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 (00:10):
Stories were following.
Speaker 3 (00:11):
The suspect in the killing of United Healthcare CEO is
back in New York, flown there by helicopter to face
new federal charges of murder and stalking, escalating the case
after his earlier indictment on these state charges. Luigi Mangioni
did waive his extradition agreed to go back to New
York today. He was immediately turned over to at least
a dozen New York Police Department officers who were in
(00:31):
the courtroom, and they led him to a plane that
was bound for Long Island, taken by helicopter to Manhattan.
He's being put in a big black van right now
on their way to a federal court.
Speaker 2 (00:43):
State appeals court has.
Speaker 3 (00:44):
Removed Fulton County DA Fani Willis from that Georgia election
interference case against Donald Trump and others. So no idea
what's going to happen to this prosecution. The case had
already been stalled for months while the Court of Appeals
in Georgia considered the pre trial appeal. It does mean
that it's going to be up to the Prosecuting Attorney's
Council of Georgia if they want to find another prosecutor
(01:05):
from a different county to take over the case and
to decide whether or not to pursue It. Still also
unclear if the Supreme Court's decision on immunity would have
an impact on a state level case like this.
Speaker 1 (01:17):
DC Studios out with the first trailer for next summer's
Superman films Good So, which gives fans a first look
at the iconic characters Man of Steel, Crypto, the super Dogs.
Speaker 3 (01:27):
Yeah, did you see He's in the snow and he
I hate whistles for Crypto and all of a sudden,
blazing through the snow comes Crypto.
Speaker 1 (01:34):
The green lanterns in it, Hawk Girl, Lois Lane, Jimmy Olsen,
Lex Luthor are all seen in the trailer as well.
Speaker 2 (01:42):
This will serve as.
Speaker 1 (01:43):
The main launch of James Gunn's new DC universe. July eleventh,
next year is when that's will come out.
Speaker 4 (01:50):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (01:51):
California officials have declared a state of emergency because a
bird flew tearing through the dairy cows in the state.
We mentioned this yesterday It was first detected in cattle
in the United States in March and has spread to
more than eight hundred and sixty herds in sixteen states,
at least six hundred and fifty infected here in the
state of California.
Speaker 1 (02:10):
Well, FBI agents have rated somebody else who somebody else's
home who works at city hall. Agents searched the home
of a deputy mayor yesterday as part of an investigation
and whether he made a bomb threat against city Hall.
Speaker 2 (02:27):
What Yeah?
Speaker 3 (02:29):
A department statement from LAPD said that Brian K. Williams,
Deputy Mayor for Public Safety, is thought to have been
the source of these bomb threats. The initial investigation that
the source was likely Williams due to the department's working
relationship with Williams because again he's Deputy mayor for public Safety.
(02:51):
The investigation was handed over to the FBI, and the
FBI is going to investigate all of this.
Speaker 1 (02:57):
So why would he call a bomb threat in to
his place of work? Was he not prepared for a
presentation he was supposed to give Karen Bass?
Speaker 2 (03:06):
Is that the version of pulling the fire alarm?
Speaker 1 (03:08):
Yeah? The final I don't have my homework ready to go.
It's a very juvenile response to not being ready to
report for your work.
Speaker 2 (03:16):
Day, isn't it.
Speaker 3 (03:17):
One of his friends and compatriots, Pastor Xavier Thompson of
Southern Missionary Baptist Church, said that Ryan Williams was a
model public servant, someone who's acted with integrity in the
highest manner. They work together on the La County Sheriff
Civilian Oversight Commission.
Speaker 1 (03:33):
Is his defense going to be, well, I'm the deputy
mayor for public safety and I wanted to see how
quickly the response would be for a bomb threat to
city Hall.
Speaker 3 (03:42):
I was I'd be a strange defense, but you got
to do something.
Speaker 2 (03:46):
Sure.
Speaker 3 (03:47):
A lot of people who know him say that he's
a really soft spoken guy, never shows anger, never shows
impulsive behavior.
Speaker 2 (03:55):
At least not on the job. Maybe a thing.
Speaker 3 (03:59):
One long time time city official state, if I had
been asked to come up with a list of one
hundred people at city Hall who would have done this,
he wouldn't have even been on the list.
Speaker 1 (04:07):
One of his next door neighbors in Pasadena says he's
not capable of that. It's ridiculous. They must have the
wrong Brian Williams. I'm positive they're a wonderful family. They
go to church every Sunday. They're upstanding pillars of the community.
They've been our neighbors for over twenty years.
Speaker 3 (04:22):
This guy and this guy has been around city government
for a long time. I mean he was in the
administration of Mayor Hahn back in the just after two thousand.
Speaker 1 (04:32):
Couple things, a couple questions. How would they know it
was him? Did it come from his own cell phone?
And if it did, then maybe somebody else had access
to it. If it came from his office, a number
of people probably have access to the communicate.
Speaker 2 (04:49):
Platforms in there.
Speaker 1 (04:52):
So and what were they searching for in his home
connected with a bomb threat? Are they searching for bomb
making material to make sure that he wasn't actually going
to blow up the place?
Speaker 3 (05:04):
They could be looking for computers, I mean, if it's
if it's an email threat or something like that.
Speaker 2 (05:09):
They're not very specific about this.
Speaker 1 (05:11):
That's the problem is it could have been the home
computer that it was sent from and they just tracked
down the IP address.
Speaker 2 (05:18):
Yeah, maybe it was his wife, maybe it was a kid.
Speaker 3 (05:22):
If you if you're investigating this, this is kind of
the I don't know, the brain game that you can
play with this. If you're investigating this and you get
an IP address and it doesn't even it doesn't even
get to specifics about that house on that street. But
you have those houses on that street that would you know,
correlate with that IP address. I'm not exactly sure how
(05:42):
it works, obviously, But then you see that one of
the people in that house, or you know, one of
the people that lives on that block, happens to be
an employee at city Hall. Wouldn't that automatically give you
like that's.
Speaker 2 (05:58):
A strange action. Strange?
Speaker 3 (06:00):
I mean, the guy lives in Pasadena, It's not like
he lives downtown LA or something like that.
Speaker 1 (06:04):
So can you hack IP addresses and make it look
like it's coming from another IP address?
Speaker 2 (06:09):
I feel like I've seen that movie. Sure, it's in
the movies.
Speaker 3 (06:11):
I know you can. I don't know why you wouldn't
be able to. I mean I can't, I don't plan
to anytime, but hey, you don't even know where to
find your IP address. Gave me a nice gift of
this double oaked bourbon finished with sherry oak staves. Yeah,
so it's maybe I get into this and then I
start switching people's ip addresses.
Speaker 1 (06:32):
It's I like that you keep making excuses for getting
into that bottle before noon.
Speaker 2 (06:38):
Can you see how my fingerprints are all over it?
All round? It's ten thirteen. Yeah, I don't know how
often you do you it's the holidays.
Speaker 1 (06:47):
It's over there, it's barely Just remember I'm leaving a
little early today, so the show's on you, So don't
get too wasted.
Speaker 2 (06:55):
Or do that would be fun, all right.
Speaker 3 (06:59):
There is a California connection to the Madison, Wisconsin shooting
from earlier this week. We'll explain what this moron did
in connection with that school shooting.
Speaker 1 (07:09):
Also, I can't wait to see what you think about
San Francisco paying a body positivity person to work in
the public health department.
Speaker 2 (07:17):
I think we all need to be positively healthy.
Speaker 5 (07:23):
You're listening to Gary and Shannon on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 3 (07:29):
I could see that we don't re celebrate his music anymore.
Speaker 1 (07:32):
Spice girls want to be eaten out. Let's see, Oh,
Drew Hill in my bed trying to find out what
song Keanu was conceived to. Babyface had a good one.
Every time I close my eyes are Kelly. Let's hope
it's not that.
Speaker 3 (07:48):
One Babyface was responsible for probably a lot of You were.
Speaker 1 (07:53):
Born around space jam time. Yeah, I mean you were
conceived around space jam time. Maybe that's a good soundtrack.
Happy Birthday, Happy Birthday.
Speaker 3 (08:03):
Kiana h Keana is going to be playing the character
Mary in the upcoming production of It's a Kfi Wonderful Life.
Speaker 4 (08:10):
Now.
Speaker 1 (08:10):
We're bringing Gary's Adult Theater to the show today, so
everybody gather around.
Speaker 3 (08:16):
I don't think we've done this It's a Wonderful Life.
For a couple of years. I had this in my
mind that we were switching off between that and a
Christmas Carol and back and forth. But I don't think
we've done It's a Wonderful Life since twenty nineteen.
Speaker 2 (08:29):
So what were we doing in the meantime, Well.
Speaker 3 (08:32):
There were times when we were just first of all,
double double birds into the air, like I.
Speaker 2 (08:37):
Don't want to do I don't want to do a
holiday play. Oh our drunk years.
Speaker 1 (08:41):
Yeah, so listen, there was a lot we were going through.
Look at the Bennet truck is back across the street.
What the Benyet truck? It's a food truck with Bennet's.
But luckily you've already brought in enough sugar to bring
down the whole building I've been brought in.
Speaker 3 (09:00):
You know how heavy those boxes are when you try
to carry them up first thing in the morning. Butter
is in those cookies.
Speaker 2 (09:06):
What there's butter?
Speaker 3 (09:07):
Oh, there's a lot of them. There's there's love. I
just call butter love. So there's at least probably I
love love, four pounds of love in there.
Speaker 6 (09:16):
Okay, Gary, Hey, Shannon, Frank the truck driver here, good morning, Hey,
five little monkeys. Anyways, what I'm calling for is, hey,
here's a theory. I drive a truck, and my truck
and trailer set up, it'd be pretty hard for me
not to notice a monkey behind my sleeper. You know,
this is a regular drive man, right when there's plenty
of trucks going up and down them highways in the
(09:36):
Southern States, like flatbeds and grain haulers, they could have
hitched a ride them monkeys, just saying.
Speaker 1 (09:43):
I don't think they took the honk honk to you.
I don't think they took the expressways. I don't think
I think that they were more about hiding in the
tree streets.
Speaker 2 (09:52):
Yeah, side streets, hy Gary and Shannon.
Speaker 7 (09:55):
The way it works with a public IP is every
but he gets assigned one by their Internet service provider, Spectrum, whomever,
and it that IP address can change over time, but
the Internet service provider would know who that IP address
was assigned to as a customer during that.
Speaker 3 (10:18):
Period, all right, So if there was an email or
if a message originated from a specific terminal, a specific
computer in a house, they would know the IP address
of that house.
Speaker 2 (10:28):
Just be a matter of figuring out going to the internet.
There's people that live there.
Speaker 3 (10:34):
Yeah, I mean I come through. That could be the
defense as I don't know. I'm not the only one
who uses my laptop, right can that?
Speaker 5 (10:41):
People?
Speaker 2 (10:41):
Over A little messy situation.
Speaker 3 (10:44):
Southern California man who was in contact with the school
shooter out of Madison, Wisconsin was apparently planning a tandem attack,
or at least saying that that's what he was doing.
San Diego County Superior Court judge granted a gun violence
emergency protective order that the Carl's Bad Police Department filed
(11:05):
against a guy named Alex Paffendorf. It allows that's the
basically the California version of the Red Flag Law, which
allows law enforcement to seize weapons and AMMO from somebody
who is deemed to be a threat to.
Speaker 2 (11:20):
Themselves or others. This guy.
Speaker 3 (11:25):
Had apparently communicated with the shooter at the Abundant Like
Christian School of Madison, Wisconsin, and said that the FBI
picked this guy up after he was discovered plotting a
mass shooting with the girl. He admitted to the FBI
that he told the girl that he would arm himself
(11:47):
with explosives and a gun, and that he would target
a government building. The FBI saw these messages between this
guy and the shooter, and they don't go into further
details about how they were communicating or what the exact
plans were that this guy was working on. But again,
a court order is set for January third. The order
(12:09):
says that guns were reported and searched for, but it
doesn't say yet if police actually seized any The order
does require somebody if you are subject to one of
these orders. Again, it's the what is commonly referred to
as a red flag law. You have to turn over
firearms and you cannot possess any guns while that order
(12:32):
is in effect.
Speaker 2 (12:33):
So this guy is under that.
Speaker 5 (12:34):
Now.
Speaker 3 (12:35):
Again, it's not clear if there's any criminal charges in
these in this case yet because none of the none
of the agencies involved, whether it's Carlsbad, PD or FBI,
they haven't said anything about criminal charges.
Speaker 1 (12:47):
Was this the guy that may have been communicating with her,
that had the manifesto or.
Speaker 2 (12:53):
What have you? Did we? Ever?
Speaker 3 (12:54):
It's possible because I don't know if we ever got
that guy's actual name. We knew that there was a
at least to pseudonym that he had been using, but
I don't listen how many? How many of these are there?
Speaker 2 (13:08):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (13:09):
Yeahs hundreds of thousands of communications like this every day,
and we're just trying to catch up to the ones that, unfortunately,
you know, make themselves known by shooting up the schoolmates.
Speaker 1 (13:24):
All right, coming up next, body positivity. It's important, but
should cities be hiring with taxpayer dollars body positivity experts
to work and public health departments? Should Barbara ferrare get
herself a body positivity expert? That's a juxtaposition, isn't it?
(13:44):
She needs to eat makes a burger positive about it.
Speaker 5 (13:49):
You're listening to Gary and Shannon on Demand from KFI
AM six.
Speaker 1 (13:54):
Forty Favorite Christmas song by Darlene Love m That rendition
Darlene Love.
Speaker 2 (14:04):
You could listen to that.
Speaker 1 (14:05):
Phil Specter's producing before he started killing people.
Speaker 3 (14:10):
I've been trying to find good Christmas music. My wife
and I like to listen to some of the We
don't I like the classics.
Speaker 2 (14:17):
I wouldn't say the classic.
Speaker 3 (14:18):
I wouldn't say we don't like the classics, but they
feel like they're a little played out.
Speaker 2 (14:22):
So I don't I go back and forth with new things.
Do you know Zoe Deschanel, Yeah, the actress. I loved that.
Speaker 3 (14:29):
Do you know the album that she put out with
She and Him I think is the name of their singing.
Speaker 2 (14:34):
Group, Well, She and Him. She was an elf right.
Speaker 3 (14:38):
But they did an entire Christmas album shened Him and
I think you'd like that one.
Speaker 2 (14:42):
I think I would like that one.
Speaker 3 (14:43):
And Oklahoma man's been killed, executed specifically forty five.
Speaker 2 (14:48):
Years and say probably a lot of people died in Oklahoma.
Speaker 3 (14:51):
Pronounced dead this morning at the State Penn and McAllister
Oklahoma the twenty fifth and as of right now we
believe the final.
Speaker 2 (14:58):
Execution of twenty twenty four.
Speaker 3 (15:00):
This guy killed a ten year old girl, admitted to
luring her and to his apartment. I'm not going to
get into the specifics, but basically he had a plan
that he was going to well, it's not all right.
He killed a ten year old, so he deserves to go.
Let's talk about all the cookies you brought in today.
(15:21):
So that's going to make my body positive. It's happy.
That's not the right term for body positivity.
Speaker 2 (15:31):
My wife made the what's your favorite kind of those things.
Speaker 1 (15:33):
I don't like to pick favorites, but if I were
hard pressed, I would say I gravitate towards the chocolate
chip that have something else special in them, chocolate. There's
something else going on in there that's probably a secret.
Speaker 2 (15:50):
It's chocolate. It's her She's chocolate chocolate chips. Yes, but
there's also chocolate, I.
Speaker 1 (15:56):
Feel okay, so there's also chocolate, right, okay? Or the
ones with the Hershey kiss on the top of it.
Speaker 2 (16:03):
We tried something different this year.
Speaker 3 (16:04):
Really, I suggested you instead of the Hershey's kiss on
those peanut butter cookies, you do a peanut butter cup
on those peanut butter cookies.
Speaker 2 (16:12):
They don't hold up to the heat as much. I
like the I saw it one out there. It's got
the Hershey kiss in it.
Speaker 3 (16:18):
Yeah, yeah, but there's also there was one that didn't
make it past the planning ste Why.
Speaker 2 (16:21):
Did you think you could bring ideas to the table.
She went with it. That's because she loves you. She
did it just also like the green sugar cookie Christmas trees.
Speaker 3 (16:34):
Right, that was the last minute save because we couldn't
find the Christmas tree cookie cutter.
Speaker 2 (16:39):
I wonder where it went? Is it with the lamp?
It might there is.
Speaker 3 (16:43):
There appears to be some sort of a tear in
the space time continuum somewhere in my house.
Speaker 1 (16:48):
Yeah, I think it's on that stair that smells that's gone.
I know, I was just kidding and I never smelled it.
Speaker 2 (16:55):
The ghost. Okay.
Speaker 1 (16:57):
So San Francisco has hired an activist who advocates for
body positivity and weight nerality. What is weight neutrality? I'm
going to google that.
Speaker 3 (17:10):
Her name, assuming her pronouns Virgie Tolvar. She wrote on Instagram.
I'm working with a team at the San Francisco Department
of Public Health as a consultant on weight stigma and
weight neutrality. Said, I'm unbelievably proud to serve the city
I've called home for almost twenty years.
Speaker 2 (17:26):
In this way. This consultancy is an absolute dream. Contrue.
Speaker 3 (17:28):
It's my biggest hope and belief that weight neutrality will
be the future of public health.
Speaker 1 (17:33):
Weight neutrality is an approach that focuses on health outcomes
rather than body weight. It focuses on blood pressure, blood
sugar levels, cholesterol, those things as opposed to poundage.
Speaker 2 (17:47):
I celebrate weight neutrality.
Speaker 1 (17:48):
I don't get on the scale unless I'm at the
doctor's office.
Speaker 3 (17:51):
Great, that's awesome. Yeah, but how are we going to
do these things? How are we going to lower blood pressures?
How are we going to increase mobility? How are we
going to do those things that you want to say
and don't say weight? Don't say weight? Don't you dare
She is.
Speaker 1 (18:10):
A plus sized Latina author, lecture leading expert on weight
based discrimination. She hosts the podcast Rebel Eaters Club, criticizes
diet culture and weight based discrimination. I bet there is
a lot of weight based discrimination. Yes there is, yeah,
I mean look at a look at an airline seat.
That's weight based discrimination. She says the idea that body
(18:34):
weight and BMI not the only, the best, or even
the primary ways to measure one's health. She did an
interview a few years ago and described her podcast as
a food positive, body positive podcast that helps people break
up with diet culture one corn dog at a time.
Speaker 2 (18:50):
Oh, I'm in on that. I love corn dogs.
Speaker 3 (18:54):
I Well, it almost uses the diet word as a
pejorative there, right, where diet is what you eat, period.
Speaker 2 (19:02):
That's true. You can have a restrictive diet.
Speaker 3 (19:05):
You can have a tailored diet, you can have a
health conscious diet. You can have a diet that is
specific to bacon or other pork products.
Speaker 2 (19:14):
Just got very hungry.
Speaker 3 (19:16):
Diet culture, she says, is the set of beliefs that
certain foods are good because they're associated with thinness and
moral virtue. Other foods are bad because they're associated with
fat or lack of moral virtue. Have you ever thought
of the moral virtue of the foods that you eat?
Speaker 1 (19:36):
I feel bad like right now, I'm eating this bacon
right because a pig died for it.
Speaker 2 (19:44):
I'm eating an animal, a sentient being.
Speaker 1 (19:47):
I feel bad about that morally, but it's just so
good that I move past.
Speaker 2 (19:52):
It quickly too. Apparently.
Speaker 3 (19:56):
She says that this idea of diet culture, or sorry,
this weight neutrality, is gaining traction in the field of medicine,
many patients have experienced weight based bias. Some doctors are
even starting to practice what's known as weight neutral care
that emphasizes that patients can be healthy at any weight
(20:17):
or size. Well you can. Statistics will tell you whatever
you want them to. Yeah, you could have a relatively
low blood pressure but still be one hundred pounds over weight.
That doesn't mean that you are necessarily healthy, but it
does mean that your body is not destroying itself right away.
(20:39):
It may just be a ticking time bomb. The American
Medical Association agrees because they began recommending that doctors look
beyond just BMI, considering metrics for diagnosing obesity, genetics, visceral
fat waste, circumference, things like that. By the way, San
Francisco has one of the lowest rates of adult obesity
(21:01):
in the United States. San Francisco does one of the
lowest rates of adult obesity.
Speaker 2 (21:09):
Yeah, that checks out.
Speaker 3 (21:10):
So then why do we need a body positivity a
consultant at the cost of twelve grand.
Speaker 1 (21:15):
Because all those skinny people up there need to feel
bad about being skinny their skinny privilege.
Speaker 3 (21:21):
There, I'm sorry say that word again. Skinny privilege skinny privilege.
Speaker 1 (21:25):
You've had this happen to you before when somebody will
look at you. This happens to me all the time.
You STU, you're so lucky.
Speaker 2 (21:34):
Oh, you're so lucky. You were born that way.
Speaker 1 (21:36):
Which, yeah, there's a percentage of it that is genetics.
Speaker 2 (21:40):
You don't have to work out. You just always look
like that.
Speaker 5 (21:43):
Right?
Speaker 2 (21:43):
What what tell that to the plank? I'm going to
make you do in the break? That's right? Three minutes today? Three?
Speaker 1 (21:52):
Yeah, you've been tapping out at two and that's not
the way you go into adult fantasy.
Speaker 2 (21:56):
You didn't tell me how long it was the other day.
You just said, it's time. Did I have that voice?
It's to it's time, don't forget.
Speaker 1 (22:08):
At eleven, we are going to be doing our our
special Christmas play, our adult theater here on the Gary
and Shannon Show. Our production of It's a Wonderful Life.
Gary is carefully crafted, it's very funny, it's very well done,
build it up, very entertaining. Oh and also tomorrow a
special edition of The Gary and Shannon Show.
Speaker 2 (22:28):
Do you want to unveil what is in store? Someone?
Let's just say I will not have to change the
title of the show, right.
Speaker 1 (22:40):
Despite there being someone missing, right, so stupid.
Speaker 5 (22:48):
You're listening to Gary and Shannon on demand from KFI
AM six.
Speaker 1 (22:52):
Forty playoff like type of game here, all important divisional
rival with the Broncos coming to town on a short week.
Did you see, by the way, all of the dirty
laundry that the New York Times published about the New
York Jets, about how the Jets owner Woody Johnson vetoed
(23:14):
at Jerry Judy trade this offseason because his Madden rating
wasn't high enough, and that Woody Johnson lets his teenage
sons have a direct influence on football decisions. The former
GM there Joe Douglas said, I reported to a teenager
that the Johnson family, including Woody, his wife, and his kids,
would walk around the Jets' locker room disparaging players after games.
(23:38):
In twenty twenty two, he went up to quarterback Mike White,
who played through broken ribs, and told him me effing
sucked after losing the game.
Speaker 3 (23:49):
Listen, if you're an owner, I mean you kind of
get leeway with with who's going to help you make
decisions because you're the You've got the FNU money or sure, so.
Speaker 2 (23:59):
I mean that part of it I'm not worried about.
But are they also upset they've got it?
Speaker 1 (24:02):
But a teenager, a teenage boy, GM's reporting to a
teenage boy.
Speaker 3 (24:08):
Yes, well he's not actually reporting to a teenage boy.
Maybe the boy who's coming up with these decisions, but
he feels like it. Yeah, I mean, that would be
an awful place to work, and that's why, that's why
the owner needs to keep that stuff in check, because
no one's gonna want to work for him in that situation,
but it's his money.
Speaker 1 (24:25):
He reportedly floated benching Aaron Rodgers four weeks into the
season as a joke in order to see everyone's reaction
to gauge if you should actually do it.
Speaker 2 (24:34):
That sounds almost Trump like, I start, yeah, totally. Trump
ended up winning, Yeah, didn't he? He tried to own
a USFL.
Speaker 1 (24:42):
I think so somewhere down the line, I started watching
that stupid Aaron Rodgers documentary because of.
Speaker 2 (24:48):
You, because of me. I hadn't even watched it yet,
and so I started watching it last night.
Speaker 1 (24:53):
I'm like, it's making me kind of like Aaron Rodgers,
and then two minutes later, this is making me hate
Aaron Rodgers more and then two minutes later like them.
Speaker 2 (25:01):
It's one of.
Speaker 3 (25:01):
Those great Yeah, I don't want to do I don't
need that emotional roller coaster.
Speaker 6 (25:05):
The holidays Shanna Garyus narrator, Narratively for a little Irish coffee.
So you get a cup of coffee, you get, you know,
a shot or two of a good Irish whiskey.
Speaker 4 (25:18):
And a little bit of sugar and some.
Speaker 5 (25:20):
Some whipped cream, and you know that's sort of like
it's like a breakfast coffee.
Speaker 3 (25:24):
Okay, that was That used to be my go to
when I when I was living in northern California and
would go to Tahoe.
Speaker 2 (25:29):
That was my go to.
Speaker 1 (25:30):
Last time I had one of those was with my
mom a candlestick.
Speaker 3 (25:36):
I think my heart would explode if I had one
of those now combing it was a really.
Speaker 1 (25:41):
Cold game, and they did a really nice Irish coffee
with whipped cream at that little good restaurant joint up there.
Speaker 2 (25:49):
God, that was a fun time. Now that's gone. Sorry.
Speaker 1 (25:55):
I get a little nostalgic for old stadiums during the holidays.
Speaker 2 (25:58):
The peanut butter cookies first, and then you pull him
out of the oven and then you put the Hirshy's.
Speaker 4 (26:06):
Kiss on him.
Speaker 2 (26:07):
Yes, that's how we do it.
Speaker 3 (26:08):
Not put the Hirshy's kiss on him and bake them
in the oven.
Speaker 2 (26:12):
No, no, no, yeah, that process has been worked out.
Thank you.
Speaker 4 (26:19):
This is Craig and I live in the city of
Orange and Orange County, and I just wanted to say
that you guys are the greatest thing that happened the
radio since Mark and Brian and I've been listening to
you for years. Love the heck out of Shannon and
her laugh. I'm my oldest daughter's name is Shannon. So anyway,
(26:39):
but Shannon, why do you have to give Gary so
much crap?
Speaker 2 (26:44):
I'm sure he's a good guy. But anyway, I love
you guys. Yeah, he's sure, I'm a good guy. I'm
sorry that's going to be my new Year's resolution. Please
don't let that be your new year's resolution.
Speaker 1 (26:56):
Well, I didn't realize how much crap I gave you,
or how lacking better term bitchy, I can be. No
until you played that old clip or justin played that
old clip.
Speaker 3 (27:10):
Oh God, that was a different time. We weren't even
doing the show together at that point.
Speaker 1 (27:15):
What do you mean we weren't doing the show together. No,
we were, That wasn't this show.
Speaker 2 (27:21):
Yeah it was.
Speaker 1 (27:22):
You were filling in for the morning, right, But that
was when Handel had his like health shoes or something.
Speaker 2 (27:27):
That was I think we filled in before this show started. No, no,
no oh, it was no. Oh definitely okay, Yeah, you
were mean. I know back in the day.
Speaker 1 (27:36):
If we weren't doing the show together yet, I would
probably be a lot nicer, right, I don't better behavior
because you.
Speaker 2 (27:43):
Would have been more of a stranger. Well, we had
lunch together a couple of times before the show starts,
and I was nice, andmember how nice I was?
Speaker 3 (27:49):
No, I wasn't and you started nice, right, Yeah, the
end of a lunch with you can be pretty hairy.
Speaker 2 (27:57):
It's not true, Okay is that true?
Speaker 7 (28:03):
Is it?
Speaker 2 (28:03):
Because I like to leave right away?
Speaker 3 (28:05):
I'm left with the check because you have gone get
out of here. It's just like this floating napkin that
goes back and forth, and where did she go? It's
a cloud of dust where you used to sit.
Speaker 1 (28:18):
I blame the pandemic because it stopped going out to
dinner and then.
Speaker 2 (28:22):
You just forgot how I forgot how to behave That's fine.
Speaker 1 (28:25):
I have a hard time focusing for an hour, an
hour and twenty minutes.
Speaker 2 (28:29):
Guess what's next.
Speaker 1 (28:31):
What's next is our adult theater production of It's a
Wonderful Life, and.
Speaker 2 (28:34):
We're going to jump right into it.
Speaker 3 (28:35):
We'll get back to some headlines and all the other
good stuff that's going on in the world, but we'll
do that at twelve.
Speaker 1 (28:40):
So next hour, It's a KFI Wonderful Life. Do you
want your Jeopardy question? Then, real quick, get it out
of the way. Sure Histories Mysteries for four hundred dollars
despite reporting no problems. The USS cyclops went missing in
eight nineteen eighteen, and it's thought to be lost in
this mysterious resion.
Speaker 2 (28:59):
Erm try it's right. One of the things we were
terrified of is children.
Speaker 3 (29:03):
That and quicksand Gary and Shannon will continue right after this.
Speaker 2 (29:09):
You've been listening to the Gary and Shannon Show.
Speaker 3 (29:12):
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