The Bobby Bones Show - TELL ME SOMETHING GOOD (THURS): Baby Billie Health Update + Abby Diagnosed + Lunchbox Got PAID!
Episode Date: May 7, 2026We talked to Abby who left the show to go to the doctor. We find out if there’s anything wrong with her. Lunchbox reveals how much he got paid for Jury Duty! Morgan had her audiology appointment... and found out what is going on with her brain. Which oddly leads Lunchbox to getting upset with her. Eddie almost burned his house down. Amy tried out sprinting per doctor advice. Bobby got a good report on Baby Billie.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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There was no anything inside those eyes.
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It scared the hell out of me.
Evil, wake up.
I'm the one that saw the murder take place by Krivac and DePippo.
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Hey Nile
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It's time for the good news.
Yeah, I'll make something good.
I do want to go to Abby first because we started yesterday.
We sent her to the doctor.
I mean, we sent her home.
You went to the doctor?
Yeah, I did.
I went to my doctor.
Did you go right after the show?
Yeah, they had an opening.
Nice.
And what do they tell you?
I do not have pneumonia.
I mean, she basically just said, yeah, it is like a lingering cough.
Because I've been really tired and everything, so they gave me a steroid shot.
Oh, I bet you feel like a million bucks today.
Yeah, I feel a lot better.
Yeah.
And so you're good.
You're safe?
Yeah.
Yeah.
And scuba feel safe?
Yes.
Yes.
I always thought it was a runner's cough.
No, you had your face covered.
yesterday. Being funny, I know what it's, it's not any, her voice hasn't changed. It's not like she's
like blood curdling coughing. It's just, it's like she went on a marathon run. Like what you're
going to, it's going to affect your respiratory breathing. She was sick though, to be fair.
Yeah. Yeah, I was. It's like these coughing attacks. That's what happened yesterday.
Great. They just said Abby was outside coughing up a lung. I never like to hear that because I don't want
the antivirus spreading around the room here. So good. You're good then. I'm good. Let's go.
All right.
at me when I said it could be pneumonia.
I was like my co-worker said it probably is.
Well, she listened to my lungs and she was just like, no, you're good.
She told you go to YouTube to find some exercises.
That's probably right.
Okay, so let's go around the room.
Let's switch it up.
Lunchbox, go first.
May yesterday, I went out to the mailbox.
The mail had come and I'm going through the mail.
Junk.
Junk.
Oh, something to me.
And I open it up.
And it is $20 from jury do.
Judy, I got paid.
That's cool.
They said it would take like a month.
It took like a week and a half.
They sent you cash?
No, he sent me a check for 20 bucks.
That is awesome.
Because I'm always like, yeah, right, it's not really going to come.
It's going to take a month.
But you go out there a week and a half later and there's $20 in the mail.
Heck yeah.
Pretty cool.
You got paid?
Now I've got to go to the bank.
Spent 20 bucks in gas.
Get to the bank these days.
No.
Morgan.
Yeah, so I had my audiology appointment.
And I finally have a path to start following.
I think I have vestibular migraines.
You've had a lot of stuff.
I know.
So, wait, wait, what?
So vestibular migraines can be connected to vertigo.
Basically, they can trigger each other.
They don't know which triggers each other, but one of them does.
And so it's connected to the vertigo, but it's not a migraine like you would think.
They're different.
Vestibular migraines are like your head feels really heavy all the time.
and you're kind of in what they call a vertigo hangover.
But like they did, they put tubes in my ears and poured hot water in them yesterday.
I had like the, you know when you see people's heads with a bunch of stickies all over and wires connected?
I had that all over my face.
It was like a whole two hour long appointment.
Why are you laughing?
I mean, Morgan has come in here and told us six different things that she has.
Oh, same with you.
Oh, yeah.
No, he's had nothing for all the doctors.
They don't know what it is.
No, but she comes in and she's like, I figured out the problem why I'm getting vertigo.
So that's how he's mad.
And then two weeks later, it's like, I went to a different doctor and I know why I'm getting vertigo.
And then two weeks later, man, now I know why I'm getting vertigo.
It's just like, I don't know what is right and what's wrong, but you are listening to everybody saying everything.
What if she continues to just learn?
But which one is right, though?
How do you know?
Well, what if one thing leads to the other?
Like she does have something, but there's something even bigger that's affecting.
All right.
You know, like your body is all connected and all the pieces kind of go together.
Well, she stopped eating food on Thursdays because of her vertigo.
She needed to stop eating food.
You can try different things to see what works.
But she said that's working.
And it was.
Like my symptoms and my episodes have gotten better.
But it's still trying to figure out why it's happening.
I'm 32 years old.
I shouldn't be having vertigo.
Why are you angry at her?
No, no, I'm just, I'm, she's, I feel like she's turning into Amy where she goes
six different doctors and they all tell her different things.
and she starts taking pills for everything.
Old Amy, not current Amy.
Oh, Amy takes...
When was I this person?
The candida, the...
You would hold the bottle.
Yeah, I mean, I think we all have candida.
For sure.
A little bit of it.
I don't know.
And, yeah.
Lunchbox, are you just mad because she went to the doctor and the doctor said,
all right, here's your problem versus like...
Well, this is the third solution she's had, at least, for her vertigo.
And so I'm just, I'm worried that she's just barking up different trees.
You're worried about her now.
Now you're worried about it.
I'm worried.
That's why he laughed.
He's worried.
Interesting.
So, I mean, just, hey, mark it down on the calendar one month from now.
She'll have a different doctor's appointment.
They'll tell her she's having vertigo because of this.
Just mark it down.
What if somebody went in for like a finger injury, right?
And you go into the finger doctor and the doctor's like, yeah, you got, definitely
something wrong with your knuckle here.
We're going to diagnose that.
I think you should go to a hand specialist.
So then you go to a hand specialist.
I'm like, oh, this is why your finger hurts because your whole hand is now bother.
It's in your hand.
It's hurting your finger.
But it could be larger than that.
Now you have two diagnoses.
You got a finger diagnosis.
you got a hand diagnosis.
And so then you go to a shoulder doctor.
It's like, oh, it's actually all rooted in your shoulder.
And that goes down through your arm.
It's affecting your hand into your finger.
This is what Morgan's doing.
She's just getting it diagnosed larger.
So they are telling her what's wrong with her,
but she keeps going to new people.
They're diagnosing it more macro.
All right.
You have to worry about it.
Your body's kind of like an onion lunchbox.
You just peel back layers as you start to figure things out and understand.
So who's the one that told you to change your diet for your bridesgo?
That's a functional nutritionist.
I've been working with with also long COVID, which is still connected with the vertigo.
That's when it all started happening.
So again, it's an onion.
I'm peeling back layers to figure out the problem.
All right.
I'm just more, I guess, dedicated to it than you are.
Like, you go to people and you're like, I don't know, they told me to look up YouTube
and you don't follow a road.
I'm following the roads that they're taking me on.
Hold on.
You're saying that I don't follow a road.
I've been to at least eight doctors.
I've had a CT.
going down roads.
I've had a CT skin, an MRI, two ultrasounds.
I mean, so saying I don't go down roads, I've been to so many doctors.
We had to get you to tell them you had a swollen testicle.
That I was...
Like, we had to convince you to do that.
I've been to so many doctors that I was going to another doctor and they said,
bring your MRI in.
And I couldn't even remember which place I went to get my MRI because I'd been to so many
freaking places.
I think we know the root.
The root is Morgan's getting answers.
He's not.
Correct.
That's got to be it.
Can you ask Morgan?
I forget why this even started.
Tell me something good, Morgan.
Morgan was sharing her thing and he was laughing.
So now she's going to do what, like, what solve?
Well, now I have to go to a neurologist and get an MRI, and I also have to get a full-blown
hearing exam different than the vestibular function test I just did.
It's just, I'm walking down the paths, try and get answers.
Vertigo doesn't come with a lot of answers.
Like, there's a lot of unknowns, a lot of things they don't understand.
So I'm just walking down each one, trying to get answers, hopefully to find something
that can help alleviate
because one day I would love to not have vertigo.
Well, you're very lucky because although
they may not understand vertigo,
lunchbox does. Apparently. I mean, I just looked it up.
Have you thought about
oh, that's not a good virus to have
to cause your vertigo? You know what causes
vertigo? Herpes.
What's wrong with you? I'm really
glad that you're one
Google search. Which kind of
the disease? Because a lot of us carry herpes.
It says various herpes and viruses
are known causes for vertigo.
A mouth sore is herpes.
What a breakthrough.
Yeah, I bet herpes can also involve a swollen testicle, you know.
That might actually just be a herpes.
Let me Google that.
The swollen?
All right.
Eddie, you're up.
Okay.
Well, last night was crazy because I recently got this like air fryer slash oven, you know,
tabletop oven or whatever.
And I found these cool like parchment paper sheets that go in the bottom so it doesn't get dirty, right?
So I was so proud of these sheets.
I put one in.
I'm heating up some pizza last night.
I go upstairs.
Fire alarm goes off.
And the way my house is with the smoke alarms, they're all connected.
So they all start beeping all over the house.
And it goes, fire, fire.
It says it out loud.
Fire.
That's what it says.
Wow.
And so I'm like, oh my gosh, all the kids are freaking out.
One of them is running out of the shower.
Like, what's going on?
I go downstairs and my whole oven thing is on fire.
The actual flames?
An actual flame.
Yeah.
The parchment paper thing had caught on fire.
and it was in the oven, and I panicked.
Like, I didn't know what to do.
I unplugged the whole thing and threw it outside.
I'm like, oh.
Yeah, backyard.
And then the paper just kind of like disintegrated and it was over.
Did you not chase it down with like fire extinguisher or water or anything?
I didn't want to ruin the, it's a really nice air friar.
Your whole house might have burned.
I know.
Your yard.
I know, but the fire was contained in the little in the oven.
So like I felt like I could grab it.
And it wasn't hot.
It felt like I could grab it and just throw it out.
But, man, it was scary.
We almost lost the whole.
house last night.
So I guess now you know like your particular unit can't handle the parchment paper.
Yeah.
It was at 400 and I put it low.
So it was actually touching one of those barbs, you know, like the heat rods or whatever.
So don't do that.
I'll put the parchment paper under the pizza next time, not like at the bottom of the oven.
You learned a lesson?
You put it at the bottom of the oven.
I sure did.
To me that didn't stick out because I don't know enough about it.
Why would you laugh?
Because you would expect a heat
Because I would expect what exactly happened
To him to happen
Well my wife said the paper is like fireproof
And I'm like well cool I'll put it right in the very bottom
Where it's like close to those heating rods
But no
Yeah but yeah it's fine you learned
Is it because you got herpes
Google it
So yeah that was close one guys
So the good news is no house fire
And your oven is still good
Correct and my smoke alarms are pretty awesome
Yeah
Yeah, that's pretty good.
I love that they talk to us now.
Yeah, but they freak out.
They freak the kids out.
The kids, like one of them ran out naked from the shower.
Like, what's happening?
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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, yeah.
Fair to say this was the big.
biggest case of your career?
Yes, sir.
Rape a murder for a child.
Just as bad as it gets.
I would think so.
Evil, wake up.
I'm the one that saw the murder
take place by Crevent 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,
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All right, listen up.
The Jonas Brothers here.
Our podcast is called, Hey Jonas.
We're here, since everyone has a podcast, we wanted 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 Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your podcasts.
All right, Amy, you're up.
I did sprints this morning.
And so we had Dr. Kellerman the other day telling Eddie that he recently read a study about how sprints will help produce testosterone.
So I thought, I'm going to wake up early.
All I did is five sprints.
Nothing crazy.
I didn't have a lot of time.
But I did 30-second sprints with a minute and a half.
half rest in between.
And I got to say, it felt pretty good.
And I'm bumping up my testosterone, maybe, potentially with that.
Obviously, we have to do it more than once.
But I'm excited because my blood work appointment is today.
So I'll find out today if my testosterone has gone up.
Well, it won't be from those five sprints that you do.
I know.
That's like eating broccoli once.
Like, oh, my God.
I am so healthy.
I know.
It's just all related to testosterone.
My telling me something good is that I'm thankful.
My follow-up blood appointment is fine.
here because I've been waiting to see if my testosterone yam pellet is producing me some more testosterone.
But then also I was proud of myself for getting up like 15 minutes early to do my five minute
or my 30 second sprints with a minute and a half. I would say to do that whole thing,
it's about a 10 minute session. Sprint for 30 rest for a minute and a half. Sprint for 30 rest for a
minute and a half. A 30 second sprint I don't think is a sprint. Hard. No, that's long. What? At the
In of it, I'm like dying.
Yeah, yeah.
You can be dying.
I think it's a lot, right?
But that's, that's extreme.
But my, how long should I be doing?
100 meters.
Max.
Well, how far is that?
So like 10 seconds is that?
No, probably about 7, 6, 4.
Oh, so you think I need to sprint for less seconds?
Say more.
It's not about less seconds.
It's, yes.
If you sprint that long, you're begging to have your hamstring pulled.
I don't think you're sprinting.
I think you're going faster and it's taking your breath away.
Right.
But a real sprint is going almost as high.
hard as you can.
I was going pretty much as hard as I could.
I'm not doubting you aren't going hard.
Okay.
And here I base that workout off of something I saw a year ago, which to your point, I quit doing
it because my right hamstrings started bothering me.
But, you know, I've started stretching the last few months.
So maybe my hamstrings in a better place.
But I saw a doctor on a podcast saying, for women, you need to exert yourself for 30 seconds,
like as hard as you can go for 30 seconds and then rest for a minute and a half, whether
it's lifting weights or some sort of endurance training like sprints, that is really beneficial.
And just doing the five exertions is adequate for a woman.
Obviously, you need to do other types of workouts.
But if you're looking for something quick, like that can be really great for older women, more mature women.
I don't know what geriatric women.
I don't want you to think we don't think you're not working hard.
30 seconds, it's probably not.
Intense and a little too long.
Okay, so like on a treadmill, I'm at a nine.
That's fast.
Yeah, that's fast.
Like I pump it up to nine, 30 seconds, and then I'm...
Great.
Good.
That could be it.
Yeah.
Oh, so at treadmill, so you do know you're maintaining...
I didn't know if you couldn't tell you were maintaining the normal speed.
I thought you were doing it around the block.
Yeah, I thought you were outside.
I'm not going to go in the dark.
That's what I thought.
Well, that's what I was saying.
So maybe 30 seconds is okay.
I was thinking you're outside and you think you're running as fast as you were at the beginning,
but you're pretty much slowing down.
If I didn't have the treadmill, I wouldn't try to.
If I didn't have the treadmill, I wouldn't trust myself.
I'd be like, do, too.
If you're on a nine, that's hard to work.
That's good.
Just be careful with your hamstrings.
That's why adults don't do it.
Yeah, I'm glad you reminded me of that because it was a year ago that I heard the podcast about the doctor saying that.
So I was doing more of those sprint type things.
And then all of a sudden my hamstring went out and I couldn't even jog anymore.
I mean, then I went no running.
And then I think November Stevenson did his half marathon for Haiti.
And I joined him on a mile for that.
and I don't even know.
I think that was adrenaline
because I was like,
I'm helping Stevenson raise money for Haiti,
but I just, I can't,
it's crazy to me, I used to be a hardcore runner.
Which part's crazy?
The mental part, the physical,
because physical, understandable,
I used to be a hardcore big pressure.
Just that I thought,
either I thought I enjoyed it
or I truly did enjoy it.
Like high school, college,
and college is when I ran the marathon.
Like, I used to go run four miles
for like with music and be like I meet up with my friends hey let's go run town lake for the six
mile loop like that's what I used to like I can't imagine doing that I ran yesterday I hate running but
I'm only running to get my ankle better and how was it I think my ankle's getting definitely getting
there but I'm not pushing it pushing it every time I just try to run 15 seconds faster but I'll run a
mile before I work out a mile after and just try to 15 seconds faster than the last time and so I
did it at 845 yesterday that's where I've gotten to on my
my, still not what I would consider fast, but if I push it, I'll end up hurting my ankle again.
Yeah, you don't want that.
So I won't run today.
Tomorrow I'll do it again.
Do a mile before.
Do my workout.
Do a mile after.
Try to hit 8.30.
I'll probably cap out around 8 and just start doing that regularly.
But Mike runs like 50 miles at 6 minute paces.
It's crazy.
But I'm not a runner.
This guy runs like crazy.
Mike and Stevenson, y'all should go for a run.
Do a long run?
Yeah.
He wants to, so speaking of his, the half marathon he did.
in November for Haiti this November
he wants to do
a full one
well you need to get Abby on that
she's taking our money doing the same thing over and over again
but I'm like maybe he needs to get with
Mike D
I mean
does Mike like running you like running with people
I've never run with anybody before
oh Stevenson won't he doesn't need to talk
don't worry perfect
so I did that I didn't think about that
did that yesterday
it was that
two-month appointment for the baby
so we did that and like
they keep this baby book where they put down
how much height, head, weight,
all the stuff. You guys probably know about it.
If you don't, I'll tell you about it later.
Please tell you guys and tips.
But she's like 80%,
85% and everything.
Large kid.
That's good. Not a large,
still small.
I don't even know how big baby's supposed to be,
but we looked at all the percentiles and it's like
85%, 85%, 85%. 80%, 88%.
So she's in the healthy range for her age.
No large.
Size.
Yeah.
The higher the number, the more rare it is, right?
80th percent of the percent of the percentile.
You got it.
Hang in there, hang in there.
80th percentile means you're in the top 80.
Like, there's only 20 percent of all kids that age that are bigger than you.
Oh.
So you're bigger than 80 percent of the kids.
That's good, lunchbox.
See, but I feel like that's good.
Like, I feel like she's going to be a star.
Well, I don't know.
It's not.
me. Who knows? I don't know. Not going to put any sort of pressure. He's already training her.
No pressure, but. She doesn't 11 minute a mile. She does it. Yeah, yeah, 11 minute a mile.
So that was good. I talked about in the other part of the podcast. I had to go and get some
medicine. It's amazing how much everybody is so smart about a baby's needs, meaning I mentioned
that the baby had acid reflux really bad, and I had 72 people telling me exactly what the problem was.
And they were all different.
And they were all different.
And they knew exactly.
And it's like you should do.
It was like with my wife and on the Bobbycast that her and I did, she has been on chemo now for a long time.
The chemo pills, the low grade.
And she has an autoimmune that's really bad.
And people were like, why don't she just go to a homeopathic doctor?
And my wife's like, I've been.
And people keep going like, just go all natural and try that.
She's like, dude, I've done everything.
When we've tried every.
We went through a process, like a year's long process.
But I would say if someone suggests, why don't you just do this?
We tried it.
But everyone is so a matter of fact and so sure about their way.
Like if you just do this, you're better.
You don't even know what she has.
And she's like, people will be like, why don't you just do this?
That would solve it.
So the internet's really smart.
Very.
They think they are.
But yeah, baby's good.
Got some medicine, healthy.
ran a mile
Arkansas won their first game of the
SEC tournament which was good
they beat Mississippi State 3-0
they were playing Lexington Kentucky
Lexington Kentucky
they play Alabama today
so everything's good
we're rocking rocking
I still haven't shaken off that
not going to bed till 3 o'clock in the morning
on Sunday morning
Saturday night after we flew back from
my heart country I haven't shaken that yet
like I'm
the older you get the harder it is to do that crap
Yeah.
Like, I'm not fully back on my, I don't have a good schedule anyway, but like I'm hurting a little
bit still from that.
You?
Well, probably because you have the baby too.
I feel like today I felt, it's the first morning where I felt, which maybe that's why
I woke up and did some sprints.
But I feel like today I'm feeling back to normal.
You?
No, no, I'm not normal.
It hurts, right?
I'm still really tiring.
Yes.
I don't know when I'm going to feel better.
Did you drink at all, Eddie?
Yeah, of course I drank.
Oh, see, I didn't.
I haven't really had my.
much since the cruise, to be honest.
Oh, yeah. You went that hard on the cruise.
Yeah, that wrecked me bad.
So you're still hurting from the cruise.
I'm hurting from the weekend.
Like, the cruise was late February, early March.
And I think Eddie, or we were somewhere side stager, Elizabeth, who we work with.
She was like, oh, here, I got an extra drink.
Do you want it?
And I was like, I don't think so.
Oh, this weekend.
I just, I can't, I don't know what it.
And I mean, even just one drink, you would be.
fine, but it happened to be vodka, which vodka, what is the main ingredient in the leachie
martini that I had on the boat.
And that was just...
Yeah, we don't want that.
Trouble.
Even saying leachy.
It hurts.
All right, there you go.
That's what it's all about.
That was Tell Me Something Good.
It's time for the good news.
With Bobby.
Tell me something good.
Last Wednesday, three generations.
of the same family graduated together at Utah Valley University's class of 2026.
And not just mom and daughter, which happens, and that's still really cool.
Grandma, mom, and daughter.
Diana, Melissa, and Hadley all received bachelor's degrees.
They finished the same semester.
They did not plan on the timing happening.
It came as a surprise when they kind of compare their schedules because one of them had one class they had to get in.
And so, Diane has been working toward the degree for 40 years.
She stepped away for work and responsibilities
Back in olden days, you know
You guys have to do back in the Lord's.
And so they all, that's a really crazy picture.
It's like a picture that that family will love forever.
That's a really cool picture.
I haven't seen the picture,
but I'm sure they all took one together,
all three in their gowns.
That's awesome.
That's from People Magazine.
That's what it's all about.
That was Tell Me Something Good.
It's time for the good news.
With Amy.
Tell me something good.
So after seeing a Facebook post about a local woman desperately in need of a life-saving transplant,
Carissa Smith of Sisterville, West Virginia, donated part of her liver to save someone that she had never met.
Just scrolling, huh?
Scroll on Facebook.
She was like, I think I want to get tested.
She's a school-based probation officer at Tyler Consolidated High School,
and she registered as a living donor through the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center.
After she got tested, she got approved.
She found her match, underwent surgery earlier this year, and all as well.
They removed half of her liver.
Just scrolling.
Saw it and was moved by it.
I have a guy, I would say kind of a friend.
I know him, but his wife was at a Starbucks and saw a flyer for somebody that needed a kidney.
And she was like, huh, she donated a kidney to that person.
And now they have, you know, like they'll see each other during the holidays.
They're not like super, super close, but they make a point to see each other.
Yeah.
But it was just from a random, like, picture and a Starbucks.
That's cool that they get to see you.
The Carissa said she still hasn't met her recipient.
The recipient's been battling illness for years and has two children.
She hopes to connect with them in the future.
But it's just really special that she just saw on Facebook and decided to do it.
Eddie, under his breath, went, that's really cool.
I don't know if he wants us to acknowledge.
You keep saying it.
Yeah.
No, no, no.
Every donation story he's always.
And then he's like, why do you always come back to me?
But under his breath, he's like, that's really cool.
So cool.
Like, you guys talk about, like, scrolling, you know?
It's cool, but you're the one that's always said you're going to do it and you never have done it.
No, all I've said is like one day that'd be so cool to do.
Like, I would love to do that someday.
And like, you know, I'm not scrolling.
I get to hear all these stories every day at my work all the time.
Livers, kidneys, being donated.
That's so cool.
You're right.
Your moment will come.
It won't because he will never do it.
Half a liver.
He'll never do it.
But your liver will grow back.
That's half of it.
But it grows back in like a few weeks.
No, is it that fast?
No.
But it goes back.
There you go.
That's what it's all about.
That was Tell Me Something Good.
Joy is essential and it's also elusive.
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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 Crevette and DePippo.
Anthony DePippo showed no signs of remorse,
appearing unfazed after being sentenced to the maximum.
I said, I'm not guilty.
I'll take it to the grave.
Listen to the devil's quarry in the Bone Valley Feed 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've here, since everyone has a podcast, we wanted 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, our 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 sports slice 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, their reactions in the moment, and the stuff nobody gets to hear. Listen to Sports
Slice on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast. And for more,
follow Timbo Slicleaf 12 in the TikTok podcast network on TikTok. This is an IHeart podcast.
Guaranteed human.
