transcript
Speaker 1:
[00:04] Alright, voicemail please.
Speaker 2:
[00:06] I was calling because you mentioned your step-back Keith, and I wanted to know if he had met Baby Billy, and what's he going to be called? Grandpa? Yeah, that's my question.
Speaker 1:
[00:18] Yeah, he has not yet. Not a lot of people have met Baby Billy yet, because it's not been two months. And the pediatrician, to us, kind of put the fear of God in us a little bit. She was like, hey, you're a close circle. All good, make sure they're not sick, make sure they wash their hands. But she hadn't had her two month shots yet. So don't just like be passing her around the festival. We didn't take her to Coachella. You know, I know that was happening. Like we wanted to go and like see Beaver and pass, but we didn't do that.
Speaker 3:
[00:45] You had your outfit and everything.
Speaker 4:
[00:46] Yes.
Speaker 1:
[00:47] Also he has to drive in. So Arkansas Keith has not met Billy yet.
Speaker 4:
[00:52] He will for sure.
Speaker 1:
[00:54] We haven't even been to Arkansas yet. I call Keith, Keith, so.
Speaker 5:
[01:01] So the baby's got to call him Keith?
Speaker 1:
[01:04] Yeah. And we have a little bit of a, it's not a dispute. We have different opinions on what the baby should call Caitlin's parents. Cause there are no real, like my mom's not alive. I don't know my real dad. Keith is Keith. Right, right. So it's not like you got to do two sets and give them both names. And so they have other grandkids. Caitlin's siblings have kids.
Speaker 3:
[01:31] Yeah. So isn't that naturally what rolls over?
Speaker 1:
[01:33] You would think, but I'm just not somebody who does things naturally.
Speaker 3:
[01:36] Are you wanting to change it?
Speaker 1:
[01:37] Well, I just am like, I just should be, not should. Grandma and grandpa are the natural names in my vernacular. And it's not like, I forget what hers are. Like tutu and papa are. I just feel stupid. I just feel stupid.
Speaker 3:
[01:53] Okay, yeah.
Speaker 1:
[01:54] I don't know what it is. I'm sure it's like, I don't know what it is and it's fine.
Speaker 3:
[01:57] The first born grandchild normally dictates what, it's not a terrible rule. It's the first born grandchild.
Speaker 5:
[02:05] Oh wow.
Speaker 3:
[02:05] Because whatever they start calling him, that's what, am I weird here?
Speaker 5:
[02:09] It was the grandparent.
Speaker 1:
[02:10] Well, that's what it is.
Speaker 3:
[02:12] Okay.
Speaker 1:
[02:12] It's sent down. So we're supposed to, according to Caitlin, call baby Bill's grandparents, her parents, the same thing that all the other grandkids call them.
Speaker 3:
[02:22] Exactly. So to Eddie's point, I see what you're saying. Like either the child or the grandparents come up with it. We're saying the same thing. I'm just saying whatever the first grandchild ends up calling the grandparents is normally how it goes.
Speaker 1:
[02:34] It feels unfair. It feels very British royalty. Like you're born that way, it's just accepted, and now you have to live like everybody else. That's bull crap.
Speaker 3:
[02:44] Well, the fair is where you get funnel cake.
Speaker 1:
[02:47] The fair. Hit me with that. If the queen had balls, she'd be king.
Speaker 5:
[02:50] Dang, dang, dang.
Speaker 1:
[02:50] Now we're just saying stuff backwards.
Speaker 5:
[02:53] I like all those things.
Speaker 1:
[02:56] Yeah. I have an irrational fear now. Maybe there are some parents because this hasn't happened. I hope it doesn't happen. I have an irrational fear of dropping, baby Billy going up and down the stairs. And so I carry her downstairs a couple of times a day. And I'm so scared of dropping her that I walk up the stairs funny. Like, you know, if you start monitoring your breathing and you're like feeling yourself breathe, you think about it, you breathe kind of funny because you're now thinking about it, you're not doing it naturally, that's why I'm going up the stairs now where I kind of hit my toes. I can go upstairs fine in case you're wondering, but when I got the baby and I'm thinking about it, like, I don't really walk up the stairs that good.
Speaker 5:
[03:33] You're making sure your whole foot's on the step.
Speaker 1:
[03:35] But then even again, it feels like it's a big fat foot now. So I have an irrational fear of dropping her.
Speaker 3:
[03:41] It's a valid fear, I've dropped a few.
Speaker 5:
[03:43] You have?
Speaker 1:
[03:44] Babies?
Speaker 3:
[03:45] My niece.
Speaker 1:
[03:46] A few times?
Speaker 3:
[03:47] Twice.
Speaker 1:
[03:49] Can you describe the drop?
Speaker 3:
[03:50] First drop was when I was trying to put her down in her crib and she squirmed and then hit her head on the crib and then hits a floor. She is 22, about to graduate from-
Speaker 4:
[04:02] She's fine, high school.
Speaker 3:
[04:03] No. No. No, she's-
Speaker 6:
[04:11] She's like the drop didn't affect her at all.
Speaker 3:
[04:14] University of Colorado. She's doing great. I was really worried for a little bit and then another time she's a little bit older and we were going to the circus in Austin, the Frank Irwin Center and I was carrying her up the steps and I tripped and she fell. Again, she's fine. Like she's great. She's getting a degree in business. She's already got a lot of ideas.
Speaker 1:
[04:41] Were you afraid that you broke her?
Speaker 3:
[04:43] Yeah. My point to you is she was fine.
Speaker 1:
[04:47] I haven't dropped baby Billy yet. Yeah. I said to Caitlin, I said, but it's a numbers game. She's like, no way.
Speaker 5:
[04:55] Let's make that number zero.
Speaker 1:
[04:56] Yeah. I'm really concerned about that. You ever drop your babies?
Speaker 5:
[04:59] No, never dropped them. I mean, they fell off of things, but I didn't drop them.
Speaker 3:
[05:03] You never dropped them?
Speaker 5:
[05:04] No. Maybe we want you to jump in.
Speaker 1:
[05:07] They fell off things?
Speaker 5:
[05:07] Yeah. Yeah. Like the back porch, we had a back porch with like little bars or whatever, and I'd say it's about a three foot drop, and one of them just fell down, but he was laughing when he fell.
Speaker 1:
[05:17] How little?
Speaker 5:
[05:18] He was crawling, so, you know, one and a half.
Speaker 1:
[05:22] Yeah.
Speaker 5:
[05:23] You?
Speaker 6:
[05:24] I've done the stroller off the curb. I turned my back to look at a cat, and my baby flipped over in the stroller and hit head on the ground.
Speaker 1:
[05:33] Did he freak out?
Speaker 6:
[05:34] Yeah, freaked out, went to the doctor. All good, small fall. Then off the front porch, the youngest one, once again forgot to lock the stroller brakes, faceplant into the mulch.
Speaker 1:
[05:45] At least mulch isn't concrete.
Speaker 6:
[05:46] Yeah, and then my middle one, he was off the playground, he was like one, and I was tickling him, and he stepped backwards and fell through the hole and landed on his neck and arm, broke his arm.
Speaker 5:
[05:58] Yeah. Because you tickled him?
Speaker 3:
[05:59] Broke his arm.
Speaker 6:
[06:01] Yeah, broke his arm. He was so small, the cast didn't fit him, it just slid right off.
Speaker 1:
[06:06] Was there a tremendous guilt on your part?
Speaker 6:
[06:09] I felt like the designers of the playground, I was upset with because there's an opening, there should not be an opening directly behind it, there should be a staggered opening.
Speaker 3:
[06:17] Or a no tickle sign.
Speaker 6:
[06:19] Or a no tickle sign, I got to be like, and he just took one step back, whoa, there he went. I mean, his head, he flipped over, feet in the air, landed side of the neck and arm, and he didn't really cry, and we played on the playground for like 20 more minutes.
Speaker 1:
[06:33] After, with the broken arm?
Speaker 6:
[06:34] But then I noticed he wasn't moving his arm, and I had to go home and say, hey, honey, he fell off the playground, I think we're gonna have to go to the ER.
Speaker 1:
[06:43] That's why I freak out.
Speaker 6:
[06:44] She was like, what do you mean he fell? And I'm like, well, I was doing the tickle thing and...
Speaker 1:
[06:48] Cat ran by.
Speaker 5:
[06:49] She's like, not the tickle thing.
Speaker 6:
[06:51] So yeah, I've dropped all three.
Speaker 1:
[06:53] Okay, makes me feel a little better.
Speaker 3:
[06:54] Well, remember the time my nephew got run over?
Speaker 1:
[06:57] Yeah, like car drove over.
Speaker 3:
[06:58] Not by me.
Speaker 1:
[06:59] Yeah, but I mean, we don't, we're good. Just to clarify.
Speaker 3:
[07:03] His body was fully run over and it's a miracle.
Speaker 5:
[07:07] Where in the body?
Speaker 3:
[07:08] His like pelvic area, so it missed organs. And then I guess at his age, something about the, I mean, obviously if it had hit organs, it would have been a different story, but where it ran over on his body with how the bones are resilient at that age or something, nothing happened. I mean, of course they took him to the ER immediately and he ended up being fine, more just scared because everyone was screaming and freaking out.
Speaker 1:
[07:34] I saw a story recently, I forget what celebrity it was, because I didn't plan, this wasn't on my list of things to talk about, where they ran over their kid.
Speaker 3:
[07:42] Yeah, farmhouse, whatever. Some influencer. I saw that too, I don't follow her, but I just remember it being, I'm reading this book called Yesteryear right now, and it's about an influencer that lives on a farm, and that's the only reason why I remember.
Speaker 1:
[07:54] Yeah. Kelly Hoppton Jones, a parenting influencer known as Hillside Farmhouse, shared an update after she ran over her 23-month-old son with her car.
Speaker 5:
[08:07] Is he okay?
Speaker 1:
[08:08] Yeah, he was in the hospital. I think this is my memory, could be wrong, but I think she was shooting influencer stuff in the hospital when the kid was in there.
Speaker 3:
[08:15] People were like, what's going on? No, she was not.
Speaker 1:
[08:17] I think so. I don't know.
Speaker 3:
[08:19] I know the book I'm reading is fiction, but that tracks based on what I'm reading.
Speaker 1:
[08:25] Hey, I read a movie. I think maybe Anne Hathaway is the one who optioned it.
Speaker 3:
[08:30] That's about the book I'm reading.
Speaker 1:
[08:31] Can I say what the book is about? Yeah, because I haven't read the book, but it's about an influencer who acts like a trad wife, who then gets put back in the 1800s and actually is a trad wife and has to live the life that she was acting like she was doing. Oh, that's crazy.
Speaker 3:
[08:43] Yeah, so the book alternates from present day to the 1800s, and then also, it's loosely based off of the ballerina farms girl who blew up, and I mean, but they also have-
Speaker 1:
[08:57] Aren't they super rich?
Speaker 3:
[08:58] Yes, because she married a JetBlue heir, but in the-
Speaker 1:
[09:01] Hey, look at us doing a farm, but they got like billions of dollars.
Speaker 3:
[09:04] Yes, which same thing in the book I'm reading, she's married to a wealthy politician family.
Speaker 1:
[09:10] Is it good?
Speaker 3:
[09:11] It's really good.
Speaker 1:
[09:12] Yeah, I saw the Anne Hathaway story.
Speaker 3:
[09:13] That's why Anne Hathaway bought it and is making the movie.
Speaker 1:
[09:16] You guys can call us if you ever dropped your kid, but positive outcomes only.
Speaker 5:
[09:20] Please.
Speaker 3:
[09:21] Oh, please. Oh, yeah, because unfortunately, we know there are tragic ones, like even when we talk about the run over stories, like I know there's so many people that the outcome wasn't like my nephew and my heart breaks.
Speaker 5:
[09:30] The Goonies guy too. Hey, you guys. He was dropped.
Speaker 3:
[09:33] Wait, what?
Speaker 5:
[09:34] Yeah, that's why he's like that. Really?
Speaker 1:
[09:35] Is that part of the story? Yeah. I didn't know that.
Speaker 5:
[09:37] Yeah.
Speaker 1:
[09:38] Sloth? Yeah. He was dropped on the head. Is that at the end?
Speaker 5:
[09:41] They talk about it, yeah, how mom dropped him. She apologizes, I'm sorry I dropped you. That's when he gets all mad.
Speaker 1:
[09:46] Is there a flashback in Goonies to go sloth?
Speaker 6:
[09:48] You're right. I thought you were talking about in real life, Eddie. I was like...
Speaker 1:
[09:51] No, it's an after-night act.
Speaker 6:
[09:52] You were talking about the movie and I do remember that.
Speaker 1:
[09:54] We have a friend, a close friend of mine, that everybody here knows that actually ran over their kid, like over their chest, the car, lived. Because it's very rubbery, it's very cartilage-y.
Speaker 5:
[10:05] You have to tell me who that is.
Speaker 3:
[10:07] Well, that's like, I mean...
Speaker 5:
[10:09] That's just crazy that a car, a heavy car can go over a body like that and just not...
Speaker 1:
[10:13] Well, it's also not going super, super, super slow.
Speaker 3:
[10:16] Yeah, like my nephew, someone was backing out of a parking lot.
Speaker 1:
[10:19] Hit us up, 877... Oh, hold on. His mother, Mama Fratelli, dropped him on his head multiple times as a baby. Lotny Sloth Fratelli.
Speaker 5:
[10:28] Mama Fratelli.
Speaker 1:
[10:29] A beloved character from The Goonies.
Speaker 5:
[10:31] Hey, you guys. That's right.
Speaker 1:
[10:33] Dang, who even knew the backstory? I guess you did, huh?
Speaker 5:
[10:35] I did.
Speaker 1:
[10:36] 87777Bobby. Bobby Bones. I want to go to Beth, who is listening in Pennsylvania. Hey, Beth, you're on the show.
Speaker 7:
[10:43] Good morning.
Speaker 1:
[10:44] Good morning. Oh, let's go.
Speaker 7:
[10:47] Hi. Hi, everybody.
Speaker 1:
[10:48] Hi. What's going on with you?
Speaker 7:
[10:50] Nothing. I just have a story about dropping my child when he was an infant.
Speaker 1:
[10:55] All right. Please share.
Speaker 7:
[10:57] I did not drop him, however, his dad was holding him not like you normally should, not supporting his back. He was standing, had his arm up under his bum, and the baby decided to fling himself back. And he kind of went backwards and then a somersault from about six feet in the air. It landed on concrete. He broke his jaw in two places at three months old.
Speaker 1:
[11:23] So what was your reaction?
Speaker 7:
[11:26] I was inside making a bottle and all I heard was my mother screaming at the top of her lung. She comes running in with him and is just like, he just was dropped and he landed on his head. And like, had it been like another foot over, he would have like smacked his head off the concrete steps. But I just scooped him up and we called 911 and he ended up going to the Children's Hospital. And probably the worst thing about it was having CYS involved because they were like, you know, concerned that we did it.
Speaker 1:
[12:02] I know CPS is protective. What's the why in child why services?
Speaker 7:
[12:06] Youth.
Speaker 1:
[12:07] Youth, child youth services?
Speaker 7:
[12:08] Children and youth. So yeah, everything was fine. He was he's 14 now. Not a single thing wrong with him. But yeah, I guess when they're that young, everything is just so pliable. They were just like, yeah, he should be fine. He had to have no corrective measures done. They just monitored him and he was completely normal.
Speaker 1:
[12:32] I think that's a great story to share because there are probably a lot of parents like me that have very, very young kids and they're either freaking out that I did. By the way, if you're listening, I didn't drop. I'm so concerned about, it's like the number one concern in my life right now is not dropping the baby. And so I'm so focused on it. Everything fills off when I walk, when I'm holding the baby, because I'm just micro movements. So, or if you've dropped your baby, like Amy dropped her niece. She's told us many times, she's successful now.
Speaker 3:
[12:58] She's doing great.
Speaker 1:
[12:59] Yeah, Beth in Pennsylvania dropped her, her husband, not Beth, her husband dropped the baby. Make sure that's clear. Thank you, Beth. I hope you have an awesome day.
Speaker 7:
[13:09] Thank you. Bye, guys.
Speaker 1:
[13:10] Bye. Let's go to Julie, who is on right now. Julie and Little Rock. Hey, Julie, you're on the show. Morning. Morning.
Speaker 7:
[13:17] Hey, morning, studio.
Speaker 1:
[13:18] Morning.
Speaker 7:
[13:19] Hey, so mine is not dropping, but once both my kids were old enough to fit up and I'd hold them on my hip, I wouldn't hit their head on the door jamb all the time, just not, because their body doesn't move with you when you walk. They're not holding themselves fully up, so you have to be very careful of that.
Speaker 1:
[13:40] A couple of giggles in the room, but I already feel that because if I'm holding her laying down, like after she eats, I have to hold her up because this shouldn't spit up. But if I'm holding her, she's laying down. Her head is out longer than my body, so I've been very aware not to hit her head. It's not been, I'm not going to say it's been super close, but it's got to the point where I have to think about it. So Julie reminds me of me going, it reminds me of the old videos of the construction workers and they got the log on their shoulder and they're turning around, they're almost hitting people in the head. That's almost what it feels like with a baby when I'm walking around with it. So yeah, that's good, that's good. Haven't done it yet. I'm sure, I can tell my wife it's a numbers game. Something's gonna happen. She's like, I wish you would stop saying that. I'm like, I'm not gonna make it happen, but it's a numbers game. Something is going to happen. And I'll tell her, Julie and Little Rocks, that we're all good. Right, Julie?
Speaker 7:
[14:29] Perfect, yes.
Speaker 1:
[14:30] There you go. Hey, Julie, thank you for listening. Hope you have an awesome day.
Speaker 7:
[14:34] You too, bye.
Speaker 1:
[14:34] Bye. There's a call. I mean, some of these are crazy.
Speaker 5:
[14:39] But they ended well, so.
Speaker 3:
[14:41] Yeah, you know they did. That was the rule, to call.
Speaker 1:
[14:44] One of them is crazy. I think it ended well, but it's not pretty. Do you want this one or not? Yeah. I'm telling you, it's kind of, it's hardcore.
Speaker 3:
[14:53] What'd they do, chop a hand off?
Speaker 1:
[14:55] Dang, you want hardcore.
Speaker 3:
[14:56] Okay, we'll see, so now it won't be that bad.
Speaker 1:
[14:58] Chloe, let's go to Chloe and Wichita, please. Chloe, you're on the show. Thank you for calling.
Speaker 7:
[15:05] Hello, this is Emily, Chloe's mom.
Speaker 1:
[15:08] Emily, Chloe's mom. Okay. Emily, thank you for calling. Will you tell them your story?
Speaker 7:
[15:13] Yes, and it is gory, but Chloe's my fourth baby. She was my little girl I had in November, and I went to use the restroom and my husband walked out of the room and our five-year-old picked up our two-month-old at the time, and we just heard a huge crash, so she actually dropped out of his arms on the floor, which he's not very tall, again, he's five, but she ended up fracturing her school. Obviously, we're in the hospital doing all the tests. What I think of is the guy from the Goonies too, that's what she's going to turn into.
Speaker 2:
[15:48] But no, totally fine.
Speaker 7:
[15:50] She did fracture her school. She'll have a little dent in her school until either it pops out or her hair covers it eventually. So she's totally fine, just a normal baby. Now she's four months old.
Speaker 1:
[16:01] They can pop a dent out of a skull, like a car that's been bumped into. I think in one of those suction cups, things will pull a dent out of a car.
Speaker 3:
[16:08] Well, she said the dent is still there unless it pops out.
Speaker 1:
[16:11] It pops out.
Speaker 5:
[16:11] On its own.
Speaker 3:
[16:12] On its own.
Speaker 1:
[16:12] I know, I'm just saying that it pops out. One minute, you hear it go.
Speaker 5:
[16:17] It popped out.
Speaker 3:
[16:18] I can imagine it's a slow, like a slowly just...
Speaker 1:
[16:22] Emily, that's crazy that her skull was fractured. I had to assume you guys are freaking out for a long time.
Speaker 7:
[16:29] A long time. Still freaking out, but it's just, you know, made us more aware and more careful. And he is my five-year-old, my son. He is just extra careful now. So we're thankful.
Speaker 3:
[16:39] So it busted open.
Speaker 7:
[16:43] Her school actually, like no skin or anything was broken. It's just kind of caved in a little bit on one side.
Speaker 6:
[16:50] That is crazy.
Speaker 1:
[16:51] That's crazy.
Speaker 3:
[16:51] It's very scary.
Speaker 5:
[16:52] I think too, you don't really tell the five-year-old, you don't think about telling the five-year-old, like, hey, don't pick up the baby, all right? You just assume they're not going to do that.
Speaker 1:
[16:58] I don't know. I don't have a five-year-old.
Speaker 5:
[17:00] You assume.
Speaker 1:
[17:01] Yeah. Emily, thank you for sharing your story. I'm glad everything's okay. Appreciate that.
Speaker 5:
[17:06] Thank you.
Speaker 1:
[17:06] All right, bye. See, public service is public service. Crap happens, and not all crap ends up being crap in the end. Sometimes the kid you drop ends up graduating from Colorado.
Speaker 3:
[17:17] Yeah.
Speaker 5:
[17:17] Business degree.
Speaker 1:
[17:18] Business degree.
Speaker 3:
[17:20] She's thriving. She has a boyfriend.
Speaker 1:
[17:21] Yeah.
Speaker 6:
[17:23] That's really good.
Speaker 3:
[17:24] Yeah, she's doing great.
Speaker 1:
[17:25] All right, thank you. All right, let's do stories. I'll go first. The FAA is investigating a close call between two Southwest Airlines planes at the Nashville International Airport. They almost hit each other.
Speaker 3:
[17:37] Okay, this feels a little too close to home.
Speaker 5:
[17:40] Well, yes, right down the road.
Speaker 1:
[17:42] I have literally as close to your home.
Speaker 3:
[17:44] Well, I mean, not just on the nose there, not just the Nashville part, the Southwest part, like I'm literally booked on a Southwest flight to Austin. And now what?
Speaker 1:
[17:55] Flight 507 executed a go around while attempting to land amid gusty winds and during that maneuver, air traffic control issued instructions that placed the plane in the path of another Southwest flight taking off from a parallel runway. At their closest point, the two planes were separated by just 500 feet vertically. Onboard collision avoidance systems on both planes activated and both flights ultimately landed and departed without incident, ABC News. My addition here is I bet you this stuff happens more than we think. There are systems on the planes to make sure it doesn't happen. It didn't happen, but because in the news, we have everything hitting everything on runways, tarmacs, airports, that this is a news worthy item because of the other stories. We don't hear about all the close calls. This was a close call. This wasn't even a call. It was a close call. So I get it.
Speaker 5:
[18:45] So you're saying that there's always close calls that we don't hear about because that scares me even more.
Speaker 1:
[18:49] I'm saying every close call we don't hear about because they're only close calls. That is not newsworthy unless there's news that leads into this, that funnels this to us.
Speaker 3:
[19:00] Like this is news because absolutely the LaGuardia or JFK.
Speaker 5:
[19:05] The fire truck.
Speaker 1:
[19:06] Then the other one, they hit the UPS plane. All those stories make this a story. There are close calls at every airport. I bet you daily.
Speaker 3:
[19:15] Well, again, this one's just a little too close.
Speaker 1:
[19:17] To home.
Speaker 3:
[19:18] That's correct.
Speaker 5:
[19:19] Right down the road.
Speaker 1:
[19:20] Yes, Morgan.
Speaker 8:
[19:20] I will say, that was the weekend I had a lot of family flying, and all of their flights got delayed multiple. They were all flying southwest into and out of Nashville, and it was because there were not enough air traffic control employees. That was also coinciding with this. I do think there's something going on with that.
Speaker 3:
[19:38] All right, guys.
Speaker 5:
[19:40] What? What's up?
Speaker 4:
[19:40] What do you want to do?
Speaker 1:
[19:42] Move your home. That's what I always say. If it's too close to home, move your home.
Speaker 5:
[19:46] Yeah, move further away from the airport.
Speaker 3:
[19:47] No, but how? Is every day the staffing situation different? How can we check in? Are we fully staffed today?
Speaker 5:
[19:53] How are we doing?
Speaker 1:
[19:53] I think we can. What they're recommending now...
Speaker 3:
[19:55] Is driving.
Speaker 1:
[19:56] Well, when you get to the airport, cross fingers. Like, as soon as you walk in, they recommend everybody that's coming in, cross your fingers for luck. And just hope there's enough staff and they're paying attention out there. When you actually go through the TSA, they want you to cross your fingers for luck. Are your fingers crossed? Okay, go on through, because you need it. All right, there's my story, Amy.
Speaker 3:
[20:18] So Todd Chrisley is being sued by a former government employee who was awarded $755,000.
Speaker 1:
[20:26] Todd Chrisley is being sued by a government employee, and that employee was awarded money?
Speaker 3:
[20:32] Yes, because he trashed her on social media back in the days, and she hasn't received her money yet, but she was awarded this in court. So now TMZ is reporting on it.
Speaker 1:
[20:43] You're telling me that Chrisley's are shady with money? Stop the presses, this is too close to home.
Speaker 3:
[20:47] According to TMZ, documents say that Amy Doherty Hines, who worked as a tax official for the Georgia Department of Revenue, is making moves to collect on the judgment that she won against Todd Chrisley. She filed docs in Tennessee where she believes Todd and his family currently live, which they do, and she wants to collect the six figures that she is owed, and she said that Todd attacked her, falsely accused her of committing crimes back in 2020, following an investigation into Todd and his wife. We know they went to jail. Lundbrock?
Speaker 1:
[21:19] They were convicted. Yeah, they were. They got out because of a relationship with the president.
Speaker 3:
[21:23] They got pardoned by Trump.
Speaker 1:
[21:24] Yes, they didn't do anything right. Nothing was, they were not led, it's crazy.
Speaker 3:
[21:28] Yeah, it is pretty crazy. But the thing is, because he said everything, he falsely accused her of all this stuff online, and she was awarded it. I'm like, yeah, how, my question is, how is she going to get her money?
Speaker 1:
[21:41] She's going to have to go to court. They're going to have to go and take away.
Speaker 3:
[21:44] They've already gone to court and said.
Speaker 1:
[21:45] I know, but now they have to, so that court says you win this money, they have to pay it. Now there's a different court that says, okay, you haven't paid it, we'll have to take it. Or if you don't pay it, you go back to jail. Which would just be a cycle, they go back to jail, hey, let them out, they're my friends. So eventually, like this happens a lot in paternity, or like parent, child support cases, thank you, where they're not paying the money, so they just take it out. They garnish the wages. So it's something similar, or if you don't, there'll be a penalty.
Speaker 3:
[22:17] Okay, yeah, and then also, just note to Self, yeah, he launched this social media campaign against her, and then none of it was true. I guess because she worked for the Department of Revenue, I remember they were making all these claims against them, and this is when they were actively fighting.
Speaker 1:
[22:34] They were convicted of bank fraud, conspiracy to defraud the United States, and tax evasion.
Speaker 3:
[22:40] And somehow, she wasn't even on the case, and he picked her out of it, because I guess he thought she was maybe the main person, and slandered her, and then she won, which is just a reminder. That's why we always use allegedly.
Speaker 1:
[22:56] I said a couple days ago, pin an allegedly to everything I say for the rest of my life. I think, you know how we do the thing that goes, guaranteed human, we should be every podcast or anything we put up, Bobby says allegedly, that should run at the same time.
Speaker 3:
[23:10] The crazy thing is when Todd came in here and filled in for Lunchbox when Lunchbox was out because he had a baby and we had people filling in, he was so nice.
Speaker 1:
[23:19] I've spent a few different instances with him. You know, he's so nice. No one's arguing that. But the reason...
Speaker 3:
[23:25] I know you just, it's really hard for me to believe that they committed these money crimes.
Speaker 5:
[23:30] It's just sneaky money crimes.
Speaker 1:
[23:32] Yeah, money crimes.
Speaker 5:
[23:32] You can be a nice person.
Speaker 1:
[23:33] Yeah, money crimes don't mean you're mean. This means you like money. But they broke the law and then they got out because of a friendship. That's why, if you're not connected, you don't get out. You don't get out of jail. A lot of people in prison, not connected. They didn't get out. What just irritated me was when they used Christian music to play as they're coming out of prison. They're like, God, allow this to come out. That's not what happened.
Speaker 3:
[23:52] Well, is it because they still maintain their innocence?
Speaker 1:
[23:54] It doesn't matter. What do you mean?
Speaker 3:
[23:57] Well, because if you, because in their delusional mind, if allegedly they are innocent, like then, then yeah, it is to them.
Speaker 1:
[24:07] They're not innocent. I don't think they were convicted.
Speaker 3:
[24:09] In their mind, if they don't feel like they did anything wrong or they are being wrongly accused of certain things, then, then, and they're now out of jail, like I would be like, thank you, Lord, because they think they're.
Speaker 1:
[24:22] I don't think they think.
Speaker 5:
[24:22] I don't think they think. They probably know.
Speaker 3:
[24:25] Oh, okay. Well, I don't know. I believe people when they say something.
Speaker 6:
[24:30] But I think publicly, they probably say, hey, we're innocent. But when they're at home, they're probably like, man.
Speaker 5:
[24:34] I bet they don't even go down.
Speaker 1:
[24:35] We did it. High five. Yeah, we did it.
Speaker 6:
[24:37] You don't think they talk about it?
Speaker 5:
[24:38] No way. There's no way.
Speaker 1:
[24:39] I'd be worried there's a bug.
Speaker 5:
[24:40] Yeah.
Speaker 1:
[24:41] Like somebody's always listening.
Speaker 3:
[24:41] Yeah, that's why I feel like at home, they're like, we are.
Speaker 6:
[24:45] But it doesn't matter. They're pardoned. They can talk about it all they want.
Speaker 5:
[24:47] They just go like, we're not talking about that. We don't talk about that.
Speaker 3:
[24:49] So if you're pardoned, pardoned, like if they get busted with this again, like.
Speaker 1:
[24:54] If there's a new element that's introduced, yeah, you can't double jeopardy somebody.
Speaker 3:
[24:59] You can't be like, I know we're already pardoned.
Speaker 1:
[25:01] Yeah. Well, you can if it's like the same exact thing. You can go after them for the same exact thing. If you find something new, it's like if somebody is found, you can't double jeopardy, it's like you can't get tried again about the same thing. If they've already found you to not be guilty, it's a version of that.
Speaker 3:
[25:15] But you could, I guess, if you take them to civil or something. And then I'll have the OJ.
Speaker 1:
[25:19] Yeah, but there's no civil being, in this case, there's no civil, because this is like against institution.
Speaker 3:
[25:25] Well, anyway, Amy wants her money. Amy, Doherty-Hines.
Speaker 1:
[25:31] Justice for Amy, both of them.
Speaker 3:
[25:33] She wants her $755,000.
Speaker 1:
[25:35] All Amy's screwed.
Speaker 3:
[25:36] And it's like, how do they come up with that exact number?
Speaker 1:
[25:39] By the way, allegedly, everything I just said, allegedly, don't know anything.
Speaker 3:
[25:42] Except for that he's nice, he was nice to us.
Speaker 1:
[25:44] He was super nice, yeah.
Speaker 2:
[25:45] God, yeah.
Speaker 1:
[25:46] Okay, Lunchbox.
Speaker 6:
[25:48] Yeah, there was a dumpster company in California, they rent out dumpsters, so you know, if you're cleaning out your house, whatever, and this one homeowner rented a dumpster, and they kept saying, hey, you need to pay the rental fee, you need to pay the rental fee, you need to pay the rental fee. Never paid it, so they went and picked up the dumpster, and before they left, they dumped all the trash in the driveway. Boom, emptied the dumpster right back on their driveway.
Speaker 3:
[26:10] That's a lot.
Speaker 5:
[26:10] They didn't do that. Well, I guess, yeah, they didn't pay, huh?
Speaker 6:
[26:13] Yeah, and the trash is the homeowners, not the company, so they're not gonna let you use it for free, so they dumped it all out and drove away.
Speaker 1:
[26:20] That's tough. Do you get littering, a littering charge then? Because you're the one who actually dumped the trash out.
Speaker 5:
[26:25] All right.
Speaker 3:
[26:27] Well, it's like, it's not, to me, it looked like stuff.
Speaker 5:
[26:32] It wasn't trash.
Speaker 6:
[26:33] I mean, it looks like trash, stuff, it looks like everything.
Speaker 3:
[26:35] Like if.
Speaker 6:
[26:37] But it's still junk, like you're still littering if you just throw it on the street, but they said, I mean, it was pretty much full, and they just sat there and, I feel bad for the neighbors.
Speaker 1:
[26:46] I get it. Do you see the video of the helicopter? And they were throwing all the money out of the helicopter?
Speaker 5:
[26:50] What? No.
Speaker 1:
[26:52] Okay, there was a video, I saw it Daily Mail yesterday. Guy died in his entire life savings, they had him throw it out of a helicopter, and people were just catching it.
Speaker 5:
[27:00] That's crazy.
Speaker 3:
[27:01] It's not for real.
Speaker 5:
[27:03] It's got to be.
Speaker 3:
[27:04] Is it AI?
Speaker 1:
[27:04] It wasn't AI. I was watching people.
Speaker 3:
[27:07] Now I'm the one that's like, Bobby.
Speaker 1:
[27:08] And the Daily, well, it had a source.
Speaker 3:
[27:12] Oh yeah. Okay.
Speaker 1:
[27:13] Yeah, I mean, the Daily Mail wasn't one of the stories.
Speaker 5:
[27:14] Were they all ones?
Speaker 1:
[27:17] A Michigan man known for his generosity made one final jaw-dropping gesture to thank his community by literally making it rain cash from a helicopter at his own funeral. Daryl Thomas, a beloved car wash owner in Detroit, died of Alzheimer's at 58. He was laid to rest. And it looks like that's what happened. I mean, I'm looking at it and there's a story.
Speaker 3:
[27:38] So it was the day of his funeral. That's cool.
Speaker 5:
[27:41] That is so cool.
Speaker 1:
[27:42] No, I don't think that's the case.
Speaker 3:
[27:43] I thought you said it was one final thing at his funeral.
Speaker 1:
[27:46] Hold on. It says from a helicopter at his own funeral. Yeah, but then he said he died. Oh, so this must have happened a bit ago.
Speaker 4:
[27:52] I think we talked about it a while back. They just reposted it.
Speaker 3:
[27:54] Oh, well, I don't remember.
Speaker 1:
[27:55] I saw it pop up again.
Speaker 4:
[27:56] I was like, dang.
Speaker 5:
[27:57] That's so cool.
Speaker 4:
[27:57] They just posted it yesterday.
Speaker 3:
[27:58] But also, when you hear-
Speaker 1:
[27:59] They posted it again yesterday?
Speaker 4:
[28:01] Yeah.
Speaker 1:
[28:01] Man, they're just farming too, huh?
Speaker 4:
[28:03] They knew it would go viral again.
Speaker 3:
[28:04] When you hear car wash owner, do you think, what's the front?
Speaker 6:
[28:08] No, they make a lot of money.
Speaker 1:
[28:10] No, she's saying like-
Speaker 5:
[28:11] Why are you laundering?
Speaker 1:
[28:12] Laundering money.
Speaker 5:
[28:14] No, I think the mattress ones.
Speaker 3:
[28:15] Whenever I see mattress places, I'm like, Oh no, just because of Breaking Bad, I'm like car washes, chicken, restaurants.
Speaker 1:
[28:21] Man, there are so many mattress places near me.
Speaker 5:
[28:23] That don't sell mattresses.
Speaker 1:
[28:25] No, they all have mattresses in them. But nobody, I don't know how many, how many mattress do you need? How many stores are there? How many people are there for each store?
Speaker 5:
[28:33] Right.
Speaker 8:
[28:35] But also, when's the last time you bought a mattress from a mattress store?
Speaker 3:
[28:38] I did. Well, I go in. It means like every Thursday.
Speaker 5:
[28:40] You go in?
Speaker 3:
[28:41] I endorse for a mattress firm.
Speaker 1:
[28:42] It means like Mattress Monday. We always go in.
Speaker 3:
[28:45] It's you have, wait, why would you not go in? Because you want to lay down on all of them.
Speaker 5:
[28:49] No, but how often is the question?
Speaker 1:
[28:51] Yeah, it's like a once every 15 year, 10 year thing, 15, 20.
Speaker 3:
[28:54] Yeah, well, when you get divorced and you lose your mattress.
Speaker 1:
[28:58] But that's like two times. I mean, you haven't had to go often.
Speaker 3:
[29:02] Well, yeah, but I guess I went with my kids.
Speaker 1:
[29:03] Every seven to 10 years. Me saying 15, 20 years feels like that mattress may be a little old. We have new ones now, but I don't, I wouldn't have thought it was seven to 10 years.
Speaker 3:
[29:12] Yeah, I guess I went a lot in the last few years. Yes, because we were, we divided up assets and then I was like, okay, the kids are now in my house, so they got to go pick out new beds. So we laid on, we got to lay down and figure out which one, because we all, like I want a firm one. And my daughter likes a soft one, like the one she picked out. I'm like, that just does not feel good to me. But that's the thing, like everybody likes something different.
Speaker 1:
[29:35] Amen.
Speaker 3:
[29:36] So you got to lay on them.
Speaker 1:
[29:37] Amen. Morgan's story.
Speaker 8:
[29:40] OK, so I have nine celebrities that have crazy side hustles.
Speaker 1:
[29:45] I'll take three.
Speaker 8:
[29:46] You'll take three? You want all nine?
Speaker 1:
[29:48] You can go ahead. I don't know. Morgan's like, I have 31 celebrities.
Speaker 8:
[29:53] Well, it kind of started out because Nicole Kidman is studying to become a death doula. That's where this article kind of comes from. So she's one of them. And she's-
Speaker 1:
[30:00] You guys know that story?
Speaker 5:
[30:01] No, I don't know what a doula, death doula is.
Speaker 3:
[30:03] She helps people through the grieving process of death. But like, who's she going to help her friends? Are you kidding me? Somebody dies and Nicole Kimmon's going to show up and soothe you?
Speaker 5:
[30:10] That would be cool.
Speaker 3:
[30:10] Could you imagine?
Speaker 1:
[30:12] I'd be distracted for a while.
Speaker 5:
[30:13] Yeah, for sure.
Speaker 1:
[30:14] I'd be like, days of thunders here. This is odd. Yeah.
Speaker 3:
[30:19] Wait, wait. So hold on, death doula. I mean, I'm thinking, is she working with the family or the person that's going to die?
Speaker 8:
[30:26] With the family. So it started out of her mom passing and she felt like her mom was super lonely, but her family can only provide so much support for the mom during that process. So she feels like a death doula coming in to be able to be this solo person to be able to help in the gaps for the family that's going through it.
Speaker 5:
[30:43] So it is for the person dying.
Speaker 8:
[30:45] Yeah. To be a support system.
Speaker 3:
[30:47] That's what hospice is.
Speaker 8:
[30:50] I don't know that hospice is as warming all the time, if you will.
Speaker 3:
[30:54] Yeah, they are. Oh, yeah.
Speaker 8:
[30:56] I think that's what she missed out on.
Speaker 1:
[30:58] I think a lot of hospices too can feel-
Speaker 3:
[31:01] But you can have it in your home.
Speaker 1:
[31:03] Yeah, but we're talking about if they go to a hospice.
Speaker 3:
[31:05] Yeah, but I've been to a hospice house too, and it was very-
Speaker 1:
[31:08] I'm sure when you're there, it's great.
Speaker 3:
[31:09] Yeah.
Speaker 1:
[31:10] It's like when you go to like an old folks home. I'm sure when you're there on the tour, they're like, look at this, everything's amazing. So when you leave, it's like Ben Stiller and Fringe the Dodgeball or whatever. Oh, no. Happy Gilmore.
Speaker 4:
[31:20] Happy Gilmore. Happy Gilmore. Go to sleep or I'll put you to sleep.
Speaker 1:
[31:26] That's what it's like when you ain't there.
Speaker 3:
[31:28] Yeah, but how crazy if Nicole Kidman shows up.
Speaker 4:
[31:31] That'd be awesome.
Speaker 1:
[31:32] I agree. That'd be crazy. You have eight others? Yeah, I have eight others.
Speaker 8:
[31:37] Seth Rogen sells ceramics.
Speaker 1:
[31:40] Like he makes them and sells them?
Speaker 8:
[31:41] Yeah, he makes them and he sells them, which I thought was really cool. Nick Offerman from The Office has a woodworking business.
Speaker 1:
[31:47] He's on a whole show on that. He's really good at that stuff.
Speaker 8:
[31:49] Yeah, he talked a lot about it and he's been doing it since he was a kid. So he created a whole business around it. Then Paul Rudd and his wife own a candy shop with Hillary Burton and Jeffrey Dean Morgan.
Speaker 1:
[32:01] Oh, that's cool. Jeffrey Dean Morgan from Walking Dead. That's what I know mostly from, Negan Negan, yeah. What else?
Speaker 8:
[32:09] And she's from Wontree Hill.
Speaker 1:
[32:11] You're doing Steve Carell?
Speaker 8:
[32:12] Yeah, Steve Carell and his wife own a general store in Massachusetts, so it was about to shut down and it was one of their favorite stores, so they decided to buy it.
Speaker 1:
[32:21] We almost bought the Yum Yum shop at Mountain Vine twice. We didn't, somebody else got it and I think is running it now. We just didn't want it to die, so my wife and I went and looked at it and walked around, we were like, should we buy this and hire somebody to keep it up? We thought, let's just give it 30, 60 days and someone else came in and bought it, thank God. We almost bought that. We were going to be on this list, but we... Didn't do it. We didn't do it.
Speaker 5:
[32:43] But it's still around, so somebody bought it.
Speaker 1:
[32:44] Somebody's got it now. That's cool. We did the whole thing, went through all the equipment, did a whole appraisal. We were going to buy the Yum Yum shop at Mountain Vine. That's the only business there that, and now Dollar General. That's it. No other business is really at Mountain Vine.
Speaker 8:
[32:56] What does the Yum Yum store have?
Speaker 1:
[32:58] The Yum Yum shop was a place where you could just get food. It's like a restaurant.
Speaker 8:
[33:01] Oh, I definitely thought it was dessert or sweets or something.
Speaker 1:
[33:03] Sounds like an ice cream. They did have an ice cream machine, but it was just hamburgers and hot dog, stuff that you could easily make.
Speaker 3:
[33:08] Yum Yum stuff.
Speaker 1:
[33:09] Pretty close to the school. You leave school, Yum Yum shop is open, that kind of thing. You got anybody else?
Speaker 8:
[33:15] Yeah, I got one more. This one isn't surprising.
Speaker 3:
[33:17] We've already gone through nine? Because some of them are couples.
Speaker 8:
[33:20] I've left a few out just that we don't really know.
Speaker 1:
[33:21] We got to do nine now.
Speaker 3:
[33:23] You're almost there, Morgan. We're committed.
Speaker 8:
[33:25] Okay, fine. Did anybody watch the one battle after another movie?
Speaker 5:
[33:29] Yes, great movie.
Speaker 8:
[33:31] Tiana Taylor's in that. She went back to culinary school.
Speaker 1:
[33:34] I didn't know she was a singer. Pretty cool, like a real one. Everybody has success being an artist. I didn't know that.
Speaker 3:
[33:42] She's not from the movie. She's a cook.
Speaker 1:
[33:44] Now she's about to be a cook. What else?
Speaker 8:
[33:45] Lucy Liu, she was in the act. Is it Liu? She's in Kill Bill and she has a bunch of artwork.
Speaker 1:
[33:52] Charlie's Angels.
Speaker 8:
[33:54] Yeah, she's a world-renowned artist now and has a bunch of her art in museums.
Speaker 1:
[33:59] You wouldn't know Lucy Liu. I completely forgive you for mispronouncing her name because that was before you.
Speaker 8:
[34:04] Yeah, I think I've watched Kill Bill, but I think that's all I really.
Speaker 1:
[34:08] But even with the Charlie's Angels song, Destiny Shaw goes, Lucy Liu.
Speaker 5:
[34:15] Oh yeah, they do say her name in that.
Speaker 8:
[34:17] I don't even think I know that song.
Speaker 3:
[34:19] You do.
Speaker 1:
[34:50] Do do do do do.
Speaker 3:
[34:51] Oh no, am I doing payment telephone bills?
Speaker 1:
[34:53] Yes, you keep doing bills.
Speaker 3:
[34:55] Okay, never mind. Sorry.
Speaker 1:
[34:57] It goes, I don't know, man. I do know that part, but that's Lucy Liu.
Speaker 8:
[35:05] Okay. Yeah, I didn't know her. Then we got Venus Williams who owns an interior design business. I guess I didn't know that.
Speaker 1:
[35:11] Tell me what you think about me. I buy my own dolls and I buy my own tea. No?
Speaker 8:
[35:17] I don't.
Speaker 1:
[35:18] No, no, no. No, no, no, no. The shoes on my feet, I bought them. The ice on my hair, I bought them. The answers I'm bound to, I bought them because I depend on, because I depend on, all the women who are independent. Throw your hands up at me. That's it.
Speaker 8:
[35:35] Okay, I do know that song.
Speaker 1:
[35:38] My girl Drew. Cameron D. And Destiny, Charlie's Angels, come on.
Speaker 8:
[35:43] All right, go ahead. And last one, Jeff Goldblum is...
Speaker 1:
[35:46] Who?
Speaker 8:
[35:46] Goldblum? Blum, yeah. He leads a jazz band. All right. Which doesn't shock me. I feel like he's super theatrical.
Speaker 1:
[35:53] There you go. Is that all nine?
Speaker 8:
[35:55] Yeah, that's all nine.
Speaker 5:
[35:55] Good job.
Speaker 1:
[35:56] Nailed it.
Speaker 8:
[35:57] Eddie.
Speaker 5:
[35:58] Oh, so there was a circus in Russia. It was just crazy.
Speaker 1:
[36:02] It was crazy.
Speaker 5:
[36:03] You saw this?
Speaker 1:
[36:03] Friggin tiger.
Speaker 5:
[36:04] What they did? So, Amy, so this, there's like three tigers and a whatever, tiger tamer in there, like in this cage, and the top falls and the net comes down and the tigers are just like, what? No cage? One of them just goes out in the crowd.
Speaker 1:
[36:20] There's people there.
Speaker 5:
[36:21] Everyone is in there.
Speaker 1:
[36:23] There's no barrier anymore. It falls.
Speaker 5:
[36:25] The tiger's just roaming around people and people are like, what do we do? Tigers next to us.
Speaker 3:
[36:30] So what are you supposed to do?
Speaker 1:
[36:31] Well, some leave and run. Some are like, huh. They're confused. Some just sit there. Here's the thing about that tiger. He's chilling.
Speaker 5:
[36:39] The tiger was not mad.
Speaker 1:
[36:42] Just curious.
Speaker 5:
[36:42] No. Actually went to the back of the tent and just kind of chilled back there. Allowed everyone to slowly get out of the tent and then they got the tiger back.
Speaker 1:
[36:51] Unless you're threatened or hurt or hungry, you're just not gonna attack. And luckily that tiger didn't feel threatened by the people.
Speaker 3:
[36:58] Well, sometimes tigers go tiger.
Speaker 1:
[36:59] They do, but this tiger just wanted to sit in the crowd.
Speaker 5:
[37:04] Just think you're going to a circus.
Speaker 1:
[37:06] First of all, just think you're in Russia.
Speaker 5:
[37:08] Okay, that's dangerous. Dude, that video was crazy.
Speaker 1:
[37:12] It is crazy, yeah. It is a crazy one. All right. Why don't we take a break? You guys feel good about a break? I like that. All right, let's take a break. Also, if you're a YouTube follower, I push that alert button. So when we come on, you get an alert. Because like today, we've had to split this up. We did a big part of this live. We had to break off because we had a couple of meetings, and then we came back again, live again. So if you want to watch it live, just be sure to hit that alert. You get the alerts when we could go live. A couple of things that I made notes about. Amy, so you left yesterday, and Eddie was like, oh, I meant to ask her about something. I'm kind of freaked out. And so I told him what it was because he was freaking out.
Speaker 3:
[37:56] What?
Speaker 1:
[37:56] When you text him, you said, hey, don't ask me what. Did you mean to send that to everyone? I even meant to address it yesterday. So but he was concerned.
Speaker 3:
[38:05] So I saw a prank online where you're supposed to text your coworkers and just say, did you mean to send that to the whole group? And then you just wait for them to reply. And he replied back, he's like, send what? And then I was just like to our BBS group thread. And then I didn't really have anything else after that because he wasn't really.
Speaker 5:
[38:26] Yeah, so then she ghosted me.
Speaker 1:
[38:28] Yeah, that's part of the prank then.
Speaker 3:
[38:31] Because I didn't really know what to say. But what were you freaking out about?
Speaker 5:
[38:34] I didn't freak out.
Speaker 3:
[38:35] Because it was what you sent.
Speaker 5:
[38:36] No, no, no.
Speaker 1:
[38:37] See, exactly.
Speaker 5:
[38:38] There was, I don't understand the point of the prank. Like, I don't know how it's supposed to, what it's supposed to do.
Speaker 3:
[38:43] I should have done it like right after.
Speaker 1:
[38:46] No, it really like left a lasting impression.
Speaker 5:
[38:48] Yeah, let me tell you what it did.
Speaker 3:
[38:49] But the problem is I did it on a weekend and I should have done it like while we're at work and emails and texts are flowing. Cause then you think, I don't know.
Speaker 5:
[38:58] Well, we were driving like my wife and I in the family. And so I was like, that's kind of weird. Like she's like, what? My wife's like, what, what? Amy just sent me a text that said, did you mean to send that to everyone? And she's like, what did you send? And I'm like, no, no, no, no, I didn't send anything. And then my wife starts thinking like, did you send something inappropriate to everyone? And I'm like, no, you're not understanding. Like I didn't send anything. So then my wife's thinking I'm sending like nasty pics to the group or something.
Speaker 6:
[39:27] So it actually worked, Amy.
Speaker 5:
[39:29] Like Amy, you want to start a fight in my family?
Speaker 1:
[39:32] That's why you have nasty pictures at all though.
Speaker 3:
[39:34] Yeah, like why would that be your go-to? Why would you send a nasty picture to the group?
Speaker 5:
[39:38] Well, what else would you refer to?
Speaker 3:
[39:40] You could be like, oh, like our boss sucks. I'd be like, did you mean to send that to the whole group, but instead you went dirty pic?
Speaker 5:
[39:47] Remember that time when Morgan took a picture of me and I had a banana and two eggs? My wife's like, you got to take that down. And I'm like, take what down?
Speaker 1:
[39:56] You didn't even know that looked like a wiener.
Speaker 5:
[39:57] No, she thought I was doing wiener things. And I'm like, I'm not doing that.
Speaker 3:
[40:01] Oh, I'm sorry, my bad. That's not what I meant. I just was, I saw it, and then I, so I said.
Speaker 5:
[40:06] But what's the point? Like, what's the reaction you're supposed to get?
Speaker 3:
[40:09] You're just supposed to see who's like.
Speaker 1:
[40:11] It's a blank canvas, man.
Speaker 3:
[40:13] You can cast a wide net.
Speaker 1:
[40:14] Yeah, blank canvas, and you just see what happens, and watch the art.
Speaker 3:
[40:17] And then someone might be like, oh my gosh, no. And then you're like, well, what was it?
Speaker 1:
[40:22] Like you right now.
Speaker 5:
[40:23] I was like, what did I say?
Speaker 1:
[40:26] Eddie's back at it again.
Speaker 3:
[40:28] Oh, what's he gonna donate?
Speaker 1:
[40:29] I forgot what I wrote this about.
Speaker 3:
[40:30] Oh, probably giving, loving.
Speaker 5:
[40:32] I'm not donating.
Speaker 1:
[40:33] No, Amy, this is from you. Eddie's back at it again.
Speaker 3:
[40:35] Oh, I know what this is.
Speaker 1:
[40:37] I don't know why I had that written down.
Speaker 3:
[40:38] Oh, I'll tell you.
Speaker 5:
[40:38] Some inappropriate pictures.
Speaker 1:
[40:40] A second one?
Speaker 3:
[40:42] No, he's back at trying to sabotage me again cause he sent me another bird article and after he sent the link, he just said, double down.
Speaker 5:
[40:50] It's a good one.
Speaker 1:
[40:50] Like go on the podcast and do the bird article again.
Speaker 3:
[40:52] Yeah, like double down. And I'm like, I will never make that my story of the day again. Although I did read the article and I did find it interesting. See, see.
Speaker 1:
[41:00] What was the headline?
Speaker 3:
[41:01] The headline.
Speaker 1:
[41:02] Bird Side Hustles.
Speaker 3:
[41:03] No. People who put up bird and squirrel feeders in their yards usually share rare personality traits. And I was thinking of everybody in this room, Eddie and I, I think are the only ones who.
Speaker 2:
[41:17] Anyone else have bird feeders?
Speaker 5:
[41:19] Nope, just us.
Speaker 3:
[41:20] So just us. So I have the traits and y'all can see if Eddie and I have them.
Speaker 5:
[41:25] This is awesome, Amy. What are the traits?
Speaker 3:
[41:27] Okay. Naturally feel empathy for living things.
Speaker 1:
[41:31] That's everybody.
Speaker 5:
[41:32] No.
Speaker 1:
[41:32] That's 90% of people. Almost nobody's gonna go, I don't have empathy for living things.
Speaker 3:
[41:37] Okay.
Speaker 1:
[41:37] That's like saying, I like music. And so does everybody else.
Speaker 5:
[41:40] My dad didn't like music.
Speaker 3:
[41:41] How about this one?
Speaker 1:
[41:42] Most people do.
Speaker 3:
[41:43] Calm down with how you're acting because I've only said one trait and you freaked out.
Speaker 1:
[41:46] This is so dumb.
Speaker 3:
[41:47] Because the next one is more patient than most people.
Speaker 5:
[41:50] Oh my gosh, we're so patient.
Speaker 3:
[41:51] Way more patient than these people.
Speaker 5:
[41:53] I know, you wanna kill the bit already.
Speaker 3:
[41:55] Can't even get through it.
Speaker 5:
[41:56] Be patient.
Speaker 1:
[41:56] That's not about patience. That's about judgment.
Speaker 3:
[41:59] Enjoy observing before reacting.
Speaker 5:
[42:02] Love that.
Speaker 3:
[42:03] I love responding instead of reacting. I love it.
Speaker 1:
[42:06] I'm more of a reaction guy. Really enjoy getting a good reaction.
Speaker 5:
[42:09] And you don't have a feeder either.
Speaker 3:
[42:11] Spend time reflecting in quiet moments.
Speaker 5:
[42:14] I love quiet.
Speaker 3:
[42:15] Two more, two more. They like caring for something outside themselves.
Speaker 5:
[42:20] Family, we have kids.
Speaker 3:
[42:21] And then finally, people that have feeders in their yard tend to appreciate slower, quieter routines. That's us.
Speaker 5:
[42:30] I will say though that I did try to shoot a squirrel the other day just because they were eating.
Speaker 1:
[42:35] In your yard?
Speaker 3:
[42:36] No, that is not naturally feeling good to be for...
Speaker 1:
[42:38] No, but also you're in a neighborhood. With what though?
Speaker 5:
[42:40] A pelican?
Speaker 3:
[42:42] That's cruel.
Speaker 5:
[42:43] And it was just in the butt. Just so they wouldn't eat the bird feed. Because they eat all the bird feed.
Speaker 1:
[42:48] I was mostly worried about you shooting a gun in your neighborhood more than I am about what.
Speaker 5:
[42:52] No, no, no. There were kids shooting guns in my neighborhood. I told them to stop. I saw them. This was a while back.
Speaker 3:
[42:56] Like gun guns?
Speaker 5:
[42:57] No, no, like BB guns. And they were shooting birds. I'm like, don't be doing that in the neighborhood. But squirrels eating food... The feed's expensive, man. So like you see a squirrel filling up his cheeks with all those seeds and nuts. I'm like, no, you're not doing that. Not for you? Can't sit here? It's not for you, man. So I shot them in the butt.
Speaker 1:
[43:16] Okay.
Speaker 3:
[43:17] So yeah, he told me to double down. So I did.
Speaker 1:
[43:20] You did.
Speaker 5:
[43:20] Good job, Amy.
Speaker 3:
[43:21] Is this going to come back to...
Speaker 5:
[43:24] Amy, did you like the story?
Speaker 3:
[43:26] I loved it.
Speaker 5:
[43:27] See? That's all that matters.
Speaker 1:
[43:28] I guess I just have trouble with stories where they just generically associate really common things with different personality traits when they really go with like 80% of the personality traits. That's my problem with looking at the stars and being like, oh, you're going to have a good day today.
Speaker 3:
[43:47] But when you think about the star stuff, isn't it crazy how complicated it all is?
Speaker 1:
[43:55] What? The solar system?
Speaker 5:
[43:56] And I love that you called it star stuff.
Speaker 3:
[43:58] No, no, no, no. I'm talking about astrology.
Speaker 1:
[44:01] Astronomy or astrology?
Speaker 3:
[44:02] Astrology.
Speaker 1:
[44:03] Okay, astrology, not a believer in.
Speaker 3:
[44:06] I know you're not.
Speaker 1:
[44:06] No scientific, but astronomy, yes.
Speaker 3:
[44:09] Yes, astronomy, yes. I'm talking, that's why I called it star stuff, because I was bringing it down to the level and probably-
Speaker 1:
[44:15] You meant to say star bullsh-
Speaker 5:
[44:18] Oh, got it, got it. So not constellations, but like horoscopes.
Speaker 3:
[44:21] No, I wasn't saying planets and stuff. No, I was saying star stuff like astrology. For it being hogwash, it's very complex.
Speaker 1:
[44:36] What's your point?
Speaker 3:
[44:38] Well, I'm just like, somebody spent a lot of time figuring out the houses and the moon, like, because there's houses.
Speaker 1:
[44:45] It's a lot of people over a lot of years building on other people's bullcrap. Someone just didn't come up with all at once. They started stupid astrology hundreds of years ago, and they just keep building stuff out and new people have new theories. It's not even, there is no scientific evidence at all to support astrology. They've done testing, they've done studies where astrologers have attempted to map traits and personality tests, and astrology does not perform better than a written down piece of paper where you answer scientific questions about yourself.
Speaker 3:
[45:12] I can't explain, like, faith. I mean, I guess there are biblical accounts.
Speaker 1:
[45:18] You know what, people that have faith in astrology, I think that's pretty stupid.
Speaker 3:
[45:22] Yeah, I get it.
Speaker 1:
[45:24] I think a lot of faith, though, if you're using, like, the Bible, there's historical...
Speaker 3:
[45:26] That's what I said, there's actual events and accounts.
Speaker 5:
[45:30] But why are we comparing this to bird feeders? Like, that's different.
Speaker 1:
[45:33] No, I just compare the stories where they just give, just straight, you must be like this if you like this. You must like to open your eyes and look at people if you like a cardinal. Well, now I'm like, no, a lot of people like to open their eyes and look at people.
Speaker 4:
[45:44] Blue Jays, Blue Jays.
Speaker 1:
[45:47] Astrology does the same thing. Like you're giving, you're a Taurus.
Speaker 3:
[45:51] Shut up. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Like your sign. I mean, people, I have some friends, they're very into that and they're like, typical Taurus. Then they'll start dating a guy and they'll be like, oh, but he's a Capricorn. And I'm like, is that how you're not going to date him? Because of Capricorn behavior?
Speaker 1:
[46:09] I have no people in my life like that. That are that hardcore about that.
Speaker 5:
[46:14] And if they were, you'd get them out of your life? Probably. What?
Speaker 3:
[46:17] Come on. No, you wouldn't.
Speaker 1:
[46:18] If they really, really believe that that means there are other things in our life that they feel that way about too. And that's probably not just going to.
Speaker 3:
[46:23] Yeah, but like if that's what they're into, like, why are you going to let it like burn your biscuit?
Speaker 1:
[46:26] But if it's a hobby, that's great. I have no problem with that. But if like they're super into it, that means there are other things in their lifestyle that probably aren't going to roll with me. We got Crystals, Brian, too. What's next?
Speaker 3:
[46:36] I think they probably do.
Speaker 1:
[46:40] Anyway, Morgan's gonna, are you gonna fly Contour Airlines? I never heard of Contour Airlines.
Speaker 8:
[46:45] I'm thinking about it. So it popped up for my...
Speaker 3:
[46:48] In this day and age?
Speaker 1:
[46:50] I don't even know what it is.
Speaker 6:
[46:51] I've never even heard of it.
Speaker 8:
[46:53] So it's a regional airline, I guess, and it's connected to American. I don't know. It popped up. Like I've been watching a Google flight tracker of like just checking flights and prices.
Speaker 1:
[47:03] Is it a real... Because American Eagle is a version of America, it's American, it's the regional carrier, but this feels like a different airline completely.
Speaker 8:
[47:11] It does, but I had posted about it because I was curious and a bunch of people have flown it and I guess it's just at smaller airports instead of at like major airports where it can take off from a major airport and land in a smaller airport because it's a smaller plane.
Speaker 1:
[47:26] Can I read you what it says?
Speaker 8:
[47:27] Yeah.
Speaker 1:
[47:28] Contour Airlines is generally considered a safe, legitimate regional carrier.
Speaker 5:
[47:33] Generally.
Speaker 1:
[47:33] That word generally scares the crap out of me.
Speaker 5:
[47:35] What on earth?
Speaker 8:
[47:36] It scares me too. This is why I'm asking. I've never flown it. I hadn't even heard of it, but it's a really cheap flight.
Speaker 1:
[47:42] Contour Airlines operates as a regional carrier focusing on connecting smaller cities to major hubs, Charlotte, Nashville, Phoenix, and Chicago. I guess it's a smaller plane. I don't know. I've never.
Speaker 3:
[47:53] It's like just pretend you're flying private. Right.
Speaker 1:
[47:56] At least you have to go through the.
Speaker 3:
[47:58] Oh, I know. I'm telling. The way I psych myself out when I have to get on a plane that looks like this, I just Googled it. It looks cool. I just am like.
Speaker 1:
[48:06] Is it smaller than one of those like regional, like American? It looks. American Eagle is the American Airlines.
Speaker 3:
[48:12] But it's like in the movies, if you look at like when they're flying a private plane.
Speaker 1:
[48:17] It's smaller than that then. How many seats on it?
Speaker 3:
[48:20] I don't know, but it's probably maybe a little bigger. But my point is, I do this to myself when I'm at a small airport and I have to go board a small plane. I just, I'm like.
Speaker 5:
[48:31] You act like you're a movie star or something?
Speaker 3:
[48:33] I'm private. Yeah, so I'm like.
Speaker 5:
[48:35] She puts sunglasses on, acts like she's.
Speaker 3:
[48:38] I'm like, this plane is fine.
Speaker 5:
[48:39] No pictures.
Speaker 3:
[48:40] Nothing to see here. I'm just boarding my private plane because psychologically it just like helps me pretend. Like I'm, like I'm, you know, because it feels.
Speaker 1:
[48:50] 30 seats. I'm sure it's.
Speaker 3:
[48:52] But this looks like I'm sure it's safe. My point is, if this is generally somebody's private plane, you'd be like, sweet jet.
Speaker 1:
[48:58] If it was somebody's private plane, it would be massive. Well, yeah, I've never been on a private plane as big as these are. Yeah, I guess like 30 seaters.
Speaker 5:
[49:04] Elvis had one of those.
Speaker 1:
[49:05] It's it's massive. So I feel like that's what one of these regional jets are underneath. I just never heard of that airline.
Speaker 3:
[49:11] Yeah, I mean, obviously, when I'm playing pretend, I'm a very successful person getting on my private plane. Y'all don't ever do that.
Speaker 1:
[49:19] It's like if you play pretend and you only like mediocre success. You're like, I'm going to do my fantasy. And it's like your fantasy is only like dupes, like fake bags.
Speaker 3:
[49:29] Well, it doesn't work if you're like on an actual, what do they call the thing that can bridgeway? Like when you're on a bridgeway walking on a Southwest, that doesn't work. It's when you have to be at the tiny airports walking on the tarmac to a jet you're very scared to get on. You're just psychologically, you're like.
Speaker 5:
[49:47] I have done that. Like, you know, when you get out of those and they have the big staircase that goes up, I always feel like I'm the Beatles, you know, like a wave coming out.
Speaker 1:
[49:57] That's usually only in other countries.
Speaker 5:
[49:58] No, LA.
Speaker 6:
[49:59] No, you've been in so many.
Speaker 3:
[50:01] Other countries to walk on the tarmac? No.
Speaker 1:
[50:03] No, to do the stairs out of a plane?
Speaker 3:
[50:06] No, no, I do that.
Speaker 1:
[50:06] Big stairs? I've never done that on like a Southwest flight or anything.
Speaker 3:
[50:09] Oh, no, no, not Southwest.
Speaker 5:
[50:10] They're the little jumpers.
Speaker 1:
[50:11] Yeah.
Speaker 3:
[50:12] Like Durango, Colorado.
Speaker 1:
[50:13] Never.
Speaker 5:
[50:14] Really? It's a cool feeling. I even did the, I'm not a crook.
Speaker 1:
[50:18] You're talking about big stairs. Yeah, the big stairs. I fly private, so that's a lot, but that's small stairs. But I'm talking about when you come out of like, I've never done that. Unless it's in another country. And I have in every country I've done it, you do that. You don't even go to the airport and go through the thing like we have in America that connects.
Speaker 5:
[50:31] The jetway.
Speaker 1:
[50:32] It's all down the stairs.
Speaker 5:
[50:33] Yeah.
Speaker 1:
[50:33] Look at you guys.
Speaker 8:
[50:34] They do it in Hawaii and they put a lay on you when you get off and you get to be on the tarmac in your lay.
Speaker 5:
[50:39] Yeah.
Speaker 1:
[50:40] But I'm sure that happened to you. Me, I just connected up in Hawaii and walked right to the.
Speaker 5:
[50:44] I know, because I've seen that in movies where they get out of the plane and I didn't get laid.
Speaker 3:
[50:47] It just depends what gate you're at.
Speaker 1:
[50:50] Yeah. Or if you flew contour or not.
Speaker 3:
[50:52] Or what airline.
Speaker 1:
[50:53] Yeah.
Speaker 3:
[50:54] Did they have a budget for the lays that day?
Speaker 8:
[50:57] So I should or I shouldn't? Because that's just- I would do it.
Speaker 1:
[50:59] It looks as safe as if you're flying. Like when you fly to New York from Nashville, you fly the American Eagle, which is American Airlines, but it's a smaller plane, the regional jet. So it's that plane.
Speaker 3:
[51:10] Yeah, but it's just like, you know.
Speaker 1:
[51:11] You can't control it. That's why Southwest is the whole thing. Like it's always the same size plane. Like that's one of their selling points. You never get on one of these little planes. That's what this plane is, is one of those bigger littles.
Speaker 5:
[51:20] You ever been on a little plane? Like an Eagle?
Speaker 1:
[51:22] Oh, you for sure have.
Speaker 3:
[51:24] Coming out of Wichita.
Speaker 1:
[51:25] Wichita is probably only those.
Speaker 6:
[51:27] One seat on one side and then two on the other.
Speaker 8:
[51:28] I think, well, normally I fly Southwest out of Wichita, but-
Speaker 1:
[51:31] That's a good point. You got me there. Sorry about that.
Speaker 8:
[51:33] It's okay. But there was one when I flew from home, when I was going on my trip overseas and I did fly on a little teeny-tiny one. It was kind of scary, I won't lie.
Speaker 3:
[51:41] Yeah, if you're in another country, pray.
Speaker 8:
[51:43] Well, I was here.
Speaker 3:
[51:45] Do you think people say that about America now? Because we're in the news all the time. They're like, be careful getting on a plane over there. Because I feel like that's what we have been able to say about other places, and now people can say that about us.
Speaker 1:
[51:59] Yeah, I feel like there's a pretty wild portrait of America, outside of America, with the guns, and we're always like, this country's so unsafe, and it's like, we got more guns, we got more shootings than anybody else.
Speaker 3:
[52:08] Speaking of, did you see?
Speaker 1:
[52:09] We have no idea, we need to hold a mirror up.
Speaker 3:
[52:13] Did you see that guy in Mexico?
Speaker 1:
[52:15] I need you to elaborate.
Speaker 5:
[52:16] Was this at the pyramid?
Speaker 1:
[52:17] Yeah.
Speaker 3:
[52:18] Yeah, did we talk about it?
Speaker 1:
[52:20] I don't know where the story is.
Speaker 3:
[52:21] Okay, a guy is at a pyramid, shows up, tourists are there, and he starts shooting. One Canadian person, maybe, is the fatality, and then others, a dozen others injured. It's so terrible. You see him just come up at the pyramid, and people are just there touring the pyramid.
Speaker 1:
[52:41] In Mexico?
Speaker 4:
[52:43] Yeah, Mexico City.
Speaker 1:
[52:44] Why do you think that is? My understanding, which I'm sure is extremely shallow, is that cartel don't shoot on normal people?
Speaker 4:
[52:55] For the most part, no. Not like that.
Speaker 3:
[52:57] Maybe just a deranged person.
Speaker 5:
[52:58] Is this cartel related?
Speaker 1:
[52:59] I don't know, but I automatically go cartel when I think Mexican gun violence. What do we think it is?
Speaker 3:
[53:04] I just kept seeing gunman, gunman, and I feel like if it was cartel, they would say a cartel gunman. An armed man standing atop one of the historic TOTKN pyramids opened fire on tourists, killing one Canadian, leaving at least 13 people injured. The shooter has been identified as 27-year-old Julio Cesar Haso of Mexico.
Speaker 1:
[53:30] Is that rare for Mexico City? Because honestly, that's not that rare here. There was another one where a dude killed eight kids this weekend in Louisiana, and it was just a blip of a story because it happens in America so much.
Speaker 5:
[53:39] I know.
Speaker 3:
[53:40] But, and it was like at 6 a.m., right?
Speaker 5:
[53:44] I don't know the time of it.
Speaker 3:
[53:46] The Louisiana one.
Speaker 5:
[53:48] I think it was like a span of time because it was in different locations.
Speaker 1:
[53:51] Yeah.
Speaker 3:
[53:51] Oh, that's so sad. I know you're right, Bobby. It's like I see it. It's like, oh, another headline.
Speaker 1:
[53:57] Every day. And we bring up the stats like every day, there's some sort of mass shooting in America. But it's like, and we're like, man, other countries are so unsafe. It's like, bro, we had one here right down the road at a school, killed multiple people, kids. Yes.
Speaker 5:
[54:11] Covenant. Shooting aside, though, that pyramid location is legit.
Speaker 1:
[54:15] Have you been?
Speaker 5:
[54:16] I've been to that. It's so amazing.
Speaker 1:
[54:17] You've been to Mexico City?
Speaker 5:
[54:19] No, many times when I was younger. We had friends that lived in Mexico City. So we would go.
Speaker 1:
[54:24] What's the skyline look like there?
Speaker 5:
[54:26] Well, so, fun fact, Mexico City is built in an old lake. So it's kind of like low, and it's surrounded by a bunch of mountains. And there's a volcano that's, I don't think, active, or maybe, I don't know. But you can see that kind of from a distance. But Mexico City is crazy, man, because it's so big. It's so, so, so big that, like, I don't know. My memories of Mexico City is just like, this is the biggest city I've ever been to in my life.
Speaker 4:
[54:53] Mike? Yeah, I remember being crazy. I went when I was probably like five or six years old. I just remember there being so many people and we had our car broken into. We walked into a store for like maybe five minutes, came back and all our mirrors were taken off.
Speaker 1:
[55:07] Nothing from inside the car?
Speaker 4:
[55:08] They just wanted us to sell the parts.
Speaker 5:
[55:11] I remember us being at a, well, I remember a couple of things. I remember the traffic lights don't mean anything. Like people see a red light and all they do is just slow down, look and go, like they don't stop at all at red lights. Then I remember being in traffic and this guy coming up with a bucket and a squeegee to clean the window and the guy that we were with said, no, no, no, I don't want that. The guy said, okay, just spit on the window then. I was like, wow, it's crazy. This place is nuts. But this pyramid place, there's a whole stadium there. I mean, how long ago were these? I think they're the Aztecs. I mean, there was a whole stadium there where they played soccer with skulls. Just the sacrifices on top of the pyramids, just crazy stuff that you think like, wow, that'll actually happen right here.
Speaker 4:
[55:55] I also remember my dad getting pulled over by police and he just had to pay him. Like, let him go.
Speaker 1:
[56:02] That's crazy, but it's no more corrupt than what our government officials are doing now. Just different. All right, that's it. Thank you guys. We will see you tomorrow. Hope you guys have a great rest of your Tuesday. I have a Bobby cast up with Melissa Peterman. So you can hear that. I know we did it in part one a little bit, but that is up. You can go to Netflix and watch it or listen to the full podcast over on the Bobby cast feed. All right, that's it. We will see you guys. Bye everybody.