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
A M six forty, the Gary and Shannon Show on
demand on the iHeartRadio A.
Speaker 2 (00:07):
Richard is in the house. Richard has arrived. Richard is
in the house.
Speaker 1 (00:10):
Oh yeah, what happened with him? He's not Richard until after?
Oh gosh, I keep forgetting he had a flat tire. Yeah,
and he waited for triple A. Well you you haven't
taught him how to change it. I would have, but
it would have been over the phone. It would have
been a mess.
Speaker 3 (00:26):
I feel like this is a dereliction of duty.
Speaker 2 (00:28):
I did actually think about I could drive to where
he was and help him with it. Right, No, I
don't want to go down free wy. I mean, I
like him, but he.
Speaker 3 (00:35):
Should know how to change his own tire. You should have.
Don't look at me, Jacob. Do you know how to
change your tire?
Speaker 4 (00:44):
Yep?
Speaker 2 (00:44):
And I've done it for other people too, Okay, but
you didn't do it for Richie.
Speaker 3 (00:48):
Ritchie. We need to get you into our autoshop program.
Speaker 4 (00:51):
You know, my dad has told me so many times, Richie,
pay attention. One day you're gonna need it. And here
we are, here, we are you know what did work?
Speaker 1 (01:00):
Gary?
Speaker 2 (01:01):
A leg?
Speaker 4 (01:02):
My leg? Yeah?
Speaker 2 (01:03):
Yeah, I told him to show some leg and see
if someone stopped to help him.
Speaker 3 (01:06):
That's funny.
Speaker 4 (01:07):
I was on the one to seventy losing my mind.
Speaker 1 (01:10):
Yeah, I'd say show someone that your abs.
Speaker 2 (01:13):
Oh, you have good abs.
Speaker 4 (01:15):
Thanks, You're welcome.
Speaker 3 (01:17):
I can't say that to you.
Speaker 4 (01:19):
To me, Yeah, because he doesn't have any.
Speaker 3 (01:21):
I don't know. I don't know.
Speaker 1 (01:23):
I've never seen them. I've seen yours in pictures. You
tend to show him off a little bit more than
I do. A bunch of stuff going on today. Campaign
is a big deal.
Speaker 2 (01:32):
We're still less than two weeks again from the election,
and a lot has been said about this being closing
argument time, that both candidates are giving their closing arguments
about why they should be the next president of these
United States.
Speaker 1 (01:46):
The whole Menendez saga has a new wrinkle. Now there's
a report that that letter that Eric Menendez wrote his
cousin eight months before they slaughtered their parents and their home,
that it was a fraud. Maybe, And it's classic Leslie Abramson,
like she's known for just making up evidence. Oh.
Speaker 2 (02:07):
Also, the breaking news campaign wise is that Beyonce is
expected to show up at an event tomorrow with Kamala Harris,
and if that's the closing argument, she's in bad shape.
Speaker 4 (02:18):
It is not good.
Speaker 2 (02:19):
Last night was this big town hall meeting, a town
hall event, I guess you'd call it on CNN, and
it actually there were a few things that I thought
she did well and then other things that she did
really really awful on.
Speaker 1 (02:33):
I don't know what people do well or what they
do awful on.
Speaker 3 (02:37):
Who the hell am I to judge? But I know
the way I feel.
Speaker 1 (02:41):
And I said something yesterday and I was able to
kind of crystallize my thought on it this morning reading this.
Speaker 3 (02:47):
Article in the BBC.
Speaker 1 (02:49):
Why Harris moved from joy to calling Trump a fascist
is the headline yesterday, I said, the whole Michelle Obama line.
When they go low, we go high. I think resonates
with Democrats. I think it resonates with level headed people,
some of the independent voters.
Speaker 3 (03:06):
They like that kind of talk.
Speaker 1 (03:08):
And the Joy thing was working for Kamala, the movie
that they put on, you know, relentless positivity and looking
forward and having optimism for the country.
Speaker 2 (03:20):
Those joyful warriors worked.
Speaker 3 (03:23):
That really worked.
Speaker 1 (03:24):
And yesterday when she went out in front of the
Naval Observatory, looking very presidential with the flag and the
dark dour suit, talking about Trump being a fascist and
highlighting all that.
Speaker 3 (03:37):
It did not work. And that's my feeling.
Speaker 1 (03:40):
I thought it worked for her, the rollout, the joyful thing,
the positivity, the optimism for the country as opposed to
the contrast of doom and gloom with Trump. Well, now
she's waded into the doom in gloom, and.
Speaker 3 (03:55):
I don't think it's a good look.
Speaker 2 (03:56):
It's almost like she took the bait, yeah, and and
didn't just allow other people to do it. Allow John
Kelly to do that. Allow these other people, these other
former cabinet members of his or close associates that were
in the Trump administration. They've already said they're not going
to vote for you. Let them do that and you
stick to a positive message. I think it would have
been a way to do it.
Speaker 4 (04:17):
But last night, you think Donald Trump is a fascist?
Speaker 2 (04:20):
Yes, I do, Yes, I do. I mean she just
that was she just said that, he said that he's
a fascist. She also went on to say they.
Speaker 5 (04:28):
Also care about our democracy and not having a president
of the United States who admires dictators and as a fascist.
Speaker 1 (04:35):
Was anybody shocked when you heard John Kelly's comments that
Trump said that Hitler did some good things and that
his dictators were loyal to him or his lieutenants were
loyal to him. Was anybody shocked? Did that change anybody's
opinion of Donald Trump?
Speaker 4 (04:51):
And that's talking.
Speaker 1 (04:52):
About the BBC talked to a swing voter and independent
twenty years old from Nebraska, Devin Devi Alasco, and she says,
when these reports came out, I wasn't shocked.
Speaker 3 (05:05):
It didn't change much.
Speaker 1 (05:07):
It was clear that Kamala Harris wanted to call attention
to John Kelly's comments. Maybe she thought she'd get more
viewership in the middle of a day on CNN than
his comments would get playing all through social media and
the news for the entire cycle.
Speaker 3 (05:22):
I don't really understand.
Speaker 1 (05:23):
That thought process, but she wanted to highlight that and
come out and say that. And then the takeaway was yeah,
so what asked an answered, We already we know who
that guy is.
Speaker 2 (05:34):
Last night at this town hall meeting, she talked about
the economy, she talked about immigration. I was gonna say
the one thing that I thought she did well was
that she came across. She seems like a likable person
in that she could go into a room, She's got enthusiasm,
she has a nice aura about her. None of that
stuff is presidential. None of that stuff elevates you to
(05:57):
the level of deserving the highest office in our land.
And when asked if there's any mistake, I mean, show
me a little bit of humanity here. Is there something
you can point to in your life, political life, or
in your life in the last four years that you
think is a mistake that you have learned from.
Speaker 5 (06:18):
I mean, I've made many mistakes, and they range from
you know, if you've ever parented a child, you know
you make lots.
Speaker 2 (06:28):
Of mistakes too.
Speaker 5 (06:31):
In my role as vice president, I mean, I've probably
worked very hard at making sure that I am well
versed on issues, and I think that is very important.
It's a mistake not to be well versed on an
issue and feel compelled to answer a question.
Speaker 2 (06:48):
A mistake is that I study too hard sometimes.
Speaker 1 (06:52):
Listen, but she's not well versed on the issue exactly.
That's I think that she was. Is there a world
in which she was saying, there's a saying like, sometimes
I'm not versed enough on the issues and I and
I say, and I sound stupid, and I wish I
sounded better.
Speaker 2 (07:09):
I'll say I do that every day.
Speaker 1 (07:12):
Not for four hours, no, but I mean I can
say every day something will come up in the show
where I wish I knew more about that topic.
Speaker 2 (07:22):
Yeah, but you're also not the vice president of the
United States. You don't have access to those those high
level I have the Google. Yeah, but I mean I'm
talking like foreign relations, international conflict.
Speaker 3 (07:38):
I wish I was more well read on everything.
Speaker 1 (07:42):
She could have said that, but she couldn't say that,
because then you're Sarah Palin and you don't read anything.
I think it's a hard that's a hard question to
answer for somebody running for president.
Speaker 3 (07:51):
On the one you don't want to show any sort.
Speaker 2 (07:53):
Of you don't want to show weakness. But on the
one hand, you've got Donald Trump, who would who would
answer that question very similar and just say I don't
make mistakes, right, whatever you think, I don't.
Speaker 1 (08:02):
Make mistakes, which is delusional if she said that.
Speaker 2 (08:05):
Right, But it's also I mean, her thing about oh,
it's a struggle for me to find out what kind
of mistakes I've made in my life.
Speaker 4 (08:10):
That's ridiculous.
Speaker 2 (08:10):
There's a there's should be a list of questions that
you know you're going to get as a presidential candidate.
Speaker 4 (08:16):
That the hard ones.
Speaker 2 (08:18):
What mistake would you make or what mistake.
Speaker 4 (08:20):
Have you made? Yeah?
Speaker 2 (08:21):
What about the question of what conflict or what disagreement
have you ever had with the president or what would
you change about the Biden policies as on Ora Harris presidency?
And she just looks off into space. This was on
the view last week. She didn't have an answer to it.
Those are simple, Listen, it may not be that.
Speaker 1 (08:38):
One poetic or that one you can you can get
ready for. There's a way to pussyfoot around that answer
without throwing him under the bus. But no, No, that
question is can mean what mistake have you made that
you've learned from? That's a tough one. I mean what
if I asked you that right now? What mistake have
you made that you've learned from?
Speaker 2 (08:57):
I have not been as good a friend to people
in my life, and that is a regret that I have.
Speaker 4 (09:04):
I think that's a mistake that I've made.
Speaker 3 (09:05):
Really, yeah, I think.
Speaker 1 (09:07):
You're a great friend. Well that's because except for some
responsive what I'm not unresponsive last night.
Speaker 2 (09:17):
David Axelrod, Dana Bash, Governor Asa Hutchinson, a never Trump Republican,
they all said she did not close the deal.
Speaker 4 (09:26):
This was David Axelrod. Her habit is to kind of
go to word salad city.
Speaker 2 (09:30):
Word, salad city. That's David Axelrod, that's the Obama right
hand guy. And he said she wasn't answering questions. I
mean not good, not good. Word salad city. Though that's good.
Speaker 1 (09:44):
I like that he added city on it just adds
a little something extra. I do want to say this.
This was just announced. George Gascon will announce his decision
on the Menendez brothers at one today.
Speaker 4 (09:57):
An announcement announcement.
Speaker 3 (09:58):
News conference at one thirty.
Speaker 1 (10:00):
My mom says her ninety two year old neighbor sal
had a tire blowout and a woman stopped on the
highway and changed his spare to his spare.
Speaker 3 (10:12):
The woman.
Speaker 4 (10:14):
Women can do that, you know.
Speaker 2 (10:15):
I don't know if you know that women can also
change tires.
Speaker 1 (10:18):
She was a manager of a company and they were
talking and he said his grandson needed a job. The
grandson went through the interview process and got the job.
That's what a crazy story see, Richie, this is what
happens when you know.
Speaker 2 (10:32):
You get a tire on the one seventy Yeah, somebody's
yelling at me. Are you Gary, all four of my
daughters you know how to change the tire on a
car when it goes flat? Okay, let me a couple
just let me let me clarify here. Richie's not my son.
I'm your work son, well kind of, but Richie's not
my son. Jacob's mind, I'll claim Jack, both my son
(10:56):
and daughter do know how to change tires. I don't
know if I would want my daughter to change the tire.
On the side of the.
Speaker 1 (11:02):
Friend, in defense of Richie's father, he did try to
tease Richie.
Speaker 4 (11:07):
Yeah, who has time? You know? Who has time? Also,
what is triple A for? Why am I paying for it? Hello?
Speaker 1 (11:14):
A dead battery? It's really good. Therefore, lock your keys
in your car or something like that. That's just dumb. Don't
call them for that? Why not because you're an idiot?
Speaker 2 (11:24):
Well I know that, But you'd rather be an idiot
to a stranger than to tell your friend or somebody
that wouldn't you?
Speaker 3 (11:30):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (11:31):
You don't even talk to your friends, So why is
that some some.
Speaker 4 (11:35):
Friends, all of them.
Speaker 2 (11:36):
Kim Jong un has sent thousands of soldiers and could
send as much as twelve thousand soldiers. We have been saying, yeah,
that's fine, but they means they're fair game if they're
out on the battlefield in Ukraine.
Speaker 6 (11:50):
I can tell you one thing though, if they do
deploy to fight against Ukraine, they're fair game.
Speaker 4 (11:56):
They're fair targets.
Speaker 2 (11:57):
That's John Kirby, the spokesman for the National Secuitity Council
at the White House. Secretary Defense Lloyd Austin.
Speaker 6 (12:03):
Certainly there is a strengthen relationship, for lack of a
better term, between Russia and DPRK. You've seen DPRK provide
arms and munitions to Russia, and this is a next step.
Is an indication that he may be even in more
(12:24):
trouble than most people realize.
Speaker 2 (12:26):
The way the South Koreans say this is going is
that North Koreans are being disguised as Russian How do
you do that? And acting acting under the Kremlin's command.
South Korea's defense minister has been telling its lawmakers that
he suggested Kim Jong un is selling North Korean soldiers
as cannon fodder mercenary.
Speaker 1 (12:47):
So integrating North Korean soldiers with Russian soldiers is just
as complicated as it sounds, just with the language barrier alone.
But the prospect of North Korea's inexperienced military bringing back
critical battleground experience as worrying the South obviously just a better.
Speaker 2 (13:06):
Way to train for the game than to get into
the game. Yeah, I mean, yeah, that's what their worry is.
By the way, have you followed the trash balloon story
out of North Korea? No, So they've been sending balloons
carrying trash and human waste over the border into South Korea.
One of those trash balloons landed inside the South Korean
(13:30):
presidential compound in Seoul today. South Korean Presidential Security Service
identified trash that blew up in the air and fell
in the office compound early this morning. They said they
collected the fallen objects after confirming they did not contain
contain any danger or contagiousness. The service is monitoring the
(13:51):
situation with the Joint chiefs of Staff at South Korea.
Speaker 1 (13:54):
We've got an AI roundup for you. Did AI have
anything to do with the teenagers? A teenager that was
seemingly addicted to a relationship with an AI chat bought
also radio station, replacing journalists with a I, oh, bring
it on, bring it on, do not bring it on.
(14:15):
The good news is I would never listen to this show.
Speaker 4 (14:17):
It's in Poland, isn't it.
Speaker 3 (14:19):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (14:19):
Okay.
Speaker 4 (14:22):
Oh and.
Speaker 2 (14:24):
A family member, a GAS family member is entering a
new chapter in life. Oh, we'll talk about that with
the change or maybe I don't know what prompts it. Okay,
a family member moving on to a new chapter in life.
Speaker 7 (14:40):
Hey, guys, truck or Jesse. After thirty one and a
half years, today's my last day. I'm done. I'm done.
I'm gonna go work for the higher Patrol right there
in Banning. If I'm wrong on the westbound ten, I'm
getting a job expecting the trucks and scales. But the
reason for this call is you guys filled my days up.
Speaker 6 (14:57):
I'd work five am.
Speaker 7 (14:58):
To seven pm, and I listened to guys every day
for the for whatever eight nine years you guys have
been around.
Speaker 6 (15:03):
I want to say thank you.
Speaker 7 (15:04):
You guys got me to hundreds of thousands of miles,
and you guys are awesome, awesome, awesome.
Speaker 6 (15:08):
I want to thank you guys.
Speaker 1 (15:09):
A lot.
Speaker 7 (15:09):
You guys really got me through a lot of many
miles many days. You guys are funny. You guys have
the best show on kfive. Been listening to camfive for
a long time, thirty one years and the camfi app
I was able to hear you guys all the time.
So thank you guys, thank you, thank you Ki, thank
you enough. You guys have a great show.
Speaker 5 (15:27):
Man.
Speaker 1 (15:27):
Take care.
Speaker 4 (15:28):
Thank you Jesse. That's fair.
Speaker 1 (15:30):
That was really sweet. Thanks Jesse, and congratulations.
Speaker 2 (15:33):
Good luck on your your next endeavor.
Speaker 3 (15:35):
We'll be out at Morongo this weekend.
Speaker 2 (15:37):
Yeah, for Conway's party.
Speaker 3 (15:40):
What could go wrong?
Speaker 1 (15:42):
I'm sure the first time we went to Conways party,
you put on a dress and gave him a lap dance.
Speaker 2 (15:46):
The second time, it was the second time because the
first time there was well, i've the first time because
there was a Marilyn Monroe impersonator there that you ripped on.
Speaker 4 (15:58):
I did not say.
Speaker 2 (16:00):
Us questioned what was going on below.
Speaker 3 (16:03):
That dress on the microphone.
Speaker 2 (16:06):
Yeah, back in the old days when you could do
things like that.
Speaker 3 (16:12):
AI if there is a.
Speaker 1 (16:16):
Start pulling the plug on this stuff. Fourteen year old
ninth grader from Orlando. His name is Suell Sewell Setzer,
and he spent months talking to chatbots on character dot ai.
This is a role playing app that allows users to
create their own AI characters or chat with characters created
(16:36):
by others.
Speaker 3 (16:37):
What could go wrong?
Speaker 2 (16:38):
Apparently his favorite was a chatbot named after Dinaristergarian, one
of the characters from Game of Thron.
Speaker 3 (16:47):
You're going to get a lot of heat for that, yep.
Speaker 2 (16:51):
This fourteen year old kid, a ninth grader from Orlando, Florida,
had spent months talking to Danny. Is the way that
he would refer to her in shorthand, and he wrote
things like he wrote in his journal once, I like
staying in my room so much because I start to
detach from this reality. And I also feel more at peace,
more connected with Danny, and much more in love with her,
(17:13):
and just happier.
Speaker 1 (17:15):
He texted Danny constantly, updating Danny dozens of times a
day on his life, engaging in long role playing dialogues.
Some of their chats got romantic or sexual, but other
times Danny just acted like a friend, a judgment free
sounding board he could count on to listen supportively and
give good advice. Rarely broke character, always texted back, even
(17:38):
though there was a message displayed above all of their
chats that said everything characters say is made up.
Speaker 3 (17:47):
His parents and friends had no idea about this.
Speaker 2 (17:49):
Yeah, he preferred talking about his problems with Danny this
AI chatbot, and in one of the conversations, said that
he hated himself, that he felt empty, that he felt exhausted,
and confessed to her that he was having thoughts of suicide.
He wrote, I think about killing myself sometimes. The Danny
(18:09):
chatbot in italics responds with my eyes narrow, my face hardens,
my voice is a dangerous whisper. Now again, that's a
talis that's like stage directions in a play, and then writes,
and why the hell would you do something like that?
He says, so I can be free, she says, free
from what he says, from the world, from myself. She says,
(18:32):
don't talk like that. I won't let you hurt yourself
or leave me if I would die if I lost you,
And he says, then maybe we can die together and
be free together.
Speaker 1 (18:41):
So on the night of February twenty eighth, in the
bathroom of his mom's house, he tells her Danny that
he loved her and that he would soon come home
to her. She replies, please come home to me as
soon as possible, my love. He says, what if I
told you I could come home right now? And she said,
please do, my sweet king. He put down his phone,
(19:03):
picked up his stepfather's forty five, and pulled the trigger.
Speaker 2 (19:07):
The guy who wrote this article for The Washington Post
said AI companionship apps can provide harmless entertainment or even
offer limited forms of emotional support.
Speaker 3 (19:18):
It is booming. It is a booming industry.
Speaker 4 (19:20):
Well.
Speaker 2 (19:20):
He said that as part of a story he had
a mostly positive experience. He tried making AI friends for
a column earlier in the year and interviewed users of
those apps who praised their benefits. Yeah, because you're talking
with stable people and his own experience. He's doing it
for a job and knows that there's a line that
(19:41):
has to be set up. But if you're a fourteen
year old kid who has emotional problems diagnosed with Aspergers,
has a series of other things, including anxiety, that have
been diagnosed in him, this is a weirdly dangerous spiral
that you get into.
Speaker 1 (19:59):
One of the founder of character dot a I said
it's going to be super super helpful to a lot
of people who are lonely or depressed, to which I say,
it's going to be the most dangerous to your point,
to those who are lonely or depressed.
Speaker 3 (20:12):
Because they're going to get hooked on this, even if.
Speaker 1 (20:14):
You're not lonely or depressed, get hooked on a chatbot.
Speaker 4 (20:19):
What's what's the what's the happy end of that?
Speaker 3 (20:22):
I don't I don't know. Yeah, what's your endgame.
Speaker 2 (20:26):
That you withdraw so the rest of sociology evolve?
Speaker 4 (20:31):
Yeah, I mean there's that.
Speaker 3 (20:33):
And that's the thing. That's what happened with this kid.
Speaker 1 (20:35):
He lost interest in everything that excited him, Formula one racing,
playing Fortnite or whatever. All he did was talk to
Danny the chatbot.
Speaker 2 (20:46):
It's weird to see these responses from this chatbot and
not think that they were written by a human.
Speaker 1 (20:52):
The other thing, though, is is this is a fourteen
year old. And I'm not putting blame on anyone. I'll
just say this is a fourteen year old who withdrew
from all of his activities, started slipping in school, would
get home, go right to his room to talk on
his phone with his chatbot all night and in the
part anything notice didn't know it. His mother, by the way,
has filed a lawsuit against Character dot Ai, accusing the
(21:14):
company being responsible for his death. Do you have anything
from nineteen eighty nine that you just are going to
stumble upon?
Speaker 2 (21:21):
Probably a T shirt or something like that. I don't
know you.
Speaker 3 (21:23):
Have T shirts from nineteen eighty nine?
Speaker 2 (21:25):
I was looking. I have a T shirt that I
wore to the hospital after both of my kids were born.
Speaker 3 (21:33):
Okay, that was nineties.
Speaker 2 (21:36):
So that's as probably as old as I get in
terms of clothing.
Speaker 3 (21:39):
Are you keeping it for when your grandkids are born?
Speaker 4 (21:42):
I don't know. I don't know why guys keep T shirts.
Speaker 3 (21:45):
Well, that's sentimental, that's that one is.
Speaker 4 (21:48):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (21:51):
Remember when you kept your ex girlfriend's quilt that her
mother made.
Speaker 4 (21:56):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (21:57):
Is it because you had a nostalgia for her mind
or for her?
Speaker 4 (22:01):
I don't.
Speaker 2 (22:02):
I don't know how to answer that is because it
was a nice gift.
Speaker 3 (22:05):
You can't answer that.
Speaker 4 (22:07):
There's no good way.
Speaker 2 (22:08):
Let's not be too happy about the people who listened
to us for eight or nine years.
Speaker 4 (22:12):
And here's my message.
Speaker 2 (22:13):
Yeah, here come for about the last oh, I don't know,
eight or nine years, I've been listening to and you
irritate the f out.
Speaker 3 (22:19):
Of me, Then stop listening.
Speaker 1 (22:23):
Why do you hate yourself? You listen to a show
you hate and I tell you all the time, stop listening.
Speaker 4 (22:33):
Her name is Denarius Targarian.
Speaker 3 (22:36):
I knew that.
Speaker 1 (22:36):
Come on, dude, I have a disappointed her name. She
is the the I never wagon mother, the mother of dragons,
dragon lady that count.
Speaker 3 (22:50):
She's very pretty.
Speaker 2 (22:52):
She was the blonde who's not really a blonde.
Speaker 1 (22:54):
Yes. Well, there is the Dodgers Yankees World on deck,
and one fan named David Campbell is reminiscing about the
last time he saw a Dodgers Yankees World Series back
in nineteen eighty one. He still has his ticket from
Game five. He was thirty one at the time. A
(23:15):
friend got two seats in the outfield bleachers four fifteen
dollars a piece.
Speaker 4 (23:21):
That's great.
Speaker 3 (23:22):
It's funny.
Speaker 1 (23:22):
I remember talking to my uncle God rest his soul,
about when he would go to the Super Bowl, like
in eighty four or whatever, and how.
Speaker 3 (23:29):
He got his super.
Speaker 1 (23:30):
Bowl ticket on the plane for like a couple hundred bucks.
You know, it's just the sports ticket prices have blossomed
like nothing else over the years.
Speaker 2 (23:42):
My god, I mean, you can't. That fifteen dollars ticket
from nineteen eighty one is what thirteen hundred dollars today.
I think was that they were talking about the cheapest
resold tickets would be about thirteen hundred bucks. The other
thing is, whoever wins Taylor Trammell's gonna get a World
Series ring regardless of who wins. First round pick in
(24:05):
the twenty sixteen MLB draft spent five games each with
the Dodgers and the Yankees this year. Back in April,
he was I guess he did spring training with the Mariners,
but then they they sent him off. Dodgers swoop in
pick him up. He comes in as a utility outfielder basically.
I think he's got six plate appearances total. Then he
(24:27):
does the Dodgers get rid of him, He gets picked
up by the Yankees. The Yankees put him in five games,
he has a couple of plate appearances with them, and
then spends the rest of the season down in Triple
A where he's with. I think it's the wilkes Bury
Scranton Wilkesbury rail Riders, the Triple A team for the Yankees.
But whoever wins because he was a member of both teams,
(24:52):
he has the option or they have the option of
giving him a World Series ring.
Speaker 1 (24:56):
The cheapest ticket for Game six, which would be the
Dodgers back at home, assuming the Dodgers are up and
can close it out in Game six, the cheapest ticket
is fourteen hundred and fifty six dollars.
Speaker 2 (25:13):
And that is it's a Friday night game.
Speaker 4 (25:16):
I believe.
Speaker 2 (25:16):
Yeah, it's a Friday night game. It would be like
you said, Game six, Fernando's birthday, Like, there's a lot
going on in that game if it goes to six games.
Speaker 3 (25:24):
And that's top deck, worst seat in the house.
Speaker 2 (25:28):
The nice thing is there's no obstructed views that I
know of at Dodgers Stadium, So even a bad seat
is going to be a great seat.
Speaker 3 (25:35):
No, No, they're bad seats.
Speaker 4 (25:37):
There are.
Speaker 3 (25:37):
Yeah, I've sat in Glendale a couple of times. All right,
we will what are we doing.
Speaker 2 (25:48):
The Eric and Lyleman Indez when we come back. You've
been listening to The Gary and Shannon Show. You can
always hear us live on KFI AM six forty nine
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