The Bobby Bones Show - Hanson Stops By This Morning After Performing Million Dollar Show + LANCO Talks About Performing On The Bachelor & If There’s A Possibility of Solo Careers
Episode Date: January 23, 2018Hanson Stops By This Morning After Performing Million Dollar Show and LANCO Talks About Performing On The Bachelor & If There’s A Possibility of Solo Careers Learn more about your ad-choices ...at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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The Disneyland Resort is everything.
We came to play the Calli Way.
It felt like I was in the roundup game with Woody at Pixar Pier.
Have you been holding out on us?
No, just showing you where the real Hollywood.
what stars are. Like Tiana's
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Bobby Bones, everybody.
We're transmitting
across America.
This is a Bobby Bones
show. Come on, Bob.
Tuesday show.
What's your do?
Morning.
Crazy night for us because
last night was our
The Raging Idiots,
our band, Eddie and I's band.
Million dollar show
with big artists, Keith Urban,
Darius Rucker, Mirren Morris.
We had special surprises.
Surprise guest shows up later this morning.
You may know who it is by now.
Lanko plays before that.
It's just a lot.
We were up late last night,
so this show will be awesome or terrible.
Or it may fluctuate.
Oh, boy.
We didn't get a lot of sleep,
but it was nuts.
We'll talk about it later.
I read this story, women don't prefer muscular men.
They just want you to appear strong.
There you go.
No, that's not true.
What up?
That's not true.
That's us. You have a lot of muscles.
We don't.
But it's not true.
Oh.
It'd be saying, you know what?
Women don't care of guys have a lot of money.
As long as they act rich.
No, is it?
That's different.
No, it's not.
A lot of difference in that statement.
Morgan number two, do you like your guy to be buff?
I do.
I like them to be in shape and fit.
And have muscles.
Yes.
Do you like you have a little money?
little security?
I mean, yeah, they don't have to be rich, but take care of me.
Well, they don't also have to be a bodybuilder, right?
Yes.
True.
Thank you.
We go to Morgan number two.
Anyone else?
Yeah, we're all good.
I think we're down with this segment.
Recognizing people doing cool things.
It's ICU.
Two Labradoodles are lifesavers.
This happened in Michigan.
The dogs Adam and Eva
woke up their owners at 4.30 a.m. on Sunday.
Now, when I say this, what do you think happened,
lunchbox?
They opened, why?
There was a fire.
Right.
I think the same thing, like there's smoke and not the case.
The owners, they're like, huh?
They get up.
Adam and Eva bolted outside.
And there is an 80-year-old woman in the snow face down.
Oh, wow.
She was just in a nightgown.
The temperature was nine degrees.
So they bring the woman inside, covered her in her blankets,
called police.
The police arrived.
They were able to warm her up, get her liquids,
save her life. The dogs
saw the woman go down. Crazy, right?
That's pretty good. Who knew they would know that a person was hurting the snow?
Give them a treat, what I say.
Bobby Bones show. Yeah, I see you.
I see you. The Bobby Bones Show.
Big Three Stories.
It's producer Raymond in government news. President Donald Trump signed a short-term bill
that's going to fund the government through February 8th, ending that weekend-long government
shutdown. In other news, a Michigan man threatened to travel to Atlanta.
to attack the CNN headquarters.
Luckily, he was arrested after an FBI investigation, and he is in custody.
And finally, a tsunami warning has been issued for Alaska and British Columbia,
an 8.2 magnitude earthquake hit in Alaska.
There's also been a tsunami watch issued for the West Coast and Hawaii.
Bobby Bones.
The Bobby Bones Show.
Back in the day, you'd listen to the radio.
When it's snow, you go, am I going to school?
And you'd wait.
And they go alphabetical.
And they'd say your school and you'd freak out.
Now, really just check a text.
The school will send out a text.
Yeah.
And even if you're not going to the building,
now teachers during snow days are doing Facebook live classes.
Oh, that's terrible.
Isn't that amazing?
Oh, no way.
Like, you're supposed to have the day off.
You go play in the snow.
After a couple snow days in Memphis,
this teacher said,
Why don't we do a little Facebook Live?
And they all got online and she held the session, had a class project.
They were on Snowbreak.
And some of the kids were like, hey, I'm really glad we got to do that.
Oh, yeah, those are the butt kissers.
Those are losers.
Brown nosers sitting in the front desk.
All 40 students took part in the Facebook Live class.
She said, don't be fooled by my pajamas because she was in her pajamas teaching the class.
She was still very much in charge and they had the class.
I love it because then you have to make a lot.
the day of either and you're doing it at home.
Worst teacher of all time.
Oh, really? All time. Oh my goodness. Terrible reviews.
And the problem now, all the other teachers are going to start doing it too, so she started it.
Oh, my goodness.
As a teacher, though, that's a pretty baller move, right?
It's a pretty baller move, right? As a teacher, you don't want the day off also?
Come on. I don't think they even get the day off.
Maybe you care about your kids so much. You don't want them to find.
Stop.
Guys, you guys' minds are in the wrong places.
Ours are like, come on. Take the day off.
Be lazy.
Don't worry.
Education.
Who?
This is a body bones.
It's time for your positivity.
We're going to go around the room.
Lunchbox has a story.
Morgan No. 2 has a story.
I have a story.
Tell me something good.
I'm going to go first because this is awesome.
There's a high school student in New Jersey who's helping young girls in Africa by sending them refurbished laptops.
Now as I go into it more, the 17-year-old, I sent 21 refurbished laptops to a school, an all-girls school.
He started the organization, and he's refurbishing the laptops himself, which is pretty crazy.
It takes him anywhere from a couple of days to a couple of months to get the laptop and refurbish it
because he's also got to find people who donate or pay for them.
Yeah, wow, that's smart.
So he's doing it himself.
And now people are starting to donate too, but that's pretty cool that he's refurbishing them himself.
So there's mine.
Lunchbox, give me some good news.
There's a middle school in Maine.
They want to do something cool this winter, so they had the winter of Kahn.
kindness. So the sixth graders had to collect supplies and goods for the animal shelter.
The seventh graders were the homeless shelter. And the eighth graders had the nursing home.
So they collected blankets and just all sorts of gift. And they donated them all to these three different organizations for the winter of kindness in Maine.
Winter of kindness in Maine. That could be all the time.
Yeah, lots of blankets and coats because they're...
I've never been to Maine, but it seems like it's always cold up there. Cold and clams.
Yeah, it's way up there.
I need to go to Maine.
All right.
I just have no reason.
Let us know what it's like.
I wish someone would say, hey, I'm from Maine.
Come up here and use...
Is Maine cool?
Like, what are you doing, Maine?
Lobsters.
Yeah, find lobsters and eat them.
Okay.
That's what I see.
I'll check back in.
Let's go to Morgan number two.
Morgan, what do you have?
Seamstress named Rami.
She is a proud mother to a garden full of monarch butterflies.
And one of the baby insects, when it was first born out of its little cocoon shell, had a broken wing.
And so, being a seamstress, she basically took...
No way.
all of these tools that she had and put him together and made a little wing for this monarch.
No way.
And kind of sewed it all back on to him.
And then after one like little flight away, it was a huge success.
And the butterfly is all okay.
She sewed him a wing?
A butterfly.
Yeah.
Wow.
That's amazing.
You ever seen one of those monarch butterflies?
No.
I'm just thinking a butterfly.
Any butterfly.
A moth.
No, no.
It doesn't matter for the moth.
You can sew a wing is incredible to me.
So gentle and delicate.
Wow.
That was my nickname in college.
Okay.
So gentle and delicate.
This is a babybon shoe.
Bobby bones.
Eddie, you don't know why size shoes your kid wears?
Yeah, I do.
I don't know.
Lunchbox came to me and said that you don't know the size of your kid's shoes.
Why?
Don't even try to lie because I tried to ask you for the shoe size
because the wife thought it'd be a good idea to get junior a pair of shoes for his birthday.
And I said, Eddie, what size shoes do your kids wear?
I have no idea.
How am I supposed to know what size shoes?
He said, how am I supposed to know?
Yeah, he goes, they grow.
I mean, I don't know what size shoe they wear.
Listen, that's true.
They change shoe sizes so quickly.
We're not arguing that.
When you said the words, how am I supposed to know?
How is that you're their dad and you live with them?
Yeah, my wife's usually the one that orders their shoes.
And I say order because we do a lot of Amazon because they do change shoe sizes so quickly.
What size, though?
The little one's 11, I think.
Eleven?
Yeah, like kids 11.
Yeah, like toddler 11.
I said, holy cow, dude, you're growing up.
He's got a big foot.
But what's your 10-year-old?
You think he's four, maybe?
Size four?
Sounds about right.
A Tom Brady rookie card is being auctioned off for $500,000.
What?
The Fleer Ultra Michigan card
and mint condition from the year 2000,
half a million dollars.
Wow.
How interested in the Super Bowl are you guys?
Very minimal.
100% interested.
I just want to see the Patriots win again
because we never get to see greatness like we're saying.
Even if you hate the Patriots,
there have been teams that have been,
busted for cheating way more than the Patriot tab.
Those are just bigger news because they
always win. Yes. And the Flakegate
wasn't even a real thing. But that's what's on
everyone's mind. They're cheaters isn't everyone's mind.
They're not, though. Everybody's a cheater.
That's a ding. Everybody wants to be them.
That's true. Yes. Same people
who hate the Patriots, hate Alabama and LeBron.
They just hate winners. A bunch of haters.
And I hate me.
You know what I mean?
Bobby Bones Show.
Boney up the day.
Go ahead. I'm ready for it.
All right.
This story comes to us from Taylor'sville.
Utah. A 39-year-old man walked into a bank and said, I have a gun, give me some money. So they
gave him some cash, put in the bag, he runs out, gets in his car. He's like, oh, no, I left
the keys inside. So he's like, I got to run for it. Starts running through the parking lot,
gets his bag caught on something, rips a hole in the bag, all the money flies through the
parking lot. He drops a bag, gets about a block and a half before police arrest him.
So no money. And got arrested. And left his keys behind. And let his keys behind. Oh, man.
I just have feeling he hadn't done that many times.
Yeah.
Like, that's rookie stuff right there.
I think a lot of nerves.
Oh, yeah.
You know he was about to poop himself when he was like, oh, no, no, no.
Like butterflies.
Wow.
Oh, I'm Lunchbox.
That's your bonehead story of the day.
Bobby Bones show.
Daniel and Missouri's on.
Hey, buddy.
I was curious, but Amy ever got a tattoo of your face on it somewhere.
No.
He should have, though.
Because here's what happened.
Before her kids came to America, I went to Haiti.
And Amy always said to me, if you go to Haiti to the orphanage,
I get a tattoo of your face
and then I went and didn't tell her
and then came back and told her
and she still has a guy
tattooed in my face
and not only that
I've been over there a bunch
like I've been seeing those kids all the time
I think that deserves a tattoo
don't you?
I heard that yes I did.
See a couple things
one Amy promised to get a tattoo
at my face
Eddie promised to take money
to that high school
that he stole
this show just is not keeping their words
I'll be honest with you Daniel
if I were you I wouldn't trust us anymore
I'm just saying, hey, y'all, good in my book.
What are you up to this morning?
Not much. I'm a truck driver. It's Missouri.
Yeah, you give us that old horn to it or no? Is that legal now?
Oh, yeah.
There we go.
So how many hours a day do you drive?
You can drive 11 in a 14 hours, yes. So what do you do? Do you crawl in the back of your truck and go to sleep?
Oh, yeah. I got a big old sleeper about there.
Is it comfortable to you to be in that?
Because I like confined places.
It ain't too bad.
You don't mind being by yourself.
I don't mind being by myself.
What about you?
You got family at home?
Yeah, I got a wife and two kids.
So do you mostly like to get away or do you want to come back?
I mostly want to come back.
All right.
That's good.
What?
See the kids get raised.
That's a good thing.
Bad kids, I want to show.
I heard of that.
Hey, buddy.
Appreciate you calling.
I'm going to tell Amy you called and that's about that tattoo.
All right. What about your tattoo?
I'm getting it. So the guy, his name's Adam the kid. I've already set up an appointment.
He's booked like four months out, which is crazy. But I am getting it on my left inside forearm.
Oh, okay, cool.
We'll see. I mean, I'm not tough. So the tattoo thing's a little stretch for me, but, you know, I enjoy it.
I do appreciate it.
You got it. Appreciate you, buddy.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Have a good day.
The Bobby Bones show
Here's a little factoid to come out of last week.
So last week we had this huge ice snowstorm.
And wherever you are, if something unexpected is coming,
if it's, hey, there's going to be ice and snow,
or hey, there may be a hurricane.
You go to the grocery store and you buy milk and bread
and all the essentials in case you get locked in the house.
Batteries.
Yes.
So I've been tipped off that lunchbox got into almost a Facebook fight
with a grocery store.
Because during the ice and snowstorm thing that happened last week.
What?
They said on their Facebook page, it said,
we're not scared of cold.
We'll be open from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. today.
Said great.
So 8.19 p.m.
I pulled in the parking lot.
Went up.
Doors are locked.
And so I knock on the door and the stupid girl comes up and I said,
excuse me, ma'am.
Whoa, whoa, stupid girl.
Thank Keith Urban.
Go ahead
Are you guys open?
No, sorry, we're closed
Well, according to your
Facebook page, you're open until 9 p.m.
Why are you yelling at us?
I'm yelling through the doors.
This is my interaction with her.
She goes, sorry about that.
Turns around and walks away.
Dang, got you.
Okay, so I went home and I got on the Facebook page.
Oh, he went to Facebook.
And I said, that's weird
because I showed up at 819
and your doors were locked.
they replied, yeah, we didn't open until 9.
I said, no, it was PM, and the girl told me, sorry, we're closed.
And they got scared.
They didn't answer me back because they're like, man, we got busted.
So I'm taking my business elsewhere.
Damn.
Got them.
Got them.
Like, how can they do that?
Where are you going to get your beer nuts now?
Yeah, man, your pretzels.
Where are you going to get those?
What are you going to do?
I don't know why you guys are laughing.
When someone says they're going to be open from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
They need to be open from 9 a.m.m. to 9.
not closed at 819.
I know.
And now you get on Facebook and you tell them.
Yeah, you go like a real man.
Did you tell them you're going to go to another store now?
Yes.
What about nobody's dog food?
I'll have to go somewhere else.
Damn.
But did you think that maybe the storm got a little worse than they expected and they had to send people home and they went, uh-oh, we have to close.
There are other things to factor in.
Well, say that on Facebook.
If you're going to close early.
I didn't know you're monitoring all the business to be a fair.
Facebook. Why not call them? I checked their Facebook page to make sure they're open and they said,
we are open. 9 to 9. They didn't say, oh, sorry, the storm got worse than we thought we're closing
early. No, lazy girl at the store decided she didn't want to work anymore, so she locked the doors.
Hate her in the house. Look at my- Yeah, she is. Look at my Facebook. It says,
hey, I'm moving in Nashville. See, not really as of date. No, it's pretty old. Not a business.
You're a human. Depends. You talk to. Well, I'm sorry. You're not going to go there.
Not going there anymore.
Did you ask for a free gift card or anything?
If they want to offer me a $100 gift card, I'll come back.
That's your prize, $100.
That's my price.
So our producer ready is at the grocery store.
And what do they say over the loudspeaker while you're there?
They're saying, attention, customers, if you have found a $100 bill, a customer has lost it,
and please return it in the customer service desk.
And we all look around.
It was so funny, we all stop in our tracks.
Everybody looks at each other thinking the same thing, like, there's a $100 bill
laying around somewhere? Like, we're going to find it.
So did you look, though, a little bit on the fly?
I continued shopping, and I kept my eyes out, but I didn't find it.
But when I checked out, I did ask the lady.
I was like, so do they end up? He's like, yep, somebody ended up turning the $100 bill.
So in the room, let's just be honest with our souls.
If you find $100 bill on the ground in the grocery store, do you keep it or do you turn it in?
Let's go to lunchbox first.
100% I'm keeping $100 bill.
I'm putting it in my pocket and finders keepers, losers, weepers.
How do I know that's the person that lost it?
Get out of here. I'm keeping it.
But what if you find 100, then you hear over the top that literally someone's lost a $100
bill?
Could we're making it up?
Maybe they saw me pick it up and they were mad.
And they were mad.
And they were mad they didn't get their first.
If we're assigning maybes, maybe it was the last $100 of their life.
Oh.
If we're assigning maybe.
Well, then maybe they should have held onto it a little bit tighter.
Maybe they don't have fingers.
They lost them in an accident.
Staple.
Yeah, maybe they really, really needed that.
So you're just not taking it back.
I'm not taking it back.
Eddie?
It's tough.
Be honest.
It's a real tough.
I'm going to be honest with myself.
I would look around and see if anyone's looking and I'd keep it.
Then what if you hear over the top?
I would turn it in.
Yeah.
I would turn it in.
I would turn it in.
At the beginning.
From the beginning?
From the beginning?
I would turn it in.
Well, I'll tell you, when they said somebody turned in, I was like, well, there are some good people left in this world.
What I would do is, I would turn it in, I'd get an envelope, write my name on it, say how much it is.
And if someone comes and asks for a specific $100 bill.
But if they don't, within 24 hours, it's calling me back.
Oh.
Yeah.
Okay.
And the person me on the counter is...
But here's the thing.
I'm not saying what's in the envelope.
I'm saying, hey, I found this on the ground.
This is, you know, some...
You're the end of the coupons.
Yes.
If someone says they lost something.
If not, I'd like...
And they'd call me back.
That's not what I would do, but I would turn it in.
Wow.
Morgan number two?
I wouldn't turn it in unless they came over the thing.
Just because I don't really know what I'd do with that.
I'd be like, here's a hundred dollars.
Morgan number two's got this bullfrog in her throat.
I know.
I think it's been there a whole life.
It goes and goes.
No, it lives there.
Yeah.
And sometimes it's like,
I can clear your throat,
but it's like,
you have like some sort of disease, huh?
It just comes and goes
whenever it was.
It's like a little friend,
always there.
But what is it?
I don't know.
Has it happened your whole life?
Yes.
I just,
like, nobody ever told me what's wrong with me.
You have to go to the doctor
because I think you've done a fantastic job
on the radio in Amy's absence.
Oh, thank you.
The only thing is sometimes when you start talking,
I know.
It sounds like you're talking through a bubble
and you're trying to pop it.
But she says she's been to all the doctors
and they don't know what it.
doctors? Can't believe that. I've been to
a lot of doctors. So can you do this?
If you know you're going to talk,
like off the mic, can you go, no, no, no,
and pop the bubble of phlegm?
Yes. I just want to make sure it doesn't
get picked up if I'm, like, trying to, like, cough
on the side. But you know, it does get picked.
I would keep the hundred dollars.
I would keep all the $100.
It's like, it happens
more when I don't talk, too. So if I, like, don't
talk for a time. Well, keep it warm over there.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm going to do exercises over here.
So Morgan number two, how do you feel about that record?
A la Camillo.
She's really good.
All right, okay.
Poor girl.
Thank you.
But someone turned in the 100, right?
Someone turned it in.
And someone got it back.
There's hope.
No chance.
The Bobby Bones show.
Bobby Bones.
Kind of sad news to pass along.
I guess I got at lunch to do it, but his Sam's Club shut down.
The one that made him.
The one that he was.
worked at? Yeah, Sam's Club 6416 in San Antonio, where I really got my wings as a cart guy,
closed its doors. Wow. I was there for two and a half years, up that hill every day,
pushing carts, eight hours a day, sun, rain, cold, didn't matter. I was out there busting my
tail. It's no longer. Sam's Club 6416, rest in peace. So is the building still there? The building is
still there, but they closed their doors.
What are they doing with the building?
Not sure.
I was wondering if I could get a cart from there for my house as a memento.
That's funny.
I thought that would be awesome.
So whenever they change to a new store, just go up and be like, hey, can I come in and
check out the house, the Sam's Club that built me?
Oh, the store that built me.
Yeah, excuse me.
Do you mind if I just take a look around?
I'll only leave with a memory.
That's right.
That's all you want to leave with.
I know they say you can't go home again.
Hey, it's lunchbox.
I used to work here.
I just had to come back one last time.
I used to push carts.
Ma'am, I know you don't know me from Adam.
618 an hour.
That's what I got paid.
These handprints on the front steps are mine.
Sam's Club 642.
No, 646.
Don't talk over the song.
You messed up.
It doesn't matter.
No.
I guess to get some.
I swear I did my homework and I learned to play guitar.
Yeah, I got school tomorrow morning.
And I bet you didn't know under that live oak.
I'm going to go to lunch, Jimmy.
My favorite dog is buried in the yard.
All right.
See you tomorrow, Frank.
He's up.
Good night.
Well, thanks for the tip, man.
Thanks for shopping at Sands Club.
If I could just come in, I swear I'll
I'm going to take nothing but a memory.
It is.
We're trying to do the lunchbox Sam's Club version.
Sorry.
You yelled over the words.
Well, it was Sam's Club 6416.
I don't want people to get it confused with some other Sam's Club that built me.
Sam's Club 6416.
And I made more than $6.18 an hour.
I'll tell you that right now.
I was just going with it.
I was the highest paid cart guy.
Sam's Club.
It's me.
Lunchbox.
I miss you.
I just want you to know.
Oh, yeah.
Sam's Club can't stop thinking about you.
You.
Complete me.
I love touching every part of your cart.
Thank you, Sam's Club.
She'll let you in her house.
Sam's Club, can I work at a different one?
Where's the bottle of water?
Didn't have any song.
That was the Jay McGuire one.
You complete me.
You're saying, Sam's Club.
You complete me.
He's not laughing, man.
So many good memories there.
Yeah, he's not.
I grew up there.
That's where I got laid off.
Oh.
Sam's Club, I'll never be the same without you.
Don't go, Sam's Club.
Don't go.
Don't let go.
Don't let go.
Sam.
Come back to me, Sam.
Sam.
Dreams I see.
That is how.
Sometimes things get out of control.
Yeah.
We just had three songs dedicated to it.
That was a 6416 RIP.
I'm sorry to hear your Sam's Club's clothes, buddy.
The Bobby Bones show, Bobby Bones.
Producer Eddie ran into Randy Houser.
I did at a bar.
At a...
Wow.
Well, I was out of a bar hanging out with a friend.
I've done that in a while, and I'm walking out, and here comes Randy Houser, and I was like, dude, what's up?
Let me show you how country feels.
Do you recognize you?
Well, no, this is the awkward part every time I meet famous people.
Like, I feel...
And I don't even know if they recognize me or not.
I don't even let it get to that point.
I have to introduce myself first just in case they don't.
And so then I leaves a room at the end where I don't even know if they knew me or not
because I say, hey, man, what's up?
It's Eddie Bobby Bone Show.
You know me, Eddie Bobby Von.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Of course I knew you.
You know, like that kind of stuff.
So that's how it started and it makes it awkward.
And then I think I missed up.
Why?
Because I, like, you know, when people don't have music for a while, like they're just, in our world,
they're kind of MIA.
And we forget about them.
Not in a bad way.
Like, the success hasn't gone away.
He's not coming through, top of mind.
He doesn't have anything on the charts.
Correct.
Or new music out in a long time.
That's what I'm saying.
And so just out of nowhere, I go, where have you been?
Yeah, I know.
I know.
And he kind of looked at me like, well, what do you mean?
Like, I'm here.
I'm alive.
I met the bar.
Yeah, I'm around.
I go, no, like, what do you, what do you been doing?
He's like, well, there's new music coming out and working on new music and all that.
I'm like, oh, good.
I can't wait to see you and get you back out.
Like you're going to get him back out.
No, well, I just meant, I meant like he hasn't been.
in the studio in a while.
So I was like,
can't wait to see you back
in the rotation of things.
But he's working on new music
in case all the fans are wondering.
Yeah.
He says he's got some new music
coming out that we're really gonna like.
So awkward.
That conversation
makes me feel awkward.
It was so awkward.
Where have you been?
But you got to understand.
I had a friend with me from out of town
and I was kind of like,
check it out, man.
That's Randy Howza.
You know, Randy Houser?
Like Cowboy and Country Fields.
Yeah.
Watch this.
That kind of messed that one up.
He's like, oh, yeah, Pedro.
No, no.
Napoleon Dynamite.
I love that movie.
No, because you're the Mexican dude on the show.
I get it.
I know.
No, he was cool.
He was cool.
Good guy.
Man, but he hangs out with some cool people.
Like, the table he was at, like a bunch of just, you know they were really cool songwriters or something.
Like, they had beards and tattoos and stuff.
Oh, that grew.
They were drinking the dark beer.
Oh, yeah.
You know what I mean?
I remember we brought a goat in here.
You remember that?
The goat pee in the floor.
That's why we had a change.
our carpet. That was the start of our bad carpet.
Yeah, they didn't lunchbox feeding here.
And the whole thing went down there. I get all the blame, but
I blame Hauser. Remember
lunchbox try to squeeze a watermelon between his legs? That
kind of had a little something to do. And also Tora's groin.
Both.
Morgan number two has a funny story, because I guess
did you and your boyfriend get into a little
fight? Yeah, we did. Like, just
a little disagreement. And so
he texted you and you didn't text him back.
Yeah, I was just like, okay, I need some space
for a hot second. Okay, so
that happens, right? Yes, I hate that.
But here's what got her in trouble.
So Instagram has like this new feature that if you go to the direct messages,
you can tell when somebody was last on the app.
And I was just on Instagram.
I was trying to get my mind off of everything.
And he's like, you're not going to respond, but you're on Instagram right now.
Really?
So he could see you're online but not responding to him.
Yeah.
It was bad.
What was the fight about?
Oh, honestly, it was so stupid.
I think it was a disagreement about like him picking up his stuff at my place.
I'm so clean.
Oh, that's a good fight though.
Yeah, that's a real thing.
Yeah.
Like fighting over cleanliness or tidiness if one of you is and one of you isn't.
Yes.
Like I don't think that's trivial at all, actually.
Especially on time fights.
Those are my favorite kind of.
Oh, my gosh.
This is the worst.
You're not on time.
Why are you always late?
Like, you know that we leave.
If it says 3 o'clock, we're going to leave at 3 o'clock.
And we're going to go B-I-S.
B-I-S.
And I'm going to leave you regardless.
Business.
But in seat.
Oh, but in seat.
We're leaving three o'clock.
Yes.
Oh, my goodness.
You always had those fights with all your girlfriends?
Yeah.
You know what that means?
Normal people aren't always early.
But you know what?
Normal people are never great.
They're just normal.
Wow.
Oh.
Wow.
Normal people make excuses.
I take offense to that.
As a normal person, I took offense to that.
But my point is, if you're normal, you're just one of the random lemmings that are being normal.
Dang.
Wow.
I pride myself on timeliness.
Yeah, you do.
Was that the root of all your problems?
No, no, abandonment issues, sadness.
There's a lot of other things.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But I can control time.
So that's why I'm there.
Yeah, unless you get a flat tire.
No, I'm changing time.
How did it end up?
How did the fight end up?
I mean, it's fine.
Is he picking up his underwear now?
He's picking up his stuff now.
We had to break through.
Because her boyfriend's a big dude, right?
I mean, yeah, he has muscles.
Pretty thick, dude?
Yeah, he's in shape.
Is he taller than I am?
You guys are probably about the same height.
6-4?
Okay, he's not that tall.
No, the dude, there's Bobby and stop it.
What?
You're not that tall.
6-4-2-10?
Is that what you're?
Big pecks, big arms like me?
I did the height and measurement
three days ago.
At the doctor's office?
At the gym.
Okay, what are you at?
Six foot, and I've dropped some weight.
Really?
purpose. I'm six foot 159. I thought you wanted to get bigger. No, I want to get lean. I don't want to get big.
159? You are, you are, that's sick. Hey, but like, no, the muscles are there, but it's just here. And the fat belly parts were all the way. Why are you doing that? Why are you down to 159? Like, what is the point? Trying to be lean. And mean. Nah, I like to be nice. Lean and in pleasant.
I'm going to Google. Is that healthy?
on the Bobby Bones
Show now
Lanco
These guys
Back again
Landcoe
I've been obnoxious
over the past four days
I was lecturing Eddie
on the air yesterday
said dude you have to listen
to the record
Not off the air
But on the year
So I was wasting
everyone's time
lecturing somebody in the room
About your record
Brandon you good
I'm good
I'm good
Hopefully he listens to it
So it won't be
You know
A waste of time
It'll just be a good lecture
Have you listened to it
Much Eddie?
No I haven't listened to it yet
No
Hey, we're an honest group.
Hey, that's good.
I like it.
Brandon texted was like,
hey, I'll bring you a new record
before it comes out.
And I was like, let me be honest with you.
First of all, I have a CD player.
Second of all, I'm not going to listen to it beforehand.
And third of all, I don't even know if I'm that interested.
But then I listen to it is good.
It's good.
It's good.
Here, I want to play you some stuff that I like.
So, born to love, use a jam.
That's a good one.
That's a good one.
I got a bunch of them.
I never just go down tracks on records, by the way, on the air.
But I'm going through now.
All right.
Here we go.
this troublemaker song
I never heard you guys play it live
I imagine this is one that rocks out
yeah yeah absolutely
Brandon said like two words
I've done all the interview myself before
that's a jam too
thanks yeah that one live we actually extend
and really jam it out so
how about this one here
I like this one I play this one there yesterday
so long I do
it's a good one too man
I'm gonna do one more
the hallelujah night's on the title track
the jam
and I just
just know this from playing the record. It's like six minutes long.
And I'm assuming you put that at the end because it was so long.
Yeah, kind of. You know, it was a good way to end a record, especially
yeah, in the middle, it would be kind of weird, but it fades out with some subliminal
messages. I have that because I wanted to ask about that. Here's the end of it.
Who is that?
That's it. My wife, actually, Tiffany.
Yelling to you or voicemail?
Yeah, kind of. You forgot milk again, Brandon.
What is that from?
It's a voicemail. It was a, so Jay was working on that track.
and kind of mixing.
Your producer.
Yeah,
Jay Joyce, the guy that produced it.
But he asked me,
he's like,
do you have any cool
voicemails or anything?
He's like,
just something talking about,
you know,
we were kind of talking
about the theme of the song
and the album,
and I sent him a voicemail
and he, like,
sampled it in there.
Good thing it was like,
I think Jay Joyce is such a cute.
That's what he was looking for,
probably, but,
look at you guys.
Now it's time to let you talk.
Man,
here we are.
I'm so excited for you guys.
Last night,
Brandon came out,
and I,
Brandon and I text a little bit.
We're both nuts creatively.
I think we bond over just absolutely being insane.
Yeah, lots of emojis, you know.
And I said, hey, Brandon, come out and do Great's Love Story, Acoustic, and he did,
and the crowd loved it.
And I don't know, man, it's a cool.
Do you feel cooler?
Do you feel cooler now?
Yeah, kind of.
I'm not going to lie.
Yeah, a little bit.
Yeah, it's just, I think that, like, there is an aspect of feeling like you belong a little
more.
Because that's the thing, when you start a band, you have this idea, but honestly, you might
be crazy.
I mean, this might not, like, you may be the only one that likes you and, you know, your mom or something.
But it's nice that, you know, people have just really responded to what we're doing.
It just feels good to know that, well, we're not crazy, I don't think.
Or are you so crazy that it makes you successful.
Or that, yeah, there you go.
That's probably actually it.
We're crazy.
So, Lanco's in studio.
Randy, how's your wife feel about this?
About being in the studio?
No, just about this.
Like, it's now a thing.
You have a real life, tangible album with a bunch of songs and a sound.
and you're developing a following.
Right.
I mean, you're kind of...
Yeah, she's really excited.
I think that, you know, she's been with us in this journey.
You know, all the, you know, the relationships that we're in, you know,
were a few of us are married, and they've all been with us throughout this whole process.
So my wife was with me, I mean, literally when I was, like, playing coffee shops,
and she would, like, come out to a show.
I was like, why did you come?
I didn't, you know, I didn't promote this on Facebook.
That's why I know one's here, you know, like her, whatever it may be.
And so she's been with us on this whole journey.
And so now it's this point,
just really, really proud
and, you know, as excited as we are.
I just, there's five of you.
That's a lot of mouths of the feed.
Who's breaking off first and going solo?
Let's start talking about that.
Chandler, Chandler, that is, yeah.
Chandler has a solo project.
His sideband, the pasta party?
Yeah, yeah.
Lanko is here.
How about we hear a song?
Boys, we play a song here.
What are we going to do, Brandon?
Born to Love You.
I'll do the vocals.
You guys just cover me.
Cool, I'll just, yeah, I'll do percussion.
I'll snap or something.
By the way, Lanco has a record
called Hallelujah Nights.
I hope you get it.
It is, if not my favorite,
it's tied for my favorite album
in the past many months.
I think the Anderson East record
is also fantastic.
Oh, man, good company.
Yes, but it's that good to me.
So here we go, Lancoe,
and this is called Hallelujah Nights.
Hit it, boys.
Hey guys, so because of licensing roles,
we can't play anything with music
on this Iheart radio channel
or podcast anymore,
but you can go to bobbybones.com
to see it.
We hate that we had to take it down.
It wasn't our decision.
but I just wanted to keep you up
and we wanted to keep up as much as possible.
So go to bobbybones.com to watch or hear
whatever you're missing right now
and thank you for listening to the show
and sorry about all the legal stuff.
Oh, they're here.
You may have known from this song.
The number one hit, look at that, boys.
Yeah.
You guys got that number oneer.
I bet people sing this like crazy back to you, right?
Oh, it is crazy.
Yeah, we're on the Chris Young tour right now
so we're playing like arenas
and it is nuts to have that many people singing that loud.
It is incredible.
That's a jam.
And a minute ago, they played this one right here, and it was real good.
I got to say something, Brandon, you got to stop climbing on crap, man.
Because really, I know that's the thing, and you don't care, and you're there to party,
you climb rafters, and you jump on the side.
You're going to hurt yourself, and then the band's going to be penalized
because the lead singer's in a stretcher or body cast.
I can still sing from a body cast.
That'll be a special tour.
If you break a rib, you can't.
Oh, well.
That's true.
Yeah, then I'll just go for not breaking rib.
But anything else I'm going to go, promise.
I was telling Eddie, I said, they climb stuff.
Like, they're dumb.
You are.
I was like, now they're making, you can't climb as much stuff because when you start to make it,
there's like financials involved and you're not just trying to make a name.
Does the band agree with me or no?
No, we're still going to climb stuff.
That's just part of a Lanco show
I know but Lanco shows won't last as long
if Lanco starts to get wiped out
Okay
Lanko's here
They have a record out called Hallelujah Nights
It's quite amazing
And
You guys are gonna do a cover?
Is that what's happening?
Yeah
What we're gonna do?
I have no idea
Yeah
Thunder by Imagine Dragons
Yeah
Which is funny because that hook
First of all
I was thinking of it
because the hook was just stuck in my head forever.
But then also, when you listen to the lyrics, you know, the point in our life right now,
it kind of relate to like, you know, it's kind of just about being underestimated in people.
Because, I mean, we've had so many people believe in us, but, you know, there are people that definitely don't believe in you.
And this song is kind of about well here.
Well, to stick out for the people who don't believe in you, I mean, look at you guys.
Just kidding.
Yeah, true.
I know.
Come on.
Come on.
Come on.
All right.
Lanco is here
and this is from the Imagine Dragon Tears Thunder
Hey guys so because of licensing roles
We can't play anything with music
On this Iheart radio channel or podcast anymore
But you can go to Bobbybones.com to see it
We hate that we had to take it down
It wasn't our decision
But I just wanted to keep you up
And we wanted to keep up as much as possible
So go to bobbybones.com
To watch or hear whatever you're missing right now
And thank you for listening to the show
And sorry about all the legal stuff
How was that Bachelor thing?
When you guys go and tape The Bachelor and sing,
is that a long day and you have to do it over and over again?
Yes, it is a long day.
It was cool.
I mean, honestly, we had no idea what to expect.
I think the cool thing for us was the way they set it up was it was like a show.
Like, we were actually in a club,
and they did the last minute tweet out to people,
you know, Lanco's playing if you want to come see him.
So we got to play like an actual set.
And then the couple walked in and was all surprised
and danced the greatest love story.
That's a good look though.
Like last night, millions of people saw that song.
again. Oh yeah, no. It was a thing where I was actually at a party with like a bunch of friends.
They all, like, all the girls there, they know, they're all in their 20s. I know who I am and
like, like, they don't really care. But then they found out that we're going to be on the
Bachelor and all of them wanted pictures instantly. I was like, all right? That's cool.
They knew you weren't on The Bachelor, right?
No, no. I was like, no, they knew we were in Lancoo and, you know, I was like, yeah,
we're actually playing. They're like, you're playing on the Bachelor.
Can I get a picture? Yeah. Then he came down. I was like, all right, well, whatever works.
Do you eat that R. R. A. dude? Yeah. He's a Rgooberer, huh?
It's pretty cool
Fair enough
Fair enough
Hey listen
I could not be happier
For you guys
You see this face
There's a happy face
For you guys right here
I'm a huge fan
I will say this too
I think you have
Jumped us in festival building
Now
We didn't even need the jumps
All of last year
Lancoa played
Then we come on after
We'd give them high fives
If we're going to play
The big boy set
Not anymore boys
You're here to stay
On the big time
We're going to be playing the little, yeah, man.
Dang.
I'm genuinely happy.
I think the record's phenomenal.
I enjoy all of you.
Something more than others, but I enjoy all of you.
Thank you very much, man.
We appreciate you.
Thank you, guys.
By the way, if you walk out of here and go, man, Bobby gave me a hard time.
I give people a hard time who I like.
It's all right.
All right.
Lanko, check out the record.
Maybe you know that song.
Born to Love You All Over the Place.
On The Bachelor.
Any of you guys talking to the girls?
Any single guys talking to the girls on Bachelor?
No.
You know, as the single spokesman,
I was surprisingly let down.
No.
At what day?
There was only one.
She was taken.
It was not a good time to talk to her because she was on a date with Ari.
They kind of frown upon that.
He's a roguber, right?
What's the question?
That would have been a plot twist that the band hit on the...
Dude, if he steals her?
Yes.
You hear that Hollywood?
Because they're all listening.
All right, Landcoe, thank you. See you guys soon.
See you, man.
Are there any songs that, as you look back at your childhood years, your teenage years, young adult years,
that you learned every word to you and you were so proud that you learned every word to it?
Morgan number two, I'll come to you.
Yes.
What song did you learn and you were so proud you learned all the words?
Dirty Little Secret.
What?
Oh, but All American Reaches?
Yes.
You don't know All American Reaches?
No, no, no, I don't know this one.
It's the best song ever.
I like all it.
They're from Oklahoma, too.
Okay.
All-American, I don't even know if we have that in our system.
Okay, ready?
Morgan number two?
I'm ready.
Prove to me that you know all the words,
a dirty little secret.
Here we go.
You're going to say it?
I'm listening.
Okay.
Morgan number two will now sing
all-American rejects dirty little secret.
Let me know that I've done wrong.
When I've known this all along,
go around a time or two,
just to waste that.
Time with you.
Tell me all that you've gone away.
Find out games you don't want to play.
You are the only one that needs to know.
A little secret.
Yeah, nice work.
It's funny because that came to her immediately.
She didn't know what we were going to talk about.
That's pretty awesome.
Do you have a song, Eddie, that you know all the words too that you're proud of?
Yes, I was proud because it was so hard to sing.
It's the Garth Brooks one.
What's it called?
Ain't coming down to the sun comes up.
What's it called?
Yeah.
But guys, this was like when I was in seventh grade, though.
And I learned every word to it.
Okay.
Ain't going down.
And it's fast.
Here we go.
Here's producer Eddie.
Come on.
Doing Aint going down.
The sun comes up.
What song did you learn?
See, how does it start?
Six o'clock.
Did it six o'clock?
Yeah, yeah.
Six o'clock in Friday evening, Mama doesn't know she's leaving.
Till the speed of the street.
The street is never.
Still the striven, squeeze the chem.
Roll go country stations just a blaring on the radio.
Pick them up at seven, and they're heading to the rodeo.
Mama's on the front porch.
Streaming out of warning, girl, you better get your red head.
Back in bed before the morning.
Now, yeah.
Play the harmonica.
Yeah.
Give me about ten more seconds.
Here we all.
Nine o'clock the show is ending, but the fun is just beginning.
She knows he's anticipating, but she's got to keep them waiting.
Grab a bout's heat, and then they're heading to the honking.
Talk the live, cried the line dancing just ain't what they really want.
down by the boondocks and park down by the creek words short straight real late dancing cheek to
yeah yeah yeah mine would probably be this one and I was so proud it's been oh yeah because this one
goes fast it's hard yeah and I haven't done it a long time but this is bare naked ladies one week
and this is the chorus but this isn't the part there but okay let me see if I can hit this one come on
All right, let me loosen up.
I'm gonna hook, I'm gonna make you soft think.
Like, I'm gonna like aqua man.
I summoned dish to the fish, although I like the salad,
Swiss, I like the sushi, because I never touch a frying pan.
Hot like wasabi when I bust rhymes, big like Leanne rhymes, because I'm all about value.
Birk, it's got the mad hits.
Okay, I don't make hits, but if I better bust through,
gonna make it set of better clubs and say, oh!
I bet the versus makes no, dang!
I'm a failure!
Oh, dude, that's tough, though.
No, I'm a failure. I got my verses mixed up. You want to feel better?
Go ahead. Have lunchbox do one. Which one do you know?
Man, I know. Lose yourself. Just pick any.
I know. I believe I can fly. I'm too sexy. I mean, I'm too sexy. I mean, I got them all.
What do you want me to do?
You just hit it. Just hit a song. I don't care what you got. Just pull up a song. Any song.
I'm too sexy for my shirt.
You already got that's a word. That's not even the word.
Okay, the dance doesn't count.
Oh, too sexy it hurts.
On the catwalk.
On the catwalk.
I'm too sexy for my car.
Too sexy for my car.
Too sexy by far.
Too sexy.
On my shirt.
So sexy it hurts.
All right.
On the Bobby Bones show now.
Hansen.
All right, Hanson's coming in the studio right now.
They're walking down the hall.
Come on in.
Bring them on in.
There they are.
There they are.
There they are.
Yeah.
They're like us.
We're all coming in like,
uh-huh.
Yeah,
well,
you know,
you guys,
you trust us so much.
We feel like we're not getting enough direction,
but that's not you.
It's just because we can't,
we still haven't woken up
from last night's party.
You know,
we're like,
huh, what?
Woken up.
We didn't even go to sleep.
I'm going to tell you guys,
first of all,
thank you very much
because you guys came and flew and drove.
You guys didn't live here.
And I appreciate you coming to the show last night and playing the, and being the secret yet.
Like, to me, just from my heart, I appreciate it.
When I can do something for you guys, let me know.
Okay.
We appreciate you.
Yeah, St. Jude's is awesome, and so it's an easy ask because we're, you know, who doesn't want to help with such a great cause?
And we all got kids, and we know what that could be like.
And so to be on the other side of that, helping people get through it.
It's hard to imagine, yeah.
You know, it's a great thing.
Last night there are all these artists, and this is true.
And you guys may not have seen it because you were right in the middle of it.
you were the artist that all the artists came out to watch.
Because as you guys went on stage and you guys did this really awesome
Acapella thing at the beginning, everybody was fighting for a spot.
Dirk's, everyone was fighting to get a spot to watch you guys perform.
It was the one artist that all the artists wanted to watch and it was you guys.
Well, hopefully it wasn't like, all right, I've got bets on this one failure.
No, no, people were climbing stairs.
It was really fantastic.
Well, you know, the rhyman is such an awesome venue to play.
And to get to walk out and start our little, you know, piece of the show by singing our capella.
It's just, it's something you're not looking at the side of the stage.
You're not looking for who's looking, you know, it's not some, you know, game of kind of like,
can I be the biggest, you know, performance of the night?
It's just like, it's such a great venue.
So much music has been there.
So many cool artists.
And so, you know, I mean, you're just, you're kind of like in that moment.
Well, you sing a spiritual song in a room that used to be a church.
built in the 1890s is all right.
Yeah, right?
Yeah.
The other thing, too, is like there's such a sense of, um, we love the craft of music.
And so anytime you can actually, and we actually are in this, believe it or not,
for making music, uh, versus so many other things that come with it.
And so anytime you can kind of have a moment where you go, hey, this room was made for this,
you know, it was made for, you know, you can stand in there and you can sing and the back row
can hear you without a mic without anything.
You're saying it's more fun to play in a venue that's made for music.
Yeah.
Someone that's made for hockey
Arena football
The puck is going to sound great in here, guys.
Hansen's here.
Isaac, you good?
I'm good.
I was just playing guitar tech at the same time.
Yeah, I saw it.
He was working on strings.
So, I met your son.
Yes, yes.
Look, I'm spitting image.
How old is he?
He is 11.
That's crazy.
You guys, there's kids all around.
Yeah, we have all.
Taylor has five kids.
Yeah, no, but is 11-year-old your oldest kid?
No, my oldest is 15.
You have a 15-year-old?
Yeah.
Man, what's happening?
We're all getting older, man.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, I got, it freaks me out.
I mean, I started early because, I mean, I was 20, basically.
So, I mean, that's not common.
And I wouldn't go around and say.
You started with kids at 20.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I was kids at 20.
Yeah, music was like.
You started music when you were nine.
Yeah, music was nine.
And it probably, what can he say?
He's just an early start.
Approxims to being a young parent, though, I will say, I wouldn't, I wouldn't go around to say,
hey everybody you should start having kids at 19 or 20 but um it is awesome to be young and like
be kind of still have that that connection with having kids i mean it's like the energy of doing
stuff and going places and sharing things and you know that's pretty cool so you have a 15 year old
11 year old all the way down but what would you tell them about music because you guys as hanson
started starting to sing at nine you three brothers do they have interest any of your kids have
massive interest to be in music i it's it's interesting because
because they're, you know, faced with it every day.
And so I think it might have been a different scenario for some of them if it wasn't like,
oh, that's what dad does, you know?
Because we didn't have that.
We were going up in a family that was musical, but there weren't any musicians around us.
And so it was very much our own thing.
And I think it's different when you're looking at something and sort of comparing yourself to it.
I mean, my boys rolled their eyes and were frustrated, you know, that I was leaving town.
You know what I mean?
Like, you were like, oh, dad.
You know, it was like, so in a weird way,
they actually have some, like you say,
something kind of like slightly negative
kind of taste to music like, oh man,
he's caught all the time.
But they, I mean, for my kids,
my oldest son has started playing guitar.
My next son plays bass and stuff like that.
I mean, so they're starting to show real interest in that.
As to whether or not they make a career out of it,
a profession out of it, who knows.
Do you want them to?
You want it to do stuff that they love.
I mean, basically anything you do is hard.
I meaner than that,
I want them to do something they're good at.
You know, like, if you're a good musician, go for it, man.
If you're a mediocre musician, don't go for it.
Dude, I love you. You're my son.
But, you know, become a plumber.
Become something you can excel at.
Like, don't.
Music is awesome, but it's so hard and there's so much, there can be so much judgment
and, like, self-doubt in being somebody on stage that's sort of burying your soul and all that.
It's like, just, you know, do something that you're good at.
Do something that you feel like you can just destroy at, you know?
And maybe that's music.
Hansen is here.
When you guys started, because Zach, you're the youngest.
Yeah.
But if you're nine, Isaac, you're the oldest, right?
Yeah, I'm 11.
So, okay, you're 11 right now.
I'm 11th.
So I was six.
Wow.
Yeah, so I was six when we started the band.
At that time, you know, we were just singing.
It was more like we had heard 50s music.
We'd heard rock and roll and motown records and gospel.
So we were doing kind of a vocal group, sort of harmonies,
re-singing 50s rock and roll songs.
And very quickly, it was a couple of years,
and then we were full-on, you know, drums and guitar and piano.
It was such a, it was a tool for us.
For us, we heard songs.
We wanted to replicate songs.
And so the idea of becoming the band going from just singing to sort of guitar solos
and Chuck Berry and all that,
it was just this natural thing.
but, you know, it's kind of crazy.
You know, I look at my kids.
I have a nine-year-old son and a seven-year-old and a four-year-old and a one-year-old, right?
And, like, if it was me, like, three of them would already have been singing, writing songs at this point.
And you just go, you know, I don't even know.
I mean, my life is not your life.
I think a lot of it is.
We were extraordinarily driven in a certain way, though.
How at that age?
Well, I think it's really not an age question, you know?
I think it's just who we are.
and who we were at that time.
I was thinking about this a lot
because this last year we were celebrating an anniversary.
You know, mark years every time.
But we're like, hey, we've been playing for 25 years, like, since we were kids.
So we did this whole tour last year kind of went, hey, this is a big deal.
And age is such a strange thing because everyone is not the same at every age.
I mean, sure, there's a reality to, like, you can't read until X point for most people.
And you can't drive.
Vote.
But you can't vote.
But I think we.
I think we just, that's who we were.
And like, we didn't see, we didn't see a huge roadblock,
which is credit to our folks, just not telling us,
you're completely crazy.
To try.
We didn't see a roadblock to trying.
And, you know, whatever it is.
Like, there was a combination of just enough,
just enough talent and just enough, like, drive and guts, I guess.
What's that like when you're that age in your whole world?
It's like, boom, you're the thing.
Because it happened what seemingly to us,
and was like, boom, they're a thing.
These kids are a thing.
I will say, you know, parenthood, I think, really enlightens this.
The great thing about being a kid, like a young person is, it stresses parents out
because kids don't think about anybody but themselves.
And so when you're a kid, you're the center of the world, and when you become the center
of the world for that moment, you know, that the actual to the world.
You're still the center of the world.
Right. So I think for us, like, we were driving towards this idea of success as a band.
And so the center of our world was that, like, how do we get our music in front of this?
How do we get a bigger show next week? What should our next album come out?
And then all of a sudden it's like, other people cared. But we were still like, okay, what's our next album? What's our next thing?
Well, also, I mean, we were talking about, you know, age and how we start out and everything like that.
I mean, you do have to think about it from a contextual point of view.
I mean, when you're 11 years old and you start out singing with your brothers,
and they're nine and six years old,
and you're memorizing songs and writing songs,
and you're doing that for almost five years,
making multiple records and all that kind of stuff.
So that's like a third of your life.
A third of your life at that point.
You're like five, six years into making music,
and then something really works, like on a next level working.
You're like,
when did you know
umbop was going to work?
When did you know that song was like, boom?
Like this is a song that's going to change our life.
Well, I mean, we, the real moment,
there's a story and some of it's documented.
The first time we actually physically saw it
was a radio event in New Jersey
at Paramas Park Mall,
which was we, I mean,
the short version of the story is that we were rehearsing
to do our first major TV
and we kind of had our heads down, right?
Because you make a record, you put it out,
it goes to radio,
and we're just preparing to actually come out
For all of our jolly illness throughout the years, we were actually quite serious.
I was saying we're way more serious in a lot of cases than not.
But we were rehearsing to play Letterman.
And we were asked to go do a radio show that we'd been agreed to do.
It was kind of like, oh, really?
We're rehearsing for David Letterman.
It's tomorrow.
And so we kind of reluctantly went to this little acoustic performance thinking that it was us, you know, on a little corner stage in front of, you know, a hundred people.
Doing the kind of thing we'd done as a local band or whatever doing our thing.
And the place was packed.
It was 10,000 people there.
And that's when I was like, holy cow, this is the thing.
We looked around and went, something happened.
What happened?
You know, there's, so I, you know, fast forwarding, though, the thing that's really cool about, you know, continuing.
And back to that very first day, the first songs we wrote is we actually genuinely are still doing it for the same reason,
which is like, that's an unbelievable feeling to walk out and see people sing your songs back.
Last year we were all over the world doing that.
And, but in the end, it's still the same rush.
The rush of creating something is still, like, the thing that causes you to want to chase that next, like, 10,000 person crowd.
It's like, that's amazing.
But you're still that, you're still excited to walk in front of any, you know, a crowd of 100, you know.
10,000 people is fun, but I actually think, I actually think theaters, like the rhyme and stuff are probably more fun.
Because it really, it really feels like you.
it really serves the art form really well for like you better say
on the Bobby Bones show now
What do you guys think of the country music community?
You saw last night there's a lot of friends
I called all my friends to come play the show
You got some good playing friends
Yeah right
Your friends know how to play music
Your house parties are really musical
The thing I love about Nashville is the fact that there is so much talent
and the fact that the talent is actually
I mean that's the reason why
as opposed to places
you know the Hollywoods of the universe
where you can somehow arrive at that spot
just because something happened
and you did a YouTube video or whatever
here it's like you walk in
and you're like you're here for a reason
that's a song. You better be good
you have to be good and if you're not
and people are respectful
you know of each other like there's a
joking about playing in Nashville
you know when you're playing a show in Nashville
and sometimes
you know you know
when you've got a good show going,
because there's always a better show down the road,
because there's so much music here.
You know, there's somebody in a bar down the road
that's probably playing a better solo than you are, right?
Most nights.
So you really, when you're in this town,
you really got to step it up and you feel that, you know?
Yeah, yeah.
I got a text from, I'm going to name drop for a second
because he was at the show,
Dirk's Bentley texted and I said,
hey, give my number to Taylor
because I was talking to him last night
and I forgot to give him my number.
And so I was standing up beside Dirk's,
and we're talking, and you guys were on,
and he, Dirk's comes over to watch you guys.
And he says, I was at a YouTube concert,
and I was waiting to go back to me Bono,
and Hanson was there too.
He said, we hung out.
They're the best guys.
Oh, my gosh.
Well, I mean, we would say the same thing.
I mean, that was actually a particularly random and awesome moment.
Yeah, well, when you're with the rock and roll pope, I mean, Bono, you know,
it was pretty awesome.
Yeah, we all walked back to, too.
And first of all, again, Dirk's a really great dude.
And we were just saying, great performance last night.
Like, watching people come in the audience is just really fun from
my perspective. And we're standing back there and all of us are fans. So that's one of the cool
things is when you, you have to remember what it's like to look up and go, this is the person I'm
aspiring to be when you look at band like you two. And so we're talking with Dirkson. Of course,
he's been crushing it. And just to have that, you know, that shared admiration, like a,
you know, like a 10 year old that's looking up at the first, you know, first rock and roll show you see.
We're like, I still, that's what I'm, that's what I want to be when I grow up. And to have that
that sense of I'm a fan of music.
Yeah.
It was pretty great.
We watched that whole show together, you know, standing there.
And there was a point in the show where everybody met, you know, and Bono calls that.
And he's like, you know, New Orleans, lift us up.
And he goes, Hansen, lift us up.
We're like, oh, my God.
I looked over at Dirk's and Dirk did it to me and I looked at their eyes and they're, oh.
Because, because, like, you all turned to like five-year-olds in that moment.
You know, you still have to admire people.
you still have to have people that are setting the bar for you.
And that's an example of, I think, a band that everybody can look at and go, man, their live performance, their music, what they've done for what, you know.
Well, and they have, and this is actually kind of you were asking about the Nashville scene.
And in a way, I think, you know, this is what I love about you two.
For one.
I mean, Dublin has always kind of been their home, right?
Right.
You know, even though they're always all over the place.
But Nashville and I think in some ways, you know, you two as well, there's this sense of like, well, you know, I might be a really big deal and I'm okay with that.
But at the end of the day, I'm just a guy in a band.
And there's a certain sense with the U2 guys and what I love about the Nashville scene too is there's a lot of that where it's like, well, you know, I can fill an arena or a stadium or whatever.
But, you know, I'm just a guy that knows how to play guitar and I'm cool with it.
It sounds like we live here.
I love it here.
But Austin has a lot of that too.
And you have a history in Austin of like real musicians or real music culture.
But I mean, we were talking about it in the last break.
We're here because of genuinely, like we would be doing it in a studio behind the scenes.
In a garage.
In a garage, you know.
And so whenever you meet people truly the greatest.
And again, speaking of your friend, Dirk's, we, you see the people that I think hang on the longest.
and the people that are there for the right reasons
because you just, it's too hard to keep fighting for this
if it's not because you actually love it,
because you actually, you know,
you would do it in front of 50 people
or in front of 50,000, you know.
Hanson is here?
It's just some music.
Listen, I have a catalog of you guys,
the stuff that I love.
And I've had you guys in to all my shows.
Everywhere I've been, I've had you guys come in and play,
and I've always tell people, man, they're so good,
and this is a jam right here.
I love this one here.
This is a jam.
This one and this.
I will come to you.
That's a jam too, man.
Don't get me started.
Like, I made me geek out a bit.
That's awesome.
Like, I'm a legit fan.
Thank you.
And that's why I was like, come on, let's get them here.
And you guys agreed to fly in and play it.
I'm grateful.
I'll say it one more time.
Sometimes I can be overthankful.
Thank you very much for coming to playing last night.
You're very, very welcome, man.
I appreciate it.
And just if I, just the fact that you just did what you just did,
that's enough thanks right there.
Yeah, I'm right.
All right, let's play us on Hanson is here.
What we want to play, boys?
We're going to play the first one you threw in, Penny and Me.
Yeah!
So this was the first single we put out.
We started our label back in 2003.
Hey guys, so because of licensing roles,
we can't play anything with music on this Iheart radio channel
or podcast anymore, but you can go to Bobbybones.com to see it.
We hate that we had to take it down.
It wasn't our decision,
but I just wanted to keep you up,
and we wanted to keep up as much as possible.
So go to bobbybones.com to watch or hear whatever you're missing right now.
And thank you for listening to the show.
And sorry about all the legal stuff.
All right, Hansen's here this morning.
I was watching a Facebook video.
And you guys have played the version that you play at BoomBob now.
And it had like 58 million views.
Is it crazy that song has stood the test of time?
Because songs...
Dude, I mean, it's amazing.
It's amazing.
And it's kind of...
It's surreal.
You know, because that song is really about time.
Right. The song says in an unbop, they're gone, right?
The umbop is about the fact that time will pass like in a second.
Sort of like 70 years or not.
You can't change it, you know.
And so like when we play that song and people still, you know, go crazy for that song.
Last night we played it.
And it's like it's like the meaning of the song is being realized like on stage, right?
It says, so the song says essentially that most things in life will come and go.
So you better choose right now, you know, figure it out right now.
what you think is gonna matter to you and grab it.
It's almost a peril.
I mean, it's like a lot of these songs,
I mean, we talk about you find your own way
through things when you write songs.
You know, the listener may not realize it,
but oftentimes the writer's like,
I don't know how this is gonna work out.
And the song is, you're figuring things out
and looking for that answer.
And you know, it's kind of a campfire song.
I mean, Penny and me is like that too.
It's like, hey, we're apart, you know,
we're pulled apart by these different things,
but we share these connections, you know,
and so I think,
I think telling that story.
For us, I'd say that's, you know, you hope that's the reason why people still carry, like, carry that connection is that it actually had a meaning to them.
And it's still relevant, you know, many years later because the connection was real.
Do you have to switch up because you've been playing it so long, how to play it so it feels somewhat fresh?
So it just isn't like you're just like beating a nail with a hammer over again?
Well, part of that is, I think, being a performer.
I mean, unfortunately, part of our job is to walk out night after night.
and make it fresh, you know.
You know that.
I mean, you come in here every day.
There's got to be lots of days where you're like,
I don't really feel like talking.
I'm not that excited about music.
You know, it's this, we do that.
There's some things we do the same,
and you do it the same.
There's other things you take liberties
and create around it,
but you give people what they want,
and then you hopefully give them
what they don't know they want yet.
Yeah.
And that's my goal every day.
I think that's the essence of it.
I mean, you know, what I will say about,
you know, when you're making records,
it's all about making the newest best version that you can make of yourself.
You know, whatever that, whatever that inspiration is that that really lights the fire,
you got to chase that.
But when it comes to doing shows and things like that, for me, it's always that combination
of remembering that you are a fan first of music.
And so you just make sure that you weave in things that you really feel like,
whether somebody's coming to their first show or their 100th show,
that they're going to connect with
in a variety of different ways.
And that's all kinds of songs.
I mean, that's songs off our first record,
second record, third.
There's always songs from those records.
I think about this.
So, and last year we put out a Christmas record.
It had been about 20 years
since we did our first one.
And we had done it again
with a good friend
who's a producer named Mark Hudson.
And we collaborated with Mark over the years.
And Mark is famously a storyteller.
And I've heard every one of Mark's stories
at this point.
We've been, you know, working with him.
They've come back.
I've heard them told over and over and over again,
but there's still something about sharing those stories.
Like, when you introduce your friend to a new musician,
you go, Mark, you've got to tell them that story.
And you still enjoy listening to that story,
even though you've heard it told three times,
you've heard the punchline changed around to make sense for the new guy.
But you still are like, you've got to tell the story.
You got to tell the James Brown story.
You got that.
And so I think songs are that way.
Like there's an element to which you're like, okay, I know this.
I know what the punchline is.
I know where the fans are going to clap.
But you still kind of, you can't help but like watching people react to it and feel that sort of connection you get from people.
You know?
I need to hear that story.
I need to hear that song story.
I'm not sure we can say the James Brown story.
There are some good and some stories that are not able to be broadcast on the radio.
They're not able to be broadcast on the internet.
Speaking of that, you know the guitar.
Which is saying something.
Just another thing, too, and I feel like maybe I'm in this mood this morning, but just again, like the joy of it is, like, we walk into the room day after day, and we are here with a guitar, like singing a song we wrote.
I mean, the percentage of the population of the world that gets to make that their job is so small that you're just so grateful that you get to look out and see people that are singing your song back to you.
I mean, that's just bizarre and amazing.
I would say, I'm sure most of the artists that, you know, you respect and know would say the same thing.
Like, it's that in and of itself is such a high.
It's so cool and so humbling that even if you've sung that song a thousand times, you, if you're the guy that's like, oh, my God, I can't believe you all want to hear my song.
You know, you just need to go, you know, just need to go have yourself looked at.
And so it's one thing to have, you know, move forward, try any things, play new songs.
Obviously, you always want to play the next thing and share new music.
But you're just, it's an amazing thing to have people wanting to sing along with you.
I'm imagining like the sleight of hand magician.
Like that guy's in a party.
Like every time goes to the party, people are like, man, man, do the coin track.
Dude, it stays in my hand the whole time.
They're like, we don't care.
Do it again.
But it's just in my hand.
I just keep my hand closed.
Let's do the coin trick, everybody.
Hanson is here.
Cuck your hands for Hanson.
Okay, so, speaking of old and nude, we're going to play your new song.
If I can get myself in this position in front of a microphone.
I was sorry, I wouldn't hear my headphones for a second.
Isaac is, he can't help himself but be technical.
This is a song called I Was Born and the first new song we put out last year.
Hey guys, so because of licensing roles, we can't play anything with music on this Iheart radio channel or podcast anymore.
But you can go to Bobbybones.com to see it.
We hate that we had to take it down.
It wasn't our decision.
But I just wanted to keep you up.
and we wanted to keep up as much as possible.
So go to bobbybones.com to watch or hear whatever you're missing right now.
And thank you for listening to the show.
And sorry about all the legal stuff.
One more segment.
We never do 45 minutes of live radio with an artist.
Never, never.
We're glad to be first.
Never.
Never. Hans is here.
They played the rhyming last night with us as our secret guest.
And I saw every phone come out of the pocket.
As fast they get it up.
They were pulling it out.
It was unlike the artists were crawling over.
They were on the roof.
shooting down
It was amazing last night
So again, I want to thank you guys for coming
And I'm glad to be here
Thank you guys for having us
I mean
Can I at least get a verse and a chorus
At Umba?
You know I'm gonna ask
Somebody's tweeting me like
Yeah let's sing a chorus
Give us a bit of that
Sure
Taylor, go ahead
What are gonna take?
No, I was gonna say
Should we do a chorus
But he's grabbed his guitar
First verse through the chorus
Yeah
Unless you're
Unless you're wanting
Because it's gonna get longer
No let's get it
Play it as long as you want.
I wish people could see the radio like Isaac's struggling to get the guitar back on.
Oh.
Oh, Hanson.
Anytime you guys are in town, you want to come by, you have an open invitation.
Thank you.
Thank you so much.
You know, it's just, it's been a nice 24 hours.
And the fact that you guys, I have people that I know now that say at one point,
they used to go to your house and drop CDs off at your door and you would sign them and mail them back to them.
Like, people would do that, huh?
Well, yeah.
Well, yeah, I mean, back in Oklahoma days where we were just playing.
We are.
three guys, we still live in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
We're on there. You have to listen to the show.
Yeah. Yeah. We love...
You know, man, it's... We try... We're very proud
and want to, you know, keep this kid going. So if anybody needs any CDs signed,
you can drop you've got my house.
And...
Well, not really at my... I mean, maybe Zach's house.
If they can find my house, then I'm actually worried.
Because I live, like, in a dark.
If they can find your house, they might be at risk of getting buckshot.
There is.
Okay, hold on.
Isaac, Zach, Taylor, thank you very much.
For the whole, the last 24 hours.
You have a fan of me, and if you need anything, let me know.
Awesome.
Thank you very much.
Everybody clap your hands for Hanson.
We're going to let them go get some sleep.
Bobby Bones, everybody.
Transmitting across America.
This is a Bobby Bonds show.
Come on, Bob.
Last night was quite the night.
Our band The Raging Idiots and Friends all played this crazy soul
that show at the rhyme and
we haven't had a lot of time to talk about it
nor do we now because
Lanko came in and played Hansen came in
and played I mean it has been crazy all day
but I'm going to tell you highlights
included it ended with
Keith Urban and us the band doing
blue ain't your color and it was awesome
yeah
it's just like
how did this end up here
you look at your feet and you go how do these feet
end up in this spot next
to that to Keith
Keith would stay there
he was there an hour and a half before
just hanging with people
so that was amazing
a real personal highlight
where it was man
I get to do something cool
two of them one was
better than Ezra and singing good
because I listened to that record as a teenager
thousands of times
and he threw me a verse
and I was jamming out
and he knew everywhere to it
go to everywhere
that's awesome
we've been started
it big with Dan and Shea.
We didn't want it to be like a build and like there's an opener and a closing.
If it wasn't what happened, it was just boom, punch him in the face.
There you go.
So Dan and Shay started and we did How Not to.
Luke Combs came out and might have blown a wall out of the place.
He was so strong.
He starts, Luke Holmes starts singing and we know Luke and he's been in here a bunch and
Luke and I've done stuff outside of the show.
But it's like when he sings, every time you go, whoa.
Yeah, that microphone didn't need to be on.
Because he did Tennessee whiskey.
Yes.
And just nailed it.
And then he did Hurricane.
And he's probably the strongest singer we have in the format.
As far as sheer force.
Yeah, him and Chris Stapleton could like do a pretty mean bout.
I think he has more force than Stapleton does.
I'm not comparing singing.
I get you.
I'm just saying it's one of those punching bag games where you just punch it.
And the level goes up.
Yes.
So Luke Combs comes out and does that.
So Darius comes out
We're playing Purple Rain the Raging Idiots are
And Natalie Stovall singing
And Darius just runs out on stage
And it wasn't planned
Nope
And Darius and Natalie Stovall are going back and forth
On Purple Rain and it's whatever
And then Darius is like sorry I had to
And I was like cool cool
We'll see what happens at the end of your set
So Darius does Purple Rain
And then he does
For the first time his new song
Then he does Wagon Wheel
Which the entire crowd was just
On their feet
Morgan number two
They were going crazy for that right
Yeah especially when you guys
did wagon wheel with him and then hold my hand. People were nuts on their feet. So I said since
you interrupted ours, you have to give us a song. And I'm the biggest hooty fan. And Darius was my first
ever radio interview. My whole life, I was 17 years old. So Darius and I've kind of been running the
same path for a long time, except he's much more famous and rich. But other than that, we've been the same
same exact path. Except for the fame and rich and a talent. Same exact path. Little detail.
So I said, do hold my hand. And so I pulled my mic up next to him and I sang the hooty song.
With Darius, right next to him.
With a little love.
And some tenderness.
And it was great.
It's amazing.
It was great.
There's so many.
I'm sure we'll remember things.
But it was a fantastic night.
And we raised a bunch of money for St. Jude.
And that's all for now.
Hanson came out.
Oh, yeah, I can't forget that.
And everybody was, they were so excited.
They were confused.
Like, does my phone record?
Am I on earth?
Oh, yeah.
My phone.
My phone.
My phone.
Record this.
Yeah.
Yeah, this is a real special night.
It's a real special night.
Marin Morris, too, singing my church at the church.
The crowd was praising the Lord at the church.
The church of country music.
Because we stayed there for three hours and she texted me right after the show.
No, no, during the show, she was like, I almost cried.
She said, I had never seen a crowd sing back to me like that in that environment at the rhyming.
Yeah.
And so, yeah, it was great.
We have more stories, but not for another day.
And that day is tomorrow.
Yeah.
Lanko, Brandon came out and sang Greatest Love Story.
I did a little joke.
I was like, hey, I'm going to sing the song acoustically.
And I was like, yes, I was nothing.
And the crowd started singing when I was doing it.
And I was like, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Don't get excited about this.
And then he came out and they sang the whole song.
It was really a phenomenal night.
So that being said, we'll have some more tomorrow.
I just want to say thank you for always letting us have a platform to help St. Jude.
And thanks to all the artists.
Bobby Bonds.
What a show.
Thanks to Lanko for stopping by playing a couple songs.
Thanks to Hansen for coming by playing songs.
We had a big night last night.
I don't even know.
You know the bad thing about doing a show on Monday night?
Tell me, Tuesday morning.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
My name's awesome.
It's amazing.
You know the rough part the next morning.
Today's kind of tough.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Eddie and now we're talking.
We didn't get to bed until about 1 a.m.
And then a couple hours later,
I don't know, rise the shine.
Except it's really like this.
Oh, son of it.
What time am I going to get back to nap?
When I see you, we will see you tomorrow.
Thank you so much for listening to the show.
I hope you Tuesday's awesome.
See you on Wednesday.
Get your Bobby bones on.
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The Disneyland Resort is everything.
We came to play the Calliway.
Felt like I was in the round-up game
with Woody at Pixar Pier.
Have you been holding out on us?
No, just showing you where the real Hollywood stars are.
Like Tiana's Bayou Adventure.
Oh, there's jazz, right?
And a drop.
You'll see.
Grab a Mickey Brussels on the way.
Girl, you'll read in my mind.
We're almost there.
Disney California Adventure Park and Disneyland Park.
We came to play.
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