The Bobby Bones Show - TUES PT 1: Is Eddie Risking His Life? + What’s Wrong With People?! + Lunchbox Is Out Sick AGAIN!
Episode Date: April 7, 2026We do a round of What’s Wrong with People?! where we all share crazy stories An investigation uncovered a large-scale fraud scheme involving Mount Everest guides and rescue operators w...ho allegedly drugged or manipulated foreign climbers into appearing sick in order to trigger costly helicopter evacuations. Eddie talked about a graffiti problem that is taking over his neighborhood and how he might be risking his life to find the people doing it. Lunchbox apparently is sick again or is he faking it? Because he sent us a voicemail as proof. You be the judge!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is an I-Heart podcast.
Guaranteed Human.
Joy is essential and it's also elusive.
But now, there's a new and exciting way to start your journey toward a more joyful existence.
Joy 101.
It's a new podcast hosted by me, How to Kot Me.
If you're craving inspiration to maximize your joy, tune into these candid, uplifting,
and moving on-air chats.
Listen to Joy 101 on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your
Podcasts. Joy 101 with Hoda Kotby is presented by CVS.
There was no anything inside those eyes.
They turned black.
It scared the hell out of me.
People wake up.
I'm the one that saw the murder take place by Krivac 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'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 sports slice comes in.
I'm Timbo.
In 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 SportsSlice on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
And for more, follow Timbo Slicalife-Life 12 in the TikTok podcast network on TikTok.
Come on, Bobby.
Welcome to Tuesday show.
Morning, studio.
Morning.
I'm going to play the voicemail that Lunchbox sent.
He's sick.
Lunchbox is not here today.
He's sick a lot.
What do you say?
More than anybody else here.
Yes.
And then we say that and it's like, I am never sick.
It's allergies.
How long is the clip, Ray, that he sent in?
Ten seconds.
Okay, here you go.
Good morning, good morning, good morning.
Not going to risk it, man.
I sell my crap.
I don't want to take a chance.
Don't want Bobby to kill me.
Yeah, no kidding.
But he takes a chance all the time.
It comes in sick all the time.
Yeah, that one's pretty bad.
You know what's so frustrated about that?
I don't want Bobby to kill me.
No, no.
What about the rest of it?
You're getting us all sick.
Like, forget Bobby's going to kill you because you are going to kill him.
But I kill him because he's getting everybody sick.
I know, but I didn't think about that.
Well, is it because he's thinking that is it potentially allergies?
No.
I don't know.
I don't think it sounds like allergies.
I think that sounds like he's dying.
He says I don't want to risk it.
Ebola.
If you would be allergies or not, like we can't risk it.
One more time.
Good morning, good morning, good morning.
Not going to risk it, man.
I sell my crap.
I don't want to take a chance.
Don't want Bobby to kill me.
So he's not here today.
Eddie, you'll have to the bonehead.
Okay.
But what, every, a lot of people have kids.
Eddie has four kids.
And Eddie, Eddie doesn't, he's always like, my kids get me sick.
Eddie has four kids and he doesn't come in.
No, I never get sick.
What do you think the answer is?
Weekend immune system?
But you would think the more you're sick, the stronger your immune system is, right?
But his just is weak.
His was so weak.
It takes so much strengthening.
So that's where we are today.
There was a story too where there are all these eyedrops that have been recalled.
We were talking about a recall yesterday.
All these eyedrops are recalled because they may not be sterile.
So you could be putting something into your eye that has bacteria or is from UPI.
More than 3 million bottles of eyedrops sold at stores across the United States have been recalled because they may not be sterile.
Pharmaceuticals earlier this month issued a nationwide U.S. recall of 3.1 million bottles of eight different eye drop products because of lack of assurance of sterility.
the drops have been sold at
CBS, H-EB, Publix, Walgreens.
And it really doesn't say exactly the kinds.
In a news story, you'd hope to hear the kind.
Yeah.
I would just, when I see stuff like that,
something like, okay, I'm just going to throw out
whatever I have and start over.
I mean, if it's a bottle of eyedrops,
obviously, if it's far more expensive,
I'm going to look for the number
and try to put it on.
Dang, Rich, Rich, Rich.
Just tossing eye.
Drops like, no.
Well, I don't want to write.
Hey, rich, rich, rich.
Hey, I'm gay.
I didn't know a box.
bottle of eyedrops was breaking my bank.
All right.
Lunchbox is not here.
So FY everybody.
Hello, Bobby Bones.
It's been an anonymous inbox.
Messing to be happy.
Hello, Bobby Bones.
I've been dating this girl for a while.
I like her, but she refers to her pets as her children.
I mean, fully committed.
She talks about them like toddlers.
Even jumps into conversations with our friends who have kids and saying,
I've been through the same thing.
I don't think there's anything I can do to change my girlfriend.
It's clearly who's.
she is, how do I keep my friends from going over the edge about something that probably isn't
worth to blow up even though they're so annoyed by her? Do I ask her to let it go? Do I try to redirect
conversations? Is there a better way to handle this? Assigned boyfriend of a fur baby mom.
So she's going to fill this way until she has kids. Our dogs now are going through a problem
where they're like, why aren't we getting attention? And they're getting a little bit, but there's
definitely, yes, we're still, we have a newborn, still less than four weeks old. So I'm sure,
sure the dogs will get a bit more attention.
But I think there are times where my dogs were absolutely the most important things.
Like, no doubt, it's not when I was single.
I took my dog everywhere.
But I never referred to it as a baby.
That's a weird thing.
No, your dog was always your friend.
Yeah, I'm like my best friend.
Yeah.
If we were talking about my kids and you said, oh my gosh, Stanley does the same thing,
I would be so annoyed with you.
Yeah.
I don't know that I would get annoyed, but I'd be like, that's really weird.
But if I did it a bunch of times and I really meant it, I think you would get annoyed by it.
Interesting.
You have that type of relationship with your cat or your dog.
What do you say to him about her?
I think it's just something he asked to put up with.
I don't really think it's anything that he can say to change it.
I think she loves those animals so much and I get that.
I don't think there's really a conversation that you can have to go like, hey, stop talking about how.
Can you approach it with curiosity?
Like, here, I would say to you, Bobby.
I wonder, I wonder if when you can pay.
your dog to their baby,
if that's weird.
If they get annoyed by that.
Yeah, I wonder if they get annoyed.
I feel like that would feel like an attack.
I think you just live with it.
And be happy that she loves animals.
Okay.
And I think she'll grow out of it.
When she has kids.
Probably.
Or she's also like in her 20.
I mean, I don't know.
I feel like you get a more responsible.
Listen, I never love my animals less.
But you can't take a baby
and put in a kennel for two hours because you're leaving.
or at least that I know of.
You're not able to do that.
So it's not the same.
So I think you just put up with it for a while.
Suck it up, buttercup.
Yeah, and if she continues so much where you can't stand it,
break up with her.
Break up with her.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's good.
Yeah.
But it's okay.
I think it's a net positive.
She loves animals so much.
That's great.
That's a key ingredient to someone who is generous and empathetic and loving.
So yes, but I can be annoying for sure.
Good luck with that, buddy.
Yeah.
Let us know when that doesn't work anymore.
We have a segment we do called What's Wrong with People?
What's wrong with people?
This first one, and so people were climbing Mount Everest,
and it turns out that some of the guides were poisoning the climbers
because when they had to call the helicopter to save them,
that would cost money, and they would all split the money.
Oh, my.
So listen to this. This is from CBS Morning.
So this is an investigation.
People were climbing Mount Everest.
It turns out they were getting poisoned.
At least Nepal told the newspaper that guides would put baking powder into climbers' food,
to make them unwell or give them drugs to induce symptoms of altitude sickness.
So they thought they were being affected by the altitude.
So this would then trigger emergency helicopter rescues.
And the insurance payout guys would allegedly be split up by the guides,
the helicopter company, even the hospitals were getting in on it.
Yes.
Investigators say that they have evidence of several hundred fake rescues between 2022 and 2025.
Millions at all.
Dirty dogs.
They'd figured out a way to game the system.
And so they're making people sick and then splitting the payment for having to rescue them.
making people sick on a lifelong
omission. They don't give a crap. Well.
Like they literally don't give a crap. I can see that.
Yeah. But what a bummer. You finally make it to Everest.
Mm-hmm. And then you have to get helicoptered off because someone
poisoned you. What about all the people hearing this story? They got sick climbing Everest.
They had no idea. They thought they literally got altitude poisoning or sick. And they're going,
oh my God. That's me. I had to be rescued. Yeah.
So what's wrong with people? What's wrong with people? What's wrong with people?
I have another one. This guy in Florida, he saw a guy and he's going to tell you about it.
His car is like broken down. He's laying on the ground so he pulls over on the highway to help him.
Luckily, he drives a Tesla and has a camera. The other dude just started beating the crap out of him.
The guy jumps up from the ground. He like lured him in. Hit it.
I saw a car crashed. I saw a door open. So being a good person, any human being would see,
you would just pull over to check.
As Hamilton Parks is Tesla, the man the red T-shirt appeared to be lying motionless on the ground.
Hey, are you okay? Are you okay? No response. As soon as I opened that car door, he was off that ground. So he was waiting.
This video from a camera on his car shows the man hop on the hood of the Tesla. And he starts stomping on the windshield.
Pulled me out on my car. As I was falling backwards, he was jumping off the roof on top of me.
Deputy's arrested Komen for battery and criminal mischief for what he did to Hamilton and his car.
He says he's grateful for the kindness of strangers who are making donations on his GoFumMe page for his auto and medical bills.
You see in the clip this guy jump up because again the Tesla has the cameras and starts beating the crap out of him.
I'm talking about it in a headlock and then the cops got there and he beat up a cop until they finally got him restrained.
Oh my.
The guy was just trying to help.
Yeah.
That's from W.E.S.H.2 Orlando.
What's wrong with people?
What's wrong with people?
Amy, what do you have?
I saw a guy being interviewed about if his girlfriend were to get pregnant, what would he do?
And he said, well, if she's pregnant with a boy, I'm saying, if she's pregnant.
with a girl, I'm out.
Where did he say this?
Just being interviewed.
And I was like, what is wrong with people?
He may just be saying this without it happening.
Yeah, I mean, it was a hypothetical.
But like, men really think that way?
I think he's probably just being funny in an interview.
It felt like a big red flag.
I'm not disagreeing with that.
It felt serious.
I didn't see it, so it felt serious to you?
I feel like it felt serious to me.
to where I was like, man, Bobby just had a girl.
And that's amazing.
And women are, girls are awesome.
Like, you'd be missing out.
I just was thinking, if I see my boyfriend on the news, like, answering that question.
Oh, it was on the news?
I'm out.
Well, okay, TikTok.
Okay, well, that's the difference.
Because you might be drunk at a bar.
Okay.
It was the middle of the day.
I'll give it to you.
Go ahead.
It's the middle of the day.
Okay, fine.
If I see my boyfriend, I'm scrolling TikTok and I see a viral clip of my boyfriend
saying if I get pregnant with a,
The girl, he's out, he's leaving me.
I'm going to be mortified.
Okay, so say it.
What's wrong with people?
What's wrong with people?
Eddie, do you have one?
Yeah, I do.
So there's a guy in Southern California that got arrested for breaking into cars at a cemetery during
funerals.
Oh, me.
So people were mourning the dead person, they get to their car.
It's like, somebody broke into my car.
Who does that?
Oh, that's like the people that actually watch the obituaries to see what time the funerals are.
And then they go to their homes because they know they're going to be busy.
and they robbed them.
It's terrible.
Say it.
What's wrong with people?
What's wrong with people?
Eddie says someone is graffitiing his neighborhood.
Yeah, they're spray painting stuff.
Street signs, you know, telephone poles,
even a house that's being built inside.
They tagged it all with spray paint.
Are they writing any bad on it?
They're writing a certain word.
I don't even want to say the word just in case they're listening
because we're going to catch them.
What do you mean?
So me and a couple other dad.
we have these shifts that we're doing, we're going to stay up all night and we're going to catch these guys.
We think they're kids. Like, there's no way these are adults. Are you worried they might be armed?
No. Armed with a spray can, like spray paint. Okay. I wouldn't think they were armed. Okay. I would be so nervous.
And you guys are going to stay awake through the night. Yeah. I have Friday and Saturday because I told them guys I have a weird like work schedule. I can't stay up all night on the weekdays. But Friday night, Saturday night, stay up with some beers, watching the neighborhood. I'm down.
You're going to stay up.
All night long.
Yeah.
And drive around with beers.
Maybe you shouldn't do that.
Okay.
Walk around with a flashlight.
Something, but I'm going to catch these kids.
If you walk around with a flashlight, you'll deter them.
Oh, so hide?
Yeah.
You get to dress all in black.
Yeah.
And if you're driving around, don't drive.
I mean, I wouldn't even drive.
Okay.
I usually like on foot in black.
But make sure people know that you're, that's your shift because then they're going to
think you're the guy.
Well, if you're not spraying things.
Yeah, it's just me and two other dads.
Okay.
And what are you going to do if you see them?
Call the other dads.
Be like, I got them.
I got eyes on them.
What do we do now?
Yeah.
I think you should come up with a plan before you run into them.
Cops.
I mean, you got, right?
That's illegal to vandalize.
Can you give the cops a heads up?
I would call the cops first before I would do any sort of like Spider-Man dad group.
Oh, really?
Yeah, probably.
Yeah, probably like, hey, we got people spray paint.
We're going to try to figure out who it is.
But what do we do in case we find them.
That's what I would do.
because neighborhood watches are encouraged by the police.
So they want that.
But yeah,
I would want,
that's a good idea,
Bobby.
You need to get a game plan.
And I think calling the police to get the game plan is good.
Well,
some neighborhoods have the sign.
It's like neighborhood watch.
I used to get so jealous,
though,
when people would adopt a highway
and I'd see their name up on the sign.
I'd drive by,
and be like, hey,
they got their name on a sign,
adopt a highway.
Did you guys ever have that back in the day?
Adopt the highway to clean it up.
Yeah,
I've seen it.
I was never jealous of it.
But you would see the sign.
You drive by and you'd be like the next mile is adopted by.
And you didn't get jealous that you weren't on one of those signs?
No.
No.
Oh, man.
I never saw anyone cleaning up either.
Like, I saw all the signs.
And sometimes I see trash on the road and those.
I'd be like, that place sucks.
Oh, y'all never see prison workers cleaning up?
But it's not Adopt a highway.
Adopt a highway is like a company or a church.
And their name gets to be on the sign.
And then we celebrate them every time we drive by.
I wonder how much that is.
Now that you're older, do you want to adopt one?
To adopt a highway?
You just have to keep it clean.
You have to keep it clean.
Oh, that makes sense.
I thought they actually paid money to have that highway.
No.
And you can tell everyone from their own out, like, that's my highway.
That mile right there?
We could do a section and then go clean it together.
I'm good.
I'm good on the sign thing now, but as a kid, I was very jealous.
You can finally get something you used to be jealous of and how you don't want it.
I have my own sign.
That's true.
And you don't have to clean up any trash.
In your neighborhood.
Where I grew up.
Oh, yeah.
I have it in my own neighborhood.
Welcome to Bobby's house.
It's generally free for volunteers who perform to clean up themselves with tools,
provided by the state. Oh, okay.
No, that was always jealous me to drove by.
Nobody ever did adopt the highway, huh? No.
All right. Well, Scuba, what's up?
Well, I have a street here in Nashville. I adopted Main Street,
you know, between, like, kind of where
Nissan Stadium is right there. What do you mean you adopted it?
I adopted it. Like you, as a kid, I was always like, this is so freaking cool.
You can adopt a street.
Is your name on it?
Yeah, it says Scuba Steve Radio, and it says 105-9 the rock underneath it.
I own, like, a massive part of Nashville going into East.
Well, you don't own it.
Well, it is my street, though. Like, like, just like you.
You clean it.
I clean it four times.
year, yeah, and I put my name on the street.
And you actually clean it? Yeah, I go out there with my wife.
And your name's on the sign? Yeah, my name's lost again.
I just suggested this. Yeah, I don't want to do that.
It is a lot of work.
Four times a year.
Maybe that's time for that. That's pretty cool, Scoop, Steve.
Yeah, thanks, man.
Happy Pride Month, Toronto.
Pride is an opportunity for you to create your own space, to celebrate your existence.
Iheart Radio is proud to be an official sponsor of Pride Toronto Festival, and we won't stop.
pride.
Turn up the love and listen to IHeart Pride Canada, your 24-7 radio stream and the only playlist
you need for your Toronto Pride celebrations.
Pride is so great because it gives a whole bunch of people this visibility that they've
never had before.
We have a ton to celebrate Toronto.
Happy Pride!
Iheart Radio.
In the moment, it felt like it was going on 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.
Fair to say this was the biggest case of your career?
Yes, sir.
Rape and murder for a child.
Just as bad as it gets.
I would think so.
People wake up.
I'm the one that saw the murder take place by 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 on the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
And to hear The Devil's Quarry ad free with exclusive content, subscribe to Lobb 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.
And it's a part of it's exciting because their new star is Javier Titorito Hernandez.
Everyone sees me as a football player, but before anything else, I'm human.
Every single day I'm still learning how to live with problems, mistakes, relationships, emotions ever since I was born.
And I still have so many questions. Where do we come from? What happens after death?
How do you deal with cancellation?
Cristiano or Messi? Do aliens exist? What is love?
Real Madrid or Varsa? From every day an ordinary to the deep and extraordinary.
This isn't a normal podcast. Everything here is spontaneous, real and genuine.
This podcast is like a deep talk with your closest friends, where vulnerability comes out.
Conspiracy theories end up on the table and goals and lessons are shared.
All in this life has an order perfect and everything is just.
Wait-in me, I'm here to put me to go to go back.
It's a good.
We are here to connect.
Hacharito. We're going to make the ordinary, extraordinary. Stay close.
No, no, you don't sing the name of the band.
We were meant to live so much.
Let's go!
On the Bobby Bones show now.
John Foreman of Switchfoot.
So why did you guys get dropped at that fourth record?
We played a show in New York for the head of Sony,
and he walked out second song after sang a couple expletives and did not like us
and thought we were not a good band.
So he saw you play and dropped you based off a song?
Actually, I think he walked out during a song called Dairy to Move, which ended up being one of our bigger songs.
Yeah.
We finished the show and we're thinking, man, that went pretty good, right?
And our manager's like, no, it did not.
I don't think it went well at all.
And I think you guys got dropped.
And it ended up being the best thing that could have happened to us.
Why?
Because we were then relegated to this, basically the farm.
team of Sony, which was RED. That was a big turning point for us. And I don't think it would have
happened on Sony. So that's what I mean. It was a blessing in disguise. What was the success story
of meant to live? Ment to live was a song. It still feels true for me. And when I say was,
I feel like I should say is. It still is a song that feels like it resonates. There's several
lines in it that feel more poignant now and almost prescient than it then when I wrote them we want more
than the wars of our fathers that line every night when I sing that especially now and being a dad
um that feels feels like a very poignant line meant to live did that for a lot of people where it
resonated with them and it felt like that fist in the air kind of moment where they want to sing
along with it was there a television performance or was it
TV or was it a radio? Like, what was kind of the lever that actually, like, pop that song?
I mean, we did all of them. You mentioned, you know, we were talking about the BC boys on Letterman.
Yeah, we did Letterman. We did Leno. We did MTV. There was one moment where the last minute we were
added to a radio show at Madison Square Garden in New York City. And it was a last minute thing.
And they said, hey, we want you to go out and play a couple songs just to come.
acoustic, just you. Now that I'm thinking of it, it was very odd. William Hung. Oh, I remember William
Hung. Was the act immediately before us, yes? Yeah, she bangs. American Idol, yeah. But you've got like
Destiny's Child and Maroon Five and all these people. Everyone's backstage. And so I remember
walking on stage with just an acoustic guitar and playing, meant to live on the acoustic guitar
and having the entire Madison Square Garden singing along with me. And that was a moment where I thought,
they all know this song.
That's incredible.
And those are moments that I feel like
that is why I do what I do.
Whether it's an arena or
14 people backstage
or it could be, I do after shows
where the show will finish
and I'll go to the parking lot in the back
and send out a tweet or Instagram
and say, hey, let's keep the night going.
Where multiple people are all singing the same thing.
When I was in high school
going to the punk show or church
or wherever it felt like,
Oh, I resonate with this.
I feel like I belong somewhere.
And in that moment at MSG, it felt like, oh, I'm a part of something bigger.
The Bobby Bones show.
If you want to hear that full interview, just go search for the Bobbycast on IHeart Radio or wherever you get your podcast.
I have a bulldog named Stanley.
He had a cut on his eyeball.
And so we've been dealing with that.
We didn't know if we're going to have to go in for surgery.
Do you know they have dog eye doctors?
Not a vet.
A dog, ophthalmologist.
I did not.
I had no idea.
No, a dog ophthalmologist.
Oh, because I have an optometrist.
For a dog?
No, no for me.
So I go and we take them in because the vet's like, we can't fix it.
We go like no surgery needed, but like his second layer was cut.
So they had to do some of those first layer to get to a second layer.
And then I'm like, you only do eyes as a dog doctor?
She's like, yeah, I'm a dog ophthalmologist.
That's crazy that there are that many dogs that have eye problems that they can just have an office of just doing dog eyes.
Yeah.
I asked what they made.
Well, I mean, I didn't ask her.
They make around $300,000 a year.
Not bad.
It's pretty good.
To be a dog eye doctor.
It's one of the hardest veterinary specialist to get into.
A vet school residency.
I just didn't know there'd be a dog eye doctor just doing eyes.
I felt like that's pretty crazy.
That seems so specific.
You'd think that normal dog foot doctor?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Pediatrist.
A dog diatrist?
Yeah.
Paul.
Paul dietitist.
Yeah.
Dang it.
I tried to go there.
I went to the pediatrician with our kid.
And do you know 17-year-olds go to the pediatrician?
Well, as long as you're an adolescent, right?
If you're not an adult, you go to the pediatrician.
Yes.
You can still go to the same doctor.
Yeah, because when my daughter turned 18, she still is seeing her same pediatrician,
but we had to sign over paperwork because now that she's 18,
but she can still see her.
And then eventually she'll move on, but she didn't,
because she was still in high school.
I was confused because it was like three babies in there
and there's like a 17-year-old with a mustache.
Yeah, the waiting rooms are sometimes I'm like,
do I want to wait in here?
There's a lot to little children.
It felt a bit like when I was getting allergy shots
because I was an adult man
and then there were a bunch of kids.
It was me and a bunch of 12-year-olds.
It was parents and they were 12-year-olds
than me just in there.
They'd be like, Bobby, then I would go back
and get my allergy shots every week.
Yeah.
And so I didn't know you could be 17
and still go to the baby doctor.
Well, pediatrician.
It's a kid, baby kid, baby toddler.
When you walk in, the wall, say baby.
Oh.
It's like, the cartoon drawings.
All drawn fishes and fish tanks and all that.
Yeah.
Wake up, wake up in the morning.
Then you turn the radio on and the dial just keeps on turn.
Dang to hear me lunchbox.
More game two.
The Steve Reddavit trying to put you through.
Mike D's writing this week's next bit.
Now Bobby's on the mic so you know what this is.
This is the Bobby Vaughnstone.
Now time for the morning, Corny.
The Morning Corny.
Why did the old man fall in the well?
Why?
He couldn't see that well.
Oh.
That's funny.
That was the Morning Corny.
All right, Tuesday Reviews Day.
Did you finish anything?
Anything, Amy?
No.
Not a TV show.
Movie?
Special permission for a book.
Go ahead.
Okay.
All right.
This book is so good.
It's called Theo of Golden.
And if you're paying attention to books, everyone's talking about it.
And I'm so excited that I finished it.
And it just is, it's so good.
I can't stop smiling about it.
Fiction, nonfiction.
It's a novel.
So it's fiction.
Yes.
Is that what a novel is?
Yeah.
Okay.
I didn't know.
I don't know the difference.
It's just.
A serious kind stranger named Theo.
Yes.
Okay.
You liked it.
What do you rate it?
Five out of five.
10 out of 10.
Wow.
We can't be making new systems here.
I forget what we do.
Five out of five.
Okay.
Five, um, um, kind gifts out of five.
Theo, a quiet and compassionate man purchases 92 portraits of local people and gives them to the
subject asking only for their stories in return.
That's the plot.
That sounds cool.
Okay, read it.
No, I'm not reading it.
How long is it?
How long is it?
my gosh. I guarantee you, after Eddie finishes this book, if he truly thinks he'll ever donate an organ,
he might just sign up. It's only 400 pages. Eddie hasn't read a book in how many years?
I read the Matthew McConaughey Green Lights. Yeah, but how many years? Three years ago, four years ago?
That's longer than that. Five years ago? I don't know. He says he doesn't read. I've given him some books.
How many books you've read in your life? Four. Yeah, that's good. Well, I'm not shaming you. I'm just asking.
Yeah, not at all. Perfect Storm. That's a good one. The one they made in a movie? I read that book.
Good for you.
2020 was green light, so six years.
Oh, dang, six years ago.
I watched is this thing on.
Mike, have you seen that?
I'm not.
Oh, is that stand up?
Kind of.
It's a part of it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So it's very much an adult movie,
meaning it's not dirty,
but it's like about the dynamics of a relationship.
They're married, stuff goes on.
He then does some stand-up comedy.
He's not good at it.
He stumbles into it.
and, you know, relationships stuff happens.
I give it four out of five microphones,
but Will Arnett's in it, Laura Derns in it, Bradley Cooper's in it.
Yeah.
I was wanting more comedy, and it really wasn't about that.
It's very adult relationship dynamic, but it was good.
And it's, is this thing on four out of five microphones,
so don't watch it with your kids.
Peyton Manning's in it.
Oh, really?
He actually acts in it a little bit.
So he's not as Peyton.
He's not as Peyton Manning.
That's cool.
It's weird.
It's pretty good.
but it's weird because you just can't not see Peytonning doing it.
Mike, you see anything?
Yeah, watch the new Robert Pattinson Zendaya movie called The Drama.
So I heard that movie is like not what you expect.
It's not what you expect at all.
It starts out as a rom-com takes a turn and then goes kind of thriller.
Almost feels like a horror movie at times.
Really?
Yeah.
I thought it was really good.
But I think it's one that you either love it or you hate it.
I think everybody in this movie would, everybody in this room would watch it and have a different reaction to it.
And it's called what?
The Drama.
What do you rate it?
I give it four.
5.5 out of five weddings.
Is it only in theaters?
Hey, tell me in three months.
Hit me up then. Eddie?
No, nothing.
I'm almost done with a couple of shows, but nothing yet.
Morgan?
I finished Paradise.
That show is just the best show I have watched in so many years.
The best show on TV, yeah.
It's so good.
And every week, I'm just, I'm sad now that I have to wait for the next season.
So five out of five apple pies.
That's an interesting.
Apple pie, it's an interesting call.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Paradise is awesome.
It's on ABC.
So it's also on Hulu.
Right.
I mean, it's crazy that the network has a show that's that good.
So, all right, there you go.
That's Tuesday, Reviews Day.
We were talking about last Friday and Fun Fact Friday,
this guy that had hiccups for like 30 years.
Took forever for him to get rid of them.
And that feels like fiction.
It feels like somebody just made that story up.
It's not.
But then we had listeners call.
Play this voicemail, please.
My mom has had the hiccups for over five years.
On February 2nd, we celebrated their fifth anniversary.
And it's like a bigger celebration than her birthday.
She just woke up one day and nobody knows why and just started hiccuping.
And I think I can't remember exactly, but I think it's like two to 400 times a day.
I just wanted to let you know that it's still a problem that doctors don't really can't explain.
Yeah, love y'all show.
Keep doing what y'all do.
Her mom, as of right now, is five years into having hiccups.
How do you even sleep with hiccups though?
Right.
Like, I feel like it would wake me up.
Sometimes it would go, whoa, wakes me up.
Maybe when she sleeps me up.
She sleeps, they subside.
No, five years.
So two to 400 times a day, what do you think, like, on average, like, for an hour?
What do I think?
You can literally do the math.
Well, I'm thinking, like, is it, like, every five seconds?
Well, two to 400, though, that's a big difference between the two.
Because I'm wondering, like, does it interrupt you talking to people all the time?
Like, you're in the middle of sentences.
Yes, you have hiccups all the time.
That's what happens when you have hiccups.
The 300 a day, though, that can't, that's not that many, though.
That's what I'm saying.
So if it's spread out, like, I can kind of see that.
Okay, but what if?
Like, I'm, why am I picturing when she's sleeping?
That part of her system doesn't happen.
It's like only in her waking hours.
So then it would be a lot.
That's 13 hiccups per hour.
Right.
That's still annoying.
So I feel like that can kind of be normal and you can live with that.
When I get hiccuffs, it's like every seven.
That still sucks and it's crazy.
Yeah.
But it's not traditional hiccups once I look at it and do the math.
Yeah.
Oh, dang.
That still sucks five years.
Give me the next one, please.
This is late, but happy birthday, Bobby.
But Ray gave you a bell?
He gave you a bell.
Didn't you get him like a really expensive pair of sunglasses and a plant and something else really expensive for his birthday?
Anyway, happy birthday, but a bell.
Come on, Ray.
Didn't think about that.
What do you want to say to that, Ray?
Because I don't have any problem with this.
Yeah, I was laughing here all by myself when I loaded this voicemail in.
It's funny.
I didn't really think of it like that, but yes, it was only $2.
That does make me seem cheap.
But did you have that bell with Arkansas hog on it before?
This is a bell that he got from thrifting.
And so I think anytime Arkansas wins, I ring the bell.
Although it's so old, it might crack.
It looks like it has a sugar cube as the thing that gets the bell.
Yeah, there you go.
We got Arkansas win.
Ring the bell.
All right.
I didn't realize it's only $2, right?
Yeah, it was more of the thought that counts kind of with that one.
And with Bobby, that's more important.
then the money's spent.
I don't know I say that, I mean.
$2 gift.
That's what I mean.
And think about it until they said it.
But by the way, you guys can leave us a voicemail anytime.
877.
777 bomb.
Pride is like love.
You feel it in your heart.
IR. Radio.
Canada's number one streaming app for radio and podcasts,
including IHart Pride Canada, your favorite hits and must have party bangers,
plus personalized and curated playlists.
Like back in the day.
Pride.
Come together, celebrate love.
Take pride with you.
Anytime, anywhere.
Just ask your smart speaker to play IHart Pride Canada.
Stream us on your phone or listen now at iHeartRadio.ca.
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 murray.
Yes, sir.
Fair to say this was the biggest case of your career?
Yes, sir.
Rape and 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 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're.
get your podcasts.
And to hear the devil's quarry ad free with exclusive content,
subscribe to Lobba 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 postpartum 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.
Because their new star is Javier T. Torito Hernandez.
Everyone sees me as a football player, but before anything else, I'm human.
Every single day, I'm still learning how to live with problems, mistakes, relationships, emotions, ever since I was born.
And I still have so many questions.
Where do we come from?
What happens after death?
How do you deal with cancellation?
Cristiano or Messi?
Do aliens exist?
What is love?
Real Madrid or Barza?
From every day and ordinary to the deep and extraordinary.
This isn't a normal podcast.
Everything here is spontaneous, real and genuine.
This podcast is like a deep talk with your closest friends.
Where vulnerability comes out.
Conspiracy theories end up on the table and goals and lessons are shared.
All in this life has an order perfect and everything.
I'm going to be
pressurably,
but me
go to
connect.
The Chicharito.
Oh Javier
El Chicharito
Hernandez and together
with Iha Radio.
We're going to make
the ordinary,
extraordinary.
Stay close.
It is a carac.
Wow.
Listen to learning
to be human
on IHard Radio,
Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcast.
Yesterday,
Savannah Guthrie went back
on the Today Show.
Also yesterday,
there were
new elements
in the Nancy Guthrie
Cole case,
her mom.
Did you see this at all?
All I saw us are going back to work and people wearing yellow to honor, but no, no updates.
They got another ransom note on the day she went back to the Today Show.
Oh my.
So this is from TMZ.
I'll just play you this from them.
Hit that.
The person who has been incessantly contacting us.
Although it stopped for a while.
Stop for a while.
Email saying, I know where her body is and who the kidnapper is.
Give us, give me half a Bitcoin.
and I'll tell you, and this person has been really persistent,
knowing that if it's a scam, it's a federal crime.
You have to assume that the law enforcement, they believe that this person is not legit.
Otherwise, they would have advised Savannah to pay the money.
So the person says they saw her in Mexico, the mom,
and shortly after they talked about this,
there was somebody that said they saw her in Sonora, Mexico.
Eddie, you're from down there.
I don't know where that is.
I mean, I'm assuming it would be somewhere where New Mexico is.
Yeah.
What I mean for you from down there, like you literally from near a border town.
Yeah, yeah.
But Texas border, not New Mexico.
That doesn't sound like a Texas border, no.
Okay.
The sender, as you heard, is suggesting that Nancy is not alive anymore, the mom.
Do you know how much half a Bitcoin is worth?
Yeah, probably like $33,000 or $34,000.
Okay.
The Bitcoin itself is struggling right now.
But yeah, it's basically $34,000.
Got it.
So that happened.
It's this, I don't know.
What do you do if you're her and you get this?
And you have millions of dollars?
Yeah, so I'm like, is it worth it to just...
You just throw $34,000 like a lottery ticket?
And then see what you get.
And then...
How about her?
She goes back to work yesterday.
You're never moved on.
It's only been two months.
And you're never moved on.
You may compartmentalize and be able to do one thing, but you're never moved on.
And then this happens the day you go back when you're trying to,
to compartmentalize to the level.
I hate this for all the Guthrie's.
Yeah, it's terrible.
You think the guy's just messing with them.
I think somebody knows something.
I do think somebody knows something.
And they want money for the, yeah,
for passing along whatever information they have.
Yeah.
I think that's what, after two months,
I would just have to be like,
okay, let's pay this and figure it out.
And if it's a loss, it's a loss.
Like, at this point, if they do have a lot of money,
I would assume, but also even if I didn't,
it's like just some of the peace of mind
I would get from knowing that these ransom notes
are real or not real.
You know?
My assumption would be they're being told by law enforcement,
FBI, whomever, not to pay the money.
There are instances where people have bucked the system
the Elizabeth Smart case
when they were like, you know, we're told not to release this image
and they were like, screw this,
we're putting the image out there because we can't find our daughter.
and luckily they did.
I'm not saying,
look, what do I know nothing?
I just see stuff and talk about it.
But I think me as a human,
I think I'd probably start bucking the system a little bit
if the system is telling me not to do certain things,
and I'm not getting the result that I wanted.
So I felt terrible for her yesterday.
So terrible.
Yeah, your first day back of maybe a tiny bit of normalcy,
just a tiny bit, and then bam, another ransom note.
Another story, which I do not know if you kept up with this one either.
Do you know who won the basketball championship last night?
I do not.
Do you know who was in the title game?
I do not.
Oh, take a guess on who you think was in the championship last night.
We're talking men's basketball?
Men's basketball.
Okay.
Well, because I've been hearing about female basketball, women's sports, too?
Well, women just had theirs on Sunday.
Do you know who played in that one?
Heard about it.
Heard about, my sister was telling me about the game.
Try either one.
I can't remember.
You have four teams up for grabs here.
You have two of women, two and men.
None of them cross over.
They're all four different teams.
Iowa.
Iowa did not make the championship.
Oh, dang.
Okay, shoot.
That was my one...
Pick another.
School.
I don't know, Bobby.
Okay, South Carolina and women's.
Okay.
They played UCLA and women's.
The coach, it's like really popular.
Gone Staley.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So UCLA beat South Carolina
for the women's championship.
Last night was the men's.
Okay.
And who was in that one?
Come on, Andy.
South Carolina.
Nope.
I just said they didn't cross over.
Oh, they didn't gross over.
Tom Brady went to this college.
Oh, he did.
He did.
He did.
Where did Tom Brady go to college?
Meet me.
Was it somewhere in Boston?
Mm-mm.
Okay.
You don't go to college where you play a pro ball most of the time.
You don't just move up.
Okay.
Did he go somewhere in Florida?
No.
Now you're thinking of Tampa Bay.
That's all I associate him with.
Where in the world did Tom Brady go to college?
Just give me a hint because I do want to guess.
They have helmets that are pretty colorblind, but they're blue with yellow.
But this is a basketball team, but it's the same colors, obviously.
Blue with yellow.
They're blue, right, guys?
Hornets.
No. Okay, I don't know.
It's also their mascot of this team that ended up winning the championship last night is in a superhero.
Is a Marvel Avenger.
I have no idea. College that is an Avenger, right?
That's a college.
Technically, not really.
Oh, he's not an Avenger.
Hugh Jackman plays him.
A Wolverine.
Now what's the school?
The Wolverines.
Now what's the school that are Wolverines?
The Wisconsin Wolverines.
No, they're the badgers.
Oh, shoot.
The, um, the, um, the, um, the, um, um, um, um, well, how.
I don't know.
You're in the same area, though, of the country.
Of Wisconsin.
Ray.
Oh, Michigan.
The Michigan Wolverines.
Yes.
They are the champions.
And they beat the huskies from.
The huskies from not the Buckeye state.
The huskies.
The Houston Huskies.
I know that's not right.
It's cold.
It's cold.
Yeah, because they're huskies.
Yeah.
It's cold up there.
The, oh, North Dakota.
It's a small state.
South Dakota.
No, no, no, that's a big state.
Oh, northeast.
Oh, oh, oh, Delaware, New Hampshire.
Yukon.
You would have got there.
Yukon.
Yeah.
University of Connecticut.
Got it.
So Michigan beats University of Connecticut for the championship last night.
We got there.
Hit that clip.
Paul knocked around, flubbed down the floor.
Caravan trying to track it down, and he will.
And it's over to Michigan.
Good job.
Michigan was really good this year.
So they're the winners.
I got other good news.
We did some bad news.
some mid news, now we have good news.
Tattoos may protect against skin cancer.
Ooh, that's cool.
So many times we hear tattoos are giving you cancer,
and I'm like, I'm fully tattered up like a biker.
Is that if you have them all over your body?
So new research suggests having a couple tattoos may protect people
from the deadliest form of skin cancer.
A study from the Huntsman Cancer Institute at the University of Utah involving 7,000 people
finds having two or more tattoo sessions decreases the risk of both invasive and stage zero melanoma.
Researchers were surprised by the findings, but say they will do more research to understand why it lowers the risk.
Participants with just one tattoo session were more likely to have melanoma.
What?
Well, I have two tattoos, so I've had two sessions.
It could be as simple as people with several tattoos are better about taking care of their skin.
Like correlation and causation are two different things.
Well, yeah, I think there is a certain amount of time, yeah, that you keep your tattoo out of the sun to...
And also people, yes, to keep it from fading.
I mean to cut you off. That's what you're saying, right?
Pretty much.
Yeah, so not just right when you get the tattoo, because you got to keep it.
I was thinking straight away in the first, like, you know, when it's still fresh, but I guess maybe they want to protect it at all times.
Yeah, because it does fade.
That's why I have my Arkansas tattoo on the bottom of my forearm.
Mine has bled.
Keep it out of the sun.
What?
Mine have bled.
Like real blood?
Like when the Virgin Mary bleeds?
No, like the, you know, and ink bleeds.
Oh.
So it used to be, you know, and that's why I've talked about getting them removed.
and it's just, gosh, it's such a process, so I keep putting it off.
But like joy looks like jog.
Dang, that's sad.
Because the ink just, it's either my skin is stretching or the ink is bleeding.
And so that's why I tell anybody, if they're considering getting just a one word tattoo or a letter or something, do single needle.
Because it's less likely to bleed out.
It will continue to look like that word or that letter.
My state of Arkansas, fully blacked out tattoo, still looks like Arkansas.
People don't know what states are.
So if I'm wearing a T-shirt, random people will come up and be like, you're from Wisconsin?
I am not.
Why would you?
And I don't realize it's a tattoo at first.
Or you're from Iowa?
They'll just say different states.
I'm not.
I'm from Arkansas.
Oh, I saw the state on your arm.
So I do check it regularly to make sure it still got those defined borders.
Yeah.
But it's there.
And I don't go on the sun at all.
So I want to thank all the listeners who sent really nice gifts.
No more, please.
For the baby.
I have so much.
I'm donating a bunch of it because I have so much.
I'm very thankful, though, for all of it.
We kept a bunch of it.
And some of it, I just have like doubles and triples of things.
So we're donating.
We've also been donating a bunch of diapers just that out of just buying them
because we realize how hard it is to keep up with diapers.
Like, it's so expensive.
I would have never learned this had we not had a baby.
So we've been donating diapers for the sake of people need diapers.
I never knew the need of it.
and I can't imagine cloth diapers.
Oh my goodness.
Oh my goodness.
So I'd like to thank all the listeners
that have sent stuff.
Thank you so much.
You know, you talk about something on this show
and things come up.
I was talking about the Starbucks energy refreshers
the other day and Starbucks sent us a bunch of them.
We all have our favorite flavor now too.
So a big shout out to Starbucks.
Here's the thing.
I am not so much a coffee guy.
I know you guys are.
I love the energy refreshers at Starbucks
because now they are putting
like caffeine in them.
Yeah, you're not a coffee guy, but you're a caffeine guy.
I am. I don't,
I just think about me in caffeine, though.
I don't need it, but I like it.
Yeah. And I can drink it in the afternoon
and not feel weird about it.
Like, it doesn't keep me up.
So, thanks to Starbucks,
I mentioned that I was drinking these,
and they sent all these up,
and the new energy refreshers are available today.
Yours is pretty. Yeah.
It's like colorful.
What's my favorite color that I wear
that's not red?
Pink.
Thank you.
And that's what?
And I think mostly it's because it's a version of red.
But this is the Dragon Energy Drink.
And so they taste good in the afternoon.
For me, they're awesome.
What do you have?
So my daughter turned me on to mango strawberry, anything from Starbucks a long time ago.
So that's what I went with.
But now it's got the added caffeine.
So this is like what I've always loved with a little bonus, like a little strawberry on top.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, nice.
Starbucks new energy refreshers are available today to order.
Now your favorite Starbucks refreshers come with, like Amy said, an added boost.
of caffeine with the new Starbucks energy refreshers designed to uplift. These drinks help power
your day in moments that matter the most. Go try the new energy refreshers at Starbucks today,
or you can order on the app. We know what we do sometimes. We order on the app and then go in.
You can also order on the app and drive-thru. You can just go, hey, I ordered on the app.
We also have one that doesn't have a drive-thru in our house. You ever see those?
Yeah, it's straight pickup. Yeah, it's straight pickup. There's really no going. It's awesome.
They have like a screen.
It's kind of like at the airport when they're looking for people to board, you know,
and you're in that group that doesn't quite get on.
The boarding group.
Yeah, the wait-laws.
The standby.
Yeah, but it's not standbys.
Like everybody's drink up there.
But a big thanks to Starbucks because I mentioned it and they sent them all up for us.
But the refreshers are there now.
There you go.
Boom.
This is Deb from North Carolina.
I just wanted to know what the pups thought of new baby Billy.
Anyway, congratulations.
They don't a lot.
Stanley does not at all.
He does not care. He's my bulldog.
And then we have a
Eller who's half husky, half hound.
She's a rescue.
And she's just curious about everything.
But everybody's good and normal for the most part.
You know, we did.
Here, smell some stuff. So you're used to the smell.
But everything's going good.
I told my wife, lunchbox, was sick today.
She was like, we're around him.
Exactly.
Don't bring. I said I won't. I sit so far away from him.
Like, we want to build a studio just for him
and all his illnesses. And he just sits in that studio.
All right, next one please.
Morning Studio.
This is George from North Carolina.
I was calling, I forgot to ask if the show could wish my daughter, Avia, a happy 10th birthday.
I called last year, and I asked the show to wish her a happy ninth birthday.
And you guys did, and I was so surprised because I was like, I didn't get a thousand voicemails.
It was funny.
It was just so funny.
I was going to call back and share that.
So, yeah, if you guys could, I would love it and love the show.
Bye.
Boom.
Happy birthday.
And the reason we're doing it, because we did it last year.
Tradition.
I want to keep it consistent.
There's a picture on my Instagram of me with John, the lead singer of Switchfoot,
and my Instagram is Mr. Bobby Bones.
The reason it looks like that, I don't touch people.
And sometimes it's awkward to people when I don't touch people.
Because if you look at every picture that I've taken, it all started with, honestly,
I don't want anyone to say that I, like, touch them weird.
Even a guy?
Anybody.
Like, if I put my hand on their back or something, especially women, I never want to be
weird guy. I get the women part.
So I just cut it all, right? So I put my hands
in my pockets for 99.9%
of pictures. And I was standing up there with
John, the lead singer of Switchfoot. And he's like, you don't
touch? And I was like, I don't touch.
And so then I
was being funny and I lean into him
and put my, and that's, people are like,
why is the picture so weird? That's
why. Yeah. It's funny too because he's
laughing. Yes, because I don't
touch people. Even pictures, if you
look at our studio when guests come,
we have a couch now. Shout out Wayfar
for sending us this couch, and I sit on it and we don't touch.
For a couple reasons.
Germs secondary, but I don't want to be the person who like get,
I don't touch me weird.
Nope.
Eliminating that right away.
But it does make for awkward picture takings because people assume you're going to touch
them when you take a picture.
I don't touch anybody, especially the lunchbox.
Oh, that's smart.
My wife's watching right now.
I never touched him.
He is out sick.
You guys can call us if you want 877-77 Bobby.
Bobby Bone Show.
Bonehead.
Dory up the day.
Lunchbox is out six.
So, doing the bonehead today.
Eddie.
There's a guy in Florida.
No, I do it like lunchbox.
Oh, okay.
All right.
This one comes from Florida.
There's a guy in Florida who checks into a hotel.
He says he's going to stay there for two nights.
And so two nights come around.
The front desk calls him, hey, are you checking out?
Nope, I'm staying.
Well, you got to pay.
Nope, I'm not leaving.
So they say they got to call the cops.
Cops show up.
He's in an inmate uniform.
So they're like, oh my gosh, this guy escaped prison.
Nope, turns out he was just in prison a couple days ago and he kept his uniform.
So he stole it.
He was squatting in a prison uniform.
Correct.
So he gets charged for trespassing because he wouldn't leave the hotel and theft for stealing the inmate uniform that he had.
But if they don't give you your change of clothes, what are you supposed to wear?
Good question.
They don't take it from you when you leave?
There's no way they let you leave with your uniform.
What's funny is this is the story.
It's not that he decided to stay at a hotel.
You know what?
He probably became really comfortable in that
and that's what he was used to being in.
It's like me and my cutoffs.
So he had cutoff t-shirts.
He wanted, maybe, yeah, he did get his change of clothes,
but he snuck that out with him
so he had his comfort outfit.
You would think you'd have to turn that stuff in, though.
Yeah, that's what I'm saying.
That's his blankie?
His teddy bear.
So what happened?
Does he go back?
So no, he goes to jail, yeah.
But he's got his uniform so he's good to go.
He just walks right back in, right?
To his jail.
That seems like,
Not a lot to take you back to jail.
Yeah, like just, I'll be like, oh, my bad, here's the uniform.
But he was squatting in the hotel.
Can't do that.
It wasn't just about that.
Like, he wouldn't leave the hotel.
But still, that's not enough to send you back to jail.
I don't know.
If you have priors, maybe.
Okay, using lingo you saw on one show.
All right, there you go.
I'm Eddie for Lunchbox.
Where your bonehead story of the day.
I was talking to John, the lead singer of Switchfoot.
I've been a fan for a long time, and I was with my wife.
And I said, hey, do you know Switchfoot?
She says, yeah, she goes, I know a lot of Switchfoot song.
And she's like 11 years younger than I am, 11 and a half or so.
And I said, what do you know?
And she said, walk to remember.
And I was like, no, I think you're talking about the wrong band.
And she was like, no, you?
And I said, I don't know you.
And so we listen to you.
Yeah.
So our switchfoots are different.
My wife's switch foot and my switch foot are completely different because that's where she was,
she knows, you know, she's probably seven songs deep on you guys, which is significant
for any band.
And I was, I didn't even know you guys were in the movie a walk.
I don't think I've ever seen a walk to remember.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I know, it is funny because we had a ton of songs in that movie,
and yet that movie feels like it represents a totally different cross-section
than, say, the songs we played, you know, two nights ago in Jersey.
Like the songs that we would, I don't, we haven't played you live in a long time.
But yeah, I still love those songs as well.
It just feels like a different band almost.
Is there a type of person that knows you for a different thing?
I mean, that's the funny thing.
So I'm in this other band, fiction family, that knows.
nobody knows about with Sean Walkins from Nickel Creek and a couple other guys. And this guy,
I'm singing in Switchfoot, or I'm singing a solo show. And this guy comes up to me and he's like,
are you in a band? And I'm like, I think I know where it's going. You know, he's like,
fiction family, right? You know, and I'm like, yep, that's me. You got me. It's funny how even
with people that will come up to me, they'll know me. I can tell by their age and their age.
Their age and their sex, what they know me from. Right. Like, if it's a,
dude and he's in his 40s to 50s, he probably listens to like my NFL show. If it's an old lady,
she saw me on Dancing with the Stars. If it's like a family American, like I can tell when they're
coming up what they know me from. And I just thought it was wild because I've been, again,
I've been a fan of you guys forever. I did not know you're in the movie and my wife knows you
just from that. And she's like, I'm a massive fan because of that. That's fun. My daughter probably,
yeah, she would know you from Dancing with the Stars. So she would fit in that. I apologize to her for
that. Yeah. For me.
Yeah, most people that didn't know me before Dancing with the Stars didn't really enjoy me on Dancing
With the Stars.
That takes some Cajonis, though, man.
My wife's always like, you could do that.
And I'm like, no, I wouldn't.
I don't think I ever would.
They ever ask you to do it?
If they have, I blocked it out.
I don't think I, like I said, that takes something special.
And I don't know that I have it.
So, hats off.
If you want to hear that full interview, just go check out the Bobbycast, wherever you get your podcast.
or you can watch on Netflix. And a big thanks to John Foreman from Switchfoot for coming on.
That was super fun. That's what's up for today's show. Thank you guys for listening.
All right, bye, everybody.
The Bobby Bone Show theme song, written, produced, and sang by Reed Yarberry.
You can find his Instagram at Reed Yarberry. Scoobo Steve, executive producer,
Ray Mundo, head of production. I'm Bobby Bones. My Instagram is Mr. Bobby Bones.
Thank you for listening to the podcast.
Joy is essential and it's also elusive.
But now, there's a new and exciting way to start your journey toward a more joyful existence.
Joy 101.
It's a new podcast hosted by me, Hoda Kotby.
If you're craving inspiration to maximize your joy, tune into these candid, uplifting, and moving on-air chats.
Listen to Joy 101 on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Joy 101 with Hoda Kotbe is presented by CVS.
There was no anything inside those eyes.
They turned black.
It scared the hell out of me.
People wake up.
I'm the one that saw the murder take place by Krivac 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 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 Nile
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 Sports Slice comes in.
I'm Timbo.
In every episode, we're cutting through the noise, breaking down the biggest moments in sports and giving you the real story behind the headlines.
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 SportsSlice on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcast.
And for more, follow Timbo Slicalife-Life 12
in the TikTok podcast network on TikTok.
This is an I-Heart podcast.
Guaranteed human.
