<v Speaker 1>Jery, Katy and Josh mix one hundred, Jeremy, Katie and
<v Speaker 1>Bubba here at makes one hundred.
<v Speaker 2>You're just gonna do it?
<v Speaker 3>Oh, just joking for it off the air. We joked
<v Speaker 3>we're gonna start calling Josh Bubba and he doesn't I
<v Speaker 3>at all.
<v Speaker 4>No, it's fine.
<v Speaker 5>Oh you're just talking how every family has a Bubba, right,
<v Speaker 5>and I didn't know about.
<v Speaker 4>That's news to me.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, my brother's Bubba. Your son goes by Bubba.
<v Speaker 3>Yeah, Josh has no Bubba, So now he's going.
<v Speaker 4>To be Bubba.
<v Speaker 2>And our family here the JKJ fam Bubba.
<v Speaker 4>All right, Bubba. That's fine. I like it, but it's fine.
<v Speaker 2>My nickname, Okay, I thought.
<v Speaker 4>You've been Katie Cat this whole time.
<v Speaker 3>You are Katie Cat.
<v Speaker 2>I think you picked that, Josh.
<v Speaker 1>I think it's either either Jar or I. Whoever called
<v Speaker 1>it first doesn't matter. That's a great nickname.
<v Speaker 3>It's really cute.
<v Speaker 4>Yeah, okay, all.
<v Speaker 3>Right, let's dive into pm I. We're gonna send you
<v Speaker 3>on your way this morning with a positive, a minus,
<v Speaker 3>and something a little bit interesting. Who had the P today?
<v Speaker 2>I have the pe?
<v Speaker 4>Yeah, Katie Cat.
<v Speaker 2>Well, because for the price of a dinner in Paris.
<v Speaker 5>Somebody's gonna walk away with a Picasso valued at more
<v Speaker 5>than a million dollars. Were you talking about, Yes, the Picasso.
<v Speaker 5>It's actually the contest is called one Picasso for one
<v Speaker 5>hundred euros. It's a raffle and it offers entrance the
<v Speaker 5>chance to take home the artist nineteen forty one painting
<v Speaker 5>called TT Defeme I think Feme I love time good
<v Speaker 5>because the price of a ticket as the same as
<v Speaker 5>the name of the contest suggests, one hundred euros are
<v Speaker 5>about one hundred and sixteen bucks. So they have a
<v Speaker 5>total of one hundred and twenty thousand tickets sold. That's
<v Speaker 5>how they can justify getting just one hundred and sixteen
<v Speaker 5>dollars for a Picasso. But I mean, realistically, one person
<v Speaker 5>only has to shell out one hundred and sixteen dollars
<v Speaker 5>and someone's gonna walk away with this one million dollar picassot,
<v Speaker 5>isn't it need Yeah, tt Defeme and yeah. So all
<v Speaker 5>of the proceeds are also going to be donated to
<v Speaker 5>the Alzheimer's Research Foundation, so that supports.
<v Speaker 2>Research, yeah, across Europe.
<v Speaker 5>So it's a really big deal and it's making the
<v Speaker 5>ways across the news obviously, because who wouldn't want a
<v Speaker 5>Pacasto for one hundred and sixteen bucks.
<v Speaker 3>Right, A lot of his paintings has sold for over
<v Speaker 3>one hundred million dollars. I think he had one like
<v Speaker 3>right around like it was like one ninety one eighty
<v Speaker 3>something like that. Yeah, his paintings bring bank.
<v Speaker 2>I mean it's Picasso.
<v Speaker 3>Yeah, but it was it like on a napkin or something.
<v Speaker 2>No, it's it is a real nice painting, just a
<v Speaker 2>really bad one. Look beautiful on your wall.
<v Speaker 5>But remember Pcasto's whole style is like an eye.
<v Speaker 4>It's already weird.
<v Speaker 2>An eye on your forehead. Your nose is on the side.
<v Speaker 3>Yeah, it looks like my mother in law mouf is
<v Speaker 3>looking funny.
<v Speaker 2>If you want to picture Jeremy's mother in law for
<v Speaker 2>just one hundred and sixteen.
<v Speaker 3>Color t as well, get back inside you don't want
<v Speaker 3>to see.
<v Speaker 5>Well, hopefully you got your ticket, Jeremy, because the drawing
<v Speaker 5>is today.
<v Speaker 3>I better get on it.
<v Speaker 5>Good luck to everybody who bought a ticket for t
<v Speaker 5>Good luck everybody.
<v Speaker 3>But what she got for the minus?
<v Speaker 1>Oh, Bubba's got a minus story about an Indianapolis man
<v Speaker 1>who was shot over the weekend and that's a minus
<v Speaker 1>in and of itself. But why he was shot is
<v Speaker 1>kind of the funny story here. He got an argument
<v Speaker 1>with his buddy about Pokemon cards, and it escalated and
<v Speaker 1>kept escalating, you did, until a gun was drawn and
<v Speaker 1>he was shot over What his friend said was he
<v Speaker 1>was taking the Pokemon cards away from him or stealing them.
<v Speaker 3>Which is also a picasto painting.
<v Speaker 4>Look he is.
<v Speaker 1>He is in stable condition, so we can joke about it.
<v Speaker 1>But imagine getting shot over your Pokemon.
<v Speaker 4>I don't want to imagine that. Poor guy. He is
<v Speaker 4>expected to make a full recovery.
<v Speaker 3>This is why I stopped collecting Pokemon smart this is why. Okay,
<v Speaker 3>and I was getting way too many chicks.
<v Speaker 2>Oh sure, yeah, yeah, sure?
<v Speaker 3>Are they binders in sleeves.
<v Speaker 4>And mint condition?
<v Speaker 3>Jeer, take me now?
<v Speaker 2>Oh I'm sure.
<v Speaker 3>Years the years that I had to put years.
<v Speaker 4>All through college?
<v Speaker 3>Like jerr, can we come to your dorm room? Okay,
<v Speaker 3>So let's wrest things up with the interesting. There's a
<v Speaker 3>new study out founding finding that, on average, Americans spend
<v Speaker 3>about five hours and sixteen minutes a day on their
<v Speaker 3>Phone's true story, But get this, if you put your
<v Speaker 3>phone down for what was it. I should have probably
<v Speaker 3>read this before we went on the air. Ye always
<v Speaker 3>PRAI reaching two weeks found it two weeks of digital detox.
<v Speaker 3>Get this. It'll reverse ten years of aging in your
<v Speaker 3>brain of digital decline. So essentially, put your phone down
<v Speaker 3>for two weeks. Your attention span will improve, your memory
<v Speaker 3>will improve, Reading stories on the radio will improve.
<v Speaker 2>Oh yeah, I need it.
<v Speaker 3>I will tell you that my phone hopped into update
<v Speaker 3>mode on the way in today and so I couldn't
<v Speaker 3>listen to podcasts or the news or anything for my
<v Speaker 3>entire drive into the radio station, and I just left
<v Speaker 3>everything off for the whole drive in. It was very
<v Speaker 3>uncomfortable for about five ten minutes, but the rest of
<v Speaker 3>the way it was like, this is like olden times,
<v Speaker 3>and it felt really good not to have a screen on,
<v Speaker 3>no music, nothing.
<v Speaker 4>Have you ever done that?
<v Speaker 3>Yeah, and shut it off when you're in the car.
<v Speaker 5>Kind of the same thing where like your phone, you're
<v Speaker 5>it's inaccessible and so you're forced to. But I'm with
<v Speaker 5>you in the moment it's kind of uncomfortable, but once
<v Speaker 5>it settles in, you're like, oh, I'm not as anxious
<v Speaker 5>like you.
<v Speaker 4>Reach.
<v Speaker 2>I don't know if you did this, but I reached
<v Speaker 2>for my phone.
<v Speaker 3>Well, when I'm driving you, I would never, of course.
<v Speaker 5>Not, but I mean when you when you do try
<v Speaker 5>and put it down and it's update or whatever, you
<v Speaker 5>reach for it, but then you're like, oh, I can't
<v Speaker 5>grab it, and then again you have to sit with
<v Speaker 5>yourself for a second. But you're right, it is a
<v Speaker 5>good feeling once you, you know, get through it.
<v Speaker 3>The thing is is just trying to get through the
<v Speaker 3>two weeks. I don't know how you can do that
<v Speaker 3>if you have a job and a family and kids
<v Speaker 3>and needing to message people, like, that's going to be impossible.
<v Speaker 5>They have whole retreats that you can dedicate to this
<v Speaker 5>process where you can go and you know, kill your
<v Speaker 5>phone addiction and then come back and you know, enter
<v Speaker 5>your real life and then try and you know, apply
<v Speaker 5>all the things there.
<v Speaker 2>So that might be the way you have to do it.
<v Speaker 3>Nowadays, I will say I have limited my social time
<v Speaker 3>so much over the past few weeks, so much, and
<v Speaker 3>it feels good.
<v Speaker 4>Yeah.
<v Speaker 3>The biggest part that I've noticed is the comparison, Like
<v Speaker 3>you're not comparing yourself so much to other people, Yeah,
<v Speaker 3>because you know they have the best stuff. On brag book.
<v Speaker 3>You know, absolutely, And I feel like I I was
<v Speaker 3>getting sucked into that comparison some things.
<v Speaker 5>Well, because you're probably comparing their best moments with your worst. Also,
<v Speaker 5>it's not like you're taking your top tier events and
<v Speaker 5>putting up against SI.
<v Speaker 2>You know, Lily, Yeah, here I am.
<v Speaker 3>I work with Bubba and Katie.
<v Speaker 2>Shut up, Jeremy, You're face there.
<v Speaker 3>Guys, as your positive your mind is something interesting this
<v Speaker 3>morning with Jeremy, Katie and Josh.
<v Speaker 4>You mix
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