The Bobby Bones Show - WEDS PT 2: Bobby Reviews $300 Brisket + How Does Bobby See The Future? + Celebrity Admits To Cheating
Episode Date: February 25, 2026Bobby talked about how his order from Franklin’s BBQ in Austin, TX finally arrived at his house yesterday. He talked about the experience of ordering a $300 brisket and why it wasn’t what ...he was expecting. We talked about how a woman in Ohio bought a scratch-off lottery ticket selected for her by a store clerk and won a prize of $40,000 a year for 25 years. A listener has a complaint about something she heard about our podcast. Lunchbox is upset about other details on our cruise. We talked about a celebrity who admitted to having 2 affairs with Russian women. Bobby shares how he feels he can see the future at times.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Get your bones on, get your Bobby Bones on.
There was this app I got on, and I was able to order an entire slab of brisket from Franklin's Barbecue in Austin.
And in Austin, if you want, they have to wait for hours.
And so I order it is very expensive.
It was for, like, multiple people.
It was like $300, right?
Order it, and it comes yesterday in the mail, and it's packaged.
And it's all on my Instagram story, if you want to see it, Mr. Bobby Bones.
And it's all in, like, ice.
and I thought it was going to be heat and eat,
because that's what it said.
Heat and eat.
Meaning I think I'm able to put a microwave and have a sandwich.
Okay.
It wasn't what was happening.
Right.
First of all, they sealed it?
In what?
Like a saran wrap or something?
I don't know where they go.
Oh, vacuum sealed.
Yeah.
That's what it looked like to me.
That's to keep it as fresh as possible.
Yes, yes.
As soon as it's done, they ship it off and it comes to you within a day, basically.
Yeah.
Okay, so I do that. I'm starving because I had a really long day yesterday. I didn't even get to work out. I was boxing at like 4 o'clock. Didn't get out of the 5.30. I'm ready to get home. Heating eat. Starving. So I get there and I'm like, oh, food's here. So my wife doesn't want anything to do with it. Something I got this. Open it up. It's sealed. It's kind of cold. I'm like, how do I heat neat this? And it says heat and eat stick in the oven for 75 minutes on 225.
That's okay. It is heat neat. That's heat neat. But that's heat.
Eat need.
Right.
So then I'm going, well, what do I have as a side?
So I get on Uber Eats and order Cracker Barrel sides.
Got some fried ochre.
I got some corn.
Little fixings?
Yeah, and it gets there way before the heat needs ready.
So then it's getting cold.
Ordered a cherry Coke, though.
Oh, my gosh.
You don't know what tastes good until you have a cherry Coke after like 10 years.
I don't even know if I could remember the last one had a cherry.
Oh, my God.
I had one last week.
It's like, sweet Jesus in my mouth.
That was awesome.
I just don't have that desire.
I don't even know why I act me either normally.
But for some reason, Cherry Coke just seemed perfect for the occasion.
At this point, my wife's long gone to bed.
So I'm up in the kitchen and I put it, luckily, she sees, because I posted on my Instagram story, she goes, hey, I know you just turn that oven on.
It's on broil.
Take it off broil.
Oh, my gosh.
It was only on for like one minute.
And so I said, oh, my bad.
Hard the top of that.
Hey, my bad.
Did you take the plastic off?
Yes, of course.
Just double check and...
You know what?
We go, of course, but good question.
I did.
I did.
Take it out of the steel.
Put it in.
Turn a timer on.
75 minutes, I wait for this thing.
And I have totally learned how to cut a brisket.
Like against the grain and there's two parts of the brisket.
There's a thin side and the fat side.
The fat side's tastier.
You want to turn it out.
You have to cut a different grain.
Good job.
I was in.
I learned all about being a man last night.
May not have had a dad, but you know what?
I learned last night from Chad GPD.
Oh, yeah.
So that's second choice.
So then I pull it out of the oven and I start slicing.
And then I realize, after about four slices, that's all I can eat.
I can't eat the whole thing.
Right, right.
It's really big.
It's really big.
So I have it.
I put it on the plate.
I reheat my okra and my corn.
I got some of them, the maples too, from Cracker Barrow.
Oh, the cinnamon apples?
Yeah.
Those are still pretty warm, except I ate them before the brisket came out.
I was starving.
It's like 8 o'clock.
And so you get the brisket out.
My buddy Steve hits me up.
He's like, hey, if you don't know how to cut it, you can get on FaceTime.
He's a great, great chef, him and Eddie.
Yeah, both like.
Solid, solid chefs.
I was going to say Mexicans.
Like, you guys really, you guys are great at grilling.
And I don't know if that's the reason.
If it's because you're both a Mexican friends, if I can, is that a big part of our culture?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We like to grill and cook.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Eddie wouldn't come over.
He had some kid stuff to do.
Basketball game.
So I cut it all.
And it was good.
It was fine.
It was too much work.
Well, it sounds like you needed to start the process way before you didn't.
You maybe would have enjoyed it anymore.
It wouldn't have mattered.
If I cook something, I don't like it that much.
I like somebody to cook it for me.
Okay.
So I have three quarters of a brisket.
I just brought and donated to Eddie and his family this morning.
So it wasn't that good?
No, it was fine.
Okay.
It was the whole production.
I don't want to be the producer.
I got you.
I don't want to be the director.
I just want to be the actor that gets to eat.
Like every...
Or just watch the movie.
Yeah, all even better.
Yeah.
It's like every task Bobby had to do,
there was like a deduction from the enjoyment.
I get it.
Was it warm though?
Was that 75 minutes?
Was that enough?
Yeah.
Okay.
It was warm.
And like, you cut it and like...
Juice would come out.
Oh, that's so good.
But I never cut the big fat part.
I left that Freddie because I knew him and his family would enjoy it.
That's the best part.
If ever that was, I don't know that I like that sound.
No, no.
So I took the knife.
serrated. Perforated knife, so I didn't. I used a slicker. And so as I was slicking it,
that's the juice is coming out of it. Oh, Amy, it's delicious. When that juice comes out of that
brisket, ah. So I made a donation to the Eddie family today. Well, we thank you.
Yeah. It was fine. It was fine. I think it could have got barbecue from here and make it just
good. Did it come with barbecue sauce? I left that at home, though. That was good. I kept that. I
kept that in the house. That was my whole night last night. So I finally ate dinner around 9 o'clock.
That's very late for you.
Yeah.
That also could have been why I felt like the meat was a little lackluster.
Because I think it was good.
But I think I could have ordered from Smokey Joes or, you know, crib and ribs or any of these places around here.
And it had been just the same.
Yeah.
It had already been done.
But you let me know.
I cooked that for you guys.
You and your family.
You got six of you guys.
Oh my gosh.
I can't wait.
I cannot wait.
And so I'm assuming I'm going to have to do 75 minutes in the oven too.
No, no.
Yours has already been cooked.
You can do whatever you want.
You can probably do 15 minutes in the oven.
I'll probably just slice it and then do 15 minutes, yeah.
Oh, really?
Mm-hmm.
So I didn't arrive.
I guess I was just so confused until I'd arrive to you.
It was cooked, but it was cold.
It was like...
I know, but Eddie's is going to be cold.
But it was only in the fridge.
I didn't, I'd have to freeze it.
I kept in the fridge.
Got it.
And brought it to him this morning.
That works.
They cooked it and then froze it, I think.
I don't know.
It's fine.
Sounds like you won't be doing that again.
I'm going to tell you what was good, though.
Dead Cherry Coke.
So good.
I think that's the highlight of the night.
night. I have Franklin's barbecue. Okay, fine. A cherry Coke from Cracker Barrel? Like this.
You don't like cherry. No, I don't think so. Oh, Amy, cherry Coke is delicious. I like diet Coke,
but. Oh, I went to Chick-fil-A yesterday and I went by like right at lunchtime because I was
going from this to an interview over at another studio. And so the line's always out in the street at
lunchtime. But man, do they have that down? Like it's double lane. You get in. They come up to you.
What do you want? I know what I want now. I want a four people.
strip, I want a fry, and I want a large sweet tea with
strawberry added. I was in and out of there
in seven minutes. Do you get chicken strips? Strips, yeah.
Wow. I don't know anybody that gets chicken strips. I never gotten that. I can't
really mess with bread if I don't know if there's been any sort of butter made
in it because it's just all avoiding dairy at all times. So chicken strips
though? They're not breaded? That's a great question. I asked
they had dairy and chicken strips and they said no. Okay. It doesn't mean they were
telling me the truth because it was just because they would. I think they would. I think
you're fine. I guess I just, I honestly never met anybody that gets chicken strips from
Chick-fil-A. Everybody gets the nuggets. Yeah, those nuggets are. Strips are bigger.
Yeah. I mean, I know what they are. I'm just letting you know, strips are bigger than nuggets.
I know what they are. It's just that I don't know anybody that gets them. What did you get to drink?
He just said. What was it? Oh, my gosh. Let's see if he remembers.
Nah, there's no way that I wouldn't have asked if I remember. Some else over there?
Yeah, yeah. Eddie's running cameras, to be fair. I got a large sweet tea with strawberry added.
Oh, that's what you've been getting lately.
That's awesome.
Yeah.
So, I wait until 9 o'clock to eat.
It was stupid.
It was like when Thanksgiving doesn't happen until way later.
She's like, no, Thanksgiving, it's going to be ready at 2.
It's like, we're not ready at 3.34 and you're like way too hungry.
And you start to get cranky.
So enjoy, Eddie.
Thank you, man.
I'm going to post on my Instagram at Mr. Bobby Bones.
I donated to Eddie this morning.
I need that.
I'm not kidding.
I need that thing I gave you.
Yeah, the pan.
My wife will kill me if I don't even know I took it.
Oh, oh.
And I think that's her favorite one.
That's important then.
Okay.
I need that back.
You got it, man.
Don't worry.
I'll get it back to you tomorrow.
Okay.
Wow.
And old me would not have cared.
Old me would not have cared.
Hey, have two of them.
But I took that out.
I didn't know which one to take.
So I just took one on top, which means one that she's probably been using.
So it's probably a nice one.
I got to have it back and she will notice.
You don't want to get to the point where she's like, hey, where is that dish?
Nope.
Because I'll lie.
I don't know.
And I don't want to have to lie.
And then like tomorrow found it.
On your Instagram.
She sees you giving it to Eddie.
I'm telling you.
She only sees like 18% of stuff.
She just happened to see me broiling the meat for 30 seconds yesterday.
I think because she knew what I was doing.
She's keeping an eye on you.
She's keeping an eye to make sure.
That's funny.
She can check on you from the bed on Instagram.
So enjoy.
You guys want to hit us up?
877-77-77 Bobby.
That's our number.
877-B-O-B-B-Y.
You can see on my Instagram story, the whole shebang last night.
And then I'm going to post a donation to Eddie and his family.
Can you guys eat that in the day?
Yeah, that's tonight.
All of that will be done tonight.
All right, a lottery ticket picked by a store clerk wins $40,000 a year for 25 years.
A woman in Lorraine County, Ohio, bought a scratch-off ticket selected for her by a store clerk,
and then won the $40,000 a year for 25 years.
The woman told lottery official she visited that store,
and the store's clerk encouraged her to buy a $30 extreme million scratch-off ticket.
She said, pick this one.
it's probably a winner.
The player said she initially was like,
I don't want to pay 30 bucks for a ticket,
but then she did.
She scratched it off,
40 grand for 25 years.
The player decided to take the winnings.
It's a one-time lump payment of $500,000.
There you go.
That's the same thing about a donation
to the person working the counter,
but a little something would be nice.
Yeah, for sure.
Oh, man, that's...
That'd be nice.
Every time the clerk has bought me one,
or picked one for me and never wins.
But you go and ask them to pick for you.
I think that's a bit different.
I do.
I say, hey, man, which one's looking good today?
They always pick the wrong one.
They're like, what do you want for me?
Yeah.
I want you to pick a winner.
They just throw their...
I don't know, man.
Take this one.
This sounds like the clerk was just kind of like, oh, look, you want to buy this one.
Well, the clerk was the one that was saying, yeah.
Like, oh, this is calling your name right here.
Like, you should buy this one.
Amy, what do you have?
Okay, so a movie that I'm excited about this year is Project Hail Mary.
and I was reading an article of Variety about it or on Variety.com.
And entertainment journalist Scott Mansell is calling it a masterpiece and it will win major awards or it would be a major awards player across the board.
And I read the book a long time ago, but I'm very, very excited for this movie.
And it comes out March 20th.
Oh, that quick.
Yeah.
So in less than a month.
So I feel like this might be something that is going to get me to the movie theater because I'm excited to see it.
and the people that have already seen it are saying it is so good.
Yeah, I'm looking forward to it.
I love the book.
You read that book?
Remember that was too when Ryan Gossom was throwing the football and we're like, uh-oh, he can't throw.
Oh, that's the movie?
Yeah, because he was throwing at home area.
Got it.
He's obviously a theater kid.
Even though he plays all these big, bad role, he's a theater kid.
Yeah.
And he throws the football like, I would throw if it was the wrong hand.
And we're like, who allowed them to put this up?
Someone should have said, nope, don't put this one up.
or show them like going back and then just the ball flying out.
But yeah.
What's this story about?
Teacher who is needed for their expertise because they got to save Earth.
Oh, right?
Yeah, and then there's a kind of an alien relationship that is endearing with this character called Rocky.
I don't know that I'd say all that, but.
Was that giving things away?
Oh, no.
No, I'm still reading.
it.
It's endearing.
Oh, my gosh.
A character name? Everybody knows about Rocky.
Well, now I'm like, who's Rocky?
Yeah, exactly. I'm not telling you.
I'm not telling you anything.
That's why I was so vague with my description of, as a teacher, I don't think you
like super spoiled anything.
I don't think I did spoil anything at all.
If people were going into it in the nude, I think that they would go, I wonder what's
going to happen.
Yeah, I wonder.
I didn't tell them.
anything about what's going to happen.
Okay.
Yeah, I look forward to it as well.
Ray, play me voicemail one, please.
Hey, I know you guys don't really choose what commercials play on the podcast.
I don't really just heard a commercial for Ashley Madison on the podcast.
I just have a call and let you guys know in case you didn't know because I thought that was
wild.
Have a great day.
Bye.
Thank you.
Not only do we not know.
It's different for everybody.
Meaning if you live in one state, you're going to get different commercials as somebody
else from a different state. If you're searching
stuff, you're going to get commercial. It's like
a dude who really got owned online
because he was like, why do I, on YouTube? Why do I keep getting ads for gay
dating sites? And they were like, dude, it's because you're looking up other gay stuff.
Is that why? I'm not saying that's exactly
why I hear, but
we don't have the ability
to go, this is an absolute
there's a couple, I think at the very beginning,
but a lot of times you're only hearing commercials
because it's where you're from. They're also
local commercials in podcast. Well, geoterm.
targeting or whatever it's called.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's interesting.
I didn't know we had those even randomly playing.
But we don't.
It's not like one of us voicing them.
No.
It's Amy.
Amy.
No.
It is not me.
It's probably based on where they are.
If for some reason they're single, I don't know.
It has nothing really to do with us.
There are a lot of weird commercials that are put in based on where the person's listening,
when they're listening.
and what they're up to.
You know what you're saying?
I don't what you're saying.
So maybe you should look in the mirror there.
What's up?
There's all something you need to do.
All right.
Next, number two.
We've missed hearing lunchbox do his SPS sunscreen protection force or whatever it is when he goes on vacation.
And since you're all going to be on the cruise next week,
I was hoping that we might get to hear some of that happening while you guys are out there.
This might be a fun chance for people to get it up.
close and personal. Anyways, have a great trip. Can't wait to hear all about it. Bye.
I don't think it'll pay off the same. Right. Because people will know. Like that's the, when you're doing it on the boat, people know that who I am and why they're on the boat is for us. So it would be like, oh, I get to be part of the bit. It's sort of like doing bathroom confessions on the ship. It's like, people will know. And they'll just be like, oh, that's so cool. So it really won't have the same payoff. I've already thought about it.
Oh, you did? You thought about doing that? Yeah, I thought about it. And I'm like, well, that's not. I thought about it. And he thought it through.
and then he thought about how it's probably not going to be.
And then he's not doing it.
It's a complete thought.
It's like when Eddie wants to give away kidneys,
what it feels like thought about it.
Anything anybody else is mad about about the cruise today?
Because today so far, everybody's been good.
Anything new come up?
Yeah, I mean.
Oh, my God.
I don't know if you're going to say this.
Yeah, I mean, there's one thing.
I got an email saying we're responsible to pay for our own dinners.
That's not true.
That's literally not true.
I saw the same email.
They're paying for food.
Did you read it?
It said, yeah, if you want to go to a dinner, you got to pay for it.
Wait, what?
I didn't see that part.
It said we're covering.
The email that I got, because everybody was on it, is like they're covering the meals.
Yeah, I saw that.
And drinks.
Unless I got a different email.
I was going to say, I think you got a different email, man.
I think there's no way you have to go for a work thing and you have to pay for your own meals.
There's no way.
Okay.
If you want to go to any dining experience, talent is responsible for paying for it.
If you want a specialty dining experience.
What's that?
You have meals provided in the main day.
dining room. So they're providing all the meals, but if you want like something extra special,
you have to go pay for extra special. That sounds about right? He made it seem like we weren't able to
eat unless you spent your own money. To me, it sounds like we're paying for our own meals.
You get to eat every meal. They have every meal covered. All right. Morgan,
lend to this. That's exactly what it is. So there's different dining halls, different things.
So there's three of them that we have access to because it's free for everybody. It's included on the
trip. And that's what we have access to all the time. You have every meal can be there.
But there are, I want to say, six or seven other places where you can specialty dine and have
different food. But if we go there, we have to pay for that. Hold on time out. See, that's what I'm
saying, Eddie. So everyone on the boat gets to eat at these three places that we're eating at for
free? I think that's part of the experience. It's like an all-inclusive. It's not a resort, but a cruise.
Okay. But they also have another area if you want to eat in a special area that is still free.
that's for talent, like artists in their teams as well.
Are you guys worried you're going to have to eat with people?
No, no, it's not that.
I just felt like we were able to eat whatever we wanted.
Not these special meals or whatever, but like I feel like we're just kind of like,
here's my ticket, like everyone else, but we're talent, right?
Right. So we should have an elevated dining experience.
I'm not saying that. I'm not saying elevated dining.
But that's what you are kind of saying.
But that's what you're saying. It's true, though.
Well, it's just like, if I want to experience the sushi on the boat,
I should be able to, they should provide me.
with the sushi on the boat.
And we're not going to get the sushi?
No, you got to pay for that.
Amy is.
Wait, what?
You get free elevation.
I guess.
I don't know.
I guess I'm wondering what the elevated meal experience means.
I don't know, but to come on and say they're not paying for our meals is wrong.
Well, I was confused then.
You apologize?
I did not understand that.
Do you apologize?
I made a mistake.
Did you have seen the part about expensive?
But, Eddie, do you understand what I'm saying?
No, I don't.
No, no, Eddie, you're on the same page as I am.
I'm not on the same.
Save a. Okay, so if I read correctly, I do believe once we return any money you did have to spend, you can turn it as an expense.
So if we want the sushi, we can just...
I don't know about sushi. I don't know. You'll need to clarify, but I think with certain things I solved that once you return, you can expense that cost. That was under like drinks.
But then they said if we have like team meetings and whatnot, they'll try to cover everybody's drinks if people order them, like on their company credit card.
Yeah, I don't know.
It just said you get to go eat where people eat
And I'm like, great, I'll go eat what people eat
I got a problem with that
Yeah, no, I could do that
And then if I wanted like the luxury experience
I'll pay the 20 bucks.
Okay.
So like you want steak or sushi.
Yeah, if you want steak or sushi,
you got to pay your own room.
You think so?
I don't think so.
But you don't know.
You're getting mad about something you don't know.
Guys, bring water bottles
because there's going to be a water station
we can fill it up.
I did see
I did see where you can't bring your own, like, water.
Okay, that's fine.
Wait, but bring a water bottle.
Just an empty water bottle.
Yes.
Scoop in the ocean.
Oh, you know what else I did see?
What?
Nowhere on there it says you can't bring a fishing pole.
Okay.
I don't think they have to put that.
No, no, it did.
It did say, and it said you couldn't bring a bow and arrow.
It said all that.
Or a baseball bat.
Baseball bat.
I don't think you can bring a fishing pole.
I double checked and I was like,
does it say fishing pole?
And lunchbox was like, it doesn't say a fishing pole.
I don't know
Let's just stop looking for reasons to be upset
No no I'm not I don't look for reasons
I just things come to me and I'm like what
I'm not going to eat dinner
Like that's not cool
Do you think that would really be the case
Hey you never know man
You do know
They're gonna make sure you can eat
Play me three please
Munch Fox
You shouldn't need poker chips for your cruise
You're asking that
Because you think you're a bad gambler
Now if you're a good gambler
You can just take your money
And make more
Think about that one
Love the show. Been listening for years. Bye-bye.
No. That way there is no risk to me.
I mean, yes, everybody thinks they're a good gambler, but you don't win every time.
And so, yes, I would like to have a safety net of, hey, man, you know, if I lose this money,
it ain't really my money, so not a big deal.
Bet a little bit bigger, make bigger bets, get the excitement going.
Everybody's gathered around when I got a bunch of stack chips stacked on red or stacked on my blackjack hand.
that brings excitement to the casino.
Still waiting on those chips.
I'm starting to get a little fatigued.
Just in general of us talking about the crew.
I'm trying to do it now at this point.
Yeah, I'm ready, man.
I mean, I'm excited.
I just feel icky when we talk about it like this because it just seems so.
Okay, it just seems.
Braddy.
Yes, ungrateful and which I get.
We're just having normal conversations.
Can you let her talk please without yelling over her?
Jesus.
I just have the, you know, like,
Like whenever we do these, and I mean, I've participated.
It just feels like when I think about it later, I'm like, it's icky because so many people would love to just be able to go on a cruise for work.
You know?
Yeah.
I can understand that.
You're talking.
You're talking to all.
You're talking to all, really.
You're not talking to all of us.
Hold on.
Eddie just agreed with me on the food.
And now I'm the bad guy.
You got me wrong.
You got upset about the rooms also.
And I'm the bad guy.
We're on the same page.
Me and you are on the same page.
That's not true.
complain about the same stuff I have.
No, I have not.
Did you complain about gambling?
Did he? Nope.
Never brought up gambling.
Even the room doesn't bother me.
The room's fine.
I don't care about that.
It's still in this room.
He was the one that got upset around the room.
Why are you talking that tone?
It's his unbelievable tone.
It's my unbelievable thing.
We have a truth and we go back to the tape and he was upset about the room and now we
ask like he's just.
There's a possibility of that.
If he won a little bit, he's gotten over it.
It's not a big deal, guys.
It's not a big deal.
Let it go.
Yeah.
But that's what I'm saying.
Like, we're going to be sailing the seas.
I know you think it's gross.
I think it's just so funny.
I think the dynamic of everybody.
Well, I have laughed too.
It makes me laugh.
I agree.
I feel caught in a weird place because it's like if it wasn't other people having to hear us, like us bickering, we would be doing this anyways.
And it would be funny.
But because also I know other people are having to listen and they're like at their jobs and grinding away.
And they're like, shut the freak up.
I would love if that was my job.
You know?
Yeah.
Yeah, we're here grinding away too.
Okay.
Anyway, we leave this weekend.
It's going to be awesome.
Yes.
Yes.
It's going to be awesome.
Next one.
Morning Studio.
I'm Anna from Fresno, California.
I just had a question for everybody.
I wanted to know what is your guys' most underrated Disney movie.
I will go first.
Mine is Meet the Robinson.
If you haven't watched it, I highly recommend it.
Can't wait to hear you guys.
That's tough because does underrated mean one that doesn't really gets credit it deserves is just not our favorite?
I don't know.
Like I would think one that no one really talks about, but it's so good.
I don't know that I have an answer because I don't think I've seen a lot of Disney movies.
So Coco.
Coco, dude.
But I feel like that got a lot of praise.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'm going to look.
You know which one's really good?
Jazz.
No.
Soul.
Soul is so good.
It's really good, man.
Oh, okay.
Maybe that's one.
Yes.
A little deeper kids.
I haven't really heard.
Oh, I have a good one.
It's called the Good Dinosaur.
That's a good one.
And a lot of people don't talk about it, but it's really sweet.
I think kids would love that one.
I think I've seen that one.
It's really good.
Yeah, it's really good.
That one's really good.
Is that about the team?
The track team.
Yes.
Yes, that one was.
Kevin Costner.
Oh, it's not all cartoons?
No, Disney makes a lot of.
The rookie.
Is that Disney?
Yeah.
I think that is.
The rookie, is that Dennis Quaid?
Yeah.
I don't know if that's Disney or not, but it feels Disney-E.
Okay, McFarlane.
Good, good call.
McFarlane, USA.
Yeah, that's a good one.
I just searched underrated Disney movies.
That's a good one.
Treasure Planet.
Anyone, 2001?
Yeah, dude, that's freaking amazing.
Martin Shorts in it, George's Gordon Levitt.
That one's awesome.
What's it called?
It's called Treasure Planet.
It flop to the box office because the promotion was terrible,
and it was going up against other things in 2002,
but it is awesome.
My kids love it.
I love it.
Brother Bear.
Oh, that one's cute.
You ever seen heavy weights?
Yeah, that's a good one.
No.
You see Martin Short's daughter?
Oh, I know.
At 42.
So terrible.
Mith Robinson is on it.
That's cartoon, huh?
Yeah.
Oh, I thought it was.
I'm thinking of Swiss Family Robinson.
What?
Do you guys know Southwest Family Robinson?
No.
Yeah, yeah, the tree and all that stuff.
Yeah, they have a Disneyland there.
It's old, though.
It's like the 60s probably.
Swiss Family Robinson.
Let's see.
It's an all-time underrated Disney live-action classic
Related 1960. No CGI, no irony. Just a shipwrecked family building the coolest treehouse and movie history.
I'm not even sure if I've seen it all, but...
Okay. Those are the other ones on there?
No, I just got bored of reading them.
The rookie is a Disney movie.
Thank you.
Lunchbox, your story.
Yeah, Bill Gates, man.
He has come out and admitted that he hooked up with two Russian chicks.
Is that where he got the SDD?
Yes.
And then he tried to secretly put antibiotics in his wife's food or drink to make sure she didn't get him.
Yeah.
He talked to his people yesterday and said, listen, all the stories are true.
What is this on?
Can you have a source?
New York Post.
Okay, great.
He said that he had two affairs with Russian women while married to his now ex-wife.
He said one was a he met at a chess tournament or whatever.
One of those bridge, bridge is what it's called.
and then another one he met at a conference
and he regrets it, but he did,
but he did not see any illegal activity with Jeffrey Epstein.
He did not participate in any of that,
but he did admit to his two affairs.
Do you think Bill Gates was just such a nerd his whole life?
So when he started making money,
he was like, I'm hooking up with anything and everything.
Oh, yeah.
For sure.
That's why I think about a lot of the rich guys
because they were obviously rich because they're smart.
And so they were nerdy young.
Yeah.
And then once they had access,
because of their money,
then they just went off the rail.
Let it rip.
I don't know what caught.
Two Russian hookers is really letting it rip.
Whoa, no, no.
No, not hookers.
Bridge player and one Russian nuclear physicist.
Oh, so they weren't?
They weren't huckers.
They were just Russians.
They weren't Russian.
No way they weren't involved in some honey pot type thing.
And Bill Gates went to go watch a bridge tournament.
Yeah.
Like just for fun?
I did have affairs.
One with a Russian bridge player.
One with a Russian nuclear physicist.
and Epstein had met the bridge player that Bill Gates hooked up with when Epstein was trying to raise money for a bridge academy and then he later paid for her to attend software coding school.
What's up with bridge?
It's a card game.
Yeah, I know, but I've never.
In America, old people play it, but who knows what they do in Russia?
I don't know what their culture is.
Yeah, but Bill Gates was playing in a tournament and that's where he met this year.
And then he paid for her to go to school.
I mean, Epstein did.
Epstein did.
Yes.
Bill Gates, don't be hanging out with Epstein.
You're on my list.
Yeah, no, it's not good.
Also, you know, I wonder this too about people with a lot of money that just have access to anything and everything.
I think, yeah, some of it might be because they were nerdy and they didn't get certain things when they were younger.
But I also think there is something to the fact, even if they did, there comes a point when you literally can get anything you want at any time.
It's like, it's like you become like this.
you're trying to chase something.
And you're bored, right?
Yeah, because it's like you can get whatever you want.
So it's like, I got to go try this.
I got to go try that.
I got to, because you're like chasing a feeling.
A couple things.
One, I call that homeschool syndrome.
Because you haven't had much.
We're talking about earlier where you didn't,
you don't have access to much.
All of a sudden it's like, I got access to everything.
So you go crazy.
It could be you get money.
You get ugly duckling.
Now you're all of a sudden you're hot.
When you're younger, you're ugly.
And then your thing, Amy,
It's like Charlie Sheen in that documentary
It's like I think his penis had felt every sensation
So he's just looking for new ones
He's like I flipped him in you
Let me see what dudes feel like
Like he's had everything
Yeah
Like whether it's
Sexually
Like doing things to yourself
Like or consuming
Like buying things
Eating things
Like hanging yourself and whacking
Yeah
People have died that way
I think Robert Carradine died right
And the lead singer from in excess
I think some people would just like that
But imagine
Yeah, imagine you've had access to everything.
Yeah.
And so then you're just trying to find new ways now because you've had everything.
I just think those ways, like, sexually because people do that.
I know country artists that have just, like, hooked up with everything.
Undone to the sun.
Everything.
It's like they've tried every hole.
And now they're trying to find, they're trying to make new holes.
It's crazy.
Yeah, and during the town hall meeting Gates admitted he spent time with Epstein in New York,
Germany, France, and Washington, but never visited the island.
Don't care.
You spend too much time with him.
Bad guy. You're out.
And he gave credit to his ex-y-vis.
He said to give her credit, she always was kind of skeptical of the Epstein thing.
The Epstein thing.
What we should do, all these people should be put back on Epstein's island as their prison.
Stay there.
This with each other.
We ship you over back to Epstein.
Okay.
Here you go.
You're now here.
So like, is this one of those?
Like, he's dropping some nuggets of like, oh, here, you'll believe me because I'm going to give you all of this.
Like, I'm going to say, I'm going to admit that I hung out with him.
I'm going to admit that I did this with a Russian.
Rich player.
That is a pretty baller thing to say.
Like, yeah, I cheated, but it was with the prime minister of this and also a nuclear physicist.
Like a, yeah.
So, you know, so then it's like, okay, I've aired this.
So now you're not going to ask me all the other questions because there's tons of other shady crap that I've done.
But it's okay.
Hydroize and truth?
Yes.
Yeah.
I don't know what that's called, but yes.
Yeah, it looks like Bill Gates, as smart as he is, really freaking gross and skeezy and terrible.
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 Podcast, 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 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 of plans on the IHeart 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 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 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.
What's up?
I'm Mylestone.
And I'm Brianna Stewart.
And our podcast, Game Recognized Game has never been done before.
Two active players giving you a real look at our lives and what we actually think
on and off the court.
Nothing's off limits.
We talk trade requests.
What's the vibe of that when it's like your star player is like, well, I want to leave?
And then actually now I'm going to stick.
We talk tanking.
I mean, honestly, like, I might get in trouble for this answer,
but I think it's like definitely happening in the WBA.
And yeah, we talk about our mistakes too.
They pulled me to the side and was like, hey, man, we got a call last night, man.
You can't be rolling around the city like this, the night before games, no, you know, doing this, doing whatever.
And of course, family stories.
They'll be like, Mommy, why did you miss that?
Mommy, do you play basketball?
Check out Game Recognized game with Stuy and Miles on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
All right, next up, Morgan.
Well, some good news.
There's a new blood test that can predict when symptoms of Alzheimer's disease may actually start.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
But can you slow it?
Not yet, but the whole thing with this new blood test is the hope to start getting, finding cures and finding things and ways to help Alzheimer's.
I was thinking about that story yesterday.
We talked about where the woman goes to the doctor and they're like, yep, you got cancer.
We're going to do some chemo.
She goes to do like four years of chemo, whatever it was, maybe year.
I remember four.
Four years of chemo.
And they're like, ah, just kidding.
had it.
What?
Years later, yeah, different doctors were like, I know.
Yeah, that would be really rough.
Back to this, would you want to know if you had Alzheimer's on the horizon?
No.
If I could stop it.
Well, yeah, what can you do?
I mean, I think you can, like.
Possibly prepare yourself and your family.
You could prepare your family.
I think it's...
I think it's just living with it is the hard part, right?
I think this is that philosophical question of if you knew, if you could find out when you were going to die, would you want to know?
Right? And it's the people that say yes would be, well, so I could make sure I enjoyed all the time that I had to live and I could let my family know and make sure they're prepared. I think this is a version of that, especially if there's no way too slow or stop it.
Yeah, I'm reading a book right now and the character is going blind, but she doesn't know exactly when it will kick in, but the doctors have told her for years. And it's like, she just has no idea any moment. Like she could wake up one day and then it's like finally. Like some days she said it's like difficult to like write.
But then other, she has better days.
But then wins the day that she wakes up and she just can no longer see.
I used to have dreams when I was a kid.
I would open my eyes and see something and close my eyes again.
And what I was seeing as a kid were visions from my future.
What do you mean?
So in my dream, I would be able to have my eyes.
This is a kid.
I haven't had this dream in a long time.
But it does.
So when I was a kid, I'd have these dreams that my eyes would be closed.
And I'd open my eyes and I could see the things happening around me.
but then I had to close my eyes immediately and then open them again.
I was back to normal.
But I could see the future, basically.
So was it accurate?
There are certain times where I see things,
and it feels like that feeling you get whenever you...
Deja vu?
It feels like I've seen this exact scene before.
And trust me, my brain, the rational part of me is like, there's no way.
But I'll be somewhere and I'll just like take in a setting and go,
I've seen this exact setting before.
And it just reminds me of those dreams I had as a kid when I'd open my eyes
and see that.
You're being serious.
Yeah.
Okay.
But I don't really think that.
No, no.
I wanted to make sure it wasn't a bit.
Like you're going to be like a friend's episode or something that I missed.
No, I'm like, oh, yeah.
I'm not seen that anywhere.
Okay.
But Amy's saying that story of the woman who's blinded and she never knows and she could wake up and not be able to see.
Reminds me of those dreams where as a kid I could open eyes see something and probably
I thought I was seeing the future.
But now every once in a while I have like a deja vu thing
where I see an exact scene and I'm like,
God, dang, I feel like I've seen this before.
Like exact setting.
That's pretty kind of weird, huh?
It is weird.
Yeah, I wonder if you're glitching.
I don't think that'd be a glitch.
I think it would be living into what I had seen in the past.
Yeah, but let's say it's a program or a system
where you're not supposed to ever have moments like that.
They're not supposed to cross?
Yeah.
But maybe it was supposed to.
Maybe I was seeing that in my dream because I would then see it later.
Yeah.
Well, then it's not a glitch.
Like if someone said to you, this is hypothetical.
Play the game.
Oh, let me see what we got here.
Deja vu.
It likely stems from a mismatch in brain processing where sensory information triggers a familiarity signal in the brain's temporal low before it's fully consciously recognized.
Often caused by small non-pathological momentary in your own.
Nah, mine's seen in the future.
But anyway, if someone walked up to you and he said, hey.
I'm going to allow you to do something.
I'm going to let you close your eyes.
Similar to what my dream was.
And you open your eyes.
And for three seconds,
you're going to see this moment
10 years from right now.
But you've got three seconds.
Wherever you are, 10 years from right now,
you're going to open your eyes
and you're going to see what you're going to see
10 years from right now.
Would you want to do it?
Yeah.
What if you're dead and you do it and it's black?
Okay.
You're going to live differently, though,
knowing that you're dead in 10 years.
Exactly.
Don't you think I'll live more fully?
You should live more fully anyway.
I know.
That's easy to say, but sometimes when you need a little kick in the pants.
Interesting.
Would you want to do that?
I'm going to go no.
I'm going to go no.
I don't really want to know that stuff.
What if it's like a really happy scene?
It could be.
Or you could look down and for some reason you don't have a wiener that's been chopped off
and the guy with a big knife in front of you going, ha ha ha ha.
And then you're done and you're just like, well, how did that happen?
And you're like, what?
What was I doing in 10 years?
Yeah, I mean, I'm definitely going to be...
He's holding it up.
You're at a bridge tournament?
You're in a bridge tournament?
Why am I in a bridge tournament?
Why am I in the jungle with a guy?
Yeah, there's a nutty scenarios, but I wonder, you'd want to do it?
Eddie, you wouldn't?
I don't think I'd want to do it.
I'm not an impatient person like that.
I kind of like to let things play out.
I really like the let's just see what happens kind of way of living.
Lunchbox?
No, I don't want to know.
I don't want to know because, yeah, there's a chance it could be good,
but there's a chance it could be bad.
Sure.
In the jungle with something
holding your wiener up.
Like, I just got it.
And that's what I mean.
Like, I would rather not know
and just have the happy anticipation
of something good that's going to happen.
Because you're going to think of that scene
for the next 10 years.
Well, what if you could just steer clear of jungles?
You're going to get there eventually.
You can't.
You're not allowed to alter.
You're not allowed to alter.
So you know, like, when someone comes to you
and they say, hey, man,
we're going on a trip to the jungle.
You're like, oh, no.
Oh, no.
And then they're like,
Why are you not excited?
No, man, no.
No, no, no, I don't want to know.
Why are you putting out four pair of underwear?
We're just going on a hike.
I don't know.
That's funny, man.
It's a fun game.
Fun game.
Yeah, but that happens to me sometimes.
I'm like, I've seen this exact scene before.
But it's the future.
No, it had been in the past.
I'd possibly seen the future.
You could be a psychic.
No.
It's tough.
I don't think I could be something.
But he could.
Maybe he just didn't lean into it.
It's tough for me to be something I don't believe in.
But maybe that's why you don't believe in it.
You don't not believe in it 100%.
I don't not believe in it.
I don't believe in it.
Like I wouldn't fight somebody to be like it's absolutely not true.
So you're saying there's a chance.
There's no reason for me to believe in it.
I don't believe in it.
But it's only because I haven't seen it.
I feel like I've seen a lot of people lie about it.
So that also leads to me going, if someone says they're a psychic,
I'm not going to believe them because I've seen so many people fake it.
So why would I believe this person?
The people that can remote view, hey, look that up.
That crap's crazy.
Remote view?
And the government would keep these people.
Yeah.
What?
They can basically close their eyes and see things far away.
Like a VPN?
Sort of.
There's been documented government proof of people that can remote view.
Oh, come on.
What about mind control?
I don't know about that.
Hold on.
Stick to remote view.
So I could see something going on in Russia.
You do not have the power.
If I have it.
If I have this.
And you're saying the government claims that there are people out there that can do this.
But if I've done it for them in order to see things in places they can't get to.
Like in another country.
Sure.
So like me, Eddie and Nashville can use another person in Paris.
And we can see what's going on Paris right now through their eyes.
I think that's probably a basic way to look at it.
Yeah.
I can give you some remote viewing stuff here.
What do you think, lunchbox?
I don't believe.
I picture in my head what it is.
I don't really know what it is.
Tucker Carlson talking about the CIA psychic program used to spy and win wars.
I don't know how long this is.
But I can probably find it.
I know if it's real or not, the government's involved.
What do you know about remote viewing?
First, tell me what you think it is.
I think remote viewing is, I'm like actually being a little bit false.
I have some sense of what it is.
It's the ability to see things that are very,
far from your physical proximity. So you close your eyes and you can all of a sudden look into a
room a thousand miles away. I know that I think it's true that CIA worked to evoke this ability
in people. But I kind of want to know this data play. Is that actually real? Do we know that it's real?
We know that it's real. Remote viewing started, it probably started at the beginning of the human race,
but remote view that we're talking about started
1972 Stanford Research Institute
Russell Targ and Al put off
physicists, scientists
were just studying psychic phenomenon
just, you know, here's a shape on a card,
you know.
I play the whole thing, but they have documented proof
people to be on to see things in places they've never been able to
and recite and recall it exactly.
Is this connected to the MK Ultra stuff?
That's the mind control that I was talking about.
Not connected, but that was an experiment they did on people.
Yeah, so I didn't know if this was potentially off.
No, this is a, I don't like say a power.
A gift that some people have that they're able to see things in places and we have used it in war and able to see things.
So that's a gift, whereas M.K. Ultra was manipulated through drugs and hypnosis and other.
MK. Ultra was like an illegal program the CIA did.
one of the people that were messed with was
Unabomber because he was a brilliant dude
and they used drugs for mind
mind manipulation. Mind control.
One is a gift like you naturally have it
and another one is manipulated
like they force it. LSD
at colleges they would
hold your eyes open give you a bunch of LSD
see what trips. All of that.
Electroshock. They didn't prisons.
They're a bad deal.
I wonder if these remote viewing people
inspired that in some way. Like if they found
not this was a gift of some people that they could
then create it. Yeah, I don't know.
I don't have the knowledge to answer that question.
You believe in this? Remote viewing?
You sound like you're talking like you believe it. Yeah, I do. I just,
there's nothing that I quite understand fully. I'm never going to fully understand
everything. So I'm just open to the idea that that probably exists.
How do you believe it? If I see 30 people that have no
relationship with each other, that have extreme education in going, yes,
We've seen enough evidence to believe it's true.
We believe people that have more knowledge about things to tell us if it's true or not.
We do it all medicine, anything we know is because people smarter than us tell us.
True?
Yeah, but how many times do they say like we were wrong about that?
Lots.
It's also your problem, though, with, I hate to say the word aliens, but for the sake of the quick version of this, you're probably with aliens.
Yeah.
I mean, I don't know.
I just, the alien thing is like the fact that people have seen.
seen them or the government knows of them but they're not telling us like this has been going on
I mean how how long have we been on this earth like as humans and no one has ever seen that that's not
true there are there are many writings of people seeing them but you're just talking about the last 50
60 70 years yeah I guess our life yeah I'm right like I just I don't know but people have also
said they've seen them and then people make them look stupid by going you're crazy we're just like
in the period right now of like theoryville like everyone has a theory everyone has a theory everyone
has, and everyone says it so matter of fact, like, oh yeah, that's true.
But when you have like eight astrophysicists that have studied this and say there's nothing
we have created or are close to creating that can move this way, period.
Like there is nothing that we can do to make something go this fast with no propulsion
system at all.
So it has to be something that we haven't created as mankind.
Yeah, but they're the only ones that saw it.
No, no, they didn't even see it.
They're just saying if that exists, but there is video footage of it, like some of these
things flying around.
So can be manipulated so many ways.
But it can be manipulated, but AI can track and see if AI was used or manipulation was used.
That's why they use metadata.
Unless we tell AI not to do that.
Okay, you're just making up scenarios to argue it.
I'm just saying that you can always argue it.
But when you believe your doctor, you believe it why?
Not always.
That's why sometimes we bring it the doctor.
When you go to the doctor and they tell you something.
Yeah, I usually have an idea, though, like I know my body, right?
Like.
You do.
I don't know for sure
Amy do you really believe this
you can do this
I don't I don't know
I'm not sure because
I don't know that I cannot say anything
with certainty so it doesn't really matter
like it's like
there's a percentage that yeah all of it
could be true so I'm not going to
fight it I think I used to
because and that was
I feel like that was me being a little ignorant
So also the reason
I think that they don't share
a lot of this stuff is true because you don't want to let your
adversaries know that you have an advantage over them
and what those advantages are.
Like other countries?
But I mean like the remote viewing
if it works so great, why don't we do it?
Still do it.
Well, you can't and how do you know they're not?
Well, because according to the internet,
they shut down the program because it was...
The program, but that doesn't mean people can't do it.
It was ineffective and didn't produce any intelligence
that they could use.
You Google that?
Yeah.
When you say that, if you didn't want people to know you were doing it?
Yeah, honestly, that's exactly what I would say.
What about those two scientists who were just killed, shot dead?
Wait, where?
Oh, Amy's back.
I think they...
Amy, go to bed.
Amy's back in.
I mean, it's definitely interesting.
I think it's just funny that we can always somehow argue that, like, you can't prove that's wrong.
And everyone has to just be like, yeah, maybe, maybe not.
There are instances of these remote viewers describing foreign facilities or hostage situations
to a T so that we were able to get in.
And they've never been there before.
That's crazy.
That's crazy.
And I'm not even saying that I would bet money on it being true,
but that's something that I look at and go,
I don't know, man.
There's just too many cases of smart people saying it's a possibility
because there have been cases of it being successfully used.
And also I'm at the point now where I think we've been lied to for so many years.
JFK stuff was such a crock.
That's a single shooter.
And everybody who fought against that was like,
like, oh, you're crazy, you're crazy, you're crazy.
A second scientist shot dead on the front porch of his California home.
Astrophysicist Carl Grilmar was shot dead at his home in the California desert this week.
He was studying comets and asteroids that posed a threat to Earth.
Three months ago, Nuno-Lorino, a plasma specialist and professor at MIT suffered the same fate.
Again, what were they studying that they got killed for?
Asteroids.
One was studying comments and asteroids that pose a threat.
So I'm going to invent a situation.
This asteroid is going to kill us.
You can't say that, because everyone's.
he's going to freak out. They're going to, governments are going to overthrow. No, I think it's
time for everybody to know them and open source says, I don't think so. Boom, gone. Oh,
because they're like, our underground bunkers not ready yet. Any of that, right?
Nuno Lureo, Lareo, I'm probably saying it wrong here. A plasma specialist and professor at MIT
who, how, I think plasma, this is way above my understanding, but like could create within
themselves. Like it was able to, like, create and manipulate. And what if there was a
discovery there that they're going it's like the people another crazy one is the guy who
figured how to use water to make cars go boom shot dead killed uh fuel industry or there's a lot of
stories about people who are discovering cures with cancer who end up going missing like there's
pharmaceuticals that's a big money maker guys i mean yeah profits over people guess two scientists were
killed at their house value right so it's like we value money over people well the yeah duh
What's crazy is.
I know, duh.
It's not good, though.
Two scientists.
Two scientists were killed at their house because of what they were studying.
So just to, and I'm just asking.
Let me say this before I move on.
Stanley Mayor, who claimed to invent a water powered car, died suddenly March 20th, 1998 from an aneurysm at a restaurant.
While his brother, Clay Mayor shouted, they poisoned me before he died.
So do you think, like, in those cases, petroleum people hired the killer or the government?
I don't know.
pharmaceutical people hire the killer
But I mean they're always
You know they're all
Those pharmaceuticals big government
They have a relationship
Yeah it's like it tied together
So it could be either
Or mutual decision
Everybody's up to no good man
Oh can I ask you something?
I'm not gonna know the answer but go ahead
Well have you have you watched
C-spiracy on Netflix?
No
Is it a conspiracy of the C?
No
It's like this documentary goes
Basically kind of undercover
and discovers all about this
like the commercial fishing industry
and how it's basically killing our oceans.
And by like 2046, our oceans are going to be empty,
which is not only bad news for marine life,
but it's also bad news for us.
Like so much of our air that we need,
the oxygen is like in the ocean floor.
It was wild.
Like I think everybody should watch this.
I'd get one of my remote viewers,
take a look down there and tell me.
So we don't have to watch it?
No, no, not that show.
I want a remote viewer to watch these shows for me.
There's just a lot going on, man.
those two scientists that were killed
that's...
Yeah, I had no idea about that.
And now I'm like...
It's so bizarre.
Just added to the list of things
that are just...
I'm now getting to the point
where the less I know, the better
as far as like what's happening around me
because I just stay so focused on...
I can't believe all of it.
I can't believe what we're being...
The lies we're being told by our government,
by our officials.
It's constant.
It's constant.
Well, what's interesting to me
is the people that double down
that aren't...
that are not directly tied to some of these people, right?
I get it if you're directly in the inner circle, you're committed, right?
You're committed to the lives, so go for it.
But just regular outsiders, you know, Joe from Jacksonville or something like, you know,
like they just doubled down.
Joe from Jacksonville.
Works hard.
They're just doubling down when like everything around us is like screaming, something's up.
but they're like, nope.
I've committed.
I think we have a commitment problem here where we've committed to things and now we will not
allow ourselves to be proven wrong.
It happens to politics all the time.
I know, but it's just not, just like for normal, everyday people like us.
Like, it's just not.
And Joe from Jacksonville.
It's not a good place to be when you get so.
Yeah.
But internet, social media internet, they do that.
They radicalize folks.
I feel myself getting radicalized sometimes by watching it.
Just get more upset because they know what's going to make.
me feel so they keep feeding me the stuff that makes me upset even though it's true i'm just like
a-huh right i told my wife i was like i'm running for office i'm out of here she's like
i don't think you want to do that it seems so um it is so incredibly exhausting and toxic it really does
yeah but that's why you need a little bit of chlorine in the pool you know what i'm saying
i don't need that that's why i think i'm the one to do it i don't need to run for office nothing
about me, I don't need the fame. I don't need the adoration. I don't need the money that they
make once they get on. I don't need any of that. I don't need anything about running for office
except for helping. That's the only reason. And I think so few people do that now. So percentage,
like, you haven't said this in a while. So now I'm going to ask you. And my wife's like,
but you just said. I said, I said my wife. I was like, I'm ready. Put me in coach.
She's like, no. I'm like, all right. Well. So you, there's a percentage her zero.
out. The part to me that's bothersome is when people tell people, well, you've never been in office.
You shouldn't run for office. No, I think we need real people that have been to real life actually help impact.
Because we're seeing what's happening with career politicians. Same crap. So, no, I'm not.
At least not right now, but I did say, I think it's time for me to go, not leave her, but like, I think it's not for me to run.
She was like, nah, I think we're going to put a hold on that. I was like, okay, fair enough.
Anyway, my town Razzeback's play tonight.
Yeah.
Moving on.
All right.
Did Morgan do hers?
Morgan, yeah.
That was the Alzheimer's.
Oh, yeah.
Eddie?
So mine's an update on, I was talking to you guys about the meta glasses and how people
are complaining.
They're getting filmed without their consent or whatever.
Well, there's an app that I found.
It's called nearby glasses.
And that tells you when someone has meta glasses that are, that's streaming or recording around you.
man that's so rare i don't think i would ever turn the app on well you just have to kind of leave it
on right so like it not so pull it out and hold it up like so they're saying the problem is on campus
right like girls are just walking up and guys are like hey you want to go on a day with me it's crazy
that's a problem so such a problem yeah yeah so and the girl has the app and it says hey metaglasses
detected near you so maybe it like vibrates like yeah like a notification like uh amber alert
oof those things scare me every time and they don't stop and so and we all have
phones in our house, so like the whole house blows up. Everything's going off when that happens.
But it works through like Bluetooth. So I guess the meta glasses, that's how they
communicate with your phone or record through a Bluetooth. That is it. That's how the video gets
to your phone. So it detects Bluetooth around there, around the area. What if someone just
listen to AirPods? That's what it says. It's warning. It might not be the glasses.
You're like, ah, you're recording me. I don't have glasses on, man. I just listen to some music.
It's kind of like when the air tag will say there's one tracking you. Yeah. And it's
yours.
It could be another one.
It could just be one nearby.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
All right.
Everybody good?
Good?
I mean, define good.
Exactly.
Amy shook.
Exactly.
I just got a brisket on the fridge.
I've been shook for like 25 days.
25 days.
That's the first day Nancy went missing.
Oh, that's when it all started.
That's what shook.
No, but I feel like since then, it's just been a lot.
Not just Nancy, but I think.
I think she went missing on February 1st or so.
I do feel bad for Savannah.
Like every time she, you know, post a video, it's just like her body just looks like worn down.
Yeah, I would be exhausted.
Every single day.
I would have to be taking things to sleep.
You know?
Yeah.
All right.
February 1st, 2026, you're right.
Oh, that was the day.
Yeah.
And then I feel like the files were released around that time.
It's just been a lot.
All right.
We're going to, this whole thing's been a lot.
Some days it's a lot.
This show, right?
The second show.
Oh, yeah.
Because sometimes we just get on stuff
and then you guys fight me on stuff
and I'm like, well, I don't really believe it.
I'm just advocating that it could be true.
And then you're like, you're an idiot.
No, we're discussing it.
That did not happen.
And then I'm like, you're fired.
And you're like, you can't fire me.
I quit.
And then you leave.
And then you're like, well, hire you back.
And then all of a sudden.
All right, you guys have a great rest of the day
and we will see you tomorrow.
Bye, everybody.
Hi, I'm Bob Pittman,
chairman and CEO of IHard Media.
And I'm kicking off a brand new season
of my podcast, Math and Magic,
Stories from the Frontiers Tomorrow.
Marketing. Math and Magic takes you behind the scenes of the biggest businesses and industries while
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This is Amy Roboc alongside TJ Holmes from the Amy and TJ podcast.
And there is so much news, information, commentary coming at you all day and from all over the place.
What's fact, what's fake, and sometimes what the F.
So let's cut the crap, okay?
Follow the Amy and T.J podcast, a one-stop news and pop culture shop to get you caught up and on with your day.
And listen to Amy and T.J. on the IHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or Word.
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Hey, I'm Dr. Maya Shunker, a cognitive scientist and hosts of the podcast, a slight change
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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 IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
It's Financial Literacy Month, and the podcast Eating While Broke is bringing real conversations about money, growth, and building your future.
This month hear from top streamer Zoe Spencer and venture capitalist Lakeisha Landrum Pierre as they share their journeys from starting out to leveling up.
There's an economic component to communities thriving.
If there's not enough money and entrepreneurship happening in communities, they failed.
Listen to Eating While Broke from the Black Effect Podcast Network on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
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