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December 6, 2024 27 mins
Gary and Shannon start the second hour with the latest details on the shooter who targeted an elementary school in Oroville. Gary and Shannon also talk about a convicted killer still on the run and the owner of the LA Time rolling out a new bias meter.
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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.

Speaker 2 (00:07):
There is a threat to the state Capitol right now.
Lawmakers and staff members who evacuated from the Capitol building
in Sacramento this morning after a threat was made. According
to a message, Senate staff are sent to one of
the TV stations there in Sacramento, and I was just
watching their coverage of it. They still don't know much

(00:28):
about what's going on. According to a message that was
sent to staff in the state Senate, law enforcement was
working to determine if the threat was credible. So everybody
that works there in the Senate side, especially because I
guess the Assembly was not in session and they didn't
have very many workers there. Legislative staff have been asked
to leave the capitol. Basically, hey, it's a free Friday

(00:49):
for you to go home and work from home. Gavin
Newsom is not in Sacramento today, so he wasn't at
the capitol.

Speaker 3 (00:56):
Obviously, he's here in southern California.

Speaker 2 (00:58):
Most of the state lawmakers are currently in their districts,
so it was otherwise a relatively quiet day that is
until this threat apparently came in. So the Capitol building
up in Sacramento is being evacuated right now. There was
an anthrax threat back in May. You'd mentioned that there
had been no previous threats. There was one back in May,

(01:19):
and the easiest way, obviously for them to go through
and make sure that nothing is untoward is to get
everybody out of the building and go through and search it.

Speaker 1 (01:25):
You know what's great about that video, the way you
make me feel as it starts with that thriller vibe,
like lowly lit alley nighttime. Is he a good guy?
Or is he a bad guy? And then it quickly
becomes this like love song.

Speaker 2 (01:37):
A man with a sash is almost never a bad guy?

Speaker 1 (01:42):
But pirates? What kind of pirates? But comma pirates? Question mark?

Speaker 3 (01:51):
All right, bottom of the hour.

Speaker 2 (01:53):
By the way, we're going to be talking about this
guy that jumped out of a van up in Delano.

Speaker 3 (02:00):
He's still gone, right, Caesar, Caesar. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (02:04):
And then later the La Times says it's going to
start publishing a bias meter on all.

Speaker 3 (02:09):
Of its articles. It's an interesting way to do it.

Speaker 1 (02:12):
Yeah, but how do you trust who was running the bias.

Speaker 3 (02:15):
Meter who watches the watchers.

Speaker 1 (02:18):
I was watching or I was reading through Bill Clinton
interview this morning, and he said nobody timely. Well, he
was talking about the state of the Democratic Party and
what he thinks, and he doesn't like the Biden part
in either. He said, you know, I wish that he
just didn't deny that he was going to do it repeatedly.
He should have just shut up about it and then
just done it, you know. But I guess that was
up to Corne Jean Pierre to answer that question every

(02:41):
freaking day. You know, what else is she going to say?
Stay tuned. But he talked about how nobody trusts anyone anymore. Democrats,
Republicans can't trust anyone because it lied to us so
much and so recently. All Right, So authorities up in
Butte County now do say they know I know the

(03:01):
identity of the shooter who staged the attack on that small,
tiny Christian elementary school that left two children wounded, ended
with the shooter dead.

Speaker 2 (03:12):
Fifty six year old guy named Glenn Lytton, homeless, mentally ill,
long criminal record in the Bay Area, and apparently targeted
the school because of its affiliation with the Seventh Day
Adventist Church, and like you said, died after he shot
himself after he shot the kids. But they said they
found a statement by this guy saying that child executions

(03:33):
were imposed at that school in response to America's involvements
in genocide and oppression of Palestinians and attacks in Yemen.

Speaker 1 (03:45):
The two injured kindergarteners five year old Elias who shot
once was shot once in the abdomen, and six year
old Roman, who sustained two gun shots resulting in internal injuries.
Both boys are in critical condition and the.

Speaker 2 (04:00):
Sheriff said that they both have very long roads to recovery.
It's very likely they're going to have multiple surgeries going forward.
And the fact that they're currently still with us, it's
pretty much a miracle. I mean, they have the fact
that their children, their tiny bodies, probably works in their favor,
I mean just in terms of the ability of a
kid's body to respond, to grow, to continue to get better.

(04:24):
But man, just to terrifying. They said that one Elias,
the five year old, the bullet went through his chest
and his abdomen, and it pierced or nicked multiple organs
before it exited. He simply had to go to surgery
if nothing else, just to stop the bleeding. And they
said that he's on a pediatric intensive care unit obviously

(04:44):
awaiting additional surgery. So they've started to go fundmes to
help cover his medical expenses. Again, this is a tiny,
tiny school, and we mentioned this yesterday.

Speaker 3 (04:56):
There were thirty five forty kids there. That's it.

Speaker 1 (04:58):
Where's that guy getting this weird mind infiltration that it
was a child? Executions were imposed at the school, like
where's he coming up with that? Does he read something?
And then he goes through the twisted pathways of his
broken brain and comes out with that kind of order.

Speaker 2 (05:16):
Yes, all of that, Yeah, ad sprinkle on top of
that some probably significant drug use and frying all of
the synapses that we're putting together, and loses all logic
at that point.

Speaker 1 (05:30):
Hannah Kobyashi's family is so thirsty? Is this the thirstiest
family that ever lived? Wanting all this attention? Apparently they're
tearing themselves apart over who should get the limelight and
what to do with the money they fundraised for their
non missing family member. Gary and Shannon will continue, Amy King.

Speaker 2 (05:51):
I want to point out this is also Friday, right,
which means we do what you learned this week on
The Gary and Shannon Show. Yes, you can leave us
a talkback message when you're listening on the app. Hit
that little microphone and it leaves us a message. Don't
leave us the questions that you'd like to ask handle.
Just leave us the what you learned this week on
the Gary and Shannon Show.

Speaker 3 (06:10):
Just like that. Hey Gary, Hey Shannon, I'm sorry.

Speaker 1 (06:12):
I'm four years old.

Speaker 2 (06:13):
That butt pirate comment made made me laugh pretty hard
because I'm I'm a little bit of a butt pirate myself.
After that booty, can I get the show me the booty?

Speaker 4 (06:23):
Look at that booty.

Speaker 3 (06:25):
Yet, show me the boot I will the booty?

Speaker 4 (06:31):
Back up the booty? I need the booty. I like.

Speaker 3 (06:33):
The point was the comment was butt comma pirate?

Speaker 1 (06:39):
Right? Is a butt pirate?

Speaker 3 (06:41):
Though we don't talk, we don't say that, we don't
say that.

Speaker 1 (06:44):
He said he brought it back up. I'm just asking
a follow up, Tama, I'm asking pirate. Follow up? Is
a butt pirate somebody who likes the booty? Or and
what kind of booty are we talking about? Are we
talking about?

Speaker 4 (07:02):
Show me the booty?

Speaker 5 (07:03):
Give me.

Speaker 1 (07:06):
It could be a treasure. That's what yes, okay? Is
that why where pirates go? Is that why bots are
called booty? Because it's it's like a I don't know.
I'm just trying to figure it out.

Speaker 3 (07:19):
Such a wise woman in so many ways, but also
not Roberts from Sydney, Australia. I love listening to your station,
two of you that I listened to in the morning. Here,
I'm fantastic to listen to Thanks, Australia's number one morning show.

Speaker 1 (07:37):
That's awesome.

Speaker 5 (07:38):
Hey, good morning, Garyan Shannon. This is Mike from the
High Desert. Hey, I just wanted to wish my wife
a happy birthday. Today is her birthday and she is
the most important thing to me in this world.

Speaker 3 (07:53):
Get it?

Speaker 5 (07:54):
So maybe my KFI family could wish her a happy
birthday too.

Speaker 4 (07:58):
Her name is Yvonne. I love you, honey.

Speaker 1 (08:00):
Oh, I love you too, Yvonne. Happy Britt. Don't tell
another man's wife you love her on her.

Speaker 3 (08:07):
I love her that she makes him feel that.

Speaker 1 (08:09):
That's true. That's good. That's a good clarification. Do you
want to sing to Yvonne? Sure?

Speaker 4 (08:17):
Dad, Booty showed me the booty, Give me the booty.

Speaker 3 (08:20):
I want the booty.

Speaker 4 (08:21):
Back up the booty. I need the booty.

Speaker 1 (08:23):
I like the booty.

Speaker 4 (08:24):
Oh the booty.

Speaker 1 (08:25):
All right enough, okay, So the girl that, allegedly, first
of all, is not a girl. She's thirty. Second of all,
allegedly went missing from Hawaii on her way to New York,
stopped in LA, didn't make her connecting flight. Hannah Kobyashi
is her name. The family starts screaming from the rooftops
that that she is missing and we need to help
to find her, despite the fact that she's seen just

(08:48):
living her life on surveillance video around to La. Her
her dad comes out here jumps off a roof near
Lax to his death. That was odd as well. They
were able to fifty thousand dollars in go fundme money.
The family was the laped this week. Came out and said, listen,
we've got surveillance footage of her a living her life

(09:10):
and be crossing into Mexico willingly on her own luggage
in tow. So we think she's just voluntarily missing. She
just chose to go missing from y'all. Well, now the
family is trying to figure out and they're fighting about it,
how to spend all that money they raised.

Speaker 2 (09:28):
There are a couple of GoFundMe pages. About fifty thousand
dollars have been raised in two separate pages. One of
them was to help look for Hannah, the other was
to help the family after dad committed suicide. Go fund
Me says neither one of those pages violates any sort

(09:49):
of term of service or anything like that, so they
don't have a problem with it. But one of the ants,
Lorie Pigeon, says there's some major tension over what happens
next with that money, especially the part where there was
money raised to help find her and she don't want
to be found, at least according to the LAPD.

Speaker 1 (10:13):
Isn't that wild that you can raise that kind of
cash for somebody who's not even missing and then just
get to spend it on whatever you want. Is it
the media's fault that we gave this story so much
attention when it wasn't really a missing person. I mean,
it's just kind of curious as to why a family
would do this, and maybe we're looking right at it.

(10:34):
Maybe it's for money.

Speaker 2 (10:36):
Well, you go back to the genesis of why we
would do a story in the first place. One of
the first impression was she may have been in danger
like this may been somebody who was at risk.

Speaker 1 (10:50):
There's missing people all the time in Los Angeles, and
it doesn't catch on, it doesn't rise to that level.

Speaker 2 (10:57):
But then it became the story of a woman who
appears to have wanted to get away from her family,
and her family just keeps getting closer to her.

Speaker 1 (11:07):
Yeah, and I like that you have learned so much
from the Denise Huskins rule that you are still leaving
it that option open. Well listen, that she could have
been nefariously directed absconded with.

Speaker 2 (11:25):
Yes, there is this that was a massive, massive issue,
a big rule. And when we came full circle and
actually spoke to Denise Huskins about her ordeal and what
she went through and how very few people believed it
in the beginning, and we were among them that I mean,
that's a change deal.

Speaker 3 (11:46):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (11:47):
Yeah, but this one, this one, I'm sure.

Speaker 3 (11:50):
This one, you're sure, all right?

Speaker 2 (11:55):
When we come back, more more information about this guy
who's still on the road on looking for an escape
murderer from La County who jumped out of a transport van. Also,
we are still following that story. Lawmakers up in Sacramento
and staff members in the Capitol Building have been ordered
to evacuate because of an unknown threat or an unspecified threat,

(12:17):
law enforcement CHP, etc. They are going through the Capitol
Building to make sure that this thing is not credible
or that it is just a threat.

Speaker 3 (12:24):
Do just that.

Speaker 2 (12:27):
There was a suspicious package that was delivered back in May,
if you remember, to the ninth floor the annex swing
space had to be evacuated in the Capitol because there
was a threat that it had contained anthrax. Other recent
instances when the Capitol had to be evacuated because the
threats like this, none of them obviously materialized. But as

(12:48):
of right now, they are evacuating the California State Capitol
because of whatever's been going on and whatever the threat is.
A judge has told a jury to keep deliberating.

Speaker 3 (12:58):
They said they couldn't reach a decision.

Speaker 2 (12:59):
In the Tree trial of Daniel Penny, the former marine
who faces second degree manslaughter charges criminal criminally negligent homicide
in the death of.

Speaker 1 (13:08):
A homeless guys, they're not going to His defense argued
that he this homeless guy was threatening.

Speaker 3 (13:14):
To hurt people.

Speaker 1 (13:16):
Prosecutors say, well, this guy went too far with his
choke hold grip. If his intention was to avoid this
homeless guy hurting people on the subway. How do you convict?

Speaker 2 (13:28):
Yeah, I don't know, and I'm surprised that they've even gone.

Speaker 1 (13:32):
That they brought the case exactly.

Speaker 2 (13:35):
Also, a federal appeals court has upheld a law that
would force TikTok's Chinese parent company to divest or face
a ban in the United States as of right now.
Congress did approve a foreign assistance package back in April
that includes a provision that gives TikTok nine months to
sever ties with byte Dance or lose access to app

(13:55):
stores and web hosting services here in the United States.

Speaker 1 (13:58):
The manhunt continues in New York or to find the
person who's shot and killed United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson
outside that hotel on Wednesday morning. They're going through a
lot of surveillance video that shows him his moves throughout
the city before and after. The reporters he arrived on
a bus from Atlanta ten days before the murder. There
is surveillance photo showing nearly his whole face that surfaced

(14:21):
yesterday while smiling. Police are hoping that'll be enough for
someone to be able to identify this guy.

Speaker 4 (14:27):
Hey, good morning, Gary and Shannon. This is Jill.

Speaker 6 (14:30):
You know what, Shennon, You're right, the booty is the treasure.
Both of you guys are intelligent. Love you guys a show.
Have ay wonderful day.

Speaker 4 (14:41):
Thank you too.

Speaker 1 (14:43):
This week on the Gary and Shennon Show.

Speaker 4 (14:46):
You're right, the booty is the treasure.

Speaker 1 (14:49):
I was just trying to get through the etymology there.
Why did the buttocks start being called the booty? I
think it's fun to learn about history, isn't it.

Speaker 4 (15:03):
His booty is a treasure.

Speaker 3 (15:07):
I found my new tattoo.

Speaker 1 (15:11):
All right, So we do have an escaped murderer running around.
They are going to look for Sezar Hernandez thirty four.
He was the guy who jumped out of that prison
transport van in Kern County on Tuesday.

Speaker 3 (15:29):
I believe it was Monday when he escaped.

Speaker 2 (15:32):
But the Department of Corrections CHP other local law enforcement
have been looking in the Delano area since he made
his escape. But then yesterday they said that the people
in that area no longer facing a security risk because
they believe that he already took off, He already got
out of town.

Speaker 1 (15:48):
Maybe here he was convicted of first degree murder in
La County in twenty nineteen, sentenced to eighty years to
life in prison with the possibility of parole.

Speaker 2 (15:58):
Not a good guy anyway, I mean eighty years because
he had special circumstances, a second strikes, second strike as well.
So since his escape, prison officials have been pretty quiet
about the search. They did say in a news release
yesterday to authorities have to strike a careful balance between
providing important safety information to the public while remaining while

(16:20):
maintaining confidentiality of sensitive investigative detail. They don't want this
guy to know how close they are to him, So
they're not going to say, hey, if you're in Delano,
keep an eye out for him, because we believe he's
still there.

Speaker 1 (16:33):
Necessarily, Why don't we have any information about what he did?
I mean, I just tracked some of it down. He
was at one time Kerrent County's most wanted He had
a girlfriend, apparently who tended bar in Lynnwood here in
La County. They spend a lot of time there. One night,

(16:54):
after he argued with her, he chased down a pickup
that left the bar's parking lot, forced the truck to
pull over a block away, Then he shot the driver
in the head, so that was his murder. His girlfriend,
she named only as Gabby and court filings, had stopped

(17:15):
working at the bar when she and Caesar showed up
about ten pm. This was June twenty eighteen. She wanted
her job back. The owner agreed to rehire her. They
stayed there the rest in the night, and then it
happens when you stay there the rest of the nights
at a bar, they get into a heated argument, and

(17:37):
footage shows her leaving about one twenty five. He followed her,
and that's what happened.

Speaker 2 (17:45):
How long would it take for you to stay in
a bar to get into a heated argument with your man?

Speaker 1 (17:49):
Twenty twenty five minutes?

Speaker 2 (17:52):
No, what would you argue with him about? He wouldn't
argue with you. No, I know it was a joke.

Speaker 3 (17:58):
He would get up and walk away.

Speaker 1 (17:59):
It was a joke. He'd be smart, he would get
up and walk away.

Speaker 3 (18:03):
I think he would.

Speaker 4 (18:04):
Yeah, well, Bill, booty is the treasure.

Speaker 1 (18:07):
How long would it take you to get into a
heated argument with your wife?

Speaker 3 (18:10):
I would fall asleep before that happened.

Speaker 1 (18:11):
That's true, you would.

Speaker 3 (18:13):
I don't get angry when I when I am.

Speaker 1 (18:15):
No, you get quiet.

Speaker 3 (18:17):
I can get quiet happy generally happy.

Speaker 1 (18:22):
You're not a big get drunk gy not generally I
have like maybe a couple nights I can refer back
to when I saw your behavior. Okay, not many.

Speaker 3 (18:37):
Maybe that's good.

Speaker 1 (18:37):
It's great. Are you kidding? It's wonderful to have that
kind of self control. Did you hear about Wisdom?

Speaker 3 (18:43):
I've heard of it.

Speaker 1 (18:44):
The world's oldest known wild bird is named Wisdom. That
I didn't know, And Wisdom is going to be a
new mother.

Speaker 3 (18:51):
How do they know if it's a wild bird?

Speaker 4 (18:53):
How old?

Speaker 3 (18:54):
How do they know it's the old?

Speaker 1 (18:55):
Go on, don't be skeptical. Sorry, I'm just you can
tell by counting its rings. You could chop it in
half and count the rings. According to the US Fish
and Wildlife Service, a seventy four year old laysan albatross
named Wisdom has laid an egg. It happened November twenty
seventh in the Pacific Ocean. Researchers say they expect the

(19:19):
egg to hatch in around two months, making Wisdom a
mother for about the thirtieth time. She hatched her last
chick in twenty twenty one. The bird has outlived Chandler Robbins,
the scientist that banded her back in nineteen fifty six.
That is a big researchers estimate. Wisdom has flown around

(19:42):
three point seven million miles throughout her life. Frequent flyer Miles,
who's hooking up with a seventy four year old bird?

Speaker 4 (19:48):
Like?

Speaker 2 (19:49):
What that reeks of desperation, doesn't it? Why that's an
old bird? Maybe it's a seventy three year old bird?
Hook on hod a bird's age?

Speaker 1 (19:56):
Maybe they ate?

Speaker 3 (19:58):
How do they age?

Speaker 2 (19:59):
I'm curious as like dogs, you know, like what would
be the regular life span.

Speaker 1 (20:04):
Of what is a seventy four year old bird compared
to a human? How old is a bird in human year?

Speaker 3 (20:10):
Seventy four is the new forty four?

Speaker 1 (20:12):
Well, I know that for humans.

Speaker 2 (20:18):
Unfortunately, today is Friday, so we're going to we're going
to do what you learned this week on the Gary
and Shannon Show.

Speaker 3 (20:25):
Leave us a talkback message.

Speaker 2 (20:28):
Of course, when you're on the app, all you have
to do is hit that little microphone button and it'll
record a message that comes into the comes into the
old computer. Here, a guy who jumped onto a polar
bear to protect his wife is recovering from serious injuries.

Speaker 1 (20:42):
You'd do that.

Speaker 2 (20:44):
The nishnabi Oski Police Service officers responded to a home
in a residential area near in Ontario after reports of gunfire,
and they discovered a dead polar bear. But before they
got there, LISTA received reports of a possible bear sighting
in the same area. Apparently this couple was out there
shovel and snow and the old polar bear came up,

(21:07):
don't you know, And he had to climb on the
polar bear's back to prevent it from killing his wife. Wow,
he suffered serious injuries as a result.

Speaker 1 (21:17):
Whenever I bring up a possibility of a bear attack,
my husband says, I just have to run faster than you.

Speaker 2 (21:25):
Does he say it seriously or does he say a
smile on his face? No, very serious. It's his plan.

Speaker 3 (21:31):
You could put that in the divorced documents if you like.

Speaker 2 (21:34):
The La Times editor doctor Patrick soun Shong says that
his team is working on a technology driven bias meter
to add to articles on the website as soon as
next year. The idea, the way he's talking about it

(21:55):
is it's going to be something like a module that
would present multiple viewpoints under particular news item as well
as some version of comments to be integrated into it.
He says, imagine, imagine if you now take whether it
be news or opinion, and you have a bias meter,
whether news or opinion, more like the opinion or the voices,

(22:15):
you have a bias meter. So somebody could understand as
a reader that the source of the article has some
level of bias.

Speaker 1 (22:22):
So when you say tech driven, does that mean it's
going to be AI driven? AI will read an article
and tell you the way it leans.

Speaker 3 (22:29):
Sounds like it.

Speaker 2 (22:31):
This idea of a bias meter has been bouncing around
as a product idea for some time. In twenty eighteen,
a company called NewsGuard provides a browser extension that would
give you a full nutrition label kind of a funny
way to put it, but of a news website and
its political leanings and who owns it and things like that.
Chris Evans, Yes, Captain America started a website a few

(22:55):
years ago called a starting Point that offers explainers on
news topics. For example, here's three opinions from Democrats on this,
and here's three opinions from Republicans on this type format.
He there was a startup not his but there was
a startup called The Messenger that it inked to deal
with the artificial intelligence company Seeker to somehow help root

(23:18):
out bias in the reporting, if you remember, a lot
of this started when the La Times, and specifically Sun
Shong spiked the Kamala Harris announcement our endorsement sorry, saying
that he believed that the La Times opinion section had
been an echo chamber and not a trusted source. And
he said, when my next level of people on the

(23:39):
editorial board shared with me that they had prepackaged and
endorsement without having met with any of the candidates, I
was a little bit outraged and felt that whatever they
were about to say should be really based on facts.
So one of the La Times editorial board members, Karen Klein,
resigned after that endorsement was scrapped. She said she sees

(24:01):
this move to make this the late call. Said if
the editor or the owner Soon Seng had decided early
last spring that he no longer wanted to endorse on
presidential races, then that would have been a fair, neutral,
legitimate decision. But it was an odd decision not to
weigh in on the most crucial election in my lifetime,
but it was his call, and she said that she

(24:21):
was upset that he made the decision.

Speaker 3 (24:23):
In the eleventh hour.

Speaker 2 (24:24):
While the candidates are in place, the polls are tight,
and almost anything can throw the race one way or
the other. So there is another website I've used it
before called all sides dot com. All allsides dot com,
and they will, depending on whatever issue happens to be,
they'll put together three or four articles on that topic

(24:48):
and then give you their version or their judgment as
to the bias in the article. Is it far left,
is it somewhat right, is it down the center? And
they kind of grade it so you can look at
these different articles at the same topic and judge.

Speaker 4 (25:04):
You know.

Speaker 1 (25:04):
I feel like it's fairly easy to find out, you know,
or just read through something and realize where it's landing.

Speaker 3 (25:12):
But I don't think.

Speaker 1 (25:13):
But maybe it's because we read this stuff.

Speaker 2 (25:15):
Say, you read it a lot, and I think people
who are who don't know to look for it, Yeah,
they wouldn't recognize.

Speaker 3 (25:21):
It right away.

Speaker 1 (25:22):
Yeah. I always tried to read a couple versions of
whatever it is we're doing, you know, go to the
places where I know that are right, go to the
places that are left, go to the places where sometimes
it's right, sometimes it's left.

Speaker 3 (25:33):
Sometimes they surprise you.

Speaker 1 (25:35):
Yes, my computer has decided to restart. Well, it gave
you the warning it did like two days ago.

Speaker 2 (25:43):
It said, hey, your company wants you to restart to computer,
and you kept putting it off.

Speaker 1 (25:47):
We have a final push for our pastathon, y'all. As
of eight o'clock this morning, you have raised one million,
sixty two, two hundred eighty four dollars.

Speaker 3 (26:01):
Wow, and it makes no sense.

Speaker 1 (26:03):
Eighty seven thousand pounds of pasta and sauce, sig die.
We are in the final push now, guys. The course
Chef Bruno's charity, Katerinas Club, it provides more than twenty
five thousand meals every week to kids in need in
southern California, and it's you, guys that make it happen.
These are kids that we're going to bed hungry, not

(26:25):
being able to get up and learn because they didn't
know where they'd be spending that night, they didn't know
when their next meal was gonna come. And because of
your generosity, which makes up of like fifty percent of
what Bruno's able to do every year, these kids have
a shot unbelievable. You have until Sunday night to donate.
You could go to KFIAM six forty dot com slash pasathon.

(26:48):
You could shop at any Smart and Final store. Donate
any amount at checkout through Sunday night.

Speaker 2 (26:54):
Pull up your pants, take off the pond, be a man.

Speaker 1 (26:58):
You could also go to any Wendy's Rest in southern California.
Donate five dollars or more, get a coupon book through
Sunday night. One percent of your donation goes to Katina's
Club LFG, Holy Macro. It's a multimedia explosion of frontation.

Speaker 2 (27:19):
Yeah, kids used to come up and reach in the
pool and rub my leg down.

Speaker 3 (27:25):
What the hell are we talking about?

Speaker 1 (27:29):
How much younger does he sound? I know that's insane.

Speaker 2 (27:33):
You've been listening to the Gary and Shannon Show. 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 lap

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