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. Race for the White House heating
up today. Trump holding a campaign event in Michigan. Then
he'll go to a town hall in Wisconsin. Meanwhile, Kamala
Harris this hour and her running mate Tim Walls will
sit down for an interview.
Speaker 2 (00:24):
Robert F.
Speaker 3 (00:25):
Kennedy Junior, when he announced that he was going to
suspend his campaign, said that he was going to pull
his name off of some of those swing state ballots
so that he wouldn't be pulling votes away from Donald Trump.
Speaker 2 (00:36):
Obviously, he endorsed him.
Speaker 3 (00:38):
However, some of those battleground states are not allowing him
to remove his name.
Speaker 2 (00:44):
At least three states right now.
Speaker 3 (00:45):
Michigan said it's too late for him to withdraw as
the nominee of the Natural Law Party. Wisconsin and Colorado
also not allowing Kennedy to remove his name from the
November ballot.
Speaker 4 (00:56):
News you can use.
Speaker 1 (00:58):
ESPN is launching an new feature on its apps showing
fans where they can tune in to watch games. This
includes games not carried by ESPN. The company said. The
where to Watch is its effort to meet the needs
of fans with new features to improve the discoverability of
live sports. Users can search for specific events, customize it
(01:20):
to push their favorite teams and leagues to the top.
Speaker 3 (01:23):
Eight in ten Americans say they are too tired to
cook themselves a meal after work.
Speaker 4 (01:28):
Now you're not you're lazy, You're not too tired.
Speaker 3 (01:31):
The survey of two thousand Americans, seventy seven percent admit
that there are days where after work they're too exhausted
to cook. A fifth of them have said they've been
so tired while trying to cook. Now they've actually fallen
asleep while making their food.
Speaker 4 (01:47):
Maybe leave the fentanyl out of your day.
Speaker 3 (01:49):
I'd love to meet that person, Yeah, falling asleep during
food prep. Half of Americans say they believe they're the
busiest during the weekdays. Thirty eight percent say they don't
get a needed break on the week ends, saying they're
equally busy all seven days of the week. That's why
we go for processed foods because it's super easy.
Speaker 1 (02:08):
Now you're making excuses for yourself, you're too lazy to
cook dinner, and I get it, but let's own.
Speaker 5 (02:13):
It's Gary Shannon of surprised none of you have mentioned
anything about this fascinating news and that Travis Kelcey bought
into a race horse and you'll never guess what the
horse's name is, Swift Delivery.
Speaker 2 (02:28):
Did you know that?
Speaker 6 (02:30):
No?
Speaker 2 (02:31):
Are you following Travis Kelcey?
Speaker 1 (02:33):
I don't.
Speaker 4 (02:33):
I do know.
Speaker 1 (02:34):
I did see that Travis Kelcey and his brother Jason
have more than one hundred million dollar podcast deal.
Speaker 2 (02:42):
Yeah, that's a podcast i'd listen to.
Speaker 1 (02:44):
It's not bad, but it's not worth a one hundred
million It's just.
Speaker 4 (02:47):
Two bros talking about stuff. Do they interview people?
Speaker 2 (02:50):
They sh interview each other.
Speaker 3 (02:52):
Because I have two sisters, I could probably convince them
that we should do a podcast.
Speaker 1 (02:57):
Yeah, Kelsey has a significant and share of the three
year old Swift Delivery.
Speaker 3 (03:04):
They said the connection is more happenstance at first than
an actual connection, but they are intertwined. DJ Stable named
the three year old racehorse with some family help. The
girlfriend of one of the family members played a leading role.
Speaker 1 (03:17):
I don't care about anything you're saying. I'm sorry, I
just don't.
Speaker 4 (03:24):
I don't find Travis.
Speaker 1 (03:25):
Kelsey to be a fascinating figure in my life. The
only I think he's a great tight end and that's
where it ends.
Speaker 2 (03:31):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (03:32):
Oh, speaking of tight ends, I'll tell you that story
next segment about Cam McCormick, that college football player.
Speaker 1 (03:37):
I thought you were going to go in a different
direction with the tight ends. Speaking of tight ends, I'll
tell you about that workout I did yesterday. The owners
of A Vanay's car rental agency are accused of using
the business as a front to operate a crime tourism
ring where they bring in people from South America to steals,
to steal millions of dollars in cash and property from
(04:00):
everybody's house and business in southern California. They're facing multiple
federal criminal charges, wirefraud, money laundering, conspiracy, all of it,
all the good stuff. They say that Juan Carlos and
his living girlfriend Anna Maria controlled and operated Driver Power Rentals.
(04:23):
They said that they catered to crime tourists dispatched them
to go commit the crimes.
Speaker 2 (04:32):
Federal authorities.
Speaker 3 (04:33):
Martin Estrada, us attorney for the California Central District, said
they served eleven search warrants, most of them in the
San Fernando Valley, but they went as far north as
Santa Barbara, there were some in Santa Clarita and Palmdale.
They seized more than two dozen vehicles, several properties, and
some horses.
Speaker 4 (04:50):
He says they.
Speaker 1 (04:51):
Offered high end cars to blend into communities they were burglarizing.
They were presented with fake ID would turn anyone trying
to rent a car away with an authentic one, so
they were solely catering to crime tourists.
Speaker 3 (05:12):
They said that they organized about one hundred and twenty
burglaries or thefts in any different cities throughout California and
across the United States in just the just during the
period of the investigations.
Speaker 1 (05:24):
Got to hand it to these criminals, what a smart operation.
Speaker 3 (05:29):
Orange County DA Todd Spitzer has also talked about this,
and we have a SoundBite that we're playing during the
newscast where he talks about you can get a visa
to come in to the United States for about ninety
days at a time, and the visa is good for
two years, and it costs you something like twenty two
or twenty three bucks just to get that. So you
can come in and if you're one of these guys
(05:50):
working for one of these rings, yeah, you just skip down.
You do a couple of these jobs, head back south
wherever you're going, Sure, come back in.
Speaker 2 (05:58):
Nobody knows you, nobody of what you're legal.
Speaker 4 (06:01):
It's completely legal.
Speaker 3 (06:02):
Visa is Yeah, not the theft, not the robberies. Also, the
state is working on cell phone bands, right. We saw
that the state is now mandating that school districts come
up with plans to keep cell phones out of student's
hands during school hours.
Speaker 2 (06:20):
But it's not enough.
Speaker 1 (06:22):
I got a kick out of the workarounds kids have
come up with for keeping their phones on them.
Speaker 7 (06:30):
You're listening to Gary and Shannon on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 1 (06:36):
This was a collision with several vehicles a big rig.
Boxes of French fries have been spilled on the roadway.
Speaker 4 (06:43):
It's a real mess.
Speaker 3 (06:46):
Yay, that's going to be a blast all day thinking
about thinking about French fries. Miami Hurricanes tight end Cam
McCormick is entering his ninth season of college football.
Speaker 1 (07:00):
Possible injuries, injuries, uh, red shirting, combination of all of it.
Speaker 2 (07:07):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (07:08):
He was recruited to play at Oregon in twenty sixteen
out of Bend, but he tore in ACL his senior
year of high school, so he red shirted first. Before
the twenty seventeen season, he was diagnosed with rhabdomaye loosis,
a rare injury where your muscles break down because he
was working out too hard. Still able to play in
thirteen games for the Ducks. Later that year, first game
(07:29):
of the twenty eighteen season, he broke his fibula tore
an ankle ligament. Twenty nineteen season sidelined because of a
fracture caused by a screw in his ankle from.
Speaker 2 (07:38):
The previous year's injury.
Speaker 3 (07:40):
Lingering pain wiped out the twenty season turned out to
be that screws in his ankle had now completely torn
his tibial tendon. Twenty twenty one, he tears his achilles
in the second game of the season. In twenty twenty two,
a roommate died in a diving accident, but he took
it on himself to play all thirteen games in his
roommate's memory. He enters the transfer portal to get out
(08:01):
Oregon goes to Miami. He plays all thirteen games in
the twenty three season, and his goal is to play
all thirteen games this year, maybe make it to the
newly expanded playoffs this season for the Miami Hurricanes, his
ninth season in college football.
Speaker 4 (08:15):
He is twenty six years old.
Speaker 2 (08:18):
They're going to call him grandpa.
Speaker 1 (08:19):
And yeah, that is older than the average age of
the Chargers team is twenty five point six.
Speaker 4 (08:28):
He's older. Wow, that's pretty crazy.
Speaker 6 (08:31):
Cost goes right across the river, right by the Pentagon. Ooh,
so maybe that photo off was in the Pentagon, but
it's so far to the White House from their situation.
Speaker 2 (08:43):
Room in the White House is where that photo came from.
Speaker 8 (08:45):
Good morning, guys, This is Elizabeth from Shruthport Threeport. A
long time listenre. I think I listened to you guys
way too much because with all this information about Google
coming out, all I hear in my head is Shannon
and that clip you guys play do go Dog.
Speaker 4 (09:04):
Have a good day, guys, Good lord.
Speaker 1 (09:07):
Sometimes I just want to run my head into a
wall when I hear myself, you should sit on this
side for four hours, you get to leave. I have
to go home with me.
Speaker 2 (09:17):
That's a good point.
Speaker 3 (09:19):
California lawmakers have approved U phone restrictions for the entire state,
a bipartisan bill introduced by Sendlingman Josh hoover of Fulsome
is called the Phone Free Schools Act, sailed through the legislature,
will require all public schools to devise a policy by
July first of twenty six to limit or prohibit smartphones
(09:42):
during the school day. Those schools around the country that
have already banned or put restrictions on cell phone use
in schools have seen not just anecdotal evidence that it's working,
but actual test score evidence, survey evidence of the kids
(10:04):
themselves who say that this has been a positive, positive thing.
Speaker 1 (10:07):
So they're using those pouches. They're called the Yonder pouches.
I had to use one of these when I went
to go see John Mulaney. They made you lock up
your phone so you couldn't take any video or anything
like that. One school, particularly Mervin Dimalley High School, spent
twelve thousand dollars for seven hundred and fifty of these
(10:29):
magnetic Yonder pouches.
Speaker 4 (10:31):
If I am an executive at.
Speaker 1 (10:33):
Yonder, I am hiking up the cost of that sixteen
dollars apiece. If you've got school districts buying it, it
is now seventy five.
Speaker 4 (10:41):
Dollars a piece.
Speaker 2 (10:42):
Government money.
Speaker 4 (10:43):
Yes, go get that money.
Speaker 3 (10:45):
Ho what Darvina Bradley is the principal there at Mervyn
Diamondley High School, and said, would you prefer that we
make sure that your child is safe and we take
care and do everything for them. Your child may do
the right thing, but another child may not, and they
may call up a whole bunch of people up here
to jump on one child. What would you prefer? She's
(11:05):
talking specifically about the cell phone band. If you were
caught at Diamon Lee High School with a phone, the
parent has a thirty minute window to pick it up
after school, but a lot of people, she said, including
that kids parents as well, would prefer a ban on
cell phones all together.
Speaker 1 (11:25):
Some kids are getting burner phones, extra phones, bringing those
with them and then locking up one of their phones.
Some kids have fashioned like cardboard cutouts of what the
size of their phone would be and are putting that
in the pouch and keeping their phone on them.
Speaker 4 (11:42):
Where there's a rule, there's a way.
Speaker 1 (11:44):
Around the rule for most criminals criminal children.
Speaker 3 (11:49):
One of the ways that kids have gotten around this
at Dorsey Senior High is they they compromised and put
cell phone lockers in the class rooms themselves, so once
you come into the classroom, you throw your phone in
the locker, and you can't get it, obviously until the
end of class. That way, they would still have access
to their phones on their own time, you know, in
(12:11):
between periods and things like that, but they wouldn't be
distracted in class. That does not solve the problem. It
solves the problem of distraction in class, but it does
not solve the greater overarching problem, which is that smartphones
like that are sucking your kids' brains out of their
faces and no one's doing a damn thing about it. Yeah,
(12:35):
it's at this point I still don't I understand why
people are fearful and feel like they need connection with
their kid and the event that something happens, something bad happens.
Speaker 2 (12:44):
I went to school. This is going to surprise you.
Speaker 3 (12:47):
At a time when if I wanted to call somebody,
I had to go to the office and ask to
use the phone, right.
Speaker 2 (12:53):
And there was never an incident.
Speaker 1 (12:55):
It's a very different world, not today. It's very different.
These kids. This is how they communicate. This is their
only way to communicate.
Speaker 2 (13:04):
Okay, they don't even.
Speaker 1 (13:06):
Talk to each other face to face. They text each other.
So Grandpa, your grandpa are showing.
Speaker 3 (13:12):
I'm saying, why don't we then give them the opportunity
to actually do that kind of communication? It would be wonderful,
wouldn't It's I think it's a huge I think that
you and I are kind of rare in that we
recognize the value of human interaction, well, because we're at
the age where we remember life before it. Yes, if
you're twenty five right now, you don't know what that's like.
(13:33):
My kids have no idea what it's like to Oh,
I shouldn't say no idea, but making friends outside of
the digital world, Yeah, they do because there I hope
that have been raised relatively well relatively, we'll see about that.
Speaker 2 (13:49):
That's because of their mother.
Speaker 4 (13:52):
That's not true. You've done a wonderful job raising my iren.
Speaker 2 (13:55):
I was fishing for compliment.
Speaker 1 (14:00):
Will continue. Deborah Mark also, wonderful job, wonderful changan. Yes,
what's going on?
Speaker 7 (14:07):
You're listening to Gary and Shannon on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 2 (14:14):
I'm the opposite. I'll stay too long. You don't want that?
Oh really?
Speaker 5 (14:17):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (14:17):
Yeah, if my wife's not with me, I'll stay too long.
Speaker 4 (14:20):
I left my own wedding before.
Speaker 3 (14:23):
Oh, that's understandable. I mean, you guys are going off
to vacate.
Speaker 4 (14:26):
Or no, no, no, no, we weren't. You just got
I just got tired of the whole.
Speaker 1 (14:30):
Event, and I went and Steve and I sat in
the hotel bar and had some drinks. I mean, I
cannot stay. I don't like staying long anywhere. I just
I just get in, get out. My entire wedding ceremony
was five minutes and thirty six seconds. I just I cannot,
I cannot handle.
Speaker 3 (14:52):
And even then you were doing this signal to the
Y to the yeah, who was move it along?
Speaker 2 (14:55):
Yeah? Can we speed this up? Tap in your watch.
Speaker 3 (14:58):
A couple stories were following a groundbreaking SpaceX mission that
had been scheduled for early tomorrow, probably going to be delayed.
SpaceX a rocket booster from a different mission tipped over
and exploded early yesterday after it came back to Earth.
Speaker 2 (15:13):
The FAA now has ordered.
Speaker 3 (15:14):
SpaceX to conduct an investigation into why that Falcon nine
Stage one booster fell over onto a floating platform as
it was trying to land after a successful satellite launch
early yesterday. And while this review continues, all of those
Falcon nine rockets are going to be grounded, including what
is supposed to be tomorrow's SpaceX Polaris mission.
Speaker 1 (15:36):
Well, Vice President Harris and Minnesota Governor Tim Walls are
going to sit down in about under ten minutes actually,
and under ten minutes they'll be sitting down with Dana
Bash from CNN. This will be a first in depth
talk since Biden ended his bid for reelection.
Speaker 4 (15:51):
By the way, where's Joe Biden?
Speaker 2 (15:54):
Who?
Speaker 3 (15:56):
He's on a beach at the home of Rehobeth Beach, Delaware.
Speaker 1 (16:00):
Reports that he was when he was seen most recently
visibly shaking, shaking. I don't know what that means, okay,
And that his body people had to be body people
and help him into the car.
Speaker 3 (16:18):
Oh, like like Hillary Clinton when she got shakes and
she had to be helped into the van.
Speaker 2 (16:22):
Do you remember that?
Speaker 9 (16:23):
Don't?
Speaker 10 (16:23):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (16:24):
Vaguely very weird video, very weird. Pull that up, yeah,
very weird.
Speaker 9 (16:28):
People are so pathetic you fall asleep preparing your own meal.
I call bs on that. And if you actually spend
the time to make a good Sunday dinner, you can
eat that for a couple of days during the week.
Speaker 5 (16:43):
Right.
Speaker 9 (16:43):
Not to mention, there is a ton of things you
can make super easy by just chopping them up and
throwing them on a sheet pan. Right, you're tired because
you're eating processed foods. Yes, and it's killing me.
Speaker 2 (16:55):
That's the real problem.
Speaker 1 (16:56):
Yes, a roast chicken is probably the easiest thing that you.
Speaker 2 (17:00):
Can make Chinese meal.
Speaker 1 (17:04):
I have been craving dim sum. I haven't had dim
sum in a long time, Shannon. I might pick them
up on the way home today.
Speaker 2 (17:13):
Hi, Gary and Shannon.
Speaker 10 (17:15):
You know I know you.
Speaker 7 (17:16):
Gary.
Speaker 10 (17:16):
You don't like butter on your potatoes, so your house
could be covered with buttered potatoes that you would be well,
we have a whole freeway with potatoes that are not buttered.
Please go out there and slur bupp these potatoes and
help us out. Thanks, Gary, have a great day.
Speaker 3 (17:34):
If I didn't have a day job, I would definitely
be out there picking up French fries. But like you said,
the HP extended that SIG alert for that southbound five
right near Stadium Way just outside of Dodger Stadium. Another
two hours collusion with several vehicles and a big rig
and boxes of French fries have been spilled across the roadway.
Speaker 1 (17:52):
We told you about how people keep dying at Grand
Canyon National Park. I think five people body count in
the past couple of weeks is at five. There was
a main pipeline that provides water to the Grand Canyon
National Park and it kept breaking.
Speaker 4 (18:06):
It has failed.
Speaker 3 (18:08):
Four significant breaks in this pipeline, and for anybody who
was planning to go there at least through the South
Rim area through Labor Day holiday, you're in trouble. The
Trans Canyon Water Distribution Pipeline twelve and a half mile
line that was constructed way back in the sixties. It
takes water from Roaring Springs up on the North Rim
(18:28):
to the Javasupai Gardens. I think it is how you
say at pump station and then back to the popular
South Rim drinking water fire suppression. For every building in
the South Rim area as well as some of the
Inner Canyon facilities. Eight hundred historic buildings get water from
this pipeline. The primary source of water for about two
thousand year round residents who live in Grand Canyon Village,
(18:51):
park staff employees, and then of course the millions of
people who visit the National park each year in the
arguably tens of thousands, if not a couple hundred thousand
people who were expected over the course of the next
week or so. It's an aluminum pipeline that sounds strange
to me and aluminum piping, but they said it twists
(19:11):
and turns around trails through some of the rocky terrain
and grit in the water. Scars in the water will
scar the inside. It creates weak spots that frequently break
and leak, and in this case, four leaks, all within
rapid succession, have prompted them to shut down the pipeline
and tell people, if you're in the South Rim area,
(19:32):
you may.
Speaker 2 (19:32):
Want to go somewhere else this Labor Day weekend.
Speaker 1 (19:34):
Stage four water restrictions, so which means fewer people. Before
you grab a glass of water, drink your own spit.
Speaker 2 (19:42):
I think it's a stage four.
Speaker 4 (19:44):
That sounds like a dentist appointment for you.
Speaker 2 (19:46):
How did yours go?
Speaker 4 (19:47):
He went great?
Speaker 1 (19:48):
Did they actually have so such a machine that worked?
Oh yeah, and I enjoyed every minute of it. So
here's something new that happened to me. You had a
first time experience with your tea cleaning appointment. I had
a first time experience as well. My hygienist was lovely.
(20:08):
She was so polite, she was wonderful. She was maybe
twenty two twenty three.
Speaker 4 (20:15):
Young.
Speaker 1 (20:16):
And there was this new thing because I'm used to
like older hygienists like I've always had. I don't know,
I think the one that I used to go to
there has left. But anyway, they're usually older, and and
they they give no f's right right, They're just like
they you know it went. They used to really guilt
trip you, you know, like I can tell your floss
in every day or what have you.
Speaker 4 (20:37):
It's like a real guilt trip.
Speaker 1 (20:38):
You're a captive audience in that chair where they're telling you,
you know, you really should flo us after every meal
kind of thing, right.
Speaker 4 (20:46):
And.
Speaker 1 (20:48):
Now with this new generation, it was oh, I'm sorry,
are you okay? Every every two to three minutes, Are
you okay? You doing okay?
Speaker 4 (20:57):
Are you all right? Like it was a root canal
or something like it was something very serious causing it
was significant discovery.
Speaker 1 (21:03):
Yes, I mean the first thing she led with was
are your teeth sensitive? And I said, sometimes she's like, oh, okay,
I'll be extra careful. I'll be extra careful. And every
time she'd scrape something, you know, with the tools, it
would be like Oh.
Speaker 4 (21:14):
I'm sorry. Oh, I'm sorry. I'm sorry. You okay, I'm sorry.
Speaker 1 (21:17):
And I'm like, are do people have people gone soft
at their dental cleaning appointments to where you have to
do that now? I it's a cleaning appointment. There's no
pain whatsoever.
Speaker 2 (21:27):
Well, there shouldn't be.
Speaker 4 (21:28):
There shouldn't be.
Speaker 3 (21:29):
I guess there have been in the past for some people.
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (21:32):
I don't know either, but I kept reassuring her. I said,
you don't need to say you're sorry. I'm fine.
Speaker 4 (21:37):
This is this is a teeth cleaning appointment.
Speaker 1 (21:39):
Like we're good not having a ca you know, you're
not drilling into my mouth?
Speaker 3 (21:46):
Would it be better if if she just didn't say anything,
because my hygienists on Tuesday didn't say a word.
Speaker 1 (21:54):
Right, That's what I'm used to. There's new like checking
in and having consent?
Speaker 2 (21:59):
Is uh, do they have the TV on?
Speaker 4 (22:01):
There is a TV? She asked me, Do you want
to they have like movies.
Speaker 1 (22:05):
They've got like a movie catalog, and they've got the
screen above you and then the screen in front of you,
and I go, no, I'm not going to be here
long enough to sit down and watch a movie.
Speaker 2 (22:13):
There was so much.
Speaker 4 (22:14):
She's like, Okay, I'll hurry it up. I'll hurry up.
Speaker 1 (22:15):
I'm like, no, that's not what I know. So everything's fine.
Speaker 3 (22:20):
And again you're tapping your watch like can we speed
this up? Quick sports round up when we come back?
Speaker 4 (22:28):
Weird?
Speaker 1 (22:28):
Right?
Speaker 3 (22:29):
Well, the lebron thing, yes, but I also think a
dog throwing out the first pitch is not a great idea.
Speaker 4 (22:36):
What are you talking about? Have you seen the video?
Speaker 2 (22:38):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (22:38):
I will say this, what are you? I thought you
love that. The greatest image is Sho Tani high fiving
his dog. Yes, like that image, that's that can't be real?
Speaker 2 (22:48):
How was that possibly real?
Speaker 4 (22:49):
That video?
Speaker 1 (22:50):
First thing this morning and I started welling up like
it was so proud. If you watch one thing the
entire day, go watch this video. Find it on Twitter
or what have you a tany first pitch dog?
Speaker 4 (23:03):
Those are your search cues. It is.
Speaker 1 (23:07):
It is remarkable and there's a great story behind it
as well.
Speaker 7 (23:12):
You're listening to Gary and Shannon on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 4 (23:20):
Coming up after Debra's news.
Speaker 1 (23:21):
At the top of the hour, we'll preview for you
the interview that Kamala Harris and Tim Walls are doing
right now with CNN. It will air tonight at six
pm our time. We don't know if it's live to tape,
if it's a lengthy interview, if it's ten minutes.
Speaker 4 (23:40):
We just don't know.
Speaker 1 (23:41):
But we'll tell you what we do know and some
of the questions that they may face.
Speaker 3 (23:45):
One of the stories we talked about yesterday was this
bill that would allow certain illegal aliens to use sorry,
illegal immigrants, to use your own term, to use a
state program that provides up to one hundred and fifty
thousand dollars in low cost loans for first time home buyers.
Speaker 2 (24:00):
Did pass the Senate. We talked about that.
Speaker 3 (24:02):
They did pass it in the Assembly again, twenty five
to fourteen in the Senate, forty five to fifteen in
the Assembly. But some of the moderate Democrats in the
Senate did join with Republicans in voting against this bill.
But it did pass both sides to the legislature. It
now heads to the governor. We haven't heard yet what
(24:23):
the governor thinks about this film.
Speaker 1 (24:24):
One of the handful of F sixteen's that Ukraine received
to help fight Russia has crashed. Pilot was killed, went
down on Monday, when Russia launched a major missile and
drone barrage at Ukraine. Four of those Russian missiles were
shot down by F sixteen's. This was the first reported
loss of an F sixteen in Ukraine. Tigers beat the
(24:47):
Angels yesterday three to two. They have started. They were
playing already.
Speaker 3 (24:51):
Dodgers over the Orioles last night six to four, and
tonight the Dodgers take on the Orioles again on Filipino
Heritage Night.
Speaker 2 (24:57):
Ticket pack. First pitch is at seven clock just after seven.
Speaker 3 (25:01):
Listen to every play of every Dodgers game on AM
five to seventy LA Sports Live from the Gallpin Motors
Broadcast booth. Stream all of the games in HD on
the iHeartRadio app. Used the keyword AM five seventy LA Sports.
Speaker 2 (25:12):
Fans, put your hands together. Stani's dog immortalize, it's the
nice bob ahead, it's decoy. And there's show.
Speaker 3 (25:27):
Hay drops his dog off at the pitcher's mound with
a ball on the pitching rubber.
Speaker 2 (25:33):
To do the catching, and the dog picks up.
Speaker 3 (25:36):
The ball and runs the sixty feet six inches a homeplate.
Speaker 2 (25:42):
Right, well, I mean it was it was low.
Speaker 1 (25:46):
And then Show he Atani high fives his dog and
then high five the dogs. Of course, his dog is
the best trained dog in the history of dogs.
Speaker 2 (25:55):
How is that possible?
Speaker 1 (25:56):
Shout out to Todd Lights by the way, the public
addressing yeah, formerly reporter, how.
Speaker 2 (26:04):
Is Shoho Tani real?
Speaker 1 (26:05):
He's not a real human, heed, He's not a real
the things that he does. But of course he has
trained his dog that well, that's just the way he
runs his life.
Speaker 4 (26:15):
Did you see the line.
Speaker 1 (26:16):
Of people that was there for hours before first pitch
to get a bobblehead? It was insanity and it was
it was show hey with his dog.
Speaker 2 (26:28):
That's the bobblehead, right.
Speaker 3 (26:30):
Forty thousand fans got it. A limited number of gold
versions of the bobblehead, they said would be handed out
to a few lucky fans. Already, resellers are attempting to
sell it for more than ten grand, and I don't
know if those the gold ones would go for even
more than that. Previously, the Dodgers did another show Heyo
(26:54):
Tani bibblehead giveaway where a little under two thousand of
them were gold bobbleheads.
Speaker 4 (26:59):
Boy, beautiful dog, it's a good boy. He's such a
good boy.
Speaker 1 (27:05):
And another sports story was lebron James, his son's gonna
play with them, and he says he's on the court,
he can't call him dad. He can call him either Broun, two.
Speaker 2 (27:15):
Three or goat.
Speaker 4 (27:17):
Those were his three options for his son.
Speaker 3 (27:20):
I cannot imagine the look that my son would give
me if I told him, here are the names that
I approve you call him.
Speaker 1 (27:28):
There's also yes, and there's also no way Bronnie would
call his dad dad in front of anybody. There's just
no way. It's gonna be probably two three, two three.
He's got to call him goat. I think that was
a joke. Two three is the accept two three is
this kid, because that's what players call each other.
Speaker 2 (27:45):
Hey six, Bronnie played.
Speaker 3 (27:49):
Wait, hold on a second, let's go back to the
the uh premise of this, which is that they're both
going to be on the court at the same time. Yeah,
in an actual NBA regular season.
Speaker 1 (28:02):
Game, Lakers are not going to do well. Unfortunately, they
are playing to fill the seats with this father son charade.
The pre season decide to win this season, they decided
to fill the seats with the father son's story and
the people that will line up to watch it.
Speaker 3 (28:21):
So it's not a championship season, it's not a playoff season.
It's not even a rebuilding season.
Speaker 1 (28:26):
I'm getting flashbacks to when we did Fred Rogan's show,
and I don't know anything about the Lakers to speak
intelligently about it now.
Speaker 3 (28:33):
Lebron two three has publicly mentioned the possibility of playing
in the NBA with his son, his oldest son, and
now that the two of them are could become the
first father son duo to appear on the same roster.
He acknowledges at least one aspect of the situation might
be a little strange, and he said, it's easy for
me because I've been calling him Brony for so long.
It's not like I've been calling him hey son, hey son.
(28:56):
So it's easy for me. It's going to be an
easy adjustment, but it will. It's adjustment for me, but
it will be an adjustment for him. We can't be
running down the court and he be like, Dad, push
the ball up, Dad, I'm open, Dad, Come on, you
can't do that.
Speaker 4 (29:10):
I don't think he would. I don't think he'd be
caught Dad calling him Dad again.
Speaker 2 (29:13):
The premise is that they're going to be on the
court at the same time. And I don't even know
if Bronnie makes the roster.
Speaker 3 (29:18):
But practice and stuff like that, practice, preseason all possibilities.
Speaker 1 (29:22):
But yeah, all right, what can we expect from the
Big Harris CNN interview that is underway right now being taped.
Speaker 4 (29:30):
We'll tell you when we come back to Gary and Shannon.
Speaker 2 (29:34):
You've been listening to The Gary and Shannon Show.
Speaker 3 (29:36):
You can always hear us live on KFI AM six
forty nine am to one pm every Monday through Friday,
and anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio AP