Mojo In The Morning
Mojo got Grounded for The Weekend
This is the Mojo in the Morning podcast, powered by Michigan Auto Law, auto accident attorneys. Visit autolaw.com. That's autolaw.com. It's Mojo in the Morning Show. Is this possible? Is it possible that a grown person, I pay taxes. I don't know if you guys do that, but I pay taxes. A grown person can be grounded, but I am grounded this weekend. You are doing what? I am grounded. I'm not allowed to do anything. I'm not allowed to go out and play with my friends. I have tried to do. There's like four things that I need to do. There's like four things on my task list. One of them is I've been trying to clean my closet and my garage out, like of all the crap. Chelsea and I are trying to get rid of crap. I always start the project and I don't finish it. Why? Yes. I'm very bad at that. Believe it or not. I look like a very together person. And I got that. I do have taxes, believe it or not, to do for breaking it into Christmas wish, so Stuart Sack has been waiting for that for a long time. Then I have two things that Chelsea has asked me to do that I can't reveal on the radio, but I will at a later time because it's very, very big news for the family. She asked me, and she said to me, she goes, "Are you going to do them this weekend?" I said, "Well, I was thinking about going golfing with Grant on Saturday." I was thinking about, and then I'm like, "I got a grad party tonight and all this stuff." And I'm trying to think of all this stuff and she goes, "You were grounded for this weekend." And I thought that that was so funny that it made me start thinking to myself, "Is there anybody that legitimately has ever been grounded as an adult? As a grown adult?" And when I mean grown adult, you're over the age of 18. Like maybe you live with your parents, they told you you can't do something. Maybe you are married, your spouse says no more going out to the bars because you come home a little crazy. Can you ground? Like, could you imagine, Shannon, you grounding Wes? Yes. You can. Yes. Can you imagine him grounding you? Yes. Really? Which one's more realistic? Probably him grounding me, actually. Yeah. We'll just be grounded for it. We'll just be grounded for it. I'm shopping. Yeah. Like, as we're trying to get rid of crap, I just keep buying crap, and it's like my whole Acadia is filled with crap that I bought off Facebook marketplace. He is going to kill me, but he's out of town until tonight, so just got to find a place for it. What's he going to do? He's not going to notice it. Megan, has Scott Mick ever grounded you? I don't think he could ground me. I wouldn't listen if he did. I would just get up and leave. No, I don't think I could ever be grounded as an adult, but I think the punishment I get threatened with enough is I'll be written out of his will. And not all of that. That's worse than being told you can't do something. Correct. 844-Mojo-Live, 844-665-6548. I feel like Kev's mom would still ground him. For some reason, I get to see your mom going, "Kevin, it's nothing that she could hold over me, though." Do you know what I mean? Like, I don't live with her. I don't like she doesn't pay any of my bills, so it's like, "What could she really tell?" Did she ground you or send you to your room when you're a Kev? If I, bro, listen, my mom is the biggest reason I am who I am and a free spirit. She used to let me and my sister do whatever the hell we want. Really? Oh, she used to let us go to the limits. Man. I probably should have got a little more. I should have married her instead of Chelsea. I'd be able to go out and do some of this, man. Actually, you know what's funny? I don't think I would have that stuff laying around, because your mom would probably beat my ass if I didn't get that stuff done. Well, here's... Okay. Well, now that I'm reminiscing. It was a moment in my early 20s when I was living at home and my grandmother and my mom, they came in my room and my grandma's a clean freak. So if my room was dirty and she came over to us, she would, like, clean my room. And I had all of these bottles of alcohol just in my room, because after parties, I would take the bottles home and finish off the liquor. And I couldn't go to a party for, like, a month or something like that. That was like the only time. That was it. What's up, Brenda? Aria, how are you guys? We're good. What's going on? We're talking about adults getting grounded. Before I moved out, I used to live with my mom until I was about 21, 22. And I would have a curfew of, like, 10 30, 11 o'clock at night. And I, with being the rebellious person that I am, used to just not come home until, like, 10 o'clock in the morning. And I would get grounded all the time for that, even at age, like 2021. Is that why you moved out of the house or did they kick you out of the house? It's one of the bigger reasons why I moved out. Ooh, we smoked. Careful. Oh, be careful. Somebody just cut you off. What happened? No, just someone pulled out of a parking spot while I was coming in. Oh, geez. Be careful. Okay. It's all good. I'm working now. Thank you for the call. Okay, to be safe. Have a great week. Of course. Thanks for having me. Renee says her husband won't let her do things. Would you consider it grounding? Renee? Are you talking to me? Yeah. I'm sorry. Yeah. Like, it's a new kids in a black summer tour and I'm going, you know, what to the Detroit show? I'm going to New York. I'm going to Florida. He's like, you know, what? I'm going to be able to get a new house. Oh, geez. Like, I think, I'm like, he's like new kids on the blocker, a new house. What do you want to do? I'm like, we'll be okay. Yeah. How many shows do you really need to go to? Oh, I go to the cruises. I go everywhere. Do you really? You're like, hardcore fan. Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. I have a tattoo on my arm and everything. Oh, my God. Wow. Yeah. He's like, no, we need to chill out. Don't you want a bigger house? I'm like, we'll be okay. You knew about this before I met you. Oh, my God. That's wild. You grew up with them and now you're literally still with them. No. Still with them. The first time I went out to dinner with them. I told them, this, this, this, this, this. I've caught out of Dany's in the window. And this is the way. Oh, my God. I cut out Dany's in the window. Oh, my gosh. Emily, what's going on? Yeah. That is crazy. Good morning. How are you guys? Good. What's going on? We're talking about adults being grounded. Yeah. So I am 26. I live on my own and I have two kids. And if there's one thing I'll do, it's go shopping and buy stuff for my kids. And she grounded me. I was not allowed to leave my house. She tracked my location and if I was at a store, she called me and told me to go home. So you're wait. You don't, but you don't live with your mom? No. And she still has, has that much control over you that she's agrounding you as a 26-year-old, your own mother. We share our location for safety purposes. Yeah. So, but like if she can't get ahold of me or something, she'll see where I'm at to make sure I'm okay. That's wild. That's like a digital conservator. That is really, that was okay. It's kind of like, it's almost like having a probation officer separates your mother. Listen to this text message, can't go on the air. This is from two four eight. Can't go on the air, but my husband is grounded from going on a guy's weekend trip because the last time that he went, he ended up going to a strip club and paying for strippers. Ooh. What's wrong with that? Yeah. You're the wife at home. You don't want to have. Know that your hard earned money is going towards some girl shaking her eyes. Yeah. He went on a guy's trip. He went to a strip club. You're not married yet. Right now. I mean, I don't even, I don't go to strip clubs. So, that's not my thing. But I feel like it's his guy's trip, would it? Yeah. No. There are places he can't go. It's not like he went to a whore house and like, "Yes, actually, somebody just went to a strip club." It probably wouldn't even his idea. Yeah. I don't think he should pick it up for the guy. Yeah. I do. First, I guess see what he looks like first before I make a judgment on whether or not I'm going to trust this guy. An official message from Medicare. A new law is helping me save more money on prescription drug costs. Maybe you can save too. With Medicare's extra help program, my premium is zero and my out-of-pocket costs are low. Who should apply? Single people making less than $23,000 a year or married couples who make less than $31,000 a year. Even if you don't think you qualify, it pays to find out. Go to ssa.gov/extrahelp. Paid for by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.