The Bobby Bones Show - WEDS PT 1: Should Bobby Get Back In Shape? + Lunchbox Gets BAD News! + Our Top 3 Childhood Crushes + 2000's Movie Quote Game
Episode Date: February 4, 2026Bobby has not been able to work out for over 3 months because of his ankle surgery. He wants to know if he should get back into shape or just stay how he is? Lunchbox got bad news about his car and he... is in his feelings about the dilemma it's put him in. According to child development experts, it's okay for your kids to have a crush! We share our Top 3 Celeb Crushes from our childhood. Bobby plays a movie quote from the 2000s and the show has to name it!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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This is an I-Heart podcast.
Guaranteed human.
A win is a win.
A win is a win.
I don't care what you're saying.
Yep, that's me.
Clifford Taylor the 4th.
You might have seen the skits,
my basketball and college football journey,
or my career in sports media.
Well, 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 athletes,
creators, and voices that not only deserve to be heard,
but celebrated.
So let's get to it.
Listen to the Clifford show on the IHard Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
And for more behind the scenes, follow at Clifford and at TikTok Podcast Network on TikTok.
Hey, I'm Dr. Maya Shunker, a cognitive scientist and hosts of the podcast, a slight change of plans, a show about who we are and who we become when life makes other plans.
I wish that I hadn't resisted for so long the need to change.
We have to be willing to live with a kind of uncertainty.
that none of us likes.
You can have opinions.
You can have like a strong stance.
And then there's your body having its own program.
Listen to a slight change of plans on the I-Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Earners, what's up?
Look, money is something we all deal with.
But financial literacy is what helps turn income into real wealth.
On each episode of the podcast, Ernie Elegia, we break down the conversations you need to understand money,
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From stocks and real estate to credit, business, and generational wealth,
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Will Ferrell's Big Money Players and IHeart Podcast presents soccer moms.
So I'm Leanne.
This is my best friend, Janet.
And we have been joined at the Hips since high school.
Absolutely.
A redacted amount.
of years later. We're still joined at the hip.
Just a little bit bigger hips. This is a podcast
we're recording it as we tailgate our youth
soccer games in the back of my Honda Odyssey.
With all the snacks and
drinks. Why did you get
hard seltzer instead of beer? Oh, they hit a
bogo. Well, then you got it. Listen to soccer moms
on the Iheart radio app, Apple
podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts. What's up everybody?
Welcome to Wednesday show. Morning
Studio. Morning. It's a Bobby
Bones show interview. In case
you didn't know. Let's talk.
with Blake Shelton about the story of his first number one, Austin, and landing his very first record deal.
On the Bobby Bone Show now.
Blake Shelton.
Back then, when your album came out, this was, oh my God, it was brutal too for me.
When your album came out, you had to go do these in-store signings like Walmart.
So they sent me out kind of like the radio tours the week my album came out.
I had to go do these in-store, like autograph things.
And they thought it would be a good idea to send me back through where I came from.
That would make a story, you know, he's back home with his.
That week, I happened to be staying at my mom's house.
I was in between Oklahoma City and Dallas,
so I got to go to my mom's for a day in between.
And that day, their label called me and said Austin had gone number one at country radio.
And, of course, it was just like, I couldn't have been in a better place with my friends and
family and, you know, it was just unbelievable, like newspapers that I had grown up looking at as a kid,
like the Daily Oklahoma, the Tulsa World, like people were bringing to my autograph signing there
in Ate, Oklahoma, I was on the cover of those newspapers. And it was just everything like, like when
you're talking about your dreams coming true, like it was just like that for me. Like after seven years
in Nashville, the song got on the radio. I was on the cover of the newspaper. Song went, when I first
started performing, we would do Austin twice a night. We would like do it like early in the
set because that's the only reason anybody's at this bar. And then we would like do it at the end
because people showed up that weren't there when I first did it, you know. So doing that one
song twice a night for at least two years, you know, because I don't have anything else
anybody wanted to hear. And we were so excited when O Red started becoming a hit. It was like,
God, we have two songs. And so I just got so burnt out on it. But I never stopped doing it.
I just, you know, it was just like, oh gosh, we got it, here we go, you know. And now I'm back to,
man, what a song. You went from two weeks working to seven years. It took that long with,
with mild traction, a little traction. Did you get close a couple times before, like, you got a deal?
Like, were you ever almost there? I only got close twice, and it was the same guy both times.
And it was Doug Johnson. And I went in.
and I got to play him, you know, my tape, and I think I might have even played him something on the
guitar. He said, man, I think you got something. He goes, I want to think about this. I like this,
you know, and so for like a week, I was dying, like, for my phone to ring. And finally, he called,
like, a week later, and he just said, you know, I just don't think you're ready. I think,
I want you to keep coming to see me, but I don't think you're ready yet. And he took maybe one or two
other meetings with me and nothing ever happened. And then a few years later, I met Bobby Braddock
who strongly believed in me and he went and reproduced like three tracks on me. One being O'ReD
and a song called All Over Me. And he went to every record label in Nashville and pitched me.
And he went to, at that time, Doug Johnson had moved over and was taken over giant records.
And he had a meeting with Doug Johnson. He said, I want to play you this.
new kid and handed him. This is Blake Shelton. And Doug went, oh my God, that's the kid. I remember
him. And I remember they called like a couple of days later and said, man, I was, you know,
Doug said, I was right. You just needed some time. I want to sign you to giant records. And of course,
my attorney at the time was like, well, we'll see about that. And I was like, no, we're not going
to see about it. I have been in Nashville for all these years. I'm signing this record deal, you know.
Did you ever think you'd go home? Did you ever think you quit? Yeah.
Any instance where I don't know if this is for me anymore?
There was always, yeah, and it started happening when my friends that I graduated high school with were now graduating college.
And there I was still like, you know, hanging out in Nashville.
But every time that I almost gave up, something would happen.
There would always be some little, hey, I heard so-and-so, they dropped, they dropped an artist and they were looking, you know, there would always be some little glimmer of hope.
You know, I remember I got a meeting one time with, you know, Byron Gallimore, which is, from Tim?
From Tim McGraw. Yeah, Tim McGraw's producer.
I had a meeting with Byron, and I played him a bunch of songs that I had written or co-written.
And it was my demos, and I even played him something on the guitar.
And it was kind of like, he goes, man, but he didn't run a record label or anything,
but he was probably with Tim McGraw back then, the hottest producer in Nashville.
is close to getting a record if Biven was going to produce you or somebody would sign you, you know.
And he said, man, I really like these songs and I like your voice.
He goes, but you just don't really have like that bottom in, that base that you need, you know.
He goes, how old are you, you know?
I'm saying, I'm 20 or however old I was.
And he goes, yeah, I mean, it's going to be there.
It'll be there, you know.
You just need more wear and tear on your voice.
And your voice just isn't quite developed.
And he goes, do you smoke?
or you drink whiskey or anything?
And I go, well, I don't smoke.
I said, I drink if I can get it, you know.
He goes, well, he goes, maybe if you smoked or something.
And I, man, I left his office.
And I went straight and I bought a pack of his right when Marlboro Ultralites came out.
I thought, man, I can probably smoke one of them.
They're probably not too bad.
And I bought a pack of Marlboro Ultralites.
And for three months, I sat on my back porch over by Harding Mall.
I had a little apartment over there.
And I was trying to smoke these cigarettes.
And, man, I would cough and gag.
I finally got to where I could smoke them, you know.
And then, but I don't know how because my dad smoked.
He was addicted to cigarettes his whole life, but most of his life.
And I never got addicted to him.
Finally one day, I was like, man, this is stupid.
Like, what am I doing, you know?
I never, I guess I wasn't doing it right.
But I tried it.
I tried it, Byron.
I guess eventually I got old enough.
that I had enough bottoming end that I could make it.
Low end developed, naturally.
Enough, I guess.
Hello, Bobby Bones.
One of my personal highlights each year is throwing a super bold party that people love.
A few dozen friends and coworkers show up.
We always have a blast, but it's not cheap.
This year, I put the word out that I'd like some help paying for it.
And just about everyone was on board.
I don't mind losing a few bucks, but I don't want to go broke continuing to do this.
what's a reasonable or fair amount to ask
to have everybody come up with money
sign Super Bowl Sam.
I think it's a great idea.
20 bucks.
Yeah, that's the exact number that was in my head.
Easy.
I also think it's, hey, good for you
for making sure this is not put you
in an uncomfortable, over-extended place
because it will remove joy from it
and you're not taking joy from people
to give you 20 bucks to come.
And you let them know ahead of time.
If you charge them at the door and they didn't know,
that's where it gets weird.
Hey, thanks for coming.
It'd be a 20-buck cover.
Yeah.
First one.
Little know in advance.
And if there's another way they would like to contribute, like, a certain amount of the food or alcohol.
I would just do it universally so there's no mix up.
Okay.
I'll cover it all.
I've always covered it all.
If that's the case, $20.
Now, some of you guys didn't like that.
They're charging.
I'm going to be honest, man.
I may not go to your party.
That's the risk you take.
Because there's six of us, right?
Oh, is it 20 ahead?
That's 20 ahead.
Yeah.
Yeah, but I don't think you're bringing four kids to the Super Bowl party, though.
Yeah, we're all going to the Super Bowl.
If it's an adult Super Bowl party with a little.
like bros from work. I don't think
somebody's bringing four kids with them.
I think if you have four kids, you watch it at home.
I pictured it with like, you know, families.
That was not the indicator.
I know, but I mean, just looking at a big picture,
someone else could be easily being in the situation.
You does and friends and coworkers show up. We have a blast.
That sounds like no kids. No kids then.
To have a blast puts it on, there's no kids there.
I'm back in then. I'm cool with that.
$20. Yeah, because you get to show up. You don't have to do anything.
You just show up having a good time, pay $20.
Yeah, and VINMO makes it so easy too.
Does that cover food, alcohol?
I think it covers what's there, buddy.
Okay.
Now, Super Bowl party,
anybody doing anything this weekend?
Emmy, you seem like somebody
that would be having a Super Bowl party
of you and your boyfriend.
Like you guys like do fancy stuff.
Yeah.
Like people coming over
having some cheese and...
What?
Charcuttery?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
You think that's our vibe?
Yeah.
I kind of see the same thing, Amy.
Y'all haven't...
What?
It's not so much about you,
but he's like, you know,
established.
A guy? Established guy.
With a glass of wine?
Yeah.
Yeah. Pino and Super Bowl?
He is like
chips and salsa with a beer.
I don't know about that though.
A hundred percent.
He seems pretty well established.
So you think for the Super Bowl?
What do you mean?
I don't even know exactly what that means, but.
It means well established.
The more well established you are.
Yeah, I'm like redneck established.
Like it's like when we do.
If you got a catamouse, what would you expect?
Oh, man.
Bag of chips.
Honestly, that's almost right.
Watermelon.
I see what you're saying.
Ice tea.
I see what you're saying.
Because before I went out with him, I kind of thought that about him too.
And I'm like, we will have nothing in common.
This is not going to work.
Right?
But he's not.
I think the word I thought maybe was like a little stuffy.
Well, I said well established.
Me.
I thought there's no way I could be in a relationship with this person when the opportunity
presented itself.
And then I put it off for months and months.
And I was like, okay, fine.
Yeah.
I guess we'll go out.
And then I realized, oh, don't judge a book by its cover because he, he's not.
He's beer and chips, guys.
What kind of beer?
Like a.
IPA.
Is he drinking Natty or a local IPA?
No, he's not a local IPA.
I got to be honest, I know what IP means.
It's fancy.
Yeah, I just know that association.
No, he's, no, he's like regular.
Okay.
Are you guys having a party, though?
Well, I don't know.
I guess I need to figure that out.
All right.
You don't have to text them now.
Yeah, it's okay.
Actually, I think I do, because it's like...
Do you know what IPA means?
No.
India Pale Ale.
Oh.
If you ask the question, why do people call it an IPA?
India Pale Ale is named for its origin as strong, highly hopped pale ale developed in England
for export to British troops and colonists in India.
Wow.
It goes back that far.
Super Bowl party.
Anything, Eddie?
No, just the family.
A couple years ago, we had like three or four.
families come together and I didn't like it. Like I wanted to watch commercials and everything and it was too
loud. So it's just going to be us. And my wife does a whole spread of chips and dips and everything.
It's great. Lunchbox? I don't know yet. I'm hoping I get cable or internet back so I can watch the game.
Half my neighborhood is still without power. So those families are out. So it's kind of like,
maybe we may be hop in a different neighborhood to find a family to watch it with. He's got 20 bucks to go to this guy's party.
What about you? I don't have a plan. I rarely have people over for
anything. My wife has people over all the time to have normal friendship hangs. I never have
anybody over. Way long time ago, you had a Super Bowl party. Yeah, that was fun.
15 years ago. Hey, I remember that one party. Yes. And I vowed I'd never do it again.
Yeah, 20 bucks is good, man. That'd be fun. And you'll be happy after because you're not broke and
overextended. A win is a win. A win is a win. I don't care which I'll say it.
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, creators, and voices that not only deserve to be heard, but celebrated.
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, and for people
who are chasing something bigger. So, if you've ever supported me or you're just chasing down
a dream, this is right where you need to be. Listen to the Clifford show on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast. And for more behind the scenes, follow at Clifford
and at TikTok Podcast Network on TikTok. You can have opinions. You can have like a strong stance.
and then there's your body having its own program.
I'm Dr. Maya Shunker, a cognitive scientist and hosts of the podcast, a slight change of plans,
a show about who we are and who we become when life makes other plans.
We share stories and scientific insights to help us all better navigate these periods of turbulence and transformation.
There is one finding that is consistent, and that is that our resilience rests on our relationship.
I wish that I hadn't resisted for so long the need to change.
We have to be willing to live with a kind of uncertainty that none of us likes.
Listen to a slight change of plans on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, I'm Bob Pittman, chairman and CEO of IHeart Media, and I'm kicking off a brand new season of my podcast, Math and Magic, stories from the Frontiers of Marketing.
Math and Magic takes you behind the scenes of the biggest businesses and industries while sharing insights from the smartest minds and marketing.
I'm talking to leaders from the entertainment industry to finance and everywhere in between.
This seasonal math and magic, I'm talking to CEO of Liquid Death Mike Sassario, financier and public health advocate Mike Milken.
Take-2 interactive CEO Strauss-Zalnik.
If you're unable to take meaningful creative risk and therefore run the risk of making horrible creative mistakes, then you can't play in this business.
Sesame Street CEO Sherry Weston and our own chief business officer, Lisa Coffey.
Making consumers see the value of the human voice and to have that guaranteed human promise behind it really makes it rise to the top.
Listen to math and magic, stories from the frontiers of marketing on the IHart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
On a recent episode of the podcast, Money and Wealth with John Hobriant, I sit down with Tiffany the budgetista Aliche.
to talk about what it really takes to take control of your money.
What would that look like in our families if everyone was able to pass on wealth to the people
when they're no longer here?
We break down budgeting, financial discipline, and how to build real wealth, starting
with the mindset shifts.
Too many of us were never, ever taught.
Financial education is not always about, like, I'm gonna get rich.
That's great.
It's about creating an atmosphere for you to be able to take care of yourself,
yourself and leave a strong financial legacy for your family.
If you've ever felt you didn't get the memo on money, this conversation is for you to hear
more. Listen to Money and Wealth with John O'Brien from the Black Effect Network on the I'd
Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast. So is it okay if you have a young
daughter to let them have a crush on a celebrity, like an older celebrity? Sure. I mean, I had
them as a child? And Kansas State did this study where they say, it is okay, according to child
development experts to allow them to have crushes. Parents need to be accepting of a crush on a
celebrity because it's actually a lot safer if your young preteen or teen daughter likes a celebrity
than like an older boy next door. So a celebrity crush is not something they could actually
turn into something. Right. Who knows if it's a real person? So let them have it. It's a
important for their identity development and just feeling good about themselves, they say.
So what I'm going to ask you now, and I'll go first, your top three crushes from being a kid.
Drum roll, please for me.
Number three.
Danica McKellar.
Do you know who that is?
No.
Wonder Years?
Winnie Cooper from Wonder Years.
Oh, wow.
Good one.
She's also coming by the Bobbycats next week.
Which.
Are you going to disclose this crush to her?
I think everybody probably had one when they were kids.
That's probably what she gets.
She's not going to your house, right?
She's coming to the studio.
She's also married in like 50.
But you had a crush on her, dude.
When she was a kid and I was a kid.
Number two.
Jennifer Love Hewitt.
That's a strong one from a lot of stuff,
but like I know what you did last summer.
Yeah, that was a good show.
That's a good movie.
A good movie.
Yeah.
Number one, Alyssa Milano.
From whose boss and then just life, man.
Charmed.
I'm kind of shocked that one person's not on there for you.
Kelly Kapowski.
Yeah, I never was really a big.
Kelly Kapowski guy.
Okay.
Tiffany Ampertheson.
I liked her.
That's kind of Zach's girl, you know?
You don't mess with somebody else's a girl if they're your friend.
You know, I didn't mess with Zach.
So, yeah, that's my Alyssa Milano at one, Jennifer Love You at two, and Danica McKell,
Winnie Cooper at three.
You have yours?
Yes.
At number three.
At number three, we're going to go with Dylan McKay from 902.1.
Real name?
Luke Perry.
Yeah, I didn't do characters.
I actually did the real people.
Oh, well, because I had crushes on the.
character, but I'll switch to real people.
Wasn't he like 43 playing a teenager?
She's a way older.
He was still in high school on the show,
so it was appropriate.
This one, this next one, a little,
probably not that appropriate.
Patrick Swayze.
He was definitely way older,
but it was after dirty dancing,
I had a major crush.
I even wrote him a letter.
And I guess my mom allowed me to have the crush
because she acted as if she mailed the letter to him.
And later upon, you know,
once I was in a,
stole at my mom's house, I found the letter. I still, I kept it. I still have it to this day.
So you kept it after she secretly kept it? Yes. And I was like, you never sent this letter to Patrick
Swayze? And I enclosed a school picture of myself. Oh my gosh. I was like in, I had a side ponytail
tail. I was in like second or third grade. What did you write on the letter? Do you remember?
Yeah. I know I specifically referenced that he had, I heard. My handwriting wasn't that great.
So my sister actually pinned it for me. And so it's her handwriting, but it's me talking. And I was like,
my sister or my mom or something told me you had a ranch in Houston.
That's so crazy because I live in Austin, which is super close to Houston, almost like I could come visit.
What if he wrote you back?
I'm like, why don't you come up?
Why don't you come around?
It's trouble, man.
But I was just like, that's so cool.
Who knows if he even had a ranch in Houston?
Do you think as a kid you were writing him like, hey, I'm a kid.
I know you're an adult.
Here's a picture of me.
Just a kid as a fan.
Or were you like, I have a crush on you.
Here's a picture.
See if you like it.
I think I just had a crush, but I was just writing him as a fan.
Like, I don't think I had that kid was connecting the dots of like he might like me.
Like, did you send a picture so he'd think you're like cute?
I don't know.
You're a kid though.
Maybe just so he could see who was writing him, not be so that he would be that.
I don't, yeah, it's not rational.
Was it okay to put a school picture in there by your mom?
Like, did she let you have that picture to send off?
Yeah, because she never was really going to send it.
But she let me have the crush and let me write the note.
So did you put a stamp on it and put a,
the mailbox or did you just no stamp and no address either you just trusted your mom.
I don't know. Guys, it's in a turquoise envelope with lined paper. I can bring it in.
We're okay, but I'm just wondering. We believe you. All right, number one.
Number one is, what's his real name? Oh, Mark Paul Gosselin, but it's Zach Morris.
Yeah, Gossler. Mark Paul Gossler? I think so, yeah. Okay, Mark Paul Gossler. You liked him?
From Save by the Bell. Yeah. He's cool. He had it all.
Yeah. He had it all. Good looking, funny. Good hair. Yeah. He's cool. He's cool. He's cool. He's cool. He's
He was good.
Preppy.
Mm-hmm.
Good, like, style for the time.
Always figured it out.
All right.
Yeah, every Saturday morning.
Eddie, three, two, one?
Yeah, so, Kathy Ireland is my three.
She was a swimsuit model.
It's totally not appropriate.
She's way older than me, but dang.
So good.
We're all way.
Well, mine weren't way older.
I have one that's appropriate.
Okay.
And then Leah Thompson, not appropriate.
She was Howard, Howard the Duck.
And she prints in Leah?
No, that's Carrie Fisher.
Oh.
And she was also back to the future.
Oh, that's where I know her from.
Yeah, and I met her later in life.
That was legit.
You did?
Yes.
Oh, that's fine.
Like when I was in my 20s, I met her.
I was still in love.
That's a good angle.
Have we gotten to meet any of our crushes?
No.
But you're gonna.
You're gonna meet Winnie.
Oh, man.
Yeah, I can't call us Winnie, though.
Be cool, be cool.
Be cool.
Don't worry about me.
One thing I am, it's cool.
Oh, that's fun.
You met her.
Yeah, that was awesome.
Did you tell her?
That she was my crush.
I was planning.
I was planning.
Like, I'm sure everybody tells them.
Like, every dude they meet.
Like, how much all do you crush?
Okay.
And then more appropriate, Candace Cameron.
I have met her.
DJ.
Yeah, I hosted a music festival.
I think I recently told my wife this, too, and she's like, really?
She was really nice.
Yeah, she was awesome.
Really nice.
Lunchbox 3,21.
Yeah, number three, Tiffany, Amber Theson.
I mean, you watch Save By the Bell and you're like, that chick is so hot.
So hot.
He's going on.
He's like, so hot.
He's screaming at us.
Okay. Number two?
Number two.
Christina Applegate.
Married with children.
Married with children.
I mean, and she wore some scandalous stuff.
I mean, when I felt like when I was that young, I was like, whoa, I liked this girl.
Dude, this is getting weird.
Was she, don't tell mom the babysitter's dead?
Yes.
Or was she babysitter club?
I think it's don't tell mom.
Yeah, I think don't tell mom the babysitter's dead.
Okay.
And then number one?
Oh, this is awesome.
Eddie, you were on the right path.
Cindy Crawford.
She was the swimsuit mom.
that everybody loved and she had that little
mole or what, I mean,
I can still see her. We met her. We met her.
Holding the Pepsi, dude. Oh my gosh.
Her daughter now looks exactly like she did.
Yeah, she's good looking.
Okay.
Okay. That's just weird.
I think her daughter, it's not creepy, super creepy.
It's not creepy how he says it, but I think she's in her 20s, right?
Yeah, she's like 90s and 20.
She's what?
19 or 20.
Why did you like mumble 19?
Well, the last time I looked, I think she was 19.
She's 24.
You look.
She's 24.
The last time you looked was sick.
years ago. He said, no, no, no, no, no, 20. Yeah. Okay. Her name is
Kaya Gerber. Yeah, she's.
Kaya or Cindy? Both of them. You know who else is a great mom, daughter? Who was the
mom daughter? Mom daughter? Is that what you doing now? Heidi Kloom? I think she does the poses
with her daughter, and I'm like, wow. That's pretty hot. It's the last time you saw that.
This has turned into a gross segment. I don't know when the last time I've seen them together,
but they put them some fix. They had a lingerie, like a toy secret and they posed together.
Because her daughter, I think, is 21.
19, 20.
Right, right, right.
Yeah, her name is Lenny Kloom.
She's 21 years old.
Yep.
All right.
That's why we have to end with him.
I mean, they're crazy that the next generation is here and they are.
You sound like Matthew McCona.
I get older.
They stay at the same age.
I'm going into my money pile here.
Whoever wins this game is going to win all this cash right here.
$4.
$4.
Nobody knows the game of me.
So everybody's name is on a wheel, including myself.
So I will spin the wheel, and whoever it lands on is a contestant one.
Whoever it lands on after that is contestant two.
I'll tell you the game after we pick the players.
Oh, boy.
Okay?
Oh, great.
Have I ready to go?
Yeah.
Let's spin that wheel.
Contestant one is Morgan.
Oh, boy.
I'm nervous.
Oh, boy.
All right, here we go.
Contestant two.
Let's spin that win.
Amy.
Oh, my gosh.
Okay.
Morgan and Amy will.
battle it out in something called a compliment battle.
Now, in a Jones in battle back in the day, somebody gets somebody to go, you go, oh!
You should get three compliments.
If you nail somebody with a really good compliment.
Oh.
Okay.
Whoever wins with the best compliments is the winner of the game.
Amy versus Morgan.
Okay.
Can you out compliment the other person?
Okay.
Yeah, exactly.
You didn't think it's going to this route, did you?
That's tough.
This is a tough game, man.
Okay.
Okay.
Can I get some compliment battle music of some sort up there?
Oh, I like it.
Who wants to go first?
Well, is she contestant one?
Oh, good point.
Oh, really good.
All right.
Good compliment.
Okay, okay.
It is with compliment number one.
Okay, Amy, gosh, it's been so cool to watch you over the last 10 years because you have only
grown up.
Your skin is beautiful.
Your hair looks awesome.
And you've come into your own style.
You look like the perfect person now.
Oh.
Wait, I'm clarifying before we compliment.
That's one compliment.
That's felt like a lot.
Yeah.
Well, we didn't make the rules really, but that's it.
Okay, this is one.
Yeah, yeah, just one.
Okay, so you can like.
Yeah, but it can be like.
Yeah, you got 10 seconds.
Okay.
Amy, you're up.
Morgan, you have been so patient for so long and been through so much.
And you finally, like, came into yourself.
Like, you were happy with being single.
And then, bam.
That is when the love of your life found you.
And you have been glowing ever since you got engaged.
And I'm so excited and happy for you that you found the love of your life.
I don't know about that.
That's not.
That's not tight.
It's a battle.
She had to be.
And sometimes swing and miss.
She had to be ready to receive him.
You don't get to keep complimenting.
All right.
Yeah.
And you both use glow, which was really.
Yeah.
But after you get engaged.
I want to make it even though now.
You have to, it's one compliment.
Okay.
Like one sentence?
Yeah.
It's got to be about one.
thing. All right. All right, Morgan, compliment
number two. I'm trying to make sure
I can't listen to what sense is now.
Now it's
like, her's interdivorce. You're a strong
independent woman.
Whoa!
What? She is.
She can change a tire.
All right, you're up, Amy?
Okay.
I think it may have been a strategically
wrong move to let the other person go first.
I didn't know that, though. We never
played this game. Compliment battle.
I know. I got this. I got this.
I got this.
Your therapy dog saves lives.
That's a compliment for her dog.
Eni's compliment her fiance and her dog so far.
Okay, okay.
It's interesting.
All right, Morgan.
Amy, you need a knockout in round three or you ain't winning this.
Come on, Amy.
All right, Morgan, you're up for round three.
Okay, okay, okay.
Amy, well, are you ready to receive it?
I'm ready to receive.
You're a dang good mom.
Oh.
That's three in a row.
Wow.
Amy, you got to come up with the
Come on, Amy.
The wrecking ball.
Amy, dig deep.
You need to compliment her so hard.
I know, but I'm like, I'm like, I wouldn't be, my,
the problem was she called me a strong, independent woman,
and I would be like, you're a stronger,
you're even stronger and more independent than I.
I hear you.
Do that.
Do that.
See what you get for us.
See our reaction.
Okay.
Compliment battle.
Amy, final compliment towards Morgan.
You have one of the biggest hearts of anybody that I know.
Oh, okay.
I did that.
She did.
solid.
The champion of compliment.
She cares for elders.
You got to vote?
No, we don't need to vote, right?
We don't even go to the scorecard.
Amy.
She's a highly empathetic person.
Amy, was that tough?
It's hard.
It's hard to find stuff about Morgan.
It's hard to go a second because you can't copy.
Like things she said about me, I would say about her.
And she, yeah.
Oh, yeah, like she's a good mom.
She doesn't have kids.
I know.
Oh, wow.
Oh, God.
I don't know.
The winner of the first ever compliment battle and $4 from the money pile.
Give it up for a compliment champ.
Morgan.
It's not so much about the money.
It's where it came from.
Right.
The money pile.
Rarely gets touched by anyone here.
Okay, so who's up next?
No, that's it.
That's it.
We're complimented out.
What the?
I'm overcompeted.
We need to see y'all do this.
You want an exhibition Eddie versus Lunchbox comment?
No, no, no, that's impossible.
Yes.
It's not impossible.
It's not impossible?
We do it again.
I don't want to waste my compliments.
That's a good point.
I don't want to waste it.
I don't want to waste your compliments.
Okay, there's our winner in Morgan.
A win is a win.
A win is a win.
I don't care what you're saying.
Yep, that's me,
Clifford 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,
creators, and voices that not only deserve to be heard, but celebrated.
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, and for people
who are chasing something bigger.
So, if you've ever supported me, or you're just chasing down a dream,
This is right where you need to be.
Listen to the Clifford show on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
And for more behind the scenes,
follow at Clifford and at TikTok Podcast Network on TikTok.
You can have opinions.
You can have like a strong stance.
And then there's your body having its own program.
I'm Dr. Maya Shunker, a cognitive scientist and host of the podcast,
a slight change of plans, a show about who we,
are and who we become when life makes other plans. We share stories and scientific insights
to help us all better navigate these periods of turbulence and transformation. There is one
finding that is consistent, and that is that our resilience rests on our relationships.
I wish that I hadn't resisted for so long the need to change. We have to be willing to live
with a kind of uncertainty that none of us likes. Listen to a slight change. Listen to a slight change.
of plans on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, I'm Bob Pittman, chairman and CEO of IHeartMedia, and I'm kicking off a brand new season
of my podcast, Math and Magic, stories from the frontiers of marketing.
Math and Magic takes you behind the scenes of the biggest businesses and industries while
sharing insights from the smartest minds in marketing.
I'm talking to leaders from the entertainment industry to finance and everywhere in between.
This season on Math and Magic, I'm talking to CEO of Liquid Death Mike Cesario.
financier and public health advocate, Mike Milken,
take to interactive CEO Strauss Zellner.
If you're unable to take meaningful creative risk
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Sesame Street CEO Sherry Weston
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Making consumers see the value of the human voice
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really makes it wise to the top.
Listen to math and magic, stories from the frontiers of marketing on the IHartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
On a recent episode of the podcast Money and Wealth with John HoBryant, I sit down with Tiffany the budgetista Aliche to talk about what it really takes to take control of your money.
What would that look like in our families if everyone was able to pass on wealth to the people when they're no longer here?
We break down budgeting, financial discipline, and how to build real wealth, starting with the mindings,
mindset shifts, too many of us were never, ever taught.
Financial education is not always about, like, I'm going to get rich.
That's great.
It's about creating an atmosphere for you to be able to take care of yourself and leave
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If you've ever felt you didn't get the memo on money, this conversation is for you
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Listen to Money and Wealth with John O'Brien from the Black Effect Network on the I'd
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We're going to get a car update from Lunchbox.
He was in a bad accident.
He was sitting on the interstate.
Somebody driving.
How fast?
60.
Just nailed him.
And the worst of it all, he lost a smoothie all in his car.
It exploded in his car.
He hasn't been able to look at pavement since.
Don't even like that word, man.
Oh, gosh.
So, I mean, it's not funny.
Your car's been gone, though.
Been gone.
You go yesterday.
Been at the shop.
I got a call yesterday.
said, hey, we're ready for you to come in, talk about it.
Guys, I went to the shop, walked in.
Oh, what's your last name? Tell them.
Oh, yeah, have a seat right over there.
We'll be right with you.
Then I got the devastating news, man.
All right, here we'll get a clip.
All right.
So now what happens?
They just crush it?
It could be a salvage tile.
It could be a scrap of carpeted ones.
Got it.
But you don't have a funeral or anything that we need to attend?
I know, right?
You're not crying, no, so that's good news.
Yeah.
I'd be crying with me.
Yeah.
But the cars, yeah, it's in 2018.
It's all the help.
Yeah, it is.
But it's a total loss.
It's gone.
So say by car.
All right.
Thank you.
You kept your family safe.
Yeah.
Well, thank you so much.
You're very welcome.
All right.
Yeah, say bye to her when she leaves for me.
Total.
Total.
Gone?
The car's a complete loss, guys.
But isn't that kind of what you wanted at this point?
Because now you don't have to deal with a car that's just been absolutely ravaged.
Are they going to give you most of what that worth was?
Well, they're going to give me a certain amount of money, but that doesn't buy you a brand new car.
That's what I'm saying, like, most of the value of the car.
Yeah.
What are they going to give you?
$24,000.
That's pretty good.
That's pretty good, right?
Brand new.
No, but I ain't the point.
You were already hit.
Like, you were already hit.
So let's put yourself,
you already got hit and your options now,
or you get your car back beat up,
probably never going to run the same.
Or they give you $24,000,
and you can go and buy something new,
ish.
Or you can supplement the $24,000
if you're going to get a bigger SUV.
Right.
And, like, I, they said I could keep the car,
and they would give me $14,000.
Why would you want a piece of scrap metal for a $10,000?
She said you can sell it parts out of it.
We had a pallet.
I'm telling you, that thing never got sold.
That would never have it.
It didn't get sold, we made a profit.
Well, yeah, it's not sold now.
I mean, there's still stuff sitting in my house.
Okay.
But, man, it was just rough to hear that it's totaled, it's gone.
Because you've got to take a trip down memory lane with that car.
I never even saw the car.
It was your wife's car.
I don't even know what it looks like.
We only had it for...
Yeah, there's no memory lane.
A couple of years, right?
No, no, we got it in 2018.
We got it in December of 2017, and we were like...
Wait, you just changed the year.
No, no, it was a 2018 car.
That he got in December.
Okay, that makes sense.
And we were like, man, if we're going to start a family,
we better get a car that can fit it.
And a month later, she got pregnant.
So we brought all three of our kids home from the hospital in that car.
Now you're sentimental?
In what year? 2017?
No, we brought it home in 2018 and 2020 and 2019.
Or no, 2021.
Oh, my God.
Sorry, I can't.
When you have three kids, you can forget what year they're born.
Yeah.
One was born in 18.
One was born in.
We brought the car home in 17.
December.
I thought it was 18.
No.
It was a 2018.
Guys, you can buy a 2018.
In 17.
Thank you.
I'm sorry.
happened to your car, I think it's a positive that it's totaled.
It's just the world, man.
He was driving it for quite some time while it was so long.
Yes, he kept driving it after the accident.
That's interesting, too, that it actually worked, even though it was totaled.
You don't think they say it's totaled and they just keep it?
Maybe, and they scrap it for parts?
I think it just has to be totaled if the cost of repairs is worth more than the...
Yeah, I know, but they give you the money and they keep it.
They find a way to kind of get around the system.
I mean, they could maybe take the battery out, the, you know, carburetor, you know, things like
Yeah, yeah, yeah, the hammy.
What's the thing they got all, everybody goes in steals now?
Yeah, the Catalonia converter.
That's it.
I'm sorry, I happen to your car.
Oh, man, dude.
What's the latest with your body?
My back still, like, here's this weird.
My back still tightens up just randomly.
Like, when you hear the word pavement?
No, that gives me the shivers and the freak out, you know?
That's PTSD.
Yeah.
That's mental.
And so, like, if I'll just be like around the house doing something, I'm like, all of a
sudden, my back's really tight.
And I'm like, oh, that's not good.
So I got to make an appointment at the chiropractor.
Because of the accident.
Yeah.
Because it never got, it never hurt before.
Will you get the same car?
I don't know what I'm going to do, man.
Isn't it your wife's car?
It's my wife's car.
She's got to make a decision.
And so we're just, we're up in the air.
Like, it's chaos around our house right now.
How long do you get to keep the rental?
Not much longer, man.
Yeah, you have to make a decision now.
Yeah.
Because you also don't have a car.
You ride your bike to work a lot of days.
Yeah.
And so that's another hard part is they want the rental back.
which is normal.
Yeah.
No, no.
They're like, oh, you should already have bought a car.
I'm like, whoa, whoa, guys.
Well, that's not true.
Did they give you the check?
No, we haven't got a check yet.
Got it.
Well, good luck.
I'm glad I'm glad to total.
That's the best outcome once the accident happened.
Yeah.
I had to clean out everything.
I had to go in there and get all my...
You're not a sentimental guy.
He is about the cars, apparently.
Because, I mean, his ultimate and this special one?
Do you still have your ultimate?
The ultimate is still out front of the house.
It doesn't work at all.
It doesn't work at all.
What are you going to do with that?
I don't know, man.
Dude, get rid of it.
It's been almost two years.
Have it just sitting there?
Yeah.
You just have a dead car for two years sitting on the street.
Yeah.
Are there plants and stuff growing on?
No, no, no, nothing like that.
Like, I take a blower out and blow all the leaves and stuff out.
So it looks, yeah.
It's like when you keep the grave of someone you love clean.
That's what he's doing with his car.
It's like over there visits it.
All right, well, let us know when you get a new car.
Yeah, everybody.
Let's have a moment of silence.
Here's a clip from a,
famous 2000s movie.
I am McLevin.
What's that? 2007. Amy, can you name that movie?
McLeod, like, one of those, like a, those one of those boy movies where they, I am McLevin.
Yeah, you're right. It's super bad.
That's it.
That's okay.
It's an example.
It's going to call it Superboy.
Superboy, totally different.
I knew that was it right.
Okay, write your answer down.
I give you seven clips.
See what you can get.
first movies from the year 2000.
These are all 2000s movies.
Go ahead.
I'm in for the wind.
I'm in.
You feel good about that?
Amy?
Gladiator.
Lunchbox?
Gladiator.
Eddie?
I have gladiator.
Good job.
Everybody's got one.
Here we go.
Number two.
We're streaking.
We're going up through the quad to the gymnasium.
Frank, get in the car.
Everybody's doing it.
Now.
We're streaking.
I'm in for the wind.
I'm in.
We're streaking.
We're going up through the quad to the gymnasium.
Frank.
Get in the car.
Everybody's doing it.
Now.
From 2003, Amy.
I'm old school.
Lunchbox.
One of the best movies ever.
Old school.
Eddie?
That's old school.
All right.
Everybody's good.
Everybody's pure.
2-2-2.
Next one up.
Calling somebody else fat won't make you any skinnier.
Calling someone stupid doesn't make you any smarter.
And ruining Regina George's life definitely didn't make me any happier.
All you can do in life is try to solve the problem in front of you.
From 2004.
Can you name that 2000's movie one more time?
Calling somebody else fat won't make you any skinnier.
Calling someone stupid doesn't make you any smarter.
And ruining Regina George's life definitely didn't make me any happier.
All you can do in life is try to solve the problem in front of you.
Amen.
Amen.
I'm in for the win?
Lunchbox.
I mean, I feel like that's Reese Witherspoon, so I put legally blonde?
Incorrect.
Eddie.
Context clues.
Mean girls?
Amy?
Mean girls.
It's mean girls.
Oh.
Eddie and Amy take the lead.
Not everybody's pure anymore.
You've lost your pureness.
Like you lost your flower.
Yeah.
All right, here we go.
Number four.
Hey, Mr. Grumpy Gills.
When life gets you down, you know what you got to do?
I don't want to know what you got to do.
Just keep swimming.
Just keep swimming.
From 2003.
I'm in.
I'm in.
Oh, man.
Hey, Mr. Grumpy Gills.
When life get you down, you know what you got to do?
I don't want to know what you got to do.
Just keep swimming.
Just keep swimming.
Amy?
Finding Nemo.
Lunchbox?
Finding Nemo.
Finding Nemo.
Good job, everybody?
Amy and Eddie still pure.
Number five.
Five in a glass case of emotion.
From the year of 2004.
What movie is that from?
Five in a glass case of emotion.
I'm in.
We got one in.
Amy's pinned to paper.
I'm in a glass case of emotion.
Lunchbox is now pinned to paper.
Three seconds.
I don't know.
All right, lunchbox.
Step brothers.
Incorrect.
Amy.
Zoolander?
Incorrect.
You're no longer pure.
Eddie.
It's Will Ferrell, I'm sure, and that's Anchorman.
Correct.
Oh, Anchorman.
Eddie still's pure as a day is good.
Hey, look at me.
Wow, wow, wow, wow.
Okay, we got two left.
Eddie takes the lead.
Next one up.
I know.
I'm just one stomach flew away from my goal weight.
Let's play it again.
I know.
I'm just one stomach flew away from my goal weight.
I'm just one stomach flew away from my goal weight.
I'm in.
I'm in for the one.
From 2006.
Oh, Eddie's struggling now.
Eddie does have a lead five to Amy's four, to lunchboxes three.
Yeah.
I might lose it.
He's taking his purity for sure.
Lunchbox.
That's a woman.
So that's bridesmaids.
That's a woman.
That's incorrect.
Amy.
Romey Michelle.
Incorrect.
What?
Hold on.
Hold on.
I have bring it on.
Wow.
Wrong.
You made it a long way.
The devil wears product.
Oh, yeah.
Duh.
Well, that makes me disappointed in myself.
Final one, lunchbox cannot win,
but Eddie, you're in the lead.
You need Eddie to miss it, Amy.
Okay.
Here we go.
Last one.
I live my life a quarter mile at a time.
Nothing else matters, not the mortgage.
For those 10 seconds or less, I'm free.
I'm in.
I'm in for the win.
You hear that again?
Yeah.
I live my life a quarter mile at a time.
Nothing else matters, not the mortgage.
Or those 10 seconds or less, I'm free.
Adam in.
Eddie, you have to get it.
So you go first?
Man, it's the whole 10 seconds that kind of threw me off.
I was like, is that gone in 10 seconds?
Is that a movie?
Gone in 10 seconds?
Not the one that I've seen.
I wrote down Fast and Furious.
Okay.
That's what I have.
And Amy?
You're right.
Eddie, you're right.
Eddie you win.
Okay.
Lunchbox.
It didn't matter, but what do you have?
Oh, I have Fast and Furious.
And they have the last one coming out.
Okay.
Well, Eddie's John Leonard.
Wake up.
the morning and then you turn the radio on and the dials just keeps on turn.
Then you're here, ready, and me lunchbox, more game two.
Steve Redavitt's trying to put you through.
Mike is writing this week's next bit.
Now Bobby's on the mic so you know what this is.
This is the Bobby Vaughn Stone.
Now the morning corny.
How are relationships like algebra?
How?
Because you look at your X and wonder why.
That's pretty funny.
That was the morning corny.
That's a pretty good one.
Oh.
You ever look at like your insights on social media and it tells you like how your video does normally?
Yeah.
I feel like that one was slightly above the normal line.
Oh, yeah.
I can normally gauge it from y'all.
Yeah, oh, yeah.
Pretty good.
I don't.
You like the smart ones.
I like the dumb ones.
Oh.
Today's World Cancer Day.
In the fight against cancer, every screening matters.
So when I'm talking about that for just a second, early detection is key, and I know it may feel inconvenient, but you know what's super inconvenient?
Cancer.
Yes, the worst.
Yes.
Pfizer's patient-focused website, Pfizerfor-all.com.
Use that to check your eligibility and book cancer screenings in just a few simple steps because every breakthrough matters.
That's why Pfizer's bringing oncology to the forefront for this year.
They're fighting for eight cancer breakthroughs by 2030.
So fewer side effects beyond chemo.
Pfizer's fighting to move cancer treatments beyond chemo and radiation and better treatments.
So I think a lot of us in this room have been affected by cancer in many, many different ways.
And you can hit at fizerforall.com.
And that's with a P-F-I-Z-E-R, Pfizer-for-all.com to check your eligibility and book cancer screenings and just a few simple steps.
So today is World Cancer Day.
and that's not, it's kind of a weird day because you would think, oh, World Cancer Day,
because it's like on World Tacos Day, what are you supposed to do?
Eat tacos.
World Cancer Day.
It don't, yeah.
It's a weird one.
Maybe it should be like World Anti-Cancer Day.
I like that.
Yeah, it's a better type of awareness.
Yeah, because on World Puppy Day, what do you need to do?
Get a puppy.
Or play with puppies or support.
You know?
Yeah, well, you do what you can with it.
You can.
Yes.
So, again, a little levity there, but it's World Cancer Day.
So early screening matters.
Go to Pfizer for all.com.
Bobby Bones Show.
Boney up the day.
This story comes us from Parkville, Missouri.
A 32-year-old man's driving when he gets stuck behind a snowplow.
Snowplow going slow and he's getting aggravated.
Guy behind him's like, come on, come on.
Finally passes him after 10 minutes.
Starts flipping him the bird.
Snowplow driver gives him the bird back.
So the 32-year-old pulls out a gun,
ba, ba, ba, ba, ba!
Shire's eight shots at the snowplow.
Oh, boy.
Adam?
Yeah.
Oh, man, I was hoping you were just going to say it in the air.
Me too.
Yeah, that'd be cool.
Sometimes I get behind a tractor on the road, and I'm like, man, I sure would like to shoot
up in the air with my gun.
You ever get behind a tractor?
Yeah.
And you're like, show it like to shoot up.
You get it a little bit.
But again, you don't shoot at.
And then also, the snowplot guy's actually doing good.
Right.
Like for the people that are driving.
And so is the tractor, by the way.
I don't really don't want to shoot in the air.
That's crazy.
Okay, there you go.
I'm lunchbox.
your bonehead story of the day.
Amy, here's the question I pose you.
So I've had ankle surgery and I've really just done nothing on my foot.
I can't really jog.
I would walk a little bit.
I do some rehab.
My type is all or nothing where if I get back training again,
I know I'm going to train hard and I'll possibly re-injure my ankle.
So I've just stayed off of it to let it heal.
I'm at the point now where I haven't done anything in three months,
longest in my life, probably since I was 17 years old where I've done nothing.
I feel pretty soft, pretty gooey.
that being said
I can just be this way forever now
or I can get back
I can go and fight and get back in shape
which you're probably going to take it a little longer
because I'm a little older
if you were me what would you do
well I would just
you're going to be a dad
and I would just think like
dad bod no
that's what I'm saying
that's not where I'm going
this has nothing to do with
the look of your body
or anything vanity wise
it's more so just your health
like I don't think you're supposed to
move and do things just for longevity and living a good life.
Well, I think we choose the whatever's going to get your heart rate up a little bit,
cardiovascularly.
Like, how can you take care of your muscles?
Gone.
Yeah.
Three months, it's gone.
Walking up the stairs just to come into work now, I sit down after doing commercials in the
morning.
I'm like, ugh, that's one flight.
It's crazy how, I mean.
But it's three months.
I've done nothing.
So that's my vote.
I mean, but do you have, like, you're a smart guy.
You know, you don't have to go.
heart. You don't have to go all in.
You're not training for anything. Just train for
like normal life. You know, I'm sorry. Do you know Bobby?
Hey, I'm Bobby. Nice to me. I know. I know you. And I know that you're all or nothing,
but I also know that you're intelligent and you don't have to go all or nothing. You can just
choose to go some.
That's really not how it works.
But it is. It's not. It's like you can choose, not to drink a whole lot, but it's like,
I'm alcoholic. I can't. Oh, so you.
I compare, I compare my obsession with, uh,
tendencies of an addict, yes.
That tracks.
I do think you have that.
You could work a program for accountability.
12-step program to not work out?
Or don't mildly work out?
To mildly work out.
Have accountability.
Kind of feels like fork in a road.
I just feel like you can't reenter yourself.
And at this point, you are also getting to an age where you, when you go that hard,
you act as if you're training as a pro athlete.
I am, yes.
And you're not.
Hold not hope.
You never know when I'm going to get that cold.
But you're not.
So like just, just, you know, do some, try casual workouts.
I don't do anything casual.
You know that.
I have an appointment today with my doctor.
Well, ask your doctor what he thinks.
Or she.
Didn't mean to.
Dang.
Well, man.
Sexes.
I know, right?
It's a he though.
I know.
I feel like I've heard you talk about him.
That's why I said that.
All right.
We'll see tomorrow.
Bye everybody.
The Bobby Bone Show theme song written.
Produced and sang by Reed Yarberry.
You can find his Instagram at Reed Yarberry.
Scoobis 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.
A win is a win.
A win is a win.
I don't care what I'm saying.
Yep, that's me.
Clifford Taylor the 4th.
You might have seen the skits,
my basketball and college football journey,
or my career in sports media.
Well, now I'm bringing all of
that excitement to my brand new podcast, The Clifford Show. This is a place for raw, unfilled
conversations with athletes, creators, and voices that not only deserve to be heard, but celebrated.
So let's get to it. Listen to The Clifford Show on the IHeard Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever
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of plans, a show about who we are and who we become when life makes other plans.
I wish that I hadn't resisted for so long the need to change.
We have to be willing to live with a kind of uncertainty that none of us likes.
You can have opinions, you can have like a strong stance, and then there's your body having its
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Listen to a slight change of plans on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts.
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Earners, what's up?
Look, money is something we all deal with,
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On each episode of the podcast, Earn Your Leisure,
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From stocks and real estate to credit, business, and generational wealth,
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Make financial literacy accessible for everyone.
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I know that, Greg.
We're teaming up on 40s and free agents,
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Every move matters.
From my draft boards and mock drafts.
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