The Bobby Bones Show - TUES PT 2: Bobby Doesn’t Believe In Luck + Curling Cheating Controversy + Tuesday Reviewsday
Episode Date: February 17, 2026Bobby starts with a man who won the lottery by mistake. Lunchbox claims the man is lucky but Bobby comes back with why he doesn’t believe in good or bad luck. Eddie heard Bobby say something he ...had to call him out on but for a good reason. Eddie wants to know if it’s legal to film in public because of guys doing creepy things to women on college campuses. We talked about the controversy in curling that is going on in the Olympics and teams being accused of cheating. Bobby shares what movie he was disappointed by in Tuesday Reviewsday.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Clifford Taylor the 4th.
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When a group of women
discover they've all dated the
same prolific con artist,
they take matters into their own
hands. I vowed.
I will be his last target.
is not going to get away with this.
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Everyone, I'm Ego Wodom.
My next guest, it's Will Ferrell.
My dad gave me the best advice ever.
He goes, just give it a shot.
But if you ever reach a point where you're...
banging your head against the wall and it doesn't feel fun anymore, it's okay to quit.
If you saw it written down, it would not be an inspiration. It would not be on a calendar of,
you know, the cat, just hang in there. Yeah, it would not be. Right, it wouldn't be that.
There's a lot of luck. Yeah. Listen to thanks dad on the IHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcast. All right, where do we start? A guy in Ohio won a 291
thousand lottery prize thanks to a mistake. So he meant to buy tickets with his usual numbers for
seven consecutive days, but I accidentally purchased one ticket with his chosen numbers and then six
auto picks. So he meant to do seven for seven consecutive days. Yeah, but he did one. And then
accidentally it was like they did the auto pick on the six others and one of the six others won.
Dang. That's cool. See, that's just the world. But that's not what you want.
No, no, I would
Because you want to play your sames
No, no, I don't
Because if I don't play, I would end myself
But you would, if you could, every single time
Yeah, I would.
But what's crazy is, that is the world
Looking out for that dude.
UPI.com
Wouldn't you say?
I'm not a big believer of the world looking out for that dude.
Is that lucky?
Don't get me started, dude.
Oh, no.
Is that luck?
No.
What?
That is so lucky.
If he would have, if he would have
done it right? He would have won. But he got lucky and something messed up and he won.
That's luck. It's not something messed up. He messed up.
Well, no, no, because they hit the buttons. I think they messed up. Yeah, the cashier hits the
buttons. I'm with lunchbox though. Like, somebody's looking out for him. Or is that luck? Which one,
or is it both? I think it'd be both. Okay. Can I just give you a... Here we go. Oh, no.
We may have, we may have. A quick version of luck. Yes. And I recently had a conversation with
Annie Duke. And for those who don't know who Annie Duke is, she was a...
very successful poker player. She won millions of dollars playing poker. She even won a really
high entry paper rock scissors tournament, like won the whole tournament. She now is a doctor and she
studies cognitive theory, cognitive science, just generally speaking. She's written a couple
books. I just spent an hour with her talking about luck. I do not believe in luck. I don't believe in
good luck. I don't believe in bad luck. And the reason that I don't believe in either is because I don't
think you can assign good or bad to anything that happens to you because of what else can happen
to you from that situation, meaning this guy went $291,000. That's lucky. What if tomorrow a weird
cousin decides he wants some money and stabs him and dies? Now, was that good luck or was that bad luck?
You can't actually define luck until you die and then if you're dead, you can't define anything.
So I think random occurrence has happened, but I do not believe in good luck. So you would just call
what happened to him a random occurrence? Completely random. We don't know if it was good
bad. I guess I hadn't really thought about how, yeah, if something really lucky happens to you and it
changes the course of your life, but then something tragic happens to you that only happened because
of the lucky thing that happened. And you guys, we've talked about this and I know I bore people all the time
by talking about luck, but I could have spent three hours talking to her. Interesting. Yeah.
She won a rock paper scissors contest. I can't believe you call it that. I call a paper rock scissors.
Oh, she said rock first. No, everybody does except for me. It's
Rock paper scissors.
Wait.
That's what I said.
You said it right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Rock paper scissors.
That's what's the game.
What do you call?
I literally just said everybody but me says it rock paper scissors.
I know, but I didn't catch up.
Now you guys are all yelling at me.
And what do you call it?
I didn't catch that you call it that.
That's because you're not judgmental and I appreciate that about you.
Yeah, I didn't notice.
So you said paper rock scissors?
Yeah.
That's weird.
Probably a genius thing.
I don't know.
I bet it's your alphabetical thing that you do.
Paper rock scissors.
L.
L. M.
O.
Q R S.
Oh, I don't know.
That's got to be it.
Subconsciously, he put it in an order.
What he does with everything?
I do that with my spices.
Oh, my gosh.
You do?
Yes.
I probably just told that when I was five and just held it on to it.
They're easier to find.
Thank you for assigning it to a more elevated reason.
But, yeah, we did that.
I interviewed her, and it was fantastic.
She also wrote a book on quitting.
Quitting what?
Everything.
But for a reason.
And we have, we say it different.
But I said the same thing in my book.
It's like it's not quitting if you're modifying what you're doing because you've learned a lot about why you're doing it and if you've learned enough to change.
Like if you keep pushing on a wall and the wall doesn't move, you got to stop pushing with your hands.
Maybe you go push with a tractor.
So it's not quitting pushing the wall with your hands.
It's actually changed.
Anyway, all that to say, I don't believe in good luck.
But do you believe in luck, luck, just luck?
I believe in random occurrences.
I don't like the word luck.
Okay.
Yeah.
Because you just don't like good and bad luck, like, because good could be good.
But luck has to be assigned with a good or a bad.
There's no such thing as random luck that's not good or bad.
You can't just say, but somebody was lucky, that means that's positive.
Right.
Or somebody was unlucky, that's negative.
So luck is genuinely considered good unless it is met with a pre, which is bad.
Like in your case, though.
I guess we can do this.
We can do this, but I'm just saying our listeners get so bored when I do these.
Why? It's kind of interesting to think about how sometimes though someone has had a lot of lucky things. Like when is the unlucky going to happen?
I think there could be a lot of micro unluckies that have happened to the one macro and the micros have actually changed the course of the person's life. It doesn't matter. My only theory was luck for the sake of luck doesn't exist at how we define it.
Just ROs.
There are just random occurrences.
And then it's how we deal with them.
Yeah.
So on the surface, it looks like a guy wanting $291,000.
That's great luck.
What if he goes and buys himself a car?
The car breaks down and he's fixing the tire on the side of the road
and somebody crashes into him because they didn't see him
because it was nighttime and he wasn't pulled over to the right.
But that is a different occurrence.
But it's all together.
It just wouldn't have happened had that first thing not happened.
Yeah, because then one would argue that winning the money was unlucky.
Because it ended up killing him.
Right, right.
But how did the money kill him?
Because he bought the car.
And if he didn't have that car,
it wouldn't have broke down.
He would have never bought the car.
I mean, yeah.
But some people say when life's ready to get you, it's going to get you.
And that might be lucky too because what the crap is life is even here?
My wife and I have such a different association with just existing in life.
This is a long time ago in therapy.
And we were just talking about life.
And I was like, I feel like life sucks and there's occasional good parts.
and my wife's like
wow that's crazy because I feel like life's pretty great
and then their occasional difficulties
and my therapist was like
that's just how you guys
like that's your growth
from infant to now like what
you've been through and how you look at life
and how it's affected you you have this
even if it's not something that you paint on the wall
that's just how you feel
and I didn't say that for any reason other than
I think we were talking about
having kids a long time ago and I was like
I don't know bringing
a kid into the world. The world kind of sucks.
And it always sucks with the little occasional lights.
Like nice light here, nice light there.
But for the most part, life sucks.
And he was like, I would understand someone like you saying that because I think a lot of
your early years, which is a lot of how we're formed and a lot of the things that, you know,
sit inside of us that maybe we don't even know.
You're wired this way.
But she's different.
She's like, life's awesome.
And yeah, there's some hard stuff.
And I wasn't saying it for any other reasons.
That's just how I felt.
But anyway.
I kind of started with life's awesome
and now I'm kind of more with you dude
I'm with you now like man
You're not a pessimist
I'm not no way
But if someone asks you
I'm not a pessimist
I don't think I'm a pessimist
That's not
I'm sorry what's the definition
Let's look it up
Because I don't know what you described to me
Just now feels like
That
Does it?
It feels
And my feeling might be wrong
You're starting at a detriment
But you have the ability
To build out
positive situations from it. I feel like, if anything, that is, I won't say...
A realist?
When people say that, it kind of annoys me.
It's almost like when someone goes, I tell it like it is. No, you just tell it how you think it is.
Yeah.
And when someone's like, you know, I like that person who tells it like it is. No, he just says it like you like it.
So then you go, he tells it like it is. So I feel like a realist feels a little self-congratulatory.
Like, look at me.
I just say it real.
But I do feel like I'm more of an optimist than a pessimist
because I do think that even though life sucks,
you can climb your way out to have some really great moments.
Okay.
But that's just my interpretation.
I don't...
I've been stunning the Dunning Kruger theory a bunch.
Who's?
Dary Kunning.
Dunning Kruger.
What is that?
Dunning Kruger.
Enlighten us.
Like Rachel Kruger?
So the dumbest people are the ones that are so sure that they're right all the time
because there's no way to know that they are wrong.
The smartest people are the ones that are like,
I don't know about this, man,
because they have learned so much
that when you learn so much,
you actually learn, you know nothing.
Yeah.
And so the people that are the most confident
in their ability, the most, the absolute,
like I know all about, what do you want to do,
Bitcoin, I know all about how to be successful,
I know how, they're really the dumbest people
because they do really feel like they know it all,
except there is no ability to know it all.
all. And the more you know, the more you understand that, did you know a freaking drop in the ocean?
And so it's always, listen, from what I know, this is how I feel, but it could possibly change with
more information. And so, and neither one of those type of people will ever be affected because
the lower end, they're so sure, they can never actually be taught they don't know because
they're so sure. And the other end, they're never going to be that sure of anything, regardless
if they really do know, because they always know they really didn't know anything. It's a bit of
that, you know, Socrates, I've traveled the world and I found the smartest man. Oh, yeah? Who's
that? It's me. Wow. That's pretty self-sure yourself. Yeah, it's because I've realized I'm the one
person that doesn't know anything. So, and I know I don't know anything.
that's what
Right
That's what I've been reading about
lately the Dunning Kruger theory
It's about it's one
Two people
Dunning and Krueger
It wasn't like Freddy's cousin
Oh like a law firm
No
I don't know how that started
Oh the lottery story
ROs
Oh I can read you the exact definition
of Dunning Kruger theory
It's gonna be just rambling on
It's a cognitive bias
where individuals with limited knowledge
Or limited competence
In a particular domain
Greatly overestimate their knowledge
Or competence
And they can never know
that they are overestimated because they're not smart enough to know that they're not as
smart as they think.
Cool.
Like that.
That's me, man.
That's not you.
Yeah, I'm not as smart.
I'm not smart at all.
No, but I don't think you think you know.
Right.
You think you're dumb, so you're okay.
So I'm the smart one.
No, that's not how that works.
No, that's not what he's saying.
Yeah, yeah, because the people that think they're smart, they're the dumb ones.
No.
Uh-huh.
No, because I think I'm pretty smart.
You're dumb.
No, but he got me.
Oh, no, he got me.
Just like that.
I'm Kruger.
No, no, no, no.
Hey, can ask you a question, though, something you said earlier.
I may not know a good answer.
You will know the answer.
But, like, do you, is it cool to you when you say stuff like in my book?
Because, like, when you say that, dude?
Did I say that?
Yes.
You did, because you were referring to how she calls it one thing and you wrote about it in your book,
but you didn't refer to it the same way she did.
I think I said it that way because I don't feel like I refer to it in the same,
at the same intellectual level that she did.
I think by me saying that what I felt, it may not have come out that way, what I felt was I don't think I did as good of a job at conveying what she conveyed at a much higher intellectual level.
Yeah, no, I get that.
I'm just saying, saying in my book.
Like, to me, that is so cool.
Like, whatever the subject is, he's just like, oh, yeah, in my book.
Like, I'll never, most people will never ever be able to say something like that.
I should have said in my second book, because that would have been real flex.
If I was flexing, I think I would have said that.
It wasn't meant that way now.
In my New York Times bestseller.
In my second New York Times bestseller.
I think you have to take time to realize how cool that is.
That's like if someone's just like, man, what movie was I making at the time?
Like, that's so cool.
People can't say stuff like that.
I can tell you with 100% honesty and authenticity that I did not mean it to be cool.
I felt like I was saying that as a shot to myself because how she said it,
was so much more articulate than how I wrote it.
So I can understand why you would say that,
but that is not what I meant by it.
It's still cool to me.
But it is in my second New York Times bestseller.
Which one is it?
Can you show the screen?
That one.
This one.
Fail until you don't.
That one.
Where I talk about quitting,
and it's okay to quit if you have learned the reason as to why you're quitting.
It's not.
not just because you're tired and it's not working,
but you have learned that continuing at the same rate with the same goal
is not going to work based on the information that you have gathered.
And to modify is not quit.
And modify it can mean it.
Modify can mean do something completely different
because you have learned what you were doing.
It was not for you.
But no, I didn't mean it like that.
If it came off like that, that sucks.
And I'm sorry.
No, it didn't.
That's not even why I brought it up.
I just meant it's cool to hear like, I don't know.
You just say things like it's like, oh, yeah, like in my book,
And it's, but like, I'll never be able to say, I've never written a book.
A lot of people haven't written books.
And it's cool to say something like, well, in my book.
Well, you've written a song.
Yeah, I guess I can, in my song when I grow up.
You've written me to say.
Do you ever, would you ever be like in my book Stanley's first day of school?
In my kids book, maybe.
I would say that.
Because that's cool too.
Yeah, but there's really nothing in that except for, unless I were to say, I did write a kid's book once.
someone was asking me about a kid's book.
And I said, I did write a kid's book once and here are the things I didn't know.
I was getting into how long it takes.
It takes longer to do a kid's book.
It does a normal book even though there's 1,000th of the writing.
And also with a kid's book, I don't draw.
Most people have an illustrator.
Does people think you drew it?
Yeah.
So you have to hire an illustrator.
So, yeah, I definitely didn't mean it like that.
I'm trying to flex it.
I didn't take it like that.
I just think it's so cool.
All right.
Amy, you know, do your story?
Yeah.
So an attorney in Milwaukee is promising $100,000 reward to anyone who has information about Nancy Guthrie's case.
His name is Michael Huppie.
And I was like, what's his angle on this?
Because he's a prominent personal injury attorney lawyer and president of Milwaukee crime stoppers.
So maybe that's why he's...
They have a president of those organizations?
Because we had that in Arkansas.
I call crime stoppers now.
McGruff.
Yeah.
McGruff and the crime stopper.
Totally different.
Rough wanted you to take a bite out of crime.
Right, that's not the same?
No, crime stoppers, they were looking for people.
Oh.
Yeah.
And you know what's crazy, though, is if you call, like, the police station to report, you know where the suspect is, you don't get the crime stoppers money.
Because it's two separate organizations.
Didn't know that.
So you have to specifically call the crime stoppers number?
Yes.
Then I would call the police and go, can you get any of the crime stoppers?
Because I want the money.
Yeah.
So keep going.
Yeah, well, I guess knowing that he's about.
president of crime starters, clearly he's into
stopping crime.
But then I thought, oh, what an angle, too,
for his personal injury
firm. Like, now he's in national
news, like, on, you know,
people are talking about him as being someone that's donated.
And it's like, there's also some advertising
for him as well. That's his angle.
Well, but he's also involved in crime
he's not just like randomly caring
about. It's in Milwaukee. It's not
anywhere close to it. I know. I mean, it's
promotion. I can agree
with that. Yeah. It's working.
He may have a good heart and just want to offer the money up, but it seems to me that he's just trying to get advertising.
But it doesn't matter if that helps.
I got no problem with that.
Have some free advertising if it's actually going to encourage somebody to turn someone in.
What's crazy is the people that keep sending the notes going, give me money.
I don't have her, but I know who has her.
They've sent multiple notes.
And they send them all to TMZ, right?
Yeah, because they know that'll get out.
Well, but also there's local news stations, right?
And local news, they have been, for the most part, super cooperative with the law, and they're giving them to the law first before they're reporting on them.
That's smart.
I saw a funny TikTok because I didn't watch Blues Clues, but at one point, he goes, I got a letter.
I just got a letter.
I'm going to read it to you right now.
And it's like, this is TMZ every time they get a letter about Nancy Guthrie.
I just got a letter.
Going to read it to you right now.
That's funny.
All right. Lunchbox?
Yeah, my Cardi B beat is running dry.
I thought I had something.
I thought offset center like $20,000 worth of balloons.
Turns out that wasn't real.
But now I do have something for you.
Did Cardi B perform at the Super Bowl halftime show?
No.
But but but if you were to bet it on one of those predictive markets,
yes, because she was dancing at that house.
And so that counted as a performance.
And so that's what the big.
controversy is some people are not getting paid for no. Some people are getting paid for yes or no.
And so what do you think? I mean, she was in the performance. I agree. So I feel like you have to be.
And so they're only paying partial because they're like, well, she didn't sing. So I don't know if it's
going to get sticky like with lawsuits. Like can you sue them be like no? Like I bet. I'm good with money back
on that. No, no, no. I cancel it because she didn't sing. She didn't perform.
Perform could even just mean dance. But she was just, you know, everyone else.
perform, but it doesn't, you don't think
those background dancers performed? No, those
those are the ones were dancing, perform.
Okay, but she was dancing as part
of the set. So was
Alex Earle, so was some other. Jessica
Alba. I think
Kedro Pascal. Yeah. Yep.
That count, if you're famous and you're out there
for a reason, that's performative.
It doesn't matter if you're famous. If you're just in
if you're the grass, you performed.
Well, you mean the grass with the people on it. The plants got paid.
Yeah, yeah. They got paid $5,000.
No, no, but I'm saying people can, like,
these predictive markets, Amy, I don't really understand how they work. Bobby may be able to explain them,
but people could bet like will she perform. And so now people are mad because saying, hey,
I didn't get my money. Why am I not getting my money when she did perform? Or why am I only getting
partial money? So I have no dog in this race. You say dog in this fight. Don't like dog fighting.
Like the race. Yeah, I'm going to go race. I don't have a dog in this race. But I would say
that if I were one of these predictive markets,
I would not pay out because
she was there. She was brought there
because she was famous. She was put up there because
she was famous. And she was highlighted with a quick
camera swipe of the people that were dancing there. That is part of the
performance. Oh, so you would pay it out.
If you bet, yeah. Well, it depends
what you bet. The people that are upset for the most
part of the people that said she didn't perform
and they're like, well, she didn't perform. Oh, they're the ones
upset. Okay. Yeah. And then some people are
only getting partial payment. Well, I think now they're going to need to like
moving forward, you have to really define
what performing means. Right.
If anything.
It should be appeared in the halftime show.
Like, that would be the wording.
But then they show her in the crowd.
But she was in the crowd.
No, no, no.
She was on the stage. You mean in the seats?
You mean the seats? Yeah.
It's just weird because like Pedro Pascar.
He was just like,
and that was a performance.
He was acting show. I would be upset if I lost
this for sure because I'd be like, what?
But again, no
dog in this race.
If you bet Cardi B to perform,
you won,
because you performed. I guess I would be upset
if I lost the bet, right? If I lost
the money. But if they gave me my money back
and it was a cancel as a void, I'd be like,
I'm fine with that, whatever. It's too stupid.
Nobody loses here.
Which I think is what they're doing, right?
Some of them just canceling the bet.
Yeah, but some are. Some just don't win.
Yeah, you don't win. That's terrible.
I just got a letter.
Can I read it?
it to you right now. Morgan.
Logan Paul, do you guys all know who that is?
Very familiar.
Yes. So he just sold a trading card at an auction, and it's the most expensive trading
card ever sold.
And not only that, because I think we're up for $16 million?
16.49 million.
Speaking of Lunchbox's story, someone bet that the card would go for over $16 million,
and they won like $400,000.
But the thing about these predictive markets, they don't care if you have inside information.
There's no rules.
It's not trading.
It's not stock trading.
It's not gambling.
There is no rule on having inside information.
You can open an account because you know something
and you see it's already up there and bet it.
And you're the guy?
There is no rule against it.
So someone did win that.
Yeah, it was the Guinness World Record
for the most expensive card of any kind ever sold.
Because I did see the one where someone,
where is that guy that we took, the president?
Trump, Obama, George Bush.
Oh, oh, the one we took.
Venezuela. Yeah, someone had bet that they were going to...
Right before it. Right before it. And won like a ton of money. And it was like, that's crazy.
Who was the person? It is not considered gambling. Predictive markets are not considered gambling.
Why aren't there regulations around it? I don't know. Too new. Because also it, same thing with like crypto.
Okay.
Currency. What about it? They're not regulations with like trading on that because, um, yeah.
I guess.
You can rug pull like crazy with crypto.
What does that mean?
Let's say I started a coin.
Let's say I started Bonecoin.
What's her name did?
Yeah.
And so I was like, Bone coin.
Here we go.
Everybody get in on Bonecoin.
I'm going to hold it for at least five years.
And then everybody buys in and I go, nope, I'm out.
And I pull immediately.
Boom.
It crashes.
I made a ton of money.
And then I made a ton of money on everybody buying because there's a little fee
attached to it.
everybody loses their money, I made a ton of money, I just rug pulled you guys.
That happens semi-frequently.
That's what Hawk Tua got in trouble for.
Where is she? Did she...
She's still doing a podcast.
She's still around.
But she's not on the Jake Logan Paul Network, one of those two.
Oh, really?
She's no longer with that, right, Mike?
Yeah.
She would wait for a good while.
Yeah, she did disappear, but she's back and now she's kind of doing her own thing.
And she did not get in trouble.
No.
But, yeah, Morgan, that was crazy.
Yeah, well, so he made almost $8 million in profit from this
because he bought it for $5 million
And then he also like threw in a diamond necklace
And custom diamond case with it
That you wore
At WrestleMania
That's an insane amount of money for a Pokemon card
Yeah
I'm gonna say this
And it
Might be against everything I've ever said
I like Logan Paul
See I gotta figure
I get which one is which
confused. Was Logan Paul the one that was going back and forth
with Tom Brady last week? Yeah, that's a super athlete. I think, by the way,
they're both very smart, obviously. Jake Paul has the bigger beard. Jake Paul's
the boxer. Logan Paul box too.
Logan Paul is
all in, all wrestlers, WWE. He's an A-minus wrestler. Mike?
I would agree. He's really good. He takes it really
seriously. He works extremely hard. He respects the sport. I watch him talk about it. And I know he's
playing a character when he's playing Logan Paul. Even Logan Paul, we'll call it an influencer.
He's playing a character. I have nothing but an extreme amount of respect for him and how he does it.
And then when I see the work ethic that he does to be a good WWU wrestler, and he's awesome. Just as an athlete,
Professional athlete athlete
It's crazy
I like
I like Logan Paul
What about his brother
You like him?
Don't know enough about him
I watch a lot of Logan Paul
On his podcast
Especially when they bring wrestlers on
And he
He just respects it so much
And so anybody that respects something
That's bigger, older
Like that's a type of person
Regardless of how you feel
About everything else that he does
Mike what do you think about Logan Paul
I mean I like him as a wrestler
I don't know outside of that how much I like him
I think it's all an act
I mean he does play into it
like he knows how to be entertaining
and he knows how to make people
get filled with rage online
he's really good at it
it's hard for me to separate that
from just like how I associate
what Logan Paul is
I don't know a lot about Logan Paul's history
of what he's been doing for the past 20 years
I would just see stuff that popped in the news
but the version that I see of him now
I like it
he essentially got started on Disney channel
him and his brother won a show
they were on Disney they weren't just YouTubers
I thought they were just YouTubers
They started on Vine, Disney Channel, and then YouTube.
Wow.
Do you feel like you like Logan Paul because he's now attached to the WrestleMania stuff?
I think with him, well, let's just call it wrestling.
Let's be respectful.
WrestleMania is an event.
It's the biggest event of the year.
Don't know the distinction.
I think the reverence that I see him pay towards that is not just about that.
It's about something bigger than he is that he respects and he wants to work hard at.
And I think that probably filters into a lot of the things that he does.
because I don't think that would be completely independent
of everything else that he lives his life by.
How do you feel about that statement, Mike?
Yeah, because, I mean, he probably had to work harder
to get respect in WWE because it's going to be like people saying,
oh, he's just a YouTuber trying to go over here,
but he, like, takes it very seriously.
And he's awesome.
Did you, like, when did he join WWE?
I don't know, 3, 4 years ago?
Yeah, I saw him at SummerSlan.
I was probably 3 years ago, and he was still relatively new.
I think that, watching him do that has brought me into being a fan.
of him. It's not just that he does that, but watching him do that and talk about other things
and having a ton of respect for something bigger than he is makes me feel like he probably has a ton of
respect for other things bigger than he is and that it's very much an act. Oh, so he's been doing it. He's
like a character for four years. I'm telling you who else was good. Like Bad Bunny was pretty good.
Yeah. Not Logan Paul Good because he didn't commit to it for as long a time. But Bad Bunny's also
kind of jacked. Yeah. Like, really? Yeah. He got in shape. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. There was a
story about Bad Bunny doing, and I got to, we got to take a break in a second, but Bad Bunny was doing
one of the shows, maybe Raw or something, and he has a Lamborghini, and the whole thing was
they were going to spray paint his Lamborghini at, like, some stuff, and he was like, just spray
painted.
And they're like, no, no, we'll use it.
He's like, just spray painting it with a, I'll get it fixed, but we really want to sell this thing.
And so they, he had him spray paint his real Lamborghini with this for the bit.
Wow.
Yeah.
Okay.
Eddie's still got to do his, and then we'll take a break.
Yeah.
And we will come back.
A win is a win. A win is a win. I don't care what you're saying.
Yep, that's me, Cliver Taylor the 4th.
You might have seen the skits, the reactions, my journey from basketball to college football,
or my career in sports media.
Well, somewhere along the way, this platform became bigger than I ever imagined.
And now I'm bringing all of that excitement to my brand new podcast, The Clifford Show.
This is a place for raw, unfiltered conversations with some of your favorite athletes,
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One week I'll take you behind the scenes of the biggest moments in sports and entertainment.
And the next, we'll talk about life, mental health, purpose, and even music.
The Clifford Show isn't just a podcast.
It's a space for honest conversations, stories that don't always get told,
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Listen to the Clifford Show on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast,
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This week on the Sports Slice podcast, it's all about the NFL draft, and we've got a special
guest.
The director of the NFL's East West Shrine Bowl, Eric Galco, joins the Sports Slice podcast to break down
what really matters when evaluating draft prospects.
From hidden traits teams look for to the biggest mistakes franchises make to the players
flying under the radar, this is the insight you won't hear anywhere else.
If you want to understand the draft like an insider, you don't want to miss this episode.
Listen to the Sports Slice podcast on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
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There's two golden rules that any man should live by.
Rule one, never mess with a country girl.
You play stupid games, you get stupid prizes.
And rule two, never mess with her friends either.
We always say that trust your girlfriends.
I'm Anna Sinfield.
And in this new season of The Girlfriends,
Oh my God, this is the same man.
A group of women discover they've all dated the same prolific con artist.
I felt like I got hit by a truck.
I thought, how could this happen to me?
The cops didn't seem to care.
So they take matters into their own hands.
I said, oh, hell no.
I vowed. I will be his last target.
He's going to get what he deserves.
Listen to the Girlfriends.
Trust me, babe.
On the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcast.
What's up, everyone?
I'm Ego Wodom.
My next guest, you know from Stepbrothers, Anchorman, Saturday Night Live, and the Big Money Players Network.
It's Will Ferrell.
Woo.
Woo.
My dad gave me the best advice ever.
I went and had lunch with them one day, and I was like, and Dad, I think I want to really give this a shot.
I don't know what that means, but I just know the groundlings.
I'm working my way up through, and I know it's a place they come.
Look, for you.
up and coming talent. He said, if it was based solely on talent, I wouldn't worry about you,
which is really sweet. He goes, but there's so much luck involved. And he's like, just give it a shot.
He goes, but if you ever reach a point where you're banging your head against the wall and it
doesn't feel fun anymore, it's okay to quit. If you saw it written down, it would not be an
inspiration. It would not be on a calendar of, you know, the cat, just hang in there. Yeah, it would not
be. Right. It wouldn't be that.
There's a lot of luck.
Listen to Thanks, Dad, on the IHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcast. All right, we're back.
Eddie, over to you. So guys are being creepy
again. They're messing with
meta glasses now in universities
where girls are feeling uncomfortable because
guys are filming girls as they're walking
across campus and asking
them questions like on a date and see
if they get rejected or, you know,
they actually get the date and then they post it on social
media and the girl sees it on social media. I was like,
I didn't say okay for this.
They had no idea they were being filmed.
It's a thing that's like six universities being like,
we're going to have to like set rules for this.
I have a couple things to say.
If it's in a public place and public universities are public places
from my semi-limited knowledge on this and a couple lawsuits,
they can't do anything about it.
Lawsuits that you've heard of?
No, that I've been a part of where people, it's like you can't record
and we're like, I didn't have to, like, fight them.
They came to us, and it was like, it's a public place.
We recorded.
I think that would be difficult.
Two things.
One, those light, those glasses have lights on them.
Can you rig it to where, like, the light isn't shown?
I couldn't.
Can you put tape over it?
Or like...
You could probably put tape over it, I guess.
But there's a light on it.
The problem is when you're outside, you don't see the light as well.
Wow.
Two, if you put tape over it, you're for sure going to see that.
But also, those glasses are slightly bigger.
like compared to yours just slightly they have holes on the sides of them like i wore a pair i still
have a pair i don't wear them as often but i still have a pair that i can record it's just a weird
thing to do but it would be the same as if someone had a phone like in their pocket and they were
just recording it and you didn't know so like can someone just go up to someone random on campus
with a phone and just be like i'm going to ask you a question absolutely if it's a public
university they don't have to disclose i'm recording you right now if it's public
you can record anywhere out. I can look up the official rule, but if you're in a public place,
you can record. I get on TikTok algorithms of people that are like recording on sidewalks,
like restaurants, and there's somebody happened, somebody in the restaurant, like committed a crime
or something, or they own it, they're trying to, and they go, you got to get off our property.
He's like, I'm on a sidewalk, bro, public. And then cops come and the cops like, we can't do anything
about it because he's on a public sidewalk. Filming in public places is permitted under the First Amendment
when in plain side, including streets, parks, federal buildings. There's no
reasonable expectation of privacy.
Filming in private areas like bathrooms or changing.
Yeah, duh.
If they're asking people out in bathrooms, that is not good.
They're not.
I'm assuming it's by the quad.
It can be creepy and also not be illegal.
Or it can be weird.
But the university can set a rule.
It doesn't have to be illegal, but the university can say, like, hey, on campus,
we're not allowing unauthorized video of people.
Unauthorized.
What does that mean, though?
because you can record, if somebody's flying a kite in the quad and you're recording it, that's the same thing.
So they can't enforce any kind of rule?
Public.
Because it's public.
Man, I remember when I worked for the news and one of the camera guys, he was sent out to go shoot like this B-roll of a restaurant.
And it wasn't a news story.
Like the new story wasn't like the restaurant anything bad.
It was promoting the restaurant.
And so they said, come on by and like shoot just B-roll of the restaurant.
and when they aired it,
there was a call from some guys
that was there with his girlfriend.
Not as well.
And he was like, dude,
you cannot air that.
That's,
if that gets out,
it's gonna be,
I'm gonna be in trouble.
And,
he was on camera
and he was like,
hello,
girlfriend,
not my wife.
Like,
no,
but I think if they're just sitting in there
having dinner.
Yeah,
that's a,
and they're seen.
And the wife's like,
why are you with some other woman?
Oh, he was with,
I thought you said a phone call.
No,
he was with his girlfriend
at the restaurant.
Oh,
yeah,
yeah,
yeah, yeah,
sorry.
but again it was like
I remember the news station being like
sorry buddy
yeah that's your problem
sounds like a you problem right
the restaurant made it okay for us to shoot there
if you were on campus and you were hiding in a trash can
and someone walked by and you were secret recording
and you went boom
and they scared the crap out of them
you can put that up right
I'm not saying it's exactly the same thing
but it's the same thing if you're in a public place
you just have to realize you're in public
and the rules of being in public are
what you have to go by
just sucks because the glasses are like
No one looks at glasses immediately and be like,
oh, are those cameras?
You just kind of think, oh, they're wearing glasses.
That's why I think I'm always being recorded at all times.
Do you still wear your glasses?
You still have those, right?
I have them, but, you know, not as much.
They're just, I feel like a creep.
That's what I'm saying, man.
I know, but I legally can.
But at times if I'm just in a place and I have them on
and the occasional person will recognize them.
I go, are you recording me?
And I just don't want to deal with that.
Yeah.
So I would wear them here and, like,
do show stuff. So I don't wear them near as much. I do have them. When I was, well, I guess before
I tore my ankle, I was using them as pickleball tape. Argue about a call, got it on tape. Then I would
just watch how I'd play a little bit when I was training for tournaments. A good friend of the family,
he went to my dad's funeral and he had those glasses on. And I noticed them right away because
I think you had just gotten yours. And I'd ask like, hey, you wear a meta glasses? And he was like,
yeah, yeah, yeah. Like I do a lot of social media stuff.
whatever and I didn't want to ask him like is that on right now like is this part of your social
there would have been a light on if it were inside so the guy that strict the super bowl was wearing
metaglasses and you see his perspective oh it was crazy and what you saw is the decoy like the
guy that jumped down first so the security went to them in the corner and then he ran out really yes
and you see it all in his metaglasses he looks to the right sees the guy drop security goes he
bam but you know what the best part of all that is is those the camera crew has gotten so good at not
showing any streakers. Except now. He didn't streak. Yeah, he just had a shirt off and a message
written on his back. Although I don't know what the message was, do you? I have no idea.
So what do you call that guy? Field rusher? Well, they're still called a streaker because
streakers is the one, that's what made that activity, that action famous. But they don't show it,
but this is what they do wrong. They should not acknowledge the reason they're not showing the
field because as soon as they said, well, we're not going to show the field, I'm like, well, I'll go find
that on TikTok. Oh, yeah. I think it draws more people than would have actually,
watched if you're watching the screen. So, um, everybody that now jumps is recording it or a buddy
is. And then I read that that guy bet on one of those predictive markets that there would be a
streaker. Of course. And he wins. And he wins. And it's more than the bail, right?
I don't know. They said it was a thousand dollar fine. But I don't know, but one of the Patriots
players ran up beside him and helped tackle him. Yeah. He wants the Patriot player.
He kind of, all right, I'm going to go down. Yeah. But that met a view of his. I was like, that was real
smart. He's going to get a lot of views. Make money off that.
So it was in a commercial on his
back. Pretty much. It wasn't like Free Palestine.
It was an ad. Yeah, it was
Trade with Athena.
Well, there you go. That's the first time I've heard that. He's an online trader. I don't know
what that is. But
yeah, those glasses catch 22.
The
curling controversy is
so funny. We talked about this on
our podcast yesterday, 25 whistles
to get more in depth. But it is
it's cheating they're cheating they're yelling they're yelling at each other you can't curse in curling
it's a gentleman's sport there are no referees in curling you know what curling is yeah where you push
the thing yeah um after Swedish and Canada is the cheater twice men and women huh and I love Canada
weird yeah Canada's like the nicest ever the women did it too I believe so yeah I saw the man do it
and it was obvious he double touched they have sensors in that handle they don't have sensors
on the actual rock.
By the way, I know nothing about curling I've dived in.
I know nothing except for what I've really studied over the past.
I don't know, 13 hours.
So understand my expertise is 13 hours.
After the Swedish curlers questioned the possible rules violation by Canadian players,
the two teams exchanged words and got heated on the ice,
prompting world curling to step in.
There's no cursing on the ice.
It is a gentleman's game.
Here you go.
Who's doing it?
You don't know it?
I haven't done it once.
you can fuck off.
You haven't done it once?
I haven't done it once.
How about you walking around
on my peel
and the last damn dancing
around the house here?
How about that?
Come on Oscar, just fucking.
You showed you a video?
So apparently the Canadian guys
were touching the actual stone
after letting go of the handle.
Again, the handle has sensors.
The stone does not.
So you can't actually touch stone
and nobody knows,
but that is a no-no according to the rules
and it means the stone is what they call burnt.
That was not being called.
You have to call it on yourself, basically,
because it is a gentleman's game.
No referees.
That's the problem right there.
Oh, I'd be cheating like crazy.
Did they have video?
Yes, and you're not supposed to video.
The Swedes had put cameras down because they knew they were cheating,
and they put cameras down in that place,
but you're not supposed to video where they videoed.
So, um, is drama, and then they, the women got called for cheating too.
Same thing?
I believe so.
Would you Google that, Mike?
They obviously...
I mean, it's cheating.
I mean, it's cheating.
Like, he's touching the stone as it touches.
as the beginning of the line.
You can't do that, man.
That is.
You know what?
If you were to ask me, I'd be like, looks good to me.
I don't know anything about curling.
So they only have that image because of the...
The Swedish cameras.
Yeah.
Which aren't allowed.
Which aren't allowed.
So this wasn't being broadcasted.
Everything's broadcasted, but I don't know they're running Sweden, Canada on America, NBC.
Both Canadian men's and women's teams have been accused of cheating.
You know what, Canada?
Do your thing.
What?
If they're cheating.
I'm so pro-Canada.
I don't even care.
They're probably cheating for a good reason.
So Oscar's in the wrong here?
You know what?
I love Canada.
And something that I had pointed out yesterday.
Could be true.
Could it be false.
I think Canada invented curling and they haven't wanted to go a medal in a long time.
And I think the pressure's on.
Well, they should win it fair and square.
Yeah, but if you invented that, you should be dominating it.
Well, if you're not, that's your problem.
Maybe Scottish people invented it.
Okay.
Why are they not there?
So never mind.
We're Scotland in this.
They may be in it.
Who knows?
Let's see.
Curling.
I mean, now they're just going to need to get referees.
Scottish soldiers introduced the game in Canada in 1759.
I think Canada's where it first got big.
But they didn't invent it.
Dang.
So golf is a gentleman's sport, right?
There are no refs out there.
There are rules officials.
There are, but you've got to.
call them. They're not watching every single thing you do.
Gentlemen's game.
And I feel like every golfer for the most part is just like, hey, I, no.
No, mostly because their cameras, like, they're showing it somewhere.
And usually the golfer's like, hey, caller rules official out here, like, the ball moved,
like as soon as I put my club down.
Like, I didn't mean to do that.
And then they'll sort it out that way.
But, like, I never see cheating like that in golf.
Well, like here the guys just like.
Probably because they're, they know.
get caught.
Because golf is a big, yeah.
I bet you there's a lot of cheating in
events that don't have a bunch of cameras.
The foot wedge.
High school tournaments.
College tournament. I bet you there's all kinds of cheating.
But yeah, that's the real housewives of curling.
I like it.
Both teams are accused of cheating. That's what's hilarious
to me. Both Canadian teams.
Man, I was watching figure skating
and the emotion that they have
after their
whatever their routine is done
is like unbelievable
they just kind of
pour out whether they want or not
they have no idea
what the judges score
but they're just like
all that work
put into this one
routine
like that's got to be
a crazy feeling
probably all those years
put into that routine
right there
I saw a guy yesterday
don't know what the event was
I don't know these events
they all look like
the same event
just slightly altered
because it's all snow
and ice
and they just do something
and he was doing some sort of ski jump thing
wasn't the super jump wasn't the flippy jump
it was something hybrid
and he fell and wiped out
and then he was just so he laid there
and he was just so happy
because
that's over
no I actually took something from that
by watching it
I felt he was so happy
because he had trained all that time
he had done the best of his ability
and that's just what happened
like he was proud of himself
not for losing not for winning
it was just
I worked hard I got here
I gave it the best I got.
And regardless of what happened,
I feel like he was going to be happy.
And I took something from that.
I like that.
Yeah.
That would not be happy.
I wouldn't either.
And sometimes when I went, I'm miserable.
So this doesn't matter to me.
I think it is living a state of misery for the most part when it comes to how I view myself.
But yeah, I liked it.
I liked his attitude.
He was just like, it was awesome.
Because he wasn't looking at it as that one moment defining him.
It was all the process that got him there.
And it was over, and he gave it the absolute best he had.
And it was a mess up, but it didn't matter.
He still gave it all he had.
It's funny you say that after one of the dances, I think it's the American that fell or whatever.
Quadzilla?
Quadzilla.
I think they showed a Scott Hamilton tweet.
No, Quad God.
I keep calling him Quadzilla.
It's Quad God.
Yeah.
Oh, Quadzilla is pretty good.
But his tweet was the same as you, like saying like this one routine doesn't define who you are as an athlete.
Oh, it's crazy about that guy.
He was a favorite.
He fell twice.
twice, quad god. And after he fell the first time, they said, oh, he can still win this with
one fall because his routine is so hard. It's so much harder than the next second third.
If he didn't fall again, he's still going to win the thing. So this is like dunks, like dunk
contests where like the difficulty of the dunk is kind of goes into the scoring. You're asking
somebody that doesn't really know, but I would say yes based on what I, the small amount I've learned
on gymnastics and ice skating. Figure skating, figure skating, on ice skating. Yeah.
Yeah.
That speed bump race is hilarious.
What's that one?
I don't know.
That's where their knees are going up.
No, that's wild.
That speed bump, they should call that speed bump skiing.
Because that crap is funny.
Did you see the one that's like cross country, but then they have a rifle?
Yeah, it's cool.
Yeah, I'm like that.
How do they come up with this stuff?
That must have been invented like in the biking days or something.
The fact that America doesn't win shooting stuff blows my mind.
Oh.
So you got to be able to calm your heart.
That's the problem.
I'm surprised they're not just pulling that freaking hand.
You don't even need a license.
We should be nailing that crap.
All right.
Biathlon.
Is that the shooting one?
Winter sport that combines cross-cock.
It's the skiing part that probably gets us.
We should just walk in boots and shoot.
They don't even stop.
And score so high on the shooting that walking in boots, we get our time.
And we do it sideways.
Okay, I got a couple other things.
Oh, Tuesday, Reviews Day.
we didn't get to it on the show.
I have two things.
I'll be somewhat quick.
This bothers Mike because we had to talk about it yesterday.
I watched Marty Supreme.
Marty Supreme is Timothy Chalamee.
Oh, mm-hmm.
Ping-pong player.
Yeah.
You decided, nah.
Didn't love it.
And I was watching it fully focused.
White's pregnant, so we just lay around a lot.
And so we're watching a movie.
And I go,
I pause it because I always like to see where we are on the movie.
What time?
How much time's left?
Always.
I like to pause around the first third, halfway point, third to third.
I like to know there's about seven minutes before a movie ends of just credit.
So I like to know where we are during the movie the whole time.
My wife's gotten way less annoyed with that.
And so I paused around halfway point just for a second to see where we are in the movie.
And she goes, you bored?
Yeah.
Are you?
Yeah.
All right.
Let's keep going.
I was, I really, powered through.
Yeah.
I'm not going to say power through.
Got through.
It was okay.
I think the hype heard it a little bit.
I'm going to give it three out of five ping pong paddles,
but I think I would have given it three and a half had the hype not been there.
Now, it's not a drastic change.
The thing that I took from this that I really liked and did not expect is Kevin O'Leary is a good actor.
He is.
And he's not an actor.
He's one of the sharks.
Oh, he's Mr. Wonderful?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Mr. Wonderful.
He's in the movie?
He's a main part of this movie.
Oh, who know?
I thought he came out at the very end because the interviews, he was like,
they were looking for an A-hole and they cast me.
That was kind of a story, right?
This director pulls a lot of, like, non-actors into the movies.
I saw a couple other ones.
Yeah.
So they, he's in it, but he's in it a lot, and he's really good.
So thought that was cool.
The guy with the golden throat, remember the homeless guy?
Ted Williams.
They found back in the day and he was homeless,
and all of a sudden he's like, I'm dead.
Kraft Macro.
Yeah.
I think that was a commercial he ended up doing.
He's in this for a minute.
He doesn't have a huge part, but I saw him and I was like,
freaking Ted Williams.
So he's still making it, huh?
It's a small part.
Are you mad at that or what?
Even that guy who plays Timothy Shalameh's, like, business partner,
he was just a random guy that the director saw on TikTok after Nick's game to an interview.
He's like, I need that guy in my movie.
Is it the same guy that did the Adam Sandler movie?
Yeah, uncut jims, the Safi Brothers.
I like that cut gems.
That's good?
It made me feeling comfortable.
You like gambling?
Yeah, I love gambling.
Ed movies for you.
Okay.
Adam Sandler?
Yeah, but he doesn't play.
It's a serious role.
Okay.
I give it three out of five ping pong paddles, but Mike gave it.
4.5 out of five.
He really loved it.
Dang.
I watched Train Dreams.
What's that?
Was it nominated for Best Picture?
I think it is nominated, yeah.
Oscars not happened yet?
There in a month.
It's on Netflix.
I knew it was nominated for some stuff.
It has Joel Edgerton in it
Who I only know from
This show where he goes into other dimensions
Inside of a box
I don't know if you guys would recognize him or not
Nope
It's called Dark Matter
Oh yeah I watched that
Dark Matters awesome show huh
Yeah but it's not back is it
I think they have what two seasons
Yeah there's been no new one
Well Train Dreams is back
Different show
So Train Dreams is a movie
And I think it was only an hour and 49 minutes
It's pretty sure yeah
Perfect
Which I liked.
And then we started watching it for no other reason that it was on and we saw it was award nominated.
We had no idea what we're getting into.
The bad part.
It's slow.
It could not have been slower.
The good part.
It's really good.
Is there action in it?
Like something happening other than them just talking?
Here's the thing about something happening in the movie.
It doesn't.
It's a guy's life.
And there's really nothing you're like, I wonder if the bad guy wins, wonder if the good guy wins.
It's just his life.
And I think the comparison that I made was every life, no matter how impactful to many, is still very important to some.
I liked it while I was watching it.
I really liked it once it was over.
It was one of those movies.
But if you're going into it, like let's really sit down and get our adrenaline going on.
Your blood pump, that ain't for you.
But I give it four out of five really large trees.
Okay.
But I don't think you're going to watch it
and a third of the way through would be like,
ooh, man, I'm right where I wanted to be.
This thing is blowing me away.
It's one of those I liked while I was watching.
I really liked when it was over.
But you have to focus.
If you are on your phone,
not just looking at you, Amy, because I do it too.
If you're on your phone.
Normally not on my phone when I'm watching something.
I'm like, blow dry my hair.
Fair enough.
Grabbing stuff out of the laundry.
I'm not driving.
I'm like doing other things.
Like I'll leave the room to go, yeah, start another load.
She's at the grocery store as it's playing at home.
Yeah.
I recommend it with a caveat of it's slow, but it's worth it when it's over if you really spend time with it.
It's one of those makes you think about stuff.
But yeah, four out of five, I definitely see why it's nominated for lots of stuff because it's just cool.
What I told Mike was, I remember when Kevin Costner,
was on. He was like, I made a movie. It's about nothing.
Yeah. And then there's no plot.
We were like, wait, there's no plot.
No, you just watch stuff.
And so I feel like this was
that except this was good.
I think like six people went
to Kostner's. I remember we were all like,
what the, what? Yeah. I was like, wait,
there's no plot. No, man. You're just like, watch
stuff. I have that as a screensaver.
Okay, so that's mine.
Amy. Well, mine's not done.
Okay, good. But it
No, no buts.
That's okay.
People may not know it's now available.
How about that?
So it's not really your review, but it just came out.
So, like, be on the lookout?
What is it?
Okay, it's a love story on Hulu, and it's the John F. Kennedy Jr.
And Carolyn Beset love story.
Okay.
And so it's going to be.
No more insos?
That's it.
I've seen the thumbnail.
Have you?
Because it just came out over, like, on Friday.
And they...
You keep an sowing.
Yeah, you were just going to sell some title and this.
But it's, it's what.
one of those where they're dropping an episode a week, so
I won't be able to review it for like seven more
weeks. All right, we'll be waiting patiently.
Lunchbox. Oh, yeah, dude, I did it.
I watched it. After all these years,
I finally saw... Don't say.
Zoolander.
Good one.
Zoolander.
I'm going to say
Brogback Mountain.
Oh, that's a good one. Oh, no, he watched that right away.
Oh, he did? Okay, okay, okay.
Heeded rivalry? He did rivalry.
No?
What?
Zoolander.
He saw me do the fingers
How did you know that?
You want to know why?
Because I have a list of movies to watch
and on that list is me and lunchbox
need to watch Zoolander.
It's been on there for like years.
Have we talked about it on the show, I guess?
We're talking about this all the time.
You guys, like people quote it and talk about it
and I've never seen it.
And I have it on DVD
and not having cable or TV.
I was like, oh my goodness.
You bought it?
No, he has on DVD.
I've had it on DVD.
Oh, you've owned it.
And so I was like, you know what?
This is one that I've wanted to see.
And I put it in.
And let me tell you guys, it's not going to win an Oscar.
But that is such a fun movie.
It is so funny.
Yeah.
Like enjoyable, hilarious, like just maybe right down my alley.
Dumb.
You know what I mean?
It's right down my alley too because it's so fun.
It's like, this is the center for.
And he's like, it's so small.
How do you fit people in there?
Oh, it's a model?
Yes, a model.
I don't even know quotes.
But yeah.
Yeah.
So I give it four out of five.
Steels. It was so enjoyable.
That's good. Is that when they do the gas on each other?
Yes.
Okay, man. I was totally wrong.
The gas! I mean, it is so
funny when they're doing the gas. I'm like, what
are we? Oh my gosh. Morgan.
Okay, so I watched a few things.
I watched the wrecking crew on Amazon
with Jason Mamoa and Dave Batista.
The action movie. Yeah.
Got it. It's like a dumb action comedy movie
and I really loved it. It made me laugh. I thought those two
together are great actors. I want to see them do
more together. So I'd give that one
four out of five. It made me get a little less. Explosions.
And? And then I also watched Eternity with
Elizabeth Olson and Miles Teller.
Oh, she dies? Yes, they all die.
Whoa. No, that's what the premise of it is.
She goes to the afterworld and they're both her exes.
Yeah, it's like an afterlife movie. And I loved
this one. I made me cry. I felt like I want an afterlife
that exists like this, but maybe not choosing between two husbands.
And, yeah, it was really good.
I've given that one 4.5 out of five afterlives.
What did you give a movie, Mike?
I gave that one 4 out of 5.
Oh, good.
We may watch that then?
Solid.
It's a little too lovey-dovey, like for us to jump into.
But it's funny?
Yeah, I got some laughs out of it.
A little bit of humor.
Eddie.
I finally watched one battle after another.
Dude, I loved it.
It's so good.
Me watching.
That's Decaprio.
And Sean Penn, watching Leo speak Spanish.
Like, it's my favorite thing in the whole wide world.
You got the whistle down.
Yeah.
Hey, I don't know.
I feel like this is going to win the best picture.
Right?
It's nominated?
Yeah, I would say it's probably going to dominate.
Like all the awards.
Between that and Sinners, yeah.
Oh, I watched Sinners too.
Cins was really good.
That movie was good because I watched it in the theater.
And that movie was good because it just felt like no other movie.
So different than any other movie.
Yeah.
And I don't, I'm not a movie guy.
So for me to say that's weird because I don't know enough to go like, that's different.
It just didn't feel like other movies and like how the story was presented.
Even like some of the shots, just vividly is that car drive, that race.
Yeah.
Where they're behind the cars.
Yeah.
I love that shot.
That's super cool.
And we don't talk about shots.
No, I don't know anything about shots.
Would you give it?
Yeah, I'm going to give it four and a half high school dances out of five.
Loved it.
Benicio del Toro, too, awesome in it.
By the way, there's a new episode.
of the Bobbycast up today on Netflix
and audio podcast with Stephen Wilson
Jr., which you may have heard in part one.
You know I have Thursday?
Who?
Jack Pearson.
Wait, from This Is Us?
Milo, yeah.
What?
Oh, Jack Pearson, that's his character name.
I was like, I don't know that is.
Yeah, Milo Ventimilia, is his name.
But Jack Pearson, he was also at Gilmore Girls.
Yes.
Yeah.
That's so cool.
He was awesome.
I thought I had just fallen for a D's nuts.
I wouldn't say anything
We don't really dees nuts on the evening
I know but still
I said who so quickly
and then I was like
Dang it
Yeah he came over
He was in town for a day
Because he has a movie coming out
I can only imagine two
That comes out this weekend
And
He was on Fresh Prince
His very first ever acting role
Really?
Yeah, it is great
Right
He was awesome
Yeah Stephen Wilson Jr.
Today I'm big fan of his music
But the one Thursday is
Milo Ventimilia
Is he shorter guy
taller guy?
He's an inch shorter than I am.
Yeah, probably.
So about your height.
He's probably like six foot.
Okay.
And he, Amy, he's really good looking.
Yeah.
Like in person, when you see good looking people.
And you like don't know, but when you meet him in person, you're like, oh my gosh.
Yeah, because you know he's a good looking by the show.
And then you meet him and you're like, oh, you're made different.
That's how I felt with Johnny Depp when I saw him in the flesh.
Really?
I'm like, yeah, you're different.
Yeah.
So, okay.
That's it. We got to go.
We will see you tomorrow.
Thank you for listening.
Bye, everybody.
A win is a win.
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Clifford Taylor the 4th.
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My dad gave me the best advice ever.
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It's okay to quit.
If you saw it written down, it would not be an inspiration.
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Just hang in there.
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