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Christian artist, Anne Wilson is in studio to celebrate International Women's Day to talk about her inspirational story, signing her first deal as a teenager, and much more! And after Bobby talked about wanting to do a 'dude's trip' to South Dakota this week, he goes around the room to every guy on the show so they can pitch ideas on what to do when they take the trip. After finding out the clocks are springing forward this weekend, Bobby goes through his PSA list of things to check on and keep up to date with!

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
We'll go transmitting Alisa, what's up.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
Welcome to the show. It's International Women's Day. More in studio.
Let's go around the rooms Friday. Let's show our favorite
story or something that made us laugh or cry from
the week. Amy you go first.

Speaker 3 (00:21):
So single people were polled ages eighteen to forty five,
and they shared what they find attractive.

Speaker 4 (00:27):
Now, it's not gonna be the stuff that we're used
to saying.

Speaker 2 (00:30):
But I bet you because they're being asked it. They're
mentioning things other than just the normal things, because like,
what do you find attractive? Let's say dude said big boobs.
You say that, like you mag or a woman or
even a dude, it'd be like lots of money abs.
So I'm curious to know what this is, like, what

(00:50):
else they're attracted to. That's what it feels like to me,
going like a.

Speaker 3 (00:53):
Lot of women must have been asked because the number
one thing is staying on top of chores.

Speaker 4 (00:57):
They find that very attractive.

Speaker 2 (00:59):
Women like, yeah, I do the dishes two times. Ever, hell,
my wife loves it. She's like, oh my, it's like
I've discovered a cure for something. It's like, oh my gosh.
The dishes I did.

Speaker 3 (01:12):
That's at the top of the list, as well, knowing
how to do laundry and doing it regularly, being well
rounded in general, and then cooking. Those are the top
five things we find attractive in people.

Speaker 2 (01:23):
I feel too that those aren't early attractiveness. That's what
we find attractive once we've been with someone for a while,
because you don't meet somebody and all of a sudden, Hey,
what's your name? I'm so attracted you're cooking. You've never
been in my house. But what if, like, you know,
the third day, you're like, oh, let me make dinner
for you. But yeah, that's but then you're setting it
up like she's gonna expect it more and anyone's early lunchbox.

(01:45):
What do you have?

Speaker 3 (01:46):
Man?

Speaker 5 (01:46):
We can't have any fun in this world anymore. I mean,
there's always got to be a Karen in the group.
A group of teachers at a high school. They do
this thing every year where they make a calendar and
they make oh, go.

Speaker 2 (01:57):
Ahead, this is terrible. The leaked, Yeah, go ahead, and
they all consent to it, and they just hang at
the teacher. I have to consent though, go ahead.

Speaker 5 (02:06):
They all they dress up in costumes and they like,
you know.

Speaker 2 (02:09):
But let's yes, hips the teachers are an explicit photo calendar.

Speaker 5 (02:15):
Yeah, with each other, with each other, and they hang
it in the teacher's lounge.

Speaker 2 (02:20):
They've been doing it for years. No one else sees it. No,
that's not true. Someone did s it.

Speaker 5 (02:23):
No, some some newbie old Karen leaked the photos and
now they're in trouble.

Speaker 2 (02:31):
Yeah, that's weird. Man, Like one of them is like
a nun and got his foot up on the butt
of another dude who's in like a gold and it's
like a shades a great thing. If you're gonna do it,
you just don't bring it to school.

Speaker 4 (02:45):
Guy, do it?

Speaker 2 (02:46):
Is my question. People do a lot of stuff, but
I'm telling you it's this isn't a Karen thing. This
is a They're not going to jail for it. It's
not illegal, but it's stupid to do because you know
you're gonna get in trouble because you're teaching kids, young kids,
and if it gets leaked, they can't look at their
teachers as well.

Speaker 4 (02:59):
It's like, how could you ever look at your teacher
in the same.

Speaker 2 (03:01):
If you see that, that would be so weird and
scarring but no one would see it's in the teachers. Teacher.

Speaker 4 (03:12):
You never made your way into the teachers on.

Speaker 2 (03:14):
Just Oh I did one time. That's awesome. Yeah, a
couple of times because I smelled popcorn. I'm like, I
want to see, like how much popcorn they're making back there?
I want to Teachers would just be like, hey, would
you go on the lounge and get this? They had
like a really nice snack machine. Oh I sat there.
I called my parents, see nice, you were there too. Okay,
so I'm not an F one fan.

Speaker 6 (03:32):
But apparently in Saudi Arabia they're making a new track,
and this track is amazing.

Speaker 2 (03:37):
It looks just like Mario Kart. They're actually trying to
base it off Mario Kart. One of the turns goes
twenty stories high and it's all lit in rainbow. No
word on bananas or turtle shells or anything. Literally, it
looks like Mario. No, it looks just like Mario Kart.

Speaker 6 (03:50):
And it's supposed to be done in like I don't know,
five or six years, but they're working on it.

Speaker 2 (03:54):
That's gonna be awesome. And Mario Kart I stood the
test of time. Yeah, people still, my kids still play
it still fun, still a good game.

Speaker 6 (04:00):
Now you can be like, I don't know, fifty different
characters now, which is cool, Like any you can be
like one of the guys from Like to.

Speaker 2 (04:07):
Me, it's like Lamb because we had like eight characters,
but Grilla punished like like we had. Also, have you
seen the Oakland Don't not Oakland anymore, but Las Vegas
as new potential Stadium did the layout. It's it's crazy.
It's it feels like Mario Kart, but it's a baseball field.
And you know the Sydney Opera House. You've seen a
picture of that has those big flaps over the harbor. Yeah,

(04:28):
it's like that over the top of it, but the
screens are underneath the flaps. Oh that's cool. Yeah, like
feed some people. But yeah no, let's build these. That'd
be cool. You're right that that'd be cool. My final story,
it's a car story too. But I brought this because
I think Lunchbox would enjoy it. He loves Lamborghini's do
and I can appreciate a Lamborghini. I can even identify one.

(04:49):
I'm like, well, I think that's a Lamborghini. I don't
know that I've ever been in a Lamborghini and I've
only ever seen a couple.

Speaker 4 (04:55):
I saw a green one this last weekend on the highway.

Speaker 2 (04:57):
It's like a weird lime green like off the way
flash the same one. Yeah, I think he lives here. Okay,
and we lived near each other, did you if you.

Speaker 3 (05:07):
Like trying to get their like, hey, my son's the one.

Speaker 4 (05:12):
That spotted it first.

Speaker 2 (05:13):
And the doors come up. That is when whenever you're
anywhere in a car goes. So it's the story is
from Kitchener. A high end sports car was stolen during
a test drive. Oh man, it was a six hundred
thousand dollars Lamborghini and no one gets no one goes
with you. The guy decided to meet the buyer on Tuesday,
just before two pm in a parking lot. The male

(05:35):
suspect drove up in a Mercedes Maybot, which is a
very expensive car. And I only know even what it
is because I would here Maybot music and I don't
even know who does that, but it's like a rapper
may maybe maybe yeah that is, Oh man, you don't know, Oh,
you don't know. The guy that got it's the guy
that went bankrupt. It's Rick Cross. That's that's who it is.

(05:57):
Rick Cross. He went on a banker. Can we saw
him fly into the airport? We guts with me when
Reck Crosstol on the cross plane mm hms wild. Anyway,
the guy pulls up in a Maybok and there are
other pastors in the vehicle, and he's like, you mind
if I just take it for test drive. Maybok can
stay here. But the Maybok had other people in the vehicle,
so they drove off, and the dude drove off in
the Lamborghini and then off he goes, and they don't
know where the car is. Oh, that is so cool.

(06:19):
It's gone. See he's gone. It's gone. It's like almost
like stealing the Wiener Mobile. Man, how are you gonna see?
It's hard to hide something that is.

Speaker 5 (06:28):
Yeah, because even if you wait two months, a new
Lamborghini on the road is gonna be like.

Speaker 2 (06:33):
Huh, they can paint it. Yeah, it's grained. Then amy
are like, we saw it. Yeah. So those are our stories.
I would love to have a lunchbox drive a Lamborghini.
Oh my gosh. That wouldn't let him rent one. There's
that thing where you can rent a car, but I'm
afraid that dude. He likes to pill out so much.
I'm afraid he would reck it and then it would
cost like my insurance.

Speaker 5 (06:52):
How great would that be if they let me take
it on the open road? All roads are pretty open.
Just get on the interstate, you know what I'm saying,
they close it down and let me just close.

Speaker 2 (06:59):
The road down for you. Why would they do that?
And who do you even know they could do that?
I don't.

Speaker 5 (07:02):
I'm saying, can you pay, like a parade pays to
close the road, you know, not the interstate?

Speaker 2 (07:09):
Why not? Uh? You probably could pay because I'm sure
like when people do races like ten k's, they have
to close parts of it, right, Like when they're doing
a bike race, they close the road. Yeah, I think
you have to get a permit. I don't think just
for lunch box in the open road's gonna do that.
But I hear you. All right, that's it. That's it's
good news. Our favorite news for the week. It's International
Women's Day. We have an all it's an awesome dance

(07:31):
party I'm gonna do of all women, we have Amy
here today. I'm always serious, the international woman herself and
Wilson will come in later. Let's get started now. Speaking
of international women, I can't play a dude song after
doing all that. No, you can't. Well, I have a
song Chase Beckham coming out. But it's like International Women's Day.
Here's a dude.

Speaker 4 (07:48):
Yeah, why are we not? I hadn't thought of that.

Speaker 2 (07:51):
Why don't pick? I don't pick all the music?

Speaker 4 (07:52):
Oh why didn't they pick that?

Speaker 2 (07:53):
Well, we can pick it up. We can do a song.
What woman, Amy, would you like to play? I know
you're don't.

Speaker 4 (08:00):
I was gonna say, Megan Maroni, I'm not pretty?

Speaker 2 (08:02):
Five five pm today local time, Amy's doing on iHeartRadio.
I deal with Megan Marony celebrating women. Today is International
Women's Day. On the Bobby Bone Show, let's open up
the mail bag.

Speaker 1 (08:15):
You send the game mail and we reading all the air.

Speaker 2 (08:18):
Pick something we call Bobby's mail bag. Yeah, hello Bobby.
My girlfriend and I've been together for almost three years.
About a year ago, she got a great job in Miami.
I helped her move there. I visit her at least
once a month for a weekend, and she flies home
every couple of months visit me. We also FaceTime a lot,
but it feels like we're slowly slipping apart. Moving in

(08:39):
Miami would mean different job, sell or run out of
my house. I don't want to seem desperate, but I
would do that if it would save our relationship. I've
always thought would be together forever. And I can't stand
to see where we're heading.

Speaker 7 (08:51):
Now.

Speaker 2 (08:51):
What should I do? Sign stuck in South Carolina very
common for long distance relationships because the hardest thing is
the distance, and it's hard to be connected to somebody
when you're very far away. And for it to not
be a long distance, one of you have to commit
to making the move unless you meet in the middle
and you go full Diamond Rio and you both do it.
Oh yeah, one starts walking one way once to talk

(09:13):
in the other day in the middle. But I don't
think that's desperate. I think there has to be a
sacrifice by one of you, and if you feel like
you could do it and it's worth it, I think
the conversation, though, just should be approached before you raise
your and go I want to move there because she'd
probably love that anyway, be like, Hey, we should figureut
how we're gonna conclude the distance part of this relationship

(09:36):
and you know, do you see yourself moving in South Carolina?
I mean I could move to Miami. It would involve
me having to find another job. There could be some
time where I'm not working when I'm there. Have that conversation.
That's not even that awkward because if she wants you
to move there, and it seems like it'd be the
easiest thing on her, like, she should be super cool
with it and it doesn't seem desperate.

Speaker 3 (09:55):
If you're having thoughts that this could be your forever
person and you you picture you'll be together like that,
then it's not desperate.

Speaker 2 (10:02):
Don't let it. Don't let it go away, because worst
case scenario, you move whatever, it doesn't work out, move
back home. The worst worst case scenario is you never
approach the idea of moving there, and then you guys
break up and you're always like, man, what could it?
Was awesome? Yeah, So it's not even a weird conversation
to have.

Speaker 3 (10:21):
But should he approach it as if he's going to
move there and like get his own place and start
with that, because I feel like it might she might
be caught off guard if he's.

Speaker 2 (10:28):
Like, I think that's what the conversation is. Hey, we
got to figure out a way to do this. What
do you what would you do? Would you move here?
Are you going to move there? And that'll come up naturally,
I wouldn't call. I wouldn't you know, call or be
there and have the conversation to be like, all, what
are wenna? Do I go move in with you? Am
I gonna move on myself? Trying to feel I know
you kind of feel each other out. I think she'd
probably want you to move in if she's if you're
gonna move across the country for somebody and you're making

(10:50):
that sacrifice for them, they should make the sacrifice of
the stinky bathroom every once in a while and sharing
a bed, that you should move in with her. Yeah,
And who's got the better job? Right? Like in that
part of it too, like who's got the better job
out of the two? Maybe not always. Sometimes it's more
for my best potential. Sometimes it's maybe he's got a
job he doesn't he likes, but he doesn't love, but
he loves the idea of being with her more. It's

(11:11):
just all priorities. Have the priorities talk figure a way
to end it.

Speaker 4 (11:14):
Caitlyn moved for you.

Speaker 2 (11:16):
My wife moved for me. We're a long distance for.

Speaker 4 (11:18):
A long time, and my hasband moved for me.

Speaker 2 (11:20):
So somebody has to do and look at us three bosses.

Speaker 4 (11:23):
Well, I also moved for him.

Speaker 2 (11:25):
I'm not atrust I say that in just because I
think Eddie's wife and my wife they knocked us both
down real here and then we be We wouldn't say
that if they were were joking. Get we got your
gam mail, and now let's find the clothes. Bobby failed back. Yeah,
you're listening to the Bobby Bone Show International Women's Day Edition.

(11:48):
Before we get into fun Fact Friday, Fun Trivia Friday,
it ready. Oh yeah, it's one simple question. What two
governors in the United States? Only two governors ever are
on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, Arnold Forsenager and Robin
And you got it, Ronald Reagan and Arnold Swarzenager. Who
are you gonna say, Robin Matua would have been Robin?

(12:10):
What is that kind of you guys? Even the wrestler. Yeah,
definitely could have been. Yeah, Robin Matua oklahom State baseball
chug of White Sox and Reagan was the governor of
California before president he was didn't actor for the movies
you like, yeah, the black and white movies. Then governor, yeah, good,
No other governor from any state has a star. Two

(12:31):
former US presidents have a star. Can you name the president? Reagan? Boom? Okay,
it was easy one Reagan and Roosevelt. No, who was
an actor? Who else would have been?

Speaker 4 (12:43):
Jim Carter? Blim Carter, Jimmy Carter.

Speaker 2 (12:46):
That's what Amy calls George Washington that pen. She kind
of extended it. So Reagan is one entertainment. What other
president was kind of was big van Dyke. Not a president,
Dick Van died. I don't know a president, yes, but
kind of an entertainer. Entertainment Clark, what era America? Since

(13:08):
America has been born? Like a Lincoln win the whole.
Two former US presidents have a star. One's Ronald Reagan Nixon.
Think of a president that is known as an entertainer,
maybe before he's even a president. Donald Trump Trump, that's
a good one. Yeah, it's good fun trivia front. That's

(13:29):
really cool. I forget everything the last ten years around
the room. I'll go first. We'll talk about wedding rings.
I have mine right here. It's I wear the rubber
one ninety nine percent of the time. Yeah, I do too.
I do have a nicer one, but I do wear
the rubber one. It was stupid to me to get
the nice one because the only reason I got itcause
I was like, my wife's got a nice one, Well

(13:50):
I want a nice one, so I get one. And
I don't like wearing it because it's hard. It's like
it's got a little dimonds in then I don't want
to lose it. So do you know why the wedding
ring is worn on the left hand and the not
the middle finger, but the one next to.

Speaker 4 (14:04):
It, because it goes straight to the heart.

Speaker 2 (14:06):
Yeah, the blood goes straight to the heart.

Speaker 5 (14:08):
I was gonna say, because most people are right handed
and it would interfere with whatever you're doing.

Speaker 2 (14:12):
And I tried to wear my wedding ring on my
right hand because you're left handed. And I was like,
what if I get called it in the pitch somewhere
all of a sudden, you never know, That's what I say, Like,
I'm training, what if we get called it, you know,
play quarterback somewhere. And my wife's like, you won't and
if you do, you can take it off. But historians
believe The idea of wedding rings dates backs dates back
to ancient Egyptians, who believe there was a vena Morris
or vein of love in the left hand's fourth finger

(14:33):
that has that direct route to the heart one vein
all the way through that somewhere else. Fun fat, not
the heart ve Yeah, somewhere else. That's top All right, Amy,
you're up.

Speaker 3 (14:43):
Oh so, Mona Lisa doesn't have eyebrows, and I always
saw Da Vinci just didn't paint them. But the fun
fact is he did paint eyebrows on her. It's just
over time when they were cleaning it. Wow, eyebrows were eroded.
That's not good, and so they're no longer visible.

Speaker 5 (14:58):
You know.

Speaker 2 (14:58):
The stupidest people are those that go to Mona Lisa
and the like throw milkshake on it. They're like, we
got it. It's so protected glass, multiple layers. You're basically
throwing a milkshake in somebody's window. Yeah, oh really on
the window. I see those. I'm like, oh many, Yeah,
you can't get it. It does look like it's just
sitting there and you can touch it if you want.

(15:18):
You can't even get close, but you can't even touch
the glass. It's one of the few that you can't
get right up to. Only went this last year, which
that was really cool. Yeah, and you can kind of
see that she used to have eyebrows, but she doesn't.
That is wild. Do you know who else doesn't have eyebrows?
Last I check? NOAs Cyris.

Speaker 4 (15:35):
Oh I saw that.

Speaker 2 (15:36):
Yeah, I wasn't thinking that era. Well, hey, nobody is
lunchbox what you have.

Speaker 5 (15:43):
It's International Women's Day, so I want to do something,
you know, involving women for the women. According to the
Guinness Book of World Records, the woman with the largest
natural breast in the world, where it's a size fifty
two eyebrawl.

Speaker 2 (15:55):
You're so thoughtful for the women. That's so nice. And
they weigh almost one hundred pounds. Wow, that can't be good.
It's good. I wore one of those weight vests wants
to jog in. It was like fifteen pounds kill me,
fifteen pounds fifteen? This is a hundred dude, Is that's
what I'm saying? Fifty eight? Have you seen them?

Speaker 3 (16:15):
No?

Speaker 2 (16:16):
I need to find I'm shocked you didn't do research
on this, And I'm surprised that somebody makes an eye
unless she made her own brawl. And is that even
a bra or is that a tarp? Like we would
cover of the boat with tarps and you know a little.
So what's the smallest linch box? Oh? I see them?
Look no, no, no, the letter letter size. I'm looking
at her. No, wow, let me see. She's smiling. She looks.

(16:42):
Oh my gosh. Wow. No, it's not that. It's not
what you think. Let me see. It's not like it's
just not. Oh yeah, and it also don't feel bad.

Speaker 4 (16:55):
It's she might have some back pain.

Speaker 2 (17:00):
They're big. Oh, I'm sure they gotta even stand up
straight like that. I mean, you've got to get a
bigger shower. That's wild. Okay, moving on, I got trivia
for you. Go ahead. Okay, So what is the one
body part that cannot repair itself? Go? That's a great question.
Is it outward or is it's inward like if it's

(17:23):
it's an organ or is it like because that's a
different can we's ay, but even the organs can repair themselves.
But is it an organ? You're asking? So is it
an organ or is it like an ear lob or
something like that? I would say external? Okay, love it,
good word external? What's the one body part? Let me
think elbows, all good.

Speaker 6 (17:43):
Hair, grup, teeth, teeth, Yeah, teeth, nailed that, it's teeth.
Teeth is the one body part that we have that
cannot repair itself. Your finger, whatever you got a scar.
Scar tissue is usually what repairs whatever cuts in your body.
But teeth once, if you cut it, you break it
can't When did you figure that out? But when you
said it two seconds after you said it, I was like, well,

(18:07):
it took me a while to get it.

Speaker 2 (18:09):
Went on that one I was thinking to I went,
you rip your elbow, and he went rip your nipple?
That that that there was a buddy? Is that a
body part though? A tooth? Yeah? Man, yeah, but body
parts do they fall out? The body parts are like
because teeth fall out, So what would you cause earlier?
Then you can die? A device? I don't know.

Speaker 6 (18:30):
I don't know the part of your body tool like
your your fingernails, part his hair a body part?

Speaker 2 (18:36):
Absolutely no, no, no, it's accessory. I'm cheating. I'm cheating,
you know. Go ahead, Morgan?

Speaker 4 (18:44):
All right.

Speaker 8 (18:45):
So chainsaws were first invented for childbirth, so it was
developed to help aid and speed up the process of
widening the area.

Speaker 2 (18:55):
And remove my gosh, that's not fun when in the
area and cutting out disease, which again if but it
had to be smaller.

Speaker 8 (19:05):
Yeah, yeah, I don't know that it was like the
one we see today.

Speaker 2 (19:08):
It makes sense. I would read stories about doctors back
in the day and they would have basically performance rooms
and people would come in with something wrong, they've been
shod or they broke and they would go okay, and
there'd be people white like oh ah, let's go and
doctor would come in like here he is, like, you're
interesting in starting lineup, and the doctor would there's a
guy who has a world record for the fastest decapitation. Crazy.

(19:29):
They didn't really know what they were doing early early medicine,
but I can see where a chain saw would make
it pretty efficient to cut something off more than that
is your best fact you've ever worn. But there's more
to it.

Speaker 8 (19:40):
It wasn't until the twentieth century that they actually started
using it for wood shoppings, like how we know it.

Speaker 4 (19:45):
It took like decades for that to be the case.

Speaker 5 (19:48):
It wasted in seventeen eighty by two Scottish doctors, John
Aiken and James Jeffrey, and they used the hand cranked
chainsaw to cut through the pelvises of delivering mothers who
we're having problems pushing.

Speaker 2 (20:01):
Their Eventually that what we're doing now is going to
be looked at in a couple hundred years if Earth survives,
like I can't believe they were actually cutting into the
body of scalpels. Wow, because we're all going to be
able to do all through lasers and laser and yeah,
that's a crazy one. I don't know. I had fun,
but I did learn something. I have a few here.
How about this. Less than fifteen percent of men in
the United States are six feet tall or taller than

(20:22):
fifteen percent, less than four percent or at least six
foot two. I'm out there. I'm in the fifteen. I'm
not in the four. Sadly, in the NBA, eighty seven
percent of the players are taller than six foot two.
And if you stand six foot seven or more, you
can see about a thousand feet farther. That's cool than
somebody that's about six foot tall. That's really cool. Seven
inches is about a thousand feet that you can see.

(20:44):
That's wow. It must be really cool to be that.
It must be really cool to be that tall, because
then sometimes when just like you, if you're tall, yeah,
they're like, do I think he's cute? I like them?
Or is he just tall? And people respect you when
you're tall yep, like, oh you're tall. Even though one
inch that I'm taller than you, people give me one
inch respect I deserve. Yeah, that's true. If you made
five thousand dollars a day since Christopher Columbus supposedly discovered America,
five thousand bucks a day since that happened, you still

(21:07):
would not have one billion dollars today. Stop. You'd get
there in twenty forty, but you still wouldn't have it. Gosh,
which shows you how much a billion dollars this a
lot of money.

Speaker 9 (21:20):
Today is International Women's Day and the breeding women.

Speaker 2 (21:25):
It's time for the good news.

Speaker 5 (21:27):
How much box Braylan Edwards used to play in the NFL.
Played at the University of Michigan football. He's at the YMCA,
gets done working out, goes to the locker room and
he's getting changed and all of a sudden, here's a
boom boom, and he's like, what is that?

Speaker 2 (21:44):
And he goes around the corner.

Speaker 5 (21:46):
Eighty year old grandpa getting beat up by a twenty
five year old. Twenty five year olds beating the eighty
year old. So Braylan steps in and says, nah, not
on my watch and stops him from slamming his head
into the calendar.

Speaker 2 (21:59):
I wonder what was going home with the twenty five
in the eighty probably a locker fight or something, or
the eighty year old is always naked. And then yes,
and why were you gonna beat him up for them? Well, no,
I'm not. No, I'm saying that twenty five year old, like,
what what is he thinking? I agree, beating up an
old man, right, but I'm wondering why.

Speaker 5 (22:15):
Yeah, it doesn't say just says that eighty year old
man was violently assaulted. I was a twenty five year
old that older people they say whatever they want, and
they oh, true, they're kind of meaning they're both naked.
That's all you got.

Speaker 2 (22:26):
That's when it said something like that.

Speaker 4 (22:29):
It's an underlying issue.

Speaker 2 (22:30):
It probably has nothing to do with Edwards Worth their
all naked like fighting each oh dude.

Speaker 5 (22:35):
In high school, there was a rule the baseball team
that the freshman could not shower at the same because
it was just like group showers. You had like five
spickets out each one, so there was like four different poles.
And the freshmen were not supposed to shower at the
pole with the upperclassmen, and so there's one upperclassman trying
to inflict that rule. Daniel Fara, freshman Big Dude, said

(22:58):
you want to bet him right there in the shower.

Speaker 2 (23:01):
Butt naked, button naked. They fought Ballsy. That's so weird.

Speaker 3 (23:06):
It was.

Speaker 2 (23:07):
Yeah, I'm saying like they fought button Nagger right there
in the shower. There was a there was a movie
like No Country froll Men where they had like a
naked shower fighting scene. Is that what that was? What?

Speaker 7 (23:19):
No?

Speaker 2 (23:19):
Watchbox made us watch a movie for his movie project
Watch All Naked Dudes Box Full of Moonlight. Yeah, that
was a note Keith key special. We saw that. He
just made you watch Botch Naked d No, He's said, kid, there's.

Speaker 5 (23:31):
This beautiful movie playing. I'd loved you to go watch
it with me. And so I met him there after
school one day. And here's the funny part. I bought
the ticket and I thought, oh, he must be inside,
and No Teeth Keys wasn't there. And so I watched
this movie by myself but apparently he had got there
late and he didn't the guy was there, so he left.

Speaker 2 (23:49):
But I watched yeah, box full movie watching going Man,
they surely show a lot of naked dudes. Yeah I do.
But I was like, man, you made us watch it?

Speaker 5 (23:56):
No, no, but I thought it was a deep movie, like, man,
you need to stop worrying about work so much and
live a little bit watude.

Speaker 2 (24:02):
And that was like that was an eye opener. Yet, well,
it's a good story. Brayleen Edwards. You don't want to
get beat up by beryln Edwards either. He's a big dude.

Speaker 5 (24:08):
Yeah you know, I mean an eighty year old. Who
just imagine if you got beat up by the eighty
year old?

Speaker 2 (24:12):
That wow.

Speaker 3 (24:14):
Matt Damon and Brendan Fraser when they did the naked
fight shower scene, they were both really school time.

Speaker 2 (24:21):
What am I thinking of? Probably this nailed it? How
do I remember that? It's your thing?

Speaker 4 (24:27):
We just from nineteen ninety two lunch box.

Speaker 2 (24:31):
It's a good movie, good movie, all right, that's what
it's all about. Telling me something good. Listening to the
Bobby Bone Show International Women's Day Edition, It's not for
easy trivia. Now Amy has set up the game basically, oh,
pretty much. When Amy won the championship, which is her right,
she kicked Daddy out of the next round, So it's

(24:52):
Amy one point, Lunchbox Morgan, Abby zero points playing a
five one round. Amy's got the crown on congrat like
it's it's kick Daddy out there? Yeah, watch this go
ahead things? What the categories country music? Amy? What country
music artist is famous for songs like Before He Cheats
or Jesus Take the Wheel, Carry into It? Correct? Easy trivia?

(25:14):
First round is always easy? Nobody goes home first round.
Who's saying Joe Lene and I Will Always Love You
Lunchbox Joe Lene, Joe Lean, Dolly Parton correct Morgan. What
country music artist is known for songs like Blue Ancient
Color and The Fighter? Correct? Abby? What country music artist
is known for Chicken Fried and toes Zach Brown Band? Correct?

(25:36):
Good job. Nobody would have gone home if you missed.
But now if you miss you get boned. You've been boo.
You don't want to be boned? Amy Ready, I think
easy trivia Kids TV shows Amy. What's the name of
the big red dog that shares adventures with his owner Emily.

Speaker 4 (25:54):
Elizabeth Willi big red dog I know is Clifford.

Speaker 2 (25:59):
Cliford the big red Doug Guess correct, Lunchbox. Who's the
monkey who loves exploring new things with the man with
the yellow hats?

Speaker 1 (26:06):
My boy?

Speaker 2 (26:07):
Curious George? Correct? Morgan. What's the name of the adventurous
explorer who goes on missions with their talking backpack and
friend Boots.

Speaker 9 (26:18):
The monkey backpack backpack?

Speaker 4 (26:20):
That's Dora the Explorer.

Speaker 2 (26:21):
That's correct. Abby. Who's the purple dinosaur who loves to
sing and dance with his friends? Barney? Correct? Good job,
everybody's still alive. The category as insects? Amy, What do
ants have on their bodies that help them sense their
surroundings and detect enemies?

Speaker 3 (26:44):
Thing?

Speaker 4 (26:44):
I took entomology?

Speaker 2 (26:46):
What do ants have on their bodies that help them
sense their surroundings and detect enemies?

Speaker 4 (26:50):
Oh, they have little wings that maybe antenna's but they're
so small.

Speaker 2 (27:00):
Antonas correct Lunchbox. Yeah, what are baby butterflies called before
they're a butterfly? They are a blank kinda pillar. Correct?
Thanks Zeddy, You're welcome here, Morgan. What insect is known
for the loud noise it makes rubbing its legs together
during the night?

Speaker 4 (27:20):
Oh, I feel like that could be a few things.

Speaker 2 (27:24):
Or let's just say, what insect is known for the
loud noise it makes during the night?

Speaker 4 (27:28):
But a lot?

Speaker 9 (27:29):
I mean, they're The one.

Speaker 4 (27:33):
That immediately comes to mind is a cricket. But I
just feel like there's so many others. I guess cricket.

Speaker 2 (27:39):
Correct? Okay? What insect is known for its ability to
cheot through wood? Abby? Oh? Those are termites? Correct? Next round? Easy?
True American history? Amy? What's the name of the ship
that brought the pilgrims to America in sixteen twenty.

Speaker 4 (27:56):
The Mayflower?

Speaker 2 (27:57):
Correct? Lunchbox. What document declared America's independence from Great Britain
in seventeen seventy six, The Declaration of Independence? Correct? Woo Morgan.
What war was fought between Northern and Southern States between
eighteen sixty one and eighteen sixty five?

Speaker 10 (28:18):
Mmm?

Speaker 4 (28:18):
The I don't know what timeline? Okay?

Speaker 2 (28:24):
What war was fought between the Northern and Southern States?

Speaker 9 (28:28):
I mean it has to be the Civil War?

Speaker 2 (28:31):
Right, like a.

Speaker 9 (28:33):
Civil war?

Speaker 2 (28:34):
Correct? Okay? Abbey who was the main leader of the
civil rights movement in the nineteen sixties MLK Jr. Correct?
Nineties TV Amy, what was the name of the popular
animated Nickelodeon show featuring a group of babies and their
adventures in the playpen. The name of the popular animated

(28:56):
Nickelodeon show featuring a group of babies and their adventures
in the playpens. Correct good Pull Good Pull lunchbox In
the title third Rock from the Sun? What does third
Rock refer to? Correct? Oh Morgan categories nineties TV? What

(29:20):
was the name of the theme song from Friends by
the band The rem Brands. I'll be There for You?

Speaker 4 (29:27):
Ooh, I don't know the title and you need the
title right?

Speaker 2 (29:32):
That's what you need? I mean?

Speaker 9 (29:35):
Is it just I'll be there for you? Is it
more than that I'll be.

Speaker 7 (29:38):
There for you?

Speaker 2 (29:38):
Correct? Wow? Abby? What animated Comedy Central TV show followed
the misadventures of a group of fourth graders in the
fictional Colorado mountaintown. What animated Comedy Central TV show followed
the misadventures of a group of fourth graders and a
fictional Colorado mountaintown. It's not hey, Arnold doesn't know dang it.

(29:59):
I wouldn't answer that. If you're asking me a question,
I ain't your answer though, can't be a thing.

Speaker 3 (30:04):
But why do I think it is.

Speaker 2 (30:06):
It's foor Hey Arnold incorrect. You've been boo. I don't
know that has been eliminated. Three people remain. The category
is Disney Princesses. Come on, hey, who's the princess and
the Disney movie.

Speaker 4 (30:23):
Aladdin Princess Jasmine?

Speaker 2 (30:27):
Correct? Lunchbox, who's the princess and beauty and the Beast? Gosh,
I'm gonna go with I don't know what's her name?
Bella Incorrect? You've been boo man, so close, it's awesome,

(30:58):
stupid girl with princesses. We did sports last week, so
doesn't yellow card? Amy doesn't. I was talking to my computer.
You got chill out to the bits over then he
is talking to an email. Morgan, which Disney princess is
known for her long golden hair in her ability to
heal with her magic hair? Correct? We're down to two

(31:23):
entertainment grab bag, Amy and what movie series did the
characters play a magical sport where they fly on broomsticks
called kidditch?

Speaker 4 (31:34):
Say it again?

Speaker 2 (31:35):
And what movie series the characters play a magical sport?

Speaker 4 (31:38):
Oh, that's in Harry Potter.

Speaker 2 (31:41):
Correct? Yeah, Morgan, what's the name of the longest running
animated TV series in the United States?

Speaker 9 (31:50):
And can you repeat that one more time?

Speaker 2 (31:52):
What's the name of the longest running animated TV series? Correct?
Good job. Last category before we go to sudden death?
Fourth grade math?

Speaker 4 (32:02):
Crap, give me a fifth.

Speaker 2 (32:06):
Amy. What's the next number in this pattern? Twelve fifteen,
eighteen twenty one. I'll do it again. What's the next
number in this pattern? Twelve fifteen, eighteen twenty one, twenty four? Correct, Morgan.

(32:32):
If a bookshelf has five shelves, and each shelf holds
ten books, how many can the bookshelf hold? If the
bookshelf has five shelves and each shelf holds ten books,
total books on the bookshelf fifteen?

Speaker 5 (32:50):
Correct?

Speaker 2 (32:51):
They were going to sudden death. Three questions buzzing with
your name. Good job, both of you. Oh sudden death.
Oh man, this is inten buzzing with you.

Speaker 3 (32:58):
Know.

Speaker 2 (32:58):
Good comment, taking back the yellow card. I like he's
selling it. He's selling it. The category science, buzzing with
your name. What's the hardest natural substance organs? Correct? We
know what she was looking for. Next question, The category

(33:20):
is four legged animals. What's the only continent for giraffes? Important?
North and correct. What's the only continent? Amy Africa? Scared?
I didn't love zero? You know what I mean? I
got scared. Final question Sunday Sudden sudden de Three questions

(33:46):
buzzing with your name. The category is outer space. What's
the term for a group of stars? That for Amy?

Speaker 4 (33:56):
Consolation winner.

Speaker 2 (33:59):
Form a past, She's two No, Amy's got again called wow,
congratulations things, Thank you deserved that victory. Good job Morgan,
good job.

Speaker 4 (34:09):
Good job Morgan.

Speaker 2 (34:10):
To fight to the end. Listen, I'm studying. I'm back
on my study game. Moving down. Stop talk going on
names at the International Women's Day. You're listening to the
Bobby Bones Show. Here's a voicemail we got last night.
Cried Bobby.

Speaker 4 (34:23):
I'm wondering, what does your day look like after you
leave the studio?

Speaker 2 (34:28):
I know lunchbox is in the parking garage watching children.
What does the rest of your days look like? Just wondering,
great question. That's funny fact about lunchbox. Most of my
days are a bit different. I've done two a day
in the life of on my Instagram in the past
week or so. If you want to see, I just
did one because I had a bunch of stuff I recorded,

(34:48):
I think got like a million views, and I was like,
people like this crap because it is not compelling to
me behind the.

Speaker 4 (34:53):
Scenes, man, yeah, just watching you. What you doing today?

Speaker 2 (34:56):
Yeah, I mean really, Amy's shocked too. I didn't want
to watch it back once I mayde it is how
bored I was with it. But yeah, I know I
from leaving the show to do another podcast to traveling
and speaking places to do. It's go to my instagram,
mister Bobby Bones. I did two of those in the
past week that you can see. You probably will not
enjoy them there. I feel like they're pretty boring. Let's

(35:18):
do another one. Here we go, Isaiah, I've got.

Speaker 11 (35:20):
A morning corny for you.

Speaker 4 (35:22):
Why did the Teddy Bear say no to dessert because
he was sucked.

Speaker 2 (35:30):
Both parents?

Speaker 10 (35:30):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (35:31):
I like that. That's encouraging. Yeah, I like that. Good job,
Isaiah from.

Speaker 4 (35:33):
Kansas International Women's Day on The Bobby Bones Show.

Speaker 9 (35:37):
Hey you guys, this is Michelle Branch from The Wreckers.

Speaker 10 (35:40):
Someone who is massively influential to me growing up in
Arizona is Stevie Nicks from Fleetwood Mac. As a kid,
just knowing that someone played music and you know, fronted
a rock and roll band in time when you never
really saw women fronting rock bands is so cool, and
given that she made it out of my home state

(36:02):
was really inspiring to me as a kid, and I
still am a massive, massive fan of hers.

Speaker 11 (36:07):
The Bobby Bone Show celebrating International Women's Day a.

Speaker 2 (36:13):
Pile of stories.

Speaker 3 (36:14):
All Right, So I never knew this, but we shouldn't
be buying wine in clear glass bottles because light can
get through that and it can change the taste of
the wine.

Speaker 4 (36:24):
So if you buy it, make sure it's in a
darker bottle.

Speaker 2 (36:27):
Question. Yeah, someone who doesn't drink wine, this could be
a dumb question, but like a white wine seems to
always be in a light bottle. Not always really really,
but mostly would you say that what you know about wine,
that's true. I don't know.

Speaker 6 (36:43):
I only drink red wine, but when I see the
white wine, which is the yellowish kind of wine, it's
usually in a clear bottle.

Speaker 2 (36:48):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (36:49):
I think that that's standing out to you, and you're
assuming that all the dark bottles are full of red.

Speaker 4 (36:53):
Yeah, but no, there's a chardonnay that I get, which
is a white wine.

Speaker 7 (36:58):
Wait.

Speaker 2 (36:58):
Wait, totally asked our question unfairly attacking her. But it's
not hilarious. It's unfair.

Speaker 4 (37:04):
Saying yeah, yeah, yeah. That's why this is a story.

Speaker 3 (37:06):
Is it is common for rose and white wine to
be in a clear bottle, but there are also wines
that you can find in a darker bottle, and they're
saying you should gravitate towards those because they'll probably taste better.

Speaker 2 (37:17):
But what if light tastes good, oh, like the sunlight.
We don't know because we've never had that. Well, they're
saying light and light, bob, right, we can't tell the difference.
But also I feel like it wouldn't be a good
move to put white wine in a dark bottle. It'd
be like doing black bottles of water at the gas station.
Would that be weird?

Speaker 4 (37:34):
Well, but it's labeled like the.

Speaker 2 (37:35):
Pars who labeled all I just look at the it's
like headlines. Ten minute segment on a headline. I just read,
I don't read the story.

Speaker 3 (37:41):
Well, this is called the sun strike phenomenon, and it
can leave wine tasting like wet dog, boiled catfish.

Speaker 2 (37:47):
And what's wrong with the white dog?

Speaker 3 (37:48):
Both of my dogs are I mean, do what you want, okay,
So hey, guys, do y'all ever feel like pressure to
act manly?

Speaker 2 (37:55):
Yeah, but I never can quite get it right. No,
so I gave up. So you just don't it I
mean I did. Yeah, I was like I should really
like try to do something masculine, and it just doesn't
work out for me. Usually end up looking less masculine
when I try to look masculine.

Speaker 4 (38:10):
Well, guys are getting vulnerable.

Speaker 3 (38:11):
They're opening up, and they feel pressure from expectations like
knowing how to be handy around the house.

Speaker 2 (38:16):
Why is it manly to be vulnerable and open up
like I just did. Oh my god, I'm the biggest
man in man I mean it is.

Speaker 4 (38:22):
I think that we need to make it that narrative.

Speaker 3 (38:24):
But this is guys opening up, saying that they are
insecure about how they're supposed to be manly in certain ways,
and they feel like they're.

Speaker 2 (38:32):
You know, if they're in secure, they're not manly according
to what the definition are like manly, manly, or maybe
none of them are manly. Like see, I always stress
out when I get around a bunch of dads. I'm like, oh, man,
let me see who's in the top twenty five in basketball.
Let me make sure. And I got all my stuff.
So you want to know manly things right down, and
I'm like, what kind of wrench? That's what I look up?
What's a crocket? Ranch? This study?

Speaker 10 (38:54):
Really know?

Speaker 2 (38:55):
Yeah, it's like I need to know something.

Speaker 3 (38:56):
Okay, So handy around the house is one of them
to act a certain way in front of others, which
might knowing sports and whatnot or having a specific body type.

Speaker 2 (39:03):
I'm good with sports and I'm also I don't know
if part of the demand is like lifting being strong,
Like for my body type, I'm pretty strong. But then
when it comes to cars tools, I can also because
I hunted for a massive part of my life. Well
I'm not massive anymore, but the first eighteen nineen years
of my life I can really talk about guns and
hunting and but the new technology like they're like you

(39:26):
have that VO two, no camera to watch the dear
feed man? Right, what are you talking about? Dude? Yeah,
it's just sit at the tree and stare.

Speaker 4 (39:33):
Maybe that's my pile.

Speaker 2 (39:34):
That was Amy's pile of stories. It's time for the
good news.

Speaker 12 (39:39):
Ready.

Speaker 6 (39:43):
Mark Rabbit he's the head baseball coach over at Whitmer
High School in Toledo, Ohio, and he heard about his
rival baseball team.

Speaker 2 (39:50):
He's like the one cross town. He heard some news
about them. Oh yeah, that's how we can beat him.
I'm not true, I'm just joking.

Speaker 6 (39:57):
He found out that they didn't have money for equipment,
like they probably weren't even gonna be able to play
for the next couple of seasons because they had no mits,
they had no uniforms.

Speaker 2 (40:04):
So he got his buddies together. He got the community
rallied up together in the team, his rival team, which
is crazy, and they made enough money to get them bats, uniforms, baseballs,
practice pants, all that stuff so that they can actually
play baseball, because he believed that baseball is the heart
of that community, so he wanted to save them. That's
a coach doing what coaches should do, not what competition right, right,

(40:28):
ends up breeding because I.

Speaker 6 (40:29):
Mean yeah, I mean a competitive coach would have been like, cool,
we don't worry about Shova's baby.

Speaker 4 (40:33):
He can still be competitive and generous.

Speaker 2 (40:36):
Well, he wants him to play though, which is really cool.
Which he just could have bought it for them and
give it to him after the game that they played.
After they're just give them like a few things to
get through that game and then giving them the stuff
at the end of the game after they beat them.
And then if you're that team that got all the
stuff donated to you, and you have to play the
team that donated it. Because I used to get yard

(40:56):
cell shoes, that's what I would wear to school, and
the kids whose parents to sell the shoes at the
yard sale would make fun of me because I ended
up wearing their shoes school because I could afford new shoes,
and they'd make fun of me, like, oh, you're wearing
my shoes because you can afford new shoes. Do you
think the team that donated makes fun of the other team.

Speaker 4 (41:11):
No, coach doesn't let them know.

Speaker 2 (41:13):
And a lot of this stuff was new too. They
they donated money, so they bought a new new equipment.
That's an awesome story. Yeah, it's really cool.

Speaker 4 (41:19):
Would you kind of let them win because they bought
you things?

Speaker 2 (41:21):
No, the only reason you want we bought you that exactly.
That is a great story. Like really that like touches
my heart. Great job, coach, that is what it's all about.
That was telling me something good. It's International Women's Day.

Speaker 9 (41:34):
On the Bobby Bones Show.

Speaker 2 (41:37):
All right, now, time for the Morning Corny, The Morning Corny, Why.

Speaker 4 (41:44):
Did the watch go on vacation? You needed to unwind?

Speaker 2 (41:49):
You got it? That was The Morning Corny. Five pm
Local time, wherever you are Today on iHeartRadio, Amy is
hosting for International Women's Day, whole hour with Megan Marony.
What are you guys doing well?

Speaker 3 (42:05):
It's a Q and A with her, so she'll be
answering and questions especially I think would be encouraging for
women to hear like her perspective on things and just
lifting each other up and women music all hour long,
women music music from women in country music.

Speaker 2 (42:22):
I like it. Yeah, So check that out. iHeartRadio today,
five pm Local time, wherever you are. It's Amy and
Meghan Marony, so Bobby Bones Show interviews. In case you
didn't know, her name's Ann Wilson. She's from Kentucky. She
had a massive song on Christian radio called My Jesus.
She has a new song called Rain in the Rearview
on Country the Country Format. New album comes out April nineteenth.

(42:45):
It's called Rebel, but a bunch of music is already online.
You should check her out. In twenty twenty four. All
this year she's out with Scotty McCreary on his cabin
a solo tour doing a bunch of festivals again from Lexington, Kentucky.
She's great. Want you to hear here she is. By
the way, her performances that can't go on the podcast
will be up on our YouTube page if you want
to watch those. It's International Women's Day and here is

(43:06):
Ann Wilson.

Speaker 9 (43:08):
On the Bobby Bones Show.

Speaker 2 (43:09):
Now it's Ann Wilson and you come verly, very highly recommended.
One of my dear friends said, hey, do you know
who Ann Wilson is? And I said, yeah, I've seen
her played the Opry before, or at least videos. H
I'm at the Opry a lot and I performed. I said, yeah,
she's awesome. She's a great singer Christian artist. And he said, well, yes,
and she's very country and she's also in that space.

(43:32):
And said, I did not know that, Yeah, because I
just knew you from you know, your music with a
message is what it feels like. But then you know,
I started to hear some of your songs, like, oh,
for sure, it makes all the sense in the world.
But you come really highly recommended. I don't know you yet.
We just were like, have we met each other. We're like,
I guess not, but yeah, people love you that know you.
So I'm very excited that you hear.

Speaker 9 (43:51):
Thank you, thanks for having me. You grew up Kentucky, Yeah, Lexington.

Speaker 2 (43:55):
Did you were you go around bluegrass at all?

Speaker 9 (43:58):
Yes? Totally.

Speaker 2 (43:59):
I asked que everybody from Kentucky because you have to
a bit.

Speaker 9 (44:02):
Yes, definitely.

Speaker 10 (44:03):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (44:04):
What about family wise musically, did anybody play an instrument
in your house?

Speaker 1 (44:08):
Well?

Speaker 3 (44:08):
Not really.

Speaker 11 (44:09):
I guess my dad played a little bit of piano,
but my mom's side of the family is very musical,
like her brother was always running around the house as
a little boy with a guitar in his hands and singing.

Speaker 2 (44:17):
So your uncle so yeah, my uncle.

Speaker 9 (44:20):
Yeah, so we have music in the family.

Speaker 10 (44:21):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (44:22):
Did that affect you to get into it or was
it kind of a resource once you knew you love
music that you could also be like, oh, yeah, uncle
Jimmy played. Yeah.

Speaker 9 (44:29):
Well what was cool?

Speaker 11 (44:30):
Was like, really, up until I started singing, like, I
really didn't think about my family like musically, you know,
I was like I didn't really use that resource until
I started music, and then I was like, oh, this
is amazing.

Speaker 9 (44:40):
I have like some built in mentors in my family
that can kind of help me through it.

Speaker 11 (44:43):
But no, it wasn't until I started singing at fifteen
that I really kind of would go to them with
advice and stuff like that, which was really cool.

Speaker 2 (44:50):
Did you love singing even younger than that and you
just thought, well, this is the thing you do for
fun and a loan? When did you start to go,
you know, I think I want to do this in
front people, not as a career, do just I just
want to do it in front of people. One time, Yeah, well, I.

Speaker 9 (45:04):
Actually never wanted to do music as a kid.

Speaker 11 (45:06):
I was not the type of like kid that was
running around the house like singing and playing, you know,
an instrument my whole life.

Speaker 9 (45:12):
My brother was tragically killed in.

Speaker 11 (45:13):
A car accident when he was twenty three and into
twenty seventeen and I was fifteen.

Speaker 3 (45:18):
And.

Speaker 9 (45:19):
We'd gone to sleep one night.

Speaker 11 (45:21):
I have a sister and my parents we were together
and we wake up in the middle of the night
and the police are at our door telling us that
he had been killed in a car accident, and so.

Speaker 9 (45:30):
Life pretty drastically.

Speaker 11 (45:32):
Changed in like pretty much overnight, and we were obviously
so heartbroken and devastated, and I think I remember having
this very vivid moment when I found out that he
had been killed, that I realized that I had to
make an impact on this earth with the time I
had left.

Speaker 9 (45:46):
And so for me, that was that was music. It
just kind of came out of nowhere.

Speaker 11 (45:50):
And my parents had never heard me sing before, my
siblings had never heard me sing, and actually sang for
the first time in front of anyone at his funeral
when I was fifteen, and so kind of singing at
the funeral, really, I just remember having this feeling like
this is what I'm made to do, This is what
I'm supposed to do. But up until that point, I
had never sing in front of anyone before, and I
had no interest in music, like doing it professionally.

Speaker 9 (46:11):
I wanted to be an astronaut. I wanted to work
for NASA.

Speaker 2 (46:14):
Very different ex different. Are you sang what a beautiful
name as your brother's funeral? Why that song? It's your
first time? I spoke at my mom's funeral, and I
know there's like eighty thousand different emotions pulling you in
different ways. I was nervous I was gonna not say
something right. I was obviously extremely distract because my mom
had died, there were all these things. So I chose

(46:37):
my words carefully, and then even then it didn't go
like I thought. But when I wrote it, I felt
like out a reason I was writing what I was writing?
Why did you pick that song to sing?

Speaker 11 (46:47):
I think for me, it was this moment of realizing
I had to trust God in this horrible loss in
my life, Like I had a moment right after we
found out that he had been killed that I remember
thinking like, if I do not put my faith in
trust in God, I'm not going to survive this loss.
And so that song I had, that song had just
come out like maybe two or three months before he
passed away, and I had never even really listened to

(47:08):
it up until that day, and it just was in
my mind. I'd seen it on like Instagram or something,
and it was in my mind. And so I just
remember like listening to it the day he passed away
and feeling like there was such a surrender in in
that song, of just surrendering my pain and suffering to
God and asking like, Lord, I'm I'm choosing to trust you.

Speaker 9 (47:25):
As hard as this is, I'm choosing to trust you.
During this hard time, and I.

Speaker 11 (47:27):
Felt like it was just like it was just like
a sacrifice really for me to the Lord, to be like,
I'm doing this for you, you know, but in that
he guided me on this such you know, such a
beautiful journey I've had so far, and literally all started
from that moment of putting my trust in him.

Speaker 2 (47:43):
In that moment you chose to sing. Is just so
interesting to me if you just never wanted to be
a singer, because you could have said stuff. You could
have like, did you know you could sing pretty? Because again,
if it you know, it's not like I want to
go to my mom's funeral and juggle on a joke
a little bit, but I don't do it well enough
to just be like everybody watch yeah yeah, yeah, So singing,
Why did you think that you could go up and sing?

(48:04):
Did you have confidence in your singing voice?

Speaker 9 (48:06):
No, I really, I don't know how to explain it.

Speaker 11 (48:08):
It was just like I just had the strength to
go do it, and it was so It was so
interesting because my sister played the piano at the funeral,
and she couldn't even get through her piano performance, but
I got through. We had two funerals for him, and
I got through both of them without crying or breaking down,
which is another thing like how to raise and do that. Yeah,
but I think it was just like I like my
soul knew I needed that in that moment. I guess

(48:29):
that's the only explanation. So singing was like healing for me.

Speaker 9 (48:32):
I think it just helped me heal and kind of
put things back in perspective for me. And yeah, it's
crazy to.

Speaker 2 (48:38):
Think back on crazy to think that that's where you went,
that's where you are now. Yeah, that was the first
time you went there, and that you didn't, you know,
crack it all while singing. I remember when I was
speaking in my mom's funerals. She died in her forties,
and I remember speaking and I lost. I kind of
started crackingest crying a little bit, and I talked for
a living. But this is different because it's real, Like

(48:59):
this we're doing here's goofy. It's fun, it's awesome, but
it's you know, we go out and have our real
lives after this. And so I started like crying, and
everybody in the audience. I was on a comedy show,
but everybody in the that's sitting in there they started
to feel bad for me because I'm struggling through it,
and somebody left their cell phone on and it starts
to ring and it was an old song. I remember,

(49:20):
It's Jim Crochy and it's like you don't tug on
suit and everybody started laughing, and I was right back on,
right back on, and I needed that to get through.
So when you said you were able to get through it,
I mean I kind of emoted out loud. I was like, Oh,
there's no chance. But I feel like, in the same
way that you said that, somehow you got through it,

(49:41):
and you know, you know, you know how you got
through it. Like I feel like I don't even know
if I made called that phone. Maybe the thing just
started playing, and it's what kind of put me back
on track. He said that it is a very difficult
thing to do, and it's just wild to think this
is that is what started this for you, this part
of your life. You'd never want to do it again.

(50:03):
But something has come from that. Yeah, that is that
is Yeah, that is so special, My Jesus. Did it
come from that situation? Yeah?

Speaker 11 (50:12):
I had been writing for I moved to Nashville when
I was seventeen, right out of high school. I well,
I moved when I was I guess eighteen, but I
signed a record deal when I was seventeen, in a
junior in high school. That quick, Yeah, it was so fast,
and then my whole life just turned overnight. And then
I moved to Nashville. I graduated high school in twenty twenty,
so only four years ago, which is crazy.

Speaker 9 (50:31):
And then started writing songs.

Speaker 11 (50:33):
And at that point I had already written like maybe
one hundred and twenty songs for the record. And then
I walked into a writing room one day and I
had that title in my head, and the other two
writers I had never worked with before had the exact
same song title No, never spoken Wow, And so we
were I was like, I want to write a song
about called my Jesus, about what it means to have
a relationship with him, and they were like, we had
that exact same title too. So we wrote the song

(50:56):
like within maybe an hour or two, and then we
walked out that day knowing that it was something special.
But I would have never dreamed that it would have
done what it did and impacted the people the way.

Speaker 10 (51:04):
That it did.

Speaker 2 (51:06):
Do you ever sing the song that you sang at
your brother's funeral again.

Speaker 9 (51:10):
Yeah, I actually did it on my tour that I
had this fall. It was so special.

Speaker 11 (51:15):
It was such a special moment, and I played the
piano like I did at the funeral and everything, and
it was really cool.

Speaker 2 (51:19):
When did you start to learn music, because again, if
you're just singing for the first time at fifteen, did
you already have any piano background at all? Yeah?

Speaker 11 (51:25):
My mom forced us to take piano lessons as kids,
so we all three took piano, and I had been
playing since I was like five or six, so I'd
had kind of that background kind of going into it.

Speaker 9 (51:33):
So I was able to play the piano at the funeral.

Speaker 11 (51:35):
And then as i've now, you know, become an artist
and everything, it's helped a lot just having that background.
It was almost like it was always meant to be
and I just had I just didn't realize it.

Speaker 2 (51:43):
You know, what did you not expect about being an artist?
Because now you're having to do a lot of stuff
that you don't see whenever you see the people being
interview or like, what's been the biggest surprise about what
you have to do as an artist that isn't out front.

Speaker 11 (52:00):
You know, I think I just didn't realize how much
hard work it was, you know, like the sacrifice the
artists have to make, leaving their families, going on the
road all the time, sacrificing things that most people don't
have to, you know, But the reward is so great
because for me, it's like getting to see how my
songs like specifically impact people's lives is really what keeps

(52:20):
me going and what drives me to continue on, because
I think music is so powerful and it has the
opportunity to literally change someone's life, and so that's a
really special thing that kind of makes it worth it.
But definitely, like the travel and the sacrifice, I didn't
realize was it at all.

Speaker 2 (52:36):
The album Rebel that's out in April. How is it
different than the other work that you've put out just
from looking because I haven't heard the whole thing yet,
But would you have recorded like songs about whiskey on
a Christian Yeah?

Speaker 9 (52:53):
Yeah, it's so interesting.

Speaker 11 (52:54):
Like this record for me was really healing to write
because of my brother and everything. And like the last record,
my Jesus record was a lot about my brother Jacob
and our memories together, and this record was really just
like a new chapter, you know, just a new season.
And so it was really healing for me with my
brother to write it and just kind of felt like
I kind of healed and moved on a little bit

(53:15):
with it. But no, like these songs, just it's so
authentically me, which is so interesting. I feel like people
are kind of wondering, like are you leaving Christian music
or are you going to country music?

Speaker 9 (53:24):
Whatever.

Speaker 11 (53:24):
It's like it's just an extension of who I am,
just in a different way than the last record, if
that makes sense. Like the last record was, you know,
country sounding but heavily Christian message. This record is still
my faith based message, but with a little bit more
country added to it. Just my roots, kind of going
back to where I came from and the things that,
you know, make me come alive. And so yeah, like

(53:45):
songs about whiskey, it's just like I love that song
because I think people are going to see that title,
but then they're going to realize it has such an
interesting twist to it.

Speaker 9 (53:53):
But yeah, the record is I'm so excited about it
and I can't wait for it to come out.

Speaker 2 (53:57):
I know you and Chris Tomlin did a song together
and I know Chris a little bit, love him. He's
like the greatest dude ever.

Speaker 9 (54:02):
Yeah, he's so sweet.

Speaker 2 (54:03):
And I asked him if he's held to an unfair
standard where people think that like he's closer to Jesus
than they are because he's always preached and they have
this expectation that he needs to be perfect all the time.
And he's like, yeah, it's a real thing, like because
he's not. He's like, I'm very flawed. Everything I do
is just like anything that you do. Yeah, And do
you ever experience that where you feel like you can't
actually have or show and present a normal life because

(54:27):
of what the expectation is as a Christian artist in
the work that you've done in the past.

Speaker 9 (54:31):
Yeah, there's definitely an expectation there.

Speaker 11 (54:33):
I think some people don't like to talk about it,
but I think it's just I always just liked, like
when fans come up and they're like, you know, you've
saved my life, I always like to just be.

Speaker 9 (54:41):
Like, well I really didn't, you know.

Speaker 11 (54:43):
I just kind of like to remind them of like
where that's coming from, that it's not me, but it's
the Lord. And I think people just, yeah, I think
they do have an expectation of that we somehow as
Christian artists that are on stage are holier than everybody else,
which is not true at all.

Speaker 9 (54:58):
We're all the same, So you.

Speaker 2 (54:59):
Ever say it word? Yes, I don't know, Okay, I'm
just asking. I'm just asking. I would love for you
to sing for our audience. Yeah, would you do God
and Country? I think that would be a fun one
to introduce you guys.

Speaker 9 (55:14):
Here absolutely, this is Chris and Andy.

Speaker 2 (55:16):
Guys, they're the best. Good to see you, guys, your vote.
You're like, you know what, sometimes in a like a
singing group if they have or a duo, they're like
dressed the same, but they're absolutely opposite. It's like the
clean cut guy but like his opposite it's got long hair,
but they look kind of the same, the same colors.
Like it's like if Destiny's Child was you guys would

(55:37):
be that.

Speaker 1 (55:38):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (55:39):
Right, here's Ann Wilson and this is God and Country.
Great job. Okay, let me say this. The album The
Whole Project comes at April nineteenth. Rain in the review
is the single which you guys are playing a second,
if i'd be playing now, We'll come back with Ann
Wilson are You're not related to lay right? No, if
people have to ask you that, do you know? Wilson's

(56:01):
also a pretty common name. But are you like Brian Wilson? Now?
None of that? Okay, all right, Ann Wilson is here.
We'll come back with her next on the Bobby Bones Show. Now.
And I think it's the perfect time for you to
exist in the musical space. And I'll tell you why.
It's only recently, in the last couple of years that
you've been able to see artists do multiple and be

(56:22):
in multiple places and it be accepted. Meaning and you're
not the same, although very very similar you and jelly Roll.
Meaning I'm kidding, you're not like jelly Roll, But you know,
jelly Roll is a guy who can He's still relevant
in the hip hop space. But we also can do country.
And nobody's fighting to be like you're this or you're that. Yeah,
And you are an extremely gifted country artist, and you

(56:45):
are a proven Christian artist. And I think it's a
great time for you to exist because you can exist
in both spaces. And I know I have friends that
are prominent in the Christian space and for them for
a long time, slightly less now it was almost like
a a turf war where people would be like, you
can't leave country, then you're not part of us anymore.
But I'm seeing so less and less of that, And

(57:06):
I'm wondering, although you've only been there for a few years,
are you feeling pretty welcomed in the country music space
and welcome to go do? What is country music with
a Christian message by the country fans?

Speaker 9 (57:16):
Yeah, honestly, I really am. I was shocked.

Speaker 11 (57:18):
Like when I first started in this about a year ago,
I was honestly like so surprised. Was like, everybody's so
nice and like welcoming, and and I think it's because
God has always been like a pillar of country music.
So I think people it's like you know, faith, family, country,
like all those things. And so people have been really
accepting and have kind of cheered me on to go
do this, which has been awesome.

Speaker 2 (57:37):
What about on the Christian side, because in the past,
not maybe now a Christian station will be like, well,
if you're gonna go do country stuff, but then you're
not one of us.

Speaker 9 (57:44):
Yeah, is that that?

Speaker 2 (57:46):
It seems to be happening a little less and less too,
I think so.

Speaker 11 (57:49):
Yeah, I haven't had any of that yet that about
these you're secular now, yeah, right, and you can be
both yeaheah, totally yeah.

Speaker 2 (57:58):
Yeah. I think it's a great time, like the perfect
timing for you to exist because you can do both
and nobody questions either one of them. Yeah, because that
three years ago or more they would have and you
had to be one or the other. Yeah. And I
think that if you want to do a hip hop album,
I'm in you can rap two. You could come in
and do that as well. Let's do the current single here,

(58:18):
So this is Rain in the Rearview. Her name is
Ann Wilson. Let's just play a little you write this one?
Who'ld you write this with? Oh?

Speaker 9 (58:26):
Goodness?

Speaker 2 (58:27):
Matthew and Jaron? Yes? I love it en. I love
Jaron by the way.

Speaker 9 (58:30):
Yeah, he's awesome, He's crazy. I love him.

Speaker 2 (58:33):
I probably won't see him to the next for a
church though. Rocks pretty hard now that they won't go
to church. But he's bally a sleep, you know. Sunday morning,
Catallac three Okay are you ready?

Speaker 3 (58:42):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (58:42):
Raised and Wilson everybody nice, awesome and Wilson's fear, Oh
you're so good, you know you and Laney Wilson did
a song together. I'm sure you guys might do worse,
sister that joke. Yeah, yeah, yah. Laney pretty inspiring as
far as like just generally artists by like female artists
that come up and I'm like, this is who I am, Yeah,
and take it or leave it, Like Laney as an inspiration.

(59:05):
I'm sure there's some of that, right because she's totally
a few years ahead of you and has had a
carve drawne path.

Speaker 9 (59:10):
Yes, she's a huge inspiration. She's one of my good friends.

Speaker 11 (59:13):
She's been like a mentor to me, and so it's
just been really cool to kind of like grow up
together and kind of do this together because like we
started right around the same time back in twenty twenty,
twenty twenty one, So it's been really cool.

Speaker 9 (59:24):
To have her as like a big sister.

Speaker 2 (59:26):
Is your band all dudes?

Speaker 9 (59:27):
Yeah, I love it.

Speaker 2 (59:30):
What is it like being the woman with all of them?

Speaker 11 (59:32):
They're like my big brothers, And it's so sweet and
there's no drama because the girls are so much drama.

Speaker 2 (59:37):
No drama more farting. Yeah, like that would be that's
what you give and get with a bunch of dudes
and a bus. Yeah, yeah, that's awesome. How long have
you been with these guys here in your band?

Speaker 9 (59:48):
Kind of like, well, I guess a year, right, a
little over a year.

Speaker 2 (59:52):
That's our quarter of your career performing in the NFL. Dang,
you're so good and you're such a spirit about you.
You know, you're very warm, and my friend was right,
you really are great. You have a huge, huge career
ahead of you and whatever you choose to do, even
if you choose to do, it's not even both. They're
just so the Venn diagram that those bubbles are just
almost completely covering each other anyway. Yeah, so it is

(01:00:12):
really cool to see you to thank you just kill this.
I say you're on CMT's Next Woman a Country that
that yeah, so exciting. So that's cool to be embraced
amy anything.

Speaker 4 (01:00:20):
Fran, Well, what about writing?

Speaker 3 (01:00:21):
Like you said that you didn't know you wanted to
even sing for so long, or that you could even
sing to your fifteen but then you know, you start
singing and then you pump out like hundreds of songs.

Speaker 4 (01:00:31):
So when did you start writing and how did you
know you had a talent there?

Speaker 11 (01:00:35):
I started when I was about sixteen, and I had
my previous manager kind of took me to Nashville and
set me up on these like random co writes. I'd
never written a song before in my life, and uh,
it's I just kind of like I don't even know
how to explain. I just would write the song with them.
I'm more of like a melody girl and like a title,
like like come up with a title or something. I'm
less like a lyric person. But yeah, it was just

(01:00:56):
kind of like out of the blue, random, I started
writing songs sin. It's been so cool to look back
on it now.

Speaker 3 (01:01:02):
I think looking back on your journey and how you
got here, I think it's probably really encouraging two people
that are going through something hard and you knew in
that moment you needed to surrender, and then that's how
you were able to get here. Like losing your brother,
it's sort of okay, well what are you going to
do with this? And you have to surrender because it's

(01:01:22):
almost like you're at a fork in the road and
you could have gone another direction that you know could
have given you a completely different like life, but that
surrender gave you the strength to find what it is
you were meant to do and gives meaning to that
and like what does this make possible? And so it's
showing people of like, Okay, you have two choices right now,

(01:01:42):
and surrendering is the harder option.

Speaker 9 (01:01:45):
It really is. It definitely is.

Speaker 2 (01:01:47):
Yeah, Well this has been awesome. You're awesome, You're great.
Thank you for free. I like to do this for
my guess. I'm gonna give you two song titles that
you can use when next time you're right. Number one's
all something I'm gonna give you called God's Lit. And
the other one is let Jesus cook and then eat
because those are also slang terms. So it's both like
looking for the people like you just cooked and that's

(01:02:09):
cool man, So have them on me. I don't even
want any credit yet publishing you. Yeah. Both are great
and I've been holding holding on to him for a while.
I was going to give it to Tomlin or I
was going to give them to you guys. Follow in
at an Wilson Music and has an Eat and Wilson Music.
Thank you, big fans, Thank you guys, thanks for having us,

(01:02:30):
and hopefully we'll see you soon. There she has a Wilson.

Speaker 9 (01:02:34):
Happy International Women's Day. You're listening to the Bobby Bones Show.

Speaker 2 (01:02:40):
I was doing national commercials for like the state of
South Dakota, maybe their tourism board or something. And my
brief time in South Dakota. I loved it, but I
only got to see a part of it was touring,
driving through. People were amazing, but I really didn't get
to experience all of South Dakota. They said, hey, would
you do some commercials for us? Said, you know what,
I enjoyed my little time there. I'd be happy to.
Then I start to do the commercials and I'm like,

(01:03:01):
I go back to South Dakota and I say on
the show, we should do a dude trip to South Dakota.
But the dude news we go kind of a just
tossing it out there, a little bit of a bit
to get Amy's reaction for it is a dude trip.

Speaker 4 (01:03:17):
What were you expecting my reaction to be.

Speaker 2 (01:03:19):
I thought it'd be like, please, God, you guys leave me,
leave give me some free time, or like be happy
for us. Like I didn't think that would be it.
I thought she'd be like, that'd be awesome if you
guys get out of my hair. Oh okay, But instead
she turned it into I don't want to go right right, Well,
you're not allowed. Yeah, we don't let you in the
treehouse for dude news. Dude. That being said, I had

(01:03:40):
all the guys and I don't know what they're going
to say. Here, list out. If we go to South
Dakota on a dude's trip, Like, what's the one thing
you'd want to do? Because the state is large, mongus,
we can't do everything. We can't go to every town.
So I'm gonna start with Eddie, Eddie, what's this thing
on your list? If we go South dakot on a

(01:04:00):
dude trip, this is amazing, This is amazing. Do trip,
dude trip.

Speaker 6 (01:04:06):
There's a place called Jim River Guide Service and you
hunt buffalos.

Speaker 2 (01:04:13):
I don't like it. What are you talking about?

Speaker 4 (01:04:14):
I don't want y'all to hunt buffalo.

Speaker 2 (01:04:16):
I don't want no. Listen, guys, this is have a
song about being on the range for the buffalo's room home,
Home on the range. Listen, listen, guys. If we get
a buffalo, we will have meat for two years. We
don't need meat for two years. We can I'm going
to say this again to somebody who hunted their entire life. Yeah,
well until I turned into like a twenty year old. Yeah,

(01:04:36):
did you ever kill a buffalo in those twenty years? No, buffalo,
but mini animal. We ate them. We didn't kill them
if we didn't need to eat them, right, we need
to eat buffalo now if there's overpopulation, I'm all for it.
I'm not even against hunting, but for me, I can't.
I'm not gonna pull the trigger on an animal.

Speaker 6 (01:04:51):
Okay, well here here, if somebody in the group can,
I'm not going you know what, I don't even want
to kill it.

Speaker 2 (01:04:56):
So maybe Lunchbox, if a Seve can shoot it.

Speaker 4 (01:04:59):
I thought we take no way Lunchbox wants to Yeah, oh.

Speaker 2 (01:05:02):
Yeah, yeah, he's vegetarian. How about what take this peanut buffalo?
I'm seeing vegetaria? Can you imagine if we outed him
for being vegetarian or we found out and he was
hiding it from us because he does love meat. However,
he does at times order like tastes good man. Hey,
check it out. Check it out. The back to the

(01:05:23):
buffalo hunting. I don't want to go back eight eight
hundred dollars for a trophy bull. Okay, I hear you,
and I have a lot of friends who are avid hunters.
It's just I don't want to kill anything. Okay, I
feel better at kill him bugs. Ok what I like.
I'll you trying to put them in a paper towel
for the most part, and freedom in the yard. Okay,

(01:05:43):
that's bad like dude. Yeah, we're gonna get kicked out
of dude news. Now you might know. Okay, I hear
you for me. Part of that eCos is so by
the way, I talked to Arkansas Keith yesterday for half
an hour. Is he coming? He'll shoot the buffalo that
he gets in the lottery every year and drives out
to Montana and shoot kills, hunts, elk you know all this? Yeah,

(01:06:09):
and he says the pictures did he send them to
you every three days of sometimes whatever? He killed ducks, deer,
a bear, it's not never a bear, never a bear.
But yes, it's a lot of stuff. Okay, put that
on the list there. Buffalo hued he wants to go
buffalo watching. That's an option too, for much cheaper. But
I'd rather hunt a buffalo. Okay, I tell you what.
You can hunt a buffalo if you do it by

(01:06:30):
a bare hand with knife. No, it's not gonna happen
to kill me.

Speaker 5 (01:06:33):
Let's make it even, all right, lutch Bucks, dude, Trip,
let's go, oh dude, South Dakota. I went north, I
went west, I went east. I looked all over the state.
I saw the bad Lands. I was like, oh, that
looks interesting. But then I settled on Sue Falls, South Dakota,
and I was like, guys, this is the ultimate guy experience.

(01:06:58):
We drop in and check out Chelsea Halska from teen
Mom's new store.

Speaker 2 (01:07:02):
You know, is it open down home by the Dobors.
I mean, come on, dude, let's go, dude, Trip said,
we're quickly not sounded like dudes. So between you not
killing bugs and this, you're paying someone to take you
to put you in a place, probably eight thousand dollars,

(01:07:23):
probably to hold your rifle, because that aint gonna be
a shotgun. You have to do it for afar to
hold your rifle. Take you where they're at, Yes, find
the If you're like, you know what, let's go out,
leave the cabin. We'll find some wild buffalo. I'll never
find anything exactly. We'll think forever. Now Lunchbox wants to
go hang out with a teen mom right now.

Speaker 5 (01:07:42):
Hold on, guys, it's right there in the Baker Landing
development just west of t exit off of Interstate twenty nine.

Speaker 2 (01:07:47):
It's so easy to get to. Let's go dues. What
does she sell their dues? He's even changed the trip
now he gotta pay dues to go. No, I said,
dude news. What does she sell? Handbags? Like what she said?

Speaker 5 (01:08:01):
No furniture, man, Oh, it's for your home. It's a
home to court, Aubrey says, after her daughter.

Speaker 2 (01:08:08):
And all transparency, she's been on the show and how
I liked her a lot exactly. I just thought this
would be a huge We can probably pound some beers
with her husband, Cole. He'll drink a beer with us.
I don't drink. Well, you can have a you have
a mocktail or a root beer. Yeah, that'd be dude trip,
no man, ray mundo, dude news, dude trip.

Speaker 10 (01:08:29):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (01:08:29):
So Eddie was correct with the hunting, but he's hunting
the wrong animal. Everybody goes to South Dakota and hunts pheasants.
They're like quail mourning doves, but they are awesome. It
would be me and lunch as the blockers. You and
Eddie work in the fields with the dogs. You guys
are out there sweating, walking through the cornfields.

Speaker 2 (01:08:52):
Me and Lunch are just hanging back his blockers.

Speaker 7 (01:08:54):
All you really do is shoot the bowl until the
pheasants start flying. Man, it's just a body experience. Usually
get your limit within an hour, so they we't have
to find something else to do.

Speaker 2 (01:09:03):
But as dudes, we gotta go pheasant haunting. I'm sure
there's good peasant hunting there, but we did a lot
of that at home, like we did. I did a
lot of bird hunting, quail hunting, and we had good
bird dogs. And I told you they'd point, they'd point
for thirty minutes. I'm sure we have to pay money
to get someone's bird dog. They take us out, they
line up our gun. They probably be faked ones in

(01:09:24):
the field.

Speaker 6 (01:09:24):
My god, Jim River, he does the same thing. I
gotta call arkansall keep them in hey. Also, to on
that note, there's prairie dog hunting too. How crazy would
that if you want to kill a poor little prairie dog.
I don't know, but I figured that that'd be fun
to watch us try to do it. It'd be fun
to watch us kill a prairie dog.

Speaker 2 (01:09:39):
I bet you we couldn't nough this songs, the trips,
I don't know traumatize from talking about it. Go ahead, Bobby,
lead him more to our vine now or what? Oh?
I letna sae a Arkansas? Keep even answer? The phone
asked me he wants to go buffalo hunting by my
cell phone? Can you hear that ring? Yeah?

Speaker 4 (01:09:57):
I'm gonna go to the Hot Springs and the with you.

Speaker 2 (01:10:00):
I'm taking Amy now through all you guys.

Speaker 4 (01:10:02):
Also Custer State Park.

Speaker 2 (01:10:04):
His last stand is beautiful. He's probably hunting, Dude, he's
on the blind. He's on the blind. Stop back to
like you know anything about hunting is in the blind?
You say he's in the blind? Man, you're calling right?

Speaker 1 (01:10:21):
Uh?

Speaker 2 (01:10:21):
Mike Di, do you have a suggestion for South Dakota
we go. We gotta go observe all the scenic views
the Black Hills. We can rent some ATVs.

Speaker 13 (01:10:28):
Instead of killing buffalo, we can observe the buffalo and
write some ATVs.

Speaker 2 (01:10:33):
I'm that second best.

Speaker 10 (01:10:34):
I guess.

Speaker 6 (01:10:36):
I wouldn't mind riding a four wheeler and then the
prairie until we see a paride dot run it over.

Speaker 2 (01:10:41):
No, I'm not gonna do that. Scuba Steve, do you
have one you guys like drinking. No, you boys like gambling.
Jude girls.

Speaker 12 (01:10:51):
No, dead Wood, South Dakota. It is the Las Vegas
of south of South Dakota. They got the Golden nugget there,
they got bars. It looks like a nice little broadway.

Speaker 2 (01:11:02):
We're going to.

Speaker 3 (01:11:02):
Deadwood boys, the downtown dead with like the historic part.

Speaker 4 (01:11:07):
Does look super cute?

Speaker 2 (01:11:08):
Nice woone wants to go and get drunk and chewed
in our wife? Yeah yeah he did, he did. I
like pretty girl known as my wife? What on a
real dude's trip? Then he ain't lying? Yeah, man, Mount
Rosemores nearby, so that's pretty cool too. That'd be fun.

(01:11:29):
Only if we can climate Eddie.

Speaker 4 (01:11:31):
There's a butterfly house?

Speaker 2 (01:11:33):
Really where the same plight at that the casino? No,
you hunt them, you go on your gun, your shotgun,
you hunt butterflies. I don't kill butterflies. Okay. And here's
my final one. And this was I was looking through
some stuff in there. Listener message me, Hey, Bobby listened
to the show this morning. He told they should come
to South Dakota. My husband, Chris is the PGAHAD golf
professional at Prairie Green Golf Course in Sioux Falls. Which

(01:11:53):
is Golf Magazine's number two right a public golf course
in the state. He'd be really happy to show you
a great time. Here's his phone number.

Speaker 1 (01:11:59):
I like it.

Speaker 3 (01:12:00):
Okay, so sick golf suit Falls, Butterfly, House suit Falls,
Suit Falls is just pretty suit falls.

Speaker 2 (01:12:05):
Chelsea house gun La and her husband Coal. I mean, dude,
we're drinking beers with him, so we're watching butterflies. Okay.

Speaker 14 (01:12:14):
Scuba's off somewhere with making money. It's back broke, so
it sounds like we gotta wrapped up.

Speaker 2 (01:12:24):
Hey, hey, this is just the I want to go, man.
I want to go on like a real big cool hike,
long hike in mountains with beers or like, no, no, no,
I have to call one of those jumpers they got
that there. That sounds cool lunch. Yeah, now we're on
to the right. We'll get Chelsea to show us the road. Okay,
we're not getting Chelsea. Well for in South Dakota. Dude, Chelsea,

(01:12:48):
Chelsea Eddie wants to bring a mounted buffalo head. Scuba
is trying to bring a hooker. It's just like, what's
happening here? I don't know. We lost it. I mean,
Chelsea and gold got to be involved somewhere.

Speaker 4 (01:13:00):
Trip it's your.

Speaker 3 (01:13:02):
If you only have time for one stop in suit Falls,
it has to be Falls Park, the city's namesake.

Speaker 2 (01:13:08):
From fallspark dot com. What you can hide hold on?
What about Ryding Harley's Chelsea's dad Randy would I'm good? Yeah? Really,
I wreck it. But these are the slow ones, dude,
the hogs. That means it'll tip over slower on me
and I won't be able to get it off. Okay,
let's take a break. We'll come right back.

Speaker 4 (01:13:29):
International Women's Day on the Bobby Bones Show.

Speaker 2 (01:13:32):
Well, we changed the clocks back on Sunday. Yep, Oh,
I did not know till I read it this morning.
Thanks for the reminder.

Speaker 4 (01:13:37):
It's spring forward.

Speaker 2 (01:13:38):
No, I hear you. I didn't know when it was
like I'm familiar with. We're not going fall back.

Speaker 4 (01:13:42):
Oh, he said, we change the clocks back on Sunday.

Speaker 2 (01:13:45):
Change it back to it like the good place, that's
where it was. Oh, we change it back. No, no,
we change it back to the good spot. It wasn't.
The bad spot for the last six months is terrible.
So let's change it back to the good place. Let's
keep it there. Gotcha? It wasn't really a a back.

Speaker 4 (01:14:00):
Back is just a back I get it.

Speaker 2 (01:14:02):
It was like, let's chage a bag.

Speaker 3 (01:14:03):
I get it now, But I didn't want someone to
like hear that and then.

Speaker 2 (01:14:06):
You know they would change back. Trust well, we do
lose that hour, so man, we got to wake up earlier.
Huh Nope, what No, this is a good one. You
spring forward. Yes, I'm not getting.

Speaker 4 (01:14:16):
You're not as time.

Speaker 2 (01:14:17):
You lose that hour for like a night waits feel
it for like a week?

Speaker 1 (01:14:23):
Man?

Speaker 3 (01:14:23):
Oh yeah, this is the bad one, Yes, totally, but
I'm gonna mind trick myself.

Speaker 4 (01:14:28):
It's the good one.

Speaker 2 (01:14:29):
Daylight saving time starts this weekend. A few things you
should do besides just changing your clocks. We're not going
to do these, but as a public service announcement, I
thought I would say it because maybe one person will
Dan dun d d thank you man. Change the batteries
and your smoke alarm. Good in theory, who's gonna do that.
The only time I does batteries get changed is when
mild of the night goes where is that? And first

(01:14:53):
it gets thrown in the backyard, and then the next
morning I go and find it and then maybe change
a battery change batteries or carbon monoxide detectors. Don't know
that I've ever done it, don't know that I have them.
I'm not sure we should have carbon monoxide because when
you adopt children and they make you have that, huh
remember that? O restock your emergency kits. My emergency kit's

(01:15:19):
probably like the little shell we have of lunchibles. I'm
being honest where it's like emergency. I'm a little hungry
before lunch, but I don't really have an emergency kit.
I have some band aids in a drawer. I have
some alcohol in the bathroom. I like to pour perox
out of my ear sometimes to clean it out where
it goes get my ear? Wait? Is that healthy?

Speaker 4 (01:15:39):
I don't think so.

Speaker 2 (01:15:42):
I turned my head and pour it in and he
goes oh, and I feel like it's cleaning something out.
What's your fact checked that, Mike, Peroxide in the air
and clean out your fridge, pantry and medicine cabinet not
gonna happen. But I guess if you do any of them,
that's a way if you don't normally do them. Mike, Yeah,

(01:16:04):
it's safe. What's it supposed to do? Fight infection? Clear
up the build up a wax. Wow. I believe I
was told that long ago, and but forgot why I
was doing it. But I just kept doing it. So
it always feels good when I get well.

Speaker 3 (01:16:16):
I was always putting hydrogen beroxide on cuts or anything,
and then I saw recently, we're not supposed to do that.

Speaker 2 (01:16:20):
But no one told us that.

Speaker 4 (01:16:22):
Fact check it.

Speaker 2 (01:16:23):
I pour alcohol. Oh dudelool you like the pool. I
just want to feel. I feel something. Wow, it doesn't
matter what. I just want to feel.

Speaker 3 (01:16:31):
Oh I have I'm I haven't had to use it yet,
thank goodness that. I'm really excited about those fire blankets.

Speaker 4 (01:16:38):
I got a few months ago.

Speaker 2 (01:16:39):
I kind of want it's a weird feeling. Yeah, I
don't want something to catch on fires and throw a
blanket on it.

Speaker 4 (01:16:44):
It just seems handy.

Speaker 6 (01:16:46):
Well, I know what she's talking about, because like I
have the fire ladders that you throw out the window,
and I kind of want to use that too, but
you you could.

Speaker 2 (01:16:52):
But is it like an inflatable raft and it opens
up and it's impossible to get back down because it's
perfectly packed. And I think once I I'm gonna get
it back like that's my point where it's it always
or in the first time you bought a paper map
back in the day at the gas station, because when
you unfolded it way back in the day, you were
never getting it folded back like it was, so you
just kind of folded it in half.

Speaker 4 (01:17:13):
Yeah, and kids have no idea.

Speaker 2 (01:17:15):
Yeah, Mike, what about PROCs out on cuts? I'm assuming
that's good. Oh, yeah, that's that's good. Yeah, what about
alcohol on cuts? Okay, let me google. No, you google
to like some hippie you don't like hippie web. Yeah,
they're interchangeable. You can use the other one. Yeah, okay,
I like to do alcohol, and that one hurt and
then I put, I put, but whatever you guess can say.

(01:17:36):
My natural word was sab on it sab. I knew it,
like what is that spider web? I knew, not that
I was gonna get made fun of. But some people
be like, what is sab? And it really is like
aniasporn or any of that type of thing, But sab.
If you were to google sab, I don't even know.
My grandma raised me for a lot of my life.

(01:17:56):
And if we if we put any side kind of
cream ointment to fix a burn or a cut. It
was always he puts some sab on it. But that's
got to be a really Southern thing then, And some
of the words I don't realize they're so Southern, like
am I nacular until I'm about to say them, And
you guys a looking at me in my eyes, spell
spell what you're saying. Sav? Well, I think it's probably

(01:18:16):
spelled save as she called it, sab s a l ve,
sal same thing, but nobody says salve. But that's how
it's spelled. Great, you know how Noah is spelled cano
right right right here you go. You can know you're anybody. No, no,
you don't say that. When you google sa sav all
of the stuff pops up neisporn and all the other

(01:18:39):
healing she'd say. She said, puts some sab on it, So.

Speaker 4 (01:18:41):
We would, okay, y'all like Utah right, you like, uh, we.

Speaker 2 (01:18:45):
Don't dislike it. I like, I've been there a bunch. Why, Okay,
this is a doctor.

Speaker 4 (01:18:49):
This is like from Utah Medical whatever.

Speaker 2 (01:18:52):
This is a doctor.

Speaker 3 (01:18:53):
This is one doctor I pulled talking about it. The
problem is we've all been told to put hydrogen peroxide
on our wounds. And yes, it may kill germs, but
it's also killing the healthy tissue there too. And the
biggest challenge with that is we're sterilizing the womb, but
we're getting rid of the good stuff at the same
time that we're getting rid of the bad stuff.

Speaker 2 (01:19:09):
You can't imagine we're killing it. If we do it
every day, it's probably like an antibiotic. You take enough antibiotics,
they don't work anymore. If you're bathing in hydroperoxide every night,
I can imagine.

Speaker 3 (01:19:19):
No, this is on a specific wound, and it's said
that when you kill the good tissue, that can then
cause a larger wound than we would have had otherwise.
And then he said, and quite honestly, the whole process
of sterilizing it and killing everything off isn't really necessary.

Speaker 2 (01:19:33):
We shouldn't stare see he lost me. Dentists say this
about mouthwash that kills the good bacteria too, so they
do not every dentist does.

Speaker 4 (01:19:41):
I think he gets certain mouthwashes gasoline.

Speaker 2 (01:19:47):
I'm still putting proxide on a wound because I feel
like most doctors will say that that's probably a good
thing to do if your wound is inside your throat, don't.

Speaker 4 (01:19:56):
Drink it banner health, why you shouldn't.

Speaker 2 (01:19:59):
Okay, now she just skin Here's the argument. My wife
and I got into USA today. It's like a dumb argument.
We were talking about names, like is this a real name?
And she it was some funny name. She was like,
I think this is a real name people use. I
don't rember what it was. It was like Godfrey John
or something like a first name that wasn't it. And
I'm like, nobody's named Godfrey John. And so she googles it.

(01:20:23):
By the way, it's not Godfrey John. I just don't
remember what it was. She googles Godfrey John and it's
like from seventeen twelve, Godfrey John was used in certain
Swiss And so I googled and sent this back to her.
Are you ready? Just to show that you could google
anything and get any story you wanted, I googled penis.

(01:20:45):
It's penis a name. The Penis family was founded in
the US, and it was in a name in the
UK and Canada between eighteen forty and nineteen twenty. The
most penis families were found in the US in eighteen
eighty and in eighteen forty there was one Penis family
living in Pennsylvania. So I'm like, anything could be a
name that'd be an amazing fun fact. What's your name,
John the Penis? But you'd have to go by like.

Speaker 4 (01:21:09):
A nice Wiener. There's Wiener's the last name.

Speaker 2 (01:21:12):
Absolutely. My point is with your story you're telling, you're
actually proving your point to gains you No, actually a web.

Speaker 3 (01:21:18):
MD, don't you seeing hydrogen peroxide or rubbing alcohol can
clean an injury, but that's all we need to know
to clean it?

Speaker 9 (01:21:24):
Excuse me?

Speaker 4 (01:21:25):
Can actually harm the tissue and delay healing.

Speaker 2 (01:21:29):
To hit you with excuse me?

Speaker 4 (01:21:30):
Dude in university? How hydrogen peroxide should never be used
to treat wounds?

Speaker 2 (01:21:35):
It doesn't never the good what alcohol? I do? Alcohol? Mike?
What did you find?

Speaker 13 (01:21:41):
I think it's just excessive use of it. Yeah, it's
like anything else, say anything with like mouth flocks. If
you use it too much, it drives out your mouth.
Excessive use of thailand all yeap. Hydrogen peroxide a chemical compound.
It's a very pale blue liquids slightly more vicious than water.

Speaker 2 (01:21:56):
It's an oxidizer, usually as a for consumer use, and
is used effectively to treat wounds and cuts.

Speaker 4 (01:22:03):
The best way to go wound is with cool running
water and mild soap.

Speaker 2 (01:22:07):
Heyst her, The best way to clean a running wound
is to they only spent some time thinking about it
and do breath work.

Speaker 4 (01:22:15):
No mild soap and water.

Speaker 2 (01:22:17):
How do we get here? I do just say, brother,
there don't get anywhere south the National Women's Day sav.

Speaker 3 (01:22:22):
Yeah, it's International Women's Day. So listen to the women
because I know what I'm talking about.

Speaker 2 (01:22:26):
Oh goddess. Yeah, you don't get a free pass to
be wrong on today. Thank you, Thank you, everybody. Here
we go, Bobby Bone show.

Speaker 4 (01:22:35):
Sorry up today.

Speaker 5 (01:22:37):
This story comes with us from Los Angeles, California. The
Los Angeles Clippers built this brand new arena. It's like
eighteen billion dollars to build it. And two teenagers like, man,
it's not open yet, we should go give it a look.
They got some ladders, climbed up, broke in the facility,
played basketball, and then they took fire extinguishers and shot

(01:22:59):
them all around the gym. And they would have got
away with it, but they put it on the top.

Speaker 2 (01:23:04):
I posted it. I saw it. Yeah, the video's crazy.
A couple things. One the fact that you could just
get in. Yeah, even if use ladders. The fact that
it wasn't locked in, you know, eight ways to Sunday,
it looked like they went in through the roof. It's
still yeah. Still. And secondly, I don't even think they
would have gotten in trouble if they'd posted a TikTok

(01:23:25):
and then playing basketball and stuff and got out. But
when they fire extinguished like the rims and stuff, which
I was, once you start messing stuff up in destructive,
vandalizing things, I think even had they posted it to
TikTok and they like, let's see, we're the first people
to ever shoot threes, I don't think they would have
got into trouble. Trouble, But once you start so stupid, Hey,
that's what teenagers did. Oh teenagers? All right, go ahead,

(01:23:47):
I'm Lunchbox. That's your Bonehead store of the day celebrating women.
Today is International Women's Day. On The Bubby bone Show,
our executive producer, the guy who runs it, Scuba Steve,
he has his own segment here. Let's go. It's time
for this is where the end of Lunchbox. Yeah, we're

(01:24:07):
not gonna kill him. No, okay, it's not the end
of lunch It's like we're killing him. I think Scuba
Steve has. It has come to just being a level
of frustration where Lunchbox is not completing some of the
bits that he's been saying he was gonna do, like,
for example, the palette bit.

Speaker 15 (01:24:21):
Yeah, the palate bit is getting a little out of hand.
And I noticed he took photos of Morgan over a
week ago, and you haven't done. We've had multiple upon
multiple deadlines, and I had the anxiety that I have
over this.

Speaker 2 (01:24:33):
I'm ready to just throw all the crap away, which
would suck for us because we all invested money in it.
Eight dollars Lunchbox went to a palette warehouse where you
don't know what's in the palette. You just go, I'll
take that. Then you open it and see what's in it,
and you either keep it or sell it or throw
it away. We thought we'd buy it all and then
sell it back to see what we could do. It
was his idea. He's project manager. He's given us three
different times where it's gonna be. We still haven't done
anything with it. No, we did this last year, by

(01:24:54):
the way, so that was like three or four months ago. Okay, lunchbox.
What's the last calendar year?

Speaker 3 (01:24:58):
Oh?

Speaker 5 (01:24:58):
Yeah, I mean it is rocking and rolling. A total
value of all of our products that we have in
there is two thousand eight.

Speaker 2 (01:25:05):
Do you have all the information ready? Yeah?

Speaker 6 (01:25:08):
Eddie spread No, how can we bones? This is very professional?
He's got a spreadsheet?

Speaker 2 (01:25:13):
Well did that? Looks like he definitely didn't do it. No,
I'm not saying he didn't do it. You guys are
wrong for that because he absolutely could have been a
part of it.

Speaker 3 (01:25:24):
I know.

Speaker 2 (01:25:26):
I'm not saying that he did the spread or he
used Microsoft Office or whatever, but I'm saying, is that
is that detailed? Down to the detail? Okay? Yeah, so
I didn't know you had that? Yeah? Is there? I
don't want to hear that yet because I'd love to
make that in a much broader update. That's welcome, But
when when can we launch? Can we launch it next week?
We have to make a decision on one thing. Go ahead,

(01:25:47):
Will you make that decision now? So do we do eBay?
That means we have to have the weights of everything. Nope,
the answer is no. What's the other option?

Speaker 5 (01:25:55):
The other thing is we can put up fifty eight
different posts on Facebook marketplace, and then you have to
do fifty eight like because we can't just post them
on our things.

Speaker 2 (01:26:06):
We're not a group. What if you do like five
and then you sell us five and you do five
more instead of fifty eight at once? Oh, I didn't
think about that a little bit. I honestly didn't think
about that. Okay, so let me just put that.

Speaker 5 (01:26:19):
But then, also, this is where it gets weird is
if you do Facebook Marketplace, you get hurted. Yeah, I know, No, no, no,
we're eBay the bids, you know, they just put in
a number, and that's what the bid is. On Facebook Marketplace,
people just comment how much they're willing to pay. So
whenever the deadline is over, let's say seven pm after
a week, you have to go through every single comment

(01:26:40):
and figure out what every ten thousand comments.

Speaker 2 (01:26:43):
What if you said the buy it now prices boom?

Speaker 5 (01:26:47):
No, no, no, this is all auction because we offer
to autograph anything, so people are willing to pay.

Speaker 2 (01:26:52):
More now I know. But what you're doing is you're
holding way out hoping it gets better. When you can
actually just take a really good number and go if
somebody will pay this, you toomatically get it first one
to respond gets it.

Speaker 4 (01:27:02):
Yeah, that's the.

Speaker 2 (01:27:03):
Best way, and it moves quicker. We get to the
next one. We have a yeah, because you sell this
stuff quicker. So you may I lose a little bit
of money, like seventeen bucks on an item, but the
fact that you can get to the next item quicker
and sell that quicker's money coming at you too.

Speaker 5 (01:27:17):
Bobby's right right now, because it's been very confusing and confusing.
When I was like when I like talking to people
that do this for a living and trying to figure
out how to do an auction on Facebook, and.

Speaker 2 (01:27:28):
I think what we do is my head was ready
to do that with five will learn instead of doing
fifty eight and going, well, there's some mistakes we made.
We just do with five learn what's easy, what we
could do better, and then the next five we get
a little better at it. But we're ready to go
next week. Then let's just revisit it next week. Yeah,
I'm there. I knew I had faith in him. What's
another bit he's not doing? The other one is eating
three pounds of food and then we how going to
step up? Yeah, say that's not on much box either.

(01:27:49):
We do need it a bit he said, if you
bring me three pounds of food, I'll eat it. But
he's very particular. He can't be deli meat. He can't
be this can.

Speaker 15 (01:27:57):
Get you need to do is send Abby to publics
get three pounds of whatever food would be, milk and cheese.

Speaker 2 (01:28:02):
You don't want to get sick. Yeah, I don't want
to eat three much. I don't understand how hard it
is food. Okay, do this for next week to list
us the food that you want. Do not be ridiculous, No, no,
I'm not. We can go to a grocery store. I'm
not even being ridiculous. I just would like a warm meal,

(01:28:23):
like I really a meal with sides and everything. But
I'm on your side. I'm not going to just get
left over and cheese fridge. That's I need you to
make a list for next week. We'll read down the list.
It's not a drip list or you want more drip.
It's something that we can go to the grocery store
and get three pounds of it and that you will
eat and see if you weigh three pounds more. But

(01:28:44):
I don't know how you're going to cook it. He
wants a warm five you're not getting a ship. No, no, no,
it's like I can't sit here and eat three pounds
of granola bars. But that's not well that he'll get sick.
But you can't eat I can eat chicken nuggets. No,
I can't eat three pounds. That's what I'm saying. If
you want to give somebody else one hundred bucks to
do the bit, I'm sorry, I'll do it. Just just
we can be over with this. Whatever. You'll get a

(01:29:05):
bowl from Chipotle when it opens to like eleven, it
won't be warm the next morning. Let's be put the microwave.

Speaker 4 (01:29:12):
Sonic Breens food sometimes and they have what quarter pounds
or what quarter pound quarter.

Speaker 2 (01:29:18):
Before they cook it. Yeah, I can't get three pounds
of burgers. They can help us, bring a digital scale.
We can weigh in how much for you to do it? Money,
I have a food scale. You wanted some fine five
star meal, that's hilarious. You know what you do not
want to do it? Three pounds is a lot. That's
the point of the bit. What if it was like,
would you like three pounds of macaroni and cheese, because

(01:29:38):
that's what they want to give you.

Speaker 7 (01:29:39):
Right.

Speaker 2 (01:29:39):
The only way to do it is steak, and yes,
I would do it for three pounds of steak. You'll
do it for how much? One hundred bucks? What you said?
All right, that won't make you sick anything. Okay, So
who's cooking it? That's what I'm saying. You guy, the
three pounds by the meat Eddie, you cook it all right?
You bring it in Okay? Anybody I'm want to need
that scale will eat three pounds of meat.

Speaker 5 (01:30:01):
Yeah, I don't understand how you just said you'd cook
him in me, but you wouldn't.

Speaker 2 (01:30:04):
Cook cook it the night before. So you would do
three pounds of steak the night before and he cooks it.
But you couldn't. You couldn't nail down what you wanted.
You were I just told you a bull from Chipotle
probably weighs three pounds. But again, you said you want
it hot and fresh, and it's eleven that hasn't been
open to the show.

Speaker 4 (01:30:18):
Have you'll ever seen a forty eight ounce steak on
them Inhu?

Speaker 2 (01:30:22):
I never weigh when I'm there.

Speaker 4 (01:30:23):
That's how big this steak's going to be.

Speaker 2 (01:30:25):
No, No, and that's before you cook it. Yeah, right,
got you. We're gonna kick out the steak. We'll get
the scale, Rai'll do three pounds of food. I'm glad
to here. Next week we guys are going to close
the palate and Ray's gonna make a hundred bucks eat
three pound of foo to see if you weighs three
pounds a month to do it, Let's go goodbye by
the International Women's Day.

Speaker 9 (01:30:41):
On The Bobby Bones Show
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