Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is Gary and Shannon and you're listening to KFI
AM six forty, the Gary and Shannon Show on demand
on the iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 2 (00:07):
Listen.
Speaker 3 (00:08):
If you want to get a step closer to World
War three, one of the things that you do is
you fire a warning shot at a German helicopter if
you are a Russian warship, and that is exactly what happened.
The crew of this Russian ship fired what is referred
to as signal ammunition. The German press agency in Brussels,
and according to the German newspaper Build, the warning shots
(00:30):
were fired at a NATO recon aircraft. They said that
it has not been confirmed by the military as of yet,
at least by the German military.
Speaker 2 (00:39):
Again.
Speaker 1 (00:39):
Big news out of Midtown, New York this morning, the
CEO of United Healthcare has been shot and killed by
a masked guy with a gun. He was dressed in
a hooded sweatshirt carrying a distinct gray backpack. He waited
in the freezing temps outside a door at the Midtown
Hilton for Brian Tom to arrive. I had a silencer
(01:03):
on his weapon, shot from about twenty feet away, fled
on foot down an Alleyway, grabbed an e bike and
rode into Central Park a few blocks away. They're using
police drones, helicopters, dogs, everything. Police have issued a poster
showing a surveillance image of the suspect and a reward
(01:24):
of ten thousand dollars for information leading to the arrest
and conviction.
Speaker 3 (01:29):
We were asking about secrets, financial secrets that you may
be keeping from your spouse.
Speaker 1 (01:33):
I've been with my wife for twenty six years and
we've only ever had one account. I've always thought it
was strange when couples have separate accounts.
Speaker 2 (01:43):
I don't know if it's strange, it's just kind of
the way things go. I mean a lot. Well, I got.
Speaker 1 (01:48):
Married too late in life. You know, it was already
you know, thirty one years old. Like I get it
when you marry young and you're trying to figure it
out and their kids.
Speaker 2 (01:59):
It's all of It's that simpler for a lot of things.
Speaker 4 (02:01):
But yeah, hey, so my wife handles everything. We have
one account. Both our money goes into and then it
gets paid for the bills. But hey, you know, I
do slide jobs. I'm a license electrician.
Speaker 5 (02:17):
You know, if I get paid cash, Hey, that goes
in my little secret drawer, my toolbox for rainy days
or et cetera, you know whatever. She don't do no sidework.
Speaker 2 (02:29):
Yeah, well we assume she doesn't do any side work.
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (02:34):
Is it one of the rules always to have your
own money, always keep a little bit, you know, freedom
money for women.
Speaker 2 (02:40):
So I tell that to my daughter, But I don't know.
Speaker 1 (02:43):
If your wife probably has secret money just in case
she needs to get away from you one day.
Speaker 3 (02:48):
She can have all of the money, that's the thing.
She has access to, all of the money. Anyway, Why
would she need secret money.
Speaker 1 (02:53):
Well, I mean if in traditional households, if the man
kind of controls the money, you're always supposed to have
your own little secret side getaway money. I think I
learned that in Belman Louise or something life lessons.
Speaker 3 (03:10):
So cops in la are looking for somebody who stabbed
a fourteen year old. Happened about five o'clock Monday night,
right near the intersection intersection a Superior Street and Pastor
Roves Avenue. According to the LAPD, they said this suspect
asked the fourteen year old for money and then stabbed
him twice in the abdomen after the teen said LENI alone.
(03:31):
Kid was walking alone by himself. Hospitalized with injuries there
said not life threatening. The guy took off before police
could arrive. They said was a piece of glass that
he used to stab the cow on the sky. They
described him just add basically in his fifties.
Speaker 2 (03:54):
How do you I don't even know how you would warn.
Speaker 1 (03:57):
Your kids to almost servehere. Yeah, you just got to
have your head on a swivel. Really, you know, I
don't walk alone and don't walk alone. Yeah, but that's
an awful story. The wife of the CEO from United
Healthcare who was shot and killed this morning in Manhattan.
Speaker 2 (04:13):
A little early for that, isn't it it is?
Speaker 1 (04:15):
That's a ballsy phone call to make just fifty years old.
This guy was the wife. Paul Ette Thompson, told NBC
News that her husband told her there were some people
that had been threatening him. She said she didn't have
all the details, but suggested they may have been involved
with issues regarding insurance coverage. Okay, so maybe threatening emails.
(04:41):
My wife died due to your crap insurance something like that.
Speaker 3 (04:45):
We did get a talkback from somebody who said specifically
that United Health is an awful insurance company. I have
no idea that we didn't play it, because it's just,
you know, it's one person, and everybody has complaints about
their own insurance. Very rarely do you find somebody who
absolutely loves the insurance company that they are true.
Speaker 2 (05:04):
They're in the money business. They're not in the Yeah,
let's not forget exactly. It's a business, right.
Speaker 3 (05:11):
So yeah, Well, if the NYPD comes out with any more,
any more evidence or any more information, we'll definitely bring.
Speaker 2 (05:18):
It to you.
Speaker 1 (05:19):
Well, there was a man who lived in Laurel Canyon
and he told neighbors he was a rothschild from the prominent,
from the prominent family, William Dad Rothschild, eighty seven years old.
He seemed to have some of the things that a
rothschild would have, of course, being a descendant of bankers.
(05:40):
He had a classic car collection featuring Ferraris and Jaguars.
He was found dead at his home last week. His
home was fire damaged. Eighty seven years old, and it
turns out he was not born with that name and
does not appear in official genealogy maintained in the archive
of the.
Speaker 3 (06:01):
This is a This would be a good example of
background checking for journalism students. Sure, I mean, for one thing,
the writer in this case was able to go back
and find La County Superior Court documents that showed back
in nineteen eighty five, a man named William Alfred Kaufman
(06:21):
petitioned the court to change his name to William Alexander
de Rothschild.
Speaker 1 (06:26):
This was the Jewish dynasty there from Frankfurt, Germany. They
have actually long dealt with impostors trying to steal their name.
He stated in that legal filing you're talking about, I
want to take my family name that I prefer to Kaufman.
It would simplify my life greatly, taking the name from
my mother's side.
Speaker 2 (06:48):
Interesting. A judge granted it. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (06:50):
However, his own family, at least the ones that knew
him as William Alfred Kaufman. His younger brother lives in Oregon,
and when The Times got a hold of this guy
in Oregon, he said he assumed his brother died. I
don't know how you make an assumptionless and families change
and are weird in many ways. But he believed his
younger brother or his older brother disappeared in the sixties
(07:13):
or seventies and was presumed dead long ago.
Speaker 1 (07:15):
Well, this guy sounds like an eccentric guy. The sixties
and seventies were not unwild times. If he just takes
off and then the family never hears from him again,
they're going to think he's dead. Right. You know, they're
not the Kobeiyashis. They're not going to start a big
search party. They say that there's no family connection to
the Rothschilds. The brother says, we're not Jewish.
Speaker 3 (07:40):
Now, neighbors had said, well, there was no reason for
them to think he wasn't. But there's not a lot
of verification about the stories that he was telling. It
supposedly donated a bunch of cars to the Peterson Automotive Museum,
and a representative for the museum says there's no record
of any of the roth Child vehicles ever having been
(08:01):
lent or given to the museum.
Speaker 2 (08:02):
He was just a storyteller.
Speaker 1 (08:04):
It seems like the fire, by the way is under investigation.
They don't know the cause of this fire at the home,
or did he die in the fire, or or was
he die and then the fire started or we don't know,
but the neighbors say, yes, he carried himself like I
(08:24):
think a rothschild.
Speaker 2 (08:25):
Would and listen, how do you know what that looks like?
I don't know. Even if he changed his name, that's
his name.
Speaker 3 (08:32):
So I mean, when you refer to him, you have
to he was Mythstirred, a rothschild. They believed that he
was a wealthy man, but they said that the house
itself wasn't particularly extravagant by any means. A real estate
listing service shows it as an eight hundred and twenty
five square foot property worth about a million dollars.
Speaker 1 (08:50):
So what do we know here? He was born in
Colorado in nineteen thirty seven. Family moves to Salem, Oregon,
where he goes to high school. They were nine years
apart he and his brother, so they weren't particularly close.
But that brother was a gifted artist who painted and sculpted,
and he was a bit of an enigma. His brother says,
my brother was a mysterious character. After high school, he
(09:12):
went to the University of Oregon, then left the state
in the sixties or seventies, and by seventy two he
bought that house on Lookout Mountain.
Speaker 2 (09:22):
This at the time was the.
Speaker 1 (09:24):
Laurel Canyon of the seventies Neil Young, Joni Mitchell, Mama
cass Elliott. They'd only spoken the brothers on one occasion
after they left.
Speaker 2 (09:34):
After he took off from Oregon.
Speaker 1 (09:37):
He said it was at some point in the seventies
or eighties, as his brother called him and for a
brief chat. It was very odd. He didn't explain where
he had gone. I was surprised. I said, we maybe
should get in touch with our parents or getting older.
Speaker 3 (09:50):
He married somebody in nineteen ninety nine, Margot Murkin. She
happened to be the daughter of the late Morris Murkin,
who founded the Budget Rennicle. So even if this money
that this guy had was not Rothschild money, it may
have been this Margot or Murkins money.
Speaker 2 (10:08):
There was.
Speaker 3 (10:10):
Margot apparently ran a drive a dream facility in Beverly Hills.
You could rent a Mercedes or Rolls Royce, et cetera.
And the neighbors in that Lookout Mountain area said that
they knew Margot Murkin, but they knew her as his
cousin or his sister. That they didn't identify each other
as husband and wife.
Speaker 1 (10:30):
She's not talking, they've reached out, but kind of interesting
how somebody could just kind of disappear in plain sight,
change their name, come up with a whole life story
and a family and this eclectic type of life, and
you just don't know.
Speaker 2 (10:44):
You just don't know.
Speaker 1 (10:45):
People don't you though you think you do, you think
you do. I don't know what you've got going on.
Speaker 3 (10:52):
Somebody suggested I have secrets financially, and they want me.
Speaker 2 (10:56):
To spill them. You are not a tell all book either.
What does that mean?
Speaker 1 (11:03):
You're It just means that you don't offer extra information
about yourself all the time.
Speaker 2 (11:13):
Does that make me secretive?
Speaker 6 (11:14):
No?
Speaker 2 (11:15):
But some would say is that what makes me an
a hole? Yes?
Speaker 1 (11:20):
I do think sometimes that your silence could be considered
you being an a whole.
Speaker 2 (11:27):
I need to blab some more.
Speaker 1 (11:29):
You do have a bit of a judgy face sometimes.
Uh hello, I know, mirror.
Speaker 2 (11:35):
I know. I'm self aware of it. You're doing it
right now.
Speaker 3 (11:43):
President elect Trump has nominated former Securities in Exchange Commissioner
Paul Atkins to replace the outgoing SEC chair when he
departs on an inauguration day. Trump wrote in a post
on social media, Paul is a proven leader for common
sense regulations, believes in the promise of robust innovative cap
markets that are responsive to the needs of investors, and
(12:03):
that provide capital to make our economy the best in
the world in the world. There was somebody we didn't
get to this earlier, but pulled his name out of contention.
Chad Cronister, the Florida sheriff who was nominated to take
over the Drug Enforcement Administration, has said, you know what
I thought about it. I'm going to stay sheriff of
(12:26):
whatever county he's in Florida. And this was the interesting
part is some conservatives were opposed to Chad Cronister, not
because he wasn't maga enough or conservative enough. It'sa that
in the early days of COVID, he in a very
high profile move, arrested a church pastor who was continuing
(12:48):
to hold church services despite that Florida or despite everybody
saying that you couldn't do.
Speaker 2 (12:55):
If that's the hill you want to die on, you
don't go to a church to die on it. Yeah,
there was this.
Speaker 3 (13:00):
I mean, there are plenty of places here in la
that in the absolute you know, under the guise of Barbara.
Speaker 2 (13:08):
Forget about.
Speaker 1 (13:11):
Not just the unpopularity of that, but the fact that
it's unconstitutional for the government to put a mandate on religion,
the fact that it would be unconstitutional for you, as
a member of the government, paid for by the government,
to go in there and arrest him. And number three because.
Speaker 2 (13:29):
Of God, because of because of God. I would put
that as number one.
Speaker 3 (13:34):
Listen, I'm not suggesting that you're going to have some
questions to answer when you get to the pearly Gates,
but you might have said it was just a chronological error.
Speaker 2 (13:41):
I meant to put the God part first. I was
just thinking immediacy.
Speaker 1 (13:46):
Immediate problem would be you're violating the constitution God for
a couple reasons. And then when you meet your maker God,
no God, which is not going to happen before the
other two.
Speaker 2 (13:57):
Like that, you say it with reverence, it quietly because
of God.
Speaker 3 (14:02):
One final congressional district race has been decided. Of course
it's in California because we cannot count apparently, but finally
Democrat Adam Gray has defeated Republican Congressman John Dwarty in
the thirteenth District up in the Central Valley. They call
it the Fight in thirteenth. Democrats now netted one seat
(14:24):
in House elections. They flipped nine Republican held seats, mainly
in blue states. Republicans flipped eight Democratic held seats. So okay,
So right now it's I think it's gonna be two
twenty to two fifteen. But don't forget Matt Gates stepped out.
He's no longer going to be in Congress. There's one
Republican seat at least. The fanic of New York has
(14:45):
been chosen to be US Ambassador to the UN.
Speaker 2 (14:47):
She'll be out.
Speaker 3 (14:48):
Mike Wals of Florida National Security Advisor, he'll be out.
So for a while, it looks like Republicans might have
a one vote majority in the next Congress.
Speaker 1 (14:58):
Financial secrets do you keep them? What constitutes a secret?
How much you know about your partner's spending?
Speaker 2 (15:05):
Hey, guys, love the show?
Speaker 7 (15:07):
Listen every day my work missus hours a lot.
Speaker 1 (15:11):
And when they cut me an extra check, I just
cash it.
Speaker 5 (15:14):
And throw it in my safe and keep it in
Other than that, we have joint bank account, which, by
the way, don't do that, big mistake.
Speaker 4 (15:22):
And last time I checked, I've got around forty.
Speaker 5 (15:24):
Five dollars in cash.
Speaker 2 (15:26):
Whoa save?
Speaker 5 (15:28):
Yeah, I don't know what to do with it.
Speaker 1 (15:30):
Well, you can donate it, well, you won't have to
spend it on going to the playoff games. I'm like
counting the money I'm gonna save.
Speaker 2 (15:38):
If you're saving money by not going to the playoffs.
Speaker 6 (15:40):
Okay, So my mom has a secret savings account from
my dad because they are retired and my dad is horrible,
absolutely atrocious with money growing up. So she knows that
if he were to get his grub little pause on
her savings.
Speaker 2 (15:58):
Waste it, she would be death.
Speaker 6 (16:00):
So it's in my name, but it's her money, smart,
so she keeps it separate from him.
Speaker 1 (16:06):
That's the other thing, because if one person has really
impulsive and wild spending habits, and you are retired or
you're get you should always be thinking about retirement. I mean,
in your freaking twenties, you should think about retirement and
putting money away. But if it's a secret for a
purpose of I'm going to be in a gutter somewhere
if he gets his money and buys a classic car
(16:28):
or whatever with fifty grand that I need to live
off of.
Speaker 2 (16:32):
Isn't that part of the vetting process when.
Speaker 1 (16:34):
You yes, But some people make the decision in their
twenties who to marry and They don't think that being
crazy financially is going to be a problem down the
road until you're down the road and you're like, hey, Bob,
why do you keep buying all this crap?
Speaker 2 (16:48):
I's getting a bad rep today.
Speaker 7 (16:50):
You're right, Hey, good morning guys. On that financial situation,
I think Gary hit it on the head. A majority
is your upbringing. If you kind of we're in a
situation where you didn't have a lot, then you get
a job, you start working and have a few extra bucks,
you have a tendency not to hide it but be
a little more secure with it. And then also men
(17:12):
in my generation, when you're brought up, you're kind of
ahead of everything and you want to have a little
cushion the case of an emergency.
Speaker 2 (17:21):
Everyone should think that way. Everyone should think about that.
Speaker 1 (17:24):
I mean, don't be like the government when it comes
to spending money and going into the red and all
of that and hoping for greater times tomorrow.
Speaker 2 (17:33):
We always act like you're in second place.
Speaker 3 (17:36):
Yeah, And we've talked about Dave rams We've talked with
Dave Ramsey before. One of the great financial minds I
personal finance, and one of his things is, hey, get
yourself ready for an emergency right now, because that's so
many times if you're struggling your paycheck to paycheck, you
don't have a lot.
Speaker 2 (17:54):
You got to cut way back. You can do it.
Speaker 3 (17:57):
It's hard and it's not comfortable, but you can do
it way back and give yourself that emergency fund that
you need. And once you have that, you have a
lot more leeway, and you have a lot more you're
gonna have a lot more personal responsibility taking care of
that so you don't have to find, you know, find
yourself in a bad situation.
Speaker 8 (18:16):
Hey, good morning, Gary and Shannon. Hey, I want to
hear Gary secrets about this money thing because it's always
Shannon and Gary always looks say Shannon like she's doing
the bad things. But I know, mister goodie two shoes
had some secrets. Come on, spill the beans. It's just
between us three. Let us know, Gary, let us show
(18:38):
like always the best.
Speaker 2 (18:40):
Thank you.
Speaker 1 (18:40):
I don't want to know your secrets if they're secrets,
because that means they're really bad. If I don't know
by now, uh, like that might be like you know,
pizza parlor stuff.
Speaker 3 (18:50):
Within within weeks of getting married, all of our moneies
that we knew of were in joint accounts.
Speaker 2 (18:58):
I think he's talking about weird foot stuff.
Speaker 3 (19:00):
I don't think he's talking about money like hot, but
then again, how would I hot.
Speaker 2 (19:04):
I mean, everything is available now, a little bit red,
getting a little ping.
Speaker 3 (19:08):
Everything is available now for my wife to credit card statements,
bank statements. I was watching We just don't use cash
enough for me to keep it secret anymore.
Speaker 1 (19:17):
I was watching this show on Netflix. Actually, Michelle Obama's
the executive producer on it. It's a dating show, reality show.
It's called The Later Daters. People in their fifties and
early sixties dating. So it's not as bad as the
Silver Bachelorette because those people are like late sixties seventies.
So these people are like you're age, they're like fifty five,
you know, in sixty, sixty two, sixty three, something like that,
(19:39):
and it's fascinating and one of the.
Speaker 2 (19:41):
Date they so they've gone.
Speaker 1 (19:42):
It's kind of like the dating game where they go
on a date and most of them choose to go
on a second date, and then some of them she's
to go on a third date.
Speaker 2 (19:49):
And one of the women.
Speaker 1 (19:50):
Her first date was with this guy who was just
like yeah, She's like, I saw you looking at my feet.
Speaker 2 (19:55):
When I come in, He's like, oh yeah, I love feed.
Speaker 1 (19:57):
He's like totally open with his affinity for feet and
how it it turns him on to look at feet,
touch feet, feel the feet.
Speaker 2 (20:09):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (20:10):
I think that should be a secret until until your
feet and until you are in the bedroom, which with
someone that level of information is too much out the gate.
Speaker 2 (20:24):
Okay, well, then let's say that it kept.
Speaker 3 (20:26):
He kept that to himself until he got to the
boot and then reveals to you.
Speaker 2 (20:32):
You know what it? Oh my god, you know what? Nasty, cankled,
old callous feet. You know what?
Speaker 1 (20:38):
First of all, my feet are in great condition. Second
of all, you're right. I would want to know about
that up front.
Speaker 3 (20:46):
Maybe not first date, maybe not boutoah, but somewhere in
the middle you want that.
Speaker 1 (20:51):
But by the time I'm in the bood, do you
think it would bother me? Because I'm already at the
stage where I love this person.
Speaker 2 (20:57):
Right, depends on what he does with the feet. Yeah,
could get real weird. Huh, could get super weird.
Speaker 1 (21:02):
But love is love, and you know, sometimes you just
you put up with the rain to get the rainbow.
I don't know what I don't you've never heard that
saying before.
Speaker 2 (21:13):
No, that's an awful, awful poster.
Speaker 1 (21:16):
You've never heard put the rain to get the rainbow.
I'm pretty sure that's an old saying.
Speaker 2 (21:21):
I've never heard that before. Dorothy, you're an idiot.
Speaker 7 (21:26):
That's a great san I've never heard it either, but
it's very clever. Oh, I put up with the rain
to get the rainbow. Yeah, it's uf explanatory.
Speaker 2 (21:36):
I didn't say you did not like it, so shut up, Gary. Yeah, Gary,
I didn't say I didn't understand it.
Speaker 1 (21:44):
No, but you said that was stupid and you were
pooh pooing it just because you had never heard it.
You were doing the very thing that you hate that
people do that they pooh pooed it because they don't
even know about it.
Speaker 2 (21:58):
You're right, Maybe I should pay attention to peple's feet more.
Apparently feet are a thing.
Speaker 3 (22:03):
Well, one guy said he'd uses feet to determine how
clean a woman is.
Speaker 2 (22:08):
Okay, if she keeps herself clean, that's gross. Want to
know how gross that is? That's really gross? That's really gross.
Speaker 3 (22:15):
You had any indication of I mean, we've seen people's
feet around here that we should never have seen.
Speaker 2 (22:20):
Hey, I never thought about the overall cleanliness, but is
a good indicator.
Speaker 1 (22:25):
Oh oh god, Michael wrote, feet fetish is a big deal.
Speaker 2 (22:29):
One of my drivers is a foot fetish guy.
Speaker 1 (22:32):
He asked one day if I watched Storage Wars before,
and I said yeah. He said, that girl Brandy on
the show sells feet picks. He showed me them.
Speaker 2 (22:43):
Who said what? Who said you that? Michael? Okay, that's
not a warning sign to me. That's a red flag.
Speaker 3 (22:54):
Nobody nobody hitting me up and telling me that they've
seen feet picks of the people from.
Speaker 1 (22:58):
A reality show us all the time. Oh he does
text us all the time. Yeah on Instagram.
Speaker 2 (23:06):
Oh that's different. He sends us pictures of his food.
I think he drives a truck or something. Please don't
send pictures of your feet.
Speaker 1 (23:13):
Not Oh you know what we should do a foot contest,
a listener foot contest.
Speaker 2 (23:19):
This is awful. Who has the best idea? Feet?
Speaker 1 (23:24):
And then what we'll do is we'll put him on
Instagram and we'll have people voting yes, yes, and yes.
What do you guys think? Keana are you there? No?
Speaker 2 (23:39):
She's either there and ignoring this or not there. I
hope she's ignoring it, So.
Speaker 1 (23:44):
Send us your feet picks? Oh no, no, too far? Yes,
I don't know. I think it might be kind of
fun if.
Speaker 2 (23:52):
We get any.
Speaker 3 (23:53):
I'm simply forwarding them to you. You shall be bombarded
by people's podiatric proclivities.
Speaker 2 (24:02):
But wouldn't it be fun to have a context everyone
can get. No, this is disgusting. You're making it gross.
You brought it up. I did not.
Speaker 1 (24:11):
You said please don't send us your feet picks, which
means send us your feet picks.
Speaker 2 (24:16):
That's not what I said to do on Instagram or Twitter.
What what's better engagement? Would you get a massage from
an AI robot?
Speaker 1 (24:27):
I don't like getting massages from people, so this kind
of makes me feel better about it.
Speaker 3 (24:33):
Really, Yeah, okay, there's a there's a new series of
machines out there that can massage you like I.
Speaker 1 (24:44):
Go to Marry at the time massage place near me,
And that's about it.
Speaker 3 (24:48):
Because I know her three D scan of your body
maps out one point two million data points, every curve
and asymmetric point.
Speaker 2 (24:55):
Didn't we sell this kind of thing at one point?
No scans were done like this.
Speaker 1 (25:00):
This is a but that what was it, Sarah Jem
would scan your body, remember it did like a three
minute scan or something, and then it would find the
areas that you needed to hit.
Speaker 3 (25:09):
Yeah, but in this case, these are actually robotic arms
with I don't know utensils on the end of it.
But then massage your body.
Speaker 2 (25:18):
Would you have your butt massage by one of these? Sure? Yeah,
I think for the same reason. I mean, it's not
like it's a person massage. Uh okay, but it's already
that's also a weird thing.
Speaker 1 (25:33):
Someone once gave me a massage gift certificate and I
went to the I made an appointment, went to the place.
Usually it's female, right, it's always female in my experience,
limited experience, but.
Speaker 2 (25:45):
It was a dude.
Speaker 1 (25:46):
Yeah, And I was like, no, like, I'm not having
a strange dude. Was it just like a storefront somewhere sage.
It was a nice little spa place in Burbank. But
it was like, I'm not going to have a straighten dude, Like,
did you make an appointment or juice? I made an appointment,
usually asked, They usually ask.
Speaker 2 (26:05):
Hu, how did it go? I didn't do it.
Speaker 1 (26:08):
I was totally uncouth and I was like, Yeah, I'm
not comfortable with that swamp.
Speaker 2 (26:12):
Watches up next. You've been listening to The Gary and
Shannon Show.
Speaker 3 (26:17):
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