Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is Gary and Shannon and you're listening to KFI
AM six forty, the Gary and Shannon Show on demand
on the iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 2 (00:07):
How about starting the twelve o'clock hour with Depression affects
millions of people worldwide. For some the old fashioned treatments
they don't work. New study out of China suggests exercise
music music.
Speaker 3 (00:21):
Okay, I can see.
Speaker 4 (00:23):
Not just any music, oh not just all music.
Speaker 3 (00:25):
Are you gonna play something not crazy music for me?
Speaker 1 (00:27):
No?
Speaker 2 (00:28):
The key factor is how much you enjoy what you're
listening to. So if it's music you like, play that music.
And they said the most bang for your buck when
you're trying to get out of a deep depression classical music.
Speaker 4 (00:44):
If you like classical music.
Speaker 1 (00:46):
I do not, and I don't not like it. I
just don't appreciate it because I don't know music.
Speaker 2 (00:53):
You don't like it, you can say that that was
you trying to say you don't like it.
Speaker 3 (00:58):
But I like to think I like it if I
understood it.
Speaker 4 (01:01):
I mean, I like that sweater on you. I just
don't understand it.
Speaker 1 (01:07):
Like the cow sweater, yes, that I wore once and
every time I see it in my closet. I think
of you making cow noises when I wore it one.
Speaker 2 (01:16):
Day, they said. Patients who reported higher levels of enjoyment
while listening to classical music showed significant improvements in the
symptoms of their depression. Challenge is the common belief that
only happy or upbeat music can improve your mood. It's
any music that you enjoy that can help your mood.
Speaker 3 (01:37):
That makes sense.
Speaker 4 (01:38):
Blue Jays beat the Angels yesterday four to two.
Speaker 2 (01:40):
Dodgers beat the Brewers five to two, including a home
run from a newly healed Mookie Bets.
Speaker 4 (01:45):
Same to this afternoon from Milwaukee. What else is going on?
Time for what's happening?
Speaker 2 (01:56):
Well, there's no better way to anger people in southern California.
Then shut down the four oh five. You morons, A
group of demonstrate.
Speaker 3 (02:09):
I'm trying to see if it works.
Speaker 2 (02:12):
A group of demonstrators block part of the four or
five freeway this morning during the commute right about nine o'clock.
CHP said this freeway was shut down at national as
of nine ten, but reopened just over an hour after
the protests started again.
Speaker 1 (02:26):
Who thinks it's a good tactic to get more people
on your side to shut down a freeway like the
four h five at the ten in morning drive.
Speaker 2 (02:35):
Well, and they're not necessarily doing it to get people
on your on their side.
Speaker 1 (02:40):
They're doing it for the publicity to get talked about.
And we've talked about it four times and that's why.
Speaker 2 (02:44):
And maybe the better better way to do for us
to do this is to say that protesters shut down
the four five and not explain what their protest.
Speaker 1 (02:53):
Everybody knows who we're talking about. In this day and age.
When we say protesters, what we should say we should
call them a different give them a different cause, you know,
like the hairless cat activists shut down the four h
five go on, like anytime there's a protest of any substance,
(03:16):
we just call them hairless cat activists.
Speaker 2 (03:20):
This demonstration comes on Tisha Bov, an annual fast day
in the Jewish religion, considered the saddest day on the
Jewish calendar because it was it commemorates the destruction of
both Solomon's Temple by the Neo Babylonian Empire and the
Second Temple by the Roman Empire.
Speaker 1 (03:42):
The embarrassment for Vladimir Putin continues, failing to top all
the leadership in Kiev, spent two years of fighting. Now
he's dealing with the first foreign invasion of his country
since World War Two with Ukraine's lighting enlightening intervention into
the Kursk area.
Speaker 2 (04:01):
Only a Gaza ceasefire will delay retaliation, according to Iranian officials,
and that does not look great. Although we do understand
that Secretary of State Anthony Blincolnt is headed to the
Middle East again. There is supposed to be some more
talks in either Egypt or Cotter on Thursday.
Speaker 4 (04:22):
We have been waiting.
Speaker 2 (04:23):
American warships and submarines and other military materiel have been
making their way through to the Middle East. One of
the sources, a senior Iranian security official, told Reuters that
along with allies such as has Belah, they would launch
a direct attack if the Gaza talks fail or if
(04:46):
it perceives that Israel is dragging out these negotiations, but
the sources have not yet said how long Iran would
allow for talks to progress before they respond.
Speaker 1 (04:55):
The Into It Dome grand opening is upon us. The
Clippers new two billion dollar arena. If you haven't seen
this thing, it's gorgeous, gorgeous outside and in the bad
news is the Clippers will still disappoint you.
Speaker 4 (05:09):
They're kicking off with concerts.
Speaker 2 (05:10):
They're going to be doing Bruno Mars back to back
sold out concerts. Usher is coming into town, as is
Olivia Rodrigo, of course, ahead of the twenty twenty four
NBA season, which will probably see some of those games
in the month of October. They said that the into
It is a love letter to fans from Clippers owner
Steve Balmer.
Speaker 1 (05:29):
Squid Game, the experience is headed to New York. This
is going to be an in person immersive adventure launching
in October there in New York City. So you'll be
able to play the Squid Game in spidered activities without
fear of death. Kind of reminds me of the old
exploratorium in the.
Speaker 3 (05:47):
City, Oh, in San Francisco. Yeah, that's kind of fun,
all right.
Speaker 2 (05:50):
Somehow, for some reason, you have touched a nerve with
this butter thing.
Speaker 3 (05:54):
Huh. I would have never thought that.
Speaker 1 (05:57):
But I would have never thought that as I looked
across the desk and new as I threw the match
on the open flame, what would happen? And you looked
back at me with sheer hatred and frustration because you
too knew what I had done. You saw the opening
of the jar of worms, the worms all ready to
crawl out.
Speaker 2 (06:17):
Buttery buttery worms, Why do you like to put butter on?
We were talking earlier today about some fun stuff.
Speaker 5 (06:24):
Hi, garyan Shannon. I hate the commercial for the dog
flea medication that's called Simperica Trio and they have an
agility course where the dog is going through the tunnel
and the tunnel is a big giant intestinal worm and
they have fleas and ticks out there on the course.
Speaker 3 (06:45):
It's awful. Grow so I have to turn it every time.
Speaker 4 (06:48):
It's really bad.
Speaker 3 (06:50):
That's awful, Gary Shannon.
Speaker 6 (06:52):
I am an actress and sometimes I work background in
commercials and movies and TV shows to make a little
extra money. And I overheard that recording of the guy
telling everyone how much he hates that will go be commercial.
And when I heard that, it reminded me that I'm
actually one of those dancing people in that commercial.
Speaker 3 (07:12):
Oh no, oh wow, tying to ruin my day.
Speaker 4 (07:15):
Sorry, don't wow.
Speaker 3 (07:16):
What are the odds?
Speaker 4 (07:18):
That's pretty crazy though.
Speaker 6 (07:21):
All right.
Speaker 1 (07:22):
We got we got some feedback from Lauren on X
about the Gavin newsome photographer question, she said, I'm actually
a full time photographer, and no, you can't just take actual,
good quality photos, especially for printing on an iPhone. Professionals
hire people and sometimes it's full time. However, you couldn't
pay me enough to shoot him. I'd be asking for
five hundred K.
Speaker 3 (07:43):
She said.
Speaker 1 (07:43):
Also, to answer your question of cost, being a photographer
is a skill when we constantly work on I carry
over thirty five k alone in gear that's constantly having
to be repaired along with all the other.
Speaker 3 (07:54):
Costs of running a business. It's not just point and shoot.
Speaker 4 (07:57):
Yes, that's a good point.
Speaker 2 (07:58):
I am.
Speaker 3 (07:59):
I am a right when it comes to that. Things
to put butter on?
Speaker 7 (08:02):
Have you forgotten that art of choke?
Speaker 3 (08:05):
Leaves are like little spoons to.
Speaker 4 (08:07):
Just eat butter.
Speaker 3 (08:08):
I know they are little spoons. I love an art
to choke.
Speaker 8 (08:15):
Okay, Gary and Shad, Yes, I like butter held by
bread butter pickles.
Speaker 4 (08:22):
It's dooricious. What up with Gregory?
Speaker 6 (08:27):
Gregory?
Speaker 4 (08:27):
Get him in the house. He's coming up.
Speaker 2 (08:29):
Yeah, he'll come up later in the Put butter on
your pickles, yeah, some people do.
Speaker 7 (08:34):
Carl from Miruraloma, Hello, Carl, you can put butter on pancakes.
Speaker 3 (08:39):
Hmm, yes, a lot of it.
Speaker 7 (08:43):
Have a good day.
Speaker 2 (08:44):
Well, now that I'm thinking about pancakes, it's not going
to be a great day because.
Speaker 4 (08:47):
I'm not going to eat.
Speaker 9 (08:49):
You want to know I like to put butter on. Yes,
I think shorter this would be what I don't like
to put butter on.
Speaker 4 (08:56):
That's smart, that's a good.
Speaker 3 (09:00):
Yes. Yeah, you canes corn on the cob. Can get
really crazy with that.
Speaker 4 (09:05):
Correct me if I'm wrong.
Speaker 2 (09:06):
The the intention of the question was not the easy things, right,
like everybody puts butter on corn on the cob.
Speaker 4 (09:14):
Give me something that's unusual that you would put butter on.
Speaker 3 (09:18):
I'm ready to put it on anything.
Speaker 9 (09:19):
Right here, Lobster roll professional here to just give a
little bit of info on lobster ro cold time with
the male, the slow and all that and just the
warm Kimes with the nice, steamy butter. Who I love it.
Average price is thirty bucks ten more bucks for some
more lobster in it. Don't pay more than that or
(09:41):
you're getting Jim eighty bucks. Are you crazy?
Speaker 3 (09:47):
Good life advice?
Speaker 1 (09:48):
Hi, Gary and Channel Nothing beats buttery popcorn?
Speaker 3 (09:53):
Want my input?
Speaker 2 (09:55):
Yeah, I worked at a movie theater when I was
in high school, and that was not butter that you
would put on there.
Speaker 4 (10:01):
Still satisfied, Still scratch that itch.
Speaker 3 (10:03):
Well that's the thing with the KF butter flavoring. I mean,
is that butter? Is that just chemicals?
Speaker 4 (10:08):
Good points?
Speaker 8 (10:10):
Butter is bacon?
Speaker 6 (10:12):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (10:12):
You ever done that? You ever buttered your bacon?
Speaker 5 (10:15):
Uh?
Speaker 6 (10:16):
No?
Speaker 3 (10:16):
I put salt on bacon before.
Speaker 2 (10:18):
That's yeah, okay. And I'm the one that has to
go to the cardiologist. Hi, Gary, I'm Shannon.
Speaker 4 (10:24):
It's Vic Glendale, evict. And I got one.
Speaker 10 (10:28):
Word for what you put butter on?
Speaker 9 (10:31):
Oh, corn on.
Speaker 3 (10:33):
The cop Okay, not one word.
Speaker 4 (10:35):
That's three words. Okay, it's four words. Actually, you get
it wrong.
Speaker 1 (10:40):
Multiple you mean it's such like a strong feature of
his message.
Speaker 3 (10:44):
I've got one word, one word, corn on the cob.
Speaker 7 (10:48):
Copyary, Shannon, Shannon and Gary squad again.
Speaker 3 (10:55):
The show every day, I do, I swear.
Speaker 2 (10:57):
I wish them every day anyways.
Speaker 3 (10:59):
But I like the feet, yeah yeah, give me the
feet in the butter.
Speaker 9 (11:04):
I don't care.
Speaker 3 (11:05):
Okay, thank you. Some people are in defeat.
Speaker 6 (11:07):
You know.
Speaker 4 (11:08):
It's a thing, buttery, slippery yellow feet from overside here
by carry carry carry, Yes.
Speaker 8 (11:18):
To say, you don't put butter on potato.
Speaker 11 (11:21):
I know.
Speaker 6 (11:24):
Where are you going?
Speaker 4 (11:26):
Then you top it off so you don't like hard jokes.
Oh well, maybe you'll learn some day.
Speaker 3 (11:32):
I guess.
Speaker 1 (11:32):
I guess you've escaped that guy's dungeon for at least
another week.
Speaker 5 (11:38):
Yeah.
Speaker 8 (11:39):
The best thing to put butter on is steak.
Speaker 4 (11:43):
Oh my god, when you cook steaks, just oh yeah,
so flavorful.
Speaker 9 (11:50):
Throw a little herbs on there, and it's one of
the best meals you'll ever have.
Speaker 4 (11:55):
Yeah, butter on steak is a good.
Speaker 3 (11:57):
We're getting into steak season.
Speaker 2 (11:59):
You can put her on the hamburger patty too, Your
cooking patty's on your on your grill.
Speaker 3 (12:04):
You really put it on anything, keep it moist.
Speaker 8 (12:07):
In Idaho, I make my own garlic butter. And when
in the winter, when I'm camping on the beach with
my friends in Baja and we send you all the pictures,
I get it. Friends, we bake sour dough bread in
a Dutch oven in the sand, cool and slather it
(12:29):
with garlic butter. Thinking about you, guys.
Speaker 3 (12:33):
Thinking about what took a dirty turn at the end.
Speaker 10 (12:36):
Hey, guys, it's Victoria from West Hollywood.
Speaker 7 (12:39):
Hello.
Speaker 10 (12:40):
Originally from Brooklyn, who make the best bagels in the world.
But I did find the bagel broker, and my favorite
bagel is a sesame double toasted with butter, lots of
good butter.
Speaker 2 (12:57):
I thought you weren't supposed to but butter on a bagel.
What I don't listen, I don't know. I don't make
the rules about that.
Speaker 6 (13:02):
I was.
Speaker 1 (13:03):
I was a big butter bagel person growing up. Like
I didn't eat crepy. I eat cheese. For the longest time.
I didn't grow up in a cheese house. I never
had just recreational cheese lying around. They didn't put cheese
on anything, and I and so I never eat cheese.
Speaker 3 (13:21):
And then and then.
Speaker 1 (13:22):
I was exposed to cheese at college.
Speaker 3 (13:25):
Became big into cheese.
Speaker 2 (13:27):
You got addicted there for a while. I look back,
it became a problem now. At least if it's just recreational,
you can stop anytime you want.
Speaker 3 (13:34):
That's not true.
Speaker 2 (13:34):
You have to but deep fried butter the time it
gets to you.
Speaker 9 (13:41):
It's just the casey of the deep fried batter and
the sheepe of a stick of butter.
Speaker 7 (13:46):
That's not there anymore.
Speaker 8 (13:47):
Because it completely melts inside.
Speaker 10 (13:50):
It is.
Speaker 11 (13:52):
I feel like that's a fair food and anything. Deygeri
and Shannon Hey. I like to put butter on my spaghetti,
no sauce. My dad did that, a little bit of
parmesan cheese. I love putting butter on misteaks. I love
putting butter on my eggs. I love putting butter on
my toast. I even like putting butter on butter so
(14:12):
to channel my inner Julia childs, Oh so much butter.
Speaker 1 (14:19):
Anyways, my dad used to put a solid fourth of
a of a butter stick on his spaghetti.
Speaker 3 (14:30):
He was a very big butter person.
Speaker 4 (14:32):
Butter is good, not fighting against butter.
Speaker 2 (14:34):
Probably I didn't put on baked potatoes because I got
other stuff on there already.
Speaker 1 (14:38):
Yeah, but see, like I kind of started to question
friendship when you said that you don't put butter on
a potato.
Speaker 2 (14:46):
But if you saw the amount of Sara Kream that
I put on that, you'd be like, oh, that makes
up for it. Sculent couple stories that we are following.
A judges ruled that independent candidate Robert F. Kennedy Junior's
name he would not appear on the New York ballots,
saying that he falsely claimed a New York home on
his nominating petitions, despite the fact that he lives in
(15:07):
southern California. Kennedy said it was a partisan decision. If
the judge's decision is upheld, not only is to keep
Moth about New York, it could help other legal challenges
in states where he was using the address in New
York City suburbs to gather signatures. Tropical Storm Ernesto is
going to be hitting the Virgin Islands in Puerto Rico
other parts of the Caribbean with heavy rain and strong winds,
(15:28):
but the National Weather Services it is not expected to
affect mainland United States.
Speaker 4 (15:34):
And a dead humpback whale.
Speaker 2 (15:36):
Washed up on a San Francisco beach a couple days ago,
officials said performed a netcropsy on this thirty one foot
long whale.
Speaker 4 (15:44):
They said it was stranded at Fort Funston.
Speaker 2 (15:46):
Was determined to be a young male, likely killed by
an orca, based on the multiple markings found throughout its body.
Speaker 1 (15:53):
Well, sometimes cold cases take a while to heat back up,
and that was a story a murder of a nineteen
year old girl in nineteen eighty six. But some finally
some kind of closure for the family Steve.
Speaker 7 (16:07):
Yeah, this is a big case and involved a lot
of different agencies. I attended a press conference this morning
at the La County Sheriff's Department's headquarters. Sheriff Luna led
the press conference along with a bunch of detectives, members
of the Medical Examiner's Office and South Pasadena PD. Let's
go back to February twenty first, nineteen eighty six. Nineteen
year old Kathy Small went into a computer repair store
(16:30):
in Murietta and she got into a conversation with the
guy behind the counter. Eventually gave the guy her number.
Later that night, the guy called her and said, listen,
I have to drive into the Los Angeles area to
pick up my boss. Would you like to go with me?
And I guess she was like, well sure, and then
he's like, I'll give you fifty bucks if you go
with me. So he showed up, picked her up. She
(16:50):
was in a nightgown, and they took off and that
was the last that anybody had seen of her until
the following day. Someone reported seeing a body in a
cul de sac in South Pasadena. When detectives arrived, they
found this body with multiple stab wounds and they at
the beginning was a Jane Doe because she had no
(17:11):
ID on her, and they were trying to figure out
who it was, and then hit the news. Then a
guy came forward and said, I think that's my roommate,
and he went down to the medical Examiner's office and
identified her as Kathy Small.
Speaker 4 (17:25):
Also told investigators that.
Speaker 3 (17:26):
She was a prostitute.
Speaker 7 (17:28):
So investigators went to work, and apparently the trail went cold,
and it just sat dormant and until October eleventh, twenty nineteen,
Detective Louis Aguilera with the La County Sheriff's Departments Homicid
Bureau got a call from investigators saying that they had
found a dead man on his couch, a sixty three
(17:49):
year old guy in South Pasadena in an apartment there
and inside the apartment was a bunch of very disturbing photos,
pictures of women being held captive, sexually delicit photos, newspaper clippings,
including the newspaper clipping of Kathy Small's murder in nineteen
eighty six. So Aguilera went to work thinking that this
(18:10):
was probably the killer of Kathy Small. So they went
to work, got a search warrant, went through the whole
place took DNA from multiple items, but believe it or not,
none of the DNA samples they got from the scene
matched any DNA on Kathy Small. So now this was
a big, you know, kind of a perplexing problem. Then
(18:33):
about a few days later, they turned everything over to
the crime lab, the La County crime Lab, and then
Aguilera and others decided, you know, we need to go
back and see if there's any evidence from nineteen eighty six.
So they brought all this evidence forward and there was
enough there where they could swab it again and get
(18:53):
more DNA off of that. Did they even check for
DNA in eighty six, Well not really. It wasn't really
that big of a thing.
Speaker 5 (19:02):
Then.
Speaker 7 (19:02):
Not all the departments had crime labs back then, because
remember we all know the big case that made.
Speaker 4 (19:06):
DNA public, right OJA.
Speaker 7 (19:08):
Yeah, So not everyone was on board yet, and it
was still being you know, it was still sort of
an unknown science, and so they kept everything hoping that
maybe some data science would get better.
Speaker 4 (19:19):
It did.
Speaker 7 (19:20):
When they ran the DNA on the older items, including
a sex assault kit, they got two hits two men,
one unknown and another belonged to a seventy year old
man named William Stuff. So as they look a little
deeper into stuff, they find out he's already in prison
serving a life sentence. He was actually sentenced to death,
(19:40):
but we all know how the laws changed here, so
he's serving life in prison for murdering twelve women in
the late eighties early nineties.
Speaker 1 (19:48):
So he probably are they gonna are they going to
charge him with this or because he's already doing the maximum,
they're not gonna bother with this.
Speaker 7 (19:56):
So the lead Deputy Da Craig humm I that this
was not going to be worth prosecuting and pursuing, and
so what they did do was get him down here
from San Quentin and they were able to interview him
Detective Aguilero, and then in the interview, Stuff comes clean
on everything and.
Speaker 4 (20:17):
Yeah, what's it going to change for his right?
Speaker 6 (20:19):
Well?
Speaker 7 (20:19):
Yeah, but here's the thing though, Sometimes they go to
the grave with that stuff because that's kind of their
last dig of a knife that you know, I know everything,
I'm not going to tell you anything. So you got that,
you know, you got some people that do that. In
this case, he was very explicit, very detailed of what happened.
They showed him some crime photos, and he said, indeed
he picked her up. They went for a drive. They
(20:40):
ended in this cul de sac in South Pasadena, and
they got into an argument and somehow she knocked his
glasses off his face, and that enraged him. He grabs
a knife from the glove box and repeatedly stabs her
while she sat there in the passenger seat, chokes her out,
and then kicks her body out of the car and
onto the cul de sac.
Speaker 1 (21:00):
You wonder if these guys like reliving that kind of
stuff they do?
Speaker 4 (21:03):
Yeah, that mean when they're telling this story.
Speaker 7 (21:05):
Yeah, So, come to find out, he was known as
the Riverside prostitute killer back in the eighties nineties and
also the Lake elsonor killer. But he had already had
a criminal history going back to nineteen seventy four when
he'd killed his two month old daughter, and oh my god,
he had been sentenced to seventy years in prison then
(21:25):
but paroled after ten years. What was his relation California?
Speaker 3 (21:28):
What was his relationship like with his mother.
Speaker 4 (21:31):
That we don't know.
Speaker 7 (21:33):
We don't know, but Kathy, the nineteen year old Kathy
Small had two young daughters and a sister, and Detective
Aguilera talked a little bit about being able to tell
the sister. He flew out to Arizona, where she lives,
and was able to tell her in person that they
found the killer.
Speaker 3 (21:47):
Where are her kids?
Speaker 6 (21:48):
Now?
Speaker 3 (21:49):
I don't know you're going to be on a TV show,
a true crime TV show.
Speaker 7 (21:53):
I was on last night, Oh, in Investigation Discovery cool
about about a case that I had forgotten about and
I covered many years ago. And they recorded that episode
two years ago and I forgot about it. I didn't
even know. I didn't even know what the episode was.
I didn't even know what the show was. All I
was told was for ID Discovery, and it's like, okay, whatever,
(22:15):
and that's cool, whatever, so go on. It's it's an
episode about the Desert Killers or something.
Speaker 4 (22:23):
I don't really remember.
Speaker 1 (22:24):
You're like a you're like a a experienced cop where
you can't keep your cases straight because there's so many
of them.
Speaker 7 (22:33):
I was on you remember Russell Dalrymple. Yeah, So I
was on his podcast Sunday.
Speaker 3 (22:38):
I didn't know he had a podcast and.
Speaker 7 (22:40):
A buddy, Daniel Rojo, and they had my entire history.
They had researched my history, and I was like, where
did you get that from? Wow, They did their homework
and I was like, holy, what's the name of the podcast?
Tapped in? Tapped in?
Speaker 4 (22:54):
Cool?
Speaker 7 (22:55):
And I don't know when it'll be posted, but I
did the interview on Sunday.
Speaker 4 (23:00):
You learned things about yourself that you've probably forgotten, totally forgot.
Speaker 7 (23:03):
They brought up, they brought up all kinds of stuff.
I'm like, where did you get that from? Did you
talk to her? How did you find her?
Speaker 3 (23:11):
They found that out?
Speaker 7 (23:12):
How did you find her?
Speaker 4 (23:14):
Thank you very much?
Speaker 2 (23:15):
So there is a new true crime documentary called The
Body next Door. A body wrapped in forty one layers
of plastic found in the garden and a block of
flats in twenty fifteen and a little mining village in
badal Up in the UK. And they were unable to
(23:36):
figure out who the body was, where the body came from.
In fact, one of the investigators said it was like
a body had just fallen out of the sky. As
they investigate this murder, they find a elderly woman named
Lee Sabine that was sort of the one person that
(23:59):
kept pop up, the one name that kept popping up.
The problem is she died about a month before this
body was found, and the people in this little mining
former mining village knew that she talked about the package
that the body was found in, like she'd asked for
(24:20):
help moving. She talked about the she had ordered a
medical skeleton and needed help moving it. Stuff like that.
Clearly a lie. But why and who is this woman?
Speaker 4 (24:32):
Anyway?
Speaker 1 (24:34):
They say that she was said, according to her neighbors,
to be a narcissistic fantastistist, fantastist fantasist fantasist with an
obscure past and affected accent, a penchant for fish nets
well into middle age. But they would reminisce about her
(24:55):
eccentric personality fondly.
Speaker 4 (24:59):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (25:00):
They said that she was either from New Zealand or
Australia or reading whichever version she was telling to different people.
Sometimes she was a nurse, sometimes she was a counselor
sometimes she was a cabaret singer.
Speaker 3 (25:12):
So it's like one of.
Speaker 1 (25:13):
Those murderers who you're kind of into, kind of like
that person.
Speaker 2 (25:19):
The best part is because again this is a sky
network that put this together. They said that she was
definitely eccentric, and according to the hairdresser, that's sort of
in this small town. They say she's off her trolley,
but the real question is whether or not she was
dangerous and who the body belonged to. The write up
(25:39):
that we have here describes the documentary style that is
used and said it's a really great style. For one thing,
they talk to the hairdresser. Who's this small town all
the gossip press for the hairdresser.
Speaker 3 (25:55):
Yeah, we all saw Steele Magnolia's.
Speaker 2 (25:57):
And said that they do an interview with a hair
wresser while she's doing someone's highlights. That's great, just the
exact same way regular gossip gets shared in small towns
like that. I'll watch that sance good. It's called The
Body next Door. You've been listening to the Gary and
Shannon Show. You can always hear us live on KFI
AM six forty nine am to one pm every Monday
(26:18):
through Friday, and anytime on demand on the iheartradiolap