The Bobby Bones Show - TELL ME SOMETHING GOOD (MON): Abby Making A Big Life Change
Episode Date: March 2, 2026The rest of the show is on the cruise. But Bobby checks in with all the crew in the studio, Abby, Kickoff Kevin and Mike D. Abby has big news when it comes to her living situation. Kickoff Kevin... celebrated a big anniversary. Mike D did something he hasn’t done in years. Bobby also checks in with the crew here to see if they have FOMO from not going on the cruise.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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They put on Lizzie McGuire 2am video on demand.
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It's time for the good news.
Tell me something good.
We'll connect with everybody on the boat in just a second.
But we do have four people here in the room today.
It is kickoff Kevin, Abby, Mike, and myself.
So let's all do it.
Tell me something good.
Abby, I'm going to go to you first.
Give me something good.
Okay.
So my mom just got in town and I love spending time with her.
She lives in Kansas, but she's in town and this weekend was awesome.
We went to the zoo for the first time with my fiance and his kids and her.
And I don't know.
We've never been to the zoo.
And we got a membership for Christmas.
So that was fun.
But something crazy.
happened. I don't know if it's actually good. Hopefully it'll get better. But like I was,
there's a playground there that is super nice. I mean, I've never seen one like it. It's like a jungle
gym that's just like made out of wood. They have nets that you can climb up and all that.
And I was following my fiance's son. He's four like underneath there. And I was kind of running
but crouched over and I like hit my head. And I like blacked out for a second. It was the craziest thing.
And I have like a huge bump on my head. And my neck like went back and I heard it just crunch.
Like, I literally thought I broke my neck.
Is the good thing you didn't die from the story?
I guess so.
Maybe.
Well, I guess the good news is we had a great time until this happened.
And I just had to tell you guys.
How was the zoo?
It's awesome.
They didn't have the giraffes out, which was a bummer and then no lions because I really wanted to see those.
But zoos kind of make me sad anyway.
Me too.
They're like all, you know.
Animals that shouldn't be where they are trapped in a cage.
Yeah.
But it's a really nice zoo.
And yeah.
But I'm going to the chiropractor today.
So hopefully there's good news for that.
Did your mom have fun?
Yeah, she really did.
Did she stay with you guys?
Uh-huh, yeah.
How did that go?
Good.
She's helping me like, I'm still cleaning out my house because I moved in with my boyfriend
and I'm trying to get rid of things to rent it out.
And so she came here to like help me do that.
Oh, you decided to rent?
Yes.
Yeah, yeah.
Why did you come up on that decision?
Well, it's like my first house I've ever bought.
So I have like this, I don't know, it's sentimental to me to like get rid of it.
It was my first house in Nashville.
And I was like, I just want to rent it for now.
I've never been a landlord, so that makes you nervous.
Well, I don't think there's a right or wrong answer.
I'm not asking like that.
Yeah.
I just wonder why you thought it'd be the appropriate time to rent and not sell.
I know.
Good question, because I would make a lot of money on it from when I bought it.
Would you?
Yeah.
Did you do the work to figure out how much you had?
Uh-huh.
Yeah, I would, like, double, basically.
Well, the great thing about renting is that you will still be building on that,
and you'll always be making money per month.
month. You're not going to do a property manager. You're going to be the landlord?
No, actually, I'll probably do that because I want a property manager. That makes you nervous to
I don't want people calling me all the time. That's what sucks about being a landlord.
Yeah. Property manager you have to pay. Right. What is it? Like 15% or more. I don't know.
Yeah. Never rented a place. I don't think I've run out of a place.
Really? Yeah, I don't think so. Oh. And like I take care of my stuff. I'm very like paranoid about
anything. I'm going to be like, don't touch the walls. Don't do it.
do anything. That's going to be hard.
Yeah. Because people are just naturally going to wear
and tear the house. Yeah. Like, I would
want to be like, no shoes. Yeah,
you can't do that. They live there. They get to
kind of make those rules. No,
parties. I'm watching. No, I'm just kidding.
You haven't started to screen people for
rental? When do you want to rent
the house out? Probably within the next two months, I
would hope. I'm just trying to, yeah. Do you have a bunch of
stuff in there? Yeah, I do. I've accumulated
it because I've been in Nashville over 10 years
and I just don't need it.
You know, we get like a lot of free stuff.
What are you doing with all the stuff?
Donate.
I'm trying to figure out what.
I have a room in there that I'm moving everything that I just want to like sell or donate or all that.
And then I'm, I want to take the stuff that I love.
I'm going to like touch everything, you know, and be like, do I love this or not?
It's like the Marie, what is it?
Marie condo.
Yeah.
It's like, does this bring me joy?
When does your mom go home?
I haven't booked the flight back yet.
She can just stay as long as she wants?
Yeah.
Wow.
She's so fun.
she's just always up for anything, so we just hang out.
Do you see that physically you guys look the same?
I don't, but I get that all the time.
They're like twins.
I don't see it.
But you don't see it.
I really don't.
Someone was saying something about me and a relative, and I was like, I don't see it,
but then I saw the picture of you and your mom, you look exactly the same,
and I wonder if that's just generally the case, you don't see it.
I don't, and neither does she.
People come up all the time, and they're like, are you guys related,
your sisters or whatever?
And I'm like, I don't see it, and she's always.
I was like, sorry, Abby.
That's fun.
Kick off Kevin.
Yeah.
Really good thing.
I just celebrated my one-year anniversary, wedding anniversary with the wife.
And I surprised her with dinner that night.
I'm like, you were I like to give gifts?
And I had her set up all day.
She's like, where are we going for dinner?
We got to take the kids.
We have two nine-month-old twins.
So we got to take the kids.
And I'm like, don't worry about it.
We'll take care of it.
And then later that night, two of her friends showed up to watch the kids.
And we got to go enjoy night by ourselves.
Oh, you had that all planned out.
Oh yeah, she had no idea.
Were you nervous leaving the kids?
No, no.
She's a lot more nervous than I am.
I'm more of like, okay, if we can get two hours ourselves, we need to go where she's like,
can we leave them?
Can we leave them?
But I'm more of if we trust them and they're obviously two of her best friends, we trust them,
then I'm fine mentally.
Did you feel like you needed two people to watch two kids?
Yes, because it's a lot.
Yeah, even the only one that we really trust watching them by themselves is my mom.
Even like her parents were like, I don't know if they can handle two.
massive difference.
Huge.
Because you can't, especially they're both crawling now and climbing and eating things and sticking their hands
and things.
So it's like as soon as you leave them, you turn around for 20 seconds and they're just doing
something.
They're on the other side of the room, hands in something, and the dog bowl, tipping over the dog
bowl, all that good stuff.
When you come home, is she ready to pull her hair out some days?
Oh, yes.
I always tell her, I'm like, when I get home, like, just take an hour or two to yourself.
You got to go to the gym, got to go for a walk.
go take a nap. I don't care. Anything. I'll handle the kids. You just take a break because she needs it.
So you can watch them both. Yes. What's the trick?
Not to get too high or low, pretty much. And just to be able to, well, we have a play pen to
do that help. Just stick them in there and have them entertain themselves and they can't get out of there.
It's kind of like a cage, you know. So that always helps.
Will she trust you to watch both kids? Oh yeah. Yeah. I did it the other night. She went to
some consignment thing on Saturday night and I had to put them down, bathe them, put them,
them down and all that. And she's a little reluctant, but she now trusts me nine months in.
We got there. Is there a difference with how you treat each kid based on what their personality is?
For sure. Yeah, the girl, our little girl, she's a wild, wild child. She'll just start screaming and
yelling. She just really found her voice. So she'll literally just be like, ah, for no reason. And then our little
boy, he'll be in the corner by himself, just like playing with a book or playing with something else,
where her I have to really give her the attention
and him he can kind of just do his own thing.
A win is a win.
A win is a win.
I don't care what you're saying.
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You can have opinions.
You can have like a strong stance.
And then there's your body having its own program.
I'm Dr. Maya Shunker, a cognitive scientist and hosts of the podcast, a slight change of plans,
a show about who we are and who we become.
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I've had a clip go pretty viral, considering I just put it up last night, of Luke Combs
giving me dad advice where he goes, baby doesn't need you. He's like, the mom is what's going
to need you. And I can never predict what's going to go viral or not, but this thing has gone
super viral. Your thoughts on that? Yeah, that's absolutely true. The first couple
months especially. I always told people the number one advice I gave them was like new dads was
be there for the mom, especially as a guy, as a male, like you can't really provide anything,
you know, other than just the comfort or just the help wherever needed. Or, you know, the mother,
they want to be with the mother. They want to, you know, get the milk, all that stuff. So you just
kind of got to be there for her, for your wife, so she can relieve the duties and just get some
stress off of her. Absolutely true. Mike D. Tell me something good.
I finished a book, the longest book I've ever read in my life, Project Hill Mary.
I am just such a slow reader, and I felt so good after finishing that I want to read more.
Yeah, finishing a book feels awesome.
Because it's such an investment.
476 pages, I know because I counted them.
I had to like read, okay, I'm going to read 20, and I'm going to get it down a little bit closer.
It was hard for me, but I loved it.
It's a great book, too, huh?
Yeah, now I can't wait for the movie.
Same.
It's awesome.
What sucks for me is my vision is so bad that if I read on my iPad 99% of the time.
and I have to, I'll look at the page numbers,
and then I have to make the font a little bigger
so then the page numbers go up.
And I know it's all the same.
It's the same amount of words,
but because the page numbers will go from like 3.30 to 480
on just a font change,
that's a little disheartening sometimes.
But that book's awesome.
It was really good.
And I'm excited because a lot of the stuff
I couldn't really envision in my head
because it's really science-heavy at times,
so I can't wait to see like,
oh, that's not what I envisioned at all.
Mine's probably going to be,
and I talk about this,
and maybe you've already heard it in part two.
But I was not as seasick as I thought I would get it.
First when I got on the boat and it started moving, I was a little,
ooh, I had some burpees.
And you can hear all that.
But I was worried about that about the cruise.
And so that was good.
The food was really good.
Not that I'm surprised by that.
It's just, I was just shocked at the scale of a cruise.
Just how massive those boats are.
And we've already recorded part two.
So I don't know when you're hearing this.
but they're all still on the cruise ship.
There were parts of the cruise ship I don't even know existed.
I don't know there was a basketball gym on the cruise.
I had no idea that you go play basketball.
You ever been on a cruise?
No, never.
Unbelievable how big the boat is.
And again, I've seen them.
I've driven by the water and seen these cruise ships.
But when you get on one from the inside,
it looks like a convention center, not even a regular hotel,
like a convention center hotel that just goes on forever.
And it's 15, 20 stories tall.
I was surprised that the theater was so big
that Eddie and I played in.
It looked massive.
We were going to it to play the show.
We hadn't been there until we played the show.
I guess we went to it for sound check
at 4 p.m. before we played.
And I thought it was going to be super small
because we're on a boat.
No, it's a thousand people theater.
I had a conference room pictured in my head.
Me too.
Yeah, it was massive.
And so, yeah, it was really good.
Truth, do you guys have FOMO for not going?
Kevin?
Yeah.
Yeah, for sure.
I didn't think I would.
I was like, ah, that sounds exhausting.
And then I see all the pictures and videos.
And I love, you know, the weather, the sun, the ocean, all that stuff.
So, yeah, I did.
After I left, they ran into a little rain at night.
I think that would have been cool.
Very cool.
Being out on the ocean.
Yeah.
In the middle of, not a water, like a wave storm.
Because they didn't hit that, but, like, just like rain would have been cool
because you don't have to go out on your deck and you're not getting wet.
But I thought that would have been cool.
I had a little fomo after I left, too, because they were doing some other fun stuff.
I didn't know there was a basketball gym.
That really gives me FOMO.
I would have been up there.
Yeah.
Abby Jeff FOMO?
Are you kidding me?
Yes.
Yeah.
Oh my gosh.
I love cruises and water.
It looks so pretty.
We'll have to figure it out next year because somebody obviously has to stay back.
Dang.
I know.
It's a hard one.
Spin the wheel.
Just don't put me on it.
I'm just kidding.
Don't put me on it.
Mike, any FOMO?
Not so much about being confined on a boat.
That kind of freaks me out.
But I do like the beach.
And when everybody was posting the beach pictures, I was like, oh, it looks fun.
I could use a little sunshine right now.
When they were all at the beach, I did not have FOMO.
Really?
I don't like the beach.
That part when the, I like just being in my room and shutting the door and just like chilling with, I had my laptop, I had my phone.
Wi-Fi was good.
There's really nothing I could do work-wise.
Like, that felt good.
No, that's the part I wanted to enjoy.
Like when they posted a picture out in the water, like, buy some rocks.
I'm like, that's what I like to do.
Yeah, if go listen to that.
They're all up on the boat.
There's a reason that we recorded the first part of the show before they left because we weren't sure we could get a show on.
But it was good.
It was a great trip.
And they're still out there and you guys can go and sign up for next year because a lot of people on the boat already were.
Top shelf country crews.com.
All right, good job, everybody.
That was Tell me something good.
It's time for the good news.
Tell me something good.
Two guys in Michigan broke a world record and raise money for charity.
by playing pickleball for 28 straight hours.
Whoa.
Brad Havrick Camp and Caleb Dang,
I can't think I could stay up for 28 hours at this point.
They played pickleball for 28 hours.
Michigan guys broke the Guinness World Record
for longest marathon playing singles pickleball
with a 28-hour game.
The men played for 28 consecutive hours
and were only allowed a five-minute break each hour
to use the bathroom.
And again, they raised a bunch of money
because they were live streaming it.
That's from UPI, but it does remind me
of the record that Ray Mundo said.
How long did you fist pump for?
Yeah, we clocked in at 17 hours.
It wasn't 24.
But that was line dancing.
Oh, he lined dance for him.
He did.
How long?
24.
Yeah.
That was cool.
Are you in Guinness or do we just do it?
Yeah, I don't think we ever made Guinness.
I believe we had to videotape the whole thing.
You can't do that, really.
Without live streaming, there's real no way to save all that video.
The only time I've ever seen the guy on the suit, the Guinness guy, is when we did the food packing thing.
I've never seen that guy.
You mean in person?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Because he was there to clock our record of.
Of packing the most hunger relief meals for Haiti in a certain amount of time.
That felt like a very specific thing.
Yeah.
It was.
So Wichita, Kansas previously held the record and then we beat it here in Nashville.
So we took the record from Kansas.
You guys could probably beat this pickleball guy's record.
Who's you guys?
If you really put Ray in lunchbox.
Okay.
Like if they really wanted to.
I think they could go 29 hours.
I mean, yeah, with bathroom breaks every hour?
Yeah.
I mean, I'd go to sleep and wake up and see if you were still going.
But I think you can do it.
Anyway, good on those guys for raising money.
That's what it's all about.
That was Tell Me Something Good.
It's time for the good news.
With Lunchbox.
Tell me something good.
Last week, there was a deadly avalanche in Lake Tahoe,
and then there were six skiers that were stranded.
And they had no cell phone service.
Luckily, Apple products have emergency SOS via satellite,
and they were able to communicate with rescuers.
and boom, send them their location
for four hours.
They went back and forth
with the rescuers.
Let them write to them and saved them.
Wow.
Yeah, I would have no bars.
I'd like for that to kick in.
I know, but if you're in an emergency situation...
Oh, no, I'm glad it does, but I would also like it to kick in.
Hey, yeah, Twitter, you know,
check your socials.
You always bring up a good point too.
He's just like, if you can call, like, why not?
Just give us the bars.
If there's extra bars to be had,
why can't we have the bars?
It's got to be expensive, right?
Then make your network better.
And if you can afford to pay for it, then pay for it.
You're rich company.
Anyway, that's a great story.
I mean, how cool is it?
You don't have any service, but you're still able to get rescued?
That's crazy.
It's like if a phone doesn't have service, no bars, or even a carrier, you can still call
911 with it because of that.
Okay, give us the bars, that's what I say.
There are times I'm on the phone.
I can't talk to the person.
On the interstate, it clips out sometimes.
That's a great story, though. Good one. That is what it's all about.
That was Tell Me Something Good.
Hey, I'm Dr. Maya Shunker, a cognitive scientist and hosts of the podcast, a slight change of plans,
a show about who we are and who we become when life makes other plans.
I wish that I hadn't resisted for so long the need to change.
We have to be willing to live with a kind of uncertainty that none of us likes.
You can have opinions. You can have, like, like,
a strong stance.
And then there's your body having its own program.
Listen to a slight change of plans on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts.
Readers, Katie's finalists, publicists.
We have an incredible new episode this week for you guys.
We have our girl Hillary Duff in here, and we can't wait for you to hear this episode.
They put on Lizzie McGuire 2 a.m. Video on Demand.
This guy's bobo-u-u-a-m.
2 a.m.
Lissie McGuire.
And I'm like...
Wild, a wild bat.
It was like a first closet moment from me where I was like...
You're like, I don't feel like she's hot, like the rest of them.
No, no, no.
I was like, she's beautiful.
But I'm appreciating her in a different way than these boys are.
I'm not like...
But listen to Los Coleristas on the Iheart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
This is Julian Edelman, host of games with names.
On our latest episode, we got comedian Blake Anderson from Workaholics and The Hilarious.
This is Important Podcast.
Let's go.
We did beat him in improv.
You had an improv against the team?
Yes, we would pull up their schools
would be there with signs for us.
It's competition.
What you would win is a bottle of gold slager.
James Fester threw it out of a van
because he didn't want us drinking it.
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Hello, gorgeous, it's Lala Kent.
Host of Untraditionally Lala.
My days of filling up cups at Sir may be over,
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Live on the other side of the hill is giving grown-up vibes,
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