The Bobby Bones Show

TUES PT 1: Amy On Her Ex-Husband's Girlfriend Arrangement + Tipping On A Wedding Dress + Amy Busted Lunchbox In Public + Finish The TV Quote Game

46 min
Feb 10, 20264 months ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

The Bobby Bones Show covers a mix of lifestyle topics including meat shoplifting trends, sleep and weight loss science, a lottery winner's surprise, a funeral home scandal, co-parenting etiquette, wedding dress tipping protocol, and a TV quote game with country music guest Cody Johnson discussing his career milestones.

Insights
  • Meat is the most shoplifted item in grocery stores, followed by deodorant and baby formula, indicating economic pressure on households for essential items
  • One additional hour of sleep daily can result in up to 10 pounds of annual weight loss through improved hormonal regulation and reduced ad-driven eating
  • Co-parenting communication works best when framed as collaborative problem-solving rather than demands, with 'thoughtful and kind' as an effective guiding principle
  • Service industry tipping expectations are unclear to consumers when not explicitly communicated, creating friction and potential resentment
  • Country music success requires sustained faith through lean years, with breakthrough moments often coming unexpectedly after years of financial struggle
Trends
Retail shrinkage driven by essential item theft signals economic hardship among consumersSleep optimization becoming mainstream wellness strategy with quantifiable health outcomesBlended family dynamics requiring explicit communication protocols and mutual respect frameworksAmbiguity in service tipping expectations creating consumer frustration across retail sectorsCountry music industry consolidation around streaming metrics and touring revenueDocumentary content driving emotional engagement and viewership despite negative psychological impactOrgan donation hesitation rooted in family protection concerns rather than altruism barriersSocial media accountability tactics (public shaming) ineffective for service recovery
Topics
Retail Shrinkage and Meat ShopliftingSleep Science and Weight ManagementCo-Parenting Communication StrategiesService Industry Tipping EtiquetteWedding Industry Consumer ExperienceCountry Music Career DevelopmentFuneral Home Fraud and Regulatory OversightOrgan Donation and Family Voucher ProgramsDocumentary Content and Mental Health ImpactStreaming Service Content DiscoveryInternet Outage Recovery and Insurance ClaimsVehicle Insurance DepreciationGrocery Store Line EtiquetteTV Quote Recognition GameHappiness Scrolling vs. Doom Scrolling
Companies
iHeartMedia
Podcast network distributing The Bobby Bones Show as part of its portfolio
Netflix
Streaming platform hosting multiple documentaries and shows discussed including 11.22.63, You, and Elizabeth Smart do...
Food Marketing Institute
Source of retail theft statistics showing meat as most shoplifted grocery item
University of Michigan
Research institution cited for sleep and eating behavior study findings
Illinois Lottery
Lottery system where two coworkers won $350,000 after initial misunderstanding of ticket value
Uber Eats
Food delivery service discussed regarding driver performance and tipping practices
DoorDash
Food delivery service discussed regarding driver performance and tipping practices
Signature Cruise Experiences
Producer of Top Shelf Country Cruise 2027 featuring Riley Green as headliner
People
Cody Johnson
Country music artist guest discussing his top 5 career-defining songs and path to success
Carrie Underwood
Country music artist who collaborated with Cody Johnson on 'I'm Gonna Love You' after song was pitched twice
Riley Green
Country music artist announced as headliner for Top Shelf Country Cruise 2027
Keith Urban
Country music artist headlining Top Shelf Country Cruise 2026
Travis Denning
Country artist who initially had 'I'm Gonna Love You' pitched to him before Cody Johnson recorded it
Stephen King
Author of novel adapted into Netflix series 11.22.63 about time travel and JFK assassination
Elizabeth Smart
Subject of Netflix documentary about her kidnapping case and recovery
Ghislaine Maxwell
Subject of Netflix documentary 'Filthy Rich' about her role in Epstein trafficking network
Quotes
"That's bigger than money. That's bigger than fame. That's bigger than points on a board. Like that's bigger than accolades. Like to know that I went in the studio and created a track that kept somebody from divorcing or committing suicide or going back and getting in touch with their family or apologizing to somebody like that's, that means a lot."
Cody Johnson
"I'm aware of everything that's wrong with me, but still you accept me anyway. And it's like, well, we forget that so much that we all kind of get in this rut of like, we're not good enough for God because last mo, cry drink, or a cuss."
Cody Johnson
"Thoughtful and kind. That was through my entire divorce, our mantra, my ex-husband and I, the thoughtful and kind, thoughtful and kind."
Amy
"You snooze, you lose. You got out of line. You lost your spot."
Lunchbox
"If you get more than an hour of extra sleep, they see you can lose up to 10 pounds a year."
Bobby Bones
Full Transcript
This is an I Heart Podcast. Guaranteed Human. Come on, buddy. Transnitting. I'm the Mayor of the... Turn it up, Lou. I need a shears about me, oh, show. Let's go! Welcome to Tuesday's show. Morning, studio. Morning! If I say meat lifting, what comes to mind? I'll get some meat and lift in it. Like working out. Like a big T-bone. Yeah. I watched these videos speaking to the lifting from his guy named Anatoly. Did these ever come across yours where he's like a... He's maintenance man or he's the custodian. And he's walking around gyms. These guys are powerlifting, like crazy. And he's like, oh, I need to wash under this. And they're like more in the middle of it. He goes, I'll just move it. And they're like, you can't lift weight this heavy. And it's massive and he just picks it up. And they're like, what the heck? Because he's a lot smaller than they are. He's a professional bodybuilder. He stresses up. You ever see that? No. Man, you'd love it. Never. Anyway, meat lifting, it's become an issue because it is the most stolen thing. Oh, that makes more sense now. Shoplifting meat. Yeah. Experts say that millions of dollars every year from supermarkets or loss because of beef pork chicken lobster that people go in and shoplift. Meat is the most shoplifted item in grocery stores. Second is... Don't say vegetables. It's not food. It's not food. Oh, it's not food. Um, deodorant. Kind of detergent. Oh, deodorant, okay. And number three makes me sad, baby food. Oh, yeah. I know. Expensive. That's from food marketing institute. Now, they say if you get about an hour of sleep more than you're getting now, you can lose a couple pounds from just getting more sleep because your body is actually in a better rhythm. More sleep. Put your body in a better rhythm. Your hormones are more. And so therefore, you're burning calories, easier, researchers found that when we're bombarded with ads for, you know, everything food, la la la la. We eat a lot. We also stay up later. And that's helping us keep on the weight. So don't stay on your phone. You won't see the ads. Phone bad, ads bad. Sleep good. Sleep good. Yes. If you get more than an hour of extra sleep, they see you can lose up to 10 pounds a year. Wow. That's okay. It's like, I do scroll every night. I don't call it doom scrolling though. Okay, Bobby, I call it happiness scrolling. Here's my thing with you. And you say that though, that Bobby, we, why do you keep saying my name? Because you already struggle with sleep. And you are smart. It's the only thing that gets me to sleep. Stop. I call it, I don't call it doom scrolling. I call it happiness scrolling. Okay, but still we know that that light in your eyes is messing with your, I turn off the blue light or whatever it is. I put, I have that. I do scroll though. Yeah. No, happy scroll. Yeah. Yeah, happy scroll. That's from the University of Michigan at, at, at, at, at, in Arbor. These two coworkers, they played the lottery and they went $350, which is pretty cool. And so their names are Randy and April and they're like, wow, they play the Illinois lottery. And they hit for 350 and they went to the store and they're like, wow, look at us. And then actually they took it in and was throwing it $50,000. Whoa. Not bad. Not bad, a little misunderstanding. Randy initially believed the ticket was worth $350. However, April rechecked it and discovered in the Illinois lottery app. They had one $350,000. That's crazy. $350 would be fun. Sure. Like dollars, that'd be fine. That's fine. But $350,000 NBC Chicago with that. And then there's a Colorado guy who got 40 years in prison. He's a funeral homeowner. He was sentenced to all those years for stashing 189 decomposing bodies and giving the family's fake ashes. So they call him a monster. They ordered the judge to give him the maximum sentence. He apologized. So they're not saying exactly what he did with the bodies. Wait, where's this guy at? Colorado. Okay. Why? I listen to some podcasts of a guy. I believe maybe he was in Georgia, but this was similar. They were a crematorium. But when authorities got involved in search the land, they found bodies buried everywhere. So buried is weird because I would think if I were trying to make extra money. Like holes and like multiple people in a hole and then covered up. Whenever I first read the story, I think is he hooking up with the bodies, but then I don't think that's the case. I think what these people do to make money is they give ashes. Because how are we supposed to know? Ashes are ashes. We don't know if it's really our loved ones. And I think they sell the body parts. Oh, like on the dark web. Mm-hm. Because you can make real money off that. What are you seeing over there? Oh, well, I just looked at the name of the podcast is noble. And yeah, it sucked me in because I was like, what in the world is happening? I mean, 300 bodies were found. And more than this guy. And more than this guy. And more than this guy. And you know, families had thought that their loved ones were taking care of with respect and dignity. And no, they were just. But what were they doing with bodies over there? Just dump them in the woods. Like I don't let's take them to the lakes. You don't get caught in your property. The dump and the. I mean, it was a large property, 16 acres. And why was he burying them in his own way? Because like they, I don't remember exactly. I listen to this a long time ago, but I just know that they were not like they, they were well respected family in town. Like when people found out about it, they were shook. And I think it just maybe got in my mind. I was like, do they just get overwhelmed? And then they didn't know what to do or maybe they couldn't keep up with it. Or they didn't want to take the time to burn it. Or did their little fire thing like go out about a business and. And before the new one. Yes. And then there's lots of things. But there's also the episode of I love Lucy where she's working on the candy machine. And it's all coming through on the wheel. And she can't do anymore to start eating it. Yeah. Like it just overwhelmed her that could have been like this. I mean, I did think when we created my dad, we got the ashes. And I did think like, wow, it's not very many. Do same. Like that's I thought it'd be more. Same. Because we got my mom and ashes saying it's like in a little bag. Yeah, it's not a lot for a whole body. And I was like, huh? It's different too. If you find out that the funeral home we were using. If they're selling the body versus hooking up with the bodies, right? Yes. That's different. That's a different kind of yeah. Like they're keeping the ball. If they're selling them, you're like, okay, you go to jail for five years. Like not nice. If they're hooking up with it, like you got to go away forever. That's life. We know. There you go. All right. All right. It's me. I'm a symbol. I'm a symbol. I'm a symbol. Yeah. There's a question to be had. Till it ends to the well. Yeah. Yeah. Hello, Bobby Bones. I am recently divorced. And my ex-husband is seeing someone I had asked when I asked for divorce that if he ever wanted to introduce our two toddlers to someone he was seeing, I would like to know about it first. From what I have seen, he hasn't introduced him yet, but I feel like he wants to. Is it wrong for me to want to know if he introduces our children to her? What do you think? Signed divorced and Dallas. You want to go? Sure. I don't think it's weird for you to want to know. And I think that that's okay to request to know and have a conversation about it. But? There's no but. I think that's totally okay to request that. And hopefully he would be the type to honor that. I mean, with my ex, we have that agreement when kids have met somebody that we've dated, there has been a conversation to the other about it. I'm thinking about introducing the kids to Dada. And with both of us, it's been some time. Obviously, the person has been an important staple in our life, for not just flippantly introducing. Not first date, right? Not first date and chose. But I mean, my ex has had two girlfriends and both. I knew when they were meeting. I guess my butt was is that he doesn't have to. He does not have to. You're correct. If it's an agreement and you both live by it, unless it's in the court order from the divorce, he doesn't have to. But you can't ask for sure you should ask. But you can't. If you get angry about it that he doesn't, it's not going to help the relationship. No, not at all. Yeah, I can't imagine being in that type of a situation. Although I will say the first relationship that my ex has been was in. It was our first time navigating it and I wasn't in one yet. So there was a lot we had to learn. And so then the second time it came around, which was with me. And then later with his second girlfriend, we already had been through it. So we kind of knew how to handle it. But that first time, it's difficult. I would also say it's nice or toddlers because they're not going to remember anything anyway. Yeah, they're going to remember less than the teenage kids. Although my son just last night was like, why did you all break up? And I'm like, who break up? You and dad. And I'm like, we have talked about this. You know, we've talked about it. And then he was like, what would you do if he asked you out? And I was like, what? Okay. Well, I have a boyfriend and he has a girlfriend. So that's probably not going to happen. He's like, well, let's just say. I'm like, oh gosh. Thank you. Oh yeah. And I tried to put myself in his shoes like when I was a kid and my parents got divorced, I just wanted nothing that them to get back together. That was my prayer. Like, I don't care what happens even though my dad was fully living with somebody else. My mom had never even dated. She would have taken him back. But I just wanted that so badly. And so I understand where he's coming from. So I tried to just tiptoe around it, but be straightforward. I'll have no, like I don't want to give him false hope. You did say no. Yeah. In a tiptoe way. I think to the emailer, I think it's fair to say, hey, can we agree on this? Because he's going to want the same from you. But if he says no, again, unless it's in a corridor. Yeah. I don't know how you'll communicate, but just I wouldn't have a demanding tone. I would have a, hey, you know, this is something new. We're navigating. If I start dating one day, like, let's talk through this. Like, how do we want to handle this? Something that would help me feel really good is if we, if I had a heads up on things and I can give you that same respect. Yeah. That's good. You know, less demandy, more just hum kind. Real world advice. That was through my entire divorce, our mantra, my ex-husband and I, the thoughtful and kind, thoughtful and kind. And so we had to, when you got into a fight, you just cute up to the ground. And listen to this song. Well, that's humble and kind. Oh, yeah. Good point. We're there. I was tipping questions. So we went to go and look for my wedding dress and she asked me what our budget was. I told her we want to cap it at $2,000. And when we went to pay for it, they asked for a tip, picked her $20 and we went on our way. Well, we went to pick up the dress eight weeks later and she knew who we were, but she treated us so bad. She ignored us. She was very short with us. She was rude. She set the dress on the counter and then never came back and just expected for us to know that we could just take it like, I would let's know your box. Well, whenever you provide someone a dress and a dress store and you're going through sizes and different types of dresses, I think there's a service element there. Now, I'm not sure the protocol on tipping also was it just on the screen. Like there are a lot of questions I have about the tipping part of it. However, I would think if someone was that rude, I wouldn't go back there. I think that's how you punish bad service is not going back to the same place. So I don't know the tip protocol and you can go who tips at a store. I don't know if she makes a commission or if she only works on tips and gets a good hourly wage. I don't know. I think that needs to be communicated by the store though. Otherwise, how are we supposed to know the protocol of tipping at a place that we don't normally go because you don't go there 10 times a year? You're going to shop for a wedding dress more than once or twice. If you enjoyed your dress and you enjoyed the process, maybe I'd go back one more time. But if it was that again, she's going to go back, it's for wedding dress. I don't know, but it's like a daughter homecoming or something like that. Oh, it's like a New Year's party. I don't know. Okay, okay. Well, yeah, I get it. I get what you're saying now. Maybe very unhappy that that happened though, but also you don't know what's happening in that girl's life. That is how I try to think about it whenever someone gives me bad service. It's quick for me to go, well, that sucks. I think I'm going to punish them by giving them less money. But also there's a thing too where if you tip somebody and they also are keeping your stuff, it's why you don't tip at the beginning of a meal. If a waiter comes and you let's say you tip at the end of the meal and you tip ad, you think they're going to give you the best service? No, of course not. If it's like, hey, leave a tip and then you'll get your dress in three months, I'm probably going to tip pretty good because they have access to my dress. But I can understand why you'd be frustrated at the service. So there's that I'm having an issue now where I cannot bring myself to give these delivery drivers bad reviews when they suck. Why is that? Because I feel bad for the same reason. They brought food and they left it at the end of my driveway by my mailbox on the day. Like they could be having a bad day. Yeah. Or they're slammed and they're like, oh my God, I got to get this with it. I don't know. There were like three instances. They forget my drinks. Oh, I don't forget my drinks. I'm like, how do you forget my drinks? I just can't, I still give them five stars. I still tip them like the 25% whatever the biggest option is on the app. Even though they suck. If I really want them to leave it at my mailbox. I don't care about that. We open the gate, they drive and drop it off the door. You open it. Yeah. Okay. Come on. No. No. Okay. Okay. That's why I wanted you to clarify. Everybody that works for Uber Eats or dork dacia you get a pretty key to my house. I would just encourage you to have a little grace on this person. Because she just could have been having a bad day. What if her grandpa died. That's always what I think. So that's all she handles. A ramble dide. Are you going to tip me. Well, she only said that. You mean when they want to pick up the address. Yes. That's true. Sometimes we can assign the narrative, but we know we tip 20 bucks. And so we might think that wasn't enough. And so we assign a narrative of like, oh, she's mad about that. But Bobby, you're totally right. On pickup day, she could have been having a terrible day. A lot of grandpa's dying my head, the people who give me a crappy service. That's just what I assigned to it. Now, if you do it twice, it's going to be bad. Give me the next voicemail, please. I am currently making peanut butter oatmeal cookies for my grand. I'm just wondering, do you leave the peanut butter in your refrigerator with a cupboard? I leave mine in the cupboard. Have a great day. Bye. I'm going to punt on this over to Amy because I hate peanut butter. My wife does, we have peanut butter at the house, and it's always though not in the fridge. Yeah, I do both kind of, I just like wherever it ends up. Sometimes if I've bought the super natural organic, maybe there's no sugar added and stuff, I put that in the fridge. If it's the yummy kind, pantry. I eat a lot of mustard and a middle amount of ketchup and that stays in the fridge. Right. After it's opened, it stays in the fridge. Before it's opened, it stays in the shelf. Yeah. Then once it's opened, it stays in the fridge. Is that normal? Mm-hmm. Carry. Boom. Now, I'll do it. Hey, big announcement. Drum roll, please. Close enough. Okay. We are coming back with another cruise in 2027. So the cruise was so successful this year that we haven't had yet, but just selling it because we don't go for a couple weeks. But the Top Shelf Country Cruise 2027 is going to happen with Riley Green. So Riley is going to be the headliner. The next year, this year, it's going to be Keith Urban. But Riley Green next year. So it's going to be awesome. We're cruising again in the Bobby Bone Show hosting another Top Shelf Country Cruise in 2027, produced by signature cruise experiences. So a lot of great shows, country music everywhere you turn. This one will sell fast and you can register now for pre-sell access. Just head to TopShelfCountryCruise.com. We don't go on ours until two, two and a half weeks or so. Right? Yeah. So we haven't been on it yet, but we're already announcing we're doing one the next year because this one sold so well. So Riley Green will be the headliner. I'm sure there'll be a lot of other acts to announce soon. Come on up. Right? There we go. On the Bobby Bone Show now. Cody Johnson. From one to five, give me your best five songs according to you. That's very hard. I think the one song that has impacted my career the most would be till you can't. Not just because it's, I think it's like six or seven times platinum at this point. Not because it's my highest streaming dollars and all that, but because of the people that have come to me at Meet and Greet and told me their stories about how the song changed their lives in very, very impactful ways. I think that's bigger than money. That's bigger than fame. That's bigger than points on a board. Like that's bigger than accolades. Like to know that I went in the studio and created a track that kept somebody from divorcing or committing suicide or going back and getting in touch with their family or apologizing to somebody like that's, that means a lot because I think at the basis of it, yes, we like to make a comfortable living for our family, but no one that you impact somebody like that, that means a lot. So that being said, I would probably choose Dear Rodeo for the second one because it was the most personal thing that I'd ever written. Wrote that with Dan Couch and it was literally my letter to the sport of rodeo because I was so depressed because I thought, I don't even know if I'm going to make it in the music business. Like let alone go back and chase those dreams that I had when I was a kid. So that's probably the most like vulnerable thing I'd ever put on paper to that point. Three would probably be dirt cheap just because of how impressive it is that Josh Phillips wrote that song by himself. And it's related to so many people and it had a friend of mine that he works all across the world. And he was in Uganda pushing a grocery cart and he texted me and I don't remember what time of the night it was for me in Texas, but dirt cheap is on the radio and Uganda. I'm like, how cool is that man? Like number four and number five, I could easily go with, you know, number one hits. I'm not going to let you out of it though. You got to give me a four and a five. Number four for me would probably be by your grace. Very vulnerable me on paper wrote that 100% myself and it's like openly like the first lines are like, I'm aware of everything that's wrong with me, but still you accept me anyway. And it's like, well, we forget that so much that we all kind of get in this rut of like, we're not good enough for God because last mo, cry drink, or a cuss, or I do like, dude, breed the Bible about the people he hung out with. They were all like murderers and thieves and he turned them into apostles. Like, there's hope for us. You know, it's like, we forget that. And it's all because of the grace. Like, you can't give someone grace unless they're screwing up, right? So it's like God's grace. It's not his love. It's his grace for forgiving us. And for me, when I wrote that song, it was more for me. Like, I was writing it for me to remind myself of like, hey, just day by day, man, just keep it up. Like, just try to be better today than where yesterday. They really gave me an in perspective on life. Number five, I really don't know. I could pick something all this new project I'm doing, but I couldn't tell you. Cop out. Cop out. We don't know. We don't know yet. Won't you pick my number five? I mean, that you and Carrie, like, that's cool. I will. Yes. Okay. I will say I'm going to love you. Maybe would be number four instead of number five. It's just in that spot of like, I always wanted to sing with Carrie Underwood. I mean, like, who wouldn't? But the way that song came about would be the better story of I had it. And then they said, no, Travis Denning is going to use it on his record. So it goes back to Travis. It didn't wind up on his record. And so they pitched it to Carrie. Carrie loved it, but said, and I didn't know this. Carrie said, I love it, but it doesn't fit my project. So it goes back into the abyss until I said, I want that song, but I want Carrie on it. And I had no idea that she'd already had it. And so that's why she said, yes, she's like, this is the second time this song's coming into my life. So I mean, that's kind of a meant to be scenario, you know, and she was so gracious to like, even down to like, volunteering that you want me to do some video for your video wall for when you play this live and we're like, yeah, oh, that's what you do. You play her on the video wall. It's the only track we run. I mean, it's because obviously Carrie's not there. I mean, she was so awesome to work with like, really down to earth. Like, I think people have their vision of rock stars being this big ego, but like, there's just, there's no ego. She's just a freaking workhorse, man. When were you able to pay your bills by doing music? My wife, Brandy, she was my fiance at the time. She was going to school doing online classes in some classes at a junior college and she quit going to school and took two really crappy jobs while I went out and played bars and stayed gone for a month. And I have no clue how she stayed married to me, but she did. And eventually it was the, it was the first year we were going to headline what we call the big tent in Steamboat Springs, Colorado at Music Fest. And I told her before I left, I said, I want you to quit your job. And she's like, are you serious? And I said, yeah, I want you to go with me to Steamboat, quit your job. Like, I'm making enough now to where we can afford to pay our bills. But that's all we were making. It was just enough to pay our bills. So it was kind of another leap of faith. And, you know, really, it wasn't until about 2014, 2015, to where like, okay, we're getting pretty stable. You know, we're growing our band, we're growing our crew. And in 2017, when I played Houston rodeo for the first time, that's when the gasoline kind of got thrown on the fire. That had to be awesome. Oh, yeah. Tell me about the first time you had line and you played the Houston rodeo. It was the day after, or it was two days after like the worst day of my life. My brother was in a very precarious situation. You know, I'm so I'm in my truck and I'm just in tears driving home and how he, that'll win my manager calls and says, Hey, we just got the call to replace old dominion because they had to bow out for, I think the family member who got sick or passed away or something. And I wanted to know if here's what they offered us to headlight in Houston. And I'm, again, I'm in my heart's broken for the situation I have going on with my family. And I'm crying. And I'm like, Dad, it sounds good. And he's like, I'm going to counteroffer him. And I remember having the phone and I went, why would you counteroffer? He's like, because I think you're worth more. And they took the counter offer. And I said, how many days do we have to get ready? He said two days. And we sold 68,000 tickets in two days. Wow. And I think that was the moment where I went to bring it on. Let's go. All right, what's the game? Ray Mundo. So I'm going to play you a famous TV quote. All you have to do is finish the quote with the missing word. Okay, go. Clear eyes. Full hearts. We know that. Yeah, that's a whole heart. All right, how many got here? We have seven. All right, boys, you ready? Come on. Yep. All right, here we go. You got it. In a liminator style. I'm in the wind. I mean, in. Oh my. I mean, obviously dude. You know, they just brought you five. Take your water bottle, boys. Yeah. Anyway, I'm dude. Yeah. All right. There you go. One. You've got it, dude. I like to sound effect on this one. That's cool. A little question. Yeah. Yeah. Go ahead. We were on a one more time. We were on a I'm in. I'm in for the wind. I'm break. Break. Break. Break. All right. Good. All right. Next. Make your job. I'm in. I'm in. I'm in for the wind. Make your job. I'm in. What you talking about? Will this? Will this. Make your job. Okay, good. Next. So what? I'm in. I'm in. I'm in. What? I can't even understand what he's saying. Get it slow down. We understood it. Yeah. I mean, you want right to slow it down. You want them to go on to the trial. What are the words being said? I guess this is what I need help with. Well, if you can't understand, we're not going to get it. Yeah. What do you think it's saying? Hook them. Hook them. Like, I think it's orange. It's not orange because that would be a TV show. That would be a, like, uh, there's a weird playing like college football, sayings or you know, you guys know it. Yes. It's very common. 100% more time for Amy. Is he saying, book them? I come. Hook them. Hook them. Book them. It sounds old. Book them. Charlie. Book them. Kid. Book them. Just saying old names. Book them. I need an answer. Hold on. Book. Hold on. We'll do it all. Okay. I'm starting the game yesterday. Book them. Book them. Book them. Hook them. Schmuckum. Answer. Book them. Schmuckum. Book them. Charlie. No. Lunch box. Dano. Book them. Dano. Book them. Dano. No. Book them. Dano. Hawaii 50. Never actually seen it. I just know. Amy's eliminated. Nice. Next. I'm not superstitious, but I'm I'm a little I'm in. I'm in. I'm not superstitious, but I'm I'm a little He saw it down. Not superstitious. I'm not superstitious, but I'm I'm a little Charlie kit. I don't know. Lunch box. Super stitious. Eddie. Stitious. I have stitious as well. I'm not superstitious, but I'm I am a little stitious. Eddie and I remain. You get the Joe Glend Vox? Mm-hmm. I give it. All right. Did you like my office AI? They did it everybody in the show. Yes. So funny. Well, it was a little rude. How'd you kick the characters? You just let it naturally happen. No, I put in who got what? Put me as white. Yeah. How funny is that, though? Yeah, it was a lot of guys. It was funny. It's on my Instagram if you guys haven't seen it. But I was like, in lunch box, got to be Pam. Like, I would be Pam. All right. Next up. I am the one who. What? Oh, no, you're right. It's down. You're about to ask us to slow it down. I thought about it. I am the one who. I am the one who. Oh, man, this is how I'm going to go out. I am the one who. I have it. You know, for sure. Yeah. I don't even know what show that's. Oh, you don't. I think if you knew the show, you'd get it. Like, I don't even know what the actor is. I am the one who. Okay. It sounds like he's about to say, something with an M. So. I am the one that. Hmm. So he either murdered you. Oh, didn't answer. I'm going to go with I am the one that made you. No, I am. It's breaking bad. It's Walter White. Oh, I am the one that knocks. That knocks. Knocks on what? He played. I am the one who knocks. Although I think at this point, he's not Walter White. He's Heisenberg. I think. Right, Mike? Yeah, that's how. It sounds to me. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Uh, okay. I win, but I like to finish up. Number seven, go ahead. I got it. Do you get it though? The one to his. I know it. Do you know that one? No. It's winter's coming. Yeah, winter is coming. No, watch that. Did you have any tiebreakers? Got three. Okay, go. Live long and I don't know. Do you know that one? Live long and prosper. Live long and prosper. Yeah, that works. Oh, it's just prosper. Yeah, what do you think about the prosperous? What show is that? Start to trick. Okay, yeah, I got to live long and prosper. Okay, next. Is that your final? Answer. The one to be a millionaire. Is that your final answer? Yes. And one more. I put it in the pool. Yeah. I put in the pool. That's fun, huh? I like that one. Uh, okay, there you go. I win. Oh, and you turn already on. And the doubts keeps on turning. It keeps on turning. And then you hear any MLR sparks. More games too. School to Steve Red. Have it. Try to put you through. Like these right in this week's next bid. And Bobby's on the box. So you know what this is. This is the Bobby Vaughn show. Now time for the morning corny. The morning corny. Why do melons get married in church? Why? Because they can't alope. There you go. That was the morning corny. Tuesday, reviews day. I did watch 11, 22, 63 on Netflix, which is about a guy who tries to go back in time and stop the John F Kennedy assassination. I forgot. I'd already seen the first couple of episodes. This from 10 years ago. That's a well back. Yeah, James Frank goes in it. So I had seen that I started watching it. And I'm going, man, all this feels familiar. Was I once back in time? I was having those weird moments. It's pretty good. It's Stephen King. Something he wrote a long time ago. I give it three and a half out of five. I really wanted it to be better because I love time travel. But I think I wrestled the first two episodes with have I already seen this and then I realized way back in the day. It was on some other platform. I watched it. But yeah, I give it three and a half out of five. Suits from the 1960s. That's the resurgence, right? Because Netflix picked it up. Yeah. Okay. That was new. I thought it was a new show. But yeah, it's pretty good. You, which I watched on Netflix, the Galeen Maxwell filthy rich documentary from 2022, which when I started watching it, I was like, oh, I definitely watched this probably when it came out three years ago. However, I was paying way more attention this time. And it's crazy to me. So any of that stuff, like, and I think the Epstein one filthy rich came out maybe a couple years before that. So I haven't gone back to rewatch that. But I might now just because I caught on to so many other things that are extremely disturbing. So I give it four out of five, former socialites turned convicted felons. And it's a, I mean, it's really interesting with the four is just that it's like, it's hard to watch some of the stuff. And you find it unbelievable. So that's why I take off a little bit because of how you feel when you're watching. I know. Yeah, it's like, Tuesday, reviews day. Eddie, do you watch anything? Yes. I watched the Elizabeth Smart documentary. Guys, why did you recommend this documentary? It's really good. It's good. But man, I was in a terrible mood for the next two days. Like so sad. Yeah, it's well done. Like it's well done. If you want to learn about this whole thing, it's a really good documentary for that. But it ruined my weekend. So I'm going to give it three just because it ruined my weekend. But it's really good. Well, she lives though. So many of these people live. I don't live. They don't live. They die. No, no, no, I know. And she's here to tell her story. And it's the stories and like it's sad, all that. And then you think about the parents, like how do they even like live normal? How does she live normal after that? Because she got to live though. I know. I don't think you're affected for two days. I think you're being a little hot. No, I was, dude. I don't think so. Uh, Latchbox? Uh, no, no cable or internet. So I didn't get any of the DVDs out. I got nothing. You still have nothing? Nothing. I even went to public shaming on Instagram. Didn't work. Uh, you know, and people are tagging companies. They're on their, they're, they're last. Oh, man, I'm on my last one. I was like, man, I saw a Taylor LeWon who did it on Twitter. And they responded like, well, expedite your request. I was like, okay, let me go to Instagram. I'll do this. Yeah, he's famous. And nothing. No reply. Oh, no heart. No, no, they reply like, oh, yeah, they're working on it. So for those who don't know, we lost power for many days because of a massive I storm. And so now, pretty much everyone, if not everyone has their power back, but Latchbox still doesn't have internet or cable. Internet or cable? And here's the problem. I use my hotspot to do like work on the computer. And it told me I'm out of hotspot memory for the month. No, you're done. The month's pretty new still. No, it resets on the 18th is what it told me. So I'm a trouble guy. It sounds like you're going to have to work here. And then I know, but how annoying change your phone plan to choose your cells, what I do. You don't need a hotspot like a device. You can just use your cell phone. I think he's using the hotspot on his phone. No, no, no, no, he's using the hotspot to connect to his computer or something. Yeah, that's what you do. No, you can do things on your phone. But you can also connect to your phone. I just don't, I don't have a, I've unleaded that. Okay, I'm going to say something that this is going to clarify what's going on here. You want him to work on his cell phone. Like we have a Google doc that we all go into. Oh, there's no one. Do you all think he has Google Doc app on his phone? No chance. He doesn't even watch shows on his phone. Right. So like you want him to go into, yeah, he, there's no way he wouldn't be able to turn it in. However, I bet you do have email on your phone. You can just email it to Mike. I do do that sometimes. Movie Mike, anything? Yeah, I watch the movie. In theaters called Send Help. It's about this woman who hates her boss. They go on a work trip together. Playing goes down and they have the survival and island together. I saw the preview. I couldn't tell if it was awful or awesome. Yeah, Rachel McAdams is in it. She's really good. If you like horror comedies, I think you'd like it. I give it four out of five islands. Wow, really? Yeah. Horror. Horror. Huh? It's a, it's a scary, like horror film. Why do you keep saying that word like horror? Because I didn't, I thought it was more of just like a cute. Rachel McAdams like romcom were on an island. We're just hearing you say horror. Not like horror. That's how I say horror. I just call it a scary movie. Horror movie. Horror movie. Uh, four to five, huh? Yeah, it's bloody and funny. Oh, I thought you were calling Rachel McAdams, not that I was like, you know what? No. There we go. Tuesday Reviews Day. Bobbitt Mone Show. Bound Head. Dory of the Day. This story comes with us from Brevard County, Florida. A 60 year old man and his wife went out to the bar, had a few drinks. He's driving home, clips of sign, car starts smoking. He's like, man, if I pull over now, they're going to know I've been drinking, got to make it home. So he keeps driving. Then the car's on fire. He's committed though. He's got to keep going. He's like, if I pull over now, they're going to know I'm drinking cops respond and they're trying to pull him over the car's on fire. He's driving down the highway. Finally, and in Goulson Flames, he has to pull over and pull his wife from the vehicle. Oh, she was in it too. Yeah. Huh. Yeah, that would have factored in a lot earlier for me. I understood his logic, but that would have factored in that his wife was in the car. Okay. I'm Lunchbox. That's your Bound Head story of the day. All right, voicemail. Question about Lunchbox is accident. If it's his wife's car and they split finances, but Lunchbox crashed the car, I'm wondering how that all worked. So I think I can get an explanation. That'd be great. Thank you. Well, it's nothing. There's no bill on my part. I was, I didn't wreck the car. Someone wrecked into me, which wrecked the car. So it's all coming from them. Their insurance is going to pay all the bills. They're going to reimburse us money. So there's nothing to worry about. There's not worried about who has to pay for the damages. It's all that person's fault. So there will be no money coming out of my pocket. There's no deductible or anything. No, you get all that back. Okay. But can I meet you with, well, you have to buy a new car. So it's going to take money to buy the new car. Yes, but we're going to get money to buy a new car from that insurance. But will it cover the entire new car? Like it's going to total the car, but then there's been some depreciation on the car. So you're probably not going to get enough to buy a full new car. Yeah, I never even thought about that. Yeah, complicated. Something. I literally just thought, oh, they're giving us money. So there's no bill. What sounds like it's on you, though? Well, there can be no bill if you want to buy an older car. Oh, yeah, then that's what we'll do. We'll buy an older car. That's a good idea. We'll buy an older car. Who pays for insurance on that car? Well, we split insurance. Well, we split insurance because usually I used to have a car. So it's like, I paid for my car, but with that one, I just pay 50-50. There's too many things to track here with their finances. Honestly, it seems. It's really easy. I'm sure for some couples, it works out really well for forever. Whenever you do, when he talks about it, I get so confused. What do you mean? Insurance, 50-50, because we only have one vehicle. It's not hard, but it's our vehicle. Yeah. But whenever we go places, he started using it. And now he's just going to get an old car with the money. Yes, if you're not going to be given the value of your cars if it were new. Right. So it won't be a brand-new car, I don't think. That would be the plan. But I want to discuss it. I never thought about that. I literally thought, oh, what is buy a new car? You can, but it'll be a lesser car than the one that you just cramped lost, yeah. Yeah, so then we'll have to make payments. Yeah. Potentially. Did you have this car paid off? Yeah, it's paid off. Paid off. Well, she had to pay off. It was for car. Yeah, now she has to have a payment. Yeah, that's what I'm saying. Like this is better than makes sense. Now he's confused. No, no, I didn't realize we were, I didn't think about we're going to have to pay minutes. I thought it was going to be over. Somehow, he just bankrupted himself. He doesn't know how. I'm out of money. I'm living on the streets. Give me now, everyone, Ray. Eddie has such a big heart and has the desire to do it. But he's just scared. He wants to. He would love to, but he doesn't have the guts. But he thinks it's really cool and genuinely would like to. But he's just not brave enough to do it. But yeah, I think fear is just what holds him up. Talking about donating organs, obviously. Sure. Sure. I mean, I think it's a guy, this is a guy that understands me a little bit. The whole not brave enough. I don't think he's got that right exactly. But I think the love, all the positive things he's got. Totally. But once an art is so positive, he's messed up. He's nailed you on that set. On that part, but not brave enough to scared. It's not that. It's just not, I don't think right now is the time. Well, what if that is the root? Like, I think he's just digging a little deeper to the underlying issue at hand. Do we just stop? Why are we saying Eddie has a good heart? I mean, you can say whatever you want. I actually go and donate $2 to Pets Mart. Where's my big heart? Oh my gosh. You should have gone with it. You donate blood. That's way better. You're too old. Then Pets Mart. Because I start thinking like, all right, what if I give my kidney away? And then like, my son in five years, like, I need a kidney dead. That's every single person that's ever given a kidney away. You have to have that. Yeah, you're so moved to the top of the list. Yeah, probably get a better kidney than the one you got over there. You're kind of like that car lunch watch strike. I work hard on that. I'll at point. So I don't know. I don't think I'm scared. No. Then your heart isn't good. No, my heart's there. I'm just a, I just don't know if it's the right time. That's it. The time isn't going to get any better because you're just getting older and less healthy. No, I think I'm getting healthier. Then the way I used to be, dude. Much like lunch boxes, car your body's depreciating daily. That's what's happening to us. However, he does live a healthier lifestyle than he once did. And you can reverse stuff. Not really. You can just slow it down. Not like the heart. He can slow down any sort of damage to it. He's not reversing to have a 17-year-old's heart. Because dude, I lived hard. What do you mean? No, you didn't. You didn't live that hard. Yeah. There is such thing as a family voucher program by donating through this program. You receive up to five vouchers for family members, including children, prioritizing then to receive a living donor kidney if they ever need one when you donate. Five vouchers. Priority. So are these vat, like it's not guaranteed, you just have a voucher. Like, try one. Doesn't work. That voucher's gone. The voucher's he's talking about. Is this like, all right, I got a voucher for... You can give it to any person on the road and they have to give you a kidney. No, like this voucher, Bobby, it brings you to the front of the line to donate to my son. Yes. But then your son goes to the front of the line. But then you die in surgery. I didn't work. That goes that voucher. I got four left. That worked. Why do you have a lot of fear? This is scary. This is rooted in fears. Maybe I am. Maybe this car's spot on. I just think he doesn't really want to do it. I think he just wanted the praise of saying he wanted to do it. He doesn't really want to do it. Why would anyone like, why would I want the praise? I'm like, oh, he's so awesome. Why would anyone like praise? Everybody wants praise. That's what we do think. You don't really want to. You think it would be cool if you had the guts and the health and the love in your heart to do it, but you don't. No, it'd be cool to do it. I have the heart and the love. Oh my gosh. I mean, lunchbox, you're struggling to understand Eddie right now. I need you to know this is what, like we're struggling to understand Eddie too, but equally we struggled to understand your car's situation. You know? We're complicated people. Is that fair? And y'all struggled to understand a lot of stuff about me. Correct. You guys struggled to understand math. That's true. Me and Amy. Just the general stuff. All right, you guys can leave us a voicemail at any time. 877-777-Bobby. Amy saw a lunchbox cut in line at the grocery store. Sure did. What happened? Well, a woman was in line with her cart, and she decided to leave her cart to get something. Clearly she forgot something in the store. And lunchbox was behind her. So when she left to go get the item, he went in front of her. And I'm not saying what he did was wrong. I'm not saying I would do it, but I was just curious, like what y'all think about this. Because then she returned and I think she said something like, oh yeah, no problem. And he was like, yeah, cool. Like, it was like they had an exchange about how she was aware he cut. So her basket was still there? Yeah, she left her cart there to hold her place. I'm not saying what she did was right. I would never do that either. Let me put myself in the situation. I'm in line. Somebody has a full buggy. Like I get a run to get something. It's not her turn in line though, right? No, there's there. I would push her cart up in front of me. I would just I would move up and now I would just push her cart up. And then once she got back as long as she didn't actually miss the register, she's still in the front of me. Right. What? Yeah, I think that's just when she when she disappeared into an aisle, he like went. Yeah, guys, I think I would cut too. Yeah, when you leave the line, you lose your spot in line. Like it's not like, oh, here just hold it. If that's the case, you would roll her cart completely away and everybody else would see it. Well, there was no one behind me. So I just went, I wasn't worried about the people behind me. I'm worried about myself. I went around the cart, put myself on the conveyor belt and a, so if it's time to get on the conveyor belt, I agree. And I was sort of spying for my- You said it wasn't time to get on the conveyor belt. No, it was. The person in front of me was the person was still getting checked out. I had to put the little bar. Yeah. So the cashier knew that it was my groceries. And I wasn't gonna wait for this lady. I was like, hey, you know what? You snooze, you lose. You got out of line. You lost your spot. Okay, I guess because I was spying from another line. So I didn't know what she said to you. Well, what would you have done? I would have stayed. I would have pushed the cart up and just held her spot. I would have stayed in my spot. Yeah, me too. As long as the cash register wasn't waiting for her to put her stuff on, then you go around because you don't want that waiting. Yeah, otherwise you push it up. Right. But also, I'm not gonna do what she did. She didn't even, she just walked away. It's not like she was like, hey, do you mind if I go get something? She's trying to run real quick. Right. And I'm probably not going to do that either, but I would. Yeah, but you would, you would ask the people around you. Oh, I just be like, I'll be right back. I forgot something. You just say that loud. Yeah, be right back. Oh crap. I was just going, oh crap. And it would run off. And then I would grab it. But then I wouldn't know what you're doing. Yeah. And if I were the person behind, I would just push it up for her to get closer to the line. Yeah, he didn't do that. And then she said something to him when she got back. I don't know what I said, I went around you. She said, okay. And I said, thanks. That's it. Why did you thank her? Well, I was just saying like she said, oh, okay. And I was like, all right, thank. It's like, I don't know why you had to make a conversation out of it. There was no need to say anything. She knew she got in line. She knew she was in the wrong. I just wanted to let her know that, hey, it wasn't out of Malice. It was just out of, you know, you got out of line. I was doing what was right in this world. Do you learn a new word? Malice. Yeah, tell us. Oh, that's a word, isn't it? Word of the day. What? Of course it's a word. You never heard of Malice. We have. No, we have. We've never heard you use it one time in your whole lifetime of the show. Oh, yeah. Well, I mean, maybe I saw Malice at the palace like documentary or something recently. And I don't even know if that fits. It does fit. Yeah, it fits. See? Yeah. Good. Okay. Well, I don't think he did it wrong, but I wouldn't have done that. I mean, just a little push. Just a little. A little buggy. He'd look out for him. Yeah. That's it. We'll see you guys tomorrow. Bye, everybody. The Bobby Bones show theme song written, produced and sang by Reed Yarberry. You can find his Instagram at Reed Yarberry. Scoobie Steve, executive producer. Ray Moonau, head of production. On Bobby Bones, my Instagram is Mr. Bobby Bones. Thank you for listening to the podcast. This is an I Heart podcast. Guaranteed human.