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Maria Hinojosa
This is an iHeart podcast. When I became a journalist, I was the first Latina in the newsrooms where I worked. I'm Maria Hinojosa. I spent my career creating journalism that centers voices who have been historically sidelined. From the most pressing news stories to deep cultural explorations, Latino USA is journalism with heart. Listen to Latino usa, the longest running Latino news and culture show in the United States. Hear it on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts. Hey guys, it's Janae, AKA Cheekies from Cheekies and Chill Podcast and I'm bringing you an all new mini podcast series called Sincerely, Janae. Sure, I'm a singer, author, businesswoman and podcaster, but at the end of the day, I am human and that's why I'm sharing my ups and downs with you in real time and on the go. Listen to Jiggies and chill on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast. In 2020, a group of young women found themselves in an AI fueled nightmare. 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.
Eddie
How serious is youth vaping? Irreversible lung damage serious.
Maria Hinojosa
1 in 10 kids vape serious, which.
Eddie
Warrants a serious conversation from a serious parental figure like yourself. Not the seriously know it all sports dad or the seriously smart podcaster. It requires a serious conversation that is best had by you.
Maria Hinojosa
No, seriously, the best person to talk.
Eddie
To your child about vaping is you. To start the conversation, visit talkaboutvaping.org, brought to you by the American Lung association and the AD Council.
Maria Hinojosa
Hey, I'm Radhi Devlukia and I'm the host of a really good Cry podcast and I have the opportunity to talk to Dr. Julie Smith. Julie is a clinical psychologist, a best selling author, and one of the most trusted voices in mental health online. Resentment isn't something that the world owes you, it's that you know, something that you need to work on. Yes, look out for those feelings of resentment because they're a sign that there was some sort of boundary that wasn't held before. Listen to a really good cry on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. The Best bits of the Week with.
Eddie
Morgan, Part one, Behind the scenes with a member of the show.
Maria Hinojosa
What's up, everybody? It's Best Bits weekend, and a lot of you are gonna be excited because Eddie's joining me.
Eddie
Hey, I'm excited. Including me.
Maria Hinojosa
Are you, though?
Eddie
Yeah.
Maria Hinojosa
Are you just saying that?
Eddie
Yeah.
Maria Hinojosa
No.
Eddie
You know what? Like, there comes a time in the week where I'm like. Or the month where I'm like, man, it's been a while I haven't done Best Bits. And, like, here comes. I see that reminder in my calendar.
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah, it's working.
Eddie
It's working. It totally is working. Yes. Cause I see it at the beginning of the week, and I know when I start my week, I'm like, oh, this week is Best Bits. So I look forward to it.
Maria Hinojosa
Well, thanks for being here, Eddie.
Eddie
Yeah, of course. Thanks for having me.
Maria Hinojosa
I got so many questions about hot dogs.
Eddie
Can we not talk about hot dogs?
Maria Hinojosa
We have to follow up on a few things and then.
Eddie
Sure, sure.
Maria Hinojosa
Do you want to get it out of the way or you want to wait until the end?
Eddie
Let's get it out of the way. Because, like, man, hot dogs, like, it's crazy that, like, I never had a problem with hot dogs. Hot dogs are like. They're just hot dogs, Right. If you're at a ball game or whatever, like, you crave a hot dog. Man, the smell of a hot dog is just making me sick these days. It's weird.
Maria Hinojosa
Well, after shoving 20 in your mouth in, like, five hours. Not fun.
Eddie
Yeah.
Maria Hinojosa
So how much money did you get from listeners on your Venmo?
Eddie
I got about $400 Venmo tips in that. Crazy.
Maria Hinojosa
Okay, but are you going to, like, send it all back because you didn't accomplish it?
Eddie
No, they're tips. You know what I'm going to do with the money, though?
Maria Hinojosa
What are you going to do?
Eddie
Real talk.
Maria Hinojosa
Really? Actually, what are you going to do?
Eddie
I want to buy a lawnmower.
Maria Hinojosa
You're going to do it?
Eddie
Yes. I got so much hate about my lawnmower conversation, about how, like, I've had a lawnmower for 10 years and my kids are complaining that it shakes, it hurts their hands. And I'm like, no, it makes you a stronger man if you go through this pain. But you know what? I got so much hate. And they're like, just buy lawnmower. Like, come on.
Maria Hinojosa
So you're going to do it with the hard work, the money that's not yours?
Eddie
Yeah. Hey, man, if. If the people want me to buy a lawnmower, I'm going to buy a lawnmower. With the money. With the people's money.
Maria Hinojosa
All right.
Eddie
Isn't that funny, though?
Maria Hinojosa
People tip me for this, you guys, at $400.
Eddie
Pretty amazing. I mean, it wasn't like somebody sent like 200. It was like a dollar three. Somebody did. 69 cents.
Maria Hinojosa
Like, it all added up.
Eddie
It did.
Maria Hinojosa
That's why they say. That's why it's good things to pick up the pennies that you see on the side of the road. You never know how much it'll be.
Eddie
Hey, Lunchbox does that.
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah. I still don't think he knows how much he's ever claimed, though.
Eddie
He threw him, like, in this big water jug or whatever, and I don't know if he's ever cashed that in.
Maria Hinojosa
How long will it take you until you eat another hot dog?
Eddie
Um, I would say about a month. Hot dogs are such a staple in my family. Like, it's just a thing, like, on.
Maria Hinojosa
A genuine, like, Friday night, where you guys decide to eat hot dogs, how many can you eat?
Eddie
Friday nights, pizza night.
Maria Hinojosa
Okay.
Eddie
Every Friday night. Saturday, I probably go for two.
Maria Hinojosa
Okay.
Eddie
Like, you.
Maria Hinojosa
You're not, like, a five eater, and that would have set you up a lot better.
Eddie
No, if I was a five eater, yes, the five would have gone down, no problem. And the 20 wouldn't have been an issue. Or the 21. But, like, no, I'm a two hot dog eater, you know, with ketchup on it, nothing else.
Maria Hinojosa
Okay.
Eddie
No mustard, no relish, no chili dogs.
Maria Hinojosa
Maybe that's where you failed. You should have put ketchup on your hot dogs.
Eddie
Do you think that putting any more calories on a hot dog would have helped me? Like, no. My stomach was capped. So, like, to break it down for you, and I'm not going to get, like, too detailed because it's pretty gross. But you start wondering, like, nothing is coming out the other end.
Maria Hinojosa
It's just all sitting in your stomach.
Eddie
And it's not even moving. So you feel it all in your stomach, which is, you know, like, right below your ribs. And then when you start shoving more down your throat, like, it's not going anywhere. So my body was like, there is no more room in here. Like, you put one more hot dog in here, I'm gonna throw it up. And I didn't listen.
Maria Hinojosa
So you should have taken the laxative, I guess.
Eddie
See, how does that even work? Does that just push it down your stomach?
Maria Hinojosa
Oh, yeah. I mean, it basically doesn't allow anything to sit in your stomach.
Eddie
Yeah, that could have worked. That totally could have worked.
Maria Hinojosa
You would have spent a lot of time on the toilet, but, yeah, I would have probably aided you in the challenge.
Eddie
I spent a lot of time on the toilet anyway, waiting. I was like, come on, come on. Anything. Just go, all right.
Maria Hinojosa
Your wife was probably like, okay. He's spending even more now time in the bathroom. And I don't appreciate this challenge.
Eddie
I texted my wife, said, I'm coming home to eat more hot dogs. And she's like, we're leaving.
Maria Hinojosa
We're not gonn.
Eddie
No. She took everyone to the trampoline park.
Maria Hinojosa
That's so funny. Do you feel bad after quitting? Like, do you feel like you failed?
Eddie
Yeah, because I honestly thought I would make seven. I would do 70 hot dogs.
Maria Hinojosa
You really thought you did?
Eddie
Yeah, I thought that. I don't. You know, it's like everyone had. It was like too many cooks in the kitchen. Like, Amy's like, you gotta exercise. You gotta move so your body digests it. Other people are like, don't do that. Like, you're gonna, like, get tired or whatever. And then some people would be like, take a laxative and do that. And some people be like, take as many as you can at the beginning and then piece it out at the end. And I think I just listened to too many people.
Maria Hinojosa
You should have just done what you thought was right.
Eddie
Joey Chestnut, he said, you know, fast for, like, 12 hours before. I don't know if that helped or not, like, because I was starving, like, when I took down that first five or the first six or the first 15. Like, I was starving, so it was no problem. Like, let's eat.
Maria Hinojosa
Mm.
Eddie
After that, though, I was in trouble. Yeah. So, yeah, I feel like a failure a little bit because I really thought that I could do it.
Maria Hinojosa
Well, in all fairness, mind you, a lot of the challenges we do on the show are set up for us to fail, so.
Eddie
Well, yeah, when I start. When people start offering their money, when Lunchbox offers $100, you know, like, yeah, I'm probably not gonna do this, so.
Maria Hinojosa
I don't think you should feel like a failure. And I think it's fair that you. You involuntarily quit because threw up.
Eddie
Were you watching the Live, by any chance?
Maria Hinojosa
Not when you threw up.
Eddie
Okay. So there was a part where I had finished 20 hot dogs, and my goal was 21, just to do three more, because I think I'd stopped at 18, 19, 20. Yeah. I stopped at 18 and I would come back to do three more. And I was on my 21st, and I decided to go outside and walk a little bit. Kind of just walk while I was eating. And then, like, halfway through the 21st, I gagged, like, and it wasn't like. Like, it was almost like something got caught in my throat and I kind of, like, went like that to get it out. And that triggered a whole, like, movement of stuff wanting to go north. And. And I. And in the live, I go, oh, oh. And I held my mouth. And, like, people, you can see the comments coming and be like, oh, my gosh, she's gonna throw up. He's gonna throw up. And I didn't say anything for, like, one whole minute. And I go, oh, that was close. Like, that was close. And then I kind of swallowed and I thought it was all over. Like, ooh. I was like, I dodged a bullet. It was almost all over right there in that instance. And then, like, I took my last bite. Or it was like, maybe like two more bites left on the 21st. And I took one more bite and then my body was like, wasn't a false alarm. It's happening. Yes.
Maria Hinojosa
Oh, Eddie.
Eddie
And I felt bad too, because I'm like, I can't throw up on a live. Like, no one wants to see me throw up.
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah, but that's also entertainment in itself.
Eddie
It's pretty gross.
Maria Hinojosa
From what I heard, you threw up to the side.
Eddie
I did. I did. I moved the camera and threw and threw up. I mean, there was. Oh, yeah, you can hear it. Because it all just. It's crazy, though. Like, you know when, like, sometimes you kind of have to throw up and you force yourself to throw up even more or whatever? Like, this was not the case. It was just like, if I wanted to stop it, it was not going to happen. Yeah, there was. No. It just went full force.
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah, you can't stop throw up when it's ready to happen.
Eddie
But that's. I'm not a throw up person. Like, I don't know, God gave. Gave me the gift of, like, an iron stomach or, like, I don't throw up. Like, the whole family has a stomach bug and everyone's throwing up and whatever. Like, I never throw up. I go the other way. I'll have like.
Maria Hinojosa
Which is ironic that this whole thing caused you to throw up rather than to do the normal thing that your body normally does.
Eddie
I know. I guess my body's just not used to 20 hot dogs, and I definitely.
Maria Hinojosa
Want to have been used to 70.
Eddie
You'D know I would have been hurting. And then my wife was Googling, like, what happens to your body if you eat 70 hot dogs?
Maria Hinojosa
And you should never Google it.
Eddie
It was, like, not good.
Maria Hinojosa
No, it's not a good result. I think you answered this, but could you have succeeded in the hot dog challenge if you tried a different strategy? And I think you said that. I think you listened to too many people.
Eddie
Just listen to too many people. I think that looking back, maybe if I wouldn't have taken so many at the beginning and because I did look at it as like. Because when you're doing. When you're doing, like, a challenge like this, you look at the clock and you're like, oh, I got plenty of time. And then you look at the hour, and you're like, that hour flew by way too fast. Like, if I don't hurry up and do three in an hour, like, I'm not going to make it. And so I kind of knew when I was struggling to take down three that I wasn't going to be able to keep up with the three an hour. And I think my mind was just like, you got to take as many as you can because you're not going to be able to keep up with that three an hour.
Maria Hinojosa
Well. And when I had jumped on the live stream, this was after we had left you, and it had been, like, two hours since we'd seen you.
Eddie
And my number was, like, 15.
Maria Hinojosa
When I left, it was 18.
Eddie
Okay.
Maria Hinojosa
And I jumped on the live stream two hours later, and you were still at 18. I was like, I. I don't think we're gonna see the end of this.
Eddie
Yeah.
Maria Hinojosa
That was when I knew something was wrong.
Eddie
Yeah. Yeah. And I wasn't gonna really jump on the live stream unless I was eating. And I just really didn't know when I was gonna eat.
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah. Well, you're already full. You're like, I have 15 hot dogs. I'm stu.
Eddie
And it wasn't like, oh, man. Had a good dinner, like, full. It was like, there's no room in my body.
Maria Hinojosa
Would you do it again?
Eddie
No. No. And people are sending me messages about this. Nine innings, nine hot dogs, nine beers.
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah.
Eddie
And I looked at. I'm like, that's kind of like, I feel like I could do that, but.
Maria Hinojosa
Don'T do that to yourself.
Eddie
I can't do it. I can't do that. Honestly, the nine hot dogs, no problem. Right? Like, I did that one time.
Maria Hinojosa
It's the nine beers. Even one beer makes you feel full.
Eddie
Yes.
Maria Hinojosa
You think about nine beers. And how you felt with that many hot dogs.
Eddie
Yep.
Maria Hinojosa
It'd be 20 times worse.
Eddie
Yeah. Be crazy. So I don't know. No. And I really have to be very careful on what I pick now to, like. Challenges.
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah.
Eddie
What challenges I'm gonna accept because it's. It's like I'm 46 years old, man.
Maria Hinojosa
Like, you can't keep putting yourself through that.
Eddie
No, I can get hurt now. You know what I mean?
Maria Hinojosa
Well, yeah. You gotta still be healthy for your boys and your family. That's more important than the challenges we do on the show.
Eddie
Yeah. And when you do a challenge like this, like, I've done so many stupid challenges. We've all. We all have. Right. But like, when you're doing, like, I remember I ate like, two dozen donuts or something while running on a treadmill. Like, you think about.
Maria Hinojosa
I did do that one.
Eddie
Right? I did do that one. And, like, you start thinking like, shit, that's too much sugar. Like, what if my body just, like, freaks out because it gets too much sugar at one time? So, like, I gotta. I gotta worry about stuff like that now.
Maria Hinojosa
Well, and they do say that your body stores trauma.
Eddie
Yeah. Well, this is definitely gonna be stored in there.
Maria Hinojosa
One day you're gonna find out I got of food trauma, and your body's just been taking hits left and right.
Eddie
Yeah. But you know what? Bobby's right, though. I guess I am probably the only. The closest we have to a competitive eater, really. Like, Lunchbox is kind of tapped out on eating stuff. Ray maybe could, but, like, Ray kind of just sits there and, like, I'm. I'm good.
Maria Hinojosa
I don't think Ray has the desire to do anything correct.
Eddie
Scuba probably could, but I don't know. Like, I feel like I'm the only idiot that just says, like, I'll do it.
Maria Hinojosa
Well, I think you just want to make money for your kids. Yeah. Give me money. All right, last one. Do you think you could do 70 of another food that isn't hot dogs?
Eddie
Yeah, of course. I could do 70 pop pieces of popcorn. I can do 70 pieces of popcorn. I can do seventy. I don't know, like, pieces of gum. Yeah.
Maria Hinojosa
Okay. You don't want to do 70 pieces of gum.
Eddie
You think I can chew 70 pieces of gum?
Maria Hinojosa
You could, but talk about some of that is going to be swallowed, and then you want to talk about messing up your stomach.
Eddie
You can't swallow, dude. If you chewed 70 pieces of gum and swallowed that, that's stuck for years.
Maria Hinojosa
Well, it's going to Be stuck. It's either going to be stuck in your mouth or you're going to have something go down your throat.
Eddie
Okay, forget I said that.
Maria Hinojosa
See, your. This is where your struggle comes on. Tell stuff. What is the saying?
Eddie
Your stomach is bigger than my mouth.
Maria Hinojosa
Your eyes are bigger than your stomach.
Eddie
That's what it is.
Maria Hinojosa
Is that what they say? I think it is, yeah. Your eyes are bigger than your stomach. So you think that that much is not a lot.
Eddie
But I've done it. I've done things.
Maria Hinojosa
Okay. You feel like you've done things.
Eddie
Like, remember when the guys were, like, debating whether to do the marshmallow.
Maria Hinojosa
Oh, my God.
Eddie
The Lucky Charms marshmallows. I would walk by that bag every day and be like, I feel like.
Maria Hinojosa
I can do that again. Eyes bigger than the stomach.
Eddie
I know, I know. But again, though, can you imagine taking all of those marshmallows in? Like, my stomach would crash. My body would crash.
Maria Hinojosa
You don't talk about, like, a fun eating challenge. When I worked at Buffalo Wild Wings, people would always come in to do the hot wing challenge. I think it was called something else. It was 12, like, of the spiciest wings in six minutes was what you had to do.
Eddie
That's tough.
Maria Hinojosa
I can't tell you how many people failed that challenge. Very, very few did I have actually succeed.
Eddie
Like, how many succeeded, though?
Maria Hinojosa
I probably had three in my four years of working there.
Eddie
Wow.
Maria Hinojosa
And I had probably 150. Try it at least.
Eddie
What did you see worked?
Maria Hinojosa
I think one. You had to be able to tolerate spice, like, on an insane level. Not just like, oh, yeah, I like.
Eddie
Spicy things, which is genetic. Like, yeah, it's. Some people can do it, some people can't.
Maria Hinojosa
And to. The strategy was like, eat as many as fast as you can. Don't stop. Don't. Because the second you think about it is when your body catches up.
Eddie
Were they dipping?
Maria Hinojosa
No, you can't have dipping sauces. You can have anything.
Eddie
No water, Nothing.
Maria Hinojosa
Nothing. You could have milk at the very end, like, after six minutes. So the faster, though, as soon as somebody would stop and, like, take a breather, it was over.
Eddie
And what was the prize for that? Do you remember?
Maria Hinojosa
A free T shirt.
Eddie
Oh, gosh. Get out of here.
Maria Hinojosa
Some free boneless wings.
Eddie
Yeah. Probably the ones you ate.
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah. Like, well, so if you. If you didn't accomplish it, you had to pay for it.
Eddie
Oh, that's funny.
Maria Hinojosa
And if you did it, you got it for free.
Eddie
Oh, that's hilarious.
Maria Hinojosa
So a lot of people paid for that challenge.
Eddie
Did you like, you like working there?
Maria Hinojosa
I loved working.
Eddie
I feel like that's your vibe.
Maria Hinojosa
It was so much fun. It was just like a party atmosphere. Everybody was always in. Most of the time, good spirits.
Eddie
Yeah. But if you weren't, you had to act like you were.
Maria Hinojosa
Oh, yeah. But you had a lot of, like, fun sports fans. But what was funny is a lot of people would come in so happy, excited to watch their games, and then leave just so devastated. Or drunk. Because they're devastated. Yeah, it was funny.
Eddie
Yeah.
Maria Hinojosa
And I'd be there on like UFC nights. People coming.
Eddie
And those would go late too. Would you guys stay to the very end or would you guys.
Maria Hinojosa
Oh, yeah. So I'd get home from work at like 2am Those nights.
Eddie
Yeah.
Maria Hinojosa
But they, I don't think they would do that anymore because it. You had people just come and sit for six hours.
Eddie
Right. Which, which, which is interesting because, like, that's kind of what a wings place is, especially that that offers sports. Like, come watch the game here. It's kind of what you're gonna do. Right.
Maria Hinojosa
And I don't think there's ever a problem with it, but a lot of people just don't tip. Like they sat there for four hours.
Eddie
Okay. So like if I was watching a four hour game, which is usually three, three and a half hour. Right. Football game, and I ordered wings, two beers, and I slowly just sat there through the whole game. What's. What am I expected to do?
Maria Hinojosa
I think you should double. So, like, think about at least another table could have came in and sat. At least one at a wing place, probably three or four. So you're trying to make up for those tables that missed out.
Eddie
Okay. So roughly, people eat in an hour and then leave, right?
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah.
Eddie
So if you're there for three hours, triple it.
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah. Or somewhere close and triple what?
Eddie
The 20, I would say.
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah.
Eddie
Okay.
Maria Hinojosa
Because you're. You have to make up for that loss if you're gonna stay, though. At least that's what I would do now, having been in that position.
Eddie
Yeah.
Maria Hinojosa
I don't think people understand that or have the comprehension if you've never been through it, to be like, I don't think they're being ill willed to not tip that. I just don't think they know.
Eddie
What if it's a dead day where they're like, literally, it's you and 10 other people.
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah.
Eddie
There could have been a lot of people sit down, but no one was coming.
Maria Hinojosa
I don't think that if you see multiple open tables. Yeah. No.
Eddie
Then don't worry about tripling it.
Maria Hinojosa
It's fine. But if you see there's a line out the door of people trying to get in, which most Sundays and Saturdays for game days, that's when you triple it.
Eddie
That's helpful. I've never thought about that.
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah.
Eddie
Okay.
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah.
Eddie
So that's a good rule of thumb.
Maria Hinojosa
There you go. All right, we're gonna take a quick break. We'll be back. We're not gonna talk anymore.
Eddie
No more hot dogs, please.
Maria Hinojosa
We're done.
Eddie
Let's just. Just stop talking about hot dogs.
Maria Hinojosa
Okay, Deal.
Eddie
And here's Heather with the weather. Well, it's beautiful out there.
Maria Hinojosa
Sunny and 75, almost a little chilly in the shade. Now let's get a read on the inside of your car. It is hot. You've only been parked a short time and it's already 99 degrees in there. Let's not leave children in the backseat while running errands. It only takes a few minutes for their body temperatures to rise, and that could be fatal.
Eddie
Cars get hot fast and can be deadly.
Maria Hinojosa
Never leave a child in a car.
Eddie
A message from NHTSA and the AD Council.
Maria Hinojosa
Hello, puzzlers. Let's start with a quick puzzle. The answer is Ken Jennings appearance on the puzzler with A.J. jacobs. The question is, what is the most entertaining listening experience in podcast land? Jeopardy. Truthers who say that you were given all the answers believe in.
Eddie
I guess they would be conspiracy theorists.
Maria Hinojosa
That's right. Are there Jeopardy. Truthers? Are there people who say that it.
Eddie
It was rigged?
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah.
Eddie
Ever since I was first on, people are like, they gave you the answers. Right. And then there's the other ones which are like, they gave you the answers.
Maria Hinojosa
And you still blew it.
Eddie
Don't miss Jeopardy Legend Ken Jennings on our special game show week of the Puzzler podcast.
Maria Hinojosa
The puzzler is the best place to get your daily word puzzle fix.
Eddie
Listen on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Maria Hinojosa
Hey, I'm Radhi Devlukia and I'm the host of a really good cry podcast. And I have the opportunity to talk to Dr. Julie Smith. Julie is a clinical psychologist, a best selling author, and one of the most trusted voices in mental health online. She was one of the first therapists to use TikTok as an educational platform. And since then, she has built a global audience of nearly 10 million people by making emotional support accessible, honest, and deeply human. You know, resentment isn't something that the world owes you. It's that you know something that you need to work on, I would say with this stuff is look out for those feelings of resentment because they're a sign that there was some sort of boundary that wasn't held before. You know, that. That if you're not asserting your own desires or wishes or needs and then resenting your partner or your friend for filling the space for you, then it comes back to, okay, well, what do you want? That's not this. Listen to a really good cry on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Liz went from being interested in true crime to living true crime. My husband comes back outside and he's. He's shaking, and he just looks like he's seen a ghost, and he's just in shock. And he said, your. Your dad's been killed. This is Hands Tied, a true crime podcast exploring the murder of Jim Melgar. Liz's mom had just been found shut in a closet, her hands and feet tied up, shouting for help. I was just completely in shock. Her dad had been stabbed to death. It didn't feel real at all. For more than a decade, Liz has been trying to figure out what happened. There's a lot of guilt, I think, pushing me, and I just. I want answers. Listen to Hands tied starting on August 6on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Welcome to Pretty Private with ebony, the podcast where silence is broken and stories are set free. I'm Ebony, and every Tuesday, I'll be sharing all new anonymous stories that would challenge your perceptions and give you new insight on the people around you. On Pretty Private, we'll explore the untold experiences of women of color who faced it all. Childhood trauma, addiction, abuse, incarceration, grief, mental health struggles and more. And found the strength to make it to the other side. My dad was shot and killed in his house. Yes, he was a drug dealer. Yes, he was a confidential informant. But he wasn't shot on a street corner. He wasn't shot in the middle of a drug deal. He was shot in his house, unarmed. Pretty Private isn't just a podcast. It's your personal guide for turning storylines into lifelines. Every Tuesday, make sure you listen to Pretty Private from the Black Effect Podcast network. Tune in on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows. All right, Eddie, so how are you doing? How's life going?
Eddie
I'm good. Life's good. Lower coasting, you know, Summer was fast. It's already, like, coming to an end.
Maria Hinojosa
Kids are going back to School?
Eddie
Yeah, Next week. So it's.
Maria Hinojosa
Is this your oldest, second to last year of high school or last?
Eddie
It's. It's his junior year.
Maria Hinojosa
Oh, yeah. So he's got two more years.
Eddie
He's got two more years.
Maria Hinojosa
That's crazy.
Eddie
But for him, it's all, like, you know, studying for the act. Start looking at colleges.
Maria Hinojosa
Does he want to go to college?
Eddie
Yeah.
Maria Hinojosa
Okay.
Eddie
He does. He's got a few in mind. And, like, he's so. He's like. He wants to go the film route. So he is so into, like, the film thing right now. He's writing a script. He's actually done with a script. His first ones. Now he's starting a second.
Maria Hinojosa
Wow.
Eddie
And it's funny to kind of see, like, with him, we never knew, like, what's he gonna do? Like, I know he's always liked movies. He's always talked about movies. He loves watching movies. He likes reviewing movies, reading movie reviews, all that stuff. Seeing how. How much a movie made over, like, the first release week or whatever. He loves all that stuff, ranking movies. But, like, never has he talked about, like, making movies. Like, he's always like, yeah, I'd like to make movies someday. But, like, the fact that he sees it's been the last, like, I don't know, seven months. Six. Seven months, where he goes into my office and just writes and writes. And I thought it was like, he's just chatting with his buddies and. No, he was literally writing a script. And so that's really cool to me. And now he kind of has direction on knowing what he wants to do. And as a parent, that's, like, awesome.
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah, it feels rewarding because you don't have to worry so much as, like, what's gonna happen to you. You leave the house. What's your life gonna look like?
Eddie
Well, there are some kids, like, you know, I have four boys. And when you look at. When I look at my four boys, there's some of them where I look at them and be like, I'm not worried about that one. He's gonna do something.
Maria Hinojosa
But there's some you are worried about.
Eddie
Oh, yeah. There's some where I look, I'm like, I have no idea what they're gonna do. They literally could do anything that, like, I don't know. I have no idea because they're not interested in one particular thing. And so, like, with him, he was kind of like that. Like, I don't know what he is gonna do. I'm real big on, like, follow your dreams, like, whatever your Dream is follow that and keep working towards that. And then you're gonna end up doing what you want to do. Right. Instead of just, like, I don't know, and I'm just gonna take a sales job, and then I'm gonna do this, and next thing you know, I'm working at the library. I don't know. Right. So I have, like, a. There's a couple of my boys that, like, could just end up working at a tire shop. I have no idea.
Maria Hinojosa
Well, and you know what? That would be okay.
Eddie
It would be Totally be okay surviving. But it's not settling for me. You know what I mean? Like, and I'm not worried. Like, I'm more of just, like. Want to, like, get an idea of, like, what are you. What are you. What are you working on? What are you working towards?
Maria Hinojosa
It would give you some control of the situation to say, like, okay, I can feel comfortable.
Eddie
Just a little bit of peace.
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah.
Eddie
And so when my son started, like, gravitating towards film and actually writing a script and then talking to me, like, talking to me about, like, how it works and what do I do once I write a script? I'm like, hey, man, I know this person. I know this person. You can talk to. Like, this author, like, is a friend of mine. Like, you can talk to him and all this stuff. And now I'm like, this is awesome. Because, like, I'm not worried about what he was gonna do. And he has direction now, and I love that.
Maria Hinojosa
Oh, and he's gonna love film school.
Eddie
Yeah.
Maria Hinojosa
If that's where he goes.
Eddie
Yeah.
Maria Hinojosa
Because of his interest, he's just gonna. He's never gonna come home. I'm happy.
Eddie
Which. Hey, I'm cool with that. I'm cool with that. My wife's not cool with it, but I'm like, hey, man, 18, you're out whenever. Hey, whenever you want to come visit, the door, you know, the house is open, but whatever.
Maria Hinojosa
Are you gonna keep their rooms the same?
Eddie
No. So, like, basically, he's got the best room. Cause he's the oldest. So when he leaves, the next one in line's waiting. Like, he's, like, already ready. Like, oh, I can't wait to take over that room. Because 1. Because 2 of them share a room right now.
Maria Hinojosa
Oh, so then they'll finally get to spread out.
Eddie
Yes.
Maria Hinojosa
So then when he does come and visit, he has to sleep on the couch.
Eddie
That's a good question. I don't know. No, you might have to kick. You might have to kick the other one out. It's my old room, dude. Yeah, it's my old room.
Maria Hinojosa
The questions that have changed over the course of time that you now have to answer is.
Eddie
I know. And you don't even think about that stuff, really, until it happens.
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah. And then you're here and you're like, where did 17 years go of my life?
Eddie
Yeah. So summer was good. We're ready for everyone to go back to school just. Just because our. Our family is almost like a. Like a little company where, like, there's.
Maria Hinojosa
So many of you. It's just.
Eddie
Yeah. Like, the gears are always. The gears are always moving, and when it's moving, it's. It works. Right. Like, this is what we do from, you know, 7 to 3, and then this is what we do from 3 to 6, and this is what we do from 7 to 10. And in the summertime, all that stuff goes out the window.
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah.
Eddie
Like, then you're just like, oh, boy. Like, what do we do for these two hours?
Maria Hinojosa
And you have to entertain.
Eddie
Let's go to the pool again. You know?
Maria Hinojosa
And, like, you're talking about your wife and the hot dog. You're like, took them to the trampoline park.
Eddie
Yeah. We have a membership to a trampoline park because you need that. And because if they're not, they don't get the energy out. Like, oof. It's trouble with four boys in the house. So, yeah, summer was good, but we're happy. Everyone's going to go back to routine. Routine, yes.
Maria Hinojosa
Normal.
Eddie
How about you?
Maria Hinojosa
No, how are you?
Eddie
Oh, what do you mean?
Maria Hinojosa
Did you hang out with any friends? Did you make guy friends?
Eddie
I knew you're going to ask me that. I did make one friend, and he's like a baseball coach. And, like, we haven't hung out, really. We talk more at the baseball field, but we text. So that's kind of like a big deal. Like, and I've lost friends through the whole texting game because I feel like. And I'm not saying I've lost them, like, forever, but, like, there have been other dads or people or other guys that have, like, just reached out and be like, hey, man, like, we should get lunch or something. And, oh, how's this going? Oh, did you see the Cowboys? You see this? And, like, I always respond and we have text interactions, but I never initiate the text. And then you kind of see it fizzling after a while, like, oh, they don't text me anymore. And. Because I don't really ever initiate the text.
Maria Hinojosa
You weren't putting in the other Side of the effort.
Eddie
Correct. So now I am realizing that I need to start putting a little more effort in. And so with this guy, I'm kind of initiating the text a little bit.
Maria Hinojosa
I'm proud of you. I'm serious. Because that's hard to do. Listen, there is always people who are really good at initiating and creating dynamics and friendships.
Eddie
Yes.
Maria Hinojosa
And there's always the people who aren't good at doing that, and they forget about it. Not because they're trying to be mean, but because they just aren't good at it. So it's cool that you recognize that and you're like, okay, well, if I want to have friends, I'm going to have to pull my weight here, because that's what it is. Friendship is pulling both sides of the weight.
Eddie
I know. And at our age, like, 45, 46 years old, and we're all dads, friendship isn't a priority. But it's important, though. I'm realizing that it is very important to have friends outside of your little family group, because your family, it's your family, but you're with them all the time, and you do kind of need that escape a little bit.
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah. You need your own dad time. And even if it's you by yourself, fine. But having a community where you can lean on and just let off some steam and that's a little crazy. Is very important to talk about different things. Yeah.
Eddie
You know, like. Like just conversations that are. You normally don't have. Because with us, like, our family, it's the same conversations all the time. So like, a friend could offer different conversations and some adult conversations. Yes. That don't have anything to do with, like, did you do your homework and why it's important to do your homework.
Maria Hinojosa
Please do this. I don't want to yell at you again. It's also no different than the maintenance of when married and having to create time, quality time for yourselves away from the kids.
Eddie
Correct.
Maria Hinojosa
They're all require time and they all require effort.
Eddie
Yeah.
Maria Hinojosa
But they're all equally important to, like, you sustaining the life that you want to have.
Eddie
Yeah.
Maria Hinojosa
And that's hard. It's just hard. That's human.
Eddie
It is. It is human. And like, like I said, it's not really a priority for me, and I need to make it just not a huge priority, but a little, little bit more than it's been.
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah. Well. And I'm proud of you for being able to recognize that.
Eddie
Yeah. I'm gonna try not to blow this one.
Maria Hinojosa
I think you can do it. I believe in you. You've come a long way.
Eddie
Yeah.
Maria Hinojosa
Since we even just started talking about your friendship evolution on Best bits alone.
Eddie
Yeah. And what I like about this guy is he's. He's easy to talk to. Like, there are some people, which is interesting. Like, that are just difficult to talk to.
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah. That is true.
Eddie
You know, like. Like, you kind of initiate a conversation, and they're always like, yep. And it's like, okay, what do we talk about again? Not. Not in this case. Now. It just flows. Sometimes we got to be like, all right, we got to stop talking. We got to get back to the game or whatever.
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah. Like, pay attention.
Eddie
I love this. For you.
Maria Hinojosa
Okay, next. Next Best bits. I'll be looking for an update.
Eddie
Yes.
Maria Hinojosa
Hopefully you guys will have hung out by then.
Eddie
Hopefully. Maybe we'll do a little coffee or a lunch or something or.
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah, or something. Little bro date.
Eddie
Even, like. Even, like, the kids hanging out. It's kind of fun. Like, you know, let's go to a baseball game. We'll take the kids, you take your boys, I'll take my boys, and we'll hang out. That's kind of fun.
Maria Hinojosa
Be a good start.
Eddie
Yeah.
Maria Hinojosa
But eventually, I hope that it just becomes, like, a guy's thing for you.
Eddie
Yeah. Go out. Go on Friday night.
Maria Hinojosa
Okay. I'm not talking.
Eddie
Come home at 3:00am no, Eddie.
Maria Hinojosa
Going to the club. But you can, like, go to a bar, watch a little bit of a game, and have a beer, have a burger.
Eddie
Games are tough. I like watching games alone.
Maria Hinojosa
Okay. Eddie.
Eddie
What?
Maria Hinojosa
We had to be out of our comfort zone.
Eddie
I know, I know, but, like, it's just. It's a thing. Like, I. I don't like watching a lot of sports with other dudes, Eddie, because other dudes like to be like, you say, just see the stats on this guy. Like, you see, man, you hear? They're like. And I'm like, I don't want to talk. I'm just watching the game.
Maria Hinojosa
Hey.
Eddie
What?
Maria Hinojosa
Camaraderie. You have to find light. Okay. If it's not a game, if this is the thing for you, I don't know, go freaking climb some rocks with each other.
Eddie
Oh, that'd be fun. Climb rocks. That'd be fun. I'll race you to the top.
Maria Hinojosa
Okay. Why are you making everything.
Eddie
I don't know. You're giving me examples. I'm kind of.
Maria Hinojosa
I'm just trying to help you.
Eddie
I'm picturing what we'll be doing.
Maria Hinojosa
Okay. Go play golf.
Eddie
Love it. Golf is always fun. I wonder if he plays golf. I'll ask him.
Maria Hinojosa
That took us a long time for us to get to one thing that you will actually be willing to go and do with somebody.
Eddie
I know my comfort zone. It's hard to get out of it.
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah, I'm pushing you out.
Eddie
Okay. Thank you.
Maria Hinojosa
You're no longer allowed to be in. Take one more break. We'll be right back.
Eddie
Don't let biased algorithms or degree screens or exclusive professional networks or stereotypes. Don't let anything keep you from discovering the half of the workforce who are stars workers skill through alternative routes rather than a bachelor's degree. It's time to tear the paper ceiling and see the stars beyond it. Find out how you can make stars part of your talent strategy@tearthepapersealing.org brought to you by opportunity at work in the ad council.
Maria Hinojosa
Hello, puzzlers. Let's start with a quick puzzle. The answer is Ken Jennings appearance on the puzzler with A.J. jacobs. The question is, what is the most entertaining listening experience in podcast land?
Eddie
Jeopardy.
Maria Hinojosa
Truthers who say that you were given all the answers believe in.
Eddie
I guess they would be conspiracy theorists.
Maria Hinojosa
That's right. Are there Jeopardy Truthers? Are there people who say that it it was rigged? Yeah.
Eddie
Ever since I was first on, people are like, they gave you the answers.
Maria Hinojosa
Right.
Eddie
And then there's the other ones which are like, they gave you the answers.
Maria Hinojosa
And you still blew it.
Eddie
Don't miss Jeopardy. Legend Ken Jennings on our special game.
Maria Hinojosa
Show week of the Puzzler podcast. The puzzler is the best place to get your daily word puzzle fix.
Eddie
Listen on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Maria Hinojosa
Hey, I'm Radhi Devlukia and I'm the host of a really good cry podcast. And I have the opportunity to talk to Dr. Julie Smith. Julie is a clinical psychologist, a best selling author, and one of the most trusted voices in mental health online. She was one of the first therapists to use TikTok as an educational platform. And since then, she has built a global audience of nearly 10 million people by making emotional support accessible, honest, and deeply human. You know, resentment isn't something that the world owes you. It's that, you know, something that you need to work on. I would say with this stuff is look out for those feelings of resentment because they're a sign that there was some sort of boundary that wasn't held before. You know that if you're not asserting your own desires or wishes or needs and then resenting your partner or your friend for filling the space for You. Then it comes back to, okay, well, what do you want? That's not this. Listen to a really good cry on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Liz went from being interested in true crime to living true crime. My husband comes back outside, and he's shaking, and he just looks like he's seen a ghost, and he's just in shock. And he said, your dad's been killed. This is Hands Tied, a true crime podcast exploring the murder of Jim Melgar. Liz's mom had just been found shut in a closet, her hands and feet tied up, shouting for help. I was just completely in shock. Her dad had been stabbed to death. It didn't feel real at all. For more than a decade, Liz has been trying to figure out what happened. There's a lot of guilt, I think, pushing me, and I just. I want answers. Listen to Hands tied starting on August 6th on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Foreign welcome to Pretty Private with ebony, the podcast where silence is broken and stories are set free. I'm Ebony, and every Tuesday, I'll be sharing all new anonymous stories that would challenge your perceptions and give you new insight on the people around you. On Pretty Private, we'll explore the untold experiences of women of color who faced it all. Childhood trauma, addiction, abuse, incarceration, grief, mental health struggles, and more. And found the strength to make it to the other side. My dad was shot and killed in his house. Yes, he was a drug dealer. Yes, he was a confidential informant, but he wasn't shot on a street corner. He wasn't shot in the middle of a drug deal. He was shot in his house, unarmed. Pretty Private isn't just a picture podcast. It's your personal guide for turning storylines into lifelines. Every Tuesday, make sure you listen to Pretty Private from the Black Effect podcast network. Tune in on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows. All right. Anything else that we haven't hit on that's been happening in your life?
Eddie
What I thought would. That you would bring up is if I booked a trip to, like, go see my friend in Wyoming.
Maria Hinojosa
Oh, did you? I mean, I thought if you did, you would have brought it up when we were talking about friends.
Eddie
Not. I did talk to him, though, but I'm not. And I told him that. That we should definitely put a date on the radar. And he said, I'll look at my calendar, you look at yours, and we'll figure it out.
Maria Hinojosa
Okay. And you're at the point where it's. We'll figure it out. Yeah.
Eddie
Which is kind of always the term that that means we're not going to do it.
Maria Hinojosa
Okay, then this is where you take accountability.
Eddie
Don't. Don't say that.
Maria Hinojosa
And you go to your calendar and you say, hey, I have this, this, and this weekend open. Let me know if any of those work for you.
Eddie
Okay? Okay.
Maria Hinojosa
Because nothing ever makes it out of the group chat when it's just like, yeah, we should do that. And nobody takes the initiative. Yeah, somebody does have to take the initiative.
Eddie
Is that. Where were you going?
Maria Hinojosa
I'm going to Montana.
Eddie
Yeah, okay. Montana. He lives in Wyoming.
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah, we're just close.
Eddie
Have you gone yet? When do you go?
Maria Hinojosa
Not yet. It'll be later this. This year.
Eddie
Okay.
Maria Hinojosa
Belize.
Eddie
Belize.
Maria Hinojosa
You're so dumb for that laugh.
Eddie
Like, Belize.
Maria Hinojosa
Eddie.
Eddie
Bozeman. Who goes to Bozeman?
Maria Hinojosa
A lot of people go to Bozeman. Who goes to Belize.
Eddie
Good point. Who goes to Belize? No one.
Maria Hinojosa
I don't think I know a single person. And right now, in my realm of people that has been to Belize.
Eddie
You don't understand how quickly I looked over. Like, I can't stare. I gotta look quickly and be like, she's going to Belize. And then write it down.
Maria Hinojosa
I'm like, she's going to place. Oh, she's also probably eloping and getting married. What?
Eddie
I didn't say that.
Maria Hinojosa
Okay.
Eddie
They said that you knew where it.
Maria Hinojosa
Was going to go.
Eddie
All I said was that she booked a flight to Belize. And obviously you're traveling with your boyfriend. Why wouldn't your boyfriend go with you to Belize? And my main question, too, Morgan, was, is the dog going to Belize?
Maria Hinojosa
If I had a private jet. Yeah, I don't have one of those.
Eddie
Why? You can't take your dog on a regular Belize flight.
Maria Hinojosa
No, she's too big.
Eddie
She's not a lap dog.
Maria Hinojosa
She's a lap dog. But she's 20 pounds. She does not fit in one of those carriers.
Eddie
Remy needs to go on a diet.
Maria Hinojosa
That's how big she's supposed to be.
Eddie
Remy. £20.
Maria Hinojosa
I think if anything, she could lose £1.
Eddie
Come on, girl.
Maria Hinojosa
That's what she's supposed to be. Little hot dog sausage. I can't take her. I used to because she was a ESA for a really long time.
Eddie
She's not that anymore. She lost her certification?
Maria Hinojosa
No, she still has it, but airlines have just changed a lot of that, and I just didn't want to mess with it. Anymore.
Eddie
9 11.
Maria Hinojosa
It wasn't. 911 was, like, 20 years ago.
Eddie
Right, right.
Maria Hinojosa
I was, like, 24.
Eddie
Well, it changed a lot of stuff for us.
Maria Hinojosa
Okay. But I wasn't even flying. I didn't even have Remy 24 years ago. Eddie.
Eddie
Right. That was stupid. Shouldn't have said that.
Maria Hinojosa
The timeline was not.
Eddie
I'm losing it. I'm losing.
Maria Hinojosa
You are. Just a little bit. But, yeah. No, it. All of that's changed. And she can't fit into a carrier that goes under the seat.
Eddie
Oh.
Maria Hinojosa
Oh, she's got too tall.
Eddie
I thought you were saying under the plane.
Maria Hinojosa
Oh, God. I would never do that.
Eddie
They would think they're dying. They would think they're in hell.
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah. No, I hate seeing that. I know there's some situations where, like, it's. That's the only way to get them from, like, another country to here or something, but I would never do that.
Eddie
What's it like down there? There's no way. It's, like, warm.
Maria Hinojosa
I don't know that it's warm or cold necessarily, but I do know that a lot of animals have died being traveled that way.
Eddie
Yeah. Which means it's not ideal.
Maria Hinojosa
No. And she's 10 years old. That's not even a. It was never even an option when she was a puppy, let alone.
Eddie
Right.
Maria Hinojosa
So we just do road trips.
Eddie
But. So how would she fit under the seat? Like, I can barely fit my backpack under the seat.
Maria Hinojosa
So. Like a backpack, like a carrier? There's ones. Think about a dog that's £10, £15.
Eddie
But not Remy. She's.
Maria Hinojosa
Stop calling Remy.
Eddie
Well, you said it. You're the one. You're the one that set her weight on the podcast, because that matters.
Maria Hinojosa
They say they can only be under a certain weight.
Eddie
Oh, what, that.
Maria Hinojosa
And they have to fit into a carrier. Yeah.
Eddie
And she's over that way.
Maria Hinojosa
She's, like, right at it. It's like £18, so. And I'm like, we're not going on a diet just so you can get stuffed in this bag to be under a car. Yeah. Stupid.
Eddie
Just one less spoon of chicken.
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah, you're. You're stupid.
Eddie
Do you. Do you give her chicken, or is she a vegan like you?
Maria Hinojosa
She's not a V. I'm also a vegetarian.
Eddie
Correct.
Maria Hinojosa
And no, I cook her turkey. She's allergic to chicken.
Eddie
How do you. Okay, turkey. How do you cook turkey?
Maria Hinojosa
Just ground it.
Eddie
No, but, like, you're, like. You don't eat it, so how do you just. Does it smell good to you?
Maria Hinojosa
No one. I can't smell, so that helps me out a lot.
Eddie
My bad. Forgot about that.
Maria Hinojosa
Just bringing up all my trauma and I can't smell.
Eddie
I'm sure that helps then.
Maria Hinojosa
And I don't touch it. I just, like, cut the package over and I just, like, drop it in the thing.
Eddie
You don't touch it. What if. What if, like, a splash gets on your hand?
Maria Hinojosa
I don't love that. We give me. Yeah, it gives me the evg.
Eddie
Yeah.
Maria Hinojosa
Because it's so slimy.
Eddie
Yeah, I see that.
Maria Hinojosa
Like it. Yeah. I'm not a fan, but it is what it is. I remember it was really funny. My. She has, like, some. She's one of those dogs that's prone to stuff on their teeth. Tartar. And so I really didn't want to put her under for surgery, especially as she's getting older. And my vet was like, okay, well, you could go and get a knuckle bone from a. From a butcher and have her chew on it, and it'll really help.
Eddie
What kind of knuckle?
Maria Hinojosa
I don't know. Eddie.
Eddie
From a knuckle?
Maria Hinojosa
No, like a animal.
Eddie
Knuckle. What animal has knuckles?
Maria Hinojosa
Knuckle bone. I think it's like a knee. It's like a. Don't ask me.
Eddie
The only one I would think was a monkey maybe. Like, what else has a hand like that?
Maria Hinojosa
No, I think it's just called that.
Eddie
Okay. Sorry.
Maria Hinojosa
You're asking me the anatomy when I don't even eat meat.
Eddie
Well, you brought up knuckle bone, like, as a normal thing. I've never heard of that.
Maria Hinojosa
I'm repeating what I got told. So imagine me just a little vegetarian.
Eddie
Yeah.
Maria Hinojosa
Walking into a butcher shop.
Eddie
Do you have a knuckle bone?
Maria Hinojosa
First of all, not a great experience for me. I was not well.
Eddie
I was like, I see meat everywhere.
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah. And like, straight up, like, yeah, it was not good.
Eddie
And they're cutting me.
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah. I was not well.
Eddie
Smells like me. But you can't smell.
Maria Hinojosa
Do you really have to keep reminding me I can't smell? Not necessary. So I walk in here. It's not a pleasant experience. I'm, like, looking everywhere, and I go. And I see, like, she said it'd be like, these kind of different parts. Box, whatever. So I go over there, and sure enough, there's all these different, like, bone parts. And I'm just, like, gagging.
Eddie
Hold on. There are bone parts. What butcher shop did you go to? Is it like a.
Maria Hinojosa
It was back in Kansas, because this is when I was home for Christmas.
Eddie
But is this, like, just A regular Amish butcher shop. Okay. And where were the bones? In a box.
Maria Hinojosa
Like in a freezer. Like a little container box. Yeah.
Eddie
And they had all kinds of bones in there.
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah. Different kinds.
Eddie
Whoa.
Maria Hinojosa
Apparently for different things. I don't know. I don't know what y' all meat eaters do.
Eddie
Well, not like that. I mean, I don't know. I've never gone to a store to buy bones.
Maria Hinojosa
You've never been to, like, a butcher?
Eddie
I have. Yeah. And as a Hispanic, we buy all kinds of, like, cuts.
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah. And I think a lot of that is for people buy them for their dogs to, like, chew on bones and all of that stuff because it's better than, you know, the stuff that you're buying at the store. Anyways, this thing was disgusting. It was so bloody. It was, like, completely raw.
Eddie
Of course she love it.
Maria Hinojosa
I took this thing home, Eddie. Okay. I went through this whole thing, and I was not well through the whole experience. I get home, I'm like, she better freaking eat this thing. This is not a good experience for me. I put it on a towel and because they said it would start to, like, bleed, because raw. Whatever. So I'm like, sitting there, I put it on the ground, but the knuckle bone on top of the towel, and I'm just sitting there, and she sits there and she just looks at me like, what do you want me to do with that?
Eddie
Like, she's like, that's gross.
Maria Hinojosa
No, literally, she sniffed it and was so disgusted with me. She thought that I had just brought her the worst thing I could have ever brought her.
Eddie
Oh, my gosh. That is so funny. So I'm googling knuckle bone. Yeah.
Maria Hinojosa
I don't want to look at it again. It was disgusting. It was like a ball knuckle bone. Raw meat.
Eddie
Knuckle bones are high density beef bones that are a good source of collagen, gelatin, marrow, cartilage, tendons and ligaments. They are often used. Oh, they're used for making bone broth. That's what people do. Or beef stock. Hey, look. Knuckle bones can also be given to medium to large dogs with strong jaws.
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah. Because it's really good for their teeth.
Eddie
And that's Remy now. Medium to large.
Maria Hinojosa
She's not medium to large.
Eddie
20 pounds.
Maria Hinojosa
Anyways, I went to a butcher all for my dog, all for her to sit there and say, I'm not touching that thing. You know what?
Eddie
You want to see a picture?
Maria Hinojosa
No, I don't, because I saw it at the butcher shop. Look I don't want to see it.
Eddie
That's a big bone. That's a big bone. Okay, so it's not a real knuckle. It's just. It kind of look, it looks like a fist.
Maria Hinojosa
I did not need to see that again, like.
Eddie
Yeah, you're right. They're bloody and everything.
Maria Hinojosa
It was not fun. All for her to just not even touch it.
Eddie
That's so crazy. You love your dog so much you would go to a meat market to get her. Yeah, that's crazy.
Maria Hinojosa
That's how much I love her.
Eddie
Yeah.
Maria Hinojosa
And it didn't even work and she still had to get her teacher.
Eddie
So what you do with it? Did you say that?
Maria Hinojosa
No, I. We didn't have thrown. It was in the freezer at my parents house for like three months. And my dad called me one day, he's like, so do you want this? What do you want me to do this? I was like, you can have it. I don't know for me to even touch it.
Eddie
He makes bone broth out of it.
Maria Hinojosa
No, no, I'm pretty sure it got thrown away. Yeah, that was not so. You know, I do have a lot of love for her.
Eddie
Yes, you do love her.
Maria Hinojosa
And I will cook meat for her for good reason.
Eddie
She's so sweet.
Maria Hinojosa
She is. Anyways. Okay, you want to make fun of me some more? Are we done?
Eddie
No, we're done. We're done. It smells weird in here. Can you smell that?
Maria Hinojosa
Stop bringing it to my attention. I'm working on it. I'm trying to get my smell back. Okay. All right, Eddie, tell everybody where they.
Eddie
Can find you at Producer Eddie on Instagram, on Tick Toc. I'm not really on Twitter. Like, sure, Twitter. And yeah, x 25 whistles podcast. Me and Bobby, new sports podcast. That's pretty much it. I'm giving my home address, but I don't want you there.
Maria Hinojosa
That would be weird.
Eddie
Yeah, that would be weird.
Maria Hinojosa
I don't know, maybe people could start helping you with your parking problem.
Eddie
My parking problem?
Maria Hinojosa
Yeah.
Eddie
Donald, don't worry. I'm taking care of that parking problem myself.
Maria Hinojosa
Sounds like you're gonna kill somebody.
Eddie
I might.
Maria Hinojosa
Okay, we're gonna get out of here before Eddie commits a crime or admits to committing a crime. And you can find me at webgirlmorgan. And make sure you follow the show YouTube page, obbyboneshow. You can subscribe and watch Eddie vomit on a live stream.
Eddie
Don't do that. Trust me, you don't want to see it.
Maria Hinojosa
Bye, everybody. That's the best bits of the Week with Morgan.
Eddie
Thanks for listening. Be sure to check out the other two parts this weekend. Go follow the show on all social.
Maria Hinojosa
Platforms obbyboneshow and follow ebgirlmorgan to submit.
Eddie
Your listener questions for next week's episode.
Maria Hinojosa
When I became a journalist, I was the first Latina in the newsrooms where I worked. I'm Maria Hinojosa. I spent my career creating journalism that centers voices who have been historically sidelined. From the most pressing news stories to deep cultural explorations, Latino USA is journalism with heart. Listen to Latino usa, the longest running Latino news and culture show in the United States. Hear it on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast. Hey guys, it's Janae AKA Cheekies from Cheekies and Chill Podcast and I'm bringing you an all new mini podcast series called Sincerely, Janae. Sure, I'm a singer, author, businesswoman and podcaster, but at the end of the day, I am human and that's why I'm sharing my ups and downs with you in real time and on the go. Listen to Cheekies and chill on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you you get your podcasts. In 2020, a group of young women found themselves in an AI fueled nightmare. Someone was posting photos. It was just me naked. Well, not me, but me with someone else's body part. This is Levittown, a new podcast from iHeart podcasts Bloomberg and Kaleidoscope about the rise of deep fate, 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. In sitcoms, when someone has a problem, they just blurt it out and move on. Well, I lost my job and my parakeet is missing. How was your day? But the real world is different. Managing life's challenges can be overwhelming.
Eddie
So what do we do?
Maria Hinojosa
We get support. The Huntsman Mental Health Institute and the Ad Council have mental health resources available for you at loveyourmindtoday.org that's loveyourmindtoday.org See how much further you can go when you take care of your mental health. Hey, I'm Radhi devlukia and I'm the host of a really good Cry podcast and I have the opportunity to talk to Dr. Julie Smith. Julie is a clinical psychologist, a bestselling author, and one of the most trusted voices in mental health online. Resentment isn't something that the world owes you, it's that, you know, something that you need to work on. Look out for those feelings of resentment because they're a sign that there was some sort of boundary that wasn't held before. Listen to a really good cry on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. This is an iHeart podcast.
Detailed Summary of "Eddie Breaks Down His Hot Dog Challenge" – The Bobby Bones Show
The Bobby Bones Show, hosted by Premiere Networks, released the episode titled "Eddie Breaks Down His Hot Dog Challenge" on August 2, 2025. In this engaging episode, co-host Eddie takes center stage as he recounts his adventurous attempt to conquer a hot dog eating challenge, the hurdles he faced during the endeavor, and the lessons he gleaned from the experience. The episode is structured through a lively conversation between Eddie and Maria Hinojosa, offering listeners both humor and insightful reflections.
The episode kicks off with Maria Hinojosa welcoming Eddie to the "Best Bits Weekend" segment. This sets the stage for an intimate and candid discussion about Eddie's recent escapades.
Maria [02:43]:
"What's up, everybody? It's Best Bits weekend, and a lot of you are gonna be excited because Eddie's joining me."
Eddie introduces the main topic—the hot dog eating challenge he undertook. Initially confident, he shares his casual relationship with hot dogs, seeing them as a staple at events like ball games.
Eddie [03:28]:
"Hot dogs are like. They're just hot dogs, Right. If you're at a ball game or whatever, like, you crave a hot dog."
During his challenge, Eddie received significant support from listeners, accumulating approximately $400 in Venmo tips. This financial backing adds a layer of community involvement to his endeavor.
Eddie [03:53]:
"I got about $400 Venmo tips in that. Crazy."
Despite not completing the challenge as planned, Eddie chooses to utilize the tips he received. His decision to buy a lawnmower, despite receiving backlash for it, highlights his light-hearted approach to the situation.
Eddie [04:05]:
"I want to buy a lawnmower."
Maria [04:05]:
"Really? Actually, what are you going to do?"
Eddie details his attempt to eat 21 hot dogs, describing the physical and mental challenges he encountered. What began as a simple challenge quickly turned into a difficult ordeal as the sheer number of hot dogs took its toll.
Eddie [06:13]:
"So my body was like, there is no more room in here. Like, you put one more hot dog in here, I'm gonna throw it up."
During the live broadcast of his attempt, Eddie experienced unsettling physical symptoms that almost led to another moment of vomiting. The live audience's anticipation added to his anxiety.
Eddie [09:44]:
"And in the live, I go, oh, oh. And I held my mouth. And, like, people, you can see the comments coming and be like, oh, my gosh, she's gonna throw up. He's gonna throw up."
Post-challenge, Eddie expresses feelings of failure despite his initial optimism. He contemplates the strategies he employed and whether external advice influenced his unsuccessful attempt.
Eddie [08:08]:
"I feel like a failure a little bit because I really thought that I could do it."
Maria [08:30]:
"I don't think you should feel like a failure. And I think it's fair that you involuntarily quit because threw up."
Eddie reflects on the multiple strategies suggested by others and realizes that perhaps listening to too many opinions diluted his own judgment, leading to his downfall in the challenge.
Eddie [07:43]:
"I listened to too many people."
Discussing his age and health, Eddie acknowledges the need to prioritize well-being over challenging endeavors. He emphasizes the importance of being cautious to avoid potential harm.
Eddie [12:57]:
"I'm 46 years old... I can get hurt now."
Maria [13:04]:
"Like, you can't keep putting yourself through that."
Beyond the hot dog challenge, the conversation shifts to personal topics such as maintaining friendships and balancing family life. Eddie shares insights into his efforts to cultivate meaningful relationships outside his familial responsibilities.
Maria [30:54]:
"I'm proud of you. I'm serious. Because that's hard to do."
Eddie [31:33]:
"I'm realizing that it is very important to have friends outside of your little family group, because your family, it's your family, but you're with them all the time, and you do kind of need that escape a little bit."
The episode concludes with playful exchanges and mutual encouragement between Maria and Eddie, highlighting the camaraderie and support inherent in their relationship.
Eddie [34:44]:
"I can't do that. I can't do that. Honestly, the nine hot dogs, no problem. Right? Like, I did that one time."
Maria [34:54]:
"You're no longer allowed to be in. Take one more break. We'll be right back."
Eddie [03:28]:
"Hot dogs are like. They're just hot dogs, Right. If you're at a ball game or whatever, like, you crave a hot dog."
Eddie [04:05]:
"I want to buy a lawnmower."
Eddie [06:13]:
"So my body was like, there is no more room in here. Like, you put one more hot dog in here, I'm gonna throw it up."
Maria [08:30]:
"I don't think you should feel like a failure. And I think it's fair that you involuntarily quit because threw up."
Eddie [07:43]:
"I listened to too many people."
Eddie [12:57]:
"I'm 46 years old... I can get hurt now."
Maria [30:54]:
"I'm proud of you. I'm serious. Because that's hard to do."
Eddie [31:33]:
"I'm realizing that it is very important to have friends outside of your little family group..."
"Eddie Breaks Down His Hot Dog Challenge" serves as both an entertaining and educational narrative about personal limits and the importance of self-awareness. Eddie's candid recounting of his experience showcases the physical and emotional challenges inherent in competitive eating. The support from listeners, reflected through generous tips, underscores the community's investment in his endeavors, even when outcomes are uncertain.
The episode emphasizes the significance of balancing ambitious goals with health considerations, especially as one ages. Eddie's introspection on listening to too many external opinions highlights the value of trusting one's instincts and making informed decisions based on personal well-being.
Additionally, the conversation extends beyond the challenge, delving into the importance of maintaining friendships and personal growth amidst familial responsibilities. This holistic approach ensures that listeners not only enjoy the humorous aspects of the hot dog challenge but also resonate with the deeper, more relatable themes of self-improvement and community support.
This comprehensive summary captures all key points, discussions, insights, and conclusions from the episode, providing a rich and engaging overview for those who haven't had the opportunity to listen.