Episode Transcript
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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. Disney is introducing a new way
for guests to skip the lines at the theme parks.
Lightning Lane Premiere Pass will launch at Disneyland next week
and at disney World on October thirtieth. This will allow
you to entry the enter the Lightning Lane line at
(00:24):
select attractions at any time, once per day, anytime, once
per okay, so maybe once per ride per day. Per
that ride. The Disneyland Lightning Lane Premiere Pass will cost
between three hundred and four hundred dollars per person per day.
Speaker 2 (00:40):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (00:41):
Wow, anybody I see in the Lightning Lane, I'm just
gonna immediately immediately label an a hole. You paid four
hundred dollars to skip them out of the line on
Thunder Mountain.
Speaker 2 (00:55):
I did that for Dollywood? You did? I did?
Speaker 1 (00:59):
You paid three to four hundred.
Speaker 2 (01:00):
No, not at all. I think I paid twenty eight dollars.
Speaker 1 (01:03):
Hey, that's the difference. That's the difference. That's a big difference.
But yeah, that I guess that is a big difference.
That's my that's not that I have a problem with
it if you want to do your money. But we're
that impatient now right in Disneyland's capitalizing that.
Speaker 3 (01:19):
You're willing to crush three or four hundred bucks depending
on the day, just so that you could stand.
Speaker 1 (01:24):
I probably it would have been more apt to do
that had I had F and U money. When I
was a child, before we had cell phones and you
had to really wait for an hour and a half
for Space Mountain with nothing to do. You had to
raw dog that line, as the kids.
Speaker 3 (01:38):
Say, you just had to stare at the back of
your uncle's head or something like that to your brother.
Speaker 1 (01:44):
Gross, tell me about Bobo fat again.
Speaker 2 (01:47):
Don't say that word because you're going to get people
to call in.
Speaker 1 (01:51):
I know it was just a joke. I know that
it's Boba Fett.
Speaker 4 (01:54):
It's time for swamp washing, swamp horrible work, just Jengo,
Hey Joe. A town hall too clearly built on a
swamp and in so many ways still a swamp.
Speaker 2 (02:14):
I have a bunch of malwarkey. What he said, drained
the swamp. I said, Oh, that's so hoy.
Speaker 1 (02:18):
And he's a clone of his father.
Speaker 2 (02:22):
Everybody knows them.
Speaker 3 (02:23):
Yeah, so there's a lot going on in the campaign trail.
We know we're getting down to it. You were tired
of it too, just some of the basics. Vice President
Harris former President Trump continue their media blitz blitzes. I
suppose a couple of town halls. One of them was
broadcast this morning with former President Trump fielding questions from
(02:43):
an audience of women on Fox News this morning. Really
the answer that's getting the most headlines out of that
was his I'm the father of IVF.
Speaker 5 (02:53):
I got a call from Katie Britt, a young just
a fantastically attractive person from all she's a senator and
she called me up, like emergency, emergency, because an Alabama
judge had ruled that the IVF clinics were illegal and
they have to be closed down. A judge ruled, and
she said, friends of mine came up to me and
(03:14):
they were, Oh, they were so angry. I didn't even
know they were going. You know, they were it's fertilization.
I didn't know they were even involved. And nobody talks
about fertilization.
Speaker 2 (03:24):
But now that they.
Speaker 5 (03:25):
Can't do it, she said, I was attacked in a
certain way. I was attacked and I said, explain IVS
very IVF very quickly, and within about two minutes I
understood it. I said, no, no, we're totally in favor
of IVF. I got a call from Katie.
Speaker 1 (03:42):
Katie Britt was the one who did the response to
the state of the Union or something in the kitchen.
Speaker 3 (03:49):
Yes, yeah, I forgot that, but yes, that's the one.
Speaker 2 (03:55):
She's well, ah, okay.
Speaker 1 (04:00):
Very attractive. She's a senator too.
Speaker 3 (04:02):
What's his mentality of suggesting that he's the father of IVF, Like,
where do you come from?
Speaker 1 (04:09):
This is where it comes from. He's doing the most
for IVF in his mind. This idea to subsidize it
is huge. It really is. I'll give him that. And
the fact that it's his administration, should that be the
case that's going to do this or has this goal
makes him the father of IVF. Okay, that's quite nobody's
(04:35):
done that on that kind of scale for IVF.
Speaker 3 (04:38):
Okay, But what happened to Republicans not being the party
of Hey, here's free stuff, so vote for me. That's
exactly what this sounds like. Is that pandering offering of like, oh,
I'm going to give you free stuff. I know it's
an important issue, and I actually like the idea of it,
but I just in general, Republicans have shied away from
(04:59):
the whole.
Speaker 1 (05:00):
They don't say I'm going to give you free stuff.
They just say, I'm not going to take your money
as much, We're not going to tax you as much, right,
which which is a better way for him to put it,
a better way to give you free stuff.
Speaker 3 (05:09):
I'm going to make it more affordable for you to
I'm going to make it easier for you to afford
IVF because I'm not going to take your taxes on
tips or I'm going to cut your taxes or however.
Speaker 1 (05:19):
But he's also the guy who ran for class president
and got up at the podium in the gym and
promised all the stuff because that's his personality.
Speaker 2 (05:29):
Right.
Speaker 1 (05:29):
There was the guy who ran for class president that
just stuck to policy and he made sense. And then
there was a guy that got up there who's mister popularity,
who wants to be mister popularity exactly.
Speaker 3 (05:42):
That is a good point, but we need to understand
that that's that that high school senior who gets up
and says, I want to make sure that the freshmen
that are in you know, attending school this year have
the highest test scores they've ever had.
Speaker 1 (05:54):
What a boring stick in the mud, that coud. He
never gets elected the best ideas, but he.
Speaker 2 (05:58):
Is the best ideas. It improves the future for everybody.
Speaker 1 (06:02):
Yeah, instead we're arguing about free condoms. It's just do
you want your trivia question really quick? Because it's related.
Speaker 2 (06:11):
Oh you've made up a trivia question? Yeah?
Speaker 1 (06:13):
Well, I mean I didn't make it up, but I
who is known in a writer's credit for it as
father of the Constitution.
Speaker 2 (06:23):
Father of the Constitution. Would you say Thomas Jefferson?
Speaker 1 (06:27):
I would have, But it's not.
Speaker 2 (06:31):
Father of the like father of IVF.
Speaker 1 (06:33):
It's exactly the same thing, is it, Donald Trump? It
is James Madison. Oh okay, for his contributions to the
Constitutional Convention and the ratification of the Constitution.
Speaker 3 (06:44):
Well, now see he did a lot of work to
be considered the father of the Constitution.
Speaker 1 (06:48):
Well, he was also the first to show up at
the Constitutional Convention in.
Speaker 2 (06:51):
Philly, right, so he's early.
Speaker 1 (06:53):
He got there early, He started drafting the Virginia Plan,
and there here we are living out his dream, no doubt.
Speaker 3 (07:02):
The other the other big town, not town hall, but
the other big interview today is going to be Vice
President Kamala Harris and sitting down with a political director
and Fox News host Brett bar for an interview that
will air at about three o'clock. I wanted to go
over some stuff. We'll come back and do this. But
some of the things that he Brett Bear has had
(07:22):
to say, Oh.
Speaker 1 (07:23):
My god, he's getting raked over the coals on social media,
defending himself before the interview, even defending himself and his
neutrality when it comes to this interview. So also Trump's
transition operation is putting together a list of people to
be banned from a second Trump administration.
Speaker 2 (07:42):
Like you, I'm not going to be banned? Are you
on the list? Not that I know?
Speaker 1 (07:47):
Why would I? Why would I be banned? I have
tons of good ideas.
Speaker 3 (07:49):
This afternoon, about three o'clock on Fox, Brett Behar from
Fox News is going to interview Kamala Harris. The interview
itself is actually taking place about an hour before for that,
because that's the window that was given to Brett Bair
to sit down with the Vice President. Now, this has
been cause for some consternation on truth social on Twitter, etc.
Speaker 2 (08:15):
Where some Trump.
Speaker 3 (08:17):
Loyalists have said that Brett behar is going to go
pretty easy on the vice president. Some of them have
said that she would not be doing the interview unless
her team knew that they would go easy on her.
Others had suggested that the questions would be watered down,
that the Harris campaign had preconditions in order to agree
to this interview, and Brett Baer had to reply, I mean,
(08:39):
he did a lot of this work himself. Yesterday he wrote,
there were no preconditions to get the interview. No one
has the questions ahead of time except for me. No
topic is off the table, and if there is any editing,
it will be very minimal for timing and will be
editorially the same question and answer. We are pre taping
the interview right before the live show Wednesday, Pennsylvania. Also,
(09:02):
he said he responded to others that claim that Kamala
Harris must have been given the questions ahead of time,
which again was the reason why they agreed to it.
Is so that she knew or because they knew campaign
knew it was going to be a softball interview, And
he had to reply to that and say it's going
to be as live, not edited, run from beginning to end.
No changes period, and they confirmed there will be no
(09:26):
commercials to interrupt the interview. They said that, oh, there
was a question about whether or not Trump was ever
going to be on the show, and Brett Bhar responded
with We've invited him every single week. So this is
one of those things where you're going to have to
kind of wait and see what happens, as opposed to
(09:47):
predetermining what you think Fox and Brett Behar is going
to do.
Speaker 2 (09:50):
With the vice President.
Speaker 1 (09:51):
Trump's transition team compiling lists of names of people to
keep out of a second Trump administration. The lists of
undesirable include people linked to Project twenty five, officials who
resign in protest of Trump's response to the right at
the Capitol, others perceived as disloyal to the former president.
(10:14):
The effort is the latest indication, they say that a
second Trump administration could have a starkly different personnel makeup
than the first, positions ranging from the most senior aids
to lower level appointees. Apparently, Donald Trump Junior is leading
the effort to assemble the names of banned people.
Speaker 2 (10:33):
I have a concern about that.
Speaker 3 (10:36):
Yeah, regardless of what happens on November fifth, does Donald
Trump Junior continue his dad's legacy and run for president.
Speaker 1 (10:45):
Who does more blow Donald Trump Junior or Hunter Biden.
Speaker 2 (10:51):
That's a real dang dog right there.
Speaker 3 (10:52):
I because I feel like he is setting himself up
to be the next I.
Speaker 1 (11:00):
Think you're right. I didn't think about it until you
just said that, And now I'm going through my mind
with all the things that he has positioned himself in,
and that seems about right. Where does jd. Vance come in?
Speaker 3 (11:13):
He's still a senator from Ohio. I mean, I don't
think he's Maybe what we've seen from him in the
last couple of months is enough to have him included
in whatever twenty twenty eight conversation is.
Speaker 2 (11:26):
I mean, if he's elected.
Speaker 3 (11:28):
Obviously, if Trump is elected and Jade Vance becomes the
vice president, he's a shoe in for the twenty eight nomination.
Speaker 1 (11:33):
Who runs the show for the Republicans moving forward? Is
it Trump World Trump? Or is it the RNC or who?
Speaker 3 (11:39):
Again, it goes the Kingmaker and the RNC is run
by his daughter in law, right, so I don't know.
I mean they again, I point to an article that
was written. It's one of many that have kind of
expressed the same feeling, which is the best thing that
can happen to the Republican Party going forward. Is a
Trump loss because it gets the party cleans the ability
(12:02):
to start over, to hit reset, to talk.
Speaker 2 (12:04):
You know, you don't.
Speaker 3 (12:06):
On the one hand, you can say something like he
has garnered more votes than any sitting president, you know,
the things that he likes to say, he's raised more money,
et cetera. But you've lost twice, assuming he loses on
November fifth, if that's what the way it pans out.
Speaker 1 (12:22):
I don't think Donald Trump Junior has the same anything
that his dad has in terms of charisma, in terms
of likability, all of that. I don't think he has
any of that. I also don't think that you have
the balls. I don't think he has balls. Sorry, can
I say that? I don't even know.
Speaker 3 (12:43):
Did we've ever figured out if he was actually stepping
out on his fiance.
Speaker 1 (12:48):
We stopped caring because he's so irrelevant. I didn't ever
have a giant care in me for no, but it was.
It was in the headlines for a while. We talked
about it, but I mean, he to me is just
a weak stream.
Speaker 3 (13:00):
There was one more quick thing I wanted to mention
before we move on from swamp Watch, Independent voters have
been moving away from Republicans and towards Democrats in a
nine percentage point swing. This is a new poll that
has come out from Gallup less than four weeks until
the election on November fifth, and or actually three weeks.
(13:21):
Gallup found that forty nine percent of independents say they
lean towards Democrats, forty five percent say they leaned towards
Republicans in the most recent survey carried out between the
sixteenth and twenty eighth of September, so late, but that
that was a nine percentage point swing from an earlier
poll going towards independence, going towards Democrats and not Republicans.
Speaker 1 (13:44):
Ten years ago. Bottom of the ninth two on two
to zero pitch tie Game three three and Travis Ishikawa
hits it out sends the Giants to the World Series. Yes,
ten years ago today, that was their.
Speaker 2 (14:00):
Last World Series in a long time. Why you do that?
Speaker 1 (14:06):
Because I'm a horrible freaking person. Justin Worship's, host of
the Dad Podcast, joins us on Wednesdays to talk parenting, fun.
Speaker 2 (14:17):
Times, fun times.
Speaker 1 (14:19):
I've been a couple of parent I've got a couple
friends who are parents that have their kids in therapy.
But I was wondering, is it because there are more
kids in therapy now or we just didn't talk about
it twenty thirty.
Speaker 3 (14:29):
Years that they should have been in therapy before that
they were, but nobody.
Speaker 1 (14:32):
Talked about it.
Speaker 6 (14:34):
The evidence says that in twenty twenty three, they found
that there was about a three percent almost four percent
uptick in twenty twenty two in kids going to therapy
over the course of a year.
Speaker 1 (14:45):
Now, I'd like to know the difference between nineteen ninety
three and twenty twenty three.
Speaker 6 (14:49):
I'll get a man on that data for you in
the break to see if I can't figure that out.
I think I honestly, I think it is twofold. I
think that therapy has become less or more destigmatized.
Speaker 2 (15:00):
I guess is the way to say it.
Speaker 6 (15:02):
Less of a stigma, less of a stigma, right, Yeah,
so it's more welcome. But we've talked about a lot
on these segments that there also seems to be this
I don't know if movement's the right word or trend
of people like that everybody's got a problem, like nobody
is just okay. Like there seems to be like a
badge of honor, kind of vibe like victim, Yeah, the
(15:22):
victim of something that yes, or.
Speaker 2 (15:24):
Do we have to?
Speaker 6 (15:24):
And I think it's always that My dad used always
say that it's a sign that your life is too
easy when you're you're the only way to have purpose
in your life is you're looking for problems like that
because you're it's I think that things have gotten pretty
good for a lot of people. And I'm not say obviously,
I'm not saying this for people who actually struggle with depression, anxiety,
or any kind of mental illness, but I do think
it's just like what I experience as in my childhood.
(15:47):
I didn't experience it as from an adult's perspective, but
I do remember this growing trend of everybody has ADHD,
and then we added another D in there, and and so,
and then it became about nut allergies. And I think
that there just seems to be a large person of
people that don't necessarily have that issue, and it somehow
it seems to diminish the people who actually have and
(16:07):
struggle with that issue, because the narrative becomes, well, we
didn't have these problems before.
Speaker 3 (16:12):
Well, And I think part of it is when we
talked about this a lot here also is that parents
don't want to they don't ever want to be behind.
Not the trend part of it, but if there is
something going on with your kid, you never want to
have that feeling of I just brushed it off.
Speaker 6 (16:29):
Isn't it weird though, to think that the real problem
is that people care more about being a parent than
they ever have, Like at large, there's like again, I
had conversations with my dad about at parental anxiety and
he was like, I don't even know what you're talking about.
That doesn't I didn't spend a lot of time thinking
about you, to be honest, I know, so.
Speaker 2 (16:48):
I'll be honest. I forgot your name exactly.
Speaker 6 (16:50):
I was living my life man, which I again, like
we've talked about. I think the middle of the road
is not too bad in all seriousness. If you're forgetting
your kid's birthday or something or not, Like, if you're
that disconnected, that's a problem. But if your entire life
is built around your children, I would say that's an
equal problem. And in the in my anecdotal experience, the
(17:12):
people who are neglected more as children actually can thrive
in adulthood more so than the kids who have parents
who just everything is about them, right.
Speaker 2 (17:20):
Yeah, and I don't.
Speaker 6 (17:21):
I wish I could understand that better, but there's just
something messed up about the human brain that doesn't work
that way.
Speaker 3 (17:27):
I would I would be a I don't know the
idea of putting a kid in therapist. On the one hand,
I would want my kid to be able to grow
knowing that there was an outlet for them. Yes, if
there was something going on.
Speaker 6 (17:43):
I went through this recently, within the last year with
my younger son.
Speaker 2 (17:46):
He asked to go to therapy.
Speaker 6 (17:48):
He was googling on his phone signs of depression and anxiety.
Speaker 2 (17:52):
And you could say I'm wrong.
Speaker 6 (17:54):
I feel one hundred percent that I know my son
and I know that this is not an issue for him.
I knew that he was hard enough to try to
figure out a way to not have to do as
much homework. Like I genuinely think that's what he was doing.
Speaker 3 (18:05):
Well, And like we've been saying, those words get thrown around, Yes,
so much more so than when we were kids, that
maybe that is a way to kind of boost your
social status.
Speaker 6 (18:17):
Yeah, if you have a problem I mean that was
when I was a little bit older than him. That
was how I thought was the best way to get
a girl to like you was to be like, oh,
thinks are.
Speaker 2 (18:26):
So hard for me. I'm so sad.
Speaker 6 (18:27):
Please you gross, Please let me check off a few
basis right now. It's a little I'll remind you Shannon
Fair and I was twelve.
Speaker 1 (18:35):
I don't care.
Speaker 6 (18:36):
Now I'm a forty five year old man who does
it a little less intensely.
Speaker 2 (18:43):
Back No, I fullblown cry.
Speaker 1 (18:47):
Oh my god, I.
Speaker 2 (18:49):
Just have a reason to be upset because ala real problems.
Speaker 6 (18:56):
And that's that's why I got I have so much
riz I pull.
Speaker 3 (18:59):
So let's just the kids say again again this is
this is the biggest issue is that we react to
this as we go, Oh this is so gross. Why
would you throw a kid in therapy? And then every
once in a while there are kids who really need
they and really do benefits.
Speaker 6 (19:15):
Yeah, thank you, Garrett, Because one of the things that
one of the experts they interviewed in this article said,
you know, there's this movement of people who can't handle
their kid and they figure, well, I'm going to bring
the kids to a therapist, and they're going to fix
the kid.
Speaker 2 (19:26):
That is not a recipe for success, right.
Speaker 6 (19:29):
I had an argument with my actual therapist about my
son wanting to go to therapy, and he was like,
why would you be against that? And I said, my
fear is that he is going to lie to the
therapist and manipulate him, and that there's going to be
some kind of fifty one to fifty situation where he's
going to get taken away from me and assessed for
three to five days. Yeah, and that's not what's good
for him. I have a genuine fear of that. And
he's like, that would never happen, and he was probably right.
Speaker 2 (19:52):
It never.
Speaker 6 (19:52):
My son actually kind of grew out of this, like
the hormonal phase of middle school.
Speaker 2 (19:56):
Now he's back to the same kid. He comes up,
gives me hugs, we hang out, we laugh.
Speaker 1 (20:00):
To tell you what to do with your kid.
Speaker 2 (20:02):
The therapist, to be honest, I mean, that's part of
the reason why you go to though.
Speaker 1 (20:06):
Like he should just be listening. He shouldn't be telling
you what to do.
Speaker 6 (20:10):
Maybe and listen. Maybe there's therapists that are listening. Like, oh,
he was over the line. I'll say in his defense
is that we had a lot of history with this guy,
and we did kind of talk to him about this
as an issue. We came to him and said, like,
my wife was like, we need to take him to
a therapist.
Speaker 1 (20:24):
And I was like to tell you not to listen
to your therapist.
Speaker 6 (20:29):
You know what I like about our dynamic. I didn't
even think of that. I was like, no, no, let
me explain.
Speaker 2 (20:35):
I don't. I got to defend him.
Speaker 6 (20:36):
He's such a nice man who did so much for me.
Speaker 2 (20:40):
All Right, Justin has joined us.
Speaker 3 (20:42):
We talk about pasting stuff this mom slop video.
Speaker 6 (20:46):
Yes, scene, So this is her name. Let's see if
I get Maha Barnes. She's actually Maya. Well, she's from Poland,
so maybe I'm still wrong. You think you're always always wrong?
Close I'll say that you want silent. So her TikTok
(21:07):
and Instagram name is the Polish Mom, and.
Speaker 1 (21:09):
She in Polish is pronounced why like the why and yetti.
Speaker 2 (21:15):
Maya or Maya.
Speaker 6 (21:17):
Anyway, the point is she probably just easier to call
her the Polish Mom. She has twin year old twin
toddlers and they so she just basically posts herself what
she feeds them on the regular.
Speaker 2 (21:28):
And I would argue a.
Speaker 1 (21:29):
Lot of this, Maya, I can't do it.
Speaker 6 (21:34):
You do, Gary, You're so good at just moving forward.
And I don't know why I find such delight in her.
Just maya, maya, maya, maya makes me so happy that
I can't help but giggle inside. Anyway, So she put
like one of the video that went kind of viral
was she put some sausage that she grilled and then
(21:55):
seared some chicken breast, season them, put them in a
crock bot with some milk and some cheese and some
chicken broth. I just made like a kind of like
a redneck Alfredle or Midwestern Alfredo kind of sauce. It
was a creamy cheese sauce and fed it to her kids.
And she does this all the time, and people get
her a lot of guff for not like putting vegetables
and not feeding her kids healthy enough food.
Speaker 2 (22:13):
I watched a lot of her recipes. They are all delicious.
Speaker 6 (22:16):
I would argue, they were all things that every single
mom has given to us at some point in our life,
or some variation of that. There was only one thing
that stood out I saw when I was in air
mix waiting to come in here that she took a
chicken breast. She said, my family requested Mexican food. And
then one of the shots is for taking actual Colgate
toothpaste on a chicken breast and brushing it and then
rinsing that off. And I tried googling it, like, maybe
(22:39):
that's a hack I didn't know of, and literally the
AI in Google says there is no reference to putting
toothpaste on a chicken breast anywhere on the Internet.
Speaker 3 (22:46):
I vaguely recall, really my grandmother suggesting that toothpaste worked
as a meat tenderizer.
Speaker 6 (22:55):
Maybe that's it then, and that but you guys are
like dryer turkey for Thanksgiving, right, Oh.
Speaker 2 (23:00):
Don't trust me.
Speaker 3 (23:01):
I'm just saying I have this feeling there's a vague
being you could put, yes, I've heard that on it
and then for some reason, the same quality.
Speaker 1 (23:11):
Taste also would clean CDs, scratches off CDs because it's
slightly embraced, and it works on zits because it dries
them out.
Speaker 2 (23:20):
I didn't know that. What would that do to chicken?
It probably tried out.
Speaker 6 (23:24):
Maybe it gives that like a little bite to it
or something. But anyway, if you're looking for just some ideas.
The problem is she doesn't give you specific She cooks
like probably all of our moms did. If you had
a hardcore stay at home moms where it's just like
pouring in it's a lot. My mom would do this
all the time, whatever we had for dinner.
Speaker 1 (23:39):
If you cook my feel Yeah, did your grandmother have
chickens like live chickens?
Speaker 2 (23:45):
Not when I knew her?
Speaker 1 (23:46):
No, okay, Because there's a tip to battle chicken pox
foul pox. According to old timers, if you encounter the
smallpox virus with your chickens, you can treat it with toothpaste.
Simply rub the toothpaste on the dry black spots to
clear the symptoms.
Speaker 2 (24:05):
But it is still on your skin, not on the
chicken itself, Doctor Fall.
Speaker 3 (24:10):
This is on the chicken where there's dark I don't
think if there's dark spots on don't understand what chicken
pox are.
Speaker 2 (24:16):
I'm not eating. I think chicken pox are when you
get pox.
Speaker 1 (24:18):
From no where do you think chicken pox come from chicken?
Chicken get the pox and then.
Speaker 2 (24:23):
They give it. It's not the bird flows her.
Speaker 6 (24:30):
Whatever you do, whatever she says things louder, it's still legal.
Speaker 2 (24:35):
Well, she must mean it. She's very passionate about it.
Speaker 1 (24:38):
Foul Pox is a viral disease that affects chickens, turkeys, quail, canaries, pigeons,
and other birds worldwide.
Speaker 2 (24:45):
That's the best poulbox. That's not chicken pox.
Speaker 1 (24:50):
No, but I'm saying that if your chickens, how fout fox,
you rub the toothpaste.
Speaker 6 (24:57):
We both regret bringing up this toothpaste thing, and so
I happy I did at the same time.
Speaker 2 (25:04):
That's right now.
Speaker 6 (25:05):
What I wanted to ask you guys, is that you
got nothing for hope.
Speaker 1 (25:13):
Sweaty was the last time?
Speaker 2 (25:16):
That was the last time? Okay, my bad.
Speaker 1 (25:18):
So anyway, low income meal mom, toothpaste chicken.
Speaker 6 (25:22):
Yarry's probably going to be toothfished chicken he's got Yeah,
that's probably yeah, that's her. So, uh, you're probably gonna
beat us in this. But I thought it would be
fun to kind of go around the room and say
the thing that your mom made that when you were
a kid, that you both loved, and then the thing
that you despise.
Speaker 2 (25:38):
So mine.
Speaker 6 (25:39):
I have a Portuguese step mom who made the best
lasagna I still have ever had in my life. She
didn't know it was my favorite, which I think was
a mistake of mine until I was well into my
mid to late thirties. And now every time I come home,
I get to have the delicious lasagna. So if you're
out there and you haven't told your mom this dish,
definitely tell her because you get it more often.
Speaker 2 (25:57):
They she loves that. Everybody loves it.
Speaker 6 (25:59):
But she would make a fried chicken that was like
black like it didn't there wasn't a lot of breading
on it or something, and it was disgusting. And I
would always just buy a pizza with my paper.
Speaker 3 (26:08):
Out money, homemade mac and cheese from scratch, like from scratch,
with actual macaroni, not elbows.
Speaker 2 (26:14):
The bread crumbs. No, that was too much. It's all
cheese and stuff.
Speaker 3 (26:19):
The worst thing was always cream of wheat or some
sort of hot mushy mom slopping oatmeal.
Speaker 2 (26:26):
I could I could hide with some good.
Speaker 3 (26:28):
Was cream and wheat for breakfast or was it a
side as well? It was all whatever. If you were hungry,
cream awaight, a bowl of cream.
Speaker 2 (26:34):
That's the quick. That's the quick solution.
Speaker 6 (26:36):
This mom that we're talking about, she said her kids
needed to wanted McDonald's, but she was on a budget,
so she like weirdly enough, she boiled some frozen chicken
tenders and then put them in an air fryer. Maybe
that's toothpaste on a chicken thing. Made her own French
fries and cut up some apples and the kids devoured it.
Speaker 1 (26:53):
But it was cream of wheat that was awful.
Speaker 2 (26:55):
How about you, Shannon, did you have a favorite or
the least favorite?
Speaker 1 (26:58):
My mom made great meatballs, and uh, my least favorite
would be uh stroganof, which was my brother's favorite.
Speaker 2 (27:07):
Really, I like a good strogan off. Yeah, maybe that's
just a guy thing.
Speaker 1 (27:13):
It looked weird to me. It always looked very gray.
Speaker 2 (27:16):
Yeah, I'll tell you know. You're getting it right, is
that right? Yeah?
Speaker 1 (27:22):
And I never saw like where the meat came from.
Speaker 6 (27:24):
I don't know, do you have the recipe to the
meatballs into your maca cheese or do you think it's
a thing that because she just felt it like there
is no way to get it right.
Speaker 2 (27:31):
How about your Shannon, did your have a recipe? I
don't know.
Speaker 1 (27:34):
She may still have that that meatball recipe somewhere. They
were good. Those were good balls. Maya maya, maya. Yeah,
like in yetti yet yet? Yeah, Maya Maya ya Maya.
I No, not Maya, because that's a long.
Speaker 6 (27:51):
Why when we come back the origin of chicken pops.
Speaker 1 (27:55):
Yeah, Maya, you're saying the same thing. I'm Maya is
different from Maya.
Speaker 2 (28:01):
Deb You might just want to come.
Speaker 1 (28:03):
You don't see the difference, Jon.
Speaker 2 (28:04):
You might have to just go Yeah, Jacob, things see
the difference.
Speaker 1 (28:09):
Right, It's two different names.
Speaker 6 (28:11):
Maya, Maya, Maya, Jacob.
Speaker 1 (28:15):
Save us, Maya, Come on, Jacob, Maya, Maya Maya.
Speaker 3 (28:24):
You've been listening to The Gary and Shannon Show, you
can always hear us live on kf I AM six
forty nine am to one pm every Monday through Friday,
and anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app