The Bobby Bones Show - MON PT 2: Bobby Relives Blue Angels Flight + Why Did Amy Have To Leave The Show? + Lunchbox Forgot His Anniversary + Why Was Bobby Taken Off ACM’s?
Episode Date: May 18, 2026We started with Around the Room talking about two crazy and unfortunately tragic gun stories that left us shook. We also talked about the two jets that got stuck and crashed during an airshow over the... weekend. Bobby talked about his experience flying with the Blue Angels and the crazy effect it had on his body. Then, we got clarification from Caller Julie about pediatricians being able to see kids even after they graduate high school. Bobby shares why Amy had to leave the show today. A listener called out Lunchbox on forgetting his wife’s anniversary and he defended himself why it’s not something they make a big deal about. Bobby shared why he was not a part of the ACMs last night and recaps the big winners.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey, Niall.
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You too, Joe.
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All right, let's go around the room.
No, Amy.
She is going off to see her son run in state.
And he's doing the mile relay.
No, 4 by 800.
Oh, so the 2 mile relay.
Yeah.
Because 4 by 400 would be the mile relay.
4 by 800. He's running 800?
Yeah.
So 2 miles.
Dang.
And this is a relay.
So there's 4 of them doing it?
Four, yeah.
So, good question.
4 by 800 means all four of them are running 800 meters, which is 2 laps.
Okay, got it.
Two laps sucks.
Yeah, dude.
One lap sucks.
One lap sucks because you think you can sprint it.
And about 3 quarters in, you're like,
Just blows.
So, yeah, we hope they do well in state.
That'd be super cool.
Let's go around the room.
Lunchbox lead us.
Yeah, Austin, Texas was put on lockdown yesterday.
After random shootings, there was reports of a car just driving around shooting people.
There was like 12 incidents where they were shooting into businesses, two fire stations, people out in front of a store, and they were switching cars.
so it's making it hard for the police to track them.
They finally tracked him down and arrested a 17-year-old,
a 15-year-old, and then I believe a 14-year-old.
Two of them were arrested right when the police chase happened,
one escaped for like six hours and was waiting outside a grocery store,
but he was covered in mud waiting for a ride when someone noticed and called police.
I saw it when it was at 10 because I saw the press conference
because I follow a lot of Austin news because we all live there or from there.
and so I saw they were like, hey, we got to lock down.
These 10 instances are all related.
I didn't know there were a couple more.
Must have happened right after.
So it was all during the day.
Yeah, they were just driving around randomly shooting.
Whoa.
It was supposedly stolen guns and they stole like four cars during this.
Kids.
Yeah.
I told you guys about the time I was behind a car, right?
And I just saw them stick a gun out the window and shoot.
And they were shooting to like an open field so they weren't shooting at anyone.
But it was like pop, pop, pop, pop right in front of me, like two cars up.
freaked me out. I'd never seen that before. And there were kids in the car.
Yeah, I'd probably be kids if they're doing that. Same kind of deal, I have a friend that you guys all know that was in traffic and he saw somebody get out of a car and go and shoot into another car. It was two cars behind them.
Sounds familiar like you've told the story, but dang, dude. They were sitting just a normal place here in town in traffic. Someone gets out and shoots.
do do do it's it's weird how you react to that because like when I saw it like and I had it was me
and my two kids we were in the back we were coming from like the driving ranges and we were playing
golf and immediately I was like what is that where I thought I've always thought like if I saw
a gun and shooting I'd be like get down and like but that wasn't my reaction immediately it was just
like so shocking to me that it was like what is that and then once I realized those guns then I
told the boys to get down but that was I'd never seen that before one time in high school
we were mess two cars
we were in one car another car
kind of road raging whatever
racing a little bit
and getting in front of each other
and so we pulled up the stoplight next to him
and my buddy wrapped his arm in a towel
stuck it out the window
and they
right through the red light
got in a wreck
and we drove off
the towel
acting like it's a gun
yeah I'm like his gun
like it was going to muffle the sound
got it
and they saw it
and they ran the red light
and got in a wrecked
they wrecked
they wrecked
See later.
There was a story that came out today too
that a guy, this is a gun story.
Police say a toddler pulled a gun from a diaper
bag during a traffic stop.
Oh.
Officers had stopped the driver for not wearing a seatbelt.
Then discovered he had outstanding warrants.
While police were taking him into custody,
they noticed three children under the age of three in the back seat
and one of the toddlers allegedly pointed the handgun at an officer
after taking it from the diaper bag.
Oh.
authorities recovered the gun
which was unloaded but it did have
a loaded magazine nearby. The father
now faces charges including child endangerment
because you can't have a gun that easily
gotten by kids. In a diaper bag.
And they
CBS News that story.
But how does a kid even like three years old
to know how to hold a gun?
You see it. It's modeled.
Yeah.
That is so young to be seen something like that.
Yeah, but three-year-olds are pretty smart.
but they pick up on things quick.
And the three-year-old may have a toy gun.
That's true.
Do you give a three-year-old boy a toy gun?
What a water?
I mean...
Yeah, Nerf guns.
You do?
Yeah.
And water guns.
So I guess when they see a gun that kind of looks like their toy gun.
I would think it's more than that.
I would think they've seen...
Oh, in this...
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
In this situation.
Okay.
All right.
Well, that one's a downer.
You got an upper or no?
No, it's kind of a downer.
Okay, Morgan, you have an upper?
But not a half-offer.
I have upper.
No, no, I want to go to Morgan first then and we'll come back.
We want to keep this thing even.
Go ahead, Morgan.
I don't know that mine's enough either.
Oh, crap, all right.
Let me find the upper then.
Hold on, hold on, hold on.
Let's see.
Morgan's is a good one, though.
Yeah.
I watch the video.
It's good.
I hope they're all good.
Hold on a second.
Let me find an upper real quick.
Gen Z is giving the hacky sack a comeback.
Oh, okay.
I never played hacky sack.
Same.
Small group did.
I guess I would try it occasionally and I was so bad at it that I'd be like, I'm out.
But I never played hockey sack.
If you were good at soccer, are you good at Hackysack?
I don't know. I didn't really play.
That was a stoner thing.
Yeah, it was a stoner thing.
Yeah, long hair dudes.
Yeah, long hair dudes, baggy jeans.
Yeah, that was definitely a type.
Hacky sacks are suddenly having a huge comeback with Gen Z popping up across high schools and college campuses.
That's from Business Insider.
All right, that's kind of an upper.
That's my whole story there.
That wasn't my lead story, but I just wanted to shift it a little bit.
All right, Morgan, what do you have?
So there was a teen takeover in a Chipotle in Washington, D.C.,
So a bunch of these teens run in.
They're wearing all black.
They have the face mask over their like mouths.
You can kind of see their eyes.
But they are running around and just punching each other,
throwing chairs at each other, throwing high chairs.
I saw that video.
Yeah.
And we have the video if we want to throw it up on the screen.
Oh, it's mayhem.
I didn't know what that was.
Insane.
Yeah.
And what's crazy, though, about it,
which I think is a good thing,
but they're charging the parents
because they left their teens unattended in a place.
Look at this. They just all go in and like do fight club.
I mean, one kid is, I mean, he's hitting with the high chair.
Boom.
Like furniture is everywhere.
It's kind of like wrestling.
They're all in, fighting each other.
Probably not super real fighting, but they're like breaking chairs over each other's back.
I mean, hitting with a high chair is pretty real.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, that part was pretty real.
Yeah, like these teen takeovers, is this becoming a thing now?
Did we show that?
Did we show that?
Yeah.
Were they're coming out and doing fights and brawls like this anywhere and this is supposed to be fun?
I mean, I'm sure it's fun to them.
I've not heard of these.
I've heard of people going into like jewelry stores and like crushing or clothing stores and stealing all at once.
I've not seen one like this.
What it looks like though, too, is they're not hurting other people.
They're just going in and creating a ruckus with each other.
And they're destroying the restaurant.
It sounds like a scheduled meetup to fight.
Yeah, but I don't think.
they're not fighting. I think they're like
rough housing, but I don't think
they're going in to just fight each other.
Oh, I think they are. I don't think so, dude,
because like, they're all going in together.
And those, even those chair hits. And look at the
high chair right there, he could totally sweet.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. He's not doing. Make sure he doesn't hit his buddy.
I mean, that one, he went pretty hard. He nailed the dude.
Okay, it's a fight. It's a real fight.
I don't think it's a real fight because they're all dressed
the same. More like a mosh bit.
Yeah. Because they all go in
together. Why would you not fight outside the restaurant?
And why would you like go in, organized to, to go by
Like, okay, buddy, we're going to go in.
Let's all go in and match clothes.
Yeah.
We'll all walk in together.
And then, no, when you want to fight somebody, you friggin' fight somebody.
Yeah, and how do you know which one's your buddy?
They're all dressed the same, covered up.
Right.
If you're all wearing the same thing, it doesn't make sense.
It does look like a crazy mosh pit.
Yeah, I've seen that at a show before.
I feel like that's a controlled environment, though.
Like, this, you're going into a Chapulte to do it.
Well, it's more fun.
And it's more fun.
Man, if you're working there, like, you just, I'm out, right?
You back out.
You back out.
because you don't know what's going to happen if somebody's going to pull a gun.
Yeah.
So you just step away from the guacamole.
So what's happening here?
The parents get in trouble and what?
Do they have to pay for everything?
So the parents can either face fines, court-ordered classes, or six months in jail.
Court-ordered classes for the parents.
Wow.
That's like when my kids are late to school.
Your idea.
I'd be pissed.
Yeah, that was your kid?
But how are they going to know which kid is who?
Yeah, I don't know.
Well, and at what point is the age 18 where it stops?
stops being on the parents.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, for sure.
But like even 17 to stop being like,
if you can go to Juvenile Hall,
it kind of stops being on the parents.
Otherwise, the parents would do the time instead of the kid.
Yeah, anyway, crazy video.
I saw it.
I don't know what's happening.
I don't like to stay too long on those
because then it starts feeding me other fights.
Yeah, that happened to me.
So I don't stay on those.
I watched a fight the other night by accident
because the context around it.
Then I got fed like seven fights in a row.
I don't like to see people getting punched.
It's not my thing.
I can't get rid of it.
I cannot get rid of my algorithm.
You can.
You just have to swipe out of it so fast.
I still keep every like 10 videos is another fight still.
But then you're staying on it.
You're staying on it too long.
Okay.
Eddie, what is your story?
Okay, so did you see these jets collide at an air show?
Oh, man.
The first time I swiped out because I did not want to see it.
The second header made me stay because instead of going jets collide, it said pilots eject.
Yes.
That's the only reason I watched.
it because I knew I wasn't watching death.
Dude, I watched it. When it popped up, I'm like,
I don't understand what's going on. Can we show it?
Yeah. Because it looked like there were
two jets just hovering in air.
You know, like there, nothing
was happening. And then they fell. And then
once I read about it, I'm like, oh my gosh, this
was an air show. Yeah,
the fact that
I thought at first they
might have died. I did not watch the collision.
Looks like they get stuck together. It does. It looks like
when two dogs are humping and they can't untangle.
Like, you can't take them apart.
Isn't that kind of what it looks like?
Yes, it does.
And then all four of them come parachuting out.
Yes.
And the good news that I have is that they were all found safe.
Yeah.
They're in stable condition.
The only reason I watch the video.
Oh, they're going right into that crash site.
They can pull strings and steer it.
So they do not land in the, they're close because they ejected at a pretty low.
You're not supposed to skydive from that point.
Yeah.
But yeah.
You know what I was thinking was since they were glued together.
that the eject wasn't going to work.
You know, like if they're glued together, say they're head and head, right?
Like the cockpit to cockpit.
Yeah, like you eject into one of the planes.
Yeah, so that's what I thought at first too, but crazy.
Also, like, I just would think with that ejection,
that one of the plane would like come around and hit you.
Right.
I'm sure they have the science of it figured out where that's probably not going to happen,
but what a crazy situation.
Crazy video.
And it made me think, too, like air shows.
Where are we at with air shows?
They made me uncomfortable.
Right?
Like, does anyone...
I think they're cool for people to seek.
And it's also like sometimes our military, highlighting our military, that does a lot of things.
One, it's patriotism, two, makes people want to be in the military.
Okay.
Like, it's a commercial in a lot of ways, too.
I see that.
I just feel like there's so many unnecessary risks.
There are definitely some risks.
To air shows that, like, I think we're good without them.
We grew up going to them, too, because Wichita was really big for...
Air shows in general. It's the air capital of the world. So we would go to him a lot and my dad
working in it. It was like him showing off the things that he was working on. So it was kind of like for
families too to see all the things that they were doing. Do you think it was like one person who
made a mistake and all four of them had to parachute out and then when they land on the ground,
they're like, Frank, you idiot. You idiot. Now our planes are done, dude. Like one person made
a mistake there, probably. Unless it was, you know, machinery. The technology made a mistake.
but let's just say one person made a mistake.
They created all that.
Millions of dollars gone.
Four people almost died.
They parachuted down.
They get down and like, dude, Frank, what's up, dude?
What were you thinking?
The CEO of the International Council of Air Shows
said there used to be an average of about two deaths a year,
but over the past decade, the average has been closer to one death per year.
I don't know how many air shows there are, though.
A lot.
A lot, I would think.
Roughly 200.
Around the country?
a year.
Yeah, that's a lot.
Yeah, that's a lot.
If somebody's dying for 200 shows,
that seems to be a high number.
Even if you're lowering it,
that still seems to be too high.
If it were like of 8,000 shows.
Okay.
And I'm thinking, is it worth the risk?
I obviously think it is
for different reasons
or they wouldn't do it.
That's crazy.
I remember when I did the angel.
Oh, the Blue Angels.
Blue Angel. That's the craziest thing I've ever done.
But you, okay, so with that, there were, you guys did some crazy stuff, but.
There was no show, and we were flying just us.
Yeah, there was no other plane with you.
I think they were doing a show the next day because there were multiple blue angels there.
But, and I think I block it out a lot of times.
Because people will say, like, what's the craziest thing you've ever done?
And I'm like, going off a cliff, dancing on TV.
I'm telling you.
You forget about this one.
It's not crazy in the fact.
that I was with the most trained, superbly skilled, one of the world's finest pilots. So that part
of it's not crazy. It's crazy they put me in to fly. Yeah. But just being in that was like nothing
I have ever felt in my life. I don't like to fly. I don't like heights. But I couldn't turn it
down because it was like an honor. They called and said, hey, because of the work you do around the
community. We think it'd be amazing for us to celebrate you by putting you in this flight. This is
something that hardly anybody gets to do. So I say absolutely yes. And then I'm nervous about it the
whole time. And then I go. And it is pretty awesome when you wear the suit before you get in.
Yeah. That's a great picture, man. Like I'm like, I'm in the freaking hell's angels suit.
Blue angels. Yeah, yeah, yeah, whatever. Very different. Yeah, yeah. And then you go through a little
class, but I'm not flying.
Yeah. So they don't have to teach me how to do anything in the plane. What's in your cockpit? Do you
have a control that's not? Yeah, but it's not working. Okay. It's like a dummy control.
Okay. But you can still hold it and act like you are. Yeah. You can. I think at times it does work,
but I think they can just like deactivate it if they're doing one of those kind of flights.
And in the class, they mostly are telling you how to not pass out. Because they're like,
it's going to pull you so hard.
And there are no G suits.
And some of those planes that actually do go a little faster,
they get to wear G suits that fight all the Gs you're going against.
This, it's cloth.
And they're teaching you to shove your feet down in the exact right way
so all of your blood doesn't leave your head and you pass out.
Oh my gosh.
And the faster it goes, the harder you have to shove your legs down into the ground
because by you shoving your legs into the ground,
it's keeping your blood up into your stomach, your chest.
and hopefully your head.
And so they start off, and it is such a pull, it goes straight up.
You go and they pull straight up.
And you're going, oh, and the glass is completely see-through.
So you're seeing everything above you and below you, and you're flipping.
It's wild, and you're like, that's the craziest thing I've ever done.
And then he goes, okay, that was the intro.
That's not the craziest thing you see.
craziest thing you've ever done. And it was so hard on my body that I wasn't even sick yet
because it was such a shock. If I ride in a car, I get sick. I wasn't sick yet on this because my
body was like, what's happening. I don't even know what to do. I don't even know what to get sick.
And I would see when he would go and he would start to, he'd go, hey, we're going to do three or four Gs.
I think we ended up going six. I could be wrong. But I think we ended up going six or seven.
I can see like the bottom of my eyes would start to get black from the bottom up. And I would
shove down even harder and I can make them go away. No way. Crazy. There was one point
where my eyes were fully black and I could still hear. Dude, that's crazy. I was totally aware
of everything. My eyes were wide open because I had to check to make sure they were open, but it was
fully black. I could see nothing because of the blood in my head. And I did in the video,
because they do give you a video, I did pass out once. And you see me go full limp. It's pull and I
do this. And I go full limp and then I come back and you seem to go,
back up. I think that's on our YouTube, right? I feel like it is. I feel like I edit a video
of you doing that. It's just they want you to push your legs down, like squeeze your black
everything. I got off and I got out of the plane, took the pictures. I laid in the floor for 30
minutes as soon as I got back in the building. I was so sick and just so discombobulated. Is that a
word? Yeah. I've heard that word. Feels like it's a word. It feels like it's a word.
I laid it for half an hour
and then I got in the car
and tried to drive home
and I could and I pulled over to Chick-fil-A
and I had to get food
and sit in the parking lot
and laying my chair back
for another half hour
Okay, so when you passed out
and you woke back up
Did you remember where you were?
Absolutely.
I was like, we were in the middle of flips.
We're in the middle of flips.
Like barrel rolls.
And I was like, oh God, oh God,
it scares you.
And then he's like, ha-ha, ha,
you okay back there?
No, no, I'm not.
And you have to be in decent shape
to do it.
Like, I had to get checked.
I had to go take a physical for it.
And so I don't think they feared that I was going to die or anything.
And I think they like, I don't know what I could take as opposed to other people, what they can take.
But I think they take you to write about your limit.
And so I think they like it if they have somebody who can hang out and go a little harder.
And I felt like I was able to go harder because I was in good shape.
That is wild, man.
Really cool.
Really cool.
One of the coolest things I've ever done.
Also one of the craziest things I've ever done.
Would you do it again?
No, no, never, never.
Never. I would do it again for the first time knowing what I know, but I would never do it again.
I would not skydive for the first time again. Oh, really? Dude, that was so much fun.
You had a trained like Army Ranger on you. I didn't. I showed up by myself and was like, anybody could jump with me? And they were like, yeah, tiny Tammy's over there. She's like five foot two. They strapped her.
Yeah, I guess it is different. Yeah. We flew with a golden nights. You felt comfortable like I felt comfortable.
because you had the greatest.
You're right.
Did you know at the time that a blue angel had crashed, like a few years before that?
No, but that wouldn't have affected me a few years.
Yeah.
If it would have crashed that morning or the day before the same site.
It was the same site.
But the day before.
No, no, no.
But like two or three years before.
Wouldn't it matter.
I don't feel like that has anything to do with what I was doing.
And then also, let's say it was the month before at the same site.
I think I would have actually felt better about it.
The same thing about when planes get hijacked or plane crashes.
I want to get on the flight right after because you know one thing ain't happening, it ain't
getting hijacked and it ain't crashing.
Mike, is that the video?
Yeah, this is where he passed it out a little bit.
Hold on okay.
If you're watching on YouTube or you can go over to our YouTube page and watch it.
Okay, so look at this is straight up.
Look at the whole ground, the earth's behind you.
And I'm talking here.
Oh my God.
flipping around.
Oh, we can't see your eyes.
No, no eyes, but you'll see me whenever I do pass.
My head gets slung around.
I'm looking around.
Man, I remember we were going back home.
I was so happy.
Okay, here we go.
7.4 G's is what we go.
Let's see.
Traveling.
Man, I'm missing the video on forever.
When they hit that and that exhaust comes off,
you can see my face like sucking back into itself here.
Oh my gosh.
I bet you I pass out later.
Oh, right there, right there.
Oh, no.
Was that it?
How your head started going to the side.
I think, dude, that's just because we're spinning.
Oh, my God.
It's like a rocket.
That's the clouds.
You're above the clouds.
That's the earth.
You're going straight up.
Holy.
Dude, that's crazy.
It looks like you're in space.
I can tell you for sure the Earth is round.
Thank you.
Yeah.
Thanks for clarifying.
Mike, how long is the whole video.
This whole thing is like three minutes.
Let it keep rolling.
I think that was it.
What we saw.
Look at you grabbing your helmet.
I'm done, dude.
Look at my face. I'm done and I'm...
Oh.
Did you feel sick while you were up there?
I know you get car sick.
On the way home.
Yeah, you get sick in a car, it is?
No, it's like I said.
At first I didn't because my body was so shocked by it.
But while you were in it, you didn't.
On the way home, when we were slowly going back, it started to get in.
And when I got out, it killed me.
But man, that is...
Oh, you see my face just being sucked back in.
Man, I haven't seen this video on forever.
That's a really cool thing that I did.
Yeah.
Not a lot of people get to do that.
Yeah, and I think I don't think about it much because of how painful it was at the end, but that's really cool.
You're just like going to the sky right there.
Like I really appreciate that right now.
What on earth?
Yeah.
And also cool you did it before AI because people don't think it isn't real, but that's very real.
The fact that the glass is a complete see-through makes the experience so crazy.
Yeah.
Those things don't fight anymore, right?
Like those Blue Angels?
No idea.
They weren't.
I was praying to God that we weren't getting to fight with me up there because my little thing was down.
My little button was down.
I couldn't get any of the dog fight in action.
this is the takeoff here just watch the take off so here we go it's all good but when he pulls up
we get off the ground and then it just goes up that looks like normal yeah yeah yeah we're still
normal we're getting up going going fast I'm talking I'm talking I'm talking okay okay mother
oh do you go straight up dude straight up six G's right there that just doesn't feel normal and then we
start dumping over as the barrel roll upside down we just fly upside down for a while oh no way dude
No, that ain't cool.
Right there, I'm like, let me out of here.
How long were you up there total?
I would probably guess half an hour.
That's a long time.
That's a long time.
No passing out drinks or anything?
No.
No in-flight service?
It was basically frontier, dude.
No food.
No drinks.
Yeah, there you go.
That's cool.
And they don't fly in combat.
They're just, they fly in air shows.
Did they ever fly in combat?
That's crazy upside down like that.
That's all upside down.
It just says that they're active duty Navy and Marine Corps,
but their mission is dedicated to public relations recruitment and flight demonstrations.
You're like a bat hanging in a cage.
You're upside down for like a whole minute.
Dude, I'm telling you.
I need to watch this at home and like really appreciate it.
Hmm.
All right.
Do you see the Waymo story?
No, another one.
Hilarious.
What happened?
That's hilarious.
They're all like in a, well, there's a few instances because we talked about this a little bit last week.
but they're all like in a neighborhood in Atlanta in this town.
That's like kind of where they gather and drive around in circles until they're called or whatever.
No way.
And the neighbors are like, what's going on?
Like get these Waymos out of here.
We applied the clip ray?
It's almost every little coldest sack around our area.
So I think it's a real problem.
Waymo after Waymo after Waymo enter this dead end street, usually early in the morning.
I think yesterday morning we had 50 cars that came through between six and seven.
Neighbors on Battleview Drive started seeing the autonomous driverless cars two months ago.
but the groupings and large number of Waymos
just started circling in and out
in the last couple weeks.
And we had at 1.8 Waymos that were stuck
trying to figure out how to turn around.
The Waymos are empty and not picking anyone up
and parents are worried,
not only calling it excessive but dangerous.
Waymo's outside your house, just driving in circles.
You think that's like their cell waiting lot or whatever?
You know, like what you're waiting for a ride at the airport.
That's crazy.
That's funny.
That's from Channel 2.
action news. Yeah, where do Waymos go when they're not being used? Like, can they just park somewhere?
Apparently, no, this neighborhood. Dang. It does seem like that movie leave the world behind
on Netflix. All the Teslas are driving through. Do you guys watch that? I feel like I did. Is that Leo?
No, that's, don't look up. Okay. No, I have not seen it. Julia Roberts, Ethan Hawk. Haven't seen it.
Basically, technology crashes. Yeah. It was good. You love that stuff.
Yeah.
It's your wheelhouse.
Yeah.
It was good.
But I wonder if it was good
just because I liked that stuff.
What do you think?
I liked it.
I didn't like the ending.
Love the ending.
I loved it.
Hated the ending.
And that gives nothing away
because I loved it and Mike hated it.
All right.
Is that everybody's story?
That's us?
Yeah.
Let's see.
There's anything else
that I want to get to.
You guys won't like this one,
but I'll just brush over the headline.
Oxford physicist says
that versions of you in other universes
may be affecting your life in this one.
I don't know, man.
Okay.
I think these people are starting to say stuff
so they can get famous.
Or have they always been saying it
and it hasn't really been picked up
because the government wasn't saying
we got all these files, dimensions.
It's the alternate universe.
That to me is like the aliens to you.
You know, like you say aliens, everyone thinks,
oh, little green men.
Alternate universe to me is like you've lost me.
like there is in theory every decision you've ever made you made the other and that triggered an alternate universe if you would have done that that's crazy i don't know
a physicist is revisiting the idea that the parallel universes may exist alongside our own through many worlds interpretation of it goes into quantum mechanics
which suggests every quantum event could create branching alternate realities that's kind of what i said they said it way better but yeah bigger words under the theory countless versions of people and outcomes
may exist simultaneously with different choices and events unfolding in separate universes.
The only thing that I have found that makes sense in explanations, especially early on when I
started to read about this, was we picture the universe that we're in now.
Yes.
We're on channel two.
You flip over on your TV to channel three.
Now, it's in the same exact spot, but it's a whole different frequency.
and it's got a whole different life on it.
It's, it's NBC and not ABC.
But it's still you.
But it's, I'm just saying even the TV box.
I'm just saying when you flip channels
or even on Netflix,
if you're watching one show,
all those other shows exist.
You just can't see them right then.
And somebody's watching them.
But you can get out.
So there are spectrums
where different things can live
on the exact same spectrum.
They're just at different frequencies.
Are you us?
Are you living on a different channel right now?
We're in the same one.
No, we are right now, right?
Yes.
But to this whole alternate universe, the decisions you make in that universe affect the one you're living in now, right?
This person is saying that, but I don't know if they cross over.
Okay.
I don't know anything or even if they're real.
But when I was in maybe ninth grade, I won a science theory competition at a science fair
because my theory was if space is.
is actually unlimited, there's a planet called Santa Claus PooPo Planet.
Okay.
And they said, why?
I said, because if it's unlimited, eventually, you're going to use every sound to name
every body, every planet, every star, every everything, if it goes forever.
So by using all sounds, eventually you're going to have to use the sound, Santa Claus Pupu
to name one of the planets because they go on forever.
Yeah.
And I won the whole thing with that, Santa Claus Poo Poo Planet.
They couldn't prove you wrong.
Well, no, there is no proving it wrong.
Because if it's unlimited, it can be anything.
It'll be everything.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Lili lulu lulu.
Yep.
There'll be a planet called that.
Right.
It's infinity.
That's pretty good, dude.
How old were you?
Eight or ninth grade.
Gosh.
That was fun.
I won a poetry contest in sixth grade, a statewide poetry contest.
Statewide?
Yeah, it was called, if I had a wish.
If I had a wish, there would be world peace, there would be no more wars.
I'd heal all deceased or something like that.
I can remember the first lines of it.
I won the whole thing.
They were like, dang, this kid.
Maybe I was fourth grade.
I was fourth grade.
I did peace and deceit.
That's my big rhyme.
They were like, that's a good rhyme.
Yeah, nailed that too.
All right.
I think that's good.
We got more to do, but everybody good?
Good.
Is that everybody's story?
Can I mention a couple things?
I guess I can.
I'm the boss.
Do whatever you want, man.
Yeah, good point.
Okay.
I made notes here.
Waymo's got it.
Ray, did you get your message?
I got you into Kane's bar.
Morgan One hit me up, and she said, I'm on the list.
Thursday night.
we're going to be christening it.
Kane Browns opening,
Kane Browns on Broadway.
I told Ray I would get him in,
so I had Morgan one set it up.
Thursday night.
It's Thursday night, right?
And you're going to go to that?
Ray, Thursday night, you're going to go to that.
Yeah, Thursday night.
Heck yeah, just one day of work left for the week.
I'm down with that.
Ray, you could have been five, dude.
I couldn't do a Monday or Tuesday.
That would have been brutal to then have to recover the whole week.
It's just one day I got to get through.
Okay.
Good.
I want you to go,
I'd love to hear about it on Friday.
Yeah, it'll be dope.
It's not probably going to be my wife.
She works pretty late now, so I'm going to roll solo.
Oh, boy, that's trouble.
But, I mean, I'm not in college.
I'm 40.
Like, I'm that confident in myself.
I can roll into a bar by myself and say, table for one.
Oh, boy.
Why don't you have, like, Abby or somebody go with you?
Yes.
I could.
I think it's legit my wife's name, though.
I'd have to get that changed.
But, yeah, that's an option.
It probably wouldn't be hard.
I mean, just call Martha Kane's manager.
And I'm not getting hammered.
But you can go, it doesn't matter. I'm just saying there are people here that would go with you.
I'll do a cane bomb, do a cane seltzer and call tonight. But the plan is, honestly, to go to it and then just stay here.
Oh, come back here and sleep. Yeah, I'm not going all the way back to the country, then all the way back to the city, then all the way back to the country.
That's like old school, Ray. Oh, that's kidding me? That's in my DNA staying at the radio station.
That's why you get into radio because of the hours. You can party and then you just sleep at the station and wake up at your job.
There you go. That's why we do it.
Okay, let's break.
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In the moment, it felt like it was going on forever.
I didn't think I was going to live.
I was terrified.
There was no anything inside those eyes.
They turned black.
It scared the hell out of me.
That was your first murder case?
Yes, sir.
Fear to say this was the biggest case of your career?
Yes, sir.
Rape a murder for a child.
She's as bad as it gets.
I would think so.
People.
wake up. I'm the woman that saw the murder take place by Creveit and DePippo.
Anthony DePippo showed no signs of remorse, appearing unfazed after being sentenced to the maximum.
I said, I'm not guilty. I'll take it to the grief.
Listen to the devil's quarry on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
And to hear the devil's quarry ad free with exclusive content, subscribe to LaVeth for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts.
Hey, I'm Hoda Kotby, host of the podcast, Joy 101 with Hoda Kotby.
Together, we're going to have meaningful conversations with the world's most fascinating people.
Like when actress Olivia Munn shared how she overcame fierce health challenges.
I've gone through breast cancer and then helped my mother through breast cancer, and that was more difficult.
There's a lot of people who understand postpartner depression.
I was not prepared for postpartum anxiety.
Listen to Joy 101 with Hoda Kotby on the IHeart 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're here, since everyone has a podcast, we want it to as well.
And we've had some incredible guests so far.
And now our good friend, Nile Horn, is joining the show.
How's it going, boys?
Hey, Niall.
It was the same thing with Slow Hands.
Slow Hands is not about anything else, really, is it?
You know, or taste so good can't be about food.
You do the same, Nick, with some of the stuff that you've done.
You too, Joe.
Drop what you're doing and listen to Hey Jonas on the Iheart Radio app,
Apple Podcast, or wherever you listen.
into your podcast.
All right, let's go over and talk to Julie, who is in New Hampshire.
Hey, Julie, you're on.
Good morning.
Good morning, studio.
Morning.
I was calling just to, you had made a comment about the pediatrician and you had seen
older kids in the office.
Yes.
And when my daughter graduated.
Go ahead.
Oh, go ahead.
Oh, no, we're just dancing around.
Going, you're up.
Go ahead.
No, and my daughter, when she was graduating high school, we figured we had to go to a new pediatrician,
and the pediatrician said, nope, you get to go all through college.
Wow.
And now, fast forward four years, my daughter just graduated college, and she went for the last time,
and she said it was so odd seeing toddlers and then herself.
Oh, she thought it was odd, too.
I wasn't shaming anyone.
I think I need to, that's what I was going to say before your story was.
to me it was a shock to see older kids there when the walls were painted with little fishies.
So I understand if you get a doctor, you want to stay with that doctor.
I had never been to a pediatrician.
I didn't go to one as a kid and we were going with our baby.
And so it was a baby and I saw another baby and then I saw like a 16 year old boy with a mustache.
And I was like something feels a little off here.
But what I've learned is, because my life is just that, always learning, is that you go until you can't go anymore.
You kind of age out of the pediatrician.
What's the difference?
Like, does a doctor only know what's up with people until they turn 18 or like...
My understanding is these doctors specialize in child medicine.
But it doesn't mean they don't understand adult medicine.
But they're dealing with kids, how to communicate with kids, etc.
Oh, that's probably it.
They're probably better just dealing with kids.
And they're dealing with a lot of babies.
Yeah.
And there's an education on babies that I know that normally...
normal adult doctors don't do. They don't have babies. They have them, but they don't treat them.
My pediatrician was so rude. Like just, that's odd. Pediatrician must be like super nice and
I know. And he was so rough with me all the time. I'd be like, ow, dude, that hurts. And he'd be like,
open your mouth. Come on. Open it. Hurry up. It's like, it was so weird. Because now that I think
about it, yeah, like pediatricians, they're supposed to know how to deal with kids and make them feel
comfortable at the doctor. But mine was bad. You sure that was a pediatrician? I wasn't just like
Carl? No, it was because he had the giraffes on the wall.
Oh, he did? Yeah. Julie, was your daughter, like, was she sad to lose that relationship?
Because that seems like a very long doctor-patient relationship there.
Yes. And I also, I wouldn't feel shamed when you were talking about it. I also felt how odd it was that she continued, would continue it to go.
So I was on the same page, and I just thought it was interesting that they get to go until college.
Well, I appreciate you calling in no way. And I hope.
I was clear when I initially said it to.
I wasn't shaming.
I was confused because, again, there's all these things that are making it more fun for a two or three or four-year-old to be there.
And then a kid in high school walks up with his ankle injury from football practice, you know?
Well, thanks, Julie.
Congratulations on your daughter.
She just graduated college.
Is that what you said?
Yeah, yeah, Saturday.
That's awesome.
Congratulations on that.
Thanks.
All right.
Thank you for calling.
See you later.
Thank you.
Have a great day.
Bye-bye.
It's almost like phone lines now are getting the Zoom delay.
Really? That's why you guys are...
We used to not have the Zoom delay.
Back of my day, phone lines were solid.
Immediate.
Now it's like the Zoom delay where you got to give it a second
or you start talking over the top of each other.
Amy just left.
So Amy went to go watch her son run in state,
and he is running in Knoxville, which is a couple hours away.
And I think she would have missed it had lunchbox not told her
that Knoxville is a different time zone.
Yeah.
Amy didn't realize.
that that she was going to be going to eastern time zone so she was going to be late miss her son i was
like amy you got to go no i got plenty of time i mean i'm basically a hero we are on the as far right
as you can be of the central time zone right and that sucks so you drive a little bit to the east boom
you're popping a time zone which means our relationship with the sun and darkness is awful all the time
yeah it's different even when it is the best it's still the worst of everybody in the central time
zone. But yeah, you drive a little bit to the right
and the next thing you know you're in Eastern time zone and it's pretty
crazy and she would have missed it because it's so
close you wouldn't think that would be a time zone change.
That happened to me. We were taking my kids to
a state football game and it was in Knoxville
and we're like, we got plenty of time.
We get there, it's half time
because I didn't realize. I think I told you
guys this. It was so stupid. I could
not. I was so dumb. Let's go
to Catherine in West Virginia. Hey, Catherine,
you're on the show.
Good morning, studio.
Morning.
So I just want to let
you know lunchbox as much as you would like to believe that she forgot the anniversary quote
unquote she didn't that's really just a test for you to make sure that you remembered the
anniversary we have a tendency to do that to keep you guys on your toes uh you're you're absolutely
i mean i'm glad you think you're playing games with me you think you're playing chess and i'm playing
checkers but my wife is just not that good okay like she does not play checker or she doesn't
play chess uh i mean there was a couple years ago when she texting me
happy anniversary the day before because she had the day wrong.
I mean, her, her parents all texted happy anniversary on the wrong day.
So I promise my wife wasn't playing games.
She just happened to remember why we were sitting there at the spring carnival and she
looked at her phone and saw the date.
Also, maybe it's not that big a deal after you've had a bunch of them.
And it's not one of the milestone ones.
Correct.
If it's 11.
Yeah, 11.
You think?
It seems about like there's nothing really special about 11.
I feel like it's always a big deal to them, though.
To them meaning women?
Yes.
Because like to us, I don't, I mean, dude, I don't care to celebrate anything.
Don't care.
Is that because you don't want to spend the money?
No.
I just, like, for me, days, like, remember, you know when people are dating and they're just like,
it's our two month anniversary.
Like, that's not real, like two months.
But whatever.
I just don't like celebrating, like, just days.
What do they do?
What about Christmas?
That's celebrating a day.
I do love Christmas.
I do love that one day.
Do you like celebrating just a day?
can remember. It helps. But like birthdays, even my birthday, I'm like, it's fine, but like, we
don't have to do anything crazy. Yeah, but you're getting older now. That's what? That's true.
It starts to be kind of a mortality reminder more than a celebration. Yeah. Okay, Catherine, I appreciate
that call. Thank you for listening. And anything else you want to say to lunchbox before we,
you know, this is over? Nah, not to lunchbox. No, I just want to say I too am not great about
celebrating things, though, either.
Like, I'm much more, I'd rather have the party for someone than to receive it.
So I totally understand that, too.
But I bet you remembered.
Well, thank you for calling.
I hope you have an awesome Monday, so week.
All right, guys.
Have a good one.
Bye, bye.
Let's go to Troy in Tennessee.
Let's do one more on this.
Hey, Troy.
Yes.
Hey, Bobby.
What's up, buddy?
Going good.
How are you today?
This is the first time.
Call her, a long, long time with her.
That's awesome, man.
We're doing, we're doing good.
I love, I love it.
You guys are amazing.
Thank you.
I just want to, I got to give a shout out, say, I cannot believe Mr. Lunchbox.
I love all you guys, but Lunchbox seriously, come on.
You don't remember the day you got married?
That should be the happiest day in your life.
I'm not sure if it's 11 years or not.
And even your wife doesn't know.
I am shocked.
I mean, it was a happy day.
But, I mean, when my kids were born, it was a happier day than when I got married.
I mean, if we're being real.
I mean, the marriage is fine.
It's cool.
But it's not the happiest day of my life.
Not even close.
I mean, it's crazy.
I mean, people are going to say that's crazy.
But I think in reality, if you think about it, getting married is not.
when you look at the timeline of life,
it's a small, like, little day.
Yes, it's cool, but there's so many more bigger days.
Prom king.
Price is right.
Interesting.
Kids being born.
So you'd probably put it like what, six or seven?
Six or seven.
It was a great day, though.
No, it was a great day.
Top ten.
Yeah, you can't say it's not top ten.
I mean, I remember it.
Like, I mean, when we went to Austin for IHeart Festival,
we stayed at the hotel that we stayed at on our wedding night.
And I texted my wife and said,
back where it all went down, you know what I mean?
And I said, I got the same room as on our wedding night.
She goes, really?
And I was like, no, I don't remember what room we got, but this is where it happened.
I even said, like, really?
That's crazy.
He remembers what room, but he doesn't remember his actual date.
All right, Troy, appreciate that, man.
Anything else you want to say?
Well, like I said, I mean, I get it.
Yeah, you know what?
I've had, I was married and divorced, and I remember the day I got married to her,
and I'm remarried, and I'll never forget the day that I remarried,
because it is.
It's the best day of your life,
but I had kids,
and yeah, it's great to have kids,
but forget the day you're married,
I guess it just kind of blows me away,
but lunchbox, I love you, man,
and I love the whole crew.
You guys are awesome.
Well, thank you, Troy.
I hope you have a great week.
You as well.
Take care, Bobby.
Take care.
I love you guys.
Bye-bye.
I'm fortunate because my wife's company
that she started
is named after our anniversary.
That's so smart
I know
So smart
I didn't think about mine for a second
I was like
Anytime I log into like
Any banking stuff
Which I do multiple times every day
That's listed as one of the things
So it's the name
So it's there
That's good
So I'll never forget because of that
Okay
Thank you for the calls
Let's roll a few more
Of these voicemails
And then we'll get to some stories
Ray if you'll hit four
If you like we all need to be called something
Us regular listeners
Like Jimmy Buffett fans
Or a parrot heads
you know, what's your
who we've he calls?
It's a great question.
And so if you listen to the show regularly,
you are a B team member
because that's, you know,
a lot of us didn't get picked first.
We didn't make the A team
and then also the show starts to be.
So you could be a new listener and not know that.
I haven't really said that a whole lot.
Maybe I should.
So it feels like everybody's part of the team.
But yeah, if you are a regular listener,
you are part of the B team.
You have to do nothing except just listen
and be nice to people.
That's the membership.
Unless you want to pay a fee,
then I can figure,
We can do a fee if people want to pay a fee.
All right, next up.
Hey, I just want to say thank you, Bobby, for explaining why you have to tell me something good podcast.
I really hated the fact that it was broken to three, but after your question, facts, and in the weeds explanations, it makes sense now.
So I just want to say thank you because I hated your guts until now I understand the reasoning.
Thank you very much.
Boom.
In the weeds is what the term is.
what I would say a lot of the times is like inside baseball but that's very much baseball very much an analytics thing
but in the weeds is the thing that I should call that because I think I called it I think called in the weeds did I
why did I call that podcast because I do over on well it was the bobby cache YouTube channel we can't put those up anymore because they all go on Netflix now
but it's at bobby bones channel I did like a frequently asked question
the FAQs
Behind the scenes maybe
Something like that
In the weed
That's a good one
But then it sounds like weed
No it does
Okay you don't think so
No no no no no
I'm thinking too much about it
Yes
All right next up
Hey guys
I was catching up on the podcast
And heard you talking about Alcatraz
And the likelihood of people swimming
And escaping from the island
And wanted to know
If you knew it's an official swim
That anyone can sign up and go do
Which is on my bucket list
So who from the show
wants to swim from Alcatraz.
I do not. It's cold. It's long.
And there are some sharks.
Right.
But one of the things that made that swim a little trickier than just us doing it,
it was also at night.
It had to be timed out exactly right.
I'm sure all the conditions have to be right for you to just attempt that swim
and there are boats beside you, et cetera.
I'm good.
Oh, and it's here.
Mike pulled it up.
Holy crap.
So is it like a yearly swim or like some of you just pay to go?
Like, I want to swim around there's like a competition.
Okay.
There's weekly swims it says.
Weekly.
Wow.
Mike, what do you see there?
I see there's one official one coming up on August 8th.
Two-mile casual swim.
Casual.
It says Alcatress to Angel Island.
August 8th is the next one.
An unforgettable and scenic two-mile casual swim to North Angel Island often build is the
original escape route.
Okay.
Angel Island is, remember I did the story about the coyote?
That's where the coyote was swimming.
swam from. So I guess the coyote was doing a casual swim. It costs a casual swim,
coyote. $295.35 swimmers is all they take. Huh. And there's a big boat that goes
beside it. Obviously, I'm just looking at it here. The water is from 55 to 60 degrees Fahrenheit.
They say which adds an extra layer of excitement. Yeah, right. I bet if you do that, though,
you're in a wetsuit. I would think so. They didn't get a wetsuit. No, they had their
The criminals. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And maybe you don't get a wetsuit. But also, that swim from Alcatraz, I'm looking at it here, it goes to Angel Island, which is not the mainland. Right, not San Francisco. Right.
Which they don't know where they tried to go. Great point. They might have gone to Angel Island. But the thing is, like, they had a raft. Right. Yes. But when I watched that Mythbusters on it, they don't think the raft would have made it. They thought the raft was a hindrance more than it was something that was a benefit to them. Okay.
because of how fast the waters were going.
Again, I only watched the Mythbusters,
so I'm not going to act like I'm an expert on it.
And I've only watched the movie.
But they did.
Old movie, Clint Eastwood.
No idea.
Yeah, it's so good.
But it's like from the 70s.
In season two episode eight of Mythbusters,
this is the one I saw.
Adam Savage and Jamie Heinemann successfully tested
the infamous 1962 Alcatraz Escape,
using a replica raft built from 30 raincoats.
I didn't know they built their own raft.
That's crazy.
I guess, how would they get one?
then. Yeah, they had to build it.
They accurately retraced the
prisoner's path and proved that escaping from
the island in a homemade boat
is plausible.
So, yeah.
All right, there you go. Thank you
for that voicemail. You guys can leave us one anytime.
877, Bobby. Okay, that's calls.
That's voicemails. I can do some
ACM winners from last night.
Full disclosure. I didn't watch all of it. I watched little
bits of it. I got taken
off this season for two reasons. One,
because they said that I'm on Netflix now
that was a competitor.
Oh, conflicts.
Of Prime.
They could have just said that to kick me off,
like they needed a nice reason.
But whenever they were coming back
and they were kind of filling out the people
that were doing the show, they were like,
hey, I think a little bit they feel like
that what we do is like a competitor of Amazon music anyway.
But then Amazon Music just sent me a deal today.
Like, do you want to like voice it?
Really?
Yeah, like would you do like endorsements, which is weird.
So the second thing was you're also on Netflix and this is on Prime so we feel like it's a competitor.
So I didn't do it.
So a little bit, I was like butt hurt.
So I didn't initially start by watching it.
But then I got some texts going, hey, are you watching this?
And they had highlighted a couple really good performances and one they said was terrible.
And I was like, well, I got to watch this.
I got to flip it on.
So some stuff, I thought Cody winning entertainer the year, Cody Johnson, I thought it was awesome.
That is cool.
It's different.
Yes, and I love that, dude.
and it's like he's like the guy that doesn't live here the guy that did everything different
like independent and then signed a record deal with Nashville his own way and like I like people
that do things different Ella Langley won female artist Parker McCollum one album of the year
song of the year choose in Texas single of the year choose in Texas so Ella won those two as
well music event of the year Ella and Riley Green don't mind if I do I think they've won that
two years in a row because I think last year they won the other one with their other song
They should just do songs together.
Yeah, every single time.
Even if they hate each other.
And I'm not sure where that stands now.
But they should just do songs together.
Brooks and Dunn won duo of the year.
Look at them.
Still doing it.
Group of the year, Red Clay Strays.
And then these we knew Avery Anna, one new female artist of the year.
Tucker Wetmore, one new male artist of the year.
Stephen Wilson, Jr., visual media.
Songwriter of the year, I think for the fourth year in a row is Jesse Joe Dylan.
She just crushes.
And artist songwriter of the year is Elfell.
Langley. So congratulations to everybody. They just play too many new songs. That's my complaint about
this show in general. I think it's hard for a casual to mid-country music fan to watch it and enjoy the
live performances when you know none of the songs because it was a lot of new music.
Morgan, you watched it. You were posting on Instagram. Yeah, yeah. I was live tweeting.
Definitely a lot of new. I felt like this year we really finally saw like the full switch over to the new
class, if you will. All the categories had a lot of the younger artists and like all the winners
were younger artists besides Brooks and Dunn. They still are dominating that, that duo category.
But yeah, all the performances were different than you're not hearing their number one songs
anymore. You're hearing their like deep cuts off the album. And it was cool. I will say like the
audio was pretty rough. That's one of the reasons I flipped over because a couple things. I'm glad you said
it because I wasn't going to bring up any negative because then I see that sound like a sour
puss.
Because you didn't make it the show yet. They said the audio was pretty brutal.
Well, I've seen a lot of those artists live and they sound great live.
But on that show I was like, this is not good.
Whatever was happening was not good.
What did you feel like the highlight of the whole show was?
Give me a high.
Cody Johnson winning.
I feel like he was just respected by everybody in the crowd.
Nobody was rolling their eyes.
Look, Morgan Wall.
Colin dominates in every single category.
Morgan has shown he doesn't want to go to these awards shows.
So the voters, which the voters are people in the ACM, the group, the voting members,
I think they probably now are going, well, if he's not going to come, do we want to give him the award?
And so what came first, chicken or the egg, him being, hey, you're not welcome here,
or him going, I don't want to come anymore.
And so people won't vote him, even though he's the most dominant thing in our industry.
other than that, like Cody Johnson, it's so legit.
And I think everybody respects how Cody did it and the music that he makes and he's wildly successful, massive shows, et cetera.
So, yeah, I'll co-sign that.
Yeah, and it was cool.
I mean, him winning that, that was his first time.
Parker McCollum won his first album of the year.
Ella Langley won her first female artist of the year.
So it was just a lot of, like, big, all of them were super emotional getting those big moments.
So that was cool to see.
Again, just that almost like the changeover in the classes is what's really happening.
Did you watch it at all?
No, no, I didn't watch any of it.
Who won group?
Were you, Matt?
Because of me.
Yeah, dude.
Thank you, man.
I'm watching this.
Thank you.
You went Bobby on there?
You didn't even know, but I appreciate that.
Yeah.
Who on group?
Red Clive strace.
Okay, cool.
So did they win last year, too?
I think so.
Okay.
Because Old Dominion, like, no more.
Because they were for a while there,
did they could not lose.
Yeah.
Right?
Old Dominion, old Dominion every year.
Duo and group, you kind of know.
Is that last year, Mike?
It's last year.
Okay.
So they did that win last year?
year. Red Claystrays were just nominated. Okay, Old Dominion's. So maybe Old Dominion was there,
like, ready to pick up our 18th in a row. I think it would have been their eighth. They did
like a whole concert here because they won seven in a row. That's crazy. Old Dominion did.
So I don't know if it was ACMs though or CMAs. They kind of blur together for me.
It's hard with duo and it's hard with group because there aren't a lot of duos and there
aren't a lot of groups. Just they're making hits. Yeah. Selling big shows. Like there's like two.
I mean, there's a lot of people nominated, but like Flatland Cavalry, they're so new into the world of where the ACMs get to vote for them, those people.
They've been around for a while, obviously.
We just had Cletto on the Bobbycast, but they've been doing it.
But being exposed to the entire country, the award voting, that's new.
Old Dominion and then Red Clay Strays.
Yeah.
Zach Brown band.
Has Little Big Town won?
They haven't won in a while.
They used to win a lot.
But what music have they put out?
But I say that.
And Brooks and Dunn, it's not like they're putting out a ton of new music unless it's like the reboot stuff.
But they're playing massive arena shows.
And then also that duo is even harder.
Yeah.
Like, I think they wanted to nominate Maddie and Tegan.
They're not even in a group anymore.
A duo.
When you say those people, you mean like, is it like a board that votes?
No, you vote.
You vote too, you idiot.
Right.
I remember that.
It's like four layers.
Oh my gosh.
You get the first one where you ride in your people.
You get the second one, which is a mass group.
It's like the most written in people.
Then the third one is the actual people that are nominated.
You pick a winner from it.
That's right.
You didn't vote?
That all sounds familiar.
You didn't vote?
I don't remember.
I'm not sure.
Yeah.
Well, you got to take your voting seriously.
I know, I know.
I do.
I do.
Any, I don't want to ask a low.
The sound?
The sound was a low.
What about your best performance?
Like, what was the best performance?
Honestly, Carter Faith was my favorite.
She's awesome.
She's so good.
She sounded great even for the audio being bad.
Was the audio bad the whole show?
It was just rough.
Like there was even moments where it would like, you know when you hear a mic peak,
you would hear a lot of that happen.
Like cracks or whatever?
Yeah.
So I feel like it was across the board.
And I couldn't tell if Shania had like a script or if she was doing her own thing.
You know there was a lot of that too.
Yeah.
So I was just a little confused through a little bit of the show.
But I don't want to be Budhard and be like, oh, the host.
because that feels butt hurt of me.
Can't say anything.
I know.
I'm not.
I'm not.
So when it comes to like this song selection,
does the artists have all the power?
Like we're going to play this song.
Sort of.
If they really want an artist,
the artist can say,
I'll play,
but I'll only play if you let me do this song.
It's a constant fight with every award show
because especially when it's on television
and television is rated by like quarter hours,
they need those artists to play the hits
or people are going to change it.
With a streaming platform,
not so much.
They can really do whatever they want.
It doesn't mean it's going to be fun
for the person watching,
but the broadcast television folks
because of how they're rated,
they want people to play hits.
And that's a battle with the big artists.
Because the big artists can go,
I don't want to play a number one song
that's already peaked for me
and we're on a new song and it's new,
but I need the publicity for it.
And then they're going,
no, but we need you to play a hit
so you can keep people on the show.
And sometimes they'll,
They'll like do a medley.
Sometimes if it's like Keith Urban and they must have them,
they'll be like, fine.
You can play your new song as long as you come and play at the show.
Because these shows don't pay these artists.
They don't pay.
They don't pay them to do it.
And they don't pay for their production.
So the artist has to pay for the band.
The record label does.
Oh, wow.
So it's easy for them to go,
nah, we're not going to do that because we don't want to play a song
that everybody already knows.
It's not helping us.
And we don't want to pay the money for it.
What are you going to say?
Well, and that was, I feel like,
That was kind of the thing with Casey Musgraves
because she made her debut last night.
That was the first time she'd ever performed
and it was one of her brand new songs.
I saw that and I saw that she was doing the song Dry Spel
and she started on a dryer or a washer,
which I thought was hilarious.
Dry Spill.
It was just like her music video.
She kind of recreated her music video.
So, okay.
Dry Spell means she hadn't got it on a long time.
What the song's about?
And one of the old school things they would say
is if you go and you sit on the dryer
is a woman that makes you.
Oh, I didn't know.
I didn't put that together.
I did not connect that document?
Wow.
Did you put that together, Mike?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, me too.
I thought it was hilarious.
That's funny.
But she's kind of been like, screw everybody.
I'm going to do it my own way for a long time.
So it was interesting to see her do an award show, which is cool.
I'm a big Casey music fan.
So that was awesome.
Where was it?
Was it in Texas?
No, it was the first time in Vegas in years.
Oh, man, we should have been invited.
Should have.
I got invited to go and present an award.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But you have a baby, dude.
Yeah, and then they took me off being like the main because I'm a competitor,
which I thought that was weird.
Like, I get to present as a competitor, but not, no, I'm just telling you,
there's a lot of wires crossed here.
All right.
The guy who threw the rock at the seal is now being hit with federal charges.
Good.
They should put him out of the water and have somebody throw rocks at him.
Ooh, everyone.
And see how he likes it.
Yeah, especially because he was like, oh, yeah, resume, I'll pay a fine.
Yeah, that whole thing was bizarre.
That was your story, right?
Yeah.
The fact that he was so like, all right, what are you going to do to me?
Like, I don't care.
Is he because he was a real rich guy?
Yeah.
And he claimed like he couldn't be touched.
I'm like, nope, you're getting touched.
You're going to be going to jail.
He got beat up too.
Yeah, he did.
He got beat up.
Oh, yeah, the guy comes out.
Yeah, he beats him up.
The rock thrower has now been identified as Igor Mike Halevich.
So then I think he's like a Russian oligarch who's like obviously got so much money and is protected.
He's not American, right?
He's from Covington, Washington.
Oh, he's American.
Igor?
It's from America.
Wow.
Whoa, wow.
Totally missed that.
That's not good of me.
He's been hit with the federal charge of harassing and attempting to harass
in a danger in monk seal.
Rarely do I think about these stories when I leave the room after we do this?
I thought about this for days.
Like, I hate that dude.
He deserves everything that's coming.
If convicted, he could be hit with the jail sentence of up to one year, a $50,000 fine
and another $20,000 for violating the Marine Mammal Protection Act.
The money's not going to affect him.
He's probably not going to go to jail.
But fortunately, all reports say the monk seal is doing just fine from the Department of Justice.
I don't think he hit it. Did he hit it?
No, he was pretty close to it, though.
Yeah.
And it was a big rock.
It wasn't just like a small one.
So he's even a bad aim.
It looked like full brick rocks, though, too.
Like the big, heavy rocks.
So, yeah.
All right.
Why don't we shut it down?
Thank you, everybody.
hope you guys have an awesome day
and we will see you guys tomorrow
Amy will be back tomorrow
we think unless something happens
Is there a Bucky's on the way?
There is where Amy's going
In Knoxville? Yes
Why are you going to hit her up and you need something?
No I just like
Beaver Nuggets?
Yeah
Yeah
I like
Buckees
Yeah that's a good place to stop
All right there you go
Thank you everybody
There was no
Anything inside those eyes
They turned black
It scared the hell out of
me.
Evil, wake up.
I'm the one that saw the murder
take place by Crevec and
DePippo.
Anthony DePippo showed no signs of remorse
appearing unfazed after being
sentenced to the maximum.
I said, I'm not guilty. I'll take it to the grave.
Listen to the devil's quarry in the Bone Valley
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Joy is essential
and it's also elubly.
But now, there's a new and exciting way to start your journey toward a more joyful existence.
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It's a new podcast hosted by me, Hoda Kotby.
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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.
How's it going, boys?
Hey, Niall.
It's the same thing with Slow Hands.
Slow Hands is not about anything else, really, is it?
You know, or taste so good can't be about food.
You do the same, Nick, with some of the stuff that you've done.
You too, Joe.
Drop what you're doing and listen to Hey Jonas on the Iheart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your podcasts.
Last night, a blown call changed a game.
This morning, the internet lost its mind, and nobody's telling you exactly what happened.
That's where SportsSlice comes in.
I'm Timbo, and every episode, we're cutting through the noise, breaking down the biggest moments
in sports and giving you the real story behind the headline.
And we're going straight to the source, the athletes themselves, their locker room stories,
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