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Bobby Bones
This is an iHeart podcast.
Lunchbox
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Bobby Bones
Transmitting across America.
Lunchbox
This is the Bobby Bone Show. Let's welcome to Thursday's show morning studio.
Amy
Morning.
Lunchbox
They're not doing pennies anymore. They're going to stop making pennies. And when I saw the story, I thought about Lunchbox, who loves a penny.
Amy
I don't understand this. This is bad for America. It's bad for me. I look for pennies all the time. Anytime I see one, pick it up.
Lunchbox
He will move heaven and earth to get to that penny. The U.S. treasury Department is winding down production of the penny. Now the penny will Stay existing. I guess they just run out at some point.
Amy
Yeah. Eventually they're just gonna be gone because they're gonna start disappearing. But they're not gonna make any more.
Lunchbox
New pennies disappearing though. Like, what do you mean by disappearing?
Amy
They're not gonna be in circulation.
Lunchbox
They're gonna stay in circulation.
Amy
But I'm saying like pennies disappear. Like they. How they go into the bank, they don't come out or someone drops it on the ground.
Lunchbox
That part.
Amy
No one picks it up.
Lunchbox
Are you sure if you go into the bank, you don't come out?
Eddie
Sometimes it's like Willy Wonka.
Amy
There's a lot of people.
Lunchbox
The bank loses money then, but a.
Amy
Lot of people aren't using cash. So they're not going to be. The pennies are just going to kind of disappear slowly and we're no longer going to have pennies. I mean, we're not going to need a piggy bank.
Lunchbox
Yeah. Nickels, dimes, quarter.
Amy
It's going to be called a nickel bank. I mean it's. We're going to change society.
Eddie
No, it's a piggy bank.
Amy
No, because there's no.
Lunchbox
It's a piggy bank.
Eddie
Not a penny bank.
Lunchbox
It's a piggy bank.
Amy
I'm an idiot.
Eddie
You are.
Lunchbox
Yeah.
Eddie
I'm like, what am I missing here?
Lunchbox
Maybe that's why you think the banks hate pennies too.
Amy
Yeah.
Lunchbox
Piggy bank.
Amy
That's my fault.
Lunchbox
Yeah. Shaped it like a pig.
Amy
Yeah, that was my fault.
Lunchbox
Yeah. I'm sure there are penny banks, but I think the.
Amy
Yeah, I think you're right. But you know, they're like coin rollers where you put the pennies in and familiar.
Lunchbox
Yeah.
Amy
Not gonna need those anymore.
Lunchbox
You are but for nickels, dimes and quarters.
Amy
This is bad.
Lunchbox
Move.
Amy
I don't understand what the US is doing. They are making big mistakes and this is one of them.
Eddie
Do you know why you can find pennies everywhere? All over the street?
Lunchbox
Because the value is so small. Nobody wants. I know.
Amy
Cuz they're worth one cent. Yeah, you guys aren't. You don't value one cent.
Lunchbox
I'm not going to stop and pick up a penny because I went back.
Amy
In the crosswalk the other day to get one. I was riding bikes and I went through a busy intersection and I looked down, I saw a penny. So I parked my bike on the street.
Lunchbox
You got off your bike to get one? It wasn't. You took a couple steps backward.
Amy
Yeah.
Eddie
Wait, so you were on your bike crosswalk. What was this? You were 10 years old. When was this?
Amy
No, it was like two days ago.
Eddie
Sounds like he was walking home from school.
Amy
It was on the way home from work.
Lunchbox
Yeah. Do you have a baseball card in your spokes?
Amy
No, I didn't have that. But I looked down, I was like, oh. And before I could slam on the brakes, right in the intersection, I was like, I'll just park right there. And then I went back.
Lunchbox
Yeah.
Amy
Jumped back out there and got it.
Lunchbox
You love pennies. Maybe you should collect them all. You should be the holder of the most pennies in America.
Amy
I'm gonna say this. With pennies going away, though, they're going to become rare, so they're going to be worth more.
Lunchbox
The problem with rare is there's 114 billion of them right now.
Eddie
It's not very rare.
Lunchbox
It's going to take 50 years for them to become rare. But you could be the guy that has the most pennies. Like, that could be your thing. You know how sometimes they'll do a news story of the guy with the most My little ponies, and you go into his house and all the walls are my little ponies?
Amy
Yeah.
Lunchbox
Like, what a loser. That could be you, but for pennies.
Amy
But I wouldn't be a loser.
Lunchbox
Exactly. You'd be a guy with a bunch of pennies.
Amy
Yes, man. It's a sad day.
Lunchbox
Is it?
Amy
Yes.
Lunchbox
I don't. I. I don't heat pennies.
Eddie
I don't either, really.
Amy
So, I mean, now what are companies gonna do? Charge you? Like, if it's 353, are they gonna be like, oh, sorry, it's 355 now?
Lunchbox
Well, most people aren't using cash, as you just said.
Eddie
They're still gonna charge you. The scent, it's just gonna be like a credit card charge.
Amy
But what if you go to get changed, they don't have pennies, man.
Lunchbox
Hey, man, listen. Do you probably round up 355 if it's cash?
Amy
That's what I'm saying. Like, so you're getting.
Lunchbox
But also pennies around in two. Pennies aren't dead. There's still 114 billion of them out there. Yeah. It's not like one day they wake up and they're like, all right, eliminate all pennies. They're just gonna stop making them. And you don't know the difference how many they're making every day, every week, every month anyway. Yes, dude, there's 114 billion. There's more pennies than times eight than there are people that live in America.
Amy
Yeah, but They. I don't think they're all accounted for, is the problem.
Eddie
What, the people.
Lunchbox
You didn't think they do pennies? Yeah. No inventory on pennies?
Amy
No. Because they can't keep track. They don't know where they are.
Lunchbox
What? He's way too upset about this. I just wanted to bring it up because I know he's a penny guy.
Eddie
Yeah, he is.
Lunchbox
There is a new trend. Ordinary people are hiring bodyguards. And so I dug into it a little bit. One real estate agent hired a bodyguard because she said her job makes her vulnerable. And then I can tell you how much they cost, like, for normal people. But listen to this clip.
Bobby Bones
Everyday people hiring security guards is part of a growing trend. Brenda told Inside Edition reporter Allison hall that her job.
Lunchbox
Welcome to 25 Columbus Circle.
Bobby Bones
Showing homes to strangers makes her vulnerable. She hires personal protection through an app called Bond. The bodyguards come from a range of backgrounds. Many are former Secret Service agents, cops, and ex military or other security professionals. The cost? $30 for 30 minutes.
Lunchbox
Do you ever have people who go, whoa, who's that?
Bobby Bones
Somebody with a bodyguard.
Eddie
They must be a celebrity.
Bobby Bones
It does happen.
Amy
You see people always looking, like, trying.
Lunchbox
To figure out who the person is. It could be funny at times. She sounded like Jennifer Kulage. Oh, sir. My dog. The little dog. Why would I let the dog in the house? From White Lotus. Stifler's mom.
Bobby Bones
So I don't care.
Lunchbox
My dog in the house. $30 for 30 minutes. That tick Tock's Cooper Hill.
Eddie
That's not bad.
Lunchbox
Is it called Bond Because I feel like this is something he'd use all his pennies on before they go out.
Eddie
Oh, absolutely.
Lunchbox
To buy a bodyguard to walk around.
Eddie
With just so he looks like a celebrity.
Lunchbox
Yeah.
Amy
I am already a celebrity.
Lunchbox
Are you celebrity?
Amy
Yeah.
Lunchbox
Why don't you have a little dog?
Amy
But it would be cool. You walk somewhere. You would get in places a lot easier if you had a bodyguard.
Lunchbox
Not true.
Amy
True.
Lunchbox
Like, I can tell you from experience, not true.
Amy
If you walk up to, like, a red carpet.
Lunchbox
A red carpet. No. They check you immediately. They have a clipboard to go who's walking on? Because they want to know. To tell the people they're taking the pictures who's walking on. So, no, that's not. No, I'm not arguing.
Eddie
You probably don't need a security guard for red carpet.
Lunchbox
Right?
Amy
No.
Lunchbox
You just need to show up with somebody to say your name, and they look on the list to make sure that you're one reel and. And then two. So they can let all the photographers know you're coming through so they can make notes when they take pictures of you. Because they don't know everybody coming through.
Eddie
Right, right, right.
Amy
I don't know. I feel like you go to Disney.
Lunchbox
But I do know you go to.
Amy
Disney World with a bodyguard. Guess what? They're letting you in the side door.
Lunchbox
No, because you can fake a bodyguard. It doesn't matter.
Eddie
I feel like there are some jobs, though, where you do need a bodyguard. Like regular jobs.
Lunchbox
I agree.
Eddie
Like a referee.
Amy
Oh, that would be a good one.
Lunchbox
Oh, I like all three refs. Hire somebody at the end of the game to get them out of there.
Eddie
30 bucks for 30 minutes. I think that's. Yeah, that's worth it.
Lunchbox
A Texas doctor who falsely diagnosed healthy patients to find their lavish lifestyle. About $118 million. That's what the scheme ended up being sentenced to. 10 years in prison. A Texas rheumatologist.
Eddie
What's a rheumatologist?
Lunchbox
Hey, as my mom would say to me, Google it. No, no. Yeah, that's way before Google. You bought all those encyclopedias with your own money. Now go look it up.
Eddie
Okay.
Lunchbox
A rheumatologist was sentenced to 10 years for leading a 118 million dollar health care fraud scheme. He falsely diagnosed healthy patients with rheumatoid arthritis to bill insurers for unnecessary harmful treatments. His actions caused severe side effects in many victims, including strokes and liver damage.
Amy
Oh.
Lunchbox
He used the fraud proceeds to fund a lavish lifestyle with private jets and luxury cars.
Amy
And he only got 10 years.
Lunchbox
I mean, 10 years. Yeah.
Amy
Liver problem. I mean, that is so awful, Eddie.
Eddie
Yeah, I misspelled it, so it's taking me a while. I thought it was R O O M, but it's not.
Lunchbox
No, no, no. That would be someone that works at one of those places where you buy chairs.
Eddie
Okay. Musculoskeletal disorders, autoimmune diseases. That's what they specialize in.
Lunchbox
Yeah.
Amy
Imagine you walk in there perfectly healthy, and dude says, oh, you're sick. And so you start doing all this stuff to your body. Terrible, man.
Eddie
There's a place they're going to.
Lunchbox
Eddie went to rooms to go to get his diagnosis. Yeah, that sucks. That story is from the New York Post.
Eddie
Bones.
Lunchbox
A guy named Lawrence is suing his ex girlfriend for 5 million bucks, claiming that she took off with lottery winnings from a ticket that he says he bought. Dang, this is dramatic. You want to hear this? This is him explaining what happened.
Amy
According to a claim filed in Manitoba's Quarter Kings Bench earlier this month, Campbell alleges he bought the ticket on January 19, 2024, and only asked McKay to hold on to it because he had recently lost his wallet. They hit the jackpot, $5 million, and met with a Western Canada Lottery Corporation agent. The lawsuit alleges Campbell was told he couldn't cash in because he didn't have ID. The suit says he was told McKay should sign the ticket and publicly claim the winnings. The claim says she then deposited the money into her bank account because Campbell didn't have one. Less than two weeks later, Campbell alleges McKay didn't return to the hotel room they were staying in. Campbell says he went out to find her in quote, after some investigation, he found her in bed with another guy. The claim says McKay ended her relationship with Campbell and alleges she, quote, ghosted him by cutting off contact and taking out a protection order against him.
Lunchbox
Wow. That's from CTN News. Oh, yeah. She moved quick. Well, also, she moved, too, partially because she didn't want to split that money either. 100 like it's 5 million. Lunchbox. Who's right here? Who gets the ticket?
Amy
Oh, man. I think she's gonna get the ticket.
Lunchbox
So again, he bought it.
Amy
And if there's proof that he bought it, like video proof.
Lunchbox
Yeah.
Amy
Then he has a case. But if it's just he said, she said she's gonna win. She signed the ticket. Unless the lawyer will come and admit. Hey, I did tell him you can't claim it because you don't have an id.
Lunchbox
It's also a little. Little suspicious. He gave it to her because he lost his wallet. You hold it. It sounds like something you make up after the fact.
Amy
Yeah, I think I would go to the lottery office and check on that, make sure that' and because he had.
Lunchbox
Lost his wallet again, he didn't have.
Eddie
Valid ID and no account and no bank account.
Lunchbox
This all still.
Amy
And they were staying at a hotel. Sounds like I'm up and up.
Lunchbox
Sounds like. Yeah, they're both meant for each other. How about that? Yeah. So she has 5 million bucks, he has none. Dang. This goes to court. So let's just say they have 3 million now after taxes. Okay, Amy, you're the judge. What do you do?
Bobby Bones
I'm gonna make her give him a little bit.
Lunchbox
Define a little bit.
Bobby Bones
One million.
Lunchbox
Okay, I like that.
Bobby Bones
Yeah, I feel good about 1 million, and she can have the rest.
Lunchbox
What if he's on? Because it says nothing about him being on camera, so we're just making that part up. But what if he is on camera buying the ticket?
Bobby Bones
Well, then they gotta split it.
Eddie
Split it.
Lunchbox
But you don't think he gets it all? He bought it. He bought it. Well, but, but, well, yeah, she did sign it.
Amy
Yeah, yeah, she signed it because he.
Eddie
Didn'T have an ID or a bank.
Bobby Bones
Account, so he needed her like sometimes.
Amy
But she could say, hey, that was my $5 you bought it with. I mean, him buying it.
Bobby Bones
But now Bobby's saying, oh, I get you, like he paid with her money. Well, whatever, split it. If that's the case, split it.
Amy
Lunchbox man, I hate to say it, but if he's on camera buying it, you have to split it. There's no way to prove whose money it was bought with is the problem.
Lunchbox
Now he's not on camera as of now, so let's say he's not on camera.
Amy
He's gonna get zero dollars.
Lunchbox
It's zero dollars.
Eddie
Does it matter though, whose money you buy it with?
Lunchbox
How you gonna prove if it's cash, right?
Eddie
Like if you buy it.
Amy
That's what I mean.
Lunchbox
Yeah, yeah, but how do you, how do you prove who bought it if it's not a camera?
Eddie
No, no, I know, I'm doing the camera hypothetical. But like he's saying, like, what if she gave him the money to buy it? Well, that doesn't matter, right? Because if you're on camera buying it.
Lunchbox
Cuz you can say she loaned it. Yeah, this is.
Amy
Oh, she. If he's on camera, then he gets all of it.
Eddie
But if I say all of it.
Lunchbox
If he's on camera, he gets all of it. But she signed it and had the ticket.
Amy
That's what I mean.
Lunchbox
Because she can just. Well, because she can just say he gave me the ticket as a gift.
Eddie
Oh boy.
Lunchbox
That's all. Yeah, exactly.
Amy
And odds are she probably doesn't have a lot of it left.
Bobby Bones
I mean, what five million, dude?
Lunchbox
What are you talking about? Well, three after taxes. Yeah, this is what I'm doing. This is what I'm doing. I'm splitting it down the middle, regardless if I'm the judge, because there's too many. I said, he said, she said. We said, from whose money it was, who bought it, who signed it, who, who, who, who are you? Who, who, who? It's it's split. Split the money. Go about. You each get a million and a half bucks. But I have a feeling, as Lunchbox said, that it's probably mostly. Well, a lot of it's probably gone.
Eddie
You think so?
Bobby Bones
Like on what?
Amy
Well, if they were Living. If they were living in a hotel, I'm gonna assume she bought a house. The dude.
Lunchbox
Yeah.
Amy
The new boyfriend.
Lunchbox
Obviously they don't make a lot of good decisions. Yeah. Okay, so my gavel split the money.
Eddie
Was that your pen? What was that?
Lunchbox
Sharpie. That's my Sharpie. Eddie's debating letting his 17 year old son go to a concert alone. Now, does it matter what the concert is or is it just general?
Eddie
I mean. No, it doesn't matter. I think it's pretty. It could be Coldplay. It doesn't matter.
Lunchbox
It just wants a Coldplay to you means safe. That's the safest show to go to.
Eddie
Yeah, I would think more just adults would go to that.
Lunchbox
Okay. Okay, so he's 17. Do you want to say the show? Sure.
Eddie
It's the weekend.
Lunchbox
Okay.
Eddie
The weekend's coming to town and he wants to go with his buddies and he's. The last concert he went to, I took him. It was Kendrick Lamar. Him and I went and I felt safe. It was him and I, we had a really good time and it was whatever. Now he's like, dad, I really want to go with my buddies. Just like me and four friends.
Lunchbox
And I go, why would you. Okay, let's do both. Why would you say yes? Give me a reason for both.
Eddie
Because he loves music and he'd have a good time and he, I mean, I think he likes concerts. So yeah, it'd be great for him to go to a concert.
Lunchbox
Do you trust him?
Eddie
Absolutely.
Lunchbox
Why would you say no?
Eddie
Because he's going with buddies. Like I feel like four friends alone at a concert. You're talking about like, hey, let's try to buy beer. Hey, let's try to. We'll vape in there, you know, whatever. Like I think with him and four buddies alone at a. In a concert environment where people are definitely doing other things, other substances.
Lunchbox
What's happening at a concert in your mind?
Bobby Bones
Yeah. Don't they have to have an idea?
Lunchbox
You make it sound like a champagne room in a club.
Eddie
Oh, what do you mean you've been concert. You smell it, bro?
Lunchbox
I was 17, I had no rules.
Eddie
I know, so.
Lunchbox
But I also didn't do anything wrong. But seven, I think 17, Eddie, 17 is everybody else's 14.
Eddie
And then he's going to drive. He's got to park and do all that. I don't know, man.
Lunchbox
17, the driving and parking, like that's why.
Bobby Bones
Then why don't you let him go? But you drop him off, cuz that'd be nice.
Lunchbox
17. No way my dad's dropping me off somewhere. I like that. Stop. No chance.
Bobby Bones
17 years old, parking.
Lunchbox
Amy, you first. Okay.
Bobby Bones
Eddie, you definitely need to let him go to the concert. Like, it's the weekend. He's popular amongst the teens and adults.
Lunchbox
Like, I think, like, regardless of the artist, it could be. It could be Coldplay or Chris Tomlin.
Eddie
Chris Tomlin? Friends of that.
Bobby Bones
Hey, I bet some people do a little smokey smoke there, that Chris Tomlin.
Lunchbox
I bet not. The last time I went to a Tomlin show was Easter. Nobody was smokey smoking. So he's 17?
Eddie
Yeah, man. Yeah, 17.
Lunchbox
When does he turn 18? What month?
Eddie
January.
Lunchbox
So he's almost able to vote. Yep.
Bobby Bones
And serve our country.
Lunchbox
Yet you're considering not letting him go by himself to a concert. Now, I will say this little asterisk on the side. Yours, dad. You know more about him. You know, you know we don't, but I kind of know eventually you got to cut the cord and he didn't come out of your womb and you're cording him.
Eddie
It felt good when I went to a show with him, you know, and him and I just there and I see other kids with just their friends who their parents probably just dropped them off and they're doing stuff.
Lunchbox
But isn't part of life doing stuff and figuring out what stuff that you can do, you should do, you shouldn't do? Like, that's gonna happen regardless. Do you want it to happen when he's 17, like, now, or do you want him to wait until he can go? Absolutely. Then you go even harder the longer you're held back from it when you're exposed to it. Why do you think in America we have such an alcohol problem? Because we don't allow it in any capacity until 21. Legally, you have to sneak it. Or then when it's time to go, if you never had it, you go crazy. In other countries that have near the alcoholism rate. You know why? Because it's not a big deal. 12 years old, they have a little drink at dinner. 12 in Europe, for sure. Absolutely.
Bobby Bones
Like, so that's young.
Lunchbox
The situation here is if you keep holding him, he's going to go even harder. It's like a homeschool kid who goes to college. Yeah. They go crazy.
Eddie
They go ape.
Lunchbox
So you should let him go. Eventually you have to let him go. Or when he's 18, he just goes.
Bobby Bones
Do you talk to him about drinking and vaping? What do you say?
Eddie
I just say, hey, I just want to make sure you're not. You Hang out your friends. Like, you're not doing anything like that, right? Because it's.
Bobby Bones
But what if he were to, like, how do you say. And if you did and you came to me and said this? What? Like, do you have to do any of that? Or if you're ever in a situation, call me, no questions asked.
Eddie
Yeah, I've done that too, but you do.
Lunchbox
No questions asked. No. Okay.
Eddie
We ask lots of questions. You will be interrogated.
Lunchbox
And I don't even hate that. I don't even hate that. But I don't even know if this is about vaping or drinking.
Eddie
I mean, that's all it is, really, because it's not the concert. The show's fine.
Lunchbox
You're just wondering what he'll do with friends when you're not around.
Eddie
I mean, you have four buddies. That's when everyone's just like, come on, let's do this, let's do this, let's go do that.
Bobby Bones
Okay, so if he's going with two, it'd be okay?
Eddie
Well, maybe two's just. I don't know. I don't know. The whole thing just makes me a little nervous.
Lunchbox
And it should, because this is your son. It's probably the first time. Yeah, you should. I'm glad. I'm glad you're nervous. It means you care. We only get nervous about things that are important to us. I think he's 17. If he's been in a positive state, school's been good, his actions have been good.
Eddie
He's been great.
Lunchbox
Of course you let him out. Let him. Give him some rope, see what he does with it.
Eddie
Okay.
Lunchbox
Let him go, Amy.
Bobby Bones
Yeah, let him go, lunchbox.
Amy
Let him go. Dude. It sounds like you're worried you're getting left behind. You're like, oh, I went to the concert with him. I don't want him to go with his buddies. He's going to have fun without me. That's what you're worried about? Let the kid go. He stepped 17 years old. You sound like a loser.
Eddie
Okay, drop him off.
Amy
No.
Lunchbox
He has a driver's license.
Amy
Oh, my gosh.
Lunchbox
No.
Bobby Bones
Hey, who are the parents of teenagers here? Me and Eddie. You could offer. If he says no, we're gonna tell.
Lunchbox
You guys you're losers.
Bobby Bones
I'm not a loser.
Lunchbox
Yeah. If you're taking your 18 year old, 17 year old and going, I must drop you off or you can't go. Yeah.
Amy
Oh, no, no.
Bobby Bones
I didn't say to say that. But I say he could offer because I think if I were to Offer. If my daughter was going with some of her girlfriends and I offered to drop them off and pick them up so they didn't have to mess with parking and downtown stuff, she'd probably be like, oh, yeah, that'd be awesome.
Lunchbox
If it's offered as a. Hey, instead of you guys having to drive.
Bobby Bones
That's what I mean.
Lunchbox
That's not what he's doing.
Eddie
And I would. I would make it fun, too. I play the weekend song.
Lunchbox
You're doing it different than what he's proposing. He wants to do it to have an extra eye at the latest time possible.
Bobby Bones
Get a little bit of both, but just present it as casual. Lay back. And then you get the benefits of having the extra.
Amy
And he's going to risk them when they get out of the car. Dude. He's going to be everybody against the wall. Let me check what you're carrying with you.
Lunchbox
And then when they come back, he's in a breath. Eliza. Exactly.
Eddie
I'll definitely do the smell test.
Lunchbox
Okay, Let him go. And when he comes back, though, give him a curfew. And when he comes back, see what's up.
Eddie
All right.
Lunchbox
Be waiting for him.
Eddie
Okay.
Lunchbox
But I think you should let him.
Eddie
I love it. Like, I'm not asking my wife, I'm asking you guys.
Lunchbox
I'm sure you and your wife will have this talk. What does she think?
Eddie
We haven't talked about it yet.
Bobby Bones
Oh, my God.
Lunchbox
Really?
Eddie
Bringing it to you guys first.
Bobby Bones
Okay.
Lunchbox
And I'm the perfect person to answer one because I have no kids and I had no rules growing up at all. Like, I'm the worst. Okay, good luck. Let us know how it goes. Bones. This episode of the Bobby Bones show, brought to you by Chase Sapphire Reserve. Everybody loves to travel, right? Weekend getaways, a once in a lifetime vacation, all of it. And no matter where you're going, Chase Sapphire Reserve. As your gateway to the world's most captivating destinations. Travel is its own reward. You know, you're out there having experiences you can't have any other way. And with your Chase Sapphire Reserve card, you're also being rewarded. You earn three times points on travel and dining. So let's say you book a trip to Hawaii, you go surfing at Sunset beach, you go hiking on a volcano, and you go out to dinner. With the Chase Sapphire Reserve card, you're actually earning three times points for going on a grand adventure. And that's not even mentioning how the card gets you into the Sapphire Lounge by the club at select airports nationwide. And access to one of a kind experiences like music festivals and sports events. Whether you're booking your next big trip or a weekend escape, Chase Sapphire Reserve makes travel more rewarding. Discover more with Chase sapphire reserve@chase.com SapphireReserve cards issued by JPMorgan Chase bank and a member FDIC subject to credit approval terms apply.
Amy
What happens when we come face to face with death? My truck was blown up by a 20 pound anti tank mine.
Bobby Bones
My parachute did not deploy.
Eddie
I was kidnapped by a drug cartel.
Bobby Bones
I just remember everything getting dark.
Amy
I'm dying. When we step beyond the edge of.
Lunchbox
What we know, to open our consciousness to something more than just what's in that western box? And we turn. I clinically died. The heart stopped beating, which I was.
Amy
Dead for 11.5 minutes. My name is Dan Bush. My mission is simple. To find, explore and share these stories.
Bobby Bones
I'm not a victim.
Amy
I'm a survivor. You're strongest when you're the most vulnerable. To remind us what it means to be alive. Not just that I was the guy.
Lunchbox
That cut his arm off, but I'm the guy who was smiling when he.
Amy
Cut his arm off. Alive Again, a podcast about the fragility of life, the strength of the human spirit, and what it means to truly live. Listen to Alive again on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen.
Lunchbox
To your favorite shows. It's time for the good news with Bobby. Tell me something good. At East Sac County High School's graduation On Sunday, a 107-year-old guy named Orville Von Ethwagon received an honorary high school diploma. He's 107. He's a World War II army vet. He left school after eighth grade during the Great Depression to work on his family's farm. Wow. The principal presented the diploma in recognition of his decades of service and contributions to the community. He served in the U.S. army in the 40s. He later opened a successful appliance store with his wife. I mean, the headline Here, he's 107.
Eddie
Yeah. His name's Orville.
Lunchbox
And Orville, that name should come back.
Eddie
It should come.
Lunchbox
That's a cool name. I think of Orville Redenbacher Morgan. Who's that? You're the youngest here. Orville Redbacker.
Bobby Bones
I think of the popcorn.
Lunchbox
That's exactly who it is.
Eddie
Good job.
Lunchbox
Yeah. How about Orville Wright? Airplanes?
Amy
Yeah.
Lunchbox
One of the Wright brothers. Yes. How about Orville Johnston? I don't know. Probably a guy I just did myself. Yeah.
Eddie
Probably just somebody I was like, I don't know.
Lunchbox
Yeah. Yeah. No, I don't either. 107 years old. That's pretty cool. Great story. Ktiv with that. That's what it's all about. That was. Tell me something good. 90 seconds on the clock. It's time for the investigative Morning Corny. How many can we get in 90 seconds? Let's go. The morning corny.
Bobby Bones
Why did the laptop marry the WI fi?
Lunchbox
Why?
Amy
Oh, good connection.
Lunchbox
I see if I can trick her into that one.
Bobby Bones
That's it. Strong connection.
Eddie
Okay, good, good.
Bobby Bones
Why did the computer break up with the Internet?
Eddie
Bad connection.
Lunchbox
Okay, those are softballs.
Amy
Go.
Bobby Bones
Why did the computer keep sneezing?
Eddie
Now we're in trouble.
Amy
Why did the computer keep running?
Lunchbox
Runny nose.
Eddie
Allergy.
Amy
Had a virus.
Bobby Bones
Had a virus. Okay, okay. Why don't computer programmers like nature?
Lunchbox
Forest, woods, trees.
Eddie
Your program is the ram, the rom, the data servers.
Amy
Forest.
Eddie
Why don't they like forests?
Amy
These are nerds.
Bobby Bones
Why don't they like nature?
Eddie
Or nature nature?
Amy
Because they need bugs.
Lunchbox
Got it.
Bobby Bones
Okay. Why was the IT guy at the beach?
Eddie
Sand Santan.
Amy
Bikinis.
Lunchbox
Sun, water. IT guy fixes problems.
Eddie
Virus.
Amy
Why was he at the beach?
Eddie
Get a suntan.
Amy
Sunscreen.
Eddie
Sandcastle.
Amy
Sand screen.
Lunchbox
Healing. Burning beach.
Amy
IT guys.
Eddie
Waves. Waves crash.
Lunchbox
Waves crash. Because the waves crash. Oh, man. Crashes.
Eddie
Crashing on the beach.
Lunchbox
Beach. What was it again?
Bobby Bones
Why was the IC guy at the beach?
Lunchbox
He wanted to surf.
Bobby Bones
He needed to start the land.
Eddie
No, you almost had that.
Bobby Bones
Did y' all get the theme? No.
Lunchbox
We have no idea. There's a question to be had. Send it into the mailbag. Hello, Bobby Bones. Long story short, my employer was having trouble with my direct deposit. They said it didn't go through. There was a problem. I updated my information. Got a paper check for the week, though. Turns out I also got a direct deposit as well. Yeah, there was an extra 250 bucks in the bank that wasn't supposed to be there at the time. I didn't know the source, so I spent it. They then notified me and are asking to take some out of my pay each week to save up. Am I obligated to pay them back? Can they even legally ask me for that money? Considering it's a mistake. I live in upstate New York, by the way. Any help is appreciated. Thanks. Signed money gone. Sorry. You're gonna have to give it back one way or the other. Even if they messed up, which they did, you're going to have to give it back. I say that from experience. I have been overpaid for different things, and that always sucks when you get the email. Hey, we overpaid you. We're gonna have to take it out of your next check.
Eddie
You don't tell them, money gone. Sorry.
Lunchbox
Might have tried once, but it did not work. I would advise you one, if it happens again, this is a learning experience. You should call the bank and say, where'd that money come from? Number two, you can almost negotiate with the company not on how much, but how much they take each pay period. So if you're like, hey, you guys gave me 250 extra, I see you noticed, instead of taking out 250 of the next check, because that's going to hurt me a little bit. Can you do 25 bucks a pay period until you get it back? Most likely they're going to say yes. Now, I did a little research in New York. If an employer overpays an employee due to a clerical or mathematical error, the employee is generally required to repay the overpayment. The employer can deduct the overpaid amount from future wages. The amount deducted, though, cannot exceed 12.5% of the employee's gross wages. So that gross is.
Eddie
Gosh, there's no way.
Lunchbox
What?
Eddie
Find out that percentage.
Lunchbox
No, no, gross is.
Eddie
Oh, all the money.
Lunchbox
The whole.
Eddie
Everything they make before taxes or anything else. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. That would be net. Net is what you take home.
Lunchbox
That's what you get home. Good.
Eddie
So, but what's the percentage you said?
Lunchbox
Well, 12.12.5. Which you can figure out very easily.
Eddie
Let's say we're not doing this. Just carry on with this email.
Lunchbox
You just do 10%, and then there's 2.5 left. So then you do a quarter of the 10.
Eddie
That's what. We're getting drunk.
Lunchbox
It's not. It's so easy. So, yeah, you didn't do anything wrong. They didn't do anything wrong. They messed up. But I would ask, hey, can you not take it all out at once? Because that's going to hurt me for a couple of weeks. And they'll probably say yes. That'd be my advice there. It's time for the good news with Amy.
Bobby Bones
Two newlyweds in Houston did something really cool with the flowers from their wedding. Their wedding coordinator, Laura Ellis, is the one that suggested this. So Emily and her husband Lauren, they got all their flowers, boxed them up, and dropped them off at a local nursing home. And they were able to pass them out to all the people, had them as decor, and the staff there said that the residents were talking about these flowers for days. So she posted a little video about it on social went viral. And that's good, because it gets people talking about it, and they realize, like, oh, we have leftover flowers. We should donate them somewhere. And they said, moving forward in their entire relationship, they're going to donate food, drinks, decorations. Any event they have, they're going to find someone in need that can benefit from them.
Lunchbox
That's awesome. Sometimes I notice flowers. We went to a farmer's market this past weekend, and I almost bought some flowers for my wife.
Eddie
Almost?
Bobby Bones
Why didn't you?
Lunchbox
Because we were not. We were going to be, like, going to the game and stuff. I don't think she would have wanted to carry a big thing of sunflowers into the game. But I thought about it, and I was like, man, that's really cool.
Amy
Very smart of you. It's a thought that counts.
Eddie
It is.
Lunchbox
That's what they always say to her. I almost bought you those flowers over there.
Eddie
Oh, no. Good thing you didn't.
Lunchbox
And she was like, oh, you almost did. I said, yeah. She goes, well, I'm glad you didn't, but I wish you wouldn't have said you almost did.
Bobby Bones
Right?
Lunchbox
Yeah. All right. That's what it's all about. That was. Tell me something good. Bones.
Bobby Bones
Wake up.
Lunchbox
You wake up in the morning, then you turn the radio on, and the dial just keeps on turning his wigs.
Amy
Next bit.
Lunchbox
And Bobby's on the mic. So you know what this is. Here are the top seven steps you can take to stay young, according to experts. Take brisk walks. Walks take too much time. I'd rather just do sprints. Have the work done and even work harder, but not spend an hour doing it.
Bobby Bones
But sometimes you don't want to do something high.
Lunchbox
I never want to do sprints. No? No. There's never one time in my life I've wanted to do sprints. Right. But there's just other stuff I need to get to.
Bobby Bones
You don't like to just go on a brisk stroll? Oh, I like that.
Lunchbox
That's cool.
Bobby Bones
Yeah.
Lunchbox
And I wish I did. I hate it. I hate it. Keep your waist trim. Okay.
Eddie
How do you do that?
Bobby Bones
Oh, the brisk walking.
Amy
Yep, that's it.
Lunchbox
And eating right. The next one. Eat a wide variety of fruits and vegetables. Strength. Train two to three times a week. Get enough sleep. People sleep seven, eight hours nightly. Manage your stress. Keep a positive outlook. This is all the generic crap that we already know. Let me look at my sleep score last night.
Eddie
I. I bet it's better.
Bobby Bones
Why?
Eddie
I can just tell from your mood.
Lunchbox
It's a.
Eddie
It's better.
Lunchbox
No, the mood is. We have. The mood is tomorrow after the show, Eddie and I and my brother in law and my father in law, we're going on a golf trip.
Eddie
That's what it is.
Lunchbox
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Let me look at my sleep school.
Bobby Bones
Like, what is it, some like, special golf course or something?
Lunchbox
We're going to Pains Valley in Branson. Like number three public golf course in America. And then, yeah, I luckily know Johnny, who owns Bass Pro Shops, and we were gonna go to the College World Series, but Arkansas didn't make it. And I'm crushed. And DJs crushed because he's the hitting coach. And I'm like, let's just go.
Eddie
That'll make him feel better.
Lunchbox
Yeah, we're gonna go. Yes.
Eddie
Yeah.
Lunchbox
Little, you know, little feel good syrup.
Bobby Bones
Okay, so.
Lunchbox
Yeah, that's all my sleep score last night.
Eddie
Come on, baby.
Lunchbox
Come on. It's pretty good. It's in the 80s. It's in the 80s.
Eddie
Okay. So it's really good.
Lunchbox
Yeah, yeah. I've had. Yeah, I think I was like, golf, golf, golf before Christmas.
Bobby Bones
Well, that's cute that y' all have that.
Eddie
Cute.
Bobby Bones
Yeah.
Lunchbox
Well, you know how I explain it to my wife? DJs really hurting after that loss.
Eddie
Good.
Lunchbox
And I really want to take him somewhere and. And hopefully just for a day, let him forget about it. Because he's very competitive, wants Arkansas to be taught, and this is for him.
Amy
Yeah, yeah. It's not for you.
Lunchbox
I didn't even really want to go. Yeah. Bobby's just doing it for therapy. I want him to live a long, healthy life.
Bobby Bones
So thoughtful.
Lunchbox
Thank you. Microplastic brain. This is it. I've been thinking about this. You know how back in the black and white days, you'd see commercials for doctors going, two out of three doctors recommend Marlboro's. And you were like, how in the world did doctor recommends doctors recommend smoking? Because they didn't really know that's gonna be the. I wondered what it was going to be for a long time. Whether it be cell phones, the radiation. If it's in the air, whatever's happening with the. It's going to be plastics and it's going to be microplastics in the brain. And it's just now starting to, I would say, be in the public's consciousness of what exactly this means. According to recent research, each of our brains is swimming with enough microplastics to form a plastic spoon. If they were to take it from our brain, it's a lot medical Researchers have been scrambling to understand how that could affect our brain health. There's not a ton of definitive answers. I got it. Go play golf.
Eddie
That's it.
Lunchbox
If you want to fix your brain.
Bobby Bones
Okay.
Lunchbox
New research does suggest that microplastics could be contributing to rising rates of depression, dementia, dementia, and other mental ailments.
Bobby Bones
Oh, no.
Lunchbox
Officials say to have if. One of the first times I ever heard anybody talk about it years ago with Sheryl Crow talking about a water bottle in the car. And if you leave a water bottle in the car, don't drink out of it because of. And then she just said a bunch of stuff I didn't understand. But it was that. Yeah, it was. It was like 10 years ago I heard her talking about that. It's from Brain Medicine, a research journal. But there's so much plastic that we're consuming. Even, like, a plastic cup. I would say. Like, I don't want to say any specific coffee place because I don't want to.
Bobby Bones
Well, plastic lid on any cup. Like the hot. Like, say you have a paper cup, but they put a plastic lid on it, and then you put your mouth on it and sip it.
Lunchbox
Yeah, I guess I would be more. The bottom where it's hot. The bottom of the cup that's hot, and you're actually drinking it. And there's little parts of that in what you're drinking. So. So much plastic going in your body. I guess it floats up instead of everything else. Comes up my B hole. The rest goes into my brain.
Bobby Bones
I think it goes throughout your whole body.
Lunchbox
But because, I mean, if I eat corn, it doesn't go to my brain. I don't have corn brain.
Bobby Bones
There's probably microplastics, like, in our hand that just doesn't impact us as much as the ones in our brain. I think it's just like corn in my hand. I think it's like all.
Eddie
That's a good point.
Bobby Bones
All in our body.
Lunchbox
Like, why do the brains float up? Like, heat rises and so do plastics.
Eddie
Maybe because our stomachs don't digest the plastic, so they spit it up somewhere else.
Bobby Bones
I think they're just in our body. It's most impactful in our brain.
Amy
Is it only hot things or is it cold things, too?
Bobby Bones
No, no, it's just when it's in plastic, anything like. And I think of, like, you know, the yogurt I eat comes in a plastic container. The milk I buy comes in a plastic container. Like, everything's in plastic. Like, some of the food I reheat is in A plastic container.
Lunchbox
Microplastics are entering human brain tissue and accumulating there. One theory is. Because it's all theory based. Now to this point. They are hitching a ride with fat molecules.
Bobby Bones
Oh, oh.
Eddie
Thumbs up.
Lunchbox
They're hitchhiking on the side of that. Where are you headed? I'm trying to get up to the old cerebrum.
Bobby Bones
Oh, well, that makes sense.
Eddie
Can I go with you?
Lunchbox
Do you know how to get to the cerebellum, sir?
Bobby Bones
Okay.
Lunchbox
Which are then delivered to the brain, a lipid rich organ. Another possibility is that microplastics are internalized by brain cells. The presence of microplastics in the brain raises concerns about potential disruptions in brain function and cellular processes. Yeah, so I think that's gonna be it. Now. That's my new. I've decided that's going to be the new cigarettes. In the 50s is all the plastic we've been unknowingly consuming in the 2000s, 2010s, 2000s.
Eddie
Well, like cigarettes though, that we were like, all right, no more smoking. What do we do now?
Lunchbox
Like, no, people still smoke though.
Bobby Bones
Oh, yeah, they do.
Lunchbox
Yeah. Have you seen?
Eddie
Yeah, I've seen.
Lunchbox
Yeah.
Eddie
Not as many though.
Bobby Bones
And I know this. And I still, you know, dabble in plastics.
Lunchbox
Sometimes I'll just eat a plastic spoon.
Eddie
You gotta just quit cold turkey, man.
Lunchbox
Yeah, it's like people who want to like, be like tough, so they smoke. I just need a plastic spoon. What's up, suckas?
Bobby Bones
Oh, wow. They're all in our body. Brain, liver, kidneys, even the placenta.
Lunchbox
Not my placenta, no.
Bobby Bones
Yes. Also our hands and feet, but yeah, high concentrations in our brain. Who knew they were hitching a ride with the fatty cells?
Lunchbox
I need to get my placenta checked asap. So I need to tell you guys something. That's correct. That's the joke. Amy.
Amy
Amy.
Lunchbox
Yeah.
Amy
Oh, my goodness.
Lunchbox
I do not have a bullsen.
Bobby Bones
Well, hey, I started to think maybe you thought you did.
Lunchbox
Oh, yeah, no, I got rid of that one. That was taken out when the uterus was taken out. You ate it? Yeah, yeah, I made a nice tea, herbal tea out of it. I grinded it up. Okay, look, I've been fighting for this and it's still a ways away, but in February of next year, the show is going on a cruise. I said no to so many cruises for so long because frankly, I didn't want to go on a cruise. I didn't think the boats were big enough or nice enough. I get a little. A little a Little queasy. I get motion sick. And in the boat. I didn't much care for any of the boats. This boat that we're going on is massive. And I don't know much about cruises because I've never been on one, but because of the things that we were able to put together, for example, Keith Urban is going to perform. Lee Bryce Parma, Lee Scotty McCurley, LeAnn Rimes, all going to be performing on the boat. So I wanted to be an experience for our listeners, not just us. Part of the reason, too, was they were like, do a cruise, and people will come and meet the show. And I'm like, guys, that's not fun. After, like, three minutes. And so we were able to do and set up this really great experience February of next year. I didn't even know what Ports of call was until we started doing this. Now I know it's where we stop. Correct, Lunchbox, because you've done a cruise.
Amy
It's awesome, man.
Eddie
Or they say, like, ports of call.
Amy
No, they say.
Lunchbox
I think they say that's when you get on a train.
Eddie
Oh, yeah.
Amy
It's more like we're heading into port. Okay, so one hour till port.
Lunchbox
We leave from Fort Lauderdale, we go to Key west, we go to Nassau, and we go to, like, Jiminy Cricket. Bimini.
Eddie
Oh, Bimini.
Amy
I like that place.
Lunchbox
You've been there?
Amy
No.
Lunchbox
So, okay, so I gotta tell you what I've been fighting for. I'm gonna go. Eddie's gonna go, because the raging idiots are gonna perform. I could have mentioned them in all the other acts, but we're way bigger than. Yeah, yeah. Obviously Amy and Lunchbox are gonna be there. And I've been like, hey, we kind of need Morgan to go. And they were like, it caught. It cost money.
Eddie
Yeah.
Lunchbox
Got to give her a room.
Bobby Bones
I mean, I could share a room with Morgan.
Lunchbox
No, no, no. Don't be offering your brain right now. I'm in the middle of five.
Eddie
Why don't you do that?
Bobby Bones
Oh, well, okay.
Lunchbox
There's no need.
Amy
That's weird.
Lunchbox
Yeah. Yeah.
Eddie
Unless you want to.
Bobby Bones
Well, I'm just saying, if money's a.
Lunchbox
Thing, like, so I've been like, you gotta let Morgan go. Gotta let Morgan go. Gotta let Morgan go. And they were like, well, if we give her a room, that's gonna be room somebody can't buy some. Finally, big announcement. Morgan is going.
Bobby Bones
In her own room.
Lunchbox
Well, now that you've offered, like, a dumb, dumb. Amy's like, I'll give her half of my food. And they're both there starving, so. And then they sent me some ideas for Morgan to. I kind of know what Morgan's brand is at this point. Everybody kind of has a brand. Things are known for Morgan. Are you okay to play boozy bingo with Morgan?
Bobby Bones
Heck, yeah, I am.
Amy
Boozy bingo. Let's go. What is that?
Lunchbox
She gets drunk and plays bingo, I guess. What do you think? That was her and Shibuzzi.
Amy
I kind of. That's where I thought you were going. That's pretty cool.
Bobby Bones
I get to drink drinks and play bingo.
Lunchbox
So you're cool with boozy bingo?
Bobby Bones
Yeah, I am.
Lunchbox
Okay. All right, well, big news.
Bobby Bones
I'm doing boozy bingo, and I think I'm doing morning meditations a little different.
Lunchbox
And I have got plastic spoons for everybody. And we're just gonna do a plastic spoon eating. We're all just gonna. So there are still some. One less now that Morgan's taking one up. Sorry, guys, but we're okay with that. Go to topshelfcountrycruise.com if you want to come with us. And reserve your cabin. And they're not called rooms. Huh? They're called cabins. I'm new to this. I'm what you'd call a cruise virgin.
Eddie
Oh.
Amy
Oh.
Lunchbox
Not sure if that's what they call.
Eddie
Them, but don't know how to react to that.
Bobby Bones
I'm also excited because I may actually get a window this time. Normally, I'm down with all the. The crew. When I've gone on cruises before, I've never had a window. Yeah.
Lunchbox
And you're with the crew, like.
Bobby Bones
Well, there's state rooms that don't have windows.
Lunchbox
Yeah.
Bobby Bones
And they're real. They're a little bit smaller, and they're more. They're cheaper. So that's what we always went on.
Lunchbox
And.
Bobby Bones
But there was all these other rooms that have windows and patios, and I never had one of those.
Lunchbox
I don't know that you're getting.
Bobby Bones
Don't get excited because you barely got.
Lunchbox
You barely got the invite.
Amy
Yeah. You're probably done with the cruise.
Lunchbox
Morgan's like, I never got to drive the boat before. Like, no, no, no. You're barely getting to come, like, and just scratch to get you in.
Amy
She's in a suite now.
Lunchbox
It doesn't.
Bobby Bones
It doesn't mean. Sweet. I just might have a little tiny window. There might be a little hole.
Lunchbox
Might also be down there shoveling coal into the things like they do.
Bobby Bones
You might be working in the kitchen. I be cool with that.
Lunchbox
Topshelf country cruise.com if you guys want to come. Topshelf country cruise.com produced by Signature Cruise Experiences. The gold standard for charter cruises since 2001. But Morgan is coming. That is big news. And I. I cannot commit to a window for you.
Bobby Bones
Listen, if you just give me a tiny people, I'm okay with that too. You know, put me in a closet, I'll be fine. Okay, so Morgan might be in an interior cabin. That's what they call it.
Amy
Crew.
Lunchbox
And that's okay.
Bobby Bones
No, I'm here for it.
Lunchbox
True. Barracks. Okay, good. This episode of the Bobby Bones show brought to you by Chase Sapphire Reserve. Everybody loves to travel, right? Weekend getaways, a once in a lifetime vacation, all of it. And no matter where you're going, Chase Sapphire Reserve as your gateway to the world's most captivating destinations. Travel is its own reward. You know you're out there having experiences you can't have any other way. And with your Chase Sapphire Reserve card, you're also being rewarded. You earn three times points on travel and dining. So let's say you book a trip to Hawaii, you go surfing at Sunset beach, you go hiking on a volcano and you go out to dinner. With the Chase Sapphire Reserve card, you're actually earning three times points for going on a grand adventure. And that's not even mentioning how the card gets you into the Sapphire Lounge by the club at select airports nationwide. And access to one of a kind experiences like music festivals and sports events. Whether you're booking your next big trip or a weekend escape, Chase Sapphire Reserve makes travel more rewarding. Discover more with Chase Sapphire Reserve@chase.com SapphireReserve cards issued by JP Morgan Chase Bank NA member FDIC subject to credit approval terms apply.
Amy
What happens when we come face to face with death? My truck was blown up by a 20 pound anti tank mine.
Bobby Bones
My parachute did not deploy.
Eddie
I was kidnapped by a drug cartel.
Bobby Bones
I just remember everything getting dark.
Amy
I'm dying. When we step beyond the edge of.
Lunchbox
What we know, to open our consciousness to something more than just what's in that western box. And we turn. I clinically died. The heart stopped beating, which I was.
Amy
Dead for 11.5 minutes. My name is Dan Bush. My mission is simple. To find, explore and share these stories.
Bobby Bones
I'm not a victim.
Amy
I'm a survivor. You're strongest when you're the most vulnerable. To remind us what it means to be alive. Not just that I was the guy.
Lunchbox
That cut his arm off, but I'm the guy who was smiling when he.
Amy
Cut his arm off alive. Again, a podcast about the fragility of life, the strength of the human spirit, and what it means to truly live. Listen to Alive again on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite, favorite shows.
Lunchbox
All right, this is K from Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
Eddie
I just wanted to call and tell Amy, thank you.
Amy
I was just nominated Jokester of the.
Lunchbox
Year at my workplace for the second.
Bobby Bones
Year in a row thanks to her Morning Cornies.
Lunchbox
And with that, it's time for your morning Corny.
Bobby Bones
Why couldn't the bicycle stand up by itself? It was too tired.
Eddie
Jokester of the Year.
Bobby Bones
Nice.
Lunchbox
Look at that. She got an award. Did you get an award yesterday?
Bobby Bones
No.
Lunchbox
Oh, I thought you went to get an award to, like, Orlando.
Bobby Bones
No, I was speaking on a panel.
Lunchbox
Oh, I thought you were getting an award.
Eddie
Two awards in one week.
Bobby Bones
Yeah, no, I got the Gracies.
Lunchbox
A guy I met in Atlanta, and he was like, I was doing a show in Atlanta, and he was like, hey, can I come to the show? I work in radio. And I was like, for sure. Come on back. And hung out with him after the show for, like, 25 minutes. He texted me a picture of you two.
Bobby Bones
Yeah. Yeah. He told me that you were really, really nice to him and. Yeah. Invited him back. He was like, it was just really cool.
Lunchbox
Oh, cool. I met him after you worked in the Christian format, though, was your thing at Christian?
Bobby Bones
Yes. Yeah, I was at Momentum, sort of like their version of crs. You've spoken at it before.
Lunchbox
They said, oh, I headlined that thing once.
Bobby Bones
They said, oh, we've had Bobby before. It was so great.
Lunchbox
It was here in town, though.
Bobby Bones
Yeah, that's what they said, that you did the one. I thought you went to Orlando. She goes, oh, no, this is when we had it in Nashville and that you spoke for, like, an hour, and they were like, everybody like you. They're like, honestly, he could have kept talking for another hour, and everybody would have been like, oh, this is amazing.
Lunchbox
I passed it on the plate. I kept all the money. Yeah, I kept all the money. I was like, all right, pass. Yeah, you hear the whole service.
Bobby Bones
Yeah, they were highly complimentary of you. And so then, yeah, when our people came to me asking about it, they're like, yeah, this is something that Bobby did. So now they. They would love if. If you could come.
Lunchbox
Oh, they tricked you into saying I went to Orlando.
Bobby Bones
They didn't trick me. They just said, this is something you did. So.
Lunchbox
Yeah, but they didn't say that this one was in Orlando, but mine wasn't.
Bobby Bones
I just figured it was an ass coming from the top. I was like, oh, yeah, okay, then this is something that I need to do. Which I went and I did it. And it was like a 25 minute panel.
Lunchbox
What'd you talk about?
Bobby Bones
Well, there was a, like, a moderator there. She was asking questions. And mostly just the. The theme of the conference was risk. And I kind of just started. Even at the beginning, like, risks don't have to look like huge things. Sometimes they can just be, you know. It was a little uncomfortable the first time I came up to you. I saw you eating at a restaurant alone. I'm like, I think that's Bobby Bones. And part of me was like, should I go say hi? I mean, I listen. And I was like, you know what? I'm just gonna go say hi. And then we had a couple other things that came up. Like, even when I decided to try out for the show, like, I had a great job. It was a risk to kind of take a gamble to go do that. But, like, the first risk was saying hi to you, which isn't like a huge thing. And so sometimes risk can be really big, or sometimes it can just be like a small step.
Lunchbox
Did you talk about wearing contraception?
Bobby Bones
That wasn't that type of risk.
Lunchbox
I would be like, don't. That. That's a risk not worth taking.
Eddie
That would be a risk.
Lunchbox
That's what my. That's what I did mine on the year before. Oh, yes. Your headline only did an hour on. Oh, boy. That's cool, though. Who'd you do it with? Who's on the panel?
Bobby Bones
Just me there.
Lunchbox
That's not a panel.
Bobby Bones
Okay, Like a Q and a Q.
Eddie
And A with just you.
Lunchbox
What do you think a panel is?
Bobby Bones
Sorry. I guess I thought it was going to be a panel. And then I got there, it was just me. So I'm still calling it a panel, but it was me with a. A moderator. Like, she was asking me questions. So I was like, oh, okay.
Lunchbox
It's much better that way because I've done it the other way where I show up and they're like, okay. And I think I'm gonna go out and speak for an hour. And there's seven other people up there and I get like, two questions.
Bobby Bones
Oh, but they had a clock, though, and it was right in front of the stage. And they're like 25 minutes. And you do not go over. Like, they run a tight ship there. I heard that even, like, if the bands that were playing maybe went over.
Lunchbox
And they were watching Go to hell for 25 minutes.
Bobby Bones
Like if the bands went over, they got fined.
Eddie
Hey, that's risky for anything.
Lunchbox
Fined?
Amy
What do you mean fine?
Bobby Bones
That's just a rumor that I Christian.
Lunchbox
I don't know, broadcast.
Amy
Well, maybe they gotta do 100 Hail Marys.
Bobby Bones
Maybe our people just told me that so that I would take it seriously.
Lunchbox
Oh, yeah, you need to be told that.
Bobby Bones
Yeah, like wrap it up.
Lunchbox
But I should have given them our universal hand signal because I'll give Amy the old rapper sometimes. But there are versions of the rapper. If there's. If it's a slow wrap. What's that mean?
Bobby Bones
Like, slowly start to, like, take your time. Like, but. But it's time to put a bow on it.
Lunchbox
But get there. And then there's the faster wrap.
Bobby Bones
Like just get it going. And then there's this fast wrap. Comes with a face. And you did it just now. It's like, like, I can't. I don't know if I can reenact it, but it comes with a look.
Lunchbox
But then there's the ultimate, which is this one.
Eddie
Yeah, yeah. Like end it now.
Lunchbox
I cut my throat. Like, stop. We're running out of time. We're about to hit a time.
Bobby Bones
Occasionally, though, this one's always fun. I'll be getting the slow wrap and then somehow I'll magically make the story more interesting. And you're like, go ahead and continue more. The slow rap stops because I have.
Lunchbox
It'll turn into a nod.
Eddie
You take the lasso away.
Lunchbox
So I'll slow rap.
Bobby Bones
And he'll be like, oh.
Lunchbox
Okay. Yeah. So we work with hand signals in here. Fat traffic.
Eddie
Excuse me?
Amy
Uh, oh.
Lunchbox
So traffic could be the reason that people are overweight. Traffic delays make people more likely to choose fast food over grocery shopping. A study found that even a small increase in traffic congestion leads to measurable rise in fast food visits and drops in supermarket visits. The effect is strongest during the evening around rush hour. Congestion between 5 and 7pm Right around dinner time had the most impact on food choices. Thought that was interesting. The Journal of Urban Economics. With that, here's an interesting one I'd like to hear your guys thoughts on. A female passenger has been charged with child abuse for attacking a kid who had called her fat and Miss Piggy on a flight home from Disney World. Although the exact relationship between Kristy Crampton and the boy was not clear. They were part of a group returning home from Maryland from their Disney trip when she was arrested Monday at the airport. This is from wftv. Crampton started swinging at the child just before takeoff. When he told Crampton, that's the kid. She was too fat to sit in her seat.
Amy
Oh.
Lunchbox
She punched him and then hit him with a water bottle before slamming the child's head into the airplane window as he tried to block. As he tried to block her blows. Airport officials haven't said how old the child is. I'm gonna guess 12.
Eddie
Oh, that's okay.
Lunchbox
I'm just guessing. However, Crampton told police the child was very rude and disrespectful during their trip to Disney. After the child called her fat, Crampton told police she took his phone away. She claims he pushed her arm off the armrest twice, and that's when she began smacking him. Crampton is charged with felony child abuse. She appeared in front of a judge who granted her a $10,000 bond. WFTV. Amy.
Bobby Bones
Oh. I mean, that is excessive and out of control and not okay.
Lunchbox
Yeah, yeah.
Eddie
Which one? The. Calling her name.
Amy
Yeah. Calling her Miss Piggy.
Bobby Bones
No. I mean, yeah, you shouldn't do that. But how the adult responded.
Eddie
I agree.
Lunchbox
Maybe you should have, like, popped the kids. The kids. Parents.
Eddie
I don't know if they're there, though. Like, it sounds like it was a group.
Lunchbox
It was a group Disney trip. But if you're 12, you probably don't want to sit with your parents.
Eddie
Probably not. 12.
Lunchbox
Again, there wasn't enough information to fully formulate an opinion, except the opinion was, you can't hit a kid that's not yours.
Eddie
Can't do it.
Lunchbox
You can't hit a kid that's not yours.
Eddie
Nope.
Lunchbox
Like, that's the universal. Huh?
Bobby Bones
Yeah. No.
Lunchbox
Although you said, why not?
Eddie
Is the kid rotten? Yes.
Amy
What if the kid is 16?
Lunchbox
No.
Amy
No.
Lunchbox
If someone says something to you, you do not hit them. I don't care if it's an adult. If they just say something to you because you're going to get in trouble. If they threaten you, you feel threatened, bodily harm, life's in danger. Hey, you gotta protect yourself. But if somebody says something to you, no need to touch them with your body. Yeah, it's hard sometimes. But if it's a kid, you have to go, this is a kid. I can't fight a kid. I'm an adult. I will be in even more trouble. If you do that to an adult, you're gonna get in trouble. If you do it to a kid, you get in a lot of trouble. You cannot hit a kid that's not yours. You cannot touch a kid that's not yours. Now, should the parents have taken it into their own hands and done what? Hey, whatever parents do is what parents do in the eye of the law. That's fine. But yeah, you can't do that if you're not that. I understand being frustrated. I mean, what kind of jerk kid goes, hey, Miss Piggy. Hey, fatty can't sit in your seat, fat piggy? That's actually very hurtful.
Amy
It sounds like. I mean, that kid was pestering her the whole trip and then it just boiled over. You know, you're already tired from a Disney trip, kid's been harassing you the whole time, then you sit down on the plane, calls you Miss Piggy.
Lunchbox
Yeah, the flight home's the worst. Oh, the flight there a little exciting.
Eddie
You're excited, you're going to Disney.
Lunchbox
The flight home, even worse than the flight home is to drive home on a road trip.
Eddie
Even worse than that is unpacking when you get home.
Lunchbox
No, the drive home on a road trip's way worse than unpacking.
Amy
Yeah, drive home.
Lunchbox
At least you get to be home.
Eddie
Yeah, that's true.
Lunchbox
There's nothing to look forward to on the drive at home, just getting home, just sitting there. Oh, is there a buc EE's anywhere in between to look forward to? So, yeah. Cool. By the way, you guys can leave us voicemails. I just want to say it again. 8, 77 77. Bobby, if we are not on the air, if it's not live, the number is still active, leave us a voicemail. 877-7. Bobby.
Bobby Bones
Bobby.
Lunchbox
Bone show. Bonehead. Story of the day.
Amy
This story comes to us from Florida. A 36 year old man's a convicted felon out on parole. Parole. Not supposed to be at a bar, but he's at a bar with friends. Someone pulls out one of those hot chips and he says, I'll do the hot chip challenge. And so he eats the chip. Oh, my mouth's on fire. My mouth's on fire. Grabs his buddy's corona, cools down his mouth. Only problem is he's not supposed to drink while he's on parole either. Someone posted the video. Parole officer saw it.
Lunchbox
Oh yeah, there's like nine things there.
Eddie
He sounds like a nice dude, though.
Lunchbox
No, it sounds like a dude who's idiot to begin with. And it makes sense that all this stuff has happened to him. Yeah, yeah. Why is he a nice dude?
Eddie
I mean, he's just at a bar doing the hot chip challenge, but he.
Lunchbox
Was already on like probation or parole or one of those no, no.
Bobby Bones
For what?
Eddie
I know. I'm just saying he didn't go rob anything else or, like, commit another crime. He's just hanging out with his boys doing a chip challenge.
Lunchbox
He did commit a crime and then broke the rules they gave him.
Eddie
I got you.
Lunchbox
I got you. Okay.
Amy
I'm Lunchbox. That's your bonehead story of the day.
Lunchbox
Lunchbox was so upset that the local news called Morgan and asked her to come be part of the newscast, talking about the celebrity softball tournament they're playing in. They called Morgan. Morgan didn't call them. And so it's the Folds of Honor tournament. Our softball game? Yeah.
Bobby Bones
It's coming up during CMA Fest.
Lunchbox
So do you want to hear the clips or no? Because he's going to explode. I'm telling you right now. His head's going to pop. Because they did a whole. She's on it for, like, four minutes. Wow.
Amy
A lot of it. Let me, Let me, let me.
Lunchbox
You saw it.
Amy
I saw it. Let me. Go ahead. Morgan was not very good on there.
Lunchbox
Why are you hating on her?
Amy
She did a lot of head nodding. Just like, why? The other guy was talking or the woman was talking.
Bobby Bones
That's what you're supposed to do.
Amy
She made a lot of head nodding.
Lunchbox
Let me play clips number one. Here's the intro to Morgan on the news. Go ahead.
Bobby Bones
The most patriotic game in America is coming back to Nashville this June. It's the rock and jock celebrity song softball game by Folds of Honor, Tennessee. Morgan Huelsman from the Bobby Bones show is a celebrity player. And we've got Tripp Osteen who is with Folds of Honor at a really fun event, too. And Morgan, you're one of the celebrity players, by the way, works in the Bobby Bones show. You'll hear her voice from time to time on the show. So tell me a little bit about how you get involved, what you're looking forward to with this game coming up. Can you play it all?
Lunchbox
So the answer is yes, but we're gonna hear from Morgan here. And they called her celebrity twice.
Eddie
I heard that.
Amy
I did. Like the dig the lady took at her. They're like, o. You can hear her every once in a while. Not very often, but every once in a while.
Lunchbox
She said from time to time.
Bobby Bones
And it makes sense because she's literally on website.
Amy
I'm just saying what she also lunchbox.
Bobby Bones
You're just avoiding the fact that they called me a celebrity twice.
Lunchbox
Okay, here's Morgan. Go ahead.
Bobby Bones
Can you play it all? Yes. I did used to play softball Growing up. So that's where my skills come in. But it's so much fun. You just never know what's gonna happen. There was one year where I was base running for Jelly Roll, and there was another year where I missed. Missed a fly ball, and Riley Green was like, what are you doing? So you just never know what's gonna happen. And honestly, this year, I'm really excited because I happened to see a new announcement that came through. Yes, Ryan Sheckler is gonna be there. And he was one of my celebrity crushes growing up.
Lunchbox
So I was like, okay, I thought you were great. That's great.
Eddie
That was awesome.
Lunchbox
Who's Ryan Sheckler?
Bobby Bones
The skateboarder. He's really big in skateboarding. He was massive for the Millennials.
Lunchbox
Oh, cool. I don't know who that is.
Bobby Bones
Me neither.
Lunchbox
That's super cool. I thought that was a great, great answer to her question. You sound good. Anything, Lunchbox.
Amy
Morgan all of a sudden picked up a country accident in there. Like, she's really country all of a sudden.
Bobby Bones
I sound exactly like myself.
Amy
No, no, no, no. And I mean. Oh, I can play.
Lunchbox
I mean, what do you want her to say? She even said she dropped a fly ball. So she's also.
Bobby Bones
Yeah.
Amy
I mean, that's hilarious. I mean, and that lady acted like that was the funniest thing she'd ever heard.
Lunchbox
Now just.
Amy
You, the lady, it was like. That was a sympathy laugh. She was, like, trying to.
Lunchbox
She's like, you're such a hater.
Amy
I needed more.
Lunchbox
But, okay, here we go.
Bobby Bones
Who's the best player on the team, and who's the worst player?
Amy
Oh, my God.
Bobby Bones
Anyone surprise you how their lack of skills.
Lunchbox
Hold on one second. You know that's a bad question to ask. It's a reporter. You can't set Morgan up like that. Say, who's the worst player? You're just asking for something salacious.
Amy
I was ready to jump through the computer because I thought that was Morgan's chance to take a shot, and I.
Lunchbox
Wish she would have. She did not take a shot, but.
Amy
I knew better because she got smoked in Home Run Derby, so she can't even say it.
Bobby Bones
Well, I also didn't think the celebrity name would really resonate for Lunchbox. I knew it would resonate for other ones.
Lunchbox
People be like, who?
Bobby Bones
Yeah.
Amy
You are a bigger celebrity than I am. You have been drinking some Kool Aid. That I have.
Bobby Bones
I'm not referred to as a celebrity twice on a television show. Has that ever happened to you?
Amy
Yes, all the time. I don't I was on Celebrity Family Feud.
Lunchbox
I don't. Yeah, but I got to pick the team.
Amy
No, no, but I'm saying, Morgan saying. Have you ever been referred to as a celebrity on your show?
Lunchbox
I was picked as the celebrity, and then you bring your family, and so I just brought you guys.
Amy
No, not celebrity.
Lunchbox
Okay. I don't like that. She asked Morgan the question about who's the worst. I feel like that's unfair to put somebody in the spot like that, but go ahead.
Bobby Bones
Who's the best player on the team and who's the worst player?
Amy
Oh, my God.
Bobby Bones
Anyone surprise you how their lack of skills. You know, Riley Green's for sure one of the best. He's so talented when it comes to playing softball. Baseball. I can see that. I can see that. Honestly, I don't know if we've had a worse player.
Lunchbox
It might have been me.
Bobby Bones
I think I did worse than I thought I should have done. Well, also, the girls, we just tend to have a lot of fun, and we get caught up and hanging out with each other.
Eddie
Great answer.
Bobby Bones
Yeah. That's all you can do.
Amy
Probably accurate. So it was a good answer. We were being honest for once.
Lunchbox
And how would you have done that? Holding different.
Amy
Oh, I would have told someone that they were the worst because there are bad people.
Lunchbox
And who's the worst? Who just said, see what is.
Amy
I mean, some of the people. I don't know their names is the problem.
Lunchbox
And this is what would have happened on the show. Yeah.
Amy
I mean, I would say Julia Cole hadn't been that good. She's fun, she's good personality, but softball wise, not that great.
Bobby Bones
I'm pretty sure she got an MVP award.
Amy
I don't know about that. I mean, that's because she's fun and she's funny. Danae would probably be the. I would say the best.
Lunchbox
Yeah. No, I didn't ask about the best.
Amy
No, no, you said, how would you handle that? And that's how I would have answered it.
Lunchbox
It. Yeah. So, Morgan, great job.
Bobby Bones
Thank you.
Lunchbox
And I'm. I'm sure they'll ask you back.
Bobby Bones
I think so, too. I mean, did you hear that Two celebrity notices lunchbox. How you feel about that?
Amy
Great. Morgan. I mean, I don't understand what you. What you want me to say. They know I'm a bigger celebrity than you are, but.
Bobby Bones
But they didn't ask you.
Lunchbox
That's true.
Amy
That's fine.
Lunchbox
Maybe they did. You missed the email.
Amy
Yeah, I may have missed the email.
Lunchbox
Yeah.
Amy
I don't check email a lot yeah.
Eddie
He doesn't know how to.
Lunchbox
He doesn't know to get on his phone.
Amy
That's True.
Lunchbox
That's from WSMB 4. Good job, Morgan. Thank you. We'll see you tomorrow. Bye, everybody. The Bobby Bones show theme song written, produced and sang by Reed Yarberry. You can find his Instagram @reedyarberry Scuba Steve executive Producer Raymundo Head of Production I'm Bobby Bones. My Instagram is mrbobbybones. Thank you for listening to the podcast.
Bobby Bones
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Podcast Summary: The Bobby Bones Show
Episode: THURS PT 1: Eddie The Helicopter Parent Returns + Lunchbox Rates Morgan's TV Appearance + What To Do If You Get Paid Too Much
Release Date: May 29, 2025
(01:54 - 06:10)
The episode kicks off with a lively discussion about the U.S. Treasury Department's decision to cease the production of pennies. Host Bobby Bones invites his co-hosts, Lunchbox and Amy, to delve into the implications of this change.
Notable Quotes:
The trio humorously debates whether the disappearance of pennies will lead to the end of traditional piggy banks, ultimately agreeing that while pennies won't vanish overnight, their absence will gradually become noticeable as fewer people use cash.
(06:10 - 09:38)
Transitioning from coins to personal security, Lunchbox introduces a new trend where everyday individuals are hiring bodyguards. This segment features a clip narrated by Bobby Bones, highlighting how apps like Bond are making personal protection accessible and affordable.
Notable Quotes:
The hosts humorously speculate about the motivations behind ordinary people hiring bodyguards, with remarks about perceptions of celebrity and security.
(09:38 - 13:00)
The conversation shifts to a dramatic legal case where Lawrence Campbell sues his ex-girlfriend for $5 million, alleging she absconded with lottery winnings from a ticket he claims to have purchased. Amy breaks down the lawsuit details, questioning the legitimacy of Campbell's claims.
Notable Quotes:
The hosts debate the fairness of the lawsuit, considering evidence like video proof of the ticket purchase and the ex-girlfriend's actions post-winning.
(26:50 - 30:22)
A listener's dilemma about being overpaid at work sparks a detailed discussion on employees' legal obligations to return mistakenly received funds. Lunchbox provides actionable advice, referencing New York state regulations that limit wage deductions to 12.5% of gross earnings.
Notable Quotes:
The segment emphasizes the importance of communication with employers and negotiating repayment terms to mitigate financial strain.
(13:00 - 21:38)
Eddie brings up the age-old debate of permissive parenting versus strict oversight, specifically regarding whether a 17-year-old should attend concerts alone with friends. The panel—Lunchbox, Amy, and Bobby—engages in a spirited debate, weighing trust, safety, and the natural progression of independence.
Notable Quotes:
The discussion touches on societal norms around teenage autonomy and the balance parents must strike between protection and granting freedom.
(24:05 - 31:42)
In a refreshing shift, Lunchbox shares a heartwarming story about Orville Von Ethwagon, a 107-year-old World War II veteran who received an honorary high school diploma. The community honors Orville’s lifelong contributions, showcasing the impactful gestures that recognize the elderly's roles in society.
Notable Quotes:
The hosts commend Orville’s dedication and the principal’s decision to honor him, highlighting the positive ripple effects of such recognition.
(32:50 - 38:15)
Lunchbox introduces a concerning topic: the infiltration of microplastics in human brain tissue. The hosts discuss recent research suggesting that these tiny plastics could be linked to mental health issues like depression and dementia.
Notable Quotes:
The conversation includes humorous metaphors about plastics in the brain but underscores the significance of environmental pollution's impact on health.
(38:15 - 44:08)
Bobby announces an exciting opportunity: the show is organizing a cruise scheduled for February next year. This event will feature performances by major artists like Keith Urban and LeAnn Rimes. A highlight is Morgan's participation as a celebrity player in the Folds of Honor softball tournament during CMA Fest.
Notable Quotes:
The hosts express enthusiasm for the cruise, detailing destinations like Key West and Nassau, and humorously navigate the logistics of accommodating their co-host Morgan.
(44:08 - 62:44)
A recurring theme is Morgan's role in the Folds of Honor softball game, where her on-screen performance receives mixed reactions. The hosts play and discuss a news clip featuring Morgan, highlighting her challenges and interactions during the broadcast.
Notable Quotes:
The segment blends humor with constructive feedback, celebrating Morgan’s efforts while playfully critiquing her media presence.
(62:44 - End)
The show wraps up with light-hearted "Morning Corny" jokes and interactions among the hosts. They share personal anecdotes, award celebrations, and playful banter, reinforcing the show's engaging and friendly dynamic.
Notable Quotes:
The hosts encourage listener engagement through voicemails and conclude with their signature humor, leaving the audience entertained and connected.
Overall Insights: This episode of The Bobby Bones Show masterfully balances serious discussions with humor and personal anecdotes. From economic changes like the penny phase-out to pressing health concerns about microplastics, the hosts provide insightful commentary while maintaining an engaging and relatable tone. Personal stories, such as the overpayment dilemma and parenting challenges, along with uplifting good news segments, create a well-rounded and dynamic listening experience. The upcoming cruise announcement and Morgan's involvement add an exciting future event for listeners to look forward to. Throughout, The Bobby Bones Show delivers a blend of information, entertainment, and community engagement that keeps audiences both informed and entertained.