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iHeart Podcast Host
You're listening to an iHeart podcast.
Morgan Huelsman
Thank you to the presenting sponsor of today's episode, American Express. Between my shows, 25 whistles. Lots to say, too much access. It's a lot of traveling for work and I get to attend a bunch of different sporting events.
Amy Brown
And while the travel can take a.
Morgan Huelsman
Toll on me, sometimes, all the points I get makes it so much better. With the Amex Platinum, you earn five times Membership rewards points on flights and prepaid hotels. Book through amextravel.com on up to $500,000 in flight purchases per year. Plus you get access to the Centurion Lounge, making travel that much more enjoyable. That's the powerful backing of American Express. Terms apply. For more information, visit www.americanexpress.com travel We've.
Amy Brown
All experienced being put on hold. The annoying music, the automated message. It's excruciating. And right now, America's seniors are on hold, waiting for nutritious meals and moments of connection. Waiting for America to care. Due to a growing aging population, rising costs and insufficient funding, Meals on Wheels programs are experiencing higher need than ever before. This wait is especially ridiculous because a proven solution already exists as Meals on Wheels remains the most effective and financially responsible solution to address senior hunger and isolation. Answer the call and help end the wait by donating@mealsonwheelsamerica.org donate.
Dan Flores
Why is a soap opera Western like Yellowstone so wildly successful? The American west with Dan Flores is the latest show from the Meat Eater Podcast Network. So join me starting Tuesday, May 6th where we'll delve into stories of the west and come to understand how it helps inform the ways in which we experience the region today.
iHeart Podcast Host
Listen to the American west with Dan Flores on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Morgan Huelsman
In 2020, a group of young women.
Clayton English
Found themselves in an AI fueled nightmare.
Morgan Huelsman
Someone was posting photos. It was just me naked. Well, not me, but me with someone else's body parts. This is Levittown, a new podcast from iHeart podcasts Bloomberg and Kaleidoscope about the rise of deepfake pornography and the battle to stop it. Listen to Levittown on Bloomberg's Big Take podcast. Find it on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Greg Lott
I'm Clayton English. I'm Greg Lott and this is season two of the War on Drugs podcast.
iHeart Podcast Host
Last year, a lot of the problems of the drug war. This year, a lot of the biggest names in music and sports.
Greg Lott
This kind of star studded A little bit, man.
iHeart Podcast Host
We met them at their homes. We met them at their recording studios. Stories matter and brings a face to it.
Greg Lott
It makes it real.
iHeart Podcast Host
It really does. It makes it real.
Greg Lott
Listen to new episodes of the War on Drugs Podcast, Season 2 on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Jessica Acevedo
The Best bits of the week with.
Clayton English
Morgan, part one, behind the scenes with a member of the show.
Morgan Huelsman
Happy Saturday, everyone. Joining me this weekend on Best Fits is Amy. How are you, Amy?
Clayton English
Hello.
Morgan Huelsman
Excited to be here?
Clayton English
Yeah.
Morgan Huelsman
Catch up on all things going on in your life. Well, we're going to start with the one thing that I was getting so many questions about, and it is both of our boyfriends.
Clayton English
Oh, okay.
Morgan Huelsman
I do have a few specific questions.
Clayton English
Okay.
Morgan Huelsman
But. And these are from listeners. These are not me. I'll have my questions after.
Clayton English
Okay, perfect.
Morgan Huelsman
Because this is not the question part, but when there's so many of one thing, I reserve it for a space where we can just talk all about that. So, most attractive thing about your new boyfriends to you guys? This is coming from Kate.
Clayton English
Oh, gosh. There's several things, but I do like that he's tall. He's 6 3.
Morgan Huelsman
Okay. Oh, we went physical. Okay.
Clayton English
Oh, yep.
Morgan Huelsman
Yeah.
Clayton English
But also he's kind.
Morgan Huelsman
All right. We got tall and kind.
Clayton English
Yeah, he's a great dad.
Morgan Huelsman
Okay. These are good things. I would say mine is that he is. His love language is acts of service, and I love it.
Clayton English
Oh. So what's yours?
Morgan Huelsman
My giving one is acts of service. My. Sorry. My receiving one is acts of service.
Clayton English
Okay.
Morgan Huelsman
My giving one. I don't know that I have a specific one. I try and show up in a lot of them, but maybe more than anything, it's quality time. I like to make sure that I give a lot of quality time, but I also love acts of service. Giving and receiving has always been. But he's very big in that and he's very consistent, which are two qualities that are kind of hard to find.
Clayton English
Yeah, I would say consistent is a good one. Like, there's. He's very stable and consistent, so that is attractive.
Morgan Huelsman
Um, consistency is sexy. We have. We. That has been a thing that we've talked about on my podcast. That is a trait that we love. And physically, I mean, he has very nice muscles.
Clayton English
Oh, yes, yes. Yeah, I saw that picture.
Morgan Huelsman
Yeah, he does look like Thor a little bit. And he's also. I don't know, he's just tall, dark, and handsome. I would say if we're going in.
Clayton English
The physical route, oh, did you say Thor?
Morgan Huelsman
Yeah, because the guys all reference Thor. Yeah, they all call them Thor.
Clayton English
I forgot that I put up a little question box, too. I know this is your. I was like. So just now, I was like, wait.
Morgan Huelsman
Did they come in through yours?
Clayton English
Well, I. I overlaid a question box on top of your question box. Because if I, If I, you know, if I do yours, they click on your page and just in case they didn't, which I want them to, but if they clicked. If they clicked the question box, then maybe they could just ask right away.
Morgan Huelsman
So.
Clayton English
So, yeah, and you're right. There's lots of.
Morgan Huelsman
There's lots of boyfriend questions.
Clayton English
There's lots of boyfriend questions.
Morgan Huelsman
Okay, well, do you. Here, I'll ask this other. This is the only other specific one I had that came from it. A lot of them was just like, talk about your boyfriends. How does he feel about sharing on the podcast, including his name?
Clayton English
Okay. He. He is okay with it. That's so funny. Cause I just read a question here. Is Amy's boyfriend okay with Amy talking about him? That's from Julie in Kansas. He is okay with it.
Morgan Huelsman
Yeah. I would assume that you probably had that conversation. And you guys have talked about things much like both you and I have discussed. We always ask for. It's not necessarily an approval, but just like the communication is there. We're not openly going to share something without.
Clayton English
Are you okay if I say this? And that's with any of our friendships or relationships? I think we've learned sometimes, although sometimes stuff will just organically come up. And I'm like, oh, this is a good story. And I have to pause. Be like, oh, I haven't. I haven't asked if I can share this yet, so I'll have to wait. Or sometimes it just comes out and then you ask for forgiveness.
Morgan Huelsman
Yes. But more often than not, we are asking for. Be like, hey, you good with this? We're not guys. We're not stupid or not. We're not openly just talking about other people's lives without having some version of a reality outside of this job.
Clayton English
Yeah, but just be. I get the curiosity behind it, because to be kind of thrown into dating somebody that talks about their life on radio, it's like, oh, how do they really feel about it? And he was pretty okay with it from the get go. I mean, he's not eager to, like, come on and talk. Like, he doesn't want to be.
Morgan Huelsman
Will he ever be a guest on your podcast?
Clayton English
I don't think so.
Morgan Huelsman
Okay.
Clayton English
But that may Change. I just know right now, no, he doesn't have any interest in that. Which I'm okay with.
Morgan Huelsman
Yeah. And you guys hard launched. Well, you hard launched a picture of you guys on Instagram.
Clayton English
I did.
Morgan Huelsman
How did that feel?
Clayton English
It felt good. But we had been in Charleston. I posted the picture that you're talking about we took in Charleston, which I think was two weeks before I posted it. So I didn't really post that much while we were in Charleston, and I didn't really post much of our trip anyway. But I had that picture and I just thought it was sweet and cute and I thought, well, I guess I'll make this the COVID shot for the month of April after you posted it.
Morgan Huelsman
Was there any like, second hand where you're like, oh, maybe I shouldn't have, or were you just like, yes, this feels good?
Clayton English
No, it felt good. My ex husband Ben, he did say something to me later. Cause I think he saw it like a week late. Cause he doesn't spend a lot of time on Instagram or anything. But he does have an account. Well, he has a work one, but then he has this other account where he posts nothing. But our daughter is on Instagram and he follows her and me. He uses it to keep up with certain things. And he said, oh, hey, I. I didn't know we were posting like our people. I think that what he's referring to is way back when, whenever, maybe we were first getting divorced or something, or maybe even we were still married, but someone we knew had gotten divorced and they were just in a new relationship and putting it all over social media. And he said that. Okay, now that I'm thinking this through, I didn't plan on talking about this, but I don't need to ask Ben's permission because I know that he would be fine with me telling this story. But now that I think about it, we definitely were still married because it was a couple we knew that got divorced. And then the husband was like posting all these pictures of him and his new person and I just was like, it just was cringy. It felt weird. And I said to him, I was like, this could never be us. And maybe that's a little foreshadowing there because I don't know at the time that I knew we would end up getting divorced, but I'm like, oh my gosh, if we were to ever be in this situation, like, we cannot do that. And I guess he held onto that because then he said something to me. He's like, I thought we weren't supposed to be those people where we're like posting all this stuff. And I said, I don't really feel like that was posting all that stuff now that I know what you're referring to. We were. That was. It was just like very much in our face, like everywhere. And it was a shady situation. I said, I think all the variables are very, very different. And I posted a picture of us. And so he's like, oh, okay, Good to know. I was like, all right. It's not that he has social media that he uses, but I guess if he wanted to and he were to post him and who he's dating because he had a girlfriend for a year, but they broke up, but they didn't. He didn't. He didn't ever post about her.
Morgan Huelsman
It's so interesting to me just hearing how much you're navigating in these new waters of having a boyfriend. You have your ex husband, all these just kind of pieces and balancing things that you're doing. Does that. Do you ever think about that?
Clayton English
No, I think we're just doing.
Morgan Huelsman
I mean.
Clayton English
But yeah, looking at it all, sometimes it can feel like a lot if I focus on it. But no, it's just like, oh, we gotta navigate this. I know Ben and I work have been exchanging like 500 texts and emails trying to figure out our summer schedule because with different travel and camps that the kids have and different things, we can't stick with our typical Friday to Friday, which is what we do our week on, week off. Because he's like, oh, I want to take the kids to do this this week. And I'm like, well, this is when we have show vacation and I would like to take the kids here, but that happens to be a week that he's supposed to have them, so there's just a lot of coordinating that has to happen. And that's when it makes me thankful that Ben and I are in such a healthy place. Because I would imagine if we weren't, that would just make stuff like this. It's already grueling just trying to like Tetris sometimes, making it all work. But if you add in a layer of disdain and disgust and you know how some people really feel about having to work with an ex man, that would be painful. So I have a level of gratitude for where we are and how we navigate it. So, yeah, it's not as much as it could be. You know what I mean?
Morgan Huelsman
Yeah, no, I. I totally hear that. And it's making me think too. Just, I think it's Hard, harder, probably for you to see in that moment, but I'm just sitting here, and a lot of respect for you that you're going through just a lot of different changes and phases all at the same time and learning constantly while it's all happening.
Clayton English
Yeah, they. They met Ben met Alex for the first time.
Morgan Huelsman
How did it go?
Clayton English
It was really good. It happened organically. And he stopped by the house after Sashira's birthday, and Alex didn't go to the birthday party. He was invited by Sashira, and he was like, look, Ben and I haven't met yet. I don't want that to steal any of the spotlight, so I'll just stop by the house after. And then Ben and I sat by each other at dinner, and we were talking, and I said, you know, I rode here with your parents because his parents were in town and they wanted to come over and hang out with me. So then I just rode with them to dinner. I said, they're going to drop me off, so they're going to be there, so I bet they'll meet Alex, why don't you stop by and meet him, too? Let's just rip this band aid off. Because I've been waiting for it to happen, and it hadn't happened yet, and I just thought, maybe now's a good time. And then Ben said, okay. So it was a little awkward, though, because Ben always comes through the back door. He won't just walk in, but he always parks in the back and comes through the porch. And this time, we're all inside. His parents are there, Alex is there, the kids are there. And Ben Parks goes to the front door, knocks. He can see us all through the window, so you'd think he would just be like, hey, walk in. So. Knocks. Everything just seemed very formal. And then he comes in, and he sticks his hand out, and he goes to meet Alex, and they both shake, and they do first and last name. Real firm grip and just clear, like, you know, be like, yeah.
Morgan Huelsman
Are you holding your breath in that moment? Just kind of like, no, I'm just.
Clayton English
Like, watching it happen. And my friend Kat was there, and I was looking at her, and I was like, what is happening right now? Why are they both acting so weird? You know?
Morgan Huelsman
But it is better to be formal than informal, I suppose in a situation.
Clayton English
Like that, you'd be like, walking through my front door and then making a beeline and being like, amy Brown, nice to meet you. And then you'd be like, Morgan Huelsman. And so, yeah, it was good, though. I Feel relief. And that was one of my feelings on my podcast this week with Therapy Cat, the cat that was at my house that night. She's my friend also Cat, but she's Cryo Cat. But Therapy Cat and I talked about on the podcast because we have a feeling of the day on our Feeling Things podcast. And my feeling was relief that that finally happened. And I can like exhale and it went well. And so I want to celebrate that and soak it up and I look for more interactions. Ben had told me at one point early on in our divorce that I had this fantasy in my head that maybe whoever we ended up dating next or being with in the future, that we would all take family vacations together.
Morgan Huelsman
Okay.
Clayton English
And he thought I was in La La Land. And I will say, in the relationship he was in for that year, that was definitely a La La Land statement. That would not have happened. That just would not. And I can understand that. I can understand if some people feel that way, like there's separation. You don't wanna have a relationship with that person. Okay. But Ben and I share kids and we've known each other since we were kids. And I think our dynamic is just different than a lot of other relationships. And I don't know, I'm starting to think like, oh, we could be like, I don't know that that would really, really happen, but we're closer to it. It doesn't seem like so crazy right now. If Ben were to be in a relationship and then we all were decided to like, I'll go hang out and take the kids and do something.
Morgan Huelsman
Well. And I don't feel like it's as weird because even listening to you talk about it, you already have an interesting dynamic in the fact that you're really close to Ben's parents. That's an important thing for you because of so many different life events. They've been involved in your life since you were very young. They're around a lot. His ex wife or his, how do you say, widowed? His wife.
Clayton English
Oh, my boyfriend.
Morgan Huelsman
Yes.
Clayton English
Oh, so his wife.
Morgan Huelsman
His in laws.
Clayton English
He has. He has a father in law.
Morgan Huelsman
Yes. I was gonna say that I would imagine is involved.
Clayton English
Yeah, I've met him. I've met him a couple times because.
Morgan Huelsman
He would want them close to them. So you have some interesting dynamics happening here that you guys are all being very mature and understanding and connecting on that. I don't think this idea that you have is really that far fetched.
Clayton English
Yeah, no, because a lot of people.
Morgan Huelsman
Couldn'T handle those dynamics. And you guys are handling multiple dynamics.
Clayton English
I wouldn't say the. My situation with Alex, I'm handling it perfectly, but I'm trying. And I had no issues meeting her dad and her twin sister and her best friends. I've met them all. And because it's like, she. There's. That would not be happening if they had got divorced. If they had been divorced and she was still alive. Like, obviously, I'm probably not gonna meet her best friends, but they're all in a place where they knew before she passed away, she said, I want Alex to meet somebody. Make sure that that happens sort of thing. So her best friends are giddy over the moon that Alex has met somebody and he's dating somebody. They're like, oh, gosh. You know, and it's gonna be hard for them. Cause, yeah, their best friend passed away. They also know part of something she shared when she was dying was, I hope he meets somebody. And now they're like, oh, yay, this is happening. And so, yeah, it's interesting territory that I never thought I'd be navigating, but.
Morgan Huelsman
Well, you're doing it from a bird's eye view. You're doing it beautifully.
Clayton English
Thanks.
Morgan Huelsman
I know when you're in it, it seems a lot different. There's a lot of things happening, but from my perspective, you're handling it really well, and you're navigating as best as somebody possibly could, given a lot of different factors.
Clayton English
Thank you.
Morgan Huelsman
So I hope you know that I'm.
Clayton English
Learning how to receive praise or compliments. Kat. Speaking of therapy, Kat in the podcast, she gave us tips for receiving compliments. And she said, you know, research shows, especially for women, it's really hard to just receive a compliment. Like, we feel like we have to be like, if someone's like, oh, nice shirt, you'd be like, oh, this. Ugh, I felt gross this morning. Or, oh, this. I've had it forever. Like, you feel like you have to instead of just saying thank you. And so tip number one is you just say thank you, and then in your head go, pause, pause, pause, pause. So right now, I'm trying to receive you, saying that I'm handling it beautifully, from what you can tell. And I'm gonna go, thank you. And in my head, pause, pause, pause, pause. Like, not say anything else. Oh, I don't have to say anything. Just thank you.
Morgan Huelsman
I need to do this. My boyfriend loves to be very kind to me, and he's always giving me compliments, and I deflect all of them. I'm like, Deflect. I'm. I am literally like, if you put up a deflector, I am it. He'll compliment me and he'll be like.
Clayton English
I'll be like, you cringe.
Morgan Huelsman
No, ew, stop. I don't believe that. Or I'll say something just totally off put. And he's like, where did that even come from? And he'll just look at me and say, morgan. And I just have to look at him back. I say, thank you.
Clayton English
Like very quietly now you can go, thank you. Pause, pause, pause, pause.
Morgan Huelsman
He's gonna be like, why are you saying pause? I'm like, I'm trying to make this happen in my head. So I get it. It's hard. We've been conditioned a certain way and it gets hard to break that habit. We're going to take a quick break. We'll be back. We have more to talk about.
Dan Flores
The American west with Dan Flores is the latest show from the Meat Eater Podcast Network. Hosted by me, writer and historian Dan Flores and brought to you by Velvet Buck, this podcast looks at a West available nowhere else. Each episode I'll be diving into some of the lesser known histories of the West West. I'll then be joined in conversation by guests such as Western historian Dr. Randall Williams and best selling author and meat eater founder Stephen Rinella.
Clayton English
I'll correct my kids now and then where they'll say, when cave people were here.
iHeart Podcast Host
And I'll say, it seems like the.
Morgan Huelsman
Ice age people that were here didn't have a real affinity for caves.
Dan Flores
So join me starting Tuesday, May 6, where we'll delve into stories of the west and come to understand how it helps inform the ways in which we experience the region today.
iHeart Podcast Host
Listen to the American west with Dan Flores on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Morgan Huelsman
She was a decorated veteran, a Marine who saved her comrades, a hero. She was stoic, modest, tough, someone who inspired people. Everyone thought they knew her until they didn't.
Zakiyah
I remember sitting on her couch and.
Clayton English
Asking her, is this real?
Morgan Huelsman
Is this real? Is this real? Is this real?
Clayton English
I just couldn't wrap my head around what kind of person would do that to another person that was getting treatment, that was, you know, dying.
Morgan Huelsman
This is a story all about trust and about a woman named Sarah Kavanaugh. I've always been told I'm a really good listener, right? And I maximized that while I was lying. Listen to Deep Cover the Truth About.
Clayton English
Sarah on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts.
Morgan Huelsman
Or wherever you get your podcasts.
Clayton English
Your.
Morgan Huelsman
Gut microbiome, and those healthy bacteria can actually have positive effects throughout your body. Not just your gut, but your mental health, your metabol, your immunity, your risk of cancer, heart disease, almost any disease under the sun.
Zakiyah
Yep, you heard right. Probiotics might actually impact everything from your brain to your heart. So what's science and what's just really good marketing? On this episode of Dope Labs, me and Zakiyah cut through the hype and get into the real deal behind probiotics, with help from gastroenterologist Dr. Roshi Raj.
Morgan Huelsman
So, yes, bacteria is definitely having a moment, and I'm very excited about that.
Zakiyah
From probiotic drinks and gummies to face creams and pillows. Yep, we said pillows. The probiotic boom is everywhere. But how much of it actually works? And what does it all mean for your gut, your skin, and even your mood? Join us on Dope Labs, where we break it all down in the lab like only we can. Listen to Dope Labs on iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Jessica Acevedo
The chilling podcast Forgive Me For I have followed delves into the hidden truths behind 7M films, the Shekinah Church, and the hold they had over members. Join hosts Jessica Acevedo, the executive producer of Netflix's explosive docuseries Dancing for the Devil, the 7M TikTok cult, and Kalia Gray of 7M Films. In the final episode, former member Melanie Lee talks about Isabel escaping the church and the hold of its leader, Robert Shinn.
Clayton English
That was the beginning of my closure. He's a scam artist.
Jessica Acevedo
Don't miss the powerful season finale featuring part two of the Melanie Lee interview, which offers new perspectives on her time in the cult and a deeper understanding of her journey of recovery. All episodes out now.
Clayton English
It's like life and death.
Morgan Huelsman
Yeah, yeah.
Clayton English
And you don't know any better. You don't know you have that freedom because you've never had that freedom.
Jessica Acevedo
Listen to Forgive Me for I have followed as part of the Mike Kultura podcast network, available on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Greg Lott
I'm Clayton English. I'm Greg Lodd and this is season two of the War on Drugs podcast. Sir, we are back in a big way.
iHeart Podcast Host
In a very big way. Real people, real perspectives.
Greg Lott
This kind of star studded a little bit, man. We got Ricky Williams, NFL player, Heisman Trophy winner.
Clayton English
It just the compassion, passionate choice to allow players all reasonable means to care for themselves.
iHeart Podcast Host
Music stars Marcus King, John Osborne from Brothers Osborne.
Amy Brown
We have this misunderstanding of what this.
Morgan Huelsman
Quote unquote drug thing is.
iHeart Podcast Host
Benny the Butcher Brent Smith from Shinedown.
Greg Lott
Got be real from Cypress Hill.
iHeart Podcast Host
NHL enforcer Riley Cote, Marine Corps vet.
Greg Lott
MMA fighter Liz Caramouche.
Morgan Huelsman
What we're doing now isn't working and.
Clayton English
We need to change things.
iHeart Podcast Host
Stories matter and it brings a face to them.
Greg Lott
It makes it real.
iHeart Podcast Host
It really does. It makes it real.
Greg Lott
Listen to new episodes of the War on Drugs Podcast Season 2 on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts and to hear episodes one week early and ad free with exclusive content. Subscribe to Lava for Good plus on Apple Podcast.
Morgan Huelsman
Have you had this where you're learning an entirely new language? So I remember you bringing up football and he watches football a lot. My boyfriend's very interested in golf and so he'll text me when he's out golfing. And he the other day he was like, I got a birdie. And I'm like googling, what the heck is a birdie? And I'm trying to learn and understand this whole new language of golf because I never, I knew golf existed. I had boyfriends that played before, but I was never truly invested in. And now when he texts me, I'm like, dang it, I have to learn all these new terms. And some listener messaged me that a pro tip in golf is anything with a bird is good news. Anything not with a bird, questionable. So she's like, pro tip. If you ever get a bird text message, it means good, good. Don't know what it means. Then I have to go further. But so I'm learning an entirely new language right now and that language is golf.
Clayton English
Yeah, I'm gonna need to pick up on golf. That's something that we've decided we're gonna start doing more together. He plays. He doesn't play as much as he wants to. That's why he wants us to play together so we can play more. And his 15 year old son is getting really into it. So I think he also. That's the way he wants to bond with his son.
Morgan Huelsman
Yeah.
Clayton English
So I see more golf in my future. So I got a golf skirt the other day.
Morgan Huelsman
I love that you went straight to golf skirt. And like golf clubs or the actual instrument we need.
Clayton English
I don't need my own clubs yet, but I assume if I start playing more then I will. But I got a cute skirt.
Morgan Huelsman
Well, we love a cute shirt. That's where it starts. Remember the outfit helps us get excited about something.
Clayton English
Yeah, like deion Sanders. If you look good, you feel good. If you feel good, you play good. Yeah, if you play good, they pay good.
Morgan Huelsman
I didn't know that was the ending part of that. I think I always ever just heard, if you look good, you feel good.
Clayton English
If you look good, you feel good. If you feel good, you play good.
Morgan Huelsman
That's what I mean.
Clayton English
They pay good.
Morgan Huelsman
That last one, I did not know. That is new information. But, yeah, that's where my. My territory is right now. And if you want to ask any questions, you can, but I just grilled you, so I'm giving you space to now grow me back. If you.
Clayton English
Well, like, I mean, what about your boyfriend being a part of any of your stuff? Like, you have a podcast and do you think that that's something one day he would ever. I mean, I feel like. I know it's a little early, but sometimes Ben would do stuff with me. And even after Ben and I divorced, we. He came on the podcast and we talked a little bit about co parenting, but is that. And that was not Ben's. I would say out of this 17 years that we were married and I was on the radio the whole time we were together, I mean, he was involved. He was involved with a microphone. Like, I could fit it on one hand, probably.
Morgan Huelsman
Yeah. I don't know that I would ever like a show scenario that feels like I'm just walking him into a lion's den. You know what I mean? But on my podcast, yeah, I think he would be so up for it.
Clayton English
What do you think y' all would talk about? Like, because you're very into therapy and your podcast leans therapeutic. Like, is he open to therapy?
Morgan Huelsman
Yes. He's very mental health focused, and he also has a crazy life story that I would love to share and he would love to share someday. That's really cool. And also just our relationship and meeting and because it was in real life and it was kind of fate playing a hand and all of that versus dating apps and stuff. That story is really interesting. All my friends love to hear it. Like, gives them hope that you can still meet the old school way. So those two things. And he's super supportive. He will always take photos and videos of me all the time without me ever asking. Just, he's like, here, I took all these. And I'm like, when did you even do that?
Clayton English
Like, if you're just like, what are you doing?
Morgan Huelsman
Like, if I'm putting together flower bouquets or I'm hanging out with the animals. Like, he's just always. He Loves snapping photos and videos, which I love. That's helpful because I've always dated people who kind of resented that part about me that I wanted to take photos and pictures and, you know, do my little food posts or any. Anything like that. It just felt like it was always a burden. And with him, there is none of that. He's. He loves capturing content. He's not even a content person. He just likes creating memories through photos and videos.
Clayton English
So he's not trying to be like a.
Morgan Huelsman
No on.
Clayton English
He doesn't. He's not asking you to capture content.
Morgan Huelsman
No, no. But, like, I love taking pictures and videos of him because that's who I was before. And he loves that. And he's like, nobody ever took videos and stuff of me. This is a really cool. I was like, nobody ever took them of me. So this is a cool moment that we're having. And so I don't. There's no part of me now that feels burdened in that aspect, at least in my side of my career.
Clayton English
How long has it been at this point?
Morgan Huelsman
We're over a month and a half.
Clayton English
So, like, I guess your parents will meet him in June when they come for CMAYfest.
Morgan Huelsman
Yes. Yes, they will meet him. They're very excited. I've met.
Clayton English
Have they, like, FaceTimed with him?
Morgan Huelsman
Yes, they've met on FaceTime. And he's met one of my sisters on FaceTime. And my. I've met his whole family besides his dad. His dad hasn't been down yet, but I've met everybody else, so it feels safe, it feels good, it feels right in a lot of ways. But there's just, you know, there's still walls that I have up that are slowly coming down. I think over the course of time, that's the only thing that will really make those come down. But I have this kind of arbitrary timelines in my head of, well, maybe in like, six months, it'll feel like I'll feel, okay, he's not going anywhere. But it's just me and my past, like, kind of speaking to me and trying to make me feel like I have to pay attention to these arbitrary timelines that happened in my past relationships or situations where something happened. So I'm really trying to fight those back and just allow it to be good and safe and happy. Because that's what it is.
Clayton English
Yeah.
Morgan Huelsman
You know, I haven't had any reason not to feel that way. It's really just more my past situations that like to try and creep in, which I was prepared for my therapist that I had for a really long time, especially after the abusive relationship told me the only way that I would ever truly heal is like, when I felt really safe in a relationship to let things down and guards down. And I've had moments of that in relationships, but I don't know that I've had. I think it was going to take the right. Whoever was going to be the right one for it to truly my healing, to truly finish. I don't know if that makes any sense because I've had lessons, I've had a lot of growth and a lot of learning in past relationships, but I think whoever I'm supposed to marry is the one will be the one where the remainder of the really hard healing is going to happen for me, like, internally.
Clayton English
Right. That makes sense.
Morgan Huelsman
So. And it feels like that's kind of happening in a way, and that scares me. And I think I'm pushing back on her a lot of like, no, I'm not ready for that yet.
Clayton English
Yeah.
Morgan Huelsman
You know, so it's interesting, you know, like you mentioned, it's this internal. You're just fighting a lot of things and trying to understand what's happening. Trying to understand yourself and your body and what's going on in all these different moments, while also just trying to enjoy, be present the good that's happening to you.
Clayton English
Right.
Morgan Huelsman
So it's an interesting experience that I'm having right now, but so far, no flags, lots of happiness.
Clayton English
Yeah. He sounds like a dream.
Morgan Huelsman
He is. Everybody, all my friends are, like, obsessed with him. I literally got a text from a friend the other day that was like, morgan, your boyfriend is the sweetest guy ever, even at 5am because he goes to the gym and he'll go work out. And she sees him, she goes to this gym too, and she's like, he's literally the kindest human. I was like, that's all you ever want, right. Is for not only you to feel that way, but everybody around you to also feel that same way about them.
Clayton English
Especially if they're nice at 5:00am, right.
Morgan Huelsman
Like, who's nice at 5:00aM I'm not. I'm a little hangry and sleepy girl all the time, so. But yeah, that's where we are.
Clayton English
Well, that's exciting.
Morgan Huelsman
I know. I need an update on the kiddos before we go into our next parade.
Clayton English
Well, I was gonna say I would like to. I look forward to meeting him.
Morgan Huelsman
Oh, yeah, you definitely will.
Clayton English
Yeah, my kids. I'm like, my kids.
Morgan Huelsman
Or the feel like I've got all the kids. Whatever you Want to share three other.
Clayton English
Kids, but they're not. I'm not there, Mom. We're not. We are taking things slow. But let's see. My kids, Stevenson, they're about to finish school.
Morgan Huelsman
Is Stasher about to finish? Finish?
Clayton English
No, no, she's a junior.
Morgan Huelsman
She has one more year left.
Clayton English
Yeah. Even though she just turned 18, she's obviously with the adoption and them getting here late. Like, we held them back. Like, Stevenson's, you know, 14 and still in junior high, or he's. And he's going to be 15 this summer, and he'll still be in junior high, but they're both doing really great. Like, Stevenson, last night, I don't know, just bedtime. Last night was really sweet. Like, everybody, I was like, hey, it's time for bed. And nobody fought me on it. Everybody just went to bed. And then I go to their rooms and I say goodnight, but his door was already shut and the dog was in there, so I didn't want to open it because the dog will run out. She loves coming to my room. And so just through the door, I was like, good night, Stevenson. And then he just yelled so loud, probably making sure I could hear it because his door was shut, and he was like, good night, Mom. And I don't know, it just warmed my heart so much, and I was like, oh, I loved hearing that from him. And, you know, we went through a season with him for a little bit where it was pretty rough, and it just reminded me how far we have come, and it was just a special moment for me. So when you were asking me about the kids, that Stevenson story popped in my mind. And then Sashira is doing great, too. Like, she's, like, trying to figure out what her summer job is going to be. She's trying to decide if she wants to apply at clothing boutiques or restaurants.
Morgan Huelsman
Okay. Was she still working at her other restaurant?
Clayton English
She quit that. When? Track season. Like, she hasn't been there, and I don't think she wants to go back there. If she does do a restaurant, she'll do a different one just for.
Morgan Huelsman
Try some new things out.
Clayton English
Just diversity.
Morgan Huelsman
Yeah.
Clayton English
A new experience. But this one restaurant she did want to apply to, it's a little bit further away. So I had to talk to her about how the further away you work, that's the more that you're spending on gas money. And so she was like, oh, I don't know if I want to do that. And I was like, yeah, I mean, if that's really where you want to work. Then you weigh that out and you, you sacrifice the gas, it's fine. But at her age, I'm like, you, you could work. You're going to want to work closer to home. And so I don't know. I was encouraging to try the boutique this time around. Like if she just did the restaurant thing last time, like working in retail and clothing. And I was like, but you may have to, you know, start. You may not be working the floor helping customers right away. Maybe you're working in the back or doing things. Which she did have a small job steaming clothes at boutique, which she reached out to them. I don't know if she's gonna. They have anything for her, like more than that. So she's hoping for more experience. I think interacting with people is what she's looking for.
Morgan Huelsman
Is she still wanting to do hair? I know at one moment in time she was wanting to do beauty school.
Clayton English
Oh, well, esthetician. She wanted to go for face stuff. Yes, she's still interested in that.
Morgan Huelsman
Could she be a front desk at a place like that or.
Clayton English
Yeah, I think for summer they're not. Those jobs are more difficult to get get if you're just looking for summer. But she has asked some of my friends that are in that field, like, hey, can I come shadow you or are you looking for an intern? I want to learn more. So she could do that too. But if she's an intern, I don't think she's going to get paid or if she's just shadowing. But she's looking to save up some money and she's, you know, starting to look at colleges and trying to figure out applying for scholarships and stuff like that.
Morgan Huelsman
So does she want to go to college now? I know that was also not really important.
Clayton English
It was not like she wanted to do more of the esthetician school route, which we supported. And now she is thinking she wants the college experience. I think because some of her friends are doing college visits and she went with her, her best friend to visit Alabama. And when she came back from that, I think she was like, oh, I think I do want to have the, the college experience.
Morgan Huelsman
Yeah.
Clayton English
And so we'll see. We're trying not to push it either way. We kind of want to see where she lands with it. But I'm excited for her if she does do that because I think it'd be cool for her to have the full blown experiment. Not experiment, experience. But she was saying the other day, I think I need to get a dog, like a German shepherd, if I go to college. Oh, boy. And I was like, what? First of all, you're gonna be in a small space with roommates. You don't have room for a German shepherd. They're likely not going to be allowed if you're living in a dorm or an apartment or something like that. And she's like, what? No, it's going to keep me safe. Like, I don't. I don't want to get assaulted. Or like, I was like, where are you? What stories are you hearing on college campuses? Which I know that, sadly, stuff like that does happen, but you could also survive it without a German shepherd. And I just don't think that your freshman year of college is when you need to focus on having a big dog, because you're gonna be going to school and you may have some sort of a job, and you're gonna need to study and you're gonna have a social life.
Morgan Huelsman
Yeah. It sounds like there might be some fear associated with college, just based on stories, potentially, or things she's seen online.
Clayton English
Get off. You know, I think she sees stuff on YouTube and TikTok. Like, she watches all those crime things.
Morgan Huelsman
Oh, yeah.
Clayton English
There's this one crime girl. I don't even know the person's name, but she breaks down, like, crazy cases on YouTube. She's just some girl that records some out of her bedroom, and I've watched some of them with her. I wish I could remember the person's name. She's got millions of viewers, but Sashira is very into those. And I'm like, maybe we need to cut back on that, because I think that's why you think you need a German shepherd.
Morgan Huelsman
Well. And she loves horror, right?
Clayton English
Yeah. Loves it.
Morgan Huelsman
Hmm. I feel like between the crime and the horror stuff, we're definitely impacting a little bit of how she feels in safety.
Clayton English
Right.
Morgan Huelsman
And that's fair. I totally get it. But, yeah, definitely. Definitely no German shepherd. Freshman year of college.
Clayton English
I know. Like, we're definitely. You don't have time for that.
Morgan Huelsman
Yeah.
Clayton English
And also the war money. Like, they just think I'm, like, a German shepherd that requires a lot of care. There's vet bills, shedding tons of food. You're not thinking this through.
Morgan Huelsman
I really appreciate that we are going from a bird to German shepherd.
Clayton English
Yeah.
Morgan Huelsman
I like the evolution of that.
Clayton English
For her, the bird, definitely. A bird could not protect her. Or a cat. Like, she loves her cat, Maggie. That would not protect her.
Morgan Huelsman
No.
Clayton English
So she just wants protection. And I'm like, get some mace. Or I bought her one of those birdies. You know the. There's also an app, keychain, things that.
Morgan Huelsman
She can have on her phone that she can hold onto whenever she goes places. And if she releases her hand, it calls 911. That's what I used a lot in classes.
Clayton English
Oh my gosh. I would have to, I feel like I would accidentally release my hand and be like, oh, shoot.
Morgan Huelsman
Well, I think when you're that tense, I would be tense sometimes walking in dark places and I would just like grip my phone.
Clayton English
So that's when you would pull up, like if you're walking on campus at night by yourself or something, you.
Morgan Huelsman
And most of the time I would call somebody if I was walking, so somebody was on the phone. But if nobody could answer or somebody. It was kind of just my backup plan. But it was there and it was ready and I felt safe because if I released it and didn't put like you can release it for, I think it's three seconds. But if you put it back on, then it won't call 91 1. If you release it and you never put it back on, it will call 911 to your direct location.
Clayton English
Gotcha.
Morgan Huelsman
It's all like safelight homelight. I'd have to look it up, but so there's so many things that she could have as resources.
Clayton English
Yes. I'm like, here's a keychain. You don't need a German shepherd, you.
Morgan Huelsman
Know, but shout out to her. She's dreaming for the stars and I appreciate that about her. We're gonna take another quick break when we'll be back for maybe some stories from Austin, Texas for our festival.
Dan Flores
The American west with Dan Flores is the latest show from the Meat Eater Podcast Network. Hosted by me, writer and historian Dan Flores and brought to you by Velvet Buck, this podcast looks at a West available nowhere else. Each episode I'll be diving into some of the lesser known histories of the West. I'll then be joined in conversation by guests such as Western historian Dr. Randall Williams and best selling author and meat eater founder Stephen Rinella.
Clayton English
I'll correct my kids now and then. We're the say when cave people were here.
iHeart Podcast Host
And I'll say it seems like the.
Morgan Huelsman
Ice age people that were here didn't have a real affinity for caves.
Dan Flores
So join me starting Tuesday, May 6, where we'll delve into stories of the west and come to understand how it helps inform the ways in which we experience the region today.
iHeart Podcast Host
Listen to the American west with Dan Flores on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get Your podcasts.
Morgan Huelsman
She was a decorated veteran, a Marine who saved her comrades, a hero. She was stoic, modest, tough. Someone who inspired people. Everyone thought they knew her until they didn't.
Clayton English
I remember sitting on her couch and asking her, is this real?
Morgan Huelsman
Is this real? Is this real? Is this real?
Clayton English
I just couldn't wrap my head around what kind of person would do that to another person that was getting treatment, that was, you know, dying.
Morgan Huelsman
This is a story all about trust and about a woman named Sarah Kavanaugh. I've always been told I'm a really good listener, right. And I maximized that while I was lying.
Clayton English
Listen to Deep Cover the Truth About Sarah on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts.
Morgan Huelsman
Or wherever you get your podcasts. Your gut microbiome and those healthy bacteria can actually have positive effects throughout your body. Not just your gut, but your mental health, your metabolism, your immunity, your risk of cancer, heart disease, almost any disease under the sun.
Zakiyah
Yep, you heard right. Probiotics might actually impact everything from your brain to your heart. So what's science and what's just really good marketing? On this episode of Dope Labs, me and Zakiya cut through the hype and get into the real deal behind probiotics, with help from gastroenterologist Dr. Roshi Raj.
Morgan Huelsman
So, yes, bacteria is definitely having a moment, and I'm very excited about that.
Zakiyah
From probiotic drinks and gummies to face creams and pillows. Yep, we said pillows. The probiotic boom is everywhere. But how much of it actually works and what does it all mean for your gut, your skin, and even your mood? Join us on Dope Labs, where we break it all down in the lab like only we can listen to Dope Labs on iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Jessica Acevedo
The chilling podcast Forgive Me for I have followed delves into the hidden truths behind 7M films, the Shekinah Church, and the hold they had over members. Join host Jessica Acevedo, the executive producer of Netflix's explosive docuseries Dancing for the Devil, the 7M TikTok cult, and Kalia Gray of 7M Films. In the final episode, former member Melanie Lee talks about escaping the church and the hold of its leader, Robert Shinn.
Clayton English
That was the beginning of my closure. He's a scam artist.
Jessica Acevedo
Don't miss the powerful season finale featuring part two of the Melanie Lee interview, which offers new perspectives on her time in the cult and a deeper understanding of her journey of recovery. All episodes out now.
Clayton English
It's like life and death.
Morgan Huelsman
Yeah, yeah.
Clayton English
And you don't know any better. You don't know you have that freedom because you've never had that freedom.
Jessica Acevedo
Listen to Forgive Me for I have followed as part of the Mike Kura Podcast network, available on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Greg Lott
I'm Clayton English. I'm Greg Lod and this is season two of the War on Drugs podcast. We are back in a big way.
iHeart Podcast Host
In a very big way. Real people, real perspectives.
Greg Lott
This is kind of star studded a little bit, man. We got Ricky Williams, NFL player, Heisman Trophy winner.
Clayton English
It's just the compassionate choice to allow players all reasonable means to care for themselves.
iHeart Podcast Host
Music stars Marcus King, John Osborne from Brothers Osborne.
Amy Brown
We have this misunderstanding of what this.
Greg Lott
Quote unquote drug fans Benny the Butcher.
iHeart Podcast Host
Frenchman Smith from Shinedown got. Be real from Cypress Hill, NHL enforcer.
Greg Lott
Riley Cote, Marine Corvette, MMA fighter Liz Karamouche.
Morgan Huelsman
What we're doing now isn't working and we need to change things.
iHeart Podcast Host
Stories matter and it brings a face to them.
Greg Lott
It makes it real.
iHeart Podcast Host
It really does. It makes it real.
Greg Lott
Listen to new episodes of the War on Drugs Podcast Season 2 on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcast. And to hear episodes one week early and ad free with exclusive content. Subscribe to Lava for Good plus on Apple Podcasts.
Morgan Huelsman
How was the iHeart Festival for you? Austin, Texas. What's it like going back for you? Especially living in Nashville for so long now?
Clayton English
I, I get asked that question, like every time I go back, like, oh my gosh, are you gonna see family? And I'm like, it's so awkward. Cause I'm like, I don't have family there any. Like, my sister moved to Colorado, my mom died, my dad died. Nobody's there. I do have friends that are still there and my cousin is in Wimberley, which is outside of Austin. So it's not necessarily super easy to get to. It's not like, oh, you're in Austin. So obviously I'm going to see my cousin because it's a little bit of a hike to Wimberley. But I do like going back. It's just not the same. It's very busy and trafficky and where we're staying, like our hotel to the venue, there's a lot of construction and so it just feels like, yeah, like if I could. And we're very busy too, so if I had time to actually get out and enjoy a few things, I think I would love it. Like, I, I normally do try to go like hike. We used to call it back in the day Town Lake, but now it's Ladybird Lake. If I go do that, that's very life giving to me. And I didn't get to do that this trip, so I was kind of sad. But of course I love Austin. It'll always be home for me. It just doesn't feel the same going back. And then I. There's the awkward, like, are you gonna see family?
Morgan Huelsman
Yeah. And you're like, okay, we have to do this again.
Clayton English
And I'm like, no, womp, womp.
Morgan Huelsman
It was interesting. I love Austin, but I don't have the experience that you. But I do know what that feeling is. Like whenever I go back to Wichita and so much has changed and you've just been gone for a long time and life is different. Even though my family. That is the different part is my family's all still there. There's so much that has changed and all your favorites. A lot of things have gone. New things have replaced them or just a lot of change. When. I don't know. Tourism is more likely in Austin than it is in Wichita, but when new businesses come in and it just changes the layout and the environment of a place like that. So I know that feeling. But also Austin to me has always, always been strange. Literally, because I. What I knew about Austin before I ever visited was Austin is weird their slogan, or modern.
Clayton English
Keep Austin weird.
Morgan Huelsman
Keep Austin weird. And so when I first went there, I said, yeah, it's a little strange. There's some strangeness to it. But good weird. It's fun weird. And every time I go, I just. I always experience some funny, quirky things, especially if I'm walking down 6th street or something. And I just witness weirder things than I think I've witnessed in any city. And I've spent a lot of time in Denver, which is supposed to be like the comparison of Austin, of the weirdness. And I think Austin wins.
Clayton English
Austin beats it.
Morgan Huelsman
Yeah, I think so. But I always get breakfast tacos. That's my thing. I will always eat breakfast tacos, like.
Clayton English
From a specific place or just.
Morgan Huelsman
No, I like try and go to new places that I haven't been. And because that's just. I feel like Austin is really good.
Clayton English
For breakfast tacos, definitely.
Morgan Huelsman
So that's what I'll always get. It's always on the menu. I try and get it both days or especially even in the airport. On the way back, I'll get a breakfast taco. Just makes me happy.
Clayton English
Yeah. What's your favorite kind of breakfast taco?
Morgan Huelsman
I love anything where they put a potato and egg. So it's not really hard because I'm vegetarian, so you can't add a whole lot of things. But as long there's some places that don't make potato and egg breakfast tacos, but anytime they do, there's one place at the airport, and I can't remember what they're called, but their potato egg is mashed potato with egg, and then they add avocado to it, and it's so yummy.
Clayton English
Oh, I'm trying to think of what is there at the airport. I like the migas breakfast taco. Always from anywhere. Migas, is it.
Morgan Huelsman
That's scrambled eggs, a specific kind of cheese?
Clayton English
Well, they may use. I don't know if every place may have a different type of cheese that they use, but it's typically just like a how I make migas. So there's like, maybe some rotel type situation. So like a tomato, pepper concoction and then eggs, cheese, tortilla strips, or like, you know, like a crunch. Like, you get that in there. That's what's migas for me.
Morgan Huelsman
Got it.
Clayton English
And it's wrapped up in a tortilla with some avocado and maybe a dipping sauce.
Morgan Huelsman
Okay. And the dipping sauces are always so spicy. Whenever I go to Austin, the spicy sauce always gets me because I think it's not gonna be spicy enough sitting there. I'm like, sweating.
Clayton English
You start sweating.
Morgan Huelsman
Because I'm a baby. I'm a baby when it comes to spices.
Clayton English
I am too.
Morgan Huelsman
I'm not good at it. I'm trying to expand my palate. But I swear, every time one of my friends who likes spicy food will try something, and he'll be like, it's not spicy. You're fine. And then I eat. I'm like, guys, I was so hot, my mouth is dying, and I have to, like, chug water. And I feel like such a child. But in my fairness, I have come a long way because I did used to put sugar in salsa, so.
Clayton English
Okay. And I feel like I used to think that that was weird when you would say that, but then I feel like I got messages after that and then even started looking at ingredients. And sometimes sugar is added to the. To the recipe. I know you were doing it to counter, so you were adding extra, but I just never associated sugar at all with it. But in some jars, if you look at the back, there's added sugar.
Morgan Huelsman
Well, so this. This is funny about this too. I Was making the homemade enchilada sauce, which tends to be pretty mild, and it calls for chili powder. Well, I was making this enchilada sauce, and I didn't have chili powder, so I added cayenne pepper. Oh, I didn't realize how much cayenne pepper I added, and it was so spicy. So I ended up having to add sugar to my enchilada sauce. And it was kind of a mess, but it ended up tasting really good. But I added a crap ton of sugar. That was supposed to be something that was relatively healthy, and it was just. It tasted very sweet. And then the ending, though, was still really spicy. And so I would finish eating my enchiladas, and I would just be sweating.
Clayton English
Oh, yeah.
Morgan Huelsman
It was not a good experience.
Clayton English
You're still gonna have to kick there. While you were telling your story too, I tried to look up taco restaurants at the airport. So is it Taco Deli?
Morgan Huelsman
I think it was Taco Deli.
Clayton English
Yeah. I'm trying to think, because if. If anybody wanted to know if they're traveling through the Austin airport, what I love about the airport there is it's all local places. So if you don't have time to drive out to Driftwood to get Salt Lick Barbecue, you can get Salt Lick Barbecue at the airport.
Morgan Huelsman
Yes. And there's a food truck. There's two places I've had breakfast tacos in there. There's a food truck that has. You literally walk up to it, and it's a food truck. And then Taco Deli, which Taco Deli is consistently good. Is that a Texas chain for tacos?
Clayton English
I mean, there's multiple locations in Austin, But I don't know if it says here Taco Deli handcrafted tacos across Texas. So I'm not quite sure where it started. But yeah, we would get Taco Deli back. You know, when we were working at the station in Austin, a coffee shop across the street from us would carry Taco Deli's tacos. It's called Ruda Maya Coffee. And we would go get the tacos, and they were so good. And then speaking of barbecue, Rudy's has breakfast tacos. And they would drop off tacos every Thursday at the station. And it was so good. And they would do pigs in a blanket, too. They would drop off breakfast tacos and pigs in the blanket. And I was like, oh, what's that.
Morgan Huelsman
Like to get food all the time? We don't have that experience yet.
Clayton English
Well, when we were going over to the coffee shop, to get Taco Deli. We were paying for it. But every Thursday when Rudy's would drop it off, it was a treat. And that was so awesome.
Morgan Huelsman
See, I love that.
Clayton English
Tons of tacos.
Morgan Huelsman
Lots of tacos.
Clayton English
We'd be like, breakfast. This is breakfast lunch. That was back when. Yeah. We were just starting out and we. Free food was. I mean, free food is always great, but especially in our early 20s.
Morgan Huelsman
Yeah.
Clayton English
Yeah. Free food was everything.
Morgan Huelsman
That's one of my favorite inventions of food, is Mexican food with breakfast. And I don't think until I finally went to Austin did I ever realize, like, breakfast burritos.
Clayton English
So they didn't have that growing up in Wichita.
Morgan Huelsman
Not anywhere that I went. Because, like, our Mexican food was on the border. Taco Bell. And we never really went to Taco Bell. I know we had a Taco Chico that was also a fast food joint, and I never went there. We always chose Taco Bell because especially in the 90s, Taco Bell looked so cool. It was like a little, I don't know, the pastels that they had or whatever. But we never went to any local Mexican restaurants. I know now there's a lot. But when I was growing up. No, for sure, we did all the chains. Texas Roadhouse and Olive Garden. We had a lot of chains. So I don't. It wasn't really until I was in college that I learned about breakfast in tacos. And a lot of restaurants started putting breakfast tacos on their menus. Kind of became a thing at one point. But then when I went to Austin was when I really realized, like, what breakfast tacos were supposed to taste like. And, you know, like the really good ones.
Clayton English
The authentic good stuff.
Morgan Huelsman
Yeah, yeah. Because you get it from American restaurants and they're good. I love a breakfast taco no matter what. But then I went to Austin and it ruined me because I had really good breakfast burritos and breakfast tacos.
Clayton English
I know you gotta find. When it comes to Mexican restaurants in Texas, you gotta find just like the. The places that you're like. You question. You're like, I don't know, should I go in there? I mean, that's what my dad would always do. He's like, oh, the more like he would just call him hole in the Wall. Top place, even for burgers, not just Mexican food. Like, the more hole in the wall it looks, he's like, the better it's gonna be.
Morgan Huelsman
That is true. He's not wrong. Is the place where he has a burger named after him also a hole in the wall?
Clayton English
Oh, That's Big Daddy's. No, not real. No, I would call that more of like a. Like a Texas Roadhouse type situation.
Morgan Huelsman
Oh, okay. Shout Out Dad.
Clayton English
Yeah, well, he had a. That was a. They had some of those restaurants and he was. It's where. The one in Odessa he had for years, like when I go visit him. He moved to Odessa for a little bit after him and my mom split. I guess they're probably quiet down some of the buzz because he was leaving her for somebody else. So they moved to Odessa for a little bit and I would go visit him for spring break. And I was a hostess at Big Daddy's, so I would hostess there. And then. Yeah, he. I guess. I guess still there. I don't know who owns it now or what, but there's still. My half sister was in Odessa for something and they decided to go eat at Big Daddy's. And she opened up the menu and there was Cliff's Burger still on the menu.
Morgan Huelsman
That's wild.
Clayton English
I know.
Morgan Huelsman
It's cool that it's still there, though.
Clayton English
It's years later. Yeah, I love that.
Morgan Huelsman
Okay, we're going to end us on a celebrity story. Do you have a celebrity story from iHeart Festival?
Clayton English
Well, I told this one on the show, my Sam Hunt story where he fell in front of him. Well, I didn't fall, but I dropped all my luggage in front of him and I might as well have fallen. It was ridiculous. I was about to start a Thomas Rhett interview on Hulu and his phone started ringing and he was like, oh, what's this? He looked at it, it was his wife calling. And I thought, and the Hulu hits are live. And so I was like, oh, shoot. Is he about to answer a phone call from his wife? And then we're gonna go, I'm gonna have to stall. But he was like, I'll call her back. And I was like, oh, see, stars are just like us. Like, he's at work doing his thing, but his wife is like, oh, I gotta call my husband. I have a question. Or maybe he's not on stage yet. I mean. Cause he was also about to take the stage one.
Morgan Huelsman
I feel like she wouldn't call for no reason either too, because of his work environment. So she must have called because something was going on.
Clayton English
Yeah. Or she could have just. I don't think it was anything serious because if he was alarmed by that, he would have picked it up. I don't think he would have. Yeah, that's more so. They probably are just used to talking, which that's the whole thing. Like, some people do not call their spouses or their significant others on the job. That was shocking to me. Like, therapy cat. She told me she just never called her husband at work. And I was like, what? I would call Ben all the time. I mean, I guess when he was in the military it was different, but in my boyfriend, I call him. I call him. I'll call him as soon as we get done here, we leave.
Morgan Huelsman
Yeah.
Clayton English
And then I'll call him again. Just. Hey, what are you doing? I'm working. Okay, well, you know, so. But I put up a thing about it on Instagram a couple of months ago and I was shocked at how divided some people were. They're like, oh, my gosh. Yeah, I would never, never call my spouse at work ever. And I. Again, it depends on what your spouse does.
Morgan Huelsman
Yeah.
Clayton English
But just the fact that it's a thing of like, no, they're at work. Why would I call them? I'm like, to see what's up.
Morgan Huelsman
That kind of shocks me because I feel like most people when they were kids would call their parents while they're at work. I don't know how many times I would pick up the home phone just to bother my parents at work. For the stupidest things.
Clayton English
Yeah.
Morgan Huelsman
I mean, maybe people are traumatized from that experience and others are like, nah, I did it all the time.
Clayton English
Or to your point, depending on how they grew up. Maybe their parents had jobs where they couldn't call them. Them and so they just. It doesn't occur to them to just call their. Their partner.
Morgan Huelsman
Yeah, because.
Clayton English
Yeah, I would call. To your point, I would call my parents all the time too. And I definitely call my boyfriend, probably too much. And then sometimes he's like, okay, I gotta go. And I'm like, well, I just got done with work because our schedules are very different. And I was like, I have a 20 minute drive home. Like, what am I supposed to do now?
Morgan Huelsman
Isn't it funny too, how I don't know if you've ever seen those memes or videos where you call somebody when you're on a drive home and they don't call you back until you pull in the garage and you're like, no, I don't want to talk to you now. I only want to talk to you because I was driving home.
Clayton English
Yes, hilarious. It's like you're at home or they'll show. It's like a girl at home, like, eating popcorn, watching tv, literally doing nothing. But her phone rings and she ignores it. And she's like, when that person calls that you called when you were driving because you're still not doing anything. Like, you could totally answer, but it's like, oh, no, no, no. You missed your window.
Morgan Huelsman
I know.
Clayton English
It's so funny that when you had way more energy or you were in the mood to talk, you're like, never mind.
Morgan Huelsman
I take it back.
Clayton English
Yeah. You may not find that energy again for another five days. Yeah.
Morgan Huelsman
Yeah. Very real. All right, Amy, well, thanks for joining me. Thanks for talking about boyfriend, kids, all the life updates.
Clayton English
Thank you. Same to you.
Morgan Huelsman
Before we leave, Just. You're good. How are you feeling?
Clayton English
I'm great. Pre menopause, everything perimenopausal stuff is, you know, it's ebbs and flows, so you never know. Speaking of I heart, I did have a little bit of a. I was emotional and hormonal. I had a moment with Elizabeth Fazio, who we work with, where backstage, I had to let out a quick cry for a second, and I was like. I looked at her and I was like, I don't know what is happening. I really don't. I was like, I don't know why I'm crying. I cannot explain this right now. And that's one of those things where it's just like, God, this is so unprofessional. Nobody else saw me besides her, so I felt okay. But it just made me want to, like, hug a lot of women that maybe just need to let out a cry where literally at their job, there's no way they could do it, and you have to go hide and find a space. So I just want to normalize random tears at work when you're, you know, your estrogen might be a little off or something. Like, I don't know. It was. That was a crazy I heart story. I've never had that happen.
Morgan Huelsman
And that probably feels really out of body, where you just feel.
Clayton English
Yes, because then I can, like, focus and, like, get my job done and, like, do what I need to do. And I was backstage, and I was like, elizabeth, I don't know what's happening, but we need to go over here in the dark right now because, like, tears are flowing, and I just. I feel off, and I need to feel on. And so it was like, I got it out, and then I felt a little bit better. So that released some chemicals that I needed to help me survive. So, yeah, I know a lot of other women are going through it, so I just want to send you a hug through the podcast. And also, if you're a guy listening and you have a woman in your life that might be going through it. Just remember to have some compassion and grace because she may act in a way that is confusing to her as well. It doesn't excuse our behavior. But sometimes maybe you just get curious about, hey, let's, let's, let's pause what could really be going on instead of thinking that we're just acting all crazy.
Morgan Huelsman
You're not crazy. Your body's just betraying you a little bit and we're understanding.
Clayton English
I don't even know that it's betraying because it's part of the process. It's literally what is supposed to be happening.
Morgan Huelsman
But also crap, because why do we have to have that experience? You know what I mean?
Clayton English
That's what I want.
Morgan Huelsman
That's where I feel betrayed is this feels very one sided.
Clayton English
Exactly.
Morgan Huelsman
And I don't appreciate that experience for all of you guys that are going through it. All right, well, tell the people where they can find you. Hear you all that good stuff.
Clayton English
Adio. Amy on socials and podcast is Feeling Things Podcast, which that's also the social handle for that show. And you can download and listen wherever you listen to podcasts.
Morgan Huelsman
Awesome. And you can follow me. Obgirlmorgan. Take this personally as my podcast. We have lots of good stuff up there if you want some extra content between Amy and myself, you know everybody else too, but you know Amy and I are sitting right here and go subscribe to the show YouTube page obbyboneshow. Bye, everybody.
Clayton English
Bye.
Morgan Huelsman
That's the best bits of the week with Morgan. Thanks for listening. Be sure to check out the other two parts this weekend. Go follow the show on all social platforms.
Clayton English
Obby Boneshow and follow at webgirl Morgan.
Morgan Huelsman
To submit your listener questions for next week's episode.
Amy Brown
We've all experienced being put on hold. The annoying music, the automated message. It's excruciating. And right now, America's seniors are on hold, waiting for nutritious meals and moments of connection. Waiting for America to care. Due to a growing aging population, rising costs and insufficient funding, Meals on Wheels programs are experiencing higher need than ever before. This wait is especially ridiculous because a proven solution already exists as Meals on Wheels remains the most effective and financially responsible solution to address senior hunger in isolation. Answer the call and help end the wait by donating@mealsonwheelsamerica.org donate.
Dan Flores
Why is a soap opera western like Yellowstone so wildly successful? The American west with Dan Flores is the latest show from the Meat Eater Podcast Network. So join me starting Tuesday, May 6, where we'll delve into stories of the west and come to understand how it helps inform the ways in which we experience the region today.
iHeart Podcast Host
Listen to the American west with Dan Flores on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Morgan Huelsman
In 2020, a group of young women.
Clayton English
Found themselves in an AI fueled nightmare.
Morgan Huelsman
Someone was posting photos. It was just me naked. Well, not me, but me with someone else's body parts. This is Levittown, a new podcast from iHeart podcasts Bloomberg and Kaleidoscope about the rise of deepfake pornography and the battle to stop it. Listen to Levittown on Bloomberg's Big Take podcast. Find it on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Greg Lott
I'm Clayton English.
iHeart Podcast Host
I'm Greg Laud.
Greg Lott
And this is season two of the War on Drugs podcast.
iHeart Podcast Host
Last year, a lot of the problems of the drug war. This year, a lot of the biggest names in music and sports.
Greg Lott
It's kind of star studded a little bit, man.
iHeart Podcast Host
We met them at their homes, we met them at the recording studios. Stories matter and it brings a face to them.
Greg Lott
It makes it real.
iHeart Podcast Host
It really does. It makes it real.
Greg Lott
Listen to new episodes of the War on Drugs Podcast, Season 2 on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Clayton English
Hi, I'm Sam Mullins and I've got a new podcast coming out called Go Boy, the gritty true story of how one man fought his way out of some of the darkest places imaginable.
Morgan Huelsman
Roger Caron was 16 when first convicted.
Amy Brown
Has spent 24 of those years in jail.
Clayton English
But when Roger Caron picked up a pen and paper, he went from an ex con to a literary darling from Campside Media and iHeart Podcasts. Listen to GoBoy on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
iHeart Podcast Host
You're listening to an iHeart podcast.
Podcast Summary: "Amy & Morgan Exchange Boyfriend Stories" The Bobby Bones Show by Premiere Networks | Release Date: May 17, 2025
In this engaging episode of The Bobby Bones Show, hosts Morgan Huelsman and Clayton English delve into their personal lives, specifically focusing on their romantic relationships. The conversation offers listeners an intimate glimpse into the dynamics of dating alongside existing commitments, such as co-parenting and maintaining healthy relationships with ex-partners.
Morgan and Clayton begin by discussing the qualities they find most attractive in their new partners.
Clayton highlights his boyfriend's height and kindness, stating, “I do like that he's tall. He's 6’3” and he's kind” (03:49).
Morgan admires her boyfriend’s acts of service and consistency, noting, “He is very big in that and he's very consistent, which are two qualities that are kind of hard to find” (04:00).
Both emphasize the importance of emotional support and reliability in their relationships, with Morgan adding, “Consistency is sexy” (05:00).
A significant portion of the discussion centers around the comfort level of sharing personal relationship details on their respective podcasts.
Morgan addresses listener questions about discussing their boyfriends, ensuring transparency while respecting privacy. She mentions, “We'll always ask for... it's not necessarily an approval, but just like the communication is there” (06:23).
Clayton shares his approach to sharing his relationship on air, emphasizing the need for mutual consent: “We are asking for, be like, hey, you good with this?” (06:27).
The hosts agree on the importance of mutual respect and consent when sharing personal stories publicly.
Clayton opens up about his interactions between his current boyfriend, Alex, and his ex-husband, Ben, highlighting the complexities of blended relationships.
Clayton recounts the introduction of Alex to Ben’s family: “We sat by each other at dinner, and I said... let's just rip this band-aid off” (12:34).
He describes the initial awkwardness: “They both shake, and they do first and last name. Real firm grip” (13:59).
Morgan commends Clayton on handling these interactions gracefully, stating, “You're handling multiple dynamics” (16:35).
The conversation underscores the challenges and rewards of blending new relationships with existing family structures.
The hosts touch upon personal emotional experiences and growth within their relationships.
Clayton shares a vulnerable moment backstage, saying, “I had to let out a quick cry... I don't know why I'm crying” (60:28), highlighting the importance of emotional well-being.
Morgan discusses the difficulty of receiving compliments and emphasizes self-compassion: “We have been conditioned a certain way and it gets hard to break that habit” (18:58).
They both advocate for emotional honesty and self-awareness as key components of healthy relationships.
Clayton provides updates on his children’s lives and the ongoing co-parenting with Ben.
He shares a heartwarming moment: “He was like, good night, Mom” (33:03), reflecting positive developments in his relationship with his children.
Sashira, Clayton’s daughter, is exploring summer job options: “She's trying to decide if she wants to apply at clothing boutiques or restaurants” (35:02).
Morgan and Clayton discuss the complexities of balancing relationships and parenting, emphasizing the importance of cooperation and mutual respect.
The conversation shifts to their experiences at the iHeart Festival in Austin, Texas.
Clayton reflects on the busyness and changes in Austin: “It's very busy and trafficky... It just feels like, yeah, like if I could” (46:22), juxtaposing his personal connection with the city's evolving landscape.
Morgan praises Austin’s unique culture: “Keep Austin weird... I think Austin wins” (48:33).
Their anecdotes provide listeners with a personalized view of attending a major festival while navigating life changes.
Morgan and Clayton engage in a lighthearted discussion about their favorite foods, particularly breakfast tacos, reflecting on how moving to Austin has influenced their culinary preferences.
Morgan shares her adventure in learning about golf, humorously linking it to her boyfriend’s interests: “I'm learning an entirely new language right now and that language is golf” (25:50).
They exchange recipes and preferences for spicy foods, with Morgan recounting her attempt to balance heat and sweetness in enchilada sauce: “It was a kind of a mess, but it ended up tasting really good” (52:18).
These segments add a personal and relatable touch, showcasing their everyday interests and challenges.
As the episode concludes, the hosts reflect on their journey of personal growth and the importance of compassion and understanding in relationships.
Clayton emphasizes the need for empathy: “Remember to have some compassion and grace because she may act in a way that is confusing to her as well” (61:30).
Morgan reaffirms the value of supporting each other through personal challenges: “You're not crazy. Your body's just betraying you a little bit and we're understanding” (62:27).
The episode wraps up with a reaffirmation of mutual support and celebrating personal happiness despite the complexities of modern relationships.
"Amy & Morgan Exchange Boyfriend Stories" offers a heartfelt exploration of modern relationships, touching on themes of transparency, emotional health, family dynamics, and personal growth. Through candid conversations, Morgan Huelsman and Clayton English provide listeners with relatable insights and inspiring stories of navigating love and life with honesty and compassion.
Note: Timestamps correspond to the transcript provided.