
Loading summary
A
This is an iHeart podcast guaranteed human Owning a home comes with a lot of things nobody really prepares you for, including yard care. Sunday is a company trying to make that part easier. They start with a soil test and climate data to build a yard plan tailored to where you live, then ship everything directly to your door. No guesswork, no dragging bags of fertilizer, and instead of harsh chemicals, Sunday uses simple nutrient dense ingredients like seaweed, molasses and iron. Everything hooks up to a hose, which honestly sounds like my speed. If your yard feels more stressful than satisfying, Sunday's approach makes a lot of sense. Go to getsunday.com to get your free custom yard analysis. That's getsunday.com living with a rare autoimmune condition brings uncertainty, but it can also create community in season six of Untold Life with a Severe Autoimmune Condition, they go beyond MG and CIDP as host Martine Hackett welcomes stories from other conditions like myositis and IgAN into the conversation. Untold Stories is produced by Ruby Studio in partnership with argenics. Listen to Untold Stories Life with a Severe autoimmune condition on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or or wherever you get your podcasts make every day feel epic in the all new Hyundai Palisade Hybrid. The Palisade Hybrid is packed full of features, cutting edge tech and up to an EPA estimated 619 miles of range on select trims and class leading interior space. Seating configurations for 78 passengers available HTRAC All Wheel Drive so you can be ready to go anywhere in style. Learn more about the Hyundai Palisade@HyundaiUSA.com call call 562-314-4603 for complete details. Beth and Rip are back in a new series, Dutton Ranch, streaming on Paramount. Kelly Reilly and Cole Hauser return and this time they're taking on Texas as Beth and Rip begin to build a future together. Peace will have to wait as they face corruption, danger and a ruthless rival ranch willing to protect its secrets at all costs. Legacy is a beautiful thing, but only if it survives. Dutton Ranch Starring Cole Hauser, Kelly Reilly, Annette Benning and Ed Harris. Now streaming on Paramount it's time for the good news. I like to go about every few weeks into my Apple subscriptions and see what I can unsubscribe to and I try to really subscribe always through Apple now. And I'm not doing a commercial for Apple at all. They don't advertise with us at all, but it just keeps it all organized. And so I found this one app that I have and I pay 50 bucks a month too. And it's a clothing app. And what they do is all of the clothes that come off of, I don't want to say displays because it's not individual stores, but like companies who have these clothes that they're showing in ads, they then put them on, on this app and you can buy them really cheap. So you have to pay to subscribe 50 bucks a month, and then you can buy clothes really cheap off of it, like name brand stuff. And so I just didn't use it that much. And for a while I did, and I was finding really nice clothes there for cheap, but again, with a subscription fee. So I went yesterday and I was unsubscribed from it, feeling pretty good about it. And it said, you know, as of like June 18, it will be canceled because I guess it already paid for this month coming up. And so I was like, all right, I'll go back over. I spent so much money on it yesterday. So I unsubscribe. But then I spent so much money on the app again going, oh, I haven't done this in a while. And I found a lot of good clothes over there.
B
I feel like for a $50 a month subscription fee, you must be getting access to like.
A
Yes, really good stuff. Really good stuff. Really, at times, higher end stuff. But for like such a deal, 80% off.
B
Oh, my God, they have women's.
A
Yeah, it's mostly women's and little bit guys. Oh, yeah. But I had to, like, submit and they had to, like, accept me back in the day.
C
Oh, did I, like, apply?
A
I know, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. So. But I unsubscribed from something that was costing me money. That's good. I like that. And then I bought a bunch of stuff and I guess I like that, but I'm out. As of like three weeks from now, I'm out. No more paying that. I do have like a Halo subscription, though, for that dog Halo fence thing that I cannot. I've talked about this before. I cannot get it off my account because it wasn't done through Apple. It was done through a credit card. And I don't. I cannot find. I don't even know what email address I used. I've tried every way. Don't know your login. Okay. Don't know your password. Okay. Don't. I can't get in. And every month it's like 12 bucks pops up on my phone. They're charging Me, I'm gonna have to cancel my whole credit card. I'm gonna have to move.
C
I'm gonna have to change your name.
A
I'm gonna do everything to get this thing to stop charging me. Like, these laws. And they try to make these laws to make things so easily cancelable. And obviously they're fought against because big companies don't want it to be so easy for people to cancel things. But this Halo thing is driving me crazy. I bet you I've done this for two years.
C
Dang. And how much is it?
A
Like 12 bucks a month. That's what pops up.
C
Yeah.
A
Yeah. That ain't good. But I did cancel a subscription. That's the best part of my day yesterday. Really didn't have much going on yesterday. I mean, worked a lot and went to bed pretty early. Didn't watch anything. Arkansas. Keith sent me a picture this morning. I think he was out on the lake.
C
Let me see.
A
And he said, I got mine on, too. And it's him holding up a fish with a headlamp on.
B
Oh. Huh.
C
Oh, he's got the headlamp.
A
He's got the headlamp.
B
That's funny.
C
Awesome.
A
Yeah. So.
C
Yeah.
A
All right. That's mine. Tell me something good, Amy.
B
So I was cleaning out my closet, I guess it was last weekend, and there was this one dress I was looking for, especially with summer coming up. And I was just thinking of, oh, yeah, if I do go on. Not if, but I will be taking some sort of a trip somewhere. And I was like, where's this dress? Because I wore it on my trip last year, and I. I loved it. So I was like, hmm, I can't find it anywhere. Well, so then I go to the dry cleaner. It's there. I got it. Got the dress back. So it's been there for, I don't know, since last summer.
C
Wow.
B
I was wondering when they still had it.
A
Like, what's their rule of now it's mine.
B
I mean, I would think. Well, before. I think I just got lucky. Well, I mean, I don't know that they hold on to stuff for a year.
A
Was it a really nice dress?
B
No, but it's, like, a cute dress. And it has pockets. Every girl loves a dress with pockets. And it's just a good summer dress to have. Like, I even. I had it altered to fit like a glove. So it's just a staple that I'll probably be able to have for a long time. That's why I was like, oh, shoot. It's easy to travel with. Doesn't really wrinkle. It's. You can fold it up. Easy to take. And I was like, where is that? And so I was just thankful that the dry cleaner still had it.
A
Did you go, oh, it's at the dry cleaner? Or did you go, maybe I should go check the dry cleaner, because I've checked everywhere else.
B
It was so. It was. Maybe I should check the dry cleaner, because I've checked everywhere else for days. And then I was thinking, okay, the. The. The main things are, did. Did I let somebody borrow it? Did my daughter just take it? That's something we've had to work on a lot. Like, but not take it, because she's borrowing it from my closet. But I've just been trying to get her to, hey, Mom, I may I wear this? Because I tell her one day you're gonna have roommates. And this is how we do life. You don't just go into your roommate's closet and take it. Cause I want. I've. I always wanted a daughter to share clothes with, so I think it's awesome. So. So eliminated her. She didn't have it. And then I guess just process of elimination was like, well, I guess I'll try the dry cleaners. And sure enough, it was there.
A
Did they, like, grab their friends there and be like, you can't. She's here. The blue dress, she's back. She's arrived.
B
Wow. But the thing is, I've dropped other stuff off there this year and picked it up, but this one must have just been hidden somewhere. Cause it's not like they added it
A
to my order, so it's their fault.
B
Well, I mean, I didn't ask for it. I should have said when I went to pick up other things, like, oh, I have a blue dress here as well. Can you look for it? Or.
A
It's weird that it wouldn't all be in your name. They wouldn't hand you that back as well.
B
I know. I think this was just a interest, like a.
C
Let's just blame it on them. Why not?
B
Or me not asking for it.
A
But if I go back, if I. If I go to the dry cleaner and I'm like, hey, I'm here to pick up my order. They give me all the clothes that are in my name.
B
That's what I'm saying. It should have been with it. So I think this one was just, like, hiding out somewhere. And then when I went to specifically ask for it, they were able to find it.
A
If I were a dry cleaner, I would find things that look good on Me. And I'd probably wear them and then re clean them while they're waiting for
C
it to get clean.
B
Oh, like that's your wardrobe is other people's clothes.
A
Yeah. Like if there was an event or a graduation or a wedding and there was a suit that fit me and it was awesome, I probably wear it, come right back home after, put it back, get it dry cleaned again. And the problem is if someone comes to get it in that one brief moment that I'm wearing it, it gets forgotten. Like your dress. So my theory is someone was wearing your dress whenever you came to get your last batch.
B
Oh.
C
Oh, wow.
B
And then, and then I never ended up with it.
A
Well, I'm glad you got it back.
B
Dry cleaning is one of those things I don't really get or understand, but somehow we drop our clothes off and I don't know what they do to it to make it.
C
Yeah, I don't even know what dry cleaning is.
B
I just know when it, when I pick it up, I take it out of that plastic bag right away.
A
Mike will give us a full breakdown of what dry cleaning is in about two minutes. Okay, Eddie, tell me something good.
C
Dude, yesterday was actually, actually awesome. So it was my kids, last day of school. Picked them up from school, blaring schools out for summer. Alice Cooper, cute schools out and they're just like so excited. Then we went out to eat, we went to Peter Sushi, and everyone was friendly. And I mean, my kids, they weren't fighting, they weren't throwing food, so everything was really nice. There was a wrinkle in the whole thing. So like around 9 o' clock last night, my son comes to me, is like, dad, I gotta confess something. I left my apple watch at the restaurant because I can't find it anywhere. So TBD on that. We're gonna call as soon as they open. I guess they open for lunch.
A
Should check the dry cleaner. Amy's dry cleaner.
C
Yeah, the guy's wearing it right now, but so there's that. We gotta wait on that. But yesterday was just a good day.
A
Why did he take it off?
C
He takes it off a lot. And I asked him the same question. He said that the band kind of bothers him. So when I'm doing stuff like eating, I take it off. But what's crazy is that we were already in the car yesterday after dinner and he's, he said, oh, I forgot my pen. He has one of those cool pens, you know that you pick the color on it.
A
Oh man, those were awesome. Back in the day.
C
Yeah. He's like, I left my pen in the restaurant. So he went back in the restaurant to get the pen, but I guess didn't realize that his watch was there. And we're not really sure that the watch is there. He just thinks that's the last place he left it.
A
So why not get him a new band? That doesn't bother him.
C
Let's find the watch first, and then we'll.
B
Because that's the first time he revealed that it was the band. Right? You just learned that yesterday.
C
Correct.
B
My son, I can't get him to take his watch off. I want him to, especially when he runs. You know what drives me crazy when he's racing is he's worried about setting his timer.
A
So you think he's gonna fall because he's looking at his watch?
B
No, but, like, why wait? You don't even worry about that. They have official times. You don't need to time yourself.
A
Oh, you do while you're running.
B
Not. Not at a race.
A
Well, can you see the time the entire time you're running?
B
No, but he's not looking down at it. And while he's running, he just wants to start it, but it's like, he might need to.
A
Oh, I don't know if he looks at it at all. If he doesn't look at it at all. Okay. But if he needs to see, like, halfway through a lap and then you can't see, like, what he's pacing himself at, I would understand it then.
B
Okay.
A
But I don't know if you can see the times the whole time.
B
Yeah, well, I don't know. I just was thinking when Eddie was saying that, I was like, I wish Stevenson would take his watch off.
C
Is it Velcro? My sense is Velcro.
B
He wore. No, it's a thing. He wore some watch you got him to. To its death.
A
Oh, yeah.
B
Yeah. So you got him something like that. A red. Yeah. G Shock or something. He wore that thing till, like, he just does not like taking watches off. I had to order him, but I got the cheaper version. After the red one died or the band, like, something happened. And he was like, I liked that one, but with camo. And then I found one on Amazon that's like, a dupe, and that's the one he used to.
A
Well, that one's gonna die a lot quicker.
B
Well, let's see if Uncle Bobby wants to get him another G Shock. That's fine.
A
Mike, can you explain the process of dry cleaning? It's called dry cleaning because they don't use Water. They use a chemical instead. So it's sweet. It goes into, like a big. What looks like a normal washing machine, but no water. They put chemicals in it, and then that machine also dries it.
C
Man, that's. That's bad.
A
Does the chemical. Is it blown through, like an air chemical sprayed on? Because if it's a wet chemical, that feels like pretty much water.
C
Yeah, yeah.
A
They say it's. Yeah, it just doesn't have water in it. So that's why it's dry cleaning. But if the chemical's wet, it ain't really dry.
B
So, like, could they just bottle up whatever they do it? And we spray our clothes at home.
A
Well, don't we have that just like Febreze?
C
Yeah, yeah.
A
Well, they do that, too. They spot clean it and then they put it in the.
C
Okay, but I've seen. Don't they have like a steamer thing where it's like.
A
That's the second. The third process after it's been dried, to be fair. Steam wet. Yeah, steam water.
B
Yeah, but different.
C
Hey, they're fooling us.
A
But the way they do it, they say it doesn't shrink, fade, or distort any of the clothing.
B
Right.
A
So it's not fully dry. But the effects of using wet don't happen to the clothes because wet then does all of that. That shrinking.
B
I hate when I think I can get away with ignoring the tag. Like, what it says. Like, sometimes the tag will be like, dry, clean, only I'm like, yeah, yeah, yeah. What? And then I try to wash it, and then it comes out like the size of Baby Billy's outfits. And I'm like, cool. I guess I'm not going to be wearing that anymore.
A
Lunchbox, tell me something good.
D
Yeah. So my wife is responsible for getting my children to school. And my oldest finished first grade, the middle finished kindergarten. So she's been getting them to school on time for two years and not a single tardy. So if they take the bus, ride their bike, or she has to drive them, they have not been late one day in two years. And so I would like to say that is a pretty good accomplishment for my wife. So I'm very happy about that.
A
Eddie, with your kids. Same.
C
What?
A
How do they get there?
C
My wife takes them.
A
Same as Lunchbox. His wife.
C
What was. What is. What's the difference? I guess he dropped. She drops them off Lunchbox sometimes, but
D
sometimes most of the time they ride the bus. But, you know, if they. If she lets them sleep in. But I'm just saying, like, if they're riding the bus, their bike or she's driving them. In two years, they. They didn't have one tardy. So I'm pretty impressed by my wife, what it is.
C
But what's tricky about my wives is my, they go to different schools, right. So like she has to drop one off a little earlier. And then so if one of them's right on time, sometimes the other one's going to be late. So that's kind of where she runs into trouble. And usually the older one is late.
A
That's good for your kids, though. Lunchbox. Like they're taught be on time. Right?
D
Yeah. No, no, I'm. That's what I'm saying. I'm glad. Like, I was worried because my wife is not the most punctual.
A
You can use that punctual.
D
Time management's not the best. And so I was worried they were going to be late all the time. But two years and boom, nailed it.
A
Pretty good. Morgan, tell me something good.
E
So I played sand volleyball again yesterday and I had so much fun. We played in the rain for two hours.
A
Are you good?
E
I love volleyball. Yeah, I used to be a libero.
A
Oh, you know that is that person that wears the off color jersey that's always kind of like the defensive way one?
B
No.
C
Oh, I thought that was the captain.
A
Morgan, what's a libero?
E
Yeah, it's a libero. You're typically staying on the back row to be a passer. Like you're really good at passing. Typically. Also as short people, because we hit from the back row versus hitting up on the necks, we're not as tall as the people who would typically be in the front row. Like a blocker or a hitter.
A
And aren't you wearing an off color jersey if you're playing competitively?
E
Yes. Yeah, I did when we played in club. So that was the role that I really took on. But sand volleyball is so much different than court volleyball. So I've had. It's been a learning curve for sure.
A
Are people surprised that you're good when you show up?
E
No, honestly, people who play Sam, they play in rec leagues all the time and they are so good. Oh.
A
So the competition is pretty tough already.
E
Yeah. So I'm, I feel like I'm a beginner again, even though I have like, you know, when your body kind of remembers the skill set but you're having to reteach it, that's kind of where I'm at. So I can serve and I can pass really good. But learning to jump in sand and move in sand is just a lot different.
A
Morgan said somebody's phone got stolen there the. While they were playing sand volleyball.
E
Yeah, you just put.
A
You just lay your phone, your stuff out, and somebody grabbed with somebody's phone.
B
Yeah.
E
There's kind of like bleachers and chairs, because it's all at these sand courts. And you set your stuff over there, and it's by where we're at. And everybody's phones. Everybody's stuff is over there. But one of the girls, her phone was just sitting there, and somebody came and took it. She tracked it down. It was to, like, a warehouse, and by the time she got there, it was gone.
A
What are you gonna do with the phone?
B
I know, because you can't get into it.
C
You can't reset the whole thing and just start it over.
A
I think if you could, more phones would get stolen.
B
Yeah, I. I don't. I don't think you can do anything, Mike.
A
It takes some working, but I think you can if you know the right people.
B
Oh, well, it's one of those.
A
The way Mike says it to me, that feels like Mike knows the right people. I feel like he's protecting the right people.
C
My son's watch had this, like, option to claim that it was lost. We hit the button, but I don't know what that does.
A
Freezes it.
C
Okay.
A
Like, if it's lost, that means if somebody takes it, they can't know the right people. Right. Right.
C
So, Mike, do the right people know about the loss feature?
A
Maybe they can also. If you know the right. Right people get through that. Can't you find it, though? Don't you have to find my.
C
Yeah, and it's. It shows that it's at the restaurant.
A
Okay, then it's at the restaurant.
C
Yeah, but it's not. It's. It's like the last place it was.
B
Oh, yeah. That.
A
Okay. But then there's not that many places since.
B
Well, so. Yeah, he didn't.
C
TJ Maxx right next to it.
B
Y' all went there.
C
Y.
B
You took the whole family to TJ Maxx. Wow.
A
How much you guys spend.
C
My wife bought a bunch of clothes.
B
She.
A
Oh, yeah. You don't know money.
C
So she probably spent maybe.
B
That's right.
C
Couple hundred bucks. Yeah. You have a lot of summer clothes.
B
You're not involved.
A
Probably at the restaurant, then.
C
That's what we're hoping. Tbd.
A
That's what I would bet. Because it would say last place of TJ Maxx, then.
B
Mm.
A
If that were the case. All right. There you go. That's it. Good job, everybody. That's what it's all about. That was. Tell me something good. It's time for the good news with Bobby. Tell me something good. Guy finds a winning lottery ticket worth 500 bucks, returns it, goes, hey, this is not my ticket. Here you go. Gave it back.
C
Why would he do that?
D
Yeah, why would you do that? I mean, does it have a name on it?
C
No.
D
Exactly.
A
The man found the misplaced Pick 3 ticket on the floor of a gas station.
B
That's crazy.
A
No, he turned it in. And so everybody's like, dang, why'd you do that? And then he bought another ticket, like, I don't know, a couple of weeks later and won $586,000.
B
Wow.
C
Wow, wow. He was supposed to turn it in.
D
Okay, maybe karma is a thing.
A
Yeah, man. He won $586,000. The guy who turned in the $500 ticket.
C
Wow. So do you think he was being
A
tested by Abraham type thing?
C
Being tested? I don't know what that means.
A
God challenged Abraham for.
C
Got it. Kill me a son.
A
Well, kill your son. And then Abraham didn't do it, and instead he killed a ram. Correct. Saved, yes. Are you familiar with that story lunchbox in the Bible?
D
Why would he want him to kill his son?
A
Well, there's a whole Old Testament test. Yeah, Listen. It's a little weird anyway.
C
Oh, they were crazy back then.
A
It is. I'm telling you. What, but you never heard the story? You never heard that? No.
D
Why? I mean, here's a test, man. If you go kill your son, you're loyal to me.
A
Yes. Yeah.
C
Would you do it? No. See, there you go.
D
And that's what we believe in.
A
It's a weird.
C
That's what we believe.
A
No, that's a weird one for me, too. I'll be honest with you. And then they. It was a ram, right? Then in the end, he killed the ram instead. But that's. Yeah, you're right. That's a weird one.
D
But he killed the ram.
A
But you don't know these stories in the Bible.
C
Yeah, these are old ones, dude. No idea.
A
Yeah, this is Old Testament stuff.
C
Yeah.
A
Yeah.
D
We're the new. Right
A
now he's. Anymore. Now he's struggling. He's like, I should. Yeah.
D
So what's the new. Like, we just changed the word.
A
No, that's a no. No, no, no. Oh, you think the Old Testament is interesting.
B
Oh, no, he doesn't.
C
Yes, he does. Let him talk.
A
No, he doesn't.
B
Wow.
A
You think the Old Testament is the older version of The New Testament. And they just changed the words.
D
Yeah, they made it more relatable now.
A
God, it is like they got rid
B
of that but because of one's.
A
Well, that is not it.
C
And you think it's the same characters as one as old.
A
It's like Home Alone 2.
D
Maybe. Maybe they change the names. I don't know.
C
Okay.
D
So I mean are they still writing things or is it just like. Is it. Who is finished?
B
What?
C
What is there a scene?
B
What like Harry Potter?
D
Well, I mean don't things change? Don't eventually get to add some things? Like not this amendment.
A
Well, they're. When they're being translated from Hebrew to Greek, Greek to all the languages, there are things in translation that they feel sometimes didn't get translated as clearly. But. But that was it. Like they don't. They're not.
D
So there's no new rules.
A
There's no newer.
B
There's no new books to the Bible in that.
D
Weird guys in that. Just, just.
A
And they did take. And they did remove certain books too.
D
But hear me out. Like it's 2026, right? When's the last time something's been written in the good old book?
A
But that mean the good book.
C
Good old book.
A
Anyway, this Guy found a $500 ticket. Turn it in.
D
Like literally, when is the last time? So that's what I'm saying.
A
There's. It's not a. It's not a diary. It doesn't keep getting updated.
D
Well, it should.
C
Why? It's.
D
We're going to follow the. We're going to follow life from 7 million years ago instead of updating.
C
You want to know what's crazy?
D
Smart.
C
You want to know what's crazy though? We keep making the same mistakes as humans. So it's the same thing.
A
That's true too. Yeah.
D
So I mean, it just seems a little like you might want to update it. Like have some different rules.
B
How many years ago do you think Jesus walked the earth?
D
I have no clue.
B
No, I just curious.
D
Guess probably before the Civil War.
A
No, after. Actually it was after the Civil War. Anyway, this guy just reminded me of Abraham. It didn't remind me of Abraham until you guys said that it was a test. It didn't me. That's awesome. Yeah, that's. Thank you, Eddie.
C
Yeah.
A
Takes you down a whole path. I wasn't really expecting to go.
C
All right.
A
There you go. That's what it's all about. That was. Tell me something good. It's time for the good news with Amy. Tell me something good.
B
So this a Young student named Mahogany. She's about to graduate high school, but at the same exact time she's getting her associate's degree.
A
That's cool. She took enough classes to have her two year done.
B
Yeah. Over the past four years, she has been enrolled in high school, also enrolled in doing the college work, all while maintaining a 4.0 GBA.
C
Dang.
A
I was always confused by schools that allowed it to go over 4.0 because you take advanced classes and it was worth more.
D
Yeah.
A
I think it's like you can't give 110% effort. It maxes at 100. Let's get our scales. Same. Because somebody could have crushed it and got a 4.0 and they don't have the ability. And then someone's like, well, I got a 4.9. Well, I don't like you, you know?
B
Yeah, yeah.
A
So good for her. 4.0. Nailed it.
B
Well, the story gets even better. I'm ready for it now. She has acceptance offers from 91 colleges, along with $3 million in scholarship offers. She said she didn't expect so many acceptance letters, and she credits her faith and hard work for helping her succeed.
C
Does that mean she had to send a bu of applications? Like 90?
A
I would imagine she sent off a bunch. Yeah.
B
Or do random schools just mail you accept?
A
I don't think they're out. It's not like head athletes. Yeah, they're out head hunting. They're scouting. The. The scholarship money is awesome. I guess the part that's kind of annoying is you don't really get that money.
B
What do you mean?
A
It's all. If you were to add every school offering you a scholarship together.
B
Oh, yeah. She's not like she's getting three.
A
That would be really cool, though.
C
That'd be awesome.
B
Yeah.
A
Like you get a nil deal for a 4.0, right? Yeah. What's her name again? Mahogany.
B
Mahogany Newkirk.
A
That's a good one. That's what it's all about. That was. Tell me something good. Owning a home comes with a lot of things nobody really prepares you for, including yard care. Sunday is a company trying to make that part easier. They start with a soil test and climate data to build a yard plan tailored to where you live, then ship everything directly to your door. No guesswork, no dragging bags of fertilizer. And instead of harsh chemicals, Sundae uses simple, nutrient dense ingredients like seaweed, molasses, and iron. Everything hooks up to a hose, which honestly sounds like my speed. If your yard feels more stressful than satisfying, Sundae's approach makes a lot of sense. Go to getsundae.com to get your free custom yard analysis. That's getsunday.com living with a rare autoimmune condition brings uncertainty, but it can also create community in season six of Untold Stories, Life with a severe autoimmune condition, they go beyond MG and cidp, as host Martine Hackett welcomed stories from other conditions like myositis and IgAN into the conversation. Untold Stories is produced by Ruby Studio in partnership with Argenics. Listen to Untold Stories Life with a severe autoimmune condition on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
B
Traditional security locks you in long term multi year contracts with huge cancellation fees. What do you think of that? Have you experienced anything similar? I know I sure have. That's why I am super excited to receive my new SimpliSafe system. They are the solution to this problem. Simplisafe can change the game. They're extremely effective. They've got 24. 7 professional monitoring that's affordable and no long term contracts. They can fully customize the system to fit your exact needs. I went through and clicked every single thing that I needed for my house so that I felt safe and they're going to help me protect against intruders, fires and even floods. Backed by SimpliSafe's 24. 7 professional monitoring agents who dispatch emergency help when you need it, over 5 million people value and trust simply safe with their home security every single day. My listeners will get 50% off a new system when you sign up for professional monitoring and your first month is free by visiting simplisafe.com bones that's half off@simplisafe.com bones mom, can I have Lingo Kids?
A
Dad, Lingo Kids please.
C
When did we become the Lingokids house?
A
No idea.
B
Last week it was Dinosaurs.
E
This week, Lingokids.
A
Why Lingokids?
B
Because it's the best thing ever.
A
You can play games with astronauts, wild animals and superheroes. With more than 4,000 interactive games, songs and shows, LingoKids is the number one entertainment platform for young kids.
B
So no dinosaurs and dinosaurs.
C
Lingo Kids everything kids love. Download it for free.
B
This is an iHeart podcast.
A
Guaranteed Human.
Date: May 22, 2026
Host: Bobby Bones (with Amy, Eddie, Lunchbox, Morgan, and Mike)
This lively episode of "The Bobby Bones Show" features the crew's signature “Tell Me Something Good” segment, where each cohost shares a feel-good story from their lives. The conversation weaves through saving money on subscriptions, unexpected reunions with lost items, navigating parenting wins and fails, and some fun debates about dry cleaning and biblical stories. The team also covers inspiring news stories—from honest acts with a lottery ticket to student triumphs—with their trademark humor and candid banter.
(00:52–05:36)
Bobby’s Subscription Habits:
Bobby shares how he regularly combs through his Apple subscriptions to see what he can cancel, emphasizing organization and cost-saving.
Difficult-to-Cancel Subscriptions:
Bobby laments about being unable to cancel his $12/month Halo dog fence app due to not remembering his login or even the email associated with the purchase, expressing frustration with company cancellation policies.
(05:38–08:22)
The Search:
Amy details her search for a favorite summer dress, which as it turns out, she left at the dry cleaner last summer—and is delighted to retrieve it a year later.
Parenting Moment:
Amy talks about teaching her daughter to ask before borrowing clothes, framing it as good roommate etiquette for the future.
(09:03–13:42)
Curiosity About the Dry Cleaning Process:
The crew admits to not really understanding how dry cleaning works. Mike steps in to explain:
Laundry Mishaps:
Amy shares about ignoring "dry clean only" tags with disastrous shrinkage results.
(13:44–15:10)
Lunchbox’s Wife: The Queen of Punctuality:
Lunchbox celebrates his wife managing to get their two kids through two years of school without a single tardy—despite her not being “the most punctual.”
Eddie’s Family & The Lost Apple Watch:
Eddie recounts a joyful last day of school for his kids, only to have one of them lose an Apple Watch at a restaurant—which launches a discussion on tracking lost electronics.
(15:13–16:53)
Morgan’s Sand Volleyball Adventure:
Morgan describes returning to sand volleyball, her background as a libero, and the challenge of relearning the sport on sand.
Theft at the Courts:
Morgan shares a story of a fellow player’s phone being stolen during a game, leading to a short debate about what thieves can actually do with locked smartphones.
(18:30–19:55)
(22:30–24:05)
| Timestamp | Segment / Highlight | |-----------|------------------------------------------------------------------------| | 00:52 | Bobby discusses canceling costly app subscriptions | | 05:38 | Amy reunites with her beloved "lost" dress | | 09:12 | Mike explains dry cleaning; group jokes about laundry mishaps | | 13:44 | Lunchbox's wife’s 2-year no-tardy streak | | 15:13 | Morgan plays volleyball, discusses skill transition & phone theft | | 18:30 | Bobby’s "honest lottery winner" story & ensuing biblical debate | | 22:30 | Amy’s "super-student Mahogany" news story |
The show maintains its classic blend of lighthearted, cheerful group banter, candid personal stories, and genuine celebration of small victories. The camaraderie shines through as the hosts riff off each other's experiences—whether lamenting lost subscriptions or sharing parenting and laundry struggles. Even heavier topics, like the sticky details of Bible history, are handled with humor and curiosity.
This episode offers a feel-good mix of money-saving hacks, celebrating personal wins (big and small), humorous detours into daily life (and theology!), and uplifting news stories. Even for listeners new to the show, you’ll come away smiling—and maybe reconsidering your own subscriptions or finally checking the dry cleaner for that missing item.