The Bobby Bones Show - FEELING THINGS: Showing Up for Your Single Friends & Why We Still Don't Understand Dry Cleaning

Episode Date: April 26, 2026

Kat is overwhelmed by ‘stroller TikTok’ and genuinely scared of Waymo cars. Amy is sitting with some shame after totally bombing a “feelings” quiz. Amy’s reminded of a re...el she saw a woman post about being the “single friend” and then Kat shares a list of things she does not understand including why iced coffee costs more than hot, how superglue never gets stuck in the bottle, and how dry cleaning works. Amy discovered an app called Yuka that scans the barcodes of your food and personal care products and rates them on ingredient quality and it’s addicting (Kat warns that this app might not be good for everything depending on where they are with disordered eating.) Get some Feeling Things merch by clicking HERE! (FeelingThingsPodcast.com) Sign up for the Feeling Things newsletter HERE! Watch us on Youtube HERE! Call and leave a voicemail: 877-207-2077 Email: heythere@feelingthingspodcast.com HOSTS: Amy Brown // RadioAmy.com // @RadioAmy Kat Van Buren // threecordstherapy.com // @KatVanburenSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is an IHeart podcast. Guaranteed Human. Joy is essential and it's also elusive. But now, there's a new and exciting way to start your journey toward a more joyful existence. Joy 101. It's a new podcast hosted by me, Hoda Kotby. If you're craving inspiration to maximize your joy, tune into these candid, uplifting, and moving on-air chats.
Starting point is 00:00:24 Open your free IHeart Radio app. Search Joy 101 and listen now. Joy 101 with Hoda Kotopje is presented by CVS. There was no anything inside those eyes. They turned black. It scared the hell out of me. Evil, wake up. I'm the one that saw the murder take place by Krivac and DePippo.
Starting point is 00:00:53 Anthony DePippo showed no signs of remorse, appearing unfazed after being sentenced to the maximum. I said, I'm not guilty. I'll take it to the grave. Listen to the devil's quarry in the Bone Valley feed on the IHart Radio app. Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. All right, listen up. The Jonas Brothers here.
Starting point is 00:01:20 Our podcast is called Hey Jonas. We've here since everyone has a podcast, we want it to as well. And we've had some incredible guests so far. And now our good friend, Nile Horn, is joining the show. How's it going, boys? Hey, Niall. It was the same thing with Slow Hands. Slow Hands is not about anything else, really, is it?
Starting point is 00:01:33 You know, or taste so good can't be about food. You do the same, Nick, with some of the stuff that you've done. You too, Joe. Drop what you're doing and listen to Hey Jonas on the Iheart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your podcasts. Everyone sees me as a football player. But before anything else, I'm human. Every single day, I'm still learning how to live with problems, mistakes, relationships, emotions ever since I was born. This isn't a normal podcast.
Starting point is 00:02:01 Everything here is spontaneous, real and genuine, just honest conversations about what it means to be alive. I'm Javier El Chicharito Hernandez and listen to Learning to Be Human on IHard Radio, Apple Podcasts, or whatever you get your podcast. she deleted one. I felt like it was too much. Okay. Well, I'm going to start with mine because it'll lead into how you have multiple feelings and we're going to have covered multiple feelings. And I feel lame and shame.
Starting point is 00:03:08 Is lame? Lame's a feeling? No. I feel lame as like a thought about. Is it like I feel hungry? Because hungry is not a feeling. Yeah. It's more like, yeah.
Starting point is 00:03:19 Yeah. So I feel shame. Okay. Because shame is an official feeling. Because? Because we did a feelings game on the Bobby Bowie. show where we all had to lean the room and come back and name as many feelings as we could. And I lost. And I could only think of like four, five. You're the feeling girl. I know. I know. I know. We talk
Starting point is 00:03:37 about feelings all the time. And I just got stuck. And then I started feeling frustrated with myself. And I was like, I just feel frustrated. Frustrated. Frustrated. Hungry. And Bobby's like, hungry is not a feeling. I'm like, I know that. But I was thinking of halt. Hungry, angry, lonely, tired. Yeah. And then I should have just set the fruits of the spirit. Because then I would have been like love, joy, peace, patience, kind, as goodness, gentleness, faithfulness, self-control. So who won? Lunchbox, I think. Anyway, I feel, I am so, I would like to apologize to my Feeling Thanks community and my co-host
Starting point is 00:04:08 of Feeling Things, Kat. I owe you an apology for not winning the feelings game because I couldn't name, I think I said, like, sad. Afterwards, of course, when I'm like, oh, yeah, envy, jealousy, all these other things start coming to mind. But in the moment, all I could must. stir up was like sad. I don't even think I said love. I was like happy. Did you do hungry and are you lonely tired? I did but obviously hungry didn't count. Oh right right right right. Right. And then I got
Starting point is 00:04:38 annoyed with myself. So then I was just frustrated. And then I'm like me. Me is me a feeling? But maybe we should have you study the feelings wheel. But I know the I know. It's like what is wrong with me when I'm under pressure? Yeah. I choked. I choked. So I feel shame. But that's actually a really good. No, this is really good because you're showing everybody that like everybody messes up sometimes, you know, everybody has those days. Yeah, well, I have a Feeling Things podcast. I've never said I'm a feelings things expert. Right. Like you just like to talk about feelings. Yes. So I think I'm not going to take your feeling away from you, but I would take some pressure off of yourself. Thanks. And here we are. I'm like, okay, I just said shame and now you've got three feelings. None of these do. I say. And they're very simple. Cats three feelings. I do not think that I said them during the game,
Starting point is 00:05:32 which is crazy. I don't think so. I didn't, I'm telling you, some of the most obvious feelings I didn't say. Because I could, my brain got stuck. We had 90 seconds or something. And then he's like, okay, clock's ticking. You got 20 seconds left. And then I'm like under pressure all. Yeah. The same feeling over and over is just frustrated. Frustrated. Frustrated. Frustrated. Um, I had a Britney Spears themed birthday party one time. It was surprise. I, you know, I love Britney Spears. And we played a bunch of games, and one of the games was, name as many Britney Spears songs in, I think, 60 seconds or 30 seconds or something like that.
Starting point is 00:06:12 And obviously, I got picked on my team to do that. And I also choked. But if I had time and it wasn't a game, I could sit here and list so money. I had no idea. But I probably kept being like, hit me, baby, one more time, like over and over because you get, like, stuck on. it. So I know how you feel. Don't worry. Right. That was the best of us. So let's get to my three feelings. Let's get to them. And I'm going to study them. I did have four, but I just was like, that's too much. I just need to narrow it down. We'll start with disappointed because that
Starting point is 00:06:42 you're disappointed in me. I could never. That's not true. But thank you. You're welcome. I'm trying to make you feel better. I watched the season of the pit this morning. And if you remember, I was obsessed with that show last season, raved about it. And I won't not give you anything away, but the end of the show, like the end of the finale, it just was like. Well, sometimes people don't like when people say what, how they feel about an ending, because then they're anticipating disappointment.
Starting point is 00:07:20 Okay, well, if you don't want to hear this fast forward, they know you're disappointed. I only know this because I have lived this out on, speaking of the Bobby Bone show, like I'm known on the show as like a spoiler. It's like my thing. Well, I feel like I want to talk about this because it was, it just, it felt like the regular episode, like a middle of the season episode. So I just want to know if anybody else feels that way or if I am expecting too much. Because maybe, you know when you have high expectations, I was watching also the Noah Kond
Starting point is 00:07:54 documentary. Have you watched that? No. You're not a big fan of his, are you? No, I like Nocom. Okay. It's really good. And he's... Yeah, I actually love his music. Where did you get that? I've never heard to talk about him before. Oh. Okay.
Starting point is 00:08:09 You've never brought him up before. Okay. I don't know that you have either, but... What are you talking about? Cryokat has never heard of Noa Khan. He's like the biggest thing right now. No, cryo cat likes Cardi B. No. Nikki Minaj
Starting point is 00:08:25 She's not I don't think Noah Khan Yeah she's rap Okay so dang if you like him so much Maybe we should go to Chicago to see his show this summer Okay Why did I bring him up? You watched his documentary
Starting point is 00:08:42 No he's not from Craig had asked him he's from a boy band He is not a boy band guy If you don't know who this is Look him up his music's really good He has a lot of feelings in his music But his first album Blue up and in this documentary he's talking about how he fills a lot of pressure for the next album
Starting point is 00:08:59 because people expect now he has expectations right and it was easy to write some of that music because he was in his feelings and like he wasn't this huge famous person but now his life is a little different and so he's like well am I only going to be able to write good music if I'm sad you know which I feel like a lot of people may me deal with in the artistic world so I'm saying that is like maybe I don't want to put that kind of pressure on on this TV show because I wouldn't want to put this kind of pressure on no icon this sweet man he also talks about his body dysmorphia and disordered eating which I did not expect oh I did not know I did not know that about him I didn't well I didn't either okay I'll give you a pass on that um but he said like he hasn't
Starting point is 00:09:44 because he talks about mental health a lot and he said the reason he hasn't spoken about that a lot is because he doesn't know, like, his place in that conversation, which I thought was really interesting because I think it is really helpful when specifically men talk about that because you don't hear it as much. Definitely not. Because his disordered eating, it says here, he admits to a cycle of binge eating during high stress periods, followed by periods of starving himself, driven by feelings of hate towards his body. I do not hear men talk about this. Yeah. And he was talking about how like he'll look at a picture and he'll be like, oh my gosh, I look like I'm 400 pounds. And the people around him will be like, that's a great picture of you. But he literally
Starting point is 00:10:26 cannot see it. And I just think there's a lot of people that don't know what, I mean, to me, it seems like everybody knows. But there are also, there's a lot of people that don't know what bodies morphia is and what it really feels like. So for somebody at his level to be talking about it. And I also do like that he's not talking about it in the way that I figured everything out. he's talking about it in the way of I'm struggling with this and this is something that even me this person who looks like they're on top of the world looks in the mirror and hates stuff what they see so recommend that I didn't think I was going to talk about that but I definitely recommend that next feeling so that was your disappointed feeling not the no con but the pit yeah so there's that
Starting point is 00:11:10 my next feeling is overwhelmed because I am on baby stroller TikTok I have a feeling that you've never been on this side of TikTok. No. I don't recommend it. What happens over there? What's going on? Are you being fed people walking their strollers or like what stroller you should buy? Is it a TikTok shop?
Starting point is 00:11:33 What if it was just videos of people like walking with strollers? No, I wish it was that. Well, I'm at the point now where I feel like I should start researching what I need to buy because I don't know. I don't know the first thing about a stroller. To me, they're all the same. So I started just like looking up stuff and you know once you do that it's all you see It is every video is a live birth or a baby stroller yes people are putting their birth I don't wait how are they what parts are they filming it's just actual it's just um it's it's the
Starting point is 00:12:05 It's the video is pointing towards like you can see the mom's top half of the body okay and like you can usually see like the dad next to her and then they'll show like either the mom will like pull the baby out and onto her chest or they'll lay the baby on the chest like with all the goop and stuff on it wow but i i watched like four in a row last night and patrick walked in the bedroom and i was just like crying it's crazy to watch somebody see their i'm gonna do it now to see their baby for the first time and like also i'm i'm pretty scared of and nervous about labor and so to see some some videos people just are like oh and then their baby comes out He's crazy. It is so crazy.
Starting point is 00:12:49 They like exhale and then the baby's there. I'm like, is that what a push is? That's not what I thought a push was. It slides out. I don't know. But then some are like in agonizing, screaming kind of. And this one girl after they put the baby on her chest, she goes, somebody help me, help me, help me. Oh, I'm tearing up.
Starting point is 00:13:10 And it was just really sweet because she was, I mean, you're seeing something in a very vulnerable spot. Mm-hmm. Didn't mean to talk about this either. But people are, I also would never, kudos to the people that do that. Because also some of the videos I do kind of like watching it is sweet. I don't think I could ever put that on the internet. Yeah, it's a very intimate moment.
Starting point is 00:13:31 And I will not be looking like some of these girls. They look beautiful. Oh, like hair, makeup. Make a highlighter, bronzer, they're contoured, their hair is pretty. And it's like the girl that just, who, she looked. beautiful and her hair was just like wavy and did she have an epidural I don't know I don't ask her because then I'm like did she not scream or feel she must have had an epidural yeah because just like she wasn't sweating at all and I just was like she was numb yeah so which I will have an
Starting point is 00:14:02 epidural but I still expect to be in distress yeah of some sort any who so strollers TikTok. I, and what I'm not doing is asking for any recommendations because I have too many at this point. It just is I, the world, this world is crazy. Like there are 17,000 different strollers. They all do different things. The wheels are different. Then this is different. The bassinet. And then how this and does the car seat go with this? And then I had to text my sister. I'm like, wait a second. Do you get like a stroller every, a new one like every three months? Like how does your baby keep fitting in this? And like, does the, does the get cry of cats laughing at me and and like does the car seat like when do you how many car seats do you need because the baby grows and then one's facing one way and one's facing one way and then does
Starting point is 00:14:50 the do you have to buy the same brand because the car seat sometimes clips in to the stroller and they all say like all if you're a suburban mom you should get this kind of stroller if you're a city mom you should get this kind of stroller and I'm like well what kind of mom am I am I suburban yeah I mean yeah You'll figure it out. I feel like you'll. This is, you are overwhelmed by this. I feel like there's,
Starting point is 00:15:16 we've got some people you can definitely ask and we'll figure out your strollers edge. And what if the one that like is for me is not the cute one that I like? That's really stressful to me because I like to pick things based on how they look. So you're talking about strollers and baby stuff and baby showers is making me think of a video I saw on Instagram of a single girl. I don't, it probably hasn't come across your algorithm because yours is strollers. dollar land in births. Wait, I think this has.
Starting point is 00:15:42 I think I know what you're going to say. Okay. Well, so Shannon had found it too and brought it up to me and I was like, oh my gosh, I saw that video as well. Pride is like love. You feel it in your heart. IR. Radio. Canada's number one streaming app for radio and podcasts, including IHart Pride Canada,
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Starting point is 00:16:27 In the moment, it felt like it was going on forever. I didn't think I was going to live. I was terrified. There was no anything inside those eyes. They turned black. It scared the hell out of me. That was your first murder, kids? Yes, yeah.
Starting point is 00:16:48 Fear to say this was the biggest case of your career? Yes, sir. Rape the murder for a child. She's as bad as it gets. I would think so. People wake up. I'm the one that saw the murder take place by Crevent and DePippo. Anthony DePippo showed no signs of remorse,
Starting point is 00:17:06 appearing unfazed after being sentenced to the maximum. I said I'm not guilty. I'll take it to the grief. Listen to the devil's quarry on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast. And to hear the devil's quarry ad free with exclusive content, subscribe to Lobba for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts. Hey, I'm Hoda Kotby, host of the podcast, Joy 101 with Hoda Kotby.
Starting point is 00:17:43 Together, we're going to have meaningful conversations with the world's most fascinating people, like when actress Olivia Munn shared how she overcame fierce health challenges. I've gone through breast cancer and then helped my mother through breast cancer, and that was more difficult. There's a lot of people who understand postpartner depression. I was not prepared for postpartum anxiety. Listen to Joy 101 with Hoda Kotby on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Last night, a blown call changed a game.
Starting point is 00:18:11 This morning, the internet lost its mind. Highlights are trending, opinions are flying, and nobody's telling you exactly what happened. That's where Sports Slice comes in. I'm Timbo. Every episode, we're cutting through the noise, breaking down the plays, the controversies, and the stories behind the headlines. We go straight to the source, the athletes themselves, their locker room stories, their reactions, the stuff nobody gets to hear. The laughs, the drama, the triumphs, the moments that never make the highlight real. From viral moments to historic games, from buzzer beaters to controversial calls, we break it down, give you context and ask the questions everybody wants answered.
Starting point is 00:18:46 SportsSlice brings you closer to the action with stories told by the people who live them. Listen to Sports Slice on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast. And for more, follow Timbo Slic Life 12 in the TikTok podcast network on TikTok. So it was her talking about being a single person when everybody else around her is getting married and having babies. And I'll just go ahead and kind of read it. I have it. I went, pulled it up because she were talking. Or was this a post?
Starting point is 00:19:19 It was a video. She made a reel. Like she was talking to the camera. And she makes a really good point about showing up for your single friends when you were married with kids. And you talking about the stroller made me think about you having a baby shower. And then you having a baby shower, people showing up for you and buying gifts. Some of those people might be married with kids. Some of those people might be single.
Starting point is 00:19:39 And then I was like, oh, yeah, there's that single girl story, which I didn't plan on talking about. But I think I saw this. It feels like a fitting place to bring it up because we might have some listeners that are also single. And it's got to feel weird when I appreciate her sharing her feelings. feelings because it's it's she's shown up for all these people through all these seasons and she really likes her friends and she likes kids. This has nothing to do with her not liking kids. And it's not about not being happy for her friends, but she wants to show up for them in the ways that she can. But there's a narrative that says, don't worry when it's your turn, we'll
Starting point is 00:20:19 circle back to you. But if you stay single, it never circles back. So if you don't have an engagement party if you don't have a wedding if you don't have a baby like you have your friends that have poured into certain parts of your life that just and your single friends if they're choosing to stay single and it's been it's like they're waiting a decade or two nothing gets poured back into them yeah and it's just an interesting perspective yeah well and i i relate to that because i got married at 34 and i'm having my first kid i'll be almost 37 so i've been the person that like i remember one time being like when I moved it when I bought my first house being like I wish I could have a wedding shower because people that get married have they have all this help to like get all their kitchen
Starting point is 00:21:04 gadgets and this and that and I feel the pressure of like I have to do it all on my own and I guess you could have a housewarming party but it is an interesting perspective of like we're going to circle back to you versus like why don't we find a way to celebrate you now like why don't we celebrate your like you bought a house or your job promotion or your whatever the same way we celebrate these other things. Yes, like the job promotion part. That's a good example of like, because we often don't throw parties for ourselves like that.
Starting point is 00:21:32 But just as friends, making sure you're paying attention to something that's going on in your single friend's lives so that you can be intentional about, oh, maybe we should go to dinner and celebrate that. It doesn't have to be a full-blown shower. Yeah. For your promotions.
Starting point is 00:21:45 That's fair. Yeah. Or bring gifts. But just simple acknowledgement, especially if it's a single friend that has been there for you in the various stages are coming to your kids plays, their soccer games. The list goes on how they can show up in those ways, but they may feel like, oh, because I don't have kids, maybe you're not coming to my important presentation or something. When it's weird, it's like if you've been to somebody's
Starting point is 00:22:12 Vatorette party and wedding shower and wedding and baby shower and another baby shower and another brief shower, you're like, I've bought this person like 10 really fancy gifts with my turn. Right. And in order for it to be your turn, you have to have this, you know, thing that's been deemed by society to throw a party for. Yeah. So it's just an interesting take. And that's how, that's where my brain went. When you were talking about strollers, I started thinking about showers. And then I started thinking about gills. And I started thinking about single people. And then if you have these, if you have these similar feelings, just know that you're not alone. I also feel at this age, even like thinking about a baby shower. Like I have mixed feelings about it. Because I'm like, well, I don't necessarily. really like need people to, I can go get all this stuff myself. Strollers are expensive. I know, but like we're at the place where we're established. So like, do I want to spend all this money?
Starting point is 00:23:02 No, but I could. I'm not like 23 and struggling and need somebody to help me buy a car seat. So it does feel, I know people want to celebrate me, but also I think it's because I've had the perspective of I've been to a million baby showers and I don't have a baby and I'm like, here we go again, you know, which if any of my friends are listening, I love going to your baby showers. But I also have the perspective of like, do you love doing that? And does everybody want to really do that?
Starting point is 00:23:29 So I'm trying to think of like an alternative way to still have a baby shower, but it not just be a typical baby shower. Okay. You know? Yeah. Like I'm dabbling with couples shower idea. Oh, that's fun. I think that those are fun.
Starting point is 00:23:40 And if it's not like showery type things and the guys and there's going to be other guys there. It's just like a hangout. Yeah, it's more of a, yeah, a party, a celebration. So for Caitlin and Bobby shower, they didn't want gifts. and so I was like, well, people are going to want to do something. And so Caitlin had the idea of everybody bringing their favorite kids book. So it started the little library for their daughter. And everybody showed up with a book and we put it on the coffee table and then that was it.
Starting point is 00:24:08 And then we did a dinner. Like she wasn't, I think she was even kind of like, oh, I feel weird about having a shower. I was like, no, people are going to want to celebrate you. Yeah, that's part of it. And I say the same exact thing to you. I know that, yeah, people want to celebrate me. And I also, it's like, I don't know if it's because of my age or just because of, I feel like I just did all this wedding stuff. I'm like, you guys just did all this stuff in my wedding. I feel like, maybe you had that perspective because you were the single person like doing all the things. I think so a little bit. Yeah. Anyway. Okay. So overwhelmed by strollers. What's the third feeling? Scared. Because I went to, what? Are you just thinking about how like, why didn't I think of scared when I was doing my game? Yeah, exactly. I went to dinner.
Starting point is 00:24:50 in German town, which if you're not from Nashville, it's a little like, what do you call a little area in Nashville? Neighborhood. Yeah, neighborhood in Nashville. And we were sitting, we could see out the window. Waymo cars. I had never seen one. So a Waymo car, you don't have them in your area.
Starting point is 00:25:08 It is a self-driving car that you can like- driverless, yeah. Yes. Like you can Uber a Waymo car to you and get in it without a driver and it can take you somewhere. I had never seen one without a driver in it yet because I think you have to, from what I know about these cars, you have to drive them enough around the area so they start to like understand the area or something.
Starting point is 00:25:32 I don't, they map it out. I'm not sure. Well, I look out the window and there's nobody in the drive. This car is just moving down the street and there's nobody in it. So then we start talking about that at dinner and I get on, of course, the internet and I'm getting fed all these Waymo car videos now of Waymo cars driving into construction zones, them going the wrong way. There's a lot of one-way streets in Nashville. And so... Oh, you're watching all the videos where it's gone wrong. Yes. And so now I'm, when it's happening, there are videos in Nashville too? So I'm like,
Starting point is 00:26:06 are we safe on the road with these waymo cars? Yeah. Have you seen them? I have. Yeah. I mean, I'm not that terrified by them, but I also haven't been fed videos of them like going rogue. Like what the construction zone one really freaked me out because like, it's, just drove through the construction zone. There's like people out there being like, whoa, but nobody can put on the break because there's nobody in the car.
Starting point is 00:26:28 Were there barricades or anything? And it just... It was like, no, it was like dirt. Oh, okay. So not even... Were there passengers?
Starting point is 00:26:39 I couldn't see that. I don't know. But I just... Because that's where I'm inside. I would want to be able to just be like, jump out. Stop the car. Like, is there a code word to say?
Starting point is 00:26:46 Oh. Like, halt. Crick. Wait, that's a good. good question. I want out. Is there, yeah, how do you get them to stop the car if you want out? Yeah. Use jump out. Add this to your list of things that you shared from somewhere of like things you don't understand. Yeah. Like I don't understand really a waymill car. Driverless cars. Yeah. But this is the future and I feel like we need to just embrace it. It's going to be the norm.
Starting point is 00:27:15 Don't say that. Yeah. It's going to get more more normal for, I mean, people already have their own driverless cars. Like they get in the car. I mean, they're in the driver's seat, but they don't have to drive. They just have to like keep their eyes forward. That makes me feel a little bit better though. Yeah, because it is going there. I get it. Yeah. If it's going down the wrong road, you can be like, turn around. You couldn't grab the wheel. I do not. Okay, would you get in a waymo car if you were like needed to get somewhere? Would you order one? I think I would be curious about it. It's not my first choice, but if it's my only option, Highway? No. Surely they can't drive on the highway. Can I drive on the highway? I don't.
Starting point is 00:27:55 Well, maybe one day if they can. A flying one? No. You know, people talk about those. Yeah, what I think about the future, I picture like little things coming to pick us up and you got drones dropping off your medication from Walmart. So why not? A little flying thing comes and picks you up like a bird drops you off. I'm not doing that. Yeah, I'm probably not. that reminded of the Jetsons and that's just weird because that was like a cartoon that we watch as kids that was like the future and now that's starting to be like literally what we live in. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:28:32 Things we don't understand. You should go over that list. Where did you find it? I found it on Instagram I'll have to look up and I can put it in the show notes who posted it originally. But I've seen a lot of these kinds of lists. This one kind of spoke to me and I was wondering if there's any of these things that you actually do feel confident about.
Starting point is 00:28:49 Okay. Okay. The first one is why ice coffee costs more than hot. I didn't know it did. Yeah. If you get a drip coffee. It does? Well, okay. Versus a black ice coffee. I think the drip coffee is more money. Really? You mean the ice coffee is more? Yes, yes, yes. Yeah. Um, I did not know that. Um, I did not know that. Um, I did not know. I'm going to start paying attention to that. Okay. It shouldn't be. What do you pay me for ice coffee all the time. But I guess I haven't compared the two prices. Yeah. Okay. Dry cleaning.
Starting point is 00:29:25 I have no idea. Chemicals. Like, and does it actually? Like, how do you clean it? Yeah, because it comes back clean. But it's like never got wet. But if there's a spot, it comes back. But do they just do spots or do they?
Starting point is 00:29:37 Well, and then they press it. So is it really clean? I think so. Okay. Do you know when you get it back, you should take it out of that plastic? It comes in right away. Wait, really? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:29:46 I usually keep it in there for years in my closet. Well, if it's like a dress I wore to an event or something, it's in there. Wait, why is it because of the chemicals? Well, I don't know. Keep going at the list and I'll look up. It's just something my mom taught me. What if she made it up? No.
Starting point is 00:30:01 It's got to be the chemicals. Okay. I don't think most people do take it out. I don't. I mean, I feel like it makes it feel like it's more clean when it's in like a bag in my closet. I'm like, oh, it reminds me that like, oh, I did an adult thing and got that dry cleaned. Okay. While you look that up, the next one is the feels like.
Starting point is 00:30:19 temp like what does that mean like feels like versus the actual temperature how does it not feel like the actual temperature i think because there's a temperature and then there's other conditions that make it feel like when it's humid so like if it's 85 degrees out but the humidity is really high it's going to feel like it's 90 something because you're like sweating more yeah because okay so you got that one i feel like i kind of mean i'm not i'm not i'm not an expert okay hold on I looked it up. Shannon's not here today to help us, like, look things up. So I had to, and my dog is all of in my...
Starting point is 00:30:53 She's loving you today. She's very needy right now, so I'm trying to pet her while I type and talk. You should remove dry, clean clothes from plastic garment bags as soon as you get home. These plastic bags are only meant for transport and trapping them inside can cause odor, chemical residue buildup, yellowing, and moisture buildup leading to mold. Whoa. So remove your dry cleaning. I feel like they should tell you that when you pick up your dry clean.
Starting point is 00:31:20 They should be like, take this out of the bag when you get home. Right. Key tips for post-dry cleaning care. Tip one. Remove from plastic promptly. Take clothes out of the plastic bags immediately upon returning home. Air them out. Allow the garments to hang freely for a few hours in an open space to let any residual chemical odor escape.
Starting point is 00:31:40 Well, I've got a lot of unpacking to do in my class. Remove wire hangers. Swap the flimsy wire. hangers provided by the dry cleaner for sturdy wood or padded hangers to maintain the garment shape. So that's up to you. Yeah. I don't like wire hangers in my closet just because I have never, I think I got that from my mom as well. And that there was that movie way back in the day. It's an old movie. I don't even remember what it is called like Mother or something. She's in the closet or yelling. She's like, no more wire hangers. They do put little pokey's on
Starting point is 00:32:12 your shoulders of your outfits or your shirts. So I get that. that. Okay, well, thanks for teaching us that. That's a, I feel like that's a helpful, that's a helpful tip we could all use. Yeah, no problem. Okay, Mommy Dearest is the movie, by the way, from 1981. The no more wire hanger scene is the iconic, campy centerpiece from the 1981 film Mommy Dearest. Faye Dunaway plays actress Joan Crawford, who flips into a rage when she finds wire hangers in her daughter's closet. Is the mom like, I just remember the scene. No more wire hangers. Was she having a bad day or is she just like kind of an erratic person?
Starting point is 00:32:51 I don't remember. I don't even know if I just like know the scene or I actually, I mean, I was born in a movie. I was born in 81. So the scene is based on a 1978 memoir. Depics extreme unpredictable emotional abuse and has become a major pop culture reference. So wait a second. Speaking of you being born in 1981, I saw. I'm curious if this blows your mind.
Starting point is 00:33:15 as much as it blew mine. I saw a meme that was like if full house was to be filmed today, this is when all of Uncle Jesse, Joey and Danny Tanner would have been born. See if I can remember. I think Uncle Jesse was like 2002. Joey was 1996 and Danny was 1997. So if they made that show today, those three guys would have been like Uncle Jesse would have been born in 2002. Isn't that crazy? Yeah, that is crazy. But I think about that show. I think they're all like 40 years old. Mm-hmm. That's not blow your mind as much as it blue mine.
Starting point is 00:33:51 You're like, I kind of see it. You're like, it makes sense, but I'll tell you it's crazy just because you think it's crazy. That's something I do understand. Okay. Okay, well, then let me find another one from this list. What about cruise ships? Well, yeah, the floating part is really weird to me. And they're so big.
Starting point is 00:34:09 There's so many rooms. Like, yeah. Yeah, it's massive. And it's just floating on the water. So you don't get that one. Yeah. Yeah, it's hard for me. Okay.
Starting point is 00:34:17 Yeah. But you don't think about it very often. Boats in general. I mean, a canoe, I sort of get. Boats in general are kind of... Airplanes. Yeah. I mean, the only travel thing that makes sense to me besides cars, I guess, like train, I get train.
Starting point is 00:34:33 The train makes a lot of sense. A bike makes sense. Airplanes, like this just goes up into the air. What about subway? That makes sense of their train. Yeah. Track. What about underwater tunnels?
Starting point is 00:34:45 Yeah, no, they don't make sense to me. Like how do you get rid of the water? Who built that and how they moved? Yes. Yeah, that one's hard. So driving through an underwater tunnel. Creepy. Do you get scared?
Starting point is 00:34:59 Or even anything underground. Like, how is the water also not putting all this pressure on it in it? Yeah, I don't know. It's crazy. Or if there's like a leak, you know? Like, there's a leak what happens? I don't know. Do you know what also, speaking of tunnels that I don't understand is prisoners who build a tunnel to escape, scrape their way out with like a teeny tiny.
Starting point is 00:35:25 Who did that? Prisoners do that. Today? They spend years digging holes and it might take them forever to break through, but they've got their little. How do they hide the hole, though? They just put a poster over it or something. Who is doing this? Who did this?
Starting point is 00:35:40 I swear. It's just in a movie, wasn't it? I swear. No. Prisoners have dug holes before. In like the 1800s? No, in modern day. And it's just crazy to me how they're able to do that.
Starting point is 00:35:52 Okay. And they dig a tunnel. Or, or fine, maybe not prisoners. Pablo Escobar, drug tunnels. Like tunnels from Mexico to Texas. That's crazy. They run drugs under there. Like, those are crazy to me.
Starting point is 00:36:02 You just like dig these holes. That is crazy. You don't watch Euphoria, do you? No. Okay. They were so crazy. Yeah. I will say it's not really my thing,
Starting point is 00:36:13 but I started watching it, so I now have to finish it. They had to transport drugs across country lines. And the way they did it, I was shocked. They didn't go through a tunnel. They had fentanyl in like a balloon. And then they had to swallow the balloons. But if one of those balloons pops, you're dead. And then like think about the tummy ache.
Starting point is 00:36:40 Well, and then you have to like go to the bathroom out. I've tried not to say food. Oh, sorry. Is that another one of those words you don't like? No, it's fine. I just try to risk someone might be eating breakfast right now. Then you have to go to the potty. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:36:55 So, crazy. Okay, so we don't get underwater tunnels. How about how come super glue doesn't get stuck in the bottle? Because air hasn't hit it yet. That's what I was thinking. But like there is some air in the bottle. True. Yeah, like when it gets lower?
Starting point is 00:37:14 Yeah. Because right when it comes out, it's sticky. Yeah. And your fingers get stuck together real fast. Like glue in general, it's like, why doesn't it get stuck in the ball? Yeah, that's right. I mean, Elmer's glue, excuse me, doesn't perplex me because that's like kids glue or like a glue stick. But like super glue, that is perplexing.
Starting point is 00:37:34 Yeah. Because super glue also dries really fast. Yeah. Okay. Okay. Perits speaking. I mean, dolphins can talk, right? They can communicate.
Starting point is 00:37:48 Not like a parrot, but they're not like repeating words, but like animals speak their own language. Have you seen that pig on Instagram that uses buttons to talk? I don't know. It seems like Marty or Marlin. Maybe it's Marlon. He uses the snout and there's like 20 buttons lined up in their color coordinated and one's like good morning. and another one's like, I'm mad. And then he's like,
Starting point is 00:38:14 oh, beeps. And he's like, does he know what he's saying or does he just pressing the buttons? Hungry. Treat. I feel like he knows. Like Saturday Night Live did a,
Starting point is 00:38:22 how I saw it was the owner of the pig was reacting to a skit that Saturday Night Live did about him. And she was like, come on Saturday Night Live, do better. Like she wrote some funny jokes that she thought would have been represented the pig better
Starting point is 00:38:36 because they like made a joke about pork or bacon or eating him and she was like, not cool. here are some other jokes that could have been funnier and then I went on this rabbit hole down the page and it seems legit like the she would and she said she taught it to read now either I'm naive and I'm just falling for this okay it's a pet what do you yeah it's a pet it lives inside I and it wears goggles in the hat yeah piss are smart but she wrote down
Starting point is 00:39:06 yes Google it oh you're me to Google it yeah I can't Google it on here it's too different Okay, so... I don't think I've ever heard somebody say pigs are smart. Pigs are smart. Let me, I will tell you, you know, pigs are smart. I just searched it up. Here's what it says. Pigs are highly intelligent. Okay. Cognitively complex animals often ranked among the top five most intelligent species on earth. Wait. And we're obviously included in that.
Starting point is 00:39:36 Pigs can solve mazes, learn complex tasks, understand basic, symbolic language. They can even use tools such as using bark to dig and they understand cause and effect. But can they read? Yeah, so that's what I was going to tell you. She was writing sit on the board, on her whiteboard, and she would just hold it up and he would sit. Then she erased it and she wrote, lay down. And he looked at it and then he laid down. Okay. Okay, this is, that doesn't mean he can read. That means he can recognize a symbol because- Right. That's reading. But could he, but if she just, But if she wrote a sentence, he wouldn't know what it meant. Pride is like love.
Starting point is 00:40:22 You feel it in your heart. IR. Radio. Canada's number one streaming app for radio and podcasts, including IHart Pride Canada, your favorite hits and must have party bangers, plus personalized and curated playlists. Like back in the day pride. Come together, celebrate love. Take pride with you anytime, anywhere.
Starting point is 00:40:42 Just ask your smart speaker to play IHart Pride Canada. Stream us on your phone. Listen now at iHeartRadio.ca. In the moment, it felt like it was going on forever. I didn't think I was going to live. I was terrified. There was no anything inside those eyes. They turned black.
Starting point is 00:41:05 It scared the hell out of me. That was your first murder case? Yes, sir. Fear to say this was the biggest case of your career? Yes, sir. Rape and murder for a child. She's as bad as it gets. I would think so.
Starting point is 00:41:20 People wait. I'm the one that saw the murder take place by Creveit and DePippo. Anthony DePippo showed no signs of remorse, appearing unfazed after being sentenced to the maximum. I said I'm not guilty. I'll take it to the grief. Listen to the devil's quarry on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. And to hear the Devil's Quarry ad free with exclusive content,
Starting point is 00:41:52 subscribe to Love for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts. Hey, I'm Hoda Kotby, host of the podcast, Joy 101 with Hoda Kotby. Together, we're going to have meaningful conversations with the world's most fascinating people. Like when actress Olivia Munn shared how she overcame fierce health challenges. I've gone through breast cancer and then helped my mother through breast cancer, and that was more difficult. There's a lot of people who understand postpartner depression. I was not prepared for postpartum anxiety.
Starting point is 00:42:24 Listen to Joy 101 with Hoda Kotby on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast. Last night, a blown call changed a game. This morning, the internet lost its mind. Highlights are trending, opinions are flying, and nobody's telling you exactly what happened. That's where Sports Slice comes in. I'm Timbo. Every episode, we're cutting through the noise, breaking down the plays, the controversies, and the stories behind the headlines. We go straight to the source, the athlete themselves, their locker room stories, their reactions, the stuff nobody gets to hear. The laughs, the drama, the triumphs, the moments that never make the highlight real. From viral moments,
Starting point is 00:43:01 to historic games, from buzzer beaters to controversial calls, we break it down, give you context, and ask the questions everybody wants answered. SportsSlice brings you closer to the action with stories told by the people who live them. Listen to SportsClace on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast. And for more, follow Timbo Slicelife 12 in the TikTok podcast network on TikTok. Could she teach in the sentence? Right, right. She couldn't have a conversation and tell him about her day.
Starting point is 00:43:32 Right. But I feel like she asks him and he'll be like, Lord. He'll go over to the mad. Okay. And he'll take his little snout. I stand corrected. I believe you now that pigs are smart.
Starting point is 00:43:47 I just never would have thought out of all the animals, pigs were smart. Okay. For communication, pigs communicate using over 20 different vocalizations and sounds ranging from social interaction to danger warnings. As for memory and learning, they possess excellent long-term memory. and can learn by observing other pigs. And as for cleanliness, they're often misunderstood as dirty.
Starting point is 00:44:09 Pigs are clean animals that maintain separate areas for sleeping and waste, provided they have enough space. So they're just like rolling around in there. It's like justice for the pigs over here. Do you want a pig? It says here, pigs are on par with dogs. Oh, do you want a pig?
Starting point is 00:44:26 I wanted a pig. Remember the time I went to the pig farm when I gave birth to a pig? Oh, yeah, yeah. for my silent film. And I really wanted to get one as a teacup piglet. But then I saw her parents, the pig's parents. And I was like, they were huge.
Starting point is 00:44:39 Yeah, you don't actually want a lot. Pigs are not on par with dogs. I do think that they can be cute. If I had a domesticated cute pig, yeah. And it stayed small. Yeah, like I could get a guaranteed, like, tiny dwarf. Pig? Isn't that?
Starting point is 00:44:55 Or a runt? Runt. Yeah. Like, um, what? A little piglet that stays small, like a pocket piglet. What's Charlotte's Webb? What's the pig's name in Charlotte? Babe.
Starting point is 00:45:07 Is that? What's the pig in Charlotte's Webb? Yeah. Is it Babe? I don't know. I think Babe's another pig. Because that pig was the runt of the litter, wasn't he? I don't know.
Starting point is 00:45:18 I'm not really recalling the story. Wilbur. Wilbur. Oh, Wilbur. Oh, that was a sweet movie. Okay, so back to our things we don't understand. The only one that I... How did we even get on the pig?
Starting point is 00:45:31 Parrots. This is my last one. Talking parrots. And this one really throws you for a loop. How does a bus fit in the same lane as a car? That I understand. What? The lane is wide.
Starting point is 00:45:48 The car. What? Crack, cat, cat, cat, cat, cat, cat, cat. Sorry, I'm perplexed. How, because... How does a semi fit in the same lane as a car? Because the lane is wide enough for the semi. But in the car smaller.
Starting point is 00:46:05 Like the car has plenty of room. You're making it make too much sense. But in my head, I'm like, yeah, this is crazy that this big thing is driving on the same thing that I'm driving on. And I feel like I don't have that much space. That means you really don't have much space. Yeah. I mean, that's accurate. Okay.
Starting point is 00:46:19 It has less space than you. Okay. Do you understand wireless headphones? No. I don't understand how we're talking into microphones right now. Crazy. It's in somebody else's ear. And they get to download and listen to it whenever.
Starting point is 00:46:31 they feel like it. No, I don't understand that at all. I don't understand radio. I don't understand telephones. I don't understand overnight mail that well, to be honest. That actually is a good one. How does it get there so fast? Well, I get how it gets there. But mail in general, fine, it doesn't even have to be overnight. Ground mail. Like just mailing a letter. Isn't it crazy? You drop a letter off with an address on it and it makes it to that address. of all the things like it there's a whole system see that makes sense to me but they sort there's so many things that have to go right yeah for that letter to make it and in in nine times out of 10 or higher 9.9 times out of 10 it's going to make it it's complex but I feel like that is more
Starting point is 00:47:19 understandable than wireless headphones you know oh yeah yeah TV yeah that's nuts live I mean a computer in general I'm like how do you build a website like how are you making this picture look this way. I saw this funny, real, this guy talking about this girl on TikTok that was going off on millennials and how we need a social media boot camp because we're old. And he was responding to her and he said, listen, little girl. Millennials, we were at the forefront of social media. We were the first ones with Tom as our BFF in our top eight.
Starting point is 00:48:01 Tom. MySpace. And on MySpace, remember you would code and, like, you could decorate your page with music and wallpaper, but you had to enter in. It was like, coding. So he's like, don't even get me started. We have it so easy. We walked so you could run.
Starting point is 00:48:17 He said, we walked so you could crawl. That's how he put it. He did say that line, but he's saying, like, you're not even running. Oh. You're crawling. You do nothing. Like, you just, you just like, because we had to, like, work for it. I will say I saw something about.
Starting point is 00:48:31 Millennials versus Genzi that actually really struck a chord with me. And it said, it was like a meme of somebody with, it was Taylor Swift with winged eyeliner, which the other day I literally sent a text to my friends and said, I want to learn how to do winged eyeliner. And it said, does winged eyeliner make you look like a millennial? And the conversation around that with the person that I was following that posted it was like, imagine like people, being able to see you. Like, I'm kind of sick of people being like, does, and I'm somebody that's been worried about this. Does this make me look millennial? But it's like, I am. So why can't I just look like it? Who cares if I, who cares if this eyeliner or the way I wear my jeans or the
Starting point is 00:49:16 shoes I'm pairing with my jeans or whatever? It makes me look like a millennial. I'm 36. That's my age. So like, it's, I don't, I don't need to dress like a Gen Z because that might be weird, you know? Right. And why did it take me seeing this on social media for me to be like, yeah, like, I'm going to wear my, now, I'm not going to wear my, like, a infinity scarf and, you know, my green little jacket that everybody had. Do you know what I'm talking about? Oh, yeah. With, like, a utility jacket.
Starting point is 00:49:42 I'm not going to do that, but, like, I can dress my, I guess, age appropriate. And I can do my eyeliner age appropriately. Yeah, however you want. However I want. I mean, there's obviously different trends that sometimes we do. Like in the 80s, blue eyeshadow was a thing. Silver eyeshadow was a thing when I was in sixth grader. remember? I was thinking about my college
Starting point is 00:50:03 eyeliner the other day and I used to wear white. And I was like, was that a thing? I don't know if it was a thing or just a thing for me. Like, was it in or is it just something I did? So it's early 2000s and I would wear white eyeliner. I remember like blue eyeliner. Mine was white. Or like silvery? Nope. White. Definitely white. Well, okay. And you know, not just in my corners.
Starting point is 00:50:30 Not just like a rightner. It was thick white. I wonder what the like beauty. Because some stuff I feel like makeup wise like it's supposed to like accentuate and make like some some ways you do your eye shadow or your eyeliner makes your eyes look bigger. Your eyes look brighter or whatever. But some of it's just style which I feel like the like white eyeliner or the purple. I had purple mascara at one point. That's not to accentuate anything.
Starting point is 00:50:56 That's just like style. Speaking of makeup, I went to Sephora the other day. they were having a sale. And I don't know if it's still going on. I think it is. Okay. So I guess there's different levels because there's you can if you're like, I don't know the levels. Am I what? Rogue level. What's what are the levels? I don't know them. I just know that rogue level had got access to the sale before the common folk did. So no, that's not me. Okay. I'm not that level. I'm a level down. I guess. I learned this because I was there. So let's just say for the sake, since we don't know the levels, There's like gold, silver, silver, maybe I'm bronze.
Starting point is 00:51:34 I'm not gold. Okay. Or platinum. I show up and we walk in and I see online from influencers as a sale, but I don't know it's only a sale for special people. So I go to Siphora specifically to get some things that I've been waiting to buy. And I walk in and even the guy working is like, oh, hey, just FYI, everything's 20% off in the whole store.
Starting point is 00:51:56 And I'm like, perfect. So I start loading my basket up with these various things that I'm real excited to get at 20% off. And then I go to check out. And when she tells me my total, like, that doesn't seem right. It's just me 20% off. So I was like, oh, the sale. And I had given her my phone number or whatever for my account. And she's like, oh, you're not platinum or rogue or gold or whatever it is.
Starting point is 00:52:21 And what do you do? I said, well, also I said, I didn't know the sale, to be fair, was 20%. off at all. I said, but when I walked in, the guy working up front told me, hey, FYI, everything in the store is 20% off. I said, so I actually put more in my basket than I was going to because eventually do the math, one of these or two of these items is basically free because of that, you know? Yeah, I get Yeah. So now she said, oh, our sale for your level starts next week. And I was like, your level. But I'm here now and he didn't clarify that. You know, like I felt. So what happened? Did you get? I just, I just paid for it. I just bought it. What was I supposed to do? No. Say, say what's the line from? Big mistake. Huge. And I walk
Starting point is 00:53:12 across the hall to Alta. I have to go shopping now at Alta. That would have been so good if you did that. Yeah. I think I would have been like, well, forget it. I'll come back next week. That could be like, do you know. But for me physically getting to the store at Sephora, I just was like, am I going to come back? And some of it, I was shopping for makeup for I heart country festival that's coming up and I needed it.
Starting point is 00:53:35 And I just was like, okay, lesson learned. Yeah. But what they should do, I get it. They're a business. But when we walked in, he should have said, hey girls. FYI, if you're a platinum, you get 20% off everything in the store. Cool. Then I would know, I don't know if I'm platinum or I'll go find out. But then I already got excited about everything I put in my basket. And then I've already checked out. And there's a line of people behind me.
Starting point is 00:54:02 Am I really going to be like? Walk a shame. Never mind. I'm leaving. That's just not my. I feel like the customer's always right. And if somebody told you, this is what I believe, because, you know, I did work at the mall for like five or six years. If I told you this was the price or it was marked wrong or something, you have to give them that price. So if that man told you 20% off, they should have been like, oh my gosh, she wasn't supposed to do that, but like, I'll give it to you. Yes, that's what I was kind of waiting for her to do. And my friend, Meredith was with me. We went to Pilates.
Starting point is 00:54:37 Well, well, the girl working did say because Meredith was like, oh, maybe I'm rogue or whatever it is. and the girl working said, okay, let me look up her number and then if she is, then I'll honor that for you too. Yeah. So there's anybody in this line,
Starting point is 00:54:53 rogue, can you vouch for me? So she looked at Meredith's number and she was like, oh, sorry, you're regular smuggler or whatever I am. Your sale starts next week.
Starting point is 00:55:04 That's, I don't like that. Yeah. I feel like we got got. When we, right we walked in. And maybe he knew what he was doing.
Starting point is 00:55:11 Maybe he didn't. I don't know. But it's not like he got quick. credit for the sale. No, true. But maybe as a team, they have a goal for the day. That's evil. They got it. Yeah. So. Okay. Which speaking of products and shopping and buying things, I, and not Gen Z, but who'd I learn this from? A gen Alpha? My son's friend, James, shout out. He's so cute. He came over to spend the night last weekend. And, And we stopped by Target to pick up some things.
Starting point is 00:55:46 And we got frozen pizzas because we were going to do like a little frozen pizza cookoff and taste test and figure out our favorite. And as I'm getting the pizzas, he gets out this app and he just starts scanning them. And pulling up in the app like, oh, it gives a score out of 100. The app is called Y-U-K-A. And I was like, what are you doing, little boy? You did not say. No, I didn't say little boy. But it made me think of that millennial guy who was like, listen, little girl. I'm like, hey, young, young kid, what is this fancy app you have where you're scanning all these things? And he said, oh, it's this app that we use in my family. He's like, it's just to give me information so I can make wise choices. He sounds. Yeah, he's really smart. He's like, he Zoom bombs people. He's like a hack. He's very tech, techy.
Starting point is 00:56:45 And he did it when we were here. Now, this isn't anything totally crazy, but it is something I don't understand. Like, he's a part of something where he gets access to Zoom codes and he can log in as long as the meeting is public. So while we were having pizza later in the evening, like we got home from Target, we're cooking the pizza. And all of a sudden, on his phone, an AA meeting pops up, like a Zoom over Zoom. And they're giving the bylaws.
Starting point is 00:57:12 And I was like, what do you do? He goes, oh, I think I just joined this meeting. And I was like, he goes, I'm Zoom bombing. So he can show up. Wait, is that kind of like chat roulette where he can just like pop into anything anywhere? And you just pops into somebody's Zoom. Like, I'm zooming you and catching up. I'm living in different state.
Starting point is 00:57:30 And like, he just shows up in our chat. Yes. Yes. So he showed up. But his Zoom photo is him as a 14 year old. And he looks like this nerdy little kid. He's like in the AA. And I'm like, do they know you're in there?
Starting point is 00:57:42 And he's like, I don't know. They haven't said anything or seen it yet. And he was like, I ended up in a corporate meeting the other day, like for some business. And I could just see him popping up like his little nerdy picture. And it's something that he, it's like a thing. I was equating it to like maybe back in the day when we were kids and we were having a slumber party and eating pizza. We might pick up the phone and prank call somebody just like from the phone book or dial a random number. Like just, oh, you would do random?
Starting point is 00:58:10 Yeah, randoms. I feel like we always prank call people we knew. Oh, you didn't ever just flip through the yellow page or the white pages. Maybe I don't remember, but I feel like I, the ones I remember, it's like we prank called to me we knew. Okay. Well, we definitely did people we knew. But then I would do, we just call random numbers and say, do silly things. Like we'd be like, is Adam there?
Starting point is 00:58:33 Okay. Bring, bring, bring. Hello. Oh, bring, bring. Hello. Is Adam there? Uh, I think you're the wrong number. Oh.
Starting point is 00:58:41 Well, you don't know Adam? No. You don't know Adam? You're supposed to say, Adam who? Adam who? And then... Adam Who? Adam Zweener.
Starting point is 00:58:58 Wait. Zweener. Zweener. Zweener is a last name. Well, so is Wiener. But Adam, Zweener. is Adam's Wiener. That's so funny.
Starting point is 00:59:14 I can't believe you did that. We were so crazy. And then we were like, ha, ha, ha, and hang up the phone. So anyway, he was popping in on these zooms. And I said, hey, that's an AA meeting. And he was like, what's that? And I was like, well, we want to respect these people and things that they're sharing. So hang up on that one.
Starting point is 00:59:35 But it was a Saturday night. So I was like, I don't think you're going to get a corporate meeting or, what like most yeah on evenings any evening of the week you there's going to be a meeting's but uh i was like maybe find another one to zoom bomb does he ever talk in them no he just it's kind of he just gets in and then he gets out like it's not like he's like boop and then yeah he's like huh that's fun what do you want to do next okay but the minute i knew right away what if he gets in like a dirty call well he would probably be like oh his personality he'd be like, his yucca app would scan it and be like, danger, danger.
Starting point is 01:00:13 Make a wise decision. Yeah, he's very cautious. So back to his app. Pride is like love. You feel it in your heart. IR Radio. Canada's number one streaming app for radio and podcasts, including IHart Pride Canada, your favorite hits and must have party bangers, plus personalized and curated
Starting point is 01:00:42 Playlists like back in the day pride. Come together, celebrate love. Take pride with you anytime, anywhere. Just ask your smart speaker to play IHart Pride Canada. Stream us on your phone or listen now at iHeartRadio.ca. In the moment, it felt like it was going on forever. I didn't think I was going to live. I was terrified.
Starting point is 01:01:07 There was no anything inside those eyes. They turned black. It scared the hell out of it. me. That was your first murder case? Yes, sir. Fear to say this was the biggest case of your career? Yes, sir. Rape a murder for a child. Just as bad as it gets. I would think so.
Starting point is 01:01:27 Evil, wake up. I'm the one that saw the murder take place by Crevette and DePippo. Anthony DePippo showed no signs of remorse appearing unfazed after being sentenced to the maximum. I said I'm not guilty. I'll take it to the grief. Listen to the devil's quarry on
Starting point is 01:01:50 the Iheart radio app. Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. And to hear the devil's quarry ad free with exclusive content, subscribe to LaVa for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts. Hey, I'm Hoda Kotby, host of the podcast, Joy 101 with Hoda Kotby. Together, we're going to have meaningful conversations with the world's most fascinating people, like when actress Olivia Munn shared how she overcame fierce health challenges. I've gone through breast cancer and then helped my mother through breast cancer, and that was more
Starting point is 01:02:27 difficult. There's a lot of people who understand postpartner depression. I was not prepared for postpartum anxiety. Listen to Joy 101 with Hoda Kotby on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Last night, a blown call changed a game. This morning, the internet lost its mind. Highlights are trending, opinions are flying, and nobody's telling you exactly what happened. That's where Sports Slice comes in. I'm Timbo. Every episode, we're cutting through the noise, breaking down the plays, the controversies, and the stories behind the headlines. We go straight to the source, the athlete themselves, their locker room stories, their reactions, the stuff nobody gets to hear.
Starting point is 01:03:03 The laughs, the drama, the triumphs, the moments that never make the highlight real. From viral moments to historic games, from buzzer beaters to controversial calls, we break it down, give you context, and ask the questions everybody wants answered. Sports Slice brings you closer to the action with stories told by the people who live them. Listen to Sports Slice on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast. And for more, follow Timbo Slic Life 12 in the TikTok podcast network on TikTok. He starts scanning the pizza. And some of the pizzas were getting like a 30.
Starting point is 01:03:37 But it wasn't stopping us from buying it. But if the score is zero to 100, 100 obviously is like, you know. No, 100 is. Oh, you want 100. You want 100. But it's hard to get 100 because 100 is like foods that don't have a barcode. Like a carrot. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:03:55 Okay. From God. You can. God's packaging. Yeah. Because the barcodes on the, like, fruits and vegetables are just to scan when you're checking out. It's not giving any nutritional data.
Starting point is 01:04:06 So the app doesn't really recognize it. So some of the pizzas, you know, were like 30 out of 100, which is not a great rating. But at least you have the information. Like, eat. It's not a zero. It's not a zero. There were some things, I'm not going to say it because I don't want to, like, shame companies. But there was one product we scanned and it was a zero.
Starting point is 01:04:25 And I was like, what is in that? What is it? no nutrition at all. I think it has nutrition, but it's ranked on everything it is made of and what it has to offer because it'll do like saturated fat, toxins or chemicals, cholesterol, like it factors in so many different variables that zero just means like I wouldn't eat that. Yeah. And I, it's not something I eat anyway, but I definitely not going to eat it.
Starting point is 01:04:55 What if it was something? Then I would be like, dang, I have to enjoy that. that in moderation. Yeah, what you probably are doing anyway. Yeah. This reminds me of, wasn't there an app called like Dirty or something that? Well, because this one will do products too. Dirty makes me think of products.
Starting point is 01:05:12 Ooh, is Yucca for like yuck? You're like yuck. Because Dirty, okay, Dirty's products. Because you talked about dirty. Or is it called Dirty? I don't know. But you don't talk about it? Yes, it's familiar what you're saying that I didn't know that I talked about it.
Starting point is 01:05:25 But no surprise there. It was from your ex-plogrief. I couldn't even remember feeling. things. Oh, yeah. He had something and I remember you tell me about it and at first I was like, wait, is this like a dirty app and like a sexual app? Oh, yeah. Dirty. Is it, was it called dirty? Uh, question. But maybe that was just products and this one does food and products or something. Oh, think dirty. Think dirty. That's it. Yes, he did. He had think dirty. And I was like, what's that on your phone? Yeah. Yeah. What's that app? Is that like a new only fan?
Starting point is 01:05:58 What are you looking at over there? And he's like, frozen pizza. So some of the pizzas were 60. So we bought a variety of pizzas. And shout out Good and Gather, which is the Target brand. Didn't have the highest score. However, it was the tastiest. Really?
Starting point is 01:06:15 Yeah, I was very impressed. We did Newman's. That's my favorite. It was so good. And it actually scored higher. But I'm not shocked by that. I think Newman's is known for more quality. Is it organic, right?
Starting point is 01:06:28 ingredients. I don't know if it's organic, but they donate. I think with every pizza. Isn't all Newman products? Like profits go to a foundation? What? I feel like I saw that somewhere. I'll circle back on that.
Starting point is 01:06:44 Okay. But, and then we did another one called yo dough. Like yo, like yo, yo. Yeah. Because the dough was made from yogurt. Was that good? it actually was good but I didn't like the toppings so then it made it bad so that wasn't my favorite it wasn't like um tart like you no and it was so that the yogurt the point of the yogurt was to make it
Starting point is 01:07:08 higher in protein i guess so anyway my whole point is an alpha gin child was at my house and taught me about the yucca app download it if you want but we started scanning everything like we started scanning everything in my pantry. I was sort of shocked by, I had two different types of granola, and one of the granola got a really high score, and I thought I would get lower than the other, and the other got lower. But again, it's taking in variables that I'm not thinking about. And the one that scored really high, I actually love. And the one that scored low, I'm like, huh. I mean, I'm still going to eat it. It's not deterring me, but it's just, it's just information. But I could see how in the wrong hands, it could be a dangerous tool.
Starting point is 01:07:49 I was going to say I wouldn't recommend this tool for everybody. And I think most of the time we can, it might be interesting and fun for a lot of people. Yeah, like we were having fun. But most of the time we can just like know what we want to eat and what our body needs and when it doesn't. Some of those, which I think that you probably knew, I was going to have a thought like this. I know. That's why I set it up of like this might not be for everybody. And I get it.
Starting point is 01:08:16 Like with two teenage kids, like we were, it wasn't, they don't. they don't have any eating disorder stuff. So for us, it was just like fun. Like we were trying to scan everything. And that's when we started scanning like the barcode on the bananas. And we're like, oh, there's nothing. Yeah. And we were like, oh, my gosh, that's a zero.
Starting point is 01:08:33 Like, it was just information. Yeah. I don't, I feel like if, and maybe this is because of me and my story, but I feel like I would not want that in the hands of a child. Yeah, I guess just the discernment of how your child. looks at it for him like like if he can say like I'm still gonna I'm still gonna eat this but I don't sometimes I feel like I had too much information about yeah like we ate pizza and ice cream like yeah after like he wasn't I think it's good for children to understand information yeah
Starting point is 01:09:06 on the labels and that to an yes to an extent yeah so but he's not I could see where also I will say he exhibited who knows like yeah how noa Khan has opened up I'm not saying just because he's a boy he's excluded from that because I was thinking if it was a girl that maybe had some issues, I think my brain automatically does that young girl versus young boy and I shouldn't. And us talking about Noah Khan that should teach me that. I observed him with the app and Stevenson and me and how we were all playing with it and it was fun. But I guess as a parent keep an eye out on it. And then as an adult knowing how you are, you have to discern, is this a good app for me to have or not? Yeah. That made me think there's research out there in the world that says like I think it's around third grade
Starting point is 01:09:56 female girls start there so we all have like kind of same level of confidence let's say it's all the same starting third grade women's take girls takes a nose dive and then guys kind of stays the same for a little bit so like it is fair for you to have that assumption that like it's mostly a girl thing because girls usually engage in like get hit with that kind of stuff earlier but then yeah guys eventually depending on their environment. Yeah. Changes. But in that third grade.
Starting point is 01:10:26 Like it starts in third grade. So I'm picturing little third grade me. Well, and I can relate to that in third grade. Yeah. You start to, in third grade, I remember starting to notice things. Like, I remember at one point I thought that like I had fat kneecaps. Like, what? That's so crazy because my kneecaps used to feel fat.
Starting point is 01:10:46 I didn't think I had fat kneecaps. I would feel it. But now that I know maybe how our bodies work, your knee area can hold fluid. Were you inflamed? Maybe. I mean, and sure, some of it could have been totally psychological in my head, but I would imagine, like it felt my kneecaps.
Starting point is 01:11:07 Am I alone in this? I hadn't thought about this in a long time, but the tops of my knees would feel like if I was having a particularly, like what I would call quote unquote, like fat day. Yeah. I remember my kneecaps feeling so heavy. I didn't look down at them and think, oh, my kneecap, but I would feel it. I bet that's a little psychosomatic kind of like, because I'm feeling this, then I'm feeling
Starting point is 01:11:29 that. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Interesting. Yeah. But that's just an example of like, you think people just like look at their arms or their stomachs or whatever. It's like, no, I took it down to the kneecaps. Like, what?
Starting point is 01:11:43 I'm thinking about myself that what I know now, I've been like, dang, all I had to do was like you can pump behind your knees. Did you know behind your knees is a lymphatic drain? Yeah, I did. But back then I wouldn't even recommend that. I'd be like, just stare at your knee and I need you to like normalize the fact that like Oh, see, but I didn't think my knee looked fat though. So what, well, how would I, it just felt that.
Starting point is 01:12:04 Yeah. Like I felt. But we don't, so we don't know if you actually did need. Because we don't know and because your brain was probably so convoluted back then, we don't know if you felt that because like, because sometimes I'll like, that's like, a body checking thing will do. We'll like feel to make sure. And like I might feel my neck and it might feel fat because I am in my brain feeling
Starting point is 01:12:26 fat. But it's not actually any different than it was yesterday or the day before or whatever. Does that make sense? Yeah. Yeah. Okay. But we don't know that because we're not back in time. But I would, I would, I as a professional, I wouldn't recommend us like finding a way
Starting point is 01:12:42 to drain your fat. I would find a way for you to like normalize and sit with that feeling. So here was my thought process on it now. It's like what if I was because I would have a binge cycles or whatever, I would be likely be consuming a lot of calories and high sodium or things. So I'm seeing if fluid was getting stuck if I wasn't also hydrated. Which would just probably have you drink some water. Probably drink some water with a pinch of salt.
Starting point is 01:13:13 Okay. Well, use that app with care. Apps. How do they work? How do they? And how do people just build apps? Some people are like, oh, I'm building an app. How? How are you? I know. And how do you get like? Yeah. It's not us. You know what? How does airdrop work? Yeah. That picture just hops from my phone to your phone. How's it getting there? These are crazy times. Crazy times. If somebody knows, I would say explain it to us, but we're not going to be able to follow. No, not at all. I can barely follow what was going on with my kneecaps a long time ago.
Starting point is 01:13:57 Or my knee, upper knee, upper knee. I don't have it. I don't ever feel it anymore. It was mostly when I was. Well, that makes sense. That makes sense. Because my brain is doing better. You're right.
Starting point is 01:14:08 It was all in my head. Good times. Good time. All right. Well, we hope we're. ever y'all are, you are thinking about leaving us a voicemail on the hotline. Call us 877-207-2077. We love hearing from you.
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Starting point is 01:14:45 You need to have. Bye. Bye. Joy is essential and it's also elusive. But now, there's a new and exciting way to start your journey toward a more joyful existence. Joy 101. It's a new podcast hosted by me, Hoda Kotby. If you're craving inspiration to maximize your joy, tune into these candid, uplifting,
Starting point is 01:15:13 and moving on-air chats. Open your free IHeart Radio app. Search Joy 101. and now. Joy 101 with Hoda Kotbe is presented by CVS. There was no anything inside those eyes. They turned black. It scared the hell out of me. Evil, wake up.
Starting point is 01:15:38 I'm the one that saw the murder take place by Krivac and DePippo. Anthony DePippo showed no signs of remorse, appearing unfazed after being sentenced to the maximum. I said, I'm not guilty. I'll take it to the grave. Listen to the devil's quarry in the Bone Valley feed on the IHeart radio app. Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. All right, listen up. The Jonas Brothers here.
Starting point is 01:16:11 Our podcast is called, Hey Jonas. We've here, since everyone has a podcast, we wanted to as well. And we've had some incredible guests so far. And now our good friend, Nile Horn, is joining the show. How's it going, boys? Hey, Niall. It's the same thing with Slow Hands. Slow Hands is not about anything else, really, is it?
Starting point is 01:16:24 You know, our taste so good can be about food. You do the same, Nick, with some of the stuff that you've done. You too, Joe. Drop what you're doing and listen to Hey Jonas on the Iheart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your podcasts. Everyone sees me as a football player, but before anything else, I'm human. Every single day, I'm still learning how to live with problems, mistakes, relationships, emotions, ever since I was born. This isn't a normal podcast. Everything here is spontaneous, real, and genuine, just honest conversations about what it means to be alive.
Starting point is 01:16:57 I'm Javier El Chicharito Hernandez, and listen. to learning to be human on iHeart radio, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast. This is an iHeart podcast, guaranteed human.

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