The Bobby Bones Show

WEDS PT 2: Bobby Captured A Road Rage Incident + Bobby Rattled By Social Media Comments + Bobby Gets Called Out By A Listener

51 min
Feb 4, 20262 months ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

The Bobby Bones Show discusses viral moments including a road rage incident Bobby captured on video, social media backlash over a trivia competition appearance, and coverage of Nancy Guthrie's disappearance with alleged ransom notes. The episode also covers consumer price cuts from PepsiCo, a 13-year-old's heroic ocean swim rescue, and a Utah man's year-long isolation project.

Insights
  • Social media comments about perceived lack of fame can trigger insecurity about professional credibility and audience perception, even for established personalities
  • PepsiCo's price reduction strategy suggests consumer spending habits are shifting due to inflation fatigue, forcing major brands to respond to market pressure
  • Ransom notes sent to multiple media outlets simultaneously may indicate either coordinated criminal activity or potential hoax, requiring verification across sources
  • Extreme isolation projects gain significant traction through 24/7 livestreaming, converting personal challenges into viral content and monetization opportunities
  • Public perception of guilt in missing persons cases is heavily influenced by family proximity and media narrative, despite lack of confirmed evidence
Trends
Influencer vulnerability: Established personalities publicly processing social media criticism and fame anxietyConsumer price sensitivity: Major CPG brands cutting prices in response to inflation-driven purchasing behavior changesLivestream monetization: Personal challenge projects generating revenue through subscriptions and donations via multiple platformsMedia fragmentation: Ransom notes and criminal communications targeting multiple outlets simultaneously rather than single channelsTrue crime audience engagement: Real-time missing persons cases driving high listener engagement and speculationExtreme wellness challenges: Isolation and restriction-based personal projects gaining mainstream media coverageViral video documentation: Everyday incidents captured and shared for social media engagement and news coverage
Topics
Road Rage Incidents and Traffic SafetySocial Media Criticism and Public PerceptionMissing Persons Investigation (Nancy Guthrie case)Ransom Note Verification and Media ProtocolsConsumer Price Inflation and CPG StrategyExtreme Isolation Challenges and Mental HealthLivestream Monetization ModelsCelebrity Trivia CompetitionOcean Rescue and Water SafetyCryptocurrency in Ransom DemandsFamily Suspicion in Criminal InvestigationsViral Video Content CreationStreaming Platform Subscriber GrowthPodcast Production and Recording SchedulesSports Classification and Athletic Definition
Companies
PepsiCo
Announced 15% price cuts on Lay's, Doritos, and Cheetos products in response to consumer complaints about inflation
Netflix
Platform hosting 'Unreal' wrestling documentary series featuring Jelly Roll's training and storyline development
YouTube
Platform hosting Skip Boyce's 24/7 livestream of his year-long isolation project with 14,000+ subscribers
TMZ
Received alleged ransom note email regarding Nancy Guthrie's disappearance, first to report the story
iHeart Radio
Podcast network distributing The Bobby Bones Show and other featured podcasts
Barstool Sports
Organizing trivia challenge event in San Francisco featuring Bobby Bones as celebrity guest
Apple Podcasts
Distribution platform for The Bobby Bones Show and The Bobby Cast podcast
People
Savannah Guthrie
Her mother Nancy Guthrie went missing; Savannah withdrew from Olympics coverage due to family emergency
Nancy Guthrie
Missing person whose disappearance is under investigation with alleged ransom notes sent to media outlets
Thomas Oceoni
Son-in-law of Nancy Guthrie identified as prime suspect in missing persons investigation by law enforcement sources
Ashley Banfield
Reported on Nancy Guthrie case and identified Thomas Oceoni as prime suspect based on law enforcement sources
Skip Boyce
Former construction business owner conducting 365-day isolation project livestreamed 24/7 on YouTube
Jelly Roll
Musician who trained for months and lost 30 pounds to perform in wrestling storyline for Netflix's 'Unreal'
Blake Shelton
Featured guest on Bobby Bones' podcast with hour-long interview available on Netflix and Bobby Cast
Logan Paul
Wrestler who performed choreographed table crash scene with Jelly Roll in Netflix wrestling documentary
Tom Brady
Former NFL quarterback receiving social media attention for Instagram stories mimicking teenage girl behavior
Quotes
"A person who is not generous cannot be an artist. The world will be at peace only when it is ruled by poets and philosophers."
Pooja Bhatt Show introOpening segment
"I'm not, I'm holding out. Like I'm like, oh, okay. Well, obviously they had to take a look at him. And the daughter was the last one to go to dinner."
Bobby BonesNancy Guthrie case discussion
"If he's not coming out and saying I didn't do it and we can't hear from him, uh, maybe he did do it."
Bobby BonesThomas Oceoni suspect discussion
"I need a sketch. I always feel better about a case if I see a sketch."
AmyMissing persons case analysis
"They're a frog and they're boiling us slowly so you don't really realize what's happening and then you die."
AmyStreaming service price increases discussion
Full Transcript
This is an I Heart Podcast. Guaranteed human. No gloss, no filter. Just stories, spoken without fear. A person who is not generous cannot be an artist. The world will be at peace only when it is ruled by poets and philosophers. Listen to my weekly podcast, the Pooja Bhachon on the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Come for the honesty, stay for the fire. What do your boyfriend say about the Super Bowl party? He said, yeah, we should definitely have one. And then I told him that y'all were like, oh, he's probably a... Fancy wine and cheese. A wine and cheese kind of guy. And then he replied, ha, ha, I'm definitely a chips and salsa kind of guy or something. And then I said, and what about beer? And then he listed out the beers he would drink. What'd he say? He said, Madello Pacifico. Oh, Mexican beers. Or Cors life. Okay. And he said, I don't do craft beers. All right, hey, I had him... I had him back all wrong. That's right. He had him pinned all wrong. So maybe he's not as stuffy as we thought. Maybe not. No, and that was a text exchange during the show. Like, wow, I was with y'all, so... Does he drink with his pinky up? Like French? Yeah. Does he drink out of the can or is he poured in a glass? Oh, good question. Good question. I don't know. We'll see. Oh, you don't know? You really don't know? I really don't know. I mean, I've seen him drink a Pacifico before out of the bottle, but I mean, who knows? Maybe he pours it in a glass. Are you guys going to watch the Super Bowl now as a... We are. And then last night, so that was the text. He was like, yeah, I'd love to do something. And then last night with his kids, they were like, oh yeah. And so they're inviting friends over and now it'll be a whole affair. Yay! Yeah. And Pacifico. Is he a puzzle guy? Well, yeah, but not the way I do puzzles. I think he might be a puzzle psycho. Oh, more, more the way you do puzzles. I don't know that he does more, but the way he does puzzles, because I didn't know this about him because we had never worked on a puzzle before. Until I recently busted one out at my house and he stopped by and I was looking at the picture as most people do. Because you need to know where the puzzle pieces go. And he's like, oh, you're not allowed to look at the picture. Yes you are. No, he's like, no. You have to just put it together like based on what you see matches. I wonder if in puzzle competitions, and I'm not sure they have them, but I would bet they do because there's a competition for everything. Apparently how he grew up in his household, they were not allowed to look at the picture. And I kid you not, he put together more of the puzzle in that like 10 minutes that he was working on it than I had done in like two days. But what if you never get to see the picture and there's just a bunch of pieces dumped out? So then are you looking for just colors? Just holes and colors that match? He starts to build the edges based on the color and he figures it out. And then he starts to go from there. He was quite quick. So I don't know if because he was raised that way, it just gave him a different brain towards puzzles. But I was like, this is psycho. I have to look at it. I have to or I want to know like, oh, this is that girl's yellow dress. And then official rules on that. Probably. Yeah. Like if in a competition, you get to look at the picture or if it's different levels, like if you're in the upper level, the double black diamond level, you don't get to see a picture and they just dump a bunch of pieces in your race. Yeah. According to the worldjigsawpuzzle.org, the world championships, if you're an individual, you're given two puzzles of 500 pieces hidden in a bag. So there is no board or box. No picture. And you just pick which one it is and you put it together. Oh, that's tough. What if they did like Dex and Vegas, but they put two puzzles together in the same bag? Brutal. And you had to figure out. Oh, that's wrong. That makes so mean. That's like a Rubik's Cube finder who like, those kids are going to shoot, like there's something in their brain that's different than what we have. The ability to have two puzzles, you don't know that either of the pictures, but they're in the same bag and all the pieces are mixed. My sister got me a puzzle that was called the impossible puzzle. And it was, they were all clear pieces and no picture. Like it's there's nothing. It's just they're all clear. And I'm like, I don't I'd put two pieces together. And I was like, I'm done. I got to quit. I can't do this. So that's all looking at the shapes. Yes. The holes. Got it. Which is like, you really just have to try every single shape and hole like until you find a match. A puzzle is about getting to the final picture. I'm not good at that. I like to get there. It doesn't matter if it's a book, if it's a movie, I want to know what the ending is. I need to pay off. I don't have, I probably would, but I haven't developed the patience for a puzzle. I think it could be extremely healthy. Something to focus on. Because whenever I was like super stressed or I would play video games, but it's because it would take my mind off of what was stressing me out. But then I heard my ankle and it couldn't go upstairs anymore. So I stopped playing a video game. Four months. Wow. Oh, you think you'll go back? I don't know. Kind of like my streak right now. But my boys aren't like, let's play because now they're not used to me playing. So they're not playing. I love a streak. I mean, I do love a streak. The puzzle, I think, I mean, you'd probably get a little obsessed because I get obsessed and I'm not like that. I just want, I would want to be the best. I'd start training. Well, then yeah, you then would you look at the picture or not? No picture for you then. Well, first I probably would. And then I would get myself in shape to where I would need to. Because first of all, your fingers, I probably don't have it in me finger wise. You got to warm yourself up. Yeah. And then it's just getting back in the puzzle groove. Yeah. I just didn't know there were puzzle people like that. The dolly one that you gave me, it had like a sticker on one corner. And it was bugging me because I'm like, I need to see what's under that sticker. Oh, yeah, like the box had a sticker. Yeah. Oh, that's. Well, sometimes on the back, it'll have a smaller image. I didn't, though. And it was driving me nuts. Couldn't peel it. Now, it was it wasn't like built in sticker. It was built in like it's. You know, like 25th edition. Yes, that's what it was. I don't know if you saw yesterday, but TMZ said they got a ransom note for the mom. The mom's name is Nancy Guthrie. So TMZ posted this. We got something in our email that looks like a ransom note for Savannah Guthrie's mother. Specific. And there are very certain amounts of money, very specific. And also they say at the bottom, there are certain things they're saying about what she was wearing and damage to the house. Clearly saying to verify it's us. So if you hadn't heard Savannah Guthrie, Savannah Guthrie's mom went missing a couple of days ago. And then they started saying the word homicide. Then they started saying kidnapping. Then they were investigating. And then TMZ said they got this email that was a ransom note. So that happened yesterday. And then Ashley Banfield, who is a reporter, was talking about this. And she said, and this is another twist, that the husband of Savannah's sister, so that would be the son-in-law of the missing woman, is a prime suspect. The last point of contact with Nancy Guthrie was when she was dropped off by her daughter at 9.45 ish at night on Saturday night. Sunday morning, 11am, church members reached up to the family. Hey, your mom wasn't in church, not normal. She's always there. What's up? Family member or members goes to the house, calls 911, and the investigation begins. But they have towed Annie Guthrie's car. And there is some connection to Annie Guthrie's car and Nancy Guthrie's son-in-law. And my law enforcement source tells me Thomas Oceoni is the prime suspect in this case. So that's the son-in-law. This information has not been confirmed by the Pima County Sheriff's Department, but they always look at family first. And again, that was Ashley Banfield with that. What are your thoughts on that? I mean, well, probably because it's fresh in my mind, I immediately go to the Elizabeth Smart documentary and yes, family is, they're always first. But in that documentary, they were wrong. I know they were wrong. So that's what I mean. I'm not, I'm holding out. Like I'm like, oh, okay. Well, obviously they had to take a look at him. And the daughter was the last one to go to dinner. Now, if she's not the suspect, her husband is. But still, they've towed her car. They need to collect information. This all makes sense. Maybe he is involved and maybe he's completely innocent. Savannah Guthrie's pulled out of the Olympics, obviously. Yeah. Her mom's missing. Terrible. But that's where it is now. When I saw the TMZ stuff, I was like, dang. Which they're investigating the validity of that note. Like that's not, it's an alleged ransom note. Correct. But even as TMZ said, there were things in that note that you had to be somehow inside. To know. To know. Right. Sort of. Wow. I don't want to give me the way in case people are watching the Elizabeth Smart documentary. But there was stuff that wasn't known in the public that then happened again. And it's like, okay, so this has to be the same person. Thoughts, boys? Man. I can't believe that TMZ got the ransom note if it's a real ransom note. Like of all the outlets, they sent it to TMZ. That's surprising to me. Yeah. So maybe it doesn't feel as real. Maybe it feels like somebody just trying to play a little prank. Yes. That it's not funny. But do they get in trouble for that if they send a fake ransom note? They're not involved at all. Yes. Oh, absolutely. Especially if you use government resources. Yeah, for sure. To investigate the fact there was a ransom note. Okay. So yeah. Man, that's so, the brother-in-law, like that's shocking to me. Yeah, I didn't really get all they were saying about why he could have possibly be involved. Right. They didn't really make, they didn't really give any details of if they had beef or if they were angry. I need a sketch. I always feel better about a case if I see a sketch. Oh, well. I got a picture. I don't have any. No, I don't have a sketch. I don't want to see a picture. I need to see a sketch. And TMZ reached out to the brother-in-law. He has not responded. Right, right. I don't know that I would respond to either except to say, I didn't do it. That's all I'm saying. Because you could say anything and they could twist it all up. But man, I'm telling you if I didn't do it and I was accused of it, I would be on Instagram going, what's happening? I didn't do this. Well, unless your lawyer tells you not to do it. I still think if I didn't do it, I would be saying I didn't do it. There's nothing that's going to happen to me. If I didn't do it, that's going to happen to me because I said I didn't do it. You think that's better than staying quiet. Because staying quiet to me is probably the safest, but still. It's the safest, but I think I'd be doing it. Tick-tock live. I didn't do it. Are you sp- Like doesn't your lawyer advise you to say nothing? Say nothing. I know. My lawyer told me not to say anything, but guess what? I didn't do it. That's all I'm saying at this time. Also, if he's not coming out and saying I didn't do it and we can't hear from him, uh, maybe he did do it. Well, that's not why. You know what I'm saying? No, no. If he's not around, that's pretty a big clue. If like the wife wakes up in the morning, her mother is missing and her husband's not there. It's like, huh. Is that what they said? That the husband was gone? No, I'm just- Are you making that up? I'm saying- Okay, you're making that up. Okay, got it. Yeah, I'm speculating on like, well, wait a minute. If he's not around, they're towing her car. There's been a lot of people that have been innocent whenever the press has said they're guilty lately. Yeah, that one, what was that one case that we saw just recently? The bomb. But I mean, the shooting. Oh, the shooting. Yes. Oh, yeah. Charlie Kirk. Yes. No, no, no. Charlie Kirk. Charlie Kirk. Charlie Kirk. Wasn't that the school shooting? No, no, no. No, those are two different things. Two totally different. Charlie Kirk got shot by a dude, and there's some shadiness behind that, but the other thing was the school shooting. Yes. And they said it was this person at Brown University. Yes, and we had a picture of him in everything. And one of him. That's just terrible. Yeah. So maybe I should be quiet about the brother-in-law. What are you saying, Amy? Well, now I just want to know more about the brother-in-law, and I can't find much about him. Yeah, give me a sketch. That's what I say. I can always tell by a sketch if they did it or not. That's all I need. It's a simple drawing. I saw a road rage with Mo and I just today, and I documented it. It's on my Instagram at MrBobbyBones. I was on treadmill looking out a window because I was doing physical therapy on my ankle that I had surgery on. And I see this woman. I happen to have my phone right by it. Not happen to. I'm always on my phone. But I mean, it's, and I hit record just as she was going crazy in the middle of the road in a white car. She pulls in front of this silver SUV, and she's like yelling at it from behind at a traffic light. And the SUV tries to go around her and she backs up in the middle of the road and like blocks it and starts screaming at it again and goes forward and blocks it again. It is wild. I thought I was going to pull a gun on somebody. Oh yeah, no, it's the craziest thing I've ever seen. And I need to know what started it, which I know, yeah, you probably didn't see that part. But I'm like, there's, it could have just been random road rage, right? But the more I looked at it, I was like, is this personal? Did she know this guy? She was hanging out her car window. Yes. You can say it. Spit it out. You got it. No, I can't say it because bad words. She was, um, you know, She was saying the back of the. She was saying back that blank up over and over. But she wanted to back up on a one way road. Hey, but to her credit, the car did. I would have too. I thought she was going to pull a gun on me. Yes. I would be like, okay, this woman is not stable and I need to go. If you go to my Instagram, Mr. Bobby bones, I posted it last night. I'm right in. I mean, I'm looking right at her. Perfect angle. Oh yeah. Like at one point she's hanging like, start rib cage out of the car window. Oh, I was waiting for her to get out. This is awesome. Like, I thought she's going to open her car door and get out and start like just kicking his car or something or maybe the sledgehammer. I mean, I went through a lot of scenarios. Oh, well, but she was making him back up in the middle of traffic. It just wasn't safe. Even if you're that mad, first of all, don't do that. And then she's going forward and backward in the road to keep the car from driving by her. So she can keep yelling at him. That was crazy. Don't do that. I don't care what happened. If you want to get at somebody, if you know them, pull off and have a side conversation. She was risking other people's lives. Yeah, there were a lot of other cars. Oh yeah. Yeah. Like, and also let's say you're that mad. You don't know if the car behind you that you're yelling at has a gun because everybody has guns. Yeah. Wow. Pretty crazy. As soon as it came in, I hit record. That video is nuts. I've never seen anything like it. And it's so close. Have you ever been that mad in traffic? No. Me either. No, I don't get mad in traffic. People get mad at me. But like, I don't. I'm like, OK, you know, I guess you're having a bad day. But don't take it out on me. You can see it on my Instagram. Wow. It's a great video, dude. That is so clear and like, I mean, just great. I mean, you can see her mouth moving. Yelling back to Bob. Back to Bob. Very clearly. You ever been that mad, Eddie? No. I don't get mad. Oh yes you do. I don't get mad. I just get like, oh, you're not going to act like that. You know, like I see. You cut him off. I see a car, kind of not like her, but I see a car in my rear view mirror trying to pass all these other cars. I'm like, not by me. And so I'll kind of block the road. Right. I'll do stuff like that. But I'm not mad, dude. I'm very even keel. You get triggered. It's not really even keeled to act like that. Just to say road rage, that is definitely not the word. It's a passive aggressive road rage. A little bit. Yeah. Yeah, it's up if you want to see it. Mr. Bobby Bones on my Instagram. And it's on TikTok as well. The asking price for the Breaking Bad house was $4 million. Are you familiar with that house in New Mexico? Yeah. Pretty normal house. Very. Because they lived a normal life. That was the whole point of the show. He was a teacher, normal life, and then sold drugs because he got cancer and needed money. And he knew how to make meth because he taught chemistry. Gosh, what a great show. Yeah, it's good, huh? So that house, they listed originally for $4 million in Albuquerque, New Mexico. They have now lowered the price to $400,000. Wait. I know it's a big drop. Wow. Apparently they were given bad advice that they could list this house. And because it was on Breaking Bad, that someone was going to pay $4 million for it. The fame was going to lift it. That's not the case. It has now been lowered to $400,000. Which is the actual market value. Because someone convinced the owner, $4 million works. Probably somebody who wanted to get the commission off that. But it's pretty likely the house will still go for more than $400,000. But what I would worry about, and this could be happening at that house some, is that people would show up with their pizzas on top of it. Oh, yeah. Because that's what Walter White did. And the pizzas stayed up there forever. I think that they've had to deal with that. They have. Yeah. We tried to, well, we were near the Brady Bunch house when we were in California. We were in California. When we were in California. What did they say? Like 15 minutes? Like with Blake Shelton. 15 minutes, but like one mile from where we were staying. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So our story is we didn't go, but we almost went. But you were going to. We loved those stories of almost going. Yeah, we wanted to. We talked about it. We talked about it. My interview with Blake Shelton, it's an hour long. It's up on Netflix. Just search for Bobby Bones or the Bobby Cast. But if you don't have time to watch it and you want to listen to it, it is also as a podcast on the Bobby Cast. So it's an hour with Blake Shelton. I want to go to Pam. Make a tucky right now who's on the phone. Hey, Pam, you're on the show. Morning studio. Morning. Yes, I was calling regarding the Nancy Guthrie. Can that being apparently a news station in Tucson? They said this morning on our local news got a ransom note also what appears to be. Oh, so they may have sent that to multiple places. That doesn't seem as much like a prank. It's going to multiple places from the same account. If there are multiple people doing it. If it's the same note. That's what I'm saying. If it's the same coming from the same account, same note, that seems less like a prank. But also that doesn't feel like that would be the son-in-law. No. Because if you kind of know who it is, the ransom is kind of wiped out. And then if your wife's like, hey, babe, where are you? Exactly. No one's saying he's missing, though. Well, true. But if you're holding someone hostage, aren't you? Oh, maybe you go put them somewhere. Yeah, you put them in a storage unit. Well, then as the son-in-law, you know it. Okay. Everyone knows that. So now if it's not a random person, the son-in-law knows she needs medication. Okay. Correct. Yeah, that's true. And the medication was left behind unless he had some filled elsewhere. Amy's figuring it out now. Or over time, he was collecting pills to keep. But there's blood, right? They really thought this out. I don't know. Am I making this up or was there blood? There was blood in the house. Yeah, there was blood. There was blood, so I mean, she may not be with us. No, I don't know that it was that amount of blood that could determine death. Also, we don't know whose blood it was. Also, we don't know anything. Like I said, for me to make a decision, I need to see a sketch. Yeah. The older I get, and I get I'm not 84, as she is, but the older I get and taking care of my dad who was elderly, he blood pretty easily. Like, his skin would break. Like, I cut my hand a lot easier than I did when I was 20 because my skin is thinner. Time marches on, man. Dang, we get older. Time marches on. Pam, thank you for that. We knew the TMZ story. We didn't know the local news story, so thank you for calling us. No problem. Love the show. My grandkids love it also every morning. All right. Let's get going before. Well, we appreciate that. Thank you very much. Hope you have a great day. Thank you. Y'all do the same. Bye-bye. It looks like another station got it, too. Alleged ransom notes regarding the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie, mother of today co-host Savannah Guthrie. We're sent to multiple media outlets and authorities, including TMZ and Tucson, Arizona news stations, K-O-L-D-N-K-G-U-N. Their name's K-Gun. Oh, wow, K-G-U-N. Huh. Okay, also. Yeah, you guys be careful with those letters. Nice to work for K-D-I-K is a whole situation. No, no, no. What? Are these, I'm unfamiliar. Are they being sent electronically or written? I assume they're emails. They are demanding Bitcoin, K-O-L-D, also K-old. It's K-old and K-Gun. O-L-D? Yeah. K-O-L-D TV initially received an email, which they forwarded to authorities and agreed not to report on it immediately. And so she was in Tucson? In Arizona, yeah. I don't know if it was Tucson specifically. Yeah, her neighborhood is right outside of Tucson. This is terrible. Bitcoin is how you can also not be tracked. And it's down real low, so you probably get a good amount now and you have it go up. I was trying to figure out things about the Sun and Law. In the last 10 minutes. Yes. Your research? I mean, that is incredible. All I figured out is at some point, he's taught like sixth grade science. He's 50 years old. He likes to write. He studies lizards. He plays electric bass. And he's a maker of homemade pasta. Huh. I'm looking at a picture of him. This is all I know. A real picture or a sketch? Yeah, I need a sketch. I see a real picture. I need a sketch. Okay, that's not gonna work. Stop with the sketches. That's how you find people. I can always tell if someone's guilty by looking at a sketch. Okay. A picture, not so much. But the guy kind of has a long beard and that's... Little sus. Yeah, anybody with a long beard? You need to look the second time at him. I mean, Lund Fuchs has a long beard right now. No, no, that's not a long beard. That's a beard. Oh. Yeah. You about to vomit looking at him or what? Oh, like... Amy. Yeah, like... Amy gagged looking at him. No, no, no, no. It's like you do let it get out of control. It's... Like, look, I mean, you want me to do that while... Yeah. It's not what I meant. It was... No, that's okay. If you guys want to call us, you can 877-77-Bobby. Obviously, we're open for the best here. Oh, he's also in a band called Reverb Nation. Wait, why does that sound familiar? Is that a big band? I never heard of him. Okay. I mean... Maybe like a magazine or something. I don't know. Sounds familiar. Y'all, he forges for mushrooms in Italy. Yeah, those are called truffles, right? I'm not gonna hate the guy for truffle hunting. No, I know. I'm saying like he just seems like a... Normal guy. Very normal guy. Did you say plays with lizards or what did you say? Studies lizards. And... I'm gonna... If I'm betting on Draft Kings, I'm gonna go no. That he's not? I don't think he did it, but I don't know. Obviously, I know nothing. All right, you guys hit us up if you want. 877-77-Bobby. No gloss, no filter. Just stories. Spoken without fear. Addiction is a disease and it should be looked upon as any other disease. How did you cope with a reckless father like me? Join me, Pooja Bhatt, as I sit down every week with directors, actors, musicians, technicians, and beyond. You don't need to work with the biggest people and the biggest sound to have great music. I have gone through the sub-CD khachakar. Reach the pinnacle. Stung by the sneaker, I've fallen down again. Yeah. I am not writing actively anymore and when I see my old work it kind of saddens me. I'm only as good as the last shot that I gave. Mom's gone, but don't shut the theater. The show must go on. Listen to my weekly podcast, the Pooja Bhatt show on the iHeart Radio app. Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. Come for the honesty, stay for the fire. Okay, let's go around the room. Amy, you're up. So PepsiCo is going to cut the prices of Lays, Doritos, Cheetos, stuff like that by 15% because of customer complaints. Guys, this is huge. So this is cool because your voice matters. They're listening to us. Also, people are probably buying less is why they're doing that. Well, yeah, because it's so expensive. Yeah, and they're half full of air or whatever they have to fill it up with to keep it fresh. And the price cuts are rolling out just in time for Super Bowl weekend. It says, according to their statement, the CEO, Rachel Ferdinando says, she spent the last year listening closely to consumers and they've told us they're feeling the strain and that lowering the suggested retail price reflects our commitment to help reduce the pressure when we can. Listen, they're not just going to drop a price because people are complaining or we complain about everything. I would complain. I'd call the earth and say gas is too expensive. There's probably some buyer habits that are changing. It does sound good though to say like, hey, we're listening to our customers. Of course. Yeah, good. That's good news though. Regardless, that's good news because I get an email, I don't know, every day from every streaming service going, we're raised prices. Oh, gosh. Like finally something's going down. Every day. They're a frog and they're boiling us. Explain that. Amy, you can get that. Explain it to Eddie. Well, they boil you slowly so you don't really realize what's happening and then you die. So a frog, you can put it in normal water and you can slowly turn the temperature up and it doesn't know the difference and it will die. It will stay in there and get boiled to death. Yeah, it doesn't like try to hop out. If you just drop it in hot water, it jumps out. Oh, okay. It's like us. We wouldn't sign up for any of these streaming services for a million dollars a month, but raise a dollar here. They slow roll us. Raise a dollar there. We're like, that's affordable and we're the boiling frog. Okay, I got you. Yeah, thanks, Amy. No problem. All right, Eddie. So yeah, there's this kid in Australia, he's 13 years old. Him and his family went out on paddleboards and kayaks and they just drifted and drifted. The current took him out there and they could not come back. They were so far, they said they were two and a half miles away from the shore when the kid goes, you know what, I'm swimming back. And he had a life jacket on. He swam about a mile, took a life jacket off and swam the rest just without a life jacket, made it all the way to shore and told them, guys, my sister and my mom are stuck out there. We need to send people out there. And they all got saved because he swam two and a half miles to shore. That's amazing. Man, to get just taken out to sea. Like, helpless, dude. You're just drifting. They said he swam for over two hours. Yeah. Yeah, it was nighttime by the time he made the shore. Wow. Yeah, I saw it was over two and a half miles and I saw that he had abandoned his life jacket. They slow you down, let's be honest. But still, dude, I would at least carry it. I don't strap it to my waist or something. That's going to slow you down. Right, he said he didn't think he was going to make it if he kept the life jacket. He was going to run out of time. Because that water is moving against you. And you have to hit a certain pace just to beat the water. Otherwise, you could swim against it all day and you're not going to beat it. It's going to keep moving you out. Man. That's unbelievable. I've never been swept away at anything. That would be a crazy feeling. Dude, in Acapulco, I'll never forget. What? Acapulco. Huh? Acapulco, it's a beach in. You also probably know it as Acapulco. Thank you. Well, how do you say it? Maybe Acapulco. Acapulco. Acapulco. No, dude, Acapulco. And dude, what's crazy is the way the current is there. And like I watched hundreds of people get sucked in from my balcony because it's so it's such a sharp drop from the sand. Like I would say about 20 feet into the water. It just drops. So that means when the wave comes and crashes on the beach, it sucks people in. When the water goes back into the ocean, it sucks people like people just walk in like they're walking their dogs and whoop. They all just go and it's a road. It's like a washing machine. It just makes them go like over and over. It was unbelievable. There'd be big rumors of undertow where I grew up, but no one ever got caught in it. Not that I knew. Yeah. Like watch out for the undertow. Where would you go? Well, we had a bunch of lakes. Oh. We were like, and then we had dams. We were right by dams that released water. And you see that water circling. Well, there was also a cold waterline. The water was like 43 degrees, the cold water. And you can see cold water, warm water. And you'd chase that also because the fish would also be, yeah, would also be running from the cold water. And so you find that waterline. And you could see it very easily. So yeah, glad they're safe. Unbelievable. Lunchbox. Yeah. Back in early December, there was a mom in Utah. She has four kids and she thought the world was ending. And she's divorced and she was had the visitation with her kids. She boarded a plane for Europe, uh, went missing with the kids. And they find out she, they arrested her in Croatia. Couldn't find the kids. She had dumped them at a Croatian orphanage because she thought the world was ending. And finally they are on their way home to their dad. Oh, they had a dad? Yeah. The dad, they were divorced. And so she had the kids and when she was supposed to drop them off at the dads for visitation. Why run off with them if there's a dad to leave them with? Like if you're going to run off, all right, that's your thing. Don't like it. You're leaving your kids. But if you're going to run off, okay, don't take the kids with you. If there's a place they could be left. It's like people that murder suicide. Yeah. Like I don't want you to do any of that. But let's leave the murder part out. Yeah. You want to end it, end it. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, but she thought the world was ending and so she needed to get to Europe with her kids to be safe. I wonder why she thought that. Like what scam did she fall for? No idea. But then she dumped them in a Croatian orphanage. That's somebody who said the world's ending. Either they used religion to get her money or they just got her money. I feel like they, somebody got her money. Because that's usually who convinces you the world is ending. People that want your money. That guy that was in, I forget what country in Africa who was like, yeah, the flood's coming. You guys need to donate. I can build an ark. Oh yeah. Yeah. End of the world. End of the world didn't come. And he had a brand new car. Oh, he never built the ark? I don't know if he built it. He may have built it for much cheaper than all the money he got. Then he disappeared. Yeah. Ah, that sucks. But they found the kids and after two months of being gone, they are on a plane home with their dad. I know. It's just. But they spent some time in a Croatian orphanage. Right. Right. Because they didn't know where the kids were. They arrested her in Croatia and they couldn't find the kids. There was no dude with her. No dude. Just her. Morgan, what do you have? Okay. So there's this guy in Utah. His name is Skip Boyce. He's a former construction business owner. And on January 10th, he decided to walk into his bedroom door, lock the door, and began his year of isolation project. For a total of 365 days, he is staying in that room. He said goodbye to his wife and daughter. He's doing everything within the confines of that room. This was basically the idea of lunchbox in a box that I talked about. We just grew it. Yeah. Lunchbox in a box and to pay him a bunch of money. This guy didn't even want the money. Here he is giving his latest update. I'm Skip. I'm isolating for 365 days. So far, I've isolated 22 out of those. I'm live on YouTube 24 seven. I never said that the isolation year was going to be easy and it isn't. Today feels hard, mostly mentally hard, but I'm working through it. I appreciate you guys. I'm Skip with the isolation year. Am I watching him live, Mike? That's him live, yeah. That's going to be so, I mean. Is that walking around throwing a ball up? He's on a phone. I don't know if he's doing an interview or. Oh, he has a phone. Yeah. So like his rules are he can't leave the room unless it's a medical emergency or there's like an unsafe building condition or required evacuation. He can't have visitors inside. No hangouts, no drop-ins, only if emergency access is needed. No drugs, no alcohol. He's tracking all of his food. He's also doing workouts and he's doing a full livestream. So there's like nothing stage. You get to see everything that's happening all the time. This is great. I listen. I don't know his family dynamic. So I don't know about that, but I'm saying this is great. This guy wants to be famous. This is it. It's already making the news. He now has 14,000 subscribers. He had none. And he just started this thing. He said I will be on a call with CNN. So news organizations are interviewing him. It has weighed up there as well. What's the point? To lose weight, get his life in order. Yeah, he really wants to really reset everything. He wants to have better health. He wants to have a better mindset. He wants to not be distracted from things. I told my wife, hey, I'm going to chill in a room for a year. She would not be happy. She would not be happy. And she'd be like, no, that's what you did ages 20 to 35. You never came out of your room. Yeah, his name is John Hawkins. No, John Hawkins just subscribed. Oh, is that what it is? Yeah, his name is Skitboy. Oh, I'm glad you saw that. Good point. Yeah, he wants to change his... His PayPal's up. You can pay him. So how does he... I'm going to send him a dollar. Okay, how does he... Maybe I'll send him 10. I see he has like a toaster and a fridge, but... How does he get groceries? Is he... Yeah, can his wife like drop him off or something? Good point, probably. But... I wish he had to grow his own in a garden. The door says airlock, so I don't know if that means the door can't be opened. Like maybe there's a... No, that's a door that's not airlocked. That looks like a small bedroom wooden door. It's like a closet door. What's his name? Skitboy. No, I'm sorry. I should have asked that better. What's his Venmo name? The isolation... Year. Let me see if I can find it. Right, the isolation year? Okay, at first I was thinking it was going to be how we were going to do lunchbox in a box. Like you're cut off from everything, which were... That would not be good for his overall health. They say isolation is the worst thing that you can do, but it seems like he still has access to the world, so he should be okay. Yeah, he has a phone, a computer, and a light. Or I'm sending him ten bucks. It's on PayPal though, are you on Venmo? So can he sit there and talk to the door to his... I think Venmo is it too, right? Yeah, he's on both. Okay. Probably, because he can talk on the phone. Right, but I'm saying then that's not really... Anyway, he's going to get super famous for this. He'll probably make a bunch of money too, but you're giving up a bunch. Yeah, a whole year. Mm-hmm. I gave him ten bucks. And he has kids. He had kids. He said his kids are grown. Oh, let her house. Let her rip, Chip. That's fine, he can talk to them if I want. His wife right, happy he's doing it then. Right. Heck yeah, she's probably in period menopause. Get out. He really wants to, like, he's trying to force himself to avoid bad habits and incorporate healthier ones is what he's trying to do. Well, you don't have to do all that. Well, I was going to say, how are you going to have good habits? You can't cook anything. He's reestablishing discipline and rebuilding the habits around health focus and accountability. I think it's eliminating the bad habits more than building good ones in this stage. I watched, Amy, there's a show called Unreal on Netflix. It's a wrestling show and it's behind the scenes of wrestling. So they're going, this is my real name. I've told you about it before. Mm-hmm. This is my real name. These are all the names I've gone by and they show you how they create the storylines, they rehearse for them. Oh my gosh, Mike just subscribed. Great. They pull off the storylines, all this. And so Jelly Roll's episode was last night that I watched. And Jelly Roll was a wrestler last year. And I just thought he did a couple hours of training. He moved to Florida and trained for months. He did? He lost, like, 30 pounds. It shows him going, they rented two houses beside each other. So like his crew went down and he, like, worked and wrote songs. But he had another house and every day he was training in their facility. So he could learn how to be a wrestler for this storyline. The storyline took a few weeks, I think. It was really cool. Because I just thought, have you seen that episode yet? Haven't got to yet. I just thought he went down and, you know, was like a celebrity who got in a couple matches. But no, he trained hard and got below 300 pounds, I think, because of this. He lost, like, 20 pounds as part of that. Wow. It was really cool. I thought it was kind of cool to see Jelly Roll in it. I thought it was going to be just a short clip based on I knew what his role was. But no, he went and trained every day and, like, had to learn to fall and was doing all. Like, had a helmet on, was falling off stuff. Yeah, because, like, I just thought, remember when he landed on that table? Yeah. Well, he was on the table. Logan Paul landed on him. Okay. So it wasn't, that was real choreographed. Like, he worked hard to make that scene. He just learned how to do all that. It's really good. That episode's really good even by itself. Right. I'm just saying it's not as simple as, like, Correct. I'm on the table and then he's going to crash on the table. Well, if it was that simple and I were on the table, I'd probably flinch, pick my knees up last minute. For sure. Because I wouldn't have faith that it wouldn't hurt. Yeah. It was good. That's a really good show. Cool. I mean, I'm not going to watch it, but cool. Yeah. Because you watched the first season. Is that what I watched? Yeah, and you came out not loving it. No, I had moments. I got emotional. I felt like maybe I was going to go to WWRall or whatever it's called. And then it went away. As it often does. I was, I mean, I was into it. I think it's episode three. I'm taking part in a challenge tomorrow night at a theater in San Francisco. I'm doing a thing with a team at Barstool. Some of our friends that work over at Barstool. And so they posted yesterday that I was going to be on a certain team. And some of our listeners were super supportive. Even some of the Barstool people were super supportive, but they were like, our celebrity person is Bobby Bones on this team. And I got hit with a few who's, which happens. Yeah. When they're like, who is that? And I was thinking about why it bothers me. It doesn't bother me for me. It bought, I thought about this long and hard because they don't often get bothered by comments. But it says at Mr. Bobby Bones will be the celebrity guest for Brandon Walker, Francis Mariano and PFT commentator on the experts that doesn't trivia in San Francisco. And somebody was nice. I said, I will not stand for the Bobby Bones slander in these comments. And I said, thank you. Someone else said, this is so cool and exciting. Can't wait. Goes on and on. Then B. Carey goes, who? And there are a few who's. I get it. This fractured culture of fame. And trust me, I do not think I'm famous. I think I'm pretty well known in rural parts of America and slightly known in metropolitan parts. I don't think I'm famous. It bothers me because I think they see it and go, oh, maybe this guy isn't famous. Nobody knows them. Why do we hire this guy? Why do we get this guy? I think that's the root of it. That whole moment with it. It wasn't about me being offended. It's what if the people that I'm playing with are like, oh, we thought this guy had a fan base. See, I guess he doesn't. I think that's. Oh, like the Thill second guest. Yeah. Choosing you. Yeah. I don't think they're worried about that. I'm in the comments now. Here's a funny one. ScottBird.ca. Round one question to the team, which is the experts. This team called the experts. Do you know who your celebrity guest is? It's funny. Who is Bobby Bowen? Ever heard of the guy standing on the stage with you? Wait. So yeah, that's what's up. Let's do some voicemails here. Ray, give me voicemail number one. Hey there, Bobby. This is Callan. I got a joke for you. What did the traffic light say to the car? Stop looking at me. I'm changing. All right. Next up, number three. So a friend had a girlfriend. They dated for about a year. Well, about a month ago, he paid for a little over $2,000 for her school tuition. Then she ended up breaking up with him because they did a fight match. Should he ask her for the money back for the tuition? I don't know any advice to give to him. Love the show and I really appreciate anything you guys give to me. Amy, your thoughts? Were you listening? Because you're on your computer. No, I'm not on my computer. I'm commenting to someone on this page about you. Let's just listen to the voicemails. But, okay. I had a good... That's okay. We can do it after. It's okay. I just... They need to know how good you are at trivia. Ray, don't even say that though either because if I don't perform... No, just listen to the voicemails. What's going on? This is what you do. You get lost in something else while we're doing something else. Well, this seems important. Ray, would you play the voicemail again so Amy can hear it? So a friend had a girlfriend. They dated for about a year. Well, about a month ago, he paid for a little over $2,000 for her school tuition. Then she ended up breaking up with him because they did quite that. Should he ask her for the money back for the tuition? I don't know any advice to give to him. Love the show and I really appreciate anything you guys give to me. You in? I'm fully aware of what's happening now and no, he can't ask for the money back. He's an idiot. He's the one that chose to do it. That's his problem. He learned his lesson. Don't do that again. I mean, he... Man, I think I... I don't think he would get it back. I think I'd still ask. If I'm bitter, I think I'm like, hey, I want that money back. And then if she says no, you just miss it. I don't think he gets it back. And if they broke up... But if she dumped him too, I think I'm asking hard. Yeah. You're like, how do you bring that up? I'm like, so you're dumping... So should she stay with him just because he paid for her tuition? Or did she stay with him just in time for him to pay and then she was already going to be out? So I'd go to the bursar offices and withdraw her. I don't think you can do that. You can't get your money back, right? But I don't think you can just withdraw somebody if you have no relationship with them legally. We walk in there and say... If that were the case, you just withdraw people randomly. That's your boy. That's trouble. Man, so I was her boyfriend and I paid for this and she broke up with me, so I want my money back. Here's the receipt. I mean, I guess you're right. He could ask for it back, but he can't expect it back. He's not going to get it back. There's no way. All true. I would still ask for it back, especially if I'm bitter about it. Like, I just paid your tuition and you just broke up with me. I would like that $2,000 back. How long did they go out? A year. The guts? Why is he jumping in paying that tuition? They haven't dated a year. Right. Yeah, that part seems a little much. But even the guts to let him spend money on the tuition. Well, maybe she doesn't have it. Yeah, but still, that's a lot of money. She knew she was having doubts about the relationship and before he paid for it. Oh, man. If anyone gave me that much money, it's like, oh, that's a lot of money. And we've only been dating a year. I mean, some women are dirty. They are dirty. She said it. I guys can't be too, but they are. Also, we don't know the story. We're assigning things. Who knows? He could have cheated on her and then he paid for it and then he also dumped her. You're assigning things. I know, but I'm saying you guys are assigning it. So I'm saying I'll just meet it on the other side. I know. I generally like, I want to support women. There's obviously cases in which they play the game and they know what they're doing and they take advantage of it. And some of them, I heard a story the other day about women. She played the long game and then she got dirty real quick at the end and I'm like, oh my gosh. I don't know how people are able to do that, but they have a need that needs to be met and they're willing to do whatever it takes to get the need met. Wow. I hear you. Not everybody's like that. I mean, and it's not just women. Men do that too. Humans. You can do it even in a non-romantic relationship. You can do it and it could be a business type deal. Like some people are just shady. So this girl on Instagram last night, I have no idea if she's saying what she's true and she ended up marrying the guy. So it's fine. But she said shortly into dating him that she lost her job and he was like, transfer all your bills to my cards. I got you. What? They had just started dating and he started paying for all of her bills. That feels like a version of a love bomb. Yeah. It's like a gift. It's bills. Yeah. It's like a gift. It's bills. Oh, like, yeah. Like too early on, like I'm going to take care of you. Like I'm doing all this for you way up front. I feel like that's kind of guy that decides I'm over it, cuts them all off his car and doesn't say anything about it. And all of a sudden she starts to get all these notices. And then she doesn't have any. Good point. I just thought, wow. But there, she said they're married now. These are just things that she said. She was telling women, don't ever settle. Don't ever settle. There are men out there though. That'll pay your bills. Like dude, like, no, she was listing all the things. That was just one of the early things he did for her. And then now it's like, she goes, I wake up every single morning and look up and there's my coffee every morning. She doesn't have to get out of bed and he's there. I make my wife a hot tea every morning. Also, she's pregnant. I wasn't doing that when she wasn't pregnant. I'll be honest with you. What do you, how do you think, how will that continue as she's postpartum? TBD. Yeah, we'll see when we get there. TBD, man. Yeah, I don't know. I don't know. I've trained my kids to bring us coffee on Saturday mornings. It's really good. Wait, so how? Without even asking. Yep. They know how to make it or you have it on a timer? No, they know how to make it. You got a Keurig? I have a Nespresso. Oh, okay. What's the difference? It's fancy, a little fancier. Dang, Flex. Yeah, it makes like foam coffee, you know, like. Bobby, we used to have one here at the studio because Luke Bryan gave it to us. You remember? I never used it. The cute little pods. You brought a Nespresso. I never used it though. Is it pod? Is your thing pod though? Yeah, they're pods, but they're different and they're hard to find. You got to order them. Like grocery stores don't have them. Well, that's. It's awesome. That's pretty legit. And they already know like little almond milk, that's how much you put on there. It's pretty cool. Ray, play next voicemail. I just want to give a shout out to my amazing daughter. She's graduated high school early, working two jobs, trying to save up for her schooling. Keep up the good work, Serenity. Serenity, there you go. I like that. What do you call Serenity as a nickname? Ren, because that's too many syllables. Seren. Ren. Ser. Seren. Ser is not a name. Nitty. Serenity. I don't know the nitties one I'd go with. I definitely an option. Seren. Seren. Seren. I like Seren. Ser. S. Ren, right? Because that's actually a name. Not everybody can have a nickname. Serenity, that's four syllables. That's too many names to call that by our name every time. Serenity, Catherine. That's still only three, but even Catherine, you probably call a cat. You can call me Catherine. Stephanie. Catherine. Steph. You probably call Catherine cat though. Okay, so you're right. It's probably Ren. Hey, Ren. Ren. Seren. Okay, here we go. Popular nicknames for Serenity include Ren. Renny. Hey, Nitty made it. It shouldn't. And no Seren. That's almost not a nickname, so Ren. That's two, that's half of it. I don't know. Not a bad name though, just too many syllables if you ask me. Ren. Next one. Hi, Bobby. I heard you say yesterday that NASCAR drivers are indeed athletes. And I've also heard you say that Jockeys horse-recording is not a sport. They are not athletes. I'm going to need you to explain further. Thank you. All right, I sure will. I don't think you have to be an athlete to play a sport. You can be an athlete and it not be a sport that you do. I think NASCAR drivers, I think that's one of the only sports that don't have a ball. It's hard to be a sport without a ball. NASCAR makes it. Horse racing, you're putting your life and the ability to win that race on another living thing. The horse is the reason. The trainer and the jockey, the jockey can be a great athlete. The jockey can not be an athlete, it doesn't matter. So, horse racing not a sport for the jockey. You can say is the horse racing a sport for the horse? Okay. He's the real athlete. He's the athlete there. That's true. But like polo is because there's a ball. Absolutely. Because you've got to actually hit the... Yeah, there's a few elements here. For the most part, it's got to have a ball to be a sport. There are a couple things that I'll allow in the category. Race cars is one. And that can be NASCAR, that could be F1. So, I want to cover all race cars. Horse racing is not a sport unless the animal is the person we're talking... The animal is Tom Brady. But even then, they don't even know they're doing it. They don't understand the concept of winning. If you don't understand the concept of winning, does winning even count to you? No. It's like putting ants in a race and declaring one champion. They didn't know they went through that race. They don't even know why the walls were built. They just found a hole. So, no. But you can be an athlete and not play a sport. I know a lot of great athletes who don't play sports. Some that have played sports in the past, some that still don't. There are certain things, like I think to be a great hula-hooper, you've got to be a good athlete. Hand-eye coordination, athletic ability, strength. I think to do that. But I don't think hula-hooping is a sport. What about gymnastics? That would be a sport only because I can't do it. If I could do that, then that wouldn't be a sport. I can't do that. So, that's one of the ones that are a sport that doesn't have a ball. I'd enjoy it if they had a ball a little more. They're tossing the ball while they're spinning on the bars. Speaking of Tom Brady, have y'all seen how people are saying he's acting like a 16-year-old girl? Yeah, his Instagram stories. He's like laying on the couch like, just another Sunday. He's like, is this what Sundays are? He loves attention. But his faces are very like, just like, yeah, teenage girl. That's kind of funny. He loves him some attention. Don't we all, though? Me saying that, our currency's attention. But yeah, it's weird for Tom Brady because he wasn't like that his whole life, leading up to it. Well, yeah, now he's not getting attention like he used to. So he's got to find it somewhere. And that's with up close Instagram stories. Yep. All right, that's it. Thank you guys for hanging out with us. We'll see you tomorrow. Tomorrow on the BobbyCast, Derek Huff will be on today, Blake Shelton. So check out the podcast or you can go to Netflix and watch it. Amy, what's on your podcast? What are you guys doing this week? Oh, today we do like a little intro together, but ours is, we talk about, it's a little bit of a repeat with a little bit of something new because of the ice. Last week, we weren't able to record, we normally do. So we have some new stuff that we did on Zoom. What is it? Let me pull it up to tell you exactly. The episode is called Meeting Ourselves Where We Are, which is us having to accept that we were having to record on Zoom and that's not ideally how we wanted to show up, but we got it done. And then we threw in a old episode about F-bombs and feelings. Do you not know what you guys do every, do you record your way out, I guess? Well, this I recorded last week. I just didn't have the title, but I didn't know, I know what we recorded when on Zoom. Yeah, that's what I'm asking. And how we were having to accept our situation and it was an ideal. And our producer was going out of town. So we normally would have done it this Monday and it would have been right on time. We don't record that far out, but he had scheduled a vacation three months ago and we were trying to get ahead and then the ice storm sort of ruined that. But I like what we did in the beginning. So in case anybody else is in a situation where they have to just go with the flow and accept the situation. That's a lot. I feel like you filibustered a little bit there. What's your podcast is called? And also I do the title and description. So yeah, I do know what we talk about. Well, I was asking if you recorded them a while ago and you do them in order, then I would understand if you're like, Hey, I don't know. But if you ask me like anything I did in the last four days, I can tell you exactly just from memory. Yeah, we didn't do it in the last four days. Oh, take that. No, I didn't know that. Five days ago. That's impressive though, guys. I can't tell you what I did yesterday. Hey, you can. What do we talk about on 25 Wuzzles yesterday? Oh, Kevin, Kevin not going to the Super Bowl. We talked about Royal Rumble. Yep. So we opened up a helmet. Yeah. Joe Burrow helmet. How do you keep it straight though? Well, because you talk about so many things on so many different shows. You get no straighter than me. Look at him. Mr. Straight. I walked down the road. They're like, dude, you're straight. I'm like, you better believe it. You can tell, huh? Yeah. Yeah. I just wonder because usually I would know the last episode, but if you recorded five or six at a time and like bunch recording, then you wouldn't. I didn't know. Yeah. Some because we were getting ahead for his vacation. We had been recording bunches. And then we got, I don't even want to tell you what. Okay. Good. Um, all right. So. Okay. Good for me. You don't have to. You're good. Yeah. We're good. You've said it. I've said enough. You've said enough. Okay. We're done. We'll see you guys tomorrow. Bye, everybody. No gloss, no filter, just stories, spoken without fear. A person who is not generous cannot be an artist. The world will be at peace only when it is ruled by poets and philosophers. Listen to my weekly podcast, the Pooja Bhachow on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Come for the honesty. Stay for the fire. This is an iHeart podcast. Guaranteed human.