The Bobby Bones Show - FRI PT 2: Jason Aldean On His Return To Acting, Luke Bryan Chaos & Why He Refuses A Teleprompter + We Take A Deep Dive Into Scandals

Episode Date: April 24, 2026

Jason Aldean talks about his 31 No. 1 songs and why he refuses to rely on a teleprompter. Jason also shares stories about Luke Bryan, Brooks & Dunn, recording in the same studio since 1999, gettin...g his wife into the studio for the first time, and the making of his new album Songs About Us. Plus, trading cards, acting, favorite artists, and the one song he stopped playing live! Bobby talks about the craziest auction items in history after a life jacket from the Titanic sold for a crazy price recently. We also took a deep dive into the Top Scandals of the Week.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Starting point is 00:02:14 On the Bobby Bones Show now. Jason L. Dean. Hey, good to see you, man. Good to see you, man. Thanks for having me. I was watching that video. I don't know if it was really a surprise, but when you were celebrating your 30 number ones,
Starting point is 00:02:32 it's actually 31 at the time. But they did that thing where everybody was playing songs for you. Were you really surprised by that? Yeah, absolutely, man. It was funny because, you know, I was told that it was just like a normal CRS thing that the label would do where, you know, all the artists will come in and play a song or two and just kind of hang out with the radio for a little bit.
Starting point is 00:02:52 And that was it, you know, and we do that all the time. So I didn't think much of it. And so when I got down there, they were just like, all right, sit right here. And I'm like, well, I don't want to sit here. Like, all my friends are hanging out. Like, I wanted to kind of go hang out with everybody. And then all of a sudden they started playing a video and it kind of kicked in of what was happening. And nobody spoiled it for you.
Starting point is 00:03:10 No. And my band knew since like November. So I had no idea, man. I was like, that's pretty good for you guys to be able to keep a secret for me that long. Could you sing every one of your 30 songs back from memory, all your number ones? I guess there's 31 now, so apologies.
Starting point is 00:03:27 I'm not asking you, by the way. I like to think that I could. But, I mean, there's probably a lot of those, some of those we haven't played in a while in the show. So, um... Do you use a prompter at all? No. None.
Starting point is 00:03:38 No. I tried to use it one time. We brought one out for like a weekend. And I just found myself staring at it the whole time. And like kind of, I don't know, it kind of took me out of my element a little bit on stage. So I just got rid of it. And I haven't used them since.
Starting point is 00:03:55 I saw Elton John do a show once. And he has so many number ones and hits it. And he's also way older than us. But, and he was dialed into the prompter. And I asked him after. I was like, hey, do you sing with the prompter? He goes, yeah, after like, I remember the number he said. But it was like after hit number at 41.
Starting point is 00:04:09 Like I don't remember. songs anymore. Yeah, I mean, it's, I don't know, it's like, it's muscle memory a little bit for me. It's like, you know, especially once you get into a tour and you're playing a lot, you know, you kind of get, get dialed in. But usually when the tour is getting started or something like that, you know, it's, you know, there's always going to be those nights where you just kind of have a, you know, have a, have a blackout on stage.
Starting point is 00:04:33 And, and, but I ended up coming up with a better system. So we have, all my stuff is on a, on a track recorded. and if I ever forget a word or anything like that, my monitor guy just hits that button and I hear myself singing to... Oh, you can sing to you. To like a rehearsal or something. And then I'm able to pick it back up,
Starting point is 00:04:51 you know, miss a word or two and then I pick it right back up. I know he wouldn't be mad at me for saying this because he's a friend, but Ronnie Dunn has someone sing the words in his ear. I was out on tour with those guys, man, and Ronnie was having like some voice problems or something one night. And we have the same manager
Starting point is 00:05:08 who's actually here, Clarence Spalding. And so Clarence calling said, Hey, Ronnie's, you know, struggling a little bit tonight. Can you jump on stage and, you know, help him out a little bit and sing some songs? And so I guess I was on his mix. And so when that happened, I could hear that guy. And I was like, what is going on?
Starting point is 00:05:26 I never in my life heard that before. They sing it like a second and a half before he sings his part. It was crazy. I'm like, I don't know how you do that, man. But it's pretty wild. You got a new album out today. How long ago did you start on the very beginning? I don't even know how you start a new album.
Starting point is 00:05:41 Is that you find one song that you like and start or what? For me, I like to have like a handful, you know, four or five, six songs, just enough to go in and kind of have a little bit of a vibe in mind of what we want to do. So I would say, man, what are we in now? The year? Oh, the month. The year. I'm aware what year it is, I think.
Starting point is 00:06:04 But I would say probably, I mean, I was listing. to these songs definitely early part of last year, if not like the end of 24 maybe. So like I was already kind of starting to, you know, put together songs and things like that. And I feel like maybe early part of last year we went in and started recording or November or something like that of 24. Do you have a studio at your house? No. Is that purposeful? Yeah. Why? I just, when I'm at home, man, I try not to work. You know, I try to hang out with the family and kids and do all that stuff. And I know that if I have stuff like that at home, that I'll probably just be in there all the time.
Starting point is 00:06:43 So I just try to shut everything down when I go home. And I've recorded in the same studio here in Nashville since 1998 when I moved to town. So the same studio that I cut all my demos and stuff like that in back in the day. We still cut there and track every record that we've ever done there. And yeah, I just kind of a creature of habit too.
Starting point is 00:07:05 Did you buy that studio? No. I would never buy that studio. It's not really that nice, honestly. It's been around for it. Probably needs some work done to it at this point. I'm sure you could spruce a show. You know where Blackbird is?
Starting point is 00:07:18 Yeah. Yeah, it's not that one. It's like one of the ones that's like close to that. That's not nearly as nice. The album is called Songs About Us. Again, it's out today. That song's with Luke. Yes.
Starting point is 00:07:32 Yeah, you and Luke did that song. Are you guys cool enough where she's like, hey, hop on this song with me? Yeah, we just, you know, Luke and I've been friends for everyone. And, you know, we're always kind of looking for a reason to do something, you know, work together and have some fun. So I had this song, and he was just kind of the guy I had in mind for it, you know. And so we were hanging out.
Starting point is 00:07:52 I think we went to a Georgia game this year. And we were just kind of hanging out. And I was playing him some stuff that we were working on. And I played him that. And I'm like, you know, if you dig it, come, you know, come sing on it with me. And, you know, it didn't take much convincing. So he jumped on it. And it was cool.
Starting point is 00:08:08 It worked out perfect. and we just ran over it actually for the first time, played it live together for the first time in a rehearsal, a couple, I don't know, a few days ago or something, but I don't know, he's just my, he's my dude, you know what I mean, and any time we can do something like that, do some shows together, do a song or whatever, it's just a lot of fun.
Starting point is 00:08:26 Can you give me a quintessential Luke Brian story through your friendship, like something funny, like a really good Luke story that maybe we haven't heard? Oh. I know. I don't know. I put you on the spot here. I mean, I don't want to say one that'll, like, dime him out.
Starting point is 00:08:39 You know what I mean? But I don't know. Luke's just, you know, he's so accident prone, man. That's my thing with Luke. I don't know. You remember when he, I don't know if you guys know the story, but, you know, he, like, fell off of a skateboard one time in Central Park and had to get stitches.
Starting point is 00:08:56 Then he fell on a bicycle and broke his collarbone, and he's always falling off stage, you know. You guys hunt together, so that would make me scared. He's so accident prone and he's got a gun around him. I don't hunt with him. No chance. send him to the other side of the ranch. So my favorite one is he was out at his house,
Starting point is 00:09:16 and I guess they were out there shooting skeet or something like that, and the skeet thrower got hung up, and so he's down there messing with the skeet thrower, and that thing lets loose and comes around and hits him right in the forehead. And luckily he had a hat on it. Probably would have knocked him out, but it's just that kind of stuff happens to him all the time.
Starting point is 00:09:35 It's crazy. What about getting your wife to sing on a song? You know what, Brits's a great singer, obviously, and I've, you know, I hear her singing all the time at the house and those kind of things. And, you know, there was a time I think where, you know, she was on American Idol and those kind of things. And I think thought she might want to do that until we met and she kind of saw what it entails. And I think she was like, no, I'm good. But, you know, I've always thought she was a really good singer and always kind of been looking for something to maybe get her to be a part of. and, you know, and finally this song that we got came in,
Starting point is 00:10:11 and I just felt like it was a good fit for her, especially something that she didn't really have to carry the song. You know, it was something that she could kind of get her feet wet a little bit and, you know, go in and sing on, and I thought she'd crush it, man. So it was really cool to get her in the studio for the first time. She had never really been in a studio or anything like that, so to take her in and let her see what it was all about. It was really cool.
Starting point is 00:10:31 That song's called Easy or Gone that you guys did together. Two of the writers on the song were, the two dudes from Lady A. Yes. So was it originally, maybe were they writing it for themselves? I don't know. Charles Kelly was the one that sent it to me and, you know, Charles was singing the demo on it. So obviously it kind of sounds like a Lady A song, but, you know, I don't remember there being like a female vocal or anything like that on it at the time. But I think, you know, Charles and Dave, those guys write all the time. So I'm sure they were probably either writing for their thing or just writing in general. You know, sometimes those guys will just write. And if
Starting point is 00:11:06 they're not writing for their own record, they're just writing. And Charles had sent me a different song, and I think Blake ended up cutting it. And then he sent me this one. And so it was just one that I immediately kind of had Britt in mind for that. And I told her, I'm like, just, hey, I'm going to be honest with you. If we go in there and this sucks, like, it's not going to make the record.
Starting point is 00:11:30 That's a tough conversation to have with your wife. But no, it was great. It was a lot of fun to take her in and kind of let her see what that was all about and let her get in the studio and do it for real like that. Is there ever a time or has there been a time in your career where you have a song, but somebody else has the same song
Starting point is 00:11:49 and you both are trying to cut it and you got to have some sort of negotiation? No, I don't think so. I remember my second single, Why, was a song that Shannon Brown had this song. Remember Shannon Brown? She's married to Sean. Silva and so Shannon had a record deal at the time and I think had the song and was planning to put it out as a single which we didn't know and so we sent the song to Sean her husband to get a video treatment for him to shoot the video for us not even knowing that she had the song and so I remember that was kind of a little bit of a thing back in the day we kind of laugh about it now but but I've never other than that I don't remember ever having a song that somebody else had dust on the bottle with Dave with Dave David Lee Murphy, because that's a David Lee Murphy song.
Starting point is 00:12:38 He wrote that by himself, too, back in the day. I know, man. That's a paycheck. Dude, that is the coolest, might be the coolest guy in town to me. He's, one of my favorite David Lee Murphy stories is this had to have been back in 96 or 7 or something, but I was playing my band down in Georgia. We got into this Battle of the Band's thing, and we won it. And so we got a chance to open for David Lee Murphy, Diamond Rio, and Johnny Pei,
Starting point is 00:13:06 check the next day. And so it's me and my band. We're in a van with our trailer and, you know, we're unloading our gear that morning and look up and there's this really tall guy just standing there, you know, and he just starts grabbing gear moving it. And it was David Lee Murphy. He was like helping us load our gear on stage. And I met him that day. And when I moved to Nashville, he was one of the first guys that I wrote with here in town. And so it was just like, just kind of became friends with them early on and and then as I got my record deal and started you know recording albums it was like he he was having a song or two on every record he wrote Biggering Tractor and you know things like that so he's just always kind of been a part of my career and that was one of those songs I think it's like
Starting point is 00:13:50 the 30 year anniversary or something of that song this year or last year whatever and and so it's just like man you know there's there's so much of that 90s country stuff being done right now and you know kind of getting back to a little bit of that. And so I was like, man, it'd be cool to just do that song and have him on it. And it was always one of my favorites to kind of play in the clubs and those kind of things anyway. Jason Aldean's here. His album, Songs About Us, is out today. We're now going to do normal people questions for Jason Aldine.
Starting point is 00:14:18 Normal question number one. What is the air temperature you prefer when you sleep at night? Probably 68. Pretty cold? Yeah. Would you go colder? Or are you both pretty happy at 68? Is that a point?
Starting point is 00:14:31 When I met my wife. wife and she would like come out on the road and like get on the bus i kept the bus at 66 oh my so um but yeah that's now i'm now i'm now i'm i've bumped it up to 68 so uh you're nice guy very kind of you you know that's team player what is the last show that you finished like tv show yeah i don't know i'm a big reality tv guy so um what is the last show that you finished what is the last Last show I finished. I don't know. What are you watching now, reality-wise?
Starting point is 00:15:08 Dude, all that stuff. Like, my wife is, she is, like, suckered me into all of them. Love is blind. Mormon wives? That one. Summer House, which is, like, all kinds of drama going on now. So, yeah. So she sucks.
Starting point is 00:15:22 She's like, you'll never believe what's going on. And then I get sucked into it. You know what I mean? But, like, your friends and neighbors, the John Ham thing, was something that, I watched it a while back, but I started watching the new season. And so I like stuff like that. Landman, you know, all the Taylor Sheridan and stuff I love.
Starting point is 00:15:39 What about acting for you? Yeah. Well, I don't know if you know this, Bobby, but I did do a movie back in the day. You probably didn't see it because not many people did. But, you know, I tried it. It was, I got offered a chance to do this movie. And they offered me kind of a bigger role in it that I turned down. I'm like, man, if I'm going to suck, I want to be on camera as little as possible, you know.
Starting point is 00:16:01 And so I took a different movie. It was Ed Harris was in it. January Jones, Jason Isaacs, and what was the movie called? It was called Sweetwater. It was like a Western. And,
Starting point is 00:16:13 you know, and I just, I didn't enjoy it. I didn't enjoy that process of whatever. I just remember being there, just being like, man, I'm a musician. Like, what am I doing here
Starting point is 00:16:24 on this set of this movie? But now it's been a long time. It's like I would be open to it again doing something. I think I would be pretty picky about it. But I just remember not feeling like super passionate or confident in what I was doing. And so it was a little weird for me. I'm looking at the poster.
Starting point is 00:16:43 Yeah. Sweetwater with Ed Harris, January Jones, Jason Isaacs, Eduardo Noriega and Jason Aldeen. And you're in the, dude, you're in like the tops. You're up in the poster. I know. I made the poster. I used to have like this, like movie room at the house. And I had, you know, posters of all, like some of my favorite movies.
Starting point is 00:17:00 And then I had that poster. to me. The Dreams, the Goonies, Sweetwater. It's like Sweetwater, Texas, or what? What was sweet? I don't know. We shot it like New Mexico, so I don't know.
Starting point is 00:17:17 If you were to play a ball player, do you think you're, for example, like whenever Major League and, what was his name, Charlie Sheen, he looked like a ball player. Yeah. Do you think you could play a ball player and look like a ball player? Yeah. I mean, I think I could probably pull that off.
Starting point is 00:17:32 For sure. I think that's easy and kind of would become a little more natural than just like trying to, you know, act and do something that I don't know anything about. But yeah, I'd be all about doing a baseball movie or something like that. That would be actually fun. Normal people questions, Amy. We've got great skin. I do. Yeah. Oh, that's more of a statement. Thank you so much. Followed by the question of, you know, do you have a routine? Because these guys in here, they don't. And their skin is fine, too. And they don't do. They just, they're like, oh, my. My shampoo runs down my face. No, you know what? I do have, I always use, like, face wash or something when I'm taking a shower.
Starting point is 00:18:10 And then my, the only thing I really do is I just, like, daily moisturize. Like, I put some kind of lotion or something on my face. Otherwise, it's just, like, super dry. And so that's it. That's your routine. The rest of it's just all natural, Amy. Eddie? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:18:27 What's the last thing you bought, like online maybe or grocery store? What's the last thing you bought? I'd say you what, man, this whole like baseball card, basketball card thing that's happening right now. I've been in it for, it's, it's, it's consuming. I'm telling you, like I, you know, like everybody, I collected all this stuff as a kid. And over time, I kind of lost all that stuff as much as we moved around. And so my son is like, kind of got into Pokemon. Like, he was kind of collecting stuff like that.
Starting point is 00:18:56 And he just had him laying around. He didn't know what anything was worth or anything. So I kind of started organizing it for him and kind of seeing it. what he had. And so next thing I know, I'm buying baseball cards and football cards and all this stuff. And now Amazon shows up to my house and it's just like boxes of this stuff. And I'm like, God. It's like, it started becoming an obsession at this point.
Starting point is 00:19:16 Yeah. Silver reached out and he was like, hey, you may have, he said, we were watching TikToks if you open cards back in the, because I was, I'm really into it. And I was posting a bunch of card content. And then I started to buy, and I had to like slow. I had to like purposefully go, take a second. don't do it for a month and see if you still love it. Right. And so I got to that phase.
Starting point is 00:19:36 I still love it and I have some really great cards I'm super proud of. But I've had to stop doing like you're, because it would just show up. And I'd have boxes stacked up that weren't even opened, but I just kept buying anyway. Well, and here's the thing is people don't understand is, you know, you have your retail box stuff that you buy like Target or whatever, which is fine.
Starting point is 00:19:53 But that's not really the stuff that I'm buying. You know, it's like you're buying the more expensive boxes of stuff. And then you, you know, you spend like $1,500 on a box of car. and the best card you get out of there is worth like 200 bucks. You're like, I feel like I'm getting screwed on this deal. You know what I mean? But it's fun, man. I enjoy it.
Starting point is 00:20:11 And now my son, he'll sit there with me and open stuff up and, oh, look what I got. You know, he's opening football and baseball cards. He kind of knows what to look for now. And so it's kind of something I got into with him, too. I was talking to Kenny Chesney, and he said that he had to be reminded to play, she thinks my tractor is sexy. He stopped playing it for a long time. And he said, Megan Roney, was like, why aren't you playing that song anymore?
Starting point is 00:20:32 Do you have that relationship with any of your songs that maybe you stop for a while and someone said, hey, you got to play it again or some of you just stopped playing? Yeah, I mean, there's been things you stop playing over the years, you know, it's just you play them so much that it's just like, you know, I mean, we had a song on the second album called Johnny Cash that was one that we played forever. And then it was just like, we stopped playing it. Like we played it so much and, you know, we've been playing those songs since 05, 06, whatever. and so you just like I mean you just want to play like new stuff and uh sometimes you have to remind
Starting point is 00:21:05 yourself to like hey you know it's been two tours since we played night train let's throw that back in or uh you know it's it's a good good problem to have when you can kind of you know change out songs every year on the tour or whatever and still pop in something that was a hit um but i just you know for me it's things that i like to play that i enjoy getting out there and and and singing and and i try to focus on those and then, you know, every once in a while I turn around and go, man, it's been, you know, we were talking about the song, Why, earlier. That was one that I didn't play probably for like four, four or five years and then decided to pop it back in. And, you know, and it kind of hits different too after you haven't played it for a while and you put it back in
Starting point is 00:21:45 the show and people haven't heard it for a while. So it's, I think that happens quite a bit, actually. Do you ever change the melodies of songs or change them up a little bit so it feels fresh to you? Um, no, because I always hated when people did that on the road. I get annoyed. When I went to see a show and it's like I'm trying to sing and they're like doing something else, I'm like, what is? That's not how it goes, man.
Starting point is 00:22:08 Let's go. So I try to keep it like, you know, like it was intended to be. When you're cutting songs for the album like this album, are you looking for songs that sound great live, like that have energy? Are you look, will you go and search for a couple like ballads purposefully? Like, how do you do that? I think at this point, um, I think there was a time where I kind of did that,
Starting point is 00:22:30 and I think it always kind of is in the back of your mind of like, man, how is this going to sound live or how would this fit into our show? But anymore, you know, I just, in a place now where I just try to, I just want to cut like really cool things that are going to be around that, you know, people are still going to want to listen to in 20 years. And, you know, lyrically is cool.
Starting point is 00:22:51 Sonically is really cool and something that I like to play that feels good on stage or a little aggressive or whatever it is we're going for. But, you know, I mean, some of my favorite things that we've cut, my whole career have come off these last couple albums, you know, things like Trouble with the Heartbreak and those kind of whiskey drinks and those kind of things. So, you know, to me, it's just kind of leaning into that,
Starting point is 00:23:12 more of that kind of stuff, more so than trying to find a tempo or a ballad or, like, whatever. Really just trying to put together an album that has, like, quality, really cool things on it that I feel like are going to be cool for a long time. Like, I always say, like, I can go. put on the mountain music album by Alabama and it's like still sounds awesome today you know i'll play that in my car and you know that's what i want it to be something that people still listen to 20 years from now and and still sounds good all right final thing let's do favorites uh favorite food
Starting point is 00:23:42 of all time favorite food of all time oh it's probably fried like my mom's fried chicken not everybody's fried chicken but hers is pretty good so yeah favorite all-time athlete um Probably King Riffie Jr. Not like a Dale Murphy or... Well, he was my favorite, like, growing up. I'm surprised. Sorry, I didn't mean to question. No, no, no. Dale Murphy was, I mean, for every kid in Georgia,
Starting point is 00:24:11 I mean, Dale Murphy was a hero for all of us. He actually came out to my show last year, and so I got the chance to hang out with him a little bit. But to me, the best player that I ever saw play all the way around whatever growing up was King Griffey Jr. I didn't mean to King Griffey shame you. No. I mean there's a lot of them Jordan
Starting point is 00:24:30 I don't know they're just so you know Okay fair enough Favorite band of all time Alabama Favorite concert you've ever been to Um Oasis concert last year Went to their show
Starting point is 00:24:45 And over in Europe July 4th It was their first show back After 16 years or whatever And I never quite experienced Anything like that So It was pretty insane
Starting point is 00:24:57 It was insane. So by far, my favorite. To go to a show like that, does that inspire you? Absolutely. Yeah. What about that show stuck out to you? I mean, first of all, they're over there playing soccer stadiums, which are huge. You know, I mean, you think if we play Bridgestone here, I don't know what it holds for a show, you know, 15, 18,000, something like that.
Starting point is 00:25:19 Over there, they're playing soccer stadiums that are holding 70, 80,000 people and they're selling them out four or five nights in a row. it's just fandom is another level over there and those guys are massive anyway so it was just different than I I mean it was just a different experience for me favorite movie of all time field of dreams that's quick yeah it's not sweet water yeah that may be on some people's list Bobby but not mine all right final favorite jason aline song um that's always a hard question for me because I just always feel like they all came at different points in my career. But I would say the one that really sort of changed everything for me was probably she's country. Songs About Us Out Today, Jason Aldine.
Starting point is 00:26:08 Thanks, man. When you go to countries, I was reading about your tour and you're going to do New Zealand. Have you ever played in New Zealand? I haven't. We actually just got back from New Zealand. Oh, so you just, then I read that wrong. Yeah, we just, I went to Australia like 10 years ago. and it was okay
Starting point is 00:26:23 you know people kind of knew the records kind of didn't you know it was really building it from the ground up over there which you know it's a long way over there man so but it's been 10 years and now with streaming and all the things like it's everything's global how to go in New Zealand then it was awesome man we went over to Auckland we were there for four or five days
Starting point is 00:26:44 played a show over there and then went over to Australia we were there for I don't know two and a half weeks and did some stuff over there, and it was great. It was a lot bigger, and, you know, country music's a pretty big deal over there right now. So they're getting country radio stations and things like that over there, which they didn't have before. So it's really kind of changed the game as far as going over there. People knowing the music and that kind of stuff. Songs about us out today.
Starting point is 00:27:12 There he is. Jason Aldeen. Thanks, Jason. Yeah, thanks for having me, man. Happy Pride Month, Toronto. Pride is an opportunity for you. to create your own space, to celebrate your existence. Iheart Radio is proud to be an official sponsor of Pride Toronto Festival, and we won't stop.
Starting point is 00:27:29 Celebrate Pride. Turn up the love and listen to IHeart Pride Canada. Your 24-7 radio stream and the only playlist you need for your Toronto Pride celebrations. Pride is so great because it gives a whole bunch of people this visibility that they've never had before. We have a ton to celebrate Toronto. Happy Pride. IHeart Radio. In the moment, it felt like it was going on for. I didn't think I was going to live. I was terrified.
Starting point is 00:27:57 There was no anything inside those eyes. They turned black. 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.
Starting point is 00:28:12 Rape a murder for a young, 12-year-old child. Just as bad as it gets. I would think so. People, wake up. I'm the one that saw the murder take place by Creveit and DeBippo. Anthony DePippo showed no signs of remorse, appearing unfazed after being sentenced to the maximum.
Starting point is 00:28:30 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, 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.
Starting point is 00:29:09 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. This morning, the internet lost to...
Starting point is 00:29:34 It's mine. 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 00:29:54 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 and the TikTok podcast network on TikTok. That Titanic Life Jacket we talked about. It was one of the survivors that wore the life jacket and they thought it'd go for like $300,000.
Starting point is 00:30:29 It ended up selling for $906,000. Wow. I think that was the one right. Yeah. It sold for $906,000. Wild. It's the only one to ever hit the auction block of its kind. It was worn by a first class passenger and secretary who survived the 1912 sinking.
Starting point is 00:30:47 I wonder if that's the same person because it's one jacket. I have a Kenny Chesney signed life jacket up there. That's right. I saw him sign it. But I had him sign. Yeah. What don't what are I get for that? Did you see on the draft how the players were signing cards?
Starting point is 00:31:03 Yeah, and they were grabbing them. They were a little too loose with the grabs. I thought the same thing. As somebody who collects. So, Amy, what happened on the draft last night after they would, the first round only with the players that were there? After they would finish, they would go and the person from tops would be there with their first card. It would be a one-on-one.
Starting point is 00:31:20 They would sign it at the draft and they would hold it up. But they were a little too fingery with that card. Like, that ain't coming back in perfect in. Because if it bends corner at all. Any imperfection at all. Yeah. But I did see that. I thought it was cool, but then I thought, oh, God.
Starting point is 00:31:31 I know. Yeah, so there's that. I have the list here before we go to you guys. Abraham Lincoln's gloves sold for $1.5 million in 2009. He was carrying them the night of his assassination. Oh. Dang. Elvis Presley's hair in October of 2002.
Starting point is 00:31:53 It was from his personal barber who had saved it, $115,000. That's weird. It would go for way more than that now, but it was sold in 2002. The hair? Hair's weird. Right? Like gloves, that'd be cool. but somebody's hair.
Starting point is 00:32:06 It was collected by his personal barber, Homer Gilliland. The baseball size jar came with extensive provenance. Yeah, that's weird. The name Homer doesn't really happen much anymore. I like it, though. Homer's cool. Homer's cool. I have a cousin named Homer.
Starting point is 00:32:22 The Mona Lisa theft mugshot tied to the theft of the Mona Lisa, the original 1909 police mugshot of Vincenzo Perugia, the man who stole the Mona Lisa in 1911. was sold for around 100,000 bucks. The Mona Lisa wouldn't be famous if it hadn't been stolen. That's what made it famous. Oh, really?
Starting point is 00:32:42 Yeah. Is it a painting by a very famous painter sculpt? Absolutely. But that is what made it famous, the heist. So had it not been for Vincenzo Perugia, you wouldn't have it. And I'm telling you, you go look at the Mona Lisa, and I did.
Starting point is 00:33:00 And people told me it was so little. You're going to get there, and it's going to be so small. And then when I got there, that's way bigger than I thought. It's just all about perspective because I thought my respect. This is going to be so tiny.
Starting point is 00:33:10 Get ready. Brace yourself. You have bad vision anyway. Get your eyes loose. And then it was just a normal size. Yeah. The sandals from King Tutt sometimes referred to as
Starting point is 00:33:25 from a princely collection. Oh, that's crazy. Sold for about 100,000 bucks. I thought it'd be more. JFK limousine bloodstained leather. sold for $46,000. Yeah, that's weird. His blood's on there.
Starting point is 00:33:38 So according to Jurassic Park, you could actually make another JFK. You probably do that with Elvis's hair too, right? You could combine them. Make a JF Elvis, J.F. Elvis. J.F. Presley. Trumman Capote's ashes, $43,000. John Lennon's tooth, $21,000.
Starting point is 00:33:54 Napoleon's tooth, $22,000. Queen Victoria's underwear, $16,000 in 2005. Her underwear. Worn by Queen Victoria, a pair of royal cotton knickers with a 45-inch waist sold for a record price
Starting point is 00:34:08 to a private English collector along with a set of replica crown jewels. I think this is more collector than purve. Yeah, because it's also not going to look like underwear we know today. Knickers are more like, I'm picturing like ruffled boxers. And also I don't think he's going to put them on his face.
Starting point is 00:34:22 Like that's what Perv people do now on eBay. Or I don't think they allow that anymore, but I think some people sell their underwear, weirdos. Yeah, probably more in the DMs. that's wild man okay Amy over to you okay follow me here don't freak out this is about Galeen Maxwell if they pardon her we riot that's what my question is because members of congress of the house oversight committee are split on whether President Trump should pardon Jeffrey
Starting point is 00:34:55 Epstein's convicted accomplice Galeen Maxwell in exchange for her testimony which I'm like I get it You want her testimony, but then is her testimony going to be truthful anyways? But then also... Somebody who's been convicted of hurting kids? She was a major player in the, yes, the... The trafficking. Torment of a lot of people. So she needs to serve time.
Starting point is 00:35:22 She needs to never get out of prison. Also... She's already in a lighter prison right now. Did you see CNN's Caitlin Clark asked Trump about this? And he... Caitlin Clark's a basketball player. I was like, wow. I meant Caitlin Clark's a basketball player.
Starting point is 00:35:31 I make Caitlin Collins. Lala. Caitlin Collins, she asked him, and he was sitting there acting as if he was like, huh, haven't heard that name in a while. That's what he said. And I'm like, what? Like either, okay, we need to check on our president's mental health
Starting point is 00:35:50 because he can't remember. I don't know. The woman, I know, but he thinks we're idiots? And that we, okay, cool. So that's it. As long as he thinks we're idiots, then okay. But I'm like, why are you sitting there acting like you don't know who Galeen Maxwell is when you obviously.
Starting point is 00:36:05 If she gets out, people are allowing politics over the safety and care of children. That's it. Nobody's even gone to jail. Is the only her getting pardoned because they want the testimony? Because she's not speaking if she doesn't. I don't know. There's so much corruption. You see the guy, the guy in the military who I think was polymarket.
Starting point is 00:36:23 He won $40,000 because he bet we were going to take down that president of Venezuela. He was the one that bet it won $400,000, so they arrested him. Oh, because he had insider information. Yeah, because he's the one that did it. He's one of the ones that went. So he goes, he bets on polymarket, he makes the money. And. Well, okay.
Starting point is 00:36:42 So he got arrested? Yes. But haven't like other high profile, plenty of people do that? There have a bit, well, you don't know who it is though. Okay. But one of the Congress people were out and they were going, hey, I say we pardon them. And people are like, why? She said, because there's so much corruption and fraud and happening actually
Starting point is 00:37:02 inside the government, that we're going to go after somebody in the military that we know that was betting on a legal side, even though he had inside information and we're not going after all of our politicians that are doing this. Senator is wild. You know me, I don't trust,
Starting point is 00:37:13 I don't trust anybody. I don't trust the government in any way. They lie to us, they're taking advantage of us, but I don't even want to spend much time on this because... Sure, sure, sure. I was just curious if you thought her testimony is at work. No, it's not. She should stay in jail.
Starting point is 00:37:27 She hurt kids. You hurt kids. The ideal situation is she has a change of heart and realizes like, okay, I'm in jail and I should just share my testimony anyways, or I should testify because it could be helpful. And this could be my way to, you can't make right what she did because it was so wrong, but this could be contributing towards the next right step. But whatever. You hurt kids. You are not good with me. Kids or animals. But yeah, that guy that, I believe it was polymarket,
Starting point is 00:37:54 could have been one of the, there's two big ones. There's polymarket. What are they called? Prediction? Yeah. Markets or whatever. The other one is Shibango or, uh, uh, Oh, Hasha, Kasha. Kashi. I think it was Polly Market. But he bet it won $400,000 when they're taking down Maduri. Did he think he was going to get away with it? Yeah, because you don't have to sign in with your email address.
Starting point is 00:38:15 So how'd they catch him? I don't know. Probably some digital forensics type stuff. Showed up with a new car, didn't he? Always. The Ferrari. Got him. Lunchbox's your story.
Starting point is 00:38:27 That was my story, so I'm trying to find it. Which one? The Polymarket guy. Go deeper then. because I'm just going from my top of my head. Yeah, he is in Fort Bragg, North Carolina, and he had the inside information, the documents, because he was part of the special ops.
Starting point is 00:38:41 And so he opened an account. He bet $33,000 total, like on the day and time that Maduro would be taken down. And he won $400,000. So at Fort Bragg, the special, did he work for J-Soc, does it say? That's funny. Amy, it doesn't say.
Starting point is 00:39:00 It doesn't tell me his job. but just says he was one of the active soldiers that had inside information. He had documents. So he was either in on the planning or he was in on the execution of it. Okay. And they were saying like you are risking lies by putting this out there. Like that could tip someone off and you're not allowed to take that information and use it. It's not supposed to be public knowledge.
Starting point is 00:39:23 You took it and made it public knowledge by putting it on polymarket. And so we got arrested. That's because it's not illegal to have inside information on these prediction sites. but if you're in government and you're using it, that way it is. But it's not illegal to have. It's not like stocks. This is not regulated. No, because like, well, so when we lived in North Carolina, my ex-husband was at Fort Bragg.
Starting point is 00:39:44 That's where he worked was J-Soc. And there was so much, I mean, I guess I say it now because he's out. There's also so much I wouldn't say. But there was so much that, like, we just didn't even ever discuss at home because he didn't want to. I mean, he wasn't public about that. I'm the one saying it. But I remember there was things. I mean, there was the time he was doing a job.
Starting point is 00:40:04 Do you remember people came and talked to you? Yes. Yeah. It's like, because I worked in media, there was like this, oh, your wife, anybody that has a partner or a spouse or a family member that worked where there's like a microphone and they have a public audience. It was like they were extra cautious about things he could even just to be extra careful. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:40:26 It was weird. Also on Polly Market a few days ago, there was some. And there's been a constant negotiation or lack of one with Iran about the straight of Hormuz. And some people had shorted oil that had very much insider information and made a ton of money. Oh, for sure. They knew exactly what was about to happen because they knew what our government was about to do. And so, but you've seen like senators, like Pelosi makes so much money. Over the years, she's made a ton.
Starting point is 00:40:51 A ton. But that's why I'm saying it's not even just this administration alone. Like, that's why if they go after him and if they go after. Yes, you should not be able to trade if you are Congress at all. you shouldn't because you have so much inside information you're on all these committees you can make so much money but it is it is so unfair that's great yeah but he did this soldier he signed non-disclosure agreements to which he promised to never divulge publish or reveal by writing words conduct or otherwise any classified or sensitive information relating to military operations and starting December 8th until the raid he was part of the planning execution and had the sensitive information information that was non-public classified information, and that's why he's in trouble. That's crazy. That's why he's in trouble. If he were just a dude that knew, he wouldn't be in trouble. But because of all of that, I'm glad you went deeper on that because, again, I was just
Starting point is 00:41:42 going from what I had read last night. Who was that one guy? I just saw a quick clip of this. So I don't, that maybe we can look it up while I'm talking about. He works maybe at the Pentagon or something. And an undercover journalist was like on a date with him and filming him. And he was talking about, was it Iran or? Yeah, he was like, well, we're not going to nuke him. Yeah, we're not going to. And he's just spilling it all. Yeah. Got him all recorded.
Starting point is 00:42:05 And she's an undercover journalist. So she's provoking him in the right way. But instead of like not answering her questions, he's leaning in. He's like, you want to get him to negotiate? Just put a pretty girl in front of their face. Yeah. And that's what she was. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:42:20 Like, yeah. And he was part of. And I'm just like, I would go his position. I'm sure I would say it wrong. But he was part. Do you have it, Mike? Yeah, I can't say it either though. Army nuclear surgery chief?
Starting point is 00:42:36 That. Okay. Somebody who knew a bunch and is on a lot of meetings who was just coax out. He was like at a restaurant. He was with a pretty girl. And the video looked like they were out to dinner. And he's just like, yeah. And the irony is, that's what he was saying that you do to find out other information.
Starting point is 00:42:53 So this is a pretty girl. You get information. She must have been sitting there like, this is unbelievable. I mean, wow. people in power just like us. They are. I think they're even more crooked than us. Unless you believe power
Starting point is 00:43:09 allows you to be as crooked as you would have been. Okay. I guess I'm not even leaning the crooked part, but him, like the vulnerable part. Like you think that they'll have enough wherewithal to be like, I got to keep my mouth shut. And of course there are people in those positions
Starting point is 00:43:25 that absolutely do keep their mouth shut. I need our politicians to be boring again. Yes. I really need them to be so boring to where it's all they care about is politicking and figuring stuff out. Don't get, I don't even care if I don't even need to agree with them. I just need them off the news fighting to be the loudest, the most polarizing so they can get the most click so they can be because that's also who gets on.
Starting point is 00:43:48 Yeah, we need. I need boring politicians again. Or I need politicians that don't really want or need to be in politics. Because a lot of people now they're running for office are doing it because of the fame, the notoriety or even a bit of the power that comes with it. This is a new way to be a rock star. Go be a politician and scream. That's the new rock star.
Starting point is 00:44:08 So what you need is somebody who doesn't need that. So you either be boring or somebody who's all rich. And then you get too like, I also don't want people who grew up rich being a politician because they don't represent people. If you grew up rich, you should not be able to be in politics. If your whole life you had a silver spoon, you do not represent. Well, that's going to be a problem. There's a lot of them.
Starting point is 00:44:32 That's who can run for office because they don't have to go and make a weekly check and they can go run for office because they already have money. That's all. All right. I got to go to Amy later. Why?
Starting point is 00:44:46 Because every day, a lot of five days. That wasn't even from, Lunchbox had the Polly story. If you would have gone to him first, we would have been talking about this exact same topic. No, we would because Galane Maxwell's where the started and I said not only that, the Polly Market didn't happen. No, no, but then Lunchbox is like,
Starting point is 00:44:59 that was my story. But that is not the same as Galane Maxwell. But the stuff we're talking about right now has to do with Polly. That's a pivot, you know? I don't know that I'm going to take the fall here. I'll admit that I bring it. And I gave warning. I bring it.
Starting point is 00:45:16 I gave warning so you could have been like, Amy, hold that story. We'll come back to you. Okay. Eddie. So do you want a cool story about birds? Or do you want another politician that got arrested? Your choice. I want both.
Starting point is 00:45:37 Your choice, man. I feel like this is Amy's greatest hits. You're offering me one of each. Yeah, these votes sound great. Who got arrested? Give me the politician. Okay, a politician that got arrested. So there's a guy that's running for office in Colorado.
Starting point is 00:45:51 He went on vacation to the Florida Keys, and he had his two kids with him, and he was watching him at the pool. They were in the hot tub. And he goes, man, I'm going to go to the bar and just get a drink real quick. Left him for five minutes. Turns out one of the kids went to the pool, looked like they were drowning,
Starting point is 00:46:06 and somebody that was sitting at the pool rescued them, called 911. When he got back, I mean, everyone was there. They were doing CPR on the kid, all of it. So he got arrested for- Kid-Live? The kid's fine. How old was the kid? Man, it doesn't say.
Starting point is 00:46:18 Because that matters. If the kid's 12, you don't get arrested. No, no, it's younger because they said, I think the older one is like 10, I believe. And then the younger one, they don't say how old she is. And that's the one that drown. And that's the one that drown. was drowning. Was drowning.
Starting point is 00:46:34 Yeah. And then got rescued. So what did he get arrested for? Child neglect. Neglect. Neglect. Yeah. And the kids are four and six.
Starting point is 00:46:41 So it's four years old. You got to have more information in these stories. No, man. I looked at yesterday and I was like, most, you come in and it's like, have you seen? There's no ending too. Eddie doesn't know that. Because all the details of that story are the kids are four and six. I think all this one was 10.
Starting point is 00:46:53 No, she was six. He was six. And the one that was drowned was a girl. Yeah. Oh, yeah. Okay. Cool, cool. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:46:59 Well, still, it's crazy. I agree. And was he really at the bar for five minutes or was he there for a longer? They said he was there for, he was gone for five minutes. You got to get more details in your stories. What do you mean? That's all the details. No, you didn't have how their age is.
Starting point is 00:47:11 You thought one was 10. I got to mess that one up. And remember last week he was like, remember this story? We're like, what's the end? I don't know. I didn't look it up. I just want to know what you guys thought. And then lunchbox always has my back.
Starting point is 00:47:20 Thank you, lunchbox. Yeah, I appreciate it. The police reported that he smelled of alcohol. He said he was only gone for five minutes, but he had a receipt that showed he had purchased two cocktails. Okay. So it was longer. Unless he chugged him, which he sounds like he has a drinking problem.
Starting point is 00:47:35 So. I don't know if that's the case. I would put money on it. I don't know. Allegedly he might have one. But you made up that allegedly. You did. Yeah, I did because I think any, it, okay, fine. Lunchmocks, did the receipt show five minutes or two drinks?
Starting point is 00:47:53 They didn't say about the time. Oh, you need more information. You need more information. That's not his story. Oh, it's not. You come in going, I don't know. I think one was 10. Eddie last week's was, man, there was this lady and then she got pulled over and the cops gave her a choice.
Starting point is 00:48:09 Okay, well, I'll say this. There was no ending. He made us choose our own adventure. You know, he just made that story of. There was no lady that got pulled over. Yes, it was the drug story. You're like, would you turn it in or would you go to jail? That was two weeks ago.
Starting point is 00:48:20 Oh my God. But I had the same thing. I was like, no, the ending. And then lunchbox tracked it down. Okay, let me say this about someone that may have an issue with alcohol. you leave a six-year-old and a four-year-old unattended at the pool so you can go to the bar. You are prioritizing alcohol over the safety of your children,
Starting point is 00:48:42 which leads me to believe you have a problem with alcohol. Or does he have a vacation problem? Because he's in Key West. Vacay mode. What? Or does he have a sex addiction? There's a hot lady up there. And all of a sudden he's wanting to talk to her at the bar.
Starting point is 00:48:57 He's O-O-O. Out of office? Ooh. Oh, they got their email. It's like, no, dude, that means out of office. Well, whatever. He's definitely, he's going to go to rehab, I bet. Yeah, that sucks.
Starting point is 00:49:14 I'm glad the kid did live, though. Did you make that up? The kid did live. Thank God. Yeah. Morgan. Oh, yeah. So obviously shared the Mike Rable stuff yesterday.
Starting point is 00:49:26 There's some more juice that I want to share today. Go for it. So Diana Rusini, is that how you say her name, correct? Yeah. She has left X because some of her old tweets are resurfacing. One being that she had tweeted back in 2020 that the Titans weren't interested in Tom Brady, that they were working with Ryan Tanna Hill, per sources. Somebody had responded to that asking if she was sleeping with Frabble because I guess how do you get that kind of information unless you're really close to somebody, right?
Starting point is 00:49:58 you guys are on football, I don't know that side as much. But you wouldn't have that information as a journalist. It's pretty huge. I would say as a journalist, you would have that information if you were close to somebody because that's your source, but not that you're close to them because you're banging them. Okay. Okay, fair. Well, she did say per sources and now there's pictures of them from 2020.
Starting point is 00:50:14 Well, we know how, but we know how she was getting the source material. For the guy I'm hanging out. Yeah. Yeah. Then the other one that came out in 2021, she was saying, I keep looking at my almost four-day-old son, Michael, while trying to figure out who are the best Michaels to ever play and coach in the NFL. So a little awkward, especially because a lot of people are assuming that, not assuming, but thinking that potentially
Starting point is 00:50:42 one of her sons is connected to all of this. So there's that side of it, allegedly. Like could be his kid? Yeah, that was the scuttle butt because the kid's name is Michael. Oh boy. And she was already having an affair with Braybill, based on the timeline that's been out. So I, wait, she has a kid named Michael and his name is Michael. Yeah. So is he the dad? Okay, so you're doing what the internet did. Yeah, that's what the internet did.
Starting point is 00:51:05 Either he's the dad or she named her baby after him. 100%. That's two of the options. It's not 100%. That's two of the options. The other option is that for some reason the dad loved the name Michael. And it was, I don't, I don't, because you're acting like it's a hundred percent slam dunk. Listen, it's not.
Starting point is 00:51:19 It's not. But it's weird. I'm not saying it's not weird. Let's say the dad's like I was one to name. Maybe they talked about it a year prior. Is she so married? Yes. Oh, he's ordering a paternity test.
Starting point is 00:51:32 Yes. Like right now. What's interesting, though, about her husband is he kind of looks like Mike Vrable. So if the kid kind of looks like Mike Vrable, it really could just be their kid because they have similar features. But the name Michael is suck. If the kid's name is Homer. You're clear. Okay, Bobby, let me ask you this.
Starting point is 00:51:52 Let's just say, you're, it's got to be flips because you would have to be the, you'd have just amateur okay whatever let's just say she's sleeping with a guy named Michael and then her husband is like I really want to name our baby Michael you think she'd be like no we should go with another name you think that's a possibility but if you do that it's like why well I just don't like it then it's like well that's weird you don't like the name we've talked about it you've liked it what has led you to no you just go with the flow
Starting point is 00:52:22 if you're going if you're doing wrong things you just got to go at the flow Nothing to throw a flag up. So you say, oh yeah. Or did she fight for the name Michael? We really should name our kid Michael. But we don't know that. Because she's in love with Mike Rable. Yes.
Starting point is 00:52:36 And I think that would be the biggest flag. If the husband's like, why are you wanting to name this kid Michael? There's nobody in our family, Michael. So it definitely could be any of those, but I don't think any of those are 100%. I would think it's not Brable's kid. If I were betting money, it's not Brable's kid. However, crazy. So that's one side.
Starting point is 00:52:58 Oh gosh, I didn't know that there was kids involved. Yes, she has too. Yeah. He has kids too. Yeah. And a wife. Oh, man. I mean, all the clips.
Starting point is 00:53:06 This is just like none of our business. Oh, yeah. The clips of their interviews. Like past interviews of her talking about, talking to Mike Rabel about his wife and asking questions about his wife. And it's crazy. I saw so many of her tweets put out yesterday. And then I saw people going, why is she not shutting off her Twitter?
Starting point is 00:53:24 And it went off like two or three hours. people were just finding old stuff, some stuff that was benign, some that wasn't. And then finally, deactivated Twitter. And then everybody's like, yep, she's gone. She deactivated it finally. So, yeah, her life has got to be hell right now. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:53:39 And then Frable came out and he said, my, I don't even know this word. Pervious? It looks like perv. Previous? I-O-U-S. Oh, pervious. Pervious actions. Don't meet the standard that I hold myself to.
Starting point is 00:53:54 They don't. What I believe is best for the two most important things in my life. My family and this football team is for us to take the necessary steps to work together and to give them what I told them I'd give them, which is the best version of me. And that's what we're going to do. And then I guess a reporter kind of really held him to and been like, why were your initial comments calling the photos laughable? He says that it was an effort to protect his family.
Starting point is 00:54:20 He further went on to say that's a private and personal matter. and he would never be dismissive, but I think my family and this football team are the most important thing. So he didn't really come out in like full-blown apology, but in a roundabout way, I guess. You know who really benefited from this scandal is the Michigan coach Shrone Moore?
Starting point is 00:54:39 Oh, yeah. Because Paige Shiver, I think, is her name. Amy, do you remember that story? He was the head coach in Michigan. He went and broke into her house, he had to call the cops. He got fired. They said the stories where there was a knife involved.
Starting point is 00:54:53 herself or kill you. So she was on Good Morning America, I think this morning. I can read this. In an interview with Good Morning America, released Friday, the 32-year-old Shiver said that she became pregnant with Moore's child during their relationship and was advised by multiple doctors and experts that it wouldn't be right or healthy for her to keep the baby because of medical condition. But like this would be that story again, but this Vrable and Rusini is over the top of it.
Starting point is 00:55:20 There was a picture of them too. and uh... Biloxi Mississippi had a kiss, yeah. Dude, he's 24. They were a black jacket, or a table. Brable? Brable and Mussini. The week before the Super Bowl last year, I think, is when it was.
Starting point is 00:55:35 This is out in the open. So what's his state now? His state? His state? His state of being. He's going to therapy. He's going to like rehab therapy. So he's not a... He's missing the third day of the draft, but not the first two because...
Starting point is 00:55:46 No, no, not not not. Not, not, not, not, Michigan guy. He just ended up getting probation, I believe. That just happened. But I mean, does he still work? No, he's not the coach anymore. Right. Because mentally he was very disregulated.
Starting point is 00:56:05 Good word for it. So I didn't know, yeah, what? I believe that just happened. And I think he got some stuff, but I don't think he had to serve any time. But he was the head coach at freaking Michigan. Yeah, 18 months of probation. The Vrabel, I went back and looked at the Vrable pictures, you know, the red pictures of at the bar where they were kissing or whatever, the one that Morgan brought up yesterday. Man, the person taking those pictures is so close to them.
Starting point is 00:56:35 What if they zoom in? No, no, no, but you can see the table that they're sitting at. Like, they are right there. Small bar, so I agree. They said it was a dive bar. Tavern. Tavern. Low lit tavern.
Starting point is 00:56:46 Low lit tavern. Also, if the picture, like, in Biloxi came out and there's this one, like how many other ones are there out there? How many are going to keep popping up? Well, Biloxi's the other guy. No, Baloxi's Raybole and Rossini at the craps table or whatever the game table it was. Oh, Lee, I thought you were talking. Check your photo roll. Maybe we got some.
Starting point is 00:57:04 I can't keep up with these people. Ray had posted a picture of him and he was like, they were the Titans game. And he's like looking in the background for Rusini and Brayball. Do you guys think he should? And I was like, Beezer, check it, 2018. Was he a coach? And she said, yep, he was. I was.
Starting point is 00:57:21 Check the camera roll. Morgan, what's up? Do you guys think he should still be a coach? Like, what are your thoughts now moving forward after all of this? He cheated on his wife. I don't think that alone, based on other coaches that have cheated on their wives and weren't fired. I don't think that alone removes him from the job because I don't think it is him. It affects his job.
Starting point is 00:57:44 It'd be like if we file it. Don't you think it depends on the more, the expectations of the owners? Who fires him? In the end, yes, it's a distract. They can go. It's such a distraction. the owner can fire him. You're asking me if I think he should lose his job because of it, and I'm going, as a judge, if I were a judge, based on precedence, he didn't hit anybody,
Starting point is 00:58:04 he didn't hurt anybody, there was no abuse. He cheated on his wife. It's a very public, yes. It's up to the owner, though, to go, it's such a distraction or not. And because he's a good coach, because they went to the Super Bowl, it gives him more line. Now, does that mean in the end he won't get fired? No, right now he's not getting fired. But if more, more and more stuff continues to pile up, I could see Robert Kraft, the owner of the Patriots going, okay, this, is too much. However, Brable was a Patriot. He played for the Patriots. Went to the Super Bowl as a coach last year. It's going to take a lot. Because again, I don't want to say just. But I can't compare the Sharon Moore story to him one to one because there's no
Starting point is 00:58:39 abuse happening. That was very different. The only reason this is a story is because they both were famous. And then on top of that, her job was to get information from coaches around the league and what made that a story in the sports world before it crossed over into mainstream pop culture world is that she was really good at getting her source material and they didn't really know how she's really good it turns out that's how and that is the integrity of her job so he wasn't disclosing anything to her that he shouldn't be because that's that was nothing illegal it's not like the polymarket guy but i mean as an expectation as a coach like what if they she okay i'm going to use the tom brady thing from whatever the tweet was from a
Starting point is 00:59:18 while ago where it's like my sources say um stuff's always getting leaked okay and sometimes stuff gets leaked on purpose okay just so people will shut up or got it i that's my question because like if he was saying stuff he shouldn't say to her and she was putting it yeah hard to get that information unless you're like in the know and sometimes in the know you got to be in the below you know what's saying mm-hmm great rhyme thank you all right we're good we're at we're done hope everybody has a great and I mean that with all my heart. Thank you for listening. And we will see you guys on Monday.
Starting point is 00:59:54 On Monday, I would bet the farm. We will have Eddie's new results. Yeah, that'd be nice. I'd bet the farm. I don't even own a farm. I bet a farm I don't own. Okay, okay. So that's safe.
Starting point is 01:00:04 That's why it's an easy thing to bet. Hey. If we don't, I will buy a farm, sell it. Or no, I will buy a farm and then give it up in the bet. No, you'd put 33,000 down in the polymarket. Mm-hmm. On Eddie. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:00:17 There are no rules, though, against having insider trading in polymarket, which is what's crazy about that, because there is no regulation. Yeah, it's just that he is a member of a military. It wasn't the polymarket that got him. It was that him doing it with anybody, him sharing the information with anybody. So like these companies, like polymarket, whatever, we talked about the other one. Like, so are they the ones that pay out? Mm-hmm. So why would they allow that?
Starting point is 01:00:40 Like, I feel like they actually encourage it too. Really? Because as it goes in, the money goes up. and it pays out according to favorite. It's, how much did he win again? 400,000. That's a lot of money. Because there were a lot of people betting
Starting point is 01:00:56 all the different days and all the different ways. Yeah, so they're making money off that and sacrifice the $400,000, I guess. Well, they have that already probably in. Like, that's the total pot. Have you ever made a polymarket bet? Yes, a couple. What I wish is that Draft Kings would fully get in
Starting point is 01:01:14 if this is going to remain a thing, if Draft Kings would fully get into prediction markets. I have. I just wasn't comfortable with the interface. Oh, I see. I don't use it a lot. I get it. I'd rather stay. And all my monies and Draft Kings anyway. They for sure pay out.
Starting point is 01:01:33 They do for sure pay out. Yeah, that's what would make me worry that I wouldn't get like some shady. Well, it used to be that way because we'd have to bet in sights. I've heard people do that. Way back in the day. People do that. that. Yeah, like they did that. Like Bavada. Yeah. Wasn't that a thing way back in the day? Never used it. Why are you like heard of that one? But no, it's all draft kings here. All right, there you go. Thank you
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Starting point is 01:02:29 There was no anything inside those eyes. They turned black. It scared the hell out of me. People 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.
Starting point is 01:02:55 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. 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.
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Starting point is 01:03:38 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. I'm Javieril Chichariot Hernandez and listen to Learning to Be Human on IHard Radio, Apple Podcasts, or whatever you get your podcast. This is an IHart podcast.
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