks.

Speaker 4:
[11:27] Well, they can gift, I guess, all their stuff to that other family member.

Speaker 1:
[11:30] How would I? I don't talk to them. I'm out. I'm out. You don't get anything. Heck, I might go rob them. Do the opposite. Oh. Just break in the middle of the night and take some stuff. All right, there you go. That's the mail back. Close it up. Okay, we have Chad here. Chad, you are a paramedic?

Speaker 9:
[11:46] Yep.

Speaker 1:
[11:47] I don't want to say the wrong thing. What are you?

Speaker 9:
[11:48] Yeah, you're good. I'm a paramedic.

Speaker 1:
[11:49] Boom. We had you come up because Lunchbox and Eddie have been both saying they had more testosterone than the other person. Yeah. So you came up today and drew blood from them.

Speaker 9:
[11:58] We did.

Speaker 1:
[11:59] How did that go with them?

Speaker 9:
[12:00] It was actually pretty simple.

Speaker 5:
[12:01] Yeah.

Speaker 9:
[12:02] There was a competition about more or less hair on their arms.

Speaker 1:
[12:05] Oh, they were already making a competition.

Speaker 9:
[12:07] Yeah.

Speaker 5:
[12:07] Yeah.

Speaker 4:
[12:08] So who won that one?

Speaker 1:
[12:09] Yeah. Who's hair on your arms?

Speaker 9:
[12:11] Um, he has more.

Speaker 1:
[12:12] Lunchbox did? So you think that's probably an indicator?

Speaker 6:
[12:15] It just screams T, man.

Speaker 1:
[12:17] Is this one of the dumber things you've ever heard of two people trying to compare their testosterone?

Speaker 9:
[12:20] I'm not going to comment on that.

Speaker 5:
[12:23] Smart.

Speaker 1:
[12:23] And so...

Speaker 4:
[12:24] Have you ever had like guy friends come in to...

Speaker 9:
[12:27] Oh, yeah.

Speaker 4:
[12:28] Oh, to...

Speaker 9:
[12:29] It's very common.

Speaker 4:
[12:29] Okay.

Speaker 3:
[12:30] So this does happen.

Speaker 1:
[12:31] Yeah. Oh, to see who has the most testosterone?

Speaker 9:
[12:33] They'll say they want a full blood panel, but really they're just looking for the testosterone.

Speaker 1:
[12:37] Got it. But that's healthy to just know your testosterone. You ever have two come in and go, I got more than him, do us both?

Speaker 9:
[12:43] No.

Speaker 5:
[12:45] Chad, what did you say, a blood panel?

Speaker 9:
[12:47] Yeah.

Speaker 5:
[12:47] Well, what does that mean? Could you test for all kinds of things?

Speaker 9:
[12:50] We do usually. Yeah. Today, we just tested your testosterone and a complete blood count. So it tells us how thick or thin your blood is. And we drew an estrogen too.

Speaker 6:
[12:58] He's got a lot of it?

Speaker 4:
[12:59] Estrogen.

Speaker 9:
[13:01] Yeah, we're doing that too.

Speaker 5:
[13:02] Interesting.

Speaker 4:
[13:02] Oh, nice.

Speaker 1:
[13:03] So what is your business?

Speaker 9:
[13:04] It's called Get Well Health. We do like vitamin IVs, blood work, go to people's homes. We also have a clinic next door.

Speaker 1:
[13:11] So for those listening, because we're all over the country, but in Nashville, Get Well Health, is it getwellhealth.com or what's your website?

Speaker 9:
[13:18] Yeah, we're in Austin and Tampa too.

Speaker 8:
[13:20] We're also there too.

Speaker 1:
[13:21] Okay, so Get Well Health, we encourage you to use them, especially if there's a testosterone challenge between your buddies. And so how long does this usually take to come back?

Speaker 9:
[13:29] We should know their total testosterone tomorrow, free testosterone, which is, we could get more into that, but it's what's actually bioavailable. That takes a few days to come back.

Speaker 4:
[13:39] Oh, oh, I was reading about this.

Speaker 1:
[13:40] So they're gonna make excuses. If one comes back and they don't win, they're like, no, we want the...

Speaker 6:
[13:45] I want the bio also.

Speaker 4:
[13:45] No, no, no, but like if you look at it, I saw a comparison like your gross versus your net.

Speaker 9:
[13:52] Right. That's a good way of putting it.

Speaker 5:
[13:53] We want the net.

Speaker 1:
[13:54] We just want a number, Chad. When you come back, you just declare a winner.

Speaker 9:
[13:57] It's gonna be the total. So I'll have it tomorrow.

Speaker 5:
[13:59] Okay, the total.

Speaker 1:
[14:01] Are you guys nervous?

Speaker 6:
[14:02] I'm not nervous at all, man.

Speaker 5:
[14:03] I'm a little nervous. A little bit. Not necessarily about like low T, whatever, but like he's gonna come back and be like, hey, you need to go to the doctor, dude.

Speaker 1:
[14:11] Oh, you think you're dying? You think this is going to lead to you dying?

Speaker 5:
[14:15] Correct. Because Chad, the whole reason to start is because I was telling these guys that like I wake up in the morning and I'm like, I sit in the side of my bed for like five minutes thinking I'm not gonna make it through the day.

Speaker 9:
[14:24] Oh, wow.

Speaker 1:
[14:25] Don't you think that's more of a mental illness?

Speaker 9:
[14:29] You know, HIPAA, we have to be careful.

Speaker 4:
[14:31] Wait, did they sign there? What were they signing out there?

Speaker 5:
[14:34] We checked in like we were at the doctor's office.

Speaker 6:
[14:36] Yeah, we did. It was like a reservation.

Speaker 4:
[14:37] But like we wave HIPAA here. Like HIPAA in this room, we have to...

Speaker 1:
[14:41] Well, they didn't stop. Not yet. Not yet.

Speaker 5:
[14:43] We don't know yet.

Speaker 1:
[14:44] Okay, but how are we gonna know that... Are you guys waving your testosterone results so he can read them? Oh, I'm waving it all.

Speaker 6:
[14:50] We're waving it out there. Tell him how healthy I am. I'm not worried about it.

Speaker 1:
[14:53] So, and again, you can tell him in private so you're not put the pressure on him. What? No, no, no, he can tell Chad that they waved their testosterone results. Because they could say it on the air as performative and then Chad's like, I can't read them because they didn't tell me in private.

Speaker 4:
[15:07] Right, right, right.

Speaker 1:
[15:08] But if they tell you in private, you can then give us the results publicly. Yeah.

Speaker 9:
[15:12] Or they can just share too.

Speaker 1:
[15:14] No, no, no, we can't come from them.

Speaker 4:
[15:17] Actually, does it need to come from Chad?

Speaker 1:
[15:20] It has to come from Chad.

Speaker 4:
[15:21] Yeah. Oh, I didn't know if he was emailing it and then we were reading it.

Speaker 1:
[15:25] It could come. He could just email it to me, but they'd have to be okay with that.

Speaker 5:
[15:28] So I don't trust you. I want to get it from Chad.

Speaker 6:
[15:30] I'd like to hear it from Chad's mouth.

Speaker 1:
[15:32] Okay, that's fine. My only point is if you guys have control of it, you're going to fudge the numbers.

Speaker 6:
[15:38] I wouldn't know how to fudge testosterone numbers, dude. I would just read the paper.

Speaker 1:
[15:41] No, you just lift it. You just make it, whatever it is, you just make it higher.

Speaker 4:
[15:43] Where does, where's a healthy range for men?

Speaker 9:
[15:47] Um, like an optimal level would be 900 to 1100 ish.

Speaker 6:
[15:52] Wow, that's a lot. I was feeling like I was 1050.

Speaker 1:
[15:55] So, what's like super high? Is there an unhealthy high?

Speaker 9:
[15:59] Our scale that we use goes to 1500. So, someone who might be abusing tests, they would be...

Speaker 5:
[16:05] Are you abusive?

Speaker 10:
[16:06] Trust me, I'm not. If you look at me, there's one thing I'm abusing.

Speaker 4:
[16:12] So, if one of them comes back significantly low, would you recommend that they...

Speaker 9:
[16:18] Yeah, and we can take care of that in our clinic. Okay.

Speaker 5:
[16:20] But if it comes like... See, I've heard if it comes out like really high, you can have like cancer.

Speaker 1:
[16:25] Oh, you think you're going to die, huh? You really think you're going to die.

Speaker 5:
[16:27] I mean, I'm worried about that. That's what I'm worried about.

Speaker 1:
[16:29] Okay, and that's good, but good thing we did this then.

Speaker 5:
[16:31] Yeah.

Speaker 1:
[16:32] There was a story of Survivor. Remember who went on and found a heart problem? Jimmy Johnson, the old coach for the Cowboys. He was going to go on Survivor, but because of all the work they had to do to make sure physically could get on the physicals, they found a heart problem, then it saved his life.

Speaker 4:
[16:45] Also Amy Robach on Good Morning America, or back in the day, they were doing mammograms. And so she volunteered to do a mammogram just to raise awareness. They found breast cancer.

Speaker 1:
[16:56] So this could be good.

Speaker 6:
[16:58] So we could inspire America is what you're saying. Dang.

Speaker 4:
[17:01] But what is, where do we want them to be with estrogen? Like, is one of them going to have higher estrogen?

Speaker 9:
[17:07] Testosterone and estrogen are directly proportional. So as one raises, the other raises.

Speaker 4:
[17:12] Okay.

Speaker 5:
[17:13] Sounds right.

Speaker 1:
[17:14] That's probably where I have 1500 estrogen. Like I'm probably, you know, I'm using the S, you know? Okay. So we will get the results. And go ahead, ask a question.

Speaker 6:
[17:24] I got a question. So like, does the estrogen show more like, well, we have more feminine qualities? Like, like, does that ever come out?

Speaker 2:
[17:32] Um, I don't know.

Speaker 1:
[17:37] Again, you're putting them, you're asking them.

Speaker 6:
[17:39] Because when Eddie drinks, he gets really feminine. I didn't know if that's like his estrogen show.

Speaker 4:
[17:47] Like the truth comes out, you know?

Speaker 6:
[17:49] He's like, hey.

Speaker 4:
[17:50] Okay. So, but Eddie said he has fatigued in the morning. What are some other signs of low T besides fatigue?

Speaker 9:
[17:56] Like, um, so, you know, we used the word libido.

Speaker 5:
[17:59] Right. That's not a problem.

Speaker 6:
[18:00] That's not a problem.

Speaker 9:
[18:01] Screaming and getting that out of the way real quick.

Speaker 5:
[18:04] How do you think we can move on from that one?

Speaker 9:
[18:05] I mean, sleep problems. There's a whole host of them.

Speaker 2:
[18:10] Bobby, you want to get tested?

Speaker 1:
[18:11] I'm telling you, I'll lose.

Speaker 4:
[18:13] Okay, look. I wish they would be honest about their libido.

Speaker 1:
[18:16] No, I don't. I don't want to be honest. That's the one thing. I don't want to hear it. No.

Speaker 5:
[18:18] We are honest.

Speaker 1:
[18:19] I don't think they're just talking about it at all.

Speaker 6:
[18:21] We haven't said anything that's inaccurate.

Speaker 4:
[18:22] Also, there's not any shame in that.

Speaker 6:
[18:25] I got a question. Is it good? Like, does it mean I have a lot of T if I can lay down anywhere and just fall asleep?

Speaker 9:
[18:30] Probably not.

Speaker 1:
[18:31] Oh, it probably doesn't affect that.

Speaker 9:
[18:32] It could be a sign of love.

Speaker 1:
[18:33] That's just your lifestyle.

Speaker 6:
[18:34] Oh, that's a sign of whoa?

Speaker 1:
[18:35] Oh, no! Okay, so we'll get the results. We'll let him read them or he can give them to one of us to read whatever's the easiest, but you guys have to outside of this room, tell him that's okay.

Speaker 5:
[18:45] Yes, sir. Done deal.

Speaker 1:
[18:47] Okay.

Speaker 5:
[18:48] We will do it.

Speaker 1:
[18:48] But don't reveal anything else because you might be dying.

Speaker 5:
[18:51] Right, right. If he comes back and says like, you might have cancer, we're not talking about that.

Speaker 1:
[18:54] Well, he's not gonna say that.

Speaker 5:
[18:55] Right, right. So that'll be our agreement.

Speaker 1:
[18:57] We're just doing testosterone scores.

Speaker 9:
[18:58] Test-T.

Speaker 1:
[18:59] Okay. Chad, thank you. How'd they do with the needle? Pretty good?

Speaker 9:
[19:03] They actually did, they both did really well.

Speaker 4:
[19:04] Well, they said you did well.

Speaker 1:
[19:06] They didn't even feel it.

Speaker 4:
[19:07] They didn't even feel it. Lunchbox says he has other nurses where he feels it and is like, ah, but with you, nothing.

Speaker 1:
[19:12] He said he cries a lot when he does it.

Speaker 6:
[19:14] I never said I cry. No, we don't, why are we making things up, guys? I never said that. I've said I'm uncomfortable when I have it in my arm.

Speaker 1:
[19:19] Is rage testosterone or lack of?

Speaker 9:
[19:22] Essentially could be, actually could be high.

Speaker 1:
[19:24] High from rage?

Speaker 5:
[19:25] This is a lot of rage.

Speaker 1:
[19:26] Yeah.

Speaker 9:
[19:27] That's a good sign for you.

Speaker 1:
[19:30] All right, Chad, thank you and we will talk to you soon. There is someone who's a psychic, finger quote psychic, and she can look into cheese and tell your fortune. And people are paying money for this. You can't tell me that, I don't know, the economy is bad when people are paying money to talk to a cheese psychic. Where is that money coming from? I don't know. That's like the worst spent money ever. From the New York Post, she calls herself a cheese witch. Jen Bielak, she is very much into tarot card reading and tea leaves and she began practicing cheese. Hmm. I can't believe people pay for this.

Speaker 5:
[20:07] So this is like instead of a crystal ball, I'm going to look at the cheese.

Speaker 1:
[20:10] I would rather get scammed, have to admit that, than I just paid a cheese witch. Like what's more embarrassing? Yeah, I got scammed by someone. I clicked a link and that or, you know, I paid that money to a cheese witch to read my future. Right, right. During a reading, clients choose four cheeses, which she interprets as symbols of the past, present, future and a specific question, using the textures and patterns in the cheese to guide her insights. She believes different cheeses produce different types of messages ranging from complex to noisy, clear and focused, but no, people are paying her to do psychic ratings with cheese. Go ahead.

Speaker 4:
[20:46] I mean, this sounds crazy.

Speaker 1:
[20:48] And you've done some crazy stuff, so from you.

Speaker 4:
[20:50] Yeah, but what if there's something to it? I don't know. I'm not going to do it, but yeah, I've like held pills and then see if my arm will stay up and then do it because my body need it or not. But that's the energy from the pills.

Speaker 1:
[21:07] You've done that? Yeah. She has. Yeah, she was making decisions on what medicine to put in her body based on if her arm was strong enough when holding the bottle.

Speaker 4:
[21:15] Medicine strong supplements, supplements.

Speaker 1:
[21:19] Nearly 20% of Americans believe they're basically psychic.

Speaker 5:
[21:23] I mean, Amy, are you believing it now?

Speaker 1:
[21:25] Do you think you got something to your sports psychic ability?

Speaker 4:
[21:28] I don't know.

Speaker 5:
[21:29] Because you're nailing them.

Speaker 4:
[21:30] I know that I haven't been totally perfect.

Speaker 1:
[21:33] Do you believe your cousin is psychic?

Speaker 4:
[21:36] I believe she has a gift that I can't explain.

Speaker 5:
[21:40] Why can't she just answer the question? Yeah, do you believe?

Speaker 4:
[21:43] Because I've told y'all from the beginning, it's hard for me, but I do... She does have a gift. I can't deny that. What's the gift? I do think she can tap into higher levels of consciousness than we do. Because she tells me she can. And she's been right about certain things too. And she's so, like, it's weird. It's like she's studied any of this stuff, really. And she just, like, comes to her.

Speaker 1:
[22:15] I mean, that would be how a real psychic would have things happen. They wouldn't go and study... Yeah, what do you study? Psychic 101? No, you're just a natural psychic. And maybe that word psychic is thrown around like aliens. Yeah, because I have a problem when people go, aliens, ho, ho, ho.

Speaker 4:
[22:30] Yeah, because isn't she more of also like a medium or whatever?

Speaker 1:
[22:33] I don't know.

Speaker 5:
[22:34] She's talking to dead people, right?

Speaker 1:
[22:35] Yeah, yeah, she can talk. Did she talk to dead people? Here's the thing.

Speaker 4:
[22:39] She's also had encounters with UFOs.

Speaker 6:
[22:43] Wow, she's done it all.

Speaker 4:
[22:45] But because she's open to it, because and that's whenever I tell y'all, like some people that see them more than others, they have, is it that higher level of consciousness? Is it the the experience that's happening in other dimensions and stuff? I don't know.

Speaker 1:
[23:00] I would never.

Speaker 4:
[23:00] I don't know. I don't know.

Speaker 1:
[23:03] It's hard to argue.

Speaker 4:
[23:04] It's hard because I love her. She is like. I love her. I do. I love her.

Speaker 1:
[23:13] I'm not even saying it's not true. I have trouble believing it.

Speaker 4:
[23:15] Like even her mom, when her mom was alive, but her mom has since passed, I think when it first started happening way back, because it's not, it first happened in her childhood, but she didn't know what it was. So she dismissed it. And then later in life, after she'd been through a lot of chaotic things and she got sober, that's when it like all like the veil was lifted and she really tapped into it and she didn't have anything blocking it. And also she wasn't trying to block it like, oh, this is crazy. But she leaned into it and that's when more came. So anyway, her mom was sort of like, what? But then her mom, there was too much they couldn't explain to her. Mom was like, yeah, she, she's got a gift.

Speaker 1:
[23:53] Again, weird, but I'm going to make a comparison that hopefully these guys will look at and go, oh, it's possible, okay? Because again, for me, it's hard to believe, but I would never say there's absolutely no way. Because how can I prove it's not true? But there are kids who are born and they're four or five years old, and they can play the piano like freaking Beethoven. Like there's something in their brain. They're able to see and hear and move things. In a way, there are brains can't do it 90 years old, and they can do it at four and five years old, or they can come out and they can read a book once and remember the whole thing, right? Some people's brains, there's something, we'll just say, unlocked, that allows them to do things at a higher level than any of us. Why would this be different?

Speaker 5:
[24:35] I would say because the piano is not talking back to them.

Speaker 1:
[24:38] Correct.

Speaker 5:
[24:38] Like, they learn the piano, they've got this gift, they can work the keys.

Speaker 1:
[24:41] But you're using the piano as one specific thing. I'm saying this is something that we can't do, we can understand how it's done. Why aren't there other things that we would go, well, we just can't do it and we can't understand it, so it could possibly be true?

Speaker 5:
[24:54] I mean, the dimension thing throws me off. It's like talking to others, you know.

Speaker 1:
[24:59] Only because you don't know it. But it's like animals can see certain things because they have different cones in their eyes, right?

Speaker 5:
[25:04] Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:
[25:05] So there are things out there that we all can't see. There are people that can see things that we can't see just physically.

Speaker 5:
[25:10] This is a hard one for me, man. I agree.

Speaker 1:
[25:12] All I'm trying to do is say that just because our brains can't do it doesn't mean other people's brains can't do it.

Speaker 6:
[25:21] Can I say it's because dead people can't talk?

Speaker 4:
[25:24] The spiritual realm.

Speaker 6:
[25:25] Like she's like, oh, she talks to her mom who's dead. That's impossible.

Speaker 4:
[25:30] Wait, hold on, Mr. You Want Off for Good Friday. What?

Speaker 1:
[25:35] Didn't you get attacked by a ghost in a closet?

Speaker 6:
[25:42] I got pushed in a closet.

Speaker 1:
[25:44] By what?

Speaker 6:
[25:45] A ghost.

Speaker 4:
[25:46] I feel like you believe in the spiritual world.

Speaker 1:
[25:49] Not believe, he's for sure of it.

Speaker 4:
[25:50] Like, how can he want off?

Speaker 1:
[25:51] He said a ghost choked him.

Speaker 6:
[25:53] Not as a choked.

Speaker 1:
[25:55] Where'd the ghost touch you?

Speaker 6:
[25:56] Nowhere.

Speaker 1:
[25:56] I'm gonna draw a picture of a stick man. Where did the ghost touch you? Show me the area.

Speaker 5:
[26:00] No, no.

Speaker 6:
[26:01] It touched you.

Speaker 5:
[26:02] Was it really a ghost, Lunchbox?

Speaker 6:
[26:04] Dude, there is a ghost that lived in that house and getting up to go to the bathroom middle of the night and it put me in the closet and I couldn't get out.

Speaker 1:
[26:13] So you're saying there are things that exist that you can't see.

Speaker 6:
[26:17] No, but I can talk to them. I didn't have a conversation with the ghost.

Speaker 1:
[26:21] But the ghost physically touched you. Yes or no? Did the ghost physically touch you?

Speaker 6:
[26:26] Man, that's a great question.

Speaker 1:
[26:27] No, you're backing off. You've been saying for years it touched you.

Speaker 6:
[26:30] No, no. Like it forced me in the closet, but I don't know if it was touching me or if just like whatever made me go like.

Speaker 4:
[26:37] A gust of wind?

Speaker 6:
[26:39] Yeah, like I don't know if it was an actual ghost that touched me.

Speaker 5:
[26:42] But you've always said it was a ghost.

Speaker 6:
[26:45] No, there was a ghost in that house.

Speaker 4:
[26:46] If it's not touching you, did it use a stick?

Speaker 1:
[26:50] Also can I make one more comparison analogy, which is hearing. So you're saying people, you can't talk to dead people. And again, I'm not fighting for it.

Speaker 6:
[26:58] You can't.

Speaker 1:
[27:00] So there are certain frequencies that even we can't hear that the other of us can hear. You know that we do that thing, it's like raise your hand when it goes out. And so with age is one of the reasons that it starts to get worse. But different humans can hear, can literally, physically hear different things that other humans can't hear.

Speaker 4:
[27:17] I almost feel like the frequency, that's how she would sort of describe it. Like, she's able to dial in to certain frequencies that we cannot. And she's not saying she's the only one.

Speaker 1:
[27:29] She used cheese.

Speaker 4:
[27:30] No, not that I know of.

Speaker 1:
[27:32] Yeah, then I'm still in.

Speaker 5:
[27:33] But back to the cheese thing, though, what's the difference between cheese and tarot cards?

Speaker 1:
[27:38] I don't think there really is any, except there are more tarot cards. I don't think tarot cards are crap, too, because you're just shuffling a deck.

Speaker 5:
[27:43] So you could do like stones, different kinds of stones.

Speaker 1:
[27:46] I think if I were a psychic...

Speaker 4:
[27:47] Well, stones have energy.

Speaker 6:
[27:48] Oh, my gosh.

Speaker 2:
[27:49] Here we go.

Speaker 1:
[27:52] Sandy, I was trying, and then there we go. We're out. Eddie tried to get an AirBNB and he got flagged, I guess, because you guys party too hard.

Speaker 5:
[28:00] Yeah, that's what it said. So we booked it online, and then we even talked to the people, the renter or whatever, and he was like, yeah, this is what the place and this is what it has. And so we were going back and forth to email. So once we booked and paid, he called. And he was like, hey, just a heads up, I got an email from AirBNB that says, you guys are flagged for like, partying. Like you guys are a partying account. You've had crazy parties in the past. And we're like, no, we haven't. We're six people, we have four crazy kids. So apparently on AirBNB and our account, it says that these people like to party.

Speaker 1:
[28:39] Is it because you leave the house in disarray?

Speaker 5:
[28:41] I think it's because we're loud. Like, four kids, you know, they have, you know, if we have a place that has a pool, the kids go to the pool and they're loud and probably the neighbors complain. That's what I would assume.

Speaker 1:
[28:52] Do you ever get or don't get your full deposit back?

Speaker 5:
[28:56] We've done it one time where they kept the deposit because they said that we ruined bedsheets. Oh, what? I didn't. I guess one of my kids maybe did.

Speaker 1:
[29:06] How much is the deposit? Is it more than bedsheets?

Speaker 5:
[29:10] It wasn't a deposit. I think it was a fee that we had to pay. It was like 150 bucks for like the whole bed setting or whatever. But that was it. And the only time we've ever done AirBNB is when we go to Texas to visit my mom and it's just a house that we get with our family. We don't invite anyone over.

Speaker 1:
[29:26] If you had a house, would you like to run it out to you, your wife and your four boys? Yes. You'd be fine with that?

Speaker 5:
[29:33] Totally.

Speaker 1:
[29:34] Because you got to take care of it?

Speaker 4:
[29:36] Could it be a mix up?

Speaker 1:
[29:37] No, no chance.

Speaker 5:
[29:39] I don't think so. Like our kids are loud.

Speaker 1:
[29:41] Okay.

Speaker 5:
[29:42] Our kids are loud and I'm just assuming that some neighbor at some point complained and then they wrote it down on one of the notes.

Speaker 1:
[29:48] Does one complaint get you flagged though?

Speaker 5:
[29:50] Well, maybe we've had multiple complaints.

Speaker 1:
[29:53] Okay.

Speaker 4:
[29:53] Between the loud kids and the bedsheets.

Speaker 1:
[29:55] Did you like leave a truck in a sink or something? Like toys?

Speaker 5:
[29:59] Oh, in my house.

Speaker 1:
[30:00] No, yeah, I don't know.

Speaker 5:
[30:01] On AirBNB?

Speaker 1:
[30:02] Yeah.

Speaker 5:
[30:02] No, I mean-

Speaker 4:
[30:03] That was the toilet, right?

Speaker 5:
[30:04] Oh my gosh.

Speaker 9:
[30:04] Your kid called it the toilet?

Speaker 5:
[30:06] My youngest son, we finally hired a plumber and they removed the toilet. There were Legos, trucks, and there was a PlayStation controller down there. Where? In the toilet.

Speaker 3:
[30:15] No way.

Speaker 5:
[30:16] Yes.

Speaker 4:
[30:16] How big is your hole?

Speaker 5:
[30:18] He had thrown everything possible in there.

Speaker 4:
[30:21] The toilet hole. There was a PlayStation controller, the toilet.

Speaker 5:
[30:27] Wires, all kinds of things. When the guy lifted up the toilet, they're like, oh my gosh, there's a whole set of toys in here.

Speaker 1:
[30:35] And do you know which kid did it?

Speaker 4:
[30:36] Yeah.

Speaker 5:
[30:36] Oh yeah. Of course, the youngest, the baby. Well, he's seven now.

Speaker 1:
[30:39] And that's fun to just stick things in that hole and flush it, I'm assuming.

Speaker 5:
[30:43] To him, it was like, there is a magical hole in the bathroom where things just disappear. And he would just flush things down the toilet forever and ever until one day it just didn't work and then we had to call a plumber.

Speaker 4:
[30:55] No way.

Speaker 5:
[30:56] I never told you guys that story.

Speaker 4:
[30:57] Yeah, you did. Not the controller.

Speaker 1:
[30:59] I remember the controller.

Speaker 4:
[31:00] Yeah, I don't remember the controller.

Speaker 5:
[31:01] That was the guy. I was like, this is the first. Never seen that one before.

Speaker 1:
[31:04] So did he stop doing it after he got, like, what do you say to him?

Speaker 5:
[31:07] Yeah. You're like, no more. Like that doesn't happen. And then he was like, oh, okay. Okay. Got it.

Speaker 4:
[31:12] You made him pay the bill.

Speaker 5:
[31:12] Because we didn't know stuff was going down there.

Speaker 1:
[31:14] You didn't know there was a missing game controller?

Speaker 4:
[31:17] Well, you just assumed that kids, like, it's hidden somewhere. You can't find it. Like a couch. Because you just think it's missing. You never think it's, like, down the toilet.

Speaker 6:
[31:25] Exactly.

Speaker 1:
[31:26] That's wild. Lunchbox, did your kids ever do that?

Speaker 6:
[31:28] Flush crap? No, they did drop a golf ball in there a few weeks ago. And it was with, there was stuff in the toilet. And they were playing with a golf ball and they dropped it. So then you had to decide, what do you do? And so I had to get tongs and a, like a spaghet, like a, you know, those little spoons that you do spaghetti with and kind of finagle it out of, cause it went down the pipe and you had to get in there and I was able to extract it.

Speaker 4:
[31:58] Hmm, interesting. They just leave stuff in the toilet and play with golf balls.

Speaker 6:
[32:03] They were going to the bathroom playing with the golf ball and they stood up and they dropped it and it bounced in the toilet.

Speaker 4:
[32:07] Okay, that makes more sense. Thank you for the clarification.

Speaker 1:
[32:11] Is this only a boy thing? I obviously have a girl.

Speaker 5:
[32:13] I don't know if girls do this or not. I don't know. It didn't sound like a thing a girl would do.

Speaker 1:
[32:19] Like flush stuff, like watch the magical hole that it goes down. What are you doing with the AirBNB? Are they still letting you stay?

Speaker 5:
[32:23] So the guy was just like, you know what? We trust you all. You're all a family of six. Have fun. So we're like, cool. So he ignored the warning. But that's just crazy to think that our account just has a big old warning now that just lives there.

Speaker 1:
[32:37] You understand it though, right?

Speaker 5:
[32:38] I get it. I get it. But it seems like we're party animals. It sounds like we're having ragers, you know?

Speaker 1:
[32:44] We should have, if you guys are listening right now, call our voicemail line. If your kids ever flush anything crazy down the toilet, leave us a voicemail. I would love to hear those voicemails. 877-77-BOBBY. That's our number, 877-77-BOBBY. Hit up the voicemail line and let us know what your kids flush. That'd be awesome. This is The Bobby Bones Show interview.

Speaker 8:
[33:05] In case you didn't know.

Speaker 1:
[33:07] I do think I've seen every episode of Reba, and not when it was live. I saw a lot of them then, but then when it was airing on like CMT, TBS, I think I've seen every one of them. And her best friend on Reba is Barbara Jean. Well, it's her best friend, but she married her ex-husband, but that's Melissa Peterman. And then she played Brenda on Young Sheldon, and now she's back on Happy's Place, which is on NBC. It's also on Netflix now too. So Melissa Peterman, super cool. I didn't realize that we had spent some time together when we did Reba's in DC. The Kennedy Center Honors. We both were part of that. So I talked to her about how she got her role on Reba. Super funny. On The Bobby Bones Show now, Melissa Peterman. You and Reba go back to Reba. Is that when you guys first started? Did you know each other pre-Reba, the show in like 2001?

Speaker 11:
[33:57] No, we did not. The first time I met her in person was the first day of the table read for the show.

Speaker 1:
[34:05] And so you didn't audition for her or with her?

Speaker 11:
[34:09] No, I didn't. When I auditioned, the show was still called Sally, I believe, because they didn't know she wasn't attached yet. So at that point I was auditioning for this show, Sally. And I believe by the time I got to like that callback where you're in front of network, at that point she was attached to it. And I thought, oh my gosh, please let her be attached to it, because I just feel like it will, she's sort of like everything she does sort of works and turns to gold. So I'm like, I just wanted her to do it, and I just wanted to meet her. But I never auditioned with her. Nope, I did not.

Speaker 1:
[34:41] What was your process like even auditioning for Sally? Because she's told that story before about how it wasn't about her until she accepted it. So was that initially just a large casting where you went in with a bunch of other people that look like you and had your characteristics?

Speaker 11:
[34:56] Yeah, I mean, I went in and to me it sticks in my mind because it was one of those auditions where the script was really funny. I love the idea of this character that they were creating of the other woman, the new wife, but I didn't quite know how to attack it. I was like, usually when you know this, when you get it, you're like, oh, I see who this person is. And it wasn't until I was, I remember sitting in the parking lot about to go in and I just went, oh, I got it. I got it. I have to play her that she has no idea that they are not best friends. I have to play that I have no idea that whatever insult or anything she throws is like, I don't, I wouldn't, it doesn't register with her because I have to think that of course we're going to be best friends. We have so much in common. You know, we like the same guys or whatever it was, but I just know she has to be, she can't fight back. She has to just know like, oh, we're going to be best friends anyway. So I just remember having that click and go, oh.

Speaker 1:
[35:53] Do people often think you're from the South?

Speaker 11:
[35:55] Yeah.

Speaker 1:
[35:56] I did until I started researching you.

Speaker 11:
[35:58] I just met somebody actually yesterday, somewhere that was like, so wait, you weren't from Texas? I'm like, no, I just, I did my barber gene. I just did it.

Speaker 1:
[36:09] I was talking to Melissa Peterman about what it's like to work with Reba again on Happy's Place. And they did the show Reba together. She was barber gene and why that reboot of that show never happened on the Bobby Bones Show. Now, Melissa Peterman with Happy's Place and with Reba coming back and you guys are all together again. How long ago did this bubble up as an idea? And did you think it would manifest itself into like version two of you guys?

Speaker 11:
[36:37] After the Reba show ended, immediately, I feel like we knew we wanted to do something together again. I think she made up jobs for me sometimes just so we could hang out. She took me on the road and I did stand up. I opened for her and for her and Kelly Clarkson, then her and George Strait when they were on the road, which was such a wonderful experience. But we were sort of always looking, it was sort of out in the world. We'd love to, some time would pass, we'd love to do a project together. And some came and went, some were like, and the reboot was always sort of in that world too, like could we get a reboot? And that never seemed to come to fruition, whether it was like who owned the rights, who was gonna do this? So that didn't come, you know, Reba. And I always trust her because she's so great about this business and she has such a great perspective of when the time is right, it'll happen. When the project's right, it's yours. I had no idea it would be this many years later, but there were some ideas that were floated, weren't the right ones. Anyway, so Julie Abbott, Kevin Abbott's wife, who is our original showrunner, the first show in this showrunner, Unhappiest Place, came to Kevin with this idea about sisters, someone finding out they didn't have a sister. So Kevin took that and ran and brought it to Reba and I, and we loved it. I mean, I don't know how much sway my love happened, but I loved it too. And sort of that's where it was born. It was Julie Abbott, Kevin's wife, who has been, you know, part of, we've all known each other for, since the original Reba show.

Speaker 1:
[38:04] What does Reba like to work with professionally?

Speaker 11:
[38:07] She's a great example. You know, she is prepared. She treats everybody with respect and she likes to have fun. You know, she doesn't need to do this right now. And she wants to do it because she really, she loves it. She has so much fun. You know, Reba, she's lovely. And she makes sure, like my favorite, my goal is that anybody who leaves that set, they walks away, they walk away saying, I had a great time. People treated me great and I want to come back. And she does that. And it's, you know, it's really fun watching her and Rex together. You would think that you would get tired of, you know, seeing how much in love they are and how cute they are, but I'm not yet. And they really are quite fun together. And he's great.

Speaker 1:
[38:49] Well, congratulations on getting renewed for a third season. Again, that is such a big deal. I bet it's so fun to do Happy's Place because it's new.

Speaker 11:
[38:56] You need to come out to a lot. You need to come to a taping or be on it.

Speaker 1:
[39:01] Yeah, I guess.

Speaker 11:
[39:02] That was not the reaction I was hoping for.

Speaker 1:
[39:04] Well, I just have been... Hollywood is so... And I'm not comparing you to this, but everybody in... Anytime I do any meetings, and I was talking to someone about this recently, I was talking to Tom Bergeron, who I love as a host, right? And he's the greatest guy. And I was like, every time I come and do any meeting in Los Angeles, they promise me the world, they tell me they're going to make me the biggest thing ever, they're going to give me millions of dollars right there in the room. And then I walk out and I never hear from anybody. And so, you know, I just have that association with anyone in LA that's like, you should do this. And I just should react like this. Oh, thank you. That's so nice of you. But I have this reaction.

Speaker 11:
[39:36] I get it.

Speaker 1:
[39:36] Yeah. You know, right?

Speaker 11:
[39:38] I get it. That was a proper reaction. But no, you are beloved by Reba. I would like us to like, I think, you know what? Don't believe me, but you should.

Speaker 1:
[39:50] Fair enough. And now time for the morning corny.

Speaker 4:
[40:28] What do you call a truck full of bison? A buffaloed.

Speaker 1:
[40:32] A buffal-oad.

Speaker 10:
[40:37] That was the morning corny.

Speaker 1:
[40:40] All right, on Tuesday, we review things we've watched. Tuesday reviews day. I will go first. I watched a movie on Netflix called Blackberry. It's been out a while, but it just was on Netflix. And it's about how the Blackberry was invented, created its story, its rise and its fall. And you would think, kind of boring, I liked it. I give it four out of five Canadians. It feels a little absurd at first. I did like it and I learned the whole thing. I never had a Blackberry. I wasn't cool enough to have a Blackberry back in the day. And the thing that separated it was the keyboard on the bottom. And the thing that killed it was the keyboard. If you like learning stuff, it's good. And then again, the guy from It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia, Glenn Howerton, is in it and he plays this really absurd, true. And you're like, this is not real. Then all of a sudden you're like, man, this guy's awesome in it. So four out of five Canadians, Amy.

Speaker 4:
[41:32] I also watch Blackberry. You did? Yes. And I give it four out of five keyboards on a phone.

Speaker 1:
[41:39] Like it?

Speaker 4:
[41:40] Yeah, I liked it a lot. And I, it's one of those where you want to Google during and after.

Speaker 1:
[41:46] And to see if everybody made money.

Speaker 4:
[41:49] Yeah.

Speaker 1:
[41:49] They look like in real life.

Speaker 4:
[41:50] The three main guys, did you Google what they were worth?

Speaker 1:
[41:52] Yes, but I don't want to say because.

Speaker 4:
[41:53] Me neither.

Speaker 1:
[41:54] Yeah, it's pretty crazy. One of them I was like, I know, I know, I know.

Speaker 4:
[41:59] I was like, okay, this is so interesting. And yeah, how something can be, I mean, obviously, you know, the rise and the fall of it.

Speaker 1:
[42:07] It was a massive part of culture. I mean, they had such a big share of all cell phone market. And then all of a sudden.

Speaker 4:
[42:15] Number one, phone in the market.

Speaker 1:
[42:16] The iPhone comes along. I think we kind of know how this ends. The iPhone comes along and it's like, oh crap. And just, cut the legs out.

Speaker 8:
[42:24] Good.

Speaker 1:
[42:25] So eight out of 10 combined.

Speaker 4:
[42:27] Yeah.

Speaker 8:
[42:28] How about us?

Speaker 1:
[42:29] Combined up. All right. Did you watch anything else?

Speaker 4:
[42:32] That's it.

Speaker 8:
[42:33] Okay.

Speaker 1:
[42:33] Movie Mike, did you watch anything?

Speaker 8:
[42:34] I watched a documentary called Sky King on Hulu.

Speaker 1:
[42:37] About what?

Speaker 8:
[42:37] It's about that ground agent who hijacked a plane.

Speaker 1:
[42:40] A ground agent who hijacked? I don't know what that means.

Speaker 8:
[42:42] It was like in 2018, he was working and then just decided, I want to steal this plane. Took it on a joyride for like 90 minutes.

Speaker 1:
[42:49] And he called in. Yeah. He was like, tell my family I love them. I remember this. I just want to...

Speaker 8:
[42:53] There's almost 90 minutes of audio of him just having conversations with air traffic control, why he did it, all the emotional stuff he was going through.

Speaker 1:
[43:00] Did you ever see the clip on YouTube or anything?

Speaker 8:
[43:02] No.

Speaker 5:
[43:03] That sounds so good.

Speaker 1:
[43:04] Oh, it also breaks my heart because I remember watching the YouTube video and listening to him talk to the air traffic control guys.

Speaker 8:
[43:09] It's crazy to watch because they have his family on who have never heard that audio before and their emotional reaction to hearing it for the first time. It's hard to watch.

Speaker 5:
[43:17] That's tough.

Speaker 4:
[43:18] Wait, and what's it called again?

Speaker 8:
[43:19] Sky King.

Speaker 1:
[43:20] It makes me emotional just you talking about it because listening back to it, you could tell that one, he was sad, he wasn't going to hurt anybody. He was just like, to my parents, I want to make them proud of...

Speaker 8:
[43:33] And then at the time it happened, they had no idea what his intentions were, so they were treating him like he was a criminal.

Speaker 1:
[43:38] Like a terrorist, like he crashed a plane into something.

Speaker 8:
[43:40] But the entire documentary is just super emotional.

Speaker 1:
[43:43] What'd you give it?

Speaker 8:
[43:45] I give it a four out of five just because it's hard to give it more than that because it feels kind of wrong because it's really well done, but the entire thing is sad.

Speaker 1:
[43:53] You gotta be in the right mind space to do that.

Speaker 8:
[43:55] So it kind of puts you in a place after you watch it, but I think it's a really impactful story.

Speaker 1:
[44:01] I haven't thought about that YouTube in a long time. Was it like Seattle or something? Or like New Orleans?

Speaker 8:
[44:06] Washington, yeah.

Speaker 1:
[44:06] Yeah. Oh, all right, Eddie?

Speaker 5:
[44:09] No, started a few shows, but haven't finished anything.

Speaker 1:
[44:11] All right, keep your mouth shut.

Speaker 8:
[44:12] All right.

Speaker 5:
[44:12] Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yes, sir.

Speaker 1:
[44:16] Lunchbox?

Speaker 6:
[44:16] Yeah, I watched season three of Hacks, and I really liked that show, but man, I felt like season three was just kind of, maybe I'm over it, maybe it's been too long. So I give it three and a half late nights out of five. It was just all right.

Speaker 1:
[44:29] Are they doing four now? Is it the final season?

Speaker 6:
[44:30] Yeah, I think so.

Speaker 1:
[44:32] You know, that's roughly loosely based off Joan Rivers.

Speaker 6:
[44:36] Oh, really?

Speaker 1:
[44:36] Yeah, like Gene Smart. That's the Joan Rivers type character. I really like season one. I like season two. Season three to me was the same. It's hard to stay good, but yeah. Morgan, anything?

Speaker 12:
[44:48] Yeah, I watched Happy's Place on Netflix. I love a good sitcom type show, and this one was so funny to me. It was nostalgic, reminded me of Reba because Melissa Petersen is also on it, and I enjoyed it. There was like 20 episodes, and it was such an easy, fun watch, so I give it four out of five drinks.

Speaker 1:
[45:07] So had Melissa Peterman on earlier on the show. She's so funny, right?

Speaker 12:
[45:11] She's hilarious.

Speaker 1:
[45:12] Barbara Jean and Reba, she was so funny, and that whole thing is on Netflix. If you want to go watch that or listen to the podcast, just search for The Bobby Bones Show. All right, there you go. That's Tuesday Reviews Day. Everybody good? Yep. All right.

Speaker 4:
[45:22] Bobby Bones Show.

Speaker 6:
[45:26] This story comes to us from Houston, Texas. A woman was driving through a school zone, so she slows down. The truck behind her, mad, she slows down, pulls up beside her. What are you doing? You need to learn how to blank and drive, you idiot. You need to speed up.

Speaker 1:
[45:42] In the school zone.

Speaker 6:
[45:43] In the school zone.

Speaker 5:
[45:44] Got it.

Speaker 6:
[45:44] Lady keeps driving and notices the truck is following her. At the next stoplight, she sees the guy getting out of the truck, and he goes to the back of the truck and he pulls out. What does he pull out, guys?

Speaker 5:
[45:56] A gun.

Speaker 1:
[45:56] I'm going to think it's not a gun because you're setting it up for a gun. He pulls out a Dalmatian.

Speaker 4:
[46:00] A machete.

Speaker 5:
[46:01] A plunger.

Speaker 1:
[46:03] Yeah, we're on it. Go.

Speaker 6:
[46:04] He pulls out a machete.

Speaker 1:
[46:05] Wow.

Speaker 4:
[46:06] I win.

Speaker 5:
[46:07] Good job, Amy.

Speaker 4:
[46:08] I win.

Speaker 5:
[46:10] That was a fun game.

Speaker 1:
[46:11] You nailed it, Amy.

Speaker 4:
[46:13] Wow, I really.

Speaker 6:
[46:13] I'm so impressed. I don't know what to say. Good for you. He went up and tapped on her window and said, Get out of the car. You don't know how to drive. Get out of the car.

Speaker 1:
[46:22] So I wonder what the idea was. If she didn't get out of the car and he had a machete. Because he can actually chop her up.

Speaker 4:
[46:30] No, maybe a little.

Speaker 6:
[46:33] Zorro?

Speaker 4:
[46:33] No, just on the surface type cuts.

Speaker 6:
[46:38] Like a warning slice?

Speaker 4:
[46:40] Yeah.

Speaker 1:
[46:40] Because I'm assuming she didn't get out of the car.

Speaker 6:
[46:42] She didn't get out of the car and he eventually went back and got in his truck and she rode down the license plate and he got arrested.

Speaker 4:
[46:47] He's very passionate about the school zone.

Speaker 1:
[46:51] No, he was not passionate about the school zone.

Speaker 6:
[46:53] He was mad she slowed down.

Speaker 1:
[46:54] He was mad she was slowing the school zone.

Speaker 4:
[46:56] Oh, I thought he was mad at her for going, oh my gosh.

Speaker 10:
[46:59] That I would kind of understand. You shouldn't do that.

Speaker 4:
[47:01] I thought he was sort of vigilante about being a bonehead.

Speaker 1:
[47:04] That to me would make slightly more sense.

Speaker 10:
[47:07] You still don't do machete.

Speaker 4:
[47:09] Sorry, it was silly of me to try to make sense.

Speaker 1:
[47:11] Dude, he's got the knife right up to her window. He's like, get out of the car.

Speaker 4:
[47:15] Okay, got it.

Speaker 1:
[47:15] For everybody out there, don't get out of the car.

Speaker 5:
[47:17] Yeah, don't do that.

Speaker 1:
[47:18] He also has her kind of blocked in, so she can't go anywhere. Yeah, no, no. Yeah, no.

Speaker 4:
[47:22] I know, I know. I don't know why.

Speaker 1:
[47:24] He's passionate about not slowing down in school zones.

Speaker 4:
[47:27] I don't know why I was trying to give him a slice of goodness.

Speaker 1:
[47:29] Oh, they got pun. Okay. Lunchbox, there you go.

Speaker 6:
[47:31] I'm Lunchbox. That's your Bonehead story of the day.

Speaker 1:
[47:35] Morgan said she rode with Lunchbox in his car. Why?

Speaker 12:
[47:39] When we were going to Atlanta, I rode with him because we were driving like 30 minutes away. We live right next to each other. I didn't want my car in the parking lot while we were gone for the day.

Speaker 1:
[47:48] You went all the way down to Atlanta?

Speaker 12:
[47:49] No, we had to go meet up in a parking lot to get on the bus.

Speaker 1:
[47:53] Got it.

Speaker 12:
[47:53] So you just rode with him.

Speaker 1:
[47:55] Got it. And then how was that?

Speaker 12:
[47:57] There was no room for me. His car was like a pack rack.

Speaker 5:
[48:01] What car is this? His wife's car?

Speaker 1:
[48:03] Yep.

Speaker 12:
[48:05] That he drives most of the time because you don't have another car.

Speaker 6:
[48:08] Correct.

Speaker 12:
[48:08] Yeah.

Speaker 1:
[48:09] But this is also a very similar story that we heard about his other car before it died too.

Speaker 6:
[48:14] Why?

Speaker 1:
[48:15] What was in it?

Speaker 12:
[48:15] Oh, my gosh. There was like fast food bags. There was lunchboxes. There was balls everywhere. There was trash. There were clothes. I'm not kidding. Like this looked like he lived in his vehicle.

Speaker 1:
[48:26] Once in his old car, someone opened his trunk and like spiders started coming out of his trunk.

Speaker 6:
[48:31] True story.

Speaker 1:
[48:32] Because there was just so it looks like a hoarder.

Speaker 5:
[48:35] Well, when he says like he recycles stuff, but all the cans and bottles were in the trunk.

Speaker 1:
[48:40] So they never made it to the recycling center.

Speaker 5:
[48:42] Yeah.

Speaker 4:
[48:43] He would say yet.

Speaker 1:
[48:44] Yet. Yeah. He would say yet. Yeah. It's pretty gross.

Speaker 12:
[48:48] Yeah. When I went to get in the front seat, he's like just throw stuff in the back. And I was literally chucking stuff in the back to just sit in the front seat with him.

Speaker 1:
[48:56] Your response?

Speaker 6:
[48:57] Yeah. I mean, it's tough when you have three kids, there's a lot of balls, a lot of food. It gets eaten in the car, which means a lot of trash because kids, leave a lot of trash behind and you have different clothes, outfit changes and yours. Some of mine, some of theirs, you know, I mean, who knows what's all in there, but their artwork, you know, they get home from, they get in the car from school and they leave their artwork in there and then it piles up. Listen, when you got a family of five and you're coming and going, it just adds up over time. And you know, after a week, you notice like, man, we're getting buried in this car.

Speaker 1:
[49:29] I hear you, family of five, but this was before you had a family of five. This has been consistent even in your car.

Speaker 6:
[49:34] Yeah, maybe it was hereditary.

Speaker 1:
[49:35] It was just all garbage. Like you had to kick the floorboard out of stuff and throw in the backseat just to sit in his car before family of five. Would you guys agree with that?

Speaker 10:
[49:44] Yes. Yeah.

Speaker 6:
[49:45] Yeah, I'm just I'm very I won't throw anything out. Like I could just called a hoarder. No, no, no. I could just in a parking lot, like some people just dump it out. You know, they just leave the trash there. I don't do that.

Speaker 1:
[49:56] I've never seen a parking. So I just dump out trash in the middle of a parking lot.

Speaker 4:
[49:59] Why is that the only other option at a park?

Speaker 5:
[50:03] You know, when you pump gas, you know how they have trash cans right there? That's a perfect place to dump your trash.

Speaker 6:
[50:08] I've never even thought about that.

Speaker 10:
[50:09] Like take it out right where the trash.

Speaker 5:
[50:11] While you're pumping gas.

Speaker 1:
[50:11] In that a minute and 45 seconds while the gas is pumping, you don't grab like cups and garbage and put it over.

Speaker 6:
[50:17] Never even thought of it.

Speaker 1:
[50:18] Where it's annoying is if the gas station trash can is over the top because it happens when they don't take it out and then you got nowhere to put it. That sucks. Yeah. Morgan, it's nothing new. I know.

Speaker 12:
[50:28] I'm just shocked that at this point in his life, there isn't a little bit more, especially with his wife. They share that car.

Speaker 4:
[50:35] Imagine his house.

Speaker 1:
[50:38] His house is this way.

Speaker 6:
[50:39] Could you imagine that maybe it's my wife fault too?

Speaker 1:
[50:41] It's your wife fault?

Speaker 6:
[50:42] Yeah.

Speaker 4:
[50:43] Well, they must be the same in that area because I can't imagine her being that way but it's got to be.

Speaker 1:
[50:49] My theory is...

Speaker 4:
[50:51] She's got other things going on?

Speaker 1:
[50:53] My theory is his force was too strong and took her over because I don't think she was that way.

Speaker 5:
[50:59] Like she gave up on it?

Speaker 1:
[51:00] Yeah. It's like how hard are you going to fight it?

Speaker 4:
[51:02] Right.

Speaker 12:
[51:03] Well, if she's picking up after three kids, that makes a fourth kid that she's picking up after.

Speaker 1:
[51:07] But he's the one that's passed that down to the three kids.

Speaker 4:
[51:11] Yeah, because the kids aren't expected to take their trash out of the backseat of the car and throw it away?

Speaker 1:
[51:15] Or the house.

Speaker 6:
[51:15] No, no, they are but sometimes they forget and when you're going somewhere, like if you're eating a snack on the way there and you say get your trash and you tell them to get the trash and then a day later you look back there, man, they left that banana peel, they didn't get it.

Speaker 1:
[51:27] But what about your house?

Speaker 6:
[51:29] Oh, they pick up sometimes. I made some mess. I mean, it happens. Ask Eddie.

Speaker 4:
[51:34] Do they have choice?

Speaker 5:
[51:35] No, my house is pretty clean. Yeah, and I made a big deal of it. For years I've been like, all right, we're here, we're home, grab all your stuff. If I see one piece of trash left, someone's in trouble.

Speaker 1:
[51:45] I think we're going down two different roads and I don't think the kidder road is fair because I've seen people's houses with kids and I've seen even Lunchbox's car with no kids and it's just gross anyway.

Speaker 4:
[51:55] Yeah.

Speaker 1:
[51:56] Ray lived with them. Ray, when you and Lunchbox lived together?

Speaker 10:
[51:59] Yeah, there were definitely dust bunnies and there would be so many, sometimes when you put your feet down from the couch, you just see all these dust bunnies go across the floor.

Speaker 4:
[52:09] They would like lift into the air.

Speaker 1:
[52:11] You didn't have any kids?

Speaker 10:
[52:12] No, we had two dogs and it was a small space for two guys with animals.

Speaker 1:
[52:15] Messy?

Speaker 10:
[52:16] It was filthy. For a year, we never vacuumed, we never dusted.

Speaker 4:
[52:21] Wait, that's sort of on YouTube though.

Speaker 5:
[52:22] Thank you.

Speaker 10:
[52:23] I didn't live down there, I just was in my room.

Speaker 4:
[52:24] But your room was clean.

Speaker 5:
[52:25] What about the dishes, Ray? Was there a problem with the dishes?

Speaker 10:
[52:27] I never ate there, so I never did dishes. But yeah, the sink was always full.

Speaker 1:
[52:31] So you just went and slept in your room and that's it?

Speaker 10:
[52:33] Yeah, that was just my quarters. The other layer, I would only go to the bottom floor when I needed to get to my vehicle.

Speaker 5:
[52:40] Ray had a refrigerator up in his room, like everything he needed, PlayStation refrigerator.

Speaker 1:
[52:44] Why?

Speaker 10:
[52:46] I didn't feel comfortable down there because it was so filthy.

Speaker 4:
[52:50] Well, so Lunchbox is the adult, but do you have chores? Do you require chores of your kids?

Speaker 6:
[52:56] Not yet.

Speaker 1:
[52:57] Do your kids require chores of you?

Speaker 6:
[52:59] Yeah, they do tell me, dad, our car is the messiest we've been in.

Speaker 4:
[53:02] Did you have chores as a kid?

Speaker 6:
[53:03] Yeah.

Speaker 4:
[53:04] Oh, interesting.

Speaker 6:
[53:05] Yeah.

Speaker 1:
[53:06] Like what?

Speaker 6:
[53:08] Like take the trash out, mow the yard.

Speaker 1:
[53:12] That didn't skip down to you?

Speaker 6:
[53:13] Feed the dog, you know, things like that. Clean your room.

Speaker 5:
[53:17] What was your house like as a kid?

Speaker 6:
[53:18] Oh, it was a mess.

Speaker 4:
[53:19] So I think this is all just-

Speaker 6:
[53:20] It's hereditary.

Speaker 5:
[53:21] Yeah. But you just learn it.

Speaker 4:
[53:23] Some people break the generational messes.

Speaker 1:
[53:26] I mean, I think environmentally you've taken it. I don't know that it's passed down.

Speaker 6:
[53:30] Right. I mean, it's sort of like lateness. If you get that from your parents-

Speaker 1:
[53:35] But that's not hereditary.

Speaker 6:
[53:36] It's hard to break. Like that's how you've lived your life.

Speaker 4:
[53:39] But you can break it.

Speaker 6:
[53:40] No, I understand, but you've lived your life for so long.

Speaker 1:
[53:43] Do you want your kids to be gross when they get older?

Speaker 6:
[53:45] Man, I don't even consider it gross.

Speaker 1:
[53:47] Morgan is it gross?

Speaker 5:
[53:49] Yes. We've all seen it.

Speaker 12:
[53:50] There's possibly an animal hiding in there, for sure.

Speaker 1:
[53:53] We for sure saw spiders in his own car. Okay, well, I'm glad you got to experience that. I thought she said she went to Atlanta with him. I was like, oh my God, you rode that for four hours.

Speaker 5:
[54:00] What a nightmare.

Speaker 1:
[54:00] What a nightmare.

Speaker 12:
[54:01] Just 30 minutes, and I was like, there's not a lot of room in here for me.

Speaker 1:
[54:05] We're going to go. Thank you guys for being here today. We'll see you guys on tomorrow's show. Thank you for being here. Bye, everybody. The Bobby Bones Show theme song written, produced and sang by Reed Yarberry. You can find his Instagram at ReedYarberry. Scuba Steve, executive producer. Ray Mundo, head of production. I'm Bobby Bones. My Instagram is MrBobbyBones. Thank you for listening to the podcast.