Difference between revisions of "Chat with Bobby C."

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{{AbsentChris}}
{{AbsentChris}}


'''Chat with Bobby C.''' also known as '''An Extended Chat With Bobby''' are 2 [[YouTube]] videos posted by user [[ThePCAssassins]] on 30 [[April 2011]]. The videos were both [[Lost Media]] until the first part was uncovered by [[Statustjej]] in [[December 2025]], however the second part remains lost.<ref>https://archive.org/details/the-pcassassins-calls/ThePCassassins+Chat+with+Bobby+Part+1+from+4-30-11.mp4</ref>
'''Chat with Bobby C.''' are 5 [[YouTube]] videos posted by user [[ThePCAssassins]] on 1 or 2 [[May 2011]]. The videos were thought to be [[Lost Media]] until the first part was uncovered by [[Statustjej]] in [[December 2025]].<ref>https://archive.org/details/the-pcassassins-calls/ThePCassassins+Chat+with+Bobby+Part+1+from+4-30-11.mp4</ref> Parts 2 and 5 were found on the Wayback Machine by a CWCki editor about a month later. A link to part 4 was already known about. Part 3 however, remains lost.


==Part 1==
==Part 1==
{{Infobox/Audiofile
{{Infobox/Audiofile
| name          = ThePCassassins Chat with Bobby C. Part 1
| name          = ThePCassassins Chat with Bobby Part 1
| video          = {{#ev:archiveorg|the-pcassassins-chat-with-bobby-c.-part-1}}
| video          = {{#ev:archiveorg|the-pcassassins-chat-with-bobby-c.-part-1}}
| stardate      = [[2011]]
| stardate      = 30 [[April 2011]]
| subject        = {{Other|[[Bob]]}}
| subject        = {{Other|[[Bob]]}}
| saga          =  
| saga          =  
| shirt          =  
| shirt          =  
| other          = {{Leaked|text}}
| other          = {{Leaked|text}}
| previous      = [[Catch A Wild Snorlax Plus Update on Bob]]
| previous      = [[Get in touch with Bobby C]]
| next          = [[Get in touch with Bobby C]]
| next          = [[Chat_with_Bobby_C.#Part_2|ThePCassassins Chat with Bobby Part 2]]
}}
}}


==Transcript==
===Transcript===
{{transcription}}
{{transcription}}
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> [coughs]
<font color="#0174DF">'''Amfermee:'''</font> Can I listen to his, uh, voicemail?
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> [The phone rings 7 times. Craig coughs. The phone rings 2 more times and goes to voicemail] Hi, my name is Richard Cullen from Adam and Steve dot com, your son owes fourteen dollars on a purchase of anal beads from the Adam and Steve Manlyhood Collection, uh, for little pansies. Uh, we’d just like him to collec--to, uh, make the purchase on our website please? Just tell him that he re--needs to re-enter his credit card because we’ve been having problems with his credit card numbers in the past, and uh, we would really like for him to make these purchases, ‘cause he owes us a lot of money in all these anal beads and anal lube and gay porn tapes. We’d just really like your son Christian Weston Chandler, to come down and, to, uh, make these purchases please. Also, um, we would really like to wonder why your son [inaudible] like [voicemail ends] a girl?
<font color="#0174DF">'''Amfermee:'''</font> [chuckles]
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Hey, Am, you wanna try one?
<font color="#0174DF">'''Amfermee:'''</font> [groans]. Yeah, go ahead, do it.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> No, do you wanna pretend to be, do you want, do you want to do one? Like…
<font color="#0174DF">'''Amfermee:'''</font> Yeah, yeah, I’ll do it.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Okay, okay. And then maybe we can, like, order some pizzas. [They both chuckle, then call Bob again. After two rings, Bob answers. Throughout the call, Craig and Amfermee have a slight echo]
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Hello?
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Bob?
<font color="#0174DF">'''Amfermee:'''</font> Hey Bob!
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> How’s it goin’?
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Hello?
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Bob, Bob, this is Craig, Craig, the en--the engineering student.
<font color="#0174DF">'''Amfermee:'''</font> The engineering student.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> How are you doing?
<font color="#0174DF">'''Amfermee:'''</font> How’s it goin’?
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> It’s alright, I guess.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> That’s good.
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> I got in the hospital and got back out again.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Oh, are you feeling better? [Amfermee grunts for some reason]
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> I’m having a problem with uh… [inaudible] retention.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Oh, okay. But, but you’re feeling better though, right?
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Oh, I’m, I’m just… day by day I guess I’m getting better.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> That’s good, that’s good, how was your week?
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> What?
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> How was your week?
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> How was my week? I’ve been in the hospital.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> But like how’s this–
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> I just got out yesterday.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Oh, okay, alright. S--sorry about that, uh, how’s the family?
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Uh, they, they’re fine.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> That’s good, that’s good. Well, uh, I’m, I’m done my finals for the semester. So—
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> You’re in your final semester, huh?
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Yeah, I finished my, uh, s--my… semester.
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Are you gonna graduate or is this just this year?
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Oh no, but it’s this--this is my first year. It’s my first year. And it was a tough–
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Your first year?
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Yeah, it was a tough year, let me tell you. Oh, it was, it was a lot of work, like… To, to be honest with you, uh, because, you, you’ve pa--you’ve p--ad a lot of patents. Like, like, what, what ma--like, what genius, like… cause I’m, a, a, I actually checked out some of your patents with the pren--the presses and stuff like that. Like, what made you come up with those ideas?
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> [chuckles] I gotta give you some… hypothetical questions, huh?
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> I just wanna know, like, how did it, like, like how, like… in what state of mind were you in when you came up with these machines for like, plastic molding and stuff?
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Well, you got a problem? You solve it.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Well, what was your problem?
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Well, you go find out the, the customer’s problem, what he wants to do.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Okay, alright…
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Then you figure out a way to solve it.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Oh, okay. Sweet, sweet, so like, so di--were you working for a company or were you like an independent?
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> No, I was working for GE.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> GE, nice, General Electric.
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Yeeeah.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> That’s good! I, that’s pretty impressive, like, I, I hope to actually… uh, I'm hoping to actually be, like, landing a job after, uh, after I’m done with school with, uh, Austin company…like GE, heh…I’m trying.
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> One of the toughest ones I ever had. I mean, how would you like to be sitting there at your desk, and they come in and say you’ve got a new assignment? And you ask them what this assignment is, and they say “Well, you’ve gotta automate this blast furnace, sittin’ up in Pittsburgh, for U.S. Steel, and nobody’s ever automated one before.”
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> That would actually make me shake in my boots, sir.
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> [chuckles] Well, I did it. It took two years, but I did it.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> That is amazing, like I…to be honest, like, I would be freaking out, like I would be sweating bullets not knowing what to do. Like, I bet you there was, like, a lot of–
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> First thing you do is you, first thing you do is you just organize it! You go to them, and you find out exactly what they want this thing to do, and you go learn the language of the particular, uh, field that they’re in, like this place it was, uh, melting of steel, right?
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Right.
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> And then you g--learn that language. And then you learn to, [inaudible] like you were them. And you say, “What do I wanna do? What, how do we produce this thing?” Then you produce the equivalent that causes it to do the same thing.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Okay…
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> That’s all [inaudible].
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Wild late nights working on that, eh?
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Well, there was some interesting…little quirks in that, nobody’s ever done it before.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> So, so, di--did you see the first two liter plastic bottles rolling off the assembly line?
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> I did.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Li--like, that must’ve brought a tear to your eye, though, right? To see your brainchild, like, right there in, me--mechanical form, working, and being successful.
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Yeah, well, it’s nice!
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Yeah!
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> I watched the first, uh, oh well there’s lots of other things I watched come off. I watched the first bifold plastic closet door, you know these closet doors you got that, they hang up everywhere, it's made out of plastic?
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Oh yeah, I know those.
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Yeah, well I watched the first one come off the line, up in Massachusetts. [Chuckles]
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> That must’ve been amazing.
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> I watched the first bottles being blown for milk bottles.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Oh, nice.
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> I watched, I watched the first, uh, dashboard being blown for a General Motors car.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> That is, oh, man, that’s impressive, uh, I…I could only hope to dream to actually accomplish something like that.
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Well, it’s like I said, I was lucky all my life. I was in this area at GE. Which was called the New Business Area.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Okay.
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> And there was a group of us, that worked in the New Business Areas. And we, we had to take these new business opportunities, that, some customer had this wild dream, [inaudible] to automate his blast furnace, right?
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Right.
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Like U.S. Steel. He had this dream. He wants to do this, so you go talk to him enough, so you can write it down, and then follow his specifications.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Okay.
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> And once you’ve got your specification all written down, and what he wants to do, how it’s gonna work, and all this, then you do the process of, of getting your feedback sensors, and your controls, to match up to do what his specification says he wants it to do. It’s just that simple.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Like–
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Just like one step at a time.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Like, like, did you see, like, um…cause, like, you, you were in, like, the whole plastic molding industry stuff, like, you invented all those machines, like, did you do anything with Nintendo? Did Nintendo ever, like, come up to GE and ask for help?
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> No.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> No?--
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> They, they pretty much didn’t, because they, they stole everything in Japan. They stole all our technology from here.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Okay.
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> And, so, they never bothered with it.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Oh, okay.
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> But I’m sure, I’m sure that they bought, y’know, um, one of our departments, in GE, was, um, allied with uh, a numerical control department, in Japan. Uh, that was, um, uh, I can’t think of the name of the company now, but they actually were working together. For all the numerical control systems, we’d do all the automating the machines, and all this kind of stuff that goes on in our world, they stole all the controls for all that kind of stuff. And, uh, so, whatever works on a machine tool, will also work on plastics or anything else, the same philosophy.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Okay.
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> It’s the same, same kind of stuff. And, ‘cause it’s all logic.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Yeah.
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> That’s what it is, is it’s just logic. And, um, see, I started out, first thing I did, was a blast furnace. It’s a, It’s just a great, big, 200 foot tall blast furnace, if you’ve ever seen one.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Ah, I, I, believe I have seen one, before I took my course, my, uh, dad, uh, my dad’s, well, my uncle, works in the steel industry, and I, I, he took me on a tour of this steel manufacturing plant and I, I believe I have seen one.
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Well, anyway, they’re, uh, they melt some steel. They make it where it’s liquid. And, uh, but that’s the first thing I did, and then the next thing I worked on was, uh, what they call a rolling mill, a hot strip mill. Where something up in Detroit, where we were rolling thin plates of steel, uh, under computerized-type control, for, uh, making the steel on automobiles.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Okay.
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> We were trying to roll it thinner than they had ever rolled it before. ‘Cause we had computer control on it. That was the second thing I worked on. After that I worked on the, the, um…guess it was a petroleum system, distribution, fuel distribution systems, where what was then at a wild airport in New York, where all the jet fuel, that goes around all over these [inaudible] and everything. And planes. That was, kinda simple compared to that. [Craig chuckles] And, and then I got into, um, what they call stacker cranes, you’ve heard of them, I guess.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Yes I have.
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> They were used in warehousing. They used all the stacker cranes where they go up and down, stash stuff in little holes, go back and get it, bring it out, put it on a conveyor and all that stuff. I worked on the start of all that, the stacker crane controls, for warehousing. Then I did some automatic, what they call pole lines, which are, cables that are in the floor, where they throw carts around with various stuff on it, for distribution like in big warehouses, and, and plate terminals and this kind of thing. I did two or three of those, and then I helped a friend of mine do a whole bunch of automated postal, post offices, where everything was, all the mailbags were automatically, read, and, uh, shipped off to their various places around the world. [Craig and Bob chuckle] I got into, I guess some night I went into, uh, a data logger for the largest steam turbine department where they make the big, large…generator turbines, for all the atomic power plants.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Really?
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> In [inaudible, referring to a location]. I wor--I built the data logger, for that thing.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Oh man, that–
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Which we were testing it.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> That’s amazing.
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> And, uh…then we had to be able to do anything, but it’s all logic, so it doesn’t matter, it’s the same thing. And, after that I got into, uh, I got into a little bit of the, uh, BART, you know, the Bay Area Rapid Transit?
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Yeah.
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Out in San Francisco…I got out there because we were building Arnet systems, and I worked on, uh, automation for the, for the rapid transit cars for about six to eight months. [Bob chuckles while saying “and then” Craig also slightly chuckles] Then I slipped back over to, uh, place in, up in Washington state called Tupperware.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Ooo…
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> They wanted to automate all their machines for making tupperware. You’ve heard of that?
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Oh, yeah, definitely, definitely, yeah.
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> And so I automated all their, their machines that, that had controls on it for molding all this tupperware plastic stuff. And then I got down and about in Rouge, Louisiana. Working with a paper company down there, to make Kleenex, they wanted to roll Kleenex…paper Kleenex, I don’t think they used controls. After that little chore, we had a…I had a little journey down to, uh, uh…place that's called Silvertown, Georgia. Where they, where Goodrich was making what they call a Silvertown tire. Which was way [inaudible] steel belted radial tires, and we were making tire cord lines down there to automate them. After that, and after that I got into, uh, mining. I did a couple of mile-deep, uh, mine horse, completely automated. And for men, and locomotive, and…everything else to go down over this five thousand-foot hole, for Climax, molybdenum out in Denver.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> Oh wow.
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> [Bob chuckles while saying “And”. Craig also chuckles] And, that was a couple years of my life right there.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> You’ve done a lot.
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Coming out of that, I, I guess I, I automated four tanker ships, for, uh, well, some ship, uh, company in Seattle, where they can run the ship automatically from the bridge without having anybody fr--in the engine room.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> That–
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> That was a little, that was a short one, that didn’t take long.
<font color="#8A0808">'''Craig:'''</font> That’s amazing, I--that’s amazing, sir.
<font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> After that I got into, uh, um…the, uh… [inaudible] controls.


==Part 2==
==Part 2==
The second part is still lost, but Statustjej found a link to what is likely Part 2:<br>
{{Infobox/Audiofile
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-E8os_pzJ10
| name          = ThePCassassins Chat with Bobby Part 2
| video          = {{#ev:archiveorg|the-pcassassins-chat-with-bobby-part-2}}
| stardate      = 30 [[April 2011]]
| subject        = {{Other|[[Bob]]}}
| saga          =
| shirt          =
| other          = {{Leaked|text}}
| previous      = [[Chat_with_Bobby_C.#Part_1|ThePCassassins Chat with Bobby Part 1]]
| next          = [[Bob Chandler's call with The P Capsaicins|Bob Call 4]]
}}


A transcript for the first 10 minutes of the video was written on the CWCki a couple weeks after the video was posted:
===Transcript===
{{transcription}}
 
==Part 4==
{{main|Bob Chandler's call with The P Capsaicins}}
This exists now only as an archive on the YouTube account of "Albert Clukley". Originally posted in May 2011 under the title "Bob Call 4" it now exists as an archive with an incorrectly spelled title. (Amusingly, capsaicin is the scientific term for the extract used in [[26 December 2014|pepper spray]]. ) It's a 15-minute recording of another conversation between Craig and Bob Chandler.
 
This chat occurred on 30 [[April 2011]], and while it has been privated, it is still accessible on the Wayback Machine.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20160110010222/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=npFYbb2sccs ThePCassassins Chat with Bobby Part 4 from 4-30-11]</ref> Bob amicably chats about his past jobs, and certain aspects about Chris and how he grew up, like how Chris taught himself how to read by watching television with closed-captioning turned on, and his skills in [[video games]]. One notable part about this call is that Bob claims Chris never made it on the honor roll.<ref>11:06: "I was just wondering if [Chris] was on the honor roll, or if he made it." "No, but he was in special education most of the time."</ref>
 
==Part 5==
{{Infobox/Audiofile
| name          = ThePCassassins Chat with Bobby Part 5
| video         = {{#ev:archiveorg|the-pcassassins-chat-with-bobby-part-5}}
| stardate      = 30 [[April 2011]]
| subject        = {{Other|[[Bob]]}}
| saga          =
| shirt          =
| other          = {{Leaked|text}}
| previous      = [[Bob Chandler's call with The P Capsaicins|Bob Call 4]]
| next          = [[Bob Call 6]]
}}
 
===Transcript===
{{transcription}}


[Dial tone for 38 seconds]
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> God damn it answer you fruity-ass.
[More dial tone]
Answering Machine: We're unavailable to take your call. Please leave a message and thank you for calling.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Hey Bob how's it going? It's Craig. Just wanted to call you [distortion] to get a hold of you. Sorry about that. Uh, just brushing off some dirt off of my cell phone. Uh, I hoped to talk to you. I don't know, maybe you should-
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Hello?
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Oh hey Bob, how's it going?
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Oh, fair I guess.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Oh that's good, that's good. Uh, it's me Craig.
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Well. How you doing?
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> I'm doing pretty good, doing pretty good.  [distortion] Just taking it easy. Just relaxing.
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> You finished for the year?
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Oh yeah, yeah. I'm done- I'm done for the year. I'm done for the year I'm just- y'know. Taking it easy. Just wanted to see how you're doing. Talk to ya. [heavy breathing]
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> I'm actually not too great.  But I'm okay.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Oh that's good. That's good. [breathing] That's good. Uh, hey how was your day today? I tried calling you like a few times today and I left you a message. [more breathing]
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> I've been down at the- I went down to WallMart.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Really?
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Yeah I went out shopping.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> That's good. [wheezing] That's good what did you get?
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Just some things.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Oh yeah? [Darth Vader] That's good. Hey uh-
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> You got somebody with asthma on your end?
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> No, no that's just my dog. That's just my dog. Uh, I do apologise for that. I'm sorry about that. Uh, here let me just shoo him away. S-sorry about that. [pause] But hey, I was just bored and wanted to talk to ya. You know? Like uh- the family doing? How's Barbara?
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Well she's uh- got worn out shopping.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Oh, yeah.
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> That's too bad, us old folks.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Oh you're not old, Bob. You're still pretty young.
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Yeah I have to ride around on one of them carts though.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Oh really? Oh now you're still pretty young to me though, Bob. Y'know you're a good guy so.
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font>  Yeah we can go in there and get in [sounds like doctor owls] and race.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> [laughs] Exactly. Oh man. Oh like I finished my exams and I find out tomorrow if I pass. And I just-
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> You find out? You don't know whether you passed or not?
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Well I'm done the year though. There was a little computer error they said at the university though I'm pretty  sure that I passed.
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Well it helps.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Well yeah well it's all good. It's all good. Y'know I-
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Well what are you gonna do for summer?
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Actually I don't know. Uh I listed in the reserves for the military y'know maybe work with the government. Y'know in the reserve army. Or maybe I might work for the county and do construction like road repair and stuff.
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Y'know a little extra time always helps.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Oh yeah-
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> If you've been sitting around all year. [laughs]
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> [laughs] Oh man, tell me about it. Like 8 ho- like 4 hours in the class like studying and reading. Oh man it's just good to get out of that. Oh but uh- yeah I'm glad to see you're doing better. I hope you feel better y'know.
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Well I'm trying to come back a long way.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Oh. Well y'know you'll make it, Bob. Y'know. You're an engineer right. They just don't give up on the job they just try and solve it, right?
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> That's right. There's got to be another way out.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Exactly, exactly. [laughs]
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font>  I've had- got an old thing. That if you can't climb the mountain from one direction you just turn around and start in another direction.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Exactly. That is so true. That is so true. And I use like- oh. That's the saying I'm going to use next time when I'm studying for my exams and tests and stuff. Uh hey-
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> I'm watching an old movie here.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Oh really, which movie?
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> You ever watch the old movies?
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Oh yeah. I love the old movies. Which old movie are you watching?
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Well this is one with Will Rogers in it.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Boy Rogers?
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> So it's really old. Will Rogers.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Okay.
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> You ever heard of Will Rogers?
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Will Rogers? Yeah I've heard of Will Rogers.
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Yeah he's one of the greatest comedians that ever lived.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Oh really?
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Anyway and this is one of the ones he made in 1935.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Okay.
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> And it's great. [laughs]
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Uh let's [laughs along]. Let's see 1935 Will Rogers movies. Uh, is it. Is it Life Begins at 40?
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> No.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Uh, Downing Thomas?
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> I forgot the name. It's got Billy Burke in it.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Billy Burke?
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> It's got Billy Burke. She was the actress that was that I think played the part of Gracie Allen with George Burns in Gracie Allen. Way back in [unintelligible] days .
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> It's either Downing Thomas or it's in Old Kentucky I believe.
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> I don't know.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Oh, okay.
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> I didn't see the name of it.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Uh, okay I love the old movies.
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> It's up in- Downing Thomas. That's it. That's the name of it.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Oh, Downing Thomas. That's a good movie, Bob.
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Yeah it is. [laughs] It's great.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> [laughs] Who would have thought? Two engi- an engineer and a guy trying to become an engineer both love Will Rogers movies.
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Yeah he was from Oklahoma.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Yeah he was actually. Yeah you're right, actually. He was born I believe in '79 and I believe he died in '35.
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Yeah it was about the time he died it's a 1935 movie.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Yeah. Oh man.
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> It's on Turner Classic Movies right now on the cable.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Oh I love Turner Classic Movies. I especially love the old silent movies they play once in a while. Early in the morning.
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Yeah. Yeah I used to lay- I used to record 'em. I loved the dubbed in soundtrack they've got now.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> [Bob tries to talk] Oh man I love the- Oh, sorry sir.
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Y'know they go out and hire people to write scores and perform the scores for the soundtracks for those silent movies.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Yes I do actually remember watching a documentary on that and they were talking about Lon Chaney Junior and the Phil Harmonic Orchestra or Philip Glass and that he composed orchestra scores for a few of the- Lon Chaney Junior's movies. I love that about the classic movies.
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Yeah I used to- I used to watch some just to record the soundtrack they dubbed on there. The accompanying music in them.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Oh, beautiful music, eh?
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Well yeah it is. Most of it. Particularly when they get the old ballroom gown and the tear jerking drama musics they got back then.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> [laughs] Oh that music just always makes me- it moves me really. Because it's the artistic creativity of the one person watching something that is- that's art now and trying to dub over his own sense of creativity, art and love for that for that work of art that he's doing. Y'know.
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> That's right, he's interpreting what he thinks he's seeing so he can have answers for the viewer.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Exactly. [Bob laughs, Craig joins in] And that's what I love about Turner classic movies and their old score- and their remade scores. Oh but you must have seen a lot of great movies in your day, eh Bob?
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> Yeah I grew up with em.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Yeah like-
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> I used to go to the movies every day of the week except for Sunday. There were no movies on Sunday.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Yes because that is the Sabbath.
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> 'least where I grew up.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> Yeah same here Bob.
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> I was in the Deep South. In the Deep South nothing happened on Sunday except for church. [laughs]
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> [laughs] And that's the way it should always be, right?
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> I think so. I think that's still a good idea.
<br><font color="#52443c">'''Craig:'''</font> I think so too. It's still a great idea. What really upsets me is like when I go to WallMart when I drive by a WallMart on a Sunday. And it's still open.
<br><font color="#00AF33">'''Bob:'''</font> [laughs] Well anyway. I used to go- we had 3- I grew up in a small town. It was really a combination of a crossroads town and a cotton mill town. We had a cotton mill that was actually two little towns together. And we had 3 movie houses.


{{LeakedVideos}}
{{LeakedVideos}}

Latest revision as of 20:51, 30 March 2026

NOTE: Chris was not directly involved in this conversation.

Chat with Bobby C. are 5 YouTube videos posted by user ThePCAssassins on 1 or 2 May 2011. The videos were thought to be Lost Media until the first part was uncovered by Statustjej in December 2025.[1] Parts 2 and 5 were found on the Wayback Machine by a CWCki editor about a month later. A link to part 4 was already known about. Part 3 however, remains lost.

Part 1

ThePCassassins Chat with Bobby Part 1
Stardate 30 April 2011
Subject Matter OtherUnknownIcon.png Bob
Other LeakedLeaked Leaked
Audio Recordings
previous
Get in touch with Bobby C
next
ThePCassassins Chat with Bobby Part 2


Transcript

CWCism-IllBreakYouDead.png  This media needs a transcript. Help CWCki by transcribing the content. If the media is too long, transcribe select portions which are funny or informative.

Craig: [coughs]

Amfermee: Can I listen to his, uh, voicemail?

Craig: [The phone rings 7 times. Craig coughs. The phone rings 2 more times and goes to voicemail] Hi, my name is Richard Cullen from Adam and Steve dot com, your son owes fourteen dollars on a purchase of anal beads from the Adam and Steve Manlyhood Collection, uh, for little pansies. Uh, we’d just like him to collec--to, uh, make the purchase on our website please? Just tell him that he re--needs to re-enter his credit card because we’ve been having problems with his credit card numbers in the past, and uh, we would really like for him to make these purchases, ‘cause he owes us a lot of money in all these anal beads and anal lube and gay porn tapes. We’d just really like your son Christian Weston Chandler, to come down and, to, uh, make these purchases please. Also, um, we would really like to wonder why your son [inaudible] like [voicemail ends] a girl?

Amfermee: [chuckles]

Craig: Hey, Am, you wanna try one?

Amfermee: [groans]. Yeah, go ahead, do it.

Craig: No, do you wanna pretend to be, do you want, do you want to do one? Like…

Amfermee: Yeah, yeah, I’ll do it.

Craig: Okay, okay. And then maybe we can, like, order some pizzas. [They both chuckle, then call Bob again. After two rings, Bob answers. Throughout the call, Craig and Amfermee have a slight echo]

Bob: Hello?

Craig: Bob?

Amfermee: Hey Bob!

Craig: How’s it goin’?

Bob: Hello?

Craig: Bob, Bob, this is Craig, Craig, the en--the engineering student.

Amfermee: The engineering student.

Craig: How are you doing?

Amfermee: How’s it goin’?

Bob: It’s alright, I guess.

Craig: That’s good.

Bob: I got in the hospital and got back out again.

Craig: Oh, are you feeling better? [Amfermee grunts for some reason]

Bob: I’m having a problem with uh… [inaudible] retention.

Craig: Oh, okay. But, but you’re feeling better though, right?

Bob: Oh, I’m, I’m just… day by day I guess I’m getting better.

Craig: That’s good, that’s good, how was your week?

Bob: What?

Craig: How was your week?

Bob: How was my week? I’ve been in the hospital.

Craig: But like how’s this–

Bob: I just got out yesterday.

Craig: Oh, okay, alright. S--sorry about that, uh, how’s the family?

Bob: Uh, they, they’re fine.

Craig: That’s good, that’s good. Well, uh, I’m, I’m done my finals for the semester. So—

Bob: You’re in your final semester, huh?

Craig: Yeah, I finished my, uh, s--my… semester.

Bob: Are you gonna graduate or is this just this year?

Craig: Oh no, but it’s this--this is my first year. It’s my first year. And it was a tough–

Bob: Your first year?

Craig: Yeah, it was a tough year, let me tell you. Oh, it was, it was a lot of work, like… To, to be honest with you, uh, because, you, you’ve pa--you’ve p--ad a lot of patents. Like, like, what, what ma--like, what genius, like… cause I’m, a, a, I actually checked out some of your patents with the pren--the presses and stuff like that. Like, what made you come up with those ideas?

Bob: [chuckles] I gotta give you some… hypothetical questions, huh?

Craig: I just wanna know, like, how did it, like, like how, like… in what state of mind were you in when you came up with these machines for like, plastic molding and stuff?

Bob: Well, you got a problem? You solve it.

Craig: Well, what was your problem?

Bob: Well, you go find out the, the customer’s problem, what he wants to do.

Craig: Okay, alright…

Bob: Then you figure out a way to solve it.

Craig: Oh, okay. Sweet, sweet, so like, so di--were you working for a company or were you like an independent?

Bob: No, I was working for GE.

Craig: GE, nice, General Electric.

Bob: Yeeeah.

Craig: That’s good! I, that’s pretty impressive, like, I, I hope to actually… uh, I'm hoping to actually be, like, landing a job after, uh, after I’m done with school with, uh, Austin company…like GE, heh…I’m trying.

Bob: One of the toughest ones I ever had. I mean, how would you like to be sitting there at your desk, and they come in and say you’ve got a new assignment? And you ask them what this assignment is, and they say “Well, you’ve gotta automate this blast furnace, sittin’ up in Pittsburgh, for U.S. Steel, and nobody’s ever automated one before.”

Craig: That would actually make me shake in my boots, sir.

Bob: [chuckles] Well, I did it. It took two years, but I did it.

Craig: That is amazing, like I…to be honest, like, I would be freaking out, like I would be sweating bullets not knowing what to do. Like, I bet you there was, like, a lot of–

Bob: First thing you do is you, first thing you do is you just organize it! You go to them, and you find out exactly what they want this thing to do, and you go learn the language of the particular, uh, field that they’re in, like this place it was, uh, melting of steel, right?

Craig: Right.

Bob: And then you g--learn that language. And then you learn to, [inaudible] like you were them. And you say, “What do I wanna do? What, how do we produce this thing?” Then you produce the equivalent that causes it to do the same thing.

Craig: Okay…

Bob: That’s all [inaudible].

Craig: Wild late nights working on that, eh?

Bob: Well, there was some interesting…little quirks in that, nobody’s ever done it before.

Craig: So, so, di--did you see the first two liter plastic bottles rolling off the assembly line?

Bob: I did.

Craig: Li--like, that must’ve brought a tear to your eye, though, right? To see your brainchild, like, right there in, me--mechanical form, working, and being successful.

Bob: Yeah, well, it’s nice!

Craig: Yeah!

Bob: I watched the first, uh, oh well there’s lots of other things I watched come off. I watched the first bifold plastic closet door, you know these closet doors you got that, they hang up everywhere, it's made out of plastic?

Craig: Oh yeah, I know those.

Bob: Yeah, well I watched the first one come off the line, up in Massachusetts. [Chuckles]

Craig: That must’ve been amazing.

Bob: I watched the first bottles being blown for milk bottles.

Craig: Oh, nice.

Bob: I watched, I watched the first, uh, dashboard being blown for a General Motors car.

Craig: That is, oh, man, that’s impressive, uh, I…I could only hope to dream to actually accomplish something like that.

Bob: Well, it’s like I said, I was lucky all my life. I was in this area at GE. Which was called the New Business Area.

Craig: Okay.

Bob: And there was a group of us, that worked in the New Business Areas. And we, we had to take these new business opportunities, that, some customer had this wild dream, [inaudible] to automate his blast furnace, right?

Craig: Right.

Bob: Like U.S. Steel. He had this dream. He wants to do this, so you go talk to him enough, so you can write it down, and then follow his specifications.

Craig: Okay.

Bob: And once you’ve got your specification all written down, and what he wants to do, how it’s gonna work, and all this, then you do the process of, of getting your feedback sensors, and your controls, to match up to do what his specification says he wants it to do. It’s just that simple.

Craig: Like–

Bob: Just like one step at a time.

Craig: Like, like, did you see, like, um…cause, like, you, you were in, like, the whole plastic molding industry stuff, like, you invented all those machines, like, did you do anything with Nintendo? Did Nintendo ever, like, come up to GE and ask for help?

Bob: No.

Craig: No?--

Bob: They, they pretty much didn’t, because they, they stole everything in Japan. They stole all our technology from here.

Craig: Okay.

Bob: And, so, they never bothered with it.

Craig: Oh, okay.

Bob: But I’m sure, I’m sure that they bought, y’know, um, one of our departments, in GE, was, um, allied with uh, a numerical control department, in Japan. Uh, that was, um, uh, I can’t think of the name of the company now, but they actually were working together. For all the numerical control systems, we’d do all the automating the machines, and all this kind of stuff that goes on in our world, they stole all the controls for all that kind of stuff. And, uh, so, whatever works on a machine tool, will also work on plastics or anything else, the same philosophy.

Craig: Okay.

Bob: It’s the same, same kind of stuff. And, ‘cause it’s all logic.

Craig: Yeah.

Bob: That’s what it is, is it’s just logic. And, um, see, I started out, first thing I did, was a blast furnace. It’s a, It’s just a great, big, 200 foot tall blast furnace, if you’ve ever seen one.

Craig: Ah, I, I, believe I have seen one, before I took my course, my, uh, dad, uh, my dad’s, well, my uncle, works in the steel industry, and I, I, he took me on a tour of this steel manufacturing plant and I, I believe I have seen one.

Bob: Well, anyway, they’re, uh, they melt some steel. They make it where it’s liquid. And, uh, but that’s the first thing I did, and then the next thing I worked on was, uh, what they call a rolling mill, a hot strip mill. Where something up in Detroit, where we were rolling thin plates of steel, uh, under computerized-type control, for, uh, making the steel on automobiles.

Craig: Okay.

Bob: We were trying to roll it thinner than they had ever rolled it before. ‘Cause we had computer control on it. That was the second thing I worked on. After that I worked on the, the, um…guess it was a petroleum system, distribution, fuel distribution systems, where what was then at a wild airport in New York, where all the jet fuel, that goes around all over these [inaudible] and everything. And planes. That was, kinda simple compared to that. [Craig chuckles] And, and then I got into, um, what they call stacker cranes, you’ve heard of them, I guess.

Craig: Yes I have.

Bob: They were used in warehousing. They used all the stacker cranes where they go up and down, stash stuff in little holes, go back and get it, bring it out, put it on a conveyor and all that stuff. I worked on the start of all that, the stacker crane controls, for warehousing. Then I did some automatic, what they call pole lines, which are, cables that are in the floor, where they throw carts around with various stuff on it, for distribution like in big warehouses, and, and plate terminals and this kind of thing. I did two or three of those, and then I helped a friend of mine do a whole bunch of automated postal, post offices, where everything was, all the mailbags were automatically, read, and, uh, shipped off to their various places around the world. [Craig and Bob chuckle] I got into, I guess some night I went into, uh, a data logger for the largest steam turbine department where they make the big, large…generator turbines, for all the atomic power plants.

Craig: Really?

Bob: In [inaudible, referring to a location]. I wor--I built the data logger, for that thing.

Craig: Oh man, that–

Bob: Which we were testing it.

Craig: That’s amazing.

Bob: And, uh…then we had to be able to do anything, but it’s all logic, so it doesn’t matter, it’s the same thing. And, after that I got into, uh, I got into a little bit of the, uh, BART, you know, the Bay Area Rapid Transit?

Craig: Yeah.

Bob: Out in San Francisco…I got out there because we were building Arnet systems, and I worked on, uh, automation for the, for the rapid transit cars for about six to eight months. [Bob chuckles while saying “and then” Craig also slightly chuckles] Then I slipped back over to, uh, place in, up in Washington state called Tupperware.

Craig: Ooo…

Bob: They wanted to automate all their machines for making tupperware. You’ve heard of that?

Craig: Oh, yeah, definitely, definitely, yeah.

Bob: And so I automated all their, their machines that, that had controls on it for molding all this tupperware plastic stuff. And then I got down and about in Rouge, Louisiana. Working with a paper company down there, to make Kleenex, they wanted to roll Kleenex…paper Kleenex, I don’t think they used controls. After that little chore, we had a…I had a little journey down to, uh, uh…place that's called Silvertown, Georgia. Where they, where Goodrich was making what they call a Silvertown tire. Which was way [inaudible] steel belted radial tires, and we were making tire cord lines down there to automate them. After that, and after that I got into, uh, mining. I did a couple of mile-deep, uh, mine horse, completely automated. And for men, and locomotive, and…everything else to go down over this five thousand-foot hole, for Climax, molybdenum out in Denver.

Craig: Oh wow.

Bob: [Bob chuckles while saying “And”. Craig also chuckles] And, that was a couple years of my life right there.

Craig: You’ve done a lot.

Bob: Coming out of that, I, I guess I, I automated four tanker ships, for, uh, well, some ship, uh, company in Seattle, where they can run the ship automatically from the bridge without having anybody fr--in the engine room.

Craig: That–

Bob: That was a little, that was a short one, that didn’t take long.

Craig: That’s amazing, I--that’s amazing, sir.

Bob: After that I got into, uh, um…the, uh… [inaudible] controls.

Part 2

ThePCassassins Chat with Bobby Part 2
Stardate 30 April 2011
Subject Matter OtherUnknownIcon.png Bob
Other LeakedLeaked Leaked
Audio Recordings
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ThePCassassins Chat with Bobby Part 1
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Bob Call 4


Transcript

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Part 4

Main article: Bob Chandler's call with The P Capsaicins

This exists now only as an archive on the YouTube account of "Albert Clukley". Originally posted in May 2011 under the title "Bob Call 4" it now exists as an archive with an incorrectly spelled title. (Amusingly, capsaicin is the scientific term for the extract used in pepper spray. ) It's a 15-minute recording of another conversation between Craig and Bob Chandler.

This chat occurred on 30 April 2011, and while it has been privated, it is still accessible on the Wayback Machine.[2] Bob amicably chats about his past jobs, and certain aspects about Chris and how he grew up, like how Chris taught himself how to read by watching television with closed-captioning turned on, and his skills in video games. One notable part about this call is that Bob claims Chris never made it on the honor roll.[3]

Part 5

ThePCassassins Chat with Bobby Part 5
Stardate 30 April 2011
Subject Matter OtherUnknownIcon.png Bob
Other LeakedLeaked Leaked
Audio Recordings
previous
Bob Call 4
next
Bob Call 6


Transcript

CWCism-IllBreakYouDead.png  This media needs a transcript. Help CWCki by transcribing the content. If the media is too long, transcribe select portions which are funny or informative.


  1. https://archive.org/details/the-pcassassins-calls/ThePCassassins+Chat+with+Bobby+Part+1+from+4-30-11.mp4
  2. ThePCassassins Chat with Bobby Part 4 from 4-30-11
  3. 11:06: "I was just wondering if [Chris] was on the honor roll, or if he made it." "No, but he was in special education most of the time."