Episode Transcript
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0:01
Mom transmitting
0:05
Alisa.
0:11
Hey, welcome to Tuesday show More in studio morning.
0:13
All right, get to know what's your favorite TV show
0:15
ever? Give me one and only one favorite
0:18
TV show ever?
0:19
Amy Friends.
0:21
Just the first one that came to my mind is when I can watch
0:23
it anytime and enjoy it all the time.
0:25
Do you think that it's because you've watched
0:27
that more than any other show?
0:30
Probably it's just familiar, it's comforting,
0:32
it's funny.
0:34
I yeah, my.
0:35
Jog it was new. Yeah,
0:37
I was it in reruns.
0:38
Yeah, no, I was watching it. It was on nineteen ninety
0:40
five to two thousand and five. This is in my
0:42
wheelhouse.
0:43
Hey day, Yeah, lunchbox
0:46
man.
0:46
There's so many good TV shows.
0:48
Just give me one, though, don't do the game. Well, I
0:50
want to pick this one, but I'm picking this one.
0:52
I would never do that. Ye give
0:54
me.
0:56
The Real World, the first
0:58
reality show television and it changed
1:01
TV forever.
1:03
The first reality television show. Yeah
1:06
gotta you said that.
1:08
Yeah, yeah, you mixed them up.
1:09
Yeah yeah, but I mean it
1:11
started reality TV and it was so awesome
1:14
and it was so real that
1:16
it was just like you watched these people on
1:18
TV going, oh my gosh,
1:21
and it provided inspiration in life
1:23
for me because I set a goal because
1:25
that's what I was going to do and with my life was me on
1:27
that show and you tried and
1:29
I tried, and I didn't make it, but
1:33
it gave me a stepping stone into
1:35
the I mean, this was like a fallback plan.
1:37
But you did get.
1:38
A call from a number in California that
1:40
you swear with them offering you a job.
1:41
It was it was three two three. I
1:44
had gone to an open casting call that day.
1:46
I went to my six pm
1:48
economics class in college
1:50
and I was like, I'm back in time, might as well go to class.
1:53
When I got home from class, three two
1:55
three called me. I asked my roommate Clay, I said, Hey,
1:57
who called you from three two three goes? I don't know
1:59
who that is. I asked my brother, who was sleeping
2:02
on my floor at that time, Hey, who
2:04
called you from three two three goes? I don't know
2:06
And I google three two three Los Angeles.
2:09
Everything okay with your brother at that time?
2:12
Yeah?
2:12
Yeah.
2:12
He had just got a job in this in
2:14
San Antonio, and so he moved in and
2:17
he slept on the floor because we had a two bedroom
2:19
apartment.
2:19
For how long?
2:21
Five months? Oh?
2:23
Such as it takes a minute to get back home.
2:25
Sure, sure, Eddie, your favorite show ever, I'm
2:27
gonna go with Seinfeld, because, dude,
2:29
the first time I ever saw Seinfeld,
2:32
I didn't see it.
2:32
I heard it. We were on a road trip.
2:34
It was crazy, and this was like, dude,
2:37
I don't know what ninety six,
2:40
maybe ninety five, and like
2:43
I had a walkman and my headphones were a
2:45
road trip on the back and I'm scanning through radio stations
2:47
and I hear almost like a radio play,
2:50
Like what is this?
2:51
This is like the old.
2:51
Days where I'm actually hearing a play on
2:53
the radio and it was Seinfeld. It was that episode
2:56
where they're in the parking garage trying to find their car.
2:58
How did you hear it on the radio?
2:59
I don't know.
2:59
One of the radio stations must have just been playing whatever
3:01
was on the TV show station that's
3:03
on the radio.
3:04
Yeah, So I'm like, whatever, this is. This sounds awesome.
3:07
So then I started tuning in watching the show. I'm
3:09
like, this is my favorite show of all time. That's
3:12
weird the radio was playing that.
3:14
Yeah, And the fact that it was so funny on
3:16
the radio.
3:17
Mine's The Office. I've
3:19
seen every episode one hundred times. I watched it and new I
3:21
loved it. I thought it was so funny.
3:23
I don't know.
3:24
I mean, it's so far the Office that second
3:27
place. There's such a gap there. What's
3:29
second place? I don't want to we can't do that.
3:32
I'm gonna hold myself to the same role as I've
3:34
put it you guys, Okay, but yeah, it's it's
3:36
it's by far the Office. The British
3:38
Office is also really good. But the thing about
3:40
British shows that they do, all the British shows, is
3:42
they only do two seasons are done.
3:45
It doesn't matter what the show is. Basically, even though they're making
3:47
a lot of money.
3:47
Yeah, straight up, Like they did an Office
3:50
UK Christmas special, they did it. But
3:53
those British shows. The Office America ran for like one
3:55
hundred years. Yeah, all right, let's go,
3:57
thank you guys for being here. We had a good show today. I feel
4:00
we had an email coming up in a second where a listeners like,
4:02
I accidentally call my current girlfriend
4:04
my ex girlfriend's name. What do I do? We'll get
4:06
into that. We'll do some Bobby feud coming up as well.
4:09
Let's open up the mail bag you friends.
4:11
In gan mail I alas leave it, Abby
4:14
Air.
4:14
Did something we call Bobby's mail
4:16
bag.
4:17
Yeah, hello, Bobby Bones. My girlfriend
4:19
and I have been together for two years. Tonight
4:21
at dinner, I accidentally referred to her as
4:24
my ex girlfriend's name instead of her name. For
4:26
the record, that relationship was like seven years
4:28
ago. I am long over it, but
4:31
I did say her name, and then I
4:33
lied to my girlfriend's saying the reason I said it
4:36
is because I found out today she was engaged, which wasn't
4:38
true. Actually I found out a few weeks back,
4:40
and I really don't care. I try to tell
4:42
my girlfriend that I'm very sorry and it was honestly
4:45
a mistake, but she doesn't believe me. I think
4:47
she feels it means I miss her or something. But
4:49
I love my girlfriend very much. I know I shouldn't have lied,
4:51
and I think the reason I did, or having the pass
4:53
is because my last relationship I felt like I was
4:55
walking on eggshells the whole time. What advice
4:58
do you have on showing my girl friend
5:00
I'm sorry and reassuring her I don't have feelings
5:02
for my ex signed
5:05
bonehead boyfriend. You
5:08
know, I guess I wonder a little bit too, like
5:10
what the context was and if the names
5:12
are somewhat similar, or if there was let's
5:14
say the girl's name was Lauren the X and there was
5:16
another Laura that you had just met.
5:18
I don't know.
5:19
There could have been a lot of factors, because I don't think
5:21
it had just come screaming out of you unless you were thinking about
5:23
her being engaged.
5:24
Right, And you kind of have to have some
5:27
kind of story, right, like some kind of excuse
5:29
or else. Why would you randomly just say her name unless
5:32
you're thinking about her because she just got engaged.
5:34
And I don't know that excuse of she just got engaged.
5:36
I like it. That's a good idea. That was a good idea.
5:38
Have it.
5:40
Why are you thinking about that?
5:41
No, I saw it on social media. I was just thinking about it as weird
5:43
that she got engaged. That's what I would say. This is what you
5:45
should do.
5:46
Look, look, it sucks, it's
5:48
happened. You can't take it back.
5:51
All you can do is go, I'm really sorry about that. I don't
5:53
know why it happened. You can say this story
5:56
and then just hope that she allows you to move on. And
5:58
if she doesn't. That's kind of on her. Her accidents
6:00
happened like this. As long as it's not happening two,
6:02
three, four, five times, that's trouble. And
6:05
especially if it's a common name, this
6:07
is not something that you should hold guilt
6:11
for. If you've apologized
6:13
and it doesn't happen again, she's
6:15
got to understand that she's
6:17
probably messed up to in certain ways. Or
6:19
you just corner her or let's say her extporar
6:22
for his name is Luke, and she's like it most fruit
6:24
lukes. You go, you said, Luke, you're in love with them,
6:26
and then you turn it on her interesting and she's
6:28
like I said, and
6:30
you never.
6:31
Let it go.
6:31
And then every time she brings it up, well, you said, Luke, Luke
6:35
Warrener. There are different
6:37
strategies to this, but the first strategy is the adult
6:39
version, and it is I
6:42
won't even say you messed up, as in like you
6:44
purposefully did something bad. It was an
6:46
accident. It's probably on your mind.
6:49
As long as it doesn't happen again, it's gonna be okay.
6:51
Just reassure her, Hey, sorry about that. That was so
6:53
stupid to me. I don't know why I said that.
6:55
Is enough? Is that good enough?
6:56
It has to be good enough.
6:57
I feel like just owning it and
7:00
how you feel about it, and own
7:02
how her feelings about it are valid, and
7:04
be like.
7:05
I saw they were engaged, and I'm so happy that
7:07
that's not part of my life anymore that you are.
7:10
And I was actually just thinking about.
7:11
I like that. Dude, that's really good. That's
7:14
next level thinking.
7:15
But I mean, well you can flee out.
7:18
Do you have to be negative and be like I'm
7:20
so happy?
7:21
Oh yeah, you gotta definitely I'd rather die.
7:23
Yeah, yeah, I almost threw
7:25
up in my mouth and that name came out.
7:27
If you notice someone,
7:31
yes, you need to build her up a bit, but apologize
7:33
and move on, and don't keep
7:35
bringing it up yourself, as in like I'm
7:37
still so sorry, apologize, explain
7:40
yourself, move on. It's on her to forgive you
7:42
because you didn't do anything purposefully
7:44
bad.
7:45
Right, yeah, no it was not.
7:47
I mean we don't know this person, but yeah, we're assuming
7:49
it was not on purpose.
7:50
Sleep in a different room for like a month, like say
7:52
it while you sleep. Oh my god,
7:55
we got your mail.
7:56
And laid on your air that
7:59
was found to Bobby failed.
8:01
That Jim, it's
8:03
time to play the Bobby feud.
8:05
Here we go.
8:07
There are ten answers on the board. The
8:09
top ten things kids want to be when
8:11
they grow up? The
8:13
new pole last kids at the end of the school
8:16
year. What do you want to be when you grow up?
8:19
Eddie, you won the dice roll, you get to go first.
8:21
The top ten things kids want to be when they
8:23
grow up.
8:24
I'm gonna go with the boys, and I think a
8:26
lot of them say a professional athlete.
8:28
Show me pro athlete number
8:32
one.
8:32
Answer that show.
8:36
Let's go with the They're gonna follow the money. Let's
8:38
go with doctor. Show me doctor,
8:42
doctor, and nurse at number five.
8:44
That's good.
8:46
I think that a lot of them
8:48
probably like their animals, their pets, So let's go veterinarian.
8:51
Show me a vet.
8:53
Number seven.
8:55
That's where it gets tough.
8:57
Mmm.
9:00
I believe that the girls will
9:03
want to be.
9:06
Say it.
9:09
Fashion designers. Okay, no, no,
9:11
guys want to be fas designer.
9:12
Sure, some some fashion designers.
9:18
Maybe three answers are off the board.
9:20
A new pole lass kids at the end of the school year. What do
9:22
you want to be when you grow up?
9:24
Lawyer?
9:25
Show me a lawyer, not
9:28
a desire profession by today's
9:30
kids.
9:30
I don't know if the kids really know what a lawyer is.
9:32
Lunchbox, my daughter, Well, they can be in sixth
9:34
grade, seventh grade.
9:35
Too, that's true.
9:37
You ready, social
9:39
media.
9:40
Starre show me an
9:42
influencer.
9:44
That's good.
9:46
Number two answer influencer.
9:49
Man, I don't know why they want to do this. There
9:51
ain't no money in it.
9:53
Teacher, show me a teacher
9:56
an answer, teacher.
9:58
Somebody's got to do it.
10:00
Gotta do it.
10:01
Lunchbox with eleven points now, m.
10:06
A, I don't know what you
10:08
call it, but I mean police, fire
10:12
first responder. They see those firefighters,
10:14
they think that's a cool job.
10:15
Are you saying firefighter is firefighter
10:17
and police are two different jobs?
10:18
I would say firefighter.
10:19
Show me firefighter.
10:23
All right, points are doubled, second round
10:26
edite, you're up with thirteen points. Lunchbox eleven
10:28
amy zero off the board, athlete,
10:31
influencer, doctor, nurse, vet,
10:34
and teacher.
10:37
Lunchbox.
10:37
You were so close you should have got a police officer.
10:40
Give me a police officer.
10:41
Tell me police officer.
10:46
I thought you had to do like I'm gonna I about to
10:48
be so mad.
10:49
I was about to be so.
10:50
Mad lunch and double. He got five left.
10:55
I'm an actor, show
10:58
me an actor's
11:01
six gets the right job?
11:02
I point?
11:05
Oh say,
11:10
uh, it's
11:14
a singer artist
11:16
artist?
11:17
Good?
11:19
An artist? Yeah?
11:21
When that? What are they called? The singer artists?
11:24
What are they called?
11:25
They're the same thing, That's what I mean. Like an entertainer
11:28
in that space.
11:30
Like a.
11:31
Like, what what do we call them?
11:34
Do we call them singers or artists?
11:35
A singer artist, entertainer in that space?
11:39
What musician for?
11:41
Okay, musicians?
11:43
I don't know if she's getting them all for the
11:45
eight points there here twenty points. You're in the lead.
11:49
Okay.
11:50
Top ten things kids want to be when they grow up. Three answers
11:52
left on the board.
11:54
I mean, everybody wants to be a parent.
11:56
Well not everybody but a.
11:58
Parent A
12:01
parent?
12:02
Apparently not.
12:05
All right, let's go over to lunchbox.
12:06
Lunchbox points are tripled, No double,
12:08
double double, all right, just expected.
12:10
To miss it. Sorry, it's
12:13
funny your mind wasn't there. Sorry that was
12:15
rude, I know, very rid of me.
12:17
Yeah,
12:20
they want to be reality
12:24
TV star.
12:25
Reality TV stars.
12:31
Anyway, points a tripled That's all I was waiting
12:33
for.
12:33
Anyway, Eddie the
12:35
points right now, Amy twenty, Eddie thirteen.
12:37
Lunchbox at eleven. There are three
12:39
answers on the board. You have pro, athlete,
12:42
influencer, both off. They've been called
12:44
musician, doctor, nurse, actor, vet
12:47
and teacher.
12:52
Gos. It's tough, real
12:55
hard, all
12:59
right.
13:00
I think there are a bunch of celebrity chefs
13:02
out there, so give me.
13:05
They want to be chefs.
13:07
Show the man a chef lose
13:14
Amy, Okay,
13:19
entrepreneur, tell I have that.
13:21
I have.
13:22
That's number ten, show
13:24
me entrepreneur.
13:29
Amy has twenty points. She is in the lead.
13:30
Lunchbox.
13:31
If you get this, yeah, eleven,
13:34
I'll win. You will not win.
13:35
If you get three, you'll tie, But if you get
13:37
eight or ten you'll win.
13:39
Yeah. Well, I'm playing on getting one of the bigger one food.
13:41
I don't go small and you don't.
13:43
No, man, there's
13:47
a lot out there. There's a lot of jobs. I don't even know
13:49
what they do. I mean, like
13:53
there's computer people like they like people
13:55
like the code. Now, people like to play
13:57
video games. But do they like I mean, do
13:59
they think, oh that's what I want.
14:00
To do is a living? Do they think they can do a living video
14:02
gaming?
14:03
Yeah?
14:03
Yeah, new
14:06
pole. Last kids, what do you want to be when you grow up?
14:08
And an answer ten seconds please?
14:09
Yeah.
14:09
And then there's also there's other like
14:12
like a banker, you know, like a money dude, like
14:14
a finance Maybe their dad's in finance,
14:16
so they wanted to follow in the family footsteps.
14:18
Yeah, maybe they want to sell cars in
14:20
an answer because they're military.
14:24
After all that, After
14:26
all that, you went military and number ten
14:28
was engineer.
14:31
I didn't even know what that was when I was a ude.
14:33
Number eight was astronaut, I don't
14:35
know what that was. And then number three was a gamer
14:37
streamer.
14:39
There and Amy is our weather.
14:43
What you want to be when you.
14:44
Grows I had a few different
14:46
things, but event at one point especially.
14:48
So that was on there, young young, and
14:51
then it turned into.
14:52
I wanted to be in news. I wanted to be a news
14:55
anchor. Probably my senior year of high school. That's
14:57
where I went for career day. Nice to the local
14:59
news station.
15:00
Yeah yeah, yeah.
15:01
You saw her get at the granite store and.
15:03
I got her autograph.
15:04
Yeah, well that's cool.
15:05
Well, thank you for being here as your career.
15:07
Thanks.
15:08
Good's time for the news.
15:14
So earlier this month, Dorothy Jean
15:17
Tillman graduated from Arizona State
15:19
University. And you're probably like, okay, yeah, a lot of
15:21
people are graduating right now. Well,
15:23
she's only seventeen years old and she just earned
15:25
her.
15:26
From college, not even high school.
15:27
Wow.
15:28
She shared her PhD.
15:29
What yeah, and integrated
15:32
behavioral health, becoming the youngest person
15:34
in school history to earn such
15:36
a degree. And she entered
15:39
college at age ten. So she's been
15:41
working on.
15:41
This for a little bit.
15:43
But so many people poured into
15:45
her to make this possible.
15:47
So what she does is she likes to give back.
15:49
She has her own charity group that introduces
15:51
local kids to arts and engineering programs.
15:54
So not only do people pour into her, but she's pouring
15:56
into others. And again, she's only seventeen the
15:59
PhD.
16:00
I don't understand.
16:01
Well, I want to to rest
16:03
and relaxed for a second because Eddie told me we're
16:05
in good hands because he just had his kindergarten
16:08
graduation.
16:08
Yes, my son graduated at preschool. He's
16:10
going to kindergarten.
16:11
Oh got it.
16:12
And they had this little thing at the graduation like what do you want
16:14
to be when you grow up? And all the kids went up a
16:16
lot of doctors.
16:17
Guys, they're saving us lots of lots
16:19
of doctors.
16:20
She hasn't figured out exactly
16:22
what she's gonna do, but she says the world
16:24
is so worster and since she did so much young,
16:26
she has so much time to think things through.
16:28
Hey, take a gap decade
16:31
to a gap year. Take a gap decade. All right, great
16:33
story, that's what it's all about.
16:35
That was telling me something good.
16:38
I'm gonna indulge lunchbox for a second. He
16:41
claims he's one of the top twenty five most
16:44
famous people in country music, one
16:46
of the top twenty five most famous people in Nashville.
16:50
We argue that quite frequently, and
16:52
named like seventy people more famous
16:54
than him. However, he did go to Atlanta
16:57
last weekend, and he did say people
16:59
freaked out everywhere he went. So that's
17:02
what he said. I'm gonna pass it over to you
17:04
tell him.
17:04
I mean, dude, I couldn't go anywhere. I'm just
17:06
walking into the Braves game. You know,
17:09
there's I don't know how many people go to a Braves game,
17:11
thousands upon thousands upon thousands
17:13
upon thousands, And we've only been
17:15
on the air there a few weeks right and
17:17
I mean right away, these two dudes
17:20
start freaking out.
17:21
As I'm just walking.
17:22
I'm like, I'm just trying to have a night out my family,
17:24
trying to you know, stay under.
17:25
The radar, dude, not celebrity.
17:27
I'm like yelling and screaming like hey, you
17:29
know, but I'm just trying, you know, being a dad. And
17:31
these two dudes are like, oh my gosh,
17:34
Oh my gosh, guys.
17:36
I can't go anywhere. I'm in Atlanta and then just
17:38
trying to be normal, you know what I mean.
17:39
And I mean these boys, you
17:44
guys start breaking.
17:44
He yelled at me, didn't he kind of.
17:46
Yeah, where
17:48
are you guys from Gusta.
17:49
Georgia boo? That's why being
17:51
famous. Guys, my
17:54
Bobby, you're not gonna watch this, but.
17:56
You had to like beg them no. You
17:59
feed him lying. You led the witness more
18:01
than I've ever heard a witness led.
18:02
And remember when you said again,
18:05
dude, they were.
18:05
Like, holy crap, like this is crazy.
18:07
The one Braise game we go to this year and we
18:10
see you and I'm like, I mean, yeah, I kind
18:12
of big deal.
18:13
Uh, it was just crazy.
18:15
So I just go and you know, I stayed to myself
18:17
at the game, and like before the game, we're watching some concert
18:20
out by the stadium and there's
18:22
these people just like pointing at me, pointing at me. They're
18:24
like looking there like that's I'm that sim But they never came
18:26
and said anything, but I saw them. I was like, geez,
18:28
guys, I mean this is getting crazy. And then walking
18:31
back to the hotel after the game, these two
18:33
ladies start freaking out. Gosh, leaving
18:35
the Braise game so famously, these lads from Leesburg,
18:38
Georgia.
18:39
I hate being so famous, but even go to a Braves
18:41
game and I just.
18:42
I mean, clash your wives hard man.
18:44
I'm so famous this rough.
18:46
How come you're the one that keeps saying how famous you are?
18:48
It's just clips of people laughing saying I'm famous.
18:52
Walking up to anybody.
18:55
Some city and.
18:56
Then you you really
18:58
didn't bring anything to prove you're point. What
19:00
do you mean you And both of those clips
19:03
were just reminding the person how famous you
19:05
are, and they just were like making a noise.
19:07
No, no, they were the ones that stopped me. They
19:10
are the ones.
19:10
You don't have audio of that. No, I did you brought
19:12
audio to prove something, but it doesn't prove anything.
19:14
No, it proves that they were so excited
19:17
to see me at the Braves game.
19:19
They were pumped.
19:22
Lunchbox down to the Lanta with ninety four nine to the Bowl our
19:24
station down there. And apparently everywhere he goes he
19:26
tells people.
19:27
No, no, no, I don't tell people.
19:29
They are the ones that said it to me. They're like, oh
19:31
my gosh, and it was crazy.
19:34
So I looked it up and there's around thirty nine thousand
19:36
people go to a game, so let's say
19:38
two and two, there's four that recognized him.
19:40
Were the people at the concert that were pointing
19:43
at him?
19:44
They were really security.
19:46
No, That's when I realized.
19:47
I was like, man, maybe it's not good to go
19:50
without security because it was who
19:52
They were pretty excited.
19:53
I feel like if you line up thirty nine thousand
19:56
people, they're all going to know like one person
19:58
there that's like, hey, oh
20:00
he didn't.
20:00
Get in front of all thirty I didn't get me fair exactly.
20:03
And then I sat in my seats where, you know, no one
20:05
could see me, like it was kind of in a corner, so no
20:07
one.
20:07
Would also, don't think he's famous like he thinks
20:09
he is, but I don't know.
20:11
On that list, are you more famous and Hardy? Yeah,
20:15
yeah, you're more famous on Walker Hayes.
20:17
Yes, his
20:20
his stars kind of like it's
20:23
not as bright I.
20:24
Would say, you know, it's not as bright as still way brighter,
20:27
you don't think. So he just launched like his
20:29
own j C. Penny clothes non alcoholic
20:31
beer.
20:32
Oh he did a non alcoholic beer. I didn't know that.
20:34
Yeah, so I change my mind.
20:35
No is his face on the beer?
20:39
But if his face and on it, then no one knows. I mean, what
20:42
about Kane
20:44
Brown? Not Kane's got me by
20:46
a little bit, like a little bit. Yeah,
20:49
I'm just telling you, man, it was. It was quite
20:51
the thing down in Atlanta. We were I was
20:54
quite the thing. Let's just put that one.
20:55
What about like Florida, Georgia.
20:56
Lyne, Oh, I'm more famous then
20:59
not then together?
21:01
Oh, if they're separate, they're not famous, Like they
21:03
have to be together for people to know who they are. One of them's got a
21:05
song on the radio. Oh yeah, I
21:07
understand. But if he's just walking down the street by
21:09
himself, they don't recognize them. If they were together, Oh
21:12
that's f G l They don't know their names
21:14
individually. What about Randy Travis, Oh,
21:17
I'm definitely more famous he was back
21:19
in the nineties.
21:22
So that all of our listeners who are new out there, this is what we deal
21:24
with every day. And let's hear that first
21:26
clipping in ray of Lunchbox reminding the people
21:28
that they think he's famous.
21:30
Guys, I can't go anywhere.
21:31
I mean Atlanta.
21:32
I'm not just trying to be normal, you.
21:34
Know what I mean?
21:34
And I mean these boys, you
21:38
guys are yelled at me kind
21:41
of.
21:43
Where are you guys from? Justin Georgia? Bo,
21:45
That's why he's tough being famous. Guys.
21:49
Do you hear the bar where he says, y'all are yelling at
21:51
me kind of?
21:54
That's What about Bailey Zimmerman.
21:56
Oh, that's a that's a close one, man. He's
21:58
starting to rise. Yeah, yeah, people are starting to
22:00
like him a lot. Do you think you're more famous than Bailey Zimmerman?
22:03
He yeah, by
22:05
a little bit, just barely. Yeah, another six months
22:07
he might get me. Okay, I'll play Bailey's Mmerman. Now here
22:09
is where it ends. Thanks for listening to the
22:12
show. The Bobby Orange Show with a very
22:14
famous Lunchbox. Maybe that's what we should started calling
22:16
the show with the very famous Lunchbox. I
22:20
got a message saying, hey, what's the weirdest thing about each
22:22
of your show members? So I made a list
22:24
here starting well,
22:27
they asked me.
22:28
About you guys.
22:29
Weird.
22:29
Yeah, let me just run through what I found was
22:31
the weirdest thing about you guys. Lunch Box
22:34
is a couple.
22:35
One.
22:35
He kisses his dad on the lips.
22:36
That's weird.
22:37
And mom, don't leave off my mom. She'd
22:40
be rude. That would be rude.
22:41
Right, you kiss your dad and your mom on the lips on the mouth,
22:43
that's total.
22:44
And how old is Lunchbox old?
22:46
I am forty two?
22:48
And then he will clip his toels,
22:51
put them on his knee, and then when he's done, eat them.
22:53
All snack like
22:56
actually ingest them. Yeah, like, which
22:59
is weirder though?
23:00
Kiss his mom and dad on the lips still like mouth kissing
23:02
his parents or eating the toneail mouth
23:04
kissing the toails.
23:06
I'm torn. They're both pretty
23:08
torn. Yeah, yeah, you can convinced me either way.
23:11
The tohails, I can't even.
23:13
One's gross and the other's gross. Okay,
23:16
so that is lunchbox's weirdness.
23:20
Amy's has changed
23:22
over the years. It's just her whole like fascination
23:25
with birds. It first
23:27
was just bird watching, which I got she was going the
23:29
hard time.
23:30
It calmed her down.
23:31
But then it started to be she would see dead
23:33
people in different birds and
23:36
her mom was a cardinal, her dad was a
23:38
blue jay.
23:39
Is sorry?
23:41
Respectful, yes, and
23:44
I like it that it makes her feel better. But what's the weirdest
23:46
thing is that it has turned from just bird watching
23:48
into bird connection.
23:52
Yeah, yeah, so kind
23:54
of weird, still good. Weird doesn't mean bad always,
23:57
but kind kind of weird. Eddie would
23:59
be his love of black and white things, black and
24:01
white movies, black I
24:03
think he I think he just did as a bit at first,
24:05
and now he's watched so many of them as a bit he likes them.
24:07
I truly enjoyed, dude.
24:09
I'm to the point now where I just turn on the channel'm
24:11
like, oh, I've seen this one.
24:12
So I think it was just a bit at first, and now he
24:14
loves them because he's just done it so much he
24:17
has to stick with it. I think
24:19
he likes them, though I love them. His wife
24:21
talks about how he likes them and the Morgan
24:23
is she loves raisins. I never met a single person who loves
24:26
raisins. She loves raisins.
24:28
Loves just alone by themselves or
24:30
I.
24:30
Like him by themselves.
24:31
I like him in trail mas like cookies.
24:33
If I get raised and troll mix, I'm getting rid of that crowd.
24:35
That's the junk part of the trail mix.
24:37
Oh I love mixing a raisin and a nut
24:39
at the same time.
24:40
Well, no mix.
24:41
She likes to eat, Mamma.
24:42
Raisins now get like the little mini boxes.
24:46
Somebody gets that for Halloween? Well
24:48
why my tricky treat question? But
24:50
if they used to, I'll be like, this is so lame.
24:53
Morgan's has to be her love for raisins. That is
24:55
weird, because who else loves raisins by themselves?
24:58
I mean raisins are good alone
25:00
though.
25:01
Yeah, I can need a little Like we have a little boxes of raises,
25:03
I go get them out of the pantry.
25:05
I like grapes.
25:06
Oh, grapes are good, you
25:08
know, smaller grapes.
25:10
Try it up grape yeah yeah, yeah, So that would be
25:12
my weird things about you guys.
25:14
Thank you, Yeah, you're welcome. I
25:17
don't think mind's that weird.
25:19
Man, I don't think I have anything worried about me, So I'm good
25:23
going back to Amy. Go ahead, you go first on
25:25
me, Ye, go ahead. I don't think
25:27
there's anything.
25:28
Yeah, there's nothing weird. You're totally normal
25:31
normal.
25:32
Give me one goom if you got one, to give.
25:34
It to me.
25:34
It doesn't sound like this is the stage.
25:38
You know what.
25:38
Let's don't worry about. Don't worry about, dude, We'll move
25:40
on normal, retally
25:43
normal.
25:44
Okay, you're not weird at all.
25:46
No, man, you have to like black everything out
25:48
on your paper right there, like once we
25:50
do it and then if if something goes
25:53
wrong, it's like prints another one and
25:55
I'll blog everything out here.
25:58
But that's a that's a medical diagnosis, im mo OCD. So
26:00
if you want to make fun of me for my medical uh
26:02
disabilities, then okay, I'm
26:04
sure we could all be diagnosed. How does that make
26:06
you feel? Well?
26:07
I only started watching birds skills depressed.
26:09
Yeah, but you have a medical diagnos.
26:11
But she stuck with them and now she has friends that live in the birds.
26:15
Okay, what else you got? You guys got nothing?
26:17
All you guys that I black out a sheet of paper, so I'm
26:19
efficient. Otherwise you have nothing
26:21
on me.
26:23
You always park like four feet away from
26:25
the wall. That's true. Out there, I do what.
26:27
I don't want to hit the wall, so it's like my butt
26:29
in the parking lot is always way out in the middle of the park.
26:31
That's weird.
26:32
But you're like four feet away from it though.
26:35
I'm just really nervous about hitting it. And
26:37
I drive slow, real slow, and I
26:39
do am a little scared of the wall out there.
26:41
That's a good point that I mean, he
26:43
has nothing.
26:44
No, no, I don't have anything.
26:45
Digging your obsession with color, like
26:47
everything has to be red. You have to have a
26:49
fat sharpie instead of a skinny sharpie.
26:51
Can't use it. I mean, everything has to be in
26:53
a certain number order in time.
26:55
You're obsessed with time, And oh my god,
26:58
you're just really weird.
26:59
Make fun of my know, why don't you?
27:01
And you have a lot of What about my eye that doesn't
27:03
work?
27:03
Make fun of that? Why don't you?
27:04
All right? Eye doesn't work?
27:05
That's not really your fault.
27:06
Color blind, Make fun of that, why
27:08
don't you?
27:09
It's not really your fault, Morgan.
27:11
The only thing I can.
27:12
Come up with is that you don't like peanut butter, and I think they're.
27:14
Very straight, like almond
27:16
butter.
27:17
Yeah, I like peanuts, I
27:20
like butter. I like almond
27:22
butter. I don't like peanut butter. So weird
27:25
because I don't mind the texture of peanut butter because I like
27:27
almond butter and they're very similarish
27:30
and like peanuts and I like butter, but peanut butter.
27:32
Oh, it's the worst.
27:34
What about when Bobby used to have parties and then he'd
27:36
be like, all right, time to go, every leave.
27:38
Don't you want me to be open and honest about when I want everybody
27:40
to leave?
27:40
More than wonder room, I
27:43
would just room.
27:45
Where's Bobby should go?
27:47
Well, the move used to be I would go in my room
27:50
and hang out, and people that wouldn't leave, I wouldn't
27:52
put on a cut off and a pair of shorts and walk out and be like,
27:54
what's up?
27:55
So you know it's time for me to go to bed.
27:56
They make him feel awkward, Yeah, like while we're still here,
27:59
we're still other.
28:00
Thing.
28:00
You cut the sleeves off your shirt.
28:01
Yeah, why do you do that? Comfort? Not big
28:04
arms, just comfort?
28:05
You cut them like run the sleep more. Even
28:07
beyond the sleeves.
28:09
You trim your under arm here, shave it all the way
28:11
off and it just grows back.
28:12
I got this with clippers.
28:13
Why would I trim it If I'm gonna do that, I don't know what we're
28:15
doing with it.
28:18
Anyways.
28:18
There's nothing about me, but that's them, those guys.
28:22
Here's the boy smail we got last night.
28:23
I was just wondering stuff. If you guys
28:26
could sometime again as long as it is,
28:28
let me get us some law. If you play a white Horse from
28:30
Christ I've been waiting for months
28:32
and I haven't heard it in the month it
28:34
was number one almost I'm
28:37
just trying to figure out what's wrong with Chris
28:39
everybody number what interesting?
28:42
I think it went number one, and then what happens
28:44
is the record label says, Okay, we're good, you don't
28:46
need to play it anymore. We have a new song from Chris we're
28:48
trying to push. So it definitely
28:50
isn't anybody boycotting him. And it did go number
28:52
one, but you'll see that with a lot of number one as soon
28:55
as they hit number one, the record label just goes, we're done,
28:57
please stop playing it because we have a new one. We got to start playing.
29:00
It was a good song and it
29:02
did hit one. And now I think they're on that Tom Petty
29:04
cover that he did on the Tom Petty soundtrack.
29:07
So also you
29:10
can YouTube it.
29:11
I heart radio app stream it.
29:12
Yeah, listen, many ways to hear it. Here's
29:15
another one, warning studio.
29:17
I'm just calling about lunchbox and
29:19
making his wife drive. I love Lunchbox,
29:22
but it makes me laugh that he's always trying
29:24
to be manly and studeley, or at
29:26
least he thinks he is. But yet being
29:28
the father and the husband, he's gonna lie to his wife
29:31
and three children travel that
29:33
far by themselves. In my
29:35
mind, that's not too fatherly or
29:37
manly, just my opinion.
29:40
Thank you for that opinion. Yesterday he told us the
29:42
compromise. He flew down and
29:45
they drove back.
29:46
Yeah.
29:46
And so I don't understand people don't let their wives,
29:49
like if they want to go on vacation, they can't drive
29:51
three hours by themselves, Like, I don't understand.
29:54
I think it was the three kids in the car.
29:57
So no one's ever gone on a vacation with their kids by
29:59
themselves.
30:00
I do like a
30:02
by yourself she's going with you, and you were like, I'm
30:04
gonna fly.
30:05
Yeah.
30:05
I think it was just how it was presented. I think at
30:07
times, sure people have.
30:10
Right like I think Eddie's wife's driven on vacation, right.
30:12
Yeah, but I wasn't going there. They were going, right,
30:14
So we're going to the same place.
30:15
All right, So it's okay for a woman to drive
30:17
the kids.
30:18
We agree with that, But it was
30:20
the whole presentation and why it was happening
30:22
and where it was happening.
30:23
I'm empowering. I'm empowering women to get
30:25
out there and road pile
30:31
of stories.
30:32
A sixty one year old man with terminal cancer
30:35
is in the news because he spent months
30:37
training and AI to act
30:39
just like him so that it can interact with his
30:41
family when he passes away.
30:44
And it's this whole service.
30:46
Cool or creepy or both.
30:48
There's a service called Eternos,
30:51
and it creates your AI double. Now
30:54
there's a one time fee for
30:56
one exactly. It's
30:58
gonna cost you between ten to fifteen
31:01
thousand dollars.
31:02
Is it just a computer or is it a do
31:04
you put inside of a Teddy ruxman or what?
31:06
Yeah?
31:06
I mean, I don't know how they play it back to
31:08
you, but it goes through a process with you, asking
31:11
you hundreds of questions. You
31:13
share with it, memories, It learns
31:16
to mimic your personality, your voice. It can even
31:18
generate new ideas similar to what you might think
31:20
of.
31:20
Oh hear you and it sounds
31:23
wildly creepy, also super cool,
31:27
man. I just feel like i'd want to grieve.
31:29
Yeah, I don't feel like you could ever move on if
31:32
you always had the option to talk to AI dad.
31:35
Yeah, I see that that
31:37
could be a concern of mine as well.
31:40
But so everybody grieves differently, you
31:42
know.
31:42
Oh, I it's I
31:45
think it's cool, but I think it's also
31:47
borderline, it's weird.
31:48
It can be both. Yeah, it can be both.
31:49
So something I think about with my kids is they
31:52
never got to meet my mom, and it'd be cool if
31:54
they could just hear her. I know there's old videos
31:56
and stuff I can show, but if I don't
31:58
know, just hear acting, like having a conversation
32:01
with her might be kind of cool.
32:03
Hey Mom, I
32:05
know I have a lot of thoughts on both sides.
32:07
Hey, yeah, that's that's
32:10
that's something.
32:11
How about that? Okay, what else?
32:13
So Jimmy Fallon refused to
32:15
use his connections to get Taylor Swift
32:17
tickets for his daughters because
32:19
he wants them to earn things and be
32:21
as normal and less brady as
32:24
possible, because obviously, with Taylor's
32:26
tour, he could have hooked him up big time,
32:28
but he chose not to unless.
32:30
He really couldn't.
32:30
He tried and they're like, sorry, like
32:32
you know, I chose not to heart
32:35
ticket to get.
32:36
Yeah, he said he's got the nicest kids.
32:38
But I just thought that was interesting, like his parents,
32:40
what we get for our kids and what we don't. And
32:42
then Lady Wilson, she has a signature
32:44
silhouette. When't you say, if
32:47
she wears a hat, I am bell bottom her bell bottoms.
32:51
I guess I.
32:51
Don't look at the feet of I don't know sure.
32:54
Like her Curt Like, I feel like yes, like I would
32:56
know for a fact.
32:57
I mean, and that's been in recent years.
32:59
But she's been consistent with that look
33:01
for over a decade. And it's because when
33:03
she came to town she was first working like record
33:06
labels, they said, look at all the legends.
33:07
They have a silhouette. So she's like, well, I'm
33:09
going to create mine.
33:10
As a female in country music, it does not matter
33:13
if you have.
33:14
A decent voice or you're a decent songwriter.
33:16
You got to do something that is outside of the box
33:18
if you want to get noticed.
33:20
And for me, the thing that felt the most
33:22
natural and the most real to.
33:23
Me and the thing that I felt like, what could
33:26
I wear that would make you feel like I.
33:27
Could take on the whole dang world? And for
33:29
me it was mailbox.
33:32
I guess if you really flared
33:34
them out in a silhouette, it looked like her.
33:37
That's interesting. I didn't think that, like you'd
33:39
need a silhouette.
33:40
Well, Morgan Wallin said that to me like
33:43
three or four years ago at the house I was interviewing him.
33:45
It's like, you know, I have my hair like this because I want
33:47
there to be a silhouette. Couldell it was me in a Silhouette's
33:49
interesting, first time I'd heard that was from him.
33:52
Like all the greats have silhouettes because they all
33:54
look a bit different. Yeah, are there something about on
33:56
him?
33:56
Yeah?
33:56
She said that she was walking around and an executive
33:59
was like, look at all these silhouettes. These are all the legends.
34:01
So she just stuck with her I'm
34:03
Amy. That's my file.
34:05
That was Amy's pile of stores.
34:07
It's time for the good news produce already
34:14
accident.
34:14
He's ten years old. He has autism. He lives
34:16
in Connecticut, and he loves the garbage
34:19
man. He loves the garbage trucks coming in
34:21
and them picking up all the trash. He
34:23
even helps the neighbors get all the cans out in the
34:25
street before they come.
34:27
He just loves it.
34:28
So the waste management company what they
34:30
do for his birthday. They said, you know what, We're going to help
34:32
him out. He's going to be a garbage man for a day.
34:35
So they picked him up.
34:36
He went on the route and helped him out, and they
34:38
even said, hey, when you get older, we
34:40
have a job waiting for you.
34:42
I saw this meme that was like back
34:45
in like the nineties, teachers always like be careful,
34:47
you'll be a garbage man when
34:49
you grow up. And they were like, little
34:52
they know the guards man made more than teachers did.
34:55
That's funny.
34:56
Yeah, it's a good job.
34:59
Yeah.
34:59
And at the end of his route, they had a whole party
35:01
for him, pizza, cookies, birthday cake.
35:03
It was awesome.
35:04
Hope you wash his hands first though here, Yeah, very
35:06
true, all right, that's what it's all about.
35:08
That was telling me something good.
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