The Bobby Bones Show - FRI PT 1: Our Three Word Horror Stories + Easy Trivia For The Ages + Is Lunchbox Tricking Us All?
Episode Date: February 27, 2026We all share our personal 3 word horror stories that went from being something fun to being something that makes us all feel uncomfortable. In this week's Easy Trivia, it's an all out battle as Eddie,... Amy and Morgan are all going for the Championship and Lunchbox is trying to block them all again to stay in it. A listener wanted to know when Lunchbox is going to be on the Price Is Right which leads us to a theory that Lunchbox might be pulling off the greatest bit of all-time.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Welcome to Friday show.
We got a big one.
Morning studio.
Morning.
Time to play easy trivia.
The magic number seven.
That's the category.
How many days in a week, Eddie?
Seven days.
Correct.
Good job.
Eddie's got the tiara on.
He is the reigning champion.
Amy, how many letters are in the word balloon?
The category is...
How many letters are in the word balloon?
What are you doing?
I don't know.
Are you playing?
Seven.
Correct.
Lunchbox, how many colors are in the rainbow?
Seven.
Correct.
Thank you, lunchbox.
Morgan, how many dwarfs live with snowy?
Right.
Seven.
Correct.
We took an hour break for Amy, but we're back.
Okay, so.
Suddenly, I had the...
You wouldn't go home anyway if you missed.
It's okay.
I know.
Eddie's the champ.
Again, we're in the tiara.
Eddie has four wins.
Morgan has four wins.
Amy has four wins.
If anybody wins are the new champion,
except for Lunchbox who has two.
Boom.
He needs to win.
One, keep him alive for next season and keep the series going.
The category is sports.
Eddie, what sport is FIFA related to?
Soccer.
Correct.
Amy, what sport is played at Wimbledon?
Tennis.
Correct.
Lunchbox, what sport is associated with the Stanley Cup?
Oh, that's hockey.
Correct.
Morgan, what sport would you play in the World Series?
Baseball.
Correct.
The category is baby animals.
Everyone's alive.
Eddie, what do you call a baby goat?
Baby goat.
Oh, that's a lamb.
You've been boo.
Wow.
That's not it.
Wow, it's a kid.
It's a kid.
Oh, gosh.
That was early.
Like, I'm out already.
You're out.
And if Amy or Morgan win, you lose the championship.
Oh, my gosh.
Amy, what do you call a baby cow?
A calf?
Lunchbox, what do you call a baby sheep?
If he misses this, we will have a new champion.
It could be Amy or it could be Morgan.
Eddie, do you know this one?
Yes.
Everybody always knows the ones when it's not on that.
Yes, I know.
What do you call a baby sheep?
I can't ask a question, huh?
Mm-mm.
You just did and I answered it.
Man, is this what Eddie said, a lamb?
I'm gonna go to lamb.
Correct.
Oh, my God.
Yes.
I started second guessing myself.
I was very like, I couldn't figure.
I'm like, good job.
What do you call a baby kangaroo?
A Joey.
Correct.
Wow.
Three people remain.
The category is famous state attractions.
Amy, what state is Plymouth Rock?
South Dakota
No
What the
What the
What the
What the
What the
No
Why did you say that?
I don't know
What are
What is this
What is this?
Why don't know?
I don't know
Because I was thinking
I don't want to say it now
Because then
Okay next question
It might be somebody else's question
What state
Is Mount Rushmore in?
God
South Dakota
Correct
That's why I didn't want to
Literally the second question.
Oh my gosh.
Why did I do that?
It's you and lunchbox.
Yeah.
Whoa,
it is?
Yes.
Oh,
God.
She missed.
Wow.
Did I say Massachusetts is that answer, by the way?
No.
No.
It's not South Dakota.
The pilgrims did not land in South Dakota.
They didn't land on a carved out mountain
full of presidents that hadn't even happened yet.
Yes, that's correct.
Oh my God.
Everybody went, what?
With that?
Okay.
Morgan, what's,
What state is Yosemite National Park in?
Oh, I believe Yosemite is California.
And I really want to go.
But is it another West Coast one?
Yosemite National Park.
I think that's California.
It's not Washington.
It's not Montana.
Did it answer?
California.
Correct.
The category is two word science answers.
Oh, gosh.
Relax.
Relax.
Lunchbox, you got this.
Back to Mrs. Beard, fifth grade, first C.
Lunchbox.
What gal is.
What galaxy is Earth part of?
Milky Way.
Correct.
Who?
Two words.
Oh!
Morgan, which gas do plants absorb from the atmosphere?
Okay, and it's a two word.
Which gas?
Can you repeat one?
Sure.
What gas do plants absorb from the atmosphere?
Carbon dioxide is air that we breathe, but then you have carbon monoxide, which I don't know if they use, although it's poisonous.
Need an answer?
Carbon dioxide.
Correct.
I thought we said we breathe in oxygen and out carbon dioxide and plants do the opposite basically.
Okay?
Come on lunchbox.
Famous sidekicks.
Lunchbox.
Who was Conan O'Brien's longtime sidekick and competed on last season's dancing with stars?
Who was Conan O'Brien's long time sidekick?
Oh, that's Jimmy Kimmel.
Oh, gosh.
Andy Richter.
Correct.
Yes!
Yes.
That just came to you.
That just came to you.
I had Horatio, but that was...
Who?
In Jimmy Kimmel's Horacio?
No, it's not, actually.
What's his name?
His name is...
Guillermo.
Okay.
So that's all I could think of.
And I was like, oh my gosh.
All right.
All right.
Morgan.
Dr. Watson is what famous detective sidekick.
Dr. Watson is what famous detective's sidekick.
Oh, wow.
I mean, the only famous detective that I know of,
is Sherlock Holmes, but did he have a
sidekick that was a doctor?
Dr. Watson
is what famous detective sidekick. You need an answer?
Black Holmes. Correct.
What has happened?
So you were alive for that? I guess.
That's the only one I know of. None of us were alive when it was written,
but it's been remade a million times. Okay.
Superhero catchphrases.
Stop! No, this is unfair. No, you can do it.
I don't know any of these guys.
What superhero says, up, up and away.
Lunchbox.
Up, up and away.
Up, up and away.
Up, up and away.
Up, up and away.
Five seconds?
Two and Finney.
He wants to bust light here.
I mean, someone that goes in the sky, so it has to be Iron Man.
Oh, he talked himself.
Come on.
He talked himself to it and then ran away from it.
Who goes up in the sky?
He wears a big ass.
Well, Superman does, but so does Iron Man.
so does, I don't, I've never heard him saying.
It's Superman. He even said it exactly like Superman says it. Up, up and away.
I've never heard him say that.
How's it?
Wow.
Morgan.
She loves superheroes.
I too love superheroes.
I don't know.
But yours was so easy.
I don't think it was.
I've watched Superman.
You even talked yourself to the answer.
Like, who flies?
Fuzzy Bear?
I don't know.
Okay.
Ready, Morgan?
I'm ready.
You got it.
What superhero says?
I can do this all day.
I can do this all day.
That's Captain America, baby.
Her first ever championship.
Hello, Bobby Bones.
Through high school, our son has shown little desire to take control of his own life.
Despite encouragement from me and my wife, he still doesn't have interest in getting his driver's license.
He's just fine with us driving him everywhere.
Weird, right?
Well, in three months, he's going to graduate.
He has a two-year associate.
degree in cybersecurity.
He said that there have been internship opportunities discussed, but he didn't want to be
bothered with it.
So he's shown little to no interest in figuring out what job he should get.
A wife seems content to coddle him a bit longer.
What do you think we should do?
What can I do to light a fire under his butt without my wife thinking that I'm trying to kick him out forcibly?
Signed dad hoping for a spark.
Let's go to you guys that have older kids.
Amy?
Yeah, I think that, yeah, we need to put something in place here.
we're enabling this lack of desire,
him being comfortable at home.
And I get that it's not you.
Maybe it's mostly your wife.
You use the word coddled.
I'll use the word enabling.
Like,
she needs to want to prepare him for taking care of himself.
And he is not there yet.
And that needs to start happening now.
So set some boundaries.
You're also hurting him.
Yeah.
If I were to talk to the mom,
I would say,
I know you feel like you're helping him,
but you're hurting him because you're not giving him the tools to succeed later.
And that's part of the job as a parent is to give kids the tools so that when the parents not around,
they still are able to do the work they need to do using those tools.
You're not giving them those tools.
So you're doing him a disservice while you're thinking you're doing him a service.
Eddie?
I'm not there yet because my son's 18 and he hasn't graduated high school yet.
But in plan, I have a plan already set to where if he ever thinks he's going to come back home,
it's not going to happen.
I want to be there emotionally to support him and give him advice on what to do, but the doors are locked.
Like, you're not allowed to come home unless, like, something really bad happens and you need something like that.
Are you going to push him out?
It's like the bird, man.
The bird's got to fly from the nest.
But when do you make the bird fly?
Like, soon?
Yeah.
Once he graduates high school, if he's going to go to college, then we're going to set you up and help you go to college, right?
If it's, you don't want to go to college, you want to go work, then go work.
And where's it to live?
Go find a place to live.
We'll help you find it.
lunchbox didn't move him back in with his parents.
Yeah, that was an unfortunate situation.
Couldn't afford to pay rent.
And so I needed to live with mom and dad for a little while and grandma.
That's mostly why you moved back, though.
Because you can't afford to pay rent, right?
Yeah.
Yeah, I just, I mean, so I think sometimes you got to let,
because I had a job.
It's not like I wasn't working.
So I think them giving me shelter,
it was because I had a job.
I didn't have a job.
I don't think they would have welcomed me with open arms.
And so Eddie, I feel bad for your kid because you can't only let him get on Facebook, spend the night somewhere, but you are going to kick him out of the house?
Yeah.
I mean, yeah, what does that have to do with Facebook and spend the night at somewhere?
Like, we've already, he has a job.
He's had a job.
So he knows how to work.
Now it's just how are you going to live by yourself?
Did you move out right at 18, right?
I did not.
But that's because I went to college in my hometown.
Well, what if he does that?
Then we'll help him get a place.
But your parents let you stay in that place.
Yeah, but I didn't like how my parents do.
did it. Okay, that's fair. I really didn't. And like, even with my older brother, like, he would
come back and go move out and then come back and move out. And I remember telling him, like, why?
Like, once I'm gone, I'm not coming back. Why didn't, you move back? Because you couldn't
afford to live by yourself? Yeah. And how, what age did you move out again?
25?
You lived with your parents? Take her 25? Yeah. Did you like that? Did they have rules at home
in it? No, no rules. There was absolutely no rules, except for, I, I mean, usually,
Saturday mornings I needed to be there with grandma because so my parents could go garage sailing
and so I could watch grandma and so that was really it. So like if I was out the night before
and I spent the night somewhere I had to get up early and get home so they could go garage sailing.
I think in this conversation specifically I think you have to communicate to your wife that
she thinks she's taking care of them but she's actually hurting them long term. Yeah. That's got to be
that it's not the kid that you have to communicate this to because
he's making his decisions based on what he's allowed to do.
And it looks like you guys are allowing him
and you're enabling him
and you're not preparing him with life skills.
So I think it's the conversation with the wife first
and it's going to be hard for her
and then it's the conversation to the kid second
because he's only following his lead.
Yeah.
Why do you?
This is tough, man.
It's a hard decision to me.
But I think it's the better decision.
It's more different.
because they've allowed this the last two years or whatever.
Yeah, good luck.
It's hard.
Don't, yeah, don't let another year pass and be like, oh, I wish I would have had that
conversation.
It should.
You got to get the wife on board before the kid.
I know it's about the kid.
Yeah, and try to hear her and see her and understand where she's coming from because some of it
might be because of her upbringing, like.
Great point.
So, yeah, good luck.
A win is a win.
A win.
I don't care what you're saying.
Yep, that's me.
Clipper Taylor the fourth.
You might have seen the skits, the reactions, my journey from basketball to college football, or my career in sports media.
Well, somewhere along the way, this platform became bigger than I ever imagined.
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You can have opinions, you can have like a strong stance.
And then there's your body having its own program.
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a show about who we are and who we become when life makes other plans.
We share stories and scientific insights to help us all better navigate these periods of turbulence and transformation.
There is one finding that is consistent, and that is that our resilience rests on our relationships.
I wish that I hadn't resisted for so long the need to change.
We have to be willing to live with a kind of uncertainty that none of us likes.
Listen to a slight change of plans on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
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On a recent episode of the podcast Money and Wealth with John Hobriant, I sit down with
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What would that look like in our families if everyone was able to pass on wealth to the people when they're no longer here?
We break down budgeting, financial discipline, and how to build real wealth, starting with the mindset shifts.
Too many of us were never, ever taught.
Financial education is not always about like, I'm going to get rich.
That's great.
It's about creating an atmosphere for you to be able to take care of yourself
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If you've ever felt you didn't get the memo on money,
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Listen to Money and Wealth with John O'Brien from the Black Effect Network
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American soccer is about to explode.
The World Cup is coming.
Coming.
Ramos sending on to Ernie Stewart the chip.
I'm Tab Ramos.
I'm Tom Boe.
On our podcast, Inside American Soccer, you'll get the real storylines.
I'm not worried about Policic.
I'm not worried about Balligan.
I'm not worried about McKinney.
My only concern is what happens in the back.
The biggest decisions.
If you're going to look at stats and numbers,
he has no shot at making this World Cup team.
And the truth about the U.S. national team.
It wouldn't be a huge.
surprise if our team ends up in the quarterfinals or potentially a great run into the semifinals.
The World Cup is almost here. Experience it all with us. Listen, inside American soccer with Tom Bogart and
Tab Ramos on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts, wherever you get your podcast.
On the Bobby Bone Show now. Luke calls. What happens that we don't see whenever you are super
famous that now you've been exposed to? I think it makes your life really convenient and it
makes your life really inconvenient. Do convenience first.
Convenience is obviously the ability and the financial freedom to like travel the way that you
want to travel, stay at the places you want to stay, have access to things that other people
wouldn't have access to, i.e., like tickets to sporting events.
And like people want you to go to stuff and be at stuff.
And that is a really cool thing.
The inconvenience is just like the obvious, like people following you to your house.
or people trying to figure out where you're staying
so they can get a bunch of autographs from you and sell them
or what like there's all these things like you are never
you always feel like someone's looking at you all the time
when I'm anywhere not like in a fear way
but just kind of like it's weird to say doing what I do
that I really don't like to be the center of attention that much
especially when I'm outside of my job parameters
like I don't want people to think that I think I'm cool or famous
like I'm aware of it, but it's not something that I take a lot of stock in.
Like it doesn't provide me with a lot of like mental fulfillment.
The fame part of it.
Yeah.
Like I'm not like, oh, I'm famous and that is like, I don't derive any of my self-worth from being famous.
Like I try to derive myself worth from like being a good friend or like being good to the people
that work for me and being kind to people that like at the venues we play at or being nice to fans in
public. That's where I derive a lot of my self-worth from is like just maintaining like trying to
be a good person, I think is important to me and trying to be kind to people and going out of my way
to do nice things for people and giving back to people. I feel like is, and fame has allowed me to
do that on a greater level than I could have ever been able to do that. So I'm very thankful for that
part of it, you know, but you just kind of like sometimes you're out and you're just like, I feel like
everyone's like I'm kind of embarrassed because I think everyone's looking at me. Do you ever get caught up in it early?
Not really, no.
Because it happened so fast, there was like, I didn't have any free time.
Like, it hasn't gotten, like, really convenient until the last two years.
And now I've got kids, so I've got that going on.
So it's like, I don't know, I just feel like the way I am with my friends and my family and stuff,
like, they would just have never let me get to that point, you know?
And I didn't want to get to that point anyways, like, of being this, like, big egotistical guy.
I think I'm going to, this is my opinion, there's a tier in current country music.
And I'm going to eliminate all the grades. I'm going to take the guards out.
Sure.
They're out.
But there's a tier.
And that top tier, in my opinion, is you and Wallen and Zach Bryan.
For multiple reasons, streaming success, number ones, touring success, right?
You guys are doing stadiums.
Sure.
Does somebody like you still compare yourself to other people?
I don't think musically really ever.
like I'm not like well I need my stuff to sound more like this guys or that guys obviously you're aware of other people's success just because like I feel like my team is more obsessed with it than I am and I don't think that's necessarily a bad thing but it's not something I ever try to get caught up in like I really want to try to run my own race you know I can be nothing but happy for anyone else having success to me like it's so rare to achieve and it's like the first time there's I mean there's been two stadium acts in country music history before we're
right now. Chesney and Garth, that's really it on a consistent basis. So to have three guys doing it
at one time, it speaks to the overall health of the genre. It's like it's, you know, it's in a
better place than it's ever been in. And it's been in some really great places in the past. So
I feel lucky to be a part of that. And I think for me, I joke about that stuff more than take it
seriously. Like, I remember thinking like, man, I, you know, put out this one's for you. And it ties
Shenaya's record for the longest
number one and then Morgan puts
his album out and beats it and it's like
you know what happens but it's like
what's that doesn't really change anything
for me there was like six months where
I was the best selling country artist of all time
and then it was Morgan shortly afterwards
so it's like it's never going to
like it never stops and I don't
know I just I just feel like it's a waste of time
to worry about that stuff man like I have so much
good stuff going on I have no
like need to be the
biggest or best guy that's
ever done it or like the most tickets or I just feel like you're missing the whole point of it.
What's the point of it? The point of it is like to enjoy it, like to look back on your life and say,
man, like we did that. We accomplished it in a way we felt good about. We were good to people that
we met along the way. And I've lived a great fulfilling life that was full of career success, but also
full of time spent with my kids and time spent with my friends and enjoying the things that I want to
enjoy and enjoying kind of like the spoils of war like getting to like go sit court side at a
Lakers game like I don't take that stuff for granted it's so cool to be able to get to do that and it's
something I never would have been able to do you know in the past and so just that's what it is man like if
we're caught in the trappings of like who's the biggest this and I'm the best that like are you
even really enjoying are you what are you even doing it for if that's why you're doing it why
are you even doing it really do you need a break ever creatively to get creative again oh big time i feel
like right now i'm like i want to write more than i ever have and i've got an album coming out in march
just because i haven't had time to like i love writing on stuff and writing stuff for my records and
willy nelson start us it's willy's most successful record of all time okay and willy nelson
i think we can all agree is one of the best songwriters in the history of country music right this is
most successful album he's ever had and it's the only album that he didn't write any songs on.
And this album that I'm about to put out is the album that I've written the least songs on.
I still wrote a lot, but there's not many that were like my idea from Inception.
A lot of them were ideas or starts that came from my buddies.
And then some of them are songs that I didn't write on at all.
And like some of my favorite songs on this record I didn't write.
I didn't write the title track to this record.
Who I am?
The way I am.
Yeah.
I didn't write that song.
those are some of my favorite songs on the record.
And it was, some of it was out of necessity from a time standpoint of just trying to be home
with the kids more and trying to be present with my wife and being there for my family
while also doing the, you know, going, playing these crazy festivals last year and making
this record.
And some of it was out of necessity, but some of it was also out of like letting go of like the need.
Like maybe there was this egotistical need of like, well, I feel like I need to write my
songs because that adds something to my thing. And I think that it does sometimes. You know,
it doesn't always and, you know, but I do think that sometimes, like, I want people to know,
it wasn't ever the, it wasn't ever the thought of look how smart of a guy I am or look how good
I am at writing the stuff. It was more like, I wanted people to know that I'm like putting the
work in. That was my thinking at the time. It was like, well, I'm not just phoning this in.
It's time for the good news.
With Bobby. Tell me something good. On the river, they see something moving.
around on a little piece of ice and there's a bald eagle stranded floating out there.
It had been hurt.
So they see the eagle struggling floating on a small piece of ice.
It couldn't fly.
So the police that were on patrol said, all right, we got to go out there and get it.
So they go out, they get a boat and they go.
And that bird's freaking out too.
Like even if you're getting saved and you're a bird, you don't exactly know what's happening.
Yeah.
You're an injured bird.
And if you're injured, you're thinking nothing.
good at this point. But they get out, they were able to take the bird, catch it with a pole,
bring it back in. They took it to an avian rehabate. Is that you say it, avian? Like avian flu?
Yeah, bird flu. Yeah, bird flu. To a rehab facility in New Jersey. So they saved the bird. It's all
on video. But they do the whole pole. You know how like zoo people do the pole with the rope on it?
And that bird wants nothing to do with that pole. You don't know yet, bird. They're trying to save
your life. Reminds me of this video. I saw this guy rescuing a deer on ice. And I feared for the guy's
the entire time because the ice could break.
And the deer scared.
Like the, it's like, it's like when I wish we could communicate to the animals.
Like, no, we're here to help you because the deer was freaking out.
But it's like, I'm here to help you.
You know my theory.
The government has the ability to communicate with animals and they know what animals are thinking.
They just haven't shared that technology with us yet.
Well, they could have used it with this bald eagle.
I don't think that police had it.
I think it's pretty secret.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
All right, there you go.
That's what it's all about.
That was tell me something good.
Jada Pinkett Smith met Will Smith
when she was auditioning to play his girlfriend
on the Fresh Prince of Bel Air
she did not get the part
but then they got married
Well
Usually you give somebody the parts
Yeah
I guess it was out of his control
I don't think anything was out of his control
Oh that was his show
Yeah
Oh did you not watch the documentary?
Yeah
I've never seen that documentary
Is it good?
Oh I just know from the show
Is there a documentary or a re
Like everybody gets back together
I guess maybe they get back together
I can see that documentary.
Wow.
Yeah, the first mom he got to be a huge fight with,
kicked her off, brought in a new mom.
The first Vivian?
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
Amy, what you got?
The reason many doorknobs are made of brass
is because of something known as the oligodynamic effect,
and it disinfects itself.
Brass does?
Yeah.
Brass objects can self-disinfect.
Oh.
Proving especially useful on frequently touched surfaces like door knobs.
My front doorknob's brass.
That's crazy.
Like the metal actually does that?
The brass.
That's pretty crazy.
What's the next?
Self-cleaning oven?
Give me a break.
Well, brass has been...
Is brass natural?
Or is it like man-made?
I have no knowledge in the brass world.
I know.
I ask you like you.
Yeah, like I feel like I'm pretty knowledgeable about some things.
I got nothing there.
I would think it's...
No, it's not a natural element.
It's a man-made alloy.
Well, there you go.
There you go.
Made of copper and sink.
Well, now I know.
I don't ever really need to wipe it down.
I still would, though.
Yeah, I would too.
Yeah.
I still would.
The most lopsided game in college football history, 1916, Georgia Tech won 222 to zero over a school from Tennessee called Cumberland College.
That's crazy.
Crazy they didn't call it.
I don't know.
At 100 and nothing.
That's crazy.
Yeah, lunch rocks.
If you own a pair of Nike's, you know what I mean?
You get a hole in them.
They get damaged.
You just throw them away, go buy a new pair of shoes.
Uh-uh.
Not so fast.
friends, Nike has a two-year warranty on their shoes.
If you take them back to the store, new Nike's.
It doesn't matter the store.
The one you bought it from.
Do you promise?
I know, but there's Nike stores, but like say you bought it at a department store.
If you bought Nike's two years, you take it back and they give you a new pair of shoes.
If it has a hole in it or can it just be...
Yeah, because I have a pair of Nike's that got a hole on the bottom.
two-year warranty on footwear and apparel from the data manufacturer for defects of materials or workmanship such as sole separation or air unit failures.
Yeah, so if you got a hole, Amy?
I do.
That's a failure.
And I haven't had them for two years.
What is not covered general wear and tear, misuse, or damage for improper cleaning?
My might be considered general rain.
It's only if there's defects in the workmanship, faulty stitching, peeling, or detective air units.
Oh.
You can go to the Nike website or Nike authorized door.
You cannot go back to wherever you got it.
Okay.
Thanks for clarifying.
This is not so much.
It's cool, though.
Not to rain on your fact, but it's cool to know.
Man, I've read it online.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I'm so confused about that brass thing, too.
But thank you.
That's crazy if so.
It just cleans itself.
That's crazy.
Morgan.
So President Jimmy Carter once left the biscuit,
aka nuclear codes, in his jacket,
which he then sent to the cleaners.
Wow.
The code for the nuclear missiles?
Yeah, now you've got to have that box.
They call the football.
But if you get to football, you got the codes,
Blow up the world.
I mean, that's what's going to blow up the world.
I have one person shooting a nuke, somebody matching it.
The next thing you know, you're just nuking everybody and everybody's dead.
But hey, how about that story?
That's not fun fact.
Popeye's chicken is named after Gene Hackman's character,
Jimmy Popeye Doyle in the French connection,
not after the cartoon Popeye.
Oh, really?
I haven't thought about it.
And Popeye is maybe because it's like New Orleans, French connection.
I don't know, dude, that brass thing still got my head spinning.
I ain't spending a much time thinking about mine even.
All right, what do you have?
Yeah, so this is.
kind of sad, but the average American will eat 35,000 cookies in their lifetime.
And the reason I say it's sad is that when I first read it, I thought it was like just people,
but now it's just Americans.
Okay, I'm going to break this down with a calculator.
So.
Guys, I am ripping through my thin mints.
There you are.
Oh, yeah, those are crazy.
I thought I was going to have extra boxes.
What's the number?
35,000.
Okay, so good.
Okay, so let's say there's 35,000 cookies in a lifetime.
Let's say divided by 78 years, okay?
Yes.
Okay, so that's 448 a year.
So let's just divide that.
by a month.
That's 37 a month.
Let's divide that by four a week.
It's nine a week.
Oh, yeah.
I bring that average up.
That's a little lower cookie a day.
That's,
for a lifetime.
But like when you haven't eaten cookies in a while,
like how many do you eat?
I don't know if I ate 365 cookies a year.
No,
no chance.
Do you lift all of us up?
I think I do.
I think you got a problem.
I have five cookies last night.
So that'll tell you that.
Fun fact, Friday.
A win is a win.
A win is a win.
I don't care what I'm saying.
Yep, that's me.
Clivert Taylor the 4th.
You might have seen the skits, the reactions,
my journey from basketball to college football,
or my career in sports media.
Well, somewhere along the way,
this platform became bigger than I ever imagined.
And now I'm bringing all of that excitement
to my brand new podcast, The Clifford Show.
This is a place for raw,
unfiltered conversations with some of your favorite
athletes, creators, and voices
that not only deserve to be heard, but celebrate.
One week I'll take you behind the scenes of the biggest moments in sports and entertainment,
and the next we'll talk about life, mental health, purpose, and even music.
The Clifford Show isn't just a podcast, it's a space for honest conversations, stories that don't always get told,
and for people who are chasing something bigger.
So if you've ever supported me or you're just chasing down a dream, this is right where you need to be.
Listen to the Clifford Show on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcast.
And for more behind the scenes, follow at Clifford.
and a TikTok podcast network on TikTok.
You can have opinions.
You can have like a strong stance.
And then there's your body having its own program.
I'm Dr. Maya Shunker, a cognitive scientist and hosts of the podcast, a slight change of plans,
a show about who we are and who we become when life makes other plans.
We share stories and scientific insights to help us all better navigate these periods of turbulence
and transformation. There is one finding that is consistent, and that is that our resilience
rests on our relationships. I wish that I hadn't resisted for so long the need to change.
We have to be willing to live with a kind of uncertainty that none of us likes.
Listen to a slight change of plans on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts. On a recent episode of the podcast, Money and Wealth with John Hope Bryant,
I sit down with Tiffany the budgetista Aliche to talk about what it really takes to take control of your money.
What would that look like in our families if everyone was able to pass on wealth to the people when they're no longer here?
We break down budgeting, financial discipline, and how to build real wealth, starting with the mindset shifts.
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If you've ever felt you didn't get the memo on money,
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Listen to Money and Wealth with John O'Brien from the Black Effect Network
on the I'd Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Hey, Ernest, what's up?
Look, money is something we all deal with, but financial literacy is what helps turn income into real wealth.
On each episode of the podcast, Earn Your Leisure, we break down the conversations you need to understand money, investing, and entrepreneurship.
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All right, let's check some voicemails.
Go ahead.
I'm a teacher in Minnesota, and we happen to have a snow day.
So I record the prices right.
I haven't been able to watch.
So I wanted to go see when Lunchbox was on, and I don't remember what the date was going to be aired.
So if you could let me know what date, it was going to be aired, that's why I can go back and find it.
That'd be awesome.
Thanks so much.
I wonder does she think he's going to be on this show.
Lunchbox, what do you think about this call?
Yeah, it has not happened yet, so you don't need to go back.
It's still coming.
March 31st and April 2nd are my two episodes.
He's just going to be in the crowd, though.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, Amy, not just in the crowd.
I mean, you don't know how many times they're going to show me in the crowd,
and I may be the star of the crowd.
Can I say something?
What if this would be the greatest gotcha ever?
If he got on the show and he didn't tell us,
and this is all a bit leading up to that.
No chance.
Oh, you don't think there's a chance at all.
You don't think he wouldn't yell at the top of the mountain,
be like, guys, I'm on.
I think it's the greatest payoff if he's able to pull this off.
I do.
I'm now starting to think that he might have gotten on the show
and he's leading us to these dates to watch him on the show
because otherwise I think he'd be embarrassed that he didn't get on the show
and they're not going to show him and then we're going to watch it and go like
we never saw you and then made fun of them.
I mean they're going to show me.
I don't think you understand.
The camera goes right in front of your face like in the crowd.
Like it is on a big little arm and it pans the crowd back and forth.
So there's no chance.
I'm not on the show. Would you like us to watch the episode on the 31st?
Yeah. You're not addressing what Bobby's saying, lunchbox.
What do you want me to say? Are you really on the show?
No. Did you make it on the show? No. I don't know now. All right.
I mean, I don't know. It would be the greatest. The great. I love a bit. He had pulled one right over our eyes.
He wants us to watch it. That's the only thing that makes me think there's a chance. I put the chance at
20% 1 in 5
that he actually got on the show
and this has been a long bit
with a massive payoff.
Amy percentage?
I'll go, I mean, it's not impossible
so I'll give it 10%.
Eddie? Yeah, I'm going to go same.
10%. Not impossible. So there is a chance.
After the way, watching him
react to what you're saying...
I didn't even react, Eddie. I just sat here.
That's the point. I know. You were good at it.
I will say this. The respect
we'll go through the roof.
If he's able to pull this off and keep this secret
and pull off one of the greatest bits of Bibone show history
if he gets on the show.
Now, do you think he just got on or do you think he wanted it?
It doesn't matter.
If he even gets down to the row, like he got us.
So he's a contestant.
Yeah.
Because now I think back, like, how are they not put him on?
He's speaking so quiet.
His energy.
It's a lot of energy.
It's just magnetic.
No, I felt like it was magnetic too.
That's why I was so frustrated that they didn't put me on.
Like, I didn't understand.
That's why the second day I went back, I tried to be calm because I was like, maybe I was too energetic.
I don't understand it.
I wish I could talk to a producer.
Like, if we could have a producer tell us exactly what they look for, is it like one day they look for energy, the next day they don't?
I don't know.
I wish I knew.
That's a reason why I think he got on.
All right.
He went too hard at that.
That explanation?
Trying to get a producer on.
How do we even know he did the second day?
The second day was couples day.
Oh, I mean the second day that he could, yeah, he had three days.
He didn't get on, he didn't get to go in.
But how do we even know that he went for couples' dates?
That whole story wasn't made up because he could have pulled off the greatest con in the history of the Bobby Bone show.
Guys.
What's your percentage, 20?
One of five.
15 after what.
He has the ability to pull off a good prank.
Yeah, I agree.
I posted from the Price is Right every day, guys.
Yeah, yeah, but you would be intentional.
Yeah, about what you're posting.
Oh, wow.
I wonder if he got on.
March 31st and April 6th.
I know we have to watch now.
And the irony of April 2nd being my birthday, and if he got on for my birthday and pulled
off the greatest bit prank in the history of the show.
How awesome a birthday gift would that would be?
Mike, what do you think?
Any chance he got on?
I say 1%.
I don't think he's that good of an actor.
Because he was so dejected when he came here.
So you don't think he's a good actor?
He couldn't pull that off and he couldn't hold in that excitement.
Lunchbox, your thoughts to him saying you're not a good actor?
Well, I mean, you've seen me act, and I'm pretty convincing.
I'm really good at it.
So I don't know.
I don't know that Mike really knows good acting.
Have we seen you act?
And what?
It's on the show?
Matt out of hell?
We weren't there.
We didn't go to that show and they took your lines from you.
Friday night lights.
They took your line from you.
We saw that.
Yeah.
It's good point.
Okay. So we don't know if he's on.
I'm starting to think that he has pulled off the greatest bit in Bobby Bone show history
and that March 31st or April 2nd, we will see him as a contestant on the show.
Thank you for the car.
Leave us a voicemail anytime. 877.
Bobby. It's time for the good news.
With Amy.
Tell me something good.
So Rita Conley is in a wheelchair.
She has spina bifida and her increasing muscle weakness has kept her unable to travel in a car safely.
Like they had a van, but she would have to just sit in it, not equipped properly.
Well, guess what?
She was given a wheelchair accessible Chrysler Pacifica where her wheelchair clicks right into the driver's seat.
it stays in place and she can drive.
Now she's safe. So shout out to all
things possible mobility because
that's a nonprofit that gifted her
the car. She can drive? Yeah.
That's cool. They have a wheelchair. Yeah.
She just says it's not like she has to get out of it.
Yeah. It just like loads up and then
locks them place. And that's a minivan, right?
The Pacifica. That's nice.
You like that? Yeah, those are nice, man.
I'm not familiar with the minivans yet. I'm not
there in my life yet. I'm not minivan guy. Like, I'll
probably never be. But man, when you get in one of those
like this, it's just perfect.
I have a friend who does my NFL show with me.
His name is Matt Castle.
And he has five kids.
And he drives a touring like an artist.
Van,
thingy.
A big van.
Bus.
Yeah.
It's,
yes.
And so he drives.
Because he's got five kids of all ages.
And sometimes he'll drive it over to the house.
It's a monster.
I've seen him pull up to like games and they all just come out of the car.
It's all the kids.
Yeah, it's wild.
Good story.
That's what it's all about.
That was tell me something good.
The radio on and the dials just keeps on turn.
It's more game two.
Scoo for Steve Reddavit's trying to put you through.
Back is riding this week's next bit.
Now Bobby's on the mic so you know what this is.
This is the Bobby Vaughn's story.
Now time for the morning, Corny.
The morning corny.
Why did the horse run away in the middle of its wedding?
Why did the horse run away in the middle of its wedding?
It got cult feet.
Oh, Colt.
Oh, Colt.
That was the morning corny.
I didn't hear the tough.
Yeah.
Oh, Colt feet.
Yeah, Colt feet.
Okay, Amy's got a challenge for us.
Write a horror story using only three words.
So we're supposed to come up with three words?
Mm-hmm.
And it's like the worst.
Yeah.
Three words.
I know mine.
They could be said to you.
Yeah.
Okay, what would yours be?
Give us an idea so we can get into this.
You have cancer.
Oh, that one's terrible.
I think it can't be that one.
Okay, you have eight.
That's what I was going to go with next.
But that's pretty.
You are dying.
Straightforward, man.
That's not good.
Okay, I think it can't be dead on the nose.
Of course.
That's a terrible one.
If you ask me, that's terrible.
I'm going to shoot you.
All those suck.
I'mma, that's good.
I'm going to shoot you.
No, no.
It has to be.
Okay, you tell me what's your horror story.
Okay.
You tell me.
My three.
Yours went so hard.
It was so awful.
Okay, okay.
I'm trying to think.
Because I was thinking like you are dead.
Well, you wouldn't know that.
You're so in the nose.
Yeah, but you can't be told that if you're dead.
I'm going to shoot you.
I like that one.
Okay.
So mine would be, if I were to have to say it,
oops, I'm late.
That's my horror story.
That's three.
Personal horror story.
Oh, personal.
Yeah.
Okay.
You're the one that did this.
Okay.
What about this, guys?
You probably, like, say you're not married and you don't want kids.
You don't want to hear it.
You're the father.
Oh, okay.
Well, not you're the father.
But you're doing yours.
Oh, I got one.
I got one along that.
I'm pregnant again.
No!
No!
I'm out.
That can be yours.
That could be yours.
I got one for me.
Okay.
Okay, let's everybody take a breath.
Because we got off on a bad note here.
Amy was going as hard as possible.
Wow.
Okay.
Ready.
Okay.
Ready.
Amy, go.
I don't want to hear life without parole.
That's not a you.
Personal.
Personal.
You're bad and you don't even understand it.
What?
Yes, I do.
That would be terrible.
But so like a hardcore one that you've done.
Okay, how about this one, Amy?
Drink this poison.
Yeah, that one sucks.
That's not a real,
that's anybody would hate to hear that.
Like you specifically.
Okay, okay.
I got another one.
Okay.
No more beer.
That's good.
Okay, okay.
Here's one.
The dog's out.
Oh, that's bad.
For me, that'd be a bad one.
It's out of the.
the gate? Oh my God, I'd freak out.
Oh, okay. Now I have one.
Amy.
Oh, my God. I'm ready whenever you're done.
He left you.
Oh.
Come on.
Okay, you're getting closer, though.
I got it. Here.
Lottery is canceled. Good one for you.
Good one for you.
Nailed it.
Brutal.
Okay, another one would be Arkansas lost again.
Oh, no.
That's terrible.
Yeah, yeah.
I don't know.
Come on, I mean, it's your fit.
Y'all are going to say this one doesn't work for me, but I don't want to hear it.
Go ahead.
Like, you've been evicted.
Guys, are you worried about that?
That's never going to happen.
I mean, that is not a good thing to hear.
Yeah, or like, that would be bad.
I don't want to hear that.
Nobody does.
These are supposed to be specific to us.
Yeah, we have to amputate your leg.
I mean, that's a lot.
That's a lot of words.
But I mean, I'm just saying, like,
Amy, it's like we're not doing it realistically, so why don't we just do a lot of words?
All dried up.
Okay, Amy.
I try to figure out how I'm going to say menopause all dried up.
That's four words.
All dried up?
That feels gross.
What is happening?
I'm going to be honest with you, that feels gross.
And I don't know.
And I want to throw up.
Amy.
I mean, this.
Okay.
What would you all pick my horror story to be?
Oh, you want to pick Amy's?
Sure, sure, sure, sure, sure, sure.
Okay.
therapy is canceled.
There you go. That's good.
That's specific to you.
Yeah.
Right?
I could have done better, but that was off the dome.
Your therapist died.
Oh my gosh.
That would be bad.
I would not like that because I don't want to start over with another one.
I hear you.
Eddie, do you have any for her?
For her, your boyfriend's gone?
Or died if you want to go hard.
Oh my gosh.
Your boyfriend died?
Yeah.
of cancer and poison.
That'd be so bad.
How about one like...
He left.
How about this?
Got scammed again.
Okay, that's a good one.
Got scammed again.
Not again.
Yes, a scam.
No, you've already got...
Okay.
Guys, nobody's ever, like, had a segment I did and they've been the worst at it.
Lunchbox, give it over her?
Man, I was trying to do something with her vocal cords.
Like, vocal cords gone.
That way she can't talk, but I don't know how to...
Sum that up.
He's saying, like, if I lost my voice, that would be...
I would be devastated.
Right, and I don't know.
How many words is ADD?
That's three.
Or is it...
No, I'm saying...
Attention deficit disorder.
No, no, no, but ADD is that...
Then do one.
We can come back as one.
Why would...
Choke on your own word?
Oh, my God.
What would you say?
I was just, you know, spitball on some stuff.
You are, I already...
No, I have it, so you can say you have ADD.
Right, because you already have it.
Yeah.
Okay.
Well, everybody, good job.
Yeah.
Thanks, Amy.
Well, this is a fun.
Like, you know how sometimes you're looking for, like, dinner games around the table?
Like, hi, low, how was your day?
You started the game with you have cancer.
Well, that would be my, that's my nightmare.
Both my parents had it.
Like, that's what I think about.
That's a, I don't want to hear those three words.
Or, like, time for hospice.
Oh, my God.
Yeah, no one wants to hear that, Amy.
Oh, my God.
Until I knew
Nuclear bomb incoming
She's just going as hard as she possibly can
Okay, that's fun dinner game everybody
Take that home with you
This story of the day
This story comes to us from Colorado
A man said he got hurt at work
Can't go to work, got back problems
Ah guys, I need disability
So he's getting disability
And then he has a burner Instagram account
And what's he posting up there?
Videos of him snowboarding down the slopes.
How'd they find the burner?
The private investigator went and looked at his Instagram and just started checking on people he followed to see if they posted pictures of him doing anything.
Found this.
Then went and followed him to the slopes.
Oh, wow.
So someone had probably posted a story of him doing his other account.
Yep.
Well, is it called burner?
Is it called like Frinsta?
Well, so that would probably be more of a friend-stah.
Yeah.
A burner is a secret account that nobody knows about just so you control people.
Yeah.
If you're posting stuff that only your friends can see that isn't public, that's more of a...
So they caught his friend-sta.
They caught his friend-sta.
You never heard of that. That's cool.
I've never heard of a friend-sa either.
Either by Eddie, I was like, well, friends-
Eddie's kids probably have some friend-stas.
Oh, great, and I don't know about it.
Well, that's the point of it.
They can show their friends, but not everybody knows about it.
A burner, nobody knows.
It's fake name, and you're only doing it not to post stuff.
about you but to just screw with other people in the comments.
So we got the point though.
Yeah. And anyway, he's done.
He's going to jail or what?
Yeah, he's going to be charged with the fraud.
All right, there you go.
I'm Lunchbox. That's your bonehead story of the day.
All right, voicemail.
Good morning studio.
I have a question.
I want to know why Bobby can be
Quiz Bowl champion, but he can't remember a few friends' birthdays
for 20 years.
Awesome. Thanks. Have a good one.
Bye. You guys rock.
you. Great question. Priorities. Yeah, it's easy.
Wait, what? Yeah, priorities.
Yeah. Like, I care to know every state and capital. Correct.
My calendar reminds...
Eddie, what are you answering for him? My calendar reminds me of you guys' birthdays.
It's obviously not a priority to him to learn our birthdays, Amy.
I barely know mine.
Yes, you know yours. You know your birthday. You've never not known your birthday.
My point is, I don't care that much about birthdays.
Our birthdays. Or even my own. So I don't really think about when birthdays are.
But yeah, no, if I really set my mind to it, I think it could.
Now, if it was part of a game, you'd probably learn it, right?
Oh, for sure.
Like if it was in a study guide for a quiz bowl game, yeah.
Like if you said there's money attached to it, I could go Amy March 18th.
Oh, okay, now you know it.
Okay, and mine?
It's the 20-somethingth.
Oh, come on.
Is there money on it?
Oh, there's money.
Lots of money attached.
Oh, you can do it.
I don't know, man.
Okay.
March 20.
He's got it.
First.
See, he knows it.
What if it's all been a gag?
And the whole thing is,
I've known all your birthdays the whole time,
but I want to be known as a guy
that doesn't remember birthdays.
It wouldn't surprise me.
That'd be a terrible bit, but whatever.
We'll see you guys.
We're going on a cruise.
We're all ready to go on.
You guys ready to go on the cruise with the show
and the artists, and we'll do another one next year,
but we're going on the cruise.
So we will see you guys on Monday.
Some of us will be in studio.
Some won't, but everybody should be here
one way or the other.
I will see you guys Monday.
All right, bye everybody.
The Bobby Bone Show.
The Bobby Bone Show theme song, written, produced, and sang by Reed Yarberry.
You can find his Instagram at Reed Yarberry.
Scooby Steve, executive producer, Ray Moondo, head of production.
I'm Bobby Bones.
My Instagram is Mr. Bobby Bones.
Thank you for listening to the podcast.
This is Julian Edelman, host of Games with Names.
On our latest episode, we got comedian.
Blake Anderson from workaholics and the hilarious.
This is important podcast.
Let's go.
We did beat them in improv.
You had an improv against the team?
Yes, we would pull up their schools would be there with signs for us.
It's competition.
What you would win is a bottle of gold shlogger.
James Fester threw it out of a van because he didn't want us drinking it.
For more games with names, visit the IHeartRadio app or wherever you get your podcast.
On the Cino Show podcast, each episode invites you into a raw, unfiltered conversations about recovery.
resilience and redemption. On a recent episode, I sit down with actor, cultural icon Danny Trail,
talk about addiction, transformation, and the power of second chances. The entire season two
is now available to bench featuring powerful conversations with the guests like Tiffany Addish,
Johnny Knoxville, and more. I'm an alcoholic. Without this group, I'm going to die.
Listen to the Ceno show on the IHart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Hi, hi, I'm Bob Pittman, chairman and CEO of IHard Media, and I'm kicking off a brand new season of my
guest, Math and Magic, stories from the frontiers of marketing.
Math and Magic takes you behind the scenes of the biggest businesses and industries while sharing
insights from the smartest minds in marketing. Coming up this seasonal Math and Magic,
CEO of Liquid Death Mike Sessario. People think that creative ideas are like these light bulb
moments that happen when you're in the shower. It's really like a stone sculpture. You're
constantly just chipping away and refining. Take to Interactive CEO Strauss-Selnyk.
And our own chief business officer, Lisa Coffey.
Listen to Math and Magic on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcast.
On paper, the three hosts of the Nick Dick and Poll show are geniuses.
We can explain how AI works, data centers, but there are certain things that we don't necessarily understand.
Better version of Play Stupid Games, Win Stupid Prizes.
Yes.
Which, by the way, wasn't Taylor Swift, who said that for the first time.
I actually thought it was.
I got that wrong.
But hey, no one's perfect.
We're pretty close, though.
Listen to the Nick Dick and Paul show on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is an IHeart podcast.
Guaranteed human.
