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 apps.
Speaker 2 (00:07):
We're going to break in real quick, getting an update
from Ventura County Fire right now about the Mountain fire
that started near.
Speaker 3 (00:14):
Restraining every property and do an analysis on every outbuilding
and every home and give us a report back on that.
Speaker 1 (00:20):
That is going to take some time.
Speaker 3 (00:22):
We want to do it right the first time and
make notifications to the property owners that their property has
been damaged or destroyed. So please hang with us as
we are challenged with the time it takes to go
door to door with ten teams. We're going to do
it as quickly and efficiently as possible. With that, we're
going to go through an operational briefing. We're then going
to get a weather update. We're then going to listen
to some information on fire behavior. We're talked to the
(00:45):
sheriff and then with our IC and then finishing up
with our fire chief and then we'll open up to
questions and with that we'll go with operations.
Speaker 1 (00:56):
This is Captain Trevor John.
Speaker 4 (00:58):
Good morning everybody. My name is Trevor John, Captain with
the Ventura County Fire Department in one of the operations
Section chiefs here on the Mountain Incident. As you all
are well aware, at nine o'clock approximately yesterday morning, resources
responded to a wildland fire that is now the Mountain Incident,
that was north of the Highway one eighteen due to
the Santa Ana wind event impacting southern California. Currently, the
(01:20):
fire grew rapidly to that number that our PIO just
spoke about, over fourteen thousand acres now on the landscape.
Firefighters again were initially engaged in structure defense, life safety
operations and performing nothing short of heroic actions across the incident.
Fire continued to progress to the southwest throughout yesterday and
in the last night. Again we had resources engaged throughout
(01:43):
the evening. Last night we had water dropping helicopters over
the fire the entire evening, which is irregular for any
type of wildland incident, but we were able to capture
that resources are actively engaged around the incident at this
current time. Due to the influx of resources in the incident,
we've built a more robust incident management structure out there. Operationally,
(02:05):
resources are engaged, engines cruise dozers. We currently have aerial
supervision over the fire using a rotor wing and assessing
for fixed wing operations to slow the spread of the fire.
Crews are re evaluating and going back through areas where
the fires already passed and making sure that we've done
a good assessment and we're checking on everybody and we're
going to have an active presence in there for days
(02:27):
to come. Our priority right now on the fire is
the northeast corner of the fire due to the alignment
with slope, topography and other factors that influence fire behavior,
fires continuing to back to the east or progress along
the Highway one eighteen corridor back towards the city of
moor Park again north of Highway one eighteen. Fixed wing resources,
(02:49):
adequate overhead hotshot crews, hand crewise, bulldozers. Everything's currently engaged
in there. We've got more resources in coming, so we'll
look to institute them into our plan again. We got
the right people in the right places. We believe we've
ordered appropriately and are managing every aspect of this incident operationally,
coordinating with all of our stakeholders. Due to the damages
(03:11):
to structures, residences, infrastructure, power, electrical, you name it. Firefighters
are dealing it with out there on the ground. With that,
that concludes the operational update.
Speaker 1 (03:21):
Thank you.
Speaker 5 (03:27):
Good morning, Rich Thompson, meteorologists with the National Weather Service
office out of Los Angeles, ox nart Weatherwise, when this
fire broke out yesterday morning, the area was under what
was called a particularly Dangerous Situation Red flag warning or
a PDS red flag warning, which for us in the
National Weather Service means a very extreme red flag condition
with really really strong winds, very low er h and
(03:49):
very critical fuels. So when this fire broke out, we
are under a PDS red flag warning. Now by this morning,
those conditions have moderated a little bit, so now we
just have a normal red flag warning in effect for
the area, and that red flag warning is an effect
for the.
Speaker 1 (04:04):
Fire until six o'clock this evening.
Speaker 5 (04:06):
That means we expect san Ana Wins is gusting from
the northeast at about twenty five to thirty five miles
per hour through the afternoon hours, along with humidity dropped
down to around ten to fifteen percent. Fortunately, by midlate afternoon,
we expect those sant Ana Wins to diminish and strength
and actually maybe get a week westerly wind moving across.
Speaker 1 (04:25):
Parts of the fire.
Speaker 5 (04:25):
So therefore, by six o'clock this evening, we expect those
red flag conditions to end across area. Hence, the red
flag warn will be expiring at six o'clock this evening
for this area of Intra County. Then going into night
and tomorrow, we expect tonight and tomorrow morning's to very
very light northeasterly wind across the fire with a kind
of a week westerly.
Speaker 1 (04:43):
Wind tomorrow afternoon.
Speaker 5 (04:44):
But the conditions stay saying still very dry. Humidity is
generally probably ten to fifteen to twenty percent range.
Speaker 1 (04:51):
But again, the red flag warning will.
Speaker 5 (04:52):
Be an effect for this area until six o'clocks evening.
Then those San Ana wins will diminishing strength and we'll
just kind of have a typical week off shore Wednesday
night week sea breeze is in the afternoon.
Speaker 1 (05:02):
For the weekend. He sounded like a weather guy.
Speaker 6 (05:09):
Good morning, Drew Smith, Los Angeles County Fire Department fire
behavior analysts, and I just wanted to compliment what Operations
Section chief has talked about and also our incident meteorologists
on the why behind fire behavior and the environmental recipe
that it's taken to.
Speaker 1 (05:26):
Cause this fire.
Speaker 6 (05:27):
So as we know that we're coming off of two
years of above average rainfall which gives us a very
robust grass component, and will those fine fuels that are
receptive to warm, dry, windy supports the right recipe to
promote large fire growth when we have high winds. So
as a weather service, with Rich talked about our red flag,
(05:48):
red flags mean that we have that warm, dry, windy
and we have a receptive fuel bed with spotting that
gives us at exponential fire growth. So when we have
those environmental recipe, if you will to promote this, it's
because of the receptive fuel bed, the ember cast. It
can transfer those embers up to three miles and give
(06:10):
us that large fire growth complementing operations, And what does
it mean on the landscape is when you have high winds,
it challenges our tactle opportunities to engage in fire. So
when we have live fuel moistures through seasonal drying that
are at sixty percent, which is critical, we have residency
time of those fuels as they burn to get in
(06:31):
that convective wind column transport those embers down range makes
it very challenging for our firefighters to combat these fires.
These fires when we're on our high risk days with
sand and winds are different from when we have our
fires during the summer that are not in a wind
dominated fire environment. So that's what gives us this fire
(06:52):
during the fall when we have red flags very challenging,
challenging times for your firefighters for the light safety, the
structured defense mission, and containing those fires across topography.
Speaker 1 (07:06):
Thank you.
Speaker 2 (07:07):
You're listening to an update on the Mountain Fire in
Ventura County at fourteen thousand, five hundred acres.
Speaker 7 (07:13):
Good morning, I'm Sheriff Jim Freyhoff. Thank you for being
here today. First, I want to take a moment to
share our thoughts in prayers for all those in our
community who have been impacted by these devastating fires, particularly
those who have lost their homes. We know this is
a painful time and our hearts go out to each
and every one of you. The fire danger remains extremely high.
(07:36):
I want to remind everyone that we have several new
evacuation zones that occurred overnight, specifically in the Santa Paula area.
I strongly encourage you all to refer to VC Emergency
dot com for all the latest evacuation zones and road closures.
In addition, you can call our Incident Information Hotline at
(07:56):
eight zero five four six ' five six six five
zero to speak with someone. This number is also on
VC emergency dot com. As of today, we've made over
fourteen thousand notifications to residents in the evacuation zones. We
don't have an exact number of those that have been evacuated.
(08:17):
We've received many questions about repopulation. We will repopulate as
soon as possible. We have not begun that process yet.
This is still a very active fire and very unpredictable,
and we have a lot of resources out there working
this fire and we want to make sure they are
safe as well as we're moving between the city on
our main roads. For those who need shelter for large animals,
(08:38):
the fairgrounds here are open for large animal shelters, and
the Camrao Animal Shelter by the airport is available for
small animals.
Speaker 1 (08:45):
As our fire.
Speaker 7 (08:46):
Partners had mentioned, we're expecting high winds again next week,
so it's critical that we all stay prepared for more
fire weather. Once again, VC emergencies are go to resource
to find out the information on closures or in additional
details related to the fire weather.
Speaker 1 (09:00):
Lastly, I want to say thank you. This is our community,
our home.
Speaker 7 (09:06):
All the first responders who are working here live here
and are responsible.
Speaker 1 (09:10):
For this community as well. We want to share.
Speaker 7 (09:12):
Everyone's safety, so please stay out of the area if
you do not need to be here. Once again, I'd
like to thank everybody for their cooperation. We're in this
together and we'll get through this together.
Speaker 8 (09:23):
All right.
Speaker 1 (09:23):
We are going to pull away. We will monitor any
questions and a pertinent information. They were very succinct, weren't they.
Speaker 2 (09:29):
They have gone to the Steve Gregors. Weisi how to
do a news conference. Very well done to anybody over
inventor accounting.
Speaker 1 (09:36):
Again, Channel seven accounted eighty three homes lost. They say
that they are going door to door right now with
ten different teams to figure out the extent of the
damage there. But yeah, fourteen five hundred acres due to
the wind event. They laid out the fire captain did
the environmental recipe that fueled this thing with two years
(09:57):
of above average rainfall, which means which means fine fuels
that are receptive to the red flag warnings, the warmth
and the wind.
Speaker 2 (10:07):
Quick circle back on the update from Ventura County Fire
regarding the Mountain Fire fourteen five hundred acres burned, and
they said that they are still concerned about the potential
for more significant winds today with sustained winds somewhere between
thirty and fifty miles an hour possible and then gusts
much higher than that, as high as eighty to one
(10:28):
hundred miles an hour, but that they've winds will die
down through the course of the afternoon today, which is
good news. Still plenty of active flame out there in
the more Park came Rio Camrio Estates Somas area that
they're fighting, and they said that after these winds die
down today, hopefully they'll get some of that onshore flow
(10:48):
once again in terms of the winds that would allow
the fire to kind of burn itself back into areas
that had previously burned, which would slow it down, But
that they are concerned about another Santa Ana wind event
coming up next week.
Speaker 1 (11:01):
Oh great, we'll get to the Gavin Newsom story and
him kicking off his presidential campaign today coming up next
how he is poised to become the resistance leader. They
wrote in the San Francisco Chronicle, The Resistance Leader, Like
this is Hunger Games or something anyway, But a quick
brief wellness desk update. Our wellness desk, by the way,
(11:22):
is being built. I love it. It's gonna be built
probably next week. Okay. But a new study out of Australia,
not involving an emperor penguin, shows that adding just five
minutes of intense exercise to your daily routine will lower
your blood pressure. True, true, Yes, how do you know this? Uh?
(11:44):
I don't take my blood pressure regularly.
Speaker 2 (11:46):
I don't have one of the little things that little
watch or the ring or any of that stuff. But
I can tell if I don't exercise, I start getting
a little Jumpye yeah.
Speaker 1 (11:56):
I do too. The study was published in the medical
journal circul looked at fifteen thousand people found a slight
drop in blood pressure after vigorous five minute workouts included
things like ryanning or cycling. The co author of the
study said the blood pressure lowering effect was even greater
among participants who replaced thirty minutes of sleep with strenuous exercise.
(12:19):
Let's not go crazy. Oh you're like, don't take my
remind no private sleep from my dead cold hands. Almost
half of American adults have high blood pressure that's defined
is greater than one thirty over eighty. Do you know
what yours is? I'm going to bring in a monitor
and we're going to find out what yours is, since
you won't go to the doctor and you have a
history of heart attacks in your family.
Speaker 2 (12:40):
My relative my blood pressure last year at this time
when dad was sick. He had the blood pressure monitor
next to the couch that he was on the whole time,
and I would throw that on just for funds and
giggles and what was And even in those instances where
I'm watching a very sick father decline and I had
low blood pressure.
Speaker 1 (12:58):
Really I would think he would you run pretty stable, Yeah,
and he didn't.
Speaker 2 (13:03):
In his history he had slightly elevated blood pressure for
a while, but he also smoked for forty years, right,
and exercise.
Speaker 1 (13:11):
Yeah. So I always expect me to have high blood pressure,
just because I'm such a hothead that flies off the
handle at a moment's I could feel it from here.
You're a little but it's very low. It's very low.
It is. Oh yeah, it's like one ten over seventy
or something. It's really low. Ten over seven, Yeah, ten
over seven. I'm always surprised by that. Did you hear
(13:32):
about the baby bongo antelope?
Speaker 8 (13:36):
No?
Speaker 1 (13:36):
I missed that one too.
Speaker 2 (13:38):
It's that it was probably stuck behind my Emperor Penguin story.
Speaker 1 (13:43):
I didn't see it in an English. Safari park keepers
are celebrating the arrival of a calf from the world's
most endangered species of antelope, the Eastern Mountain bongo. This
time mom Athayah, Welcome to male calf in the late afternoon,
(14:05):
marking the first Bongo calf at the Woeburn Safari Park
in over ten years. Want to see a picture of
them in the Q. Well, Bongo, little bongo antelope. It's
a major success for the park and for the global
conservation effort to save this species native to Kenya. He
(14:26):
was soon standing on his wobbly legs after he came
out of Mom in a deep bed of straw prepared
for his arrival. Both mom and calf are doing very well.
Do you want to know about the father? His name
is Sonny Sure and he mixed well with the females
when he arrived at the park last November. Wasted no
time in doing his job boom, boom, boom. It's boom boom.
(14:51):
Once the mom and baby are ready, they'll rejoin the
rest of the bongo herd in the African Forest Exhibit,
where visitors will soon have a chance to see the
baby bongo in person. Did you know that the Eastern
Mountain bongo species has been hunted almost to extinction in
the wild, with less than one hundred individuals remaining. You
got to get Sunny back into action. You got to
(15:12):
get him back out there, boom booming with the bongos.
Speaker 2 (15:18):
The Mountain fire continues to burn fourteen five hundred acres.
We just heard from Ventura County Fire and several agencies
regarding what's going on there. The priority, they said this
day is going to be that northeast corner of the fire,
and that would be out towards the one twenty six
if you know where that is, out towards Santa Paula.
Speaker 1 (15:38):
They had some new evacuations.
Speaker 2 (15:40):
National Weather Service suggested that the red flag warning is
going to be up in that area until six o'clock.
Speaker 1 (15:45):
In the Inland Empire.
Speaker 2 (15:46):
It actually got extended through Friday for a while, so
in some of those areas. So these conditions will continue
through most of today, and they're hoping that the conditions
will the windy conditions at least will die down a
bit and give them a chance to get some containment
line around this fire, because as of right now, it's
zero percent.
Speaker 1 (16:06):
We're talking about the Democrats kind of soul searching right
now the same way that they did back in twenty sixteen.
How could this happen? Where do we go as a party?
I truly believe they need like a blue collar Democrat
and a lot of them, a lot of them that
don't talk with a hint of condensation. Condensation, condensation if
water comes out. And you know who that is, by
(16:28):
the way.
Speaker 2 (16:28):
You know who epitomizes that for at least from my perspective,
would be a guy like John Fetterman.
Speaker 1 (16:33):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (16:34):
I know he's got cognitive issues and that's but if
that's the guy, the guy, even if he has cognitive issues,
is the one who's making the most sense for Democrats
right now. That because I don't know if they would
even put him up there because of his car heart,
you know, shorts and sweatshirt, kind of Bill Belichick style wardrobe.
(16:55):
But he's a guy that has has the ability to
speak to those people that you're talking about.
Speaker 1 (16:59):
The party is just dripping with condescension, it really is,
and that's a problem because that turns off most Americans anyway.
Gavin Newsom, the complete one to eighty from that, has
called for lawmakers today, wasting no time in his run
for the White House, calling on lawmakers to convene a
special session later this year to safeguard He says the
(17:21):
state's progressive policies on climate change, reproductive rights, and immigration
ahead of a Trump presidency. The freedoms we hold deer
in California are under attack, and we won't sit idle.
Why does he think that, well, he says, California has
faced this challenge before, and we know how to respond.
(17:42):
We are prepared to fight in the courts. We'll do
everything necessary to ensure Californians have the support and resources
they need to thrive.
Speaker 2 (17:49):
That's what I want. I want him to come in
and say, I'll protect you.
Speaker 1 (17:52):
They're going to Trump proof California's state laws. They're already.
His announcement called on the LA Legislature to give the
Attorney General's office more funding to fight federal challenges when
they meet in December instead of getting things done here,
let's just get in this schoolyard fight with Trump for
four years. This is like when he wanted to continue
(18:16):
to fund the slow moving train to Merced or whatever,
just to spite, just to spite the Trump administration. Yeah, listen,
it's a fight.
Speaker 2 (18:27):
You're pretending to fight something that doesn't actually exist.
Speaker 1 (18:31):
It's not your fight. It's not a fight that you're
invited to.
Speaker 2 (18:34):
I mean, as an example, he's going to use and
I know it because we've seen him, you that do
this before, He's going to say that women's reproductive health
rights are under fire.
Speaker 1 (18:46):
Because of a Trump administration.
Speaker 2 (18:48):
Trump has said repeatedly, over and over again he would
not sign a federal abortion band and in the state
of California, there is no threat to abortion access.
Speaker 1 (18:59):
They're just isn't there.
Speaker 2 (19:01):
So why, I mean, that's the kind of thing that
I don't quite understand. He's pretending that there's a fight
that doesn't actually exist. If he wants to be the
candidate in twenty eight he's got plenty of time.
Speaker 1 (19:12):
He the election.
Speaker 2 (19:14):
He's he can't run again for governor obviously. The election
is in November of twenty six. He leaves I believe
it's the first week of January of twenty seven. That
gives him almost two entire years to run for president
and fundraise and do all those things that he's got
to do if he's going to be the candidate. But
can he overcome somebody like Josh Shapiro. Can he overcome
(19:37):
somebody like a Kamala Harris, who has every opportunity to
run again, should she so choose. It's just this frustrating
aspect of being a being the governor of the great
state of California. You're already on a higher pedestal than
other governors, perhaps, but with that comes the danger of
(20:00):
inflating your own importance in your own head.
Speaker 1 (20:03):
Yes, and he's great at it. He is so head
in the sand, flating his own If the Democratic Party
wants to turn the page and move forward and find
a better identity, then is what it is now, which
is not resonating with most of America. Proof in that election.
It's not my opinion, They're gonna have to move away
(20:23):
from Gavin Newsom. I have proof that we are a
weak people. Are you ready for this? I mean it's everywhere,
it's all over the place. But this is just case
in point. The LA Fire Department reported that that hazardous
materials incident at USC involved a person handling pool maintenance
chemicals and no hazard has been identified. Here's the quote.
(20:47):
It was determined that an individual was handling pool maintenance
chemicals and two others working in the general area noticed
the smell, say they felt ill. They went to the
Health Services office for evaluation because they smelled chlorine. We
can't even smell chlorine. We get anxious and ill smelling chlorine.
(21:10):
Oh what is wrong with me? Health Services department? Please
evaluate me? I smelled chlorine.
Speaker 2 (21:16):
That's somebody who never went to a public pool when
they were ever ever.
Speaker 1 (21:20):
It used to make your eyes get red and bleed
and your hair would turn green. Did we complain? Well? Red,
I mean bloodshot? Did we complain? Oh? No, when my
blonde hair turned wicked witch green? Did I once say
what's wrong with me? I feel ill? What is that smell?
Speaker 2 (21:39):
And when gathered kids come up to you and say, hey, alpha, bah.
Speaker 1 (21:43):
Yeah alphaba, popular skin is green? I want to be
popular your hair and everything? Did you cry? I didn't
because my eyes were already filled with tears from the
red veins that had populated the whites of said eyes
from the chlorine. But did we complain? No, no, why
(22:04):
because we were Americans back then? Yeah, and in America.
Speaker 2 (22:08):
It was my freedom to open my eyes in that
chlorine and urine infested pool.
Speaker 1 (22:13):
Do you know why? That's what the founding fathers wanted.
Did you think that we would have parents that would
pay for goggles for us coggle? Hell no, hell no.
They weren't raising no soft children, and they wanted our
eyes to bleed.
Speaker 2 (22:27):
If my grandfather could serve on a supply ship in
the Navy and World War Two without goggles, get it, Dickerson,
get it, then I didn't need goggles while I was
lounging about, lazing about the pool.
Speaker 1 (22:43):
Goggles. Goggles are for communists and Canadians. And really, if
we're gonna be honest about it, because.
Speaker 9 (22:50):
This this is America, America, and that is Zebra mark
is a pool full of chlorine full American, yes, okay,
American passport holder and everything.
Speaker 6 (23:07):
Yes.
Speaker 1 (23:07):
Congratulations, she just went to Arizona. That's why American she is.
Speaker 8 (23:14):
Hey, Garian Shannon, great little trivia fact about chlorine. Mm
hmmm that smell that you are talking about and takes
you back to your childhood. Yes, is actually chlorine mixed
with just a little bit of urine.
Speaker 1 (23:28):
Chlorine urine.
Speaker 8 (23:29):
There are a test out there and people have done it.
You should look it up. So, yeah, your childhood is
the smell of chlorine and just a little bit of pe.
Speaker 1 (23:37):
A little bit? Are you kidding? Exactly?
Speaker 8 (23:41):
Enjoy?
Speaker 1 (23:42):
Thank you. Of course there's pa in the pool with
the Chlorine's what makes it great?
Speaker 2 (23:46):
Did you have a municipal pool near where you lived
where you grew up?
Speaker 1 (23:50):
We went to the Hamilton Air Force Base? Okay, cool?
And that was like that was like walking on the
edge of danger because all the public school kids were there.
This is back when I was a good Catholic school
got it and all the public school kids were there.
Speaker 2 (24:07):
There was a short sliver of time where you were
a good Catholic school girl.
Speaker 1 (24:11):
Wow, well you so you don't have to laugh your
way through that line, all right, I'll say with the
straight face. Fourth and fifth grade, that was good. That
was a good run. It really stuck. My mom actually
has a picture of me in fourth grade and she'll
point to it and be like I missed this girl.
Oh that was so sweet, Like, well, that's when I
(24:34):
wasn't allowed to talk in the home.
Speaker 2 (24:36):
We always had my I was the only boy in
our neighborhood of the couple houses that had kids that
were kind of our age. So when we would walk
to the pool, I would have to go we you know,
my oldest sister would pay usually, and it would be
like a dollar twenty five or a dollars seventy five
for all three of us to get in, and their
friends would go and they and then like six girls
(24:58):
would all go through the girl's locker room, and I
have to go through the boys locker room. And I
always remember it being like, I ain't sticking around in
this place. Just straight through from one door to the
other was maybe about ten paces. All the lockers and
the showers and all that stuff was off to the side,
so you never made that detour. It was just a
straight shot right out to the pool. And I remember, man,
(25:19):
you knew as a little boy you weren't gonna hang
out in Yeah, not a sense. What was it about
locker rooms growing up? They were always so gross.
Speaker 1 (25:27):
It's just like I just I.
Speaker 2 (25:30):
Don't remember it being gross, like dirty, But then I
got I don't know, I didn't spend I didn't spend
any time in there, so I wasn't worried about it.
Speaker 7 (25:46):
Hilarious.
Speaker 8 (25:46):
I love you guys.
Speaker 1 (25:50):
Rob.
Speaker 2 (25:52):
Yes, tomorrow we are live at Lucidore Brewing in Chino
Hills once again for another news.
Speaker 1 (26:00):
And bruise, and we would love it if you would
come on out and say hi to us. We got
some stuff to give away. We have tickets to give away.
We have all kinds of stuff that we're giving.
Speaker 2 (26:08):
We have tickets to Hops in the Hills, which is
the brewfest that's taking place the next day.
Speaker 1 (26:13):
It's taking place on Saturday.
Speaker 2 (26:16):
Luchador Brewing is heading that up, the Hops in the
Hills Brewfest on Saturday. We're gonna be out there Luchador
Brewing in Chino Hills tomorrow starting at nine o'clock. And
and today we're giving away tickets to this weekend's Chargers
games on the Titans.
Speaker 1 (26:32):
It's so fun and that's a hot ticket. The Chargers
are red hot right now, justin Herbert putting together an
MVP season and that defense lights out. The Chargers defense
is allowing the fewest points in the entire league. Really
the number one yep, that's great. I didn't realize that
statistic existence. Well, how about another question for you, Gary, Yes,
(26:53):
superlatives for four hundred dollars. Since nineteen eighty five, People
Magazine has been pointing out this person, including Sean Connery
and Michael B. Jordan. And I know you want this title.
You've been talking about it for years. Not that which
magazine you had it wrong? People Magazine? Bull Okay, yes,
(27:15):
it's what is the sexiest man Alife? The sexiest man Alife?
You know what you should submit for your entry is
that you can unhook a woman's bra with just a
simple hug. It was an accident, right, but it happened not.
Speaker 2 (27:30):
Yours, by the way, No, clear, I don't say it
like that, like it was like.
Speaker 1 (27:36):
It's worse than another code. You didn't you didn't allow.
Speaker 2 (27:39):
That, you didn't explain that that was an accident. And
it was also fifteen years ago, so.
Speaker 1 (27:46):
It doesn't make it better. Technology has changed. There's like
bluetooth now or something. Swamp. Why is it so cold?
It's amazing. I'm going to go get a blanket. Oh
my god, right, it's cold. The air is blowing. I
got it. You're so tiny. Red blood cells are already strung.
(28:09):
I know, I'm going, oh my god, something is going on.
Oh my gosh, somebody crack a window or something. It's
it's blowing. That's what I said.
Speaker 2 (28:19):
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,
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